HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-07 - Orange Coast Pilot• •
-_ThOrOUgh6re~
6Claildren
North Carolina
1'
Floods Kill 9
MORGANTON, N.C . CAP> -
North Carolina mountain com·
munities began clea{ling up today
after storm-spawned floods that
raged through dozens or towns
Sunday, killing nine people, car·
rying off mobile homes and
smashing businesses. Six orthose
k illed were children. The slate's flood death toll rose * .. * *
Tragedy Hits
Home as Crew
Filub Victims
TOCCOA, Ga. <AP> -The first
part of the cleanup was the worst,
as rescue workers removed
1 bodies buried in mud and debris
after a dam burst, flooding the
Toccoa Falls Bible College
campus. "We saw one guy gone crazy,
running out otthe water in hls un·
derwear, .. sald ambulance
RESCUE WORKERS
• CONTINUE SEARCH -A4
to nine when the Burke County
SberifC's Department repotted
that the bodies of three boys were
found early today in a rain·
swollen creek al Morganton and
anoth~r body was found in an
empty one-story storage building
in Mor11anton. Officials identified the storage
building victim as Ike Peterson,
who lived alone in the building
and was believed to be in his late
60s or e~rly 70s. He was dis·
covered by a friend who cheeked
on him daily and brought him
food .
Burke County officials said the
hodies of two Valdese brothers,
Chris Hemby, 18, and Tony Hem-
by, 16, and that of 14-year-old
Mark Hawkins of Morganton
were recovered from a creek ear·
ly today. It was reported that they
had been trying to swim the creek
to help a boat dealer recover aome
boats that had floated away. A
fourth boy swam lo safely.
Officials said Carolyn Morgan
Hendrix andber two boys, aged 4
and S, were pitehed into the
swollen North Hominy Creek west of 1Uheville and drowned
(See FLOODS, Page AJ)
,
.• -NB Cops Test
'Murder Gun'
'ByJOANNER8YNOLD8
Ol Ule DINI• .. llfCM&ff
Newport . Beath police con-
tinued their complex probe or the --.,.,t--.--.t c • ....,_ ... __ ........ ,,,.. "'---~
toClay. awaltlnlf results or
ballistics tests conducted on a
Carter 'Death' ' ¥yed by A.min
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP>
~ Ugandan Prealdent Idi
Amin said t odl)' that
President Carter was con·
trolled by "Z1onista and
imperialists" and could be
assassinated.
Amin spoke at a con·
fercnce or Organization or
African Unity OAU -Jn.
formation minjsters
"I sympa thi ze with
President Carter because
he is bcine trapped and he
eould be ass assinated .
,However, I am not against
President Carter as such
J\or the U.S. as a country "
2 Christmas
Trees Cut
For Disney
~USANVI LLE (AP> Two
60-foot Christmas lrees Cor Dis-
neyland and Disney World were
t·u t down this week in Northern
California. Lassen Nationa l
For<'st offic1ab said Friday.
Tht' trees were white firs that
\\ 111 CObt a total of about $.5,000 to
mo\'e the 600 miles to Disneyland
m Soulh4'.'rn California and the
:1.000 mil~ lo l>1sncy World in·
Florida
A Disney ofC1c1 a l who
"llPl'rv1o;c<l the cutting said the
t ret•s were fitting decor alaons for
D1sn<.'y sates. The $.S,000 cost in -
l'ludcs permits to cut the trees.
The \.'Utting took place Wedne.<1 -
day
In past years, several Dis-
neyland Christmas trees have
been cut in the Plumas N3tional
Fort'st
From Page Al
WORK •..
counsel in a pubhc heorin~ ... "
she continued.
As for her use of commission
stamps, Mrs. Benson stud today
the commission ran out of
:-tamps some time ago and she
1>urchased any stamps used with
her own funds
Commissioners voted unan·
1mously to dismiss the former
Washington. D.C. transportation
ronsultant last week s aying they
had "lost confidence" in her
performance.
Parker said he would be filing
a civil trespassine complaint and
seeking a restrainin1 order in
Orange County Superior Court
today.
Mrs. Benson said her attorney
would be advised of the pro·
cedure. She said her actions ao
r~r have been upon her a~ torney ·s advice.
Meteor Viewed
FLlNT, Mich. (AP> -A
meteor slashed across the
Michigan sky, dazzllne viewers
from Muskegon to the Mackinac
Bridge with lta brilliance. Of·
f1c ials at the Robert T. Lonaway
Planetarium in Flint said the
meteor was unusual because it
could be viewed in bri&ht 1un· light.
ORANGtCOA.n '"
DAILY PILOT
~u. I.Ill .........._ -..."'4-.... .._• ....... au wut.
automatic pistol have not bMll
completed yet. He 4ecllried to
·~wale when th06e teats would
be tinlstied.
The gun, which ean car:ry ei1ht
bullets in its clip and a ninth in lta
chamber, was located by police
who were told whe~ to look ror
the weapon.
They believe it was the gun
used to pump nine fatal shots in·
to Dov an on Oct. 22.
Meanwhile, rour men arrested
on charees of murder conspiracy
in the case are tcl\eduled to re·
tum to municipial court Tuesday
mornine to com~ete their ar·
rai1nment.
Only one or the tour, Alexander
Kulik, 28, has entered a plea of
not guilty in the case. Kulik, who
was originally arrested in Mis-
sion Viejo on suspicion of
possession of more than a J>OUnd
of nearly pure heroin. was fAed
from jail Thursday night alter
posting a $750,000 bond.
The bond, the highest ever
posted in the history or the
Orange County Jail, comprised
the $.500,000 ball on the murder
charge set in the Harbor Judicial
District Court and $250.000 on the
narcotics charge set in the South
Orange County Judicial District
Court. _
The three other men charged
in the case remain jailed. They
are Gerry Peter Fion, 41, of 19822
Brookhurst St , Huntington
Beach. Anthony Marone Jr .• 23.
of 10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt·
ington Beach and Raymond
Steven Resco. 28, of the same ad·
dress.
Arraignment of the three was
continued from last Thursday in
order to give the court time to ap-
point attorneys for them.
A court spokesman said loday
that David Brickner of Santa Ana
will represent Fiori. Ron Brower
of Orange will represent Marone,
and Tom Crosby of Newport
Beach will take on Resco as a
client.
Kulik is represented by Philip
DeM aasa of San Dle10.
Municipal Court Judee Selim
Franklin said be would also hear
motions on Tuesday to redute
bail.
At the same time, police ar&
pressing their search for Kullk's
wife and hls three business
partners named in murder con·
spiracy arrest warrants issu~
last week.
Still sought in the case are
Elsie Caban Kulik, 29, Joseph
Shelton Davis, Joseph Gabriel
Fedorowskl and Roy Christopher
Richard.
All four were one-U,ne mem·
bers of the Hare Krilihna re·
ltgious sect.
Gun Accident
Kills Man, 21
COVINA <AP) '-A '21-year-old
Azusa man has been accidentally
killed wlllle handling a gun in the
second such incident in as many
days, authorities said.
Robert Plathe was examining
a handgun with several other
people 1n a car early Sunday
when the weapon accidentally
went off, shoot.inl him in the
head, sheritf'sdeputies repdrted.
On Satutday, Bradley Price,
17, or San Gabriel die<l rrom a
si m liar wound after a rifle ht bid
been loading in his cat-dis·
charged. deputies aaid.
wb«!n 1 one end or their moblle
home was torn from the ground by
ra pagingwaters.
lh Polk County, another ram11y
yi t Jived in a znobUe home tri~ to etcape watst-deep flood
waters. Four-year-old Bryan
Scott Hart fell and disappeared.
Michael Charles l'owosend, .28,
of Boone, drowned while be tried
to uso a lag to cross a flooded,
str~otn tolntety near his home. The flash Oooding was caused
bv tbuntlerstnr01s that moved
acr~as me state arom tne west
Sunday, dumping as much as Uve
Inches of rain in aix hours' time ln
some areas.
Authoritlee In Hot Sprlnis ancf
Marshall in Madison County re-
ported water reached depths of up
to seven feet ln city streets before
starting to recede, carrying
merchandise from smashed store
windows and leaving many b~i
neases \\ith thick layers of nllld on
tbefloors .•
Three houses were destroyed
north or Boone when the Tater Hill
Dam on Howard's Creek col-
lapsed and the 52-acre reservoir
emptied.
A bout 100 persons were
e vacuated from homes near
Asheville where authorities said a
dam developed a crack. A dam on
Reems Creek in Madison County
was reported broken.
The thunderstorms moved
eastward across the state Sun·
day. selling orr lesser flooding in
some Piedmont and coastal
areas. A half dozen perspns bad to
be eva·cuated from Chocowinity
south or Wuhlngton, N.C., and a
shopping center roof in Goldsboro
was partially caved in by heavy
ruins.
* * * Fr.-. Page A I
DAM •••
cut them away with a saw. She
waadead."
It took 20 minutes from Beat·
ty's an1val for most of the other
emergency veh1cles. represent-
ing 20 emergency agencies, to ar-
rive.
"Everyone Just came. They
didn't have to be asked." said
Sheriff Don Shirley.
At the h~pital. an emergency
disaster plan went Into action.
Victims were classified accord·
ing to the likelikbood of saving
them, then doctors worked Cirst
on those who could be saved.
The P.lan was "sickeningly
simple,• Dr. J . Wade Knowlton
said.
"Jt conslsted of just pronounc-
in1 people dead."
The hospital purchasing de-
partment waa set up as a
morgue.
"But you know, Toccoa's a lit-
tle town," Beatty said. "Things
like this don't happen here. They
happen ln cities like Atlanta."
Man Forced
IDto Holdup
MURFREESBORO, Tenn.
<AP) -A college football player
and hts roommate forced a
Tallahoma man to attempt a
bank robbery because he gave
the athJ_ete a bad cl\eck as pay-
ment for ~mosexual favors,
police said.
Lt. Jim Cook of Murfreesbo~
pollce said Michael IJllrrls, 24, of
Tullahoma, was arrested at
Murfreesboro Bank and Trust
Company, and charged with at.
tempted larceny.
Cook tald Kyle Noms, 19, a
freshman linebacker for Middle
Tennessee State University, and
his roommate, Fred Hollifield.
18, were charaed with second·
degree burglary, attempted ex-
tortion and kidnapping. Har'ris i~
a graduate ot. MTSU, le><!ate<! ln
M urtreesboro.
...
FOR DORA LOVELY, WHO eloped with
Robert at aee 16. th~ ceremony served as a
"booster shot" for the couple's 30-year mar·
rjage.
''The first one wasn·nrte ame·as <loliig it
·in church,·· she said. "And my parents were
very upset because I was so young.··
MARRIED AGAIN WERE the Lloyd
Lovelys, R.Mert Lovely1, Ralph blvelyt end
Paul Loveln.
Ralph Lovely wu married without Ute
watchful family members 20 :J::d a.ao
-becall.ff, ~ his wife Lola rutem , •'We
went by ourselves because it seelQed lite such
A hush fell over the unlted Church in
Cabot as thti couples. 1n tancystittS and lbng
gowns. marched down the aisle to the strains
of the traditional wedding march from
Wagner's "Lohengrin " When the organist
1witched to "I Love You Truly," rrtends and
r e latives dabbed their eyes with
handkerchiefs
Uecl'etthmg."
MARGE LOVELY, MARRIED to Paul.
endorses the Idea or re-marriage.
'Tm very erateCul for the 39 years Paul
and I have been married," she said. "Renew·
ing our vows was something we wanted lo dQ..
for our own personal grallficatioo."
"None of us ever had church weddings.
receptions. honeymoons or even wedding
cakes." explained Wilma Lovely, who mar-
ried Lloyd 34 years aeo ~unday. "We were
Others in the congregation rose at the re-
quest of the Rev. David McBride to repeat
their marriage vows with the Lovelys.
·The four couples t\a v~ 11 children and 30
grandchildren amone them ..
3 Heyerdahl
·Aides Leave
OSLO, Norway CAP> -Three
Indian sailors hired by Thor
Heyerdahl for his latest research
expedition walked out on the
Norwe1ian explorer as soon as
they discovered the reed bOat he
is using bas no en&ine. the Oalo
newspaper Verdens Gang re-
ported. .
In tbe report from Iraq, where
•the reed boat Ti1ri1 js being
readied for departure, the
newspaper said the Indians were
to have been members of a 14·
man international crew a&·
. sembled by l{eyerdahl for his ex·
pedition to the Ihdian Ocean
Heyerdahl, who became
famoua 30 years ago with his
Kon-Tiki balsam raft trip across
the Pacific, plans to saU the copy
or an ancient Sumerian reed boat
from IraqlntothelndlaoOcean.
Fr .. PageAJ
KISSES •••
Policewoman Janice Beeler
said, "This opens a Pandora's
Box for female officers. Are we
supposed to be 4ble to be pawed?
This is a demeaning decision.··
Appeal ~ontinues ..
'TV lma'nity' Plea
Again Rejected
MIAMI (AP> -Ajudierejecl·
ed a cl.reuse motion today to
overturn the conviction or RoMy
Zamc>ra1the15-year.old boy con·
victod 0t murder in the so-called
·•television insanity" trial.
Circuit Judie Paul Baker then
swor~ witnesses tor a hearing on
another attack on the conviction,
this one alleging procedural er-
rors before the trial last month.
Defense attorney Ellis Rubin called !or testimony rrom eight.
people involved in the trial, in·
cludlriC the prosectitor, assistant
State Attorney Tom Headley
The mOtJons delayed the sen-
tencing but Baker gave no in·
dlcation he would have to put It
off until another day.
The trial had drawn wide at·
tention for the novel defense
argument that Zamora killed
while temporarily intoxicated by
endless violence be had seen on television.
The trial also was the tirat in
Florida to be extensively covered
by courtroom cameraa since the
state Supreme Court ordered a
one.year experiment to see if
s uch coveraee would disrupt
trials. Still cameras were also
allowed in the courtroom
Presidinc 4)ver the trial, Baker
blocked effort.$ t<> bolster the de. fense theory with testiD)ony by
television detective Telly
Savalas and a psychologist who
had studied television viQlence.
Zamora, a Miami Beach hiab
school student, admitted ltll.Ung
his nelghbOr, 83-year.old t;unor
Haeeart, when she surprised him
and a pal as they ransacked ber
home laat sprin1. The other
youth faces a murder charge but
hasn't been tried.
As during the trial, television
cameras were present today to
record the events. But this time
the court was crowded with other.
defendants and their lawyers
waiting for hearings.
WASIUNG'tON <AP> -I\ Jll'O·
posed 18-month delay of a federal
bnn on aaccharin Is on President
Carter's desk after recel~ng
final congressional approval.
even as a new stud1 Jinked th
arttrlctat 1weetene'r to cancer in
animals.
ByJACKIB RYMAN
A Ot•Dlltr .... Mltl If ~OU out to IH from SOUUl n !tpril, ..,ou·
m f Octd·l ••~ )el 1 ~ble~ •.~ut. I r mu .. .oru1h0ro.; U won't t)6 u oU well. ~ JtwUlWa.tifJJl,. 1 ~be quarter-acre akueture Mil
....... ·-..;-....~.l-4•---~ .,~--.. -"" --kelp lb the ~ sea. where C\lflo' . Hntty few D'ftrlellt• and. Uteretore. littJe plant ind DI~ earef.Wnd. ; " ·
t After l\arveatlnj, the kelp_~u
.be die~ by b~c~a iii an anaerobic.~ that p.rocluee9
methane. the chi~ compooeQt of
natural aas.
'' "If the expetlmellt ls 1uc-
cesslul, 1 thlnk Jt will be on• «
the m~t important eontrtbutiobs
our aeneratlon will make to
.. future ceneraUona,., said l)r ._..
Wheeler North, <lli'eCtor ot "the
biological part of the experiment
at Caltech'• Ku~Jt~ff, M~o Laboratory m Newport 1'each.
"It will mean tbaUS i>ercentof ... our planet which II Vlt'rually tin· .:·,,..
used will become· fertile
fartnland, "he ~d. "ll will solve can srow as fast u two felt per • •
c>ur energy problems and our . day, reaching 70 to 100 feet in •
food problems." length.
The project began iQ 1974, with The plant can l>e harvested re·
more t.laan $3 million from the pealed~ without ·haVing to be
American Gas Association. It replanted. ' · ·
was divided into two parts:· It can~ used to produce not
engineering and bloloay. only metha»e J>ut also Methanol,
The Orange Coat was chosen or methyl alcohol, which can·be·
as the site for three reasons: the burned in internal combuatian .. ··~:
protection afforded by outlying engines. he sald. "We're very concerned !·1••
isl ands, the nearness of the Kelp can also be used to. make •about vao<lalism... :: ·;
Caltech lab. and the fac\ that pharmaolUUcals, fuel oili. add· Bryce aald the farm may ; kel~ grows here naturally. ' perhaps many other products. become what"· the law terms an • , ,.
Engineers trom~Geaeral!Elec· Also, lt~beds attract fl.ab. •''attnctive-.~~e !' m·the uu
tric, supervised by Technical Ca~tech's . cN<!r.lb said ~ -·sense that scuba dive~ may be ~"'
Director Armond Bryce. have beheves the lie P far!D and ~1: attracted to it and then find • • 1
been working with Global Marine ble future farms Wlll be m~or themselves in trouble in tbe kelp.
Development Inc. in Newport •soun:esoC!ood. • · The quarter-acre farm experi-llfii B~acb t& design ... •nd build.. .a llut kelp nornJ..~JJrows only melU will .ru11. !qr about ts •n..:
structure capable of supporting alone s~ wliere it llad ad~· • mont..bs. with. the .growth rate or,
the quarter-acre ot kelp within 50 quat.e sunllcht. a .place to a.oc.bor the kelp. being monitored con· •1.b THIS fS ARTIST'S CONCEPTION OF DEEP WATER KELP FARM OFF'O~NGE COAST '
Wiii Experfment Leed to Untapped Fuel and Food Suppllea? feet or the water's surface, 1tseKandplenty.ofJWtri~ta. 'tinuouslY, Caltech's Dr, NGl'th ,,.,_. ·~ although the ocean at that point "If you really want to uae tho said ... lrr•
is t,IOOfeetdeep. mai1a; ar~a ~ the ocean," Dr. D;. Horth~ his regearcbers .,,,.
Nudes Get
Citations
At Beach
SAN DIEGO (AP) The
clouds overhead weren't enough
of a cover-up for six beachgoers
who Saturday tested the enforce-
ment ot a nudity ban at Black's
Beach.
Saturday had been announced
as the first day citations would be
issued for violating the ban. For
the past month, police officers
simply warned unclothed
bathers.
A &roup led by Robert Jacobs,
chairman of the Nude Beaches
Committee of San Diego, ap-
peared on the beach shortly after
8 a.tn., waited for police officers
to come along and then st.ripped.
They were presented with mis-
demeanor citations and asked to
put their clothes back on. They
did, and left.
The misdemeanor citation
could result in a maximum
penalty of six months in Jail and
a~fine.
Besides the 29-year-old Jacobs,
those receiving citations were
Sonya Peasley, 31; Sam Metroff.
44; Frans Guepin. 42; Kathy
Jones, 25, and Dieter Nenn, 40.
All are San Diego residents.
A majority of city residenut
voted to support Proposition D.
banning nudity at Black's Beach.
in a September munlclpal ele<'-
tion. The city council voted 8-1 in
early October to forbid unclothed
bath en at all public beaches.
Black's Beach had been the on-
ly one in the nation allowing nude
bathing.
Sturgis Claims
'Compiracy' 'L~?
To Kennedy Dea:th
NEW YORK <AP> -Watergate burglar Frank Sturgis
said today that an "international
conspiracy,•• inelad1ng Soriet
and Cuban element., wu in-
volved in the assassination of
President Kennedy.
Soap Opera
Spooks 'Sam'
NEW YORK <AP>
David Berkowitz. the ac-
cused Son of Sam kWer,
was sedated and placed un-
der restraint after he
became "upset'' while
watching the soap opera
"Days of Our Lives," cor-
rections officials said.
Phil Leshin, spokesman
for the corrections depart-
ment, said Berkowitz
began "screaming and
shrieking in an unintelligi-
ble manner" after
watching about 15 minutes
of the program.
Berkowitz, held in
seclusion at Kings Cou.nty
Hospital in Brooklyn, ii al-
lowed lnto the hospital
recreation room to watch
television after other pa-
tients have left for the af-
ternoon.
In an intervJew on ABC-TV's
.. Good Morning America" pro-
gram, Sturgis said he turned
over evidence of the cons.piracy
to a federal agency. He did not
specify the agency, but said the
House Intelligence Committee
was aware of the information.
Sturgis s aid his evidence
showed that Jack Jluby knew Lee
Harvey Oswald, and that Ruby
was involved with Cubans.
Sturgis said he passed a poly-
graph test showing hew ~snot in-
volved in any way with the as-
sassination. and that he was not
in Dallas at tt\e time of the as-
sassination.
Last week, Sturgis was arrest-
ed in New York for allegedly
threatening Marita Lorenz, who
says she once was a lover of
Cuban dictator Fidel Castro. Ms.
Lorenz said Sturgis was trying to
stop her from giving testimony to
a congressional committee.
Ms. Lorenz has maintained
that just before Kennedy was
kilted, an assusination squad
which included her, Sturgi5 and
Lee Harvey Oswald went to
Dallas from Miami. -Sturgis, who has denied those
allegations, was released from
the charges here when the dis·
trlct attorney's orfice said lt bad
no evidence to support them.
The structure muse be able to North ~aid, 1 you have to ~ave believe they. also have the '"'
withstand· ocean currents and some kind of structure near the anawet to another problem: the ·
weather, yet provide a minimum s urface th~t tbe nlp oaa ~ need forfl\lt.rien.ts. .,;~.
of interference with sea life. •plan~ed· on to permit enoufb "There's an almost lnexbausU-" ·.
Meanwhile, scientists at the sunbg~t to penetrate the water. ble source of nutrients on the bot.-Caltech laboratory have been ex-That s where engineer Bryce totn ••he aald-r
perimertting with California comes to. · . ' A• pump oPerated by a dlesel !"1
giant kelp. Tesb with small fridS' The ke1J1. will be planted 00 a enalne on tile farm's cent.rahpar
have 1bown that the kelp can in-s_tructure that look.a some~ will bring nutrient-rich "deep '"<t
deed ll"OW lb the open ocean, u hke an upside-down ambrelta. watet• from the ocean bottom to •rn long as it has sufficient nuUenta General Eleetric'• Bryce ex.. th k 1 and sunlight. plained that1he device ii caBed a e e P4iot. • ""
While the kelp atudles and ·•ten.aion·grid" structure and 11 •' SiDc!_.._~.~\y 2!.!f~·foOd '-'rt
d · ed th-• •--Will U11.~ What oa ...... ~ '10Vf.· ~1 structural engineering have cen-es1gn SO ... ocean wal.C£ can ing kelp receives. Dr. North \aid.
tered on Newport Beach, another pass ~h !t. ·one lmponant tbblJ tile ~·
part ot t.he experlment bas been It coosfltl Of a iteel and plastl~ , ment wil ~Ul ~ ~ 1-Me
goingzogJn CbJc•tP .. and ~ or _(iberglaa,. main ,apar kelp cugrow'iibdertliesonur-
anotbcr pvt lp Al_,, Calif. splder:webl:ied With ropes wov• ideal condlUOOI-~ In Chicaao, the lnstlWte or Gu or polyptOPyleae plastic. alone ·r.-,
Technology has be4Ul studying which the keJp Will be plantecf. ••1t '°° lld\i··• ttle ttaces ot ·
the bacteriological·proceas that The structure wu developed 1nan,i1,0eSOamcUrontothewater •. :.::
ferments the kelp ln the ableoce from scratch. Bryce Hid. He you can s~l4te gro-.rth even 1 •
of air. ' • said analysis of destcn and. , mOTe,.•'1.. n,:. Norlh aaid Caltech ~
Althau&h this process is not fabrlcstiUlb.U 1aken about'wa • studl .. naves,hown. :'
new, since kelp growing natural-years and thai Uie structure )ViU Natural kelp beds are harvest-~ .r
ly along shore b.8a been harvest-be assembled 011 shote before it is ed three times a year.
ed for 60 years, the institute is installbdinApril. . "0ur'ti"8 std~ lndl~te deep'
seeking ways of improvtns th4' He said the structure. while•· water 'fJ!OWs plants twice as last · ;
process. !Jent.Jal. b a mi!'or part•of the ex· as sh~ \f'41ter." be said, and ·r 2.
And the Regional Research perJment, which he sa\d will the e~ent will show if the •·.
Center of the U.S. Department of yield ~ ~rcent biologlc•l d$l~ kelp can be harvested six; or :~
Agriculture in Albany, Calif. bu and o.ply 2 perceQt enginee~ more times ydJrl1. . ; :
been studying a pretreatment intorniat.ton. ,, Ir this experiment is sue-,
program for kelp en route to Only about a foot of the top of ceasfal, the nut step will be a · ·
fermentaUoo. the spar, plus the tops of the lOO·'acre' t1rm much farther ..
The focus of all this activity is growing kelp. will be visible from offshore, ~yond the coastal··~·
a plant that 1rows naturally-•• ,~r9,»qcesald. islands.
along the Calilornla coast and the structure will be outlltted l>rob\ol!lJS faclnf this larger C!
often washes up on shore aloqg ~itb ~a~~onal Djar~gs all(l . ~farm wdutd~etbelliecUora c;
with otbert)1H'f.' of sea.weed. ·1dentif~C. signs Wfl'IUDI bOati.' completely new type of structure --'=
Giant kelp is Uabt sreen or away. and Its atatus as a navigational •
brown in color. .m comiJta of However .. Bryce said, ~o hazard ... -:'(• •
leaves'and bulb-like arowths at· believes man, r•ther. than If all eoes well, wJthlri a few ~
tached to a long flexible stem. nature, may be tbe bl&gest years man cOa1d achieve wtiat0
It's anamuin&plant.. hazard facinl the ~enW has up unttl now seemed OnlY a""J
The kelp Ol•erocystls !antt. , • scieltce.ftctltmpc>ssibllity: farm-"'''
pyrifera>. ii one ol the. fastest "We expect it to become an & iug ttfe ·oceans intensively tor • ~t.
growing plants in the world. It tracUve place for aport!labiill,.. food and f'ttel. .,., ~ I ~ •I'\~
..
. . .. . -· ~
Murder
. . ~\
Probe ContinueS
Two Convicted in Death of Ari~ona Reporter
PHOENIX. Arll. IAPJ The
conviction of two men for the
-m~rder-of Arizona Rcpubhc re·.
porter Don Bolles has not clost'd
the books on the case, says chief
prosecutor William· Schafer Ill.
"We have alwavs maintained that there·s a sma·u band of con·
spirators ... Schafer said "As I
said before, we don 't have all the
conspirators, but we v.111."
JAMES ROBISON, 55, a sub
urban Chandler plumber, and
Max Dunlap, 48, a Phoenix con
tractor, were convicted Sunday
of first degree murder and con
sp1racy in Bolte-;' death
Th~ conspiracy conv1ct1on in·
<"luded a plot to kill Zanzona At·
torney GeneraJ Bruce Babbitt
and Al "King Alfonso .. Lizanetz,
51, a former employee of wealthy
liquor wholesaler Kemper
Marley Sr.
Robison and Dunlap face possi·
ble execution by gas when
Superior Court Judge Howard
Thompson sentences them Dec.
Ii
BOLLES WAS FATALLY in·
Jt1red June 2, 1976, when a bomb
exploded under his car in a hotel
parking lot. He mumbled lht'
words "Adamson," "Emprise""
and '"Mafia .. to passersby as be
lay on the. Qavement. He was
hospitalized for 11 days beforene
died lie waS<t7.
As a verdict against Dunlap
was announced. his .eldest
daughter, Pam, burst int.o sobs
and threw her arms around her
mother, Barbara. Dunlap struck
the defense table hesitantly after
the verdict was read. •
Robison contained his feeling~
and said to his court-appointed
attorney. David Derickson,
"Ttial's the breaks.''
ROBISON AND Dunlap Wl!re
arrested Jan. 15 after John
Harvey Adamson admitted his
rote in the car-bomb slaying. ·
Adamson, who got a 20-year
prison sentence tor second·
degree murder after agreeing lQ
serve as the state's key wilness,
said he planted the bomb under
Bolles· car after luring the re-
porter to the hotel with a false
news tip. Adamson said Robison
triggered the blast with a radio-
control transmitter.
Dunlap, Adamson testified,
hired him to kill Bolles, Babbitt
und Liumctz.
Auld Lang S,yne
Lombardo Band, to Go on
NEW YORK CAP > --Guy Lombardo. thesonofanltalian
tailor who started his first banc;l in Canada but became known
as the maestro of middle America, will be buried Wednes-
day.
But his brother. Victor. promised that their band, the
Royal Canadians. will go on and that the tune most closely as·
sociated with the bandJeader -"Auld Lang Syne'" -wiU be heard again Dec 31. ·
Lombardo. 75. died Saturday night at Houston ·s
Methodist Hospital of a breathing dif(jculty.. Hospital of-
ficials said death was not related to heart surgery he had un·
dergone there in September.
Lombardo's wife of 51 years. Lillibelle, was at his side
when he died.
Floods Periling Pixie
· TWO TaAILER PAB&S
nestled at the foot of the hills. BABBl'IT WAS repgrt~ty a primary housing areas for mar.
target ~ause of an .antitrust. ried students, were leveled.
suit againsLI.he-UQuo.t..tndusYo.J. _ ... El~ Elsberrx • ..A vp~t~r
and Lizaneu because of his bar· fireman."aaid be and two other rag~ '11, let.ten to legis1a!ors re-firemen saw the water cascade
portu\11 alleged Marley crtmes. down Toccoa Creek about 1:30 Adad'lson said Dun!ap told him a.m. ·
Marlet. who was not charged in "I looked up and I saw red
the case, would Cinance the kill· waler that was really starting to
ings. move," be said. "We ran and aot After the bombing. a group of into a Jeep. we were going t:o
investighbve reporters traveled turn the sirens on and wake peo.
to Arizona to try to continue work pie up ...
on BolU$' major to.,ics of in·
vesligatiqn -organized crime
and its posaible links to promi·
nent Arlronans.
Members of Investigative
Reporters" Editors Inc., headed
by Pulitzlfr Prize-winning re-
porter Bot> Greene ot Newsday,
spent nefrly six ·months in
Phoenix before producing a
series of 23 1U'ticles last spring.
Many newspapers published
some ol ttleftndings.
HE SAID THE Jeep was
swamped before they could cl"OSs
a bridge to a trailer park.
Elsberry got bold ot a small tree
but his partnen were loat.
••J woke up last night and beard
a noise and the llabts went out.••
said one YOU.DI man who recount·
ed the disaster at aiemorial
services Sunday. "J grabbed my
-wile and kids. I knew Go4 Jt,8Ct\IS
in his h.iu'l<b."
BV/this \\eek
PERSONAL SHOPPER
1 We've thought of the perfect holiday help~r, another pair of hand !
Diane Salem, our personal shopper, wtll shop for you or wJth you.
She'! knowledgeable about everythfng at BW to save you time,
to feet the perfect gift or to help you with a complete holiday wardrobe.
Call 759-1211, ext. 225 or 219, for an appointment.
It's a Bullock's Wil5hire courtesy service, of course. -SCENT SHOP
A delightful comerokoUectibles, gjfls and treasures,
all scented, opens tomorrow in Batfi and Boudoir.
ST. JOHN KNITS
Val Gray presenls the holiday collection 11:30 to 3:30 Thursday in Townleigh knits.
GROSVENOR, CANADA
ulent fur collection for men and women arrives Friday eveninst
al mode1tng 11:30 to 3:30 Saturday'af!d Sunday in t~e furSalon,
.. -.... -.&..~V.a.&a. \l'ILA ~ ••••'W-.-.¥
baa eharaecl two men with assault
and batttty for alle1edly klsalni
pollcewomen, but Tulsa's top
policewoman ••YI the city pros-ecutor's refusal to bring the
charges himself has made women
orticets "theobjectofridlcule."
·•A temale officer ii not a sex
object. We have a tough enough
Job • • . to have to pui up with
Getting ha Shape
A pair of joggers didn't seem fazed by the
temporary barren appearance of
TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa recently as
they went for an afternoon trot. The earth
mover in the foreground is clearing the
way for landscaping.
. Newport Cops
Study~van .
'Murd~r Gun'
• I
BJ JOANNE &EYNOLDS Ot .. ~,.....,
Newport Beach pollee con-
tinued their complex probe of the
murder of Stephen Jobn Bovan
today, awaiting results of
ballistics tests conducted on a
gun they found in an Upper
Newport Bay mudfiat.
A spokesman for t.be crime lab
run by the Orange Ct>unty I 6beriffs Office said today that
tests or the German-made 9 mm
eutomaUc pistol have not been
completed yet. He declined to
c;peculate when those tests would be finished.
The eun, which can carry eight
)>ullets in its clip and a ninth In its
,chamber, was loeated by police
• who were told where to look for
Jbeweapon.
They believe It was the BUD
. .used to pump nine fatal shots in-
to Bovan on Oct. 22.
~ Meanwhile. four men arrested
pn cbarps of murder conspiracy
in tlle case are scheduled to re·
,tum to municipal court Tuesday
mornln1 t.o complete their ar-
ralgoment.
. Ont~ oneof th&four, AleXander
Kull~. 28. bu eatfted a . plea or
not ~ll\y ln tho cue. Kulik, who was ongln811J arrested in Mis-
sion Vjejo on suspicion or ~seSlloD ol ltlOt' than a pound
or nearl): pure:tiei'Qbi, was freed
( BOVAN.IPafeAt>
A suney conducted by parents
al Mopte Vista School in Co6ta
Mesa indicates ~percent of rasi·
dents in the east side school's al·
tendance area oppose a proposal
to move McNally continuation
school to the Monte Visla cam·
pus.
Results or the poll, which clrew
134 responses, wlll be presented
to Newport-Mesa School District tru~tees Tuesday nlgbL
According to the survey, about
87 percent or lhe respondents are
not parents of students at Monte
Vista Elementary School.
At 1)1esday's 7:30 p.m. meet·
lng in Costa Mesa City Council
chambers, trustees are expected
to mate their first public com-
ments on a series of recommeo-
dAtions from a citizen's advisory
committee.
The major recommendation
Coast Solons ·
Set at Forum
calls for tlit clolure of Monte Vis· ta as an demeratary school. The
vacant campus would theD
become Ole new home of .McNal·
ly High School, currenUy located
at 19th Street and Newport
Boulevard ln Costa Me$a.
The district-appointed ad·
viso~y committee also bas called
fot' a study into the possibility
that McNally students could be
absorbed into alternative educa-
tion programs at reeular high
schools.
The committee-Is also expect·
ed to present a new r~mmen·
dation regarding .triteria for
future school closures.
This recommendation suggests
that any school with an enroll·
ment of 300 students or less be
considered a candidate for
closure.
Monte Vista, California,
Lindbergh, Mesa Verde and Vic-
toria schools iJa Costa Mesa and
Bay View School in Santa Ana
Heights currently have enroll·
ments ol 300 or less.
Toll Calls Told
-After Morean refused to pros-
ecute Jimmy M. Fortner, 24, and
Marshall W. Norman, 28. officers
Burnett and Nadeau ~rsuaded
the state di.strict attorney's off ace
NEW ORLEANS <AP> -At lea:sl 10 penons were shot within
an hour today tn three attacks.
rangine across New Orleans.
Police aatd one man ,Probably
was responslble, and tliey had a
former Intemal Revenue Service
worker in custOdy.
No one was kllle4!: but tJie
emergency room director at
Bourbon Street ln tbe Pr*
Quarter.
Five more victims, their sexes
not lmDMdlatelY known, were
shOt in the oUtce of Merill LJDCb.
Pierce, FellJler, & Smitti, •
downtown broltel'ase Orm.
Witne!INS of the ahootl:Dp lD
lb" P'l1!ilelr:QUartet HM t pn-m.n parted a green ear in tbe
middle of traffic, marched lnt.o
the part l.Dd sbot a man alttini
on a bench.
Tbq s~cl M then J?l•ced ~..P.!' to the body of a second man 1YU>I · on a bench and fired twice. ·
{8ee6HOOT, Pase.U)
MORGANTON, N.C. CAP> -
NOl'tb Carolina mountain com"
rv»Oitlea betan cleanln& up leida1 a"fter atorrn·apawned fioods that
rued through doiena of tow!"
Sunda.y. kllHng nine peoplo, car·
rylns otr mobile home! and
A•u••UU'6 UA.1.1UU11::-1MO ••. u.4 \ll ~.-c
killed were children.
he state's flood death toll ro11e
pine when the Burke County
riff's Department reported
t the bodies or three boys were
od early today In a rain·
lien creek at Morganton and
nother body was found in an
* * *
• JfOCCOA, Ga. (AP) -Thenrst
;part of the cleanup was the worst.
9'lt rescue workers removed
1cs buried in mud and debris
e er a dam burst, flooding the
Toccoa Falls Bible College
campus
"We saw one guy gone crazy,
running out of the water an his un·
derwcar, · said ambulance
RESCUE WORKERS
CONTINUE SEARCH -A4
drl\ er Jerrell Beatty. one of the
f1r:.t on the northeast Georgia
nood scene Sunday. "He just
•kept going doY.n the road. But "'e
rnuldn't ~o after him. There
"ere the others.··
By the '"others" he meant the
hod 1cs, so manv ht• l'OUldn t re·
mt•mber the numb<.•r Workers
--... ere seeking udd1tional bodies
anti by midmornan1it today, the
]
toll stood at 37 dead and 45 in ·
JU red T\\ 1·nty children were
among the' ictims.
'Tii t• first was u hoy. down in
' thn·c or four fret of mud, .. Beat·
• l\ said "i''rom then on 1t was
mostly young kids ..
You know. this is bad.
som<'lhmg real bad, when the
youni,: kids come in,·· he said
later.
"You hold the tittle baby m
your arms ::ind you think about
the ltfe he hasn't lived You think
that you are Just 2.4, but you have
at least hvcd a life.
"This should happen to you
bl·forc 1t hapµens to this baby.··
e19N toQ'. :sun•&iut , ~--
ln Morganton. Oltirtals ldealliled .... ,.,,_ .. u,.,...,,.,.,
buUdinC victim as lk 1:P.'f!!Jf P•'ICtln
who Uv«t alone 1D tbo b6 I n
and wu beUeved to be lb is 1~
GOs or early '70I. He w 415~ -.v°;c~A.i U¥ Ii. Ul.biu wnQ..C~eG
on him daily and brou1b.t "him
I~ ..
Burke County oftieiel aald the
bodlu of lwo Valdese brothers,
Chris Hemby, 18, and Tony Hem-
by. 16, and that or 14•)'.ear-old
Mark Hawkins of Mor1anton
were recovered from 4 creek ear-
ly today. It was reported that they
had been trying to swirn the creek l'nMa Page AJ
to help a boat dealer recover some 'iOTERS boats that had noated away. A • ~ '
fourth boy swam tosa!ety. • • • • Offi~ia.ls said Carolyn Morgan· Nelson and Marjorie Rees.
Hendnx and her two boys, •led 4 None of the seven candidates
and 5, were pitched Into the seeking a spot on the five·
swollen North Hominy Creek member board are incumbents.
westlof AshevjUe and drowned Nathan L Reade <division four>
when one end of th~ir mobile and Alvin Pinkley chose not lo
home was torn from the ground by run for re-election rampaging waters.
In Polk County, another family
that lived in a mobile home tried
to escape waist-deep flood
waters. Four-year-old Bryan
Scott Hart felt and disappeared.
Michael Charles Townsend, 28,
of Boone, drowned while he tried
to use a log to cross a flooded,
stream to safety near his home
The flash flooding was caused
by thunderstorms that moved
across the stale from the west
Sunday, dumping as much as five
inches of rain in six hours· time in
some areas.
Authorities in Hot Springs and
Marshall in Madison County re·
The sanitary board oversees
aewer planning and contracts
with the City of Costa Mesa for
trash pickup The sanitary dis··
trlcl levies its owtt property tax
which currently ~ slightly less
than two cents per $100 assessed
.valuation.
The water district's board is a
Policy-making body that looks
after the district's financial mat·
ters aod has the power to set
water rates and levy taxes. No
property taxes are currently
levied in the district.
ported water reached depths of up
to seven reet in city streets before K.illnr Di.es starting to -recede, carrying o
merchandise from smashed store
windows and leaving many bus1·
nesses with thick layers of mud on
the floors. -Three houses were destroyed
north o(Boone when the Tater HHI
Dam on Howard's Creek col·
lapsed and the 52-acrc reservoir
emptied. A bout 100 persons were
evacuated from homes near
Ash ev i I le where authorities said a
dam developed a crack. A dam on
Reems Creek in Madison County
was reported broken.
The thunderstorms moved
eastward across the state Sun·
day, setting off lesser noodln& in
some Piedmont and coastal
areas. A half dozen per~ons had to
be evacuated Crom Chocowinity
south of Washington. N.C .. and a
shopping center roof in Goldsboro
was partially caved in by heavy
rains.
FromRa*Jr
Blade Cuts
RALEIGH. N.C. CAP> -A
51-year-old convict who begged a
jury to send him to death row
after he pleaded bu1lty in the
slaying of his wife died early lo·
day after he was found in his cell
"1th apparently self-In flicted
razor cuts, Central Prison
authorilles said.
OUicials said a note was found
beside Daniel Webster He was
rushed to the prison hospital.
where he died minutes later.
Appeal Continues
At a news conference. prison
Warden Sam Garrison said
Webster apparently slashed
himself with a small injector-
t y p e razor blade. He said
Webster used the blade for shav·
ing. and that it was not prison
policy to keep razor blades away
from death row inmates 'TV Insanity' Plea
Again Rejected
:'\tlt\:'¥11 <AP>-AJudgercject·
l'd a d<>ft•nsc motion today to
o' l'rturn the convicllon or Ronny
Zamora, the 15-year·old boy con·
'1<'ll'd of murdt•r in the so called
"tl'le\' 1s1on insanity" trial.
Circuit Judge Paul Baker then
~more \\ 1tnesses for a hearing on
<tnothcr ::ittack on the conviction,
this one alleging procedural er-
rors before the trial last month.
Defense attorney Ellis· Rubin
called for testimony from eight.
people involved in the trial, in·
eluding the prosecutor. assistant
State Attorney Tom Headley.
The motions delayed the sen
tencing but Baker gave no in·
tl11'.1tion he would have to put it
off until another day.
The trial had drawn wide at~
tention for the novel defense
argument that Zamora killed
while temporarily into"icated by
endless violence he had seen on
television.
The trial alto was the first m
DAILY PILOT
Florida lo be extensively covered
by court.room cameras since the
state Supreme Court ordered a
one.year experiment to see if
such coverage would disrupt
trials. Still cameras were also
allowed in the courtroom
Presiding over the trial, Baker
blocked efforts to bolster the de·
fense theory with testimony by
television detective Telly
Savalas and a psychologist who
had studied television violence.
Zamora, a Miami Beach high
school student, admitted killing
his neighbor, 83-year ·old t;unor
Haggart, when she surprised him
and a pal as they ransacked her
home last spring.
Fre.PageAJ
WORK •••
The blood·slained blade was
round beside the body, Garrison
said
"I personally have known Dan·
ny Webster for 20 years:· Gar·
rison said. "Webster·s religious
beliers ruled out blasphemy and su1c1de ...
In the two-page note. Webster
said he was killing b1msetr
bee a use he couldn't go on wilhout
his wife. Garrison said. Tbe
warden. who has worked for 20
Hars at the maximum security
prison. said Webster wrote that
he had communicated with God
and begged for forgiveness for all
the trouble he had ca used.
"God has spoken to him," Gar-
rison said.
Webster had spent 22 years ln
prison, on and ocr, for various of·
fenses.
Thor6ulfhbred horse r cJo
gets under way at noon TuCs4ay
at Los Alamitos Rnce Courae as
the Orance county "F.811 Fair"
opens tor a 12-day run.
The first thoroughbr6d horse
racing Qteet in county history
was approved Friday wbel) a trio
of Los Angeles appellat~ court
judges overturned an earlier
court decision.
·Eight thoroughbred r:.ces, iwo
quarter horse races and one AP·
paloosa race will be featured dnl·
ly <noon to 5 p.m.> on Los
Alamitos' %th-mUeoval track.
Because of the track's 1mall
size, lhQrOughbndl wm nan by
Ute grandstands twice.
Fair otficjaJs are pNldictinc a
dally betUn, handle of about S1
million and daily attendance of
11,000 people.
' Some Observe Friday Date
' State offices and some city government.s·will celebrate
Veteran!\ Day on Friday, despite a federal law that changed
the holiday in 1969totbetourth MoodayotOctober.
THE TRADITIONAL date Nov. 11, is still California's
•official Veterant> Day. Next tear, the olfjcial f.ederal holi·
day also will return to Nov, 11.
To help clear up this year's hOliday confusion, here·s a
rundown on openings and closings this Friday.
, 1-'ederal office.a and post offices will be.open .•
STATE OFFICES, incll.ldint t.b.e Department Ot Motor
Vehicles, will be closed.
County offices and the county library system will be
closed.
Muoicipa1 courts will be closed..
SCHOOLS WILL also close Friday except for the Irvine
Unified School District.
Mo:>l banks will be open, but individuals planning to
transact business should check with their own banks.
Cities that will conduct business as usual are Hunt·
ington Beach, Irvine. Laguna Beach, NewJjC>rt Beach, San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and Seal Beach. , •
COSfA MESA will close its city offices Friday. Trash
pickup in Costa Mesa will be the following day for those
scheduled to have tral)h collected on Npv. 11. Fountain
Valley city offices also will close Friday, but trash will be
picked up as usual. ·
Fro.a Page AJ
SHOOT •••
He then came back out on
Bourbon Street and shot a man
who was walking with a woman.
witnesses said.
Witnesses said the man got
back into his car, apparenUy in·
tending to drive way, but the traf·
fie was too heavy and he nec:1 on
foot.
The brokerage firm shootings
occurred about onc-balr hour
later.
:DOOR KNOCKS
DOOR KNOCKER
LEWISTON, Maine <AP> --
Door-to-door campaigning can
be rough on a guy. Ask Launer
G. Biron.
Biron. running for mayor,
showed up at a "Meet the Can·
didates Night .. with a swollen
right eye~ four stitches
Tbe caridldate said he hacltieen
campaigning door-to-door when
hit on the bead by a door opened
for him by an aide.
TONIGln'
COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL
-Refular meetina, City Hall.
6:30p.m.
OCC CECTURE -.. De~etop a
New Sell-Imag ,•·Fine A$119,
7:30p.m. "
TUESDAY, NOV. 8
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Reaular meetins.
Costa Mesa city council charn·
bers, 7:30p.m.
"BEJilND THE
HEADUNES" -or. Giles rr.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forurn,
7=30p.m.
GOASTIJNE CC LEC'J:URE -.. Alternative Lifestyles,··
Halecrest Clubhouse. 7:30 p,m.
2 Cliristma.8
Trees Cul
For Disney
SUSANVILLE {AP> -Two
80·foot Christmas trees for DI&· neyland and Disney World were
cut down this week in Northern
C•hfornia, Lassen National
Forest officials said Frlday.
The trees were white firs that
will cost a total of about $5.000 to
move the~ miles to Disneyland
in Southern California and the
3,000 mites to Disney World in
Florida.
A Disney oHlciat who
supervised the cutting said the trees wero fitting decorations for
Disney sites. The ~.ooo cost in·
eludes permits to cut the trees.
The cutting look place Weemes·
day.
In past years, ~everaJ Dis-
neyland Christmas trees have
been cut ln the Plumas National
Forest.
---=-=-------=--.-a.... -- -
• •
lt. o' I nwmooarmn.
:he-q mr· c 11truct
be part or llD ~ment to
kelp in Ule ~n a, whero :rently fe nutrient& ad ,
rtherefore, lltU plWlt utl Una1
lite are fowid. ·
• After h&rveStinJt, t kelp_will
bC digested by -6act~a tn an
anaeroblc,procesa that produc
methane, the chief component <:A
naturalC•· "If the experiment ls sue·
cesaf ul, I think it wlll be one of
the most Important contrlbUUdbs
our aeneration wlll make to
future aeneraUons," said Dr.
Wheeler North, director of the
biological part oft.De experiment
at Caltech's Kerckholf Marine
Laboratory 1n Newport ~ach.
"It will mean that 75 percent of
our planet which la virtually un-
used wlll . become fertile • • farmland," be said. "It wlll solve can crow as laat aa two feet ~r
our ener&Y problems and our day, reaehinl 70 to 100 feet in
food problems." · length. · · The project began in 1974, with The i-tant can be harvested r•·
more than $3 m111ion from the peetedly without havtnc to lje
American Gas Association. It rtplanted.
was divided into two parts: It can be used to produce llOt
engineering and bioloay. only methane but also Methand,
•
The Oranae Cout was chosen or methyl alcohol, wbicb can be·
as the site for three reasons: the bumed ln lnteml.l combUstlon :r
protection afforded by outlying engines. • • he sai~ ~·we're very concenid
islands, the nearness oC the · Kelp cap also be used to make bout vandalism." \
Caltech lab, and the fact that pharmaceuticala, fuel oils; ind Bryce sala tlie rarm may
kelp grows here naturally. perh•ps many other products. become what. the law termS an
Engineers from General Elec-Also, kelp beds attract fl.sh . ''attractive nuisance,•• lo the
tric, supervised by Technical Caltech's Dr. North taid be sense that seuba divers maJ ~
Director Armond Bryce, have believes the kelp fann and pout-attracted to it and then fl:d
been working with Global Marine ble future farms will be m.;c>r themselves m trouble in the k~
-DevelopmenL. Inc. in Newport, souri:es_of~ -_.~The •uaric·.aue la.rm UPt:li·
Beach lo desisn and build a r But nip normally grows Oily ment will run Cor about ,t5
THIS IS ARTIST'S CONCEPTION OF DEEP WATER KELP FARM OFF ORANGE COAST
Will Experiment Lead to Untapped Fuel and Food Suppllea? •
Nodes Get
Citations
At Beach
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The
clouds overhead weren't enough
of a cover-up for six beachgoers
who Saturday tested the enforce-
ment of a nudity ban al Black's
Beach.
Saturday had b~n announced
as the first day citations would be
issued for violating the ban. For
the past month, pohce officers
simply warned unclothed bathers. _
A group led by Robert Jacobs,
chairmao of the Nude Beaches
Committee or San Diego, ap-
peared on the beach shortly after
8 a.m., waited for police officers
to come along and then stripped
They were presented with mis
demeanor citations and asked to
put their clothes back on. They
did, and left.
The misdemeanor citation
could result in a maximum
penalty of six months in jail and
a $500 fine
Besides the 29-year.old Jacobs,
those receiving citations were
Sonya Peasley, 31: Sam Metroff,
44; Frans Guepin, 42 ; Kathy
Jones, 25, and Dieter Nenn. 40.
All are San Diego residents.
A rrtajority of city residents
voted to support Proposition D.
banning nudity at Black's Beach,
in a September municipal elec-
tion. The city council voted 8-1 in
early October to forbid unclothed
bathers at all public beaches.
Black's Beach had been the on-
ly one in the nation allowing nude
bathing.
Sturgis Claims
'Conspiracy' Led
To Kennedy Death
NEW YORK <AP>
Watergate burglar Frank Sturgis
said today that an "international
conspiracy," including Soviet
and Cuban elements, was in-
volved in the assassination of
President Kennedy.
Soap Opera
Spooks 'Sa111:'
NEW YORK <AP>
David Berkowitz, the ac-
cused Son of Sam killer,
was sedated and placed un-
der restraint. after he
became "upset" while
witching the soap opera
"Days of Our Lives," cor·
rections officials said.
Phil Leshin, spokesman
for the corrections 9eparl·
ment, said Berkowitz
began "screaming and
shrieking in an unintelllgi·
ble manner" after
watching about 15 uiinutes
or the program.
Berkowilt, held in
seclusion at Kings County
Hospital in Brooklyn, is al-
lowed into the hospital
recreation room to watch
television after other Pll·
tlents have left for the ar.
ternoon.
In an interview on ABC-TV's
"Good Mommg Amer1ca" pro-
gram, SturgiS said' he turn~
over evidence of the conspiracy
to a federal agency. Hc did not
speciry the agency. but said the
House Intelligence Committee
was aware orthe information.
Sturgis said his evidence
showed that Jack Ruby knew Lee
Harvey Oswald. and that Ruby
was involved with Cubans.
Sturgis said he passed a poly-
graph test showing he was not in-
volved in any way with the as-
Sllssination, and that he was not
in Dallas et the time of the as-
sassination.
Last week, Sturgis was arrest-
ed In New York for allegedly
threatening Marita Lorenz, who
savs she once was a lover of
Cuban dictator Fidel Castro. Ms.
Lorent said Sturgis was trying to
!ilop her from g1vmg testimony to
a congressional committee.
~ts Loren;: has maintained
that JUSl before Kennedy was
killed, an assassination squad
which included her, Sturgis and
Lee Harvey Oswald .... ent to
Dallas ftom Miami.
Sturgis, who has denied those
allegations, was released from
the charges here when the dis-
trict attorney's office said it bad
no evidence to support them.
... structure cal)able of supporting alon1 shore where it bad ade-moot.bl, with the growtti rate.of
the quarter-acre1)f kelp witbin so ~uate sunlight, a place to anchor the kelp being moriitored con-
f eet of the water's sth'fafe, 11.11lf andplenty<:Anwtrieaw. unuoueb' caitech's Dr. Not*h
although the ocean at that point "If you really want to use the said ' •
is l,800feetdeep. :;. main area ~! the ocean," Dr. D;. North arid his research~
The struct.Ure must be ableito North ~aid, . you have to·have believe they also have the
withstand ocean currents and some kind of structure near the angwer to another ~blem~ \be
weather, yet provide a mloimum nrface tb~t the keli> can be need for<nutrients.
or interference with sea life. plan~ed on to permit •00\lCb •'There's an almost inexha~·
Meanwhile, scientists at the sunlieht to penetrate the water. ble source of nutrients on the bot·
Caltech laboratory bJve been ex· Tbat:s where engineer: Bryce tonJ.'' ho sald. 1.
perimenting with California comes m. •. • • • · / A pump operated by a diee.el
giant kelp. Tests with small gri'5 • The kelp will be planted on a engln• on the fann 's centrahPfJ'
bave shown that the kelp oan in-s.tru&are ~at looks somet.lllng will bring nutrient·ricb "deep
deed grow in the open ocean, as hke an upside-down umbrella. water" from the ocean bottomA.o..
lone as it bu sufficient nutients General Electnc'.s ~ryce ex· 'the kelp. ,_
and sunlight. P.llilned -~~~device 15 call~ a Slnce this supply of plaat·focd
Whlle the telp studies and tension·gnd structure and is will exCeed what naturally grow •••
structUral engineering have cen-desi,-ned so that ocean water can i~ kelp receives. Dr. North said.
tered on N~rt-8each, another pass tbrqo,h it. , t · lite Qfliri·
part of the experiment has.been lt~ot•lleei•ntt1)laitic meattYtll al fJi; J1oW fast tile
eoing on in Chicago and yet or fib~rellss . main •P•" kelpc.ancn>w'\u)dertb~near-
another part tn Albany, Calif. spiderwebbed with ropet ..-oven Jdeal caadiUons.
Io Chicaeo~ the Institute or Gas of polypropylene plastic, alOni . Technology nas befn stud,yi.Dg which the kelp will be planted. ''l!'"you add little traces or
the bacteriological process that The structure wu dnelc>Ped mansanese an<Uron tot.be water,
ferments the kelp in the absence from scratch. Bryce said. lie x~ can. ·~~ulate e~wth even
ofair. said analysis of deaicn"'ana ';merer;~~ Nortb•l'llll4 Caltech
Although this process Is not rabrication has taken about two · etudiesbavesbown. -
new, since kelp growing natural-years and that the structure will Naturalj(elp beds..ue harvest.-
ly along shore has been harvest· be asseml>led OD shore befQre it is ed tbr~ IJ.$81 a year . .!
ed for 60 years, the institute is idStalled io April. i \"Dtit. ~b"Studles. in ate deep
seeking ways of improving the He said the structure,. while es-water arows plants twice as fast
process. sential, is a min()r P&l'.l of Uie ex.-. as shallow water," he said, and
And the Regional Research periment, which he said will l:M iexperimeot will sbOw if the
Center of the U.S. Department or yield 98 pe~~ piological dat.f:_ c bj · barVeated six or
Agriculture ln Albany, Calif. bas and only 3-ncent entmeer4lg ;> ·11loretl esj¥arly. • .
been studying a pretreatment Information. ' If this experiment is suc·
program for kelp en route to Only about a foot of the lo,P. of .cenf\fl, ~~.next atep will be a
fermentation. the spar, plus t.be to~ of Ebe .lOO·acte o\r,lll much fart~er
The focus of all this acUvity is growing kelp, will be visible from oflshore, ~yoiid the coas,,al
a plant that grows naturally shore, Bryce said. ialand,;. '
along the California coast and The structure will be outtitted Problems facing ~s l~
often washes up on shore along with naVigational markings and farm wOWdloclude~'oeedfoi'a
with other types of seaweed. identifying signs warning boats completely new type of structure
Giant kelp is Ught 1reen or away. · and lta atatus as a nayiaa~
brown iii color and consist.a of However, Bryce said, be hazard. ·
leaves and bulb-like 1rowths at-believes man, rather than If all goe$ weU. witbln a "w
tached toalongnexiblestem. nature, may be the biggest ye9? man could achieve w}iat
It's an amazing plant. hazard facing the experimental baa up uoiU now seemed only a
The kelp <Macrocystis farm. • . &cienc•fict.IOopolSibUilY: fU'IJl-
pyrlfera), is one of the fastest ••we expect it to become D at· lng the ocq,au intensively IPr
growing plants in the world. It ... tractive ~ace for spottftjbina,.. food and fuel. .;
Bp]E MONDAYS: Tbere ls
nothing quite Uke 1ett1n1 your ~.J wu•u.t .. a•· uu'4cH ~.7~
wltna catastrophe. Uke you·re
juat about to rush out the front d~'lwl\en the cat 1ets sick and
doellJn yourllving room rua.
0. you seem to have a chance
to make it to work on Ume when
the 'bathroom plumbing abrupUy
lets go, spewing forth areal
geysers from the fixtures.
Ttte.se little incidents come
alotei life's pathway just as sure
as Blue Monday rolls around
onceieach week.
Y'Ou can, howev~r, suffer
worse indignities than the Mon·
day Morning CatastroRhe. You
can also be done in by the False
Motiday Morning Calamity.
YOU WAKE UP with this
gh($Uy toothache You reach for
the, phone and scream
"E111ergency! Emergency'" al
youl'. friendly dental answering
:;ervice.
Amazingly, the good dentist
agrees to meet you at his office at
7:3Q a.m. And when you arrive,
the pain and throbbing have
my1teriously vanished like the
mi!fs ofthe morning "JV hi ch tooth is it?.. he m
quites wtlh probe an band.
"I can't remember now," you
m11mble "Back there
.so~eplace
~u get a look like you've just
been uncovered as the
neighborhood arsonist or the guy
whb lurks ln the bul>he5 at the
kiddie play~round.
SAME TmNG if the emergen-
t") 'invohcs Monday morning
-.hooting pains in the back. You
rut-ft to the medic-al office
whereupon your health abruptly
1mproves.
"There. there," the doc says
wearily. "'Take these pink palls
twice a day .. You just know
they 're sugar pills. He's humor·
jng you. You retreat in disgrace,
)file to work again.
Around our place, Blue Mon·
day catastrophes are almost
always mechanical, involving
some awesome foulup in our
various modes ortransportalion.
My family is on a light
schedule. We have people headed
seven different directions on a
Monday mom. We do it with
cars, mo-peds, motorcycles and sometimes waterwings.
WHEN WE GET everylh.ina
fired up aM rolllni on a Monday
morning, it sounds like General
Patton just drove his tank corps
through Uie streets or Balboa.
But everything is on a delicate
balance. We figure out the
logistics of who goos where on
Sunday night. Alas, it was Sun·
day night when the engine in my
faithful heap let go. It sounded
Jike two rocks rolling around il'l·
side a tin can.
"Its got to go to the shop Mon·
1lay mornin~." I whined.
''Just listen tothal. It'sdylng.~·
Thus the entire family
schedule was re-vamped to ac-
rnmmodate my misfortune.
AT DAWN TODAY, I hopped in
my distressed vehicle and start· l ed for the auto shop, the car r wheezing and knocking as my
wife followed in the other car to
eventually get me to the office.
By the time I rolled op to the
auto shop foreman's office, my
faithful heap wasn't knocking
any more. All the noises or dis-
aster had vanished. The engine
hummed away contentedly.
But it was knocking itsetr to
ces just a minute ago," I
ted out in protest.
There, there,'· the shop
man soothed. "Here, take
e two sugar pills ...
. WEAntER I NATION
PHOENIX. Ariz. <AP> -The
conviction of two m~n for the
murder of Arizona Republic re-
porter Don Bolles bas not closed
the books on the case. sa~ chief
prosecutor Wilfiam Scija!eillt:"
"We have always maintained
that there's a small band of con-
spirators," Schafer said. "As I
s.aid before, we don't have all the
conspirators, but we will ...
JAMES ROBJSON, 55, a sub-
urban Chandler plumber, and
Max Dunlap, 48, a Phoenix con-
tractor, were convicted Sunday
of first-degree murder and con-
spiracy in Bolles' death.
The conspiracy conviction in-
cluded a 1>lot to kill Zarizona At·
torney General Bruce Babbitt
and Al "King Alfonso" Lizanetz.
51, a former employee or wealthy
liquor wholesaler Kemper
Marley Sr.
a.m.
"I looked up and I saw red
water that was really starting to
move," he said. "We ran and. got
into a Jeep. We were going to
turn the sirens on·and wake peo-
ple up."
• HE SAii> TUE Jeep was
. • • swaml*S before they could cross
ROIUSON AND Dunlap were a brldge to a trailer park.
arrested Jan. 15 aft~ ~o • ElsberrygothO!dofasmalltree
Harvey Adamson admit~ his but till partnen were lost.
role in the car-bomb slayjng. • ~ · "I woke up last night and beard
Adamson. who got ~-year a noise and the lights went out,"
prison sentence f~,_second-said one young man who recowit·
degree murder after. acreems t.o• ed the disaster at memorial
serve-as t.ne t1l1te's key wi~. senlces Sunday. "I 1rab'-d my
said he planted the bomb Wlder • wife aJld lddl. I knew Gocftlld us Robison and Du.nlap face posst-
b 1 e execution by gas when
Superior Court Judge Howard
Thompson sentences them Dec.
6.
B~les·c~~~~gtheu~.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~in~h_b~h-~~~··-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~porter to the hotel with a false
BOLLES WAS FATALLY tn·
JUred June 2, 1976. when a bomb
exploded under his car in a hotel
parking lot. He mumbled the
news tip. Adamson said Robison
triggered the blast with a radio.
control transmitter.
Dunlap, Adamson testified,
hired him to kill Bolles, Babbitt
and Lizanetz.
AulcJ Lang S:pie
NEW YORK <AP> -Guy Lombardo, thesonof anltaliAn
tailor who started his first band in Canada but became known
as the maestro of middle America, will be buried Wednes-
day.
But his brother, Victor. promised that their band, the
Roy al Canadians, will go on and that the tune most closely as-
sor)ated with the band leader -''Auld Lang SyJle'"'' -will be
heard again Dec. 31. •
Lombardo, 75, died Saturday night at Houston's
Methodist Hospital of a breatblne difficulty. Hospital of..
ficials said death was not related to heart surgery he bad UD·
dergone there !n September.
Lomhardo's wife of 51 years, Lillibelle, was at bis side
when he died.
BV/this \NOOk
We've thought of the perfect holiday hetper, another pair of hands!
Diane Salem, our personal shopper, will 1hop for you or with you.
She's knowledgeable abOut everything at BW to save you time,
to:Select the ~rf ect glfl or to help you with a complete holiday wardrobe..
Call 759?1211, ext. 225 or 219, for an appointment.
Ws a Bulfock's Wilshire courtesy 1ervice, of course.
SCENT SHOP
A deliiJlff ul corner Of coUectlblet( gifts .ind trea5ures,
.ill scented, opens tomorrow in Bath .ind Boudoir.
ST. JOHN KNITS
Val Gray presents the holiday collection 11:30 to 3:30 Thursd.iy in T ownleigh Knits.
GROSVENOR, CANADA
lhe opu t fur collection for men and women arrives Friday evening!
Inform~ modeling 11:30 to 3:30 Slturd~ •Sld Sund~y in the Fur Silo~
\,. ..
..
Floods Pe~g ~ixie
e Cpl.
Sentenced
SA Dl GO <AP> -A pretrial
acreement reduced the sentenee
Of a Marine Co~ Recruit~
drill instructor found guilty of
maltreatini recruit.a to a $300
fi.ae, two ontbs coolinement
and reducUon one irade in rank.
e;~ . .!;:.~,....._ T '-•1"" '2 .
f orm:r:Mi State root ball, track and ·ng star from Hen·
deraon, Nev., was sentenced by a
specl•l court-martial panel.
·:TUB JURY of Marine officers
and enlisted personnel had or-
dered Bales confined for three
iiiontbs at hard labor, fined $501, • ~uced to Lance Corporal and
recommended the confinement
and a bad conduct discharge be
$\ISpended, a spokesman said
•The pretrial agreement limited
the confinement and fine, the
spokesman said .
. BALJ:S OIUGINALLY was
~harted with two counts of strik·
int recruits and two counts of
maltreatment in incidents that
Occurred June 21 and 23 while he
served as a drill instructor with
the 2nd Recruit Training Bat-
tallon.
Store Deatbt
He pleaded guilty to the
multreat.meot charges before the
trial began and the other charges
were dismissed earlier.
Dr. Joel Stokes pauses in' an unusual settJng for a dental
office in a Sears Department Store in El M.onte~Stokes • •
is believed to be the first dentist to practice his pro~
fession within a few steps of appliances, housewares and
clothing. ·
!l.esearcher Says Study
<Jf Lung Cancer Wrong
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-A researcher who
worked on a study linking
str_iki~gly hig_b lung
cancer rates in south-
central Los Angeles to in·
dustrial air pollution now
says the study w~s
wrong
Dr. M~clcolm C. Pike.
one Of Sil( investigators in
the University of
Southern California
study. said in a Los
Angeles Times article
Sunday the high in-
oldence of lung cancer io
south-central Los
Anaeles is "totally -not
partially but totally -ex -
plainable by occupation.
These people are just do·
ing nasty jqbs."
Additiohal research
has shown the "l'ela-
llonship between in·
dustriaJ pollution and the
high cancer rate to be
merely coincidental,
Pikcsrud. .
THE USC STUDY, re·
sults or which appeared
in two scientific journals
in 1974and1975, found the
lung cancer death rate
among whlte males in
soutb-central Los
Angelf!S was more than
one-third greater than in
In Yosemite'
Boy, 4, GorM
By Park's Deer
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK <AP> -A 5.
year old boy was fatally injured when be was gored
·by a deer near Wawona in Yosemite National Park authorities said. '
Colin New of Clovis was feeding the deer Sun-
day when the animal suddenly gored the child,
puncturing has chest The youngster died en route
to a hospital, officials said.
Girl Su"''"~• L~ap
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A young girl who
held her nose, leaped from the Golden Gate Bridge
and ~urv1ved was hospitalized after surgery, but
why she Jumped was still a mystery.
The parents of 17-
( )
. year-old Katlly Schoen· State stein or San Francisco re· _ _ fused to comment Sunday ----........... -· .... =-~ about the suicide at-
tempt, and were advising spokesmen at Letterman Arrriy Hospital to say lit-
tle about the girl's condition
She suffered unspecified internal injuries and a
fracture. She became the 11th person tq survive a
leap from the bridge, where 630 others have suc-
cessfully jumped to their deaths since it opened ih
1937
· Dpaallfl Flap Duralce
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Lt. Gov. Mervyn
Dymally has sent a scathlni letter to Califonlia
State Universities and Colleaes Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke attackinJ the system's decision to ball its
participation in a private scholarship procram for
minority engineering students.
The decision, announced in September, was
based on a legal opinion from tbe coUeges' g teal
counsel concluding that such participation ran
counter to the California Supremo Court's con-
troversial Bakke decision.
the rest of the country.
1'be researchers
believed that the high
cancel' incidence could
best be ~itplatned 1>y ex-
posure of area residents
to cancer-causi ng
chemicals emitted from
petroleum facilities and
other industries.
ASKED IF !'HE study
had been updated, Pike
said· "Yes, I can update
it. It 1sn 't true."
Pike, a statistician at
the USC Medical School's.
pathology departnw:nt,
said the on-the-job ex·
posure ·theory hel.,_ ex·
plain why the high Jung
cancer rates were ob-~
served amon1 men a.nd ·:.'";'a not women. "-·.rr
HE SAID TOE USC re· -::: ..; ,
searcbeJ'S revised their '-
originalcoocluslons after
interviewing hundreds of
lung cancer patients and
healthy residents in
south-central Los
Angeles and additional
cancer patients in areas
of western Los Angeles
where the air is cleaner.
The revised findings
conflict with a r~ent as-
sertion by state Air
Resources Board
Chairman Tom Quinn
that industrial air pollu-
tion -particularly from
011 refineries -appeared
to be resPQnsible for a ris-
ing lung cancer death
rate in the Los Anceles
and San Franci~ Bay
areas.
IN A SAN Francisco
speech, Quinn said last
week that a newly com·
pleted ARB analysis con-
tains statistics showing
lung cancer was twice as
common in Los Angeles
and the Bay area as in the
nation as a whole and five
timff higher than in
similarurbanareas. ~ .
Those figures have
been challenged by a
variety Of state, federal
and ipdependent cancer
specialists who said lune
cancer mortality in the
state's urban areas was
only slighUy aboVe the
national average and the
rate of seme other urban
areas. ' '
• J.cyctt1Wast1 Selection
Normal Wosh, Short Was~
Rinse and Hold.
• Normal Power Saver Cycle.
• TuffTube Interior.
I)
I • I 1 • ** Oe,.,.r.t El-=tri' h• ,,,.,..... to "rfo"" a -t . ...:m,., c...,... b11t ,......, ......
which woll be bllled 10 G•nerel Elec:trie, wttlt the Plltch•• •f .... foll-int Ge o..-.ww. models: GSO "3>050"'53: GSO 1163; G&O 861. OSO *70; QSO 963:
OSO 970 end GSO 1070. N0tmll tfuno9 our lttsl•ll"lon "defined toiftcl'udri eftfV:
1. o-..... t ......... Wll" hne, .,, .. n '""'· -"'«rtcit ..... , ••• G• .... ......,.
.... .,.......... 1• • Rl'lrei.11 ,_,., .. llne, """ llM1 lltcttiul ,,,. ..,_ ..-c.,,-.ct Air ...
, flftd11dn ell>os llr\d 411~N"ffeo f0t itl11Sttl!1t"'*'• Otttr (llplne 0-ller 31, 1t77. 1 I t. •
(
Strange Neighbors
Newport Beach police last week disclosed that two
Huntington Beach suspects involved in a Newport murder
investigation have been living on the Oranee Coast under
assumed names after having been quietly relocated here
by federal authorities.
According to the local police, the true identities and I
backgrounds of these suspects were a closely guarded
secret of the United States Marshal's Office.
Even the Newport Beach pollt'e cannot learn from
federal. authorities the backgrounds of the suspects. The
U.S. Marshal's Office, as of this wrlthig, has not responded.
to press inquiries.
The assertion of local authorities is that the two men in
question at one time testified or served as informants
against organized criminal elements on the Ea.st Coast.
In order to protect the pair ftom retaliation by the
mobsters, they were secretly whisked away to tbe Hunt-
ington Beach area where they took aliases and each gets a
$1,500 per month federal stipend. "
While the federal payoff appears on face value to be a
fairly comfortable arrangement for the witnesses, it all
•may be reasonable in value received in the federal crime
~ighting effort. ·
And it also may be quite reasonable that the witnesses'
lives be protected and they be allowed to move and live in a
s ituation where they would be shielded from their former
associates.
But if in truth these people have prior criminal records
1()f serious magnitude, why would this information be
withheld from local law enforcement officers?
The notion that some ex-mobsters could secretly
become your next-door neighbors under auspices of the
federal government is somewhat disquieting at the least. ·
• It becomes even more alarming when it 1$ suggested
· at UU.SJact ~shielded from local law enforcement agen·
ies \tlUCb m<l.'t 'of our citiJens consider their primary
ourcM>fprotection from criminal elements.
Monitoring by local police might at least.insure that
relocated witnesses with criminal backgrounds are not
falling back into their old ways.
In the homicide case currently pending in Newport
Beach. a deputy district attorney alleged in court that one
of the suspects has a prior conviction for murdttr.
This fact and perhaps others involving tile suspects
may be of significant value in the current police investiga.
tion.
It is difficult to understand why federal authorities are
so reluctant to diwlge that informaUon to the benefit of
local law enforcement.
Penny Pinehers
l" l I We've had no-frills airplane tnjlS and no-frills houses
d now it's no-frills food.
A maJor mid)V~ food chain is liltroducing a trial line
f 88 no-brand-name foocl and houaebold prod)lcts which it
laims can save the shopper 10 .i>ircent to ~ percent on.
ocery bills.
The one-size packages With plain labels -no pictures
~ cmtain stmddd or lowel' quality ite -no fancy
~des. I Canned grapefruit . Jl!4Y lnclu.de broken pieces,
anned peacheS Will come onij' in slices paoked in light
yrup, rice will be ball broken J[emels and there'll be no
lPerfume added to the cut-rate, •bite only, toilet p~. "
Older householders may remember penny-countmr
ays when this was pretty much the wily~ sboppln&
d to be. Whether younger shoppers will ~ willing to
ade their pet brand names for economy r~ains to be
een. ~ •
'
~ kttv11 dtfor
-----------
--- -
SBlPPJ~oroRT Pa. -
Heading north .ioas the w1iid1nl
hiBJl••Y that the townspeople e.U Green Garden RQtd, JOU ean
see w~ oOttClli Clou al).11u ~low oye_r ~o mountalm.'{.l'he
tranquil eeeae i.i ao!; bO'#ever.
enUrely tbe work ~ nature. Tbe
clouds orialnate from alX mun-moth, cylindrical coolinl towers tbat rile fr<>m the bana of the
Ohio Blver Uke tdols to th• &oda
ofenVSY.
Svperheated vapors from the
ouelear worb below form the
clouds wbic:h
appear so
white and in·
nocent. But they han1 ,
over Sblp· .
pinlP()rt, Pa ..
like a pall.
Beneath them
i1 a dying
town con·
taminated by
a deadly white dust of lead. cad-
mium, chromiwn aDd iron and
an even more deadlY irradiated
, ·ml.st.
Twenty years a10, Ship
plngport was a pastoral farmini
comQlunit.y. The. in 1953. the
A~mAc Energy CommlHlon
.elected the virl1n riverbank as .. the site for the nation •s flnt
preuurhed water nuclear
reactor. 'l1le bank bas now been
transformed into a series of
booming, whlrrin& enersy
compounds, a Disneyland or
futuristic domes, eon~e-.
reaeton, &ridl and trammiasloo
.liues like a scene from ''Star w.,.. ...
TUE NUQ.EAll WO~ en·
dowed by the federal 1overn-
ment, is operated by a con·
sortlum of 1>0wer companies known by the acronym CAPCO. ne flve compames -Duquesne
Licht, Pennsylavnia Power,.Obio
Edison, Cleveland Electric and
Toledo EdisOD -prQvide elec·
trlclty for some snen mUllon
consumers. But it is the Ship-
pingport townsfolk who bear the
environmental burden.
Out of the CAPCO compounds,
with their cooling towers and
950-foot coal desulfurlzatlon
chimney, comes tbe deadly
fallout -the mineral dust and ir·
radiated ml.st that ra1D down up-
on the commUDity. We were
shown calcium .wtate chunb
the size or pie plates, which fell
like flying saucers upon the coun·
tryside. In the few months since
our investisation began, we have
Earl Waters
~ PEAR llqeruuc, invlsable death from iltie radia·
Uon~ nier. AH tales :birds thal
wait b naids. LOcRl 'hunt.en
eompl that foU.,
along the n .w tumed
brown and llekly. d 10llC
ago abandoned their: former
haunt..
We found the power companies
to be arroaant and secretive. The
hue from the coal plants can be
seen, but the iase1 tbat seep out
of the planta and the Vittwn that
seeps into the tap qt.er are more
difficult to detecL
Last July, a technician ml&-
aligned two valves, releulnl
9,000 1allons of water con-
taminatel by tritium. It ausbed
out of boldJq tanb and poured . .
atrr NO • the proteli60r'1 sus.
piclon1 an borde out by an iii-
.. ••tll•tion by the G oral Ac·
countlni Offtce. A oew report
ralse1 lerlous dOubU about the
reUabiliW Of the feder~ •overn· ment'1 redi&Uon mOQltortq pro-
aramt.
Wbat ~e tulure bold.I for SblJ>.
pingport ls UD.Certain. D\lq ..
U,ht )um requested permliaJOD
to triple the size of lta niadear
waste· storage. BUt 30 miles
away, Pittsburgh clty ottlelals
have obtained a co rt order
forbiddin1 the conatructlon. lrleanwblle, the deatb!Y pill still
hangs over Beavel' Valley.
Pootnote: A -sJioteaman tor
Nuclear Regulatory COmmlsafon
conceded that the operitlng Ids'
tory of the first .Beaver Valley
plant wu "pretty rOtten." but tn:
slsted "that's common unW tM
but• cet worked oui."
Veterans Day Switc~ .. a H~llow Victory :
?
tion and in California It had= but disappeared, even th
If the ~g Veterans Day
on Nov. 11 ls confu.slna ln the face
of having just had such an ob-
serv a nee on Oct 24 with all
federal agencies shut down, in·
eluding the post office, have pa·
tience for it won't be thai way
next year when Nov. 11 will once
again be tbe only official
Veterans Day throuebout the na·
Uon. Tbla bappenstance is due to the
strident activities of the once
mighty
veteran or·
aanlsations
such u the
American
Le&lon who have pre-
vailed upon
all law-matera to restore the
November .
date as their official day. In do-·
ing 10 the veteran aroups have won • battle while all arcund
tho111 they bave been losing the
~ans· war.
The Idea which resulted 1D an
October Veterans Day WU part
of the plan to observe all but sllCh traditional holidays as
Christmas, New Years and TbankaCivint an.the Friday or ·
Monday cloeeat to the actual
date. avoldina mld·week work in-terruptions and giving.
restored in most· states and will
be bttbe federal law JMzt year.
It provldeil a classic example
of how some pressure fl'OUPS will
storm over some relatively un-
important lsaue and tbrou1h
IUCb dlatractlon overlook tbinp
of vltal lmportance to them.
employee1threedayweeteDds. EVEN BBFOBS tbe Vetenns
•-• V'---D ori""'""•1h--; •Day furor started. the bard n.aor --..,, .....-.v earned beDeftts pined fortboH called Armiltlce Day1 lts wbO nrved their country durini
celebration an Nov. Uu aaQot" timeofwarwerecndaa.UYbelns' peace !lad become somewbu · •todecL , bollow WWl tb8 ilhent ol WW D. · · . Korea and Vietnam. Sllice Oc· In CaUfornla the pro~ ta:
toberwasWltboutboUdaylltwas' • exempt.ion of $1.000 aranted
advanced to that month thus veWam followiq WW I hilcl
avoidfna tWo JioUdQI in Nov--become meantn41eas as H-
ember. • ::-a':'.=r::1.•Nf1:i':r =
home loas under the state's
•et.ran loan proaram available
to an ftU!nml. a means teat bav·
iDJ 'been b:DpoMd to limit the
loam to tbOle least financlalb' ableto doril a bonl•. ·
· Jol> prtftrerice Of vetierau wu
uJlCl throUaJloat tho na:·
veterans b7 tbe thoua&ada • jobless. .
In contraat totbe attttude Wbne0
'the f"atbtina 1'85 gotn1 on ID WW
D which exblbfted ltlelf ID de-
.mon1tratlve efforts to show
llOtbinl was too 1ood for 0 our ·bo11. 0 such as sblpplq an over· -abundance ol ei8areu,s to tbe
troops, di1trtbuted for free
~the Bed CroU and otber
~leta. atCD81"!l'e ·~up bl all public place• t•llln1 thoae
TeteraDS they Could DO blfer
smoke ~ uceptma the
aaactity d tbelr own bom• and
ahQilarprlvGe placel.
TBB vaTEBAN oraanlaaUGn'
leaders 11187 think tbeJ made a·
great achievement In riltoilq
Nov. 11 as tb8ir ocdQ" bat 1D tbe
Off!' all it fa of ao prac:tlcal ftlae
to any •etAlran. and a moetrZry
tor thOM v,etenns wbo ccdliue
to •utf• fiom the injariel ..,..
ceived In combat. ·
.~
: Birds Outto~ Bunters .. ., ,. ·. Hunters at Skagit Flats, Wash., were look-found only starlings. HJgh winds in the
ing for ducks and snow geese. Instead,· area last week scattered tlie preferred
Drew Chukitus, left, and Frank Weyland birds.
.. Crime Sullies Canyon
Urbamzation Draw8 'Phieve1, Killen
GRAND CANYON, Ariz. <APJ
--The nat.ur.al. wonder oI Ulo
Grand Canyon makes tt the mGSt
-popular national park in tbe
co11ntry, attracting 3.2 millloo
visitors a year. But not all ire
ti) ere for the view.
· Along with lhe throngs who
come to stand awestruck at the
-caQyon's rim or to hike the gruel-
ing trails to the Colorado River
below, tM canyon drawa dope
peddlers, thieves and killers.
ALTHOUGH TUE NAME-
Grand Can,on -coojures as
much an imqe of isolation and.
raw nature as anytbJ.Di on ~arth,
•its rims are nearly ur6anlztd by
~visitors. On some days in Juty,
•Whicb is the busiest month at the
;canyon, as many as 20,000 people
·visit.
The urbanization is having ill
eCtects Thirteen years ago, there
were 94 criminal cases handled
in state and federal courts here.
ln 1976, the number hit 1,QOO ~
it is going higher this year, law
: enforcement officials report.
MOST OF TUB CRIME in-
volves break-ins, ahopllfting and
l.3•mile Route
drug poss~ioo. But there are
more serious occurre~es as
well
Laat January, for example,
Michael A. Sherman and his wile
Charlotte. both 27, were found
dead, shot througb the bead, at
Powell Point, l~s than one mile .i
from the main village here.
The Shermans were traveling
cross country and were described
as "typical tourists" aetttna a
look at the canyon. The motive wu robbery, authorities said,
althou&b the ca.se baa aot been
solved.
LAST YEAR, 198 persons were
arrested for investigation of
sllopllftlng and there were 49
larcenies and 14 burglaries re-
ported.
Hundreds of visitors report
thefts from their cars ancl motel
and cabin rooms. Backpackers
on the trails and in the campsites
of the huge gorge report that
their gear ia stolen.
One day this summer, Park
servtce officials said, about 20
visitors reparted that cameras
were misstng from their cars.
i Required Report
.1 Delays Bikepath
LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -Off-again, on-again pJana for a Marina
• Peninsula bikepatb have received another setback 1n the form o( a
Superior Court decision requiring preparation of an environmenta1
impact statement on the proposed 1.3-mlle route.
· Judge Geor1e M. Dell granted a petition to stop construction.
The petiUOll bad been filed in August by the Concerned CiUz-ens
League. ~
Dell ruled the city Recreation an<f Parks Commiuion had acted
• wronaly in approving the project.
I Plans for the $110,000 path, first drawn up five years aao. were
already revised once in response to opposition from beachfront
landowners. •
Most of the equipment was re-
covered latef in E:u1ene, Ore., and part of the evi~nee was tflm
in tJie cameras with pictllllS of
the canyon.
A FORCE OF 34 Park Service
rangers patrols tbe cany9n dur-ing the busy summer, wb:Ue balf
as many are on duty in the winter •
months. All are trained as law
enforcement officen, aays Chief
Rime er Gary Kuiper.
''You have to be nacJy for
almost a.QYthlng," Kuiper says.
The rangers, who enfwce Park
Service rules and federal laws,
are assbted by a U.S. ma11strate
here. In addition, a Coconino
County shtrlff 's deputy is u-
signed here full time.
THE CIVILIAN Conservation
Corps. a depression-era public
works program, left ill mark at
'the canyon la the Conn a( awell-
Uled jail. LU\ year, offfdillsay,
184 persons were held in Its 11ngle
ceU.
Abo wttb1D the realm of tlie ca-
nyon •s la• enforcement officers
ii traffic! eontrol. Traffic viola-
tions are committed fr~uenUy
by motorists too busy gawking at
the canyon to pay attenUon to the
road, officials say.
ln 1976, officers issued 1,241
traffic warnings, and there were
187 traffic (:9llisslons, lncludinl
one ln which a person was killed.
The Parle Service oftlcers have
radar to detect speeden and a
terminal linked to a naUonwide
computer network that provides
Information on criminal sus-pects.
( EARL WA. TERS )
COVERS
SACRAMENTO
In the DAILY PILOT
i ...... .
t
TOE DD'PUENCE IN nlCE, theriflft, ct-.;
pends mainly on the loeatloa -.nd li1e of JOQr cabin.
An outside cabin with porthole. wW cost men the# ~n iuide one. You allo Will paJ IDOf8 for a ubtn
located in.the.middle ot the 'hip~ theie li Uk•.:
lyto b.l~ motion.
The average cruise sbip wUl haft about 10
decks, Armstronf said. Tbe topdeek&cetalb' Will ....;.;,,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
be tbe most expensive since Its cabins have tile best
view and ventllatJon. It may not necesaaril1' be
most desirable for everyone. boWev•, amea ~ ,.. ... ~~·--"""""~~-~;..,,;...--!o".--....,,..;.:,. generally will feel more rnotian OD the top d k tbU
you would OD the second or third.
ARMSTRONG RECO•MBNDED TBAT
would-be passengers start with a travel qent.
Make sure. ba\fever, that yoq &et an agent wbO hu
sailed on or at least vWted tbe ship you are comlder·
tni. . . Whether you deal directly with a cruJse llne or
go to a travel -.mt, you should ·aa1c to aee the deck.
plan and check dimess,ioo.s of 10lll'r eabiD. Subtract
the area t.ba\ will be occupied by tbe bed~ bedl
<figure alx-foot by three-root for a stQste bed> tO rit
an idea of bow much space YoU will acblallY have.
.
SOme Vitamins
Comarninated
SACRAMENTO (AP),-~ Call!omlans sboW<l
not con.smne certaln b!andl al new))' Im~
vitamlns and related yeut-bae npplement'"'
duct.a because they may have belil eoptamJ.Dafed
with s alrnonella. the state reports. '
State Health Director Jerome Laelmv aatd
eight California manufacturers and aome manuf.c ..
turers in other states recentty received bulk sup-
plies from Great Britain of ccmtamioated brewer's
yeast.
SALMONEU..A IS A BACfBU& thJt produces.
an inflammation of the mucus membranes ol tbe
stomach and intestines. The rlak of l1lDen from It ii
~reatest in infantt. elderlY. and people iJ\ poor health.
About 30,000 bottles of the products 1n tables
may already have been pure~ by eonaumll"I
throughout the country, the .Healtb J>eputm.ent
said. A spokesman 1ald lt as bot tnoWD bow m1D1
or those botUes were sold ID California.
Here is a list of the producta ill aUestlon:
l(a1 °"lat9d ZlftC C)rwllc~1~ ~ 11111MO11111 Makersot K .. Olel....,.....,"""' ·~ He.1•= :ICMJ; H .. ntl lest ~ Y .. S\ llC9i ft. SU.S ,
.. Sile Can't Sit Still
after AllO· U; "-"" atw ~ V~e ...... UC .... 7Hll• ,_..., lA• Natvr•I a....... v.-.T--. ut .... oan»; "9J,=''-"' c.n.. ""'"' .. 1t.-c1. t.oc ..... a1na.0t11t0~..,111; ,_.,,v....i.. •
I ~.ui.a.u ecldad. Ult Ho.a111•: Vita~~ ·~WI~ a.n a~ \AC 14o. c.llJI· .....,_ .. , FMca """"*._ Vl4amln a • c.m,kll Wttll 8-12 ... Ld_ HO. 0911ot omit Md .. '111; .... Gf ,,, ..... 8 Coll'\pln •1111 Vttemln C. [Gt He. M74.tf7; ~ NlecllllllnlcW. UO me. • . · . . . ..
ti
...
••
'Baby Sister' Whirh Endlessly at Work
OSCO, Ill. (AP> -Janl~e mckenbottom
works OD a com 1belllnt rtg, diivea a araln
truck, tends bar aenral nt~ a week at
Tooy•s Tap and on Fridaya flxea what
cu.atoJDers say ls "the best catftlb in tbo
world."
Sbe bowls once a week, does farm work and
is a housewife and mot.ber of thHe.
Sometimes late at 111tlt wben she wants to &et
away from it all, stie and a ftieod J)eda1 thelr
bikes around town .
LG~~·· 75Dfl0; -~ 1..iw. 2JO mo.; t..c .... 7S.IO.
-.~----------. ---=--~~-----·~ --=~-~~ ---
I J "Come on. Dad! Read another one!"
J
llUN'kY WINKER BEAN
DEFINE "Jl.E FOUDWIN&:
CASEY
I "4AVE SOME
<QoOP NEWS ,AND
SOME 8AI> NEWS
, But tbe K\l Klux Klan ,a· It won't
• ror1et the woUfldlnl of on t.tt; m· ber1 lutmonth. . .. "' ~ I
\\Will you buy me a bottle of boat, Mommy?"
'IRE DISTBJCf ATTORNEY'S office
decided agamst 'ftltii(' a charge againSt
the woman bartender who shot KKK
member Gary Walker .. ~"'· Zi'ou
.Jack&j>l! said !be tbok ._pistol trom the
office to mate Walker "Stop makinf
''abusive" and·raeial.1'mlarb. ,
The bullet was fired accidentally, she
said. J,nvestigato~· COllC'luded t.tie pistol
has a "lighter than normal" trigger.
Walker, 33, is bedridden £rom his wound.
The KKK demonstrated in T-shirts
that said, •'White Power -Ku Klux
Bounties ~ Death Notice• D~tfl Notlee• •
O'KELLl!Y L•neol New!IOl't~.i<n, p..,1ei..onerd F D
.. LOREHW.O'KELLEY,re> ... nlOI olC:onn.,....SHllfrtettWllll•msolNe• or rugs
MIUIOn \l'\eJo peswd aw•y November Jerwy. Alto NVIV.d I)'( broUWr 8re11<
J, 1977. $Ur-o\ledbylcleUOlll•r6. L.uCUle ton C•mpbell ol Onlo •nd ten
"Billi•" Wheeler 01 L .. un• Hill• gr•ndtllltdren Men1or1dl »rvl<H In
Lorena Ruso of StoOIOf'I ~ L~ Tu••d•Y November S •t 1:00 p~ crease
. Md!lllenofl ot I~. c. gr~d•lldten, P•tolo< VI-Memorl•I O>apel. P.Cill~
11 great·Qfelt(!Chllelren. Gr.a,..tl•• View Mort"6•v·Newpo!I Bea<n Dlrec
services wn M id Mond•v No~n'lbef twi. ALUH LOS ANGELES (AP)
I at JcOO PM. P.c:oflt v iew Memorl•I A . t . , Puk. P•cifle view Mor~y Dir•<· LEON 0. ALLEN, ruooellt ol -n ,Organ1za I On
tors. Newport llff<ll, C.• Pau.o awn<!" founded primarily to Mc.CALLlttalt Novemt>otr 5, 1'111. SurvlV9CI by his woft
STUART J. MCCA4.'-fSTEA, resl· JjlM H ....... of NtWDOrt Bt•<h, Ca .. fight drug traffickers is
dent., 8urbllnk..,..,.., ... y In (.OSI• _.. J•y Allen of lrM. CIMIQnter June expanding its pro11ram I ' Mese Hovembef' •• 1911. Ht Is surv1¥ed Blelk•r of N~l ...... CL •n<I r· b t . "'t by e t>rotl'ler Donald e. MtCalllst•r of lhree s1sten, Matdle Allen of Long 0 0 U D l e S 0 r
S.n Clemente. Prhl•te h.iner•I services Buch, Ca., Elaine Davld>On of Long anonymous information
w•re helO. Bell Br0.dwav Mortu.,y Buch, C:.. and Francn {>arr•ro ol t , 1 d 11 . Directors. Beaumont, Tex,as and tour 0 _lnC \I e .a ID 8J0r
RHODES grandth•ldref'I. Services provate. Balli Cahfonua cnmes.
LEONARD RHODES OWEN, , • .,. Bergeron funer•I Home C.O•I• M4'W Bill Brown 11 f d
I cMnt ot Sant.a Ana. C•. PUse<l •Wav on dtreclo". e ' OUD er November •• 1971 at lite age ol 81. THOM~ of We TIP (an acrotlym
ee1ove<1 tiu~nd of E11zabetl\ RhOde•. TINA THOMP!.Of<, rutde"' 01 Co•t• for We Turn In Pushe...,) father of LeonarO G. Rnooes of LonQ M..,a, C•. P•n"" ewevon NovemDer 7, • •. ,
8H<l'I, Ce., brotN!r of All•"" Rnode•ol 1,11 li•loveO mother OI Merth.a Said that lbe group Will
Esconclloo, (.a., WilllltfTI Rnode• of LO. prindley. Funer.i •rrM19'1menh are Offer 8 maximum $iOO
Osos, Ca., RH Rno<lt5 of &urllngame, pending al Sm1tn Tuthill Lamb Costa . c•. IMh ()tq\ ot k-, c..,. •llWll ~~v-~. award. for confidential
~TROUGH BE SAID, "dozens" of
citizens have offered moral support,
some even sendlng in money, old
customers avoid lt,
An elderly woman .. utked in laot
week, said she never drinks but "I'll 1\t
' ee,...i•r ol C.yucot. u . efld,FlonY .... ,. WHl~iunlde 1 1 ,.~1 infotmafioll leading to
• Elfrlnkot Lonll ~Cf Mr 6110de> ........ • re n ° ....,. • th d i · wes tNt pnfl"flf•nt of;.,,. NalloMI ~-* • ..., Ho..-r •• l917. e arrest an CODY otion
Auo<letlOll ot Fe•ral Employee•, he She l .. survt...0 l>Y -O.ugllter, Vere Of thOS~ invol:ved in
Pianos
and
Oraan. . .,,~,°" , cJ,,.
wu II constructlOll englnHr for the R•yllOlds ot Et• Gro.,., c:.., two SOl\5, b 1 . . .. . Unit., StatnC.Overnment for so.,.ars lllr9il A. Whltaof !>enl.a Ri\.a,Mo,,ter,., Ur g ary, hlJ a Ck l ng 1
RosetywlllbtrK1t""onMOtw:lay,NOV· an<I L•VernW!llleof N-rt BH<l'I, rJ'turder, fObbery, Child
tmP<lfl' 1 1,11 •I 7 JO p M at Smith two broti.<s. Art Holmen of North b h f d Tutn ht lamb s.nie A~•. Moriuary i>•k°"• el>d Jite .Holmn. 111 No<lll a US e , t e j. a 0
Cn.ptl,M•s..ot Ovlstlen B<malwlll be D•kota. thr.., Sl\ler•, AlmM flreclutgof feloniOUS 8:158\l}t,
helO l:lft Twsd.ay November i 1977 "' North Dakotd; Bertha Norberg of B ··--" 'd th t
q oo A.M. al St. Ann·s CathOlk <.hurcn Gardena, CA., 4'd Cl•Ja Ql)l!n of Mon· rOw1n::u S~l ~ Un·
LESSONS -INSTRUMENTS
:·--~:~R
• ,.., talan41 MO-tat
_l,llL l .. t
. t
111 Ull.OPIU noom HAS l eoof 11UIQ GOIJl .. GOl•G
ll1fT TO YOUR DOOi!
A tl"t of bright ~lue 1ffl OOclge vanl. c;otnplettlV outfltttd to
groom YoW ~t fO ptrtJ(floA rlCJht at YoUI' curb, awaits your
call ... ()14) .,...,.,,
111£ UU.WC GROO .... .IAMll tlOUSt CALlS OILY ... .i ~Ice> g,mparable to thOte lnfTtdl·
tlOnll gtOOmlng salonL•hd tM GALLOPING GROOMER t
tillmlnatts Ill ttll fuu r"" bottler In the bargain. I
lH1S UllQU( P£T GROOMING SlRVICL &rings 111 ttie
ftcllltlff of ttll finest pet perlour to 'f04Jlf' door' In a (;OmClletelv I
aelf<Otrtalned mobll• unit that otters cenvenlenee to vou and
alt ~ltlontd comfort to your pet. who Is bathed and
Qt'oomed to tM soft str••ns of rtiusrc.
PROUD IS 1llE P£T ... who Kn tllen ~by the I
GALLOPING GROOMElt •• .t lkllled~sloNI •"°
hdc:omtllnect ~lentlfk kftOW-IWJW.. •
ettttlve arfll"Y to provldt a service Nt -
will hive"°" and vour pet betlfno for
more ...
,, ... ..
1-1\';, .. ~~~~.· ... ~, • " ....... "-.. ...
.,,.,. ' r. -_, •
\ "'"" :: -.. In Santa""'"· Ce. lnte<menl Wiii ~ •I tan• .... 9r~llO<M an1ll twogre4t· der a state-wt de Witness
Holy <.ro.s c.me1e1y in Lo• Af\9eles, grandch11oren.fUf'le•alservtcn~111.1>e Anonymous program
<.• Srrlllll lutholl Ldmo Sant• An• heldonT..no.yNovemberle12.ojjf'M • ' Mortu.,y director\ ~7-..131, Beij 8rNdWaY CMpel Wllh Rev. L.E Call~fS Wlll nO longer be
P1nENG£R ~·'"" ott1ci..t1ng. •roterfntlnt c.oo4 re<ri•ir~d to idenfit
• 1 BERTHA E. Pl TTENGE R resocltnl SIH•pherd Frl•n ... ~y cell et IN 'j -, . Y
of HunlJnt\Of'I Beecn,,.ueoa'way Nov· mort••ry ~Novem~r I themselves and 1i8Q. 10•
emt>e1A, t977~1heageollll Survived lro(lt •:OO PM I PM. Btll stead be asked~ 4'UeS·
ov nusOand Harold H. P1tl6"1ger, l ar ... ciw•v , *' t · d · fl d4U9f\ters BaroeraMeti.o•lcnal Hunl ~WAltt ions an given a C·
onglon '!iach, Oo<othy Balle<IOf'I Of RU'Y J. S~~t ........ ol Sant• titiOUS name tO be \18~ in
Mlnloft 'lll•Jo •nd Peggy SwtonrY OI Arwi .... MCI ....... fl()...,.tier ), 1971· 11 . lb bo' 'f " Newport Beech son Harold H C:. Pit· SIW Is Sl/NIWdby-Cle'OQMer, Wolma CO ectmg e \lnty I
·~1~et ·us . He1·p:::~ i~ ~· ~
ten9t r ol t(.wport ee..:'11. f> wnelcnel of Sent• Ana, t19hl the tip leads tO an arrest
graf'ldcniloren end q gr•at· ijll'anoCftlldrtn and nine great· d . . 9ranekhll<lren. funeral servlcn l'Od•'/ 9 .. .ac1111c1ren • .i'.ullllfll servlc~. •n<I an a convt~t10n. NOYtqt~r J at 2;00 PM ill Oilday 1n1trmtnl ... In HuntUIOIOI\ ln<11af'la. We TIP was founded
6rotllers Mortuary, 11911 Be.en BlvO., Bell Broaowey Mortuar y •o:c•• dire<-5 f.L b
... A father discovEirS his adolescent daughter.is experimenting with drugs. He doesn't know what to d.
... A lonely y.iife s(\bs into a pillow. Her marriage is breaking up. Her elderly parents have become
Huntington fk'Kh ton. .,.. y e a • s a g 0 Y,
GR1ssi<nE Brownell, who says \Jle
ESTELLAR GRISSETTE, rno<lenl group b~S recefyed
of ~nto Ana. c.. P......, ew•v on Nov· • d · embff s. 1'17 at the -of S'I. Betoveel :t , 10,513 tip• lea mg to
burden. She can't cope. · ,.
.. :A m~ddle-aged man with a good {ob shake~ unc'o ntrollably as he reaches for a bottle of booze. He
tried to stop drinking, but failed. .. wile of Wallace Grossetle, 1ovln9 Oeathil l 388 .arrest& and 838 COD· •
mother of Connie T. Gnswlle of !>en ~ ,,'1· C*O... ·
Dleoo, u .. O..rlene aracton ot west " •-·
c.ovlM, Ce .• -Wall.c:e s. Gdsselt• , • T e group funded::l>y
Jr., ol Sante Ana, c.:.a. sister ol Wllll•nf th •t and' ri t · <.olllns ot RlverslOt. C•., Ntlll• · e Cl f p V8 e Or•
f'l•Mry o•~· AAa. c.:.a. end Jufl• Eu~· ... hb·n ~ganizatio"5. bas paid .
RoH 01 Saf'lt• 'Ana, <.•. Funltr•I ~"'1· ..:::;;. ti:-> 450· in tewards It is
'4trvlcts will be held w~~y Nov· ~ , • •ml>O• '· 1911 ., 11 oo A~t sm1tn • I • responsible for i><>llce
l uth1ll Lamo Santa An• ~Y ' · ' t · *19 l "111 <.ha~1w11hRev.0ewev11e'tlut1eto1 VIENNA, lAqstri.a seu ng • · ml ,L9D
TMlhurtnolUC>d lnOtrlst.offltlelln9. <AP > Greta~ Uer 72 worth of drugs and the interment wlll be al HUl>Or ""t -• e t > feCOVery nf -'> 992 'ln <.tm•MY on Co5t• N\CIU, u. sn111n the Austrian· m . enter-y -· ,
lutn111 Lamo S.nt• An• Mortuary tainer aCCl,im~tt in lt~Jen ~roper.ty , o1ru1ar•S4l-41J~w~ America and Europe fM' BrowneUs;ud.
RVTHEVELYNDWEN,ageS6.ru1-her songsoflove sorrow M• he
oent or Garoen Grove, CA. Pau.O aw•y ~1~5' rd reI;r •• un Novemoer •• UH •I we,.v ,, and.,. hope. ""' N~l P.Y
An•helrn Hosp11.a1. s.. .... 1ve11· b' at her borne Vl~nqa.
daug1>tors, Ling• wnLsner of h A t · ~ t'f.4 wutMinstt~, Cir'. e nd Paulette t e US rftlll .-eSS a-~ Do t ~uvectre of A,... helm, C<I. and son Paul Cy reported efA,
Owen of Hunllngton lie•'"· u. Eoght a ·
9ran<1chl1<lren, lour Oroti.ers, Earl C.r•bnorn of Top.an911 <:enyon, <.a.,
Ar<.nle and Tneooore 01 Net>ras•• llf!O <.lllforcl Grebhorn Of S.n FerMnOO"
Velley, Ca., two sbt&r5, Edna Pa<len or
Norton, K•M .. and riora Oene ol
Culver City, Ca. Fri.~ mey <•II et
Poerqo 8rotners Smiths· MortUllTV
from 4'.00 to9:00 P.M. on Tuesday NOY•
ember 8, 1977. Funeref .. rvl<es Wiii ~
condu<ted ~ Interment wtll bt In U. Good ShlPh•nl cemettry. Plec<• BrotlMlrl Smit!\$'
Mortuuv Cltre<:ton. OE"c;ELY
1v11k P. GEJlGELY, rnicient 91 SUN CITY. Ar1·z. (AP > Costa Mes.a. Q. P•ued llW.VO!tftOY•
ember 4, 19'11·'1 the ~.of ... ~ed
hu•b•nd of Helli c:p.rge1y. H• torm•I
'9rVl<H Wiii be held. Crtmllfon and
ourl•I •I M•. <:ondudecl by Smith
Tuthill ,.,,. Cor.ta Mesa Monu¥y.
~. CAM,8ELL
WENDELL B, CAMPBELL, Pe9SOO
<owey Oc:lobef 2', 1971 •I hi• r11tlden<•
B•lbO• B•v Club, Newport 8ta<l'I. Survived by thr• O.UQl'lters, EllUbelh
SMmt TUTHIU I.AMI
COSTA MISA CltAPIL
427 E. 17th St Costa~ • 64~888
Senta Ana Chapel
518 N. Broadway
Santa Ana• 647-4131
NICIMOTHllS
SMrmS' ~TUAaY 627M1lnSt.
Huntington fleactl ·~ 63M639
Tax Adds ~p
$~CR.AMENTO (AP>
Papers
I
• I -
J ·I;
,~
'..,~,,. ~ . ,,.. , .. . . .
..
These scenes are common everyday experienc~s. All of us ha"e problem$ an~ we.$ rch for th~ir ~~ij.Jtions.
Sometrmes we succeed. Other times we cant. Then we need profe$STOMI help. Where tQ find tlt.s he1p 1·' I
tan be'tome a probl~m. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helps people find a~w~rs to t~eir pi;oblems. J
PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are free cQunseling and referral services located in ?~~119e County. l
PROBLEM TALK SHOPS ate here to o.~fel' you help through c~unsellng.ario referral. There is 'o
charge f.ar our service to you. We refer to both public and private agencies ln prange Count~. Fac~i·
ties to car a for individuals are available on a 24-hour basis. That means we can help you when r ~u
:need help. Appomtmen\s are not necessary. If you prefer to make an appointment. day and event·g
hours are available. (<Uffi<;' hours; 8:30 a.m--5:00 p.m .• Monday tbrough Friday. In extr~ e
emergencies, a counselor. ~an oe reached afte ~:00 .m., and on wee~n s,) ~I
••
'Top Teaell.? .
'Mama B' Late Staner
By RAYMOND ESfllADAJR.
OfllwO.ilyrl .. Utllfl •
Her students c~ll her" Mama B."
However, in the past half century, Huntinct.On
Beach High School teacher Kiyoko Bemud haabeen
called a farm laborer, maid, market clerk,
strawberry farmer and, most recently, an Ora.nie
County nominee for California's teacberofth6y~ar.
Mrs. Bernard, 59, currently a Corona del Mar
resident, has lived in Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach
and Westminster.
She worked at many different jobs before she
began teaching in 1962.
A NEWPORTRARBORmGHSchoolgraduate,
Mrs. Bernard and her family were among the
thousands of Japanese-Americans placed in intern·
ment camps during World War II.
Upon returning from confinement at Poston,
• Ariz., Mrs. Bernard eald her family found its pro-
duce store in Costa Mesa was a gutted bulk ol a once-
thri ving business. All the store equipment was eone.
The family had to start from scratch.
:.... Aft.er cleaning houses and wubinac dtshes fortbe
n~xt few years, Mrs. Bernard and ber husband were
• able to buy some farm land in the Westminster area
to raise strawberries.
As a youth, Mrs. Bernard had worked in fields of
Orange County to help her family. Her father and
mother spoke no English.
THE STRAWBERJlY FARMING lasted about
12 years as the family acreagegrewintolol6iilSanta
Ana.
By 1959, Mrs. Bernard was ready to fulfill her
dream of earning a college degree and becoming a
teacher.
At 41 years or age, she attended Orange Coast
College. In later years M.rs. Bernar<l,)vas to earn her
bachelor's and master's or arts degrees from Cal State Long Beach.
In 1961, she began her student teaching at
Westminster High Schqol. She has been a grammar
and literature instructor in Huntington Beach for the
• past 14 years.
"I ALWAYS WANTED TO be a teacher, she
said, "But my family was poor and I couldn't go to
college."
.Mrs. Bernard credits her third and fourth grade
teachers in Costa ?rtesa with inspiring her.
,. "At recess they would let me go to the Costa
Mes a Branch of the Orange County Library aqd read
anything l could get my bands on,'· she remembers.
"Since my parents couldn't read anything but
Japanese, l had to learn English fast," said Mrs.
Bernard.
Awarded a $1,700 Fulbright Teaching Grant in
1974, Mrs. Bernard bas travelled to universities ln
Tokyo and Osaka. Japan, to write a teacher's·
manual on Japanese lilerature instruction.
"MAMA B," AS MRs. Bernard's students have
dubbed her, says she d~eply enjoys teaching
fr es hm an grammar and senlor lilera~uirecla$seaJ
Describing herself ea "tough'' teacher, Mrs.
Bernard says,'' all my students are my favorites."
Her only son died In 1969. Mrs. Bernard says she
hopes to always be close to her youngsters in the classroom.
While stressing a point in class one day, Mii.
Bernard told her students, "It's beuUH Mariia
Bernard says so."
She has been known to her students as .. Mama
B" ever since.
Mrs. Bernard is one or three Orance County in-
structors nominitted ror st-te teacher or the year by
the county Department of Education.
Come on In, lOMP..·
lumper nit. 1tript, standaM.
,rotectm bocly 1kM
moldlqs, •ten4ard.
•
I
RICK BASHORE
Out for Seaa6n?
Colts.Eace .
Redskins
Tonight ;
BALTIMORE CAP > -The
Washington-Baltimore neighborhood rivalry heats up
once again tonight when the
Redskins visit ~emorial
Stadium a Nationll! Football LeagUie:41'ame afatrlst the COlt.S. •
A sellout crowd or more than
60,000 is expected for the fu-st
confrontation between the two
teams since 1973, and the first ap-
pearance in Baltimore for the
Redskins since 1969.
When Baltimore regained an
NFL franchise in 1953, the late
On TV T0ttfglat
Channel 7 at 8
Redskins owner George Preston
M a r s h a 1 ·1 e x t r a c t e d a
bundle of money from the Colts
for invasion or his territoey.
Marshall also had the league
put the Colts on his achedule
every season, even though the
teams were not in the same con·
ference. The move not only cut
travel expenses, but it was de-
signed to give Washington an ap-
parently easy opponent.
But it dido 't wort oatthat way
for the Redskin.5. Wbhfu«t6\l did
win two of the first-t.bi'ee 1
but the Colts ~k U ot Ua next
13. The annual matcbupa coo-
tmued through 1987.
Baltimore fans never ~ave
Marshall, and they re"k•rded
each victory over the R~kins
as a measure of revenge. The
reason for the hatred has long
since faded, but the inter-city
rivalrye>tistsonmanylevels.
As a result, the rush for tickets
exceeded the demand for the
game against the Miami
Dolphins, one or Baltimore's top
challengers in the AFC East.
And, following a game against
the Pittsburgh Steelers, it gives
the Colts their first successive
sellouts since 1970.
BalUJ'llore, with a 6·1 record, is trying to pro~t its one-game.
lead In the AFC East. The
Redskins, 4·3 in the NFC East
and tbree games behind the
Dallas Cowboys, are struggling
for a wildcard playoff spot.
The Colts feel they came of age
a week ago when they scored a
31-21 victory over the Steelers.
But in tho Redskins, they meet
a veteran team which thrives on
taking advantage of mistakes
and which received a much
needed offensive boost last week
when Joe Thelsmann replaced
Billy Kilmer at quarterback.
Tbei$man completed 18 of 24
passes, for 218 yards. •
As
Bo8tile Steeler -
I
... me .j:j::~P'ffOIT'S RICK KANE (32) LEAPS OV.ER THE LINE FOR SHORT YARDAGE SUNDAY~
~~~ff •
ffetroit Quiets Jeering Pro 'Cage,
'By Rippilig ~sari. Diego-···S-Ht_ ocd~ey_ .. ,. an_1ngs
• .f'ONTIAC. Mich. CAP> when Marv Hubbard It was Kane's first
R
......... , .......... ~ ...... ,....,. ookie Rick Kane, dived over from the 1. 1 0 0 · y a r d · p l u s usTHNcONP:UCNC&
stllrt1ag in place of In· The score was set up by a performance. He was AullltkDl•IMll J'iea.> llatrback Dexter 37-yard punt return by Detroit's 1.hird·round ~wvork "!,~ ~ ~t. 0~
Bussey, plunged for two Eddie Payton to the San draft choice. Bussey 1111Hade1p111a •• • .soo 1 t~wns and rushed Diego 30. missed the game due to a ~~:~:,,.Y ~ ~ :~ !h (Ou;~~ yards Sunday to A Silverdome crowd of severe ankle sprain. 11o~1on 1 1 .m •
loarllthe Detroit Lions to 72,559 booed Detroit con· San Diegoquarterback Auinil CHtraiOIYj~'-: .m •
a 20:01 National Football tinually in the first haH James Harris had as c1t••••na 1 J .100 1
z:eague victory over the because quarterback much trouble as Landry ~!:',?;.!•.,,• ; ~ ~~ ;'"
San Diego Chargers. . Greg Landry failed to moving his offense in the $•nAn1011io s s .soo l
.Mt the scoring came in move the offense. But I first half. Former Lion v..~"l~';'11114 cOH'~~~H~ '~'
ttR;'IAtoond half Kane, of the boos turned to cheers Bill Munson replaced MMl-..t&DI•••*' San Jose State, scored in the second hail. Harris after Kane's first Mllwiuk" ! ! .. u -
ttil. first touchdown 10 The shutout was the touchdown. but also was 'if'.:::' s s := , -
rniaates Into the third first bv the Lions in th~ unable to move the o.1•011 • • .soo 1
qldtter, leaping over the two-year history of the Chargers. . ~,:;!~~en, ~ ~ ~~ ~~·
cetlEfr of the line to Silverdome and their Detroit was coming off P.c:llcDtv"*t
chrnax a 59-yard, 13-play first since Oct. 28, 1973 consecutive losses of 28·7 ~~:;:;~1.eie ~ ! ~~ 2~.
dtiVe. The march, on the when they blanked to San Franclscoand37-0· p,_n1. • s .4" 3\a
.Jirst possession of Gr~ Bay. to Dallas. The Ltons ~1~1~1• ~ ,~ ~ ~
t e second half, con· were loudly booed the s.NY'•S<Mw
d th t th t k th V.ffllln;MlllOl.-Or!HM'7 me more an seven momen ey oo e N~wvo,1<10.,i.o..,,..i.s102
inutes following a s.an. fl8 Girl }st field S1,1nday and the Port1 .. 1c11ot.1~ io. ego punt J·eering continued wben unw•cnv.,,lift,11 .. ., • • • • T•fllll'•~ ;After DetrQft s defense In s•;-tm• g Landry chose to con-' H•U of"""' Game. Glew•-vs ~ym led a Chargers e.n tinual1y run the ball Prwi.n1••1Sc>rlnQfie..,_MeM. ,.,.11<1>i·
ve that ended when However, 1t finally pald T_..,.,c.eme• t! . . "°"'
Jr Benirschke missed ONTARIO, Canada-off in the second half. ttnAnlOl!lfttNewvon.
07-yard field goal in the' In only the second figure Besides Kane• s ~!~0;.~~= ..
flurth quarter, the Lions skating competition she yardage, Horace King KansucitratPwll-
~me back with their has ever entered, eight· ground out 64 yards. HATIONAU400<EVt.uoua •
J.
ond TD drtve. year-old Lisa Marie Vis· Landry threw only seven WA&.~~;,~:!"c&
The Llons marched 70 co or HW1ting\on Beach passes, completing five "' .. T PlS OP' OA
rds in nine plays, with took first in her division for a meager 67 yar(b. ~!':~,. ! ~ ~ :! ;; ~ ne diving over from of the 14th annual Ar· Harris and Munson o.1ro11 s • 2 12 ll4 31
e' 1 for the score. He row he ad 0 pen here took to the air 27 times. f'11"1turoh 3 • 1 1 30 51
bt.4 for 55 yards in the Saturday. . s.no1eoo 0 0 0 o-0 'huhln;ton ....!.~11,:,...,l 2J •
1
ilarch, including one During her first com· 0e1ro11 o o 1 u~». eut'tto • i 1 11 " 2•
\
Oetr~2MMfkt·Ml'l'ft!lkll 1~1o I ; t tot 43 l'I 3~·yard burst to tbe pet lion six months ago cw-1t-1n1nM1k•Mever111t1< cttw••nd s ' 1 11 a1 .a Ojlargers 30. in Santa Monica, Visco o.t-HUl>bt•o 1runk1<.lr.t•lltf. 10,1on • s J 11 34c »
•The Lions put the was Injured and did not A-n.~~· · CAMP::,~r,~!EHC
game out of reach with place. She began skaling CMrttnU.• Phl1.c1e1p111a • 2 1 11
fjve minutes remaining wben she was five. • ~~::.:~~.,. u.111~ ... ,~~ =~~::ftdff'I : ; ~ a
Alamitos Entries ..
~ OlllANO£ COUNTY P:Allll
• U.Al11N1M
t £"'""forT-Y ~ar, Tr.ell '•It. P:lf'l4 f'•I N-
' IJEu<U" .... "llU· ' uaueta1•111,1111,tU1, 11t11 C1111n lllACa J ~••r old' a. up. w..,.d. AbOut lour •nd one bell
f\lllOntll. P\lrM U .000. lnvllallonel
IOI)..,.-., lllS<~tl..9wll)
t Rtx IL.llcklel
rltlflllyroe21No0.,.11
Mt/, Parrot
ll!Je Flies ta.nits I 3-~l~o'Hffrt ICrutl
H•l0tkCrOC* llM'l•her•I
Pnwnsi V•l'Ol .,. ., NY flanvart s ' ' II
Relliftl'U reb I JI ~DM.-PeWK ls.IM S.74 (fll<tge ~ IS
PlMll\' ....Z <M4 ColorHO S 11
'°""'otn-lcal H H Vt11e-r I .Penfltl ..... w• MS 2·JO Ml-te a
11t ,..-• SC.~• 1 IO 2 "• 119 INDIV~~LU•mtH "9MV'aac.r.
119 Rl,/StflNG -Sell Olagt, J. Oel ..... 4,~1 1 11• Yte.iitattta .,.., v..,... ,..., M,tl• • luffalo1,M.:~4
119 thews i-11. ottrolt; K-UIS, kt~ Pflll_t_l.V_,,.,2
i tt ,._..,Hu-a M•, u . Hlll2·M. llol!Oll S, ,._.Yorll lll~I..,..
PASSINC. -.... O:l•ltO· "4wrls At1Wltd.(N'*":lll'1 ._11.0-s•.-,.~C>etfolt: ,.._.,._.
~n.!tyS-1~. Mi-etut~rtal R~CEIVING. San Ol•oo. J. T_..., •• ._. Yt1~1"41lon S.12, 'rtlllnQ Mt, !(..... L9IA1t91'4Ut'tt'fth!"lt0ft
3-•S, 0.troll, !Uno~. vancouwUCCOldtec!e
BUFFALO VS NEW
ENGLAND -0.J. Shnpeon·lesa
Buffalo •tag1ered the New ~nglalW Patriots, 24·14, at Pox·
boro, Mass. as quarterback Joe
Ferguson passed for 201 yards;
halfback Roland Hooks ran for
155 more and Buffalo pic~ed otf'
four Steve Grocan puses .
Hookl, ptaylng for the injured
Simpson, set up Bwfalo'• second
TD in the flrst period with a 66·
yard run.
New Enctand 'a offense consist·
td altno91 exctualvely of a 83·
vard return 'of a kick for a 'l'D by
Ra1m0odctaybom. Kano Clark'• iAter~epUon set
up a Buffalo field goal and Dout
Jones nn 24 yai'c!rfor a TD witb
one of Groean •1 puses .
PIT'l'SBURGU AT DENVER
-Rick tfpcbU(cb returned five
punts for 187 yard.i, includh•& an
8'l-yard tbuchdown run as
Denver ~ed PitUbur1b, 21-'?.
The Broncos raced to a 21-0
halftime edee after l\ob Lytle rin one )'ard ror a TD, Upchurch
went the distance on the punt re-
turn and Crate Morton pqaed 20
yards to Haven Moses in the end
zone.
Upchurch also had punt re-
turns of 32 and 38 yards to keep
the Steelen backed up. Pitts·
burgh croued the 50 only three
times ln the same and dld not -
score until four minutes re·
malaed.
DALLAS VS NEW YORK
GIANft -'l'he Dallu Cowboys
conth\ued aa1.be NFL 's only UD·
defeated team, rackln1upa24·10
victory over the Giants in East
Rutherford, N.J.
Drew Pearson cau1bt three
long passes from Ro1er
Staubach. e•ch settln• up a
Dallas score. Pearson ·s catches
stretcbedhispenonal clubreeord
skein to 39 games and potltloned
the ball for tou~downs by Bllly
Joe Dupree alld Tony Dorsett and
a'.35·Yard field eoal by Efren J{er·
rera.
CINCINNATI AT
CLEV£LAND -Clnclnnatl's
Bengals upped their wlnmng
streak to three following Chris.
Babr'a 47-yard field goal. wblcb
lifted the Bengals to a 10.7 vie·
tory over the Cleveland Browns.
The victory cut the Browns'
AFC Certtral Division edge to one
game over Ctnclnnall, Pitts-
burgh and Houston.
Cincinnati t001c the lead in the
third quart.er and appeared in
trouble in the final stages when
Cleveland punted to tbe Beqall'
five-yard line. °'
But Cincinnati controlled the
ball with a around-oriented
tbrust to nm out the eloek at that
point to preserve the Ylctory.
Prep Grid'Poll
~ oa4NGB OOUNTY 'l'OP 11 • ht.Team.~ ~
1. Santa Ana Valle1 <B-0) 53
2. Servite <s-i> ' 51
I. Fountain Valley (8-0) 49
4. Villa Part (14), 30 s. Pactftca lf~U 21
I. NewportHatbOt (._2) JS
1. El Dorado (e.1.u U
8. Mater Del CM> 12 t. EataAda <W·U 10
10. Loara '5-3> 8
MartU <Band.Dst4e Beadl) at~D"'* <a»
' Dlredloas! South on·s&o Die10 Freeway <4M> to Newport
Blvd. turnoff. South on Newport Blvd. to 16th St. in Cost.a Mesa.
Left on 16th to Irvine Ave. t
Ed.boo <Buntlni«>D Beach> vs HuUncton Beacb a& Oruge
Coaa& College (8).
I Dlrectlom: East on Adami, cross Harbor Blvd .• <>CC located
on right.
FoaaialD Valley at Westmlu&tr (8)~
~
Frtday Nl&bl'& HJ&b ~bool GUil•
t . Ellanda (Co.&a Meta) n Footblll (Tut.ha) at. 'hstbl 111&'
(8).
Dlret&loas: North on Newport Freeway (SS) to Santa Ana Free'#~ (5). East ot1. 5 t<> Newport Ave. tW'J)off. Left on Newport.
nebt on IAguna Road. ·
Co".rclDaclel llu•~a Mesa atOruseCoutConese· <'>~
DlrecUoas: (fl'Om Pacific Coast HJghway> north on Newport
Blvd., Cf06S Victoria (22nd St.>. veer left on Fairview Road. OCC
located at Fatrview and Adams. ----
Ca~Valleyat.1" eRlp<7:31).
Dlreetloas: North on Freeway <S> to Culver Drive. Tarn left
on Culver and proceed south to Walnut and turn left.
Sa&arday Ntsltt'• JUDlor Colle•e Gables
Ora.ace Coal& Collele at c.erntGI m•>·
Dlredlons: North on MeWay 405 (San Dlego) to~ North
on 605 to Alondra and proceed ea.st.
Directions: South on 40$ to Fafrvtew Road turnoff ill Costa
Mesa, tum lieht and proceed south to Adams. ·
Saddlebaek Colle~ at Ctiaffe1 t'l:M).
BJ DNIBCASTR..U> .... aa.11\1,.... .....
Accordin1 to Frank Fry. llf• u 1 rnarathoa ruo· ;nerbeeinaat3S.
"Distance runninC ls a.n old man'a pprt." aaya
thi ;:aid~. • o aa lirto~ ever s1nce moving to HantJ:ft(lton Be ch •
five years aio and bu quickly blossomed into one
of the nation's best marathon men ln hls aae aroup .
.. J don't know wby, exacUy," he adds. "I auess
it's the condition.Inc eflect, the fact that you feel 100
percent better running plus an emotional hich you
wouldn't believe from finish inc a marathon.··
Fry is one of a new breed of distance runnen in
America, the over-30 businessman who takes to
• cllmbine hills when he realizes he's just about over
the hill.
Yet. he takes running more seriously than others.
A chemist employed as an associate research direc-
tor for Hunt-Wesson foods in Fullerton, Fry con·
stanUy work• on the retattonahip between diet and
uercise "I'm the kin1 of carbohydrates," be
boasts.
He's also working on being the king or the over-40
marathoners.
At the recent Santa Barbara marathon, Fry
finished first in the over 40 di•ision and was 21st
overall in a field of 500. He covered the 26 mile,
385-yard coune 1n 2: 48 : 02
By comparison, it takes a time of only 3.30 to
qualify for the Boston ¥arathon, the nation's most
prestigious, for runners over 40 whUe a time of un-
der three hours is required tor open runners.
Fry runs in 12 marathons a year, three of which
are in a six-week period that starts in June. "l"d get
..Dver one and hop into another," he says "But only
in the peak season. The rest of the time, I leave a
month in between "
To train for the grueling event, Fry puts in 75
miles a week. And though some world class
marathoners double that mlleage, it points out
another peeuliarity of the event: you can never run
over-di.stanc• workouts for a mar at.Mn.
The trick is to stay in shape and hope your body is
in good enough condition to withstand the physical
torture, Joss of weight and dehydration on race day.
It takes years to reach that level and many never
make it on a competitive basis.
"It's a year-round thing once you start,·· Fry
says ·'It ·s something you have to do. even if it ·s just
to keep you from getting injured
.. As Frank Shorter once said, 'You train hard for
four years and if you are lucky. somelbing w1U start
tohappen· ··
The emotional release at the finish line. Fry says.
as enough to make the whole thing worth 1t. "Very
sober and unemotional guys break down and cry
after a marathon," he says. "Il"s a challenge un·
matched
"Somebody once said that when you firush a
marathon. for three days you feel you've done
something important Welt, it lasts a Jot Jonger than
three days for me. I hurt for that long. If J run on
Sunday, Tuesday I can barely walk up the steps ··
Besides the pain factor, another inherent problem
in runnJng a marathon is "the waW"
MARATHON MAN FRA~K FRY
Mater Del <Saata Aaa) -
Junior Mike Dotterer hu ldckoif returns of98 ana 91 yards for TD8
and also ran 69 1ards from
acriJllmase for ·• touchdown.
Dave Gonzales Mli a ~yard TO
1'UD, David Reyes scored on a
'11-)'ard pass play from Tim
O'Hara. O'Hara bad Uiree TD
passes a1ainat LakewoOd
Dotterer sc:Ored four TDs against.
St.JohnSOsco.
C•pl1truo V1Qey -Robin
Charles bas an 82·Y1rd kickoff~
turn for a touchdown.
Estaaela (Cosia Me••> Dave Jeranko'a 49-yard run for a
touchdown was the only Jong gainer for the Eagles untU
..Tburs~·· outbunt when Glenn
Hlcks ran S2 yarda fpr a TD aDd
Jerry HopkiM fouabt Cl yard& to
set up a tyiJlg acore a1aln.st
Tustin. New~rt Harbor -Wayne
Kasparek 1~ored on a '10.yard
PRO F.OOTBALL. MlHkio Viejo -Mike Brawley
has caught a Sf.yard pass for a Coatbuled From Pa•e Bl'.
touchdown among bis seven TD& passes ol 20 and 24 yards to
and Scott.Spear tosse4 four TD Duriel Harris and Mlami 's de·
passes agairust Dana Hilts. Mike tense sftlged a four\b..period
Ochoa has a ~yard scoring run goal·line stand that 1ave the
le hie eredlt. ! Dolpblns a i4:10 victol'f _pver tbe
•. Jets. .
Laguna Beaell -Perbaps the Marty Domres passed ig yards
most explosive team in the South to Jerome Barkurn for the Jets" Coast League, the Artlsta • Matt
McCullough has scored on runa only touchdown wtth SO seconds
or 46, 63, 41 and 67 yards. Bailon lett aft.er quarterback Richaril
Arabe went 63 yards and Bill Todd was tfost witlt a bruised
Gompf 60 yards (or TDs right~. '
Griese'• 20-yard scoring pau t.o
Univenity 1D1ta Urville) -GU • Harri• with 1:49 left ln the fll'$t
Zaldivar returned a punt 90 yard.! half climax«! a U.yanj drive
for a touchdown, a kickoff for 86 and the Dolphins cliAched it wit.h
yards and a TD and ran 55 yards a 77-yaid scorinl march at the
for another TD. Sean Tlmoney outset ol the third period with R.~ ~ll.th()Jl_:c~a~u~gh~t:.......::a:.....=.:p~a~ss:......:f~r~o=m:......:D~a~~~i~d~~"~~~rri:.::...s~doini:=..::::~tbe::.:..~ho~n~o~n~.~...;:....~~..:...:::~__;.~~~-:."""'~--~~ "Yes, I've run into the wall before," Fry admits
"But only on shorter races. It's where all of a sud·
den, you feel like you've adopted an anchor
"People talk about a pain barrier, but I don't feel it. .. Is a Mental Battle
Fry got into jogging by default and marathons by
friendship. Never a track man. the Wisconsin
native began running only when, he said, "basket·
ball gave me up."
A chance meeting turned him on to competition
"I was just running down the beach one day and
this crazy guy named Tony Gomez pulled up next to
me... he recalls. "That was the start of a long
friendly relationship. I started running with him
one thing led to another and all of a sudden it
becamehabitual ..
Pro Football Standings
AMIEIUCAH ,OOTIALL
COH,ElllENU
Eaat...., OIYllieit
.. L T Pct. P,. PA
B•lhmoA • 1 o .a)] 1n 112 Ml•ml • 2 0 .7$0 11111 111
Nllw E "Viand J .) 0 .•U laJ Ill
hY Jel' 2 6 0 .2)0 Ill Ill
1.1u11a10 J • O .2j0 99 111
Central OM~°" C1eve1ano s l o .6H 1" 140
110\lllOn 4 4 0 jOO 1.0 111
Pllhburgh 4 • O SQO 1'7 IQ
<.oncJnn41h 4 4 0 .!iOO II) IU
Oakland
Oenver
!>an Diego
~ .. tern OlvlllOOI
1 I 0 .llS * IU 1 I 0 .aH IU 11
4 • 0 .jQO Ill 112' !> .. Ille.
1<ens;1J C.•lr
2 • 0 .JjO 1)3 l.Y
2 6 0 .2~ \IJ 191
hATIO .. AL FC>CnlALI.
<.OHFllllH(IE
IEaAffft Ol'fbleft oatru • o • 1.000 221 'II
St. l.ouis .s l o .•ll " 111
V.Mlllngton 4 i o '11 10. 111
11'/lll••t~ I S 0 .JIS 126 111
HY G~l$ I S 0 .17.S IOI 171
c:eiitnl O!Yhloft
MIDneM1a S l 0 .+U M 1 If Oetroll • • o .soo 1' ,.,
C111ca90 J 5 O .31S l.U , ..
Gt'fftl Bay l • 0 :U0 61 U)C iampa 8.-, o • o .Oi;JO ,.. 14'
*'..._Olwlll.,.
LOS Ano.I• S 3 0 '2S ltt ti
AlfHUI 4 4 0 .S\)O 13 $6
!>an ~fa11<fsco,) S O .J1S 10. 121
h-OtlMM 2 • I .UO I~ 2oa ._...,,,le_
AlvfNIDIA; ~allQtand 14
'1Mt11Nt1 l,Oe'rtllnd1 O•llH 24, ,._ ....... Giant. 10
Miami t•,MW,..;aJtta to
f'llOMl41)111• M. H-Ot1"M 1
0.1rol129, Sir\ O\eoo 0 S.n P.r_,..18 Attamaf
"-tono,~• KanwsClty20,.._,_., II ~""'"· f'ltttllut , \I 1.:o.Mtl,~7 O,.land~$t.tn , ~AfiOfieilt, 1~ 'na
, f t -t Ji •
"'""-'·Nev, U
11e1111nort•l llull••o
C.l•v•l•110el Plll~bUr9n C>otro•t •1 All.,.la
hew f;;"91.tncl41M1•" I
hew "ork v1anli •IT •mP~ Bay
~•Ill• 8t ,..,. Yori< Jel\
v.un1119I011•I Pl\lf-11)1\1.t
~an Fren(IKoll hew()rleanJ
k •nws C•IY•I Cl\•(•00
Lo' A1'9elrs "" C.rten 8•y • Mllw•Ul<ee
Ctnvtr •I S.n 0-
'10iftlon •1 OUl•no
c.1n(1nn•ll •t M•RM!IOI• _ . ., ...... ,.
!>I LO<n' •ll.1allas
Anteaters Nip
Arizona, 9-8
UC Irvine's Anteaters
upped their water polo
record to 16·3 Sunday
with a 9-8 victory over
Arizona University at
Newportliarbl>r High.
G11ry Fiaueroa poured
in atven goals to lead the.
Anteatets, Who held Olf a late Arizona rally.
Figueroa 't 7 1oal1 up ·
ped hi5 season total to '76. ·
WIN PRIZES
WORTH ·
MORE TH.AN
S3,GOO
JN .........................................
i . ENTRY B~ANK ~t
: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • c
....................... ·~··· .............. .
~· ···························•····•·
Qty .......................... 2Jp ........... ..
~ ..................................... .
-
I DAILY PILOT
J • t
~ • t
MS.• CAaBUA aald
h r niiln concern la that, at•preseo~ a landowner
bu no clear le1al right
to a free flow of lliht
from aurrouodins
properties.
ReaU!e.ata dependent
on aolar energy could be
severely hlndered by
butldJ.np. fences or trees
raised on neighbors' pro-
perty, ahe polnted out.
' IN ADDITION, Ms.
Carella said, she ts cob··
cemed that some aolar
collectors mleht have to
be placed ln front yards.
aubJect to restricUons by
local ordinances and
e<>m pl&i.nta by ne!~botl.
She urted dtfes to ln·
• I cot1>0r•te eneflY plan-
ning into ceneral plans. ·----~~-----.-:=~~~=---'-""""""'
"18UCNOTJCi
* A Harris County <Tex.> probate judge said the
scheduled Nov. 14 trial of the Howard Hugbes estate
cas~ eould continue into March.
"It is going lo be bard to say, but I would im·
agin9 at wiJl take a week or two just to get a slx-
meftiber jury, .. Judge Pac Gregory said.
'the trial is to determine the legal residence ot
Hughes and the validity---------.
• Three brothers, aged 10 to 13. uied their earn·
ings from delivering newspapers over four years to
make a down payment on a $40,000 brick house in
Champaign, DI. of the purported Mormon [ ) will that names Noah PEOPLE
DleJt'lch, a former long-
time aide, as executor of
Why a house? ·
".Because houses appreciate, and because it
would build a start for their college education, ..
said thelr father, Herinan Walsvta, who immlgral·
ed from the Netherlands with bis wtfe, Vera, in 1966.
Mas, 13, ~tributed $3,672; Leitman, 11, came up wlth $11900; and Darid, 10, chipped in Sl,100. Their
father loaned them the remainder of the $8,000
down payment.
the tstate.
For the Record ...............
Of Ma~
•
'°"IOMMI.' OdNld G. and MM'( • Gertrude; 01 ORIO, Gt.a Lewis and
, Bernard; CHOTT, .John W. and
Snlrle'( J ,; Cl.ARK, Cynthia Key ..... G¥y L"; WEEKS, K...,,.UI L. and
JaMt ,..,; TA14NER, Rover L. -Pama•~· L.· LIMAGE. flonlncll "·
After learning the bad terminal cancer, Lots
Reed or Debesa, asked for a ride on a fire engine
and got it.
... ~ R,; WRl(illt, ~ E. Mil ... £.:; DONAHUE, Rollald
The treat was deserved. Mrs. Reed, a widow,
was a charter member ol the vohmteer firefiehlers
and thelr f1nt settetary. She donated two acres or
land to the fire atatlon. Alan and Caro! Ann, CAFFREY,
Edllh Evel'(n end Robert Leo;
HEATOH, Donna Mule And RONll<I
HO ...... ; EATON, Erma W. end
KWIMlllL ....
Mrs. Reed died 1.n a hospital at 60, donating her
eyes "to help 90me other person aee the world she
enjoyed so much," a friend said.
Vatican 'Satisfied~
By Prelate's Release.
ROME CAP> -The Vatlcan ex-
pressed ''deep satisfaction·· today for
the release or gun-running' Greek
Catholic Archbishop Hilarlon Capudjl
from an hraeli prison.
Vatican sources said the SS.year-old
prelate, expelled from Israel and
flown here, would recuperate for
about three months and then would be
1iven a new post, probably in tbe
Amerlcu or Australia. Associates
said he >ost about 25 pounds Ln prison.
Tbe arcbbistlop bad served nearly
S~t• Cfteflrate
MOS.x>W (AP> -The Sovet gov-
ernmfnt marted the 60th anniversary
. t __ 1N_s11_0_1JlT _ ____,_)
crude oil for 1978 despite tbe Carter
admiD11tration'• campaign to ward
off a riae, tbe Middle East F!conoailc
Suneyaaldtoday. , -
The aatborlt&Uve oU newsletter
said the unidentified oil minister of
one 80\'enlbleot aeek.Lo1 ao increase
commented:• "It the Saudis agree to s
percent, they WW have a deal as far as my country ls conctmed. But we
couldn't go for anytb1ng belOVI tb_at. ••
a.rcer P•tp0ttes Trip ... .
WASHINGTON <AP> -President
Carter hU pOltponed his forelp trip
set for lat.r th.ls month because he
"ant.I to rematn In Wuhlngton wbil
Coneres. c<JaSlders bis energy pro-gram.
Tbe State Departmen' announce.
ment toda:v: of Cartet''s deelslon con-firm• ta:rller rtpOrts \bat the presf· •as 'IOliaf, to aorap tbe tour of
nine natkma. The announcement atSO "
indicated carter would make the trip tater.
Solar euement.i among PICTl"cuuu,...91 property ownen, rl1ht1 NAM&ITA,_.,. to sunlieht and apeclally ..'!. ... ...:,..........,_ ... ...,
planned open space for CAn~a ,, ... l'1tv, eu w.
group colleetora were tt111St.,~-..,CA::t
amoncheraunestlons. AW~~~• · ~
MefY "° ~ .... w. IJMlln Aft.,Allftfm.CA. •
Tiil& ~ It ~ tlY a ................... ~ ......
..... J.&..een.w IMryJ.Leerw
'Yhl1 1\1...,... .,_ ru.e wltfl • Smoken'
Pkdge
Sought
~ Quilty Clertl tf Or ... OM!ly H Oct. te,1m.
The Oran1e County un•
it of the American
"Cancer Society is aiming
al gathering 10,000
pled1e. from an estJmat·
ed 300,000 county
smokets to qoit amotmi
cigAretlel for ThUnday,
Nov.17.
The unit's effort la part
of the national "Great
American Smokeout"
campaign. The drt9e, ac·
cording to a unlt
spokesperson, Is de-
signed to "encouraae
smokers U> give up the
hablt for one day, at
least, and boi>efully for
good."
For further Inform•·
ti-0n call the Oranae
County American
Cancer Society at
752-8600. •
Medic81
Film Set .
A film d monstrattn1
the effect.I of biofted·
back wlll be shown
Wednesday eveninl in
the South Coaat Com·
muntty Hospital
audltorh.on.
.. Biofeedback! The
Yofa of the West,•• ~JI
be alred at T:ao p.m. anct
a biofeedbuk d•m·
onstratlon b)' Dr.
Clara Riley will follow.
For more lnformatlt)n
on the free proeram1 call Katby Howara at 499-1111,ext.161.
P•ofl•Hto••t. ••caow 11•v•c•• r :.."::,~~ ."""' .... "'' ..... "'*' ...... °*"' CMtl Dell"( ...... OC\.M,11,IN_.,),~tm
491>71
"1JSUC N011CB
PVBUCNOTIC
PUBUCNOTICB
I
• • I
I
'
11£9 "'Thie Of Mutty .ion.I" • TMe A.VDllOS'8
Whln Mitlemen farmet 8lr c.td ....,_and hie butler ....
~ to dMth. St.ed Ind
• EIM'll .,. GAiied "· I MICICl!V~
.1 WAIT1'U YOUR FATHER Gl!TSMOM
• "CMt't:Job"
• 8EBAME STREET
I VIUA ALEBRE 1:$0 =:
11 "No MON Mr. Nice Guy"
• ADAM-12
"V~"
HODGEPODGE 1.0DGE . ~ ......
l:OO 8 C88 NEWS .. I ~EHCY ONEJ
Peremedlc G11ge taHe tot one of
the Jtudent nu,.... whll4t dem-
on-.tratlng llf•••vlng tech-
nique..
Cootelag Coo
• 9 Nfl. FOOTBALL
The WHhlngton Red1kln1
taacle the Baltimore Colt• at
Baltlmore'a Memorial Stadium.
fJ MOVIE **~"I Walk The line" (1970)
GregOt)' Peck, Tuflday Weld
A mlddi..aged aherlff bec:omea
Involved with the marrl9d
daughter of a moonshiner he'•
euppoM to ci.ar out of the
country. (2 hrt.)
• THE BRADY BUNCH
"Love And The Older Man"
ti) THE ROOKIES
Two policewomen attempt to
enUoe an elullve atrangler.
ZOOM 8 ¥0008 FOR THE
MODERN FAMILY
"Vatlety M•ts"
.... MOVIE
Betty White gets kittenish with ex-husband John
Hillerman in a scene from tonight's Betty White Show ay 9
O'clock on CBS. Channel 2.
9 NEWLYWED GAME CD THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg Is obMaaed wtth becom-
ing a big league pitcher and
when guest-Star Don Ot'yadaJe
encourages him, he dec:Jdea to
give up everything else .. .lnelud-
1~ echool. CD LET'8MAKE A DEAL
• 2STOHIGHT
OP«• Star Beverly 81111 lnter-
vi.ws Opera Patroo Lawrence
E. O.Utact\.
Cl!) FRENCH CHEF )
"Turkey Brust Bralted" (R)
Cl) 8100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
he la ttllPl*f In • violent lee
iuaJc•. (2 hrs.)
JOKER•& WILD
'tAROL BUANETT AND
FRIENDS
Guest Jim Naborl. e MOVIE ' ***'A "A Star la Born"
( 1950) Judy Gatt.nd, Jamee
Maton. Aa a yciung 9Ctr ...
dlmb9 the ladder' of MI009a.
her pereonel ate IUffwa. (2 hra.)
• LIVE FROM THE MEthOPOUTAN
*** ''The Savage Bees"
(1878) Ben Johneon, Gretchen 1:00 8 Cl) LOGAN'S RUN
"Algdetto" J.,,,.. Leme con.
duCtl 1Na V•c:H dutio feetur-
tng PtaickSo Damlngo .-MS Cor-,,.. MecNen.
.,. Cort>en. TM onatqht or a
awann of klN« I>-. muat be
stopped before they r.ch the
Mardi Graa In New Ott'Mna. (1
hr , 30 min.) CD MY THREE SONS
"My SOn, The Ballerlna"
• MWESEelT
''Trlala Of Richard'' An In-depth
I<><* at a bleck youth'• experi-
ence In a newfy-detegregated
eotioot; "Ablllty Grouping" or
'b'ad(lng' In relation to deaeg-
r~atlOn.
GD FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Ear'v Adjustment To
Mam.ge". ~ 7:001== UAR8CWB
ILOVEWCY
''Houaewatmlng''
• ADAM-12
A cue provtdea the perf t :t
bl~ pree.ht f()( OfGCM
M9A0¥.
• MAONEJL I L.!HAER
REPORT 81> ~WITH MAOELINE
(I) YC) Tell TH~ T"VTH
7:30 D DAVID HOROWITZ
COHSut.'ER BUYUNE
By JERRY BlJCK
LOS ANGELES <AP ) -NBC's
"Today" show is 25 years old, dura-
ble, and still popular -but in trou-
ble.
Thus Say5 Robert Metz, who spent
many months studying tbe early
morning show, past and present, and
put his findings into a new bookl
published by Playboy Press called
"The Today Show."
Meb said on a visit here that hard
times had overtaken the venerable
show. established in January 1\tQ by
Sylvester "Pat" Weaver, then NBC-
TV president
HE SAID RE FOUl(iD the present .
show predictable and dull. lacking
imagination. excitement and a naJr
for entertalmnent. Thal'i an assess-
ment aha.red by many peeple.
"You know what they think is ex·
citing?.. asked Meli, a New York
Times columniat who also vr 'Jle
•'CBS: Refiectiona in a Bloodshot
Eye."
"Put a Minicam on the Statue of
Liberty. Wow!• TIJ•Y look at the
Statue ol Liberty and ~ at:!:~·
Logan, JMtlea and Rem muat ·
make a tlf~th dectalon
when they teem there Is enough
•ntl·s>l-oue Hrum for only
thr" of alx awvtvora auapend·
ed In a ftozien state for 200
year a. 0 UTTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
"The Aftennath" The notorloua
Jamee Brotherl, dlsgulMd aa
tr8Vellng bullnesamen, hire
Mary lngalla to run errands,
then uee her .. • hottage when
bOunty hunten CIOM In. 8 MOVIE
**~ "legend Of Amaluk" (1971} Documentary. A young
EMlmo fights fOr IUl'.Ylval after
Ratings Gadd~
!Mewl• .,.. '-'" •ciwfl,. , .. bO• offlu ~ Mlwler for TV .,.
,...,..., b¥ •critic.I
* • * * -Excellent * * * -VeryGood * • -Good
• •, -Fair
• -Poor
G Tl4E 8E8t OF ERNI
KOVACS
P«ey Dowtonall8; the gltt In
the tub; U.S. epace program
and TV w.tema.
8:30 I CONCENTMTIOH CA088-WIT8
MWESEErT
Highlight• from pro~rama
lnvotvlng Miami, Fla., HICIOfy,
N.C., Memphis. Tenn., Stock-
ton, C.Uf. and eo.ton.-M.._ ·
t:OO 8 Cl) 8ETIY WHITE
John'• ailing mother (EJizabeth
K.-r) who ,_ ,....., beer\
Informed Of her aonta ~ ann. In town to IP9rid the
night with th• "happily.
"*'1ed" eoupt.. DASPEN '
Fonner mobster Aiu ~
(Anihony ~~to ~Tom Ke9tlng'a fatt.
(John Mclntlnt) to ... hit
ranch, attempta to burn him
out. U1tnWhlle, lAe Bllhop
(FWry KJng). now • "Jlllhcj.i8e
a.wyw'' by reputaUon ..... hla
~ appeal from death
row. (Pait 3 Of 3)
8 MOVIE . ***% "ChllUm" (1970) John . . .
-Trouble-Jn A.M. ~·~
Louis. 'Here we are, folks, looking at
the arch in Sl. Louis!•\•
Tom Brokaw. NBC•s former White
House cOITeSpoadent. is the current
host ot the New York-based ahow,
along with Jane Pauley. wbo
replaced Barbara Walters when she
departed for treener pastures at.
ABC.
METZ' BOOK IS AN interestine
and inside look at the history and '
workings of "Today." fl'om Its early
stumbling efforts to its days of glory
to its present ttate. •
The "Today" show bas been
passed in excitement and nair. it not'
in ratings, by ABC's "Good Mornin1.
America," whose host ia actor David
Hartman, aatd Meta. .
"ABC l$ on the 10arcb, .. be said.
•'Did you mow Pat Weaver's now a
consulUmt to that show?
"I predict we're going to see a
cb~ge on tti"e ~Oday' show. A new
host. and a new producer. They really
need IO~ wbO•s lot a fiair for
abow l:Nsioeaa. At aeven o'clOck in
the morning tt•a ectettainment. If a
·not. h rd ~. That's the problem
with the show now .••
IN ITS Z5 YEARS, tbe abOw hi.'
been tbrcallh six host.I, Dave Gar-
roway, John Cb.ancellor. Huch
Downs. Frank McGee, Jim Hartl
and Brokaw. Asked wbO be thOuaht
had been the best host, Meb ijUlckly
he ls talki.nf to me and when Tom
Brokaw is lllJktnc I bave the feelliig
he'• tioldi.Dg me at arm's lenath and
is aa1f.ng, 1UstC, here's what's baJ>:o
pentng• and he's telling me the oews
and bia intenlewa are somewhat·
oflPuttiq.
said Ganoway. ..Brokaw ls a competent newsman.
..Garroway was the bolt duriDa tbe a ttroag hard worker, and he asb
ally period, .. he •aid. "If Garroway. gi>od questlou add be eliclta aull m·
had been bolt with, tet•a say a pro-lo.nQ•tloa. They need one abOw 1top-
ducer like Al Mot&an, who really per every day. It lacks excltelqent.
made tbe 'Today' abOw important. it · It's 1boW bUllneas! And the ne-. de-
wouJd have been an unbeatable show. partmeut cloean 't underatand that.
It would last forever. I'm DOt s8ytn1 abow business with a
''Of ccurse, it 1'lU last foreVtt, eapltal s. bUt. tt needs a flavor cA en· because NBC bas all lts key attlllates tertibunent. ••
in the fold and ABC doesa't end
that's <IM reason ABC will never Metz. who professes a great ad·
beat it with wba( I believe b mlratJoo for Barbara Walters, W4 :'-'-':,....,...~.....-.. .... ""~__,..~
supertor sbc;>w. · · be thQaaht the best miCUcine i the
"David Hartman iJ not a pro-abow would be for Tom Silycler lo
f esslonal interviewer. but. be'• beeome lioSt. something more lmpOJltant. He's ~eoneJOQcanf eet coulfottableWith
acrosathebteakf uttable."
DOES 'PLOT parallel Simon '1
own rom ce with hla aecond wtfe, ac·
tress Marsha Mason?
"My wife died and I married
Marsha: that part of the play 11
autobtosrapb.lcal," said Simon. "Cer-
tainly I bortowed aome of the pro-
blems of !!'.J..ustin& to a new rel•·
tionsbip il'£er 20 years with someone
else . • "But my own brother ls older, not
younger, as in the play. The actress
Fay ls a composite of actressea I
know. And Marsha-...nd I did nOl meet
on a blind date. W~t at re-
hearsals of 'The Good in
TOPLPS •
1. FLEETWOOD MAC -Rumors (W'arnaP"1
which she appeared. Three wees~~
later we were married."
Bros.)
. 2. LINDA RONSTADT -Simple Dreama
(Asylum) Simon conceded that like Georga
Schneider in the play, be himself
knew torment before and alter bla'
first wife's death.
''I TmNK IT'S the culmination "WRITING THE PLAY was
creatively of everything I-have striven cathartic.'' he said. "But 1 don't lUce for," said the moon-faced playwright over a salad at. the Beverly Hills Ten· to talk about what I went through. It nis Club. usually come up in Interviews and to
"It'a more than just a comedy. It's repeat the experience would seem to
a blend of comedy and drama. I've ~reag~~~~ercialiiing on a personal
tried that before, sometimes suc-"Chapter Two .. seems to be the cessfully, sometimes not. I think it worked well in 'The Gingerbread most moving of Simon's plays; there
Lad • b t it Id be are moments when the players -and Y • u wou not a happy the audience -are moved to tears. It play. The ending was hard tor an au-dience to accept... is also the longest of his plays.
In "Chapter Two .. Judd Hirs h "I think that's necessary," said the
(TV's "Delvecchio") plays a nove~st ~uthor of "Baref<>?.t .!n the P8;"k.::
who undergoes turmoil when his wife . Th~ Odd Couple, Plaza Swte, etc. 'To get the emotional momenta,
~ CR.<JSBY'S YVLE the play needs time lo grow."
HERBERT ROSS IS making his de._
SPECIAL SUTED
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Bing
Crosby will star in his annual
Christmas special on CBS on Wednes-
day, Nov. 30, taped In England shortly
before his de,4ltb on Oct. 14.
In addition to his wife, Kathryn, and
their three children, Harry, Mary
Frances and Nathaniel, the special
will feature rock superstar David
Bowie, Twiggy, Ron Moody come-
dian Stanley Baxter and the' Trinity
Boys Choir.
but as a play director. He directed the
film version of "The Sunshine Boys,"
which Simon considers the best adap·
talion of his works. Ross also directed
an original Simon screen play, ''The
Goodbye Girl," with Marsha Mason
and Richard Dreyfus.
"I like to work with people I know
and respect." said Simon. "I've done
four plays with Mike Nichols, and I'd
do another if he were available. Ray
Stark is the best film producer I've
found. When we film 'California Suite'
starting in February, it will mark our
fifth production together."
3. SfEELY DAN -Aja (ABC)
4. FOREIGNER -Foretaner (Atlantic>
S. ROLLING STONES -Love You Live 'Put ,em Vp' (Rolling Stones)
EASY LISTENING
Actor Elliott Gould slips a left through the guard of Matilda, a
boxing kangaroo who plays the title role in Gould's new movie
'.'Matilda," abou.t a carnival booker, a sport.$ writer and the box:
mg kangaroo.
1. WE'RE ALL ALONE-:1-Nta OooUdce <AfcM>
2. YQU LIGHT UP MY LIFE -Debby Boone
(Warner-Curb)
(RS~cnow DEEP JS YOUR LOVE -Bee Geel
4. BWE BAYOU-Linda Bomtadt (AlflWD >
Golda Views 'Golda' (Atl:;,~REM~:::G=YOU-P)nfaU
Israeli ,1UJ1basaador to ception after the pre-1· BACKINLOVEAGAJN-L.T.D. (Alcll> NEW YORK <AP> -
Former Israeli Prime
Minister Golda Meir has
given a poslUve review
to tbe Boradway ·play
based on her Uf e.
After a preview
performance of ''Golda''
Sunday night, Mrs. Meir
said she liked i~ "very:
much."
Also at the sellout pre-.
view at the Morosco
Theater were New York
Gov. Hugh L. Carey;
U.S. Sen. Jacob Javits,
R-N.Y., and Mayor
Abraham D. Beame.
Mn. Meir was accom·
panied by "everal mem-
bers of her family and by
Slmcba Dlnltz,. the
theUn1tedStates. ·view. 2. n"S ESCSTASY WHEN YOU LAY DOWN I U urity ta NEXT TO ME-Barry White (.20th Cen.tiar7) ·
• The play, which opens we~!a:n ~ lo p~:Ct ~Col~·.:=:rENTJNJ!:· FIRE -Earth. Wind fc Fire
Nov. 14, star'& Anne Ban· Mrs. Metr. Before 1ler '· DUSIC-Brick (Bang) croft. . arrival, the theater re· y
The star and MfS. Meir. portedly WU searched (Go:dy)ou C~T TURN .ME ~FF-Hi8h~
traveled toeether to a re-. by a po~ce _bomb squ-......------------------
:Ron Howard p lansMfiftfiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
New J!'ilrn Project
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ron Howard, star of
'Happy Days," will direct and co-write "Cotton
Candy," a two-hour movie {or NBC.
The story, which he will write with his brother,
Clint, is about a group of bigb school misfits who
form a rock band.
. He previously directed the movie "Grand Theft
Auto." which be co-wrote with his father, Rance
Howard. .
"DAMNATION ALLEY"
"3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR" (R)
"LOOKING FOR MA. GOODBAR"
(R)
''SMOKEY AND THE BANOtT"
"Tl:iE STING" (PG)
-
DAILY PILOT
CABO FRIO, Braiil (AP> -West
Get"many's Klaus Peter Stohl was in
first l'Jace SWlday after the two races
m the opening day of the third Laser
Class SeUing World Championships.
StohJ finished third in the first race
and was the winner or the second.
Some 106 specialists from 24 coun-
tries were participating in the tourna-
ment m this Brazilian resort city 120.
miles south of Rio de Janeiro on the
Atlantic Ocean.
ORGANIZERS o•· THE competi-
laon did not Immediately pubhsh the
general standings after the first two.
regattas but they confirmed that Stohl
had grabbed first place in the six-day·
tournament -
John Bertrand of the United States,
.he defending champion, was 13th in
the first race and 19th in the second.
Two more races were scheduled for
Monday. _ .
Sunday's competition took place m
light winds and under a cloudy sky
with temperatures in th• 70s.
FIRST RACE RESULTS: 1, tvan
Pimentel, Brazel. 2, Ian Brown,
Canada. 3, Klaus Peter Stohl. West
Germany. 4, Edouard Kessi,
Switzerland. 5, Kevin Fawcet, Bri-
tain. 6, Gary Harris, United States. 7,
Monty Spindler, United States. 8.
Manfred Kaufplan, Brazil. 9, Andrew
Foulkes, Australia. JO, Arne
Lindberg, Sweden
Other Americans: 13, John
Bertrand, 15, Craig Thomas. 16,
David Perry; 17, Richard Robinson;
20, Kelly Gough.
SECOND RACE RESULTS: l,
Klaus Peter Stohl, West Gerrnany. 2, I
Peter Commelte, United States. 3.
Jeff Boyd, Canada. 4, Christer Bath,
Sweaen. 5, Gary Knapp, United
States. 6, Monty Spindler, United
States. 7, Steve Jeppsen, United
States. 8, Greg Tawatstjerma,
Canada. 9, Kurt Miller, United States.
10, Richard Robinson, Britain.
Other Americans: 11, Craii
Thomas; 12, Bob Whitehurst; 18,
Stewart Neff; 19, John Bertrand.
Mistress
Capture s
,~elman
NHYC Team, Wins
Schen£k Trophy
Mistress, skippered by
Warren Hancock, won
• the seventh •nd final
race of Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club's Angelman
Series fOT' Performance
Handicap BAcing t
yachts Sund •
Final r f e ·-,dMV corop\lt·
n ced
Sunday'•
i. Mls-
phyte, ed
C; 3, Virttnla,
ell, SSYC.
CLASS -1. Pranc,
Dick Ne\l\bre, BCYC; 2,
Thrillse r, Bill Fil·
singer. J)CYC; 3,
Lumaran, 'Bill Rohrs,
VYC.
CLASS C -1, Wind
Runner, Paul Timon,
Capo BYC; 2, Jiffy ll,
Rod Woods, VYC; 3,
Holiday, Jon Lebeau, ncYc ...
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's team of
Lehman-12 skippers successfully defended the Jean
Schenck Memorial Trophy Saturday and Sunday In
a breezy series that bad boats capsizing on every
leg of the course in Sunday's races. Satutday'a
races were salted~ rain.
The NtiYC team Of Henry Sprague IU, Jaclt
Jakosky, Tim~ and '!'om Scbock wound up
with a score of six Wins and one loss.
Mission Bay Yacht Cf~and Balboa Yacht Club
tied on points wtlh 5-2 rec ds but MBYC captured
second place by beating B in their match.
Other teams in order ot finish were San Diego,
St. Francis, Wjndjammers, Santa Cruz and
AlamitoS Bay. Each club entered four-man teams,
making a total of 32 boats competing.
Twilight Captures
Dana Club Series
Twilight, skippered by
Bill Wiedemann.
Oceanside Yacht Club.
was the overall winner of
Dana Point Yacht Club's
Animal Farm, co-skippered by Mike Byrne and
Bruce Hansen, Voyagers Yacht Club, was.the ov.er··
all winner of VYC's Humphrey Bogart Senes which
ended Sunday .
The Bogart Series is for Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet. yachta. Winnen in Sunday's fUial
race: C~ A -1, Vanessa, Dick Seward, VYC; 2.
Animal Farrn; 3. Different Drummer, Lewla
Spruance, BCYC; 4, Giant Killer. Foster/Stender. ~YC. S, Gypsy, Alan Brown, VYC. ct>:$ B -1, P~guus Jertf Montcvmery,
CBYC; 2, Bebo ll, Bob J>ameh, ~P9liYc: 3; Tiier
Lilly, Ron Deacon, VYC; 4, J>tmy C.t, J Ohn Stalay;
VYC; 5, Trllo11, G.D. Glrv Dt~C.
MORF -1, Bold ForbeS, Ed CUmmlnas, Capo
YC; 2,AJohalI, Glenn lleoo1SSYC.
• ,
•
INSID :
ByDENNISMcLS~ , JShadow~ him the repu Uon Of. °' .. ~,....,.M.aff beiat the "RembranAA of
"A Hwrtll porlnut i.a to the~ Holly ood!' •That st7le, l\lch
pubUcit~ dl about 1ohal a Roll&·RDJIC• la epitomlied HoUYWood 1lamor Of the
to a rollcnlsot•"-E1qiifr• ~. '30s and '40I is u 1D4elible u the
J936. · sereeo ~ who passed Wore
In 19Z8 George Hun-ell, a youne Los
An1eles painter-turned·
pboto1rapber, was introduced to
Allent acreen star Ramon Novarro
who ,.,, I' 1 new portraits taken of
bimnU.
Flattered at the request, Hurrell
shot the actor -dressed in a
peuant tunic and holding a sword-. 1tanding In the woods next to a white
stalliop.
Novarro, eestatlc over the unusual·
ly. glamorous pictures, showed them
to Norma Shearer, then MGM's reign·
Ing actress and wire or studio chief
lrving Thalberg.
She wanted pictures to prove to her·
husband that she could be a "siren"
for a new movie role being cast. Hur·
rell, she was certain, could do the
trick.
"I made the pictures of her lookine
sexy," recalls Hurrell, "and she got
the part."
I The photographs, in fact, were such
a blt at MGM that Hurrell was called
I
and asked if he'd like to run the
studio's photo gallery.
"AT nlt8T I was a little hesitant,
being the smart little punk that I
was," says Hurrell, a colorful dresser
t who sports a gray goatee. "But 1 de-
cided it would be' a good thing, and I'd
be shooting all the Hollywood stars."
Hurrell was right about that: ln the
ensuing 50 years he's photoeraphed
virtually every major Hollywood star,
from Jean Harlow to Marie Osmond.
Hurrell's innovative use of li&ht and
hlsleDJ. • · Few ... bo bave seen Hurrell'•
clualc pbotoarapba of Jane Rossell
poainc seductively tn a bayataclt or-Jean uanow rec:Unlnc 'OD wb.lle
bearakin rug soon fOrget them.
"'I'hey all had a special qualltj,"
says Hu.riell, wbo finds it dllfiCUlt to
say wbicb wu b1i favorite "Subject.
"They all had somethlll1 apecfat, nOt
only in thelr person.Utt but In thelt
photogenic qualities.
"GAJlBO WAS ALWAYS;the
sphlnx. She tboucbt I wu cruY-1
was alwaystryingto~eherla~.
"l used to .shoot. Joan Crawford more than anyone else. It wu no
problem gettinc her to take~ day off
and pose for plct""8. She lo~ed to
poc1e."
These stan and the Nortb.--
Hollywood resident's remembrances
of them are all capbu'ed ln hla and
film biitDifan Whitney Stine's bOot
"The Hurrell Style," published last
year and already in Its second print·
ing.
Orange Coast residents who haven't
seen the book-<>r who want a closer view of Hurrell's work -will have
that opportunity Nov. 9 tbrouab Dee.
• 22, when the Laguna Beach Museum
of Art presents Hurrell in Retrospect.
This Tuesday evening Hurrell and
Stine will be honored by the
museum's board of directors at a
fund·raising dinner-dance. The pair
also will be al the museum from 1-4:30'
<See HURRELL, Page CZ>
Picture ol Bette Davis in 'A!I This And
Heaven, Too.· 'She loved to pose.'
•
Y PtL.OT MonClay. Mowenlbet 1, 1177
0.lld at He ft I
Toys are a lifetime love, says this buyer. 'Adults
rrever lose their interest. '
87 JllDITJI OJ.CiON ..... OMlr...._l.Wft
• · All work and no play may make some people
dull, but it's not likely that this wilJ ever happen to
lan McDermott. His woclC Is all play
McDermo«; c.aUed a "toy ambassador to the
world," la a senior buyer ror lhe ramed New York·
based F.A.O. Schwarz toy store and spends most ot
his time bu)'inl and talking about toys.
A former actor and musical comedy star. tbe
British-born McDermott believes that toys are a
lifetime love because "adults never lose their
childhood interest. We're all basically children at
heart."
Thal McDermott loves his JOb is evident. Al the
mere mention or the word toy, his eyes s parkle and
a slight smile begin'J to form. He seems to be
transported to another world, a fantasy world
HIS INVOLVEMENT with toys is ironic, since
he left one make.believe world for another. He had
planned to have a career on stage but round op·
portunllies on Broadway scarce.
·'I took a temporary selllng job with Schwarz 15
years ago," McDermott said. "I stayed on and on
bee a use things looked better in toys
•'It developed into a career which now sends me
back to Europe \wice a year and occasionally to
South America."
He also has visited every continent in the world
m his search for unusual toys and even attended
fairs in Eastern Bloc countries.
On one of his trips to West Germany, the Steiff
Co. noted for its plush animals, used his c~ampion
Wheaten Terrier J ason, as a model for one o( its
new toys. McDermott started as a salesman in Schwari's
book department~ taking time orr periodically to
audition. but he found that he gradually began to
know the whole store and what to expect when a
customer came m
THE FIFTH Ave. shop, where he began, 1s '_'a
very e"cltln1 store to work ln," he added. "Yo"
never know who might be walldng in the door, from
Hollywood stan to famous diplomats and royalty."
He was new to New York at the lime as well
as being new to Fittb Avenue, so the aspiring star
was star-stru~k by tbe glamor. • -
• Tbete Js ctttain kind ol ex en~ that
Flfth Avenu generates -you cannot eaca,. it,·· tie
noted.
McDermott be1ins ht• search for: quality toya at
the European toy fairs, which follow each olher for
the convenience of the buyers.
He first toes to Britain, then to Italy, Nuren-
burg Paris and Valencia. "I look for unusual items,
but they have to be the best quality, irrespective or
the price," he explained.
CERTAIN COUNTRIES used to be noted for
certain kinds of toys but most countries now make
all kinds, McDermott said. "Germany, for exam-
ple. used to be famous for wooden handmade toys
-but now everyone's in the act."
Toys Crom Ciechoslovakia and Poland are in·
teresting, he said, but "they know nothing about
packaging" and many arrive broken.
McDermott said toys from various countries
· do have an identity," but generally because
"graphics differ from cpuntry to country
"It's easier to spot an American toy. American
toys are much more streamlined."
McDermott said plush toys are the most
popular or any kind In the Schwarz stores, and that
within that category there Is a hierarchy.
"Bears are first. Horses are second, cats are
third and mice fourth."
His store, which has opened a branch in South
Coast Plaia, even offers life·siied plush animals tor
up to $1,000 each.
"WE DON'T SELL them every day, but people
do buy them for very special occasions or for
groups. Elizabeth Taylor recently bought a life·
sized giraffe and had Lt delivered to her New York
hotel. I assume it was for the children, but we don't ask uestions."
Time for ·Retirement?
DEAR ANN
LANDERS· Have you
considered early
retirement? If not, may I
suggest it? I think
senility 1s t•rc<.'ptng up on
you.
l almost qu1l reading
vour column after that
ridiculous poll you did
last year on whether or
not parents would have
had their children if they
had it to do over again.
Then you had the gall to
try to defend that crazy
question by calling 1t
Ann
Landers
''research." For some
masochistic reason, I
continue to read you.
Your latest, however,
is the pita. It seems
you've gone haywire on
how to hang toilet paper.
Who cares, except a few
neurotic lunatics? It's
enough that you printed
that letter from some
dude whose uncle
happened to manage
hotels in Switierland.
And then you printed
another letter from an
idiot who advises toilet
paper manufacturers to
put the print on the other
side -so the design
won't race the wall ~en
hung "properly."
••
The real solution
would, of course, be to
use while tissue paper
and hang it any way you
darn well please. Of
course that would delighl
the environmentaltsts
whom you insulted
recently by saying that
they have overdone a
good. thing and now we
are havlng an energy
problem. I mention the
environmentalists
because they claim that
white toilet paper causes
Geo. rde Ht•rrell ~~~SS ~~tl~~~s~~:r:J· • e ., ~~i~t?~~io:ol~idth~ebet~
<From Page Cl)
p. m . Wednesday to autograph copies
of their book.
IT IS FITTING that Laguna Beach
is the site for a Hurl'ell exhibit. It was
io the art colony that the young
Chicago painter lived after arriving in
California In 19'l5.
He quickly discovered, however,
that he could make more money with
portrait photography than painting
and soon set up his studio in Los
CJAngeles.
That, of course, was abandoned
orcehegotthecallfrom MGM.
Hurrell spent four years there before
opening his own studio again on the
Sunset Strip, prompting virtually all
the other maJor studios lo request his
services.
Despite working with the greatest
names m movie history, the photo·
grapher says he was never star
struck. "I don't know why -probably
because I was too darn arrogant and
and conceited myself."
Actually, he says, most of the stars were friendly toward him. Two he
especially enjoyed were Clark Gable
and Jean Harlow
"OH, SHE WAS a wonderful gal,"
he says. "She was so much fun-
always laughing. She'd go into this
posing thing with so much gusto and
enthusiasm. She was just a big, happy
. kid."
today's stars?
"It's kind of hard to talk about to-
day and yesterday and make com-
parisons because if you take these
present personalities 1t would sound
like sour grapes.
"Take that Farrah Fawcett. l had
three months with her on 'Myra
Breckenridge.· She was a nice, pretty
gal and sweet then-she probably still
is-but comparing her to any or the
great ones of the past she's .. "
Hurrell, pauses, shaking his head.
" ... She's just a pretty girl who made
it, I guess. That's all l can say about
her."
TllE VETERAN PHOTO ·
GRAPBER, who is still busy
shooting advertisements and oc-
casional movie and TV sbo!st views
Hollywood as a whole new oattaame ·
today
He used to have an entire day for
shooting a star and would ose a
recycle your column.
Signed -D.R.T. FROM
WAKESFIELD,
NEBRASKA. DEAR D.R.T.: I am
properly ehaatened .bY
yoiJr tbaaptfal letter. -I
have DO piant W retire at
the moment, but oae
more leUer oil toflet
paper Qtay well send me
'round the bend and Utey
will take me off tbe job
wltb a butterfly net.
CONFIDENTIAL to.
Why the Icicles?:
Longfellow said it best:
"Every man bas his
secret S01TOws which the
world knows not..
Oftentimes we call a,
man cold when be is only
sad."
large studio camera, oftentimes with ----------elaborate lighting erf~ts.
"Now they can't give you five
minutes and you shoot existing light.
That's why you've got to use a motor
drive because you've got to chase
them."
According to Hurrell, who helped
define the word, Jilamo,r ls a lost ~m·
modity in today'!movies.
Wedding and engage-
ment announcemtnt.s nm
on Sunday '" the Doily Pilot. Forml are atxnlable
at all Deily Pilot o//1Ct.s or bJ1 calling the Features
Department. 64.2·4321
( Horoscope )
ANNLANOERB I HOROSCOfE
Ian McDennott.
buyer.for
F.A.0.
ScfJ..warz:
'Be113 are
first;~es
• are second;
cats sre third
sndmic&
fourth.·
Cancer Facts .
Piiblished
• SCORPIO <Oct. NEW YORK, N.Y . ..-Of the two most
TUESDAY.NOV.S 23-Nov. 21): Family widespread major cancers, one l• largely
BySYDNEYOM.ABR secret is discussed . preventable and the other h11hly curable,
A RI ES < M arc h Confidential matters are declares the American Cancer Soclety'a lrrl
2l·Aprll 19): Emphasis viewed from standpoint edition of Facts & Fleures.
on. contract, marital of security. Build. repair, It says 80 percent of lung cancer could be
status. public relations, ccmentfriendship. prevented by the elimination or clprette
getting an earful of views SAGITTARIUS (Nov. smoking, and nearly two-thirds of colon·teetum
opposite your own. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis on cancer patients saved throqb early dla&nosi.s
Cap r i corn . Cancer desire, friendship, wish and prompt treatment.. About 102,000 new cues
individuals figure fulfillment -know of each of tM!se cancetJ are expected in tbe
prominently. difference ~atween coming year. AJtoeether, tn 1918 &boat '90,000
TAURUS <April reality and 1Jlu•ion. peoplewill~Clia_tnosed.,.. h Wigeucer.
l >
~
Q
4 • .. • •
I
"
11
..
'" 20·May 20): Acceftt on Pleasant dream ts fine. The 1918 Facts & r11u • recqpMRd .. •
tow·key approach, diet, butdon'tbankonlt. standard reference wort 1n lts field. presents a "..J
vitamins, nutrition, CAPRICORN <Dec. comprehensive picture ol cancu ln lbe United
resolutions concernlng 22.J an. 19): Business. States today.
health, recreation, work. p r o d u c t i o n , Tlie new edition clearly deme.trates wby
Youarefinishingacycle. advancement -these there is' such overwhelming concel"l\ about
GEMIM <May 21-June are featured. One in cancer today: It claims more lives tban any
20): Highlight creativity position to pull strings other illness except heartdlteue, and kills more
-be ready for ehange, will help, provided you children between the •let ol 1 and 14 than any
t r a v e 1 • v a r i e t Y • a 1 s u m e a d d e d other disease (altboUCb cbildbood cancer is not
i n t e n s 1 f i e d responsibility. common>. ·
relationships . Leo, AQUARIUS tJan. "Nearly 55 million Americans now ltvine
Aquarius persons figure 20.Feb. 19): Finish wlll eventually have cancer," tho ban.dbook
lnpicture. rather than initiate predicts.
CA NC~ R CJ u n e projects. Get finger on ----------~---.,.------21.July 22f: Security, pulse of public .
long-term investments, p IS CE S (Feb .
emotional responses are 19-March 20): You're
part of your personal able to darily a puule -
scenario. One you have i n v o l v es mo n e y ,
known wants more than a reputation, member of
noddingacquaintance. opposite sex. Sc:Orplo,
LEO CJ.u ly 23-Aur. Leo persons figure in
2 2 > H i g h I l g b t scenario.
intellectual curiosity, If Nov. 8 ts yocar
versa"t.ility -make blr&bday, yoa are
tnquiries. persist until dedicated, forceful,
answers are obtained. vibrant, creative,
Gemini, Sagittarius competttlv~ and
figure prominently -so stubborn. Capricorn,
doesnumber"3." Cancer persons play
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. lmportiril roles In your
2 2 ) : A c c e n t o n tire. Emotional wound.
collections, payments., suffered earUir tbis
budget considerations year, will heal. This
a n d p e r s o n a 1 month you will be rid of a
possessions. Be specific burden.
about details; thorough ---------·• approach is necessary.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct.
22): Die for information.
Obtain hint from Virgo
messaae. Get views on
record. You gain allies.
Member of opposite sex
is drawn to you.
To place your meuaee
before the
readina public,
pboM
DallyPUot
ClassUled.C.U-5118
. .
. '
\
Gable was much the same. "He was
a very happy man. Like Harlow, he
was dedicated to his career. Bul he
was always lauehlne and bavina
"It's my theory that they lost a
great deal of interest when they let
glamor go down the drain. Today It's
all blood and thufider. There's no love
and romance and tender quallUes to
life today.
To avoid ~t.sappoint-.
ment. ~~ brides
are remtnd.td to have their
wedding stone•. with a
black-and·white gloalJI oJ the bride or of t~ cotiple, · ,... ... ...., _______ ~-'!~-----"
fun."
What does the muter
''They're all t.ryibg to dq.aomdbin1 bla and smaabing. wen, hell, llfetsn't
smasruna. It's JUSl • tender eilitence
when it'sgood." ·
to the Feature• lnpart· · men' OM week btJo,.. the
wedding.
J
4191·71
PUBLIC NOTICE
MOTtC:STOCUO.TO ..
SUN•tOlteoutlTOPnta
STA ft OIJCMJ ..... IA l'O•
I
"U"I , ...
D
A
I
1..
y
p
·1
L
0
T
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L
A s.
s
I
F
I
·E
D
NllW1Moflce:.
:::I Walker t; leP.
All~ estate advertlaecl
ill t.bia newqaper la ~· Jed to ~ F~al Fair H«naainl Act of ltH
wlllcb mak• it We1al to
advertise "•l>Y pr•·•----------• rercnce, limitation. o·r diacrhniDatlaca' buect an nee; ~.·~iton. an,
or naUQPal orilfD, or an intentloa to make.; any
IUCh preferenee_ limlta·
b. or dlacrlmiD.aUon."
FAMTAmc .
DUPLD
.OJ~2'!!.~ ~~ nm, 2 trpie•a .. an bhns,
aep. laundrf nm Ii over·
11'.ia .....apeper wW Mt Jiml ~.Woad & knowin1ly accept any brick en w/sbab root
advertlaia1 for real adlktoil'a DUlleiHMU.
at.ate wblcb ia ill viola-SW u • d~x for
UOnaftbe law. $219,500
tta.ts for s. or eacb. aDit ca be sold
•••••••••••••••• ~.. •• • aeparate}y Oib. condo)
G •• .,.. I 002 each ror 49 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1 .soo.
TWO & A VllW JACOIS REALTY
Spacious z atory wttb 67~70
panoramic view from the
upper level. Lwnlriou1 NEWPOIT llACH w. entry\ plush carpet-· MEW CONDO
ing & central air condi· $l7 tOO tioninl an Ollly a fnr of ,
the feature. of tbta fine Only ~ mile from the
home. Priced for a very oceatl. Huee muter quick aale at $89.500. suite with warm, wood
CAIJ.. 751-3191 cathedral ceilin&• 'and C: SELECT room for 1 e c re t
... ~. HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
----
T'PROPERTIES =·:~~~c~~ moves you in C • 11 G~~~iiiNiiiiP.iii91
CAPICOD
Sll.000
sz.110
9112-7788.
~ KE:Y 1v 1 P.E:ALTORSA TOTA&.DOWH
Windln1 roadway to Trade your old stuff for
aoartn1 2 •t7 retreat!
Private ll'OUDda protect ~luded enU)' to lavish -::::=====:::;:::::::::::--1 liv rm ! Gourmet
kttcben overloou 1un-
lbme courtyan1 ! Wind·
lnl stairway Jeada to
1w~epin1 master
bedl'oom phaa child'• rm.t• Hurry, seller ls
amloUI. M7..0lt 6Jf Fnl1T-1 r s r.;."ld 'lil tll 1
1•1111
----
Serving Cost<t M esa-lrv11w
Huntington Bcdr.h-N ewport B <.•,Kh
U,_. l()UI: li()MU
REAL TORS~ 676-8000
.2443 East poast HIQhwav. CoroM dtl Mar
also in Mesa Verde. at 546·5990 '
,, ....... ~l<l\11\
r.;,~ ! to"'~., 'c~""1 O•' uJt
. 1111£ POOL!
"))
asTIUYIM
~NIGE l:
Ul\IL:EY &
l\SSlJCll\TES IAR&AIM
HUMTIRS
l-2LOT -
Gftat a bedrm, 1 bath.
Ql.&allty built bome with
--~~ -HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
'
t "
Lingo
Rul&Lm
L.<GUNA
NlGUt:L
495-1720
SIHSA TI OM AL
ITAUAMVILU
Brand new, Laguna
Beach, hJUs1de location.
Views of hundred• of
acrea of wilderness, lit.ea,
ocean & coastline vlewa.
3 Bedrooms, den, dLDml
room, 3 baths. $1$9,SOO
CJ Coldwell Bonker
.Pnme loution. Nr ocean.
•
NEWPORT'S
FINEST
to 1154,500. Make ofr.
LC. TAYLOR CO.
'55-0350
Fresh au·, sunshine.
Vaulted hv. rm , frplc,
!am. rm., tile kit., 3 Br, 2
I.lie baths, lndry rm., oak
patio, lge trees, fncd yd,,_-,;.;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;: 2 car ear Bit 1972."'
$89,900 By owner.
8'G CANYON
AMIRI.TY
75'·1515
WATERFRONT
.HOMES
., .. , 611·1400
1090
2~ACRES
Darlilll bou9e cm mlDl·
raocb. SumNnded b1 eo 1---------1 beaut. U... Fantutic
s-a.-• •••••••••••••••••••••••
view. 3 Hone atallJ, 2
tack locker•, t.aeed,
crou-flfteed, won't laat .
AGT. * ** * * * * * <n4) m.5'11T .......... m.:ao
IAY VllW lw,,M._1 ••1.·~mr.•1..··~=::·· Mobile Home, located in IMMACULA Tl 5 .A.C&IS >A•R •r u ... _. eulla Bayalde Village, 2 Loaded w/oak trees In
Beautiful akefronl Br 2 Ba, Din Rm, Den, DPLX the Cleveland NaUoaal
home. 2 Story, 4 bdrma, 3 wetbar, lndry, bltns, etc. X1nt terma, wlk to beacb Forest. So. of 0raqe Co.
baths, frplc, walk·in bar. By owner. Prine Only. &sboppio&. $113,500. Munlclpal water, &tatle
Immed pouesslon. $.W,S00.1'75-7903 HowwdJo ..... lltf roll.Ins knolls for v1'w
Lowest price on the lake. 497 1744 lita. Owner will carry.
Reduced to Slll,000. PrivaSe Party, wishes to • AGT.
581-5720. trade 5 Br bome on * * * * * * * * (7H)m.a.1
ftJPllX. C.M.
Great Euhide toe,
newel' 3br, Zba, frplc, yd. <J> 2br, lbla, pe'*, encl.
&ar.~000.
Tom tee, Rltr,M.2·1903
-------111111114 prime part otdo9ta Mesa•---------i OR llD-0530 LllM Fonti COltdO Golf Co u r 1 e for ELEGANT ---------1
. 2 Bedrm, 2 bath, pride of waterfront home w /pier VILLA GRANADA 180 undeveloped acr ...
ownenblp. Upiraded 1ft le aUp. Linda, Lldo. etc. 2 BR, 2 Ba, Condo. Josbua Tree 117 ml'•
beautiful earth tonea •. 1_54&« __ 1s_1 _____ _.
Great atarter home • ...,._ , .... -_._ ,_ .... Price REDUCED $2100 ..... ·-.-....... ., &U ui
NOW ONLY 161400 Red W•t. • .a Dally Pllo
carp et Re~ lt ~ ra , Claaalfled Ad. Phon MWl74. _MZ-_Wll __ • _____ _.
I
-•
•
6
. • ' t
c
graded,
wahr/d.ryr, pool, jacu.u.i,
sauna, walk to beach.
Leue $495/mo. 54o-4480
associated
BRC,.;ERS-REl\l TC.RS
102~ \Ill lo•bng t11·Jb61
3 BR. 2 ba. condo, nr. go Oceanfront. Z Br. 2 Ba,
eoune •tennis club. N a\DU'OOf, weet.IJ or mon-
chllclren, no pet.a. $4 tbly. 714-DM-2882, uk for
Mo. 487-3388 Alt-Sir .
WESTCLIFF BLDG.
NEV/PORT UEACH '"•. .... . . ... . . . ~ ..
.. -
~
I
..
-• •
6
i
l •
,
1 • -
.......................
• Nnpalt llutne Batpr. -..s-..c:a..·, m.a.o
Spiri._. Reader
l&lSSo. El Caonno hal
San Clemente. Fully lie.
For appl. '92· 7298
...
*MICHB.l.FS* At'"
O\acall Musage eon.truct
10AM·2AM 731-4462 cub· di•
•SHERILEE•
Certified Museuse
House Calls • By Appt.
83M83I
DANCE OF FUN
BUl nude girla dance & rap session. lOAM. to
2AM Mon-Sat 825 N .
Euclid Anah 559-6150
FREESESSJON W/AD
Good looking man 4
w/beacb house seeks
young fun loving girl who
needs friendship, Bob
673-0164
EXOTIC GllLS
llla.uage & Modeling
Outcall ~-3161J /543-3250
IAIR
F /time lhUlt, 3-11 or 2 to
10 PM. No bpr nee. D·K
~· .1Sl5 So. Briatol,
DIRECTORY
6~
H.r:POflf,n'f l'ELP
. -
VOL.:T ..... , ........... "' ..
I , .
llACll E Pl
:imall preeiaioa 1w1tch
compoDeata. Op•rate
tmnt latbe, HanlU.,e. B s. la accou.atlns or tllilllU machin , ~unch ~nlent wlltl 1·2 nan preia is drill preu. Short poeral aceow:i.tfq fn 1
• nm production, small man~acturhat eavin>o-m~WlfcH IMC ~~~ o1
11311 Baker Cotta Men pa)'ablea Ir payroll &
549-3041 eoordlnate t.bo bil.llu
Equal Oppor Employer receivable fuactlona. ~~~~~~~~~ WW umt la pnparaUon = ol 9<!COUDtiq atat.Jneo ---------i & manacemeat reporta.
UC.....OMIST
t>ut-Tlme
lmasediate ~ level
Clerical ll09lUcm & Yaila· tale. Will coaia1dtr ltal.G-
1.q. a.qut,.. 50 wpm
tn'q alPllL •• oil• • pro1re1ihe atartln1
1ala~ Cood com
~ .... catfrorappt:
Nancy Denlertan
• 7»-i7'1I
MACHINIST GllATWISTBM
SAYIMCIS
, ~ewport Beach
SECIOAllS ACCOUITING SALU & TYPISTS
Cl.Ell Ao Equal Opportunity/ SUPPL1MB4T 119 prepand tor tbe Ill>"
Short run production.
Setup & operate Hant·
1nge, Turret Lathes, Vert1cle & Horuontal
MiLl.5. Own tools. Days
only.
STACOSWITCH IHC
ll39BakerCoeta Mesa
549·3041
W\Ureport to6 aui.st the Afff.rmat1veActk>o Y""'--coME comlnl bolldays, ean
manager ol uaJysis & Employer Male/Female -'" tcp $$$OD wmporary .,. s-v. a. Help Deeded im· hoaocial control 6 · be SSSS SSSS alpmenta with office med. FllU « p/L Apply,
ee Sta. NIJbt Attend
2 Or 5 aJtel a WL APPlf,
SbeU, 11\b • Intue, NB'
re1ponsible for all field PA&TTIMI ovfsioed,. Cllll toda7 lot _, &. CA Hwy, Nwpt
lnventory recf?tds. IKept/SHy $100 ~EWOU lmmod.placaumt. . • Bdl. llinh~wn i year mac-Free. Pretty olc, happy HOUSIWIYU ~Q~ office • •--~-·--sc-1-.... ----• counting +eollece level eo lucky bou ~ at· s---..,._ ~
accowilloc course. Ex· tractive indlv. W/brilht COLUGI 'IUV~•· 0 overload Eaper'd craftsman. l*'ience wor~ w personality to look after Guaranteed Hourly Jlult be abla to haad cut MACHINIST llMmory data, journal them. Moderate typinc Wage Plus Bonus. 5:30 -· 557-006 I
Equal Oppor Employer
· Product.ion lathe & _,. .lrreporta helpful. req'd. Allo Fee Jobs. pm to 8; 30 pm. Call 3723 BlRb8i. NB
press operators needed can Rtta S40 6055, ;~~~~or~c~~~m~e~-t~o~250;E~.e~;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 both day & night sbtft. maf'ftUIMl£L Coutal Personnel Agen· ~7th St., Costa MMa.
MORRJS INDUSTRIES. f"U~Ullft cy,2'790HarborBl,CM Sales Lady, exper
2901 W Garry Ave, Santa Cl.Ell RECEPTIONIST Fu!I Sportswear, steady SECREJAllES
Ana._ time, exper i»ref'd. Light P/Ume, retired OK, ~ •0pen'1:-tn..$:30pm
MAID-E:.:per only Ref's To ~111t in a busy e!ec· typing" pbonea. 6'2·5874 Sile Shop. BIK-m2, Hnt1 •Call Evenin11 SJS.8112 . · troo1c manufacturing Bch. ard 1------req d. P/T Xlnt salary. personnel dept. of a RECEPTIONlST needed --ForswtqAgravey
Reply to ad #959, Daily growing divlaion or a by Chiropractor Muat Saleslady' Gill Shop abifta.avaUabSle.
Pilot P .0 . Box 1560, lqe corporation. Typ. t well Ute bk pg. Matw-e. Do not apply UO· •MO FEt
Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626. In& 60 wpm, general of• :M58 ' leas you have esper. With & without sh. 50
MAID. F/ti... flee background with Buus International, wpm +. Short " Joa1
F'or lite cle• .. •up Richard good telephone man-RECEPTIONIST needed ~Westcllff Dr, NB twm. TOP SSS. Ouellette .... Salon, 20 oeru m ls a must. by SL Jobn Knita, IUU Previou1 personnel timepermpositionw/ad· Sales _N_ewpo__:.._rt_Ct_r_D_r_, N_B_--1 bac.kuound helpful. 0 vancement posaibllilies. MA y CO.
MAJDWANTED mandatory. For attraet1ve person MUSIC DEPT Don Quaxote Motel wilt office ak1lls. Xlnt • :uOONew~ Bl, CM Vie ol.fe.r oxceJlenl working con.da. 17312 CHRISTMAS _.. salaries & benefits in· Eastman, Irv. 540-7171
MANAGER cludi.nl 1 week vacation nl:V"EPT·TYPIST Irvine HELPERS .after 6 months, Q.J.:A,. ln
0. f_e n1 JO
Tl~fl(JRAf1' ti( lP
S 150 ~ Cbrutmu week off with l~tion must have x t To supervtae adults and pay & group insurance omce skills. Type 70
rnunsel earners. Must starts 00 d!.f of hire. wpm accurately. start Do you like people •1------------------; music? Are you looking
be over 2S, enthl191asttt', $800 mo ~+ benefttr. >..
outgomg and e~oy peo DOCUMINTOR for Kathy. 833-8435
pie. Dependable car a RECEPTIO ... IST must. Available even· ~~ "
inp 6-9 PM, & Satunl~y. 2921.Sb~St PART TIME. Flexible
Call 642-4321, utens1on Sant.a Ana CA 92711 bn. Typln1 req. 0 C. ~between l 00 and 5. (71A) ~3S51 Airport MCJJlt. Coa.aull·
PM. Aak for Jim. Equal Equal Opportunity ing Firm. 752-5741
Opporturuty Employer EmployerM/F/H
lor a full or part time job
cl~ to home for the boli • day season? We may
have a Job for you that
you would ~Y io one
our ~ May Co. stores.
We are looking for full
and part time people tot~~~~~~~~~ work in ou.r re~nt. radiot.:.
and stereo dept.a d~g SICIET ARY /Euc
RESALES our bmy holiday aeason. Must type 60 wpm, LUSKIEALTY We can be fle:.:ible on shorthand 80 wpm.1---------1
MANAGEMENT
4 self-starters for new p/ aJnter, apprentice. No is opening a new resale hours, but some evening ei.tomer aalea oriented
bus i o e s s. Fu 11 Y exper necess. Call Jim olfice in the Hu.nllogtoo and weekend troura & 1tron1 1alea ad-cap1talized. 536-2403, 6-8 after5pm631-0789 Beach uea. Better than maybe necessary. Lel'll miniatrationnee.
pm.,forappt. average commiasion + discuss. Collect calla SpauJdlnaDi•of
MAMtCUllST PAil JIM( incentive plateaus. This 'r!:ip'!x,°.,iU:m°!n~rea. Call =!:o
F/t1me Tues thru Sat (YrYINGS office will be approx 1800 ult for Mr. Rowland.
Following pref 'd Lftl sq.ft. with a lot ol com 1213)320.5151 EquaJOpporEmplyr. ,..._,.-.__.,_,_ Richant Ouellette Salon, Adults with outat.andmg, ~!,.!1upport. Call B~. • ...... __ .__ ~NewportCtrDr,N.B. attractive personalities .....,._ I SECIETAIY.f/Tlm HOUSIWIYIS ·
bo . ~· .th Equ,el Opport Emp oyer ....., ..... -i.. .. .:.uu-+n"-c. !I A R K E T I N G w enJOY wo ... mg Wl Allay _ _.... UD
RESEARCHinterv1ewer kida. Start at $3.~ per BeeemtioDClerlt SALES· ... /f teiepbonell1en1o!c. Nr
Eves A wlmda. EJtJ>er. hour. Phone 6C2-4..'IZ.l, ex-exclu1lve motel lo Lee Corp bas outataod'g O.CAirport. 7$1-47tl0
Pref. but w11l tro. t.awlon 2SO between LOO Laguna Beach. Two girl aalesopeninttor0range1_:. __ ~-=-~-.-.. -... -.,--
751.m66 and 5: oo PM. olflce, neat appearance, c 0 • 1' e 8 1 d e n t w / ~-•-
--AM for Jha nm:h detaJ..I , 5 day week managerial ability, am· XlJJt~ ll abort.Md
MATURE W 0 MAN Equal Opportunity incldwknds.4.M-Wl bitloa ll a record ol p~ ~e. Sa~=·~
p, time to welcome Employer •-t-•I CL.....L Jn!SS. Bua, colleee or Call newcomers & contact rwa _..... sales expr helpful. Yraexper.requtred. men:bants. Flexible hrs. PIX AMwttr Sent. for prominent N. B. Sal+comm. 3 yr traJnlog 75'2-SSU
Need car, hte typing P /t1me days, eves & restaurant. 67:M>l21 . program-sal+comm.i-;.-..,.SICa--IT-~-1-,---i
547 3095. graveyant Exper pre· Start'g salary to 11800.
f'd, but wtll tram. Good Rest.au.rant , Contact Tom Bradley Newport Ctr iD"'tment
Maturi e,ArMesponeadlt foe co. benefits . .EOE . B COOICd f .Esper) ~ I• 88S-8550.E .O.E ftrm.Goodd 11e,n •. olEcllba ecll-ear y . . n wspap r 646-8000 roa am1 y s.y ... groun . Ca • n, delivery, mst have trans · restaurant exper. req'd. SALES/~ M0-01Z3. _ ~2756· PIXAMwerS.... m-OUT Electronic firm, SF.cRETARY Ofc. recpt.
Medical-Urology Ore, Wanttowork~ays,.afler· --------•I customen are A• E's, wanted. P/tlme. Gd.
mature woman, f/time. noons & eve~gs lD NB ut.illtlea&macblne mfgs. phone person1lily 6
Typing stenlizing In & CdM areas. W~rk f/ RETAIL Travel 20 lo 40% • some c:lerical exp. nee. • ''d time or p / time Sal bo uto •-WHOLESALE s ur. Ex per. req Weekends a must. Xlra + nus, a • ex· PlacaJlaftQ>Jl"95·146S
548-2247 , d ERIS pemes. Fu.llCo. benefits. TO THE TRADE · pay for exper CL Industry leader ln SICllT'AltY/EXIC MedicaJ office asslst. Will operaton. Call 64G-0812. analytical instrument&· M.L IMV. RIM ftff'l -.u
tram. Spanish required. E.O.E t.ioo Rea etoRe1lonal ' 1 lft~ Lite typing. Must be abl Pharln Rtlp wanted lat, 2nd & Jl~. 1793~ Sltypark, Ste !!al n~'.:f,~; 'l'elepboDe lteseaftb lD· SllPlnn to work eves &/or wknda. acy Assistant. A~-3rd shilb. No uperlenct E. lrvtne m1• ~al ll ortaniu· t.eniewer OD advertialn1 Utt
548-ml bilious girl to work in r:""''d. We train tboat lion.al .~ .. •-to a11J1t Is new producta. N MON'IJAYNOV.1. ---------; buay pharmacy. Must -.. eo-•-outsld /f now ~ui al z • ud.I NOON MES~-.1!..a have good personality. hired. Applic:anll apply......,_, e. w 0 • manaaement of a1· • es. va "" · 11
.-on• 9AM-6PM II Frl Call at: ins. New travel agency -·'veco.SendreatUD• m.ca S•••a•A•o 1aLfd lmmed.openlng,p/t1me, on-UTOTEM inN.B.Call846--5051 t .. o ....... Donna, ~ewport•----.. -1-.-.-..,-_-.., 112'2 .... Cllla ll·3 wkdys. Need rel.la· Bob Lane, 847-6084 ~on· ~.. --
ble, industrious person Frifor appt. SALIS Federal 3355 Vla Lido. air minlmWD. Pleut;y H.I,; 17141 lf3.71ot
w/own car. Irvine Sav PLASTIC ASSEMBLY STORES Part time, 5-&pm, Mon-~!!: :;:;.:,.~~rtl..!1all&~~·-!!~le!!?__~-~~~~~~~~~~'ll 1ngs, 752~. EOE. Division bu immed Fri, perfect for CoUece ' ~SoUdton, • ANTIQUE ~b Dill·
Mis&ionVieJO openingforJr.E11gineer-LocatedAt· Student, no prt11ure SICllTAIT (10) Immediately & lnCRm6et$550.
MOTOR ROUTE in& Technician. Needs 124'2 Lampson, G Grv 1&Je1 or qldaa to meet. Doe um e 1l t at lo n • wort Dleuant H • Ml-ID ·
The Daily Pilot bas a good electronic · SlOW.SouthSt.,An.ahm 53Hllll Newport Ctr inva\mtmt Ian. f!lo eaper n•c.
large route in Mlssio mechanical backin>uod. lllDel Mar, C.M. SA.LISP9lSOM ftnn. Xlnl akil1s req'd. P-.S.50 hr. Call a
Viejo • approx ea.rn.lng Ultra.sonic exper. a phu. 885Glenneyre, Lai Bch Lacuna Hllla Kall, 40 hr Calll4CM>l.2'. Jpm. '15'-1801
DJ() per month. Mon tbr Call _or send resume to: We are an equal t .... • ............ l!lml ..... --i Fri afternoons and Cavttron Ultruonlcs. opportunity employer wk . '2. 75 to a tar . SECRETARY, part wme.,.
SaUr:Sun momlnga Ca 1902 McGaw, Irvine, Ca. Definite advan~ement Mature woman pre· 1.....;.;--..:.-"""."""-:--~':"':"'':"ll
;::Jood drlvinl recont 9271' Equal Opportunity poteaUaJ. 11/F, ta fl up. !erred. General ofllce
red. Call 8-42-432 Emtloyer ~1889 ~. worll. Typtna, ftllna, etc.
Retail No 1bort.hand, flexlblt Leavini name and phon PLUMBING Exp'd. drain u • w • '-!.IM...aT 1-------•1 hoUn. 615-ZZ92 number. c 1 e • n e r " a n t e d . """"'"~• 1iir't
MOl'llERS AIDE, live in, Preferably w/own truck. TRAJMEIS
cblld care lite hstpc, Could eam $tOO wk. Aft 11per a..._ for
cookinC,atbCb.494·1111 6PM495-1465 f.let~ .
PUS$MIH ...._..~
MEED
MONEY?
A.IJ. Dtck, JTEK. P.I.P, Must have kno•ledge of
2'70 E. l'ltb St. C.M. tine relall men:handlae ~ ~Uoo • abll1t1 to communicate w /floe
cJ!artele.
TOP SALARY
&BDO:rrrs
Call (OC"Appolotment <n•> IM-580
AlilaeC lltu .. ••• ~ ... u
SECRETARY tor •mall
businaa ~ SODM t.yp-
iQt " record keepinJ.
• F /time. Beach Jhial1*•
Pnducta, 4020 Campus,
NB
..
1040
THE.DAILY PILOT.
RIST MAS TREE
I FT' PAGE
TO SELL YOUR :
LIDAY GI FT IT-EMS·
OUR ~AGE appe1rs ev.rt Thurld~ -nm ttov. 17 thru Dec. 15. The more
you ·lrun the I••• you P•Y· For
Into • help in ptaclng rour ad call
.·
1•Q11t..,p0rt.qe Velv
ScQ. XIII&~ ms. p
59tQI& ·---------------~ ....... ......................
6' 8" Surfboard with ne
fin & Jeub-$3S. Prim
wetauit, new ' alz
small-SU. F lache •----------•
TOP
DCILAI
PAID
PORQ,BAN
IMPORTCAai
Au.MODELS
WI
Cl.IAM
UllDCAl.S
MOW
CALI.PAPPY
540-5630
1011 \StJ\ & SO\
• LINCOl N· MERCURY
SADDLE BACK
BMW
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
'16 2'0Z. Stereo. mags,
air. $8771. 983·1177
989-0m
f 731 .......................
miracle
mazda
"71 VW, lllnt cond.. Best offer!
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TULSA, la. <AP>-Tbestate
ttas charged two men with assault
and battery for allegedly kissing
policewomen, but Tulu 's top
wucewoman says the city pros·
e.Cutt>r's refusal to brina the
c}larges hhnsel!has made women
officers "theobjectofndlcule "
"A female officer Is not a sea
object We have a tough enough
job ..• to have to put up with
Flooding
(mhes
I
Carolina
MOJlGANTON, N.C. <AP> -
North {Carolina mountain com· m unities began cleaning up today
alter storm-spawned floods that
raged through dozens of towns
Sunday, killlna nine people, car·
rying off mobile homes and
,mashing businesses. Six of those
jilled were children.
The state's flood death toll rose
lo ni.<e 'when the Burke County
Sheriff's Department reported
that the t>odies of three boys were
found early today in a rain· '1 swollen ereek at Morganton and
another body was found in an
empty one-story ~torage building
in Mor~ahton
Officials identified the storage
ll,uBding Yictim as Ike Peterson,
who lived alone in the building
.~nd was believed lo be in his late
60s or early 70s. lie was dis·
covered by a friend who checked
on him dally and brought him
food.
· Burke County officials said the
bodies of two Valdese brothers, f Chris Hemby, 18, and Tony Hem· ~by, 16, and that of 14-year-old
Mark Hawkins or MorganlQll
were recovered from a creek ear·
ly todQ. It wu"pcl!Ud Uaa\ tbeJ
ha<fteen try~ to swim the creek
tohelpaboatd lerrecoveuome
boats that had floated away. A
fourth boy swam to safety.
Officials sald':Carolyn Morgan I Hendrix and her two boys, aged 4 ~ and s. were pitched into the 1 swollen North Hominy Creek
·1 west or Ashevillf and drowned
when one end Of their mobile
home was tom frorn the ground by
ram paging waters.
In Polk County. •nother family
that lived In a mobile home tried
to escape waist-deep flood
waters. Four-ye•r·old Bryan
Scott Hart fell and disappeared.
I Michael Charles Townsend, 28,
of Boone, drowned t-'hile he lrled
to use a log to crogs a flooded,
,tream to safety neat his home.
The flash flooding was ca~
by thW>derstorms that moved <See FLOODS, Page AZ>
* * * Workers Dig
Bodies From
Flood Scene
TOCCOA, Ga. CAP> -The first
part or the cleanup was the worst
as rescue workers removed
bodies burled ln mud and debris
after a dam burst, noodtng the
'l'occoa Falla Blble College
campus.
''We saw one guy aone crazy,
running out or the watel"ln hls un·
dcrwear. •• aald amb'41,nce
RESCUE WORKERS
CONTINUE SEARCH -M
Her criticism was aimed at City
Prosecutor Jack Mor1an, who re·
fused to file charges after
policewomen Perri Burnett and
Rosie Nadeau reported that each
was kissed by a man sbe stopped
for questioning.
Winter Wonderland·
Old Man Winter left his mark in an early
trek across the Sierra over the weekend,
and it was a welcome sight at the Donner
Summit ski lodge off Interstate 80 where
s~v~ral inches of the white stuff were de-
posited.
By KATHY OANCY
oe•DMy~~
Members of the Orange County
Transportation Commission
agreed to go to court today in an
attempt to keep their fired ex-
ecutive director from continutnc
lo report for work.
But Carol Benson, who was dis·
missed from her $30,000.a-year
job last week, said after today's
meeting she will continue to re·
port as usual because she has not
yet received any legal enforcea-
ble order to do otherwise.
Commissioners asked their at·
torney. Clayton Parker.
lo seek a court order restraining
Mrs. Benson from entering com·
mission offices In Santa Ana.
Parker told commissioners
Mrs. Benson has continued to re·
port to work. to give orders to
employes and to use commission
stationery and stamps.
Mrs . Benson told com-
missioners last week that she
would follow the advice or her at·
torney and remain on the job. •
She contended commissioners
were violating "due process" by
not permitting her a hearing with
her attorney and giving her an
opportunity to refute what she
said were alleged complaints
.about her performance.
Mrs. Benson malntlined the
same poeition today saying, "(
feel it is in Ute best interests of
the conuhlsslon as w~l as J'DY&elf
to continue to function t9 the ~t
or my ability in ctrrylnc out the
duties or executl.ve.director."
"They den1e<J me the right to
counsel in a public hearlna. . . "
she conUnued; ~s tor her use <>f mmiaslon
stemps. Mrs. son sat y
the c:ommiaslon r n out
si.mps some time a10 and 1
purchased any stamps used with
her own.tund.s.
S~ial Distriets
FY, Westminster
Elections Readied,
Elections of special district
directors will be held Tuesday in
two sanitary dia(ric:tstbat wall at·
feet some rn!dents in: Fountain
Valley and WestmJmter.
Three people will be elected to
Coast Solons ·
Another roun~ ln the conUnu·
ing b'attle between residentlal
and industrial interests over the
Gothard Street industrial land is
scheduledtonlgh~.
The lflmtlngton B~a_cla Cit,v
Council will ~onalder several
parcels for po.sslble rUoniftC to
realdential:-use. _.two of which
have sparked eoatreversr.IA tbe
. past.
Mom Held
. """'-··------the city ~ell Wted al fi to retaJn1ndu:strial
"deslgnatloa foi-the land.
• But atter a recess. council
melbbei's l~ a second ttme tO
aend thfl ltem :back to the plan·
Sllnl commission for its recom-
mendatiGn.
The IOD!nc Issues have re-peatedJ1 come berore the city
co•n~ll and plannln& com• mlsslGU. Cbeli.u.s viewa tbe f requeney OI
beanqs as a move to break the
resolvffl lnduatrial backers.
0 Weibave •ppeared belorethe pt~ eommtulon and city
council on d~ previous oc·
casion.s,0 Chelius said. ·~OQJ.ght
will be the tnenth. ·'
IiooR KNOCKER
LJ!.WISTON, Maine <AP> -DOOr·tiJ.:c!Odl' campalgnln1 Clift'
be roup; an a guy. Ask Lauritt
G. Blrob.
Biron? IWlDJng tor mayor,
lhowid ~P at a "Meet the ~· dlda* Niltil" with a swollen
right m and four stitches.
ne cMdidite aaid lie bad Wlr c.ampatii:dill door-to-door when' bit on Use hntl by a door opene«'
for ltllll Uy,Jlll atde.
•
Y PILOT HfF
-o~n 'F ati Eair' ~uesilay
Thoroughbred horse racing
1eta under way at noon Tueaday
at Lo6 A.l.amltoi Race Course as the Orange County "Fall Fair ..
opent fora12-dayrun.
Mn,..... ...... ..,-o.y ..._
THEY'LL 8E COMING OUT OF THE CHUTE TUESDAY AT COUNTY'S FALL FAIR
Loa Atamftos R•~ Cour•• SH• of Horae Racing, Other ActlvttlH
Hydrogen Plane Viewed
May Cruise 4,000 MPH By Xear 2000
WASHINGTON <AP I Air
pa:-sengers may someday ride in
hydrogen-powered planes that
could fly three times raster than
I he supersonic Concorde, but
without the controversial noise
problem
Lockheed-California Company
has a new federal contract to
study design or a liqu1d-hydrogen
a ircraft thal could carry 200
passengers up lo 6,000 miles at a
cruising speed of 4,000 miles per
hour
The Concorde can go 1.300
miles per hour. although 1t is
restricted to hair that speed when
flying over most land areas
bl'causeof1ts loud some boom.
The British f'rench plane flies
al 60,000 feet c·omparcd to about
120,000 feet for the proposed
hydrogen plane The higher
altitude would ehmmate the
no1!\e problem
··from that height, the iot.ensi
ty or any some boom would be so
dissipated by the time it reached
the ground that it would not be
obJecllonable to anyone bearing
1t. .. said Dan Brewer ,
Lockheed's manager for
~drogen studies
The 15 month, $270,000 study
was awarded bv the National
At-ronautics and Space Ad·
ministration.
The plane would usc five con·
venhonal lurboJe1 engines (or
takeoff and five supersonic com.
bust1on ramjet engines for cruis-
ing. The turbojet engines would
reduce noise on takeoffs and
landings.
The contract calls only !or a
design concept with no actual
construction. bul federal officials
are considering experiments
wi)h a test vehicle.
/
Th ram lbO~
n~ ID W~ was ~nW'od Frlaa whe o
o( T.oS l\rigttei a court
Judges overturned earlier
court decision.
Eight thorouchbred races, two
quarter horse races and one Ap-
paloosa racewill be featurtddaJ·
)y <nooll to ~ p,m.) on Los
Alamitos' .. th.mile oval track.
Because or the track's small
size, thoroughbreds wlU run by
the grandstands twice.
Fair otficlills are predicting a
dally betting handle of about. $1
million and daily attendance or
11,000 people.
For those who don't fancy
horse raclnc, an old·stYle tent
tair with homecraft eitblbi&S and
midway rides wUl be held ln the
raceway's parking IOt from 10
a m to 10 p.m. Tu~•Y tbrou&h
Nov. 21.
The Calr Will olfer popular tn·
tertainment in the evenings and
many of ihese entert.elncrs will
also offer shows Jn the late alter.
noon for youngsters who drop by
af~er school,
Admission to all fair events,
excluding the racee, is free. A $1
parking fee will be charged. •
Northbound travelers on the
San Diego Freeway should take
the Valley View exit in Cypress.
then proceed east to Katella
A venue. A left tum on Kat~lla
will take motorists to the
raceway course.
""~ Willls Hawkins. Lockheed
president. said US airlines
:-hou ld be nying hydrogen planes
by the end oflhe century
HYDROGEK-POWEREO P~NE SHOWN IN ~RTIST'S CONCEPTION OF FUTURE AVIATION
Window Hit
In Huntington
Street Brawl
A Sunday night brawl on Main
Street near Coast Highway in
Huntington Beach resulted in a
vehiC'le being bumped through a
plate glass window by another
('ar, pohcereported.
No one was injured. The vehi·
cit' smashed through the window
of the Wild Oats bikini shop. 101
Main Street. at about 6 p.m .
police said
The store was closed ~t the
time ofthc incident.
Witnesses told police a light
rol orcd sedan rear -ended
another car and pushed it
through the window. Police were
unable to locate the suspected h1l
and run car
Police said they are not sure
what touched off the fight on
l\f am Street. Several arrests for
d1:-turbmg the peace were made.
Names of those arrested were
not available.
Honeymoon Over
SAN DIEGO CAP > -
Newlywed Carroll Carter, 64, has
beep arrested for alle1edly
shoolin1 the woman he married a
day earlier, authorities said.
~ANO& COAtT , " ,.
DAILY PILOT
By the End of the Century, People Could Be WhlzzJng Around th• World
'TV Insanity' Rejected
Judge Turns Down Plea to Overturn Ruling
MIAMI (AP) -A JUdge reject·
ed a defense motion today to
overturn the conviction of Ronny
Zamora, the 15-year·old boy con·
v1cted of murder in the so-called
· television insanity" trial.
Circuit Judge Paul Baker then
swore witnesses for a hearing on
another attack on the convrctiou,
this one alleging procedural er·
rors before the trial last month
Defe~ attorney Ellis Rubin
called for testimony from eight.
people involved in the trial. in·
eluding the prosecutor, asststant
State Attorney Tom Headley
The motions delayed the sen·
tencing but Baker ~ave no tn·
dication he would h~ve to put it
off until another day.
Chapman ~ts
$1 Million
Anonymoiuly
The trial bad drawn wide at·
tcnt1on for the novel defense
a rgument that Zamora killed
while temporarily intoxlcated by
eqdless violence he bad seen on
tc1evislon.
The trial also was the first in
Florida to be extensively covered
by courtroom cameras since the
state Supreme Court ordered a
one year cxpenmeot to see if
such coverage would dissupt
trials. Still cameras were also
allowedinthecourtroom
Presiding over the trial, Baker
blocked efforts to bolster the de-
fense theory with testimony by
television detective Telly
Savalas and a psychologist who
had studied television violence.
Zamora. a Miami Beach high
school student, admitted killing
his neighbor, 83-year-old l!;unor
Haggart.. when shes&Vprised him
and a pal as they ransacked her
home last spring. The other
youth faces a murder charge ~t
hasn •t bttn tried.
As during the trial, televbion
cameras were p~sent today to
record the events. But thi& time
the court was crowded with other
defendants and thefr lawyers
waiting for hearings.
...
Kayaker Dies;
FrienJ, ·Saved
SAN FRANCISCO .CAP> -Two
people who tumbled out of their
kayaks were recovered one
alive and one dead -by the U S
Coast Guard.
The Cout Guard said Sunday
the survivor would be taken to
the Army's Letterman Army
Ho$pital he~. IdenUUes were
withheld until their families
could be notilied.
The Jcayakers were reported
missing by a third k.ayaker who
spotted them in mid-anernoon
driftin8 out to sea ln l>rakes Bay,
whtcb ls oU Pt. Reyes National
Seashore. 30 mi north or San Franci5co.
SCHOO~ WJU also close Friday excesit for the lt~in•
Unlllcd SchoOt Dt.strtct.
Most buikJ wlll be open, but lndividUBls plannlna lO
transact business should cbeck with lhelt own banu.
Clliea that will conduct busltless as usual are Hunt-
inston 8each, Irvine, Lacuna Beach, Newport Beach, San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and Seal Beach.
COSTA MESA wlll cl°"e its city ornces Friday: Trash
pickup in CoGta Mesa wlU be the followillc d11 for those
scheduled to have trasll collected an Nov. ,1. FOWt.tatn
Valley city otfic~ also Will close Friday, bUt trUb will be picked up as usual. _
It was not a good weekend for
Costa Mesa motorist! trying to
use the Balboa Ferry, Newport
Beach police said today.
In two separate mishaps,
motorists lost control of their
vehicles and ended up in the
water alter crashing oU lhe
three-car boat.
F,....PageAJ
BOVAN •.•
posting a $750,000 bond.
The bond, the highest ever
pos ted in the history of the
Orange c.ounty Jail. comprised
the $500.000 bail on the murder
charge set in the Harbor Judicial
District Court and $250,000 on the
narcotics charge sel in the South
Orange County Judicial District
'Court,
The three other men charged
in the case remain jail~. They
are Gerry Peter Fiori. 41, 0£ 19822
Brookhurst St.. Huntington
Beach. Anthony Marone Jr., 23,
of 10121 Merrimac Drive. Hunt·
ington Beach and Raymond
Steven Resco, 28, of the same ad·
dress
Arraignment or the three was
continued from last Thursday in
order to give the court time to ap
point attorneys for them
A court spokesman said today
that David Brickner of Santa Ana
will represent Fiori, Ron Brower
of Orange will represent Marone,
and Tom Crosby of Newport
Beach will take on Resco as a
client.
Kulik is represented by Philip
DeMassaofSan Diego.
Municipal Court Judge Selim
Franklin said be would also hear
motions on Tuesday to reduce
ball.
At the same time, police are
• pressing their search for Kullk's
wife and his three business
partners named in murder con·
splracy arrest warrants issued
last week.
Still sought in the case a~e
Elsie Caban Kulik, 29. Joseph
Shelton Oavls, Joseph Gabriel
Fedorowska and Roy Chri&topber
Richard
All four were one-time mem·
bers of the Hare Krishna re-
11 gious sect.
Israelis Upset
JERUSALEM <AP> -Defense
Mlnister Eier Weizman says if
the PatesUtlians in southern
Lebanon continue to shell
northern Israel. the Israeli army
wllJ act "swtrtly and f undamC'll·
tal1y" to restore peace, Radio
Israel res>Qrted today.
' Police said the first mlsh.P oc-
curred late Fnday night when
James Hunt. 23, or 236 ~a
St., Costa Mesa and bts J 19'11
Y am~ha motorcycle pluni oft
theferry.
Police said Hunt ttlklrt~.~
injuries, ft1 the mllhap. ~
Patrolmen fished the motorcycle
out of the water.
The second accident oc ul'red
Sunday at 10 p.m. when a caJ"
driven by Vlrgmia Johnston, 43,
of 2111 Canary Driv~~ost~
plunged off the ferry. 1
Mrs. Johnston told polfce her
accelerator stuck as she was
drivina her tm Chevrolet Moote
Carlo onto the ferry and it ran off
the end of the boat and into the
water
Mrs. Johnston. who was alone
in the car at the time. ~rrted no
injur\es in the accident.
However, it took divers from
the Orange County Harbor ,
Patrol several tries early this
mornlnJ to lotate her car. They
said they found it off the gas dock
ea~ otthe ferry lane.
They said Mrs. Johnston ts ex-\
pected to hire a saJnge crew to
get the auto out or U~ water later;
today.
FroaPqeAJ
FLOODS •••
across the st.llle lrom the west •
Sunday. dumping as much as five •
inches of rain m six hours· Ume in
some areas.
Authorities in Rot Springs and
Ma rshall in Madison County re-
ported waler reached depths of up
to seven feet. in dly •t.reeU before
starting to r~ede, carrying
rnerchandisefromsmashedst.ore f
windows and leaving many bus.i·
nesses with lhick laye['S of mud on •
the floors.
Three ttouaes were destroyed •
north or Boone when tbe Tater Hill
Dam on Howard's Creek col·
lapsed and the 52-acre reservoir
emptied.
A bout 100 persons w~re
evacuated Crom homes near
Ai..heville where authorities said a
dam developed a crack. Adam on
Reems Creek in Madison County
~as reported broken.
The thunderstorms moved
eastward across Uie state Sun·
day. selling orr l~ser fl~ in
some Pied111ont and co~tat
areas. Ahaltdm:enpersonsh8dto
be evacua~ from Chocowinity
south oC Washington, N.C., and a
shopping center roof In GoldsbOro
was partially caved in by heavy
rains.
* * * F ...... r..,,eAJ
TULSA, Okla. <AP> -The stale
has charged two mm with assault.
and battery for allegedly lt1ssing
policewomen, but Tulsa's top
policewoman says the city pros·
ecutor's refusal to bring the
chargea himself has made women
omcerJ 0 the object of rldtcule."
'·A female officer is not a sex ~bJect. We have a tough enough
Job . . to have to pu\ up with
I ~
soF.'ething like thls is wrons . . .
so lnherenUy wronc," Sgt. Monte
P•terson said.
Her critJcism was aim«}d atCiiy
Prosecutor Jack Mor1an. who re-
fused to file charges alter
policewomen Perrf Burnett and
ftosie Nl\deau reported that ~ach
was kissed by a man she &topped
for questioning.
!Puppets for Moppets
"I don't Uilnk ttier~ as any law
against klsst.ng a police officer,"
he said. "Maybe they should as1t
the commissioners to 1et a law
passed covering it.·'
,Morian's ·•sewt atUtude bas
made ,.omen omcers the object
I Los AngeJ,es puppeteer Bill Souza visited
with V1sta Verde elementary school stu·
dents in' Irvine ,friday with puppet show
and instruction about how: to tnake their
own puppets. Souza works with Alysa
Rowlands, 7, <top, left) and Jennifer
Wuornos, 8, on making hand puppets, then
(below) 6-year-old Michelle Davis looks in
wonderment at one of Souza 's finished
pup~.A>uppeteer's visit wu pan o( in·
t.ersession activitiqs.
22,590 Voters
I l May Vote for
I Water Posts
By PIUUP ROSMARIN
OI U. 0•111 ,.._. s .. "
About 22,590 registered voters
are eligible to vote in Tuesday's
;Jrvme Ranch Water District
election, which will see two
board seals fiJ1ed by popular
choice.
A. E. Olson. counly registrar of
voters, is predicting that no more
than 10 percent of those voters
actually will visit the polls, which
wall be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
There are 18 candidates. nine
in each or tWQ divisions Division
1 includes northern Irvine and
part of Tustin. Division 2 com·
prises central and southern
Irvine
Until now, the JRWD board has
been compo.sed of persons elect-
ed by landowner vole.
The Irvine Company, by far
Irvine's largest landowner, has
thus controlled the board.
This year the district board
voted to reapportion its mem·
bersblp to reflect the increasinl
burden of water costs borne by
(See VOTERS, Pa1e AZ)
After Morsan refused to. pros-
ecute Jimmy M. Fortner, 24, and
Marshall W. Norman, 28, officers
Burnett and Nadeau persuaded
the stale district attorney's office ..
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Al
least 10 persons were wounded -
some seriously ~ in the French
Quarter and two other locations
near downtown today within the
period or an hour and a sus~l
was taken into custody. police
said. There were no repoJts of
deaths.
..Police would not say whether
one gunman shot all 10 victims
The victims, ~bQ. included at
least one woman, wer~ tak~ to
Charity Hospital, which then is-
sued an urgent plea for blood
donations
Police said the first reports or
gunfire occUrred at midmomi~
when 'woman and a man were
wounded In a city peig}\borhood
about two miles trQrn-downtown.
Shortly after, three men were
. wounded near a pedestrian area
known H Edison Puk n
Bourbon Stiett I.ti the French
Quarter .
Five more victims, the r sexes
not immediately known, were
shot In the office of MerJll Lynch,
Pieree, en~r. Ii Smith, •
doWntowf\ brokerag~ firm,
Policr !ta.id ' sUQeet w~s \alteq i ntc>custody outside the office. ..
Witnesses of the shootings ln
Policewoman Janice Beeler
. said, "This opens a Pandora·s
Box for remale offteen. Are we
supPQsei:l to be able to be pawed? •
ThislS.adOmeaningdecision. ·•
"the French Quarter said a gun-
man parked a gt'een car in the
midd~ of tratnc, marched into
the perk and .shot a man sitting
ona bench.
They said he.then placed a 8Wl
to Ute~ of a ~wt m n lyinJ on a bench Pd fired twice.
Ke th4?!1 ,t_1me bac:k out on
Bourbon ~ and shot a man
who was walkioi with a woman,
witnesses said. ·
Witnesses s~d the man got -
back into his car, apparenUy in·
tending to dJive way, but the traf·
tic was too heavy and he ned on
CS.SNIPER, Pate AZ)
Floodhig Kills. Nine
North Carolina T~ Begin Cleanup Work
MORGANTON, N.C. <AP> -
North Carolina mountain com·
munlties began cleaning up today
al r ft~ pawaep ~
raged tiirough ·doiens of towns
Sunday, killing nine people, car~
ryin1 off rnobTI omea nd
smashinl ousinessea. Sb orthoSe
killed were children.
The state~s fiood deatla toll rose
to nine when the Burke COunty
SherifC's Department reported
that the bodies orthree boys were
found early today in a rain·
swollen creek al Morganton and
another body was found in an
empty'one-story storaie building
HB Mother Held
In Death of Infant
The 23-year-old mother or an
11-month old infant was arrested
Sunday in <!onnection with the
death of the child over the
weekend, Huntineton Beach
police reported today.
Rosaria Cossio, who police believe is an IJlegal auen, was
jailed on suspi'cion of murdering
her son, Edgar Salsedo.
Miss Cossio lived with her son
and several other relatives in an
apartment at 16881 Nichols St.,
Huntington Beach, according to
police Sgt. Luis Ochoa.
One of the relatives reportedly
found the baby unconacious
Thursday. The infant was taken .
lo Paci!lca Hospital and later
ltansferred to Santa Ana-Tustin
Community Hospi~I.
TOCCOA, Ga. <At>>'-'thfifint
part of the cleanup was the WOJ"$l,
as rescue workers removed
bodies buried in mud and debris
after a dam burst, flooding the
Toccoa Falls Bible College
campus. ..We aaw one guy 1one crazy.
running out of the water in his un-
de r wear," said ambulance
RESCUE WORJ<EAS
CONTINUE SEARCH -M
driver Jerrell Beatty, one of the
first on the northeast Georgia
tlood scene Sunday. ..He just
kept going down the road. But we
coutdn 't ~ after blm. There
were the others."
By the "others" be meant the
bodies, so many he couldn't re·
member the nutnber. Workers
were 58Ckina additional bodies
a~d by midmorning today, tbe
toll st.ood. at 37 dead and 45 in·
jured. Twenty children were
among the victims.
"The tint was a boy, down in
<See DAM, Page A%)
OT
emov
Of Exec
Asked
By KATHY CLANCY ••a.. ........ Members ot lhe Orange County
Transportation Commiulon
agre 10 aoto court tOdaytn an
attempt to keep thoir llred n·
tieutlve diTector frQrn continUlftl
lo report for work.
But Carol Benson, who wasdll·
missed from her SJO,OOO·a-year
Job last week, said after today's
meeting she will continue to ""
port as usual because she has r.ot
yet received any legal cinforcea·
ble order to do otherwl&e.
Commissioners asked their al·
torney. Clayton Parker.
to seek a court order restraining
Mrs. Benson from entering com-
m assion offices in Santa Ana.
Parker told commissioners
Mrs. Ben,:,on has continued to re·
port to work, to give order.; to
employes and lo use commission
i.tationery and stamps.
Mrs. Benson told com·
m 1ssioners last week that she
would follow the advice or her al·
torncy and remain on the job
She contendl>d comm1ss1oners
were violating "due process" by
not permtttln" her a hearing with
her attorney and giving her an
opportunity to rcCute what sbc
said were alleged complaints
about hl·r performance
\l rs Benson maintained the
same posilton today saying, "I
ft'el ll IS In the best Interests Of
the comm1ss1on as well as myself
lo continue to function to the best
or my ab1ltly an carrying out the
duties of executive director."
"They denied me the right to
counsel m a public hearing ... ·•
she contmued. '
As for her use of commission
stamps, Mrs. Bl'nspn said todav
lhe comm1ss1on ran out of
stamps some timc ago and she
purc,ttased any stamps used with
her own funds .
Com mtssJOners \'Otect unan.
imously to dL">mass the Cormcr
\\'ash1n,l!lon. DC'. transportatwn
('Onsultan1 la!-.! "<·t•k sayan~ they
had "lost confulcnce" an her
Pl•rform<11it•e.
ParkN said he Y.ould be film~
a Cl\ ii lrt'!-.JKISSIOg ('Omplaml and
sc(•kmg <l r(•strainang order tn
Orange County Superior Court
tuda\
\1 rs Benson said her attorney
Y.Ould be advised of the pro·
cedure. She said her actions so
far havl' been upon her at-
torney's advice
Killec Dies
From Razor
Blade Cuts
•• I
RALEIGH, ..,; C. IA Pl A
~ii -year old convict who be~ged a
111ry to send him lo death row
after he pleaded bu11ly an the
slaying' or his ware died l'arly to
day after he was found in his cell
with apparently self inflicted
razor ruts. Central Prison
authorities said.
Officials said a note wa!\ found
beside Daniel Webster He was
rushed to the prison hospital,
\\here he died minutes later
/\l a news conference. prison
Warden Sam Garrison said
Webster apparently slashed
himself with a small inJector·
t \ p~ razor blade. He said
Webster used the blade for shav·
mg. and that 1t was not prison
pohcy to keep razor blades away
from death row inmates.
The blood ·Stained blade was
found beside the body, Garnson
said
··1 personally have known Dan·
ny Webster for 20 years," Gar·
rason !laid "Webster's re1icious
beliefs rul«t out blasphemy and
suicide.··
In the two-page note, Webst~r
said he was killing himself
because he couldn't eo on without
his wife, Garrison said.
ORANOI COMT
DAILY PILOT
•
o.lty ............ ..,. __
THEY'LL BE COMJNQ OUT OF THE CHUTE TUESDAY AT COUNTY'S FALL: FAIR
Loa Alamttoa Rec• Court• Stt• of Hor•• Racing, Other Actlvltt••
--~~~~~~~~~~~
E'rora Pag~ .4 I
FLOODS ...
swollen North Hominy Creek
west of Asbevalle and drowned
when one end of their mobile
home was torn from the ground by
rampaging Y.ater!>
In Polk County. another family
that lived m a mobile home tried
to escape waist deep flood
waters. Four-year-old Bryan
Scott Hartrell and disappeared
Michael Charles Townsend, 28.
or Boone, drowned while he tried
to use a log to cross a flooded ,
stn•am to safety near has home
The fia:,h floodrng was caui;ed
hv thunderstorms that moved
across the stale rrom the west
Sunday, dumping as much as five
111chcs of rain m s1:< hours' time in
somt' areas.
Authorities in Hot Springs and
Marshall m Madison County re·
ported water reached depths of up
to seven fed in city streets before
starting to recede, carrying
merchandise Crom smashed store
w mdows and leaving many busa-
nl'sses with thick layers of mud on
the fToor.>
Three houses were destroy~
north of Boone when the Tater Hill
0<1m on lloward 's Creek col·
lapst>d and the 52·acrc reservoir
l'mptaed
A bout 100 persons were
evacuated from homes near
As hev i lie where authorities !\aid a
dam dt>veloped a crack. A dam on
lh'cms Creek an Madison County
was reported broken.
1st Thoroughbreds
To Race at OC Fair
Thoroughbred horse racing
gets under way at noon Tuesday
at Los Alamitos Race Course as
the Orange County "Fall Fair·
opens for a 12-day run.
Carter bDeath'
Eyed by Amin,
NAIROBI, Kenya <APJ
Ugandan President ldi
Amin said today that
President Carter was con-
trolled by "Zionists and
imperialists" and could be
assassinated. ~
Amln spoke at a con·
Cerencc of Organization of
African Unity -OAU ·-in-
formation ministers. .. r !iympathize with
Prt•!-.1dl'nl Carter because
he as bcmg trapped and he
voulcl l>e aitsassinated
I lowcver, I am not against
Prt•s1d,mt Carter as such
nor the l' S. as a country ..
f'rOltt Page Al
SNIPER ...
f.oot
The brokerage firm :shoohngs
occurred about one-half hour
taler. . ..
The first thoroughbred horse
racing meet ln county h&Story
was approved Friday when a trio
or Los Angeles appellate court
.1udges overturned an earlier
court decision.
Eight thoroughbred races, two
quarter horse races and one Ap-
paloosa race will be featured dai·
Iv <noon to s p.m .> on Los
Ala,m aloli.' ~•lh·mile oval track. _
Because or the track ·s small
size, thoroughbreds will run by
the grandstands twice.
Fair ofl1cials arc pr~ieting a
daily betting handle or about $1
million and daily attendance or
11,000 people. .
For those. who don't fancy
horse racing, an old·style tent
fair with bomecrafl exhibits and
midway rides will be held in the
raceway's parking Jot from 10
a.m. to 10 p.m :ruesda,Y tl}rough •
Nov. 21. ·
The fair will oHcr popular en·
lertainment in the evenines and
many of these entertainers will
also offer shows in the late after·
noon for youngsters who drop by
after school.
Adm1ss1on lo all fair events,
excluding the races, as free A SI
parking fee will be charged.
Northbound travelers on the
San Diego Freeway should take
the Valley View exit in Cypress,
then proceed east to Katella
1\\ enue A left turn on t<atella
.... ill take motorists to lhe
raceway course.
murder of Step en ohn BoV
today. awaiting ~esull l
ballisUcs tests eond11cted on
eun they found In an Upper
Newport Bay mud(let.
A spOkesman for th~ crlmt la
run by the Orange Count
Sheriff's omce aatd today that
tests of the German·made t nun
automatic pistol hav• not been
completed yet. He declined to
speculate when thoSe tests would
be finishe<\, ~
The gun, which can carry eight
bullets in its clip and a ninth in its
chamber, was located by pOJ.lee
who wei'e' told where to l for-
tbe weapon. t
They believe it was the 1UJ1 A 0 used to pump nine fat.al shots in· hilln·
to Bov~ on Oct. 22. ccld S\lnday. \\f'Mn th car
Meanwhile. four men al'rested •hew driving hit a cars~
on charge:s of murder conspiracy f'9r a red Ught at .Jamboree Road
in the case are scheduled to re-ql MaoArthur BouJevard.
turn to municipal tourt Tuesday J
momtng to complete theli' ar· '~The coD.isiao pushed the rear·
raignment. eaded; car lntO a lblrd car stopped
Only one of the fQur, Alexander in fro•t.
Kulik. 28, has entered a plea or Doris J . Hollenbeck, $S, of San.
not guilty in the case. Kulik, who ta Aoa, was taken to Costa Mesa
wns originally arrested in Mis· Memorial Hospital, where she
sion Viejo on suspicion or was charged by IrvlDo Police
possession of more than a pound witb drunken drivUi&.
or nearly pure heroin, was freed Officers said she suffered a eut
from jail Thursday nlght Iller 19w,.etr lip and several broken ribl
posting a $750,000 bond. in the accldent. She later was
The bond, the hi&heat ever transferred to UC 1"ine Med.ital
posted in the history of the ~ter, wbere her eondiUoo t.o-
Oranee C®nty J.U. comprised_ day was d~crlbed a_s fair. _
the $500,000 bail on the murder !nte e>«upants of lbe other two
char1e set in the Harbor .JuC:lici&l cars were u.nlQjured, according
District Court and $250,000 on the to police reports.
narcotics charge set in the SOuth In the first car to be hit were ,,
Orange County Judicial DlStriff c:tnver Robert W. BOatman, 36, •
Court. -· and his 12-year-old son, Morgan, J
The three other men charged of~Beg90ia.,CoronadeJMar. 1
in the case rema,in jailed. They Boatman's car was propelled
are Gerry Peter Fiori, 41, of 19822 by the impact into a car driven
Brookhurst St., HunUngton by Rockwell K. Raun.
Beach, Anthony Marone Jr., 23, Passengers in Raun 's car were\
or 10121 Merrimac Drlve, Hunt· his wife. Verna L. Raun, 31, and a
ington Beach and Raymond couple, Michael P. and Karen F. 1 Steven Resco, 28, of the same ad· Nlcastri, aged 3' and 31, of 20212
dress. Flax, HunUngton Beach.
Arraignment of the three was
continued-from last ~6raday in
order to give the court time to ap-
point altomeysfortbem. S
A court spokesman said today ''10TER tha( David Brickner of Santa Ana T ' • • •
will reptesent Fiori, Ron Brower residential users.
The thunderstorms moved
eastward across Che state Sun
day, setting off lesser flooding in
some Piedmont and coastal
areas. A half dozen persons had to
be evacunted Crom Chocowinity
south of Washington. N C , and a
shopping center roof in Goldsboro
was partiany caved in by heavy
rains.
* * * E'rora Page A J
DAM •••
Joyce Saylan. a secretary at
the brokerage office said, "The
guy walked m the door. went
down the haJI ahd started shoot·
ing. He got a customer and two
account executives. Everybody
thought il was a joke with a cap
pistol because at was so quick ...
Ferry Mish~ps Hit
2 Mesa Motorists
The Cive-membeT bo3'rd wm be
expanded to seven witb this elec·
Uon. Candidates ror Division 1
are: Lf
-Sales enaineer Ernie
Machado, county admlnistraUve _
analyst Dorothea R. "Dottie"
Blaine, teacher Jackie Boynton.
electronics engineer BU Butts'
and altomey Robert B. Schoen·
three or four feet of mud, · Beat·
tv said "From then on 1l wa5
mostly young kids ..
··You know. this as bad,
soml'thing real bad. when the
voung kids come 1n,' he said
later
"You hold the little baby in
~·our arms and you think about
thl• life he hasn't lived You thank
that you are just 24, but you have
at least lived a life
·'This should happen to you
before 1l happens to this baby."'
Another victim "was a lady, 73
years old. Her head was caught
between two trees. They had to
cut them away with a saw. She
was dead."
It took 20 minutes from Beat·
tv"s arrival for most or the other
emergency vehicles. represent·
ing 20 emergency agencies. to ar·
rave.
"Everyone just came. The:;
d1dn 't have to be asked," said
Sheriff Don Shirley.
Man Forced
Into Holdup
MURFREESBORO, Tenn
IA P > -A college football player
and his roommate forced a
Tullahoma man to attempt a
bank robbery because he gave
the athlete a bad check as pay.
ment for homosexual favors,
police said
Lt Jim Cook of Murfreesboro
police said Michael Harris, 24, of
Tullahoma, was arrested at
Murfreesboro Bank and Trust
Company, and charged with at·
tempted larceny
Cook snid Kyle Norris. 19. a
freshman linebacker for Middle
Tennessee Stale Uni\•ersity, and
his roommate. Fred HolliCield.
18. were charged with second·
de~ree buq~lary, attempted ex·
tortion and kidnapping. Harrts is
a graduate of MTSU, located in
Murfreesboro.
Police said the Cirst mishap OC·
curred late Friday night when
James Hunt. 23, or 236 Pomona·
St . Costa Mesa and his 1977
Yam aha motorcycle plunged off
the ferry.
Police said Hunt reported no
injuries In the mishap. Harbor
Patrolmen fished the motorcycle
out of the water.
The second accident occurred
Sunday at 10 p.m. when a car
driven by Virginia Johnston, 43,
of 2711 Canary Drive, Costa Mesa
plunged off the ferry.
Mrs. Johnston told police her
accelerator stuck as she wa,s
driving her 1973 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo onto the Cerry and it ran oft
the end o( the boat a,nd into the
water.
Mrs. Johnston. who was alone
in the car at the time, reported no
injuries m the accident.
However, it took divers Crom
the Orange County Harbor
Patrol several tries early this
mornini;: to locate her car. They
Students Feeling Pinch
Many at Sa4dkback in Financial Need
said they round it orr the gas dock
eastoftheferrylane.
They said Mrs. Johnston is ex·
peeled to hire a salvage c~w to
gel the auto out of the water later
today.
It was not a good weekend for
Costa Mesa motorists trying to
use the Balboa Ferry, Newport
Beach police said tod%'.
In two separate mishaps,
motorists lost control or their
vehicles and ended up in the
water aner crashing oft the
t~ree·car boat.
:DOOR KNOCKS
DOOR KNOCKER
LEWISTON, Maine <AP) -
Door·lo:.door campaigning can
be rough on a guy. Alk L~er
G. Biron.
Biron, running for mayor.
showed up al a "Mee~ the Can·
didates Night" with a swollen
right eye and four stitches.
The candidate said be had been
campaiarung door-to-door when
hit on the bead by a door opened
for him by an aide.
burg. '
Administrator Ronald E.
Shaver, corporate financial
analyst Peer A. Swan, site plan·
mng manager Robert H. "Bob"
Reed and sales engineer William
H. Epplng'er.
Candidates for the Division 2
seal are:
-Wayne A . Clark <an ex·
ecuUve aide to supervisor
Laurence Schmit). consu1tin~
engineer Joseph S. Doraey, bus•·
ness executive Robert A. Donath.
businessman R. Patrick Donnel·
Jy and regional sales manager
Andrew J. May.
-Realtor·associate Frank W.
·Boyd, enelneer /contract ad·
mfntstrator Julius L. Bognar.
consulting engineer David L.
Hansbrough and economist
Charles W. Uuegy.
Teachers Retum
OAKLAND <AP> -Sporting a
pay raise and a promise of am·
nesty, public school teachers ln
Fremont returned to dassroom
duty todll.Y for the first time tn
three weelts as a labor dispute
wassetUed.
81DENNIS MeLBLLAN or .. ...,.....,. ........
.. .. A H1'tTftl portrait u to &Jae ~·
publfcft• datobotd t.Mat,a RoU.Ros,eceu . to .ca ~"....:&equjT• ~ • • JUI.
In lllZS Georae HurTell, a YOWll Lei Anaelea paloter-turned· pboto1rapher. was l.otroduced to
.silent ICftell star. Ramon Novuzo
who wanted new portratta taken of
blmaelf.
Flattered at the request, Hurrell sbo~ the actor -dressed io a
peasant tunic and holding a sword-
. 1tanClill6 ln tbe woods next to a wb.1~
· stauton.
Novarro, ecstatic over the unusual·
ly 11amorous pictures, show~ them to Norma Shearer, then MGM'sretp.
lng ac~ and wife of studio chief lrvtn1 Tbalberg.
' She wanted pictures to prove to her·
husband tbal she could be a "Jirea"
for a new moVie role belna cast. Hur-rell, abe wu certain, could do the trick.
"I made the pictures of her IC>Oklna isexy," recalls Hurrell, "and she cot
t.bepart."
The photographs, in fact, were such
a hJt at MGM that Burrell was called
and asked ti he'd like to run th~
studio '1 ~· aaUery.
"AT ftaS'r I was a little hesltet,
· being the smart little punk that I
was," says Hurrell, a colorful dresaer
who sports ~cray goatee. "But J de-
cided tt woum be a 1o0ct thlng, and I'd
be slloOtlitg all tbe Hollywood stars."
Hurrell wu rlpt about that: Jn the
enautnr <iO years he's photographed 1virtuaJ.1' etery D)ajor Hollywood star,
rrom Jean HarJow to Marte Osmond.
Hurrell's innovaUve use. of ll&ht and
(
!
'
Picture d Bette Davis in 'All This And Hea~en. Too.' ·~he loved to pose.·
,. _, ~J -•
says this buyer. 'Adults
• AU wcwk no plf3 mu• eome people -1 11,but -Ian McDermott. H1I work la ill~ay.
McDermott. called a ''.t9Y ambulador to the
odd, .. .Lt a bMYd.Air: I ,New :York·
based F .A.O. Schwan toy store and 1Pi:ftcli most of
his time buY1nl and talldnt atiout toyt,
A former actor and musical comedy atar, the
• British-born McDermott believes that tov• are a
lifetime love becaw.e "adult.a never loae their
childhood interest. We're all basicallf children at
heart."
That McDermott loves his job ls eTideot. At the
m ere mention of the word tor, b1a eyes aparltle and
a slight smile begins to form. H• seems to be
transported to another wort •fantasy world.
HIS INVOLVEMENT With to19 ls ll'onlc, since
be left one make-believe world I« anotbv. He bad
planned to have a career on st.ace but found op-
portunities on Broadway scarce.
•'I took a temporary aelllq ~with Scbwan lS
years ago," McDermott sald. ' J 1la10d on .aod on
because things looked betterlntoys.
''It developed into a career which now sends me
ba~k to Europe twice a year and occuk>nally to
South America."
He also has visited every eontlnent in the world
in his search for unusual toys and even attended
fairs in Eastern Bloc countries.
On one of his trips t.o We&t Germany, the Steiff
Co. noted for it.a plush anlmal.s, used his champion
Wheaten Terrier Jason. u a model for one of its
new toys
McDermott litarted as a s.iesman In Schwarz's
bo6k department, taking time off periodically to
audition, but he found that he gradually began to
know the whole store and what to expect when a
customer came tn.
THE F1FfH Ave. shop, where be becan. is ·:a
•
very ••citinC ltoc'e' to work ln," be added. "You
never know who rnlgM be walJdn& ln the door, trom
Hollywood at.an to famous diplomats and royalty. •l•
He wa new to New York at the limtt as we l
as new to Jl'ttt!rAvmn'lt71G'"Ult uph1q:star
WH alar-struC:k by tbe Slamor.
"There ts a c«taln kind of excitement that
• >Fifth venu. eoer..,..-youeannot•9" '
noted. • McDermott bectns bis seJrch for quality toys at
the European toy fairs, which follow each other for
the convenience or the buyers.
He first goes to Britain, then to Italy, Nuren-
burg, Pari11 and Valencia. ''I look for unusual items,
but they have to be tbe best quality, irreapecUve of
the price," he explained.
CERTAIN COUNTRIES used to be noted for
certain kinds of toys but most countries now make
all kinds, Mcl>ermotl said. "Germany, for exam-
ple, used to be famous for wooden handmade toys
-butnoweveryone's ln the act." ..
Toys from Czechoslovakia and Poland are in·
teresting, he said, but "they know not.bing about
packaging" and many arrive broken.
McDermott said toys from various countries
"do have an identity," but generally because
"graphics dirfer from country to country.
"It's easier to spot an American toy. American
toys are much more streamlined."
McDermott said plush toys are the most
popular of any kind in the Schwan sto"', and that
within that category there is a hierarchy.
"Bears are first. Horses are secohd, cats are
third and mice fourth."
His store, which has opened a branch in South
Coast Plaza, even offers llfe-sb:ed plush animals for
up to $1,000 each
"WE DON'T SELL them every day, but people
do buy them for very special occasions or for
groups. Elizabeth Taylor recently bought a life· sized giraff~ and had it delivered to ber New York
hotel. I assume it was for the children, but we don't
ask questions."
Time for Retirement?
D E A R A N N Your latest, ho~ver, won't face lhe wall .when
LANDERS Have you is the pits. 1t seems hung "properly."
considered ea rl y you've gone haywire on The real solution
retirement? IC not, may I how to bang toilet paper would, of course, be to
suggest it? I think Who cares, except a few use white tissue paper
scnahly 1s creeping up on neurotic lunatics? It's and hang it any way you
you enough that you printed darn well please. Of
I almost quit reading that letter from some course that would delight
vour column after that dude whose uncle tbe environmentalists
ridiculous poll you did Attn happened to manage whom you insulted
last year on whether or Latt_.__ . hotels in Switzerland. recently by saying that
not parents would have ueT3 And then you printed they have overdone a
had their children if they another letter from an good thing 81\d now we
had it to do over again. idiot who advises toilet are having an energy
Then you bad the gall to "research." For some paper manufacturers to problem. 1 mention the
try to defend that crazy m asocbistic reason. I put the print on the other e n v i r on men la 1 is ts
~question by calling it continuetoreadyou. side -,so the design because they claim that
white toilet paper causes
Georde Hurrell ~~'s ~~1~~~s~~:r:J • • • e . ~~f~t?~:0::~idth~e~!
<From Page Cl>
p.m. Wednesday to autograph copies or their book.
IT IS Fl1TING that Laguna Beach
iJ the site for a Hurrell exhibit. It was
in the art colony that the young
Chicago painter lived after arnving in
California in 1925
He quickly discovered, however,
that he could make more money with
portrait photography than painting
and soon set up his studio in Los
~ngeles.
• that. of course, was abandoned
dnce begot the call from MGM.
l Hurrell spent four years there before
8penlng bis own studio again on the
Sunset Strip, promptine virtually all
the other major studios to request his
$ervices.
today's stars?
"It's kind of bard to talk about to-
day and yesterday and make com·
, partsons because if you take these
present penonalities it would sound
like sour grapes. .
"Take that Farrah Fawcett. I had
three months with her on 'Myra
Breckenridge.· She was a nice, pretty
gal and sweet then~he probably still
is-but comparing her to any of the
great ones of the past she's ... "
Hurrell, pauses, shaking hia head.
" ... She's just a pretty glrl who made
it, I guess. That's all I can say a~t
her."
THE VETERAN PHOTO·
GRAPBER, who is still busy
shooting advertisements and oc-
casional movie and TV shows, views
Hollywood as a whole new ballgame
today.
recycle your column.
Signed -D.R.T. FROM
WAKESFIELD,
NEBRASKA.
OEAll D.R.T.: I am
properly chastened by
your tboqhdw leUer. I
have DO plans to i'ed.r&at
the momeat, but eae
more lett,r oD to Ile&
paper m81 well lend me
'round the bend Pd t11ei
will take me oil the job
with a baUerfly net.
CONFIDENTIAL to.
Why the Icicles?:
Lonefellow said it best:
"Every man has his
secret sorrows which the
world knows not.
Oftentimes we call· a
man cold when be is only
sad." Despite working with the greatest
names in movie history, the photo-
1rapher says he was never star
struck "I don't know why-probably
because I was too darn arrogant and
and conceited myself."
He used'to have an entire day for
shooting a star and wo\lld use a
large studio cameta, oftentimes with -----------
Actually. he says, most of the stars
were lnendly toward him. Two he
especially enjoyed were Clark Gable
and Jean Harlow.
el a borate lighting effects.
"Now they can't tlve you five
minutes and you shoot existing light.
That's why you've got to use a motor
drive because you've IQt to. chase them.··
According to Hurrell, wbo belPed
• "OH, SHE WAS a wonderful gal," define the word. glamor is a Joet com-
he says. "She was so much fun-mocuty in today's fJl~>Vies. ·
always laughing. She'd go into this "It's my theory that they loat a
posing thing with so much l{USto and great deal of interest when they let ~nthusiasm. She was just a bie. happy glaJllOr go down the drain. Today it's
Wedding and mgaoe·
m~t annovnument• ""' on Su:oday in the O<Uly
PfU>t. Form.a are avoilable
at oU DoU11 Pilot of fjcn or bJ1 colling the Features
Dej>artmbat, 642-4321.
To avoid duoppotnt-.
mmt, protpecfftje bricks
are reminded to have their
wedding atorlea, with a
ANN LANDER~ I HOROSCQPE
. l
tan McOermott,
buyer, for
F..A.O.
Scltwarz:
'&JAis are
first,· horses
are second;
CBt! are third
andmfce foutth.,
t
( ] Cancer. Facts
PllbliShed
• .1. SCOR PIO <Oct. NEW YORK, N.Y. -Of tho two moat
TUESDAY.NOY.I 23 Nov. 21): Family widespread major cancers,' one· ls laraely
BySYONEVOMARR sefrtl Is discussed. preventable and the otbet hl1hly cutable;
A R I ES C M a r c b Confidential matters are declares the American Cancer ~l•t.Y'1 111'8
21·Aprll 19): Emphasis viewed Crom standpoint edition of Facts & Figures. i.
on contract, marital ofsecurity. Build, repair, It says 80 percent or lung cancer could be
status, public relations. cemontfriend.ship. prevented by the elimination of cigarette
getting an earful of views SAG,.l'!'TARIUS <Nov. smokine, and nearlftwo-tblrdl Of eoloil·rec:ttml ·
opposite6 your own. 22·Dec.21): Smphesison cancer paUenta saved throqb early di~
C aprtcorn, Cancer desite'-friend.Ship, wish and prompt ~atment. About 102.000new cues
individuals fi1ure fuHlllment ~ kno..., of each OC these cancers a.re expeded ln the
prominenUy. difference betweeD comlng year. Altoaet.t(U, ln 11'11 abOiit '100.000
TAUBVS (April reality and illusion. peoplewillbed.laposedutiavmacancer.
20-May 20): Accent on Pleasant drhm il fine, The 1978 Facts le Ftau..-, recQp1*ed as•
low-key approach. diet, butdon'tbankocdt. standard reference work in it.a fteld, presents a
vitamins, .nutrition, CAPRICO&N <Dec. compreben.Slve picture of cancer to the UD.lted
resotuUoos conceraln•~ 22·Jln. 19): Business, States~-
health, recreaUon,~rk. p r o d u c t l o n , The new edition cleartt demcmti'ateS •bY
Youarefmishlngaeycle. advaneement -these there i1" such overwhetmlng ~ about
GEMINI <May 21-June are featured. One in cancer today: It claims more lives than any
20); )IJgbllahl creativity posit.ion .)JJ pull strt.ngS other illnessexcepttieartdlseaie. aridkilbmare
-be ready for change, will belP, prOvided you children between the •I• of I and 14 than any
t r a v e 1 , v a r i e t y • a s s u m e a Cl d e; d other disease <although childhood cancer la not
l .,_ t • n s t f i e d responslbllity. · comD'lon).
relationships. Leo, AQ-UA&IUS <Jan. "Nearly ss mlllion Americans now Uvin& Aqu~m persons figure 20-Feb. 1$): Finish will eventually have cancer," the handbook
lnpicture. rather than initiate predicts.
CA II( CE R <June project&. ~t linter on,..------------------
21-July 22): Security, pulse of public
long-term Investments, P.I SC E 8 (Feb.
emotional respons~ are 19-March 20>: You're
pert of your personal able to clarify a puule -
scen•rio. One you have l n v o l v e 1 m on e y ,
known wants more than a reputation, member of
noddlngacqualntance. opposite sex. Sc0rplo,
LEO <J.uly 23·Aua. Leo persons llaure ln
2 2 > : H i g h l l e h t aceoarlo.
intellectual curiosity, If No•. 8 Is 1oar
versatility -make blrtbday, you are
Inquiries, persist until dedicated, forceful,
answers are obtained. vibrant, cr:eatlve,
Gemll1l. Sag'ittarlus comp•tltive and
filure prominently -so st.ubbom. Capricorn.
doesnumber"J." Cancer persons play
VIRGO <Aua. 23-Sept. lmpottant roles in your
2 2 > ; A c c e n t on Ufe. Emotiollaf wound.
collections, payments., suffered earlltr thta
budget considerations year. wlll beat. This
a n d p e r • o n a 1 month you will b6 rid of a
possessloos. Be •J*:lllc burden. •
about details~ tbOrouth ---------approachla necessary.
UBaA (Sept. ~-Oct.
22>: Dig for lntormauoo.
Obtain hl.nt from Vireo
m sage. Get views on
r~ord. You aatn allies.
Membtr of oppGsite sex
jsdrawntoyou. '
...
.. ., . ~ ..
. tld." · all blood and thunder. 'l'here's no Jove
Gable was mucb the same. "He was and romance and tender qualltlea to black-ilftd.whfte o~ of ................... _________ ~ ... ~-~-.. the brtM or of Chi ~.
to the F'fOtllrlS Dfporf•
ment one t.0ttk Mf or• tha
a very happy man. Llk• Harlow, he life today. ·
was ded.lcattd to hi. cateer. But he "They're all t.rYlal to do somethlnl
was alwaya laucMne and tiarinc blg and smastilnj. Well, MU, life lan't
smashing. It's Just a tender existence
think of wben it's &ood."
weddlng.
..
TULSA, Okla. ~P) ~Tbestate
' has charged two men With assault
and battery for alleeedly klssine
policewomen, but Tulsa's top
policewoman says the city pros·
ecutor's refusal to bring tfie
charges himself has made women
officers "theobjectgf ridic~le."
"A female officer is not a sex
object. We have a tough enough
job . . . to have to put up with
somethl,n& Uke thli ls wrooc ..•
so Inherently wrong," Seti Monte
Peterson said.
Her criticism was aimed at City
Prosecutor Jack Morsan, whOre·
fused to file charaee after
policewomen Perri Burnett and
Rosie Nadeau ~rted that ea h
was kissed by a man she stopped
for questiooing.
Winter Wonderland· ...
I
.
Old Man Winter left his mark in an early
trek across the Sierra over the weekend,
and it was a welcome sight at the Donner
Summit ski lodge off Intetstate 80 where
several inches of the white stuff were de· posited.
! Newport Cops
Study Bovan
'Murder Gun'
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
011MO-..y ...... s1.a"
Newport Beach police con·
Unued their complex probe or the
murder of Stephen John Bovan
today,. awaiting results or
ballistics tests conducted on a
gun they found in an Upper
Newport Bay mudflat.
A spokesman for the crime lab
run by the Orange County
Sheriff's Office said today that
tests of the German·made 9 mm
automatic pistol have not been
completed yet. He declined to
speculate when those tests would
be finished.
The gun, which can carry eight
bullets in its clip and a ninth in its
chamber, was located by police
who were told where to look for
the weapon.
They believe it was the eun
used to pump nine fatal shots in·
to Bovan on Oct. 22.
Meanwhile, tour men arrested
on ch~rges or murder conspiracy
in tbe·case are scheduled to re·
turn to munlc;ipal court Tuesday
morning to complete their ar·
raignment.
Only one or the four, Alexander
Kulik, 28, bas entered a plea of
not guilty in the case. Kulik, who
was originally arrested in Mis-
s loo Viejo on suspicion or
possession of more than a pound
of nearly pure heroin, was Creed
from jail Thursday night after
, <SeeBOVAN, PageA2>
• • P'lve Laguna Beach realdenb
are seeking three seats on the
Laguna Beach Cotmty Water Dis·
trict Tuesday, including three in·
cum bents
Seats are currently held by Al
Hastie, 68, who has been a board
member for 20 years: Bruce
Scherer, 42, an appointed incwn·
bent who joined the P.anel In April
1976, and Louis Zitn1k, 5'. also an
appointed incumbent, named to
the board in 1975.
Joseph Shea, 45, is see.king his
first term on the board, which
serves mor~ than 7,000 water
users in La~a Bea(h. Emerald ·
Bay and environs. .
Also competing for a seat ls
Maggie Meggs, an Art Colony
housewife who frequently at-
tends water board meetings.
And while there is no contest
for seals on the South Coast
County Water District, tbat diS·
trict is seeking voter approval for
14 Seeking 6 !Seats
On Water Board
MORGANTON, NJ;. <AP) -
Nortb Carolina mou_htaln com-
m unities beean cleal)lng up today
after storm-spawned floods tbat
ra&ed throuih dOZLf\S ol towns
Sunday, killin& nite~people, CU'"
rying off mobile homes and
smashing busineuea. Six or tbole killed wereohlldren . ......__ __ __.__~
The state's ffood death toll rose
to nine when the Burke CGU.Qly
Sheriff's Departme"t reported
that the bodies ol three boys were •
found early \oday in a rain-
swollen creek at Morganton and
another body w\s ·round in an * . *
0 .. 1., ,, ... SUH , .....
SAN CLEMENTE AWAROEO AAA SAFETY CITATION
Chfef Brown Given Award by Barbara Hende,,.on
I
San Clemente Wins
MA Sa/ ety Award
San Clemente ranked In the top
two percent of cities Its site na-
tionwide in an Automobile Club
analysis of 1976 traffic death and
in1ury records and safety pro
grams .
Emmett Lindquist, safety con-
sultant to the Los Angeles office
of the American.Automobile A s-
~oc1ation. said San Clemente's
outstanding record earned the ci-
ty an AAA safety citallon, pre-
sented recently to Police Chief
Gary Brow')_.
San Clemente has had no
pedestrian deaths in three years • Lindquisl sa1d. '
.. With 9 ,000 pedestrian
casualties annually across the
country, San Clemente can be
proud it hasn't contributed to the
problem."
Lindquist also praised the
police Clepartment ·s "Officer
Bill" program. which makes
police officers available to taft to
school classes in the community.
·'I personally have known Dan·
ny Webster for 20 -years," Gar-
rison said. "Webster's religious
belieCs ruled out blasphemy and
suicide."
In the two-page note, Webster
said he was killing himself
bee a use be couldn't go cm without
hls wife, Garrison sa.id. The
warden. who has worked for 20
years al the maximum security
prison., said Webster wrote that
he had commuhicated with G6d
and begged for forgiveness for all
the trouble he had caused.
"God has spoken to him,:: Gar-
rison said. . · '
Webster tfad speqt 22 years in
'prisoo., on and off, for vari.Qua.of-
fenses.
. "
to escape w~i•t-deep flood
waters Four-1ear.old B_r1an
Scott HartfeH aiiddi!Jappe red.
Michael CharlH Townsen•, 21.
of Boone, dtow-ned while ht tried
to use a 101 to cross a flooded,
stream toaafetynear hla home.
The nash fioodinl was caused
by thunderstorms that rnoved
across the state from ttie west
.Sunday, dumping as much as five
inches of rain Jn alx hours· time in
somea~as. .
Authorities In Hot Sprln& I.ltd
Marshall in Madison Counly r..
ported water reached de,,UiJ ol up·
to seven leet. Jn city atreetii' btfwe
starUnc to recede, carryint
merchandileCrotoamuMdatore
wlndows and leavln& many busi·
nesses with thick l~era of\nud on
Ute floors.
Three houses were CfesLtoyed
north of Boone when tho Tater ff.ill •
. Dam on dloward's Creek col\
lapsed and the S2·acre reservoir .
emptied.
Students Feeling P~ch
A bout 100 _persons were
evacuated from hotnts neal'-Asb~vUle where aulhorltlet said a
dam developed a crack. Adam on
Reerns Creek in Madison County
was repott.ed broken.
The thunderstorms movt1d
eastward across the stale Sun·
day, setting ore lesser floodine in
some Piedmont and coutal
areas. A half dozen persons had lo
be evacuated from Chocowinity
south of Washington, N.c .. and a
shopping center roof lf\ Gold1boro
was partially caved in by heavy
rains.
_Many at Saddl~back in Financial Need
By WILLIAM HODGE
01111e oa11, ,., ... i~••
While most people don't view
south Orange County as an
economically depressed area,
Saddleback College's financial
aids officer says there are a
significant number·of communi·
ty college students· in financial··
need. ·~
"The common misconception
is that community colleee slu·
dents do not have a need because
they're Ji\ling at home," Mary
Long explains. "111 fact, many
families in our area aren't able to
support the additional time away
Crom employment necessary to
attend classes.•·
Mrs .Long believes the size of
lhe college district is something
not orten considered in asscssmg
Saddle back stucJents ·needs.
"IC you cover that much area
(376 square miles ), you're going
to have a broad spectrum or
socio-economic groups," she ex· plains.
For the 1977-78 school year
alone, Mrs. Long expects the col-
lege to receive about $22S,OOO in
student aid.
And for three programs in-
cluded in that fieure, Mrs. Lone
exp~ls to request $122,000 for lhe
1978-79 school year, up from the
current year's $29,000.
"l think we have justiried that
· kind of need based on our current
financial need data," &be says.
Current Saddlebacr College
financial aids programs include:
Basic Education Opportuni-
ty Grants <BEOG). a federal pro-
gram available to any sludent lo
Tax Break Denied
SACRAMENTO CAP) An al·
Ciliate of the Rev. Sun Myuna
Moon's Unl(ication Church has
been dented property tax reemp·
lions (or threfl or Its propi!rties.
The affiflate' fs New Education
Development Systems Inc.,
which i~ headquarter d in
Berkeley.
DAILY PILOT
oa#v Pli.t $left,. ....
COL.LEGE AIDS OFFICER Marylong .
defer educational costs including
rent, transportation and books.
-Colleie Work Study, a
federal program providing on-
campus employment subsldlzed
by the covemment for needy stu· '
dents. .
-National Direct Student
Loan proeram CNDSL>. a federar
proaram offering atudentS low
interest loans that dQ not begin
accrui.Jig interest until gradua.
lion.
-California Student Aid Com-
mission scholarships and grants.
-Saddleback College
scholarships.
In most cases, according to
Mrs. Long, these proarams re,
quire enrollment in six units of
colleae credit. satisCactorr prog-
ress. toward an educational goal
and a demonstrated fJnandal
need.
MotlwrHeld
In Beating
"We're ltying lo reach SW· lJeath o~ Tot
dents who don 'l realiie they may 'I
be elii:lble for financial aid," · Mrs. Long says. "Guidelines in · The 23-yell!'·old mother or an
some programs have been 11-mont.h_old mtant Y"as a~rer.led
broadened because veteran ·s', Sunda_y 1n connec~1on with the
benefits, for example, have not death of the c~1ld over the
kept pace with inflation.·· we~kend, Huntinaton Beach
Jo'or some financial aids pro-pohce reported today. .
grams. students can apply up to ~osaria Cossio, who police
Mar. 15, 1978 to receive aid for ~e.heve IS an . U_teaat a11en, was
the current school year. Jaded on susp1c1on of murdenn1
And the opening date for ber~on. Eda.ar~alsed~. .
1978·79 scholarship applications Miss Cossio hved with h~ son
1s Dec 1 and several other relatives m an
· · apartment at 16881 Nichols St.,
Apparently, Saddleback's Huntington Beach, accordinf to
scholarship program ls among police Sgt. Luis Ochoa.
themo$tpopularforrno[ald. One or tho relaUves reportedly
"We were only able to. serve found the baby unconscious
about half or our schc>larshlp al>' • Thursday. The infant was ta.ken
plicants this year," Mrs. ~ lo Pacifica Hospital and later
explains. "We had a great many transferred to Santa Ana-Tustin
qualified applicants we didn't Community Hospital.
have scholarships for." The infant died in the Santa
Next week, the financial aids Ana hospital at2:02 a.m. Sunday.
office will spon,Sor a "scholarship An autopsy revealed the infant
week" to soHcit scholarships had suffered stun fractures,
from area businets'ts. broken legs and a broken arm,
''We've dooe very well bl ln· policesaid. •
creastne tbe program over the Miss CO.Sio wu arrested al
past few yean tiut we need more her ho~ at 9:30 p.m. Sunday,
donorS," Mil. I..Oril says. "We're She rem ins ill Huntin1too
hopina the ~omrnunitr will con-BeacbJailinlieuof$250,000ba1l.
linuetosupportttieprogra01." U .S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service UNS> of.
ftcials said her immieration
status will be ascertained durin1
the criminal court proceedings.
If the woman is fouod to ~an
Ulegal allen. deportation pro·
ceedings could not occur unUl the
arhnlnal cue acainst het la com-
pleted, INSofliclals 1a d~
'
After two years of quarrelin1
over the c05t breUdO\rt'n of a city
sewage treatment plant ex·
pansion program. Sin luan
Capistrano coancllmtn creed
receotfy to turn qv the r pr
facility's owners.hip tO an area c:~unc:ilmen week tbe
waste tieatmenl ~eJley. s Otild ct on th d tramfi F~llowing • closed•door,. • 'Th~y <SERRA> contempt it;
sea ton, councilm voted four to somelrlnd otJegal action ~c_.inu
zero to ti::anisf er their gewag • the city if tbere ls o aCUClft ••
treatment plant deeds rtO lhe Thorpe warned councilmen ' Southe~t Regional Reclamation • Prior to the closed~door
A uthoritr <SERRA>. Coun· session, councilmen were' pre_.
cilman R1chard McDowell ·was ·pared to accept the audit ud
absent. · withhold ap(>roval of \he deeds
A second action requested by trans(er ..
city stalt -the approval or an FolJo~i~g Ttiorpe·s ~arksf
audit aettlng S~n Juan's portion and the so-called exe·~utlvel
of t~e expansion costs al $1. 7 s~ssion with CitY A\ttotney James
mllhon ..... was deferred by coun. Okazak~ councilmen voted to
cilmen and. will be decided al a transfer the deeds and withbol
future meeting. approval of the audit.:
The troublesome aewa1e treat·· •
ment plint issue began In 1973
when councilmen· aareed to ex·
pand the f acllity's capacfty to
nine million gallons per day
der a Joint powers •ll'1?emen~
The Santa Margarita and
Moullon·Nigu_el Water DJstrict.s
and the Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach Sanltary Dis·
~ricts were the other members or
lhe SERRA joint powers uency.
The 1973 agreement req\ilred
San Juan to transfer ownership
of the treatment plant to SERRA
upon completion of the expanaioo project
But, according to San Jua4
Public Works DJ~tor WlJliam
Murphy, when the project was
completed in 1975 San Juan dis-
agreed with the cost breakdo\vn.
"San Juan Capistrano did not
agree with the final cost alloca·
lion," Murphy said today. "Their
concern was with their percen·
tage: they <San Juan> telt it
should be less."
San Juan's disagreement
Health Aides
For Schools
A
CR VA&Y IN LENGTH. price and style.
inoo• the moet popular are:
.. -~lllibbean cruises, lalti.DI one or two wMka.
This 1S where tho acUon ta ln the cruise lnduat.ry
neht now," said one spokesman.
-Tbeme cru es, bullt a.roUnd a single subject.
You can play bridle with the experts, induJie your last~ tor 1ourmet c0okln1 and study everythln1 from
ancient bl.story to modern jazz. ~ _____ ...;..• _....._.. "Fly ·C ruises,"
( coiuSUMER) which sail fro~ a foreign '" port. Many crwse lines of·
fer a packaae iochldiog
the crulJe itself, plua reduced-rate transportation to
and fromtbe~epolnt.
JNDUSTaf SPOKESMEN SAY CRUISE ships
wiJl CA'trY. more than one million passengers this
year. 'lb~ HY aborter cruises and fly.cruises have
made vacations at-sea more popular among people
with a limited amobnt of Ume and money . •
William Armstronc. a spokesman for Cruise
Lines IntemaUonal Associelion, whose 24 members
account for 90 percent of the market. said the
typical passenaer can expect lo spend from $80 to
$120 a day, not eountir)g tips. If you're ·comparing
that figure against a vacation on land, you should
remember that the total ioch.ade4 )'our accommoda·
tion, your transportaUoo, your meals and )'6ur en·
tertillnment
Virta.allJ all cn11se abips todey offer one-class
service . .\ll pa&&en&erJ bav~the run of the entire
ship and facOiUes and select their food from the
same menu.
TllE DIFFERENCE IN PIUCE, tberefon!, ~
pends mainly on the location and me of your cabin.
An outside cabin with portholes will cost more than
an inside one. You also will pay more for a cabin
located in the middle of the ship where there is like·
ly to be less mollon .
The average crui!ie ship will have about 10
decks, Armstrong said. The top deck genetally will
be the i:host. expensive slnce its cabins ba" the best
view and ventilation. It may not necessarily be the
most de.11ll'able for everyone, bowe~r. "Binte you
generally will feel more motion on the top deck than
you would on the second or third.
• ARMSTRONG R~COMMENDED THAT
would·be passengers start with a travel aaent
Mate sure, however, that you get to aaent who has
sailed on or at least visited the ship you are consider-
ing. ~helher you deal dir~ ~ a e line or
go to a travel agent, you shawft k to see the deck
plan and check dimensions Of your cablJ'l. Subtract
the area that will be occupied by the bed or beds
Cfigure slx-root. by three.foot for a smale bed > to aet
an ldea of how much space you will actually have.
See where your cabin is in relation to public areas
and recteation facilities. Check to see whether it is
air conditioned. The cruise lines association, in a manual for
travel agents, recommends that lhe aeents check
such things as closet slic, number of hangers, •
bathroom facihties, the promptness of cabin
service and the type of entertainment. How many
tables are there ln the restn\lr&nt?
"We're leltift8 you have a raise, not because you're a
valuable asset to the team, bUt beeause-t Jove you ."
Pd. Pol. Adv.
WHERE IHOW-HOW COUMTS
IEEPYOUR
LAGUNA llACH
COUMTY WATEI DISTRICT
IH EXPERIENCED HAMDS
VOTE FOR THE .
THREE IMCU~EMT.S A.TTH .
GENERAL E~EC'r.ION, iFUESDAY I
NOVEMBER I
·YOU WILL HA VE TO MAKE reservations for
your dining room sitting once you gel on board ship.
, Ask about port taxes. These can run $8 to $10
per person and. it you have several slops, they can
add up. Th~ time of the year you select will have a bear· '!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!?!!!~~~~~~~~~~~
.ing on price. ChJ'istmas and New Year's cruises are ..:: •
the most expenaive. Ofl·season sailinaa ~an cost up ••••liiilill••••••••illi . t.o 50 percent less than peak ·period cruis.es. You also will have to decide what llize ship you
want. Sm&Uer ships carey about 300 pasaengers;
tarser ones accommOdate more than 1.000.
TO OOMPARE VABIOUS SHI.PS, ask about
aontethfna called tbe "Gross Re&ister Tonnage" or
• G RT •. which ls a measure of the volume enclosed by
• the bull 8D4 auperauvcture. One GRT equals 100
·cubic teet and space raUos on cruise ahips generally
ran1efroml7t.o55GRTper passenger. : Note: The GRT raUo won't enable you lo com·
pare cabin sizes. But it will aive you some idea
about tht general spaciousness of the uhlp. . Beware or putting too mucb faith in the
-. minimum price liat,.S in advertisements: Tbere
usually are very few mlnhnum price, in.Side cabins.
'.I. woman was "injured in a
clilin-reaction three-car traffic
aceident Sunday when the car
s was driving hit a car stopped
f a red light at Jamboree Road
acArthur Boulevard.
he coTiisfon pushed the rear-
ed car into a third car stopped
ront.
orbJ. Hollenbeck. 55, of San-
ta Ana, was taken to Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital, where JJhe
was char1ed by Irvine Police
with drunken drivlng.
O!Ctcers said she su!Cered a cut·
lower lip and several broken nbs
in the accident. Sb later was
transferred to UC lrY1ne Medical·
Center. where her condition to-
day was described as fair
. 'fhe occupants or the other two
cars were uninjured, according
to police reports
In the first car to be hit were
driver Robert W Boatman, ~.
and his 12-year-old son, Morgan,
0£604 Begonia, Coronadel Mar.
Boatman's car was propelled
by the impact into a car driven
by Rockwell K . Raun .
Passengers in Raun's car were
his wife. Verna L. Raun, 31, and a
couple, Michael P. and Karen F.
Nicaslri, aged 34 and 31, of 20212
Flax. Huntington Beach.
Ski Classes
Now Offered
In Newport
Ski instruction is beini offered
by the Newport Beach Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Depart-
ment from November through
December.
A cross country skiing class,
which runs from Nov. 8 through
Dec. 6, will be held Tuesdays
from 7:30 to ~:30 p.m. at Ensign
View Park. Participants must be
12 years or older apd provide
ttwtir own equipment. Th~re is a
SlO fee for the class. ~eginning and freestyle-ballet
skfing classes, for ch.ildren and
adults, will be held at Muioers
Et~mentary School, Dec;. 19-23.
'!]lere is a $20 fee for tlie clus.
Em1ipment will be provided.
JlegistraUon is being held at
the Parks, Beaches and Recrea·
ti.c?IJ Office, Monday through Fri·
day, 8 a.m. to noon and 1 to5p.m.
FQr further information call
61fA·2271.
\>J I 'Foll Calls Told ' LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
Bevtrly Hill! publicist says he
charaed hundreds of Iona·
dtstance calls to the office
number of Los An1ele1 City
Co\lncl1man David Cunningham
with hls approval, but Cun·
ningham denies authorlzln1 the
bilUnc. The p.ibllcist. Leonard
Herring Jr., said he made ttie
calls sollcitlng support for the an·
nual dinner or the California
Black Caucus or Local El~ted·
Officials, an event ht co·c:balhd.
RB Man Faces
Newport Dr.ug
Saks Charge
A Huntington Beach man was
slated to appear in NetfpOi't
Beach municipal court today
following his arrest on a warrant
charging possession of a variety
of narcotics for sale.
Michael Lee Mar!indale, j3, Or
7813 Sycamore Ave., apt. s. was
arrested Thursday by a team of
Newport ~ach and lfuntlngton.
Beach police.
M '-rtindale had been sought
smce Oct. 24, when police raided
a Corona del Mar apartment they
claimed he shared with his
girlfriend and allegedly found a
pound oC hashish, a pound of
marijuana and small amounts bf
cocaine, LSD and benzedrine.
The woman, Barban Sue
Ricbatdson, was booked on
charge$-of possession of
narcotics for sale. the !ame
cha"e )isled on the warrant Js.
sued for Martiddale's attest.
Police officers Gary Black,
Lee Roberts and Ron, Rodgers s~ld they broke Joto lilartlmJ.llt:• locked :Hitltinftoft neacb apart-
ment ThUrsday and f9'Uld him
· bidi"g in a bedroom cl05et.
They allege he waa armed With
a handgun. but they said he sur-
rendered without incident.
Mr. Campbell
Services Set
Memorial services will be held
Tuesday in Newport Beach for
Wendell B. Campbell, reUred
maqager of JCGBS radio slalion
in Los Angeles.
Mr. Campbell died at hls res-
idence. the Balboa Bay Club, on
Oct. 29. He was 66. Services will
begin .at 1 p.m. •t Paciflc View
Memorial.Chapel
Mr. <An\pbell is survived by
three daughters: Elizabeth Lane
of Newport Beach: Paula
Leonard oC Connecticut; and
H4rriett Williams of New
Jer•ey; a brother, Bruton
CampbeJI of Ohio ana O
grandchildren.
BOVAN; . .-
charge set in the Harbor Judicial
District Court and S?S0,000 on the
narcotics charge set in tbe,South
Orange County 1Udiei&l District
Coun. ' .
The three other men charged ·
in the case remain jaJled. They
are Gerry Peter Fiori, 41, of 19822
Brookhurst St., HunUngton
aeach, Anthony Marpne Jr., 23.
of 10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt-
ington Beach and Raymond
Steven Resco. ~. of the same ad·
dress.
Arraignment of the three was
continued· from last Thursday in
order to eive the coltrt time to ap-
point attorneys for them.
II. court spokesman said tOday
that David Brickner of Santa Ana
will represent Fiori, Ron Brower
of Oran&e wtU represent Marone. ·
and Tom Crosby of Newport
Beach will 'take on Resco as a
client .
Kulik is represented by Philip
DeMassaofSan Diego.
Munkipal Court Judge Selim
Franltlin said he would also hear'
motions on Tuesday to reduce
ball.· ·
Fr..,PageAJ
WORK ...
not. per.mitUng her J bearing with
her attorney and givin1 her an
opportunity to refut.e wJtat she
said were -1leged complaints
about her ~rformanct.
Mr$. Benson Olaintained the same position today saying, "I
feel it is in the best iQt~esli of,
tbo commi¥ion u Jo'eJI· as ~elf
to continue to function to the besl
of my abiltlY ln carrying out the
dutleibf e-Xt!cUttve dJrecwr. •·
"They d.nied me the tight to '
counsel in a public• hearing. . . ·•
she continued.
As for her use of commission
stamps, l\frs. Benson said today
the commission ran out oC
stamps some lime ago and she
purchased any ~tamllt' used with
het own funds. . ..
Commisaioners·lyoted unan-
lmouttly to dlamiss the form.et
Washington, D.C., transportation
conaulttmt last week saying they ·
had ''lost confidence .. in her
pertonnance. I
Parker siUd he wouJd be filing
a civU trespassing complaint and
1eeklng a restraining order in
Orange County SUpenor Court
toda)f.
Mra. Benion aald bu attorney·
would be advised of th• P1"0-
cedure. She said b.er actions so
far have been upon ber at·
tomey's advice.
t
State omces and some city governments wltl celel>rate
Veterans Day on Friday, despite a federal \aw that chanced
the holiday in l.969 t.o the fourth Monday of October.
'ro.P,..e AJ
SHOOT.".~
flc was too hea\fy and he fled on
foot. I
The brokerace flnn shootings
occurred about one·half hour
later.
Joyce Saylan, a ~~retary at
the brokerage ofOce said, "The
guy walked in the do<>r. werit
down the hall am starteH shoot·
ing. He got a e~torncr and two
account executives. Everybody
thought it wa,., a jokt w1ttl a cap
pistol beeause it was so quu:k. ··
1
Her criticism was aimed at City
Prosecutor Jack Morgan, whore.
fused to file char1es after
policewomen Perri Burnett and
Rosie Nadeau reported that each
was kissed by a man sbe sti>ppe4
for quesUonlng
°"" Pla.t ,.....~~ ......... THEY'LL BE COMING OUT OF THE CHUTE TUESDAY AT COUNTY'S FALL FAIR
Lo• Alamttoa Race Courae Site of Hora• Racing, Other Actlvltl••
1st Thorough:bred.S
. . . ..-
To Race at OC Fair
Thoroughbred horse racing
gets under way at ~oon Tuesday
at Los Alamitos Race Course aa
the Orange County "Fall Fair"
OJ'CDS for a 12-day run.
The flrst thoroughbred horse
racing meet in county history
was approved Friday when a trio
of Los Angeles appellate court
..
For those who don•t Caney
horse racing, an old-style tent
fair wit.h homecratt exhibits arMl
m1dway rides will be held in the
raceway's parkblg lot f'rom 10
a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through
'Nov. 21.
• judffl overt\U'ned n earlie.r
court Cl~ision.
The fair will offer popular en·
tertainment in the eveninis and
m•n-Y of ~~ ers will
alsO offer ~hoWs In the late after· noon for youngsters wHO mop by
aftet' sebool.
·'
EiCht thoroughbred raees, two
quarter horse races and one Ap-
paloosa race will be tea lured dai·
ly (noon to 5 p.m.) on Los
Alamitos' %lb-mile oval track.
Because or the track's small
size. thoroughbreds wm run by
the grandstands twice.
Fair officials are predicting a
daily betting handle o( about $1
million and daily attendance of
11,000 people.
Admiision to I fa r events,
excluding the races ls free. A $1
parklog(eewtU be charged.
Northbound travelen on the
S.n Diego Freeway should take
tht Valley Viaw exit in Cypr.as,
then proceed east to Katella
Avenue. A left turn on Katella
will take motorists to the
raceway course., •
HB Mother Held
: In Death of Inf ant ,
The 23.year-old mother of an
11-month old infant was arrested
Sunday in coMection with the·
death ot the child over the
weekend, Huntington Beach
police reported today.
koaaria CoS1io, who police believe is an illegal alten, was
jailed on suspicion or murdering
herson,EdgarSalsedo.
Miss Cossio lived with her son
and several other relatives in an
apartment at 16881 Nichols St.,
HuntinRton Beach, accOrdinC to·
police Sgt: LUis OCbOa.
One ol the relatives reportedly
found the baby unconscious
Thursday. The infant was taken
to Pacifica lf01Spital and later
transferred to Santa Ana-TU.stin
Commmlity Hospital. .
The infant died in the Santa
Ana hospital at 2:02 a.m. Sunday.
An autopsy revealed the infant
had suffered skull fractures,
broken legs and a broken arlll;
police said.
Miss Cossio was arrested at
her home al 9:30 p.m. Silnday.
She remain• in Huntington
BeachJ&Utnlleuoffl5_0,000bail •.
U.S. hnmtaration and
NatutallUtion Se"lce <INS> of·
ficlala 1aid her lilimlfra\loa
status Will be '5Certained d'lfiq
the cr1min81 court procoedt"-$· ll the woman is found to be an
Ulec l alien, deportation pro;,
ceedlnp coul'1 not octur: until the
criminal c&Je qalnst her is com·
pleted, lNSoUlcl said.
•
Fr .. PqeAJ
DAM •••
three or four feet of mud," Beat.
ty said. "From then on it w•
mostly younf kids ••
"You know, this is bad,
someUung real bad, when the
young kids come in," he said
later.
"You hold the little baby in~
your anns and you think •bout
the life ht bun't lived. You think
that you are Just 24, but you have
at least lived a life.
"This should happen to you
before it happens to this baby."
Another victim "was a lady, 73
years old. Her head was caught
between two trees. They had to
cut them away with a saw. She•
was dead."
It took 20 minutes from Beal·
ty'a arrival for most of the other
emergency vehicles.. represent··
ing 20 emergency agencies, to ar·
rive.
"Everyone just came. They
didn't have to be asked," said
She raff Don Shirley.
At the hospital, an emergency
disaster plan went Into action.
Victims were cla.sified accord ..
mg to the hkelikhood of saving
them. then doctors worked first
on those who could be aa ved.
. The P.lan was ''sickeningly
simple, Dr. J Wade Knowlton
said.
"It consisted of just pronounc-
ing people dead."
The hospital purcbasint de·
partment was set up as a
morgue.
"But you know, Toccoa's a lit·
tic town,·· Beatty said. "Things
llke this don't happen here. They
happen In cities like Atlanta."
* * "" Pr ... P~.41
FLOODS •..
evacuated from homes near
Asheville where authorities said a
·dam developed a crack. A dam on
Reems Creek in Madison County
was reported broken.
The thunderstorms moved
eastward across the slate Sun·
day. selling off lesser fioodlnt in
some Piedmont and COHlal
areas. A half dozen persona had to
be evacuated from Chocowinity
south of Wa.shington, N.C., and a
shoppin& center roor in Goldsboro
was partially caved In by heavy
rains.
3 Heyerdahl
Aides Leave
OSLO, Norway <AP> -Three
Indian .ulJors h1red b)'1 Thor
Heyerdahl ror hls lJ\eal resear~h
expedJUon walk~ ou\ on the
Norwegiart' explorer aa aooa u
they dlscovtred lh• reed bOat be
is usln1 bas no enalne, the Oilo
new1paper Verdens Gana re·
Ported. ...
Health Aides
For Schools
The introduction of health
aides into Capistrano Unifi~
schools will be discussed.
Wedn~ay at a general meeting'
oftheCapist.ranoUniftedoU!lcUof
Pflffnl·Teacher·Sludent As•ocl•·
tlons.
Don McNeff, district special
education director, will address
the meeting, scheduled for 9:30
a .m. In district offices, 32972
Calle Perfecto in San Juan
Cap~st_rano.
Utstricl trustees recently
authorized the hlrlnt of five
health aides, dlsconlinulng thr~e
school nurse positions. School
nurses objected, sayin1 the move
would jeopardize student health
service5.
The district is currently ac·
cepting applications for the flve
health aide positions, McNeff
said.
Additional tntormatlon on
Wednesday·s meetlne ts availa·
ble by calling Donna Caza.res,
492-6937.
Flames Continue
CHATOM, Ala. <AP> -ll will
be at least a week before Red
Adair's crew or olltield
troubleshooters· can c•p a
poiaonQUf gas well that has been
spewing names more than 100
feet into the air over southwest
Alabama tor days, a Phillips
Petroleum Co. i,pokesman said
Sunday.
"None or us ever had church weddlop.
receptions, honeymoons or even wedd1n1
cakes," explained Wilma Lov~ly, who mar·
ried Lloyd 34 years aco Sunda~. "We wero
F....,Page.AJ
BOYAN .••
• poslin' a $750,000 bond.
The bond. the hiahest ever
posted in the history or the
Orange County Jail, comprised
the $500,000 bail on the murder
charge set in the Harbor Judicial
District Court and S'lS0,000 on the
narcotics charge set ln the South
Oranse County Judicial District
Court
The three other men charged
in the case remain' jailed. They
are Gerry Peter Fiori, 41, of 19822
Brookhurst St .• Hunlinston·
Beach, Anthony Marone Jr .• 23.
of 10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt-
angton Beach and Raymond
Steven Resco. 28, of the same ad·
dress
Arraignment of the three was
continued Crom lut Thursday in
order to a.tve the court time to ap-
point attorneys for tbem.
A court spokesman said today
that David Brickner of Santa Ana
will represent Fiori, Ron Brower
of Orange \fill represent Marone .
and Tom Crosby of Newport
Beach wlll take on Resco as a
client.
Kulik is represented by Philip
De M asaa of San Diego.
Municipal Court Judge Selim
Franklin said he would also hear
motions on Tuesday to reduce ball.
Gun Accident
Kills Man, 21
COVINA <AP> -A 2l·year-old
Azusa man has been accidentally
killed while handling a gun in the
·second such incident in as many
days, authorities said.
Robert Plathe was examining
n handgun with several other
people in a car early Sunday
when the weapon accidentally
went off, shooting him in the
head, sheriff's deputies reported.
On Satnrday, Bradley Price.
17, of San Gabriel died from a
similar wound after a rifle he had
been loading in his car dis·
charged, deputies said
Fr .. Pag~AJ
' BOARD E~E€TIONS. • •
"We're trying to reach stu·
dents who don't realize they m•y
be eli&ible for financlal aid,··
Mrs. Long says. "Guidelines in
some programs have been
bro•dened because veteran's
benefits, for example; hHe .not
kept pace with inltatlon ...
For some financi'Bl aids pro-
grams, students can apply up to '
Mar. lS, 1978 to receive aiSt for J
the current school year.
And the opening date for «
1978·79 scholarship applications
is Dec. l .
Appar ntly, Saddleback's
scholarship proarnm is an'long
the most popular form or aid.
"We were only able to mve
about half of our scholarship ap-
plicants this year, .. Mrs. Lang
explains ... We had a great many
qualified applicants we dldn 't
have schola~hips tor:·
Next week, the financial aidS
office will sponsor. a "schotanbJP
week" to sollclt scholanhipt;
from area businesses.
"We've done very well in in·
creasing the program over the
past few years but we need more
donors," Mrs. Long says. ••We'Pe
.hQplng tM community will con·
.tlnue to1u~porl th~program.·· .
'.
ull
. K MART THE AGGBBSSIV discount ebain. used ' I ~
eltht aJtemal~ paaes to proracQ appllaaeea avaUabl~ In tu :•~u
J 200 stores. One paie featur.d a SCO dlacount on a Wb1rlpool 't ,,
1 wuhcr-dryer ~mbinatloa. ADOther bad. sean ad for a !)~
Kenmorewuber.made by WhlrlPoOl. 'J Whll~ tbbe advertlslnl revenues are PfOdlllous. the
Dltett alW4YJ likes to maintain a balan~ tn wblch tho re·
aders ~tribute more dollara than advertiaen. ao_ dfec.;{
tlve with tbe January Issue. •readers are coJna to bt asked .4
pay more. 1be cover price ot the Digest ll movin1 tn>m 75
cents ios¢a: the annual mailau~ptlan rate I.I movlri1
up from $7.8ltoll.8L
Betty White gets kittenish with ex.husband 41ohn
Hillerman in a scene from tonight's Betty White Show ay 9
O'clockonCBS. Channel2. •
D .. EWLvweDGAME m THE BAAOY BUNCH
Greg ta obleaMd With becom·
Ing a big lellgue pttcher and
when gum.star Don Ofyedlle
encouregee him, he cMcld .. to
gl11e up everything elae .• .lnclud-
l~ echool. • m L.ErS MAKE A DEAL
• 28TONIGHT ~ Star Bevtrty Siiia Inter·
v1ewe Op«a Patron Lawre11ce e. Deutlch.
G!) FRENCH CHEF
"Tul1cey Breast 8ra1Md" (R)
(J) S100,*NAM!THAT
lUNE
ha la tr~ped In 1 vtotent ~
i •k•. (2 hta.)
JOtet!R'8 WILD
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(,luelt: Jim Nabota.
MOVIE ***,_. "A Star la Bom"
(1055) Judy Oartanct, Jamet
Maon. Aa • young ect,.._
dlmbe the laddlir of .........
her pe;90MI life luff ... (2 In.)
• UVE FROM 11f£ METAOPOUTNt
"Rigoletto" J..n.. Utvtne con-CNCla.Oill verdldiiilC ,...,,_
8.'00 8 (J) LOGAN'S RUN Ing PS9ddo ~ 8l)d Cor·
MIMecNel •• Logan, Je9tlca and ~ muat •
mlllt• a l~..o.th cMctllon
.... tMy IMtn tMre la enough
.,ti-plague ...-um for only
tht• of eix a&.w'YIVcn IU&pend.
ed In a trozei, stat• tor 200. --~ HOUQONTHE PRAIRIE
"The Aftermath" The notottoua
J.,,,_ Brothen, dllQUIMd u
trawtlng bust~. hire
Mary Ingalls to nm etrancU,
then use her u a hQat•g• whtln
bounty hunt.,. OloM II•. e MOVIE * *~ ... Legend Of Ameluk"
(1971) ~. A young
Eltctmo fights tor airvlval after
Rating• Gulde
(JM¥ ... -,..., -~ ..... Mike........_ .. Mwltl tor TV.,. lwf99d lly urUIC.I
* * * * -&cellent • * * -Very Good • * -Good * 'l -Fair * , -Poor
e THE BEST OF ERH1E KOVACS
Pefcy DoY9tonelll; the. ;,Gill. In
the tub: U.S. ~ ~ and TV '"9twnt.; t301 CONCarTRATION ~ Highlight• from program•
lnYOMng Miami, FIL, Hick°')',
N.C., Mernphla, Tenn., Stock•
ton, Calif. and Botton,·Mue. · ,,...
9:00'9 (J) BETTY WHITE
John'• ding mother (Ellzal:leth
Ketr) who hat nev.r ~
lntormed of her eon'• c:AW>rce,
atftwe In town to 8pend the
night with the "happily
inarrted" couple •
• A8PEH
FomWmobl -..---Alex Budde (~ FnncloM). unilblt to
perluede Totn ~·· fathw (John Mcintire) to ... '*
rlneh, ettenipta to tun hlrri
out. ~ L9e m.hop
(~ Kfng). now• .. ~
IAW)W'' by reput8tlon, fir.a hla
..... .,th 9PC*I from deeltt
row. (Part 3 of 3) 8 MOVIE •
···~ "Chllum" (1970} John ...
Today Show-
By JERRY BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP> -NBC's
"Today" show is 25 years old, dura·
ble, and still popular -but in trou-
ble.
Thus says Robert Metz, who spent
many months studyine the early
morning show, past and present, and
put his findings lnto a new bookt
published by Playboy Press calledl
"The TOday Show."
Metz said on a vialt here that hard
times had overtaken the venerable
sbow, established in JanuarJ 11$2 by
Sylvester "Pat" Weaver, then NBC·
TV president.
Louis. 'Here we are, folka, looldnt at
the arch In St. Louis!"'
Tom Brokaw, NBC'• former White
House correspondent, is the current
host of the New :Yotk-based show,
along with Jane Pauley, wbo
replaced Barbara Walters when 1he
departed for greener pastures at
ABC.
with the 1how now."
IN ITS 25 YEARS, the show bu
been ~ six hosts, Dave Gar·
roway, John Chancellor, Hugh
Downs, Frank McGee, Jim Hartz
ancS Brobw. Aaked who be thought
had been the best host; Metz quickly
sald Garraway. ''Brokaw is a competent newsman,
"Garroway was the bolt during the a strooe hard worker, and-he asks
sllly PG'iOd, ~· be sat~ "ll Garroway. ~ questions and be ellclts dull lo·
bad 6een bolt With, let's say a pro-formation:: 'Ibey need ooe aboW itop.
ducer like Al Morgan, who really per eveey~daftlt lacks excitement.
made the -roday• lhOw lmportut; it · It'• lhow bu.sfMSS I And the aew:s ae.
would have been an unbeatable lbow. partment 't undent:and that.
It btild 1Ut forever. rm DOt aaJ\Dg show business wiU. a
"Of course, it Will last forever, capital S; bot it needS a flavor of en-because NBC bU all its key affiliates tertainment ...
in the fold and ABC doesn't and
that'• ooe reason ABC will never
beat It with wha( I believe ii a
superior abioW. •
.. Davld Hartman is not a pro-
ft?stlonal Interviewer, but be'•
11ometbing 'more important. He's
som~yogcanteel comfol'Ulblowtth acrossthebfeakfutta.ble."
•