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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-21 - Orange Coast Pilot7 Against Schmit For Former Seat· Wlaale's End . ByROBEllTBARKER Of .. o.lly~ Huntinaton Beacti resident R.obert Myers apparently scrawled several numbers on the palm of his Jeft hand before bis death and lnvettl1at.ors believe they are a clue to bis murdererS, it was revealed today. DetecUve J>enals O'Rourke of the San Bernardino County Sheriff'• Department said the numbers are believed to be that of a motorcycle that Myen may have encountered shortly before MesanKil~ 'Friend Hurt In eari Oraah Fo• ·Bat Battery as • NORl'OUC. Va. (AP) - The Vir&lQf & Alcoholic Beverage Control Coin. in1ssion says lt doeS'n't care w~ he's the PTU· ldent's brother, "BUly'• Beer" can't be aold fn VlrginJa. Billy Carter has a finan· cial arrangement with Falls CltJr Brewing COm· pany of ,\A>Uisvtlle, J{y., which brews and m..-kets the beer. 'lbe cans carry a picture of the president's beer-drinking brother from Plains, Ga. And that'• the problem. The commisston bas a rec· ulatioo banning the ule- of alcoholic beveragea tbat carry any endonement of any famous person on the label. • ero'· •I ,. \\'ASlllNGTON Ci\Pl • 'fht> fHl released today nearly 53,000 pages of secrcL'> about it!I efforts ·• to harass un(,;1 dis rupt radical l~rt­ wing and right-wing pollUeal groups from the 1950s to 19'1. FBI agenta handed sections of files to some two-do1"n ~porters who pre pured ror' u day-long search for details of the FBl's counterintclligenc~ prosrams, called Cointelpro in bureau " 'a •new!lpaper lo dlstt1but~ at Jargon. r A'mert'c8t1 'lfnl v ersit)' in Th~ files were mat:Je pUbllc in Washingwn ih an effort to·c0un· response to 'req~stot W1d"t the ·. r tel"'~ctstudl?ntprotestactlvities. . i're.domof lnf'ormatlo11 Act. FBI agents proddedloeat police ' :fb6-first brief scr\ltifty 51\owed in Philadelphia to artea~ mern-"' ln JeruaeJecn. tae departure no startling diaclO!lur(!s of FBI : : ber.s of lh~ R~l'bluJfonary Actiorr scene wu almoM. • repUca o/ I ibui~s but provided fttsh detjllls Movement, a blade gr~, "orr Sad~.t·s triumphant arrival • 'oM~e brassmttitcampa1gn. 1 ·~very possible -chat"ge'. ht 1968, Satu.rday. 44 bottre and 16 Forexample.thertfesdisclosed · otherdocumentsd~sclbs~d. • , mlnllleae.rWer. ·• thetthe bureau•ccwertly prepared '.' • '1They·Were •lfr~ted dn.'every ... • . ----....,.,..,~ ......... ~"---....___,, •possible'charge unlil'l'.Hcf t!oul<t " Sad.a\: stood at attention 'rto·longel' rrtake'b1m;•· the memo flanked by bra~ll · Pr.;•ident 111tld. "Mi 'a"tesult; RAM leaders Ephrajf!l K4_t:zlr an4 &eein (or ... ~enl m0$l'<1f'tH~ sutdrii~tr fti Jail' , . tt)e ~.;!b,qna\ anJ,berps,:9f, brael attlJ no vidf(!l'ice1ra~eh'ble ~~RAM hand ~i1P\". flMd.l\.•PllCted an · '"tohkl>la~e~" " · · ' ' onqr A~Jl\ll,,.. . . • . Pa of eutern North Dakota and northern Minnesota reported 16 to ii<> lnchei of snow, wlUt snow still falling. Blluard warnlnp conllnued for early today in north and central MiMesota and in ~temNorthDilko~. Stron1 winds ext.ended ac:rou Lake Sust0rJor. where storm waroinis were 1n effect. Hl'1l wind warnlitd and travel ad· vlJorlet reac:6td from aoutherD portions of Minnesota Into ex· trecne northwest Wl.sconslo. As the storm moved east, blt.. ter cold moved in behind lt. In western North Dakota, the mer4!UJ'1 dipped below iero over- night. Readings as low as 80 degreea below zero were ex~­ ed In Montana. Cold temperatures were mov· Ing over the cbnt.ral Plains as hlgh pressure pushed aouthward behind tl\e storm. The blcb cen- tral Plains had reac11ngs near zero and lower 20s were expected In southeast.em Kanau. ""The bureau fele~ed a\M>ut S00 . A 21 a(ll\~a)\(te bo0'1ied s t>re'vlous'l y ·µhdis~los~ pages. of ''the 'a\~·· pµ:ee trumpetc~. THE ECYP'tCAN PRESIDENT'S speech was "excellent documen's rrom a countersn· · fare11 wei"' ft9u~ed Bouq,u.ets of .. Sa · d O:lllgencc P.rogr11m labeled Es· flowers lify lit Sadat·~ /eel. The bec!luse . dat did not eviate from the Arab line," a Jordanian iiov- • • ' ' I LONG DJo:ACli CAP ). ,A •• pionage. Bu\ mor-: t)lan 4,500 huge "'"'"ant readlnl "Welcome erqroent SQUrce said. "He explained the Arab sland tully within a 1. ·pa.,cs o(mat:..~ .. I f""Om •h ~ r-'"' bumanltaiian ""~rncwor", and this wlll brin1 new benefits." " · ~,.. '' ,. a .... pro-President Sadat" ln Hebrew, Th ~ t!. 'i" ti l gram wer~kepisecrer«)Hgtolinds Arab~ and Enf.rib _.;u ""un.4 . 1 ~ jqa .P•·~ ,nian 1uerril u, wh<> are controlled by Syrian . dol~n Long Beqch pplicc ~i~rs 1 surrounded a Mllse Where i man ' • barricaded himself wltn three hos tages today. puthdtitriJ said. . Lt. Rudy Pr<.'11 said the man. I ,., tentatively sdentlfied as JQhn Sha rrnr. released two of t,he three male hostages. The otficen; were attempting to taik Sharrar 1 'Out , Prell said · I Sharrar bart1cad~d hhrtself thay tlleY are cl~itled (or na ·~ "' 6 Preald~ rex A.nae), char1ed Sadat wl\b "the uaUeist t.renoe ln tionai s~uritypurposes, . i';~rQQ ~e ~I bu(ldlnc. lb~ h{atory or the Aral) n·~ion" and J&ld: "The blood of the tr&Uor Ag~nt.s siid ebaut 16.~ pages Aaked for a lut comment on rrluat be abed. He mut\ t;e ronowed ,tQ the ~a.rt.best eonaen ot the • f""" all or the·"C<Jint4!lf1i'6 mes I!!JlaeU td.o~S..gid'f lanai~~ worhtubUJ t'he deatt\ sentence ia catr1td out.' ., +.-er~ beirtg wlthtlefd ~ gtotmds i •It MUI. Mt Tffi ,.., A Syrian eovemment statement broaduat by Damascus Radio • 1tha.y the* ttte classtnwt v 1:,,v of , called on "our brothers or Egypt. .to rutore you.r nauon.i honor ' tho ~.648 pageoa tl\llt'\.,.er~..,. re· ,or everythina.:· . . J and dignity: '. .disgraced and besmirched by the visit to lirael of fl le~edwereh~avllycenso~. At ~~n~t~ei Begin th«!traitorSadat.'' · · ·Althoogh,\he FSJ has tumed said ltiat lhe chief achievement '"and the others In the house &!>out • 1 over several thousM<t<f plies of of Sadat's viisi\ waa the stat o( a 1 LIBYA. WHICH BROK~ dfplomal\c relations with E&YPt .. Colntelpr6-ftt.s towrious Jr..c?µps , • • s e. r 1 •. 0 u 1 e t t' e• c t betauaeofSadat•s trip, ur1ed "EoptJans In every town and vlllaie :$a .m .. Prell said. The incident appa'l'ently was 11 triggered by an argument' Sher· '· rar had with one or the three men, th~ lieutenant added. ' " Prell said Sharrar has fired randomly a couple af•tltnes,·but . no injuries were renorted. : " ' ' .. Expert Says : " :·Patty Forced. SALT LAKE CITY (APl -A polygraph expert who ~ami.oed newspaper heiress Patty Hearst says his tests connrm.ed she was threatened with death by ber captors and that sJle waF forced lo help rob a bll'lk. 1 Dr. David Raskin: a University I or Utah profeSSAr reco)Cnft\?d as one of the nattan 's · rote'1nost psychophyaioto1lsts and an authority on the lie detector, made three examinations of Miss '' In· five years, tod1ly 'ir ticSon •. dialogue-•.. •, ftOt only hetween toriae,takearmsandtopplethetraltor." 1 represented the •btggesl single " Israel and Ea.YPl but with afl the Iraq's 8aghda~·Radlo said: "Sadat lhe traitor has recoptied •·•chunk of •Cdfntettir;a 'ft1atertal' the .. othe• stetea. the Ziomat entlt)''thl'Guih his speech ... · buteau has retea!Ped!'' "· " · 1 • • • , Cairo newipal)eti hafted Sadat apd one called him .. the hero of · · · · • • Oil'frif'lft.C~ "" '·In ~ente, •cotnt~pl'O w~'the •'The key word ts continua-pe6c~:·•·tSut tb'e seml~r tlal daUr Al Ahr am crltlc:lced Becln for . ANNOUNC2ijt$ C~'NDl9.""" FBI'a ''dirty tric~s" ope~atldn. It . Uon,•.:•aidBeth\ .... Weqaed we tailing f.o 0J)t<ocl\U:e tin tng new' on .. ,what concesalona Israel ls • • 1' '".l!x·Su~r llluo(" •-'C.:•r 'wad a campaign«> wre'Mi 1lavoc 11 flll'e 1ol11.111 tp continue .our · ~llU J.'~Of'f~rfofp6s lhf ll\epeacewheelln the MJddlel!:apt.", , • I••• ~···.m·~~n · ·r~~~~~~W~e·~t~d --~---~------~-~---~---------------~ "'' ' f'....a p~"A· i"' .. '. left! tiy •e~tflt' luionrmo(.11 Jet-.. .•. . _..... . te~. attett>f>tlriit ·to get acti'vlsts __ :u.... ............ ,,,,.,.. ....... .....:.._ ........ J_, ---,~~~~----------------........ ---------- • • • ·' • • '·' 1 rrtM from thetr-jobs rostering ··dlsitenslon·amoriii><>llUc,t allies •and sprtta'ding' derocatory rumors about fllilitant leaders. .1""'The efto'rt hQ ~n roundly de- , nbunced by •ao%ens ''Of ~on ­ 'lreufonat leaders 'and legal authorltte«, btl4' feW'ln th~ 'FBI 'Mt tempt to4efefnd~ abf.mol. Fltl OfrectO\I' ~e ~I! el)ey u1u year tau~ · t e N. IOgy ... tbf"'the burew•s .... .,,,:J~ of po\#er '' (MJlu\!i iJ "'• r.": • f4 I"' • ctli+'~ ' ·~·1x?Jne ' . ~n-·~ A~ti~~t>~~t reP9rt In 1'74 call sorri~ <'.:t)tn~f».r.9ptac· 1ich ••a hM"rent 1fii ·a ·tre~ ·· > society.'' ' •' I - , ...... I .,, .. ~ ' I •I ... . . . . I' ,. # t •I ' .: .... ,. ... • . " !t' . \ . .. . • ,. I I .. , ,. ByROBEltTBAJlKER Ol Ille Delly ...... Staff Huntington Beach re.sldent Robert Myers apparently scrawled several numbers on the palm o( his left band before hil death and. lnvestJ1atora believe they are a c\ue to his murderers, It was revealed today. Detective Dennis O'Rourke ot the San Berna.rdln9 County Sherlff's Department said the numbers are believed to be that of Cheered • in I Ditty~ ......... ,.... ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY "' Ex-aupervlaor Baker =stale Ready iTo Prosecute I Supervisors By TOM BARLEY OIU.o.ltr~l .. Utaff Superior Court Judge Philip E. Schwab was assured by the California Attomev General '1 Office today that the state ls ready and willing to J>rosec:ute Orange County Supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip An· tbony and two codefendants. But Deputy Attorney General 2Uchard Haden made Jt clear in ~he pretrial hearing tbat the 1tate'1 lnt.ervenUon la dependent on an awaited rullnt fro.m tb6 Fourth District Court of Appeiili tn San Bernardino. That appeal was filed by the district attorney's office aftet Judge Schwab agreed with &he defense that there was enoup evidence of prejudice to juatlfy asking th& state to ta}(e over tbe pros~utloo chores. · Jfaden told Judie Schwab that u the Judie'• ncluslon rullna ia uph~ld, the state will need delaya or all pretrial motlona and tho tt~l dateOt Jan. 30. We have vast qqanUtlea Of 1etal papers arid evidence to sift throuah,,. Haden utd. "Wt would need a delay of at lea.st two or three rnonthl to enable us to ,preparefortrtal " • Judie SchWab •et} an. 9 n tM next hear:lQI date for the four de;: (SMAPPE~ PapAI> a motorcycle that Myers may have encountered 1h0rt.Sy btfore his death. The S?-year-old Myers, a longttme resident of La1una Beach, was killed Nov. 11 near B•rstow. Jle was 1hot lw}ce In the chest. "We an .,,re that he wrote these numbers before tie was shot and that he was trylnc to tell us somethln.c.'1 O'Jtourke said W- day. · ''This ts our major clue at this point. It's just a matter or de- v.eloplnslt," O'Rourke allde<l. llyers wrote •he or seven num- bers on the webbing of hll hand i between· the thumb and Index finger tn blue baJlpotnt pen lnlc. The tint three letters, which ... · O'Rourke declined to Identify, w~re JectbJe. The final three are betnr exum.tned by idenuticatlon experts. "We believe it !' the Ucense A Costa Mesa man was kltled and his roommate was crltlcally injured early today when their car smashed into a slcnal li&ht pole a block from the scene of a similar fatal accident less than a week aao. Dead is Ricky D. Terbush, .21, of 234 Victoria St. Hls l>a11encer, Dennis Zeutenhorst, 24. was in critical condition today at Costa Meaa Memorial Hoepttal. Police said the pair were driv· ins southbound on Newport Boulevard shortly after midni&ht when their car skidded into the Jlleel pole at Fair Drive. Terbush was killed Instantly by the tro- pact1 traffic invesuaators said. • Police, (1r~men and paramedics labored for haU an • hour to free Zeutenhor&t, "ho 1uf(ere<l severe injutlea to h1a head an(t lower body. The accident ~curt'ed only a bloeJt from the intersection ot Newport BouleYard and Mesa Drive1 where .Raymond Joseph Beauary Of' Ne~i't Buch was fatally Wui'ed less than a week a10. ltl that accl4S~t; till car also akldd~ intO a lllft8lJlght. pole. The causo ~ today's crash is lt.111 un~lnveatlgitton. • ~ . .. Back to Work • "Welcome el:oof ace,'~',..·~-,_. llie the le.tcftl ol .. .. God bleaa your movH for peace" and .. Welcome to your luid of peace ... After 1bakln& htnde wUh memberll '* hit cabinet, pwafa- ment, the armed force• and the dlplom.Ue corps, dat boarded an open llmoualne lor the 1even- 1nlle ride , to the presldenUal mansion on the ban.kl of th• Nile. _ Security at tbe alrp_ort wu ex· cepttonally tieht.~ apparently beeauae of the auaulnatlon threat ag•inst Sadat by the Syrlan-backtd· Saiqa auerrilla or1a11bat.ioa. In ht. open car, Sadat was flanked by security men fonaine a hum1111 shield. THE 'EGYPTIAN' PRISIDENT•s speech was "uceltent because Sadat did 11ot deviate from the Arab line," a Jordanlun 1ov· ernsnent aouree aaid. "He e.x:plained the Arab stand fully wttb1n a hum anitariao framework, and t.bla wlll brina new ~ftt.s. • • Robert Bums, principal of Costa Mesa 's Pomona School, exchanges greetings witt-,,. students who welcomed him back to work today. Burns returned to h:fs offi.ce today after a two-month illness. Students put up banner qs part of tribute to their favorite principal. Alter early morn.Ulg welcome, it was ba~ to work for ever)'body. Jn Jerusalem, the departure scene was almoet a repUca of Sadat's triumphant arrival Saturday, 44 hours and 18 minutes earlier. Sadat stood at attention flanked by Israeli President Ephraim Kat.zir and Besln for lhe national anthems of Israel and Egypt and inspectect an honor guard. The Salqa PaJeatJ.nian auerrUJu, who are controlled by Syrian Prealdent Hlfex Auad, cbarsed Sadat wltb ·~· 11ittost tnuon In the history ol the Arab naUon° and aid: '-rhe blood of tbi trajtor muat be ahecl. He must be followed to the farthest. coroen ~ the world unW the death aentence ii carried out.'• A Syrian 1overument 1tatecnent broadeut by D~e111 Radio called Oil "our brother$ of Emt ... to restore your 1l&tlan'1 li0nor aJfd {llplty, .. disgraced anCI•bamlrcbed by the vlstt to Iarul of the ~*.Sadat:• 40Survive Argentine ·Jet Crash BARILOCHE. Argentina CAP l A c hartered Argentine JCliin<.'r carrying mostly honey· mooning couples from Buenos Aires to this southern lake resort crashed as 1l was trying to land in .stormy weather early today. Airline officials said there were .some survivors among the 79 persons aboard A spokesman for Austral \irlines said the BAC·ll l twin Jet <'arrying 74 passengers and a crew of five left Aeroparque Airport at Buenos Aires on Sun· day night on a direct flight for Bariloche, a lake and skt resort in the footltllls o( the Andes 1,000 miles southwest of Buenos Aires. Ruben Chihade, a spokesman for Austral, said a 15·man army and police patrol reached the 'cene of the crhh., a rocky Ito about 20 miles from here, about m1d·day and r~ported flndmg -,urv1vors. The nallonal new~ agencies re- portcct 40 people survived. Earhcr today a search plane reported il spotted the wreckage in a rocky area near here, but of· fic1als said it reported no signs of survivors Thc news agency Not1clas ArJ~entlnas reported the plane had problems with landing gear and had overflown the Baril<><:he airport sev.eral,.tim•i A.r)lina lo gt•t lh,:l .l.An~lng -~~c.IS\lA,A<>.IUon Jnd therl' attempted' to "CU\.ert to another airport at Neuq'uen. ' Most of the passengers were n•porll•d to be Argentine honey· .moon col.lples from the 81Jenos Aires area on a package lour. Austral is a privately owned Ari~entine company with ex· t~ns1ve domestic routes. It also flies to Uruguay. Ram's Valley Home Burgled Rurglars threw Los Angeles fl•1ms linebacker I siah Robertson for a $400 IQss Sunday while he was in San Franctsco for the Rams• 23·10 victory over the 49crs. Fountain Valley police s,aid today ..._ Investigators said someone oroke Into Robertseln '11 home near Mlle Square Park and slole a tape recorder and jewelry. Police said a friend or Robertson's reported the burglary when she discovered a window screen cut. and found a bedroom ran.sacked. Police Officer Mark Armando said a pHJow case apJlar~ntfy ,, s used as a bag to carry the t from the pro football star's me. •..--~-------~~------O"ANGI COAST c: DAILY PILOT Fro. Page Al DISPUTE •.. ; ge~tureofgoodfaith " The problem arose because of a reorganizaLion plaA •itned al regaining federal certlncation and Medi·Cal funds for Fairview and three other state hospitals. Improper staffing was one of the violations of federal codes found at the hospitals last sum- mer by a state licensing team. which decertified the hospital. The team was working under contract with the federal govern- ment. Fairview is currently losing $500,000 per month in federal funds, which the state is maklng up. However, psych techs have · maintained that the proposed new positions would not solve the starting problems but would merely substitute cu..stodlal medical care for training1n skills that some retarded and han· d1capped patients need Dr Franci&;Cript:lla, executive ,director of Falr.tew. could not be reached this morning for com- ment. However, he said earlier he believes the proposal to bar psych tecbs troln the new posi- tions amounted to an •·eroslon of their professional stature " E'rom Page AJ BAKER .•• · ·'The politicsl seaton ls heat· ing up and anyone can run for pf- fice, ''Schmit a•id. The Garden Grove supervisor also said he believes the real is- sues in next year's campaign will be formed during the campaign and "the best person will win the job." Baker said he favortt strong campaign reform but isn't sure a plan has been offered as yet that can control the machipations of campaisn managers. Schmit's clmpaign will be managed by political consultants Arnold Forde and William Butcher, according to Schmlt's mo11t recent campaign disclosure statements. Baker said his campaign or· ganazalion Is likely to be made up of volunteer workers and th•t an organization will be formed ln the next few weeks. The former county supemsor would not speculate about the amouolof money he will1pend in his comeback attemot. However, he said, "l think everyone ls dilenchanted with a poliUcal •Y•lem that renders un- to Caesar that which ls his throu1h a series of fund-raisers by officeholders in non·election years." Since he left office in early 1975 the former Garden Grove supervisor has been lndepen· deotb' employed aa a conaunani speclaltzinc in the disposal oC hazardous waste material. -~Y, 16, Held After Fatal Canyon Crash A 16·year-old boy is In juvenile hall today and charged with felony drunken driving as a re- sult of an early Sunday morning fatal accident in Trabuco Can-yon. According to a California HigJtway Patrol report. the un- identified juvenile was at the wheel of a car tbat skiaded off Plano Trabuco Ro-d, pJun1ed down an emballkment and then rolled over twice. As the car tumbled down the embankment, 17-year-old John Lynch of 12851 Sprint St., Garden Grove, was thrown out and killed when apparently struck by the auto as It went into ill flip, the re- port said. The accident on the lonely dirt road about one mUe Crom Holy Jim Canyon occun:ed at 3 a.m. and resc~ \\'.Orkers labored in darkness in the desolate area lo bring the victim and young drunken driving suspect back to where their injuries could be treated. Lynch, however, was dead at the sceqe, The surviving teenager wu not seriously hurt, the CHP report said. Woman Faces I Mesa Assault, Dnfuk Raps ' A 21-gun salute boomed across the airport, three trumpet fan- fares were sounded. Bouquets or flowers lay at Sadat's feel. The huge peMant reading "Welcome President Sadat" in Hebrew. Arabic and Englbb still bwig across lhe terminal butldin1. Asked for a last comment on Israeli televlsloh. Sadat said. "Thanks for everything. Thanks for everything." At the news confetence. Begin said that the chief achievement of Sadaat's visit waa the start of a ·'serious direct dialogue •.. not 011Jy between Israel and f:gypt but with all the other st.at.es. "The lt.ef word ts conUnua- tion," said ~ln. "We a1reed we .are g,olng to continue our dialogue, and ulUmately out ot lt will come peace." He read what he described as an "a1reed communique" issued by the Israeli &overnment "in response to the sincere and courageous move by President Sadat." The communique prop~ed "that this hopeful step be further pursued through dialogue between the two countries con· cerned . . . leading to the siin· ing o( peace trealies in Geneva with all the neighboring Arab states." LtBYA.· WIUCR B&OKB dlploroaUc relaUons Vii.th Eapt became of Sadat's tiip. Dried .. Egyptiamblevery town ancl vlllqe to rise, take arm• and topple the traitor." Iraq's Daebdad Radio said: "Sadat the traitor bas recognized the Zionist entity through bis ~peech. •' Cairo newspapers hailed Sadat and one called him ''the hero or peace," but the seml-offlclal dally Al A.hraD\ crtliclied Belin for faillog to "produce anythin1 new On. •• wbat cooeesalons Iarael ia wllllna to offer for pushing the peace wtieel in the Middle East.·· . . Knievel Surrenders • • FOr 6~Wonth Term SANJAMONICA <AP>-Sblnt man Evel Knievel surrendered· today to begin serving his six- mon tb jail 1entence for the baseball-bat beatin1 of a television e:irecutive wb'o wrote a book about him. ·'Good morrung, good morning, good morning," Knievel greeted reporters and pbotograpfim as he surrendered at 8:20 a.m., 40 minutes before the time he was ordered to _appear by Superior Court Judge Edward Raleedle. Knievel, wearin1 a suit made of blue leather and white cotton, Greenhouse Fire Probed was taken bY bus with other in· mates to County Jail, where he wiU wait one or two days while his application for a work· furloulb program ~ processed, said tab attorney. Paul Caruso. Under the work-furlough pro4 gram, Knievel "would leave the jail In regular clothing at 6 a.m., go about.his duties until 6 p.m. at ni1ht. then report to the jail and put on jail denims.•' Caruso said. · Knievel could be out ot jail in 4\-i months, with time of( for 100d behavior, Caruso said. In an interview with NBC's John Chancellor. broadcast on the "Today" show, Be1ln and Sadat ~aid there was a P:QasjblJity that a Gen&"Lc:<i\f'ereb~'could Oran1e Count.Y Sheriff's of- be corweneb ~fbre the ebct of f~C~{S have determined t.bat a After the jail sentence, be could be allowed to leave the state under the terms of his three-year probation. However Knievel could not 10 to Montana until after the slx-montb jail term was completed unless the judge modified the sentence, the attorney added. this year. Both men strwed. /ire which bur.n•d down a however, that \dequ te pr@ara· greenhouse at a Santa Ana ri.:~.J!' ~-1· tionra11~t~h t,.,. a H~ia,hts n41;~~ry 11ftµrln1 the , ~l~J· I . ~111 weekend was the work or an Jn • "All the efforts now spo\lld be arsonist. ~ ? direc:,tecJ. toward'·lhe t.P'Yer.dlfl of Th id I .,.. U f •.. QWW• ~ •• the C~deva conferene1!~' 'Sadat ey SI nves.,..a on o u1e •aciol-0 blaze Saturday at tbe Frantic said. Fern Corop•ny, 20322 Kline "MORRIS,IU. <AP>-Twosons C M l. kl h ln of Morris Fire Chief Sherman osta esa po ace are see ng At his news conference Sadat Drive, aa indicated that e fire Hexdall are amoni tl\'e younf charges of assault on a police of· was asked what compromise he was deliberately set by an in· men who have been cbarsed with fleer and drunken driving was prepared to make. He sa!d truder who poured 1as0Jine on arson. against a woman who allegedly he could understand Israel's the building. Arrest. were made as the re- s mas bad her car l'flto•a securltyh--~s,''butltshouldn 't Oneratonofthenurseryhave 1 f ak ..-..1 nd l t blt ~ till;' ·-~ th su t o st eouts by p()lice Lryin:. paramll;;Ujc van a a er a be through any compromise on es mai.c:u e total damage at to solve she fires set in corn cribs policeman. land b"'~au11e 1't would mean ex· about $15,000, includln& growing d al b Th t J l Cl ... , an rur u1ldings in the last e suspec , ane eary pansion... plants valued at. $10,000. few weeks. Brooks,24,ofLaCanada.isftee --------~~---~-~-~-----~---~~---__;-------~ on $2,500 bond1 .; Follce said the accident Oc· r-----------------------------------..___.___, curred about 2:40 a.m. Saturday while paramedics were parked at 22nd Street and Newport Boulevard to aid the victim of an earlier accident. After the paramedic unit was struck, sustaining major damase, police arrested the SUS· pect. However, before they could tum her over to jail authorities. she allegedly bit one of the of. ficer's hands. The bitten officer was treat.ed at Hoo1 Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach and sent home. ,,,..,_ Pflfle AJ APPEAL •.. Tht namt Aoll•·Royc~ tht Aoll1·Royct r1dl1tor grfllt, and t~t aplrlt of Eo1t11y hood omamtnt art 111 Roll1·Royot tradtmarka, ultd with tlit approval of Roll1·Royce Matore. 11 I 1 °"'''~...,, ,. ..... SCIENTIST RASMUSSEN OVERSEES CELL PREPARATION Technician Marci• Witte Helped DHlgn Pollutfon THt UCI R e searchers Testing Pollutants By PHIUP ROSMARIN Of Ille O.tllf ""•I SC.If Exposure of human cells to Vic :ur pollutant nitrogen dioxide, 1n conce nlrnl1ons rcgulurly occur- ring in urban aruas, causes the cclb to die. UC Irvine pollution investigators have discovered Though the r~earcheri. quick· Jy emphasize that their cxperi menls arc preliminary. they say the system usc.>d to test the reac lion or the cells closely resembles the condition of cells in the living human respiratory system 1'ht' importance or the re search is that It brings scientists closer to being 1tble. for the first time. to produce scientific' data on the effects of everyduy air pollut1on on human beings. They arc closer to discovering whether these s ubsta nces destroy lung tissue, or cause it to chanJ{c,orproduce~pcer. \ Nitrogen dioxide hus been ~hown to kill cells 1n much higher concentrations of Lho gas until the UCI research. sclcnfrits have been unable to directly expose living, reproducing cells to the gas m concentrations that the air or cities Nor ha\C the effects been s hown to occur in such low con- . centralions. of only .12 parts nitrogen dioxide per million parts of air. F ederal nitrogen dioxide stan· dards permit emissions of the 1tas of up lo 2S parts per mil- lion <averaged over one hour>. more than twi<.·e as much as used in the UCI l'Xpenments. State standards are more lax, allowing 05 ppm. but averaged over an entire year . UCJ rcseurchcrs regard their findings as siJtni fi cant. but not conclusive of the effects of nitrogen dioxide Though the cell culture system they in\ ented closely resembles life conditions. 1t does not replicate them. The scientists arc working now to improve the already pioneer- ing cell model. The research is a combined ef· tort of the School of Engineering and the Department of Com· munaty and Environmental Medlcl.1e. ._Principals involved include 'Urs. G. Scott Samuelsen, Ronald E . Rasmussen, B . Karunakaran Nair and T. Timothy Crocker. 'rhclr new method for testing the effects of airborne pollu tants on human and other mam- malian cells. and the resu•ts ot the nitrogen dioxide experlme.ntc O' are lo he published in ·'Environ menlul Science and Technology." Rnsmusi.t!n 1>aid the system is deceptively .sample Human <or humst~r l cells are planted on membrane filterb, rtat, circular pieces of material which contains microscopic pores. The cells arc grown on one sadc or the filter. which is filled into u st<.>rilc. l)Caled plastic holder Nutri e nt liquid f qod Rasmussen culls beef soup ts supplied the laving ceJJs through a tube fit Into the holder, with the "soup" filtering through the un- rlerslde of the membrane. The <.•ell!l dine on lhii. The cells arc covered by a thin layer of nuid comparable In thickness to the mucus layer in the throat ant.I lungs or a hurnan being This concoction ls plliced ln a glass ga:. chamber for exposure lo whatever gas Is being tested. In the nitrogen dioxide experi- ments, human cclli; began to die after less than four hours of ex- posure. Within six hours \he cells were vurtually eicllnct. One per· cent 1urv1ved Ras mussen emphasized that the allaofhumao !,!ells exposed to such air thrQU,,ih breathina ls probably five times than that or the experiment.a) cells. In the human throat and lung lining, most of the cylinder-shaped cell Isn't exposed lo air. In ex· perimental culture, the cell spreads Oat, exposing 50 percent of its areu to the surfacl! But the similarity t~ close enoueh to lead the scientists to believe their results are signifi· cant Said Rasmu!l!!en. "This very clearly demonstrates that we are on the right track. It's clear that effects are 0<:curnng al concen lrations you find al an urban sel-ling ·• Samucls~n s aid the exper1· ments are providing additional evidence .required to justiCy con· trot pro1r(lms for Umitlng emissions of c1sr·11 and factories. "Congress can orily go 110 far," Samuelsen 5'kl. "without hard scientific data w back lt up.·' The research team, already at "'ork about four .rear•. hopes ln the next two years to prove juat how nitro1en dloxlde. and other POUutant.a. affect the hum•n cell . 'fhe atudies1 ne financed ln part by a contract with the En· vlronmenlal Protection Agency and a arant from tht Notional Cancer tnstttulo. HBMan·Gets . ,, Probation ir1 Wife Assault F o rmal probation for two years and psychological counsel·' tng ha~e been ordered for a Hunt· lngton Beach D'llP -..ho dra1ged his pregnant wire br her hair down a local street beside \heir accelerating tar. Mark awvell, 22. who, at the time of the incid~t la1t May, lived at 2620 Delaware St., pleaded guJlt_y to reduc•d charges or assault and battery at a hearing In West Oran1e County Judicial District Court. The incident took place on Nichols Street, just south of Warner Avenue. Police at the tune said the cou· pie were breaking up their household and Sawvell was followins his wife to the home of friends where she planned to slay. driving a second car. Her car was suddenly forced off the pavement by the other and Sawvell got into the driver's seat, grabbing her by the hair when she attempted to leap from the passenger's side and escape, poUcesaid. The epldsode was witnessed by a number of persons at a nearby church including the pastor, who called police, then dashed out Qnd reasoned with Sawvell unlil they arrived. Durin1t hls two years' proba lion, Sawvell's psychlatrbt or psychological couMelor must :1ubmlt quarterly reports on his progress under terms of the pro- bation agreement. Bombing of Briggs Office Planned? LOS ANGELES <AP > -Five people believed to be members or the Weather Underground ter· rorist group were scheduled ror arraignment today following their arrest over the weekend for allegedly planning to place a bomb in the Fullerton oltlce of state Sehator .John Bri11s. The five, arrested here and in Houi1ton on Saturday. were ac- cused of planning a series of as- sassinations and bomba~s that would'have started with an ex- plosion Sunday in Briggs' orrlce at 1441 N. Harbor Blvd., FBI agents said. Ted Gunderson. special agent ln charee of the FBI 's Los Angeles oCCice, said sear~es followlne the arre11ts Saturday turned up more th1rn 100 pounds ol explosive$ in fh'e T..os Aneeles locations. Numerous weapons also were uncovered, he said. All rive were charged with con- s piracy lo violate federal rlrearms laws and possession of unrcglstcred explosive devices. Gunderson suld. Arraignment was scheduled before federal magistrates in Los Angeles and Houston. Arrested in Los Angeles were Thomas Mkhael Juatensen, Z7. ~md Mark !>err ~ Those arrested in Houston wJrc idenUried as CJaytoq Yan L 4 trut. 8'2 , Ju U'h E\ftfly Bissell, 33. and a worrtin named E sther. abotrt 30 yea,.. old, who used the name Grace-Fortmer. Gunderson said Brisgs said SundJY that the FBI y.iarned him la:it monlh \hat. he w a-s an asaA:hflnatio11 tareet. Agents later ~Id him that his oC- fice would be bombed. but they did not know tf l\e.\vas to be killed. brl1p. who is seeking t~ Republican nomination for gov. ernor, said he was told by Uie FBI tbat he had been chosen as 1 target becaute of his strong stands supporting capital punish- ment and opposing homosexual teachers. ''I don't think It was anything personal." Briggs saJd. "l 'm a bilhlY vilible tariet represent- i.ng 11nythin1 they oppose ·' B~lll6 •aid he has been 1uarded by·poltce since Oct. 28, when an undercover FBI aient was told that BriBfs' office had been "targeted for v1olen\ ~c· lion." Members of the group nad been sighted on weekends es they ··cased his office," Bnus !laid Althout{h he has had to alterhls -I I lifestyle. Briggs :said he had no plans forchan11Dg his poltUcs. "I don't intend to be violent, 1 don't Intend to change; I intend to endure," he said. The FBJ contends Perry planned to bicy.cla to Briggs· of. fice •l 5:30 p.tn. Sunday to plant the bomb under the front porch It w(ls scheduled to go oft at 1 :30 this morning. the FBI said. The PBI safd members Of lhe group. disguised In wigs. wtre observed as they apparently "cased" the offic<: Nov. 4 and the following week. An affidavit filed by the FBI before u U S. magistrate Friday said the rive arreslcd made trips to the desert neat' Bar.stow for fireurms traanln~ SYDNEY: Australia (APt -A 54-year old arandmother who le'arned the bamboo flute and -Esperan&o whlle ':It sea stepped off her Z7·Coot yacht aner a~ &Ill· pubhci1.ed t-ai._ areund the ..,Otld and took refuge in a commune "It ~oti'!. thmk 1 hnt done t1nytnJ111.{JtnP<?f!Anl, · · 4uld Anne Oa h In a br'U~ telej>hone in- terview, "If J rt talking about this ll wUI never stop.•· Mrs Gash sailed her battered 1loop lltmo Into Balllna. soo roilea notthofSydney, on nday. Alter bile cleared customs. a datuhter and son-In-law took her to the ~Qluslon ot a cominune elsrht miles away. ' "ShAts ul> Oil tfte hill about half a mile trom here." said a man •Ito answered the commune'i. only telephontt. ''She jµst wants to be alone, 1:1ut in perhaps another week or so will be sailing on down to Sydney." ''This Is Jusl the liiOrt of thing Mother ~." said one of Mrs. G•sh's !tlx duuahters. Libby Buhrlch ot Sydney. ''When she WH 11ery roun,. she rode to Melboumcon a bicycle." Melbourne is 400 miles south of Sydney. A former social worker and vegetarian. Mrs Gash took a brief course >n navigation )>etore Lakin& lhe llimo ou{ ot Sydney harbor in July 1975. She salltd up the east coust. through the ln lhaf complaint, VW1 Lyde- graf was Identified as head or the Pt airle Fire Organizing Commlt· tee of the Weather Undergrotmd. Jn 1974, the committee dlstrtbut· ed a boOklet clairnlng crectit for 19 bombings across the co~ntry. The complaint. also contended that Van Lydegraf told one UR· der cover FBI agent that Ms. Bisaell and Esther were the lenders or the Revolutionary Commltt~ of the Weattier Un· der1round in Los Angelea. Ms. Bissell, o naUve or New York. has been sought since June 9. 1970, when a federal warrant in Seutllt!' charted her with con· spJracy to destroy government property and post4ession of \ln ll· lcgul destructive-device. Mrs. Gash' left Britain l t November Jnd sailed t.hrouab th"e canals of Belgium and Holland before heeding down to ~lbralt.Ur and the Canary Islands. Tbet\ stie s ailed across the Atlantic to Tobaeo and Trinidad, passed throuih the Panama Canal .n1' went on to Tahili. Rarowoa~. Tonga an<J Ballina. SAY IT ISN'T SO: Consumer fraud fighters have been doing a Jot of good here in Calltornia In their etforu to keep the buyers or our region from beine bam- boozled or bilked. But like all good things, when the zealots get into the act, the ~earch tor evll·doing can get warped to outrageous llmlts. It has now happened in San Fran· CISCO. Up in the Bay City, the <tistnct attorney's consumer fraud crime unit hns jw.t unleashed its wrath upon Wheaties, the Breakfast or Champions. Since 'way last June, the DA's fraud pt,'Oplc have been probing into breakfast bowls . Now they have leveled the allegation that Wheaties made raise claims that one Bruce Jenner, United States decathlon champion, trained on Wheaties for the 1976 Olympics. .1'~urther, the lawsuit against the flakes manufacturer, General Mills, Inc .. challenges the claim that Wheaties is indeed the Breakfast of Champions. THE GHASTLY ATfACK on Wheaties JUSt goes to show what happens when Wrong Thinkers get a hUle power and start as· "aultmg our sacred mstituhons. J t 's shameful. Haven't those consumer people up in San Francisco ever heard of Jack Armstrong, the All American Boy'! D1dn t they ever listen to radio, v. hen Jack was on every after· noon, gulping down hi s Whe aties .ind thwarting evil·doers who hadn t eaten their Wheaties? PROBABLY NOT. It is unlike· h any of those consumer people arc over30. ,'And as for athletes like Bruce -.Jenner, there must be hundreds or them whose photos have ap· peared over the years whilst chomping down a bowl of Wheaties Generations of Americans have ripped off Wheaties boxtops and mailed them away to get some gadget or hreakfast bowl with a famous athlete's pieture ·~nd autograph emblazoned upon Jt. How shameful to suggest these flakes aren't the Breakfast of Champions. You begin to wonder who real- ly is flaky around here. And would the Wrong Thinkers in the consumer dodge change lhe grand traditions of American haseball?. YOU KNOW WHAT I mean. The pitcher ls out there on the mound. The count on the batter works up to two strikes and three balls. The next pltch is crucial. Unless the batter hits or fouls it off, that next pitch is either going to be a walk for the batter or a :-.t'rik t•out for the pitcher. J\n<I what do we call that next pil<'h ') Why, it's The Wheaties Pltch, or course. But if those consumer people u~ in San Francisco have their way. I guess we'll be calll.oi that n~xt pitch "the non-nutdtlonal cqrnflakes toss." Dlsgracet~t. ,COME TO THINK of it, I have- n jt had a bowl or Wbeatles for bteakfast in years. That may ac· ctunt for why I huff and puff a lot tpning up stairs. When I try to h•rl a baseball these days, my a,m goes with it. ; J tried to punt a football the other day and it went orr the •idt o• my foot. Jack Armstronf WC\lld be ashamed of tne. !Which way to the neareat inlpcrmarket? FUNCIIAL. Madelta (AP> Survi11on 'o( e-crub &.hat killed 130 of 104 people •hoard a POrtUlueM JeWMr Hf ttie pUot apparently reallied he landed too far down tho runway and tried to take off, but 'tho plane plunged 200 feet down an embankment and bunt Into n~es. TAP, the Portu1uese naUonal airline, said the Bc¥!in1 717 that crashed Saturday ntabt In a rain was carrytnc 91 Portucuete passengers, 65 forelpers and eiaht crew members on a flltht from Bru.ssela, Belslum, and Lisbon. No Americans were reported aboard. THE J'ORWARD section of the plane cartwheeled onto a rocky beach, throwing some of those aboard into the surf. "The pllot could not find the position for the final approach and clrcled three or four times," said survivor Davld van Beetz of Amsterdam. "At the last mo- ment he came down. overshoot· ing the r.eld. The plane was goin1 far too fast. I saw half the plane ripping open. I passed out.'' The 62-year-old department store executive said that when he regained consciousness, the plane was burning around him and he crawled out. "I CAME TO IN water.up to my waist," said Marie Paule Oos terlinck of Antwerp, Belgium. "I tried to get my mother out of the water but couldn't because or my broken arm. Then my son ..• well, I didn't see him any more. I had to get out of the water myself. I was near lhe fire and couldn't stand it. .. Her mother and three· year-old son were listed as missing. Her husband survived. Six of the eight crew members were killed, including the pilot, Joao Costa, and bis copilot • THE PORTUGUESE eovern- ment has ordered an inquiry. A spokesman for the airline said that despite the rain, vis- ibility was 2i,,t mtlea at the time of the crash. He said some witnesses report- ed the plan~ touched down halfway along the l,800-yard runway, but others said it was closer to the beginning or the strip. The family of the late Sen. Robert F . Kennedy visits the grave of former President Kennedy at Arlington Na- tional Cemetery. He was assassinated 14 years ago Tuesday. They also visited the nearby grave of Robert Kennedy. also an assassination victim, who would have been 52 years old today. Family members frQm left are Patrick, Christopher, Mrs. Kennedy, Rory, Ma~w. and Steven Bryant, a family friend. THE OTHEa ts resolutions wore approved e11it, Sund•Y ln a seulon that saw little confllct between conaerv .. tlvea and others at the conf erence4 te11tee adOrsed ~ro~als to •nd dllcrlminaUOn asatnlt bomotOXuala In housln1, jobs, credit, pu~c accommodaUoba, the mllltary and child custody cases. "We must not oppre11 any part or our IOClet.Y or of womubood," said Eleanor Smeal, president of the N atlonal Oraaniaatlon for Women. who laid she spoke u "a homemaker and the mother or two cbitdren." t BBTTY l'RIBDAN, eon· sidered the mother or the modern feminist movement. admitted Fired, She Won 'i E,ight Unite d W ay Gift Too Small, Boss Rules KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -A YWCA officer worker fired because s he gave only $10 to the United Way says she won't fight to get her job back. "All t really want is that policy changed," said Sharon Walter. 34, an employee of the Kansas Ci· ty branch of the YWCA· for four y~ars. .. , BELIEVE IN the YWCA and I loved my job. I was COO· scientous about my job, but that wasn 't enough ... and that's whathurtssomuch." Mrs. Walter and her husband, Tom, said Sunday that they bad contacted an attorney but de- cided against taking legal action. Mrs. Walter said she is looking for another job. Alice Kennedy, the local YWCA executive directpr who fired Mrs. Walter, said she will ask the association's dlrectors to review the policy setting a m lnimum eorrtflbution for employees. But she said she would not make any recommen· dations to the bo11'4. IN A LE1TER dated Nov. 10, Mrs. Kennedy told Mrs. Walt.er she was fired because she had not given enough durtng the Heart of ~meriu United Way's latest fund drive. The YWCA is a United Way agency Jnd was allocated S215,000 from the community fund program last year. pay each month. For Mrs. Walter, a $2.80-an·hour desk clerk, that would have been a $27.60 donatlon. THE WALTERS SAID they llmlted their donation to $10 because they wanted to make an extra donation to their church's educational fund. Mrs. Walter was an exceDent employee, Mrs. Kennedy said, •'but I'm a very literal person and you have to have personnel policies." No D amage Told .. Mrs. Kennedy said YWCA policy requires each employee to give the equivalent of an hour's Sarah Alice Wright, executive dh:ector of the YWCA 's national organization ln New York, 1aid natlonal policy urges contribu- tions but does not require a minimum amount. Individual dlstrlcta are allowed to set their own personnel policies, YWCA offtclal5uid. NATION I WORLD. she had been wronc in cn11adlq to .keep lesbians oul of tho mov. ment for years. calling lesbWls "the lavender menace." "Thl.s wue bu been used to divldo wt too muc'tl." abo told a hushed c:onvcntloo ball. ••it bu alienated many of ua. Al someooe who crew up lQ Pearla, u 1omeono who oerbaps baa lovf(l men too well, l have had trouble with theiuue." ' But, she aald, "We have all been rn1sta.ken in our focus Oft this la~. . . I believe we must protect the women who are lea· bian.s ln Uielrown civil rt&h\s." THE Dt:LEGATES and the thousands of observen roared their approval. many or them taken by surprise by Ma. Friedan's switch. After the vote, hundreds of balloons with caption! "We are everywhere" were released by supporters ot the lesbian rights plank. The opponents of the provision ranged lrom Dorris Holmes er Atlanta, bead ol Georgia's Equal Rights Amendment ratl(icaUon council, who said, •'Tbls lsaue has always been an .albatross around the neck or the women's movement," to Katheryn Nelson or Maitland, Fla., who said, "It's against the law of God.•' * * * BRYANT A.CA.I N BUSTS ERA. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. <AP) -Anita Bryant says the Nat.lonal Women's Conference at Houston is "pro-lesbian, pro-abortion 4nd pro many other lhinp that a.ren 't representative or the thinkiJlg of most American women." "I believe in equal riibts for women, but not in the Equal Rights Amendment, and certain-• ly not in the Women's Con· ferencc, which is a wute of $S million of the American 1.U· payer's money,'' sbe told ~ porters at the LiWo Rock A1tpOtt on Sa~urday en route to a 1loahll engagement in neafby Pine . Blutf. In Mexican Quake WASHINGTON CAP) -A strong earthquake has occurred in the Gulf or California in northwestern Mexico but cau.aed no apparent damage, the u.a. Geological Survey reported today. A Pre-Christmas Sales • 6 A USGS spok~sman a aid Sunday niaht 's tremor was centered in the gulf about 200 miles south of Yuma, Ariz., and occurred at 8:49 p.m. PST. The area wu described as a "fairly activellelsmic zone." The quake bad an estimated magnitude or 6.0 on the Richter scale, thespo~esmansald. T rallle Ra..a DELHI, Colo. (AP) -Rail traffic resumed today on a sldini along a Santa Fe right-or-way in southeastern Colorado closed by a passenger train derailment in which 20 persons were injured Saturday nieht. Five or the injured remained hospltallied early today. Four engines and 14 cars of an Amtrak passenger train derailed when the train struck a ·truck parked on tbe rails. J.nvesUcators said. Tbe train was on a run from Los Angeles to Chica*o. Strlb T llreoteiu SCOTI'SDALE, Ariz. CAP) - Negotiators Cor Greyhound Unes and the Amalcamated Transit Unloft recessed after da,l~ talks aimed at beadlnt off a na- tionwide strike that could disrupt Thanksglvtng travel plans for thousands. ( I N SHOlfl' J Negotiators orrered no com-ment on results of the talks, which broke up late Sunday, but they were expected to resume thelr efforts today. If an aaree· ment is not reached by midweek, union officials have •aid there will be a strike that could st.rand thousands of holiday travelers across the nation. Pa e•aler 11ei ...... ec1 ATHENS, Greece (AP) Premier Constantine CaralJ'lanlls and bis conservative party won re-election wttb a re- duced but safe majority to ntain- l a in Greece's pro-Western policies. But Andreas Papan. dreou 'a anti-American, anti· Western party made bla ealns. With more than thre.-quarters or the returns In from Sunday's general elections, Caramanlll' New Democracy Party had 42.31 percent of the vote. Opportu~ity For You! CAUFO A Actor.s· Assail Bro·wn LOS ANG£LES CAP) -At Ule Screen Acton Oultd national meetinf, President Kathleen Nol•n said CaUtom.la offJclala have ahown dladaln for actors, In contrast to llffection displayed by the White House. · Miss Nolan read a telegram from President Carter to 1,000 actors eathered at the Hollywood Palladium Sunday. Later the u- sembled actors voted unan· imously to demand that Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown Jr. withdraw a proposed change ln unemploy· ment insurance benefit rules. UNDER THE proposed rule, the test for eligibility would be 10 weeks or work. a requirement that the guild said would leave 78,000 actors without benefits. "There is a diabolJcal and dis· criminatory plan to undo the ac· tor." Miss Nolan said. "In our state or California the so-called public servants huve manifested a disdain of actors In contrast to the display of artectlon by the White House." SH E SAID the Carter tele· gram, was the first from a U.S. president to the guild on the oc- casion of ats annual meeting. Carter promised lo "reinforce laws to protect the working man and woman." He also asked that the "In· dustry long plagued by un- employment" support his "pro- grams fo improve and enliven the economy so that enough jobs will be generated to benefit all the American people." WITH SUPPORT Crom the guild members demonstrated by st:indlng, cheering ovations, M 1ss Nolan vowed a vigorous fight against the Brown ad· ministration's unemployment proposal. "The frightenme aspect or the challenge the Department of Employment and the Brown ad· ministration has made to our in· surance benefilc; in California is not just in the loss of funds but In the lack or awareness that our rights as citizens are belne challenged, she said. "It Is not unemployment we seek. We are victims of the system." SAG EXECUTIVE secretary Chester L. Migden proposed the message to Brown and said, "To apply such a new test to in· dustri~s which have full year- round employment is one t.hing. But to apply It to us -where TV is done in less than six months or the year because or the crazy way networks order shows, and to a totally depressed and somewhat vanishing feature film business Is the height or folly ... The message approved by the actors charged that the Depart· ment or Employment's proposal "imposes standards w~lcb workers In the motion picture ln· duslry, ln view of Its curtailed employment opportunltlea, "an· not reasonably meet." MIDGDEN ALSO sald it wu a myth that employers pay the un· employment benefits t.ax. He told the union members, "Your work generates the revenue and the tax. And if the tax weren 't paid, at's money you would have 1otten under the collective baraalnlng agreement. because they are dollars allocated to actors." Jn a separate action Jamea Cagney was named winner of the annual Screen Actors Guild a ward for professional and private contributi9ns to the com· munity. The star of "Public Enemy No. l" and "Yankee Doo- dle Dandy" was recuperatlnr frorn an illness in the East. 'nle award was accepted by bis ala· ter, Jean Cagney. ,.. ~ ......... -RllAl.Ufm · • t.MltellWlltJ By Auoelated Preli Co d nlD and IPO peW Northern CaUfonila Qdey, 1"011CU n>uab 1ever1l Sierra DlOWl· taln "-""" and flooatn• some 8an Francbeo 1lre tswtthuptoarootofwatet. Dlluard cood!Uons forctd tM Hl1hway Patrol to halt tralflo alon1fJO mUea Of lntdrstate 5 from Mount Sbuta to W ea. Chaini were requlrtd alone the rout.e trorn Reddinl to the °"eon Border. DAIL v PILOT A m . ' I Tloca, Soh<>ra and Ebbetts putes also were closed and earty mornlni traflk moved slowly throuah Donner Pass on snow-covered Interst•te 80, with chains mandatory. Drtvln1 rains kicked a 4'0> 1maU mudslide over a •in1lo lane of H!ihway 101 ln ------+;.------------- Marlp County and the Hl1hway Patrol reported dozens ol minor accldenta on slickened streets and highways ln the re1lon. In San Francl.lco. several downtown streets were flood as dusty dralnaae devices clo1sed and backed up. $7,000 .. for only $135.0'l · a molrth. Up to eight inches or snow were reported in Redding and two Inches in Red Bluff. Up to 14 in· chei were reparted at higher elevation. Some schools were closed and scattered Power outaies · were reported. "What this means ls we're 1olng to have a wet week," said National Weather Serviceman Chuck Pucevlch. He said a aeries of rain-yielding storms were expected to keep the region wet through at least Friday. Whether you need $3,500 or $10,000 get It from the people who lend mllll<>flS. Commercial Credit. Monthly payment based on a $7,000 HomeOwner loan, ior 84 months, ~t an annual percentage rate of 15%. Total paym nt 11,345.88. NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY. '•I . ....... _,,_' 115,000 Affected We find waye to help. . COMME~IAL CRS.DIT COR.POR.ATION ® Resident Glaotd Rock music star Alice Cooper, on leave from a New York alcoholic treatment center, was in Hollywood over the weekend for the filming of the surreal Beatles- tribute Olm .. Sgt. Pepper." Cooper, 30, plays a money. grubbing, religious cult leader m the film which stars Peter Frampton and the BeeGees. 'Sta~ Wars' Buffs ' Wild Over Concert LOS ANGELES CAP> -A hpaclty audleoce of 17 500 rock music buffs, some we.aring space costumes, joined sympbo~y rerutars and famlly groups ma lO·minute screamlne ovation for the Los Aqeles P~~har~oni.c's "Star Wars Concert" Sunday nl_ght. I _don t Uunk an orchestra has ever had such a ahouUne. screaming ovation, not in the Hollywood Bowl,'' said lh.e PhilbarmonJc's executive director. Ernest Fleischmann. "In fact. they're stall screaming. The audience JUSl went out O( their mlnds. "THEY WENT WILD. absolutely wild,·• Fleischmann said backstage after the sell-out performance or a laser and pyrotechnic punctuated "Music From Outer Space -A Star Wars Concert." ··t dldn't think they were ioint to let Zµbin Mehta and the or· c h estra off the s taae," Fleischmann added. THE SHOW, which caused traflic jams along freeways and Hollywood surface streets around the Bowl, opened with William Shat.Der or televl1lon'1 "Star Trek" readln1 selections from H.G. Wells' science fiction classic, "War of the Worlds." Tbe concert featured music from John Williams' score for the 20th Century Fox blockbuster film "Star Wars" as well as other space-related works -Richard Strauss' "Also Sprach Zarathustra" used tn the mm "2001: A Space odyssey'' and Gustav Holst's suite fn>m ''The Planets." SPECIAL EP.f'ECT8 more common to rock conceris than to' sy mpho ny perform 1n1cu marked the COhcert. "We used a very sophisticated tock sound s~tem and had till• incredibly 1 ectacular las~r s how." F eischmann explaf ned. "The laser and sound p~p1e have never worked· with u symphony orchestra before." Noting that many of the young rock fans had probably never heard a live orchestra, he noW<t. ..Thls bas opened up a complete· ly new audience for symphonic concerb. There's obviously a lot ' of polenUal here.'• ONE IDGHUGHT ol the show was a simulated outer space bat· tie done with l asers and pyrotechnics, staged by Daniel Flannery. who commented: "I've done n lot ot opera before, but this is the first time J 've vis- ually presented a symphony." Colin Waters, who was ln char1e or the sound system. has done sound for rock groups, ln· eluding the Beach Boys and America. "We had 20,000 watts or equipment of the type we'd usually send out on a rock tour " he said. ' WATERS ADDED that 100 microphones were used for Sun- day's performance. ''In a normal altuatlon, this type of orchdtra w o uld us e maybe two IJ\lcrophonea, and about a thousand watts total," he aald. Flelachmann pointed out that the late LeopOld Stokowaltl had conceived the idea of stating a sound·and-Ught show with a sym· phonic performance so years ago. "But tho technology just waan•t there ln hla time," he aajd, .. I only wt.h he could have been hereto see this." Bus Strike Hits North . OAKLAND <AP> -Union employees stuck the giant Alameda County Transit District today com· pl~tely haltine service to us.ooo commuters, ~chool children and elderly who ride buses dally . Piclcet lines were established shortly alter an e1ght-ho':'r negoti~llng marathon ended at a mid· naghl stri~e deadhnc without compromise. District oCficlals sold no buses would be run- ning today In the district, which serves Oakland and 36 other communities an a 600-aquare mile area. ao.b Tllreat Prove• Plaon11 LOS ANGELES CAP) -The police depart· ment's bomb squad checked a Rapid Transit Dll· trict bus that had been commandeered early today for a threatened bomb, but no explosive device wu found. author1tles old. Police were seeking ( three persons in connec-~ ...llTE J taon with the Incident. _ ~in. The bus driver, Man--------- ny V. Laborlan, h41d been told to get off the bus by the three men aner it was parked at North Figueroa and Colorado streets. 2 let• Eqlodr, 7 R11ra SAN DI EGO c AP> -The explosion of two Navy F-8 reconnaisance jets at Miramar Naval Air Sta· tlon has left Ill< enlisted men and a civilian firefighter slightly lnJ4J"ed from bums and 'mote inhalation. The planes were being defucled when they ex· ploded and burned Sunday. also damaging the truck tbatwa.uemovlng fuel from them, NavaJ Lt. Cmdr. James Ramsey said 8300,000 Fire Bit• ,.,,... I COMMERCE CAP> -Fire swept througb the General Felt Co. late Sunday, burning three. quarters of an acre or stored foam rubber material and causing about S300,000 in damagq, Los Angeles County Fire Department oUleials said. One tlreman, Randy Brandon, 39, wal l~ured when a loose hose struck him in the back. He was taken to Downey Community Hospital, where a spokeswoman said he was listed In good condition. Mart KHled I• Crada SAN FRANCISCO CAP> A 71-year-old Snn Francisco man slammed his speeding auto into ihe rear of a streetcar killing himself and blasting the trolley off Its track!! and onto a sidewalk. Pollce estlmated the car was moving at an 80-mph cUp Sunday night when It crashed into the streetcar at a downtown lntersecUon. Firemen worked for 40 minutes to tree the driver from the wreckaee. He died at a nearbl hospital, police said. Pot S•tlflfllft-G•Ht" FRFSNO (AP) -A man accused of smu11llnc SOO pOunda of marijuana to Bakersfield from Mex· ico bas pleaded guilty in U.S. Diatrict Court here. John Raymond 8ullene, 32, of Quincy, reversed a previous innocent plea. He wUl be sentenced Jan. 23. ~loetw ~ A lo.t11 nl SS.000 .wt 0..r ll'Utl bf MCU...t by • combor\dllOfl or, ...... d ~ pr0!><"1Y. Costa 1r1.. • 870 E. l'ltb Street Oran-• Ull Town A Country Rd. .. ~ Suite 26 , Aatique Lovers! Meet me on 31st Street • 6'5-ITOO • 6'7..6871 You Are ~lally Invited To The Ct1nn•ty Village Christmas Walk December 2 & 3. 10 a.m ..g p.m. Refr .. l'lmet\ts ~ All Through The VIiiage Cannery Village PUBLIC HEARINGS WILL BE HELO AT IAf VIOi UllCEITAH SQOOl. 2531 llCltAll a,. WTAW GM .._ 21. 11711 llt Tlf£ MDlTJ. MflS£ llll At 7:JI r..1. * * * VITrlll BDUNTMl SClllt., 1125 ;.c11111 mm, tDSTl MESA II IUOtlEI 1, 1117, llf TII£ Man; MrlSL IDIM IT 7:.11 P JI. .. ... .. f I nut el' Good Investment A manugement oudit of Orange County government's seven-year $26.2 million computer 1ervlce1 contract is ~Qrrectly being 8ouaht before supervisors seelc a new contract for 1978· 79. Supervisors followed tho recommendation of the county grand jury last week in ordering the audit and setting aside $44,000 to pay for it. Grand Jury Foreman Henry Webber said in a letter to supervisors that various county oWcials had expressed dissat1sf act1on with services now rendered by the contractor, Comput er Sciences Corp. Their chief complaints <.·onccrned alleged programming errors, late arrival of reports and u lack of suppart from officials or the computer firm. The audit also will check the firm's compliance with terms of its county contract, point out possible future contract changes and determine if the firm lives up to computer industry standards. . The hiring or an o~tside a~diting fi~m off er_s c~~nty officials a good way to fmd out 1f complaints are JUsllf1ed. where improvements may be needed and how to obtain the best service for many m1 !lions of county taxpayer dollars. Bill Worth Forgetting r 1 On Jan. 1 thl' federal minimum wage of S2.30 a n hour '4-ill be increased to ::;2.65, then go up in annual steps until it reaches Sl.:l5 in 1981. 1 The incl'casc was lll'avil y backed by organized labor ~s a base from which tn push up wage scales generally to rpaintain the customary differential between skilled and unskilled labor. But t.>conomists and the business sector have viewed the minimum wage inc:rcasc differently. They see.it as an itiflationary step likely to increase consumer prices and reduce the availability of JObs for young people and other mcxperienccd or unskJllcd work~_r:s. ~ So it's not suprising to learn that the Small Business Department of the California Chamber of Commerce is mounting a dnvc to head off a state bilJ that would boost the minimum wage even higher and faster in California California's 1>rcsenl minimum wage of $2.50 <with special exceptions for minors and trainees> has been above the federal minimum for some time. Apparently in an effort to kc<.'P one .1 ump ahead of the nation. Sen Bill Greene. D Los Angeles. introduced a bill earlier this year that would Jump the slate minimum wage to S3 :m hour immediatelv. Additiorwllv the mt•asure. SB 002. would establish a ~J5·hour work week a nd require double time pay for all overtime And. unlike the federal law which exempts businesses with gross annu<Al sales of $275,000 or less, it makes no exemptions for small businesses It's estimated the new federal minimum may cost California more thun 250,000 jobs for women, minonties and workers over H5 as payrolls are reduced to offset the higher rate. The passage of a measure like SB 902 would make matters that much worse. Sen Grct•ne 1s r<.•portcd to be reconsidering his . 1•xaggl•rat<.•d \\'UJ.!l' proposal That \\-OUld be wise. Town Too Busy Constdl•r lhl· dilemma of ~1ayor Woodrow Glasscock Jr. or Hondo. Tl':\ The C'il11cns of Hondo Cpop 6,000) would li(\e to build a Sl m11hon c1v1c center But they couldn't possibly afford it without fodcral uid. Pknt\ ol other town!> have received federal aid for such worthy projects, but Hondo doesn't qualify. Its unemployment rate is only 3 percent. Federal assistance is available only to communities with an unemployment rat£ of 6 percent or more. Mayor Glasscock figured that just 180 more people on the town's unemployment rolls would accomplish that eligibility. But there aren't that many people ih Hondo who want to quit work. So the moyor. tongue in cheek, wrote a letter to President Cartel' requesting a list of "people who won 't work under any circumstances" from which he might ~elect 180 who would like to become bona fide unemployed citizens of I londo That \\a~. he fl~urcs. the new civic center would be in the ba~. ,, • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Piiot. P 0. Bo1C 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642--4321. • Boyd/Southpaws f Eleven percent of all public school desks have the writing arms nttached to the left $Ide for the benertt or 11outhpaws. It the Federal Government l0b1c over the welfare ray· rd,.e n ta , N e w Y o k. Mbssacbusetts and Caliro nla ~~Id wiod up with 51 percent of all that money else in print. 04d that it's a word so little used when what it l'neans ls so common every. .where. In the market, at the care, beside the ticket win· dow, wherever, there's more or that arrogant overbearing contumely going on than Ju11t about anything. What's f needed aroun<l here is an anti· • contumely campalp. Last week's doings tilted the heavily weighted scales on Richard M Nixon a lad closer toward a balance Jn judgment by history When a president is w;. i;assinated, especially while serving in crls·es, or has charisma. he is immortahzed. If a president resigns In disgrace , <Nixon> or Is defeated after one term Clloover ), he i s stigmatized ANVWAV, it will be a long time b~fore we ~ain some sen.'>e of balance on Nixon But we should rccull that m his first ll'rm. Washington experienced the la r~csl and moi.t..>"1olenl an tiwar cl('monstrations of the Viet n:.im period Nixon and ht:. A<lm11ui;trat1on were blam(:d for ovcrrca('ttni: to the mobs wh1l'h roamed lhc- ('arntul Indeed. lht.·rc• wcr!! C\'CO lawi.u1ti. lutcr for flj!ISc arrt-sl• and great W<'Cl'tnl! for tht• inno <'t•nt ~outh ipcurn•ratccl D c; p<>hcc uml frdnal law cnfort'c mt•nl ;1ulbnntacs tlul tU•t' l<•ar ..:as cluh-. and hanilcuH:-. to qllC'li v1olcnct• wJl<>n 11 broke out hgrr an tht• Ywlnam 1•n1 Nixon wa11 blamed •'al urully fur Earl Wat~rs Althoulfh he says it i,; not aimed nt Chief Ju~licc nose Bird It Is hard to view Attorney General Evelle Younger's pro. pos1ll to rotate the omce or chief ju11Uce among the memln!rs of the supreme court as anything other than a politlenl ploy de· !ligned to take some of the sting out of his earlier confirmation or her appointment. There is no quution that Youn&er l!i .still ~qulrmlng under tbc cratac1sms which h e generated when, ao1 the swing vote. he okayed Gov. ernor Jerry Brown's con- troversial ap- pointment to the high court. Tile opposition was based part• ly on tho 1fact she was totallr Jacking tn Judicial 1 experience bu&. more importantly as far as it affects Younaer. there were also bitter obJectfons amona the COfl· scrvativcs due lo her reputed liberal lcanin&:~. Unfortunately for Young~r. many of those conservatives are influential Republicans whose 'help he needs If he is to win that party's nomination for governor next June. In eicplanalion of his proposal he points out that Bird, age 40. can expect to be chief justice ror the next 30 years or longct. Although the foct wu evident at the time he voted for her con· firm ation it now ttecm it is bothering him. "It wnuld be .. ealthy to rotate the posJtion." ne said, observing that, "Il Iii one or tremendous power .. IF YOUNGER lhlnks that mlnimlzlngthepowerofthe chieC jusUce through rotation or the of- fice will serve to mollify those whose SUPPort bo eeks, It won't 1work. ln the linst,placo the die was cu.at by hi• acUori on tile connrmatlon and hia furthtr dialogue on the Juue can only keep the flam of resentment burning. ' That rtsenttnent has little to do with the fac~ that Bird was named chief jusUce. tt would have been just as bl.tter had she only been named a j1,1stice or Ute court. For in actuality the title is more prestigious than rnore powerful in comparison to the other justices.' U is only one of seven votes when it comes to de· ciding caself. True, the chief j ustice has certain ad · minfstrative duties not shored b:v the other court memberA and "erve s ag chalt'man or th\! .Judicial Cot.Inell. But the latter duty ha.t never bc!tn considered too onerous os evideneed by the fact the members ol the council !ierve without com pens at.ion. So rotation of tbe oCfice would do llttlQ l! anythlne to ctianse the tone tho court will taJ<e with Bird as a Justl~e. BUT EVEN assum1na that 1t would and that Youru~~r·• pro· pos~I would J(et htrn orr the h* with hf s ltepubU~an frt~ds Cor fotrri~r fnend10. the poliU~al re· .allb• is that it won•t t)appen. To put it into eUtct would re- q ulro a constitutional amend· ment to be first passed upon by a Lefialalurc d6minated b Democrats not JlJcely to,do Younger any fQVOts even it they liked his idea. It would then have to be submitted to the v<>ters for final approval whfch c:oUldl)•t be done before the very elechbn in which Youn1er Will seek eltc:· lion, U\lls too lutelobenefit him. ' AND nl£RE ls $rnllll reason to believe the le1islators, O~mocrols or Republicans. wou Id want to chango a system in Cullfomiil".,...ich has worked well at the federal level ror. illl of lts 200 plu~ ye ans. OBJTUARIES I RANGE COUNTY ' .. I lhould have klKJIA beUer tbaD to set Involved wttla someone with a custom-made ebatr lift!" . Deed• Notfe• Deot• Netlea . OIGEIF lmfMCu._ H..t Of MM'/ C.Ulolk IELSIE A. Ol!GEEF, ... 71. ,._,_ Olwth In 5-Q AM, GL Int..,,,... ruloent of Hunll109ton ~11. c.. Wiii be .t Tiw ~ MoM!Ci.tr PalWd away on ~Y ~' •• C:.metwy Ill Oii,.__, Ollhuallwi, 1'11 In WCN\a, SYrlllved b't' ,._,, Malll<o. Smlttl TuWll LAmt1 S...UMa dau9flltn ~ MCNalfl of Hllllt• MenllatYCllrtdort...S0-41JI, •11910ft 8ffdl, C.., Marwnt 8'1IWll tf MOtlA COfona, Ca., Maltlne l'lllen _. Mlw~ "Al'A•I. <>"TIZ MO!tA. r•IOafrt of l1;;'.;:t\l::'.:?Aa.;;;l2:~~:i"tJC:~ Dllff ............ H..,.t IMtl\ ol Hunll,,.,..,., IMdt, C... &.file AN, CL PllSMCI Hfay ett N- Utffn 9r..ocnlldrtn and llWW .,..c. ~tiff 11, 1'n et ..... of 42. ~ 11ra11dcl\lldren, al'° • b<.tMr _,.. ~of E,.MOH. MrlefGllll..,.,. Sc'°911ff'• of c.uba, Ml-I, --lllldPuCH'tlaMw•ofMbkO fMllN'tf $illtr Mabel Burel.cin of s..t Olego, c.a. Jllllm't' Mor'.....,. Mor-, PrtMIMo Fyner•I 5erVIO$ Wed ....... , HOV• Met• ..... RMe More. "-" Wiii lie ember ll, 1911 at 1.00 P.M. • P•c.e l\ald~y~rfl, 1tl7at61ao l:lrOlll•n SrnllM' C,l\aptl with !Wv. P.M. elT,,.l"""*ul .. eHNtfOfMary Cl\arles Smilll of the CAivary a...et .,_ c.tl\Ollc Ow'dl In S...1.9 ~<a. Mau t1<1all1>9. lnlttm<rnl Good SN...,d .. Olrl1tlan &urltl wlll .._Mid Tu.Ider Cemetery. Piere• 8ro11,.r1 Slnlllll' Ho,..mllW n, 1t77 M t :JO A,M. • TIW Mot'l.,.ry t1lre<1on .. F•mlly W19"b lmmecul• .. H-1 Of Mary Catl\ollc OOflatioM ba inade 10 ,,_ •-11· CllUfClt In SMIUI Alla, Ce. Interment COMMITTEE MEMBERS -Elected t-0 serve on Disneyland's 1m Community Service Awards C.Ommittee are, seated from left, Mrs. James H. Keeley, Laguna Ni1Uel; Amin David. Jr .• Anaheim. Chairman; Miss Kathleen Ballou, Brea; Standing from left, Dr. Morton Fierman, Fullerton and Jolln D. Lusk, Irvine. Not shown is Mrs. Charles 13auer, HunUJ18ton'Beacb. cl\arlly. .,.Ill be et 1lW ~ MunkllNI MOllA C:.m.tery In Oii~. 010.,.,.t!W, DIANA MORA, resloent •f1S-W Maxf<e.StnlthTulhlllLM!lllS...l•An• A ds AN, C•. p_...,ayon~rll, Monliary-..awJW_.Q1. WIWP, it77 at t11e age°' >. L.ovlne ....,.._., SAMOOlt ~ • EvaMora,9Aflddeuglllet'ofG<llUermo ANDREW SANOOft, p11Mad away -PN Of'ti&#«•ol-.l<o,•l• .. ,of November It, lfn at l.MAnetl•• N .. Jimmy MMe, Etwll• Mtw11>, Fr..CIKo Holpllel. A rn!Otnt .. C-.. oe1 Mar, p l -· Mtl Raia -·· R-v wlll.. ... •• _ ...... Dy ........ .ie-. a l\tld ~ ~ 21, lf17 M •:• .... yecf IMIWf Of o.wtcf '-"'-' Of ne P.M.atThtllTWYl«\llateH-1otMWy lrYIM, C. .• Rkltolrd S.'Slftd!W of Los UlllolkC-dll11Sen .. .Ane,Ce..MeM Allgel ... CL, .loneUIM A. S..... ofl> olCllrhtl#&rlalwlllbe,.,...T_.., hr~I~, Ce., encl Mk)orta J. fo..-r Nowmbtr n. 1tn at 9;l0 A.Mo .. TIM OfCorOftadtl~,C...AllO-'tlwellll't' El d four 9rMldtlll!Ofwn. S.rvk.es' wlll be ecte ----------T,.tOay, ~ 22 ilt 11;111 AM In Pacllk View "*'-l•I Peril Cl\epel, DNLVPU.OT Ttstimoniea given No collection Chlld care provided 7 l'I , , II ' ' ) I CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NKSGIVINO SERVICE 11 A.M., 8th & Olive • Huntington Beach d ·HAM ' ,...., ••• ttWll ........, Y• lffl .... GaMU 11'"5 HOT TOO IAILY TO OIDBl . ..... a. ......... -..... ,.... , .. , .. . 1-fljltt ............................ . At4D YOUll OWM ntAt«SGtYIMG 6 CHllSTMAS DINNa ::: • Jleady to 5er'ft with B~ 'n SDtce Glue • Splral SUced ' tor euy ler'Wul • We P~e and Ship from Coat to Cout • J'u11 s.vtce Oelleat.eeMn • ~ OMeSe. ._...c:a.rwe Wiim ,_..... f&.IM'ftNCS NOWIN .... •¥lliiiiit~ 1100 LC.-...,. 11111 Hwy• 111 lA HA8aA ,..._r..1e19 tZUS.lf• P' .. UU)IJ""'9 ............ J41t Me.,...._... 1• .. w ACllOM-.. UICHO lllACE i.ore•• ' 014) ·-• . C11i) W-2411 . ::re:= (714) 341-3194. ~ "B FAMILY COlOHIAL FUHHM. Ofll~""9 WIU lie R.oel 8enwd K1"9. In llou ot llowerl, temlly praten con-.:..::=::::::=======::...::.===::=~====:.;:;:j::::=!:======================== tr1111111on1toH«t1orRtt_,...,.,... Amin David Jr. of'" HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893·3525 'AClftC VIEW MIMOllAL P.4U Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1f1c View Drive Newport. California 644-2700 McCOIMJCK MOITUAllH Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laouna Hills 788-0933 .. San Juan C3p1strano 495-1776 IALTJ..IHGHOM PVMUAL HOMI Corona del Mar 673-94&0 Costa Mesa 846-2424 llUUOAOWAY MOllUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 SMITH TUTHtU. LAMI COSTA MHA CHAN&. 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • MM888 · Santa Ana ChaDel 618 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 547-4131 lltlltCI noTHHS SMl'TMS' MOtlTUUY 827 Main St. Huntington Beach 536-6539 PUBUC NOTICE FICTITlOUS•UllM• .. MAMA STATEMENT c Tilt followtno ~'°" I• ooino 11Utl-neu u : REOWINO Gt.ASS CRAFT, SIO 2'111 Stffft, ~ Btacll, C..llfom ... Mervin H. ee1v111e, 1'10 South Prot.-cl Oft ... , POt-., C.lltomla ""' Tl\lf ~ 15 c.endw<..0 Ir/ M 6fto ctMdYN ~H.Belvllle ,.1\11 .....,,_,, we tlleO wltll 1tla Couflty Olf1l ol 0r-. COllnl't' on '6o¥• •"'41tr "· 1"17. • ....... ,.,,..ltMCIOnnoa Cont oall, Pilat. ""· 21, ..... DK.'· 12.1'17 ...n ;11!.~·~ ~.:C.:.4: ~s.i~:.i.:, Anahei~ has been elect·, CM1cAtr ane1 8IOod R~ u2 ... ed cha1rcnan of Dis- e=':t!!.":'~::-.t:= neyJ.an~·_a_}977 Com· 1or1. munaty ~ce Awards "0•itSaN c mm'tt ' JULIA O. PEDERSEN, retldent Of O 1 ee. Cos•• MaM, c.. p-away.,. NOii· The six-member com-::,~~~.:o~..;w~:o .. he!: mK illhJee alsoBalllnclu~f Mias Meu, c.. M4I 1wo -.-w. "" at een OU o Brep, Pffef-., Ari_. an0 ,,_ L. Mrs ·Charles Bauer of ~ ot c:>reoon. Uv'ee ·--• .,.., ••• ..-....wcN111ren. "'-°' Hunt!Aston Beach, Dr. :: ~=:w T,~'!f:,:':1...a:t Morton C. Fierman of St.Joad\1tn'1CeVw11cOM'c.l\lftGD1U Fulle~ Mrs. James =.,-:;=.~-:.~~ff: Keeley of Laguna c:.tv•ry ¥•_.._ "' LD11 ~ Niguel and John D. Luak c.. En..,,..neuc~ ~. of Newport Beach v~ MoM9Y 1r-•1:00 P.M. • Mel ,__, l;CIO A.M. to 4:00 P.M. == CA11&A MIM F _ _. DISNEYLA.ND•S v.,... Community Service MICHAi!&. DAVID VAIL8, '°""'*' Awards proe:ram is en-,....., .. a.-..,, .... -.. ... t . 'ts 21.s , HarllOI' HIQI\. PftMCI away on Frklay ermg I t year an(l No ... mbtr 11. 1'77 wc1ot111, et u.. -will llJ'OVide $100 000 to « .ao. ~1...0 ll'f ""' ..., .... ""'. " . • Mrs. o av10 s. 11•11• •nd bro1ner various Orange County Cllrlalopll•r ll•llt. Cremation •nd commUIUly service Or• prtv••• -·.i. . u· gamza ons. This amount represents a $25,000 ln· c rease over 1976. The money will be dlatribut- ed through a $20,000 out- s landing award, six special judges' awards MIAMI CAP) -Dr. bffering $5,000 each, and Manael Artlase, •s. a 50 category awards at foriner oftlcer ln Fidel $1,000. . Cutro's revolutionary atmy who turned qatn.st TEN CATEGORIES Castro and helped areofferedforf.artlclpa- launch the abortive Bay lion: cultura • educ•· of Pigs invasion, died of tlonal, service for youtb. llver cancerThursdaJ at accompliahcnent1 by Miami's American youth, special health Hospital. services, accompllab· ments by support NEW YORK <AP) -groups, social communi· CbarlM E. Loebmaaa, ty service, civic com- 83, who wttb hia mother. munlty aervice. environ· Frieda. founded the ment and ecology aad women's fashion chain diversified community bearing their name, died service. Thursday. Loehmann's Recipients of the .. .. . Let US Help ~ I ..• A father discovers his adolescent daughter is ex~erimenting with drugs. He doesntt know what to do. ••. A-lonely wife sobs into a pillow. Her marriage is breakihg up. Her elderly parents h ave become a burden.' She can't cope. .•. A midd(e·aged man with a good job shakes uncontrollably as he reaches for a bottle of booze. He tried to stop drinking, but faifed. ,, ' _ .. - .. ( ~ .. (' -.. .. f/ ... 4 ,. : . '-'''' -,. I "' ' .· ' " ': .1. . . . If ., u I These scenes are common everyday experiences. Al I of us have problems and we search for their solutions:· ~ometimes,we succeecf. Other times we can't. Then we need professional° help. Where to find this help can become a problem. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helQs people. find answers to their problems. ,1 I PROBLEM TALK StjOPS are free counseling and referral se.rvices located in Orange County. started selling clothes by awards will be an-5 ff I h h 1· f I Th · famous designers at cut-nouncod in March 1978. PROBLEM TALK SHOP are here to o., er yo~ he p t roug counse mg C!nd re erra . ere as no ratepriceslnl.920. Any Orange County or· charge for our service to you. We refe• to both public and prwate agencies in Orange County. Facih- iaobatlon wishing to 24 h6 b Th t I BROCKTON. Maas. partlclpateintheawards ,ties to care for lndivid4als are available on a · ur asis. a means we can hep y9u whenever you CAP>-Dewey D. S&oae, ·program should cootact need help. Appointments are not necessary. If you prefer to make an appointmen~, day and evening 77, a businessman who the committee's record-belped Ol'lanize tbe u. tnr secretary at (71') hours are available. (Office hQurs: 8:30 a.m. -5:00 p .m·., Monday through Friday. Jn extreme legal migration of Jews 533-44.S6,extenslon538. emergencies, a counselor can be reached after 5;00 p.m .• and on weekends.) ~ .. ----------into Palestine after----------' '" PUBUC NOTlCE World War II, died • ':-. / ~ir. ----Saturday. Let Us HefPi W1Wt.,. "< • ricnnouHuMNus •• eoMat,.. lt I NAMIUTATaMaNT 'fe.ftllNtni_...,..,,....,_ NEW YORI( (AP> -NMtnwuw. "°"':~uNT••H••o• TAx ~·· Juz slnser Tedd.I Kin•, ,.... Crisis Intervention -When a problem is so big or soc1A11u, nos c.r--. '"'"°· s2, whose reeordlna of complex that you are unable to see alterna: CMl!w.Otz1W ' •' ... W d f J ' 1 O.r•ld J, tMM. 11os ~ g,a r • on er u L==::.::::::====~I t• t lk 'th f · f h I 1 '"''"°·~w.. • became a b1t in tho mid· aves, a 1ng. w1 a pro esS1ona may e p. • Mll•H• ...... 17fJ C.rtMI, 19505 died Fn.tu (. I 'o;':;~'l!~--.ta.1". ' · Marital Ois~ord '-A ~ounselor helps establish a · ..-...,.,_...... $10100 ni• =.;,;.-:::,,.., ..c11i.. st~rting point and guidance for husband and QiulltY Oft .. Or .. <ltunty ... ...,. , & ..,.,11.ttn. ' ~ 155. 26 A Wf1e. h91111Nd Or ... a.. OlllJ ....... ..... 21 ..... DK. •• t2,tt11 ..... 7t Alcohol and Drug Problems -More and more· p~opfe are becoming depe~dent on alcoh<?l,_ and other drugs. Specialized medical care anq . a treatment program are needed. lndivid'Ual Psychiatric Problems -Sometimes we .. feel.that our world· is cavin~ in·on us. Tension';. anxiety. and 1ear may keep us from copi~J effectively wit~ everyday life. Psychiatric he~~ may be your first step toward healthy Hvi~"- 1 • . . • • . , ... • ""t . . .. .... ··' .. '.,. " • Ill l .,,. SAN FRA~CISCO <AP> - Those octen-W\l\otlced linemen had a day of t)ory as the Los Angeles Rams ended the San Francisco 49ers' four.game win· ning streak. "If we had gotten the ball in at the end or the nnt half 1l would have given us a big lilt," said 49ers coach Ken Meyer, whose. team's spirits were instead somewhat defla~d by • Rams' goal·llne stand. · ''We had a goat.line stand last week. too, and we knew the 49ers didn't have to score," detenalve tackle Larry Brooks said after Sunday's 23-10 victory whtch left the Rams two games ahead of Atlanta in the NFC West. With a first down al the Los An.l(cfcs 1-yard line arter a pass Oakland Loses QB And Game interference pen tty 1" the end zone, the 49era ft&u.red to make a touchdown and ito the acore at 10.10 before halfttnie. Three run- ning plays later they were at thO 2, then Jlm PlUnkett was tushed hard on a pasa which went in· complete. "We thought about goine for a field goat but believed we COUid aet lt acrou Ute goal ll1ae," con· eluded Meyer. · Two plays lntO the second hall Lawrence McCutcheon.....iaced through a hqe hOle off left tackle and scored on e 42·yard touchdown run, fl vine the Rams a commandingl7·3lead. "lf I made a ereat block on that play. l guess 10 other 1uys did, too,'• said tackle Doug France, · who received one of I.he game balls presented after the victory. The Rams trail~ 3·0 early ln the game, but Cullen Bryant 'a 26-yard punt retur~ led to a fleld goal by Rafael SepUen, and Pat Thom as blocked a punt by the 4~rs' Tom Wittum to set up a 26-yard touchdown pass from Pat Haden to rookie Billy Waddy. "We kept coming up with alltM big plays -the blocked punt, the reverse on the aecond hall kickoff and the bll run by McCutcheoo," said coach Chuck Knox. Bear on t he ltJ°"e Walter Payton ot the Chtcago Bears established a Na· tional Football League single game rushing record with 275 yards Sunday against Minnesota. See page B·2 for further details. MINNESOTA AT CHICAGO - Walter Payton shattered 0. J. Simpson's slnile-game NFL rushing record by gaining 275 yards and a touchdown ln 40 car· riea to lead the Chicago Bears to a 10· 7 victory over the Vlkin1a. Payton scored on a 1-yard run in the second period and Bob Thomas booted a 37-yard field go ill. Minnesota averted a shutout when Matt Blalr blocked a punt and picked up the ball and ran 10 yards for a touchdown. Tom Hicks intercepted to stop a Vikings threat In the third Quarter after Minnesota had CLEVELAND VS NEW YORK GIANTS -In a penalty-pJaped issue the Cleveland Brown• out· luted the New Yortc Giants, 21·7, at Ea:stRutherford, N.J. Nine holding penaltles--1b against the Browns and three on the Giants-bad both offenaes stuttering. Linebacker Gerald Irons re· turned an interception 53 yards for a tc)Uchdown to snap a 7·7 tiff in the tblrd quarter. DENVER AT KANSAS CITY - A tremendous goalllne stand In the last minute preserved a 14·7 victory for the Denver Bron· cos over the Kansas City Chiel1. Kansas City wu at the Denver l ·yard Unewlthafirstdown after a 51-yard run bJ Raymond Burka. Louis Wright stopped Burks short of payd.irt and then two straight plunges by Ed Bonne~t Bags First Major Race Victory ONTARIO, Calif. <AP) -Nell Bonnett cut under Richard Petty with five laps to go and managed to keep his Dodge ln front the rest of the way for n dramaUc two-car length victory Sunday in the $165,000 500 Grand National stock car race. National champlon Cale Yarborough was flve len«ths back in third. It was the first super speedway \ ictory of Donnell's 2-year-old Grand National caretrL J.n onl~ his first rtce at tM~:'S-ml'fe Ort- tario Motor Speedway. Bonnett had a lead of more than eight seconds over Petty with 11 laps remaining when Benny Parsons apun out and Yarborough swerved oH the track t.o avoid him. That brought on a brief caution per,tod durina which Petty took on Cteah tlres. Bonnett did not make a aervtce slop, electing instead to protect his lead. When the green ll&ht burned again, Petty used his tracUon ad- vantage to reel in Bonnett and pass him goln& into the thlrd tum, slx laps trom the end. But Bonnett Uned Petty's Dod&e back up In his sights and re-passed a half lap later. On the final lap, Petty aiain made a bid goln& into turn three, pulling up on Bonnelt's rear bumper. He moved out to try and overtake Bonnett on the outside, smoking his tires badly as he fought for tracUon. But Bonnett held his line and carried his slim margin the final quarter· m lie to victory. Yarborough. who bad to 1et around traffic before he could chase the leaders, had loo much ground to make up and not enougb time. The. nose piece on his Chevrolet was hanging on by a piece of tape after the set-to with Parsons. TM llnlS4'1111 ~·11 SOO Gr...S H•l'-1 M«• <w ·-el .... 2.S "'''• OftWTM> ~""' ~•y, "'"' lyllf "' C¥, ·~ ~ ... •nd ~·· ... .,'9' ..,..0; I. Hell eennttt, 'Oodge, 200 lepe, 1JI.~ mlln "'-'· Z. Altl\Md f9tty, 00d99, 200. J, CM Y~. O.vro111, l00. ... ·-......... """1, 200. ). Oevl4 ~.Ma"ury, 1tt. 4. Ol<ll ~OOlls, Fon!, ltt. 1 Bot>byAJl'-l,~. , ... •• AIO.y Audcl,Chevrotet, "' ' Jem~ Hyl-, Chevr-. ltl 10. Rkll Oltldrftl. Ole!orO!et. 1t1 • II A.J.,,.,.,~1'7. U. 11.nny P.._, OleVt'Olet, 1,7, 1l. Jee-~ For4, .... 1•. o .... Mllf'Cb,. Ghevrolet. 1•. H. Aolend 'Wlodyll.a, O.vn>let, 1'6. ... "'·'*~ Dodgt, 1t$. 17. T/tlW Scott, Qevrolel, ttS. 11, HeryY Jlfflf'IOll, l'onl, 1'S. 19. 9IMy ArrlftOl;Dfl. oo.io.. '"· 20.J.O.McOuftle,~ HO, 21, O.K. Ulrld\.Q19W'Olft. 1'0. 22. 'fornGMe,Ford;,.., 2J. 8111 Olalonlt, Olwrollt, , .. U.Jtnt'tGllUlrle,Otevf'ltet, 11S. u. ltldlenl'NNM, Ole¥1"91et.17S. 24. loMy il!Mley, F9N. I~ 21. Ed Nelrt,Oodee. tat. 21. Joflft ~. OllYT'Olet. uo. 2'. Oerrell Waltrlc>, CMWOlet, 111. :IO. Ooft GfW!n, OlevrOltt. 1 It. JI, Aenlll<Gee,~ 103. U. Cetll Gordon, OleotrOMt. 101. ;&J. Vh~•~lfeln1401110,01evre1et,~ U. Nenn Ptimer, Dodgt,U . ' as. ErnleStitf'ly, ~$4. J6. JOM Kleper, OleW'Oltt. 50 JI. EIMlellf.av-, OleY,..i.t. JO. ». ~m Sornrnett. CMYf'll._ ._ "· CIM'll ...,,Olev ....... . olO, A991f'McOWM'f, F .... ,20. .. 1. 8 111klwnll1. 0.Vrolat, IS. 40-*Alf'-I.~.·- NEW YORK JETS AT BALTIMORE '-Bert Jones pa11ed for 322 yards, includ.lna TD tosses of 53, 33 and 28 yants, to direct the Colt.I to a 33-1.Z rout over the New York Jets. Jones completed 11 straight passes in the first half and LydeU :Mitchell added 52 yards to up his career total lo 5,212 yards. replacing Lenny Moore as Baltimore's all-time rUMh.er. MIAMI AT CINCINNATI - Quarterback Ken Anderson crossed up Miami wlth a triple reverse, firing a 29-yard TD pass to Ught end Bob Trumpy with 2: 35 left to cisp a see-saw struggle and Uft the Ctneln.aatl Bengals to a 23·17 victory. Earlier Chris Bahr kicked field goala of 44, 43 aJJd 42 )'ards in a tense stru1&le that saw the lead cbanse hands sh' times. Mlaml led, 17·16, on a 3$-yard field 1oal by Garo Yepremian, but the Bengals ralll.ec:l behind Anderson's passing and a circus catch by VUla Park H.lgh prod11ct Pat MclnaJly. HOUSTON AT 8EA1TLE - Dan Pastorin! found Ken Bur· rough with a 13-yard TD pus and Tom Dempsey booted a paJr of field goals to lead tbe Houston Oilers to a 22·10 victory over the Seahawks. Putorini completed. 21 of 36 passes for 237 yards and Dempsey's kicka were iood frooi 27 a41d :rt yardl out Jfter two bad been partJally blocted. Seattle bad a 3-0 lead on John Leypoldt 'a 51.·Y ard field goal. NEW ENGLAND AT BUF· PALO -Sam Cunningham scored two fourth q\larter TDs on runs of 31 yards and one yard to help the New Enilaod Patriots keep their pJayo{t hopes alive with a 20-7 victory over the Bills. A meager turnout of 27,B watched the BUia fall to 2·8. Cw:minsham'1 31-yard score capped a 76-yard drive that put the Patriot.a in oommand. Area Tennis Te81D8 Open CIF Playoffs HAYES RAPPED. • • '. anchorman at CoJumbUI statSoQ WCMH·TV. called for actJon by Hindman. once Hayes• ustatant coach, JD a commentary &Rirtbe game . .. Ohio state bad two la:a~\ sames to wtn thla •Haob, • ~ told hta vtewera, reterrtna to Oklaboma and Mlchl1l11. "Woody, not the players, lost both of them." Allen Hid the television swttchboa.rd lit up afterward.. "The opln.lon was about evmb' divide<! Ob Hayes," be 11td. Bill LlDIQn, the •eek end 1P<JN anchorm•n for WTVN·TV ill ColUIDN, liO crlUcl#iid Ha,.a1 ·~• blt eoae~ •* t.be Bll· Ten MbOOl la "a eluate ex.a1:DP1e· q( th tall •111N Wt dOt. •• ... ......, O-,T'9dl'nl ,,.IT RAC&. IM,.l .. H I • ~ J W.-0.-& -· Ollmlftt. .. _.a-. ,,_Oell;N <etwl 14AO t.tO •·'° ~SKlllfO'~( ..... llMltAO ''° R...., A.a. Ulllfal 22.JO -r--..-.-_ -.. _, ,-_-_ B1 ~TONMo&KOWM • u ~.,. bOuiht aDf 1toca Gr boedi ~. JOU 'ii .. not • tmw Americn. PUbU.C put.tclpauai 16 u.e ciu ... ~-. : ltnoW1l u the N.w Yortc St.Oek &c~e as.is tall Ott ~.a 1,.: drlbb~ loavln& th action to th P!6(1AioDat.. , : Thia J>'1 apathy 11 refiect*! ln the tnt.Ndlble declm~~. L • tJon or the ranks or broktraae hOuffl. It'• as lf a maeb~·. •. aunn• W wallcod into a crowded room and •tarted •PtaY.:-: tnc. ~·. NOINDVSTaYTHATlkNOWotba11ufteredtbe1tttt-•. Uon lnnlcted on the aecurttl fteld dmin& the past tln ·. yeara. To 10ok on the brltht elde, when the Securltlta J.D. • dusl17 Aaocfatloc catbers in Boca Raton, Fla •• OQ Dec l I • for Ill annual conclave, the1~~u not haye to wony abo\a• · ftndln1 tnaQOt accommocla~tor ~nta. • There --·t be real.llN.dcms from AJuandv fl Co.; l>.H. Blalt: C&rJlsle&«feO>ppet: De1"'61d; du Pont, Glore, For•an: EdWanh & Hanley; M.J4d«»dotf, Col1ate & Co.; Newb9rcer, Loeb&Co.; .iameslL OUpba&lt; r~. smi~ Steln•r Rouse & Co.; 1• r: Wallach •co.. Walaton; ,. ~ . tad Artbur Wejaen-Money .~J: berger. They are amoaa U\e 140 tlc'okeraa• firms Tree Which have been elimlnaltdadnce um Those companies r cloted their doors. An even treater number of brokera .. firms have dl1appeared via the mereer route, lumlrtl an in i' dustry that used to be called a "Uabt UUle club" lnto an1r eveh tighter little club. / There have been so many Incestuous amal~amaUona • that n ·s difficult to trace the roots of some Clrma. Tak•"~ house that rues tocfay under the flaa or Shearson Hayderi Stone tnc. Here's how ltevolved: r A PAaTNERSHJP CALLED COGAN, BerUnd, WeUI &l • LevlU wu formed in 1960. ln 1987, it acquired Bematebi• Macaulay, an investmeat adviser. In 1970, It absorbed a huae brokerage house, H~ Stone, takln1 ltl aame. lft · 1913. It at.orbed another b1Gkera1e house, ll Hentz. tn~ · ·1974, It merged wltb another huae brokerace n1m, Sbo&NOn ff am mill. Lut )'QI' tt acquired LamJOD Bros. and tbll year it aw allowed Faulkner. Dawkins & Sullivan. • Another amalgamation in tbe works will jotn Loeb: Rhoades & Co. wlth Hornblower, Weeki. Noyes & Trask, itaelf the result of several earUer aiarriaaes. Robert H.B. Baldwin, ehalm\lft-elecl of the Securitl fndust.ry A.San. lftd president of Morgan, Slanl~y & Co., prer~ dicta that 2S to .SO .more flMM wllf disapppear within ~: comlntiC year throuah mergers or ocqulsillons. • AT ONE TIME THERE WBRE more than 5w1. brokerage firms that dkl b\,lslness wllh the public. Toda~ <". 'there are fewer than 375. And two-thirds or the business ~ done by~ firms. While the brokera1e fraternity lov~ to aee ouaer c:om- P nl .. sell stock to the publlc, lt doetn 'l take it.a own ad vie~ J Onl.Y pin Wall Street firms have atoek In the bands Of tha public: Merrill wnch, E.F. Hutton, Baebe, Paine Webber,, Dean Wlttert.:.. Flnt Boat.on, Shearson Heyden Stone, Reynolds Ud uona\dson LuOtln • . NewBBee~r To @pen cJ.an. J5-::. Beach·GarCield, an S8·mUllon. ntne·acre shopping cent.er lhut wtll contain Ralph'• Supert'l'\arket and Sav-or\ Drugs, ht expected to open Jan. 15, um. at the aquthwesl corner ot Bea~h Boulevard and Garfleld Avenue, Hunt· lntton Beach. , The Buccola Co. proJett tncludes locations for 15 1pecla)ty shops anct U.S. 1.ffe SavJnp. :J'be center: if 90 per- cent 1oased, ac~ordlng to Coldwel~ Banker Coaunerclal Brokerage<:o., Newport Beach. • • Scheduled ror the center are HaJhnark Cards, Jl"unrest Travel, Val's Jewelry, Scandanavlan Bakery, Ray's HeaJt.ti, 1• and NUlr'IUon C<lnter, C.ou.nt.ry Road AaUques <ol Lacuna>. • The Clothe& Une women's 1hop, RunUnJlA>n Beach RaJty,~ a men '1 1hop and Norton 'a Dry Cleanlns. Other a tore lttQ from 1200to 2100 square feet an avalla~le, ---,._., Sffte,,_ I• Tlte D°"'10114P~t!e,..9ft· .... s~·'"•"' ~w, ..... °""'"._._ .... "'w Va.ti( CAf')o ~"'· ~ ~I '-ti m I l~-m·;~ !J· ... ~:~-~-~~J l\lfltWk ~::::;:. J u .... ~~It.:::.:·:.:·::.:·::::.:·.:·:: J!l.- oew C:..:'9::::: t" "~:::: ...... l !1~·~ :1'········ 11 ,.,. • ~ Wlaat Stocll.ll Did ~.'.'.'.'.'."' f • ~ = ~ HI.~ V°"k IA~) r..... ... . ' . s1"' • --..!~' "'::~/ • "' "-•....... 1• • t '9 • ~ ~~"'" ._ •u ~·ti.I:::::;. =::. .. v:.= ~ .5 . ::::m~~ ,. ·I .. WMTAM•• OID HIW ~O..IC CAl"I : . f-1~ NEWS "TMWlah" THl!AVEHO!M "A9turn Of Tti..Cybtfnautt" tD MICKEY MOUSI CLUI 8UPIRMAN 81!8AM& tTREEJ' VIL.LA Al.EGA& 6:30 D ABO NEWS 8) BEWrTCHED "Cheap Ch9ap" Q) ADAM-12 ''Venice Dtvltlon' • D HOOGEPOOGe lOOGE 1:00 C88 NEW8 NEWS EMERGENCY ONl!f When a foreign dignitary btoomee "'· °'· Bt9d(ett It &Med to cure him • • 0 NFL FOOTBM.L The Green Bey Peckert t.oki. the Washington Redtklnt at Wuhlngton'a A.f'. Kennedy Stadium G MOVIE *** "Lut Summer" (1969) Barbara Hershey, Richard Thomaa A newcomer changu the character of a small. close group or teenagera vacationing on Fire Island. (2 hrs.) GJ THE BRADY BUNCH "Room At The Top" Q) THE ROOKIES The rookies try to break up a robbery ring. fDZOOM al> FOODS FOR THE MODERN FAMILY "Convenience Mixes" 8:30 fJ MOVIE * * * "Soldier Of Fortune" ( 1953) Clart< Gable, Suaan Hayward. A htfd--drlnklng gun runner rescuee en American newt photograph« Imprisoned in Communlat China. (1 hr., 30 min.) a» MY THREE SONS "Charley. The Plgeoo" • fD OVER EASY Imogene Coca; eocletal pres- sures on Mlf...atMm tor the elderly; special telophone aervtcea; muelc, dance and e)(erclae therapy. '2 FAMILY PORTRAIT "Changing Rolee" CJ) CBS NEWS 7:00 D NBC NEWS 9 LIARSCLUB a» ILOVELUCV "The Audition" m> ADAM-12 Motorcycle• and a hellcoptel' add excitement to the Adam-12 team's day. • MACNEIL I LEHRER , REPORT G YOGA WITH MADELINE (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 0 DAVID HOROWITZ CONSUMER 8UYLINE D N!WL~ OA._,E · e THE BRADY BONCfi Bobby fall• fr()m • ,,.. and ~r.ina his ankle and becomu afraid to climb. I LET'S MAK.EADIAl 28TONIOHT ''t,lke Any ot'IBd, Ollly More 60" 19 FRENCH CHEF "Fi.h In Monk's Clothing" (R) (I) $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE 8:00 fJ Cl) A CHARLIE BROWN THANKSGIVING Peppermint Patty lnvlfe9 her· self to the hollday teut forcing Chartle Stown to enlltt the questionable Htlatance r of Snoopy and Woodatock In pro- ducl ng tfle moat novel Thanklglvlng menu sine. 1e21. (R) D LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE "The Fighter" Charle• lngaJlt kayoet an aging prlz.Hghter (Moses Gunn), but hla jubllatlon turns to grave concern when he realizes t~ man J9 MVerely Injured. Raymond St. Jacque., Ketty l.Mter guest star. (1 hr .• 30mln.) 8 MOVSE. ** "The L041Q ChaN" (1972) Ben Murphy. Buddy EbNn. pep1cta the exploit• of "Kid Cutry and H..,,nlbal Hayea." (2 hrj,) ! JOKE~'S WILD CAROL BURNETT AND ENDS ' ~t: Stev• Lawrence. e MOVIE * * * "The Joker It Wiid" ( 1957) Frank Sinatra, Jeanne Ratba911 Gatide Crain. The llte ol the balCM&d ~median J09 E. Lewis la depicted. (2 hrt.) fJI THEAGEOF • UNCERTAINlY . "lAnd And People" The rote of land In determining ~th end pO¥erty I• ln~IQated. • me BESt °"ERNIE KOVACS The gorilla ballet; an Italian ~·and• Bela Bartol< pi.ce. 8:30 B Cl) WCILLE BAU ConcerMd about a eummer camp t« u~ ehll· dren, Lucy Whittaker (l..,Ucllle 8.,1> tpMJca to the President ctunno • Whit• Houte phone.In ahct endt up lnvttlng him to her horl\e. Ed McMahon, Gale Oordoti, Vivi.an Vance, Steve Alten and Mary WlckM guat star. D CONCENTRATION m t12a.ooo QUESTION G OVER EASY Imogene Coca; societal pres- "''" on Mlt-eateem for the elderly; tpeolal telephone Ml'Vicet; mu11C, danc. tl'ld . •xerCIN therapy. (R) 8:000 MOV1E **~ "~lute" (1971) Jane Fond1, Donald Sutherland. -' dettcu.e get• Involved with • call-gftl and 1r1.. to find the pttaon who tried to murder het. (2 hrs.) D IP!;CIAL "South Africa: A Vtew From • The l!Wld•" Thlt dooumentaty preaeots an up.to.dat9 took Id • the tunnoo that ,. on~no South Ah1ca't wtilte mlnortfy g__overnrnent. ID MERV GRIFFIN Guest.: George Burns, Bllly Cryalal, Jadti. Vernon, Edwin Nftm1n. • MOVIE * * ''The Woman On Pier 13'' By JAY SHARBtJTI' LOS ANGELES (AP> -You may be wonderlni what., become of Lt. Columbo, the cop in th~ rumpled raincoat, the IU.V who start.I to leave a 1u1pect, then nails blm with just one more quesUon. Well, torueht, NBC will air a ~mlnutj show, "Try and Caleb .Me." Peter Falk b the star, his raincoat ta amonc U\e supportlfta pJayen ind WI algnali the 1tart of a seventh "COlumbq" seaaon. <Channel•. 9:30p.m. > • 11:001DeCl>O NEWS HOU.YWOOO CONNECTION D MOV1E *** ·"L.ut SumrMr" (1989) Barbara Hershey, Richard Thomas. A MWCOfMr chano- the ctiaractet of • small, ctOM group of teenager• vacationing on Fire Island. (2 hra.) m THB 000 COUPLE Felix tries to reform after hi• finicky attltud9 toward• food ruin• an otherwlae pf..,.m dinner with hi• el(.·wtfe. G) HON&YMOONE"Ra Finding a auftcJM crammed with monay, Ralph goea on e epeitdlng .,,,,. untri ,,. n.mt Into the counterlettera that crammed the eultcaee. fD DtCKCAV£TT Guest: SWectlah ttlm rand tt•oe act,... Bibi Anderuon. ID SPE<:IAL "N onaJ Women'• Confer• ence 19n" Edited COYer9 of tour~ ot demoeratJc uaem~ bllei 81'111 w0ibl\<>P9 hitd In Houston and attended by mat• than 20,000 women and men. 1 ~.(I) C88 LATE MOVlE . **~ "Lel't Switch" (1974) Barbara Eden. Barbara Fetdon. A frustrated hbuMWtfe and an unhappy buatneawoman meet at a Clua reunion and decld9 to usume each other'• roJ•. (R) the same limo. I can't make movies andahoot 'Columbo.' " INDEED, HE HAS been mak· ing movies. LUt year lt was Neil Simon 'a "Murder by Death," thla ·1ear It's Slmon'• "The Cheap OetecUve," and next February he start£ rllmina "The Great Brink's Robbery." As for "Columbo." which ln its ttrst few aeason1 aired el1ht ., TONIGHT I Guett hoat: G~ Glen CMlpbell, Bob Ueckw, Vlotor BuOriO, llty Tomiln. • LOVE. AMERICAN 8TY1.E "LOYe And The 8actt I Love And The Trip" G MOV1E *** "I Walk ·AIOM" (1948) Uaabeth Scott, 8Urt Lancutw. A mob9ter IMtnt \hrough ex~ t~t his tough tac· ttce dan't Wotk .. wen ea they one. did. (2 hrt.) G) NEWS tD OET8MAAT A Ch~ In utlgnmentt I• "ordered" by a t<Aot ag•nt lmJ*toti•tlng ttie President on the hot fine. f8 CAPTIOH!O ABC N$VS 0 IROH81D! "Wrong~. Wrong Place" 9YTIJE ASSOCL\TBD P&as t Thi fOllOWinl ar• Blllboanl'• bot record blta for w• eodinC November ·m as they ~u tn , ., t week'1 lssue of BillbOard mgulne. ~ ' I • I'" BOT SINGJ..13 1. YOU lJGHT UP MY UFE -1I>ebby Boone <Warner..CW-b> ' , 2. l)()NT JT MAKE MY BROWN EYES Bt.UE Crystal Gayle (United Arttst.s) • 3. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE ._ Bee Gees (~$0) 4. BOOOIENIGHTS-Heatwave (Epic> 5. BABY, WHAT A BIG SURPRISE -Chlcago (Columbia> ... 6. HEAVEN ON 'l'HE TI'H FLOOR -Paul lebolas <RSO> · 7. WE'RE ALL ALONf; -Rita Coolidge CA&M > 8. BLUE BAYOU -Linda Ronstadt <Asylum) 9. IT'S ECSTASY WHEN YOU LAY DOWN - arry Wbit.e (20th Century) . 10. IT'S SO EASY -Linda Ronstadt (Asylum) TOP LP'• ' 1. FLEETWOOD MAC -Rumors (Warner OS.) . 2. LINDA RONSTADT. -Sjmple Dreams ((\-sylum) 3. STEELY DAN -Aja (ABC> : 4. COMMODORES -Live <Motown) 5. ELVIS PRESLEY -Elvis In Concert <RCA> EASY LJSTEMNG 1. YOU LIGHT UP MY LlFE -Debby Boone <WarnerBros.) • : 2. HOW DEEP IS YOUR LOVE -Bee Gees CRSO> ' 3. WE'RE ALL ALONE -Rita Coolidae ~&M > , 4. BLUE BA YOU -Linda Ronstadt <A11lum) • 5. SUP SLlDIN' A WAY -Paul Simon (Colum• la) SOUL SINGLES 1. SERPENTINE FIRE -Earth, Wind & Fire Columbia> 1. YOU CAN'T TURN ME OFF -H1ah Inergy Gordy) -, I . BACltINLOVE AGAIN-LTD <AUrl> 4. DUSIC-Brtck <Bani> 5. IT'S ECSTASY WHEN YOU LAY DOWN EXT TO ME-Barry White <20th Century> COUMT&Y SINGLES . 1. THE WURLITZER PRIZE -Waylon Jen· tnis <RCA> 2. BLUE BAYOU -Linda Ronstadt <Asylum) 3. HERE YOU COME AGAIN -DoUy Parton <RCA) ' 4. FROM GRACELAND TO THE PROMISED AND-MerleHaNard <MCA> 5. ROSES FOR MAMA -C.W. McCall Polydor) "APPEARING NA ED DmN'T reatly \Ot!Mr ·me ln London," saJd Firth. "It wunevera problem because I was thorouahly wrapped up in wbat I wu dolna, and I knew that it was ettec:tlve theater. To me it was as natural u drtnkin¥, a cup of coffee. "But then, I was playing Equus' ln repertory at the National Theater, appearlne three times a week for eight months. "When I came to New York, I had to do the play eight tlme:s a week. After al" months I got sick of it, 1 and I got bung up on taking my clothes otr. It became a real problem.•• mE ONSTAGE NUDITY NEVER became a problem in performances of "Equus" around the world. except ln South Alrlca, accotdlnC to the co- producer of the film, Lester Persky. Thenudltywas baQned by eovernment cenaorabip but late wu al-~----lowed by a court ruling. INQUSH ACTOR OF "URE PROMISE' PSl1Wrl.irt Quilter tald r1-.wm1 foret9 ~ Pet11 Firth'• PerformanQe ~Near~ poled tbe nuCllty ID Mactrta &Qd tbreata wwe made • '1 " qaln.st the aetrettt wbo played Alan'• would·be ,, • sweeth.-n; ~·u con\lnued, an act of cour ... for Ann,.Margret Stars ape~o:doaboutoudityinthemovie? .. SIDNEY WMET, THE DlaECTO& AND In 'Joseph Andrews' Peter Shaffer decided and Elliott Kutner (too LOS ANGELES <AP> -Ann·Mareet and Peter I Firth star in "Joseph Andrews," baaed on the cla&J~c n()'Vel by Henry Fleldtn1. lt wa directed bY· Ton1 Richardson. wbd won an Acedern)' Award for dlrectbil another Fietdln1 novel. ''1'0rit 'Joael." Allan Se6tt tb4 Olu1I Bryant wrote the 1cnenplay. Mlcbael Hordem, Beryl J\eld anclJJID Qate i1ao en Directs Film;-'iar_. ~~----Y .. Doesn't Act ( NEW YORK (AP2-wooc11 Allen ll direetinc. dtloo picture which )le a1lo wrote, ln which be WU,\. appear. I The drama stan Dlane Keat.on, Geraldine me, Maureen Stapleton, Marybeth Hurt, Rlcbard dan, Sam Watenton, E , G. Marshall and KriltlA fltb. : It ls beint made on location. A title hu not been , lect.ed. "BOBBY DEERFIELD" (PG) . "ALICE DOESN'T LfVE HERE ANY ~ORE" "NETWORK" (R) .. THE OTHER Sf OE OF MIDNIGHr . .. "KENTUCKY FRIED MOVJE" (R) "THE GROOVE TUBE"· "TUNNEL V1SION" "HEROES" (PG) "THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAINH "FIRST LOVE'' CR) "ALICE OOESNT LIVE HERE AN_Y MORE1 . ;n c !tec!red S~ior• 1.eaiCI a Ua11d DEAR PA'P: l nf)ticed an itell\ about a grollp called Retired Senior Citi.Du~ Volunt•t .J>rogratn 1 <RSVP) in a Los Angeles newspaper. Do we h~ve any such group in Costa Mesa or the other Sou\h Coast cities? J .M., Costa Mesa The Voluntary Action Center sponsors the South Orance County RSVP propam, accordlnl to Cecilla O'Meara, director. Phooe the RSVP office at 17$-1210 to make an appointment for an in· t.ervlew. Mn. O'Meara say• Uiat this area's RSVP pro1ram baadles vohanteer opportunities for person• ••ed !40 and over. The Interview at· t4lJmptl to mate~ volunteers' resou.rce1, skills and prevJou eapeneace with various vohmteer ac· r tlvlUe1 lo tbk.a~•· Mote j.bao t~ peopte now are active RSVP ~unbers, but there ls a need for at it lea.st $00 volunteer, for tbJs pro1ram. · .tt T ?. ""'"Kora St••JJ• L~llfl Gat1e DEAR PAT: Can KJnf lCom=ps 1till be re· t deemed? I brought sevtn filhld to California when we moved several 7ears aso. and I jQSt ran across them hl a storAn box the other day. I'd like to cash thent in. b it.pos1lblt? • rJ • G.P., Irvine Probably ..804.. Khl& Ko~ "®Ptd cllttrlbaUna slamps July 14,)IH, a~d slmaJ&..-eoHly filed fol) chapter 11 b•ri~rqpt.cy In die V.$, iHstrfct Court fw lbe Nortbena m.tnct of lllbiOU, ,.\.& tbal time u ea Um ated $!.S mtlJlon wortll of &be aaamp1were1tlll oulsta.nding. People were ad\llMd &o maU 1tampt Co Cblca10-Mldwe1c Credit' Ctq,.. B;px f77, ltark Ridge, Ill. IMS. Chlcaco·*tdweSt wq .appotnt.ecl '· b) the court to keep reeords of Hm.,. Ueeh'ed for redemption, 10 ~oa ~o•ft. wrlfe to tha' f\rm to~· rormaUOn. u ls mill1EeJ1, ~'fei,:tbAfrectem a hi tttill ;.alble. . ·i:-~ J r ' ~ I ' • "' ' •·Arr Pre& 4ar• W.•eser.fhtal?- DEAR PAT: I'm thinking about purcbaslnc freezer bee(. What should I watch out Cor, and 8j'e • the relatively inexpensive freezer plans too goocfto 1 be true? • C.F.,NewportBeach 1 If you cbooff aa lnexpeulve lroun beef pla1tt you probably WW not M baylni u many desirable cu~. Callfornla law now reqalres a freeser·beer purcbuer to W a11ppUed wltb a eomp1ete ud ac· cur•te t.veat.017 of. die ·~ weigbt of meat de- llvered, eompl~ catuni naktaodi for eacll cat of 1 meat and ei&act lnveato11 of each cut, alODC with ·the total welJht of IJ'Oand meat. A ball of beef al.lo mut coallst of a forequrter and blndqurter frem tbe Hme aalmal aDd die couamer mast rec;.e aa . Invoice lllUDI Ule wet1bt of each qaarter. • ; • ~ . . . •Comics •Clalilfled MclndlW.~21.1m Tbankqivln( oo the farm! For m01tt fo1':s that's impc>$9lble. B\lt the. feeling 11 there wben you serve a btg, broad·bmsted ·turkey in an old· :f asbion~, deliciously roasted way -with corn· bread stuffing and tlblet gravy. Team it with all the delicious foods Grandmother used to make and you've 1ivett your famUy a touch of the past, a wte of the old·fathloned homey Tbanbglvlng of years 1oneby. ' Inc, rout breut.down <mtnl V nck) for ftntQJf of roast1na time. lnaert thermometft aft«ttirlite; II turned breut.•lde up. The breut..clowsl metbod n-aulta bi Juicier white meat. TUaKEY lS DONBwifEN: Roast-meat thermometer re1llter1 180·18S • decre.ea· 11Uck part of dntmJUck !eels •A when pra.ec:t with thumb aft4 forefm1er: Drumstick and thieh move eully. TOlB CllA&T POa SOASl'INGTU~ INP&B8&.\TEDl25 DEG&iB~VSN WetPt • COOklnaTlme 6to8lbt. 3to311.ah0qrs 8to12lbs. 3~to4~b0an 12to181bl. •11.ttoS\\ bOun 18 tb 20 Jbs. 511.t to 6 v.. hours • 20 to 24 l)>S. 611.t to 1 hours .. • NOTE: Because turbyi Var/ from Off another due to confo~Uon, "Variety, etc .. eooldn1 Umel can be only approXlm~te. Beeauae o! um it wOQJd • be well to allow an extra ball·bour rouUn.a u.Me IA -caae 1our turJtex needs tbat extra cookJnc. C~eandiservo • ·------------~~~----~~ ..... ~ .. ~111111111..-..... ~ ........... """ ........ ~ ........................... ... HOUDAY PlJlll~KIN TARTS l~cupsmilk 1 5-~ oz. package vanilla instant puddln1 & ple filling · 1·"' cups canned pumpkin l teaspoon pumpkin pie splce 1 cup prepared whlpped toppin& mlx ~~ cup ch~fped nut. 8 baked 3' pastry abells, cooled or 1 baked 9'' pie sheU,'cool~ · Combine mllk, pie nmn1 tnlx. pumpkl~. spice and whip~ topJ1lne ln a deep bowl. '"Beat al lowest speed Of electric mixer (ot 1 inlnute. Fold in nuts anct dat6s. Fill Urt •h~U• or pie shell. Chill until set, at least 3 hours. GamlS'b wlth addJtJonaJ whipped topping and nut.a , lf de- sired. Yield: 8 tart shells or 1 pi~. • Q DAILY PILOT ~ 4 -c.-anbenies: TPatlitien from th Thanksgiving ls a herltace f holiday, and one wonderfwly filled Wlth oostalaia and tradi· lion. It's a day of reunion, when family and friends eatber together and rejoice in the in· credible bounty of our land, and the autumnal splendor natuie bestows upon it. or the many traditions lin)(fJd • o this ~casion, surely most \Jlemorable are the foods we pre· pare for our celebration. One ot these is America's very own ruLy hued, tangy cranberry -a very versatile fruit which can be much more than a saucy accom- pan1menl lo a Thanksg1v1'lg feast. For those who want lo add something new lo their tradi- tional holiday menu. here are a variety or cranberry recipes sure to become Cavonles. "Cranberry Turkey Pie" is a splendid entree either for a festivity on a smaller scale, or u a means lo use up those leftovers alter a grand Thanksgiving din· ner. . I ,:( Turkey shortcake for leftovers: flow to Prepare leftover Bird 1t pays to buy a big \urkey whJle you 're at It. 'l'he big ones usually cost Jess per pound. Th~re is greater portion elf meat ro bone and it can be earved more attractive- ly. Obviously the cost per c bJ1cu.it mix, wat r and poultry seuonlnf. SUr until well blended. lc.nead ~.h tnbcc.ure a few times and form ldto • •ft>ooth ball OD I flour'M 1w1act. Cut Off a W41Ce the tlie of a peach. Roll out nmilnlo! ~n lo to a p,le_oo 1111• tl)O)lft !ft ~ver c&11erole ancs ha~~ -~[1·tDth 0¥ rb • en !'-~~ ftrin. ly to casserOle ailcl bna.h ouati wtth beat.ea ea. Roll out n- 1erved d~ and eut into a turkey, ~ Place in cuter d ~u,.rote.' lhU.b 1'1t.b beaten egc •S IA. Bake iii a prebe•ted bot oven (400deereea F.> for 2S to 30 minutes or until richly browned and tQlxtUN ii bot and bubbly. C&ANBERRY STUFFED YAMS 8lar1eyama ~ cup butter or mar1arine 1 eup fresh cra11berriu. rinsed and dratntd '4 cupaugu Grated rind of 1 oranie 1 cup (Ya pblt) heavy cream • Salt Bake yams ln a 350 degree oven !or 1 to 1 ~ boun or until ~der. Cut yama lqUiwlle in DON1 BE MISLED! Mag·-~-J. ~ ... , .. ~r.~:=~ ....... ~.-::.;r ... • ..... "'···•""'"*" ...... .. half. Scoop out pulp leav1n1 h inch thJck shell and place pulp in· to a bowl. Mash pulp unitl fluffy. Reserve shells. In a saucepan. melt butter and add cranberries and 1u1ar. Cook, 9ver row heat, sttrrlne oc:culonally, until cran· b~rr1ea are tender. Add cran· berry mlxtu.re, orange rind a.nd beavy cre.m to masbed yam~ and beat well UJ\Ul light an(t fl\lffY. Pile yarn mhttun~ back lnto re· served lhella. Bake shells at 3:iO deirets for aoto 25 minutes or un· tll lightly browned and heated throu1h. MOLDED CaANBEBaY TllJFLE 2 en\feloi-ta unflavored celaUn 2 cups fresb cranbe?ries, rinled and drained J cup1 cranberry juice cocktail ~cup1uaar 1 can (1 pound, 14 ouncea> fndt cocktail drained 1 cup <~pint) heavy ueam, whipped 2 packaces (3 ouncet) lady fmaen, split Spiced cranberries Grade 'A' YOM"G Turkeys, FrozenTpma. 18·22 lb. Average. Our Finest Quellty Turkey • Umlt OJtt Per Family Pftate . ·SLICED. DCON ~ , ... . Smok·~Aomlt 990 . ~ .... . • SPICED C&ANBE81U£S 2 cupt cranbtrrlea ~ cup sua11 • \4 CUJ) water 1 cinnamon 1Uck a wllole clove. ~ t~~l"J'.OO cround mace W uh mldraln cr•nberiies.}D a uuc~pan con'lbine 1u1ar, water aDd splces. Brina ~a boll and,almmer 5 mlftutea. Add cran- berrle1 and simmer 5 minutes. Cool cranberries in ayrup; t.beD cblU. . F8UITFV~CaANAPPLE PJTCRBR PUN CB · 4 cups (1 quart> cranberry apple drink 1 paCU,e (10 ounces> ftOHD ra.apberries, thawed 1 package (10 ounces> froieo strawberries, tbawed 2 eupll linltt ale, cbllled In bl..Ser, combine 1 cup ol tbe cranberry apple drink, raspberries and &trawberrie1. Whlrl WlW cmooth. Pour into a tall pitcher and atlr in rematnlnc cranbe1T1 apple drink. Slowly atlr in atnier aJe. Pour Into 1luses and add lee cubes, if eje.. aired. Serve at once. · .. LookiQ& for a thrifty m ¥ that 4oean'l talc a lot of Um top · pare! It takes some Na! In • ty tbeM da~ to avoid -.hippier up Ute M.llMt Old menu day aner <fay. liOt g(ve your fa Uy a welcome ~hanse! 1'Jj 1round turkey. Ground tUrkey ls economfcally priced, but lt ia a little different from the usual standby. For one thine lt has a more delicate navor tO you need a llahter hand witb tbe spices. It also blends easily with other roods. Just switching to ground turkey can subUy change an ordinary dish into a gourmet treat Although turkey meat browns as fast as other ground meat, it m~y have to be cooked ~ ltltle Jonger. Don't overcook Jf you want it M!nder and juicy. You'll notice ground turkey leaves no fat drippings in the pan. ll'a 19w an fat-that's why it is lower in cholhterol than an y other popular red meal. Ground turk~y as dark meat with its correct proportion of skin. ll is lean and mild in flavor Turkey with a Southern accent. "' A Turkey Froni ' I ' The Old South Stop the last paced wblrl or aormal activities for one day at least and elve thanks for an old· fashioned. relued, family din.Der. And what 11 more reminl1cent or gracious dlnin1 than a atep backward in Ume to a southern plantation-style feast. Old South Stuffed Turkey uses sucb staples as peanuts and con to add navorful variety to this unusual atuffing. The crunchy texture of the peanuts plus the golden kernels of eom will fascinate family and euesta alike. To add a aparkllnl touch to the turkey, brush 1t with a golden glaze of prepared mustard and honey during the last few minutes or roasUng. This glue is bound to draw "Ab's" u tbe turkey 1s removed from the oven Potatoes cannot be forgotten. This year try Potato Carrot Pudcllng, a quick and easy solution to the laat minute rµah. A casserole ol ipabed potatbel made lrom instant potato fiaku is mixed With shredded carrot to a~d Oavor and color. 01.J)SOV'nlSTVFFEDTURKEY 2 CUP' cbopped celery l cup chopped onion l'2 cup butter or margarine 1,~ cup water 2 to 3 tablespoons prepared yellow mut1tard I cups dry bread cubes 1 can U-lb. >whole kernel corn, drained I cup finely chopped peanuts l2to 15-pound turkey 1 .. cupboney 1 tablespoon water Cook celery and onion in butter until tender. about S minutes, sllrrln& occaslonall>'. Add Y. cup water and atabfespoons of the most.a.rd, .a6r. ring to mix well. Combine bread cubes, peanut._ ' and com; add celery mlxtuii ua iD1X llcbtly. Swtt bod1 ud neck cavityOltudey JoollelY wttb peanut-corn stuffln1; close wtth skewers or string. . Plac. oo rack ln large •tJWJotr pan; eo\'er · loosely wttb alurnl.num foil, <1"11 aide up. Routjn 321dAill'eeoven4 toe~; remove fQii. cPm· blne bmey, rtmalnlDJ tablMpoon mustatd, abd 1 tablespoon water; brua~ ae..-ou.1)' oviar turk~)' and c:opUnue to r<>•t '-ii~ IOn&fl; ~fl tender ahd meat thermometerreaa1185 decrees. POl'ATO CAllROT PVDblN~ • t.lervln1 recipe ma1bii(lpot1toD1u1 rt r•w carrot • shredded ~•leaipOon &J'Ound nutmeg 1 g, allctitly beaten • l~tableapoon butler · Paprika Prepare potatoet, toUoWlq Cli.Ncuona on package; add alu"edded carrot.. nut~~· an~eg'c. Spoon:imo l'h:quart oaasetj>J · <lot tll liitter. Sprfnldt with paPfllta. !Jake m '400 ~·· te'OYeft 14 to 20 mbiutee, unUI UsbUy br~n f toe •eD· 1u1•. One of tho thi"ls we used to be thankful ror durini the Thank.a&tvtn1 season was su1ar-free cranberry sauce. Now ·that it's no longer widely 1, a v a 1 I ab 1 e • we fat · fighters have lo make ~ oor own as low in sugar 'us posbiblc. Here are . bOme sum Gourmet variations for you to try: CHERRY CRANBERRY SAUCE For variety, aub- ~t&tute strawberry <or 1----------"":"."":~~---:----_..:;.-~----------------------------------...-....~.....:.:...:.~;...;..;:::.-.:_...:.;.;.~.;_....::========~ orange> gelatin mix - regular or sugar.tree. 4 cups fresh cran"r· rie~ 1 ~ 2cupswater 4·Scrving envetos}e l!herry gelatin dessert mix <regular or sugar- free> Combine cranberries and weter an a sauce pan. Cover and simmer over very low heat until cranberries have popped open . Remove from heat. Stir in gelatin, until 1t 1s completely dtb· bOlved. Pour into cov· ered Jar and chill in refrigerator until set. Makes 10 servings, about 50 calories each with re·· gular aelatin; onlr 2s calories. sua-.r·rree. MUD ._. ~BERRY · ' , SAVCE You can slow-bake· this in the oven along with your turkey. 4 cups Cl quart> fresh cranberries 4 tablespoons waler, or ~weet red wine Wash cranberries and" combine with water or wine In covered cas~erole. Slow-bake un· t1l berries pop open, ~bout 45 minutes at 300 dt>grees, or about JO minutes at 325. Sery~ warm or chilled. <Ta.it and tangy wHb n o sweetener added, or sweeten to ltJ.Sle wlth a few drops of honey or li- quid sugar subsUtut~.) Makes eight servh•IJ, ubout 40 calories each. UNCOOKED CRANBERRY ORANGERE WR Make this Jn your b)ender, grinder or food Jit'Ocessor. 1 3 ~ups raw cranber- ries , I "t~ • -,: II · '* .. ~ . ... ,,,OUllS ....... - RolllateStrte 1'rftoilt '* ~ I lb. Goloen Pr emium Meats P.,n tr1 Fillers FOOD' Goose ( Q&A) , How to Defrost Turkey Q. I never bow bow Jone to allow for a turkey to defrost. Could I buy one over tbe weekend and keep It Jn tbe refrigerator defrostlac untlJ TbanksglvlDiT Or would It be better to buy It on Wednesday and leave It out ovemJibt to defrost? I have no freezer space for a turkey. A. A frozen turkey will take two to four days to defrost in the refrigerator. dependin1 on its size and your refrigerator tem- perature. So it would be safe to buy a turkey on Saturday or Sunday, al- low 1t to defrost in the refrigerator. and then keep it refrigerated until Thursday. Slow refrigerator defrosting is the preferred method. We do not recommend defrosting a turkey at room temperature as this could allow food poisoning organituna to grow and contaminate the turkey. So buylna a turkey on Wednesday and allowing it to stand out overnight to defrost Is not a good Idea. I( you do buy a frozen turkey on Wednesday and must defrost it in a hurry. place the turkey in a dou· ble brown paper baa or wrap it in two to three layers of newspaper. Then thaw at room tern peratu.re. The p..,_ 'Will act <Ut Insulation, keep- 1 n g t he turkey cold enough so bacterial growth will not be a prob lcm A 12 pound turkey >A-111tukc12 lo 15 hours to defrost by this method; a larger turkey 15 to 20 hours. Check turkey dur· ing thawing, and when completely thawed im- m e d I ate I y cook or refrigerate It. Q. Lael year I bad bought a fresh harlcey, but at tbe lut mlDate we were Invited out, IO I froie It. When I cooked the turkey a few mOlllba later It wu &otap Hd dry. Wu WI beeauae I froze It! A Probably. Home freezing equipment can· not freeze large amount. such as a turkey quickly enough to retain bl~h quality.Na resultotlhe slow freezin&. the meat toughens and loses moisture when cells rup· lure. You would have been better off to cook the fresh turkey, and then freeze it in meal size portions. q. Mat do Joel Wilk QI &lie me&bod ol N.uail a tarkeJ lnllde 1 brown paper bas at a blP tem· perataref A. Thia la not the beat method for roaatlnc turkey and could be \lft· safe. At a hllh tern• perature the paper bac could become too l\Ot and actuaJty l1nlte. Teat• have •hown that 'You 1et the beat turkey -:--moat juicy and tender ~11 you rout It aU2S d!CJ:MI • .A method of eoverln1, which la safer tbah the paper bill, la to Uff • Joote ''tent .. Of foll wblcb la left open at .. ch iW to allow the. 1tea1n !to eaeape. Some people Uk• he me~od ol ~UtilM· a turkey folt a bUJ.., at a blib teQlP.trat :'ol COO·C25 desr ~~l~ 1bOrUr tlQll. ~ method yoa 11'9 .-... ln1 Ul• blM r:~tMI' daui roaatln1 I n ~lb M dr1erud ~ apartw ® ~u~~a!~•••. Q Breakfast Steak Lb •1• Bonlleee 9eef Clluc:il . T ASTl·BASlED With the POP-1.JS> Timer that tells you when the turkey's done 10-14 LBS ...................... 53•Lb. I 18-~2 LBS ...................................... . BASTED 'TURKEYS Fazio's Gourmet for Those who w.nt · best BUTTER, BA JED These are brand new with 100% pure creamery butter. end the Pop.Up Timer. 18-22 LBS. c A delicious basted turkey perfect ror your table ZlJCCHINI AND 'rolllATOBAKE '1 medium-siled auccb.ial, bllced '•·lncb thick 2 table&poon1 lnatant minced onion 1 teaspoon lnat.ant mlnc.d 1•rBc ~ teaspoon salt \.ii teaspoon around black pep~r 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 medium-sized tom a toes, cul Turkey Costs .More • By JOE BIGHA!tf .FRESNO <AP> -The J);~ce of this Thanksgiv· iog 's turkey will be about lQ, cents higher per ~d than last year's, mdustry officials ::.ay. · Fresh grade A turkeys could retail anywhere fr9m 69 cents to 79 cents a pound, they estimate. Prices of frozen turkeys urc expected to be 59 cents or more per pound. "That's cheap meal," maintains Henry Turner of the California Turkey Jndustry Board. Wholesale prices to growers are seven to 'eig ht cents above Jai.t ~ ~ar ·s deprcsl.cd level, Turner says. But a lot of turkeys be- ing delivered now were bought by chains earlier this year \\hen prices were lower, ::.o some supermarkets may be of· fering good bargains, Turner adds. "The price is going to he reasonable and the ciwality high," Turner feels. "rt 's been a good grow in g year for turkeys.·· · Prices have Increased this fall because of In· creased demand, says Ralph Uricn, manager or Turkey Growers Cooperative of Central California. He also considers cur· rent prices a good deal for consumers in com· parison to other types ot meat. "Turkeys have always been a real good buy, .. l'ncn says. "More pco· pie arc r>crhaps un. dC"rstanding they are low on cholesterol. high on vrotein snd the food tollar can possibly buy inorc turkey than other 0'11ngs ... The supply or turkey!; 1-; plcnt1rut, but there 1:-.n 'la serious oversupply such as occurred last y e a r • U r i 'en s a y s . f'avorable prices in 1975 c-aused growers to over- produce last year which then caused prices to plummet about 10 cents a pound. • ·'The turkey business is fu nny," Urten says. "Last year, feed costs w~re high and turkeys '~ere cheap in price. This year, recd costs are down quite n bit and turkeys are high. I guess 1t 'a Just a matll'r of sup· . ~Y and demand .. ~rowers lost money in 1?7'6 as they received low ices but paid high ex· es for feed, which etenls 75 percent or cost of producllan, ersay1. It looks like we might e a little money this , .. he says. "I think ft wUl turn out to be a year for everybody producers and con· tn~rs." G'rowen are 1ett1n1 ·34 cents a pound this afl • whlch Uritn aaya la r to she centa over l costa otproductlon. received 27 centa a und durinc tho llllt ., lday season. But Urien worries that turkey growers wlll ra110 tqp~lS)any btrdl a1aln tn lt'O'.r caualn& another oversupply and C!epreu- ine prices once more. ''The J two quarten ot this year have been vety encoura;m, to the 1row~r. ••ho saya ... If be ju .Soetn't lose hl1 head now and try to ~t in toO ntany turkeys nqt year. maybe we can maintain n aood price. The prOb• . lem In thls lndustry t1 sr, YOW havo a 10oet yeat. )IOU IO 008' Wild the n xt ae11on and have 1 bad year.·• LANCASTER 0R V ALCHRIS USDA GRADE A FROZEN, 16-22 LBS. Limit One per hunlly Jt thi• price ,. HARVEST DAY 65 ~~~K~~~~rHOZl~ .• IU e 10-1.J LBS. FROZEN, LB 68¢ FRESH £.19 ~~O~ ~~LJ:Yr~~~ .... lB e 0 "0..r Pric• Pro•~c tion Poltey qu.ordnteo th•M' turlcf'Y pri< e• 10 be etlnti"' thru W<rdM..S..h No,emMr 2J, 1977 " ADDmONAL HOLIDAY POUL TRY ITEMS: ~<'our complete selection of ducks, geese. c,1r>v1h, fryer size lurkeys, sluffed turk"i!ys, g111ne hims .111d moro•. including ldcky's lrei.h young 1urkey11. We musl r~rw lom 1 r~• nn b1111rk~· "' llM-M '"''"'· "' '~•r 1u1>ply I§ wlllhtadeQU4tclor,,lour1.u•lun~~··"11 ... i..-.1otM1yc;r•nm4<r1.1~& .. !c.:.::;'"_. __ _ T url<ey is better than ever. We've heard tales that SQme farmers have had to strap a bicycle-like (:ontraption to the front of some extra plump birds, so they could get around without toppling forward. lhat may just be a tall tale; we haven't seen it with our own two eyes. But we can tell you some things we do k00\.11 for sure. U.S.D.A GRADE A What's it me.an? It means 'look out for below grade birds' {birds wi~out the Grade A), 'cause at this time of year you want the best for your table. U.S. Department of Agriculture guide· lines require that the turkey be whole, with· out parts missing. There must be no tom skin, and no pin feathers. You shouldn't have to pluck away with tweezers to make this bird beautiful. A word about freezing. Some of our customers have been buying fresh turkeys to take home to freeze. We sure wish you wouldn't. You see our frozen birds have been blast -frozen. This takes only a few hours, leaving little time for natural bacteria to multiply. The flavor stays tip-top. It takes up to two days for the same size bird to freeze in a home freezer. Tastebuds can tell the difference. So if you want to roast your turkey right a~y, purchase it f wesh. H you plan to store it before you cook it up, the pre-frozen kind will save the ruvor. A word about cooking. Come into our stores this week for a copy of this ad plus information on roasting times, and instructions on carving, free for the asking. · FREE IRON-ON. By popular request, and because we thought you'd like it, we've reproduced the turkey in this illustration above as an iron-on for t· shirts. By a miracle of modem printing, it's on our grocery bag. Get one with your purchase, without charge. , Fresh M"ats Canned&Packaged p ORO\\IH 6 SERVE Canned & Packaged Health & Beauty Aids Produce b ~~~CT.WG .39 p MANDARIN 6~~~~~.39 p CRANBEAAY 0 ~~W&.~.29 .r LADY LEE ~PINEAPPLE ~t~!E(M.37 b ~~-~~ nOJc.<N.49 ssr.ao PEACMES .,. Y.r.!IL'f •••• • .. :ioo.u:.vr,49 P HAAVEST DAY SUGAA 0 l'Qt.O. ll tlW ()I'. I)(. OM •• '6 Ol OOIC .33 L ~~.MIX •)l.~:-.59 L ~~.~~ .... ~Ol.(,\/C.62 L ~~.~-~OLCAH 1.06 L ~.1:.~ ....... n'oOU"(.99 Dairy & Frozen b ~~.~~ ..... ,l!ldOJS0.69 L ~~,~~ t.)()Ll;Zl,99 Household & Pet EXTRA l.AAGE ~ ... EA e39 RQ\A£ OEAUTY ~.~.lll .G9 .. • .... I • 1B1 CaAal.1:8 a . DDIDMTll BOYNB CJTY. Mlc-. -bJl• ftobody waa lookU.1, th.la Uny place and U>outanda Jlkt It acrou Ute United tai. quletty revened th• na· tuu1 '• mott "ln-•v•r•i· ble .. population trend. TM)' Aoppld dylnc. In fact. ··~· boondocks'' are b~ •• crowto1 at twlce the rate of the moribund bll cltiea and attractt.ni a now of peo. pie, talent, Industry and Influence that hasn't been •~ since f rontler days. This wasn't suppoaed to happen. Conventtotta1 wlldom had h that .. urban lnduatrlat socle· ty .. would contlnue akJro· mln1 the cream trom thti countryside for the ben•flt of ever more clotted metropolttQ cen· ten. An unexpected "hayseed revolution" The 'Boondocks' are fkJurishing, , growing at twice the rate of the cities. They are attracting youth and talent . fas t.g rowing body of urban emigres. At last count they numbered 1.8 milllon, which is rough}y equal to the combined city populations of St. Louis. Baltimore and Plttsbur&h. Kuhn craved personal achievement and physical security un. available in hleh· pressure corporations and hi&b·crime cities. The anoaymlty of bil- neu, be teell, projeell . an appearance of free4om -and the reall· ty of cobsiderable dan•e?. .. At GM. nobody la totally respon1lble for anythlnC.'' lflYS Kuhn. That protects anyone from bdDC blamed tor the 1oots that cauae cost· Jy recall procram.s, but it: also prevents aQ in- d 1 v id ual from aeWng full credit for aucceu. Rewards also are often lk!SWed. JUlt U Kuhn de• History Qf the Zipper Horoseope DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently you had a letter ln your column about a guy who busted his zipper. Your reply gave the im· pression that when you were a little ifrl uppers were c~ldered quite a novelty. A lot or readers Aaa L•llden jumped on you and said surely go broke from the He treats me very well sippers have been lawsuits. but what lC he should • around for at least 80 Well -I don't need to ch 8 n ge -or meet years. Well -here's the tell you what happened. someone else? I would be straight story and you The zipper became one left out In the cold with no are ri&ht. · of the most successful savings. I need your ad· Charles Clatk, author products ever invented. vice right away -NOT of .. Brainstorming," And you WERE 8 little SLEE Pl NG VERY said, ''Each one ot us girl in 1.926. -YE OL' WELLINSANDIEGO d HISTORIAN D E a N shout understand there DEAR OL' HIS·. la A 0 T is alw .. .,. -'·tance to a SLEEPING: Your le .. -r • ~u • ..... ut 1921, I WU etpt yean ...., _ ~oeuwral~eaed.~ don't be dis· old. O.K. _ sta .... n-r· leues many Tltal qaet· ~ .. • ...,, e-lions unanswered. Satb Hewentontotellofa ~ .. 1~~·1~~00'1:.~b'vel as: Are 10• Uvtac al b k in u-together? la be free to younc • eaman ac have atwa"• lteea ve-1,,.... h lied ' ., marry you? Did "OU Hk ""v w oca on a com· up.front about my age. " pany that made "hook· It'• lnterettlng that the him to alp a note when Jes s fas le n er s . ' , women wbo knock a few he bortowed tbe money Someone asked him how years on their own •-. or did you Just 1lve It to th l ... him? Bu he hinted tbat ey m ght sell more of variably add them 011 to he needs moreT Wbat them and he replied, aomeoaeelse's. kind of "commitment" .. Why not use them ln· DEAR ANN: Seven dJd be •ave IOf' ..... 1 stead of buttons tn the years ago I met a man D fk'ontolmen'atrouaera?" who was the kindest oes becamblef I sugiest yoa talk tha. Everyone preaent wu person J had ever known. over wltb a clerl)'man or convulsed with l•u1bt.er. We 1rew to be very close a friend whole Jlldimeat They declared it wu the friends but be ne'Ver yoa trust. In &JM •en· cruieat ldea they bad asked me to marry him. time, don't lend .him ..., ever beard of. What self· I am 46 years old Ca more money. Now ll tbe re1pect1D1 man would nurH) and he ia 44 - a time to tblnk aboet JMr wear pants with a ilpper pollce officer. Iatan bl cue yoa end ap Club Colnd4r nma each in front? The problem: I assist· aJone. Wtdnndau in ttr.. Doll., Even ii they were ed this man with a $$,000 D £ A Jt A N N PUol CJftd eoNabtf noticn foollab enoufh to do it commitment. J)id I do LANDERS: Th1I ls oae of ioomen'• and Nt'V'ic« there were bound to be the rltht thine! Should I problem 1 have never club ~ end aHmta some dreadful acctd911'8 conUnue to help him out seen in )'OW' cohman. It's for tJw lolltM&tg uwk - and th• compan_y w~d financially if he uka? about teeaqers aleeplnc Thuralat/ throuioh WedMI· -----~--:-~~--~-------...,;;....;;....~_:__:::...:..::_ doJI. ~ llOCiU1 to Club ColendaT, ~Pilot, P.O. Boz !5ti0, CNCa Mna, CA '262f, Be IUTI to fncluct. your nom• cmd phone number. No&u must bt tn °"' ~ two wttlu In od~I. Ta Tf4Ul•t a piotur1. wnt. or oaU IJW F'.al~ ~·(N'ffl.-~l. ~. curt• are Undted to 1llfl4. ralun ~ lo ltr.. publie. TUESD&Y,NOV.tz By SYDNEY OMAJtB ARIES (March 21·· April 19): Emphasis on collecU.01~ ftndlna what you need, brlngtn1 budget into focus. Cbeck details, tnsltt on quality -and don't throw &ood money after .. bad." Aquarius. Taurus and Scorpio tieure pro- 8AGl'ITARIU8 <Nov.--=~~~~~~~~:--~...-.;;..;.._,,...;...:;;,.;~; ~·Dec. 21): ~y pace win•; . ~lal acttvity ls ln picture but you must keep basic objectives bi mind. Fine for work -vacation. Excellent for takine stock. Another Sa1tttarlan and a Gemini tlaure pro- mt.nently. · CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Good lwiar aspect colncldea now with creattvt~. imper. tant ~~. bi'eak1ng free rrom restrtctlons. ~~-~-----;..._.;...;;;,;:...;~_..,.....~..;....;,,;,; Aquarius, Taurus ancl Scorpio llcure pro- minently. You aet lood news concenllnc put in· vestment. contacL AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Peb. 18): St.renith ol convktlons la tested - you are Itron,., th~ mlaht b• 1u1pected. Taurus, Ltbra ll1-.~e prominently. StJck to number 5. Be IUlalyUcat -take not!lbJI tor craat-ed. Tranaac\foo wUl be complet.d -to 1ofil-ad .. vantaee. PISCES (Feb. 19· March 20): Accen on close neighbors, re- latives. 1hort trip, re- ceipt of latormatlon which vindicates views. Taurus, &torPio J*'IODS are part:. of:. ptnonal scenario -and so ls the number 6. Family membet maket solid aeature ~ recondllaUon. If Nov. a ts your btrtlt· da1 )'OU 8" a free spirit. thOufh otten troubled by clrcutnlllan<!et which put )'OU oo YoUr own early lD lfe. "If he-licks your face, 11·11 stay clean for · . Ufel" FUNKYWINICERBEAN CASEY • BJ' G1I A. IRJLUGAN _...... .. , I I D>OZFJl:LD, Coon. ~ For &:ti .._.... owns lf'.Ylnt Oold. tilt World Sena wu tho atraw UaA1 brab.tlle cam '.I '6,. to ctrcom1trtbe &be metaphor. the blow um broke tho baa•t 'Mf'hat'• when I declcMd after etabt years Ol atdf erlnf t.hroUIJi • M•oday nl1ht football that Howard had to 10." aald Gold. a JitUe m~lnat a ml1bty network, I ataunch lo Ma white aptoa next to the pastrami slicer here in the naUonal head· quarters of the "Cosell Mu.st Go" movement. FltOM THE refrig- erated showcase d isplay- ing the chicken livers, roll mops an<\.~mqked salmon bung dozens.. ot letters alllrming. sup- port for the month-old campaign against "Old Motor Mouth," as several of the respondents called the sportfcaater in question. ,.,..,.... 'NASAL VERBOSE IDIOT' CoeeH Tumed Off ••rM NOi' a demoirapber and" I haven't figured out the statialics from the man. but the number ot people twuine off the sound wbeo Howard la oo is in- credible,'' aaid Gold, stroklng his Solzbenitayn beard dlssldent]y. "At $200,000 a minute, it doesn't ll\ake sense. The sponsors must be losing millions with him." The backroom of Gold 's Ridgefield delicatessen, normal- ly · given over to Jars ot kosher pickles, tins or paprlka and tubs or , potato salad, bulged with cartons of "Cosell Must Go" kita, co1111lsting or a large green and wt}ite button and a like-colored bt.Onper sticker, a"" stacks of let- te{s. more than l.l>oo, each ac· coptpanied by a $3 chec~ from fr~sh recruits to the cause. Moines ~d AUanta ~alllna on ABC to recall the slib announcer whom he regards as "a throwback to the ra4io days of Ted Huaing and BUI Stem when all that verblaae waa needed." Generously built like one ofhls boloena sandwiches, Gold ~ "played a tittle football" and has· a keen knowled1e of the game, but be can't say tbe aame for Cosen. Gold. a Monday night footbap TV addict who "just couldn t take C<l6ell'1 verboJity and ex- tr•neous statistics any lonaer .. b4Jgan it all by placinf newspaper ads In Denver, Des THE NEW YORK DAILY News refused to run the ad, but Gold began getting letters from ail over the country trom sports fans Ute blmsell who turned off the sound when Howard was try- lni to tell lt Uke iL was in his famlllilr ~enoldal stacatto. "I've nothing personal against him; J never met the man. He's probably what my mother would call •an honorable decent human beln, who works hard every day. I don't want to deny blm an opportunity to make a livlnf. Just get him olJ Mooday nilht football. Let him do radio, talk "Boring" ••. ,"brazen" •.• Hammer Displays Art 200 of Millionaire's Workl Viewed in Atlanta From AP Dlspatdles Millionaire ArsnaDd Hammer, the 'J'D.year-old chairman ot Occidental Petroleum c'oqi., is in AUanta carryine a $3.5 million Rembrandt portrait, one of 200 ot his paintings that will be dis· tptayed at Atlanta 's High tMuseum o( Art. First Lady Rosalynn Carter was among the guests invited to a reception at the museum where the $30 milllon art collec· lion. including Rembrandt's "Juno," is on display through January. Most ot the other paintings, lncludina about 100 by artists such as Vaa Gogll. Cezanne, ltenolr and Chagall, arrived ahead of Hammer. .. It was the end or an era, and brought tears to the eyes of Karl Wallenda, patriarch ol the famed family of high-wire artists. · Wallenda, 72, watched from the winas as the daring seven·persoo pyramid was performed in Sarasota. Fla. by the Great Wallenda.a for what he said would be the last time -and for the flnt time without him. He fell during rehearsal Jut moath and suf. fered a hairline fracture of a vertebrae. The high-wire pyramid was re-created for film- ing of a television special called "The Great Wallen· das' •to be aired oextyear. .. Lexie Palmore got Jl job as a maid aboard the riverboat Delta Queen three years ago. Soon abe will be one of two pllots aboard the steamer whieb cruises the Ohio and Missiasippi rivers. Pilots are responsible for steering and navtg•t~ ( Jing the vessel and rabk PEOPLE just below the ship's -----------muter. Ms. Palmore, 30, of Tyler, Texas, was the top graduate of her ctasa after completing 22 months of tratnibg at the Na· lional River Academy in Helena. Ark. to uae rough language with o!flcers, and ordered the town to make up Calenda 's ao days ln lost pay. The mayor 1ald the town woaJd appeal the rul· ing. The fl.refi&hten' union vice president, Georse McLaa,..Un. said, "The union in no way condones cunlog," McLaufhlln s aid. "We never said he was right, wrong or ind1fferent. •' • Former Gov. Edmud G. "Pat" Browa says that he ran for a third term against Republican Ronald Reagan in 1966 primari· ly to make sure fellow Democ:rat Jene Unruh dldn 't become 1ov· emor. · In an interview with the I.a Angeles Times, Brown said of Unruh, who was then tbe Powerful Assembly Speaker and is n~ state lreuurer: "He had been SQ nasty . . . And I JWlt dldn 't want him to be aovernor al that Ume. I felt he had been an ingrate.'' Brown Jost the 1966 race to Reagan by a million votes, and admitted during I.be interview tbat he probably should have retired alter two terms tn· stead ol seeking a third. .. A Hayward mini.Ur accmod of ltldnapping two girl• from a Fresno shopping center last July at bl• bid for a ebanle of venue and wlll stand trial in Fresno oo Dec. 12. Lom Adolfo Ba.-., 30, will be tried tn Superior Cpurt on two counts of lddnapplo1. three counta ol rape and two counts of sex pe"eralon. His attorney, Paelope C'.eopeT, aougbt to have his trial moved to Alameda County because of what she termed prejudicial pretrial publlclty. • IUnea was blamed for postponement of planiat Vladlalr •••wUa'• recital scheduled at Severance Hall In Cleveland. A apokeaman for the Cleveland Orchestra said \be '10-Y,ear·old pianist becaine Ill with bronchitis and a cbut cold alter a perlonnaace tn Cbkac<> Jut week. The Cleveland performance wu rescheduled for Mareb s and Horowitz will remain in ChJ~IO until he r~oven, a • apokeaman aaJd. ·1 IC9T !l'OOK up t.tnnt• and now Howart'.f .. ls doinc ten1Us, wblcb I don't need, thank you, as another anravatlon to my suit.¥.'' · Besides tbe newspaper ad.I, the bumper 1Uckers, the Cosell· m"'8t..IO buttOQ.a ill supported by the 13 eontribuUona, Gold is cSrawtna up a roster of names on • n'allonwide recall petition. He STILL WtTH NASA, but now manager for approach a n d 1 an d l n g t e.s t s at Edwards Air Force Base is Donald "Deke .. Slayton. Jle foresees in the next 30 years, growth of manufac· turing facilities, with every type of occupation, hospitals and solar cells generating electricity in space. \ fN GOVERNMENT John JL Glenn Jr. says, "We'r at the 'payoff' stage of our in· vestment.•· One of the original Project Mercury astronauts, the U.S. senator from Ohio also has been a pilot nnd a Marine Corps •'Viator. • :EXPECTING TO BE i around 'WJtil the year 2000, Walter "Wally .. Scbirra also expects. between now and then, "only to see the space shuttle operating.·· He is a vice president of the division of marJCetlng. power plant, 800 a"'°space systems of the Jobos- Manville Corp •• De.aver. THE REGATTA STARTED last Wednesday with each of lhe 96 skip· pers being required to sail live out or to races Wednesday lhrouab Frlday Oo Saturday the fleet was divided with lhe top 48 scorers competing in two race1 for the championship. Ross-Punan's flnal score was 11~ to 2-0l'i for runner-up Hobie Alter, Capistrano Beach, the creator of the Turkey Regatta ·sailed More than 100 boats m 13 cla11es turned out Saturday and Sunday for Balboa Yacht Club's an· nual Turkey Day Regal· la sailed on bay and ocean courses. Largest class was the Santana-20 with 14 en- tries. The winner was Wahoo, sailed by Barry Brown,BYC. Troph'y winners in each class: SABOT A (11) l, David Cefall ; 2. Kris Schworer. BYC . J, Gordan Wanlass. BYC SABOT B (7 > I. Scott Loos, BYC SABOT C CS> I, Hay Garra, BCYC LlD0-14 (12) I, Jon Baldwin, KHYC. LASER A (6> I , Dwayne Bora, BCYC; 2. Mark Whitehouse, BYC. LASER B C6> -1, Tim Sullivan, BCYC. SNIPE (6) -1, Bruce and Ray Schus s ler, KHYC. THISTLE (7 ) ~ 1, Bob Ball, BYC; 2, Steve Thomas, Fresno YC PHRF (8 ) -1. Seduc· lion. Gene Wilhams, B YC ; 2. Spray. Lee Painter. UCISA. JSLANDER·30 (9) t. Tiger 11RonJ>eacon, VYC ; Un ' Owl, Al· ten S 1'JN"l, VY<;; J, Symp onj', T. C. Moore, SSYC. Soling (6) l , Breezi9'J J~ck DolJthlle, OYC; ~. MilfenlutTi Phant , Willlatn Fields, C. ET L ·22 (9) l , Get G , Ted Munroe. NHY , 'Amante, Bob Searles, NHYC. SANTANA-20 Cl-') 1, Wahoo ; 2. Br~aker, Doug Teulle, BYC; 3, An· dastar, Will Temt)leton, BYC ; 4, Sunshlr\e, Tom Summers, NHYC. Aussie Sets Speed Record SYDNEY, Australia CAP> .-Australian Ken Warby set• world water speed record of 288.175 miles per hour Sunday in a jet-powered hydroplane • 'Splrlt ot Australia." Warby mode a hl1h speed run on the placid waters of Blowerlng Dam. I I ~ UCLA 8.a-iTo.~ii.~· Win . F oi-d Cup . Three ~ealns of UCLA sailors won the Carter G. Ford Tr<>phy, symbolic of the Pacific Coast In~ tercollegiate Yacht Racing As~iallon team r.a.e- ing championship Saturday, in a close contest wttl' Orange Coast College sailors whO last week won the Southern Area ~hampionship over 'UCLA and she other schools. Saturday's race at Newport Beach was for the Pac1rtc Coast championship agaiQ.$\,~o l'(ortbem California schools, Stanford and ljC Berk•)., UCLA's team score was seven wins and two loues to 6·3 for OCC: 3·6 for .Stanford and 2·'1 for UC Berkeley. · Both UCLA and OCC (lualified for the natlonJ} team racing championship to be held at San Dlep next J1µ1e. The regatta was sailed in Lido-14 sloops. UCLA's teams were Mark R,ast~Ho and Jennifer Marlin, Alan 'ewell and ~ Martin, and Sue Mercer. On the OCC team roster w~re Ty .Beach and Debbie Turner, Peter Dral!ftin and'l'om Devlin, and Bill Wheeler and Doug Ayres. Winso01e Winner Of F er01in Trophy Winsome, a 33-Coot sloop owned and sailed by Dick Brown of the Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, won the Point Fermin Perpetual Trophy Sunday for the first monohull yacht lo finish in CBYC's annul. Poin~ Fermin race. . The race leatur• ~r.~ 1whlclt the boats start accC)rding to. their c6 ratln&' with the flnt bolt. llCl'OSs fiieiiiiisn me u th• W1nne'r. Winsome ~,s also 1be.win.n.et.0Uhe..Km..D&YiS' Trophy for the ftrst yJcDt. bet.wetn ~and 0 t to finish. ~ THE llACJ: D82W Q entries and was sailed in lfght air off Loe Angeles Harbor. Another double \rophy winner was Lloyd Greeno's 18-foot Duet, eicldng up the Greer Trophy Cor the first yacht under 20 f~t. and Smitty's Mar• for the finit Mercury Cla!IS sloop. ., Other pel'1)etual trophy winners were Steve Bair's Colloquy, the. Audrey Brown Trophy for the first yacht over 40 feet; RambuncUous, co-1--o.;.;...:.:::....:.;:-... ...... ~~--:-"'""""I Balboa Yacht Club has announced the date of July lS for th• start of lts eixth annual Around Guadalupe Island race. The race starts and n11t1hes at Balboa. The, race has ~ • N11t.W•tMoffcr.' '\ Allrealeatite adverti1ed _l.Q UUa newapaper la aub· ' . Ject to the Federal Fair lfoualn• Act of lHS -·whtcb l'Ollket It UJ~1al to adtertiaf "any pre .. _fernce, llmttatJon, or diacdmlna~ baaed on 'tatt. color, 1'Ualon, sex, or naUonal onaln. or an lnte11Uon to make any such preference, Jlmlta· ~ tion, ordl1crtmlnat100." . . IVY covaa SHIH•LI· COTTA•• No (ool·in; 2 bedr<>0m. l·bath shingled h~me with ~IJ}ed ceilings, paned wmdows. shue .roof and ·a Winding brick walk thru and ivy covered yard. No fool-in, but there's more: a sunny detached one bedroom income unit with its own privatt.PaOb yau-d. ThU newspaper wall not Both for $156,900! No feol-in! know Inf Ir accept any .advert. aine ror real IJ~l()UI: t1()Ml:I csi.te which is In vlolu REALTOf3S':·6'15·6000 J'"Udn of the law. 2,443 East Coast Hignwey, Corona del Mar ,.._..foto-S• / also m"Mes~Vertle. a\ 646 5990 ....................... ~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~ -o,....... I OU -. _ ........................ ~ .......... tNC•IDllLE / •••••• ••• • • ••••,•••••• , V ALUI / CAPE COD 3 Bdrm. ram-un, 2 ba, SH.000/12•110 •-super ah at\> home. TOTALDOWM ,.<>woer will tooaider VA Wlndrna roadway to or f1lA. N~ carpet, new ---' 2 '"" pal•t 1 'Jibvered patio ........ na atol")" ret.rea~: P.tofe4~onal landlcap· Pnvate 1rounds protect •• Jnc. ~ck fireplace Bet· aecluded entry to 1av1sh • tel' tall on this one. llvlna rm. Gol)t"mel MS 111 kitchen overlooks sun· atune courtyard! ,Wind· 1ng stalrwa)I leads t sweeping ma s te bedroom pl~ child 's '::~g;~~~~~~I retreat' Hurry, s~ller 1:. ....: anxious. 847-6010 »-1''''''·"~"'"'·11•. ,. OCIAHPROMT By owner, "uplex, 2 Br 1 , Ba ~a u.nit. W. Nwpt ' s@-7219; ~·4221 ' MiS~VUDE . " lmr,nac. 3 BR, fam·rm + , DR, on lrg., pvl. cor. lot. ~.Fam.rm has a new 1 cathedral celllnR & addl· t1ona1 brtck frr•lc. H~e " game area or patio & plenty of room for boat & • trlr., alt' fenced. s101:tso JACOIS REALTY . 675-6670 UMrtlD OffBI' •. &!vttal 4·plexts 11r So. · ~t. Plau now ovolla -ble. Pnced from 1114.000. MCffth.I)' lncome as high .as $1°'5. All units 2 Br. some wftli 2 bath$. Cal 641-'646 -:~ THE HEA E~!-~T_E_!l HEW AND srARIUJHG Brand new altractave eod unit townhome. 3 bdrms. 2 11 bath1 , beamed celllo1s In hv rm. Air cond. Two recreational centen w 1 pools It Lennis lnclUdes kitchen blt·in11.~~~~~~~!!~I refrt&·freezer. clothcsr: waaher & dryer, gara11c door opener. Prlvat patiol. Xlnl location nt!ar So. Coast Plaza. Dwncr .will ael! GI. 84f-'7711 211Dlt00 5 LOW LOW l!RfCE! H1J'bly upu,atJ41d ! bdrm patio homt'' Th~ }'e11r old hom4.'. lh1&h df~n.~· of prh·acy w1tb x~ lik~ u dnor I llllfff!NOTON IU•';A~1f li"75•1141ttt•h lllv4f 540.12'40 Bill GRUNDY . REALTOR 1.11 ~"Y"" ,. (li ,. ~.II f,l'> ,.,161 t JAC:UDI TIMI -A beautiful 4 ~ • home just 2~ yeata Old,; ill . . *i!cf clean. Neat jacuui for your · entertaioment. Hurry on this one $96,900. c.a ,.._. l 4 ~ COUMTitY CWI UYIMG '1'he owner has bought another h.om.e &: is willing to let you benefit on this well placed condo. Shop arouQd then oall ua. We think you '11 agree that this ls the finest value around. $65,000. Call 64()..6161 Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine Huntington Bc<Jch·N •:wport Beilch IOOZ .............................................. '. MANAGER . WANTED UAL ESTATE A high earning opportunity with a well known standing Real Estate Co. Opeo· ing a new office in Costa Mesa. Mu.st have experience. Salary + Applica· tions coof.dentiul. Reply to Ad #68, Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 ,. l •• ,. l it • .t I 1•1 I • UVllM IMOICmD LAROE 4 bdn:ai.. CaQllty hO.me. El Toro, cio.. ioR •c:hool1 It shopploe".' SD..500 "• BtJftt>!R'S attention, '. TWo R·2 Iota. ai.art. ot 1 Dana Polnt. Bolh tor· ... LoftvJIR ,·~ MblU~;(. Nc>aa M lJ , 1tu1 homo o(feri•I areat warmth to COGa· leract b\11• vu. 81'1\ ctp .. l\ucecloeeWttpan- tey $170,00G. (XI) . ""J ~-:.!.1 _ ...• .} -~J.. '.L:..~ A;}1l f I I ''' .· . ' . f I 1 llt • 1 ' '1, I • I• .. I .. ~ ·' . •• -. • • ; ... J. i r ' r I I I I Lingo Rut &TAl'I COAST IOYALE -w.,.tflc... tto.• ., .. ....,.._. .............. M.-ftl c...t .... , 11/J Loh. ~ ,.._ ... --....... hmlly ,... ,.... wtf bcr. Fow ,.,,, ........ 4 ........ c ,, ... ,... ....... L A tn.ly ,. ........... l MdrOCMll.....,, of a..c,... •atlty. Mt llated for ... SJ l.2,500. l.Ata1NA MGUl!:L 495.17:.io 499-4551 l>J\NA POl!\'I 4ll3 Hlll:! LAGUNA Ut::ACH 497-2489 Newport IHch I 069 Hewport leoch I 0'9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPEN DAILY 1·5 24 lnvcrness Ln. BIG CANYON · OCEA.HVIEW COHDO, REOUCB> THOUSA.HOS Rl'<IUCl'<i for a fast 111111· .. . ~ I LIDO SANDS Nice J br homr. l blk t OCEAMFROHT Lovely 3 BR. 2 bath furmshcd beach house i106 W. OCEANFRONT Only $277.000 CAYWOOD HEALTYJNC • 541·12'0 • .,~ ;:c. HERITAGE . • REALTO RS if1 lt• • ' I ,'1• '"'' • fl #~I I 1 II I' •I • 1 I •I If ------- associated I· • . '•' . ... THI DAISY FOl KIDS AMO THEJI 'AREMTS! . ,ool •Zbethom1 •Tof lot PaUoe, fenced yardi.. 2 8R, 1 Ba, 1tove & refrig, uUI. pd. Adults, no pets . Nr prk, lenn.ls & shop'f, as. mo. 6'8·7889 uonc GIRLS Acclna Superv lo l800 Loan Officer toll8K Real FAJU, Bank Exper. •-----.-----1 Secretaries ' lo$J.2K Bkkpr R. F.al:.ite t.o $12K MASSAGE FtGURI MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHLY 631-311 I I I ... AVON Chri1hM1E~ ...-.Mow ForAVOM .. RIHIS!HT A TIVIS ~st tlm~ to e1tabliah cwitomers. lntec-Hred r Call 540·7041 or Zenith 7-1.3$8 ~bil1ou,, Couple Wanted ~~~~~~~~ \o m.mai,:c a i.mall bus. , Will not interfere w /your , ··_pfci.cnt job. Mw;t be will · ""lfll: to le11rn. Mr. Hall, '·~ 1634 Wwlftttr W..ted For 8 & 9 year old.I. Llght housekeepln&, Tues .. Weda.-Thurs., 2:30 to 6:30 In MI.slon Viejo. $30;week. References re- quired. Call 83'7-IHl82. Antique Auto Hestorer. mu~t do t•vcrythrnl(. Fx11. & nifb rcq. $7. hr <11111 J::mplovmcnt D1•v BABYSITl'ER NEEDED 0\•111 Mfl· 1~1 Ad pd b> 1-.:venltl~ & weekends, El.£CTRlCIAN·Prtred Don't drop tl¥! ball ! Get a rii?>t·fne e1Umate on job with 1 ldtf"~l>llUy larleoumaUjobs. Pilot CIU'l'IMlld A'<i . Uoemed l'la.-0359 l?'bolloMZ.511*'\ ·' I Cleatllnf Ofca, p/t eves. Irvine area. Fanta1Uc pay. (1) 641-0714 Clerical · SENtOR CLERK We have an immediate openlaa for a qualified Senior Clerk in our PUR.bulng Dept. Typlng speed ot at least ~pm ________ 1 f)l\'t ptv Christma11 vacation. 2 • • r-r -bl \ -Dkk small children. 546·8683 ~ ;iya l' 1 ~~t pr ------ required. Dutie• to In· elude typt111 and dl1· trlbulion or oil pUtthaae ordera and related form.. Mlnlmal flllnf. Definite po11lblllty for tuture advancement lo ---'---- lll'cdcd . Xlnt cu. Sal Babysitter needed in~y open St J ohn l\n1t1, home for 3 yr old l>by. 17312 Ea!>lmJn, Irvine. Costa Mesa area. Own expedltor or relaUd poal· Uon. f' :>10 7171 tran.~. 548 7565 aft. 12. Pleo10 apply th ~son II ARTIST /PASTEUP -Banking ----to: ~1Drafl1ng, 1nk1ni;:. prt-511 TELLER reparation 1-;x pcr'd. Bank exper. req'd. n t ere!> t 1 n ~ w o r k . Contact Bob Cretf{hton ~nef1ts & advancement Irvine National Dank i:rowin~ <"O 979•7660 833-3700. ____ _, TRINDATA CORI', St9'CllrdM.,.riu DlYltkllt l ART HHOLEWOlk Banklng ~uture re~p ad ult w /oi,. Tl\.LU ' r an knlllani,:. crochet· P/tim-' Fri. 1-9:30P , i.: & needlcPoint wanted Sat. t:"SAM~:30PM for r 11os1t1on in Art ow l)o. Coast Pina Ofe. (:cedlcwork SpeclalJtJI 1!x~r. pref'd . C•U ,t 1\uat ... ~unU/.,.Y 1,hop SOmc retail exper. Ka .Bouska, M0-406e m,..oJw • ,req u Ired. 6 45· 5546 Cl fotnia Fodcraf ~da> s after 9AM. Savlnaa & Loan C1ertcal -3333 Bristol St, CM PAIT· 'ftMI F.ql1A4 Oppor Employer 4 Ju. mom.lq Moo tbru -..;._..;...;...,...-.........-.;,..., _ _,, ASSEMBLERS 1--------i Fri. Req'a typln1 56+ Bankina wpm, t,ran1crlbtn1 ex· •OJIC'n 7 .JOam·5:30pm , • C: a II f; v em n lea s:J3..8882 I ) Fur ~win~ &t Jtr&Veyard > •HO FEES I l.xper1enced &Trainees <:a r ~ pbont a m~ SIST APT M GMT ChrilUa.n couple n.tded. M1m to do maintenance, woman to 4o oftlce work. 1147-9805 I ASStST. MAMA•& Pvt country elub. For UIW ... CCTS .~ per. be1p(uJ. Wlllinl lo " ,. ...-. train. Appl1 Nltional TILLY Systems Corp .. 43ftl Xlnt• employment ORJ>, Bl.CC!b St, NB (Nt OC at local otnces or Sad· Atrpott) EOE. dJeback Savlagt. !!:xp. -----'------1 pr er' d . M us t t y p e Clerk/typlal w /payroll ex· 60Wpm. ~ls. call Mra. per. for wqrk ln Public lcrue for oppt. Aceoum oltlce, Gd typ-~~~~~~~~ SAODLEBACll SAVINGS l59-0181 ' .. ~ Q_f Pf)l ()0 It f-'l''•llAllY 1•111• .. ' .. MECHANICAL INSPECTOR Mechanical Recelvana lnapec:tor w /2-3 yrt ex· per. Preter some elcc· lroaic:a knowleda&•· Set· up Is tae loapeCt.IOn tool• & eqwp. " read draw lnp. You will be WOC'kina on your own wltbou close aupervlaion W are an expanding div. o Addre11ograph/Multi graph Corp. &otreru sta bl• working environ ment. Please call ou Personnel Dept. fo rurther detalh; & 11n in ter.Htw appt BRUNING l8US. Bltchuy Santa Ana. IS36·0021 Equal Opp Empl m f h W..te4 7100 ~Wellftd 710 ............................................ PIX AMwff 5-n. utAU. SALIS Want lo work days, after· SH.OE SALESMAN noons Is eveolQP in NB Cathy Jean Court SJde " CdM areH? Work ~!!i~ for top pro-f ta m e o r p / t 1 m e . f · for one of SO. Weekends a m1.11t. Xtra Calif'& fast.est tirowln1 p a y f o r • x p e r ' d retail o~ratlQn.1. T9P operators. Call NG-0812. pay Is beoellt1. xlnt E.O E. potential for advance-------1 meat. For lnten1ew call PiX OPiflA TOR JUdt Reed at 759-0IW, N. B. toe ation. H ra frosntt.ollAM. 6 30am to 12 noon S3 Hr. -------- Contact Sand • 640-1460. RM, F /TIME 11-7. Mesa Verde Conv •• Pbotoerapher wanted to u-••i c st C" mEJ?lCAL-Fro~l Ofh<:c do studio portraits on .....,.p,"" enter • •u position open. Eur, No:.~ location. MH~ be ex·l-548_·_5585_. ___ -- " Throat. rac~al plH~I Pe r I enc e d . W r i t e RN S.."lsor i.urgery. lr~.ne. ,01c P.0 .89x 2881 J'uJJertoQ 7-3:30, "'..oelaa nesa a-a. taphone, typ1n1. f1hn&, 92832 ' "-U uo.":::.•. m. ... billing, aome back oHlcti. --.-------1 ____ _. __ _;._,;;._ __ _ ~J;f~t~!!id1r!ku1~~ PLAhMAkER/ SAUS . Ad. 85·, Dally P1lol, ASSTCAMlttAMAM SUPPUMIMT P.O.Box 1sso. Coi.t a S2.7sperhr +bonus. Co. YOUllMCOME Meaa CA 92626 benefits. Apply, Produc· S$SS sass ----'-' -lion Dept., 1660 Placentia • MED OFFICE TRAINEF Ave, CM PAa.'rTIME Llte typlne, must be able PLUMil .... '-~I WORK lo work eves/wknds ,... HOUSIWIVES Spanishhelpful,548·7771 Expr'd drain cleaner COUKISTUOIHTS .'1 L' D 'I' F', C 11 wanted. Earn MOO to S500 G l d H I .. .,, per wee« Call 4994621 uaran ee our y Venapund ure ex 11 bt• · Wage Plus Bonus. 5 30 P lime, cull for appl wnBAM&SPM. pm to 8 ·30 pm. Call SALES (11, 150 nl:LD MERCHANDISER 640-0140 PIESSMAM ~or come lo 250 E. MICROFILM GRAPHIC Offset Printer S3lostart 17thSt .. CostaMesa. ---------• ARTS Tramm& posiUon + bonus. 40 Hr wk Co -..:...;.....;..._ ____ _ ilVail. Cull GU3)59S.49U benefits Apply· Pen· SALES for appl. Long Beach nysaver. 1660 Placentia Airport area Ave, CM, ·Production Dept. Mobile Homf ~1 Pri.ntina. Versatile photo No exp. nee". M~Ji . com· typeseUer1 pasteperson pJete training, high com Jleeded for monthly trade missions. lntervlC!w, publlcallon. Exp. desir~ ~7-541.5 on A.M. Compset or MOLDIMG/TrolM• s I m II a r e 4 u l pm en t. 956-~ Noe.xpr. nee. 548·5598 Mr. Donut, Nile 11hlft . • It.I. SALES: 2S·4S Yrs. Full time. 135 LAGUNA BEACH A well E. 17th St. CM e.itabliahe4 small office with hl•h ..-olume needs A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO WORK. IDIDN1 WANT TO GO HURSE quallly help. Very Exper'd RN or L VN tor favorabie contract. A Wl· If yo..,. Mt family prac. ofc. Xlnt sul iqae opportunity. Cllll INn'-*'- & benefll:f according to 494.7551 Aak for Robert _, exper & abiht.y Call Real Fatale Sales People wortiftgw tMltiftg fi44..Ull. wanted. Up Lo 90 110~< oiMMI nDMY- MUllSES AIDES coouo. apllt. I. Bc:h ~=~lw Training eta~ st11rttn11-e:t_l-0800 __ ___,......,,.._;___1 IASIPAY + ~c~J~ frLna~,uu.,,n181&ill1· •&u•, •r411.:l.__._. ____ _. COfltM + IOMUSH white you letirQ. Awl)'. RECEPTiot41ST Long Dl1ta,nce Lines Purk Lido Conv. Uofip, bobusyNorthU.B Real Casual.FunAtmO!phere 1186 Flagship Rd . N a F.atate ofc. EJ(per·d s FU ... TIME 642.-8044. Oayt, incld'g Sat & Sun ,ART·TIMl ----8:30 to 5:30. Real Estate If --"' u Ilk •·.u•ses ..... IDES lie desirable, but not nee. you r'l:.illl we · c to nu" ,,. Ulk on the phone le want Ex per. prcf'd 7.3 4' Olll Vera at, 148-1371 for to enjoy your job •. Call 3·UJ>m . M~l· Verctt~ARio~ln~l~~~~~~I Belwn8:30amCillom eon~. iw,p, C>ty. Cfntcl1 _ Tl St.c;:r.I __ RECEPTIONIST-Gen. ME/~lf(, t4URSIS AIDIS De~U1try. Npt Bch. -LIBRARl£S INC 7,3 "3-11. Costa Mesa upd.GM-0032 area. 5'9·0061 ltcltt/Sff 833-8095 -------~-1Servtce Sta. Attendant, no SALES ReLall Orapbk exper nee. D•Y It nlaht Ana. MUM. bit ~·n-shtfts. Apply, Airport tious. oi'lhll\ti~ 6' )}eat.. Texlk'O. 4678 campua Dr, Will ltllsume reap. for Newpo,rt.Beach. JOb in. Npt. opp. (or advancen:ient. Call: PAS GRAPHICS, 754-1439 SANDWICH MAKER Lattuna Hilll! 76M6it SECRITAllY Mlnlaa um 2 yrs. ex· MUllSISAll)IS Newport Bealh Ad· F,qualOppEmpl~mtr " Orderlies needed t vertlfLllC Al~)' looklng~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;1 give tender lovins carti tor ajwp, lb&.elllrent girl lo the elderly patlenla. wttb m.lnlmum 2 yrs ex- • • Will train ~uaJified ~per. ;>?6,!!S:nt'&IJ~ penonnc). Earn wblle ,.-yo u learn. All shifts retllrial skll s. Call llVail Apply 144s Barbie Fulmer Superior Ave, N .li. _<_71_•_>640_·2822 _____ , 642-24lt OCfice y.,.qitalflcatloftl C..L-'Teu TWS,.CW ,.,.... Unique Opportuni.Uea AvallableFor: • • SALES D-Li~D.lllQ II H, 141\11~ Id! • 1079 b.taun 0210 2 Door -3' month open •nd i. .... Exect·i..;. P.vment i.-.s.t per month + tax. Vehicle value-f35f4. Pay only '215.30 advance ~ta to ta~ dellvery on apprOY94:t crtdlt. Total ot te... pay· m1nt~1S.'40. OpUon prtce st encs of ,..,......,932.18. (3550lt) . . .~UAllMTEED TUD~MS BARWIC I( 0 A ~ SUN • . •! 8 Jl-IJ7';.<19l-Jl7<, - as l.904door, sunroof, nice int.er. Runs well. SUOO. 645-1"25 or 846-9134 UCB.&.INT 350 SL. Uke new. Reeent-SBICTION OF ly overhauled. Steal at IMW •HAUS $10,600, Pb 557-4281. We may bave yoUl' ~ M1NT OONI> '76 ZllOt car in our loveotory. cau ml 1.-der ~, •today! ·--• ll 1·2040 4t5-4t4t 1-~-r_. "-·--·-~---• CREVIER ,... . . . . '.J - BARWIC K DA ntJN • I · 11 I 1,11 t • 8Jl -I J7549j.J J/'.; "71450 SJ.., Sll•er. Witts, Baettr AM/FM tape, P.-fect. SU,000 firm. t11-0UZ en. '73 Mercede1 '50 SE. like new, $11,990. 840-2981 f 744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974FOtlD ., • ' • ") J 1.... • . ... • ), f"''J. • ,,. " 9 .. .... .... ... 1.,,,1 '~ l . .. .., ·1 •• .. . ' -,. I CAIRO <AP) -President Anwar Sadat oC'Egypt ended bia historic journey to Jerusalem and returned to Cairo today alter pJedeina with the Jeader of t1raeJ: "No mdre war." ' Millions of Egyptians 1* the route from the airport to alro, hailing their returning pr ident as a "hero of peace." In his Cinal statement to Israel's cabinet members in Jerusalem, Sadat aald: "Let us raise two a1Qaan1 -no war, and security. "No war. Let every glrl every woman, mother, here and Id my country, know that we aball aolve all our problems throuch necotiatlons around the t9ble rather than start wan. "We've bad eno~h -four wars in 30 years," aald tilt Egyp- tian president who risked his polltlcal JPture ud the UD.lty ol tbe ,\rab world to apeak in tho carital of his enemlea. f ~ araeli Prime Minister lrf enahem Begin echoed the sen· Ument: "We have decided, no more war between our nations. We will esi.blillh peace and Uve in peace." · He then aave Sactat a 1U\ of nine ancient candleaUcb and said: ".From time to Ume, have a tllmpse of it and remember your friends in Israel." At a new• conference earlier In the day, Sadat sald lt was Israel'• turn to take "bard and dri1ticdeclllons ... "I have already taken my 11\are of risk in my decision to come-here," be Said. But he repeated that there could be no compromise on Arab demands tor the return of all~ Numbers ScraWlell on Hand f Challenge• Sela•it Baker to Bun . . ~or Supervisor lang Betreh BJ GARY GllANVILLE Of .. Dltl'I ............ Former 1upervJsor David Baker announced today that he wUJ trt in 1'71 to take the seat he once held on the Oranae County Board of Super"Vtson back from Second District Supervisor Laurence Schmit. Baker, who u a 12·year tncum· bent county supervisor was de· feated by ~hm~t In 1974, uld hls candidacy comes In response to ui:ainl by J\lPPfrten "l¥.iho want intecrity an.d ~ felpectabUlty re- turned to CQUDty government." Am<>n1 Beker'• RJ)J>Orters at hl• announcemtot press con· terence were Huntinaton Beach Police Chief Earl RobitaUlei Hunt111gton Beach Clty Schoo District Trustee Doria Allen, former county planning com· miuioner Roger Slates of Hunt· tneton Beacb and movle- teJevlsion actor J a.ck Kelly. Baktr, who .,.. .. defut,d by a campaip in 1914 that •aa main· ly financed ht former county polltieal klnatnaker Dr. Louis Cella, Jaid ~ '74 campal1n will be an issue ln um. Man Release• i TUXJ Ho1t~e1 •'I dld not expect that a potltlcal broker (Cella) would emerg• with a ba1fuJ of ap- parenUy stolen money and dump moJ'e than $140,000 into my oppo- nent '1 coffers ln a vicious cam· paign to remove nte from of· flee," Baker s4ld aa be discussed his 1974 defeat. LONG BEACH CAP> -A dozen Long Beach police officers surrounded a house where a man barricaded himself with three hostages today, authorllles said. Lt. Rudy Prell said the man, tentatively identified as John Sharrar, released two of the ~ree male hostages. The officers were attempting to talk Sharrar o\lt, Prellsald. Sharrar barricaded hlmaelf and the others in the house about 3 a.m .. Prelhald. The incident apparently was triggered by an argument Shar· rar bad with one of the three men, the lieutenant added. Prell aaJd Sharrar hu l1red randomly a couple of timea, but no injurie.s were reported. "This time we will not un· derestimate the special interests and their puppet. We are putting together a solid coalition. (Se_e BAKE•. Pase t\2) Howie Micken of San Diego ap~ars to be expending more effort keeping warrn than sightseeing on a motorcycle dr,iven by Gary Harper, also of San Di~go. The .two Argentinan Jet CraJJhes; 79onBoard "We are sure that tie wrote these numbers before be was shot and tha\ htt was trytna to tell us sometblng," O'Rourke sald to. day. •'.Thtl IJ our major clue at this point. It's Joust a matter of c:te. veloplna it, • O'Rourke added. Myers wrot&1ix or seven nwn· ben on the webbing of hb h&Dd between the thumb and index ftrt1erln blue ballpolnt pen ink. The first three letters, which O'ROurite deCllned to identify, were Jeetbte. 'l'be final three are beln• exifuined by ldentiflcaUon. ex~. •we believe lt Is the license number ot the 1uspect vehicle, .. O'Rouritesald. O'J\ourke sald that In .. vestlaators experimented with combinations of numbers and. that prellminarY work indicates the vehicle wu from the Orance Coantyarea. O'Row-ke1ait1thenumbencor· reapond to a motorcycle license plate lo. that there ate no letten. A. (8eie SCRA~ Paae AJ) ...,, DEUOJJ'NER p Sl~COSF.LL Mive aQd W~ll . . . l: 2 Victims Rescue~ . . . ,, From BUriiif,g)fiiJO • A 53-year-old Santa Ana 'W oman and her 19-year-o ld ~aughter are alive today thanks to three men who pulled the two women from the burning wreckage of a Friday evening .1uto crash in Huntirrgton Beach, police said. Manuela Guerra Lopez and her daughl<'r, Issa, were pinned in their comP.act sedan at t.beji: terscction of Bboh lio.+r'e~ <.ind Warner Avenue at 6:4S p.m . after their car was rear-ended by a pi ckup truck, police said. Michael Hall, oJ 21~2 Surfwood Lane, Huntington I ·Missing Girls'· Bodies Found In LA Park LOS ANGELES (AP) -The , bodies of two Eagle Rock girls ,missing for monc than a week were discovered in a ravine in . \he area where three nude young 1f.\'Omen's bodies have been found 1 recently, police said today. Sgt. Frank Tomlinson of the ,xo bbcry-homi~ide d;v1s,ion declined to say whether the I bodies or Dolores Cepe'1a. 12, ~tid Sonja Johnson. 14, w~r~ un-. 'dressed when discovered Sunday in Elysian Park by several un- identified youths. Police also refused comment on cause of death of tho two girls pending autopsies. The p~ir were last seen Nov. 13 boarding a bws at the Eagle Rock Plaza wt)ere 'they had been shopping. Earlier Sunday, in a hHlslde 1T~sldenlial area of 1-ijghland Parle ~everal miles away, the third nude young woman's bodt to be found In the area was di.s<!o"Vered under bushes. ' The. latest \tic1im was described as betWet.ft 20 and 25, 5-fcet-6 Inches tall,''los JM)utl8s, with light brown hair and bue eyes. Beach, Thomas Lee Robin, a Camp Pendleton Marine, and Robert Nicholson, of Onn«e, need to the vi.ctbn1 • ates after the allt-o burst into Oamb: ' ·Mrtl. Lopez said she llhd her daughter wee• JD s•ooW and trapped in thtir1•.ear< They re- ceived minor cuts and bruises. Bqth were treated~H~lngton l;tercQpunJI Q it nd re-~'{easecfi!tter t lluntb\gton • e l~e ar- rested Ramon Rosales Garcia, ~. of,lVestminster, on &~cion \>( {~y d~ ~,iD1' 1D '°n· · tu!ctlon With the'fbtir-caf era.Sh. Also involvecUn the et~ll.were John E. Ricbardso• and bi&wife, Ludll&. ot Quntlngton Seae!h. Their van was .struck by the µ>pez vehicle, poUcei salct .. 1 '};bt;6'; werep 't. .bqJplt.aJlzed. J{ow~ver, the1r ~~~~le w~ a ,total wreck, p0lic:eisaid, ' The fourth driver. Rober;to Mpntes, 23, of No~alk, e,:scaped in1ury and his vehicJe SUJtamed only minor damage, (lcco{ding to police. After removing the stMc.ken women from the burning vehicle. Nichofson and Hall told police they" observed the pickue truck dtiverfleeing'thesceneon root. Poijce said three of the autos in the crash were "'ai\f{'lg a't ~.red traffic signal wl\~n tlie ~r:ash qc- curred. 'Garcia has l,>een released "on bait, officials ~aid. FroaPf.geAl . ' '' SCRAWL.:. ·~: I • ••• ., Frflllll: Poge A J .. B~R ••• dedicated to what will be the theme of my campalp, restor- inl' decency to •public office.·• Baker said. ' Baker, bo'wt!Ve"t, tnado it clear tl\athe wtll hammer at Schaf.it's rtebrd as a'SC>!called Cefl& can- aidate, a' s+rif.lor who bas ' •1\enated ci)\inty If W enforce- ment omcta.ts and a pu\)Uc of-fl~al who "bas failed. to d,lscl<>Se his source oC campalgn funds, .. Schmit said he was not sur- prised at Baker's annoutttement. '"•-The pojttlC'al s~isot\ \s heat-ing up and ah')lon·~ can run for ol-nce-;" Schmit said: · · The Gatden GroV'~ supervisor filso said he belleves the real is- •ues in next year1s camp~lgn will M 01rmed 11~rlng pie ~ampiltgn and ''the 6est persol'\ will wtp the jol> ,, • Baker sa(cl be favqr~ st.fong campaign reform but isp'~s~.a plan hu been offered o yet thtt can C!ontrol the mac}\lnatiooa f)f campa{p m"Qllgent. Schmit'• ~Jll~ikn ~Jl be 'ftlanlfged i1Y Pdfttit.• .. 'l COl'ls'itftants Arn~ld Fbr,de an<f WllJ\am Butcher. ~~rdlng ti> SChlnit's most recent catnpalgn diSclosttte statemenUI. ' Baker ~aid his campaiJr! or- ganization is likely to be tnade up or volunteer w6'rkel'$ and th¥t an organization will ~ formed in the n~xtfe\Nweeks. " The ro~r county !jU~ry~or would not spefulate_'';ibOUt tbe a mount of money be Will sqend in his comeback qllempt. . , ti ow ever. he satd, ".I think everyone It> '1t~l!ncflanted· with a political system tl'lat re~dei'f.un· to Caesar 'th'at 'wtilcH ts' his l!i~qugb a sertes of' fµi\d·r~en by otf!~ehOtder-8 iJ'l 'n9.~:ele~UQr yhrs. SJpce he)eft pf(ife in, e$f~Y 1975 the forrq er <;"uden rOY.f! s upervisor .ha~ be,eq fn ept!n· dently eme\o.y~ as ~.}~Qnsyltant s~ciallzlog in ~e ClisWSN of l\atardoos waa~mat~at, . I .. ... ~ h ·..: •: .B.,;m· iuikd .. .. I I ' l!y Wife in .· Freak Muhap An elderly Midway City man WH killed Sunday and hls wife, who was at the wheel of their car Jtat••'k~ Ua:at~cct­dent, is wtder m lcal c_are ~ for shock as a result of Cle. tra1edy. I ~sEnd A sta~ park employee ln a bulldozer pushes aand over a 43-foot 40-ton whale after the carcass was wash~d ashore' ~t Jones Beach, N.Y. Officials ~t ttie' beach said the whale apparef\Uy was dead before it was beached. Fairview Winning,· Battle With~ w;e~ I • By JAQQEHYHAN ot .. DIMIJ ......... . Psy~~r~tr(c te~h~ictan.s at Fairview stata bo4eJt.al lq Costa Mesa ~ 10 gt{\er s~t~ hospitals 31>Pe~ ~lilY te> have won \be first r~d in a dispute with state health officials about a proposed staffln' reotganiza,tion. Department of H ealth spokesman 'Bob Nancy said to- ~ay the state has shelved plans to create a new supervisory posi- tion that coul~ be. filled only by registered Dt.tf'l!es. It wo"1d have feplac:ed a pe>sltiOQ open to both nurses and paycb tee~. He said the present posltlons will be maintained for four monLbJ, during wbleh ttme the ~tuqen:wtU tw, ~aluatal by state and federaf ofticlals. Howeve r, Troy Brlmtl!Jl· FalrvieP-tb.aiPCer' «~tat of the canrc>rnra ~,iociatlon of Human Servic~ Tecbnqlog>.sts. said a\ Ule. Costa Me11• h~~tal psych tech! have greeted-the an- nouncement with mix~ feelings. "Everybody thinks UJey'reJust throwitig us somethlng to pacify us," He said 'toda,y, noting that . state om~tafl might have ~n alarmed by threats or a strike by some psych tecl\s. However, he 84dcd, ''We're reallv hooj~g thllt ~cause of this new offer ~ can work out a way to solve the problem wtlh. the state. We're hopfhg it's reatly a gesture or goodfaltb. • • The problem at'oSe because of a reorganization plan aimed at regaining federal certification and Medi-Cal funds for Fairview and three other state hospitals. Improper staffing was one or the violations or federal codes found at the hospitals la'5t sum- mer by a state licensing team, which decertified the hospital. The team was 'working under contract with the federal govern- ment. Fairview is currently losing $500,000 per month in federal fW'lds, which the state ls making up, · Howe.er, psych techs bave maintained tha1 the •propolSed new positions would not solf'e the starting problems but would merely substitute cuslodlal medical care for training ln sklUs th.at some retuded and ban· dicapped paUents need. Dr. Francis Crinella, execuUve director of Fairview, could not be reached this motnlng for com- ment. However, h~ aaid earlier he believes the proposal to bar psych techs (f9m the new posi- tions amounted to an "erosion of their professional stal\IN!." Induatrlal Interests sa1 there is a demand for the land for in- dustry and are oppo1lnf mixing residenUal uses ln the•~•. They say there is too much of a threat of ~croachmimt no the area by homes . .. The city plannln,c department bas made studles which show the l2nd north of Warner Avenue to be Ideal for industrial but the llfld south of Warner to be mar1inal. SiOOrving Car KillA 2 Women about 20 miles from bere. about mld.da)f and repor~ fin~ .survivors. The national news acenctet ~ ported 40peoplesurvJved. Earlier today a .search elan& reported it spotted the wreckage in a rock~ area near here, but of- ficials said It reported no s{gns or survivors, Th• name Roll•·Aovc•. th• Roll•·Rovc• radlttor grille, and th• Spirit of Ec1t1~ hood ornament art 111 Roll•·Royce trtdtmarkl. used with thl 1pprov11 ot Aoll•·Rovoe Motort. 11 t: By GARY GRANVILLE °' .. ~,, ........... Former supervisor David Baker a.Mounced today that be wUI try ln 19'78 to take the seat he once held on the Orange County Board of Supervisors back from Second District Supervisor Laurence Schmit. • Baker, who as a 12·year lncum· 1*\t ~ounty supervisor was de· feated by Schmit In 1974, said his candidacy comes 11,l response to ur1Jn1 by •~en "wbO want integrity and res~bUi(y re- turned tocounty governmenl" Among Baker'• 1'1J,>~rtert at his announffment prest coa· ference were HunUntton Beach Pollce Cblef Earl Roblttllle, Huntington Beach Clty School District TrU1tee Dorla Allen, former county planmnt com· missioner Boger Slates or Hunt.- 7 Sidecar Bu DrawfJarb Howie Micken of San Diego appears to be expending more effort keeping warm than sightseeing on a motorcycle driven by Gary Harper, also of San Diego. The two Boy, 16, Held After Fatal Canyon Crash A 16-year-old boy is in j uvenile hall today and charged with ~lony drunken driving as a re· suit of an early Sunday moming fatal accident in T°rat>uco Can-yon. According to a California Highway Patrol report, the un· identified juvenile was al the >wheel of a car that skidded off Plano Trabuco Road, plunged down an embankment and then rQlled over twice. As the car tumbled down the embankment, 11.year·old John Lynch of 12851 Spring St., Garden Grove, wu thrown out and killed wben apparently struck by the auto as it went into Its flip, the re· port said. The accident on the lonely dirt road about one mile from Holy Jim Canyon occurred at 3 a.m. apd reacue workers labor.ed in darkness in the desolate area to bring the victim and young drunken driving suspect back to where their injuries could be treated. Lynch, however, was dead at t~e scene. The survl ving teenager waa not seriously hurt, the CHP report said. By ROBERT BARKER Of .. o.i,, ...... ...,. Huntington Beach resldenl Robert Myers apparently scrawled several numbers on the palm of his left hand before his death and investigators believe they areacluetohismurderers,it was revealed today. Detective Ueonis O'Rourke of the San Bernardino County Sheriffs Department said the nu m hers are believed to be that of a motorcycle that Myers may have encountered shortly before hisdealh. The 57-year-old Myers, a longtime resident of Laguna Beach, was kllled Nov. 11 near Barstow. He was shot twice In the ~t. ··we are sure that he wrote these numbers before he was shot and that he was t.rYin1 to tell WJ somethinf, u O'Rourke said to· day. "This ls our major clue at thls point. It's just a matter of· de· velopina It," O'Rourke added. Myers wrote •ix or seven num· ber1 on the webbin1 of hia hand between the tbwnb and index fin a er ln blue b~Upqtnt pen Ink. The first threel:Jetters. which O'Rourke declined to tdentlfy, were legible. The llnfll three •re beinf examined by ldenUrtc•Uon experts. '•w believe It ls the l&ctnM number of the •us~t vehicle," O'Rourkeuld. O 'Rourl<e Uid that In· veaUgat.Q.r$ experimented with combinaUons of numbetJ and that pteUmfn•ry wbrk Jndlcates the vehicle was ttQm the Oranee County area. 0 'Rourke said the numbers cor. respond to a motorcycle license ~late in lhat tbere are no letters. A standard automobile license car· riea 1ett.ers as weU as numbers. Invest!gaton are atHl seeking Myers' van, which was apparent· ly driven away by hls assailants after he was dumped from the vehicle. O'Rourke said earlier that discovery of the van held the key to the murder investigation. The missinR van is a gold· colored 1970 Ford with a white bubble top. It was previously in· correctly listed In news stories as a 1974 vehJcle. CAIRO CAP) -President Anwar Sadat of ECYPl ended his historic journey to Jerusalem and returned to Cairo today after pled1lng with the leader' or Israel: "No more <t.tat.,. Millions-of EgypUana Uned the r()1Jte1rom th• aitPOrt to Calt'O, hailinl their rtturni1ui presld'1\1 as a "heroofpeace." In his final statement to Israel's cabinet. members in 40SunJive . Argentine Jet Crash . Jerusalem, Sadat aald: .. Let us ralse two slogans-no war, and security. "No war. Let every girl, every· woman. mother, bere and tn my country, know that we sbalbolve all our problem.a thro\lCb negou,uons aJ'ouAd the table ratber than at.art wan. "We've bad enough -lour wel'S in 80 yeeri," said the ~gyp. llan prest/'-~nt who risked hll P{\TE'RSON, N.J. <AP> -A bedridden cancer patfent wu electrocuted ,when a U1htnln1 bolt. traveled along a wire outaldt his hom• to a heating ·pad 'oa whfoh he was lying; officials said. .. Police aatd Manfred Shulta, 11. of Bloomingdale, was killed at the height of a severe than· dera~ that passed over the state. Shultz' wife, Katherine, told police she beard a "pop" sound, ran into the bed.rOC>m and saw ber huabahd pn ffi'e. She put out the flre with wet blauets and called the police. pollt,lcal Mure 8Dd the Wl.lty d the Arab world to speak in the caritalofbll enemies. naell Prime Minflter Menahem Besm echoed the HD• timent: •-we have decided, no more war between our natlCJDS. We wlll establlah peace and live lnpeace." He then eave Sadat a lift of nine anclent candlesUcks and (See SADAT, Pase A%) state's intervention ls dependent on an awaited rullna ftom the Fourth District Court of Ap~ala in Sao Bernai'di(K>. Tbat a~ WU filed by the .. district aUQrney's office an.er Jtid1e &tr.ab agreed with the defense that tliere waa enough ev~ Ill prtjudlco to JUIUly asklDI the state to take over the ·prosec~~- Haden told 1udge SChwab that II the Juda•'• ex.eluslon rullna la upheld, tbe state will need delays or all pret.rtal motions and the trial date of Jan. 30. "We have vut 9uaotltles d lesal papers and evidence to sift through," Haden sald. "We would need a delay ot at leut two or three months to enable us to prepare for trial." Judie Schwab~et Jan. 9 as the next heariftl date for the four de· fendants, none of whom has yet offered a plea to felony charees contained ln a arand jury lndlct· ment. Diedrich, 53, Anthony, 41, financial consultant Gene Conrad, 43, and Dr. William~ SS, face trial on cbar1es of vlolat.: jn1 st1lte political campaien &Iii financial di.sclosure laws, Haden's appearance today lq.o dicated that hls omce liu signlflciJltlJ changed it& atUtude towardJ tblna over the pl"Oleeu. tion of the (our defendantl. (See APPEAL, Pase ,U) • QOke.tmm Bob !NUcy •Gt to: .......,...;.;..;;,.~_day lbimt.o w»etvect Jl)anl to r-E'l"09IPflfleAl CLAY.-•• teacher. Now she's come back to · whip the master." Balley, his buJalng~ agiric muscles swelled aeal.oJt his blue University Hlgb Var!lity Ceramics T-shirt, was proud of his team. He trained them himself. , ··we worked hard on colMliUon. mg," Bailev br..,ed. •·w;,; go tor 110 percent errort; to acfUeve ex1• cellencc. We work within the team spirit. ''We're all team ployer$ hete, •• Bailey, who also leatl!i a Walter Mitty hfe of instructor at the school, glared at his team, look· ing for rogues. · Friday's big game 'WU the re- &ult of a running ba~Ue between Bailey and the University Hieb sludcnlnewspaper. the Unlvine. For years, it seems, Balley has claimed to have a varsity ceramics team, chock-a-block with all-ceramic league players, tunning up preposterous wlnninc records. Occasionally the newspaper would print game results. Balley had learn T-shirts printed for his <•eram1cs students La s t year Bailey even manai:?ed to plant a-supposedCIF record of 23 wins, one loss, in the t;(·hoo ryearbook. Two weeks ago the Univfne de- t·1eh:d 1t had been duped. Put up or shut up, 1t challenged Bailey. In a ·'No, Virginia, there aln ·~ Vars tty Ceramics·• «litorial, (he newspaper charged that 8a0ey had perpetrated "a horrendous, hideous scandal.•• The newspaper will have: to'. rewrite its words. U• ~ IUperyUor)' Poll• t.lon UW could be tilled only by Ci•t~ nurse.. It would have r placed a .-UOO open to bot.ll DUl'MI and J>')'Ch techs. He atd.d the preeent PotlUons will. be maintained for four months, during which time the situation will be evaluated b)- :state and federal officlala. However, Troy Brtnr!laU. Pairview cbaptc graide.tJt tlt the California Ai.Od&UOA of Human Servlcea TQChnol~llts, Hid at the Co.ta M..a ~tal psych techs bav• Jreeted the an· nouncement with mixed f el!llnga. ••t;veo-body th1nb th'Y'rejust. throwi.,g us som~t.hiq t.o pacify us," he said today, noting that state officials might have been · alarmed by lbreats or a strike by some psych techs. ""1101til!Ver, .he added, "We're .rdll.Y hoping that be'cat.111 oltbis new offer we can work out a way to solve the problem wilb the sta~e. We're hoping it's reaJly a gestUTeof good fpittl." The problem arose because of a reorganizationJlan aimed at regaining feder certification and Medi.Cal tundl for Fa,rvlew and three oth~ state hospitals. Improper staffing was one of the violatior1' of !ederal codes found at the h0spltals last sum- mer by a state licensing team, which decertified the hospital. The team was working under contract with the federal eovem- ment. Fairview ls currently losing $500,000 per month in federal funds, which the state is making up. However, psych techs have maintained that the proposed new po!fltions would not solve the stafflng problems but would merely substitute custodial medical care for training in skills that some retarded and ban- djcapped patients need. Dr. FrancisCt.bteJla, executive director of Fatrvfew, ~ould not be reached this morning for com- ment. However, he said earlier he believes the p~ut t() bar ~sych techs from lhe new posi- tions amoWlted to an "erosion or their professional stature." Skati"9 ta Vietorg· Jesse Cochran (in white T-shirt} and Kevin Roach, both eighth graders at 'Vista Verde School in Irvine, won hands down. They came in second and first respectlv~ ly in skateboarding competition last week. Bot)\ w~re competing for T-shirts. The contest was SP<>'1•o.re.d ,by, a cQmpaay whlA:b sent its sk~teboard Jeam to give a safety demonstration before turiling the kids l008e to show their stuff. . WASHINGTON (AP> -The FBI released today nearly 53,000 pages or secrets about its efforts lo harass and disrupt radical left. wing and rl1hl-wing political groups from tbe 1950s to 1971. FBI agents handed sections of files to some two dozen reporters who prepa~ for a day-long search for details of the FBI 's counterintelligence programs, called Cotntelpro in bureau jargon. The files were mad~ public in response t.o requests under the Freedom of Information Act. The first brief scrutiny showed no st1u1.lin,c disclosures 9f FBI lea5'dwereheavUycensored. abuses but provided kesb det&U.s AltboUgb tile F8I bN t\amed afthebarusmentcampalp. over aeveral tl)Oulaod paces ot For example, the files disclosed Cointelpro ft.!• '° V-11oua &roupa thattbeburea1&covertlyprepared ln flve, years, todaY'.11 action a newspaper to di•tribute at represented the tilueat 1tn1Le A m er I can Un iv.ere lt y l n cb~ of Co!Q~pro mate.rial the Washington in an effort to coun· bureaubaJtele~. 1 teractetudentl)rotestactlvlties. Jn e11~pce. Col.iltelpro was the . FBI a1ents ptOdded local poUce FBI'• "dlrty trick.a" oper,allon: It m PhUadelphta to arrest mem-, was ~ campaip to wreak havoc bers of the Revolutionary Action arnonc miUtaot4 of the Jia'.ht and . Movement. a bLack 1roup, "on left. by sending anonym.o'P let· every possible charge" in 1968, ters, attempting t.o get acllvt.sta otherdocumentsdlsclosed. fired Crom their job_s1 fostering Firemen Halt Eateey Blaze SAN RAFAEL CAP> - Firemen extlnlUlsbed a blue in a bar and rectaurant here today as it tbreat.etied to overtake an •dJoJnl.bi mota, forcloc offldaJs to roust scores of sleeplnf per101111 from their ro0m1. Some hallways of the Holiday Jnn ftlled ~th amoke aDd visitors 1nU1ed oublde thetr rooms after being tolat.o prepare to evacuate into driYillg rains. It tOOk a c~w of .CO fJ.1'$-flgtders aDd seven eoJOnes to cbeck tho blue, which lp.lt.ed ln a drtvina rain at •:30 a.m.4 acc01'dlnc to San Rafael Fil'•· Capt. Rich M\llhaugt. Mam Killed Ori Freeway An 'UnldentUted man wu ldlled on the SaQ Oie10 Freeway near El Toro eatly tod~ _.hen he wu atruclt by a tnllltary pollco van as he attempted to cross the freeway on toot. In time-honored sports tradi- tion, the real University High School Varsity Ceramics team .showed up to prove what three years of imaginary competition can do, and pummeled their Mis- t.ion Viejo challengers 131to125. Fr .. Ptage AJ "They were arrested on every dissension among poUtlc&I aWes possible charge until they could an.d spreading derogatory no longer make ball," the memo rumonaboutmifitantlead~r,s. said. ''Al a ~ul\ RAM efi4en ' The etfonhas been roundlyffe- fSpent most oi:tbe eamrner fn'jaJl no"'nced by dozens of con- and no violence traceable to RAM greuJ011a1 le~d~rs and legal took place." ( ~ ~ !' authorities, and few ln the FBI According to a CaUfornla lUghw~ Patrol report, tbo man llescribed as a male Hex.lean was moving toward the frHWay center divfd-er when st.ruck by the southbound van near Farmea So Impressed were would-be varsity ceramics coaches from Newport Harbor and Saddleback high schools who scouted the match, that there was Im- .mediate speculation as to who would be the next Greai Pot llnpe. Bailey explained his close vic- tory. "Outstanding players ... bel- t er depth." But there was .tnotherreasonablcexplanatlon. The other team's feet obv1ous- l \·were made of cJay. ChiersSom Arsonists? ~101lRIS. Ill. <AP)--Twosons of Morns Fire Chief Sherman 1 lcxdall are among five young J1')t'n "'ho have been charged with ,arson l\rrcsts were m"de as the re· ~ult of stakeouts by police trying . to sol\'t' six fires set ln corn cribe and rural buildln1s in the last few weeks. Charged were Brad Hexdall. 21, and his brother, Brent, 19; and Ronald Bell, Jeffrey Farris and Richard Pinder, all 20 and all of Morris. ORANQICOASf I. DAILY PILOT SADAT RETURNS. • • Ephraim Katzir and Begin ror ttte notional anthems of Israel and Egypt and inspected an honor guard. A 21-gun salute boomed across the airport, three trumpet fan- fares were sounded. Bouquets of flowers lay at Sadat'a feet. The huge pennant readlng "Welcome President Sadat" in Hebr.ew. Arabic and English still hung 1&cross the terminal building. Asked for a Int comment on Israeli television, Sadat said: "Thanks for everything. Thanks for everything." At the news conference, Begin said that the ch\ef achievement of Sadat's visit was the start of a ''serious direct dialoiue ... not only between Israel and Egypt but with all the other states. "The key word is c<ftllinu.a· lion," said Be&in. "We agreed we a r e going to continue our diaJoaue, and ultimately out of it will come peace." Th~ ltcrfeu. ~-td abou~ attempttode!.end ttanymote. previously undisclosed paies of FBI D,trector Clarence Kelley documents~ro a cpun~rln· las\ year ts~ a public: apolo1Y tettlee•4'1t m lahl8':"Es· for the b\lttJu•s 'p_.( ''ab\iaes of p1onage. ut more than 4.500 power," including some Coin- pages of rnat.erial from ttiat pro-Lelproactloqs . gram werekeptsocre\onarounds A Justic~De.Partmentr~in thay they are classified for na· 1974 caUediomeCointelproprac- tionalsecuritypurposea. lice!' "abhorrent in a free AgenL'I said about 161000 pqes society." from all of the Cointelpro files Kelley aM other' FBI ottlcials were being withheld on grounds insist that' no Co\ntelpro opera- thay tpey ar~ classiried. Many of lions have been carried.out slnce ~he 52,648 pages that W$r~ re-April 1971. '' CrossinJt. • The report said the as yet un· identlfled man wu dead at the .sceneoftbel2:05a.m. accident. Cancer Surgery ROCHESTER, ?.ttnn. CAP) - A cancerous prostate gland was reipoved ln an operation oo U.S. Supreme Court Associate .Justlee Harr)' A. Blackmun, 69, a Mayo Clinic ·spokesman conUfmed. He was listed ln satlsfaet.ory condi· tion lo Methodist llosp!tal. ,, The nal'l')t At:m1-Royoe, the Roll1·Royc1 radl&tor arlllt, and tt\1 Spirit of Ec1t1ey hood om1m1nt · · art Ill Roll1·Royo1 tradtmarkt. . ' uitd with th• approval of Roll1-Royoe Motdrw • IJ ,,, l CAIRO (AP) -President Anwar Sadat of Enpt ended his historic journey lo Jerusalem and returned to Cairo today after pled1lng with the leader of Israel: "No more war." Millions of E1yptians lined the route from the airport to Cairo, hailin1 their returning president as a "hero of peace." In his final statement to Israel's cabinet m embers in Sidef!ar Bas DratelJae!la Howie Micken of San Diego appears to be expending more effort keeping warm th sightseeing on a motorcycle driven by Gary Harper. also of San Diego. The two POllUcaJ fUture and the untt7 ol the Arab world t4 1peaf(;'lh We capital of bl.I enemies. hraelt Prime Klnlater Menahem Begln echOed the sen· tlment: "We have decided, no more war between our nations. We wlll establish pc/ace and live inpeace." He then eave Sadat a gift of nine ancient candleaUcks and said: .. From time to ume, have a 1 \ I Missing Girls' r1 I ~es Found In LA Park SC Crash Su"'ivor In Stable Condition ' l j I LOS ANGELES (AP) -The t bodies of two Eagle Rock girls r missing for more than a week , were discovered tn a ravine in the area where three nude young women's bodies have been found recently. police said today. Sgt. Frank Tomlinson of the robbery-homic ide division • declined to say whether the 1 bodies of Dolores Cepeda, 12, and Sonja Johnson, 14, were un·. dressed when discovered Sunday ln Elysian Park by several un- identified youths. Police also refused comment on cause of death of the two girls pendlng·autopsies. The pair were last seen Nov. 13 boarding a bus at the Eagle Rock Plaza where they had been shopping. Earlier Sunday, in a hillside residential area of Highland Park 1everal miles away, the third nude young woman's body to be found ln the area was discovered under bushes. Victim Slain MONTEBELLO (AP > -Four unidentified young men have fatally beaten and stabbed Otis J.yndon .Beal, a 67-year·old man ln an apparent robbery near his home, police reported. The sole survivor or an Orteea Highway crub Tuesday, who wandered three days ln shock before he was fo"'nd. was in sta- ble condiUon today In the SBD\e Mission Viejo hospital where his brother is recovering from another auto accident. George Rea, 19 , of San ~emente wn spotted al 9: 15 a . m . Friday by a passing motorist who saw the youth slumped beside a tree, not quite a mile Crom the Tuesday night crash which kllled three or his friends. Funeral services were planned today In Capistrano Beach at Pld'ea Park for Deborah Lynn Miller, 17, or 113 Ave. Do- minguei. a San Clemente Hilb School student kllled in the acci- dent. David Border, 21, of 108 Ave. Petayo, 18, and Terrance Ryan Palma , 21, of U06 Ave. Presidente, were also kllled1 when the new lightwei1ht car in which they were riding skidded on a curve and plummeted over a 30·foot embankment into a dry riverbed. Hikers in the Santa Ana moun· taln .relion, where the Orteea Highway enters Riverside from Orange County. alerted police to signs of an accident Thursday about rour miles east of the coun· ty line. Reports had come in late Wednesday of an injured youth wandering the area. When the triple fatal accident was discovered Thursday, blood 1meara on the hood of the wrecked car led them on a search for a fourth vlctltn, said California HI1hway Patrol of· ficer D.E. Smith. Rea was taken to Lakeview General Hospital In Lake • <SeeCKASH, Pace AU glltnpse of It and remember your friends ln llrael." · At a news conference earlier tn th• day, Sadat said it was Israel's tum to take '1bard aQd draaUcdeclilona. •• "I have already taken my share of risk In my decl11on to come here,•' be said; But he repeated that there could be no compromlse on Arab demands for the retum of all ter· ByROBERTBABKER CM•MIY,....IUH Huntington Beacb resident Robert Myers apparently scra~ several nuiObera on the palm of his left hand before his death and lnvestieators believe they are a cluetohJs murderen, lt was revealed today. Detective Dennis O'Roul'ke of the San Bernudt~o Coitnty Sheriff'• Department said the numbers are believed to be that of a motorcycle that Myers may have encountered sbortl}' before 40Survive Argentine Jet Crash . hi1death. The 57·Year·o14 ?d1ers, a longtime resident of Lacuna 'Beach, was killed ·Nov. 11 near Bantow. He was ebottwice m the chest. ~ "We are ~ure that he wrote tbes~ numbers bef~be wushot and that be ~u trYlns to .tell us sometbhlg," O'Rc>urke alld to- d~~ • "1'blr b ®r: Qt.ior clue it UU. J)<))nt. n11 }.mt .• matter Of de- velopfnalt. 'O'Rourkeadtfed. Myen wrote six or aewen mtm· _ tq full· • oewap~r es • around town/.:.Oreeooaal~ ~tlD.lt7~:'0lllr.::1 :r~eptir it&rtlil!c~O:iro- • ... 0 e.d.---.. ... wapa~ wn. out ;~a. ~ li•M on \ho nr't. traah dl)' or . BYTO•BAKU:Y ... ... ~,... ..... t Superior Court JUdte Phlllp E. CNftrl'M .......... , I ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY Ex-Supervisor Baker •• ,, $1,300Tab ·,.For Crayons Questioned La~una Beach school trustees, !jUCSlJOned a b1g i.£eDa Oll'th~dM­ trict ·s purchase order 'list 115l week -nearly $1.300 fdt wax crayons for youngsters. 'w • •'!'fle political season•"' n..t· lttg up and anyone can rµn for of· !ice," Schmit said. The Garden Grove supervisor alsc5 said he l>elieves the real is- SJ.les lllnext.Yl!ar's campaign WJU ":' 'M.!Chfied daring Ult Orb-f'trf e.na .,~ besf person wal'wil'l th4! • job." Baker said he favors strong , ,.c~qipajgn refwm !>1;1ti1n't sure a phi'l ~as been ol(e100 as yet that can· control the machinations or .. ca.mp~ign managers. Schmit's campaig,n will ,be m~aged by political consultants Arnold Forde and William Butcher, according to Schmit's most recent campaign disclosure statements. Baker said bis campaJgn or-- ganli1tUon is likely to be mad&up of vohq1teer wpr~ers and Uiat an organiµtion wHl be rorpi~ in the next few weeks. The former county ~uperviaor would not speculate about the arnountofmoney he wiUspead in his comeback attempL However, he said, ''I think everyone is disenchanted with a political system that. renden un· to Caesar that whicll-is his through a series ot lund-ra,sers by officeholders in non·election years." , Since he let1 offjse ln «14rly 1975 ':the ~meC tlio:.c:ieQ Grove s upervlsor tfaS"" bem ttidepen· denUy employed as a consultant specializing in the disposal or ha:i:~ous wasfeJUaterial. ' ... \. .. 1 don't mean to pick out one Hem," trustee Dr i ~OIJ"<lH\lr:ote • said. "But it does catch my atten-. · tion." · T., key · ,. · '!he board member said that · · ··..I. UT. Trot r price works out to almost tt pter · •. 1 •' "" 1 student in the five·school district V El ... •for the coloring tools. And tl\e . ror l.,.J.0Tr0 , prayons are not used by st'*2lts r ,, ,1,at all five schools, Juat those in S*-~-!~~·0· '='-t i,be lower ~rades. r,f.U.re• ""47 .;:,e Board president Harry Bilhell igreed the annual amount for 1 ,r;rayons seemed unusual. ·:u the t administration came at us with '.,$50 for crayons evel'y month. we probably wouldn 'l notice," he uid. • , District Supt. Robert Sanchis 1,said the Crayola expense ts an annual one. "The~ really are a consumable itern at th~ sctioo~ ... he said. .. , . '" :::Chief's Sons . . ' ';'.Arsonists? •11 MORRIS, lll. (AP)'-Twc)gous or Morris Fire CtHcr Sherman · }lexdall are among five young .men who have been charged wtth arson. Anests were made as the re- sult of stakeouts by police trying , .,to solve six fl.res set ln cdra' cribs , and rural buildlnes in thd llast , levr weeks. 1. SC Changes Day Of Refuse Pickup Ref'Use· pickup will be on Fri· day tor those San Cleniente resi· It's the students who 'wUl be trotting, but t.hey ltlll ull It the El Morro Turkey Trot. Fourth, fifth and sixth grade boys and girls will be competing for frozen toms Wednesday at 1130 at the school. It's the ninth anntJ-1 Turkey Trot, says instructor Pete Petersen, and the winning boy ~nd gjrl will get: a ieady'.to-cook . turkey' as a prir.e . ··we.' used to ,,&\v~ ~01 .. live turkeys, but l got l\r~ ol 4riving .all tbe way to Biveraide .for them," Petenao la.ulhed. T~e .youngaten; wlll run. hOp, .skip and cUQ1b along a 500 yard '°1tac;le course for the turkeys . a qt,berpri~andawarm. , arents are invited to comeout lo the playing field and watch the <;.o.mpetition. Center. Hoai. • f I f ·DJ Marines t month, · But tho goi"g Is a llt\l "tum· fl ben:some, comlderiitg th• eoiidl· 1 tlon of • ••recycltc1 truck"' ed • by Greene and, Thomas to mike . their rounds. . "We call it -Old 98'," 'UlPmas· laughed. "It's about 12 yee&.t>ld and used to be a city truck.::. The vintage t.wo-and-a-blltton lruck lrindJ ita way up 1Y roads in the Art Colony, ~.lts crew leaptn1 out to crab up bundles of f\eWSpapers ~eftout for them. "If you've ever been np in jl\QJe hillll in "-n~ --car, you '-'1ow it's nQ pi<;nic," Greene said. "That truck was on its way to the glue factory when we rescued it." • The rec~cllrui 'center t\ves off ; "4\unteer °li~l'lS Wt\Q <fiop off "1ttles ani bundles d'iil' at the cxc lone fence entrance. "It's turning into a garbage swt:ip meet," Crcene admitted. • • ·~ get J>t!Qple who will come in here and drop off a bunch of maaazinCR, then browse around · and plck out a couple of unusual • ' '" • DilllY , ................ bottles." '· · ••1t·s a tSottle cutler's JIM GREENE (LEFT), HAL THOMAS BAG AtUMlNUM CANS ' llt Ulguna 9•aoh Recycling la aa Art Form . paradise," be added. But moat people come to get I' ... Page Al rid of their trash, thereby' s;lVing • valuable landfill sp'ace al', the SADAT RETURNS. dump ~ helpinc to ~~e • • . " the naU~ s resources. · · "Newspapers alone cotnprlse colored 1l1n1 Teadlnt: lara41i t.levision, Sadat saJd: 10 percent ot tbe landfill at "Welcomeberoofpeaee '' "L<>ag ''Tllllllb for evel'J'tbinl. Tban.ka dumps," Greene said ... And 85 live t.be leadenbip of' EoPt " for everything." percent of what goes in people·s "God bless your movea f~r At the news con.terence, 'Begin ·trashcan.slal"ecyclable:· .peace" and "Welcome to your said tbat the ch.let achievement But at le.St sqtnt of that trash land of peace." of Sadat•s visit was the statt of a ls showing up at the Laguna Arter shaklnc bands with ' ' s e r i o ·u s d l r e c t . center. rt>e iwo men fl1ure they Jllembers of bl• c-~lnft, pull•· dialogue .•. not only bet•een now have aliout ~O tons of a lass. ment, the vm~ f orcts a,nd the lar.Hl and Egypt but With all ~ (Qur toq~ of newspap~rs and diplomatic corps, Sadat bQuded other stat.es. three tom or ca,rdbqar:d box.es, ~an open limousine ror t.he ae\'en· .. Th• key word is contlnua- a Ion g • with .s t e ~ J cans . " 'thile rtdt to the presidential Uon,'' said Begin. 0 We afl'eed we maga~\n~s .. bo'n<l Raper manaionbbt.bebanl<aoftheNUe. are foing to continue-our cram med ont.Q th.e sm_.11 lPt. securit.Y ''1\ the airport waa ex-dialogue, and ulUmately out of it. So i r you · re in the ceptionally tifht, apparentty • wlllcomepeace.'' neighborhood wi~h a pile o~trash, because o( t))e a,saaalbftilon He read what he described as st.ol? by. r \breal ag~Jnat ~4'd~t by the an .. aareed communique" i111ued. Jim and H'al will even Jet you Syrian-baqked Salqa euerrtlla by ithe lnaell government .. ln. sortlhe stuff. organlzJtion. In hla os>en car, response to the eincel'e and . , , Sadat was flanked by security courageous mo.ve by President men forming a human shield. Sadat.'' ' In Jerusalem, the departure The cornmunlque proposed 1 r . • scene was alm°'t a replica oC "that this hopeful step be-further ··CRASH. ·.·.··.' SJldat'_J tr~umtt»n\ Nlival pursued· through dialogue j;t.Ct~<Jky .. ·44 h6ura -~4 16 between the two countries ton- 11 minutes earUer. cerned • • • leadillf to the slen· Elsfnore •-' 1i~ was tO\llld Fri-s d t .,... d j tt~l Int ot peac4\•Ultaties in Geneva " t!ttY. ~rttdt>n~llt'fot'}aw and P. a s...,o .a a on with all the neighboring Arab 'sh0uld~in)w1e5tn'Uieh0s.:.,1lal's f~aQk•.l>ntsr-. '~ ent stales." f! • 1 ., ~phraltit "'~attit and' B4!gin for merg 11cy room, he was the national anthem!5 of wael In an interview with NBC's transrerred tQ Mission Communi-and Egypt a.fld .Lnse>ectad an John Chancellor. broadcut on ty Hospital in Mission VleJo, honor'g\.tard. • th• "T~" ahow. Beain and where hb brother was already a Sadat said there was a possibility patient. A 2l·&Wl salute boomed across that. a Geneva conference could Rolland Joseph Rea, 16, was the airport, three trumpet fan. be ~veDed belA)re the end of critically tnjUred Oct. 7 when he fares were sounded. ~ouquets ot this year.· Jlotl:I men stressed, was thrown rrom a car near San flowers lay at Sadat • reet. Th~ · however, that adequate prepara- Clemente Hieb School. He was huge peMutreading "Welcome tio.n W.Ull~ed rcpbrted fh saUsractoey conc:li-Pres~dent Sadat" in Hebrew,' :'All tbe effoz:is now 'should be tfon today: · Arabic and EngUsh still bung directed toward the convening of Miss Miller's mottfer re~tted acrosf the terminal buUdina. the Geneva conference," Sadat Schwab was aasured bY. the · c lComia Attorney Genera.I's Office tod~ that the tat. is re d1 find willing ta 'rosecute Or•afe County Supervilors Ralph Dledrlcb and Pl\Ulp An- thony and two cod~endants. But Deputy Attorney Gefta-al Rtcbari\ Haden made it clear in the pretrial heannf that '" •tato'a lnt.ervenUon la depen.dent on an awaited ru.u~ Crom the Fourth Diltrlct Court of Appnla .lo San Bernard ao. :... That appeal wat rue.ct bY. tbe d~trlet attorney'• ·omce after Judie Sclutiab qreed wJt.b tbe defense that there was~ e.Vldtnce ot pri,JUdlee to JQIUly a1Jdn1 ttMt ltete to take ov• the proseoUUoa chorea. Haden tokl Judge 8eh1'al> that if tbe Jud.Be's ~clui\00 i'U1inf ls upheld, tho t~t wm need delays or uU pretrial motions and the trlol da~of Jan. 30. "We hn.ve VOil quanUUes or legal pnpen and evlcSeoce to sift. throuah," Haden said. "We would need a delay of at least two Qr lhree months tO enable us to prepare for trial.'' Judge Schwab set .lan. f .. the ned hearing date for the four de- fendants. none ol whom bu yet offered a plea to felony char1es • contained bl a &rand jJ.a.ry indlct· ment. Diedrich, 53, Anthony, '11 financial consultant Gene Conrad, 43, and Dr. William Kott.. ~. f aee trtal oo charces of Vk>l•t· ing atato POlltJc&l campalp and nnanclal ~lMu.re 11ws. lladen'a appearance today ln· dlcated that bl• office bas siinmcanUy changed ill attitude toward.a takln1 over the prosecu· tton of t.M Cour deten4ants. Three months aco hls of nee n- tected outrislht a plea by the county Board of 1upervlson to declare a conflict. ot interest in the case and take over its prosecutlon- H adeJl declined today to com• ment on hia office's appuent new stance. t Members ot the Lacuna Beach· Masters, which soUcits new members lot' tbe Claamber of Com rnerce, hHe elected Gene ShldJer president for 1978. • Other omcera n.med to. t..he Mast!rs board hu:Jude Jack Smith. vice president and Tim Howell, secretary and treasw.r. In addition to 1eekint new chamber members, tbe Masters organize the chamber's social funcUona, according to preaident Srnith . to San Clemen~ poJ,lC:e la~ Tµes-Asked for a last comment on said . · .. da~ that Iler dat.tc~~er tat~~ to ---------------------------------- rt?turnhomefrorq • pf,rty. , --------------~-----------_.......,..._ __ ..__ ___ __ 'ftoss Vetde~rajp, aulst.ant prlnctr.' al at $an Clemente High SChoo , ~aid Ml$s Mlller w~ "a hard workfhg young Jady, who held a number of after-school jbbs .. "She Was a 'happy-go-lucky person and a very good student.•· he Uld. "f!verybod'y llke.d her - .she was ,"1w~YJ lfO pleasant wtth us alt" Rev. Kenneth Mulder of the San Clement~ Presbytetian Cburch was to Ptf:side at tJ>day's _f\lheral s~rviccs for Miss Miller at Pines P.a:rk. Private interment wa• planned at El Toro · Cemetery. , , She is survived by her motber. Betty MllJer, ot the same San Clemente address; by ber rather Burleigh Mllltt, of BelUngham' Wash.; and by four brothers. ' ,. '. ... ' Tht name Roll1·Rovo!, th• Roll•·Royct radiator oi111t, and th• aplrft of Ec1tuy hood ornament · art 111 Aoll•·Royoe trademartct. · uied With th• approval of Rolle·Royoe Motor1. [I Services are pending in Staten Ml(JOICl=~~·~~d,. ... JAE.. err ance • 111\'1 Jb t.ake-1 for DavJd Border. ByaOBERTBARKER Ol•Deltw NeCIUIC Huntlntton Beach resident R obert Myers apparently scrawled several numbers on the palm of his left hand ~tore his death and Investigators beUeve they are a clue to hi$ murderers. lt wos revealed today. Detective Dennls O'Rourke of the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department said the numbers are beUeved to be that of Cheered • in • motorcyct. that Miers may have encountenMI abol'tly Wore • his death. Th• S7-year·old Myers. a IOl\Stlme resident of La1una 'Beach, was killed Nov. 11 near Barstow. HewaubO\twlceinlh chest. "We are au~ that he wrote these numbet'i tiefore f\e was hot and that he Wat trYlnc to tell wt something," O'Rourke said to- da y. Challenges Sela•it ·Baker to Run . . . g For Supervisor .,.., .... _~~ ~NNOUNCES CANDIDACY EX·IUJMrvf tor B•ker State Ready rFo Prosecute Supervisors By GARY GRANVILLE .... Dlttr ..... ...,, Former supervlaor David 'Baker announced toda1 that he will try in 19'78 to take tbe seat he once held on tbe Oraace County Board ol SUpervison back from Second District Supervisor Laurence Schmit. Baker, who u a 1.2-year incum· bent county s upervisor wa1 de- feated by Schmit in 1974, Uld bis candidacy comes ln ruponse to urginl byasu .. Who Waftt in\euit>' • b' ff>o tUl'DAld to •ovemm•t; •· Amont Bater~• n at hi• ennounctme ~ tcJD· • fetence ff atacla Pollce Cblef Earl obltltUe, Huntington Beach Clty Sebool District Trustee Dort• Allen, former county planQ\01 eom· mlsalonet Roser Slatea of Hunt· lngton Beach and movie· television actor Jack JC~lly. Baker, who was defeated by a campaisn ln 1'74 tb•t was maJn· ty financed by former county po1ltJcal klntmalter Dr. Louts Cella, aatd that "7tcampatin will be an issue ln um. .. I did not expect \hat a political broker (Cella) would emerge with a baafuJ of •P· parenUy stolen money and dump more than~.~ !ato P'Y oppo- neot'1 colfen tn a vicious cam· pai1n to ~move me from of- fice," Baker aaid as he disou.ssed his 1974defeat. "This Ume we will not un- deresUmate the special interests and tbalr puppet. We ar• puttinR toaetber a aolld coaUUon. • • dedicated to what will be tbe theme Of my campailP. restor- ing decency to public office." Baker said. · Baker. bowenr, made tt dear that he wUl bammq at SChmlt's record u a ~8.lled cell& can· didate,. a 1upervlJor who bas alienated county law enforce-. ment offlcials and a pubUc of· flcial who "hu fallled to clllc~ <See.BAKE&, Pas• A2) • ' 0 'Thl5 ls our m~r clue at this point. It'1 JU$t a matt.er of de .. veloptngit," O'Rourkeaddeci. ¥Y~.-S wro~ 1~ or uven num~ ber1 on Ule webbing Of h1s b4Uld betweeit tt>e tb~mb and lndex finger In blue ballpoint pen iQk. The fin>t three letter~. which O'Rou.rke cleclined to ickqUfy, we re leeible. The final thre, are beio• oxl.Ollned by ldentlficaUon experts. "We believe it !' Ute license Big Sdag~ Lori Jackson, 17, ol Ne~ Beach, pre~s ber rune .. month-old sbeltie, "Lisa,' for a swinging time. Lori says Lisa loves to ride in swing.,. ;tl. o·aourke alto said that in· veatiaaten are aot abandonlnf the th~ that Myers was •bot to death l>y httcbhiken altbocaab Hyers' f mJ1y members said that be was oot Ute t.ype to pick hltehhJkers. The mun!eren le.ft behind $65 in cash in Myers' wallet a.Ion& with creditcitdl andJewelry. By'IM~latedheu A mlllor soowstonn hit mucb of tl\o Midwest and wu moving into western Ontario today, with blowlna snow, wind austs up to 60 mUea per bour, and tem-peratµm in the tffns ln llin· nesota, uatern North Dakota and northeastern South Dakota. BAJULOCKE, AraenUna (AP) -.A cbart•r• Art••tl•• 'etliner cUT)'lnt .uy b"1IU moollina eouptes m B_.... 4trea to tb.Ll .outhena lakJ r1llOrt crubed .. It wu UyJJur to lu4• stormy weather.tu.ta, • Airline oftldall aal4 • ~ ~ome 1urvivors amOQI fbe 1' tersona ,.board. A spokesman for Austral Airlines said the BAC·Ul twtn jet carTylng 7( paasenaera and a cirew of five left Aeroparque Airport at Buenot Aires on Sun- day night on • direct rupt tor Bartloche, a lake and ski resort in the foothills ot the Andes 1,000 miles southwest of Buenos Aires. Ruben Chihade, a spokeaman for Austral, said a 15-man army and police patrol reached the scene of the crub, a f()Cky area about 20 miles from here. about mid-day and reported finding survivors. The national news agencies re- ported 40 people survived. Deity "'91 ...... ., llidlMI ....... Earlier today a search plane reported it spotted the wreckage in a rocky area near here, but of- ficials said it reported no sips of ~urvivors. FIREMEN STRUOOU! TO FREE CRASH VICTIMS 0n4t q.1d, Qne Hqrt 89dty In ~ ,AOclltent The news agency Noticias J\rgentinas reported the plane '1ad problems with landing gear apd had overflown the Barlloche ~rport several times trying lo ~t the landing gear Into position and then attempted to divert to another airport at Neuquen. Most of the passeneen were reported to be Argentine honey~ moon couples from the Buenos Aires area on a package tour. Austral is a privately ow1100 .\rgenllne company with ex- tensive domesbc routes. It a1ao flies to Uruguay. Dr.Sandor Dead at 64; Rites Tuadar. Services will be held Tuelday for Dr. Andrew A. Sandor, a Corona del Mar ophthalmologist who died Saturday. Ue wu&&. .. Dr. Sandor, who practiced medicine in Orange, was a member of the American Medical Association and the Oranee County Medical Associa- tion. He had lived in C1tliforrua for 33 years. Services wUJ be held at 11 a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Parle Chapel in Newpon Beach, with Rabbi Bernard Kingoffk1atio1. Or Sandor 1s survived by hia wife. Jeanne, sons David of Irvine. Richard of Los Angeles and Jonathon o( Berkeley, and daughter Marjorie J . Sandor or Corona dct Mar. He also leaves Cbur grandchildren. The family suf'gests donations be made to Harbor Reform Ten:i-. pie of Newport Beach or the lnsUtut.e of Cancer and Blood Research, 152 N. Robertson Blvd., Beverly Hilla. Mesa Liquor Store Robbed by Bandits A Costa Mesa Uquor store waa robbed at gunpoint Sunday by two men, one of 'fbom reportedly told the clerk, "Get onto the noor or I 'JI blow you up." Police said the two men escaped an a small red pickup Wi\_h between $50 and iec> ln cuh., The hoJdup occurred at 10:40 'J>.m . at Vaughn's Llquor, J.125 Victoria St. No one was reported injured. Danger Reduced Froaa Page AJ BAKEll ••• his source of campaign Cundl.'' Schmit said he was not sur- prised ~t Baker's announcement. ''The J)C)litical se~n ia beat- iog up aod anypae can ran !or of· fice," Schmit said. The Garden Grove supervisor also said be believes the real ls· sues in next year's CUQpaJp will be formed during the campalan and "the best person will win the job." • Baker said he favon strong campaign reform but ian't sure a plan bas been offered as yet that can control the rnachlnation.s of campaign managera. Schmlt's campaign will be managed by political consultants A..Qlold_Forde and WUliam IUltcber,-ac~ to SclSmit's · most recent cdrtipafgr\ dls?fosure statements. Baker said bis campatgn or· ganizalian is l•k.ely t.o )te made up · of volunteer worker,s and that an organization will be formed in the next few weeks. The former CQunly supervisor would not speculate about. the a'mount of money he wlll spend in hia comeback attempt. However, he said, ''I thlbk everyone is di.senctranted Wfth 'a J>OUlicaJ system that renders un- · to CAesar that which is hts through a series of fund-raisers by officeholders in non-election years." Since be left office in early ms the rormer Garden Grove superviaor has been Indepen- dently employed as a consultant specializing in the disposal of hazardous waste material. Boy, 16, Held After FatBI Canyon· Crash A 16-year-old boy is in juvenUe hall today and charged with felony drunken driving as a re- sult of an early Sunday morning fatal accident in Trabuco Can· yon. According to a Callfornla Ri~hway Patrol report, the un· identlffed juvenile was at the wheel ot a car that skidded off Plano Ttabuco Road, pl1,1nged do"'n an embankment and then rolled over twice. As the car tumbled down the embankment, 17-rear·old John Lynch of ~1 Spring St., Garden Grove, was thrown out and ltUJed REDDING (AP> -Operators when apparently struck by the of the Iron Mo.untaln Malo have auto a1 It went lnto Its rup, the re- installed a coppt; J,rA,p.. U..l .... JM>n.aut. .-, ,.. should reduce Ult! cfanaer ot fish The accident on the lonely dlrt kills in UMt Sacramento Rh·•r. lt road about one mile from Hbly was reportedSunda)". Jim Canyon occurred at 3 a.m. DAILY PILOT a"d racue worken l•borid in darkness in the deaol.tl •~• 10 brln1 tbe v1ctlm an;! Jouns drunken drMnc tuspect back to where their htjuriOI Could be treated. Lynch, however, wa• dud at the scene. Tb• survlvlnJ ~enafer was not erio sl~ hurt; the CHP~rtsald. • \ Mesan Killed, Friend Hurt In Car CrtUh A Costa Mesa man was killed ond his roommate was critically injured early today whe" their car smashed into a signal light pole a block from the icene of a similar fatal accident less thu a weekaeo. Dead I.a Ricky D. Terbush, 21, or 234 Vletoria st. His passeneer. Dennis Zeutenhorst, 24, was in critical condition today at ~ta Mesa Mentor:lal Hospital. Police said t.he pair were driv.- 1 ng southbound on Ntwport Boulevard shortly a!t'er midnight when their car skidded Jnto the steel pole at Fair Drive. Terbush was killed instantly by the hn· pact, traific lnvesticators sAt4. Police, firemen and paramedtca labpred for h,alf an hour to free Zeutenhorst, who suffered s~vere iniUOe5 to his head and lower body. The acoldent ocdurred only a blo~ rrom the interseeUon of Newport Boulevard and Mesa. Dnve. wa.,. Rayroond~Jaeepb Beaudry Qf Newport •Beach was fatally injured leslJ tUn a week aeo. In that accident, his car also skidded into a aianal Uahl pole. The cause of today's crash is still under invesUgation. -,....,pflfleAl DISPUTE •• ~· that some relarded and ban- . dic.apped patients need. . Dr. Ftancls Crlne1h1, executive director of Fairview, could nOt be reached tb\s momlng tor com· ment. Howev~r. he said ear11er: he believes the proposal to, bar psych techs from the new PQ.5i· lions amounted to an "erosion of their professional &lature ·' Woman Faces Mesa Assatilt, Drunk Raps . 7 Guns Taken At ·~H1 di" Four rtttes and th~a~ot were a~,U.. stolen Sdlmtiif bUi-at netted more tban 13,000 ln Coods from a Ne~ri S,.a~;Mtiie, poUcea • ~ • • .. Wade J . Drt11en. of 212016th st., told police his tiome wu .. burglarized Sunda1 artemoon wbile be was vt,fttns a sick -relative. Besides the weapon•, a number of rintlJ~ bracelets and gold chains were repbrted '1\lu· ing. p<>U~ saJd. ' I• ' I r ~11£ ltG'YPTIAN P&BSID~N'l''S spo cb WU ttexe.Dent becauseSldatdldnotd vlatefrom the Arab UM," a Jordw;,,y:v· ernment aource aaid ... He Qj)lalned ~ Arab st.and fully w a bumanitartan framework, and this will brt" now beaetlta. '' :The Sal!tl PalesUnlal\ tuerrillaa. ~hO are CQllt.rOlled by Sy(ia" Pretklent Hi(jx Allad, charled sadat wttb "4'he ~est treuooio. the hlatmy of the Arab n&Uon" and ai.ld: •-no blOOd OC the traitor muat be shed. He·mu.t be followed to the fVtbelt comus of tbe world until tbedeatb senteuceis earned out.•• A Syrian 1ov~ent statement brOadcut by Damucus lladio called on "Ofl? ~ of -E&YPL •• to Mat.ore your naUoDat bcnor ~ di&nily ••• dl1sraoea~.besmlrdwld by the v!Slt tO IU.¥1 ot tht li'aftQ.rSadal" • ' . . Lian;; wan::e. BROU diploma c relations with. Eiypt botaut-et&adat'• &.eCI .. EOPUau in ev f'J &owa ID( .W..,e toriie, takeatma.a the traitor.•• lraq's Balbct.d Ra uid: "Sadat the traitor huncolftlled the Zioniatentlty tbf'O\llh his speech.•• • Cairo ~aperl balled Sadat and one called bJm ''the hero ol J>e8Ce,"' but UM sebli-official daily Al Abram eriticiied Beam for falllns to ''produce anythJng new OI\. •• wt\at eonceaaioos larael is willing to olferfQr pushing the peact wheelin ~ M.iddle t." Itmev.el -Surrenders For ~menth If erm SANTAMONlCA (AP)-stunt man Eve.l Xll••l lune~ today to heilJ:i ~g hJ.a 'il· month jail sentence for the baseball-bat beating of a televilbl exec:utlve who wrote a book about him. · "Good n10tnlnJ, tood momlqg, 100<\ morning,., Knievel greeted reporters and photographers as he &Urrtndered .i S~IO a. D\., 40 minutes bef01'91he tfme he was ordered ·to aJ>pear by Superior Court Judge.Edward ftafeedle. Knievel, wearinc a suit made of blue leather and white cotton. was taken by bus with other in- mates to County Jail, where he wlll wait one or two days while hls applicaUon for a work- furloulh prograrn is processed, s-1d his attorney, Paul Caruso. Under I.he work-furlough pro- gr&,Ql, ~el '''!!t'0"1d...leava tbe jail In reg\ilar clothJ.Dr at a a.m .• go about~ ctHl!es until 6 p. m. at nl1ht, then ~'r«!iSort to the iatJ -.pd put on Jail denJ,ms:• Carusq 1akl. I ' .. I Cancer Surge~ ROCHESrER, Minn. <AP> - A cancerous prostate eland was removed in ao o~ratlon on U.S. Supreme Court Assochtte JusUce · Harry A . .Bllt"m~. 69, .a Mayo CUnlo ·spokeaman cont.if med. He was ltsted in satisfactory condi- tion in Met.bocliJtHospltal. "' K.nlevel could be out ot Jail in 4Y& moatlas, t_!lh time ()ff for good behavior, Carusosa14. After the jail sentence, he could 1Mt allowed to leave the •tale under the terms of bia three-year probaUoo. Ho"ever Knievel eould not 10 to Mon.tana until after the si)[·Jllonth jail term was completed unless the · judge modified the &elltenc.e. the attorney added. Ram's Valley . . Home Burgled Burglars threw Los Anceles Ram a linebacker la lab Robertson tor a SCOO loss Sunday whlJe he was iQ San Francisco for the Rams' 2J.:10 victory owir tbe "8er$11 Pouniam Valley poUco said today. • - ' Jnveatli~tora said IOJ!l~e broke tnfu ltobekUon '• home ne.r Mlle SQUUe Park -.id AoJe a ta~ Teci>rder and J~elry .' PoUce said a friend or Robertson's reported tbe bur1lary when she dlJcovered a wfndow SCl'ffn cut and found a bedroom ransacked. ·~- Police Officer Mark Armando said a pUlow case apparently was used as a bag td carry the loot from tho pro foolball st.a.r's home. Tht natnt RoJ11•Royc1, tht Roll1·Royo1 radiator grUlt, and tt1t Spirit of Ec1t11y hood om1m1nt . · -art all Aoll•·Royoe trademarkt. . ' . . und with th• approval of Aollt-Aoyot Moto'8 • . . II . .. .. .. - 7 By GARY GRANVILLE OftM Diii• l'li.t "-" Former supervisor David Baker announced today that he will try in 1978 to take the seat he once held on the Orange County Board of Supervisors back from Second District Supervisor Laurence Schmit. Baker, who as a 12 year incum- bent county supervisor was de- feated by Schmit in 1974, said his .. candidacy comes in response to urging by supporters "who w~t integrity and respectability re- turned to county government." Among Baker's supportera at his announcement press con- ference were H\U\tinitoD Beach Police Chief t:arl Robitaille, Huntington Beach City SchC>ol Dlstrlct Tru.s~ Dorjs Allen, former county planning com- missioner Roser Slates of Hunt- Garage, Contents Dntroged I lngton Beach and movie- tGlevlJion actor Jack Kelly. Baker, who was defeated by a C?ampal~ in W14 tbat was main- ly fmancta by former county political klngmaker Dr. Louis Cella, said that '74 campaign will be an lssue in 1m. , "l did not expect that a political broker (Cella) would emerge with a bagful Q( ap- parently stolen money and dump Fire swept through a Mission Viejo fidals are still trying to determine the garage shortly before midnight Saturday, Cjlll!e of the $30,000 flre at the Charles destroying the shelter and its contents, in-Bettars home, 25371 Campjna Drive in •• ~~c~lu=d~in~g~a:......:l=a=te:......:.m~od::.:e~l-=C=or~v~e=tte::.:.-~fir:...::=e-o=C~·__:Mi:=•~s~i~n~V~~~j~o.:__~~~__:.i:!!!!.!:~~!1!.~~ ""' Boy, 16, Held After Fatal Canyon Crash A l6·year-old boy is in juvf?nile hall today and charged 'with telo'tly drunken driving as a re- sUlt of 811 early Sunday mornlnt fatal accident In ~raliuco Can-yon. According to a California Highway Patrol report, the un· identified juvenile was at lhe wheel o( a car that skidded off Plano Trabuco Road, plunged down an embankment and then rolled over h wee. As the car tumbled down the embankment. 17-year-old John Lynch of 12851 Spring St.. Garden Grove, was thrown out and killed when apparently struck by the auto as It went into its Olp, the re-port said. The accident on the lonely dirt road about one mile from Holy Jim Canyoh occurred at 3 a.m. and rescue workers labored in darkneu I.ii the deaolate area to bring tM vlctlm and young druhken driving suspect back to where their Injuries· could be treated. Lynch, however, was dead at the scene. The s urviving teenager was not seriously hurt, the CHP report said. ties letters as weU as numbers. Investigators are still seeking Myers' van. which was apparent· ly driven away by hil assailants . after he was dumped from the vehicle. O'l\ourke "'aid earUer that discovery of the van held the key tOthe murder lnvesticatioh. The miasln~ van is a 14· colored 1970 Ford with a wau,o.c:,~ bubble top. It was previously iJi.. correctly listed in news stories as 81974 vehicle. O'Rourke also said that in- vestiaators are not abandonlnc the theory that Myers was shot to death by hitchhikers although Myers' family members said that ho was not the type to pick up hitchhlkerB. The murderer! left behind $6S In cash In Myers' wallet along with credltcards1lndjewelry. · • more than $140,000 into my oppo. nent 's cof!era ln a vicious cam- pai•n to remove me from o!· lice,'• Baker 1aJd as he di.le~ his 1974defeat. ''This tlme we will not· un- derestimate tho apeclal interests and their puppet. We are Putting toeether a solid coalition. • ~ dedicated to what wm be the theme of my campalfn, restor-i~g decency to public omce. .. 'No More Wa_.,, ·~ . Sadat Pledges .. CAIRO (AP) -President Anwar Sadat of Etypt ended hia historic journey to Jerusalem and returned to Cairo today after pledging with the leader or Israel: "No rnore war." Millions of EaypUans lined the route from the airport to Cairo, hailing their returning president as a • 'hero or peace.'' ln his final s t(iement to Israel's cabinet members in 40SurVive Argentine Jet Crash BARILOCHE, Argentina CAP) Jeruaalem, Sadat said: ''Let us poUtlcaJ futW'e and the unity ot raise two slogans -no war, and the Arab world to speak in~ security. • capital ol his enemies. "Nowar.LeteverygirJ,eveey· Iaraell Prime Minister woman, mother. here and in my Menabem Belin echoed the ten· country, know Uiat we shall solve Ument: "We have decided. no all our problems tbrougb more war between our nati~ negotiations around the tab&. We will establish peace and live rather lhaostart wars. • in peace." · ''We've bad enough -four He theu pve Sadat a aut ol wars in 30 years," said the El)'J>-nlne ancient candJestJcka an4: tian president who rlak~ 'his CS.SADAT, P.,•A!) •: PATEJlSON. N.1. CAP) -A bedridden tancef patient was elec<~ocuted when a li&htAlnf bolt traveled along a wtr•out.ttde hl5 home to· a beattna pad on which he was JyJng, otnclaJJ 1a1d. ' t>oUce said Manfred ShuJk, 11, of Bloomtnidale, was killed at the height of a severe thun· derstorm that pused onr the at.ate. Shult.I' wire, Kath.ruie. i01d police she hW'd a '*pc>p'~ IGUnd, ran into the bedtOOlll and Hwber husband on tue. Sbe put out tbe fire with wet bluketa and Called the police. state'• hrtervenUon lS dependent on an await.eel nillng from the Fourth DiJtrlct Court Of Appeals ln San Bema.rdino. 1 ' VOL. 70, NO. 325, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES By GARV GRANVILLE oeu.o.111 ,11.uuH Former supervisor David Baker announced today that he will try in 1978 to take the seat he once held on the Orange County Board of Supervisors back from Second District Supervisor Laurence Schmit. Btaker, who as a 12 year incum- bent county supervisor was de- feated by Schmit in 1974, said his candidacy comes in response to urging by supporters "who want integrity and respectability re- turned to county goveq1ment." Among Baker's supporters at his announcement press con- ference were Huntington Beach Pollce Cb1ef Earl Robitaille. Huntington Beach City School District Trustee Poris Allen, former county planning com- missioner Roger Slates of Hunt- Garage, Contents De.troged ington Beach and movie- telev ision actor J ~ck Kelly. Baker, who was defeated by a campaign m 197• tttat was rnaln- Jy financed by former county political kinemaker Dr. Louis Cella, said that '74 campaign will be an issue in 1978. "I did not expect that a political broker (Cella > would emerge with a bagful of ap- parently stolen money and dump Fire s wept through a Mission Vi ejo garage shortly before midnight Saturday, destroying the shelter and its contents, in- cluding a late model Corvette. Fire of- flcials are still trying to determine the cause of the $30.000 fire at the Charles Bettars home, 25371 Campina Drive in Boy, 16, Held After Fatal Canyon Crash A 16·year-old boy 1s in juv~nUe hall today and charged With relohy drunke'l driving as a re- sult of an early Sunday morning fatal accident In Traliuco Can- yon. According to a California ltlghwa~ Patrol report, the un- identified juvenile was at the wheel or a car that skidded orr Plano Trabuco Road, plunged down an embankment and then rolled over ti wee. As the car tumbled down the embankment. 17-year-old John Lyne h of 12851 Sprini;< St., Garden Grove, was thrown out and killed when app'.lrently struck by the auto as it went into its flip, the re- port said. The accident on the lonely dirt nad about one mile from Holy ~m CM)'oh occurred at 3 a.m and rescue workers labored m darkness ln the desolate area to brlna the victim and young drunken driving suspect back to where their injuries· could be treated. Lynch, ~wevcr, was dead at the scene. The surviving teenager was not seriously hurt, the CH P report said. Orange Coast Variable high cloudloess tonl1ht and Tuesday. Not much temperature change. Lows tonl1bt •6 to 52. Hl•hs TU da; 6S lo '10. Mission Viejo. Scrawled Ntmil)ers Aid Murder Probe By ROBERT BARKER Ol• O.U' ,.....,Utt Huntington Beach resident Robert Myers appar.ently scrawled several numbers on the palm of his left hand before his death and inveslifators believe they a re a clue to his murderers, it was revealed today. Detective Uennis O'Rourke of the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department said the numbers are believed to be that of a motorcycle that Myers may have encountered shortly before his death. The 57-year -old Myers, a longtime r esident or Laguna Beach, was killed Nov. 11 near Barstow. He was shot twice in the chest. "We are s ure that he wrote these numbers before he was shot and tbat he wa"B trylne to tell us something," O'Rourke said to- day. ·'Th.is is our major clue at this point. It's just ~ matter of de· veloping it,'' 0 'Rourke added. Myers wrote six or seven num· bera on the webblnt of his hand between the thumb and index fin a er in blue ballpoint pen Ink. The first three letten, which O'l\ourke declined to ldenUfy, weto leJible. The final three are beinc examined by identificauoa e)(perts. ·•we belleve lt ls the llcen•• number or ~1uapect vehicle," O'Rourkesatd. O 'Routke uid· t.hat ln· vesti••tor'i expOrlmentea With comblnlUGM lof numbers lnd lhal preUmlnary wotJC lftdicatts , the vehlele wu from Ul Ora~e Countv..-. 0 1Rourasai&&numberscor· respond la motbr'~ycl• license plate In Uiat dim ar, no letters. A standard aUtomobUe license car· ries letters as well as numbers. Investigators are still seeking Myers' van, which was apparent- ly driven away by his assailants after he was dumped from the vehicle. O'Rourke nld earlier that discovery of the \tan held the ltey tothe murder investiaa ·on. The missing van ls a '1#-colored 1970 Ford with a w ~ bubble top. It was preVtously fo. correctly listed in news stories as a 1974 vehicle. O'Rourke also said that in- vestigators are not abandoning the theory that Myers was shot to death by hitchhikers although Myers' family members said that he was not the type to pick up hitchhikers. The murderers left behind SSS in cash in Myers' wallet along withcreditcards-andjewelry. more than $1.(0,000 into my oppo. nent 's coffers In a vicious cam· pai1n to Hmove me from of· race,'' Baker said as he dllcu,,seC! his 1&74 defeat. · "This llme we will not un- derea\imate the special interests and their p\lPPel. We are "PutUnt together a solid coalition. • ~ dedicated to what will be the theme of my campatgn, rest.or· lng decency to public of!lce," Bakeraald. Baker, hOwever, made tt clear that be will hammer at Sctunlt'& record q a so-called Cella can. dldate, a supervisor wbo bas alienated county law enforce- ment omclab and a public <JI. tlclal who "bas failed to dllclose his source of campalp funds." Schmit said be was not sut· prised at Baker'• announcement. "The polltlcal season is heat· inf up and anyone can run lo~ ol• flee," Scbmitnld. The Garden Grove aupervliOr &110 said be bellevea the real' ls• suea in next year's campa.lp Wlll be formed durint the campal- and ''the best puaon will win tho job." ' Baker said be favors atrong campaf&n reform but Ian •t aure a plan bas be«t offered u yet that (See MXEB. Pace AZ) 'No More .War,' \ Sadat Pledges n CAIRO (AP ) -President Anwar Sadat of Egypt ended his historic journey to Jerusalem and returned to Cairo today after pledging with the leader of Israel: "No more war." Millions of EgypUans lined the route from the airport to Cairo, hailing their returning president as a "hero of peace." In his final statement to Israel's cabinet members in 40SurVive Argentine Jet Crash BARILOCHE, Argentina (AP) -A chartered Argentine Jetliner C!tltt')'lni CDQftly honet~ mooning couplu from Buenos Aires tt> Ws sol.ltbem JaJre retOrt cra$hed as it was tcy1n# to lelJd fn stormy weather early today, Airline officials &ald there were some survivors atnonc the 79 persons aboard. A spokesmah for Austral Airlines said the BAC·lll twln jet carrying 74 passengers and a crew or nve Jett Aeroparque Airport at Buenos Aires on Sun- day night on a dJrect lllaht tor Barlloche, a lake and ski resort In the foothills ot the Andes 1,000 milts southwest of Buenos Aires. Ruben Chlbade, a spokesman for Austrlll, said a 1$-man army and police pa\.l'Ql reached the t&e°'e of the cruh, a rocky ate• atldut 20 ll\lles tr't>m here, about mld·day and reported fJndlna surviyors. The national news agencies re- ported 40 people survived. Earlier today a search plane reported it spotted the wreclu(ge to a rocky area near here, but of· ficlals saJd it reported no signs of survlvon. 1 The news agency Noticlas ArgenUnas reported the plane had problems with Janding gear and had overflown the Bariloche airport several tlmes. Jerusalem, Sadat said: "Let us polltlcal Mure and the unity ot raise two slo1ans -no war, and the Arab world to i!peat in tbe security. · capital olhis enemies. "No war. Let every girl, ever~,. Israeli Prime Minister woman, mother. here and in my Menahern 13egin echoed the sen· country, know that we shall solve timent: "We have decided, DO all our problems through more war between our nations. necotiations around the table '!le will establish pe~ce and Uve rather than start wars. m peace." "We've had enough -four He then g,ave Sadat a gilt~ wars In 30 years," said the Egyp-nine ancient candlesticks an4 ti an president who risked his (See SADAT. Page Al) Ruling On App~al Awaited by State By TOM BARLEY state's intervention is dependent ot111to.t,..,....llllff on an awaited ruling from the Superior Court Judge Philip E. Fourth District Court of Appeals Schwab was assured by the in San Bernardino. ...Ca.ttfol'Qla Mtornev G~er.l That appeal was filed by the • omce to<lay that the state ti diltrJct attorney's otttce after ready Md wUllnf to ;rosecute .Jud~e Sebwab as.reed with the Onlst• 60Wt1 Supenlnrt dtf,n.e that tb,ro W81 ~ Ralph Diec:trlcti ii)d PhUlg M• · Y t( l!'tJUdJ"~·to Justify t.bOt'\Y and twocoaetendant!I. ·~=-~ tllc8 over tho But Deputy Attorney GeMral prOl~CYUUU \,;11111~~· JUcbard Haden made lt clear in Had• told Judeo Schwab that the pretrial bearing that the it the judge'• exclusion ruuna is upheld, the state will need delaY'S of all pretrlat moUons and th6 lightning Kills Manin Bed PATEnSON, N.1. CAP) -A bedridden cancer patlent wu electrocuted wben a llghtninf bolt traveled atone a wlre outside bls home to a heaUna pad on which be was lying, officials said. Police said Manfred Shults, 77, o( Bloomingdale, wu killed at the height or a severe thun· derst.orm that passed over the state. Shultz' wife, Kath,rlne, told police she heard a "pop .. sound. ran into th' bedl'OOm and saw her husband on flre. She put out the fire with wet blankets and called the police. trial date4»f Jan. 30. "We have va!t qu.ntities ot lefal paptn and evidence to •lit through," Haden said. "We would need a delay or at least two or three months to enable us to preparefortrial." Judee Schwab set Jan. 9 as the next h~ date for the four~ reodattta, none of whom bas yet, offered a plea to felony charges• contalned in a grand jury indict• ment. Diedrtcb, 53, Anthony, 41. financial consultant Geno • Conrad, '3, and Dr. William Kott, 55, face trial on cbaraes of vlolat· t ing state political campaign aod financial disclosure laws. Haden's appearance toda1 hi· dlcated that hls office has significantly chanted tt.s attitude towards taking over the t>rosectt· tioa ol the toar defendants. (See APPEAL, Pace A%) Team RE-niain& 'Clµimpion' In Ceramics DAVID EASTWOOp LEANS BACK AND GRINS DORING A LUU. IN COMPETITIOti His Caplstr1mo V•fley Hfgh ~hool Team Lost Tough Match to Uni High Big Storm Assails Midwest By The Asi.ocialed Press I\ major snowstorm hit much nl llH' Midwest and was moving Into wesll•rn Ontario today, with lllov.. tnJ.! snov.. wand gusts up to Ml mall's pl'r hour, and tem- r1eralurt·s In the teens JO Mtn· l'IC''>ota. l'astl•rn North Dakota ·1ntJ north1•;1stcrn South Dakota Parts of c•astt•rn North Dakota :tnd northc•rn Minnesota reported u; to 20 inches or snow. with snow •1111 falhng Blinard warnings c onltnul·d for early today 1n north .ind n·ntral Minnesota and in 1·.1slern North Dakota. SI rong winds extended across 1.akl Supl'raOr, wht:rc 'storm \\ arnmgs were an effect. High wind w<.1rnangs and travel ad· '1:-<ir1t·s n•ached Jrorh soutt\eln portions of Mannesota into ex- trem e northwest Wisconsin. As the 1-.torm moved east, bit· tcr cold moved in behind it. Jn western North Dakota, the mercury dipped below zero over· night. Readings as low as 30 degrees below zero were expect- ed in Montana. Cold temperatures wore mov- ing over the central Plains as hi~h pressure pushed southward behind IJ\e storm. The high cen- tral Plains had readings near zero and Jower 20s were expected 111 southeastern Kansas. Fro• Page AJ CLAY CHAMPS ... teacher. Now she's come back to whip the master." Balley, his bulging, aging muscles swelled against his blue University High Varsity Ceramics T-shirt, was prouct of his team. lie trained them himself. "We worked hard on condition· ing," Bailey bragged. "We go for 110 percent effort, to achieve ex- cellence. We work within the team spirit. "We're all team players here,' Bailey, who also leads a Walter Mitty life of instructor at the school, glared at his team, look· ing for rogues. Friday's big game was the re- sult of a running battle between Bailey and the University High stlldent newspaper.._ the tJnlvine. For years, it s~m&, Bailey has claimed to h ave 1t varsity ceramics team, chock-a-block with all-ceramic league players, t-unolng up prepOsterous winning recbf'dl>\ Ol'casionally the newspaper would print game results. Bruley had team T-shirts printed for tus ceramics students. Last year Bailey even managed to plant.~ supposed CIF record of 23 wins, ~e Joss, in the school yearbook. Two weeks ago the Univine de· cided it had been duped. Put up or shut up, it challenged Bailey. Missing Girls' In a ''No, Varginaa, there am'l no Varsity Ceramics" editorial, the newspaper charged that Bailey had perpet.cated "a horrendous, hideous scandal." The newspaper wall have to rewrite its words. In time honored sports trada· lion, the real University High School Varsity Ceramics team showed up to prove what three years or imaginary competition ('an do, and pummeled their M1s- s1on VieJO challengers 131to125. So amprcssc.>d were would-be varsity ceramics coaches from Newport Harbor and Saddleback high i;chools who scouted the matC'h , that there was im· mediate speculation as to who would be the next Great Pot Hope. Bailey explained his close vk· tory: "Outstanding players .. bet- ter depth.'' But there was another reasonable explanation. The other team's feet obvious- ly were made of clay. Froaa Page A J BAKER ... can con~rol the mactunauons of campaign managers. Schmit's campaign will be managed by political consultants Arnold Forde and William Butcher, according to Schmil's most recent campaign di.scl~ure statements. Ram's Valley t /I # · Bodies Found InLA Park Ho~Burgled Baker said lus campaign or- ganization is likely to be made up of volunteer workers and that an organization will be formed in the next few weeks. The former county supervisor would not speculate about the amount or money he will spend in his comeback attempt. Burglars threw Los Angeles Ram s linebacker Isiah .Robertc;on for a $400 loss Sunday Wh1le he was in Sah Francisco for the Rams' 23-10 vi~tory over the t9crs. Fountain Valley police :-.aad today Investigators said someone brokf' into Robertson's home near Mile Square Park and stole li tape recorder and jewelry. · Police said a friend 0£ 'Robertson's reported lbe burglary v.hen she discovered a window screen cut and found e. bedroom ransacked. Police Officer Mark Armando :o;a1d a pillow case apparently was used as a bag to carry the loot from the pro football star's home. Pilot Office Hit For Camera ~U: -i'hieves ·escaped with over ,ooo worth 0£ camera equlf- en t from the Dally Pilots aguna Hills office, 25201,.La Paz oad. sometlme over the eek end. ORANOI COAST: SI DAILY PILOT LOS ANGELES (AP) -The bodies of two Eagle Rock girls missing for more lban a week were discovered in a ravine in the area where three nude young women's bodie,s have been found recently. police said today. Sgt. Frank Tomlinson of the robbery-homicide division declined to say whether the bodies oC Dolores Cepeda, 12, and Sonja Johnson, 14, were un- dressed when di$covered Sunday in Elysian Park by several un- identified youthi. Police also refused comment on cause of dealh of the two girls pending autopsies. The pair were last seen Nov. 13 board mg a bus at the Eagle Rock Plaza where they bad been shopping. Earll er Sunday. ln a hillside resid•nt!al area of Highland Park several milet awar.• the third nude 1ounc woman • body to be found In the uetf. wu discovered. 1 HQwever, he said, "I think everyone is disenchanted with a political system that renders Ul'I· to Caesar that which is his through a series of fund-raisers by o!ficeholders in non-election years." Smee be left office in early 1975 the former Garden Grove supervisor has been indepen- dently employed as a consultant specializing in the disposal or hazardous waste material. Amin Ranting Against U.S. NAJROBI, Kenya <AP) Utandan President Idi Amin bas ac~Uled the United States of try. to ~·aabot.a1enhb Tefi~ and threatened to retaliate a~t Americans Inside and outslcte Uganda. Amln, quoted Sunday by Of· ficial RadJo U1anda, said i V.S. 1ovemment had impos trade curbs a1alnst U1anda, • pelled UJandan student. fro th• United States and apretd .. malicious _,ropa1anda0 abobt the :i\frlcan country In tho Ameilean ~s. .. He eald he bad been tn ~ wlth tei'roliit croupa abroad w are wlWnc to defend U1d qaln.at the alle1t<S 11~ WASHJNGTON <AP> -t FBJ teleased tod•J. ne.rly $3,000 pages of secrets about it.a efforts to harass and diarupt radical left. winr and rl1bt·wln1 poUUcal groupslrom the 19505to1971. FBl aaent.a handed sections of flies to some twd doze!\ reporters who prepared for a day-JOA& search for detaJll of \be FBl'a counterintelligence pro1rarn1. called Cointelpro in bureau Jargon. The mes _.. made pubUc in response to ~uesta under the Fr~edom of tnrorrnatioo Act. The first brtef acruU~ showad no atartlina dilcloaurea of FBI abuses but provided fresh details or the harassment camp11i1n. For enmple, 'the fUes disclosed that the bureau covertly prepared. a newspaper to distribute at. Americap University in WJ1hlngton Jn an effort to coun· teractstudentprotestact1v1Ues. FBI aceotaproddedlocatpolfce In Philadelphia to arro•t mem- bers of the Revolutionary ,AcUon Movement, a black 1roup, !'oo. every possible char1e" ln ~ other documents disclosed. "They were arrested on every possible charge until they could no looger niake bail," the memo said. "Al a result, RAM leaden .spent moat of the s ummer in Jail and no vJOlenco traceable to.RAK took plae!1-'." . 1 T ~ Fr.mP~Al The buteau released about 500 previously undl.aclosed pages ot documents from a counterln· telli1ence prolJ'am labeled Es· plonage. But more than 4,500 paaes of material h'om that pro- gram werekeptseeretonarounds thay they are classified for .na- tional se<:wily purposes. SADAT RETURNS. • • said: "From time lo lime, have a. glimpse of it and remember your friends in Israel " At a news conference earUe-r In the day. Sadat saJd It was· Israel's tum to take "hard and drastic decisions " "I have already taken my share or risk in my decision t.o ·come here," he said. But he repeated that there could be no compromise 011 Arab demands for the reluf1\ of all t6r· ritory captured in 198'T or °" the creation of a homeland for the Palestinians. · Begin pronounced the vlslt "a real suceess for both countries and for the cause of peace.'• Sadat left Jerusalem in bla special Boeing 707, nanked by four Israeli Kflr jet fl&htera, at. 4: 14 p.m. local time. A 21-gun salute thundered over Cairo Airport40 minutes lat.er ts his Jet touched down. At the root of the ladder Sadat was hugged and kissed by Vlce Prime Minis\er Mamdoutt Salem and Sayed Maret, speaker of the· Egyptian people's assembly. Many greeters at the airport. had been bused there from u tar away as the port city or Alexan- dria. Supporters hollted naultl- c o Io red signs readtnc: ''Welcome hero of peace." "Long live the leadership of Egypt.'' "God bless your moves for peace" and ''Welcome to your land of peace," After shakinf band• with members or his cabinet, parlia- ment, the armed forces and the diplomatic corps, Sadat boarded an open limousine for t'1p, seven· mile ride to the pres1'dential mansion on the banks of the Nile. Security at the airport was ex- c e pllon-.lly tight. ap1>_..,1¥ly t>eoause of al& •1sastin1tlon threat against Sadat by the Syrian-backed Saiqa auerrilla . i. L Fr.., Page Al . .. ~ . . -APPEAL ..• Three months ago ht.office re- \ected outriJiht a plea by the 4:ounty Board of supervisors lo declare a conruct of interest in the case and take over ~s prosecution. Haden declined today t.o com· m~nt on his office's apparent new stance. organization. Jn bla open car, Sadat was flanked by security men forming a bum an shield. Jn Jerusalem, the departure scene WI!/ most a replica of Sadat's triumphant arrival Saturda7, 44 hours and 18 minutes e rUer. Sadat •tood at attention flanked by JaraeU President Epbralm Katdr and Bealn for the natiortal an°"ms of Israel atld EC)'Pt and 1n1pected an. honor guard. A 21·aun salute boomed across the airport. three trumpet fan- fares were sounded. Bouquet.a o( flowers Jay nt Sadit's feet. The huge pennantlradhrf "Welcome Pre1ldent Sadat" In Hebrew, Arabic and English still hune across the terminal buUding. Asked for a last ~OJDment on Israeli televtslon, Sadat said: ''Thanks for everything. Thanks for everything.•• At the news c6nference, Beeln aald that the e~f achievement Of Sadat's visit was the at.art of a ••serious direct ~ialogue ... not only between 11lsrael and Egypt but with all the other states. 'The ltey word ls continua- tion, .. saidBeatn. "We agreed we are golnc to continue our dialogue, and ultimately out ot lt wlll come peace." He read what be ct.scribed as an "aareed.cornmunfque" iuued by the Israeli gQvernmeqt "in response to the sincere and cour._geoo.s moYe by President Sadat." · The communique proposed •'that this hopeful step be further pursued through dialogue between Ule two countries con- cerned ••• leading to the sign- ine of Reace treaties in Geneva with all the neigbbOritlg Arab states." I In an thterv1ew with ·NBC's John ChancellOT. btoadcut on the "Today" show, Begin and Sadat.said \here was a possibility that a Geneva conference could be convened before the edd of this year. Both men st~ssed, however, that adequate prepara- tion was needed. "All ttie efforts now should be directed toward lhe convening of the (;eneva conference," Sadat said. · . Agents sald about 16,000 l)8'es from all of the Colnt.lpro files were bein& withheld on grounds thay they are cl.aslfied. Many or tho ~2.&48 pages that were re. leased were heavily censored. Although the FBI baa turned over several thou.sand pases of Colntelpro files to varioua 8J"OUP5 ln five years, today's action repreunt.ed the blgseat single chunk of Colntelpro material the bureau has released. In essence, Colntelpro was the FBI's "dirty tricks" operatloJ'l. It was a campaign to wreak havoc ~mong militants of the rigbt and. left. by sending anonymous let- ters, attempting to eet activists fired from Utelr jobs, fostering dissension al'.Qong PollUcal allies and spre1ldlng derogatory rumors about militant leaders. The effort has been roundly de- noun c ed by dozens of con- aresslonal leaders and legal authorities, and few in the FBI attempt toderend it anymore. FBl Director Clarence Kelley last year issued a public apology for the bureau's past "abuses or power," including some Coin- telpro acUons. A Justice Department report in 1974 called some Colntelpro prac- tices .. abhorrent In. a free society." .Kelley and other FBI orficials jnslst that no Cointelpro opera- tions have been carried out since Aprlll971. ,,... Man Killed On Freeway An unidentified man was kllled • on the San Diego Freeway near El Toro early today when he was struck by a military police van as he attempted to cross the freeway on foot. Accordinr to a California Highway Patrol report, the man described as a male Mexican was moving toward the freeway center divider when struck by the ~oulhbound. van near Farmers Crossin5e. The report. said the as yet un- identified man was cfead at the scene of the 12:0S a.m. accident. ·iht namt Rollt·RoYC!.z th• Roll1·Royc1 radiator or1ll1. and the ~plrlt of Ec1t11y hood ornament are all Roll1·Aoyc1 trad1markl, u1td with th• approval of Roll1·Royoe Motor1. . II .. ·--· ......... -·· .. . I BUSINESS s Few Broker~efi. Survive ARathY .· -: :::::c: • ... 87 lllLTONN081l0Wl'l'I • If JOU'v• bouabt any •toca or bonds refft'IUJ, You',.....:. not a typical Am rlean. p.abllc partJolpaUoo ln th c • , • krio•n as the New York Stock ExC!bant• h11 fall off to• "'·· di'tbbte, teavcn1 the acUon to~ looab. 4... . • Thia pQbUc apathy ls reflected ln the lnctedlbl• 4 cim~-•. Uon ot the ranka of brokera bouset. It'• as ll a machlnia • · 1unner hid Wal.Iced Into a crowded room and atlt'\ed •Pfl>'· 1011. NO INDVSTllY THAT I KNOW of hu 1utfered the attrt· : ' Uon lnlUcted on the s~urlUes field dw1n1 the put Rv• .. y.an. To loOk 011 &he britbt side, when tbe SeewiUet Ill-, .. . du1try AmocJaUon 11ther1 In Boca Baton, Fla., oa !>et. i ... . for lta annual conclave1 tboy will not have to worry about. . . findln,1 cnoutb accommodaUons for rqisLranta. • There won't be realstraUons from Alexander & Co.; D.H. Blair; CarU1lo & deCoppeH l>eJalteld: du Pont, Gl0tt, For1an; F.dwarda & Hanloyc atddendorf, Colgate & Co.; Newberser, Loeb IG Co.: Jam• H. OUpbant; F.8. Smithers; -• Steiner Rouse & Co.; Wallach&Co .• Walston; and Arthur Wei1en· ber1er. 'lbey are amoo1 the 140 brakerage firms wblcb have been Money Tree .. eliminated since um. . Those companlea closed lhttr doors. An even treater number of brolceraae firms bavo disappeared via the meraer route, tumln1 an~ duatry that used to be called a "Ulht little club'' Into an even tighter llttte club'. There have been so many lncesluous amalgamations that it's dltncult to trace the roots of some firms. Take a house that rues today under the fiat ol Shearaon Haydu Stone Inc. Hen's bow it evolved: .. .. ,.,.. ,. A P.Aa'l'NEUlllP CAILED OOGAN, Berllnd, Weil • Levitt was formed In 1980. In 19S'7, it acquired Bem1tela· Macaull)', an lnvettment advlMr. In 1970, it ablorbed & huge brokeraie house. Hayden &on., taklnl ill name. la .. 1973, lt ablorbed another broltera10 house, H. Hentz. lll 1914, tt mereecl with anotbtt bu1e brotera1• flrm, Shearsoo Hammill. Lut year it acquired Lamson Bros. and this year it swallowed li'aulkner, Dawklns &Sullivan. Another atnaJaamallon ln the works wlll Join Loeb. Rhoades a. Co. with Hornblower, Week!, Noyes " Truk. ltaelf the result ot aeveral earlier marriaaes. Robert lLB. Baldwin, chairman-elect of the SecurlU Industry Asan. and president of Moraan, Swley & Co., pre; diets that 2S to 50 more flrms will dlsapppear wllhln tbe coming year throu1b mergen or acqulsWons. AT ONE TIME THERE WERE more than s& :~. brokerage Orms that dld business with the public. Today, there are fewer than 37~. And two-thirds of the bualness ia done by 2S Orm1. • While the brokerage fraternity loves to lff other com•. . pan lea sell stock to the publlc, lt doesn't talte its own advice. · > • Only n1ne Wall Street firms have stock lo the hands or tb9 • ., I public: Merrill Lynch, E.F. Hutton, Bache, Paine Webber~ .. Dean Witt.er, First Boston, Sbearson Hayden Stond. .... Reynolds and Donald.son Lufkln. New HB Center • I I To Open Jan. 15_.,.; ' Beach-Gatfleld, an SS·mUUoa, nJne·acre abopplng center that will contaJJi Ralph's SUpennuket and Sav-011 Drugs, ls expected to open Jan. 15, ltT8. at the aoatbwest corner ol Buch Boulevard aacl G&lfleJd Avenae. Hunli .. , ington Beach. .. Tbe BuccoJa Co. project includes JocaUons for 15 specialty abopl and U.S. Uf e Savtnll. The center b 80 per-- cent leuedt accordl.na to Coldwell Ballker Commercial . Brokeraae Co., Newport BMcb. Sc:bed.uled for the center are Hallmult Cards, Funtest . Travel, Val'• Jewelry, Scandaaavtan Bakery, Bay'• Heatu. and NutrlUon Center, Countl'J Road AntJquea (al Lacuna>. .... Tbe Cloe.bes Une wol'Deo'11bop, HunU.nston Beach Beatty. . a men •a thop and Norton'• Dry Cleantns. Other 1tore alt. ... , trom 1200to 2100 square tfft .... evalleble. . The Buceola . Co. hi besun Work Oft • 1maUer center : • : for the nortbeut corner of Beath aod Garfield. It will house • . • Plankhi:>Uae and St.raw Hat Pia.a Palace restaurant.a. apeclalty abciPI and 15,000 square ttet ol 1torqe 1pace wllb Coldwell Banker allo responalble for l uinc arrangement& . : · .............. fi .. •• O~at Southwest Corp., which e>peralel 'llovleland Wax · • MuHum in Buena Park, u reported reeord tblrd.quarter earnlnp and revenuu. Bamtnp were Slt,129,000, 01' $4.•1 • fhare, on revenues ·: or '65,089,000. Jn tbo llko perlod 1-st year. the compallJ • earned sie.11t.ooo. or S:U3, on NVenues ol $54,888,000. t · For the cucrent nine moot.bi, Umlnp were 01,4".000, • · ( TAKING STOCK ) or $4.171 on ncoi'd "' venues of tllJ,m.ooo. For the nine months ended Sept. ao. 1911, u.e: •.•. eom peny earned .: 1311515,000, or $f..50, on .. i-evenuea ot $102,t09,000. • · .· .. ·. e.-oo1 ~ Nawe "TheWlth" TH AVINO!'RS "~ OfTMCybw~ta" e MICKEY MOU81 CLUB 8Uft!RMAN 8ESAME STREET Yiu.A ALeORE 1;30 ABC NEW& e t &!WITCHED ''Cnup Cheap" CD AOAM·12 "Venice DMllon" CD HODGEPODGE LODGE 1:00 C88 NEWS NEWS EMEROENCY ONEI When a foreign dignitary bec:omee Ill, Dr. Breckett Is uhd to cure him. 8 9 NF'l FOOTBALL The Green Bay Paci<ers tackle the W..n!ngton Redskins at Waahl~ton"s RF. Kennedy Stadium. ' G MOVIE *** "Last Summ&r" (1969) Barbara Herehey, Richard Thomaa. A newcomer changes the character qt a small. close group of teenagers vacationing on Fire Island. (2 hra.) 0) THE BRADY BUNCH "Room Al The Top" Q) THE ROOKIES The rooklee try to break up a robbery ring fJl) ZOOM '1!) FOODS FOR THE MODERN FAMILY "Convenience Mixes·· 8:301) MOVIE * * * "Soldler Of Fortune" (1953) Clark Gable, Susan Hayward A hard-drinking gun runner rescues an Amtlflcan news photographer lmprlaoned In Communist China ( 1 hr . 30 min) CD MY THREE SONS ""Charley. The Pigeon ' tt) OVEREASV Imogene Coca, aoc1e1al pres- sures on self-.steem for the elderly. speclel telephone services. music, dance and exercise therapy. '1!) FAMIL V PORTRAIT "'Changing Rotes" Cl) CBS NEWS 7:00 0 NBC NEWS &J LIARSCLUB CD ILOVELUCY "Tha Audition" Q) ADAM-12 Motorcycles and a helicopter add excllement to the Adam-12 team's day fJl) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT al) VOOA WITH MADELINE • (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 Cl OAVIO HOROWITZ CONSUMER BUVUNE • NEWLYWED GAME CD THE BRADY BUNCH Bobby falla from a tree and sprain• hi• ankle and becomes alrald to climb. CD LET'S MAKE A DEAL fD 2BTONIGHT "Ul<e Any Chlld, Only More So" Michael Landon awaits help after kayoing aging fi ghter J oe Kagan <Moses Gunn ). while Kagan's manager <Raymond St. Jacques) looks on. in a special Little House on the Prairie, tonight at 8 on Channel 4. CO FRENCH CHeF "Flit! In Monk's Clothing" (R) Cl) 1100,000 NAME THAT TUNE 8:00 8 Cl) A CHARLIE BROWN THANKSGIVING Peppermint Patty Invites her· aelt to the holiday feast forcing Charlle Brown to enlist the queallonable assistance of Snoopy and Woodstock In pro- d uc Ing the most novel Thanksgiving menu •Ince 1621 (R) Cl LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE "The Fighter" Charles Ingalls kayoes an aging prizefighter (Moses Gunn), but his Jubilation turns to grave concern when he realizes the man Is severely Injured. Raymond St. Jacques, Ketty Lester gueat star ( 1 hr .. 30 min.) D MOVIE ** "The Long Chate" (1972) Ben Murphy, Buddy Ebsen. Depicts the eicplolta of "Kid Curry and Hannibal Hay ... " (2 hrs.) D JOKER'S WJLO Q) CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS Guests: Steve Lawrence. (I) MOVIE * • * "The Joker Is Wiid" ( 1957) Frank Sinatra, Jeanne Ratings GNide IMOlll• .,. r•..i .occordinq to bO• ofllo •ttffld6nct ~, .. '°' TV ••• 1UC191d ~ e crllk I • • • • -Excellent • • * -Very Good • • -Good • •, -Fair • -Poor Crain. The llf• of the beloved oomedjan Joe E. LeWla la df'plctfd, (2 hra.) ' 9 THEAOEOF UNCl!RT AINTY "Land And P.ople" The role of land In determining wealth and poverty la Investigated. I!) THE BEST OF ERNIE KOVACS The gotllla ballet: an Italian ~a and a Bela Bartol<~. 8:30 8 ()) L\JclLLE BALL Concerned about a eumm« camp fa." underpt1vlleged Chit· dren, Lucy Whittaker (Lucflle Ball) apea~ to the Pr~ent during a White House i>hon•ln and ends up Inviting hlm to her home. Ed McMahon, Gale Gordon, VMan Vance, Steve Allen and Mary W~e. guett star. 0 CONCEHTRATION 0) 1128,000 OU6STIOH I!) OVER EASY Imogene Coca; aoeletal pres. aur" on self-esteem tor the elderly; special telephone servtcea; mu1lc, dance and exercise therapy. (R) 9:00 8 MOVIE **~ "Klute" (1971) Jane Fonda, Ooneld Sutherland. A ci.teetl."9 gets Involved with a call.girl and tries to find the person who tried to murder her. (2 hra.) G SPECIAL "South Afrlea: A View From The lnalde" Thia documentary present• an up.to-date I~ at the turmoil thet la g~ng South Africa'• wtltt• minority ~ment. • MERV GA1FFIN Gueata: George Burn•. Siity Cryat8', Jedlle Vernon, Edwin Newman. • MOVIE * * "The Womaii On Pier 13" 11:00 IJ DD()) 9 NEWS D HOLLYWOOO CONNECTION 8 MOVlE • * * "L.ut summer" ( t989) Barbara Hershey, Rlc~rd Thomu. A newcomer Changee the Character of a amen. clON group of teenagers vacationing on Ar• ISiand. (2 hra.) m THE 000 COUP~ Ftllx trl" to reform after hl9 flnlCky attitude toward1 food rulna an otherwise pleasant dinner Wfth hla ex·wlfa. (I) HONEYMOONERS Finding a aultcaae crammed with money, Ralph goes on a spending apree until h• runs Into the counterfeiters that crammed the aultcase. 9 DICK CAVETT Guest: Swedlltl film and stage actreaa Bibi An<1erat0n. m SPECIAL "National Women'• Confer· ence 1977" Edited COYer&ge of four daya of democratic uaem· t>llea and workltlopa held In Houston and attended by more than 20,000 women and men . 11:308 (I) 018 LATEMOVlE **~ "Let'a Switch" (1974) Batbara Eden, Batbara Feldoo. A frustrated houMWlfe and an unhappy butlnenwoman m.et at a ci... reunion and decide to auume each other' a roles. (R) • As'BC 0 6~00 NFL Foott>all. The Green Bay Packers tackle the Washington Redskins et Washington. NBC88:00 -"Little Ho\lse on the Prairie." In "The Fighter," Charles JngaJJS' kayocs an aging prizefighter <Moses Gunn), but his jubilation turns to grave concern when he realizes the man is severely injured. • CBS 8 8:30 -LUcille Ball. Concerned about a summer camp for un· derprivilcgcd children, Lucy Whittaker <Lucille Ball) speaks to the President during a White House phone-in. CBS EJ 9 :30 Ameri~a 's Greatest Movies . Charlton fl e s ton .h o s t s th e American Film lnstitute's 10th an· niversary gala saluting the top 10 fiJms as de- termine<! by AFI mem- bers• ballots. D TONIGHT Gueat host: Bob Newhart. Gueeta: Glen Campbell, Bob Uechr, Victor Buono, Liiy Tomlln. 8 LOVE. AMERICAN STYL£ "Love And The Sack I Love And The Trip" 8 MOVIE *** "I Walk A\ont" (1948) Uaabeth Scott, Burt Lancatter. A mobster learn• through ex~ that h1' tot.lgh tac- tics don't work u well u they one. did. (2 hra.) tD HEWS m GETSMART A change In uelgnmenta la "ordered" by a KAOS agent Impersonating the President on the hot llne. &l CAPTIONED ABC NEWS al IAOHSIDE "Wrong Time, Wrong Place" •MORNING 12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE "Stop Over In A Outet Town" m FOREVER FERNWOOO m MOVIE **~ "Fr .. f'CK All'' (11Mi) Robert Cummings, Ann Blyth. An Ohta Inventor of a tabfet, which tuma water Into gaaollne, throws an oil ~n Into a fren· ~ (1 hr., 30 ~n.) 12:308 MOVIE * * "CowDoy Serenade" (1942) Gent Autry, Aand Lieutenant Returns With Usual Trappings By JAY SllARBUTT the same tune. I can't make movies Wtdshoot "Columbo.' " INDEED, HE HAS been mak· log movJ~. t:ast year it was Nell Simon's "M\ltder by Death," thls •1ear it's Simon's "The Cheap DetecUve," and next February he start! filming "The Great Brink's Robbery." As for "Columbo," which in lt.s first fe9t Seasons aired ei&ht times a year In the now-dehanct "Sunday Mystery Movie·' slot, well, be dld a few more lasl season. But there were doubts he'd return ln 1977-78. And Falk, who reportedly gets a Udy $500,000 per episode these days, admits be was among the doubters. But now he says there'll be five ''Columbo" capers this 1eason. Why the change of heart? IT DIDN'T INVOLVE aaluy he said, explaining that he'• had no kick about bis stipend the last three years. The blg cause of doubt, he added, was findlJ\s fir•t·ratescripts for the series. "ft 's hard to get trtn:l4!ndous writing when the rnedlum bwm it up so quickly." the SO· year-old actor said. ''It.'s very, very dif· ftcult. So now, here you cot a show like 'Columbo,• with no action, no violence, so scripts were a pro- blem. ·•