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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-10-03 - Orange Coast Pilotan • Firing ~•f Homose~l Paramedies' · . Effort Fails To Save Baby A t5-1ear·Old San Clemente ilrl told police IB WU awabned1 earl)' Sunda)' by • naked man lD ter ·bed, wbo waa f.r1m1 to rape er. . The ~ 1aJd 1be waa able tO fiabt the man elf aQd run to i.r mother's bedroom. Police aald tbe man ..,-parently left UiroaCh tbe slrl'• bedroom wmdow, fJOm which be bad removed a screen. The •irJ described Iler u - sailant as being in b1s early 20a. She laid be Ud brown bair. Police Sa.id tbe1 believe the man left hll clOtbel 1D b1a cv, parked outaide the elrl'a home. Howe.A.ha ... . To See Paa WASRJNGTON <AP> -~e lO Houae m•mbtrt HlreG a le•al cu , but aonrnment .aourcesUld tbec mvo\Ved to datearerelatlvelymtoor. Mrs. Gandht, Sanjay, and ber COfllJ"8iS Part1 iU &llege that the iovestlgattons are part of a ·~poUtlcal venctetta•• by Prlme MUU.te Korarji Deu.l's new government. They have claimed the cbarges are baseless, c:osta are juat two altemaUve nolse control measures men· tioned by Kuyper in a memo to Thom.a Riley, chairman ol the county Board ol Supervisors. It was Rilef who asked Kuyper to outline lesal alteraativea available to the board when it wreatles with Oranae County noise problems. RHey empbasiled that Kuyper"s elJht-pa,e response to .... - ORANGE <;OUNTY, CALI FOR.,IA i I bJs query does not contain rte· "Increased landlnt and de- om'1>endaUonsforacllon. parture fees could be c::Jed 1 lnatead, the Newport Beach aca.inst atrcralt that ex a 1upetvlsor aald, the county spedfted noi.se level." tbe board counsel simply ll.lted tbe le&al of su~rvl1or1 • tecal advisor remedJesavailabletotheboard. added. ••we are ol tbe oplnlon that tbe He 1Wmt oa to ()9int out that ''lt count1 may exclude speaiflc is solely because ot noisy types ol aircraft mm use~ tbe ·aircraft" that count1 rovern· airport co tbe basil of noise COG· ment ••has the expense ot main· slderatloru," Kuyper said in his • taidin& a noise abatement office memo. and a noise mooitoriD1 aystem. '' &Gan • Jailed \ Cbltrged With 'Abuse Of Office' NEW DEUU. lndJa <AP) Seven .inontha after ~r Iron eriP on lndia was broken in a st~'bf etectioo defeat, Indira G wu arrested today and charaed with abusing her posiUon as prtme min.lster. She promptly charged the arrest was political. AidhOrities &a.id nine other peo- pl e, including four former cabbMt Jillni~rs iDd Mn. Gan· dhl's ~ secretary, were al.So anested. Kn. Gandhi was charaed in two cases under India's Preven- tion ol ComapUon Act, olftclals reported. They aald she was accused in one case~ "illegally eonnivina" with ctbera and pressurtn1 two com~es to obtain 104 Jeeps ror election work In several election districts including her own. 1'he second charge aUe1ed Mrs. Gandhi misused her J>C).'i· lion by awardlna a $13.4 million government oil drllling contract to a French firm, despite a lower bld by a competitor. The names of the companies were not Immediately released, and details of the other cha.rces wMe not mide pubUo Her 11-year admlnlstraUon ,was capped by 21 months of emer1ency rule in which an estimated 100,000 poUUcal oppo- nents were Jall«I. Among them were many leaders of the Janata party 1overnment that suc- ceeded Mn. Gandhi 'a resJme after parliamentary elections last March. The arrest came as Mrs. Gandhi appeared to be setting the stage for a comeback with a seriu of polltical appear· ances in rural areas and se~eraJ statementa crlttol of Prhne Minister Morarji Desal 's 1ovem· menl Desai was among ~de· talned by Mrs. Gandhi under emergency roles tb-t smpended civil liberties and censored the Indian press for the first time since the nation gained indepen- dence in UM7 Mn. Gandhi wu an.red in a web of polltlcat corruption ch belo• :wroven .. , -m t the I , cabinet ministers have betln ar- rested on charges of olrtdal cor· ruption. Scores of aaent.a rrom lridia's Central Bureau of 1DvestJ1at1on -CBI -: ac~ompanled by ~icewoma~ a.rrested Mra. Gaodbl, 58, at ber New Delhi home while more Uian 1.000 followers crowded around the house ch.ailtlna aupport f« ber. Mra. Gandhi wu held in her home for moc'• than an hour after the plainclothesmen arrived. She was then driven to a police jail In a CBI car. While invesU1aton were in· side the bome. Mra. Gandb& is· sued • statement cbarglnl that the "anest is a political one. It ls to p~venl me from golnl before tbe people. It ls "" attempt to dis· credit me in their eyes and the eyes of the world.'· The agents refused Mrs. Gan- dhi's demand that s he be taken away in bandcurrs, sources close to the household s aid. The in vcsllga t.ors explained thl.s was not customary in such cases. In her statemen~ the former :pl'f m aald tbOaCh sbe .bt ber Jndindual llbettl ror • bet~ be• p~ to ftiht • • ~ J"tal tbreat to the country's self. reliance.•· Police said t.be baby bad been under medical treatment tor a mouth trifectlon bUt that t.ber. wu no IDdlcatlM th1t th• hlfec· tlonortlie~cln wulnvOlv.d • ln tbtdeeth. • • 'Su"r Block' . Set for Meea COanell Stady De Patfftaee •I a Scihat Sacha the St. Bernard killa some time at a dog show I.ii Rome by pl1')'ing with a one· . County Tax Chief 1 Urges Special Meet Cahfomia Gov. Edmund G. Brown •Jr. should call the state Leaialature into special aeision to enact-a property tax reform meas~. accordin1 to Orange County Tax Collector-Treasurer Robe"'CitrOn. In a letter to Brown, Citron warned th• eovernor that he "m~ not wish to face the voters next year wltbout decisive property tax reform" having been enacted. "I am certain voters wtll not buy Democrats blamlng RepubJlcans or Republicans blamlna Democrat• for the failure to pus property lax re- forrp," Citron said. "ThiS isn't and shouldn't be a partisan issue," the tax collector added. Citron emphuii6d in his letter to Brown that, to bis view. there Mesa 'Snuff Film' Triad I\ four· eek ielay~u IJ'tnted today in tbe Orance County Superior Court trial of a Colta Mesa uphoJ1terer accused of p~ the •Urder b1 tGrtare of two WOOHQ:·be•llegedtJ hired for rolee lri porno1rapblc m<mes. Judae Mason L. Fentai de- layed tho trial of J'red BerTe Do!&ClU until ()Ct. 31 WMn M learned that the defendant bu retained -~.new lawyer, Pretrial n:aotlons wUJ tie •rJueej Oct. 14. Douglu, $4, of Z'lt 16th Placei t•mai!)S'in Co\l)lty Jail witb bal Ht at '150,000. He was arrested July 20 1n the Yucea Valley desert area by lwo uoderco!~" police women aJ. lefedly ~ ' by blm to play parta ln pomoarapbl~ mo'vtes. It ta alleced that Douc1u in· tended to murder and dis· member them u the tlDal acene in hll movie and then dlspoM of the bodies in the sui'roundtng desert. can be "no meaoln&ful tax re· form" without accotnpa.nytnc reatricliou on the apendinc habits of local 1overnment. He pointed out lhat a 1972 measure Ulat Umlied lncfeases in property t.u rates that local governments could fix without first obtaining voter approval bas failed to curtail ·~ in· creuee. That's because inflation bas caused property values to soar and, in the process, provided a larger Lax base for tar.io1 aaen- cies, Citron taid. He noted that . in Orante County tblt year the avera1e homeown•" will pay S190 more in property tax• than he 01' she did in 197&-17 "In some areu, homeowners' tax bWI hne lneteuecl by more than $300," Cltron aatd u be arl\lecl in bb letter for the need to enact proper11 tax rtfonn. llfgh StepMr r 1 .,..,.,..... FLORIDA TIWN·TRUCK ACCIDENT CLAIM 10 UVES AffCUen Recover Boc:IH From Pickup, 7 of TM Chlldien PLANT CITY, Fla. <AP> -"I did everythin1 ln my power to stop it, but there just wasn't enou1h time," says the en1lneer of an Amtrak passen1er train that alammed broadJlde into a pickup truck and killed 10 people, seven of them children. F'Jorida Hichway patrolmen at tbe scene of the Sunday nitbt ac-cidentsal4 t))ere were noaurvivors ln the camper:·baclred truck. None ol the 40 passencen ln the train was injured. TtQOPers said th~ tboulht ~victim& were m.llrant workers. They aald it Dl•Y be ap~Y or ao before firm ldentillcations are made. I EA.BLY &EPOaTS indicated that two adwts were in the cab and one adult arid seven cbildren, qes MO, were in a camper perched atop the truck bed. The camper waa wrenched olf and crushed abnost beyond recopJUoa. Investilaton safd late Sunday that they belitved they bad re· moved all ol the bodies but because of \be daroe&a aod thick un- derbnlsb WOUid acain aiA tbn>uah the cbamtd, twbted wreck•&• to- day. POLICE INVBS11GATO&S aaid they found a purse wlth fdeo- 'ifttcatlon card$ indJcatini some of the vtcUma were from Dade City, northcitTalhpa. Pete Jil.Wey, enaioe~r on the Cbicaao-to-St. Peterabur1 route of the Floridi~ said tried h1i beat to atop. Walter Boyd, a •J)OUlman for th• blabope, 1aid the •~would bear reports on several lllues today and could consider relOluUont to establish l\lldellaes for tbe ordina- tionofwomenprtests. Midwest 10 Get Frost t Ian BE ADDED THAT the Soviet· American statement provia "the era.loo of tho Amei'ican position on tb1s illue." The atatement, also called for Jarael to withdraw from ter- ritories occupied durin1tbe196l war, the creation of de· militariied zones manned by U11ited NAUons troops or ob· serv"'5 to protect Israel's securi- ty and poaible partieipaUon of t.be United Stat• and the Soviet Unim in lnternaUonal auaran- teea of Israel's bordera. 181tAEU LEADERS asserted that the dectarat!On would atllfen Arab po!~y and hamper efforts to reconvene the peace con· ference, which met brleOy in December 19'13. The Israelis con· ten~ the call for Palestinian par\1cipfUoo would opon the door to tho PLO and to creation of an independent Palestin,an on K.Neter, wbo embraced his motiter before beadin1 to a medltatfoo center to apencl the ol1b\, aald he was relea1ed because ol lll hellth. '"'l'BE PLANE GOT SO llOI' that at one p0lnt the oxycen mub fell down.from the over- head compartments,'' x.rue,er slid in a telephone interview from the Slddha Yo1a Dban meditadoa center ln the WUshire District when be prQed shortly aft.er blSSri•aL "PbyslcaJl1 U was a drain and strain. I~ to bave some sbortnell Of Jnatb. l told the hi- jackers l had an elllar1ed heart." In a private ceremony at Los Angeles home Of the aroom, singer-composer Kenny Rogers i5 married to TV actt'ess Marianne Gordon. Both star in the TV series, "Hee Haw." Congratulating them is the Rev. James Davidaon, father of singer John Davidson. who performed tbe mar .. riage. . . . Couple Leap to Death DOUble SUU:idB Fint for GoWen ~ • SAN FRANCJSOO (AP) -Ah Asian man qd WOIDU ... ,, killed iD • lu.p Otl the ~ Gate Brfdte, tbe 1lnt ~ death among m AlddtiJ the bridcewu bullt40~qo; AutboriUes were tr)'iqto"lden· Ufy the victinis of the·~ leaps. The Marin Cowlty coroner'• - fice said the couple jumped him t he bridge ••lk -ay directly beneath the north tower and landed on the pavement of a road near a rocJt.strewn area rt.sine ' Elder"' Get ft;o~rty ·Tax.Relief SACRAMENTO <AP) -'Gov .. •J!dmuDd BroWft Jr. bu stcned letlllatlon to help aentor California homeo1fnera ~ no more than szo,ooo a 1ear P1co111e •bed theft' property tu worries. Brown's office said Sunday that AB 1070 by :Aasemblyipan Fred Chet (]).Long Beach), Js a first for the state. IT \flL\, ALLOW bomeownera wbo bave reactied 12 Y•¥aol ... tO po&tpooe th.tr propert1 tu.II u loot u they wish, on coadition that when tbey die, the state Will bav• liens OI\ tbe bOmes tn. orde~ to cOUect the amounta due • . The li>meownen wl1l allO ~ seven percent annUal lntetest an the mc:meyowed. Tbe bUl was made ~lble throu,ah the voters approval or Prop.13 in lune, 1'76. TB£ DEMOCRATIC IOV· emor'1ott!ce •aid that morderto quality, these corldltlont muat be met: -Income may not exceed '20,000 •year. -Eqi.llty tn the homo must equal at leut 20 ~rcent of full aa1essed valuo -Annual f\Un11 of clalma for postponement mutt be made. with tho elate Prancbl1e Tax Boatd. -:-i A lien must be mlde to the 1tate for tbe amount ot def6t"rid . property tu .... ..- ~ \ A Needed Facility When Judge Vincent announced he will soon be sen- tencing young lawbreakers to fixed terms be also asked the cotmty Board of Supervisors to set ·the all but aban- doned McMillan Reception Center in Santa Ana aside for •~use. I lbat speclal use would be confinement of juveniles sentenced to short terms, from five to~ days. Jridge Vincent said that using McMillan for that pul"p()8&.:wouid.help keep youngsters free from the in- 11uence Of heavier off enders sent to Juvenile Hall. It would also help brin& to them special counseling services and ~rbaps keep them closer to family ties. supervisors balked at the suggestion for economic reasons even tbOUgb Judge Vincent assured them operation ot McMillan wowd not be adding additional people to the ProbatiCll~partment payroll . Super~isors &aid they will consider reopening McMillan for special use this week when more precise I financial information is available. I !I'bey can't and 1houldn't be criticized for being con- cerned with Onanclal consequences to county taxpayers In this case, however, Judge Vincent is suggesting a f unlque Wa,Y, of dealin with youngsters freshly embarked I on a troubled pathway. Supervtsoril wOOld be wise to heed Judge Vincent's 1 words aDd to fliJd the wherewithal to keep McMillan's , doors open tor juverilles with problems. ·,Closer ~It at laws l n p tt~~e_ll~meaniog lawmAkers occaslm y " <USCOVer that bills they bad approved in all goocJ f81th cOulCl1nOt be implemented without putting a .c~ financtal buiden on iovernment a1encies--hence rthe taxpaye~. · . So it bas tilcome CUstomary to have all now bills re- viewed. before fmal votea are taken. b~ an expert who can detennin their probable financtal impact. Willi this information at band, legislators can weis.h relative merit of a new law again.st its llltely cost. Lately a new -problem bu arisen. Time and tlJne again a new law triuers a rub of la ts from ind1vidu81S or firms who contend the law abrfdges their riibts by imposihg an undue burden on theii' lcaitimate activities. IJi an effort to bead Ott some of these legal tussles. the U.S. Department ol Justice plans toftle ''judicial impact" statements on proposed laws. to alert legislators to possi- ble p tfalls. This is an excellent idea, and one that could well ~ adopted at state level. where courts are similarly jammed '!ith suits and claims as a result of poorly drawu. le1isla- tion. / JOP1niorw ~ in tM 1p1Ce llbove .,. thoee ·of the o.ny Pilot J0tt1et ~ •Xl>fUHd on um ~are thoM of their authora and r .. i .... -comment ........... --tlally Piiot, P.O. flo)( 1eec>, co.ta ... CA 9Q82.tl. Phone (714) 84M321. cept putters, be made so the shafts Join the beads at the heels. never .In the middles The only natural enemy of a youn1 crocodU~. bealde1 in an. ts anold croCodlle. · Nutnerous Soviet medicos treat arthriU• t>•- ttenta \nth bee atJn&a, • Tbo center attracfion in Daooy Kaye'• pereonal Chio.else kitchen ls a stove that. eotUI00,000 .. lo the middle of bit re-. markable careers, old Ben Franklin tossed. out of his vocabWary some wotdl". Uke "certalnly:• "undoubtedly" and .. obvioo.sly ... and adopted such phrasea instead as "l imlline;" "I conceive" &Jtd "soft1eems." Noaensational' cbanae in bis outlook. maybe. JJut this Jualln1 of penonal e~reisl~ occurred at just about the1ame Ume be added to b1s t-aiowned llS1 of virtues that ~ caUed •'humility." He credited the counsel of a Quaker critic for his new ln- 1i1bt. \ • Tb computel" bo71 analYzed all tho crtmlnall wbo'vo turned upon the FBI'• Vost Wanted U.t durinc the lut IO -rean to find out that the tou"*t thut ln thla COUil· try, If tJpicaJ, ts ~bably 38 :y ara old, w1l1bint 187 ~ wttb a helght. of Meet-' 9-lnchtl. . dltot! Carter Stiff ens Mideast Stand W ABHINGTON -Tho sbaty ceaieflre that President c.rter finally pulled off lo aoutbem Lebanon last week wu the result of a cltfthanatni d-rama bol4Jy• played out bmoe. in larael, and to. Saudi& Arabia totally coocealed. from public view. The atakes were far hiiber th-an su.1pected, both for Jimmy Carter's isllm hopes for an Arab-Israeli seUlement and for U.S. relatkn9 with two Jntimate Mideast al-llea: lSTael and Saudi& ArablL For tbe first time, Uiie .President sent a touJh pri..te 'MU'Dinl to Israeli Prime Mi.alltn' Menabem BeJln: if b& did not order maraudln1 Jsraeb. troops -at least two companies of inf entry plus armored person- nel carriers and "super- Sberman" tanks -back into Israel from southern Lebanon, Begin could not count on the good offices of the American Prest· dent. Coupled with this warning, after months of Israeli deftance over Carter peace plans, was an only m~ less stem sum- mons to SaucUa ~rabia: persuade the Palestine Libera: aPolo2ile for my credentials as a friencf of Iara 1 ... Sen. Abr-aham Rlbicolf tpld Dyan at a doled- door luncheon elven by tbe Senate ForeJao ReJaUorus Com- mittee Sept. 20. Ril>tcott then dropped thJs watnlD1: more Israeli aettlemcwrta on tho West Bank mllht make it fmpoaalble for the U.S. to op()OI& • Unlied Nat!oos resotutloQ cond~ Isrul. IoaimilaTV in,Dayanalsogot the full force of Mr. earter•s true fee.Unp about aoutbem Lebanon in h1a ~ with the P"61dmt last Week. Dayan. who la .,.e; 1arded by eome dll>lomatl here as .. flexible;' uncfoU1lt.ecllY in- for med the prime minister ion~ thole taUcs that, with M.r. Carter aniry over . . . Uon OrgllDDation <PLO) to pull out al their lsraen border areas. • As the PLO's c.blef sublddher. the Saudis are powerful persuaders. FOB BEGIN. the posalblllty of truly al.leoati.ni the American • President was, in the warda of 0ne Mideast expert, "a real and praent danger." The implica- tion sent Begin by top-secret dipk>matic: messaae tbrouab U.S. Ambassador Samuel W. Lewis was that the U.S. could not go on financing Israel's economy and secunty while Israel's army was on the J005e jn a neiehboring country. Addinl to this pressu.re, Israeli Forelsn MbUster Moshe Dayan wu bluntly told last. week by a U.S. Senator and loyal friend or larael that Belin mut stop his eDC'l'Oachmeot of the occupied West Bank ... I don't have to Charles McCabe liow mmy people teach these da~ ju.st because be or sb~ wishes to? One wonders. Tbe l'Jatloaal Edueation All· sociid.ioo ~ reeenUy that while Ainerican • teachers -earn higbd aataries and enjoy better worldna conditions than ever befatt, t.belr morale la at its lowest in nan. The NEA aJd a recent survey sb&Ns that experienced teachers are dropping out in record numbers. The proportion of teachers with 20 years or more of ex-p er i e pc e declined from 21.4 percent in 1H8 to 14.1 percent in . 1978. Only ten percent said tbey would stay teaching until retire- ment What were the causes ol this discontent? The three moat often ~uoted co~J>lalnu were • neptive" student atUtudes and disd~ problems, inconu>e· tent admint.ttn.doo, and a heavy workJOad. The te-achen who tau1ht me weren't a bit like tbla. The teachers t bad, the nuns and Chrlatian Brothen, all bad voca- tions, ot Hid they; had, and they Art Hoppe Thi corrupt spoil• system whlcb pervades The White Houae these days has all but destroyed respect for that sacred American institution, The First Family. Latest dismaYina example of the 1eaulta ia Bill)' Carter. who told · U .S . News&Wortd Report that the JRS was persecuting blm, that bh heart btlonced to George Wallace, that be waa smarte than Jimmy and th1t the job or PtealdentiaJ Brother paid only a measly $200,00() • year In ptnonal ap aranca. ln1Ually, the nation h d hiah. hopes for Bllly Carter. He wu .. 'fiewed as a Jov•bl~. beer~­ill nf, aas-pumptna. bomespun philoeopher. Thia ahowa hoW dif- ficult \t ii to tell a homesp~I\ phtloaoOber from a clod. And hc>w d d Billy Carter 1ain the sinecure of Preaidentlal Brother? W~ it )'llt abllit)', tx· perl~ce, ffitellicence or c:harm r No, tt was due entirely to nepotJ m -nepotlam, pure and almple. Talk;,.~bout the eicesses • of Tammany ttall! TO DE t'Alll nepotism can and doea ocuslonally, produce capable public: aorvanta. Mia LUllan has thus far lived up lO our expectations -. Finl Mother and Mil Allie. who ls seldom IMO or heard. hu aet an excellent tx· ample as Firit MoUier·ln·Llw. On the other side of the cotn. ho ·ever. the two marrtod Fi1't . Sons, Chip .nd Jeff, bnm~tately moved Into th thlrd .floor or Ttl Lebanon and the U.S: Senate UO• happ( over the settletnents, lsrae might conslder a tactical retreat. THAT llETREAT LED to the ceaaelire iJa 80Utbera Lebanon. but it womd not have takell place without the Preeldent'• atern pressure on S.udla Anbla -a more sianift_cant. player in the Arab-Iaraeli sh'u11le than generally realized. With the Saudb. Mr. Cvtet's taek wu lhe preservation ID &ood health ~ the U.S.-Saudl Arablan alllance: without Saudi muide to move PaJ .. tlnian guerrlllas away from the laraell border, the PreaideDt wOuld bJ.ve trouble ~Congress to approve ihe sale OfF·U fi1bter merlft to JUydl. • . .:l'OYS I MISCELLANY :- Vid~o -Toy_War Looms Games Multiply But Price Subtraeted for. '77 . . ... . . SAN FJUNCJSCO (AP> - 'Wltb Onistmas ap~chm,, the , two leacl.lQ bOme video came JUJUlfadUl'WI are waeinl war ~tb tanb. subnlarines, mtn~. 2 lU4in e.nd bMet..J,l bat& -;11 • b to.11, d eoune. • ., ~ between the two .,. anUQfac~ -tarl Com· pany~~a Faircl:dld ~ Compuur Qf P•o.Alto -lit be.i-~ up with ()De lr7h1• to t.op the Otbef 1rith improvement. for the l home model Pont lllDl• lint. ~mms. t • • MAiaU.111 JWB'.N, ATAm'S udlrfft<ir of sales, Hid Poo1 • ~amt1 tJ!eViousl1 could play only ":Pe>na. Tb1a Yeitr's models can s .P191,, up to 191 diffenmt I~ eac~ includiq tank war, black- .. jaclr, doc ftgbt and baseball. test JUath skills, draw Indian 2 l>lanbts and doodle. f· The old Pao1 aame sold for n.$100 !alt rear. but have dropped to *35andlesstbil1ear. : An Atari system retalls fOf $190 ud Fairchild's Channel F Video ~ Entertainment System retails for $170. Each unlt accepts eartrid(es programmed to pll)' up te 50 eames each. The units can. be used witb any type of televlskln set. r B1,1t neither the company nor their cartridle5 are com· padble wUh tbe other. Cbuct Jacoby. Fairchild's mlll'kettna director, said Atari's ••mee are merely take«ta of ball aDd'l*ld}e 1amee. ••ney t!an't play bueball. theycan'tplay basketball." • JACOBY SAYS ATAltl'S iames are alla.lmllar. '"IbeJ qJl one same biplane. one jet, oae pme submarine. Tanb, subs and ships. It's all just tbinp floatinl across the screen;" Falrchild's video sames are dilf81'9lt. Jacoby aald, like the "Quadra-doodle/• a 1ame that automatically draws an in- i.rtca&e. e)'1Zl1lletrical pattern in seven! colorl that resembles a Navajo blanket. With the push of a but.too, the screen clears and a new blanket appears. TRB COMPANY'S blackjack game allows players to hit, st.and and double down. The player sets '500, and if he lcJses, an extra $100. When a player 1oes broke on Atari's game, it's allover. "I'm llad they did that," said Kuhn ol Fairchild's blackjack By Bil Keane 1ame. ''because it's not very re- alistic. Vegas sure doesn't 1lve you$100.". Kuhn's criticism of Fairchild's games is that they are too inflexi- ble. · *'11fEYllAVE A UNIVERSAL hand coolroUer that's very dif- !icuhtodotbings with.·· He said Atari's tanks, sub- marines and biplanes look re- alistic and.sound comes from the televisloo set and can be adjust- ed, not from the video unit like the Fairchild models. The consensus among salesmen is that while the Atari sames look better on the screen and "1er more variations, the Faircbild games are more com- plex and challenging. However, most stores carrying the models report tbey sell in equal numbers. Tbe new units are plastic, mass produced and .the she of a small typewriter. • ~. Octoei.r 3, 19Tf presentJ.r. FINANCIAL PLA~NI~. a concept for today A three-week seminar of professional help in organizing and planning your personal finances presented by FRED BASOM The serfn includes: •Money dynamics for '77 •Howto protect Yourself in this chengitig economic world •Making 2 digit inflatior:a work for you •Lowering your Ufe insurance costs •eudget end estate plaMing •High yield, low risk investments •Tax-free income. Tax savings techniques •Timing your return to the market. Stock$, bonds, mutual flinds •Real estet&-eoMmercial, income, land •Turning your tax lfeblllties Into capital mets• *Balanced flnancial plannfng •YOUR FINANC1AL PROFll!E THURSDAYS, OCTOBER 6, 13 & 20 , 7:3o.9: 15 in the Tavern Dining Room/Upper l.8Vet TM fee. is $15: For reservat1ons, please call 668-0611,axteasion 371. OUR FALL WHITE. SALES STA8TS TQDA:Y AND r "I'm never wedt-in' this shirt to school again! J I got called on five times today!" · ~~eon Droppings Threatening Jets VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. <AP> -Hangar 122 at Oceana Naval Air Station is home for a fii1ht of AS llltruder jet& and about 16 persbtent pl1eons. . l l(){t\clals are tylnr '° evict the piaeons. w~e­dropplngs are threatening tbe airplane's skin with corroe on. ·~T MANY: PIGEONS C~ leave.Jutte a e~t," said ~· Cq,_dr. ¥ike Schuster, as ety of- licer at Oceana. I Schi.ter said rotaliD1 beac:ons were installed m tbe hangar to generate a pattern of ahiftlD1 ·shadows to scare tbe birds. • Several other dmces were conslder-.d and re- jected, indudin1 rubber snakes anddfifl• of owls andbawks. · · . SCllUSTEJl SA.VS B!\BAS SOME other ideas: a barrier of plastic atrlps alq the top of tbe hangar dOOrs to keep pl1eons out or 1trlnetn1 mesh nettin2 tbroulbout the hanaar's roof area to keep tbem Cromflyiq around ortoostlq. "If they bad no place to land, t think lt would be a short time till they sought a more hospitable re- idence," be reasoned. Meanwhile, tbe ()(eana pleeon flock is "alive and healthy." he said Sheets and comforters by Martex•. A delightful medley of begonias, cherm~s. and mums on brilliant yellow. Just one of the many beautiful patterns on sale now. In polyester I cotton no-iron percale. 4.99 Twin sheet Reg. $8 i • ' . "1 . «!! DAILY P11.0T Monday, October 3, 1977 .. . Immigrant Quota Bill Backed ByO.C. BtJS'11NGS °' .. °"'.., ......... ;;; U.S. Sen. S.I. Hayakawa <R·C&lif. >bas termed )'i.idjet Director Bert Lance's reslinauon "&mo- urent Of p-eat tra1edy for America" tn a letter to Pre.ident Carter. "I f~ar for the tuture ot & country which forces o t ot office those who have m•de ireat penonal dcriflces ... to accept public otnce," H~akawa wrote. I 1 b . A BILL TO INCREASE THE combined annual lmmlarant quota from Mexico and Canada lo 50,000 will continue to have While House backing, the Carter adminlatrallon ha~ confirmed m a letter to the bill's sponsor, US Rep. Jerry Patterson <D · Santa Ana> Sen. /ll&n Cranston <D-Cahf >. has introduced an identical blll in the Senate It passed, the bills would amend a law that became effective Jan. 1 It limit• Canada •a and Mexico's annual quota to 20,000 SA Suspects 93Years.Old :Face Trial For Murder r ~ t " Three Santa Ana you hs Festivities Mark City's Founding Erin Moran or TV's "Happy Days" as grand marshal each. It cut Mexico's previous quota \n half. Canada uses only about 10,000 slots of its quota, a ccordin& to Patterson ••• A FtJNDBAISJNG llECZPTION ln honor of state Attorney Gen. Evelle J . Younaer, • Repubhcan candidate for governor. wlll be held Oct. 13 at the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. Thurmond Clarke. The recepUon commlttee at the $250·per-person event will include former Newport Beach Police Chlef James Olavas, Joan Irvine Smith, bullder John D. Lusk. Huntlnaton Beach City Coun· cilwoman Harriet M. Wieder; builder Ben Deane and other Orange Coast notables ••• DEMOCRATS WILL SOON overtake Republicans in Orange County, the last citadel of Republican v0Un1 strength in the state. That was the prediction ol former aovernor Ed· mund G. "Pat" Brown recently at a party sponsored by the Newport Democratic Club. "I wed to 10 with the fellow wbo owns that shop. He Jives upstairs." .bQOked on murder char&es after ~t police aaJd was tl\e 1an1 re- taliation slaying of two brothers 1Ji a city park last July ~ have been ordered to f&,ce trial In Ora.nae County Superior~. The Rev. Lemuel P. Webber, wllose 225-tnember reUaious and a1ricultural commune 1rew to a city ol more than 70,000 souls, miabt rub hb eyes and stare In amazement today. A variety or other events in· eluding a pet show. and banquet are scheduled on parade day. The city was named for the Presbyterian Church's Westminster Assembly of 100. Brown aaid he conalden the conquest of Oranie eo'unty an important 1oal because blf votes ror a -;::=======::::i:=========~ GOP candl<late in tbe count$ frequenUy have de· JUDGE JERROLD S. Oliver has been assigned to preside over the trial of Alejandro Mollna Seeura Jr., 18, Steven Alex Alcala, 11. and Randel Ponce, 18. The trio will be tried Nov. 14 with pretrial acUon set for Oct. 7. They are held in county jail with .bail set at $250,000. OP'Jl'ICER8 SAID THE three defendants beat, stabbed and shot two young brothers In El Salvador Park when the two vic- tims jeered at the trio as they rode past them on their bicycles. Police identifi..S th~ victims as Hector Colores, 17, and Walter Cqlores, 15, both of Santa Ana and both members of a rival 1an1. Westminster's founder will be st.anc:tlog at the croesro.ds of Westminlter Avenue and Beach Boulevard in spirit, Oct. 6' throueh 9 dwi.ng Founders' Day Celebration. • FESTIVITIES MARKING the community's 93rd year will occur each day and otter a varle· ty of faJnily fun starting Oct 6 with a carnival at the Westminster Community Services Center. The annual Founders' Day Parade is set for Oct. 8 at 10 a.m:. preceded by an 8 a.m. 10,000- meter run and a family fun run. WESTMINSTER'S GOOD old days parade will be led by lltUe Dftdll Notkn My1tic Park Unit Sel8 Energy Talk The Mystic Park Neighborhood Aasoeiation of Laguna Beach will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. to hear presentations on energy con- servation and home insulation. The eoerey conservation slide sliow will be presented by Southern CaU/ornia Gas Com· pany officials and Bill Cauthen alld Dino Soterapaulos will dem· onstrate home .Insulation techniques. The meeting will be held ln the Thurston In· termedla~ School multipurpose room. For 1oformation, call '94·170C. 0<~4.wn•st ~•Jfll/lllOld ~MMlll_Or...,..Slt.IAH""I· '"" .. 8NCll, c.' --~ « ,.. CIWlll ... ""1.i wlll • ~ ·~ 10:1DAM .. -..-....l' ,,, • .,_wlll For the b• M•cte h1 Ille Good Shepherd C•,.,.l••l'· P1..-ce llroU..rs SmltM #Nnwery~on ·----Record feated statewide Democratic ofnce seekers. ••• DISCU~ON MEETINGS on eneray will be held in October by aeven local chapters of the League or Women Voters in Orange County. Membership . in the lea1ue is open to all persons. League districts are· Anaheim-Garden Grove, Capjstrano Bay, Fullerton, Huntlnaton Beach-Seal Beach, La Habra. Oranae Coast and Santa Ana-Tustin·Oranae Additional Information is available by calling 638-0921. REMEMBER MIRACLE ON 34~ SllEEJ? .. SLAUCHTER ON 10tll AYEMUE! NOW IT'S ELEGANCE ON E. 11tb STREET! l.JN 'BEL Vi fllE lEATIEI llllS 369 E. 17th ST., COST A MESA IN WESTPORT SQUARE 646-5533 ---- Let Us Help .... ,.ANJl.Y C:OLOMIA&. """IMAL NOMI 78018olNAve. Wettrnlnster 893-3526 SAN DIEGO <AP> - Medell•• Rawle)' McOellaa Lacey, 84, a cl Vic leader who wu San Dle10'1 official ireeter of A1'ctl~ e,Jtplorer Rlehant E. BSitd tn 1931, di•d Sal'ltday on ber bl~. ,She also .... actl•e ln the national prohlblUoo movement. 0 CELLO, Uta.ti . CAP> -Jim Mike, 105, a Palute Indian credited with dlscoverln1 the natural rock formation Rainbow Bridle In 1outbern Utah. died Wednesday. PlJBUC NOTICE ll'ICTITIOUJ aUJINHJ NAllUl&fATC,_.IMT , ... ~ --If Oo'"t """'" .. ii...:11.M"°"MY 01',,CU. t• Cllllter Ori ... ~h<ltll. (AfZM) PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are here to offer you help through counseling and referral. There is no charge for our service to you. We refer to both p\lblic and private agencies in Orange County. Facili- ties to care for individuals are available on a 24-hour basis. That means we can help you wh never you· '.,,eed help. Appointments are not necessary. If you prefer to make an appointment, day and evening hours are available. (Office hours: '8:30 a.m. ·-5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday:. Jn extreme emergencies, a counselor can be reached after 5:00 p.m., and on weekends.) Let Us Help With: Crisis Intervention -When a problem is so big or complex that you are unable to see alterna- tives, talking with a professional may help.· f Marital Discord -A counselor helps establish a sterting point and guidance for husband and wife. c;.....,......,,tUVle~ ~-=:;a~aw ... 1 ... Adolescent Problems -The years 141hrough 18 ••v....,GeMn1M1t-are trying for the young person as well as his T"'9 IU!t ....... -· flled •1111 Ille t I . . f Coul'llv""' .. 0r.,..eoun1, ... s.,.. paren s, earning to communicate 1s one o tef'llW•1 '" .... , the basic steps a counselor can help bring "'*'.,.. er ... c.o.it o.u, "''°' 0c1.i.10.1'.u .m1 about. 412H7 Single Parent Problems -The single parent 1'1ay ••llllil••••ll •-A-l_L_E_R_G_Y_?_ • ....,. often feel ignored in a couple·orientod society. Trying to be two people, mother and father, (714) 543-9624 can be too difficult for one person to ha~dle. R 8 c 0 r d e d Geriatric Problems -Sometimes a sen ior citizen Messa1e parent needs tender loving care away from the ALUICT CUTIDL farntly, spec1al1zed nursing care, or a place to TIOM live with others near his or her own ago, and loa 113. hi ca 12SH the ch ildron who make these docisions .must leJrn how to cope w ith their feelings of guilt. 1 . ... ,,,__ Collcernina litestyle satisfaction, 11· you talk-ic> 10 foreip seniee officets- (FSQs), you may get 10 different answers, dependin1 on the· FSOs '· ~rscJQl experience. A duty post. in Bermuda. for inst.an~. is much dlf. fereht than Clfte in LeninCrid. . Older PSOS tend to apeq llowmct1 Of their etijoyment m tenrJnc abroad. ~ut some y~er FSOS. and thefr spo\lllel are raislfti questklas about · inadequate rJ>•~: 1sqlation, b .. lth hazards aridlamiJyproblema. • .. FllEQUEN'I' toMPLAINTS focus on boredom for ~ siuse, and condli tlons at some po.1ts are aald to harm dlildren'a educational and social de· velopment. While it's atypical, aome host govenutients diacouraie aftu. bu.siriess socJali~ wJth cltbens, a pollcy wbicb makes dlplomatic famWes feet like sallon denied shore Jeave. r The upshot: if you're enteri.Jia the forefah service expectine an adven- tur•pacbd. posh existence filled wkh servants, dauline functions and WASHINGTON CA"'P> ,-Some peo- ple call theil1 "jiailk tAtlepboM calls ... Tbey are prerecordN me11Nes. \intolidted, which ~.set wbeb you ans;-~ your pboDe, whldi has been dialed tit an autotrtaUc drnc~ . . 1'-J'EllllON ·"1LED 'di with \ht Federal Comn\unlcatlOns Com· :''*'"'....,. thae callS u. ln~· • eel the petition Mb u;.:C1 to tOOaider restricUOns to the public .fro .. nuisance, &bnO)'Ute .and lnvasiai Of privacy." The de\ice lDvolved'dlals a Serles of t.elepbane IW.lllben, either preseleet- ed or chqu!o at random, and: plays a :prerecorded meau1e wben the ielepbone ia answered,; the petition H)'t. When the caU b completed. the device autOmatJcaJly caJlt Ute next number. THE PETITION, FILED by Walter ' Baer of Santa Monica and Citl.&ens Communications Center of Wa1hlnaton, D.C ., 1ay1 the Widespread me.of tbe devices by ad· vertllen COuld brine a ban.,• of wi· :1<>lldt.c:l ~alla to ri.Ddom llomtS at. any boUi' of the day or lll1ht. lf you have a comment about th,e ·matter, ..nte before Oct. l8 to lb• Federal Communieatloo1 Com· mill~ .PUbUc Information Offtcer, 1919KSt,N.W., Wublnatoa,2055t. ) special prtvite&es, you'll be disap- pointed. · AS ON~ VETERAN FSO fold me, "Hardi~ have atw.,s ~ iD Uils. career -tttey're Just-belnttalked about montnow. •• Be&innlnc pay for FSOs usually is $11,500 or $13,500 annually. Between 100 and.100 FSOs are hired each year of the m«e than 14.000 applle.nts who take thO foreJan Service Entnnce Exanlnatlon. To pus the eaam, you need a "l°t'"Qeral. over an knowledge of everything," ia the way one recruiter putt~ · N6 PAll'nCtJIA COLLEGE ma-jor ia required -not even a college dearee. Ne~rtbeless, many of those hired have craduate degrees in public administration, political science, economics, or history. Some are lawyers. Some are 1eocrapblc area specialists. You need not know a foreign languqe eoing in, but you must lean at least one soon after being h.ired. About 75 institutions are listed in Lovejoy's College Guide as offerin& courses or l>roarams in forei•n 1entee and diplomacy. Further, the Foretcn Service says you cab acquire the knOwledge you need in the •tan· dard eun'icula of most American col· letes and umveniUes. IF -You. CANNOT obtain •P· Pi'>\Qtment as an FSO, you may be , able to entet at. the clerical level and ~rhaps take advabtage of upward mobility ·prorrams to reach pro· fHaiooalstatus. The .application deadline fat tbe next FSO exam i• Oct. 21. To Obtain an applicatloa, aami>le test; ad:l car- teet information Write to: &ard of. Eumlnen for the Foretp Seritce, ~ 9317, Rosslyn Station, ~ • Va. ml9. Aak for all available career :UUrature. inclu4J.q clerical lf you wish:. CABSON ClTY <AP) ~ A South Lake Tahoe woman bu plunged to her death in a skydiVini mishap near her•. 1 Cats0n City authorities said 22· year.old Katby Butts, a Stateline caalnO dealer, apparenUy didn't pull her rip ~rd in tiU)e Sunday. Friends jumpiJlg with the woman 1ald .a>e be1an tb• trip with a free fall trOm the T,SOO-fOot level abd Just wait- ed too lori1. It wu ber 21st Jump. FRANCONIA NOTCH, N.H. <AP> When Anoe Bfi11s and her boyfriend went to spend a quiet weekend in New Hampshire's wilderness, they found 500 people there with the same idea. "U I had wanted tQ see this many peo- ele, I could have stayed in Harvard Square,'' .Ml. Brite• complained. THE COUPLE DESCRIBED their · hllce alont a trail on Mt. Washington as "like a forced march, with people '¥alk· ing in front and behind us.·' Droves of hi.ken, lured by the coun- try •a awakened love or the out.doors. are trampinc their way up and down trails in New Hamablre's White Mountahi.s. But forest officials say all this Jove is wrea.Jdn8 havoc with the miles of trails in the northern part of the state. And dur· in1 the summer, enthuMaata who come to commune with nature are more llltelf to run into a neighbor from down the street than a dffJ' Ol' raccoon. In fact, Ma. Briel• did meet a neicbbor. "ON AN AUGUST weekend the popular trails ln the PresldenUal ranse look more like downtown Bolton than tbe wilderness,., aald Ned Therrien of the .. . White Mountain National Forest in- formation office. •' P'°i>l• find themselves walkina ript on top of eacb other and it must ~rta.bi)y detract from their wilderneaa ex· perience," be said. State Police say weekends also mean traffic jams alon11 the roads ln the na· tional forest, a section of the state wblcti 1.1sually brings to mind rockY wilderne14, pine trees and c!ear mountaln !ltreaina. IT WILL WORSEN through the fall as the fallfoilage turns. · A representatlye of the Appalachian Mountain Club, which employs :M people during the summer to maintain the . trails, sald the crews can't keep up with the da.tnaie. •'The problems are compounded in the summet with almost • 'mllllon persons usin& various trails around the nadoaal forea\," said Karl Wendelowskl, wbo manages the club's Pinkham. Notcb camp . . . Mondmy, October 3. 1077 Sixty-livt boats In senn · classa turned out Saturday and Sunday for Lido tale Yacht Club'a Fall Retatta. Lar1est cJa.uea were the Ll~lu, won by Cbad TwlCMll. UYC, and Sabot As,·won by Jerry Nol'IQan, Bahl• Cotintbian Yacht Club. Both cl~ had 13 eD,triet. Summary Of ttsulta: 1'ID0-1' (13) -1, Cbad Twichell, LIYC; 2, Al Lopes, BYC; 3, Dave Tln1ler, LIYC; 4, KenH.UtiSan, LtYC. LASER 01) -1. Tim Cannon, DPYC; 2, Steve Otto, BCYC; 3, Gordon Wanlass. BYC. ADULT LASER (~ > -1, Bruce Twichell, VYC. Voyagen Sailors I • ScOre in Races Voyag~rs Yacht Club dominat- ed the Singlehanded race for performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts sponsored by Balboa Yacht Club Sunday. The winner was Jtrry, skip- pered by Roderick Woods, VYC; second was Lumaran, Bill Rohrs, VYC, and third was Gypsy, Allan Brown, VYC. Winner in the !:tcbells-22 class was Amante, sailed by Bob Searles, Newport Harbor Y a.cht Club. SABOT A 03) -1, Jerry Norman, BCYC; 2, Davld Fran-co, LIYC; 3, John Pernick, BCYC; 4, Ned Shelton, LIYC. SABOT B (6) -Cassandra Smeltzer, NHYC. SABOT C (9) -1, Evan ldalanoaky, DPYC; 2, Bryan Hauser, BCYC; 3, Ray Garra, BCYC. MOTHERS SABOT <8> 1, Colleen Gibbons, BYC ; 2. Carolyn Ross, LIYC. Bal, Yaclwman · Walea Champa The Balboa Yacht Club team of Mark Hu&bes. Robin Sodaro and Steve Ross won the local ellmina- . Uons for the Prince of Wales Trophy in a round robin series of two races sailed in Etchells-22 sloops Saturday. The BYC team defeated the Newport Harbor Yacht Club en· trv of Tony Wattson, Dwight Beldon and Brooks Benjamin. The Prince of Wales is a 1)8· Uonal match racina ladder that climaxes after a series of eliminations ln the eieht districts of the United States Yacht Rac- ~ Unlon. .-:--:-~~~~~~~~~~;..._.;.__.;-..:.,. __ ..,._~__;;.......~--::..;:...:....:-..:-...,;-..;;,;..;...;.;..;..;...;...~-----....;.,.;~~~~---~~~!"'t""' ChOose from ,dlfferent memberShip P"9rams. Including our two week inlrOll~iffer • ...... 510 South Beach Blvd. SoUth of Lincoln Avenue (714) 826·0381 c.... .... 2.100 Harbor Blvd. Harbor Center (714) 549.3368 . ECOL.OGY /·MISCELLANY r ..... SCliland Changes Tenanu >, • . ~.October 3. 1117 t I • > .. \ I ) ... Your <tteams am bec.ome reality ... if ~pan for them nO\V. Whether It's Euro~ next year or college in ten years, Home Federal ha$ a~ plan oestghed to hetp you. . < • For flexi~, use otir ~ ~accoUnt. You am~ funds an~, Ma.still~ higher Interest than wJth any bank passbook aa:ount For long .term goals, we have a' plaQ' that \\!11 double~ money Jn 1~ than nJrie years.• Whatever ~ur need, ~tever ~ur bud~ you're sure to find a savings plan to suit you. Start with a goal of $2,500. Because once you raadt that magic number, you can enj<7y the many fun-filled, money-saving benefits of our Investor dub. \ Remember, ~ a little effort from you and some help from us, your dreams can come true. Don't watt, start earning today. Together~ can make things happen Huntington Beech Office: 2111 Main Street• 63&-.6511 Huntington Beach/Downtown: 411 Main Street• 636-6591 lrvlne Office: 4543 Campus Drive • 752-6181 , San Juan Capistrano Office: 32039 Camino Capistrano • 49a;.()6'0f Santa Ana Office: 100 West 17th Street • 835"'4336 Seal Beach Office: 1350 Pacific Coast Hwy.· (714) 898-3481 (213) 59&l5576 ., . Home Federal Savings and Loan Association 9f San Diego . ' ' . •Television ~Entertainment ~· l..Olf #<lt .. --Wtls.11)1' c;. ...... ,. cew-rl Mey-rylll ~ ... , Ot•ct Pa•tu• To1.i, lt 1 1 1 10th Title peeted for the klckolf, the 35th mffUnt in the o.oce-bltter rivalry which dates to the blrth of the old AFL 17 yean aao O~land, the defendlna Su~r Bowl champion, lost offensive tackle .tOhri Vella and linebacker Phil VUlaptano in last week's 16-7 vlctory over Plttsbur1h. Defenalvto back Jack Tatum wH &lsooothequestlonable list. •'My time you loee a player or i>l•Yttl Uke these. it has. fot to hurt you," said Raider coach John Madden "But that's one - Monday. October 3, 1977 LOS ANGELES (APl -The biaaest question mark in the N•· tional Football Leacue remains the Los An&eles Rams. They wlilpped the San Fran- cisco 49ers 8'·14 Sunday in a came they dominated. but it was only the Rams' third victory of this um campalfll. Lawrence McCutcbeon and Jobn C.ppelletU each ran fOI' two . toucbdowna and the Rams scond 17 points ln the ftnal period to in- sure their record at 2·1 and a share of the NFC West wltb Atlanta. •+TbJs is still not the kind of football team that I want lt to become." declared coach Oluct Knox. "But we've made a Jot of improvements in the put two weeks. We wanted to run on tMm, particularly into the mid· die because t.hat San Francisco defensive Urie is so quick that you need to nm the ball on them tn Or· der to neutraflie their pass 1'\13h.''' E v en 1 'i m p y · le 1 c e d quarterback Joe Namath ran. When he scnmbled up the inld· dle for aeveo 1ards to keep a second quarter scoring drive alive. the crowd of 55,488 ln the LOS ANGELES <A'P>-A Los Ansel~ Dodgen-Pblladelphl• PhiUies i>lt\Yoff sertes, some feel. ii a little like gettina your dessert ·before you get throucb the lift!' and peas -t.be National Lequ& pl~olfs fl,ure to be the best ol baseball's postseason fare. Los Angeles and Pbiladelphla square oft Tuesday night in Los Al)gelts for their best-of·llve playoff set, a series thit 's expect- ed to be ao good it threatens lo make baseball's annual fall classic, the World Serles. seem anticHmactlc. Sunday, James Rodney Richard struck out 14 ln hurlin1 the Houston Astrot to a tour·bit, 6·3 victory over Los AnaeJes u the Dodgers set a major league ho.me run record and em· bellished their attendance mark. Dusty Baker slugged bJs 30th home nm. one of three Dod1en homen in the sixth innil\f. The thing we've felt that we've always had, pretty rood depth. Now it's cotng to be tested." Tbe Chiefs, 5-9 tbe past three Ollrt'T .. ljlac ONltliiel 7 ., • seuons, faabloned a 3.a ellhtbi- tion record this year and sparked hope that their much-advertised rebuilding proaram was becln· nlng to bear fruit. But a seuon- openlnc losa at New Eneland and last w~k's 23·7 shellacklnc by DAILY PILOT Colhewn came alive with its bit· cest ovation. The 3'-year-old quarterback hit seven of 14 pasaes for 126 yards and 4.idn 't throw for a toucbdown, but neither did the newcomer to Los Anceles tiave a pass Intercepted. He wu a ked twice but last year wbeo the n Jost to San Franclaco l&-0 at the CoUaeum there were 10 aacb. Tb.ls ~ tbe Rama• oftenelve Une protected the quarterback. :the def enae intercepted two 'Passel and there was a blocked kick by Bill Simpson that led to a score. The victory was costly to Los AnceJes with the Joss of wtde re-"celver Ron Jessie, who suffered a Jenee iltjury alter a lint quarter catch and underwent SUJ'tery to- day. Still, the Rams appear to bave jelled into the type of club that won divisional Utles the past four years. .. We have becun play1nc tocether acaln. •• said veteran of. tensive euartt Tom Mack when aslltd boW hla club conlalned the vaunted fraa.t four of San Fran~ ci co•s ~ecse~ .. Dodgers becatnettia first team in major league history with four 30 home run men. Baker joined St.eve GarvtY. 33, Renie Smith 32, abd Ron Cey 30. Richard 18-12, re11trlcted Los Aneete'J to Just one hlt for five In· nines. then was ta1ce<1 for the three home runs in the sixth. Los AIT ... ,OT , ...... ,..~ l'llU ... Cllll•al LM"nttlts..S 1$11."' __..........,..o.m .. Ke,....a1Yat....,\'ork. l2LIS11"' Pllllealllh!UHMMltla, S 10."1 ,,.,....,.,._. K•-Cltyat ...... Y•k,S U p M , .... , .• o-. LOJA/lftl1 .. 1l'l>li10tlpflle, 12 up.m. · ,...,Y~•I te-c•tv.• 1.tp.rn. ~·Ga­HewVerUl lC-Clly,J "' "'· ........,-.o-H•• Y.,k 11 1<a111a1 c11r, 12 u P m., II lllC8UMY ,....,...,,.0.,,. .. l.oa ....._.," •l Pllll-tpll1a t:IJ p.m, ff fl9<t__, -V~MIC.,._CtlY,S.Up "1 ,11--..Y San Dteao liave put the Chiefs in dancer of another diam al year. '·we are ln the process of crow· lng and we are aware of that," aaid coach Paul Wi1eln. "I think we've 1ot to evaluale Just what fur team is all about rltbt now." The evaluation resulted lb frM uent1 sh<>vina two veletan Uneme..'\. otf the lll'lt team . .Bob Simmons wlll start ahead of Charlie Getty at left cuafd and CUit Fra7.ler has wrested the left defensive tackle job from Willie J.ee. ~ \ 'Until Jn~g Uie 49tn1, t~ Rams bid only beaten lb• Philadelphia Eagles this year:-1 once in tbel1 1·5 p«!Season 4UlO anlo in the second reaular se~ game. Los Att1etes now hat a ~,i recorii while tbe '9tts are0.3. "'"'~ A1n,..,..ytnl• PHlll'Q Y •refs Ae\Url\Y•cll Pn-Pw.U Fumbl•l.oA PtN IC.tl·Y•rn ... _._ ti 11 ~ ..,.,,,. Ill '-t ,. 7 l'-~lM..O 1-~ .... I ,.. , .. ll-101 f.10I An1teles, which seemed to have the West DM.slon clinched last Aprtt, ii a team easer to make a hero of its novice man•ger, Tom· my Lasorda, who last sprint promtsecl anybody whQ'd U,ten. thatthiDOdaers would win itall. bUadelphia with it• in· tlmldaUng lot of brutal 1tu11ers. {ft the playoffs for the econd &tralght year. and manager Dan· ny Ozark swell'5 the experience will tilt the seal~ the Phili' way. Anet II the experience doesn't do it, there's always a fellow nameit&teve Carlton. Carlton, considered by many to be the best pitcher an baseball, will catry the J>hillies · baMer In the ~er Tuesday nl1ht \n Los Anleles. Going for the Dodaer!> in the fil'Sl ~ the belt;of.five serieS Will be Tommy llobri,• MOUlTD" .., ... J tnnrt lil t Oav•llllOtf Ca11t11a 4 1 l t C..dfnect • , > t Wat-lt1 J 1 ! l CeMlllllll I 0 0 0 '"'"'• •o •• Wall1t11lt 4 t l a NM• •OtO """ mlllll c • 0 , 0 "Nltll1'H •Ot t "lflltrclp l 0 0 I J I t ia·· D~Y PILOT Mond.y, October 3, 1971 -Eilbl TD• ..4,_,. Gittens Setting i~:· Sizzling Pace f>' · ' • lb IOO a CAaLSON fullbaek type, but. he'a taken ai !l ., .. ....,,.....,. aomereahhots. t bO .._. ntvtr to e1117 tbe ••we try not to become a ooe- baU ~ for the l'ountaln baek oaeme, but u 1ood a 111n-vaue:; Barons, Willie Git· ner as be ts we want the ball In !.i...... attllln be0 the peCoatestt his bands. Tbua,.everyone le tey-r -·runner ranae u ingonhlm.'" .,eafootballblltory. · Major colle1e feelers are a • Wltb ~ tbrM ••mu behind dime a dozen at the Fountain Mm ln Ilia aenior year tbe •pee-Valley mailroom. but Gittens ~cular Gittens, a 172-~und says he bu no preference at Uilil • ntatlon, baa scored 32 point. toutbdowna tor the Baf'()CS -"I just want a free education, .. eJ(bt th1a year, 16 as a Junior and says Gittens. o:i.itfl)ltlntbelutfour same.of the · Wlth a 172-pound frame. Git· --,5 campal~ tens lacks somewhat in stature Gittens aave FouotaJn Valley on the major colle&e level, but f an1 a scare Thursday ni,bt Pickford point. out St. Louis wbeo be 'ftlll off the field with a Cardinals standoUt Tel"l'Y Mel-ba~ lnjury after seorto1 calf was very similar u a prep ·Mee oo nms ot ~ and '5 yards and collMeplayer. 104 cmly three cames. "Hell. or-eays Pickford. "Git- But Gtttenuaya UMifl\jUl'1w• tens hardly compares with a not eelious and wtth JoteiDI aod brulllng fullback. But you don't str~. expects to be back on run workhorses in the Kentucky ttie practtcefleld today. Derby, either." tn tbeae three aame1, as Whtie the Fountain Valley of. Redlands, Long Bea~h Wilson fensive line continues to improve and ~telJa <An abeam> have with each outing and comple-- fallel\.!>.Y scores of 35·6, 35-0 and ments Gittens, Pickford says it's 49-0, Gitt.ens has avera1ed 9.2 8 two-way street. )'1lrdspercarcy. . ••A good running back · 'Glt~ens bas two goaJs i~. mmd generates this in linemen," says ~r this season, and says: _I just Pickford. "ll"s one tbmi to open want~ team to keep winrung -a hole for a back who runs three and I d • !fke to 1et 1,500 yards yards and falls down. But when l'U.Sblna. . they know everyUme Willie While the first. aoal seems touches the ball he may be 30 almost automatic for the Batons yards downfield, they don't want Dream Team, tbe second mJaht tobelriinabadoa.&Uftlms. be tough to accomplish, even for a "WUlle'a a natural aUIJete. the W=~ stand out: First, kind that mates a eoach JOok with games aettina out ot hand awf~ eooct. without dOilia a quickly, it's touib for any coach thins. R>UNTAIN VALLEY STANDOUT WIWE GITTEN8. . . . to keep poun&ni away with his bfft. ~ndly there are others awaiting their chance to play . • Tblrd, with a back of Gittens' .~rn•. it would be foolish to mk . esstnJury. Chargers Rip Be~gals lthough he possesses the tural talmt • ueat fUDDeJ' , Gittens ls not unaware or e blocld111 up front and SQ"S: Ciney-SD Trade Pl.aYf R.01,e in Shocker • Our line has bee.a blowinf open me nice boles. J>an .Dtnnb, lTY Bwt;en. BJ"Yan Caldwell. '11y, ·all of the .linemen are do· •Job.'• llte.ns acli:nlts a preference to ruiliiC over the taekle alot . 'Wr be can take a cbolce of akin& to the inside or outalde. 1llao eruon ~ OA~ end pass from quarterback DOu1 Tho~. "because ft sets me lia the open quicker." ''Gittens is ~1er, faster and better than h.st year," aaya P.ickfotd. ''Maturity means so mueh. There ts just no com- parison between tbe averaie lS!yeir-Olcl Ud 18-yur-old. ''It's easy !or a kid wbo ts mak- ing a Jot of toucbdoWJ>s to think the world revol~es around him. tiut W\llfe's a team player. And he's tou;h. He's nol 1l brui.llns Firatee, UCI 'A est ouinan club team lDYades the Oran,e Coat area Tuesday to bat~le Orange Cout ~ 8M UC I"tne in watli' polo actloa. occ· wUl boat the Germans at 2 with the UC Irvine match set for 7 tNewport Harbor HJlb. SAN DIEGO <AP> -Tbe San Diego Cbar1ers bave beio U'ansfonned 11lto wbmen with • 2-1 nccnl. But the wa, tbe Chi· cinnati Be11gai. play94 was "ve&T ~:· ~e~ to Cinelnmti eoaca.BW JolauGn. ''W• c:ouldn't even tick a field goal." Jotmsoa said. sb.aklq bis bead lo tbe locker room after the Bwall' aw upei,et loa to &M Charaen Sunday. "We went to pieces. "It WU DO cont.est ft'om the open.Loi tlckott. No answer for Jt. I bow we are a better footbell team." .JobnsOn &&ld aa ttie ~lell to 1·1. Tbe mak.iqs of thl.I tame 1tut.c1 after Uie 1m aeuca •hen Clllc1Jmati tradecl &W&J'. wide Neetver Qiarlle Jolaet to the aw-,.. iil ntum tor cte,;. femive end Co; Bacon. Baeon IJ*lt most of the after- • AOOO ~ his face 1~ In t.be dirt ·by. tbe Char•en • ol· tena.lve line, •bile Jomer wu brin11n1 a wln·•tarvtd San Dfeso Uowd to fta ftet wlth a daulln1 performance. San DI.ao quarterback Jam• Hanii teamed wttb Joiner for a ' 30-yafd touchdowp pass alter en&iDeietinf an "'1ird drl\'e on the pme•a flnt aeries. BOYS AND GIRLS 8 thN 13 MAY ENTER FREE AT 1HEODORI! ROBIMS FORD lZ060 HAIOIR ILVD .. COSTA MISAJ OI ANY LOCAL llANCH OF JWtlOR ARIA IOYS CWI '"' , ... "'" ""."" .... ...... .,....w ... , .......... 808 LONGPRE PONTIAC LoalCa••H"- ' ................. ................. 19U611 .... ~ .. -~i.llOI~ ' . • FIL. OCT. 7. 7 P.M. tlWIMcLI PAU COITA...s4 More than $3,000 wotth of pttn1 w1Q IM ahared by wlnnera of 10 ~ Plgakln Plckeroo '77. Th• re9ul•r feeturil of tM Dally Pilot ~ Mctlon t•sCa the footbaft o•me outooeM .,..... dlctlng aldn• or hund...U ot Onino- Cout aport1 tine and gridiron dadcln. A one-year mem nahfp at NeutUua Ne~ -• co-.d fftneH c.nter faVONd by .,.._ attMMa -wut '.be aw•rded e8Ch w.etc to ttt. Daltr PUOt ,._ ader Who beat ptedlet9 the ouecomea Of foO'ttiatl oontettt from coa to OOt11t;, NautUu• coridltfOnlng 9qu~t ta favored by pro footb1U te1ma. N1utlfua Newpott I• locetM at 4220 Von KarrMn Avl!tMI, N~rt 8eacm. hcond •nd thtrd pl1ee entrant8 wlll ••ch NCtlV• • '10 olft certlfle•t• from Sou1h Cotllt Plue. CertJftc•t•• ~•Y be red""'*I .. 1ny of th• mall 1torH. To be eftglt>t• for WMldy contest awarcs., ent,.nt• muet1ptedlct th• wl~ nera of each of 30 footbiaU g1me1 and al10 eu-•• the total nuftlber of point• acored In 111 30 o~ntH. . """'" ill'khree h • ·-=~"ftn>I .ttlle OttlJ ~ ... ~ --.. ~··' , ............ FOOTBALL I GOLF I MISCELLANY I Area ·Football For This Week ftunda7 Nl&Jat'• BlPSelilool Gamea NtWport BaiMr 'fl ~ (Alaahlm) at Santa Ana Bowl (1:S>). Direetlons: Nortb on Brtstol Ave. to Civic Center Drive in Santa Ana and turn riabt. Kemsecty (La Palma) n Foutal• Valley at Western (Anabebn) Hill> (7~30). Dlredleaa: North on Beach Blvd. to Ball Road. Left on Ball, rJ&bton Western. Aqu.tau (Saa Beraanllao) ys Caplstraao Valley at. San Clemente High (7:30). Dlree&a.s: Soatb on San Die10 Freeway (5 > lo A vemda Pico tu molt in San Clemente Lett an Avenida Pico. Frfday NIOt'• Rip Schol Games Mater Del (SHta Aaa> vs Edlsoe (ffuUqioa JSeull> at Orange Coast College C8). Dlrectleaa: West oD Adams to Fairview and turn l'iabt. Loa AlamltG9 at Baatmctm Beaela (8) Loara CAaalaelm) n Jlarlaa <Butla1toa Beaeb> at Westmlmter Ritb (8). DtrecUoaa: North on Golden west Ave., school located on left, just north of San Diego .Freeway. (8). Oranse vti Estaaela (Colta llle11) at Newport Hµbor Hilh Dtftdloa.a: East on 17tb or 19th to Irvine Ave. and tum rieht. eon.a del Mana El T•ro at Mission Viejo High <8>. Dlrec:Uaiu: South on San Diego Freeway to La Paz turnoff ln Mission Viejo. Left on La Pu, rieht on Chrisanta Drive. Laiua Beaeb at SH Clemeate C8). • DlrecUom: South on San Diego Freeway to Aven1da Pico in San Clemente •nd turn lert. Elflaere tlrvlae Cl). Ha~ Valley Cbrlatlu (Newpo11 Beadtl Tl Maruatlla <Areadfa) at Monrovia High (8) <Eigbt·D)&n footbell> DlreCtlCllU: North on Sani. Aria Fr~ay to Orante Freeway (57). North on 57 to 210. Cootinue aoi1b on 210 to 210 West. West on 210 to Huntington. Drive turnoff. East on Huntinlton, left on Monterey Ave. toColorli!oBlvd. Satitnla7 Nl&bt'• IDp Scll1oeJ Games MWI09 Viejo v1 Co.ta Mesa at Orange Cout Colleae (8). OU.U...: ( Fri>m Misaion ViefO) North on 5 to 40S. West on 405 <San Diego Freeway) to Fairview Ave. turnoff lb CO&ta Mesa. Turn left. or> Fairview to OCC, located at Fairview and Ada ma. Daaafflll ntJDhenU.7 (lrvtne> atlrvineHieh (8>. l>lftdl-.: (From Univenlty) North on CuJ~er Drive to Wal.nut and turn riRht. <From Dana Hills> North on Santa Ana Freeway (5) to CUiver turnoff. Turn left on Culver and proceed south to Walnut and turn lei\. Bet.Ml Cluistlan <Gardea Grove> vs Uberty Christian !Hunt· la~.Beacb> at Ocean View fflgh !Huntington Beach 1. 1 JO pm <Eieht-m.n football > SaCIU'CIQ Nletrt'• JaalOr c.uece Ga a es Oriqe CGa-1 CoHqe •1 Grwam•t at San Dieao State (7:JO). · ~: SOuth on San Diego Fl'eeway (5) to Mission Valley })-ffway (8> in San Diego. East on 8 to San Die10 State. located on rtghL FOOTBALL .. Cont.mued From Paae B2 h11 te&Dl to a rt· 1 victory over the Houstoo Oilers. The 'Dolphins equalled a f1r~t· pertod club scoring record as Benny Malone ran for 53 yards and a touchdown. Miami added 1t.> final tally in the fourth quarter after Vern Roberson intercepted a Dan P astorini pass at the Houston 48. ST . LOIJJS AT WASHINGTON Bill Kllmer threw touchdown passes to Frank Grant, Jean Fugett and John Riggins and the Washington defense stopped a fourth.quart.er threat as the Redskins edged the St. Louis Cardinals, Z4·14 Late m the fourth period. with the score l4 7, Washington cor- nerback Joe Lavender inte~pt­ ed a Jim Hart pass on the Redskins' 32 to end a Cardinals threat. The Cardinals had scored only one touchdown in two previous games and were unable t.o cross the mid fteld stripe until the third quarter. PITTSBURGH' AT CLEVELAND-Pittsbur&b. quarterback Terry Bradshaw threw three touchdown passes, two to Lynn Swann, and ran for another as tbe Steelel's took ad- vantage of numerous Cleveland errors to beat the Brow,ns, 28-14. The Steelers put it out of reach early in the foUrtli period when Cleveland's Greg 'Pruitt fumbled and Steelen comerbaclt Jim Al- len recovered. The Steelers went on to score on a one-yard dive by Brad~haw to make 1t28·14. NEW YORK GIANTS AT ATLANTA-Rolland Lawrence set up a seco nd-period touchdown wttb a JO.yard punt return and Atlanta salvaged only a field goal and a late touchdown out oC six other opportunities as the Falcons downed the New YorkGlants, 17-3. The vlc.tory was produced by a devastating Falcons defensive unit that sacked Giants' quarterbacks nine limes for 81 yards in losses and also re· covered two fumbles and in· tercepted a pair of passes PHILADELPHIA AT DETROIT Dexter Bussey ran for one touchdown and scored .mother on a pass from Greg Lan dry :J~ the Detroit Lions took <t 17 13 ''t'tory from the Phtladelph10 Eagles Bussey's lirst score came on a 14 -yant s weep on the first play after Levi Johnson intercepted a Ron Jawonkl pass late In the opening quart.er. J aworski threw two TD passes. the nrst a 32-yarder to Keith Krepfte and tbe other a 16-yard 1 strike to Harold Carmichael Doug English blocked Horst Muhlmann's conversion attempt after Carmichael's TD Steve Mike-Mayer kicked a 45·yard rield goal for Detroit on the final play of the first hatr. Goast ·Area GoH Results You Me 1nv1l\fd tn trrt'I CHARLES FRACE. Wildlife Artist Pt.OAI l rlll'..., r I\ <..011<J·11 l 11li I HURtiOAY. <X TOBER 61h 1 00104 CXlPM • ,, (ll10'111n1'~ Former Bustier Davis· Running Less, BUt. Scoring More By CRAIG SHEFF Ot•DtltW~SMN Former ·Golden West CoUege standout Muk Davia, Colorado State Uoiverslty's Jeadin• rusher a season ago, has run ror less than 200 yards ln four games tbls year -buthe'sfarfromdlsmayed "I'm not that concerned wlth my yardage total, I Ju.at want.to contribute and do whatever I can to get us into tho Fiesta Bowl," says theS-9, 195-pounder. And Colorado State bu to be considered as a coate.nder l0t the Fiesta Bowl since the Rams bne won thelr first tour aames this season -knockin6 off Paclflc <20-J>. Hawaii (~16), Northern .Colorado <48·10) and Utah (44-3). "[ dldn 't start the tint two game• because the coaches Baseball X·N~Y: k Boston BalUmore Detl'Oit Cleveland Milwaukee Toronto L Pet. Gil. 100 u .617 t1 6' .802 2~ gr 6' .I0,2 2~ 74 u .csr :26 71 90 Ml 28~ 67 95 Ai• '33 SC 101 .335:45\il w .. tl>IYl.don .x·Kansa1Clt)'l l02 eo ,QO Texas M SS .580 '8 Chicago 90 '72 .s:sG ~ Mlno a 8' TT .52'l 11•"i. Aa&ela 74 88 .457 28 Seattle 91 .~ 38 Oakland• 63 • .391; 38n x-cliocbed division Ut.hJ ... ......,.. ..... .,. ..... M.~1 .. ~111111--.~ .. ,.,,,... .......... , ... 'ttftl ....... Deltllt7 ..... ,,,Cllklle9t -.c-satr a. Otliftnll• • ,,. ......... Ml ....... 2 n ... e,Ollldt11t1 NATIONAL LEAGtJE East~ll~ Pet.' x·Phlladelphia 101 u .m Pi~t\. 96 66 .593 ~ ,1wanted to loot at some freshmen. But I knew they woul<t be countlnt on me as the season progressed," says Davis, a La Quinta High (Westminster) pro- ducL .. I came to Colotado St-le because I knew some of the other guys from Golden West would be here. And Colorado State ran the veer, which I liked at Golden West,•• says Davit. St. LOuis 83 79 .512 1$ I ~hJcago 8l 80 .500 "'-. Montreal '7$ 8T .463'i!6 Davis, who ran for 1,806 yards in two seasons at Golden West, had 845 yards for Colorado State last year ~amine second team AU~Western Athletic Conference honors. He's one of lour former Golden West players on the Colorado State l'Olter. The otbem.Anclude ticht end Jack Upton, middle linebKker Mark Nichots and atron1 aa!ety Andre .(.opez. Upton and Nlcbols a~. NJehols was a down l!Dem•n last seaan, but bu •wit.cbed to middle linebacker. He nmed secood team All·WAC laurels ln '16 and thus far in 'TT leads the Rams in tackles <24 unasslst«l. 12 assisted). He's a 6·3, 230· pounder. . ............ , ~~"Q;J:·.· . ___ ... .; - • Tb& Rams haw switMed from the veer to more ol a pro-style of· fenseandDavlssaysbelitesit. .. We have• new offensive CO· ordinator and ••really like this offense. We've bee!l mo-ring the ball well, tiU\ we bn\m't rea\lf' opened QP yet,•• •-.YS Dnis. Despite PinfnC. less 0.-n 200 yarcb Dub has scored ·stx touchdowns -five 011 short yardage nmnlnat sttaatlciU and the other ona ~JUd pus. And be•a bop1na to a4d to that total this Saturday when tlie Rams take Oll the Univet&.tt.y o! Texas <El Paso). • I 1 NewYork 6' 98 .393~ /. WHt.DtvJ1lon x-Dodltn i98 M .60$ ... Cincinnati 88 74. ..543 l4 Houston 81 81 .500 17, San Francisco 1S 87 .483 ~ San Dtego 69 93 .426 29 ' Atlanta 61 101 ~:m. :rr x-cUJ\cbedatvlaion title lo,,ii.-.,,~~ ,.......,.Ollc.t01·1 HtwYortl .. St..u.llC Ad ...... OfldlwMlll3 ........ '--~~ 6M'*Oat,.SlnPl'll"'3tc01 ~·U--1-.cll EShmition 'Fiff~ ,, ... •Ji {) d J .. 'by Brad Anderson BOOMER MISS PEACH 1.:r ~ f :t I :a • ~,POYCUfr'JU.Hld ~~ OP~ )QA. WIDIMALL? ~ by Wm~ F.Brown and Mel C.uon j ~ I 10•3 • ---,. bY,Mtll c . l '-------------~--------~~~~:::z.a~~ byTom Batfuk t , DOOLEY'S WORLD tlJT'r, , I'M ~ OFF I I. GOT SIX &J5HEUl OF~ A Dff.rl l , u.u.._,_~.......,w.---.i~__.;11.1.1.~ ,~ by· OYrtes Radrlguu , TODAY'S CIGSSWDBD PVZZLI GORDO .... ----------------... UNITED Ftature Syndicate PuuleSolved: d1an IHder 42 CllMra 44 Wl1d apple .-1ct11n .. e civets A9Turnedto water 51 ---Monica 52Vtrdl • heroine 63 PrlmJy proper 6fGrat---: O.r. battla• ship . 65Zoosouna 56 Of the Scots 51 C.remoni&l ·act 58 S.thfoOrn Item 801nt'l law Auoc. AFTER COMMING t11S MEETI~5 WITH TME ATTORNEYS FOR THE MARTHA l.AVENOAA ESTATE. ~AM ORIVER DEC10ES TO Vl5fT T'HE PRIVATE DET!CTl'IE AGENCY! I MUST COMPJ..AIN TO THE MANl'G!R OF THAT FACTORY PEANUTS ' t • , STOCKS I SYLVIA PORTER Monday". Cloaing Pric 1 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ~··•-lnV-ltMH a.I .. Hew 'l' .. t. ,..._,,, J'e Clfl!I>, l'•W, -...Oft Ootroltano C.•n<•nlWlll 11~ t. ··~-•--..,N N ..... tfA1-lal .. ofS.Cur1t .. 10.••~-ln>l" .. I l/N OAIL 't PtU>T Eeonm.IC! Gloolll False 'Facts' • Muddle Views By SYLVIA POBTBB "'*""'•'-.. Me ~ following atatementl true or f alJI t -The unemployment rate II a by tndtcator Of lnf1 • tionary precaures. Wben the rate rt.ti. demUd dwlQ and prtcea are under downward PIWlllftt. W!Mn lttalls, cte:: mand perks UP and prices are under upard PNMUN. ftll lJ • Mtt8r Indicator o1 lnllallonat'1 prequrea Ulan tht • ernplO)'ment raUo i -Chances In the U .s. wholesale price lDdu fo,..tell cbanies ln the consumer pric. lndex. -WHENEVER lNrt.AftON HAS accelerated Ot' e. celerated, crucial factors have bffo aharp cbaDJ• in fOod prices due to crop failures or surpluses, 1b&11> eba.qit1 ln n· duat.rt.al and raw material prtcea due to •bortaa'9 or cur. pluses, or such events as a war or the Arab ~Uol of oil prices. 'n>ere is no close Ue between the bustneu cycle at such and inflation. , -Tbere is no elose tie belw~ the bmlnea cycle and food prt~ either, •ince food Prices resPOnd prlmarlly crops. -Economists are aware that the rate of lnOation te to perpetuate ttsolf, and tbty have e•c:eUeut .records OI roree•Hn& inflatioo ntea and turnmc potnta. All are f&IM, accoJ'd.4tC to 1tgl_lel by Dr. Geo«Hy Moore, expert on tbe business cycle asaociat· ed with the Natlonal Bureau or Economic Research, ln a recent Morgan Guaranty rnon- thly review. SINCE IT 18 ELEMENTARY THAT oJuUons to thein· natton problem cannot be found untU lK• problem ls id•· t.i!ied, a rec<lll'lt.ion of what Moore cj!la "five Uttle·knowo lacta aboutintlation" may beof crtUcll value: FACI' ONB: The employment ratio u a beUe!' lodic of inflatSoo.ary pr~ures than ls the unemp~e:nt rate. All 4ocumeotaUoo. the mOlt recent up 1 ln lnllaU began Iii t.bi •Pi'lnl of 1178, when the unemploj'~ wu at a~ 1~ perc.nt. In 19C§t. Artbur r. BW'ftl. R~ Board Cbattman, summidM It~ "lii~ dM oot waft for fall ellJplofaMitL.. Mon mi!icattft la Ult · pereentap old>• worldn• ... Jq>Ulttkia bo!diq }*. FACT TWO: The whot ale -,.ice tndu u not a tOOd toreeast.« ol. COGSWl2V pn • no matte1" Ytbat lojlc 1esta. Only about 30 percent ~ the WPl ts dir U1 ntaled to pricee we pay as consumers. Th• rest. Incl raw materials. machinery, etc. lfouaine, rent. mortaas _m. tertlt ud medlcal are not covered b Uae WPJ. l'ACI' '1'1111.EE\ Every be"ineu Clowntwil a:bu:e 1941 has been usoclated with a slOwdOwri la tM tAfladoo rate and every uptum with a speedup'lli tbetnfJ.i&a rate. ·-o. tbe recont, a stow~own CX' rec w been both a1 ~cessary and a 1utflcient cond.lUon to ridue. Use iDflaUoo rate. A business recovery and expanaloo bas been both neeesnry and sufficient to rallle the Inflation rate," Moote says. NlW~). I~ ............ ·~"" ....... ~":::::. ~· ..... ~TJ':l. :::::. 11....-tt..a A ..... v,,. .....•• .,, ... I I I I DAILY PILOT \I( ),\;I},\ y EVEN&NG :001~0 NEWS TH! AVEHO£A8 MICKEY Mouse CLUB HEa<LE ANDJECKL£ lf.8AM 8TFEEt VIUAN.1~111;. A8CNEWS e TOM AND JERRY 8) WNr TILL YOUR FATHER GETS HOM A kindly beek.-per bloc*• Hany'a effort• to exterminate a 8WWm Of b.-~ hie l'louM. HODOEPODGELOOOE • Monday, Octob41r 3, 1 m e;oo ,-CBS NEWS =ENCVONEI ~~~ Stella Stevens and Robert Deman are im plicated in "Murder in Peyton Place · tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4. 'The Oak!Md RakSer9 dah with the Kanc&J City Chlef9 at Am>whead Stadium, Kanaat City. G MOVIE **'Ai "Love M• Tender" (1058) EM9 Presley, Richard Eg.,. A pair of blotheta from the SoytJ\ ftoht on oppoalte aid• of the CMI W•. (2 tn.) • TKe PAATRJDOE FAMILY Otnny Isn't dotng too well In hi• Engllah clau and matters aren't helped When J.aurle tak• over the class as a ,4 student-teacher. CD THE ROOKIES A tattooed foot la the rookies' only lead as t~ search for a runaway girt. azOOM G FOODS FOR THE MOOEAN FAMILY "C9nnlng" 8.'308 MOVIE **IA "Madame X" (10&6) -cUna--Tumer, John Fotaythe. A young &aW)'9I' dllc:iCMn that the woman he defended on a mur- der charge wu actually his mother. (1hr .. 30 min.) • TffE 000 COUPLE Much to OICllr'a discomfort, F•bt brings home an aban- doned baby. • A8WE8EEfT "Retreat" Unpr~ compe. tltlon and tM c:haOenge of out· door Hvtng In Austin, Texas ~ lnterrecla1 Under• atandlng. • Gl) FAMILY PORTFWt "Whit Mak~ A Marriage Succe.fW?" Cl> C88NEWS 7:00 8 NBC NEWS e UARSCW8 • CAROL BURNETT ANO FRIEHD8 ' 0UestS: Catol ctlanninO, Msty ~-' • LET'8 MAKE A OEAL •rs a e1VL& :rhe third Of thne preview. of a new clllldn1n'a aeries featuring the adv«tt\#98 Of a gll'I who OW!come9 aex-r<>'e stete0typ- lng to ~lty handle a job u a gu atatlon attendant. YOGA WfTH MADELINE Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:SO G CONSUMER BUVLIME Oevid H<>rowltt vl11ts the Con- aumer Credtt Corporation and talk• to G.necal Manager John Wold. 8 NEWL VWEO GAME Q) THE BRADY BUNCH Wedding day f .. tlvttles prog- ress smoothly tor a widower with thrM daughters untn the fllmlly pets decide not to go along with the Idea of peaceful coeXlstence. a> ADAM·12 Offlc:era Malk>y and Reed make some unueua! arrests and Reed delt\118f'S a baby. a 28TOHlGHT 8) FRENCH CtfEF "Small Kitchen, Big ldus" ()) S100,000NAMETHAT TUHE 1:00 (I) ELVIS IN CONCERT The legendary rock superstar mellows a bit and puta his dls- tJnctlve style to good use In rendltio,,. of popular atand- arda, country favorites and gospel songs H well as I reprtaea at put hhs. Rati11g• Guide (Meiries -..... •c.rdtnq •• llo• •"IU ~ ._. 10< TV are 1...-11¥11"1llc:.l • • * • -Excellent ·• • tt -Very Good ** -Good • 't -Fair * -POO< LOS ANGELES (AP> -. 'SY JAY SllAIL8l1Tr ( J Anc>tber new sitcom eased in TV REVIEW over tbe week•nd -CBS' "We've Got EulLOtber.'' lt was _ _ El Doggo, even though it w_, made by the Mary J'yler Mocte gadget&. The clock dldn 't ring or works, whifb usuJlly .bu cl.sy bl&U. ltscreamed. Okay wares • A Saturday night etfort, the ibow has Oliver Clark flDd Beverly Archer s . a married •couple. She works for a Cashion pbotograptier <Tom Poston). He Jolls at home as a copywriter for • mail-otder house. THEN HE MADE breakfast, she got ready for work. A crisis developed. You knew that when her employer's top model, a dense, nasty blonde played by Joan Van Ark, called and said she had a crisis. D LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE "The Handyman" Catollne 8COePts a handyman'a (Git Gerll'd) onw to oomplete their unflntaMd kitchen In exchange for room end board. but aoon nnd9 henett the ta,ic of loc::a.I b3ov1e **~ "The Unknown Wttder-. nea" ( 1973) Adwnture. Two teenage boya aearch for the labted treuure of Frenc:hy Latrek while exploring the unacceHlble mountalnoue areas ot Wyoming and Montana. (2 hra.) 0 JOKER'S WILD tD ILOVELUCY "Lucy In The SWISS Alps" '8 MOVIE * * * "The Ralnmaluw" ( 1858) Burt Lano .. ter. Katharine Hepburn. A oon man, poelng .. 1 rU'lmak•. not onty enct. the drought In a 9m8!I Southwest· em town, but mo brings romance and cotttldenoe to a spinster. (2 hrs.) 9 THEAGEOF UNOEATAINTY "Kart Mane -The Maaaive Oluent" Marx' own phraaea natTate this evaluatlon of the Impact of aociallat thought on the 191.h century tl!) EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER LAW "Marbury V. Madleon" The authority of conatltutlonal lnter- pretattqn Is Ofven to the Judicial br9r1ch of government. 1:30 CONCENTRATION • OROSS-WfTS ID ASWES~EIT "Gf9d&lallon Flashbadca" sw- denta from PontlK, Michigan gtlM ttMlif vtew1I on eerty bualng: "CNrle Brown'' PC1'1tand, 0-. gon atudenta di.cu. ....._ types ..,.,,.. and tMChera ha~ ot eact'I other. • 9 00 8 (J) BETIY WHITE Joyce and th• 'Undercover Woman' caat encourage Doug Potter to stop being • measen. ger boy for the network and statt making decisions for hlm- aelt -soon after Oouo t1nd1 hlmselt without a Job. G NBC MOVIE "Murder In ~ton pt~" (Premiere) Ed Nelaon, Dorothy Malone. The grtuty alaytng ot two young Peyton Place real- dent• trigger• • wave of Intrigue and auaplclon Which aweepa the towo. fJ MOVIE ***IA "Grand Prix" (1888) Jame. GardMr, Eva Maile s.Jnt. lnjurlea, r<>Mance and competition WMve the lives of three racing drivers togettw. (2 hra.) G IRONSIDE o.tactlve Brown dlM:OY8t1 the body of a man during a plenlc In the ptllk, but the body dlaap- pears before he oen get aid. • MERV QRSFAN e M0\11E *** "Blf1h Of A Nation'" (1915) H.wy 8. Walth81, Ulllan Glah. The evenu ludlng up to and during the Clvll Wtr are ~In~ notonoua o.w. Grttttth F11rn Whldt ~ the theme ol NyM aaperiortty and the Ku Klux Klan'a r<>'e In •aav· I~ the nation.' (3 hra.) e DAW> 8U88KIHO "Death On Demand -A Debate On The Right To Ole" 9 MOVIE *** "The ~ Is A Lonely Hunt•" ( 1968) Alan Arkin, &lndra Locke. 1' mute commit• auldde after tits only friend dies. (2 hta.) 9:30 ()) MAUDE "Victoria'• Boyfriend'' 1'ne llbenlllld ~ h• no place In aoollty-8l ...... thllt .. what VlctOrta Butterfleld'a 9lem, West lncl9n father (Aoeooe L• Browne) prof 11111 wtllle Maude protesta. 10:00. (I) RAFffRTY Dr. Rafferty playS detective for a pregnant altllne atewardeas who feera ~ WU expoeed to radiation from an air cwgo crate end c.n't get any Infor- mation about the shipment. Another patient. • paralyzed cartoonist, la Nied with anger stemming from Mlf-plty. all NEWS • NIGHT GAU.ERV Three sl9t.. end a brother fight for their llvee In a haunted hoUM. 10:30 I NEWS 11:00 8())0 NEWS HOUYWOOO COfiD(£CTlON G MOYIE **~ "Lcwe Me 1'Mder'' (1He) Elvf9 Prealey. Richard · The premiere show started by rousine ber at dawn wilb a new clock Clark was testing for bis boss, a purveyor or crazy Sbe said her car was broken. It turned out to be a fiat tire. Miss Archer went to retrieve her and bring her to work, aa Post.on was l4> shoot a big fashion spread that day. Miss Archer -seen tut season as a swr dataib~r on ABC's first flop;, version or "The Nancy W a1ka' Show'' -always runs aucH errand! for the model, we learned. and seems to ba~ the chore. Betty in TUBE TOPPERS SO WREN SHE and Miss Van Ark arrived at the office, verbal snipina occurred. Miss Van Ark demanded. an apology. Miss Archer refused. Miss Van Ark demanded she be fired. Poston aald, "Wha!" Mm Archer quit. For the rest of the show, Polton, playina an absent·mlnded cenius, noun· deTed 1boiit. So did tbe rest of the cast. They seemed to be walling for GOdot or a 1a1. Neither ar· rived. A neighbor or Our Couple, sporting a T·shlrt that said "Pool• by Ken," dtd arrive, tbougb. He said he'd bad a fiaht with hl.s wile over some hot dogs Then be withdnw POSroNllADTHE best line in the ahow. For the record, it · went : "A vacation That's what you need, a ruce long vacation. Ta.Ice an hour." The act.ors were okay. But the script by Tom PalcbeU and Jay Tarses, creaton of the series. needed somethtnl extra, like maybe a vialt to a bonfire. It wu reeble, weaker than even the weakeat altcom ol the mid·1950s. Unl•as drasUc im provem nt occurs, I (ear the out· look (or "We'vt Got Bach Other" ~ ..... -...~;.:....:.-~ ............ ~~ • .is ob, no, you do 't. ByBOBTllOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP> -"I don't dare send out my laundry,•· says a super-cautious Betty· White about the chances of her new show in the 1977·78 television season.. Industry. sources would advise Miss Whi~ she'd sun be around CBS Studio Center to aet her laundry back "The Betty White Show" seems one of the better prospects of the new season. After all, the serles stars the well·liked Betty White, and sbe is Joined by Georgia Engel, also ol "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," plus the accompllsbed John Hillerman. And the show has been put toget~r by two MTM vetcuns, David Lloyd and Bob Ellison. "Btrr JT WILL be an uphill fight, no two ways about lt," said Betty, a realist after 28 years in television. ''It's no easy slot, OP· Poslte pro football on ABC and NBC's Monday night movies "Jack Schnelder !CBS ex· ecu'llve) fold me not (o b1:r ,alarmed by the early raUn1s. and I answered, 'Shouldn't I be soylng that to you?· He explained that of course NBC wlll throw its hest movies into the ftnt of the !leatron. Football will perform as usual, he sold That means an nvcra1e 33 sbare of thl' audience 35 If it's an especially iood game, 31 tr lt'!I not so aood "On the plus alde, tb.e first thing in our favor wu that CBS picked ua up for the ntlV season. The second b a aooct reacUan in the trade to tbe pilot. Third, we've bad excellent. scripts. That's all-I mportant. No performers, no matter bow clever they are, can carry bad scripts "rl''S UP TO the public. That's what it really bolls down to.'' Betty had been reheanlnc a show tn which muerman, as her estranied husband and dlreet.or, mo~ back into her house. Bet· ty, the star 0£ a pol lee show on TV, haa been sharing the house with the dellahtfully dim Georata Engel and doesn't relish resum· toe the battles with her bmband. Jle demands to be led, and she serves him dinner -cat tuna. The tnt.erplay between White and Hillerman bad a pice zing to it, sort or a hi1h·class ''Pete and Gladys." Betty White admits that if "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" hadn't come alon1. ''I'd stlll be doing the game shows. com· merclals, talk shows and tryln1 to sell my animal show.'' When the role of Sue Ann 1Nlvens, the Happy Homemaker, cam• up, someone 1ug1eated it was "a aetty White type.'. "8VT WIULE ICKY·aweet on her cooking show, Su• was reallY Egan A pair of brothere from the South fight on opposite aid .. of the Civil War. (2 hra.) tD FOREVER FEANWOOO HMllW Hartman h .. a divine vision; Tom movea Into hi• cat; George fella Into a Vlt of ruato-r.um; ~tta auOoumba to a hend8ome temptaOon; Tom meeta a pair of twms. • PERRY MA80H '"T'he Caae Of ~ Jaded Jollet" A. • 'Of'f •bout the etrange world ot 1h• ·~tNctc•.' the 8o-celled beat ~Eal I LEKAER REPORT 11:30e(J) CBSLATEMOVte' • ••~ .. I.let .. From nv .. Lowra·• (197$) J~ Altylon, Ken &Mry. Thr• lettera. delayed tor • ~ by • plane craan. ~u. 1\191 oft~ _.of kMr9. (R) 8 TONIGHT Guel! hott: Jonn Denver. Gueata: o.orv-aurna. Dr. Jotln Uly, Teny Garr. Kenny Aogen, Alcha(d Pryor. e LOYl.~8TYLS "Hawrttd ~I Attll!IM'' DMOVE *** ''Deedller Than TM Male" (1N7) ~ Jotnon, Bk• 8oe111..... .... gli'tl .,.. aulp8Cttd ot bllng execution- .,. In • plot ~lnMred by • muter c:rlmlnat. (1 hr., 4'5 min.) 1=.oe "CheQk, Mate And Murder" (Pert 1) MORNlHO 12:00. lWIUGtfT ZONE "The Mlgh1y ca.ay• • L08T IN SPACE "Flight Into The Future" • MOVIE *** ~ 8tcxy•• (1954), Ann. Baxter. a.wit COc:tnn. Aon'*'Oe .... In hgedy fOt' • young c::ernMlt ~. (1 .ht' •• 30mln.) I CAPnONEDA8CNEW8 12:30 MOYIE **~YIMTI~·· (1935) 0.. Autry, 8mH9Y ~ Whln • cowboy'• tathw 11 kllled, ne ..i. out to find the man .-ponllb'8 for 1he cnn,.. (1 hr.) .. MAONEILILEHRER AEPOR1" 12:40 di MOVIE * * "The Sectet Partner" (1911) Stewart Grenget, Haya Hat ..... A Brltlah exeoutlve la a.bMdoned by frlende and hi• wife ""*' ne'• acouMd of bhlckmal and <0bbery. (1 hr., 20mln.) 1~• TOMORROW G...st holt: K9lly ~ 00- anchor' ol t<HBC. Loe ~ MWL 0'*1ia: Vldll Siiilloon, Deborah Manantr, beauty CONUlt*lt&. a piri.nba t)'Pe,'" aaid Betty ... In fact, she wu hPtilf an -Uair with Lan, PbylUi' baabanct." Other actresses were audi- tioned.; Tbe ttlow'1 producer• were reluc~t to cast Betty because of the close friendahiP. of the Allen Luddens <Betty White> and t.be 1Grant Tinkers <Mary Tyl• Moore>. But CBS talent ex· ecutive Ethel Wlnant said, "Why not try Betty?" Sue Ann wu a hit rrom the. sYu't, particularly because she · .eemed· so cilfferent from Betty Wh1te. "I 1.ISED TO be a. bal·and· twiner on talk lho~, but nobody seemed to notice,•• ehe re·· marked. •• 'The Mary Tyler Moo.re SbOw• was tho fint Uma anyone beard "bat J said.•' .. TELEVISION' G 18PY Th• theft of a top Merel sample of rockft feul brlnQt "Obtnaon and Qcoh to Acr.puloo on 1 • trait Of a *\Jtlful bUt ekJaiV. ~. 1:15 NEWS 1:80 HIW8 • MOV\E **"' "Private Uyee Of Adam And Eve" (1980) Mlc:k•lf Rooney, Mamt. Van Dor•. A tMd to d ot gambler•, nroute • te> Reno, .,.. ~l\d II\ churclh.(f hr.,30 min.) 2:00 NEWS 2::30 NEWS ~ NEWS S:OS MOV1E ***1~ "Andy" (19e5) Nonnen Aldef\. Tamara DlytcemOl'IOYL The ~ eon of an rmmi- grant flmlly ~ out to hi• oommunlty. «tty to be mlaun- derlCOOd and ,.buffed. (1 hr •• 25mln.) ~:30-~ME I ENTERTAINMENT / THEATER ., ........... STARS TAKING THEIR HIGHLY PUBLICIZED 'ACT' TO BROADWAY On Mlnnelll, Bany N .. aon Ch•rrp Pubic, Not Cltttc1 'Aet' NY BOund Li~ Troupe Drow ~heen, Pans 111 JIOB 't'BOIUS . . .. LOS ANGELES (AP> -Critics 1enerally dlSttke ll. AQdlences seem to enjdy it. TH paU.m ts ~Y to be repeated when UU llhUielli opens "Tbe Act" oo rsro.ctway on Oct. 29. "The Act;" fonnerlJ "Sblne lt On" and before ~ ''ln ~." ts the most written and talked-about stage musical ID recent times. Most ol the wri~ and talk baa been bad, yet the • ._. ... .._~ • ..u..m C!JlciMO, Sia l'rancbeo and DOW bere at tll811usit Clater. •1om ama1ect at tber.diaD" sa,s krneat Martin. who with ,iiartner Cy Peu• U. proc:l~ed • Gu1• ud l>Olb," •'Slit Stoelrings .. and other bitl. ·•·HERBI! GOES TO MONTE CARLO'' - "SEN.Jr • ~~. ""THE HtU.S HAVE EYES" "RABID". "eXoRcisT ll:THE HERETIC" (R) _...., ___ _ \ 'Kookie' Byrnes Looks for Co~back nor.r H MOOttl ,11\M( S RllNll 011/ \HE SPY WHO lOVEDME done about 10 films since leaving "Sunset Strip," but most of C1em were in Europe. He said his latest mm . "Stardust," WU a blg bit in England. It starred rock singer David Ea.sex, and Byrnes played himself, which sbow5 people haven't foraotten him. ••The English ap- preciate me," be said. "They really like me, and ijley hire me. They t.h1nk I 'm• Sood actor.'' HE SAYS moat of his fan mail these days come& trom West 'Germady, where the "Sunset Strip" series ls J'UllDina on tel6vtalon. ''But I can't afford to answer Jt. You know, the photographs, all those--------- stamps -thalstuCf 1.8 ex· ' -~LYPILOT Monday, October 3, 1977 ECOLOGY ., Shuttle Effect Questions Remain Unanswe~ed l . • . . •• flights from Vaodenbur1 Air Force .Baae near bere in 1982. A PaEUlllNAllY environ- mental impact statement wu dtaemaed at a bearina that at- tracted about 300 pe.raons, lnclud· lni members of the Cbum•h Jn. dian tribe. Burial aitea located ou land owned by the trlbe, and which might be affected by con· struchon of shutUe facilities, were another issue raised. One member of the public, Paul Kelly, complained that the impact statement dealt only ellgbtly with the shuttle'& effect on wild.Ule. "I AM DISTRESSED to learn that the focal point of sonic booms will be at San Miguel Island, one of the last nest1.n1 places oJ the California browa pelican in Soul.hem Callfon>.la," said Kelly. He added tbat the boom• • caused b1 ...,the rocket-laund*l craft could" ....Wt 1n the btrdl leavinc their nests and 9XPOlb:l8 their eggs to predaton. The brown ~ellcJn ii an en· dangerechpedes. Choose more tha11 ·~ Ala roaCB LT. Col. Earl Jones said &Ollie booms woWd OC· cur only·on particular launch• of the ahuttle and that wa~ were ~ IOUpt to avoid them. The Air Ftfte expects about 20 rugbta a yeu to beein and md at V1 .. denbutj. Tho illue of posslb weather modification bys rocket fuel d~ launches as raised by Arly: low-tar cigarette will give you a low-tar number. ~~ But tliete's something else that you should consider. We call it "filter feedback:' As you smoke, tar builds up on the tip of your cigarette filter. That's "filter feedback:' Ordinary flush-tipped filters put that tar build- up flat against your lips. And that's where low-tar Parliament has the ad-. vaatage. Parliaments filter is recessed to ke.ep 'tar builduR ff om touching your lips. So there's no "filter feedback~' All you get is that smooth Parliament taste. -J •• a: tr .. ., -Arln Landen •lb'Qscope The CSHfOmla Mart, bralnt:hHd of Rawey Morse, displays more 'lhan 8,000 lines. •People '-classifted eaturinn. ..... ·~· __ • ____ a A.any Eaks. left. end Wa)ne .Jarvis prepare for wax oasting proc~ Susan Spiritus · Phpiography Is not new, but collecting It Is .. And it's a serious business for a NewpC?rt resident H~ llmmet Gow' Jlaft7 Clllaha ad Jel'I')' Uelamana. · 'Iba thee .,.. wbM -· _. ... o 111l la" the~ and eomlng .. aam. ID the tM•••HM Jfke' Joum cawa, Dnid BayJea and JNa llyaos. 'TbcJtocrapbJ la not .... " MYa tbe .,.,,._... old 1lfllo&biar ol -.ro. "lta been al'CIUDd fOr 15t 1'ftl'r. bUt eolleet:lnc 18 .... It .._ m1; been ..rtthin tbe lat ftTe ye • so. adall:r, ev.n i ... thm th&*. about Uiree ,..... tW caa--. Us beeome. MliAlua bum.a. .. 'Dae Newpen Beaela reatdeet 1111111 8W '*h 1be and lier llUlband, a pb)osietm ta Ole ana. "llave alwtlYI bee tnten.ted la Mt. "E'fen when we were f1nt married aad b.t DO furniture, there WU ut -oar Walla, .. aha aaya with a lauch. Mn. Spirit.us conftdea their ftnt pJece COit $250 and iM1 didn't bave the mcney so the dealer allowed them to make payments on lt. "I offer that kind ol aervlce today and I pride 11\YSell ID belpin,f peop!e become collec:ton. '' She admits· to belnc Ul amat.v photo-grapher IDd eQjoys workiq u an •teal for~ Jeuional art.IN. Mn.~ left a. cm...-u ~··e11 · J I ' Cl DAILY PILOT Monday. oCtober 3, 1977 By DENNIS Md.EU.AN Of .. Delly ......... Truman Capote bad Jlllt cut the eeremonial ribbon oo UCI's new campm boob.ton aDd was tneide waltln& for the tbrq Of book·t.od.nl a\lloo 8faphaeeken. • Clicking camera shtten sounded Ute machine IUD fire u the~ ba>d'°' aatJ:MWln naT)' blu• a~~ a CGPJitl NIB Cold Blood. .. .. I read tbat in Attica andlt~ebllle41n7 bJood.0 gushed a womaa tlldnf~,pt!tift. ,.Did you lock your but dciwt' d~ tile writer. The author's bookstore appevance lut week was a bonus for students wbo later spent ''An Evenine With Truman Capc>te" Jn the 'Wlivenity'a Village Theater. For those expectin1 the author of "Breakfast at Tiffany's .. and "In Cold Blood" to expwnd at l~ on-the ·~ of the DOftl or to reveal the secret toru.s IUCea.$, jt WU a di.la~ But whlle Capote tept bl.a co.,.,,,... to the audience brief. bit nevwtbelea proYed to be a. bona fide hit as he read three ~ II.II fal'Olite S\orles. • The ~ demonitr.W Ids flair tor: bumor and pathos,, pattlcu1ar)1 ln bis toucblne rendition of tile semt·autabto1raphlcal • .. Christmas llrlemory. •• • • Sehool of Art c From Paie CU The originators went out and found. " 20 people to «iv• '1~000 each u aeecl money and enllated tM Lquna Beach Art.Association ..na city council to lend their support. Another $SOO was donat- ed by the FestivalOI Atta~ 1 That ume' year, .. 196'1, a bWl4b:lg was leased at $1 per year: to hciuse the school, which wu ad~uate until 196' when a burgeonine student population needed more room . In 19::f:;ace was rented for the ptfiitm · 'and Jewetrymakinc de- pt.rtments but hr thJs time tt "'u evi-• cJttlt that the schi:>ol wouJd bav.e to find l '-Lo • ':''!S'f!f~· .• THE SEARCH FOil land was launched 1n It'll and after two years, t the acreemmt wij.b the ll'!lqe co. was made. , • All the wbUe, the school bas strived for excellence. Mrs. S,atyer, a eraduate of Choulnard Art Instil~. has luided lt to follow that ''bOol '1 e~· amp1e. '1Cbou1nard was my idea of one of \M finest i.. th• country and thl8 actiool has followed that pattern," abe said. .. We offer: very sound, basic art • tratnm&." she added. ''There ts a lot ot ltiv~ and take. Middle-aced housewives, 18 to 22-year-oJds and HQior citiiens are gettln1 alone ~ and benef1t1Dj &om tbe as~ Rcillton. • ~ the 1cbool malritains hlCh stbdarcb a1lJI bas wb•t Mn. Salyer eau. ... tnarveloas faeult.Y," there .,, oo formal admission ~uire­ ments; Other than ''the desire to learn." "&£GAJlDLEss of whether stu- , denta are bi1bly talented, they all IO • ~ ••t far better orient~ to el\)oy art. especially 1n Otaqe County," she U · aerted. "'lbere's a food 1ptrit h..-e." Si.nee we've been here and all,OQ one cam· pus tbere'a beea much more aptrlt." OM of the unusual features of tbe ac:hool ii its Hbolanblp procram for partfdpanta in the ~C <traveJ, lunCb and COl1JW'1ln1> pro11ram for aen1ol' cltiiens. E..ry quarter for the put three yean two older people bave taken ctaaaes wider ,th1J proiram and the r pcnse bu been "marvelous," the director Hld. ,. Mn. Salyer estimates that 50 per. cent ot the students are worklna on thMr BFA dqreea, thoup not all fuJJ ' UmL The tlnt BFA In the 1cbool 's blatory wu awarded UilJ put June to Marcy Ja•er, a Latuna Beacb realdent. who • went on to the Fubloo IOltitute ln New York. •'TllA'f'8 A TOUGH 1cbool to 1et i · to," Jdrs. Salyer n~. ... Another of C>Ur atudenta, Conrad Scbwabte. was accepted this summer at the Tamarind School Jn Albu'iuerque. '' Molt of the 1Dstnteton love the achOOl beCauae of its location ancl tts old tnditloa ot lone cl~ At most unlventtl• elasses are ane to two. Jiours laal, while at th"e taiuzaa Beach cbOOl they are me . .. PtoPI• put tn a lot o# enerry bere," aald a., JacOb, the the deailn and color ~ctor. ''There ls a Jot ot camaraderte and the eluaes are ex· el~. People often work later than 4 and come 1n at other times." Kril Coz, who teacbee ceranilci, uid be likes the variety of people wbo toe clmet. ifAnd, J Ute the "people t. work 'With." M added. ·~ t'• much inore lnform1l bere tban otbet: School.a and not .. 1tructUrld ... in Lafuna. "'Teachint here ls a ••Y of aJm~t making a living," he kl~. LEWIS OOBBN, tbe atone catvt.nt teacher. commented, ''Tbe faculty here is really involved with the school. Tbey really care about UHi stu- dent.a. You see the opposite tn otbv schools ~es."· It •Na quiet momtni at the scbool. Sueo Seriaawa's advanced painting class was in session and n•1Y .90 stu· d'entS were wormg Intently on varia- tions m a atill lifct. Serisawa moved around the circle, ~courqine each studeqt and offer- ing suuestlon.s on how to 11la.ke the w~rk better. 'There ls no competJtion here, .. he noted, bis glance sweeplne around the studio. .. Any acbool (of art) la fine. P.bilolophically we're interested 1n patntln1 as a medium for nlf· Jmowleqe. '':l'o m.e that ls the mostlmporiant of all pbilosophies... . What draws students to the aebool? One woman in the ~aintina ~lass came simply to be able to study uiider Seri.saw a. Larry Eaks, worluoa in the scul~ c:lau, pauself for a mooient to ~ A retired arcf'ii~ ~ de- cided to take Cla.IMa'"ti pnntm~. jewelr;mati.na and atcae "~ ju.st for aomethiq dlff «tnl to do. "I'd looked around," be aaid . ''These clasHS are oat aomeCJ>Jnc that you aee every clay. "I waQ.ted to do aomethhlg with no pressure.,,. ~ ' DEAR ANNt May I respond to "Furloua '' who eompl&IMd about the "cdppllnf, tOrtul'OUs llv•lncb bee& follted OD us by the women's shoe industry''? For the lat 20 1•an it bu been wedaies. plat· forms .or boOta. Women looted lite combat Marines or construction workers paid to trample the asphalt. Let's face It. Htah heels are sexy. They nenr were Intended to be comfortable or func- tional. The idea b to 1et a woman up on bet toes. The big.her the beel, the sm4ller the fdot looks, the arch and inltep ap. pear curvier, tll4 lega look lont~l' and more shapely. The hips wtnte more wbell ahe walkt. a"he teXteat lhoe haa a ve"Y. hllh heel, it back-> l.u ancf tOlleu. Maybe "P'Ut1oua•• 11 too old to weu. aplke heels. u ao, ab• atiouldn 't knock them. TMy turn tnO!t men on. I would rather bear cUtktty- cUck coming down the street than cloppttY· clop. At Jeaat I'd know it '\YH a doll and not a hone. -REDDY TED-DY 'DEA& BED: Tlloae less numbers may be sexy but tbey ean be hazardoaa to ltfe and llmb. U I.bey turn men 9D -and appate11tly t116y do -yoa cu be nre tbe ladles wlll bQy them. Vantt1, tbe name Js woman! DEAR .MISS LANDERS: l b•ve a serlOlJS problem. Actual- ly, lt'• my 1randma's problem. She is an aJcoboUe. l have auuested w.e call Al-Anon or AA, but my lamlly lnaleta tha~ ahe would never 10 to "one of THOSE meet· in1s" because she mi1ht run Into someone she knows. I'm oaly 14, 10 it's not like I can have any clout · Jn um family. CAT IN SAN JOSE DEAR CAT: Too bad people &blU lt'a de1rad· I.DI to 10 C. a meet1n1 wbere &bey meet otbere wbo are ICnlli1fa1 wl&la a eomm01l problem. I woader If alce~ollu th1at J&lamon ·~&· able•• te I• 1et plastered. talk ITYLl llO UM "Mil 4*L'n A$LOWAS ~ ~TO CHOOSI NOf.4 .. One faculty member aald be liked J>ii1J1i Pal'.t ot·the ~tic communJb: .ftw• eoeltU, back· Please print tb1s letter and If v• me aome tdea of what t can do to help ow- •randma -SCAREt>Y o...-...-.. 11181--tf ~ savings on ev~ . . La· z. Boy•chalr In stOck =-~iru~l~·~!li:~· • • 'freaki' 1nd who should not bo 'left tn a closet,"' lhH-.ya. "I left wlth a marvelous feellni -we ob· ta1nod J\urlhl aids for all the children. I was preanant wlth my lirat child and we came to California." . Susan Splritus adds she enjoys what she is dotN now because, "l'miwt'nere all tl'le tlme. l s.,.n.d half my time 1olng to aee private people. gol to ahows ln Lo.'I Angeles and San Franctsco -and I don't look forward to expandin& my busi- ness." r.o-. .. -.... ~h~tOl*o4'119°Qll­tll••• !lo•• Otl cwroy ol O!il! loo C!lowt -CO•tr• lo ----....~ ...... Ut,... ~~\,mt.~ -.. ---.. _ --- MISWNVIEJO feff A*Y fltiyt nm=:-~· .,.. ..... .............. ,... ..... .... 491-5902 .................. M 10.7 COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEAat Utl.17tlt51rW cw.-... .... , ._::fliilia1M.U .. ............ 642 .. 657. .....,.,.,, ... M I0.7W. I0.1 .. LANDERS/HOROSCOPE a pl'-9 fl>r Brady who aald he fpends most ot hls thue trylfta to keep tall men tu.Uy aware of-the dan of~ t•illlbt peaee that bu fdfull1 fflUed over tM 38tb panllel bol\kt' between the two Xoreas. "Let's face it,•• Brady said, "if the wont biapperu here, if tbe North invades again, there'll be a lot ~ Americans ktlled. We'll lose an iQfantiy battalion right off. l want my men to remem}>er that. Plt'ESlntiNT CA&TBll in· tend& to withdraw tnott ol the 32,000 American solal$ from Korea within five rears and Soutb ~ affidala Qd critics on its 14th m~or revision of readioeu repqrtin• since 1952. For the zndnnlantry Division wblcb sita astrid tbt Uke1¥ in· vasioo routes, tbe major pf'Qblem is personnel. Not only are impor- tant mainteauce itlots filled wlt.b people of lesser rank and ex· perience, but also the rotation system lo""8 standards. ''My people are assigned to ine for a year," uld Brady, "but in actual fact l have each ol them only for about four productive months because of the sett.ling-in process. What I need la a twe>- year ustcned tour for key people such as my own staff, unit com· manders and technicians." School vacations also • • ' I I . • M Ootc>W S 1971.. • PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE •ten<nOUt 11111••• .... tTillftMIJn' ............ _ ........ ea: • WHVTOCI( INTllltlO"S· 4,.. PUBUC NOTICE 6 4 2 • You Can Seit It t Find I ' Trade It With a Want Ad ---- ~ali~1httr!f ~ r t• ~ 'flff:" REAL J ESTATl:RS ·----- lllK&flNll ....._Lhtof'fA' ....... o.c. mm'.Il~ 11 -.i..W tn \I " J • ' l'lll I Cm · ••1 C1110 0.1 "''' TIBEr E C M ~ I G I " Y 0 E K R E A M H S C KSRJPOTAALYANNOWQLH YDLSNAR ONE KO KHUK UTULODNYLELZYETAt~I £AK1QKULSNY"KSIUMAA NKY"ICOSUE100l8MAMM RAQTYWVKXYHAANEAL81 8LJ6HANEOGDMUJTlALA £INAHPKLRNAHHAAVYCL AATQBULYTEOTOLXTAKL SLITOHOAEPSAATKYODA K A 0 V A S R D R l E T R N Z A R l A f D H S A L M A 0 H 0 1 U H J X H E D A t A l D N G 0 H P U C S 8 l A S J Y Y G P Y E L L 0 W W H A T T P Q P C A H11111laye Koko Hor Oal11 tr,wt1 :: Kvnlun Htkono R. Tomorr°": lns OC!lniacs eJ Walkm t: lee Real Estate NEED 1BEDIOOM? Farni11 1row1ng? LEASE Wini OPTION TO BUY. Grut Sanu Ana area . Nice nel&J'laors, nice atrMt, nice horn ... 4 Bed.rm, 2 beth, paneled 1ar1fe use as rumput or gara1e. Li•J'ard. f1UOO. ll'otf.il· focal!. UACH&OCIAH VllW $13,toO Senauoua bachelor t'OI\· domtnlum with beach and ocun view from master bedr00rn aulte. plua a«ludtd Iott den Cathedral ll~nl room boata Sweda~ llre9lace ahd ov erlook• private balcony Call 912·77A! • KEY I f\E:ALTOP.S. CORONA DEL MAR INCOME Below are several samples of South ot the Hwy. income properties. 4 Bdrm.s., 3 bath• + rental $179,000 Triplex, ~ blk. from beach, $225,000 Duplex, 2 BR. + new 2 BR. addition ~sTEAL th.ii bil 4 br, 2 be beauty! Many phiat1 "lncluded family rm, paUo fruit tl'ftlll etc. elc4 Priced Sl.000'• below m.rkt. al 114,850. Convt. or VA Joan OK. No-Act. . MIWPOIT CUST Price reduction! Beautiful upsraded.·nur ..W. J Bedrm, 2~ baUI. dlnil\l T1D Coodo. Lovely wallpapers. Catpeta "and coordinated d rapH. Now-1119,500. PETE BARRETT -REALTY-· ICM?OO JUSl UU._..YCmT Charqil.tia 4 BR. 3 bath Ivan Weill home. Le. aourmet kitchen w/ eat- ing area; formal dining; paneled f amUy rm. Quiet street -walk to school & shops. Pride ct ownsahlp home! $215,000. Mary Lou Marion 642-8235. (S.88) 642-1235 901 Dover Drive UW200 Herbor View Centi!' lrvlne at Campus Valley Center 752-1414 ~: ... HERITAGE . • REALTORS e:3 Walker 1: lee Real Estate ..._ P•f•1ulo I 007 .... ._. • .... T -----_.,..._ ....-- GfMf'_, t002 jG1•ref 1002 ------..---••• ••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lllDUCID SI 0,0001 F1nelt value In Sp71la11. ~oc•an•bay < ~ ··" HERITAGE . • REALTORS CE 110111 ·BLlllS CD. View.• BR., ramJly rm.,,_....._ _______ _ OV~Fi 59 YEARS OF SERVICE Dl.u.ATIC RAii IN 1NI MEWll 11.UFfff Spectacular 2 Stol'y End Unit Townhous99, OverlOokina Sparklin1 Pool And Ramada. 2 Separate Suites, 3 Bathi, Huge Family Room Easily Convertible To Another Suite. Highly Uperaded. Many Custom Featut~s. Sta7,500 II f DOYM DIJVI 631-1800 . CRAJUQNO J Br, 2 Ba, frplc + 1 Jw, apt t1M,OOO. Ownel'. M0-1030 • ~~~~ HO DOWN TOVm We have eewraJ bom•· I ; I l ' ' l I red hi ll ..:.., 55 2-7500 Woufd you Bellen a 1>0 tpm home tn La 1---------1 .,N~l tor Slli,9$0. F'PliUnt.r onb'. 83J..l812 ---__ , ........ U•fwmthff .,,. ....... futwlahed ~fth Unfw-a. Aporfnt•Rh u..fw1\. Apert.ettf1 u..fwR.. • Mond!y1 Qitobef !, 1177 e• ....................... ·~···················· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• % ~ .......... .._. 3%40 ......... leecla lZH t.11ioa ,.,_. 3706 Cotw .. M• lUZ C.C.to Mft4I 3124 tWwpott IHdt 316' u Refthll 4400 ...... ~ ' II -·•••-•••-•••••••• ••• :;::;_ .............. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-•••••• Opp a fWlflf 5001 --··-··•·--•••• .. 3Brw/:ltnll•F•m Rm, a Br, a ba, extra •harp. Upper 2Br. l'pls/drps, Euts1despacio~2br.Nr Tnplex. Beaut. 2br. lba, •COSTA MESA• ....................... 0 0 KIN 0 .,. 0 nemr tbe beach • ltot1 f'rpl, pnol, 2 care-nc gar. frplc, \!I blk to bay,~ ....... shopp1ne. Patio, ear. beam cellinJll. Compl. Ofc apace avail, ~1300 TY I All AMERICAN' Sf'UVS Harbour, ~ per mo. Ire patJo. new plush bm mo. 6TS.m3 • ~I ' $310 645-3858; 645-4166 redec. New crpt.1, drpa, Ml ft <or any comblna-••..,, ••• a.. %7 Yr old t folk AvaUOdl.M4M.M7 cpt's . SSOO/mo lit. + -'II~ ~tove, et<". La• pvt vauo, tJo.n> Newly remdl'd Ul· ln-1~.,.t~~m ""'·~~ dalaiul ~ Cd', oner cJhn dep. Marlanne.lBr,lblkbch.$250.mo zot-~a_ 3br.2ba,MenDelM1tr. praee.laundryrm Top ude/oul. air cond, ... ~~.~Dtu!!Jl~ .. · ~~w~toWmrit IBr aiorae 'wlth ~· up· 141-7414' eva640-0Sl3 Very l1e 1 be $350. UW. • Lower $300. Upper $290 Nwpt Ills lociillon. $:295. Janitorial ave Ir uUl 111· ~:-all ~'=""'x• ... _,_ O¥tr -OJ ·=-=1~t!: •'t~y ' lncl.17Me12 CORONADELl!iAR Family,oopets.MS-4991 ~~Y pref~rred. cld Short drive to :;-''utatfon'°1"l~~ MlulOmlUR.t,Jtwa• cpt'd, OJI quiet Clll·d•· *UDO ISLE• Lie l BR, dahwbr, llUD• 2 Br TownboWle, frplc. BRAND NEW CONDO 2 --------1 airport. travel aat &: -~ cu.nt.1 .. Ap· llwa Moon, P.O. ~ aac. "ml from bcb. deck. $325. yrly. us Pool,t.m.1.1.SomeC>Cdn Br, 2~t Ba . fp~c . Yrl.YTwnbae,2 8R,2Ba, banklnbldf.Seeretarial prox.-..OOMt,OllDer ua,Sewl.Korea i.Ano. Ownlr "2·=8 3 BR, 2 BA. aewt1 Q)l,linl.CT$-817& le Catalina views. Close dshwshr, trans c mptr, frplc, W/D, D/W, 2 cu svc avail, conference leafiDlarea. •IHAIOM"S* Ul;~pm. decrt'd lrl IUDDYpaUo toahopJllDl&(mebeacb. JM patio, $38:). 642-3783 &ar.~.mo.551-33118 ~~m ... ~[?.v~.ded, abun· '1&lldfxcfl•IOrt ~&TT ~&LG.i.Q..c --,.,..--------1 A~1to t~ bch fi ...,.,., ...... 3707 644·2111 eves, bef9PM ..... ~_. .. ._ •' .... '"'.\~~ ...... 3M. 1"' be, btuna, drpa, dub A# (114) ~ ....................... SJ8S 3br, 2b1, encl. gar. 64US60 IJJ..17-.. .. crpw, tacd cul 1ac. . . Oceanfront tamry 2 I& 3 ~VERDE 2 br, 1\.ii Bk>ck to beach,, bakony, ~rest& t. Call D''"'L ..1. savlCI MIO/mo. 1'1881 OWodOAl1 J5drm1 a prk'J. Winter C>cea.nJ'rmt 1 br, ftp, 1ar. ba. Garden paUo. Encl. yard. Nopeta. 65• Piil SQ FT ........ ...,... uran .__,.,.. " 0-. (lo toward Ocean on Lovely 2 •b'. S B~1 2~ ba, ~. up. 2fXM vi Ocean· AdJta ao peta. SW> Wntr, pr. '250. Ml-6188 TSL Mcnrt W.l&OS 1611 WESTCUR-NB for detall2'. LS BAIBOJl 1!'.SCORTS. KODICLS 4J J!'.dwirdt, put Sater to frplc. 32' Boahup. $650. truot.M4.a.Q2 • yr$£25.613-T117evea Adult ""-Wde 1,b .,,.,.., ,..._,.__ I L lb AGT.5'1-ICm JlEA.L1:Y&SMD ~~-Belmonl, turn rat 2 87$-6TI5. -• c.-r,.,.,...., ..... wucana • uxury r. 8ANDWICR SHOP· - blb), <nOue.aM or 2br, lba. Steps to bch. IRIATHTAICIMC> Jacuui, laundry, encl. Open beams, ':J;c• 2 1501 Wesfclff Dr. Beat!L Local tr1de & Mforat.;2S WJ-.oDOI BLUF.FSCONDOS Wlnter,utilpd,parklng. JITTYVllW gar.'240.6"-0878 decks. Adultt o 1• no NewportP'!naoC'.JalCt.r thonunda ottoun.t. To .. .,,. • ...,.5* Leue. atartJ.nc at 8'l5'CZ5tt n ... -.-a.e 3 BR upper u--V--" 2 B ' Ptits. Yrly $3115 rno. • __.__ ___ .__ aee calh Pactl1o Bu llU--U5n --------1 llcmth.A&enl9".UIS ..,...,~ • _.. uue r, lJOO•, 873-0357 ---.~....-' 0Ul'CALLKA58AC!l ltMTBS CorW def M• 3722 Bt.ePll to China Cove. $150. cpts, drps, gar, open for -Call on Site llanqer 811-11'1 llAlf·ZPK -..0 ·Let lbow,.,ubowyou BLUFFSWATERVJEW ·-·-•• .. ••••••••••••• Mo. Call NJ1el, at inspection Sat/Sun Speclous3br,crpta,~, (n4)"2·3lllutM IBl.utS ~ be li'fina rt11l tree 3 BR. I& fam., beaut. 1at-P\lm. 1 Br apt. 3 "1llb "4-'72lU1t. 16S1A., Iowa. ~ mo. bltn1, #~le. Gar. o DauxE OFFICES • il.lkt 1JP our liaL Pacfftc ud mak1oC money by edtotutyd""6"-ll33 trombch. '335 rno lea11 CM CdM ctmminc a Bl' EYes,549-1783 pets. Ad u iorur· Near OJmmt • lndstl •ix:C1111· a..SaJ-.m.uu t:':illuln1 Jour own c Br, 3 ba, fam rm, a>e> t75.S98', 6'0·7711 o~ l ba, rzl,1c. patio, aar: _a-L...a. u 26 !!~~Hoip ta· '37S. .,,... 2000 ft 1 Call--·~ ., _ _.._ m~ i d •315 -----.............. 6'11Uto sq. • ow u-a...•---.;. 10•., . ~ .. me. aq . .ft.1..,.~ .... go, N.8. · n ry rm. • mo.••••••••••••••••••••••• -u3.'iFaq.lt.IA&NtgueUr ...._.,---... SCOTTllA&.TY S1500mo.A(cmt.54l..sn31 AnilyrlylBroopvtbcb, ~ Panaroma view, new 2 •*2Bryrty,pso,Stepsto Mlaalon Viejo areH ...... _. ........ -•••• IJ ... 71U er.tLUx.C:codo pvt cate. SS25 nio. Spacious upper duplex, BR & Den t-Plex. No beacb.N='5 Handy to S.l>. Fney: l•.W&WT.D.'• 3br,1~ ba, temm. pOol, ZlJ.Sl28.184C; n~Tl84 wWl 4 lema. 3 Bedrm. 2 pets. Mgr. '98-1097 Call: &a'l-1400 LOANS AVAILABLE :Beaut 3br Condo, Newlf Jaeuszl, salbla. Wik to eo.taW... 3124 be. fpk, 2 blc:b to Bil Deh&xe ocean vJew 3br 2 Br 1 Ba & 2 Br 2 Ba, AlrDarf Officn Cred.ltnotfos~t. redeeo, PreaU,e Joea. bch. ~ mo. 13l•UCM, .. -··--••••••• Corooa. $600 /mo. Zba patio beamed ceil: Nwpt a,ta. AvaU now. . lilONTBPllE.B ll'olllr.4f).l 2 :;.~':31~~ ~!m~·~ ll2·Z718 $40.00 Wiii a U' s.J.lab11r7 llnlb' 613-6900 tng,\labwhrA/C, &!1 re-64U105 or~ Nl aervtce. No leue ........ w.... 10 0 1_,;.......;._-=-:---.-~- ltuab&td. ~ Br ~~WFF ,a_ *•TV~~~B~ ii a .. ~,~ r:r~:· ~~-q'd.$tOOQlO.G3--0075 ~ts !.! blnr, z ~!; ci,·c1..~, ,aq.~PJs•J .. _ .............. . ---------1 3 , 3...., w/bm + .,..,.,, ·--·••••n ftV'a _., • ., • Luxury apt 2 Br+ d 2 ....... • no.,..... <l· ~ o par .. n • _... ..... f you're not 1•ttlni • 2 S&ory Be.ch • N•w form/dJo, Jrg ttcheo. •ftlclaeSerT,IDdpooJ ~~821, btwn •-•PM Ba in~ 4-plex. F:ic, ll,1'100WestcUtrDr. Brt1tol St, Newport ~rtanon70Ur1n· Cpt, new pelo\1, 4 br. 2\ii rrptc, vttw. t&'lS/mo Incl 3318NewponBlvd, CM balcony w/mtn It vly Bach.~5'M010 YettlD•Dt. call Sandy ba.tm.CallBultNIUMT p,rdli:wtr.AnllOctlf. 54M755orMS-M7 1 Bll,1 ba. Corner. Cln view,min.homlbrina, S..Clnsale 3176 n..AJne..•-11u MS-4107 ..,95 ~C9·8'7S5 r n"s mo t••·OUO or -·•-•••••••••.-•• .. •• •A,...... Jlcld on PSJ· :Beaut38J'COodo,2ba,nr1---------1SB>.Attrllct,furn.1lrdeo -mo. o -· • LeaseOpt Beatare&.2Br olllil to A.ju Jnv-.ort, belch. 2 car tar. PooJ. er. 2 Ba, oear new, $COO ~· Blto' 1ara1e. 8"-723) 997-0328 2 Ba adUlt condo. $375 Ju. thn .JuJr, lttT.•--------..... M25/mo.S38-1049 ~,~·.~~~~T~oJ:~ ~~~~:no 2J:~·~il~ 1Udll4••0ch 3140 mo.~(, o~~~~ ._la1'pennlt.leJIC'lt-2~~ba. Condo. Tennia. ffoan. ~·'"-U7D .......,,:a....... near y. . ....................... pure or • thly .z~.-.. ~ peulty cbarce , $300 mo. GU-5971, ..-• lmw+oalta 3740 mo. Call Suzanne, f~. porUoo ot mon ol.... ....Vllali to'°"' ol • 96J-'7Dhfttpm ~Crest COlldo 2 ....................... U4·2071 or Frank , N:i=w 3BR,daBA, ~rpl~ rent would apply to ~=::,.....,.. month• Wl•Q'1le4 111-1--------.-.. Br, den, .2~ Ba, tetuits, SMALLBEACllHOTEL 975-004, or aft. 5, ~':r'~.u'p ~ 8£da purchase. 71"48Z-1Uo.t .,._._..,.... -..t on tbo l>elaoee. eh Cl...._ to 1ll ·~~~5/a~~: pobl, jae .. lse, $HS. Rooms$30Week ~12 4r pets ok. 6'zs-681o or _m-81 __ 73 _____ __, ~..__......., ~~~ ==~~e Catlu.dleJ,147-8844 MM!:.'11 AptSl.O/mo.536-70Ci6 Brt&ht&<:heeey2BR 1 ~5506. SOllllt&,_,.. 3116 dmUaalJ llteffuUlell.;tiplJ'tq ii-------... •IBACB apt, all utll fW'D l ba. C.thedral cell. Mini ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' Ad 9100 J>.Oy MJoi. ....... 3244 OiroaadeJMar!Bdrm. blttoplet"bdch. v~, vtew.$600Mo.Aci. A:J=:.0.::;.~= 1•2Brspts,puoramlc ~ Tnit -s !!:,,~-mo. Colt& ••••••0 ••••••••••••••• ll ba, frpJc, b.eama adlls. suo mo. Sheryl 491..aa ~2212 units in H\IDt. Harbour view & new cpts. Pn --• -- UMTALS SS85/mo. -.2SS1 !paOc>wJ 3 br, 2 ba, trplc. era. Adult ~le. Write bcb. 13()() mo. '8HM4. 2BR.Ua ...... $125/525 Shoreclifrs: Cbaming 2 tWW-No pm. S>ZS/mo. C\assified Ad lm, Dal)y G6-'118llA«PM 2tJ>orSbr.2ba .. ms bdrm home •/larre lbi:i: 3742 Pau.I f\'anklln m-1533 Pilot. P. 0. Box 1560, Af I bf¥ .. hd i_a ......... issonoo pa~1ard$'ZOO/tno. ··---· .. •••• , ensu11-=saS212S .. ~,_pl w 390 38R,2KBa .......•• $42$ ON WATER. 3 8dim "SWll1 PCH ~REAL-mm .................... . 48R.,Z\~Ba •••••• -.".'795 ontce fam rm din nn ll tromo'--~Pool ~ja~1 nrrrDPR•t'~ •ALL NEW APTS 2 Ir 3 THE EXCITING COSTAMESA bo t' d ck 'prt t.. """.. • ac · -"' ~111u s.x.o> bdrm4 encl. car. 3BR,2batha ........ ~ ~rm: · va SZ 5 O I mo. D a Y s • Ci replaces. blt.·ins PALMMISAAPTS. WArERl"RON'IHOKES (714*6-mf, ev., (213) ~ Jrts. 3 Br 2 Ba, hilh (n4}8'Ull87da,yg. MINUTESTO!W1' S'W971. clp, fplc. deck. Avl Nov. BClL Call 531-1400 1. $UO. 47~~ aft I 2 Bdrm. 2ba, Condo. pool, Bach.1"2 BR. ~~~~~~~~~jNew tum. Studio. ac"°!U carport, adlls only. from$220..llup. • "'"'uCT ~ from Deb-Dock avail. Peoplewboneed people s:ns1a>o. 955-3097 Adult.a No Peta *--'-* Water pd. Jaeum, pool, ahm.&klalwa)>lcbeckthe lSSUi Dr 3Br. den, 2 ba. elec; crpta. drps, lrplc, vie*. Service Di.rectory In the 3 Br. 2 tun baths. Fatly <~BJQ1:ut9:N..:......rt 1ara1 .. door, no ~ta ~.mo.1~1 DAILVPJLOT cpt'd, frplc, d1bwabr Blvd) --...-~Imo. f73.~ Li'-Ch".a-OK · •--"' 37•• '"--"-u~-11•• ae new. .....-.. n ~ 1-~19~ --~ '"' 1410/mo 1028 Adams St. --------....., •t orif. BJuU.s ~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••-.-•• .. •••••••••• Agt. Ellen C. Mahoney It.-4000 'l523 CAM'°5J>.:IR'/JI(£ Family 11:r.ed 'BR, 3 ba. LAGUNA BEACH MTR. too E/Slde triplex, Sbr, 983-0731. ••••••••••-••••••••••• tnhome: vacut since INN. $75/wk. $2'75/mo. 2ba,frplc,yd,enclgar. ROOMS $50 wk & u t;:~~~~;-~11===: comp. redecor. llove in ltaid .. n. color TV, TSLKimt "'2·1603 QUIET & COOL W/ldtcbens '42 50 wk~ n o w ! A 11 n e "' • l\t ate d pool. '71' ) Lee 2 Br, 1 Ba, gar, l~ry • · 1=::---:--:::~-::-:-:-:-:=~l!lll•~~ls ~N~' ~!'!:..f:,:t &or&eousl 1725 Mo. '9W294, ~ N. Coaat New CONDO 2 br, 2~ be, facil, no pets. Adult.. "11" Apts. 5'8-t'ISS Delun Qlftc. •pece 5'25" Y • n ... ..,,t · Aient6'0-5580 Rwy. 2 frplcs, blUna, pool & S23.S.42SA.Utb&.Hntg Niceal'fflnAnabeim.SZ'O ~Newport Blvd, CM. Kida/pet welcome. $395. -spa. '400 mo. 875·4912 Bch eek. KJt b pri 210l 311e ft. «a .. ua> MC..2218 '6Mi67 "'•nt. No fee. ~~fa Plaza 3 BR. end Ull· ............ l76t Bltr . perW~efield ~~ • nlE RANCH .S B d 1t Fresh palnt, plush ••••••••••••••••••••••• -"4 _. ----• . r + en, carp. Spotless thruout! Ocean! BR 8 2 Br 1 Ba, new cpts & * 3 BED-$295 ROOMS, Sea Lark Motel, rutle yard, $460 mo lnl'ld Walk to mkU, pool, achls root 3 , 2 u. drpi, bltn.s & re(rfg, en<"I 2274 Newport Blvd, Costa pdnr.8'4-4201 & park $.'500 MOftlh frplc, Sept. -June. or yr oar no peL, A\ll now * POOL·JACUUf · ly 99641.56 "' ' Me~,. Some rcfrig. OllEENTllEE Windsor -\gent640-~-S270 646 lUS,CM ovual.. l'OlorTV, A!'t!,l"M mdL.f br,2ba2sty. Xlnt. LIDO ISLE, l'llle 3 Bdrm. 2 8" l', Ba twnh~e. pJtin. * fAMJLY·ADULT radm avail Weekly ren • oond. CaU: 144-0412 an 1., ba, ice itmny patio, OCIAHFllONT CPM, anzt.ime wlmds. nr bay, 2 car aar, avail WINTER RENTALS ToWD!ioa1e.J Br, 2 ba, 10.tu.. MSC>. 175-acJ.$ alt. 6 2 BR, 1 ba. S370 MC. lrs encl .,.i. uwlJ Ot''ll'lalda. ~BB, 2 ba. ~ ___ ......, _______ 1---------• SM1i1Md "1m1D&c. ~. NptKit-CU«Ravwt.ar. ~To1u.c:x' ..cia«l56-2'99. 1ba, new kttcben, aH 28Jl,cfea.iba SS'D TWO Sl'Y, 2. BR, 2 BA, bit.a&. Jmmac. LI'S Jtd. l·Bll.yearly. 5'00 we cpt'1. •M 1ara1•• ..,mo.549-1111 2-Bl\;"en.unturo $$75 $175/mo. canm.am. ~ View a Br 2 Ba, ......... h ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Br.2'~ bi!, 2 carpilirking. Walk to beach. /acuizi 180 8c:ean view. Nr • .abo(j. ISOO. •99·3031 pvt pool, JICuiz;I, fln!pk. Comp privacy, erdn.r. "pgol ..... e.4-t!401J91, SHARP REFURBISHED Do you llke the Macb! Proleulonll decor, 1 br. A ra.ro cha.net at '310. 1510 W. Balboa (l'n.~) • DAILY PILOT • Add it ... Build 1t ..• 01aper it...Hammer it ... Carpet SERVICE it ... Cement it ... Wire it ... Hoe it •.• Clean it ... Move it ... Press if ... Pamt lt...Nait it .•. Plaster it ... Fhc it ... • VOLT ••• ....... , "'''' • I.• I • Cell or come in toda)' IEtl)J &ElllVICl!8 tU-1441 •63'-0765 AutoJQattc tra.as. Te: builder. Top salary • .Ex, p •d _oaly. Xlot. Co. beftdlta.IQ.eea5 AU'l'OllO'l'lVll IXCWSIVI US'IDCAI ULISllRSOM J\ature mea&alaJ pro· •i>ec&1. Call-General Sale. llanaiu 10't •P-~t. tJ7~004tl..fll 1 AVON NEID uraA CASH1 F.amlnp are l(OOd·boura ..,. flexlble wltieft )'OU're an A VON repruen- tatlve. can S.7011 CJI' 7Anltls 7-JB. • DIRECTORY 0 $illllli Tl 1.1Pc mr.n, 111 ~ 1• VOLT ..... tll 11 • , • RECEPTIONIST GOOD BUDDY! SEC1\f:TARY. Girl .Fri· day, R . E . Ofc, nr1---------1 Airport. Uta bkkpoa. inq Telephone Tool Jloom 540-2980 or write ~00 Sa.Jes.Earn to Sl(),000.+o. 11i1s It fflil .... ...... lrvlne Aft. Ste 101. NB, 11 Loc&Uaoa. Oranp Co. Wssatilg & fllli Mies 119> • LA. Gnat beaelUI, a.... t.... n..-,._ w ~ -•~ MC:Urity ti rapld ad9&n· r-• -· ._.,.. -• ' exper. to traw cemeat Call a.pub Uc OHw • *--. • as lei aeey. Apply at Diat.rib~tors Inc Mr r-• 4Zll8 llacArUlur Blvd.Ste ' • · Call Mrs. Wb.lte ror in· good co••·· slRf a>ON.B. or call TS2·533'7 Rof, 114~. tervlew appointment. ltoMa & casual et· Telephone 581• PaulDoalerAaaoc.loc. _.,..,. .. to~ SICTY/G84'\;0fC NeedMooeySSSSSUSS eo.ta 11 ... ~7075 w/_. tMff ININ'flta. Exper.•Sm.U ·1111 flrm. Work an PboM a.w list· M9 door to doer. OW ~ ;:c.ltl~::~: Inga 9:30 A.M. to 12:80 .Eqval()ppx.'ErnpJoyer ofc ~ft beailftf .. Tapmatlc Corp. Irv. ~:::·~·!!&.:if: ·-.~,..-:-:::-:-:Of-=:8::-A-T::-0-::-::1-._ ... __ .__..__, & ... .,.,.. mast. t'7HOIO come to 250 E. 17th St. ~-Obl1 b tOature, 4e-We T,. Semce Sta Nl1ht Attend Suito 0 , Costa Mesa palable. a la to follow RICEPTIOMIST SOUND GOOD 2 or 5 rutei a wk. Apply, Talepbone Sa lea, Ad· )estructlona. VarJou NXOPEIATOR n..Cll Sbell,17lb•lrvine,NB vertlaln". Will tralb. Wun.~ 6 '° day• IUllB DUC11 • j ld Pl JI "' ServJce Station Atten-Some 1ales aper.1'\alJ " .:i1 • ar • ~ •M 8st. lmmecllate openiq fora At dant, eaper'd. Day &: pldme. a hr + eomm. CM.St.ff. • Receptionist-PBX IJUotl Ev11. J'IJU It p/Utlle. Al>-835-'129eorl3Ufln. Operator. Muat have typ-TIMlo&.lfl ply, Shell StaUoe, 11th & lbf allllJs of 50wpm • a imne. NB. T I •.a-. monthl reeent work ex-LllUIJIS -------18 MIR perienee preferably .. a EqualOppll:mplnmlr S."tce Sta. Attendant, Local vWoo ot a lar1e · nceptforu.t. Wlll add uper'd. Full or p/Ume. eoirporaUoo "°" blrtnf. =:. f:.Pfa°n'~~: W..ProfWMloall ~~~111~Uon, 17th salary =mlttl.otl ----------caa e:acellent 1tartlnr Fine womea '• and ---------• n1ary with Ulleral frin1e cblldnn '• apeclalty Serv. Sta HeJpneeded lm· benefttl. PJeqe apply In cloChJnf store. Full tJme me-4. Full or p /t. Apply, p9t0n: I ad y . Top pay fllO E. Cat Kwy, NwPt Salary + commi11lon. Bch. TOO & DIE MAIER ·.IENDATA CORP. STAMOllD ~cu':rt!:!ti ~.!~~ SHIP /llCltVlHG " Huullnf.ou Beach. We are looltln1 tor a Brief ban •Written re· penon w/ottlce eaper. autoe to The Red Balloon DuUee Include Ute typ-Ltd. Jlr. Reyoold9, lf8l5 101, pbon•· tor resp, Alconquin St., Huot-•hlp/u c. men 's • tnatoa Beaeb, Ca DM9 women'• clothlnl. CaU (Of' iotAlrvi•• SALIS THI LOOK Electroulca muulac-turer-tic>t a job abop. Mu s m expet" Top ratea It Sood oo. beneflta. c.n.,•tec..;. 711L17tfll.•"'ll CoihiMIM 64S.llOI Patt time. 5-9pro, Mon '4~100 Tow Truck Dr1ven u - J'rl, perf9et for Colle•• 'd T .. t Student no preuure Sou&hLa1un• f:w·~f-"PP'/, lal• or quotaa to meet. MOTORROUTF. Av•NB~" .~CJOOltville 531-0911 TM Dally Pllot hH a ... -·- larae rout• la South Trainee SaJH-.tut S .a.us IA1una approic earn· Orow1n1 Dl1tli button "' .mp $COO ~r month. Mon Qorp. now hlrln1 to ban. sz1.ooo.sso.ooo thrU Ft1 af\emoona and die comm'l " hlduat'l Within 5 yn in )'our &lt&Sun mornlnl•· Car sales accountl. Top pay. ~~~~~~~~~! 1 e and iood drlvlnr reCOl'd 8enitftta Advoc:ement .:.. No lhorthand req. Call .p~ U:.~a~~ us required. Call ,.2-•!21. Call Mr Harrlt 888"'488 · Mra. Win.slow for appt. ""'·'' · -•· , Leavln1 nome and phone · • • PICTUllRAMB pr'4 mat It 1lau cot· . eanvu .u.tcltlnf It ruatom traallla1 aalea. Paftorl/Um ;.t'.: __ .lit WGrld nam• ·"° No. CoHt Hw1. taima Blach.eM.a105 l:r7·1080 • r uu ~muual•Oftl --'•FreetralnlnaPfO.lr•m number _ _ TRUCKDIUVll llC~ST -<>ranaeCountyolJlcc:s Statlonerf Store Jn Mun be onr 21. Call ' Beautyaalon. Must beat· EveAppg Call Now Ooronadel MJrneedan· BetweeQW,at5*«501. tractive w /pluuni ,_..,.,__Grollp per'dulealad)'fllllU~e ptnlOftallty. Betwn 20-35. JOE CONNERS 5 dAye, Jtlnt ftfkJnl COD· Wort Tuu. lhru Sat. Laauaa Nltuel UH811 ds, esped aUy llne cllea· 1"ln '752-1141. • ~alOCl'f0-7740 tele.175-IOJO A TRUIUTE TO THE ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL WOMEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONALS •,J .· ~-.. 1 I.I~ 1, l.H Al.ti Ul '.'D "1Ji;11 •;(,l'lt, tllACM .. ~. ·;;., ,:o o: :; IMPOl1' CMS Al.LMOD BARWICK DATSUN .... <II I ,,, ' ' ••• , SJ 1.1375 49 ..1-ll7S NEWPOR T DAISU N I c;ap.a ....................... ' lf7' CAOIUAC COUPI DIV•u.tS <4To~eFrotn) With leather lnterior, 1tereo t a10, etc. • t293PTL). Prieed ea low .. ~ ... ,__--... ---..... --....... _ .... $7288 .... .....,_c.-..... PemionPWn ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1977 to Decide Park Uses~ They inchlle p amphtibeater, skateboard park, eymnaslwm, tennis courts, archery fields, 1olf courses, a miniature train, akeet range, botanical 1ardens , baseball stadium and a football and soccer mdium. A similar survey was recenUy complet.d by city council mem· ben and a teunis court complex received the support ot all seven members. Other actlvlUes that lained council endorsement were a family camp1round, a skateboard park, ~questrian facllltiee and a 5,000-seat loot· ball·soccer stadhtm. The city ts movin1 ahead to in· crease activities at the park following complaints that the facility has too little to offer users and bas been plagued by a Jack al attendance. Councilman Ron Shenkman has aone as far as to call the park a "white elephant" and bu pro- posed that the county take over the operation of the park. Tbe county is comiderina the inove. • Other projects that would coet $287,000 are coming up for ap- proval at toni~ht'& city councU meetiJ\a. They include plans to build a. a Gan • Seiz.ed ( Charged With Misme of Pou'eT NEW DELHI, India <AP> -In· dlra Gandhi, prime minister of India for U years until her elec· lion defeat last March, was at· rated today Oil charges or misus- ing her position. Eyewitnesses said a lar1e squad Ot aients from India ·s cen· tral bureau of lnvesU&atioo took Mrs. Gandhi, 59, into custody at her New Delhi home. Mrs. Gan~ was char&ed with acquiring 10. vehicles lbJoouib misuse of her official position, In· dia ·s naUonal news a1ency re- ported. A larae crowd assembled out- side Mrs. Gandhi's bome as soon as supporters learned of the raid and while wbe was still i.Qstde. Tbey ctianted "Long live Indira Gandhi." Shortly after the plain· clothesmen arrived, supporters of Mrs. Gandhi issued a state- n>ent in her name chargine that the "arrest is a political one. It is to Pl"fmlftt me from goin1 to the people. It is an attempt to discredit me in their eyes and the eyesottbewodd." Huntington . Beach civic leader/Elaine Craft has been named the woman of the year by the California Women in Chambers o( COm· merce. She won the award over 26 other nominees at the group's convention in West Covina Saturday night. Mesa 'Snuff . Fdin' Trial Delay Given He was arreated July 20 in the Yucca Valley desert area by two "Undercover police women al· le1edly hired by blm to play parts in pornograpblc movi•. lt 1i alleged that Doullu in· tuded to murder and dis· membel' them u the ftnal scene in his movie and then dispose ot lhe bocli in th• surrOUndln · desert. Sources cbe to her household said Mrs. Gandhi demanded that tbe bureau agents lake her away in handcuffs but. they explained this was not customary in such cases. In her statement, Mrs. Gandhi. said even though she lost her in· dividual liberty for a ume her supPOrters must be prepared to fight "the very real threat to the country's self-reliance.·· She was taken into castody UD· der Section 5 Cl India's Preven- tion of C.Orruption Act. First re- ports said the s~ifi~ charge was mllusing her JJ9.sition ~ the prime minilter to acquire lOC jeeps from two firms for elec- tioneering. The arrest came as Mrs. Gandhi appeared to be mak· ibg What political sources said was the first tentative move toward a comeb1ck alter her election defeat In parliamentary voting last Maren. In recent weeks, Mrs. Gandhi has paid a well-publicized visit to one of India ·s aged spirltnal leade rs, stepped up her travels to rural areas and made a few GENEVA,Switurland <AP) - Two men kidnaped the S.year-old daughter of Un milllonaire Georsea Ottiz-Patino today as tbe family chauffeur wu drlvlfti ber toachooJ. Police uid tbe mn arabl*I Grulelle Ortiz-Patino shortly after she was driven from her parents' home ln tbe VaD· 46euvres 1ub1.1rb of Geneva and took off In an Alfa-Romeo with Genoe, Italy, lice.nae platet. 424 Aliem Seized Border patrolmen ap·· prehended 424 Illegal aliens .it the San Clemente checkpoint over the weekend. A spokesman for the U .S. Border Patrol said 274 or those aliens were captured Sunday. . statements critical of the new Janata party government. But while w~• wu on the move, investlaaton were follow· iog the time-teated 1leuthln& tecbnlque of •-rollow the money" to unravel what tbey claimed wu an intricate pattern of al-le&ed embeulement. fraud, ex· tortkln And abuse ol authority by the inner circle of tbe former Gandhi pernment. In Aµaust. authorities arrested \wo ot Jin. Gandhi's formeT cabfn8' mlnisters on chat1• of officit)~ruptioll. The political and financial dealings of her~. Sartjay, 30, are undel' micf()Seopic inn.sU1•· tion by a special covernment commission. He has been lm· plicated in .t least a half dozen leaal cases. but aovernment sources said the cues in•olved to date~ relaUvely minor. Mrs. Gandhi, Sanjay, and her Congress party all alle1e that the Lnvestieatlona are part of a "poliUcai vendetta" by Prime Minister Morarji Desai 's new gov<!tnment. They have claimed the cba.rses are ba:selesa. "' ;I'be chauffeur tried to stop the ktdnaptac and wu hoepitaUied with minor tiead in.Juries. Tbe Alta-Romeo was, aban- doned a ~bort distance from the acene~tbe tddriapln1. A ~ce spokesman aaid tbel'e has beleri no word trom tho kid· napera. Roadblocks were thn>wn up ai posts OI) tM nearby French (ronUer and check.a weN belna made at the Genev airport and rai1W'aylt&Uon. The spokesman aald the motive for the kldnap was "either political or for money,·· and there appeared to be no reason to feat for the child's safety. · • Grulelle la ~ 1rand-Dlece or Antenor PatUo, Bolivian t1n kin( who invested a huge fortune ln Europe befote Ule Bolivian IOV· ernment naUoo:allzed b1a mi.Dea. He livesln Paris. Refugees ~eep Aid . A federal proeram which pt'O- v ides atd to abo'at 3,200 In- dochinese refufees Ii vine in Orange C.Ounty wm continue at least another Dlonth, coun'y Social Services Director Dennis Hart said today. Leslslation autborislna the • prOIJ'am expired Friday, Hart noted, but lb~ State Department has aireed to continue lts financ- lnl throuJb October while efrorts centlriue tn Congress to seek it.a extension. Hart noted that a me1sure that would extend the program bas paued the Senate Human Resources Committee but has been delayed because of the Senate fillbuster over natural eas del'elfUJation. The Indocblntse Refu1ee At.· sistance Procram costs about $2.5 milllOll a year for Oran1e County alone. Howdo.you~llrellet? .1 ln Huntin1ton Beach's Dwyer School. pupils are apell· • ln1 It W-J·N·D·O·W·S -windows that open and allow fresh air to circulate, thaUs. . r mE NEED f'Oll remedial act1Ql'\ came •bout when new windo\ta \Veto Jn.stall~ in the 42-year~ld achOol build· ln1 ln a "'50,000 rehablijtation prosram over the summer. However. tomeone •Upped up ln Room 50 and put ln wtndowa that dldn 't ~n. Unfortunately. thty cut oft the on· ly means Of drcuJaUnf fr hair loto the clusroom. • .. group picnic •b~lter, construc- tion of a rustic amphitheater, im· provements of the nature center. 'renovation of th~ water tower and creation ol a water stream and landscaping. Federal funds would con- tribute $140,000 of the amount with the remainder of the mooey co mini from park funds. Plans call for tbe 270-acre park ALGIERS, AICerla CAP> -Five hijackers who took a Japant:1e Jetliner on a tb~ay journey ot terror over two cont.l· neota releued tlaelr laat 1t hotta&ea and surrendered to Alterian authorities today, airtm.officials said. ""Ibey came out with their ~Esoort PkmRediwea SD'Flashen' in the centrat part of tbe 0 city' to be expanded to 400 acres on both sides of Golden West Stteet between Slater ancl Ellls avenuee. · About 280 21eres are currenUy developed. City council members reeenuy , voted to allow Prentice Taylor. the orlldnal part concessi~ jWildict!on over the entire a <See PAD. Pase AZ> -A• DAILY PILOT H /F Monda)'. Octob« 3, 1en F.DU-tim.e Effort tn establish a child abuse com- mittee: Coaunaoder Stuart. the aenlor nurse at El Toro, was ap- pointed as t.be base represen- iaUve to that group. She admits that she thought ishe would Juat sit at tbe meet- ings, listen and pus tbe informa- tion aJq. But •ho couldn't do that. 0 1 think it was because I'm a nurse. You get involved in your CUet, ••she explained. But Commander Stuart, a 1'7· year'W!teran who bas a muters degree in ptychlatric nunlnc 8Dd JMfminlatratJon, said her ex- perience and interests have been packaged in thb fob. Foolball Fan Fights Parking Lot 1Jif.;ke.t .. .rem Britain SitYS he ls goln1 ni&bt; (0 r~t the ticlttl he recelvtd Saturalj night when he parked .hls car in an emp)oyu-only lot at ~ 'the .Huntington Beach Civic CenUI' durtna a football 1aroe. ''1 feel the 300 or IO other peo- . pie and 1 wbo recelveCl ticket.is rhould take them to court because W4!1 are taxpa7en and have a rijbt to park In that lot on Akin said the employe lot ls off l!mits t.o football farts bec:ause pollce officeu and other weekend city workers need the spaces for their cars. Ji'Ootball rans ~ allowed t.o partt ln the vialt.or Jot Just eaat of the emplo)ie tot. be aafd. w ends,•• aatd Britain. Britain, a HunUnat9n Beach il"Wl.JI S resl~t. took Ilia famU7 to watch ·........,. ult• #' • • AlthoQlh ber aim ts to help Marines, her effort& have not been confined to the alr ~. 1._ the year that she has bad the job. she bas become increasinlJy in· volved In a nwnber of communl .. ty,roups. · One communtty mental health oUfdal nld ahe baa bee. in· strumental Jn breaking throu&b barriera which have long existed between community agencies. After ehe took tbe iob lut year. Commander Stuart explained. abe realised that Oft• to Mvell asencles, ranctnt fnm· public health to tbe ·police, CCIUld be wortd.nl on the same cblld abuse case. Ai.so, she said, people....tr- ing ln child abuse "ve17 easily get frustrated .•• She felt tbat a 1'a;r d wortdnc together and coord.lnattna these cues was needed. Others work- ing in the south part of the county aareed and they formed • Child Abuse Consultation Team which meets regularly on the base . .. It's not military. lt's aot clvill111," abe sat,s. "It doeln't make# difference, if you're in child abuse, what lrlnd f:A suit YoU , wear. We 're all committed to preventing chilli abuae." Since that group bu proven successful, a similar ~ulta­ tioo team bas been started bl t.be north county area. The commander also bas become involved in a South Coun- ty Ch.ild Abuse Tuk Force which hopes to aensttlJe the pubUc to the need t.o report child abuse CHCS. "It's pretty bard for anyooe to call and say, 'I suspect child abuse'," Commander Stuart said. But if people would report the cases, she 1ald, "wt •ve got all the foodies we need to do something." Slnce she's taken the child ad- voc ac y job, a Parents Anonymous group ~as been formed on the base and a.tralnlng class for parents has beftlD. AddltioaalJy, sbe helped draft a questionnaire which la being pretested on young recruits t.o see if it will pick up potential abwsera. She would Uke to see the ques- tionnaire given t.o all hllh school and maybe college students to potential child abusers can be Identified eal"ly. Marines, the Naval offteer aald, have been "scapeaoated" with the reputation thlt they ac- count for an above averace number of chU4 abusers. Child abusers, ahe arsued, were abused children themselves B\11 the Commaildv said her suceeutul ~volvemeot in &he field b.8S come about "because J think people in the civilian com· m unity were walling for somebody Cat the baH) ard tb9y bent over backwards to help me." With the addltfon.t 3Uppiort of the Navy and Marine Corps, abe added, "I couldn't (all." When she took this job, sbe had expected to stay at El Toro untJI July. tm. By then, 1be tboU&bt, she would have time to develop and write th41 pro1ram as a model for Intervention and have it developed as a permanent, MJ. time billet for a hlih ranking of. ficer. Now, abe aatd, "the pro· babillties or my beinc taken away from here are very lar&e." Ed.ilan HlCb School lose to Plus X Hfib School before a capacity • crowd d 4,500 at the Hantiillton T "T e f N. Tn Beaob Hi&h School atadfum .l.:JS 0 IXOD ~pes acnm the at.reel trom the cMc _ cente-. • Jlunti.rigton Beach Police Traf· T ..;._; f/~ • v• d ~.~:=: d1~~ c~~~:: UI L&W.SUitS IeWe from tb6 employes-only lot dur- ing football ca mes. But no poltce cadets were on duty sat.Urday because the crowd wu not~ted to be large, said Aklit. Akin tiU.d record• 1how only about 3) tickets were issued al the clVic center lot Saturday OftA~COAIT "'" - DAILY PILOT WASHINGTON CAP > -Some of Richard M. Nixon's famous White House tape recordin1s may be released for poaaiblie uae In civil suits, the U.S. Supreme Court said in effect today. The Justices refused to review a decitlOD by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ln Washlnaton that the tapes could be sub· poenaed as possible evidence in a civil suit growing out of the May Day antiwar demonstra- tioo.aberein1971. Lawyen for Nixon artued that the presidential privUeae o< con· fidentiality barred releue ol the tapM for noncrhninal letal case.. Nixon'• appeal represented the fourth time the nation 'a hllhUt BB Council Mulls Airpoit Huntington Beach City CouncU membert will dlscun the con-ttovenlll Meadowlark Airport •lain Ulollhtat8: 30. The sealon, scheduled for an bow. will be held at Boom B-3 at city hall. Tonliht's dlscunton Collows a meeUni that ~ell membera Richard Siebert and Harriett Wieder held recently with both tbOlt supportina and opposing the possible closing of the airport. ' . J court was asked to consider a JepJ controversy sparked by the existence of the once.aeeret 880 reelso(lape. Jn 1974, the court's tullnl that Nlxon'a claim of presidential privileae could not be used t.o withhold evidence in a criminal trial forced the former president to 1urrender 30 White House tapes to the apeclal Watercate prosecutor and hutened Nixon's reslenauon. Last June, the court l'Uled that the federal government, and not Ntson CODtroll the 5,000 boars ot recordiiig1 1enerated by NlXon 's s·-~·year presidency. Pending before the Justices i• the question of whether the 30 tapes \Bed at the Water1ate cov-et·~ tri&l of Nljori's top aJdes can be reteased for broadcut and reproduction as records and cuaettes. Thl.l latesl appeal grew out of a suit against former attorneys eeneral Richard Klelndein.at and John N. Mitchell and the former ch iefa ol the Dlstrlct of Columbia and CapitEl p0Uco f~rces. Convict Dies SAN QUENTIN CAP} -A 2'1· year-old San QuenUn convict bas died of atvei'al atab wounds to b1a chest and back, officials ·said. The victim of the attack Sunday was ldentltled u Artbur llodrlguer, 2'1. of Lo. Anatl•, servlna a sentence for arand theft in 1975. I leeherg Ptaaell Prince Mohammed Al-Faisal of Saudi Arabia gestures" as he talks to newsmen as Dr. Shawkat Ismail fllls cups with apricot nectar chilled by a piece-of i,000.year-old iceberg. A tw<rton chunk of iceberg was flown from Alaska for the International Conference of Iceber& Utilization at Iowa State University in Ames. IowL Valley Disabled • Aided by Program Fountain Valley baa a way t.o &et meals moved to folks who m~ have trouble cottine around t.bemaelves. The Meata to the Home pro- ara111 bu aided about 20 resi· dents since June, uJd •ollmteer coordinator Judy Wllhit.. But the Pl'OlfUl oan aid a llmiUeu number of disabled or handicapped Founta.h1 Valley residenta,UeJald. , Program participants pay only $2.45 foe two meals and $2. 75 if they have special d . No one is , tufDed aw&)' ULanJt; to a special fudd set 11p b1 the Fountain Vslley Jaycees, u•d Mra. Wilhite. TIM only problem with the pro. cram atnee it sUrted ht June hu been to convince people to take tbe city's neighborly belpins hand it UH!y need it, said Mrs. 'Ihieves Loot Warehouse Thieves broke thl'oulh the dry wall of a partially constructed warehouse and removed about $2,000 1n bedtoo01 aupplies from a t Hcmttniton Beaeb atore over the weekend, police reported. About haU of the property taken from th• Bedroom City atore. 16672 Beach Boulevard, wu recovered at the scene, said policeSg\. Forrest Lewis. The loot included el1ht velvet bedspreads worth $800, 18 assort- ed bangln1 pictures and one fur bedspread, police said. 1'be thieves apparently bubed lo a aec:tJoa ol dry wall to 1ain en· try t.o the warehouse some time . between 6 p.m. Saturday and noon SundAlf, Lewla said. Sacha the St. Bernard kills some time at a dog show ln Rome by playing with a one- I ' " • Irvine EDITION . . ~'~-. * * ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA NEW DEUll, India <AJ>> -~ven monthS alter her iron crtP Indla'Was broken 1n a 1tmmln1 ection de(eat, Indira Gandhi as atreSled today and cM.fiid •1th abusirig her positiOI) as p/ime minlster. Sbe promptly tftargedthe arr twas political. Authorities 1a1d run other~ ple. includi.-1 fo\lr for.mer cabinet mlnisters and Mrs. Gan· Cfhl's personal secretary, were arrested. Mrs. Gandhi was charted. in wo cases under India's Preveo-on m COiruplion Act. ofncials PQrted. costs are just two alternative noise control measures men- tioned by Kuyper in a memo to Thomas Riley, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors. It was Riley who asked Kuyper to outline legal alternatives available to the board when it wrestles wltb Oranse County noise problems. Riley emphasized that ~uyper's ei~ht-page response to his query does not contain rec· ommendations for action. Jru.tead, the Newport Beach s upervisor said, the county counsel simply listed the legal remedies available to the board. "We are of the opinion that the countyL may exclude specific types or &rcrafl from use of the airport on the basis of noise con- siderations." Kuyper said in his memo. a Gandhi They said she was accused in one case ol "illegally connivins" with others and press\lring two companies to obtain 104 j~ps for election w~ in several elec\ion districts including her own. The second cbaree alleged Mrs. Gandhi misused her posi· tion by awarding a $13., millaon iovem!M!Dt oil drillinl contract to a French farm, despite a &ower bid by a competitor. The names of the companih were not immediately relused, and details of ibe other cbar11es wel'e not made public. · Hn 11-year adm!nistratlon HOSTAGES ARRIVE IN LOSAHGELES-6tory, A.SI M million ransom paid to the hi· jackers, landed in Algiers after an overnlcht, two•stop night from Ban1ladesb, where the ter· rerist.s held il for five days after hijackin1 it over India. An official communique said laJtding permissioh was 1iven here "at the express demand of the Japanese governmehtand for humanit.ari~ reasons." One Am~rican was among the fio l group of bostagu abo4rd the plane. ·~ IDJACK, Pase .U) • was capped by 21 months of emergency rule in which an estimated 100,000 political oppo- nents were jailed. Among them were many leaders of the Janata party government that suc- ceeded Mrs. Gandhi's regime after parliamentary eledions - last Matth. The arrest came as Mrs. Gandhi appeared to be setting the stage for a comebact with a series or political appear- ances in rural areas and several state.ments qitical of Prime Minister M()farji De!ai 's govem· (See GANDIU, Pa1e A!> Planners To Offer Guideline& The lrvu1e Ptanninl Com· misskln ls ~ to make a series ot relOnunebdatlonl tO the • city council for pro•klin• low and moderate income bousina over the next nve years, altet meeting tonilht at 7:30. The recommend1tions are part 0( an overall review ol the bous· in1 eJement of the city's 1eneral plan, a euide outlining Irvine's exlstt111 bousini and future needs. The housina n~ are based on the esUmated t)umbers ol new jobs that will be cenerated by new commercial and induatrt.t development. Current city fl&ures project Just under 20,000 new jobs thrc>ttgh 1981. Accordfn& to economic atudy m~ls, the city ougM to provide . housing ror one of every three new workers, or, for the period up through 1981, about 9,700 new homes. ll the commission recom mends that affordable homes be computed by standard methods. baaed upon monthly renu that are no more than 25 percent or family income, 1,848 lower cost housing units would be needed in each of the five years. Jn Orange County, very low in· come is considered as a famtly income under $8,400 a year; iJl· comes or ts.coo to $13,440 ere labelled lower Income. E~limatea show that 6.7 per· cent or lrvJne's new workers should be considered very low In· come. with Z'l.1 percent con· s1dered tow income. T~cOon 's Daughter K:idnhnet!-by 2 Men • GENEVA, Switserland <AP> - Two men tidoaped the 5-year-old daushter of tin mlllfonalre Gt"O OtUi·Patlno today as ~ fainily ebaufleur was driving .her b>1chOOI. Police said the men grabbed Grutelle OrUz-Patlt10 ahortly after abe was driven from her parents' home in the Van· d~uvru ul>Urb of Geneva and look oci ltl ao Alfa-Romeo with Oenoa, llB.\Y, license plates. The chai.111,ur tried to •top the kldnapin1 and was hospilaJized with nlU'IOr head iajuries. Tbt Alfa-Romeo w•• aban- doned a short dLstMce from the uene ol the lddDapJna. ' A police spokesman said there has been no word rrom the kid· napen. Roadblocks were thrown up at poeta on the nearby French frontier and chech were being made at the Geneva airport and railway station. The spokesman uld the mo&lve for the kidnap wa• "either political or for money." and there appeared to be no reason lo rear for the child's safety. Grazlelle Is the 1rand·nlete ot Antenor Patino, Bolivian Un ldna who t.nvated a hutt fortune in Europe before the Bolivian fOV· ernmenl nat1onal11ed bis mmes. Hellws ln Paris. • "Increased landing and de· parture fees could be charged against aircraft that exceed a specified nolse level," the board of s upervisors· teeal advisor added He went on to point out that • '1t is solely because of noisy aircraft" that county govern- ment "has the expense or main- taining a noise abatement office and a noise monitoring system.'' Supervisors already a.re limit· ing the number o( jet arrivals and departures at the airport as wtJ!l as curtailing 'the hours jets can oµerate. · ShouJd the board of supervlsor~ attempt to ban noisemakers from the airport, charge their oWJ1US bicbu fees for airport use or t'ollow any of the other available opUom it' is likely lawsuits will •follow, LaW'el Spence of Irvine knows her bnpromptu 1teei:t WOD •t go very f asl, but it beats walking ~er a loai da~.tounng the Cood and craft booths or the Irvine Harvest Festival* held this weekend in an open field at Culver Drive and Bar-ranca Road. B1WILLIAMSCRRElftElt 0t•oe11, ........... The Caliloi'rila Supreme C-QUrt will be a.skeet Thursda)' to 1"\.114$ 0n a writ of mandate demanCfin1 tbat the~ be barred from the trial of a.1-Juvenll \lll)eelCd of' sla)lin.t Lake For t ousew>f ~ Rachel Sparlinc more than six manthsago. AM M;aloney. the Los Anl public defender asslaned to the youth's case. Is expected to aJ)- peal ln !avor or the writ before the seven·member court when it convenes in Los Angeles. Sbe was nOt available for ~m­ ment today but has refused com· ment in past months clUna her desire to prevent adverse pre- trial publicity hi a case lnvolvin& a juvenile. A clerk for the hlih court a&Jd the Sparling murder lrial case la the last item on the docket Thurs· day and may not. be heard W1Ul mld·afternoon. The sesslon. which is open to the press and pubUc, wlll tue place at 3580 Wilshire Blvd., Room 213. Kuyper said. "B\Jt the c..'Qunty ts bein1 aub- jected to an tncreasine number~ damaae suits already," he poln._ edout. Kuyper also said an option available to aupervlJors in their contiriuln1 noise battle at th airport fj to ao nothina more than is now beina done to cUrtaU noiJe. <See NOISE, Pate AZl OAILV PILOT ··Fthn' Gase A (our-week deJay WU l?Pled ., • today in the OraDi• County Superior ~ trial of • Colt!' Mesa upholsterer accused of plaDbing the murder by torture of two women he allt&e<lly hired for rolea in p9nw>1nphl~ movles. JUdte Muon L . Feotocl de- layed the trial of Fred Berre Douatas until Oct. 31 when he ·,. learned that t.be defendant has ;} retalDed a new lawyer. Pretrial · :• motiam Wl1l be araued OcL 14. ~u. 54, ot 276 16th Place. remains in county jail wtth bail .:; set at $1SO,OOO. He "5 arrested July 20 in the Yuc;ca Valley desert area by two undercover police women al- •! le1edly hired by ~m lC? play ., partiin~aphic moVla. ~ It is alleted that I>ou,iu in- " tended to murder and dis- 9' memba-them u the final scene " ii:a bis movie and then dllpo&e of • , the bodies in the surl'OUlldi.DI, desert. ._.,..,.. .,..._,_,.,.....,. vi..~.!iD .. ~ ,.,...Jr-,.... ......... __ ,.. .. _ ~~Mtl== ... • ~"" °'-0.-_,....,. °""' iiilp ..... -· -"· u ....... -....... .. -•tw ., ..... , ....... ~ ........ " ..... ~ .., .. ~ .. w11._.v1 ·~•·• "'"""letl e1 ~--~ ''"' ............ ,, c.t•• .... , c.o1l1er1111 Sn1trltll•11 .., ,.,,.., t> .. =r.:.:~ ......... ,. _!My, "''"'"' iUI-·· f',.._Poge.4J IWA~K ... The hijackers, believed looking for asylum in a sympathetic country. commandeered the DC8 over lndla on Wednesday, forced it to land at Dacca in neighboring Bangladesh, where they released most of lhelr bosta~es. After a 'Y.-day aieae, they took off Crom Dacca Sunday, stoppin1 iu Kuwait and Damucus, Syria, re- f u elin1 and freeln1 more bost.aaes <II\ the way. Tbere was speculation that lf Al1eria bad refused to atve the terroriats refuae, they would have turned to Libya or ~th Yemen, two Arab countries with radical gov.-uments which have accepted)iljaeken and other ler- rorista in t.be past. Tbe hijackers are members of the ultra-leftist Japanese Red Army, whlcb works closely wtth the radical Popular Front. for the Liberation of Palestine. The takeolf from the Syriu capital had been delayed while Japanese and Syrian ottlclals tried to 1et more b01tai• re- leased. but the blJ•cken retuled and ordeHd tbe pilot t.o a take , oft. There bad been 161 persona abOard when the tenwbta MlMd' COl)trol ol tbe Patts-to-Tokyo plane early Wednetday aft.er it toot otttrom Bombay. Tbe bljackera fr.ed lU bost.aaea bi Dacca, .... mon m Kuwait aild 10 in Dtmucua. 11US left 12 captive ---.en and the enw d """'"aboeid aloq with tbe ft-ve btjacken t.na 8lll ter· rorlats freed from Japanese prtscm bl respcime to the bJ. jat:kers' demands. The Japan~e eovemment also paid a ransom of '6 mllliGn. Twelve Amerlcau •tre aboud the plane When It was bi· jacked, the alrlln. said. Nine were tried in Dacca aDd two In Damucua, leulng one atlll aboard~. Appeal Denied For Murderer WASIDNGTON <AP> ...! The death aentence imposed la5t year on convlcted Nebraska masa murderer Erwln Charles Si· mants was left untouched by the 1J S.SupremeCourttoday. The justices refused to review Slmants• appeal, wblcb a~ked as unconstitutional the state pro- cedures used in condemninC bim to death ln the electric chair. Slmants was convicted ol slay- m& six members of the ffenry Kellie family In their rural Sutherland, Neb., home in 197~. Simants' case won national al· t~ntJon as much for actJcns by the trial )ud&e as for the irtsty details ol the murders. Before the trial began. Lincoln County District Judie Hugh Stuart placed certain restrictions f' ..... PapAJ TRIAL ••• Forest dev•lopment of El Toro in south Oranae County. 1 Sbe disappeared mysteriously alter a visit to her psychiatrist's offlceln Pasadena March 1'. The day after her disap- pearance, poUce arrested the youth while he wu alle1edly tn J>()SSesaion ol Mrs. Sparling's dl.s- tlncUve broa.&e Corvette. Tbe car bore the peraonaU1ed Ucenae "WUVYOU." Three days later, after u. · hausUve searchlnc in the ru&aed An1eles National Forest, the woman's body was found at the bottom ol a ravine. She had been shot in the bead. Detectives alletedly fOWld more ol Mn. Sparlln1'1 belOQI· lncs in a house occupied by the youth. ... , 22, Dies In.Stabb~ EL SEGUNDO <AP> -A za. year-old El Segundo man bu died after belq stabbed IA the chest and •ta11mn• JOO feet tO a liquor stein for help, pollce sakl. Steven D. RIU wa walklaa home from work Friday when a 19-)'ear-old Los Aqele9 DlU al- le1edly stabbed him, ~ ported. l'loy(I Lawrence Traylor as bffn~boolted CM lnvestitatlcn ol muraer, they said. AutbOrltles said they knew of no motiv• for t.be atteck. on wl\8t rtporters could publish or broadcul. The restrictions were cbatlen&ed and In June 1976 the Suoteme Court used the cue to had down a major decision on freedom of the press. The 4eclaion banned virtually all prior restraints -so-called ga1 orders -by judges on the re- portlM of matters that become part of a trial or pretrial record. Simants' appeal dld not de~l with the immense publicity his case recet\'ed. In.stead, it argued that Nebraska's capital punish- ment laws do not meet the con- stitutional tests laid down by the Supreme Court in a series of 1976 decisions. Specifically, Simants c~aimed the Nebraska laws are mvahd because they ltnore Jury participation In a convicted murderer•• sentencing. Once found ,Wily, the murderer is sen· tenced to llle tmprlsonrnent or death by the presidJng judae or a three-judge panel. Simants argued that the law denJed him his full right lo trial by jury. The three st.ates whose death penalty laws for murdere,.bave been upheld u comUtutloaaJ by the hath court -Florida; Georgia, and Texas -do have provisions for jury participation in the sentencin• phase of a capital trial. lo Florida. however, the trial Ju~ does not have to follow the jury'• recom· mendatton. Simants also claimed that the Nebraska 1-w failed to meet con· •litutJonal atandards beca"" lt did not adequately provide for a Judie to compare one capital case with otben to dttennln• it the duth Hntence was •P· propriate. ...._P.,,e.4J NOISE ••• Tb.tt opt1on would mean de- fendinC the county against each lawsuit that comee lu wa, and then Pll)'ina wbatever j~4'Qts are awarded to tbOle wbO filed the lawsuit.I. K\O'l)er said "'Tbat lD ouropin-ioa" Juron are llkel1 ~award dabia to p~eny owners wh06e property u. wattun ~ airport DOIH tmpatted areas. ~ 'fWlth each 1uctes1 obtain byil~o or.Wbetbu • vu.t 11 .~e am all, other propertJ ownen will be· ID· courqed to sue." Kuyi>et aald. Toro Nurse Na'flY's Advocacy Officer He noced lQ his memo to Riley tbat a recent settlement with Santa Aaa H•l1bt1 resldtat HatrJ JUnller "•U a Wllq\ae cu• and not a pACedtnt for tho outcome of all other AJrpwt DOlle litiption.." K\11Pfl!' reported to IUley that lawaulta aeekln1 roUfhly S2t mUUcin b)' owners of Skl1 land parctb near Che airport are cur- fently ~. a, uuaia KABPEa Qf .. Deffy .......... Coft)mu4er ltent Stuart didn't plan to aet thb Involved when sbe was made chlld ad- vocacy repreaentaUve at the Et Toro Marine Corps Air Satlon last year. At first, it was just a collateral duty added to her Job u assl.stant to the senior medical otOcer on base. But now, she ts the only full-time child.advocacy offtcer in theNuy. ln fall, 19'7S, the Navy's Buteau of Medicine 8IJ4 Surtery not~ that child abuse was a national problem and ordend tta restona to establisb a chJld abuse com- mittee. Commander Stuart, the senior narse at El Toro, was ap- p0inted as the base represen- tative to that ll'OUP· She ldrnit.I that sbe ~ht she WOUlcl Just alt at tbt mtei· Jngs, lilttn and pass the lntorma- tion along. But she cowdn 't do that. "I thinJc it was becaUse I'm a nune. You 1et tn\'C>lvtd in your cu•, .. &M expl&lned. ' But Commander Stu~ a lT· year veter&!\ wbo hat a 'mutera d•ll'M in psycblatrlc nUHint ud-admlnlatr&tlOQ, 1al4 her tX· petlfilCe and lnterwta ha~ !Nen patkued in th11t )ob. AllbWlb her a1rn la to btlp Marlne8, bei ettorta haw not . bffo ~to the alt bue. Jn tht year UJ.at she bu bad thtJob. · she has become lncreuinily In· volvtd ln a number of commWll- ty P°O'Q)S. One communlt.y mental healU.' ofllclal 1a1d •h• bu been In· atrumtat.al tn brtulna ~b b11'rlers wtdcb have lotll tld.tttd be~ comm\mlty aiencJ•. After abe took the Job wt year. Commander Stuart explaiotd, ah• re.:tbe4 that on. to ••vel\ ••encl•, ransmr trolll p.abllo health to tbe l)Ollce, cOWd be worlclna on the aatae chlld abuae C!IH. Also, th •1111, ")?~t'1fod· ma ln obll4 abuse 'very eaa.111 att fTUStrattd." She felt that a way of worklni to1etber and eoordlnaUnc these cas .. was ne.ctod. othel'1 worlt- IDI tn the south part of the county •i!WI and tMy formed a Child· Abme QlnsultaUon Team which .,...,, ............ 'YOU O!T INVOL V!O' Child Wor1ter Stuart Si.nee ah '• tak the obllct ad-v o ca c y Job, a Parents Anonymou1 croup bas been formed on the but 'Ud a t.ral.DinJ class !!'r p'1'ents bu~·~· Most ol thole $26 million worth Of claims aaa1nst thecoWlb' cover inverse condemnation aulta In which property owners claim to have auffered loases lo property vah1H becauae of noltf Jet atre~o.ru~ta. '24 Aliens' semed Bord•r patrol.men ap- prebebded Ultfal tllena ·at the San Cltment.e cheokpolat over tbe wetkerid. A 1po1t•man tor tbe O .SJ B«der PaltOl aald 11' d ~· allena were capt<lNd Sunday, A hro-week delQ WU Oldered todq tn Ormice Count1 &iperior Coart adlc.us Mledion of a new veaue for the fre~aently postpcned trial ol Dr. Loella J . Cella Ir. and former bospltal ad- ministrator Stephen Jlobert GANDm ••• ' l I I I \ STOCKS I SYLVIA PORTER Monday~s ClosinR Prices .. , NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Monday. Oct°'* 3, 1t1'7 llN E~._irGloom False 'Facts' Muddle Views By SYLVIA PORTE ,,..,."' ..... Are the followtnc atalementl true or falae? -~ unemploymen\ rate la a key lnd.lcator ol i tlonlU')' pressures. When lhe rate rises, dtmud dwlndl and prices are under downward pressure. Wh A It lalls.'d · mand perks up and prices are under upward p aure. 'nilS is a tM,tter Jndicator of inttationary pressures than t employment ratio. -Chana es In the U.S. wholesale prlce Jndex fo chtJ1gea in tbe consumer price index . -WHENEV·ER INF'lAnON HAS accelerated or de· celeraled, crucial factors have been .lbaJ:p chUltt in ld>d prices due to crop failures or surplus•. sharp ch1111ea in J.A· auslrial and raw material 'Prices due to sbortasea or sur· pluses, or such events u a war.or lhe Arab qulnt.upUng of tfll prlce;s. There i1 no close tie between the bu•lries• cycle such and l.nl1atlon. ' ·-There ls no close Ue between the bua\nets cyele and rood prices either, since !Ood prices respond prtrnartly tQ «~. ~ -EconQmlats are aware that the rate ot tnfi•tlon te .... to perpetuate Itself, and they have excellent. records of foree-~lnf1atlon rates and tumlq polnta. • All ;\re lalse. accord.m, to atUdJes by Dr. Geoffrey If. Moo~. e~pert on the business cl"':le associat-ed with the National Bureau of 'Economtc !\esearch\ in a recent Morgan Guaranty mon- thly rme~. \ i SINCt IT 18 ELEMENTARY THAT soluUons t.o the ln· nation problem cannot be found until the problem Is ldtd· Ulled; a recC>eniUon of what Moore calll "five lltil•knO"<tt fact.a about ln01Uon" may be of critical value: f'ACI' FOUR: FOOd pnce intlatiOD also is cloaely lied to the business cycle. Food prl~ have responded to c~p failures or surpluses, but most of tbe m&jor swing5 in food· vnce anllaUon have beeo Uod to ups and d01lrm m bu.sJ.ncss: ~Acr FIVE: ForecQtaoftheillJlalloa rat.ebne l•flinl tndfcator oft.he acwal n.t.e. EconotnlJta usually iota t\.U"QI i.n lollaUon ~aus th y rely on l~tyear's rate to predict next_year'l ra • OrllJ'lJ the 16 turns ln the tnnallon rate b«Ween 1141 41970 w recognized by lorecuten. N~~:~trtt Haw \'OfllC ''"'I·.._••·"' ,rice ~ ""UliM9 .. .,.-, ... ,,,.., .cuw A,_lcMI 'Moci1 Crf'Jf. l.-s, E Mllentlly at l'IOI'• l 11. Olrf...... "' " -.. IN..... l•.100 i • ~ ""'°''~~.. .. . !J. "' .. , ' ~OE t ,., ... f;• + :• lrateen . •• • .• • , 1 -• Aua1ra1 Oft •• ·~ n;I U .•.• C:--11111 •.••• :itl 121• +I r11t••MY Qp,.., ff•"° '!~ 1:-r! "*I Ntllt. . •. . . . ;tOt • •• "•tOl'tlnll A. ... I.JOO l1Y1 +''- By IAYSHA.QUTf LOS ANGELES CAP> - Another new sitcom eased in over. the we~ktod -CBS' "Wc'~e GOt Each.Other." It wu ~ J.>9QO, even U.ough il wea made by ttie Mary ..Tyler Moore om. bicb usually bas cl.Uay wares. A Saturday ni&ht effort, the 1bow bas Oliver Clark and Bev ly Archer u a mairied toupl • She works for a fashion pb<Marapher (Tom Poston>. He toils at hOme as a copywriter for mail-order bouse. The pttmiere ahow started by rousing her at dawn with a new clock Clark was testing for his boss, a purveyor of crazy Stella Stevens and Robert Deman are im- plicated in "Murder jn P ~yton Place" tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4. new cNldr9n'a Mrlea featuring the 9dventur• of a girl who o\IWC:Orl'lee eex-role eteniotyp- tng to~ handle. )ob u • ~ ataUon attendant. CID YOOA WITH MADEUHE ()) TO~ n4E TRUTH 7~ II OONSUMER BUYLINE Davkt HOtOW!tz visits the Con- eumer Cred1t Cofpotatlon and talks to General Manager John Wotd. e NEWL VWED GAME • THE BRADY BUNCH Wedding day festlvltlee prog-,... SMOothfV for • widower with ttwee ct.ughten untll the family pets dedd9 not to go afont with the ~ Of pMCeful coexlat9nee. ., AQAM.12 otftcers Malloy and Reed make IOfne Unueua1 atr•t• and Reed delhler9. baby • 28TONIGHT G FRENCH CHEF "Small Kit~. Big Ideas" (I) $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE 1:00 (I) El.V1S JN CONCERT The legefldary roci< auperstar mellowa a bit and pute hla c:tJs- tlnctlw atyte to good u.. In rendl~ of popular atand- ar~ country favont .. and goapel aongs aa well es ....... of past hits. Ratings Guide IMftlta -,.._, «<9rdlnt Ml 1111• ..,lu ~ McNln '°" T¥ .,.. 1""9fCI.,,. C'rtk.' • * • • -EKcellent • * * -VeryGood ** -GOOd -Fair -Poor . THEN RE MADE breakfast, she got ready for. work. A crisls developed. You knew that when her employer's top model, a dense, nuty blonde played by Joan Van Ark, called and said she bad a crisis. D UTILE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE "The Handyman" Caroline accept• a handyman'• (Gii Ger•d) ofter to oomplete their unflnilhed kitchen In exchange for room and board, but aoon flnda heraelf the topic of local il'Jov1e * *'h "The Unknown Wiider-. neea" (1973) Adventure. Two teenao-boyl Merch for fhe tabled treuure of Frenchy Latrek wtille exploring the unaccea1lble mountalnoua areaa of Wyoming and . Montana. (2 hrs.) G JOKER'S WILD ga ILOVELUCY "Lucy In TheSWba~lps" • MOVIE *** ''Tba Ralnmakw" (\958) Burt lanc11tar. Katharine Hepbum. A con m90, polling• a rainmaker, not only -* tM drought In a small Southweet- em town, but allO bring• romance and oonfldenoe to a spinster. (2 hn.) fD THEAGEOF UNCERTAINTY "Kart Marx -Tho Muatve Dlaaent" Marx' own phraaea narrate thl• evaluation of the impact of aocialiat thought on the 19th century. EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER LAW "MIW'buty v• M9di8on" The authority of constitutional Inter- pretation ls given to the Judldal branch of government. 1:30D CONCEHTRATION C8 CRQ8S..WIT8 G MWE&r..err "Gnlduetlon Rtiahbacka" Stu.- dents from Pontlae, Mkhlgan gt\19 theit viewt on Mtty bu9lng; "Chat1le Btown" Portland, o-.. oon atudwlta dlacu• aareo- 1 ypea au.~ta and '•achers have ol eectl other. • 9:00 8 Cl) BETTY WHITE Joyoe and the 'Undercover Woman' cat encourage Doug Pottet to ltop being a meaMn- ger boy for 'he network and atatt making deci.lone for hlm- Mlf -eoon after Doug flnd• hlrnaell without a )ob G NBCMOVIE "Murder In Peyton Pfaoe" (Pr.mlere) Ed Net.on, Dorothy Matone. The grizzly alaytng of two young Peyton Place re.I· dent• trigger• a wave of Intrigue and ,uaplelon wtllch •weaoa the town. &MOVIE **•"' "Grand Prix" (196e) Jamee Gardner, Eva Marie Saint. lnjuriet, romance and oompM1tlon wea11e the nvee or tl\rM racing drtYwl together. (2 hrs.) U IAONS&DE Detectl11e &town dlac:o119ra the body Of a man during a plcnlc In the pwk, but the body dlaap. ~ before he can get aid. Q) Ml!RV GRlfAN e MOVIE *** "Birth Of A Nation" (1915) Henty 8. Watthat. Ulllan Gleh. The ~ i.dlng up to and duMg the CMI War are depicted In thla DOtOf1oul O.W. Grlfftth Fiim which p. ...,_ the theme of AIYfll' ~and the Ku Klw Klan'a role In 'aav- lng the nation.' (3 tn.) G DAVID 8U88KINO "o.th On Demand -A Debate On The Right To Ole'' (II MOV1£ * ** "TN Heat1 la A Lonely Hunter" (1981) Alan Mdn. SoncSq LocM.. A mute commtta tuldcM idler hi• only friend dl-.(2hr .. ) t:308 (J) MA.Ube • "Vk:torta'a Boyfriend'' The Ubera\9d .anan hu no plaee In aoci.ty . ..,at ~ that Ja what Vlo1orla Butterfield'• stem, Welt lndt.n ffthtr (Roecoe Lee Btowne) prof91Ma While Maude prote9b. 10:00 8 Cl) RAFFERTY °'. Ratt.rty plays deteoUve tor a pregntint alfllne atewardeM who fw. lhe WU expoeed to radiation from an air csgo crate and can't get any fnfor- matlon about the shipment. Another patient, • parWymd cartoonlat, la filled with angef' atemmlng from Mlf..plty. 8GNEW8 • MGKT C1AU.ERY Three alsftrs end a brother tight fot their livM In a haunted tticue. \ 10:80 • NEWS 11:00 G•(J)O NEWS e HOUYWOOD CQt..ecOON G MOVIE * *'~ "Love Me Tender" (1958) El* Presley, Richard She said her car was broken. ll turned out to be a fiat tire. Miss Archer went to retrieve her and brln• her to work, aa Poston was lo •boot a big fublon spread that day. twArcber-seen Jut season as a staff daughter on ABC's first flop version of "The Nancy WJlker Show" -always run.ci such errands for the model, we leomed, and seems to hate the chore. Betty in SO WHEN SHE and Miss Van Ark arrived at the office, verbal sniping occurred. Miss Van Ark demanded an apology. Miss Archer refused. Mias Van Ark demanded she be fired. Poston 'said, "Wba? .. Mia Archer quit. For the rest of the show, Poston, playin1 an 1b1ent-minded genius, noun dered about. Sc) did tbe rest of the CHt. They seemed to be waiting for Godot or a aag. Neither ar rive.id. A nejghbor of Our Couple, 1porting a T0 1hirt that said "Poola by Keo," did arrive, though. He said he'd had a fight with hi.a wife onr some hot dogs Then he withdrew. POSTON HAD ntE besl line in the show. For the record, It went •·A vacation . That's bat you need, a nice long vacation. Take an hour." The actors were okay. But the script by Tom PalcheU and Jay Tar$cs, creators of the series, needed something extra, like maybe a visit to a bonfire. Jt was feeble, weaker than v n the weateest 1ltcom of the mfd·l • Unleu drasUc Im· pro mc!nt occurs, I fear the out- lo01C for" • Got Each Other .. le ob, 'no, JOU don't. By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES <AP) "l don't dare send out my laundry,·• says a super-cautious Betty· White about the chances of her new show in the 1977·78 television season. Industry sources would advise Miss White she'd stlll be around CBS StudJo ~nter lo &et her laundry back "The Betty White Show" seems one of the better prospects of the new season. After all. the series stars the well-liked Betty While. and she is Joined by Georgia Enael, also of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," plus the accompllshed John Hillerman And the show bas been put toeether by two MTM veterans. David Lloyd and Bob Ellison. "Btrr rr WILL be an uphill fight, no two ways about it," aa.id l Betty, a realisl after 26 years in television "It's no easy slot. op- posite pro football on ABC and NBC's Monday nl1ht movies. ''Jack Schnelder-<CBS ex· ecuiive) fo)d me not to btr alarmed by the early raUngs, and I answered, ·~ouldn 'l I be saying that lo you? He explained that or course NBC wm th.row tts best movtes lnto lhe first of the season Football wlll perform as usual he 11ald. That means an average 33 share of the audJence 35 if 1n an especially ·aOod 1 game, 31 if It's not so aood. ''On the plua side, the first thing in our favor was that CBS picked us up for the new season. The &econd Is a good reaction in tbe trade to the pllot. Third, we've had elcellent scripts. That's all·lmportant. No performers, no matter how clevet' they are, can tarry bad scripts. "IT'S UP TO the public. That's what it really boils down to.'· Betty had been rehearsing a show 1n which mnerman, as her eslranted husband and director, movea back into her house Bet- ty. the star or a police show on TV, bu been sharing the house with the deUabtlully dim Georala En1e1 and doesn 'l relish res um· ing the battles With her husband. He demandl to be red, and she serves hJm dinner -cat tUD.1. The lnlerptay between White and Hillerman had a nice xin& to it, sort of a hi1h·class "Pete and Gladys." Betty White admit& that ii "The Maty Tyler Moore Show" hadn't come alon1. "I'd still be doing the aame 1howa, coM· mercials, talk ahows and tryln1 to sell my animal show." When the role ol Sue Ann Nivens, th Happy Hmnemaker, came up, somenne 1uirgested lt was "a Betty Wltlle type:• "BVT WIDL JCKY·aweet on her eooltini ahow, Sue waa really Egan A pair or brothers from the South fight on oppoalte aide. ot the CMI Wat. (2 hra.) G) FOREVER FERNWOOO Heather Hartman haa e divine ¥1alon; Tom mow. loto hla cv: George tan. Into a vat of ruat~ leUm; LCH'9tta auc:cumba to a handsome-temptation: Tom meet• a pelt of twin•. Cl> PERRY MASON "The Cue Of The Jaded Jok•" A •tory about the 1trange world of the 'beatnldca.' the ao-celled beat ~tlon. G!) MACNEIL I L&tRi" REPORT 11:30 8 (I) C88 LAU MOV1£ **'h "Lettera Ftom Thr• Lowwa" (1073) Jent Alfyaon. Ken &«ry. Thr.. letters, detlYed for a y...-by • plane or81h, change the llYM of th,. MtaOf~(R) D TONIGHT Gunt hoat: John Denver. OU.ta: George Buma, Dr. John LUly, Terry Garr, Kenny Aogera, Richard Pryor. a LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE "Haunted Houae I AtNete" 8 MOVIE * * * "Deedlier Than The , Male" (1M7) Rk:hsd JohMon, Elk• Sommer. TWo gWta .,.. ~ of ~ execution- .. In • pot engl~ by • mutwcrtmlnel(1 hr .• 4Smln.) i=IOE "Chee*. Mate .And Murder'• (Part 1l MORNING 12:00. TWluGHT ZC»IE ''The Mlghtyea..y' e LOST IN 8PN;f. "~ tnto The Futw9" • MOVIE * ** ·~ Story" (1854) Anne But•, 8t9¥e Coctnn. Romance ,..,n. In tregecty tor a young oamlWt hlgtMflYa-. ( f hr., 30 min.) I CNWT10NED ABC NEWS 12:80 MOVIE ** "Tumtlting TumbtelN1da'' (1SIG6) Gene Autry, Smttey Burnette. When a cowboy'• father la kited, he aets out to find the man NepQnalble fOf thec:ttme. (1 hr.) • MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 12:40 (II MOVIE * * "The S.C.-et Part'*" ( 1981) Stftart Onnger, Haya HatarMt. A Bfttlah axecutlve la ~ by friend• end hi• wffe wMt1 he'• llOCWed of bl8clktnall and robbefy. (1 hr .• 20mln.) 1:008 TOMOMOW G&.i Met Keay ~ c:oo anchor of KNBC. Loe AngM8 ,,.,... Gu.t9: V1da.I Sa:Moon, Deborah Mazunu, O.•u•r ccinliuftinta. a piranha type," ald Betty. "In tact, she was Jtavblg an .tfa:ir with Lara, Pbyllil' husband.•• Other actreases were audi· tloned. The abow'a ptoducera were reluctant to cast Betly because ot the close frlenashlp of the Allen Luddens (Betty Whlte> and the Grant Tinkers <Mary Tyler Moore>. But CBS talent ex- ecutive Ethel Win•nt sald, "Why not try Betty?" Sue Ann waa a hit from the. st111, particularly because she • seepted so dirterent from Betty White. ..1 VSED TO be a hlt·and· runner on talk shows, but. nobody seemed to notlce." ahe re· marked. ·• 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show' was the first Ume anyone heard what 1 said." Ho does she C'OltlPIN sue Ann, Joyce and Betty! Tuesday'• Dafltltae Movlei -. ~aguna/SOuth Coast WASHINGTON (AP> -The . S. SUpreme CoUrt let atand to- day rullnp bY atate courts la Uhirilton 'that bo1nocexuals ''unmoral'' and may be tired m lbc!ll" jobs because~ tbe1r iual prifereace. • TM N.tioil 's ht1best court ~ MMd to btar the appeal ~ a 'l'•coma bi&b 1cbool 1oclal ttudles teacher fired aft.er nearly a years Oil the job because be EDITION ORANGE COtlNTY, CALIFORNIA . Co111·t acknowledged be1nl a l>Qmoeo- ual . Civil liberties attorneya representing Jam~ Gaylord, 39, hoped bis cue would be used as a vehicle by the court to break le1al ground.~ court bas not dealt with the rights of bomose.x. ualulnce 1967. · • Gaylord. a Pbl Beta JCaPpa craduate of the Univenity of WuhlMton. taulbt at Tacoma's " . Wilson HJ1h Schqol until 1972. when school officials learned of bis homoeexuallty. Althoueh no misconduct Involving other taculty members or atudents was alleged, Gaylord was fired for! vlolattna the school district's rule against immorality. "'Ibey came up with tbe idea that l1nce I badn 't denied any il· le1al conduct. I can be pr~umed to have encaged in It," Gaylord told The ~Jated Press in an interview this year. "I was dls- charced for status. I was never even asked it l enga1ed ln lm· pro~ coqduct, and no one sug- 1ested \batl had." ScbOol alftcials dis&ll'ff, HY· mg they had "sufficient cause" to rtre Gaylord on tbe assumption of his homosexual act.a. His con- tinued employment would hnpair the scbool 's Jearnin1 at- Gan • Seized ·CIUi:r:ged With Misuse of Pou,er NEW DEUU, India <AP> -In· dlra Gandhi, prime minister of India for 11 years until her elec- tion defeat last March, w.S ar· rested todaycu-chartes of Dlisus· ing her position. Eyeflitllesses said a larte squad ot aaents trOm India ·a cen· tral bureau Of mvesttcation took Mrs. Gandbl, 59, into custody at her New Deihl home. 1111. G&bdhl was cbar1ed with acquiriJaC 10. •ehicles t.hrQUlb ~~ he:r;(jff)clal position. In· dia 'a natiODal news •I cy re. plort.ed. A larp crowd assembled out· aide.Mrs. Gandht'a home as soon aa supporters teamed ol the raid and While, wbe was stlll iDside. They chanted "Lon.s live I~ra Gandhi." Shortly after U~• plain· clotbeSmen arrived, supporters of Mrs. Gandhi issued a atat.e· meot tn her. name cbarlio1 that the "arrest is a political one. It is to prevent me from goln1 to the people. Jt is an attempt to dlscredJt me in their eyes and the eyesoltbeworld." Soiittes close to her household said Mrs. Gandhi demanded that tbe bureau agents take her away in handcuffs but they explained tJilis was not customary in such cases. In her statement, Mn. Gandhi said eTat thoulh she lost her in· divfdUaJ liberty for a t1i:M her aupPQrten must be prepand to fi&bt ''the very real threat to the country's self-reliance." She was taken h>to custody un· der Section s of India ·a Preven· lion of Corruption Act. Fil"St re· )?Orts said the specific charge was misusing her posillon as the prime mlnister to acquire 104 Jeeps from two firms for ele<:· tiooeeri"g. The arrest A ·:l~year-old San Clemet1~ airl tOld police sbe was awakened earl SUnday~l>Y a haked man ln her , who,Was tryina to rape ber. Tbe atrl aaid she was able to llcbt the man off and run to her motner's bedroom. Police said the man apparently Jett th.l'ot!gh the itrl's bedroom wirtdow, from which he had removed a scretn. The Slrl described her as. sallant as bein1 in his early tos . She aaid he had brown bait\ Police aald they believe the man left his ctothe.s ln bis tar, parUd outslcle the tirl'a hOine. NORTH OLMSTED, Ohio CAP> -Oftlclalt In tbh Cleveland 1uburb have poui'ed water on a Southern Baptist miniits'1 plans for a bonfire to burn bOOnts and otber thtncs he belleves are anli·ChrisUlD. Police and fire offlclets aaid that local otdtnancea ban open· air burnln11 Jar1er than a ))arbeeu . llowover, the offlclalt Offered t • Rev. John W. Wilbers a 1arba1e truck to replace the torch. Mr. W1tbers ealltd on m mben of the Columbia Road BaPti t Church to brtnc "inatru· menta Gt temptaUon" to a bonlirt at U\o church. • Gandhi appeared to be mak· ing what political sources said was the first tentative move toward a comeback after her election def eat in parliamentary voling last March. · In ~t weeks, Mrs. Gandhi bu pajd a well-publlclied vlslt to one of India's aced splritual leaders, stepped up her travels to rural areas and madct a. few statements critiul of the new J anata party eovemment. But while whe was on the move, investJgaton were follow· ing Uie time-tested 1leuthln1 tecbilique of ':it>Uow the mooey .. to tmravel .W'hat:'-they claimed was an intricate pattern of al· leged einbeiilement, fraud, elC· tortion and abuse or authority by the imaer circle of the former Gandhi government. In August, authorities arrested two of Mrs. Gandhi's former <See GANDID, Pa1e All Hijackers Free All, Surrender ALGIERS, At1eria (AP) Five hijackers who toot 1 Japanese jetliner. on a she-day journey ol terror over two c:ooti· nents released their last 19 hostages and surrendered to Alg~ri•n authorities today, airline officialS said. "They came out wlth \heir ban~ up," said a Japan Air Llt'les spokeswoman In· New York. ''As far u we know, tbe hostages are okay, but we d6n't know for sure." The conditlosis for the aur- recder were not lmmedlatelY known. It was believed the ul· tra-leftist te.trorista hoped to ob- tain polltlcal asylum· rrom Algeria's leftist eovernment. 'The Japanese Forel1n Ministry said all the terroruts - HOSTAGES ARAlVE . lN LOS ANGELES~tory, A5 incltidini six "comrades" freed from Japanese jails to meet the hijackers' demands left the Japan Air Llnes DC8 at 4 p.m. local lime (9 a.m. PDT>, less than two hours after It landed here. Thel'e waa no immediate word . on where they were taken. ~Nlane, wblch also carried a $6 on ransom paid to the bl· jackers. landed in Alsien after an overnight, two-atop fll1ht from Bantladesh, wher• the ter- rorists held it for five days after bijacklne it over India. (See IDJACIC, Pa1e A%) Court Studies Penaion Plan W~GTON (AP> - The U.S. Supreme Court a1reed today to decide the 1 legality ol pension plans requlrinl women to con. tribute a larger portion Of their aalaritt tban men because studies show women 1enerally llve 10111er and collect more bendltt. The justfcn voted to re· view a declslon by the tth U.S. Circuit Court ot AP· peals strlJdn1 down 1ucb a pension plan ~cause it was found to perpetuate eex dJscriminaUon. At the aame time, the . court today let stand 1 rw· Ing by Indiana 'a hl1hut court outlawlns penaton plans •hkb pay amaUer monthly benefits to •omen. L/SC La\liYera for Nixon argued that tbe preaideratial privileae ot con- ffdeutlality barred releas• of the tapea for noncrirnla1l leaal ,.... / Nixon's appeal represented the fourth time the nation's highest court was aaked to consider a J~cal controveny sparked by the extJtence ol tbe once·secret 880 nelaoftape. ~ • lb lt'14. tbe court•s rultnc that NixOd'• clalm of presidential p'rlvlleltl could not be uaed to wUbbold evidence lr\ a criminal trial fOl'eed tbe former president to aurrender 30 White House tapee to the special Wateraate pl'OHCUtor and hastened Nixon ·s ~. L8lit .June, tbe court ruled that U>e federal aovenunent. and not lflX()D. eootrola the 5,000 hours ol rec<Jtdinp aenerated by Nlxoo 's Olllr .............. ONE OF FOUR MOBILE READING LABS PURCHASED IV CAPISTRANO SCHOOL DISTRICT Moblllty Alk>wa Therri to h ·Tranafened Where They are N.Wed the MOet C~ Unlfted Bebool Dil· ~~·1Ul' presidency. trlct iruatees wUl b4t asked P--''•'" 1.-1 tb j .. __ ts •..:..•-. to Marth bOnd ~ ·• --.u1o1J umote e ua~ ..... rn t.O~~! •Cboals to the questioa ot wbetber the 30 hOule 7 go new ttudeota IQICt· taJ)f9 med at the Wa\erfate cov- ed bj nit • el"•Up trial of NlxQD'I top aides ' Taal&ht;• board meetlnl Wl1l can be ~eased for broadcast .~ be at 7:l0 la tbe board room at aud reproductico as records and dlatrict offtce1, Ut'12 Calle cassettes. , Perfeetol!lSaD Juu Ca,PtltranO. • ~ TrUJ:Dan Benedlet, deputy 1••U~bap~a il aro~ projection repQl'.t for tr .... abo.tDa tbat t.be ICbool ~ d1ltrtct will ac.ed tta stadeat 1 ea~ Dat )'tar by m 1tu- denta. • Eni'ollrneat bY 1911 will be 5,137 beJOQd c~. accordlnc ~ to tbe,..art. I SuperlDtesadent Jerome ., Tboria$ley bu recommended tbat dfltrict idmtalatl'atan put ~ toaether • ~alre.:.oi.tdt· . .._ lfll C*Ulw:d~.~ CID bOtr to "" deal 1Jitb lncreul 1l1 over· " .. ~ ICbool eobditiom. ~rn..,~. 'lbotDl&.y .... rec·· omllM"ded coDd Cth:ll • KUdl election to Win voter~l'OvU ol •ctiOol ~ lamtor aleae~arrw mmt. :t Re bai :alaO ncomlliendld • tnct auwon o1 tbe J $3$) • mllllOnst.tebobd ~ ._J . This latA!st appeal grew out of a 1ult against former attorneys aeneral Richard Klelndeinat and Job N. Mitchell and the rormer chlefl cl~~ ot Columbia arid~ • ~l~rces. Rep. Ronald Dellum• <D· Calif.), mil D1De C>UMn sued in behalf cl 1;200 persons anated durlna the 1t7l demoutntiom pro~ tbe •ar in Southeast A.ti&. . .. DeIJwm an4 thfJ otlle.n 1ald tbe UOO were arrested u lbt ~ ault of a CCDSplracy aman., the deftadaDts and others to sup-press lawful clilMat. PraDle Count)> &.cen are CC11mt:t1111a ~ID J1lred iii tbe ~· ol h1t car aomewbere alOQJ tbe Oitqa Blf~ra or tbe Sbertff•s Mardl and NSCUe team1 and the Je~ are concentrattq · on a point near San Jaao Caplltrano ~ tMr believe • the car owDecl by Jetrrey ·Scott ~ 21. wuiDvolvect bl an a.cddent. Tboanpson'• puun1er~ Neil VJctor Kelly, 21, ol 24801 Harbor View Drive, Dana Point. contact- ed iiberllr1 Cl(ft~ ~ to~ port tW ~.wa .. vt~ (I( .n acCJ&int ~ Dfaht while rld-ini in 'l"borilPIOll'• car. . Kelly whO 1.s now I.lated in .u;;.;w eoadltkiia in SoUtb CoUt C:omaun1tY Hosp1ta1, •i.ld be wu aiven a lift bome Crom the aeddeat acene bl' a.motorist who rOW:ti4 hlm craw~ aloq the OrtUa Blgbway. '·, Olftcen said Kelly, wbO it •Uf· f erhll from concussion and DOUl!ile tntttnal lnjurlea, can on-ly Neall crawling up an embank- ment and reacbtnc tbe road w)ere be wu spotted by the motorist. They laid Kelly has only been able to ccm8rm that be waa rld-lna wtth Tbompaon, 21, ot a3822 Dana Vista, Apt. 22, Dan.a Pdnt, in TbOtill*Jin'• black anjl lfay Toy«a auto. DePUtld •aid teeny cannot re- call any cWiailt of the accident or what happened to TbomPIOO hn· mediately prior to bb crawlinc to the ro.d to leek help. Oftlc-en aatd they are amdous to wace tbe driver who aided Kel- A two-week ~ WU Ol'deled today ln Or~e Coaidt Superior Court actlm on Hldoo Of a new •enue for the tre~tly ·pottpat;ed trial ot nr. J . Cella Jr. an4 fooner bOi.Pital ad· ml11lstratoi' St•pben RoMrt Enns. Judce H . Warten Knlcbt acbedWecl the chanle of nnue decitloo for Oct. lT when be learned that the state's hdfclal Council bas not yet dtclded which Callfomla county or toun- lle1 should host the tepM'ate trials ol Cella, 52, and Evans, 32. Both men face trial on lZ1 felony counts contained in a grand jury indictment. Cella l.a free on $25,000 bail and Evans l.a free on hll promlae to appear. It it .ite1ed that tbe palr were involved in repeated acts ol fraud whlcb cost two bospltals eOn· trolled by Cella u Me,reWy· treUW'Or au eaUmated $2 milllon tn funda. It was alleaed in a Loa Anaetes Federal Court trial that ended with the conviction of both men r ..... r,,..Ai S.-1..agU.Qan · JEW.ELS ••• Siles Neighbor lhe1ronto1nce. ''We thlDk the band.It ran lDto l"L. D u·1 aome C\atonun OUUlde and told v.yer c>g I e them we were c1o1ec1,,, wUber said. "'lbOse people mtcht ha-ve •ten him leave. or aet tn •car." • A South Laauna Ulan who clalms h1I ndlhbor's do' bit him on both arms while he was ti)'tiif tO protect h1I two amall dop from attack went to court Friday t:o demaDd clamqea to be de- tennloed ill trial court. Named .. defendant ln the Oranae Count, Superior Court lawaUit filed by bonaJd J. McCall fa William DeLucla, who la Identified aa the owner of the Great Dane whlcb alleaedly bit McCall. McCall •t.t. the attack •· curred on Vlralnta Way July~ while he and hla wife were w · lnt tbetr two small do1s. e clal1DI Del.ucla 's dog wy dn· leaabed and in Yio1atJon Of lOC'al leuhla-.. . . Police tald the1 would like tD talk to potentlal wttDe11t1 to tha dayU&ht crlme. And LaUher wowd welcome any help from witneu ... After all, be jilat aet up shop. . downtown thtH w-,1t1 •10. Convict Dies SAN QUENTlN (AP) -A 2"1· YtaJ'-old San Quentin coavlct bas died ol aewril atab wOWlda to bb chett and back, olfidall •aid. Th• vlcthn ol the attack &Unday wu ldentUled 11 Arthur R.odrfaun, 2"1, ol 1M A.qeJes, strvlni a sentence for irand theftlnl.f'l5. Woperty Tax Bill Stressed. Saddlebaek EDITION peal in favor or the writ before the seven.member court when it convenes in LoS Anieles. She was not available for com· ment ~l.Y but bu refused com· ment In past months cltJna bu desire to prevent adverse pre- trial publicity In a cue ln..;>Jviq a juvenile. A clerk for the hi1h cou.rt said the Sparlinl murder trial case is the last item on the docket Thurs· day and may not be heard until mid-afternoon. The session, which is open to the press and public, wlll take place at 3580 Wilshire Blvd., Room213. Mias Maloaey filed the writ of mandate in April, challeo&in& a ruling by the Los Anaetes Superior Court's presldlna jud&e that would have allowed press a Gandhi the "arrest is a polltical one. It is to p~ent me from coma to the peophr. It la ant attempt to diacffidlt me in their eyes and the eyesofthewor14." Source4 clOM to bet bousebOld said Mrs. Gandbl demanded that the bUrea\l ~entl take bet" away in handcuf(j bU( they eiptai.Ded . this was not customary in such ·cues. Jo her st'atemea Mn. Gandbl said even tboulh de lost her ln- dJVidual liberty for a time ber sopPC>rten mast be prejared to fi1ht "the very_ real threat to the cout1try 1uelf.reUance." · She was t.aHn irito custody un. der Section s ot IDdia ·a ~ven· tion of Cori'µption Ad. Ftrst re- ports aaid the specific charce was mis\asing her po1ition as the ptime . J:ninister to acquire 104 jeeps from , two ntms fOI' elec- Uoneering. The arrest came as Mrs. form." Cit.ton said. '':l'bia isn't arid shouldn't be a partisan issue,'' the tu coU~r added. Citron emphAlali.ed in Ilia letter to Brown that, lft his view, there can be "no meanlriaful tax re· for01" without accompanylnc restrictions on the 1pendin1 babltl ot local covemment. He pointed out that • 1972 measure that fimltCd lncreasea JD prOPerf.Y tu rates that local goveriunenlS cOuld , f iX without first obtainin1 voter approval hu f&ned to curt.all apendlnl in· creases. A Pbllce ·~ man 1ald there hu been no word from the kid· aapers. Roadblocka were thrown up at ~-GJ the nearby French tnmUer and checkl were belna made at the ~eva aJrport and railway station. 1'be 1pokeaman uid the motive for the kidnap waa "either political or lor m<>My," and th re appeared to be no teaSOG to fear for the cbUd'a " aa!~. OrUidle lt th trand·Dltce of Antenor Patino, Bolivian Un klAJ who lnvated a bu,e fortune fo Europe Wote ~ Bollvlan 1ov· ernroerit naUooaUied hl1 . Ha Uv ln Parli. Gandhi appeared to be malt- ln1 what polltical sources aakl w•~ the first. tentative move toward a comebaclt alter her electkln ddeat in parliamentaTy vottni last March. . In reffnt weeks, Mra. Gandhi bu patd a well-publlclzect 'Visit to one e>t India's aged spiritual leaders, stepped up ber travels ~ rural areas and made a few statemeuu crlUcal of the new J anata party government. But while wbe w.aa on the move, investicators were foUow- lng the time-tested sleuthinc technique of "follow the mooey" to unravel what they claimed was an intricate pattern Of al· leced embeulement fraud, ex- tortion and abUse ol authority by the inner circle of the former Gandhi eoveminenl.· ,. Iri Augugt, tuthorities arrtaled two of Mrs. Gandhi's former ' ~See GANDHI, Paie .Ul A t~week delay was~ today In Orange County Superior . Coult action on aelecliuo ot a new venue for the frequently poatl>O')ed tiia1 of Dr. Louls J . Cella Jr. and fonner hospital ad· ministrator ,Stepben Robert Evans. Jud•~ H. Warren Knlebt scbedWed the chance Of venue decliioD for Oct. 17 when he teamed that tbe atate'a Judicial CouncU bas not yet decided which eant0m11 c:ount1 or coun· tlU iboUld beat the aeparate tria.Js ~ Oe.11~52. lild~&AS. 12. Both men fac,· ttial on 127 felony counts contained ln a 1rand Jury lndlctmeat. Cella ls free oa $25,000 l>all and Evans ls free on bis proiniae to appear. It la alleced ttiat the pair were involved tn re~ated acta of fraud which cost two bospltala c;c>n· trolled by Cella as secl"•W'f · treasur~au estimated $2 million in funcb. It was alteaea iii a LOI AJiieles Federal Court tttal that ended with the conviction of both men and two codefend'1!ts that much of the mone.r was utULZed by Cella to support the campaJ~ of political candidates •ho met with Im approval. Juda• .Matt BYrne sentenced Cella to five years in prison and Evans to a ono year tern>. 8oltl men are free on appeal. · l Cella and Evan• were acb~uled to appear before Ju.dee Byrae agaln later today in federal court. ALGIERS. Al&erla <AP) -Five hljackera wbo took a J apaneae Jetlliler on a silt-day journey ot terror over two cantJ. nents released tbetr• taat lt hostages and surrendered to Al1erlan authorities today, airline officials Hld. "They came out with their HOSTAGES ARAtY£ IN LOS ANOEL18-6tory, AS hands up.'' aald a Japan Air ' Lines spokeswoman In New York. "Aj far u we know, the boatqd are okay, but we don't know for aure." Tbc coridiUona tor the sur· render wore not 'lmmedlatel1 known. It wu believed the ~t: tra·leftlst teirottsta boped to ol> taln polltical aaylum rrom A11e111·1~Tovern1mmt .Tbe J apaneae Porelcn Mlnlltty aald all the terrorbta - tncludinc aix ••comradea0 INtd from Japanese Jans to meet the hlJacken' demands -left the Japan Alt Lines DC8 at 4 p.m . mlACJ[. Pace.U> SB . • BOdrdEyes ltOiril Vote ' ForCUSD ....... .,,e41 NURSE ••• • q_ue.tfmnalre whlcb ts beiq-pretett.d OD 10UJll ncndta to aee If it will pick up potenUa• abUlen. Sbe would Ute to aee tbe ques- tioonalre liven to all b1'b lebool caiutruo UblftectScbool J>ts. aDd mqbe eollce~1tQdeats' IO trlct trustees will be uked pOtstlal child a&uiera ca be tGIUlbt to l!PPl'OVe a March bond ldentiftedMr)y. eleietian to P81 for 1cboob to • Marines, tb• Nnal offteel" boUle 1..-new rtudeats expect. said, uve been .. aeapqollted'" ed byllll. With the~ tbat·tbeJ ... TCIDllbt•• board meetmr will count for u abO•• averaae be at '1:80 in tbe board nJCJa> at numberd cb.Ud abuaert. dlatrlct offices, 12972 Calle Pmedo!DSanJuuCaplstrano. Cblld abuaen. ahe ariued, Tt'Uman Be11edict, deputy we re abut ed c blldren •~t; baa p~ a themselves. powtb projection report for But tbe "'--ancler ,_ .... ber trusteea. abowfnt that theubooi ~ -411tnct will exceed i'-atudent .ucc.stw involvement in the c~tf nat year 1>1 m 'ltu· field bu come about ''*-use I cl ti think peopl• ln the eivillan com- e;ilriiument by uet .UJ be muntty were walUn1 for c ,_ r...--.;.;.a ........... ................. somebody (at tbe bue) anl they .,,_, ~~ cap-..i..,, a ....... _... bent over backwards t4 belp t4 the repoA.: me:• Supertntende.nt Jerome T,bo~J91.-bu recomlllelided With the llddltklnal support of t•at dlstdct ldmbdltrat.on put the Navy IDd Karine Cofll9. ahe toaetber -~~aiN, IOUcit-added, 0~COWd.o'tf&ll." Int eomm1mt17 opfnJOD OD bow to WbeD Iba toot tbis job, •bit bad =.!.t::~f~~':t:!;. over-expected to atay at El Toro Wlt11 ht addition. 'l'bom.al•J baa r.c-· July, 11'79. By then, she tbouabt. ommended conduct4ll a March •be would ba'" time to deve)op. leetiall tO ~ 1 ro and write the pro1ram u a a..;...;..i model for tnt.rventtOD and II.ave :i; ~ Jtdn~ .. •ptl'IDUlaCoM· He baa a1.o reeominaBed di> time hWet tor a blab ran.kiai ot- trict 1qppon d the Jane -.so fleer. mlllk'D state bctad eltcUoo. llOme ~ari2ed A diminutive bur1lar who 1Utbtted throucb the doao door to teln etry to an El Toro bome Jett With silverware, Jewel~ and ... b'Ylla.d al$.1,.2". Onna• Count~ 1berUf'1 oftlcerl nld the break·ln wu re- ported bJ 111te1n1 anatyat Wl1llun IL IAIO.; II, ol Mm Stem Drl ... H wu CIQ vac:aUon ·~ tbe time ol the crimt. • WASHINGTON <AP> -Some 50 Houae members 14Jred a federal eourt Judie toda7 to or, der Presldent C&rtel" to sublnlt the proposed Panama Canal treaty to the HOUJe for lta ap. proval in addlUoo to the Sena~. Tne suit llled In U.S. Diitrlct Court in Wuhinston was initial· ed by Rep. Mickey Edwards (ft. Okla.>, who 1114 be believes the House hu the right unC!er the Constitution to vote on the treaty since the proposed pact involves a transfer of American p~. ~ward.a said the Constitution specmes that Con1ress shall have tho authority to dlapose of U.S. ~rty and this means the Senate and the House. • WASHINGTON (AP>...;. Tbe U.S. Supreme Court .,reed tod~ to declct. the te11llt)t ~d pension plus reqUlrlna women to con· tribute a l&r1v portion ~ their aalari• then meu becauae 1tudtea abow womeq •eneral11 llve lonaer and collect more benefttl. The Justiceti vot.d to re- view a ded.lton by tbe Ith ,U.S. Circuit Court of Ap. J>tals •trtklni down aucb a pension plan becauat lt w 11 found to perpetuate -.. 1ex ctiterimlnttk... ...... ··~ .... At ~ aame time, ttwi· court t4day let atand a ruI·· me by Indiana'• bilhelt court outJawtn1 pension plans which pay smaller monthly benefits to women. • Ruling Releases Tapes? W ASIDNGTON CAP> -Some of Richard M. Nixon's famous Wblte Houae tape recordin1s may be relellled for possible use ln elvil suit.a, tbe U.S. Supreme Court saldin effect today. The jusUcea refused to review a decision by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeala ln Wu~ that the tapea could be aub· poenaed as posaJble evidence in a dvil 1uit .P'OWina out Of the Mar Day antiwar aemonstra- ti<JM here in 1971. Lawyers for Nixon ar1ued that the presidential prtvUece ~con· fideuUality barred released the tapes for noncriminal le1al CaMS. NUon'1 appeal represented the fourth time the nation's blthe.st court was asked to consider a legal controver117 sparked by the existence of the ooce-seeret 880 reela aftape. In ltT•. tbe court•• ndinl that Nixon •a claim ot praldenUal privileie could not be used to withhold evidence in a criminal trial forced tbe former president to surrender 30 White House tapes to the special Wattraate prosecutor and ~ed Nlaoo'• ·resignation. Last .T\q\e, tbe court ruled tftat the federal ,ovemment, and not Nixon, control& the 5,000 hours ot recorcUn.p generat.ecl by Nixon's 5~.yearpnsideM1. · P~ before tbe justices Is tbe qmstian Of wbetbu tbe ao tapes med at the Watercate COV· er-up trial d Ni.zoo 'a top aides ean be released fotr broadcast and~uctioo u reeocda aDd ca1..U.. . · . Tbl.s latest appeal "'" out d a suit qalnat former at.tome.JS general Richard EJelrideh)st and John N. Mitchell and t!Jetonner· chiefa d tbe District of Columbia andcapt~pollcet~rces. · llep. Ronald l>ellum1 <D· Calif.), and nJne otben aued in beh&lt ~ UOO persons arrested dwinC the lJ71 demonstr.tlom Procestlnl the war in Soulbeast Alla. . Dellums' and the othen aald tbe 1.200 were UTelt.d u the rw- suJt ~ a coasplracy amani tb defendants Qd others tb l\lp- press lawful dissent. • ' I 424 Aliem. Seized · Pour mobile readlill labt CC.t· lo& Q>.ooo each·~~ bf tbeCla>l*ano u~.~ l>fltrl4· tlds. summer to bolster cluaooai ruclin& DJ'OlfaQW.; ·The ~ adiantaie of tbe readinl labs 1t mObWtJ, 1aJd Karin L)'ncb, diltriet re~ sJ)edaliaL Tbel))e(lalli.Oiltfttted Wbmebaio campen al1oW read· ina teacbeni to talte theb' akllb wberevertbey a.no eel moat. Tbe labl are part <f,a dlatrtct effort to'Jnei'eue the amount ol inatriiCtional time dev<Qd to buic lldlls. CaPtattano students 1bowed a wtdt disparity, school by school. in Jut year'• 1tate testtn; procrlun. Student• attendin• San Clemente'• J.,aa Palmu El•· meQtary ScbOol loe1ea aomo ~ Oranae Couiit111 loweat state aa- HIJACK:.:. .