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The Rams special auction In Sunday's Register not only will be the largest special section ever produced by The Register, but Its pages will be flooded with the most lavish layouts of four-color process photography and artwork ever reproduced In a single Issue of the paper. Get the colorful Rams special section Sunday and help welcome Orange County's new football team to Reglsterland.

Justice Probes Carter, Clvllettl In 'Billy' Case


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First Solar-Powered Airplane Sustains Flight


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vening, August 8, 1980

METROPOLITAN ORANGE COUNTY'S

WATCHFUL NEWSPAPER

Six Sections 104 Total Pages

ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA

Daily 15<-Sunday 50<

75th Year-Number 279

Tailored To Court Ruling


PROFILE OF KILLER SUSPECT

Bon/'n; A Man Of Many Faces


On a torpid little street in Downey, an elderly woman watering her lawn was asked where Angell Street was. "Oh, that's clear across Imperial Highway." Then she smiled, "I looked it up the other day. That's where (Bonin) lived." Later a reporter asked a jogger if the Bonin residence was near. "Bonin?" the young man mulled. "Follow me, he lives up this next street." At 10282 Angell Street, a car and a van were in the driveway of the modest frame home. The doorbell had been removed, leaving two naked wires that seemed to say, "go away." A middle-age man working in his garage a few doors away crinkled his nose when the name Bonin was menBy J.J. MALONEY Register Staff Writer

tioned, then said that William Bonin, now charged with 14 of the so-called freeway murders, was not well known around the neighborhood. The house down the street belongs to his parents, and Bonin would occasionally stay there, the man said, adding that "it looks like he put us on the map." A group of children, riding bikes, dared each other to ride across the Bonin lawn. One of them, pedaling furiously, finally did, then all three pumped frantically until they were out of sight. The elder Bonins for years have frequented the Ric-Rac tavern a few blocks from their house. A reporter waited there for several hours, hoping they would come in. Several times groups of children shoved the door open and yelled, "Weirdo weirdo!" Some of the children were
Please See BONIN, Page AlO

Egly Unveils LA Busing Program


LOS ANGELES (AP) - A judge's detailed plan for racial integration of 175 tax-supported schools in Los Angeles was issued Thursday one day after a state appeals court ordered the judge to drop a controversial definition of a desegregated school. Superior Court Judge Paul Egly and court-appointed computer experts quickly re-drafted their plan which is to go into effect Sept. 16 in the nation's second largest school district. Under the court plan issued Thursday, the 175 elementary and junior high schools to be integrated this fall are to be combined in groupings of William Bonin two to eight schools. Under the court's supervision, school officials will decide how many students must be bused within each grouping to proLOS ANGELES (AP) - The United duce racially integrated classes. Egly noted there are now 70 "natu- Steel Workers of America voted overrally desegregated" schools of the whelmingly Thursday to endorse Pretotal of 497 elementary and junior sident Carter for re-election after Sechigh schools in the sprawling district. retary of State Edmund Muskie pro* Mandatory busing to integrate Los mised a strong military posture that Angeles high schools wouldn't begin would not refuel an arms race. The vote by 4,000 USW delegates until the fall of 1981 under his plan for followed a heated 15-minute debate the system that has 540,000 students. Gale warnings were discontinued in Largely untouched by Egly's plan and a plea from union president Lloyd the Florida Keys at 1:30 a.m. PDT. are 226 elementary and junior high McBride to spurn Sen. Edward M. Texas authorities planned sessions schools with high concentrations of Kennedy's plea for an "open" contoday with representatives of 35 feder- black and Hispanic students in cen- vention that would free committed al and volunteer relief agencies that tral, south and east Los Angeles. He delegates to vote as they choose. would go into emergency action if the said Thursday that voluntary one-way Muskie pledged "unwavering" opstorm hit. busing of minority students from position to such incidents as the Soviet Thousands of Gulf Coast homeow- those areas into predominantly white military thrust into Afghanistan and ners stocked up on candles, food and schools may be allowed to add to the the seizure of American hostages in plywood to hammer over windows. mandatory aspects of the program. Iran, and said the Carter administraHospitals boosted orders for bottled Twenty-six elementary and junior tion has increased real defense spendwater and Red Cross and Salvation high schools in predominantly white ing by 10 percent since taking office. Army officials prepared relief centers areas of the San Fernando Valley also He compared this to a 35 percent and placed workers on alert. were left out of the court plan. Egly decline in real defense spending in the Insurance companies sent in teams and the court's computer experts, Ed- eight years of the administrations of to handle those who could be dis- ward K. Hamilton and Francine F. Nixon and Ford. placed, and oil companies evacuated Rabinovitz, said those 26 segregated "This is the price we must pay to 2,500 workers from offshore rigs and white schools may become receiving preserve our strength," Muskie said. production platforms. schools for minority students who Kennedy, who has started his One helicopter carrying 13 people volunteer for the Permits With Trans- speechwriters on drafting his acceptfrom one platform crashed 60 miles portation program. v ance, will address the Democratic Naoff the Louisiana coast Wednesday. Egly was preparing to issue his de- tional Convention during the Tuesday Coast Guard authorities said four tailed integration plan Wednesday night prime time television floor debodies were found and the others were when the appellate judges in Los bate over economic issues in the platpresumed dead. Angeles revised ground rules for the form. Allen buffeted Mexico's northern integration program - throwing out a Convention goers will hear the first Yucatan Peninsula with 185 mile-anPlease See BUSING, Page A2 Please See PRESIDENT, Page A15 hour winds and 15-foot waves Thursday but caused no injuries or serious damage, government officials said.

At LA Convention

Storm Gathers Strength

Carter Captures Endorsement Of Steel Workers

Hurricane Roaring Toward Texas Coast


MERIDA, Mexico (AP) - Hurricane Allen roared today toward the Texas coast, less than 500 miles away, gathering strength from warm Gulf of Mexico waters after a Caribbean rampage that left at least 72 dead. A hurricane watch was announced for the entire Texas and northeast Mexican coasts, and the U.S. weather bureau said Allen could create hurricane conditions to portions of the watch area within 36 hours if it continued its course. Early today, Allen's eye was near latitude 22.8 north and longitude 90.2 west - 500 miles east southeast of Brownsville, Texas, and traveling west northwest at 18 mph, packing winds up to 145 mph, the weather bureau said. Hurricane force winds extended outward 75 miles to the north and 50 miles to the south. Gale force winds extended outward 200 miles to the north and 100 miles to the south. The w e a t h e r b u r e a u urged smallcraft from the mouth of the Mississippi river westward to the Mexican Gulf coast, including the Yucatan Peninsula and around extreme western Cuba, to stay in port.

AP LAURPHOTO

JOYOUS REUNION Nine-month-old Arthur Lee Orange is hugged by his mother, Cynthia Orange, of Houston, after the two were reunited Thursday at Houston's Intercontinental Airport. Arthur was kidnapped June 16, but was later left behind in Knoxville/iTenn. He required hospitalization before being returned to his mother. A teen-age girl suspected of kidnapping Arthur hitched a ride in Knoxville, and was later apprehended in Wyoming.
"A tax system that penalizes achievement and success is a tax on progress itsell." Paul W. McCracken

Please See HURRICANE, Page A15

Jeering Yanks Greet Iranians In Capital


New York Dally News

NIWSMNR

Warm, Sunny

Patchy late night and early morning clouds, otherwise sunny and warm through Saturday. Highs in the 70s at the beaches, near 90 inland. Lows tonight in the 60s. For late news of area weather and road conditions, call (714) 972-9980.
(Additional weather. Page A2)

Inside Today's Register


Patrick Mott is on vacation.

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Weekend Life What's Your Verdict

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Classified 558-3311

WASHINGTON - A mob of about 200 Iranian militants shouting their support of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini carried their protests from the streets of Queens to the nation's capital Thursday and were met by an angry crowd of jeering, flag-waving Americans who pelted them with eggs and rotten tomatoes in Lafayette Park across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. The Iranians including some who were hssailed by rock-throwing Queens,' residents Wednesday night were protesting the treatment of 192 of theirt countrymen who were arrested herfc 11 days ago during an antiAmeriian demonstration. Tryii g to avoid an international incident, i cores of mounted District of Colurr.jia riot policemen surrounded the denonstrators. Whit > House sources said that President Carter was incensed that the Iranitfis had received a permit from Washington police to demonstrate throughout the sweltering afternoon because he had warned authorities 'Please See ANGRY, Page AlO

U.S. APPROVES CASH TRANSFER FOR IRANIANS


New York Daily News WASHINGTON - The Treasury Department has licensed the transfer of at least $94 million in Iranian cash to the 50,000 Iranian students in the United States over the past eight months, it was disclosed Thursday. However, federal officials said they could not determine how much of the money was actually being passed on to the students and whether it was being used in a coordinated campaign by militant supporters of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini for demonstrations, propaganda, or even murder. Treasury Department spokesman Everard Munsey said the Iranian funds, from both private and government sources, are funneled through four major Iranian banks with Please See IRANIAN, Page A2

Anti-Iranian Protester Holds Khomeini Effigy

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