HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-10-12 - Orange Coast PilotFleeiQg Youth Teen-age Girls
Nearly Choked· L11red ln,o.
~Peet
Y01. 1t. If(). •• • NCTl(llllS, 49 l'AHS
Cross Nea;rly
Chokes Youth
A San Diego youth apgarenUy
trled to swallow the rosary be
bad beeri clutchin& and kissing lot protection Thursday as he )eel
California HilhYt'•Y Patrol cars
QD • hilh speed freeway ch-.,e
from Los Alamitos to Laguna
HUis.
When the pursuit ended in a
crack\Q> at 5:15 p.m., just north
1 of Lake Forest Drive, CHP of-
ficers reported finding the string °'" reli~ beads wedged into
the moQlh ol »year-old Carlos
LOrQiliSAntana.
When Cllficers puJled the beads
out. they fouitd ·tbat the cruclfix
normally attached to rosaH
was ml11in1 and presumed
caught in the suspect'• throat.
" Latuna Hilla paramedics were
aaDlinoned to the scene but
couldn't find the cross. A county
flte departmettt spokesman said
tOday they presumed it bad been
swallowed and would "ahow up
eventually.''
Santana miraculously auf(ered
only mlnol' 1njuries and was
takeo to Orange County J all.
A CHP spokesman said
Santana was booked on charges
of drivin« under thinnuence of
INSIDE T08.4 Y
YOU rnJgl'd think J10U know
~hblo Gbotli bm', bMt did
11011 know that d.t,rgnt
reridut tn thl oiou con rum
the head? Or that 1111\Ught can
o./fft!I the bmo? Sn Food,
P.OgtCl.
drugs and reckless driving.
Tbo suspect was alle&edly t\rst
spotted driving at more than 60
miles an hour along the center
divider shoulder of the San Dieeo
Freeway near Los Alamitos.
omcen gave chase in the
rusb·hour traffic but Santana
allegedly floored the accelerator
and reached speeds of more than
110 during Ute 20-mlle pursuit,
The suspect allegedly •WWII
<See ROSARY, Pa1e AZ)
WASHINGTON (AP>
Former Water1ate proteeutor
Archibald Cox told the U.S.
Supreme Court today that a
special admluions pro11am at a
University of CalifomJa medical
school was needed to help
minorities because "the other
alternatives suggested simply
will not work."
In oral arguments in the case or Allan !>au) Ba.kke, Cox de·
f'"1ded tbe so-called affirmative
action procram used by the
Yl)lverstty'a medical school at
Davis. He said the program
aided minorities "long
vtcthnhed by racial dis-
crimination."
lte was the first of three
attorneys in the oral arguments
to address the court In the Bakke
"reverse discrimlnatJon" case,
which many constitutional
scholars believe will produce the
court's most important
statement on race relations since
it ouUawed segregation 23 years
ago.
Bakke, who is white, suc-
cessfully challenged the
university's program before the
California Supreme Court. He
claJmed the special admissions
1 poltcy made b.lm a v\ctlm of
racial dlscrlmlnaUon.
At stake In Baltke'a case ls the
future or affirmative action
proararm, begun iJi tile last 15
yeal"I tQ liYe Spec?lll preference
to minority meml>th and women
~tlOn ind bualnfla.
The Ctdifoniia court'fuled that
such r ce·consclous progr rns
tJtutioaaJ. Cox argued today that the
ntv r.Jt1's proaram -and
in t &ueh proaram1 -are not
c.., ,PaieAa>
Gangland
Slaying
Reported
BAY HARBOR ISLAND, Fla.
(AP> -The stepson of
underworld figure Meyer Lansky
was shot to death today In what
police speculate was a aangland
revenge killlnt.
Richard Schwartz, 47, was shot
once as he sat in his car beblnd a
restaurant be owned in this
e•clu.sive resort cily between
MlamJ and Miami Beach, police
laid. ·
llll body was found shortly
after 9 a.m. EDT behind the
Jns1 restaurant. Details d the
slaying were not immediately
available.
Schwartz, son of Lansky's
wife, Thelma , had been
scheduled to go on trial Nov. 28
on charees ol killing his drinking
companion. 29-year-old Craig
Teriaca, son of underworld
fiaure Vincent Teriaca.
A number of known mob
fig urea attended Terlaca 's
funeral.
"The motive doesn't seem to
be robbery or anything of that
nature," police spokesman
Ralph Page said. "It would be a
logical conclusion that revenge is
a good possibility. Considering
who he is and the incident with
Terlaca, we have to look at the
revenge theory."
Teriaca was shot June 30 at the
bar of The Forge restaurant
before several witnesses. Police
said Teriaca and Schwartz had
been drinking together an<! the
shooting occurred during an
argument over a $10 bill left on
the bar
Trio Facing
Vice Charges
Three Orange Coast women
were arrested on suspicion of
co nspiracy to co mmit
prostitution Tuesday night by
Newport Beach police.
Vice investigator John Simon
said the three were taken into
custody ot a hotel during a
meettna arran1ed with aa
undercov lnvesti1ator.
Booked into city jajl were
MarjQr\t R yburne, 30, of 19007
Vermont Lane, Hunttnaton
Bead\: Vemel\ Lou Laurence,
41, of 1101 W. MacArthur Blvd.,
Santa Ana, and Toni Marie
Lorance, 29, of 1935 Sher1ntton
Place, Nev.rport Beach. All three
were released alter postifll S2ZO
bail.
I
'
Conductor Leonard Bernstein <right> shares a laugh
with Mstislav Rostrbpovich at the Kennedy Center !or
the Performing Aria in Washini\(>n as they prepare for
a performance with the National Symphony Orchestra.
Teen Girls ~nred
Into ProstitutiOn?
NEWTON, N.J .. (AP) -A
cabinet maJter abd his wife have
been accused of lurtn1 hlah
school girls into a prostitution
operation they ran from their
homelil Wanta1e1'ownahlp.
Su.sex County authorttl~s
charged Frank Barone, 57, Tues·
day with lmpalrina the morals ot
a minor, cunally abu1t11g femal~ under the age o( 16 Rfld
prostitution. His wife, Diane, was
charged witti aidin1 and 1betUn1 him.
Authorities said at least nine
girls were lured into prostitution
since September 1Wf6.
"He would pick up youni
female hitchhikers or be would
use young 1irls as babyslltera
and 1n each case he would try to
talk them Into workina for him as·
a pro1titute," said pr ecutor
Georae Da1&ett. .
BarOD , reached at hit
at~y'1olftceTu ay,d
the chara . '1'bey aro blowl
nothin1 into bl thing up a .
there." About six girls "huna''
around his house for a tJmo. h
said, addina tbey were friends of •
hls Uve-In babysitter.
Da11ett •aid chart• would
not be brought &gain.st any ol the
nine teen·agers, all biib school
atudents Uvlng with their parents
in the general viclriity ... We are
lookiJ1g upon them as victim$,"
he said.
He added, however, that the of.
fice was examining whether
<~e CHARGE, Paae ~)
Youth
Faces
Grilling
I) •
Aaaened ·
A2 DAILY PILOT s Wlldnesd1y October 12 19n
BBPurclaas~ MxoaCo
County Backs
Bolsa Project
Arntrek offlclala HY th y•d
like to step on It when they reach
a five-mile stretch of railroad
track near the 22-acre Nixon
complu in San Clemente. .
By KATHY CLANCY Olti.Delly Plie.lleft
Oranae County aupervlaors
took addition·al steps Tuesday
toward the purchase of park land
which could llnk Huntington
Beach Central Park with the
Bolsa Chica manh
Supervisors unanimously
ordered a study aimed at finding
out bow much it mitht cost to
acquire 120 to lSO acres or park
land stretching from Central
'
p,.... P-ee AJ
SUSPECT ••.
BaltimQre suburb wllh a
pttotocraph of a knife sheath,
hoping someone could identify
one of their few clues to the stab-
bi.Dgdeaths.
Jack Rayhart, a spokesman
fol' the Anne Arundel County
police, said citizens also would
be shown photographs of the
victims: Deborah Ann Hogan,
10; her 8-year-old sister,
Theresa, and their friend Ann
Marie Bneszkiewica, also 8.
Police said the sbealh was
found Monda.y near the small
st;feam in a deMely wooded area
where the parka-cJad bodies were disrovered. The 1irls had
dilappeared Sunday wbUe
playing.
Authorities say they have not
found lbe murder weapon.
Flags at Southgate Ele·
m School, which the girls
attended, new al half-sWf Tues-
day. "If theT can fly them for
gen s, they can ny lbem for
kidS, too, .. said custodian Jim
Winters . Meanwhile, about SO miles
away in Carroll County, state
police sa.id a 9-year-old1boY was
found safe this morning more
than 18 hours after he
disappeared. Troopers said Tt\omu Doehrer was found w~8 along a road about t"'o miles from his rural
F{ftkaburt home. He bed la.st
been s~ about ' p.m. 'l\ies-day, P1-1iol in frGnl ot the house.
The younpter apparently had
l'U.D away Crom home after a fight
with a family member, they said
More lhan 100 persons, tJon.c
with a bloodboW'ld and a stale
police belicop\er. bad taken part
ill the Carroll County ~earch,
they said. Besides the knife 1beath, police
said they hOd only J'e$>0l"t( ol a
stranger ID a bl ~ollCswafen
and some undiscloeed autopsy
details to aulde them in \Mir
invesliaation of th• Cirls'
murders . .. Whal we're wlthholdina is
very impe>rtanl to us. It's au
we've got aol~ for us, ... Sit.
William Chaphn or the Anne
Arundel County homicide squad
said of lhe autopsy reports.
"All indications are that it is
11omebody in the community,"
was all Lt. Robert Russell would
say ot the search for a suspect.
"We are concentratina on the
neighborhood "
Russell said two of the victims
had been stabbed more than 40
times each.
r ..... Paee A I
CHARGE •••
charges should be brought
against any of the customers.
"Barone ls chareed with
arranaint the proslltullon
meetings while he was In Hudson
County," uld Daggett. "The
men would then ·.drive to
Barone's home by appolntmcnt
and meet the girls there ''
The Barones, who have two
pre-school children, turned
themselves in al the prosecutor's
office hen Tuesday. They were
released after po&Unf $2,500 bond
and plecfaing their home as ball.
DAILY PILOT
Park to Pacific Coast Highway.
In addition, county planoers wut seek agreementa with bolh
state authorittes and Huntinaton
Beach city official• for Joint
,planning in the marsh area.
Last June supervisors set aslde
$2 million to help finance what is
envisioned as a possible 380-acre
park stretcbln1 south from
Central Park and around the
marsh.
The link would run along
Huntington Mesa bluff seaward
and also str~lcb arouftd tM
marsh reaching Warner Avenue.
Supervisors' action Tuesday
included steps toward obtainine
the first link, that running
directly seaward from Cesitral
Parle.
But a .O.mlle-per hour Um1t far•
north and southbound Amtrak
trains was irnposed someUme •
during the Nixon presidential
years for security reasons, says
Arthur Uoyd, Western retlonil
manager for the national rail
system. .
Lloyd said Amtrak would Ulte
to see that speed limit Increased
to 75 miles pet hour from aeurve tn the tracks. just north Ol ~~-··"_., ... ~
Clemente to just past the Nix09
enclave.
Action on lhe remainder "l'ill
depend on how successful state authorities are at obtaining up to
924 acres of the Bolsa Chica
marsh, as well as Huntington
Beach ci~ plans for the area
alon& Warner and adjacent t.o
Huntington Harbour.
Bear Bug
•'The Federal Rall road
Administration and Amtrak
itself have jurisdiction on speed
li mils on curves and the
maximums~ that the track
will allow," Lloyd said today.
"But where you have trackage
that wW allow more speed. l()(al
ordinances will restrict speed,
for lnstance at grade crossln1s
This year's state budget
includes $4.6 million to buy the
marsh.
Chow, ij seven-foot, 500-poond Kodiak bear, gets a b~g
kiss from his keeper. Liza DeBedts, following has
capture in Hialeah, Fla. Chow is still ~nder the. effec~s
of a tranquilize r used to capture him following his
escape two days ago.
and for safety. "And in the case of the Nlxon
thing, it was for security," Lloyd
said.
GaterSigns
HOraing, City
AUlMetuure
Carter Says Crisis
'Severe' in Energy
But, he added, "We baYe
shown lbaL 40 miles pet hour 5-
not very practical north of
tA>wn."
He said the maximum speed
between San Dle~o · and Santa
Ana la 80 miles per hour. l8)'iN
trains pick up that speed just
past Del Mar and barrel along to
San Clemente, with a few
alowdowns on curves and.
WASHINGTON <AP)
President carter siped a bill
today providing $14.7 billion for
housing the needy.an~
revitalizing the c1Ues, callinc 1t
"a giant step forward" in
improving living conditions for
low-income, elderly and
handicapped families.
The measure includes $1 .2
billion to help the famllies pay
their rent.
Recalling bis vlsll lul week to
the South Bronx slums ln New
York, Carter said he saw Uvin1
conditions lhat are ••a diiarace to
our sreat country -enouch to
shake our confiderce In the
structure that we've evolved."
While there are no instant
solutions to such hows\.M problems, the Pr~idebl si1d,
"This bill lakes a Clant step
forward."
"In iene.ral, this ls _a :te.r:t.
exctllel'>t pi~ of m~· Cartertoldthem. Ut .Udoae
part flit. remcwina tnlnts6n
building homes in flood p!ains,
caused him concern.
The Presldent said be would
delersnine whether tA> ~te
the restraints with correetive
legltlation next •year or try to
deal with the matter
administratively.
The signin& ceremony followed
Carter'• weekly breakfast with
congressional leaders.
Employment
Up;]obla1
RmeDown
SACRAMENTO <AP>
California employment hit an
all-time high In September while
the jobless rate edged downward
to 7.4 percent, the state reported
today.
The Employment
Development Department 11id
there were 9,452,400 Job-holders
in the state last month, an
increase of 100.000 since Auaust.
Meanwhile, the total or
unemployed looklng for work
dropped from 720,300 in Aueus~to
675,200 in September. the lowest
since October 1974, the de-
partmentsaid.
The jobless rate had been 7.5
percent in August. The national
rate in September ••s 6.9
percent.
The department said all major
industries in the state showed
employment calnl. It also said
statistics from the 12-month
period ended ln September
indicate a stroni improvement ln
the job picture.
During that period,
employment increased by
419,000, unemployment dropped
by 132,000, and the Jobleu rate
dropped from 9.2 percent to 7.4
percent. '
That rate, however. does not
include persons who have 1lven
up looking for work.
Newport Man Not
In Driver'& Seat
Newport Beach resident JU~bard Soriano had a real
ptoblem TuHday when he
want.eel to drive to work.
WASHINGTON CAP> -
President Carter said today the
energy crisis ls "much more
severe than it wu six months
aao" when he unveiled his
energy proftasn.
He promised lO ••go back to the
coUhtry" to lain support for his
proposals. many of which have
been rejected by the Senate.
Carter told repc>rters that ever
sin~ he anoqun.ced his enerty
pro1ram last April, "the oil
companies bave . · . on an
almost hourly basis presented
F ..... P_A..J
BAKKE •••
only ~titutlonal but virtually
necessary.
He contended that special
ad~ ~am wu .. not a
quota. atllast u 1 WOuld use lbe
word."
Prased b7 JuaUee Potter
Stewart to aplaln hil View, C.Ox
aald that lbe unl verslty's
pf'Olram "doe. not point a finler
tA> UY people, telling tbem •you
ate inferior.' " .
He said that unlike quota.a
aaatnst Jewa and blacks used In
the recent past, 'the &pecial
admlsalons proaram cballeoged
by Bekke did not aUematize any
.rroup.
''It. dld pul a llmit on the
nutnber of white people, didn't
ll?" Stewart asked.
Cox said the pro1ram was
justified because lt served tbe
"obJecllve of breaklnc down lsolatlon," civinc mlnortUa"the .
chance to join America'•
mainstream. •
Solicitor General Wade
McCree. aral.linl tor .. t.be'Cuter
administration u a frte'nd·of.the--
court. aJao urted the JusU"5 to
overturn the California court
ruling.
"To be blind to race today is to
be blind to reality,'' he said.
He Sflld that a supposedly
neutral society cannot expect to
see minorttles who for so long
have suffered dtscrlmlnatton to
make algnllicant ialns.
Chier' Justice W•rren E.
Burger asked McCree whether
any racial discrlmin~Uon had
been practiced by the UC Davia ·
medlcal school before the special
admissions program was beiun.
One of lhe worriea clvll riabts
leaders had over the Ba ke case
was that lt could not be proven
that the school, eatabllabed in
1969, had any discriminatory
. history to be remed.Jed.
Deer eermits
Now Available
Thlrty·eiaht unclaimed
permit.a for anUerlesa deer bunt.a
in the Tenaja realon or the
Cleveland National Forest, and
on Santa Calallna Island, wlll 10
on sale Ttiursday, at 8 a.m. at U\e
Lons Beach ~11onal omce of the
Oepartmfl\t or Flab and Game.
Pmnlti wm be oUtred on a
fl rat-come, ft rtt·terved
basis.There are ~laht left for the
Tenaja hunt and thirty left for tbe
Santa Calallna Island hunt; the
I alter lnclud .. an tlO fee.
Soriano. 27, of lDOe Court St.
dl1covered tbat lhlnts h•d
made olf Wllh tb two bucket
seat.a trom bis Flat 12' that h
had left parktcl on •trMt.
ovtrnl&bt. Tbe eallm•&ed
For ful"tbfir information call
Information Officer of the
D~pa.rtmenl of Flah and Game,
Ralph You.n1. at 580-5126. from tho theft wu 1.'100.
their point of view." He called
that "completely leeltimate"
and said he didn't critic~ the
firms fort.be practice.
But. be said. "the basic
struule ls whether or not the
average ra.mlly will be treated
fairly," whether supplies will be
adequate and international
stability and national security
wm be maintained '·or whether a
special interest group can derive
unwarranted advantaee at the
expense of the American
people ...
"I Udnk It is important for me
aeain to go back to the cowitry
and reaffirm the reasons, which
have not chanaed, for the
comprehensive enern policy we
have adopted," Carter said.
Asked. whetber this meant be
would IP ov'f tbe beads or • members o Con areas ' In
appeahn& directly to the people
for support. he replied: "No, I
think I'll be workina with mOlt or
the members ol eon,rea."
crosstnP. "'lbm tbey bit that .S.l mue
stretch that really slow. t.beri1
down." Uoyd said. He sald a 7~mile-per hour
Umit along the Nixon atretcti.
plus some other reviled •~
•
off the San Diego FTeeway •t tbe
La&Wla Freeway junetlon, sped
over to the Santa Ana reeway
and continued south. Officers
who got close durbti the chase
·said Santana periodically kisaed
the rosary be was boldina.
The CHP said Santana flnall.y
Jost control of bl•· cat and-;
s mashed into the center divider
feace just after aier&iDI back
onto the San l>iego Preeway
north QI Lake Forest Drive.
Rq. Sale
O.ina ...•••••••••••• $ 2649.00 · $ 2249.00
Credenn , . • • . . . . • . • • 1229.00 1049.00
Drawer deck • • . . • • • • • • 359.00 299.00
Rectansular t.lblc . • • • . . . 849.00 719.00
SQtat bxk arm d'l.tir • • • • • 360.00 299.00
Spl•l b ck 5idc chair. • • • • 299.00 259.00
a
-,Orange Coast
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Former Watergate pr~ecutor
Archtbald Cox told t'-U.S. Supreme Court toda~ hat a
special admissions progrJm at a
Unlveraity of Cali,Cornia medical
schOol is need~ to htJlp minorities
bec!ause "the other alternatives
suggest~simpl,y will not work."
In oral argume11ts in the case or
Allan:J>aul,Batke, CQx defended
lhd so-caJled affirmative action
program Uffd by the ualvetsit.y's
med school at Davis. He said the
program aided minorities .. lon1f
EDWARDS AIR FORCB
BASE <AP> • In lts most
realistic test and fastest night to
date, the Sp. ce Shuttle
Entem e-lJncl sa.Wy toclay
after a diving descent simulating
a r ffum.s~ce.
WASHI G'f.ON «AP, ...,.
tesldmt CattU sign • ~
\cMtay 'l)liMdmg !$14.7 bil tor housing the needy and
revitalizine the cities, callin& it
"a liant step forward" in
hJiprovinc living conditions for low-income , elderly and
!ianclicapped ramilies.
Tbe measure 1ncludes $1 .2
billion to help the families pay
tbeirrent.
Recal.Ubg his vistt last week to
the South Bronx ums in Ne~
York, Carter said he saw livin1 ~that are ''a disarace to our great country -enough to
bake our confiderce in tfle
~tructure that we·v~evolved. ••
While there ar, no In tant
aolutioi:aa to sufh houaing
t.roblems, the President said,
'This bill takes a giant step
forward.'
"In general, this is a very •~cellenti piece of legi4laUon,"
Carter t.O d them. But be said~
part of it. removing restraint.I CID
biUJding homes in f10od pla.Ins,
caused him concern.
The sign.in& ceremony followed
Carter's weekly breakfast wttb
congressional leaders.
EDITION
v i c t I m i .~ e d b y r a c l a 1
d.iscnmfntltlon."
Bakke, who Js white, sue.
ceaafully ohallen1ed the
university's Protram t>.fore the
CaUforiUa Supreme Court. He
claimed it made bjm a victim of
radi.ldiscrimlnation.
B kke's "reverse
dJScrlminatlon '• case ls
con.si<leted by many
constitutional scholars to set the
lltage fOt' the hllh court's most
lmportant statement on race
relations 1lnce it out1!1wed
tJnUk the previous ru1bta,
tOday•a glide, carraed U ve oo
national television, was so short
that the shllttle was unable to
malte a leisurely U-tum and
n:iany t t maneuvers before
landin1.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1977
segregation23years ago
At stake m Bakke's case is the
future of afflrmativo action
programs, begun in the last lS
years to give special preference
lo minority members and women
in education and business.
Bakke's attorney, Reynold
Colvm of San Francisco, urged
the juslic.es lo affirm the
California Supreme Court de-
cision. '
Colvin argued that the
Constitution's guarantee of
"equal protection" !or all citizens
1s violated when a ~chool takes
into account an applicant's race
-making that factor a "crucial''
one
·'The use or race as a basis for
admission to a medical school, or
for granting any other rights, is
improper." he argued
Race should be considered only
as 1t provides a clue to the
appllcant's total evaluation, he
said
Cons1dermg race, Colvin said,
"1s permissible only to the extent
1l gives some clue to the
'Raee
admissions committee whether
there was a prior htatory of
economic or educational dep.
r1" ationor persecution."
Bakke's legal briefs have
contended that in such cases,
tri vmg special preference to
cconomJcaJlyor educationaUyd•
pnved applic&nts would be ac·
ceptable
Colvin appeared to displease at
least on& member or the court,
Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., by
devoting the first 20 minutes of his
These five New Yorkers, baseball Cans all,
pedaled their bicycles across the country to
the Orange Coast just in time for the World
Seric!l. They watched Tuesday night's
Yankee wm on TV in Newport Beach. Can
you guess which one iS lhe only Dodger ran
among them., From ten are Pete Hanson.
Ken King, Robbie Robinson. Rich Robinson
..IOU Hich Kelly.
Mesans Ask Zone Change
,. Citizens Seek General Plan AmeRament
About 100 residents of Costa
Mesa came lo a planning
meetin1 Tuead ay to tel I
commissioners they want their
neilhbiot'hOod below 17th Street
left16ne.
ore thsn 24 c1ti1ea.s stood up
to speak about a request to the
planning commission to amend
their area's general plan des-
ignation, and a re<:ommendallon
by the clty pl~in& staff for
some zoning changes.
Reafdetit.e told co11u'!i$&oners
~arte·r Says Crisis
• •
'Severe' in E~ergy
WASHINGTON CAP>
President Cart.er aaid today the
eneray crisis is "much more
severe than it was six months
ago" when he unveiled his
eoergy program
He promised to "go back to the
country" to gaan support for his
proposals, many of which have
been rejected by the Senate.
Carter told reporters that ever
since he announced his enercy
program last April, "the oil
co111panles have . . on an
almost hourly basis pre."ented
their point of view." He called
that "completely legitimate"
and said he didn 'l criticize the
NORFOLK, Va. <APl M<>re
than 100 people have been
Indicted as the result of the
blcgesl "sUq" in the history of
U.S. tJw enforcement, the FBI
said today
LoCal , state and federal aeento;
manned phony f e ncing
operations in an apartment in
Virginia Beach and a pool hall In
...... l'(twport Nt1n. They took in
more than $600,000 ln stolen
goods, and most or the
transactions were videotaped,
Hkl Herb Clough, special afenl
ln charge of the Norfolk FB or
flee.
,
firms for the practice.
Bu\, he said, "the basic
struegle is whether or not the
average family wlll be treated
fairly," whether supplies will be
adequate and international
stability and national security
will be maintained "or whether a
special interea~iroup can derive
unwarranted ~vantage at tht expense of the American
people ...
"I think it Is important for me
again to go back to the country
and reaffirm the reasons, which
have not changed, for the
comprehensive ener&Y policy we
have adopted," Carter said.
The soods ranged from a bottle
of baby formula, stolen during a
house break-in, to a forklift
truck. There were hubcaps, tape
recorders and luxury cars.
Clough sa.id 107 people faced
2'16 charses rangina from
homicide to robbery. The
indictments were returned Tues·
day by special grand Juries.
5"<ty-six or those charaed had
been arrested by 'this moi'ninJ,
Cloup!.said, ln NorCotk, Viretnia
Beach. Newport News,
Richmond, Ftederlcksbur and
upstate New York.
The operatlon. code·,n•med
..
allotted 45 minutes to recitin& the
caae•stact.s.
.. I'm here pr\marily to ti
constitutional ar1ument1, •
Powell said in a gentle rebuke. "I
would like some help with lhe
constitutional lssues. '' •
,, ..
A; DAILY PILOT C Wedn 'la 0Dt9!1t! 11, 1177 •
New State Law
-.
Distri If Must Pay
M•WJort Beach and Costa
?ii lPP11tn will bave to pay
out ~ than $1.3 million to
o r ac1'ool district& by 1981
Uiider a now law. Newport·Mesa
•chool ~ wore told 'l'ues-day.
Nor1nan a. Loats. deputy
superintendent of the Newport-
Meu Unified School District,
aald tbe mopoy must b9 paid
under AB 65, a new law almed at
equaUslng expenditures per
atudtnt between wealthy and
pocr school dlatrlctl.
A schedule presented to ttit
board ahow1 lhat the dlalrict
must turn over to the state
$782,540 in 1978-79, $1.2 inUlion in
19'19·80, and $1.a mllllon in
19'0-81.
Jean Harmon, executive
aulstant to the superintendent,
said the Newport-Mesa district's
budget growth is also restricted
under the law, with 2.3 percent
growth permitted next year.
That ls not enouab to offset
inflation, sbo aald.
"The effect of the law I& to
between Newport Boulevard and
Eh!en Avenue along Monte V~ta
Aveitue.
~ommluloners uid they
would like lo see more houalo1
developments adJacent to
Newport Boulevard. Townhowies
are proposed for that property.
* * * E',..,.. Page AJ
REZONE •••
indicates on a larsor scaJe what
types ol uaes the city believes
should be developed lr1 the long
run ln different areas.
However, much or the soning
now in exlatonce predates the
ceneral plan, which wa1 adopted
in Um>. Under a state law passed
In 11r74, zontna and general plan
de1l1nation1 mutt be
compatible. Where they are In
conruct. one or the other must be
chanted. .
The aru ln quesllon Is
bounded by 17th Street, Tuttln
Avenue, 1Sth Street and Ora:n1e
Avenue. Moet of the area b zoned
tor either alncle·famUy homu or
medlum-denalty raldel'IUal de·
velopment.
However, Lho central plan du·
lpat.ed the are1 for low density,
which would pennlt 1ln1le homea
only,
The lnue aroae when de-
veloper Peter Nouno IO\ltht to
build a lO·unlt condominium
project, which would meet
zonl111 requl~mentl but nqt the general plan. ' /
ChairDlan Clarke said thal
chancing the general plan des·
isnaUon to medium·dens1ty
residential would permit •th
t.ypee ~ nJsUn1 IOSllng-.
penalize wealthy districts, and
we are that," Mra. Harmon 1ald.
The school finance law is a
result or the Serrano vs. Priest court decision, which held tbat lt
is unfair to penalise student.
financially Just because tbey live
ln poor school dl1trict.a.
The bill's goal, Mrs. Harmon
explained, is to bring the amount
1pent per student In each
California school district to
within P> of that spent in all
other achooi diatricti in the state
E',....P11pAJ
SUSPECT .••
the victtmi.. Deborah Ann
Hogan, 10; her 8·year·old sister.
Theresa. and their friend Ann
Mane Brzcszkiewicz, also 8.
Police said the sheath was
found Monday near the small
stream in a densely wooded area
where the parka·clad bodies were discovered. The girls had
disappeared Sunday.
Meanwhile. about SO miles
away in Carroll County, state
pohce said a 9.year-old boy waJo.
found safe this morning more
than 18 hours after he
disappeared. Troopers said
Thomas Doehrer was found
wanderln1 along a road about
two mites from his rural
Flnk.sburg home He had last
been spotted about 4 p.m Tues-
day. playln1 in front or the house
The youngster apparently had
run away from home after a fight
with a family member, they aald.
More lhan 100 persona, alone
with a bloodhound and a state
police helicopter, had taken part
in the Carroll County search.
they said.
Emp~~
Up;Jobfeal
Rate Down
. ,
SACRAMENTO CAP)
Callfomla employment hll an
all-Ume hllh in September while
the jobleu rat.e .ct1ed downward
to 7.4 percent, th• at.ate report~
today.
The Employment
Development Department said
there were 9,452,400 J<>b·holder~
io the :;;tale last month, an
incre~ o( J00.000 since Au&usl.
•
Conductor Leonard Bemsteui Cright> shares a la~gh
with Mstislav Rostropovtch at the Kennedy Center for
the Performing Arts in Washington as they prepare for
t1 performance with the National Symphony Orchestra.
CHP Nabs Speeder
In Laguna Hills
A San Dleao youth apparently
tried to swallow the rosary he
had been clutchln1 and kluln& for protection Thursday u he led
California Highway Patrol cars
on a higb speed freeway chue
from Loi Alamltoa to Laauna
Hills.
When the pursuit ended ln a
crackup at ':15 p.m .• just north or Lale• Forest Drive, CHP of.
flcers reported flndlnl the strin&
~en Favored.
RENO. Nev. (AP) -The Loa
AntelH Dodjora are l·to-7
favorii. to defeat Ute New York •
YankOOI tonlSht ln the second
1amo of Ulo tm World &!rtu, accordln1 t~ Nev da odd•·
maken.
Harrah'• Reno and Lake
Tahoe 111\0HI book also aald the
Dodaers were slllJ 10·to·13
ravorltea to win the belt-Gf·
seven game series detphie bing .
the openor to the Vennes 4-3 ..
Tuesday nljht.
of religious beads wedged into
the mouth ot 20·yoar·old Carloe
Lom·e11 Santana.
When omcera pulled tht beads
out. they found that the crucifix
normally attach~ to rosaries
was ml11lo1 and preanmed
caupUn the suspect 's tbtoet.
Laguna llllls paramedJOI w~
summoned to the 1cene but
couldn't flnd the era.a. A county
fire department spo~esman 1ald
today they pre1umed I\ bad been
· 1wallowed and would "lb.ow up
eventually."
Santana mlr1culou1ly tuffeNd
only minor lnJurlt• and wu
taken to Oranat Count.)' J all.
A CHP 1pokeaman 1ald
Santana waa booked on cttar1es
ol
"''
,
Thlrty·elght unclatmed
per"lts for antlerless dffr launts
in \h• t:enaja re1lon of the
·Cleveland National Forest. and
on Santa Catalloa Island. will o
on 1ale Thursday, at 8 a.m. at
Loog Beach Ntlonal offaee of the
Department of Fish and Game.
Permit.I wUl bo O(f on a
fi rst·comlt, flut-aerved
basis.There are eight left for the
Ten,Yabunt and thirty left fort.Ile
Sani. Catalina Island hun\; the
latter includes n $IO Cee.
For furtber informaUOft call
Information Officer of th~
Department of Fish and Game,
Ralph Youns. at SS0.6126.
However, the cornmlMlon alto
recommended to the city council
that most or the area between
15th and 16th street.a and between
Orange and Santa Ana Avenues,
currently zoned for medium dens·
ity. be rezoned 50 that multi·
tamUY dw runo could only be
bulldf lot$ •ere combined.
Meanwhile. the total or
unemployed looking tor work
dropped from 720,300 l,n August to ----------------:-~--,---~~~---------"'."":"!'"'!'l" ..... ~·
675,200 In September, the lowest
since October 1974, the dt· A Colle Mesa woman returned aft.er a brief absenc~ Tuesday
d fOund that 14,820 ln camer1
ft\Upment and Jewelry had been
polleeaaid. .:; Someone prted open louvered
"1qdows at the home of Laura
ut.h Blrchell between 9:30 a.m.
and l p.m., police aald. About
'4,800 worth of the mlaatn1 Items
were c:ameras, lenaes and other
photographic equipment, ac·
cording to police reports
Ma111en iD Mesa
Assemblyman Den1tls
angen <D-Huntlnston ~art\>
will Jlold a community forum toal1ht at Costa Mesa City Co~il cbatriben from 7: 30 to t
o'clock.
c
DAILY PILOT
Planning Director Charles
Roberts said this chanae was
requested beuuse If multiple
units were buUt there, u ls
currently permitted, on the
present Iota there would be Uttle
uubte open space. lfe aald that
In larg~r projects the apace can
be better planned. ·
Commissioners also pointed
out that at present most of the
Iota can't have unlt1 added
becauee water malna are
inadoquate and, untU they are
replaced, a fire hazard would
exist.
· Uue Tax Eyed
CARSON CITY <AP>
Geothermal exploration in
Nevada could run out of steam
unleu a current tax on
aeothtrrnal leases ls chan1ed lo'
provide leviea on actual
production, a le1uslatlve panel
h•1~iold.
pa rtment said
The Jobless rale had been 7.~
percent in Au1uat. The national
ralt '" September waa 6.9 percent.
The department said all major
industries In the state showed
employment gain!! It also said
1tati1tlc1 from the 12-month
period ended In September
lndlcat.e a strong Improvement in
the job picture:
That rate, however. doea not
Include persons who have 1iven
up lookina for work.
Teen Girls Held
In Mesa Burglary
Two 14·yeJ1r-old Cotta Men
girls were arrested Tuesday
after they allegedly stole $:f26
from a gas station and hid lhe
money ln a planter.
Police aatd the incident oc-
curred about 1 p. m at the Exxon
station at 2600 Newport Blvd. The
station ultendant repori.ec:t that
the lwo 11rla, after chattiftl with
'him, look the money from a
drawer while ht was helpln1 a
customer. f •
Speedup Sought
'Amtrak Raps 'Nixon Limit'
Amtrak offlc11l1 HY they'd
like to Itel> on lt when they reach
a fiY•milt 1tretch of railroad track near the 22-acre Nixor.
complex In San Clemente.
But a .O.mll•~r our limit tor
north and SOUU\bound Amtrak
trains .w11 f mposed sometime
durint the Nixon presidential
years for security reasons, saye
Arthtll Lloyd, Western relfonal'
manager for the national rail
1y1tern..
Lloyd said Amtrak would Uke
i. see that 1peed limit Increased
to 75 miles per hour from a curn
la the tracks just north of san
•Cltruente to Just past ttie Nlxon
enclave.
,.The Federal 1\allroad
~dminlatratl~n and Amtrak
1uelf have juriadlctlon on 1p6ed
limit• on curves and the
maximum speed that th• track wUl 'eUow," Lloyd said today.
"8\lt Yo'here you have track•1e
that wiD allow mort speed, locaJ
ordinances will restrict sPted.
for instance at 1rade cros~ings
and forsafety.
"And In the case of th• Nixon
thins, It wu for security," Lloyd
said.
~ut. he added, "We have
shown that 40 miles per hour is
not very practical north of
town."
He 1ald the maximum speed
between San Diego and Santa
Ana ls 90 milea ~r taour, saying
trainl pick up that speed j1.11t
past Del Mar and barrel along to ·
San Clemente, with a few
1lowdown1 on curves and
croselnp.
1'1hen they hit that 5.I mlle
1tretcb that really slow• them
down," Lloyd aald.
He uld a 75-mlle·per hour
limit atone tbe Nlxon stretch,
plus 1ome other revised speeds,
would nve San Dle10 to Los
Ancelet travelers about 18
minute~.
Amtrak pruenhd the
Increased speed plan proposal u
part of a Clve~1ur plan lsauttS In
Wul\lnfton. Tb• plan also calls
tor increased aervltt bet n
the two clUes and an lnettue
from five dally roundlrlps to
11even
Res.
011na ••.•.•......•.• $ 2649.00
Credcnu • . . . . . • . • • 1229.00
Drawer deck • . • . • • . . • 359.00
Rectangular uble . • • . . . 849.00
Splat bKk arm chair . • . . • 360.00
Splat back ~ide eh air. • . • • 299.00 .
..
• .,..., ...... "'9ff ......
FORMER PRESIDENT NIXON'S SAN CLEMENTE ESTATE TO BE TOURIST ATTRACTION
A Ste>9lfilay Charity Event to Booat th• City'• 50th Birthday Celebration
r
.... PUblic Tours of Grount/JJ HU.torical First
Tile ff'ounds or former
President llichard Nixon's 22·
acre San Clemente estate wiJI be
opened to ourists tor the firs""\
time durms a one-day charity
event this winter, a San
Clemente Chamber: of
Commerce offici-1 say•.
The bus tours. M\J•r Feb. 261
1918, were anoounOed Tuesday
by Alu Goodman. executive
manager or the chamber of
commt.•r He descrili them
as a IUAl:t·f 1 .,a ucational
ventute' <'clebfatlnf lhls seaside
city's SOlh "lversary.
"W~ appr«iate thls offer ftorn
the Nixon family and want the
public to know we are not paying
them anything tor the privilege,"
GOO\f mtm aaJd.
"All procetdJ> rrom the ticket
sale:. \\ill go to the • chamber to
cover e.'<pense::o for the birthday
celebrnt on, • including a
cocktail party and a b~r, party
for the city's 28,000 residents.
Goodman estimated that 4.300
people would pay $2.50 for the
25-minute bus tour throuch
Nixon's La Casa Pacifica, a $1.4
million dollar estate that
includes a Spanish-style mansion
and guest bouse, swimming pool,
&olf course and helipad.
Nixon mewed into tbe rnanslon
in 1969. and four years later a
group ol prominent Republican
businessmen Cinanc:ed
onstruction of lhe $200,000 1011
course.
The buses will leave San
Clemente llagh School ot 10·
minute intervals between 9 at.m
and 5 p.m.. and guides will
provide commentary on the
history of the area and the Nixon
family, Goodman said
Goodman said no one wall ht!
altOWe<f Ofr the tour bUS~. ft IS
are not unusual an central
California. e\en h e "us
~urpnscd by th~ hundreds
spotted along the Pac1f1<; coast
He said the) portend <i
population boom among spiders.
''All .the en\'ironmental
coriditions are probably nght,"
speculated Lennie Vincent. a
grad uate enlOfl'\Ologist
specializing in spideri. at t;C
Berkeley.
Vincent explained that tt\e
huge webs are made up or
rnlllions of smaller ones woven
by spiders so they can use the
wind lo migrate. •
Residents as far as 100 miles
not known yet whether Nixon
ttimsell wdl greet the tourists.
Other homes in the .area in the
renced Cypress Shores seaside de·
\'elopment where Nixon's house is
located may be included in the
tour. Goodman said
"I think a lot of people would
like to see a little blt of history,"
Goodman said. He added that
during the s.wpmer. more than
500 people a day stand outside the
gates or 'the Nixon complex
taking photographs.
The chamber exec0t1ve said
arrangements for the opening
were mode by Jack Brennan. a
formcr Marine Corps colonel and
Nixon's top aide. Brennan wu::.
unaYalluble for ~mment on the
tour Tue:iday
A handful ol Secret Service are
ass1gn<.-d to Nixon. as they are to
all former Presidents or their
w1do"s. and u iuurd ut the gute or Cyprc::.s Shores providel> ad
d1tional security for the complex
A. lralil engineer whose leg was
evered Tuesday when he slipped
beneath the wheels Of a moving
caboose in Buena Park was
reported ln stable condition in a
hos pital intensive care unit
tod•Y·
Buena Park police said Gordon
McDowell, s1. or Mira Loma, was
uttempttng to climb aboard his
moving engine when he slipped
and fell.
Officers said McOowell's left
lee wn.o; severed at the knee and
the train wheels also severed
several toes on his riaht foot.~
He underwent surgery arter
the 11: 10 a.m. accident at West
Anaheim Community Hospital.
police said. The accident OC·
cuf"kld on the SoUthern Pacific
l!allway o ln n ar Western
Avenue.
Set
, Jt'ATIMA, Portugal <AP>
Pilgrims jammed this village ln
ntral Portuaal today and
•p,lted over Into the fields around
as they prepared for the closing
Thursday or the annual holy
seaS<>n at the Roman Catholic
shrine of f'attma. More than
20.000 persons were expected for
the rites at the chapel on p.e spot
where the Virgin Mary is eaid tb.
have appeared before ttiree UlUe
shepherd children on May 13,
1917. and to ban returned on the
13th of the monlh for the next five
monlh:s
\
r
Theater
Closµre
Sollght
An Orunee County Suptnor
Court hearioe Into allegations
that the Mitchell Brothers Santa
Ana theater is showing obscene
movies resumed today before a
judae who is being asked to issue an injunction.
IC Judge Lester Van Tatenhovo
signs the order soua:ht by the city ot Santa l\J\a. the Honer Plan
theater would be closed until
trial of the issue raised In the
city's civil action.
Lawyers for the city s8.llthex
intend to include in tbelr
courtroom evidence a number of
sli 11 photographs depicting
scenes from mo\'ics shown at the
theater between October of 1975
and March of 1977.
They claim that the
photogrMphs will prove that at
lew.t 48 movies shown during
that 18 month period ure obscene.
without redeeming social value
and in violation of the city's
an ta-obscenity ordinunce.
Lawyers for the Mitchell
Brothers chain argue that the
city ordinance is unconstitutional
und that any closure of the Honer
Plaza theater would amount to
denial of free speech.
They have pointed out that
sunilar attempts by other
California communities to
prevent showing ln Mitchell
th eaten; of movies condemned as
obscene have been unsuccessful
Judge Van Tatenhove b
expected ta rule today on the
1:;sue of whether the comln1 trial
will be before jurors or will be
nonjury.
Lawyers ror defendants James
and Artie Mitchell would prefer a
JUry. Lawyers for the city feel
tbatJudgaVan Tatenhovei;bould
rule on the o~cenity Uisu~
OC to Hire
Lawyers for
Noise Claims
Private attome)'s will be hired
to ass1::.t County Couni>el Adrian
Kuyper in defending 265 personal
damage claims brought against
tht! <.'OUl\ty lx!cau::.e of Orange
Co unty Airport nu1sl.'
~uperv1sors decided Tucsda>
Kuyper was ashd to prepare a
hsl or pnvate haw farms with thf'
l'\pcrlist• to handle upcomini::
airport Jlrt nobe luwsu1u. He also
is to submit another Uat of
adjustor-investigutor firms to
.c.s1st m tnal preparation.
Kuyper told suJ)4lrv1sors he dad
nut know how much the outside
htdp might cost but he" <•s told to
report those co::.ts every two
months.
He said hb own oCfice 1s not
starred to handle all or the legal
and clerical work necessary
The plaintiffs. who reside near
the airport, contend jet noise has
had an adverse errect on thelr
health and has lowered
'pro~y values.
Two Plead Guilty
PHOENIX, Arlz. CAP> Two
former oftlclals of a defunct
Arizoria land firm have pleaded
guilty in federal court to reduced
charges In a ~.3 million swindle
by New Life Trust Inc. Cecil
Bateft'lan, 59. ot Oklahoma City,
and Donald F. Steward Jr., 35, of
Sovato, Calif., were ll!Jloni five
l)i)rsoas indicted by· a federal
gtand Jury last April on charcei-or mail fraud.
......... ;<..-"~·'"""'"
Gem
Talk
DIAMOND FAEEOOMS
don't tlus/1 them awu11'
Slow-flow Fauce
' .\n)llm e )OU think that lhe
Ameri,an ity.stem i · tiahterung th'
screws too much on your personal
freedoms. consider this·
When a Russian \igal\ot 1ot
promoted tA> the top position in the
Comauwst Party of Soviet Georlia.
l'le went al his new Job bare·hancf~.
You see, Mr, Btgs hot didn't llk
jewelr}·. So. he called a 1neeUl\I
other party bipi1s. sat them down.
and had them place their hands on
the table. Mr. B1gshot's hands were
bue, bill the other leader1 of the
"classless society" showed fineers
and wrists that &Uttered with
diamonds. ''Gei l'Jd of them" was the
order. We don't know if they nushed
them down the drain, or what. But. lr
they did. they were aclin1 like
cnp\lalist1. because, ac:cordlna to
Insurance report•. more than S2:S
million ln diamonds hai n lost tn
Amertcbn sewers and 1arbi1e can-s·-------
durmg the pHt 20 yeara. So be
cardul. In Amerlca you can kffp
your diamonds. Don't nu h your rr edom down the drain•
A4 DAILY PILOT l../SC WednQday. October 12. 1977
DEATH AND TAXES: Our
coa1tal assemblyman, Ron
Cordova, the Democrat fro1n El
Toro, 11 back in our region and
still banglna away Gt the lasue ot
property tax reform.
Cordova waa down lo our
coaaf.a) southerly Hdlon only
ye1tentay, 1pulclq before the
Caplatrano Valley Exchance Club on the property tax a!tuaUon.
In this area. the freshman
auemblyman graded the
Cautomha Leaillature on bow it
attaclted tho problem. •
He suaceated that the Leei,slatu.re fiunked.
You may recall back when the
solons were in Sacramento
se11lon, our man Cordova ended
up in the eye of the property tax
reform hurricane when he
rcfUSed to support a measure
th t was the darllnai of most of
the Democrats.
FOR IDS TR0l18LE, be got
verbally na~ed on the Assembly
floor by one Willie Brown, the
Democrat from San Francisco
Brown, of course. lsn 't going to
have anything lovin& to say
about any Jt&~lW:>r who doesn't
line up with his own liberal
viewPOint.
Cordova bad taken the view
that the ane1ed tax reform
measure was in reality mOl'e of a
Robin Hood bill -&1vlng no tax
relier to those who pay the m06t
and aiding only the lower
brackets.
In his talk down in the
Capistrano Valley, Cordova de-
chlred he plan.a to introduce a
homeowner's tax exemption bill
in the next round when the law-
makers gather in Sacramento.
Trus plan would carry many of
lhe ideas suggested by our own
Orange County Assessor Bradley
Jacobi.
Thus the homeowners tax
exemptiori would be increased
from $1, '150 lo $2,~ each.~~.
Then the exemption w~d be
allowed to "noal." Maybe this is
somt'thina Uke noatina curteMy.
AN\'WA.Y, WHAT it means LI
that as the ptoperty value on a
borne ls increaaed by the county
asse&s0r. lhe exempllon would
increase In dirfft proportion.
Additionally. the Cordova·
JacobS prop05al would abo low
an e~tra $125 exemption for
e ch year a homeowner mes for
an exemptJon on the same
property.
That might be envisioned as a
sli&ht .curb against those who
would be tempted to nU off on speculation()( a fat profit.
Despite hit havlng locked
horns with Willie Brown and
othera of the liberal wing,
Cordova still envialons aome form of propetty t.ax relief belng
paased by our august Legislature
before the solons fold up in
September of 1978. ,
THAT LEAVES JUST about
one year for a lot of pondertng.
And you can bet on considerable
speech-making In the intertm.
Cordova, however. probably
went to the core of t~ ~t.LeStiou
when he warned, ''I'm not coing
to supPorl a bill that would
bankrupt the state."
And that means II you reduce
taxes, then eovernment has only
three choicu: 1. Go into debt: 2.
Reduce spending a Uke amount:
3. Find a new source to tax.
H's that third choice you have to worry about.
Israelis
Accept
Proposal
JERUSALEM CAP> -The llraeli cabinet has unanimously
accepted the C1uter
administration 'a tentative
proposal for Palestinian ~pre
sentatlon at a new Geneva peace
conference. .
A State Department
spokesman in Washington said
the Israeli decision Tuesday was
a step forward, but. he cautioned
that the Arab st•tes may demand
chan1es In the still-secret
"working pa~" the Jnaelit ac-
cepted.
THE KEY POINT of dlJpule ls
expected to be the question or
oartlcipation by the Palestine
Liberation Organization CPLO>
in tbe proposed Arab-Israeli
peace talks. In announcing the
taraell decision. cabinet
Sttretary Arieh Naor renewed
Israel's refusal to necotiate with
the PLO.
Meanwhile, PLO spokesman
Faruk Kadduml told the United
Nations Gcieral Assembly in
New York that there will be "DO
peace without the Palestinians
and no PalesUnians without the
PLO." He also said Foreign
Minister Moshe Dayan·~
statement Monday that Israel
will not give up \he West Bank of
the Jordan and lhe Gaza Strip
means the PLO's "armed
struggle will continue."
TllE STATE Deportment spokesman said the working
paper would now be presented to
the Arabs for consideration. The
proposal deals only with the
procedures for reconvening the
suspended Geneva conference
and not with the s ubstantiH
issues lo be negoUaled at the
peace conference.
lt is understood that the
working paper , completed an
talks between President Carter
and Israeli Foreign Minister
Moshe Da.yan last week. calls for
a three-stage peace conference
IN THE OPENING phase.
Israel would face a unified Arab
delegaUon lncludJn& Palestinian
representatives. The talks would
then b~eak up into bilateral
working groups in which lsraeJ
would negotiate relevant issues
with each Arab state
individually. Finally. the braelis
would rneet with Jordan, EIYPt
and the Palestinians to decide
the future or the Gau Slrip and
the West Bank.
• Senator Huberl Humphrey.
<D·Minn. >. has resumed
radiation treatment for
inoperable cancer of the
pelvis. a t:n1ve1·s1ty or
Minnesota spokeisman said
Tuesday.
Dead at 73
"iovoli.st Mac}\mlay Kantor.
1956 Pulitler Prize \\inner
for .. Andcrsonnlle" and
author of 32 novels and
hundreds of short stories.
cli~d Tuesday in Sarasota.
Flu., of heart ailment.
New Treaty
To Reduce
Nuke Arms
WASJDNGTON CAP> -A new
treaty being worked out with the
Russians would reduce nuclear
weapon stockpiles. slow the de·
velopment of nl•w arms and set
~t.tparatc ct:1Jings on major
missile systems. according to
Carter administration officials.
They told The Associated
Press that while the negotiations
now CE'ntcred In Geneva are far
from O\ er. the emerging pact
rcprt•!>cnl-. maJor achievement::.
toward the goal of arms
reduction
BUT ON Capitol Hill. as details
emerged, there were predictions
of a clash with Congress One
knowlt.'<lgeabte source said the
U S. posilton had collapsed since
March, when Carter proposed a
comprehensive ·mutual weapons
cutback that was rejected by the
Kremlin.
Initial questioning will begin
Thursday when Secretary of
Stale C)'rus Vance appears
before the Senate Forel1n
Relations Committee to testify
on weapons negotiations as well
as on administration efforts to·
arrange a Middle Eut peace
conference by Christ.mu.
VANCE IS to be que$lioned on Friday by the Senete arma
control subcommittH/.buded by
Henry Jackson <D-\Vasb.). a
leading hard-liner wtto has
warned or concessions to tM
Russians In past Republican
administrations as well as the
present Democratic one.
Among the pMncipal features
of the new treaty are re-stralnts
on the development of R~lan
IJltercontinental baltlslic
misslles that pack multiple
warhelids and a temporary
• range llmil on cruise missiles
carried by the American bomber
ron::e.
BOTH POINTS could be
constdercd concessions lQ tbe
United Slate!) as the Soviets had
resisted co nstraints on
modemliln" their mlssllel> and
wanted to lmpose permanent
limits on lhc jet-powered crwse drones.
However. ii. was learned lhe
Soviets wouid be allowed aoout
300 heavy missiles, double tho
total Initially pushed by the
Carter adminisi.ration.
Jody Powell. tile Wh1 i.e House
press secretar} . said .on Tuesday
thot the adminis~ratlon would not
make any conce•aion not
matched bv the Russlans.
Frost Warn~gs Posted
Storma, Galea Move Toward Great Lakes
'.l'e•)N'rat•re•
"'-&..-"•· 6S SI .. . " 1• • .. '7 .. ... ... .u ,. a OI
~ 41 JU Jr ,.
,. 41 •
·~ .. .,
IJ " u • e.a 5' " ,, .. jt .. ,.
,, J1 ...
4l :11 .tit 72 ., 2 ...
'2 ...
'1 ... .. ,.
ti H •S d
..., .... o.e-, ............ /11/onth.,.,,,,,,, ,, ~ °" "°' "'"" '°"' .,_.. i.... li ~o P 111 (1111 1>111or• r Pll\"~W411wlll ... __ ed
a.turda1 •llCI .. l!Clly If y>U Clo llOI
-.,,,.,, L'Opy l'I' I '""' ca:I "'°'910•1!1 •• ,_..,..w.11111e ..... lid
11m11tr•tUt"H In 6olithern C.11t0<nt1
lllurldev
Tl•• l .. llonll WOIMr 5e,.lct
or.01ch ll•Qll '--""l'tt '" 1111 eo. '°' down•-UK Anoe•ts -tho C0.1111 YllltY\, •ttll 1119'1$ of • IO"'
In .... IMWtnec111I• vall~ •ll•r llW IOQ<~•-IY
In IN mounu.1111, ttmoerat...-.s •t• ~·-*'lo tN<ll l'lt 10s. The ll'Of>l In OW""'°'' OIW'rt w lll la. In lllt 906,-
lft lhe~ln 1 ... ._r .. wrt1.
HHY Wl'ltftlnt ..... rnld·.....,111 ..
T""fldll' ... th -s•dtrfflt fot NII 1110M ...,.,_,.,,....,.llinohol.oo.
LIOfll verleblt •111d~ lllO"'t llld
rnofn•"I llou"-KIOM T_tdl., In ....
70I Co.11tt t•m•otur•t wlll ran91
b•l•••ll ·~ l!ld 12. lllltllll ttrnPeratw9' •tll t-,e lltl-11 #>2 _._. n.. .... ...,...,... •• _.,111119 ..
WEATHER I NATION I WORLD
Crim.e Rat
WASHI.NGTON <AP> -Tho natlon'a crlme
rate dropi>ed 7 percent in the tint half or t.ht. year
compared with the first six months ot 1878, the FBI
reported today. • New York, Detroit, Pblladelphla, Loi An1etes.
Cbl~aao tnd Boston all poeted lower crim• ratea
than during the snme period a year a10.
But tbe ~nd, whlle encoura1ln1, was not
conclusive.
Rape soared 8 percent, and asuulll were up 4
percent. Although most big cltles re1>9rted lower
overall crime rates, ffouaton listed an unexplained
12 pereeot increase, and some smaller Sun Belt
cities al.so had higher crime rates.
The statistics are contained In the FBI report
on the number or murdera, r~. usau(ts, rob-
NATO llnderided on War.laead
BARI, Italy <AP> NATO's
Nuclear PlllllnlnC Group ended a
two-day meeting toduy without
any decision on deployment of
thl' controversial neutron bomb
Despite urging from U.S
Defense Secretary Harold
Brown, alllance defense
ministers considered Polltlcal
objections· far too important for
any quick decision on the
weapon. It is designed for use
against troops but spares
buildin~s except in the Impact
area.
THE CLOSED meeting in this
southern Italian city on the
Adriatic r&sed no objection to
the "miUtary utlllty" or the
"'arhcad for tactical use. particularly against uny Soviet
tank thrust in Europe.
West Germany, Britain and Italy
-seemed far 3'W&Y lrorn any yes-or-no decialon on the matter.
And the United States told the
ullies that the neutron warhead is
only for European U5e and lt
won't be produced until there is a
decision oD lta deployment by
European allld.
AFfER ANOTHER delay, no
detision seemed likely for some
mont.lls. but it may fiaure durinc
President Carter's Brussels
stopover on bis rour·conlinent
swing next month. The warheads are for use in
ground-to-ground Lance miuiles
or firing from 1.55-milllmeter
howitzers. Some 7,000 nuclear
warheads are already deployed
in Europe but equipped wilh di(·
ferent arid. what 'NATO OffiCllls call "dirtler"warbe di.
BROWN TOLD allied defense
ministers that the small neutron
warbend would "klll tewer
people to accomplish the taDJe mllitary etfect. •• Within lts
impact area U .would. klll
humans whlle doing only llmlted
'damage lo objects. but clvtllan
population In adjacent areas
would be spareCl aloof wlth
objects.
The Alliance•• Nuclear
Plannlna Group ls compoMd of I
se\len members, with the United \
States. West Germany, Britaln
and Canada permanent and
three rot.atlnf ooes. thla tlllle
Belgium, Denmark and Greece.
But "emotional and political'"
opposition was reported in most
"'ATO countries, includin& the
United Stlileti.
ObJeetions have been raised.
part1cular(y by western Europe's
growinc and outspoken lefl. lhat
the nuclear warhead is immoral
State Legal A.id
Rejected by Senate
ANOTHER POINT or the
weapon's opponents ls that
bccau.sc it is compact and de·
signed for battlefield use in
Europe, temptation may be
greater for its fast use, thus
increasing the likelihood or 11
larger nuclear confront1tt1on.
The seven·nati0J1 group did not
need unanlmlt,y to decide for or
agalosl the weapon. The United
S t a t es !1'l a d e o n-s i d e r e d
"sub6tanllaJ consensu!> as belni
sufficient to be n producUon. ••
Bur KEY NATtt) s whtre the
warbead .. ·ouJd be deployed -
197
N111ettal N.1H,_.,~rio Ou.f'H
STATE '/ SOUTH N CALIFORNIA DAILVPLOr
SACRAMENTO CAP
'WOllHID • C9 to IJ'&duat
the ftnt feruale navl1a V .s. Air Forte.
Offlcllli eai4 Tuesda e five,
plu1 a female U.S. Coa uard
pUot, are amon1 18 m the
navi1ator tratnln& c a at
Mather Air Force Bas t of
tbe women, lat Lt. M KAY HlgebJ,l, ll first ln the clu \
MISS m INS, a 1ria~of Chic~ota f#. Xavier Coll wlU
serve Olr:ll KC·W air
tanker at PlattsbW"ah Ai ce
Bast,N.Y. '
The other lVomen Inch,\ 1st ta. Ramona Royb• of·
Sacramento, who wl be
stationed at McClellan :A.lr
Base at S4crameoto.
Ftrst ~ FJQrence Fl , a
Radel ff, l\Y.. rutden ho
graduated tn;111 the ~ve o1 keutu~: Will be atatlon at
Keesler Mr Force Bue, MJai
~FOWLER. WHO waoto bo an utton•ut. alld she Jst
becam' lntereated 1n flylJ_iJ ~ •ht atarted rudlnc acl6e llcuon 1n hlsh school. •
Capt. Elizabeth Koch.-
Univenity of Florida erad
who will bC 1tatioo t
. Alr Force Base near Rlverst1,
says her husband, Ala_!t.,,
studyin1 to M an Air Force pu
CAPT. BETl'YE PAYNE,
Jackson, Min., will be 1tat101U
at Travis Air Force Bue. SI
said that alter aomo years 4
!lyina. sbe h()pts to make
career In alrcra!l malntaumce.
· Cout Guard Lt. ~ivien ere. ot A1exandria, Va., is the firs
female pilot or fixed-wlne planet
in her branch oftbe service.
APWI,..._ ..
MAKES HISTORY
. Navigator Roybal
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The
CautorniaEnergy Col{lmiUion is
beln& ur1ed to publish tbe names
of cncr1y gluttons, which
presumably would embarrass
them mto taking conservation to
heart.
Another energy.saving
proposal calls tor tiber1lass
window screens instead of
expensive double-paned 1lass.
RICHARD MAULLIN,
chairman of the commission,
recently soJlclled comment from
the public on how the
commission should spend its
$20·milllon annual budget, which
comes from surchar1es on
electnclty bUls
About 125 responses came in,
by mail or at public meetings .
Stephanie Bradfield,
comnuss1on spokeswoman, said
TuMday thltt 1om• of the
suJpsUoos may be followed up.
But she said lntormaUon about
how much electricity an
individual uses cannot be
publlshed because it la private.
ROY J. SMITH, P OFUSOll
emeriius at the untvertlty ot
Call.tomla, Rivet1Slde, 1~1•ted
makini public a Uat of who uaea
exorbitlnt amount.a of oner~.
Pbif§r w~~m Co. of the City
ol Jn'austry has developed
fiberalasa window screen tbat
the company says performs almost aa well u double-paned
glass, Ms. Bradfield Hid.
':Tiley want the commission to
make standards that require tho
industry to double the weave ln a
window scrHn," she :said.
THE COMMISSION would be
interested "if that really worka
as well u double-paned windoh
in a more inexpensive way to
build conservatJQn into
buildings," Ms. Bradfield said.
Amoo1 other au1eeaUoos was
one from a MJssJon Viejo woman
who says a lot of energy can be
saved by maJdo1 coffee, then
putting it into a vacuum bottle.
A Sacramepto man
complained that 1as is wasted by
lines .DI cars at drive-throufb fast-food reatauranta or bt.nlca
ANO'J'H & OGG 'l'I H
would call for Ult bulldful of SO
percent of a structure'• WiDdo
ao tbeycan bo~.
On• writer wants t~o
comirilsilon to s4t ue a new de-
partment dev~ to the public••
ideas. -
Ms. Bradfield said the list of
idep v.iiU be "real interestlJ\afor
the cominlJslooera to see, We
may do more things like thJ• ...
A.dvUo,.Y Panel Pl.anirBd
Power Struggle Cited SAOIWQ;N'l'O <APl -U. Gov. Mervyn Dymalb' 111~
for 1s young people to form the new California Ad~
Commlssion on Youth.
11:iey will advise the state legislature and execuUve branch
SAN DIEGO <AP>
California Atty. Gen. Evelle J
Younger says ihere is an
iapparent struggle under way for
control o/ the Malia or organjzed
crime in California.
There have been 125 gang.
related slay1ngs in the state in
the past three years, althou&h
many appear related to
prison·eang activities, Younger
said Tuesday.
Ex-Mongol Tai-get
Of Bomb Threat?
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Police demolition experts have safely
dismanUed a bomb found strapped to a car belonging to a man
described as a former Moniol motorc)'cle cane member, authorities reported.
A San D1e10 mechanic bad been preparin1 to service the car
when he found six stickJ of dynamite attached to the transmission police sllid T\iesd~. '
I Tut: IDENTITY Of' THE VEHICLE'S owner w.s being
withheld, bUt officer Pale Clark 1aJd lt wu llkely th• attempted bOmblnl.w~ related to an onaoins feud between members of the
ilell's.Ai\lelS&nd Mon1ots motorcycle clubs in San Dieeo.
LaSt week, a ~weeptni county-wide roundup netted 3' members and assooiates Ol Uie Hell's An1el1. E~~~ef an undercover officer turned over to police a dynamite
bomb aw 1n a Pacific 'Buch apartment tiouse that was powerful enouah to' ave leveled the complex," police said.
11lE BoMB REPORTEDLY was meant for the Mongols in
i-.tallatitn tor an Incident lut month In which a car reportedly
dtiven b' a Mongols member allecedly knocked over a motorcycle driven ty a Hell's Angel
Oak said police were !'IUJI invHtleatJne Tuesday's bomb. and
that noarrests had been made.
"THERE IS SERIOUS
competition for leadership,
serious competition Jnltiat.ed by
blcreased activity'' amonc mob
·members ln CaUfornla, be said.
Younger also pointed to a
heavy influx of 10-called
"retired Malla" members tnto
California, but he added that
many law enforcement .
authorities belleve that 1t Is
impossible for any Mafia
member to retire.
IN A SPEECH TO TllE Chula
Vista chapter of the National
Mana1en1ent Auoclatlon,
Younger a.aid Calilornia ls very
attracti\le to oreaolled crime ot
all kinda and resldenu have the
same fraUties they do in other
states -they eamble, bet. buy
narcotlcs and en1.,e In other
illlclt activities.
"That just makes tbe
syndicate drool," be1ald. •
.. MOB PROf'ITS raoM
rackets such as 1amblln1, loan
sharking, narcotics, proaUtutton.
porpography and cl1arette boot-
leglin1 are apr,roxlmately Sta bllllon yurly. ' the attorney
1eneral said.
The San Dle10 area is a likely
target for organlHd crime.
Younger said, because of Its
proximity to Mexico, major
businesses and a major airport.
SaJe!
on what's &ood and bad for their &10 croup. •
Dymally said Tuesd11 be is acoe~Una appllcaU9J'S untU Nov
15 from ls. to 25-year-olds. He wd the panel will repreae.Qt tbe
s•ate geoarapblcally, ethnically and by sex.
Forums will be held -.M stud.lea conducted on aucb i.ssuu as
)'outh une111ployment. cnme and .educaUon, Dymally aild.
Members will serve for two or three yean and wlll be ~mbUraecl
tor~. · I>ymauy establllbed the panel by exeeuUve oi'dei: Jut JXlonth
wb1le actln1 In Gov. EdmWid Brbwn Jr.'• abaenct.
Brown's olllce sald the aovernordidn'tobject •
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -San .Jose rteorded a 12.1 percent
drop In Mrlout crimes dwina ~ flnt slX montbS or 1f7"1. while sari Franciac:o was down 5.6 percent and Oakland down 3.8 pettent. Ule FBI~ Wednesday.
Tbe total serious crimes in SU Jose for the lint six months
were 19,001 compared wlth 21,189 a year earlier. San Francisco
dropped from 37,BU to 35,72' and Oakland was down from 20,300 to
19,521.
Berkeley showed an mere of at.Out ooo-balf percent mm
S,833 to S,863, while Sacramerato had a 7.S percent drop from U,814
crimes to 12,765.
Fresno was up 2.6 percent from 10,002to10,285 and StOcktCin up
1.2 percent from 8,100 to a,1'13.
Los Angeles registered a decline 1n serious crimes of neatl}' S.3
percent for the six moo.tbs from 1111400 to l~,513, and San Dieao bad al.Spercentlncrease. i
, San Jose reported an incteaae in murden from 18 to 24, wh1Je
San Francisco was up from M to a. Oakland down from Sl to 43,
Berkeley up from four to nine, Sacramento down from 28 to.26 and St~~ \IP from six to 12 for the six month period.
Antique and E:staE
precious jewels!
A diamonGd s~ecfGlcLJIClr!
1. R!Qutor
1.1.ss ct. diamond
ond 2.86 ct. aopPhlre
3·atone ring • • • . • $5,000 U,000
2. Ortfx. dJomonCf dnd emerald
Nubian head pin $3,000 $2,200
3. 2 ct. diamond and 4·3/4 et.
ator rubv, plollnum
ring ••• ; .. ~ •..•.• $7,975 $5,900
4.10 ct. emerotd and 3.25 ct.
dlamC>nd ring ••• $6,950 ff,700
5.10 ct.~ ooo 3/4 ct.
diamond
and platinum
ring........... . . $4,500 $1,750
6. A·1/2 ot. diamond ond
SOVth Seo pearl, plotlnum
ring. . .. • • . • . . . • $8,500 $61500
7.1 ct. diamond and
11.87 ct. aqpptilre nng,
platlnum. . . . • • . • $3,!500 $2,495
8 .. 15 ct. diamond and 20 ct. at~ ..
IOpphlre.14K .•... $3,750 t2,950
9. 2·1/2 ct. aopptllre. 2 ot. diamond
diamond ond 440.:1/2 ct. carved
opc:>n j:)efld •....• $7,500 $.S,900
10.1/2 ct. diamond and
8 ct. ootteye. Oent's ~i~m
ring ......... ·~ ••• $6,000 , U,9SO
11.13-3/• ct. diamond ond pkltlrun
aprav pin ••• ·~ ••• $24.600 t1a,soo
12. 2.80 ct. marquise ones bOguette
diamond, for\Cfl ~lallnum
mounting.. • . . . . $4,500
IASOns
Robinson's .• Newport Fashiqn Island •
• t
Board Missed on
McNally Decision
The problem of relocating the McNaJly Continuation S~ool increasingly dominates Newport-Mesa Unified
School Di,trict affairs.
' Where to put the school came up more than a year ago,
but the school board was unwilling to make a swift and
"lear decision on a new location from its present site at
,19th an<I Harbor in Gos ta Mesa.
Citizens around other low-enrollment schools in the
district didn't like the idea of moving McNally into their
neighborhoods.
They ptot:ested and the protests have gotten louder.
The school board pushed the matter onto a citizen
committee which tield sever$1 meetings and spent many
hours on the question. Melli'bers were unable to d~:clde
where the continuation school should go.
'• Now the m ttet is back.in tbe school board's lap.
..-hotter and morediffioult than it ever was.
• How much ea~ier things would be now if trustees had
disposed of Uio rel ation matter when it first came before
them. .
They houli:l hu~ swallowed the medicine and gotten
it over with. • ..
$.-. Street Not for Storage
lf you have a neighbor who leaves his three cars, boat
and reereational vehicle on the street and takes up half the
block, you 're not alone.
At this week's Costa Mesa City Council study session:
Mayor Norma Hertzog recommended a dty cleanup effort
to persuade citizens not to use the streets for storing little·
used vehicles.
Council members cited the problems such vehicles
cause street sweepers and the danger of bJocked sight·
lines for motorists. They also cited cases where citizens
rebuild buses and jalopies on driveways and lawns.
causing nn unsightly mess
The council is wise to test a soft approach to the
problem. While large boats and \'ehfcles should be towed
away if they pose a safety hazard, most of the problems
are esthetic and subjective. •
•It's really a matter of people taking pride in their
neighborhood and showing consideration for others.
l
,Paving the Way
It would appear the local cities won a victory of sorts
after skirmishing with CalTrans over two major highway
resurfacing projects.
City people in Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa got their hackles up when the state agency
announced plans to re-pave four miles of Newport
Boulevard and nine mrles or Pacifie Coast Highway this
summer.
The screams of outrage and anguish apparently
carried all the way lo Sacramento because work is :iust
now getting under w y.
In s~ite of the deUiy of schedule to miss summer traf · fie, we s uldn·l be overwhelmed by the thoughtfulness of
the folks CalTrans
They may be paving at night, to avoid blocking traffic,
but they're Rainting the newly paved lanes on Newport
Boulevpn:I in the middle Of the peak traffic hour.ii during
thedaY.. 1• '
What \Vill happen wh they start on Coast Hig~wa~·"
• Oplr\lons upreaed In the IP9C9 aboY9 •re tho .. of the 0.Uly Pilot.
0th• v.... npreesoct on this page .,. thOM ol their authQrS and
artis1S. Reider comment Is lnv1teo.:~.Addresa The Dally Piiot. f .0: Box !560, Costa Mesa. CA 9282$. PhOne {714) &4~1.
ByL.M.BOVD
"Trieger queries" ar~
those questions which have
been known to start family
fights Our Loft and War
man i!\ collecting a list of
same. From divorce records.
They're not nece~sarily
critical, inswting or degrad·
mg, not in themsehies It's what they lead to, however
mysteriously. These are
lrigger queries: "Pancakes
again?" "l!\n't the game over
yet?" "A melon ball cutter?
How Much?" .. Don't you
want plain gingerale
tont&ht?" And: "Do you trunk
it's alltUetoosmall?" ·
Surveys prove a lot of
tourists pick motels with
swimming pools even though
they have no intention of
1oing swimming. They just
believe ·the places w1th th
pools will also be better
equipped otherwise.
The average automobile of
the. three ~iggest i:ar rental
a1erxies is driven by abou\ 90
persons before it's iold out of
the fleet after 10 months.
No wonder lhe mitl l•
slow! J wjtnessod t.wo
mall trucks doublt
parked, with motors
running, blocking •lane
of tiallic for at least 10
minutes today while the
driven, a man and a oman, chatWd. . M.A.D.
If you didn't say apple. you're
not among th~ majonty so
queried.
Q. "How long was the Old
West cowboy's lariat ,
typically?"
A About 50 feel.
Q. "Whtch stat.es permit
persona1ized car license
plates?"
A. Easier to name the
states that don 'l · Alabama,
Colorado, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Mississippi, Missouri,
Montana and South Dakota.
Q. ''Has anybody ever
really dispro\'ed Adolf
HWer's theory that selective
breeding could produce a
superhuman being?''
A. In a way. it was
disproved. Long ago. But not
with humans , because
humans don't breed
selectively. On the contrary.
It was disproved witft dogs,
which have been selectively
br~d for centuries, s.hll
without ever turning out a
super dog.
Rapid Reply: Figure 55
percent ot your grownup
weight Is water. Lose less
than a fifth of tt. you survive.
Lene more~ you die.
• G~. generally. . .
Ttie 20,000 books about
ch . ~xceed in number tM bilek about an other fai:net
PU\ tolether, I'm told. One M
these chess books cites
studietl to prove that a good
memory is not the most
significant faculty a top chess
player can possess, not at all.
Imagination is. accord.in& to
1 this authority The mos t
remarkable chess
performances. it's said, are
not executed, the way a
pianist renders n tune, but are
tf"e'1lted, the way a C'OMpo!lf'r
dreams up such.
•
Jack Anderson
Energy Chiefs Tilt to
WASHINGTON James
Schlesinger's rise from political
obscu.nty lo political power has
been smooth and sul)lle. He bas
the !Air more or a college
professor than an energy czar.
But behind the pipe smoke and
contemplallve manner. he has
the heart of an industrial tycoon.
He has been an unabashed
advocate of nuclear power, for
example,
ever smce he
came o'ut of
the Atomic
Enerr:y
Commission
in the early
1970s. The bi~
utility
com pante~
desperately
want to dev·
elop energy, of course. that will
ut1lue their existing gnd
systems and pemlt them to go
on selling electricity to the
populace. A more revolutionary
form or energy, such as solar
power. might put the utility
industry out of business
There is disquieting evidence
that Schlesinger may be quietly
stackmg the new Energy Dept.
with subordinates who share tus
enthusiasm for nuclear power
Top policymaking positions will
~o. for example, to John O'Leary
and Dale Myers. who are
regarded llS nuclear proponenL'i
Dr. James Liverman, u
nuclear apologist. has been
mentioned as Schles1nger's
choice to be his new
environmental chief This
poss ibility has so outraged
e n \' i r on m en ta 11 s t s l h al a
t•oallt 111n ha.., d a ... hed oCf .i
private letter to SChle~nger.
warning that they "would
op~e" Liverman's nomination ' SCHLESINGER'S most
controversial ctio1ce. however
may turn out to be Robert
Thorne. who heads lhe San
Francisco oCfice of the Energy
Research and DevelQpment
Adminisn·ahon <ER.DA>.
SchJesimier has Thorne In mind
as h~ assistant secretary in
charge or technology, an office
thal will control the Energy
Dept. 's nuclear opera\1ons.
Thorne not only was in dlarg~ ,
of nuclear affair in Sart
anci co but alle di}• f un<led
an app.srenUy "improper•• lo~
byitlg effort \o lnflu nee
Con1ress to I klndJy upon
nuclear p<1wer
To the Editor:
Have read your iditorial of
Oct 4 anent the Panama Canal
with much intere1t. Yes. :,yqu
noted some facts, but omJtt.Cd
someotherractS ' 'l1 You mentioned th• tact tnat
some or our Navy shit>s ond some
freighters arc lOQ large for Lhe
canal loc.kS . Tttes~ shlps are Onl.Y
a very small Pt,.,eentage Ol OW'
Navy, fleet, also commercial
neet. We can always build larger
locks !if we hang on to the canal,
thnt is I.
Another fact :. nder the
proposed treaty, we must refrain
from planning another canal
anywhere throu&h the blhmus
except with Panam~·s consent.
IF THE Canal Zone is suth a
thorn in her side, why doesn'l
Panama offer to Neimburse us for
our investments? Th~t w Id;~
the decent, businesshke thing to
do. Why not give the U.S.
taxpayer a break for once? rt looks very much as if lhls
treaty gives Panama all the
goodies on a silver platter while
the U.S. gets noth ric but
obligations!
I'm afraid that the world would
judge Uncle Sam as a paper t!ger
who cavea in to blackmail and is
afraid to stick up for hts rights.
HE.NRY R. BENNlK
Nets.~
To the Editor: .
Zemth TV manufacturers are
moving part of tfteir operation
overseas where they clln set WS·
sembly workers for $2,000ayear.
Now we can buy Zenith TVs
cheaper, bu\ we will have to pay
more taxee·ror unemployment in·
1urance to the unemployf'a
workers and thete wall be f er
taxpaye .
Multiply this bi thousarids of
other companies rrom I to
automobile.! a~lou~ll ha e a
sm n idea ol proble?n al. doe~ thJs do to baJinc~ of ~Cle? Let's face '4P to ii.· Those
baraahu we are getting from
ovene...s aren't SQ cheap. They
are breaking us.
JAMES W BOLDING
·TM R~I lleren
To the Editor
The cartoon published on the
Comment paae or Oct. 1 coneen'I·
ing the Kent State sltuatfon was
~ally.
He used $J J:L250 of thl·
taxpayers' money lo cslabh..,h
the Energy Awareness Pro1eet
an idea advanced by a registered
nuclear lobb¥ln& croup known ns
the Calirornla Council for
Environmental and Economic
Balance <CCEEB>.
There ls a suspicion that the
Energy Awareness Project was
really supposed to make the
public and Congress more aware
of nuclear energy, althou&h a
CCEEB spokesman told U! the
pro1cct was intended to Inform
the public on all enerey
alternative:;
THE CCEEB slated m Its one·
ioal proposal, wtthout
mentioning nuclear power, that
"we would want participants to
write their congressmen to a::ik
th,m to support specific
legislation, pass resolutions
_write letters to the editor."
Thorne's office adopted lh1::i
idea to the tune of $113,250 over
the objections of at least one
subordinate who warned in an
internal memo· "l beheve such
an effort to be both iU·conceived
and misdirected." He added with
emphas.1s "The logic of the
proposal not only escapes me.
MANY OF tJS were 1'i
against the status quo before wwn. 'ni difference was that
we were smart enougH to reall&e
that 'aesired,; chlflgea could be
made bee: use Of our s~alem of
govemmen not In spite of it. We
were smart enough only because
we were patient enouch to wait
until we had ~ouch knowled&e
to assess Ule f ts 1lnd arrive at a
logical plan OI ctJon. Alexanlter
Pope was so naht whtn he said:
••A ltttle ~nowJcd1~ is a
da~erous thing. • . •• The wol'd "H e" needs underlining
nd Kent St te? The whole
thlna wu so useless, so utterly
stupid. There were no h toes
there, nothing to bC pr(Jijd O(; no
memories that 1tlr the marrow 61
man such as the marro)' Is
stirred aUtnding ov r the rusUn1
bulk of the Arizona. May they not
have died use Jes ly.
J .W.REID
~c ... ,...._
Qu tes
.. Freedom of the pres~ b the
stalf of life for any vital de·
mocracy."
WmdeU WUUde
American law11tr and pothtcai
lft:ldcr
.. but, its outline would ppear to
be an excellent plaiif~ ~<i the
greatest political l ~r
modern times."
The suspicions of Jl~am Jeff~. R -Vt., have been
aroused. He has d the
General Accountin Office tp
investigate the PA'ojeel. The
taxpayers' m<>ney Wal 001 he
charges, Cot what appelt$ lo be
"improper purpo e•. lndaudlne po~sibly the use of ap~roP.rfated
funds to lobby the Con,r on
legislative matters "
POT POLICY -The men
around President Carter have
t>een quarreling behind the
scenes over what words to put in
his mouth on the rnariju•na
question.
One faction favored a mQre
sympathetic llttitude toward pot
smoking. Ttiey managed to get
their ideas into an early draft of
the drug pohcy message that
Carter asked his aides to write
for him. This was approved by
the president's health adviser
Or. Peter Bourne.
It included such centences as
.. marijuana has become an
established fact throughout our
society and the sky bas not
·AU. TRIS is ven-\fntaUl\I,
but I arn iust 6cenlly
experiencing tho \ll~ate in
ctisturbina phone c• •· After
recently sutrcrln" a rnl~atriaae.
I aun painfully remtndd or my
baby'' approaching du d te by
phone ra))~ ofterht iapc
servic
HEAL TH I MISCELLANY
• THF. mGHEST EMPLOYMgrn rates are at
UC Irvmc, S6.6 percent, and U~ and Riverside,
56 percent. The lowest ls at 5'.nta Crm. 32.4
p_ercent. ·
The JW"\'CY found that manied studen\s have a
hi1her emPloyment rate ind work more hours than • unmarriechtudents. ,.
Men are slightly more Ukel,y to boldjobS than
women, and aJSowort longer bOUrl. And the IOftler
th tudents st.ay at the univ raity, lbe 1110re likely
they are to have a job.
leadint emptoyer stud IS the
university itself, which bires 49.3 pueent Of an
&ludents holding j~. the survey said.
ROSE AND CAJIPB£U. TURNED up safe!Y In
C•loxico after hitchhlklnt. i;.
Tbe van occupants made it to El Chiriero, 30
mlles north of San Fellpe on the Gulf Of Callfonaia, a
sheriff'• sJ)Okesman said.
Keanwbilc, a aearch plane sp<>tted ~St
, belieVln« him to oo one or the ftve mlssbig persons.
A sheriff's <leputy said Crui was plcJCCd up lft tood
condition and 1denUfied.
"It's lucky the1 were out lookin& for~ 9thet
1 ~ple., or this other 1uy (Cruz), would have -n lD
, ~al trouble," saJd a deputy; "ff might even hnvc
died."
.
\
•I
'Skull, Crossbones'
For Cigarette Ads?
WASHINGTON <AP> -Two
consumer croups have augaested that
cigarette advertlaing should carry
somethtnc like the skull-and-
crossbonea aymbol that warm of
polSoo.
A spokesman for the Consumers
Union and tho Consumer Federation
of America made the proposal to the
Federal Trade Commission Tuesday.
WARREN B&AREN, the
spokesman, urged the FTC to require
more effective warnings in cigan?Ue
advertlslna about the health hazards
of cigarette amok int. If all attempb
at health warnln1s are demonstrated
to be ineffective, then the FTC should
recommend to Congress a ban on
ciaarette advertlsin1 and promotlbo, be said.
Another croup, Action on Smoklng
& He<h, called oo the FrC to restnct
c:iearette ads to the "tombstone"
format med for mo&t ads relatinc to st~ka and bonds. Such ads merely
state the name of the company issuing
the security, the offerlni price and the
names of brokerage houses offering
the investments.
The recommendations about
cigarettes were made at a public
hearing before member.; of the FTC
staff seeking comments on a report
which said the American public is not
well informed about various aspects
of smoking and nonsmoking.
THE REPORT TO the FTC by
Martin Fishbein of the University of
Illinois last May said the public needs
more information concernine the
specific health hann:':s ot smokin&
and specific benefits of not smoking.
Cigarette advertising has been
barred by law from radlo and
television since 1971. In addition,
since 1970 all cigarette packages have
been required by law to carry the
statement "Warning; The Surgeon
General has determined that.
cigarette smotinc is dangerous to ..ll:iiiiiil:..iiiiiiii:;;:==m;;;,;:~--==~~;;-..~.;.;~~ .... ~~~~..;.;~if,~ yout health."
Our tum tell• you everything you
want to know about your team
..,_ ,..._, ... ...,_ ...,.,."""' J>Wtl\llU"I peoennu"' ,.,...,_. J.11 _,. ,.,o,_ tlHO-•-10.,. ... ~,c:: _,... ~~ ~ Cett•l\Ule ssoo $1000 11000 $1000 $1000 11000 ............ ,,..,,.,...,., --"'"""'""' _...,. !ft)--~AL ANNUAL ......UAL ANNUAL AHlfUA&. AHHUA&. Ytn..O VllLO \'llLO nao YllU>
S.JK s.tn •.7n 6.tft 7.7K "°"' Al,,_,, flOul• _..,on~~ d..,.peld ~ rd r-nlflgl!l)'Ollf-nl lot .,.,._.A......,•tyolC~"-llla ........, .... ...., ...... __ .. ,,,...,,_
•fei#r• ·~ •eQUlr•. ~penally IOr~ -41hdr-• Oft
......,.,., .. -... &lll ~Of -··
Lapuaw.omcei
24881 Alioie. Prk;wy., Laguna. Hills Plaza.
(next to Von's and Payless)
'(714) 681-4100
•
DAILY PILOT
By Phil lnrerlandi Prop~sol 'Has Merit'
AT YOUR SERVICE /ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARlES
'llm•
hater
Air Expansion Shelved O.nc•
T•lffl1lon
fn th•
DAILY PILOT
Tb W t Oranae County United Crusade has
moved to new and laraer headquarters ln Garden
Grove.
Oranae County supervlson asree there may be
merit in a pro~al to expand a private airplane
sales and aervlce opt!ration at Oranae County Airport. •
But they also said Tuesday it is too early to de·
cide whether officials or Mission Beechcrafl can
exp~ their five acre airport facility to 10 acres.
Sopervtson concurred with a report prepared
by offl~lals of the county General Services Agency
<GSA) which la responsible for airport operaUon.s.
THE REPORT SAii> WHILE Miasion Beech·
craft's four-year-old request "appears to have a
areat deal of merit, .. no declalon should be made
unW compleUon of an environmental impact report
(EIR) aimed at helpln1 chart the alrpo~ 's future.
Mission Beecbcraltotnclals asked July 1 if they
either could expand tbelr operation to IJJUO it more
profitable or be liven peMl\isslon to sell their
airport lease and move elsewhere.
But GSA olCiclals said lbey could mate no
recommendation about tbe airplane fltm's request
until the airport EIR is completed. .
They noted it probably will be about three
months before the revised EIR is submitted to
CO\.llltY planning commissioners who must take
actiotl before the report goes to supervisors.
GSA OFFICIALS SAID they agreed that
Mission Beechcraft's current space "is inefficient
for the current level of service,'·
Hearing Tests
Free hearing tests will
be held between 10 a.m. ·
and 4 p.m . or. Saturday
at the Easter Seal
operated JtehabWt1Uon
Institute of Ounce
County. No appointment
is necessary . The
Institute ts located at
1800EastLa Veta Ave. in
Orange.
ServiilS charitable institutions In H n
Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster•Ml<'lway
City. Surfside, Sunset Beach and Seal B aoh~ the
1cency ii now located at 8100 Garden Gl'()ve1Hvd .•
just east of Beach Boulevard. .
But it probablY would be about 18 months after
tu~ take action on tha airport's future •
before a leue to either proyide another five acres of
land or anew 10.acreaite could be arranged.
. rr BAD BEEN LOCATED for the last 101years
at 8th street and Stanford Avenue in Garden Crove
but the need for more space led the move to larger
facilities. Also located in the center that houses the
_. United Crusade are the Salvation Army., Voluntary
Action Committee, Jewish Family Services and the
Dayle Mcintosh Center tor the Disabled.
·-THE NEW CENTE& WAS dedicated Sept. 27 in.
ceremorues markln1 the opening of tbe crusade's
fall campaign to raise $750,000 for the agencies it
ierves.
Tho new telephone number or tb& United
Crusadeb 898-0029.
Blrdu
rGUHTAINVAU.s.Y COMMUIOTY .. Olf'ITAL.
1be report noted, "Mission Beechcralt is one
of the largest operators on the Orange Coun\f
Airport and baa been doing a very satisfactory job
in providlna services to the tlytni public.••
GSA OFFICIALS SAID depending on what de·
cision supervisors make on the airport'• future it
could be that the llisalon Beec!buatt land would be
used by the county for ita own alrportsemcea.
In that caae. offlclal1 laid. they would
Tttommend thal another »acre ~ be made
available for MWion Beecbcraft. .
:c •
Wint st. .. ..,.... tMt1t11c awe-.~ DEAR PAT: l heard that when one pays cash
J)QKALO o. Wint.! '"'~ ., HUt•. ~. •••·-"'' Hoey C••n for a reta.ll item a new regulatiOft enUUes him to 1 H••otr\ ..0, ca. "aJMll ewrt ~T. IM """""' Ga. O'c-, ' om. ~ tm. Slrflwtf..., ......... ~kt*,.,._., .... ..,.._ cash discount. ls this true? I usuall; pay c:ash and
:ftM~;:.~:': • fft&.:lf'u:'~o"" STUMP. wanttoknowiflcandemandadJscount
""'· C>Meit·b, .,. .... ''·· , ... ,...,....u .... ,.,.,c:..,..,... ... w J.W,.HunUnatonBiacb
• ..,_,.,. "· ~ ellot'Sunrl.H Ill' 1111 Odllllw ». tttt tt ..... ., " In stores tbat accept CTedlt cai'dl, tbe fedenl
.. .,.. 1rN1GchllOH•. ,,.......... • .. .., .. Wi IMI ..,..., F lr ~1. 91u ... , •ct of H7S •Uoir• cona•e-to ~ 1"llWllU:'I'~ n."" • ~u.~_... c.., ...._... Kut11 a ~· JUU1 n ...
ii: -•• "*"IG VllW ,__,., Gifttnlly • c.a ...,., ca. ,._.. uk for aJld mucbaata to offer a J \ dllCoaJSJ ,...._ .,. a-... 111 11cot .. ._.,. .SlllMnNtlt wk1 '-.._.."' h TL.•-I --~ ••-• • • llY •u11u11 M•fl'I••"' Bit ~MkNl!lnet"'9MltNMd for a caab pure aae. &IQ ,. -........
c .. trlbvl~t to H.. Mtm .. el V1W Qmiltuy, lfnolll TVIMll LemCI stores to giTe a dbcoclnt and dOil • ot applJ to ~::~: rodtl( VI•• M•r••.trY ~.:=u.~u-oeofloul merchants who lsaae Ulelr owa erecllt eard.a. Moy
"~"• M.UllTT credJ&·canl compaafe1 prevtoualy rehlsed to lel
JOS """"•''·""i.141tif"'1'•• OANJ,MAl..ETT,rtoldentotH•met, at.ores participate ln their plans anlMS. the taUU v .. io. ~· .._.., ..,.Y"' ()(._.r n, C.. ,_,.., -on Ck..., 10. 1'111. ,tn, ~"" w -~ Mn. SWYlwcs oY hi•""'• J-c:. Mei.tt of prombed not to otrer dlJcounts to caab·PlYIAI ~i:;:.:::::::~:e'i!i ~=-;-..:;:~=~~ co.at.omen. Thia now ls lllegal. Alao, mercbaau •l.o
1H.oi.-..,.,,, AwiM, ••uc: .. ..,. °' "''"' IMl9'l o1 ...,..,.., ea. I'll• f!WIUW• were allowed to offer dlscoun\S often ebose not to do
lolew Ywt."" utW C.tlle ""*" *' Mrs. Ull•M. ..,,_..., Celtllll, c.., -10 because they bad to fill OU& Jen&tbY trutb•fn• Fw..._ ....... Ille( .. .._ ~. WotW ~ $. M91ett of Tues, -, ,_., __ ~ T..._... U:OO A.~ .... Oy(le ~ .. SAftt• AM. c.. lendlnc dlacloaure form•. TMI recwaUon la •o
~:.'t'~-.r.:!!.~ ~::;:;:,~ ~~ :;~t:;:.t ~: longer ln effect.
o•c-""""• Miii• #ortHl'J '"~ .. ..,.,, .... Mtmwiet
•ncwi. 14VMIT = =:..,""~ ~ 'r.: €re4U Codl•9 E~plcal•ed
J:!~v,.; ~~~-= :_ ~~!:·Al. .. u ~ DEAR PAT: Does the credit bureau or the
0cw.r tt, "'7. Wvt...c • N• •He Mncu.z•• creditor rate a credit account for report? I'd also ll'MY -.t .................. ~ ........... v. Ml:KIENZ1£. rwtl*nt .. Uk kn h t th ' be t' l AliltaM.~°'"""~c.... c.,,....., c.. ,,..._ •es•t1t ., e ~ ow w a e vanous num r ra mas n a
...-,_.,. 5"illt If .....,, • ~. &.....-~ ca; ,.~ ·-• °" credit report mean . . ~=.:-=~= ~·~·.!..!:r.!; ,c= L .L., Laguna Niguel t._...., OC1Dllef u. m1et1:•,. .M. 111 ..... SlnfWll 11¥ .. , ~ ..klf'ln The credit bureau does not rate an account. It ~.:, .. ~~-~= ~~~=:d~ ju1t keeps records of each creditor'• ratln& ac·
Crot.11¥., ~ Hllls, c.. -11"" cordln• to the way an account Is paid. Tbe code !:!;:r!.~~ :~,:r.~~·g.::., L!: 1y1te~~!•ylrly ablmple !,o1~deurstand1thand It fa buasedt
----------Plloe111x. Arll•11• e11d e t1111 "· natl00w1uc. ou ave a ra ng w a mere D
~~~ • ..:_~·.; .. ~~~~c1~: If you pay your account wltblnb301dayabor b~tn'dl· If
1t11 •t 1:00 P,IA.. '" '•c1r1c vi.-you pay within more than 60 ul. ess t an -ays, =::t: ,_,. ~. f'ac111e v-you'll get a "3" rating. A "9" means an account bas
PACtfltC YllW
~llALPAIW
Cemetery Mortuary
-Chaoel
3500 Pacific View Drive Newport,
California
S.'4·2700
,._. .. f'OC1WL been placed for collection or written off as a bad
"'::~:o:;:;::;;:;;;;;:::Z:=:l:1/i' debt. Letter c0clt1 alao are ased to indicate tbe ka.d 1' of business and account Involved. U you do not
WcCOIMICC . .,,, .....
l.aQU"a Beech '494-9415
L guna Hill•1 788-0933
NEW BRUNSWICK ..
N.J. (AP) -Dr. Mason
W. Grou, Rutgers
University president
from 1959 to 1971 and a
television quiz expert
during the 1950s , died
Tuesday in Red Bank.
Hewas66.
understand any particular number or letter raUnJ,
ask the credit bureau for an explanaUoa. Tills
rattna, syltem may seem t011tplleatect. bat • l• 'more objective than the ota
..Satisfactory /Un1atlsfactory" method, '4!eause •
wbat'• u.naatJsfac&ory for one klnd of bq1l11e11
might be acceptable for another.
5an Juan C.plattMC>
i95-1770 Conlpca1111 Get• Pat on Baelc ·
DEAR PAT: How about a good word tor a
company that does value its customers? The
cartndge m m y Cross desk pen wouldn't 1nsert
properly so I asked a local stationery store what to
do. The clerk said all Cross products are
unconditionally guaranteed and even supplied me 1:-~-------r-, with a special envelope to mall the pen to A.T. Cross
in Lincoln. R.l. I sent it and a short note about thr~
months ago, but received no pen, no answer. Last
week I sent a follow-up Jetter and six days later
received ln return a NEW pen Crom Cross alone
with a typed mesaa1e aaylna there wu eo record of
my pacli1t1e. but they ar.rume that it waa Joat fn
tran~it "Jo questions, no nonsense -a new pen and
thanks tor writing.
M.T.lt • ~e '~ l.$1dU11'
Yabr' letter wH a renewal ot .... alt1 '"' .\ ,-i
MM& n:putable buelnesses still , ,. ·r'il"" h H•' 11
cu1comen. Thi• column bu letrl\&"'1 t .... t Lh·· ,h .• , .. 1
system often cauh1 more probhim-1 h~1-."""
bu11tnes1 and consumer tban It aolvei.. ~la1lh.IL"
seem to go utray more than they 1bould, a:ad
eve ~c•rntd becomes up~tt. Aa In yu•r
u .. , when no r••ponae II received to aa lnltlal
letter .Of merchandise m1UJn1 ror re'fund or
replactmetlt., a follow·up letter usually reeelves an
1n1•et from a reputabl~ company. If not, there's
alw1y1 Pat Dunn. Believe It or not, It's very
rC)ward.log to bHr that this col1aroft•1 aa1bt1nce b
not required.
ALLERGY?
(7~4) 54a;9524
Recorded
Message
HlUU COMTl8L
fOUICDATIOH
Box 1513. Ori! ca 12561
•Reqaires no errort, forward ud reverse automatically
•All Steel >.1itator •Edee cleaning channel •Cast aluminum chusii;
•Three pot1tJon handle
•Instant rue a<ljmtment
Mode1Ueoo3
AVE $40.00
..
Rebel Leaving Russia
Amne.ty Leader 'Heartened' by Nol>el Prize·
MOSCOW <AP> -The leader
of the Moscow chapter of
Amn~ty International says the
uward of the 1977 Nobel Peace
Prii:e to lhe parent organiaaUon
has heartened b~ smaU group of
human.fights activists. But he Is
quitting the country Friday
because he says life as a Soviet
dissident has become
unbearable.
''The term of life of a dissident
1s rather limited here," said
Valentin Turchin. "It is
somewhat surprising that during
Cour years 1 have managed to be
orean.ir.ationally acUve."
( J
announced Tuesda:> h1td ta.ken
IN SHORT control of the government were
all three members of the
presidential council which al·
------------Hamdl bad headed since he took
January. 'nle report covers the
first six months o( 1977.
Motlter, ret Slala
BOWIE, Md. CAP> -A young
woman Md her infant dauebter
were murdered as part of a plot
by two men to klll eac:h other's
wl ves, autheritles say.
over in a bloodless coup in 1974.
PrUott E•tered
GUADALAJARA, Mexico
(AP) -Guards armed with night
stlcks entered Jalisco stat~
prison today after it was held tor
two days by rebellious inmates In
a bloody uprislne.
·~ Turchin spoke in an interview
Tuesday, the day after the Nobel
prize was announced, in his half·
empty apartment on the edee of
MOIC'Ow, open suitcases &l'O\llld
him.
An inveaUaalor for the state's
attorney's office gave that
motive Tuesday at a bond
hearing for Lon A. Lewis and
Gene T. Meyer, arresled last
Friday in the Sept. 23 stabbings
of Lewis' wife Carol, 71, and
4-mooth-old Heather Lewl5.
Warden Pedro Parra said 14
inmates were slain by fellow
prisoners 1n the rebellion. He
sald those who were killed were
trusties who had abused and
extorted money from fellow
inmates.
Roek star. Elton John
baa )>cen .inducted into the Madison
Square Garden Hall
of 1''ame. John broke
the garden'& all-time
c°"ncert attendance record in 1973.
~Dke,.•ed
WASHINGTON CAP> -Tbe
flrsl public accounting of a
ti'Z,OOO·a-year expense account
(iven members of the House
shows that tax money paid tor
concert tickets, bar association
dues, car rnsurance and even a
rented tuxedo.
The expenditures were 1n the
flrst semi-annual report ot the
House clerk since the chamber pasS«l a series of reforms in
Smog Deteetor
Ye._ B.W. Sceacf9
CAIRO, Eeypl (AP> -
Western diplomats In North
Yemen's capital predicted today
that the assassination or
President Ibrahim al-Hamdi
would not result In any
&iJtnlficant chan"e in the Policy
of the Yemeni government.
including its ties with Saudi
Arabia and the United stat¥.
The diplomats, reached by
lelepbone, said the tbree-man
military council Radio San'a
n.e.o. ff•fkr lfater
TUCSON, Ariz. <AP> -
Flooding in the Tucson and
Nogales areas has left roads,
bridges, homes and cotlon crops
damaged. A town on the Mexican
border bas 106t much or its water
service and a score or families
had been evacuated from an area
southeast or Phoenix.
No deaths were reported
Nogales residents were still
without normal water service
today.
Balloon Ends Journey
OXNARD ·(AP) -A tree-
floatine balloon will help Uie
South Coa$l Air Quality
Management District decide the
tu~ of a proposed Standard Oil
of Oltio tanker terminal in Lone
Beach.
The balloon "America" ended a 28-hour journe1 Tuesday -a
Journey tbat lndlc led sulphur
dioxide emissions from Alaskan
!upenanlcers travel dowa the
cout and build up at sea to tum
Into more dangerous pollutants.
"Thia has given us plenty to
think about, .. said James
Birnkos. deputy executive oCflcer
for the SCAQMD
rr.IHtt.._ E.ued
LOS ANGELES <AP> A
Municipal Court judge has
Hsted two pf()bation conditions
be imposed on a Los Angeles
man wftich Q,lrred the mu·Crom
associating wilh known I homos xuals and frequenting
Lido Regatta
To Lohman
Rowland Lohman or the
host club was the Clas~ A
winner In Balboa Yacht
Club's Lldo-14 Open
Invitational Regatta Satur-
(lay and Sunday.
Claas B winner and
_ winner of the low.point
perpetual trophy was Dave
Watry, M;ssion Bay Yacht
Club.
Final results·
CLASSA -1. Rowland
Lohman, BYC: 2, Bill
Hernchaft, SMYC. 3, Stu
Robertson HHYC; 4, Chris
Raab, HHYC. 5. Jack
McClarty BYC.
CLASS B -1. Dave
Watry, MBYC; 2, Brian
Hench, BYC : 3, Bruce
Crary. NHYC: 4, Bernard
Lef&on, ABYC: 5. Emanuel
Coster,51 BYC
( STA.TE .. )
places where known
homosexuals 1ather.
In an order signed Tuesday,
Judie Jack Tao revised the
term! of probaUo'ft for Edwin
Womble, 37, to state only that be
muatobey all laws.
Pareret• s.iuw .
LOS ANGELES CAP> --Two
Long Beach parents accused of
imprisoning lheir adopted 16·
year·old daughter in a filthy
bedroom for four years have
pleaded &ullty to three felony
charges
Randolph and Willie Johnson
each pleaded guilty Tuesday to
one count or raise impri:.onment
and two counls of child
endangering.
C.111111! Get. ..... .,.
LOS ANGELES CAP> -
Comedian Jack Carter has been
awarded nearly $100,000 to
1amages from a moaey manaier
he claimed defrauded him, court
records show.
Los Angeles Superior Court
Commissioner Leo S. Rich Tues·
day awarded Carter $49.290 tn
actual damages, $15,000 In
allomey and accountant fees.
and $12,000 in punitive damages.
PoBee B11rglarized
LONG BEACH CAP> As
many as four jail inmates may
have been involved in three
weeks of smuggling raids that
looted the police department's
evidence room of cash, narcotics
and valuables, authorities said
''We aren't sure vet how much
is missing.·· Deputy Chier Robe.rt
Hm aid Tuesday.
Bond to ChaHeng~
For Cup in 1980
PERTH, Au.tralta <AP> -
MilliOl\aire prope~ d~vel91)er
Alan Bond announced pl lot
the 1980 challenge tor tbt
Amenca'sCup WedneadaJ.
At a news conference on
arrival here frorn Newport, R.J .•
he announced the formation of
the AustraHa America's CUp
Foundation to raile funds for the
1980 challenae:"
This year's challeo1er
AuatraJJa would be ahown around
Australia to help raise funds to
pay off debts incurred durin, the
recent cha1Jen10, Boad said.
"The ~ roundaUon will have
the job of ratslna this year's
deficit u well as raising fu.nda for
the neJCl ch41len1e." he said.
The CO&t ot the new cullenae
would_ depend on bow much
money had to be spent on
modlficatlon, be said.
"The America's Cup can be
won and we believe we can do
it," Bond added.
Ii.pg Beach's
Boating Show
Sees Boost. .
Marine Electronic
Cla.s Set at O'CC
Indicative of the growth ot tbe
Sout.Mrn California Boat Sbow,
opening Oct. 22 al the Lon&
Beach Convention Center, ls the
lac' that 24 companies wUl be
exhibltlne the lint tJme at the show.
The Southern CaUfotnla
Mari.De Aasoclation event will fill
ntuly 150,000 squar• feet -
three times the 81't!J or lbe 1916
all·sail show.
It will be the first public event
i.n the new Convention Center
loc"ted on the shore off Ocean
Boulevard. A non·tech.nical lecture senes
dealing with maril1e electrorucs
for boat ownert will be offered at
Orange Coast College lhis fall
beginning Friday at 7: 30 p. m.
Admission is free. ,
Serles lecturer is Gordon West,
o well·known Newport Beoch
Hthor and lecturer on marine
el ctronlcs. Hls articles have
appeared in s uch yachting
publlcntlom, 11 Yachting, Sea &
Rudder, and ~fotor Boatirti and
Sallin&
Po · ce Chief Seta
Newport Beach pohce c:h1ef
Charles Gross will ~ the guest
Bpeaker at a Thursday meeting
of the Balbon Peninsula Point
o0s.77 Homeowners AB&<>eiatlon
The meeting will be held at
, ;\ 7 : 3 0 p • m • ll t th e B a 1 ho a
:• w1 • ~~ Peninsula Racquet Club. The
public ls lnvlttd to hear the
police. cbtcr dhcuaa the
commwlity'1 role In crime
"This series is tor everyone,
nol just the owner and skipper,•·
said We,,t. "l'or the 'first. mate'
we'll discuss radar ranaea anoat,
how to operate kitchen ac·
cessorles aboard ft'ith voltage
converters. and other lopics for
the women.
"The serlu wl 11 not be
technical. We'll demonstrate
how to use manne electronic.. at.
sea. We won't conctm ourselves
with how electronics equtpment
is put.lol(ether."
West's lectures are spiced wtth
humor, •lldoa, tape recofdlngs
and equipment. demonstrations.
The opening lecture will be
concerned with m arlne rad lo
c ommunication~. Radio
navigational devlcea wm bt
examined on Oct. 21, and the Oct.
28 ~slon will foeus on depth
soundera and sonar Tho flnal
lecture, Nov 4, will look at the
m uintenanco or eleclronlc
equipment.
The 24 new com pan lea
represent a high for new
exhibitors, according to show
chairman Jerry Sehi. He also
sald that 90 percent of thoeo who
exhiblted at \he 197'8 show have
renewed their s pace
res aUons.
More than 80 1978 model cran
tltH be introduced •t the 1hoW.
afons with 200 bOolb eahlbits
showcasinf nearly everythln1
that aoes oq a sailing craft.
Catalina Race
To .Cat's Pajamas
Cot's Pajamas, skippered by
Carl Last, Voyaaera Yacht Club.
was the Clasa A winner in Bo.hln
Corinthian Yacht Club':t Catalina Rac6, the sixth or ttac seven raco
Angelman Scr1 e1J f or
Performance Handlcap Racing
Fleet yachts.
...,--~-------,, preventJon and law enforcement . ..
On Saturday. Nov. S, a •J*lal
vi Ion will be held on the
wat . For further lnCormat1on
on the aeries ca!J ~ •
The neet raced to Avalon on
Saturdll)' and after an ovemi1ht
rendeivous htd an informal race
back to Newport.
T
Wldl.-y. Ootot. 12. 1977
Former actronaut I
Frank Borman says
he's concerned that
the United States is
spending too much
. on social programs
and not enough on
the space program.
Golden
Gate Tab
Now$l
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -Beelnning Nov.
1, it will coet $1 to cross
the Golden Gate Brldae
spannine the entrance to
San~coBay.
Brtdp dlatrict dll'eC-
ton \'Cited JU With three
absent CO rai.ae the toll
from 7S cenui. All tour ·no• votes were by Karin
County reptelentatives.
BE ALSO UUGBD DEVELOPMENT
ol new <a-road v clo <ORV>~. openi.D• ilU'ee
in the Jut threeyevs.
Now comes CabUJ, wbo sounds much Wee
William Penn Mott Jr., tbe Reapn ~Jm ~tor.
lie favors "ener•Y·collffrVinl'• of para, a
dlrec:talam at motorcycles and dune bugCtes, wbieh
use ltaSOllne. • McU's hottest battles arso were aaiinlt ORV
enth\IStUts, wb4> wanted Larae puts Ol Dtw parb
setui*forthem.
OIS'l'aICT aecretary
Camey Campion said
cars containina three or
more passen1era still
will be allowed to cross
the bridge tree on
weekdays durio( the
commuting hours of 8 a. m. to 10 a. m. 111E IDEA AS AUIOST comple\ely nealkt-
C amp ion also an-• ed under Rhodes. •
nounced a new fare Cahill, however, won't tum hlsback on every.
s chedule for the dis-lhingRhodesaltempted. ·
trlct's 248 buses and four He says he'll continue pushing f~ urban parka
ferry boats and may even try lo replace some abandoned shop.
ping centers and gaa atallans with ereenery.
TO TAKE a bus from "We can't force cltles to do that." he said, "but s a n Franc 1 5 c 0 t 0• we can prioritize some of Ute dou,ih Utat toes to the
sou them M arln County cities."
the rare will be $1 : to
central Marin, $1 .25: to
western and northern
Maria, $1.50; to southem
Sonoma County. $2; and
to cmll'al Sonoma, $2.25.
Those who purchase
discount coupons will get
20 percent otr.
A RIDE on the ferries,
wbjcbrun from Sausalito
and Larkspur to San
Fcandsco, will cost $1 on
weekdays and $1,25 on
weekends and holidays.
All increases lake e!fect
Nov. I:
Directors have not de-
termined how to spend
the estimated $1 mJUion
the increases are expec\·
ed to senetate, Campton
said.
.BART Saved '
SACRAMENTO (AP l
-A halt·cent. sales tax
extension to keep Uie San
Francisco Bay Area
Reg10bal Transpottation
District in business bas
t>een siined Into law.
Pollution Attaek
EASTON, Md. CAP) lt's been two
years since lt became known that the
James River was polluted by a toxic
white powder called Kepone. Today
hundreds ot aclenUst.s, engineers and
health otrh:lals are working to clean
up the James, once one of America'• ·
richest sources of marine life.
The federal Environmental Protee·
lion Agency estlmatei1 S4 mllllon in
tax money has been spent to evaluate
the problem cau.Sed by a small com·
p ny in Hopewell, Va .. -that manUlac-
tured Kepono tn an abandoned service
station. Th cheri\lcal was used to ltiU
potato buP in Ireland and banana
pest.a lD C.ltal America.
AT A 'RECENT conference here.
nearJy 130 of those involved in th•
clean-up met to discuss the wort.
A representaUve or the Army CoJ1>$
oC Engineers discussed 15 niecbanlcal
cleanup opUons involving dred1tn •
filling, dammlnr or t17tna concrete
over the 1,000 acru o l1nd around Ro1ley '11 !Jay
• I I
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
5001\l WE. Will FALL At-.;D
CC#lf'LETEL~ DEC.Ac,>!
CASEY
12 llaJtao coin •O Al&Jlla town
13 You119 '41 Avo>ded l1J
animal r cunni119
16 CowboY s I 4.t Rope ele·
DOW lCCtslOfy ments N 22 labof • 7 Running r
1 Church union away 10t11a· ,.
servlCe Abbf, rry
2 Have a cMI 24 llahan Oily 49 S•sttr
pain 26 01-.1d s 5 I Olftt and
3 Mak•• weaPon orange fa etllP 2'1 O«man 5it.l.,_alan
4 In a rwer dwelling
lul!.ewarm 28 Rtduct m 55 Shen'11tea'
man111r degree land
5Mallt1111 2 '--·.:'jlOCe 56 Frencn
taut Very solUy staPOrt ,e Sastball 11 Headdreu 57 " •• ··nowt'
• stat 32 "To b'J. •• ·•• 58 Aclrtu r Comprened 10 ~· " Marla···· rolls 33 ·vo1re 60 Hole-in-one
8 Foohall •···· 1 • maker 1
9 Sc:artcrowa Your 61 Feallve
2 word1 lltallh' ' 62 Bu1ld1ng
1 O Shtde ol 36 l'feal 111<1 , winos
pyrplfJ brow1t 65 I 1100 of a
t I U S S R c•tv biead yen --.....-~-, ' 1 • t ........... 11 ..... 1-l .... ,~) ... ,
\
11'5 SlJl¥0$£P
'i> ~ SAD
W.JCI( H?lt "f He
GtOOM 1' see
~6 SIZID~
&efOC' 1~£.
~C10111k;.
'MISS PEACH
le.A, 00 YOU ~11U.. f'l!L. YOt.«· PA1'eN1'~
l.OV& YOtA.." OO!J MOiE THAN 1'He¥
L.OV! 'IOU?
•
NANCY
~
by Tom Batiuli
I BRU&HEO EVER(,)
DAQ!!
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
• ff •Po·. .....
t
-
-.wac:z -•-
,
I !
' t I f ABULOUS I/ i
.......... t f
of \
. world-famous.
. LA·Z -Bo ·v~ .
Comfo~t Chairs ; ..
• Wall-Recliners®
.
The chairs that "break their
backs tor you I"
Jlio
• Reclina·Rockers® ·
I, \ . • .
America's No. 1 Recliners ,
• Wall-Recliner®SofetteS .:. i
The reclining Sofas
Select your
favorite
OTHER mus AS LOW AS s 179
" .
Al2 Business DAILY PILOT
Thw; unusual triangular building going up on
MacArt.hut Boulevard near Birch Street 1s
lhe latest addition to Koll Center near the
Orange County Ai~ort. Wh,en completed in
June 1978. the bwlding will have 118 000
square foet of office space. Like some of the
other office buildings along MacArthur in
Newport Beach, this one wHI be covered with
mirror like glass Jt is being built by the Koll
Comµan;
Countinns Promoted
Roaald D. Blake, Corona del Mar, has been
elected to the board of directors of Saddleback Sav·
logs and Loan Assoda&loD.
Ile has been an executive with the Southern
Cahfornia Edison Company since 1960 and 1s
manager or the Huntington Beach district, He also
has served as director ot the Newport Beach
Chamber of Commerce and president of the Sad·
dlt'back Valley Chamber of Commerce .
•
:\'lark Simmons, Irvine, has joined City Na·
tionaJ Bank as manager or lhe Lido Village office in
Newport Beach
He had p~vl.ously s~nt eiaht years in the
banking industry in the Orange CoWlty area.
•
Rlcbard Pr BoDd, Newport Beach, has been
president and managing oCOcer or
Ora e Coast Saving~ a Loan
Auoclatlon. a new independent
savin"s and loun ussoc1alion
being rorml.><l 1n co .... la :\h--..i
Bond. whu ha~ been a
enior·l~vd savm~ and loan
deC'Uti\'e since 1960. us former
\'ice president and director of
a\·ings (or Downey Sa\·ings &
Loan Association. Re was
responsible for all 23 branches
and 20() personnel ror Downey
Savin !i. lie i :i pasl president of the '-'ewport Hills
Community As:o;ociatlon •
Y.'ounder Jnd former publisher of Western
Foodst.•rv1ce \tagailne, Banks Wanamaker. has
joined Mccreery, Straban Aclvertislnc, Inc .•
Newport Beal·h. as an account executive. His
career in foodservlce communications also
includes ei~ht years as representative for
Instltutlom; maguioe in the western states.
•
Ltonard Valore, San Clemente, has been
named assistant director of education at Natfoaal
Systems Corp.
~----
LEASE A 1978 FIREBIRD
s I 05'0 """'°"'" AS LOW AS Pl~f""
He Joined North Amencan Correspondence
Schools, u wholly owned subsidiary, tn 1968 He will
conl.lllue in bis position 11s vice president and direc·
tor of education of North Amencan whale assuming
his new responsibilities or a!lsisling the corporate
director o( education in planning, overseeing and
evaluating the educational programs or the sub-
sidiaries He will also serve as an "inside" educa·
tional coru;ullanl.
Warren II. James h~ Ix-en promoted to the
posahon or\ ICl' president. administration for Irvine
Pacific: Oevelopmt'nt Compan)·, the Irvine
Company's homebuilding unit.
In his O<'W position. he ts 1nvolve::d in all
operations of Irvine Pacific. Including planning .
budgel\ng, construcuon,
purchasmg. cu!ltomcr services
and de'1elopment and lmple-
me nt a lion of operations,
::.cheduks and cost controls.
lie had been .., vrojcct
1lt11·l111r lot lr\'1111· l'.111f1r "lnl'I'
19i5, with re::.pons1b1ht1es for
Woodbndee Estates. Wood
bradi:e Pl~ce and Rancho San
.roaquin townhome:. In Irvine
With the Irvine Company
since 1970. Jame:. was a project engineer in the
hrm ·~ forml.lr project development division and
became a project mana1er and then manager or
res1dentJal de\'elopment In the residential division.
He was involved 1n the planninR of the village of
Turtle Rock and development of Walnut Village. •
Les Cole has joined Cocbraoe Chase 6
Company, Newport Beach, as a copy wnter. He has
worked ror Foote, Cone & Belding/Honig, D'Arcy-
MacManus & Mnsius. Ayer/Jorgehsen/Macdonald
and Botsford-Ketchum, {nc . •
Stephen D. Wood, Mission Viejo. has joined
Andenot1 and Anderson, Newport Beach, as a vice
president. He has 14 years• insurance eKpenence
14.63* INIERESI
In May ol J977
Ajax lnvettoq earned
14.6% Interest on trust
deed ,,.yon.. The average
yield on ,&Jax tNst deed paY'lfTs from January l,
1977 tl'ln.t July 1977
wa.sl3.8%.
CAB Rule
Penalizes
Airlin ? es.
SAN DIEGO <AP> -
Airline seats are empty
because covernment.
regulations require it,
sa)'s ~ep Norman Y.
Mineta (0-Callf ), 1a
member of the Houae
subcommittee on
aviation.
Send one card ror each tag + one spare We return
permanently sealed
attractive tag & strap,
meeting a1rhne 1.0.
requirements. Preven t
loss & theft' For a
personalized tag
enclose wallpaper',
fabric or 'Day Glo ·
lt'S haf(J to believe.
but high yields have been
eamed by AJax lnveaton for more than 16 years. AJax hu a1T11nged more
Ulan S.000 loans, Ill
•cured by trust deeds
on southern C.llfomla
real estate. And tht,.
has ne11e' been any loss
to the ln'1estot.
RegulaUons won't
permit us to prom!~
more than 10%. but many Ajax wst dttds •
peyoff earty, earning the
lnvoator a prepayment
bC>nus of up to 6 months
lnttrut on 80% of the
loln b•lanc:c. Thb combination of bonus
He said internat.lonal
airlines such as· Pan
American Alrways are
prohibited from carrying
Americans in certain
domestic flights
"ll is a compellin&t
example of the damage
which can result from
the Interference of
unnece ssary Civil
AeronauUcs Board
regulations," Mineta
lold the Flight
Enc!Mers' International
Aasoc:11Uon. paper & we will
t:>acl< & trim your tags. Or
t,f two cares back to back.
nd mtueat produce the
~ rate ol ret\lrn.
$2.ea. or 3/SS
415 tags $1.60 ea.
619 tags $1.50 ea.
10 or more $ 1 .40 ea.
To ftnd out how
your lnves.t.ed uvlnga
can uiJoy these high
earnings. phone or
come fn.
•Average yield on
payotra lo AJ•it 1"'1e5lol'I In the month of
He ha.s lntroduced o
bill in Congress lo allow
lntemaUonal carriers to
fill empty seats and
cargo space on more
flights.
II
CONCllNID
PRIV•NT
Sales Tax included
Ho C•rd7
Or.IN vwr own, "' '~n'1 yu11r l!<t-. ••"" .,,,f 11!.Un• n~rn!>.r Wit 11
nM-" "'' c tr11 pl'r I "l AOO J>
1M<ll
May 1977.
Suite 202.
Tl.I Mahal Building
Ltaune HUit
837-3744 .....
""'
Space Telescope Seen
NAS.4 Probe Project to Cost $350 Mil~ion
LONDON CAP> -The British
At'rospacc Company has won two
maJor contract.., fur work on a
giant Amenran telescope that
will probe deep i.pctce and
posi;ibly kit ~c1cnti~ts what 1tre
was hk~ t.11lhons of vears ago
The company i.t11d Tuesday 1t
will lead H consortium of 11
companies rrom eight European
t•ountr1es lo fulfill the contract
The t~lcscops. to bt! operated
by lhc NutJonul Aeronautics and
Space Administration, ts
considered by Westt:rn uperts
as the world's most ambttJous
space astronom y project.
Estimated cost i!> $350 milllon.
Br1tibh Aerospace's
Electronic and Space Systems
Division at Bristol was awarded
the contracts. totalling $23 .275
million by ESA, the European
Space Agency.
Under the terms of an agree
ment between NASA and E.5A,
approximately 1S percent of the
Space Telescope project will be
developed in Europe, and
European astronomers will get
not less than 15 percent of the
total telescope observing time.
The Lockheed Missiles and
Space Company is the main
contractor for the structure and
support systems. while the
Perkin-Elmer Corp., of Norwalk,
Conn , will build the optical
telescope assembly
Co.pl.ex Plann~d
SAN Dl EGO ! AP l San D1e~o
Gas and Electric Company ha-.
offered S5 malhon in "seed"
money to plun construction uf a
proposed major electrical
generating plant on the west
coast of Baja Cahlorn1a
The San Diego uuhty w<>uld
like to buy excess clectr1c1ty
from the proposed $1.2 b11l1on
coal.fired plant that would be
located in the Ensenada area.
1~\KING
STOCK
The proJect is represented as
mutually beneficial to both the
United States and Mexico, and
ofhc1als say 1t would provide
cheap and abundant power for
BaJn and huge export revenues
for Mexico.
SDG&E spokesmen say the
1200·megawatt power complex
would not replace the need for
SDG&E's Sundesert Nuclear
PowerPlanL
Coon Ca•pa~ltlg
GOLDEN. Colo. <APl -The
Adolph Coors Company, which
has traditionally relied on low·
key advertising for its beer, is
launchrng a youlh·oriented
campaign featuring four dif·
ferent styles of music and
suggestings ''Make It yours,
make it Coors.··
Officials say a radio and print
media blitz will spread into all 14
Coors market s tates this month
as the nation's fifth largest
brewer gears up lo bolster sales
and m eet encroaching
<'ompetition from laraer
brewers. The musical spots were-
prcpared by Cadco, Coor's in·
house ad agency. and taped at
A BC studios in Nashville. They
feature the same basic message
with a backdrop or soft.rock.
country·we~tern. pop or modified
:.oul m1151c
•·we started on this in
f''cbruary with the thought we'd
been missing a segment or the
market 10 terms of appeal," said
Cadco president Lee Shelton.
"In the past we baven'l ba<.l to
advertise so much. Production
couldn't kei!p up with the de-
Over 1'he Counter
MASO Ultlfl9'
m and. Now production l1realb'1n
gurandwebavetocettncear.''
Credit, Card l•nw
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
Thirty·two of the naUon'• D,500 t
credlt unions have been accepted .;
as card·lssuinfi memberaofVlaa. '
formerly BankAmericard. an4 J
could begtn i11uln1 the bank cr~t cards soon. j
Vlsa president Dee W. Hock
said the credit unJol\I are the
first to join the card systam,
which lncludel bankl, saving&
and loan assoclatlon.s. and the
nation'• targets brokeraae firm,
Merrill Lynch. Pierce, Fenner &
Smith.
The Credit Union National
Association says 23 of tbe credlt
unions, most or them ln Ohle>,
Michigan ao\t California, will
begin a three-month pllol
program with the cards earl)'
next month.
Credit unions in the program .l
would charge Visa card·camen •
1 interest of 12 per~nt a year OD
purchases and cash adYanees.
That is lesa than the usual 18 ,
percent annual rate allowed la ·
many states. :
Credit unions would earn :
interest on outstanding balances !
of the card-carriers. In addition,
they would be reimbursed Cor I
their handling expenses by banks !
wbo sign up merchants from ;
whom card·carriers maka • pure~. ·
STOCKS I MOSKOWITZ
Wednesday'
Closing Pricea. NYSE COMPOSITE
•
TR.ANSACTIONS
Woct~y. °'tobfr 12. tin N DAIL y Pll.OT A .I
Top t:onapanies
Biggest Jaws·
Smwive Time
Market Suffers
51Mt~r Bnibbing
NEW YORK <AP) -&toe~ Pl1c.t took• solid drubbln1 lOda.y ln a sellotf blamed on eoncttn over rlsLD.r intereat rates.
'l1le Dow Jonet evera1• of IO lndultriat~. which had droppedlUOpolnllonTuad1Yto•Ja.moalhlow,fellanother
io.'8tQBaa.88 today.
Declln. overwhelmed advancw by about a 1-1 margtn
amq New York Stock Exduant..Ual«t llsues.
Analyst. Hid tb• ll)Jtklt wp unaeWed bf fears tbaL interest rates Ulltht be bHded for ltVm at whleh they coul~
c:auae ptObkma for both bUSl eetivit.)' end tnvestmeat.s Uke atocta Ind boada.
HJlh ratea Jncrea•• butb>••' nrtt alld a1$o ea11
dlacourap borrowln1 tor Pll~flOTI
Due to late transmlsslon today's 1 lst,ng wlll not appear ln"t Dally Piiot .
•
' .
I
I
' I I
I
J
}
Al4 DAILY PILOT
Only
,,1lmg
tar
WedneMtay, Octoti.r 12, 19n
n mg '1af. 0.8 mg nicoti~ ev-=-per cigarette. bV FTC me1hod .
.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health . .
. ' "
'
r .-.. ••••# •
INSIDE: •Entertainment •Movies
•Television •Prep, JC Football WtdnMday, Otlober 12, 1977
Hooton Tries Get ·.
;+' l.061\NG ELES <AP> -Coach
!.John ROblnson says although his
-Trojans lost to Alabama, they
J>:llheda test or another sort.
_;.,.!•we did not play up to our
'Pability," the USC coach said o ·lastSatitrday's 21·20 loss to the
qimson Tide. "But we tried lo.
lt wOOld have been unroreivable
~ we badn 't tried. When you try
d 106e, ll's disappointin& but
bot indictable
"We just didn •t have the
refined ec:tae you n~ in a aame
e that, "Robinson continued.
"We certainly didn 't
UQderesUmate Alabama, but we
didn't.play with the same foc\.IS,
._e same fanaticism we did
~ U~lnat UCLA last year, or in the ~eBowl.
•!~'It 'a funny, but I Celt before the
me durina warmups that it n 't goin to be our day. I
k any::3y who's involved in ~ knoWs the feeling It was
Odtescribable. but il was there."
·~,The USC coach said the
!~back hurt, but that his outlook
(or the Trojans wasn't dimmed . . :~e pain we felt arterourloss
o Missowi la! t year 1s with us
aln," saud Robinson who has roit but two 1ames sioc:e be
tarted coachin~ the Trojans in
G. ·"Our pride 1s wounded."
But then he added, "Thal game
does nothing to our confidence.
~e'reokay
"We have a positive outlook
about tho rest or the season.
We're Just 1ettln1 started as a
,fQOlball team, and all Ol.lr goals
Me fllll aUainable We still have
an OJ>POrtunity to have a great
stason. The key is how we
~f,rove (rom now on, and l think ~e 11 get better. J. think we'll
r..ebound very well from the Jajs. ...
he defeat col>t the TroJans tbGlr 'No. I national ranking. as ~Y sftpped to sixth in the poll
t'h1i:. W<'ek nn d Alahama
<ld\.0.anc-ed from sc~ cnth to fou1 th
SC. which resumes Paciric-8
play Saturday against Oregon,
has a 4·1 record and is 2·0 in the
conference. Oregon is l 4 O\ era II
aad winleu 1n two Pac-8
tontest.5.
Robinson. who played football
al Oregon then was an assistant
coach there for 12 years, said the
Oµcks are an unpredictable learn
•!his fall. a• "They played 1ood games
against some tough opponents.
Georgia, Wt scon slo and
iltanford, ·• Roblrison said. "Then
they had that bad game last
weekend."
The Ducks lost to Geortia
'""' •16, beat TCU 29·24, lost to
• scoosin 22.1anctStanfard28-JO ~~fore beine humbled 54·0 by
.. uhirigton last Saturday.
'"They're lilte thoU young i"OY&
on the golf tour." Robinson !laid.
• hey can s hoot a o.1 and 68, then
a 19. They may come down he~
• d shoot a 6.5 agaln, or they h'iay ~~ t c<>me down here an<l dt " •
CONTROVERSIAL PlAY Steve Garvey
appears to slide hon'\e ahead of the tag by
Yankees catche~ Thurman Munson. but
TV, Radi~ Menu
Oft Television Toots ht
5 p.m. (7 & 11> WORLD
SERIES -The Dodgers meet
the Yankees In th.r! second game
at Y Stadium.
OD RadJo Ton ls ht s:m KABC (700) and KNX
0070)-. ORLD SE&IES -Th•
Oodaen and Yabkeea in New
• York. •
Reld8~%~•
PHOENIX -Kerry Reid had
IJltle trouble ousting Pam
'l'ee1uard•r., 6·4, 6·3 Tuesday
nisht in first round play of a
women's proresslonal tenni.!J
tournament here.
In other matches Tuesday,.
C)'nlhia Doerner stopped
Kristien Shaw, 6·2, 6·3, and
'
DAILY PILOT
.. .. .l DAILY PILOT WednMdey. Oc:tober 12. 19/7
Hard Work
PayiJ;ig Off
For Raff
Dedication and bard work
durtna the otf-auson baa paid off
for YOUOJ Eric Raff ot Co~ del
)(arHlgb.
Raft, a •tart.inK middle guard
on def.ense all season ln his
sopbomoft year, will be the only
Cd)( player come both ways
Friday nlaht when the Sea Kings
meet 1urprillo1 Dana Hills ln a
South Coast Leacue football
outing a\ San Clemente lU&)\.
"He's the anchor man ln the
mJddle of our line," coach Dlck
Morris says. "So far, he's
avenged between elcht and 10
tackles a came and has been in oa atleut 50 others. He's usually
in Oil every tackle that la made in
the nllddle of the line.
"We do a lot ot stunting and
he's in the middle of our de·
tensive line, usually over the
center. He's real quiet and it's
hard for the opposing center to
block him because of this.··
Raft wtll also start on offense
at a guard poeiUoo. But offensive
actioQ is not new to the 5-10,
18S-pouod jl11lior classman. He is
alao the center on plMt.s and
conversions and is on the field
with the kickoff team
.. He's a team leader,'· Morns
adds. "We don't usually select
juniors as game captains but he's
alrefldy had that honor this year
sn the Newport game."
Morris says that Raff moved
up to the varsity as a starter in
every game last season because
of hisolf·ie&SOD work
"He ran in the hHls and on the
beach and did a lot of extra work
10 the weight room," Morns
says. ''He put in a lot more extra
work than the average euy and it
paidotflor him. Without the hard
work ol lilting and running. he
wouldn't have made 1t as a
sophomore.·'
Raff has confined his alhJet.Jc
a.ocomplisbments to the football
field in the past but this year
plans on trying out for the varsity
wrest.ling team as well. Morris
will -1so be bis wresUlns coach.
In the summer, be works !or a
private club on BaJboa lsland
where be'• lo cbarse or training
younge?' children in swimming.
As a sophomore, he was a
second t~ all·leaau. aelecUoe
at inJdd.le guard. He could make
the first unit this season.
EV No. I
Fountain Valley High's Barons
remain No. l tn Southern
California prep toOttialt drcl
as aeli!Cted by the Dall.r PilCl
rollowinl their fourth 1traiaht
victory and third atral1bt
1but0ut.
Costa esa High'$ Mmtanp
8J'e No. 1 m the CJ F croas COWltJ'Y poll aJabl ud Newport Harbor
remains No. 2 ln water polo.
* * * CIPS--S.CllMT .. 19
..... llCMel, rtQN
1.~va1...,i..1
t.Sl.PMl+tl
l LtiN'-1._.I •.Pi..X~I
). SMll•MenlU 1•01
• s.nla""-V•lley l4-0) 7. Servile U-11
·~u.11 •.v. .. ~u+•1 M ...... ,.,,,.. U II
,..._
u sa
lJO • 1' ..
11 •• 12
M
\ o.41, ............
UNIVERSITY HIGH QUARTERBACK DAVID LANOMADE.
Versatile Star
Langma.de Big Key
In Uni's Offense
Versatility is • rere Q\lality in
foottiall and Un versity Hip
llrv.lne> qu•rterback David
Langill e may be the moSt
vcrs&tlte t n the South
Coast League. Until three weeks ago.
Langmade had n41ver played
quarterback. He was forced into
the job 'tl(heo 1tartmc Q8 John
Davis fractured a tbu1nb.
In lb.rte tames Langmade bas
completed 16 of 3& passea. for 100
yards. relpeetable fig\lftS for a
junior wbo had never played the
po1ltioo before
Lanlmade is also the team's
punter, placekieker, defensive
cornerback and kickort
apeclalisl. Before the switch to
quarterback:, he wu touted a.
University's finest nmnlng back.
He was also University's
starting catcher as a sophomor.
on the baseball vanity and a
starter for the sophomore
basketball team.
That's a lot of action ror
someone who bas been bothered
by injuries smce his sophomore
~asoo.
Lqmade is still recoverin&
from a sprained ankle but
Unl9enity is lackin1 In depth so
he, keeps playln1. The ankle
injury has curtailed his klcldng.
but he remains the starting QB
I reel l.angmadc IS the finest
placek1cker m OranKc COYnly,"
says University coa.cb Dick
Roche. "Last year he kicked one
from 33 yards to win a game for
us and he ahio kicked a 45·
yarder."
Davis could be sufflc1ently
recovered to take b3ck his
quarterback job in l~o weeks,
and when thut happens
Langmade will return to half
back
"Next year we may keep him
at a runnin& back because we'll
have Ron Marvlck. who's a
junlor now , to play
quarterback, .. Roche says.
Estancia Foe Small
Sant.a Ana Baa Tough Obstacle
"We feel Langmade has done a
fine JOb al quarterback ,
considering he's never played
there before and all the
mtncacies of readi.DI defenses
that he's had to learn," Roche
says. "We put hlm 10 there
because he's our best all·round
athlete."
Filling the void al halfback for
Langmade is Gil Zaldivar, who
was originally penciled in as a
platoon·player lo alternate with
Laogmade.
Santa Ana High is still reellsag
from bil football 19S1ea to Villa
Park and Foothill of Santa Ana,
and the trend doesn't figme to
change Frid_, night when the
Salnts host Estancia Hiab of
COlta Mesa at the Santa Ana
Bowlat7:30.
() l:stantia 11 4·0 and listed amooc Ora.nee County's top 10
teams, while Santa Ana ls 1·3. ·
Villa Patt beat tho Saints 19-0
and lat •eelc Foothll1 stopped
tl'lem in tbe Century Leagµe
opetter,21-7.
.. We're a small team and we
toot a beck at a beaU!lg *lalnst
those IUY•." aaya Santa Ana
coach BOb Larson. "W only
have two CUJ1 over 200 pounds an4 \bole bigger lids can just
wear uedown som.Umos, •• He~ to aet tbo..a•me kind
of b'eatm nt from .Bstancla,
altbougb the E.,ies won each of
their last. two pmet by just two
J)Cfultl.
Orms• Cout Collf'c_e acored
~ st~ goals In the final 2:56 but
comoupabort Tue!lday afternoon
as the villtinl Fullerton College
Hornets captured a 13·11 South
Cout Cool ence water polo de·
eillon.
Steab ad loula in tbo closing
three mlnu brou&hl the 1ame to an clttng climax after the
Pit h d. trailed the Hornets,
·lU ..
Fullerton pUt Ul d c.tston out
ol reach Wfth seven ao•ll lD the
flrst pmod ancf wbll th• twious
OCC fourth quarter rall1.
matcb thls total, tt wain t
quite gb.
Go&l e BOb Kue1ernann had
··Estancia bet a very fine
running 11me and we bave to
stop that and control tbe ball as
much as pcmible If we expect to
win," Larson says.
Santa Ana runs its veer offense
under the direction ~
quarterbacks Jerry Wallbridge
<6·0, 185) and Ken Cast <S-11.
185) They alternate each ~cries
and trade off starting
assignments.
"They're practically dead
even in ab1U~." says Larson.
··T ey're both seniors and tt\9y
both deterve to play. so 1 wwitch
almOltevery eriesofdowns."
The runrung backs are Sam
Masania (5·10, 185) and Ken
Peterson (S.9, 165>, and e top
receivers are John CarlYle (5-7.
160) and Matt McLaugblln (5·9,
160)
Standouts on the line are David
Reyes, a 220-J>OUDd tackle, and
Danny Baldwin a a 5·7, 140·
pounder.
five saves during the action for
the Pirates.
The Hornet.a now have a 36·'22
edge in Ole series which started
in 1953 and a 3-0 South coast
Conference mark this season.
Orange COast, the derending
champion . h now l·l 1n
conference play and 12 6 on the
!eaaon
In other area junior college
action, Golden West College ran
its Southern C alifornia
Conference rccord to 2·0 with a
19·'7 vtctory over Santa Monica
Tony Woott>n "cored three of hll'i
1ame-high five goals In the third
period for the Rustlen. now 7 ~
overall.
"Zaldivar has emerged as one
of the f.lncst running backs in the
league," Roe be says. ·'He'll keep
playinJ after Lancmade moves
to halfback. Maybe I'll use.them
both or alternate them.··
~ut Cor now, as University
prepares for a South Coast
League game with El Toro
Friday night (8 > ot Mission
~lejo. I.angmade i s the
qil•rterback ' . JC Grid Poll ,.. ... ~.·Kl Fu•i.rton IS-OJ
1 LOflt8t6Clll._.1
l P•-•".01
• Solnl• MO/ll(a ll-0 I ~ GolOtn We\1 ,,.,,
• ~n0lf90~ ,._.,
1 LA V .. l•Y l ... I •. ~IN<~ 1).11
• a-.ni..io I> 11
IOCIW>lltf l'°'J 0 1"41fl ,...., ..... .,.,. , .. , • 1•11 l.i.cll s
,., .. •• •J ,,
>o JO
lt u ,.
1)
II
SaddJeback Collette had a case
of missed opportunities in its 11·7
M1ss1on Conference defeat to
Palomar The Gauchos bad tour
man-advantage s ltuallons and
couldn't ca!lh in on any of them u
they w1tlched their overall
record dip lo 10·9
l'utltf'lon 7 2 I J-tJ
0<•"9"0..11 0 J t 1 II
Of .. C.0.11-•"9 ~''"'"I, HHQ J Et .. r 1
O..iebm 1. \I-
~~-· .. ,, ~ !o.lnlAMi""<• 1 t I J I
GW(. "'"'lnQ G«ll"-11 1 .... ,, 'Ill _ _, I,
Bo.,..,, 0.Moll J, ~y ... J, Mll'<lltll J 1111•¥ k-.., °".,, .... s.ocM-" I I I 1 1
P••-t l 7 4 II
S•dOl•bH ~ ... ,,,., luno• Mou
M1Adiiflror••r Sc.t,un.n 1. Mi.~•" WOt.IW\
FOOTBALL
lions, .Tars
Similar
BB Friday
In Style
Barons Seeking
Arwther Shutout
Two teams with reputations for
1nllmidattn1 defenses collide
Friday night a\ Newport Harbor
Kigh where Westminster invades
m the Sunset Leaa:ue opener and
Westminster coach Bill Boswell
says both elevens are similar.
"We're very similar." a aye
boswell. "We are defenalve-
orient.ed and defense has really
earned both teams so far "
The Lions or Westminster
enter with a 3·1 mark, with de-
renae providing both touchdowns
last week ln a 14·9 win over Long
Beach Wilson.
Tt\e two have one common
opponent -Long Beach
Millikan. Millikan was stopped
by Newport ln the opener, 3-0, but
upset Westminster, 21· 7.
"Newport presents quite a
challenge with Its defeDs~
against the run,·' says Boswell. lt
bas been t.be runnlng game that
has provided Boswell with his
bright moments on offense. The
aerial game has not set the world
OD fire.
Westminster features biC
players, as usual, with tackles
John Bell (6 ·1, 210), Rob
Parchinski (6·1. 225), defensive
ends Charlie McNeill (6-S, 230>
and Mitch Siemens (6-4, 200> and
Sean Williamson (6·2, 195) lbe
moinstays.
The only Juniors in the startint
lineup are tailback Eddie
Remele CS·lO, 1651 and fullback
Dan Abbott <6·0. 200 > and it is
these two who figure to give
Newport's line the test over the
tackles.
Despite Fountain Valley
High 's 1pectacular scorlna
oulput the put at 1ames, the
Barons have prided ·them.selves
in dilenae anct tbey'r. 9'eint •
fourth ,ttralpt 1butout Friday
nl1ht (8) at Huptin.aton Beach mah.
.. We're looldni forward to
SUDHt League ad.lOG after four
noo-leasue ram••.•• ••Y• Fountain Valley coach Bruce
Piotcford.
"But we aren 'l tlktfll
Huntlnaton Beae.b li1btly.
Huntin1ton Beach ta well
coached and It h not
undermanntd. Buntbi~ Beach
is u bl1 u we and yOU'can rest
assured we•re not taldat the
OUen lightly."
The only toucbdon allowed in
four 1ames wu in tM opener.at
Redlanda a.nd Pickford admits
hi.a flrlt resetVM to see actioa, if
they do. will be on offense.
"We •but out flve teams last
· yeu and we'd llke to break that
record. Our defensive players
get ~ upset wbeo l put ln
someooe who mlibt hurt the
shutout (actor. They have a lot of
pride. I know tbla. we'll be in
trouble when our defense doesn't
dolbejob."
Tough defensive play· is
notbin& new for a Pickford
eleven at Fountain VaUey.
however. The '69 team ehalked
up four •U'a.i&bt sbutouts ~ tht
'76 out.fit allowed ooJ.y two teams
<EdUlonandl'Olltana> mmyaa
two toue~. Eacb oceuloc\
result.ct in a P~n V•Uey de-
feat.
Willie Giltens (11 touchdowm.:;•
and a ·9,9 yards per carry
average> is the mll.ior focal ,oini
at Fount-1Jl Valley, but.P!cktotd sar,• he bat more. ·u concerns ua that tal" ,,
always centen around Willie and.G
Tim llolmet,.. 18YS Plekfo~ ..
"We buve aome othen wht.i
not set Ling muc~
recognitlon ... but they are a&11•
good ·as anyone in Ora '
County. • ••t..a,rey Budsen at Jin cur
and guard Bryan Caldwell on <le-r,-:)
fense, our de!enaive en~, DoP.·l
Stantoo, Carlos Reyes and JOhil
Nicholson, our tackles Al KoenJc
and Pete Chinnici, and ouraeeon;•.J
dary, with Ron Padilla and S~tr
Shibata. Both of those
cornerbaclts are majoT colleae
prospects " , ,
Also there are fullbackl Bra.4i µ
Wood, ;rim Henigman and Jim
Freeman, who double on de·
fense. .~~ Friday that gr.up, alonf wlw >
quarterback Doug Thompsol\
and the rest of tbe Barons lrivade
Huntington Beach as be&VY; ~
fnvorite.<J-but Pickford warn.s;,.1
"Hwttin~n Beach has the bes\.•t
quarterback <Marco Pacnuelll>
we've faced this year and that
creates problems." ;fJ
P3st Newport-Westmmaler
clashes lave resulted in hard· ·
hitting struggles. "I don't know
why that is," says Boswell. "But
Newport always gives us. and
Edison <Huntington Beach>.
for that matter, a roush
game."
ROse BOwl Ticket Sale .~:;
Westminster has won the last
three times with a defense that
has allowed Newport no more
than seven points
Hole-in-one
Patrick Swift, a 14·year-old
freshman al Corona del Mar
Hiah School. scored a hole-In-one
on the 17S·yord 13lb tiole al
Rancho Sao Joaquin Golf Course
using a five-wOod.
WIN PRIZES
WORTH·
MORE THAN sa,ooo
IN
More then $3,000 worth of pt1zet "111
b• 1hared by winner• of 11 weekly
Plg1kln Plckeroo '77. The r-.outer
fe•ture of the Delly Plfot SP.Ortt aectlon
tHtl th• football game outcome pre·
dieting skUla of hundreds of Oranae
CoHt 1pprt1 fen. and grldlron ho-
daddl••· .,
A on•yeer membera"lp et N1utllu1
Newp0rt -• co·td fltne11 center
favored by eree ethletH -wtll be
awarded eech week to tht Delly Piiot r•
adtr Who beat predict• the outcom or
f ootbell contHta from coHt to co11t.
N•utllu• conditioning equipment I•
favored by pro football tHma. Neutllu•
Hewport It located et 4220 Von K1rrn1n
Avenu.. Newport Beach.
~ and third place ent11nta wlll
each receive • $1 O gift c.ttlflcate from
South Co11t Plaza. CertlflcatH may ff
redHmtid at any of the mell atorea.
To be eUglble for weekly contHt
aw.rda, entrant• must predict the wlna
nere of Heh of 30 football gemH and
alao guHI th• total number of point•
1cored In all 30 gamea. DAILY PILOT
-------
'
...
OOTBALL I WATER POLO.
l!rep F~tball
Players of Week
Tho foUoWin1 athletes were selected players of tho week by
tbelr after the weekeod varsity acUon:
Defeme
G'REG OHLER, Corcma del Mar -Kobler was credited ~ith eilbt unaulated and seven assisted tackles, intercepted two ·
paaaer, eauaed a fumble and recovered another in a 1·6 victory.
. MIKE KENNEDY, Costa Mesa -A junior, Kennedy's de-
fense agairult the power pl~ to his alde and the pressure he
applied to tho Mission Vi* quarterback earned him special rec!O@ltion.
a.ANDY COWNS, Capistrano Valley -A safety in the Couprs,. secondary, Collins intercepted a J>a.", recovered a
fumble met bad two sacks oo tbe opposing quarterback.
DAVI! BLOW, Dana Bllls -Ehlow was involved in 12
tacklee at linebacker and played with fewer errors than any Dolj>bins defender.
JOHN BOGDAN, EdllOll ·-Bogdan, a linebacker, bad 10
tackles, sacked the quarterback once and blocked a punt in his
thl!d atrai&ht solid performance for Edison. .
JORN RESS, El Toro -Hess, who turned in a solid game
with h1s tackling and pressuring the Corona deJ Mar passer, was
cNdited with seven unassisted tackles and eight assisted tackles. ..
· RON PADIL£A, Fo.a.ntaln Valley -Padilla carne up with hls
third lntetceptlon in four games and did an O\ltstandine Job
tackling on. awee~ ancl provided the Barons with good pass coverage.
SHAWN VONESH, H1mtlqtoo •aeb -Voneab, who has
been consistent since the season be&an. had lift unassisted
tackles lfOm blS ~ltion iii Ute RB secondary.
H&RarHOMPSON, lntne -Alsotheoflensiveplayerofthe
came, 11'0mpson stopped the running of EJslnore on bis side and
forced the opposition to pass to the other side of the field.
B1IL GOMPF, Lapaa Beada -A two.way standout al
quarter'baCk and linebacker, Gompf caused ~ recovered a
,fumblo; blocked punt ahd was the catalyst of the Laiut>a Beach
defense.
• MaKEa, Newport lla7bor -Barker, with a wboppJnc
17!lead tackles, pl.,-ed a s~rb all-round game despite the Sailors· 24.0 J~s.
MIKE MURPHY, Saa Clemea&.e -Nµrpby at. defensive e pl&q:ged up the holes effectively in aeallng of1 Laiuna
B ch's offense and played a near ml.stake-free game in terms or execution.
JOHN ORTMAN, UnlvttSlty --Ortman graded out as
U lventty's topdeJender. He bad four first hits and came up with a yqu;art.erbactsack. He was the mostconsisteJrtUniversityde· le derina25-'l21o...
performance. We played very
well, we didn't have the
breakdown. t hat hurt us 1il
earlier games."
RCC has a 2·2 record for the
season, defeating Collece ot ~
Desert, 26-14, while losing to
Antelope Valley, t28·0, and Moorpark, 21-7.
"We're attempting to make
some strides with our program
and the win last week could have
been a turning point." says
KrOA, in his second year u
Rivet1ide"s bead coach.
The Tigers are led by runnine
back Ray Jackson (6·0, 210), the
leading ground gainer, and
fresbman quarterback Tim
Carter (5-10, 170), who completed
11 of 20 passes last week for 115
yards.
Defensively, Riyerstde Is
atroni in the secondary with three of the four atartera
JOpbomores. "Our secondary has.
played super. We got four
interceptions last week and now
have 12 for tbe year," says
Kr()fS.
The Tigers also have a good
linebacker in freshman Tobin
Hood (6-2, 215), an All-CIF 3·A
selection last year at Riverside Poly.
Al for Saddleback, Kross says
the key to beating the Gauchos Is
stopping quarterback Billy
Yancy.
"I'm amazed at Yancy's
improvement. He's throwing
well. Now he's n complete
player. He really puts pressure
on the defense. We have to
contaln Yancy to beat
Saddleback and we've eot to Jtet
tohlmquickly,"saysKross.
Vikes Back
Averaging
11.4 Yards
Greg Karman didn't play
football at Marina High
<Hunµngton Beach) last season
but be is making up for lost time
this campaign despite the
won-lmt record of the Vikings.
Karman will be the starting
fullback for coach Mike
Henigan'• Marina squad Friday
nJght (8) when the Yikes tangle
with Edison High's <Huntington
Beach) Cbareers in opening
Sunset League action at Orange
Coast College.
He was an outstanding football
player as a freshman at Marina,
was hurt as a sophomore and
opted to play soccer last year in
place of football.
"He was a little disillusioned
after his sophomore season,"
Henigan says. "But he stayed
with our weight program and we
all felt he was a good prospect for
this year. 1 talked to him a lot to
get him out and he has done a
super job for us."
Checking the statistics for the
5·10, 185-pound .fullback, he bas
scored four touchdowns and is
averagmg 11.4 yards per carry.
He has carried the ball 37 times
for 423 yards and had his biggest
nl&bt against Magnolia when be
picked up 225 yards in 15
attempts
Last weelc: he was out with the
flu during much of the practice
time and only carried six Umes
for 35 yards.
Where does his ability come
from? ~·He's got tremendous leg
strength and good quickness."
Heni&an says. "He is able to find
the open bole, too, but bis mam
assets are bas strength apd
quickness.
"Last summer he was able to
lift 295 pounds in the power clean
event. There are very few college
players who could do that." the
coach adds. "You have to be able
to use your legs In that event.
"He's also a good student and
one of our seniors who is doing a
fine job for us. I think he can play
junior college football and
potentially can play for a four-
year school."
Mesa Could
Go Bananas,
Says Sch~f
San Clemente High football
coach Alhe Schaff, despite the
fact his South Coast League team
is undefeated, says his Tritons
have a major obstacle to
overcome Saturday nl1ht (8).
The Tritona invade Orange
Coast Coll~e to duel Costa Mesa
Hlgh's pass-happy M"'tangs and
Sch.rt cites the passing of Mesa.
a two-platoon · system •nd the
odds Mesa will not be turning the
baJJ over u much as it did last
week. •
"Tu.movers have hurt Costa
Mesa," aaya Schaff. "It hasn't
been IO much the interception as
it has been the fumble. Mesa has
fumbled away many scoring
opportunities.
"Costa Mesa quarterback
Jerry Cribbs wu the leading
passer in Orange County a.mW
last week and Jf be gets a hot
band against us they cO\lld go
bananas.
"His passing puts pressure on
u• everywhere with th~ sbort
passing game and they beef up
their runnlne game with two ttshteods.
"We'll just conUnue to try to do
the things we do best.••
What San Clemente does best
Is run ... with only an occasional
pass thrown in. However, when
San Clemente goes to the air, It's
uaually effective.
The Trttons completed two or
three passes in an 18-14 wln over
Laguna Beach and have
averaged two completions a
ea me for 30 yards.
"We don't throw on third and
big yardaee. But we have won
games with the passing game,''
says Schaff.
San Clemente figures to en1er
with the same unit that knocked
off Laguna Bdch, with the
exception at halfback where
Nate Rowsey assumes a starting
role.
Pro Basketb all ................. "" ..... N-'l'orll llJ, ... tOll !Of
1ncMN1111,"""'"~ .. 1os
S.11""*"'011J, "'""4• IOI 0.1,._.t I 10, Al~• 104
H"' Or1NllS 111, Wee!>lngta.i 1111
ELINOR BAGGETT MARILYN GUST
COMGIA TULAnONS! c.., ........... , .,... ..... .. .... c..,..
T raweIBag
AIR TICKETS-Tat.RS· CRUISES ~r • SeNloe Char~
All Mii« Credit Cato. Acc9pted
MARINERS MILE SQUARE
2700 W. CoMt ~ .• N"1)0t1 Belch.Ca. 92883
C114t 611-197'
•
..
It was a day for high
scoring on the high
school water polo scene
Tuesday as three games
were won witb 16 or
more goals and five
players bad five or more
markers.
Mitch Kahn had six
goals as San Clemente
edged Monte Vista
(Whittier) 16-15 io
overtime, Bob 'Cut•.!e had
half a dozen goals as El
Toro whipped visiting
Capistrano VaUey 17-S
and Bob Dolan scored six
times to lead Costa Mesa
past host Footblll (Santa
Ana) 11-4.
Dave Varney bad rive'
goals and Joe Delaney
four as Dana Hills
cruised past Cypress 17-3
while Doug Pickford
scored five goals to lead
Edison of Huntington
Beach past Esperanza
<Anaheim) 11-S.
Su.oset Leque acUon
kicks off tonight with
three games on tap at tlle
Orange Coast Colleie
pool. Huntlniton Beach
and Fountain Valley
square off at 6 followed
by Edison against
Marina <Huntington
Beach> at 7 and de·
fending champion
Newport Harbor
meeting Westminstet at
8.
VAllSITY
~...,~
l'oolNll 2 0 2 0-' Co1teMotM J 4 2 2-11 Coit•~ t<Of'ifl9-Frc111 2, OI...,
2, Do1M6, II-"·
JUNIO• \IAltllTY
""""' QMtt..-Foolhill S t 1 3-17'
COtl•Me.a 1 0 0 2·-)
'
C0&1• ~ ICOtl~hOlomel
V<SITY ... ~ ...... S.lltaMI 4 1 I 4•1t 1tvlne 4 J 1 J-11
'"''"' -•111-Tntr, .....,'°"• P'1111 2, O . McCor111lck a, J,
Mce:ann!dl,lpf ... 1.
12 GAUGE GOOSE GUN*
59!~
\
"~'°"" ............
S.11t•Mll ' , • 0-4 lrvlM 1 1 S j-tJ
1,., ... .,..... ,.,,,.,.. •• lrolldl .._
V.H$lTY .... ...,......,,
c.po Veilfy 1 't t 0-~
EIT-A ~ S J-1'
C.pe v .. ,..,. -~ (eolt '· M•l.,.MI•. lt#oro n•rl111-~0lltletl J. AIHftt•tne> ,_ fll1dlle(~a, ~
..... ...,"' "-Ill' ...... 1!--I 1 1 0-S ElllOll J 6 t 1-11 Edl-..i~J, f'IOl!fO J.Hol#Mn,~2.
JUNIM va1-.1TY
kiwelll' QMnlra Esper-0 t o 1-2
Edlioll 1 J 2 l-t
Edtt[Dn -'"9-4el~ 2, Fftlle" 4, WarfeU.
..
IO~I *-...,...,..,.
ldlWI t • t ..-1
,,_.,,Ill 1 1 , !OM ' •c11--~ ............ t. lm«y, OclllNf • ......,.... ..,,,.._ lj-'"---"
flltO&H.IOf>t4 ..,.......,...
lhl)llr.-t I I t-t
ldlMlll 1 ' t t -' ldlMft klll'il'f-OriMI•., H. Hof-tM.,.,Nm1.19i, ..... lclla.
' YAlltlT't Le WlllOll t, c:.ron.ott Mar 1
.IUNIOltV&•tlTY
L8WlllOllt,C:-..-dll•O .. ~ ..
LI Wl'1111 S.~4194-ll
. -
•
Wedneeday, October 12. 19TT
~·,Women'-s Athletic ResUlts £Or Coast APea
~
c.r ... ·Sol-IUI *' AIOw,,,_. "*"'*' .. '· ... 1ec.-o·~~ oet c;ey....,.,_a ...O; K•ml•Ut·
A..c,,,,,..,r IU) 19'1 ,_., ... ,, >t;
C-~WrllJ)IMt .. ,.._., .. ,.
ta•MeN 4'1 ltl at Ten .. .,_-.., ..... _ ........
0ve1i. cal""•....,,... u. 1ett '° ~..,,cAf Ntllh ,.,, ~
ll!l I091 k. -.. 2. ._,; .._ Cl! ..,., .... -~ ...... OwM9I
8ry•on·8Urke ti> "' llel<Nn·
Lunoellus '·•· loJ' 10 KJtarey
(;rl*lt"91 ,_., def Meul-Fttillw M.
L .. t<ll-~ tll •1 u , -a.J, ~. .Prl..sml.,Cllio.tt..,w,-._..
c:.-llY 11Sl lllk.._,t ......
C.yblln IC) I.a to ,.._...,. ,...
dtl. Jendlea.1,.,, ~a.I; tltYMI
ICl ...... t ... W91 7..S, .. I~ lngltll'(C)
.... ~.-M.•·I
0-..
llaYt•IW>lltN IC.I •t, MllWllO-
Me91it1"tt-l,dwl C.r...,..,.C...llllo..0,
d•I. 1t1,~0 ·$01arH1ro •·• Cor-·Cuihllljl IC.I WOf'I •I, 1 ~ •• ~.
"' ............... ,.., l(.J -.. ,, • , •-11.
l*'-<18 U.I Otl ,,__ .......
JettMe IU lltf. J. Meyor~H. lool 1o
I.. fNrf.,.. H ; <:Ml• II.I ""°" II\' a.
.. UIC. ie.t 04, Mt:Mlll ... Cl) lo•I IO
Mcc.tmlck U, to.I lo Olldll'l•I ~
eoclH' IEI loJl,M.N; Ju IEI lo>tlo
cutler 2·•· 1011 to l'orbetll J·•
Vonl..ut-Ill IOll J .. , l •, MUOmen IE I ..... to O<.,_ +., loel le 1'14141
•·•; Harvey Cl I won •·•. •·1, ll•ell>onOKh IE I Oil. oo.n ... , C.rell
<El l~toClarlls-7
o.Maa lomd«WMlec• 1e1 def Dain•· C."'""'' •·•, 1011 to Pelrner• CuMl"lfWmU; 81tll•-d IEI lo•\ 0-., -W, ~l-1..M IEI IDS
to Jam1>011·C.•rneron o •· IO•l to
Motll\ln·M<L•utlllln S 1: Lint·
tiot,..r-loel N , I .. ; Wllll•mt-~ i.;i io.1 to fftl,..p~ H,
clef ~ 1-S; VMCOll•
V•1.-II!) lellk,-M; Hal-
C•><0 lf;;llcaHoO-·Poot>-4, lost lo
'-•"•·V•u&blnoer •·•,
for-s.p..1,..... tl!I-7-s .... 1;
Herrl•·Yetet CE) 1011 lo
~ne pllarO -Oldenwa ld •·•;
fl•d•l-Horl IEI fOlt lo Froncy •
K11c11..-..
l'lf°"'Ctll (11T111li•
Siall•
0 •,.11• IEI del Z.llrt91r IS, oel O~bofn •2. def ~lh t-2, C.rter If.I
10\11 .. , _, M. •-2; !'>t..O IEI lotl W, 2·•.wonw. •
o..iw .. llryton·llUraa IE) I011t to ~1-.1-
C.••kelt ._,, d9f McDanlel-Gorl• , .. ,
Cl<lf l .. y.Connillly a.1; LOd<,..D•ck
f L I wan._., M, toll S-1; PrlU-Smt\11
IEl1o.c ... ,1 ... -1.s
JUNi0.VAllSITY
Et,_ UI CIJ T11tllft
, .. ,.1 ..
ll•on<e ll:.IO.I Tort ... l, ~•14if"4•e
E I 001 J-e-J, l' .. lcw ll I O.t
M~•OOOftW.
DIM*M
Morri•·Oone\O IC I "*' UuO•• V.111Q.,,.,a..). Al'rOYO-(IMI,. IL J 1<"110 tt•rden-PortH W , Brown.f"ulmer
le I Cletl><l\l-·WflC.0--.1·•·
~ C\1111> .....,,.... IM<ll
Slittl•
l'•lf IL) ICllt 10 f<OOI 1 .. , IO>I lo J Ltpyank , ... '°" to J~ k , 0·!>11
ll••n IL)IOtl0.., 1 .. ,won•~. Wachl•I Ill fost~,M,().6,
Oollll>IH
Klu•t•r·W•ll•C• IL) IO\t lo
Huml)hrey•HerNncle~ I •· f0>I '"
EI •ln·Gl••11ow J·•, IOU t o
1>1orklt.ft).IC. L.lpye11lk 2 ... Nl<holton·
Wllllm•n ILi lo•t , .•• O·•. J·•. He.,.tllor,,.Pllflny lLI loot I ... :!-•, J •
C.•Mee411U 161&1TH'• s.,. ..
!><h .. •O IC.I 0•1 81anca H . '"' f•lut•U• .,.., •o•t to P•~ttt< 1 •~
von..-11a <Cl wot1 t-• ... ,, t-J, croci. • ..-
1c 1_.1.),7 • IO>l ... I
~ F1.....,...UIQr\l IC100IMOHll·Oo"6IO
f •, oct Cht~ArtoYt ... J, oet 8t~ l'ul,._ .-Jt MorftJ-0 N .. I (Cl IO>I
I•. 1 .. , won 1 .. , HM'ri•l'rwln CCI to.t
J.•,Cl-4,_. ...
CMalflJ' 161 If) SI. ........
''""°' h'"'" (Cl ., ••• Oupl .. Sll •-o:
l'o...ell IC) cltlf, l.<llleur 11-1; 0.YWOW
IL I dtf l<Ol)r-Mll l.-0; O'O.y IC>
Oef. t.9(11Wt "4
oeu.I• 0 O.~C.ytirow ICI def, l!Dllft'1-
1<opr-I M ; s.n1n--.i1ey tC>
otl Oupl-1..c.ottalloMI.
ConnetlY var111y I» now 6-0 Oft the ......
SPECIAL YAtUES FOR
TODAY THRU SUNDAY
COSTA MES~ FULLERTON SANTAANA
1530 S. HARBOR BLVD.
PHONE: 870-0700
120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS
PHONE: M7-7477
REPLACE DIRTY AIR FlllfRS NOWI
AIR FILTERS
-.... ~ ~ Dowgard
~
fOI MOST AMOKAll uas
YOUll CHOICI
.l!tfo!~l 1 !!
EASY TO USE
ENGINE ENAMEL ASSORTID COLORS
' Sproy 1•to h"o , .. ,..,. wlMire 11."'ht• ~0~: .. ~~':::~·· 89c
13 FL OZ. CAN
COOLANT AND
ANTI-FREEZE
HrELS GREASY •
WATERY STAINS OM
MOST fUtNISHINOS,
APl'AUl ANO AUTO
U'HOlSlt:RY
r.to!~~""I fO• USI IN NOMI. omc1.01tcu
1~: .... 1'' CAN
The""' Pvfofotor lS,000-Mile Duol Oii Rlttf' detlir*f
provide lonp-Oil filttetffon ffiOft rwer .....,...
ENTERTAINMENT I THEATER
HUME CAONYN ANO JESSICA TANDY PLAY 'THE GIN GAME'
Bitterness and Comedy Among the Geriatrtc Set
New Broad-..,ay Play
'Gin Game' a Grabber
By WILLIAM GLOVER
NEW YORK CAP> --''The Gin
Game .. ls it smull. funny pluy with a
sharp finale wallop.
Two rankln& Broadway
performers, Hume Cronyn und his
wife Jcs:uca Tandy, arc the whole
cast or the seemingly innocuous trifle
that premiered at the Golden The:.ter.
The production or&~inated at the
Long Wharp company 1n New Huven,
Conn .• which is becoming 11 regular
wnlributor to Main Stem well-being,
though the script has also been teated
by seve.rlill other rca.ional companies.
ITWAS WRl1TEN by D. L. Coburn,
u nuUve ol IJuttimorc now resident an
DUUi!li, and ~ reportedly his first
excursion into dramaturgy. Besides
tiovinJ,t a keen ear for dialo&uc.
Cobum :;hows rewardin1 compassi¥
4nd undttNWndina for the way in whi~b the minor lrritutlons of every
day life can become tune bombs that
dutroy o pcr:-.on.
Tho l«ulc is an old age wt:lfare
borne ~here over a spun of lhre~
weeks his two lonc1y churacters mc<:t.
wurlly ret.tch out to cuch other over a
furd table and then quite
unlntentlonully amosh down the
pol.inont, private illu~ions of self.
sutvivi.I.
Through three scenes. Tandy and
Cronyn sustain a level -or surface
um1ty, two crotchety elders in mutual
fligtit from the petty. patron121ng
u~gravatlons of institutional
existence. Once in a while a fragment
or det<iil about lhe lives they have left
behind is dropped, hurriedly covered
while another rummy hand pluys out.
COIJURN'S DRAMATIC device. a
bit too pat, is t• h~ve the woman win
constuntly as the man arows
Increasingly wrathful. In scene four
bitterness reaches a violent peak. and
as she wins -if anyone has been
counting -the 13th band. the last
shr~ Gt Cron yo 's pride rip apart He
totters off designer David Matchell 's
tattered &ray veranda, leaving her to
ponder~ moral of this excursion into
solitary dismay.
Until the ultimate gnmness dev-
elo~. Nichols and his stellar players
keep "The Gin Game' .. lightly
diverting, and make the commenL"
about j!er1atr1c hfe more umu!llnl?
lh~n they rcully arc Crnnvn i~ a
fidgety mwrvel. Miss Tandy <i wc1ncler
of ~randmothcrly uplomb
"J'he Gin Game" ts miniature
dra'lnn. prc1wnled with su11crbly
professional urtlstry
"YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE
COHIT-''fl\JNNV LAOY"' (PG 1
''NEW YORK .
NEW YORK''
.. ANNIE •'·~·. HAU: .,4,
.. LO\'Eml nt\Tir ............
Call tU•H I.
Put • few words
to •ork for ou.
. SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT
"THE STING'" (PG)
"NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG)
"A STAR IS BORN" (A)
'"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME"
"THE DEEP" (PG)
-rHX1138"
"A BRIDGE TOO FAA" (PG)
"THE HILLS HAVE EYES" ''RABID"
"HAPPY HOOKER" (A)
Ull'S "You Light Up My Life" so. COAST PUZ& UT/~-=-= '"RINMY LADY" .. ,,,. _,. kl/......,·1 .. 1 .. t•t•
URS
SD. COAST rwA ....... --
IWl'S ClltlWID " ........ ...... .. ,.
"ltOU.JMG THUMDSl" IRJ
• .,. AXI DRIVER ..
CALL THlATU FOR
SHOWTIMIS
•
Q: Succ~s. fame and fortune sffm to axrtt
with Syln~tu Stallone. Seelnl( hJm at poolside In
Beverly tnlls, be looked fantastic. If he's on a secret
diet -I'd like to know what It is. Will you aak bim!
-•10 Levy, Beverly Hills, Calif.
A: Here's the diet. But I doubt if you ·11 like 1t.
Three times a day Rocky eats shark meat and
alfalfa'
Q: Wai.n't there a fatal accident that caused
W.C. Fields to quit making JOkes about bJa loatblng
children? Do you have any details! -H.C ..
Memphis, Tenn.
A. In 1941, Christopher, the 4·year-<>ld son of
Anthony Quinn, Ml into W.C. Fields' lily pond and
drowned. The comedian was so distressed at the
tragedy that soon afterwards he gave up bis rented
house and moved elsewhere. The heartbroken
mother was actress Katherine DeM1lle. adopted
daughter and an assistant to her father the
famous movie director. CecH B. DcM1lle. Anthony
and Katherine Qwnn divorced in 1964
Q: Hasn't a Georgia neighbor or Jimmy
Carter's been voted Penthouse magazine's "Pet or
the Year"? -M.T. Thomas, Norfolk, Va.
A· Not exactly a neighbor. her name 1s Victoria
Lynn Johnson. a native of Georgia. who used to
display her 34·23·34 lines
modeling in Atlanta b<.'fore she
madt> doLcns of TV commcrc1als
and three films. You may have
st•en her latest. "Grizzly,'
where she comes to an untuncly
t!nd at the paws of a k11ler-bt!ar
who d1dn 't l'are for lady forest
ran~crs Vicky's hobby is
JQggmi: Knowm&: that she'd be a
beauty queen someday, she took
up karate and 1s now quite an JOH"so"'
expert
Q: We remember watcbln1 you tryln1 to
interview the late Leopold Stokowsld on TV and
l(et&iDI( into a slight dispute right on tbe air with
him. Was the maestro really such a felsty fellow!
And bow did .be pronounce bis name! -Mrs. T.
Sucblnla.s, Long Island.
A That's what started the areument. We
pronounced h&s name .. stuh·kow·sky. ·• He
mterrupted t.o correct us Saying it was "STORK·
kow·sky." Decades before the conductor bad been
asked by the New York Times whether 1t was trul'
that "full name was Leopold 8oleslawaw1c1 Anton•
Stanislaw Stokowsk1, or was he in reality a cockney
named Ll~el Stokes., His answer, we're told,
T t'futitsllOO flNOIA • ......,., ........ .... ,,...,~ .. (•CM UUIU
"ONE ON ONE"
"A PIECE . IMOKEY &
OF THE THE BANDIT'"
l'L.S ACT18N" (P'9) THE !HING
••LL ~·-" I fH•S THU .. ~ llCHfY l' .. T151l II 11
;;UMBALL RALLY '!~~-~.~~~M} ~~'!J.f.I I ... , ................. , .. ".,-----
I ht.,_, .. ,. ,.;.-y.
3C:4~
""' "THE EDGE" I
-t'\f_,... •• ~. ", .... ,
HESTON• COBURN 'A PIECI OF
'THE LAST HARD MEN' TH! ACTION"
BILLC088Y
SIDNEY POITIER PLUS "GUMBALL (PG Ll
w.dneldq, October 12. ,..,,
'Glad You Asked That'
by Mwltyn -4 Ht G_....
wasn't fit for the Times to print.•• Stokowsky was
born in London on April 18, 1882, and to eive you an
idea of bow long ago that was, Queen Victoria wu
on the thrOne and Wasner, LI.sit and Tchaikovsky
were still ahve. His father was a Polish ant.brop-
ologlstand bis mother Irish.
Q: Who said "Wbea JOU are doWD and oQC';'
someddnl always tul"DS up-osually the no.es of
your rrtends"?-H. GoJclea, Cola. , Ohio,
A: Orson Welles. ·
Q: ID •blcb war did aetor h&er Falk Ion la.ls
eye! -Elhabeth D., 'ften&oll. N • .J.
A: No war at all. Peter lost bJs eye as the result
of a tumor -when be was (lQly Jyears old.
Q: Wua't tbe Kore• Nadmal ~them stola from .. Auld Laq Syae.,! -Sae a.. Sacnaeato.
A: Not;;toleD -borrOWed.. Tbe Korean Alltbern
is from an old Scottish Alr. Tbe same to wbich
"Auld Lang Syne" is tracliUonally sung. The lyrics or "'Auld Lani Syne" are credited to Robert Burns,
who said. when he sent lhe.ll'l to the BritJsh museum.
he had copied them down from a song aunc by an
anonymo~old man.
Send JIOUr quutionl to Hy GardMr. "Glad y OU l\Slcid
That." COT~ of thu MtOspopet, P.O. &%J560. CostoMua
92626 Merrill/ft. and H11 Gordna 1oiJl OMDeT at m=v
quesftoftl GI tlwfl COft m UJar column. bMl the volt.nM Of
mail maka~rSQl't4l replh•~blt.
edwards CINEMA CENTER
HAR I OR A J AOAM!.. C. 0\ TA Nl\A
MESA VERDECEHlER ~79·4141
Wodneeday, Octobet 12. 1&n
Be's Different
Perry Lang pla ys Hewitt, .i r et a rded
teenager who is befriended by his peers
dter res cuin g one of the m from an
excavation on the ABC Afternoon Special
toda_y at 4:30 on Channel 7.
~ounded for a week.
ID AOAM-12
A wealthy pollee buff oversteps
~ law and endangers the
safety of tl'le Adam-12 team.
• 21TOMGHT
G1) STARBOARD
Cl) $128,000 QUESTION
1:0011 (I) 0000 TIMES 0 GRIZZLY ADAMS
"Sunllval" Adams loaea his
rnemc>fY following a hunting
accident end beoOmee a stum-
bling, frightened ttranger ln an
untamlllar wllderneu, unaware
of the bounty hunter (Jamee
Wainwright) eworn to capture
blm. 8 MOVIE *** "The Big Sleep" (1948) Humphrey Bogart, Lauran
Becall. A private dettlcilva,
hired by a wealthy femlly,
Ul'ICOY9t'9 a ITMlfd« cue and
flnda tOm~. (2 hra.) a JOKEA'• wu.o
8) CAA0t. BURNETT AND
FRlEHOS
G..-: Vllloent Price.
• MOVtE * * * ''Wb8ft Worlda Collld'" (1951) Barbara Ruan. Richard
Dirt. A rocJ<-.Np Is hurriedly
....cted In cue Earth Is IUb-
Jeeted tc1a meteotlte lhower. (2
tlrS.l
Ratbags Guide ,.,.,..... -r..., «C9'tll• to -Ofllc• --..... •. ~ ~ TV .,.
•J~ll'f•~n•c.>
* • * -Excellent
-Very Good
-Good
-Fair •
• -Poor
fZl) NOVA
• Incident At Brown's Ferry" A
documentary ot America's
worst nuclear reactor accident-
-a near-catastrophe-which
examines the nuclear power
dllemma.
'1!) SPECIAL •
"A Storyteller's Town" Novelist
Sherwood Anderson remin-
isces about two smell Ohio
towns.
~NEWS
8: 15 G MOVtE * * • ·~ "The Sand Pebbles"
( 1966) Steve McOueen, Richard
CrannL An A"*1can expatn-
ate 11 forced to talce a stand
when the gunboet he i. on Is
held under IMQ•. (2 hrs.. •5
min.)
8:30 f) CJ) BUSTING LOOSE
Lenny trlff to five up to a c:hild-
hood pledge to help his bud-
dlee and tells them aboUt a
vacaocy In hla building. He
~ Is dlamayed to learn he
has roommald who don't went
to'8ave. 0 CONCENTRATION CD CA088-WITS
CD A8WE8EEIT
"The PromlM" Ol8ctlmtnatlon
egalMt lndlwl students: ooun-
sellog wt.It• and Indians: eth-
nlo Identity through mua.tc and
dance.
t;OO 8 CBS MOVIE
"The Glr1 Called Hatter Fox"
(Premlefe) Ronny Cox. Joanelle
Rome<o A young doct~ takes
up 1...aency at a state retor-
enatOtY '°' girls to help fr• a
frightened, stubborn. violently
disturbed, Indian git'! from the
'devlla' that \Ofrnent ti«. D Of\EGON TRAIL
"Tr~· Rendcvous" When
lhe wagon train'• scovt la ~P
tured by hoatile moumain men,
Evan Thorpe must fight their
leader (Claude Akin.) In order
to win the man'a frMdom
Q IAON81De
tronaJde tackles the problem of
credit c:ard thefts CD MERV GRIFFIN m GREAT PeRFORMANCE8
"Salome" Karl Bohm conducta
the Vklli(l• Phllharmoolc: In
Rlehard Strauss' one act opera
based on the play by o.car
Wiide. Featured are Ter ...
Stratas. Attrid Vamay, Hana
Belrer and Bernd Welklas. (A)
'11) AUSTIN CO'Y LIMITS
"Aaoo JlrMneZ Y Su Conjunto
With Ry Cooder" Accordionist
Jimenez tind hi• conjunto band
are Joined by guitarist Ry
CoOder In preeeritlng tM!r
unique Southwestern music.
CJ) MOVIE
**IA "Where lt'a At'' (91Bg)
David JanaHn, Rosemary
Forsythe. After resl•tlng, an Ivy
Leaguer learns hla father'•
night club bu1lnHa and
becomes a ruthleea manager.
(2 hrs.) tm MOVIE ** "The Forty-Eight Hoor
Mlle" (187Q) Darren McGavfn,
Wlnlam Windom. A private eye
ll'lvestlgatee a murder lnvoMng a love triangle. (2 hra.)
10:00 8 BIG HAWAII
"Pli*lne" Mitch Feera coma
to the rescue of a dlvOfcee \!With
whom he la romantically
Involved when her brutal ex-
hua band (Stephen Macht)
arrives on the acene and
threatens to beet her.
UO NEWS
(I) NIGHT GAUE.RY G:> EQUALITY
This program attempts to reach
Into four comers of the equality
question: equallty of age. aex,
race and economic Clrcum-
ttanoe.
10:30 CD mt NEWS
11:00IJD0(J)~ NEWS 0 HOUYWOOD
CONNECTION Q MOVIE
*** "Root• Of Heaven''
(1951) E:rol Flynn, Juliette
Greco. A group of ooncerned
lndlvldual• band together to
protec1 the endang«ed -..
phant1 from poectwa. (2 hra.) e FOREVER FEANWOOO
l'he gaebo ha dl~ed;
Mac ttS. dlatadee: Eleanor
tempta Tom end Penny want•
to roast her fOf It: the gazebo la
tound.
'8 PEMYMASON
A shady lnyer. a ai.nt f.cing
a nMJr<* cttarga. and a wtm.a
demandiog • P8)IOf'f complicate
thilcase. e OtQC CAVETT
Guests: The Ritz Brotherl, Har-
rt_ 8fld Jlmmy.
'1l> MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
11:308 (I) HAWAII FIVE.() G TONIGHT
Host: Johnny Ca"°". G~
Joan Alvara, Pt!yl11a George.
Nell Stmon, Lot lndlOe Taba-
jaru, M.,lha Muon.
0 LOVE, AMaucA.N STYLE
"LOY9 And The Ofdy Weda/
Love And Th• Chrlatma1
Punch''
G <ti 8TAA8KY •HUTCH
"Kiii Huggy 8-r" Huggy
11 1lngi.d out tot murder by •
mercUeu nurntaeta rackatw
when he la unab• to NPeY a
huge aum or mooey botiow.d
from tha moblter. (A) NEWS
CAPTIONeDABC NEW8
MORNING
12:009 lWIUGHTZONE
Peoole gathering on a ra.d-.y
gradualty ....itte they hav. all
been killed during the Clvl •
War. e MOVIE **~ "OUt Of TM P&at" (1947) K~ Oouglu, Jane Greef. A
gu station owner. hiding hi•
MCr•t peat, helltat• to many
a lovely young girl. (2 hra.)
G) MOVIE
**IA "Illegal Entry" (1949)
Howard duff, Marta T0ren
Und«cover agents break up an
alien amuggllog nng. (1 hr., 30
min.)
12.:30 I) CJ) C88 LATE MOVIE.
To Be Announced. 8 MOVIE
**IA "The Empty Canvas"
(19$4') Bette Davis, Horat
Buchholz. An artlat, obeMMd
with his lovely model, tri.. to
pay her to leave her Jover and
stay with him. (1 hr., 55 min)
12:378 STARTIME
12:-40 (It MOVIE **% "A Degree Of Murder"
( 1869) Anita Pallenberg, Hana
Halwach1. Aftar aceldentally
kllllng her lover. a young girl
attempts to conceal the crime
with the help of another man, ( 1
hr, 30 mtn.)
1:00 8 TOMORROW
Guest: 'Jolly' Charlie Grimm,
former major leegue baaebeil
manager (Mllwaut<ee Braves,
Chicago Cubs) will dlscu• tt-4
~Ing Wor1d Series.
U ISPY .
Robin.an and Scott 1n ..... tlgate
the poiaonlng ot a young aoclal-
lte'a flanee.
1:308 NEWS
(I) MOVIE
**~ ''The GOiden Alr<M"
(1964) Tab Hunter, Roaanna
Podeata. Dlagul"d .. a
bag gar. a young prince
•tt*"Pt• to win the hand Of a
prince-. (1 ht., 30 mfn.) 1~G N!.WS 2:000 NEWS G MOVIES *** "Both Sid.. Of TM law'' (1954) ,.,.,.. Cfawford,
Peggy Cummlnga. British
poffo9 &tt9fl\Pt to meintafn the
law on the street.a of London. (2
tn.)
**'*'~ ·~ Men In G~ (1946) J..,,.s Muon. Stewert
Grano.,. A awuht>u~ll'lg
nobleman m.-rtaa a women w
convenience. and Is evw
unlalthtul to trar. (2 hr&.) e MOVIES • ** "Planet On The Pw'Owt" (1969) Jack Stuart. Amber
Collins. A group Of apeoernen
attwnpt to destroy a planet
befiev.d to be ..ing ..rtt...
qvalt• and cat~ on
Earth. (2 hrs.)
*** "Ooak
Thursday'•
Daytime lffovles
Concert~ Tops ·TV Ratings
,
NEW YORK CAP> -ore people watched
"Elvis in COncert, .. the taped highlights of two ot
Elvis Pttsley's last live concert&j than any other
proeram during the week endin& Oct. 9. A. C.
Nielsen fieures show.
ABC maintained its firm grip on T'rs prime
time audience despite "Elvis In Concert" the night
of Oct 3 and a strong No s finish for tb6 final game
ln the American League baseball playo(fs Sunday
night.
But three consistenUy popular pro1rama,
"Laverne & SbiTley," "Happy Days·· and
"Cbail.J.t' Angela," Cinisbeil close behind and left
ABC where il has beeh si.nce the new season began
in 5ept.embcl' -at the top or Nielsen's weekly
r atinp, released Tuesday.
ABC HAD AN OVERALL Nielsen ratina of 20.6
tor the week ending Oct. 9, followed by NBC al 19.8
and CBS at 19.4.
Victor Frenrla
"Elvis In Concert," seen in an estimated 24.l
million homes, was taped in June al concerts m
HeaVy Tt~1ns Humorous
SHOWS FUNNY SIDE
Victor French
ing Crom the bl& city; my being
white, him beina black. We have
a ma)'or who is trying to pattern
hlmselt after Jimmy Carter, ex·
pect.ing that will get him to the
aameplace."
French says that, 10 tar, they
have done 8howa dealing wtt.h
"unionization of the police force,
the homosexual Issue, old age,
tax relief and a dream sequence
show whJch ls really tart-lcal.
Like 'Barney Miller,' which
reflect.fl New York, we're trytn1
to rtflect um small Southern.
town."
French rnpbulzed that .. We
re nOt hi a thdw ed on
one-linen. lt'1 based on ailua·
lions. We're trying to keep the
characters real. The basis of
comedy is conflict: we're not try·
ing to bring in joke writers.
There are problems between the
oolice department. and the
mayor's office."
FOR 'YEARS. French has
directed the Victor French
Drama Workshop, a weekly gel·
together in Hollywood at which
he and other aotors meet to
leam, rehearse, perform, and
generally just "stay tn shape.•·
Because of the new demMds
on his Ume, French says, "I don't
have the workshop any more. I
miss It incredibly; I may start
one day on a weekend. I lecture
in colleges and high schools as
much as I can."
Thls summer he directed and
starred in "After The Fell" at
Company of An&els Theater in•
Hollywood,
"I JUST FINISHED 'Alter The
Fall, ... he said. "Mimi Col ens
played Loui8e, my wlfe ... lt was
such a smash here, 10 well re-
ceived. You've never seen such
reviews. l 'd love to brln& the
whole company to New York"
Oft.tie difference. between live
thuter and 'JV or films, he said,
·'They're two d.lltertnt medlums.
Thea.ter ls Just an actor 's
medium: television la a di rec·
tor's medium. We do our ahows
in front of a Uve audae11ce <for
'Cattar Country'), 1 love thal .. .I
want to do Jood films and I love
funny people becau."e they're In
runny 1ituatlon11." . .
I
Rapid City, S.D., and Omaha, Neb. Presley died tn
August.
Sports specials were popular with prime time
viewers through the entire week. ABC's Monday
Night Football iame between Oakland. and Kinsu
City ranked No. 21 Cor the week, and the second
game or the National League chan"p1onsbJp series
between Los Angel.es and Philadelphia, Wednesday
evening, was No. 2'
IN ORDER, TBE TOP lt shows or the week were:
"Elvis in Concert,•• a 33 rating, representing
2'.l million home!. CBS: "Laveme&Shtrley," ait.7
or 20.9 milUon, "Happy Days,•· 28.6 or 20 8 million
and ''Charlie's Anfels, .. 28.6 or 11U mllllon, ati
ABC; Baseball Playoffs Oct.. 9, New York ys,
Kansas City, 2S.5 or 18.6 million. NBC: "AU in the
Family," 24.2 or 17.6 mJllion, CBS, "Three·•
Company," 23.8 or 11.4 million, ABC ; "60 Minutes"
and "The BeUy White Show," 23 3 or 17 million,
both CB.5, and ''The Six Million Dollar Man,·· 23.l or
16.8 miltion, ABC.
·A '~omebaek' for IJes
By JAY SllAUtrrr.
LOS ANGELES <AP> -It seems' only yester-
day that Lesley Ann Warreft helped fifht Intern•·
tional eYil in "Mission Impossible" and guested so
onen in other seria you Celt six other were at large
in TV.
Nope, s~s Miss Warren,.there's only one her.
And that one hun't done a TV show in over a year,
the Jsst. being 1 sitcom called "Snip," which NBC
dumped before it even had a chance to premiere. But she returns to the tube Oct. 16, 17 and 18
when NBC ain its adaptation of Harold Robb1na'
potboiler, "79 Park Avenue:•
MISS WARREN. WHO ORST acored bt1 in a
TV version of "Cinde Ua, .. now wtll b6 playij\f a
poor New York: l!il"l who, to survive, successively
becomea a prostitute, a at.ripper and a madam.
Demure in a blu dr and 1pm't.ln1 a amaU
powder bum sbe 11ucrer on the chee:k while t11pinf a CBS musical last week, she -~..,,.......;...;..._"'"..,
.,.as aakedwhatahe'a been dome
durinc her sell·lmposed hiatus Crom TV.
Welt, she said, she w~ in a
three-Tt'OmWl play in Chlca,o,
"Vanitie • · a fllrn called
"Han-y and'"W lter GO to New
York." and made h rd but u a
night dub ainaer in a aJoon
here. Studio One. She didn't r cell tho last as Urne of much joy.
WHILE
in Bro.d mustc l , a cate cl lho ._,Illies whon, ba
.. •
:NTERTAJNMENT I MOVIES
By BOB THOMAS
LOSANGELE.S (AP) -"Wbattlnd
of • ~ara.der do I p1-.f ! " muses Frerich actress Isabelle Adjani about bu tint American tum, ''The
Driver."
"It reminds me of aome dialogue in
'To Have and Have Not,;• Bogart says·
to Bat~ 'Who ari you and where do
yoo come from?'~ answers, 'WeU.
it's a kJnf s~/ and sbe never 00.
res U>thtq tioo.
"WHEN I WAS 14, I d1scovcre<l lhe
CiJtematheque in Paris ... s he
expla.ided. "Atone with other students
J spent my days in the theater. t.a.kirig
alone rood to sustain me -at that
time I wu hvln& on ara~ruit juice t
couldn't get enough filtns. My favorite
directors? Murnau, Hitchcock.
Lubltacb, Toumeur." jl'~daugtit.er of a car aalesman, sbe ap~ in a chlldre.o'• movie at that
time. Two years later ahe was chosen
by the Comodle Fl'ancaise for a role ln -,;
1
Moliere'1 "Scbool for Wives."
"They asked me to alen • contract
fer 20 years." Miss Adjanl recalled.
"Tw~ _years! I couldn't lmaglqe
signing my We away for 20 yean, yet
there are act.ors who do that. It la very
prestigious to appear in the Comedle
Franeals. You can appear in rums as
well. but only if the Comedie doe.an 't
nffdyou.
.. , TQLD THEii. 'I'm sorry but I
can't ~ for 20 years.· They were
upset and couldn't understand why I
would retuse." .
Francois Truffaut had seen her on
the stage and in tilms, and he offered
her the role of Victor Hugo's love·
obsessed daughter in •'The Story of
Adele H." Truffaut had >Nrilten the
script years before and 'had been
waitine for an actress with youth and
fire to play Uie demanding role.
"Are you sure you don't want
Glenda Jackson?" Miss Adjanl
inquired..
Tl-uflaut ~sured her he wanted
Isabelle Adjanl. "The Story of Adele
H ." drew a good, though not
sensational response in France
.. the French are used to TruHaut and
the othE'r New Wa\'C' tiire rtor. ·•
AMERICAN CR1TICS went
hananas over Miss AdJant's tour de
force performance. the Nev. York
Critics. Nationa l Society or Critics
and National Board or Revu.•w named
ber best actress of 1975, and she was
nominated for an Academy Award.
Louise F1etcher W1l$ the winner for
"One F1ew over the Cuckoo's Nest ...
Miss Adjanl h., appeared In other
French films and in Roman
Polanski's .. The Tenant." Director.
writer Walter Hill ("Hard Tlmes")
brouaht her to Hollywood for ''The
Driver," a co-production of 20th
Century-Fox and EMl Films.
l
Wednnday. October 12, 1977
Nostalgia Series
'Fourth of July' Slated on NBC
By JAY ~HARBVTI'
LOSANGELES <AP> -Dan Curll:..
TV producer, SllYS he went through a
time ln 1952 as an NBC barnstormer,
selhng syndicited TV series to
various stations in variQus towns ln
tho Midwest.
"What shows." he recalled with a
sod aardomc grin. '"Dangerous
Assignment,• 'Hopalong Cassidy.·
'Douglas Fairbanks Theater,· 'Hia
Honor, Homer Bell' ... '·
But while hawking this vast sonata
or entertainment. he had this comedy
series idea about his boyhood in
Bridgeport, Coon. And when he got
back to New York, M commenced
Wtitingit. He says be called it "When Every
Day Was the Fourth ot July.''
FOUR R£1ECl'IONS and 2S years
later, ho's just finished filmihg it..a.s
an NBC movie for next year -~ a
pilot for a possible one-bour family
series set in Bridgeport In the late
1930s.
It still bas the original title. But
there's less emphasis on comedy and
more emphasis on serious matters,
namely a little girl who persuades her
Cather, a lawyer, to deCend a brain·
damaged World War One veteran ac·
cused of a murder she knows he didn't
commit.
It's a chanae of pace for CUrtis, a
horror show specialist. He used to
produce the old soap·opera·cum-
vamplre series, "Dark Shadows."
then made about 16 TV thrlllen.
movies like "Dracula" and ''The
NlgbtSt:alter. ''
As~. casually dres9ed CJl&n of
49, he says be never gave up on
maldne "When Every Day Was the
Fourth ol July" even after his old
employer, NBC, first rejected it in
1952.
B£ Gal' A SECONDJtejection two
years ta~ from MCA, the giant
entertainment conglom"'ate. when
he worked there. CBS then got inter·
ested, he says, but the project never
paMedout. "Now, the best thing U>at happeJted
was that I never sold it, beCause 1
never would have done this kind of
show, .. says Curtis, referrtnc to the
program in its pres«mt Corm.
''The whole id~ always •u a kind
of 'Leave It to Beaver· set in the 1930s.
But my thinking had.JI 't matured
enough then.•·
He said he pitched it 1.o-NBC IOI' a second time two years ago, sun as a
Prez Role
For Fonda
LOS ANGEL§ CAP>
Henry Fonda is bac:lc
in the White House in the
Slli m illion science
h ction epic "Meteor."
r-·onda portrayed the
president in "Fail Safe ..
and a presidential
candidate in ·'The Best
Man.''
The film. about
American and Russian
scientists uniting to save
earth from a meteor
shower. also stars Sean
Connery, Na~lie Wood
and Trevor Howard.
sitcom idea. But after initial interest.
NBC passed again.
L.\,!,'T VEAR, HE sa1d, he started
thm)ung about it as a pilot for an
hour-long ramlly show, "still with
humor, warmth and all the rest of lt
"But also we'd be taking <>n more
serious subjects. things that really
happened or could have happened in
Lhe '30s, and not Just things involving
only kids." Whereupon he agaln pitched it to
NBC successfully this time.
"OF ALL THE thines I've ever
made, I've never had a better time
than in making this one." he said. He
was asked what happens 1f NBC de·
cides not to order It as a series.
"WeU," Curtis said after a tone
pause, "I did what I've always
wanted to do. If it goes as a s~es it'll
be a hit. If it doesn't eo, that s life. I
JUst had lhe greatest trip in the
world."
• Caine·Set to Star
ID 'Silver Bears9
LOS ANGELES (AP1 -Michael
Calne ts a'Brltlsb financial expert who
tries to bUy a amall Swiss bank ror a
Las Vegas 1yndlcate to hold its
·~ndeclafed gains in Columbia's
"Silver Bears."
The rdm or banklng intrigue and de·
cepUon, written by Academy Award
winner Peter Stone from a novel by
Paul E. Erdman, also at.an Cybill
Shepherd. Louis Jordan, Martin
Balsam ancfTom Smothers.
A JERRY"WEINTRAUS PRODUCTION
CEORGE BURNS • JOHN DENVEll ·"OH, G001~
TERI GARR • DONALD PLEAS£NC£
,
Based on the Novel by AVERY CORMAN
Screenpta~ Dy LARRY GELBART
Directed br CARL REINER · ProdUUi:I by JERRY WEii\ TRAUB
APIECEOF
TltE ACTION
Ad~ullycf.elfdouj~
Jack Lemnion and Walter Matthau, the
"Odd CoUpte•• of the Neil Simon movie,
line up a putt durtng a charity golt
tournament in Los Angeles recently\
..
I I
. --
in the kitchen.··
Slim and honey-haired, Mrs.
Hance, S.C, has won a place
nationally as a double rarity -a
woman mayor and a Republican
one.
She has administered one of
the na\lon 's fastest growina
)
cities with '4hat she terms a
conservat1\le approach, focuslng
on u balanced budget with no tax
increase while maintaining basic
services
"As I say to women's groups
overywhere. don't be afraid or
tokenism Use your uniqueness
to further yourself and women in the future," she said dunng a
reeent interview.
Mrs. Hance fits ne1thl'r lhe
stereotype of the rabid h!male
femi.nist nor the selC·descnpt1on
of middle-aged housewife
Nam ed to WomenSports
--~~~~~~~.,...;....--~~ ....... ------~~~~~..._.~
lss't. navws
PllSTO
"FRY BABY"
ttAIRSPaAY
•fllrN.Ma Assorted
formulas
DETERGENT
ENTER THE s40,000
FALL~!~~~TAKES*
VASELINE VASELINE lASELINE
IR8ISIYI wt wrDfSM CAif
Bath Beads, Mifleral lOTtOll
CONDITIONER
Ra~utndiiR.;11
IAat rf'IM atn seem.
Bath and Herbal Re&ular or , ~OUUM
=~' ggc ~;~' 1 29 fiJc 15 ll. fl 15 Ol. • 1.5 oz.
•£mY lllUS &YWILE at YOUI lOW. SlY·Ofl
COIPOI MIST IE MAIUI TO CHESHIOUCN·,O#DS ----..m..i------.-.1.-------------. CAPITOi. fAMl.Y PACK "DEP" 12 oz.
Hair Styling Gel 'CASSETTES' Almond Roca
W•ttJ te~tunur~ ggc Sets last lonRer
Gll01t
Right. Guard
DEODORANT
»QL 59c
wm<OIHD
..
JOHNSOH'S
Baby Shampoo
NO MORE TWS
llOZ.·1.89
~;:;;:~ Rehn d1stres$
of colds
.. ..
INSIDE: •Club Calendar.
•Featuring
•Produce
•Slim Gourmet
iBrewing .
~Dib.Der .. • . : Cook who routinely use wine in preparing
• meals often overlook cooking with another liquid
:, thlltisjustas versatile: Beer.
: :Jbe beveraie. which varies in color and
: character rrom the pale and delicate to the dark
: and full·bodied, bas been used for basting,
• navorin1 and as marinades for centuries.
• Following ato som favorite recipes using
..i the centbrias·old beveraae:
Serve tn
PRAIRIE BEER CAKE
1cup1hortenin1
2 cups brown sugar, flrmly packed
2 egp 'ft ell beaten
3 cups sift d flour
~teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
• \;teaspoon all!!plce 1; t pQOn clov ·
!cup (l pint> beer
1 cup chop~ walnuts or pecans
2 cu~ finely chopped dat or prunes
cteam short nln until of\ in a large bowl:
BE R,Pa1ea>
Beer Here t •
Beer .tasting parties haven't caught on like wine tasang ..
That's because if you got a good bottle of Bud in '7 4, you
get a good bottle of Bud in '75 ..
By DENNIS McLEU.AN
Ol .. O•ilYl'lletl>t .. I
Most beer drinkers have a favorite brew and
slick to it religiously. Paul Newman is noted for his unquenchable
craving for Coors. And Billy Carter, one of the
nat.ion's all·time 1reat beer dnnkers, bas a de-
cldedpreference ror Pabst.
But how do the Billys and Pauls of the world
come to prefer one brew over the other?
Uke anythin1 else. 1t all boils down to
personal preference. usually obtained over years
of imbibing various brands.
One way to s peed up the process
considerably and even become something of a
connoisseur is to bold a beer tasting party.
Gather friends over for the afternoon or
evening, supply them with test forms and start
passing around the unmarked glasses of brew.
ONE WAY TO Judge beer is visually. Is 1t
clear or cloudy? Is 1t hght or dark? ls the
sediment visible or mv1sible? Does it or doesn't it
have a head? Is the head small, fullortoofull!
The preference test is made by judging on a
scale from one to five these factors: body, foam,
color, aroma, taste and bitterness.
Although beer ls one ol tbe nation's most
popular beverages among the adult population,
beer taslinl parties have not caught on like wine
tasting.
"One ol the reasons," says Irwin Newton,
regional representative for the U.S. Brewers
Association, "is you have so many varieties of
wines and they change from year to year.
"~r is more standardized. If you &ot a
good bottle of Bud in '74, YoU 1et a, good bottle of
Budini5."
Still, whatever brand's taste, body, color and
aroma is most appealine to an individual all gets
back to personal preference, says Newton.
"I UKE A good head or foam on my beer ...
he says. "The main thing to serving a good glass
or beer ls to have. clean glass that hasn't been
washed with any klnd of detergent because that
leaves a film and kills the foam."
The Lt•nch Bunch
If you forgot your lunch or can 't go out,
one service will bring it in a b asket.
8 ) J(.OITll Ol~~'li a..,. o ............ ~ ... ..
For~ot your Hinch a~ain today'!
Tired or grahhmJ.! .1 'anch1.1t'h from
the' <·ndmJ,! mal·hmc'' Too husv to !>hp
out for a !'><1l.1d '
Lon's Kitchen to the re::.l·ue A good
soldier bc:mng a wicker ba~ket piled
high with home· made sandw1che' and
salads will be al your des k at the mere
turn of a telephone dial.
For those who haven't seen the
traveling baskets, they·re quite a
sight. Appealing vegetarian and meat
salads. large sandwiche!; on extra·
sized bread and containers or carrot
cake are arranged attractively an
red-checked linings.
Nineteen saleswomen currently
serve customers in the Newport
Beach, Costa Mesa. Santa Ana.
Irvine, Huntington Beach and Tustin
areas, dropping in on beauty shops,
office bualdmgs and factones to del·
iver their wares
.. PEOPLE THl~K we're Red
Riding Hood," commented Eileen
Hale -"They get really excited. It's
like Christmas."
All of the saleswomen are asked
frequently if they prepared all the
food al home themselves. and most of
them have been called. Lori at one
time or another.
Thoul(h lhe ~ales force has not made
the sandwiches and salads, the food is
as dose to homemade as it can be.
The items are put together fresh each
morning at Lora's Kitchen. which is
the domain of Charlene Johnson, a
Cos la Mesa resident.
There 1s a real Lon. too She 1:. the
17·yc.ir ohJ dau~hlcr of Mrs. Johnson .
and a :.cntor at Estancia H11h School.
Tht! kitchen opened it.c; doors an
December of 19i3
.\NEIGHBOR of Mrs. Johnson and
her husband. Enc. had the idea of
taking food out in box lunches but de·
r 1ded ,they didn't want to follow
through Johnson, who Is in the meat
::.upply business, thought lt would be a
good opportunity and asked his wife lf
she· d like to try.
"I had 45 minutes notice," Mrs.
Johnson recalled. ·'I thought it would
be a good lde;l so we started with
sandwiches on three ehoices or bread.
·•we dldn't quite make ends meet
that first year," she added, "even
thoueh we did all kinds of extra
catering."
They soon moved lnto salads, to
appeal to a wider spectrum of lunch
eaters, and added carrot cake "before
people knew what. it was."
Today the menu leans beavily
toward vegetarian recipes, even
though there are the old standbys or
roast beet, turkey, and salami.
"WE'RE ALWAYS huntin1 fo&..
more vegetarian Items," Mrs •
Johnson said. "We eet r~uests from
our customers, too. They tell us what
they want. They send recipes and say
'Why don't you do this or that?'"
The preparation begins at 5 a .m.
and the sales force is out by 9:45. Most
food Is delivered by noon because the
saleswomen have found that many
(See LUNCH, PageC2)
m~~B,NMc~~~mvi~~~~~~~,
Jeff Krohnfeldt prepares salads.
•
Reaardtess of whatev~r brand proves to be a
hit, the Brewers Association offers these Ups tor
i:;e rving a ''perfect" elass of beer:
•To get glasses sparklinl clean use a soap.
free odorless cleaning agent or a detereent.
Baking soda also is good.
•A clean glass is neceQSary to acquire the
proper foam and flavor. If washed. properly,
there will be no bubbles clin1ln1 to the side of the
glass. The foam wiU adhere to the ii:aside of tbe
glass in a ring design. ,
•Rinse glru ses thoroughly in clean, cool
water, preferably running water. l).Q'not dry
glasses. Instead, allow them to dralil so air can
circulate.
ANOTHER SUGGE~ION is to nnse the
glass in cold wat.er before serving to elimmate
dust
Beer connoisseurs say there is an art to
pouring beer. A high foamy head is preferred by
some; others like a short head.
To get a fine creamy bead pour the beer
directly into the glass instead of down the side.
One way to get the foam the way you want It ls to
tilt the glass and begin pouring the beer down the
side, then straighten the glass and pour into the
center.
By varying the distance between the can or
bottle and the glass you can learn hmt; to build a
high or low head.
NEwroN NOTES that sunlight can have a
bad effect on beer. It should not be kept oo.t ln the
sun for any great Jengtll of time and also should
not bekeptin the trunk of a car.
The Association recommends storing beer in
a cool, dark place, away from the llgbt; This
helps protect the rich body and at.reacth of ~
brew.
When chilling it in the refrigerator. it &bould
be kept away from the freezer.
Most people prefer drinking the be\oerage
when it bas been chilled to about 42 decrees.
Experts say this is when it Is most dellcious.
Beer is a perishable product, adds Newton.
and often has a shelf lif& of about 90 days. dep-~
ending on the brand.
J
) DAILY PILOT Yl.cfnesday,October ra. 1177
Fall Pork Grill
tJ you've had your !Ul
crllled hota and
lrcera ... tbat's no
1 ason to consign the
mlly Crill to mothballs.
>rk shoulder chops
· rer a dltrerenl yet
laUvely inexpensive
tiniaUve to th• UJual
1tdoor tare. Good for
,U -two n•w recipes
t iatare pork shoulder
1 ·opa and a great bean
•lad for a change-of
; lCt bu becue menu. Savory GrUled Pork
lOPI are made with
tber por k shoulder
iopa or pork arm
eaka: either ls an
ooomical cut wbich 11
uaUy lean and good for ·nu.nc. Just marinate
· e pork in a tuty onion
1 arlnide wblct\ ia easily
irred toaether with an
1velope of ~on 1ravy
ix. Then (rill for ao to
' minutes brushing with
1e extra marinade for
ldeclfiavor.
Green Bean Salad la a
· el come switch from the
wiual t~ed. potato ur
m aca(OIU varieties. Mi x
fresh ereen beans with a
zippy homema d e
dr~ing which combinea
prepared yellow
mustard and honey.
Complete your menu
with tarllc bre1d, cherry
tomatoes, frosted cue.
Iced tu or coif ff.
SAVORY GRI LLED
PORK CHOPS
1 envelope (V. oz.)
onion 1ravy mix
~cup water
11 .. cup lemon juice
2 tablespoons oil
2 tablespoons
catchup
1 tablespoon soy
sauce
f to 8 pork ithoulder
ch ope
Combine contents of
sravy mix envelope,
water, lemon juice, oil,
catchup. and soy sauce.
Arrange chops in
shallow pan; pour gravy
mixture over chops and
let stand~ hour, turnina
occas1onally. Grill over
hot coals or broil 20 to 30
Minute•, untH done.
turnlne frequently and
brushln1 with eravy
mixture. Four to bix
servmgs.
G&EEN 8EAN SALAD
l to l 1t'J pound• f reah greenbeana
2 tablespoons oll
1 tablespoon vinegar
2 tabJe1poons
prepared yellow mustard
1 tablespoon honey
Lettuc~
R e.move ends and
strings from beans; cut
in half. Cook in small
amount of salted water
for 10 to 15 minutes, unlll
tende r; drain. Stir
together oil, vineear.
mustard, and honey; add
to beans and toss until
lightly coated. Chill.
Serve on lettuce. Four to
SlX servings. (Instead of
fresh beans, two cans
Cl-lb. eacti> cut creen
beans, drained, may be
used. Do not cook > .
• L11neh Bunch
(From Page C1)
• pie aren't willing to wait much
t then for lunch.
me days the baskets come back
pletely empty and other days not
bcb ii sold. But business has been
iak lately, with hundreds of
dwicbea and salads moving out
cbday. :i'be saleswomen have funny stories
, tell about peddling their ware$.
ae, who was stuck in an office
I
ilding elevator, kidded her fellow
aonera. ••At lea:;t we won't starve.··
!ANOTHER HA D car trouble with a
I load in her basket and sold her
ches to employees at the de-
alershJp where it was towed for
repairs .
Sincell is relatively difficult to plan
how much food to blJy each day to the
last sandwich and salad, there are
usually some lunches left each day.
"The saJesgU'ls are very hungry
when they get back," Mrs. Johnson
said, "and they can buy the food. We
discount everything to them "
There is a litUe walk-in trade and everything left at the end of the day Is
taken home to several of Mrs.
Johnson's neighbors who have large
families to feed.
"I wish I knew when people would
be hungry, .. she said after answering
one phone call to cancel an order and
another to place one.
,ellied Pepper Relish
until mixtures comes to
a ha"1 boil. Immediately
add the 1u1ar. Stirring
constantly, bring to a full
rolllAJ boll and boll hard
for 1 mlnute. At once la·
die Into aterlllud, ~·plnt
cannlna Jan, mnna to
withln \Ai·lnch of the top
Wipe top and threads or
jars with a clean, damp
cloth. Seal accordin& to
J ar m a nufacturer 's
directions. Process in a
bolJina ••* bath for s minutes, Umln1 when
the water returns to a
boil. Store In • cool, dark
place. Makes four 8-
ounceJan.
Best Idea Sloce
Shopping Carts
;..:.. · ··"~Now you can do a week's shopping
~ without forgetting a alngle
Item! Use pre-printed
shopping fists
prepared for you by
PILOT PRINTING.
140 ••rat• "'"'" lteme, p(Uf eddltlonat tpt.088 JOU oan tut In rourMlf.
I 14 lteplee
21 YegeteblH
14 flloulta
I 9atlery Item•
5 hvel'ages
, ....... nd
fl•h entrl•• " , , DelfY ft•ni•
20 Ml~llaneoue
DAILY PILOT ~--... -~ .... --Jltll---.-.-il _____________ .,, ______________ .
Pot#< chOps for a budget barbecue.
Mushrooms 'n' Beef
Wihrooms have been
comiq to the aid of tbe
party for many years,
centurles in fact, but
obviously never more
than last year when the
U.S. trop of mushrooms
zoomed to 347.I mi.Ilion p0unds, 12 }>ercent more
an tbe year before. Tbe
nlodeni dinner party
m'\Du would be lacklng
distincUon wlt,bout at
least one <qsb smartentld
up with tnu$hf<>oms.
Wbetticr tor. auesf,5 or. the tam.Uy, m~ms
are uceUent aauteed,
broiled, steamed.
pickled, marinated raw. or COOkea in 1tumn~ st~a, aoups and saucet.
Mushrooms. fresb or
~ anned, can dlmost
always be added to a
di d~ th last few
minutes of cooking -
Just iii case there are a
couple :G extra guetts and ~feel nu must "sb«cb'' the maln db;b.
MUSBROOllS AND
BEU' BURGUNDY ,. JI& cµp oil
l
.. r
J ' pounds bOneless
beef tihoulder, cut in
l ·inchcubes
2 cloves i•rlic, minced
~ cup all-purpose
flour
2 cans 00,,... oz.
each) condensed beef
broth I
l !h cups .ted
uraundywine
2bayleaYes
2 teaspoons salt
lh tea.spoon thyme
leaves, en.ambled
11• teasPOOn J{l'Ound black pepper
4 cups carrots cut ]n
2·inch chunks
1"11 pounds small
white onions, peeled
2 pounds fresh
mushrooms or 4 cans (6
to 8 oz. each> whole mushrooms
In a large heavy
saucepot or a Dutch oven
beatoil.Add beef; brown
well an all sides, a Cew
pieces at a time; return
all bee( to saucepot.
Sprink.le with garlic and
floor. Stir to blead in all
of the flour. Add broth. 8 tablespoons butler
wine, bay leuv , salt. or marearine, divided
thyme and black pepper l cup chopped onions
Brin( to the boiling 1 can ( 10'~ o z.)
Point. condensed mus hroom
Reduce heat and soup
simm • covered, forono ~cupwatcr
hour. Stir in canots and ~ cup dry whate
ooiona. Cover and wine,divtded
simmer until meat and Ha pounds fresh
vcget•bles are lender. mushrooms or 3 cans (6
about 45 minutes. Rin.se, to 8 oz. each) whole pat dry and halve fresh mushrooms
mushrooms or drain 2 packages (9 oz.
canned miishrooms. Stir each) frozen cut green
m u s h r o o m s i n t o beans or tiny peaa
saucepot. Cover and
aimmer for 1S minute•
Serve with parslied
noodles and tossed 'lalad,
if desired.
On waxed pap e r
combine flour , 1
teaspoon of the salt and
black pepper. Cut each
chicken breast in half.
COMPANY CHICKEN Coat with flour mixture. BRE~ In a very large skillet WITHMU MS h e a t o i 1 a n d 2
Stables flour tablespoons of the
lY.a teaspoo .5alt, butter. Add chicken a
divided few pieces at a time;
-'t.& teaspoon around brown a~t 3 minutes
blackpepper on each s1de. l\emove
6 chicken breasts and set aside. In same
skinned, boned and s plit ·skillet saute onions until
(12pieces> golden. Add mushroom
3tablespoonso1t soup, water and 't2 cup of
Millbi'OOIC ]AghtWhite and
MillbrookLjghtWheathave 25% lt!ss
calQries than white bread. So, if you're
weight oonscious, you'll wonder how bread can
taste this good-arid still save calories
Millbrook Light White arid
MillbrookLiglitWheat~ve35 times
more fiber than white bread. (Fiber
is the''~~,, hr "bulkt' in our
diets-oft.en lost when food is over-
processed orreffued.) There's never
been a more delicious way to appease
your appetite.
•
Mushrooms and beef burgundy
are a company dish.
the wine und remaining
112 te~poon salt. Brine to
the boiling point. Return
chicken to skillet.
Reduce heat and
s immer, covered, llntil
chicken is tender, about
10 minutes. Rinse, pat
dry and halve fresh
mushrooms or drain
canned mushrooms. In a
large skillet melt
remainini 6 tablespoons
butter. Add mushrooms;
saute until golden, about
S minutes. Stir green
beans into slcUlet wlth
chicken. Cover and
s immer until beanS' are
crisp tender, about 5
minutes. Stir in saut.eed
mushroom• and remaining 14 cup wine.
Heat until bot. Serve
over boiled brown rice. if
desired.
MillbrookLiglitWhit.e and
MillbrookLigbtWheathave
auniquemouth-~
tast.eyourwholefamily'Will
enjoy. 18$testshave8bown
strongconsumer~pumceof
. MillbrookLightWhimanaLight-
Wheat. So, tryMilllliOOkLiglitWhit.eand
MillbrookLiglitWheiltfor~calories. Moreffber.
Great tasre. lt took Millbrook to put it all~ #
I
I
C4 DAIL. V PILOT Wtdnetday, October 12, 1977
Napoleon Pears Helene.·
j ~utty Desserts
I When are desserts not just
c!es8e118?
• Wbeo packed with protein as well as good taste.
Usually tbou&bt to be just a
flavorful finale, more than 60
pounds ot desserts are CQDSumed
each year by the aYerage
American. But, thelr nutrtttonaJ
eontrlbution to meals ls often le· nor ed. How to improve it? How about
1Uppinl a little utra protein and
other Important nutrlenta into
tile family's meal by ending with
peanut butter?
NAPOLEON PEARS
HELENE
V.. cup pe&Qut butter
4pears
1 pint vanilla ice cream,
lliehtly softened
~cuphoney
6 ounce package Semi.Sweet Chocolate Pieces
~cupmllk
Pare aDd core pears. Place in a
baking pan. Bake in a 350 detree
fahrinheit oven for one hour or
uaW tender. Chill. Spoon aof.
tened ice cream into 4 dessert
disbel. ftefreue. To make sauce.
eombine honey. peanut butter
.ancl chocolate pieces in a
taueepan. C4)0k over low heat
_ 11Unin~ coast.antly until mixture
smooth. Stir in milk. Arnn1e
chilled pears on lee cream. Spoon bot sauce over pears. Serve at
ooce.Yleld:4aervli>gs Wbethe~ lt'I bacipackioi. a
backyard barbe(aue or just baclt-
to-sc&ool, Fantastic Cookies and
anuche are the perfect
ePdlng to a well.rounded meal.
Packed with quick pick·m•ui> eoera, both provide plenty Ol
protein for ~e active Younaster'
orlldulL .
PANTASTICCOOIDES
~cup peanut bUtter
~ cup 1hort.enlng
JA cup butterot marcartne
~CQP•Ul&r ¥.aCQpboDey
legg
1 ~ CUPI elfted nour
~ teupooa batlnj poWder
¥.a teaspoon baktnc aOda
1 t.ealpoon vanilla
¥.a cup chopped peanuts
Jn a lar1e Dl.lxin& bowl cream
toaether sbortenlric and butter.
Add.sugar, honey and en. Blend
unW Ught ··and IDlOOlh. Add
peanut butter. Mix well. Sift
tocether dry tnireclienta and add to the pemut butter mlxt1lre.; Stit: ID vanilla and punUU. Drop by teasPoOUfWs OD a Cftued COOk}'
sheet. Pre.a eaeb cookle flat.
Bake in a 350 ~etree oven for
10 to 15 m1n11te1. Yield: a to •
dO'UDOookles
Jh'olJI..,: 1 Cap peanut batter
¥.a cup bcioe)"
Combine peanut butter and
bOney. Blend well. Spread on the
top~ cb cookte: PANUCBB
2 (UJ)I peanut butter
2 CUJJIJ auaar
2 cups water
.?ti ure ~a.Qut butter and Ht
ulde. Colrib!Do 1ucar and w~ter
ln 1aueepan. COot and aUr over
sn WJ1 heat until ntar ~ BOlv~ mJxture comf!ll to a
boll.: eomtnuo C®klnl to about
240 :.~ to 2'S deirees on a earutY: thermometer, 1tlrrin1 c011 St • Remove from
Mato. Qa:lekl1 lttr ln>pelnut but-
uatil ·~combined.'
l'GurloM>• llnCh~ • P.fx!l. CUt Jnto IQG4rtl OJ'
1Dto~to1~.· Note:~ can be cu&ln b< W1tbescellmt~ti.
milk and shortening in a large
mixing bowl. Sift together dry in-
gredients and add. Beat weU tor
about 1 minute to thoroucbly
blend all ingredients. Pour batter
into buttered 9 by s inch loaf pan
and let stand for 1S minutes
before baking. Bate In 350
degree fabreahelt oven for 50 to
~ minute$. Cool sqbtly and re-move from J>8ll. CooJ completely
on wire rack. Bread allces eutu
theaecooddQ'. Yield: oneloal.
To Make Sandwlclaes: Cut
Peanutt;y 'Quick Bread into ~
mcb slices. ~read with softened
butter combmed with chopped
fresh watercress. Top with a
secmd slice of bread. CUt into
f'lnger sandwiches.
I· WON'T-GBOW·UP ROLL-UPS
Creamy peanut butter
10 large pitted dates
Sslices bacon
Stuff dates with peanut butter.
Cut bacon slices in half. Cook
bacon Wltil partially done. Wrap
a halt slice of bacon around each
stuffed date and fasten wtth a
pick. Place'UDderhotbroilercnly
unUJ bae<lll is crisp. t'lJ'DlllC to
cook bacon evenly. Serve bot. ·
Vartatlaa: Use dried aprfcoCa
or prunes. u rrunts are taed,
s1mmer untl soft, about s
minutes and remove pits before
stuffing with peanut butter and
wraooin«witb bacon to bl'flil.
TlNJ(gUELl/S TINY
caSPP.S
Peanut bUUer
Zeus
~c milk
l tabf espooo oil
lhcupflour
~teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
Qlutney, finely cboPsSecl
Beat eggs thorou1bly. Add
milk and oil. Combine dry lnere-
dienta and add to e11 mixture.
Beat until smooth. Rub a small
amount of oU on a bot &rtddle.
, Drop crepe batter by 1 tablel·
poon.fuls ooto griddle. May also
use a small skillet or an electric crepe pan. Cook, turning once,
until llabt brown on both sides. Spread with peanut butter and
chopped chutney. Roll. Yield: 2
doiensmall crepes.
TIGER LILrS TEMPTING
TlllANGLES
1t'2 cup peanut buUer, creamy v. cup oranae juice
~cup chopped dates v. cup finely chopped outs
4 teupoons &rated orante
rind
18 ounce can New England
Brown with Rlistns. cut ln llicea
1,4 Inch thick
Peanut butter. creamy for
sandwiches
Blend ~cup peanut butter and
orange juic4 Add dates, nuta and
orange rind. Mix in well.
To A11emble Saadwleb:
Spread two slices of brown bread
u1ing l~ tablespoons of date
mixture on each slice. Spre-4 a
third slice with 1>1anut butter.
Stack ali~es placin& peanut but-
tered alice in middle. Cut
sandwich Into •itbt wed1ea •
Spear uch wed&e with twooden
pick. Make up four more 3·
lay~ Undwiches and cut Into
appetizen.
.FRESH PEACH CROCODILE
C&UNCB
~cup peanut butter, creamy
\4 cup com syrup
4 cups cornflakes, crushed
3 cups sliced fresh peach•,
about4
Powdered sugar
~cup wbippln& cream
1 tablespoon suear
~teaspoon vanllla
Blend peanut butter and com
1yrup. Add cornflakes ustna a
paat.ry blender or apoon unW well
combined. Spoon cornflake mlx·
ture into aiit individual smv&na
di.she. reservinc • amlll amount
·to sprlnk.le over top. SprlnkJe
powdered 1u1ar lllhtly over
peaches. Whip cream until aurr.
Add auear and vanilla. Spoon peaebea (not 'jutce> over
corn.flake mixture. Top wJtb
wb~pped cream. Sprinkle re.
ma~ cornflake mixture over
top. SerYe Immediately. •
•
YOUM5 . TINDER
BEEF UYER
RISH
SUCED
HOIM&
BACON •2 01.
UNDA-SCOIH
·IORnLLAS w-..c:..-11·-
MILAM FllMCH . , IOI. DRESSING IOTt'LI
• NIUIDI VANILLA ~AMR
CMIOIS
CIMCHCOIM
BREAD MIX 150%.
IOX
CRISP
LOWER
PRICES I
RED or GOLD
DB.ICIOUS
FOOD
hr ifght, '°'*'"'chicken
dlnnilt; tlgtrt., Getman
Ch/Cken Burgundy.
'
Treat. Taste _ Buds to Chicken Wliile Reducing
Are 101J on a JO.cal diet that and skim milk, black coffee, or BvaG\JND'f Salt Ind pepper-oil from iltlllet. Add oaions and oo top~ aut.: Co'IV and f tow ... ywr morale more than teawithlemoo. 2 s mall broller·fryer 2tablespooMaoarcream ceJ.ct')t to skillet oil and aaule sia:unerowrJowbeatfor20to40-
your :'!dlbtf Tbeie's no need to LO-CAL BAKED CHICltEN chickens, cut.ill parts Heat oU in large skillet on hllh three minutes. Drain can of minutes unW thiCs are done.
give up the~ ol 1,aUsrytn1 your t fryinJ chicken, cut up Yt cup bUtter beat. Brown thighs very brown sauerkraut ancl rinse with cold Remove thleb.s. ~Ur tho 2 \ablet-
tute buds whUe trylne to 1Um 1 envelope <~-oz.) Au Jut \ 1 Jaree onion, cut iaCo rtnp on all side:S, about 15 minutes. water. Pat dry. Stir sauerkraut poons •our •r•• Into ,.,
down. .~avymlx Ucup> Remove to warm platter. into sauteed ooion and celery. sauerknuit: h 't.borouallly.
Here'• a ~at way to entertain 1 can <1-lb. > tomatoes 1 stalk celery. diced ( h cup> Remove all but 2 tablespoons of Sprinkle all sldes of cblckela Pour saWJ:t:nut lritO er ~ / friend:S or feed a Jnuim lam.Uy ~cup chopped ir:een pepper l cup chicken broth thighs SenefOUSl.Y with salt and serving dbb d,Place thlgbl on WltbOUt u19ne even qDeSa'inC l can (I.a&.) mushrooms, UD· ,,.,cupbUrp.ndywJDe pepper. Return tbJMM to atillet t@.SiriePJPf.iljfiot. 4.; ~at 19U'r counttn;c calories -drained 6 peps-;eom1 \ uowr .entn1 to l)e exac:t ! ~cup abetry. ii desired 2 cloves
lallmatterofmtriata)'!J9can Remo~ ncest fat ftom lbeyle.t ~x,ctas~ a tt.votful ••UiC• chicken; artance chicken. skin llemon c~ ol an envelope ol au side up ill aballow pan. Stir Brown cbitkeo pana ID IS)elted
jua 1nv1 mix and canned totetlier ccatents of gravy mix butter over medium blCb beat tn
tomatoes with mushrooms, envelope, tomatoes. green pep. large skillet for about 10 to 15
rreesi peppera., and sherry added per, mushrooms, and sherry; minutes. Add onion rings and ror estra appeal. Spoon the sauce 1poon over chicken. Bake at 315 diced celery, and 1aute 5 1J1ore
over tbe chitken and let the oven de1rees for~ to-80 minutes, untll minute•. Ora.Sit off all b\tt 2
do the rest of the work while yoo tender. 4 tos servlngs. tablespoons of '.'batter. Add
eu1nvicoratinr bicycle ride ~~·CALOIUE chicken broth. wlne. P•P·
a)Oqwalk. D ING percoma, cloves ad bv leaf.
Keep your 1limmin1 secret by ~cup bUttermllk Sprinkle with lemon Juice. Sim· •e.ni.ne this Creamy Low Calorie 2 tabJeapoons prepared mer covered for JG minutes.
SaJICI Dressinl over Individual yellow mustard Serve bot on prepared noodJ.aa. td&• ol iceberg teltuce. To 1 tablespoon vlneear Serves 6-9.
pt'epan tl>e dressinf, combine l tablespoon oil DELUXE GERMAN C111acEN
buttennUk "th prepared yellow ~teaspoon salt . A.ND SAUEltKllAUT
moStard ..00 place in an atlrac· . Combine all inCTedlents, stir· 6 broiler-fryer ebickm dliChs
Uve crutl Only you will know ring ~ well blended. Servo as • l cup vegetable all t.J dmsirtJ contains just dresl!ml wWa lettuce. Mikes ~ 1 medium anioQ, sllcid <""4 calcJ!i~ per tebteapooo. cup dreuing. cup)
To ~ete your menu, add * * * • 2 cup sliced celery peas, plus sliced peac;bes. GERMAN CHICKEN 1 powui.can saueriraul
I
~ Remember how you -
IMea to get HersHey's When
y-QU were a little aevil?, ,
Hot Potato Skillet
Create terl'lptinl Hot Potato
Skillet ..• a hearty main d.ilh with
tbe buUt-tn convenience Ui-S modem cooks look· for. 'l'tsis
speclalty takes ita lead from the
tanu·sauced bot potato salads
that bold revered places on
German menus. But from that
point Oil, there are new twists
1alo~.
There's no blending, a~. or 1tra.ln.i~ Deeded to "prepare '
a navorful minute-ready sauce.
canned chicken gravy assures
that.
To complete Ulla tasty main
dlab, embellisb wjth eenerou.s.
sized pieces of browned tnnb
and the subtle flavor of earllc.
100%Pure
natural coffee
I •
l
I I
1
' I
Whln n coma to uCnement. tht big nns 11 at Slfewayt Tids II the INnl week ot
Satewar111pnttc 1 •• •soo,ooo SWeepatata durfng Whlcll va uabl•= wrn be ·•--every ..... Wiik in..., •Ingle atorel Entwtng II 11 llSJ a VII llflway
for entry bllllb. E.ni.-oftln ... 0sotUte1y no purcflaae requlNd. Alf w~ wut be.
!1U9U111 lor ttll wllllllJ ln-atore Dmwlflla, die fabulous Dlvl11oft.Wldl Dmvlttla ml lhl
flntatfc Grand Prtzt Drawing It tM eild of IM 8-week SWeepatakat. You nlld not De G:::" to win. Contest rules .. posted In nery Safeway. dlld try to win In lhe dllnl wlelr of ftdl aen11ttonal Safeway Sw11p1tna. And for an 111e •wtepttM• w-. thereaftlrl
Every Entry Has S Ways To Win!
A WEEKLY DIVISION·
"' WIDE DRAWINGS
EACtt W£EIC All ~EGISTMTION
SLIPS= All:'?34 rARTICIPATINQ AT STOllES Will IE
COMBIN AlfO TIIE FOLLOWING Pmrs Will 8£ AWAllOEO:
Z ·FQHtf~§!~S
,0 -ZENITH 13"
COLOR TV SETS lo -TAPPAN
MICROWAVE OVENS
By Anchor Hocking
GRAND SWEEPSTAKlS DU WINO
AFTER 8 WEEKS OF REGISTRATIONS AU SUPS Fa All %34 rAftTICIPATUIO WEWAY &TOMS Will IE COMllNEO ANO THE
FOLLOWING rarztS Will IE AWARDED:
I -LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
MARK,¥ AUTO
8 -F~~~.!_~~S
'
Th1sWeek s
Offer'
. ~~~~e~rJu1ce 490
Glass
c!J!.~_; each
'Large Size
'AA' EGGS
L~;:~~e 590
1-cfozen
Carton
I
White Magtc
DETERGENT
Tree Top
~s~~!!~! !!P .~.~~~.~ .. ~
!9~~!!!~.h .. ~i~.~.~~5. ....... ~ !.~.19
I
APPLE· CIDER
'1 Roll On DeOdorant
I BAN ~!~!~d~!~~ .. ~~~~~-.... ~lb. 79°
CALIFORNIA
COUNTIES
~!~~~M~a!!~~~~ ....................... : ........ ~: 79°
liim: ,~ B no ·-·-~~ 'tf~ BROCCOLI
..
Cabbage
center ol cabbaee removed from head. (Save
remainder to use for col ea law.>
Combine eu. water, ground beef, contents
of potato pancake mix envelope, ult and
c:hopped cabbaae: spoon into cabbare shells
Combine tomatoes and diced cheese in shallow
baklni diah. Place stuffed cabbaat abe.Ua on top
of tomatoes. Cover with foil. Bake at 400 de1rees. for 30 to &'5 mlnute3, until tender. Remove cover;
ba~e 10 minutes loneer, until meatloa.t 111
browned.8aervlnas.
B~EF AND EGGPLANT PATJ'IES
l egg, sllghUy beaten
1,2 cupaoft bread crumbs
~teaspoon salt
l pounc1 around beet
2 cupc diced, unpeeled •llPl&nt
1 tablespoon oil or ahorterung
1 ~ cups water
l can (&-oz.> tomato pute .
l envelope (1 ~-oz.) apqhetU sauce mix
Mouarella eheese, if dealred.
~ POU.nd 1pqhett1, cooked
Coinbin4' en, bread crumbs, and salt. Add beef -and euP}ant; mix U1ht1y. Shape into a·
patties; brown in oil in larte akWeL Add wat~r.
tomato paste. •lld contenta of sauce mix
envelope; shnmer, uncovered, 10 minutes,
atinina occasionally. Top patties with CbHSe
and serve with aauce on cooked spaghetti. 6 servings.
CHA!'IP.\GNE .••.. .t~ ~ ~-.' ...... 1.99 ....
1"9 (){f by U.. C11e
t>on't he,ltate to stock up on bananas.
They'll never 10 to waste. Even Uie very ripe
onet will aerve you, as thae are tbe ban.anu that
work belt ln Q)' number of~ eake ao'd rauf· ftnNClpes. .
B~ANA PANCAKBI " .P.....-.:P Ile batter froaa'&lmix,f0UC1'1'·· tile pacble CIJriCUon.s, or with favorite rec!~
Add 1 dlctcS banana to batter and bake u directed.
BANANA BISCVJTS
\4 cup butter or mar1ariM .
14 cup apricot Jam or orqe marmalade \.\cup flaked coconut
2banana iem!J=r. (9.5 ouoce1).,refrl1erated btit-
Dt.sde butter amonr 10 muntn pat:a cups.
Place mufflA pan ln 400 degree oven unW b11tter m•lta. Dl'148 Jam and COCOftut ai:noq m\lffin
cups. Peel bananas and cut into 1Uca. Place about~ banana sllc81 l.n each muffln cup"and place a biscuit in each cup. Bake iD 400 degree
oven for 20 minutes or until blaculLs are golden
brown and a cake teater inserted in center comes
out clean. Cool for 10 mlnutel, tum out olpan and aervewarm. YIELD: lOblacultl.
B~ANA 1'11.IPftNS
Why settle for ordinMY coffee whe11you c:.en enlaythe spccfal rfchness of Yuba~
Ground Yu~n·s 100%Colomblan coffee beans. C>r Instant Yubin's own sP.eQal blena. EJther way, you get a cup of c:offeo so delldouslY, rich It's alweys worth 1 se<x>ni:t cup.
· Use the coupon to save 30¢ on whichever one~ choos.t-•nd make yOUrSelf
a little rJcher rJght away.
,
DAILY PILOT ~ednelda~.October 12. 1977
Produee
exhausted as we enter .present time as the
the (aU·winter months. Salinas Valley dwindles
Cucumbers are ver y in volume and the Yuma
s hort wlth industry area has yet to beein
buyers looking to li'lorida heavy volume. Thi.I is
-
VEGETABLES suppliers to fill the void. j u st a temporary
Items in short supply
a t thi s tim e , but expected to improve
within a abort period of
time, include; hot house
cukes, br occoli a nd
squash . Local supplies of fr'osb I c e be r I le tt u c e s ituation b a rr in g
ve1etable5 are all. but. supplies are short at the weather probl~s in the
IteDl
Pricing
Battled
B7 SVSANSWAlll>
SACRAMENTO <AP>
-Take a look at the box
of cereal or the can ot
froaen lemonade you
buy. There may be a lit·
tle square box full of
lines and numbers on the
sideolthe ~ckage.
Behind that UtUe box is·
the story of one of this
Capitol's long-standinc
consumer issue•. the
baWeover Item priclnf.
At issue ls the na-tionwide grocery in··
dustry's drive toward
the use of electronic
scanners to tabulate
yoar bill at the checkout
stand, usln• a
~ eye lalread.
the eocle 1n tile liWe box. r So far,·15
supermarket lo
Catifornia 11se.1tho IC
Del' system,• but ailmCJst an '1.ores carry items
marked with codes f06
scan{Wl'S' eveutu.._..._""
..-~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ,
a:>. Del Monte PMchn ~ Yllow Cll'l H.iw. or SIOed it 4fte Your Ctloki8 2t Oz. Cen ...... . . . . . . "JI-
® ~~ .. ~~~~ ............. sac
® ~~~·:-o.n ....... 4gc
@ ~~t;~~~E . ········· 79c
®
0
®
0
a;.x A1gu Spaghetti Sauce 1 ~ EJctr• Tilldt . z.ty-PWn, wfth • 25 Mu111woom or with ....._ 32 OL ,,_ •••••
® r:::~!~~ ............. 1:•1
0 ~~ '!-~~~10z. c.n ........... 53c
DEL MONTE
@ !2~!.~.~~!~~ ..... 49c
0
0
@
0
~
~·::Al ~~~'!i ..... ······ 53° ~~= ~':"c! ........... 3&c
=~~~~········· ~c:~~t ................. •110
~r~':?! ................. 31°
Regular or Diet
®PEPSI COLA
Hot Cocoa Mix ==~~~.: ............ •11$ ~:'!. ?:~ .............. •1•
Nescate Coffee s4es '"""'1 10 Oa. ........... -.. .. .. • • .. • • •
i'1:;\ WESSON
\l3J OIL 1 $139
0
0
0
0
® •
II OL 8olt1e .... ,. • •• ·• ........... .
~:!~!! ~~~ ..... ~ ........ '1!5
Upton ii'•~· ~ ,00 CoUrtl .......................... -,--~
=--~~'".!~·-··· ...... •1• ~~~9!. .............. 48c
~'1, ~":~.~~~ ...... 75°
/
« the Jut two years
consumer and labor
e~ have tried to win
passqe ol a bill assuring
thaftlte arocerY: iodustry wUI tteep individual
price '-CS on lte even
iftht=1wse~anne'1J. ~ ZIO
But tbil bUls have
alwJYS-been kUled or p~ dOWD t.o .me•ur
requtrtn.1 UM aroee~ in,
dustry to ('C'GtiDQ.O item
pricing for another year
ortwo-yarperloc:l.
E6eb time. the IP'Otery
ioclustry officials have
fought a permanent re-
quirement for Item pric·
ing, aa)'ing they need
mqre time ror to
aee 1 y
p
"It's unn c s
labioi" fotte4 ~ •
n86Sman that tho COO•
sumer is going to bave to
pay ror. To mandate ln-
.d i vidual pricing i1
nothing short of
featberbeddln1 by
letislatiOQ," 1aid Merle
Goddard, lobbybt for the
California Grocers As·
aoclation.
Grocery represen-
tatives bave also argued
that putting the price Of
an item on the 1holf
below i\ ls a auttlclent
euidefor&h!SPpers. .
"The grocery Industry
hal ~ hol>e. I Ilk. Ua•t eomurners at some
future d te Ylill accept
haylng prices 'tak
items. ><:Dd o see
ablalutely no chan~ of
that bappenJng," said
ltoy Alper. lobbYbt for
the Calitot'Dia Citizen Ac-tion consumer group.
Recently, Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr. alned a bill requlrin1 Item
pricinl to continue from
J an.1, when tho exls~ item priciDI require·
ment would run out,
thrOUJlh Jan. 1, 1980.
A NO~ember IUl'VeJ by
tho Assembly otnce of Research found .that
customers wanted Item
pricing cooUnued and
that elimination Of the pricing system would
mean little savings to
supermarkets. State Sen. David
Roberti, the Los Anseles
Democrat who has
pushed item-prlctn1
JealalaUon, cited the
study ln a floor debate on
theblll.
"Consumen view item
priciDI u a necualty
rather than a conven·
ience, "beaald.
Alper said the Robert.I
bin would "protect coo-
1umers for another two
vean. '11lat mean!I in ~· other year aPd half,
CObSUtnet groups Wiii
have to put to•ether
anotber effort and 1et
another extension
adooted.'1
AIPe.r said he could not
under1tand "why the
1rocery Industry con·
tinu to presa for re·
movil ot ltem prtclna as
an al feature of
th uctlon of acan· n r "
..
••• on.
.\teats
.. ..
~~!~.!!~.~ ..... •1• Chtpa Anoe" ...
...,. 14~ OL Qllp 910 ,. ,, .. ~ Qlaa, CNp ••••• pq.
..!:.~er.~~~~ .. 8~
~CLOROX
\lY 81:.EACH 57c
.. ()I..~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
® ~~"!."!'.'?'~ .......... •1•
® ~.!~ .............. 98°
Your Choice
AH Except
.Beef& Ham
Vatlou1 Size PkQt.
•
OOttll I IO•O\ 011111'
'iAVI ''> ~K
Ort••'' Al,,.,,
-
Ill· alt h & Beaut.' \id'
-. . . . . . . .. . . • . • .. .. • • • . • •, •• •. ·• • •, .• A • • ••.....,._I• • • _. •
..
. .,
Blintzes for That
Weekend Brunch
s~ pancakes and waffles
enriched witb the CO\mll'1 Cood·
ness ol real butter and milk are
truly the best ever. Blintzes, hid· ing a sweet flll1nc and topped
with dairy sour cream are
another traditional type of pan-
cake th.at will please the weekend
brealdut-een. You can use tbe
same basic bauer ror bOtb the
pancakes and wames. Tb.is de-
licious reclpe ls accented with
cardamom.
If you are a kitchen gadget col·
Jector and have a plett Pall or an
authentic heart shaped ~eandma·
vian wattle lron now's the time to
use them. OtherWi.Se a reiutar
griddle and watne baker will do ,
the bakini Job nicely.
Some successful party givers
rove to entertain at a relaxing, in·
formal brunch. When it's a large
nt.he~1r;~ can ve an ex· teb4eid ~ Ume, encouragint
guesta to eat when hungry. For
such occasions, bring out the
portable appliances and invite
them to bake their own waffles
and pancakes whenever they're
ready to eat. Assorted toppings
mi~t include such tbinga u but·
ter aDd bot syr:up, wblpped honey
and blitter and whlpp&d c~am
and berries. . .
Blbitzes are another thin pan ..
cake made wlUi milk, butt.et and
eass. Fill these with brown •&liar
or .i>reaerves then fold and try til
coldeh. You can make the
bUatzes ahead -even the night
before if desired -ancl
re!rigerite. Then f\ll and fry the
sweet pancut envelopa at serv-
ing thn~. Guests can do their own
It you have an electric skillet.
SOUit
• ..
1 cupfiour
l tablespoon sugar
14 cup butter
Brown sugar or raspberry preserves
Dairy sour cream
Beat milk with eggs, salt, flour
and sugar until blended. Melt 2 tables~ butter In 7 or 8-inch
skillet or crepe pan. Pour into bat-
ter and beat to blend. Pour 3 to 4
tablespoons batter into hot pan,
tilt to coat entire bottom. Bake
over medium hjgb heat untH
golden. Remove from pan.
Repeat With remaining batter,
stacking blintzes.
Spread blintzes on counter,
cooked side up. Sprinkle a spoon.
ful of brown suiar or raspberry
preserves into center of each. Fold in two opposite sides then
remaining sides to make a
uare envelope. Mell remaining
2 tablespoons butter In sldUet '
Fry blintzes until golden. Sern
with sour cream. Makes 12 to 14 blintz.es.
SWEDISH PANCAKES AND
WAFFLES
lcupbuUer
2~cupsflour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1tlt teaspoon ground card-
amom·
~teaspoon salt
2~cupsmilk
Melt and cool butter. Mix flour,
baking poWder, cardamom and
salt. Beat in milk and butter to
form a smootb batter. Bake
small pancakes on griddle or in
plett pan. Jf preferred, pour
about ~ eup measures into elec-tric waffle iron over-the-rante
Scandinavian iron.
Bake as for waffles. Serve with whipped cream and fresh or
thawed frozen berries or syrups.
Makes about eight wafnes or 2
dozen pancakes.
·-# ., ........ .
Herhed Soup
Is Hearty
"Soup 1s a healthy.
light, sustaanin1 food
which is iood for
everyone," wrote the
areal Brillat-Savarin a
century and baJf ago, "1t
soothes the stomach and
encourages it to receive
and digest more
nourishment. .. "
U teaspoon 11round
black pepper
1 cup diced peeled
carro~
1 cup diced peeled
potatoes
1 cup diced zucchini
Herbed Minestrone is, ot course, of Italian
origin and so is seasoned
m Italian fashion viilh
basil and oregano
leaves, parsley flakes,'
black pepper, a bay leaf
and instant chopped
onion and instant minced
garlic. This is a hearty
bowlful and a comforting
food ror a cold winter
day.
l cup fresh cul sreen beans or 1 package
C9oz.) frozen cut green
beans
1fl cup elbow macarom v. cup parsley flakes
l tablespoon basil
leaves
1 teaspoon oreiano
leaves p
In a large heavy
saucepan or a Dutch
oven combine soup
bones, white and red
kidney beans, onion,
HERB ED
MINESTRONE ,
2 pounds beer soup
bones
1 a cup dried while
kidney beans
1 2 cup dried red kidney
beans . •
~• cup instant chop~ onion
1-:i teaspoon instant
minced garlic
l bay leaf
2quarts water
1 can U lb.) tomatoes,
broken up s teaspoons salt
, garlic, bay leaf, water,
tomatoes, salt and black
pepper. Brtn1 to bolling
point; sklm foam:
reduce heat. Cover and
simmer for 2 hours or
until beans are tender.
Remove soup bones and
bay leaf; skim fat from
soup. Add reDlaln1n1
ingredients. Ret1.Jrn to
boiling point; reduce
heat. Cover and sJmn:atr
30 minutes lonter, or
unW vegetables are fork-
tender.
Yield: lOportlons.
OAll .. Y PILOT
Cheery cnerry
Bread
We kend breaktaat '
ought to tut wtti.
1omethlna specitl. )~t ..
because we ktnd
breakf ls are s~ial.
Generally, there'• morj ti me to enjoy th
momin1 meal so 1''
we>rth a JiUle exb'a • fort.
CHER Y llAISJN LOA 1 2 cup• sifted allt
purpose flour
~cupsugar
Pinchaalt ..
~ teasPQOn soda
1 te•apoon baldnc
powder
>,t cup
butter
~ cup
raisllis
(1 stick)
(
seedless
1 cup maraschino
cherries, coa.r ely cut
ie11yolks, beaten
'1ii cup bUttermilk
Comblne dry
ingredienta. Cut in butter
as f~ prustry. Add fruit,
mixing tbOroughly. Add
~ g .}'Olks. Slowly adcl
buttcrrnllk, miXU\I ~o
form a sWf batter. Pour
into buttered 8~ x •~ x
2Y.i·lrich loat pan. Bake in preheated 350-degree
overa fw 4S minutes or
until tootlipick inserted
into center comes out ·
clean and loaf begins to
pull away from sides of
pan. Cool 1~ mlnutes in
pan: tum out onto wJre
rack.
r:----,m----...-----OllllllPotlM &l\A t£C~ ~t this~ to YoUr~
Plec:.e~me: • ~
I --~~c:?.~~::-== 11 ..,. 2~ '°' °' NelcXJ!6., --~ muo Mll•J. "°' eoct1 seitol fol.-. It-. «ldONd $6.00 onct otl9 "* ~ lllOl'l'I Of'Y
I 111• t!ICeOl ltle 2-ounc:e lar Of NetcoN. l 1
s.M e._.., ~.,.. ,..,-. ..
~-....,o .... ._....,..,.,..,m I :.. ,._______ 11
CllV'-------------1 SW( • I I OllM ...... ~ .. ~ ...... "°" ____ "" ____ _
11 =~:=.-=:J 1504-
. . . .
£JO DAil. Y PILOT
Jeep. separated
2 • J)lmltk
1 ~ cup qulck-cooktn1
tapioca
M teupoon salt
1 tableapoon van.W.a extract
\4 cup butteraeotch morsell .
Jq a ·~ saucepan
melt b\ltter. Add ~ cup
of the brown aqar; eook
unW aup.r ta dieaolved· Ht uJdo. In a amali
aaucepan beat 111 Yolk•.
Gradually add milk.
blendll'I welt. Add t~ploca and ult; let
•land tor 5 mtnut•. Cook
over medium heat. stir-
rlnc constantly until
mlxl•• tJalcJrtu and
com. to a boll. Remove
from boat: atlr In •an.Ula extract and r .. erved
cooked brown auaar mix-
ture. Tum lntO a 1-quart
CallefOle; Ht ulde. In a
1ma1J mbdna bowl beat •II whltea untll soft
Holly Farms
USDA Grade A
Fryers
whole bOdy •
peaks form. Gradually
add remaining ~ cup
brown 1uaar; beat until
1Uft but not dly. Spoon
mertniue over tapioca
mixture; spread to that
lt toucbos odre of cuserole. Sprinkle but-
terscotch rnol'lela over
1J1ertniue. Bake ID a pre-
heated moderate oven
(375 dosreet> ~o to 1s minutes or untll me-
rr!Qauels Colden bl'OWD.
YIELD: a ,POrt1ona
a ...
Homeiri8de chicl<en is otMously
not an extmct bird.
With this kind of i pn difference, it won't go the way of
the dodo and the carrier pigeon to that feathery Valhalla in
the sk~. NQt far P\U' cuttotnen, it won't. Besides, for any·
ono with h r t t \la in ht1 or her head, homemade is a
f~r. far betttt ttil a than thGt 9 ay kid stuff. Sure, we're
~II grateful fOitt'\'1 ecnyenltn( of takeout at the end of a
long, h<lrd day. ~Ut our cu1tom.r1 never teem to Jose
Jight of the fact that, whsn it'com .. to a dinner worth
clucking abQut. a home coo"ed mt \ · -· -..--.,...-~!Sii
does it, every time,
Fresh Meat1 Canned&Packaged
l CHfU
W/OEANS 99 W>V UE NGIAAI\ O'\ HOf • • • • 40 Ol. (N4 •
l ~~1.~.~~~~~.s •• .,oz ..... 70
P POKOP-N • o-~ f ~~ ,l)Ol"".85
P MISPY CMCKEll.S /> )l<',.~W't;l~IM#o.11 • , 00• .49 L MOTrS .. ~SAUCE )0/ .... 57
' !~~~.~.'.~ ••O(CN<.49
! ~~~~~.~~.~~""°'(AN .60 I~~~.~~~ ... •)OlUll.29
A ~~~.~~CH u-.ot w .59
P SANDWICH COOK!~ • 6 Jlllll« )WMIO,, , , J•Ol 1'111; .79
t ~A~vt:~T.~AY CA~~·~"' Ill\ .45
HA~~sr DA v co~ , / (>!< •26
HAAV£ST DAY TOMAT<?£S ;.. •39
Liquor & Beer
I W. ~ DOURDON 6 99 """"""'"~· ... .,.Clll\ • 'WCJ<Y SCOTCH _....., .. llllOCtf ............... 01 5.44
~.~, ~~~ •. -'"~2•t10l.W 1,99
DISCOJ\IT SLPERrv1AAKETS
HUICTllCOTOH HACH •LAQUHA Hllll
tto .. IROO•Hl,llll' ITllHT' .tla11 OAIOT JIOAD AT I.A PU
•LA MIRAOA •O .. AHOI •SAHTA ANA
LA MIRADA '"~'llCQ C&NT!" :2tl0 'HA,MAH AVINU Hit 10. tallTO'-ITa&IT
ITO"HO"N DAILY t A.M.
VBn/Jla P.'6dJ
Tapioca T/?uttd/ng.
Is ablg t
tor big family. •
The one to pick to be suri
That's Holly Farms. Grown without hormones to fatten
them up, and shipped fresh, without preservatives to
cloud the. flavor. USDA Grade A means the stan~
ards are high, Jet me tell you. Not
even a wingtip may be missing.
There must be no torn sUin. No
pin feathers. You shouldn't have to
pluck away with tweezers to maJ<e
this fowl beautiful. And the giblets
should be ttiere for your favorite
gravy or stuffing recipe. Yes indeed, f
Holly Farms grows those plump and
pretty cluck·clucks you can beeureof.
Health & Beauty Aids
A~P.EE ~c?!omo~~~1 Cll " 1.59
GELUSIL LIQUID
.... -· .•• •70l Ill. 1.49
SAFE DAY AHTl·PE'-SPIMl'IT
Oll>OOC:UOH ......... 11)0 M 1.19
LISTEP.Ml~T MOUTl4:--~~ ~ 1.65
SCHICK AAZOR GLADES ............... (,1'9 1.70
Dairy & Frozen
The 1overnment's n1JiTilion publications
re described as too
alrnplistlc in some cases ~ too complicated in 0th .
Public:atlona, which
account for a slanifacant
part of the $70 million coat. are amon1
thousands .of materials
lisued every year by the
l1mted States -one of the world's busiest prlnten.
Cups. &•rv~s four.
TO~'TED BREAD
TlJUPCUPS
Brus h eiaht hrge
square> white b read
slices with melted butter
or margarine. Press into
muffin cups. Bake in 350
degree oven. 10 to 15
minutes, or unlll toas ted.
sran••ttof.
MONIY SACK GUA•ANHI
ON 4UAUfY MlAfS
l'<ll't•f P•t(I Qt •tat r • . :.~.::AU ~~~w::~ f
Wfll •• (NII ft(JU t •tt u,,_ ff b
Tuna Tulips
are ideal for
teenage parties.
....
RIIS
~
SLAB BACON ANY SIZE PJECE
1.9c, ..
PEARS
LAROE• lXTRA FANCY • IARTU:TT$
-3cL&
CJ2 DAIL v PILOT Weclneedtly, October 12. 1877
Children Being Seduced by Sweets on .Tielevisio
.
It•a 10 a .m .
Saturday ••• do yoa
know where YOUR
chlldrtn ... t
Safe .. front ol the TV?
Watch out for aeductlon
and vJoJ ce. . .1weet
••dactlon to 1u1 ry
foodJ and vlolenc• to
th lr.uDchabltal are~lwdou you m1lh1 dt•w ftOm a
repoft ln thlt month 'a
'"Journal of Nutrition Education.•• the
Sii•
6....-nset
By e.rtiara G;bbont
IOW•Cal :.alad drt'SSlnf:,
an a covered plhltc
bowl. 1n th• morn1n1 add
some shredded leUuce or
other fresh 1reenery. ll
will thaw by luncbUme. Stir 'n' eat.
HEAT 'N ' E AT
MEAl..SIZE SOVP -It
your o ffice h as a
hotplate, here's <i hot tip ·
freeze single i.ervin &
portion.s of cubed cooked
lean meat. Take it. to
work frozen, along wilft •
siogle can o/ veietable
soup. Heat meat and
soup together.
HAVE B&EUFAST
FOa LUNCH -Is cold
milk available o n
'Premiffs '? JCeep a box of
ht&b protein cer•al, a
spoon and a bowl in your
deak. Add • sprinkle of raisins\ rtesbly·sllced poach, or drain a can of •uaar.r~ f rui\ cocktail
'
and add it to lhe cereal
alon1 wUh some milk.
\JNCANNY SEAFOOD
LtJNOO:S are euy wltb
canned water·packed
tuna, 0tr 1mall cans ot
aardlna in tomato pute. Keep a supply in your
d esk ; they need no
refrieeraUon. Or, for an
appeUzJni chill, brfns
them from bome packed
in a mOlsture·proof b11
wlth some lee cubes, and
a few celery atal.U.
·DITTO HARD ·
COOKED EGGS, 1till in tbtY'. abell. Just peel and
eat, topped wllb salt and
Pfpper. Brtn1 a nice ripe tomato, too.
COTTAGE CHEESE
SUNDAES taate like
dusertl Pack tcy-cold
cottaie cheese in an
tn1ulated wide-mouth
jar. Spoon on s liced
atrawbe.rria or crushed
juice.packed plneappl .
The jar w111 keep
everytbln1 cold until
lunchtime.
NATURAL YOGURT
-For a 1u1ar·free treat,
spoon plain unsweetened
lowfat yo1urt lnto a n
insulated Jar and top
wlth two or tbut
tabJeapoona undiluted
available , add
praleaJonal publlcaUOQ r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~~:-r-~
of nutrition teacb•n. n. ns-t oUWDa t.b•
flQ(llngl GI 13 &rad11a utritron mad ti wbo
Uu'oQP 17 boUrl of
t•l•mion to watchdoa
SIO eoaunerctal!. Their aim WU to le9 If tbe
earlfer ei·ltloa of
junkfood commercial.I Jtave had uy dfoct on
the nutrttloGal ctUAll~ of
looda promoted to
children. To ftbd oat. the
13 stucSent1 watched
comm~ almed at children, bou11wlvH
and mixed adult
audleac.. U...'1 what
the)' disecm.red:
'' percent of the commerclab ..vere for i
thinp to eat. n percent of the food
commerdall aimed at
children were Hllln1
presweetenect cerealt or
snacb. '1 percent of the
commerdala on Satur-
day mornJna cartoon
shows are f0tr ctreats.
38 percent of tb• commercial.I were for
• hiahly •a1ar1d
cerula ... tbolt with a 1ucar content of 20
percmt or more.
43 percent of the
cereab were promoted ror t.bdr sweet taste, de-
scrJ bed as "fud1ey,"
.. fl'Cllb'" or some other
adjective that au11esta
sweetness.
Cereals with a hilh
1u1•r content were advertised flve tlmes
more aft.en on Saturday
morntnes than UD·
netened cereali. ·
•percent ol the food
cro111inerc:Jals aimed at '
' adults O¥er the week •et• tor Pffll•eet.aed cereal•, anacka and
drtob. n IMll'l*11 Of the food
comntei'clals aimed at adult~ audiences
were for l.aat foods.
.IMADUd d&U.
The cmnlJ mnriUoaal
v ot_.:;i:v ·touted fooCll b ~. 1M foods &d~ to children If 9' 18\' poorer DUlri· ~ alu tban food ,
:&ds at18dalta.
oods adnrtlaid on
da;tlnte eame 1bow1
and. ~l> operas ••r• Jcu 11Ub1UGlll than tbGM promoted on evenln« drama; 1uapenae and
talk abOft. But the moat
empty.caloried foods
were targeted for
cartoon abOwl.
The p~rcentare of
commerelal time de-
voted to promotlni Junk
food has lncreaaed •in(• 1'72.
The largest'! Sncreue
shice 1972 b in \he area
of coolies. candies, sum,
popcotn and 1nackl.
That catetory accounted tor 17 percent of Satur· day mornjn g
commercial time in im.
ln the later study, Junk
actca bad a 37 percent
share of commercial
Umt.
Hl&b calorie jankfood
manufaeturere have
moved in to talte over th•
eommercl~J time
•band'oned ·b1 ·.vi,amtn
pUI maken. Tbe vltamtn
co:J.~e$ voluntarily wt edl aimed at
tbUdren lareely because Of presaure from ACT,
Action •tor Children's
-Televltlon, an actlviat
&J'OUp.
The 13 TV-watchers are graduate students in
the Public Health Nut.rt·
tlon Pro1ram at the
Univeralty of Minnesota fo lnneapolta. Their
tindm were· rePorted by Judith Brown, an
Ql!Qilialt ' ptot and
act.tn1 dlnct.or of th• aternal and Chlld
NutriUon proaram • ••• }Jow to avoid the calorinc conc~ons of th comj>any cafetena
or 1ohool lunch· oom •.• Join tb•
Br wn .B11 rtf td I
Le lichl l II trOm om be qulck And eaay well as w lght·
wary. Jf you lunch at
your k, here are 1om
tOP-dt&w tdeu:
.THA ·N· asava,
8AL\D 90WL -l'mie
:hidlvldual poftlona of
cooked, cubed leftover
lean roaat ••t or
1><*1&17. eotered. •Wl
.. c .. t8wi111Beef
•&;.steak
~~s._.
ta'Mf Shankl
D&•ctu:k
J;)oro...t Ctu:k P.
l11 Cin Liver.'
Wines & Spirits
':' 111
:r.89
': , ..
:' .88
:' 121
:: 2''
':' , ..
::. 311
,;. , ..
:: 3••
""' ...
~P91t....., Bcr.al111 Pa,tc Roast ,., ...
lF.;;Loinchapl ,., .. D --~,_cm .. ,., ,., 48 ~Twttty .. •
~~'ttn ': , ..
~ cw"""",,_ Rainbow Trout ':: , ..
~ , ... ,,...
Red Snapper ~ , ..
Health & Beauty
~H';;t'*
~D;;i;to1on
~e:q,;syrup
,~ , ..
'::-.99
4: , ••
lpedal Jl1.n ,tck camet c ....
21 °'"II ptcg.
Pantry Fillers
~l';ti;;'8;.p ,,. .. ,42
D~~ ·::.35
~~·;;. 114 38 -. ~t4:iiila.ut ~.88
~ ..... ., .... ,..,., JlffJ Popcorn :.~ A'1 0 11....-.e .......... Portt & Beans ~.49
~-...... ,. ... S9 -· ~.89
~ . .,...( .. .,
Gouda Ch111e
~~'D-'
~~Frlnb ••• ...
~c----... ;,;r*
SwltCh to· Number One* ••• Swltcli to I
'
••••• ••••••• ••••••• ••• • •• ••• ••••••• ••••••• ••• •• ••••••• ••••••• •••••••
•••••• ••••••• ••••••• :.. . .. •••••• ••••••• •••••• ••• ••• ••• •••
• •••• • •••••• • •••••• ••• • •• ••• • •• ••• • •• ••• • •• ••• • •• • •••••• • •••••• • ••••
••• • •• ••• • •• ••• • •• • •• • •• •••••• •••••• ••••••
• •••• ••••••• ••••••• ... ·:· ••• • • ••• • •• ••••••• ••••••• ••••••• ••• • •• ••• • ••
with
• •••• • •••••• • •••••• ••• • •• ••• • •• • •• ••• • •• ••• • •• • •••••• • •••••• • ••••
• •••••• ....... , • •••••• ··: •• • ••• • •••••• • •••••• • •• • •••••• • •••••• • ••••••
a
• ••••• • •••••• • •••••• • •• • ••••• • •••••• • ••••• • •• • •••••• • •••••• • •••••
newspaper-
routel
Daily Pi lot carriers
earn fun trips to exciting places like
.
Disneyland, Sea World, Knott's Berry Farm,
Magic Mountain and Catalina by selling ·
new subscriptions. And you can, too!
Find out about earning your own money,
prizes and college ~cholarships by
finding out about a newspaper
route In your neighborhood.
Send in the coupon today
ED PLACE
"'8.nw ••••.•••••.••••••••.• ':. . . . . . . • • . Age •••••••
Addr.a ••••••.•••.•.•...........•..........••.•
City ••• ,, ••••.••••••••..•.••.••••.• Zrp •••• , •••••
Phone ................ . ..
MaU to, C.11tr~r ~·~-,t Dally Piiot
P.O. lox 1ea> • C09ta M...; Ca.~
•
CJ4 VlufJ Calendar OAILVPlLOT
B&ANDEJS WOMEN'S COMMITTEE: TM
.R?oupwill meetat8p.m .. Wednesday, Oct.12, at
East Blulf Elementary School. Tim Timmons.
autbor of ··0ne Plus One" and "Muimum a.rri.18• .. wlll &iv• the Pl"Oll'&m.
Pl BETA PHI: The annual Arrowcraft sale ot the South Coast Alumnae Club will be held
.froml0:30 a .m . toS:30p.m. Thursday, Oct.13, at
the Bayside Village Clubhouse, north off Coast
Hiahway at tbe intersection of Bayside Drive.
The sale is open to the public. An additional sale
will be held from 10:30 to 2:30 p.m. at 893-D
Ro.oda SeviUa in Leisure World, Laguna HiUs. ..
LAGUNA BEACH JUNIOR WOMEN: The
group will mt.-et at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct.13, at
the home ?f Gayle Brown, Laeuna Beach.
GAMMA TAU GAMMA: The Alumnae
chapter of Alpha Chi Omega will meet at 10 a .m.
Thursday, Oct. 13, at the home of Mrs. Ronald
Gagliano, OosLa Mesa.
INSURANCE WOMEN OF O&ANGE
COUNTY: The group's annual public relations
and Bosses Night will be held)'riday, Oct.1-i, at
the Santa Ana Elks Lodge. Cocktails are at 6:30
p , m.; dinner at 7; 30. Adm~ion is $10..
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE PATRONS
Cl&<LE: A membership bruneh wui. be held-a\
11:30 a.m. Friday, Oct. 14, at the home of liilr$.
Florence Woolbriabt in Hwitington Beach. The
program will be a look at women in history.
• CHAPMAN WOMEN: The membership
brunch will be held at 10 :30 a.m. Saturday, Oct
15, at the home or President and Mrs. G T. Smith,
Villa Park.
LEGAL SECRETARIES ASSOCIATION: A
Second-Time Around fashion show wlll be pre-
sented by the Orange County Harbor group Satur-
day, Oct 15, at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club.
CoronadelMar. Coc}(tailsareatlla.m.; lunch al
noon and fashion show at 1 p.m . Tickets are~ aod
may be obtained by calling 540-8902, or 835-2200,
<LoisMcKeon>. The pubhc is invited.
From left, Charlene Burke,
Pat Guiver and Pat Rochester with Rafiki.
For the
Animals
Animal Aaslstance
Lea1ue of Orange
County will hold a
benefit luncheon at the
Airport.er Inn, Irvine, on
Saturday, Oct. 15, in
conjunctloo with a
Christmas boutique.
Proceeds will help
finance the various
projects of the· all·
volunteer humane
society, iocludloa the
Animal Help-Line, the
Pet-Aid Fund, foster
horning of unwanted
pMs; and tbe public
lnlo~t.ion prol!'am at
the Oran1e County
Animal Shelter.
For inlonnatiob, write
Animal Assistance
League, P .O. Box 818,
Huntinetoo Bea@. 92648,
or call luncheon
• ehalrman Pat Rochester
at 587-2273 orMS-71'80.
ALPHA DELTA KAPPA: Founders' Day of
the teachers' honorary sorority, will be observed
with a luncheon program at noon Saturday, Oct.
IS, at the Balboa Bay Club.
EDtSON HIGH SCHOOL BOOSTER
ASSOCIATION: The group will hold a football
dance from 8 to 12 p .m. Saturday, Oct 15, at the
Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. Tickets are
S8 and available al the door.
From left, Mrs. Joseph Scroggs,
Mrs. Rol C«>utier, Mrs. Robert
Gray are ready for the fashion
show at the Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club in Newport Beach on
Thursday, Oct. 13 for the Mesa
Harbor Club lunch and fashio
show. Proceeds wlll be presentc<t
to the Ray of Hope in Tustin ~Qt
their therapeutic training an<I
social program for the men~
handicapped. q
IADIES GUILD: The group from Our Lady of
, Mount Catholic Church, Balboa. will
hold a tea and fashion show from 2 to 4 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 19
BETA SIGMA PHI: The Saddleback Valley
Council wUI hold a Bunco Party on Saturday.
Oct.15
· MYASTHENIA GRAVIS FOUNDATION:
The California chapter wiU meet al 2 p.m
Sunday, Oct. 16, at the Lo6' Angeles Hilton.
ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ALUMNI:
The Southern Calirornia aroup will hold a wine·
taslini dinner at 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16. at Izaak
Walton League Hall, Sib~ Ana.
llOSARIAN DOMINICAN GUILD: A
nostalgic m~ical extravaganza will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday, Oct. 11, at lh• EmbJSsy Room or
lhe Disneyland Hotel. Donation is S6 per ticket
for the benefit or the Dominican Sisters.
AME&ICAN ASSOCIATION OF ltETIBED
PERSONS: The Huntington Beach Chapter will
meet ut 1 p.m . Monday, Oct. 17, at Murdy Park
Center.
LAGUNA BEACH MUSEUM OF ART
Al'FILIATES: The aroup will give a benefit style
bow and luncheon al 12:30 p.m. TKuesday, Oct.
18, at the Museum. Cost is $3.75. For reservations.
call 494-6531, 494-4192, 494·8792.
DELTA GAMMA ALUMS: The Santa Ana,
Newport Harbor group will meet at 10 a .m. Tues·
day, Oct. 18, at the home of Mrs David Snow.
Corona del Mar. Mrs Herbert Walhngford is
guest speaker
I CHILDREN'S THEATER GUILD OF
NEWPORT HAJ\BOR ~ The group will hold an
open coffee al 10 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18, at the
home of Mrs . Petr As ton, Irvine . For
information, call Mrs. Aston, 752·6566.
WOMEN'S CLUB OF HUNTINGTON
BEACH: The group will meet at 10 a .m. Wedncs·
day, Oct.19, al the club house.
NEWPORT HARBOR PANHELLENIC:
The group will meet at 10:30 a m Wednesda~
Oct. 19, at Glendale f'ederal Savings, Fashion
Island. Kenneth Sampson 1s guest speaker,
followed by a salad luncheon and bndge.
OFF1CERS' WIVES LEAGUE: The Orange
County eroup wall meet for lunch at Dick
Darling's Silver Jo'ox Supper Club on \)'edneSday.
Janet Farrington, left, and Mrs,
Alan Crittendtpl with garage sale items.
Oct. 19. Social hour is at 11 30 a.m. and lunch at
12:30. For reservations. call Mrs. Robert Post.
Mrs Malt Kenney or Mrs. JohnScbwab.
UNITED METHODIST WOMEN: The fall
festival will be held from 10 a.m. lo4 p.m. Satur-
day. Oct 15, at the Newport Center United
Methodist Church
MATER DEi HIGH SCllOOt;• PARENTS
GUILD: The group will hold a C tury Club
Omner on Tuesday. Oct. 18, at the Saddleback
Inn. Santa Ana. Cocktails are atn p m. with
dmncrat8p.m .
THE FASHIONABLES: The sup~rt group
of Chapman College wllf hold a luncne6n fashion
show Wednesday. Oct. , at the Balboa Bay Club
Deck Room. Cocktails re at 11:30 p.m. With fl
salad luncheon al noon.
CM> Calendar ~"' each
Wednesday in the Daily
PilOt and contain• notices
of women'& and service
club meetings end •vents
for thf' followtng week
Thursday through Wedne1·
day. Send notice• to Club
CoJendar, Dolly Pilot. P 0 .
Bo;i: JSf,(), Co: to Ne10, CA
926%6 Be sure to include
your name and phone
numbn'. Notices miut ~
"'our hands two weeks tn
4.dvonce.
,Juliette Marg/en Method Manicure 81.·
JJo6i
Ten ~ercent Discount During October
ppomlm' nt 7 59·0941 Appu1111m1 r r
Newport Beach Hair And Co.
~';Q 5ml Mr·~ud • Fosh rm hl(lml
'"""port Reach Cn'1fnm n
ELEGANCE OM E. 17th STREET
Elegarit
Junk
The annual
Highlanders·
Philharmonic super
garage sale is set for
Saturday, Oct. 15, from 9
a .m . to 2 p.m. at 1453
Galaxy Drive, Newport
Beach
More than 30 families
wiU contribute to ttie
.fundraiser, which will
feature such items as e l e g ant d e.c o r a t o ,.
merchandise, sporting
goods, clothing, plants
and furniture.·
To reque!t a picture.
write or. coll the 1''«Jture1
Dtpartmml, &f2-4321. Pie·
turn or limited to fund·
raittn open to the public. UN 'BEL 'Di
OFr.~1 MONDAY• l>ATVROAY 10•6
A New Program
for Student Success
-
f
\
HEWPORT BEACH· COSTA MESA'S
CHIC LEATHER EMPORIUM
IMPORTED a,,cJ DOMESTIC
LEATHER a,,c/ CANVAS HANDBAGS 1
1..UGCAGE • WALLETS • ACCESSORIES
369 E. 17th ST., COST A MESA
IN WESTPORT SQUARE
iiZ Ul-5533
(
Grades 4·12
• SPEED READING
• BETTER COMPREHENSION
• SHARP.ER CONCENTRATION
• FASTER STUDY
Readwrite Educational Programs
'1 70 Newport Center Orive, Surte 120, Newport Beach
By Appointment Onfy • 646·1944
&
fRANCIS-0RRt
fine statiorlery
~ ... .....,..e....,.
ORAMCE •
T...--K .....
1419Ho.T-""AH
(714) 991·•
.eDt ....
IWS.lt1" at . ........ ,
(714) 135-2451
Wuact.or W•ndoor Wand6or .Wrnd.oor
lUindsor
COSTA MESA
Cele"#Jrales Its
40th
ANNIVERSARY
We must be doing •omethiM rieht lo
celebrute our 40t1t .A.nniticrsary ! !
SAVE
UP TO 35·IJ·Off , .,,.
· • Blouses • Tops • Sweaters
• Pants• Jackets• Etc.
' I
"
SALE STARTS THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 13th
.. t
.
! omen Producers
~re are more on 'Broadway this year because there are
tewer male Investors and more benefits from women's Wghm. ·
I N~YORK (AP)-Womeoprouducen are
b · flY on Broodway in record number this season.
0 Wlth any luck" says ont. "the old macho.
•UPNmacf could ~tually tMlcome a so.so
propoat.Uon." •
Although they still are a minority in the
Lea1ut ot New York Tbeaten and Producers -
2£ ol 160 members -their current activity
~rutlcallY revises that ahltract ratio
Five ant prime forces behind current hits
d U. others are in the top management of 20
more shows announced for near-future
~tation.
A producer's main tasks are three: findlD& a
likely property. ralsl.nl the elMDtial money and banato1 tou1h as a decision maker about
tw~ all tbowa1 to o~Di1bt. Tho son Of chor't9 tb used to be Nlarded, with an
oc:culoaal exctpt!on, u Poedinl masculine
clout.
Feminine lnvolvement bu been oo the rtae ~ several aeuons. Just wby Is guesswork.
OpinlOM ran&t from the retreat of rich male
lnvestott during the receulon al the early "105 to
aplnoff benefits from the women ·s liberation
movement
1be new lmpresarlos fall lnto two groups:
well-heeled dlvo~eea who madt lhow business a
chic ouUet for their enersies and long-term
careerists who decided to move up In the power
structure after indenture ln the lower ranks as
ttaae direct.ors, company managers or script
hounds for some of the Main &.m's erstwhile
~·""'· 'lbe busiest woman bots of this season ls Bu1TY Frednk with "Night al \he Tribades, ·~ a
eama about lesbian.a that opena OcL 13. at the
Helen Hayes Theater; "An Almost Perfect
Person," described as poliUcal comedy, due Ocl.
27 at the Belasco and "The Dream Watcher,"
arming up next month in Seattle for January
arrival here, the story of a boy's friendship with
an l():year-old woman to be played by Eva Le
GaWeune -wh.o, incidentally, produced plays 30
nan110.
Horoscope
UIURSDAY, OCT.13
BJ SYDNEY OMARR
A.BIES <March 21-April 19L Examine
arious projects, opportunltles. Social life
-• creuu -JOU make addltiooal contacts.
mphuls on financial status of partner, mate.
tick lo number "J "
TAUllUS lApnUO·May20>: Lie low -cheek
t•l rl1hta, permlasions. Accent on public
cfutions. confrontlni diverse views --and
arltal statU&. Ue thorough. Tam~ 1s on your
de.
GEMINI I May 21-June 20>: Study Taurus
essage -he analytical, take nothing for ~nted. Don't be satisfied to know merely that
ethint bappelMd -find out "why " Virao.
atiltariu.s persons ncure prominently.
CANCER (June 21-Ju\)" 22): Good lunar
e>«t c01ncldes now with variety, creativity,
affair 'of heart. Emotiona tend to fiood logic. Key
la to 1lrive for balance. Ye1, the domestic
dJustment was necessary -~ so was th•
ttrd1ue. · LEO <July 23 -Aui 22>: Your illusions, rea~. creative errorts find fertile 1round.
lieu. Vtrgo fi1ure prominently.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Ideas can be
ransformed Into aomet.hin1 aolld, a viable
~oncept that rpolts ln satisfaction. profit.
UBRA <Sept. 2*·0ct. 22): Obtain binl from
irco 1t1essage. You'll get financial support for
panstoa'. ·
aPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Lunar poslUon
cc ts initiative, independence, personality.
ina throuah making ~raonal appearances.
. SAGITl'ARIVS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): Trust.
tultioo. Adhere to credo of "Learn by
eachin :·
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19>: Emphasis on rrtendly atmosphere, encouragement. Social
l~ accelerates. AQUARIUS <Jen. 2'>-Feb. 181: You are off
e sidelines and htto the came. ·· ·
ES <Feb. 19·March 201: Accent on
etttn thouf'hls on paper. communlcatin1!
&king necessary ch DI .
Beautiful
~Hap~n
~a RoWersGtrl.
'
ln reserve, MiH Fredrik has dibs on
"Barnum," a mualcal about the great 1howman.
Like most of her distaff collea,ues, the main
Fredrtk interest ls spon.soring the efforts of
creative newcomers "That sort of thine
shouldn't be left to regional theaters," she says.
Two productions are on the agenda of Dons
Cole Abrahams, who notched impressive
triumphs previously as a co-producer of
"Equus" and "Travesties," both
award-winners. In solo venture she now lists a
revival of Peter Shaffer's "Black Comedy" and
·'One an One," a career vs. marnaae drama.
Frankie Hewitt, like Mrs. Abrahams already represented on the bit parade with "Your Arm ·s
Too Short to Box With God," ls ready to enter the
lists anew with "And Still l Rise," an
Afro-American musical. Ms. Hewatt bas been a·
staunch believer 1n the boxoffice pull of ethnic
entertalnment du.rtnc her decade as chief of
Fote!'• Theater jn Washm,ton. where she tests
ever"Ytbinl berore Broadway 1ortl•.
The other three women currently repre-
sented on the Rialto haven't announced
subsequent plans while tendl.nl their present.
treasures. They are Terry Allen Kramer, who
found a sleeper ln the musical "I Love M.Y Wlte"; Ruth Mitchell, Hal Prince's long time
partner. with "Side By Side By Sondheim" and
Maxine Fox, wrapped up with her husband
Kenneth Waissmen since 1972 in the spectacular
success of "Grease." The pair has just sent a
fifth company on national tour, leavina scant
Umetorbu.nb.Dgnew jackpots.
Back ln action are two or lhe di.staff squad's
belt·known doers. Cyma Rubin, instrumental m igniting the
nostal&la fad with "No, No, Nanette,·· is
readyin« reprise of another oldie, George
Gershwin's "Ob, Kay."
Adaela Holier, who has far-nuns business
Interests outside theater, lists a brace ot musical
prospects, "Jam" which bas to do with New
Orleans jazz, and ''Sarava," set ln South
America.
Scbeduled to debu.t on her own is Diana
Burry Frednk, wtth Pekmgese, has three plays scheduled to open.
Shumlln, who previo\ully has operated ln tandem
with her husband Herman. The project ii a
musical treatment of the 194' drama
· · J acobowaky and the Colonel... •
Elizabeth Mccann. like Mlaa MltdMU a
veteran of mahy showbi& ventures, 11 movlDI up
into the Impresario fanlct N a co-prod<el" of
"Dracula," set for the Martin Beck on Oct. 20. ln
addition she ls 1eneral manager for productlooa
presented under other auspices.
Another first-timer 11 Judy Gordon,
preparin1 "A Hlatory of th American Theater.··
Gladys B•Uroll. \Uldaunted lfttr two Prim;
floPI in wblcb abt participated, ls Mt to return u
one ot the sponsors of "Sunset." a charade about
the reebrdhi1 buslaeu.
Miss Rackmil typified the attitude of ~
producin& sisterhood by insist.in• that sbe be an
active participant, not a allent partner.
Claire Nicbtern, after a lensthy absence, is
steering Alan Ayckboum's "Absent Friends .. to
Broadway, slated to be followed with Ronald
Rlbman's black comedy "ColdStoraae.··
In other multiple partnerships. M117 Lea Johnson is en route wltb two C-, Coleman musicals, "20th Century" and ••Encoumer .. ;
Martha Greenhouse and a partner are plam>.lng
early 1978 revival of the Geore1 Kelly cmnedy. 't'fbe Tordl Bearers."'
The veteran of the 1roup Sa Cberyl Cfawford.
who put on her lint show IA 1931 and at flS II co-
sponsoring "Do You Turn Somenaulta? :·
scheduled to brine Mary Mart.In to Times Square
ua January.
Miss Crawfo?d comments OCl the feminist pniclucinl tread. with "it's become euler for
women ln all profeuions -anyone wttb the
nerve, educatlon and ftutl bas a better cbaace than 15 or 20 years ago. •
Detectable in her con•enation. however. ii
a bit of wonder tbat the mov snent t.ook.o !Ona to
gain moment.um. .J Recalling her early days •be ,.,.. u1 never
felt deprived or put utd8 because I wu a
woman. And it never occurred to me I was doln& anytbing odd. ••
What About Daughters-41-Law?
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: J just read
the letter from th e
woman who suggested,
as "The Perfect Gift" tor
a motber-in·law, a whole
day alone with her son
The woman wrote. ' I
have apent many da)I•
with my dau1hter·in·law
but never a day alone
with my son since he
married several years
ago. It would be a perfect
gift, and it costs nothing
Please su11est this to all
those dau1htera-i n-law
out there who are
wracking thelr brains for
1omethlo1 apec1al lo
give lheir husband's
mother."
That letter blew my
mind. Please tell me,
.Ann, how can I /et my
husband to spen a day
with his mother when I
can't evm get him to
telephone her?
And why was the
request directed al the
daughter-in -law ? It
sounds like a
nol-so-subtle hint that
she is keeping her
husband away from his
mOther. Why dldn•t she
. suggest it. to her son?
The facts are these.
My husband does not
have very good feelings
about his mother She 1s
a complainer, a na" and
a bore. She is also an
Pxp<'rt at laymi: on the
14111 It I' 'You always
Sl'Cm too busy for me.
Why don't you call? Why
don 't you include m.e? .. l
I have tried hard to
smooth lhings o\/er to
prevent a lot.al nrt. 1 ·m
the one 't'ho sends the
rlower8on Mother's Day,
the girt at Christmas. I
bake the birthday cake
and buy her a &irl from
"us." tr it were up to ber son he wouldn't give her
the time of day. And In
all fairness I must admit
she Is a selfish, difficult
woman, and I can
understand bls feelings,
althouah I certainly
don't condone them. A
mother is a mother, and
should be treated with r e s p e c t a n d
consideraUon no matter
what. But please, Ann, play
fair. Print thia letter for
all lhe daU&hteta·in·law
who are ln my apot. -
OUR NAME IS LEGION
A•• La~ DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I was dis·
turbed by the advice you
save the 'woman who
D EA R I, t~ G I 0 N :
Thank ynu for
exprenln& your 1ut
feelln11. It wac;
dlstreulng to me to
receive tbou1ands of
letters from other
dau1htera·ID ·law who
uld tbe aame thing.
Wlaat in the world Is
happenln1 to famlllea
anywayf I wtab I had
some eaay answers, but
ala1 -I have none.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: On April
25th, my husband asked
me for a divorce. No
reason -jusl "fed up."
He moved out or the
house but came by often
to see our llWe girl. <He
ls cruy about her).
Last week he told me
he had been U\'inl wlt.h
another woman but 1rew
Ured of her and wan~ to
come home and be a part
or the family again. l complained about the
was thrilled until be save pencmal byJiene of one
me lhe Big News. The ot her co-workers. You
11rl Cwho is 23) went and 1u11eated, without re-
got herself pregnant. His aliJ:lnc it, a poison pen
commenl to me was, letter.
"Whal a dirty trick! " Some people have u
I need lo know bow to odor that cannot be eor-
deal with thia situation. I rectecl with "• coat of
stlll Jove my husband paint." Their f..Unt•
and our Ii ttle girl nffds a would be terribly burt by
d a d d y . P 1 e a ' e au anonymous letter.
adv l 1 e. -BIG Anyone who cares
TROUBLE JN TEXAS enouah to want to help
DEAR TROUBLE: people abouJd have the
'1rst, dear. no womu ce>uraie and decency to
c a o • • I e t b er• 1 lf put a signature on any
pregnant." She •eed1 letter be writes, or better
belp. And your bu.band yet.. be should UY
helped ber. He baa a something direcUy but
le1al re1~n1lblltt1 to gently. At least tbe ex· ---~----the womH. aad mHC cbanee·would be human·
support tbtlr dtlfd utU to·human. not aa
he <or ahe> II no lon1or a anonymous hate letter -
A'llnor. • H.M.H., D.D.S .• WIN·
Dfacml &ll1J problem NETKA
with a coanHlor, a DEAit D.D.S.: Al a.~----........ ~
cleromu. or a lawyer. D.D.S. ,oa llloald kDow -------""."---
We are pleased to announce the opening of our new stor.e at:
2630 AYON STREET. NEWPORT BBACH
..
P S • · PAMTS SPECIAL • •• * CH!MIM DE FER
CHE S
HJ.$. 20%0FF!
g• I &266 GOLDEMWEST-WISTMIMSTIR rti•oo• IMU&,,. WllTMIMITll NAW
.'-J ,.. PHONE: 893-4431 ..
lo'-.:.!\.. Mon.-Thurs.-10-6/Fft,-,10-9/Sat.-10-6/Sun.-12-5
I
FACIAL 49c TISSUE
Scottie -White or A sorted-200 ct
Heinz Ketchup • 79c
Rich and thick-large 32 91. ai.i:e
Rice Mixes ••••• 33e
M .J ~;-all varieties in 6 0t pkg .
Mint-Apple Jelly 49c
Smucker'e-g~at .with lamb! 10 oi:
Stewed 39c Tomatoes
S & W pttferred quality-16 oz can
Safflower Oil •• s1 59
Hollywood, for health! 32 oz btle
, Raisin Bran •••. &9c
.Sliinner'e-cn old favorite! 15 oz
Margarine • • • • . . 59c
Chiffon Soft-I pound cartol')
, All tlavors-Springfjeld Vi gal.
Dressing :SS ••. 59c
S8'ien St--creamy tmooth! 8 oz
Cat Eood ••••••• &1s1
:All varietf ea--Sprinitfield 61 : oz
Spaghetti •••••• 45c
L8 Rosa Refc. or Thin-t lb pkit
Cascade ••••••• s 139
For di11hwal'heni-50 o7.(20c off)
T.d s439 I e ~'fl ...... .
Delightful' -that's the only way to describe it! Whether you choose to roast a tender leg o' Iamb, or
broil several of those tasty chops -they're sure to ~u} almost in one voict· ... "Delightful !
SMALL LOIN
LAMB
CHOPS
F~h! We:.ttrn! l.i.S.l>,A. Ch1111:e
FRESHI
WESTERN I
BONELESS LOIN
CHoPs $29?
Surato~n rut lr&h l .S.D.A. Cho1u·
LARGE LOIN
LAMB
CHOPS
Frl',h' \\ E-'<lf~m' l .::-, D.A. Chnict·
Roast one of these beauties to 1 rich &olden
doneness, list. to the r...U of
~ when ,.. put it Oii
the table! ls it'' be"1&
cant4, ntdt for die
tqmslons tf appreciatitn,
.. -lfter h --ii
onr ~ c..t the siCfls of
utistactm Then. sit
~ nl ICCIPt tilt coqliaulb
Ground Lamb •• 79~
Fresh! •.• and it's U.S.D.A. Choice
leg o'la•h ........................ ~l514
Tender and sucrulc-nt ... oflering flavor they're i;urc lo uppreci.1te' Htn: .. real plcllliure -and the ultimate in i,atbfoction!
SMALL LOIN
LAMB
ROAST
Frmh Western U.S DA. Choice
WE FEATURE CEHUINE
MILK-FED VEAL
The real thing -so you can be i.urc!
LARf.E LOIN
BONELESS LAMB $299
ROAST •
Fresh Western U.S.D.A. Choice •
Corned letd ~KET.· •••••••••••••••••• II!
U.S.0.A. Choice beef • lean and tender aa can be, flavor enchanced by own very special cure! Whole or point halC -Sliced Bacon ••. s1 2~
El Rancho'11 thicker ··ra:.ch ~tyle'"
7 Bone Roast •• 89~
Chuck cut ll.~.0.A. Choice beef Beef Rib Bones 79~
l.J.S.D.A Choice -to bake or b·b..q
. Sausage RAUM mu • Sl 4!
We make it as authentic as con be!
0 Bone Roast •• 99i
Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Bratwurst •••••• s 14!
Pork, milk·fed veal, fine aeaaoning
\
Ground Beef ~c:s1°! Steaks .== .s1 2! Ground Beef ~,s1 2!
Lean -does not exceed 22', fat
ROWD
BONO.ESS BEEF $149
ROAST •
Chuck cut Chn1ce 11houlder clod
Does not •xceed 15"'1 fat! 3 per lb.
SPLIT 69 BROILE• !
l.ar({e Grade "A'• fryer with giblet.a
S uper Fresh Pro duce
0005 not exceed 15'"; fat content
CHUCK
STEAK 69!
Cent.er cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Bananas. ......... 17!
Extra foncy quality '. •. Central America's fine:;t!
RED
YAMS 29!
U.S. ~o 1 ... excellent bakinc'
,
COLDEN
DWC!OUS
APPLES
.
4 ·s1
lbs
Golden ripe and extra fancy
Serve slices en cereal for a breakfast treat!
• I
Brussell 29.c Sprouts
Garden fresh ••• all sreen
Delicatessen PrtC·f',.. i," ri!r(·' Tf.11r. Orr. !.'!
thf'1:uµr "-rd. Ort If< Buddig' ~ Mec1ts ~~z 39c Opm dflily f:J 111 9 .~urc'ay f(I 111 7
Nr1 ·"'"'"" '" c!rc '<·r.• •
FRESH
TROUT
Deviled Crabs ••
Fresh Perch •••
Fillets .•• freah from tho oocan
Cooked Shrimp '
Shrimp so •••••• s
White shrimp .. No. 1 quail~
Mahi Mahi ••••• s
Fillet of
SOLE
TOOTH
PASTE
El Rancho's own label •.. c yeera old and 86 proof reducoo J .00 quart
Weight Watchers89c
J>rOce.ed che~ 11icei-lO oz pkg
DressingROQllJou •• s1 39
Bob's family 1~ze 16 oz bottle
Variefy Meats • 5139
Oscar Mayer's 12 oz Variety Pak
Mozzarella11ozuu. sl 69
Preciou• (12 01 ••• 1.49) (I oz ••• He)
·BONBEL 'or 99c
BABYBEl
C.hetf;e in tht" french IT'ar,nt>r' fl 01
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES ••• SlJ9
Mnrv .. :ltrn'" nlcl lime i:••.dnr""' :Z lh
BLACK PEPPER ............... 79¢
~rhilhn,,:'~ linr icnnd-·4 u11°nr" tin
l
Kamchatka ••••• s499
A vodka of quality! Quart bottle ·
Sunnybrook •••• 5529
Smooth blended whi. key-Quart
GILBO $999
GIN
Now ~ave 1.00 on the J.i5 liter . -
MR. CW.N ••••••••.•••••••••• 98c
I l1111!!th11t.I clunn-~ en (lk eftl
GI.ASS PLUS ••••••••••••••••• 59C
( :11111!1 rlt'nntt in :I.! ounrt rtnll ~•rd
7
VOL. 70, NO. 285, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A . WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 12 1977
Ba,.,,._fl In ~
f U ooks. as fhou&fi Hiinlington Beacl}'s
O.cean View High Schoen needs a bigger
bike rack. Students, apparenUy figuring
the "No Parking" sign d<>e$n't apply to
them. are parking their bicy~les thusly at
the Warner Avenue campus. One creative
rider even has determined bow to park in
double deck fashion so he won't have to
walk so far along the fence line.
project;
Sopte 185 single ~edroom
apartment units of S4015qu,are feet
l\fe e~ted to reni for PJH per montb. accordinC to SteptieJt
Kohl4'l' <:A the H\U1tln&t9n ·Beach
P.l~ Departll\ent.
Tlie' con$lruction wlll be
prlatelr, developed but the fid r'1 (OY~~etlt ~!11 Pl.)' "'t pa Olt.JMt fell\ Wbla; ia 25 petetnt
m thU ~~citizen's net
JIJ u1PoU1iu iriC01De. •
Teen Girls
Lured Into
Sex Work?
'
NEWTON, N.J. CAP) -A
cabinet maker and his wife have
been accused of luring high
school gJrls into a prostitution
operation they ran from their
home in Wantage Township
By KATHY CUNCY
Ol "'9 DIMiy ~-$'6ff Orange County supervisors
took additional steps Tuesday
toward the purchase of park land
which could link Huntington
Beach Central Park with the
Bolsa Chica marsh.
· Supervisors unanimously
ordered a study aimed at finding
out how much it might cost to
acquire 120 to 150 acres or park
1 and stretching from Central
Park to Pacific Coast Highway.
In addition, county planners
will seek agreements with both
state authorities and Huntington
Beach city officials for joint
planning in the marsh area
Last June supervisors set aside
$2 million to help finance what is
envisioaed as a possible :.>-acre
park stretching south from
Central Park and around the
marsh.
The link would run alon1
Huntington Mesa bluff seaward
and also stretch around the
marsh reaching Warner Avenue.
Supervisors' action Tuesday
included steps toward obtaining
the first link. that running
directly seaward from Central
Park. Action on the remainder will
depend on how successful state
authorities are at obtaining up to
924 acres or the Bolsa Chica
manlh, as well as Hunt1n1ton
Beach city plans for the area
along Warner and adjacent to
Huntington Harbour.
This year's state budget
includes $4.6 million to buy the
marsh. \
But what was not known when
supemsors set aside S2 mllllon
in local funda tor the llnka3e
park in June was that the state
purchase requires a Sl million
contribut1QO rrom local aiencle$.
Bob Fisher of the count~'
Environmental Management
Agency told SUPffrvisors part of
the county's negotiation wlth
state authorities would be aimed
at learning lf the county can
provide planolng assistance or
other help to make Ul> the St
roillion without making a cub
conttttiution.
The state Lands Commission
Bandit Hits
Burger Stand
IDHunt~on
Jobler said today that
cOl.lStrUc:UOli ls a~uled to tart
sOD'letime aft.er the first OI the
year. ""lie said that an envlronmeotal
impact report will be prepared by
a coosulting firm and must be
reviewed by the Southern
Caltfornta Association of
Govemments aod by state of-
ficials.
Sussex County authorities m rted Prank Barone. ST, Tues· day with impairing the morals of
a minor, e.-rnally abusing
fef!Uales r the age of 16 and
pr Ut on. His wife, Diane. was
chi.ti ti\ ahUna anCI abetlill&
him.
Authoritl said al least nine
g~rls were l\lfed into prostitution
s1J1ce September llf16.
"He would pick up young
CemaJe hitchhikers or he would
use young alrls as babysitters
and in each case he would try to
talk them into working for him as
a prostitute," said pi:osecutor
George Dauett.
Mob Leade~s Kin
Slain in Florida
/\ scar-faced gunman robbed a
Huntington Beach hamburger
stand of $100 Tuesday n\ght,
police reported today.
The robbery took place about
8 :25 p.m. at the Jack-ln·the·Box
hamburger stand at 16311 Beach
Blvd., police aid.
The gunman, who also had a
mustache. ordered the lwo
employesondutytolieont.benoor
while . he cleaned out the usb
resister, said police Lt. JobD
Foster.
The robber then dashed acroes
the street where a female with
long dark hair waited In a white
sedan.
The pair ned south on Beach
Boulevard, witnesses told police.
The project also requires a
conditional use permit from the
city when plans are completed.
Several environmental
concerns were voiced at the Ume
plan.n)ng for the project was
•t>PJ'OVed. Questions dealt with
overburdened sewase lines now
serving the area, drainaee
problems and the fact that an
earthquake fault lies near the
area. • Kohler sales that these factors
will be studied by tbo EIR and in•
special geolocical report
requ.in.t ,;y the government.
PeoJfle 62 years of age and over
would qualib to live In tbe
. project.
Kobler said applications by
renters can be made after
construction starts with eithertbe
developer or the Orange County
Housing Council.
Barone. reached at his
attorney's office Tuesday, denied
the charges. "They are blowing
notbin• into a big thane up
there." About six etrls "hung"
around hi.a house for a Ume, be
saldI addina they wer' friends of
his I ve-ln babyiltter.
Daueu 1ald charaes would
• aOt bo ~t apinst any of the
nine teen·aters. all high school
studd\ta living with their parents
in tbe general vicinity. "We are
loolu.ng upon them as victims,·'
he salcl
He added, hoWever, thal the of.
fic:e was exasnlning whether
char'-es should be brought
a1ain.st y ol the customers.
BAY HARBOR ISLAND, Fla.
CAP> -'the stepson of
underworld fifure Meyer Lansky
was shot to deattl today in what
police sptculate was a 1angtand
revenge killing.
Richard Schwaru, 47. was shot
once as be sat lo hla car behind a
restaurant he owned in tbis
exclusive resort city between
Miami and Mlaml Beach, police
said.
His body was found shortly
after 9 a.m. ED1' behind the
Inside restaurant. Details ot the
slaying were not immedl•tely
available.
Schwartz, son of Lansky's
wife, Thelma, had been
scheduled to 10 on trial Nov. 28
CHP.. Ng,bs Speeder
lnL~Hills .
A San Diego youth apparently
fried to swallow the fOS.n' he
bad bttn clutching and liluing
for protecUon 3'hursday as be led
California Highway PatrOl cars
on a high speeCl freeway chase
from Los Alamh.os to w1una
Hills. ..
When the pursuit ended in a
crackup at 5:15 p.m., just north
of LaJte torest Drive, CHP of-
ficer. ~ findinc the 1trinc
of religious beads wedged lnto
the mouth of 20-year-old Carlos
Lom iSantana.
When officers pulled \ht \leads out. they roWld that ui: crucifix
normally attaehed to roearles
was mi1atn• and presumed
caught ID tu1ped'1 tliroat.
La»ma Hilli paramecstcs were'
summoned to the 1ctne but couldn't. find the cros-i. A cowity
lire department. 1poke1man said
toda,y tMJ presumed 1t bad been
1wallowcd and would "ahow up
eventu ly.''
taken to Orange County Jail.
A CHP spokesman said
Santana was booked oo charges
of driving under thinfluence of
drugs and reckless driving.
The suspect was all~edly fint
spotted drlvinc at more than 60
miles an hour atone the center
divider shoulder of the San Dieao
Freeway near Los Alamitos.
Officers gave chase in the
rush-hour traffic but Santana
allegedly floored the accelerator
and reached speeds of more than
110 during the 2JO.mlle punuit.
The suspect allegedly swung
off the San Diqo Ftwway at the
Laguna Freewa,y Junction, sPed
over to the Santa Ana Freeway
and continued south. Officers
. who got cloM d\arllll the ehaso
said Santanl ~riodic:all:r kilffd
the ro1ary he was boldtng.
The CHP said Santana finally
lost control of his cat and
smashed into the center divider
reoce jwit after merline back
onto the San Dle,o Freeway
north ot Lake Forest Drive.
Chow; a seven-foot. 500-pound Kodiak bear, gets a big
kiss from hts k~eper, Liza DeBedts. following his
capture in Hialeah, Fla. Chow is still under the effects
of a tranquilizer used to capture him following hiJ
escape two days ago.
on charaes of killing bis drinkii11
companion, 29-year.old Crals
Terlaca, son of unde,...,,orld
figure Vincent Tertaca.
A number of known mob
figures attended Terlaca's
funer,.t.
7 ~Jl9-inted
To V acanciea
In HuntU,gwn
H /F
POLICEMAN CALLS FOR ORDER OUTSIDE COURT
Spectators Pu1h for Seat• at Bakke Hearing
Cox Def ends UC's
Admission Policy
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Former Watergate prosecutor
Arcbib•td Cox told the U.S. Supreme Court today that a
special admiasions pro1ram al a
University ol Call!ornia medical
school is nffdedto help minorltie.
because "the other alternatives
augeestedaimply will not work.•·
In orll argument. tn the case ol
Allan Paul Bakke, Cox delended
tbe to-ealled affirmative act.Ian
program UHd b7 lhe unlveniey'a
med aebool at Davls. Ht said tM
PJ'Oil&Dl aided minorities "long
victimized by racial
discnmm.uoo.''
Bakke, who i1 white, suc-
c essfull Y-challenced the
unlvemty s protrarn before tbe
Calilomla Supreme Court. He
claimed it made him a victim ol
raclaJ discrimination.
B a k1k e ' 1 • • r • v e r s e
discrimination .. case 11
conalder'ed by many
c:Oalti~l 1cbolara to Mt the
atace for tbe high court 'a moat
important statement on race
relations since lt outlawed
.seere1aU0023 yeara ago.
At stake • Batte'
future or fflrma •~ eti
pro1nms, un ln th• last U
)lea.J"S fo live l~taJ DH~._,.,.
to en~ embeirl .nd w(Mneft
iD edutatloii and business.
Bakke'• attorn•1. Reynold
Colvin ot J'r.nclaeo, ~ed
the Justices to atflrm the
California Supreme Court de-
cillon.
Colvin u1ued tbat lb•
Constitution's auarantee of
"equal protecUoo" for aU citluns
Is violated when a school takes
into a(COW'lt an applicanl's race -maldna thattactora "crucial ..
one.
'"nle wie ol race a.a a bull for
adiniMion to a medical school, or
for erantlrig any other right&, ii
improper," he ar1ued.
Pair Named
To Board
Three men were appointed
TUaday to Mata on the Sunset
Beach Sanitary District by
Or°'e eounty aupentson.
The appOlntment.a were made
because the candidates were
runntn1 un~hallenced ror the
seats in the Nov. 8 election.
Appointed were Michael Grif·
fitb, 181'8 PacUlc Coast
Highway, and Robert P. Crawfis.
16329 Pacific Ave., Sunset Beach,
for four·year terms. Ivan
Lig1ett, 16582 Pacific Ave.,
Sunset Beach, was appointed to a
two-year term.
DAILY PILOT
., ........
CENTEA OF STORM
Petitioner Bakke
. l ' Services Set
For lligria
V. Berggren
Funeral servicfl will be held
Friday for lngred V. Beruren or
Huntington Beach, famed as a
salad maker for more than 12
years, who died last Friday after
a lengthy illness. Sbewaa4'.
A native of Sweden. Mias
Berggren presided over a vast
array of salads while working at
the Villa Sweden Smorsasbord,
first In Huntington Beach and
later formostofherlZ yeva with
the firminCoronadel Mar.
Born in Boliden, Sweden, she
ten her family to emigrate to
America more than a decade ago.
"Sbe w~ a beautiful person,"
sa1s llrs. Herta Blacklund, who
heads the Villa Sweden
oraaniiatlon. "She was such a
happy, loving person, always so
conscientious ... ''
Survivors Include her father
Arvid; a brother Gosta, both of
Sweden; a brother. Stxter, of
Australia; plul sisters Ruth
Wahlund and Astnd Lundstrom,
of Sweden.
"She eave herself to her work
and the church," says the Rev.
Richard Carlson, pastor of the
Wesltnibster Chrlatlan
Assembly, of which Miss
§eraren was a member.
•. He wlll conduct funeral
services Friday at 10 a.m. In
l'lerce Brothers·Smlth's
Mortuary lb Huntington Beach,
Just acrosa the street trom the
restaurant where she started
work In Ahlerica.
Her &Shes will be lnurned in
Sweden by members of her
farriily, who are comina to the
OranceCoastfortherites.
· Mw Bergrren'• wish was that
friends may make tnemorlal
contributions lt they de~re, to the
Fred Wein~rf Honduras Chapel
through lhe Westminster
Christian Aasem bly, 14642
Bushard St., Westminster, In care
of the Rev. Carlson.
..
3 Foa0d Guilty
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A one·
tJme Colombian model, her 21·
ye•r-old daughter and a Swias
man have been convicted ol flnt·
de1ree murder in the stabbln1 of
travel a1ent Donald Tubach. 47.
laat Christmas Eve. A Jury de·
liberated almost three days before conv1cung Mrs. Tubach,
her dautchter Patricia and
Federico Frank, 23, of l..uaano,
Switzerland, late Tuesday.
·Qiliet Night
Fews nlabt as a quiet
one.
However, t check or the police log revealed that omcera
were dispatched hither and yon(.() check out:
-A loud street sweeper operating ln a sbopplnt center.
-A I~ crew of construction workers atayin& late on a
job.
-A loud motorcycle.
--A loud burglar alarm.
-A complaint of someone playin& a sterf'IO sel too loudly.
A loud self-proclaimed musician who wu pracUclnl hil
bongodruma late into the night.
Police noted that Tuesday ni1bt wu foHY, addlnlJ that
they always aet a lot of noise complalnta on fouy nl1bta
because Co1is a natural amplifier of sound.
E',....PageAl
SURPLUS •••
After the split vote. Hundley
said he was not really opposed t.o
the land transaction but the
method in which it was proposed.
More study was needed, he said.
Hundley said some or the funds
should go lo projects such as
athletic field improvements at
newly opened Ocean View High
School.
Board President Don
MacAJlister warned that if the
school district did not act within
two months to buy the land for
Huntinilon Beach High School,
"It could be l0&lfor good."
MacAJllster said if the land is
not purchased by the higb school
district, the Huntington Beach
Company may build housing on
it.
·'This may prove very
embarrassing and could
jeopardUe our relationship with
Westminster and Huntin&ton
Beach re&ardJnl joint use auee-
ments. ··said Mac Allister.
The land near Huntin1ton
Beach Hi&h School is now used
for park.in& by perm isslon ol lhe
Huntinitoo Beach Company.
Ken Helfrich, the Ocean View
High School booster e)ub
president. told trustees some of
the land deal funds should go
toward eQuipi:nent for athletics
Bl his achoo).
. But MacAlllster said state law
restricts use of the funds for land
acquisition.
Hundley said that if some of
the land sale funds went to Ocean
View Hieh School for building
projects or athletic field
1mprovements, "It would free up
more money for equipment."
Tnistees will hold a special
Jolnt meeliag wilb lbe
Westminster City Council to
discuss the proposed land deal
and joint use aareement.
Th• meet.in& will be beld aext
Tuudat)' at 7 :st p.m. at
Westminater City Hall.
Space Slwttk
Simulation
'Succeaful,'
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE <AP> -In lts most
realistic test and futeat fll&ht to
date, the Space Shuttle
Enterprbe land«t safely today
after a diving descent atmulallng
a return from space.
Flying for the first time
without a streamllned tailcone
used in the lhr~ prevaous flights
to extend at.s ~lidln& range, the
shuttle dropped more steeply and
swiftly, touchlna down only 21h
minutes alter separaUne from
the 747 jet that bore it aloft.
Minus the tailcone, the sbuWe
waa about 30 feet shorter with a
blunt, Instead of pointed, rear
end. nUs made the bulky space
transport craft less buoyant and
alao cauaed Lbe canler to strain
and •hake while taklac the
Enterprbe to launct; altitu4e.
The added dra1 durtni the
cUDU> over the desert caused the
separation to be delayed by
minutes while th4i 747 trualed
blgber. ·
After c'astinC• ree ot the
mother sHlp, the 1huttlo '1ras
plded by astrol\~ Joe Enale.
45, and RlcharCI Truly, 39,
throuah a few quick maneuvera
before toucb1n1 down on a dry
lake bed at about 2'° miles peT
hour, aome"h•t toter than
previousJlh:lln8J.
Board Saves
Westminster
High Farm
A nine-acre, student-run farm
at Westmlnater Hilb School
received a abot in the arm Tuel·
day ni&ht.
Huntinatoa Beach Union llieh
School Distrid officials present-
ed a revUed plan which would
prevent the farm from beln1
squeezed out by a proposed park
nearby. . Trustees took no action on the
plan Tuesday since the propoeed
park a&reement with the Clty of
West.mlnat.er could not receive
final approval until next year.
The proposed plan actually
adds about one-hair acre to th•
farm. 1l would allow a buffer
zone between the propoeed park
and ex1stinl animal pens, of-
ficials said.
Students were afraid the
horses, steers, chickens and
other animals would be
endangered if the park wu built.
Farm teacher Charles Ramos
said be ii pleued witb t.M new
plan.
Ramos said 40 baby hoes were
added to the farm Tuesday.
Driver Injured
In Auto Crash
Larry Dean Decker, 2$, of
Huntington Beach 1VU reported
in good coodiUon today at Colla
Mesa Memorial HospltaJ after
sutrertni Injuries In a tramc ac·
cl dent Tuesday.
Decker, of 311 Memphis Ave ..
waa hurt when bis car coWded
with one driven by Laurie Bennett
Lloyd, ~ ol 12$~ JM!e Ave.,
Balboa Island:> The •c t curred ab()ut lo Lm. OD.~~lt
Road norti'of .Baler
Police said the iheath wu
found Monday near the small
stream ln a densely wooded area
where the parka-clad bodies
were discovered. The Sirls had
disappeared Sunday whUe
playt.ne.
Autbcifttiel say they have not
found tbe murder weapon.
Flat• at Soutbsate El•·
mentary School. wbicb tbe lirb
attended. new at half ·Staff Tues·
day. "U they·can fly them for
generals, they can flY them for
kid.a, too," said ~u,,todlan Jlm
, Wint.era.
Meanwlllle. abOtat IO mll
away in carrou eouni,. Ila~
police said a t-year-old boy was
found sate this momln& mof9
tb an ta hours after tie
disappeared. Troopers 11ld
Thomas Doebrer waa round
wanderinl al°'1& a road abOUt
two mlles from bi1 ruul
Finb=me. J:l.e had Ian been abOOt 4 .p.m. ~
day, Pl&YtililD.frOat_of_~boUse.
1'be ~r •wannut w
run aw.y from home ~r !It tight
wt th a falli111 memtier, tti~liid.
Jf<Jfe UulntlOO:penou, &IODI· wltb a bloOdhoQDd_~a-~ ."a 1tate
JOUee beUeopt.ei", b.&Cl ~en.,part ln the Carroll CO\mtj .le.arch, :~a ...... -.,. .... ''li,!l"J~~-
Re,. All 'previous U.S . manned
space fillhll ended wlth eoeUy
and complex ocean aplubdowna. China ..••••••.•••••• $ 2649.00
Oedenia •••••••• , • • • 1229.00
Deer Permits
•
Now Available
Thlrty·elaht unclahn.ed
perm.it& for antlerless deer bunt. ln th• TtoaJa re1lon or the
Cleveland National Foreat., iDd
on S..\a Catalina llland. wW.IO
on 1ale 1'bund1y, 1U a.m. alt.he
Loni Beach regional offtce Cl( the Departmentofll'llb and Gan\ .
Permit.a wUl b4J ottered on a
rlrst come, flrst ·served
basis.There are el&ht left for the
Tenaja hunt and thirty left for the
Santa Catalina Island hunt; the
lotter Includes an $80 fee.
For further Information call
Information Officer of the
O~partment or Fish and Game,
Ralph Young. at590·S126.
Drawer dock • • • • • • • • • • 359.00
Rec&an"'Lv uble. . . • • • • 849.00
Splat b.ltk arm chair. • • • • 360.00
Spla\ bick sido chair. • • • • 299.00
r
I
.
Polie!ftg :by Pilots
'
May Help Airport
For years, Meadowlark Airport ln Huntingtpn Beach
has been the target of residents who want it closed down
beca\.ISe of what they believe are noise problems and satet.y hazards.
It seemed airport opponents were on the verge of
getlir\g ttie1r woy when an airplane crashed into an airport
building in August and the city council instructed its
attomey to find wa.ys to close down the private airfield as a
public nuisance.
The &uncil has changed directions recently. however.
and decided to cease closure activities. Instead. a
committee \s to analyze and help solve specific problems
ppponent chdms this means the airport will
simply continue to operate as it has in the years past.
But this rtf8Y not be true.
An encouraaing sian is that posture taken by the pilots
themselves.
They promLe to set up a Meadowlark chapter of the
Orange County ~1\pts Association.
They say lh~Jl install an optical de\•ice designed to
cut down on levels Ot engine noise on landing approaches.
il'hey also say they'll help-residents check out violators and
will take complaints to the Federal Aviation Agency if the:.
are blatant.
If the pilots do indeed carry out their program and can
successfully apply peer pr~sW-e to other fliers, this may
be the most positive step yet to emerge in the MMdowlark"
controversy.
Street Signals Crossed
Coloma Juarez property owners surprised a group of
Fotintain Valley city oCCicials in telling them what type of
public works projects they feel should be started in their
SO.year-old neighborhood.
City officials were under the impression for the past
two years that Colonia Juarez residents wanted three new
cul·d~sac-type streets built where dirt alleyways are·now.
But about 60 Colonia residents said the first thing they·
want is a plan to builct sidewalks. gutters and other
improvements on the neighborhood's four existing streets.
The 60 residents and property owners who confronted
city officiats made their point quite clear. The new streets
can wait a while. ,
It is clear city of f1cials should have been more in touch
with what the Colonia residents wanted.
And Colonia residents should learn from this
experience that they should keep in closer contact with of·
ficiats at city hall.
'lb<i5e items resolved, work on the sidewalks and other
street Improvements should ~tn as soon as possible.
It would appeal'. Ole local cities won a victory ol sorts
after skirmishing with CalTrans over two tnajor higbwa ·
resUrf acj.n projecl'f.
City people ln Huntington Beach, Ne\\l>Qrt Beach and Costa klesa got their hackles up when the state agency
announced p!ans to re-pave tour miles of Newport
Boulcv rd nd nine miles of. Pacific Coast Highway this
summer.
Th sere ms of outrage and anguish apparently
-carried all the way to Sacramento because work is just
now getting under way.
In spite of the delay of schedule to miss summer traf-~
fie, we shouldn't be overwhelmed by the thougbUulness of
the folks at CalTrans. 'I'heY may be pavina at night. to avoid blocking traffic.
but they're painting the newly paved lanes on Newport
Boulevard in the middle of the peak traffic hours during
ttieday.
Wha~ will happen whe? they start on Coast Highway?
• Oplnlone ••pressed In the 8P8Q8 abOve are thOM of the Dally Pilot.
Othir vtews exp"*'-d on this page· are thOM of ~r authOra and
artlats. Reader comment la Invited. Addreea The Dally Piiot,
P.O. Sox 1560, Cotta M ..... CA 92626. Phone (714) 042-:4321.
Boyd / Trick Questions
Byt..M. BOYD
... Trigcer queries'' are
those questions which l]avo
be~ knoWn to start ramlly
fights. OUr Love and War
man is coUecUng a list or
same. From divorce records.
They're not. nece11arily
crltlcal, insulting or de1rad-
lng, not ln themselves. It's
what they lead to. howe-ver 1 mysteriously. These are
trigger queries; "Pancakes
again?" "Isn't lho 1ame over
yet'?" "A melon bal\ c.._ttc~?
How Much?" "Don't you
want f,lain C\ngttale
tonight 1 ' And: "Db you think
Ws alittletoo1mall ?''
Surveys prove a lot or·
tourist p ck mq ta· with
swimrnillg pools neo though
they have no intention or
going .,:aWinimtng. They Ju!it
beheve the placel With the
Po<>ls will abo b. better
eqw~o mis
With all the fl1httng
that's goin.t on between
the different tac~. thla
country should have its
name chan1ed from
United St.ates lo Divided Stat.es.
. L.C.
9tM"'1 ... c--.t1 -,... ...... ., ~..-. ......... . _,....,,"""" ............. .. -...... ..... .,..,... ...... .. .....,... ""'
'
Q. ··wruch states ·permit
personalized car license
plates?"
A. Easier to name the
stata Ul.at don't: Alabama.
Colorado, IJUnois, Indiana, Iowa. Mississippi, MissOUri.
Montana and South Dakota.
Q. ·'How many teeth has a
borae?"
AAO.
• ';J
Q. "Has anybody ever
really disproved Adolf
lfltler's theory th•t select,ive
6reedlng could produce a
super human being? ..
A. Jn a way, it was .
disproved. Long ago. But not
wilh humans. because
humans don't breed
selectively. On the contrary.
Tt was disproved with dogs,
which have been selectiwly
bred for centuries, still
without ever turning oul a
super dog
Rapid Reply· Figure 55
percent or your grownup
v. elghl is water Lose less
than a fin.h Of it, YOU "!IUrVIV~.
Lose more , you die .
qen~l,y. generll,t!y
The 20,000 books about
ch~ss txceed in nlimber the
books about all other games
put together, rm told One or
the1;e chess books cite•
studies to prove tl'lat a good
memory is not the most
significant faculty a tof chess
player can possess. no al all
Imagination is. according to
this authority. The mo~t
remarkable chess
performances, it's sa1Ci, itre
not executed, the way a
pianist rende~ a tune, but arc
created, the way a composer
dreams up such.
'
Jack Anderson
Energy Chiefs Tilt to
WASUJNGTON • James
Schlesinger·~ ri~e from political
Obt\cur1ty to poht1cal power has
been smooth and subtle. He has
the u1r more of a college
prole$sor than an energy cur.
But betund the ptpe smoke and
contemplative muner, he has
the heart or an industrial tycoon.
Ile has been an unabashed
advocate o( nuclear power, for
exa mple ,
t:'ver since he
came out of
the Atomic
Energy
Comm1ss1on
in the early
1~70s. The big
utility
t•om paot e~
desperately
want lo dev·
elop cner~y. of course. that will
utilize their ex1st1ng grid
systems and permit them to go
on sellin.: electricity to the
populace. A more revolutionary
form of ener1Y. such as solar
power, might put the utility
industry out or business.
There \s disquieting evidence
that Schlesinger may be quietly
stacking tbe new Energy Dept.
wtth subordJnates who sh~ his
enthusiasm for nuclear power.
Top policymaking positions will
go. for example. lo John O'Leary
a nd Dale Myers, who are
regarded as nuclear proponents.
Dr James Llverman. a
nuclear apologist. bas t>een
mentioned as Schles1n1er"s
c hoice to be hu new
environmental hter. This
possibility has so outraged
environmentalists that•
ro•tlit1on has dashed off a\.
private letter lo Schlesil)I~
'tl(..arning that they "would
oppose'' Uverman 's nomination.
SCHLESINGER'S rnost
controvel"31al choice, however.
may turn out to be Robert
Thorne, who heads the San
Francisco ofrice or ttie Energy
Research and Development
Ad ministration c ER DA>.
Scblesinte-r has Ti,ornt in mind
as his assist•nl secretary in
churgc of technology. an office
that will control the Energy
Qept. 's nuclear operatiot)S.
:Thorne not only wu.Jn ehar.ie
of n clear arraiu ln n
He us~d $113,250 of the
taxpayers' money lo establish
the Energy A war~ess ProJect
an idea advanced by a registered
nuclear lobbying group known as
the California Council for
Environmental and Economic
Balance <CCEEB>
There ls a suspicion that the
Energy A\\ateness Projecl was
really supposed to make the
public and Congress more aware
of nuclear enerey, althouah \
CCEEB spokesman told us lhe
project was intended lo inform
the public o n all energy
alternatives.
THE CCEEB st'ated in its orig.
inal propo1>al , without
mentioninl(' nuclear power, that
"we would want participants to
write lhe1r con.1ressmen to ask
them to support s pecific
legislation, pass resolutions.
write letters to the editor ...
Tborne's office adopled this
idea to the tune of $113,250 over
the objections of at least one
subordinate who warned in an
internal memo: "l believe such
an effort to be both ill·conceived
and misdirected." Ile added with
emphasls: "The logic ot the
proposal not only escapes me;
Yr. bU alle1edlf. l, nn apparently "lmpro :.-;.;:;.i:~;;,,ri,...
bying erfort to iftrluence
Congress lo I k kindly upon
nuclear power1
IF THE Canal Zone la aucb a
thorn m her std«!, why dOesn't
Panama offer to reimburae us l9r
our investments! That WQ\.dd be
the de<'ent, businesslike thlruc lO
do. Why not flvo the U.S.
taxpayer a break for once?
lt looks very much s lf this
treaty gives Pan rn all the
i<oodies on a silver platter while
the U.S. 1et-1 nothiD b t
obllgaUons!
l 'm afraid that the world wouf#
judge Uncle Sam as a paper tiger
who caves ln to blackmail and 1s
afraid to all ck up tor his rights.
HENRY R. BENNIK .
1Uf16t• EN481
To the Editor.
Your editorial entitJed. "How
High ls Uf{Jy" t5ept. 21) Could
mo!>t probably also be asS<)('ltted
w1th "TheT1pofthtlceb rg" •
The Transceiver Antenna
height restrictive ordinance
represents nothing more than
another minority segmtnted
ordinance h.Y the Cjty of ~ountaln
Valley. which is )Clst ono Yn0tt of
many dominoes being stacked by
the city planning comm1s onJor
the eventual otdlblQC
passed whJch wtll bike av the
ril(hl'I of property ownel'i 6t tl'ie
m ujorlty or the cttlzeni; In
Fountuin Valley covenng many
Important UHpel.'l ll or our
personul hves
or (.'Oncern to all citizens of
Founttlin Valley s hould be
passible future ordinances that
would restrkt the height of T. V.
antennas. and then to be followed
by an ordmance that prohibits
external T. V. antennas totally.
Also. what about tccreabonal
Toth 1wr:
Our two·laced illunUngton
Bench City Councll did It .,aln to
the loot residents. They nut on a
big 1ct when w had our last
plane cr~h. They pretended to
have sympathy and concern for
those in harm· way They were
going t.o declare the airport
public nuisanct: .
The city lold us to only aet ~i1natures Crom under the Ol1ht
pattern. Then they counted
lgnatur pUoti aot from all
over south rn California.
•
but, its outline would .appenr to
be an excellent plan Coron ()f the
"reatest political bOondogales ot
modern times."
The suspic\ons of ltep. Jam
Jellords, R.·Vt.1 hp.ve also been
aroused. He nu aslCed the
General Accounting Office to
investlaate the projett. The
taxpayers' mon.ey was used, h
char1es. for what ppears to b
"improper purposes. includlnj
possibly the use of •PPrQS>riat.ed
funds to lobby the Congress OI\
{egislative matters ...
'(>OT POLICY -T'1le men
around President Carter have
been quarreling behind lbe
scenes over what words to put in
his mouth on tho marijuana
question.
One faction favored .a more
sympathetic attitude toward pot
smoking. They managed to &et
their ideas into an early draft or
the drug policy messaie tha\
Carter asked his ajdes to writ
for hlm. This was approved b
the president's health advise
Dr. Peter Bourne.
It included such sentences a
"marijuana has become a
established fact throughout o
society and Che sky ba no
THESE phony POUticrans
eyeing their future pqllt
eareer1. Well, it wasn't out-ot
town pilots who put them in of
flee, It wus we fools who lw
here. •
Our double dealing city coc.rnct
ml1ht find there are more vote
lh l hate 8lrports than there an! p1f6ts thatny.
J.COWNS
A.F.COWNS
Deef!.'IW'CI
To the Editor:
J )VOUld. like ld rescind my
previou s teller to you
c:ompllmenting Harriett Wl.Cder.
On tho danterous airport
sUuatlon she did a comPtete turn-
about hen she eyed th out·
of·town slgnaturea. We were told
by city attorney ll> OhlY 1et
algnalures from under flJght pattern as that wa all coum
would consider.
Let this be Mtice that no
homeowner wlll attend another
one or city council's stupld,
useless, time·wast1ng ad-hac
meetings.
About 10 homeowner11 T
keeping their c:ameras loaded
and taking notes. We will •J\'<?
pictures and facts t anyon
•Uing city or airport, whether
homeowner or injurc!d pilots nd
their children. W ~vcn have
movie cameras going.
ALVIN OAKDEN
uclea:r
fallen" and "research studi~
indicate it may hive bcheflclaJ
uses in the tteatmeni of ~rt.aln
types or llln~s ...
THE PROPOSED message
also rontalned a auuesUon that
the states should repeal their
crlmfnJI probib1tions. "thus
brin11ng to a close int ut1happy
und misgulded chapter in our
history."
But these $entenc were too
strong for scbolarly Stuart
Elunstat, th Pr ident' top
dornest1c pohcy adviser. He
dashed oil a conlfd8ntial rnenio
to Carter, (leclarins:, "l am very
conotmed about the mariJWUla
lllettfoil Of this mC!IS.!age. • •
Eittnstat protested that "the
eetion on marijuana is written
in an almost laudatory tone.
which I believe as unfortunate. ..
Some ot the &entences, he objec~. "almost. letm to be a
PolliUve recommendation of ttie drug."
The president stntck ,out the
sentences that Eizenstat didn't
like. Nevertheless. the final
message endorsed de·
criminalization o( small amounts
of pot.
• -_ ... _ L_ -• .. ~ ---~--~..... 'I -
lr¥ine
I .
VOL: 70, NO. 285, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1977
I __ e Town Center Start Or.deced
By PIULIP aoSMARIN 0...---o.ity ...... , ....
A proposal by Southern
Calltonda Presbyterian Homes
for a senior citizens apartment
colbplex, may 1~t the long.
delayed Irvine Town Center
proj und way.
The I~e Clbr Council. after hnriila Tuesday that the seniors
project would be jeoparcli&ed by
further delayt tn preliminary
'l'be lrv,ine Cit~ Council bas
ordend ciJ.y offi~ala to esti~te
tht eo5ta of alt.e improvements
that WW have to be m9de oo
lrvhae Company a1ricultural
landt .ad*iuled for residential
de,·CJopment in the oext 10 to ao
years. ' Io a companion action, the
council ordered the 1t.aff to count co-. ...
O~ed or the first exer~lise is to
help city plan.oers 1au1• wltat
arnounta ot money wtU t)e i\eeded
for: roads, P•rks • .-ewers. µboots
arid ~ publlc h:nprovementa
pl'Q.fects wben housing ls built.
The eurpose Of the COW·
counttni venture ts to see wll~ the lttine Company Is
abiding by terms of the
Williamson Act, under which the
gra1tn1 lands have preserve suws.
TbC Irvine C.Ompaby
50,000 iaerea in W Ua so
approval or development
shndards for lhe center.
directed that the housing phase
of the Town Center proceed.
A second phase, development
or a commercial central core.
would come later.
The council previously held
back early approvals Cor the
center in hopes the proJect rnlaht
be developed as a whole, the
commercial core built al the
same time as the housing.
The Irvine Company claimed
that was impossible, that there
was no economic Justification
then for the commercial center.
The company wanted to build
houses fint.
Alter the city's three
commissions told the company
they wanted to see plan:s for the
commercial core before
approvtoe any development
. •
standards for housing, In 1974,
the project hung ln limbo.
But on Tuesday, Nick T. Uerin,
president of the non-profit
Southern California
Presbyterian Homes, surprised
the coW\cll with news his ll'OUP
was ready to build a hlah·riae
convalescent care and
apartment project for senior
citiiens.
The apartment& would be
16, Held m
'Speeder'
Suullows
Crucifix
A San Diego youth apparently
tried to swallow the rceary he
had been tlutching and kissing
for protection Thursday as he led
California Highway Patrol cars
on a hlgh speed freeway chase
from Los Alamitos to Laguna
Hills.
When the pursuit ended in a
crackup at S: 15 p.m., just north
or Lake Forest Drive, CHP of·
ficers reported flndlne the string
or religious beads wedged into
the mputh of 20-year·old Carlos
Lomeli Santana. ,
When olficers pulled the beads
out, they found that the crucifix
normally attached to rosaries
was missing and presumed
caught in the suspect 's throat.
Laguna Htlls paramedics were
summoned to the scene but
couldn't find the cross. A county
fire department spokesman said tod~ tlMf presu It bad been
priced for low and moderate
income seniors. That struck a
responsive chord wlth the
council, which is undel'. preaaure
to £ind low co!it housia1 for.
residents.
At Councilwoman Gabrielle
Ptyor's ureing, the council broke
the Town Center deadloc~,
allowing the Irvine Compa.qj to
submit pl&f'IS for the ~Oler ln t!re
two phases.
.~~"'n1M5oi!PVe, al(J\01 ,Vllll .. .,. '"'-
th t within city limits and
th ands of acres more 'Within
the rvine pohlical sphere of
influence subject to possible
Conductor Leonard Bernstein <right> shares a laugh
with Xstislav Ro.stropovich al the Kennedy Center (or
the Performing Arts in Washington as they prepare for
a p~rlormance with the National Symphony Orchestra.
swallowed and 4 "1~ up
eventuaJt1."
l
anee.xaUon.
Tbe company reports there are . a.~ cows on the property.
·Councilwoman Gabrielle
Pryor ar1ued that because last
month the council adopted a land use amendment to the city
1enerat plan that calls for
eventual residential de·
vefopment of the Wiiliamson
acteage, the property ought to be
removed from the preserve.
She sBid the taxes tbe city
would collect could et least
partly pay for public
improvements needed when
house. are built.
She Hid the Irvine Company
last year: paid only S2.0S per acre
lb taxes on the preserve lands, for a total of only $7, tU.
Comparably, Irvine Company
farmland not under tbe
William.son Act protection and
taxed as agricultural land
<See COWS, Pa1e A%).
JfiejoStan
Celebritie8
lnChalknge
Some ot tbe bri1htest Ital's of
televbJon And the movies will
come to Milslon Viejo next week
lot the second time ln alx months
to competa In the pseudo-aports
event called Celebrity Challenge
Of UM Sexes.
One hi8hll1ht or the five.day
event, which will be videotaped
ff>r a lwo-boui. presentation on
TV. Nov. 13, 1' •1ain expected to
be Farrah awntt·MaJon.
Farrah, the lonner •tar of
iefevilion's "Charil 's Angels"
attles, will compete Oct 20 in a
Uiinls match against actor Dtck
Van Patten. star of tbo show ~·BlRht Is Enoup."
Last time the tennis match
drtw an enormous crowd to the
Marguerite Recreation Center,
wt;e,.. it wUI t.ke place aealn
e•t w..k. Tbe event will belin aUp.m. ·
t· A 1polceaman for the Miulon
VltJo Company aakl the public
.,Ill be •dinltt" to dlff erent • cventa bbt details have not yet
ien worked out.
T C!elebrity 1ports events wUI
kick olf one wee from today on
the track at SI dleback Coll 1•.
'l'ho firlt event to be ata1ed for
the camera and onlooken will
be an obstacle courH run
between Leall• U11am1 and
F.A•••U. Pa&eAI>
Municipal Theater
Planned in .Jrvi~
A "highly recognized" theater
architect will be sought to desisn
a municipal stage play theater
planned for the Irvine Town
Center near UC Irvine.
The City Council authorized
She city arts ~ommittee to hunt
to such a ~ areldtecl T\ies·
d y, and coro.mended tbe
NUdeBeach
OKJJDogs
SAN DIEGO <AP> NaM«t dogs, but not naked
people, soon will be
allowe<t to use Black's
Beach.
The City Council. ln a
new ordinance, is
'prohibiting doga from most
city beaches. But, if
they're on leashes, dogs
will.be allowed on portions
of ?.fission Beach and
Black's.
Black's was the only
• ··~wimsuit optional"
municipal lx!ach in the
United states until the City
Council recently rescinded
a l!r74 ordinance allowing
nudity.
committetS for develop1n1 initial
plans which call for a 60().seat
/acUlty.
However, Mayor BJIJ Vardoulis
failed to get tho committee to
reconsld r 1ivang the architect ~he leeway of plann1oc for as
'' rge 'i,200 cal theater.
Shirley Palley, chalrman of the
arts committee, balked, arguing ~at the cornplcx is being de·
signed primarily for community
theater. ·
It would be :'desolate-looking,"
Mrs. Palley said, for a httle
theater aroup to play to 200
people (consickred a good crowd
lor such 1roups >sprinkled over a
1,200-seat theater.
Coundhnan David Sills agreed
wlth her. When the average
person considers how large a
theater should be, Sills said, "We
tend to think of football
1'tadh.\ltls. A theater of 600 is a
larae theater.
"It's Impossible to have a
repertory company play in a
barn or some 1,200 people.··
The theater project is backed
by $1.2 mllllon in park bond funds
already approved by voters.
Organizers say much more
money will be needed.
On Oct. !5, the arl<l committee
is scheduled to make ils
recommendations to the council
forfundtng the project.
Cmlple A rN!sted
Santana miraculously sulfered
only minor Injuries and was
taken to Orange County Jail.
A CHP spokesman said
Santana was booted on charses
of dri vme under thlnOuence of
drugs and reckless driving .
The suspect was alle&edly first
spotted driving at more than 60
miles an hoUr along the center
divider shoulder of the San Diego
Freeway near Los Alamitos.
Officers eave chase ln the
rush·hour lrafrtc but· Santana
allegedly noored the accelerator
and reached apeeds of more than
110 dwing the.20·mile pursuit.
The suspect aHeaedly awuna
off the San Diego Freeway •t the
Lagwia Freeway junction, sped
over to the Santa Ana FTeewl)'
and continued south. Officers
who got cl~e durln1 the chaae
said Santana periodically kissed
the rosary he was holdina.
The CHP said Santana finally
lost control or his car and
smashed into the center divider
fence just after merging back
onto the San Diego Freewuy
north of Lake Forest Drive.
Turquoise Stone
Stolen in Irvine
A 7•,c.r.pound stone or pure
turquoise valued at $2,200 was
stolen from an Irvine man's
home Tuesday by a burglar who
kicked in a locked bedroom door.
Henry E. Harjo, 48, of 17565
' Hastings Ave .• told police the
thief also took 13 one·dollar bills.
Police found no sians of fOt"Ced
entry into the house, but the
bedroom door Jamb was broken
when the door was kicked, police
said
Teen Sex Ring Charged
• NEWTON, ~.J. '(AP) -A
cabinet. maker and his wire have
been accused oC luring high
school girls Into a prostitution
operation they ran from their
home lh Wantage Township.
Sussex County authorities
charged Frank Barone, 57, Tues-
day with impairin1 th• morals of
a minor, carnally abusing
females under the a1e of 16 and
prostitution. His wlte, Diane, was
char1ed with aidins and abettina
him.
AuthorlUes said at least nine
girls were Jurf'd into prostitution
sinceSCpternber 1976.
"He would pick up young
female hitt'hhlkers or ho would
use YC>Unt girls as babysitters
and lb ~ch case he would try to
talk them Into worklnl( for him as
a proetltute,' • uld pro ecutor
Gc-<>rge Dacgett.
Barone. reached at his
atLomey·s ofllce Tuesday. denied
the charses. "They are blowina
nothtn1 into a big thing up
there." About six Jlrls "hung''
around his house foc-a time, he
sald, adding they were friends of
hla llve-ln baby1lller .
Daisett said charges would
not be brought against any of the
nine teen-agers. all hlah school
students living wlth their parent.I
in the general vicinity. "We are
looking upon them aa vlcUms,"
he said.
He added, however, lhal th Of·
fice waa examlnln1 whether
charces ahould be' brou1ht
agai.Dat any of.~• cu.atomera.
Speedup
Asked by
Amtrak
ADlttak ~cltla IQ they'd
·llke to steD on it wben they reach
a n,,.mne a\ret.ch of railroad
track near ~ 22·acre N~
eomplcx lo Saa Clettaatt.
But a 40-rq!J•Dlt bour limit for n.ortb and southbound Amtrak
trainl was impo1ed sorneUme
durtq tbe Nlxon prealdenUal yean fOI' tecuritY nuona. says
Arthur Lloyd, Wn&em ruioaal
muqer for tho naUonal rail
•f•tAlm.
Lloyd aald Amtrak would Uh
to a that •P"d Umlt locreaed to 1& lnllee per hour from a curve
in tb9 tracb JU1t north ot Su
tCJemente to Juat past the Nlx.oo
enclave.
''The Federal Railroad
AdministraUon and Amtrak
itself have jurisdiction on speed
limit• on curve• and tb•
maximum 11M*t lbat the tnck
will allow' .. Lloyd ... d today.
'But where you have tr.ekate that will allow more speed, focial
ordinan~ will restrict speed,
for instance at arade crosslnp
and for safety.
.. And in the cue ol th• Nlun thlq, It WU lor: ucwi.t.y,., IJoyd
aaid.
But, be added, .. We have
shown that 40 mll• ))er' hour la
not very practical north of
town."
He aaid the maxhnum speed
between San Die10 and SUfi
Ana ll 80 m1lel per bow', ,IQ'f,na
trainl pick up Ulat spejd just
past Del Mar and barrel akJaa to
San Clemente, wltb a {ew
1lowdown1 OD curves abd
crOISin.p.
'"'I'Mft they bit that S.1 ID!Je
stretch that nall1 alows tbem
down." Uoyd Mid.
,,....,,.Al
cows •.•
brouaht $:U mUUon, on 4,m a era.
Mra. Peyor •aid Ulat If tbe dtJ
i!'e!used to renew Wllliall\IGn N:t
contracts, lt ·could 1tah catledilli more tba11 $1.8 mtWm
P•r year when· th• contnct.
expired fn to~.
She 'aaJcl the t.aea coalcl tie ~ in a fund for pqbllc improvement.a.
Bather tb: alon1 with that. the council ty decided flrlt to~ the probable COltl for imJ>n)vemota. then atudy
howtoftnaQCetbem.
CoaiidlmU Davtd Sll aal4
that, city II !lcdDI to eount
COYt'a as part ol the uvclM -to mate sure tbe lntllui Compaey ii usliif :the WUJ.lamlOft J&Dda for J?izlni -IOtD._. OU~ to be
hired who 'ltOfb cheap.
He said be lean that. because
the council orders wv. directed
at city attorneya, men la
plutrlpe 1utta and britlcuea
ml&bt be tramptn1 oYer the
paswres at uoo an hour.
City llan.,er Wllll•m Woollllt
auured Silla that 1tudenta would be~forthe\Pk.
Deer Permits
Now Available
•
Thlrty.el1ht unclaimed
permlta for anUerlees deer tiunti
in the TenaJa re1ton of tbe
Cleveland Nattonal Forest. aDd
on Santa Catalina Island, wW co
on sale Thursday, atl a.m . at the
Lona Beach nctoa.i otnce ol the
Department at P'la>t and Game.
Pei'mlll will be offend on a firat-come, lir•t·1erved
basil.There are eltht left for the Ten~• bunt and thirty ldt for~ Santa C.taJJn• bland hunt; the
latter includes an $80 ree.
For t'Urther information call
Jnf ormatlon Ofllcer or the
D*partment of Fish and Game,
Ralflb You:nf, atU0-5128.
FARRAH •••
J •• • 'Jbat Will bl followed at U:JO a.m. a blc,cle raeo bewMA
Valerie Perri•• aad lamea
Fanntlno.
Tbe lllt event of the nnt day
•111 be •. tria~ competiUQQ 1\arUQI at 1:30 p.m. Tbe male
compeUtor'WW be LeVar Burton,
tbe .Youn.a Kunta Klnle of
••Boob." His Gppc>Qflllt bu yet to
becbaleD.
The ant WIDt OU Od. 20 at the
Jlarsuerlte recreation center
will feature Susau Saint James
and Robert Culp ln awimmlnt comt*fti9n. Tennll with Farrah la tM 0011 oUler e~t of th•Q)'.
Two bor1tback events are
alated for Oct. 11 at the MlutOft vttdo ~an Center, located Just ol.l llarcuerfte ~ tn tbe IOUdl put oltbt comm\lftlty.
LlDda '*nie Exorelat" Blair
wUl compete asaJnst Tab Rumer
tn a borse jumplne event Jt 10 a.m. 8teVe 7ord.. aon ol former
president Gerald Ford, wUl
compete in rodeo event.I a&ai=t
a1r unnamed female oppooCllDt 1tutms aU:30 p.m.
BAY HAJ\BOR ISLAND. F1a.
<AP) -tht H•pson of
, underworld ttitae Meyer wmty w al sbOt to de•tb today an what
police IPCCWate was a 1UU&J.an.O revencokJlUng.
RicbardScbwub, 47, wu&hot
once .. be aat bi hi1 car behind a
rest•urant ht o..-ned in tblt
e:1Eclmive retort oity ~'Wein
Miami And Mlaml Be1eb, palloo
said.
Ht.I body w11 found ··tbortty
after 9 a.m. EDT behtnd th•
Inside rt1taurant. Deta.111 ot t!'e
sla)'tne were not Jmmtdla*'tly
av&lll))le. •
OnSiturdaY. Oct. 22. tbetceee
of tM tctlon ahlfts to Caplltrano
Valle)' IDCb School.
At 9:30 a.m. in the school
aymnasium, TV sports
personality and former Miss
America Phyllis Georae will
compete m pins pon1 a1alnst an u~et muwned opponent .
u---
POLICEMAN CALLS FOR ORDER OUTSIDE COURT
~ectators Push for Seats at Bakke Hearing
Sehwaria. 101t of {)jnalcy'1
w lfe, T-behna~ hadt b••D
scheduled to go on trial Nov. 28
on Cbarges of killing bis driiiklal
coD\panion, 29.year-old Ciate
Terlaca, son o( uadenrofld
flivre Vincent Teliac
A number of known mob
figures attendtd Teriaoa'a
funeral.
Tbat wU1 be followed at 11: 30 a.m. by a bllllard1 match
teaturtnc Susanne Somers ol the
"Three'• Company .. TV show.
Her CllJPCl*)t also bu not been
annouDCed. ~Urday•1 fi.DaJ evat will take pta~ at l p.m. at th North Beacb area of Lake Miulon
VJeJo. Jt wlll feature Krt1ty
llcNichol of .. Family" ln a
ataWboardlnj coatdt as&lnat an
Court Eyes UC's .
Admission Policy
"The motive doesn't seem to be robbery or anythine oC that
nature," police spokesman
Relph Pa&e said. "It would be a
Ioatcal oonclU1lon that rtven1t la
a iood posaibWty. Conlldtrins
who he l• and tbe Jocldent with
Terlaca, we have to loOk at the revenae thtor7 ...
Twiaca wa ab¢ June 30 at tbe
bar ot The Force restaurant
wmalQed~t. . The F.OCSUdloll wUJ wrap up
S~ Witll a uou te>mitry race at t a.m. uouDd Cuta del Sol
f olf courae betweu llobert
Coond and me &om mer &Qd. a
J>.lll bowllft• match between
Gabe ·~ .. Kaplan and unnamed oppon1Dt at Sad-
dJtblick c.a:na.
The •'eolcll" of the womm•a
team will bl Nm Perrine and
eomlc McLean SWvenaen Will e.gacb the men. Flip Wltson b 1lated to act u tbo master ol eemnontee-
BOmb Threat
Quelled in NY
NEW 0 <AP> -Ai>omb th.8t pioUff cOuld ha\ii hurt
.. tbou1and1" of luncbtlme
1troUen outalde the ral Motan bulldiq ,, .. faund nw
mlnutlil bet~ lt WU to 10 orf. But another bomb did
explode outal4-th New York Public Library, dama1ln1 a 1tatue Md IOQD1.aJD,
Police bWned a Puerto ltkan t.m.ut poup, FALN, for both
lnctdenti Tuesday because ol 11
lett« found in a telephone booth
near Central Park.
The device found out.ltd• the General Motors bulldtn1 on
Madlaon Avenue conatated ol 1\ii sticb Ol dynamite and a clock
timer. Police aaid the bomb may
have been dismantled unwtt·
tln1ly by a drifter who found the
device and toaed lt into a large
cement ir.e planter.
-
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Former Watergate prosecutor
Archibald Cox told the U S.
Supreme Court today that a
special admissions program at a
Unlvenity of California medical
scbOol 11 needed to help m.inorities
because "the other alternatives
su11eatedslmply wUI not work."
Jn oral argumenta in the cue of
Allan Paul Bakke, Cox defended
the ao-called aJCirmative action
pro1ram used by the unlverslty's
med school at Davia. He said the
program aJded minorities "l<>nf
victimized by rac1aJ
discrimination • ·
Bakke, who ls white, suc-
c e11f u lly challen&ed tbe
university's proeram betot'e the
California Supreme Court. He
claimed it made him a victim of
raciald.isulmlnaUon.
Bakke'• "reverse
discrimination '· case is
considered by many
constitution.I acbolars to set the
staae for the bi1b court's most
important statement on race
relations since 1t outlawed
se1nttaUoo 2J years .. o.
At state tn Bakke's cue b the
future of 'affir,.,,..tlve action prosrama, betun in the last is
year11 to aJve apeclal preference
to minority members and women
in education and business.
Bakke'• attorney, Reynold
Colvin of San Francisco, urged
the ju1tices to aU!rm the
Callforilla Supreme Court de· etalon
Colvin argued that the
Conttitutton 's guarantee of
"equal ptotectlon" for all citizens
ts violated when a school takes
tnto account an appllcant's race
-making that fact.or a ''crucial"
one.
"The uae of race as a basis for
adminlon to a medical school, or
for srantlnc any other rights, is
Improper," he ar1ued.
Race 1bou.ld be considered only
Priee Right?
M~IDry Budget in Doubt
WASmNGTON <AP) -Congress' investigative
agency is skeptical that the armed 1ervicea need to
•pend more than $100 miJlion a year to attract enough
quatity volunteers. •
. ",-The basic question that still r~ffiain-t
unamwered is how many advertlslng dollars are
needed to attract the quantity and quality oC
volunteers to meet service goals," the General Ac·
counting Office said in a new report.
The GAO told Conrress that :the paid advertfsin,B
program'• high cost and the difficulty in ~valuating ·
its effectiveness warrant continued attentfOn.
The military bud1et for advertising has risen
from •·~million in 1973, the last year of the draft, to
thJ1year s propased altocationofSlOS.6 mUUon.
Carter Signs City,
Housing Boost Bill
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Carter slped a bill
today PtOvldlnl ttC.'7 bUlion f« bouala1 the needy and
revltalidng the clues, calllnl It
"a Clanl step forward" In
lmpioW\1 Uvtnt conditions for
low·lncome, elderly and
b1ndJca1>ped famlHea .
The meaaure includes tt.2
billion to help the famllles pay
their rent.
Recalllnt his vialt lut week to
Use South Branx aluma in Ntw
Yorlr. Carter aaid be saw Uvln1
conditkea that are "• diacrace to
our snat coun\J')' -enoqh to 1balr• our conflderce bl the
at.tudure that Wt 'Ve e.ol"4.'•
While there are no instant
10JuUon1 to such houslne
problema, the President said.
''This but take11 a giant step
forward."
"In general, this la a very
excellent piece of legislation,"
Carter told them But he said one
part of It, removing restraint.II on
bulldlnl( homes ln flood plains, caused him concern
The Prnldent said he would
detf'rmlne whether to reinstate
the restraints wtth corrective
lealslatlon next year or try to
deal with the matter
admlnbtrativ•ly.
Th@"llttnlng ceremony followed
Carter's wttkly brukfast with
congrea.~lonal ludeu .
as it provides a clue to tho
applicant's total evaluation, ~
said. p,....pllfll!Al Considering race, Colvin said,
·•ts permissible only to the ext.ellt
it gives some clue to tbe
admissions commlttff whet.her
there was a prior hlatory of
economic or educational dtp.
rlvatJonorpersecutJon."
SENIORS •••
Bakke'• le&al briefs have
contended that in such cases,
glvloe special preference to
economlcall1 or educationally d•
prlved applicants would be ac-
ceptable.
Colvin appeared lo dl1pleue at
least one member of the court,
Justice Lewia F. Powell Jr., by
devotlna tl\e n,..t 20 minutes othl1
allotted '5 minutes to reeil1n1 the
case'lfacts.
"l'rn here primarily to hear
con1Ututlon1l ar1umtnt1, ·• Po..-en aald tn a cenue nbuke. "I
would Uke some belp with the
constitutional luua."
Colvin quickly compiled,
streuln1 that Bakke wu de·
prived adinWlon to the medical
school solely because he is white,
an automatic violation ot the·
Constitution.
Rq.
Chin;i ••••••••••••••• $ 2649.00
Oedenza ••••••••••••
Drawer deck .••••• , •••
Rectangular table .••••••
Splat back arm chair : ••••
Splat back side chalt •••••
1229.00
359.00
849.00
360.00
.
. STOCKS I MOSKOWITZ
ed1 1day's
Clo ing Price~ NYSE
.
COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
Ouot•llOft•lnttUO.t•-. .... Ow H•• Yo•~ M•Cl-11 P•c••·· PIW lto61on Ottroit •I'd Clftclollllalt>l•O t.tC"-"91' itnd t•OOf1"'1C»y 1"4J N•UOn•I AIM<.i•hOl\Of ~v•UMI• Dlal-eri -.ftO if',tl"'9t
•
....
~. Ootobor 12. 1•n
Top Com anles
Biggest Jaws
Survive Time
by 'JtUL TON MOSKOWITZ '
Of the top 100 industrial companies in 1917, only 35 re.
main in that class.
That ·s what For~s magarlne dlacovered w n due
up data for its 60lb anniversary iasue, p\lbUlh t. lb.
The moral Forbes drew from th\s hip rat of 1t\J1UO'b'W8$
th c the bis can don., always wtn.
"Corpout h It ll no fu.,ant
maal.l1no.
THAT ~ Y BS Buta tloe1 •uinll'laUon ot 7
1'0ller revt•l• that wbltt there were 1opit co~panl ~ t
couldA't h•clic It and drop~ Out-Ctntral .Leathtt, Ulllttd
Vefde EXtenaloo MIAiot. ~ltlcan LocomOtl 1, for •
•mples -a much larcer number disappeared btta\llle they w re a~quired or merged or other:wlse captured by uother-
1\anL
A.nnQur & COmpany was our fourth largest industrial
compaay In 111'1. Aiwl ahr years later it acquired another
company on th t Is~ Morris & Company, which rallked ~th. TClday. A'rmoQr la part of GreyboWld Cob, bow the
mlahty ti ¥e:t•lt.n). Swift• Comp1py, another meat packer, was No.$ OQ
the l917lllt. Now lt'• p rt or a mixed baa called Esmark. &th Greyhovna ~4 Esmark are among the 501eadina
lndustiian today.
No. 3 on the 1911 list
was Bethlehem Steel.
Our second largest steel
mak«. Bethlehem u
still around, ranking
33rd, rlaht behind
Eam1trk. But three
other steel makers Oft
Money
Tree
the 1917 list -MJdvaJe Steel, cambria steel and Lackawan:
na Steel -are 1ooe. What bapperied to them! Bethlehem
:1cOOJ*lth mupln\manctum.
A COMPANY C~D CldU: COPPER. which did Ju1t what Ill name Implies, ran.bet lltb 1n 1917. Another
mlnln& com~QY on the 1111 Ult wu G • Caoanea Cop-
ptl' -It n.nked ah; 11ley wen both eantoped in 1929 by
AnacOnda Coppet, •Ille~ :rant.ea lSUlt and Anaconda now
~•loci• to.Atl.Jn&Sc JU~lch 11 the survivor of at
l•ut'lfour compani on tbC 1 lbt~ AUanUc Refmina,
SlnclairOtl, PralneOU SIDc rGwt. . tn otbcr words, eevtft ol U. Jeadlt\a companies of 1917
an now oomblned into oae. wb!eti r.U. lath. ·
Standard OU of Nnt Yen •• No. 14 in 1917 and
Vacuum OU ~u No. 15, They )olned forcea la 1931 to form
Socony Vacuum OU. wbleb later bteame Socony MObU,
which later became MobU, wblch now also own
Montcomery Ward and ConWM"r ~I]). of America. Two oU\er compal\la on th 1917 Jlat -KapoUa Petroleum.
No. 87, and Virclnia Carolina CtMmiJeals, No. 46 -are tOd.ay
alao part ot MobU.
MEXICAN PETaOLEUM aANKBD MTB on the 1911 ll1t In 1919, it wu acquired by Pan American Petroleum
and Transport, which had ranktd 990\. And In I~ Pan
American W8$ abtorb.d by Studard OU of Indiana, which
was No. 38 ln 1917 (today lt'I No. lJ>.
The moral mtfbt be that lo 1 1wamp filled wltb al·
U1atcn, tho ones with the b!Uest jawa surv1ve.
Mar~t Suffers
AnotMr Drubbi~
NEW YORK (AP> -S~ prices took a solid drubbing
today Jn a aelloff blamed on eoncern onr rilin& lnte t re toe .
'I'he Dow Jond averan ot 30 lndustritls, which had
dropped 8. 40 polnts on Tuesday to a 2' month low, fell l.Datbes'
10.48to823 98today.
Declines overwhelmed ..Svantes bt 1bout a 8·1 m Am<m8 Now York Stock Exchanre·Jllted tsaues.
Analysts aald lht market wu unsettled by fe-.n that.
intereat rates mlsht be headed for levels at whlch they could'
cau.we problems for both bUlin adhlty and inYesllncnta
Jlke stocks and bondi.
HJah ratta lncrease ~· coe&a and also can dlacouraae borrow inc for exptn11C111.
Due to late transmission
today's llstlno wttl not
appear In ttw Delly PUot.
Due to \ate transmlsslon :
today's Ustlng wltl not
appear In the Dall)' Pl tot.:.
I
l
.. ___ _
Laguqa/South Coast
VOL. 70, NO. 285, 4' SECTIONS, "8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
!Amb'Q clficiab .say they'd
• &o oa Jt wbaa tk¥ i..ech
• strekll: of~ r.u.ro..s
aCk u tbe .22" acre Nb
complex in San Clemente. •
But a 40-mile-per hour limit for
north U4l..-uUlbound Amtrak
trains was imposed sometime
during the Nixon presidential
)'ears for security reasons, says
Arthur Uoyd, Western reaiona1
oaanacer for the QatioDJI rail JS~~ •
Lloyd said Amtrak would lite
to see that speed limit increased
to 7S miles per hour from a curve
in the traets just north ot San
Oemeote to jusl past the Nixon
enclave.
"The Federal ·Railroad
Admlnl•traUon and ~mtralt
itself biVe jilrisalcUOD on speed
tlmih on curves and the
maxlmwn sP"d that the track
will atroiw :· Lloyd said today.
"But Wb6e you have tnckaie
tbat will allowi.more speed, lOul
Ordinances will restrict speed,
for ~ at arade croalne,i ~d tor safety.
i "AnCi ln the case of the Mxan
tbing, 'it was for security," Uo:Yd
said.
But, be added, "We have shown that 40 mnes per hour is
not very practical north or
tOwn." .
He aald the maximum speed
tietWeen San Dleco and Santa An• b 90 mile1 per hour, saytng trains pick up that speed just
past Del Mar and barrel alon1 to
San Clemente, with a few t (8"TIL\INS, •• ,.Ai)
) I '1
INSIDE TODAY.
y Oii mfglit thbtlc '°" ""°'° tt~ldng about t>Hr, but did
JIOta Jm01o that deterg•nt
rclidw fn the 01&1 can ndn
Ult htod? Or thal IUftlight can ·
oftfttJM bMO~ S«e Food,
P.oj/cLI.
16, Held • m
'Speeder'
Sim,llows
C~i/ix
A San Die10 youth apparently
tried to swallow the rosary he
hJd been ~lutcbing and kissing
for protecUon Thursday as be led
California HJghway Patrol cars·
on a high speed freeway chase
from Los Alamitos to Lquna
Hills.
When the pursuit ended in a
crackup at S: 15 p.m • just north
of Lake Forest Drive, CHP of·
ficers reported finding the string
or religious be1tda, wedged into
the mouth of 20-year-old Carlos
Lomeli Santana.
When officers pulled the beads
out, they found that the crucifix
normally attached to rosjlries
was misslnr and presulned
caught in the suspect's throat.
you guess which one is the only Dodger fan
among them? From left are Pete Hanson,
Ken King, Robbie Robinson, Rich Robinson
arid Rich Kelly.
Laguna Hills paramedics were
summoned to the scene but
couldn't find tbe cross. A county
fire department spokesman said
today they presumed lt had been
swallowed and would "sbow up
eventually."
Santana miraculously suffered
only minor injuries and was
taken to Orange County Jail.
If you want to keep
rattlesnakes out or your living room, leave rr.h water out for
them,
at'1 ad :f.0111 M a SlfNift, animal s rvke otftcer t leech who helped
rouat a four.root rattler rrom an
Emerald Bay home earUer this
w elC.
"He was cotted and ready to
strike, right in lhe"tniddle of the
Uvlnc room;• Misa Slevin said of
the uninvited Monday visitor to
th~ home of MT'. and Mrs. James
Law.
5 Held in Porno
SAN RAFAEL <AP> -Police
have arrested five persons al·
leged to be involved in a million·•·
year pomoaraphic movie rtnc.
Arr•ted for lnvestt1atloa of
distribuc.llic pomoeupbfc films
were 11mothy Edward Feehan,
30, San Francisco; John Plumlee,
38, HoUywOOd; and Gregory w uhnk, 21. o..., OsterhCNdt, za;
and Wtlliam Kllncensinith. 221 all
of Novato.
The Laws' dog was barking
when a family member entered
lhe room &nd saw lbe reptile, lbe
anl mel service officer said.
County SMnff's cJeputles were
un•ble to r~pond to tho call. and
ll would have takel\ county
anlJnal control officers more
than an hour to arrive, police
said.
So Miss Slevin and Sgt. Dave
Avers drove out to the hous.e.
pinned the snake down long
enolJ&h to slip a noose around it,
and carried. it outside.
There, Avers chopped its head
off with an ax.
.. The house was near the
hillside and there are a lot of
animals comlne down because of
the drou1hh" Miss Slevin
explii.ned.
She aald the two-year dry spell
is rnatiDg the creatures bolder
and they're comlna down to
drink from JwJmmlng pools and
ornamental fount.alns.
She su11ested that hillside
residents pJace large bowls of
water on the perimeler of their
property. ·
A CHP spokesman said
Santana was booked on chart.es or driving under lhlnnuence of
drugs and reckless driving.
The suspect was aUeaedJy first
spotted drivin& at more than 60
miles an hour along the center
divider shoulder of the San Dieco
Freeway near Los Alamitos.
Officers gave chase in the
rush·bour traffic but Santana
allegedly floored the accelerator
and reached speeds of more than
110 durinai the 20-mUe pursuit.
The auspect aUesedly swuni
off the S8n Diego Freeway at \ho
Laeu.na Freeway JUDftlon, $ped
over to the Santa Ana J'reeway
and continued soutti. Officers
who got close during the chase
said Santana periodically kissed
the roury he was holding.
The CHP said Santana fl!Wly
loat control of• his car and
smashed into the center divider
fence just after merging baclf
onto the San Diego Freeway
north of Lake Forest Drive.
2 Held in Kidnap
SAN DJEGO <AP> -Two San
Diego men are in jail ln
connection wltb the alleced
kidnaping and assault of an ille1al
allen, police say. Gerardo Garcia
Garcia, 20, of TiJuana was
reported abducted Crom an
apartment here early Tuesday,
taken to ~an Beach and beateQ,
oflicersaaid.
Page~nt Gets Facelift
~;ooo ~ Admin Offices D~ in January
By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. .,_.,,...._ Staff
Paieant of the Masters
director Don Willlamson sa)'I he
can 'l wait until work on the new
$200,000 FHtival of Arts
admlnietratlon building is
completed 1n January.
~at's because tht next step
will be to tear down the old one
next door, a former city
englneerinf building moved to
the faUval nearly three decades
ago.
Williamson says the old
building l\as been added to,
revised, and made lo do for 30
years, "and it's a real eyesore to
people eomins into town from
Laguna Canyon Road."
The 14-year paceant dlrector,
who N)'S be bu all but liven up
his private arcbitectuuJ
Silverware, Cub
Taken in San Juan
Silverware and silver dollars
with a total value of $8, 700 were
taken from a San Juan
Capistrano borne by a butQlar
who earned off a1t.ronc box.:
Ore.a&• county sherltl·• of. flcert said Intruders whose
bualness because of festival Williamson said a new
duties. designed the new entrance to the festival grounds
administraUoo building. will fill the space left by the lev·
Work began ln September on eledbuildln1.
the two.story, S,000.square foot • "We'll have a less congested
laclllty which will house the entrance with the new gates," he
festival board room on the said.
second floor and box offices and And what is now the festival
administration rooms on the entran•e will become a garden
lower level. area with a aeries of waterfaUs
Board members approved the cascadlilg Into separate pools.
spending of $25,000 to rumish the "We think the sound of
building, al a director's meeting splashint water will put festival
Tuesday nicht (See PAGEANT, Pa1e A.2)
Petition Peaclhlg
A croup of San Juan
Capistrano residents and
property owners will circulate a
petition n xt month callina for
removal of a controversial city
a1rlculturaJ preservation
ordinance.
The ordinance, passed by a
three to two City Council vote last
aprtn,. act.a uiae 230 acres or
raribJand for preservation.
Tony Forster, spokesman tor
the IJ'OUP s~kinr the peUlion
cfrculition, said today the group
will ask voter1 to place the
cont.rovenial ordinance on the
March 1 clly ballot.
whether or not they want General
Plan amendment 17·1, which sets
up the asrtcultural preserve,'·
Forster e.xpl ained.
Forster cited a March, 1976
city ballot mcuu:te which uked
elty ~kltnts If they were willing
to pay 10 cents per $100 assessed
valuation on their property taxes
to buy agricultural land ln the
city. \
"We believe the voters ex·
pressed themselvea In that
election but the council Just did
wbat U1ey wanted anyway,"
Fonsteruld.
method ot entry ha1 not bHri d ·
ttrmined took the 1tron1 box and
cosUY silverware frorn the home
of r.llree martlll McGre1or Homer,' 51, ot 25582 SplM•lt• ,~:=:;;.;.:=.:=:::.;;::::.;:;.;;:.;=;::;:.."-.1-Dnve. wbilebtwuouttboooln•. "We want th• voters to decide
TM airlcUlt\Q'al prenrvaUon
me UN wa.s def tated 2G>$ to
• M DAILY PILOT use w.cm.cs.x. 0ceooer 1a. 1177
Se11t to Cotmeil
Lasuna Beach planning
eom.mlaatoners ••ve their
uoaaJmO\d eodorHi:oent of a
e ~-l>Nklbl ana1ement ~~ TuiadtY .U,ht before a~ tht p~a) OD to the
clo OOUncllforftnal approval.
Ttio uch·delayed propoeaJ,
wblcb "'°"1d add three multt-
1tory parking structures to the
downtown ana of auto-conceated
La1una Beach. would coat
approidma'tel1 SU ailllloa. ac-
coJ'dinl to city studl•.
Tuesday nigbt 'I heari.n2 WU
the •eeond helcI by
commissiooerl in two weeb OD
the program.
Planninl Director Doug
Scbmib said the 20-pqe ltQdJ
preparetl by• city plumen was
approved wltb only minor
cbana•· The Pl'Olfa.Dl con.slsta ol four
PUC On/en
$1~rHome
PhDlie Refund
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
RefUDds averqln1 $1 per bome were ordered today for telephone
euatomera cbar1ed under . a
m....,e unit •JSWbl whlcb bu
been ruled to be UDf'eUOClble.
The callfomla Public· UUUU•
COmimulm instructed Padlic
Teleptde Company to mike the
retundl to C\Wtomers wbo were
charted 1lb1le messa1e rate Uniinl betWeeD Nov. 8, U'M, and
Auf.8,1'11.
The refunds 10 to thole wbo
have »messa1e IU>d to-mesaace
service. The refund• wm be
made~ now and Mueb l
in the form ol a credit on blllina.
Tbe old system provid• for ch~fot the amOW1t olttme a
customer talks. It doesn't apPb'
to nat nte eustomen.
' • Last JUiy U the PUC DE-
termiDed that the previous aelu1>
baHd Oil ave-minute inuementa wa unreasonable and ~
• &h1stoone-itllnu.telncrementa. • .. At tbe aame tlMt. the rt}C ~rdered a refu'Dd plan be aubinlttedtar approval.
Tlle rt:fuDd iota1a fl mlJllOD
pl 7 PtRtnt lnlereaL
A Sm Clem te man was U'•
rested T\ield~. for cal'1'7lnC a
loaded run In public aner pOUce
1 were alerted that someone was
1
' nrtng a gun near apartments at
JSSW.?4=· JaTJ Hu air.et lllldrta
UJiknow1l; was t en Into custod7
at the Mariposa addren and a
,3$1 IM~m platol lOHed into evid~. police said. Hubbert la
'8. The witnea wbo called oalcen
said be beard two ahob alabo\&t T
p.m. One rouna ••nt into a
awlmmln& PoOl and the other abot Wal wlJd .. As ht lafked to
police, another round waa re~>' fired. Hubbert was booted at tbe San
Clemente pollce stat.ton, where
he pasted $10,000 bail.
Bmh Viewa China
HONG KONG (AP) -Tbe
United States alrudy baa
abanddned too many
internatioDal commitment.a and
cannot abandon the N atlMallst
CbineH 1ovtmmeot on Taiwan m Cll'del' to normallie relations
wlth PeJdnl, 1ay1 George lush.
the fonner cblef of the U ,S.
liaitclO milalon to Cblna.
DAILY PILOl
plan.t, with fundln1 comt.ne rrom
taxable tales assessments bued
on retail tales of downtown
bu1lne11men. Other sources mtatrt include patking ln·Ueu ftei ancl from federal and state
10\U'CO!I. n.e proposal calls ror a three-atory parking structure on lhe
north side of Broadwa)' near
Beach Street. A two-story
a\nlc:tUl'e 'WOUid be located on an
~ dty-owped PNkiile lot
<>1l Gt~ Strtet near Lesion.
Tbat atte 11 11,0"' be1ni coasldered aa a posalble location. for a
c:op:uDunlt;f cent«. but pWmers
say tile bulldlof wouUS not
tOafllct with a parlW:il •~
et tbal lite.
0 AI Iona as the centet proYidea parklnl for ltl uaen. lh«'e11 no Problem ... aald pla.nnef Michael
G.Uant today.
A tblrd two·tl•r parkln1
structure ls propose4-. for an exlstinl private lot north ol city
hall oafcee.
The parklnf mana1tment
PNlfl.lll al.lo teeka solutions to parklni problems north and
south Ol the businen dlatrtct and a1001~a Canyon Road. A f ourtb pro1ram would
include establllhment of ""'1nl
faclUdes at the two entrane. to
Lapna Beach. accompanied by
a tramlt semee to move people lntotoWn. •
Gallant eald th• parldn1 m~tpropotaJ wWnot be
on nut Wednesday's City eou.cu apnd.a.
Sand kt
Deatroyed
YUCAIPA (AP) -A man 1pend1 months
aculptlna .. The Lau
Supper"' tn sand. A vandal
spends a few minutes~ lmocklnl ltdown. .. He just •anted to show
hi.a lrtendl boW touah he
was. I 1ue11, • • Ted·
COnlbUr said TUesday in deacrthlna the dam11 to hll wOrk at Bible Land. a ·
non-profit toitrlst attnctioo about ·90 miles
east olLos Angeles.
ec.dbear, who ha been
acwJtiq reli&io'ls ftauret
bl .w· for 80 of bla,·"2
7eara, said it would take a couple mooths to repair
lb• work. He estimated
damage at 9'.000.
Oellyl'llllt...., ......
CONSTRUCTION WORKER SECURES FRAME ON FACILITY
F•8tf'i'*' Admlnl1tratJon Bulldlng Due In Februery· .
From Page Al
PAGEANT. •
goers in a aood frame of mind, ..
Wil\iamson said. "Especially if
they've had to hike down the
canyon from their can," he
lauehed.
The new building ls not lhe first
designed for lhe fesUval by the
pageant di'rector, >Nilliamaon
was also instrumental in the
creation Qf the forum theater. the
staae bulldlnf and the trigtnal concept of the festival's
restaurant.
JJalUfta Deach bu)lder. Charles
Benton ta constructina the new
facility and feaUval officials are
expected to move into the
building by Feb 1, Williamson
said.
·1.ease Tax Eyed
CARSON CITY <AP>
Geothermal exploration in
Nevada could run out of steam
unle11 a current tax on
ceotbennal teuet la chanied to
provide levies OJl actual
production, a le&lslaUve panel
bu been told.
Carter Sigru
Housing, City
AUl Measure
WASHING TON (AP>
President Carter signed a bill
today providing $14.7 billion for
housing the needy and
revitalizing the cities, calling it
"a giant step forward" in
improving living conditions for
low-income, elderly and
handicapped famllles.
The measure includes $1.2
billion to help the families pay
their rent.
Recallina his vlait last week to
lhe South Bronx slwoa ln New
York, Carter said he saw Uvtnc
conditions that are '•a disgrace to
our great country -enouih to
shake our confiderce lo the
structure lhat we've evol\led."
While ,there are no ins~'nt
soluf\on ••o such houllnc problems, the President aald,
"Tbls bill takes a giant step
forward."
Burglaries Probed
By Lagµna Police
La1una Beacb police are
lnveatlgating three commercial
buralarles reported Tuesday by
do-Nntown 1bop keepers and by
offlclals at the Lacuna Beach
Water District. Police aald bur-1ars entered
Lorie'• Beauty Sbop, 375 Broad-
••>'· aometlme Monday
evening or Tuesday mornlnc.
taking wooden statues valued at
$22. The thieves entered the shop
p,....P_,,eAJ
BAKKE •••
California Supreme Cowt de-
claiao.
Colvin areued that the
Conatltutlon '• guarantee of
•'equal protection" for all cl~
ls violated when a school takes
into account an applicant'• race
-maldng thatfactor a ••crucial"
one.
"Tbe use of race u a baall for
&4niluloo to• medlcal atbool, or
tor ,nnt.ine any other rtabta, ls
,lmproper,'' be araued. R8ee sbould be con.1ldered only
u It provldea a clue to the
appUcant't total evaluaUon, be
1aid.: CcJmlderiDI race, Colvin said,
••ts permbalble only to the extent
it 1tves some clue to the
admissions committee whether
there was a prior history of
economic or educational dep-
rivation or persecution.''
Bakke'• lecal brlef1 have
cootendect that 1n 1ucb CU411,
1tY1n1 special· preference to
economically or educationally de-
prived applicants would be ac-
ceptable.
Colvin aweared to dilpleue at
leat one member of the court,
Justice Lew1I F. Powell Jr., by
d""1tlnl tbe ftnt 20 minutel or hls
allotted 45 minutes to reciting the
caae•lfacts.
"I'm here primarily to bear
o•nttl\utional ar1uments,"
Priell aald ln a 1entle rebWte. ''I
wOU)d like some http wtlh the
conatltutional laaue1. •
Colvin quickly complied.
1u--ain1 that Bakke wu d~·
prlved admission to the medical
aebool aolely because ht I.I wblte.
an automatic violation of lhe eomutut.too.
by removlo1 four louvered
windows six feet off the 1round.
Emptoyes at LI ve Wire
Cleaners, 439 Forest Ave. told of-
ficers someone entered that
business. possibly with a key.
and took $55 from the cash
re1later. And Laguna Beach Water
District orftcials said the night
deposlt box at district offices, 306
Third St., was broken open and
waler billini payments removed.
Police said the billings were
found by children near the office
soon after the crime was
reported.
Debate Slated
For San Juan
?ropo~al
A San Juan Caolstrano
councilm8J\ '904 a represeota~ve
from t.he :1roup espou11ng
division or the mission .city Into
seven councilmanic district.a will
debate the issue thursday at 7: 30
p.m. Councilman John Sweeney will
speak in opposition to the
propoeed chanae in the city's
councilmanic election process.
Concerned C.,thens for
Responsive Government
Chairman Bemie Matthey will
speak in 1upport of the proposal.
Tbe Con~erned Citizens are
aPonsors ol a March 1 city ballot
mea1ure to create seven
councllmanic districts that
would each elect a councilman.
San Juan currently has flve
councllmen eleded at·larf•·
The debate 11 publ c and
sponsored by the Capistrano
Bu1lneu and Property Owners
Assoctatlon. The discussion will
bel(in at 7:30 p.m. at the San Juan
Moblle Estates club house, 32302
Alipu ln San Juan.
V-11'118 Di&covered
TUCSON. Arb. CAP) -A
m•n·made virus created at lhe
Unlvenlty of Arizona could lead
to a breakthrough ln the flaht
a1aln1t· 1ene\lc diseases,
retearchen report.
Ctedehza ••••••••••••
Or~wer de<:k ••••••••••
Rec;bngulv &Jble ••••••
Splat back arm ehalr •••••
Splat back side ch:llr •••••
Teen Girls
Lured Into
Sex Work?.
Moves into TOwn
Sue&estlona for location of a community center
primarily !or Laguna Beach's senior citizens -have ra~aed from an abandoned sewer plant to the relocation of
a church to a eucalyptus 1T9ve.
lh the l>ast year, cowictl members and seniors alike
have come up with more than a half dozen suggestions for
a center. The latest, construction of a building atop the
bluffs at Heisler Park, 'WMS shelved by c<Wncilmen last
week. There ls insufficient parking at the site and the
bulldiilg would damage the park atmospbere, th~y say
So now the council is looking at construction of a
center on a port.ton of the parking lot on Glenneyre Street oetween Legion and Laguna Avenue
The site has the benefits of being centrally locat¥ and
adequate roof top parking coUJa be pre ided. Cost of a
~e9ter at that location has been estimated at roughly '38(),000. .. • •
The search for a new center came after the seniors
were disAlaced from a city.leased annex on Glenneyre
Street. They were moved to the Human Affairs
Department building at city hall where they still meet.
amidst other acUvlties not related to Uieir projects.
The seniors deserve a separate community center
wbere they can meet. And the city, council has vowed to flrid them a home.
The latest proPOflial aeser:ves full study. ..
• Capistrano Unified School District trustees should stick
by their guns on pro~ changes in district health care.
District aamimstrators want to hire five health aides.
trained by the Capistrano-Laguna Regional Occupational
Program (ROP>. to replace three nurses wh<> left the
district. This would spread nurs · g care to more students at
noextracosttotaXpayers.
Nurses object, saying no one but a t}urse can provide the
quality OI service r4;Cluired. We disagree. The state code
allows a scbOol JlUrse to do little more than wash a wound
and appJY a bandage. School secretaries, certified in first
aidbytheRedCross,candojustaboutasmuch. _
Without denigrating pie ski"' and dedication of the nu~. we believe the health aides can fulfill virtually all
erdinaryneeasoithedislrict'sstudents.
Paramedlcs, doctors and hospital$ are immedlately.
available if more professional treatment is needed.
Face Canyon Facts
Laguna Beach council members are seeking
immediate solutions to end the sl~ughter along Laguna
Canyon Road where 13 persons h e died in collisions in
the past nine months.
Those short·term solutions include seeking funds for
the construction of pa iQI lanes along the road from El
ToroJWad to the San Diego Freeway.
Additional signing and striped no-passing lines are
J>clng added to the winding roadway this month by
Cul Trans.
These are stop-gap si>lutions to be sure. The council
plans to meet with the City of Irvine and Orange County
officials-whoshare responsibility with Laguna Beach on
the seven-mile roadway -to seek funding for the passing
Ja.ne concept. f"" •
Stille fundS for rurther wldetting or Laguna Canyon
Road are not" included 'in'Cal'Drans· six-year plan. And
some r.a unans applaUd that situation because they
believe improving the roadway to that extent will make
l.Jilgurta more attractive to visitors and thus worsen city
traffic problems.
That view will simply lead to mol'e deaths. The road
must bC 'Widened beyond patched-on passing lanes. And~ far as the tourists go, we might point out that
more \;Bgunans than visitors have to get Into and out of th~
clty every day.
Coldly, n two-Jane Laguna Canyon Road will kill more
Lagunans than .those from anywhere else.
• Oplnl<IM expr-.d In the ep,ce tt>ove are thoee of the Dally P11ot. Oth4ir views uPf95Md on this page are thOM of their ~ and
attltts. Rtader comment I• Invited. Address The Dally Piiot.
P.O. Bolt 15e0. Costa ~CA 82829. Phone (71'J ~1.
• B~d 1 Trick Questions
ByL.K.BOYD
"Trigger queries " are
those questions which have
been known to •tart family
fi&hts. Our LOve and War
man is collecting a list of
same. F.rom divorce records.
• rfhey're not necessarily
criliclll, insulUna o'r de1rad·
inf, not in themaelves. It's
what they lead to, however
mysteriously. These are
tt~gger queries: "Pancakes
a11ain?'' "Isn't the aame over
yet?'' "A melon ball cutt«?
How Much?" .. Don't you
want plain 1ingerale
tonlaht?" And: "Doy thlrt
it'• aliWetoosmall71'
Surveys prov a lot of
tourlats pick motels with
awtmming pc>Qla even tbou1b
tbey have no intention of
aoing sWimming. They 1wit
Dear
Gloomy
Gu
believe \he places with the
pools will also be better
equip~ otherwise.
Quick, name any truH that
comes most swiftly to mind
If you dldn 't say apple. you 're
not among lhe majority so
quet,ted.
Q. "Ras anybody ever really disproved Adolt
Hitler's theory that selective
, breeding could prOduce a
1uperhuman being?"
A. In a way, it. walJ
disproved. Long ago. But not
with humans, because
humans don 't breed
selectively. On the contrary.
It waa disproved with dogs,
which have been selectively
bred for centuries, still
• without ever turning out a
super®g.
Rapid Reply: Fi1ure 55
percent of your arownup
weight is water. Lose less
than a fifth of lt, you survive.
Loae more, you die.
Generally, generally. ..
The 20,000 book• about
chess exceed in number t.M
booJt lbOut an other gamea
put tocether, I'm told. One of
theae chess books cites
studlea to prove that a good
memory ls f\ot tbe most
slgnllicant faculty a top chess
player can pos!ess, not at alt.
tmaetnaUon is. according to thla authority. The most
remarkable chess
performanc s, it's said, are
npt exec:uted, the way a
ph treriders a tuno, butare
er the way a compoeer
dreams up auc b.
f
Jack A:D(ferson
Energy Chiefs Tilt to
WASHINGTON James
SchlesTnger's rise from political
obacurily to political power has
bee11 smooth and subtle. Jie has
the air more oC a college
professor than on energy czar.
But behind t}\Q pipe smoke and
contemplatlve monner, be has
the heart of an Industrial tycoon.
He has been an unabashed
advocate of nuclear power, for
example, ·
ever since he
came out of
the Atomic
Energy
Commission
in the early
1970s. The big
util1ty
companies
desperately
want lo dev·
clop energy, or course, that will
utH12e their existing grid
s)'St9ml and permit them to go
on gelling eleetricity to the
populace. A more revolutionary
form of energy, such as solar
power, miaht put the utility
industry out or b\asiness.
There is dbquicting evidence
that Schlesmaer may be qui Uy
stacking the new Energy Dept.
with subordinates who ~hare hls
enthusiasm tor nuclear power
Top pollcymakint .positions ~ll go. for example, Mi1ohn O'Leary
and Dale My rs/ wbo are
ret(~icl es nuclea propon ts.
Dr. James Liverman, a
nuclear apologist, has been
mentloned ais Schlesinger's
chot c to be his new
environmental chief. Tbis
poss1 bili\y has so outra ed
environmentalists that a
conlll1on has dashed off a
pri\'ate letter to Scblesinaer.
warnloi that they "would
oppose" Uverman's nomination,
SCHLESINGER'S most
contro\rersial choice, however.
muy turn out to be Robert
Thorne, who heads the San
FrancisC9 office of the Energy
Research and Development
Administration (ERDA>.
Schlesmger has Thorne in min~
He used $113, 250 of the
taxpayers' money to establish
the Energy Awareness Project
an idett advanced by a registered
nuclear lobbying group known as
the California Council for
Environmental and Economic
Balance <CCEEB>.
There is a suspicion that the
Energy Awareness Project was
really supposed to make the
public and Consress more aware
of nuclear en ri)', althouih a
CCEEB spokesman told us the
project was intended to Inform
the public on all enerey
alternatives.
THE OCEEB stated in its one·
inal proposal, without
mentioning nuclear power, lhat
"we would want participants lo
~ write their conrressmen to ask
them to support specific
legislation, pass resolutloni.,
write letters to the editor,•'
Thome's office adopted this
idea to the tune of $1.13.250 over
the objecUoos or at least one
subordinate who warned in en
internal memo: "I believe such
an ~fort to be both ill-conceived
and misdirected." He added with
empbasls; "The logic ot the
p not only escapes me;
.. 1
as his assistant secretary in .,,
charge of technology. an office
that will control the Energy
Dept. 's nuclear operations
Thorne not only was in charge
of nuclear aHairit in San
Francisco but allegedly funded'
an apparently "improper--108
bying errort to lnllu nee
Congress to look kindly pan
nuclear power
To the Editor:
Zenith TV manufacturera are
moving part of their operal.l60
overseas where they can aet-•
sembly workers for $2,000 a y r.
Now we can buy ZeJtit.h TVs
cheaper, but we wlU bave to pay
more taxes for unemployment ln-•
surance to tbe unemployed
workers and there will be f~er taxpayers .
MulUply thl!'l by thousaftda of
other companies from steel
automobiles and you m ht
small Idea of the problem. at
does this do to balance or trad ?
Let's Caco up to '"' Those bargains we are 1ettlng from
overseu aren't so cheap. They
are breaking WI.
JAMES W. BOLDING
2P1•2
To the FA!ltor ·
On Oct. s. I read on your
editorial page of a unique "new"
way to help our children leam. 1'hl~ amaiing discovery 1s lo
but, its outhn• would ppear to
be an vxceUent plan for one ot thu greatest political boOMoggl~ of modern times."
Tho ausptcions of Rep. James
Jeffords, ~ .. Vt .. have •lso been
•rouled. He baa asked the Gen~rti Accountt11.g OtOce to
lnvestteate the proj ct. Th
taxpayers' money was liae<t, h char~es. for what BPPe.•r.1' to "improper purposes, inaudlng
possibly the Use of approprh1lbd
funds to lobby tbe CMSr on
legislative matters."
POT POUCY -The men
around Presldent Carter have
been quarreling b'ebind the
scenes over what words to put in
his mouth on the marjjuaoa
question.
One !action ravoreCj a more
sympathetic attitude toward pol
smoking. They managed to get
their ideas into an early dr1ft. or
the drug policy rqessace that.
Carter asked bis aides to writt
for him. 1'bis was approved by
the president's health adviser
Dr Peter Bourne.
It included such sentences as
"marijuana has become an
established fact throu1hout our
society and the sky bas not
, in 1&66. Is the reUgioh
sented by some 3000 bra of
the Church of Christ, Sdentlst,
throughout the world. It ha~ no
connection with the Self.lfetp
Foundation in San Diego. Net er
'does it spon.~or the sinetes group
or leaderehtp tr-tining course
that your: art1clelmplles.
I am SW'O M.S. Carman, as well au of Uie Chmtlan Sdencc
churche3 in Orange County, wf11
1pprcclate your: publication ~
thls clarification .
ROBERT C. PEMX>CK Cbrtstlan Sc1ence Commilte<! on
>ubllcatlon for South rn
CallromJa
E-£eccer
To tho Editor: J
I must compliment you nd
your staff for consistently
turning out such a Un
publication. B lpg n avid
rendcr of newspaJ>U.S rrom all
ov r the nation, I realil bow
fortunate the citizens Of the South
Coast area aro to have such an
informative and well·rounded
quality loca.l newsi>aper. The
wide variety of topic matter,
int.emaUonal, natlcmal and local,
is most satisfying and four
ente'1aJnment ction is aupcrb.
l'rrt sure I speak tor. many
thousands who ruso nrutlo ly
look forward every day lO th
atlmulating ud enJ.oyabl
experience of the Dally Pilot
wh 1' I aay, "Thank You" and
kecpupthe1oodwork. ,. ....
RONAL.URAZ
PIMnlel•~
\
I
I
l I Ot.:. 70, NO. 28S, 4 SECTIONS, -48 PAGES
1~ I ~~~~> w ~t?~~! .. , ~~~~ ~.~~~
f .Fortner Watergate prosecutor discrimination." Atatake in Bakke's case is the into &CCO\lllt an applicant's race
Archibald Cox told the U.S. Bakke, who ls white, s ue-future of affirmative action --maldnglhatractor a "crucial"
1
1 Supreme Court today that a cessfully challenged the progr.oms, beaun in the last IS one
s~ial admissions progo.m at a university's program befe>tt tho years to give special preference "The use or race as a basis for
Univel'Sity 0( Californla medlc:aJ California Supreme Court. He to m\nority members and women adrruss1on to a m~1cal school, or
schoolis11eededtohelpmlnonties claimed it made him a victim of lneducatlonandbuslness. for granting any b ther rights, is
because "the other alternatives racial discrimination. Bak.Ito's attorney, Reynold improper," he argued.
suggestedsimptywillnotwork." (J at k e • s •'reverse Colvin ol San Francisco, urged R~eshould beconsideredonJy
IaQfal4U'lumentsinthecueof discrimination" case ls the justices to affirm the as it provides a c lue to the
Allan PauJ Bakke. Cox def~ed c on 1 id ere d · by m a a y Catl!ornla Supreme Court de-a pplicant's total evaluation. he the so-oallecl affirmative ecUoo coDStltutional scholars to set the cislon. said.
proaramo,,e<lbytlleuniversity's stage for the high court's most Colvin argued that the Considering race, Colvin said,
med acbool atl Davt:s. He said the important statement on race Constitution's guarantee of "is permissible onJy to the extent
program lltlded rninoriUes "looi relations since it outlawed • "equalprotection"forallcitizens it gives tome clue to the
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE CAP J -lo its most
rhlistic test and fastest flight to date, the Space Shuttle
iJiterprbe landed safely today
after a diviag descent almulallng
t r~tWTI fri>hl apace.
WASJU GTON (Aft> -
Pttaiden Catt.er glgned a bill
today providinc $14.7 billion tor
housina the ~eedy aod
revttalixing the cities, calling it
••a giant step forward" in
improvinl livine conditions for
low·income. elderly and
baPdicapped families,
~he meaioure includes $1.2
bHlion lo help the families pay
\heir rent.
ttecalling his visit last week lo
the South Bronx slums In New
:York, Carter aaad he saw living
~oditions that arc "a disgrace to oµr great country (lo-enough to
shake nur. confiderce tn the
strudurethal we've evolved."
While there are no Instant
~olutions to such housing
proble"", the President said,
•ThJa bill tues a giant step
forward."
"In eeneral, this is a very
excellent J)iece of legislation,"
Cuter told them. But he said one p·an Of it.lftmoving restraints °" b~ mes in flood plains,
ca\1$Cd hlm concem.
The signing ceremony followed
Carter's weekly breakfast with
concressional leaders.
Flying for -tbe first time ·
without a streamline<l talloooe
used in the three previous fliihu
to ext.end Its gliding range, the
shuttle dropped more sl~ply and
swiftly, touching down only 2~
minutes after separating from
the 747 Jet that bore it aloft.
Minus the lailcone, the sl)utUe was about 30 feet shorter with a
blunt, instead o( pointed, rear
end. This made the bulky space
transport craft less buoyant and
also caused the carrier lo strain
and shake •titre taking the
Enterprise to launch altitude.
The added dras duting the
cliMb over the desert cawieid the
s eparation to be delayed by
minutes while the 1•1 sttuuled hl&W.
Alter eastinc free of tt.e mother ship. the sbattle was
1wded by astronauts Joe Bh1te,
45, and Richard Truly. 39,
through a few quick maneuve.rs
before touching down on a dry
lake bed at about 250 mites per
hour, somewhat faster than
previous landings.
Unlike the previous flights,
today's glide. carried Uve on
national television, was so short
that the shuttle was unable to
make a leisurely U·lum and
many teat maneuvers before
lan~. -lnatead, it noeed down at a
steep allgle and made a D-Oarly
straight·in approach with little
time for t.eisU of JUidaiJce control
&ystems.
Immediately alter separation,
Encte and Truly were told from
the ground they were some UOO
feet higher than planned for the
course. ·
The pilots tben opened the
SJ>ted brake. a pair of hinled naps on the shuttle's tau that
stowed it and dropped it lo the de-
sired pofition.
• m
These five Ne~· Yorkers, baseball fans all.
pedaled then'! bicy~les across the country to
the Orange Coast just in time for the World
Series. They watched Tuesday nigbt·s
Yankee win on TV in Newport Bea~. ~n .......
made of tlie proposed compleUoo
of FUth Avenue in Corona del
Mar.
The vole waa 4 ·2. with
Councilmen Trudl Ro1ers and
P &lJl llyckoff dl1sentin1.
C~er Says CrlSis
'Seyere' in Energy
WASHJNGTON CAP> -P.resldent Carter said today the
energy crills ts "much more
severe than It was .six months
a10" when he unveiled his
energy pr'Qfram.
He promised to "ao back to the
country" to galn support for his
proposals, many of which have
been rejected by the Senate.
Carter told reporters that ever
since he announced his energy
program last April, "the oil
companies have ... on an
aJmoet hourly basis presented
their point of view.'' He called
that "completely legitimate"
and said he didn't criticize lhe
NORFOLK, Va. CAP> -More
than 100 people have been
lnc1tcted aa the result of the
bltees& •'1Un1" In the history ot
U .S. law enforcement, the FBI
11tdtoday. Local, state and federal aaents
manned phony fencing
operat.loM in an apartrnent in
Vlrgtnla Beach and a pool t,all in
Newport News. They took in
more tb'an S600,000 ln stolen
1oods, and most of the
tran1actJons were videotaped,
1 Id Herb Clough, special qent
in charae of the Nortolk FBI 0(.
fice.
firms for the practice.·
But, he sald, "the baste
struggle ls whether or not the
average ramJly will be treated
fairly," whether supplies will be
adequate and International
stability and national security
will be maintained 0 or whether a
special~ groul) ~ dorive
unwarranted dvantage at the
expense of tho American
people .•.
"1 think it ls important for me
again to go back to the country
and reaffirm the reasons, which
have not changed, for the
comprehensive energy pOlicy we
have adopted," Carter said.
The goods ranged from a bottle
of baby formula, stolen durtne a
house break-In, to a forkHCt
truclf. There were hubcllJ>9, tape
. recorders and luxury cars.
Clough said 107 peopln faced
276 charges rangtna from.
homicide to robbery . The
indictments were returned Tuea·
day by special arand JUrica •
Sixty·six of those charaed h•d
been arrested by lhls momlna,
Clouih said, ln NQrfolk, Vtr1inla
Beach, Newport Newa.
RlchrnMd.. Frederlck4burc aiid
upstate New York. •
The operation, code.name~
'Race I
admissions committee whethet
there wa$ a prior bistoty ot
economic or educ:ational clep-
n v ation or persecution.•'
Bakke's legal britrs h ve
contended that lo uch cba, aivlng speelal preference to
economically or educationally de·
prived applicants would be a&·
ccptable.
Colvin appeared lo di.aJ> ase at
least one member of the court.
Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr •• by
de vodng the first 20 minutes of his
/
N Wlictn!!ftX, 0.tote 12, 1977
bo~ ...... r.:.t '" t n:aust turn over to the state
$111.MO'ta l9'18-11. U.I lD
lt7t-n, and $1.1 mUUon tn 1980-81.
Jean Barmoa. executive assWut to tbe s~~
Mid --~~a dbtrict's ~ Is 'Nltrlcted Q4d.er ·1 law, 1.3 pettent
growtla permitted next year.
Tb•t ll ao& eoouab to QUlet iDQadclQ; lbeaald. . •-nae elfed. of the law la to
Pay
penlllaa ~ dlltricta. ud We.,.tbM,H)fftt, Jl&--lald.
The school finance law is a
resw~ oC the Serrano vs. Priest
court decision, which held that it
is unlatr to penalize studeota
flnancJall.J jwit because they liff
ln PQOI' acbooa diatricta. I
Tbe bill'• .,.i, Yrs. Hannon explained, ls to bring the amount
spent per student in each,
California school di&uict to
within J)O of that speat in all
o&Wacbooldlltricb 1D ~&late.
IninJJ OKs P~ s.;;~~~· ..
For Town Center ..
• :J
Tbe apart111eat1 ..o• h pnc.d fOr low and aMl1hte
income ltftiors. That ~ a te$ponslve chord with tlae
co'-'1. ~da ts under~
to nd " cost bowih.i& (~ ldenta.
Al ~cilwoman Gatiri le
ttry0r•s -.ma. the councO bnlke
tbe Town Center deadlock,
ailowing the Irvine Company to
submit plans fof' the center in the
two plrases. • The vote was . \,\ftanimous.
CoundbnaD David Sills saJd. Just
before. "U we try to do the whole
tblnl"et OMe. we're ~vw laiQ& to pt~··
'!'be proJeet b to be on a
triansle ol 231 aens bCRmcled by
UniftnitJ. Oalnr aad Ca&QPQS drives near UC Jntne.
STUDY •••
Jack Raybart. a pollce
spotesm'I. Hid cit.liens al$0
woWd be abowll ~ of the victims: l>eborab-Ann
Hogan 10; her 8-year-old sister,
ThereU, and tbeir friend Ann
MarleBneNkiewlcz, also8. -PoUee ~d the sheath •u toUnd Moeday near the small
stream ln a densely wooded area
where the parka-clad bodies
. were discovered. The girls had
disappeared Swtday.
Meanwhile. abcnat 50 miles
away ln Cart'OIJ County, st.ate
J)O)ice said a ~year-old boy was tound safe this morning a:aore
than 18 hours after be
disappeared. Troopers said
Thomas Doebrer was found
wa.nderiQa alaoc a road about
two miles from bis rural
PlQbbura .. bome-He bad last t been apod.8ct about f p.tn. Tues· da7.~ ID ftoatol tbe bome. ne J""mpt• ~ b9d naa a-.,~ home after a fitbt wtu. a r~ member. u.ey said.
lfare than 100 persons. aJoo&
wltti • ~ abd a ctat.e r:Uee belJcOpter, li&d taken part
the Carroll County seareb. ·~aid.'• • "'"'I' r .. ~ ." • ,,
POiiee !eeking
Jewelry '11ilef
Newport Beacb poltce are s lat \be thief w o broke lnto a
Nu•l'IOl't Heights bome aiad stole
$f ,1Db wotttl of jewelry will,_ the
occupant was out.
Barbu-a Kinyon sal4 ab4l l•l event ~lecea of Jewelry
including an 1819 eolc1 coin oa a
sold chain. l• tbe 'tuesday e,~ tnak·ln. Ne. seW \be bu~ar i« lnto the bome tbroua.h aa~Window.
I ,. '\
" ~en Favored
RENO, Nev. CAP> -The Los
Angeles Dodaers are 5-to-7
!avoritoe to defeat the New Yon
Yankeet tonftllt In the second
game of the 1977 World Senes.
according to Nevada odds· ma ken.
Harrab•a Reno an41 Lake
Tahoe sports book also said the
Dodeers were sUll 10·to·13
favorites lo win the ~sl-of·
seveo came series despite lOlina
tbe opener to ~ Yankees 4·3 Tu~nl&bl
S~ap .Soa •t
. ~ ~ 'Nixon Li;mit'
~ra\rak o1nc1.is say ~·d like to atep on It when th~ reac)\
a five-n:Ule atretcb ol railroad
track near Ule ta. aere Nixon
complex iii San Clemen\e.
But• 40-mlle-~ hour UmJt Cor nonh . and southbound Amtrak
tralns was lmpose4 oate\lme
during t ~ ntlat years for eeu.tity reasoa, un
Arthw-Uoyd. Western rettoaat
manager for the JlaUonal rail systern.
Llo~d ale! Am\rat would like
to &M Uuit speed Umlt lncreuocl
to 'IS m.iles per hour trom • curve
ln the tracks just north ~ San
·Clemente to JCLSt put tbe NbOG eQelave.
••The Federal Ratlroad
, Admin\stratlon and Amtrak
Itself have JurucUctlob on •P'l:'d Umita oo curvea and the
maximum •'"4 that the tratk \fftll aUow," Lloyd 1ald today.
.. But.,_.. you have ttaclcac•
t.,at ..nu allDw more •"41d. local ~ wtll restr\ct •PMd.
for e at 11'ad• crmsln1s
and fonafety.
"And in the case of Uie Nixon
thine, il WU for MCl.lfib'.'' Lloyd
sald.
But. be added, "We have
shown that 40 mUes pe.r ~ is not very practical north of
town."
He said the maximum apeed
betwtien s.n ·nre10 ea i.
Au II tO mll.Spu hour, ~n1
tratna pick up that speed just
past Del Mar and bnrel along to
San CltJDe•t•. wit a •few
a.lowdowns on curves and
crcaU\11. •-n.en t.hey blt tbat S.1 tnUe air.teh that really 110 ... ·1 Utem
dowri, .. Lloyd eald.
He said a lS·mlle·per h<>Qr
limit aJona the Nhton stntch,
plus aome other revised •~.
wouJd ea~ San Dleao \o 10i
Anseles travelers abou\ 18
mfnu.t..
t\mtrak pruented tbe
lncreaHd 1peed plan propoeaJ u
part o( a five-year pltQ Issued la
Wubln,ton. The p1en alto calla
tor lncrcastd ltf'Vlce betweea 1the ,.,, dUes and an lncruse
from fivt dat11 round\rtps to
e~ven.
Bear Bug
Chow, a seven·fOGt, 500-pound KQdiak bear, ts a b
kiss from his keeper, L11a DeBedts, following
capture in maleah, Fla. Chow ls still under-the dteets
of a tranquilizer us ed to cap\ure him following hlS
escape two days ago.
lngred Berggren
Funeral Friday
Funeral services will be held
-Frida)' for Jnired V. Bergreo ol
Hunttncton Beach, famed as a
salad mater for more than U
years. wbo died last Friday after
a lencthY illness. She was'4.
A aalive of Sweden, Mlss
Bergren pl'eaided ovu a vast
array of salads whil• worklq at
the Valla S.eden Smoreasbard,
first in tt tlngton Beach and
lalerf01tmo1toltler 12 years wilb
tbeflnn ear.a deUtar.
Born lQ Bolkten. Sweden, she left ber famlly to emi1rale to Ameri~moreiba.:i idecade•.
.,Sbe WU a beautllul per'SQQ, ••
aaya Mrs. Herta Bl1cJdund, who
heada the :VUla Sweden
orglni<lon. " wu '1 a ==-~~"·· IO Survivon include bu father
Arvll; a brother Gosla, both 0( •
Swed a r. Sl t.er, r
Aust a us
Crede nza •••••••.••••
Drawer cleck •••....•••
Rcctlngullt: t.1b" ••.••••
Splat back arm ch.iir •••••
Spin bacl.. sido ell.ii( •••.•
W ablund and Astrid Lundstroa.,
of Sweden.
•'She gaw berse1f tO her ..vt
and the cburcb. •• says the l\eY.
Ricbard Carlson. pastor of the
W estmlns ter CtarllUan
As s,mbly. of which lu seraren w1,5 •meaibtr.
He will conduct f\aDetal
servi~ Fricky at 10 a.m. In
Pierce Brotb•r•·S1111tb•s
Mortuary ln HW'ltlDl\e>n Beacll,
just across the street from the
res\aurant where ahe started
worictn America.
H.-&Abes !(ill be inunMICl ln
Sweden by mem.bers or Mr
ramU.V, who aro eolnl.rta to tbe
OranpOoasttorthe ntts.
MiS$ ~"'1'1 wl.5 WaJ tbat
tr end~..-.-~Y meke.,;~emon-1
c tnbUUolis ll tbb dal.re. lOtbe Fred Wel.aberc Honchlru ~
throusb tbe West.-laater Christi•o Aaseml>ly ·U&U
Bu tart of
..
I
J
r t
f
l
},
The controversy over a Fifth A venue traffic Uto~rare in Corona del Mar is like a ghost that refuses ~tie laid to rest. the topic reappears every year or so, tn a
vuriety or forms. renews rear and dismay among some
Newport Beech residents, then. gets shoved into the
background and forgotten for a while. '
We can understand the f eellngs of residents of the
hom immediately adjacent to Fifth Avenue who don't ~ant to see their quiet neighborhood boNiered by a major
thoroughfare for motorists seeking to avoid driving in the ongest.lon on East Coast Highway.
But we thin~ they may have gotten a little too seos1ti ve
~o the subject over the years and the hue and cry they raise
t each mention or Fifth venue may not always be
easonable.
What is needed now is for all concerned to take a more
reasoned approach to the problem. An environmental
impact report on completion of the roadway across the
~asmine gulch doesn't mean the construction is going to
·tart tomorrow. . •
1t will, however, give city officials factual data they are
going to need in order to make a Clecis1on that can be shown
lo be best for all Newport. Beach residents. And that is
about the only way the haunting problem of Fifth A venue i ever'. going to be laid to rest.
&a.rd Missed Bus
Tho problem of relocatinf the McNetly Continuation
· School increasingly dominates Newport-Mesa Unified
School District affairs.
Where to put the school came up more than a year ago,
but the school bOard was unwilling to make a swift and
clear decision on a new location from its present site at
J9th and Harbor in Costa Mesa.
Citizens around other low-enrolln,ent schools Jn the
dlstt1ct dldn't U e the idea of mo91ng-McNalty into thek
neighoomooos. . ... •
They protested and the protests hav~ gotten louder.
The .school board pushed the matter oot~ ii citizen
committee which held several meetings and spent many
hours on the 9uestion. l\fembers were unable lo decide
where the conbnuation school should go. •
Now the matter is back in the school board's lap,
hotlet and more ilifficult than it ever was ..
How much easier pungs would be now if trustees t\lld
disPoSed of the relocation matter when it first came before
them • ,
Th y !l;h()uld have swallowed the rnedtcine and gotten
it over with.
\
Pav.iijg the Way
·ummer. t ,
The screams or omr an~ aneuisb· apparently
earned all the W8)' to S4i en{q because Work is Jilsl
now getting under WIY. •
Jn ~ite of the delay of .schedule to miss summer traf.
f C, We SOOUldn't be OVeNhelmoo by Uie thoughtfulness O(
the folks at CalTTans.
They may be paving at night, to avoid blocking traffic.
but they're painting the newly paved lanes on Newport
B6ulevard in the middle or the peak traffic hours ~uring
the Clay. • ·
What will happen when they start on Coast Highway ?
• Opinions ·~ In the space above are those ot the Dally illot
Other Vl8W9 exprnled on this page are tho9e of their auth0t9 and
artltta. Reader comment ts Invited. Add~ The Dally Piiot.
P.O. Box 1560, Costa, Mes11. CA~· Ptlot'le (714) ~1.
ByL .BOYD
''Trigger: queries'' are
those qu t1ons which have
been known to start family
fights. Ow-Love &l\d War
man is collecUng a list Of
am • From davorce recQ~.
They'Te not neceuarlly
critical, insulting or degrad·
JDI, not m themselves. It's
what lhey l ad to, however
!'l\Ysterlously. These are
trigger queries: "Pancakes
again?" "Isn't lhe game over
yet?" .. » melon ball cutter!
How Much?" "Don't you
want plain 1tingerale •
loo"ght?'' And: ''Qo fOU think
it's llttletoo11mall?" •
Surveys prove . lot or
tourist. pl~k mo la with
~wimmins pools eveo tbpugb
they ha.ve no lnltl\llon of
1oing sw1mm•ng. They Just
beli v the places wlt.h the
pools .,..ill lso be better
equipped othenvise
Mu t nit to have u
jOb wllh • 1ovemment
acency. While they
enjoyed their Columbus
Dny holiday 98 percent
of u in private tndustry
had to work tn order to
pay the taxes to make
their holiday poaai ble.
J.V.T.
..
comes most swiftly to mind.
If youdldn't say apple, you're
not amooc t.'le majority so
queried.
Q . "Has anybody ever
• really disproved Adolf
Hitler'.s theory that seleqUve
bre~ding could produce a
super human being'!··
A. lti a way, at was
dlsJ)n)ved. Long ago. But not
'With humans, because
humans don 't breed
sele('Uvely. bn the contrary. It ag f.iisproved wilh dogs,
wtlkh ha~ been selective!~ bred tor centuries, still
wi~hou~J ever turning out a
~aog.
Rapid Reply: Figure 55
percent of your grownup
~eight is water. Lose less
than a fiflh of it, you survive. tose more, you die.
GenerllJy, generally.
Q "How many teeth has a horse'>"
A.40.
The 20,000 books about
chess exceed in number the
books about all other games
put together. I'm told. One of
the~e chess book!! cites
1ludie!l CA> prove tt1't a good memot~ Is nol the fl\ost
sisnJlicant racutty a lop ches~
player 0-n po!isess, not at all.
lmaaination is, accordina to
this authority. The most
remarkable c he s!\
performances. it's saic,l, are
not executed, the way a
pianist renders a tune, but are
created, the way a compost>r
dreams up such
The average automobile of
lhc •three biggest car rental
a1enci is driven by about 80
pe.-.ons btfore it's soJd out ol
tho fleet after 10 months.
Jack Anderson
J ..
Energy Chiefs Tilt .to Nuclear
WASHINGTON James ~chlesmg~r·s rise from political
obscunt,y lo political power has
been smooth and subtle. He has
the air more or a college
professor than an energy czar.
But behlnd the pipe smoke and
contemplative mannet', he bas
the heart of an industrial tycoon.
He has been an unabashed
advocate of nuelear power, for exampl<',
ever since he
came out or
the Atomic
Energy
Commi~sion
in th~ early
1970S. The big
ut1l1ly
companies
desperately
want to dev-,
elop energy, of course, that will
utilize their ex1st1ng grid
_sy..stems and permli. them lo go
on selling eledric1ty to the
populace. A more revolutionary
form of enerb, such as solar
power, might put the utility
mdustry out of business.
There is disquieting evidence
that Schlesinger may be quieUy
stac:king the new Energy Dept.
with subordinates who share his
enthusiasm for nuclear power.
He used $113,250 or the
taxpayers' money to establish
the Energy Awareness Project
an Idea advanced by a recl.stered
nuclear lobbying group known as
I the California Council ror
Environmental and Economic
Balance (CCEEB>.
There is a susplclon that the
Energy Awareness Project was
really supposed to make the
public and Conaress more aware
of nuclear energy, although a
CCEEB ~pokeeman told us the
proJect was intended to inform
the public on all energy
alternatives.
THE CCEEB stated in Its orfg.
inal propot;aL without
mentiorung nuclear power, that
''we would want'particlpant.a to
W'l"1te lhelr congressmen to ask
them to support s peclf1c
legislation, pass resolutions.
write letters to the editor.''
Thomo'a office adopted this
idea to the tune of $113,250 over
the object.ions or at least one
subordinate who warned in an
internal memo: "I beh~ve such
an effort to be both lll·conceived
and misdirected." He added with
emphasis: "The lorlc of the
pror>osal not only escapes me;
Top policymaJcini posilicms wilt
go, for example, to John O'Leary ~ and Dale Myers, who are
regarded as nuclear proponents.
Dr. Jamer. Liverman~ a
nuclear apologist. has been
mentionAd as. Schlesi'!Pr'i;
c b o i c ~-to b \! his new
environmentMI chief. This
ponibalit; bAs ioo outraged
en Yironm.Jtnt Us ts ~htrt a .,
coa(ilion has dashed off a
private letter to Schlesin,er.
warning that they "wouJd
oppose" Livern)t.n'a noraUiM.ion.
• SCHLESINGER'S mos t
controvers•al choke. however.
may turn out to be Robert
Thorne. who heads the San
Francisco office of the Energy
Research and Development
l\dmin1strution <ERDA>
Schlcsiniter has Thome in mind
as has ussistanl St!crelary tn
char~c of technology. an ornce
that will control the EnerJ{y
Dept 's nuclear operations
Thome not pnly was an ~harg'~ ,
of nucleu~·affa1rs in So
Francisco bu\ allegedly fund ~ 11~Gtl •·tmP.f@e11·.~ '
bylng effort lo fnrJueMe
Congress to look" kindly uwn
nuclear power. v
Perh.aps Pana~a
• To tho Editor
Your arUcle enllllett "Self Help
Cius Set for San Juan" !Dally
Pilot, Oct. 3> confuses two
distinctly different reli1tous de·
nomin Uons, and would leave
your readers quite p11nled unless
, • corrected.
MANY OF US were rebeJJing
al(am!ll the status quo before
WWII The difference was that
we wcr.e smart enouih to realize
lhat desired chanRe!I could be
PERHAPS M1. Carman has
already mentioned this to you,
but Chrilli n Selene •
discovered by Mary Biker Eddy
r •
STOCKS I MOSKOWITZ
, edne y's
Closing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
°"°tAllOAS lncludt "-'on,,.. H.w York, M!OwotJt, l'Kllk, l'IW, lotlM, Oolf Oil -Clnclnn<1U stocl( ••<henQK.nd~llY the Hat""'411 Aue<le tl0ftol S.Cwtues be•Nn-ln"lrwl
N DAILY PILOT A J :J
. .
VOL 70, NO. 28S, .C SECTIONS,~ PAGES WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1977
iRos.ary·kiSsi• Speeder ·w~pS Eross
A San D1e&o youth apparently o( Lake Forest Drive, CHP of· LngunaHlllsparam~dlca,,,.(lre A CHP spokesman said Officer• save cnase In tbe ,who eot close durint the chase
tried to swallow the rosary ~ fleets reported flndlne the strin& aummoned to tht ·Ue"• bl.It &intana wa.s booked on charges rush·hour traffic but Santana said Santana ~riodicall)' kiued
had been clutching and '°5slili of rellatous beads '*ediecl lnto coutdn 't fil\d the c~A eounty '· o( driving undtr lbinfluence of ,uegedly floored the accelerator the rosary be was holding,
for protection Thursday as he led the mO\rti) of 2Q.ye~ld Carlos flre d~ent spokesman said ~ drugs lllld l'ec"1esa drtvlnc. and reached a~!I '>f tnQre th.an
California ffiihway Patrol can • '\.OIP~~tana. tooay thOY ~umed it had been l!'lduringthe20·milepurtu~ The CHP flaid Santana rmally
on a high si>ffid freeway chase When officen pulled the beads swallowed and would "show up The suspect waa allegedly first The suspect. alle&edl)I swung lost control ol his car and
• from Lo8 AJamitoS to Laau.na out, they found that the crucifix eventually." spotted driving at more than 60 oft the San Diego Frff._wa smasbed Into the center divider
Hills. normally attached to rosaries Santana miraculously suffered miles an hour along the center Laguna Freeway jun tl s~ fence ju,,t alter meralnc back
When the pursuit ended In a was missing and presumed only minor injuries and was divider shoulder of the San Dieeo over to the Santa Ana Freeway onto the San Dleato Freeway
crackup at S:lS R·"'·• just north caughhnthesuspect'stb1'oat. takeritoOranieCountyJaJl. FreewaynearLosAlamltos. and continued outb. Offi«rs nortbolLakeForestDrlve • •
• m Girls' ila,mg
. .
f:arter Si~s City,
Housing Boost Bill
WASHINGTON CAP) -
ptesident Carter signed a bill
today providlng S14.'7 billion for
housinc the needy and
revitalW.ng the cities, Callin& it
••a giant atep forward" in
Jmproving living conditions for
low-income. elderly and
Uitdenrorld
Etgure Slain
·For Reverige?
BAY HARBOR JSLAND, Fla.
,CAP> -The stepson of
underworld fiaure Meyer Lansky
w•s shot to death today in what
police specwate was a eangland
revenge k!Jlin1.
Richard Schwartz, 47, was sho~
once as he Ht in bis car bebind a
restaurant he owned in this
exclusive resort city between
MlaM.i and Mtami Beach, police
said.
handica~ families.
The me1sure includes Sl.2
billion to belp the families pay
their tall.
Recallln1 bis vislt last week to
the SoutJ:l Bronx slums ID New
York, Carter !aid he nw llvfn1
conditions that are "a discrace to
our ~ t eountrx -enoulb to
ahake our ccinf1de~ce ln tt-e structure that we've evolved."
While tbere are no Jnstant
solutions to such housing
problexns. the President said,
"This iblll takes a giant step
forward."
"In 1eneral, Uiis Is a Vet'Y excellent, piece of lecitlaUon,"
Cart.er told them. But he sald one
part Of 1t, removJna restraints on
buildin• homes In fiood plains, ea~lUmconcern.
The ~ent said be wowd
determine whether to reimtate
the restraints with corrective
le&l5laUon ne"t :vear or try to deal wlth the matter
admjnistratively.
The signing ceremony followed
Cart.er'• weekly breakfast with
congressional leaders.
FBI Roundup
I 00 Indicted
In 'Sting' Raid
NORFOLK, Va. (AP> -More
than 100 people have been
indicted as the result o! the
bigaest "sting" lo the history of
U.S. law enforcement, lbe FBI
sald today.
Is Bandit
Same on
·2 Heists?
The Federal Bureau of
Investigation ls studying the
possibility that the burly man
who robbed a Granada Hills bank
Monday is the same man
suspeetelt ol holdlnl up a Laiuna
Hills bank last May 24.
Dick WJ)Olf, a spokesman for
the FBI in Los ADl•les. said the
physical descriptions of lho two
suspects are geneully tbHame.
He said the bantJlt in this
week's Bank of Amtrfca hetst,
which netted $42.000 in cub and
checks, was about six feel, two
inches tall and weighed an
estimated 240 pounds.
A man or the a same build held
up the same branch ror SS,400 last
April, leading investigators lo
dub him "the Heavy."
A burly blond·halred bandit in
a basebball cap robbed the
Lall\aa HlJ1s Bank of An\trica
of aoocun May.
"When de&eriptlons are this
close, we always try to compare
them,•• said Woolf. "These guys
are usually 1'9'aters."
Iovestitatora believe the
susJ)fet wears wigs and other
dissUJ,ses whtn staelng his rob-
beries. He wore a blue ski mask
in thia week's Granada Hills job,'
Woollaald.
And in both Granada Hills and
La1una Hills, the large man
vaulted ~ counter to confront
tellers and eat.her his loot.
Oaima Soaring
SACRAMENTO (AP>
Malpractice claims against Dr.
John Nork and others involved
with him have resulted in about
$13 million being paid by their
insurance carriers, say lawyers
close to the case. The
Sacramento orthopedic surgeon
lost his license lo practice
medicine in 1974 after numerous
malpractlceclatms.
Local, st.ate and federal agents
manned phony fencing
operations in an apartment in
Virginia Beach ancf a pool hall fn
Newport News. They took in
more than $600,000 in stolen
goods, and most of tbe
transactions were vfdeota~.
said Herb Clough, special agent
m charge of the Norfolk FBI of· rice.
The goods ranged from a bolUe
of baby formula, stolen during a
house break·ln, to a lorklirt
truck. Tbere were 1\ubcaps, tape
recorders and luxu.ry cars.
Clough sald 107 people faced
276 charges ranging from
homicide to robbery. The
indictments were retumed Tues·
day by special grand juries.
Slxly·si" of those char&ed had
been arrested by this morning,
Clough said, In Norfolk, Virainla
Beach, Newport News,
Richmond, Fredericksburg and
up'\tate New York.
The operaUon, code·natiied
Talon, invQlYed seven l~al
police departments, the FBJ lJWl
slate llOllce.
Federal money left over from
Operation Seawall, a similar
operation ln Norfolk earlier this
year, was used to fund the
"sting."
The number of indictments
from Operation .Talon is the
biegest ever, Clouah said.
In some cases, the alleged
sellers of stolen merchandise
talked freely wlth the undettov.-
aaent.s, and one man repottedly
confessed to a murdet before the
hidden camera.
Teen Girls Eur.ed.
Into Prostitution?
NEWTON, N.J. CAP) -A
cabinet maker and his wife have
been accused of luring high
school firls Into a prottituUon
operation they ran from their
home in Wantage Township.
Suuex County authorities
charged Frank Barone. 57, Tues·
day with impairing the morals of
a minor, carnally abualng
lerpaJes under the age of 16 and
prostitution. His wife, Diane, was
charged with aiding and abet.tine
ham
Authorities uld at least nine
girls were haed il)to prostJtutton
since September 1976.
Jo#
f{is body was found abOrtly: arter 9 a .m. EDT behind the
Jnside restaurant. Details of the
slaying were not immediately
avaUable.
Schwartt, son of Lansky's wife, Thelma, had been
scheduled to._ on trial Nov. 28
on charces lc'llllhe his drinkine
companl , ear·olcl Crail
Terlaca, on or underworld
fi1ure Vincent ertau.
Fa~ah Coming Back
A number of known mob t11~res attended Teriaca 's
funeral.
'''l'he motive doesn't seem to
be robbery or anythlnf of that
ooture," police spokesman
lUdph Page aaid. "It would be a
logical conclusion that revenie ls
a aoOd ~lbllity. Conslderinl
who be ls and the incident With
Teriaca, "' ha\'e to look at ~
veneetbc,(,iy.'
,
f
Stan ~t Second 8Pt!rta Chtdlenge ·in J?~jo
Some of the briiblest stars of
television and the movies will
come to Mlssioo Viejo next week
for the second tJme ln six months
to compete in the pseudo-sports
event called Celebrity Cballenae
of the Sexes
One hiehlight of the five-day
event, which wW be videotaped tor a t.,o.bour presentaUon on
rfV Nov. 13, Is IJ&ln expected to
be Farrah Faweett·Majon.
Fal'f'ilh_ the former atar or
televil1Cilt\1 "Charil•'• Anaels"
aeries, *ill compete Oct 20 in a
tennis match •«alnst act.or D\dt
Van Patten, 1Ur of the show
"Elabtlt EnoUah."
Last Ume the tenflis match
drew an enormous crowd to the
Marsuerite RecreaUon Center,
where It will take place aaaln
next w It. Tb• event wUl be1Jn
Upm.
' '
f
• "
A spokesman for the Mission
Viejo Ci>mpany said the public
will be admitted to dlUerent
events but details have not yet
been worked out.
The celebrity sports events will
kick off one week Crom today on
the track at Saddleback Collete.
'the flrst event to be staaed for
the cameras and onlookel"I will
be an obalacle course run
between X...Slte uuams and
James Ftanclscus, starting al 9
a .m .
That will be followed at 11 .30
a.m . with a bicycle race bftween
Valerie Perrine and James
Farantino.
The last event of the first day will ht a tMathon competition
starting at 2:30 p.m . The male
compeUtor will be Le Var Burton,
the youn.g Kunta Kinte of "Root.a." His opponent has yet lo
be chosen. •
The first event on Oct. 2IO at tl\e
Marguerit' recreation cent•r
wlll feature S\llan Saint .lames and Robert Cutp in swtmmJni
competJUon. Tennis with Farrah
ls the only other e•ent or the da.y.
Two horseback events are
slated for Oct. 21 at the Mlislon
, Viejo Equdtrlan Center, located
just olt Matiuerit~ Parllway In
the south part of the commWlity.
Linda "The !!itorci&t" Blair
wlll compete a1alnst Tab Hunter
in a hone Jumpina event et 10
a.m. Steve Ford. son of former
president Gerald Ford, wilt
compete In rodeo events acatnst
an unnamed female opponent
startJnsaU:30p m.
On S8turday, Oct. 22, the 1cene
of the action shlfb to Capistrano
Valley Hl1h School. 1
<See FARRAH, Pa1eA2) ·
,
ELVAi\'ON, d. AP> - A
teen-age youth was arrested
today in tbe •tabbine death.$ or
three )'oung 1irls wtio
disappeared while ptayinc and
were found ljtng by a stream
near ltlelr hopiea ln this
BalUmore suburb, police said.
An Anne Arundel County police
spokesman identified tho suspect
as Stuart Kreiner, 1', of tbesaroe Southga~ community where the
1irls lived and wSere tbelr bodies
were found Monday.
The spokesman sal4 Kreiner
had been cbatged with three
counts of hotlllcide.
Befo~ word of the arrest,
police had said they would eo
door to door through the town
With a photograph or a knlCe
sheath, hoping someone could
identify one of the few clues 1n
tlie atabblng deaths.
Jaek Raybart, a police
spokesman, saJd citizens also •
would be shown pboto1rapbS o!
the victims: DeboTah Ann Hogan, 10: h«8»•ear-old sister,
Theresa, and their friend Ann
Marie Bri.eS wica, &lso8.
PoUco 1 Id the 'Sheath was
found :M(Qljj :near the small
stream hi 1 \lez).Se:ty: WoOded area
where the paf'ka-clad 'bOdia
were dlsCovered. The 1lrls bad dlsa~ared Sunday.
Meanwhile, about 50 mil
away ln cvron County, state
poUce said a 9-year-old boy w's
found sato i(hla morning more
than 18 hours alter ~e
disappeared: Troopers said
Thomas Doehrer was found
wanderin1 along • road a6o\lt
two mlleis froD\ his rural
FlntilbUtg hOme. He had last
been spotted aboUt 4 ·p.m. Tues•
day, playing ln front of the hoUSe.
The youngster apparenUy had
TUn away from hOmo after a Jlght -
with a family member. they s&id.
More than 100 pe.rs • along
with a blOodhouDd and a state
)>(>lice helicopter, bad taken part
in the Carroll County search.
tbcyaaid.
.ti PM. Y !tit.OT 58
Moslem
~. ~iUppP._tH <AP> -.\ oalem rebel leader claimed t~ 1 that PhlUppln• troops
mauac about 400 MotleD\
dvlllW to tv,en&• the deatba ot an .-mJ neral and St Gtber
aoV9"DlDeDtloldJtta.
A government spokesman in
Ma.Sladenlecl the clalm mtde by Jt.aumu IWlan, ht1fleat·ranklnt leader Of th• Moro National
Liberation Front, lo a telephone
inwrvl!W from Zambo-n1• City. MtUtar)'. aotlaorltlea ln
Zamboapra ordered an
••lJitenslfleclp,ai;UUvt campalp''
a1atnst rebelt responsible for
killing Bric. Gen. Teodulfo s.
Bautista and his men. The
eovernment said they were on a
peace mission with rebel leaden
10 Paticul on Jolo illud when
the, au.eked Mondu.
Hu.an 1ald ''very r.tlablt
goaces•• hMI rtPorted to blm
that "Immediately after the
incident, s everal famllles
evacuating from the area, some
oC them rtdlna lo jeeps, were told
to come down anrt were killect w
tbe IJ'ln)'.''
Jolo l1land 11 100 mtlea
southwest ol Zamboanga ln the
southem Ph.illpplnes, where a
nine-monU1-old cease-tire
between governm•t fottes and
Moslem rebels lighting for
autonomy broke down las t
month.
"
Viejo, ToJ.o
Schools Set
Tyranny. Tyrants •~d
Tantzwna. a aertes of lectures
1pon1ored by SaddJeback
Commwdt)' Mental Health. will
bt1m at l :ao J>.m. Tb'-ndlY at
MINl«i Communlty Hosplc.I.
Dr. Elnora Scbmad•I,
executive dJrector of Leamlns
Development Strvlcea, will ~ punilhment within the
family dl.Uina the four weeicbi
ae11iona. }.dmiulon to the lectures ilf ree.
.Strike Rule Told
SJ\.fi llVoNCISCO <AP> -An arbitr tot bai told W eat Coast
docnmers to break an earlier
aareem~ and cross picket Unes stt·..,up by ltnld.nl &ut Co~
hmgsbonmen. Jn a rullnt Tues·
day, Sllm Ka1et. an arbitrator ap~ by the lnternaUonal
Lo Dr• h~o rem en • • and
Warehousemen's Union ahd the
sbi.pj>inc industry's PaciCic Mari·
time Association, said the East
Coast strike could not be honored here.
-
DAILY Pl LOT
•
IWao Will Be C-rotcnaed!'
AtNlxo
Amtrak omcfala say they'll
like to step Cl'1 it when tb~ reach
a flve-mUe stretcb of railroad
track n•ar the a. acre N
complex tn San Clemente.
But a 40-mlle-"r hour limltfor north ~ southbound Amtr.t
traloa was impoeecl 10._,eUme
durjnf the Nllcon pHticte~Ual yean for security reuons, says
Arthur Lloyd, Western rulonal
rnnnager for the naUonaI rail
syptetn.
Lloyd aald Amtrak would like
to see that ipeed llmlt ll:lc~ued
to 75 mllee per hour from a~
in the tracks juat north of San
Clemente to just. past tbe Nl%0C1
encl#lve.
El Toro High Sch •s.homecomlna ~ueen
candidates. <from left) Christy Lon~. Kathy
Gavin. Robin Crow, J ackie !\!orris and
Sha.ron Madewell will find' out Frid ay,
during the school team's football game
a.gainst University High School, who 1s
\ .
queen. The announcement will be mJdt when the queen's n ame is emblazoned in
fi reworks during the half-time Nights on
Broadway show. Selection of the queen is
made on the basis of popularity and s ervice
to the school.
•'The Federal 1\allroad
Administration and Amtrak
ttaelf have JurisdlcUon on .,ed llmits on cuuu and the
maxiroum ~that t.be track
will allow," LlOyd said today.
.. But wtaer. )'IOU have trackage
that will allow oiore 11peec:l, local
ordinances will restrict speed,
for bwtance at srade cl'Oli1rlp
andforwetJ.
F,...PageAJ
FARRAH ••• Cox Defemls Ul;'s . ·'And in the c·ue of the NlxOn
thine, it was for 1ecurity," 1JO)'d
said.
But, he -adcte4, "We have
ahown that 40 miles ))er bOur la
not very practical north of
town." At 9:30 a.m. in the school
gymnasium, TV aports
personality and former Miss
America Playllia Georie will
compete in l!IDJ PoDi 11atnst an
as-yet unnaqied opponent.
Admission Policy . . -He sald the maximum tj)etd
betweeo Sao Oiego and Sai)ta
Ana la 90 miles per hour, •aYb>I trains pict up that apeicJ J
put Del'Mar and barrel alonrto
San Clernerite. wltb a few
slowdo•ns on curves and
croeainp.
That will be followed at 11: 30 a.m. by a bi1Uard1 match featuring ~ Somen ol the
''Three's COmpaiiy .. TV 1how.
Hei-oppoaent also ha• not been
anriounced.
Saturday'• ftnat event will \alt• place at 2 p.m. at the NOrtb
Beach ar~a of Lakt Mission
VleJo. It wm featltf'e Krlaty
McNlcbol or "FamUy" In a
skateboarcfinc cociteit aca.tn.st an' unnamed opponent. ·
Tbe procluctlon •lll wrap up SuncllY with a crou country race
at t a.m. aroUAd Cuta del Sol
1oll course between Robert
Corai'ad and ~lkt Sommer and .. a p.m bOwlina match bel~en G•bC~~')(otter'' Kaplfll' and an unriatttied opponent at Sad-
dle*k Lanes.
The .. coacb" of t.he women'•
tea :Mn be fdlaa Perrine dd eomlc ~cwn. ~venJOn will
c1>ach the men. FUp Wii.on is
alated t.o act as the m•ter of ceremOnl•.
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Former Water&ate prosecutor
Archibald Cox told the U.S.
Supreme Court today that a
special admlsaions program at a
University oC C.Ufomia medical
scbool ls needed to help mtnorities
becawse "the other alternatives
suggested simply will not work."
In oral ariumenu in the case of
Allan Paw Bakke, Cox defended
the so-called atnrmatlve ectlon
program used by the university's
med schoQJ at Davis. He said the
program aided mlnori\ies "long
v ict i mized by racial
diacriminallon.''
Bakke. who Ja white, suc-
c ea s f u lll challe-nced the university a proiram before the
Calltomla Supreme Court. He
clahned It made him a vlctlm of
raclaldiacrlmlnatlon.
Bakke's "reverse
dlacrirnlnatJon" case is
con s idered by many con,Utu~ ttholata to set the
sta1e for the hl1h court's most
Important statement on race
r eli&l1ons s rnce It outlawed
segrqaUon 23 years ago,
At stalfe In Baklre'a c11e ts the 11 •
PairN·amed
To Coun'1
Women's Unit SACRAM~NTO• CAP >
CaUCornia employment hit an
all·time high in September while the jobless rate edled dOWbWatd Bernice Munson of w1una
to 7.4 percent, the state reported Hills and Pauline Ran1el Qf
today. • Fountain Valley were appointed
lo three-year terms On the
T h e E m p l o y m e n t Orange County Commission on
Development Department said the Status of Women by county
there were 9,452,400 job-holders 1ur>ervisors Tuesday.
in the atate last month, an Superv11ors alao reappointed
lncreaseoflOO,OOOslnceAuaust. La ll1bra resident Greta Han\bs ch to a three-yea(
Meanwhile, the total of commi11siottterm.
unemployed looking for work Mrs. MW\&On, of Ml P Ronda
dropped from 720,300 In August lo Mend011a. replaces Huntington
675,:.nl in September. the lowHt Beach· reeldent Helen Barrios,
since October 1974. the de· wh0&t>lerm expired.
part.ment&11d. Board Chair man Thomas
Rhley Hid Mrs. MWJson, an
The Jobless rate had been 7.S active senior citlzeh. should
percent in Au1ust. The national broaden the commission's repre--
rate in September was 8.9 sentation.
percent. Riley noted ~ent commission
cnUca have queaUoned wh«Mr
The department said all major its member& represent a cross·
industries in the state showed section of county women.
employment gains. It also said Mrs. Ranier. o! 9044 Bitterroot
1taU1tic1 from the 12-month Circle, Fountain VaUey, now
period ended in Septe mber s erves a s commhslon
Indicate a strdng improvement in chairwoman.
the Job picture:
Durln& that period ,
employment lnc reued by
419,000, unemployment drop~
by 132,000, and the jobleas rate
dropped from 9.2 percent to 7.4
percent.
That rale, however. does not
include persons who have Riven
up looking !or work.
Alcoholism
Center Aided
A San Juan Capiatrano
cowueling center was 1tven a
$75,S2S contract by Oran1e
County supervisors Tuesday to
operate a detoxiflcation center
and recove r y h om es for
alcoholics
A report lo supervisors said the
service would be provided by
Community CounselinR Center
32141 A~paz Road, and would serve chenta referred by law
enforcement and social service
qencles.
The contract wUI ti. Clnanced
with Sf,'31 in county funds with
the bulle ol coell paid with atate
and ff'deral granta.
. .
Deer Permits
Now Available
T htrtY·•lJht uncJaJmed
permit,, for anUerless de•r hunts
in the Tenaja region of the
Cleveland National t'c>rest, and
on Sant.a Cataliaa talarid, will go
on sale Thursday, at I a.m . at the
Long ~acb regional office of the
Department of Fish and Game.
Permits will be offered on a
fl ral·come, fl r s l ·aerved
buil.There are eleht left for the
Teaaja hunt and thirty lett for Ule
San\a Catalina Island hunt; the
latter includes an S80 tee.
For further information call
InCormallon Officer oC the
Department of Fis h and Game.
Ralph Youns. at 590·5126.
Viejo Home Looted
A burglar who pried open the
front door of a Mtasion Viejo
home carried oCC coins and a
camera wtt.h a total value of MM.
Orange County sheriff'• oCficert
said the theft occurred at the
home of l>a\'id E. Pierce, 39, oC
22302 Platlno DrJve, •hUe he wu
away at work.
•
future or affirmatJve action
programs, bec un in the last 15
years to &ave special preference
to minority members and womeo
in educaUon and business.
Bakke '1 attorney. Reynold
Colvin of San Franclaco, uraed
the jus tices to amrm the
Califorrua Supreme Court de·
c1s1on.
Colvin argue d lbat the
Cons titution's cuarantee of
•·equal protection" for •II cillftnl
is violated when a school takes
into account an applicant's race
makingthateactor a "crucial"
one.
·'The use of race aa a baais Cor
admission to a medical school, or
for grant!na any other tights, is
improper, "he ar1ued.
Race shou.ld be con.sldered only
• as tt provides a clue to \he applicant '11 total evaluation. ht
sa1d.
Considerln1 race. Colv1n ...Sd,
"is permlulbl• ooly to Lhee.xlent
it gives some clue to the
adJUlsslOG5 committee whether
there was a prtor history of
ecobo c educational de · ..
riv• r " n "
''Then thq hJt u.u s.1 mUe
stretch that 1'eally tl<Wtt tbem
down," Uoyd Mid.
He tald a ?S-mne.per bour
Um lt alorif u,. Nixon Aretda.
plua aomt other nvtaed sl*idl,
would save San Dteso to CM
An1elt1 travelera about 18
Free Flu Shota
Res.
Olin&, •••..•..•••••• S 2649.00
Credenza • . • . . • . • • • • • 1229.00
Sale
$2149.00
1049.00
299.00
719.00
299.00
259.00
Drawer dcc;k • • • • • • • • • • 359.00
R~tangular table . . • • • • • 849.00
Splat b;iek arm chair. . • • • 360.00
Splilt bJck ~ide chair. . • • • 299.00
The Store ofFamoua Names
Ch1ndlu's futuru the finest from Du••cl lierltoge. Henrtdon, Century. lkliu, Welman, Shorrtll,
Merge Carson. Atreloom Bedding. ~llfflt, Marbro. Chandler Cuaton\ Or p.rrie1 & C1rpct1ng s
' •
'Affordable' Housing
The Irvine Planning Commission and city planners
tiave taken a creative approach to somng problems of
providing affordable housing for city residents.
Instead of merely buckling down to the state-
mandated task or attempting to provide housing for au
income brackets. they've been busy r~efining what is .. ar. lordabtc·· housing. • ..
' It is an attempt to reduce the apparent need ror lowq cost housing. In a phrase. it is juggline the figures. Here·s
what they·ve done. ,
Lending insUtutions have traditionally --and dQ today
-considered housing to be affordable if monthly rent or
· mortgage payments are no more'\han 25 percent off amily
income. f'
• The Irvine planners say the figure should be raised to
30 or 40 percent, since city rent records show that many
people already are paying that much as J. trade.off for the
amenities of living in the suburban community.
That rails to recognize that those people are paying
rents beycmd their. means -beca1.4se there is nothing else
a\•ailable in Irvine.
And that "s wbat low.income housing studies are about:
developing" housing plans to meet e>cisting needs, not
sidestepping those rieedS. r
..
Th& City or 'lr:vine is truegling ·with a proJ>()Sed city
arts policy to raise the eulturaJ level of the community by
requiring develOQers to in sculptures. paintings and
other work.5 of art in public ai.Uf piivate t>uildirig projects.
The struggle 1sn 't Wbrth it; atleast rorpriv~e projects.
Under the prm>osed paticy, 1 percent would be added
to total project costs for public works, 1~ of 1 percent for
private developments.·
A city committee would decide what sorts or art \ltorks
hould be mcluded in~). project1 Y.(bo should do the work. ~Qd where lhe art shou!f~ displaye<f
It's hard to imaeine any government bOdy deciding for
an entire community -even a section of it · -what is
required good taste. tl\ough it might not be totally out or
line for a city commission to help select art for public 'buildings.
But the idea of requiring the mcluston of art works in
p1 i \'ate buiJdings ant! even attempting to dictate their
selection -would be outrageous. if it weren't just pl airs
ridiculous.
• Opinions ex~ In the epece abOw ate thoee or u. Daily Piiot.
0th« vi4rw9 eJtprffMd on thla pege •r• those of their au~ and
artists. Reader comment la Invited Address The Dally Pilot.
P.O. 8cix 1580, Coata t.\888. ~ 92ea. Phone {!14) 142--4321.
BQyd I Trick Questions
ByLM.BOYD
"Trtgger queraea" are
those questiort'> which hav1
been known lo start family
fights. Our· LOvc and War
man is collecting a list or
~ame. From divorce records.
They're not necessartly
cr1tlcal, insulting or degrad·
ing, not in themlelves. It's
what they lead tQ. howcl/tt
mysteriously. 'these are
tricger queries: "Pancakes
again?" "Isn't the game ovar
yet?" "A melorY tiall cutter?
• How Much?" "Don't you
want plain 1ingerale
tonight?" And: "DO you think
it'uUttletoosmall?"
Surveys prove lot of
tourl1ls pick motels with
Mu t oo nke to heve o Job With a 1ovemment
agency. While they
enjoyed thelr Columbu,
Day holiday 88 .,.rcent
of us in privato industry
bad to work ln ord r to
pay \he taxes to mal<t
their holiday pew Ible.
J.V.T.
•'-'I .. ~lltt '" .. ~=~tt:::.'C:! ... JJF ................ .. ......... IMlfJ
t.
swiJtming pools even though
they have no intenUon of
going swimming. They Just
believe the places w1lh the
pools wtll also be better f'qµ1p~ otherwise.
Q . "lla9 anybody ever
renlly disproved Adolf
Hitler's. theory that selective
breeding could produce a
super human being? ..
A, In a way, il wa.11
disproved. Long ago. But not
with humans. because
humans don't breed
!\eleclively. On the contrary.
1t was disproved with dogs,
which have been selectively
bred for centuries. still
>Vithout ever turnjng out a
!iuperdog.
Rapid ReP.IY: Figure SS
percent of your grownup
weicht ·is water. Lose less
than a fifth of it. you survive. t. o s e m o r e . y o u d & e •
Generally, generally.
The 20,000 books about
ch~s exceed in number the
books about all other gomrs
put togethf!r, f'm told. One or
these chess books cite~
~tudies to prove that a Rood
memory ls not the most
significant faculty a top chess
player con possess, not at all
Imaaination is, accordlnJt to
this authority. The mo~t
remarkable chess
performances, it's said, are
not executed, the way a
l)lanl t renders a tune, but are
created, lb way a compoger
dreams upauch.
\
Jack Andenon
WASHINGTON -Ja01es
Schlesinger's rise from political
obscurity to political power has
been smooth and subtle. He has
the air more of "' college
professor than an energy czar.
But heh.ind the pipe smoke and
contemplative manner. he has
the heart or an Industrial tycoon.
He bas J>een an unabashed
advocate o? nuclear power, for
example.
ever since he
came out of
the Atomic
Energy
Commission
in the early
197~. The big
utility
compun1es
desperately
want to dev-,
elop energy, of course. that will
utilize their existing grid
eyet~ms and permit them to go
on selling electricity to the
populace. A more revolutionary
form of energy such as solar
power, might ~ut the utility
industry out of business.
There is disquieting evidenc«;
that Schlesin.&er may be quietly
stacking the new Energy Dept.
with subordinates who share hls
enthusiasm for nuclear p0wer.
lie used $113,250 of the
taxpayers' money to eslabhsh
the Energy Awureness Project -
an idea advanced by a rea1stered
nuclear lobbying group known as
the Cahfornaa Council tor
Environmental and Economic
Balance <CCEEB>.
There is a suspicion that the
Energy Awareness Pr<>1ect was
really s upposed to make the
public and Coneress more aware
of nuclear energy. although a
CCEEB spokesman told us the
proje<:t was intended to Inform
the public on all energy
a I tern a ti ves
THE CCEEB stated in Its orig-
inal proposal,, without
mentioning nuclear powu, that
"we would want participants to
write their congressmen. to ask
them to support specific
legislation, pass resolutions.
write letters to the editor."
Thorne's office adopted this
idea to the tune of $113.250 over
the objections of at least one
subordinate who war)led in an
mternal memo: "l believe such
an effort to be both ill-conceived
a.ad Dlisdirected." He added with
emphasis: "The logic or the
proposal not. only escapes me.
Top policymaking positioos will
go, for example. to Jobn O'Leary :-~
and Dale Myers. wbo are
re1arded as nuclear proponents.
Dr. James Liverman. a
nuclear apologist. bas been
mentioned as Schleain1er's
choice to)>• his new
enYironmentat chief .. Tbis
po slbHltY bas so outraged
environmentalists tbat a
coalition has dashed off a
private letter to Sch,esincer.
warning that they "would
OpJ><1Se'' Uverman's nominaUoo.
SCHLESINGER ·s mc>st
cont.roversiat choice. however,
may turn out lo be ftobert
Thorne, who heads the San
Francisco office or the Energy
Research and De¥'elopment
Adminis tration ( f;RDk.).
SchJesmaer has Thorne in mind
as bis assistant secretary. in
charge o( technology. an ornce
that will control the Energy
1Dept. 's nuclear operations.
Thome not only wu in eharge
of nuclear 11Uairs in SJan
f ancfll.co ~ut allegedty ~~lied • an ~attnt!j "impr
bying effort to ,, tuence
Confress to look kindly upon
nuclear power,
fF ntE Canal Zone Is such a
thorn ln her side. why doesn't
Panama offer to relmburs~ for
our investments! That wowd be
the decent, bus1ne sllke thtng to
do. Why not ~ive the U.S.
taxpayer a break for once'?
It tooks very much as If this
treaty gives Pan1ma aU the
~oodles on a silver platter while
the U.S. uts nothing but
obligations! · •
J 'm afraid that U•e world #ould
J\Jdge Uncle Sam us a paper tiger
who cave.., in to blackmail and Is
afraid to stick up for~hls Mgtits.
HENRY R. BENNJK
NetS.~
To the Editor:
Zmlth TV manuf ctuters are
movmg part of their of)'erebon
oven;e-as where they can 1et as·
sembly workers for $2,000 a year.
Now we can buy Zenith TVs
cheaper, but we will have to pay
more taxes tor unemployment fn·
surance to the unemployed
workers and there '1m be rewer
tax pa~.
Muluply thl" by rnou.sands of
other companies !tom ~l to
aulomobll~ and f9U will hav~ a ~mall idea of the probl~m. t
does lhls dot 0 balance or trade'
l.et'"' race up to lt. Those
bargains we are gettlnR froni
overseas aren't so cheap They
art! breaking us
.JAMES W. SOLOING
'.l'lw R~I Brren
To the Editor:
The cartoon published on the
Comment· page or Oct. t concern· ma the Kent State situallon WU silly.
ANY 01' \JS were rebellln
agalnsl th tatus quo betOl'e wwn. The. Ciirt ce was U. t
we were smart e"ough to reallre
that desireCf changes could bC
made beCauso of our f)'llem o!
government, not fn spite Q( It. We
were smart enoush only because
we were patient eno111h to walt
until we had enough knpwledge
to aQeSS the facts and arHve at
logical plan or action. Alexander
Pope was so rtght when 9'e said:
·•A little .knowted-ge ls a
dangerous thine. . •• Tb wori:J
"JitUe" needs undetlinimr. •
And Kent State? The wnOle
thing was so useless, so ulle;Jy
~fupld. There were no heri1cs
there, not.hint le> be proud ol, no
memories that stir the marrow OI
man auch as the marrow
stli"red standing over the rusting
hulk of the Arizona. May they oot
have died useles.~ly.
Quotes
"Frffdom of the press Is the
statf of life ror any vital de ..
mocracy ..
Wlftd11l Wfl~
A m•rfcan law11crr and poUtical
l.adn
but. its ouUine would appc to
be "'excellent pla f W n of th ereatest poUttca bOondoggl bf
modern tiqies. ·•
The suspicions of Rep. James
Jeffords. R.-Vt., have so been
aroused. He bas asked the
G entral Accountmg Oflieo to
invesUjate the 11r<>Ject. TM
taxpayers· money wu uMd,
charies. for what apP-tari to bt
"improper purposea. lnclUdlnf
possibly the use"of ipproDtlatW
funds to tobby th Con&ra& on
legislaUve matters. '
POT POLICY -The men
<Around President Carter have
been qulrreling betiind the
scenes over what .,.ord.s to put in
his mouth en the matiJuana
question.
One faction favored a more
sympathetic attitud~ toWard pc>t
smoking. They man.aced to 1et
their ideas into an early draft or
the druc policy messa1e that
Carter asked his aides lo write
for h.im. This was approved bY
the president's health adviser
Dr. Peter Bourne.
It included such sentences as
"marijuana has become an
established fact throuabout. our
society and the sky bas not
• •
•
STOCKS I MOSKOWITZ
TRANSACTIONS
. s ONLY
Top €mnpanles
Biggest Jaws·
Survive Time
Source of Energy
Not ~hick Fe~d