HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-14 - Orange Coast Pilot,
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 14, 1917
VOL. 1t, NO. >II. J HCTIONI, 2' l'AGIS
• • • •
Flight · Patterns Evade. ·Threats?
Tossed Fram \'an
HB Resident
Shot to Death
By ROBERT BARKER
Of 11190.1ly11'1 ... Si.tf Huntlngton Beach resident and
businessman Robert Vancil
Myers, 57, was found shot to
death Saturday on a lonely stretch
of Interstate t!i near Barstow.
He was prevLOusly a lone-time
resident of Laguna Beach along
with his widow, Rita, who has a
real estate business in Laguna.
Sheriffs' Detective Dennis
O'Rourke s aid today that Myers
Mesa Youth
Held in SA
~Slaying
A ditpote over a can ol beer In
a Sant.a Ana nisht club early Sun·
day ended in the atabbin1 death
of one man and the arrest of a
Costa· Meaa man on murder
chargH, police reported.
Officers 1ald the murder vic-
Um. Paul James Henson, 2S, of
Tua tin, was one of three bouncen .
at the Clubhome Bar, 2700 N.
Main St., Santa Ana, involved in
the2:40a.m. brawl.
Henson was dead on mrrlval at
St. Joseph's Hospital, Oran1e. a
de.th a eoroner'a invesUgator at-
trl buted to "multiple staJ>:
wounda."
Arrested and charted with the
bouncer's murder as well as u-
aault with a deadly weapon atter
two other bouncers suffered at.ab
wounds in the fracu wu Oeorte
Cruz Camarena, 18, of Costa
?tfesa. Polle~ would not reteue the
bOme addreSsei of elPJer lbe vic-
tl m OtlUS t.;
1,h t •o ounded tiouncen
re idenutied T rrt rtlna,
C E eAZ)
apparently was· shot lo death by
someone be picked up near Vic-
torville Friday.
The body was found un-.
derneath a tumbleweed off a
highway embankment before
noon Saturday.
The search was touched off by
a witness who reported lo of·
ficers that he aaw a body being
thrown out of Myers• gold·
colored van shortly after noon
Friday.
Myen' daughter, Sheri Blanco or Huntington Beach, Saturday
filed a missing persona report on
her father.
Detective O'Rourke said that
robbery, apparenUy was no the
motive of the slaying. He uid the
victim still had about S5S cash,
Jewelry and credit cards.
A.n all-points bulletin hu been
isaued on the van which the as-
sailant, or assailants, apparently
took. The license number of the
vehicle ia 35656H.
"The key lo the Lnvealigalion
at this point ii find.inc the van,"
O'Rourkesald.
He added that Myera carried a
.22-callber revolver with bim but
declined lo say if it wu used Ln
the alaylng.
The coroner's olfice In Barttow
said only that Mym dlect bf a
1unsbot wound lo the body,
0 'Ro\ll'ke 1ald that the itnesa
motorlat Ba91 the f>Ody b4!lng
<f'.'eeKILLED,P11eA2> •
This couple planned to spend a quiet day,
fishing on Newport Bay recenUy until. a
§ea lion interrupted. The seagoing
panhandler scared all the .fish away and
Father Shot .
By Son, 1·2
Deity"" ...... .., ...... .,..
managed to talk the fishermen out of all
their bait and most of their lunch. All they
got in return was some barking and a few
burps ol gratitude.
Measures
Enforced
FRANKFURT, West Germany / .(AP> -Luftb ~e are .. 11 1n vulon p'iUettil at
a let-'. I , rorllt ~o up
plan in r ;mtasiw,
authorlUea 18.fd toda1. In the
Uatted States, protective
measures were belal taken at
4everal airports.
A U .S. Coast G\lard
spokesman aald tod.ay the
aervtce has been patrolling
WJlterl a1nce Friday O(f the in-
ternational airports In New
York, Bolton and Pbiladelpb.iL
"Our tnformalion is that ll'll
aupP<>Sed lo happen somewhere
In the world tbla week,•• the
apokeamarudded. •
Special precauUona were allo
belna taken In airport termJ.nals
at New York, Chicaao, LOs
Angeles and San Francisco.
spokesmen for tbe alrports said.
The a~al evulon patterns
for Lufthansa apply obly lD West
Germany since tbey require
cooperation from m1bt con-
trollers and other alrJ)ort penoa-
nel.
The Federal Flight Security
Institute bere said Luttuma
pilota have tieen using raridom
route deviatiom aDd unpredlcta.
ble clianiea in I~ and take--
off procedures since Frlda)' to
decreue the dancer ol at.tacks
by terrorilts clai~ to have
SOvlet-mado ll'OUDd·to-alr mis·
slles.
Spokesman Peter Graf 1Uct the
Lufthama pusenaer plar:ies and cargo Jeta 'Will use .. random ap.
proach and departu?e fllabt ~
cedures" for an lridefl.Dite penocl
at atrpoffl throuah~ut :Weat.
(See TIDlEATS, PateAJ)
•
ONLY PILOT -·. . . ...
Cm·ter BaCkS Full E01ploy1nent Aa;
npandinc job op·
ln the private sec:-SfDNGTON CAP> -Prea1·
Carter formally threw hi5
rt today behind the Hum·
p Y·Hawkirus bill that would
sel,.1983 unemoloyment rate of
•V-yet '-C:U\ .... d ...... ~..... .... ...
without mandaline 1>peclhc pro·
g ms to combat~bleasnna. bis ia an am Uqua objec:Uve
and one that may rOve very dif
fi~ll to achievt>, ut setting our
sigbts high challepges us to do
our best." Carter said at the
White House.
The administration•• suppdrt
for the Full Employment and
B11lanced Growth Aet of 1977, the' • ....... .,o. "' ··~·--....... ~ --···' culminates necotlations tbal
began in Jwie for a pQhcy alrned
at reductnc unemployment. The
legislation ls named aner Stu>
nuber\ H. Humphrey, D-Mlnn.,
and Rep Augustus Hawkins, D
Ca Hr., It.a original sponso".
The bill. accorc:Unc to Carter's
statement. commits the fedtral
government to achievlnc full
employment while rematnlng
.... u '""' ...... ~ .......... --... -..s.> ..... '4-4 ....... -.
"reasonable price stability."
The four percent unemploy-
ment rate t.ranslat. to a rate of •
three percent for all adults ln the
work force. The October jobless
rate was seven percent.
Man Killed
·Jn Slwotout
ldenlified
Pit Stop
Till<; Canndian goose. h<-'<iding soulh for a warmer
d1 rn.tll'. droppt•d 111 on a waterfront at Kirkland. Wash .
for a ~pl'll ufll'I' flet·ing the cold northern winter.
Women to Gather
To'·:s11ape FutUre
WASHINGTON CAP> -
Thousand.'> of women, ramo\Js
and unknown, will meet at the
first National Women's Con-
ference in Houston this week to
map the future of women Ul the
I 'mted State·~.
Men wtll be there too. In all, :•o.ooo people arc expected, 6ome
lo ~upport the goals of equality,
others like the Ku Klux Klan
to protest.
The big names include feminist
.1uthor Gloria Steinem, flrst lady
ltosalynn Carter, former first
ladies Betty 1''ord and Lady Bird
Johnson, anti-ERA crusader
Phyllis Schlafly, and Rep.
Barbara Jordan, D-Texas. .
The delcgatt-s include Dr.
Gloria Scott. president of the Girl
Scouts. Judy Carter, daughter·
in-law of the president and Joan
Moo.dale. ~1fe of the vice presi·
deat.
But most participants and on-
lookers will be farm women,
welfare mothers, homemakers,
educators and other women who
do not belong to any organized
women's group
The 2,000 official delegates
were selected at 56 state and ter-
ritorial women's meetings at·
tended by 140,000 people. At least
18,000 observers also are ex·
pected.
Although the federally
sponsored meeting is being com-
pared to an 1848 conference at
Seneca Falls, NY .• when women
demanded the right to vote, there
OftANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
are more issues this lime.
The delegates will debate some
26 major topics, many of them
conlrovers1aJ, and make recom·
mendati.ons to President Carter
on how to accomplish equality in
many areas of life. Carter then
must make recommendations to
Congress on how to implement
the goals
The issues include the Equ-1 •
Rights Amendment, aborUon
subsidies for poor women, pro-
tections for homemakers, bat-
tered wives and rape viclirN,
civil nihts for lesbians and crea-
tion of a cabinet-level Women's
Department.
Rosal)'nn Carter and Betty
Ford will hnk arms publicly lo
urge ratifi1aion of the ERA.
They will sponsor an ERAtnenea
fundraiser Friday rught, the eve
of the conference.
On Saturday morning,
Rosalynn Carter. Betty Ford,
and Lady Bird Johnson wiJl ad-
dress the ceremonial opening or
the women's conference. Rep.
Jordan will give the keynote ad·
dress.
Opponents plan what amounts
to a counter-convention.
Conservative religious and
political groups are expected to
protest the conference. And U\e
Ku Klux Klan ia send.lne anen &o
protest as well.
Mrs. Schlafly, who bu put·
toeether tbe opposition coallUoo.
contebds that state mettinp
were rigied to favor "letblam
and llbbera."
Police have Identified a
burglary suspect killed Saturday
night dunng a bloody shootout in
Santa Ana in which a poUce Of·
f1cer from Mission Viejo. was
fatally wounded.
The suspect was identified as
Rov Kenneth Hill, who police
characterized as "a transient
wtlh ao armed robbery convic-
t100 record."
Hill, 38, reportedly. was felled
by a shotgun blast u he end a
partner dashed shootlnt 1un1.
from a modest southwest Sant.a
Ana home seconds after Officer
Daniel Allan Hale, 31, of Mlasion
Viejo, was 111ortally wounded.
The police officer reportedly
entered the darkened home in
response to a burglary in pro&·
ress call and was fatally
wounded by a shot fired by either
Hill or his partner De Wayne Em·
melt Dunlap, 38, of 1-'ullerton.
Dunlap was wounded in the ex-
chanae of 1un!ire with police.
and was reported ill serious con~
rlillon today In UCI Medical
C'enter
Backup otricers arriving at
the burglary house near
Western and Wlllets streets
beard the shot that apparently
mortally wounded officer Hale.
The fleeing suspects reportedly
flrt>d shols in the officers' direc·
hon as they raced off on foot.
In the ensuing exchange or
gunfire, Hill was killed and
Dunlap seriously wounded by
shotgun fire.
J1'9git Eyed
ToMUJecat
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Uneasy about its hopes for
Mideast peace talks,
Carter admini.straUon of.
ficials are COMldering a
new diplomatic iniUaUve
by Secretary of State
Cyrus R. Vance to get the
Arabs and Israel moving
toward tl\e necoliatlng la·
ble. (Related story, A4)
One option bein1 dis-
cussed ls havtn1 the Mid·
dle Eut. loreign ml.nllters
meet with Vance next
month in Europe.
The other option -
particularly lf prospects
for a Geneva conlerence
by Christmas fade -is to
send Van<!e on bis third
tour of the Middle Eut in
January.
The blU would also:
-E~blisb a framework for
economic policy deci.llons. With
the admlnltlratlon aendifll to
Congress iU goals f!>r employ·
.---·-.. 4a_ -"••••.,•w.1...,,.t.iit..a.\.• ., • .., ........
tion and incon\e over a five-year'·
period;
-Recocnlze that .. special gov·
ernment eCfort.a'' are needed to
fight hlgb unemployment "but
that primary emphp.als aboyld bJ
Ghost Parking Lot
to
In what is meant to be a commentary on
America aod the automobile, these junk
cars are being filled and placed in con·
crete m Hamden. Conn. The cars are to
be covered with mo're concrete to form a
··ghost parking lot" at a large shopping·
center.
I
I
Shah's .Backers Rally ' i
I
I .
Will Off•et Iranian Student, Prote•ten
WASHINGTON <AP) -Sup·
porters will demonstrate for the
Shah of Iran when he arrives
here Tuesday, competing for al·
tention with the anl1-shah Iran·
ian students who protest his
every appearance
The shah will be in Washington
. ror two days, talJdna with Presi·
dent Carter on subjects ranitn1
from sales of arms and nuclear
reactors to Middle Eastern af.
falrs aQd human riihts in Iran.
Officials in Pana said Ute shah
and Empress Farah letl Paris
for the United States today on his
special Boetng 707 jetllner
His two-day official visit
begins Tuesday after his arrival
in the United States. Iranian of·
flclals have declined to ~lose
his exact schedule because of
possible disturbances.
Supporters or the shah say at
least five planeloads of Iranian·
Americans are flying from
California, Texas and Chicago to
demonstrate in Washington.
"I'm told to expect at least
9,000or10,000," sald Jack Heller,
a Washington t•wyer who ~present. abah supporters.
· tHe aaid 1bo.t. of the 14 or·
dniiaUoas be reprHenta are
ethnic ll"OUP5. planning to 88·
semble several hundred mem·
bera apiece.
Coalitions ol pro and anti-shah
force• have been srapted
permits to demonstrate during .
the controversial monarch's
viait.
Anti-ahah ktudenta already
have painted sidewalks with
slogans, plastered walls with
posters and gathered at the
White House and on Capitol Hill
lo protest the shah 'a military and
economic •lies with the United
States and lo label the ruJer's re-
gi.me as repressive and corrupt..
They chArge that the shah paid
for the transportafion, accom-
modation and feedloi of hi.a sup·
porters. The charge was denled
by an Iranian embassy official,
who said there bas been no con-
tact between bis government and
the pro·shah orgardiations.
"We heard that there are a
number of them planning to come
to Washington to pay their
respects to his majesty," the
spokesman said.
He said he believed most
groups represented minority
populations in Iran. such aa M-
syriana. Armenians and Jews.
Vladimir Tuman, a membe1 of
the Assyrian Cultural Founda·
lion of Stanislaus County, Calif.,
said he arranged transportation
for .some 200 Assyrian·
Americana to W.uhineton.aspart
of a contingent of pt'0-6hah dem-
onstr aton flying from San Fran·
cisco. · ·
A phy1ic$ professor at Cal
State Stanislaus, Tuman said the
money f« the trip wu raJsed in
Iran and channelled to the United
Slat.es by Homer Ashurian.
"To the btst ol my knowledge,
the Assyrian merchants of Iran
have provided the budtet and
Asburian is coordlnatina ...
Tuman said.
Tuman identified Ashurian aa
a m•mber ol Ute Iranian parlia·
me!K, the hlChest elected body
KILLED •••
under the counlry's one-party
political system. '
•·I hones Uy don't know where
the money came from," Tuman
said in a telepho~e Interview, '
"and it really, doesn't matter. •
Thi,; Is an opportunity for the As-
syrian community to dem-
onstrate their support. for the
shah."'
F,...PapAl
THREATS. .
Germ.ny.
•
, ,
'
The procedures were in-
troduced after Luttbansa and
:;everal news agencies received
letters from purpo~ members ;
of tbe Red Anny Factlon, West
Germ any 's violent terrorist
"roup responsible for the kidnap-
ping-murder of industrialist
Hanns Martin Scbleyer last
month.
The letters threatened to ex-
pl6de three Lufthansa airliners
in £light starting T"esday to
avenge the prison deaths of t.b.ree
RA1'' members lo a Stuttgart Jail
Oct. 18. The deaths were ruled
suicides by German oCficuls but
le(tlst extremists claim the Ulree
were miadered.
The letters, signed by the "Red
Army Factto.n Commando
8.E.R.," warned potential Luft·
bansa passengers that· "death
rides wtth them" aQd told of.
ficials: "There ts no way ol ~
· venline this."
The threats are being taken
seriousty by Gennan authorities.
But a spokesman !or the Federal
Criminal Office ia Wiesbaden
su1u1e1ted that tlie letters m~
not be "a\llhentJc." •
• A 'Lufthansa apokeawoman in
New York confirmed t.oiday that
ntght 'canceli.t.lons were ''bltber ·
than normal .. aa a result
of the Jett.er threat&. She said
there were no plan.i to caqcel 1ny ruebta. .
Lufthaoaa bu"' received
permlasloo to send Jtst~wn un-
armed '8CUf'izy, t.&Jns.~ screen
boardlng ,pasaenceu In ll·
forcltn countrlu, ~ Federal
Aviation Adminl'ltratlon
spt>keaman connrmecl that Luft·
thanu hired utra aecurlty
guard11 to watch tta plan ll th&
United stal4:S.
tJoast
....
Ca1·ter Backs
W ASHlNGTON CAP) -Pr..t-
dent Carter formally threw bia
support today behind the Hum-
phrey-Hawkins blll that would
set a 1983 unemployment rate of
four percent as a national eoaJ
without mandat.ine specific pro-
grams tocombatjoblesanesa.
"This is an ambitious obJectlve
and one that may prove very dif-
ficult lo achieve, but aetUns our
sights bigb challenges us to do
our belt," Ca!Ur said at the
White House.
Tbe administration's iupport
for the Full Employment and
Balanced Growth Act of 197'7, the
Humphrey-Hawkins bill,
culminates negotiaUons that
began lr.-June for a policy aimed
at reducing unemployment. The
legislation is named after Sen.
Hubert ff. Humphrey, D·MiM.,
and Rep. Augustus Hawkins. D·
Co lit., lta on~ gponaon.
The blll. aceordln1 to Cl.M's
statement, comm.its the federal
•nvernmeot to acblevlnc f~I employment white remain
committed to acbievlna
"reasonablepricestablllty. • •
The four percent unemploy-
ment rate translates to a rate of
three percent for all adults in the
work force The October jobless
rate was seven percent.
Man Slain .
Shot Victim Found iii Desert
By ROBERT BARKER
Of tM o.lfy ~i.t SIMf
Huntington Beach resident and
businessman Robert Vancil
Myers, 57, was found shot to
death Saturday on a lonely stretch
or Interstate t.'i near Barstow.
·He was previously a long-time
resident of Laguna Beach alona
watb his widow, Rita, who has a
real estate business in Laguna.
Sheriffs' Detective Dennis
O'Rourke said today that Myers
apparently waa shot to death by
someone he picked up near Vic·
torville Friday.
The body was found un·
derneath a tumbleweed ore a
highway embankment before
noon Saturday.
The search was touched off by
a witness who reported to of·
ficers that he saw a body being
thrown out of Myers' gold·
colored van shortly after noon
Friday.
Dispute Over Beer
Mesa Youth Seized
In SA. Bar Slaying
A dispute over a can of beer in
a Santa Ana night club early Sun-
day ended in the stabbing death
of one man and the arrest of a
Costa Mesa man on murder
charges, police reported.
OICicers said the murder vic-
tim, Paul Jamee Hemoa, za. of
Tustib, was oae ol three bouiicers
at the Clubhouae Bar. 2'100 N.
Main St., s.nta Ana, ln\'dYed ln the 2: 40 a.m. brawl.
Camarena allegedly pulled his
knife and began slashing at bis
f<>es, police said.
Mesans Moll
BowtoS~qd
Federal Fmid Hensm was dead on arriYaJ at
St. Joseph's Hospital, Or~e. a
death a coroner's lnvesUgator at-Costa Mesans wttb suggestioas
trlbuted to "multiple stab on how the city stiould spend wounds." nearly -.ooo in federal funds Arrested and charged with the ..,.,., bouncer's murder as well u as· . have one more obance to make their feelinp known. sault with a deadlf weapon after The city's Housing and Com· 1 two other bouncers suffered stab munity DeveloPmeot Committee
wounds in the fracu wu Georce will bold ita flna1 public beartna
Cruz Camarena. 18, ot Costa Tuesday nllht a\ 7:30 ln Costa
Mesa. Mesa CitJ CGwMnl cbambeta.
Police would not release the At two prior public beartnp.
home addresses of dther the vlc· ciUuns have oltend fn • U•
tim or suspect. • ticma oo bow the city'• annual Tfie two wounded bouncen lotment ol Housing and Qrbala
were idenW\ed a Terry Larldm, Development (HUD) f and a
of 24, of Fount.am Valley. ana woaldbebestputtouse.
David Lynn Renolda, al, ot TH eommlttee is now prepar-
Buena Park. 1111 a proposed fourth year
Both men were reported tn Ila· bvd&et for u.e qpendlture tbe
ble condition at St. Josepb'• -'ler funcll, with an eye on maldn1
being slabbed with the pocket houain1 more affordable for knife police alle1e wu wielded familleawlthlimitedmcomee.
by Camarena. FamWes who qualify can ap.
According to police. the 11-ply for bousin& rebabUitatiOft
. year-old Costa Mesa man arrived loans or outright grants.
al the after hours nl&bt dub Mr· Previous years' funds have
ryiaa an open can of beer. been used to us1st in the develop.
He reportedly belan ftibtmc meat of a senior cltizeu boullnl
with HtDIOD wta the bouncer project with guaranteea low-rent
attempteel to tile the oan Of beer' • apartments; an emercencr boUs-frolll l:itm, a ftibt that tUrned Into ;.}DI pl'Olfam and a fWil to help
a · brawl when enson' t.UOW eatablltb a new co~~'~!.'~ty bouncen tried tO help him. eenter for f amllies and RJUOn in
So met.Im d~ the ttacu, the central clty aru.
Myers' daughter, Sheri Blanco
of Huntington Beach. Saturday
filed a missing persons report on
her father.
Detective O'l\ourke said that
robbery apparenily was no the
motive of the slaying. He said the
victl m still had about S65 cash,
jewelry and credit cards.
· An all-points bulletin has been
issued on the van which the U·
s.allant, or, assailants, apparently
took. The license number of the
vehicle ls 356:i6H.
"The key to the lovestitali<lll
at thls polnt la finding the van. ..
0 'Rourke a aid.
He added that Myers carried a
.22-caliber revolver with hlu:l but
declined to say if it was used in
the slaying.
T.he coroner's office In Barstow
said only that Myers died of a
gunshot wound to the body.
O'Rourke said that the witness
motorist saw tbe body being
thrown from the van by a blood
Cauc aslan with a mustache.
Relatives said that .Myers was
not the type to pick up
hitchhikers.
Myers went to the detert Fri d•1 oa a business tall in connec·
Uon w thbladutia as an uaodate ot Tameo Cb'.eiiaical ill Costa
Mesa. .-
ffi• ~all&et lD IJi.
dustriaJ tfe&tment.
yen JMid uotti wllfl friends
at Vietorvllle before depart!D&
for NeWbel'I')' SPJiPp to set up
new accowits.
The bo4Y was seen being
thrown from the van at 1: 10 p.m.
Ofticen launched a search but
didn't flnd tbe vtctlm until U:07 a.m. the next day.
II yen bad lormerly operated a
concrete and m~ business
on Lasuna Canyc:in Road. He also
was employed at tbe Lido
Shipyard In. Newpori Beach,
friends say.
He and h1I wile moved to Hat·
lngton Beach about five years ago.
Firemen on Strike ·
LONDON (AP) -Britain'•
firemen walked out of their sta-
tion houses today in an un-
precedented nationwide strike
for more pay, leaviJt.1 butily
trained servicemen alid volun·
teera providing a tbln line of fire
defense.
Tbe flnt cuualUes after tJie
firemen walked out at t a.m.
were an &I-year-Old woman who
was criUcally burned when her
chair wu•aet alllht by a spark
from her fireplace. ·
e bill wouUI Ibo:
-Eit.abll&b a ft mework for ecOnOlrilc PQUcy i'decblou, with
the rimlrilittatJon aendlna to
• Concrea its roata for epiploy-
ment, unemployment, produc-
tion and tncOme over a fiv•year ~riod; .
-Reeo,mu that "special eov-
ernment efforts" are needed to
ll&bt hl'9i unemployment "'but •
that primary empba&is abould be
.
placed on xpanding )ob op·
portuilitlcs tn tho ·private M(:.
tor:"
Hard-hatted workers are silhouetted amid
steel framework of new bigli rise office
buildlne going up in Costa Mesa. Building
near South Coast Plaza Hotel will bave
eight stori~ and a penthouse. It is being
built by Downey 'Savings and Loan and is
·scheduled for completion lii June ma.
• 20,000 Expected at Houatan COnfen,rwe
WASHINGTON CAP> -
Thousand.I of women, famous
and unknown, will meet at the
first National .Women's Con·
fetence In J{ouston this week to
map the future of women in the
United Sta~.
Men WUI be there too. In an,
20,000 people are expeded, aome
to aupport the 1oata of equality;
others -like the Ku Klux Klan -to protest;
Tbe bl& names include femlnilt
author <florla steiaem, tint lady
Rosalynn Carter, former fint
ladles Betty Ford and Lady Bi.rd -
lfnieVelSentenced
SANTA MONICA (AP> -
Motorcycle daredevil Evel
Knievel was sentenced to spend
alx moathlinJailand thrM1ean on probaUOft anet he openly ad-
mitted tieaUng a ~moter with a
baseball bat and sald 0 1 am a
•
' l
FRANKFURT. W t Germany
c~p) Luftharuia jet11nera are
flying speclal evasion patletrus as
a security precaution against ter·
rorist threat.a to blow up the
planes in the air with mlaailes,
authorities said today. In th-.
United States, protective
measures were beln& taken at
several aJrports.
A U.S . Co ast Guard
spokesman said today th~
service has been patrolling
waters since Friday ofr the in·
ternallonal airports in New
York, Boston and PhiladelphJa.
Fair Races
Bring In
High Bets
Horses at Los Alamitos race
1·our:.1• begun a late weekend to
day. taking a two day break un·
Lil racin~ resumes Wednesday at
noon
Attendance and betting rec-
ords set Fndav la11tcd less than
24 hours as 1·(428 people turned
out Saturday tu place $1,819,023
ID bets
On Sunday, 12,627 racmg en·
thus1asts showed up to wager
more than Sl.5 m1lhon.
So, at the midway point or the
12-day racing meet, Fair D1rec·
tor Ken Fulk reports averqe
dally bettmg ls exceeding Sl.3
million Fair officials had only
hoped for an average or about
$1.l m1llton
Thl' Orange County "Fall
Fair" al Los Alamitos will re·
main open Monday and Tuesday
from 10 am to 10 p.m. There I.a
no admission charee.
Li ve entertainment, livestock
and home exhibits and midway
rides will keep this schedule until
the fair shuts down next Monday,
Nov 21
Racinl( will resume Wednes
da~ at noon and the 11 ·race a day
pro~ram \\-tll be offered six con·
s~ul1veda}s until Nov. 21
Frm.P~AJ
KNIEVEL .•.
granted a week's stay of the sen·
Lenee to allow Knievel to get bis
affairs in order.
Knievel, 39, admitted a~sault·
1ng Saltman on Sept. 21 because
S<.11lman had written a book
a h out Knie vel whic h the
daredevi l d1dn 't like He called
the book "pornography .. and
said it contained lies about his
mother, grandmother and
('h1ldren
While another man held
Saltman down, Knieveislammed
1 he victim's hands and arms with
a baseball bat
lie explained, ''You write with
)Our hands.·
Saltman. 16, author of "Evel
Knievel on Tour," was Knievel's
press agent during the
c.JaredeVJl 's unsuccessful attempt
to 1ump the Snake River Canyoo
in Idaho on a rocket.powered
motorcycle. Saltman Is currently
a vice president of the telecom·
munications division of 20th <An·
tury Fox.
The attack occurred outslcte
the studio. Knievel has refuted to
identify the man who aaslsted
him in beating Saltman.
Prisoners Protest
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A half·
dozen prllOl\ers refused food pro.
vided by San Dteco County for
the sixth day today, prot•t1nl
conlinement to lhelr cellll ln the·
county Jail. But a apak .. man
said the lnmat• were buylJ\I
items from the jal1'11tore.
"Uut UUOfllllUClll II a~ U. • •
1uppoaed to hapP4tn somewhere
in the world this week," the
spokesman added.
Sp"lal precauUona wen alao bel~• taken Jn alrPott terminal•
at ]¥ew York, Cblcafo, Los
Angeles and San Francisco,
spokesmen for the a1rporta ailld.
The special evaiion paUerm
for Lufthansa apply only ln W~t
Germany since they require
cooperation from flight con·
trollers and other a1rport peraon·
nel.
Tbe Federal ""Jl'Ugbt Security
Institute here said Luflbanaa
pilots have been ustns random
route deviations and unptedlcta·
ble changes in landinc and lake·
off procedures since Friday to
decrease the danger of attacks
6y terrorists claJmine to have
Soviet-mad• ground-to-air mil·
siles.
Spokesman Peter Graf said the
Lufthansa passenger planes and
cargo jets will use "random ap
proach and departure Oight pro
cedures" for an inderlnlte period
q_t airports throughout Wes t Germany.
The procedures were In·
troduced after Lutthanaa and
several news a1enciea received
letters from purported members
of the Red Army Faction, W~t
Germany's violent terrorist
group responsible ror the kidnap·
plne·murder of industrialist
Hanns Martin Schleyer last
rpontb.
The letters threatened tQ ex·
plode three Lulthanh airliners
in flight startin1 Tuesday to
avenge the priaon deaths of three
RAF members in a Stuttgart jail
Oct. 18. The deaths were ruled
suicides by German officials but
leftist extremists claim the three
were murdered
The letters, signed by the "Red
Army Faction Commando
B.E .R.," warned potential Lull·
hansa passengers that "death
rides with them" and told of-
ficials· "There is no way of pre·
venting this "
The threats are being taken
seriously by German auth<mlics
But a spokesman for the Federal
Criminal Orrice is Wiesbaden
suggested that the letters may
not be "authentic · ·
A Lufthansa spokeswoman in
New York confirmed today that
flight cancellations were ''hi~her
than normal " a s a result
of the Jetter threats. Site saJd
there were no plans to cancel any
nights
Lu rth~n sa has rece1 ved
permission to send its own un.
armed security team!I to screen
hoarding passengers tn 11
foreign countries. A f'ederal
Aviation Administration
spokesman confirmed that Luft·
thansa hired extra security
guards to watch its planes In the
United Stat PA.
Vuit Eyed
ToMidecut
WASfDNGTON (AP> -
Uneasy about its hopes for
Mideast peace talk s .
Carter adminlstrat.ion of·
ficla11 are C0t1Sldertnc •
new diplomatic initiative
by Secretary of State
Cyrus R. Vance to get the
Arabs and Israel mo"\'lna
toward the negotiating ta·
ble. <Related story, AC >
One option being dis·
cussed is having the Mid·
die East forei1n ministers
meet with Vance next
month ln Europe.
The other option -
particularly tr proapecll
for a Geneva conler,nce
by Chrlstmu I ade -11 tt>
send Vance on his third
tour of the Middle E11t ln
January.
••"*' • r .,............,..
Glao•t Parldag Lot
In what is meant to be a commentary on
America and th~ automobile, these junk
cars are being filled. and placed in con·
cretc in Hamden. Con9. The cars are to
be covered with more concrete Lo for~ a
"ghost parking lot .. at a large shopping
center .
Shah's Backers Rally
Will Offset Iranian Student Proteat,en
WA SHINGTON (AP> -Sup.
porters wtll dt!monstrate for lhe
Shah of Iran when he arrives
here Tuesday, competlnc for at·
lention with the anti·shab Iran·
Ian students who protest hls
every appearance
The shah wtU be ln W uhlngt.on
Three Quakes
Jolt Southern
California
GOLDEN. Colo. (AP) -Three
minor earthquakes hit Southern
California overnight, but a
spokesman for the National
Earthquake Information Cent.er
~aid 1t is unlikely they were the
precursor or a major quake
The quakes measured between
4.0 and 4 2 on the Richter Scale,
the most powerful being reg.
1stered at 6:06 a.m. That quake
was centered six miles east oC El
Centro. and 10 miles north of the
Mexi can border.
Tht> earlier quakes were re·
corded at 6:06 p .m. and 9 :37 p.m.
Sunday.
Quakes measuring between 4.0
and 4 S on the Richter Scale are
capable of causing moderate
dam age in populated areas
Although the quakes wer~ (ell
over a wide area, the Earth·
quake Information Center said
there were no reports or damage
from the tremors.
The spokesman for the Earth·
quake Information Ce!lter.
Waverly Person, sajd the q,Ukes
were part of a swarm o(Jmlnor
tremors in the region recorded
over a two-day period
"We have had some swarms in
that area for the last couple o(
years and they haven't de·
veloped inf4) anything." said
Person. "'nare Is no evidence to
sue.est thit swarm means a ma-jor quake is coming.··
for two days, talklne with Presi·
dent Carter on aub1ects ran1ing
from sales or arms and nuclear
reactors to Middle Eastern af-
fairs and human ri&hts In Iran.
OU.cials In Paris said the shah
and Empress Farah lert Parts
ror the United States today on his
special Boeing 707 jetliner .
His two-d ay official visit
begins Tuesday after his arrival
In the United States Iranian or.
ficials have declined to diaclose
his exact schedule because or
poss able disturbances.
Supporters of the shah say at
least five planeloads or Iranian·
Americans are flying from
California, Texas and Chicago to
demonstrate In Washlneton.
"I'm told to expect at least
9,000 or 10,000." said Jack Heller.
a W asbington lawyer who
represents shah supporters.
He said most or the 14 Of·
ganlzatlons he represents are
ethnic groups, planning to as·
sem ble several hundred mem·
bers apiece.
Coalitions of pro and anti-shah
forces have been cranled
permits to demonstrate durlne
the controversial monarch's
visit.
Anti-shah students already
have painted sidewalks with
slogans. plastered walls with
posters and gathered at the
White House and on Capitol HilJ
to protest the shah's military and
economic ties with the Unlled
States and to label the ruler's re-
gime as repressive and corrupt.
They charge that the shah pa.Id
for the transportafion, accom-
modation and feeding of his sup·
porters. The charge was denled
by an Iranian embassy offlclal,
who said there has been no con·
tact between his 1overnmenl and
the pro-shah oraianilaUons.
"We heard that there are a number of them planntne to come
to Washineton to pay their
respect.a to his majesty." the
spokesman said.
He said he believed moat
groups represented minority
populations in Iran, such•• ~-
Mesan to Plead
Car Case Tonight
Sid Soffer, a Costa Mesa resi·
dent who screamed foul last
week when city orrlclal1 had
three cars towed off his property,
ia' expected to plead bis cue
before t.onl&bt's meetln1 of plan·
nln1 commisaloners.
Soifer clalma lhe city bad no
right to tow hi• three vintage
Cadillacs off bis property on
croundt that the cars were ln-
'
operable clunkers.
He said be requested a public
hearine on the matter, but city
officlals say the request wasn't
received within the 10-day time
llmlt.
A key tuuo to be aetUed la ·
wheth• the can were In runnlna
condltlon, thus maktnc their
locatJon llJowable under city or-
dinance. Soifer claim• lb Cid·
dlea run.Qty o1nc1aJ1 dlaaa.-.e.
Jn tbemeatiilme Soffer'• can
awaltthelr late ln lb clty's com·
pound for Ue1edly derelict
au\ol.
Tonieht'a re;utar meettna of
the plannlnl commwion eta un-
der way eiao p.m. ltl Costa
Mesa Oouhcll °' m , n r Drive.
syrians, Armenians and Jews.
Vladlmir Tuman, a member of
the Assyrian Cultural Founda·
lion of Stanislaus County, Calif.,
said he arranged transportation
for some 200 Assyrian -
Americans to Washln1ton as part
of a conUncent of pro·shah dem·
onstrators flying from San Fran·
cisco
A physics proressor at Cal
State Stanislaus, Tuman sllld the
money for the tnp was raised in
Iran and channelled to the United
States by Homer Ashurlan.
"To the best or my knowtedce.
the Anyrian merchants of Jrtn
have provided the budget and
Ashurlan Is coordlnatine,"
Tuman said.
Mesan Found
Dead in Car
Carbon monoxide poison1n1
from car exhaust fum6 has been
listed as tho cause o( death ol a
Costa Mesa man wbo was foUnd
Sunday in his parked car.
Coroners official.a said Sl·year·
old Charles Russel Wilson ap-
parently took his own ure by
starting hia car and remainlnC ln
the vehicle ..-rule exha\l•t.fW11es
filled his closed garage.
The vicUm was found by police
Sunday at aboul 8:50 a.m . after a
neighbor reported smoke apew;
ing out of the garage al 17•1
Tustin Ave.
\
Father Shot
By Son, 12
ALAMEDA CAP> -A father of
five was in critical condition with . a bullet wound to lbe head today
after ht. 12-year-old son shot him
while twirUnc a pistol on his
line er, police said.
The youngster beean toying
with the .22·callber handgun Sun-
day afternoon while his father,
J<>hnn)' Wllllaml, 1lepl in their
Alameda home. accordin1 to
Alameda Police Sgt. Chuck
Rodekohr.
"He started twirllna It,
western 5\yle,.. aodekobr 1aid.
''Aa it stopped ln his hand, be ap.
parently put too much pressure
on the triner and It went orr."
Coniedian Home
PEOJlJA, lll. <APl -Com&
dian Richard Pryor was dl&·
charced from the hospital where
he was admitted earlier tills
week compl.tnln& ot chest pains.
A spokesman al Methodist
Medical Center said Pryor left
the hospital and departed pn •
chartered jel for his horne In
Callfomi•.
\
I ,
APWI ........ •
KATHRYN CROSBY VISITS OLD PAL PHIL HARRIS
Working on Boon About Her Life With Bing
Bing's Legacy
WulowWorkingonTu:o Books
NEW YORK <AP) -Kathryn Cro~by i.aid today she had been
working for Ule past three weeks on two books that will feature
the life of her late husband, Bing, and their family One book will contain excerpts from letters Bring wrote to
her during their courtship and the 20 years of their marriage, she
said on ABC's "Good Momin&. America" show
"OUR LETTERS .•. SHOW MORE of Bing than anything
else could," Mrs. Crosby said. "How he felt about things. the con·
cerns, the wornes." Another book, which she called the Crosby family album. will
have travel diaries Bint kept and pictures he took as he toured
the world, Mrs. Crosby sald. One month to the day after Crosby died of a heart attack on a
golf course in Spain, Kathryn Crosby said she was getting along
all right. because she had "allowed myseU to be supported by
those I thought I was going to have to support,·· her three
children
SH~ STOPPED IN NEW YORK today en route to London,
where she will visit Harry Crosby Jr., 19, the eldest of the
Crosbys' three children. He is attending acting school in London.
She also planned to attend a royal variety show while in Lon·
don, Mrs. Crosby said.
Mrs. Crosby said the family's annual Christmas show. which
was taped in London before Bing's death, "was the best we've
ever dooe." It will be shown lat.er this month, and she said the
f am Uy woulcttlo ll Christmas &bow next year aa well.
Sexual Regulations
Opposed by Most
NEW YORK CAP) -More
than 70 percent of Americans feel
"there should be no Jaws. either
federal or state, regulating sex·
ual practices," according to a
survey. <>
But on the subject of pontOI·
raphy, the survey showed 74'
percent. supported the vlew that
"the government 1bould crack
down more on pornography in
movies, books and nightclubs"
and 64 percent Mlleved that X·
rat.ed movies are iatmoral.
The poll of 1,056 registered
voters alao revealed that 51 per-
·cent believed lt ls not wrong ror a
couple to live together outaide of
marriage.
The survey, conducted by the
research firm of Yankelovich,
Skelly and White, appears in
total 64 percent -said a woman
should be free lo have a legal
abortion if she want.a it. Fifty.
eight percent, however, object to
the government providing finan·
clal aid for abortions for the poor.
Nearly half those surveyed, '8
percent, feel it is all right for a
woman to have an abortion.
While 63 percent objected to
sex relations between teen-
a1ers, more than 75 percent
believed parent.a should teach
their teen-age children about
contraceptives.
Strong Surf
Clai11U Pair Time maautne. WbUe it dls-
closed relat.tvel1 llbera1 attitudes
on aome se1.ual laauee, am-
bivalent f eelln,. were apparent
on i11ue1 ltb abortion. While 4' percmt o( thole polled .d U\ey beUeH it ii Wl'Ol\C to
have an abOrtion. some of that g\oou), atona with othera -for a
HALF MOON BAY (AP)
Rough sea• off llosa Beach
capsized a 23-foot cabin cruiser,·
leavlns one Modesto man
drowned and another mlaslng in a
perilous day fO!' pleasme boa ti.DI,
the CoutGuard.1ald.
Tb• Sm Mateo County cor-
oner:, omcoldentlfled Ui drown·
inl •ldim, recovered Stihday 1n
the surf DOrth ot Half Moon B •
nJoJan D. Rae, abOUtB.
Tbe CoUt GUard 1ald lt called
. oftlta eeardifartbe dlllstnaman.
Thon:tu Chudarll1, about is. wbOwa~lddrowntd.
Backed
Count~ Slaye~
"' . )
·l&nQ~Q A ... ~..01 -----~~-rA-__ ,...._
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme CQurt refused to-·
day to review the convict.loo ~
condemned murderer Jobn A.
Spenkellnlc of Buena Park, whole
life temporarily was spared
three days befote hie scheduled
execution in a Florida electric ,
chair last.September.
The Justices turned down
Spenkelink's appeal that be wu
not given 11 chance to prove that
prospective jurors were im·
Five Aliens
Captured
In.Pursuit
An illegal alien, driving a car
full of fellow Immigrants, leaped
from the moving vehicle Sunday
mornrng. leaving bis eight
passengers to fend for
themselves.
Border Patrol agents said they
captured five of the aliens about
three miles north of the San
Clemente border checkpoint Sun-
day morning after the biiarre
chase.
Agent.a said Antonio Farias, 24,
was drivilli: the heavily laden
1969 Buick when it reached the
checkpoint Just south of San
Clemente.
When agents alt.empted to pull
the man over. he aped off with
border patrolmen in pursuit.
Several times the alien pulled to
the side of the road. only to take
otr when agents began to get out
or their car.
The jackrabbit starts con·
tmued up the San Diego Freeway
until a point where Far1as leaped
from the car which was moving
at about 30 miles per, hour. ·
Agent-in-charge Al Janicki
said the driver's foot was
crushed by the back wheels of the
car in the leap. The vehicle con·
tinued off the side of the freeway,
plowed through a fence and into a
IO·footdeepditch, Janicki said
Border patrolmen captured
five or the aliens, watching as
four of the men escaped in the
dense scrub brush at Camp
Pendleton.
Farias was rushed to a San
Diego hospital suffering injuries
to his foot, J anicld said. He eatd
the captured allens suffered.
mlnor cuts and scratch• in their
encounter With the ditch
StudyAaked
For A.liem
On Welfare
W ASlllNGTON (AP> -Aliens
who go on weUare shortly after
they enter the Uolted Stat.et are
costing taxpayers an esUmated
$72 million annually in just five
states, Seo. Olarlea Perey, R-
Ill., said today.
Percy's n,ur. came from the
conereeeional General Account-
ing Office. which he asked to in·
vestlgate the pracUce. .
The GAO did a 1urve1 In
Califomla. F1orida, llllnola, New
York and New Jersey. Aft.er ex·
amining a sample of 23,000
wellare redpientt, the GAO 11id
that it estJmai.d there were
31,000 1n the ftve stat.el who were
collect.lng welfare.
Under the law, aliens who
enter the country uader the
aponsonhlp al a trltnd or rel·
aUve n-1 an atrU!aYlt from the
sponsor saybig that the imm1-
1rant will not become a public
char1e.
But, the affldaTlbl have no
Je1aJ force. Percy 1ald tt II a
common practlce for clUzeni to
vouch tbat they wtU IUJ)port an
aaed or diiabled relative whUe
they actually intend to ·put the
relative en welfaro ahol'tJy after
his or her anival.
properly eJtcused from his trial.
Spenkeltnk , 28, had bis
scheduled Sept. H execution
postponed on Sept. 18 by a federal.
Judge pendln& the death row ln·
i:dlte •s appeal to the Supreme
Court. •
Now. Florida authorlUes are'
free to reschedule an execuUon
date.
Spenkellnk was convicted iD
Tallah~ of the Feb. 4, 1873
murder of Joseph
SaymanJdewica, 43., of Introit.
Sxymanldewicz, who had been
traveling the country wlth
Spen.kelinlc, wu shot twice ln the
head and once In the back. He
had been struck In the head will\ a hatchet.
Spenkelink claimed be killed
Szymankiewicz in self.defense.
He said the older man forced blm
at gunpoint to a homosexual act
and play "Russian roulette" with
a loaded pistol.
Spenkellnk's execution was
postponed by a federal judge
after the st.ate judge who pre-
sided at the California man·s
trial and the Florida Supreme
Court refused to delay it.
State trial judge John Rudd of
Tallahassee rejected
Spenkellnk 's argument that bi.a
conviction wu unconatituUonal
because prospective jurors op..
posed to punishment were ex·
eluded from serving in the trial.
Rudd noted that Spenkellnk·s
court-appointed trial attorney
had never objecud to the jury
selection. The state Supreme
Court upheld hls ruling.
Spenkelink 's appeal acted on
today argued that his trial at-
torney's failure to appeal should
not waive Spenkellnk's right to
challenge what he alleged were
illegal jury exclusions.
Florida's death. penalty laws
were upheld, along with those in
Georgia and Texas, by the
Supreme Court on July 2, 1976.
No executions have taken place
in any ot the stat.es since then,
however.
The laat Florida execution was
in 1964.
Prior to the firing-squad execu-
tion lut January of convicted
Utah murderer Gary Gilmore,
·the last such death in the United.
States occurred 10 years ago.
Court Delays
Snit of GI
Cut in Half
WASHINGTON (AP> -'lbe
U.S. Supreme Court sent back to
the U.S. Court of Claims for
further study today a ~ mUUon
lawsuit agai.nlt the Army faled by
a J!Oldier who waa cut ln half by a
tank three years ago.
The justices told the claims
court, which dismissed the
lawsuit last March, to decide
whether tbe Army broke the
enlistment agreement it made
with Alleo Aaron Jackson and
whether he ts entitled to
dam aga fOf' the accident.
Jackson aald he waa promised
by the Chicago recruiter, Sgt. A.
C. Kosik, that he wu not to be u-
sigued to any dangeroua comba~
type mllltary maneuvers. The
written agreement. he alped,
however, said the Army could
transfer him to any assignment
for the 20 months be might not be
in mechanical maintenance.
...,.,.. .......
NEWPORT BEACH'S BEi IV COOK WITff HER BOAT
54-year-old Grandmother QuHn of PoWetboat Racing
Oaly Womaa Driver
NB's Betty Cook . .
Wins Power Crown .
By ALMONLOCKABEY De{lrP ........ llOIW.......
Betty Cook of Newport Beach,
the only woman driver in the
rugged sport ·of offshore
powerboat racing, won the world
·championship in stormy seas off
Key West, F1a.,Sunday.
It was a fitting climax for the
54-year old grandmother who
won her tlrst race last March In
the Busbmills Grand Prix off
Newport Bea.ch.
Two cracked ribs and a swoUeft
Up later, Mrs. Cook slammed her
38-foot ~arab hull, Kaama,
through etabt to 10-f oot seu to
outduel 46 of the world's top male
drivers for the champlonsblp.
Cook beat the favored U.S.
champion, Joel Halpern of New
York, by 22 minutes over the
110-mile storm-eborteoed course.
The race bad been postponed me
day because of stormy weather
off the Dry Tortu1as. The
orllinlllcoursawas 158.9 .m.i.. Cook came Into race belld-
qoartert at Key Welt apilllas
through black and blue lilNS ·~ parently suffered when she col·
llded with her navlcator, Don
Holloway al Fort Lauderdale
durlne the rugged raoe.
"Boy, do I have a fat Up.'• abe
grinned as newsmen gathered
aroundber. .
Cook'• throttlem&n. John Con-
nor of Newport Beach said tbe
seas were probably not over 10
feet. ••but they seemed Ute ~ at
times.••
During a recent rouah weather
race off Florida Cook auffered
two cracked riba.
After the BoshmlllB rabe here
last March. Oook beld the North
American pohlts lead for several
races before breakdowns
dropJ*l ber to third place bebtnd
Halpern apdJoey Ippolito of New
Jene,.
The top three drlvel'I from
each eauntry quaJlJ'lfld for the
·sudden-death world cbam-
pionabipraceoffKey West.
In tbhd place ln the cbam-
plombJp race wu Italian drlver,
...
GuJdo Nlccotai, and fourth wes ·
Bob Nordlkog ~ Van NuYa. wbO
made the cbamplonship race by
vitrue of winnlne tho South
American cbamplonsbip earl.Y
this year. Cook '1 time over the coune f6
2: 18: 26 was comldered relatlveb'
slow becauseoftheheavyseas •. Cc>Gk was drlv_ini the Hme
boat in which abe won tbe
Buab.milla Grand Prllt after tbe first place fiDiaber was 41,..
qualified.
Helpern droVe a 38ofoot Cobra,
Beep Beep, and NordNof WU It
tl\e helm al bis •foot Cl&~ PowerBoaUlagulnoSpecial. • ·
Thia ls the tlrlt )'ear the wcrJ&
offshore power boat cbam·
pionahlp bu bee detei'mhied by
a sudden-death race. ForthepUt.
13 years, the Sam Griffith •
Trophy, sym!t:: ot the wwt4:
cbamploaablp been awarcwl
to the driver earalq the~
total Po1DtS In Villon Of IDt.iul• tloo lil<iairbnlttna <Ul14> s&DC•·
tioned race..
The commltJDent of time, mouer and '8'ort to accompllah
t.bi. tut WU atauertni bee~ races were often ecbeduled CINY
a few d8)'S apart ln dJtterent:
countries al the world. A aedom
contender found lt neceua17 to own at leest two full1 prepared boat., staUontng each on dlf~
fennt coatlnents. Tbl1 type ot
globetrotttns ~trcult waa, of
necetslty, reserved for thole
with immense penou1 wealth. •
· Ill order to reeUty the lltutlm
and put more Interest In of5bcir8
rac1D1, Sob Nordltof, veteran
racer and former Power BoatAs-
sociatlon (APBA) preltdent/1
began a campalp to establlab a
•in1le-event champloo1tilp · format. • Non:takof spent a great deal fl
tlme penuadln1 VIII of the
mertts al tbe ~e race. I.st year the lnteroattonal com .. ·
miaelon aaeecl with Nordsbe'•' Idea aadtbellnal•raceonatOft •
Key West WU born.
. ONE oaE TJllE: Amon1
tbe movtr• of our co11tal
roi.mktpal •ovemmenta. a J)&nel
ii 1cbei!uled to uaemble toftlpt
wbereln tbey may be taxed to a
jud1ment demandln1 the
wifdom ~Solomon.
Thia body poUUc la the Coela
Mes~ Plannlnl Commlaalon. In
tbe cue at iAut. the plannen
won•t be wei1blna a mualve zon.
in1 chance ot 1rave impact upon •
tbe community. They won't be
j\llalinl the complexities ot an
enormous subdlvilion or apart·
ment complex.
Before them may come the •
beady iuue of judging whether
one penon's treuure ta another
peraon•1junk.
The cue la of one Sid Soffer.
Newport Beach restaurateur,
and his automobtle1, veraua the
City of Costa Mesa and ill tow
truck.
WHAT HAPPENED WAS that
Sid, who lives in Costa Mesa, had
three cars parked in his
driveway. City officials came out
and inspected these vehicles and
declared them clunkers.
They serv(.'<f written notice on
Mr. Soffer which gave him three
options
1 Getridoftheoldcars.
2. Swear they weren't his
responsibility.
3, Demand a public hearing
~1tbin 10day1.
Sid uaerta he wrote In to City
Hall, demanding the public hear·
ing. City officials say they didn't
,get his demand on time, thus pre·
cipitating their arrival with tow
truck whereupon they hauled
away Soffer's three old motor
cars.
Soffer screamed foul m the
loudest kind of fashion. He
claims his written demand for
hearing was mJile<l on time. Peo·
pie who have suffered recent ex·
pertence with the United States
Po1tal Service might see a
thread of credibility in $offer's
position on this.
Further, Sid insists his three
vehicles are not junkers. They
are classics, he declares. The
autos in question are Cadillacs
vintage 1947, 1980and1964. '
CLEARLY IN TIDS case, auto
historians might be called as wit
nesses to testify on the clunker or
classic characteristics of theae
three old machines.
From th.ls corner, I'd put my
cash on the '47 roodel and let the
debate rage on over the other
two.
This aside. the city hall inspe<:·
tors have already passed judg-
ment apparently viewing all
three as Early Eyesore when
they summoned the tow truck.
NOW THE ODDS are heavy
th at Mr. Sorter will show up
before the municipal planners
tonight, seeking justice for the
three machines he sees as things
of beauty and joys forever.
Soffer, it should.be noted, is
ring-wise in jousts with city ball.
Back in the 1960s, be successfully
withstood several assaults by the
City of Newport Beach. The mo.at
epic of these came when
municipal officers tried to jerk
the entertainment permit for hia
eatery. known lls Sid's Blue Beet,
near Newport Pier. They failed.
SO SID CLIMBS tbrou1b the
9ty Hall rin& ropes one more time.
Will the Mesa planners elude a
confrontation by rulin1 Sld too
late in bis protest? .1..Wlll Soffer
prove to be rusty aner so long
away from tho City Hall arena?
Tune m for the next excitlnl
chapter
'Altsolutelg Beauttlul'
President Carter applauds actresses
Shirley MacLaine, center. and Leslie
Browne following a private showing of
their movie "The Turning Point" at the
Kennedy Center in Washington Sunday.
The Carters invited Ms. MacLame and
Ms . Browne into the presidential box after
the sliowing. After kisaing Ms. MacLaine
on the cheek, the president exclaimed "Are~·t t.~ey good. It was absolutely
beautiful. Ms. MacLaine has been a
longtime Catter supporter.
Soviets
Out of
Ordered
Somalia
NAIROBi. Kenya (AP) -Somalia, angry at the Soviet Union'~
toward rival Ethiopia, is expelling the Soviet navy from ill chief bues
on the Horn of Africa and ordenng thousands of Soviet advisers out ot
the East African country, Radio Somalia bas announced.
The broadcast Sunday said the Marx 1st government. wu alao break·
mg diplomatic relations with
Cuba, renouncing the 1974 in the Soviet. Embassy staff in
frtt;ndship treaty with the Sovtet Mogadishu, the Somali capital.
Union and ordering a reduction SOMAIJA HAS been the Soviet
One Kill~"'
Tiro Wounded
In Shooting
PORTLAND. Ore, <AP>
One man bas been killed and two
men have been wounded, one
critically, in shooting that erupt·
e d during a meeting or
motorcyclists al Memorial
Coliseum
Melvin Leo Moore . 36,
Port.land, died at Emanuel
Hospital two hours after the
shooting in the Coliseum. Dr.
William Brady, state medical ex·
ammer, said Moore was shot
several times and died of internal
bleeding caused by a bullet that
entered his chest.
WALTER HOLLAND, 37,
Portland, was reported in
critical condition at Bess Kaiser
Hospital with multiple bullet
wounds.
Rick E. Joner, 21, Vancouver,
Wash .. was reported in serlous
condition at .Emanuel Hospital.
Police said he was a bystander.
OFFICERS REPORTED that
tbe shooting followed a fi1ht. that
broke out near the north entrance
to tbe Collaeum'a Assembly Hall.
About 10 Bhola were fired, Mn<l·
ins some 400 persons rushioi for' ·
cover.
No arrests were made, and
ooUce Sit. Scott Smith said. "As man)' people as were m bere. no
one will admit to seein1
anythina." .
A man from Eueene. who was
seWni chrome bars, gas tlll.lks
and other items, said, "ThJs is
the last. time I'm coming up for
the me«. I really like to 1et
to1ether with everybody, but this
is crazy.
Union's chier ally in East Africa
~•nee 1969. But recently Moscow
has been pouring arms into
Ethiopia and denying them to
Som aha ln an attempt to end the
rebellion ln Ethiopia's Onden
region by Somali tribesmen who
want to join the territory to
neighboring Somalia.
Somalia claims that the Marx·
1st military regime in Addis
Ababa ls also being aided in the
Ogaden war by CUban troops, a
charge whJch CUba denies.
NEITHER MOSCOW nor
Havana had immediate com·
ment on the Somali action. But
Somali President Mohammed
Sa 1 d Barre had repeatedly
warned the Russians that the
Sov1el·Somali alliance wu in
danger. and the aMouncement
Sunday was no surprise.
lt has appeared for some time
that the Russians thought either
that the Somalis would not go so
far or that Ethiopia would prove
a more valuable ally. But with
much of Ethio_eia in revolt and
the ruling military clique Jn Ad-
d11 Ababa a hotbed of dlssentlon,
the Kremlin may have mad• a
serious miscalculation.
INFORMA'nON Minister Ab·.
dulqadlr Salad Hasan announced
that the Soviet miUtary and
technical experts ln Somalla,
who are believed to number
between 3,000 and 4,000, had
5even days to leave the counuy.
He said the CUban embassy staff
had to set out. in 48 houn.
Abdulqadlr said Soviet use ot
Somali facmues "on land and
sea'• would end immediatei1.
The Soviet navy•1 Indian
Ocean neet bas been usl.DC the
port of Berbera, on \b• Gulf of
Aden in northern SoCb&U•. and
Kismayu, on the aouttiim cout.
Western experts say the Soviets
also had milllle 1tora1e slloe at
Berbera. Somalia exchanged
these facilities for Soviet
weapons and training tor the
Somali armed forces.
'Legal Pot'
Plan Urged
CHlCAGO <AP) -An
end to criminal penalUea
for usinr small amounts ot.
marijuana baa been urged
by the American Medical
Association and the
American Bar Association.
Tbe two professional or·
ganizatlom Issued a joint
statement Sunday calllns
for a plan under whldt
criminal penalties woul1l
remain ror possession or
lar1e amounts of the sub-
stance but not for small
quantities for personal use.
The aroups urged
Congress and state
legislatures around the na·
tion to adopt their pro·
.posal.
Rain Batters Coastline
.
JERUSALEM CAP>-Primei!ibJsterM m Jestnt&>kAnwar
Sadatuponhltortertovl11Uaraelandlnvttedth upUanp to
tddreu the laraeli parliament. .
J Be11n ipoke Su.oclay. tbe same d~y, bombs killCd two Arabi tD
eru1ilem and a 1pcke1man for the PaM.IUn• U atlon Ol&lnlla endorsed the recent Soviet·
Americi!ln declaration as a bnslt
for a new Geneva peace eon·
rerence. :
·'If President Sadat wants an of.
ficlal iDvitaUon from me. be has
it,'· B\gtn iold rePottert '8.fter the
weekly meeting ol hia c:abmet.
But "thlageaturesbouldnot be ex·
auerated; President Sadat hu
not yet decldecl to-eome." Belin
added.
TWICE LAST WEEK. Sadat ex·
pressed willingness to so to larael
if hit trip would give Impetus to
the Geneva conference he and
President Cartel' aN IO ea1e1' to have convened thi.a year. But be
told viaian, U.S. congreasmen
Saturday that be bad not been of.
ficially invited.
Sadat alao said Saturday he had
sent Carter the naine or a Pale•
tinian·Amerlcan professor who
would be acceptable to PLO
leader Yasir Arafat as the
representative of the Palesti·
nians at Geneva. Tbe Israeli
Foreign Minilt.er rejected the
proposal, but Begin said:
"If it comes to a concrete pro·
posal, connected with a name, we
must fint hear the name in order
tomakeadecision.''
SADAT DID NOT identlly tie
professor but said he was a l'-S.
citizen. However. informed
sources in Cairo said be was a
PLO member, and Beginrelt.erat·
ed Israel's refusal to negoUate
with PLO delegates at Geneva.
Sald Kamal. head of the Pt.O's
Cairo office, told a meeting of
Arab foreign :ministers in Tunis
Sunday that his orsanlzaUon Is
prepared to cooperate in new
Geneva talks if the United Na·
lions in\'ites Paleatinlan
representatives on tbe baais of the
Soviet-American declaration.
THE DOCUMENT, issued in
New York by Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance and Soviet Foreign
MARXIST Paleattniau ot the
Popular Democratic Front f«the
Liberation of Paleatlne claimed
responsibility for the two bOmM
tb at exploded Sunday la ~
Jerusalem and said they were in
retaliation for the ltrffll air" ~
atrlkes that killed UO pal~tin·
ians and Lebanese in Southeni
Lebanon last week.
4ArmedMeii
Ste&I Baby
crocodile&
KUALA LUMPUR. MallJlla
<AP> -Four men armed ..nth
kni vet raided a c.rocodl1t farm
near Johore Bahru and stole 113
baby crocodiles worth st.ooo. a
police spokesman aal.d Monda7.
He said the robbei'I tied up
several workera at the farm
before loading the crocod.llea 1n a
truck and driving off. Tbe wtc-
ti ms freed tbematlvea and
notified police. . ·
Crocodile akin can be uaecl to
make purses. belts and other
articles and crocodile meat SS
considered a delicacy in aome
.ChJneae dishes.
..
Add th• polic.epproyed
Security II cse.dlook
With 1·1nch boll
J
..
STATE I SOUTHERN C LtFORNtA •
Brutality
Charged
By Chief
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
Police Cb1cf Chatlea R ~ .. in
c:laims he'fi the victim or vicious
police brutality the work of his
own department.
. 'Th11 is a very VICIOUS City and
pohce department," Gain ~aid
Sunday in an angry interview. He
wus upi;et over rumors he had
been cited for dnving without 1t
valid license
GAIN HAS USEl> u hberal law
enforcement approach since Uik ·
ing over the department an
January, 1976, drawing criticism
from many influential San Fran·
ctsco police veterans.
The latest anti Gain message
came f'tfday an the form of de·
partment scuttle.butt that the
chief w..-i caught driving his car
after his license had expired
"Sure 1t 's expired," Gain ad
milled Sunda)' "It expired on
my birthday, Nov. l But there·~
no law that savs I have to have a
rurnml dn\'c·r··s license I !'limply
don't drive "
HE DEMEO HE WAS cited
and "1thout naming names at
tacked those responsible for a
computer read out ""h1ch
dotumrntc-d that his license had
t•\ Jlll'l'd
'l'hl' ~on~ can run all the com
puter checks on me they want If
they think they ran we1.1r mt
down. they've got another think
C'Offilng .. r can be tougher than they
art• "
Newlgweds
Actress Shirley Jones .md Marty Ingels, comedian-
turned-Hollywood-agent. were marrled in a private
ceremony at the Rel Air Hotel. Teen idol Shaun Cassidy,
the sun of Miss Jones and late actor Jack Cass1d) gave
,1\\ a\ the bride Her other sons. Patrick and Ryan
Cassidy ulso uttended the weddin~
Strike Expands
L 0 S A N<.i EL ES ! A P l
Negotiations in a strike agatn~t
the Lo('khecd Corp continued
during the weekend as 500 add1
t1onal workers at the aerospace
firm's Ont1mo facility Joined
the walkout
A spokesman for the lntema
tional Associ1:1t1on of Machinists
'>aid Sunday that a major ~tum
bhng block. a proposed '>enionty
system. was not discussed dunn~
the most recent talks "1th the
giant aerospar1•corporat1<1n
Lockheed has recommended
t 1ghtening rules that allow
workers facing layoffs lo bump
em ploye-es in other spec11slt1e.!
""ith less seniority
C-ontraet Toasted
Raisim Sold
To Soviets
LOS ANGELES <AP l A contract between the
' • •Moftdq, N1cwt~W 14, 1tTT DAILY Pit.OT ,45
Nude Pose Changes Lif~:
Teacher Says,
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Three
yeaH ago, gym 1tacher I.;ou
Zlvkovlr·h tinffM h\• .. v.. ... -....
t>ecorne a Play1lrl cent.erlOtd.
HJ• wile left him. his achoo! tried
to tire him and he l\ow has two
lawault• m the works
On the plus side, the centerfold
shot did brlnt Playgirl 'a 1974
Man or the Year some t.elevlslon
and commercial parts.
friendship with Mae West and a
tecond marrla~ to a former
Mias Arizona. But he says no,,.,
he'd rather get into show bu.ti·
neH through an agent.
''I wouldn't pose for another
magazlne nUde," the 35-year-ofd
Apple Valley High School
physical education teacher sald
"It's OK tf it's in st•tues or
museums: but when you do it In
the neab, ltdoesn't work.''
ZIV KOVICH SAYS RE expect
ed some public notice, but
nothing like the "disaster" that
resulted when the skin magazine
arrived on the newstands of Ap·
pie Valley, a desert town of l,000
about 75 miles northea!t of h.ere
"I thought there was nothiflg to
1t, J had told school authorlties:·
he said in a recent telephone In-
terview. He received $1,000 and
an enjoyable weekend in llawa11
to pose ror the photos.
The magazine's July issue
eame out just as aprtng term
ended. giving parents the sum-
mer to simmer over pictures
showing their sons' nude teacher
sailing a boat and frolicking m
the surf and a story describing
how students d!scuued sex
problems with him
APW ..........
CENTERFOLD MODEL
Lou Zlvkovfch
TR E SCHOOL BOARD voted
to fire Zlvkovich. He appealed.
and • tl}ree·member state ap-
peals panel agreed in March 1975
that he was "indeea a respons1
ble individual and Cit to serve as
a teacher in the district." He
could be admonished for a "mis
take in judgment," but not fired,
the panel ruled
But the school district refused
to restore him as tennis coach
and department chairman
Zivkovich has filed a suit in San
Bernardino Superior Court seek
mg $8,000 in back pay for the ex·
lra dut1ea taken from him. The
matter will be heard in
Deee m ber or January.
B\/thls w-;ek
WOODLAND HILLS
(informc1l inodeling 11:10 to 3:30 unles1o noted otherwise)
ANJAC
He also has pendinlJ a i:f:
mllllo11mv ut Pl1• y,,tult
f.1ul Arutelaa Suotdor Cou
. •t•tnn l'llYttn m•11•tw-. '¥", clatma the aitlcle that aceom;.
pan led the photos w u tutd •
and fabricated. t'
THE 8108\' TALKS ABO\JT a
"restleaa" e.fool-4, 218-pouncl
youni man who played Canadl&f\
profeeaionaJ football, fought olt
1rouples and tried to avoid bat
brawls
''Yeah. I gut"Ss there's colng to
a be a few people in town bent out
of shape about the layout," th~
magazine quotea him u sayin•,
"But a lot of people have told me
they think It's great. I'm trylnj
to promote a healthy way o( liv·
ing. Good sex and lt>od health
ure closely related ~nd aoOd
health comes nrat ..
The article dta not menbon'
Z1vkovich's wife and twQ
children. His wife was not
amused. They were divorced Jr)
1975.
Some of the centerfold fallout
wu exciting for Zlvkovich. The
publicity from the dh1roiasal hearln~s brouaht calls from TV'
figures He was on .. To Tell tbe
Trutb."
ACTR~ MAE WEST got his»
a Screen Actors Guild card and a
bit as a bartender on the "Diel(
Cavett Show." He also played It
crooked health SP.a attendant in
an episode of 'McMillan Uld
Wife.
He said he has some small
movie parts coming up. but
•doesn't really want t.o be an •c-
tor. except pet-haps Jn tom-
mercials.
'\un Maid ra1sm coop<'rali\'e and a Soviet Import
company wus sealed with a kiss as an agreement to
send 3 1 m1lhon pounds of California raisins was
settled after four vcars of
A !lpelial envoy prl'~rnh the colh.'<.lion with inform.ii modeling Frid.iy in M'I. Wilshire Ore)!le1>.
neiOt I atioru. Everyone dr1rnk
STATE tat1vt•s uf the tlSSR ( J vodka and reprcsen
---------,kissed Frank H Light
µresident llf thl• ">un .~1:11d r<11S1n grower S
l'OOperat1ve, Sundav uftcr the signing of the $2
m1lhon contrult
Lii:?ht said the agreement reached with Juri B
Zh1zhm. president of So1uzplodo1mport, was the
first sale of California raisins to the Ru.,slans The
ct•rt•mon)-\\as attended by Vladimir Suskov, a So
i·1('t ~e>puty minister for foreign trade. who was at
tC'nchng the l 'SS't 's trade and cultural exhibit here
S1ape~t ldnttlf~d
SAN JOSE IAP> Police have 1dent1fied u
second man who was arrested after allegedly ac
costins: a decoy policewoman as Carlos Albert
\'11lanueva. 25. an unemployed farm worker
Police :-.aid Sunday they are investigating to see
if V11lanucv11 . who lives about 10 blocks from San
Jose Stale Univcrsit~. may have been mvolved in
any of the 30 rapes and sexual as~aults in the v1cmi
lY of the urban cam pus so far this year
Sn1prr• Aittttk PoUt."~
RIVERSIDE !AP> An investigation con
llnued today into a sniper attack on 20 pohce of.
ricers in a predominantly Mexican-American d111
trict, authorities said
No one was injured during the Sunday morning
attack by an undelermined number of snipers m the
Casa Blanca district. poh<'e reported. Officers said
the incident began after two patrolmen were shot at
from ms1de a public park.
40,000 l'iete So.,~t E%1tlbft
LOS ANGELES CAPI More than 40,000 vis
1tors viewed the Sovlet National Exhibition over the
weekend as demonstrators outside critleiied the
Soviet government for everything from suppression
of dissidents to slaughter of whales
Security at the Convention Center, including a
metal detector similar to that used at aJrporta. was
tight and only one incictent was reported. A Santa
Monica woman was arrested after ahe alleaedlY
shouted "Free Soviet Jews" and threw 1 balloon of
red dye at a Soviet o(ficial.
Vaeatlo• Ertcb 111 Deatlu
LOS ANGELES CAP> A planned vacation to
Haw ail ended in death Cor three Southern California
women and a ~ear-old boy when the car they were
drivina to In~rnaUonal Airport was bro•dalded by
another vehlelo.
A fourth woman "as aetiously Injured ln Sutt·
day'•. accident and th• driver of &he cv that al-
leaedly hit them after ruJllling a atopUiht was
booked for investStatlon or felony manala111hter. ,
ATLAS LUGGAGE
~elect• holiday gift from a trunk showing of altach~ and briefcases Saturdily in lugg.ige.
TENNIS TIME!
''od, G.:inl and Adolpho fenni .. wear and sportsweair will be tnform.:illy modell'd Saturday m Mr Wil,hirt•.
GREGORY AND GOLDBERG
\ee their hlou'c lollection pre!lented by a representative 11:00 to 4:00 Saturday in f'"hion Separ.ite\.
REVA
A ~pc<.i.il envoy Jlre)enls the elegant evening bag collection 11:00 to 4:00 Saturday in Handbag~.
•
ORLAN I
Coast Oa11v P1101
001ic Employees·
Demand:Too.Much
-·--c.<1 ts beronu.og o.re appaEe.nt..&hat execut.lv to
<Gh•ft ru1hllf• :.u:J~nrw ~re dllnH•ntUtur And lil &l\Mlt ,__AS.M-'"~~~-·
I
getting. more than their counterparts tn private fnQ'uatry
. i;:or inst~n,ce, one tidbit the executives want and get
with mcre~sing frequency la fixed-term contractJ, mean-
ing should they be fired before the contract expiration date
they must be paid for the term of the. contract. ,
.Orange County Transit Distrlct General Manager Ed
Lor1lz works \,lnder a two-year contract. Last year a cou·
pie .of transit distric.t directors talked privately of llrinJ
Loritz. But they hastily retreated when reminded be would
ha.ve to be paid for the 18 months remaining on his high·
priced contract.
More recenlJy. the now-deposed Orange Countr
Transportation Commission Executive Director Caro
Benson asked for a four·year contract starting at $30,000 a.
year.
Additionally. Mrs. Benson wanted the contract
freedom t<? d~ outside consulting work while employed by -
the comrruss10n. Sht• also wanted upward salary adjust·
ments every si>c months, 23 days vacation plus 12 days sick
leave during her first year of employment and other
benefits hard to find in private industry.
As things turned out Mrs. Benson was abruptly fired
before her contract was negotiated.
Nonetheless, those who hire for the public should keep
in mind that executives who want a job and believe they
can do it properly have no reason to ask for job insurance
through long-term contracts.
Those who hire should also do the contract negotiating
publi~ly so that the public will fully understand what is be·
mg given to the ttlghest paid personnel in public service
along with the fringe benefits offered
Executives in the private sector learn from the outset
good job performance is their only job insurance. The
same should hold true for those who labor in the public sec-
tor.
S1lll8hine Rights Next?
Just when il seemed every conceivable type of human
"right" had been hashed over. along comes a UC Irvine
student-researcher with the notion that "the right to sun·
light" may become a serious concern or fuqure land plan·
ners.
In a report on Solar Energy Utilization and Its Effect
lipon Land Use and lJrban Planning, the researcher points
out the present-day homeowner has only the legal right to
rec.:c1ve light from the sky directly above his property.
There's nothing to stop his neighbor from planting
trees or building walls. or even a two-story house that will
ca~l shadows at various times of the day.
And for the homeowner relying on a solar collector for
his household energy, this could pose real problems
Therefore. it's suggested. future planners may have to
<:ons1der solar energy use by spotting open space in a man-
ner that will protect a property owner's access to adequate
:-.unlight
Which uni~ gue:-. tu µro,·e that every step along the
road to progress runs into its own special stumbling blocks
and sets up still more challenges lo human ingenuity
Legislative Confusion
A listing of measures introduced in the recent session
of the state Legislature includes no fewer than seven bills
four Assembly and three Senate by seven different
authors, all dealing with identical or closely related con-
trols on Department of Motor Vehicles records.
All took slightly different approaches to the question of
restricting public access to vehicle registration and driver
license records.
All of the bills must make their way separately
through Assembly a nd Senate committees with no attempt at coordination. Any one -or more-ean reach a floor vote
and it 's not impossible for different bills on the same subject
to reach the governor's desk
tfhe Assembly Rules Committee now has undertaken a
studl of the "committee bill" system used by Congress,
under which bills pertaining to the same subject are con·
solidated into a single m easure before being put to a vote.
The chief stumbling block to this logical course of ac-
lion is pride of authorship on the part of the legislators.
Any legislator can introduce a bill on any subject, have it
printed up and put through the whole legislative
mechanism. And the more popular subject topics usually
generate a whole rash of bills by lawmakers an~ous to
have their names on the final product.
This is expensive, time-wastine aQd confusing. Adop·
tion of the "committee bill" procedure could solve much of
the problem. Unfortunately most of our lawmakers seem
more interested in racking up brownie points for
themselves than in legislative logic .
• Opinions expressed 1n the space lb,ove are those of the Daily Pilot.
Othff' views expressed OI" this page are thoee of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O
Box iseo, Costa Mesa, CA 9~826. Phone (714)642-4321.
Carter. Slips
"W~SRINGT<>N ,.. Jimmy ~ "-~-.,·~~'~ with tbe problema of the pres·
ldency to pay much attention to
politics. He haa not brought the
Democratic Party 1talwarts,
chafing from elebt years out in
the cold, into th~ warmth of the
Oval ot.oce.
Nor baa the president indutced :
ln the back-s lappln&, tale swapping,
horae-tradi.n&
cajolery of
Capitol Hill.
H e b a s
alienated
m ll n y
legisla\of8 by
keeping
himself aloof
from their
back room
folkways, by attacking such pork
barrel delights as water projects
and by pulling out t'he rug from
under his supporters.
His inexperienced liaison team
also seems to have a knack for
ruffling the congressional fur
they are supposed to stroke. The
result has been that many of his
ambitious proposals are si4
like dead weights in the
legislative morass.
But Carter's political advisers,
particularly the astute Hamilton
Jordan, are quietly prodding the
president into the political
cauldron. Somewhat grudgingly,
Carter is beginning to emt,?race
the party politicos he had tried to
keep at arm's length.
THERE WILL be lim1l!>.
however, to his political con
cessions. Sources close to the
president say he remains ada
mant. for example, that his de
partment heads hire their own
staffs. "In the old days. a party
person could walk in here and get
thumbs up or thumbs down on a
job," said one White !louse aide
"But now I make it very clear
that the people in lhc depart·
ments are making the hiring de·
cisioos.
"We may give them a recom-
mendation, of course But an
Earl Waters
laead o( . ~
ON
Robert N. W /Publl$Mr
JIMMY CARTE& rode into ,
Washington with his outalder'a
lance ai~ at the backroom
politicians and their horaetrad·
ing methods. His pious insistence
on morality in government ~.
annoyed the political veterans in
Coosress and the.bureaucracy;.;
as a result, he l\as had far more
dramatic initiatives than con-.
crete achievements. ,
Cart.er intends to hol4 the line
aealost the hacks and the favor
:seekers, but he is slowly reallz·
ing that he is also the leader of..
the OemocraUc Party. As hi~·
young administration eomea un-
der heavy partisan crossfire, the
beleaguered president increas·.
ingly is being pressured to begin
using the powers of his office to
win his political battles.
Senate Bill Aimed at Phone Call Pests
IC you have ever rushed drip·
ping from the shower lo answer
the urgent ringing of your
telephone <and who hasn't?) only
to find yourself on the receiving
end of an unwelcome solicitation
foe painting your houae, putting
on aluminum roofing, or repair
ing your furnace <a ll being
things you don't need), there is
good news ahead.
U.S. Senator Wendell R. An-
derson, former governor of Min·
nesota, has
authoted a
blll to make
such calls il·
Ieeal. And he
has put teelh
in the bill by
providing for
a $1,000 fine
and 30 days in
the slammer
for each viola·
lion.
That his i& not a lone protest
against such unwanted in-
trusions of privacy is evidenced
by the fact that a similar blll has
Paul Harvey
been introduced in the House by
Congressman Les Aspin with the
support or 40 co-authors.
At present there is little de·
fe nse against the annoyance,
<.>ven harassment, caused by un·
wantt!d phone ~alls. In California
lawmakers have failed to act.
fearful of the reactions of those
who thrive on this method of
sohcilation. Phorte subscribers
may. m desperation, ask that
thei r numbers be unhsted but
that doesn1t stop the calls. Those
in the business nave access to
other listings
UP UNTIL now the most crass
commercial types operate from
"boiler rooms" where batteries
of aqlicitors, working from mom-
ang ti1 late evenings, callously go
through page alt.er page of nwrP
bees in pursulto!Ulelr victims
But what really bas brought
Senator Anderson to action ls the
discovery that a new automated
device capable of making 1,000
taped phone calls a day Is belng
marketed for a mere $4.500. TM
I
price than home.ma.It.
Not only has this unfair com-
petiUon <1losed the Youngstown
~tee1 plant at a loss of S,000 jobe
but there have been other ahut·
downs at Armco, and the South
Works of United States Steel in
Chicago is in peril.
We need remedies more than
we need reerlmlnatlon right now
but remedies require recognltion
ofsome~nomic racts. \
One of t~se . facts 11 that American ateelwor~u have
• l~ l
mechanical "pitchman" has
been so perfect~ it can even .
take your order.
Pointing out that telephOne
solicitation is already so
enormo~ ilproduces an estimat-
ed $28 million a day through an
astounding seven million calls
daily, Senator Anderson said "I
believe the right of a person not
to be telephoned for the purpose
of commercial solicitation in the
privacy of the home is a
legitimate lntere8t worthy of pro·
tection "
UNDER THE terms of his bill
pnone companies would 1tve
each subscriber an opportunity
to i.ndicate such calls are u•Want-
ed; require commercial firms to
obtain the lists of those wbo do
not want phone calls, and ftne or
jail those who violate the l••·
Anderson however ii obviously
a realist. AnUcipaUng the oppotl·
tion of various Powertul 1roups
wllose telephone aollcltatfons are
well known, he hu ..exempt«I
charitable organl.zationS, u well
as agricultural, hortlcUltural and
political organiaatioAs, alona
with pubHc opinion Polls and
radio ~ tetevision rating firms.
He als o has exempted
ne.1npaper and magadn.,
publishers for calll made for sub-.
llcription renewals and calls
made fa connection with Ul)J)aid .
debts or unfulfilled contracts.
ANDERSON has been joined in,
bis efforts in the Senate by bis·
fellow .Minnesotan, Rubert Hum·;
phrey and by Thomas Mcintyre
of New Haml)Shire. ,. •
Speak:lng ln support of the biu. · Mcintyre stated, "Few things:
are more basic in our societ7:
than the privacy of one's bormv
and few t.binp can be more dls·-:-
ruptivf of tblll privacy Ulan un •.
wanted phone call• that disturb
your sleep or pull you out ol the., •
shower." The bill he said .. ls a
simple and sen1ible solution to a
problem that reelJy does not~·
to be •problem."
Amen.
o.11• ,. ......... """"
'FOX tN SOX' AT DANA LIBRARY
Kendra Phftbtn. left, Mike Toole Intrigued
:Library Sets
Dr. Seuss Film~
Fox in Sox. the notorious character from the
pages of children's author, Dr. Seuss, will decorate
Dana Niguel Library this week in celebration of
Children's Book Week
Five fllms made from Dr. Seuss book! will be
shown during the week, including.
-"CAT IN THE HAT" and "The Lorax" on
today at7p m. "Sncetches, .. "Green Eggs and Ham" and "The
Zu" on Thursday at 7 p m:
Children 3 to 5 years old can attend a Dr. Seuss
story time at Lhe library Tuesday at 9 a.m., said
Linell Mallusen, children's librarian
"I LIKE DR. ~EUSS," said Kendra Philbin, S,
a kindergarten student at Moulton Elementary
School in Laguna Niguel. "But my brother. Willie
Joe, who's 7 -he likes books about snakes."
Dana Niguel Library is localed at the Jntersec·
t1on or Niguel Road and Pacific Coast Hl1bway in
Laguna Niguel. Additional information _on
Children's Book Week act1vit.Jes is available by caH-
10g the,ibrary, 496 5517.
Housing N~ed
Tops Agen\la
Housing needs in south Onnge County will be dis.-
cussed by members of the Southwest Orange County
Housing Task Force Tuesday and Tbunday al
League of Women Voter's mee~ga.
Judy Swain will address a meeting of the
Capistrano Bay Area ---------
League of Women Voters Both women were ap-
Tuesday al 9:30 a.m. at pointed to the task force
the home of Joan Sidell. last spring by Fifth Dis-
25886 Dana Bluff West in trict Supervisor Thomu
Capistrano Beach Rlley. The task force bu
Irene Romero wlll completed its report on
speak to the league's t.be south county boul1nc
meeting at '1:30 p.m needs and problems, a
Thursday at the home of league spokesman said.
Mary Carhart, 30286 AdditJonal in!ormatlon
Grande Vista in Laguna on the league and lta
Nltuel. · meetinp is available by
calling '96-5131.
••People know
almost zero about
homosexual and bisex-
ual relationships:" be BRYANT
says. "What we're talking about is a new social
evolutionary change.·'
BUT ALTHOUGH SJIE MYS·her name bas
become a battlecry for homosexuall, Miss Bryant
says she ls happy her involvement in the Dade
County vote also brought "the normally apatheUc
majority out of it.a cloaet. •;
"They are fed up with these acta of intimidation
and lhey want to do 1omethln1 about it," abe aald.
UC Irvine
Schedule
Outlined
Longshoremen Settle ·
North Atlantic Strike
'
··n·aE ESSENTIALLY IN'l'EaESTED in
educating tbe rest of the country on what bomolex·
uallt.v ll and wbo homosexual• are, .. be • ., •• uwe
want to get acl'OIS the Point that bomosauala are
not child molesters. There is abundant lnfonnatioD
in this area, but we have to &et it out so we ean dis·
pel an tbeee lean that the radical ii.Chfliive e611·
juredup."
The following schedule
of activities open to the
public has been an
nounced by the UC
Irvine Extension pro
gram:
( IN SHOKI.' J
Campbell says tbe Human JUgbta Ooalltloa baa
opened a commWlity cent.et for moednla and counaellng. He speaks of plans to endorse can-
didate. In upcomiD1 local elecUom and a ~le
court challena• of the vote. But ptana for anot.M.r
vote are low Oil the Uat. r• _...,µ...-----~
'lllOAY, SATUllOAY
ANOWNOAY
N<N 11. "e1M11 n
"Clllldren'• 1..1i.rat..,•: Pl••..,••
•n4 lnilel\\;· Kar GoiM• M.A IHCMr 1111-SchOOI, C¥rnel A UC
1rv1n• £..t.mron •Hll•nd c04'rM,
l'rl.,1·1tP.tn.,~I endSun.1•""'12
,_, •nd 1~ pm , Am 241, Soct•I
Scl«'Ce lalll, VCI ~·FM:""·'"" ,1uc1e•-m,,,.,.,,.,,.,riaPMlllno
U.TUllOAY,NOV.11
''COIM>Mflng En-.IO'l'W>.'' 1>4-••4
WlllClll, ',,,.-m, AdmlNllr•ltY• • Ru••rt+I ANO<lal•, Inc. A UC:
lr'flnlf E~ one-cieY Mf'l'tll\lfr,
t.JO•m,-4:»,.m., Oold ""'"'· MeM Coolrt c-ncna. UCI ~ F•;
lSO, lrw:;I~ Cl.U meterl1l1, 1-11. 41414, .... ,~
"!ttlKllW MaNOlment Ill• VnlOft l[Mdronmtnl," Edward C. ~,"0 .• ~tCM•
wlt.wil A. UC 1 rvlM ~·'*-IOfl ~
"'"ml,_,.,l11'1.ll'IA:•it.m., Rft\. 1u, _, .. k-..c. I.All, VCJ um...,._
FH: '50, lno;luOes cl•• ft>lttrllls,
hlftdl .... ,.rtl,..
"l don '1 tblnk the majority abQaJd ev.r Me on ,
the rights of a minority and I I !tl'bomoeexuill are
a legitimate mlnOrity," be says. "We just wam the
same basic human riebts thatevtrJ~.iei!hu. l
know very few homosexuals wbo w nt to flaunt
their sexuality!'
ed to become tbia city'• first black
mayor has asked the at.ate Supreme
Court to overturn the election and
declare hlm miaYor.
Ao attomey for th~ defeated can· -------------------dldate, City Councilman Joseph •
Dl&oaa, a white, said today that THE FAMILY CIRCUS:
brtefa were filed with the clerk of.
court SUnday.
6-rtlBeWI• ..... ,
SEOUL, South Korea CAP>
Police arrested a rail Creiaht auaro to.
Clay and taJd a candle be left burning
wben he passed out detonated 30 tons
of dynamite aboard a boxcar, ldlllQI
58 peraons and ravastng the southern
cityoftrt.
AutbOrttieJ aatd Shin Moo-11, 38. told them~· "I'm sorry for the dreadful out.
come of what I did." They said be ad·
mitt~ being dMlllt Friday eveaiq.
the nlptcttbe exploelon.
AccOrdlDa to "Dew figure. Nle&Md
today, tbe blast Also Uijufticl I.US
p~raons, de1tro7ed or seriously
damaged 1,W buildings, damaged
7,$66 xnore bu.ildinC&. 'left 9,m ,_,.
den ta homeless and wrecked a mile of
railroad track and tos treltb\ ears.
The damage was estimated at $10
million to $20 milllon.
....... Qarpll .....
By BU Keanr
NEW ORLEANS (AP> -A trend
jury wlll be asked to consider Grit·
de1ree murder char1es apl.ritt ---------.;....,------~--
Carlos Poree toDowln1 tbe death of
one or 10 penoaa be ill aceuled Of
shooUng tn a downtown rampaae wt
week. Geo~e Held, ~. of suburban ken· ner, Li., died Saturday of a gunshot
wound be receivtd while vilUlll8 a
Canal Street brokerafetlrm last Mon·
day, the day of the lhootlnp. Held
bad been kept GD ll!e auppol't l)'ltema
a1nce he WMUd iD the neck.
6lrl'• ........ F-41·.
RENO, Ne•. {AP) -Partial
1keletal rematn1 of • e-year-old .Martlnei, Calif. ~l mJalng since
sept. 3 have been:Jow:id by bikers ill
the Dog V~97 area near Verd.Ii
Waaboe County Chief Deputy
Coronu Ralph Balley 1ald a Jawbocle
foUDd wu posltlve)T ieltn·
....
BOOMER
MtSSPEACH ..
"I'm tired of having my corns stepped on!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
Record Roundup-A
stereo system should
reflect your needs.
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
® 'IW·Fl~ST ~Poo-FWHEP
EMMY'S
BUSINESS
~> ,ANC>··
GERIATRIX
... --.-.-
If you're the type of
person who handles
records without wear-
ing long-life, non -
lint, static-free
gloves ...
GORDO
AT LEAST WHEN
YOU L.6FT 1HE
PO,TAL. SEIZVICE
TMeY ~VE )OJ A
I GOT A L.1Fc1'\ME
PASS 10 H::>Mf GliNE~
ANO A B'<ONz.eo
SWSAT SOCK!
NICE: WATC'Hl
by Tom Batiuk
then perhaps you'd
be better off with a
batt.ery operated
Donald Duck port-
able!
Dy Ferd and Tom Johnson
&fr l<EEPIN<i OUT
OF iHE HI~
INCOME Bll.ACl<ET.
.cOttftCS I CROSSWOR~
by Wm. F. Brown 1nd Mel C.sson '
-----PEANUTS
' •• b ••
by MIU
DR. SMOCK
H !!Y, Ml.SS CRlif!!Sf!! ! ~ vUST FOUNP
MYS!!t...,. IN "TM• A .M .A . c::>1ReC"T'OAY!
MOTLEY'S CREW
SO(, Wl'fM ~ PRIC'5, ,. I I
"!'AX~, AA' IN5U~MC~ I'~ ~S Al.L 601N' UP 1 " •t
1 .1U61' DON"f,.".
I~~THE'S
Pl.ANNIN6 .• I WONOER
\JMT ME'S THINKIN6 ...
I NEVER CAN REMEMBER .. AM 1 iHE RED. Cit AM I TME SLACK?
-AND JuST"1b BE
FAIR, -rne.Y SPEND
MIU.IONS NCJfl'£ ON
1()EJACCO SUBSIDIES!
t>y George Lemont ..,
Yl!!AH, eu-r ONt...V'A
N 1-rw1-r t...IKe
YOU W'O(.)t...t> GWl!!A SMAU.. MIRRO~ 'TO .ON II OP l"T'S
PA<5E!5 .'
: TODAY'S CIDSSWDBD PUZZLI
UNITED f Nture Syndicate
S.turclly'1 Puule 8olV9d
0
-
_--~-..... ._... __ -.....l"c ___ -.__---.-c=----"t-.:_.-o-.,.,~----...... ---=---
r
COUNTY I POLITICS J AT YOUR SERVICE ... ·~. HO'remb« 14. 1m
•
J:re• l'etld •• T•••
DEAR PAT: My IOn "cau1ht a toad
lul July We already have a doa and
a cat, so I was not that enthralled wttb
the prospect ot another pet. I figured
the dam thing would escape, but it's
still here, apparently happy in ita box.
My son wants to eet a proper con-
tainer for the toad. What should it be?
K.W., Coeta Mesa.
Your aoa's Coad aboctld'be put bl·a
«IHs vivarium tank, along with molal
mo11, ferns aJtd rocks. For desert
speciH, IDclude •ry aand and rock un-
dft' wblda It can bide. Tbe tank must
I
be covered t.o keep the toad from
escaptnc or belnc clUpalched by a cat.
Be sore Co leave a crack for air t.o
eater.
First Ladfl La•dlord
DEAR PAT: I am a woman who has
been quite successful in the real
Can you flnd out the fC?_J'l!Ul!? _ . .... ........ ....,......_,,. ...........
DlaMlve one cup ol bor .. ta me
&•lion al warm waeu. Soak u.roUe4 newspapers la &1111 IOlaaioa Md dralD
off enesa. Roll wet papers, one OI' t.o·
sheets at a Ume, lll'OUltd a metal or
wooden rod. 'fte roll. wWa wire ud
remove rod. Stud •P to dry tor about
tbree weeks before bunatnc.
Yahl-•lcel,.. Change
'I
estate field. Part of the reason for this
1s that more women on thetr own are
buying property. Who was the first
woman rn the United States who
bought property without the aid of a
husband?
M.C., San Clemente
It took some doing, but A YS found
that the first woman t.o be granted
land 1n her own rt&bt was a colonJal,
Lady Elb:abeth Dale. The VtrgtnJa
House of Burgesaes granted her 3,000
acres on the Delmarva Peninsula In
16Zl.
DEAR PAT: What the heck is aotnc
on? For years, four-ply yarn baa beeo
sold V> !our-01»1ce skew. Knitting
and crocheting paltema have always
called for a certain number of four-
ounce akeins. I purchased some sale
yarn at K-Mart recenUy, only to find
out after I got bome that they were on-
ly thre~ce skeins. I've done some
checking since and found that a lot of
other stores also have replaced !our-
ounce skeins with the smaller ones.'
I'm sure that others abare my concern
about this sudden chance lo akeln al&e
and the resulting problems it will
cause in trying to follow pattern in-
structions. Can you find out why thla
change has taken place?
L.S., Huntington Beach
A Coats • Clark'• Sales Corp.
spokesman &old A YS that &.be skein
size cban&e ls a almple matter of
"economlcti." Thia yam maaalac-
turer changed t.o three and one-balf-
ouoee solid color akelaa In 1177 ,
became It decided that consumen
probably would reslat tbe bl&ber price
that would have t.o be cbarced tor
four-omace akelna. CAC claims tbat
there wu some price redaciUoa wltea
it changed t.o tbe 1maller abe, but that
some Imported tb.ree-ounce akelu ac-
tually cost more lha.D the larger abe.
Thia yam company'• new pattera1
now lndicate tbe amoa.nt of yam re-
quired IA oa.nces rather tban number
or skeins. A conversion chart a1ao cu
be requested by wrtUDg to: Coau ac
CJa rk, Consumer l.nformatlon Depart-
ment, 7! Cummings Point Road,
Stamford,Coan.061CM.
RalJIJle Remains
Rubble from arson-caused fll'e at 16755 S.
Pacific Ave., Sunse~ Beach, remains to
mark site or $225,000 blaze two weeu ago.
Orange County firemen believe the build-
ing was torched at 2:12 a.m. Oct. 29,
possibly by someone whose car, speeding
from the scene, awakened the occupants
of the bulldin& in Ume for them to escape flames. However, firemen haven't de-
terminecl a moUve for the arson and said
they have no new leads in the case.
f
I
....
IRS RulnSoy No
DEAR PAT: I have Incurred big
medical and dental bills this year,
!;Orne of which won't be paid off until
next year. Can I deduct the full
medical expense on my 1977 mcome
tax? I've heard this is possible and I
want every tax break I can get when r_
file my 1977 return.
GOP Rules Cities
Party Controls Cormeil Seau
J.ft'., Dana Pomt
Sorry, bat IRS says no. When vou
Ille your 1977 lncome tax return, )-ou
will be able to deduct only the ex.
penses you actually paid before Jan.
1, 1978.
Paper Log• E'or•ufa
DEAR BAT. l 've heard thal
newspaper logs can be dipped m some
kind of solution that will produce
green flames when they are burned
If you prefer four-ounce skew, shop
at yam specialty stores, aacb u Su~r
Yarn Mpt, 1'19 W. Warner, Santa
Alla. Th1I flrm carrles onJy four-oaace
akelu aDd It featmea a large aelecUoa
of colon.
Deaths Elsewhere
JACKSON, Tenn. CAP>
-Charles B. Jones Sr .•
89, son of legendary
railroad man Casey
Jones, died at his home
here. Jones retired in
1960 after 50 years with
the Illinois Central Gutt
Railroad and the old
~1 o b i 1 e a n d 0 b i o
Beotia NOtle~• .
IUTTEA
I.II.LIAN COHLS RITTER. r•ldeftt
1 ~nta Al'lll, c.a. PHMO aw•v on NOii· miler 10, 1'77 M tr.. 999 OI M. S.lowd '°'""' of Fred Riiier OI ~la Ma, • .• 11>l•r of Alll"9d Cohia of KanM11
nd Maqorla CA>nls of l(anHI and
1e1an MaQQArd of Santa Ane. Ct.
uner•I -vi'" will be neld Monda'f
1ovamber 14, 1977 II 11 00 A.M. at
mlUI Tullllll LMnb $Mita Ana OMpal
•1111 PHlor Raymond Nie.Ila! of TIMI
•nltad L~ll CllvtCh of SMl.e AM of·
1c1et1n1. Interment wlll •• at
alrllav.n Memorial Parlt, Sent• Ma,
•· Snlllh Tulhlll l.9mb !Manta Ma \orl ... ry ~rectort. W_. tll,
MYEH. ,
ROIEAT V. MYERS, 18ta rKlO.nl
r M02 9oOlfl aey Clt'Cle, HuntlnQlon
le.Cll, CA. etlowd hlalwond of Rita,
evotad fM~ ol Oevlel-~rr, o...o.
'O Grandpa al Paul -Stlally ti.nco nd 1ov1no rn-of all .. llO llntW rum.
NI tamlly --•all frl9"dt IO a
~amorl al $arvlc•• at Chrlll
re~•-~n. 20112 fMOllOll•.
luntMIQIOn lltae", C.. Cll Wedne.0.Y
lovtmber t•. al l . U P M. In lieu ol -·~ daftelkln• ,,..., be ....-lo ·~ .merican Canur k<l•ty, ball
•roadWl'/Monua<Yellre<IOl't f THaOf'HfLVS
l lllatARO-W. THlOPttlLV~. All•
1 I""' OI C.O"' MeM. c.a Paued away on
• P111CI nOTHHS
~S' MOltTUAU
827 Main St.
Huntington Beach
53M539
PIRllAMILY
COt.oHIAL PUMUAL .
NOMI
7801 BolH Ave.
Railroad
SAVANNAH, Ga.
IAPI -Pinkie Masters,
64, a Savannah tavern
owner for nearly a
quarter century and a
personal fried or Presi-
dent Carter, died Sunday
at a hospital after an ex-
Beotia Netlees
tended illness.
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Weatmlnater •eaws26
PACINC YllW JUST ONE PHONE ~ALL
...-.OllALPAU
Cemetery Mortuw
Chapel
3IOO P9cjflo v•ew Dnve Newport,
Csllfomla
844-2700
. . . and one visit to Fatrhaven take9 oar• of ever-
ything. We have COMPLETE MORTUARY and
CEMETERY SERVICES available. All .this Is conve-
niently placed In a beautifully landscaped setting, that·
ls purposely ~1,uded. yet Is easily reached from atl of
Orange County.
Our experienced, courteous coun1elora will be
p{ to answer any questions th t you may have
concerning our een1k:ea. .
The role ol the at.ate le&blature in
hfgher educaUoo will be oae of the
subjecta Cordova will dllcUll.
ERA ORANGE COUNTY, a coall-
tion of 34 organizations supporting
ratification of the federal Equal
Rights Amendment (ERA) baa
formed a speakers bureau.
Speakers are available tree of
charge to discuss the ERA by dialing
the coalition's 24-hour anaweriq
serv lee at 639-8807.
In addition, the group now bu
brochures print.eel in Spanish which
discuss the ERA. Copies can be ob-
tained by calling Nelda Wyland at the
above phone number •
•
A DEC. 15 tundra.Iser at $50-a·
person ta being planned by ERA
Orange County. •
The cocktail-buffet fundrai.les' wUl
be held at the Newport Beacb bome ol
Molly Ly~ coalltton otrldals Hid.
ln.lormatioo aboUt tlcketa can be ob-
tained by dlallnl 639-8807.
•
DO YOU IMOW THAT COSTA ..SA
HAS A HOUSING PROGIAMm
~C11 rtrNeW._
NCOC 11M
P.O.lieill1"..._114
c.te ..... c:..
I
I
RENTALS I BOATING I MANZANAA
. Sony, Folks; .·
~.:3~~~:A=--PocrSmart~,.
•
t
-·
By UteAuecllW Preas •
Too smart to get an apartment?
It may aeem bard to believe, b\lt &hat eowd be
the c qe' in New York City where a judp bas ruled
that a landlord can discriminate a1a.tnst .. Jn·
telli1ent persona, aware of their rt.•hts, w~ may•
cive him trouble in the future ... The Jud,. also eafd
a landlord could use occupation a a hula for dedd·
-in& whom to rent to.
THE RULING DREW COMllENTS of
"absurd," "ridiculous" and "capricious" from
most of the houslnc experts aroQnd the n.auon eon·
tacted In an A.uoclated Press a~ cheek. Most of·
ficials saJd they dido 't think a aimUar ~tandard
would hold up in their cities, but a few aald it could
happen elsewhere.
Ed Holmgren of the National Committee
Against Diacrimination of Houslnc in ~uhington,
DC., said behad.Jieverheardotsucbacase.
"To auggest that this form ol discrimination is
le cal is capricious and arbitrary," be sald~
CHAR.LES COSTA, HEAD OF a Detroit-based
landlords' association, said the ruling was
"ridiculous.·•
Barry Dean, executive vice president of the
South Florida Apartment Association, said bu
group "has taken the attitude that a fully l.ntonned
tenant ls a bet~r tenant . . . I can assure you that
the association does not discriminate against smart
people."
And Donald Haas of the Seattle Apartment
Owners Association said: "I've never beard of any
such discrimination against anyone. It would
amaze me."
THE PROBLEM IN NEW York -and the
potential for a similar case elsewhere -arises
becau~e most statutes do not specifically prohibit
discrimination based on intelligence or profession.
They deal with such things as race, religion,
marital status and sex. But they don't cover brains.
In the New York City case, Judith Pierce, who
is black and divorced, claimed that landlord
Stanley Stahl refused to rent to her because of her
color and marital status; that wOuld have been ll·
legal.
CB Radio A:ppehl
Rej·ected by· FCC
•WASHINGTON CAP> -The Federal Com·
munications Commlasion is standing by a decision
ordering retail dealers to take 23·eh~ citiiens
band radi06 off the ahelves by Jan.1.
The FCC vote<f 4·2 to reject a proposed seven·
month extension ol lhe deadline.
The year-old order was l53ued because newer
40·channel sets were found to cause less in·
terference with TV reception and other electronic
equipment, the FCC said -
The extension request came from dealer11 who
are sluck with thousands of 23-channel sets. Other
dealers complying with the deadline opposed the
extension, saying it would be unfair to them.
Camp Reealled
Facility Held Japanese-Anwricam
E6tABLl8H DIN ltn by D....:..pe v1•ethn Cons,.._, tho auxtUaey ~onstats AW
or "Yolunteer clvlUana, aod like · ·
\he Coaat Ouilrd. hu welcomed D .. ck Home women into full membership, ..1>11 -
Eberaole txplalned. •
"Oun is probably th• tead After Care service •molll th~ armed f orcos ln bl1naine equality to WOJnen,"
Ebersole sticl ol theu;ai'd· Like the auxiliary, e Uni~
States Power~ua i active
in pubDc bo:!:ff eesuuti<>D. But unlike the · vy. tb6 power
squa.droo ls a privatel; operatell
boating orianlnUon offering
public boa . couraes.
"WOMEN IN BOATING may
be runnlJll into dlacrimlnation,
but lt 'snot comtna from ua," a aid
Len Berman. \rice commodore ol
the ~xili•rY' lo So~thern. California.
Berman said women members
teach adety classes, conduct ex.
amination of boata, 10 on patrol,
participate in restue work and
also hold elected and appointed
offices at every level ol the aux·
diary, the same u"D:iale mem·
bers.
OXNARD (AP) -Linda rtae
\I home from the bo9p1\.al nearb-·
a month after tbO bl'Utal l.neldelt
ln whieb e wa l>eateft ind
;raped and Iler boyfriend ilaln. ~
However, )t1u Fieoe, 18, wa
11Ull toO emodOMlll upset after
bet release tC> &Ive j)Ollce her ac-
count of what happened Oct. 14.
when abe and 17-rear.old Paul
Ymney Jr. were attacked while
walking home from & date, ot;
fleer• laid.
POUCE ,&\ID TUEY would
ftot question Mila Fiene untillaer
·doctor lives permluloa.
Ruben L. 1orret. 17, Charged
wltb the murder ol Yenne1. tbe
attempted mur4er and rape ~ '
Mias Fiene and the robbery andr
kidn1ppln1 of botb, f acee ar·
ral1nment today In Ventura
Munlclpal Court.
M EANWRILE, SINCE the
press conference, Mlu McPher-
son bu told tbe Asaoeiated Press
she knows the difterence between
the Cout Guard, the auxiliary'
and the U.S. Power Squadi'on. ln
fact, sbesaid, WIB hu f\led aault
against the power squadron becaua~ of alle1ed dis·'
cri.mlnatory practices. ·
AT A BEAIUNG Tbund.,-,
Ventura Juvenile ourt Judje
John Sullivan ruled Ton-es could
be trled as an ldwt.
MIW.,_UllD
P~PlllACIS u ... , ......... t ••
1000· .......... ..._.
THI,,_ sttoP JJOO ....... c:.hlMeM ....... ,NlllY
Let Us Help
MANZANAR (AP) -During World
War JI, this was a Japanese intern·
menl camp and the biggest city on
U.S. 395 between Los Angeles and
Reno. Now, 32 years alter Its close, lit·
tle remains but Its memory.
"The people who came to Manzanar
probably had it better than anyone
else. It was basically a happy place,"
Walkins says. "Some were dis-
gruntled, but many more were glad to
be here. They bad a great fear of so·
meone gunning them down and they
fell more secure."
... A father discovers his adolescent daughter is experimenting with drugs. He doesn't know what to do~
... A lonely wile sobs into a pillow. Her marriage is breaking up. Her elderly parents.have become a
Man-zanar, which officially clooed
Nov. 21, 1945, following Japan's sur·
render, was the first· of 10 inland
camps which held about 110,000 peo..
pie of Japanese ancestry during the
war. More than 10,000 such persons
called lhls high desert camp home.
JEANNE WAKATSUKI Houston,
interned here as a child, describes the
camp, in her book "Farewell to
Manzanar," as "a special kind of
western boom" town that sprang
from the sand, flourished, had its day
and now has all but disappeared.••
The camp also was popularized in a
television movie, "Farewell to
Man-zanar."
Todd Watkins, whose Chalfant
Press Publications, operating in Inyo
and Mono counties, put out the
camp paper during the war, says that
in retrospect the c1tmps were a good
idea. •
THE CAMPS WERE set up follow.
But many Japanese disagree. ·
MANZANAR ONCE consisted of
barracks. guard towers, mess halls,
shower rooms, a hospital, gymnasium
and even tea gardens.
Mrs. Houston said in her book, CO·
authored by her husband James, that
Manzanar became "a totally
equipped American small town, com·
plete with schools, churches, boy
scouts, beauty parlors, neighborhood
gossip, fire and police departments,
glee clubs, softball games, Abbott and
Costello movies, tennis courts and
travellngshows."
Now all that remains are parts of
the orchard from which Manianar got
its name (Spanish for apple orchard>,
a suiall graveyard, a abrine and a pl•·
que at the old entrance to the camp,
both put up since by Japanese groups,
burden. She can't cope.
... A middle-aged man with a good 1ob shakes uncontrollably as he reaches for a bottle of booze. He
tried to stop drinking, but fa iled.
(
1hese scenes are common everyday experiences. All of 1,JS have proble~s an~ we search for th:irsol~tions.
Sometimes we succeed. Other times we can't. The!" we need profes~nal help. Where to find this help
can become a problem. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helps people find answers to their problems. •
inc then·Pl'etident Roosevett•s 1942 THE OLD GYMNASWM at the
order giving the War Department camp, localed in th& Owens Valley
power to define mmtacy areas in the between Lone Pipe and Jndepen·
weal and exclude from them anyone dence, bas been taken o•er by the
who might threaten the war effort. Inyo County road department to store te~~~ew:r,~rfur~~"Tr~r!:'::el~h:!a!: and matntainequlpme!1t. PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are free counseling and referral services located in Orange County.
iq ,coastal areas and upon their re· Japanese people who were interned
14Mse found that they bad to start from at tbe tamp still return here OC· • scratch. But Walkins adds "thesepeo-casionally. Hundreds showed up PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are here to offer you help ·through counseling and referral. There is no C~~t!~~ .. ~ be protected from war ~!~!1:o:.1' year lpr • dedication charge for our service to you. We refer to both public and private agencies in Orang~ County. F.acili· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-ties to cara for individuals are available on a 24·hour ba~s. That means ~ecan help you ~heneveryou
·need help. Appointments are not ~ecessary. If you prefer to make an appointment, day an(i evening
,.... ____________ .... .._..._...._ ___ ..__..,.•hours are available. (Office hours: 8'.30 a.m. -5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. fn extreme
AUCTION SALE emergencies. a counselor can be reached after 5:00 p.m .• and on weekends.}
..
I ,
1
,MIL~AVKEE <AP> -Lynn
Dlc:l<ey ttarted bearine the boos
early Suadar afternoon, and
1tbeir decibel 1evel peaked •hen
be trotted ontO tho fleld with the
rest of the Green Bay Packer of.
fentlve unJt with 7:17 left in the
third quarter.
TbreemC01J!1)1ete paaaes later,
btck•Y ttudjed back to the
ald.tline dlssustedly 1nappin1 bis
helmet &kap. Now the boos were
mtxed'Wlth a ehant.
"We 'tfpt Whlteburatl We
want Whi~urat!" many yelled.
They mUDJ. David Whitehurat,
the Packen' eighth·rouod draft
choice from ~man and only
other quarte1back on their
• roster. · They'll get him next week.
J>tckey was hit as he threw his
38th pass on the final play tn the
Packers' 24-6 defeat "by the Los
Angeles Rama. It was probably
his final play of the National
Football League season, since he
tumbled to the turf with a broken
lower left lea.
Dickey, prone for several
minutes while team doctors and
trainers attended him, finally I was carried by stretcher to an
Jambulance and taken lo a
hospital j His injury took considerable
ledge ofC the levity in the Rams'
locker room after perhaps their
1flnest game of the season. Now
1
6·3 with victories in four of their
last five games, they kept a one·
game lead over Atlanta in the
National Conference West, while
Green Bay slipped to 2-7.
Rams quarterback Pat Haden
completed 10of17 i>aas" for J'G yards, while Jobn CappelletU Id
a ball control grOWld cam• with 1'
· yardatn20carries.
Haden led a 91-yud march on
the Rama second 1erle1. Ht
passed to Harold JacklOn fort yar~h and to Lawr,nct
Mccutcheon for 27. Terry NeJa:Qft
1alned 18 yards on a tight ena,..
verse to the Packers 2, l.nd
McCutcbeon scored on the first
play of the second quatter.
Momeatl later, safeey Dave
Elmendorf caught a ruml)le by
Packer rookie Terdell Mldd~
in the air and raced 41 yards to
the Green Bay 32. Haden pused
to McCutcbeon for 27, then toued
a &-yard set>rtng ~s to Ntlson,
who beat linebacker Tom toner
over the middle.
Cornerback Pat Thomas in·
tercepted a mckey pass on the
Packers' next series and re·
turned 29 yards to set up Rafael
Septien 's 32-yard field goal a~ the
Rams led 17·0 four minutes
before halftime.
Dickey connected with Steve
Odom on a 65-yard scoring bomb
late in tbl! third quarter, but that
merely interrupted the booing.
Haden retaliated by leading a
65-yard march capped by Wen·
dell Tyler's 1-yard touchdown
plunge with 12:5Stoplay.
No one seemd to know exactly how Dickey was tnJure<1, but
Rams general manager Don
Klosterman sald he was hit, ap-
parently by defensive tackle
Larry Brooks
"l'nl not sure who hit htm
Several of us were trying to get to
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\·To IJse Coin Flip
SW Conference
: Jump Ball ls Out
/,
thla season as a 1uide for poialble
cbanees in the future.
Conference offlclala had re·
ceived as of u.ts week replies
from 20 visiting school• aareeln1
to eliminate the jump ball and.
from 13~uslngtoeUminatelt. · • Mea~whlle, all nine SWC
coaches were ln acreement on
one thing Sundq at Prest Jj)ay -
that Arkansu shoeJd be favor
to take the tlUe asaln.
.. -.
to . CHAMPAIGN, IU. -Harry
Combes, who coached Illlnoil to
four: BIC Ten basketball tiUa and
three NCAA tourney ap-
pearances, has died after an ill·
aen of teveral mont.ba. He was
62. " Combes, who died Sunday, was
Ulinl mentor from 1H7:.&7 and
compiled.a mark of n•1so. Hl&
team• won t1Ues la 1949,, 1.951,
1952 and tled Obio State tor the ~hamplon1blp iD 1913. He
COitched llllnoll to three NCAA
third-place tourney llolthea,
beating Oregon State in 1949,
Oklahoma AlcM tn 1951 and lc>a· tng to St. John 'a in 19$2 only to
bound back aeatnst ~ant a Clan.
~to B..,,I
·----·
$75,0bO Honi Kon• Tennit
Patrons' Claasic. •
402~ ...... £tit
BAKERSFIELD -Bruce
Wilhelm, a 32.year-old au~r
beavywei~t, broke Ma own
ADtertcen snatc record "tb
a lift of 402,,. ~ in the Oen·.
tral California "elcht llftlnc
cbamplonships Saturday. •
cordinc to U.S. weicbtllttln1 Of.
ficlal .Jiid~miti. • Ttie new American record ~ame on Wilhelm's third at·
tempt. He failed to ralse ~
pounds in a f<>w1h attempt out·
side the competition, Schmitz
said.
In an earlier ltft Saturday·
Wilhelm snat.cbed 896~ pounds
to shatter his previous mark or
391~. set Aug. 28.
. Terry Bndthaw pa11ed for 9'-yard bomb fi'Om K•n ~ toucbdowna before he wu 4enoatoB1U)'Broou. •
bOeked from the 1am1 wlth a
der lroW'J, aDd tbt Plt11· · IAN FaA.Na.84'0' AT NB
bu.r•b a.eien held olf, a late ORLEANS -Ra1 Werschma
raUy to beat the Cleveland bOottcl a aa...)'ard ftel4 al 1n
Browm, ~1. SundaJ at the Win· oYertlme ~ eap • 1~bilf
aer'a field to hi1hllaht Nlltlooal Frassctaco NnY and ••v~
J'ootball Learue acUoo. '9era a 10-7 victory over the N
It wu a aeuoo bi Ch total for Orleans Salnta.
Ute St.eelen, who jumped Into a We~ mlued a cb~ to •
tie with Cleveland for the Central end the tame ln resulaUoo when
Diviaioo lead in the American be failed on a 50-yard attempt
Conference. Both are 5.4 in tbe midway throu1h the fourth
ru,.ed circuit. quarter. Devin WiWarm scored
The Browns traJled 35-10 ln tbe the •een• touchdown in the third
final quarter before backup QB quarterOllaflve-yardrun.
Dave Maya combined with Larry New Orieans opened the scor·
Poole for three TD passes. tn1 with an eight-yard touchdown
Bradshaw bit 13 of 21 passes for 1"1,Ul by Tony Galbreath in the
283 yards and Ptttsburgh raced to tlrst quarter.
a28.3edle. Ellew&ereln~NFL:
BOVSl'ON AT OAKLAND -
The Oakland Raiders car;r
from behind for the thlrd time
Clarence Davis' three-yar
touchdown late ln the third
period, then got three big plays
from defensive backs to aave a
34-29 victory over the Houston
Olleri.
Oakland quarterback Ken
Stabler to.led three touchdown
passes,~ to Mike Slanl and one
to Fred Blletnlkoff, while
Houaton 's Dan Paatorlni com-
pleted two TD aerials. The key
plays from Oakland defensive
backs lnclud~ interceptions by
Willie Brown and Jack Tatum
and a fumble recovery by George
Atklnaoo.
CINCINNATI AT MIN·
NESOTA -Fran Tarkenton lg·
n1 ted Minnesota 's long -
sputtering offense and broke a
National Football League record by completing 17 or 18 passes
before he was u\jured as the Vik"
mgs overpowered the Cincinnati
Bengals 42· 10.
The 37-year-old quarterback
injured his right ankle when
sacked with 3;34 to play in the
third quarter, and could be out
for the season.
The Vikings' Chuck Foreman
scored ~ree touchdowns and
Cln.tnnati's only TD came on a
NY GIANTS AT TAMPA
Bob Hanup~nd plunaed a yards
for a touchllown and Joe Danelo
added a '3·)'ard field 10&1 before
halfUme u the New York Giants
huo1 on to top the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers, 10-0, handlnt the
Bqc1 their straight loss.
The only TD of the game was
set up by a Tampa milscue In the
opening minutes of the same
when a bad snap by center Dan
Ryczak sent tbe ball salUnt over
punt.er Dave Green'• head and
gave the Giants the ball on the
'!'~!Dpa t·rard line.
KANSAS CITY AT CHICAGO
-The Kansas City chiefs rolled
to a 17-0 halftime bulg~. then went on to blow a 28-27 tiff to the
Chicago Bers.
Brian Baschnagel got the
Bears fired up in the second half
with a 55-yard kickoff return
(nullified by penalty) and a punt
return of 42 yards. Walter Payton
scored twice from short yardage,
and added a 15-yard TD "11.
Later, with three seconds to play
Bob Avelllni t06sed a 37-)'ard
touchdown pass to Greg Latta for
the winning play. It came 21
seconds after Ed Podolak ran 14'
yards for a TD to give the Chiefs
a 27·21~ad. Pay gained 192 yards in 33
carries to his seaaon totals to
1,129 yards.
Football Playoffs
Nine Area Squads
Given CIF BerthS
:'f'Quntaln Valley High 's un-
def epted Barons, champions of
tbe Sunset League, hav~ been In·
stalled as the No. 1 seed In the
CU' <Big Five Conference>
pl•yoffa and have drawn wild
card pick Fontana High, the team.
tll•t eliminated Fountain Valley,
Crom the l976playoffs.
· Ahlo drawing a home assign·
ll)ent in the Big Five Conference
is Sunset League runnerup
Newport Harbor, which meets
. D•l Rey League representative
SC Francis.
' On the road are Edison <Hunt·
1en Beach) and Mater Del
aota Ana>. Edison draws
· 1elU5 League co·champlon St.
Raal ·(Santa Fe Springs) 1 whlle
t-ter Del ls at Redlands.
tancla <Costa Mesa) Hi&b's
Jes, third in the Century
sue, are on the road agaln$t ~seeded Rlveraide Poly <M>
the Southern Conference
offs. e Central Conterence
res four area teams with
at-year Caplatrano Hlth
oved up ln stature. 1&lnl.na a
rth at South Coast League CO·
am pion M.lulon Viejo.
·"I'm not completely aur .. rlNd." says Capo coacb Bill
erty. "Our win over Blabop
ont1omery aurely bad et.hina to do with that d~
1lon." ~n Qemente, which Iba e South Cout crown wltb Jdll·
t.lon Viejo, also bu a bOnie 81·
11l1nment, meettn1 E1swran1a
<ADabeim) Hip, a tum wtlJCh
I buried Caplatr•no Valley.arU r,
•1·7. • Tb• other playorf entry,
Corona d 1 Mar l.draw1 tou a I ment.,.t .NO. 2 I r o <PJ a) IC , U\e VDUlli•:t.~~IS•(V"''""ITllD\ ,
rtn.oiftW.11'11J cam
w '.~s JNGTON' AT
P81LADBL'PHJA -i'.be
Waahlngton Red1ldna l'a(Ued
wUb 10 Polnu Jn the flaal
quart•r. capped by Mark
M eley'a :S..ylri fteld aoat wltb •
S:Cl left to Calo a 17·14 ~Ct.oil
over tbe PhUldetphla &qi •
MoMlty'I boot WU aided t>)' an
18-mlJ•pet1-hour wtnd.
The Redaldna bad 1coted tho
tyln1 TD with 9:31 left afW'
DallH lilCkmaD blocked an
Ea1le1 J)UDt and reeovered the
ball at the Philadelpbla lt. Ori
the flnt play the Ea1te1 wer.
1ocked with a penalty a.pd ~ plays later Joe Tbeilmana (
Daqny Bua• wUh a 5-yilftl wcpua.
BALTDIORE AT BWWALO -am Jones led the Baltimore
Coltl to a S1·13 win over the B:uf·
falo BUla, completlnC 12 of 23
passes and rwmlnl for a TD.
1 ' ' _,....
OAKLAND'S OAV& CASPER MAKBS A DIVIJfO RlCl!PTION IN THE 33'-29 WIN OVER HOUSTON.
Hi• cwntspart, Joe Fercuaon
nf Buffalo, waa tntneepted
twice,• aettin1 up ~hall TO.
by Lydell Mltchell lbd ~elt
L•ak1.
Jones pused to hi• bJckl fre·
quenU1 aDd Mitchell added an
Denver Rally Tops SD
18.yard TD run to tbe BllUmore s A N D I E G O < A P > -termlasioo to f1n1ab 12·for..b and
column. Buffalo'• Jobn Kim· Quarterback Craig Morton fired 1'9 yardl.
broueh returned a punt 13 yards two second-half touchdown Otis Artnltrond and Perrin to provide the Bills with a abort· passes to wide receiver Haven • Uved 7-0lead. Moses, the final one an S·yarder were the leadlna Denver ruabera
w1th 1 :36 remaining, to lift the wltb only 33 yard.I each. Johnny
SEATTLE AT NEW YOaK Denver Broncos to a 17·14 Na-Rodgers, making h1I return to
JETS -Jim zom toised two tiooal Football Leaeue victory the San Dies<> lineup after 1lttinl
touchdown panet and Seattle's over the San Diego Chargers out four games with a hamstring
defense chalked up tfa first Sunday. injury, topped the Chargers with
shutout e~r as the Seabawk.s The Broncos scored their ao-the same figure in only one
beat the New York Jet.a, lT.O. ahead touchdown on a fourth· carry·
Zorn completed 16 of 37 passes aod·four play, cllmaxinl a M· Harris completed 13 of 31
for 219 yards, hitting Don yard drive. Key to the march wu passes for 166 yards, including
Testerman with an•18·1ard scor-8 a,.yard paas Jnterference four to JolDer for '79 yards and
ine pass '11\d David Sims tilth a penalty a1alnat Mike WllU&llls three to Rodiera for 7S y•da.
9-vard strike. on a thlrd·and·lO play, putUna the1 Harrla went out ~th an ankle ln·
The Seahawkl dominated ballattheSanDlo&o3. jury early in the fouftb quarter
throuahout.. Pat Leatiy mlssed a The game ended •• James and wu ~ecS briefly by BUI
46·yard fteld aoal try early and Harris. who bad marched the Munaoa, whola~Al)' pus was IA·
the Jet.a mana1ed to get to the Cbar•en from thelr owd 18-yard terceptecl.
Seattle 12 later before Steve line, threw four incomplete Muneon-.ruhltaabetbrewthe
Preece intercepted a pass to pre.. pass et from the Denver 45. ipterceptlon aud au ff ered a
serve the shutout. San Diego out1ained the Bron· broken left fl~a and Harrta,
-D I nolT "'T ATLANTA -COi 320 to 22Z yarda as oeltbet' limping noticeably• returned to E"l'A ~ team was able to 1enerate. COD• ... e oame Ralph Ortaga returned a fumble ... • • "' aiatent offense. Morton, after.10-
ably be sidelined for the rat of
the s'eason.
The defense sacked Morton •
four limes for 29 yarda In losses,
whlle the U5Ually potent Broncos·
defense reached Harris only once
for a six-yard loss.
Leroy Jones led the San Die10
defense, tt1urlng ln seven
tackles, logaing two aackl aoc1
deflecting two passes.
... * *
Broncoa
Cllefe-n
J 0 1 1-t1
710 .... 14
SD -DMn 11 tYont>i. """'" , .. nlrtdlutildU Otn-PO lllf!W'5 SD -Jolnu t2 oaa• from VtHlllllfto" CBenlrtehll.9-ICll)
Otn -Mows~ pealrwn MorMn IT-11.ldl> Otn-Motatoent,..,,,~IT-rlde:k> • • ,t.l"9n D'--.U.21'
IHDf'll~~AOtl•I
"UUONG -0.-, ""1'1n ..... A ........ •»-Jtnlllft MJ. SM oieeo. R....,. M3. v .... 1:M7, W•llllllflOl'I 1 .. 26, ...... U. ,
-.. AHU~O -Olr!Wr, MeriM 1NM, 149 • ._ ~ oi-; Hant• 1WHO, , .. I w .......... ~ • lll:M-~t·t,O.
'1t~CllVlrcG-O..-,,__~O...,._
Armttront >2>. 1>119111 a.-. llfl oi..a. _,.,
+1', llM9Wt>7 .. Y91o111,..,W.....,..a.\I. 14 yards for a touchdown and ing 3.for·l3 In the flnt hall. bit San 1!!.;fo coach Tommy Robert Pennywell scored ..,itb a nine for 19 pUMt alter tbe tit· Prothro MUDIOD will prob.:
20-yard run after lnterc•pttng to ~~!-!~..!!~==-=~==-=~-...._--~-~--:-:-..;..--:--------------
spark the Atlanta Falcons to a
J7-6 triumph over the Detroit
ILlons.
Ortega's TD run came with
8:02 remaining. Rick Kane, who scored
Detroit's touchdown on an 11· •
yard run, was the victlm of the
fumble that Orteaa returned for
the first Falcons touchdown. Mo-
ments late!' Pennywell intereept·
ed and AUanta kept Detroit win·
less on the road thi$ year.
NEW ENGLAND AT MIAMI
-Miami running back Gary
Davia came off the bench to de·
liver a touchdown and a key 73-
Y ard kickoff return as the
Dolphins defeated New En&land,
17·5.
Davis capped a 94-yard drive
with a 1-yard /lunge and after
New Englan moved to 7·3
in the fow1.h quart.er on John
Smith'• JS-yard field goal, Davis
took the ensuing kickoff and
rae?ed 73yards tothe22.
Garo Yepremlan kicked a 32-
yard field foal to glve Mlaml a
10~ lead and an insurance TD
came with 5:51 left.
11iree ArealTe8Dl.8
In CIF Volley~
"
,W,1N PRIZES
WORrH
MORE THAN •a,ooo
IN
-
The varaliy squad tan't the only football
pc>w•rhoule at Fountain ValleJ Hiah. While Wlllle Glttella and nm Holmes bave been
leadlnf the Barona to an unbeaten season and No. 1
CIP rankinl amldat mucb fl.Qlare, the feats or
St.eve Southward and Blll Tyler on the freshm'aD
JevelhavegcmealuioetunnoUced.
But the FountalA Valley froeb team, uader the
· cllrecU. of Dave Fitzpatrick, hu been bWldlnc a
d)1ia.tty of tu own. Lut Thunday's 42·11 rout of Weatmiilater
cUncbed the SUD.let Leaeue freshman cham-
pionship for the youncer Barona, wbo flnlabed tile
seuoo with an8-0·l record.
It w~ the team'• 20t.h straight leacue victory
spann11lf four years and B#OPS freshman teams
have now won 34 of their last 3e camd.
Fltipatrick eivea a lot ol credit to ualst.ant
coaches Job.a Roeales, Bob Bell and Q~ Carrouo,
not to mention Fountain Valley's aeemlnaJy unesid·
iDI wealth of talent. •'The four of us have been coachin& toe ether for •
the last three years and this ls our f°'1rth con·
aecutlve cbamplonshlp," be said. "Q_ut we've been
lucky. Look at the varsity. We've haa some talent,
that's for sure." •
Nearly all of Fountain Valley's varsity players
have come up through the ranks of the lightweii,bt
football teams and it ls thls process, much like
baseball's minor league system, that bu made tbea
Barons a strong contender year ln and year out.
"Our fl.rat good year was with Gittena and
Holmes," says Fitzpatrick. "Since then, we baven·t
lost a Sunset League game. They started the ball
rolling and we've kept it going since "
Southward appears to be ready to carry on the
Barons' tradition of flne running backs. His two
touchdowns against Westmlnsler ln limited act.ion
~ave hlm lSfor the season. Tyler scored once aaainst the Lions and wound
up with nine. A name synonomous with Fountain Vallev klrlr. ·
ing. Steinke, also graces the freshman roster.
Greg Steinke, whose brother 8teve booted a pair of
52.yard field goals for the varsity a y~ar aeo, bu
bandied the frosh kicking duties with the poise of a
veteran. ·
He has missed only two of 28 PAT kicks while
booting three field goals, the longest of which went
37 yards.
Except for a 13 ·13 tie wt th Sana Ana on the ~econd game ol the season, the Barons have seldom
been tested. They outscored opponents by an
almost Cour·t.o-one margin, averaging 26 points of·
fenslvely while allowing 5.2. JC that wasn't enough, Fountain Valley's dis·
trict football team went 9-0 in its campaign.
The winnln& formula, Fitzpatrick says, was
simple. "We bad a good group of kids who worked
very hard with a compatible coacbln1 staff." ·
I ~~ Athletics
f VAllSITY I 0... Hiiia llU i.1,...._ v•i. ........ ~IOI def MINfl H, def Wt,..
Wl ... ,cl9flMTt*1 .. 1; Kf'elllVS 101 _ .. , ......... ~101 -...... , ...... ......
'""'..,,_ 10) ..... o...ktlen-"°"' 1-4; IOll te dtVr ..... '"*'-o-4, def ~9-S .. J; AldH'IN ...
Geya IOl-.... lolt1-4.-M;
O'eon--~ (01 lost ....
H,H. u..__.,m1m••'-..._..
~eftda IUI lelt .. Steed W, M&l to
Oval .. , ....... '°(MW 0-4; 511 .... IUI lost,..,_..., .... J.7; eunon
(Ul_.M...._H. ~ AuCltftlOMY·Kaml~ IUI wf
8rylOftoo114#11a .. 2. loSt to i..Kll-Olc.k
2-4, ICllt to f'TDSmllll 1-4; c:uuen-
LQoml• CUI 11111 ..... -7-J, loct 0-4; C:-r-~wr IUI IOlt J.1, U.
2-4.
Pro Grid
Standings
PlnM ltAC8 ·-6 fWIOflOI. ,..,..,.
..... ,. ~ f'llrWS,f,500
UOMll"9 ....... llt•lllf'OIJ 22AO # .20 4,00 .... ~~I UOUG f'•k•~ lc.dltol ).00
flll•"'' ,5 ""'° r• >t• TMt, Enwooo, w to AC.II,, Rltlll Tri• Noter_,.•
SeeOlld 'l'ea
TE-;-rScott Ualgb, Foothill
T -Davl4SU,SA \'811ey
T -Dao am, Oraqe
G -Mike Otl.I, SA Valley
G -JmeO'Brien. Tustin c ~eme~ar. SA Valley QB-= Dave leramco, Eat.aneia
RB-BOb Moore, Foothtll
RBdlmlke er,l'oothlll
RB-Joe Henry, Tu.stln
WR-Jcmn'Carlyle. Santa Ana
Seco.d Team Defeme
DE-JeffBnck. PootbUl
D g-Kevln Sloui, Estancia
DT-I>Qn MPlatedtt FootblU
I>T-WQMManb, Foouiw
NG-Jim llaWlewa. El Mod.en•
LB-JobliLauck, Oran1• LB-11izellffopper, SA'Villey
LB-Douc ""-1 • .Ttiltbl DB-Mike Le:ltd', El Mod
DB-EU'l BeWU. Estanda
DB-Lance Woni, TUStlD ~~c-=----~'~
)
Sultry Raquel Welch shows off her lat~st hair fashion
termed "L' Animal" named after her current film with
J ean-Paul Belmondo. While weekending in France, Ra-
quel for~ot her hair dryer and improvised the style which
is now becoming quite popular .
Learning a New
Lingo: Real Estate
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN
Af' ,...l .. c.-retJJA•11t
R IDGEFIELD, CONN.-Atter years of battlng about the Clobe
in rented rooms. unfurnished flats and leased apartments, this
itinerant typewriter tinker has setUed down and bought a house, hls
very first.
It's on a ridge in Ridgefield, Conn., overlooking lhe prtce and a
school bus stop, and it wasn't easy.
. JOINING TH.E LANDED GENTRY involves moretbanjuatthe
care fr<>c tossing of checks into the middle of lhe table at a colorful
ritual called "the closing," which ends when you run out of checks,
everyone shakes hands and they turn over a bunch of keys that don't
fi t anything.
)
'·Now it's yours,'· says the
• ~ _ real estate man. "No, It's
u.a~.,..~~·· ~ mine,'' says the banker.
"""-"'-11111111 .. St e w And everyone hues every· _____ _,_ __ • __ ,, one and his wallet .
But long before that stage is reached, the incipient country
:>quire must muter a whole new lanell&le that consists almost eft·
urely of acrooy ms and abbreviatiool, UebUy marinated in alphabet
soup and spiced with larcenous hyperbole.
JEAN FRANCOIS CHAMPOWON, the French scholar wbo
unlocked the thoughts of Ptolemy V on the rosetta stone tbat
Napoleon's soldiers plucked from the mud of the Nile, mi1ht have
"'armed up for ha biggie by lranalating the classified real alate
ads in any American newspaper. .
• Lacking the French wi zard's knowledge of Arabic, CopUc •.
llebrew and ancient Greek, lhe pn:xspecUve home buyer is up a tree,
if the property bas one, in unlocking the cluaified secrets of "R·
rnch, 3 BR, Lrg LRw-cat beam cl, WSFP, form DR, 1~ ctb, ctry kit,
fm rec room, fin blmt, att gar, CAC."
PECIPHERED AT ONLY I PERCENT by your friendly
.neighborhood cryptographer and real estate acent, this "Absolute
steal at $87,000" breaks down to: Ra.bed rancb, three bedrooms,
large living room with c athedral beam cellin1 and worldn1 atone
fireplace, formal dining room, one and a half colored tile _,.tbs,
country Jgtchen, family r~reatioo room, flnilhed basement, at-
tached 1ara1e and central air condltloninr.
By tb1a time, as AS& mlcbt seem like a aelf-accusatiOll to tbe
timid house hunter, but it actually connotes Aluminum atonn win-
dow sand screens. And Jl'AH isn't a government·backed mortcace
but force air heating.
FURTBE& CODE-BUSTING BEVEALS that a FU SP 11 a
filtered 1wimmtn1 pool, and a par-pan·f am-rm ii a partially
panelled family room. DF and jdw connote deep frMZe" and dllb
"uber, while w & d la a washer and dryer. 10 Rte must be a
refrlcerat.or and DH maybe a doghouse.
Language 11 ooe th1n1 and meaninl ii another, u Sen. S. r.
:Ra1akawa and the other learned aemantlcilta have been 1ayba1 for
. ~ · years, Real eatate rhetoric ii rife with 1ubtl•
• t.JUnotoutri1htfraud.
It takea a heap of cb~ah to make a
house a 'Handyman'• Special, which 1'1\Wb' means the buyer bad better come from a loq
line of stooe mUOD1. plumbers, electrlclaDJ,
carpentera ancl HC®d mort1a1• auaranton.
SU1btly leal fllm1y la "Uie CNat atarter houa•1 .. wblob hut·wiff atv11 you a bUd start
on your awraae AmUOD.lan abortstne.
-BB FLEXIBLE. IP a ch.lid
has a real reason -not merely
an excuae -for being late
aoan.Umea, be willing to step
back ln, or to help arranae a
trade-off with liblinp.
-Don't t.ake over. Answer
9uesU~ cbeerfully and pat.lent-
( C4REERS J
ly, or abow how aomethini ls
done if you're uked -but don't
move In and do the Job. It
puncturesacbild'amoraletosee "NO PRIVATE CO&POU.ftON
that you don't thlnk be or she can fiad ordered 8 new •hip to be tlbilt 00 handle the job. ,.. 7Y REPORJ.'ER
F;iCES CR4RCE
-Meet totetber at apeclfted the Great Lakes since the late 1950s.
times to discuss bow thlnga are Steinbrenner went to Washlncton. He
goln1 ..... what Meda chanae or put tosether a p0werful conrreas1onal improv~t. . lobby that succeeded In 1etUng the SACRAMENTO (AP> -Televillon 9I•~t Lakes included in the lf7t repo_!"t« Bill BrarJCb wu arr.ated
-KE&P YOt1R VALVES ~Ume Act, which permitted bull· when he tried to crMS a police Une ln
s traight. Remember that ne.-Jmen to use pre-tax dollan for anare~whtteabomblbreatb1dbeen
cooperaUon ii tbe coal not I*'· •hip construcUon, and permitted tbe made, polit• 1ald.
fectton. An ocftlional' 1apu m. federal govemmt!l'lt to guarantee 17.5 Branch. '4, \of KOVR, Channel 13,
an ovenll patteni of respooalbW· J>tr~~nt of any loan used for •hlpbulld· wu relelMd on $1,000 ball &!Ur belni
ty ii best foratven and f o~. Ina.· • booked for tnvestiaatlon of tnterf enni -Relax. If 1ou've a Tbe New York Yankees later N· wltb a police officer ln tbe
meticulou houaek.ee • tb• ceivedllmllaraubsldlet. Tonifurt>lsh ~rfonnanceot~d.uty.
odd.a are acalnat YOW' cb.lldNQ Yankee Stadium 00 the ldie ot the Ke was arrested SUOd•)' nl1ht after·
measurln&uptoyouratandardl. alumrldden Bronx, New York C1t.J-poUce-and otnm•t.llkld a mab lnto l----'---'--=--..,.--
Tbis doesn't dlean-you must a pent $100 \llllUon, 10 times what the cUmb\q dOwn from a 75-foot perch on PVBUC NOTICB
tolerate real alopplnesa but It Stelnbrennerarouppaidforthet.eam. ·a ndio transmta.stoo tower ln7MJUth 1----....------~~
does mean everyone wtll•be ha1>:' lD um, after buylnc the Yankees, Sacramento. offic..en aald. ..,,..•••OCMHtTOllTM&
pier and you'll Cain more Um• Stelnbrennerfou:ftdh1mself embiUiic:I •;:~~::::::.='
for younelf U )'OU don't expect ..a.ASM
too much. K1dl can be 1.reat, but ~C:~:a,.:, ...
we shouldn't expect them to D1TettM01u1n.eto
perform like miniature adulta. Notice of •roPoMd ,..MONAL~""·
.a.v EXEMPT · · ~-· •· ---l'lllOeATWCDOC••.1 .----... ----·11Tnt.A· 111:1:========-=--=:t TN lilt.It• elf llUSS.U. VAl.l.U _ BE GSNE•OV8 •• TB n BONDISSUE K.Y ..... USKLLA.VAU.UU\' praise. A little booelt appreela-~~.stlLL vAu.uuv.
Uon may·be all tbe nwud that•a Propoeed New J11ue w~.~~.· ~.~..:' :;",.'!'::\,~ needed to tnake childretl foe! ~IM nt1e • ,..._. ~
good about tbemlelftl because /1 11tt•1n t• •••tn•• ,_., ~'"'
they help atbome. .1. r.~~·:.~'C:.. W:'::. =.: Since about balf of American It is prol>osed that the bond issue herein described will be ld14 to un· ti.. •Mn "'"• ,, i.r .... ""
mot.hen wlth chtldren wider.: 11 derwri~through competitive bidding 011 Wedne5day, Nov..16, 1971 _,-.!-:!:=-...ftll ,..ct• ... ~
now work at paid l*• many at ll:OOa.m. PDST. wc11 c1e1m,..,,... i. ~ •
readers wtll be ln erested in • '°'"r~ ... ,..,.. .,.... .._ " Be rm an• a c e o tl e 1urvlva1 Jntertlt u ezempt, in lhuJ>tmon of Soled Cotmul, from F.r.rat ~ tmw icw o.t•tf'(.,. Gift.,.....-.--..
maa•al on balancln• the Ae. undn'nUtfNJ lows,Ofldfr""'~'"H•IDfthbltii.S1o.teo/CoUJorma 1ue s .. 111 "•'••~1~"•"•'"'• • " c.llf9r111e. l111:1Wlne -~. maoda of home and career more stoc11 ...-,,.., c.11 ..w --. -aanely. $8,020,000 ~u~.,......~ mVINERANCHWATERDIST)\lcr =--~,~-....
FDA ·Moving
To Restriet
Pltatic Lena
·• r •·™.,...__,_..._.. ~o ..... • ...,.u. "'""• ....,,.. tt..-IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT ~ .. • "1Ce¥ "-".,.. ~
No. lft~ .............. "-<1119 SUMe ....... ... ~ ...... ..,...,~ ..... .... <ORANGE COUNTY> ,_. ....._,. uw1er, .,..., ... • rKllll ., ........ , ,..,..._.....
Waterworks Bond.I, Election 1974, Serles A
(C.Ompriaing the iniUal offering of genet,al obUgaUon
authorizations 8(grega~g $29,090,000 )
Unlimited Tax • General Obll&etton Bdi'l<IS
Bonda Dated August 1. 1977. ~l Bonds Due ~IUSt 1
Proposed Maturity SChedule
'9CelY.oMifldodlll_,_ ...... ~P.NH•..,rtlel_._
"""'"' l«Mll!ll ..,. ............ '!,. .,,...,,,.... ~. ~~ ··a.1 .......... "'.. • ........ ~.-• ...,. "-•·· •e ~.-.~ "K«il .. ~·"T,.._.IM~,. ••A~ llltlW'll,., ..W "'ltllll 09fl. •
TM-.W..,....lt .. llWllNI' ...
... "" ~ c::.r1 .... ,.... .. callt!W'Nt ....... c-ity ti Ot ....
M<etM et NO CMc OtMlr Dfiw we-.
SMt•AN. c.I .......... '*'"'*"° '9, f "1t .... :• A.M. lft O.•rtll'leM .. ., .... Ctlll't. "*'-•"*'-..... ,...,. t• 9f tile _.Ill MN CIM'I llW fllrVW
'*"""*"" OATaD:.......,4,tf»,
llUINDUN 6 McALUIT•• ·~,,.,LMtAIN*" A forl'ftl.._
..A"puN& a A,.., .... ,,~..._ .. , ........ ....... .,....,,,....,........, ............ ~ N I 411 .... tl ..,_, ...CtlMilt Or ... Clllt c.D¥,,.....
Hw. 14, u, at, 1"1 . ~
MAKING HIS QtJART&•LY •epearaaff betol"e
Congress to explain Federal Reaerve poUCJ, BUl"DI oa Nov.
9 clearly expressed bla dlabeUef ln t1M Cuter coals of 1ut;.;
stantlally lowertna lnflation and UDUlPl01ment. Prices wtll rtee about 6 percent to 8.S percent ovu the
next year, be aald. And unemployment wtll Nmaln atuck at
a relatively hllb level, faUlna oalY to 6.5 percent froin the
emtin17 percent.
The cbalrman indicated be abo oppo1ed wbat II widely
believed to be an Important plec:e ln &be tax jlCH• pualo
that Carter la preparin1. The ellminadoa ot tbe caplt.al
gains tax advantqe would be "ll\Oll unfonunate." bt aalcl.
INSTBAD, RE INDIC4T~ WS should be \r)'lDI to en
courage investment rather tbaD nmovtq lta attractiou.
because capital gains are the tnc.Uve needed to promote
capital lnveltment and set our .-omy on aolld foot1D1.
Afterward, It WU nl>C)IUd, BW'DI told Dtws J*>PI• tba •
the admlnlltratioa ml1ht be tryinf to do too muc:b too 90GD, .. •
and that ltl many lqialaUve IDCWtl were crtat.lll8 amiety
and confwsfoll lD tbe buslneu world:
There II plenty of room f« erlticltm, aftd ooltMr Carter n« Bums bu been reluctant to nu that rocna. NetUtilr la
likely to have tbe anawer to the eccoamlc puule, but each
baa bl.a approach. .
CAD'Ea, DESPITE JUS DIMVOW.U.S. ap.,..ra to
believe that few tasks are bard or impossible to the f .cterat
government -lnflaUon, unemployment, reorsanltatio.ll,
higher ethical atandarda, peace, PJ'Olpertty.
Bums. perhap1 the most outapOlceo def ~er cl tbe tree
enterprise epproacb, belle.es we have to nOWt•b the
private seetor It we are to mait a dent ln the econoillto bar·
rien we s,e before u .
Tbe two meo clearly have dltteracea Md the dlf·
fereDcea &bow thl'OU&b the dJplomatk: "'11 tbey atte• to'
drape over them. NeJtber bu lost bl.a~ but tbelr c.bn&stlJ have~ barbed and weU almod.
Stock Market Rallj-
Rum Out of Gas
NEW YORK <AP> -Stock prtces &boirid •uttered
loesee today u lut week'• rall1 came to a balk.. •
The Dow Jooa aver••• aUOlndustrtats. wblcb cllmbe.I 3S.95point.slastweek,drop~backT.S3toll8.38.:·
Oalnefs and I01ers were abou\ nenly balanC4id tn the.f
broad tallJ of New York Stock Exchanle-l1Jted llsues. 1
Big Bow volume, ~well behind Frfd y'1.huvy ,
pace, totalled 2a22 mllUon Ill.es. • ,')
St~ld ••The Oote.l•anAoeraen Spotllfllat -Y-W'll" ~---'
:;· 1;!! 11~ ~ fn-?t=g · n "'';' 'i"J m m:t ,:u::;,• I "G,JOO 211\• -'"' 6$ Siii 1'0M 191, I aM ...,,_ J
24'.100 •'"t • "' 1"4Mts ...................... 1"""1Dt TrM ...................... iila' UUft •••••••,..•••••••••• ••• _ ., as Sttt ............ ,,,,,,,.,,.,,... ~ ..
AWHG
i.'.A ~ ~ MIQPIMCI On fM Way Tei TM 8tftt(on" ••
MIOl<IVM()UU CLUB
8UP!MIAN
SUAMB 8TREIT
VIUAALEOAE ABONEW8
llEW1TCHED ''l'Mr9'• Odd In TMm Thw .
Pina"
Al)AM..12 .. ~ .. q Frofn~'LOOClE 'l:ool :. NEWI
IMEAOENCY ONEJ O.O.'• efforte toward becom-ing a rodeo etar come In hMdy
wher1 a echOOI but plungee oft
!_ ollff.
• 0 NFL FOOT8AU. The St. Louie catdlnata duh
with the Dali.. Cowboya at
Texu Stadium, Dallas.
8 MOVIE * * "The Gr .. t American WlldemMl"Doeumentary Nar-
rated by Biii Burruel. (2 hrs.) e THE BRADY BUNCH
"Grego Gete Grounded"
THEAOOKIE8
A routine atr•t lead• to terror
when a tutpeet'a brother Mek•
9z80M
f1l) FOODS FOR THE
MODERN FAMILY
"Slow Cooking"
1:309 MOVI! **'h "Operation Cobra"
(1971) David J.,,...,, William
Conred. A ctrug..emuggllng ring
la traciced down by a t..m of
Treasury ag«it1. (1 hr., 30 min.)
d) MY THREE SONS
"Charlt. And The o.netng
Leeeon" 8D OVER EASY
Mlz UUlan carter; purehulng
preter1ptlon dnlga.
~ FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Structuring Communication"
Cl) C88NEW8
7:00 0 NBClilEWS
8 LIARS CLUB
G) ILOVELUCY
"Lucy Think• Ricky la Trying To
Murder Her" m AOAM-12
A busy night ende up In three
tregedlM.
• MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT G YOGA WITH MADEUNE
Cl) TO TEU. THI! TRUTH
7:30 D CONSUMER BUYUNE
• Oevtd Horowitz examlnel partt-
~ =~&AMI t 8) THE IAAOY BUNCH
~ break• a v... and the
other kid• try to eowr for him. e LET'SMAUADIAL
fD 2t TONIGHT
"Alalttl Oii: America's Pipe
OtMm" ID FRENCH CHEF "t..agne A La F._,., ___ .,_, .. (R)
BJ WINIPllED ELZE .
• rt ........
Ed JlcMabon ea.J01a bi. work on "The Tonlpt Show,. hffauae,
he aays, "every m.ht lt'a dif.
ferent."
McMahon bu been with the
show for fifteen years, and 1a19,.
·"I know I couldn't H In a
Broadway play fifteen
montba . . look forward to every nlabt. There'• alwaya
aome penon I clue in on:• ·
Althouab it la taped rrom 1:• p:m. to 1 p.m .. "Tbe TODlabt Sbow .. bas a late·Dlaht feel to lt.
Tbl• ii llecauae 1ay1 llcllabon;
.. We do it jqat hie w•'n on the
air. All tbe cJockl are 11t ror tile perform.lni time. Tbat•1 our at-
titude. We reel u thouab w•'n
on late at nl.abt. There'• a Dish~
Um• at.JDOiPhere •••
Frank Sinatra, who has starred in virtually every
medium o( show business, chalks up a first tonigJlt when
he fills in for Johnny Carson as host of the Tonight Show
at 11: 30 on NBC, Channel 4.
Cl) $10o.000 NAME THAT
T\JNE
8:00 8 Cl) LOGAN'S RUN
Logan, lmpritoned by a society
bent on creating a matter r9Ce,
f8QM the alternative of Joining
that aoc:lety Of' allowing JeNICa
to become one of h• mlndleu
menlalt. D LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
"The High Coet Of Being
Right" Alice Garwy ..... Job
out8lde the home to offMt the
family'• aevere financial
Ntbed<t. She la shoOked,
hqwever, wtMft her husband
,_.. threlfened by the move
.-ld dem9nde. dlvor~. e MOVIE ** ''The Bengal Tiger" (1970)
Documentary. the migration of
the Bengal tiger from Slberf•to
lndla la treci9d. (2 hra.) ' II JOKar8 WILD '8 CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIEHOS
"Farnlly Night" m MOVIE * ** ''The Young Phlladelphl-
.... (1969) PauJ Newman, Bar-
beri Rulh. The Integrity of • young lawy9r .. lnatrumental In
hla geinlng" a preettgtout poel-
tlon end. bautthil girt. (2 hnl.)
Rati•g• Guide
~-·--........ ,0 .. ofttc.e ~. MovlH fw TV ore
J*'OMlbye<l'ltk.>
* * * -Excettent '* * * -Very 9<>0d ** -GOOd
• •, -Fair
• -Poor
•
•
._ A · ~ ... ~ hOT81NGLE8 J '"1' te1os
1 • 1. YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE -Debby Boone
CW .,-ner-Curb >
2. BOOGIE NIGKl'S -Heatwave <Ei>tc> Philadelphia
' I
3. DON,. IT MAKE MY BROWN EYES BLUE .
-Crystal Gayle (UnltedArU1ll) .
•. JT'S ECSTASY WHEN YOU LAY DOWN -
Barry Wblte <20th Century> • 5. BABY. WHAT A BIG SURPRISE -'Cblcaco
(Columbla) e. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees
<RS<))
T. BEAVEN ON THE T1'B FLOOR -Paul
NlcbolN <RSO>
I . WE'RE ALL ALONE · Rita Coollqe (A&M )
9. BWE BAYOU -Linda Ronstadt (Asylum)
10. NOBODY DOES IT BETTER· Carly Slmoa
<Elektra)
TOPLPS
_j 1. FLEETWOOD MAC -"Rumors (Warner
Dros.) •
2. LINDA RONSTADT -Simple dreams
(Asylum)
3. STEELY DAN -Aja (ABC>
4. FOREIGNER· Foreigner (Atlantic)
.. 5. ELVIS PRESLEY -Elvia ID Concert <RCA>
EASY LISTENING
1. YOU LIGtrr UP MY LIFE -Debby Boone
<Warner Bros.) • 2. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees
(ltSO) 3. WE'RE ALL ALONE -Rita Coolidge
(A"M) . 4. BLUE BA YOU -Unda Ronstadt (Asylum)
5. SLIP SLIDIN' A WAY -Paul Simon (Colum·
bla)
SOUL SINGLES
1. SERPENTINE FIRE -Earth, Wind & Fire
(Columbia)
2. BACKINLOVEAGAIN-J..T .D. <A&M >
3. YOU CANT TURN ME OFF -IIl&h Inergy
<Gordy) ,
4. DUSIC -Brlck (Bang>
5. IT'S ECSTASY WHEN YOU LAY DOWN
NEXT TO ME -BUTY <White>
COUNTRY SINGLES
, 1. THE WURLITZER PRIZE -Waylon Jen-
nings (RCA>
1 2. ROSES FOR MAMA· C.W. McCall (.Polydor)
3. BLUE BA YOU -Linda Ronstadt <Asylum )
4. FROM GRACELAND TO THE PROMISED
LAND -MerleHaigard (MCA>
5. HERE YOU COMj: AGAIN -Dolly Parton
<RCA)
Q: All • ._f·tlme W.C. '1eldl &dmlrer, I've
ofteD wandered wily Ile kept paUlq &be rap •
P1alladeiplila. Ukelalt wlleeraek: •1•• .-er IM
dead ID la Aaiele1 tllaa dve la PllllidelPI•·"
Wu llil ldl• al Ute Qty ti BrotlilerlJ Loft real or
WU U ldddbtif -Aft.bar P ., Pltlladelplala.
A: B)'lineT Martin t.ewt.. lndlcatea that the
comedlan'a barra1e of barbs wu intentional.
·"William Claude Duklnfleld"WaJ
born in Pbiladelpi.bla OD April 9,
18'19 • . . When be left home at
:the ace of 11, be never aald Sood·
bye. Ten yeara would pua
before he aaw bis pareot.s aiain.
.Fields spent h1I youth llvin& by
,his wlll and often was a realdent
ln the city Jaill. U..tt wu not the
police houndinl hlln, then lt was
1ang1 of boys who would beat up
."11LD11 the small and independent
Fields. It wu those beatin1s and the banb weather
on the streets where he wu often forced lo spend
the night, that gave Fields that weatherbeaten run-
ny nose ...
"It la not stranie th•t he developed such a
'Glad You Asked That'
by Mwlly• _, Hy ~ .....
sharp d1stute and acorn for the City of Brotherly
"Love." Q: I UdDk the 1reate1t cbue 1eene In moYiel
waa ln •'Tbe French Con.nee~" where a detec:Uve
cllaaaes a killer rld.lnl above blm ID a New York
elevaW trala. What kind of a car wu be clrtvlal.
1114 wberel91tnow1-BW B., Morrldowll. N.J.
A: That's difficult lo answer since there were
four identical 1971 maroon Pontiac sedans Gene
Hackman (o~ stuntmen) drove in that apine-
tingllng chase. Photographed over several days un·
der most hazardous conditions of sub-zero cold, ice--
slicked pavemenll, etc. -a fresh, undented car
bad to be provided every day. The numeroua takes
and retakes were then spliced to produce the
brealh·takln& action.
Writer, Hitclreock
Teamed Up Again ·
Send JPUr ~ to H11 Gmdner, "Glod You Aalced
Thal," ccn o/ thil MWJ>OJ>ef', P.O. Boz 1560, Coata "'''°
n62'. Moriljln and H11 GONIMT ~ OM«r GI tnanv ~
Ucml. Cll IMJ/ can tn thtir column, but U.. tJOlume of mail
nJilJU• pmonal repltu fm~.
Ml ICU ••ml , ....................
•:Joo
Nublan lD tall 1&1 u and white
.-iurbW mov ..,17 ~ the :wicker fumit~ a Ultinri conaklend Yiew Uld aalct. "It can•uiav. chaPled much a.nee those di71 ...
. Indeed. If JOU blot out the blkhtt-dad towla1a
and the wblte plaster tower of U.. l04t0i7iCata:ra.C\
HGUl, tho ald Cataraot with ill brown eanvu •wn·
ins• aDd JlniJ,e-beU bOne carrt.aaes lffJU to have
mer1edintactfrom a d.lltantdecade.
IT 181'1118 iu, tbe 1930s, before the blah dam
made Alwan an lndustrall boom town, that .. Deatti
on the Nile" ,.U to recapture.
But Ustinov'• Poirot wUl not be a faithful
recreatloo ol the mustachioed fuu-budcet, who wu
Jut portrayed by Albert Finney ln "Murder on \he Orient Expreu ...
. The SS.year-old U1t1nov, wbo won. Academy,
Award.I for beat 1upportlnr actor ID "Sl>artacua'
and ''Topkapl, .. abaved off b.la beard for Poirot b\lt
kept hll hair and muatacbe their uaual 1and1·cra1
color.
Uatlnov himHlf ls no treat fan ol eltber Acalh&
Chrlltleor ~ula Poirot. ·
THE ncnONAL orn:cnvz can't have
been a very likeable cbap, Uatioov allowed. "Poirot
always knows everytb.lnt. He must ~ a lot of
U.me l1.atlniDI at docn and bathrooms. '
• ~
' l
llEARiJLESs PETER USTINOV AS POIROT I l:
1l A~ Id lgypt Filming 'Death on the NII•" ~
1omet1me next year, UsUnov-Poirot solves \he ~ I
murder ol a beautiful younc b~ aUJTOUDded by a cut wbicb includes Bette Davts. David Nmm.
11.,11e Smit.band Ana el a Lansbury. I
BE CAME TO EGYPI' atrailht from a tour of J ".: the United Statel, promotln& bfJ autoblOCf•Pb)'.
"Dear Me." • ~.;.~ ~~i:.·~c::.~~~~.Diabed up : i
the Nile. :. I Al for the late Dame Aiatha, ''Sh wu so _______ ..._ _____ _,__ ___ _ ~ i meticuloua anchballow at the same tlme."
In ''Death oo the Nile, .. expecwel to be.released
. , . , . ! . . . • . . . 1 . ~ ..
. • . ..
" . .
Harbor R.otiers rJ:rophy
I I
Winners To Thrillseeker
listed
The Newport Harbor
Yacht Club was host lo
three sailboat classes
Saturday add Sunday in
the United States Yacht
Racing Union Youth
Championship. Five
races were sailed inside
the bay in light winds.
Winner of the La$er
Class was Mike Smith of
the NHy J.acbt Club,
Long Beach. Second was
Mark Whitehouse of the
Balboa Yacht Club, and
third was Kevin Kird,
BYC.
Tbrillseeker, a Santa Cruz-21 sloop owned and
skippered by Bill Filainltr of the Bahia Corinthian
Y acbt Club, won the Af Roiera Memorial -.rophy,
symbolic of the Petformance Handicap ltacl.ng
Fleet <PHRF> cbampionablp in a three·ra~ regal·
ta sailed Saturday and Sunday out of the Newport,
Harbor Yacht Club. · ·
The races were sailed over a modlfled Gold C\lp
course in extremely liabt -11'8 that saw the lead
change in the flnal race.
John Reynolds' Yukee-38 Ghost II, NtwPort
Harbor Yacht Club, wu'\eidlng after the flrat two
races Saturday but could not save her Ume ln the
fluky airs Sunday and droPped to third place behind Thrtll~ker and Mike .,SCliacter's Hawkeye, Santa
Moil.lea Yacht Club.
There were 19 00.tl to the series. To qualitJ for
the championship the 1._ cbta had to sail in slX major
PHR F races during the year.
rburth plactl w•nt to Solano <Newport .. 11
Larf1 Amberg, KHYC.J •~d fifth was Flambuorant
<Cal-40)Barney F1am, Long Beach YacbtClub.
uccess is 'bfling .comfortable aboUt who
you .are and what you're doing-and
being'feminine while you're doing it., .
\
.A n.ewly promoted executive
1'0man wu aitttal in her tint im-
~l ~. Sbe WU the cmly
Jemale present. and she wu aur· r~:ed to beU & male CO•'WOrker,. kini abe •u a aecretary, aak
herto1etsomecoflee.
What abould 1be do in a aituaUon
like that! One.answer would be to
wblp o¢ her copy ot "The New Ex·
ec•tlve Woman" to see what
Marcille Gray Williama advises.
<She probably will have a copy
stashed away in her Very Bualness·
like Briefcase which doubles as a
purse.)
A woman furnbhine her ex·
ecutive office for the rlrst time also
will find hints in Ms. Williams' new
bOok, aa will the wolt)an tryini to
juggle career and household
cbbrea.
• Many kinds of problems con·
froat.lN 'WOmen who have made it
up e executive ladder are dis-
Clllitd lo tbe new Chilton Book Co.
eue, wlllcb Ms. WiWams wrote
over J.8...montb period ln Laguna
Beac • • , . '11T~,1WA~ BEil tint book, and to-t\aY., j\,ist a~ weeks after publica-
UOn, ah!ml&bt •a1 lt.'a her tut.
Jt ,.U start4'd when Ma. Williams
wenHo t.be ~tore to find some
adVlCefOf'women lo business.
"I was WOl'king in a man's world, i with no role models." she ex·
plained. "I wanted somethine that
would tell Dl4! what I should do apd
what was expected of me. There
was nothing like this to be bad.
That was what gave me the idea."
Ms. Williams, once an aspiring
i oboeist, talked to several people
t about how to get a book published
and was adviaed to aet an agent.
•
"I decided I would just sell
myself. I bad been doinS lt for
~ars," she aaid. •
After preparin8 an oulllni.
submitted it to 12 publ.bben. S.Ven
wanted to talk further, ao she flew
east to meet them.
"I came· back witb three dlf.
fer~nt contractual offers and
hadn't yet written a chapter," abe
related.
Ms. Williams selected her Pa:ui·
sylvania publisher be<:aUH it wu
smaller and pledied .. good p
tion." •
SHE AGREED to a six-month
deadline and set to work. ~v
dreamiQ8 it would tatta ber 18
months to write and that she WOU1d
ultim alely agonize through boun
of fear and writer's block.
Ms. Williams admitted she w~
scared to death to send the flm
chapter to her editor, onc:a it wu
done, for fear he would tell ~ it
was totally inadequate.
Aner she was ~onvinced to
mail it and accept the verdlct. sbe
was relieved to set a call from
P e11 n s y Iv a n i a s a y in e t be
manuscript was "terrific."
Now that Jt bu been published,
she is waiting for the r.vlewa to
come in. "They have been favOf'&·
ble t10 far," atie said . .A~eral
magazines have aJked tA}reprinl
chapters."
The author is especially interest·
ed to see what Ms. Ma1azine will
have to say about lt, thoµgh, aa it
isa 't a radieally feminist book.
SHE WAS PLEASED to learn it
was displayed near the cash re1·
later at the prestigious Harvard
BUJiness School's bookstore.
Jn writtna the book, Ma. Williams
<See EXECUTIVE. Pa1e C2)
••• ... • -,. ¥
Jaena Pulaski loves fishing as much as her grandmother, Frances
Miller, and her great-grandmother, Lucia Burden, did.
87 SVDITB OLSON
Of .. Del., ...... ""'
Not too Ion& eao, .Jaena Pulaski. 20,
w aa having a chat with her
grandmother, Frances Mlller, 84.
Miss Pulaski tokl her grandmother
about her new job as a deck bend on
the W estem Pride. a 1portll11hlna boat
based in Balboa, and bow her boa
called her ''TueboatAnnle. ••
Somethi.Jlg clicked in Mrs. Miller's
mind. Her mother bad been called
"Tugboat Anni~" in her days u a.
partner in a charter fiahlaa boat ID tbe
early 1800I.
In tact. Mn. Miller had some old
pictures abowing her mother. Lucie
Burden, and her partner. Earl Wood,
on th•lr boat in Av.ion.
The two talked even inore and dis·
covered all sorts of aimllaritles
between the three . 1eneraUo of women. TbeY all IOvtid to flab; dlilil't
care much about eatlni tMtr catch
. and liked the challence Offer.ct b)' ~e spore
\ Jsena Pulaski
with her
grandmother,
· Franc's Miiier,
today. Mrs.
· Miiier likes
the sport
beeause 'There's
the fflellng you
want to get a
big one.'
• •
Jn 1919, Lucie Burden, the first ol
the fiaberwomen, moved front ber
home in Georala to Long Beaeb,
where abe met Wood, and ~ lo
his buainesa as a clerk boOk,lna
charters.
-•
f
•
I .
~ine Tasting
Robert Lawrence Balzer will
conduct a formal wine tasting par·
ty at 7:30 pm. Friday, Nov. 18, at
Bullock's, Santa Ana. Proceeds
from the everung will go to S\. An·
drew's Episcopal Mlaslon Buildlni
Fund. Tickets, $6. may be obtained
by c alling 552-1858.· Twelve
California wines will be served and
rated.
, .. Executive
(From Pa«e Cl)
ew on her own experiences as a
•Ung advertising agency owner
1d advertising copywriter in
ale-dominated flelds.
She also interviewed other suc-
ssful women from throughout the
untry with three iiuidellnes as
r basis for selection:
They must not have been "hyped
· the media as a token woman,"
.L•ey must be ln a nontraditional
·ld and they must represent a
rlety or industries.
"I decided I wanted to base my
ok on more than my own ex-
rlence," she said. ''I wu 28 when
;tarted and I was curious about
w other women had handled it.••
After contacline a dozen women
rough her friends at a business
agazine, she made appointments
·, spend several hours with each
e ofthem.
~he asked the same basic ques-
ns of each woman but found that
e "got more feedback from
ne areas than others" with the
ferent women.
'FTER THE TAPING and
.1nscriblng waa finished, abe re-
i •ed her outline and sat down to
·ite.
fhroughout her research, which
·luded readini soclologlcal and
ninlst works, she found binta
t it "business la a big game." Tbe
• rrerence between men and
1men playine the iiame ls that
aen bad role models" where
•men did not.
}fa. Williama also became con·
need that feminlty is Im·
raUve for success in buslneas.
1ough many women-HY that
:nl.ninlty la too tied to sexism to
.. •
I ••
be useful, Ms. Wllllams bellevea3
that by being feminine, a woman
isn't threatening the masculinity of
her male co-workers. ''You reln·
force their masculinity," she ex-
plained.
"Women who try to dress like
men are making a mistake.·•
lJ1 the book she discusses what
kind of clothes a woman should
wear in the executive ortice, baaed
on this observation. She recom-
mends tailored, basic clothes ln
conservative colors, augmented
with simple, good jewelry and well-
madttblouses.
SINCE THE publicaUon of the
book, Ms. Williams bu found that
her own. career bu .. taken a
positive tum." She la conslderinl
three different pos1lbll1Ues but
isn't really sure which direcUoa
she wants to go.
She also bas learned that anyone
who writes a book is suddenly im·
mersed in a •·celebrity aura,"
which she find.a amuaine because
she says abe merely "put a lot ot
words together.';
Between interviews the plays the
piano, goes to football ud balltet-
ball games and reads .. in·
ceasanUy."
Aa a one-time publicist for the
Rama, she la even more of a
celel>rity when men find tha~ abe
knowt many of the players
personally.
Does abe now conalder bereelf a
succeas, with a bualnea and book
behind her? By her own deflDltlon
abe is. Suc:ce11, to Marcllle
Wllliama, la "being comfortable
about who you are and what yau•re
doing -and belna femlnlne whlle
you'redoln<."
1lch put would-be boua.swappeN ln touch
lb each other offer no auaranteel ot 1attlfac·
If\.
There are a number of boase-lftPPb:ll plans
allable, but they all operate in the tame bulc
:?tbod. An lnter•ted lndlvidual who wants to
.ide hla or her bom• pa19 • 1 .. to tiave lt ltltect·
a directory published by an exchange service.
te UatJ.ne usually includes a butc descrtotioa of
e house OI' apartment, the location and the time
will be available for 1Wapptna. Some 1ervices
JO include peopJe wbo want to rent, rather than
de tbelr home..
Copl• ol the dlrectory are mailed ~ eVf1l'1•
e wbO baa Ut1*l a bou.Je. You at.iO may .Ub-rtbe to the d.lnetorY wttboat lilUDI 10Uf own
ldeGCe. Either way, 1t 11~.UP. to YOCl to muo · intact with the OWMI' ol a 111Uq tbal IDtenlta
iu and to wan out. th• detaill. ,. .. for the .mc:~All1 rana• trOm $10to t15. ~· JOll · nuwut.tollat~-.eorjait c.tn tbl ~. MOit aeMn1e iinicea
tbllab two lLlt8 -aioilDd tbe ~· Of
dJ year a04 a d, Wdllaq ll1Uh tbe It
dnf.
(J'rom Pap CU
out on her charter boat unW b r dnt.b
around1939. ·
dldn 't know about It until ahe w
already involved. bUt abe la lntent on
advancina as far u aho c:an In the
male.domlilated world. Mrs. Mlllw, a charter member ot
the Newport Barbot Lady An&Jen,
weol deep a tii WllU
juat two years ago. Her home ia ftlled
wWa..~ 11¥1 abe alw:'tfia kept her '~!!'~!i-:~ ~~~~ ~.l.~ !h-... .. .
''J'm tallina my ocean operaton'
lie• ae test ~. 10," •ll&•atd. 'tThll
requires three years• ttme on tbe
ocean and a kiiowledae 'Of navt,catJon and all tho rules ol th road." . . . ~ aald with a tbuclte. ·-so t never let MISS PtJIABKI who baa r0oms tn
the Balboa lM. wbicb ber 'f&UlOr,
architect RoUy Pulaaki. now owns, is
a talent('d artist with three years ot
colle(le under her belt.
any' cat or dot down.'•
88£ ALSO GAVE away her cateh on the trips to women who badn't had
a bite IO they 1¥0Uidn't have to 80
home em.PtY,.·handed. J aena Puluki, aow the proud
posaeaaer d. the· bolt of old pie~
Sbe plana to set a de1ree and work at ber art.on the side.
and cllpplnp, alJo prefers tor ft.ah • 1
more for the a~ than for the catcb. ~ thou•h ahe jolDed ber grandmother tn
a lunch ot rock cod.
"Most people would do art for a llv·
)ng and &h for a bobby," her Cather
commented. "Jaena doel tier bobby
for a living."
She bu thedistilittlonotbeJ.ni prol).-
ably the Onti femU. deck haftd b:l •
tbe Newport Harbor area .-nd
possibly ~ ot onlJ two ln tll ot
Southern CalUoruJa.
Mlss Pulaaki, a l{'&duate of
Newport Harbor Hl1b ~bool. tot a
job u a "bolteas" on a ~1er
, boetgoinatoCatallna, almplybecauae
1he needed work, and then became a
~k on a cbarter boat.
One ol Iler friends bad helped ber
aet the .)ob ln th &alley and wheD be
Sbe never reaU:y pluoed Ob "9ePinl
up the family tradlUon, amce
D EAR A· N N
LANDERS: I follow you
aa often as. I can. Some
days I ml11, but I'm
what you'd call a faithful
reader.
Will you please tell me
why your column la so
one-aided? You print
many ldten about the
abnormalities ot mea but
never women. Surely
you must know there are
lesbians around as well
as male bomoeexuals.
Why bu tbls subject
never been mentiooed In
your column?
You print loads of Jet.-
ten about male impoten-
cy but nothing about the
frigid female. In fact,
once a while back you
said, "There is no such
thing as a frigid woman.
The problem la clumsy or
insensitive men." RecenUy you ran a let·
ter a bout a husband who
"enjoyed sex by
bims elf." (The wife
wrote to say she was
mortified.) Surely you
know there are women
wbo do the same thing.
Let's have both aides
of the story, Ano. Your
column would be not only
more realistic but more
educational. -TIRED
OF HALF THE PIC-
TURE. DEAR TlllBD: I try t.
be fair ud prim 1MCb
1ldea but many more
male bomoenuals write
to me than women.
Howe••, lf 1• are a .. faltltfal reader" yoa
aaw a leuer flll& rettmtly
aboatlelblanl.
Al for fltCkl womea,
I've dealt wltll &hem la
Ute cohuu, too. I bold
Ute vteW' <and have a-
preuecl tl 111 prba&> &bat "maay are Niel, bat few
anfrosen." Of coarse 10nte women
u well • mm "teJof
MX alone."'U Jmt Jaap.
peu UaU maaJ. win•
llne wrtUea to complalD
abeM •buds wbo 4lo WI l>S l'ft 1ei& to bear fro ._ ...... ,...._.,.,.~ .....
of &Ht pdld fl'ffl1 word I
'dltor &o cut wbat be ttonaJ ud. must bO .... want• w.> eolved bY talld.ai. Dis· --~-:----.-:-~__,...__
Till• teqt-.y tetPoDttt ~ It wltla your aehool la to exptaln &hat perbpa eod.HeJor and It more ID·
~· rtMOD >'OU tJdDk 1 tenthe tllerap)' ta •II\ 'biased la beense you neetl~ be <or abe) wlll
do not aee eveij a.tier la 1alde yoa. •
IDY tolama eYety day -
aad •adoabtedly tbe ii~~~~~~~iiiiii ••• , .. ~ were tile nry oats 1oa were SO COAST .
leoldag tor. AcroRS ~.cg:. .
D EAR ANN. =-~, ... ian:! LANDERS: I have a bor· fw t.M ~""*"' lnc!U'll'Y·' rlble problem aDd bope :ft.:"'Y-hrt,,.....,,...
write are tbe Clalc:ago you can help. I'm 17'-nd (714) W7-o212
San·Tlmes and tbe tn love with a gl.O' wbo L!:c=----=-==-==-= ClaleaJo Dally News. I'm ma kea me· 1lek. Yes, -"."-..;...;"'":-----:-~...;.___....._.__,.-...-;.;.;.;.;.;=.;:=
a are there ma at be really 'Ibis has been ao-ti A~ [) ~ otllen, but I doo't see tftg on' since my birthday
tllem eTery day of my In May when be took me
llfe, asldot.b.-etwo. to dinner in • nice A
J write .even columns rataurant.Igotnauseat· 1114,.HAAIORILVO. tet1tdlS.,....)
a week -5Z week.I a ed at the table -forced C(>ffAMUA CA t2MS fOftt•ntl'IMftCClllMHMtl.
year. Some papen don't 1nysell to eat uyway and I) GENTL..EMEilWELCOMI! -
pabllab oa Sanday, so the then had to eolhrOW up.
aabnrlben of tboae Ever since that tlme I
papen mlla oae-seventb try to avoid eating with I)
of JDe. Otbet1 don't ran him but when I can't get
the colamn oa Sauarday, out of it, I do -and I
even tboaCh they pabUab alwaya end up vomltinl. ~
a Saturday paper . My mother..,.DOIUY
<Wh1t Ask tit.em. I'm l.• worth tt. I ,.ii.; love . .
avaUable.) Other papen Ed and don't now •hat
ban spaee problems so to do. -TROUBLED
tiler lop aoe or nea hro -rREAK
leUera off my eolama. DJ:,\a FalEND: You
<Natanll1, I'm am not problem b Ml aa t.r.akJ
happy aboat th1I bat It's u JOU &ldllk.. • ..., teell·
the prhtlege of nery a1en b.aYe It.. Jl't emo-
[
. -
TUESDAY, NOV. II
BJ SYDNEY OMA&&
]
. .
I
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITIC:llS•UMNIH
NMl .. ITATEM6NT
T.,_ fotlowlno lie<-Ii -"9 l1•m ... u ••.
~ETLAND AHO A$S0CIATIS.
JOO! R-4 Hiii A,. • bldg J !Moil• ?IS. Cotti ~s.. CA t»»
D••ld W Sl\ellond. 1311
IHlltrlM Plk•, ~.CA 911 ..
Tl\fs IMISl"•H It'~ by tfl lfl div"*'•' Oj1vldW ~U-
Tltl' tlll-1 WH 111.0 Wiii\ II>*
County C lffll OI Or~ c:.unty on ()(.
totltr 2', "" , .. ,..
P11bll1,,.., Or-. C:.0.tl D•lly Piiot ?<t.31,Nov 1, 1.c,21, 1'11 •11•11
PUBUC NOTICE
"OT1ca Ott IALI 01'
A•ANOONIO PlltSONAL PltQP« ltTY NOUU li"-"b\I 11'¥ell ln.t _, Wld
'"'"u•nl It S.cllon ttll ot I"•
C..llfornt• Ovtl C.. ~~y 111\ff
-botloWCI 1o lilt~ by J. Wllll•m Smllll 1111.e J•me\ WllllMll
Smith •nd Lori ~Wt •U Ooloro1
SMlll'I w,,_ 1.,1 .odfoo ,.,. <to
Tnom•• M. _.,,, &4; Miller,-·
Oontlcl, 84111\ A. "'~ lz:JS N,
Hubor lllwd, Sloltt 100, fullerton,
C.llfo<nl• '2U2 -P.O. 8n 21S.
-.un..onl, Colof-IOtl1, Wiii C. &old
et publlC -lion •I ui. rN< ol »oc>
C•fl'IPVI Drive, N•wll>Orl 8••"'·
Cellfomlll f'JWO, Oft Nowm11«r 1', 1'11
•111 °'' m. Oucrlptton ot property. P~klng
Ur1on1, ....,,. ol -. cen\ of "'nt lfl9 m•ter1,.s.-to '*'tl'los
Ot...S ll'lb lllft Qly of NO..-mt>or tt11.
o.ti. e1ectroN< CoMrot CM-PO«tt-
by C. W.~M Pr"idtnt
Pvblhl\eo OrW19t' to.II 0.Hy Pilot
....... 14, 21, ""
PUBUC NOTICE
~
SU,llUOlt COURT O~ T"I ST A Tl OI' CAUl'OfllNNIA ,0.
THI COUNTY Of' OltAHOI .... -.. ....
ltOTlctOf'INTtNftOH
TOJILL alALl'ltOf'llltTY
ATf'ltlYATSIALI
£sl•tt of CATMCRIHE ANN
SP£NCl!R, .... CATHERINI! A. S'ENCE~ tk• MRL HIRIEAT
ftUSSEL.L 5,f:NC8R, SR. •U CATHlltlHE AHN CODMAN,
OitciteMcl. Nttko l•........,tl-tNc. tlAllKt tt
Cleflllrrn•I'*' ~ Ille 1b0ve .. 11t1t1t11 ~ ... c-.1. 4NI --u. "11, .t t:OO 1 rn., Of "*'Mfw wlu.Ht Ille
11-....... lly ... , "" ll'tder~. H Aeniltletr•tor of ,,,. Wiit or
~"""' 1-lc<tr, dt<.HMCI, Will •II lit .,....,. ...... tM ft19'1HI Ind > .. .,~....,,on,,.,.,,,,..,,..c.....,1ion..
~ ...,..,.., • .,.........., 111 rloM, 1t11t, ........... .,~ .. ,.,.,.5"MM. ...................... ....,,_
fll ntM. UI», -.-..1 tN1 Ille
1
• .-.... ~111 ... 111n10 ... lof
0.C.-... ..... flint of hor dNtt\, In tN
.... """'1T lo<•i.d .,, "'° ()lunty Of
Or8ftll, ,..._ '11 Ctllfwftlo, deKrltltd ......... :
UMtvWlld ~ llfll IM«nt In
lAt •of Tr«t .... a.», a ~ Oii a
,._.,~Ill looll 13', P ... t to. 11
•1111 12 Of~ Mapi, ""°"" ofOr~.Qllfwllla. TM .... fa M+tc1 t. ,..,...,.. t ... u, c-nt., CCfldlt ..... r91lrkltons. , .. MN•f*"-,,...... fkltiU of way, end ••~•""°"'·'hie 111..,.,ty 11 to .,. .... °" "' ... , ....... tll<tl'I ....
.. tltlt.
NOTIU TOC•llOITOIU
WPUllO.C:OUltT 01' THI
STl.T(Ol'c:AU"Olt•IA,O•
THICOUNTYO,O•.utGI
PtJBUC NOTICE
He. A-mJI l'IC'TI TIOUS •USllolU.$
EU•te of MA•THA O'WLL.IVAH, .. AMLSTATIMINT
O.cu..a Ti.. rotlqwl,. --It oo;ne IKnl· NOTtCE IS HEREBY Gl\/Ell to,,_ MU H .
"•dllon of 1111-M"'"de<edtftl VALUE ENGINEERING 414
lltel •II pe,_, Nvlno cl•lm• -4...SI Tr•'Y L•ne, Or-. CA'*' '"*Hid~-..... r-11'9d to fl.. Sl ... rl J, Lodi.....,, 04 Trky
o .. m, w1111 me ""Hf.My_,..,, 1n i.-,O.Oft91,CA9Utf
ti.. ofllu o1 the cleric o1 , .... .,.,.. '..,. Tllll tKlll,,.,, Is conckKteo bv en tn
lllt<td CO<lrt, o< 10 pre..,...t tllem, wtlll llte dlvl ... •1
n e c •I I• r y v o u c 11 •rt, t 0 St-1J L.odll'IQIMtn
,,,. Ynd• .. lgned <lo SALLIE T Tllh ,, ......... 1 WH l~eo Wltll IN
REYNOLD$, Meml>Or JAMES o : Co.inly C~ltOIOunoe County on()(.·
GUNDERSON,• ~w Cor!IO<llilon, ..O.rl,,ltll mn PllMO • V•tenci., ~,. IOI ..... ,.
lAgUtt• HUil, CMlf0'111• 97.U, wttlcll ti Publlillecl 0r-. Cout Otlly Pl .. ,
Ille Pltte Olbu&lntHof the~ Oct. ll, NOY.,, 1', llf1t71
In •II m•tten ller1aln"'910 u.. ..ut•ol 1------------" .... u-..n..._1 MIG dece-1. wllllln tour monc,,__...,. U.. lh >l l>Wllk•tlonot thl&noho. D•teOO<.lober 1t11tn
PATO'SUUIVAN
PERKINS
lllkUltlcOf t,_Wlll o1
IN ~lllm«lde<IH»nt I.ALL.II T. •l'l'"'°'-0$,~ JA.MalO.~HHlll()tf AL.Aw~
Dstl '•-eV-.CM,llllte ttl U.-."111-.~'2"2 ,...,.__, C7Wla7·M6e
A .................
Publlihtd 0rM>91 CoeA D•ly Piiot
()(.t 14 )I, No¥ 7, IA, lf11
•seo.n
PUBUC NOTICE
C:"tJ" ,_
l'ICTITl(IUS •u .... ns N~STATEMHT
T lie tollowlfll ...,_ -00f"9 -·· ...........
CAP'T MIKES FIW. FRY, IU W.
"Ill Sl, Coste #Mw, CA '2•11 Lewis J . ltllrMn, \l6o W. l.i..c.Jtt A .... , AnM>elm, CA
MMy JO ltO.V., letO W. L.lflc9ln
Ave.,Al\Oltelm.CA.
Tllla buslneM i. <onduclee II? •
~ner•I pwtnel"lhlp,,,_.nctwllt . LewbJ.L.o8Nn
MMY J. Le°"'"
lllb l\Al....ni -· tiled Wftl'I Ult Co""ty Cl«!I fl// Or91ge eo..nty 4NI Oct. II,"" raOl'llSSIONAL asc•ow sa•v1ccs
1'21 N-n.tltlA-IMt• ..... ?A '21tl
·~ ...... ,,.,~
Pvbtlihtd Or-.ait Cootit O.ily Plitt, Ocl. 24, II, -Nov. T, U, "77
•JG·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOTt<:e TO c•EPtTOtK
SU ,. •• tcMl CIDUllTM nt•
ITATliWCAUfJOltNIAl'-Ott
TMI ()OUMTYCHJ~ .... ""'-bltlo ti RHEA L. OUCj(ETT,
0.C.IMd.
NOTICE IS HER1i8Y GIVEN ti Ult
<rHl••tltN ............... ~
thtt •II po.-'-"" cllllma ... -. "'° ..... _...,. -,.., ..... , ... IMm, wltll .. _,.~In
.... offl<.t ol ti. dtnl of ......... -
tillodUur'l,wto"""""'--..wlllltllt
PUBUC NOTICE
fllCTITIOU• eUllNIU
NAM&STATIMINT
Tiit 191._.,,. --Ii_,,. bYU. ........
A. TR(NO REAl.TV, B. TREND
REAL l!STATE;. 2052 twwport e1v•.,
Uf\•l • IO.~MeM,C.llfwnlenn1. G<H'don Ola ... lrroer, 7M Cll(t
Ori••, U"ll ••, L.etvn• Beacll, Celltwnlet»SI
Tiiis 0..-ll conclllct• .., ., ,,.. . ...,._,
Ooldon 0.1 eo.•-Tllh ·~ .... thd •1111 ,,,.
C-ly Clefll II Or.,,.. Coumy 4NI Oc· ~•lt,1'71 .,._
l"l*I.,... ~ C.HI O.ll'f Plitt
Oct."· 31, Noot.J.14. "" ... ,,
PUBUC NOTICE
SUHIUO. C:OUll'T Ott
CM.I~-·· COUNTYO~Olt ..... 1oea.ic c-on.. w..1 .... ,...~
UK HUMa•lt Dlt-17 .. 1 SUMllllONS <MA• ltlAOll In rt the !Nnlego of "9CIW-:
DAVID MALCOLM TtOWl!LL •fld
R~:JOYEl.AIN( TIDWIU. NOTIC•I y., ,..,,. ..... -4. Tiit
~ ............... .,.. ......... .,_ ................... .,.., .......
wl!Mfl • .,.. ...... ............. ...... .
AYllOI Uti91M ........ DMI .. Ill
.,...... ..... *<I*'~ u .. tl4I ....._lt•-.. IH ......... ................ i...._ ... ... .....
I, To tho R--.1 !Sot ....... ');
L Tiie '"'U..0' l'IM llltd • '911t*I C4NIUflllllt 1'0llf IMM'~. You ....., f1 .. 1wrmllftr-wtt11111aoo.~o1 ... ..... -111111-...... .. _ .... tll
you.
PlJBUC NO'l1CB
'"*" NOTIQ 10~•01Toa1 ....... JIN
au r•a1oa coun Ofl '"'
PVBUC NOTICE
NOTt" TOQllDITOttt
IUPl.ltlOlt COUltf 01' TMI 5T ATI 01' CAUfllOllHIA l'Ott
D
A
I
L
••
mnn1'DD1~
11 .... >..\l ir1\ll\
1'!1~ 1 :.u1! Mw1 l.tlOt.1 dr' \11•
associated
81101-:lQ~ QI A.T()PS
;ul' ""' Molh,., & ' • 1i'
(I
I
r:
l
I
Vfl • aAUTllU~ ...... ,°"
~ That lt th Deane Home 5 bedroom
-model ... and this one it beaUtltull1 va·
'"' c:antl With new carpeta. palat. drapes
. •• tb~uealry clean feel. Presented 4·'1;~.at $146 . .
tJ,_.,l()lJt. tiVMU
REAL TORS~ 876-8000
2443 Eist Coast Highway. Corona det Mir ~'!J • also in Meu Verde. at 546-5990
~1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~~!1
:0.1•ral • I002f awnlf 1001 ''-!····················~············· .. ········· ,
·~------
.. . NEW EXCLUSIVE umNG
Beautifully decorated Eastbluff home
u ... with view of BACK BAY & Ji1lbt
" lights. Fabulous family room + 4
bclrms., 3 baths, formal dining rm. le ~c newly remodeled kitchen. A. great .n. home for your family & entertaining.
lv\• ..
~, . . ~
!.o•
759-081 I
SUPER
SHARP!
3 Bedroom homer VA
t.ermlf Low downf seller movJDI om ., State • must Mil DOW! SHe .. I
..
Cal1Bedcarpet7M-UOZ . IXCnn. POSSlllUTY -for an extra 1 sharp purchase of tbi8 lovely 4 br & ... -. Pa 1'1111fr I 007
famfly room home. Mesa· Verde's
· lowest price at $79,900. but make your IAIY IM
I
offer. Owner most anxious! All new Beacb bouse with ''*t carpets, drapes, roof, exterior "int, apt. oa l1r1e lo~. one
1ev-: ......... CH ~venthedisbwash~r.hurry!! 14Ml41 blo~k to tbe beacb.,,__--..,.-----~ ~~ IOMAMTIC MIWPOIT -helpful hints =£-:~.,.~~~'r----~lli!iti-••F or bt.\Yl Prime &ut&lde ' for romantic living in this better than MOllH$ llALTY IAl•AtM ~500~:a ;e~~exol~~ : new 3 bed.rm home. Luxurious bot tub * 494-1057 * HUMTllS s p a c l o u, t b" e e · d jacuzzi with extras to make the , ________ ,
bedl'Oom-t.wo \>atb up-; heart throb~ $139..500. C• 64N 16 I · .. · per wait Uu1t Jtke a bome). Let the lower two
4!>0 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE :'7&9-0811 bedroopi unit help make
.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!t YoUt ~nt.I. C~tom
Ser11inq ~osta M eset-lrvini.•
Hurillnqton OeJch-Ncwporf Be>ach
:l.G1MNI IOOiGewtll 1002 =~o':f.~ !f~~r: . , . . . ::.s:om· Full price
., ............................................... lc:ltdlem. wood bw:uuil 0..;..a1 . 1002 G••ral -1002 LC.TAYLOI co. ---
Vl·:SLEY N
~YLOR CO.
llEALT<JHS !'>i11ct· l!J·l(i
.:.~
• "i --===-==== . . • -. .. . PRJCI IB)UCID-$211,000
Unusual design in thia exciting brand
~":.NEW 4 BR 2-story home in N.B. ..... Formal DR, lge fam rm, 3 baths. Rm
~r .:.for. pool. View of back Bay & city
,.i. ligbts. Be first to live here!
"'• WISUY M. TAYi.01 CO .. ~LTOIS.
2111S.J .... Hlll._ _
MIWPOIT CEHTEA. M.I. . . .~, 1.0
fireplaces. Need four •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. •-•••• ,.1• a-910 1lx unit• In San ~ -· ~MIWPOIT . !PBIMSULA PotMT JA.S•4841CUB
REALTORS . 4 Bdnn., 2 ba. home. All amenities.. Pim t \sarfllde. i Br,
'7M51 I Lovely area, few steps to beach. , Fam am, View. Feb. oc· 1---------1 .. $189,500 cp7. $111,HO. Alt ... ,
NEWHOUSE
llMTfl(L
YOUOWM 7 Moath old home ha moat
desirable area of Co•tt Mesa. Owner . will rent
for $495/per mo.alb Wl
you exerels"e your optJon
to own. HWTY take ad-
vantaae, eall 982-1'788.
. UDO tSU . ...._ ..
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den,' 4 -South Of Hwy
baths, living rm. w/catbedral ceiling. -
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950 $139,500.
An at.oluteb' cb.annlna 2 bedrooi:o oa PolnMttla
wttb beautlfw hardwood noon Owner occupied
forever and ln idot concll-
UoD t.bna-out.. 2 Full doU·
ble 1ara1e1 <not
-
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
J.\ I !\oy., .. J, D11·1o-. fJ fl 6/5 6li.1
· · tandem)
-
··.:;e.llt· HERITAGE
• • REALTORS --
.. :;.~;·.HERITAGE
• • REALTORS .. 1<~ -.-.
•1 REALTORSA
G1Mr.. I 00 CiSCAs.. lt02 A real dOu bouM offered •••••••••••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• for tbe flrlt time ln o.,.,.I!!~~!!!'!~~~~~~~
•%HOMES*
EHlllde Costa Miu. ~I bdrm., 2V. b1., toU ~ btt.-lm pl UI cbarro.h11,
E cled 2 bdrm. home. • to beach. park,
& bus. Both for
S'lJ0.000. Open Sun. 1-5.
255 Palmer (off Santi ,,Ana An.)
;~A.1.~L ~_L 6H·Ji1.a
. .ulC. I U:l\uv
''" New,ott Po•t OUiu
SHAIP DUPLIX
Brand new rear unit. Older unit is.
extra clean. Wal.It to aboppm1 and
beach. Good propertJ for:mveator or
owner OCCUJ'ied. $165.000 fee.
12,ean.
'
c.1644-72 t I .......
,. '
IHI 833-9781 , Ht.-ster-Brown · llA\!0~\
..
{
LG. I Br, 2 be. I bib ooean. Gar. bakoal•, ar. *111111 ..-,ea-8171
AT THE BEACH 100' aaDd. Spec Z br apt; =-···llll
•
SILVER FOR SALE IOO ooe troy ounce .
pn &Uver Uolvert ---------t G.50 ea. tn 1oU ol a bun·-~.;....;..-..-.....-~~;.:.
TTRACTIV• LADY ublp'
it • •
~wbooeed People
Tbat'1 wbat the
DAJLYPJLOT
SERVICE DIRECTORY
la all about I
Help Wmtecl . ......................
• VOLT
ti"'"''.,.~·''"'' ·~.ftvlC• '•
Automotive
ASST HGR/11.GR
DIA'1'IMBI
•ctn/ .
Me1••ct1J
TllMDATA
, CORP. St .......... ,. .. .......
AJi Applied llapelles Co
MIO 'fl. S.Cemrom
Santa Ana, CA t21CM
('114) MNI05
.. '
NIW IHTAUIAHT
OPBllNfi
CA.al:SJl.
MA.CHINlST Part time boys, 11-11 yn, Weltminlter 11.U loca· ·ASST. FORIMAM lite fador)' wor1t o•a. tloa. Coon • cauoter
Sm. abopdoin&prototy .. B:JOpm.IG-2'lQ2. time, Full~D.1;.ait
mach. work It wind tun I'll( Amwtr S.... m,hta. Apply ln P8'IOll:
net mdla. seeb exp' pJ\Lme dQ'l 6: eve1. Ex· lam to $pm. Uru&a •c-
persoo to hand.le qual. per-pnl'd, but will train.. ~ app~Uom: control, purcbasln& GooCl co beoefi1s EOE W. i.-.... pmao
follow up or outaide ven ~· • ' Garchm Gl"O'fe
tJen..
EEi
l79'lK1USer, Irv.
7M·ll.51
MAINTENANCE MECH.
Must have minimum
·yrs exper 1n l(eneral
plant maJot. Contact Ro
Cowher, 714·~7·3770 xS8
EOE
PIZZA FACTORY
now blrin1. Fowstain
Valley 913-1117
~WarnerAve
FouataiD Valley
RETAIL
CLERKS
Loeat.edAt:
~Lampeoa, G. Grv
SlOW. South St. Anahm
111 Del llar, C.M.
885 Glemleyre, Laa Bch
We are an equal
opportunlt1 employer
'·
'9' ~~~~J!!!!!!!!~~~-~~=--1 : i • : • it • • • • • i • It • • • • • f • $
l • • • • ' (.
6~
'I '.'I Clllo\ll r tit, I
CALL
TODAY
tf 50
72 COL Pl WGM
9111.r=~/olr
rr a D • ll 7' P ll o t "76 Vega wn1, 4-spd, alr, a .. Hled Ad to b1&7, lell PP. Below cost. Must ar,_IO"D"hlnl .eU. $1985. 8G8IM()
COSTA MESA DATSUN·
DEMANDS Y6Urt IGHTS
• 3 Pr. Walnut Doors ~--~-=---=---1,.::::::::::=:=.. ______ ,
, lOl'.'x"2"xS'', Can be usl aell 31' Bertram _.. rlybrdge aprt rahr. · seen anytime. M-e ofr. Completely nu lhruouL , 836-3321 i Xln1 cond. 8'1~ 41•.
t DRY M 0 U NT Pre u, 67J.5033 __ e_va ____ _
Jumbo l50. New $389• 19-' FORMULAlB/OB i•"' I; sac. $200. Gd cood. HP,OMC. Try S3SOO • ...,
{ 548-8300 __ 26' BARTENDER dbl
I t t.ac.I ender riahiaa boaL Nlce.
I ..... .... 8013 ~~isCo.8'1UllO ....................... ----=-------
1
'4 11lu violin, hard abeU, loah. W1 906
velvet lined cu•, S85. · Blond eplphont etec. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1ullar, biunbuckln1 WAMTllSU\.TS?
pcltupe $300. "2·3'71 Sell yov boat thru
1970 Fender'I Tele.laater.
Sl'15, Gllden '' ~nnel P.A w /mlke. atfO. Ph
8'1UW
SOUTHWISTllM
YACHT SALIS
FUJI ,IMIWPOIT DIALBS
9110 •••••••••••••••••••••
AMC..JW
#1 •Cdlf. WE Otrl'SELL ALL
JEEP DEALERS
IN THE STATE
HUCH IMYIMTotlY
All Modell New• Used Leul.nl Available
Colt.MeH
WE BUY
CUAHCAIS
&TaUCICS
Alllos. I_, a rtt4
...
BARWICK DATSUN
'·'" f .1.lfll q11 Ir ,HP'
831-1375 411J.J J7 S
is1ril 21GZ. Jiho/radlall.
AM /FM, 10,000 ml,
SuperClean! 5'0-2380dy,
M0--1059 ev.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
......... 97051------~~-1
'71 .. AllON
WAY flOI MIXT
WIBI D&IYllY
cOMNta
IOOYIHOP
MOW OP .. ~
?2 COL Pl WGM
Mll.P~/ol.r
IZIO HATCHIACC
I:
j
' '.
' I) i
' " I
I I
1 .
. .
OL. 70, N0;-3l8, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
Jet~
FRANKFURT, West Germany
~p) -Lufthansa jeUmers are
fine special evasion patterns as
security precaution J1aiMl ler;
•rist threats to blow up the
anes in the air with missiles,
1thorities said lod!lY. In the
nited Slates, protective
easures were being taken at
·veral airports.
A U.S. Coast Guard
>0kesman said today the
has been patrolling
Businessman Sliot
leer Dispttte
Mesan Charged
. .
In Bar Slaying .• ~~
A dispute over a can of beer in
Santa Ana night club early Sun·
ay ended in the stabbing death
I f one man and the arrest ol a
'osta Metia man on murder
harees. police reported.
Officers said the murder vie·
im, Paul James Henson, 25, of
~ushn, was one of three bouncers
1t the Clubhouse Bar, 2700 N.
~ain St., Santa Ana, involved in
he2:40a.m. brawl.
Henson was dead on arrival at
;t. Joseph's Hospital, Orange, a
)eath a coroner's investiaator at-
r i bu led to "multiple stab·
1 .vounds."
Arrested and chargod with the
I >0unccr's murder u well u as·
;ault. with a deadly weapon after
' Fair Races
Bring In
High Bets
Horses al Los Alamitos race
course beean a late weekend to-
by, taking a two-day break Wl·
Lil racing resumes Wednesday at
hoon.
Attendance and belting rec·
ords set Friday luted less than
24 hours as 14,428 people tum"ed
out Saturday to place $1,819,023
in bets. On SUnday, 12,627 raclnc en·
thuaiuts showed up to wager
more than $1.S million.
So, al the midway point of the
12-day racing meet, Fair DU'eC·
tor Ken Fulk report& average
daily .betting is exceeding $1.3
million. Fair officials bad only
hoped for an average of about
$1.l million. Th& Orange County "Fall
Fair" at IM Alamitos will re·
main open Monday and TUesday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. There 11
no adm ssion charge.
Liv., ~einment, livestoek
and bome exhibits and midway
rides Will keep this schedule WtUl
the fair sbuta down next Monday,
NoY.21. Riehl will resume Wednes-
day at noon and the ll·race a day
pro r m will tie Offered six con·
aecUtlvoda11unUl Nov. 21.
two other bouncers suffered stab
wounds in the fracas wu George
Cruz Cit(Darena, 18, of Costa
Mesa.
Police would not release the
home addresses of either the vic-
tim or suspect.
The two wounded bouncers
were identified as Terry Larkins,
of 24, of Fountain VaUey, and
David Lynn Renolds, 23. of
Buena Parle.
Both men were reported in sta-
ble condition at St. Joseph's alter
beinJt stabbed with the pocket
knife ~ce allege WN wielded
byCamarea
According to Police, the a.
year--0ld Costa Mesa man arrived
at the after houri nllht club CW· ryln1 an open can of beer.
He reportedly becan fi&h11ng
with Henson when the bouncer
attempted to take the can of beer
from him, a tight that turned into
a brawl when Heoaon'a fellow
bouncers tried to help him.
Sometime durinc the fracas,
Camarma allegedly pulled his
knife and began aluhing al his
foes, pollcesald.
Model Homes
Vandalized ..
H1.1ntlncton Beach Mayo10Ron
Pattinson told police Sunday vae-
d a Is caused about $1,000 ln
damage to three model homes
under coMtruction near 17th
Street and Adams Avenue.
Pattinson said the Yandals ap.
parently entered the structures
between 4 p.m. Saturday and 8
p.m. Sunday and kick~ holes ill
the walls.
In bis real estate business, Pat·
lison is in charee of selling the
homes represented by the van-
dalized models under construe·
lion.··
Fall ·Kill, Cbnd'
LA MESA (AP) -A4•year-old
La Mesa boy is dead af\er fallin1
thro\l&h a alldial 81811 door at
his home while playlna with
another child. The cotoner•• of..
!ice said that Edward T. 'l'er·
-reault, eon of <larol Terreault,
wadalcen to Al.ar do CommU:ril·
ty Hoapttal where h ~~ed •bOdt
an hour after the lriCident.
..
Huntinston Beach fire ln·
vesttgators Hid today they
beUeve an anortl1t ls \o blame
for an early S.turday morning
blaze that destroyed a pair of
two-story houses und~r construe·
lion. • The bOuses were located ln a
tract west of Newland Street
near IndianapollS Avenue.
The anonilt apparently
do\lsed aner.or th• br·P•Penid
houae frames with a 'flammable
liquid short!Y before 2 a/I'll. 111d '
ignited it, said Fire Capt. B.oaer
Hosmer. .
The matm8l exploded lnto
flames and qQjcJq)r spread to an
adjacetlt-atnlct'lf:e, No one wu
injured.
Six fire engines roared to the
scene over as yet unpaved ltrMta
20,0001.a...i ..
WASHING TON (AP) -
Tbousancb bf women, famous aDd unknown, will meet at the
first National Women•s Con·
ference in HoUlton th11 week to
map the future of women in Qie
United Statea.
f .
DM..Y PU.OT
Presid.:.· .. ,
I I
Endorses
oh Bill
ASlllNGTON (APr -Preal-
nl Carter formtllly 'threw his
~=="" .. M,_...,~..._ 't llle Hum-
J>l.lrey·Hawldna blll that woulcl
sot a 1983 unemplo~ent rate ol
fOUr percent as a national aoat
(
I
~ithoul mandating s~lflc pro·
gams tocombatjobleaaness.
, "This is an ambitious obJeclive
aod one that may prove very dlf·
f¥:u1t to achieve, but setting our
sights high challenaes us to do
our best." Carter said at the ·
While House.
The administration's support
ftr the Full Employment and
Balanced Growth Act of 1977, the
Jfumphrey.Hawkins bill,
ctslminates negotiations that
·began in June for a policy aimed
at reducing unemployment. The
l~islation is named after Sen.
tl\Jbert H. Humphrey. D·Minn ..
~d Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D· c:.11r • its original sponsors.
-i'he bill, accordin& t.o Carter's
statement, commits the federal
government to achieving full
employment while remaining
committed to achieving
"reasonablepricestab1lity."
. The four percent unemploy.
ment rate translates to a rate or
three percent for all adults in tbe
work force The October jobless
rate was seven percent
The bill would also
Establish a framework for
l'Conom1c policy decisions, with
the administration sending to
Congress its goals for employ·
mcnt, unemployment, produc·
lion and income over a five·year
period,
Recognize that "special gov-
crn m ent efforts" are needed to
fight high unemployment "but
that primary emphasis should be
placed on expanding job op·
portunities in the private sec-
tor,"
-Recognize that monetary
and fiscal policies, rather than
government control of private
production, wages and prices.
must be used to achieve full
employment and price stability
Unemployment has shown ht·
tie fluctuation in recent months
and little response lo govern-
ment programs
An earlier version of the bill
was "'uch more controversial
because it mandated specific
government programs t.o au.aih
the lower unemployment goal
· Carter sa!d last year during
tho pregidential camf!a.ign that •
he' supported the bill s concept,
but never endorsed the actual
legislation.
Youth Seized
In Rape Try
On Girl, 12
A 19·year-old La Habra youth
1s free on $10,000 ball after he was
arrested Saturday In connection
with the attempted rape of a 12-
year·old Huntington Beach girl,
pohce reported today.
Sgt. Luis Ochoa said Daniel
Jlbthan Rosenblatt faces a
charge of attempted rape OD a
g'rl he allegedly picked up while
sbe was waiting for a bus ln
downtown Huntington Beach.
The assault allegedly occurred
in the 1uspect's vehicle near
Pacific Coast Highway and
Newland Street at 11 :30 a.m.
Ochoa said the girt mana1ed. to
elude her attacker and nagged
down a truck driver to aid her.
The truck driver, Timothy
Ramsey of Santa Ana, apoU.ed
the suspect's vehicle at a gas ala·
hon and held the man for police,
Ochoa said.
Bogtu Bills Seized
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The.
seizure of another Sl.5 million In
counterfeit S20 buta and three
by Secret
., ..........
•
Jack Campbell, Mia ml
millionaire and chairman or
Dad~ Oounty (Fla.> Coali·
tion for Human Rtghts, sees
need for another campaign
-nationwide -to inform
country about homosexuali-
ty. (Story, A7 >.
HB Council
To Comp lete
Heavy Slate
Huntin ach City Council
members w meet al 7:3~
tonight take city 1business
left over r m last week's heavy
agenda.
The council will meet with
members of the chart.er revision
committee to deliberate final
recommendatioos made by the
nine·member panel for chanaes
in city government.
Among the more provocative
issues to be discussed are the
panel's recommendations for a
two.term limit on councU mem·
bers and elimination of depart-
ment heads from the city's
personnel system.
The panel, which has been
working on charter revisions
since last October, also recom·
mends that the post or city at·
torney should remain elective
while the city clerk should be ap·
pointed.
The council will hold a public
hearing on recommendations
before it is decided how they wlll
be placed on the ballot.
Any changes in the charter
must be approved by city voters.
Mesa Police
Sure Bandit
Struck Twice
Costa Mesa police are "99 per·
cent sure" that an armed bandit
who robbed a local bank Satur·
day is the same robber who
struck at the same location seven
days hrlier.
The two heists, both carried
out by a man wearing glass~
and a curly blond wig, have
netted about $1,500 from a branch
of First Federal Savings and
Loan, 1455 Baker St .. Costa
Mesa.
Police said the bandit has
twice thrown a brown paper sack·
onto a counter and said, "Fill up
the bag -this ta no joke," before
scooping up the cash. .
The bandit displayed a small
pistol in the latest robbery which
occurred at 12:55 p.m. Saturday.
He escaped with an estimated
$500, brinlinl tbe total to $1,500
during the past two weekends.
Police said they will keep a
close watch on the bank thls com·
ing weekend 11' case the robber
tries for his third Saturday hel•t
an a row.
1
. .
Backers
Of Slllili
.'Rally;'
. w ASHINGTON (AP) -SuP:
porlen n demon1trate .for the
Shah of Iran w~n be· arrives
here Tuesd.aY, competint for at·
tentlon with the anU-shah Iran·
Ian students who protest bls.
every appearance.
The shah will be ln WJ.Shlngton
for two days, talkh\g with Presi-
dent Carter oo aubjed.a ranging
from sales of arma and nuclear
reactors to Middle Eastern af.
falrt and homan rights In Iran.
Officlala in Paris said tbe shah
and Empress Farah left Pam
ror the United states today on bis
special Boein#707jetliner. .. His two-day official visit
begins Tuesday after his arrival
in the United States. Iranian of·
ricials have declined lo dlscloee
his exact schedule because ol
possible disturbances.
Supporters of the shah say at
least five planeloads of Iranian·
Americans are flying from
California, Texas and Chicaeo t.o
demonstrate in Washington.
"I'm told lo expect at least
9.000 or 10,000, .. said Jack Heller,
a Washington lawyer who
represents shah supporters .
He said most of the 14 or·
ganlzaUon1 he represents are
ethnic groups, planning to as·
semble several hundred mem-
bers apiece.
Coalitions ol pro and anti·sbah
forces have been granted
permits to demonstrate durin&
the controversial monarch's
visit.
Anti·shah atudenta alrea.d.y
have painied sidewalk& with
slogans, plastered walls with
posters and aathered at the
Wbite ~ abd on Capitol mn
to protat Lbe shah'• mlllt.ary and
economic ties With the .United
St,iea and to label tho naler's re·
eUne as repreiaive ud corrupt.
They charte that the shah paid
for tbe transportation, accom·
modatlon and feeding or his sup-
pOrtera. The charfe was denied
by an lranitm embassy official,
who sald there has been no con·
tact between his government and
the pro·shah organizations.
•
"We heard that there are a
number ot them planning to come
to W aahington to pay thefr
re1pec~ to his majesty." the
spokesman said.
He said he believed moat
grou,ps r~ptesented minority
populationt in Iran, such as As·
syrlana, Armenians and Jews.
Vladimir Tuman, a member of
the Assyrian Cultural Found&·
ti on of Stanislaus County, Calif .•
. said he arraneed transport.atlon
for some 200 Assyrian·
Americans to'Wuhington,as part
of a contingent or pro-shah dem-
onstrators fiying from San Fran·
CilCO. ,·
A physics professor at Cal
State Stanislaus, Tuman said the
money for the trip was rai!ed In
I ran and chann~led t.o the United
States by Homer Mhurlan.
"To the best of my knowledge,
the Assyrian merchants of Iran
have provided the budget and
Ashurian is coordinttln1,"
Tuman said.
Tuman identified Ashurian aa
a member ol the Iranian parua:
ment. tho hJgbest elected body
under the country's ont·party
political system.
"I boneitly don't k~w where
the money came from • Tuman
aaid .. in a telephone interview.
"and it really doean 't matter.
Thia la an opportul)lty for the Al·
syrian communHy to dem-
onstrate thelr support fnr the
shah."
Intrepid Explorers
Nora (top) and Norton, a brother and sister team, ex·
plore the bush country in a backyard on the Balboa
Peninsula. The kittens are owned by neighbors Eloise
Luther and Bill and Cindy Peck. The two cats get
together frequently to exolore each other's back yards.
Marine View Kids
Learn 'Wildlife'
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Oltlleo.lly l'llM5Ull
Laura Glusha brought the
story of SUck·A·Toe. a battered
baby monkey, to Huntington
Beach recently to help teach
children that all cR&turea'need
and deserve love. -
Mrs. Glusha1 who has earned
the message about the world's
endangered wildlife species to
more than 15,000 Southern
California children now. also
taught tbe youngsters about
artistry.
laboratory exercise the sad facts or life facing so many creatures
who are victims of manklnd's
thoughtless handling of the en·
vironment.
Armed with a referee's whiatJe
to comman~ atten~n. ttie 11:.
lustrator blow.s a sharP tilast at
the combined class as they work.
''I hear some of you say to your
neighbor 'my picture la better
than yours.' I don't believe that,"
Mrs. Glusha explained. "You are
Just doing your pictures bv uslnll
your own handwriting."
Her theory is that aU children
are artists. They aimpty haven
been taught that, nor had ft
properly expla!ned
She brought her husband.
artist.photographer and
graphics designer Dan Miller,
along t.o Marine View School to
lend a hand in helpina second and
third 1raden1 learn about wildlife
and become artists. "If you need help, we will hdp
"I feel if I don't do this, no one you. My husband waa my
will," says Mrs. Glusha, who teacher." Mrs. Glusha says of
comblnea her teachint of Miller. who has been a pro·
artwork h\ a \IT\lquf! method fessionallor5o years now•
based on the touchlne story of lit-One tiny blonde with tears In
tie Suck·A·Toe the monkey, a her eyes slipped orr her chair and
symbol of hope for the world's went to primary teacher Mrs.
endangered species. Milli• Dan, who stood nearby.
Utilizing a method called ·'I c•n't get my no1e
breakdown drawln1. Mu. right ... , •· abe whimpered,
Gluaha 1how1 children au pie· pointing to her half.finished
turea are essentially just made 'portraitofSuck-A-Toe.
up or lines and the shat>ef of let· The plaintive plea won extra
tera and numbers they have help from both her teacher and
already learned. Mrs. Glusha. She aave hlm a
Suck·A·Toe, the forlorn baby quick nose job with an eraser and
de Brana monkey she met while soon bla DOff wu pendled on
execuUna 12 portraJts or animals straight and herttani were dry.
threatened with extinction on a" "She does this as her contrtbu·
commluloned Los Aneetes Coun-lion to society." expla.tna Sharon
ty Zoo assignment, I• her cl\lef Knoppel, a campus volunlHr
model. aide instructor.
She showed a combined three A lone-time psycholo1y •tu·
cl asses how to draw htm dent, Mrs. Glusba hu monl~
altbouah Suck-A·Toe must stay the moneky Suck·A·Toe'1 Pr.ot·
home at the zoo. ress at the zoo for flve yea" SJmultMeoualy, she wove into now. three of those spent ln tM
her lecture and dr a wf nl( oareof dedfc•led nurses.
F rom Page AJ
KILLED •..
motorist saw the body tieing
thrown from the van by a blond
Cau.caslen with a mustache. ~ell,Uves siijd that Myers was
not the type to pick up
hltcbhikers.
Myen1 went to the desert Fri
day on a b~lness (alfin ~oMec·
lion with his duties as an associate
or tamco Chemical in Costa
Mesa.
His business ~pecialiies m in·
dustrial water treatment.
Myers had lunch with friends
at Victorville before departing
for New~rry Springs to set up
new accounts. ,
The body, was seen being
thrown from tho van aL 1:10 p.m.
Olficers launched a search but
didn'Uind ,ibe victim until 11:07
a.rn .. the.oext <tay. • · • . My~u liaCl formerly operated a
concrete and masonry business
on Laguna Canyon Road. Be also
was employed at the Lido
Sh.u>Jard tn Newport Beach,
friend5 say. •
He "and his wile moved to Hunt·
ington Beach about five years
ago.
Mepiorlal setvWes '1ill be held
at ~ P·l"l· Wedn~day at Christ
Presbyterian Church, 20112
MagnohaSt .. Huntington Bea~h.
Also !'lurvlvlng in addition to
the wid<>w and daughter, are a
son, Davtd. ot Anaheim and two
grandchildren.
Four Killed
Jn Home Fire
SAN DIEGO CAP)-AS2·year-
old mail carrier, bts wife and
their twin 9-year·old daughters
died today in a nre that
del'ltroyed the-ir two-stOry home.
Two tttn-aged som. Vincent
and Gerald, escaped but. the
others apparently were sleeping
and trapped on t.he~d noor.
The dead we~ identified as
Arthur E . Chew, • Chinese-
American who worked for a
number or years for the U.S.
Poatal. &!rvice; his wtf Bobble
Jean, 37, and the twtns, Stacey
and Tuey.
7
FRANKFURT, West Germany
·CAP> -~a jetJiners are
flyin1 specaal evasion patterns as•
a security prec:auUon against ter-
rorist threats to blow up the
planes iJl lhe air with missiles,
authorities said today. In thu
Unit(.>d States, protective
f!leasurcs were be&ng taken at
several airports.
A US Coallt Guard
spokes man said today the
service has been patrolling
waters since Friday ofC lhe in·
ternallonal airports an New
York, .Boston and Philadelphia.
"Our information is that It's
supposed to happen somewhere
1n the world this week," the
spokl'sman added.
S1.ll'eial precautions were all'lo
bcmg lakt•n in airport terminals
al N cw York. Chicago, Los
An~cles and Sitn Francisco,
Carter Bae
·Full J ohs BUl
This Canadian goose, heading south for a warmer
climate, drof>ped in'on a waterfront ,at Kirkland, Wash.,
for a spell after fieelng the cold nortnern winter.
National ·~
Goitl
Lauded
WASHINGTON CAP> -Presi-
dent Carter formally threw his
supl>(trt today behind the Hum-
phrey-Hawkins bill that would
set a 1983 unem1',loyment. rate of
four percent as a national I I
without mandalin1 spectric pro·
grams to combat Joblessness.
"This is an ambitious objective
and one that may prove very dif·
ficult lo achieve, but setting our
si1hts hJgh ~hallenges us lo do
our: best," Cart r aald at th•
White House.
The administration's support
for the Tull Employsnent and
Bat ncect GrQWth Actot:iirr11,·1the
Humphrey-Ha wk ins Ml I,
culminat~s negotiaUoos that
began1ft June tor a policy afmed
at reducing wiempteyment. ~e
leglalaUon is named after Sen.
Hubert H. Humpbre)"!. D·Minn.,
and Rep. Au1u1t0s HaWkins, D·
Calif., ll~ original 1ponsors.
The bill, according to Carter's
statement, commits the federal
government t.o achlevlng full
employment while remaintn1
committed to achievinf
"reasonable price stability."
The four percent unemploy-
ment rate translates to a rate Of
three percent for all adults iri the
work force. The October jobless
raLewas se•en percent
The bill would also:
Establish a framework for
economic policy decision•~ with
the administration sendin1 to
Congress its #Oals for employ·
menl, unemployment, produc·
tion ao,d income over a five.year
period;
-Recoiruu that "special iov-
ernment efforts" are needed to
fight ht&h unemployment "but
that primary empbuls shO'uld be
placed on exp•ndln& Jeb Op· portunlUes in the pr~vate sec·
tor;"
-Recognize that monetary
and fiscal ~llcft!f!, ra er than
1ovemment coo\tol or private
producttoo. wages and prices.
muat be used to achieve lull employment~ price 1tablllt)'.
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Thousands of women. famous
and unknown, 'VlU meet at tbi
' first National Women's Coft.
ference in Houston this week lO
map the (ulure or women in !he
United States.
Men will be there too. In all,
20,000 people are expected, some
to support the goals of equalJt;;
9tJ)ets -lilce the Ku K.lu>t Klan -
lo protest.
...
By ROBERT BARKER °' ................ .. unhngtof) ~h re&ldent
bu•il"lesamwa lR . en VandU
M9ers, 57, ¥1 fousid lo ~
dtt"ith Saturday Mia kwte1~ etch
of lerstate I~ncar Barstow.
e was previously a_lon1·tlme
r!doo ol La1una Beach along
W his Widow, ftjlo who bM a
r l ~te buaioeas m Lqama.
hetms· Dct.ecli ve D•,mis
O'Jourke awd lod-.y t Myers
a~parenUy wu shot to deaa by
someone he picked \Ip near Vit·
tQ11villc Friday .
fhe body was found un·
derneath a tumble.weed off a
hWbway embankment betore
noon Saturday.
!fhe search wH touched orf by
a w 1tnet1s who reported to of·
f1 rs that he saw a ~y .t>eipg
tlltown oat of Mvera· .eold·
('Olored van shortly .O•r noon
Friday.
)bers · dauahter, Sheri BJanco
of Hud.ineton Beach. S•ntay
filed a mi1s1ng persons repor\ on
her father. ·
Detect1ve1 O"Rourlte said that
robbery apparently wa1o no the
molt ve oC the sl ayini: He l'l&Hi the
\'tCllm i;till had about 165 ustJ, •
JCW('lrv and credit cards.
An all pollltS bu"eun has-.,
issued on lhe van which the as-
:-ailant, or as1>&Jlants, apparentty
t1.>0k. The license number or e
vehicle is 3!656H ·tTe,e key to the invesbgaU.
al tJld tielillti!> fi.ndiag tJte Vllll, ..
O'JloudtUaJd.
lie .sded that .Myers carried a
22-caliber revober wil:h hbn.but
decilaed to 11y if jt was uffid in
the slaying.
The coroner's office.inBaratow
:-aid only that r.s dted cif a
~unshot wound totbebocty.
O 'Rourkt!'laid thAt Ute witness
nwtorisl saw ~ body lteanc
t hrown from tfle van bv a blond
C;iucasian with a mustache
llela t1ve!'> said that Myer!> was
n o t l h 1• t y p l' l n p I C k U P
h1lchh1kers .
M vcr~ went lo the de11art Fn
day 'on a busUlcss call in c~ec
t1on w1thhu1duties as an associate
11f Tamco Chemical tn Costa
Mesa.
llis bu!'ltness !'lpeclalizcs in tn·
d\llllrial waler treatment.
Mvers ruw lunch With friend." ~ at Victorville before departin&
for N~wbert'y Spnn~ to set up
m•w arcounts.
The bod v wa~ seen being
thro"'n from t.be van atl:l~p.m.
<>Hice"" launched a ~•afl'tl but
d11ln'l ftnd the vacltm until ll:{)k
a m the next day. T
l\1 ye rs bad formerly opera led a
I
HOMES •••
btslldlnss range from S250 for a
one-bedroom. to $38() for a three.
bedroom
According to planners, at cnr-
rcnt rents and home pricea. only
t S pereent of Irv1~ itoustn1 i5
a(ford~ to the lower IMOme.
cotei:ory, and 25 pe~nt is af.
fordable to mocl'F.atetncome
According to tM figures, no
new housing is affOrdabte by
lower income remmes.
By state law, Ute c:tt.ylflnsin1
plan rmua' mcluh 1Mu1int af.
fordlb1e bY 111 se.:ment'I of
!!Mi,\y.
Police have identif1eci a
burglary suspect killed Saturday
niaht during a bloody 11tr.oto'4 in
Santa Ana ha which a Polie!e e>f·
ficer horn Mission Vilejo w
fill.Olly wounded.
The SU1$ped was identflied as
Roy Kenneth IUU. Who police
characlet!ized as "a tr:anstenl ~ltb .an armed robbery convic-
'hon rat1ord."
.l:hJl, a. f'QJ>Orledloy wes felted
by a st\6'jun blast w; l\e atMI a
pal"lnar ~ashed .shoot in&: eons
•from a medest. so~west Santa
•na home .seconds aftor Officer
an;el .nantJ1BJe. :n, ot · ·a.
"Vi(Uo, was mertally wound .
The Jdlic.e otficer rep()J'ledly
81lte.rea 'the dukerMNI home an
r~onse to a bJ,U'glary m prog.
resa call ar<d was fatally
wounded t),y a.ttot.&red by ettber
11ill or his ~lteW11YDe Em·
rmeUrJ>milap,:JI, df.IFubcsrton.
il>.wtlapwr•·woun4eCI in the ex-
hll'fr8e <4 wunf•e ~ ~ .and WM't:e,.,,W h> ~'*5 C..
dl•i.oo 'lilday in UOI Medi.cal
Ceitter .. Be~ officel'S aTrivi1\c at
the •bttrclary M>u&-e near
Wei.tern Avenue and Willtts
Street heard the shot that ap·
parcnlly mortally W«>unded of-
fi cer Hale. The fleeing suspects
r09»0Tt~ly fired sho~ in the Of
fieers ·direction as they u ced off
un foot
In the ensuing ex.change or
~unflre, Hill was killed and
Dunlap seriously wounded by
shotgun fire '
Tilr.ee QUakes
Jolt Seu.thern
Califer.nia
GOLDEN. Colo . .(AP> Tbree
minor earthquakes hit Southera
Cali.for:n1a overnight, hut a
spokes man for Lhe National
Earthquake Information Cent~r
s~ it is unlikely they wcr41 the
preeuraor of a m~or quake.
The quakes measured between
4.0 and A.2 on lhe .Ri(lhler Scale,
the most powerful 1bem1 r•a-
istered at 6:06 a.m . Thal quake
was centered six miles east of El
Centro. and 10 miles north of the
M ex1can benlier.
The .artier qu&kes were wit·
corde<l at 6:06 p.m. and 9.37 p.m.
Sunday. .
Quak• SP~urina between~l.O
and 4.S eoiftielJUc:hter Scale w•
capable of causing moderate
damage in poplllated areaa.
AU.b.ough the quakes were felt
over a wide Jll'ea, the Barth·
qwake lnfornaation Center sald
there wtrellO n;>otts ot damage
from. lhe tremQl'I.
The .spokaman for ~e Earth·
quake Information Center,
Waverly Person, 5aU2 the ~kes
were ·part ot a swarm df 'rnlnor
tremors in the region recorded
over~ two-day J>tt;iod.
.. We have bad me ~warm1.in
·that area .IQI' the la.st A:ouple or
years and they haven 't de· v~loped into. aJ\)'thine, ·• s•id
Person. "'There is no tvld oe '9
auqeaLtbis. s~na m a ma· Jar nwW?.iuomina ... •
Some researcbera h Ve lijC-ce&tect thlt mmot QU
to rellt~1~res1ure '1ona .earth ,ouake ilOnes ancl.prcvcm.
"iilltt9P ~ ~ collM rw;· sull ijii'Qmc . ·
..
latrepjd Esplerers
Nora (top) aitd Nort.Oll. a brother and sister lt;.am, ex -
plore the bash country in a backyard on the Bal~a
Peninsula. The kittens are owned by neighbors Eloise
Luther Bnd Bill and Cindy Peck. The two cats get
together frequently to explore each other 's back yards.
Breallthroligh Seen
Ill Schi.ZOphrenia
Arter 15 years of Tesearcb, an
tntemat1onal eroup of ~ientlnc
sleuths 11 closing tn on wbal one
rei.earcher calls "the sites of
craziness" in schizophrena«.
"Thia u; tho first. biological
• b re atttn..,.iii!Jf tb at 111 accept., .. ~a~ ant of the ftffuclters. Dr
Philip Seeman. chairman af the
depa rtment of pharmacology ~t
tbo University of Toroato. "This
new fi.Ddin1 provkies tbe first
d irect understanding or why
sc hiioptareaic patients Clt·
perience del..tons aad escewve
fl.odiQg of uoufual thoughts,
behavior and emotion." '
The new evidentt may give
doet•rs the fiTSt cbrecl an·
<lerstanding or schit.ophrenia and
such secmin1ty unrelated dis·
orders na Parkin!fOfl 's diseue,
Seemansavs.
The findfues were presented in
Anaheim to a convention m the
Society for Neuroscience here by
Seeman and Or. Tyrone Lee. a
pos t -doctoral fellow i tl~UtOChflll'!i~lT~ « the Cl·· vers1ty'~ Ont.er~ 'Mental ~h
Foundation
!'he two were members ol1he
tcwe that st.die.I d.e flfedlll'-4
ale dleml~ •~amine do tbe
brain.
Wh.'.lt the research found was
that scruzopbrenks do not have
an excess amount al dopaa'Une.
as pr~osly believed. But they
have nearly double ~e number of brain Tecepton w1rich react to'
th<' chemical.
Most of these recCJ'\Ors are in
the a r~a of the brain that cout.ro1s
motor activity and em<rt.ion, the
rescarch'found.
The research also found ~at
victims or hrklnson·s disease,
which ls characterized by mtdde
rteidity and-tremors oftb•timbs,
had more .\han the notmal
num bcr ol ddpaml.ne ncep(on in
theLr' brain'S. scleiiii*t.a hd known that .-~ bhOJ»hTenlcs ha.id tom~
t;i9t9ch:al defect and that
Parkinson's se patients who
t.i.lt L d mical ""8Ulte
-ody c i:,.oi~~
•omet,llft
!-iclWophrenrc~ikest.ates.
&t until naw. the rei;earcbcrs
s dd, 1t was lhou1ht th t
sceiiopbreak:s ·defect was an e"X·
cess of dopamine.
Legionnaires'
Dise&8e Kills
3 Californians
·-__..... '
Fair Races
BriJ,g fn
High B~ts .
Horses al Los Alamitos race
courte tiecan a;lai. weekend to· d•r. ~ a ~Y break un·
ti1 tadn! d ednesday at .noon.
Attendance and betting rec·
ords set Friday lasted less than
24 hours a.s 14,428 people turned
out Satyroay to place $1,819,023
lnbe~ .
On Sunday, 12.127 racing en·
thusiasts MoWed up lo wager
more thao Sl.1 million.
So, at the midway potnt of the
12-day racing meet, Fwr D1rec·
tor Ken Fulk reports average
daily ~ is exceedine $1..3
mUOOo.. Fah' offidalS bad oal1
hoped for m averace of aboUt
$1.1'mi.llioa..
The Oraoce· COanty .. Fall
Fair.. at Los Alamitos will re-
maiJt' open JIODday and Tuesday
from 10 a.m. to let p.m. Tben ii
no admi-.. cbai'ce.
Live enlerUioinent, livestock
aad home exhibits and mJd ay
ridea wW keeptbis ~ectule UDUI
the faJrshutsdown next Monday,
Nov. 21.
Racing will resu~ Wednes·
day at noon and the 11-race a day
program wHI be offered six con·
secutivedays until Nov. 21.
SAN FRANCtSCO CAP) . -:-::-. A
musician has mt.Id poUcetse.tp
recovering a flS,000 viCU be~
he left leaning ag.ainJt. lbe wall ua
a downtown boteL
Walt~ Trampler. 62, of New
York. tokl police !lie ootic.cl theiD-
~trums was mis•inl wbea hear-
rived at ~ airpOilt after Jenine
the Sir Francis Drake Hotel.
Trampler said be ~urned to
Ute botd mmediatel~. but t.bt ln-
slrumeat, a circa 1820 Amanli,
was coneVJhenhecQl&.bere.
I
WOMEN •••
Prisoners Protest
SAN .DIEGO (AP) - A halt·
dozen Prbc>Oen rail.led foOd pro-
vided by Sah Dteco County Jor
the ai~th day today, protatinl
vconnnement to their Ce.lit in the
county (jail. But a ~man
sald tbe. !nm1te1 were bUytnc
items from tbt jail'• •tore.
.• .. .
.:. Tbe' ;varsity 11quad Isn't the only football
1M>'1¥ tbc>Ule at Fountain Valley High.
·" While Willie Glttena and Tim Holmes have been lenc1lne the Barons to an unbeaten season and No. 1
ClP nnldng amidst much fanfare, the feats of
iSleve Southward and Blll Tyler on the freshman
level have gone almost unnoticed.
But tbe Fountain Valley froth team, under the ~cttoo of Dave Fillpatrlck, baa been buildlDg a ~UQr of Ila own •
. • Cut Thursday's 42-8 rout of Westminster .~Jh>ched the Sunset ·Leaaue freshman cbarq-i>ionahlp for the youo1er Barons, who finished the
sea1on witb an 8-0-1 record.
:: It was the team's 20th atraiaht league victory
f panning four years and Barons freshman teams
Jlave now won 34 of their last 36 games.
·: Fitzpatrick aives a lot or credit to assiltant ·~oacbes John Rosales. Bob Bell and Guy Carrouo,
:.not to mention Fountain Valley's seeminaly qnend-
1ng wealth ot talent.
: "The four of us have been coachina together for
the last three years and this ia our fourth con-<
Jeculive championship," he said. "But we've been'
Jucky. Look at the varsity. We 've had some talent,
that's for sure."
Nearly all of Fountain Valley's varsity players
have come up through the ranks of the lightweight
fbotball teams and it ill this process, much like, baseball's minor league system, that has made th~
Barons a strong contender year in and year out.
''Our first good year was with Gittens and
Holmes," says Fitzpatrick. "Since then, we haven't
lost a Sunset League game. They started the ball
rolling and we've kept 1t going since ..
Southward appears to be ready to carry on the
Barons' tradition of fine running backs His two
touchdowns against Westminster in limited action
gave him lSfor the sea!\on. . Tyler scored once against the Lions and wound
up with nine.
A name synonomous with Fountain Vallev lcirlc-
lng. Steinke, also graces the freshman roster.
Greg Steinke, whose brother ~teve booted a pair of
52-yard field goals for the varsity a year ago, has
handled the frosh kicking duties wtth the poise of a
, veteran. ·
I
He has missed only two of 28 PAT kicks while
hooting three fi('ld goals, the longest of which went
37 yards.
Except for a 13-13 tie with Sana Ana on the
second game of the season, the Barons have stldom
been tested They outscored opponents by an
almost four lo-One margin, averaging 2t points of-
fensively while allow mg 5.2.
JC that wasn't enough, 1''ountain Valley's dis-
trict football team went 9·0 in its campaign.
The winning formula, Fitzpatrick says, was
simple. ''We had a good group of kids who worked
very hard with a compatible coaching stall.··
Girls Athletics
Ol•UTl'NIUS Mlcl\a..,d-o-nen (El IOlt N, -
I . VA•MTY •--'.19'13 ....
Dana HIJ19 Ull It) MhMeol Vloje . ~ .... ldff 101 dtf Mofltn M, det_Wln· '9n H, def l..amtlert .. I; Krotllil 101
~ "''· .... M , ~IOI won .............
0.......
, 8Kk·J-CDI IOll to~
,ftotll 1-•. lcoJ1 to OtYrlo· Thompton
i-4, CMi 8i-n.&ow.n•2. Alderrn.n-
;Goye tOl -M , loM 1 .. , _, 1 S;
'9.Con,,_·Wll'M<NllM COi IOll 4 •,
~•.H.
' UNwnitY Ul (U) II Tete ""-' '. llrondl CUI lol1 i. SINd W , '°" lo 'c>v111e 14, !Mt .. CMter 0-4; soiewn
IV> lost t.._ _, M, Iott S-7, Burton -tu> IOltH. 1"-D-4 DeWMI
iMC ....... tW 161 c.&eMesa
~ S4tU tSl def SCheW .. 2. def U<l 1 .. ,
Otl C.roOM•2; Unde tSt-•J.tnt 1 •, won 7-S; Mc:~ld ... t :H, 2-4, :w .......
foremen-Ste.,.nl IS) det Hiii·
0 H•ll •2, def Flor.S.Wl9flt •3, Cltf
lrwln Herrl~ ...0, Ol•Y•t t.sl -•1, '°'t :W, _. •2, _,,_,.A
b&otl CSl won •·•· won on S-4
t..0.H~,lollS-1. ue-a.._-.,J.i.16>aN~
SMllH Kluet•r (L) def $1tu ..... def Ulldt .. a. d•f Brumrnnwtt 7 .. ; Pitz (Ll -
.. 2, .. J. klst M ; O'ktllvMI (LI -
.,..~ .......... ..,..,.,....._
FOUNTAIN VALLEY FRESHMtf STEVE SOUTHWARD RUNS FOR A BIO GAINER.
•
Pro Cage,
Hockey
Standings
Natl ... ....-..it A-'41tlff
IASTallN ~Fl•INC~
AtMlltlc Olvlel•
W L f'ct. 01
New ~Ofk 1 ~ .SU
Plllleditlptlo• • S .S.S 'n
8vflllo • • .IOO 1
... tOll ) • .271 J\'t .......... v 1 ' .112 4h
C....tr.C DM'1• AU.,le t J .121 -
C14Nelencl I 3 .727
~ AntOlllO • • .SH n, " .... ,,Oft • • .soo 2., N-OrlMll\ • 1 .4'2 3
Wllhif'IQ\Oll • ' .«IO J' a wa'T~llNCOfilHll•NC• ~OIVlsMR
Oenwr
Otlroll Otl~90 Mllw...,kle
1(-tlty
IMI-
• s •• ,, • .s ..kS 1 16..s311
• • .JOO IY, • • .A2' 2"1
J • .m • '•llicOllllsl• 9.2 • s , 1 7 . ' • 10 ..... ., •• Sc.otw
.. ,. -~s ;& .soo 3ft
.JOI 2~ ........
0.lrtft '°" w ... ,,.. 102 ... IO<I IV,Mllw ..... ltt,OT
f'Nenlx 11', lnlllleN Mir
LMAfttlllaf7,~llMe'5 SHtUe 117,Hewc:>tSeMsU T ......... ..... ...... .,.." .... ... T.....,..10.-
lndl-II Buffalo
N-Orl ... •1"'-'l'ork
PlllllclelplltUIA•--
SeltUell ~!Ill°"
ll.M1t1101YllS....ANW0
Portl-ltMll ..... U.
O.lrollll 0.-
Cl-lllfldilt l.Ol"'"9'lH •
*
Auc11moodv·K•mlnskH tUI del
•lryMln-BIMM .. 2. Iott lo L-11-Dlck -a... lost to PYk•Smlth 2-4, C:..lltn-
•Loomla IUI IOlt 4-4, wot1 7-S, IOll o.t;
C:O.-r·UnWrflllllff tUI Iott H, ,_,,
~ ...
W, lostS..~-K
w 1 tt man • .fa':~':rno c L) de I _____ FV'_S_M_l_K_E_O_A_E_E_N----L_EA_F..:(_81....l):..SC;..;.;A ____ M;.;.PE.-,R;;..;8;...P;...A;.;.;;ST..;..;,F..;:O;.;!:;.:•;..._ __ _
• JUNIOll YA•MTY at T-191 ltl Ulltwnlty
U•lnrtlty--lleWoell«,IM1. a-... , L. 81....U IEI dtf 0.-.. .. 1. wf
.,Slater .,1, def Sl"91eV .. 1; F1h1t•ll•
•ll:l IMtU,2 ... U,CMw tl!l lottH, won 7·.S, io.tu .,......
0-\+-MOITl6 IE) !oat .. MitChell-Cl .. 11 1-6, dtfl w..,..r-0.WIOl'I •-J,
def Th9m-MorTb M l A,,...,..C.
lllWKe lost I•, -'-3. IOlt H ;
Pro Grid
. Standings .
F0<emen-sw.tM M, IOlt to AJ•·Yott
•·•· dot f'ofnendoz·Al>llC>ll •·I; F~W..._. ILi -1-4, 1·5, Ml
Pof'IM'(•WedMI IU IOllM,W, •t.
C.-MIMw (It) CJ)~Meu ,......
M«ko (QIM) *" O'NNI 6-0, Clef
erooer .. 2. *" Hiii H ; .i-(QIM> -"°· w.w: eiew cCdM>-w, .. l,H. .,.....
8Jorkl"'"°'K. Upyenltl <~> def Wll1111·~..,, ......... v-u
M, dof Herrtf-Erwlft ... , ~
Viera ICdMI -K loll H, M ; J.
Ll..,...,lll·PrMI& ICAM> !ell U, -..........
MbaMViale 1'411410.. Miiia ~ GreMm <Ml def. Hem\111 M , def.
~y M , .... HostecUer .. 2: Ivory
llt\I la.* S.i,wonW. 7•, Hol1...S <Ml
,_, 2•, won S-2, IOl1M.
0.....
Hooll.atr•·•odlorn IM) def, ,.1-.Font« .. 2, o.f. OW.-stnel·
f'rlJfflm M , dlf. Get<'-' Trlllofet .. ,;
LarkenM"'rptiy IMI _. M , 1·S. .. , :
Hebel$oM<GowM IM) "'°" .. ,, .. 3.
IOllU
Alamitos Race, Results .......... ,
OMr, TrK .. Falt
f't•ST aAC& -• l"'r1«199. CAP. .,.ioose, J ,..r -& uo. Cll•mtne •
f'uf M $.2 ,000.
A--JM41VlnM•C# µ...,.,, 7//0 2.10 J.10
Anether OIMtl IAIUQll 1 2 60 2. IO
lreM Oelithl IC.llllol 1.tC
lime-~~ "°scrttdln A·GltftdleMwller lr94Md tnlr'I' u aue11 1~ ..... ce. ,. J>A .... Qiaftl, "llW$ft..•
SaCONO•AU-JJOylrft lYHr
olcls. Claimu,..PutMU.000
A-lre ve BIWW'I Flalft
(C..rdoal HO 261 120
Ml4wey Mee IC.Ill 4 IO J :io
Trul'I'• f'rlnut IRoutl'l • 11
Tlme-Tt»
Nos""°"' A•R c H-utr .. ntdlftlrY
"''™ ltAC• -· llH'IOft9S. 'yNr Tlme-1.t> otc11& .. p.C111ming,f'111'M$4,SOO AllO , ... -a ........ ., •• l.•lff,
Uftdlng Plolnt ~ MelOllY. °'"'"* lfl oew.A ~'~:J!'w••ayc.e>n.ao t: U& Noi.crotc.i.t
Prk• C4fnlfl!MIOll cc.u"oJ uo "'""' uca -' flKIOl'll9. a ~ 4 Time -t.1a•1s yeorol0•. l'IWN'6,500
AIM ren --Hit flit, E-OOd, L• K• Ana.,, It..,.. Tri• • OllNClollt wo Kratu.s 1•emlrad s 00
""''-!Mete#D) ~ lelO &..older '"'°"""'
, .
Pint Team Offeaae ..
) POI, PlaJer, 8eMol Wedlpt a .. ,
TE-Todd Litman, Vllla Park 215 sr.
T -Bart Erlcb, El Modena 190 Jr. t
T :.....:JeftLewiS, FoothW llO Sri ,
G -Kevin Obyma.ko, Estancia 205 Sr,·
G -Brett Erlch, El Modena 175 Sr. c -St.ve Martln, Wla Park 185 Sf .. 10
QB-Andrew Palae, SA Valley 200 st ...
RB-Mart Kahn, Wla Park 115 ~-RB-Robert Powell, SA Valley 180 Sr.
RB-Bob Verbura, El Modena 160 Sr.
WR-Mike Camp, Eatancia 195 sr ... ,..,,
Flnt Team Derenae I:)
DE-Jon Thorsen, Tustin 210 .If-'•
DE-Alan Lulfau, SA Valley 170 Jr,.·
DT-DaveZeller, Villa Park 228 SI'.~
DT-David Reyes, Santa Ana 240 Sr~
NG-Barry Wright, SA Valley 210 Sr.,
LB-Mark Ferguson, SA Valley 210 Sr.
LB-Jeff Bleller, Villa Park 222 Sri~
CB-Kirk Springe, Vllla Park 217 Sr.,
DB-Jake Blanchard, Foothill 115 Sr.:
DB-Dale Hedrick, Oran1e 172 Sr.r
DB-F.d Hollin.I. SA Valley 170 Sc,."! '.
Second Team Offense . .
TE-Scott Haigh, Foothill 200 SJ'f
T -David SU. SA ValleJ 220 so..
T -Dan Oark. Oranae 185 .
G -Mlke Otis, SA Valley 220 Jr.
G -Mike O'Brien, Tustin 195 Sr.
C -Keene Aguilar. SA Valley 200 St.~
QB-DaveJeranko, Estancia 175 Sr.-
RB-Rob Moore, Foothill 205 Jri" RB-Jlm Bremer, Foothill' 170 $( ..
RB-Joe Henry, Tustin 170 St'\·,
WR-John Carlyle. Santa Ana lS> srd
11
Secoad Team Defense ... t
DE-Jeff Brack, Foothill 175' .Jr.
DE-Kevin Sloan, Estancia 240 Sr.·
DT-Don Mablstedt. Foothtll 230 ~-D'l'-WayneManb, FoothlU 215 Sr-4 1
NG-Jh:n llattbew1, El M'odena 200 Sn,,
LB-John Lauck, Orange 185 St.
LB-Mizell Hopper, SA Valley 190 Sr.
LB-Doug Finney, Tustin 185 ~.
DB-Mi.Ice Leiter, Bl llodena 165 Jr.
DB-Earl Hewell, Estancia 18$ Sr.
DB-Lance W~, Tustin lSS
College Grid Slate
OT •
Raquel's New Look
:-iultry Haque! Welch shows off her latest hair fashion
ll'rmNl "L' Animal" named after her current film with
JL•an Paul Bclmondo. While weekending in France. Ra·
qucl forgot hl•r hair drver and improvised the style which
is now hl•c:oming quite popular.
Learning a New
Lingo: Real Estate
By OUGH A. MULUGAN
A~s.-J .. c.wrotp * I
RIDGEFIELD. CONN After years or batting about the globe
m rented rooms. unfurnished flats and leased apartments, lhls
111nerant lYJ>t'"'-ntt•r tanker has settled down and bought a house, his
vt•rv first.
·It ·s on a ndgc in Ridgefield. Cotfh., overlooking the price and a
~rhool hu~ -.top. and at wai.n 't easy
JOININGTllELANDEDGENTRYinvolvesmorelhanjustthe
cart' frC'C' tossing of checks into the middle of the table at a colorful
ntual <·all<'<l ·'the closing," which ends when you run out or checks,
everyone shakes hand!I and they turn over a bunch of keys that don 'l
fit anyttung
JEAN FRANCOIS CHAMPOLLION, lhe French scholar who
unlocked the thoughts of Ptolemy V on the rosetta stone that
~apoleoo's soldiers plucked from the mud of the Nile, might have
"'"armed up for his biggie by translating the classified real estate
ads many American newspaper .
• Lacking the French wizard's knowledge of Arable, Coptic •.
Hebrew and ancient Greek, the prospective home buyer is up a tree,
1f the property has one, In unlocking the classified secret.s of "R·
rnch. 3 BR. Lrg LRw cat beam cl, WSFP, form DR, l't!a ctb, ctry kit,
fm rec room, fin bamt, alt gar, CAC." ·
DECIPHERED AT ONLY S PERCENT by your fritndly
neighborhood cryptographer and real estate agent, this ''Ablolute
!iteal at $87,000" breaks down to: Rais'ed ranch, three bedrotma,
large living room with cathedral beam celling and working atone
rlreplace, formal dining room, one and a ball colored tile baths,
country kitchen, family recreation room, finished basement, at·
tached garage and central air condJtionlng.
By UUs time, as ASS might seem like a self-accusation t.o the
timid house hunter, but It actually connotes Aluminum at.orm win·
dow sand screens. And FAii isn't a covemment-backed mortgage
but force air heating.
FURntEa CODE-BUSTING BEVEALS that a Fil SP la a
filtered swimming pool, and a par.pan-ram-rm is a partially
panelled family room. DF and Jdw connote deep freeze and dish
washer, while w & d is a washer and dryer. so Rig must be a
·refrigerator and DH maybe a doghouse.
Language is one thing and meanini is another, as s.n. S. I.
Jrayakawa and the other-learned semanticist.s have been sayln1 for
· years. Real est.ate rhetoric is rife with 1ubtle·
ty it not outright fraud.
It takes a heap of chutzpah t.o make a.
houae a 'Handyman's Special.' which usually
means the buyer had better come from a lone line of stone masons, plumbers, electricians,
carpenters and second mortgace guaranwrs.
Slightly less flimsy ls ''the ireat starter
house." which hut·wlae gives you a h-4 start
on your averaKe AmazbnJan aborigine.
M41LUM• .. MINT CONDmON" REQUIRES THE
'1ame ol you bank account, and .. gardener'• delight" opens up vllt.u
of rolllnc acres and dense ve.ietatioa rare!)' seen thiJ far north ol the
tropfcal ralnforata.
Tbe last .. convenient to nerythlnl" otrennc we lnspetted wu
bebtDd U.. 1upermarket, acrou from the a.11-nlaht 1u ataUoa and
just arOund the Mrid from Ua town dump, .illcb was nut to tho
·parktns Jot for snow plows a~ 1cbool biuia.
"Grutlamlb Dtt&bbo Oocl''watnsth thelutft occ anti
moved out because of them~ Ul'dllns on the blodr, J>tefal·
1ywhent.be8dbeatns: "lmmaieulater f lb'roloca ''Even
an urban f amUy that wanted t.o ala1 P"1'4t woUJa biit tt to :.Ud1
Jrom thlsono.
CAREERS I REAL EST ATE I BUSINESS
I
Chi.IJren -M0'1eY-! I ~
S1wuld
-DON"t HESITATE to admit
you need,belp. Beine a. good
mother doea not mean dolns everything ror everyone else.
Glvin1 children responsibility for
their own needs helps them
become independent.
-Have a deflnite plan and
give the children a share lo the
planning. Pose the problem, list
all the chores, then let all join in
arrangin& a faJrer dlatribuUoo of
the work load. Chlldren aeem
more r•llable about fulfllling
duties they set for themselves.
-Be speciflc. Make sure
everyone knows ex.actly what's
expected and when. A written
chart may work best.
-BE VLEXIBLE. IF a child
has a real reason -not merely
an excuse -for being late
sometimes, be willing to step
back in, or t.o help arrange a
trade-ofr with siblin1s.
-Don't take over. Answer
~uestlona cheerfully and patient·
( C4REERS )
ly. or show bow something ls
done if you're a&ked -but don't
move in and do the job. It
punctures a child's morale t.o see
that you don't think he or she can
handle the job,
-Meet together at specified
times to diacuas how things are
going -what needs change or
improvement.
-KEEP YOUR VALUES
s traight. Remember that
cooperation is the goal, not per·
Cection. An occulonal lapse IA
an overall pattern of responaiblll·
ty Is best forgiven and for~ten.
-Relax. If you've a
meticulous housekeep , the
odds are against your children
measaring up to your standards.
Th ls doean 't rflean9 you mast
tolerate real sloppiness, but it
does mean everyone will be hap-·
pier and you'll 1ain more time
for youradf If you don't expect
too much. Kid.a can be great, but
. .
Wealth 'B0116hl' Sida
STe1N.U•NN•" ltUHlll
his mark, t.o buy the Yankees from
CBS for Sl.O million ln 1973. In •'The
Rich Who Own ~ports." a book
published earlier this yea~ by Ran·
dom House, sports writer Don Kowet
depleted the members or this group as
having "little m common eitcept
enormous wealth . . . . More of them
had pumped the hand of President
Rieber• Nixon than of manager:
Ralph Houk."
Kowet, who holds a deeree ln
economics from the London School of
Economics, recalled how Stelnbren·
ner assembled another aroup ol in.'
vestors in 1967 to take over Cleveland·
based American Ship Buildln1 Co.,
whose sales and profit.a doubled in the
next five years. Kowet explained
bow:
"NO PRIVATE CORPO&ATION
had ordered a new ship to be built on
the Great Lakes since the late 1950s.
Steinbrenner went to Washington. He
put together a powerful congressional
lobby that succeeded In getting the
Great Lakes included in the 19'70
~ltlme Act. which permitted buai·
'nesamen to W1e pre·taX dollan for
ship construction, and permitted the
federal govemmeftt t.o guarantee 87.S
percent or any loan used I or shipbuild·
ing."
The New York Yankees tater re·
ceived aimll.,-subsldlea. To refurbish
Yankee Stadium on the ed&e ol the
slumridden Bronx, New York City
spent $100 million, 10 tim81 wbat the
Steinbrenner eroup paid for the team.
In 1973, after buylni the Yankees,
Steinbrenner found hlmselt embroiled
ln tbe corporate Wa.ter1ate ot Ul al
poltUcal (Qllbibutlons.
AT PlUT A DE•OCUT, stein"
CARSON CJTY (AP>
-A~ __ _.,..._
eel or ateallnc daredevil
motorcycll1t Evel
Knlevet•a cold-eapped,
dlamOftd.encrusi.d cane
baa bem parol«ld alter
Hrvlna 2\1\ yean of bil.
tour.yeart.erm. ·
brenner naet Herbert Kalmbach of The state P•role Newport~ach, Nbon'• pel'IOllal at· Board 111d that G"'ory
tomey, i.Q 1972. Kalmbach told him be Eliades, 23, convicted lo
oucht to ''let on the ri1ht team . . . . .1175 of at.ealins the cane
Weare1olnftobearoundhereforthe worth about '7,000, wlU
next four years.·' Steinbrenner came be released OflCe a auila·
away from that meettng Wltb the ble work protram is set
1tron1 impression that he needed to up.
cootrlbute at least $100,000 to the Nix·
on re-election campaign.
He did, but that some of the mOnies
came Crom the coffers of American
Ship Building, which. was a violation
of the law. which Steinbrenner ot).
vlously knew because be went to
elaborate measures to conceal It.
Steinbrenner awarded phony
bonuaes to executives and ordered
them to Write personal checks to tho
Nixon ~lection campaJp. When
FBI agent.a came around to ln-
veaUgate, Steinbrenner had hia ex·
ecutlves lie tq them. The executives
eventually buckled and agreed to
stop f)erjuring themselves. They
testified against Steinbrenner, who
was indicted on felony chargt.a by a
federal grand Jury.
JN AUGUST lt14, Steinbrenner,
already tn control or the Yankees,
pleaded guilty to one felony charge
and one misdemeanor char1e. He was
fined $15,000.
BuebaJI commissioner Bowie
Kuhn reacted t.o this conviction by
sidelini.nJ Steinbrenner from any
participation in the Yankees for two
years. But Ute suspension wu lifted
after a year. in time for Steinbrenner
to bankroll hla ~am to the world
cbampiooship.
'lY REPOR'l'ER ·
FACES CIL4RGE
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Television
reporter &ill Branch was arrested
when he tried t.o cross a police llne In
an area where a bomb threat had been
made. p0Ucesald.
Branch. 44, or KOVR, Channel 13,
wu released on $1,000 bail alter beln1
booked for lnvestigaUon of interf erlns
with a police oftlcer ln the
performance of his duty.
He wu arrested Sunday nl~t an.er ·
ELIADES WAS con·
vicled ol takinl the cane
as fans of Knievel
1napped pbotosrapbs of
blm and on• <>f his
motorcycles outside a ' club tn Sparks in
December 1914.
A polle. check ol pawn
1bop1 turned up lbe
cane, pawned ror about
$800 by Eliades, Parole
Board records show.
Eliades said he took
the cane to show tt to
friends, and when he
tried to return lt the next
mornlnc, Knievel was
1one.
PUBUC NOTICE
~ ......
•u f'ea1oa C:OUaTCW TM•
IT ATECWCMJP'OltNIA "Ott
THe(lOUWn'~~ ........ ,.
Nq(lU ~"U.lilllllO
Of' PeTlnON "°" P~T· Of' WIU.MDPORUneM TUTNUNTA,_Y
Eslalt Of HALL•• "'· Wei.LS, C>Ke_.i. •
HOTIClt IS HlflEIY GtVaN ""'
Wi'LIE ooooc. """"'" ... i. ... M W.otWfK1tl. .._ 1119" 111t911 • ,_, ...
tionfor P..-.aOIWlll...Stwlt..-c• .. LAlltr'J ,.............., It 1119 PeU·
t~. rel--C.. le""'°' ft -tor fwllltr per1J<....,... .,.,. llWlt U. ,.,,.,.
ellCI !MIKI of llHflno IN -1191 bHn Ml~ Howmber7t, "17,.ilO;OOt.m.,
lftlll9C011rt,_.,.of~f1-N0.20f
wle t~rt, at 100 Orie Ctfttw Drive WHI, Ill Ille City of 5tlllt A11•,
c.tl I lom 11. C)llOCIN~f,1'71. 1 Wlll4Mt I . M ,,._
Gollf'lt y Glefll Wl'-UA~OMQAIN .. CMl ... 0.-.,S.....•
.... ....... CA. ....
Ttf: 11141111-1•
A""'"yter: .... ~
Pvl>llt/leel °' .... ('.Mil O.lly ......
Nl\I. 14,'U,21, tf71
police and ~ers lalke'd a man into •---------
climbing down from a 75-foot perch on PUBUC N011CE
a radio transmission tower ln south 1-----------.... Sacramento, officers said. . su .. u101t c:ou"'o""TM•
----------------. .-ITATaWCAUf'O•Oll4f'Olt TH•COUHTYOf'OllAN°*
HQ.A.UM
NOTl(e Of' NU•INO
we shouldn't expect them to Node.ofproposed
perlorm like miniature adult.a. •-=-=ip--==-=--•ll TAX-EXEMPT tP====--=-·m.· =·-=-··-··· •. --n
Of'HTITIOMTO
D•TWllWINI TIT\A TO l"C•~1.f'tto,..•n, f' lil()eA ,. Q)Otl .. u
_ BB GENEROUS ·W1TB n BONDISSUE praise. A UWe honest apprecia·
lion may be all the reward that'• ~
needed t.o make children feel
good about themselves because
Proposed New Juue
they help at home. It is proposed that the bond issue herein descri.bes11wm be sdld to un· m~:~:~ a~t ::~'.°!n A:.d::': derwriters through competitive bidding on Wednesday, Nov .. 16, 1977
now work al paJd Jobs, many at ll:OOa.m. POST.
readers wlli be Interested in
Berm an 's gentle survl.val
manual on balancing th'tt de·
mands of home and career more
sanely.
READER. SERVICE: The Na.·'
tfonal AuoctoUon for Dioorced
W omm toa1 /orm«J in 1915. TM
group ~a bimonth!J# ~·
tn-to tdrkh both ~ and non-
mmabers can '1.lblcnbe. To obC«dn o
cop11. nclou a stamped, lflf •
.oddreued, long whltf trtwlope "*Ii
JIOUT rtquat to JOJICe Lain K~
.at thU nttospaper. Ask /or "NADW.
N noaletter. •• .
FDA.Moving
~To Restrict
Plllllik Lem
Inlereil ll eumpt, in Ill' oplnfon of Bond Coun.ul, from f.Urol f1ICO!nC ltael
under emtlno low•. al'ld from fltcorM tm:ei wtthin the Stale of ColJl<>mlcl
$8, 021). ()()()
IRVINE RANCH WATER DISTRICI'
for
IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT
N0.103
(ORANGE COUNTY)
. .
Waterworks Bonds, Election 1974, Serles A
(Comprising the initial offering of general obligation
authorizations aggregating $29,090,000)
Unlimited Tax -General ObUgation Bonds
Bonds Dated August 1, 1977. ~ Bonds Due Aucust 1
Au pat l 1'mount
1981 ............ $115,000
Proposed Maturity Schedule
Ausuat 1 Amoynt •
J990 ............ $305,000
1981.. •• • •• • • •• • 221C>,000
1992..... •• •• • • • 23Sf000
1993 •••••••••••• 250,000
119• •••••••••••• 2$.S,000
19'l.5·. • • •• • • • • • • • ~.OOC>
TN Ul.tt o4 "U$S84,1. VALi.~$
kEY Pt •USSl!l.L A. VALLH KEY
01 AUUEl.L VAL&.eSKEY0 Ot<ttMd. Ho\ltt fl ,._,Ill.,_ llllt 1111M
Wfltlll hH "'" Mr P•lltllfl to
Oti.t'll"llM Tltlt '° """"°'* """'""" 11.,fll\ IO cleltrll'llM 11\ft «rtelll
""'"•I ~ ... rty wllltll lll•Y M
tlellMCf to .. lncllldM Ill Ille •-U -
Ille tffllt t•l_,e 16 l\4t '°'' eftd
Mptt tit PRPtf\Y.
'"' j)n)ptf1y '1111111 ~to wtlkll
WCI\ <telm It meot It --tibtd H
IOllowti
A. T ... OOlnt ~t k-~
Key O•lltl'Y -Gift ~. ltUWCf at I UO Seu Ill Htrl>tr, A11elltlm,
Ctl lfOrlll 1, lllCllMllllll Ult 1""'9flW\I,
~letk IM Ir ... , <-'! eft4I !Mllll, K• 0111111 re<etv ............. 1,,._. _,,1 .. ,..,,,...., ... lhrt-., ..... tqlllp-,,_,,......,;
I, TM...,_ llOrM rtclfte Wt~ NM or ..... deft .._., M .,,,_ It..,
"MKll" °' "Key flendl ... P'UeMIC H1tt11tu Hotse fleeing s.-.:·..,. etl .. wts ,,,.....,, lnchdnt • INC.I .,..
._.. tr""""'1 •'**'· ~ reqlnt tl«k_, ~ ~u
reutv.i>lt lneludlnt ,...._ ... Md Oii _,..,.,..p,l ... l•PfK1lel .... __
11ar.-., lnctwllle M ""' lfnllMd to. "Unllmltetl Ol*e. .. '.:t!W ..,....., "
'"0111_,U .. tr,• "'llf .. Ta,,• •Ant
MICIM.'' "9ye Awey.'' "Erlft FtPSt.:'
.,Ket~le Wo9ierl,'' "TIM11t11e•eo•t.''
"Arto .. 1(....,,," tftlll •'Slllo Daft."
,,,. ·-tlllltlell It Mt .. llffr"'O .,., lllt $lipl"" c-t .. fie 5UW of
callf9nll• .... llW Col#llt of Ot'e1191
ltCelM ti 1GO CMc CMIW Dtlw li\Oett,
Sift ta AM, Ctllltmle, If! OtclMDtt ,., "11,att:OOA.M.ln~ •itlf ~ ,ovrl, Rtftl'lfKet mMt ltllllt"'l-
11911 of fllt will! .... ~ .... ,,,,,.
,.r1k11l•ra.
OATliO; H•WIMtU, ttn. •
a.-AHOLIH 6 MtAl.L.llT£"
IY "IYL MCAii~ A!Wf1Y1,.,'9tlt .....
llRAMDLIN • McALUITt• . A Pnm.-.ec..r.-.. DTI.._. ....... ............ ,......,,.,,.. .... ~~-.. Te410'•·Nt1.,._t ~~or-. c...a oe11y "i.«.
Hev, 14, IS, U, tt77
(
•
_._ .. _'0"'_4
,
BUCH AS TllE P&ESIDEN'I'' aftlce ww 1 at.a ..
mttSt Jhiet weieQ a.io thal ln effect. warned t.be Pcider
Rnene to refttin ftom rllainc int.rest raw and tberebj
in the admlnlstraUon '1 vlew, dam8'lDC Ute recovery.
And Bums' •PMCh Oc&. • In whlcb tut luaetl_'*l lb
economy wu tacijl1. • maJaia, unlut tho admlnlitraU
got hold of lttelf aod acted dt.clllively on taxw. enera.
vtronment, lJ\llaUoo and governmental N~atlon.
11 it hadn't been for the Fed, ht a~ld, t~
"I havo little doubt that.fears of intlaUon
would~ runnJ.ni stroater" and lnt.ereat
rat.ea wO\lld be hl&her. He places a lot of
blame on tho at.epa of the White Hou.ae.
la the same apeoc:b, at Spokane, W 85h., the chairman let.it be known that
bis board intended to exel'ciH Ila
resJ>'.On.slbWty with regard to 1DOMtarJ
alfalrt, no matter how many pretlden·
Ual bills are s-ted on the bulletin board. c:u1111H,.,
MAKING HIS QUA8T•aLY appearance befor
Congress to explain Federal Reserve policy, Duma oo No~
9 clearly expressed hi.I disbelief tn tb9 Carter 1oat1 ot aub-
atantlatly lowerln& inflation and unempl01ment.
Prices will rile about 6 pertent to 8.5 ~nt over the
next year, he said. And unemployment will remain stuck at
a relatively high level, fallinf only toe.~ percent f1om the
exlstln17 percent.
The cnalrman indicated he also oppoeed what la widely
believed to be an important piece in the tax Jtasaw puule
that Carter 1s prepariDa. The eUmlnaUoo of Ute upltal
gains tax advantaae would be "most unfortunai.," beaald.
INSTEAD, HE INDICAT&D, WE lhOuld be trylne to edl
courage investment rather than Nmovtns kl a&lrac:Uons,
because capital gains are the lncenUvt needed to promote
capital investment and get our economy oo 1ollclf ootlnc.
Afterward, it was tePorted, Bumi told new. people th
the administration might be trying to do too mucb too IOOA,
and that its many legislative moves wero creauna aruciety
and conlullon ln the bualnea world.
there ls plenty of room lot crlticiam, and ntlther Carter
nor Bums has been reluctant to fill that room. Neither ~
Ukety to have the answer to the economic puult, but eattl
has his approach. ·
cun'ER, DESPITE IDS DISAVOWALS. appears to
believe that rew tasks are hard or lmp05stble to the federal
government -inflaUon, unemi>loymeot, reor1ani11tion,
higher ethical standards. peace, p~perity.
Burn.a, perhaps the most outapoken defender of the tree
enterpriae ap~roach, believes we have to nowtah the
private sector 1Cwe are to make a dentin the economic bar·
riera we see before us.
The two men clearly have dlflerencea and the dlf·
ferences show through the diplomaUo ~eila they attemP' t+
drape over them. Neither hu lOit h1I coot, but their l.bruatf
have been barbed and well aimod. ,I
Stock Market Rally
Runs Out of Gas
· NEW YORK <AP> -StocJr prices showed scattered
losses today as last week •a rall1 came to a tiatt,
The Dow Jones average ot30 lndustrtala, wflJcfs climbed
35.95 points last week, dropped back 7 .~to838.36."
Gainer~ and Josera were about evenly f)alanced fn th~
broad tally ol New York Stoct Exchal\ft·llated iasuea.
!it~lu 111 T'*'
Spot light
Hew YOAK. CAPI· S.lta. 4 11.m. ,,kt enCI lltl t~ of IM IHIAltft m .. I e<llW Mew Y.,k Mock h<l\anOt luuet, lr<MllllQ nall0ft811r at ITIOl'e ll\all ". Sam-R~I. • 4t0,j00 20•·• J<. Pei>slC.O . • .. 144,700 2•'n • '• $0ul~(AI Ed .• , 141,'IOO 1611 • '• 00111 en......... m,'IOO 2ue -•"•
Oo8"lo11nA .,~ra~•
H~"'f. •ork(API l'liwl ~JOfll't 1111~~· ''~"· . ~ tnd °&':ls~' ~ fr.--~ l rn 211. • Jtl.~ 2U.l6 11s.6t-0.¥ s Utt IU.4.1 11l.O. lllM 112.o.i-0 4 ~.ttt ~~. ~1• ~·. ~.~ .-·~~t;.;;~ lran . ..... ••• ..... . . .. . 4tl,WI
VIII\ "'""" .......... •lf,3;,10, ..s ~·· . • . .. . .. . . . .. • . . .. • •• . ~.011, 100 comsa1 .. .. . . . ua,200 ,. . _ ...
(.Orn• ,...... ... 120,IOO .... -lo ---------------Gen MOU11'1..... 21._ooo .. ~ -~.
,....II UMlll.. • .. au~ 10~ -... PllllltM .. . • • iU »<It • "" ~ Pall........ 20:I Ult;' • '• ~ !~~:::·:::: 1::·15700 2r+: :.:·i~ Cllltert> • . • .. • • 1'4 Uitt ,. •11 6farsAb .. •. • 1n. lt\i -~. (Oflt Oii... .. • tU,O itl'I -~
NEW YOltK (API· S.les •• 11.m. pr~ eno nal <'-., uw ..,, mo1o1 acll11• '"""'lean ttou E•<flaft9t IJ-i.. trMlllO Ml ..... Ur at n.'• ll!NI 11, 149vOHM • .. • .. • ua,ooo U•• -._
HWUI 111<........ t00,1'18 •l>a + ... C.l\emp Ho....... 1',toO 214 ... .. 1111<1 Tnrm.. • .. 1•• ao\• .... . M<Cull Q;t ... .,. ~ J'v-\o ~•n•tr t:M • •t:..> 3.._ .... . 1111 e11-no1, , • 3J;ZOO a~ ... 1•
r11tea Cotp .. , "-i 1"' -1
Xetl'lltron .. .. .• lO. ». + ~ ftQloCo Ud ... , 2P,l ,._ -h
What Sto~lu Old .
NEW •OAK tAPI ........
TN.., fl 61't ' I 111 ,, ,,. J1S
~· ''!f
II "
SAUi$
.,
Due to tate transmission
today's listing wilt not ·
appear In the pal.Cy £>!1~.
JIHIATAM~ll DID
ftji;W YO'IK (AP> •
llOHANZA n·AYINQf.R8
"A 'unny n,tna H~ On
The Wfl'/ To 1hi 8tftlton"
MICKl!Y MOOOE Clue
8UP!RMAN
8E8AME8TR~
VILLA ALEGRE
A8CNl!W8
BEWITCHED
'!There'• Gold In Them Thar '
Plfta"
•~12
"KJlllng Ground"
• HODGEPODGE LODGE
"&ugar From Tr ... "
't.'001=EW8
I EMEACJ'9fcV ONEJ
G1ge'a effOf't• tow11d becom-
ing a rodeo atar COfM In handy
when a IClftool bu• plunges off
• cliff. 8 9 NFl FOOTBAU.
The St. Louie Cardin• cluh
~th the Dallu Cowboy9 at
Texaa St8dlum, Dallaa.
llJMOVIE * * "The Great Ame<lcan
Wlldern-."Oocurnentary Nat·
rated by BUI Burrud. (2 hre.)
CD THE BRADY BUNCH
"Gregg Gett Grounded"
g) THE ROOKIES
A routine arr"t leads to terror
when a suspect'• brother aeek•
revenge.
fD ZOOM
G.!) FOODS FOR THE
MODERN FAMILY
"Slow Cooking"
0:30 fJ MOVIE **'Ai "Operation Cobra"
(1971) David Janaaen, Wllllam
Conr8d. A druo-amuggllng ring
Is tr.eked down by a team of
Treuury eo-nf .. (1hr.,30 min.) m MY THREE 80N8'
"Charlie And The Dancing
• L..on''
" OVER~SY
• .c"' Mlz Liiiian Carte<; purchaalng
prncrlptlon drug1.
'1t FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Structuring Communication"
(I) CBS NEWS
.1!00 D NBC NEWS
8 LIARSCLUB CD I t.OVE LUCY
"Lucy Thlnk1Ricky11 Trying To
Murder Her"
g) ADAM-12
A buay night ends up In. thr"
tragedlea.
• MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT G YOGA WITH MADELINE
(I) TO TELL THE TRUTH
. 7~D CONSUMER BUYUNE
David Horowttz examlnee perk·
1~1o1righa
ti1 NEWLYWED GAME m THE BRADY BUNCH
Pater br'Mkt a v... and the
• other kid• try to COYer tor him.
: LET'S MAKE A DEAL • 9 28TONIGHT
"Alaah Olt America '1 Pipe
Dream"
GD FRENCH CHEF
"l.augne A La Franc.JM"~)
A First tor Frank .
Frank Sinatra. who has starred 1n virtually every
medium of show business, chalks up a first tonigllt when
he filJs in for Johnny Carson as host of the Tonight Show
at 11 : 30 on NBC, Channel 4.
(I) $100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
1:001J (I) LOGAN'S RUN
Logan, lmprlaoned by a aoolety
~ bent on creating a muter race,
faces the alternatlve of Joining
that toctety or 911owlng Jesalca
to become one of It• mlndleaa
iQfWllal•. . " II ·LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE
"The High eo.t or Being
Right" ~llca Garvey Mel<• a Job
outalde the home to otfMt the
fa.,,lly'a aaver• flnanclal
.. tbeckl. She Is ahockad,.
however. when her' huaband
..... thraatanad by the mOYI
and dem&ndt a divorce. 8 MOVIE ** "The Bengal Tiger" (1970)
Ooeumentaty. The migration of
the Bengal tiger from Siberia to
lndla la traced. (2 hrL)
0 JOKER'S WILD m CAROlr 8URNETT AND
FRIENDS
"Famlly Night"
g) MOVIE" * * * "The Young Phlladelphl-
ans" (1159) Peul Newman, Bar-
bara Ruah. The Integrity or a
young lawyer Ja lnatrumental In
hi• gaining a pr•tlglous J>C*-
tlon end a beautiful glr1. (2 hre.)
Ratings Guide
IMovlel .,. rlrled eccord•"9 10 lloa
ofl lc.e ~· ~ '°' TV .,. ~ll'l•UllK-1
* • • • -Excellent * * * ~Very Good • * -Good
• •, -Fair * -Poor
• THEAGEiOF
UNCERTAINTY
"The Big CorporaUon" The
COf'POf'atlon, o.plt81Jem'• moat
petVafve fore. la dlaHcted,
demyttlfled end lta unwitting
~t of llOClallam
noted.
Ii) THE 8E8T OF ERNIE KOVACS
Wolfgang von Sauerbraten;
What'• My Unr. lndlarHhoot-
lnct-the«raw and the Nairobi
Trio. • 1:ao11~TION
$121,000 QUESTION
OYERENJ"f
Ms. L.aen Clr1*': purchalng
preecrfptlon druge. (R)
t:oo 9 (I) 8E1TV WHITE
Mitzi t. broken up with her'
boyfrlelld and Doug ...mp to
be getting nowMI• wtth Tracy,
ao It'• Joycie, the matchmllkM,
to the reecue. 8 THEGOOFATHERSAQA
While In Italy, Mleheel ~
(Al Pectno) meeta and merrlM
th• bHuttful Appollonla
(SfmoMtta Stefanelll) WhO falls
victim to ........,. In a bomb-
rigged eutomobUe meent for
him. (Part$' Of 4)(R) • .• 8 MOYIE •
*** ''10ng er.ow· (1951)
EMe Pre119y, ~ Jonal. A
teeneger becorW • big ......
Ing hit-""' he '8 IOroed to elnO
"' • ~· nlOf*llub. (2 hrs.) D INCONCeRr
"Ctdtfna Valantt" e MERV GRIFFIN
Ou.ts: Oft1d Brenner, Zit Zia
Gab«. P9tlN' Pr1ngte, Mlck-V
Ann And .Hla Rlgttme Band.
Dyan Cannon, Devtd Fnllen. .. e MOVIE ' · *** "Mlllb\ to Moecow'.' (1843) W.rttr Huston, Ann
Tonight'• Ed lffelffalaoa
.A Top second Banan~
By Wl.NlFRED ELZE' • TV OMA! lwvke
Ed Mdlahoo enjoya hls work
on "The Tonitht Show•• because,
he 1ay1, "every night lt'a dif.
ferent."
McMahon bu been with the
sbo for Meen yea.rs, and says •.
·"I know I couldn't be in a
Broadway play fifteen
Jd"osttbs . . look forward to
etery nlebt. Th_,re•1 always
~e person I clue lD on." ·
;Aillhough It ii taped from 5:80
;.
to 7 p.m., .4-rh• Tonlaht S •• bu a late·nl1ht feel to it.
ii because, HYI McMahon;
"W'e do It just like we're on the •
air. All the cloeks are set for the
ptrformlna Ume. That's our at·
t1tili1e. We teel aa tbou1b we1n1
on Uate at nlabt. There'• a ntiht-
U at~bere.'' .
· Aboat the ....... who I>.
pear on tbo ebow •. llellahcii Mf'• "It'• Nsler to~ With John.'' bee&UM tbe)''re Uied t0
eacb othlr. ·'Wltb • new ... a
tak" tbem awhtlt-to tiDdentd
DIJ )art: I'm oa1,J there w belP· Moat Ol them by DOW Uft been
on -we.repeat a lot -ud l"v
developed a l'apport with e1eb oae ...
2 min .
• DAVID ND
"You CM A
Cfath• ..... HoW'' David
lntarvlaWI w euMvorl Of •
plane crt8h Ind air Mr.ty
upe111, vmo CSltcvU what'• belf'IO done IO lnoNMe turvfvat ~ ***~"The Graduate•· (1te7)
Duatln Hoffman, Ketharlne
Rola. While being UrOtd to
d ... • nelQhbew'a daughter, a · young ~ II haYlng an · ' '"* wtth 'hif mother. (2 hta.) .. _.,.(I) MAUOI!
Mai.Ide ftndl the moet llttractl\oe '
thing about~~ Plan ..
Perry Flanrittv (Edward
Winter), t~ hlndloma young
matt In~ I
10:00. (I) AAFf:ERTY
Or. Aalfarty t....w • tMn-~
gymnast IUn.tng from MWf'9
malnutrttlon, a police Offtolr
c:anytng • ut.thrNl..ino bu~
let In hie b.:k Md • madlcal
c:oCINgue who .. dJeplaytng eymptome of a~.
BDNEWS
GETeMAln'
.
~eln ·Blo.-1 . .
Rue McO.anaban is more than mildly interested ~.gov
ernment ecologist Edward Winter in toD.,lght 'a episOde or:
"Maude, .. at 9:30 on CBS, Channel 2.
Smart trtee to ~ram Hymie • ..
10 do bettJe wt1h ti t<AOS robot. • • MOVIE ·Tuesday'•
Da9tlnae Jffovle• 10-.ao 11 NEW8 11:00 ..J!~EWI
CONN!CTlON ' II MOVIE * * ''T'M Gr .. t Amertcan
Wffdemelt"Doa.tmentary Nar-
rated by Bfft BurNd. (2 tvt.)
8) THE ODO COUPLI
··~·· Fll'lt Commerdal'' e HONIYMOONERS
Relph and Ed take their wM9
to the n10000n OClfWllntkln.
• MACHSl. I LEHRER
REPORT
11:308(1) C88l.ATl!MCME **~ ''Coflea. T• Or Ma" (1173) K8Nr1 Vllentlna, John
Oavldlon. A "9WWdea ftndt
that her Job, and being man1ed
to a medical ttudent In Loe
MgeNe and • ~·Ing artllt
In London, both exhaultlng end
exhilarating. (R)
8 TONIGHT
Gu.et hoct Frank Sinatra.
Guests: George Bumi, Angle
Dlotdnaon, Don Rtoldee. Cetroll
O'Connor, John Barbour. 8 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
''Love And The Elopement
Love And The Pen Pala" ·
• MOVIE **"Corruption" (1NI) Peter OueNno, Sue ~· A noted
pludc eurgeon mutt ooDaot
~ aMM* to reatcn CM
bN<y Of hit 80lrred ftanoee.
(1 hr •• ~ rrM):
NEW8 GET8MAAT
Max and It mutt locate a
NCrel llbofatory.
I CAPTIONl!D ABC NEWS
IAONSlDI!
"Eden It The Pl80e We Leave"
MOAHIHO
12:00 e 'TWILIOH't ZONE
''Where II Ewrbody?'' · • e FOREVER Fl.ANWOOD
**'Ai "8'ng Boy Sing" (1958)
Tommy 8Mldl, UQ Gentle. A
young rock ltllr nearly col·
lapMe under the ttr_. put on
him by hll flNWlger and hi•
rtUglout beckground. (1 hr., 30
min.)
•~CAvm
Guett: Jaon Robard ..
12=30. MOVIE
** "Boots And Sadd .....
(1137) a.. Autly, Judith Allen.
A young 611'1 lnhertta a ranch,
whk:tt he dac:tdte to ... untn he
00-thar• and fdt In loYe with
the pMce. (1 hr.) 12:401~ ** '"The Two F.cee Of Dr.
Jekyll" (1891) Pu M ..... ,
D9wr1 Addams. A r111 Miiler,
studying good and 91141 In
human nature, d•o•o••t•
Into hfe 91141 Mtf, but ~ ~
aelt..uampta to cSO etWrtf With
the other. (1 hr .• 20 mfn.) l
1:00 8 TOMORROW U ISPY •• Lori .. 1:151 N&/8 • 1:30 e NEWS
MOVIE
**~ "Abandoned" (1949) . °"'"" <>'Ken. Jeff Cn.ndler. A concemad newtpaperman
expoeae the black nwtcet baby
rllC:Ut. c1.hr .. 30 min.) 2:001 HeW8 2:05 MOVIE •
**~ ''MdiaM'• Nevy Join• The Ai Force' ( 1886) Tim
Conway, Joe Rynn. An tn9'gn
on a South Pac111c Island II
forced to Impel tonat• a pflot
and gets lr'M:IMd With • 8cMat
m9ictlent •. (2 hrs.) 3:001 NEWS ... NEW8MAKEA8
4 NOOHTIME
. .
MOAHING
l :SOG MOVIE *** "8'aal Town" (11&2) Ann Sheridan, John Lund. A apotled
young man, teaming h1a uncle'•
tteel buel.-to he CM Wee av. the oompeiny, II hated ~
,. t.low ~ until he .
provee hlmMtf by .mo Nit
uncll'• llt•. ( 1 hr .. 30 ink\.)
10:00 • MOYie . •.
*** "lalty O'Rourtce'' (1946}
AJln Ladd. GaM "' ••• " ,...,.. tnldc ~.who OWet twen-
ty ..,c:I .... up • jook9y to
wtn a hOt89 race. (2 hft.)
12.'00~
***~ "The Lut Hu,,.,,"
(1958) 8penoar T~, ~
Hunter. An lncumbem mayor ..
daf .. ted after a hard-f~
and morally que1Uonabt•
campaign. (2 hrs., 20 min.)
2.-00 8 MOVIE · . .
*** "The See Wolf' (114a EdWard G. Rob1neon. Joh O#ftltd. A hewu.. capt.en ·,
upon di.oov.1ng that he
gotng bllnd, ttlel to deltroY ·
~around him. (~hr&.~
3:00 Ill MOVIE ' * ** "Cat On A Hot Tin Root' (1951) Elltabeth T~. Paul Newman. :rennwae WlllMw'
story of • Southern fM'lflY p&a.. 9'aad b)'. ~ afooftoQln,
and Jeajou8y. (2 hni.)
3:308 MOVIE **~ "The Pow.'' (1.; George HamHton, .. Suzllnne
Plelhotte. A myst.._ ~
attef'npta to control the .,..
of the IClent'*ll In • .,,...
labor•tof~. (1 "'··~min.)
Be'sC•arDe
~7 J~Y8BU.B1J'IT
LOS ANGELES (APr -In every "Cbarue•a · .An1el1, ••
Charlie, the wealthy. bedonlat1c
tiols OftheAqell, ~out wort by phone wbllst lrith
well-built dollies. But h1I ace is
never lbown.
' ABC's prea kit OD UJe lbOW
40esn~ eYeD idesd.lf7 ... the .et«-
who pJQs CbarHe! 'l1lls la called
4 &tmmic:km aome ctrdts.
Tbe tbeqUD; d course. la Jobn
l'oraytbe, $9, the urbane
Broadway and ft1m nu from
Carney's PcMDt, N:J., wbO belaa
hls caner a few decades back u
a public address announcer for
the old Brooklyn Dodten.
17
By JlOBE&T BARK ZR °'"" 0.itr ,., ......
Huollniton Beach resident and
businessman Rolo>erL Vancil
Myers, 51, was tQund shot to
death Saturday on a lonely stretch or Interstate 1~ near Barstow.
He was previously a long-time
resident of Lacuna Beach along
with his widow. Rita, who has a
real estate business ln La&una.
Sheriffs' Oetective l>ennas
O'RO\lrke said today that Myen
apparenUy was shot to death by
someone he plcked up near Vic•
torvllle Friday.
'Phe body waa found un-
derneath a tumbleweed off a
highway embankment before
noon Saturday.
The search was touched oU by
a witness who reported to of-
ficers that he saw a body being
thrown out of Mver s · ~old-
colored vari shortiy after -noon
Friday.
MJen• daughter. Sheri Blanco
of Huntington Beach, Sat•rday
filed a missing perlOl\J report on
her father.
Detective O'Rourke sald that
robbery appar&ntly was no tJ\e
motive of the slaying. He said the
victim still hltd about $85 cash,
jewelry and credit caras.
An all points bulletin has been •
Canter Bae
This Canadian goose, heading south for a warmer
climate, dropped in on a waterfront at Kirkland, \Va .,
for a spell afler fle~ini he cold northern winter.
Women Eye Houston
For Big ConventiOn
National
Goal
Lauaed •
I
WASHINGTON CAP > -Presi·
dent Carter formally threw hls
support today behLOd lhe Rum·
phrey-Hawkins bill lhal would
set a 1983 unemployf)lenl rate of
four percent as a national aoal
without mandaUng specific pro-
grams to combat joblessness.
"This is an ambitious objective
and one that may prove very dir·
Cicult to achieve, but setting our
sights high challenges us to do
our: t>est." Catt.er aald at Jh Wbite House. .
The admJnistrallon's sup~rt
for Jh FuU Employroent and
B 1 et r am,1u.e
Hu ph ~'1·ll•• in titll,
culminates negotiations that
began lD tme ror a Polley aimed
at rtduclri8 unemployment. The
legi1latton is named after Sen.
Hubert H. Humpbrey, D·Minn.,
and Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D·
Calif., it. orisJnal sponsors.
The blll. according to Carter's
statement, commiU the federal
government to achieving full
employment while remainlnt
commllted lo achieving
"reasonablepricestabillly."
The four percent unemploy.
ment rate ttanslates to a rate of
three percent ror all adults in the
work force. The October jobl~s
rate wu·aeven percent.
T'h:e snoft\t< atth1f'J)ttctr
rirrbmrtbln~ ut 1 tl'tt-tt1~ dMyt· tn,
La..,'tmu Btoal"h W*8 ~t\e~ bY
a mtin working late Sunda,Y night
al !117 Glenn<'Yr<' St
l'olH·e :-a1d·a man called to sav
h1· ht•ard hrcak1ng gla:-.s in a
carport at lh4" l W'tHtort <'om1
ml'rcrnl bulldan~ at aboU\ H14!9
p m and look'ffi outside to ue
flam<':-in thr parkini.: lot
Poll('e and fi~men· arrrved al
the '<'enc to find a Molotov
1·ocktarl •smouldl'ring in the'
l'art>brt area . Tft~fl~mnfGbh:Mi<t·
trld was <'Onlaincd 1n a test tube
police said. adding the miss.I~
caused nad1u11•gt1
Burj>olicc said they are !\tin in•
\Cst1gatmg firebombs tos~ at a
stc~ stor<' laat fo'tiday mM'ftfhJ:
ll•ss than a blCX"k frnrn Sunday
111gbt'l> incident.
,\ patrol officer noticed flam-OS
at U\e cornt!r of the Laguna
Ster~o huildlng, 1020 South Coasl
l11ghway ul about 3 a m.
ln\l~sligators said twe Molotov
1·oc~t ails. compnsed of beer bol·
Lapne•G9P~
Group' ~!f
~ali~ 80~
The'rAgtlha ~11th'R~ubn~an
Assembly w+ll rnfft Wed~ht!•~ mghl to hl!al' tht-ee speaktrl ad<·
dre-9· lckat is!lues. inth.adt~t
modifieatb11 of'' Lagunl Canyon
Road an61odl fisUHeg~liuon. S p•~l<eu 1ncfbd~1 !lf.'atib'a
Bt'r~e!;ot\!1cantftdat+ for t"~'7"Cfl'"
A,,sembty D1stncl. whO' wttnHa-
cuss-tb • ~111ert1 W'a1nf' B'ltlm'
will ai'r pfllM fiw La~Ol\ll Cant09'''
Roa<F" ahd"' HOwef'di OaM<Jtt wHYl
air yiews ott tftc!"'cfty 's Rnknclal·
outlMtk. Bi~Uk ~ Oawstn al'f!'
both former C'&Ml'c!Met" fb~ Lagu~Bhcft (JltCotlMe ) Th~ me«tn ~II ·aa~7{3(11
p.m. ift tllftU.IUnA ~d'tJSaY'
ings Office, 280 Otffn 1A\"t., 41\tfr
will ~hltltr:tn -conf'1Mtden' tfftfl 1
the !Jal BeactWReputlfft.W& ...
W.omen's Club U al 7°1tl
WOMf;·N •••
con over5ial. aftd.rnal<e recom-
m~dG•~:(6 President/ Oiifdr.r
on bbw-tdiat.ttontpll!lh equlftt't frti
many an~as of life Carter theti
m u!R make· re<?ommend•tioaa to•
Con11rHS -00 how to 1n11>lembat#
the goals.
The i~ include uu, Dqual
R1$hls Amendment,. at.orUoot
subs1d1es for poor women. preo.-
tections for homem•k•rat tN!l•
tcred wtves and r-ape l!Mtllll!I;
c1v>I right& forfosbiens a•dd.r
,
n.. ~ b~dhri''Red
Ar•J> RaebOD• C.omm.eodo• B.E.JL~:· wwlWApeteatial Luft·
hasaa ~---s that "death1
rides with t.Mtn" and tokl of•
fioi~: ''Tbere:Wt no wq of pre.
venting this.··
The threats arc being taken.
seriot.W» b)' Germ-.aulboritaas.
Jack CampbeU,. Miami mtt1illlme an<t d\airmart or
I.>ade-O>tmty (Pla. > Coati·
lien ror Hmnan !lights. sees
need' for another campaign
-nationwide -to inform
countr)' aboat' hOmosexuali-
t.y. <Stary, A1).
Parle Fee Schedule
Poied~for Ballot
_ Proposed park fee· scheduled
that pmpa.ai. •Ywtll1aenerate
thou..-. off dbllars for-snn·
Clemente parks and opponents
say will discoura,e.development
in the city, m1gt¢ 10 on. the
March ballot.
City planners r~ommended
that city *>Uncll~ vote to put'
the park; ~ aniUlltile or the•
ballot at ~ Wula:: °Ill' m-..
ln\!aCeduled for 7:30 p.m. at cl-
ly JOG.Aw. ~l9Sktto1
~~onnrnutce wouur
recrutre de-v~rs ctf· tive 01'
m~ lbts (/If units t<1 dtdkat.e
part1tmdorpay t.t'Prisf~e
ln'al'enmple of'how ttn! pro·
p09t!d ordinance would work,
Rod CON>mn, dt~ finance dlrec·
tor, said the develbper of a 15·
An Analletm couple were Jdlled
Sunday afternoon wh..., taelr
lip~=· we8' ha&O • IPiD! anu lt'--ilr'•..._Adl llltU
Fullerton Municipal Airport.
A coroner'• 1Avesti1at.or ide.n·
tifie41 e .. ~. •,,...
Lee: ~.mad'aadefl.ft-. St.~
of 1531 .E. La Palma Ave ..
Anaheim. ·
. A CC cH•'diin~ lG •II' I' A &
spokeamae. Ii.et racfilffd. tlllia'
•
..
VOL 70, NO. 318, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
t,aCmg ·ierronst
'
Jets
FRANKFURT, West Germany
<AP> Lufthansa Jetliners are
flying special evasion patterns as
a security precaution against ter-
rorist threats to blow up the
planes in the air wlth missiles,
authorities said today. In tht
United States, protective
measures were being taken at
several airports.
A U .S . Coas t Guard
spokesman said today tht>
service has been patrolHn1
waters since Friday off the in·
t e rnational airports in New
York, Boston and Philadelphia.
"Our information is that it's
supposed lo happen somewhere
in the world this week," the
spokesman added.
Special precautions were also
being taken in airport terminals
al New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles and San Francisco,
spokesmen for tho atrports said.
The special evasion pattema
for Lufthansa apply only in West
Germany since they requirt
cooperation rrom flight con·
trollen and other airport person·
nel. ·
The Federal Flight Security
Institute here said Lufthansa
pilots have been using random
route deviations and unpredicta-
ble changes m landing and take·
Carter Bae •
Full J ohs Bill
employment while remaining ~
off procedures i;ince Friday to
decrease the danaer of attacks
by terrortsu claiming to have
'Soviet·niade cround·to·alr mis-
siles.
Spokesman Pe~r Graf said the
Lutthansa pes1enger planes and
cargo jets will use "random ap-
proach and departure night pro-
cedures" fort an iDdefinite pertod
at airports throughout West Germany.
The procedures .w~re ln·
troduced after Lutthansa and
several news aiencies recelvtd
letters from purported members
or the Red Army Faction, West
Germany's violent terrorl1t
group responsible for the lddnap-
ping. murder of industria1(st
Hanns Martin Schleyer last
month.
The letters threatened to ex·
plode three Lufthansa airliners
WASIUNGTON <AP> -Presi·
denl Carter formally threw his
support today behind the Hum-
phrey-Hawkins bill that would
set a 1983 unemployment rate of
four percent as a national goal
without mandating specific pro·
grams to combat joblessness.
T~e administration ·s support
for the FuJI Employment and
Balanced Growth Act of 1977, the
Humphrey-Hawkins bill,
culminates negotiations .that
began in June for a policy aimed
al reducing unemployment. The
legislation is named after Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey, D·Minn.,
and Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D·
Ca lif .. its original sponsors.
co m mitt e d to a c bi e vi n g • ...,...~ .. ,,__, ""-~'--""-·
"This 1s an ambitious objective
and one that may prove very dif·
f1cult to achieve, but setting our
sights high challenges us to do
our best." Carter said al the
White House.
The bill, according to Carter's
statement, commits the federal
government to achieving full
'Tossed From Auto'
Coast Businessman
'·reasonable priceatabilily."
The four per~ent-unemploy·
ment rate translates to a rate ol
three percent for all adults in the
work force. The October jobless
rate was seven percent.
The bill would also:
Establish a framework for
economic policy decisions, with
the administration sending to
Congress it.II goals for employ.
ment, unemployment, produc·
taon and income over a five-year
period.
Recognize that "special gov-
ernment efforts" are needed to
fight lugh unemployment "but
that primary emphasis should be
placed on expanding job op·
portunlties in the private sec-
Seagoing Paalaandler
This couple planned to spend a quiet day
fishing on Newport Bay recently until a
sea lion interrupted. The seagoing
panhandler scared all the fish away and
managed to talk the fishumen out of all
their bait and most of their lunch. All they;
got in return was some barking and a few
burps of patitude.
tor;"
F oundSlwt to Death :~e.!f~f:~~.'.·:11~;:: •'omen to Pio+, 'Du.,-•i•n'
ByROBEBTBARKEB Friday. production, wages and prices, "~~ 11'J. .Fi.: :l;'~-~.&/V
0tuwo.i1y ,. .... ,\Alf• Myers' daughter, Sheri Blanco must be used to achieve full .
Huntington Beach resident and": or Huntington Qeach, Saturday employment and price stability.
businessman Robert Vaatll filed a missing persons report on
Myers, 57, was found shot to her father. death Saturday on a lonely stretch
of I ntemate Ui near Barstow. Detective O'Rourke said that robbery apparently was no the
motive of the slaying. He said the
victim still had about $65 cash, He was previously a long-time
resident of Laguna Beach along I with his widow, Rita, who has a
1 real estate business in Laguna~
I Sheriffs' Detective Dennis
O'Rourke said today that Myers
I apparently was shot to death by
I someone he picked up near Vic-
torville Friday.
The body was found un·
derneath a tumbleweed off a
highway embankment before
noon Saturday.
The search was touched oft by
a witne.as who reported to of·
ficers that he saw a body being
lhro~n out or. Myers· J(old-
colored van shortly after noon
jewelry and credit cards.
An all.points bulletin has been
issued on the van which the as-
sailant, or assailants, apparently
took. The license number or the
vehicle ls 35656H.
"The key to tile investigation
al this point is finding the van,"
O'Rourke said.
He added that Myers carried a
.22-callber revolver with him but
declined to say if it was used in
the slaying.
The coroner's office in Barstow
said only that Myers died of a
<See KILLED, Page AZ>
Balboa Resident
Nixes Irvine Plan
Balboa Island resident Harvey
Peaae sav• he'd like to see res·
identlal \Diltl or same klnd of
mann.ortented buaine1se1 built
attheentrancetotheuland. SO Pease, a realtor who cur·
rently works in property
nsan 1emen~ has appealed ade-
cl lon which would allow the
Irvine OotnP'1lY to tiulld an office
Unemp}9ymerit has shown lit-
tle fluctuation in recent months
and little response to govern-
m enl programs.
An ·earlier version of the bill
was much more controversial
because it mandated specific
government programs to attain
the lower un~mployment goal.
Carter said lul year during
the presidential campaign that
he supported UM b11l's concept,
but never endorsed the actual
legislation.
20,000 ~qecied at Hou.ton Co#fe~nce
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Thousands of women, famous
and unmown, will meet at the
first-Natioftat Women's Con·
ference in Houston this week to
map the future or women in the
United States. '
Men will be there too. In all,
20,000 people are expected, some
to support the goals of equality;
others -like the Ku KJux Klan -
to protest.
The big names include feminlst
'uthor Gloria Steinem, ftnt lady
Rosalynn Carter. former fint
ladles Betty Ford and Lady Bird
Johnson, anti-ERA crusader
Phyllis Schlafly, and Rep.
Barbara Jordan. D· Texas.
The delegates Include Dr.
Gloria Scott, president of the Girl
Scouts, Judy Carter. daugh~r.
in·law of the president and Joan
Mondale, wile of the vice P~·
But moet participants and OD·
lookers will be farm women,
welfare mothers, homemakers,
educators and other women who
do not belong to any organized
womerf s group.
The 2,000 official delegates
were selected at 56 state and ~·
rltorial women's meetings at·
tended by 140,000 people. At leut
18,000 observers also are ex·
pected. I
Altboueh tile federatty
sponsored meeting is belna com·
pared to an 1848 conference at
Seneca Falls, N.Y .• when women
demanded the ri1ht to vote, there
are more issues this time.
The delegates will debate some
26 maJor topics, mJnY of them
controversial, and make recom·
mendations to Prealdent Carter
on how to accompUsb equality in
man1 areas of tile. Carter then
must make recommend~Uoos to
Congress on bow to lmplement
the goals. .
The issues include the ~u 1
Rt1bt1 Amendment, at)orlion:
subsidlee f« pioor women, pro-
tections for bOmematen; bat·
tered wives and rape victims,
cl Vil rlehll ror lesbians Uld crea·
lion of a cabinet·level Women's
Department.
llosalynn Carter and BettT
Ford will link armlt publlcl1 to
urge ratlftcatlon of the ERA.
Fair Rae~
To Resume
After Break
Hones at LOS AWDitol taee
. course belan a late weekend to.
day, takinl a two-day break un•
t1l racinS resumes Wedilesd-t at
noon.
Attendance and betUnC rec·
orda set Friday lut9d len thn
24 hours as 14,'28 people tumed
out Saturday to place $1,111,GZa
lnbetl.
On Sunday, 12,82'7 raclnf en ..
thuslaits showed up to w
more than $1.S mllllon.
I
Analwim
dtspateaterW~llYr;~~~:::~~~~~~~~~~~;:.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a anta Ana DiJbt club early Sun· tri bu led to ·111t-~~~~~~~D?.~~~~---+. day ended in the atnbbln& death wounds." ;ci
of pne man and tho arrest cl a Arres&..s and char1t!d wltb tJle
Co~ta Mesa man on m,arder bouncer'• murder as well u U·
charges. pollee reported. a.null with a deadly weapon alteT
Officers said the murder vie· two other bouncers suffered stab
tiqs, Paul James Henson, 25, or wounds in the fracas was George
TIJi;lin, was one of three bouncers Cruz Camarena, 18, of Costa
at the Clubhou.le Bar, 2'100 N. Mesa.
Main St., Santa Ana, !nvolved in Police would not release the
the?: 40 a. m. brawl home addresses of either the vtc-
Henson was dead on arrival at Um or smpect. •
\St. Joseph's Hospital, Oranae. a The two wounded bouncers
• 1 were identified as Terry Larkins,
or Z4, ot Fountain Valley, and
David Lynn Renolds, 23. of
TO LEAVE NEWPORT
P~lce Capt. Oyaa1
NB Captain
Quits, Takes
Bay Area fost
Newport Hc<Ach Police Capt.
Don Ovaas has announced his
n'signalion to take a JOb as police
cht•tf in lhe Sm1 Jo'rancisco Bay
area town of San Pablo.
Oyaas. a 20·veur-veleran of
tht.> Newport Department, will
assume his new duties Jan 3 He
:-.aid he cxpccL'> to remain ut his
current job as commander of the
department's traffic division un·
111 then
Accord1nl! to Oyaas, San
Paolo. located on the easL side of
by the bay next to Richmond, is a
town or about 20,000 people. The
police chief he replaces has
headed the department there for
28 years and will relire al the end
or this year.
Oyaas has spent all of his law
i•nforcement career in Newport
Heach. lie was made a captain in
1967 In that rank he has headed
Pach of the department's lour
rlivbion.~ -patrol, a.dministra·
t1on, investigation and traffic.
The traffic division was added
to the deiuutmcnl in 1975 when It
moved to its Jamboree Road 1ta-
hon and Oyaas l'ias been its only
commander
fn 1963, Oyaas was the first re·
c1plent of the Newport Harbor
Exchan1e Club's Officer of the
Year award and In 1966 he was
that organization ·s nrst choice as
Supervising Otrlcer of the Year.
Man's Valuable
Ywla Gone
$,\N FRANCISCO CAP> -A
musician has asked police help In
recovering a $75,000 viola he said
he left leaning acalnat the wall or
a downtown hotel.
Walter Trampler, 62, of New
York, told Police he noticed the in·
strument was missing when hear-
rived al the airport alter leavinJ
the Slr Francis Dr,.ke Hotel.
Trampler said He returned to
lhe hotel immediately, but the In·
strument, a circa 1620 Amantf,
was gone when he got there.
OftANQI COAST H
DAILY PILOT
Buena Parle
Both men were reported in sta·
ble condition at St. Joseph's after
being stabbed with the pocket
knife police allege was wieldl'<i
by Camarena.
According to police, the 18·
year·old Costa Mesa man arrived
al the alter hours night dub car
rying anopencanoCbeer.
He reportedly began fighting
with HC\1500 ~hen the bouncer
attempted to take the can or beer
from him, a fight that turned into
a brawl when Henson's fellow
bouncers tried to help him.
Sometime during the fracas,
Camarena allegedly pulled has
knife and began s lashing at hls
roes, police said.
F.-.-PageAJ
KILLED ••.
gunshot wound to the body.
O'Rourke said that the witness
motorist saw the body being
thrown from the van by a blond
Caucasian with a mustache.
Relatives said that Myers was
not the type to pick up
hitchhikers. . Myers went to the desert Fn
day on a business call in conncc·
t ion with his duties as an associate
of Tamco Chemical in Costa
Mesa. His business specializes in in·
du stria! water treatment.
Myers had lunch with frit?nd!I
at VictorvHle before depart.Jn!(
for Newberry Springs to set up
new accounts
The body was seen being
thrown from the van at 1 10 p m.
Officers launched a search but
d1dn·t find the victim until 11:07
a.m. the next day
Myers had formerly operated a
concrete and masonry busin•s
on Laguna Canyon Road. He also
was employed al the Lido
Shipyard in Newport Beach,
friends sav.
He and his wife moved to Hunt·
1ngton Beach about fl ve years
ago.
Mesa Police
Sure Bandit
StnrekTwice
Costa Mesa police arc "99 per·
cent sure" that an armed bandit
who robbed a local bank Satur·
d;iy is the same robber wbo
struck at the same location seven
days earlier.
The two heists, both carried
out by a man wearing glasses
and a curly blond wig, have
netted about $1,500 from a branch
of First Federal Savings and
Losa, 1455 Baker St.. Costa
Mesa.
Police said the bandit has
twice thrown a brown paper sack
onto a counter and safd, "Fill up
the bag -this is no joke," before
scooping up the cash.
The band.It displayed a small
pistol in the latest robbery which'
occurred at12:5Sp.m. Saturday.
He escaped with an estimated
$500, bringing the total to $1,500
during the past two weekends.
Police said they wlll keep a
close wateb on the bank thia corn-
ing weekend in case the robber
tries for his third Saturday heist
in a row.
--~ Glaost Parkfag Lot ..
In what is meant to be a commentary on
Amt•rica and the automobile, these junk
('ars are being filled and placed in con·
crcte m Hamden. Conn. The cars are to
be covered with more concrete to form a
··ghost parking lot" at <.1 large shopping
center.
Shah's Backers Rally
Will O/faet Iranian Studsnt .Pro~ten .. -
economic ties with the United
States and to label the ruler's re·
gime as repressive and corrupt.
tact bet.ween his government and
the pro·shah organiiations. ·
Seconds taler. the tlanea
Viking flown by Lee rtportedly
went Into a spin and crashed Into
the field about one mile northeut
of the airport.
Today. crash investigators
were unable to say· where the
plane began Its flight and
whether the hasty attempted
landin1 ln Fullerton was part Of
lt.1 flieht plan.
An airport spokesman said the
Lee plane was based ln Chino and
because ofluggase and 10U clubs
found in the wreckage that it is
believed tho couple were on a
vncaUon l1f·
Both vicUms were killed on hn·
pact when the plane cruhed
"almost nose first" In the open
f 1eld owned by Hulhes Airer all
Corp , the coroner's lnvesUgator
said
W ASlnNGTON <AP> -Sup-
porters will demonstrate for the
Shah of Iran when be arrives
here Tuesday, competing for at·
tention with the anti·Bhah Iran·
tan students who protest his
every appearance.
The shah will be in Washington
for two days, talking with Preli·
dent Carter on subjects ranging
from sales ol arms and nuclear
reactors to Middle Eastern af.
fairs and human rights in Iran.
They char&e that th& 1bab paid
for the lranaportanon, accom·
modation and (eedin1 or ._ls sup-
porters. 'The charge waa denied
by an Iranian embassy offlcial,
who aaid there bu been no con-
"We heard that there are a
numberotthemplannlngtocome
lo W aablngt.on to pay their
respects to hls majesty," the
spokesman said. •
OCCic1als in Paris said the shah '
and Empress Farah left Paris
for the United States today on bis
specl al Boeing 707 jetliner.
His two-day official visit
begins Tuesday after his arrival
in the United States. Iranian of.
ficials have deelined lo disclose
his exact schedule because of
poss1 ble disturbances.
SupJ>Qrters of the 'shah say at
least five planeloads of lranian-
A me ri cans are flying from
California. Texas and Chicago to
demonstrate in Washington.
"I'm told to expect at leaat •
9.000 or 10,000," said Jack Heller,
a Washington lawyer who
rcpresen~ shah supporters.
lie said most or the 14 or·
i:anitat1ons he represents are
£'lhnac groups, planning lo as·
semblc se"eral hundred mem·
be rs a pu.•cc. •
Coalitions of pro and anti-shah
forces have been granted
P<'rm1ts lo demonstrate. -during .
the controversial monarch's
VISlt. Antl ·shah students already
have painted sidewalks with
slogans, plastered walls with
posters and eathered at the
White House and on Capitol Hill
to protest the shah's military and
f'rora Page AJ
THRE~TS. •
rides with them'' and told of-
ficials: "There is no way or pre-
venlinc this "
The threat& are being taken
serto111ly by German authorities.·
But a 1pokaman Cor the Feder&! Crlmin~I Olfice is Wiesbaden
sugaested that the letters may
no\ be "authenUc."
A Lufthansa spokeswoman In
New York conflrmed today that
night cancellations were "bliber
than normal" aa a result
oC the Jetter threats. She said
there were no plans to cancel any
nights.
Lufthansa has reoelvtd
perm ruJoa to send tu own un:
armed aecurity tetma to screen boardlnl passenaera lo 11
foret1n ooun\riea. A Federal
2MenRape
NB Woman
In Apartment
A JO-year.old woman was
raped In a central Newport
Beach apartment this weekend
by two ol four people who broke
into the apartment as she slept
and held her at knllepoint, police
said today. ·
Newport Beach police Detec-
tive Lavonne Campbell said the
vicllm went into shock after the
incident and could provide police
wlltl few details.
However, Detective Campbell
said, officers were able to de·
termlne that four people -three
men and a woman -broke lnto
the apartment where the victim
was staying at about 8:30 p.m.
Saturday.
The victim told police that the
woman and one of the men held
her while the other two men
raped her.
She suffered a knife wound on
one thumb durin1 the incident
and sprajned her ankle while
running to 1et. help later, police
said. She was treated at Hoa&
Memorial Hospital, but was not
hospitalized.
The victim described her as-
sailants as all in their mid·20s.
Borgl~s Hit
Unoccupied
Homes in NB
He said be believed most
groups represented minority
populations in Iran, such as As·
syrians. Armenians and Jews.
VJadJmir Tuman, a member of
the Assyrian Cultunl Founda·
tion of Stanislaus County, Calif ..
said he aJTanged transportaUon
for some 200 Assyrhn·
Americans to Wuhington as part
of a cooongent or pro-shah dem·
onstrators flying Crom San Fran-
cisco. .
A physics professor )lt Cal
State Stanislaus. Tuman said the
money for the trip was raised in
Iran and channelled to the United
Slates by Homer Asburian.
"To the best of my knowledge,
the Assyrian merchants of lrt:t
have provided the budget t.nd
Ashurlan is coordinat1n1."
Tuman said
Boat Burglarized
Newport Beacb police are
seeking the burglars who broke
into a boat and siOle $1,,SO worth
or marine radio equipment. nus
boat's owner, Vincent Lombardi,
52, Covina, told police the equip.
ment was In place last weekend,
but was gone Saturday when he
got to hiJ boat. wbicb la docked at.
2001 W. Coast Highway.
F,.._PllfleAJ
KNIEVEL •••
granted a week's stay of the sen-
tence to allow Knievel to get bis
aff alrs in order.
Knlevel, 19, admitted auauJt-
ing Saltman on Sepl. 21 because
Saltman had written a book
about Kntevel whleh the
daredevil didn't Uke. He called
the book ••pornography•• and
said it contatned lies about his
mother. grandmother and
children.
While another mah held
Saltman down, Knievel slammed
the vicUtn'.s han<h and arm• with
a baseball bat.
He expJaJned, "You write wtlh
your hands." '
Saltman, 46, author or "Evel
Knievel on Tour," wu Knievel's •
press ac~nt during tbe
darNevil'a UQ111Cceuful.altempt
to jump \he Snake River Canyon
in ldabo on a rocket-powered
motorcycle. Saltm.an is currently
a vlce president of the telecom-
munications division of 20th Cen-
tury Fox. .
The attack occu~ outlfde
the etudio. KrUev~ hu refused to
identify the man who assisted
·him in beating Saltman.
VOL 70, NO. 318, 3 SECTION
Jets
FRANKFURT, West Germany '* CAP> -Lufthansa jetliners are
flying special evaaion patterns as
a security precaution acainst ter·
rorist threats to blow up the
planes in the air with m1si.iles,
authorities said today. In tht:
United States, protective
meas ures were being taken at
several airports.
A U .S Coas t Guard
spokesman said today tht
/ service h•a been patrollln•
waten sinc!o Friday off the in·
ternatlonal airports in New
York, Bolton and Philadelphia.
"Our inlormaUon is that lt's
supposed to happen somewhere
m the world this week," the
spokesman added.
Special preeaulions were also
being taken in airport terminals
at New ·York. Chicago. Los
Angeles and San Francisco,
spokes~ for the Airports said.
The special evulon patterns
for Lufthansa apply only lh West
Germany alnce they require
cooperation from flight con·
trollets and other airport penon·
nel. .
The Federal FUght Sffunty
lnatitote here said Lufthansa
pilots have been using random
route deviations and unpredicta-
ble changes in landinc and e:
Carter Bae
17
Full J ohs Bill
This Canadian goose, heading south for a warmett-.,
climate, dropped in on a waterfront et Kirkland, Wash., for a spell after fleeing the cold northern winter.
National
Goal
Lauded
WASHING TON <AP) -}>fesi-
dent Carter formany threw h.is
support today behind the Hum·
phrey·Hawkina bill that wo-.ld ~~~ftfJ ·Pa ~ct a 1983 unemployment rate or ~...._.,.
four percent as a national goal
without mandating s~cific pro·
grams to combat joblessness.
·'This is an ambitious objective
and one that m!U' prove very d.if·
f1cult to achieve, but setting our
sights high challenges us t9 do
our best," Carter said •t the
White House.
The administration's support
for the Full EDll)loyment and
Balanced GroWtll Act of 191'7, tbt
Hum phrey·Hawklns bill,
culminate• neaotiations tti'at began ln June for a pollcy aimed
at reducing unemployment. The
legislation ls named after Sen.
Hubert H. Humpl:lrey, D-MiM.,
and Rep. Au~tus Hawkins, D·
Cali(., its original sponsors.
The bill, according to Carter's
statement, commits the rederal
government to achieving Cull
employment while remainlJtg
com milted to achieving
·'reasonable prtce stAbllify.''
The four percent unemplOY·.
ment rato translates to a rate of
three percent for all adults in the
workJ t~c , The Oeto~r Jobj
rate was seven perc"'t.
The bill would also:
-Establish a ff'amework for
,economic policy decisions, with
the ~dminlstratioo aendlng to Conaress its goals for employ·
ment, unemployment, produc-
tion and income over a five.year
period;
-Recognh:e that "special gov-
ernment efforts" are needed to
flgbt high unemeloyment. "but
that primary emphasis should be
placed on expandinC job op.
portuniUe.a in the private MC·
tor;"
-Recognize that monetary
and Ci1Cal policies, rather than
1ovemment control of private
production, wages and pri~,
must be used to achieve full
employmeit and price stability.
l:~::~~f 1~ts~1'0pc for
ideaa;t peace talh,
..... ,-at''l.el'=tldmiN LNIUO. ...
ciala; are con111denn1 a
ew d1plomat1c 1nit1atjve
k'ere'tary of Slate .P•• a. YM'tft t& get ~ rabs and Israel mevln1
V>ward the ftelOtiatln& la·
ble. CRelas.d story, A4>
One opllo• ~-id»-cussed as ••g ~ .M
die East fatttg'Y\ "11'msttts
meet with Vance nexl
"'1onth ln Europe
The •ther option -
~-,·~•-•1 ii ,,~ tor a Ga9n cr~~
~>' ChrlMIDa1 !aide' -• \O
send v ... ml his Oiifd
~ of the Middls Eiml •
January
Six HODleS
Picked for
Viejo Tour
Tie!MM are-on.Hie ror die fifth
unnu•I n.t• de Mactenda tQi.
day har1M "1Ut tJJOfl&O'ed by the
M t!ttkm \'~,)& beaatduf Comml\·
ll'l' 8ta bci#Hlt will be featured on
the4nteuMa1 • .Dec. 4, fro.mt to
9 p .tft. TiCMl book~. • cb co~t $Ui0, I'* admlHJoo hJto
t>at'h bcll'8s .ad a rHeptknl lm· mt>dlM)'l~lllJ IN tour.
T.be re.epdon at the fdon·
tan080 "8crn&.lon Cent.er •W tt\-
c· I u de doot prizes, hors
d'o8V¥£e9, a ~l bat aDd eo·
tl·rhdnment by .Oan Hoder and
llts 70ert.
Ptollt8 ftotn the wur wtu IM1P
the eommttUie .-Ith lla mantbJ)'
lundaope award• protraa, and
other cotnrn\ttllt)' bc•"1illdtle18
projecta.
'Tickma are blln1 aold ul1 Jo
adyonte of th<' event. Tbey Ill&)'
bt• putthued from committee
mcmbt>r" or ;1t the Mont,rnosn
Rccn·at1on C'enll'r. M1ss1on VteJO
S'>\ 1m and Ha<'qucl Club 1md M1~
s1on V1eJO Realty office:\
Three Quakes
Jolt Southern
California
GOLDEN,~. <APJ -ntw
minor ea~aih>" hk SM"""'1
California overnight, but a
spokesman for the Nat1on.aJ
Etu:~lM!ke hlf~ C.w
said.i• i& ~akely ta.ey -.re*
prccnar..or..C .a .. jar,.._.
tb~Quk8~Mt.-.
I 0 and. 4.2 on •the lti'*'-.sc.k.
the most powerful ·~ "91·
1!.l(l'ed a\.&:06 a.a1 tb9t: 141l!dlee
w a1. centered 1tx 'In Mls..td l>l
Cent.ro.•aod 10 .ra1ktti4*l\D oflllh;
Mciucal\ bo!!du.
Tbe earlter.tQuake6 •went l'e·
corded at 6;06 p .m and 9:37 p;m.
Su~da)'. y.a.lln .DUl\lft~•bdlweeo4 ·
an 1•.Son~cbNr SM\e -~ cap.abie .of aausi•• m.Mierat.e
d a i:?a~ an , 1>9ptiate4 ..,.,....
Althoueh tJae, ql.&Mc~ ~ Wt
ove.r a. "1lcle .area, .u.e .w:.rth· quak~:lnfonnation C~r~
tbue. were .oo rf4>0CU of 4-m• from 1be tremors.
Tile ..,ok86Dlall ~r 1be, Eada·
quile LoCor'lnaltiOC> Cuter,
WaverJy, Penao. u..kUbe1•uahs
were,.part. .of. a ~ND « ..._
tremors in the region rccDccWd
over.a &.wo-day per*·
·~•tba111e had ._....,.main
lhat . .uea 4or t.be1•&t ~
yeau aJMI ~ 1-.Venrt1M·
velQIPed .. to .,.~;."••Id
Pereon. ·m.e --·~to suues~IAas ...,_._...., .....
JOr quake ls comin&. ·'
S... r~rabt.lrt tis aw •.q•
ges&d:t1t.bat1....,..ftUtrit&t • ......
lo rd""'8 Wtt•r•~·iurtb· quak.•._..._,...,...h
bu11dw>M ~
sull in major qua c:f·
ltdreepid ~er•
' Nora ('top) and ~.a brother and sister 'team, ex·
pion~ the bus~ a backyard on~ BalO<>a
Pemnstda. The kit.teas att owned by neighbors Eloise
Luther and Bill and Cillilb' Peck. Th<• two cat~ get
together freque!Jtly 1-explore each oh"• back yards. t ~--=;,__~~---=~~;;...;;:...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Pro. Pa1fe Al 1
Mesa Youth Seizeil
In SA Bar .Slaying
THREATS. •
ri~ wi'tb 1Mm · aGd to1d of·
f1c1als. "111~ ,is no way or pre
ventincttlis •·
Thr ~~ 1ltt brine taken
serimlst11>..v ~l'Sltn ~nt1es.
But a atpdkes.rn&D Ur tli c Fu1er .ai
Crim.in.al OO'M:e is Wioe:'IO-.deD A dispute over a can of bet1r 1n
a Saat• Ana night cle ~arl,ySun
da.v nde<t iA 'Ule Ctabb\ftC 4'eath or ~ man ~ 1be .1trrest of a
Co«a Mesa l'ft1tn on rfttJrdcr
charges, police reported.
Officers said the murder vie· tUn.. Paul .Jp:us Htesoa. t.s, ".Qi· ,..Itta. wa.ne«41tt-.e~~
at the Clubhouse Bar, 2100 N
Mala St. • .I.a Ma, -IW!d i"1
theZ:4JOa.•llr.alwt.
f-k9oA --•at OD •riY.11111 • .St.~·.-. ...... ~.· deatA .a cenmet-. .i9 · .-•·
tribu'-d .t.o "muta,;te 1tt~b
Treaty~ed
·:ey HayaKawp
wound!> ..
i\ rn-sted and char'cd wttb the
bottncc.-'!' ..-der es VilU ~s as·
S<AUlt with a -~ly weapwi after
two otherbt>uncel"lt surcer'ed stab
'>\ C1und!'I in the fracas was George
Cru1 Camarcn.a. 18, of Costa
Aleu.
PoH~ woUtd not re1ease the
home• addresses of .ci.lher the vic-
ltm or sUIJ)eCl. n.e two 1rm:Uaded bouDceri "N~ H~1t.1rttid as Terry~
of %4, of ,.,_,tam V11lley, an<J
oa~1tl dJyrm Re-notds. u. o!
B Ueft a f'atic.
Both men were reported i.o st.a-
ble~ at tit . .Yosepb's aft.er
bei~ ~ 'W1th the pocket
knife ~ce a:lit::t:9 w.as •'ie!ded
by Catnat'Cml.
According to police, tlle 18·
year-old Costa Mesa man arri~
the taer~rs rti.&ht ci.111> ~r~.
f.rmc • ...,., can of\eet.
He 'teported!y began flgfiting
wllh Henson when the bouncer
att.,pted lo take the can or beer
fn>ftl: him. •fiekUMlt•a.1 .... a. wJ tr.tMlft •~·s ...,...
bouncers tried to helptrim.
Sol'IMtJme ~ ~ .Jrat.2.s,
Camaraa a0 11dy ,..u..a m
knU. ad me• M:.mille a Iba foeJ.~aid.
,sug~csted that tlle leUers CUf
not be "aut~"
A LufLhan.s.a ~sw..naD in.
'll-w 'V.ar.k cOl:tfirtned .Led•¥ U....
n1~t unc.dlalians-wen ''bl&aer
than norm.al·· a.JO a r.eu.Jt
of ttie lenN thre.als.. Site ~
there we.rt! no ,PS.ao.s t.o c &DC.Cl uy
n1~.
Lufausa laJU He~i~e.4
pcrmi~ lo SCDd .its (J\Ua •n-
armt>d sec.unty i.aa.ms lo screm
boarding pa.ue.oiers ia 1l
fore1io ~ouatTi~. A Fe.de.rail
A vi.atio .. A_...mi.01~.t;.o•
sp<*esmao conf.ir.tned LurJ...
thans.a hired extra S«tUr.ll)'
guards lo a'3Ub .iJ.5 ,lalaaM kl JJ.e
United Sl.alP&. . ,
Canned Food
StOckedUp
T~chen end "St.aent.s ha 1:1\e
Sa<ddle'bad V•Ue-y Untf.1.ed
Schoc!i Oistrlet are cdUectt.;
ca~ ~ 91h we4 to ..s~·
Th~tmnc 1ta~ for 1'.UM!Ctr
families i.n Ora.a1e Cou.Db'.
' 1'• eaMd feod lri¥e b heUtl
SP-OJ'et "7 ~ Sa~d vane,. ~ ANM'iation
<SVEA9 •o!Mag Wild\ 'the Slha-
tton Arr.,.dOr~ Oeunty.
Parents may assist the· effort
by •eodinJnnnedloodsiO .~.
wtftt ttutt C'°'Hdren. C.mmqnl.t,y
re~ iwfto wistl 1.o wrrtici~e
but '4oft"t han cbildren ~ sChoct
m1t1 c4 MJli'k ~attn at Mo.n· tevi~ff E'!em~•t:irry 'Sclto°'•
~iQ,
'
111<11 AS P&S81DBNT'8 ofnce lalUlq a ta meat tbi'et weeb .,o Uaat ln elf~t warned the Ftid•ril
Reffr'W to Nfraia trOm ralalq interest rat.a aPd • ID tbe edmlnlltrat.loa'e vi•w, da.mqlns tho recovery.
And BUml' ll>MCb Oct as ln which M aqs~
eeonomy was factn• -1nalalH' unleu the admlnlatntl IOL bold of ltftlf and: acted dedllvel;f OD taJtes, enert)',
vtronmeot. lriftatloa and aovemmeatal NplaUcie. u It htldn't beetl ror tho Fed, he aatd,
"I bave llttle doubt1hat fun of infl•Uon
would be runn1nl strolll•r" and intenlt rate. would be bllber. ·He olaces a lot of
blame on tbe steps ot tho White House. n~•• ln the same 1peech, at Spokaa.,
Wash., tho chairman let tt be known that
hla board Intended to exercise lta
reaponalbWty with retard to moaetary
alfain, no matter bow many prealden·
tlal billl 8fe post.cl on the bulletin board.
MAKING BIS QUARTBaLY a.ppearance befoi Con1reu to explain Federal Reaetve policy, Bums Oil N .
9 clear!1 expreued b.ls diabeUef lD the Carter aoa1a al a
stantlJllY lowerins tnnaUon end unemployment.
Prtcea wlll rite about e percent to t .5 ~rceat over tbe iiat year, be laid. And unemployment wtU remain stuck at
• relaUvety blah level, falllq ooty to t.S percent from the
oxlaUn1 '1 percent.
Tb• chairman tndlcatecl he alto oppoted what la widely
believed to be an important piece In °'" tu ll11aw punle that Carter b preparing. The elimination of tM capital
iainl tax advantaae would be "most unfortunate;• be aai6.
IN8l'EAD, HE INDICATBJ>. WE ahould be trylnt to ti· cour•te investment rather tbaD nmovm, lta aUtact!ona,
becaute capital aains are the iDeenUve needed to promote ·
capltal investmeot and get our ecoGOIQ)' on~ footlnl.
Afterward, it was reportecl. Bumi told newt people thtl
the admUmt:raUcn might be tr)'inl to do too mueb too soon,
and that ita many letfalative moves were creattn1 anxiety
aod contuaioo in the business world.·
There ii plent;y of room for qit:ldlm, and neltber carter
nor Bums bu been reluctant to ftll that room. Neither 11
likely to have the answer to the ecoDomic pu.ule, but eaeb
bu bl.a awroach.
CAaTER, DESPITE BIS DIBAVOWALS, appean to
believe that few tukJ are hard or lnipoaslble to t.M federal
government. -inflation, unemployment, teor•anlutlon,
higher ethical standards, peace. prosperity. •
Bums. perbapl the most outspoken def ender of the trte •terpriae approach, belle"8 we Jaave to ne>Urllb the
private aectQr it w~ are to make a delil ln t.bo economic bar-
riers we see before WI. ~•
The two mea clearly ha"\te dltterencw · •• tho 'cllt-
ferences lbow thrwah the diplomatic vella tb•f a~'mpt ~ .
. drape over them. Neither bu )Ott b.ll cool, bUl tulr thnaafa
have been barbed~ well aimed. J
A81DB f'JWM•TBEI& "111UC 1tatemeat1 and u--Uons. tbe two bHe expNU6d illeniMlflla ln Orinte con.
ven.Uons ilao, and It It pretomed &bat the subject mat4et
bu been much the 11me 11 that revealed in ,PUblfe.
But lf that is JournalllticimiPl&Uoa, the re.Jt lan't. T&e
two men don't quite see eye to eye;...and u L,ndoa Johnaon
used to ask, 1f you can't meet tJeball' to eyeball, bow c•n you poulbly aaree?.
Pipeline ·Woes
.Begii:i to Ease : .
.., ..
~ ir~' t } "A~H~On
The Way To The 8tatlon"
MfCK!Y MOUSE CLUB 8U'PEWAN
8E8AME 8'TREET
• VILLA ALEGRE
A8CN!W8
BEWITCHED
"Ther9'a Gold In Them That
Plllt"
• ADAM-12
"Kll1tna Gtounc:t"
• tt6oGEPOOOI! LODGE "Sugar From T,.... ..
··~ C8'NEW8 N!WI
EMEAGENCY OHEJ
Gege'• effott• towwd b«>om-
lng a roc:Mo atar come In handy
wtien a 8Chool bua plunges off
a cfltf.
• 0 NFL FOOTBALL
The St. Louis Cardinali ct&ah
with the Dallu Cowboys at
Texu Stadium, Oallu. 1J MOV1E , * * "The Great American
Wlldemeea''Oooumentaty Nar-
' r~ by BIR Burrud. (2 tn.)
• THE 8RAOY BUNCH
"Gregg o.t. Grounded" e THE ROOKIES
A routine arr .. t i.ad• to terror
wMn a euepect'I brother Neke
~M fB FOODS FOR THE
MODERN FAMILY
"Slow~lng"
1:30 fJ MOV1E * * ·~ "Operation Cobra"
(1971) David JantMn, Wllllam
Conrad. A drug-emuggllng ring
le trectted down by a team or
Treuury agent•. (1 hr., 30 min.)
• MYTHREE80H8
"Chat1t. And The Dancing
l.eeeon"
• OVER EASY
• Mtz Ulllan Certer; purchulng
preecriptlon dtuga.
CID FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Structuring Communication"
Cl) C88NEW8
7:00 D NBC NEWS
UARSCLUB
I LOVl!LUCY
"Lucy Think• Ricky 11 Trying To
Murder Her"
Cl) AOAM-12
A buly night ende up In three
tragedies. f.8 MACNEIL I WRER REPORT G YOGA W1TH MAOEUHE
Cl) TO TE.L THE TRUTH
. 7:30 D CONSUMER BUYUNE
o.wt Horowitz examines partt-1~ Jot rights.
U NEWLYWEDOAME
Q) THE BRADY BUNCH
P.ter break• a v... and the
other klda try to cover for him.
S) L.Er8 MAKE A DEAL 9 28TONIOHT
"Aluka 011. Amerlca'a Pipe
Dream''
FRENCH CHEil
. "Lasagne A La FrancalM" (R)
•
A First tor Frank
Frank Sinatra, who has starred in virtually every
medium of show business, chalks up a first toni&ht when
he fills in for Johnny Carson as host of the Tonight Show
at 11: 30 on NBC, Channel 4.
()) 1100,000NAMETHAT
TUNE '
8:00 9 ()) LOGAN'S AUN
Logan, lmprlM>ned by a eociety
bent on creating a muter rec.,
faoet the alt•n•tlve of Joining
that eoclety or allowing Jeaak:a
to become one or lte mlndteu
menial•. D LITTLE HOUSE OH THE
PRAIRIE
"The High COit Of Being
Right" Allee Ga-vey ...Xe a Job
outlJde the home to offeet the
famlly'e eevere flnanclal
Ntbadte. She It ehod<ed,
however, when her husband
teela threat*'9d by the move
and demande a divorce. e MOVIE ** "The Bengal Tiger" (1970)
Documen1aly. The migration or
the 8engal tiger from Siberia to
India II traced. (2 hrl.) CJ JOKER'S WILD
Q) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
' "Family Night"
eMOV1E *** "The Young PhUadetphl·
an•" (1959) Paul Newman, Bar-
bera Ruth. The Integrity of a
young lawyer I• Instrumental In
hit Qlllnlng • pr9111glooe poei..
tlon and a beautiful gtr1. (2 hr•.)
Ratings Guide
IMovi.. .,.. ,...,. ecc-•"9 to bo•
ofllce M-..C.., Meviet for TV •re 1""9ed by a crllk I
• • • • -Excellent
• • • -Very Good • * -Good
• •, -Fair
• -Poor
• THEAGEOF
UNCERTAINTY
"The Big Corporation'' The
oorpc>t9tlon, cepltalllm'• tnoet
petVMtye force la d~,
demystified and ft• unwitting
enoouragemet 1t of eoctalllm
noted.
81> THE BEST OF EANfE
KOVAC8
Wolfgang von Sauerbraten:
What'• My Une; lndlan-ehoot-
lngo-U.......ow end the Nairobi
Trio.
1:30 D CONCEH'mATION •1aa.ooo QUl!8TION
OVEREAIY
Ma. lMln c.rter: purcbalng
~drugs.(R) ~-(I) BEm' WHITE
MltZf hM broken up wtttt her
boyfrtend and Doug ....,,. to
be getting nowt.e Vftt1l. Trecy. '° W• Joyce, U. matc&aaker, to the reeoue. 8 THE OOOFATHER SAGA
White In Italy, Mk:flMf Corteone
(AJ Paclno) meett enc:t meme.
the beautiful Appollonla
(Simonetta Stefanellf) Who falta
Victim to ......... In • bomb-
r'lggld automoblte rnMnt fOr
him.(~ 3· of 4) (R) • • .. 8M<ME *** "King eteoe.•• (1958) EMa l'Nlley, Cllofyn Jonee. A
teenager beoomee • big alng.
Ing hit when 11911 fOf09d to ting
In • gangster'• "'9Mctub. (2
hrs.) e INCONCERT
"C8trlna Valent9" e M!RV GRIFFIH
Guetta: Dlvtd e,.,,,.,. ZR Zaa
G-'>or, Pet« Pmgle. MtcbJ
F1nn And .Hie Ragtm. Band,
Dyan Cannon, David F,...,_
• MOVIE • · · * * * "Mi.ion to Moecow'' ( 1943) Witter Hwton, Ann
Tonight's Ed ltfellfalaon"
. .
A Top SecQnd Banana
I
By WINIFRED ELZE TV Peta Mnka
Ed McMahon enjoys bis work
on "The Tonlcbt Show•• because,
he. says, ''every nlgbt Jt'a dll-
ferenl" ·
McMahon bas been witb the
sbow for fifteen yean, and aays,
"'I ~now I couldn't be to a
Broadway play fifteen
JJiontha . . look forward to
eve()t niebt. There'• always
.olnf penoa r clue in oo." ·
Althoulh it is ta~ from 5:30 p:sn~to 7 p.m., 'The Tonlibt ~ " baa a tate-mlht feel to lt. '11f&\ bec1tise, 1ay1 McMahon."
., ··~~dolt Just like we're on the .
alr. All the clocks; are set for the
pei'formma tlnle. Tbat•a our at·
tttllde. We feet as tbouab we're e>crJ~ at nlsbt. There•• a nJl}lt· tlni t.moep&m ... · . , ..
tioiilat but that•• fine because 110•
am I. He'a easy to be with mt
e•Y to work with.' He 8$ bllh
standards f« h1miM1f aiMl 90.he'•
free to demand biP staitdarda ~
others."
r
MORHrNO . 1~· TWIUOHT ZONE ''Wtw9 It EYMJodl '1" .
• FOREVEe ~000
• MOVIE
. ··~ .. ~ Boy Sina" (1958) Tommy $1Qd9, UU Oentre. A
young roek star ~ OOl·
..,.._ Under the ett9l8 put on
hlin by hie rnanaow Met "''' rellgloul becttground. (1 hr., 30
mtn.)
• 00< CAVETT
Gueet: Jaon Robarda.
12-.30. MOYie ** "Boots And 8addlet" (1937) a.. /wtty, Juctlth Mtn.
• " young &rt IMeftq & NnCh
Wf)ldt fie deddet to ... Wd .. "°" tMr• ~ , ... " IO'l9 With
·the =1 hr.) • I wms .
12:AO *~Two Ftc11 Of Dr.
=Jl:!:~ .. =: ~good·~~ hUrnan natur•. deQilMrat•
Into ttll M MM, but the good
Mlf att.mpi. to do awty wtth
the other. (1 "'·· 20 min.)
1:00 tOMOMOW
f 8P'(