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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-30 - Orange Coast PilotI I I I I • a ~arter s WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 30, 1977 Of Strangler Seareh · YOI-1t, MO. IM, t UCTIOMI. • l'ANI • • • Truck Causes Laguna Havoc Hooker~ Bookies Co~t-y "Y"ice Arrests Rise· By GAJtY GRANVILLE ot ... o.ltyl't ... swt Prostitution and bookmakinl are on the upswing in Orange County, accord.in& to Sheriff's of. fice vice officer Jack Marwin. Records for the year ended Oct. 31 show that vice arrests by the Sheriff's ofrice "more than doubled" during the paat year, Marwin said. His fiaures included only ar· rests made in unincorporated UuterNa~• Top Aide/or Peace Mu•ion areu of the county and ln city ln- vestlgations aided by aherUf'a vice lnveet.t1aton. Cited u the l:M>lbed for ladles of the night waa the so-called "Harbor Boulevard strip" that runs roughly from Katella Avenue ln Anaheim to Bolaa A venue in Westminster. In county territory, Mission Viejo WU llsUid by Marwin .. the bot spot for call pla. Most women arrested ln both prostitution centers were described by the vice officer u refugees from the heavy action on Hollywood Boulevard and the Sunset Strip in nel&hbortill Loa Anaeles County. And. Marwin said, moat women arrested on prostitution charaes in Orange County are what be called '"hype whores,•• women wbo have \Oen to the atreeu or a hotel roolll to support a drug habit. "But let'• face it," Marwin aald, "there'• mope:r•ln Onna• CountJ and vice followl mOMY." "Sor we have mu,. ol foaror five 1lrl1 workin1 the areu because there la bll money bere.t' He cited u proltltution arnata d 55jeWd eondudt arreata dUI'· bl• tbe <lft8 7ea1' period IU~· tri• tM .tc.atUd)\ Marwtn a1ao •aid there were three arreau on porno1raphy cbar•• u well., three arresta forptm~. One of the PC>n>P ettelta.: hi· voht~ obtld .. pftno1raphy, Manri.b iald. IUt il'dOUart.l&at 11 attncWij street~ to Otani• County they are bll dollan, ac~rd!D8 to the vice Offlcer. He .. id women arrested oo prostitution c•araea set their 1t1hte on $200 niahta u they make their way alon1 Harbor Boulevard boplna for a "John" to pick them up. M a result, J'Pllce lD Anaheim ••Y 1lrll worldq their poitloo of <See VICB, Pa .. AJ) Diesel Destruction Downhill B18i'&t&lllfl:UBLL ot ............ A lO·ton truck carrying a heavy load of dkt hurtled out of control down a steep bill.side road in Lal\IOA Beach Tuesday after- noon. destroyiq three 1araaes before flippin& CJD ita aide. No one was Hriously hurt ln the 1:30 p.m. Incident, which left the bottom of Nyes Place loolriac like a baltlelleld. Bob Hamlltoo, %7, driver of the 1971 vehicle, said the tnnamluloo on the hute truclc went out u be drove down the ao percent trade roadway. "It was Just like d.rlvlna ln neutral." the clued trucker aald. looklnf at a 1mall 1Uate~ Oil hla arm. "I tried to catch tbe edge ol that 1araie with my truck," be said, pointlni to a house owned by Richard B. Johnson at 8&l NyesPlace. The truck, carrying an estimated 14 too.a of dirt from a project atop the blll, dicS clip the Johnson saJ"•I•· op~ • water pipe wblcb lent a·ftve-loot high fountainlntotbe air. Hamilton 1aid be elOHd Ids eyes after that, and did not Me the truck alam Into a aeijciod garace further down the bill at 3'0 Nyes Place. The veblcle coo. ttnued cme boule further, OlpP.na ln tbe roadway after lUtuni a cJrport sara•e contalnlna a Mercedes Ben1 at 222_Jlfyes Place. Hamilton WU helped out~ the back window of tbe crushed $23.500 tit by a pa.uerby and treated at the ICeDe by Laooa <See'rat1f;K. Paie ,U) • 1\2 DAILY PILOT ... . -e · Sect Plans Suit 'Eruh Link of Krishnas, Suspects' By MlatAEL PASKEVICR Ol•DeltJ ...... Maft 1'. Hare Krishna 1polte1man •afd the rellgtoua aett wtU an· nounce a tradematt law1ult to- day against Praaadam Dlatrlbut· in1. Inc .. (POI) the Newport Beach investment firm whose tour principals have been Indict· · ed for the Oct. 22 murder of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley. Hare Krtahna. member Multun- da Du aaJd Tbunday that tM ault la deslped to end the '149- ceptlon" that has led to report8 ot alle1ed llnk8 between the murder suspect.a and~ Hare Krtahnaa. In denytna any such links, Ou said the reUpoua 1roup haa been "miarepreaented and lt baa serJoUJly dama•ed our Jmace to the public. It IUll been a __ Jeq etn111Je to get this 1maIUpUntei' aroup tecopl&ild (or what tt II," Daaadded. He would not elaborate, aaytnc more detalll would be available at a special news conference scheduled for,!! _!l.m. today1lt the Los ADseles nare Krishna Tem· pie. "Basically, lt'a 1ol.D1 to dell wltb federal trademarks,,. sald Oas. Krishna officlall have stead·· featly denied fhat Alexander· ~ullk, the 28-year-old bead of POI under Indictment lo lJ<>van's death, has ever bee.n associated with tbe sect. Kulik wu one of four partners ln PDI, an Investment firm tbat, accord.int to an affldavtt on ftle Jn . Superior Court, may have been uaed' to .. launder money • made from tranaportation and am u11ling ot narcotics." · ""w~ All Tangled Vp c. • Jim Reid of Philomath, Ore., is surrounded by fishing line collected by members of the Corvallis chapter of the Northwest Steelheaders during last year's season. The discarded line is fished out of rivers in western Oregon. Bandits Get $700 in Cash · From Sailor A hitchhlklni sailor was robbed of $700 ln cash and his lug. gage Tuesday n1ght by two men who picked him up near the in· tersectlon of Pacific Coast Highway and Doheny State Park, Oranae County Sherifr's officers said. Deputies said Robert James Donnelly Jr., 23, told them one of the two men threatened him with a small caliber automatic shortly after he got Into the vehicle. · Donnelly said he was forced to leave the car a short distance from where he was picked up. He said he was not allowed to take his baggage with him. Officers said the Navy man bas given them a detailed descrlpUon. of the vehicle U!ed in the kidnap- ping and robbery and the two men· who occuped It. PATRONS PICK 'TRUE' TOP TEN OK, so Gone With the Wind la the best film ever made. Patrons at the neighborhood bar could live with that. But the other nine cholcea of the American Film Institute were just so many turkeys. Amid shout• and ahota and beer for the house, a new "Top Ten" emerged. AP special correspondent Huah Mulllaan tell• all on Pace A14. °"ANQI COAIT ' DAILY PILOT E',.._PageAJ SEARCH ••. Warner saJd a nelthbor told him of bit daughter'• abducUon. Police were able to match the missing person report wJtb the body or the petite, red·halred woman discovered Tuesday by a Mt. Washington woman taklng a walk with a friend. Asked why be thoucbt bis dauabter was abducted, W81¥J: said only, "I guess because ah• was a girl." Then be broke into tears and walked away. "She was not a rowdy lirl," said the victim's brother, Lyle .. Miss Wagner, a 1raduate of Monroe H1gb School, was t~ legal secretary courses at Sawyer Business Collese. The coroner'• office scheduled an autopsy to determine whether Miss Wagner wu raped, u were seven other women. Cooke saJd investigation of the latest death bad already been turned over to a 32-man Hlllalde Strangler Tuk Force, made up of Los Angeles and Glendale police, county sheriff's depuUea and coroner's statr. Pair Killed In Bar Fight VAN NUYS (AP) -A 24-year· old woman w~ killed, alort1 with a 30-year-old Sun Valley man who tried to detain her attackeJ', in a light at a bar that ended in aunfire, police aald today. Nora Sanden ot Van Nuya was pronounced dead at the Raw Music Dar after her boyfriend, Richard Moreno. 35, 1hot her twice.Jn the clMtst durlne an artu· men~vesti1aton aatd. The doorman at the bar, Ernest Clark, a1lo was fa tally 1bot when he tried to detain Moreno, Yibo later surrendered and wu booked fOf' lnvest11atlon of intarder, offlctalt aafd. Hla three partners -Roy Christopher Richard, Joseph Gabriel Fedorowskl and Joseph Shelton Davis -are al10 under indictment. Richard and l'edorowski are at larce and ~ Davis is in an Indoneilan Jail' .. -.:.,__ Afla~n awaiting indictment. ~ • . . . Krishna officials aclmowledce that these three men were active members of the Lacuna Beach temple, but claim ~Y were ex· pelled in September. 1976. However, Laguna Beach police recently released a letter dated Jan. 24, 1!777, to PDI rnernbers from Swami Prahupada. the Hare Krishna founder who died ol natural causes Nov. 14 ln India at the ageof82. The letter reads in part: "'Krishna will give you in· telllgence bow to engage in brilliant, glorious work on His behalf. There is no need to engage in anything dishonest. Krishna haa given enough money, now earn bf honest means ... " Poll~ allege that Bovan was shot nine times as he wu leaving the El Rancho reatlllttant In Newport Beach becalia he al- legedly kidnapped a PDI official and held him for $100,000 ransom. Anthony M~e Jr., Raylft<md Reaco and le Peter Fiori re- main in cua in the alle~ murder conspiracy caae. F!ori, 41, of HWlt.lncton Beach, bu ad· mitted to beinc the trtuerman in Bovan '• necuttoo 1tyl• death. KuUk, who wu arrested In · Ml11ion Viejo, reportedl7 Jn po11eavon of 1.1 pounds of heroill, fl now free on ball. The '"ur men are due lo Superior -·~ Friday for ar- raJpment bl Judie Robert P. Kneeland '1 court. Lisa Cruz. 15, stares from tbe window of her Chicago home after returning from Florida to attehd .her lalher'a funeral. Paul Cruz, •41, died Thanksgiving Day, calling out the name of his missing daughter until his death. The runaway girl learned of her father's death from a friend who had been in Chicago for the holiday weekend. Conference · Covers Dams, Vows, Veto WASHINGTON (AP) -Here ls an at-a-glance summary of President Carter's news con· ference today : DAMS The President aaid there are 9,000 "hig.h-r1ak" dams in the country and the federal govern- ment "will commence very shortly an lnapectlon of all those dams." He estimated the safety inspect.ion prorram would takenearlythreeyeara. CAMPAIGN PROMISES Alted if be made too many prornJaea tn hi1 campalcn. · Carter Hid: "I don't thlnk I m•de too many promlaea, and I think I'm doinS an adequate Job tn tl'Ylni to fulfill ~e prom· Ilea.'.' ENERGY LEGISLATION Tbe Preatdent reaftlrmed bit * * * ,,._.Page AJ earlier pledge to veto any energy legislation that would be unfair to the American people or violate energy conservation goals. TAXES Carter said he was "com- mitted to substantial tax reduc- tion in 1978" which would 'be coupled with a revlaton of the nation's tax laws. BURNS '.fhe President said he baa not yet decided whether to · reap- point Arthur BUllll aa wlrman of the Federal Jlelerv• Board. He added he clld not think· anyone was "indispenaable." TRADE DEFICIT A number ol key witbeiaes am expected to appear 1ncludina Frank Ro11l, who baa been tranted immunity !tom proeecu· Uon and bu already t.eatifted CARTER before the arand j\U')'. • • Carter said the natlon'1 foreign trade deficit averagin1 about ~.4 billion a month wu diaturbing. He said the deficit wu primarily caused by oil im· porta and the lmptovement in the U.S. economy which permits the United States to purchase more forei8Jl soodl. TRIP . Groups ... Back' Water Ruling SAN DIEGO (AP) -~Hore than a dozen interest aroupa have voiced support for a ptopoled state law de1l1ned. to meet C1Jltornla'1 water needs - particularly Southern California -throuib tbe year 2000. The ~al, SB3'8, calls tor .. $3.5 b pacll:ace of northenl California reservoirs and waterworks to finish the State Water ProJ~t. A primary teatur• is the Peripheral Canal, a .q.mne, tllCJ5 million aqueduct that would rdute Sacramento River water around the east eda• of the Sacr11mento-San loaquil'! Delta to pumpin& stations aervlng users in the Central Valley and Southern Calllornla. Dayan in Germany BONN, We.t ~rma'ny CAP> -hratll Foret1n Mlolsttr Motbe Dayan viewed an exbJblt ot anc:lent E1n>Uan art 1-· da7 tn what eoarcea 1ald "°"1d be bl• only contact •itll anythl1t1 E111>tian1 t\urln& 1i& villt t.o Bonn. He lurtber characterized the U.S. role u to encoura1e pro1· re11 to1'ard D9'oUationa and an over· all aettlement. "We' have no control over any nation in the Middle East," be said. ''When we find profraa be· lna •topped. we use al the in· ltiatlvewecan. '' Tbe United States and the So- viet Union are co-cbaJrmen cftbe Genna conference at wbJcb pre- vtou.e Middle Eut aetUementa have been reached. The President said he baa rescheduled his recently postponed overseas trip and that his itinerary would be an· nouneed Thursday. McCLEUAN Carter praised the late Sen. John L. McClellaq tor bis legislative efforts to mainttln a stron1 naUdbal defense and ex- pressed condolences to the Arkansas Democrat'• lamlly. McClellan died Monday. . E',.._PGtfe.41 VICE ••• the Harbor Boulevard it.rip are probably ra.ldna ln collectively at least $80,000 a month, according to Marwin. He emphasized that a heavy majority of the prostitution ar· rest.I net out of county reaideata. Marwin said there ii no indica-tion of an organiud crime thread running through the prosUtutioo activity in Oran11 County. However, b6 added, •hould prostitution activity lncreue~ not be subject to intense ,_w en. forcement it iJ UkeJy that OI'· canlsed crime will move Into the racket here. ·A• far as aambUoc ts coo- cerned, Marwin said the 1' sheriff'• bookmating arrests Jn the put year have involved operattom 1ro1tln• at ~­Sl0,000 a week. "Bookmakers pocket an estimated 22 ptfcent of the gross,'' Marwin nld. .. So you can see that it la a profitable operation." · . He also uld moat the bookmaJdne acUvity In Oraqe County 1potllshta sports action. includtna football cards that net the bookf ee a 95 percent prollt. As ts the cue with proetltutlon, the vice officer 1aJd tbere it no ln· dicatlon that or1anized crtme Ls at the reins of Ulegal ••mbllna In Orange County. Probe Continues SAN DIEGO (AP)-A federal grand jury lnveltlf atlon ls coo- tinuln& lnto alleged rauduleatac- UvitJes by Rancho Santa Fe bun. ne11man Walt.er Wenke and there may be new charges, ~ ficiall say. I • • until l'ebru.ary to prepare bia de-phrase '1'hb country la a covent- feose. mentoflawaandDOtsnenT' Tbt delendaata, wbo face a Sipman aDd Lo Vaa1tur, mulmum pml.lty of flve Jean former IWdenb at tbe UnlvenJt.,y In priloi> 8Dcf a ..,,000 llDe, have of Hawall, lived at the cJolpbln been tree cm tbeir reeo~aba at tho w:dve.ralty'a !Dstitute awalttn,utal. ot Manne BJOloa where the)' Le VUHUr'• trill sot worked as c:ustodJana. • way with Pl"OHC'utol'S putUn1 Slpmao. wbo b•d been atucty. ~~~.,.._--two questkma &o •'pooJ « prca. m.c.theJlll~atwbal ~ peeU:Auron: ''RoWm~Ofyqu dotphtm. &Ot• bathelor'a ~ Pop Top Kid ............. Billy Carter models a hat and vest made out of beer can pop tops during the tap- ing of an upcoming Mike Douglas Show segment in Philadelphia. Billy said dur- ing the interview that he learned more about politics from his father than his brother. County Dumps Mandatory Retiring Age Orange County employees oo longer will have lo retire at age 67 10 long as their bosses believe they can perform their jobs ade- quately. County supervisors approved temporary procedures Tuesday that allow employees al age 67 lo be given a county certificate of competency and bold onto their positions. The procedure was drawn up in response lo new state legillation which permits workers to remain employed after reacblne man- datory retirement age. Exempted from the county provillon. are public safety workers, agency chiefs and de- partment head.!I. County Personnel Director Bert Scott satd most county employees retire before age 67, and the new law probably will af- fect only six to 10 workers a year. Damages Soug\.f. In Death Damagee &o be determlned by a trial eourt a.re beint demanded today by tbe parenta ot a 5-)'ear· old llrl wbo WU klllod May 28 wbeo a banner towlnl aircraft craab landed near Capistrano Airport. Named u defendants ln the Oran1e County Supertor Court law1\llt filed by Richard and Joyce Zell of San Juan Capistrano are Albert Martin Clbt. tbe 'Dl1ne's pilot, his emplo1en, Newport Aerial Ad- vert.ialng and the city of San Juan Caplatrano. The 2'.elll, who lnelude three other dilldren aa co-plaintiffs, claim that necuience by any or all of three defendants led to the death of Jennifer Zell. The aircraft piloted by Cibl was lowing a benner Ma)' 28 when the billowing material became en- t.an&led in .the plane's undercar- riage. Clbl lost congrol of the machine and crashed close to the airport. Jennifer Zell was one or a group of children playing in the area. She waa struck by the fall- ine aircraft and several of her companions nanowly escaped injury. Cibl was unhurt. A recent claim against the city of San Juan Capistrano for $1 million in damages was denied by the City Council. It was al- leged by the Zella that negligent operation of the airport led lo thelr daughter's death. Crash Kills Motorcyclist A 29.year-Old motorcyclist was killed Tuesday in Santa Ana wben bl• speedine vehicle crashed into a curb and be was catap~_into a brick wall. Police tdentified the victim ol the 4:14 p.m. accident u Robert A. Marooes, S>lO W. 11th St., San- ta Ana. Officers said he wasn't wearing protective headgear. According lo wltneuea, Marones had been "r1cln1" b1a motorcycle "up and down the street•' shortly before be loet con· trol of the motorcycle and it slammed ipto a curb In the 4800 block of W. l~ St. Parents Fla11ed Mangers Lashes School Si~tem by collectlYe baqalnlng, the Ser- rano dedslon and new com pet.en· ct etaiidara tor hip 1cbool 1raduaUcm..'::! .\ttbouCJ:l he ~ lbGrt ot advooatini an; new Jaw reptd.. tna acbool. prtndpalt, Jlaqen hinted that prlncll)ala •bould bt &etter verae4 t.n bow to bud.le the flall'Jdal aspecta of l"UIJDlDi an educational tmti\Utfon. Oo tbe edueatkmal 111tem u a whole, Mancen •akl ''Oru&• Counl,1 sebooJa bave IUC~mbed &o every fad." such aa adlvtt.y c.men when ltQcleQt. pet bun· ida or l1sten to 1pelllnJ telU on . beadpboba. ' wale 'FUpper"t" a teJriblon inJ>tJcboloCY JD lt'lf. Le Vuaeu.r 1ertes about·a Pon>OlM that wu got a bacbeloi'• deatee ld llbeial ~ar aeveril 1e.n~. -io. anct artain 1'78. How1DU,YClf10'lbanbearcltbe On My 2t, tJ!!Z earned Kea Death Bearlag HB Boy, 7, • Won't · Testify Watela tor S•okeg Wayne State University in Detroit is having difficulty with speeding motorists and campus police want motorists to know they're using radar units to catch speeders. So drivers are now confronted with a real "Smokey" -which in CB parlance, means the long arm of the law. B1SAYllONDP.8TltADAIJl. ot•DMIJ ........ A. 1·1ear-otel HunUntton Beach boy refused to testify under oath Tuead91 dwiq a West Oruice County Court bearin1 to cle· termlne if -23-j'eu-old woman should be tried on murder cb,arses steinmin1 from U.e Nov. 6dealhofber 11-montl\-oldllOG. On tbe advice of his family's attorney, Robert Van Hoy, YOUDC Arturo l:D.droco, of 16881 Nichols St., told .Judge .Robert Knox 0 1 don ti wanna answer" when ques- tioned by Deputy Di.strict At- torney Paul Meyers. The two-day-old bearl.q was contlJaued to next Tuesday . ·Meyers said the youn1ater, ·"• key wttnees," wW asain be uted totetUty. The defendant In the cue, Roaaria Colato, alao of 11881 Nlcbola St., la cbareed with murder and.endaneertna a child ln connection with the dt1tb of ber aon, F.diar Salsedo. Jitt.u Coeiio was broucbt into the courtroom Tuesday with handcufla on her wrists and shackl• on her ankles. Her ~ tome)' said the restraint.a used OD hel" are ln keeploJ wltb the OraDee County marahal's pollclealncuealiketllbone. Van Hoy l&ld be adviled young Arturo and four -.dult members of tbe boy'• fe.milJ no( to teetily for fearolHlf·lncrimlnaUon. · Pools, Restaurants Top Boil~:Plans ·Hun~ Beach police in· ve1tlgaton believe .Jeaae ucJ • . Jolleta Bidrolo. their SOD Arturo, Marla Garat and Uortncla Coulo Uved with the defendant when the fatal injuries were in· ructed. Orange wunty residents are building more swimming pooJa and more restaurants, lroceJ'Y stores and other food establish- ments th.ls year than In the past. Ae~ to count1 health of. fleer Morton Nelson, plans for 818 Dew food establlsllmenls will Police Probe Identity of Female Body An anthropologist bas de- termined that bones round Salm'· day near Ortega Highway Jn south Orange County belonged to a female between 15 and 30 yea.rs old, sheriff's officials said today. have been submitted.to count.Y ol· flciall for review by the 7ear'• end, coqipared with 5'° in 1975 and 700 last year. • In addi~lana for 182 new swimmlq will have been submitted in 1977 compared with 108 in 1975 ud 1'0in1976. A• a result, the county sanltartaaa who review plana for pooJa aDd ftlod eltabllabmenta to make 1ure the)' meet count)' regulatfooa are falllng behind lD their wort. ~ Supenbon acnJed to hlre one new aanltarian to a11Jat als othera who reYiew those bWldlna plans. The new wortera wl1l be pelcl throuib fees paid by IWlmmJq pool and food establi.abment bull den. Beoauae of th• current bactloe, Nelaon said, it takes a long as two weeta to co':~:!°~ view ol nlmm.ln8 pool IDCl .. lonf .. four &o ftve ween for reviews of food ettabliabment pla:DI. -4 But attomey Van Hoy advised h1I flvt dtentl not to en• five tbe1r adclreu hen questiOlled by the proeecutor. lllaa Ccleaio, wbo police s'-· pect ta an W.al alien, wu ar· rested Nov. 6 ID her bome aft.er ber aon died following •ur1ery at Santf ~a-Tustin.. Community Hol~. An autoply reveaJed tile Infant died from a m&lllve atull fnc. tu.re. Tbe autopsy allo abowed the lDfant aullered an earlier 1tull fracture, three broken rU>s. tbree leC tractures and • brcteo arm. Miu Cossio remains ln Orqge CoUDty Jail lD lieu ot '250,000 ball. Federal l~mliratlon apnta have prevented ber re- leue aat1l her cltbenablp status IW been verifled. DQfing the tue&daY beariJll, Van Hoy med lt young Arturo could be gr1U1ted immunity lrclm proaecutlou in retunl for hla. testimony. • Prooeeut« Meyers tint b&lked . at the olfer, but lat.er offered to · ~ tUt "hat the lad h.Y8 wbile oo the witness stand lhaJl not be used .. ainst b.lm. . Moyers aaid that wblle fOUI' ot Van Hoy'• clients tn\fOked t.M l'itth Amendment, Arturo CQQ)cl not teclmleally claim the same privilege -1nce be ii too JOUllJ to be proeecuted. ... ap:a bOt golna to put thla wtti:• nesa (Arturo) on the rack Uilf•' screw," said Jud&e K.nox in • .'i fenae of bia dedaioa &o allow ttii . boy&o~teatimoay. "t•:O K.no~ said be estabUabed ~ the boy was competent u a wtY . neaa by aakine Arturo, ••Do ~ r know tbediff.-ence between tltM ' andwroae?" _ ·• ,. Knox also uked the lad, .. lla'M • you ever told a lie? Do you know you could be pu.nlshed for teUIDI .. , a lie?" .. ~, Arturo i.ndlcated that he c1&I 1 know richt from wn>atJ and th8( be knew be could be punlabe4 fOrJ telline alle. · The child'• attorney 1ald tJlO ! • • boy ... ''acand and confulleCt.• . durinc the first day of the i.ear;.• ln1onMonday. <x, Van Hoy aald the boy w.a• • "fri&btened by the authorities and was in tears" durfns the Monday preliminary hearf.DI. HB. Widow :-< • f Sues 6ver ·":·i~ Man's Death· .. .s • A H~ Beach woman who was widowed Nov. 15 wtiell u.min-•••••4'• ~-··· 112 &Ucsraft phalaed into ibe oeeeo , after eoWdlng wJUa aqo~ airplane bu sued the ~· of the inddent for c1am.,. .. to be detennlned tn bill eoart. . Named u defendut.I In._. Oran1e County Suoerior eo.t; law1ult ftled by Unda L. Tl~ 9SU C«netock Drlve, AN PMll Jacobs, 2lllllZ Curetas Dr., )llS.; sion Vl*, aDd Gree Bl'OWM; 24182 Acada Lane, Laguna HWi. I acobl and Blowle were die oecupaata ~ a Piper ~ aircraft tUt limped home to Oraqe COunty Airport .a.~: of a Wini waa damqed in tbocoa..: ll1ion with Jam ea Tlbbott'a machlnle. ' • Named u co-defendant. are MarUn A~ lno.~Of ~ ownen of the atronft ftlDtell bY Jacoba and Browie. Named a co-plaiatifta with. Mrs. Ttbbott are her tbree children: Daniel kelly 'nbllaU. 14, Gregory Scott Tlbbatt, U; and KebbiD EUabet.h ~ s.· .. A sheriff's spokesman said the coroner's office la attempting to Identify the remains throu1h dental records of mlsslng persons. Some of the bones have been sent to a Los An1ete1~~----~----------_..;----..._.----------------------------------------~· laboratory to more closeJ.Y de- termine the age of the woman at. her death . .. The sooner we set her Iden· ti!ied, the better chance we have . of determining what happened to her.'• a spokesman said. The sberttrs official •Jid there was no evidence to link the re- mains to other crimes in tbo area. , EllD WIND8: We seem to a ck U¥*l a Ume wheQ the 1eem1 to have Ult.ed crul· d bappenln11 are upon ua. In asuna Beacb, a truck went on a ram1>aie and wiped out se eral 1aragea. Up in Downey. a oman drove her Cadillac th gb the garace wall and into he swimming pool. n Huntington Beach, ai· lanes have beeJl falllng d n; one into the around. an ther into the surf. d if they don't have enouah al9lanes droppin1 currentb' otf th Huntinston 1horellne1 people ar-diving into the water and fi~lng planes that ditched e er. nly las\ week, a coupl.e ol di ra touod a World War lI vln- ta Coraair that ditcbed some 3' ye J&O. • tESIDES ALL THAT, juat I~ bow people are actin1 ~ da s. Arotmd our offlce, every- Y seems to be coughing, hack· in 1 Sneezi1l4C and WbeesiJlg. lt'I Ii an epidemic. The place so ds like a chorus from the in· fi ary. ven in my nei&bborood, the ·e1 seem to haye_,ffllctod poJ>U]a~. One neichbor has lO tuninl up hia motorcycle ename at 4 a.m. Another Seema to have replaced hla plastic traah cans with tin ones so you can tell every time the lids are banged in· to place. ls there .$Ome wel~ Unk b~t.weer;i all these oddbjgij-events Slrlklng us at this time? • VETERAN POLICE reportefS, for example, will smile at thia no- tion and nod knowled1eably. They note we have just 1one through a period of the full moon. The full moon will do it every time. the cop shop reporters in· sist. Just check the police 101 during the full moon and every crazy occurence you can imagine 1s reported. As for the massive· coulhlng and wheezing, other observers discount the full moon and blame it all on smog. SMOG EXPERTS, ho\\lever. insist that we are sUfferin& Do more aerial pollution right now than would normally be •x· pected. Meanwhile, however, the meteorologists who erobe c:wr #' weather have theortna that Ole Santa Ana winds are to blame for all the wheezes and anMzes. These savants su11eat that the hot desert blows are kicking up a lot of dust and pollen whJcb now plagues the populace. BY BLAMING the heated winds, we may be 1trildn1 cl()Ser to the truth. It may indeed be the Santa Ana ..... that 811t*ivN the population ~anaa ~13.stQ • aircraft to t.tl don ancf. • automobiles .aftd truck.I!' tA nm· amok. . --In our region tD ancl«*t tnnes, it was said tbaUlae IQdiM:ea.n.t .. these bot deaeit'bredllit ~ • vil winds'' beCause after the)' had blown for awbtl tribal membera belan to act loat:TIMY. would be swept up in goof)I an- ti . . CJua cvauNT cltdla, ool-ever, may be blamed ·mar. on preaent·day tribal euiCOm than oo winds, weatbe or lie phue -<JI tbe moo1t. We 'all ve about to coou.t and blow the fun!· ly w~pu.m. Taxes are clue to the Great Wb1te Pa.thera in the COUDty seatandbackin Wuhinlton.ADd the holiday apencllq oro ii hard UpoD\11. Put that all totetber ancl no woncler we go 1oofy thll time ot year. ATTORNEY GENEUL Grif· fin Bell announced JobnlOll'a de- cision at a news conference Tues· day. He said he and President Carter may aaree on a replace- ment by lat.L 17, when Congress returns ttom a recess. Bell Uked the current di~· · tor, Claren~ Kelley, to postpone bis 1cbec1uled Jan. 1 ret.Jrement until nUd-Febtuart· Kelley was to 1tve Bellbll aQIWer today. . IN A 8TATEME'NT from his Montgomery, Ala.,' office, Johnson said bia 1low recovery H&.4SY lflOM from m~or aurgeey laat Aucuit had forced'hlm to atep ulde and to ask Carter to wtUifttaw b1a nomioatlon. .. It will be several more months before I wlll re1ain my strenath and stamina," Johnson said. ..It will not be fair to the Federal Bm-eau of Investt11tian or to metokeeptbls matter pend-tn1 any lqer." ~ THE AIABAMA judge wu Carter'• tlnt choice tor the job, aod the pn1Sdent Will bave a toug1' time findinc another nominee wttb such broad sup-port. Civtl ri&hts croups that have critlcind the FBI for past abuses of individual r11hts praia~ Jobnsoo for bis judicial deetal• proteetln1 the rithts of school Clll.ldna. prlaonera and mental patien&s. FBI acenu and other law en· Branded 'Forgery' R~Try Faih; Six Die in Fire Tri~l ,f!.eating Up . . . Over Mor.man ·Will US VEGAS, N;v. <AP> -Openina 1We~ents ln a trial to de· termtne whether Howard Hughes wrot. the ~called Mormon Will en· tered thelrthirdday today with the fll'll testimony expected sometime PRIE'Sl' RIVER, Idaho " CAP) -William Ackerman thougbthla wife and five of hi.I children were at his heels u be fied hia burning log home. By the time the 48-year-old logger discovered they were still inllde, it wu too .Thuraday. • Attom9)'1 fo~ Huth•' relatives sot their chance to go on the of- fensive late. Tuesday after ·Los Ao1eles attorney HUold Rhoden flniabect his opentna statemmit defendlnc the tbree-pag4t docu· ~ent. Rhoden represenU former Hu1bea aide No.it Dietrich who is named executor of the vast Hu1bea fortune. Repreaenttna three cousins on Economic • I ' Index Still Hughes' father's side of the fami- ly, Los An1eles attorney Paul Freese aaid the Mormon Will ls a forgery and contains numerous "fatal faults.•• . late to save them. Gordon Sundquist, chief Bonner County sheriff's deputy, said that when .. TBEDOCUMENTbrougbtin· Ackerman tried to rescue to this courtroom and offered to his wife and children early you for porbate is a forgery,'' said Tuesday, •'oxygen rushed Freese, adding that be intends to in and the house became show that some of the exhibita to an.inferno." be pretented b,Y Rhoden also are AuthoriUes ldenUfied forgef\es. · those who died in the blaze "Yo•'re golhg to hear about as Ruth Ackerman, 41, and handwritinc unW you wish you ~bUdren Jay. 13; Steven, hadn't heaill about it," Freese tl; JOHAb. 10, AJtd t\Yina said. He erJialned that much of SbellvandKelly, 7. ASPEN. Colo. <AP) -Por two ntahta, blp In the anow-coTered Colorado Jtockl• wUb ~temperature Mar aero, the IUni'fOll of a 1mall-plalle crash above the timberline shivered nd bopecl for rescue. . ... One ot them, 17-year-old Ow-lea l\indolpb, 1etom to ftnctheJ.p. Then. on TUesday. It came.• A rescue bellco~ spotted Randol~h on a ·~•·covered slope, waving his arms. It pic'ed blm up, aod Jle IUldtd the reacuera back. to the otben. , - IN TBAT WAY. •ix of HVen Oklahoma City *1denta aboard a twin-englne plane that crubed on SundaJ nlaht wen found alive anc\ airlifted out to be" bospltallJed. . A seventh person, C. B. CQieron, president of Amert can Fidell· ty JnluraoceCorp., wuCounddead. .. It waa a miracle that we found the boy at all,., said Barry Stebner of Aspen, Who wu ontbe helicopter that spotted Randolph. · Stebner said Randolph was 1blverinl NM! his face wu 4eeJ> . blue. "w.Bt>aof.n dowu and picbd b1m up," aaid .st.elmer. "1t was fortuiil\e we were able to land. The poor Jtld was Jut b1iie WWl. the ~old aod about aa mtaerable as• 801 illd!Yldual eould be. llUt fortuutt\Y be wu cobereat. • C)n Increase thecasP~~v~vehandwri~C ;~~~~=·=·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ expertl •-Jtifying In detail on certain aspects of the document. W ASIUNGTON (AP) -· The One of the fatal naws. accord· government index deslped to log to Freese, is that the author predict future eeonomic trenda of the will waa too consistent and rose in October tor the fourth poesiblytoocareful. consecutive month, the Com-Hu1he1, like many people, merce DepartmenUald todlJ". varied certain letters, Freese The index of Jeadinf indleaton said,, Such a style i.. known as increased 0.1 per'*l , aft•r ris-natural variation. Simply Put. it inc 0.4 percent In 'SeptetQber, 1,"7 means a l*'IOn. may write the percen!tn Auauat and 0.1 peree~t sa.tne letter 1n sev.enal different lo July, the depatttne:nt Hl4. . .,...,.,. DESPITE TllH lne'l"eue, CCC· QEESEaAiJt.EDtheautbor tracu and orders forllanti arid ofthe.MonnonWlU,workingfrom equipment decline for tbe a model. comlatenUy formed let- month. Economlltl have beeil ter• a c:ertaln way -letters wblch • towitihc Oil bbsbless ptan. tb ft· •bowtd ftriatkms in examples of paud. to beP the economy lin-JfUSb•'bandwrtting. ~. -1 .Fr~ also said the contentS of The over-all lncreatft waa the will are not consistent with · mmu, encoura1tna. bUt f ~I Jnemoe Huabea wrote to soine of abort of tlMi mcreaaes of .2 to 3 tua to1 aides in 1968 when <the p'et'c•nt pe'r moath which Mormon WW waa alle1edly writ- followed tbO 1*t4-~nce .. ton. ten. . Hqbel told a number ot aides • A1'0N0·1.1NDICATO•S cpn-that be bad a will, and there are a · tributlna to:ti. J crease ~ a number of references to the will lon&er aveta1e 'Work w~ • in the memos. lower 18'Qtt rate, rums prices , Speeiftcally, Freese noted that for aenatflV. pl"OClµfta, the moQQ .. Hupea wrote in oao memo re- supply, Jilw factory orders; tarcilna a boardoftruateea which b'Oill'na "rmiu and inereaied was. to administer hil eai.te after liquid aaetl. . · bta deatb. • • • Our Qh•••lfted aeotlon wlll feature a speclai Chrlatmae Card greeting page on Decerra~er 6th. Write, type or draw your card or we wlll aet It In print for . you':" Sample• are shown below. Actual alzea are: r 1%"x3" at $10, '1%"x6" •t S20r 3Y4"X3" at $20. Add $1.00 addltlonal for m•lllng a complete paper to your loved on•• in ~h~ U.S. ' ' Transportation Peeled A three·month·old Cadillac rests at the bottom of Don Ayala's pool near Los Angeles. Tuesday. after the accelerator stuck while his wife was driving it into a garage. 1l crashed through the wall at the rear and sank • Mrs. Ayala and her child escaped ~~~~~~~~ Property Division Eyed Solution: Recognizing Common Law Marriage? . SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Recognizing com· mon law marriage in Califorrua may be the way to disentangle the financial strings that a high court says exist between cohabiting but unmarried couples, leguJ experts said. They agreed a decision late last year, involving actor Lee Marvin and his live-in girlfriend of six years, did not forge any new law when it said un· married partners who break up can sue each other Teen-age Actress Pleads Innocent BEVERLY HILLS <AP> -Teen.age actress Mackenzie Phalhps. who portrays the older daughter on CBS· TV's "One Day at a Time" series, has pleaded innocent to a single misdemeanor charge of pubhc drunkenness Miss Phillips, 18, was released on $500 bail Tuesday after a Jan 10 preliminary hearing was scheduled before Municipal Court Judge Jae quehne L. Weiss. A Los Angeles County sheriffs deputy said he arrested Miss Phillips s hortly after mid- night last Wednesday when he found her sprawled on a West Hollywood street. She was held overnight at the jail ward at County· USC Medical Center and then released on bail Barbara Brogliatla. a spckeswoman for her television series. said a substance found in the ac· tress· purse which deputies initially thought to be cocaine was a diet pill. And the spokeswoman said. a blood test showed Miss Phillips had not been intoxicated Expert Emphatie Bus Victims 'Suffered' to recover communal property. But, they 1aid, it probably has had a dramatic psychological impact on couples throughout the country, raisin1 questions about how unmarrieds should be treated by the law. .. MARRIAGES MAY BE MADE in heaven and Marvin relaUooahips may be made in bars, but they both end up ln Superior Court." cracked Stephen Adams, editor ot the California Family Law Quarterly. State Sen. Bob Wilson, D·San Diego, who chaired the hearing, said he thought the Marvin de· cision by the California Supreme Court "is leading us toward common law marriage. ·'It seems to me that if we recognized common law marriage, many or these problems would be solved," said Wllison, an attorney. Donald King, from the California Judges Association, agreed. STATE LAW DEFINES WHAT happens when a marriage breaks up, but has no proviaiom for dlvid· ing the financial fruits of mere cohabitation. But s ince the Marvin decision, lawmakers have been scrambling to write a law covering unmarried couples, too. The commotion stems from a 19'12 lawawt filed by Marvin's ex-glrlfrtend, Michelle Triola, who claimed she was entiUed to $500,000 or half of the property lhe two accumulated. She said she gave up a slngioi career m exchange for his promise to sup· port her Although a lower court dismissed the case, the state Supreme CQurt said Min Triola had aright to a trial, $cheduled to beeln next month. THE COURT SAID THE IAW must enforce any expressed or implied acreemtinl between couples -married or not -to pool their property or earnings, as long as the relationship was not ex· plicilly for sex, as in prostitution. And when the coupling end!, the courts must decide Mw to divide the loot. But the decision haa raised a question llke: -Should such a rule apply tp homosexuals liv· ing together and to roomm~ who share house payments, for example? Those testifying generally agreed that it should. .JIL BAUME & MERCIER GENE VE ~;!~,,,,~tit &,;1te ... ". --, ": .. f lf'l'o P\f 11 1, 3 Klansrrien Found Guilty · LOS ANGELES CAP> -A Superior Court Jury ha1 tOWld tbrft Ku Klux Klan members 1uilty of oonaplrtna to coinmlt t\nt-dqree murder in a plot acalnsllbe WestCOUt leadtrofthe Jewish DefeDM 1.:A11ue. The.,nme-lnan, th~·woman jury returned the verdict Tuesday •t•lnat .. Robert Dehpel, S2, Timothy Wayne Anderson, 28, and Daniel Ellla Taylor. 43. The three face a penalty of life ln prison The three, who were members of the Klan's North Hollywood chapter, were accused of plotting the murder of Jrv Rubln. ATl'OllNEYS FOR THE 11UlEE said they would appeal the verdict by the jury. wMch in· eluded two blacks and one Mexican·Amencan. Sen· tenclng was scheduled for Jan. 5. Dehnel and Anderaon, both from the Hollywood area, remaJoed in CU!tody, while Taylor. who ls from VanNuys, was free on ball. Deputy District Attorney John Watson sud he was "amaz~" at the jury's swift decision. which came on the second day of deliberations "I WAS VERY IMPRESSED," he said ·'They must have been paying very close attention to the evidence as it wu presented." But Dehnel's attorney, James Epstein, said that "given the shortness of the deliberations and the complicated nature or the evidence. it seems that the Jury was not able to overcome its preJ· \&dices.'' ANDER.SON, WHO CLAIMED he bad left lhe Klan, whispered to his attorney as he &lanced toward the audience. Outside the courtroom. An- derson remarked. "I thought we had it l really thought we had it.·· A rookie officer who infiltrated the Klan last veer -Paul Rolf Gebhardt -testified that thP r1,.. fendants planned to klll not ooly Rubin, but hi s sue cessor in the militant J OL. · : ' • ,,:'t. f I ' I '1 • ' !\ & ( • . ..... , . . • •\ . '. F.or More Adequate Parking ~ REDUCING STOCK FROM ALL CATEGORIES! ~~50%QFF .... r•r o· . ) :: ·. I . •. . ' ' ' J 'T I• , "" ~ t. .. t • I iTruStees' McNally s ;Action Practical ' . Just when it appeared the unaoinf dispute over what to ·do with McNally Continuation Schoo wus &oing to outlive us aJ.h Newport-Mesa school trusteos took three key ac- tlon1 l'ast week to clarify the situation. The first unanimous vote was no( surprising but it was long overdue. The schOQ.I ctislrict will now initiate the sale or lease of the entire McNally site at 19th Street and Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa. · The site will then become a cornerstone or Costa Mesa's Downtown Redevelopment program and tax- payers'will benefit by having the property (valued at up to $2 million> back on the tax roll A second unanimous vote g1vcl:i assurance that McNal- ly will continue to operate at its current site until fall or 1P79 A committee report due early next } car will provide trustees with infor.mation on the district's alternative education needs. This will help trustees decide if McNally should be relocated ~t a separate facility or its programs slipped back onto existing high school campuses. In a 5-2 vote trustees tabbed Monte Vista school on Costa Mes a 's cast s ide as the best site for Mc Nally if it is determined that the continuation school should remain .autonomous In voting agains t the selection of Monte Vista, Trustees Tom I lcndcrson and Barbara Skilling raised a .. alid qut•stion wh y choose a future sat(• 1f tl is uncertain that it will be needed? However, more school clos ures arc inevitable and up· coming hearings on this issue would ha' c been held under an air of suspicion that McNally would be moved to other campuses that ma~ be closed Trustees have elmanatcd this problem by taking a firm stand A Growing DangerJ Dunng November, two young men died in scparJlc automobile accidents within one block of each other on Newport Boulevard 10 Coste Mesa, less than a week apart. One passcngtff, now ~overing, was critically injured. One of the intersections, at Mesa Drive, was also the sate of a double fatality only months before. According to stalistics given Costa Mesa police by the state Department of Transportation, Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa 1s the second most dangerous stretch or road m the state per 100,000 miles driven The long-overdue completion of the downtown Costa Mesa Freeway link , which would take most or the traffic from Newport Boult'vard. has long been a source of fric- taon between lotal officials und CalTrans chief Adriana Gianturco If CalTran::. i·ca lly does not intend ever to complete the freeway, then 1t is time to do more than just repave Newport Boulevard, as was done this fall. It is time lo rcdesiin Newport Boulevard to limit ac· ccss and to post upcoming street names so they,are clearly vis ible in advance. Old-fashioned signal light poles, in- volved in both November fatalities, should be replaced by new snap off poles. Either a completed freeway or a redesigned street 1s badly needed -and is the least CalTrans can do to see that this month's fatalities aren 'l just the prelude to even more tragedy. Somehow. the message has to be gotten to Governor Brown b<.'forc the state has more blood on its handS. Pre-season 'loss' The Coast Comumunity College District has thrown a few coastal area high school football teams for a loss or sorts well before the opening kick-off of the next season. In order to finance the installation or new lights at Orange Coast College stadium, rental of the stadium has been upped from $.550 to $1,000 per e'9ening -an 82 percent increase. Larger schools like Fountain Valley and Edison High Schools probably can abs<>rb the tab easier because of big- ger following. But the increase maf run Estancia (Costa Mesa> and Costa Mesa High rootbal teams right out of the stadium. Coaches al these schools say they will be forced to move their games to Newport Hart¥>r High next year. This could cause some real scheduling headache!, not to men· lion less favorable transportation and parking situations -along with less than pro caliber lighting. College district officials say it costs OCC $1,063 to operate a game under the light.I. While it would be un- reasonable to expect the college to take a financial loss each time it rents out the stadium, it might have been ap- propriate (and more considerate) to phase in the increase over a couple of years • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pelot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd I Dogs and TV Byut.liovo Note It claimed in print that doa& can't see televlalon. They can pick op the ll&hl patterns and notice the mo Dear l Gloomy Gus lion, but they can't focus well enough to make out the nature of the action, it's con- tended. lnt.eresUog, lf true. Not even many Zloni1t1 know that the Br1tiab eovern· ment in 1903 offered 8,000 square milea of uninhabited land in U11nda tor aettl• ment by homeless Jews. Amoni the NCAA flrat- divlalon lootball teams. more call thelDMlvts Ttaert than any other .nickname. Ten do ao, lb tact. Second moat com· moo team niekn1me 11 Bulldop. With six. Ro rtlN, WHd/PubllatMr Thomas K vii/Editor . Wedn-.,.. No-..tnbw '°-11n Barbar• Krelblcl'l/Edltorl1t P~ Editor Jack Anderson ·Did Park Also Con Koreans? WASHINGTON -Ju1tlce Departlllt 1Uorney1 h1v• ogreed 1l will take a Ue d tec:\Or Lo get the truth out of Korean payorf man Tonpun Park lf he accept.a the deal to clve bls teatimooy in exebanie for im- munity. Park hu made so many con- 11 i c tin& statements, tbe prosecutors ucknowledge, that his testimony would be worthless an court tin.less It can be bol· stered with supporting evidence . They will in- sist, therefore, that Park submit lo a Ile detector test as part of the deal. Their bope is that Park. with a polygraph machine monitoring his veracity. will pro· vide enough new information that they will be able to build on et. They wlll seek corroborating evidence, which they will then use to make more cases against congressmen who have accepted bribes. The prosecutors admit 1t will be tough to nail many con- gressmen. The Justice Depart- ment has determined, for exam· pie, that Park highly exaggerat- ed his influence on Capitol Hill. He boasted lo his Korean cohorts that he was close to congressmen whom he had merely met and that he had passed out cash, which he really had diverted to his own use. It looks as if Park was a skilled con man who misled even his own government. On the other hand, the Justice Department has solid evidence contradicting the South Korean government's claim that Park was merely a businessman who acted on his own UIS LINK with the Korean Central Intelligence Agency has been established to the sallsfac lion of the prosecutors They are aware, however, that Park didn't flash his KCIA credentials on Capitol Hill and offer "bribes" to congressmen. He told con- gressmen, on the contrary, that Mailbox he wu a bualnesaman who want- ed Lo ~tribute to tbelr cam· .. palp1. It will be dlfftcult to prove there were any alrin11 attached to tbe contrlbutlons. Not until later Would P1rk drop by and make a pltcb on behalf of South Korea. Tbe Juatice Department. t.beref ore, ml&bt have trouble in court d1ff erentlat1n1 between p0Utlcal contribullo1U and out· right bribes. The proeecutors will be able to prove, however, that some con· cresamen were aecreUve about their dea.Un11 with Park and con- cealed the cuh be 1ave them. AUTOSTATIC: In a move that could aqueese the nation 'a a mall radio manufacturers out of buai· ness, General Motors is forclng auto dealers to buy some of Its 1978 model3 with built-in GM radios. Car radios have traditionally been optional equipment. and deolera have ~en free to purchu them from Independent flrma. But Gener1l Motors bu de· cided that ibl own rad.to wlD be standard equipment on every 1B7I Buick Rlvlero, Oldsmobile Toron·a~o and Chevrolet Cbevette. The dealer will have no choice. Tbls GM actJon baa raised lhe hackles of Sen. Edward Ken- nedy, D.·MUS., wbo t>u fired off a confidential letter to the JusUce Department's antitrust chief. Jobn Shenefield. The new GM pollcx, Kennedy complained, has "tremendous potential for lnftlct- lng irreparable injury on in- dependent radio manufac-turera. •) The relatlonablp'be- tween radio !irms and auto deal- ers could be ''disrupted," be wrote, by this "seleetlve In - trusion into their market.'· The Justice Department has· launched an investigation into the matter, which wlll also focus on other au&o part1 and IC· cessories CUOOL evs SAPB'tY; Thousands of unsaf o school buses are stlU on tho road becaU1e ol a bua-slzed loophole in the law. Coneress ordered strict safety standards for tho nation 'a school buses back in 1974. But anY"'bm chassis manufactured before the April 1, 1977, deadUno doesn't have to meet the tou•her stan- dards Some manuracturers, • thereforeJ drastically stepped ue their production to boat the· deadline. Their tactics have been uncovered by Rep. Andrew Maguire, D.-N.J., who has asked hi&hway safety chief Joan Claybrook to blow the whistle on these unsafe buses. •·Hundreds, if not tbouaandl, o! school bus chassis built before April have been purchased by school boards and manufac- turers.·• Masuire warns in a con- fidential letter. A Tax Bill for People, Not Politicians To the Editor The Democratic Speaker of the Assembly, Leo McCarthy stat.es that no tax relief that would reach the homeowner befoN November 1978 can be de.-eloped that would be acceptable to Republicans. How about a blll that would be ac- ceptable to the people lnstead of the politicians! IT BECOMES more and more- e v l dent to more and more· California homeowners that the pre•ent controlled state Legislature does not wish nor in· tend to produce any legislation that will give the inflation ridden homeowner any tax relief in the very near future or ever! During Governor Brown's Ad· ministration more taxes have been collected from the people of Calif omla than any previous ad- m inlstration, but less benefits have filtered down to the people in the way of property tax relief· highway improvements or im- provements in the pre"ent de· teriorating educational system. MR. & MRS. E. P. BENSON Me•a'• Dftelt .. represents in Costa Meaa and he has shown great leadership in pursuing this Issue before our elected stateofflclals. Assemblyman .Mangers has made the state much more aware of our problems than ever before, and Mr. Mangers certain- ly has my vote of confidence as well as the community's strong support on this issue. I feel cer-. taln that os a result of his representation and Influence in the governor'• office, that' something wiU be done about tbis situation and that we wUl be ul- t.lmately successful In reaolving this problem. Thanks aealn for the Daily Pilot's support and Assembly Maneers' dedicated efforts In see- Ung this project through to com· pletlon. DOM RACITI Councilman City of Costa Mesa Cead••lleper( To the F.d.ltor: lo your editorial, "Untimely Display," of Nov. 16, you crtt.lclzed the Cout Community Colle1e Dlatrict's use of public money on its annual rep0rt, en- tttled "AccompU.hmen\t." The dlltrtct want.a. to account fOJ' ltl UM ot public money and an aanual atatement aeem1 a reatonablew~~t amoq otben, of 111eetJnttb1aODU8ltlOD. The tOta1 ~i of tho document, includlQI po1ta1e and m1llln1, ceme to S'IA03.rr. You can't tn· form people without 1pendln1 money.· We a.re •••re -and riptJ.y are ~Uy reminded -or the need to be •• ftjacal u pcmlble. Tbe repart ll an et- tempt to moet both these obUt•· tioos. It lhoUld be lffft ln tho ton- tftt of a current totit1 operatinc budget for the dl1ll,1ct •a three community collefH of $75 mlllJon. district's sailing vessel. Saudade. is heavily featured in the report but you may have given the Impression that il was purchased with public funds. It was a gift. Its maintenance comes to $3,000 per year. We will through chartering attempt to cover that charge. The vessel ls used for sailing classes, some marine science classes and will i:->ssibly be used for winter navigation classes. Its principal function ls a floating classroom. Finally, may I repeat some pertinent facts from the report. Some 40 percent of adults in the district use its facilities in a year. Cumulative enrollment was 136,091. The year before, it was 109,811. NORMAN E. WATSON CbanceJlor Teae!lter'• TrlfJute To the Editor: As an elementary school teacher who was raised with up· per Newport Bay mud between bis toes and the Harbor Area in his blood, I'd like to share some feellngs I have with you and your readers. It is merely coincidenlal but highly appropriate that these things be aald 110 close after Thanks1ivin1. In what I'm sure was a most fruslratlng partnership, Newport Harbor Hich School and the Newport·Coeta Mesa area had the unfortunate responsibility of 1eelng to lt that I, aeainst greater than ueual odds, become an educated and useful person. 1t mu.et have seemed a futile com- munity ef!ort to all those In- volved In such a thankless and monstrous undertaking. But aomehow tho Harbor Area sur- vived. Coming from the age when l'~onzies were real people and a tame that was called the "Apathetic Fifties," I found myself among the legiona of sur· prised observers shaking their heads in disbelief when I had In· credibly managed to finlsh two years of college at Oran1e Coast. Again, Ute shock waa almost too much to bear when I received a B.A. in English with ambitions towards tea chin~. You see the reasons I was able to get through college and go on lo a profession were not reasons that would show up on test scores or in Stull Bill objectives. 11Je school district could not look to their files for what tt was that caused this amazing turn of events. THERE ARE two reasons that I made it through college, became a teacher and eitjoyed what~ver success I bave been nble lo achieve, and everything positive I do either in my classroom or my creative pursuits is directly traceable to these reasons -Mr Robert Wood and Mr. Robert Wentz. They were two of my hip school teachers and with their help my Ufe got itself together. I'd like to thank them now, publicly. In the finest sense of the word these two individuals are teachers, and teachers on the highest level Mr. Wood ls not teaching at Harbor Hieb anymore but Robert Wentz is, and I know that at Newport be is still &I ving that extra quality Uaat the rest of us In educaUon can work towards and hope we're ap- proaching. In my classroom and an my life I have always looked back to his example with the firm belief that If I were ever able to be half the teacher and person be is, 1 would be an oventbelmllil success. Tho amazint thiDI Is. I not only remember them ~ what they were to m~r but 1 also remember the things tney nld. I know how terribly luck)' I to have been a student of Mr. Wood and Mr. Wentz and J want· eel to let people know bo11J luclt.1 their students stJU are. DENNIS CRAIG SMITH Lompoc vn.Jnect School Dlltttct -· TVVie-wers Turning Off? NEW YORK <AP> -A. C. Nlelaen Co. rattn11 ahow that fewer people are watchina televillon thtl year, aparklng a cootroversythat plta ~advert.t. inl induatry •ea.inst the t.bree m.tof networlu because of the money at stake. "We're con<'<>rned," ABC Vice Preaident G~rge )Ceramad11> commented Tuesday ln a re- mark typical of the networks. "It's klnd of a wall· and-see thing Right now we're juat very cauUoua about il." WHAT'S CAUSING THE CONCERN is a decline since last year in the flrure for the Homes Using Television -HUT -of 8 percent durtne daytime and nearly 3 percent at nitht. This can have a direct Impact on revenue. Ju.st as magaatnes guarantee their circulation, networks base the cost. of a commercial minute on an estimated audience Ir the size declines, ad· vertlsers won't pay as much for a minute. "If we continue to see a dedine ln the lone term. then this could have the effect of reduced ad· vert1sing expenditures for TV," said Michael Drex· ler, senior vice president of Doyle Dane Bernbach advertising agency '•But this ls not golne to happen overnight·· THE NETWORKS SAY THEY are waitine for the resui~ in about two weeks of the November "sweeps.· in which 100,000 houaebolds nationally keep diaries that measure the audiences of local stations. Through their Committee on National ~ Television Audience 'II tbe e .. t11111e to •ee a deeH11e 111 tlte 101111 tert11, tlaell tllU e••dd ha.,e tlte elf ect of re- d11eed advnotls· lag expen· dltu~ tor Tl'.' Measurement, tbe networks also asked Nielsen on Nov. 1 for data to back up its num- bers. Several advertlslne agencies -and Nielsen say they are already convmced the numbers are accurate on the basis or a similar diary analysis in October oC 23 c1t1es, including New ~ York, Chicaeo and Loa Angeles. ln addition, a second ratings service .. Arbitron. showed a downward trend that confirmed Nielsen's October figures. A Nielsen spokesman put the declines at roughly 1.2 million daytime viewers and a quarter of a mi Won at night since a year ago. "It does not appear to be a function of methodology and research," Doyle Dane's Drexler said. "In fact, it's real." BUT THE HEAD OF CBS' television research, Arnold Becker, contends, ''If there has been a real decline. il is hard to document. I'll be happier when Novembercomesin " Added NBC research chief Bill Rubens, who re· ferred to the network committee's study and the Nielsen November sweeps, "Unul the work is com· pleled, l think anybody's opiruon of what is going on is merely speculation." Larry Fried. a vice president of Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborne advert.islna agency, concurs that it's difficult to say "exacUy" where the viewers have gone Nevertheless, there 1s speculation within the in· dustry. DREXLER, FOR EXAMPLE, SAID that the networks' new fondness for "stunting," or use of specials m place of series, along with the popularity of mini-series. makes it necessary for viewers to keep making new decisions about program cbolct and lo make them quickly. "I tlunk that's become confusin. to some peo- ple and may have turned off some viewers In the medium," he declared. "I t.b1nk that baa created a great deal of confusion and some dissatllfactioa." Says TV consultant Michael H. Dann: "For the. first time, the American viewer .•• cannot be sure what's on any of three networks on a elven nilht." DREXLER THEORIZED THAT THE daytime dropoff may be related to the increased number of working women and tbe decreased number of children -"long-term factors wblcb I think are beginning to catch up," he said. Indeed, analysis of ~lelaen figures by Ted Bates agency indicates a drop of nearly two percen- tage points in women watching TV at home. The networks say that, as far as they are con· cerned, there are three possiblllties about the •P· · parent. decline. One ls that they are real. The second b that there hu been some adjust· ment to lUlusually high figures for 1978, year of the presidential election and Bicentennial. THIRD, THE NETWORKS SAY and pre· sum ably hope, it's possible Nielsen wu wron1 aa it waa nearly two years ago. Then, there was another HUT decline, but tbe ratings service attributed it to a failure of tll Hm· pie ot 1,200 homes to account for an lncreue ln the ·number ol cblldless families. Ill computer analysll was also faulty, a spokesman aa.ld, addlnl that these areas were bein1 watched cloeely. •'These things get ex .. cerated to a fare·tbM· well," Becker or CBS remarked. "If thll was another industry, not so much tn t.bt llmellaht, wbo would know, who would care 7" Separation ~tioned .. WASHING TON <AP) -80c111 wotktn who separate battered children trom their abualYt plll'enta may be dotnc the famlb' mon bann tban cood, aceordlna to aeveral aptltl. Speclallata attendln• th• amnall meetlnl ol tbf American Allociatloo of Payeblatrto Servtcea for Children, 11ld separation can be traumaUo for cblldren, wbo probably would chooM to atay with tbelr patODbt d•plte a bun. Dr. APctre P. Derdeyn ol tM UPlvtnlt)' of Vlrlinl• Medlcal Sehoal llld NmOYlfta cblldren ffom their homes may ltav. U*n fltllq nJed*t by their ~. StperaUon llo faill to aolve tbt ond•r)fiDi lld that led ti> tlMt abUM. Trousers Optional Uniform SHEFFIELD, Eneland (AP) -~DH· leneth skirt.I may pre· serve a lady cop•1 f•m!nlnlty. but &bty 'r• no cood for cbaatn1 crtmlnala, poUcewomen in South Yorkahlre com· plain. A skirt can also prove HA rrs MOT TOO IAIL y TO OIDll! ••• flWQaklllm ........... ,.... ,,., .. ,_ ............................ . ALSO ••• ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS HAMI ~~ ~: r~~~0 ~ ::.:~ rGE/(;:;:;;::~~~1:::;,U~~R=~l~~~;::~:;;S:::::B:;~rAZ~~;;;:~::::A::~~==~~;i~:ii over a wall, they told superior officers. Ed Harris. one of 13 hobbyists in a South Florida railroiad club, 'tips his cap beside a s mall portion of a $30,000 model railroad display. Harris says he and his friends spent more than 6 ,000 man hours putting the assembly together for a Christmas display. CHIEF QONSTABLE Stanley Barratt sym- pathized, and aut.hortied his lady conatablea to awltcb to t:ro\ders, wblch they started weartnc Monday. From now on policewomen will have the choice of two skirt.a or one skirt and a pair of trousers when uniforms are banded out each year, he laid. JUST ONE exception: the female bobbies must wear skirts In court. Adult Games, Gags, Gifts, Novelties Now open .•. the moat unusual 1tore you've ever seen. The largest 1electlon anywlttN of adult toy1, party 8•8•· glft1, novell1e1. Not an "adult book IC.ore." A pluab boutique full of naughty 1reeUng cardl, swtnglna party pmea. 1ugge1tlve fortune cookie1, the out· rageoU1 talking toilet. unusual soaps A candles, golfer gadgets, bo11 • eecretary gas•. anakea, 1plder1, body 0111 and all kind1 of things. A wonderland for the fun loving. Corna and browse, have a cup of coffee In our pluah loun.ge. meet all kinda of people. from hip •wingers to little old ladle1 • senta from Llesure World. If you're ot age you must come 1ee thl• for yourself. You'll go home either laughing or breathing hard. but you'll be back for more! CENTUR!ANSBAZAAR ~ladle~....._ 128U Garden Grovt Blvd .. Bldg I plua, ......_ Hatt.r 111•4. • r~. Garden Grove. CA 9260 .... _..,dtelaWdlwlapeflb Phone (714) 534-7152 a.... 0--• luta AM fWJ, MEET DIANE VON FURSTENBERG And see how varied a one-woman show can bet If you're a collector, expect to see more of her standout prints ... brighter perhaps than you're used to seeing. The collection boasts lots of young· looking Ideas. and there's one unmissable theme-sottl Below, sun yellow scoop neck dress and front·wrap candy·colored dress with 6leeves that tie up tight or, un·tied, make cap sleeves. Each, 6-12, cotton/rayon, $87 See the collectlon Informally modeled today,· 12 to 3. I Meet Diane tomorrow, 11·12. Fa8hlon Gallery • t I r • t. i • ~ WedclWle1. No'flember.to, 1177 NATlQNA~ Sevrareid's Career of 38 Years ClOses To.,,igftt BJLESBYllD W ASmNGTON CAP> -"A lot of l*)ple atart bloominl when that Uttle liaht aoa oo," aaya Eric Bev areld. "I start to die." After 38 yean with CBS and thou.sands upon tboutands ~mortal 1wps. Eric Sevareld can start to relax. Televlaion'a pr.eminent asaytat wUl yield bla daily 2~ minutes back to Walter <;Jonkite this week, and, llke it or not, that's the rayft la. SEVAREID, WHO TURNED 15 SATU&DAY and will air his final re1ular commentary tonitbt. clearly bu some reluclance about his forced reUre· moot. But typical of bla countenance on so many thJn11, be sees both aides of the Issue and, in any case, doesn't take it too seriously. Though once crowned by the New York Times as "CBS's commentator in charge of significance,'' Sevareid, imposin& as he is to his viewers, has never felt comfortable witA &elevialon. He ii a ab~ llU. even aloof, and 11 IDlcbWy bothered by the medium's stress on personalities. In a "Summing Up" interview with Cronkite: SEVAREID Sevareid said, "I think one should quit thls busi· nes1 when you're at least slightly ahead. You can wear your welcome out. This is the most personal form of journalism there's ever been, and that has a built-in danger to it. Maybe you can go on writing for print until you 're 85. I'm not sure you can go on broadcasting every day." And contrary to what so many think of him, he is not, he insists, an oracle. "The best brains know there are no simple answers anymore," he told The Washington Post. "There were simple answers to Hitler, and to the Depression and the suHering of people, and to McCarthyism. That's one reason Ed Murrow was so great. These were great, simple moral issues. What would Ed say about the Middle East today ... l don 't think he could have had the same black·and· white approach. "WHEREVER YOU TURN, THESE things are of such compleXJty that anybody who pretends there are simple answers is either a lot smarter than I am or a knave." Sevareid's sensitivity lo bot~ sides of an issue has often produced howls to the Mtwork from both camps in a given conflict as well as earned him the nickname "Eric Severalsides" from fellow com- mentators who think he should be more assertive. But "the great fault of the press," he said, "Is not bias. It's haste. I don't know how you avoid It. I suggested once we should broadcast news only every other day . . . think what a good job we could do then. And thank how everybody's nerve ends would be rested. The wonder is we 're as good as we are.'' SEVAREID, A WRITER OF considerable re· pute, still prefers the printed word to the spoken. Insofar as his broadcast career ls concerned, "I thought I wrote much better in the radio days when 1 had three or four minutes instead of tbe present, say. 214 minutes. Three or four minutes is not a bad essay length; you've got time for a little grace, for more eviden:e, for the beginning and the end. I * * * Syndicated TV Series Eyed BySevareid By JAY SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES (AP) -Now and then I &et this odd dream. In it, Eric Sevareid arrives at his podium on the CBS Evening News, clears his throat, and says: "I can't figure it out, either." For years, this shy, scholarly North Dakotan has given millions of viewers the impression he's got the whole thing doped out, an lmpresaion he prob~bly would be the first tod~ny. IT ALL ENDs TONIGlfl', thou&b. CBS says he's doing hls last nightly think piece for the MUllltOW network. He's leaving the ran.ks of the regulars. He turned 6S Saturday, an age CBS folk an takenoftactiveduty. Sevareid, a University of Minnesota graduate and a r. porter 111nce age 18, bas been on · active duty with CBS a while - since 1939. In that year, be was In France, reportJni for both tbeold · Parts Herald and United Presa. A call from London cbanaed hiJ lite. The call was from CBS' Edward R. Murrow, who Wlll in the procesa Of formin& hll famed band of. 1cbolar·Journallst1 to cover the comln& war in. Europetbrou&h the yount medlwn olradio. . . . . . SEVAREID SIGNED UP, IN time galninf a meuure ot fame reportinc the fall of France. And he'• be«1 a broadcut Joumallat ever 1lnce, both u a reporter and pl11·by-pt., ana111t of history. After he blda adieu to that ton.ltht. be'll sUll be with ~ u a consultant. the network 11y1, but it Sln't'ltDown yet if he'll have a succeaaot on the CBS Evenlnr Newa. e'll also atart wort soon as a narrator of a new ayn lcated TV serl11, "Between the Wan," which 1t.udla tho period 1918-41; accorc!J.q to the spoDIOf, MobUCotp. publl1bed a lot ol those essays then. 1 wouldn't publllh any~ tbeso ... '' Thoulh bo bu written several books, includ.Ln1 aome for chlldren, one of Senretd'• belt·known plecea w.as an anlcle for Look maaaiino ln ·19ss that renected oo eonveraatlona he had ln London wlth bla frlend Adlai Stevenson Just two daya before Stevemon dled. The prlit·wlnnin1 article 1bowed that Steven.aoa felt frustrated .. Lyndon Jobnaon'a delegate to tbe United Nations, wanted to retlp, and revealed that the United Slatel twic. rejected UD· dlacl08edeeac.feelenfromNortb Vletna.min1"'" • IN PAYINGTJUBUTE TO St.even.son, Sevareld wrote : "Adlai dldn 't make me feel powerful, b~t be made me feel Important and he made me feel trusted. •'There wu something else; of no meaninC to anybody but me: I am cursed with a somewhat forbiddln& Scandinavian manner, with a restralnl that spells stuffiness to a lot of people. But Adlai saw through that unforfunate facade. He knew In· side I am mush, full or a lot ot pathetic sentimentality about this country, the Midwest, Abraham Lincoln, and the English language. He knew that I can't easily give affection, I cannot easily withdraw it ... " Many have not seen through that "unfortunate facade." Newsweek magazine quoted a "former aide to Richard M. Nixon ca01111un ·as saying the While House never attacked Sevareid, as it did other commentators, because "we were scared ... he looked and dressed like God, except for his neckties." SEVAJlEID'S SILKY GRAY HAIR, jutting Norwegian race and solemn' comportment have given others the same notion. Jn a salute on the eve or Sevareid's retirement, columnist George F. Will noted that "In a new mov- ie, 'Oh, God!.' God is played by George Burns, which is ridiculous. Everyone knows that God looks like Eric Sevareid, whlch is a handicap for Sevareid, not God, because people tend to think anyone who looks like that, you know, so imposing, must be trying to impose bia views on everyone." But that, said Will, is hardly the case, for Sevareid's "real power ls much less to tell people what to think than it Is to suggest what they should be thinking about. Sevareid's career has been a SUS· talned meditation on this sobering centw'y In which men and nations have obeyed Instincts more than laws." SEVAJlEID, GRANDSON OF A NORWEGIAN immigrant, was raised in Velva, N.D., and then Minneapolis ln the midst of the Depresaion and du.st bowl. "I never wanted to be a mining engineer, or a fireman,'' he told Cronkite. "I was a little boy In a very small town and I hung around the weekly newspaper shop a lot. The fellow who published the paper ... didn't have any children, and he sort of adopted me. , . I just got fascinated with It. Having a one·track mind, I never wanted to do anything else, from then on." HJt f1nt bil atory wu I llft'apaper aceount Ota IJ'Uelin£ 2,200-milo canoe trip be mau when be wu 11.lrom the Ml111atlpplRlvertoHudton't Bay. He and another boy traveled all summer and fall, bad several DHr m1l1es with dlauter, and almost quit teveral um ... BUT •41 KNEW INBTINCl'IVBLY that U 1 tave up, no matter •hat fbe justiftcaUon, It would become easier forever afterwarda to 'Justify-com· promise with achievement.'' be exi>1ained later in hil 1Me autoblocraphY, "Not 6o Wlld a Dream." Tbe youth attended tbe Univeralty of Min· naota, rillne at 5 a.m. to work at the post oftlce before cluaes, and later bead.cl for Eu.rope to at· tend schools ln London and Parts. ''I wu thlnkint back tbe other day," he said, "and I reallied how much of the little advance· menta in my career that came alaat were due to thlng11 Uke lying and cheaUni. I walked Into tbe Pana Herald ln '3'1 • • • Now, tbero were no Joba for American ocwsm n ln Europe • • . and WI younc man aaid 'we're terribly aho~handed hen, worldn1 u1 to deatb, give me a quick fill about yourself and I'll ao tell th mana1ln1 editor YoU're the rreawt re- -porter como lloW11tbe]Jike, and tm OW pal ot ml.De.• So that'• wbatbet did." SEVAREJD WORKED A.T THE Haald for several years before Ed Murrow recrulted him in 1839. "I told him I wu 26, and be said 'l'U have to Ue. I'll tell New York you're 29, we'll stra.l&bten it out lat.er,'" Sevareid recalled. Murrow once said that Sevareld conleued be was "too nervous, tbat bis voice wu no good. I told <&e.SBVA&EID, Pa1eA.le) Sl•deatS Test Smoke Effects . MANCilD1'£a. N.H. (AP) -Some New bl&b acbool puplla ve 1teadlne11 ud 1ldn temperature docnued. . . Lllirary Plans I elluwed to amoke iD dua tbll' WMk -to &bow them tb.e bum arpoktn1 ~-t.belrbodl ... Tlut Jf&IDlllbln LUl\I Aasocia- "ll makes you rullae what 1arot:l.QI ruUr does. Jt mabl 10W' &rt.tll ana velu unaller IO the heart bu to wort harder," aald Karen Klop. 15. She 1a1d abe amota ••one or two" d1arette1 a day. but will qult ~'Udi wea::• because of the science clua a-. petlmenta. "For yan, •• he added, "we htctured .them and they wwe ti.red ot tbaL U.. tbe1 have visual evidence before and after they 1moke. 'l'beJ UDdentand it an4 can make declaiom oo thdrown. •• LAtTaJE M VOIB, U. aald &be hu cvt· her nnoklq from a pact to a half paek a day became ot the expertmenta. Meeting Tbe La1una Beach Pan eUentc AaodattOD will hold tt1 annaal Chrilbml laDchiOiD Dee. '1 at tbe Boudwalk Reetautantat U:30 a.m. Holiday €raft8 ·,. Uon, federal ~t\i.Dcia. bu been aup. plylD• b1lb •choola tb.roulbout New Hampt.blre thls fall wttb equipment to monitor heart rate. •kln temperature, carbon monoxide tn tbe blood ltream · and nenousneu. On 'Mooday, the telts .. beaan at WHt Hilb School ln Mancbester. TBB PVPl18 ARE monitored before and alt.er smoldq. Teall wttneued Mon· day showed the be.rt rate and carbon monoxide in the blood increased, while JAMES BALL. CBAmBIAN of the blah 1cbool'1 sclence department. aald the proaram affectl pannta ·u well u students. "I am quite pleued," M aald. 0 We have bad many parenta and atudenll· qu.lt amok:ioi. Paruta have called taaay .they have stopped 1mokin1 because the. . kids ao home and torment tbem. 4'lt teared me becaUM ttlcured that all of that pollon la aoinl lDto m.v body ••• ehesald. . And non·amoken who 1at near clapmat. who smoked w.-. alfeet.d. Non·anobr Paul Pepin. 15, watched a meter a.bow that hla carbon IDODCWde lenl increued after be aat witb a smoker. He laid he never bad plumed to. 1moa and ..Sded. 0 I'm aure now. aft.er tb.eteata." Acltivtti81 for tbe 111l• lver1lty sorority IJ'Aduates Ol'lanlnthW. include a mualcal pro. ·aram by the La1ua Beach Hllh School Artt.tl cborale. formaUoa, call Mrs. .. Among Teens o __ u_E_EN_•_E _____ •_Y_Ph_~ __ n_•~_.t•_rJ_~_"d-i""" New Car For reaervatlon ln· ~ Sherman A. Todd at · ,_. .(94.7207. . Liberal Sex Trend Fades? NORTHBROOK, Ill. (AP) -Seventy percent of the nearly 24,000 high school juniors and senion who answered a questionnaire say they have never had sexual intercourse, and 58 percent say they would prefer their husband or wile to be a vlr1in• when they marry. Awarded .. In Suit . EAST PEEKSKILL, N.Y. CAP)-JCJlePbOd· do'• new Cadillac Eldorado burat into na111n as be drove it . bo111.e from the showroom ao Oddo sued wbep the dealer aUeced· ly balked at replacin« the damqed car with a AT i!rma t•ll• It lln It 11. WIT'S END In the DAILY PILOT The nationwide poll is conducted annually by "Who's Who Among American High School Stu- denta" among juniors and seniors chosen by thelr principals, guidance counselors and national youth groups. new one. Later, after a Judie or-. dered the dealer either to refund Oddo'• money or replace the car, Oddo de· ctded he'd had enouah. · With his refund, his wife said, be bought a CASUAL JUNIOR CLOTHING * GIFTS FOR HM ~ tB LARGE SB..ECTION OF Ta>s * AMERJCAN OAK ANTIOUES PEWTER * PANTS AND SKIRTS * HOME AND GOURMET ITEMS THIS YEAR'S POLL -THE eighth -pro- duced substantial evidence which seems to show the teen-agers have reversed liberal trends of 10 years ago and are becoming more politically and morally conservative. 11·3"0 ~rma.n-made BMW. ~(].~ • Oddo aaya be bou&ht Seven out of 10 or the leaders surveyed say they do not condemn couples living together without marriage, but only two of tbose seven say they would seriously consider such a relati~nship for themselves. a;::o:;: ..... =:·:-:-:-=::: ... ::-::·:::_.,:::::·-=-==-=-=======:::. the Cadillac for $12,000 -from the Dell 91ency ID Ossining in July 1978. After the fire, evidenUy caused by a defect in the Reaf,tg Lialcs However, 37 percent said they approved of pre- marital sex if there was mutual consent, and 5 per, cent approved if the couple are going steady and another 18 percent said it was okay if the couple plan to marry. Locked Homes Fll"l'Y·FOUR PERCENTUSTEDnaUonaide-L Thi fense as a priority in spending tax dollars. That was ore eves the first time a majority picked defense as a priori- ty. Seventy·seven percent favor maintaining the de- fense budget at the current level or increasing it, a contrast to four years ago when only 8 percent LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bur&lan are zeroing in on homes for sale that are equipped with a lock box urged greater defense spending. for use by real estate agentl, police say. . In 1B71, only 30 percent advocated capital punishment. Now 66 percent favor reinstaUn1 the . death penalty. Al.so, 64 percent believe in ceD.lloring Terry Wessel, an investi1ator in the police depart· ment 's west San Femmdo Valley dlvlalon, reported opposed any censorship in 1971. that more than 30 such homes in the Canoga Park and Woodland Hills areas have been burglarized in six weeks. ~ certain movies, television programs. books and .. , magazines whereas almost the same percenta1e. Nearly half the studenta. 49 percent, said they never had beer, 46 percent never drank a glass of wine, and 61 percent never tried bard liquor. In . • S 1972, 85 percent said they had tried some alcoholic Election et beverage. ABOUT 88 PERCENT SAID they never bad used drugs and only 9 percent said they have smoked marijuanL Aho, 85 percent reported never having smoked cigarettes and 8 percent have quit. About 57 percent favored passage of the Equal. Rights Amendment, a drop from 74 percent in 1974. • The Irvine chapter of the American Associa- tion of Retired Persons is scheduled to elect of- ficers at a 2 p.m. meet· ing Dec. 15 at University Park Recreation Center .. Three Levels of Fine Shopping & Dining In a Relaxed Atmosphere • Open 7 Day• at 10 AM. 1100 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach, Ca • ...._ 11•Yedl S..OC.0... BIP"1 r .... c ,, •• ......_ He ooted that half the homes on the market in the San Fernando Valley are equl~ with lock boxes contatntn1 door 1t·eys so realtors ftll show houses ~ potential buyers when the owner la not home. "Frankly, it bu kind of caught us olf auard." said Jim Link, executlve vice president of the San Fernando Valley Board of Realton. ' wiring, the dealer re: paired the car, but Oddo refused to take it back, inalstinl oo mum ot his money or a new car. The dealer said be was obliged only to repair the car, but state Supreme Court Justice Charles Tierney overruled him t last mouth. aa.ying Oddo "bad every right to ex-pect his lUXUl'Y car, with expensive addltiona, to perform at the very least, safely." Suit Mixed SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The city of San FrancHaco'a $1.5 billloo' suit qainst the eovern· meat and Navy seeklng ' to overturn a leutnt of Hunter's Point Nani Shipyard to a private firm bu been thrown out' of federal.court. .,,... .. .,..... Gift IOI ClwtlllNll A ll9lllM ol ,........ ,,._...-Ila ~ .,,. 'Pit "'11111 "' "°"' -La~·Boy ....... flOCllll9, Wei~ otWt/A ~ ....... MndllOIM dwr Of 'Pill ell.-. ll'Olll • ·-Wfr/ ,_ COien ... ,..,.. e.i...ii ... good looll• -.... ,.. ..... .. llellil IMOt La·Z·8oy --....... ..aon.Mr GOING DANCING ;. • • • ·GOING PARTYING • • • •. LO ... DllSSIS. NISSY DllSSIS. DISCO DllSSU. NMPSUtn. PAMTS. TOPS & MOii MIAT THIM&S ...CHIMIMDI,_ •CltOIAMJOM.STIClt •6IOIWS MC10IY *'OIHTA ·•tu.S. •J. ... ,.... _...,, 1 • : -·"Y ~GZ~ ~~Al Diie.,. ~ • • ...-.-.111 .... .,...,..«I own. IO enjGY, ClwlllrM8 efttf I ~ 1•/ ' I • .. I t l I . .. • I ' ' j i A i ~ u llAN . , N.H. (AP) -Some new bllb acbool pupils are ~• allowed to amok• lD dua W1• ~~ ·T t'o lbow tbeJn th• barm amnkhll ~GD&belr IMMU•. Tb• BamDlbtn Luq Aasocia· Uoo, utal tedltalf\lnd,, bu bwl aup- pl)'lnt blab achoola throu~ New llamPlhlre tJ1la fall with equlpaMDt to moottor heart rate, akin temperature, carbon moooxlde In the blood stream· and nenousoeu. On 'Monday, the tests .. be1an at Weat Hi&h School ln llancbeeter. ateadlneu aocl akln temperature decreued. . "It mlk• you realiM what ·~ reallJ doel. It mu• )'OW' utm.e1 mil velu amaller ao the heart bu to work harder," aaid Karen IOop, 15. Sbo uid the 1moke1 .. one or i.·• dauettes a day, but will quit "thla week," became of the science olaaa ex·. perimmta. IAMBS BALL, CILU&llAN of the blah school'• science department., aaid the prolfUJl affect.a parenta ·u well u students. "For years,•• he added, .. we lectured them and they were tired of that. BeN they have viaual evidence before and after they amoke. They undenltand lt and can make declsiona on tbeiJ' own.•• IAUIUE SAVOIE, U. nld abe b .. cnat' her •moll:iDC from a pact to a balf pack a day because ol the experiment.a. .. It acared me because I ft,.aed that all of that poJ.son la CCUI Into my body,'' abeaald. , And non•amokera who sat near cluam.atea \vbo smoked were affected. Meeting .. The La1una Beach Pauellenlc Auoclatloo wUt bol4 lt annual Cbit.tmM bmebeall J>ec •• T at tbe Boardwalk R•tautllllt at U :IO a.i:n. • AdUvtU.. for the llll· l v • r1 lt1 aororlty eraduates orlantsaUoct. include a mualcal j)l"C)o ·gram by th• La1uDa Beach Hllb Scbool Art.la ta charale. Lil\.IDi Jflpl and Dana Point~ aJS make ·&. onamentl for Cbrtatmu.~ •.. ~at the Dana NllUe1 Utirt.r)'. Tbe ntnry, located at NlcUel Road and Paclft" coast ~.,. will CODCluct a a.a dQ from a:ao tof:IOp.m. • L The f'rte craft nent ts ~ by tbo Captstral)o hY Ana rrtenda ott.bl Ltllra17. wbic!S will contrtbUte craft materltla. Por lllOft lftformatloD, call the cblldND'• librarian at-.WT. THE PlJPllS A.RE monitored before and after amoldna. Testa witneued Mcm· day •bowed the heart rate and carbon monoxide In the blood increased, while . Among Teens "I am quite pleued," be uid. "We· have b$1 many parenta and ltudeata- quit smoldna. PU'elltl have called lO'aay they have stopped 1moldn1 because the. . kida go home and torment them. Non-81DOker Paul Pepin, 15, watched a meter abow that hia carbon monoxide lenl lncreued after be Ht with a smoker. He said be never bad plaDJMtd to' amoke llDd added, "I'm aure now. after thetesta." o_u_E_EN_1_e _____ ·1_1_~_i_1 _•!'_.t•_rJ_~"-d_i _ New Car For renrvatloa fn· g AT formatloa, ult llra. . ,. WIT'S !rma t•lla It llke It 11 • Sherman A. Todd at <;;;, 49'·7207. " ENO In th• DAILY PILOT Liberal Sex Trend Fades? NORTHBROOK. Ill. CAP)-Seventy percent of the nearly 24,000 bigb school jwilors and seniors who answered a questionnaire say they have never had sexual intercourse, and 58 percent say they would prefer their husband or wife to be a virlin when they marry. The nationwide poll is conducted annually by ''Who's Who Among American High School Stu· dents" among juniors and seniors chosen by their principals, guidance counselors and national youth eroups. Awarded. In Suit ' EAST PEEKSKILL, N.Y. (AP)-Joaepb Od· do•a new Cadillac Eldorado burst into flamea aa be drove it · home from the showroom ao Oddo aued when the dealer alleged· ly balked at replacing the damaaed car with a new one. Later, after a judae or· dered the dealer either to refund Oddo'• money or replace the car, Oddo de· cided he'd bad enough. With bis re!un4, bis wtfe s aid, be bought a THIS YEAR'S POLL -THE eighth -pro· duced 1ub6tantial evidence wblcb seems to show the teen-agers have reversed liberal trends of 10 years ago and are becoming more politically and morally conservative. 11·:30 German-made BllW. :r; .. ~.Sl • ...U. • Oddo says he bou&ht Seven out of 10 of the leaders surveyed say they do not condemn couples living together without marriage, but only two of those seven say they would seriously consider such a reiati~bip for themselves. '.::o::-:::•:•"';:-:•:-=-=-=·=_,=_=_=_========.:. the Cadillac for $12,000 -from the Dell agency lJl Ossinine in July 1976. After the fire, evidently caused by a defect ln the wiring, the dealer re· paired the car, but Oddo refused to take it back, imisting on return of bla money or a new car. lleal.t11 Links However, 37 percent said they approved of pre· marital sex If there was mutual consent, and 5 per· cent approved if the couple are going steady and another 18 percent said it was okay if the couple plan to marry. Locked Homes FIFTY-FOUR PERCENT LISTED national de-L Thi fense as a priority in spending lax dollars. That was ore eves the first time a majority picked defense as a priori· ly. Seventy-seven percent favor maintaining the de· fense budget at the current level or increuinl it, a contrast to four years ago when only 8 pen:ent urged greater defense spending. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Burt}ars are zeroing in on homes for sale that are equipped with a lock box for use by real estate aeenta, police say. In 1871, only 30 percent advocated capital punishment. Now 66 percent favor relnstatlna the death penalty. Aiao, 64 percent believe in censortni certain movies, t.eleviaion proerama, books and magazlne:s whereas almost the same percenta1e. opposed any cen10n1bip in 1971. Terry Weasel, an lnveatilator In the police depart· ment 's west San Fernando Valley dlviaion, reported Nearly half the students., '9 percent, said they never had beer, 46 percent never drank a glus of that more than 30 such homes ln the Cano1a Park alMl Woodland Hills area s have be e n burclariuld in six weeks. e, and 61 percent never tried bard liquor. In · • S 2. ss percent said they bad tried some atcobouc Election et verage. ABOtrr 88 PERCENT SAID they never bad ed druiS and only 9 percent said they have moked marijuanL Aiao, 8S percent reported never aving smoked cigarettes and 8 percent have quit. About 57 percent favored passage ol the Equal. igbta Amendment, a drop from 74 percent in 1974., • The Irvine chapter of the American Associa- tion of Retired Persons la scheduled to elect of· ficers at a 2 p.m. meet· ing Dec. 1S at University Park Recreation Center .. Three Leyels of Fine Shopping & Dining In a Relaxed A1mosphere Open 7 Day• at 10 AM. 1100 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach, Ca. £81h 11•111ock So.6 c...t ... .,.., .... c.. • ....... He noted that half the homes oo the market in the San Fernando Valley are equiPPld with lock boxes contafbln1 door keys ao realtors Oln.. show boules ~potential buyen when the owner la not home. "Frantly. it bas kind of caagbt us off suard." aaid Jlm Link, executive vice president of the San Fernando Valley Board of Realtors. ' The dealer said be was obliged only to repair the car, but state Supreme Court Justice Charles Tierney overruled hlm 1 last mooth. saying Oddo "had every rtcht to ex· pect hia luxury car, with expensive additions, to perform at tbe very least, safely." Suit Mixed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tbe city of San Francisco'• $1.S billion ' suit aaalnst tho CO'i'ern· ment and NaV)" eeeldnl ' to overturn a leU~ of Hunter's Point Naval Shipyard to a private firm bu been thrown out ' of federal. court. . CASUAL JUNIOR CLOTHING * GIFTS FOR HM ~ HER · LARGE sa.ECTlON OF TOPS * AMERICAN OAK AN110UES PEWTER * PANTS AND SKIRTS * HOME AND GOURMET ITEMS ·GOING DANONG • • • • ·GOING PARTYING • • • • ·ee.MbMMDI,_ -C~STICK ••IOIHS MCTOIY •IOIHTA •CHlllS .•HJ.S. •J.RID -cm-. ( I d • I t ( } 1 • .. Carter to Break 'Gag' Senio~' He'll Give Red World's Fint Open Conference Benefits PUBUC NOTICE Fros AP Ol1patc~ breathlnt. the apokeamao at Northwtatern Offered P.1'el & Caner wlll become thollnt 1J.S. pr• Memorial Hospital said. aldent to hold a wlde·o~n newa conference In a The actor 1uffere<J a heart attack Friday durin1 Communist country when he vlal\.ll Warsaw late tbe fll\al minutes of "Side by Slde by SOndbtlm," In ntl(t month. which lM wu ~pearlng at the Drury Lane Water Poland will be the rirst atop on a curtaUed Tower PlaceTbeatre. version of Carter'!> once-postponed world trlp, set to • begin Dec. 29. n probably won't make much difference to hla- Wben Carter meet.a the press In Wanaw, PoUsh tor , but a burnln1 question that arose from Aawar journallsts will be Invited to join Western col· • Sadat'• visit to Jerusalem was: leagues ln questioning the president. It was not Old the president of Egypt kiA known whether Poland 'a state-owned networks wlll Golda Meir? broadcast the session llve. However~the Voice of Sadat says no. America is expected to beam the c nference to The reason \t came up Is Communist countries, Including the So et Union. that at welcomJn1 ceremonies at • Ben Ourlon International Nearly SM0,000 police confiscate from two Airport. Sadat was seen to bend Alice, Tex. youtha last Januar has been forward as he was introduced lo transferred lo lederal control and a federal jud1e the 79-year-old former Israeli ordered the money invested m interest-bearing ac prime mmister, perhaps kissing counts until the owner is M••• her. determined. ( ) Asked about it In am interview with CBS News, U.S. District Judge PEOPLE Sadatsaid: . Jack Roberts made the ·'No, but 1 would not have been ashamed I/ 1 ruling in Awitin, but the had." order was entered in Waco where the money has been in a bank vault un· der the care of McLennan County officials A Waco patrolman stopped lS-year-old James Dun Bridges and 16 year old Percy Arnold Garcia tor a traffic viol<.1t1on Jan 31 and allegedly found the money and !'>omc marijuana In the trunk of a new car the pair claimed they bought only hours eurlier • World all-around rodeo champion Tom Fer&uS(lf'I, movie actor Jamea Caan, former pro football player Walt Garrison and Steve Ford, son or the former pre~ldent, are among the cowboys ch06en in the draft of players for Major League Rodeo. Ferguson was chosen by the Denver Stars, and Caan and Ford were packed by the Los Angeles Outlaws during player selection by the league's six pro· CAA• fessional teams. Each 14-playC'r team in the fledgling circuit wtll play a28·match schedule starting next April. • Former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox, re· cuperaling from a heart attack, says he stlll owes $15!1.000 from hi<; unsuccessful l!l7 t gutwrnutonal campaign I'm praying and hoping th.it I can get well." Maddox said Maddox suffered a heart al· tad. Sept 25 lie 1s recuperating al his home tn northwest Atlanta. In addition to his lingering cumpa1gn debt. Maddox said he owes ~t.000 on h11> home in north Fulton Cow1ty. * MADDOX Actor Cyril Rltcbard'a condition stabilized after he slipped into a coma. A hospital spokesman in Chicago said •'he 'a still critical in the coronary unit." The 78-year-old Ritchard, known to many for his portrayal of Capt. Hook in the mualcal "Peter Pan." was usin~ a ventilating system to assist his • A former basketball teammate of Ulysaes Cribbs, who 1s charged with killing a deputy aherlff and wounding 25 persons with a shotgun at an Omaha nightclub, says the Vietnam war "really dad something" to Cribbs. Cribbs, who was ordered held without bond at his arraign- ment, is a Vietnam veteran classified ru. eligible for 100 per- cent mental disability. He spent two weeks last May lo tbe Omaha Veterans Administra- •• ... . I ~ ; -· -~ .• ~t; tion Hospital but left against the auHa advice of a physician, a hospital spokesman said. Tim Scbmad, sports Information director at the University or Nebraska-Omaha, said he wu a starter with Cribb!i on an Omaha high school's basketball team in the early 1960s. • Assemblyman Alister McAJlster says "I owe much of my athletic success as 1951 singles tennis champion or Greenville College to my consumption of large quantities of Wheaties." The San Jose Democrat released a tongue-in-· cheek press release praising the General Mills breakfast cereal but conluded it with criticism for a district attorney's lawsuit against the company. The lawsuil contended that promolln1 lhe cereal as a training food for Olympic star Bruce Jenner is m1sleadlng advertasmg. The legal acUon has 1>ince been dismissed. * A 58· year-old jet flahter tesl pilot grounded six years ago because of his age soon may be back in the cockpit because of a U .s. supreme Court de- cision In his favor. ··u they wanl me, I'm ready to Oy," Phillip Houghton said after learning that lhe Supreme Court refused to review a lower court ruUne that Houehton's grounding violated age discrimlnaUon laws. Houghton's former employer, the McDonnell Douglas Corp .. must pay him six years back salary, estimated by Houghton at $200,000. And If a federal district. Judge finds that Houghton still can perform his teat pilot's job, the company must 1lve it to him. ·sovtet Blast Recorded Exploaion Detected in Nuel,ear Teat Area U PPSALA, Sweden CAP) -The Uppsala Seismological lnstltut1on reported a powerful un· derground explosion today ln the Semipalatinsk nuclear testing Jrea of Soviet Siberia. Profeuor Marcus Baatb, head of the inaUtu· ( J 'tloh, Mid the blut oc· /IU SHORT curred at 8:07 p.m. PST '" Tuesday and reghtered ----------' 6.9 OI' the Richter scale. l be Richter scale iJI a measurement of ground motion as recorded on seismographs lhat was de- vised as an index to the size and possible destruc· ti ve power of earthquakes. Major governments pre· sumably have calculated lhe alie of underaround nuclear explosiona th.at the various Rlcbt.er read- ings indicate, but oo one hu ever made tbia ln· formation public. Tricleat C.•t .... ,. after inquiries prompted by an Aasoclat.td Presa atory disclo.lng the pendin1 decllloo. Tmt ........ ~..werecl WASHINGTON (AP> -The Carter admlniltra- tion apparently la on the Vef'le of overtumini a Ford administration rulln1 that has aaved major U.S. banks milliOM of dollars lD corporate income taxes, 'Ibe Wuhinltoft Poet aald toda7. Under the Treuury DepartlfteClt rullnt last November, American banks w~re permitted to claim full foreign tu credits against their tJ.S. tax liability for a 25 percent tax withbeld by Brull on interest the banka tamed in that country. The Post quoted Treasury sources as aaylna the rulln1 ia beinl reconsidered' by the Carter ad· minlatratlon and probably wlll bo revok.ci, although not retroactively. lleClll"ll •I Cre1e11 Pinimefl . WASHINGTON (AP) -Hundre~1 of Hunearian·AmG"lcana marched ln Icy rain to the White ffoqse Tu-1a.1 to protest tht propoHl N• turn oCtheCrownofSt. Stepbentoffun•ary. "As 1 Chi11Uan. president It I• lllcompr hens I· bJe that Pretldent Catter blftb over ibe boli .. i tymbol ol a a.don to tta communilt lavacSen," aald Dr. Tibor Bodi of PhU.delpbla, one of~ mareb leaden. It. called the Imminent retu.ra of tM crown "a 1Jap 1n the face to the Hunprian coipmunlty. 0 The 1enior discount prof r~co-aponsored by the chamber of com· merce, la available to all La1una Beach senior citiieoa holding a dla- cou n t card, 1ays Bob Porter. program chairman. For l card and list of partlc•ating merchant.&, call Porter at 497-2441 or visit the senior center in the Human Affairs office at 515 f'oresl Ave. Luncheon Sclwduled The Orange Coast division of the California Retired Teachers As· aociation will sponsor its traditional luncheon Dec. 12 in the El Adobe Restaurant. 31891 'Camino Capistrano in San Juan. The guest speaker will be 74th District A6· semblyman Ron Cordova. D·Lake Forest. Cost of.£he luncheon 1s $5. For reservations or in· formation , phone 837-4116. PtJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS au51MU5 PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE NAll'8$T,l'T8Ml .. T 11850LUTIOH0f'TH8 Tiie lollqwlllg 119fMM ereel9ipt llutl 80AllD0ft TltUSTIHSOP' llllUt: COASTCOMMllltl'fY ttATHOAY Plt0,.l..E$, 1•tf1 COU.IG8otftltlCT t.OW•ll O~ ... tM'llntt9ft 8-Kl'I, (.A Of'OtlANO~COUHTT ftM' CAUf'OttNIA Cl8uNl18 l'.""lct $ftllllt, 16'91 ..__'·"17 L-•11 Clr<le, Hur11tn;too1 a..cll, CA (In motlol\ Of I r\llWe Wwlll K-. 92Mt outy '8t-.f -<•rrltcl, llMI loll-· G•orole EllHllelll JOllH, ••Mi '"' A•'°tuttcn of lnttftllon lo LffH L-•11 C.l~le. ~llGMI\ 8-11. C.. II••• Property 1er i:.dwullon•t '11'4' flwrpoW\ -C.11 tor Se ... • 8uh ,.., Tl•h lt111lfleM It <ondw<led lty • ~Itel .. Mf •I pel'V\enllfp, \'.11 "It EAS, Yid C.ommWf'HY Co41891 Cll!Mlla Ewnlu Smith Ol•lrltl I• Ille owner OI une1n r••• •1111 'Tlllt ''"'_. ,..,, llled •llh IM oer•onel property h•retnefler c.IHI I y Clerk ol Or 619 c-t Y on NIY Cle \Cr I IMO, aNI I UNln potllo<l et ulcl '· 1'11. PMtn Pwblllfttld Ol'lll9t Coe•I Dall~ flute. "°"·'· i.,u,»,itn ""'·" PUBUC NOTICE PEOPLE/ NATION l'UIWC NOl'IC& Puauc NOTICS Puauc NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE 11t011'c:a 111tv1Tn.oa1D1 PUBUC NOTICE . . . Sentencing Stej>ped Up ' New Program AirruJ at Career Law-breakers l'un IJ Mrvlces wan be held Thursday for former ho1pttal ad· mtnlatrJtor Jack E . Guiney, 519, wbo dled 1n bi1 Fountain Valley home Saturday. Guiney, a 21-year Orange County resident, waa tbe personnel dlrec- t or for St. Joseph Hoapltal and Childfens Hospital ot Oranae C'oun- ty for 20 years until last year. Since leavina bosfltal work be was lo rea estate lo Mission Vie Jo. GUINEY WAS employed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation durine World War II and served u a U.S. foreign service officer from 1945 to 19~. Gulney's wife, Sharon, operated Sharon's Hallmark Shoppe in Laguna Hills GUINEY IS survived y bis widow, Sharon R. uiney; his son, Jack uiney III of Newport each; bis stepson Ken- Y Helsel and s tep- augbter Kimberley elsel, both or .Fountain alley, and his saster. lly Yaple of San Diego Funeral services will held Thursday at 2 .m at th<: Bell roadway Mortuary in osta Mesa. Burial at ood Shepherd emetery in Huntington Beach will follow the By KATHY CLANCY Of•Mlr.....,....,. Orange County officiala believe career law· breakers may be obtainin1 lleht.er sentences than they deserve becau11e of the district attorney's workload and crowded Superior Court calendars. County supervisors took steps Tuesday to speed up the seniienclng of the so-called career offenders and reduce their rates of repeat arrest. Supervisors approved a $96,950 program, financed chiefly by federal grants, that would establish a new district attorney's team to ldentiry repeat law-breakers as they enter the justice system and give them special attention THE GOAL IS TO REDUCE nlE re·arrest rate of the career burglar by 40 percent and other career offenders by 30 percent. In addition, the team of three deputy district al· torneys and a clerk will attempt to reduce the Lime between a suspect 's arrest and sentencing by 50 percent. Keith Concannon, executive officer of the Orange County Criminal Justice Council, said the Agreement OK'd Medics Cross County Lines An agreement permitting Orange and Riverside County paramedics to cross county lines while car· ing for the ill or injured was approved Tuesday by county supervi&<>rs. A report to the board said existing state law pro- hi bils paramedics from---------- offering service outside their home counties without such an agree- ment. The arrangement will allow paramedics to con· tinue treating victims while en route to hospitals outside their home countif!s as well as permit them to assist one another during times of disaster .laU Mcndtor Plans to install a $27 ,000 monitoring system in a portion of lhe Orange County jail won .11 the endorsement of coun- Deatlu Elsewhere ty supervisors Tuesday. The jail monitor would include five cameras, video tape records and mom tors in the men's re- ceiving area, a report to supervisors said. GREENVILLE, N .C. (AP) -Welllngton 8. Gray, 58, dean of the East Carolina University School of Art since its founding in 1962 and a former Judge of the Miss America Pageant, died Tuesday. CHATTANOOGA. enn. <AP> -Mar1aret awllngs Lupton, 77, idow of Carrter Lup- on, a bottling pioneer ho founded several oca-Cola companies around the country. died Tuesday. SACRAMENTO <AP> -A mass 1s to be celebrated toray for Alfred W. Eichler, 82, state design architect whose Tower Bridge nt Sacramento is said to be the first lift bridge in the world with coun· terweights enclosed within the lowers Eichler died Sunday SAN DIEGO CAP) - Baron GI.no Daro, 75, a form,.,. vaudeville and motion picture erformer who was plan· ing a stage comeback In exlco City, died of a eart attack A dancer nd mime, lhe Sicilian· rn Daro appeared in ·Raisin in the Su.o," 'Moulin Rouge" and all Disney movies. BAKERSFIELD CAP> A veteran performer of 37 years and former mer-ber of the vaudeville troupe of Weaver Brothers and Elviry died Sunday in a Rakersheld hospital June Weaver , 86, was the last living member of the group County officials said many of the complaints about the Jail involve ac- tivities alleged to have happened in lhe receiv- ing area. The monitors ----------will permit those ac· Death Notlf!e• tivities to be recorded. HAM8LllT Pl . JOSEPH HAMBLET, r111oent of ann1ng Hewporl &e.ch, CNIMCI away Nev· ----- e,..ber 21, 1m. s..r-.1-11y 1111 wife Mary LoulM, son Wllllam J H•mblet, -;reno.on. 8rlan, twothor Albert of s • s Lovl11ana.Mr.,NulGr .... ofTelt,Ca er1es et S.rvlcu Mid Weclnftdey Howmber JO el 11 00 AM Petlll< View CMpel Of flclet11>9 Rev. Jeck Tho,,,., of St . ..,,.,. drtwl Pre~erl..-Ooufoch l"ler-nt Peclllc Vltw Memorlal Pen Memorlel contrlbulhwu to Cenctr Society or • ci.arl1Y of .,...., choice Paci lie View Mortuary Olrecton Ta.Ult VICTOR TRASK MO, CNIHCI ew•v November B, lt71 In Sen Diego Funeral Mrvlcn Wiii lie Friday 2 PM cryphfde at Pacific View Memo<l•I Perk. Tl'le Ret . .-, 8ooeh offlclaht>Q PKlflc v-~, HewPl>"I e .. cl\ 01,...ctor .. OC*IALlll ALIDA OOHZALEZ.-•. rHldent Of Huntl"910ft 9e«h. peued ....... NOY· ember 21, 1'17 •I Ho99 Memorlel Ho.pllel. $o.inllftd tty Pier l>Ulbllnd Arnol• end S sons, ArtlOl<I Gcwueler, Jr. of Co~• Mew, Hector, Oenltl, George •nd t.1audlo Gontale1, all of Huntlnqton •-11 Me'5 of o.r111i... llurl•I will be coflductect t0fli9hl Ho,,.mber JO •I k lnta 51,,_ -Judi Oluttll Int••· menl Wiii be el 10 AM TllurMlu Dtcember 1 In Ille Good S11e~ord Cemetery Pierce 8rotners Smith Mortuerv Otre<lorL 8EllM JESSIE 0 llEEM. retklOlnt el Colla Mew, passed -•Y H-ber 21. itn She Is 9'/fVfwd by • llstlr Vlrole A 0.-ott of Gotta-· S "*"• CMrlsle P. C•M ef Downty, Ca • Bonnlt c-.. r of a. .. MeM, 11-llrlOos How to plan and pre- sent s pecial events, from conventions to parades, will be the subject of a lecture sen es to be of. fered Wednesdays and Thursdays, 7:30 to 9 30 p. m .. starting today through Dec. 8, at Orange Coast Collf"g(• in Costa Mesa. William Coulon, v1ce- president of the Board of the Oranee County Coun- cil of Camp Flre Girls, will lecture on present- ing banquets and fund- raisers, corporate and non· profit organizational· activities. Admission is free and lhe public Is in· vited to attend. For further information call 556-5880. of OfttMt., ~., Twll• 111119 of Colla -----------' Mesa, Glorie ...,,,..,, ef 1' P•lms, Ca .• .,-~~~"'JCll t on•t~ end 2 gr .. t·nleoa. ~ o.ce,..ller ieoo oo AM .. II ••-•v • ...... 'S OW.-1 wltfl Rn. L. V. Tornow offltl•I· ~ lflt .,.e ,....,.,._, 4lt 1.....-od Peril • P'LUM81NO C.m•Mf'r· '"Mids tnay tall ., Ille HEATING ,u,..ref 5ef'vl9's wlll lie held on Friday 1t mWW.rv on TilundeV OK. 1 '"°"' Atlt C<*O. ,,...--, ... -c-, .. -c-.. -,-.w--""" -~Ill l :lD PM, .. II .,~., ' !>I. Lte. 211•}7 A n Y MortlNrv DIFW<tor.. Serv•c• l•-\larts at Yovr Ooor MlMOllAL ,All( LUCAS •C•ll !>tot• .....,ttt Your .ArHI Cemetery Mortu•ry OILLA LUCAS. Resident of Sent• COSTAMHA642·1753 Ch•"el AM. P.• _ __.., ,....,.mber mr.. "11 lU. ..._1 81.,.. -Funeul Mnlut .,. pendl"IJ •I Slnllll, M,.,, ..... Vlll ~49C_l\A01 3500 Pac1hc View Onve r..111111, L..,. Sen•• ,.... MorMf'Y .. ....... ,,.., ,,....,.., N.. rt "7-4111 2"'1~c..,l*-.,,wpo cs... Di.,.,,..,.,.•• Avery,.,.,,, C.11forn1a 844-2700 McCOIMICC MC>nUAlllS Uguna Beach 494-9415 ~unaH1lls 7M-0933 s.n Juan Capistrano .ftS-1778 For the Record Dl•••lldlO•• 01 Marrfag~ HEAAINO TEST FOR SENIOR CITIZl!NS FOR S1.oo· premise is that a disproportionate number of violent crimes are committed by a relatively hard- core airoup of offenders. CONCANNON MENTIONED ONE STUDY which salcrtwo-thfl"ds of the violent crimes are com milted by six percent of the criminal population. In Oranee County last year, Concannon con- tuiued, 1,661 defendants were convicted of crimes in Superior Court. Of those, 1,345 had a prior record of some type and 190 had been in state prison one or more limes. THE DI.STRICT ATTORNEY'S office, because of it~ organization and present workload. is unable to devote extra effort to Identifying and prosecuting career offenders. Al present, for example, three deputy district attorneys usually handle prosecution of cnmlnal cases at different phases. "This duplication of prosecution effort often works to the advanta'ge of the criminal," Concan- non said, "in that be often will use this change of at· torneys to stall his case, costing the loss of wit· nesscs and evidence. "ALSO, THE EXPERIENCED crimmal defen· dant. if not specifically identified, will use the fact that the court system is glutted with criminal cases to his advantage." That advantage 1s lhe criminal may plead gull· t} to a lesser offense and obtain a lifhter sentence. The new prosecution team wil work with local law enforcement officials, identify the repeat of- fender early and the same attorneys wall handle career·offender cases from start to finish. THE PROSECUTORS ALSO WILL maintain liaison with witnesses and victims and obtain restitution for victims when !)OSSible. County offtc1als said lhe caseload for the three prosecutors •Nill be kept at about 15 each compared with the d1str1ct attorney's average per deputy of 23 to30. An Oranee County 1ovemm t offtclll who bu been told he can no longer stable bia bone at Caspers Regional Park decided to &lve the county bis steed. Supervisors Tu•day accept.eel the dollaUon ot r Teneril's Half Angel, a register.cl Arabtu bone, valued at sa,~om Joaeph Cardello, an employee of the eotmcy Environmental ManaaementAaenc1. THE BOUE BAS BEEN aubJed at Cupen si.nce l!n4, but supervisors receoU1 decided to d.il· continue allowing privately-owned animals to be ' kept at the park. LOOl(IHG FOR . MR. GOOD BAR? You won'1 find any of that sweet stuff at Dr Flanzer's -he's a dentist. But even though Or. Flanzer is a family dentist, he doesn't bar singles. They too can have a complete range of dental services. And take advantage of Dr. Flanzer's conviction that modern dentistry doesn't have to be expensive. Could you save money having Cr. Flanzer as your dentist? You don't have to be married to find out. . Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer 370 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-0112 , W'lthon insuldion tihil IOllld be filli llDSti expensive ro• in your llllule. I \. • I =~====:=:;.:?/ ~ -=-~~~====== ORCELAIN Nite Lites [iqu1s1tely hand painted translucent porcelain on endmel steel bases •IOOS EACH 6.99 Nature's hdlve~l. Beauitlul Cahlornia everlasting flowers SMALL MEDIUM 1 1.69 2.99 "F.RESH'' f ' CONaNTRATED DEODORIZER REVLON Dry Skin Relief Moisture LOTION • tu o~ 1.69 TRIAMINICIN FOR TH£ COMMON COLD AND HAY FEVER 24 TAILUS 1.39 _, ' I t , GILLETTE Supermax 2 ADJUSTABLE STYLER/DRYER 200 TO 900 WATT ~ '\.' ~~ ~:..~-~ ,µ ~ ~ \ ~ ... ~·,~ ·~ ~~ ~ De tangles and ~tr a1ghlens. Smooths and shapes. W1tlt 9 ad1ustable heat/air settings and a 3 row comb with d11ferent length teeth. •9!~21.97 CLAIROL KINDNESS DELUXE 3-WAY HAIR SETIER with CUSTOM CAR£ CONDITIONER Rollers that slay Gives a deep cond11toning mist set, water mist set. or long lasting dry set , warm longer & are trouble tree #K400 28.97 "C I O" NORaco ur y. . CURLING WAND with MIST Helps shape today s soft. natural look Leak·prool , coo1 hp, swivel. and tangle· lree cord #1600 11.88 NORELCO GotchaGun 1200 BLOW DRYER full 1200 watts with 3 speed and temp selling 18.97 11117 -. NORllCO HAIR TOOL l60° BRUSH STYLER/DRYER tor THOROUGH BLOW DRYING , 900 walls ol drying ~ power Brush styles curls, waves and I lhps j!~ #9900 y 16.66 scHtCK Styling· Stick with EXQUSIVE CURLM.AKER Unique 1el a11flow Snap on attachments Curls last all day (OHAIR "the WIZ" THE TOTAL STYLING SYSTtM Mawooo Pencil wov MnAMINE 3-PIECE SNACK SETS with lMi'moplostlc Mug ENGLISH tEATHER 11TRIPLE CROWN" GIFT SET ~ ·Christian Bros. BRANDY &O Pf1.7HITER 11. 9 9 OJ 9.UPF 6 99 5th • Jim Beam BOURBON WHISJ<lY ID Pf1.lHITER 10. 9 9 Count Vasya VODKA ID Pf I 75 LIJEI 6.69 Foster Creek 6 YR OlD BOURION WHISKEY IO Pf US LITER 7 • 6 9 .. . ) wtlSKEY IO Pf 175 LITEI 6.99 Canadian Reserve WHISJ<Y IO Pf 1.75 LITCR 8.19 FAIR TIAOE PRICES PREVAIL IN CASE Of Enoat NORELCO "GOTCHA'' ROTARY RAZQR Nine clo~e comfort selling~ Improved pop up trunmer. No cuts •1121 "SEW PERFECT ~ Sewing Machine ~ irM:;;;i .. "' The School Bus that eoes on its Merry-Go·Rounds. Picks up doll who ndes, slides, and swinp. · llDl5 10.99 . DW "Suntan Tuesday Taylor" Tawny Gold ' Gergeous She really tans -.:~~ 1n the sun & hair chanaes from blonde to brunette! "PARCHEESI" RO c;AME Of 11MA ., saOIOW J A combination t · of skill & ~~IM!!ll'J:rit:.•. strateay. 8314" SKY ROBOT .,ESSXAY (Batteries not included) Knock him down & he rotts across floor. #13416.99 auv "Flutter Ball" 6y ftA YSKOOL for bathtub s:9s ® ·1· 4~39 "DOMHON" MflUaa~ Hoe fresh squeezed or1n1e or 1r1p1f rult juice th convenlt~t 21 OZ. SIZI 11.-.ii::::~ 2·spted/solid state port able. With str0n1. easy-carry· .J4.99 ~"MAX MACHINE"~ ., A U-DRIVE IT TOYI ., SCllAlfl 1 ~ It's more than ~ a toy.tfuvan ·.you d rive yourself! . • .. 1 13.99 .... .{ ' Lady Bug Fly Away t;MUI ~ . ,. M1h it soar, ~ hover & ll01t .-...... 1enUy & safely. • ::~ •2404 5.99 . .. .... r 10" TRICYCLE , 6y AMF JtJlllOI Sturdy rear ste~ ~d ec k wi t chrome d handlebar. .• 14.99 ~ ~ .~ . \ . \". ·-~···· I'-·· ~· . .:c.. ., ·,. \ , ·'· I WITH ANTI-SPOT I RINSE AGENT I I ggc "Sasheen" RmlON Traditional or Colorama ' . l I l I ( DAILY '"-OT ( ao. 1177, BUstne ·Amid Shouts and Toasts, New 'Top Ten' BJ BUGBA. MVLUGAH . I#~~·, NEW YOM:: election ... : aulta OD TV tbe other ntcht bad • everrone all steamed up at Mal t1an'1 Bar, a nohy nel&bborbood counter·cultural center wtthln arpeuto ranee or Carne.Se Hall. It WUQ't the cont.It l:d Koch won that caUMcl all th• abOu1lnc and the profanity and the tbruta to turn oil tbe set bJ the manqe- m ent, but the one that bad Charlton Heston a1 tbe anchor man and "Gone With the Wind" as the all-time, bandl-down, DOW· and-forever winner. SOMETHING CALLED the AmericmFllm Institute, a crea· • tion of Lyndon Ba.Ina Johnsoo, wbo bad a way with whm.lng elec- tiom, bad packed the Kennedy center for Performinc Arts in W•ihington, D.C., with a lot. of Hollywood mo1ut1 in bolled shirts and some asm1 film sirens aotng all the way back to Fay Wray for the purpose of saluting . . tbe 10 putest fllml of all time u picked by a poll of the mem- berablp. There was even a =•~ with the Carter famiJ.y y i.Dltalled to field all the predicta- ble jokes about the burnJ.na ot Atlanta and the South rlslng agaln ln the event GWTW won, wbicb everyone knew lt would. No argument there, even from the normally argumentaUve nm· ident critics at Mulllaan'a, who have been known to go to the pay phone during a teleeast to Jet the local weatherman know lt was raining on Seventh Avenue. The flak Started going up over the bar when the returns came in for the next nine places from the poll of 17,000 people conducted by the Film Institute to select a Top Ten from a fl.rat ballot roster of 1,110 films. "Citizen Kane"T No way; for the creeps and the art houaea now turned pornq palaces. "The Grapes of Wrath"? A weepy bore, except for Henry Fonda. ·~Wan"? They 1ot to be kid· dlns, F1uh Gotdoo wu better every SatW'dll)' tn the chapter. ·~·African Queen"? Not bad, but "The Maltese Falcon" was Boce1'• best. And ao it went, but what really got tbe fllm coonolaaeura at Mulligan'• livid was bow many of their al12time favorites failed to makeeventhetop50. THERE AND THEN, well, not quite tbeQ but two hours or ao of heated dlleulalon later, the U · aembled criUca came up with their own list of nlne films to folio• "Goae With the Wind" in the all time areatnes.s parade. "Shane" emeraed u the finest oater ofthem all, a oeck abeadof "Stage Coach" and "Red Rtver" and way out front of "Hilb Noon." "Tbe Informer," John Ford's I classic of the Irish Troubles, ranked very blah. and so did "Goodbye, Mitter Chips," the onslnaJ with Robert Donat and .. not tb.e musical bromide with Peier O'Toole. THE llAN AT THE end ottbe bar, a native Of Ireland, thouaht · "The Quiet Man," with John Wayne. Barry Jl'Uzgerald and a rich, rolllcktnc roster of character actors, was tbe love- Ueat movie be bad ever seen, and he bought a round on the strength of it, which ended all dissent. There was spirlled diacu.ssioo over whether "White Heat," with James Capey oa the top of the world, Ma, or "Bonnie and Clyde" rated as the areateat canister film, and io the end, both made the Mu1U1an list.. . altbouab a truculent tactloo in a back booth held out for .. Public Enemy Number One" and ''Th8 Roarinl TwentJea.. as beiDC more representative ot the genre. A Mad.lion Avenue type 1n a to ao below with a tl=bt, aoct f blue denim 1uit wtth 1 vest. who lt wu ieMrally • , al'tu, 'I m l1bt have been Freddle tome bOlleriDi ucl lapel ira~ Bartholemew, allesed to '#Wk btna. that ·~clon" With C&i1 : nearby aa an ad a~ency Gnnt bl.I n•t. Ev l'YOD4l. copywriter, aunested •David 1eemedtorememberthean~ Copperfield" u a aenu.1.D• film chatn ln the WlDdow ad his in:: f ma1terplece derived from a terutlDDOlsori. \ ~ • literary masterpiece, and tbe "The 'healure of the Siena·: ladl'1urprlllndY went all out !Of'. Madu" beat ''They l>ted With : it. Lionel Barrymore, Edna Mae.. Tbelr' Boota On .. tor 10th place In. l ---------------------------------·;-..... '""!'"'~----------..... ·, : 'Oiketa. K•rte'f Ne ., ... 'lk 'fi::r; •I ~-: WratJa'1 A IHepfl hre. 'St•r ... ,,.... .. ~ get t• be ldddl .. 'Tile Alrl~•• ..... '1 Net : bad. ~ .. ----------------------------------------------------~· Oliver, Basil Rathbone and, of course, W.C. Fields u Wllldna. Micawoer, who could forget that. one? The ad man boU&bt a round to tout it. A SALUU SUCEB frotn tbo Kosher dell acroa the avenue brouabt up the worb of AUr-1 Hitchcock, wbo appate0tly ~ bad ordered a Plmm '• cup on the premises, causlne the bartender this over·lhe-eounter rev-: : oluUon jpinst tbe reaultS an-: DOUftced by lleston. "It bad DO : wOQ\en in it," aaJd ono of the all· · clonadcs ol the rucu. Come to ; tblnk ol lt, neither dld Mulllcan'a \ ' way after mt~wben voices ·: were 1Wl heard "GUQP ' Din,•• .. P1ycho " " er1eant.: York0 aad"MeetMolJlSt. Louil".' into the wind boW'Ulll down from the dlrectJmof Camegte Hall. Median Income. Rises $4,000 Awaiting Journey ... w.,....... WASIDNGTON (AP> -The median income of American families was $14,094 in 1975, more than $4,000 higher than five years earlier, new government figures show. The extensive new Census Bureau report gives income and poverty statistics for all 50 stat.es and the District of Columbia for the first time $ince the 19'70 ceO'SUS . IT SHOWS THAT Alaska had the highest median family in· come in the nation, $22,432. It was followed by Hawaii with median family income of $17,770 ; Maryland, $17,556; New Jersey, $16,432, CoMectlcut, $16,244, and Illinois. $16,062. California ranks at $15,069. . Mississippi had the lowest me- dJan family income, $9,999, the report shows. COMPARATIVE FIGURES show that the median family in· come in 1970 was $9,876, the Census Bureau said. Thousands of Japanese cars wait on the docks al Yokohama, near Tokyo. for shipment to the United States. Three days of trade negotiations between the two countries ended with no commitments about the Japanese trade surplus. "Median family income" means that half the families in the state or nation earn more than that and hall earn less. The new report, titled Household Money Income in 1975, 1s based on a new one-Ume ORDER YOURS NOW • • Presley Boom Publicity Right Applied to Case By SIDNEY A. DIAMOND The unexpected death of Elvia Prealey at the age of 42 last Aucuat touched off a boom market 1n posters and other souvenir merchandise. People magazine had a recent cover story headlined: .. Remembering Elvia -lmitaton, fans and rtp-offa launch a billion-dollar industry.'' There is a c-0rporat1on called Boxcar En- terprises, Inc., with exclusive merchandising rights to Presley's name and pJ~ture. Two days after Presley died, Boxcar issued an exclusive license to another corporation, Factors Etc., Inc., covering tho Presley likeness in connecUon with souvenir merchandise. THE RASH. OF lJNAtJTBOBlZED Prelley material on the market wu met by Facton and Boxcar With lawawi.. T~ lint of these to be de· clded was aplnat a poster manufacturer aamed Creative Card Co. In federal court in New York City, the un- licenaed poet.er company•s main defense was that Presley's control of the explottatJ.on ot bi.a plct~ was a persooal right that dJd not aunlve after IU.s death. The legal q_ue.sUon ls ( ) ~~:k1t~ais!~~t~~:w~~ PA~ hi biting the use of the ...,_ -..... ------ name ot likeness of an in- dJvidual for commercial purposes without his writ- ten con.sent, and this ls Umlted to llvln& penon1. District Judae Charles H. Tenney pointed out that a dllferent right is \nvolved ln th• Praley case. An eatertainer or other public figure makec part or hts HVl.nc by Uccoatna the use ot his name or like- ness. poll commissioned by Congress. IT HAS CONSIDERABLY more information that the cur-rent PopulaUoo Survey, usually used as a ba.sia for the figures although it was primarily de- signed to collect unemployment information, with the income datJ a secondary objective. The new survey ii based on 45-minute interviews with 1s1,ooo• households. That ii about three times the 55,000 bousehold,heads interviewed in the survey to ob· taln the 1975 CPS material. Also, the CPS waa conducted ln March 1976, wbiletbeoewaurvey waa conducted from April throuah July of that year. That meant that reapondenla for the new surtey had a chance to refer to their income tax returns for more precise lnCQme haforma- tlon. WITH. THE MORE complete survey technlques, the Census Bureau also found that the aov: ernment has been overestimat, ing the number of poor people ih the United Stat.es by 7 percent. The new survey estimated. there• were 24 million poor' Americans in 197$, compared· with 25.9 milllon poor Americans estimated durtna the same year by the CPS report. • The new survey shows that· . Mi111lsslppi bas tbe largest percentage of ,oor people -26. l percent -white Alaska and eon. necttcut have the smallest percent.are of poor residents -. 6/7' percent each. Over The Counter · tWOUstlncJI NYSE COMPOSITE· TRANSACTIONS llN ' twl Y PILOT A.la . . . . 'Roots'· Save.- Seafch Needn't Be Co•tly BJ SYLVIA POln'U llANY Pl'lOft.B A.BE WASTING mone7 When an qulrrtoth8Natlclul Azcblve1ol•fe"8fal~re--qultesoalya u-Hnt1tun~. · · · l.D'tbe arehlv• an recordl n~ to ptOpil wlac> bw bad de•ttnp wltb Ute U.S. ~; q.,,.., ..._.,In full detalls about a person ci'ucW to~ neearda or merely a name. ·----· _____ ...,.. Here is a guide to use of tbe U'dllves and other loexpenalv• IOW'Cea: -Doa't upect tut I action, Malll cov•rn· f ment neordl lac1' u.m• lndnet. n. Natloul Arehlftl bu reeo.i'dl Of births, ma.rriaCM ...S 1111:~,: u .s. Anttt factllt* from l8M to 191.1, witb .... dated u llte aa lnl. It also hu IOIDe ~ tl...U. _. marrla1e1 UlrouCh llMt, and reptrts ol. ._......_. *' 1949 of American cltneM ab'°'d re-.... Ill r ...... Service pGltt. It will aearcb ~t'eCOrat _..._..._,.. vide blrtb (Dame of child, names ofpallllettee.), WJlatt and death records. Most of the recorda subject to re$trkt.lons at the-. Uonal Arehlvea lD Wa1hlftltoa, D.c .• or the Ge.-.1 Archiffl Dlvt.aion ln Sultland. Md., may be COG1ultad. Photocopies of most are a vatlabl• at a moda'm r... -REQUESTS POR INPOWTIC* ~ ....... hons at foreip aentee poltl macs.-. thma 11,... ._. . may be aent to the Stet• ~"'dalt•, D.C. 20520. Request.a about· earllv 917 '9 ... dresa6d to tbe Ct'ftl Arcbl.-ctl lf......a Ardllwa (GSA), Wuld.nltoo. D.O. IOd. -lnformailcm about otbll' adllu1 n•• ti 1illCll. inarrt.aae and death may be avallatili. hom ~ Bure• « Vital StaU.aUcs, cburcbea, or GtlMr ~ ID t.Y • proprlate lute, county or dt1. To~ a lilretlltillc~ ... =:-~~Cloc=.~:.er:, s~ birth. • -'l'be SaperintendlD1ol~ 11.1. ~ Printlq Oftl~. WNhlldtm, D.C • .., ......... : "Where to Write for Blrt1l md Dl.cb •• .,. •cm.; "Where to Write for Manta~..,,...,-• .,....; UWllJn to Write for Divorce Reeor4' •• ..... -THE NATIONAL ~ 1IAI ~ avallDle censua aobed'ula cad thett' tadntl. c.o,fes 111111)' be bouiht at a moderata co.t S*' roll. Upoe rs cwt. the 1'• tional Archives wUl provide It.I pltbOUUon .. F~ Populatlon Censusee, 1190-J.llO," 1rbicb _,, 'n a roll Jlst. tng and Prices. -Microftlm copies of ceM sfbellloall u-..i.) an at re&iooal a.rchlves bruelael. Wrtt.. U. ., ae Archives Brancbforalistoftbetnaeflll. - -A llatof people •ho do ...... W.r.»anUallle trom the .Board of CertUlcatba ~~Jin llsir.t .HamDlhireAve.N.W., W .. bfn..-.D:c:iiiii ~ 1'be N.Uooal Arcblvee apomoa CIM 4Q Mln' I periodically. Faeta about these propama hom U. om.at Educational~ General Senf-~•· .. tt 111, WuhlDltoa. D.C. 20a. $,ocks Halt Slide, _, Rally Late in Day. NEW YOlllC (AP) -The stoet mubt twmed a lilt lo fairly acti•• tracliq today .tter a WOllll ad aharp .decllDeearlle:r in tbe week. · The Dow looes awrqe oUOIDdUltdall, ~peatet a Jm8olman&ban12po1n1I1'UMda,y aDd WU dowa1»7 ~' ~ early toda.Je.x recovered aomewhat bf allel'llOlllll. The Dow. waa up 2.'3 ,J>Ointa to 828. 70. AJ8 DM. Y ptL.OT f' ~,, ... .A11111.,ttt\ t , .... ,, '1 GoT A MAMG ~"IL 'lCRAtcM•~ -n.l NEW WALNUT c .. ~.~s . ' ,, . ~edneedav. No._.mtiW 30, 1917 JS1D&. STEINtaOBN Dear Dr. Stelaer•••: My dautbt.er bu beea complala.IDf ol betna Wribb' Ured lately. SM la 17 aDd it Meml wm.atu.ral f<W her to llO to sleep so earlv and elve up ctaneet and putl.,. ls lt poelible lt'a due to·· ve1etarian clJet 1be bas lien on for tbe past few m.U.1-Bn. tJ. Dear Dr. 8&elncroba: I have a sis-year-old wbo ii liltlesa. la it· possibly due to the fact that she refuses to take fruit Juices? She is quite pale and our pediatrtclan ~ 11y1 abe bas iron deftclency. - .Mre. T. Dear Dr. S&eblerolua: 1 have 'been bemorrbalial from a Iara• uterine ftbs'old. I bad a byttel'ec· tomy. l'ai aWl weak. k it paui. ble tbere•a aomethlni wroo1 with myd1et7-Jln. Y. COMMENT; I've condeaaed the above three letten ~_ex· amples of. COQlmOD COIDPJaiDt: iron deficiency anem~. Chronic loaa of blood may be a reason. Another, commonly overlooked, ta deficiency of iron ln the diet. DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE · Anothtr kind la found b' cerall e111, veietablet, fruit aod .meat.I. Ont reuoo why your .S.x-nar· old ml)'bave aumla, Mn. T., Ls It '1 true that muy ~setdlans suffer from iron de.ftclency. So do many preenaDt worpen and many lof anta. ' WHAT'S IMPORTANT, of course, ta diqnoals. Is l1'0D defi· clency anemia present? One kind of Iron ls found in red meat.· 4AiAMES fOIUSS nweszo 'ber refunl to tab fruit~~:;',; ·we bow that lliclud1DI C, and 10111e tbh -4 poultry, in· creases the ablorptlcn of iron. Jr 8BB WON'T. take oranae Julee or tomato juice, be sure Ibo takes some poultry or fish. Other. · aourcea ol vitamin C are leafy· vegetables like cauliflower and broccol!. Pertlaps you can tet .Gin BOXED PENDANTS ON GOLD FILLED CHAINS 15" • 17" & 22" SOFA PILLOWS .. 4 GAME VIDIO SPOl1 nLEVISION AOION GAME 9'7 1397 """"' .., ""' ....... ,..... ""' ........... ..., .,.,... .................... '-'· ~ ., ................. ~~tfftw.11 ----••LAI--4.50 VAlUEI* a.... ,.,_ _, •fllllillt tlyttt II tlle _, ,.,..; i-. ...._ aWI & f9ria. Al mfW wltll t ..... ... tf ,..,....,, cttt-..., _...-1 Al -"-' ................. , .... ......,, ..................... , ............. . tic ............. .....,.,........ ........... ... COMPARE ............ , ...., .. ....., ......... ms..itt nus OMI DOIS nALU .............. .......... ............... ' REG.19.97 2 6" "8 ITCASI 15'~ ·3 PC. V1NYL LUGGAGE ·~ 01. IA. llUT CllMI lOTIC* •llUT, APMODl'MA, WOOOMUI LOTIOM .88 HC. m MEN'S FAIDGE MINI FOURSOME GIFT SET Tiit w... ....... ,., ""' .. ·:•11 ..... .... ....... Clllecftel -t.,.cllly 'Y .. U.tt4hMfr'1. Y .. Kodak HEAL11'1 JACK 8"0HAllER 8t9na With ~ton •Movies nt •Boating BJ JWGEllC.UUON Of .. O.U., .......... Hunttn1ton Beach Hlth baseball ptoduct Jack Broham~ baa ained to a three-year con· tract for $300.000 lay wlt.b the Boston Red Sox. The deal wu made official this moraine in Boaton and Broha~er told the Dally Pilot from hfl Vista residence. "Yes, those figures are preUy close. But management doesii't really want the figurea revwed. "Becoming a free a1ent in the re-entry draft was tho only avenue open to me at the start of the season and it waa very frustratmg to play in dilly eo games. "But now I'm with a contender and the coosensua around the SaysAncich I ( St. Paul Still Hasn't Jelled SANTA FE SPRINGS-St. Paul High'a Swordsmen are in the CIF (Btg Five ConferenceJ semifinals Friday night agamst Newport Harbor High at Cerritos College, boMtine a 10·1 overall r~ord and the co-championship of the Angelus League, but foot ball ~oacb Marijon Ancich says bil team hasn't really jelled, yet. "We're getting closer and closer to finally doing aomethln1," says the veteran Swordsmen coach. "But we real· r 1y haven't connected on all cylin· ders. Consistency Is the key and we're notdolna that. Our 10-1 rec- ord ls great, but we have things to do and we have two games left to accomplish that -if we're fortunate." Friday's skirmish with the Sailors of Newport Harbor is a task which starts with stopping the passtng game and Ancich s~a: .. Craig Lyons, the Newport quarterback. Is the taraet. No. 1s ia a 1'ell known commodity on our campus. And we're aware or .Jeff Bitettl and Don Barker Tbty use their helmets for what ~y're meant for and we're def· iD.ltely not eoing to be fooled, we bow Newport can hit. .. Newport doesn't have a Joe Superman, but It is a complete, • cohesive unit. And it has a pretty fair group of blockers up front to protect the pass rush, s tarting with Doug Brockmeyer. "Lyons is definitely the k(.'y to Newyort's offense, he and those receavers-Wayne Kasparek and Frank VencUk. They may be the quickest set of receivers we've eeen, but.Lyons is the target." UCI Notches 62-56 Victory CHICO-Wayne Sm ith and Kirk Christ led UC Irvine to its first basketball victory of the youn1 season Tuesday ni&bt by defeatins host Chico State, 62·56, in colleae acUon here. Smith hit 20 points and had 14 rebounds for the Anteaters while Cb,..t scored 11 and 1rabbed nine rebounds. .' UCI went in froni in the fmt half, taJdill a U-2 edv~tage Jt the out.et and then pulling away • ear.ly in the second ba1f after the bolts hid aarro..._. the maraln &culls polntl at halllme • .. : The netory liv• UCl a l·l rec· 'ord wJth the nut 1ame Saturday : ,U,btatUCSanDleso. UC1'*-l4t)CfltCMce.._ ....... .. ...... t I t U ~1111 I A I 10 1114 .. -..rt 12,A·. t!ttOWltt •lt11 ,,, ..... 111t• : , l_.. ·n • 11 u ~ 1 o i • . • ~-:uelMM,,._tl. St. Paul's guns j nc lude quarterback Tim Cowan, a 175· pound senior who was the Angelus League's MVP as a Junior, and senior runnine back Rick Valenzuela, who among other things, returned a kickoff 98 yards to beat Sunset League e ntry Edison (Huntington Beach) in the first round of the playoffs. "We've got Chris Arena back after an ankle injury," says An· cich, "and that really helps us at running back and receiver " Others in the st. Paul arsenal· include linebackers Jim PaUares (198) and Robert Ybarra (205). linemen Richard King (210) and nay Gomez (198) and secondary whizzes Chuck WllliJ and Mike Lozica. Willig has tied a CIF record with 14 inter(.'eptions this year and combined "'1th Lozica and the rest of the St Paul secon· dary. promises to be the toughest setup Newport Harbor will have seen Utis year. Ancicb says Newport's defense poses problems, stating: "It is not hke four years ago when we played Newport. This lime tbere are several combinations and the different alignments can confu:,e your blocking patterns " St Paul's trump .card . however. 1s Cowan The Swordsmen have trad1t1onally been tough on defense, hurn the oppos1lJon with punt and kickoff returns, don't beat thcmi.clves anct present an outstanding quarterback. "Cowan does one thing b<!tlcr than any of our quarterbacks c1f the past," says Anc1ch "He ('an run and scramble. lll"s a Acn· umc runner who can p·,..,., as he runs Ile 's not a Al'n 1 u" but ht· has football sense and has a knack lo find the open rcce1 ver " The only other meetinJ( between these lwo was in 1973 when St. Paul eliminated the Sailors from the playoffs. 17 7 St.l"•tM-1) IS SL louts t-.ill1 • $<1n"te 12 2' s.nte ~ • 2' C-..rci.n c.ni.. 11 ~ l• P .. y 14 1i l•~"6ne\ • 11 H.,._ 0 Of I• !Mier 0.1 1 14 Edl!IOl'I 1 Ill Pli.. )I. 1 11 $<Wll\H1ll1 (oO 1' IV A Stars Move To Fountain Valley ,.. ..... TAKE THAT -Atlanta Flames wing (;urt Bennett <right) takes a hard check at mid-icemld·iceTuesdayntghtbyMinnesota North Stars Fred Barrett in Nation-I Hockey League first period action. Min- nesota prevailed, 4-3. INGLE WOOD Pete s11•rn kowski rifled in a pair of 1•1•a ls m the first period· to lead t lw Los Angeles Kmga to ll 4·2 National Hockey League victory ovu Washington Tuesday night :ind extend the Capitals' winless streak to 17 games. The KinJCs who are unbeaten m their last 10 outinsa against w ashlngtoo, bunt a 3-0 lead In the opening 20 minutes, then held on to turn back the Caplt•la, whole record of 2-15-S iJ the worst in the NHL. ~B-;aien attempted to ~ure former\ IM Angeles Dodaers fleld aeneral Walter Alston to manage the Angels. "I talked to Walt durina the World Series," lraid Patterson, a fotmer bodgers executive now serving 8S speetal assistant to Aiagels chairman or the board Gene Autry. "Walt aaid he was happy doing what be was dome ~d that was that." Ahton. who guided the Dodgen for 23 years before retif. inc art.er the 1978 aeuon, ts still oo a $35,000 annual retainer with Los AnReles. • Sophomore center Richard Smith, ... two I~~ tar Weber state .Sth one ralnute .re. maJnin1 to send tb~ "mt into overtime. . · ~•Ad1'a~ BELGRADE Yugoslavia - Spain defeated Yo&o11avia 1..0 to- day o• Ruben Cane .. Coal ta the· 7oth m.1$e ud qUallfied for the World CUp )Otctt cbampiceabtp nextyario:ArgentinL • RiabtwtilgluanitoofSpalnwu apparently ·1erloual~ ltiWed when a boUle throri,. ta.. . standsbltbimClbtbobeed. en unconsclous ancl bled tiO the head but hi.I condfti<>n wu im"' medlatelytnown. OM.Y Pl\.OT • . ..... ............. _.. ....... SAILOR SPIKES -Kar~n Olsen (83) spikes a balw\ as teammates Marie Lundie, Kris Pulaski (15) and Kori Rush (3)) watch. ~efeQding for La1una Beach are Sue ·Wetzel (3)) and Ul14a Robert.Ion 1U>. . , . Sailors Oust · Ll:lgun8 CdM Girls Rally to Top 1\fira Costa Newport Girl. Gain Volleyball Filud. By HOWARD L BANDY Of u. o.11r ~ ... tc.ff Karen Olson and Kori Pulukl of Newport Harbor Hitb put tbe. final two poUits on the board to overshadow a brllllantJ1tdJvidual performance by Nancy Tresselt o( Laguna Bee&h in a comeback bid that fell two points abort Tuesday night In CJF 4·A 1trls volleyball playotr action. As a rdult, Newport Harbor, the No. 1 rated team in the playoffs and Sunset Leaeue champion, dethroned defending CIF title bolder Laeuna Beacb.ln three games, 7-1~. 15-8, 15-13, in action at Fountain Valley Hitb. Newport Harbor wtll meet Corona del Mar In the CIF title match Saturday nliht (8) at Hun· Saddlehack Tabbed to.Win OCC Tourney Saddleback College'• basket- ball team is favored to capture Orange Coast College's seventh annual Miles Eaton tournament, which gets under way tonight.. The Gauchos, 2-0, tangle with LA Southwest College at 7: 30 In ,tonight's lone game. Three eames are on tap Thun •. day night. Imperial Valley bat· ties Los Angeles CC at 5, Santa Rosa takes on Fullerton al 7 and Orange Coastfaccs Phoenix at 9. Saddleback haa poate<l vic- tories over Fullerton and Lolli Be~h CC, but Gauchos coach BtJlldulll1an says his club hun't played toitl potA!nUal. "We've been disappointed \t\th our play. Maybe we expect too much~ maybe we're not 11 eood a1 we t.bOUgbt we were. We hue some new people, so we're trying to blend them toielher with our 'people from laat year," 1ay1. llullltan. The Gauchos will start aopbomore1 Tim Shaw, Rick McElrath, Tim Knieht and Cralc Stahl alona with freebman Artie GrHn. Green ta the ludlne 1corer C28 points>. followed by Tom Uoy (28), Shaw (24) and Me Elrath (21). JG Grid tington Beach High. CdM ta ••1 wu a little worn ~ secoed seeded In the playoff• and they tied lt at a," N~ coach is co-champion of the Soutb c.out Judy FOil Mid ol tb•fhW 1ame. 87 A Da11J l'tW Writer Leacue with Laeuna Beac:h. "But after lrfuie IA&DcH* bit her Coron.a de1 Mar Hl•h School Tresselt, the spark .of coach serve into the net, I felt tbe lirll llrll volle)iball team came from Georee Carey's Lallm• Beach would wla tt. for bes 111d tieblnd lD the third and d~idinl outfl$ was the leader of a them1elVe1.Andtbe)tdi~ 1a01e todefut Mlra Cotta HlSb brilliant comeback by the In the openlq 11me. ~ • .(Manatt.an Beacla) 9.14, 15-7, Artists. Down' 12·1 lD the tblrd made few ml.stakes ftl1e Uie • 11·12, lD the •·A CIF aemtnnala and deciding game, Tre11eiu.t-New port playert a~poareel 'l'uetd!l.Y _ nifht at Fo1mtalD the Artlats to a 13·13 Ue bifbre nervous and overanxlooa. 'lbe Valley Hllb. Olson blocked a shot for the Wtb Tara turned thlnp 8.l"OUPd ill tbe It wu a tea~. ocy with point and Pula,skl duplicated the second game to aet tbe staae for Susle CrdtM itDtn8 ettm1 for feat for the wtnD.Lna marker. thWbe fin11ale.; ,_,.,_ 0 ,___ d .... _ Cheeyt JC>tibjtoa, ld Wurta e &AU~ aoul4 en UIC and A1leeia BemOQaen and oc-"We had everytblnc 1oln1 ffl' Pulaski slat.era' Kori aDd K1'ia culonally aettbil lo. • 1plte ol ua ln the flnt game "Carey 1a1d. ed the Sall Trea It, Un-her OW1l. "But we have lull;{ lD the second ~:c Robertlon.0Sue wZ1 and . The win puta the Cdll Sea sa'!le all year ~d tVe did it again Karen Lynch were outstanding tn Kings in the CIF title 1crap for to~igbt and ~lilted too lone in the the comeback bid anabroua,bOUt the second atralgb.t year. But lb.ls third tame. the three eames for tb"I Artttta. time, !nltead ot Mlouth C<>ut Cage Outlook Eagles, Mo"114rChs· To Be Contenders? Free lance n<JWcomen Irvtne High and Captatrano Valley Hlf)l figure oo sett1DI the 1round work for. future . campal1n1 wblle established powers Mater Del <Santa Ana) Hilb and Estancia (Costa Mesa) meh wtll be blddiq for league cbamplonabipa th.La up. com in& baaketballaeuon. While Mater Del and Eatancla are concerned about findlne replac«:ments for · araduated starters, ltvtne and Caplatrano Valley are worried more about. ee ... bls tJu'oujh the campaJan allft as tftey field their lint ever var,.ty baket}>all aquada. Following are rundowna on~ foulteama: Estallela another title la El Modena mp, which. bo&Stl 6-8 Blll Trumbo. lffaterDel Lea1ue battle Yt'ltb La1una Beach, it will be • neilbborbood brawl with Sunset kin1pin,, Newport Harbor. Newport dethroned Lacuna Beach 1D the other hmlfinal Tuesday nl&ht ln thrff 1amea to satn a berth oppoalte coach Kathy Bulmer'• Sea Klnp. The ftbaJa wtll be. pla1ed at Huntinltba Beach Hip SatuiUy ni&bt (8> followin1 the l ·A (1), 2·A (3) and3-A (6) t.lUe games at the1ame1lte. In tbe aemltlnall, CdM loet tbe firat 1ame and fell behind, 4-0 ln the third and decldln1 enCOU!lter. But the combo of Jobnatoa and Crone put the flnt point on tbe board u CdM ran off a 1trtna 0( a.ven stfaiaht, then combined' talentl for tJw winblnl poiAt with Crone aeulnl ud Jobmton •Plk· lDC tile b9ll bard to Che fioor, Once the Su KJ.naa went on top, ibey n4'Yer looked ban althouiti the battllnl Mira eo.t. aguad pulled within two poloW at 14·12 and kept~M from aeortna on four atraicht 1ervtcoa before Cron• aervedibe Wfmlb:ll polnt. There Wll., toint outltand1D& floor p•a, b1 the .sea JUn&I to keep alive ralllea on ·at ·leat three occaJonl lD tile 11.aal 1ame when it appeared a pol.Dt wu· loet. FOOTBALL I VOLLEYBALL I BAS.KET~LL LOS ANGELES-No atrqer to the Cll' water polq pla)'off•, Newport Harbor HJ1h wllJ bO bid· dinf for Its fourth atrat1ht ap- pea rance In the 4·A cham- plonablp same wben th~ Sailors take on Lone Beach Poly tonisht (1:80) ln a aemillnal cluh at Eaat LA Colle10. . In the other semtfinat 1ame, · defencttna cbamplon Sunny Hllls (Pllllert(lQ) will meet top-seeded Mira Cotta <Manhattan Beach) at 7. Winners advance to Satur- day nilbt•a (9) flnals at the same lite. Thia ii the 11th consecUUve season Bill Barnett has guided Newport Harbor into the playoffs aa Sunset League champs and It is rare indeed if the Sailors do not make the finals. Newport Harbor has won four ol the last 10 cham- pionships and finished runner-up on four other occasions. Tight defense, a lood counter attack and a bal&Dc~ offense are the Sailors' trademark. But Barnett expects a wlde·open af. fair toolaht . "It lbould be a hi1b-scoring game," ht aaid. ''Lotl of 1hool· lng,llota of ntn·and-1un. Tbey score a lot of points and l 'm sure we will, too." The Jackrabbits of ff.rat.year coach Steve Shaw revolve their offense around Alan Moucbawar -and Mark Quincey, tVbO have both scored over 70 1oals. Poly haa lost just twice tn 23 outlnea tbua far, falling to Newport, 7-8, and Mira Coeta, 13-9. The problems Newport pre-sent.a, aQa Shaw, are bic oaes. "They're blg, very fast, well C!On· ditioned and a well-run ball club. They have a lot of experience and that could be a factor." Barnett 1uma up Poly in two words: "awesome offense.'' Newport's starting lineup will be the same aa It has been all year-James Bergeson, Jetf Young, Georae Robertson, Tom Ta)'Jor, ~ Grier, Jeff Fults and &oalleChria Fonyth. GWC Blast& Foe, 123-84 Golden We1t Colle1Je, abootlnl eo percent from the floor' stormed to qaay 123-14 basket· ball vlctoi'T""over vilttlna Barttow Collete Tuesday llltbt. · GWC'a RUltlen, behind the play of Todd Zirbel, Gary San· dera, WW fletcher and Dave Strlcklln, Jumped to a eo.43 halftime lead -then really put It away wttb a lM spurt In the opening minutes or the second ball. In ~at spree, Stric:kUn hit 9 of the 19 potnta. Zirbel flnlabed With 21 polntl, canning 10 ot 13 from the noor. The 6·5 sophomore al.lo bad l3 re- bounds. Stricklin had 11 potntl and 8 u- •lata •hlle Sanden, Fletcher and Harold Chambllas 1cored 12 each. Golden West hit 52 ol 87 abotl. The Ruatlers return to action Thunday, facing Cotlece of Ute Canyons at 5 iD the opening round of the Moorpark toumantent. ......... (1DI ...,.,. .. ....... 4 J t 1t P'Mtlt i A 4 I ,,,,, G«r.tlMI tlt4 tt 1 • • O\amblla • 1 J n 2 0 S 4 '.J91'1111n& 0 4 I 4 6 o 4 12 Glbttt I 0 l 6 I 0 1 • 8,_11 2 0 I f J04 61Md• Jiii, Ttcilt 12 1t a tD Holftllflt: Gtldtll W • • t • 6 0 • 4 t . llack 'Bite 6, .Gets Teelinical. I' • • • ..... ..._ .. ,,,,,~~·, ,,,. '• • • f •,, •• • • • .. ., • .. •• " • • .. • ... ~~·~~ ......... ~.~~··-~··~-~~ FOOTBALL I MISCELLANY CAGE •• • C-C ••Pro• Pa1e 82 wou.Jd be no coat.a aJlowed in the locker room." A •enao oc humor will be 1.1 useful commodity for the younic Vaquema, who expect to be: m quite • few laugnera this seai.on Unfortunately, lt'Vll\e wlll ~ on the receiving end of most of them. .. We've got our work cutout for ut," admits Stewart, who will try to mold Irvine's first varsity team without the benefit of size, experience, depth or time. "We're very small and un- fortunately, we 're not very quick," Stewart said. "But we hope to make up for it by being fundamentally sound, playing a very strong defense and press-ing." Of the 10 players on the varsity, the best appears lo be 6·2 Dan Monteverde, who was a standout tight end in football. Andy Odden: S 10, is expected lo provide the Ooor leadership while Pete Miller, 6-1. 1s an out- side shooting threat. Stewart says Jim Rudy C6·0>, a Cine leaper with good moves, could be one or the top sophomores in the county once he gains some experience. ' The above four are expected lQ be starters. Jim Weiss, 6-3. a transfer from Illinois, lends some needed height, as does 6-1 Russ Davis, the most improved player. The rest of the roster Is comprised of guards Dino Caporuscio (5·10), Wayne Kresber (5-9 ), Chris Mangan (5-9) and Brian Joyce (5-9) Capbtrano Valley Starting rrom !>Cratch w1lh a young, inexperienced team 1s a new feeling for Capistrano Valley coach Paul Smith He's accustomed to better thmgs In five years al Ramona High in Riverside, Smith won three lvy League titles and compiled a 10~-32 record. Last year his varsity was 26·5 and advanced to the CIF championship before los- ing to Corona del Mar. This year Smith looks al his schedule and rnlln}bles, "We'll be lucky if we win one or two games. There won't be any easy ones for us," Only three senior!> tire on the squad. Only one has varsity ex· perience Bob Charles-and be won 't be abl& to play until January Charles 1:. a transfer from El Toro, where he averaged 20.2 points a game, but surgery on both knees has interrupted his career. He sat out the football season and will miss about h!llf the bQsketball campaign Carrylni the load will be guard1 Bobby Schubert (5-8 sophomore) and BUJ Skiles CS-9 junior) and a lot or forwards, since Cupistrano Valley doesn't have an outstanding big man to fill the middle. . BILL HOLST ~•yerofYe•r Checking Prep Grid Sites For Playoffs Two CIF football playoff games will be played in Orange County Friday night with Newport Harbor High 's Sailor!> and the Villa Park Spartans trek king outside the county. Sunny Hills (Fullerton) High, upset winner over No. l seeded Santa Ana Valley in the Southern Conference, cl4shes with Los Alamitos at Anaheim 's La Palma Park. And at Placent1a's Valencia High, No. 1 seed Neff High <La Mirada) tangles with Esperan.ia lAnaheim) High. Newport Harbor vies with Angelus League co-champion St. Paul in an 8 o'clock game at Cer- ritos College in Norwalk, while Villa Park is at UC Riverside, where Riverside Poly's Bears await. ... .. j ... c:...1 .. -. Lovol• , .. , • ., V• LM 41106 110.1) •t Ml. s.n ,.,.. lon10 Colleve (II Newport Harbor 1 .. 11 ¥1 St Paul Cl~I) •t (M rlto&Coll-111 C...Stel C...lentK• Lii Poe~ 1 .. s1 •• Lii M1111un CT·;J.11 •1 \lettr•n• ~l•d111m 17 301 Arc..s1e Cf.JI v• Compton 110.0-11 •I Aemw .. 1 !>tao111m 17 ;JO) 1evUiw11c..i..-. WM'f Hiiis C•'ll vs ~ AlemltM 110·1) ., Le Palm• Pri (1;:IOI v1111 P-<•11 •• R• ... ni• Pocv 111,.> ti ul Alvt,.ICM C1 ;20) aa1tentCIM'-• Lyn-<•21e1SouthP-110 11 Ura1 El Ren<JIO ll1 .. )v1Ttm91e City et 4Tc.oillHIGfl 17.JOI ......... c-ter... V.el11•1t 1~11v.C>..-n1en1»11 etC11..-eo.19 11~:.C, <•JI._~ <•21 •I C1ltul Co4Migt CSetwdeyM7.lOI ..... A actllY• CM+tf'-.M. • Lompoc t ll.01 vs 8twr1v Hiiis 1-.21 •I Silft!llWI l'ltld Ill RIO/Olew If.ii alAnlelo t Vellt'I' 110.1) 7.Jlll c.tral~• Neff 110.0-1) VS ~enJe 17·1·2) •t Vlfen<t• Hl9n O:JOI H"""llll l•t.t) "'' ~ SIM 110..11 11 H-C:.Olleoe O:Jllll Daen-MoHMtel11 Cell'-• Sent• Ynei O~lat Puo Rabi•• 110..1111.Jllll Notre Dame <•21 n BIO llelr 1•21 ti VklOt Valley Hlllh 17:301 • Bill Strickland, a 6-1 transfer from Ohio, is bidding for one forward spot, along with 6-2 Bert Fenenga. Cam Bryant, 1 a 6-0 freshman, could also start. lltM-MMC...-e 'l•lt MO<ltclelr Prep 110..1) •I Rio 11onoo Prtl) l._11 17;30J Basketba11 . 10 Rustlers • Selected All-SoCal _. Ten Golden West College foot- ball playen have been honored with first wllt betths on the All· Southern C'1,ifornla Conferenee team select«! by circuit coaches. Topplni the list ot Rusu~ is quarterback Bill Holst"' wh shares the conference'• player-- of-the-year award wt\h Santa Monica qua.rterbUck Keith Let . .::c Goldeft W.t landed •ix othir fint team olfensive berths. They included linemen Mark Case, Tom Formica and Eric Huth, place-kicker Pete )'JQJ'in and running backs Steve ~l and Loren Micklin. First team defensive honors went to down lineman John Stem mer, lineb~cker Rick Shirley and back Mark EasUand. Santa Monica, which finished behin9 GWC in the conference race. had 10 an-conference first team players-5ix on defense. ~ All .......... cat<:ellt#~· ,'"1Tt-Of1-TI Ronfer'911,,.IOHMdO ~ Marti C.., Oeldefl WHI L Ttm ,ennlu,0....11W ... L a; rlc Hvtll, OeNtll w .. L lony~.w..-.~ L Donovan Y-o, ..,,ta Metuce G• a111 -ac. GetNti w..i U& ltellll LM, Senta Montu NII l'htl Emerd,(4,,.. .. Ila 51t .. "-eM,~WHt ... Lero~ll"'Oo49e11WHI WR N1teyG<it,Seftl1Monlce v. H Joe hcaon, LA So..illwut V.R CJlllO\let-,AloH- l'lt ,elt Flerlfl, ~ \IOHt S.C.. Te-att.111a r l Joe 11-11. LA Hen.o• L Loreouo llucCUMr, LA H ... bor L ... Gaw•~. o.IMll -L Frid Hlna, LA So4.illl1¥1Ht L Ttm~eoue.Nlo~ 08 Ptter J-t. Rio,,_ Q8 ~ltvellmtlll, LA H•tl>Or All Jon Nitro, AIOHOftOo H B M1~e PO<Ulle, Senta Monte• All SOC> *CC•no, !.ant• Moruu y,, A Jell Boyo, LA Sout,.,,..11\ v. A Gecwve F...,.,.,, S..t • Monie• V. A Oa,,. J.1,..,.1,A HarbO<' ~~T .. m~w no So. 2Jlll le. m 1e. m i<r. 230 fr. lH l'r. 175 k. 180 So llS $o. IU Fr. 1tt le • llO ~. llO f-r. llS ~ 1'5 se.. 20> fr -!oo. w Jt. 2AO fr. ru fr w ,., l'iO So ltO So llS f'r Ito So 111) So 11s So 110 So. l Mlltt81'~5->teMonlca 290 f'r. .: Meffflc...tlon, *taMon1ce 190 So. • Mike JeOIOf\. Sift<• Monlu 22S So. L lr15 Hew1<1r11, LACC 2U So. L J..,11 s.._r, o.... w"t U11 1e. L Ike Wlllleml, !.ante MontU 225 So. LP Aotl<yCr~. AloHol>do 210 fr. Lil ao11 u11 .. 1, lilftltMonlc.. no :.o. Lii Mike Mofvoy, LA Harbor 200 So • LI lll<kWrlef,o.IWl!Wnt Jt5 le. DI! Wiiiiam bleckburn, l.ACC 110 1-r. 011 John c..1.,.r, C.ypru• Ito So. D• Merk £ut-, GeloNft WHI JOI le. Ob Jvll ... Hemlllon,!>tllte Monl<•"' 1.0 So. h<-THmO.fe•M l r ony c.emp11e11, C.vllt'eu l heo V.llltems, LA SOUt,,..eit L T1m CNN. Alol1Clndo L ttnh•r---..~w ... L Jim S..r,Crmr•u •' L6 ~rect&olltf',Cypr"' LB J•m .. U1c1Ny,LA~nwu1 LI V.lllllltl Mlklltll, 1.ACC LB c.lrotT1ir111er,S...1•MonlU oa Erk......._,LAHM- DB ~.__,,SMCC OB JOdJ~,Rlo....._ o 11 L•rrv McC.0...tchle. SMC.C Co-pl•Y9f'• ef IM ,..,-HOii! encl Lwt Pro Scores Meti-......... A-....... Cle11tl.ild 111. l.MAAtelff.IOI Atlante IOI,...._., 101 Detroit IOI, M1'1weul<M tt Ph11M9lllfl(e Ut, Sen Antonio 117 OllQOttll NtwOrte-•1 H0111ton11t1,HtwYor111a 0.11¥er I IS, SMnle,. Golden St.eee 110, New Jerwy 101 Ptrtl1M10l,PflCltfllll" N.._.IMcUyW..- TCH"OntoJ. Cl...,.._ 2 • /lol\OlltrHlt, Pl~ 1 MlnntMlte 4, Alllnte J Pllll-.MlllfllU, Vencouwr 0 L .. A1191'-4, Weatllngtoe' l'O So 210 f'r 210 "'· -s.. 200 Fr. 11S Fr 20Cl So. llS fr 110 So. llO Fr llS So. .... -· 17J s.. •AIT Co111m1>1e tS, CCHY •s Holy cr .. •M. St. Al!Mlm'U7 Lefa.,.tte ... YeleU Menfl•ltMlll, '-"~•l Prep Wrestling ,.. Barron Leads SoCal, 96-66 SOU TM CreltM., 10, ...0.-0mefle JI Dule 110, WMllll'IQtOft Col .. Mempllls5t.1t,~SI. 74 St. Jef\11' .. H Y ff, V.,......11 W $. CM9tl11e St. '°' ...,.,.,.,...,. M to • to .. I . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . ... ..... ~ ................... _ . I .d'I ' MIDW111T llllMltWKI ... o. .. _,..'5 H. De1utt•St.M.~e,.W1111.eo IOVTMWHT POMONA -David Barron hit 25 and PauJ Anderson 22 points to lead coach Paul Peak's Southern California College (Costa Mesa) Van1uard1 basketball team io a 96-68 victory over haet Pomona-Pitzer Colle1e here Tuesday nllbt. "My utfaftotlon "8a '*'t lllUl'td by the P10Pft who cart." · . H. fHe1St.71..SC Mery'" Tou'1 T .. uU,Oll.._..7' T eu'""'ll"8tall •. TC:U 1' "AltWl•T UC lr•l11e'2,0llc.St. Si C"-<n.,, 71, ~ L~111161 Moflt-k 7a, ""9t leuN .. He•ecle-LM V.... 7" ,..,,.,._N7S ... .., ..... _ ,.,.,"'*" ......... .. H•• Mule• tU, Ht• ... ,(, Hltlfl1111191* N.Golor .. 17,~711 St.Mt""'41,0..7~ Seti D,_ to), LA\1-74 Solltllfffl ~Col ... 1tomc1M-.. 1t1er .. Wt9ff St. ft, C..I Stitt (LMJ .. .ell) '6,0T. 1978 CARS I and TRUCKS e 't'be ~ry evens the Vfn1uanta record at 1·1 with the next 11me -1 ho1ue Friday, D~e. • aaainat Cal PoJy. (Pomona). ltlCll..._,...'=,~ '-1D J Cle,ttfl I O ..... ,..... " . ,...,...., t l J t • ft • 1 • RONIUADITT Slnt&An8 Or1nge County'• Of deaf llncolnaMerpury Delltratflp ... ~ ........ ... .. . DAILYPILOT Field Limited ~·.ln Manzanillo · ·FJShing Boat Set l\'B Ensign Aviawr •1 Navy Ensign Stephen A 1m graduate of the t>. LJllie, son or John A. :j..illie of 601 Lido Park ;J)rivc, Newport Beach, !bas been designated a ·naval aviator. University of Colorado, with a bachelor of arus degree, he joined Ute Navy in JW'le 1978 • .. .. . Court DeCiares Meal ti ·~ Allowances 'Taxable' . : WASlllNGTON (AP> -A worker's )-egularly paid meal allowa~ces are )axable income, the 0 .S. Supreme tcourt has ruled in a decision.that will l!'ean millions to the Internal tf\evenue Service. : The court's 7·2 vote Tuesday is a :legal 8'ld financial· setback to some :io.ooo state police trooper• across Ute ""Country who face payinc federal in· ¢ome tax~ on such allowances. /THE DECISION ALSO will .affect ~ny other workers routinely relm· ;:J>uraed for meals t*ten while on duty. ". In atudyln& the case of a New te~ey lta.le policeman, the JusUces ere told by government lawyers that. heir decision would affect some po.ooo trooRen in lS states who collect 'Jneal allowances totalina $10 million a .year. Thos e states, aside from New aersey, are Alabama, ArkanHI, • <;olorado, ConnecUcut, Idaho, Iowa, ~ ... !firefighters' IJreathing Gem Vaih Testing_ I~. LIVERMORE (AP) -MOit ot the ~reathlng eguipment that's supposed ~ protect flrelllbten hu f alled 1D ?.est.lna at University of Callfornla ~aboratories. ~ Gail Gardenu, part of a research ~am at \]C's Lawrence Llvermore ~boratory, sald. "The equlpm~Qt <9un 't deslped for flrefi1h.UG£ Fir. ~epartmenfa an belng aold a pa~kac• tot &oodl tn terms of what the et&UlP. ,.ment tuupPosed to do." Mi111ouri, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota. Texu. WiaconaJ.n and Wyomlns. SIX STATES PROVIDED state police with such allowances but dis· continued •be practice in receat years. They are Georela, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota and Mississippi. .. Without a specific exemption !>y Congress for cash meal allowances, the court said in an opinion by Justice William J . Brennan Jr., such al· lowances are income as defined by federal tax laws. "Wblle the Issue centered on state. paying their police omcers, the same rationale theoretlcally could bave been used for all employers." a Justice Department tax lawyer sald after le.ar'litn2 of the court '1 action. ''The &ates mlgbt have been opened if thecfurtbaddecided the otberway." THE DE<JSION DOES not affect reimbunements made for all aQd lodllb• for a worker who travels on company bullnesa~ nor does It affect "sporadic meal retmbura.menta" that ~Y l\Vorkers receive when worklrij overtime or on a temporary u11sn111em.. • Members of the milltaty are ex· empt by' Jaw rrom payin• JaXu on meaJ ancUaoualng allowancet. THE \1.8. COAST Gua~d alftlady baa the authority to forbid a IOU> sailor fsom leavtn1 port on an ex· tended cruise if lt ls determined that the craft ii oot seaworthy. Erlcaon Yachtl of San· ta Ana bu annou,ncecl production of t.b• Ericson-31>, reputed to be a. big, fut family com· petition yacht 1uitable for .ract.ni or cruiatni". The boaJ\::S designed by Bruce for racing under the JnteroaUoul Offshore Rule. Mldltt OcHn Racina Fleet llld1et ~ean Rae••• Au~clation mea,ure· ment..Wes. The Boyal Western Observer Yacht Club commodore, Lloyd FOlter. la -:::=======::-I an1werin1 the IMCO demands by re· quests that merchant vessels be re- quired to~ave more strin&ent regula· Uon1 for watches and lookouta. f A.SWAN, Egypt CAP> -"Death on Ule Nlle," ll'OUStd one member of the CfflW lllmlnt tbe ttar·stuclded murder . · mystery, "will be the death of us all." Filmln1 a movie on locaUon is seldom euy. and filmlnl one under the bot EIY'Ptlan sun, even with such profeulolials u Bette Davia, Peter Uttlnov and Davtd Niven. presents its own problem: palm trees growin1 where they shouldn't, horses refusln1 to 10 where they should, and Russlan Mf Gt of the-Egyptian Air Force zooqiing ove-r~ead In the middle of a love scene set in the 1930s. The BriUah team producinl "Death on the Nile" la nearly through six "eeks of location work ift Egypt. The 5 million JDOVie, which al.so stars Mia Farrow, Angela Lambury, Ma&tle Smith an4 Olivia Hussey, ls expected to be releued about the middle of next.year. WHILE AGATHA CB&IBTIE'S fie t onal detective, portrayed by lnov, Is trying lo find out who kll d the rich young heiress, played by for r American model Lois Chiles, ~ p p men and set dressers scurry around Aswan, 500 miles up the Nile river from Cairo. "You don't just 10 out and buy anything in Egypt," a prop man says. "Ev~ryt.hips hi)& to be made. You want pole1ffor the boat, you buy two· by-fours. Then you look for an Egyp- tian carpenter and try to tell him you wanUhem made into poles. "You want palm trees, you make palm trees," he continues. "Never mind that there are plenty of palm trees growing all over the place. They aren't in the right spot. The director wants them here. So we get six dead palm trees, anchor them six-feet deep in the sand and fasten fresh fronds on top. All day we do this, and at6o'clock at nlght, 12 hours before they are sup· posed to shoot the scene, the director says, "Good work, boys, but I've de· citt-?d I want them over there now'." THEN THERE ARE the horses. The film is set In the 1930s, with several scenes al the old Cataract ijotel, perched high on a rocky cliff over the Nile. Four decades ago, a horse·drawn carrlajte could have pulled up in front or tbe hotel. Not Ull'S 'SO. COAST PUll IHSall-. .... mJ . .• ' ' .. _,. .. ... \, ..;,. : ¥ '# I , I , 'If• • ~ t • • • I "' ., • • • ' . ......... -.......... ~ ..... ······ .. -.------ 10 today, with all the new conatruetlOA. ButthHcnJ>tcalla for hon-. "So I aet these two horse carrta1es, and I finally coax the beasts over the rocks," a set dresMr aays. "The art people take all th• wicker furniture ._._,..,,_,.-,. off the hotel terrace, replace it wttb period stuff we had specially made. Then they don 'l shoot the scene, so we have to do it all over again ne~t week." The heat and the dirt of ECYI>t prompted the producers to brinl their own doctor, an Encllsh specialist lD tropical diseases. So far, none of the alars bas become ill. The more adven- turous have sampled local rest.aurantl in Aswan. "IT'S MUCH CLEANER here than It was l.n Morocco and Tunisia," said Mlas Husaey, who spent aeveraJ weeks ln the two Nonh AfriC"1 na· lions portraying the Virein Mary it ..... ,... Franco ZefftrelU 's "Jesus of Nazare'tb." Telephones, not food, worry the east mor~. "I really don't like telephones," said Jon Fineb, who plays a young Communist lo the mov· le. "But they are nice to have. Here, I can 'l call anyone and no one can call me." The scenes 1hot at the Great A~tress Valerie Perrine chats with actor Pyramids near Cairo had even more Paul Shenar during the taping of a three· probJemstbanthoseatAswan.Inthe hour mutti~al drama for television, middle ot a horseback love scene at "Ziegfeld~ The Man and His Women." Miss the left front paw of the Sphinx, Miss Perrine plavc one of the showman's mis· Chiles and her movie bridegroom, ;.,. Simon MacCorklndale, are all setfor a_t_re_s_s_e_s_. ;.;.;..:;:~------------­close-ups.~:_ _ . _ DlllEl."TOK .IOHN GuiJlermin Jeans back ln bis ch~ under a b(a sunihade and signals the actors. tn Movie ·Scripter Set mid·kisa. a doaen military jets fty LOS ANGELES (AP> over in V-formations. -Waloa Gs:ees h~ been The Egyptian sulfragis, Qaen and signed by Lorlmar boys who tote props and cold sort ProducUoaa to write the drinks to t.he film c~w. shuffle and 5 c r e e n p 1 a y f o r talk. ''Elb:abelh " from the Assistant director Ted Stl,U'lls n 0 ve1 by J e 11 l ca makes a long plea for silence. COD· Bamntoa ol a teen·a1e cludinl wtth, "Come on boys, it'• pt· girl with supernatural ttng awfully noisy." The Eaypt.tan In· powers. terpreler reduces th• sl)ffe& to one Sinaer-composer Paw word, "uskut," meanln1 ''shut up." • ---------:--- "'Julia' is a gem. Jane Fonda in her fineSt role ... Vanessa Redgrave is glorious. Jason Robards gives one of the year's mos! memorable performances. , ~Sball .. ~ . ' Simon will be bo.!t of his own special on NBC on Thursday, Dee. 8 ... Cenre Dan~va jQins the cast of "National Lampoon's Animal House" .•• . . . . . . . . ; MMC*'°•--~ IONY DIDftlLO CN1 '"" RIN wmt DICK A JANl1N1 •O. ...... IOlltt 9IMVl1I OM OODICNt '"" 9UMIMI UllY.,_. """"" .. ,..,. ........... MAND "=ti AUTOC'NI UtMYDUmc.. . .,, . .. . . . .. .... . . . ............ ' BUT, SAID FINNBY, bl.sot It all Wl'ont. "For one thini. tbe USt was tee damn short. He left a lot or ladles Ol&l •• · :The mu.sic wu eompos~ by Dennis Kine, famed in Britain for writilll t,be theme music for XV. sbow1. Finney said he ~ many of die songs Jut year dtirtn1 re UrN1a for "TamburlAl.ne" at. the new N.u.aJ Theater. "1 bought"ia ib}'IDloC ·~· tionary and iot dowft to lt. '* be Ukl "I sot two lyrics llDiahed and Dennls put them to mualc. It wu mattelous aeelng the concept iate to 1 •al do1ln and wrote som~ more." ~ • .. } I ) ' .. \\'1 .1>\l .~H.\' tvENtNo t:OO 8. e (I) al NEWS 80NANZA "A Horea Of A. Different Hue" G TH! AVEHGEM ''The Forget-~Knot·• 1:='8ECLU8 "The Town That Wun't" VILLA ALEGRE 5: 16 8E8AME 8TREET 5:30 BEWITCHED "Solld Gold Mother-In-Lew" CD AOAM-12 "Kraeh'' 6D HODGEPODGE LODGE ··s~one'' a.-oo. C88 N£'W8 ee NEWS e EMERGENCY ONEJ A vlaltlng fireman caoaea je8IOuay when the s>WarMdlca take him on the round• . • BA8KET8AU. Detroit Pistons vs. Los AnQeles Lakers from Detroit (delayed) • THE BRADY BUNCH When Greg can't find a friend tor a blind-date, ti. talk• Peter Into poelng 11 a high IChOol eeniof and dating an "older" woman. m THE ROOKIES The rooklel protect a contro- veralal Army general recently returned from Vietnam. G FOODS FOR THE MODERN FAMILY "Pie Making" 0 A8CNEW8 8:15. PLEDGEBAEAK Regularly ICheduled program- ming may be delayed due to pledge brea)(1. 8:25 e OVER EASY Roy Rog9r"I and Dale Evans (Part 1), Cyra McFad<Mn; eenMl- ty. "Meals On Wheela"; the llte- 1tyle or an elderty P~ago Indi- an woman. (R) 8:308 MOVIE ***'h "In Hamfa Way" (Part 2) (1965) John Wayne, Kirk Douglas. An oot-of-commlaalon Navy man 11 ualgned to c;ap- ,-ture Important •nemy·hetd 1 ltlanda. (1 hr., 30 min.) • MY THREE 80N8 Robbie Douglll hll a·~ with hi• gtr1 wttlle baby-titting for friends and haa to take the baby home with him. Ql!) FAMILY POATAAIT "StraJned Kn9t: Crt.11" • Cl) C88 NEWS , • (II MERV GAIFFlN Gueata: Mich ... Caine, Tom Smotti.n. 1l00 D NBC NEWS ' 0 UAR8 CLUB fl ABC NEWS • ILOVEUJCY ''Th9 Beneftt'' • ADAM-12 The otncera Initiate an lnvestl- Q_9tion ln1o medlc8t fraud. :..: 9 MACNEIL/ U!KMR REPORT · m YOQA WITH MADELINE : Cl) TO TELl THE TRUTH :1!30 D SHA NA NA : U NEWLYWED GA.ME •. G CUSTODY AOULElTE : An examlnetlon Of the fate of .... ... Final Concert Bing Crosby is joined by David Bowie for a blend of "Little Drummer Boy" and "Peace on Earth" on Crosby's last TV special, to be aired tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. children In a divorce cue. m THE BRA.DY BUNCH Greg announces to the famlly that becaUM he II now In high school he lhould be t,..ted like a man mld demanda that he need• privacy. g) LET'S MAKE A DEAL • L.A. INTERCHANGE "Snapshots" m STARBOARD (J) $128,000QUESTION (II FAMtLY FEUD 8:00 8 (J) RUDOLPH THE AED- NOSED REJNOEER Burl IVM narratea the animated trials and uttlmate triumph of the lhy relndMr who Wll the laughing etodt of ell Chrlatmu- vtlkt. (R) D NBCMOVJE *** "Earthquake" (1974) Charlton Heston, Ava Gardner. Loe Angeles ta destroyed by two melllve trtmora which wreak havoc on both the popu- lace and the terrain. 9 MOVIE *** "Roed To Morocco" (1942) Bing Croaby. Bob Hope. After being ltllpwred(ed, two men heed for Morocoo. (1 hr .• Ratings GuJde t-lft -,_ 11«ordi,,. to llO• off!Ge etl-.ca Mcwlit• for TV .,. ludeeel boy. a11k ) • 11 • • -Excellent • • • -Very Good •• -Good • '• -Fair • -Poor 30mln.) 8 ®' EIGHT 18 ENOUGH "The Retum Of Auntie V" Tur- moil 1trlkN the Bradford hoosenold when Tom's flam- boyant ai.ter (Jania Paige) glvea the newfl/wedl the dovt'rl payment on a !Mnllon. m CAROL BURNETT ANO FRIEH08 Gueata: John Byner, Franctne Beets. 8) MOVIE **'Ii "Wake Me When lt'a Over" (1960) Ernie Kovaca, Margo Moore. A. addler i. almost court-martlaled for boltdlng a r9IOl't hotel on a radar poet In the Far East. (2 hra.) • SPECIAL • ·-· -·-"Snow Goose" Paul Galllco'a World W11 II tale of a young girl (Jenny A.gutter) and a crtppled artist (Rlehard Harris) who real· lze their vulnerabiUtlee whHe saving a snow QOOM. 8D MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING "Sklee" 8:301J COHOENT'RATION m °"°88-WIT8 G OVER EASY Aoy Rogers and Dale Evans, Oyra McFadden; aenlllty; ''Mems On Whteb"; 1he llt. style of ., etderty Pepago lndlo- en woman. (A) 9:00 IJ (I) 8#.o CA088Y ''Meme OkM ~·· The . Crosby fWntty Is joined by Davtd Bowle, TWtggy, Aon Moody, Stanley Balcter and London'• Trinity Soya Choir In celebrating the hoUdaye tn ., ancestral English manor~ on 'Trial' with bis 250 men of the 7th Cavalry in the Montana Ter· ritory? What if be bad lived to tell why be chose to attack a superior force of Indians? THAT IS THE theme of 'The Court-Martial of George Armstroot Custer,., seen as a Hallmark Hall ol Fame presen- tation on NBC, Channel 4, at 9 p.m. Thursday. Jt was adapted froin tbe book by Doualu C. Jones. "In playing the part I tried to • 0 aTAR8KY t. HUTCH ·~ Ftx" Wr.t e ~· mobltV• gft1fv lllld beccw'M9 romant101fly lnvolved with Hutch, 8~ ha9 to go °" a ftantic teenm fQr ..... abdUCted pattMr.(A) I H!W8 . G£T8MART Mex .nd 19 ere Pluoo-t Into an ~ dHlle thlt wtll lttoek .nem Into a five "8t lleep, e ~EDABONEW8 .... , ABC News ' • ---.~..:.....;. __ lit= __ .. NTERTAINMENT I MUSIC I MOVIES No IOt'n' tJl srud opera wW diJput.t \tie fact tbat tt'• tztn~• ly dllfte\alt to ftDd the ktDd tJl fem al• Geor1ea Bllet bad tn 'mind for ~ .UUe role when be wrote Ida be!OYed '4Cann-." She bu to M lbe klnd of vereaW. alto wbo ean wrap bv vocal cbordl around tome ol the moat cball.,sn, -and m..,.,.. ing -artu In opera. · And k'• Yitai for her to _. a vamplq femm91 fatale w)lo can fell lb• Mpleaa Don Jote -and every otber male on Ital• for that matt.er -wttb a ftlck ot the eyelatl* and a twitch Of wbat should be abapely aecoutre- menta. belt. wbo II tbe automatic choice ot the \M•w York Qlty' Opera Company w-.•a "Carmen"iaOllthe ... a. tbey love her tn N"' Y_. u. "B>undentand, they lov~bel' . Covent Garden. We HW wby weekend when the b.lp. alto from Erlaland ~ the Anaeles Music Center by ttorm. ROW.UD WAS A 1plln.dtd Carmen, fiery and aen1uo"9 when she was on a lusty bqnt lot lovers, yet incredibly toncter those momenta when lbe 1av• her beut to Don Joae ud then to .. .... HEALDSBURG, CaUf,,.. (AP> -Jlmm'y Ste"art. wbo baa played oppoilt. beauUful womeQ like Grace Kelly and June Allyt0n, bu no mlt1lv· tngs now about co-atarrin• with a do1. · ••1 gtve \JP ~lilt to compete with Lassie. You have no ~e/ he Hid wryly at a ruaUc winery here where tceDes from "Lusie, My Lu.lie" are beinJ filmed. "I )lave no qualms about playin& second fiddle to ados." Stewart la 69, a veteran ol 11 movies, and ls a hou1ehold face. Laale, 2~ and making bis, yes, bis acUn1 de· but. ls also a household face, but only because he look• just like the five ancestors who preceded him on movie and television screens. -1'08 BOTH ~IE and Stewart. the picture ls a comeback. Slated for llaster release, It is the first step In a revival of Lassie, the dog who made Amert ca 's tear ducta everflow. The collie has been off the silver screen for 28 1ears after six movies that soaked handkerchlef•and made millions. ABC also haa signed with Wralher Corp., which 1s producing the ioovie, for a new Lassie ~levialon series to beain neJCt fall. The old aeries ran for 19 ye an until 19'13, and went through tour doas. The current Lusie, son of Hey-Hey, was at first a bit uneasy under the lights, but "shf'• a real trooper now," says co-producer Blll Beaudiiie, Jr. Ever)'body on the set calls Lassie "she:' althoulh they alllawnrbe'anot. PEMAU DOGS JUST ABl'!N'T as pretty became their coatl are always aheddlnf, says Beau4bfe. Ptt,11 they're amaller and have less stamffta. So female olfsprtn• of the Laaaie family, never to be at.an, are rented out for breeding. A• for Stewart., he's ln his first lead role since "FQOl '1 Parade" ln 19'71. In "Lassie, My Lassie," he ~Jays a ldndly vintner and a grandfather to two orphaned cbildrtt) and their collie. lt'a the clalllc Jimmy Stewart rote. He wears an •aina'tedora, hi. own tbtU. &luses and his pants legs buncMd up around hla ankles. "I've. ~ft. In this thing for 45 years now," Stewart aays u 1low aa molauel, b1a lower Up quivering as lt'a wont to do. "Naturally, the parta arc fewer and1'ar between. ••J BA VE llY FAMILY -we travel a 1ood bit. 1 keep myaelf busy in alhorta of ways. "It's difficult because of age, you know. The parta, u I say, Juat don't come alona as often u they uSed to, and they'll be less and leas, you know." "Lassie, My Laaale" ta atrictly a family movie. The most risque scene la that ln wblcb the villain - played by Pernell Roberta of Bonanza fame -sua- • .. • • • • • ' • • t ' ..... ~" ....... ~~~.,.~',I, ....... , I.,, •.• f ••• '' . . . ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . -.. .. . . . .. .... . . . . -. I Fu. ...... "' ........ , .... . . . .. . . . . DEAR PAT: What tf any\blnf, ca be done~ get. rid of the cloudy nlm that fonm' on 1Jaaaware after r peat.ed wuhln1 la bard nter? W.F., Hunthil\On BQch Yoa.r problem Lt DO& mew. '°"'ally, prevlou reader auuea&Jou ••1 laelp. tr; dJ.tferent ctt.dt- , waaber de&erJ~ tome wort better •• odlen hi eoatrolllaa mlffral .se.-au. Alwar• -• a ttaae aaeat •·fO'lt ....... , CUqald If..,... a dh· penaer or ID powdtnd ,,.,_ dlat cu be attached to Ute aP.per rack). • . • Lhne-Awa1" baa beea recomm,ad,ad by. readen as an ncelleat remedy. Add the &llM9Dt re· co••ended to the dlllllwaaber (do not use de· ter1eat> and wash dllcolored itasses, puulac tbe· macblne tb.roap Its regular wab, rtue aa4 dJ')t C)'clN. Bnremel7 lllea97 mlaeral dfPostts uUUf caa be removed bJ soakhlt 1laSM1 la a haU·a-'·•aJr mli1ture ol ammonia and water for two or Uaree day1. DEAR PAT: I ordered and paid for :•su~ . Gulde To California Wines" oa Oct. 11, 1971. February l ~elved a let* from the publisher statln1 that the book would be delayed until Apri • due to Wneas and producUon difficultia. I •till ha- ven 't reeeived this book and m}' letter requestAni im· mediate delivery or a ref\mcl has remained un· answetedfortwomonlhl.HelJl R.T., HunUQ~'Beach Wine Conaulidtl of Callforala has llsaed a r.u refund &o )'OU following eoatad '1 A VS. Tlae Su DleCet P'lbllsbe(' explalned t.bat futber piodacCJoD delay• a.ave cauud a revlied maJUq d8'4t l' thla book. Orden now are aelMduJed for • I ID, December. • • + •1 I . • • .. t ) t ' I I 1 l Latkes with strawberry sauce make a wonderful Hanukkah treat. • '9 I • • -• l , . . . . . . . . ••••\ ,,, ... ..,. ..... ...................... 4 .... 4 --... ~· ................ he ltOl'f of Hanukkah 11 oae of the moct charm.l.nl \D the rich tapestry Of Jewilh beritace. It tella o( ancient Jewish victory over Greek oP- pressiotl and the reatoraUon of the Sec:Ond Tem· pie of Jerusalem. The Jewa needed pure oll with which to re· Uabt the Menorah ln the temple ti&at could rand on- • ly en.uib to bum tor one day when tt would take et1ht days to Qlake pure oU. ll!raculoualy. the atnall JUI they found burned for elght days. In memory~ th.la wonderoQa event Jewilb famWea the world-over observe Hanukbh by burnlnl. candles for eight Di&hts. Latkes, or pancakes, la ~of the festive di· shes aerveddalriDa this joyous b0l1day. Lattes are made with oO to symbolize the cruse ol oil which. aupportedtheflameidtbeTempleof Jerunlem. ., Our 01ttaae Cheae Latkes are served wttb a aparklina Strawberry Sauce to tempt both children add adults. ..t tor'l'AGB CBc;ESE IATKES · 2 eap, separated ~cuPlllilk 1 tablespoon sugar Y.t teupoon salt W. teaspoon vanilla 2 cupe (1 pound) creamed cottaae ch~e ~cup unsifted all-pu.rpoae flour Salad oil Sour cream In large bowl combine eu yolks, milk, sus· ar, salt and vanilla; beat qnW blended. SUr in cottase cheese: blend in flour. In small bQwl beat en wbJt.es Ul\til atilf but nqt dry; fold into cot· tage cbetse mixture. In laree skillet beat IA lnch of oU. To fry pancakes, drop tablespoons of mix· lure into hol oil; fry until golden brown, turnil}~ once. Drain on paper towels and continue UDUl all mlxture is used. Place in crepe pan an~ keep warm over canned heat. Spoon Strawberry Sauce over pancakes. Top with sour cream~ YIELD: • J a boll ind thickens. Slice reserved strawberries and ddtoaauee. YIELD: lcu:pua~. POl'ATO IA'l'KF.8 3egfl "' 2tabl•poonsflov · 1 teupoon salt . 2 C\IPS "1redded pired potatoes (UH lf&tef with 'll·iDcb (holes) ~ 1 tablespoon f1ne1Y ar•tec1 on1an • Saladoll • Apple Topp~ In medium bowl beat together ens. ~ and salt. Add potatoes and onloD. In Iatc• UWtt beat Ila lncb OU. To try potato latke1.· drop potato mhr.tu:re by I/• cup lnto bot ciil. Fry -1 aolden brown on both aides. Dr...._ CJD~~ towe1I aDi conUnue cooklna unW ell mixture:ll used. Plac. in crepe pan .and eover with ApPle Topp~. Keepwarmovercannedbeat YIELD:4aeninp. APPLE TOPPING ~emarprine 3 pooas honey 2 tablespoons water ~ te:' lemon juice Dash am on 1 large GoldeA Dellclom apple, paftCl ~ thinly 1Uced Melt ma.riarlne ln large akillet. Add honey, ' water, lemon juice and cinnamon. Add apples; cover And cook 5 minutes. CBEESB-aAISlN IATKES 2 egas. aeparated IAcupwater 2 tablespoons suaar 1 teaspoon salt . 2cups (l.pounct) cottaiecbeese ~cup unsifted flour Y.a cup ralalns Peanut oil servlnp. Beat together Uae. eet Yolks, water, aup;r and aalt until well mlxed. Stir ln cottage cheese. STRAWBERRY SAUCE Add flour; sUr until thorou1bly b~endetl. Mfx·tn Y.a c&q» water ralalm. Beat the ege wbltes unW stltt peab Y.a cup ora,nie Juice form: fold into cottage cheese IDixt\are. Heat ~ 114 cup sugar -about ~ to "4-inch depth of peanut oil ln a lara'e 2tablespoona cornstarch heavy skillet. For each latke, drc)p -bout Ila cUp 1 plnt strawberries, hulled and washed cheese mixture into bot oil. Fry on each slde.unUl Place water, orange Juice, augar, corn.starch &olden brown. Add peanut oil to pan as needed'~ and all but 6 whole strawberries in electric keep proper depth for fr')'inf. Drain lattes well blender container. Puree and pour Into small on absorbent paper. Serve hot with dairy 8001' saucepan. Heat, sUrrlng, unW mixture comes to cream. Matea 12latkes. . . . . . t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lii1'.~~~~~~"I°~~·. J&ek·in·the·Box ~ MeMor11iug t 1 The early crowd at the fast food places . 1 are growing for breakfast in. a minute. t Chuck MacGregor Of Laguna stops oft for a qLick breakfast at Jack In the Box. Mlche/11 Gatley of SanJtJan downs a Breakfast Jack. t j l . ......... . ! . . . . .. . ~·---·· .... .... " ...,,, • , ........ '\.·~-.. --,., ..... -.~-..i\ ........ .q .. 'I .. .. .. .. • 19 I "' Fruit Cake in s Robe is baked Inside a pastry crust. It's Fruitcake in a Rohe Spirited fruitcake has 1001 been a traditional favorite for the holidays, but when it b baked in a "robe" or delicate golden pastry it suddenly becomes in· teresting news. This is an easy accomplishment for you lnven· tive cooks, and a spectacular "show off" dessert for creative hostesses. You can add versatili- ty to its popularity also, for this fruitcake can be served several ways. Sliced, as always, or warm or cool as a puddinl topped with a choice of thin Brandy Butter Sauce or Fluffy Sherried Hard Sauce. The fruitcake itself ts richly flavored and superbly mellowed with a fine well-aged California Brandy and robust Ruby Port. FRUITCAKE IN·A-ROBE rrwts and walnuts; mlx WdJ .• Spoon into pastry lined pan. Fit top crust over batter. Moilten edges and fold back over top of cake so the fold is on top of the cake (not over rim of pan). Prick top pastry all over. Bake in a slow oven (300 degreea) about 2 hours, until cake tester com• out clean. Let stand in pan 10 minutes, then invert onto wire. rack to cool. Makes 1 (3 quart) cake. PASTRY: Combine 2 cups sift· ed all-purpose Oour, l tablespoon suiar and 1 teaspoon salt. Cut in % cup butter or margarine. Add about '1\ cup cold milk (sufficient. to make stiff dough). Roll out about~ of the dou1b to a large circle to flt a 3 quart pan or mold. (This will be about the diameter of the pan plµs twice the hel&ht>. Carefully fit pastry into pan, eas- e11, lemon juice and peel Until mixture boil1. Add brandy. Maka about 1 ~ cups. FLUFFY SRERRIED llABD SAUCE Y& cup soft butter 1 lh cups sifted powdered suiar 2 tablespoons cream sherry Beat all inved!enta t-0getber until fiuffy. Mikes about 1 cup. Ba.\NDY C&ISPS 5 tablespoons butter 11.a cup brown sugar (packed) 1 tablespoon light corn syrup ~cupbrandy ~ cup sifted all-purpose nour 14 teaspoon salt \'6 cup flnely chopped almonds · · 21.., cups diced candied fruit 1,, cup sliced datea l lh cups seedless raisins ~cupbrandy 1/4 cup ruby port Pastry ~ 3eggs lcupsugar . ins out fu1hless • ndes. Trim off excess pastry, leaving about " inch overtian1 au around. Roll remai.Dlnl putrJ to circle about 1-lnch wtaer than top of pan to use as top .erust. Combine butter, · $ugar, com syrup and Brandy in small saucepan. Heat slowly juat unW butter is melted and 1ugar .db-·. solved. Remove from heat and cool au,btly. Stir in flour, 1alt and almonds. Bake 2 cookies at a Ume, dropping about 1~ tea· lpooDS batleroatou,hUJ~ baklna lheet for each, atu1 allow-- tq QQple room for apmadlq. Bate la moclera\e oYeD (350 deer-ea> 5 to a ullnute1.Ju.t vn1il ll&btl)' brOwnetL RemoYe from oven )and let ltand 1 m!Jiute. · Then, quickly loosen eds• With spatula, and rc>ll around the ban- dl~ of a wooden spoon. If cookies ruffle at edfes when they are l001ened. allow to stand a few seconds loa&er. If ~ey cannot. be loosened eaally from th' bu.m, sheet, return to oven for a tflW seconds. Makes 1" to ~ docell cookies. dependin1on11.Je. ~ cup soft butter 1 cup sifted all-purpose nour lh teaspoon baking powder >h teaspoon salt Ya teaspoon ground cin· pamon •/4 teast'OOll ground elov . 1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts Combine fruits, port and bran- dy. Let stand an hour or longer stirring ooculona.J.b'. Prepll{e pastry and line pan. Beat eas and sugar untll ll&bt and fluffy •• Beat in soft. butter. Resift flour with baking powder. salt and 91>ices. Stir into eu mixture. Add To aene cake as a P\ldd!DI: Cut 1lice8 ol warm or cool cake, · Serve with warm Brandy Butter Sauce or Fluffy 6berrled Hard Sauce. Or, be daring and serve • this uausual fruJ,tc ake-pudd.ina "double sauced" With a litUe ol botbl BRANDYBtrrrERSAUCE 112· cup butter lcupsugar 1 egg, well beaten 3 tablespoons lemon juice lh teaspoon grated lemon peel ~cupbr"andy Cook and stir butter, suiar, ppetizers? k "Cheese CllEBSE PASTJlY SANDWICHES lcupflour \4 teaspoon aalt ~ teaspoon thyme, crumbled a tablespoooa butter · 1 \'9 cupe grated monterey jack cheese 5 tablespoons dairy sour cream le",*ten i,.f. cup frated provolon• cheese Mix flour. aalt end'tb1m4< Ort in butter. Mtx ln 1 cup jack cbeeM. Stir m 10Ur cream. Wort with flngu tips µnttl evwy. Inbred. '.l'uro onto UgbUy flOU1'9d surface: Knead lightly into; smooth ball.: Roll out to ~-inch· thlckn · . C.-into 2-lncb rounds .. , Pl.Ce oo ~ battDI sheet •. Brush ~th beaten ell. Bake in. '21 de~cmta :$ sntoutei or untll U1btly browned. Remove and cool on racu. Mbt rem~ \4 cup Jack cheel• With provolOGe. Top ba1t the rOiiDdl tJa.e.roundH:teu• · poou Of cbeiille mlxtafe Heb.•· Cover with renWnSDf rOwdl. · SbOl'tly Ware Hmnl. place on' baking lbOet. Bake ba GI 4epee oven aboUt "8Wtltii at: JUlt ~tU cbeeao J>egtM to ~ Mahl t ~osen taDddbel. J Be-v;erage8 Wit;tl a Piinch MULLED BO LIDA Y PVNCR 1 can <•• 01.) Plne_appJe Plnk Grapetnut Julee Drink ' cups cran~rry· Julceeocktall • lcupwat.r " c\ip firmly packed brown '""ar ~tlp .• alt -2 teupoona whole cloves 2 cinnamon aticka, broken in pJecti1 • ComblneJulces, water, more niacin, more vitamin B.. ·t · o" vi anun • ~ brown auitit and all\ lari• saucepan. PJ•c• clovH and cinnamon plecn in cbNMclOth f.Qd Ue. Heat to botlln• &ni5\ almmer isa nilinltea. PINEAPPLB.OUN<;E NOG •• I cupa Plaeappl• Oran1e Julee Drlu. chilled 1 qU(U'teunoa l Ptnt ftnll1i lee cnam, ~~ lqredlata wstb mixer • . ' • -' ( l t .. . I l I .. U ')toa w to have a ho day but )"OUr apace ls Jiftllted and your pat llsl Jona. opt ror an open bol.tff. It'• a relatlvd1 •lmple way to entMtaln a 1ilea· ble crowd, ., the 1uesta come and 10 over a ~or evtrJl •ours. Just aet ou~1 liltl4irs of t'nlbble" food and bl~ wl brlmmtni wttb holiday ' cheer" 'bat ean be roplenl1bed u ~ed. Tbe patty will JTactical· .&, take care of Itself u guests )Jelp tbemlelves from the hollday array. Sugeestions for the refresh- ments -deviled eegs, crabmeat· topped biscuits, finger aandwicbes and holiday cookies tre elven below. Plua a recipe for , Teanoe -a creamy rich vana ti.on on the eggnog theme. DOUD.\ Y 1'EANOG ,6egp $ tablespoons superfine sugar 3 tablespoons lemon flavored instant tea 1 (6 oz .) can froaen cranorange eob~ntratc, thawed \\ii ~aspoon nutmeg 1 cup heavy cream ,,_, cup rum or few drops rum 'xtract DHhofsalt Chlll bowl and beaters. On luch speed, beat eggs unUl frothy. (;radually beat In sugar, Con- tinue beaUna until thick and lemon colored, about s minutes. Combine instant tea, salt, (ranorange concentrate and nutmeg; stir until tea ls dis solved. Graduall)' beat into egg oiixture. Beat in heavy cream, t.ben rum Chill in covered jars Pour into punch bowl and sprinkle with nutmeg. Serve in punch cups or stem glasses, and V>rl~le With additional nutmeg. Recipe maybe doubled. Note: If . . . . . I • • • • • CAVIAR EGGS CJ shelled, bard-cooked e111 ~ cupmayonnaase 'H teaspoon salt Daib of white J>Opper 3 or 4 drops of cesterahlreaauce * dfOlle Tab~o aauce ~~ teaspoon D~ mualard 1 tabldj>oon •riiPped chives Red caviar for tarnish Cut eggs in ball lenglbwtae. Car.fully remove yolks with. teaspoon. Combine yOlb wtth1e- malnln& i.nsredlept& except caviar. Mi weU unW 1mooth. Refill hollows in whites land ar- range on aerv.ln.g platter. Garnish wtthted eavlar. . CRAB CAN APES i cups ~arM bilcwt mix ,,_,cup water 1 teaspoon,ancbovypaste About 3 tablespoons butter, sortened 1 (6 oz.> can crab meat, drained and naked 1 tablespoon minced green pepper 1 tablespoon chbpped pi· mien to ' ,, . 4 tablespoont finely chopped ' celery • ct tablespoons mayonoatae •.c.i teaspoon Worcestershire sauce l'4 teaspoon Tabasco sauce Combine biscuit mix with water 1ccordin1 to package directions. Roll ~·Inch thick and cut with 2-inch cutter. Bake ln450 degrees oven until lightly browned, about 6 minutes. Blend anchovy pute with butter and spread over hot bllcuitst Com· bine crab meat -with remabuni mgredlen~nd&lui a teaspoon qn . ~ . . . . . . r • • • f • , • TEAcalSPS ~ cup butter, softened 1 cup packed brOWD su1ar legg ,,_,teaspoon vanilla 114 c~ unsifted all·PUJ'PC)le fiour t ~ teupoons bak.lnt poWder I/.& teaipoon salt 2 teaspoons lemon fiavored instant tea ~ teaspoon cinnamon Red or green colored sup.r Cre.am bQtter and ':Jr.! together. Beat In en and v unW lliht and fiufty., Mlx ft· malnlng tngred~ta together ex· cept colored aufar and •Ur into creamed t:Uxture. Cb.Ill at least• hours or overnight. Form into small balls" about '4·1nch diameter ana place 2 Incises apart on buttered baktne sheet Flatten with the botU>rn of a etw dipped in (lour or a floured fork. Sprinkle with colored sugar. <The dough may also be shaped into rolls and sliced Uk~ other refrigerator cookies.) Bate t.n preheated 375 degrees oven Wltil done, about 8to10 minutes. , • ' • f . . . . . .. · .... ·.-::: • , We Welcome USDA Food Stamp Coupons , Tow=!!!!!~~~~C. 49° 2$Margar.lne 490 Nucoa Stlc:k ............................... 1-.. eta. Boneless u.s.o.A. s Choice Beef ... Fu~ Center Cuts 1·7> . Shoulder Blade Steak lb. , ,,, ,,.~ ........ . ..,..:-.._..:.;;;I ,,.,..,,.,,,.,.P", r• ~ • • .... ..,. ... .. • .. I .,,. .,, ..,. ....... i • • Thls Cbriatmu "uon. wby m a k e compared to t be le hopped nuts nOt try 10UJ' hand at presentlnl Renalssarlce creation.a, they're H at oraqe JU.Ice \lnUt hOt but • 1our family an4 friends with one of the moet beautiM bollday not bolJini. Pour ov r butter, flfta that Clow with the time anct baldJigs to set on a Christmas ta· sugar, oranre rind, aalt and effort youputlntotbena. SQrPlhe ble. Flavored wlth the fresh, spices in a tarp· bOwl; cool to all with delicious and leSUve 1parkllnt tute ot orance. lukewarm. Sprinkle yeut into Oran1e Ouiltniu BNad.s maCle juice nNn-Christmas Breads warm water and It.Ir unW d.l.s-•ltb fresh «Mle:.· You cu Cle-• .:"'·~~ -· • ·---., ··-···-solve(!. AM. to bowl. Add bHten algn theM breadatn a number. Gf of eplcea. candled trults and egp; ·mtil'~ell. Beat 1n 4 cups ' holiday abapea Cbnatm•• 0~~ breads are made witb flour. Stit in rat , candled tree, atan. or a braid. Tbe11l t that tb d h isea and fruit axil nuta. 81 d ID enoqh of ehine with Oranae Glue af\d can· re•• so e ous r reai aiJllng 4 cups ftoua: to make a Several cookies can be made from basic dough. Basic Cookie The merry month of fun and feasting begins early in December with the bustle and ex- citement of a busy kjtcben. From traditional dishes for family din· ners to spttial recipes for enter· taining and gift giving, holiday •cooking gets an extra measure of attenUoo. And of course, what would Christmas be like without cookies. Cookie decorating buffs will be detighted with the limit- less P9$Slbilities from a batch of sugar' cookie dough. Here you can parlay the basic dough into Christmas tree sandwiches, bar cookie vatiations topped with an orange &laze and drop cookies decorated with a chocolate top- ping and then sprinkled with toasted coconut. non pare.Ila or chopped nuts. BASIC SUGAR COOKIE DOU GB. 311.a cups umilt.ed flour 11-:. measuring teaspoons cream of tartar 1 measuring teaspoon baking ~oda 1 measuring teaspoon salt 1 cup butter, softened 1 cupsugar • 1"2 cup firmly packed brown sugar 2 meas uring teaspoons van.Illa extract 2eggs 2 mea1Juring tablespoons milk Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In s mall bowl, combine flour, cream of tanar, bakin& soda and salt; set aside. In Jarae bowl, com biQe butter, sugar, brown sugar and vanllla extract; beat until creamy. Add ens. one at a time, bea~ well after each ad- dition. Alternately blend in flour mixture with milk. DROPCOOUE VA&IATION To basic cookie dough, add de· sired amount of red food coloring. Dl'Op basic cookie doueb by rounded me asurlng tea· spoonfuls 2' · apart onto un· gtease<t cookie sheets. Bake at 3'5 degrees for 10·12 mlnutel. Cool on cook.le abeete for one minute. Remove from cookie sheets, cool cookies completely. Dip tops~ cookies into Topptna to<COat tbM'oqbly. Place on wire racks, set over waxed paper; sprmlde with touted coconut. non pareila or chopped nuts and allow to set at room temperature <a bout 15 minutes). TOPPING: Melt over bot <not boiling) water, one 6-oz. pkg. (l cup) aem.l·sweet real chocolate morsel and 1 meuurtng table- spoons vegetable shortening. Remove from beat. Makes 7 dozen 2-lnch cookies BAft COOKIE VARIATION Pfepare basic cooki~ recipe. After blending ln flour and milk stir in one 6-oz. PkJ. (1 cup) but: terscotch morseJa, 1 cµp currants and 1 mea.su.riD1 teaspoon mace. Spread batter hito a greased 15" it 10" x l" baking pan. Bake at ~ dt!grees for 3S minutes. Cool completely. Spread with Oranie Glaze. Decorate with candled cherries, if desired. Cut into S" x l ~ .. ban. ldakea tbirV 3" ~ l'AI" bara. - ORANG Et GIAZa: In small bowl, combine 21~ cups sifted confectioners' sugar, S measur- ing tablespoons milk , l'h measuring tablespoons corn syrup and 11,~ measuring tea. spoons grated oranee rind ; beat well. SANDWICH COOKIE VARIATION Pnpare basic sugar coolaie dough. On a ligbUy flpured board or cloth, roll doueh 1/16" thick. Cut 14 dozen ·cookies, usinc 21,',"-3" holiday cookie cutters. Place on ungreased cookle sheets. Sprinkle half of tbe cookies with crystal sugars. Bake at 375 degrees for 6·8 ,minutes. Cool completely. Spread half the cookies with Chocolate Filling usin1 l ' measuring teaspoonful for each. Top with· remaining cookies pressingnnttl fllllng show3,. • CHOOOIATE FIUING: Melt ; over bot (not bolJinl) water, ooe 6-0z. pkg. (lCup) semi·aweet real chocolate rnobele. Remove from heat. In small bowl, comblneone 8-0z. pkg. softened cream cheese, melted cbocolat., \4 cup alftecl contectioaera' augar, t me..-. tng tablespoons milk, ~ meuur· lng teaspoon orange extract and ~ measurtni te= Wl; beat A unW cnadr)'. • " T dozen 2~ ".a·: IUl,twich co0kt61. died frultomamente, ud-,-easlly ~fe~~oftob:::! 'I::: aottdOUlb,,'turll'out toOoUred .becomepartoftbefestl~ities. onereclpe.Onetblrdofthedoup surfaee1Uid'lhead un l amaotb.: Holiday breads date back to la used to make stars which are Form into ball and ce ln • uc.lent tim• wben they .,,. formed with a atar shaped cutter 1r•aeed clean bow ; Jlabtb' 1unounded by 1upenUtlon and Another third ls Uled in malrJDI a fo:!t8 ~J,°P.Ji le!"'1t/1 .. later b,y religloua aymbols. ~ Christmas tree 1baped b~ad. ..,ar~m "..ta-• ~d ..... b'l · i:!:u~ were baked Jn the I.ha~ of Thia is easily dOllt by formina \ "' .. .-... un '"" Jn ._., anlml.la as ••crlftclal breadi to the dough lnto a Jons rope ana 2 to 3 hbun. doup out onto be 1y111tbolically offered to the then folding It into propealveb' li1bt1~ flOu?ed Jurface; ·~ eodl. Others were buried with abol'ter loops. Tb• brald·ahajed dOWtl and knead llabtl)t. l>ivtde the dead either u offering or • bread UHS ~ remalnin1 dOUlh into three equal parta. food to austa1n the dead on their which is formed into three thin Stan; Roll out_... of douab 44 journey. Later, eeriain ·breads ropes. The ropes are slmpl7 inch thick on a ll&titlY f10UNd became associated wltb braidedandtWtedattheends. surface. With a 3-incb star cut· particular holld~ya. Since the ter, cut out 2' at.an. Place oc a' European peuaqte ate coane ORANGECBBISTMAS greased J)aklJl8 abeet aad let rise black bread claJlY, they looked BBBADS in a warm place unW doubled. 30 forward to a bollday event wben 2cupeorangejulee • to'5 minutes. Bate ln32Sdeane they could dine oo white flQur .. ~ cup butter or maraartne oven for 20 m1nu~. breads which wereftl'\'ed oa1y QD • % ~paugar • l'Me: Shape ~ of doueb ~ a these special days. So, holidays • dl tablespoon grated orance rope about 30 tncbes long. Form were anticipated with ~at joy rm lnto a tree •bape on a snasecl not only fot their rellatoua lteUl>OOllSalt baking sheet. Start with ODe end significances but a1ao for the-1 teaspoon cinnamon of rQPe ud make a stem and the special breads that •ere part Of 1 teaspoon ainier /,_ baH of die tree~ then ~ thef~stivemeal. 1 teaspoon nutmeg foldiq the ropetntopJ'OIJ'fllSlve-ln Renaissance days, b1Qn 2 pack.aces aetlve dry yeast ly aborter loOJJs, endibc w.ltb a were 10 Influenced by sri.ndloee \4 cup warm water curl at the top. Let rise in a warm arcblt.ectural ltylea that tber 2 eaa, beaten place until doubled, about 4.5 competed 'to see wblcb of them 8 cupe sifted all-purpose minutes. Bakeia325deaneoven couta make tbe most compllcat-ftour,divlded for45minutes. ed and Intricately dee.rated loaf 1 cup ll&ht raisins Braid: Divide ~ of dough into of bread. Altbougb Orn1e 2 cups chopped mixed can· three equal parts. Shape each Christmas Bread.a ar~ simple to di«d fruit part Into lonl thin ropes about 2' I , I t • #.. ., inches Joni. Braid the ·three ropes, l~ the ends &o seal, and place on areased baldnl sheet. Let rise in a warm place unW doubled, about 4$ minuteL B•ke lo 325 depee oven for 45 minutes. To decorate: While atnl wann. drlnle bread wlth Oran1e Glue•. For the Christmas tree. ornamente may be sbnulated by aurroundinl halved candied Nd cherries with pleees ot citron. For a star at the top, use quartera of candled green cberriea. Decorate tbe braid by aprlnkllq grated orance rind over th ataze. Deeorate the stars wUb candled fruit; to use the atara ea Christmas tree ornament.a, make a bole in one point with a cake tester or skewer and make a loop with red ribbon. Yield: a lar,. loaves of bread and 2' stan. ORANGE GLAZB 3~ cups confect.loners• suaar a tablespoons soft. b\ftt,er or 111ugartne 3 tablespoons «ante Juice 1 tablespoon grated oranp rind • Blend to£etber all inpedlents • unWsmooth. • - . . Citrus Soup Nibble t I A Tree· A sausage tree is fun to make and an unusual focal point for a festive Iuffet table. The wide election of sausage pro- ucts available give you * variety of color and ~xtures in addition to Eeat eating. Add to the reativity of your tree by aking salami or bologna cornucopias, t olls and olive wraps. (rnd be sure to include a packa1e or two of small fOCktail sausages on your shopping list. Create a new side dish tppetizer by s tuffing1 aeli·SILC dill pickles With liver s ausag e or braunschweiger. To form the tree, select a styrofoam cone -large or small, depend· rng on the number of guests -and cover with green foil. Next add g reens using end ive, escarole or parsley, securing them to tbe tree with fine hairpins. Work from the bottom up, tuckin1 stems behind the leaves below. If usina 1>arsley, try to find bushy bunches with s hort. stems. After the tree is com- ,,1 etely covered, spray with a Cine mist or water :ind store in a plastic bag 1n your refrigerator. J)ecorations may be made ahead of time - complete with toothpicks -covered with plastic wrap and refrigerated. A lihort time before guests arrive you s imply skewer them onto the tree and, viola, a holiday hors d 'oeuvres tree. <You may wisb to keep a s mall tray of extras refrigerated to replenish the tree -the goodies disappear fast!) • SALAMI ~ CORNUCOPIAS 12 slices salami cut in half 1 3-oz. package cream cheese and chives Cw hipped) • Pl ace a mound of whipped cream cheese in the center near the rounded edge of each. IJalf-alice. Roll up in cor· 9ucopia atyle and attach fo tree with toothpick. Yleld 2C. nam .... ~aaac 1UU1n11•11AUrY man Al9Cll ... -. ~=v:rJU~ TO P'\.UU YOU Ofl YOUll MOMY Will • CHUJtf'UU y llOUICllO I lllf • IOlllllSS s 11 t j .ROUlmSIUK .l.. . PRICES EFFEalVE 7 FULL DAYS, DECEMBER 1 • 7 I 1977 ((: ' ZeatfUJ change: Orange- cinnamon soup. LB. 9 PILLSBURY. 9 PAICAQ ---M ......... -sa• PAIKAllMll-............... -.65• wt MIXIS :=;a.~•M••-•1.11 CAii DICDUlOll .,-...... 1S• MOT IOL& m .......... " ....... "-•" NmsTllUl ......... ~ ........ fl .. ,,-414 NsnCll ................................ -tf• mAJa~l!!!=-~-~~ ........ : ..... 11• I ,.. - • 'o " ~ &rQ . ( 'ma abl inf Mo ma 'l wit be .. , 'Wf st< go go tlo to sa fu OJ 68 pt tb k• lo it tt SI Tt le. w r1 n • '\! } e t 2 1· ( ) Hom emade banana apricot jam bread are Ideal for Christmas gifts. Bananas About Holiday Cost~? If you think Santa has been JUSt sitting up there at the North Pole ignoring your holiday problems. it's not so. He's been scratching his fashionably long while hairdo and curly beard to think up ways to make gilts that don't take much money. For instance, he s u ggests a beautiful jar of homemade Banana Apricot Jam to catch the spirit of the season without breaking the bank. Santa had a friend In the Banana Bunch, industry- sponsored center for consumer information, who helped hJm to develop these seasonal solutions to gift giving. Bananas are still tbe most Inexpensive fruit at market. and their luscious, mellow flavor gives just the right festive touch to homemade treats for gilts. Banana Apricot Jam is easy to ~ake and yet it is a 1ourmet Item, the sort of thing ri~b ~e buy at ele1ant shops. It s no deal financially to make t1lll am at home, and you can usually flftd inter~ting con- tainers around the house. Another very attractive gift no- tion 1$ a loaf of Cranberry Ban~a Bread, bringing a most en1agmg contrast of flavors - the mellow banana and the tart cranberry. Tbe bright cranberry color is the right note for this bread at this season, and it has so many uses for the one who re- cei ves this 1Ht. Cranberry Banana Bread makes a mar•elou1 snack, a festive breakfast treat, and a grand way to greet 1Uests over a cup of tea or coffee during the holidays. "All is not loet," says Santa and to prove it, offers you thes~ fuclnatln& recipes for making gift.a. BANANA APRICOT JAM 1 package (8 ounces) dried apricots 3cupswater 6 cups sliced bananas (about 12 medium bananas) 3~\alfsugar 1~ <.t\Jplemonjuice 3 whole cloves In large saucepan combine apricots and water. Brine to a boil, reduce heat and simmer8to 10 minutes or until apricots are • soft. Drain and mash wtth fork . In large kettle mix mashed apricots. bananas and remain.in& ingredients. Stlr ovtir medium heat until mixture comes to a boil. Boll rapidly for 10 minutes or until thickened. Remove from heat .. Ladle Into sterilized jelly or canning jars. Fill to within V. inch of top. Screw cap on evenly and tightly Invert for a few seconds and atand jars upri1ht to cool. If jam is to be stored for a long time or in a warm place, stand jars on a nok in a large kettle and cover with boiling water. Boll for 10 to 15 minutes. Remove froJD water and cool. Yield: AboullJhalfpinta. C R ANBERRY BA NANA BREAD 1~ cup so ft bu tt er or margarine 1 cupsuiar 2eggs 2 cups sifted all-purpose nour 1 teaspoon baking soda 14 teaspoon salt 1 tabl~ lemon juice 1 cup mashed ripe bananas (3 medium) 1 cup chopped cranberries In large bowl cream butter and sugar. Beat eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Sift together flour, bak.inJ IOda and salt; blend into creamed mixture with lemon juice and bananas. SUr in cranberries. Turn into a greased 9 x 5 x 3-lnCh loaf pan. Bake in 350 degree o.-en 1 hour, or unw cake tester insert- ed in centA!r comes out dean. Cool 10 minutes, tum out of pan and cool completely. Before...-v· 1ng, sift confectioners augar over "top of loaf, if desired. Yi,ld: 1 loaf. • t • • • • • • e I 'ii , ...... , ..... , YOUNG ~ 'NTalDER BEEF LIVER· 59: FIESH SUCED . OUI OWH COUNYIY .snLI POil SAUSAGE . JIMS IAMCH .. ISM HOIMIL 150%.CAM DILMOMl'I . . ....... • .. VIVA ,.,. M.UISCO ·CHIPS~OY CHOCOLATI CHIP IASlaM &IAI" FID PA.l!MBt STYLI POU SPARERll.S·'. LEAN ... MEATY l 1.a1LI; KERNS 1011ATOES 2•1."" . 39c • Um '°starta J1'! la be for• th ,Mays, not after. The e•lrs between ~livinj and New '• are frauebt wlth duo-provokinl pit· 11• -it'• better to t pld temptation now Jn to make up for lt '~ ter. · n. . ' ......... ___ . ___ _ ~<!.· Beein IM · ' ~ DIATELY. Not ~P'!lorrow. Monday or . y~rter the holidays." • ,11 a.Getdressedinyourf~~-:::;r;.r-.;;;l;;ir;r-~iWi~~~irii~~~~~ijp;i;;;;l~r:;r;iir?;r:;r=,:W~~fP.;i;.;w;::;;;;;;;~~;;;.;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~Ff~:-lDost natterine clothes, the outfit that makes you look as tf you've lost wel&bt already. 3. Go to the beauty Ulon or barber shop and ffave your hair re-styled that natterm,, more thtul look you 've n considering. Been king about a dye job? ~~ow's the time to fool JlOtberNature! • 4. Clean out your tlosets. Get rid or all the ftumpy, un.flatterine, un· fashlonable clolhin& to hide in. Go on a "dry" shopping spree. . .look, but l e ave your checkbook home. Win· tow shop the newest sblons for inspiration bout things you '11 buy when you're thin enough ,, wear them. 5. Clean out your kitchen cupboards. Get t'id of all the candies, cookies, crackers, cup· cakes, the s nacks, spreads and sweets, all those munchies, cruncbies and assorted JUnkie-wunks. Dump them. Don't keep them around unW you can find somebody to give them to Whoneedsit! 6 . Go to the supermarket and load up on healthy stuff. By now you know what's good for you: fresh frults and vegetubles, lean meats, poultry and seafoods, skim inilk and low-fat dairy products, cottaae c h eese and yoaurt without sugar, salad dressings without oil. 7. Get a notebook and plan some workable menus that fit your lite· style and your new non- fattening fOods. 8. Get your bathroom scale out of the attic. Or buy one if you don't have one. Buy yourself some calorie guides and low- calorte cookbooks. Mak• Jt rour Christmas pres· en to yoursell, the most i m Poryent pcFSOA ln th& • world. " 9. G k some calen- dars, eer'f and next. Gewti&hed. Write your fll.ffellt weight on today S·-cl8te. (Put tt Ur code i"oubstve to. J(yoll weigh ('rl.62," writ• ·'AFB," using l~to correspond to ~r1. Or add one number to each dlglt : "162" becomes "273. ") 10. Go throuli'b t.be calendars and mar~ down your predicted weight Joas ..• at the rate of two pounds a week. Deduct two pounds from your-pres- ent weight and write that , number down for the following week. Keep on goinc untn you reach the date that puts you at the weight you want to be. Circle that day ln red! But. recoenlze that your actual wel~t-toss p attern won 't cor- respond exactly to the weekly estimates YO\l'v• marked oo your calen- dar. Some weeks the scale ~register any wtl1bt , but y0u 'r~ lo1lsa1. ~t the 11mel Some weeka, es)>e(:lalty in the beCIAnlnl, the toss will be better than pre· dieted. Bui 1Uck to lt. Your "red circle day" la a lot closer than you thlnkf (;roccrics 18 Oz. Can Kitchen Cut or French Cut Beans 17 Oz,Cen SweetPMI . . . . . . ' _______ .............. _..."""'"".,,...,_...,. ...... .,...~ , .. ,. r' T' "r • • , • • • .. ' v J:DO.orR'Y (8) SubaUtuta low·· skim mUk instead or .;:'~-:-'dr.t:'ra! celorle foods for hl1h whole milk in p'Umpkln Onf • tt bollday II calorie. For exam le, pie; aeuon veietabl pa.Ct .na 11 Just make a dlp out of wllh berbl, vtneiar, or al'GlilDdlbiOS'IMr whJpped couap dleeae lemon Julee wi.ad of • 0,11 " tboa .. ·wltb lalteadottoW"cream or butter or mar1ariae; • matterfUJ wW '(ldttv 8 ,. cream eMele and ~e bake potatoa instead of abli to klile t dur-· freab veietab!el for dJf-frylnt them. ma u.e lw>Hd•J aeuon ptn1 lnatud ot chips; * • * ... _. _, , • drlnk 1euoned ~ato Q. l wuUodo1e111eof .-...-"" •· CAD t. •vt~ julce ill1tead of 1oft my CllrtlQmu codl!IC ma~U.llatasquO. ·•clrln.Ucwfndtnn"'cb alaead el time ... h• T!te dectaioD ta always ~ · with us: eat. ~ and _ tbe food rea41 fer nok· be merry today and be (7) Prepare foods ln lnglatlilefneler.Cooldl' . . ~ay. lloolember 30, 111.7 bake before or aher ed•ts al the two pan1 frealal1 to• ther. Packace ln a A. Ptampkln pecan bt free ser ba1 or in froz 1uccesafuliy but mol1ture-vapor proof tlon't teep lt in tbe paper or foll. Bake treeser more than a frozen pumpkin pie month. Frees• It un· without thawina -10 baked by,,fii~arln1 ple minutes at 40Ct; then re· shell Qlf 1 I q usual. duce beat tom dearees ave lilllQ cold befor. to fln1lh bdJD& • addtn1 it to an unbaked, · • * * COid pJe lhell. Frene 1n Q. I wu dleddal •1 P ,u. To_ protect the freneJ' Ule odile1' daJ Hd top, c:O\'er "1tb a •ee.oad · 1 foa-4 I .UU flne a emptyplepantumedup-paek•C• •f •••tetl 1lde·dow~ and tape t•l'key from laU -.. . . " . . . . .. . . " -- ... . . ...... - 1ad tomorrow when we ways that add fewer freeae,....U....._ ... weigh in; or suffer' calories: use evaporated If so, abould l••i: bt stoically wbilo others ,__._"'=,...----.,--~~~~-~-------..-------.:.__,~~----~~.-..~;..._~-~--_;;...;,;.;..;..;;;..~----.--.~..-;.;.-._.~-....~ gorge lbemselves with goodies. Basically it's 'a ques- tlon of whether we want to put off imrqediate satisfaction in favor of a future goal. Most of us opt for immediate aati1faction. One fact to keep Up· permost ln our minds ls that it's far easier to keep weight off than to Jose tt once we've eained it. Prevention la eaaler than cure, you might say. . Instead of setting un· realistic goaJs for weight Joss during the holidays, we might Bet a more reasonable one ot eating moderately enough that we don 'tgaln weiaht. Here are some ideas: Cl> Get more exercise. Exercise helps to use up extra calories. Perhaps the additional sCUJTYing around you do during the holidays wil~ provide lbe extra exel'cise. Or perhaps you'll have to make an effort to take a daily brisk walk -for example, by parking in · the far corner or the shopping center parking Jot instead or right in front of the store -or do some extra indoor ex- ercise. C2) Allow yourself to eat just small portions of holiday &oodles instead of normal size servings <Some people can't do this -once they start they ~an't stop -so they' re better off not starting.) Discipline yourulf to nibble ap. preclativeJy and sip slowly to make a little food go a long way in en- joyment. . (3) Prepare yourself in advance for big meals by eating extra-small. low calorie meals the day or two before (4) Enjoy the best parls of holiday meals the turkey, the cran- berry, etc. -and cut down on the hieh calorie extras such as the gravy, salad dressing, whipped cream, bulter, pastry. For example, when faced wi\h pumpkin pie, eat the filling and not the crust, with just a dab of whipped cream. (5) Watch out for "hid- den" calories -fats and su1ars -found within foods like aweet potatoes <hi eh sugar), avocado (hi1h fat), nuts <high fat), raiaina and dates (biJ{h S\liar). Ideas for Holidays IMf·Bone In Round Steak USDA CHOICE per. lb. Super Meat Marl<et USDA IMlflowid , .. cM01c1 Boneless Rump Roast ':. . [P;s;Js• Beef ~ 111 JiJfiW .,_.,__Clll per • 1• \ill!.W Beif Brisket 111. ~i'JTIP'Steak ~ , .. D ~11nhcbt• · Ground Slrtoin :' ,. , .. . D G~nd Beef Patllel !.: 3Lbl.otL.., anu111 1 ... f Pantry Fillers Super Deli .45 ~Mitch.ctd. :: .21 o•chlpped,... .79 ~-Mlrglml· l Ha .... 21 .. -.79 .33 , ... -! ... 4'' Super Bakery A unique way to save. Present this wild card coupon along with any one of the Ralphs "cents off' coupons below. and Ralphs will double the value of that coupon it's as simple as that. Super Produce :.:l .95 , ... 45 ,..... , .. 59 ,.. I Wines & Spirits •\ ,, ,, I': f \ F• Holiday Crullers Ha nukkab ii tbe 1mootbandeluUc,aboul "4a1P ofUpu 5 m1a•tH . Divide 1 ·CO emorai.1 dou1b lnto 11 equal ylcta17 ol Jud.ah and plocoa. Fenn eacb piece ... M warriors into a UDOOC.b round ball. &lleS)dua. Cover wtth a doth and Bea:i•"n.s Dec. 5 w. letttaud 20 mlllutd.. ••· ~ around tbe Boll each ball on • Id wW five thwa uabtly floured board into ••4 draw naptratlon • •·lncb round. Let tbe ~m tbb 1reat eYent round• atalia for 5 '1'bieb meant tbe aur-misiutm. Frt bl deep bot Thal of Judaism . (115 clepee1) peanutpil Candles wtll be liabted ln unUl pu!fed and &olden wery Jntah home -brown. ~ ao P@er cmeontbeftntntab~two·-~~~_;_~~--~~==:--~--~--~~...;;:;;:::::;;~;;:;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;:;;:-=....-~~~~~"t on the MCODd, three on \he third -and ao on up to the eiehth nlcht wbeo el1bt candles will be burnln1 . The· upiftcance of the Uft· 4Je c,remony ii that it t'llealll the rekiDdHni of dle lllflta of tbe Temple when the bob' place was rededicated after tbe Kaccabean warrion had ~aptured it from the Syrfam. Unlike Puaover, there ,.,. no special food reatrlctlons for Hanukkah. Fried foods are traditional at this time of year and many .Jewish cooks like to '5erve fruit fritters and dou1hnuts for dessert. Suggested here are Hanukkah Crullers with a brown sugar syrup. The crullers are fried in peanut oil. : HANUKKAH CRULLERS 2 cups unsifted flour 2 tablespoons suaar 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon salt leg, beaten ~cup sherry ~cup water 2 tablespoons marearine, melted ~ teaspoon anise ex-tract Peanut oil Cinnamon sugar Sift together flour, IUI· ar. balcfug powder and salt; set aside. Combine egg, sherry, water, melt· ed marganne and anise extract until well blended. Gradually add to dry ingredients. Form dough into a ball. Tum out onto ligbUy floured boa rd . knead until To Give Fol! Yule Fresh Meats T-OONE 198 STIAK O<>QD OUI l.CIH • • • .. • • ••• UI. BLADE QJT ~~~EfR?.~! LD •• 68 LADY LEE 5LIC£D. BACON 98 ...•.•••••••••• 11.D. PKG. e OOMEl.ESS · ROUND STEAK 148 OONOEI> DEEF ••.••••.•• LO. GROUHDDUF :i.,o A<G.Ol\1"()11[.0-.•_J0,..,~.59 TOP SIN.OIM STEAK 1 9.a. OOl«Ulll IOHCID IW ION . ..11 • V CROSS PJD ROAST ~ IOHD(D 1W O<l.o. ••••••••• IA 1.38 FP.£SH OEEf DPJSl<ET OON1XD 1aJ . . ., . . . UI 1.o&' DONELru STEWING BEU ~ ........................ ta.1.Aa ~~~ ....... t4 1.68 DW>E a.tr OIJCK STEAK DOMllDlllF ............. • ..... ..U) .78 POf\lt'NfOUSE STEAK OONOCDtaFlOll -............. Ul 2.08 ~~A~~!. ......... IA 1.19 P0AA LOIN IUD CHOPS 1!. a ................. .1 ................ UI 1.~ ~c!?.~.~ ...... ud.78 • BONELESS TIP SlEAK ICHDID 1CP AC)UIO ..... ., ......... IA 1.6& om: DAO< IUDS ~~ ...... , .... ,.._., ..... ~LA .68 ~~.J~ ........ IAi.88 SUCEO DUF LNER 5llMUlll • .. • .. • • • • • • .. • • • • . • • ........ IA. 7 8 OSCAA MA'ta MCOM flQD ("'4 alCJX> 12 OZ. I~ 1 IA flCO. 1.58 ---·-···- Canned& Packaged KERN'S l PRESERVES 99 STIWWEAAY ......... .32 oz JAP.. .fl GREEN GIANT 6~~ .. 170Z~.29 }-LADY LEE 6 ~!~~~20Lon..69 MIDlffiCORN ... .. .. Dairy & Frozen .b~Ft~~-56 l ~~ .. ~ .~~ ~~20Z ClH .59 P FISHSTIOO 0 Cil\1111\DH ... . 1H'll Al(', 2.25 l ~~~~.~~~~~. 700l Pl<G .69 L ~~~.~~.~~ • ..a b ~.~.~~"'4~ liquor & Wane P CNW>tAN auo 6 ""91'( k6"'°°' ••.•• '780"'-Gll.6.99 l ~'.~.~~. orn•.n.9.98 l ~~~.~~~ .QI Oll.5.99 Household & Pet Making a list and checking it twice . OK. So there's the neighbor who watered the lawn and fed JI' the cat while you ~ on . ..__' vacation. The newsboy's made ~~ sure the paper hasn't landed in "-'the nasturtiums once in six ~months. The milkman's been ~~good about delivering the cream • 1 before breakfast. instead of · ·: ' after. That's the kind of help you'd really like to remember with a small something. But what? "Just what I always wanted ... " Let ua suggest a Gift Certificate from our store; It's practicaJ. It comes in any size to-fit YoUr budget. Jt•s· versatile. For eome folks it may become part of their holiday dinner: turkey, ham, the trimmings ... you know , all the good food we carry. But you may not be aware that, at our larger Discount Centers, we offer a whole array of toys, clothes, plants, pottery, domestic items like sheets and towels. A new steering wheel cover for a car buff. Or a full, fresh, green Christmas tree ... with all the ornaments. You choose the amount to give. The person you give it to chooses a dream come true. Like a built-in "Christmas Club" Our discount prices actually make the same amount of Christmas money go further than it v.K>uld at another type of store. Come to think d it, if yo'1 choose to shop with~~ the coming year, you couJd saw enough to make next Christi'MS go a lot·smoother. Just pretend .to your budget that you \Wre 1 shopping elsewhere, and tuck the difference in the bank. To see Mw much you'd save this week alone, look at our prices and compare with your present store. Th•n com« Shop with us r\g}it away. iYou can't start saving too soon ... for Christmas. s ' (~ ....... --·_· ... _•_e_~_e _ _, ' J l ' ,.,...,.,., 1 ftDNDOllU& AllUI OIUch 11·Apr0 U): Acant oa c:Jw.ap. ~. creatl~, baytq a sm..t ln life nstared. Ematlaal tend to dMttam lotllc. TAtJIWS CAprtl »lliq •>: What b114 been a ratnctln t.Dtlueaee beeomel aa uaet. JnpHOt flatbWty. Sbow )'OU are DOt a "Jolm·. ny.o.a.Nate." Your posltloG ta ltnlef eYeD tboulh 101De appear to be ~mii'i:i about yoar 1abmluloaa, propoeall • . GBlllNJ (llQ 21..June 30): StudT Ta1ll'UI meuap. Orpm. lDformatklD. Pile data. Bltq prloritiel Into focua. a.nae,~. tear down ao )'OU can rebuild on a tolld bue. . - · CANC'Bll (June 21..July 22): You wat t.o Jeana, to write and express. Words and mUllc act as a stimulant. Genilnl, Vtrso penona f'llm'e· promlnently. Accent oo maklq belt use of material at hand. Yea, the money will be forthcomlnt I LEO (July 23-Au,. 22): Get 1olna oo bome repair, Mttllna differences with family concern· ing bud.let. Cycle hllh -Jud&ment and intuition are likely t.o be on taraet. · VlaGO (Au,. 23-Sept. 22): Kuch Oc:curs beblnd cloeed doors -a meetina, comultatkm. What you need la delayed, but only temporarily. Piacea la ln picture and so is the number 7. A dream could be prophetic, if properly Interpret- ed. Dllol• ......... '--....,.. Snow White, right, presents awards to, ·1rom left Kerri Borroel, Andrea · Watcher, Ke/lie Flinn and Tammy Hiii. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent OD getting job done, fulfilling obligations and ambitions. What aepeared to be a setback rebounds in your favor. Diacover what you want -professionally and in penona1 llle. Cycle is such that pieces will fall into place. A Doll Fair The dolls W'8l9 redone by~. 'sooaftO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Univenal ap- peal, ia keyPOted. You reach more pel'IODS. Popularity 1ncreuee u views are vind.lcated. You fin1sb project -and you have a right to celebrate. Preatl1e, career, dealln11 with authority figures are highllpt.ed. SAGITl'A&IUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Lunar upect Indicates travel, new start, excitin1 con· tacts, original concepts, procedures. Leo, Aquariw pel'IODS fil\lfe in scenario. In matters of apeculatioo, slick to number 1. Avoid llfting heavy objects. CAP&ICORN ())ec. 23-Jan. 19): One eloee to you can provide needed data. Key la to be thorouib. to follow tUougb on lnfonnation, to check records, to be aware ot rentala, leases, checks, credit cards. AQUABJUS (Jan. 20-Peb. 18): Accent on publicity, recoamUon of legal boundaries, rights, restraints, permlastons. One very close to you re- veals aood news. Travel, writing are part of scenario. Sagittarius, Gemini persona figure prominently. Pl8CE8 (P'eb. 19-March 20): Go slow. Be moderate, diplomatic. Avoid extremea, especial· Jy where dining, imbiblni are concerned. Check fine print, be aware of details. One who a.aka for major reviaioos ls actually on your aide. Don't be irritated or discouraged, Tammy Hlll, Foantaln van.y, walked away · with top booors at the 11th annual GoodwUl Jn. dustrles' Doll Pair. She was awarded a Snow White doll and a ribbon by Disneyland's Snow White. The event was held last week at the Goodwill Rehabilitation and Evaluation Center. Santa Ana. Tammy la one ol buod.reda ot Girl Scout.a, Camp Fire Girls, 4-H Glrla, and Job'1 Daupters from all over Ora.Die County wbo checked out Goodwill dolls, f~oned new clotbee for them, styled their hair, and returned them to Goodwill Industries forlale at the Doll Fair. Judeea for the event were Kn. Marty Lockney, Newport Beach; Mn. Fred WlWam.a and Mn. Walter Broob, both of Santa Ana. SeC<IOd place went to Kellie Fl)'DD. l"ouDtalD Valley; th1rd nmner-up wu Andrea Watcher, also of Fountain Valley. RecetVlna honorable mention were Kerri Borroel, ll1uloa Viejo; Celina ClouCb and Llaa Zrlnsld, botb of Anabeim. The purpose of the Doll Fair wu to atve rec- ognition for the service of 10'Jlb cqudutloaa and to show appreciation for their contribution toward helpln.I Goodwill 'a programs of evalua: tion, tralnloa, and Job-placement for physically, . mentally and aoclally bandicappedlndlvtduala. He's Alive at 65 DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a man 85 years of age who bas been reading your col· umn since 1960. I do not always agree with your advice but I respect you. I am in good health and so is my wife. She is 63 -a wonderful person, Aaa ·Laaders , •• ii "11IE sruFF ;J'HAT SHOPPING fine housekeeper, cook,1 D E A R A N N expect to do everything and she did a beautifult LANDERS: What's so perfect. I think yoa are job of rearln1 five, awful about lduing with be lag too bard oa children. 'lbe problem-. your eyes open? I'll ad-yoarself. .. aex.Onmy63rdbirthday. mit it's a lot more Aproblemreeophed she did me the grand: romantic when the eyes 111 a problem ball solved. "favor" of sleeping with a r e c 1 o 1 e d • b u t Analyze wbere yoa 10 me. She then announced sometimes my afrl and I wrong. Learn from you that from now oo I'd bet· open our eyes in the mid· mlaiakes. S&op ud think ter foreet about sex die of a kiss and we both before yoar act -or because, as she put, "It'• 1et a big kick out of it. speak. Sometimes five or obscene for a couple of Also. bow does "Look· · six secGDda cu make a old fools like us to carry lng a Lot. tn Lansing" wbale ot a dllferenee. . on like newlyweds." know when be bas his Try M and yoa'll see •bat I don't feel like an old: eyes open if she isn't 1 mean. fool. Althouah I'm not! looking benelf? -THE the man I waa 3S years EYES HAVE IT IN DEAR ANN·: RetenUy ago, I aUU have a lot of WAYNESBORO · a woman wrote that her pep and am far fromJ D EA a WAY N E : blood pressure Jumped dead sexually. Senral readen wrote to. 50 points because her ex Will YoU put aometbi.D1 HJ tbeJ lleep dtelr eyes refused to pay child sup- ln your column about opea wbell tiey k1u 0 to port. My blood pressure this subject? I'm sure aeelfaJlYOMllcomJDs." jumped SOJ;ints I'm not the only petson Odien aald cloeed eyes because I am aying In the world with tbi1 · mean you are fantaal.a· support mone to a problem and all too Uttlel IDI aboa& 80IDeOlle elle. woman who w eel out baa been written about I IUD M1 feOP1e wbo on me for a man old it. Thanks, Ann. -MAN. kin wUb &Mir 9199 epea enoup to be her father. I. ALIVE AT~ " • • 1 t 1 et a ll U I e don't have one word to D•AllllAN AUVB: I cro11eye4. lie -I say about tbe way my. Coal4 18.1 a great deal alwaya clOM ialoe. kid8 are bet.DI brouabt a boat ~· J•Y• ••4 · up and it'1 ld11iDc me. 1tealtlalDMaola1oochex· D E A R A N N The lawa muat be Ille tllat ceatl••••· LANDERS: I'm a 15· chan1edtoare1pectable tllro•all tbe aohl••· year-old pl wtth a bis· father can 1•t bit years, bot yoa, aad problem. It's me. I'm children when the edier1 wllo allu• tile always doinl aometbi.Da mother la a tramp and ,roblem ol a ae1athe dumb that could nliD me p r o v es· it by her .,.... CiemeUmee It'•·· forever. Selne"old 1tory: behavior. How can a ·die•....._.>, lletd ..... I didn't think ot the COD· woman teach decent , dlaa die Umltatien a.la 1equenceaabeadottlme. moral• when the hu Q•ee....._ • II'/ famUy la U'Yiu to nonehenelf? "~.-cl $1.11 • build a buainee1 lor-me I'm brcteparlql .. 11 "IA•• mlea After Sla· to nm In tbe future. I'm bills and can'i So back' t1" bJ l&obert N. a.tier O.JC. for a wblle then 1'11 into court •lalii till l. aacl •>'r•a Lewi• dooraayeom~-;real· aave tomemone;. In the ~paltU111ei, Harper a ay autt)-that C*iil blow meantime, I ,.t •let a.w). J&'a a paperback llfor &ood. when I t.blnk ot wbat 1' dill..., tl De;U 11 ud1 I don't mean to be bapDenlnl to mJ ~da. - will IO a lo•I way atU)lld or careleu, Ann, If X" AN]) LOTS 01" tew.,._.._,...,...._. lt Jult comes naturally. OTHERS . eW....llaaateaWllen Do JOU bavt an)' ldeu DEA.a YOU: More 10 • .., ..... ....,_ tbat mtlbt help? -tdluw IMift catudJ .._ ad ~ I NC· OOOPY<JLORL\ • dal ..._ ner ..... I eea• .. ltlllMllEu• DBA& ~ Pit· ar1e ~ M •aa1 la ........... -......... ....., ,..., Mi .... Dia ... ..,..,. ~ l e r . . c .......-....... 1 IS EOF. .. om· LISTS? Imported Holiday Candies Brandied Idlh Fruit Cabs Blum's Fine Chocolates Fresh Roasted Nuts Hand-whipped Fudge Gift Packs Holiday Gifta of Tea English Jam Samplers Our Own Unique Confections plus Exclusive Catalog for Mall Oi~ers Lnmb-Ycad Plam 384 Fcnst A.-. LaguDG Beach Sweet Sometffling Cafe d~ .. ~ 'J.. • T N n anca ••ELL a.vs: Tbore .ut be a Cbriatmu Tea at 1:• p m.1bW"lday, .1.LDUaeclubbouM. LAGVNA a ACB A.AUW: State divlilon pr id t Evelyn Stanton will apeak al the Chris lancbooo at 12:30Tbw'lday. Dec.1, In: Clu 1, Lelture World, f..alwlaHllb. BALBOA Y.ACBTCLU8t Tbewomen'1eo.m· mlttee will present Dlane Voa F\U'ltenbtr1 at a fublon brunch at 9:30 a .m. Tbuncla)', DeQ. 1, ln the fashion 1allery. Bullock •1, South Coast Plua. Proceeds will be used to Improve tho elub's Cat.allna StaUon at Whites Cove. C.tallna laland. The brunch ls open to non·mem~rs. I . I SILVER ANCHOR AU~Y: Tho Hunt· ington Intercommunity Hospital poup w1Ubold a boutlquefrom9a.m. to4p.m. Thuraday,Dec.1.ln the hospital lobby. LAGUNA BEACH ASSISl'ANCE LEAGUE: The annual Christmas Doll Tea wtll be held at 3 p.m. Friday, Dec.2,inthechapterbouae. MESA HARBOR CLUB: The annual Winter Holiday Happenln1 will be held at tbe Tale of tbe Whale Restaurant in Balboa Peninsula Friday, Dec. 2. Cocktails will be served at 1 p.m. followed by a buffet dinner and dancing. MIUTARY WIDOWS' SOCIETY: A fund- raising luncheon will be held atll :30 a .m. Friday, Dec. 2, in tbe Beverly Hills Savings and Loan, l8351IrvineBlvd., Tustin. A Christmas party will be held at6 p.m. Tues- day, Dec. 6, in the Scandia Village Restaurant, Orange. COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB: A Christmas boutique will be held Friday, Dec. 2, from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m., in the clubhouse, 610 W .18th St., Costa Mesa. The public is invited. FREEDOMS FOUNDATION: The Orange County Women's Chapter will hold its holiday ·boutique from 1 to 4 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2, in the homeofDr. and Mrs. Donald Belville, Anaheim. COSTA MESA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL AUXILIARY: A boutique and bake sale will be held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2, in the hospital conference room. LAGUNA BEACH WOMEN'S CLUB: A Christmas dinner will be held at 12:30 p.m. Fri· day, Dec. 2, in the clubhouse. Tbel:30 p.m. meet- ing will be followed by Angie Papdakis, one of the country's few women gag writers. CATIIOUC DAUGHTERS OF AMERICA: Court Stella Maris will hold a Christmas boutique at St. Joachim's Hall, 1964 Orange Ave .• Costa Mesa. Thefund·ra1smg events will be held from 1 to4 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2; 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Satur· day, Dec. 3; and from 8·30 a.m. to6:30p.m. Sun· day,Dec.4. SOUTH COAST LITERACY COUNCIL: The annual Christmas international potluck dinner for students, tutors and their spouses will be held from 7 to 10 p.m. Friday, Dec. 2, in the San Juan Elementary School, San Juan Capistrano. UCI MEDICAL FACULTY WIVES: A Las Vegas Night benefit will be held at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3, in Allergan Pharmaceutical, 2525 DuPont Dr. Irvine. Information is available from Mrs. Eldon Foltz, 2480 Monaco Dr., Laguna Beach. IOI: The annual holiday party will be held Saturday, Dec. 3, m tbe Wilshire Country Club. Funds will benefit Children's Village, USA. Jack Kelly will MC the evening, which will include en- tertainment by stars from the Lawrence Welk Show. WOMEN'S OVERSEAS SERVICE LEAGUE: AChnstmaspartywillbeheldat12:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3, in the Orange Assistance League Building. 20 Plaza Circle, Orange. In- formation 1s available from Doris Clay Patterson, 581·4136. ALPHA OMICRON Pl ALUMAE: The in- ternational sorority's 80th anniversary will be celebrated at a founder's day luncheon at 11 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 3, in the Camelot restaurant, San- ta Ana. . LAMP UGHTER GUILD: The Children's Hospital of Orange County group will hold a Christmas boutique from 10 a.m. to S p.m. Satur- day, Dec. 3, in the Garden Grove Women's Civic Club, corner of Chapman and Gilbert, Garden Grove. BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL COUPLE.5 CLUB: A dinner party will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 3, in the Airporter Inn, Newport Beach. Reservations may be made through Dale White, 4 Hampshire Court, Newport Beach,92660. ALPHA GAMMA DELTA ALUMNAE: A Christmas cocktail party will be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday Dec. 3, in the Anaheim home of the Mel Schantzes. Reservations m•y be made by calling Meme, 53'1""948or Marge, 894-0249. ALPHA XI DELTA ALUMNAE: A pro- gressive dlnner will be held at 8:30 p.m. Satur· day, Dec. 3, beginnln& at Uie Westminster home of the Dean Crouches. Reservations may be made bycalllnaSharonAllslleter,8'8-2514. IaVINE JlJNIOll EBELLS: A Breakfast With Santa wW be held Saturday, Dec. 3, in the Ranch Pre-echool, "876 Irvine Center Drive, Irvine. TbU. WW be four seatings: 8:15, 8:-'S, 9:15 od 9:45. Information is available by c:alllftg M2·89'7L From left, Mrs. Lorenz Otzer, Mrs. Dick Granieri, Mrs. Lonny Martin, members of League Junior Auxiliary. Candy Cane Ball The Assistance league of Newport Beach, Junior Auxiliary, will hold its 29th annual Can· dy Cane Ball on Saturday, Dec. 3, ln tbe Monte Carlo Room of the Newporter Inn. The theme will be 0 Dickens' Christmas Carol." . . ,. Ruth Teny worlcs with LucU/e Dean. Sigma Kappa has won an award tor its work in gerontology. An Award Sigma Kappa sorority, Oranee County Alum- nae, has received an award from the National, Council for its work· in eel'OfltolOIY· The group also will bola a Chriatmaa bazaar from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Satqrday, Dec. 3, at the Santa .Ana Assistance League Clubhouse, Santa Al)a. Dance, Dance . Dancing, ainPi& and f asblom trom the past will e.nt«tain members and 1uesta oltbe Muslcal Theatre Guild of Newport lSeach at their Christmas meetln&. Wednesday, Dec.1. Gatherina at Bahia Corlntblan Yacht Club, Corona del Mar, coffee will be served at 10 a.m., followed by a meeting. Bob and Sharon Boies will entertain st meeting of Musical Theater Guild of Newport Beach. The program , scheduled for 11:15, will be performed by Bob and Sharon Boies of Mr. Roberta DAnce Studio, and Gloria Schumacher and dancers. .Holiday Buffet . Alta Bahia Committee of the OraDI• County PbUhatmontc Society will live a holiday-party OD SundQ-• Dec. 18. at the Balboa Pavilloo hr Newport BEach. Proceeds will 1upport the ecmcert H8IOD. A buffet dhmer will be pre- ceded by cocttalla and followed by ~•etng. · Party.goers also will View U. boat parade> near the pa\filion. Frcim left, Mrs. Richard E. Griffin, Mrs. Stephen DuBow and Mrs. Richard E. Barrett rnske popcorn balls for Philharmonic benefit. SOUTll COAST JUNIOR WOMEN'S CLUB: The Christmas meeting will be beld at 7 :30 p.m. Tueeday, Dec. 6, in the Fountain Valley. home of Nancy Jo Kaufman. · , DAR: Patience Wright Chapter will meet at noon Tuesday, Dec. 6, Sn the Capri Room of the Hotel Laauna. · NATIONAL MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS~ SOCIETY: A patJent and public information pro- 1ram willbeheldat7:30p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 6, in the Disneyland Hotel. Information ja available from Mar&aretSprunck, 636·2171. NEWPORT B£ACH-~OB EBELLS:'Tbe December Board meeting Will be held at 7:)0 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 6, in the home of president CbeeylSaOtt • . BOY. SCOUT TROOP 315: A Christmas Ballar Wlll be beld from 10 a.m. to4 p.m. Dec. 6, 7 and a, ln tho~ program 5 lobby of Fairview HoaPital. Proceeda wlll be used for the retldentl' . needs. p.m. Tuesday. Dec. 8, in Bltbe1~.688 Welt' 19th St., CoSta MesL KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Ja.umHo: A Cbrlstmaa luncheon wW be bilchit U a.m.Tbun-, • day,~· 1!1r: tbeCoronadel Mat bom6ofMrL ' ¥lobert Bia ar. ResentatkJDI may be maCle by callina)Us. Blackmar.613-'1'123. DELTA DELTA DELTA At.UllNA.£: A Sleiabbell fuhlodluncbeon will Zm -ru.w .. Dec. 8, in the International ot"~ Beverly Ullton Hotel. From left, Mrs. Alfred Beazley and Mrs. McKee Thompson prepare for Braille Institute luncheon. Lunch Bunch ·-----...... The Braille Institute Do Sonaethi~ Auxiliary of Newport Dif•ll for .:L-:_· • Beach wU1 present its an· srerent 1IE r nual holiday bridge . t:..1-.1:..J_: _1 luncheon trom 11 a.m. to 1 ~ 4 p .m . M~y, Dec. 5, at 'lalteacourseot JRP the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. Brid&e begins at 11 a.m. with luncheon served at 12:30 p.m. and Santa'• Bake Shoppe operating all day long. Proceeds wW ao to the Orange County Braille In•tltute of Al!lerlca which offers bulc trainlnc. educaUon and recreational ac· tivitiea to the blind. Both adults and )'OUD8 people are enrolled ln its pro- gram. The Schoola for Your Personal De.ielapment ORANGE 3 Town &Country (714) 547-8228 .J.. ~ne Lee, D.P.M. announces the opening of his offl08 specializing in the MEDICAL AND SURGICAL TREATMENT OF FOOT DISORDERS Costa Mesa Medical Center 276 Victoria. Suite 2J Costa Mesa, CA 92627 ~jacent to Costa Mesa Memorial Hoepital between Har1>9r 6 Newport) CHILDREN & ADULTS -BY APPOINTMENT &ta-7779 /().~·· ' ,. , . ~{/ I ol, I (Jl.'\l.. •"S;•· l . ,, ,,, . ,, . . , , 1. Sllce 1947 llmwf S.laH= WALLPAPER STUDIO 01.4W 10,000 Style9. Patteml 8nd Mltd'llng Fabrk:e ~AIU lot the kJds ALL DECORATOR LINES FLOCKS-FOILS-VINYLS.SCENICS MURALS-HAND BLOCKS ~ Vokn, °"'°"' Y.bodM'l Shutt.aand Custom~. 30~ 543·5254 I ' "What did he do? What DIDN'T he do!" FUNKY WINKER BEAN A Fl5HERMAN MAKES NE.LO NET6 ANO RE.PAIR& OLD ONEE> ~~ THE Wl~"TER SEASON. CASEY . MOON MULLINS ... _. ....... -.. __ I t ~Ill/ I ' .. -.·.·. ~ ,. . ... , (., [j\] • • • • .. ,. • • • t ' • ~ .. F • ' "' .., .., by Tom Batluk WHAT wooi.D SE HI& NET INCOME.~ ' • I 11·9<> By Cheri•• Aodrtguea by Ferd and Tom Johnson !.\ -----LONGER THAN You BUN WALKJN', PAL! GORDO . . . . . . . . . ........ ~ ....... GOSH/ WHA"T" ~ROOGH"'I"' "T"HA"T" ON ., ! by Roger BradtJeld by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman ~CAU6£ 1lliY 6fOF'Pe0~ RUM8la~5 • .. 1MIRAQE - WHIP .93c Kraft'11re1t aalad dreuingl Quart Margarine • • . . . • 59c ' lmperial......with re1al flavor! l lb R·1ce •.. 75c .... •ll•••• Uncle Ben's Faat or Regular! 6 oz ·Egg Nog . . . • . . • • &9c The real thina-Golden Cream-Quart COOKIE 69C MIX ffAUI .Choose Fudge Chip, Oatmeal, Peanut Butter or Sugar! Cottage Cheese..n&3c Large, Small Curd. Low-fat! Springfield ·c . 0·1 s1•9 r1sco 1 ••••• ~ Big 48 ounce size tut.a so lonsl Kleenex: ....• 75c Colors or White-280 count packqe APPLE JUICE 1 Drink a gla11& of health! Motta quart ~ Dressing .... . .. age French, Italian, 1000 Ial.-16 oz 1 ~ Peanut Butter . . 79c New! Hollywood Natural! 16ozjar Mqrton' s Salt • • 19c .,; PlaJb or Iodized in 26 oun~ boz • : Mixers .,. "' . . . 39c , · ClubSoda, Ginger Ale-28 oz NR btle ~ CAKE .. , MIXES Duncan Hin~your ~bbfce ot all layer cake varieties Granola wrra-... &9c Back~ N1ture-all varietiee-16 oz Chuclc cut ofU.S.O.A. Choice beef 1 ,; • Beef Roast :ram. 515! Shoulder Clod chuck cut-end Choice • ·, Filet Mignon ••• s3'1 Beef tenderloin ol U.S.O.A. Choice beef . • ' ChBJ•nbriailt t':l! ......... ~l.11 . . Start with El Rancho'• U.S.D.A. Choice quality-add natural a,ing-and you have 1uperb utiafactionl Beef Tenderloin cut Sliced Bacon ... s1°! El Rancho's thicker "ra.'lch style" ... Sausagen~mu . S13! We make it authentically ItaUan Bratwurst .••••• s13! Pork, mllk·Ctd veal and eeuoning · Ground Beef ~n:st 0! Ground ·Beef ... s1 ~! Steak uu.r • • • • • 39t Lean-does not exceed 22% fat Flavqdull Pan ~dy! net wt 5 oa MCh . / ( .. D h s449 Choose the whole orhaltatthlt price ••• andbH1tcmi1Wat.it.~~ ~flmm'olttadem-!~ ~ as llllmT •••••• The big 13 lb 3 ounce pkg (SOc lff) Purex Bleach .•• gc Liquid doea It fut! half-cal (k tff) Dog Food • . • • • . . 2oc Kai Kan M.P.S. Chunb-6Yl oz can . ·Tomato 45c JUICE • Libby'• pmmed quality! 32 en btt. Pricu in fHtct 'fhw.. Dtc. I throulh Wed. Dec. 1 Opera doily 9 to 9 Sundoy 10 to 1 /flJ H/t;I to dta~. FRESH TROUT Mountain trout-gourmet'• del~aht! • Mahi Mahi •.•.• '1 2! Relive those Hawaiian Memori Stuffed Clams .,1$1 GILBEY GIN Now reduced •Oe-Quart bottle Scotch a..., ... s74• Bottled in Scotland-for ue! Qu~ , Walker's Deluxe·~·· Stratght whiak.,-uve ~--nM Scotch ,...,.n ••••• 1549 1 A fine acot.ch reduced soe fifth · Italian Swiss ••• s24• Rhine, Burgundy or Chabli .. Mqnum Krug Wines ••••. szso Vin RoM, Bursundy, ChabU.-fiftb Liebfraumilch •• s39• 1 NEW'77 FORD PINTO l DOOll SIDAM ·53399 .. 172 CHEV YMACPI. 5799 · . ' DA&LY PILOT • ! PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU' 81JSIN•M "CTITIOUI llJ51Nl5' NAME ST ATUdNT HAMa ITAT•MIHT l no toltowlng Ptrtcm •rt 00t119 IKlll• • Tiie fot-'"9 PH-•••llolno bull· net• o ntuat: OCIAllC HCWSfi APARTMENTS, SERUM L.AllORATORIU, mo Ii us l-•· Cliff Drive,~ 8Hcll, It A11drtw1 Piece, Senta Ane, C.llt•r!QefWI C41fltornl•tl70S J ellttY Oar,,.t Wayman, 2JS , AIOerl t Ho ... 111, ot Danita, low1r C.flfl Drive, i; 100, L•e11n• Cero<leo.1-r,C..11torn1e•:a» butn, c.tllotlll•~I Reul• L. H• ... 111, .,, Denlla, JOHOfllnt 8-..l Waym.n, 504 Gwon• oet-r, C.lltorn1•t:a:zs "'• • 1• C.•ncn•, IU•P•rt •••c11, S<ott Dale Or..O.ktr, ~ Onr-. C..lllornla TWr•nce, Celll'Ornie ~ I ,.,. Ov1lneu '' cond .. cted by • t Tiii• 11.il!MU Ii <OnOvcle<I by a llmll• ~"4ral Ptrll,.r.tltp • pert11ertrM1> Jellrey turn" W•Y"""' , AL8£AT E HEWITT • Tllla •l•IAln-1 ,..,, tlleo wllll I~ llu1 111-....-1wet111 .. w1U1 , ... C.O-tyC.1-olOr-c...ntyllf\Hov. C.0..IY c.1 .. 11 OI OrlnOI C:....y •n-4, 1911 efl'\Mr ll, 1917 l'lffJJ ,...., Phll•hed (;""91 C:0.11 O.Uy P1 .. 1, Publl&NG Or MIOI C.O.•I o •• ,, Pll04, Nov •••• )J, .)U,.,,., o.c. I. 19/1 N•• JO, -DIK. 7, 1'.11. 1'11 MW·ll PUBUC NOTICE i ·~~~~~~~~~~-· PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUt ll/5'N8'S ~'°:. HOTICIO~UO\.UTION Ol'l'ARTNIR~ll' NAMI ITAT .. MINT f'ubll< fttl•ce " ,,....by 9t•tn 1na1 ,,.!~:,1011-1119 ""''°" fl dOl119 1>u11-:.1.:~~~so;o:'10:~ ':!.~ ()VERLANO CONNECTION, 410 ,. .. ,.__. u.. 11c11uoui l1tm name •IHI li Camino RMI 111, 1 uston, CA, '26'0 tl' 1 t et REED. MAT WI W S OorW!yO. Wel~t, )'1()1 Perkvl•w -• COl'ISULTANTS. •1 ltlS.U MKAr11!ur Ln., llO.CJ.ln111,.,C.A '271~ 11vc1., CllJ ot ,,..,,,,., C-ty ot Or~... Tiii• ..,...._" I• cor-.oucted by •n In· s .. i. of CMllwrll•, did on 1119 lUI d•v o1 <llvlouel Aueu•t, 1tn, by nwtue4 ~""'" 111., O.,.-ot....,. o. wa11ao IOIV• the H id P••ln•••lllp .,.. Tiii• ... ...,,..,, W•• Iii.a with ,,.. Mttlnlnelt INI• rtlellon1 a1 P•rlntrl <.ounty Cl9nl Of Orante C.Ountr elf\ Nov. ' therein IO, 1911 O.ttd •I '8n\t An•, C..lllornl•. lhi> f' Dilll>tcl Or ,.. f Ult7 • IOlll0eyefS191.mber,l9'1. u MQ9-.-SI Deily Piiot, I .. EEOl.PA1TEF150N Nuv. l~.1J,JO,anclC>ec l,1Y11 '-'•Ott I NY & l'OWILL '9~77 ., ...... ,. ......... ~y ._...._CAtV91 ttuloll~ Ora19 COHI Delly Pilot, ~·-·"" PUBUC NOTICE 1'77 6 4 ·2 • 5 6 ' 8 - D A I L y p I L d. T c L A s s I F I E D ll:DUCID 41B>IOOM Great Meta North tour bedroom with new carpet.a and many other f eature&. Close to schools. ahopplni and JC· ceu to freeways. Lirt'• aeU it and move you Jn by Cbrl1l.m111. ~!313 riliii AIAMDOH• VILLA SPAMSHlll HACH S7t.fl0 Arched tor-mil entry to dramatic Uvln1 room with cathedral opeo beamed celllrl1 6 noor to celllnc fireplace. Wall of alua views terrace and f 111h •roundl. MaJuUc :K' master 1ult. wlth •d· .. . .. . . . BILL GRUN DY, REALTOR ~ 11 n,, ,.,,,,. I •r1... '• 1' /, ,_,,J, SHHHHHHHI JUST USTIOl Another ateat Harbor Realty ex· elusive Jn the original aawcs. Quiet corner. location, beaWfuUy de- corated ' Bdrms., spacious tile paUo ..-you '11 Jove to show It off. Call to see. $174,500. 673-4400 ~~ Tll[ REAL I ~~H~~; . - SUPER HACH IUY lmmac. ~w carpets. new paint, aJry a bdrm. 2 bath, break!aft nook . tee double flr. Tennl.I, ~THF. REAl.l CSTATERS I -. ,~ec. .. .,., ..... ..-: ...... . .. - ~~COATS & WAl.LACr ~ R£Al ESTATE I INC. I " ., ...... , ""' .11•.1· .. '"'•'"' IHI ,111'lt1 · • .~'' '•'!' ""'I \'"· •;ervmq Cn'-;t,1 M•·'>a lrvtnc ll1111l1nq11,11 IH· 11 11 N1·wpot1 R1-.1• 11 WAUC TO WATER $275,000 AeT01s the street to P• n1ula BayCront II Jl.9t stepe to bett Ocean· rl"OSll beach. Oraadlo .. • bdnn home w /2 1tories of creative decor. Open r..una ~lconlea Is 10ar· int lndoor greenhouse. One or a kind on a pre· IU,SOus comer. WATERFRONT HOMES ltSM. !STATE l.163M400. . . . MIW HIW llDFOl.D Popular 4 bedroom New Bedford floor 1 plan, brand new in active Seaview. Best value, especially In that it ii, draped, landscaped and wood floors have been added. In Seaview the ten- nis is tops, pool is perfect, jacuzzi is jumping and the view IS ... vantastic. Price is just $235,000. U,_.l()Ut: lif)Mt:S REAL TORS I~ 675·6000 2443 t:ast Coast Highway, Corona del MJr' also in Mesa Vorde. ill 546 ·5900 CHMral I ooi GeMrGI I ooz ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• &II & FHA l IR + FAMIL y Ill $73.tDO.EastUde Great Starter Xlnt Eastaide Costa Jmmaculate home. one Mesa local10D. 3 Bdrms r b be + gJonl add on riuruly o t o st buyers in room! Sbowas llke a jewel CAita Mesa. Large lol, " v A bu Yer 1 Ii re super 3 bed.room home, welcome! <No down to covered patio, ealin& Vets!) Price ruduccd area off the kitchen. Trailer parking $63 500 $2000 for fast s ale! n,_ • • ' Hurry' Call846-7171 DN,C&IJSC0-1720 °'"'NI• Y ·rt~'UNIOI t1<li 'JRR81[C [elfi!ll\I •'#I 111 CaDfont10•• -- COROMA DEL MAR DUPLEX CORONA DEL MAI Ocean side or hwy' de· llghtfully charming 2 MOUMl'AIM HIDIOUT $6-4,900· Get. away from it au & atUJ be )ugbway, close to oivUiz,_tion. 3 bedroom, llfj bath, brick llreplace : formal dinlnJl room .· Clean Air. stnale .. auage detaChed. Some furtlisb.lngs &· flock of chickens go witb thie Silverado ·retreat. · CHRISTMAS IONUS $107,000 Spend your Christmas in this lovely 2 story, 4 bedroom, 2~ bath in beautiful· A.naheim Hills. W~t bar, auto energy time saver, air purifier for asthmatics. Many extras. Decorate to your heart's content. Separate ctining room, large family room. IY THE SIA $'7, too· Walking distance to beach,. community pool, 3 bedroom, 11/2 bath, condo. Lender will finance to in~estors. IMDOO. SUNSHINE $6f.t.OO ' GoQCl news! Light up your life with tbe indoor sunshine of this beautiful 3 bedroom, 1% balh cornered lot home .. Many amenities. Bring your wife & smell the freshly baked bread in this sunny kitchen. 11055Mogll0ia5t. fwt•Yalty 963-1311 with pool. Just lislcd. One or a kind duplex w pool & jacuzzi on over- l>ized lot. Sep. 2 BR house In fronl, 3 llR 1n rear. $189,500. Owner may carry un hou.o;e + near new 4 G _, I 002 ·~---• Bit upl. + •1 car l(aral(c. 9ftet""" _.,. 1002 ~185,000' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SRI CHS IRWJN UMGO RULESTATE 644-7020 Batboa lay Prop. Realton • 675-7060 * SUIURllA TRl-lEVEL Be11ut1ru1 lri-level in sub---------1 urb1a llunl1ngton Beach FURN'O. l In. l ba, 811: clo~cts 1n u II oc:.eanfront cond o bedrooms \l.1lh hu1IL·m w .ircul proximity lo book case 1n maslcr bo11l basin. bcuchqh, hclrm. ll looks llko u new h:irb<>r & ~ntc•r FUN modot In a \t'r~ quit'l Vucanl al $59.000 Call nC'1ghborhood. 5-lh ;?.113 WALLACE & Co. <~I'll I J .. I ' r, ',, '' - -REA-LTO_R_S _,[~ •• ·• ~ 714-729-5966 . '°" ~ Si111J1ing! MANAGER WANTED REAL ESTATE A high earning opportunity with a well known standing Real Estate Co. Open- ing a new office in Costa Mesa. Must have experience. Salary + Applica- tions confidential. Reply to Ad #68, Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 GeMt"al 1002 GeMrat 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• · ~II. mecnab I trvlne ~ realty TWO IM WOODlllDGt •SU PER VALUE. One of the nicest 3 BR Villagers -end-unit w/lg. rard & lovely covered patio. Move· m ready 1 $72,500. •SPARKLING! 2 BR condo near· lake & close to pools, clubhouse & nomm'l center. $72,500. (A·57) ' Forrest Powers '152-141' ~j;YOUI Clean a bedroom, 2 batll, atarter home. tlS'1 ,000. Eub~ chatmer, new carpetM&palot. '71,000. Metl Verde 3 Bedroom, +famllyroom! S'lUOO. Vacant 3 bedroom ln move-lo coodltlon ! -~· ....................... Beautiful 3Br & den, 28a, ·· -· .s:· HERITAGE flEAll O RS --· *** BELIEVEIT7 •ll1•oom •21/ie.tlll •1700$41.Pt. .r-.co.t •Poil 0*$13.000 PACIAC COAST PROPRTllS 631.0400 24 Hrs. *** ~ Walkr.r t; lee workshop " atora1e --------• b.uildlnt. recently re-Uke qew~o e1e Park -4 decorated, offered bJ Br2ba. $89,900 by owner. Shown by appt ownr. only642-8729 Real Eti.te only. S21S,OOO. 8'75-SCll TIM.EVIL -,..-c-.-.-s-•• -G-Hr-- ...dll\'CMll C-*t l!AUTY Pvt party, mutt sell one Fisbulous ono of a klncl Colombia io Col~•• Park. Ideal for O• resalonal peraon th tarse family. Home be• belm C\llt.1>1-t Ut ia· chide over 30 addltlcmat ;&~~-d~&. .~•kl~~ IES11UYIN WOODBRIDGE 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, 2 parking 3 BR, 2 BA. extra sharp of two properllea on apacea.. Sul>terranean noor pJan. Hl11hly up-"Flower St. ha East C.M · l garage, security bldg. graded. c.iose to ever-duplex or 1 lot. w /2 A. Br I a r wood -4 $118,QOO. Call .Pepper ythlng. Low down, low hoWiea.rTJ.63'1% ...___-..::: _____ ,bedrooms, 3 batht, ~lit Jooes payments, ofrered at SANTA CRUX level Up..-aded wilt\ de-CONTINENTAL p.500. Call now. CM Trtpletr La Cuesta with .maulve coralor mirrors, huh REALTY 54n.3666 2Breacb.•lnl'lncome.& Spa.nith tile roof. carpets. drapet and iSH.Slt .,.. location. sieo.ooo. Bltr. c.thed al .. ,_ levelon. Plus a J.oni Utt : 645-31132/'7~-9023 r ce ..... p create al exti-u. Priced fS,OOO --------1 open apacea. Separate below com-•abto ""t'O· family rm, country ,._ ' eoro.a., Mar' I OZJ me M'aa Verde Home. k:it.cbm wtth break.fut. pert.lea forquleka~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~-----=---.-1 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, new exqultl(e formal dine. I i--•-----1 poo1 as Jacunl. Many UP-, Lp stud&o ror proJ~. l'tf ltel.-in •IAl BIAll HOUSEALOHll! I/SIDI grade8, Open Sunday. Sweepln1 maater ii worth thl.t pm.. But CO•'T ... ME.S.._ 2B73 Europa Dr. 557-2.157 ~uarten. All very near you can Uva near the • "' "' ,....111:a .... 3 ••a •-e"•y •A vi-• beach in Corona del Mar $71.000 "'....,._, · Bkr53&.sau-""' .... · & have tenants help 3 Bedrm. hure tot. e>.a'cMltt 1oa4 ' pay ... $175,000. Complete with hardwood ....................... 1 .... 1!9• NORINS REA,Ln floor, dbl gar. covered ~ 1042 * 4,4 ao57 * patio "quiet street. Out WHITI WA Tiil VU ... •••••••••••••,••••••,_--.._....-....---...,;;..:..;;... .. of st.a~ owner need11 im· ·-mediate sale. Su ..... r buy-Exec. !l'ownhome over-OCEANFRONT1-------- CDM ~OTtAGE hurry! CaUM&-sai> looklnf harbor & south Sunset Beacb D1QRa WITH.POTEMTIAL coast inc with night 2 bomes, 2 lou. Bkr/Atn DEUG.C.: ... ,. 2 BR. 1 BA charmer. Ugbtl. 3 Bdrma, 2~ ba, IM&-5686 Part Ho---Pl-"' fl a-.a ram rm, lrplc. 2 Story1---------1 ,._ ma ,,..,. Live lo beautiful front end unit. Pror landscape lrffle 1044 a number ode bol1\e ! unit, whUe budding unit &decorated. Gas BBQ on .. ••••••••• .. ••••••-•• Parquet e~. ellcetlut on rear of Jot. Greatl~~~~~~~~~I sundeek, wetbar. 11. mi • carpet, COfJ)er location. leverlfee. 10% Down OK. Fl U bch, comm pool, Ju. $1 58,500 can be a 3 IUl or 2 and a Only~95·:>°~ .. so xa PPERI sauna, clubhouse. Deane home--Univ. den. Gr••l couotry ~~ Use your lmarlnallon! Tr 8 0 5 f.e r , q u 1 c le Part "Ktnslnrton" mdl. ki~hen. ll't Hahl, it's With paint, carpet & poueaoon. Owner w/pool, jacuzzi .. ai·r. airy and ll't priced rttht sic,,.., r·•• ,.,,,.,. •• """"' 111 HI tCJn t-. Ot VI l UPI'-''• VICTORIAN IUUTY llOme fixln' you cao turn ' 0 d 11 • alWJ,.500 this basically good 4 GS-81. 1 pen a )'. 3% Cst.m. pool decking. 2250 bdrm home Into 8 aetwelcome.$129.$00 sq. rt. Mtnl·bllnds ahowplac-e. A large fami· ----------thruout. Comln& Cook- 1 y room. pool 11ze FOlmf•Val.y 1034 \Op llOYe. lush atrium. backyard & much more. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• auto. spnnklera & lites. Call 64s.o:l13 TllUllOM ~Ownr~:i/A~&t~·=540S:4'.:"~1::--t~~~~~=~ OHMYGOSH red hill ~ .. 552-7500 F=ORE S T E OLSON ..,.,. ........ , ... , 4 BDRM.$., C~mily rm .. Fee I.and. New c~lng just lnsta.lled. Well local· ed. 4 BR .• a'A! ba., family rm. home, only $109,950. Wow l lH) 833-9781 Hester·BNwn U lllt1)8 ~ For the Bu51 Fanilly All decoraUog and landacapln1 haa tae.n dooe. Ready lo movein-to. 4 Bdrm .• 1 t:>a .• CLEANER and. PRET· TIER tban to:w : , __ ;;;;___;..;_,._..;;;=.;:...;;;:...1 REDUCED prh~e aow • $114.500 FORt;ST E OLSON . ... . . Wl1ela11 'fAl l\IATI ·. ' I t t ' .. '" OCIAMYllW TOWNHOMI _,..,.,....J•••u•2Va ..... ..... .. _ .................... . ...it1es ..... t1Nt • C11xis'ty .............. ~ ...... ~ _ .... .,. ............... 0... :f1ie-*-.._. ......._ flrapl1c• Ill l•lllg ~_._... ..... Sl27,IOO. 493-1112 ~G\jNA MGUfil. G$.1T4!0 SOL TH LAGliNA ~l a.,-.... ...................... IJYIEAA IXCLUSIVIS HtQB IN THE SKY. 3 ~· & den, fanlasic ~-" c;ity ~lew.I Xlnt ~.close to =· See today at E 6: INCOME. 6 downtown Laguna 3 Commercial, 3 rflldentlal. PantHl II 'Quall\. ~viewa.$595,000. ; • ~RTUNITY OF A Iii IPllKe . ' ~KEI Oceanfront~ . reatauraol, be art of MOO QUAN.St. IUCM wuna Beach. All new PltEST1GI equipment. $850, 000. Community at an af-ritt ST I C H J L L S . fordable price. Close to ovcn-lookinl Laguna; beaches & frwys. Don't a.a sq. ft., Chris .Abel miss this • call now. deslped 5 bdrm. home. 548-GJ22 "' rare opportunity at $375,000. c:= WalkHr & lee ~ Walker C lee RealEatate Noam LAGUNA. Walk Real F.atate 60 Ft. bayfront,' BR, den, td'beach. 3 Larte unil.a,J---------1 ~enlnlula. beautifully lands~. . Patio Home• Rlty 67~ =~-~:::9• ced Move-in condition. nle MIWPOUCOMDO roof, aprlnklers, new Sll0,000. 2 Br 2 Ba. fplc, llAGNIFICENT 3200 sq. landscaping, many in· Bkr. $45-211S32n52-9023 n.., 4 bdrm., 4 ~ bath tttlOI' upgrades. 2 BR's, LOVl!IYMOMI home. Finest oceanrron l n ad u 1 t co m m • , Ya. community. Loads or ex-amenities abO\lnd. (36) WMTIMG FOi YOU tne. ~.ooo ~· i/an 1 Newly decorated 3 Bdrm • home with all new lSKRGE 4 bdrm., family carpeting, wallpaper, tdfte. El Toro, close to • large country kitchen/· ~h.500oola le s hopping. ..II family room lnclud 'a _ -• --buUtina & microwave. 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~11821 Marinen. BUILDER'S attention. Dell'tMIH TMt 0..1 =======:::. ,.._ R·2 lots, heart otMhea.V191o 1067 $149.101 .~tJMB~ Daaa Point. Both for •• .. ••••• .. •••••••••••• 642-0913 146-5~43 SUIHIDI ~•Al6»0Ct~lk.a 1 ..,000 3 Be 2 Ba, carpet. dtp1, UYIMGl I HI~. C..t Hwy. patio, lndacpd, fned, UDO SA .... DS Theultlmate In 1urf1lde ...,...._. 4t4-t411 I INV·ESTllENT op· beaut view. "7-ISSO or f"llll l • portunity; a beauWul 1»3'125 Nlce a bl' home. 1 blt to living. Panoramic y ew •----.:...---'"- -inoCel. heart of Laawaa bcb. ,J..«U of detorator • BefdL Close to bea*s ... __. 1HU I 06' lci&ArtU lt...a yow-own If. parks, Xlnt cop~. ~-~··•••••••••• Jac~~l. Offered at I ~.000 I $115,000. ' '" I~ Y VIEW FUUll llAL TY ~l:llFftOOM~~tn . 2br. atia Moblle Home 1n 14~• • • ~ 'ii'' ~xcltulve Bayalde1---------1 .,;;;-~-w •H·2800 VJll•ae. Din. mi, den, OCIAMROMT __ _.......,_..._ ___ __. • ._ ..... · lndry, wet bar. Pool, Lovely 3 Bit 2 bath R d jacuad le clbh.e fac. furnisfled~achlaouse CClllYOll oa . Bo at. • ll p av all. 7108W. OCt.\N1'1\0NT 0ute eotU.Ce wtth bi1 tot. S!9.509totr. f7S.780I 0n11 $'l17,ooo :tit::or,,b~~·~ '::r4. OCIAM VllW CAYWOOD Many poaalbllltlea JQJI Cateo.-UC• ~Jt,C,i.. th1a MlA sooed property. STHOUSAMQSS ~ &90) . W1ac*I f« a fut aale.i----.---•1 Vacut 6 .eller ls au· IAl&AIM ~--~~---~---11""::-::7=:-::-::=:=:-I .1ou1. BeauWw 2 br a .......... ~.• .. /~~c.f •CoJamc~~ft S !4"11 MTllll N Swport C1,llle mo 1171 ,....... --par .. n e ••••••••••••••••••••••• um price t won't laatl Beach poql bome. a MO'l'MAHYLEFTI Jturry!Cal ~ Bdrll\. fam. rm.• din. BR ho rm. Sea~ul cupeta 6 Sln&le story ' me dr'apes.Prtoedtorafaat In San Juan Capo. ~rJ~EST E OLSON . ' . ale at S1111MO. BWTY I $15,500. Totally up1rd -----~~~• ean-.1151 tbtu-out. Lndacpd, varle· tJ~=~:r· Re."l:. Bett)'Cbeppe ~ -· -: . HERITAGE . • R[ALTORS S.ut. dphc. 3 br, a baths, 1900'. a aundecka, flJl, walk to bch. S565. •·Ul$5 ~ ... '. •-' ~- K~rtCrest Condo 20r Deluxe, cheery 2 Br, qwet --------•I 3 Bdrm, plus Den. Ten-:.r~ly. No pets. S375. OCEAMPIOMT nls, Pool fac. Close to -----_ --3 BR, 2 ba, yrly. ~ bch. $575. Agt. 631-1304 ~, ....... a 3707 ST&tS TO HACH 2 BR lildeaway. Pnvate, ••••••••••••••••••••••• qUlet, lge yard. $390. mo. BF..ACll, View, Pier, 2 Br 494·5873 o r art. 6 , $450. 1 Br $375, '325. 499-1036 556-0846 Adlls, ul1l pd. 303 E . · F.dgewater. (1) 871·2866. WATH VIEW Bach, $175 yrly. 1 adult only, non smkr pref'd. 2 BR, 1 ba, yrly $310 2 BR, 1 ba, yrly S375 associated 0ROK Cll '. RfllllOllS i a1•, 'lw liotho•t c. I ' ·~• 1 Townbome located In the u t i 1 Pd . 6 7 5 3 o 6 3 C.OVee. 2 ~R, 2\.-li balhs. 2 eva/wknd!I ---------• Priv: patios Upgraded --Large 2 br 1 block to appli'a. Security, pool & Costa Mesa 3724 ocean, euy' accesa 2 car Jacuzu. 6 Mo. lease. ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar, large patio. Avail•· owner will consider SSO WIEt( & UP ble Dec. 5. S300 mo to loo,ger. $1500/mo Studio, 1 bedroom June l or ~ annual I I "f. _. I< I \I I ' ,')lj I (OJ\I ''"' Ci1on1 d•I ~l' Maid service, pool lease. No peta. 5'4""206 2376 Newport Bl, C.M. 548-9755 or 845-3967 Bl~f~ c00do, 3 BR, 2 ba, Logima hodl 1741 yrly. 2 br, 2 ba , 2 ~ cond. S500 Mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• story 2 car encl. 1ar11e AJent 844-1133 LAGUNA BEACH MTR. balcG,y. ' NWPT. Shores, waJk to . 557-4IOO • 43$ ···················~ ANTED: Slncl• w \ carace to kut ln CM oet1 Newport Area. C•IP. 548-7157 -. i OT • .12111Jlq Cl w/2 ofClces. Htg, A/C. 3 pbue power+220 'Annual lease. 15181 Weatatate St, · Westminster. 839·0711 or '968-0027 RtOMlOTO 1,000 sq. FT. burr Whit \'.. R\'.,dl\lr 7901 Nt'wpo tt Olvrl N 0 (/14167'• .\(, 10 -·--- SEND CHRISTMAS CARDS VIA THE DAILY PILOT I Mailed anywhere in the U.S. for $1.00 Send your Christmas message to your loved ones -write, type or draw your card or we wlll set It In print for you. Sa mplea are ah own below. Actual size• are 1'1t" x 3" for $10. 1~·· x 6" for $20. 3Y•" x 3'' for $20. Add $1.00 to th• COit and we wlll mall a complete paper to your loved ones. Your Chrtatma• Card• Wiii appear on December 6th. For more Information or to order your card by phone please call our Christmas C•rd Ad·Vlaer at 642-5878. Or you may btlng or mall your card to Dally Piiot Chrt1tmaa Card, 330 W. Bay St., P.O. Box 1580, Co a ta Meaa, Callf. 92821. Charo• It or use Master Charge or BankAmerlcard. HAPPY HOLIDAYS t~tbe GRIGGS in Virginia BABYSITl'ER Wanted. M)' home or youn. S days week, workln1 mother. Al-4748 at\ 5:10, CM l!:QuaJ Opportunity £mplo)w'M/P ~llltCt•tll1r venSucc.., Ja 11re PrOr ... loA! C411Ua.JWlfO Uz Relnde.rs A1ency 4020 Blrtb, Ste 1CM NB Call for Appt/Etl•b 'IS , I 1 J \ I ----·-- INSURANCE·P•rl·tlme c:uualty, commerctal mqier. •cency. m-w1 or~• LhasaApeos YorklblreTerriera ·· Bea1Jemlx M lxed kittens ... Himalayans '•i PAIKH"SPITS ~ Next to RALPH"S ~~ Ford l\d. N.B. 640-00llO :.,. l;'antaaUc II' dry bMr, 6 . stooli, blk lthr & oak. ·.beautiful cond. 1300 . • Must sell. 768·0190 ·:Bumper Pool 4' Dlnln& • Table Combo Solid Oak. 5 mos old. $375. S-.9 311 ; aft.4 ·:;<)FA, 2 pc sett 'I, 8' ea, ti :l dye terry grn/yel/ or :• 11whl. Gd cond. Xlnt Co ·•(am· rm or a pt $125 '• 831·2Ml alt. 8 wkdys .-Brown Corner Group, • complete set. Excellen : cond.tt1on. $75. 842·8055 ·~mogeSale 105 ·>····················· ao.1m New Brand Name Pianos lO"'c over cost Beach Music Center 174«M Beach Blvd, 11.B 8'7-8536 UPRIGHT PIANOS Steinway Sharp $1895 ,_..,Plano Shoppe T28 W. 19th CM 548·72'72 Reuphol lounge c hr Christmas : PM al Kaiser Middle ' School Old & new item + baked goods. :~1Sat Dee 2nd & 3rd ·j :30 ·4 30 . Many $i9 962·78S4 SWIMG SET, $20. 496·1585 art 6 S.wiftg MochlMI ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Ouistmas goodies 406 KING Slit! Mattress & • Morningstar Dr. llun Spnngs, xlnt cond. $65. SINGE.ft Dlx. Zig·Zue. (Oial·A-st1lch ), xlnt. cond. Automatic, but tonholes, blind hems, .• llrbr cash. 9611 6().H ::? Wkds Dee 3rd & 4th & 11th &r IOlh 318 Coronad •<Bal Penn) IOam 5pm ..-Bst ofr buys. everything • goes, oven, Cum, clothes. • cmplt hse sale Grea ·• Christmas bargains r -- :OOllS, dishes, lamps. • misc. Pool tbl (slate) l ' 2 • "l.luck, 6'2" x 5'2''. ti' ; Slater, 118. Wed thru"_ SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Parcel -Dusky - Sixty -Wallop - PAY·UPS SpoethlgGoocb 1094 Five dayi. a week I go to •••••••••••••••••••• • •• a health spa and ever-Fischer Super&lass yume it's the same snowsk1s. 195 cm w /o schedule: Chm.ups, sit· ups, push ups and then what hurts me the most PAY-UPS. ,:furniture and many -items. 2105 Santa Anu 11-1 ,. CM. Wed to Jo'rt ufte ; 61'M ---rwo men's 3 pu~cc suits. ,.W:.hr, dryr, beds & many Brown p1nstr1pc and • other items 9tl72 t:r bluck grey plaid. Size 42 r 1 n g ham Dr , JI U. reaiular. Paid SlSO ea. Sut1Sun. Almost new. Lost 35 lbs · can't wear. SSO each. i Family lluge Yard Sale 979.2342 after 6 00 PM Thurs thru Sat 9 A!'d to 4 1060 ·········~············· Beauty. Arabian gelding. reg. 3 yr old, chestnut. l6 3 hands, trained 754· 1039 or 548· 7222 Hom1hokl Gooch 1065 . "' .....•.•..•....••.••. Btfl Christmas Girt Waterless Stalnle1111 Steel Cookware. reduced, 19 pcs. lifetime guarantee. 4 aeta, must sell 536-2403 KING Quilted Bed spread & 2 pr. matching drps Nr. new. Yellow, green & org. noral. $200. 645·74 &1133-9880 ........., 1070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID FOR YOUR JEWELRY. WATCHES, ART OBJECI'S. GOLD. • 81LVER SERVICE, ·FINE FURN 4' AN- 'MQU~. 645·2200 , 'Uveetock 107 s USE THE DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE GIFT PAGE TO SELL YOU~ HOLIDAY GIFT ITEMS OUR PAGE eppe8rl every Thuract•y from Jlkw. 17 thru Dec. 18. T more r.ou run the '••• you p • Por nformaUon • h•lp In pl.ctng your ad call your CHRISTMAS AD-VISER 842-6678 • '°'' C.U:"" SiM/ SEA RAY'S Al 1971M.det• I 81-301 HARRISON'S SEA RAY 2327 So. Main. S.A. 54CMS55 3101 Coa1t Hwy, N.B. MOTO.R HOM ES FOi\ RENT From $100. wk. 710·0644 Twin dal, 3k.w+ many RENT Fireball 23' Sell extras. Super cond. cont. Auto/air. CC, CB, $55,000 or orr. <714) stereo,slps664~2283 957q ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly custom, new cstm paint. Ma11. A /C , AM;l•~M 8 track, CB. TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR CLEAN ~·1 ·:1 1Jt• I' 1 I A' •I bl 'Jl l qu~ .. '1N1,T H~IHt.•-:t • 111: ..• ,., •,1(1(J 14/ . . : Ml',\1'.)fJ, 11 1CI ,,,...,,, .. '' J.. , 1 I ' I • ·I > ~ I • t l -I 1978BMW's HERE NOW! COMPLm IODYSHOP MOWOP!M DCB.LIHT SB.ICTIOM Of IMPORT C:AIS IMW RISAUS ALL MODELS We may baye yoW' next ---------=--1 car ln out inventor)'. Call Ml 'l(."J ~If 1r v&•(1IT< ,HJ, I ~.a~. ol'J ''14 wt us today! .._.EED IJl·Z0404tMt49 '8DAT510AM/FJSdu. " 1-.....;.. .......... ~~====:--1 Gd tlret, tWll 1cL MUJt CWH ~~31s1but o,,tr. USIDCAIS HOW CALLPAIPY CRE VIER 540;,5630 1011\SO\ ,\SO\ • LINCOl N· ME:RCUl!Y '73Holiday. xlnt cond, self Complete calm in\r. cont. Ii ving 4' lra vel. 498-3832 ----- .,, .. , .J ..... CL.I.AH CAMPEIS lo4"\flJ•1 I/fl ( 1MP >I.tr\ ?2 ... Tep C...... .................... $2791 Alr,.......,..,..tin\ · it, r I . 41' 1"1' '.J l 'Z!.~..,., . so"' Gl.OtllOUS GHIAS ?2 ........... ~ •••.•••••••••••• attl ~ ........ ,at, -~ -~ •.. . "'· f' •• , ... 7 --................. ~-.. --... . . ... ····-~-................... .. • • . .. "' ..._ ... ...... •••• ..w ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._, t7JI o~ 'Tl 1M IPYDIR Only 20,0lllllll. ma1 wbLI, oew Urw. w •• xlnt. toad. Mil.tse.ll.lSOflnn. PP. 714·!13-7400 rrom I t 6PM • 114-MMal3 aft 6PI( ·r. Coupe, nda work. ~ 416-1185 att. e 74 FORD CXXIUE:R Cuatom eiderior. f 1 A05058 • OHLY •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '2895 ·75 OtEV MONZA Good gaa mleage. (869NKJ<) OHLY ·-·······••••••••··········•·············'2595 r 72 PONT. GRAND SAFARI Wagon. Room for whole family. (131ELT) .. OHLY .......................................... $ 1995 76 OLDS STARFIRE Bucket aeata. 6 cyl., air. (717NAMJ OMLY .......................................... '3995r .. • • 75 OLDS OMEGA SALON •Or. Tiit wheel, w. (888MUt) •' . \.( OHLY .......................................... 13495 75 OtftY CDtDOIA . Air, speed oontrol, AM tape. (622NLDJ 09'4LY .......................................... 14195 77 DOI& ASPEN WGH. Economy & room for the family. (o.MRKR) OHLY .......................................... 1 499 5 76 IRADl.EY GT ~ 1.' Sporty, economy plus, only 3~·m11... 1 OHLY ....................................... : •• 4995 .......... ,w •••••••••••••••••••••• '64 JaS. XKE Roadster MG 9742 Hardlop, wires, $2800 -or •••••••• ••••••• •••••••• , beat. &52·0505 eves or * * * * **·** · wlmds . • • '73 XJG. Brwn/lan leath rf. • intr. M.000 ml. $6600. Ph * • ~aft 3pl'D. ,. ·K~9Mo 9735• · • •eHeeeeee•••••••••••••: i°l Ghla Cpe. Stick. Xlnt it ' oon4. J,M95. or beat orr. .... • 4lM ·21.30 .... • • ...... ' 9731, • ·~r·•••••••H••••••••• • • • ltL=:==;,.;;;;.;;...:;:==i miracle mazda ~ f ......... ·, • HERB • it FRIEDLANDER • • 7iMAllY Biii Blta Dlllgner Seri••· (728RSC) 76MARKIV Full power, blue. (084NXN) 76¥AitKIV Full PoWef, white. green landau. (238NK1J 't • ~' ••• ··:····· f ••••••••••••••••• ·: ••••••• 10,395 ,. 76~1V Fl.Ill poww, nwoon. (797NBW) OML\' ....... : •.•.•••••••••.•••.•••.•••••••••••• '9995 . 75MARICIV Full power, white. (486l.10) ....................................... '869 5 llFOllYOU sa&. YOUI I VOLVO, See us for • t.op dollar estlma~l . MERCURY CAPRI :g ·. . . . • • 1977 • lt76 CADILLAC ,,,. BRAN D NEW CAPRIS "'~ EYER~ BRAND NEW 1978 PLYMOUTH .. VO LARE In stoclJ reduced to only $75.00 0Yer Factory lnYoice!* GIANT VALUES ON '77 DEMONSTRATORS! 168 FORD FAIR LA HE v..a. aut()fnJ11C, air con01ttontng, p(!Wer steering, power brakes, AM radio. heater. Whitewall tires. (XOA570l , ATLAS ~ C hry1ler Ply111o•th Se"lc• Hours: MOftday thru Friday, 7:00 a.& to 6:00 p.m. Sahrclay, 1:00 o.m. to 5:00 p.m. .,.. ... ,.,..---. -...... .,. 11Ht SaJe or "••• .................. . C .. I P• CrH9a,. ·546'>1934. ; --- After• Ii .Y.Steelm VOL. 70, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, 4 PAGES ORANGE CO\JNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1977 HookerS, Bookies ·Jncreftse • ID By GUY GRANVILLE °' .. DeMy ...... Mllff Prostitution and bookmakinf are on the upswtn1 ln Orance County, accordini to Sberttra of. fice vice officer Jack Marwin. Record.a for the year ended Oct. 31 show that vice arrests by the Sheriff's office "more than doubled'' during the put year, Marwin said. Hia filW'es Included onJy ar· rests made ln unincorporated are~• of the county and ln clty ln· ve.U1aticm aided by aberiff 's vice invesUcaton. Cited a tbe hotbed for ladles of the nlJ.bt waa tile 10-called "HarbOi Boulevard at.rip" that runs roughly from Katella Avenue in Anaheim to Bolsa Avenue ln Wea~ter. In count)' territory, Misllon Viejo WU listed by Marwin u the bot spot for call elrls. Moat women arrested ID both proatltutlon centers weH deacrlbed by the vtce oUlcer .II retugees from the heavy aetioa on Hollywood Boulevard and the Sunaet Strip in DeiPborfnc Los Anselea County. And, Marwin aatd. moll women arrested oa proaUtutiOD chareea ID OraQle Comity ~ wbat be called .. b)'IM( wt.ore.a." women who have taken.,. to tbe streets or a hotel room to 1\lppart adrugbablt. D9lty ................. IMclllll DEBRIS LEFT BY OUT -OF-coHTROL TRUCK INCLUDED FRONT WHEELS Lagun• Cnash Left Tona of Dirt. Tom Met•I, Stucco on Street• 7 Bias Charge Rumiway T'TllCk B.iu Jail Writ 3 LB Garages, ElipS Delayed Superior Court Judie Everett W. Dickey has delayed any ac· lion that mi1bt force Oran1e County Sheriff Brad Galea to al· low women prisoners to serve their time in branch jails or on the honor farm. Dickey refused today to luue a writ that would have forced Gates into1uch action. The judge advbed lawyers for Barbara Dretzka Molar, 42, of Anaheim, that lawyers for Gates and the county Boarct of Supervisors should be atven time to respond to the allesatlom ln her lawsuit. It ia expected that a bearing ln· to allegaUona and a renewed de- mand for a writ will be acbeduled after the eounty. c:oumel'1 olftce lilet its anawer. BJ 8TBVE lllTOIELL oe•MIJ,......._.. 4 A 10-ton truck carryln1 a heavy load of dirt hurt.led out of control down a steep hillside road ln Laeuna Beach TUesda.y after· noon. destroying three 1ara1es before filppine on ita side. No one wu seriously hurt In the 1: 30 p.m. incident, which left the bottom of Nyea Place look.l.da like • battlefield. Bob Hamilton. 27, driver of the lt71 vehicle, said the trantmll9ion on the bu1e truck went out as he drove down the 20 percent ll'a4e roadway. .. It was just like drivinC ln neutral," the dued trucker 1ald, looklnc at a amall scrat.cb on b1I arm. "I tried to catch the ed1e of that garaie with my truck." be said, pointiDi to a bouae owned by Richard B. Johnaon at 36' NyeaPlace. Tb• lruok, carr1tn1 an estimated 14 tons of dirt from a project atop the bill, did clip the Johnson garage, uprootiDI a water pipe which tent a fi•e·foot high fountain into the air Hamilton said he closed his eyes after that, and did not see the truck slam into a •econd garage further down the hill at 340 Nyes Place. The vebtcle con· tiDued one house further, filpping in the roadway after hlttilll a carport 1arage containln1 a Mercedes Benz at 222 Nyes Place. Hamilton wu helped out of the back window of tbe cn11bed $23,500 ril by a pu1erby and treated at the scene by Lquna Beach firemen and county paramedics. Piremeo used abovell to move aome of the apWed dirt, fonnJnc a dam to prevent leaklne diesel fuel from nmnine into the iut· ten. .. "But let'• face it," Marwin aald, "there's money in Oraq1e County and vlce follows money." ''So, we have~ of lour or five 1lrl1 wor I tbe areu because there 1 bic money here." He cited ~ prosUtuUon arrests and 55 lewd conduct arrests dur- inl the one year period support. lnl tbe vice study. M arwln also said there were three arrests on pornocrapby cbarce$ .. wen u three arrests for phnplnc. . One ot tbe porno arresta ln· volved child pornoerapby, Marwin said. tr It ta dollan that la attractiq street walkers to Oranee Cotmty tbey are big dollars, accordlnl to tbe vice o(ficer. He 1aid women arrested OD proatitutioa dlarge1 aet their lllbtl OD $200 DiSbta U they make their way alone Harbor 3 Groups Zero In Boulevanl boplq for a "Jobll"to plck them up. A.a a result, police la A.nabeQn aay 1trll worlr::lq their pOrtloo ot the Harbor BOufevard etrip u. probably rakinl in cOUectlvely at leut •.ooo a month. accord.ln& to Marwin. He emphasized that a heavy majority of the prOIUt;utlon ar- . rests net out of count)' rc'aldeats. 1 Marwin laid there la no.lndica. (lee VICE, Page .U) MeadowlarkCrash BJ ROBERT BABKEB °' • ......, ........... City offtciall, pilots and an an· U-alrport IJ'OUP are zeroinl in on embattled Meadowlark Airport in a aeries of criall-like meetblp~ after an airplane craab lut Wedneaday. The Meadowlark Airport Cltbena Committee, which met thia week, bu called for the state Divtaion of Aeronautics to make a complete and unblued safety lmpectlon of the Hunt- inltOn Beach alrfteld. 'I'be Meadowlark Pilots Al· sociatloo will meet tonight and wtll take action to mlntmi1e nlsht operations at the troubled a I rport,, .. acoor4Jlp• to a apok•zz· -Coin•·=-oec::':i~ may reeommend tb•t nfcht nt1b"" be diacontlD ed, It• chalnDenH.ld~~; 1· ll&JW Ron · )'~ ciial8d tor a hialt ~ mpt openticilll earlier thla wen, Althoaeh he faYOn keeplq the airport open. PatUnson Hid that two Of tbe last three aubel occurred at • ni1bt and wduld appear to be a basla for t.be city to put a curfew onfilghta. The Meadowlark Airport Citizens Committee, a •roup which bu wqed a Iona and voctferous campaign against the airport. ta t'Onlklwln1 a recauat for a court in.junctlOD tO cloee tbe faeW~ aatil it la elther pl"OMIS aafeorunule. Tom LlftDIOOd. the lead« of th& 1mall t!l'Dlm, allo clalma that ''Iota of tbfiiP" wen left Q\4t ol a safety inapecUon report lut January: He edda that maa1 questiclm were left unauwered la tbe re- port by tbe state Dlmlon of AeronautlC9. Counctlman Rlcbud Siebert said tlKt cit.Y's atrpOrt committee may puraue tbe Dl&bt fly1n1 bail and make that reeommendatlOo to tbe city council. Siebert aald be believes that the city bu th• authority to halt Dilhl OlOta throuah enactment of an ordinance. Siebert'• committee, acbeduled to meet Dec. 8, will now convene Dec. 13 because two city coundl memben on tbe panel wlll be out of town at a Lea1ue ot Cities conventloo. Jim Evam, chairman of the Meadowlark Pilots A.aaoclatlon, aaid his lfOUP wUl "do what's necessary" to iDo~ue airport safety. Thia Includes minlmlzlQI nllht operations, Evans said. A pfan for nolle abatement and flJabt ufety procedures also will be ----'ENVOY TO TALKS' c~ MvlM• Preu ~rNamea . Top -Aide for Peace Muaion ac&ed on. Ev-.na uld be bell~ that some n1tht ru,bta are essenlial, but that student training •houldn'toccur after dark. . ''There are muy better places to 10 for ntlbt practice than Meadowlark," be said. Evans al.so said be doubts that the city can balt.nllht filabta. (SeeAIBPORT, Pap U) Suspect In Murder An-eSted 87 lllCBABLPASDftCR. • Of .. Dlllt ...... J Dma. one ot etPt~ r~ . ~~ murdttof 8tepben lobD BoYan ~ Fountalll l~~ .. bu beGI ar-rat94 b7 IPIUP'lllet lD Ball. In· donala. Newport, Beach police rePol'ted today. bavts. a former member of the La•una Beach Hare Krishna temple, reportedly ts "en- tbuaiutlc" about returniDI to the United States to face murder and coblptracy charges. · However, Newport Beach pollce Capt. Richard Hamilton 1aJd, ••we are •till trylnt to wort out tbe technlcalltlea of whose re1ponaibUib' 11 ia to 10 and 1et him." !!amlltoo Hid Davis was ar· r•ted 1'hankl'1vinl evening by Indonesian police at tbe reqast of U.S. autboriUea. Davia bad been IOU.lbt on a grand J\11'7 lndidment llelDWQf from t.be extbtion-ltyle •bootinc death ot Dewan ln front of the a Rancbito re1i.urant in Ne~ Beach. . Autborltles alleee tbat Davja · wu one of five prlnclpals Ill Pruadam Dlatributtq Inc. o/. Newport Beach. PoUce allege he (~ SUS~ECI', Pa1e A!) llOme Burglarized· The Huntinlton Beach HOME Council la expected to d1acuss 'municipal election reform meaaunt at its recutar monthb' meeti.Dg tonilbt. The meetjQJ will start at 'I: 30 tn !\Qom B· T, ad· Jacent to city council chambers. --~ 0 --• - ~YPll Ol ti F WASlllNGTON <AP> A Los Anleles clothin& firm owner says be lunneled more than $500,000 ln "com miss tons" from a btg American electronics firm to an oflicial of the South Korean em- baaa,v in Washington. Ttt.e remark• came lo testimony from Howard Lee be- fore tbe Securities and Exchange Commmion, wtuch is investigat- ing whether that money, plus about $900,000 more lo com- missions from E-Systems, Inc., of Dallas, wu uaed in the alleged South Korean influence-buying scbemeln Wubington. ln particular, the SEC la lri- vestiaat.lnl whether any preient or former memben of the U.S. mltltary received payments from the South Korean govern- m e o t. An SEC tubpoena specifically menUona a possible $10,000 payment by a Sauth Korean official to a retired U.S. Ai'r Force general. Lee, a South Korean-born U.S. citizen, was ooe of two officlala of th• Korean Research IJlsUtute of Los Angeles, wtuch received $1.4 million in commissions from E- Syatems. The SEC subp()enaed Lee and Boa Beloved Man Braves Fire for Pet EAST GREENBUSH, N.Y. (A P ) -Volunteer firemen led tenants away from a smoky fire at an apartment complex, but one resident pleaded to re- turn. He pestered lhe firemen. He begged the chief. But he wouldn't say what was left behind. Finally, a fireman led him back into the building. Three mi.Hutes later, the man returned with a large snak~ wrapped around him, firemen said . The unidentified man said the snake was his pet boa constrictor, but didn't want to stay and talk. "Once outside, his primary concern was that his !nake would catch cold," an official said. "So, he wrapped it around him once and stuffed the rest in his pocket until he got to the car." Probation Officer May Sue on Salary By KATIIY CLANCY Ol "'9 o.lly P'I ... Slaff An attorney for Orange County Chief Probation Officer Margaret Grier said Tuesday Miss Grier will go to court if necessary to ob- tain what he called a "reasonable salary." Santa Ana attorney Duff Hel- sin g told county supervisors that the 5 85 percent pay increase they were considering for Miss Grier as "inequitable, unfair and discriminatory " Supervisors then granted Miss Grier the salary increase recom- mended by County Ad - min1str.1&Jve ~pa-,r .tta.ltert Thom as wl\lch brinp her yearly pay to $39,:m. Helsin1 said Mlss Grier's 987-member staff Is the state's second largest probation depart- ment. In addition, its $20 million an- n ua 1 budget ranks the third highest among county probation departments in California, he said. Y cl. the attorney continued, her salary is seventh highest among probation chiefs in California. In addition, Helsing continued Miss Grier recently was offered Teen Disco Hearing Set 'Fountain Va11ey Planning Commission members have alat- ed a public bearing tooi&bl on a ptlJ>Oled teen discotheque. The heartnc will be beld at 7:30 p.m. in the Fountain Valley Council Chambers, 10200 Slater Ave. Bill Warren, a Huntlnston Beach entrepeneur, has applied for a permit to operate the teen ddco lo a 1hoppln1 center on the aoutheut corner of Brookhunt Street and Talbert Avenue. City Ptannln' Director Clint Sherrod baa recommended that the ~ommlAton amend "Uie city pfallJ11n& code to allow the pro- posed dbco to operate in a bust- neaa zone. a $45,219-a-year position evaluat- ing the impact a cutoff in federal funds would h ave on county youth programs. He contended that posiUon, which carried less responsibility than the probation chief's job, of- fered a $6,000salary increase. Supervisors Chairman Thomas Riley noted that position was on· ly a temporary one, limited to 18 months. Riley also contended the S.M percent pay increase was consis- tent with salary hikes granted most other county employes and called it a cost-of-llvin& lncre~ He said Helsing was argulnc for a merit pay increue w~uch wasn't the iasue before supervisors. .. It has to do wi.h the salary of the chief probation officer," Helsing continued. He said Mlss Grier's reputa- tion and career of more than 20 years are "on the line." Hearing Dam Public View OXNARD (AP) -A pre- liminary bearing to determine whether 17-year·old Ruben L. Torres should stand trial in the slaying of a high school drummer and the rape and attem~ murder of his &iJ'Urlend Jiu closed to the public at the request or a defense attorney. Torrel is cbaried wltb the bludgeoning death of Paul Yen- ney. 17. and the brutal beatina- r ape of Yenney's sweetheart, 18-year-old Linda Fiene. 11ley were found Oct. 15 in a field behind Channel Islands ru1b School. where they were both seniors. Two other teen·aae youths were previously arrested in con- nection with the murder and beatlng-rape, but were released aft.er the district attorney 1ald there was insufficient evldence to prosecute them. However, a Judie ruled earlier tbla month that Torres 1bould stand trial u an adult. Jona HQ Yoo, th• other known of- ficer of the lnstJtui., to testily about the money. According to aources dose to the cue and document.a obtained rrom the Sil!C, Lee teatlfle4 that he f wuielecl abou.t $500.000 of &he E·SY•tema payment.I to Col. ~~ Hwa.o Lee. '11te reR ~ ~ fl,4 mlWoo ttu handled by Yoo, a source said. The SEC it ioveaUgatlng whether Yoo al.lo funneled &he money to South Korean offidall in thla country or in Seoul. Col. Lee ta uaiatanl mWtary allacbe at the Soutb Korean em- bassy here and ls Howard Lee's uncle. E-Syatems, a major supplier of electronic equipment tor the Pentagon and the Central In- telUJence Agency, baa ~veral contracts with the South JCotean 1overnment, Including the 111.le of more than ~ million in military field radios. In conoectioo wt&h the 1ale d. the radios. E-S)'ltedl• bu ad- mitted paying $1.4 million ill rees to Lee and Yoo, who were doing business as the lna&.ltute. E - Systems has said the institute was recommended to It by the · American embaSJY iD Seoul as a aa lea agent, but there is no evidence the institute performed services for E-Systems to justify lhe commission. Yoo, a South Korean citizen, is a resident alien living in Los Ancetes, court records say. Fr981 Pflfle AJ SEARCH •.• An J.8..year-old redhead whose nude body was found lying along a narro\V winding residential road was seen being forced to the aide of the street near her home and dracged from her car the ni~ht before her death. Laureen Rae Wagner Tuesday became the ei&hth young woman found stran&led and dumped on slopes or at the base or bills in the northern suburbs since mid- October in a case police have dubbed ''the hillside strangler." .. Police believe there may be more than one strangler because a .teighbor or Miss Wagner re· ported seeing two Iara• meo force the girl'• red Muatanc to· the side ol the street Just two doors from her home in the Sepulveda area of the San FertJando Valley. Htr bod1 1'U found at a bend in the road Tuesday morning in the Mt. Washington area, 20 miles away. Police Lt. Dan Cooke said the discoloration around her neck indicated Mlss Wagner was probably strangled like the other victims. J. G. "Joe" Wagner aaid be filed a rnisaing penoo report on his daughter when she failed to return to their home after visit- ing her boyfriend Monday niabt. Wagner aaid a neighbor told him of his daughter's abducUon. Police were able to match the mlsaing person report with the body of the petite. red-haired woman dilcovered Tuesday by a . Mt. Washington woman taking a walk with a friend. Asked why be tbo111bt bis dau1hter wu abducted, Wagner said only, "I guess because me was a &irl" Then be broke into tears and walked away. "She was not a rowdy girl," said the victim's brother, Lyle.· Min Waper, a f raduate of Monroe High Schoo , wu taldng leaal secretary courses at Sawyer Business ColJe«ie. The COf'Oner's office acbeduled an autopsy to determine whether Mlsa Wasner..,. .. raped, aa were seven other W<Jmen. Cooke aald lnv..U1adoa of tbe latest death bad already been turned over to a 32-man flll.lalde Stranaier TUlt Force, made up of Lo• Ans•lea a.nd 01-..,i. police, county aherilf'a depUties and corooer'a ltaft, .. O"ANGI COAST H " DAILY PILOT FAA. Pro·ben llunt I Direlwd Pla~ P:ilot 1 rr..re1pAI Federal VICE .••. .. tJoD of ID ~anised crlmt thread =Ill OrUp , T However, t .added, hould proatituUOD acUvlty lncn and not be 1ubject to intense J w ea-• forcement it la likely at or- 1anlted crime will move t.o the racket here, As far u gamblln ll con- cerned, Marwin said th• 14 11herlfr'1 bc>Mmakinl arroata in tho put Y••r bave involved operation• 1rossing at. lea1i $10,000 a wea. ''Bookmakers pocket an estimated 22 percent or the eroaa," Marwin said. " So t~ can aee that it is a profl~e SEEKS ASSOHll. Y SEAT Optometrttt frlu.ehe Frizzelle Runs/or Asae~ly Dr. NOian Frfuelle, Oran1e Couq~y chairman of the Callfotnla Republlcan A11embly, announced h1a candldac:Y Tues· day for the Republican nomlna.- tlon ln tbe73rd A.saembly District. FrlzzeUe aald the district, which include• Huntington Beach, Fomnalo Valley. parta or COIJ,a Mesa and Seal Beach, is ont'ot six Assembly district.a that can be won by Republicans lo restore a bipartiaan Le&i.slature. "The era of low expectations, high taxes, antlbusineas and sbrln~lnc job avallabWty needs more tbouibtful btpartlaan de-b• aod fewer excuses for lnac- tion,'' hesaid. "Also, we've seen enou1b policy ntp-Oops by Governor Brown, and thc»e hanging on his coattalll, to have any faith left in what standards he may have or!ginally claimed," Frizielle said. · Frizzelle, a Newport Beach op- tometrist and a resident of Cotta Mesa, put 73rd Assembly incum- bent Dennis Mangers in the Brown camp at a Fountain V alJey press conference called Tuesday to announce bis can- dldac y. The Republican candidate said that Mangers, a Democrat, co- . authored a tax rebate proposal to &in excees Wes u a aocJolotjcal arrangement instead of givlne the money back to the people "the state tookitfrom." FriJ~lle said that Maqen later ale.a 1&alnat hla owll'blll. "He 1peaketh with forked tongue," Frinelle said. He said that Mangen Is a "Madisoo Avenue packaged can- didate with good looks. charm and articulation." He said, however, that Mangers wouldn't have defeated Bob Burke last year had Burke not been so busy in Sacramento and been able to communicate with bis district more frequently. Frizzelle was defeated in 1974 in a bid t.o become Orange Coun- ty supervis<>r in the fifth district. M anf.ep ls not expected lo formal y tmnounce his candidacy for re-election until the filing date in March. He does plan to run, however. Cbarlee Gibson, a Huntington Beach planning commissioner and a legialaUve analyat for the Los Angeles City Council, allo will seek the Republlcitn nomlna· Uon. oper at.kin." . He also said moat t'be bookmaklni acUvity in <>ranae Cowity apotllchtl sports act.ioo, inclu~ football card.I that net the bookies a 95 percent profit. As is the cue with prostitution, the vice officer aald there 1a no in- dication that organl~ed crime la a.t the reins of We1al gambllna ln Orange County. Atain tboulh, he emphulsed, or1anlzed crime will follow where there are auece11ful bookmaklne operations not sub- ject to vtcoioua law enlorce- ment. F,....PageAI \ SUSPECT.··. orfer'"ed three OUler men 125,000 to kill Bov"1 and two odier men. Affldavita tn file ln Oraqe County Sl.pt1or Court claim tbU Prasadam eaa a "froat'' for ll· licit dnll ttafftc. Captafa Ha.mlltoo would Dot re- veal the apedflc cbarcet upon whieb Davia ls currenUy belq held iD. Ball. but noted that lJh doneaim '11lboritlea often bold alleeed druc dealen for 20 dQI for lnvestiptioo. Because Indonesia does not have a form.al extradition treaty with the United Stat.ea, Newport Beach police will meet today Tilth Fill aeenta and represen· taUvea ol the District Attorney'• Office \0 work out tecbnlcallUes. Captain Hamilton aald local authorldea will try and IJ'&nl Davis' reported wish lo return to the U.S. to clear bis name ln the Bovan murder case. Davis is the fifth defendant lo be located im the case. Jerry Peter Fiori, AnlhQDY Marone Ir., and Raymond Reseo are .current- ly In custody ln Oranee Cowlty awaiting a Friday ArraiA'Jl~t on murder cbarges in "'SU)tel10r · Court. Fro. Pgge AJ AIRPORT ••• ''Only Mr. Nerio (airport owner Art Nerio) bu authority to do that." Evans aafd. When contacted earlier, Nerio said no comment. Asked to ex- plain, he said "No comment on no comment." Two Huntington Beach peqple, a commercial pilot and a student pilot were lnjured when tbei1" Cetsrra "° snipped power lines upon takeoff last Wednesday and crashed into a vacant field near the afrpbrt. Federal AviaUon Adminiltra- Uon officials said the rented trainer plane was belni nown by the quall1led pilot at the Ume or the crash. The Umv4!rtllY of .California will refule SU mlWon in federal aid to ltl five medical achooll- lncludlnl a yearly $.122,121 l!'ant to UC .Irvine-rather than lower a elm t11lon ttaadard1 for AmerteaDt who transfer from foretp modleal scbooll. The Health, Education and Welfare 1raota are tied to legialatlve amendmentl beln& debated by the U.S. Coqreu. HEW admlol1trator1, who back Uae leOalaUon, are request- ing that the IChoOla admit an m - dllctosed number of American student• tranarerring from forelp medical ecbooll wit.bout cooalderi.nl crades, courses or clau stand.in&. Ten Olbef' medical schools, ln- cludina Stanford Unlveraity, have refused to aancUon the pro- posed amendment to the ms Health Prolesalons Educational Aulstance Act. The exlsttn1 lelialatloa pl'O- vldet crut.1 to medical acboola, the amount baled on enrollment. It'• intended to eacourace the achool• to increaao enroll· meota. · The aaneodlnf tecislation would reqWft the schools to at· cept a certain DQlber ot the traoaf er ltudeotl, or stve up the t-4eral nbilidle1. By, ac!m1niltnUve order of UC Pr*' dent Oavid Saxon, the amendi'lient b unacceptable and the uQlventt.y will fore10 the 1ranta rltber than submit to the prOpoeed requirement. Tbe amendment wu rejeeted ln lta orll1nal form by the Senate. aDd now J:t before a Joint ~ Sena&. conlerence committee. Moat ~ tbe transfer atudents, accordlnl to UC tpoltesmen, are t.hos• Who could not meet ad· mlstion requtrements of U.S. tcbooll. After two years of study in forelcn pl'Olnma, many apply for atlva:oced admlasion at home. Some, tlut not all, a.re quallfled, the •~men aald. Technicians Call Sick-in At Fairview By JACKIE llYMAN Ot .. DMty,,_ltaff Psychiatric technicians at Fairview State Hospital iD Colt.a Mesa said today they will 10 ahead with a mus stck-ln begin· nin& Tbunday deaplte a viait to the h01pital today by two key state hea.lthofflciall. Psychiatric technicians leader Cathie Joy estimated that between 60 and 75 percent or the p8ychlatric technicians will join the sick-in. She said slightly more than 500 psychiatric tecbni- claoa work at Fairview, although hospital officials there have aaid there are more than 600. The ~blef demand by psychiatric technicians is writ- ten aereement that they will be recoplzed by the at.ate as the equivalent of nunln1 penoanel in dea.linc with the develoemen· tally disabled -primaril1 re- tarded and handicapped pa- tients. -- • .,, Orange Coast Daily Piiot Ed.ltorial P~.ft! .............. .--. ............... R.o•~•rt•N•w•Hd .. '.P.ub•11•she•r ... T.hom .. •.'.l(·"·v•111•e•d1•t«• ·• ~D. WedMtday. N'Ov.mbet 30, 1977 S.r~ra l(relblc:h/Edltorl•l Pe91 Editor ~irport Problem Demands Action ·rwo airplane crlljthea in JU.St over two weeks make at all too clear that the. city of Huntington Beach has a real problem with Meadowlark Airport. A great deal of emotion has been vented by residents , who declare that the privaie airfield is unsafe and should be closed. Events in rf'cent weeks have shown that there are grounds to be emotional. The crashes, although they didn't mjure anyone on the ground, are genuinely frighterung. Residential and commercial development surround the airport, leaving little room for error. The margin between a "routine" crash and a more tragic incident is thin. It is true that the airport was there first, not the peo pie. lt also is true that there is a need for general aviation at.rports in Orange County. And also, it is true that the city 1s at fa ult for allowing development to encroach on, and virtually strangle, the airport But these established facts don't dis pel the real fears the airport poses to nearby residents m the northern part of the city. For starters, Mayor Ron Pattinson as calling for a halt to night flights. This would appear to be reasonable in as much a s two of the last three crru;hes occurred at night. If something cannot be done. and soon, the city may be obliged to re-examine an earlier study to close the airport through court action. There are no easy solutions lo this complex problem But the time for action 1s here. We ma} not be so lucky the next time Doubtful Pi-~edure Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees have voted 3 to 2 in favor of a complex plan to spend $500,000 on the purchase of five acres of land near Hunt· angton Beach High School. The plan calls for dipping into a school district employee ins urance fund for $346,000 and into other ac· counts for $154,000 to come up.with the needed money for the purchase. Trustees have also voted 3 to 2 to sell some land at Westminster High School to replace the money taken from the depleted accounts. All of this came about when district officials decided lluntmgton Beach Hi gh School needed more athletic fields und parkang s pace Trustees Doris Allen and John Hundley opposed the plan calling it "fist· ally unsound and shaky." The general intent of providing more facilities at Hunt ington Beach Iligh School is laudable. But the manner an which this type of land deal was ac hieved should not become a pattern. Pre-season 'loss' The Coast Comumunity College District has thrown a few coastal area high school football teams for a loss of sorts well before the opening kick-of( of the next season. In order to finance the installation of new lights at Orange Coast College stadium, rental of the stadium has been upped from $.550 to $1.000 per evening -an 82 percent increase. Larger schools like Fountain Valley and Edison High Schools probably can absorb the tab easier because of big· ger following. But the increase may run Estancia (Costa Mes a ) and Costa Mes a lligh football teams right out of the stadium Coaches at these schools say they will be forced to move their games to Newport Harbor High next year. This ::ould cause some real scheduling headaches, not to men· ion less favorable transportation and parking situations along w1th less than pro caliber lighting. College district officials say it costs OCC $1,063 to )perate a game under the lights. While it would be un ieasonablc to expect the college to take a financial los:-. :?ach time 1t rents out the stadium, it might have been ap oropnatc <and more considerate) to phase in the increase >ver a couple of years. • )pm1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot )!her views expressed on th11 page are those of their authors and 1rt1sts. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O fox 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd I Dogs and TV ByL.M. BOYD Nole 1t claimed in print hat dogs can't see television. t'hey can pick up the light 1atterns and notice the mo· ion, but they can't focus well nough to make out the 1ature of the action, it's con· ended. lntcrestinc, it true. Was none other than a man 1amed O'Higains who iberated Chile from Spain )'Higgins? Indeed. Bernardo )'Higgins Dear Gloomy Gus IC you commute, you not only go to work, but you go back home. Commute 1s a roundtrlp word. Best way to !righten off a threatening dog ia to open a large black umbrella at it, l 'm told. Nobody yet bH explained satisfactorily why the wed· ding band for more than 2,000 years has been worn on the third finger of the lett hand. Not even many Zionists know that the British 1ovem· ment in 1903 offered 6,000 square miles of uninhabited land in Uganda for settle· menl by homeless Jews. Arnone the NCAA first· division football leama, more call themselves Tlaers than any other nickname. Ten do 10, In fact. Second most com mon team nlcluume 11 Bulldop. With 1hc. Jack Anderson Did Park Also Con Koreans? WASillNGTON Justice Depllrttncnt attorneys have agreed it Wlll take a lte detector to eet the truth out of Korean payoff man Tongsun Park if he accepts the deal to 1lve his tesllmony in exchange for im· munity. Park has made so many con· Cl1ct1ng statements, the prosecutors acknowledge, that hi s testimony would be worthless in t:ourt unless it can be bol· ster ed with s upporting evidence . They will in· s1sl, therefor~. that Park submit to a he detector lest as part of the deal. Their hope is that Park, with a polygraph machine monilonng his veracity, will pro- vide enough new information that they will be able to bu1ld on 1l. They will seek corroborating evidence, which they will then use to make more cases against congressmen who have accepted bribes. The prosecutors admit it will be Lough lo nail many con· grcssmen. The Justice Depart· ment has determined, for exam· pie, that Park highly exaggetal· ed his mfluence on Capitol Hill. He boasted to his Korean cohorts that he was close to congressmen whom he had merely met and that he had passed out cash, which he really bad diverted to his own use. ll looks as if Park was a skilled con man who misled even his own government. On the other hand, the Justice Department has solid evidence contradicting the South Korean government's claim that Park was merely a businessman who acted on his own. HIS LINK with the Korean Ci.'nlral Intelligence Agency has been established to the satisfac · t1on of the prosecutors. They are aware. however, that Park didn't nash his KCIA credentials on Capitol Hill and offer "bribes" to congressmen. He told con· gressmen, on the contrary, that Mailbox he wu a bullnestman who want· ed to cootrlbute to thelt cam-paigns. It will be difficult lo prove there were any strings attached to the contribuUona. Not witil later would Park drop by Md make a pltch on behalf of South Korea. The Ju.st.ice Department, therefore, might have trouble In court differentiating between political contributions and out- right bribes. The prosecutors will be able to prove, however, that some COD· gressmen were secretive about their dealings with Park and con· cealed the caah he gave th"m. AUTOSTATIC: In a move that could squeeze the nation's small radio manufacturers out of busi- ness, General Motors is forcing auto dealers to buy some or its 1978 models with built·in GM radios. Car radios have traditionally been optional equipment, and dealeu have been free to purchue them from Independent rirmi;. ButGeneralMotorshasde· cided that its own radio will be standard equipment on every 19'78 Buick Riviera, Oldsmobile Toronado and Chevrolet Chevette. The dealer will have no choice. This GM action has raised the hackles oC Sen. Edward Ken· nedy, D.·Mass .. who has fired off a confidential letter to the Justice Department's antitrust chief, John Shenefield. The new GM policy, Kennedy complained, has "tremendous potential for inflict· ing irreparable injury on in· dependent radio manufac- turers." The rel a tlonsbip be· tween radio firms and auto deal· ers could be "disrupted," he wrote, by this "selective in- trusion into their market." The Justice Department has· launched an investigation into the matter, which will also focus on other &&uto parta and ac· cessories. SCHOOL BUS SAFETY: Thousands of unsafe school bu.sea are still on the road because of a bus·slied loophole in the law. Coneress ordered strict safety standards for the nation's school buses back tn 1974. But any bus chassis manufactured before the April 1, 1977. deadline doesn't have to meet the tougher stan· dards Some manufacturers, ' therefore, drastically stepped up their production to beat the deadline. Their tactics have been uncovered by Rep. Andrew Maguire, D.·N.J., who has uked hi&hway safety chlef Joan Claybrook to blow the whistle on these unsafe buses. "Hundreds, if not thousands, of school bus chassis built before April have been purchased by school boards and manufac- turers." Maguire warns in a con· fidential Jetter. A Tax Bill for P e ople, Not Politi cians To the Editor ; around the country. This is an The Democratic Speaker of the operation which brtngs extra /\sscmb1y, Leo McCarthy states revenue back tosupplementlocal that no tax relief that would reach tax dollars. the homeowner before November You rightly mention that the · 1978canbedevelopedthatwould district's sailing vessel, be acceptable to Republicans. Saudade, is heavily featured in How about a bill that would be ac· the report but you may have ccptablc to the people instead of given the impression that it was the politicians! purchased with public funds. It IT BECOMES more and more-was a gift. Its maintenan~e <' dent to more and more· comes to $3,000 ~r year. We will .". 1. . through chartenng attempt to C 1hforma homeowners that the cover that charie. The vessel is pr e.s c n t con tro 11 e d s ta.te used for sailing classes, some Legislature does not wish nor .m· marine science classes and will tend t? produce .any lcg1s~ation poUlbly be used for winter that will give the mflatu;m r;dden navigation classes. Its principal homeowner any lax rel:ef m the function is 8 noaUn& classroom . very n.ear future or ever. , Finally, may 1 repeat some ~1;1nng Governor Brown s Ad· perUnent facts from the report. ministration more taxes have Some 40 percent of adults in the bee!" collected from the ~pie of district use its facilities in a year. C~h~orrua than any previous ~d· Cumulative enrollment was mm1st~aUon, but less benefits 136 091. The year before, It was have filtered down to the people 109'911 in the way or property tax relief· ' · NORMAN E . WATSON highway improvements or im· Chancellor provements ln the present de- teriorating educational system. MR. & MRS. E. P. BENSON Coast'• Report To the Editor: In your editorial, "Untimely Display," of Nov. 16, you crlticiud the Coast Community College District's use or public money oo its annual report, en- titled "Accomplishments." The district wants to account for its use of public money and an annual statement seems a reaaonableway, amon1others, of m eeUns tbla obll1ation. The total cost of the document, ineludina J)06tage and malling, came to $21803.87. You can1 in- form peop e without apendi.nf money. We are aware -and rightly are constantly remlnded -of the need to be u rrueal as possible. The report ta an at· tempt to meet both thcae obllaa· lions. It ahould be aeon ln the con· text of a current total operating bud1et for Lb d11trict'1 three communtty colle1ea of $75 million. THE DOCtJMENT la d11trlbUt· ed to lnteratod lndlvlduala and IJ'Oupa in and around tho district nd -this ii lmportant to tax· psyen MA -to people tn other parts or t.bO country who can be aupporUn and infiutnUal on balt Of lbe district •hen St ap.. pU ror f odtral rundl. Tbe re- port Is a1t9 used u a martetln.I a.Id •h &be dlattlct, li;ailtlMf. iDI oaUonal erodat~H' of telecoun I off en bu proo lf Al'QI I• cu• Lo iuU'Utionl • •••.en ~ ... ,, To the F.dltor: I have no argument with pay- ing the animal license fee. I have done that. I do, however, resent the atUtude of a representative of the Animal License Department. 1 allo feel anerY because I keep my dogs confined, up to date on shott and Inoculations, out of other people's way and then I hove to go out and clean ur the droppings ot·dop -who lm· aglne do have licenses and their owners feel safe to allow to roam -or I have to redo a 1arden a cat (who doesn't have to have a llcenae}hu decided to dig up for hla dropping». It doesn't seem rah·. On Nov. 10 a man knocked on my door ln the early afternoon. I 11w from a taa on his 1blrt that he had tome sort of connection with. the Clt,y ot Hunttnaton Beach. He asked me how many dop l bad. J aald tbreo. H~ wed if l ad licenses for them. 1 Hld no, :tbey are alwaya kept tn th• backyard. Jte Hid aomethln1 about tbom havln• to have lie aea. W. manner wu very ebnapt arid curt and t be11n to 1et aqry. I asked how m...ch lice11111 were. He napped back a\ a.e. "Fifteen dollara 1lnce you n late.Jo• .. formation. He said he would go down to city hall and get it. I said fine you do that. Yes, r may have been angry and seemed nasty. The man was extremely rude and gave no ex· planation or what he was doing. From looking at the notice, I have 3 feeling that I probably could have taken care of my licenses right then and there if the man had in any way indicat· ed what was happening. I resent his apparent note at the top or the notice that I was very nasty. He could have prevented it if he had stated who he was. what his business was and what I needed to do to comply with the regula· tions. JACQUE L. OBERBECK PHoi• at1d Salet11 To the Editor; The community has become in· creasingly polarized, perhaps dangerously so, over the Meadowlark Airport issue. It is time to cool tempers and allow the City Council Airport Commit· tee to work out a plan for peaceful co-existence between local residents and aviators. O/)e or the most counter· pro'1uctive factors which in· names opinion on both sides oC the lssue lt the assertion by unin· formed laymen that the airport is too abort to pus today's safety requirements. One local resident bas gone so far as to claim that the short nmway contributed to an en1loe failure. The fact ls that any airport, re· gardless of length, In and of itself is neither safe nor unsafe. It is either adequate or Inadequate dependina on the mechanical soundnesa of the aircraft, the a kill of the pilot, and the weather condition. 'fhe people in this com- m unity should know that duly constituted aviation experts have stated publicly that Meadowlark Airport ls adequate for the types of aircraft. which are now using the field. IT SHOULD BE obvious that st ate and federal authorities would close the airport im- mediately if all safety standards were not being met. This fact should di.scredlt. the emotJonal charges that the airport is un· safe. As an aviator with 35 years of flying experience and several thousand hours of flyina lime in all types or aircraft all over the world, I can probably speak with some authority on airport ade- qua c y . In my opinion, Meadowlark Airport is 1uperior to half the wrports in California. It is superior to probably nine- tenths of the airports in Alaska where I spent three years. That Meadowlark is adequate as an airport is proved by the fact that pilots continue to use It. I have never met a pilot who wasn't hiply motivated by self· preservation. We have a lot to live for. The group or people who are most interest.ed in fiytq safety are the pilots themselves. The city council simply cannot guarantee against ai~raft aec:l· dents in our communi\y beeause it does not have the f)6Wer to ground all aircraft. What the dty council can do is to provide the leadership needed to reduce causes for complainll a1a1D.st the aviators who use the airport. Let's give the council a chance. JAMES R. EVANS Pilot Representative on lbe Airport Committee Chairman, Save Meadowlark Commlttoe, OCPA Quotes ''A ·people witb<>ut r liable new• ta, sooner or latet, a people · wltbout the bula of h'eedom. •• Horold J. LGlkl Brltilh socfalttf and poUUca1 ~- Transportation Poo'led /\ three-month-old Cadillac rests at the bottom of Don Ayala 's pool near Los Angele~. Tuesday. after the accelerator stuck while his wife was driving it into a garage. It crashed through the wall at the rear and i,ank. Mrs. Ayala and her child escaped. Property Division Eyed Solution: Recognizing Common Law Marriage? SAN J<'RANCISCO <AP> Recognizing com- mon law m<.irnage 1n Cahforma may be the way to disentangle the financial stnngs that a high court says exist between cohabiting but unmarried couples. legal experts said They agreed a decision late last year, involving, actor LC<' Marvin and his hve-1n girllnend or six }Cars. did not forge any new law when it said un- married partners who break up can sue each other Tee n-age Actress Pleads Innocent DEVEHLY llILLS CA P> Teen-age actress Mackenztc Phillips. who portrays the older daughter on CBS TV's "One Day at a Time" series, has plendt.'d mno<:ent to a single misdemeanor charge of public drunkenness M 1ss Ph1l11ps. 18. was released on $500 ball Tuesday after a Jan 10 preliminary hearing was scheduled bcfort> Municipal Court Judge Jae· quelme L Weiss A Loll Angeles County sheriff's deputy said he arrested Mi ss Phtlllps shorl1y after mid · night last Wednesday when he found her sprawled on a West llolly"ood street She was held overnight at the Jail ward at County USC Medical Center and then released on bail Barbara Droghatt1, a sp<>kcswoman for her telev1s1on series, said a substance found in the ac- tress· purse which deputies initially thought to be cocame was a diet pill And the sp<>keswoman said. a blood test showed Miss Ph1l11ps had not been intoxicated Expert Emphatie ·Bus Victims 'Suffered' OAKLAND <AP> The prosecution in the ChowctuUa kidnapping trial rested its case today with a doctor's emphatic testimony that kidnap vic- tims suffered "serious bodily tnJury " Dr Delmer Pascot. u proressor of pediatrics and expert in heat illness, was to undergo brief questtorung oefore he leaves the stana He was the last of 19 witnesses called in the state's eHort to prove that three confessed kidnap-( J pers caused bodily harm STATE to 26 Chowch11la children ._ _______ ...... and their school bus driver in July 1976 OU DrHH•g 1t'l11s Round LOS ANGELES CAP) -The City Council baa tentatively agreed to write an ordinance allowing Occidehtal Petroleum Corp. to drill for oil and gas in the beachfront Pacific Palisades area. Tuesday's 9-5 decision still must be approved ln a second reading, and even If the council itvea rtnaJ a pproval, the city Planning Commission and at least t wo ooastal commissions must uphold the ac- tion. ._,,,....,q Atl'artl Appealed? to re<.'over communal property But, they said, 1t orobably has had a dramatic psychological impact. on couples throughout the country, raising questions about how unmarrieds •hould be treated by the law "MARJUAGES MAY BE MADE in heaven and Marvin relationships may be made in bars. but they both end up in Superior Court. cracked Stephen Adams. editor of the Cahrornia Family Law Quarterly. State Sen. Bob Wilson. D·San Diego. wbo chaired the hearing, said he thought the Marvin de- cision by the California Supreme Court "is leading us toward common law marnage. "It seems lo me thet ir we recognized common law marriage, many of these problems would be solved." said Wilson, an attorney. Donald King, from the California Judges Association, agreed. STATE LAW DEFINES WHAT happens when a marriage breaks up, but has no provisions ror divid- ing the financial fruits of mere cohabitation. But since the Marvin decision. lawmakers have been scrambling lo write a law covering unmarried couples, too The commotion stems from a 1972 lawsuit filed by Marvin's ex girlfriend, Michelle Triola, who claimed she was entitled to $500,000 or half of the properly the two accumulated. She said she gave up a sing mg career m exch<.inge for his promise to sup· port her Although a lower court dismissed the casi!, the state Supreme Court said Miss Tnola had a right to a trial, scheduled to begin next month THE COURT SAID TllE LA W must enforce any expressed or implied agreement between couples married or not to pool their J>roperty or earnings, as long as the relationship was not ex· pllc1tly for sex, as in prostitution. And when the coupling ends. the courts must decide how to divide the loot · But the decision has raised a question like : -Should such a rule apply to homosexuals llv· mg together and to roommates who share house payments, for example? Those testirying generally agreed that it should _m__ B AUME & M ERCIER GENE VE (C,jo/'Z lla' l i1 ( fa11t' ....... v • . , ... I' ·• ~ f ' I 1 • I ,, 3 Klansmen Found Guilty LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Superior Court jury has found three !Cu Klux Klan memben Cu.illy of con1plrin& to commit first-detree murder ln a plot against the West Coast leadet of the Jewish Defense League. The nine-man, three-woman Jury returned the verdlct Tuesday a1alnat Robert Debnel, 32, Timothy Wayne Anderson, 26, and Daniel Ell11 Taylor, 43. The three face a penalty of life in prison. The three, who were members of the Klan's North Hollywood chapter, were aecuaed of plotting the murderoC lrv Rubin. ATl'OBNEYS FOB THt THBEE said they would appeai the verdict by the Jury. which in· eluded two blacks and one Mexican-American. Sen· tencina was scheduled for Jan. 5. Dehnel and Anderson, both from the Hollywood area, remained in custody. whlle Taylor. who is from Van Nuya, was free on bail. Deputy District Attorney John Watson said be was "amazed" at the jury's swift. decision, which came on the second day of deliberations. "I WAS VERY IMPRE~ED," he said. "They must have been paying very close attention lo the evidence as it was presented.·' DAILY PILOT For More Adequate Parking REDUCING STOCK FROM ALL CATEGORIES! ~~50%0FF But Debnel's attorney. James Epstein, said that "given the shortness or the deliberations and the complicated nature or the evidence, it seems that the jury was not able to overcome its preJ· ~dices." I I ANDERSON, WHO CLAIMED he had left the Klan, whlspcred to his attorney a11 he glanced toward the audience Outside the courtroom. An· derson remarked. "I thought we had it. I really thought we had it." A rookie officer who infiltrated the Klan last vear -Paul Rolf Gebhardt -testified that th,. fip. rendants planned to kill not only Rubln, but his suc- cessor in the m1litantJDL. If you dCt before December 31st, you can lake advantage of a plan that will gt'le you big sov1ng:; on your 19T7 federal U}come taxc3 Not only will you save an 1mpor· tant amount of money. but the interest you earn on that money will be tax-free for year,; to comt' Do you qualify? Art you stlf·tmploytd? You can set aside thousands of do~rs each year and not pay federal income taxes on a nickel of it tint~ you retire And the interest this money will oarn for you ls also tax-free until you rettre When you do pay ta.xes on the pnnc1pel and uiterest. 1t will boat the rate determined by your tax bracket af tcr retirement Ar• you no• wtrklno for • com· pony wltllout • rttirltfttnt plan? You can Sdve a SUbstanllal amount of money each year on wh1cp you pay no fedora! ~come t~C3 on the pnneipal o 1~ntcrest unttl after rotirement. Ths detW are sh9htlv diffe~nt from the seU· employed plan, but tho tax sav· ings are mojor. Dt you P'-111 -.N ltti•? If you leaYO a eomp&ny In whlch • you have company-p01d rf'!lJre ment benents coming to you, you can "roll over" (convert) those funds to an mdMdual retltement plan and postpone paying laxes on them until you retire 1.R.A. Tax s.vfnp M* lncrlOStd. Recent changes m the· law re qardmg h1d1v1dual Retirement Accounts allow separate ac· counts for· unemployed s~. tlfus increasfng the potential I R A tax saVln<T-1 fur o ram1lv Tax· free ret\Tement accounts arc insured to $40.000 bY an ogency of the federal government and thb interest as gtJaranteea The highest earning account pays 8 06% when the annual mterest rate or 7 75% ls comp&undea d 1ly M101mum Term .is 6 yearo 100 mfnimum depo11t re· quired Federo.l ~ulattons r:o· qu1rtn9 a $~tanta.ol penalty on ... l .I I ' ' I • f REl • c n. compl•t• ht-'• ,....... GUW11 ,. • .. "l Th15 big 349 page book JS t • encyclopedia of estate plan~ '. . It covers investments 4nd lex.a· t1on. roal estate, 1nsuMnce. "'ftre- mnnt trusts, and muCh mo~. It~ yours for the aslcln9, whOe q~. lilies ltst, ot any off lee of Mutual Savmt;'3 No mail orders. p~ ,. . i '. VOL 70, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, ... PAGES TotlaY's Cl t.g N.Y.Stoeka . . . . TEN CE~is·1 Hookers, Bookies IBBne&~e . . • ID By GARY GRANVILLE Of• Deity""' ...... P rostitution and bookmaking are on the upswins lD Orange County, accordine to Sberilf's of. flee vice officer Jack M arwln. Records for the year ended Oct. 31 show that vice arrests by the Sheriff'• office "more than doubled" during the pu t year, Marwin said. HJs figures Included only ar- rnts made in unincorporated areas ol the coWlty and in city ln- veat11atioaa aided by sheriff's vice (aYeati1at.or1. Cited • tbe botMd for ladles ol the night was the so-called "Harbor Boulevard atrip" that ruos roq1bly from Katella A venue in AJlabelm to Boa.a Avenue ln Westminster. In county territory, Mi1$!0ll Viejo wu listed by Marwin u the bot spot for can Sirls. Moat women arrested ln both proatltutlon centers were deaetibed by tho vice officer u refuaee1 from the heavy a~ on Ho~ Boulevard and the Sumet Strip Jn netshborinl Loe Ansel• County. And, Marwin said, moat women arrested on pl"OltftuU<n cbar1ee ln OranJe County are what be call..t •'hype wbons," women who have taken to tbe atreeta or a hOtel room to support a drul habit. . _..,,... ........ ...,. IMdllft DEBRIS LEFT BY OUT-oF-CONTROL TRUCK INCLUDED FRONT WHEELS Laguna C1'8ah Left Tona of l>lrt. Tom Metal, Stucco on Streeta Runaway Truck· F~ps 3 LB Garages Hit; No Serioua lnjuriea· By STEVE MITCHELL 0t•DM1y~1Mttuff A 10-ton truck carrying...,a heavy load of dirt hurtled out or control down a slttp hillside road in Laguna Beach Tuesday after- noon, destroying three earages before nipping on Its side. No one was seriously hurt in the 1: 30 p. m. Incident, which left the bottom of Nyes Place looking like a battlefield. · Bob Hamilton, 27, driver of the 1971 v e hi c le , s aid the trans mission on the bu1e truck wenl out as be drove down the 20 percent ~ade roadway. "It was just like driving ln neutral," the dazed trucker said, lookln& at a small scratch on his arm. "I Uied to catch the ed1e or that Clrage With my truck," be said.r.. pointing to a house owned- by 1dcbard B. Jobnlon at 364 Nyes Place. The truck, carryioe an estimated 14 tons of dirt f"IP_ a project atop the hill, did cUJ"lbe Jobn1on garage, uprootln1 a 1Htness ~lee•tlea water plpe wblcb sent a five·foot ltlch fountain into the air. Hamlltca said be closed bis eyes after that, and did not see the truck slam into a second eara1e further down the hill at 340 Nyes Place. The vehicle coo· tinued one boule further, ntppiq in the road••Y after bitting a carport garaae containina a Mer cedes Benz at 222 Nyea Place. Hamilton was helped out of the back window of tbe crushed <See TRUCK, Pa«e A!) U.S. Calls Moratorium The U .S. Department of JuaUce bu plac..t a one-year 1noratonum on tta prosram to re- locate federal witn14aes in Southern .Calilornia, it wu an· DOUDCed today. 1 A 1pok11man for As · Mmblyinan Mark Hannaford, I>-· • * * &van Murder ' SDSp.ect Found ID 1Ddone1ia · Lakewood. wbo abo repreaenta western Orana-County, said the area affected la between Saa Diego and Santa Barbara. Tbe relocated witneas pro- 1r am, aimed at protectln.J perJGna wbo ml,ht be killed for tHtlfylnt a1a1n1t or•anlsed crime ft.&ures, bu come under fire seetlltly followina the 0ci. 22 abootiftc death ol Stephen John Bovu ol FOUDtalft Valley. The ld1llng ln tiewport Beach reportedly tnv~lved two r•loc•t· ed witneues, altboulh defeue lawyert ~ft cleDlecf any Juell ecmnectklnt. The >federal relocatl01l pro-aram. at a cott Of abOUt '80 mllllon. bU bOU.jbt new Iden· titles and Uves for about J,tOO people over the put 1lx yeata UO· der the Witneai Protectloll ~ aram. The procram bu two pbua. Tbe tint la a~vt prot.ctlon, ID .. But let'• face it,'' Ill aald, ·~·· money lD Or~ Cou.nty Md vtce follows mooey. • "So, we bave atiinp ol four or fin tlrll ~orklD1 the anu becaue tbere la bl1 mone1 bere." 8' cited 55 Pl"OllltutJOD arrtsta and " lewd conduct arreatl dUI'· lal tbe ooe Y4W' period aupport-lDI tbe vice study. Marwin abo Hld there were thtH arneta on pomoarapby • cbttJ• as well u three •rNlll Boulevanlboptqfora 0 Jolm"to for ptmplna. pick Uwn up. Ooe al the gorno U'Nlta hi· Al a nsult.. police in Anlhelm vol ved child ·pornosrapby. .., slrla wortln& t!)elr port1oa of MarwlD aalcl. tbe Barbar Boulonrd strip pe Ult ii doUan that la attnd:lq probably raktpa ln collectiYel)'.at street walkers to Oraqe Ooanb' leut '80,000 a month. accordlnf they anrtU dollan, aceordlnl to to M.anri.n. the vlcedllcer. He empbul&ed that a heavy He uld women arrested • majority al tbe pro8litutioa ar· prostltutioD char,_ set t!Mlr r..U n« out ol eounty realdeata. 1l1bt1 OD '3l)O Dltbta .. tb8y • Marwta aslcl there la DO lndica· make their :way ~ HarbCt" (Bee VICE, Pale Al) Carter Eyes Top· .Envoy t~ Cairo 4More Held on DrugRCip JJy ftlJLIP aOSllAIUN --~ ........... Fcfur more people were arrest- ed Tuesday by JrvlDe police lD connectloa with wbat police call a m•i:-==.IL!a&_.. Uoo to nine tbe aumb9r r!ro mCIGthlDV ~ • Tw~ tDdudtna a 1'1·Jur:otd bO,. Wbaee 0aJM WU DQI. re- leaMCI. an Irvine reakteDta. ad wen~ at UMJ.r ~ bom-. lAl1l m•....i·; Cftcl•~ when five otbert were ~ Nov.11. Betides the youth, who WU tabn to Oraqe OoulstJ Juvenile Hall, police Jailed 11-year~ld Jennifer Lynn Noble. She wu held in tbe county women'• Jail on p,ooo ball. Bc>th were charted wtth Hie al heroin. Arrelted ID Santa Ana, at 328 Chestnut St., were Robert B. Saldana, 50, and Geor1e F . VUlava. S2, both ot whom lilted the bome u t.belr addreaa. Tbe men were booted lato Oranae County Jall1 held on $10,000 bell each. Satdaua wu char1ed wltb poue11ton of herolD and Uh ol heroin; VUlava WU 1Uipedfd ol 1 .. e of berotn. Police d_.m tbe arratl broke up a heroin dlttrlbutlon bUllnesa neWna up to '8,000 per week In ltreet Nlel. The 1.iwestt1aUOD wu jolntly (See Aaal'Bl'8. Paae A!) School Board To Discuss Test Scores Will UC Re~e . Funding? Tile Unl'ffl"llty of CaUtOl"D19 will ref\IM •.• mllllan bi f fCJital aid to lta five medJcal achoOll- lnclucliD&. • yearly $33ZtW ennt to UC lrrine'!'-ntbtr J.hJD Iowa' admlaaion 1t•ll4arda for Am.ericam who transfer from foreip. medical eobooll. The Health, EducaUon and Welfare 1rant1 are tied to le1i.laUve amendment.a belnl debated by the U.S. Conpea. HEW administrators. wbo back the lellalation, are reqUMt· ins that the achoola admit an un· dlacloeed number of American 1tudent1 tnnaferrina from foreip medical aebooll w1tboul conalderiq trades. COUJ'HI or clauatucttna. Ten otbtr aHtdleal acboole. ln· cludtn1 Stanford Unlnnlb'. bave nifuNd to aaocUoa Qlo fl'Oo po9ed amendment to the .Im Health Prolculom SdUCJUoul A»atstanc:eAct. The ailtib& lelialatloa pro. vi4ei sruts to mtlcllcal acbooll. the amount bued OD enrollmmt. It'• intimded to encourqe the 1chool1 to laereue ,•Droll• meat..· · . Tb• am1nclln1 lt1l1laUoa would J*1'11te the febooll to ac· • <SllllAID.Pal•AI) · 'Historic . Break' Lauded WASHJNGTON (AP) -Pre.st· dent Carter announced today the United StatM will aend a bilh· level representative to • mid· December peace conference In Cairo aDI\, called recent Aral>- hraell coniac~ "a hi1torle · br•aktbrou&b in the tearcb. for a laatln.: peace in the Middle l:alt!r - Carter told a natltJDally broad· cut npwa Conference that~ laDt ~ "'State AJb-.t L.. 'lotbertco will bead the u .s. del- . tPUon to ~ Calro conference CaDed bJ PTesideal Anwar Sldat ~&Int . Caiter 1ald the conference II acbeduled for a.round Dec. u. Wbe.n Sadat called for the con- ference, be set Dec. 3 u the deadline for responses to JU.a ib· vitaUons. He said be would then aet a dateforthetallas. · Carter's refereoce to Dec. ta 11 the first public announcement by any parties o! the likely startln& ~ate for the conference. Tbe president said that the im. portance of the meetings between Sadat and Prime IHnl1ter Menabem Becin of Israel ·11 that there has been an initlatlon of direct, person-to- pel'IOD neiotiatiODI." • Taming tot.be U.S. role, Cart.r aald, "I t&lnk it '1 much more im- portant to have dlnct coo:a· mun.lcaUoa betften Eeypt -4 Israel than to hew UI acting as a constant, dominant In- termediary." He further characterhed tbe U.S. role as to encourace Prot· re11 toward ne&otlatlem and an oyer-all aettlemeat. "We have no eaatrol over any. nation in the Middle East," be. said. •'When we ftnd prosreu be- iDI atoipped, we use all the in· ilia live we can ... The United States an4 ihe$o. vtet UDion ~ CO-Chairmeri oltbe Gnev• coaference at wbicb ~ vtou. Kiddle Eaat HttlOJ:Qelltl· have been reached. He refemd to tbe ditticulty many Arab leaders tiave in a1reelD1 to cllrtct cti1eu11lon with lat-1 after IO many yeara (SeeCA.atE&, "-l•M) DAILY PILOT Wed VICE .••• of an arp.Diaed crlm• thrucJ "loDIPU -t.llle pr.u~ . ac:t.IY!VJa Coimitt· However, he added, 1bould pewUtution aC'tivity inereue and n.at be subject to lntenae law en- forcement it ii likely that «· 1a.Diud crime 1ri1J move into tho r'!lcket here. At far aa gambllnc la COD· cerned, Marwin aaid tbe 1' sheriff's bootmak:iq arrest.a 1n the put year have Jovolt'ed opetaUom 1ro11ln• at leaat $10.000 a week. ·'Bookmakers pocket an estimated 22 percent of the gross," Marwin 1ald. " So you can aee that it is a profit.able oper atlon." · -. He alao said moat tbe bookmaking activity in Oranse County spotlighta sport.a acUon, including football cards that net the bookies a 95 percent profit. Aa is the cue with proatitutioa, the v l ce otncer said there la no in-, dicatJon that organized crime is lit the reins of Ulesal gambllng ln Orange County. Again though, be empbasl.zed, oraanized crime will follow where there are successful ~kmaking operaUona not sub- Ject Lo vigorous law enforce- ment. He noted that invariably a bookmaking conviction In Oranse County results in a jail sentence. "But greed overtakes fear and there is a lot of money here to al· t rac t gambling interests," Marwin said. AD Tatlfl"led llp Jim Reid of Philomath, Ore .• is surrounded by fishing line collected by members of the Corvallis chapter of the Northwest Steelheaders during last year 's season. The discarded line is fis hed out of rivers in western Oregon. . . 'ComrDisSions' ·Eyed · L4'1Busineaman ·'Funnels' ThOwKinds WASHINGTON (AP) -A tGs ·ADJ:!• clotblnl ft.rm owner says he neled more than $500,000 in .. commtnton1° troio a bta American eledronlca flnQ to an otflcial ol tbe Soutb Xoreu em- bassy In WublD&ton. Tfte r•marta came in teaU1n~ ~ Boward 1-be- fore the SecurlUea and l!:xcbante Commllalcm, wb.Jch la lnves~at-1D• wb«ber that money. plua . abOut M0,000 more lD com· llJJ.Nloaatrom E-Syatema, Inc., ol oan ... wu uec1 in the ~"ed So\lth Xonan 1nflue.nce·bu:,y1q 11chemeinWu~. lo puticular, the SEC ii tn. ffl'11atlnt whether any praem or f onner membert of tbe U.S. mllltary re-eelved pay~enta from the South Korean 1overn· meat. An SEC 1ubpoena speclflcally mentions • J>ONible $10,000 payment by a South Korean offtctal to a retiffd U .s. Air J'o.-ce 1eneral. Lee, a South ~born U.S. Cltl.MD,..,.. OD8 ottwo ottlclaJaol tho Xoteu ~ lDIUtute ol Lot Ani:S.:.~f!~ved $U mlWOA in 1• from z. System-. Th SEO aubpoeqed Lt. and JOQI llo Yoo, the other known of. tie« "' the institute,, to tatify about the moaey. Accordtns to IOW'cea close to . the case and doeume11t.. obt.ajped • from tbe SEC, IM t.ttilled tb.al attacbe at t.bO Soatb Jtoruo em- he funneled about "°°·000 o( the bas1y here a.nd la Howard Lee'• E-Sy1telllt pay111ent1 to Col. uncle. Kyoo R•e Lee. The rat of tbe E-8yatems.. a major 1upplter ol '$1.4 mUUoo wu bandied by Yoo. electronic equipment for th• a source eal4. ; Penta(Oll and Ute Oential ln· Tb• .. EC is lnveatl1atJ01 · tem,eca Aaency, bu ......i whether Yoo a1ao funneled tbO contr&etl Wttli U.. SoaUa Kana.a mODey to South ~an oflldlk 1ov•rn--.1nct{ICIJ.utbe1a)tot 1n tbla country or ln Seoul. more thin '3Z mllUon ln m.Wtary Col. IM la asalatant military field radi01. Krishnas to Sue 1-,,J,ictees' Finn \ . B1 lllCllAELPASKBVJC&. smugaliqotnarcotlct.'' · ... _.,........ Hl• three partner• -807 A Hare Krllbna spokesman Chri1topher lUcbard, lOJtill. aatd tbe relllloua 1ect will an-o brt-• ~......._ "' • ..Ai TOle'Jili nounce a trademark lawautt to. S:etto~ ·D=~·::e ~"'UDcfer. day a1a.lnat Pruadam Diltribut· indictment. Ric bard ••d lq, Inc., (PDl) the Newport Fedorowaki ~ at lar•• and Beaeb lnveatmeat flnD •bole Davia 11 1n .Ml IPdontllaa Jall four prlndpala bave been lndlct-awaJUnllndl~t. ed for the Oct. 2Z murda' of Krtalma ~alt acbow~ Stephen Jobn Bovan of FO\&Dtaln that tw. tbM -.re .uve Valley. • membert ol the LI~ Jluch Hare Krlltma member )lutw· tea'lple, but Wm they wen a • da Du said 'nl~ay tllat the u~ ... ...-auit ii deslped to end tbe ''de-pe ~111 •-·•· cepUon''thathuled toreporta• Howeyer, ~•a.ilChpoJ.lce alle1td ll.nb between the mm'der recen~ reJ.Utecl a"•leUC dldtd •aupectumd~U.reKrlalmu. Jan. 19'1'1. to PJ>l mei..Mr9 Proae Pagf! Al Fairview Aides Protest TRUCK ••• In denyint any •~b UU., Du from wamt PJ"aJu1pad1i1;. lbe Hid thenls.toua rfoul> hu been HareKmbnafOdDdtrwbodleclCJI• ''mltre})1 .. uted and U h.tt naturalcaUH1Hcw.Ulnlldaat amoulY damqed our lm• _,, th• •J•ola. the public. It bas been a lonl Tbiletterreedaln : 1tru1-1e to lllt tbll 1mall apllnter "Krllh.aa wtll •• 1'0ta Sa· I. $23,SOO ril by a PUNrby and treated at the scene by Laguna Beach firemen and county paramedics. Psychiatric Technicialu Ci:dl MaM Sick-in . Firemen used 1bovel1 to move · some of the spilled dirt, forming a dam to prevent leaking diesel fuel from running into the gut· te rs. City building inspectors termed the house at 340 Nyes Place uninhabitable untH sup-~ru are replaced at the base of tbebome. By JACKIE BYMAN Ot•Dlifl'f ........... Paychiatrlc technicians at Fairview State Hospital In eo&ta Mesa said today they will go ahead with a mua sick-In begtn- nlnc Thursday deaplte a viait to the bospltal today by two key state health officials. Psychiatric tecbbic1ans leader Cathie Joy estimated that between ISO and 75 percent ol the Laguna Beach police called psychiatric technicians will joln California Highway Patrol com-the 1lck-io. Sbe said sllgbUy merclal vehicle ln.apecton to the more than l500 paycb.Jatrlc tecbni· scene to determine the cause of -clam wort at Fairview, altboulb _ the crub. hospital officlala there have said Judge ·Delays Action . . . ·On Jail Bias Issue Superior Court Judae Everett W'. Dickey has delayed any ac- tlQn that might force Oran1e County Sheriff Brad Gates to al- low women prisoners to serve their time ln branch jails or on the honor farm. "Dickey refused today to issue a Gales said he .is bound by law to separate male and femaJe prisoners. In any event, he said, women prisoners are being iiven privileges and out of Ja.il Ume not available to male prisoners. writ that would have forced Private Rites Gates into such actlop: Tbe j'Lldie adviaed lawyers for Barbara Dretzka Molar, 42, of • Anaheim, that lawyers for Gates . Set m Stockton aod the county Board of Supervisors should be given Um. ; · :rrr:::t to the alle1auona in For Dr~ Sinai It la expected that a bearin1 in-to allesatlonl and a renewed de-Private services wU1 be held mand for a writ will be acbeduled Thunday in Stockton, Calif. for after the county coUOHl 'a office tntematioaally recogn.tied health files lta answer. economlat. Dr. Nathan Sinai, who . Mn . .Molar, who lJ iervtn.s a died at South Coast Community one year jall term after belni Hoepltal ln South Laguna Mon- con vtcted of drua offenaea, day on his 8ISrd birthday. cJa1ms that women prlaonera are The LalUDa HJlla resident suc- conflned to the central jall ln cumbed after 1ufferin1 rrom an Santa Ana and not allowed to Intestinal disorder. serve nnt.ences at the Theo Lacy Sinai served u an adviser to ~rancbjallandthehonorfarm. Presidents Roosevelt and . She claims that out of Jail Truman and to Earl Warren privlle1es are reserved for male wben be served u Callfomla's prtao.nera under a lOlll •tandinc 1overnor In the 19408. system rJ tmpriaCJD.me.at tbat bu The Stoekton native authored alwey1 discriminated aaalnlt several books and articles in the •omen lo.mates. field ot health economics and Gata points out that It would· health lnlurance and wa1 presl· cost "~ ml1llon.a CJ1 dollan" dent olthe World Health ll'ounda· to build the eeparate lacWtlet · tlO:a wu also an economic COD· necuaaey an4 hire extra penon. aultant in the U.S. Public Health .net if womlll priloaen are aeist Service, 1he Social Security Ad- to the bnncb Jail and the honor mtnlatratlon end the World farm· Health Orfaniution. OAANOICOMT 1 • 8lnal, who llved at 1st DAILY PILOT Roaamoor . Tower East, ll aur. vived by a aist.e!l ~lna Kaplin of LalWl• Hllls, uiree n1ec.. and flve nepbfta, Hil wUe, Xathryi\ Maree Slnal, dJed in lt65. Fueral unniemenu are be- 1a1 mad• b)' McCormick Morti1a17 1il '4'Dll• Buch abcl private Ml'Vicea will be condUct· eel in aod;t.oD. there are more tlulo 600. , The chief demand by psychiatric technlclam la writ- ten agreement that they will be recognized by the state as the equivalent or nursing personnel in deaJ.ina with the developmen· tally diaabled -primarily re- ta rded and handicapped pa· t1ent.s. As psychiatric tech11tctans maintained a picket line outside the hoapital today, state Deputy Director of Health Raymond Procunier and Associate Deputy Direct.or Wllliam Kealin• met with hospital staff members to try OD~ Qgain to MtUe OD a pro- gr am to regain the faclllty's certification. Fairview and three other state hospitals were decertified tut summ,,. by a state team under contract to the federal govern. ment. Federal funds amounUna to $500,000 per month to Fairview alone have been cut off. The state' is making up the difference. Trouble with paychiatric technicians arose when. amoaa the changes proposed by the state, was a plan to substitute a new supervisory position open only to registered nurses tor a f',.._P..,eAJ ARRESTS ••• conducted by Irvine and Santa Ana police, and began lo Irvine Jut Sept.ember with a aerlet of six purcbuea of heroin by an un- dercover officer. Police allege four or the purchase• were made at the Hi11bcr•t Circleaddrets. The otheu were at the Chestnut Street location, police said. Purchues amounted to 2s balloons of heroin; an additional 12 balloons were seized during the Nov. lS arretta, acco"1lnt to pollce. b the trade, heroin is packaged in toy ball~. rrvme· narcotic. lllvettlptor JAO .Janes said the quality of the heroin 11i1ed wu hllh. 10 tlaat each balloon could supply tour to five dotea,orfbea, 1'be Oranie Counti Sbertff'a crlmtnall1Uc1 laboratory analysed tM llltlMd nareotk u •ood quality .. Ma.lean Bn>ft" heroin. Police aald the lnveaUaaUon la contmulnl. . . poaltlon currently open to both nurses and paycblatric tecbnl· cla.n1. Procunler' told Fairview 1taff members today bo and Dr. Keat- inl will be meetin1 with It.ate llcemlnl penonnel and finance officiala th1a week and Monday to try to work out an acceptable proaram for recertification. Procunler'1 only reference to the psychiatric tecbniclana dis- pute wu a statement that the state will ask the federalcovern- ment to recognise paycblatrlc technicians as equivalent to nurses in most positiom. but not in the new supel'liaory onea. "We don't enn bow the validity of the equlvalency they're talking about," Miu Joy said. "Wt don't know wbat HEW's (t.f.S. Dtpal1Jnent of Health, r.dbcation aDd Welfah> stand is." "Most ol. us don't want Lo call ln sick," added Jean Nellon, a1ao a Fairview psychiatric tecbni· clan. "We're hoping they'll live us sometblna in wriUn1 soon." She noted that the bospltal bu arranged buic custodial care for patient.a durtnt the alck-.ln "but they won't have our sldlls and we hope to abow how important those are. "The kida are not sick. They need developmental tralnina, not nuralnl care." Mrs. Nelson, who bu worked at Fairview for 11 yeara, ex- pressed frustration with the cur: rent situation. "We've worked hard and we feel that we should have the equJvaltPC'J'." •be sald. IJ"OUP recoPi&ed for what it ii,'' telll•ence ho.w to ••l•l•'aa Du added. . brilltQt, '1ortoaa wart oa a· He would not elaborate,·~ behalf. • mon detaill would be available at a 1peclal newa COllferuce. * * * acheduledforUa.m. todaf aUhe P,... P-. .&I Lot .U,elea Hare K.rtahlla Tem· • ole. SUSPECT "Buically, ft'a 1otn1 to deal with federal trademark.I, 11 1ald ~ · • .'• . ~ .Dai. • · · ·was one ot ft'V• 'pribcJJ>ala lD Krllbna oltlctala bave at.ad· Pruadam J>lstrlbUUne lnc. ol faatly denied that Alexander Newport Beach. Polle. all9'e be Kulik, the 28-year-old bead of offeredthrMothermentaa.oooto PDJ under lncllctment 1n 8ovan'1 kill Bova add two oUaer ma. death, bu ever been uaociated Affldntta Oil m. 1D o.....,. with the sect. County Superior Court clalm that Kulik wu one of four partnera l>raaadam wa a "front" for il· in PDI, an investment firm that.. licit dn&I tratftc. according to an affidavit on rue Captain Ha.milt.on would not re- in Superior Court, may have veal· the IJ)eclflc cbar1ea upon been used to "launder money which Davis ii cu.rrentb-belnc made from transportatloo. and held in Ball, but DOta4 that In· donealan au.tbortt119 ofta hold F ..... PageAJ 'AID ••• cept Jl certain number of the tranafer students, or etve up the federal 1ubaldles. By a4mlnlatratlve order of UC Prealdent David Saxon, the amendment la unacceptable and tbe university will fore10 the 1rant1 rather than submit to the proposed requirement. The amendment wu rejected in ita original form by the Senate, and now lJ before a joint House- . Senate eoaference committee. Mott cl the transfer 1tudeata, accordlnl to UC .-pokesmen, are those who could not meet ad· mission requlremeots of u.a. schools. After two years of study in forei1n .,rosram.s, many apply for advancet! admluion at home. Some, but not all, are quallfled, the apokesmmuaic!. . .•• alle1ect dl'Q& dealers for • 411a for invest11ation. Because Indon~a does not have a form*1 atndiUon treaty with the United Sta&M, Ne'WJICll't Beach police will meet today with FBI aieata and represeu- taUves of the Dlatrlct Attorney's Ofttce to work out technlcalltles. Captaln Hamiltob said local authorities will try and gnat DavlJ' report«! with to return to the U.S. to clear bl.a name in the Bovan murder cue. Davl.a is the flttb defendant to be located lm the cue. Jerry . Peter Fiori, Anthony Marone Jr., and Raymond Reaco are current- ly in cua1ody in Oran1e County awaitm. a Friday ArraJgnment on muriler charges in Superior Court. Alexander Kulilc, the 28-year- old helld ol Prasadam DlJtrtbut· in1, bu al.lo been apprehended but is free on bail. StJll at large are Kulik'• wife, Elate, Roy Cbriatopber Richard and Joeepb Federowatl .. • Or ngeQ>aatO dyP1101 Editorial Page ....................................................................... Robert N. Weed/Publisher Th mat KMVll/Edltor Trustees' McNally Action Practical Just when lt appeared the ongoinf dispute over what to do with McNally Continuation Schoo wa1:t golhg to outlive us all, Newport· Mesa school trustees took three key ac lions last week t.o clarify the situation. · The first una111mous vote was not surprising but it w~ long overdue Tht· ~t·huol d1slr1ct will now initiate the sa or lease of the entire Mc:Nally s ite at 19th Street an Newport Bouh•\·ard in Costa Mesa The site will tht•n become a cornerstone of Costa Mesa's Downtown Hcdev~lopm~nt program and tax payers will benefit by having the property <valued al up to S2 million) hut·k on the tax roll. A st•cond unanimous vote gives assurance that McNal ly will t·ont111ut• to opcrall' at its current site until fall of 1979 A committee report due eal"Jit\• next year will provide trustee::. with inform a lion on the district's alternative education nt·t·ds Th.is will help trustees decide if McNall) should be rclocutcd al a §eparalc fac1lit) or its programs slipped back onto ~xislm~ high school campuses. In a 5·2 \.otc lru::.tcc::. tabbc!d '.\lonte Vista school on Costa Mesas t·ast sidt• as the best site for McNally 1f it 1s determined that llw contmuatto11 school should remain "JJtonomous. ln voting against the selection of Monte Vista. Trustees Tom Henderson and Barbara Skilling raised u valid question why choose a future site 1f it is uncertain that it will be needed '! Howt•vcr , more st•hool dosurt•s arc inevili:ible and up coming hcunngs on this issue would have been held under un <Jir of suspicion that McNally would be moved to other l'ampuses that may be dosed Trustees have l'lnunuted this problem by takmg a firm stand A Growing Danger During "'"'·cmb1.·1. t\\o )oung men died m :.cpart.1tc <1utomobill' al'l'l<lt·l'h \\1th in one block of each other on '.'I cw port Boule\ <trcl in Costa Mesa, less than a week apart One p::tsscn~t·r, now recovering, was critically injured. One of tht· mtcrsections, al Mesa Drive, was also the '>Ile of a doubll' I <.itahty only months before. According to statistics given Costa Mesa police by the state Oepartmt.>nt of Trnnsportation, Newport Boulevard m Costa Mesa 1s the second most dangerous stretch of road m the state pt•r 100.000 miles driven. The long O\ er<luc completion of the downtown Costa Mesa Freeway link , wh1C'h would take most of the traffic from Newport Bou ft•\ urd, has long been a source of fric- tion hctwl'en l()(·;.d offttials and CalTrans chief Adriana C1anturco If CalTrans n•all~ docs not intend ever to complete Utt• frcewt.1)', then 1t is l1 me lo do more than just repave Ncwpo11 Boulevt.1nl. a:-; wa~ done this fall. It is timt· to n :<les1gn Newport Boulevard to hm1t ac· <.·ess and to posL upcoming street names so they are clearly visible in advance. Ol<l·fash1oned signal light poles, in volvcd in both November fatalities. should be replaced h~ new snap off poles Either u completed free\\ay or a redesigned street 1s badly needed and is the least CalTrans can do to see that this month's f atahties arcn 't just the prelude to even mon• tragedy Somcho\.\. th<.· mc'>sag1.• hus to be gotten to Go\ ernm Brown bt.'fon· the state has more blood on its hands Pre-season 'Loss' The Coast Comumunity College District has thrown a few coastal area high school football teams for a loss of sorts well before the opening kick·off of the next season. In order to finance the installation of new lights at Orange Coast College stadium, rental of the stadium has l>ccn upped from $550 to $1,000 per evening -an 82 percent increase. Larger schools like Fountain Valley and Edison High Schools probably can absorb the tab easier because of big gcr followmg. But the increase may run Estancia <Costa Mesa 1 and Costa Mesa High football teams right out of the stadium Coaches at these schools say they will be forced to move their games to Newport Harbor High next year. This could cause some real scheduling headaches, not to men· lion less favorable transportation and parking situations along with less than pro caliber lighting. College district officials say it costs OCC Sl.063 to operate a game under the lights. While it would be un· reasonable to expect the college \o take a financial loss each time it rents out the stadium, it might have been ap- propriate (and more considerate) to phase in the increase over a couple or years. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views e><pressed on this page are those of their authors and a111sts. Reader comment ts Invited Address The Daily Pilot, P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd I Dogs and TV ByLM.BOYD Note it claimed In print that dogs can't see television They can pick up the light patterns and notice the mo- Dear Gloon1y Gu A pilot told Channel 7 TV tht lut Meadowlark Airport phano cra•h waa an "laolated incident." Since Ove of that Inc • dents have occurred within a ft\JID 9f my Hun· lln1ton Boacl'\ home In the laal al• months I IUft Wllb th y'd make them ev moN isolat- ed -HY 40 mil out to aea. J.C. lion, but tbey can't focus well enough lo make out the nature of the action, it's con- tended. Interesting, if true. Not even many Zionists know that the British govern· ment in 1903 offered 6.000 square miles of uninhabited land In Uganda for settle· ment by homelesa Jews. Among the NCAA first. division football teams, more call themselvea Tigers than any other nickname. Ten do so. In fact.. Second most com· mon team nicknamo la Bulldogs. With six. In Rome, ll'a ctalmed, the avera1• female tourist uncter the age of 40 ;eta some IJort or l.nvlt.aUon•l comment from ell(ht men a da)'. Q. ''Aak your LOv ar man hat at 1u11 ta to him that J tometlmn 1 a noscl)leed while en1agid In that thin< ho calla pbysl~&l roman T" A. Onty \Mt you•ve lher tot hl1h blcOd ~ure or a ll1ht1n1 pa:rtntr. Jack Anderson Did Park Also C~ ... K"oreans? ~SHlNGTON Juffice D.e1>artment attorneys have agreed It will take a lie detector to get the truth out of Korean payoff man Tongsun Park it he uecepts the deal to give his tt'stimony In exchange for Im· munity Park has made so many con· flicting statements, the prosecutors acknowledge. lhal his testimony would be worthless in c·ourt unless 1t 1.:an be bol- ~t<>rcd with supporting evidence . They will m si-;t, therf.'fore, that Park submit to a he detector test as part of the deal Their hope is that Park, with a polygraph machine monitoring his veracity, will pro- v 1de enough new Information that they will be able to build on it They will seek corroborating t•vidcncc. which they will then use tu make more cases against congressmen who have accepted bribes Th<• prosecutors admit it will be tough to nail many con· i.:ressmen The Justice Depart· ment has determined, for exam· pie, that Park highly exaggeral· ed his influence on Capitol Hill. He boasted to has Korean cohorts that he was close to congressmen "'horn he had merely met and that he had passed out cash, "h1ch he r;eally had diverted to his own use lt looks as 1( Park was a skilled c·on man who misled even his own government On the other hand. the Justice Department has solld evidence contradicting the South Korean government's 1.·laim that Park was merely a businessman who acted on his own HIS LINK with the Korean Cc•ntral Intelligence Agency has hl'en established to the satisfac· t1on of th<· prosecutors They are aware, however, that Park didn't flush his KCIA credentials on Cap1tol llill and offer "bribes" to c•ongressmen. lie told con· gr"ssmen, 01\ \he contrary, that Mailbox he was a bualnenman who wa.nlv ~ to contribute to tbelt'-ttln· palgns, It wm be ditrfcull to prove there were any strtnes attached to the contrlbutiona. Not Wttil later would Park drop by and make a pit.ch on behalf of Soutb Korea. The Juatice Dtpa.rtment, therefore, mieht havo trouble in court ditferentiatto' between political contribuUona and out· right bribes The prosecutors wlll be able to prove, however, that some con· gressmcn were secretive about their dealln1s with Park and con- cealed the cash be eave them AUTOSTATIC: In a move that could squeeze the nation's a mall radio manufacturen out of busJ. ness. General Motors 1s forcing auto dealers to buy some of its 1978 models with bualt·in GM radios. Car radios have traditionally bl•cn optional equipment, and ,___- dealers have been free to purchase them h'om independent rtrms. But General Motors has de· cided that lt.s own radio wlll be standard equipment on every 1978 Buick Riviera, Oldsmobile Toronado and Cbevrolet Chevette. The dealer wlll have no choice Thia GM action has raised the hackles of Sen. Edward Ken· nedy, D.-Mus .. who has fired off a confidential letter to the Justice Department's antitrust chieJ. John Shenefield. The new GM policy, Kendedy complained, has "tremendous potential for infllct- intt irreparabl~ il\Jury on ln- d e pendent radio manufac- turers." The rel ationship'be· tween radio firms and auto deal. ers could be "disrupted," he wrote, by this "selective in trusion mto their market." The Justice Department has launched an investigation mto the matter, which will also focus on other auto parts and ac· cessorlea. SCllOOL BUS SAFETY; Thousandsorunsafeschoolbuses are still on the road because of a bua-aized loophole in the law. Conaress ordered strict safet)' standards tor the nation's school • buses back In 1974. But any bus chassis manufactured before the April 1, 1977, deadline doesn't have to meet the tougher stan- dards. Some manufacturers, ·therefore, drastically stepped up their production to beat the deadline. Their tactics have been uncovered by Rep Andrew Maguire, D.·N.J ., who has asked hl1hway safety cbler Joan Claybrook to blow the whistle on these unsafe buses. "Hundreds. 1( not thousands, of school bus chassis built before April have been purchased by school boards and manufac- turers," Maguire warns in a con- fidential letter. A Tax Bill for People, Not Politicians lnlh• Ecl1t111 Tli1• l1t•1111wr.1t11 Spt-akcr of the \.., ··11d•1\ l.1•0 MrC'arthy states llt,11110 tax n·ltl'fthat would reach 111,. h11m1•o"nl·r lX'forc November 1'17X <'an Ix• d(•veloped that would ht· ;H'<'cptablt• to Republicans. I low "hout a hill that would be ac· rl'pla bl<• to the J>C!oplc instead of I ht• pohlacians' IT BECOMES m1>rc and more ,., idt.'nt to more and more C'ahforn1a homl'nwnen, that the pre!oient <onlrolled state Legislature floes not wish nor in- tend to prodUC'l' any le1nslation that will giw Lh<• anflat1on ridden homeowner any tax relief m the very near future or ever' Durinl' G<>vernor Brown's Ad- m mistral ion more taxes have been collected from the people of Califom1a than any previous ad- ministration, but less benefits have filtered down to the people an the way of property tax relier. highway improvements or im· provcmcnts in the present de· tcriorating educational system. MR &MRS E. P. BENSON Coa•t'• Rqert To the Editor: In your editorial. "Untimely Display," of Nov 16, you criticized the Coast Community College District's use of public money on Its annual report, en· tilled "Accomplishments." The dJstrid wants to account for its use of public money and an unnual statement seems a reasonable way, among others, of meetlnglbisobllgalion. The total cost or the document, Including postage and maillns. came to $2,803.87 You ~an't In· form people wlthout spending money. We are aware -and rightly are constantly reminded of the need to be as frugal as po111lble. The report 11 an at· tempt to meet both these obli1a- tions. It should be seen in th• con· text of a current tot.al operatin1 budaet for lbe dlstrlct'a three. com munlly colleaoa of sn mllllon. ' THE DOCllMENT la dlatribut· ed to interested lndividuafs and aroup1 tn and around the dl1trlct and -this i11 important to tax· payora here -to people in other part.I of the country who can bi •upportJve and lntluenUal on behalf ol tho dlatrlct when lt ap. pllu for federal fundsi The .,.. port la also ustd u a marke~J ald h tho clUll1ct, u a 1"4· ln1 natlonal producer of teJecoun , Off ra these 'Pn>- 1ranu fOf' I to lnstll\atka ....._ around the country. This is an b.eir mes for what it waR that operation which brings extra caused this amazing turn of revenue back to supplement local even ls. tax dollars. You rightly mention that the di s trict's sailing veuel, Saudade, is heavily featured in the report but you may have given the Impression that ft was purchased with public funds. It was a elft. Its maintenance comes to $3.000 per year. We will through chartering attempt to cover that charge. The ve11el is used for sailing classes, som~ marine science classes and wiU possibly be used for winter navigation classes. Its pnnclpal function is a noaUoc classroom. Finally, may I repeat some pertinent fads from the report. Some 4-0 percent of adults in the district use ils fac11illes in a year. Cum ulatlvc enrollmefll was L36,091. The year before, It was 109,811 NORMAN E. WATSON Chancellor Teaclter'• Trlb•te To the Editor: As an elementary school teacher who was raised with up· 1>4tr Newport Bay mud between his toes and the Harbor Area in hls blood, I'd like to share some reellng11 J have with you and your readen. It ia merely coincidental but blihlY appropriate tbal these things be snld so close after Tbankslivina. In what I'm sure wu a mOlt frustrating partnenhlp, NewpOrt Harbor Htch School and ho Newporl·Oolta Men ar9a bad the unfortunate resPonslblltty of Rfflne to it that l, a1alnst creater tban usual odds, become an cd"catecl and usetut penon. lt mu1t have tte.med a futile com· munity effort to all those In- volved in such a thankless and mon11 trout undertailtin1. But somehow the Harbor Area tut vived. Comins from lhe *• when f.onliea were real peo and a time lbat WU Cl ltd t.ht ''Apathetic Flft.ltt," I found myself amon,1 lh leaJom of •ur· prlJed oblervera 1b1k1ns '-helr heads ln dilbellel whtn t had t,,. credibly rnan11ed to n1111b two yoara of colleee al Oral\lt Cout. Aaatn, the shock ... almost too much to bear when I received .a .A. In Enellsb Wllb amblUons toward.at acbln1. :You Me &be l"'l!.mLKJrlll J .,., ab1e lo 1•t thrOU«b coll e and fO to a prOtewoa '"" not r \hat Wa.kS ibOw up .98 tat I or In StWl BUI .OJ>Jtetl • '1bt ool dbU1.tt c:Ou1d not look to THERE ARE two reasons that J made it through college, became a teacher and enjoyed whatever success I have been able to achieve, and everytblng positive I do either in my classroom or my creative pursuits is dlrecUy traceable to these reasons -Mr. Robert Wood and Mr. Robert Wentz. They were two of my hi1h school teachers and with their help my life got itself together. I'd like to thank them now, publicly In the finest. sense of the word these two individuals are teachers. and teachers on the highest level. Mr. Wood ls not teaching at Harbor High anymore but Robert Wentz is, and I know that at Newport he is still giving that extra quallty that the rest of us in education can work towards and hope we 're ap- proaching. In my clMsroom and ln my life I have always looked back to his example with the firm belief that if l were ever able to be half the teacher and person he is. I would be an overwhelming success. The amazing thing Is, I not only remember them and what they were to me, but I also remember the things they said. I know how terribly lucky I was to have been a student of Mr. Wood and Mr. Wenu and I want- ed to let people know how lucky their student; still are. DENNISCRAIGSMITH Lompoc Unified School District c .. 1aei~ To the Editor: As the Pllot attempt, to sway public opinion (editorial of Nov. 23) regarding the forced resigna- tion of Larry Lynch, it shduld be noted that the vote which ap- pointed hlm was not unanimous <Roaers. Ryckoff. Wllllams dis· senting). r tinue to state that I appreciate the kind of thinking that Mr. Lynch brought to the planning commission. However. the fact that he could not vote on the key issues limited the usefulness of thul thinking. The commission. as often as reasonably possible, should operate at full strength. Thl' conflict of interest Jaw which cau!lcd the recent action by the council was fully operational at the lime the appointment was made. Though it was not council policy m so many words. 1t has been slate law for some time. RAYE WILLIAMS Afrport Prob~• To the Editor Our board of directors has re· viewed and discussed your editorial of Sunday, Oct. 16, tiUed "Noise: Sum also Rises." To our muids that editorial pift- p o in ts most precisely the responsibilities for our continu· Ing problems with Orange Coun- ty Airport UNFORTUNATELY, the Orange County Board of Supervisors throughout the years has lacked the vision to tackle the local and regional airport re· qulrcmenls for Orange County. Study an.er study bu not pro- voked int.elligent response. Now our options are very limited. We hope that the ever lncreasin& noise and air p0llutlon from the commercial jets will noi convert portions of Newport 8each into another Play a ~I Rey. Despite the ••ll·f)Ublicized problems asspc)ated with the growth and cxpanaion ol LAX. Oran1e County has not bitten the buJJet to addreaa our airport problems. Declalons have been made by defhll rather than reaaonedJudgment. Wt bope that the Dally Pilot will cooUnue its vigorous purauit of satisfactory solutions to our local and re· gtonal airport requirements and protect our communities from further dettriorallon from com· merc;lal aircraft. GEORGE INGLES. President UU)Q Balboa bland Property Owners Auocl1tlOt1 Transportation Pooled A three-month-old Cadillac rests at the bottom of Don Ayala's pool near Los Angeles, Tuesday. after the accelerator stuck whtk hb \\afc was driving 1t into a garage. It crashed through the wall at the rear and sank Mrs Ayala and her child escaped Property Division Eyed Solution: R ecognizing Common Law Marriage? SAN FRANCtsco (AP> Recognizing com- mon law marrial{e in Cahforrua may be the way to disentangle the financial stnngs that a high court says exist between cohabiting but unmarried couples. legal experts said. They agreed a decision late last year, invtilving actor Lee Marvin and has lave-in girlfriend of six years, did not forge any new law when it said un- married partners who break up can sue each other T een-age Actress Pleads Innocent BEVERLY JflLLS CAP) Teen-age actress Mackenzie Phillips, who portrays the older daughter on CBS-TV's "One Day at a Time" series, has pleaded innocent to a single misdemeanor charge of public drunkenness. Miss Phillips, 18, was released on $500 ball Tuesday after a Jan. 10 preliminary hearing was scheduled before Municipal Court Judge Jac- queline L. Weiss. A U>s Angeles County sheriff's deputy said be arrested Miss Phillips shortly after mid· night last Wednesday when he round her sprawled on a West Hollywood street. She was held overnight at the JaJI ward at County-USC Medical Center and then released on bail Barbara Broglialli, a spokeswoman for her lelcv1sion series, said a substaJk:e found in the ac- tress· purse which deputies initially thought to be cocaine was a diet pill. And the spokeswoman said, a blood test showed Miss Phillips had not been intoxicated Expert Emphatie Bus Victims 'Suffered' OAKLAND CAP ) The prosecution in the Chowchilla Jtidnapping trial rested its case today with a doctor's emphatic testimony that kidnap vic- tims suffered "serious bodily injury." Dr. Delmer Pascoe, a professor or pediatrics and expert in heat illness, was to undergo brief questioning Defore he leaves the stand. He was the last or 19 witnesses called in the slate's effort to prove lhat three confessed kidnap-( J pers caused bodily harm SI'ATE to 26 Chowchilla children '----,.------" and their school busdriverinJulyl976 Oii DriWa9 1t'l11• Ro1111d to recover communal property But, they said, 1t probably has had a dramatic psycholoetcal lmpacl on couples throughout. the country, raisin1 questions about how unmarneds should be treated by the law. ''MARRIAGES MAY BE MADE in heaven and Marvin relationships may be made in bars, but they both end up in Superior Court,'' cracked Stephen Adams, editor of the California Family Law Quarterly. State Sen. Bob Wilson, D-San Diego, who chaired the hearing, said he thought the Marvin de· cislon by the California Supreme Court "is leading us toward common law marriage. "It seems to me that if we recognized common law marriage, many of these problems would be solved,'' said Wilson, an attorney. Donald King, from the California Judges Association, agreed. STATE LAW DEFI NES WHAT happens when a marriage breaks up, but has no provisions for divid· ing the financial fruits of mere cohabitation. But since the Marvin decision, lawmakers have been scrambling lo write a law covering unmarried couples, too. The commotion stems from a 1972 lawsuit filed by Marvin's ex-girlfriend, Michelle Triola, who claimed she was entitled lo $500,000 or half of the property the two accumulated. She said she gave up a singing career m exchange for bis promise to sup- port her. Although a lower court dismissed the case, the state Supreme Court said Miss Ttiola had a right to a trial, scheduled to begin next month. THE COURT SAID THE LAW must enforce any expressed or 1mpl1ed agreement between couples married or not to pool lhe1r property or earrungs, as long as the rclat1onsh1p was not ex· plicitly for sex. as in prosl1lulirm And when the coupling ends, the rourts must decide how to divide the loot. Butlhedec1s1on has rais<.'d aqucslion like: -Shuuld SUC'h a rule apply to homosexuals liv· ing together and to roommates who share house payments, for example'' Those testifying generally agreed that it should ~ 8AUME & M ERCIER GE NEVE lS/;tyo Ila' lit C/Fi11e c: ... , "" . . , . 11 o•,• '1 • • I DAil V "'LOT A.5 . r Plet 3Klansmen Found Guilty LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Superior Court jury has found three Ku Klux Klan members 1wlty of coo.1pmng to comm1t first-decree murder in a plot againi~t.be West Coast leader of the Jewish De!enae Leaaue. The rune-man, three-woman JUTY returned the verdict Tuesday against Robert Dehnel, 32, Timothy Wayne Anderson, 216, and Daniel Elli1 Taylor, 43. The three face a penalty ofllfe in prison. The three, who were members of the Klan's North Hollywood chapter, were accused of plotting the murder of Irv Rubln. For More Adequate Parking ATl'ORNEYS FOR THE THREE said they would appeal the verdtct by the jury, wbicb in· eluded two blacks and one Mexican-American. Sen- tencing was-scheduled for Jan. S. REDUCING STOCK FROM ALL CATEGORIES! Dehne! and Anderson, both from the Hollywood area, remajoed in custody, while Taylor, who ls from Van Nuys, was ftee on bail ~~50%0FF , Deputy District Attorney John Watson said be was· "amazed" at the Jury's swift decision, which came on Lbe second day of deliberations "I WAS VERY IMPRESSED," he said. "They must have been paying very close attention to the evidence as it was presented." But Dehnel's attorney, James Epstein, said that "given the shortness of the deliberations and the complicated nature of the evidence, it seems that the jury was not abte to overcome its prej· \ldlces." ANDERSON, WHO CLAIMED he had left the Klan, whispered to his attorney as he 1lanced toward the audience. Outside the courtroom. An· derson remarked. "I thought we had ll. J really thought we had it.•· •MO LAYAWAYS •HO RETURNS ' J :,6 ~ff l4f' Be Comtortable In Your Cups We Spec;lallH ln O I OD'• Qreduate Con9tl•r• A rookie officer who infiltrated the Klan last vear -Paul Rolf Gebhardt -testified that thf> ,.,._ fendants planned to kill not only Rubm, but bis suc- cessor lnthe militant JDL. 370 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA Ii you dCt before December 31st. you can toke advo.ntage of a plan that will gave you big savings on your 1977 £ederal income taxes Not only will you save an impor- tant aJ!lount of money, but the interest you edrn on lhol money will be tax-free for years to come Do you qualify? Art you Hlf· 1mploy1d? You can set aside thou~ands of dollars each yeM and not pay federal income taxes on d nickel of ft until you retire And tho interest this money will earn for you Is also tclX free unit! you retire. When you do pay laxes on the pnncipal ond mlerasl. 11 will be at the rate determined. by your tax bracket after rotiretnent A.rt y.U ntw wOridne for a com-,C.r wltlleut1 retfn•1ent ,._? You can save a substantial amount of money ~ch year on wti1eh you pay no federal incotne taxes on the principal or interest until after retirement. The d@t&ls are slightly different from the self· employed plan, but the lox sav- U\gs 4"' major. De rov plan on ~"' f0b1? If ycu lttava a compeny to wMch you have company·pa1d rt:llre- rnent benehls coming to you. you can ' roll over" (convert) those funds to ap md1v1dual retirement plan and ~oslpooe pdyang taxe!" on them until you retire l.R.A. Tax Savings now lncrtaucl. Recent changes In the law re· gardmg Individual Re11rement Accounts allow separate ac· counts for unemployed spouses. thus increasing the pole4!h4j I R A tax saVtngs for a family To.x·tree rellrement 4ccounts arc insured to $40.000 by en dgency ol the federal government and the interest 1S guaranteed The h1ghost Mrmno dccount poys 8 06% wM.in the &nnual mterest rate of 7 75% 1S compounded daal~ Minimum 1erm 1s 6 ye11rs -$100 mm1mum deposit re· quired. Feaerol regulabons rt)· qulr1ng subst~b41 pt;nalty on ~ .. ?~ , i fHC BICi M FIEE TIM Contpl1t1 httrt1 Pl•• .. GuWt~ Th1S big 349 page bOok ii encyclopeda.i of estate plaM1ng. II cove l's rnvestmonrs and 14.Xl· • 11on, real est<lll), msuronoe, rotire- ment trusts, oud Oluch more. It':, youro for tho ciskmg, whlJe quau· titles last at \lny ofbce Of Mutual Savings No mcul Ordtlrs, plMse .. 1 I \ . ' . . f T •, ··~ ,. , FC i o +4¥ f I Lag11na/South Coast VOL 70, NO. 334, ~ SECTIONS, .CS PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Hookers, Booties Increase • ID By GUY GRANVILLE °' .. .,...., ........... Prostitution and bookmaking are on the upswtnc in Orange County, accordiq to Sheriff's of· lice vice officer Jack Marwin. Recoro. for the year ended Oct. 31 show that vice arrests by the Sheriff's office "more than doubled" during lhe past year, Marwin said. His figures included only ar· res4 made in unincorporated areas of the county and in city in· vesliJatklm aided by sheriff's vice investigators. Cit.ed as tbe hotbed for ladies of the nigbt was the so-called "Harbor Boulev.rd strip" that runs roughly from Kalella A venue in Anaheim to Bolsa Avenue in Westmlnster. In county territory, Mission Viejo was listed by Marwin as the bot spot for call Jirla. Most women arrested in both proatltutlon centers were described by the vice offlcer u reru1ees from the heavy action on Hollywood Boulevard and the Suuet Strip in netpborini Lo6 Anaeles County. And, Marwin said, most women arrested on pf'Ostltut.ion char1ea in Oranee County are what be called "hype whores " women wbo have taken to the streets or a hotel room to support a drug bablt. "But ,et'1 face It," l(aii.rwin said, ''there'• money in Oraqe County aod vice follows money.'' "So, we have strin11 or four or five alrla workina the area• because there 11 bi1 moll~Y here." He cited 55 prostltuUon arrests and 55 lewd conduct arrest.a dur- inl the ooe year period support- Ini the vice atucb'. Marwin aleo aald there were three arreata on pornoarapby cbar8es u well u three aneata for plmpiua. One Ol the porno arrests lD· volved cblld pornoeraph)'. Marwin said. Utt 11 do11an U..t 11 atuacttni str~t walltera to Oraqo Coun\7 they are big dollan, accord.lna to the vl~e officer. He sa!d women arrested oo proaUtuUon charges set their s11bts on S200 ntihts u .= make their way alon1 H TEN CENTS l Boulevud boPJ.n1 for a .. lohn° to ptcttbem~ Aa. MvJ.t. Polk• in Anahelro say llrll 1"ll"klna their pOrtiClll al the Harbor .BoUlevard atrtp an• probabl.1. rMbli IA cQlleetiveb' at leut ~000 a montb, aceard.IDI toManriL He empbuiled that a heavy majortty al the proltitution ar- reata Mt out al oount.y raldenta. · Manrin aald ~ 11 qoedic&• • OleeVl~Pa&eAZF- 1 .. -... ... . ' l Truck Causes· .• avoc in. Laguna Wants to Retura? Death Suspect Found in Bali By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH OI tt1t o.llf f'llet MMt Joseph Davis. one of eight peo- ple under Orange County Grand Jury Indictment in the Oct. 22 murder of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley, has been BT· rested by authorities in Bali, In· Voters Ask 17 Repeal of ·Ordinance Petitiom calllnl for repeal al San Juan Capl1trano'1 eon· troversial agricultural preserva· lion ordinance have been filed with the City Clerk's office, a spokesman for the petitioners said today. The ordinance, passed by a three lo two City Council vote la.st spring, sets aside 230 acres of farm land for preservation. The petition demands that the ordinance be placed before city voters durtn1 regular city elec· lions next March 7. "We got 1,070 signatures on the petitions," spokesman Tony Forster said. "We found Ylrtual· ly no resistance amons c:lty voters to put the issue back oo the ballot." The agricultural preservation issue was on the March, 197t city ballot where a plan to uaea 10 cents per $100 uteued valuation lo raise money to purchase farmlands was rejected by voters. Fontter i. confldent v°"rs will <8" aEPEAL, Pase Al) DR4FTINC TABLE SOUJWITHA.D .. Tbe ad rroduced a tood reaponae and aold It." That's the advertialnt 1u~ceu slot)' told b1' UM Newport Beach woman *>pl~ .. Wt clualtled ad In Uae Dally Pflot: If you have tooh or furnlablnp you no lonter need, convert Cbem to cub with a Dal· ly Pilot want ad. lt'a euy. Juat call "2-5'11 and a friendly ad·viaer will ~ you put words to work 1D U.. Dally Ptlot. • donesia, Newport Beach police reported today. Davis, a former member of the Laguna Beach Hare Krishna temple, reportedly is "en· lhusiastic" about returning to the United States to face murder and conspiracy charges. However, Newport Beach police Capt. Richard Hamilton said, ''We are still trying to work out the technicalities or whose responaibillt,y it ls to 10 and get him." HamUtoo said Davls was BT· rested Thank.tglvtna evenine by lodonealall police at the request of U .s. authorities. Davia bad been aou&bt on a srand Jury indictment •lemming frolD tfle execution-style 1booting death d Bonn in front ~ tl:e El Rancblto restaurant in Newport Beach. Authorities allege that Davis was one of five principals In Prasadam Distribulini Inc. of Newport Beach. Police allege he offered three other men $25,000 to kill Bovan and two other men. Affidavits on file In Orange County Superior Court claim that Praaadam was a "front" for 11· licit drug traffic. Captain Hamilton would not re· veal the specific charges upon wblcb Davis is curretltly being held in Bali. but not.ed that ID· donetlan authoriiles often hold allepd drug dealers for 20 days for investi&atton. Because Indonesia does not <SeeSVS~Ecr, Page t\2) Bandits Get $700 in'Cash From Sailor A bitchblkina sailor was robbe4 of. $700 in cub and bll lua· saae ~ nl&ht by two men who plcMd him up near the in· teuecUon of Pacific Coast Hlshway and Dobdy State Pm, Oran1• County ~f'1 otftcera ... ~. De_putles 4alcl Robert J amea DOuelb' Jr., 23, tal~U..m one of Uae two men thr.a~ him with •flDill cAUbet automatic abortly after heaottntotbe nhicle. ~ aald was forced to leave the car a abort dlatance from where be was picked up. He aald be was not allowed to take bla baaase witb blm. Officen1ald tbe Navy man bu liven tbem a detailed deaerlptioo. of the vehicle used in the kidnap. pins and robberJ and the two meo wbooccuped lt. · Downhill R11n Bits . 3Gar~es a, snva 1111U11:u. ............... A 10-ton truck carr1lns a heavy 10IMl ol dirt burtled out fll control down a steep bflll1de road in Lapna Beach Tueldq after. noon, dettro)'tnc three 11n1es before ftipplag on lta aide. No one wu aeriously hurt Sn the 1:80 p.m. lnddent, which left the bottom of Nye.a Place loold.n& like a batUe:fleld. • Bob Hamilton, 21. driver of the 1971 vehicle, said the \ tranam•111on Oil the bqe truck weat out at-. drove down tbe 3> perceat~roadway. ••tt wa fl* like drlvine In Mutra1. ••the dUed trucker al~ loOldllf a a llii:all aerate-. °" b1a arm. ••1 tried to cateh the ed.ae ot. • that 1.-ie 'Wttll 1111 track,," be aal~to a bouae owned \ b7 • Job:nton at aM N1•~ Tile truck. carr1tn1 an •lmltAd lC tom of dlrt from a. proJeet atop tbe hlll, did cUp &be .Johnson 1ara1e. uproottni a water pipe which aent a five-foot hltb fountain into the air. Hamilton •aid be closed his eyea after that, and did not see the truck 1lam into a seeond 1ara1e f\lrtber down tbe bill at 340 Nyea Place. '!be vehicle coo-• tlnued ooe boUle further. mppl.Qg in the roadway after hlttinl a carport earaae contalniDC a Mercedes Benz at 222 Nyu Place. Hamilton WU helped out of tbe back window of the crushed $23,500 ril by • ~by aDd treated at the scene by Lap.a Beach firemen and county paramedics. Firemen med lbovela to mo.ve some of the tpU1ed dirt. forminl a dam to pnvtnt leakiq dlelel fuel fl"OID nmnln8 into the aut· ten. City bulldtnr lnapector• . termed tbe boaae at :WO Nyes Place .mdnbabltable until ap. porta are replaeed at tbe base ol. tbebome. Lapna Beach police ean.d CalUorDia Hlahway Patrol COID• merclal vehicle IDlpecton to tho •cmi• to determ1De tbe cause ot thecrub. Police set. A. J . de"'1ca aald CHP mapector1 believe tbe bnkN en the irutk were not in p~ 8d,lultmeot at tbe tla:Mof TlMs<IQ'• lncldent. (SeeTaVC&, Paae AU .,. I Ni f+J (P # -~ • Laguna/South Coast After. ... .Steeb EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 33', 4' SECTIONS, 4 Pe.GES ; ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA HOokers, Booties lnc)~ease • ID • TEN CEN'TS l [ounty By GARY GRANVILLE oe .. .,....,..._.._.. Prostitution and bookmakint are on the upswin1 in Orange County, accord.ins to Sheriff'• ol- /ice vice officer Jack Marwin. Records for the year ended Oct. 31 show that vice arrests by the Sheriff's office ·'more than doubled" during the past year. Marwin aald. His figures included only ar- rests made in unincorporated areu ot the county and 1n city ln· vesUeatianl aided by aberlff'a vice LnvestJ.gaton. Cited• tbe hotbed for ladies of the nlebt waa the so-called "Harbor Boulevard strip" that runs roughly from Katella A venue in Ana.helm to Bolsa Avenue in Westm.lnster. In county territory, Mission Viejo was listed by Marwin u the bot spot for call tlrla. Most women arrested 1n both pro1Ututlon centers were described by the vice officer as refueeea from the heavy action on Hollywood Boulevard and the Sunset Strip 1n nei&hboriot Lo6 Aneelea County. And, .Marwin uld, most women arrest&! on p!'Ostitution chareea in Orange County are wbat be called "hype whores," women who have taken to the streets or a hotel room to support a drug habit. "But ,et'• face lt, •• l(au'Win said, ''there'• money ln Otan6e County a vice follows money."' "So, we have atrinta of four or five 1irl1 worldnt the a.reaa because there la bis mon.y here." He cited SS proatltuUon arreai. and SS lewd conduct arre.ta dur· ing the me year period 1uppgrt- int th• vice 1tudy. Marwin al.lo aald there wen three arreata on pornoar•l>hY cbar1es a well u three anata lorplmP1n£ One Ot the porno arrest.a lD· volved child porno1raphy. Manrinnid. Ult i.I doUan that i.I attracUQa str~t wallten to Oraoie Couat.1 they are tu doUan, •ccord!nc to the vltteolffcer. He saLld women arrested cm proatltutk>a cbucu set tbelr 1Jtbta OD '20C> Difbta -u.~ make tbelr wa;r alon1 Bou"vanf iq;lD1 for a "lahn"to pick Ulan~. As • nAlt. poltc. in AnaMlm say aJ,rb WOltiDI their portian ol the Harbor Boulevard strip are probablJ raklni ill colleetl~ at leut .-ooo a month, accordini to Ma.nm.. He empbaahed that a heavy m-1ortty ot tbe prostltuUan ar· re.w Dllout ot count)' reatden.ts. ' MerwlA said tbere ii qo indiea· • (8le VICE, Pa .. Al) Truck Causes· BavQc in .. Lagunft Wants to Ret•ra'? Death Suspect Found in Bali By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Olt19DMl1 ........... Joseph Davis, one or eight peo. ,.pie under Orange County Grand Jury indictment in the Oct. 22 murder of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley, has been ar· rested by authorities in Bali, In· Voters Ask 11 &peal of ·Ordinance PeUtiom callins for repeal ot San Jua11 Capl1trano11 ton· troversial agricultural preserva- tion ordi.nance have been filed with the City Clerk 'a omce, a spokesman for the peUUoners said today. The ordinance, passed by a three to two City Council vote last spring, sets aside 230 acres of farmland for preservation. The petition demands that the ordinance be placed be/ore city voters durlnl regular city elec· lions next March 7. "We got l ,070 signatures on the petitions," s pokeaman Tony Forster said. "We found Ylrtual· ly no resistance amons city voters to put the issue back on the ballot." The agricultural preservaUon issue was oo the March, lt7e cicy ballot where a plan to uaeu 10 cents per $100 aueu4d valuation to raise money to purchase farmlands waa rejected by voters. Fo,.ter ii contldent voten will <See &EP£..U. Pa•e AJ) DR4FI'INC TABLE SOUJ .WITH AD ''The -d f roduced a 1ood retPoue and sold lt." That'• tb6 advertlaln1 aucceaa story told by tile Newport Be~ WOlJ)aft WfaopJ~tbJ.t cJUlilJed ad ln Ule Dally ~: Draftln1 'l'ablt, · Proftuional 1he, metal, xlnt cood, lamp included. $175, lUUMOOUt. If you have toola or f W"Dilhlap you no looser Deed, convert them to caJ!I with a Dal· 11 Pilot want ad. It'• easy. Juat call 142-#71 and a friendly ad-YlseJ' will btlp you put Wor'dl to wort ha the Dally Pllot. · donesia, Newport Beach police reported today. Davis, a former member of the Laguna Beach Hare Krishna temple, reportedly is "en- thusiastic" about returning to the United States to face murder and conspiracy charges. However, Newport Beach police Capt. Richard Hamilton said, "We are still trying to work out the technicalities of whose responsibility it is to go and get hi .. m. HamUtoa said Davis wu ar- rested TbaoJuglvln1 evenlna by Jndonaiu police at the request oru.s. authorities. Davia had been souebt on a 1ramd jury indictment stemming from~ execution-style 1booting death d Bonn in front of tte El Rancblto Nltaurant 1n Newport Bea.eta. Authorities allege that Davis wa1 one of five principals in Pruadam Distributing Inc. of Newport Beach. Police alle«e he offered three other men-$25,000 to kill Bovan and two other men. Affidavits on file ln Orange County Superior Court claim that Pruadam was a "front'' for 11- llcit drug traffic. Captain Hamil too would not re· veal the specific charaea upon which Davis is curreOtly being held tn Bali, but noted that In· donetlan authorities often hold allepd drug dealers for 20 days for tnvestiption. Because Indonesia does not (SeeSUSPECI', Pace AZ) Bandits Get $700 in· Cash From Sailor A hltchblkint sallor was tobbed ot '100 in cash and hi.I lua· l•Je ~ ntabt by two tnen whO plcUd him up near tbe in· teraectlon of Pacltlc Coa1t Hltbway -1 Doheny State Park, Oran1• County Sheriff's oftlcert aaict. D~ ..ici Robert Jatnea I>On.ae)'1Jr.,23, tol4-t.btm one ot the two men UU'ea~ blro witb !&~all callber automaUe 1bortly r=J.nto Uae vebftle. Do said was forced to IHve the car a. abort diltance from wbere be was ptcked up. He aald be wu not allowed to take his ba,,.,e with blm. Officers aald tH Navy man bu stno them a detailed description. of the vehicle Uled in the kldnap- plnc and robbery and the two meno whoocClll*ltt. · Downhill Run Hits . 3Gar~es BJ ft&VB lllTCll&U. ... ...., ......... A lO·ton truck earr11D1 a heavy load ot dirt hurtled out ot control down a siee, bllllide road in Lapna Beaeh Tuesday after. noon, destroylJll three garqea before lllppinc on its aide. No one wu seriously hurt ln the 1: 30 p.m. lneldent, whlcb left the bottom ol Nyes Place looking like a battlefield. • Bob Hamilton, 71, driver of the 1971 veblcle, said the \ tranamluion on the hue• truck went out • a., drove don tbe JO perceat~roadway. ''Jt WU fQSt like drivlaa in ~··the clUed trucker Mid. • ~lit a aZllaD acrateb CIQ his arm. . "I tri9c1 to catch the edle ~ _ that I~ with IDY truck/' be aald,. pobdiq to a hOule owned \ 1'7 lfduir.t ~11. Jolmlcm at * NTt9~ Tiie truck, carryln1 an •"mlhld 14 tom of dirt trotn a projed 4i&Ol> the hlll. did cllp t.be lohuon 1an1e. upr00Un1 a. water pipe which sent a five-loot hlib fOuutalD into the air. Hamilton •aid be closed bis eyea after tbat. and did not see the truek alam into a second 1ara1e further down the hW at 340 Nyes Place. 'Ibe vehicle coo~ tlnued Gae bouae further. rupptng in the roedway after hitting a carport 1ara1e containing a Mercedu Benz at 222 NyM Place. HamUton WU helped out ol the back window of the crushed $23.500 rte by a passerby ldld treated at the scene by La11JD& Beach firemen and county paramedics. nremen used lbovels to move 10me ot the spilled dirt, forming a dam to prevent leaking diesel fuel from runnlng into the tut· tera. Clty building inspectors . termed the house at 340 Nyes Place l.minhabltable until a191>- portt are replaced at the base of thebome. La,-u:na Beach Police called Calllornla Hltbway Patrol ootn· merclal veblcle inapecton to the Hen• to determine the cause of thecruh. Police sat. A. J. del,uca said CHP ln1pector1 believe the braket cm tbe truc:k were not ln proper ldjUltlnent at the Um& of Tuelday'I incldent. <&eeftUCJ[, Pa,eAJ> Weather s~.and a litUe eooler Tia~. Lon toniebt a to 55. Hl,a. 'J1aun4ay near '10 at bbctiei to low 80s in- Wid. 2 ONLY "'LOT Sect Plans Suit 'Ends Link ol Krishniuf,-r By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ol•Oellyl'i ........ A Hare K.riab.na spokesman Hld the relllioua Met Will U- nourtce a trademark lawsu.it to- day against Pruadam Di•tribut- 10g, Joe., (PDJ) the Newport Beach lnvti1tmen\ nrm whole four prtnclpaJ1 have been mdlct· ed for the Oct. 22 murder ol Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley. Hare Krishna member Mukun- da Das said Thursday Ulat the suit 11 deatped to end the· "de- ception'' that haa led to reports of alle1ed Unka between the murder su1pecta and the Hare Krl1hnu. ln denying any 1uch UnU, Du said the religious aroup hH been . ·•mtarepreaented and it bH nrioUJJy dama1ed our lmace,to tbe publle. It bu M.a a ._. at.ruule to ret tMa amalJ •mt• aroap recocnlzed for what it is," Datadded. ~would not elaborate, aaytni more detalla would be available at a 1pecial news eonference scheduled for 11 a.m. today at the Los Angeles Hare Krishna Tem- ple. "Basically, it's going to deal with federal trademarks," aaid Daa. Kmbna officials have stead·· Castly denied that Alexander· Kulik, the 28-year-old bead of PDI under lndlctment in Bovan 's death, bas ever been auociated with die sect. Kulik wu one of four partnert 1A PDI. an lnvestmeet ftnD tut, •ceol'd'·1 .. -.a'Wa.tt -Ille in Superior Court, may have been used to "launder money made from tr::rfcrtation and S11a•..-U... ~fl ct ... Ria three tvtn•r• -Roy Chrls\'Optler lllcb•rd, Joaepb Gabriel Fedorow1ki and Joseph Shelton Davia -are alao under i ncltthnent. JUcbard and Fedorowaki a.,. at larce and Davie ti in an· lndonealall jail awalttns \ndictment. Krtahna offlclall acknowlecfie that theM three men were active members or the Laauna Beach temple, but claim they were ex- pelled in September, 1t'18. Niguel Widow Sues In Radi&tion Death However, Lquaa &e.cb police recenUy releJ,Hd a letter dated. Jan. 14. tm, to PDI memben front ~•ml Prahupad9\ the Hare Krishna founder who died of natural causes Nov. 14 in India at the a1eof82. The letter read.a in part: "Kri•hna will 1tve you. In- telligence bow to ensaae ln brilliant, 11orloua work on His behalf. There is no need to engage in anything dishonest. Krishna has given enough money, now earn by honest rnaan1 ... " LOS ANGELES CAP) -'Jbe. Laguna Niguel widow of a U.S. Marine Corps major flied a $1 million suit today in U.S. District Court, cla1min1 her husband's death frorn cancer reaulied from exposure to radiation while he and other servicemen were or· dered to participate in U.S. nuclear teat pro1rams. Maj. Cbarlet A. Broudy died Oct. 27 of lymphosarcoma, cancer of the lymph system. whic h was diagnosed last February. "He should never ever have been exposed to that amount or radiation without his consent." Mrs Broudy told a news con ference after her lawyers filed the suit. ''He waa not a volun· teer," The suit claims early detection and treatment could have pre- vented Broudy's death. It clairna E'ro. rage Al PAPER ••• )liguel News-Post. Tbe defendinl Golden West eroup publishes the Saddleback Valley News, the Beach C!Ues News, the News-Advertlaer, the Valley Advertiser and the Irv1ne lndependent. McCray arJ(ued Tuesday that ~ctioru1 by the defendant& ef!ec. ti vely banned distribution of Spitalert newspapers arnona the 17,000 resident.a or Laguna Hills Leisure World. And be told Judge Charanua that ample proof of his claim la supplied by the lecend on a newspaper circulated by the de· fendants: "We are the only newspaper that delivers to every home in Leisure World.•' Spitaleri lists his operating dam ares as $7,424,423. He brew the damages down as $.105,000 for the forced mailing' of his newspapers, $2,069,423 ln lost an- ticipated profits and $5,050,000 ln lpss of anticipated increase in his asset values. Subdivision Gets Approval Routine approval baa been granted by the South Coaat Regional Zone Conservation Commission for a $1.s·muuon re•idential subdivision of U homes near the sea ln Capiatnno Beach. Tbe 6.32-acre project near Camino Mira Costa and Camino Capistrano was previously juctced to meet all 1171 Coastal Act provisions and development guidelines of planntnc .,encl• at a lower level. Caplatrano Bluffs, the bullder, plam 2C two-story homes and s even one sfory 1maUer res- idencn in ita developemnt. The actJon was taken on the eam- mlssion 'a resular eonsent ealen- dar without discussion. it was the respciosibillty of tbe government and the Veterans Administration to notify Broudy to seek early medical treatment. ldra. Brou.cly siUd her husband was firat qpOMd to radlaUoa Jn 1948 when oNered to bclard 1bipa contambtatff by radioacUve debris tram nuclear tests near Bikini Atoll He wa1 alao exposed to radla- tion durinl three nuclear teats lo the Nevada delert 1.D Jue ud July 11S1.abe1ald. lo Aquat the VA reject.d benefit elalma filed by tbe Broudys, eoncludln1 hia dla- ablllti• wen "not incurred or ag1ravat.ed by aervtce." Broud:y'a claim waa backed witb oplnlom from b.ll phy1tctu, Dr. J&IMI Padon, a TuaUn. Calif., bematolofl1t, and Dr. G lyn Cald1ul , a cancer speclali.lt from the National Center for Dtuaae Control ln Atlanta. that hla condlUon could be related to past radiation ex- po1ure In the service. The flllnl of the Broudy suit coincides with the 1tart of a na- tionwide campaip by a lf'OUP called Another Mother for Peace to Joe ate others exposed to radia· tion du.rinl the t.eata, or their aur- vi vors, to warn them of health hazardl and adviae them Of their right.a. "A Jot ol people don't know they were exposed or have rights to any claims,•• Dorothy B. Jonea, an AMP spokeswoman, said in an Interview. Miu Jaaea said the 1roup ha coot.acted about 30 men wbo -.n expoHd and is aeekln1 tbe names cl others. "We feel It'• important someone outaide the govern- ment mate a record and make it known, since the 1overnment won't. "abeaaid. Sbe noted tbat in a cue involv- ing natives of islands in the Paclllc test range, Conaress re- cently voted $25,000 for each penon affected by the radiation and $100,000 tn death benefits for survivors Of each person who died u the result of the U.S. nuclear tel1J.na. "How can they do any less for o ur owu men?" she said. .. They've been· turninc down claim.a Jell and right.•' Klas Jones said one problem la the ti.me lq. Under VA recuJa· lions for Hniee-econetted ~ abilltles, tbe dlaabUl~ must be reported wUhlD • 1UJ' of lea"riq active Mnice. sheaaid. ''UDICll'tuutely, in the cue ol cancer and leukemia the lac la much lonpr:• sbe said. Police aJJe1e that Bovan wu shot nine Umes u be Till leavlnl the El Rancho ~eataurant 1.D Newport Beach because he al· le1edly kidnapped a PDI official audbeldblmfor$100,000ramom. AntboftyllarooeJr., RQmcncl R•co and JfinY Peta-Ftort re- main 1.D ~tody Jn tbe alleted murder complracy cue. Flori, 41, of HuntJnitoa Beacb, bu ad· mltted to beinl tbe trJuerman in Bovan '•execution •t1le death. Kulik, who wu arrested in Mlulon Viejo, reportedly lo po11e11lon of 1.1 pounds of heroin, la now fl'ee on ball. Tbe four men are due ln Superior Court Friday for ar- raienment ln Judie Robert P. Kneeland'a court. * * * F,....Pa.,e..41 SUSPECT.··. have a fonnal extradition treaty with tho Unlf,M States, Nnport Beaeb police will meet today with FBI agenta and repreaeo- Ulives ol the Di.ltrict Attorney'• Office to work out tecbnlcalities. Captain H'IJliltoD said local authorities ""1ll try IUld pant Dav1s' reported wish to return to the U S. to clear his name in the Bovan murder cue. Davis is the flftb defendant to be located im the cue. Jerry. Peter Fiori, Anthony Marone Jr., and Raymond Resco are current- ly ln custody in Oran1e County awaiting a Friday Arrai1D1Dent on m u.rder cbar1es in Superior · Court. Alexander Kulik, the 21-year- otd bead ~ Pruadam Dlstribut· 'ins. bu also been apprehended butiatreeon ball. ~ sun at tarce are Xullk•a wife, Elsie, RQf Cbriatopher Richard and Josepb Federowald. p,.._pflfleAI ~UIT ••• i.1\1.,, Appllcatiom are J;etq P"OC'- eaed thla week. with 3S nnt · aubaldy aireementa at It.ate. • The llnt are expec:t.ed to be in el· feet by next w.ek. Private Rites Set in Stockton A person must be onr 62 years of a1e, handicapped u deflnecl by tbe Social Security Ad- mlniatratlon or m a low lneome family to quail~ for tbe rent u- sistance. Sh.imlmsafd. To qualltfy, an e1deri; or dft. abled single applicant eannot eam more than •,• a ye.,-. A couple cannot eam more than $101700 a year. The aaa~11n1m ID· n'-al .Income allowed II tltMOfor " I . For Dr~ Sinai a family of eight. • An applicant mast find aeeo. modlUona =far DO more than $1113 a for a studio, $211 for a ooe bedroom 01' $aS9 for a two bedroom apartment. A 1vc~ applicant 1llOQld tb•D :i-P.~Y U percent of bla moa&llb' hM:ollle en nDl. wUb federal Boualba and Urbu Development ruDCll plcJdnl up the remainder. · ' · · · o.llf 'll•Ulaff,...... VIEW 8HOW8 DAMAGED GARAGES UP HILL Out-of.Control VehlCN Struck ThrH Structurea ,,..__P-AJ TRUCK ••• Be Hid police will recommend a complaint be laauecl by the Dll- trict AUorney'a offtce cltina the vebJcle u unaafe. omcen said there WU only one pel"llOD in any of the homes at the time ol the crub. Theresa Alice Josepha said she wu watcbltt& televblon in her •econd story apartment at 222 Nyea place when ahe beard the truck alam into the fint floor 1araae below her. "It sounded just llke all the rest of those ll'a vel trucks that 10 careening put here from the top of the hilf." she said. But she said ahe felt a thud, and went to the balcony to take a look. "Need.leas to a~. one peek over the side sent me Into a state of shock," ahe lauihed. Sbe said i' dldn 't help when abe aaw }ler •ma.shed Mercedet 1n theglrage. SC PROWLER PUfSPOSSUM That WU DO dol clrlnkinl out of Teufel'• water dish Tuesday nilbt, ~ when tho intruder "Hlltured tbrou1h bls douJe door. James Gibson of San Clemenw called police. Tbe animal that trted to move in with the Glbeom at 212 E. San Juan turned out to be a babJ opouum. otncera toot the friendb' critter to an uninhabited area, where they released it. Lioome Fee · · lncreWJe Eyed By LB Cormcil Lapna Beach councilmen will conalder fncreasln1 bu•loesa licenH fees in the city by 10 per- cent when they meet ~gbt at 6 p.m. The proposed rate increase, which would take effect Jan. 1, if it ls approved. would affect all buaineues in the city that re- quire licenses. Chamber ot Commerce Prest .. dent Frank Buck aald he bu DO objections to the proposed ln· crease, adclini that bu1lneH· licen.se fees 1n Laauna bave not gone upfn a decade. · Other items achedaled for the' eveninl portkJn ~ tbe council · meettq include: -DiaCmalan of a request b7 • the Citiw Alllmce to adat& a grandfather ordinance wblch would allow property owners who loee their homea in a m~ disaster to rebdllcl the structure u it now ltancb. Current ordinances apeeify the homeowner mu.t comply Witb all present-day codes to rebuild bia home and must seek va.rtances t.o construct the same atnacture tbat was on the lite before the dis· aster. -camac1er the next mps fot' a parking manacement projram that would lDclude eonatruc&o of two or three parldnfe::C· turea in ceDtral Lacuna to alleviate traffic woes . -Hear a report on the widen- ine of Coast IDgbway at Main Beach. r..... P,,.e Al VICE .••.• t1on of an orsaoJ&ed crime thread ... tlmluO Ute PTIJllRllMUUll ectl'lity ID Coullt7. However. be add d, should Pf()ltJtuUoo acUvtty blcreuo and not be 1ubJect to intmM law en- forcement lt la Ukely that or- aantstd crime will move tnto the racket!Mft. A• fsr u 1ambtln1 11 CCJQ- cerned, Marwin said the 14 eberiff 'a bookmaklne arreda in tb~ put 1ear have involved oprauou 110111n1 at leut $10,000& • "Bookmakers pocket an estimated 22 percent or the 1rosa," Marwin aaid. ·• So you can see that It la a profttable OPtratloa." · He allo said moat tbe bookmaklni 1ct.1vil7 in Oraqe Count~ spotil&hta 1porta action. incJ~ football card.I that net the bookies a 15 percent pt'Clflt.. A.I la the cue wltb p~ the vice offlcer •a.Id tbere b •f.D.. 'dicatlon that Ol'la.nized CrillM is 1tt the ninl ~ JJJecal cambliaa tn Oraqe Count,J. Alain though, he emphasized, oraanlled crime will follow where there are succ .. af\ll bookmakinc operations aot " Jed to vtaoroua law enforce· meat. '"r! noted that invariably • bo malctn1 conviction in Or ge County results in a jail s~ntence. "But lreed overtakes fear and there la a lot of money here to al· tract 11mbUn1 lntereata, •· Marwtnwcl. ,..._P ... .41 REPEAL •• .- reject the ordinance which re- quirea deve&open to pa.y r .. to create a t\IDd for qrlcultural preee'9atian lncenttvea. Tbef-1 is not used to purchase land set aside under tbe pruervatioo or- dinance. . San Juan City Cleric Kary Ann Hanover said today 801 signatures are required to place the laaue on the ballot. She will ask councilmen Dec. 7 to CGD· tract with the Orange County . Registrar of Voters to verify signatures on the petition. · The petitions must be verilied in30days. The agricultural ~ issue ta the second to quallfy f«" the clty'a March ballot u an m. itiati ve. A _peUttoo to e""'8 councllmaidc dlatrtcta and In· • creue Chy Council membenbip to 8"tn qoalHled for the ballot last October. Dick Clark Rites Slated · A memorial service will be held Saturday for loa1thae South La1una publlcl1t Dick Clarll, who died Tbanbflvlnc Day et the aeeof67. Frienda said the service wtn be held at tbe Cany00 Club, 1NS La111Da Canyon Road, bertnatng at2p.m. Tbe meb'Jorial for Ute wen. known advertising man will be a chance for friends to "a.bare memories ol Mr. Clark,,. a friend said. · For. more JnformatJon, call 499-2842. \ A• OAA. y ptLOT w~. lfoftmw ao, 1m NATIONAL Sevrareid's Career of 38 Years C1"ses Tonight By LEE BYJl.D WASJDNG'.?ON <AP) -"A lot of people st.,-t blooming when that !lUle Ucht &oes oa." aaya Eric Sevareid "I start lOdle." After 38 years wl°' CBS and thousands upon thousands ol mortal 1ulps, Eric Sevareld can start lO relax. Television's pre-eminent essaylat will yield his daily 21,A, minules back to Walter Cronkite this week, and, like it or not, that's the way it is. SEVAREID, WHO TURNED 15 SATURDAY anc& will air his final regular commentary tonight, clearly has some reluctance about his forced retire- ment. But typical of his countenance on so many things, he sees both sides of the issue and, in any case, doesn't take it too seriously. Though once crowned by the New York Times as "CBS'& commentator in cbar1e ., of significance," Sevareid, imposing as he is lO his viewers, has never felt comfortable ' with television. He is a sh~ mu. even aloof, and 11 mlehtlly bothered by the medium's stress on personalities. In a "Summing Up" interview with Cronkite,' Sevareid said. "I think one should quit this busi· ness when 310u're at least slightly ahead. You can wear your ~elcome out. This is the most personal form of 1oomalism there's evec been, and that has a built-In danger lO it. Maybe you can go on writing ror print until you 're 85. I'm not sure you can go on broadcasting every day." And contrary to what so many think of him, be is not, he lnsists, an oracle. "Tpe best brains know there are no simple answers anymore," he told The Washington Post. ''There were simple answers to Hitler, and to the Depression and the suffering of people, and to McCarthyism. That's one reason Ed Murrow was so great These were great, simple moral issues. What would Ed say about the Middle East today ... I don't think he could have had the same black-and· white approach. "WHEREVER YOU TURN, THESE thlngs are of such complexity that anybody who pretends there are simple answers is either a lot smarter than I am or a knave." Sevart!id's sensitivity to both sides or an issue has often produced howls to the network from both camps ma given conflict as well as earned him the n1ckname "Eric Several11des" from fellow com· mentators who think he should be more assertive. But "the great fault of the press," he said, "is not bias. It's haste. I don't know how you avoid it I suggested once we should broadcast news only every other day . . . tti1rik what a good job we could do then . And think hOw everybody's nerve ends would be rested. The wonder 1s we're as &ood as we are." SEVAREID, A WRITER OF considerable re· pule, still prefers the printed word to the spoken. Insofar as his broadcast career ls concerned, "I thought 1 wrote much better in the radio days when I had three or four minutes instead or the present, say, 21.4 minutes. Three or four minutes ls not a bad essay length; you've got ti me for a little grace, for more eviden' e, for the beginning and the end. I * * * Syndicated TV Series E ye d B ySevareid By JAY SHARBU'IT LOS ANGELES (AP) -Now and then I set this odd dream. In it, Eric Sevareld arrives at bis podium on the CBS Evenlng News, clears his throat, and says: "I can't figure ltout, either.'' For years. this shy, scholarly Nottb Dakotan has given millions of viewers the lmpresalon he's got the whole thlng doped out, an lmpresaton he i>rob~bly would be the first to deny. IT ALL ENDS TONIGHT thou,fl. CBS says he's doing his last nigh Uy think piece tor the network. He's leavin1 the~ of the regulars. He turned 65 Saturday. an ago CBS tatk an taken off active dutr. Sevareld, a Unlvenity ol Minllesota graduate and a re- porter slnce age 18z..!1as been on acUve duty with C!R> a while - 11incel939. In that y•r, he was in France, reportlns for both the old· Parts Herald and UD.lted Press. A caltf rom Loudon changed h1$ llf e. The call wu from CBS' Edward R. Murrow. wbo was ln the procas of f ormtns hi• famed band of. 11cholar-journali1t.s lO cover the ~omlna war in . .Europethrouibtbe~I medlumotradio. SEVAllEID SIGNED UP, IN time 1alnJn1 a measure of fame reporting the fall of France. And he 'I been a broadcast JoumallJ\ ever a1nce, both as a reporter and play~by-play anal)'lt of hiitory. After he bldl adieu to that tonl&ht, i.e•n still be With C~ as a conaultant, tile network 1ay1, but lt lan1t JcPown yet 11 he'll have• succeasqr on the CBS Bv ifQNtwa. ll8'11-1soatartwork aoon ua oarratorof an•• 111aicat4id TV IJries, "Bet~ the Wan.'1 wblch · dlo the periOd 191Ml. accordlnt to U\e apouor, obll C«p. publlsbed a Jot of those essays then. I wouldn't publlatpmy of these . . . " Though he bu written several books, lncludlnf some for ebildreu, one of Sevareld's best-known pieces wu an article ror Look maaazine ln 1965 that reflect~ on conversatJoos he had Ln London with bia friend Adlai Stevenson ju.st two days before Stevenson died. Tbe prize-winning article showed that Stevenson felt frustrated as Lyndon Jobnaon's delegate to the United Nations, wanted toresian, and revealed that the United St•tes twice rejected un- diaclosedpeace!eelers from North Vietnam in 1984. IN PA YING TRIBUTE TO stevenson, Sevareld wrote: "Adlai didn't Jn.ite me feel powerful, but be made me feel important and he made me feel trusted. ''There was something else; of no meaning to anybody but me: I am cursed with a somewhat forbidding Scandinavian manner, with a restraint that spells stuffiness to a lot of people. But Adlai saw through that unfortunate facade. He knew in· side I am mush, full of a lot of pathetic sentimentlllty about this country, the Midwest, Abraham Lincoln, and the English language. He knew that I can't easily give affection, I cannot easily withdraw it ... " Many have not see.a tbroQlh that "unfortunate facade." Newsweek magazine quoted a former aide to Rlcbard M. Nixon C1tON1un as saying the White House never attacked Sevareid, as it did other commentators, because "we were scared ... he looked and dressed like GOd, except for his neckties." SEVAREID'S SILKY GRAY HAIR, jutting Norwegian race and solemn comportment have given others the same notion. In a salute on the eve of Sevareid's retirement, columnist George F. Will noted that .. In a new mov- ie, 'Oh, God!,' God is played by George Burns, which is ridiculous. Everyone knows that God looks like Erle Sevareld, which la a handicap for Sevareid. not God, because people tend to think anyone who looks like that, you know. so Imposing, must be trying lO impose his views on everyone." But that, said Will, is hardly the case, for Sevareld'a .. real power is much less lO tell people what to think than it is to suggest what they should be thinking about. Sevareid's career has been a sus- tained meditation on this sobering century in which men and nations have obeyed instincts more than laws." SEVAJlEID, GRANDSON OF A NORWEGIAN immigrant, was raised in Velva, N.D., and then Minneapolis in the midst of the Depression and du~t bowl. "I never wanted to be a mining engineer. or a fireman," he told Cronkite. "I was a little boy in a very small town and I hung around the weekly newspaper shop a lot. The fellow who published the paper ... didn't have any children, and he sort of adopted me ... I just got fascinated with it. Having a one·lrack mmd, I never wanted to do anything else, from then on.'· l.l RIJ f1rlt bl• atory Wat • newspaper account of. gruelln1, a.200-mtJe cHoe trip be made wbfn ht waa 17, boom the Mlulsaippl River w Hudson ·a Bay. He and another boy travtled all 1ummer aod fall, had several near mllaes with dlsuter, and almost quit aoveral Umea. • BUT ''JKNEW INSTINCTIVELY that ll I 1ave up, no matt.er what the just.lfleatlon, it would become easier forever alterwardl to justify com· promise with achievement," he explained later in his 1948 autobloaraphy. "Not So Wild a Dream." The youth attended the Unlverstty of Min- nesota, ruins at 5 a.m. to work at the post omce before classes, aod later beaded for Europe to at- tend schools in London and Paria. "I wu thlnldng back the olhe.i:.day," be said, "and I reallied how much of the l.ltUt advance- ment. in my careel' that came _,ong were di.le to things like lyln1 and cheating. I walked lnto the Parb Kero.Id tn •n . . . Now. there were no jObl for American newsmen In Europe --. and thl• )'OUDI man said 'we're terribly sbort·handed here, wol'k.ln& us to death, si ve me a quick fill about yourself and I'll go tell the manaains editor you'" the ~t re· porter come down the pike, and an old pal of ili,lrie. • So that's wbatbedld." SEVAREID WORKED AT THE Herald for several years before Ed Murrow recruJted hlm In 1939. · ·t told him I was 26, and he said 'I'll ~ave w Ut. I'll t~ll New York you're 29, we'll stral&hWt it out later,'" Sevareid recalled. Murrow once said that Sevareld confessed be was "too nervous, that his voice was oo tood. It.old <SeeSEVAREID,PaceAtt> 111111 ~ 11, .111111.1111.I ; . C!tltristiiUut mr.e.e 111.estiual! ; Qi) • Custom Designed Trees Qi1 ~ • Gift Boutique ~ Qi] • Wreathe• To Your Order 'fi1 ~ • Gourmet Foods i.,. • Arrangements -Plant~ I I I • Visit With San,~ jf • Jim Gamble and His Puppets I Saturday: 3:00 P.M. and 4:00 P.M. I Sw1day: 11:30 A.M. and 12:30 P.M. I • Miniature Doll House Display 1 I I I @ptn 3Jfnuii.e i I I Saturday, December 3rd I Sunday. December 4th I 11:00 A.M. -5:00 P.M. I Adults S 1.00 Children 50¢ I 1J Ntwpnrt Jlarbar Art Slusann I I 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport Center I 1111111111111111111 I people drive new cars without b · them! NATIONAL R~ue l•paet TV Viewers Turning Off? NEW YORK (AP) -A. C. Nielsen Co. raUnp ahow that fewer people are watch.lna televillon this year. sparkinl a controversy that pf ts the adverlls· ing industry aealnat the three major networu because ot the mopey at a take. "We're concerned," ABC Vice President George Keramadis commented Tuesday in a re- mark typical or the networks. "It's kind or a wait- and-see thing. Right now we're just very cautious about 1t " WHAT'S CAUSING THE CONCERN Is a decline since laat year In the fl1ure for the Homes Using Television -HUT -or 8 percent durtn1 daytime and nearly 3 percent at nieht. This can have a direct impact on revenue. Just as magazines guarantee their circulation, networks base the cost of a commercial minute on an estimated audience If the size declines, ad· verttsers won 'l pay as much for a minute .. If we continue to see a decline in the lone term. then this could have the effect of reduced ad- vertising expenditures for TV," said Michael Drex· Jer. senior vice president of Doyle Dane Bernbach advertising agency. ''But this ia not going to happen overnight" THE NETWORKS SAY THEY are waiting for the resull'i in about two weeks of the November •·sweep-;," in which 100,000 hou.seholds nationally keep diaries that measure the audiences of local stations. Through their Committee on National ~~__,,,,,_._ Television Audience 'II u:ie contl11.w t• •ee a dft!H11e f11 tlte 10119 term, tlten tlau eetdd lta1'e tlte ellect •I re- d~ed ad1'ertU- l 11 g e~pe11• dUura for 1"¥.' Measurement, the networks also asked Nielsen on Nov. 1 for data to back up its num be rs Several advertising agencies -and Nielsen -say they are already convinced the numbers are accurate on the basis of a similar diary analysis in October of 23 c1t1es. including New ~ York. Chicaao and Los Angeles. In addition, a second ra(lngs service. Arbitron. showed a downward trend that confirmed Nielsen's October figures A Nielsen spokesman put the declines at roughly 1.2 million daytime viewers and a quarter of a million at night since a year ago "It does not appear to be a function or methodology and research." Doyle Dane's Drexler sald. "In fact, It 's real " BUT THE HEAD OF CBS' television research, Arnold Becker , contends. "If there has been a real decline. it 1s hard to document I'll be happier when November comes in." Added NBC research chief Bill Rubens, who re· ferred t.o the network committee's study and the Nielsen November sweeps, "Until the work is com- pleted, 1 think anybody's opinion of what is go!oa on is merely speculation " Larry Fried, a vice president of Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborne advertislna qency, concurs that It's difficult to say "exactly" wti.re the viewers have gone Nevertheless, there 1s speculation within the in· dustry. DREXLER, FOR EXAMPLE, SAID that the networks' new fondness for "stuntina." or use of specials in place of series, along with the popularity of mini·senes, makes It necessary for viewers lo keep making new decii.lons about program choice and to make them quickly. "I think that's become conlusln1 to some peo- ple and may have turned off some viewers in the medium," he declared "l think that bu created a great deal of confusion and some d.iuatiafactlon." Says TV consultant Michael H. Dann: "For the . first time, the American viewer ... cannot be sure what's on any of three networka on a atvett nl&hl." DREXLER THEORIZED THAT THE daytime dropoff may be related to the increased number of working women and the decreased number of children -"long-term factors which I think are beginning to catch up!' he said. Indeed, analysis of Niel.a.en fi1ures by Teel Bates agency indicates a drop of nearly two percen· tage points In women watchlnJTV at home. The networks say that, as far aa they are con- cerned, there are three possibihlles about the ap· parent decline. One is that they are real. The second is that there has been some adjust· ment to unusually high figures for me, year or the presidential election and Bicentennial. THlllD, TUE NETWORKS SAY and pre· 1umably hope, it's possible Nielaen WU WfODI Ult was nearly two years ago. Then, there was another HUT decline, but the ratinfs ae.rvtce attributed It to a faUur. ot ita sam· pie o 1,200 homes to account for an lnctHH 1n the 'number of childless famlll=lta computer analysis was alao faulty, a spok• an said, addlnl that tbeae areas we ... beln1 w• clOMly. "These thinaa 1et exalleru.ci to a tare-th ... well," Becker of CBS remarked.. 0 U Ulla wu another Industry, not ao much 1n I.ht UmeUCht, Who would know, who wouldcaH?,. Separation ~iioned 'WASHINGTON <AP) -Social worttn who 11parat.e battered children from their abusive parata may be dolnl tlMt ta.iD111 men bum tho 1o0d, aecorcllnC to aevetal npena. Spec:lallsta attendint UM un\ial m~ ot tbe American AllodaUoD of Pi~atltc Senteee tor Cbtldnn, UJd ~auon can bl.\ tta1U11&Uc tor chUdrea, who p~bl)' would cboote to atq wttb thelr parett diS\>lt.e abuse. Dt. Nidre. P. l>erde~ ot tM UDl"1'tltJ. Gf Vtralnla Mtdlcal School 1iSd nmcmDI cblldNn from tbW' homM m11 ltaff them fieUDC fe:Ject4d by u; lr p~. '9ParaUon alto~ io IOlve th• Wld.Ct~~ Ula\14Ml t.OU.~ po,ooo •••"9 Ed Harris. one of 13 hobbyists in u South Florida railroad club. tips his cap beside a small portion of a $30,000 model railroad display. Harris says he and his friends s pent more than 6,000 man hours putting the assembly together for a Christmas display. ,_.. - Troll$ers Optional Uniform ·. ----------- DAILYPILOl A~ IT'S MOT TOO 1AaL.t TO OID8J • •• hrC19illlezcq .... ;.,pe,_,1,. , •• ' ~-........................... . ALSO ••• ORDER YOUR. CHRISTMAS HA.Ml SHEFl"lELD, En1land (A.P) -Kn"· • RHd)' to Serve wltll llonty 'l'I BPlee Glue • Spiral Sllctd len1th sldrta may pre· for euy Mn'llll • We Paek•&• and Ship from eo.tt to Oout serve a lady cop • 1 • t A•rt.w4 • ruu Servtce DeUcai.en • Imported Cbeeatl • femininity, but they're ....._c._.. 5!=••• COIOMA Ill MU · PAUi SPllMIS NOW IN 1 no 1004 for cbaslnt OUNCE n. 17001.c..tHwy. 7fRIHw,.llf lAHURA crtmlna.l.a, policewomen T"""-"..... llH (714) 17~H .. ....,..... · in South York1h1re com· J4tt Me. T•tt. AY• 19' Ill~•• ,......,.... WCH MttlCE Of9•• plain. (714) 197·99'0 014) IU-2411 :Ir=: . '(714) 341-1114 ; :=.: A •klrt can a.llo prove ..., _____ _. ____ ~ ______ ._ ____ .., __ .,..il!tf. em bar r aH lA I w b en r":;=;";:;";:";;:;::;-;;;~;"'~~;:;::-;~;'"".;;;~~=-::::--°diiii~~ you're \l'Ylnl to climb r_)J;'"/\T' ~~~ri:r:~.:.ey told ~ '--TURIAf{S BAZAA CBIEP CONSTABLE Stanley Barratt l)'Dl· pathl&ed, and authorized hl• lady c~tablt1 to swlteb to troUHrt, wblcb they started wearlo1 Monday. From now on pollcewom.en will have the choice of two 1klrta or one skirt and a pair of trousers when unl!orm1 are handed out eacb year, he said. Adult Games, Gags, Gifts, Novelties Now open ..• fbe moat unuaual atore you've 8V9'r aeen. The l11111t 1tlectloo anywhere of adult toy1, party 1ag1. glfta, noveltle1. Not an "achdt book.tore." A pluth boutique full of naughty sreet1ns cud1, 1wtnaln1 p&rty pin"· 1u9191Uve fortune cook.lea, the out· raaeoua talldn1 tolltt. UQUtuai IOtlJ>I • candlee,J9lfer pdJeta, bo11 • Merttary l•Jt, anP.et. 1ptden, body oll1 an all klndt of thfnp. A wondarlud (or the ftia lovtns. Come and brow1e. bave a cup of coffae ln our pluah 10\lOp. meet all klnd• of people, from bJp awtnpn to llUle old ladle• Ir genta from Ll•ure World. If you're of aae you mat come aee tbfa for yourself. You'll go home either laugtUng or breathlna hard, but you'll be back for morw! IAca ..... th•~ .... . p&au. ""--......, 11.-4 •• , ...... . .... "9., ....... + .... .,, ... Otr .. G ... • luU Aaa FWJ. - MEET DIANE VON FURSTENBERG And see how varied a one-woman show can bel If you're a collector, expoct to see more of her standout prints ..• brighter perhaps than you're u~d to seeing. The collection boasts lots of young· looking ideas, and there's one unmissable theme-soft! Below. sun yellow scoop neck dreea and front-wrap candy-colored dress with sleeves that tie up tight or, un·tled, make cap sleeves. Each, 6-12, cotton/rayon, $87 See the coUectlon Jnformally modeled to6ay, • 12 to 3. .. Meet Diane tomorrow, 11-12. Fashion Gallery ----"-·----· r . -Robeft N. Wffd/Publlsti.r Th9me$ KHV11/Edl\or: u~angeCoast Dally Pllot Editorial P!!f1. .. e _______ ·.W·ed·Mlday-· .... ~ .. ·.mbef ... 3bli.il1• .. "····---B·•rba. __ , .. K.r.•.lb.lc·h·/·!d·l·t0f'·I···· P·age-·E·d·lto~r-~ Let's Remember • Festival Bounty t ' It is rare when a city benefits fmancially from cultural events staged in that municipality, but Laguna Beach bas annually reaped rewards from its popular Festival of Arts iind Pageant of the Masters. This year wus no exception, with more than $190,000 going into the city treasury for rent of the festival grounds on Laguna Canyon Road Most of that money goes toward retirine the debt on the Mam Reach Park development which means city taxpayers are saved that expense. And high school youngsters with interests in art. drama, music and writing are included in the pageant benefits. More than $39.000 went to Laguna Beach High School students in the form of 74 lndividual grants. Those gifts insure the Art Colony will be well represented m future years through the talents of the younger students. In addition, art schools, nearby UC Irvine, Saddleback College and the Pacifica Ballet also receive monetary gifts from festival proceeds. And the city's Free Clinic, Boys and Girls Clubs and other civic organizations also collect. The benefits should be kept in mind when residents face all the traffic and congestion at festival time. At least it takes some of the sting out of long lines of tourist-packed vehicles along Laguna Canyon Road Test Score Evaluation Contradictory messages are being broadcast by Capistrano Unified School District admmistrators on how they evaluate standardized test scores and what weight they give to the scores. . Test results this year showed Capistrano students scoring above the state and national averages, but lagging behind neighboring Laguna Beach and Saddleback Valley Unified districts. Assistant Supt. Philip Grignon's statement, made in his analysis of the district's teaching success relative to other districts. that ·•we are an excellent district and get· ting better every day" sounds like sugar coating. Administrators blamed low scores on socio-economic factors. Capistrano Unified students were outclassed by Lai,!una Beach and Saddleback Valley Unified students in the tests because of socio-economic patterns in the three d1stricls. lht'Y sald. If the test n .•sulls reflect mostly socio-economic fac · tors among st'hool children, school officials have little for which to take credit If they reflect at all what is happening m district <:lassrooms. administrators should be address· mg thcms<.'lvcs to what appear to be district weak spots and rally community support for improvement. A Sensible Idea Laguna Beach planning officials are doing things a ht tie differently these days. They're actually cutting the red tape homeowners go through to get the municipal nod for minor home projects. That means Laguna Beach residents who want to im- prove. add to. or spruce up their homes, can do so with much less paper shuffling. The new mini-permit program is not available to resi- dents with homes in environmentally sensitive areas, such us coastal blufftop properties. But in most areas, the program allows construction of concrete walls, fences. gates, patios, walkways, ground level decks, reroofmg projects, minor interior alterations, und prefab fireplaces. The over-the-counter permit program eliminates the need for a plan check, structural plan check and the design und review process. And, city planners hope, the mini·permit plan will en· t1ce more homeowners to come in and take advantage of II.he less complex procedure, instead of going ahead and building without a permit. All that can do is help ensure a higher quality of con- struction m Laguna Beach. • Opinions expressed In the apace abQve are thoM ot the Daily Piiot. Other views exQres.sed on this P•O• are those of their aul~ors and artists Readef comm t Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, A 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd I Dogs and TV ByL.M.BOYD Nole it claimed in print that dogs can't see television. They can pick up tbe light patterns and notice the mo- tion. but they can't focus well enough to make out the nature of the action, it's con· tended. Interesting, If true Q "Can eels crawl on land like snakes?" A. One aort uo, anyway. Aneuilla roatrat• is Its nomenclature. 'Been known to wiggle ov~r moi1t ground as far as three mUes. Q "Whal'• ''Mtch ha.1el'?" Dear A. A shrub with pliant branotlcs that blooms lD the fall. Also, an alcohoJlc lotion made from witch hazel bark. The name, incidentally, came from the fact that lhe shrub's branches were sup· posed to be U5ed a5 witching rods by the oldUme water finders. These were the cun- ning characters who would point out to you for a fee the best place to die your well. lf you commute, you not only 10 to work, but you 110 back home. Commute ls • roundtrtp word. Not even many Zionist.a know that the Brillab aovern· ment In 1903 offered 6,000 1quare miles o! uninhabited land Sn U11nda for settle· menl by homeless Jews. Amons the NCAA flral- dlvlJlon football te1m1, mot• call them1elves Tleera than ony other nickname. Ten do 10, In fact. Sffoftd m0tt com- m on team nickname • la 8ulldop. Wlth aix. • Jack Anderson Did Park Aiso Con WASHINGTON -Justice Department attorney• !'lave agreed it will talte a lie detector to get the truth out of Korean payoff man Tona11un Park lf he accepts the deal to give his testimony in exchange for im munlty. Park has made so many con· f11cting statements, the prosecutors acknowledee. that his testimony would be worthless In court unle!s it can be bol· slered with supporting evidence. They will ln· sist, therefore, that Park submit to a lie detector test. as part or the deal. 1belr hope Is that Park, with a polygraph machine monitoring his veracity, will pro- vide enough new information that they will be able to build on it. They will seek corroborating evidence, which they will then use to make more cases against congressmen who have accepted bribes. be Wiii a buah>eumu who Want• ed to contrllNte to lbelr cam- paie~. It will be dltricult to prove there were any strings attached to the cont.ribuUoos. Not until later would Park drop by and make a pltch on behalf of South Korea. The JusUce Department, therefore, might have trouble ln court dllferentlating between political contributiorts and out· right bribes .. The prosecutors will be able to prove, however, that some con· 1ressmen were secretive about their dealtngs with Park and con cealed the cash he gave them. AUTOSTATIC: ln a move that could squeeze the nation 'a small tadio manufacturers out of busl·. ness, General Motors ls forcln& auto deaJers to buy some o( its 1978 models with bullt·in GM radios. Car radJos have traditionally been optional equipment, and ~l.r.«el''1 tl(llll/ofl0~ dealers have bean fro• to purchase them from lndependent tlrma. But General Moton baa de- cided that Us own radJo wW be standard equipment on ever)l 19'18 Buick Riviera. Oldsmobile Toronado and Chevrolet Chevette. The dealer will bave no choice. This GM acUon has rai.aed the hackles of Sen. Edward Ken· nedy, 0 .-Mus .. who baa fired off a confidential leUer lo the Ju.sUce Department's antitrust chief. John Shenenetd. The new OM ~licy, Kennedy complained. hu 'tremendous potential for lntlid· lng lrreparable injury on ln- d e pendent radio manufac· turers." Therelatlon1blp'be- tween radio firms and auto deal· ers could be "dJsrupted," he wrote, by this ''&elective in· trusion into their market." The Justice "Department has launched an investisatlon into the matter. which will also focus on other a1.1to parts and •c· ceaaoties. SCHOOL BUS SAP£TY:1 Tbouat&Dds of unsafe school bllMI ~ro stlll on tho road becaiqe of a INs·&lzed loophole ln the law. Congtesa ordered. strict talety atandarda for the nation'• achool buaes back In 1974 But any bua chassil manufactured befoNt tho ~pril "t1, 1977, deadline doean't have to mfft the toucher stan· dards. Some ma•ufaclurera, • tt\erefore, drasUcally stepped up their productlon to beat tbt' deadllne. Tbelr tacUc1 have been uncovered by Rep. Andrew Marutre, D.·N.J .. wtio has asked blghway safety ch.let Joan Claybrook to blow the wblstle on these unsafe buses. "U~. lf not tbousanda, ot school bus chusis built before April have been purchased by school boards and manufac- turers." Maguire wuns ln a COil· rideotial letter. The prosecutors admit it will be tough to nail many con· gres!>men The Justice Depart· ment has determined, for exam· pie, that Parle highly exaggerat· ed his influence on Capitol Hill He boasted lo bis Korean cohort~ that he was close to congressmen whom he had merely met and that he had passed out cash, which he really had diverted to his own use. ~ot1•;..1y"' ... ~,_;H.1':t, .. 'l It looks as if Park was a skilled con man who misled even his own government. On the other hand, the Justice Department has solid evidence contradicting the South Korean government's claim that Park was m~rely a busmessman who acted on his own HIS LINK with the Korean Central Intelligence Agency ha5 been established lo the satisfac tion of lhc prosecutors They are aware, however, that Park didn't flash his KCIA credentials on Capitol Hill and offer "bribes" to congressmen. lie told con· gressmen. on the contrary, that Mailbox A Tax Bill for People, Not Politicians To the Editor: The Democratic Speaker of the Assembly, Leo McCarthy states that no tax relief that would reach the homeowner before November 1978 can be developed that would be acceptable to Republicans. How about a bill that would be ac- ceptable to the people instead of them out of that, Imagined, place? She riles about anti· feminists riling against feminists as she riles against them. This ·•women's movement" seems as incoherent as the administration that sponsored it. GOLDIE JOSEPH the politicians! Bbfoty Forgottftl IT BECOMES more and more --Tothe F.d.itor: evident to more and more California homeowners that the pres~nt controlled state Legislature does not wish nor in· tend to produce any legislation that wm give the inflation ridden homeowner any lax relief in lhe very near future or ever' During Governor Brown's Ad· ministration more taxes have been collected from the people of California than any previous ad· ministration, but less benefits have filtered down to the people in the way of property tax relief· highway improvements or im- provements in the present de· teriorating educational system. MR. &MRS. E. P. BENSON Fe11dnutRfln On Nov. 18 the Laauna Beach city council, on a 3·2 vote, acted to permit the use of the take-out window at Jonathan's restaurant serving customers ln Heisler Park. Jt'ollowing this action, BUI Leak, who had contested the use, resigned as planning com- rnlssioner, a post he has held since 1974. The incident, besides depriving the city of a dedicated and valued commissioner, raises disquleUng questions concerning the equaJ application of the law and the ob- Jlgation of elected' officials to adequately respond to pubUc in· put. It was the second time r.tr. Leak had challeaged the uae of that same window. Installed ln 1971 when t.bc bulldln• w•s re· model~1 to service It the city re· quired use owner to Jay a five· root-wlde sidewalk throu1b H~laler Park le1dlo1 up to the window. Leak objectid, contend· lna that tho uao was commitment of public property for a corn· mtl'c\al purpose lo the R l ione. The plannl.of commlsaiort con· eurrctd with Leak's P')llltlon and in con1tderin1, a co.ndlUonal use permit for-a liquor Ucen.ae, pro- hlblted the uso ol j.h window. Ma)'or Ooldbtrf, then operator of tb• restaurant ulled .. s~·· Sidewalk Cate'' •II' d not to use lbewtndoW. Ing members or the public may be listened to but not necessarily heard Certainly Leak's findings, closely reasoned and checked out with the city attorney, s hould have been welcomed as a valua· ble contribution to the process, and the merits of his arguments reviewel and weighed. Instead, they were put down and made to appear insignificant and even ridiculous. Granted that not all council members can be expected to have the judiciaJ temperament, as a minimum they should cultivate a certain humllity that recognizes their obligation to listen and reapond. To specifical· ly refuse to respond as one coun- cilman did, lJ by definition an act of irrespe>ns•blllty. Let's hope this incident will focus attention on the principles at issue here, and remlnd all serving in public office that ours ls a government or laws, not men, and that power derives from those tolks out there who go lo th4' polls ev.ery tour years. MILDRED HANNUM 'Re ........... Late 4,275·~quan' foot bu1ldmg on a 5.000-squ.Jrc• foot Jot zoned C-1 on South Co<.t~l l11ghwav You have two rental unit~ paying a total of $2,000 1wr month rent, and two p<.trking spate~ on site If your building burns down you wm only be able to rebuild a structure con· tuan1ng 2.1 10 t.quare feet, and the hahtn<'f' of the lot must be used for parking and landscaping. What docs the passage of a "Gr andfathering Ordinance" mean» 1l means your rents will not be drastically reduced lf your building is destroyed, and it means you can build bulcally the same structure with illl "Laguna character." It means there won't be a city covered with ugly asphalt parkiqg lots. You also won't have to worry about the loss of value ln your property investment. This Issue is critical Jf Laguna Is to remain tomorrow what it Is today. Al· tend or write a letter to the Laguna City Council voicing IUP. porl for the "Grandfatberlng Ordinance" STEVE BOICE •••tUJC..faed . • I Transportation Pooled garage. It crashed through the wall at the rear and sank. Mrs Ayala and her child escaped LOS ANGELES (AP> A Supenor Court jury has roWld thrM Ku Klux Klan members 1uUty of coo1pl!tnc to commit firat-de(fee murder in a plot a1aln1lthe West Coui leader of the Jewish Defense l.A!aeut. The nine-man, three.woman Jury returned the , verdU!t Tuesday a&ainat· Robert Detinel, 32, Timothy W&YDe Anderaon, 26, an4 Daniel Ellis Taylor, a . The lhrfe face a penalty ol life In prison. The three. who were members of the Klan's North Hollywood chapter, were accused of plottina the murder of Irv Rubin. ATIO&NEYS FOR THE THREE said they would appeal the verdict by the jury, which ln· eluded two blacks and one Mexican-American. Sen· tencl!lg was scheduled for Jan. 5. r Dehnel and Anderson, both from the Hollywood area, remained in custody, while Taylor, wbo is from Van Nuys, wu free on bail. Oep_uty Dlatrlct Attorney John Watson said he was "amazed" al the jury's swift ~ecis1on, wbidl came on the second day of dellberaU,ons "I WAS VERY IMPl\ESSED," he said. ''They must have been paying very cl01e attenUon to tb6 evidence as it was presented." But ~el'• attorney, James Epsteln, said A three-month-old Cadillac rests at the bottom of Don Ay ala's pool near Los Angeles. Tuesday, after the accelerator stuck while his wife was driving it into a ~~....:!....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ th~L "atven the shortne11 of the deliberations and the complicated nature of the evidence. It seems thaL the jury was not ab1' to overcome its prej· \ldices." Property Division Eyed Solution: Recognizing Common Law Marriage? SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Recognizing com· mon law marriage in Callforrua may be the way to disentangle the financial stnnas that a tugh court says exist between cohabiting but unmarried couples, legal experts said. . They agreed a decision late last year, involvini actor Lee Marvin and his live-in girlfriend of six years, did not forge any new law when it said un- married partners who break up can sue each other Teen-age Actress Pleads Innocent BEVERLY fill.LS CAP> Teen-age actress Mackenzie Phillips, who portrays the older daughter on CBS TV's "One Day at a Time" series, bas pleaded innocent to a single misdemeanor charge of public drunkenncs~ Miss Phillips, 18, was released on $500 bail Tuesday after a Jan 10 preliminary bearing was scheduled before Municipal Court Judge Jae· queline L. Weiss. A Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy said be arrested Miss Phillips shortly after mid· night last Wednesday when he found ber sprawled on a West Hollywood street. She was held overnight at the jail ward at County-USC Medical Center and then released on bail Barbara Broghatti, a spokeswoman for her television series. said a substance found in the ac- tress ' purse wtuch deputies initially thought to be cocaine was a diet pill And the spokeswoman soid. a blood test showed Miss Phillips had not been intoxicated Expert Emphatle Bus Victims 'Suffered' OAKLAND <AP> The prosecution in the Chowchilla kidnapping trial rested ils case today with a doctor's emphatic testimony that kidnap vie· ti ms suffered ''serious bodily injury." Dr Delmer Pascoe, a professor of pediatrics and expert in heat illness. was to undergo brief questioning before he leaves the stand. He was the last of 19 witnesses called In the state's effort to prove that three confessed kidnap· ( ~ .4TE J pers caused bodily harm Jin to 26 Chowchilla children .._ _______ _, nnd their school bus driver in July 1!r76 OU Drilll•fl tt'I•• R.-d LOS ANGELES CAP) -The City Council bas tentatively a•reed to write an ordinance allowln1 Occidental Petroleum Corp. to drill for oil and gas In the beachlront Paclflc Palisades area. Tuesday's 9-5 decision still must be approved In a seco!MJ reading, and even 1f the councU gives final approval, the city Plannin1 Commission and at least two coastal commtsslona must uphold the ac· tlon. •••,....iq A••rd ApJte•lecl1 to recover communal property. But, they said, it probably bas had a dramatic psychololical Impact on couples throucbout the country, rallJ.ni questions about how unmarrieds should be treated by the law. "MARRIAGES MAY BE MADE in heaven ~d Marvin rellUonsbips may be made ln bars, but they both end up ln Superior Court," cracked Stephen Adams, edit.or of the California Family Law Quarterly. State Sen. Bob Wilson, D-San Diego, who chaired the hearing, said be thouaht the Marvln de· cision by the California Supreme Court "la leading us toward common law marriage. "It seems to me that if we recoanlzed common law marriage, many of these prob1erqs would be solved," s8'd Wilson, an attorney. ~nald .ltlng, from the California Judges Assocl•tlon, agreed. STATE LAW DBFINEfJIWHAT happens when a marriage breaks up, but bas no provt11ons for d1vid.< mg the financial fruit.a or mere cobabitaUoo. But since the Marvin decision, lawmtkers have been scrambling I to wri~ a law covertn1 unmarried couples, too:. The commotion stems from a 1972 lawsuit fil~ by Marvin's ex-girlfriend, M.icbelle Triola, who claimed she was entitled to SS00.000 o~ half of the pro pert)" the two accumulated. She saJd ahe gave up a singing career in exchange for his promise to sup- port her. Although a lower court dismissed the case, the state Supreme Court said Miu Trtola had a right to a trial, scheduled to begin next month. THE COURT SAID THE LAW must enforce any expressed or implied agreement between couples -married or not -to pool their property or earnln&s, as long as the relatioMhip was not ex- plicitly for sex, as ln prostitution. And when the coupling ends, the courts mu~t decide how to divide the loot. , Butthedccisionhas raised a question like: -Should such a rule apply to horrlosexuals liv- ing together and to roommates who share house payments, for example? Those testilylne generally agreed that it should. _m_ 8AUME & MERCIER GE NEVE 'C..J/ • C"r.' ( 1~1lllt» I II (!:/f1J~ ANDERSON, WHO CLAIMED he bad left the Klan. whispered to his attorney as he gl'1lced ~oward the audience. Outside the courtroom. An· derson remarked. ''I thought we had 1t I really thought. we had it " A rookie officer who infiltrated the Klan last vear -Paul Rolf Gebhardt -tesUfled that LhP ftp. fendants planned to ktll not only Rubm, but his suc- cesaor mtbemllltantJDL. ~~50%0FF . . .j .. VOL. 70, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, • PAGES B1G.UY GMN\'11.Y « .. ....., .......... Proltltu&o and ~dial are on the up1win1 IA Oraaie · County. aecordlna to Sheriff'• ~­ nee vtce olftcer Jack Marwin. Recordl for the year ended Oct. 31 show tbit vice arr.ta by the Sheriff.. o1ne. "more tban doubled" durtn, the past ,_r, Manrla 1ald. H1a ftpra included aal1 .-. rests made lD uaiDcorporat.cl . proatltutlon centers wer• deaertbed bY the vice Oftleel'. u refu•ee1 hm the beavt ad:loa on lfoll)rwood Boulevard IDd the SunHt Strip la nel&bborlnl to. An1el• Coant1. Aod, Marwin aald, moat women arrerted oo proat1tuSJoa cbar1e1 in On.nee County are wbat he called ~·hJpe wbonl~" women wbo have taken to the atrffta or a bfttaJ. room to·~ adruchabiC,-' 0 But let's face lt," Marwm Hld, ''tbere't ~ In Orqe Countr and ¥tee follows money." "So, we have atrlqJ ot tour or five strta world.DI the areaa because there i1 bll money here.•• He crit.d 65 prosUtutJoa arftltl uul 55 lewd cooduct arreata dur· ma the one 1ear period 1upport. . lnl the vice atudy. Marwin UC> aald there were three arrests oa pomo1r~ . cbar1e1 11 well u three unitl for pimplna. One ~ the porno· arrestl In- volved cblld porno1rapby, Marwmaaid. U It ta dollan that ta attractin& street walkers to Oraqe CoWlt)' they are bf& dollan, accordlaa to the vice officer. He said women arreeted on pro1tituUon cbaraea 1et their stahta on '200 . ai&bta u they make tbeir war aJooc Harbor 'today;•CI ...... N.Y.Steeka Carter Eyes Top Envoy .to Cairo *• * * ....., ......... ~._......,. POLICE AND RESCUERl ITAM AT FINAL REmNG PL.AC! OF 10-TON TRUCK. Yehle .. Hurtled Down Steep Hin, Taking Out Three Home Qaragea TruckCQllJJes UC Rates Standard Heavy D~e A1... F d ...;.1. ,~.~.~ In 'Runawar' '-7Yer · e eru.a ~~.-. The Ua.tvemty of Callfonata wUl refuse tU miWoa in f ederaJ aid to lta five medical acbools- LDcludlne a yearly $322.121 grant to UC Irvine-rather than lower admhaion standards for Americans who tranafer from forelcn medlul schools. Tbe Health, Education and Welfar• srants are tied to le1i1lative amendments belna debated by the U.S. Conues1. HSW admlnlstraton, who back the legislation, are request· inc that the tcboo1a admit an an· dl.lcloHd number of American studenu tr•naferrioe from foreirn medical schools .without coosiderinC erades, courses or class 1tandin&. Ten other medical 1cbools, ln- cl ud ln1 Stanford Unlveralty, have refused to sanction the pro- posed amendment to the-19'18 Health Proleaaiona EducaUcnal AHlstance Act. The exisUne legislation pro- vhtea 1rants to medical schools, the ibl0unt baaed on enrollroent. Pledges, En~rgy Covered WASHINGTON (AP)·..:.. Here ls ao at·•·llance 1wn.mary of Prefideat Carter'• aewa con- fe.rence today: DAMI l'be Prwident aald there are 9,000 "blst.·rt.ak" "8ma ln the country and tbe federal IOYSD- ment "wlll commence ~•11 . aborllf _an .lntpectlon of .U tbQH ~· e.umated ~ ,.,..tt'. ~~ 'l'f'Olram~-.... take aeai'l)'~yean. CAMPAIGN PaOJOIU Aaked It bl ~ too ~ promise• ln hi• eu.llttr~n, Carter aatcl! .. t doa't 1 made too many promiHI, ud I think I'm do6q an adequat. Job ln lr>'lna to fUJIW thole prom. .lae'" ENERGY LEGl81AftON1 _ The Prelldent reafftrm.a bit earlier pledgeto--vilo 'iiiY energy leetalatlon tbat would be unfair 'to tbe American people or violate energy conservatloe It's intended to encourage the Bovan Murder 'mcehn~~.1, to increase enroll· , w The ref!on·a1 eo111tal com· Panel Git1ea OKf•'SP On Marriott " goals. . The a111endln1 legislation ·TAXES mlHlon haa ldda tentative S .. apect Found would ~e the schools to ac-Carter aald be waa .. ~m· ~lortlMllaniottlfot.el uo cept a certain number of the mltted to subetantial tu red\ac-bt ~Nf'WPGtt cater to erwt .a . transfer studeota, or give up tile tion in 1171" which would be $11.seGlla:D-~ltMif. In Ind • federal aubeldiea. coupled wltb a revlllon ol the Fiv•*-..i.• ..... leUen atop the 00e818 By admlnlatrative order ol UC natfoo'11u la... n.tne-~ will be in· President David Saxon, the . '•tailed, provided tbe atate By lllCllABL PABKEVJCR amendment la unacceptable and B11&N8 CoUW O\mmknon airw. Joeepb o':'vb.'C:::r'et&bt peo. the univenlty will fore&o the The Preddtat laid be bu not a.1tonal commlHlOll staff r.e under Or•""'• COUil"' Grand aranta rather than 1ubmU to the yet d~ whether to reap-planners recommended denial al 1-.M~ -,_ th "J n.-6 p?OPC>Md requirement. potnt n.n&IUI' Burm .. eball'IDaD the permit. dtiD& lta 'riolaticln al W'Y JUU&'-"Y.Umt w e ""'""" 22 The amendment wu Njected of the F~ Jlelene ~--tbelt7teo..talActruJ... murderofStaenJobnBovaoof lnita~fonnbytbes.at., He added be dld not. t~.1y· But Marriott Corporation Fountain Valley, baa been ar-__ .. ::,........, J ,_ a..;.;..._ _,._., wu •'JDdll-able." --• telted by authorities in Ball, Jn. all'I now uaon a o-t .-.-~-· --repreaentatives 11tcce-.Ul17 1. b 11~ Seoate tnmeeeommlttee. _ ........ D-~ . araued that their nln ... torJ dOnes-. Newport Beac poll\.-. Moet of the tramter lfadenta, •anM s-... _,. structure ta taalh to .fiDd lD the repon.dtoday. M .... toUC ..:. Carter aald tbe n•tlon•1 .. ~..... ... ..... Davis, a former member ol the aceor,....... spo .. •men. are forelp tnde deficit averacinl forest ol other .......,.·rile INllU" Lacuna Beach Hare Kri1bna thole who could not me.t ad· about •·• blWon a month waa Inf!.~ temple, reportedly la "en-mluton nqultementa of U.S. dtlturbma~ Re said the deficit ~~~Y ~~ out at llm- thualatic" about returntna to "t\.~· two yean ot itUd.j ID wu prtmarlty taUMd by ail lm-~:~ct :.i tbe ~ ~~u:= the United Statel to face murder foreig.::r;au• manr am porta and the lmprowment in atnsle larte l"ftln~al bultdini aadeonapUac)'cbarses. 1 .. ..a-•··l t"~ tbe U .S . economy wblcll --.~ ... __.. ... ,_ ..... _ Hqwever, New,_,rt Beacb ora v -.uu.uM OQa ~•· permits the Unlt.M Stat• to. In the eenter ..,,.... wawuu Vl'IJ p0Uc-s C. Rlcbard HlimlltAiil • t::;o::::. ~dr ~~ . pqreb ... men fontp ioodl· ~=-!.U:S · ~ ccaattol ee>r· . Aid, ''We are ltillt.tyllij to won., ..... ·.......:~---~~~~~~·~-~~, ....... ~~·----, ~----"'!~-.-~-~-~.,---=-~~~--out ~ tecbDlcaUtlea of wbOM · retpoulbWty It ts to 10 and 1et JUm." Hamlltoo lald Davia WM U'• re1ted 'l'banbll'ritll evenlq by Indonesian polle at tbe fl!Quelt U.S. autboritl•. Davit bad 1*lli aouaht oa a P'and JUrJ lndletment 1temniilll (Seel\JSPZCI', Pa1e Al) • 'Iliswric Break'. Lauikd 1 ' t • OAIL Y Pl\.Qf Sect · · 'End8 Link of flrishruis, Sus~cts' ';/ . " •7 JOOL\EL P48Jl.&Vlca Ol•-11,._Mltf • .\ Hare Krllboa 1poke1mua •aid the nu.ious net will m· nounee a tr.aemark lawsuit to- day a1alnat Pra.sadam Dlltrtbut- in1, Inc .. (PDI) the Newport· Beach inv•tment Ii.rm whole lour gribclpala have been lndict· ed for the Oct. 22 murder of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley. Hare Krilbna member Mukun· da Du said Tbursda'y that the suit 11 deaiened to end the .. 'de- ceptlon' •that baa led to reports cl. alle&ed 1inb between the murder suspect.a and the Dare Krishna. * * * Under Fire In d~ any such Unb, Das f .. tly denied that Alexander said the ftlfpoqa Jl'O'l.P baa been Kulik, the 2&--year-old bead of • 'mlarepruHted and it bu PDJ under lndlct121ent in Bovan's HfSouJ.r~dam~ oar tmap to dea~1 bu ever beeA UNCLlt.ed the pubhc. It. been a loq with use HCt. 1tl'U11le to get tbla 1mall 1pllnter Kulik wu ooe of four partners ll'OUP reeopbed for wbat it 11.'' in PDI, an investment flrm that. Du added. · accordinl to an llttl.davit on ftl• He would not elaborate, aaJtq tn SQperior Court. ma7 have mare detalla would be available bMft med to "laUD4er mmq at a special news conference. made from tranaportatlon ana scheduled for 11 a.m. today at the amuallln& ofnarcoUca." Lo.I Ancel• Hare Krishna Tem· His three parUiert -Roy ole. Cbrlatopber Richard, Joseph "BQfcally, it's &oinl to deal Gabriel PedoloWlki and J09ePb with federal trademarks," said Shelton Davia -are allO under Das. . indictment. Richard and Krishna officials have stead· Fedorowski are at lar10 and * * * Davi.a ii in an Indonesian Jail await.int lndlctme.nt. Year's Bia~ Set For .Witrwss Moves Krishna offlciall aclmowledle that theee three men w•r• active members of the La"°1Jl Beach temple, but claim they WIJ'e ex- pelled in Septexnber, 1971. However, Laguna Beach police recently released a letter ct.ted J:ln. 24, lJ117, to PDI members from Swami Prabupada, the Hare KrBbna.fr•ha. cJiedot natural cause10Y:i4 ln India at the ajeol82. The U.S. Department of Justice baa placed a one.year Tll9ratorium on its program to re· locate federal witnesses in Southern California, it was an- nounced today. " 1pokoaman for As-semblyman Mark HBDaford, D- L~ewood. \vbo also represents wo1,ern Orange County, said the area affected is between San .rueeo and Santa Barbara. The relocated witneas pro- gram, aimed at protecting per.sons who might be killed for teatifying against organized crime figures, hu come under fire recenUy followinl the Oct. 22 shooting death ol Stephen lobn Bo van of Fountain Valley. The killlng in Newport Beach reportedly involved two relocat- ed witnesses, althoulh defense lawyers. bave denied any such * * * SUSPECT ••• from the execution·atyle •booUn& death of Bovan in front of the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach. ~utborities allete that Davi.I ~u ODe of five priDcipala in Pruadam Dlstr:lbutlq Inc. ot New1>0rt Beach. Police alle&e be ottered three other men •ooo to ~ill Bovan and two oUlU' men. Af!ldavitl• on ru~ .!JI &ianl* ' County Superior Court elaiat that Praaadam waa a "hoot" foe ll· licit drug traffic. Captain Hamilton would not re- veal the specific cbargea upon which Davia la currently being l\eld in BallL but noUld th~ In· donealan autnorttlea often bold · alleged druC dealers for 20 days for investigation. Becawie Indonesia does not }\ave a formal atradWon treaty '¥1th the United Statel, Newport :S.,acb police will meet today wf th FBI a1enta and represen-taUvea ol the Dtatrlct At\orney'a Office to work out technlcalitiea. Captain llamllton said local aut.boritl• ,.in try and erant Davia'~ wlab to return to tlle U.S. to clear hi.a name 1n tbe Bovan murder cue. Dam la the fifth defendant to be located im tbe cue. JmTJ Peter Fiori. Anthon)' Marone Jr., and Raymond Besco are current- ly in custody ln Oranie CouDtJ awattlng a Fridly Arratnmed\ on murder charges in SU1"tric>r Court. Alexander Kulik, the 28-year-old head ol Pruactam DtatrtbUt- .lJq'. haa all9 been apprehended but la free OD bafl. SUll 8 large are'Kulilt'a .Ue, EJale. BO)' ~her lUcbard andJoeeph~. I connectl~. The ~-'rll relocation pro- gram, a't a \cost of about $60 million, bu 1bougbt new iden- Uflea and lives for about 5,600 people over the put .six years un- der the Witneaa Protection Pro- gram. The procram hu two phases. The first la active protection, in which the witness i.s guarded by federal officers from the time he flrlt appears before a federal grand JUJ'71DlW the conclusion ct the resultant trial. In the aeco::,ir;ue, the wit· neH and bit f are moved to" a new area, atven homes, Jobs and medical care, and provided with a monthly ltipend and new identltlea, U neceuary. Stipends ol about •15 la.st an averaae cl. Dine montm. The Justice Department hu been asaeatni the proaram, as has a Senate subcommittee. Meanwhile. local law enforce- ment people say they would like to 1ee better aupervlaion ot the proaram and lta partlclpanta. ••Juat because they're aettmt a government 1ub1tdy doesn't mean tbeJ•re 80lnl to eeuo to enaage ln anti·aocial behaTtor, 0 one Newport Beach detective 1ald. Despite Visit The letter reads in part: "Krishna will give you in· telligence how to engage in brilliant, glorious work on lib behalf. There is no need to engage in anythin& dishonelt. Krishna baa 1tven enoutb money, now earn by honea?. m.eana ... " Police allege that Bovan was .shot nine times as be was leaving the El Rancho restaurant in Newport Beach because be al- legedly kidnapped a PDI offtdal and heldhimfor $100,000nmom. Anthony Marone Jr., Raymond Resco and Jerry Peter Fiori n.- main in cuatody 1n the alleied murder consplracy cue • .Flort, 41, of Huntlqt()n Beach. bu ad- mitted to being the tri11erman in Bovan's execution style death. · Kulik. wbo WU arrested in Miulon Viejo, reportedly in poaaesalon of 1.1 pounds of heroin, ts now free on bail. The four men are .due in Superior Court Friday for ar- raienment in Judge Robert P. Kneeland'• court. A number of key witnesses are expected to appear tncludin1 Frank Ro11t, who baa been granted immunity from prosecu- tion and bas already testifled before the grand jury. Fairview 'Sick-in' ·Set for Thursd,ay 87 JACKIE RYMAN Ol_Delty .......... Psychla~c tecbnlelans at Fairview State Hospital ln Costa Mesa said today they will 10 ahead with a mua alck-ln ~ bing 'fbursday despite a viait to the hoeJlital today b7 two key state bealtboMcials. P17cbtatrlc tecbniclana leader Cathie Joy H\i!Dated that between eo and 75 percent ot the paycb.lmic t.echnlclans wlll join the alck·ln. She said aliabtly more than !00 paycbiatric techni· cians wGl'k al Fairview, alt.boQab holpital offtdala there have Nld there are more than eoo. Tbe chief demand by paycblatrlc teclmlclana la W'l'it· ten acreement that they will be recopi&ed by the atate u the equt~alen1 ()f nursinl pertOMel in deal.lu with tbe developmen- Mesa Woman Kidnapped A Costa M'3a balr atyll.st waa kidnapped and robbed after a man forced her Into her car in the parkiq lot ~ SIMd.h Cout P1aa Tu"4a,r ~.police aaid to-day. R&ellllll Sehaut, 24, 'WU re. leued unharmed IA IOUt.b. Cotta The enetne fell out of this van Tuesday nl&ht after a col- llalon at Balboa Boulevard and 8th Street 1n Newpon Beach. The van belonp to Thomas Leon, 830 E. Balboa Blvd., but he wasn't drivtna 1t at the time -about 0:30 p.m. police said. Whoever W8' apparently fled on toot immediately after ·the acclden.t"' accor~a to poUco r• ports. The other vehicle lnvolvea wu dit.ven by !Uchael E. Gale, ~ W. Ocean Front. He wun't h\irt, police said. Al • tiou of an Of&anlzed crlJD• threed rwlD1Da ~ tbi lll'OIUb!QcD ·~ty lD OrlulP COuntJ. . However, be added, •bould proeUtuUon acUvttJ IDcr. ... llDd not be subject to lnteoae law en. f orcemeat lt la Ukeb' that «-1anlzed crime wll1 moYe lnto the racket here. A• far u rambliliJ 11 con-cerned, Marwin satd tbe H abertff'• bookmU:lQI urata ln the p.,t year havo 1nvo1Ved o"ratlona 1roaato1 at luat uo,ooo. week. • ,.Bootm .. kera pocket an estimated 22 percent of the 1ros1," Marwin. aald. " So you can ,_that It la a prafttable operattoio./' • He.·alto 1eJd moat the bookm~n1:_actlvit)' tn Oraaie COuD~~&btl sports action, incl fcMJtball cards that net the boO a ts l*'CUt proftt. At 1' thlcuo with PlQltJtutica. ~ vle.oUlcer a.aid thV.11 aot.D- dicaUon that or1an!Hd crlDM 1' at the nlDt Of Wepl caanbllai ln Orana• eoumy. A1a1n tho~. be empbulled. orsaolaed cri121e wUl follow where there ere 1ucoe11tal , bookmaldnl operatlou POt a\lb- jed to ~UI law WQl'eeo . IDODl. He noted that lnvarlabl1 a bookmuln• convlctloll In Oraoie ODiuDt7 !'tllulta ln a Jall HD~ 'lbieYe& Get . cas~ Goodies Burslarse1c1Pe4 With t:a.•ln caah, beer and meata )(cmclay ol1bt from a BalbOa lalan4 Turk.S.b rettauraat while tile Victim's Dad Admits ~:;::==r.~;: 79u-old Brahlm Brahlmsade. Lie to Spur Action • • owaer ol the Dtvan 2 reAl.urut · at US lb.tin.Ave. He WU .. ~ in h1I upstabs apartment wbe:n the bu.rahin eo. teTed tbrouah an unlocked loWer window. be told omcera. Tbe thieves toolc $1,800 in cub from an unlocked 1afe before movin& to a deep freeze 1tora1e area where they made off with $'100 worth of meat and three cases cl. beer, according to police repona. LOS ANGELF..S (AP) -'!be lather of an l8·year·old 4'cl, whose nude body wu f9QDd on a narrow road said today that be fabricated a atoey about he.r be- ing draaged into a car to prompt the police to immediate action. "I saw her car and nei,hbon said they bad seen people in a car next to her the nlibt befon," J. G. Wagneraaid. 0 But I made up the part about her beln1 dr•11ed awa:y. Becawse l1M W'U over qe (over 18) Jhe1 said they can't take a miaatac person's rePort unW after 24 boun • • • So I to14 the police tbat.abe wu draued from the car. They came out riOt away." Wagner's daupter, LaUND Rae Wagner, on Tuesday became the eighth )'OUDf woman f<NDd straJJgled and dumped on slopes ·or at the bue of the hllll in tM northern auburba since mld· October In a cue police have dubbed ''tbehillaideatraqler" He said the tut time he 1aw b1a dauehter alive wa• about :u hours befote aellhbort saw her empty car parked two doon fl'OID her suburban Sepulveda home .Police aald before Wasner'• dl.acloaure that they belle'fe there may be more than one •tranller. because of the father'• story that > nellhbor re~ aee1Dt the glrl being forced 1nto ber red Muatana. near the famlly•1 home. Ber body wu found at a bead. in the road ~ mornlag in the .lrlt. Waahlocton area. zo miles awa)'. Police Lt. Dan Cooke aald the dl1eoloratt0n around her neck indicated M1aa Wagner wu probablJ atranaled like tbe otbel'vtdiml. Four l\Jore Nabbed . . In Heroin Roundup B1 PBIUPllOSMAJPN ................. Four more people were arrest.. ed Tueada1 by Irvine police in connection with what police call a m-1or heroin trafflcldnc opera· tton, brtnciDc to nine the nwnber of thOH Jnearcerated after the two month 1Dvatl1at1on. Two, .lncludinl a 1'1-year-old boy whose name wa.s not re- teued, are Irvine residents, and were UTelted at their apparmt bomt, 14811 H.lihcreat Clrele, where five others were arrested Nov.18. Bealdel the youth, wbo was taken to Oraqe County Juvenile Hall, police jailed 18-year-old Jennifer Lynn Noble. She wu held ln the county women•a jail on $20.000 ball. • Both were charCed W'iUa Hie ol heroin . M'rest:Ald ln Santa Ana, at 3Z8 Chestnut St., were Robert B. Saldana, ~. and Geor1e F. VUlava, sz. both of wboDl listed the home as their address. The men were booked Into· Oranae Count1 J!il1• held on $10,000 bail each. ~ wu cbarsed with po11e11loD of heroin andsaleofberoln; Villava was suspected of sale of heroin. Police claim the anettl broke up a heroin d.lstribuUon bustDea nettinf up to •.ooo per •eet in .street sales. The investt1at1an was jotntJy conducted .by lrvtne•and S8llta Ana police, and bean tn Intne lut ~mber with a aerles 9' silt purchases of heroin by 1.11 UD· dercover oft.leer. 17 Br GABY GRANVILLE Ol .. o.lty ......... ProsUt.ution ud bookmaklna are on the upswini in Or~ County, accordlna to Sheriff'• of. fice vlceOfflcer Jack Marwin. Records for the year ended Oct. 31 abow that vice arrest.a by the Sherill' a office ''more than doubled" durlnJ the put year, Marwln said. Hi4 figures included only ar· reata made in unincorporated areu ol Uae cOunty and 1D city• vuutatloN aided b7 Jbaiff'I vice lnvei!Uiaton. • Cit.d a t6e bottied tor tadles of the nl1bt was tbe 10-eallecl ''Harbor Boialevard strip'• that run1 roushly from Katella A venue in Anaheim to Bolla Avena ID Westmlnstel'. Io county territory. Misalon Viejo 1VU U.ted by Marwin u the bot spot for call &lrls. Most women arrested lo both Wanis to Ret•r11'1 .. Death Suspect Found in Bali By MICHAEL PASKEVICB OIU. o.lty ~IM 1'9ft Joseph Davis, one of eight peo- ple under Orange County Grand Jury indictment ln the Oct. 22 murder of Stephen John Bovan o( Fountain Valley, bu been ar· rested by authorities In Bali, In- dones ia, Newport Beach pollce reported today. ' Davis, a former member of the Laguna Beach Hare Krishna temple, reportedly is "en· thuaiastic" about returnln• to the United Stat.es to face murder Peace Talk ·Envoys Set By Carter WASlUNGTON CAP) -Presl· dent Carter announced today the United States will send a blJh· level repreaeotaUve to a mid· December peace conference in Cairo and called reeent Arab- 1 s r a e li contacts "a bbtoric ·breakthrough ln the searcb for a lasting peace in the Middle East." Carter told a nationally broad· cast new. conference that Auls- tanl Secretary of State Alfred L. Atherton will head the U.S. del· egatlon to the Calro conference called by Prealdent Anwar Sadat of Egypt. Carter said the conference ii scheduled for arolllld Dec. lJ. When Sadat called fOr the con· ference, be •d Dec. 3 u the deadUM for ,..paues to bb lJ>. <See <"ASft , Pac• Al) DR4Fl'INC TABLE SOWWITH;4D • 'Tbe ad f roduced a Sood response and sold It." That's the advertl1ln1 aucceu story told bJ the Newpoft Beach woman wbOplactMI tbii oJualtlecl ad ID tbe Dlfli, PilOt: . II you bave tooh or furnllhlnp you no lqer netd. convert them to cub with a Dal· 11 Pilot want ad. · It'• e.uy • .lust call ~ and a friendly ad·Yiler willbe!p )'OU put wo?dl to wort bl tM DaUyPUOt. and consplracy charges. However, Newport Beach police Capt. Richard HamiJtoo said, "We are still tryini to work out tbe teebnicallties of whole reapon.siblllty it is to go and 1et him." Hamilton said Davia wu ar· rested 'lbanUgivlng evenlna by Indonesian police at the 1;eques( t of U.S. authorities. Davia had been sou1ht on a grand Jury lnd.ictment atemmin.c from the execution·style sbootlna death of Bovan ln front of tbe El Rancblto r.tavant la N.wport .84lacb. AutborlUes .Ueae u.t Davis waa one of five prtnclpala in Prui.dam Dtstrlbutlfts Inc. cl N~ Beach. Police alltge be offeNd tbree other mtD '2'.000 to kill BoYiiD and two otbe1' mer. Aftldarita oa file in Orance County Superior Court claim that Pruadam was L; "front" for U- liclt drug traffic. Captain Hamilton would not re- veal tbe 1peclfic char1ea upon which Davis ia currently betnc held lo Bali, but noted that In· doneala authorities oftest bold alleaed dn.ll dealers for 20 days for invatilation. BecaUle lDdone.sla does not (Bee 81J8~ECT, Pase AZ) Regi1tration Announced for ~indergarten Parent.a or ellslble children may be1in re1isterlnc their younisten In Ute SaddJebact Valley Ualfled School· Diltrtct'a Early Ale 1Cinder1art.en Pro- cram Friday tn the dlatrict'a P\U>ll Services Department. 'l'be children must be five years old oo or before Feb. 1, ma, tbe·day the proaram will ibe1bl. Th• pro1ram bas been utabliabed u the reeult of• new law wiiteb permlta districts to earoU ~~ ln tlndersarten ti tbe C*j)au bis fifth 1b~ darlJtS tb.e teltc:>.~l 1ear. Prevl•l1 • Qlllr c:bUctreft wbo c:e&.bfated~ Mil btitbda1 betor• Die. a cOu1d enrou tn 1ctiool. CIUMI wW be citfered at Gate. and lJDda \'iata elementary acboola for a maximum of 25 YOUDpts'I in eadi. Parents are reaponalble for their cblld'• tranapartat!oft. '-':./ ~ wW be CondUctid OD a 4'ftnt come" bUta. Waltbia liata will be atabl&bed when the claaa Umlta have tMleD reached. f SEC lnve~tiBat,e_s Korean Payments WASHINGTON (AP) -A lAI . Angeles clothing firm owner says he (unneled more than $500,000 in "commissions" from a bi& American electronics firm to an official of the South Korean em· bassy in Washington. Ttie remarks cam~ In testimony from Howard Lee be- fore the Securities and Excbance Commission, wbicb is lnvestie.t- ing whethef that money, plus about $900,000 more in com- mlsalona from E-Systema, Inc., of Dallu, was used In the~ed South Korean lntluenc acbemeln WublnitoJi. In particular, the SEC is fn· veattaatine whether any present or former members ot tbe l.T.S. military re~ehed payments from tbe Soo:tb Korun sov_... meat. Au SEC subpoena specifically men~cm a poulble $10,000 payment by a South Korean otncial to a retired U .8. Air Foree seneral. Lee, a South Korean·bom U.S. citizen. wu one of t1'0 officials of the Korean Reeearch lmtitute of Los AA1eles. wbich.rec:etved $1.4 million ln commlasiona from E· System1. The SEC subpoenaed Lee and Joni Ho Yoo, tbeotber knownol· .fleer of the instttute, to t.Ufy about the mGDeY. Acc.ordinl to aourcu close to the cue and documeota obtained from the SEC, Lee teaWled ttiat he funneled about *500,000 ot the' UJee8BC.hl•~) . Downhill. .. y IACIDB BYMAN "' °' .. ...., ....... • Paychlat.rlc tecbolcJana at Fairview State Hoepital in Colta Meu ,... toda,v Uae>-w~ aahead wttll a mu1 llck-J.n • Jl1aa Thund.ay delplte a .ta! to the boepital today by two key state health officials. Psychiatric technlciam leader Cathie Joy estimated tbat between 60 and 75 percent of the psychiatric techniciam wJU Join the aick·ln. She saJd slltbUy more than !IOO psycblatric techni- cians wort at Fairview, altboucb hospital officials there have slid there are more than 600. The c hief demand by psychiatric technician.a is writ- ten agreement that they will be recogni%ed by the state aa the equivalent of nursing personnel in dealing with the developmen- tally disabled -primarily re· ·larded and handicapped pa· tients. f',....PageAJ PAPER ••• Niguel News-Poat. The defendin1 Golden West group publishes the Saddleback Valley News, the Beach Cities News, the News-Advertiser, the Valley Advertlaer and the Irvine Independent. McCray ar~ Tuesday that actions by the defendants effec- tively banned distribution of Spitaleri newspapen among the 17 .000 resident.I d La1una Hilb Leisure World. And he t.old Judge Charamza that ample proof of bis claim ts supplied by the le1end on a newspaper circulated by the de- f endanta: "We are the only newspaper that delivers to every home in Leisure World." Spitalerl lists his operatin1 damages as $7,424,423. He breaks the damaees down as $305,000 for the forced mailing of hia newspapers, $2,069,423 in loat an- ticipated profits and $5,050,000 in loss or anticipated increase in his asset values. • McCray argued Tuesday that ~he determination of Leisure Eorld operators to prevent dis· ibution of Spitaleri papen by and ln the retirement commwli-. ty had coat his client many ~illions of dollan. He told Judee Cbaramsa ~\ the unfair restraint on trade would contin:tt.o ••fllttl.art lnlte sums of one1)mur~,m. lair pract{C' (~ alt~. : He argued Lbat dneloper Jtou Cortese built the Laiuna Jlllla re- tire m ent community In bor- rowed fed•rai funds and that the complex wu therefore subject to r~steral lawa which barred the kind of discriminatory practices ~.lleeed in the lawsuit. Spitalerl araues that the defen-dants' acUOQ represents a delliaL of the First Amendment 11uaranteeof a tree preas. He contends that the defen· dants are involved in a con- spiracy to deprive bls company of advertilJiu revenues it would receive if ll could boost ita leaderat).lp in Lei.sure World. · PATRONS PICK 'TRUE' TOP TEN OK, so Gone With the Wind ls the hen ftlm ever made. Pat:rcns at the neighborhood bar could live with that. But the other nine choices Of the American FUm Institute were just IO maQy turkeya. Amid sbouta and shota and beer for tbe house, a new ''Top Ten" em era• AP 1peclaJ correapondent Huth MUll11.._ te1ll an on Pase AU. ORANQI COMT •• DAILY PILOT I A• paycblAt.rlc t.eebalclau rnalntained a picket 11.Qe outside the botptt.al today, at.te Deputy Director of Health Raxmond Procanier and Amoettte ~utJ Direetor William KeeUn1 JJtllt with hoepital at.aft members to try once again to settle on a pro- gram to ·regain the facility'• certlfieatiea. Fairview and three ott.' a.ta hoapltall were decerUfted l.llll summf!I' by a state Caam ..ter- contract to the federal So~ ment. Federal fwads amomt:Utc to $500,000 per moa&aa to Fa1niew alone have been cut off. neat.ate is mama, qptllecWfennce. Trouble witla paycblatrlc tecbnldam anJM ..._, amoat the cbugea propo9ed by the state, was a plan to substitute a new supervisory position open only to reiCiltcecl nurses for a position c~ open to both nunes and PQCbJatric tedmi· clam. Proeualer tald Jl'airvlft' staff members today be and Dr. Keat- ing will be meeting with state licensing personnel and finance officials this week and Monday to try to ..ort out an 4cceptable proerun for recertlflcaUon. Proeqnler's OGly reference to the p1)'ddatrlc teclmlcians dis- pute wu a statement that the state trill u.t the federal 1overn- meat to recocn1ze psycblatrlc technlclam as equivalent to nurses ~ pmltlcms, but not in the new ~rvbot7 ones. "We don t even know the v aUdlty of the equlval•ncy they're taltina about," M1aa loy sald ... We don't know what HEW'1 (U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare) stand 11." "Moat ol ua don't want to call in sick," added Jean Nelson, also a Fairview psychiatric techni· ciao. "We're hopin1 they'll f!ve us aomethift& in writini soon. ' She noted that the boapti..t bu arran1ed basic custodial care for patients c:lurinc the tick-in "but they won't~ave our skUla and we hope to snow bow important lhoaeare. Private Rites Set in Stockton For nr·. Sinai Private servic'9 will be held Thursday in siocttoo, Calif. for internationally reco1niled health economist Dr. Nathan Sinai, who · died at South Cout Community Hospital in South Laruna Mon· day on bis 83rd birthday. The Laguna Hilla resident suc- cumbed alter su!ferln& from an intestJn.al disorder. Sinal served as an adviser to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman and to Earl Warren when be served u Calllornla's governor in the !MOI. The Stockton native authored several boob and arUcles in the field of health economtca and health insurance and wu presi- dent of tbe World Health Founda- tion. He was also an economic ~ sultant Jn the U.S. Public Health Service, the Social Security .Ad- mlniatration and the World Health CW,anllation. Slnal, who lived at 158 Rosamoor Tower Eut, is sur- vived by a sister, Miu Kaplanol Laguna Hllls, three nieces and · five nephews. His wife, Kathryu Maree Slnal. dJed in 19SS. Funeral arran1ementa are be- t n 1 made by McCormick Mortuary io.Laauna Beach ud prt.ai. services wW be conduct· ed in Stockton. p..._P-AJ . ., CARTER •• Bllled as an old f asbioned melodrama, "The Streets of New York" will open Thursday at Capistrano Valley High School. 26301 Via Eacolar in..Miallon Viejo. The first drama production of the new school which opened ln September, the cast includes (from left) Larry Wilken on his knees, 'Lisa Mendez, Sage Osterfeld, Mark Drumm, being choked by Paul .Hugbe"S, as Christi .Glazer tries to restrain him. Performances are at 8 p.m. Tbun· day, Friday and Saturday, with a 2: 30. p.m. matinee on Sunday. 'ncket informa- tion is available by calling 496-6100. Kri,shnas File Suit 'Would ~nfJ .. Se~, M...rder· Susp~ I.ink' tlon of moraaiil.Md ertme tbrnd r~ UuwO tbe.wa.-ltkli • Y.ibiD~ • How.....,, he a •ed. •boWcl proaUt~ acUvitJ' mereaM and not be aubject to lDteUe law ..... forcement It la likely that °"'" ••nlled crime will IDOft !oto the rac:ket~ ' A• far a s•mblinc ta eoa. cerned, Marwin 1ald tbe 1' 1herift11 hoobnakina 8"9ta lA the put )'ear have ln.ot'"4 op ratlons croaallll at. l•Mt $10.oooa--. ••:sookmaten poek•t •n e1tlmated 22 percent of tbo lrotl," Marwin said. " So ~ can '" that tt. la a )lnfttab&o aper at.Ion... •• "' lh abo ••Sci moat the bookm~ctivltt tn Onnf Count1 1 ~rti aetiaD, lncludlnt !<* I cai'dl that net the bookfesa•~nt~ Aa ii the ease wtth »rOltltutkla, the 'rice Offtca" •Ud ti.Im II no~ ' dJcatJcn that orpn:Jted ertme is Mt the relnl ot mecai t&JQblinl ln Oran1e Coulit1. Alain~. Ile eml)fJubld. or1anlaed crime will follow wbere tbere are 1ucee18f'ul bookDlakina operatiocia nat ad>- Ject to viaoroua law ore. aient. lie Dotad that iaYarlabJ1 a baolunalda1 coo•lction hi Ounie County resulta ill a Jail sentence, "But lreed overtak• fur and. there 11 a lot of money here to at- tract 1embUa1 intert1t1, •• Marwin aaJd. ,.....P.,,eAI TRUCK •• ~ By MiaiABJ. PAREVJCB. °'.'*" ........... A Hare IC.rilbna spokesman bee'n used to "launder moiH7 .made from tranaportaUcm and 1muulin&o1 aareotle1." Fedorowtki are at large and Davia is in an Indonesian jail proper adjustment at the time ol awaitlnl lndictruent. Tuesda.y'1 lncldent. 1ald the reU'1oua sect wm .. nouace • trademark lawault to;. day .,a1.nst Pruada.m Diltri!Jut.. lq•• lne .• (PDI) the .NeWJ>OJt :s .. cb investment firm wboff four prlnclpala have been lndl~ ed for the <>et. 22 ma.nter ot Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley. Hare Krishna member MukuD· da Du 1ald Tbunday that the suit 11 destaned to end the"'de· ceptlon ••that bu led to reports of alle1ed Unka between the murder au.pectl and the Hare Krilhnaa. In denylnc any auch llnb, Du aald the rellctoua Cl'OUP bu been "mlarepreaented. and Jt bas seriously dama1ed our lmqe to the public. It bu been a loa1 strunle to eet this small splinter ll'OQI> :ncop1zed for wllat lt ls," Duaddecl Re would not elaborate, sayi.nf more details would be available at a apecilll aews cooferen~e scbed'18' t>r 11 a.in. today att!lil! Loa Angeles Hare Xril!ma Tem· pie. "l\asically • lt 'II goiJli to deal with federal trademarks," said Das. ltrl1hna officials have stead· lastly denied that Alexander Kulik, the 28-year-old bud Of POI under indictment in Bovan's death, baa ever been auoeiated with the sect. ICuUk was one of four pa,rtoera in PDI. an investment flnn that. accordlq to an affidavit on file. in Superior Court, may have . * * * F,....PflfleAJ SUSPECT ••• 1111 tbtee P•rtnen -ltoy Cbr11topber Rlcbard. Joseph Gabriel Yedorow1k1 anct JOMDb ellon DaYla -are allo under Indictment. Richard and Krllhna offtciala acknowlqe He nld ~ wW reeoiDmlDd that theae three men were active a CODlplaiDt be luoed bf tbe DJ.a. ·members of the Laguna Beach· -trict Att.an.J'• olftce dUq the temple, but claim they were ex· vehicle u unsafe. pelted in September 1971. Officera Wei there WU Gilb' ' one person lo 8J17 of the boinet at Judge ·neiays Action On Jail Bias Issue. the lime ~ the crub. 1'ba9a Allee Jotepb1 Hid •b• WU watcbinf televtalon Sn her MeGQd story apartment at m Nyu place when lhe beard the track slam into the first Door 1araae below b4'!'. •'It sounded Just lite all ~ rest of UlOl8ttaveltrucbtUt10 careenJnc put here from tbe top of the hill," 1be 1.ud. Superior Court Judte Everett W. Dickey bu delayed any ac- tion that mt1ht force Oran1• County Sberttt Brad Gate. to al· low women plisonera to serve their time lD branch jails or on the honor farm. Dickey refused today to issue a writ that would have forced Gates into auch acUo~. The Jm. edvtted J&WJen for Barbara brcalra Molar, 42, Of Anaheim, th1t lawyen for Gates and the county Board of SUl)etViaon should be given time to respaad to the alletations in her lawtllt. It Is expected that a bearln1 in· to alle1ations and a renewed de· mand for a wrft will be scheduled alter the county counsel's otnce IHea lta anawer. Mrs. Molar, who is serving a one year jall term after beina convicted of drue offenses, claims that women prisoners are confined to the central Jail in Santa Ana and not allowed to serve 1entmces at the Theo Lacy brancbJ&U and the boaor farm. Sbe clahu that out of Jail privlletea are NHned for male priaoners under a 1onJ 1tlUICUq 1,atem ol imprilonment tbat bu always dlacrlmlnau.d a1alnat women inmates. Gates points out that it would coat "many mlWona of dollars" to build the separate f aetlltles necea~ and hi.re extra penon. net if women priaoners are Milt to the branch jail and the honor f ann. Gate. aaid be is bound' by law to aepar1te male and female prisonera. IA any event, he l8ld, women prllonen are beint it•en privilec• aod out of Jail time IKlt availabletomalepriaonera. ·aothing Stolen From Mall Store Clolbtng valued at rn: ,, .. stolen from a Lasuna Mall st.ore by a woman who frabbftd an armf\11 of farm~nta while employees were busy in the rear of the store. Oran1e County aheriff 't of· ficera aald the theft was reported• by employees ol the J.C. Pelmey store. They said tbe clothing - jackets, sweaters and alacka - was taken from racks at the 1roat of the store. Bat a.be laid abe teJt • thud, &Dlf went to the ba1eGQ.J to take a look. "Needleu to H7, ooe peek over the aide 1at me into a ai.t.e of shock.•• lbe larqhe4. Sb' lald lt dlcfl\'lhelp Wbelilbe -saw her aniaabed Mucedel bl lbe•~•· ' FreaP~AI SEC ••• E·Sy1tem1 pa1menta to Col. · Kyoo ffwan Lee. Tbe Nit ot tbe St.• mllUclll WU bandle4 bJ Yoo, a aoureeaalc1. Tbe SEC 19 ln•e1tt1alln• whet.Mr Yoo &190 tmmefed U.. money to South koNa oaldals in thla country or lD 5eoul. Col. Lee .. amtaat rnilftmy attacbe at the South Xonaa em. · buay here and is Howard Lee•a uncle. ~a m.,_aOJIPlla'al eledrcmle equtpmf:nt tor tbe Pentaloa and tM centn1 JD. teW1nce Aceney, ha ....at contract. 1'fth tbe Sotd.b Sona 1overnment, includlnt the Ale fll .more t.bn •rm•ca 14 mWtu7 field' radioa. , .. 1 Oa1lyPOot ' Bike Safety Plan I Deserves Support .. Last week, the Calllomin ffiihway Patrol -primary traffic law enforcement agency fn the Saddleback Valley -announced a new progr.am to teach young people bicycle lsafety and develop a rapport between officers and children. Highway Patrol offlcers reminded Saddleback area bicyclists that the two-wheel, non·motorized vehicles fall under the same trarfic laws as automobiles The new program is geared to educate bicyclists primarily ch.ildrcn -of the proper way to ride safel)- CH P plans lo issue warmngs to youthful bikers who break traffic laws And after a third warning, a c})sld would be forced to appear in court or complete a bicycle safety course atSaddleback College. It sounds like a good program. The need for defensive bicycle riding cannot be stressed enough. A bicycle offers little protection when matched against an automobile in a trafCtc collision. And while the highway patrol should be applauded for initiating a bicycle safety program, area parents should also be encouraged to teach their children safe bicycle riding habits. Thal way, we can avoid the tragedy of a child's life lost because or a few needless mistakes Test Score Evaluation Contrad1c lor} messages arc being broadcast b> Capistrano Unifil·d School District administrators on how they evaluate standardized test scores and what weight they give to the scores. Test results this year showed Capistrano students scoring above the state and national averages. but lagging behind neighboring Laguna Beach and Saddleback Valley Unified districts. Assistant Supt Philip Gngnon's statement, made m his analyst~ of thl• district·~ teaching success relative to other districts. that "we ate an excellent district and get· ting better every day" sounds like sugar coating. Admmistrators blamed low scores on socio-economic factors Capistrano Unified students were outclassed by Laguna fkach and Saddleback Valley Unified students in the tests bccausl• of socio-economic patterns in the three distr1Ns. thcy said. If the.• tl'st results reflect mostly socio-economic lac· tors among sl·hool children, school officials have little for which to take ac.·d11 IC they reflect at all what is happen mg in district <'lassrooms. administrators should be address· in~ lggmsl'lves to \\hat appear to be district weak spots and ra11y cummun1ly support for improvement. Not That Equal Although there may never be a long line oC expectant fathers claiming the benefit. the Irvine City Council took an absurd step when it approved a policy of extended paternity le a vc for male city employes. The council reasoned lhat if it granted maternity leave for mothers it would have to do the same for new dads, or violate laws forbiddinf sex discrimination. Oh brother! (Sister?) It is unlikely that any court ever will rule it 1s unconstitutional that men are not allowed the physical joys and responsibilities of motherhood. Not as we understand the species It is certain that the up to six months of unpaid time off could hinder city operations in terms o! jobs undone or filled by part-time replacements Further, it ts preposterous to believe daddy should he so tuckered out by the experience of his wife giving birth that he should need such time off to get bQ.ck his strength -or Just go fishing to recover his equilibrium. The council's equal-rights instincts may have.been m the right place, but its judgment that men and women have totally equal biological and physical needs is silly -and possibly a s illy waste of taxpayer money. • Opinions expressed tn the space abo~e are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are thoae of their authors and artists. Reader comment la Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.E> Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 6-42-4321 Boyd I Dogs and TV By L.M. BOYD Note it claimed an print that dogs can't see television They can pick up the light patterns and notice the mo- tlon, but they can't focus well enough to make out the nature of the action, it's con·, tended. Interesting, if true Veterinarians. too, use ~cupuncturc oow. To cure that ailment in dog11 known as taUbit.er'a diHJSe. They used to amputate. Lately. though, they've taken to slicking lonr needlu Into four poin~ around the poor pup's tail. • Whot, you can't name the fJrst state that wanted to Dear Gloomy G secede from the Union in 1859? Credit Wisconsin with that distinction. It had its own reasons unlike those of the soulhem states. fr you commute. you not only go to work, but you go back home. Commute ts a roundtrip word. Best way to frighten off a threatening dog ts to open a large black umbrella at It, 1 'm told. Nobody yet has ex.plained satisfactorily why the wed· ding ban4 for more than 2,000 years baa been wom on the thlrd finger of the left hand. Not even man)' ZJonlats know that lhe British eovern· ment In 1903 oCf ered 8,000 square miles of uninhabited land tn U1anda for aetUe· ment by homeless Jewa. Amons tbe NCAA flr1t· dlvlalon footbtll toam1, more call themselves T11er1 than any other hickn11ne. Ten do !to, Sn tact~ Second moat com· mtn team nickname fl Bulldola. Wlth 1lx. RObert N. Wffd/Pubtllhtr ThOmes K .. wU/Edltor,. S.rblr• K,..lblch/ dltorlal P"' E tor Jack Anderson Did Park ·Also · Con Koreans? 1WASHJNGTON -Justice Department attorneys bave agreed it will take a lie detector to get the truth out of Korean payoff man Tonasun Park lf he 11ccepls the deal lo elve hi• testimony in exchange for lm· mumty. Park has made so many con flt cllng statements, the prosecutors ~cknowledge, that hi s te!;tlmony would be worthless in court unless 1t can be bol- s tered with supporting evidence. They will Ul· s1st, therefore, that Park submit to a he detector test as part of the deol. Their hope is that Park, with a polygraph machine monitoring his veracity. will pro-v 1de enough new information that they will be able to build on it They will seek corroborating t•v1dcnce, which they will then use lo make more cases against congressmen who have accepted bribes. The prosecutors admit 1t wlll be tough to nail many con· ~rcssmen The Justice Depart. ment has determined, for exam· pie, that Park highly exaggerat· cd his influence on Capitol Hill. He boasted to his Korean cohorts that he was close to congressmen whom he had merely met and that he had passed out cash, which he really had diverted to b1sownuse. It looks as lf Park was a skilled con man who misled Pven his own government On the other hand, the Justice Department has solid evidence contradicting the South Korean government's claim that Park was merely a husinessman who acted on his own HIS l..INK with the Korean Central Intelligence Agency has been established to the satlsCac· lion of the prosecutors. They are aware, however, that Park didn't flash his KCIA credentials on Capitol Hill and offer "brib<?s" to congressmen. He told con- gressmen, on the contrary, that Mailbox "' he was a bullneaaman who wanl· ed to contribui. to t.btlr eam.- pal1ns. It wlll be difficult to prove there were any 1trin11 attached to the COUtribution1. Not W\W iater would Part <1.ror by and make o pitch on bebal or South Korea. The JustJce Department, therefore, mJ&bt have trouble In court dlfferentlatlna betwten political contribuUons and out· right bribes. The prosecutors wlll be able to prove. however, that some con· gresamen were aecretlve about their deallnaa with Park and con· cealed the cash be 1ave them. AUTOSTA'DC: In a move. that could 1queeze t.be naUon 's imall radio manufacturers out of bual· ness, General Motors la forcine auto dealers to buy some of Its 1978 models with bullt·ln GM radios. Car radios have traditionally been optional equipment, and dealen have be.n free to purchase them ftom tndependent flrms. But Geaeral Moton bu de- cided that lta own radio wUJ be 1tandard equipment on every 1918 Buick Riviera, Oldamoblle Torona«to and Chevrolet Cbevette. Tho dealer wlll have no cbolce. Thia GM actlon has raised the hackles of Sen. Edward Ken nedy, l>.·Mo11., who baa nrod off a confld~ntial letter to the JusUCe Departdhsnt 'a antltrwst chief, lohn Shenefield. The new GM ~Uc)', Kennedy complained, haa 'tremendous Potential for mtlict· ing Irreparable injury on ln· dependedt radio manufac· turers. •• Tberelatlon1blp'be· tween radio firma and auto deal· era could be "dlJrupted," he wrote, by this "aefectlve in- trusion into their market." The Justice 'Department bas· launched an investigation into the matter, which will aliso focus on other auto parta and ac.. cesaorles. SCUOOL BUS SAPBTY: ThJ>Ula.nds of unsale achoofbuses a~ atlU on the road because ot a bus~aliod loophole In the law. Con1ress ordered strict 111.t.v standards for the nation 'a school buses back in 1974. But any bus chaasls manufactured befon the April l, um, deadline doesn't bave to meet the tou1her Stan· dnrds Some manufacturera. •therefore, draatically stepl*t ~ thelr product.loo to beat the· deadline. Their tactics have been uncovered b)' Rep. Andrew Maguire, D.·N.J., who has asked highway safety chief Joan Claybrook to blow the whilUe oo these unsafe buses. .. ff undredl, I.( not tbousan4.t, of school bus chassis bullt before April have been purchased by school boards and manutac· turers," Maguire warns in a coo· fidential letter. A Tax Bill for People, Not Politicians To the Editor The Democratic Speaker of the Asscmb;y, Leo McCarthy states that no tax relief that would reach the homeowner before November 1978 can be developed that would he acceptable to Republicans. How about a bill that would be ac- ceptable to the people instead or the poll1Jc1ans' IT BECOMES more ana more evident to more and more· California homeowners that the present control led state Legislature does not wish nor in· U?nd to produce any legislation that will give the Inflation ridden homeowner any tax relief in the very near tuture or ever! During Governor Brown's Ad· ministration more taxes have been collected from the people of California than any previous ad· ministration, but less hen~ h11ve filtered down to the peopl in the way of property tax relief highway Improvements or Im· provements in the present de· terioralini educational system. MR. & MRS. E. P. BENSON f'eafnlst RUH To the Edltor: -. lf "Kate Millett on lbe Women's Movement," Nov.18, la any indication of the educators we pay to educate our chl1dren it is no wonder the system ls In such o mesa. Even her rhetoric lJ con· tradict.ory. She'• not .sure lf the "subveralon" la from the "radical left" or the "radical richt." And it the "radical ri&bt" took over the d&leeatea to Houst.on'a lnternaUonaJ Women's Year Conferen~. N 1be clabns. how come they only make up 30 percthtotthototalf And het' accU1allon of a ''ritht wln1 movement'' Sa out of place in a "women'• movement." She depicts anyone not In a1retment with her pbllotophy 11 a "powerful mardpulator of middle and lo"' r clan Am~rJcans." ta 1hc trylnl to tmply that clul or WHlth df'nOtea Jntelli~eoct1 Of "' th t ·~ ln pq11tet,' whoever: th y ~may be, are keeplnr th• wotklitJ d&u~ownt them out of that, imacined, place? She riles about antl· feminists rillne against feminists as she riles against them. This "women's movement" seems as incoherent as the administration that sponsored It. GOLDIE JOSEPH .'l'eaelter'a Trtb11te To the Edit.or: As an elementary school teacher who wu raised with up- per Newport Bay mud between his toes and the Harbor Area In his blood. I'd like to share some feelings I have with rou and your readers. It ls merely coincidental but highly appropriate that these thlnss be sald so close after Thanksgiving. Jn what I'm sure was a most frustrating partnership, Newport Harbor Hl&h School and the Newport-Coeta Mesa area had . the unfortunate responslbUlty of seflng lo it that I, aeainst greater than usual odds, become an educated and usefUl penon. lt must have seemed • luUle com· mup\ly effort lo all t.bOle ln- volVed in au(h a thanklesa and mon1trous undertatlnc. But S?m~ow the Harbor Area 1ur-v1ved. Comlni from the 11e when Foncles were real people and a ttme that wu called the "Apathet.ic l'lrtles," t found mfself amon1 the Jealom of 1ur· pn•ed oblerven •h•~lnt their bead• ln d.labellef wheo I.had ln- crecllbly manaaed to ftnllh two years of cotleae at Oru1e eoa.t. Aaain, th abock wa1 a1moat too much to bear when I received a B.A. in English with ambitions towards teaching You see the reasons I was able {o get through college and go on to a profession were not t;#?&Sons that wouJd show up on test scores or in Stull Bill objectives. The school di11trict could not look to their rues for what It was that caused this amazing turn of events. THERE ARE two reasons that l made it through college. became u teacher and enjoyed whatever success t have been able to achieve, and everything positive l do either in my class'room or my creative pursuits is directly traceable to these reasons -Mr. Robert Wood and Mr. Robert Wentz. They were two of my blah school teachers and with their help my life got itself together. I'd like to thank them now, publicly. In the finest aense or the word these two individuals are teachers, and teachers on the blehest level. Mr. Wood Is not teaching at Harbor Htgb anymore but Robert Went: ls. The Bookmari and I know that at Newport he Js still giving that extra quality that the rest of us in educatJoo can work towards and hope we're ap- proaching. In my classroom and in my life I have always looked back to his eumple with the firm beUe(J.hat if I were ever Ible lo be halflthe teacher and person he is, 1 wo"hld be an ovenvhelmlne s uccess. the amazine thing is, I not only remember them and what they were to me, but I al.so remember the things they said. 1 know how terribly lucky l was to have been a student of Mr. 'Wood and Mr. Wentz and I want· ed to let people know how lµcky their students still are. DENNIS CRAIG SMITH Lompoc Unified.School District • Utttri /rom rtadtTI art welc01'M The nght to condense ldtna to Jtt rpace or eliminate li~l is reaen>rd. Letter• of 300 words or ltu &AU ~ gi~ prtftunce . .4ll letttr1 m"'t in· clwl#' lfgnatur1 and maUino addtcu but ncmt1 mo11 bt withheld °" rt· qunt f/ $U/licient ~eoaon ta apparent Pe>et'I/ urlll not ~ pubUahfd. lli8tories of Success lessly, nor does he stop the now or his narrative periodically to preach or harangue. And, u h,a been noted, he does have a fine sense of wjl which add• plenty of sparkle to a book \hat ml1ht olherwlM hav~ been ponder()UI reading. The book la suaddtd throu&hout with case hiltori of meai, ~ women, who have m de thetn1elvea 11uccess. an4 lt k fn these sketches that Korda•a moat lnteroatlng material ls \0 be found. The ncld In •hlcb thtM J*ple manaaed t.o an1tch the brua ring and 1et th'e ptfM are nrfed -?MP from pubUc:a· dons to bambura r: chal.nl -lliUt the prot.llJC<>nllt.I all tbare CM quaJlly -they succeeded. PtnliTROMA& ~p 80ob Editor Transportation Pooled A three-month·old Cadillac rests at the bottom of Don Ayala's pool near Los Angeles. Tuesday, after the accelerator stuck while his wife was driving it into a garage. It crashed through the watt at the rear and sank Mrs. Ayala and her child escaped .. Property Division Eyed Solution: Recognizing Common Law Marriage? SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Recognizing com· mon law marriage m California may be the way to disentangle the financial stnngs that a high court s ays exist between cobab1ting but unmarried couples, legal experts said. They agreed a decision late last year, involving actor Lee Marvin and his live·il\lgirlfriend of six years, did not forge any new law when it said un· married partners who break up can sue each other Teen-age Actress Pleads Innocent DEVERLY lllLLS (AP) Teen·age actress Mackenzie Phillips, who portrays the older daughter on CBS TV's "One Day at a Time" series, has pleaded innocent to a single misdemeanor charge of public drunkenness. Miss PhHllps, 18, was released on $500 bail Tuesday after a Jan. 10 preliminary hearing was scheduled before Municipal Court Judge Jae· quelme L. Weiss A Im Angeles County sheriff's deputy said he arrested Miss Phillips shortly after mid· night last Wednesday when he found her sprawled on a West Hollywood street. She was held overnight at the Jail ward At County· USC Medical Center and then released on bail Barbara Broglialt1, a s pokeswoman for her telev1s1on series, said a substance found in the ac- tress · purse which deputies initially thought to be cocaine was a diet pill And the spokeswoman said. a blood test showed Miss Phillips had not been rntox ic a led Expert Emphatie Bus Victims 'Suffered' OAKLAND CAP) -The prosecution in the Chowcrulla kjdnopping trial re3ted its case today with a doctor's emphatic testimony that kidnap vie· t1m s 9uffcred "serious bodily injury." Dr Delmer Pascoe, a professor of pediatrics and expert in heat illness, was to undergo brief quest1orung oefore he leaves the stand He was the last of 19 witnesses called in the state's effort to prove that three confessed kidnap· ( J pers caused bodily harm STA.TE to 26 Chowchilla children and the ir sch oo 1 bus d~r...,.i v-e-r"'"'i_n_J_ul,....y_l_97_6 _ _.. OU DrHU11g 1t'l11• Ro-d LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe City Council bu tentatively agreed to write an ordinance allowln1 Occidental Petroleum Corp. to drill for oil and gu in the beachfront Pacific Palisades area. Tuesday's 9·5 decision still must be approved Jn a second readina, and even if tl'le council 1tves final approval, the city Plannln1 Commission and at least two coutal commtaslons must uphold the ac· Uon . ...,,,..tq Aao•rd AJJpe.Wt . to recover communal property But. t.bey said, it probably has had a dramatic psycboloilcal impact on couples throughout the country, ralaln( questions about how unmarrieds should belreated by the law. "MAR81AGES MAY BE MADE in heaven and Marvin relallonshJps may be made in bars, but they both ~ up in Superior Court,'' cracked Stephen Adams, editor of the California Family Law Quarterly. State Sen. Bob Wilson. D·San Diego, who chaired the hearing, said he thought the Marvin de- cision by the Calilomlli Supreme Court "is leading us toward common law marriage. ''It seems to me that If we recognized common law marriage, many of these problems would be solved," said Wilson, an attorney. Donald King, from the California Judges Assoclaliop, agreed. STATE LAW DEFINES WHAT happens when a marriage breaks up, but has no provisions for divid· ing the financial fruits of mere cohabitation. But since the Marvin decision, lawmakers have been scrambling to write a law covering unmarried couples, too. Tbe commotion stems from a 1972 lawsuit filed by Marvin's ex.girlfriend, Michelle Triola, who clalm'd she was entJtled to $500,000 or hall of the property the two accumulated. She said she gave up a singing career in exchange for his promise to sup· port her. Although a lower court dismissed the case, the state Supreme Court said Mils Triola bad a right to a trial, scheduled to beain next month. THE COURT SAID THE lAW must enforce any expressed or implied agreement between couples -married or not -to pool their property or earnings, as long as the relaUon,,hlp was not ex- plicitly for sex. as in prostitution. And when the coupling ends. the courts miut decide how to divide the loot. But the decision has raised a question like: -Should 10uch a rule apply to homosexuals llv· jng together and to roommates who share house payments, for example? Thoae leatifytns generall~ agreed that it should. .:.m._ BAUME & MERCIER GENEVE ~tyalla> I ii (<h1v 3Klansmen F ouffel, Guilty LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Superior Court jury haa found three Ku Klux Klan members guilty or coosplrtnl to commit flrtt·dearee murder in • plot agalnal.the West Co11t leader oflhe Jewiah'Defense League. The nine-man, three.womjlD jury returned the verdict Tuesday a1alnst·· Robert Dehne), 32, Timothy Wayne Anderson. 26, and Daniel Ellis Taylor, 43. The three face a penalty or life in prison. The three, who were members of the Klan's North Hollywood chapter, were accused of plotting the murderoflrv Rubin. A1TORNEYS FOR THE THREE said they would appeal the verdict by the jury, whJcb ift. eluded two blacks and one Mexican·Amencan. Sen· tencing was scheduled for Jan. 5. Dehnel and Anderson, both from the HoJlywood area, remained In cwstody, while Taylor, who ls fro01 VanNuys, was free on bail Deputy District Attorney John Wat.aon said be was "amazed" al the jury's swill decision, which came on the second day of deliberations. "J WAS VERY IMPRESSED.'' be said. "They must have been payfn1 very clo.e attention to the evidence as It wu presented.'' But Dehnel'a attorney, James Epstein, said that "given the shortness of the deliberations and the complicated nature or the evidence. it seems that the jury was not able to overcome its prej· µdices." ANDERSON, WHO CLAIMED he had left the Klan. whispered to his attorney as he glanced toward the audience. Outside the courtroom. An· derson remarked. "l thought we had it I really thought we bad it.'' A rookie officer who infiltrated the Klan last vear -Paul Roll Gebhardt -testified that th,. tfp. fendants planned to klll not only Rubin. but h11 SUC· cessor in the militant JD L. .. "?, . . • > ,, I For More Adequate Parking REDUCING STOc;K FROM ALL CATEGORIES! ~~50%0FF . • NO~YAWAYS • NCfalTUINS --~ / t _. / & l/J .s~1 i'!f/ ~ ee C.Omfonable In Your Cups We 8pec:l8llH lnD lDD'• Gradu•t• CorffU.re 370 E. 17th S'f,. COSTA MESA ' f .. .. ., . .: I I 1 I i• '• ;. , . ,, •. • . I Orange OOast Dally Pilot Bike Safety Plan I Deserves Support Last week, the California Hiahway Patrol -primary traffic law enforcement agency in the Saddleback Valley -announced a new program to teach young people bicycle "afety and develop a rapport between officers and children. Highway Patrol ofricers reminded Saddleback area bicyclists that the two·wheel, non-motorized vehicles fall under the same traffic laws as automobiles. The new program ts geared to educate bicyclists primarily children -of the proper way to ride safely. CHP plans to issue warnings to youthful bikers who break traffic laws. And after a third warning, a child would be forced to appear in court or complete a bicycle safety course atSaddleback College. It sounds like a good program The need for defensive bicycle ndmg cannot be stressed enough. A bicycle off crs little protection when matched against an automobile in a traffic colhsion. And while the highway patrol should be applauded tor initiating a bicycle safety program, area parents should also be encouraged to teach their children saf c bicycle riding habits. That way, we can avoid the tragedy of a child's life lost because of a few needless mistakes Test Score Evaluation Contraditlory messages are being broadcast b} Capistrano Unified School District administrators on how they evaluate standardized test scores and what weight they give lo the scores Test results this year showed Capistrano :-.ludents scoring above the state and national averages. but lagging behind neighboring Laguna Beach and Saddleback Valley Unified districts. Assistant Supt Philip Grignon 's statement, made m his analysis of the district's teaching success relative to other dtstricts, that '"we are an excellent district and get ting better every day'' sounds like sugar coating. Administrators blamed low scores on socio·economic factors. Capistrano Unified students were outclassed by Laguna Beach and Saddlcback Valley Unified students in the tests because of socio-economic patterns in the three districts, thcv said If thl' ll'<>t results reflect mostly socio-economic fac tors among school c:hildren, school officials have ltttle ror which to take <:red at If they reflect at all what is happening m distn ct classrooms. administrators should be address· mg themselves to what appear to be district weak spots and rally community support for improvement. Not That Equal Although there may never be a long line of expectant fathers claiming the benefit, the Irvine City Council took an absurd step when it approved a policy of extended paternity leave for male city employes. The council reasoned that If it granted maternity leave for mothers it would have to do the same for new dads, or violate laws forbidding sex discrimination. Oh brother! (Sister?) It is unlikely that any court ever will rule it is unconstituttonal that men are not allowed the physical joys and responsibilities of motherhood. Not as we understand the s pecies It is certam that the up to sax months of unpaid time off could hinder city operations in terms of jobs undone or filled by part-time replacements Further, it is preposterous to believe daddy should be so tuckered out by the experience of his wife giving birth that he should need such time off to get bll.Ck his strength - Qr just go fishing to recover his equilibrium. The council's equal-rights instincts may have been in the right place, but its judgment that men and women have totally equal biological and physical needs is silly -and possibly a silly waste or taxpayer money. • Op1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are thote of their authors and artists Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P O Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd I Dogs and TV By L.M. BOYD Note it claimed in print that dogs can't see television They can pick up the light pattM!t and notice the mo- tion, but they can't focus well e,nough to make out the nature of the action, it's con·, t~nded Interesting, 1r true ' Veterinarians. too, use qcupuncture now. To cure that ailment in dogs known as tntlbiter's diseiase. They used to amputate. Lately. though, they've taken to stickinl lonr needl~• Into four points around the poor pup's tall. 'What, you can't name the r)rst state that wanted to A pUot told Channel 7 TV the wt Meadowlark Atrportptane craab w11 an "lloiated lnclcles,t." StDc llv or that mcl· dent• have occuntd within a mllo of my Hun· Un1ton Beach !bi:>mo ln tho lut aix mOdthJ J 1ure wt1h lhciy'd mu• ·\Mm even mo,.. laOlat .. ect -uy.Omll outto J.C. G .... y .. ,~.,._. ~ ..... , ....... .. ==r-.~~:.-= secede from the Union in 18597 Credit Wisconsin with that distinction. It had its own reasons unlike those o! the southern states. If you commute, you not only go to work, but you go beck home. Commute is a roundtrip word. Best way to frighten ore a threatening dog is to open a large black umbrella at It, I'm told Nobody yet has explained satisfactorily why the wed· ding band for more than 2,000 yean has been worn on the thlrd finger of the left hand. "'Not even many Zionists know that the BriUab govern ment In 1903 offered 6,000 squart mlles of unlD.babLted land tn Uganda for settle· ment by homeless Jews. Amon1 the NCAA flrat· dlvlaion football team1, m°" ca1l tbcmselv Tl19r1 thu any other nickname. Ten do 10, tn fact. Second moat com· men team nickname h Bulldop. W1th llx. • ' Ro"bert N. WHd/Publllher Tbornet K .. vll/EdUor,. ·Jack Anderson Did Park Also · Con Koreans? 1W ASHINGTON -Justice Department attorneys have aareed it will take a Ue detector to eet the truth out of Korean payolC man Tonaaun Park lf he accepts the deal to alve bis testimony m exchange for lm· munity. Park has made so many con· fl1ctin1 statements, the prosecutors acknowledge, that his testimony would be worthless in court unle!s it can be bol· stered with supporllne evidence. They will ln· sist, therefore, that Park submit to a lie detector test as part of the deal. Their hope is that Park, with a polygraph machine monitoring his veracity, will pro- vide enough new information that they will be able to build on tt They will seek corroborating evidence, which they will then use to make more cases against congressmen who have accepted bribes The prosecutors admit it will be tough to nail many con gressmen The Justice Depart menl has determined, for exam pie, that Park highly exaggerat· ed his influence on Capitol Hill I le boasted lo bis Korean cohorts that he was close to congressmen whom he had merely met and that he had passed out cash, which he really had diverted to bis own use. It looks as if Park was a skilJed con man who misled even his own government. On the other hand, the Justice Department has solid evidence contradicting the South Korean government's claim that Park was merely a bu!linessman who acted on his own HIS LINK with the Korean Central Intelligence Agency has been established to the satisfac· lion of the prosecutors. They are aware. however, that Park didn't nash his KClA credentials on Capitol Hill and offer "bribes" to congressmen. H~ told con· gressmen, on the contrary, that Mailbox . he was 1 buslnealman wbo want- ed to eontrlbute to their cam- pal1ns. IL wlll be dl!ftcult to prove there were e.ay 1trtn11 attached to thet COl\trlbutJom. Not UQW later Would Park drop by and make a pitch on behalf of South Korea. 1be Jusllce Department, therefore, mllht have trouble ln court differentlatlnt between political contribuUons and out· ri1ht bribes. The proeecutons will be able to prove, however, that 1ome con· 1.-eaamen were aecrotlve about their deallnes with Park and con- cealed the cash be 1ave them. AUTOSTAftC: In a move. that could squeeze tbe naUon 's imall radio manufacturers out of busi·. ness, General Motors is forolne auto dealers to buy some of Its 1978 models with bullt-ln GM radios. Car radios have traditionally been optional equipment, and . . dea len bave been fret to purchase them from independent firms. ButOeneralllotonbud • clded that its own radio will be standard equipment on every lt'18 Buick Riviera, Oldamoblle Torona~o and Chevrolet Chevette. tho dealer will have no choice. Thia GM acUon has raised the hackles of Sen. Edward Ken· nedy, D.·Mus .. who hu fired off a confidential letter to the Justite Department's antitrust chief, John Shenefield. The new GM policy, Kennedy complained, bu "tremendowl potential for mruct· tne irreparable injury on ln· dependent radio manufac· turera." Tberelatlonablp'~ tween radio firms and auto deal· ers could be "diarUJ)ted," he wrote, by this "selective in· tr us ion Into their market." The Justice Department has· launched an investigation into the matter, which will also focus on other auto part and 1e-ceaaori11. · SCHOOL BUS SAFETY: Thouaa.ods of unsafe 1cboo(buies are atlU oo tht road beeauao of a bua·1l1ed loophole in tht ,uw. Conireu ordered strict aalety standards fOf the nat100'11ehool buses back in 1974. But any bul chassis manufactured before the Aprll 1, 1977, deadline doesn't have to meet the tou1her Stan· dards Some manufactur•ra. •therefore, draaUcally atepped up their production to beat the· deadUne. Thelr tactics have been uncovered by Rtp. Andrew Maguire, D.-N.J., wtio bas uked h11hway safety chief Joan Claybrook to blow the whlatlo on these W\Qfe buses. ''Hul'Jdnlds, U not tbousand.t, of school bus chassis built before April have been purchued by school boards and manutac· turers." Maaulre wa,rns in a ccn· fidential letter. A Tax Bill for People, Not Politicians To the Editor: them out of that, imagined, The Democratic Speaker of the place? She riles about antl- Assemb:y, Leo McCarthy states feminists rillnl against reminJsts thatnotaxreliefthatwouldreach as she riles against them. This the homeowner before November "women's movement" seems as 1978 can be developed that would incoherent as the administration be acceptable to Republicans. that sponsored It. How about a bill that would be ac· GOLDIE JOSEPH ceptable to tbe people instead of the politicians! .readier'• Trt•t&Ce IT BECOMES more ana more--To the Edit.Qr: evident to more and more As an elementary school California homeowners that the teacher who was raised with up- pr c 1 en t controll ed slate p~r Newport Bay mud between Le1islature does not wish nor In· h~s toes an~ the Harbor Area in tend to produce any legislation his blood. I d llke to share some that will give the Inflation ridden feelings 1 h~ve with you af!d your homeowner any tax relief in the read~rs. It is.merely colncadental very near tuture or ever! but highly approprtate that these During Governor Brown's Ad· things be said so close after ministration more taxes have Thanksglv~g. been collected from the people of In what I m sure was a most California than any previous ad· frustrating partnership, Newport ministration, but less benefits Harbor High School and the have filtered down to the people Newport-Coste Mesa ar~a bad. tn the way or property tax relier-the unfortunate responsibility of highway improvements or im• se•lng tolt thatl, against greater provements in the present de-than usual odds, become an · ed educated and useful person. It teriorating ucatlonal system. must have seemed ~ luUle com· MR. & MRS. E. P . BENSON muntty efforl to all those in· vol\led In such a thanldesa and mon1trou11 undertaklne. But somehow the Harbor Area 1ur· vlved. f'emehtut Rlla Tothe~tor: If "Kate Millett on lhe Women's Movement," Nov.18, la any indleation of the educaton we pay tb educate out chlldren lt is no wonder the system la in such a meas. Even her rhetoric ls con· tradictocy. She'• not sure If the "subversion" 11 from lhe "radical le,ft" or the "radical rlght." And lithe "radlcaltlaht" took over the dele1att1 to Hou1ton'1Jntem•Uonal Women'I Year Conferen<:•, u abe claim.a, how come they only mate ':IP 20 percentoft.hOtotal? And her accu.atlon of • .. rllht wine movement" la out ot plac in a "women's movem nt." She dcplcta ~one not lo ~reement with her pblloaophy ·al a •'powerful manipulator of mlddlc and lower clau Amencans. •• Js •he trying tb fmpl,y that ciao or wealth den6tM lnt&U1enct? Ot th t • • ha P,q•tf' ... •boever. tht)' may tie, are keeplJ\1 the worklna u1.downt Comlni h'om the a1e when Fon1ies were real people and a lime that wu called the ''Apathetic Plftles:• 1 found myself amona the le1ton1 of •ut· prised oblervert •haklnJ their head• in d.labeUef when l bad in· 'Credibly manated to tbllsh two years of colle1• at Oranae Coast. Aea1n, the shock wu almost too much to bear when I received a B.A. in English with ambitions towards teaching. You see the reasons 1 was able Co get through college and go on to a profession were not reasons that would show up on test scores or ln Stull Bill objectives. The school district could not look to their mes for what It was that caused this amazing turn or events. THERE ARE two reasons that I made lt through college, became a teacher and enjoyed whatever success I have been able to achieve, and everything positive I do either in my classroom or my creative pursuits is directly traceable to these reasons -Mr. Robert Wood and Mr. Robert Wentz. They were two of my hl&h school teachers and with their help my Hre got itself together. I'd Uke to thank them now, publicly. In the finest sense of the word these two lndi viduals are teachers, and teachers on tbe highest level. Mr. Wood ls not teaching at Harbor High anymore but Robert Wentz Is. The Bookman and r know that at Newport be ls still giving that extra quality that the rest of us in educaUon can work towards and hope we're ap- proaching. In my classroom and in my life I have always looked back to h.is example with the firm belief that if I were ever able to be half the teacher and person he 1s, I would be an overwhelming success. The amazing thing is. I not only remember them and what they were to me, but I also remember the thinga they said. I know how terribly lucky l was to have been a student of Mr. Wood and Mr. Wentz and I want· ed to let people know how lµcky their students still are. DENNIS CRAIG SMITH Lompoc Unined.S<:bool Dtslrict • Lettua Jrom rtadtr1 an toflcomt. TM right to conden1t ldUtt to #t ipace or eliminate llbfl it rtNJWd. Utttr• of 300 wordl or a wUl bf given prt/erence. All lettn1 mUlt In. chide dgnalurt and maUiq oddrcu but namt• ma11 be wtthhfld ors re- qi&est i/ .ul/icitnt rtason it CJPP!l~· P~l"JI wm not ~ pu bU.hed. Histories of· Success ' STOCKS I BUSINESS Wednesday'• NYSE COMPOSITE 2 p.m. ~D'I) Pricea ~.Howmber30, 1tn . s ~ 'Roots' Saver Seatch Needn't lie Costly . Slnol Al Jlaley's f amlly h1ltoW waa cbrocdcled In •1Boc>U. ••vactni ut.ctdentlbumushroolDed from a bobby ~~ Nlatlve low to anobusalcm auppcllltJ.Qa a m\alU"· ar lnd\lltl'Y. . O\dla,Js CD t.be acUvtty. lltt.tJ runnSq at • aaQ1lal rate of $10 DlWloa, are continulftl to aplral botla 1A eumben 1 ot ,.op.a. a tn dalWa Involved. I MANY PEOf'LS ARB WASTING money w.Mn an ID· qu.lryCOthoNaUQQ&lA.rcbivesoltb.tf,_.al~tre-, qulresoa17•11-ffDtltamp. . . -ID the arcblv• u. records m.ttn1 to people who laave had deallpp wtLb the U.S. ,ov~t; the>' m17 ooatlbl full detalll about a person ci'udal to ~ell reaeareh or mefely a name. · Here ls 1 l\lld.t to uat of the arcblv• and oth•r lnexpeoalve IO\U'CH: -Odn"t expect tut MQney'S Worth actlon. II~ aovem· . meat~~ckname lad•a.el. Tbe Na~llll ArcblYll bas rec!Orda of births, O\Vl11 .. and deaths at U.S. Ai::aiY fadllUa from 1814 to ltlJ, wttb .om• noorda dated as late u 1928. It also lw aome tteotda ol b1rilla U4 mamacesthrouab DU, and repona otaomecleatba ~ 19'9 of Amertcan cltJ&eDJ al>t'Olld re~ at rein.IP Service~. It will aeardl tbelerecords foitltole wbo PJ'O'." Vid• birth (lwneof child. tismcsttl.~. etc.>. mamaie and death NCOl"dl. Kolt ttl. the recordS •ubJect to nstndlom at the Na· Uoaal Aftblves lo Wuhlnctoft, D.C., or the Geaerll :Arcblv. Dlftllqn 1n SWUand, Nd., may be~ · Photocoptee of moet "1'0 available at a mOderatd ... -aEQUE8'1'8 FOB INFOUIATION ABOUT rtliaU'a· tlon1 at forelp aervlco llOlta snide i ... tban '15 ,.an aio may be sent to the State Department, w~. J>.C. 20520. Request. about euUer nailU'aUaca ID&J be •d- dresaed to the Clvll Archives cUvWCia, National Arcblv (GSA), Wublnlton, D.C. 20t08. -JnformaU0n about otbe' ortpnat records of blrtb. marriage and death may be avallUle h'om the Bureau ol \'ital Statistlas, churc~ or otbft ~ ln tbo ap. prtprlate state, county or el~.-To 1et a blJtb tertlftCJte. ad· ~· tbe vltal statistics buteau lD U.-. capital cltt ot ~ ltate tn which the birth oecurnd. liWI& date aD4 plaOe ot birth. -Tbe Superlotendent ot Documentl. U.S. OoVenuueat PrintJni Ottlce, Wuht.nttce. D.C, 3IMOa. Hlll leaflN~ 14Wbere to Writ. for Birth and Deada RecOrdl" IS etata: "Where to Wtlte for Maniai• Recotda." as cent.a; "Where to Write for DiYOMe Records'' 85 ea.ta. -THE NAftONAL .ucmvES BAS microfilmed available census acbedules and their lndexta. Copies ma, be bouabt at a moderaw cost per rOU. Upon HQuest, tbe Na· tlonal Archives will provide lta publication "Fedetal Population Censuses, 1790·1890," wblch coutalna a roll Uat.- lbg abd prices. • -Mf el'Ofllm copies or census 1cbedula (179t).1900) ar• at regional archives branches. Write tho chief of tbe Archives Branch tor• Utt of the brahches. -A Uat of people who do retearch for a fee II available from tbe Board ot Certlllcat1on ot ~ 1I0'1 N• HampablreAve. N.W., WuhlaltOD,D.C.IOOll. The Natlooal Archives lpOD50l'I ~ Hmlnan perlodicallJ. Facts about these Pl'Oll'•IDI from the Otnce of Ed,ucattonal Program•. General Services Admln1atntlon, Wuhlngt.on, 1>.C. JCMOe. Villa Park:·~fA. Reception Slate_d A reception ror Villa Park reaJdtntl wlll be hid by Bank ol America from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday to mark th• openin1 ol lt.t lint branch in the community. Utbt refnlb·. meots will be aened at tbe $345,000 office at 17883 SUJtlago Blvd. The branch -W open for business aa of today. Facilltiel Include two drive-up and~ waft.up wt. dow1 With extended buikina bodn, a 10.statlon teller Une, aate depotli box•, nt•bt depository, lnltut deposit. a mercbanta• deposit booth with -windows ( TAKING ) and~.111 STOCV'. be handled by LaVerno A Smlth, manaser, and --------------Satnl Morcos, uslltant . manager. Truat services will be provided by A.M. (Chris) Christensen Jr. ol the Sama Ana cllatrlct trust oftlce. Drive.up windows will be lft operation from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . Mondays through Thursdays and until 6 p.m. ·oo Frfdays. 'lbewalk·ups will beopenfrom9totoa.m. and Ito 5 p.m. Mondays lbro._,b Tbunday9 and 9 to 10 a.m. J'rtdara. The office will be ope:n ftom 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon· da" UU'OUab Tbursdayaand unt.ilt p.an. on Fridays only. . Au.llep•n•W... r Altee Corp., Anabelm; has reported a Iola of .. u.ooo, ot lJ ceata a •bu'e. on saln of SM.2M,000 tor ~ l'llcal )'tat ended Sept. 25, ~JDpared wttb a Joa ID 1.976 of Ots,000, or $1.CM, CD aalelof $M,284,000. The 1tni loss Included wrtteorr of load will and Pl'Q-vS1Jon tor Joa on t.be dilpoellion ol tbe uni Elec:troa.lca and· EconoUte Dhitlons. . Founh.quarter loi:i ot $4C9.000. or t cents, on tales ol, ta:SM,000 contl'alted to• protlt ot t:zsa;OOO. or 4 centa, cc Nlea of •.m 000 tor t.b• fOurtb q~ of JIN. UaC &*· tron1c1 wu ao'icl t~Uer Sn th1a year and d.lrecton roeeoUT •Pproved th• uJ6 Of certain uaeta, principalbo lnvatoQt. ;related to Altec'1 telephone product Une. Tbe ••of the tcl~h<laa product Uno took pl~ce tn flleal lt78. I' Al• REG. 26.97 24"PUWUM REG. 29.97 2'" SUITCASI · •an abi hu 1roa dellclency. -.• n.T. Dear Dr. stelaer•••: My daulbter bu been eomplaliWla Of betnc terrib11 UNd latel)'. Sbe ls 17 and lt Memt umaatural for her to ~ to sleep so earlv Ud five up dancel. ~ partJes .. h lt poulble lt'• due to. vecettnao dJet abe baa .._. OD for the put few montbl?-•~ u. Dear Dr. lleble.-at I have a slz.yeaNJld wbo it llldeu. la it· possibly due to tbe fact that abe refuaea to take fruit juicesf She ta quite pale and our pedlatrlclan Dear Dr. &eelocnb: I bavo 'Meri morrbaslfti from a larc• utm.Do fibroid. I bad a byatenc. tom1. rin StU1 weak. b it ploss!. bl• tben'l IOmetbln& wrona with myd.Jet?-Mn. v. COMMENT; I've eondemect tb• above three J.tten u ex· amplea d a common complaint: Jron deftctency aaemia. Cbroa!c Jon of blood may be a reuon. Another, eommooly overlooked. 1s de!lcJeoey of 1n>n la the diet. Oln IOXED PINDAN1S ON GOLD flUID CHAINS 9•1 1397 0....-............................ ..... .., ..,.. ......... ""· ........... ,....;. ., .......... flt .... '9lftct ON-. ;ttt Well ·~ Ol. IA.llUT awlllnoel •llff, APMOOISIA, WOOOlll LOTIOM MIN'S FAlllGI Miii FOUISOME Gtn sn ·3 PC. V1NYL LUGGAGE 'Dlt JM ;If .... ...,~ ;ttt lrtt ,...,.. "'-....... ..... _ ....... • , .. """" .. ,,,,, •• Actlll Nit DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE • It'• true that many veaetartans 1u!f er frolD lroD deflcleoey. So do many presnant women and ina.ay tnt~ta. WHAT'S IMPORTANT, of course, la d18'ft08ll. ls iron dell· clency allemta preaent? One kind of iron ls found in Nd meat. IP 8llB WON'T take oranio Julee or t.omato'julce, be sure Ibo lakes IOUle poultry or flah. Otbtr. 'aources d Yitemln C are le.,Y ve1et,b1es Uke caulinower and brocco1!-Perttapa yo~ can · iet 4GAMES FOIUSS 11Wl$1t .. 4 GAME VIDEO SPOIT RUYISION ACTION GAMf Al ........................ , .... .....,, ..................... , .......... ..... tic ..... '"""·"""' .................. .... COMPAll ............ , ................. ...,_...ms• THIS ONE DOlS "AJ.lt ..... , ........ ......... ... ................