HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-28 - Orange Coast Pilot• 1
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Fortune• at Stake
LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP) -
Trial began today on a com·
plicated question that could de·
cide the fortunes of some rel·
atives of Howard Hughes and of a
young man in Utah who says he
once aavea wealthy recluse a ride
in the Nevada desert. The case ls
expected to last alx to eight
months.
The question is the validity of
the ao-called "Mormon Wlll" -a
three-paae handwritten docu·
ment dated March 19, UMl8, and
purporting to be the laat will and
testament of Huahes, wbo lived
at the time in a penthouse suite of
a Lu Vetaa botel. The person offerlnl the wlll for
probate in Clark County District
Court is Noah Dietrich, once the
closest aide to Hu&bes before a
falllnl out in the 19508. Dietrich wu named executor ln ~will.
The moet lntriguln1 be!luest ln
the will ii to Melvin pummar,
who was a service atatlon
01>9rator in Willard, uiah, when
ttte wlll turned up about three.
' weeks after Huahel died April 5,
1976. The Will leavea Dummar
one·alxteenth of Hu1hea '•estate.
The wlll makes lllUe mention'
of Hughes'• relatlvea but leaves
part of Hu&hea'a estate to the
Howard Hughes Medical Foun· .
dation in Florida, aev.pral un·
lveraitles, the Mormon Church
and Dumirilat. At the trial.:: Dl1trlch'1 at·
tomey, Harold Khoden of Bever·
ly H1lls, la ex~teet to preNot ha~Clwriting expert.I wlto wlll aay
Huihea Wl'OW the will. RhOdeii ta altore~ed to call Dummar to
. testily. Tb• ril•UV~ of Hufhes Ill)' the Mormon WUl la a torcery, <d
that they bave handWriUlll ex· "rti •bo will tiiltjfy to that. D11mmar at flnt deftled bavtnc ~d AD)' Jcnowt.dte <JI the will
btfore ll ~~rioUity aWf.ced
at \la• tieadquar or tbe
Mormon Church. But later be
said that the will was delivered to
his service station by a attasll(er
on April 27, 1971, and admitted
that be was the one who delivered
it to the church offices. The ad•
mission came after the PBl
found b1s thumbprint on the en·
velope that contained the will.
Dummar denied wriUn1 the
will or knowtog who dl4,
however. As to why be was named tn the
will, Dummar saya be picked up
a bedra"led old man i'n the
Nevada desert about 10 yean •So
(See HUGHES, Pase AJ) •
Psychiatrl:st
SaysPomo •
Fil,,,. Helpful,
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While folks in other parts of the nation
were freezing their tootsies, thiB family of
fishermen was enjoying an outing on
N e~port Bay Sunday in sblrtlseeve
weather. Continulnf Santa Ana wiJ14 con·
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t\Z DALY N.OT § Mond!x. Hcwmtw?!. 1m
Israel to Cairo?
Begin Names Delegates to Parley
JERUSALEM (AP) -Prlme
Minister Menabem Be1in
rormally anoouaced today that
Israel wlll 10 to Ca1ro pext
weekend row preliminary peace
conferenci" and named two
senior officials as Israel 'a del·
es a tea.
They are J>r. Ellahu Ben·
Ellsaar, diJ'ecU>r-1enera1 of the
prime mlnilter'• office. and llelr
Diet Fraud
Pair Lose
Court Bid
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two
California men each sentenced to
90 years in prison for detrauc:Una
some 28,000 would-be dieters out
of more than $160,000 lost their
bid todtlY for U.S. Supreme Court
review ol the.Ir convictions.
The Justices retu.sed to hear the
appeals of Conrad L. Germain
and Robert W. Kane, wboae letal
problems be1an nve years 810
with the mass malllnt of an ad·
vertisemenl that beean: .. Want
to Lose. Weight?••
The two and their HoTiywood
firm, Outpost Development Com-
pany, were indicted on charges of
sending out a fraudulent ad, the
one in which consumers were told
they could learn a secret weight·
losing regime by sending in $5.95.
The federal government
charged that the ad repeated
fraudulent material pubUshed in
the diet-plan booklet.
Specifically. the government charged that it falsely stated that
by following the diet plan, "Ule
fats in the foods you eat are
changed into energy instead of
fat. ..
A !so, fe1eral prosecutors
· tharged that ln many Instances.
ordered booklets were not mailed
to persons who sent in their $5.95,
and that many requested refunds
were not honored.
The diet plans were advertised
as being discovered or devised
by two people-Lydia Feldman
and Brenda Hardy. The govern·
ment charged that no such
persona exi.aL
Germain and Kane were con-
victed of fraud and sentenced to
90 years each and fined $18,000
each. Their firm allo was flned
$18,000.
Both have remained free pend·
ing appeals.
The diet booklet, In essence, In-
structed readers to three times a
day drink half a cup or grape
juice, half a cup of apple Juice
and a larae mashed ban~na.
Some vertlona of the booklet rec·
ommended that the "tonic" be
taken before meall whUe otner
verslorus ureed that lt be used as
a subatltute for meals.
Doctors testifying for the aov·
ernment said that iC the tonic
were taken as a meal supple·
ment, it would cauae a welekt
gain rather than loss. The doc·
tors testified that taken instead
of meals, the tonic would lead to
severe mineral and protein defi-
cieoc.(ft.
Gas Station
Worker Slain
DECATUR, Ga. (AP) -A
service 1taUon attendant .was
shot and kllled In an ar1ument
with a customer over a penny's
worth of aaaoline, aut.horltle1
said.
A 1PQkelman tor the_Dtltalb
County Police J)~partmeot said
Leroy ClMence Smith, 34, of
Atlanta, ell" f~m a Cutlahot wound in the lert ahOulcler.
Ro tr L. Underwood, 24, of
Oc , rla. WU arretted and
chi ed wtth murder bi connec-
tlo wltb the abootlng, the
spo auuuald.
RoaeMe, the Forel'n Mlolstry•s
legal adviser.
Be11n made the appointments
ln a 1peeeb to tho Xneaaet, or ·
Parliament, dlacualna the af.
termath of President Anwar
Sadat 'a historic trip to Israel and
Sadat's invitation to all parties in
\be Mideast dispute to come to
Cairo to prepare lor a full-dress
Geneva peaco-eonference.
'Slipshod'
FM Hit
WASHINGTON CAP) -
A California coogre.uman
char1ed today that the
Federal Aviation Ad·
miniltratlao h8I wasted up
· to $50 million in recent . years on programs that
tailed, equipment never
delivered and contract ir-
regularities.
Rep. John L. Burton, D-
Calif., also complained
that the FAA la cllntlng to a "see-and-avoid" concept
for averttna mid·air col·
llsioos, relyin1 on pilots'
eyesight lmtead of modern
electronic gear.
• Burton, wbo ls planning
two days of House heariop
this week into FAA
policies, accused the agen-
cy of "slipshod and highly
questionable .. practices.
Routed Thief
Flees Police,
Leaves Loot
A burglar escaped but left his
loot behind Sunday after a Cotta
Mesa policeman noticed a bar
door pried open and went to ln·
vestigate.
Pollce said Sgt. Max Wilson
was on patrol at 4: 15 a. m. when
he noticed a door ajar at the Reef
Bar, 820 W. 19th St., aod called
for backup units.
When they arrived, police
beean searching the premlsea.
Durtq t.be search, one officer
looked out and noticed a man
runntn1 out ot Carol 'a B~ next
door at 810 W.18tb St.
Further invest.11aUon revealed
stolen property from the Reef
Bar pUed up In Carol's Bar.
Police said they believe the
burelar fled empty.banded.
Plane Drops
Bales of Pot
OCALA NATIONAL 11'0,RPSI',
Fla. (AP) -While tlunters
roamed the Ocala National
Forett, law enforcement. ofncera
were busy tracldnt 50-pound
bales of marijuana app~ dropped from an airplane tbe day
before.
Sheriff'• deputies from Marton
County said the smugalers ap-
parenUy didn't realize it was
hunting season when they scat-
tered at leut 3,000 poundl of pot
over aneigbt·mlle area.
They 1ald that much mari-
juana would sell on the street for
$1.2 million.
Arson Blamed
InIBM Fire
SAN JOSE (AP) -Fire of·
ficiat1 say an arsOtllst set a ti
million blaie in a four-story
bulldin1 boua1n1 IBM offtcea.
Fira were lgn!Wd early Sim··
day on two tloora of the bulldbl1,
according to Captain Ron
Del1ado of the San Jose Ftte
De_partl'Qent.
Ont blaze WQ let on tbe ftnt
noor in an IBM office tbat coe.
tained • mlllic:G worth Of. 1pare
computer and typewttter paiw. ,
D1t1ado Aid. The HOOnd ))Un
oa the f ourtb floor o .an at· t.orney 'I cake.
So tar, only Iara~l bas ac-
cepted.
Be11n dllclOled that Sadat .. tn-
.ttation and Israel'• acceptance
were excbanted tbrouah tbe
Egypt~an and Israeli am-
bassadors at the United Na·
Uons, A. Es mat Meguid and
Chaim Heno1, ratl\er than
throu1h U.S. embaulei or any
other int.ermedlvlea.
In otber Ml'8ea1t develop.
ments:
-Jn Cairo, acting EIYPtian
Foreign Minister Butroa B. Gball
confirmed that an inYitattoo bad
been sent to Y aslr Arafat, head of
the Palestine Liberation
Oreanir.atioa. to send delesates
to Cairo.
PLO spokesmen have declared
their delegatel will not attend the
Cairo meetlnf, but there bu
been no direct response from
Arafat.
A spokesman for Belin said
Sunday Israel will not go to Cairo
If the PLO does. But in bis
Knesset speech the prime 1 minister gave no Indication
whether PLO presence w~cl·
keep the Israelis out of Cairo.
Farrah Fawcett-Majors is 1hown with her mother, Mrs.
Pauline Fawcett, iat a party in th• actress' honor in New
York. The former .. Angett' starts work on )ier new mov-
ie, "SomebOdy Killed Her Husband," th1I w~k. -The Arab anU-SadJt front
stiffened with an announcement
by Syrian President Hatez A.Uad
that he was ready for a ~
ciliation with nei&bboriD1 I.raq.
"We are all facma the' aame
danger," Assad aald, wbo bu de·
nounced Sadat's unilateral lfeace
moves toward Israel.
Assad told a news conference
that he would personally attend a
conference of bard-Une Arab
leaders in Tripoli, Libya, on
Thursday.
Saved· Pilot Gone;
Guards Seek Clues
Pro.Page Al
HUGHES •••
and gave him a ride. to Las
Vegas. The man identified
himself as Hughes and apparent·
ly wu grateful, Dummer bu
said.
The Monnon will la only one of
a number of purported Hughes
wills that have turned up llnce
Hughes died, and it bas become
the subject of le1al proceedings
ln three states -Texas, Nevada
and Calltomla.
One of the unresolved ques.
lions b in wblcb atate Hulbes re-
sided 91 the time of h1a death.
None ot the o~ p~
wllll bu been Jlven a aertous
teat In court yet. Tbe HUcbes
eat.ate, ~ a hu1e tu bite,
would So to bll relatives if no will
la ruled valid '
A ju:ry of ltve men and three
women hu been .elected to bear
the case
Rhoden bu t)een appointed
special executor because
Dietrich 11intm808.
Fimu Charged
lnFeedCaae
ORA.ND RAPIDS. Mich. CAP>
-Federal autbOritiea rued Ma
crlmlnal char•• to4•Y qalftlt the two f1nm atlepdly tnvolwd
in Michl1an'1 PBB d11Qter four
year• ago.
Tbe char1es agalnat Micbi1an
Chemical Co., involve federal
claims that livestock feecl was
adulterated with PBB, a toxic
fire retardant. The char1es are
misdemeanors aince there la no
evidence anyone acted de·
Jiberately.
Rocer Clark, attorney for
Mieblaan Chemical, sa14 be had
not •••~ \be char1e• and therefore could not comment.
Michifan Farm Bureau Services
was not. immediately available
for comment.
,,...Page Al
GANG •• ·•
State beach ll!eguards were at·
tempting today to locate tbe
owner of a plane which crashed
int.o tbe surf Saturday. leadine to
his rescue by 1urf ers off of Boin
Chica St.ate Beach near the
terminus ol Golden Wat Street
ln Huntiniton Beach.
They said the lltUe Mooney
Rancer piloted by Dave
Hernandez, 28, of Cypress, hu
been towed to a nearby semce
road, but tbieve1 have van-
daUzed it, ateallnl a variety of in·
atrumenll over the weekend.
Sheriff's deputies who patrol
the state beach are currently ln·
vesti1atina the 1rand then case.
Lifeauards and state ~ach
ranaen aald today, however,
that Hernandez bu not contacted
them about retrle•)as tbe
monoplane b.-.4 at Fullert4D
airport and the D\Ullber he t&VO
them where be Hid he eou.ld be
reached ll no looaer in aernce.
Hernandes told invat111tora
followlal h1a oftabore dltchinl shortly before noon Saturday
.
Hetwy Ske~r.:
Kil& BOy, 9 ~
NEW YORK (AP) -A 9-ytar• old boy •ho bad cerebral palsy
died of apparent 1uffocatlob
when b1I motber'1 ~ytriend tell
uleep on top of b\m, police re-
port.
Pollet aald :Wllllaa:a Brown,
who 'wu "about the 1lst of a •
year-old," •aa dllcovered 11tn&
uncoa1cloua under Paul Alu·
ander, 28, in the Uvtnc room of
the apartment in the city's Far
Rockaway 1ectton, where they
botblived.
The boy's mother, Tere1a
Speller, 45, wu in her bedroom
asleep when htr older ion, Vin·
cent, 16, found the boy and Alex·
ander on tbe couch about 12:30
a.m., autboriUes &aid.
that he lost power at 1,800 feet
while switching the engine
system from one fuel tank to
another.
The aircraft dropped from the
sky about 3$0 yards offlbore dur-
ing low tide, skipped once like a
. nat rock, and then bellied down
lnto the water.
Surfers paddled to the rescue
after Hernandez walked out oo a
wing and jumped into the water.
Bruce Cleeland 23. a Huntington
Beach clly lifeguard. not a state
beach lifeguard as reported Sun-
day, assisted in the rescue.
Hernandez was treated tor face
cuts at Pacifica Ho1pital and re-
leaSeit followinl the aborted re·
turn from a fllght over Catalina
Island.
NB Burglars
Get Jewelry,
Rare Coins
Thieves broke lot.o a Newport
Beach home while the owner was
on Thanksgiving holiday In Palm
Sprines, h-u.Uni off an estimated
$8,525 in jewehy aiid rare coins
in a 1b0pptn,1 bag, pollce re· ported. _
The burglary was reported
Saturday by teacher Betsy Lewta
Helle.
Police said the burstars ap-
parently entered the backyard of
the home through an unlocked
garage, th4!n boOsted themselves
through an unlocked kitchen win-
dow.
Once Inside, the buralara
dumped 1arba1e from a 'hop-ping bl\i and Used it to carry
away coins and. jewelry. lnclud·
ing a tanzanHe. gold and
diamond rtna valued at $3,200.
Police said an investi1atton
will contlnue. but noted tbat the burglars took extra care in wip-
ing off fingerprints.
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X-RATED •••
any time around a monkey cage·
wm quietly conftrm ...
Dr. Spotts wood is the final de-
fense witness ln a trial based on
legal action taken by the city of
Santa Ana aealnst brothers
James and Artie Mitchell.
City attorney James Clancy
will ask the jury in his final argu-
ment to condemn 41 movies
shown at the Honer Plaza theater
1n tbe lasi two years to be ob-
scene and without redeeming
social value.
Ex-BB Aide
Hospitalized
After Tumble
One time Hunt.initon Beach ci-
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ty adminlltrator John
Henricksen, 79, was listed in fair
condition today at . Hoag
Meuaorial Hospital In Newport I
Bea.ch follOwlU dl'Cft'Y Friday
for injuriel 1Uflued iJ1 a fall at
his home. '""\
The lonttime mobile home 1
park operator, of 618 W. Adams I
Ave., lluntin1ton Beach. bu
been listed in fair condition for
several days foUowiDc su.r1eons'
decision not to ope.rate unUl his
cardiac problems 1tablll1ed in
the wake or the accident.
He and his wife, Jewell,
are lollltime Huntineton Beach
residents and Henricksen ls the
current president of the Hunt. 1
in1ton Beach Rotary Club. I
He retl red os city ad: 1
miniatrator in 1962. /
2 Hurt in Brawl
PACOIMA CAP> -Two
policemen were injured and
sevep persons arrested in a sta·
lion )louse brawl lnvolvin1 the
ram Wes of two YQUtha who were
beln1 releQed from custody,
aulhorlUes say. About 20 r~l·
atives wbo came to 1et the
youth• becan scufflln& with
poltce Sunday at Poothlll
Division beadquarten, police
satd.
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---GLENN MARTIN AT FRONT DOOR OF UNDERGROUNDHOME
He Qutt Working and Eating -and DrOpped 81 Pound•
Boling Up
No Place Like Buried Bus
SEATTLE (AP) -Glenn Martin figured he had dug himself
into a hole with too much eatina. drinking and working. So he dug
another hole Into which he dropped an old bus -and his high
blood pressure.
The buried bus has become his home.
"I WAS A FOODAHOUC and a workaholic most of my life
and it damn near killed me," Martin said.
A retired construction worker who is about 60, Martin de-
cided it was time for a change after he ate his way to 320 pounds
and dangerously high blood pressure.
He says he could have started taklni tranquilizers to relax,
but chose instead to start digging a hole, three hours a day, by hand
WHEN THE HOLE HAD REACHED nine feet by SO feet last
month, Martin had an old bus dropped m. Then he covered it with
six inches of soil.
Finally, he moved in.
"It's a place to get away from it all," he said of his residence
just east of the Duwamish River south of Seattle.
. Martin says the digging beat the tranquilizers as a way lo un-
wind. He has a home blood-pressure measuring device and says
he has n"ted improvements. '
. MAR11N SAYS HE USES ABOUT one gallon of water daily m the b~. _gets heat and light from candles and propane, and has
no electncity.
He has access through the bus back door, behind which ls a
passageway sealed off from the outside by a corrugated metal
door.
Two devices poke up through the earth above the bus -a
cbimney and a ventilator.
. The result is a lod&jng \hat ii warm. quiet and lne=naive.
Not, however, re<:ommended for tboee prone to eleus\J'O bla.
. ·'I know some ~ple who would go completely erk,,.
said Martin.
HE NOW WEIGHS m AND is aiming to lose another 20
pounds, but the diggln1 wu not the only factor. His eatln1 hablts
have also chan«ed to veJletarianism, and beer no longer nows.
Martin's staples include fresh vetet.ables, fruit and buttur
wheat. He says he can get by on "a lot less than $100 a month."
He said he lives on about $125 a month from a $470 peo.aton check. J
His wife, who does not live with him, get.a the rest, he said.
MARTIN, WHOSE HOME IS ON a 20-by 80-foot lot he bought
from the Transportation Department, said bis one concern is that
bureaucrats may find a code that prohibits ma1cing a buried bus a
horpe.
. "But I don't really see why. l Ju.st parked my bus In a hole,
that''s all,'' he said.
Probers Check Bay Area Anon
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The afternoon fire·, but arson had not
c a u 1 e of a s p e c ta c u I a r been ruled out, they said.
warehouse fire that threatened lo Investigators initially ques-
overtake posh homes on San Uoned two men who were seen
Franci.sco's landmark Telearaph running from a warehouse wben
Hill was bein& investigated to-smoke began to billow out of the
day, officials said. Fire offlclall unoccupied three-story struc-
_... -.... in h Sund lure. Both were later cleared and nam~ no sus.,... .. -t e ar released.
East Coeered
811.'be Auodated ......
Heavy: 1now that aoeke4 pOr.
Uons of the nation at tbe clou of
the Tbanklglvlna holi4•Y
tapered of( today. But lt left •
death and tnarled traffic ln It.I
weke.
In many areu, the snow _..,
not aa heavy u expected. Jn N•w
JerHy. for tnatance. most arou
received only abo.U a quarter.
inch of anow before u.e 1torqi
pa11ed. '!be NaUonil Weather
Servlc•~ald ~ reason wu that the 1torm moved ·~oufh the
st.ate much futer t.bb hacl beell
expected.
Tbe storm hit hardest ln the
Midwest, -weatern New York
State and western Pennsylvania.
Slit lncbes of snow were r.
corded at the Metropelitan
Airport outaide Detroit between
Sunday noon and early this
morntn1. when the fall tapered
off 'to nurriea. The streets ol
Detroit subUfbe were 10 slippery
that taxi companies were refus-
ing to take calls.
In Alpena. Mich .• alone Lake
Huron, nearly seven inches of
snow was recorded and another
two inches was expected today.
M o t o.r ls ts s tr a n de d i n
Caryville, TeM., on Interstate 75
north of Knoxville, slept in motel
lobbies, a church, an elementary
school and on the floor of a coin·
operated laundry.
Police Chief Wayne Gunter
said, "We had about four Inches
of snow. Then It turned to solid
ice.''
"We had our arammar school
completely full," Gunter said.
He said CaryvllJe's rour motels
were full, some 175 persons slept
in the school, and another 1SO to
200 people found other makeshift
lodging.
He said about U Caryville
families invited stranded
travelers to stay overnllhl in
their homes
More snow was expected today
lor parts of New York, PeM-
sylvaniaa(ldNew En.eland.
On Sunday, five people were
killed when an airplane crashed
into a snow-covered Indiana
farm Cleld aa the storm waa pus·
lna.
Slick roadl caused at least two
tramc faW1ties h1 Oblo and one
in Kentucky Sunday.
Travelera anct residents ln
Kentucky were dealina wt th µp to
12 inches of snow tbat fell Sun·
day, para1yzln1 traffic and filline
motela. At least 30 school
sy1tem1 were closed today.
The most severe traffic jam in
Kentucky occurred on Intent.ate
7~ near Corinth. State police 1aid
the hlghwv was backed up for 12
miles in both directions for about
four houn. Some or the backed·
up vetucles ran out of gasoline
before traffic was unsnarled,
police said.
Most of the state received four
lo eight inches or snow before
precipitation tapered off into
'Srdper" ·
Target ~
Slwoter?
CORONA CAP) -A 19-year·
old youU\ doing target practlce
was probably responsible for the
sbootlne ot a Japanese bust·
nessman originally believed to
be the victim or a sniper's bullet,
officials said.
Soji Sakal, 33, a businessman
bued in Torrance, was seriously
wounded Saturday as he pre·
pared to tee off u the 14th bole of
a Santa Ana Canyon golf COW'ff,
authorities said.
He remained In guarded condi·
tion Sunday at Corona Cotnmuni·
ty Hospital with a bullet lod1ed
near his heart, Riverside Countf
sheriff's deputies 1atd.
Following news reports saying
authorities were 1earchln1 for a
sniper, a man called the
RlverJlde County 1berlff's de·
partment la.te Saturday to ·~ be
had been s~n1 at t~1eta near
the iou course.
Sherllf's Deputy Bill Myers
said Sunday a prellmlnary In·
vestigation showed Sakal had ap-
parently l>een hit during the
target practice.
However, he said, further ln·
vesUgaUons and testa would be
done to confirm the llndina.
"At this poinl. it does appeat
there waa a sniper,•• Myen satct.
Authorities noted th• man,
whose name was not hnmedlat•
ly released, bad not bfen t.alten
into custody or charted in the ln·
cident.
Sakai wu struck by one ot a
series of shots fired from
somewhere near the 14th bole ot
the Green River Golf Course, ac·
cording lo deputies. Wltneaes
said that when they attempted to
reach the wounded man, they
were pinned down by more shots.
At least eight other aolfers
spent anxious moment.a before
help could be summoned.
Sakal was one of 66 Japanese
businessmen playing at the club
in a tournament sponHred by the
Mitsubishi 'ank.
Bandits Hit BB Gas Station
Two banditl. one wleldlnsc a
sawed-of( 1hot1un, held up a
Huntington s .. eb gaa station .
Sunday nltht and took $200 in
cash, police reported.
Robert Maris, an employe at
the Union 76 1u staUon at the
corner of Beach Boulevard and
Stark Street, 1ald a bearded 8UD·
man flashed the weapon at him
and demanded the ebb at about
7:30p.m.
The g\Ulman and hi1 tall ac·
complice. who wore ·1un1l111es,
fied on loot toward some nearby
apartment.a, Maris said. The
employe notified police wbo
pursued the •uapeetl throuab an
alleyway.
The bandits managed to •UP.
throu1h the police pursuit. Th8
men are bt;Ueved t.o have la~r •
ned in an auto. police lild.
--=--~~~u:r.~-~·~~r
t:ARRY WlLDEA, 14, SALUTES AT l!LVIS"ORAVE "'"'
In Memphla, Mourner• Pay Reapecw to 'King' ...
'•
3,480 Presley Fans ·
! •
Visit 'King's' Grave
!I
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP:> -
They filed past Elvia' IP•ve
qu1eUy, some of Uiem clutcblnl at !•llen leaves snatched from
the 1rounda of Graceland, tbe
estate where ''The Kina" of
rock 'n' roll is buried.
About 3,400 Elvis Praley !en.a
u,c:Declines
In Enroilment
For 2nd ~year
SACRAMENTO .(AP> -Total
enrollment at the University of
O.llfomla dropped Qnellpeetedl>'.
thl• f 11.1 bY 1~4*5 stud. ta, eonw\!
utna for ~second year a decline
officials have difficulty explaln·
infrc Vlce President for
Academic Affairs Donald Swain
sa\d the drop tnlght ban
somethJng to dO with "the re·
covery of the eeonomy,.. with
potential studept.a d~clding to go
to work i.n5tead of to campus.
Another possible explanaUon,
he eu11estedi might be tbe
enroUment eel ins• in effect at
the system's three usually most
popular campuses: Berkeley.
Dav and Los Angeles.
When the ceilings are reached.,
he said, excess applicants are
"redirected'' to other UC cam·
puses,· but do not neceaaarlly
always 10 there, cbooainl ot!Mr
schools instead.
Six of the nine c1mpuaea -·
Berkeley, UCLA, irvlne,
Riverside, Santa Barbara and
Santa Cr-uz -showed enrollmel)t
dedinet Ws fall at the under·
graduate level, be noted, wb01
the other three -Davll, SP
Diego and San Francisco tbO'Wid
undergraduate increases. .
At the sraduate school level,
Santa Barbara, UCLA and
Berkeley experienced decreuea.
paid respecta to their idol Sun-
day, I1norin1 the cold, wet
weather to view Presley's new
grave tand that of hil mother,
Gladys Love Presley. The fans
left flowers on bronze tablet.a that
marked the burial places.
The visitors, many of •bom
waited for )lours out.aide the high
gates tJa front of the manalon
where Presley lived and died.,
were allowed. on the 13.S.acre estate~bout8:45 a.m. Mostspent
about five minutes •t the graves
altbou8'h they w4lre allowed up to
15 minutes.
Security officials at first
broa1ht the fans in groups of 25 to
30, tben allowed u many u eo at _
once to walk the quarteMnile
drive t.o the M~tatloo Garden.
Tb• wtd iron 11te1, deeorat.o:
ed wltb musical notes, were
closed at4 p. m., Leavins aboUt a -
dozen peraoDI who failed to cet
inslde dwing the nm day's view·
ing.
The tat.ea had been closed at 11
a.m . for two bouu to allow
guards to eat lunch, rest and
change Into dry clothes.
Menaloo seeurtty chief Dick
Grob said S38 people visited the
cravesttet durtnc tbe 211, houn In
the momina. The real eame after
the 1at.ea reopened at 1 p.m., be
said.
The crowds were orderly and,.
Grob said, there were no at·
tempts to remove flowers from
the1raves. · "It went very well. very
smooth," Grob 1ald. "We will uJ.
tlmately reach 5,000 people a
day. We had no problems today."
Jerry and Dlann Ardoin of Port
Arthur, Texas, were the first J.o
view the grave. They drove 11
hours, stopping only for
breakfast, and h•d waited at the
man1lon since noon Saturday. re-
lieved brteny by relaUves.
The bodies of Presley and his
mother were moved to the
mansion irounds Oct. 2 from tM
mausoleum at Forest Hill
Cemetery. He died Au1. 18 at the
mal\1lon.
11 , .,
J10 ..
I ,,,,
... .. -. ... ·-. --.... --·---~·----..... -. -• .. A ,. •
• v THE BIG GAME: For thole
. d'amtlles who auffel"witb a apt>rta
fan or two in the household. this
Jons Thanks1ivtn1 holiday had to
be tbe weekend that wu. The
television fetched up football,
coast-to-coast and hour·by·t.¥>ur,
for the past four days.
You could watch the USC·
UCLA epic under the lltbta. You
could view Pitt and fenn State
struggle in the snow. You could
immerse yourself bl the color and pa1eantry of Army verau.s Navy.
Watch the LA Rams freezer
tame in Cleveland; the Fumbl
Bowl. .
· For the true teevee Cridiron
fanatic, it may take Wffka for hli
e!',balls to recover. Bylhen, it'll
be time for the bowl sames.
J YOU MAY FIND this hard to
believe, but some people didn't
spend the entire holiday weekend
watching televised football.
Some people actually watched
football live, with breathing
Players, right there In the flesh.
Since you may have missed
one of these splendid living op-
portumlles, I take you now for a
report on the Asphalt Bowl which
was played Saturday afternoon
at Avalon by-the-bay, Catalina
Island.
There are lots of open spaces at
Catalina Island, in parks, on
lawns and even the beach. But
the two teams involved here had
selected the asphalt parking Jot,
next lo a park, where the lour
buses ply in and out.
I am uncertain about the
names of the teams but for clarl·
ty, I '11 call them the Blues versus
the Tatters.
The Blues get their name from
the fact that two players wore
identical blue foQtball shirts,
each with •he number 32. They
alternated at -4uarterback. With
l;ioth or them carryine O.J.
.~impson 's famous number, you
might thJnk this would be confus-
ing lo the opposition.
IT WASN'T. One Blue bad Jone
blond hair and was about four
feet, 10 inches short. The other
Blue was a pudty kid of about six
feet who bad obviously 1rown too •fut.
The Tatters, on the other hand,
get their team name from their
leader and quarterback, who was
s hirtless. He wore blue jeans that
appeared lo have survived an ex·
plos1on in a paint factory. He had
a patch on his seat the size of a
pie platter.
Anyway, the game started and
raged up and down the asphalt.
Little Blue 32 spent a lot of Usne
~locking Big Tatter with the ex·
pJod ed jeans. He came about up
to his navel. Some of the block•
could be fairly characterized as
low blows.
THEY PLAYED WITH a
ftuorescent chartreuse football.
Big Blue 32 on one play heaved
this colorful orb about half a mile
to the sprinting Little Blue 32. I ~ouldn't contain myself. "Hurry,
hurry," I screamed at Little Blue
32.
He paid no attention and
caught the ball for a touchdown
anyway. Thia caused my wife to
r~mark, "I didn't bear them call
on you for any coaching ... "
Late in the fourth quarter, the
bie brown Catalina tour buses
be1an to arrive back on the park·
in& lot. They were roundly booed
the players on both teams.
e buses broke up the 1ame.
tte Blue 32 kicked tbe fluores-t chartreuse football in dil·
t.
t•s tou1h when you lose to a
rbus.
Siamese twf'ns identified only as Hassane
and Ousseni, 16 months old, we~e separat·
ed in a 15-hour operation at Necker
Hospital in Paris earlier this month. Doc-
tors s!lid the surgery was a success.
Rhodesia Kil'& 1,2(!)0
Destruction of 2 Guerrilla Bases Claimed
I
· NATION I WORLD~
became a mte before Arkansas.
McClellan wu known du.ring .
his long career in the Senate as a
law-and:Order man and as a re-
lentleu investigator of wrongdo-
ln1 In and QUtof government.
SALISBURY, Rhodesia <AP)
-The Rhodesian Jo9ernment
reported today that ita lr:ound
and air forces have desll'Oyed two guerrillaS bases ln Moaam-
bique and killed at least 1.200:
black natlonallsta.
McClellan was elected to
the Senate tn l942 8lter two terms
based in Moiamblque have been communique said. in the House. He bad been
wiped out It said the raids1 were carried chairman of the Senate AP·
A ipilitary command state~
ment said the bues were used by
Rhodesian bl•ck natiortallst
guerrillu fighting to topple the
white minority eovernment. .
TROOPS BACKED by air sup-
port penetrat~ 132 miles inside
Mozambique at one point during.
raids in the past several days,~
military communique satd.
The military communique con·
firmed earlier r~porta from
Mozambique Ulat Rbodeslan air
and ground atta~q bad been
launched against 1uerrilla posl·
lions in the neighboring eountry.
Observers noted that if 1,200
guerrillas have been slain in the
raids starting la.at Wednesday, a
fifth of the forces of Robert
Mugabe's Zimbabwe African Na·
tional Union forces known to be
INFORMED SOURCES said, out "In the interests of self· proprlatlona Co.mmlttee 1ince
meanwhUe,thattbreemoderate ,__d_e_fe_n_s_e_:_·----------~------------------------------...;..;A_u&1u_s_t_ur72~-·~.-.'_,.'::""':.._ ..... ~
nationallat leaden have agreed
to meet with Prim~ Mlnlates' Ian
Smith for Wks that could lQd to
black rule
The other chief leader of na-
tlon allM forces outside Rhodesia,
Joshua Nkomo, rejected Smith's
promise of elections with uni·
versa! suffrage as a "deceit" to
wintlme.
The communique stressed that
there were no cluhes with troops
or the Mozambique eoveroment,
whlcb provides bues in the coun·
try for tbe cuerrUlu.
NO 8AJDS WERE reported
a1alnst Nltomo's auerrllla forces
based In Zambla.
The communique, which came
after she days of official silence
on reports from Mozambique of
the raids, aald one Rhodesian
soldier was slain and ei1ht were
wounded. All Rhodesian troops
have returned to the country, the
Study: Strenuous
Sports Help He8rt ,,
MIAMI (AP) -Really strenuous exer~e ii c~ medicine for your
heart, but sporta like eolf and bowlin1 aren't enoueh. a new study
finds.
The study also indicates that a hilh amount of enero spent each
week in physical acUvtty, lncludlne walklnJ, could provide some in·
surance a&ainst premature bean
~tacb. ·
Spending a high total amount ·
or enerey and calories is slutfl·
cant, especially ln excer!lset
that demand bunt.a of enerat '
output, aays Dr. Ralph S. Palfen·
barger Jr. of UC Berkeley.
BUT THE IUSK OF heart at·
tacks waa lower for men t"lal·
ln1 in "strenuo1.11 sports," wblle
"casual" 1port1 seemed to bave
no infiuence, Paffenbaf'ltt aald.
Among strenuoua •l>OIU, be.
listed aw.hnmlng aild ru ,
baak:etball, bandball and aquaa •
11
TUJUNGA <AP) Two
Canoaa Park cblldren have been
injured b)' a def anged, dectawod,
400-pcruncl pet ttger owned by a
wornan their famtl1 was viattln1
over the weekend, accordln1 to
the Los Anceles County sheriff's
office.
John Applewhite, his wlfe,
Colleen, and their three children
were •t the home of Dee Arlen ill
the Angeles National Forest nur
Los Anaelea on Sunday when
Mrs. Arlen'• titer, B .C. ·
(Beautiful Cat), ran from the
room it shares with her and Into
the Uvini room where the Ap-
plewhite famUy was sleeplne, the
sberiff'sdeputtes said.
• THE TIOEll jumped over her
head, Colleen Applewhite told the
deputies, then landed on the
chest of her 7·year-old daughter
Ellzabeth with one foot ln her
face. The animal then pounced on
5-year.ptdJohn. • i
Part of the boy's right ear was
torn off and had to be stitched
back on, she saJd, amd he al.so suf-
fered scalp cuts, ofrtcials said.
He was listed ln serious but sta-
ble condition at Pacoima
Me morial Lutheran Hospl~l.
The girl suffered superficial
facial scratches.
..
Mrs. Applewtute described the
tiger, who was placed ln 14-day
quarantine at Mrs. Arlen's home'
after the incident, as "not that
fierce but so111elimes overly
friendly."
HE OPPOSES PLAYING BRIDQ& FOR MONEY
Expett Charlea Goren Nix•• Gambling
3 Men Held iii Kidnap,
Rape of 2 Tee~·agers
LOS ANGELES (AP> The three men alleged·
-Three men have been ly pickeduptwo girls, age
arrested io connection 16 and 17, in the Co·
with the kldn1appin1 and vina area Nov. 17 and of·
repeated rape of two fered to ~· them to a high school ei.rls from party. 11\eytben.took the
Azusa they allegedly· girlstoanabandonedcar
held for six days, of-wash in est Covina. a
ficials say. cabin atArrowbead8Dd a
Sheriff's depuU~s aaid house in Baldwin Park
John WetterUnp, 19, and where the alleted rap-
James Donald Whit~ 23, ings occurred. •
both of Bal<lwtn Park, Tbe gtrll ere "re·
and Larry Jama Allred, lUMd In AtWa W•es·
23, or Hacienda Hel1bta day and the men atrwt·
were booked Sunday for ed after one of tbe girls
investieation of rape and Jed investigators to Wet-
kidnapplna and were be-terlings• Baldwi.D Par~
int held m Ueu of $50,000 home, authorWes said.
bail each. Wetterlint~motber
T
Punch -
---. --·
Ruth, 48 , was also
booked for investifalian
of compounding a felony,
deputies aaid.
j'
Liquor ..
Dealer . ..
Jailed
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -The state Court
of Appeal has refused to
stay a fi\le-day jafl term
and a '2.000 coatempt
fine against an Oakland
liquor de11ler who bad
been selling alcobollc
beverages below fair
trade prices.
Robert Lee, who
operates Warehouse
Wines and Spirits, had
aaked that rulings by
Alameda County
Superior Court Judge
John Sparrow be held ln
abeyance pending ap·
peal.
LEE HAS until Dec.13 to further appeal the con-
tempt sentence.
A preliminary lnjunc·
tion was granted Nov. 18
to the Cal-State Packaae
Store and Tavern
Owners Association and
four individuals.
THEY ALSO were or·
dered to post $10,000 --=---;..;.....;._..;..;. ___________ bond to cover posstble
losses should Lee prevail
in bis appeal.
300,000 View Event ·
HOLLYWOOD CAP> -Actor James
Stew art was arand marshal of the annual San·
ta Claus Lane Parade ~wn Hollywood
Boulevard which drew an estimated 300,000
viewers, officials said.
Police had anticipated some diaturbances
along the 10.block route Sunda)' evenfnJ, but
Capt. Jerry Feinberg of the Hollywood
Di vision said tbere were no m.UOr problems.
Controversy )lad developed oveP a noat
provided by the gay community, but the noat
rolled along without incident, elCcept for the
taunts of alJandful of people. offtdaLs aaid.
Some 400 police officers were deployed
alone the ro~. PeiDberg aald, adding there
were only the 0 ua\ll.l mlnor arresta" dwini1 tbe t\No-boUr event. •'
Singer's .Mother Dies
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Singer Tony Bennett
finished two Sunday night performances ln the city tte romanticized in bis most famous aonc and new
today to attend bis mother's funeral in River Edce,
N.J.
His mother, Anna Benedetto, or 1\tver Edse.
died Thanksgiving nltht. Her fWleral ls scbeduled
for Wednesday.
Bennett, whose "I Left My Heart lJ1 San Fnn·
cisco" became a classic love ballad, petformed'Fri·
day, Saturday and Sunday at the VeoeUan Room of
the Fairmont Hotel ta.re. His molher's death wu
kept secret he aaid.
Asked b;;w he w&J able to 10 on state after his
mother's death, the singer sald:
•'Shew .. a great lady and would bave wanted it
that way ••• and I wouldn't have wanted to dlafp·
Po nt the •dlences. •• .
.. • •• fl
Siin F.rarwisco E~es ~
.. . • 1 71Jni.n/I, CoUe P;la~ :.
SAN Pl(ANCISCG CAP) - A pl'O-' builders would be allow.ct to milt,
postt(I residential t.onlng•cocle for San half the garage at.alls for amall caJ'!,.
Francisco emphasizes smaller build· which builders are not permitted tooo
in1s and increased 11eipborbooct now. The rules also would requlre
services. ilmaller gara1• eotrance1 lJ1 order to
Tt\e four·~ study. to be presented save C\Jl'b apace tor parldng. to tti~ city plannllg commj.uion Tuel--~mall rest homes and child care ~ay. abo demonauates how: arctdtec· centers would ~ constructed or •· ·
ture c~ accommOdate new trends paneled without fed.tape, to ease the
and lifat'Jlea -aucb iu ~wrdes~d pli1bt n Fraacrtcaco•a J~ u. of compdtt ~ind Uie ~g. number of wor Inc m en a
numberotworWilt moUiers. ~lderty. Howe.er, bl• lmtltuUC?na ..
• ,-; would face a =r.er tilJ)e expai\dallj PREPARED BY city p~annen wbo . because they to dlsplace bOus~
looked at every retldential block ln and create traffic Jama the ·~
San Francisco, Ute study considers said. • ~ ranglog from tbe .need for trees -the rttles discourage fiat-frolll
t.Q,1w.bat kind of businesses should be apartmenll and encoura1e balcOni•.
allowedinnetit\l;>orboods pallos and varied entry-ways. ~
The planners ala<> coinaidered bow rulu would diseoOraae bavlDC homes
many apartment units should be al-converud to professional offices.
lowed on neighborhood blocks, what The planning commtssion is expec:t-
new social services -such as rest ed to approve the rules ThW'lday.
homes and ehild ~ar-e centers -Pultllc bearln&• wlll follow Jn
should be permitted and what prof>. February and then the code will '9 ~
lemspastr.onlnglawshaveereated. passed on for conalderatlon by the.
NEARLY A ,THIRD .of the city's BoardofSupervlaorsandthemayor.1 reald~ b'loeb would be N20Ded ' Although some builders say the pro-~ decrease density, mearun, the~ posed t11lei would Umlt them Ud
would be fewer people and apart~ cause ~ts toaoar, city planner Mark
rnents per ,Parcel of land.. ' Wtnoll'Od · daid tbo changes will ~
The coclflprOPQffS that: •. popufar. ~ ~
-the clty make tt tougher for .. These rUlet are what we I neig~borllood 1as sta~ons to renew when we meet with nel1hbom
their: pennlts to dllcour-.e auto use and look at what ls bJppenlng a •
in the tJ'affic-ctossed city. Apartment the city," Ii aald.
1
New State Uaws . .
llike Trash Fees·
Carrying out the family traah in Orange County -
all two million tons a year -ia going to cost more in
the future thanks to two new state laws county officials
say they neither want nor need.
While county experts don't know yet exQcUy how
much the legislation wlll cost taxpayers, they say
residents should expect to pay more for trash dlaposal
either through property taxes or higher monthly refuse
collection bills.
One of the new measures requires that trash be cov·
ered over with more dirt and compacted more than in the
pat,. Before Oranee County can comply with this require.
m t, about $842,000 worth of new equipment must be
pu chased and five new employees hired.
The second law could force the county to• pay a
25-cent-per-ton trash premium or $500,000 a year to the
state for recycling and Utter clean-up projects.
(That law also could impose fees of $10 to $30 a year
on letail firms and force manulacturers of such items
as 'Jlewspapers and soft drinks to be assessed $200 to
$2 ~each year.
1 Orange County residents haven't had to worry much
abt>ut trash disposal in the past thanks to a well-managed
county operated system . It appears now the state
LeJislature is trying to help manage the job by imposing
ex~ensive new regulations but unfortunately it doesn't ap-
pear the Legislature is offerine the county much help in
pafing for them.
Bus Service Views
A survey of 2,000 Orange Countains has pointed up
som e marked differences of opinion between people who
regularly ride Orange County Transit District buses and
people who rarely if ever ride them.
The OCTD invested $40,000 of federal funds in the
two-month survey in an attempt to find out how the
citizenry is reacting to the county's bus service and
what changes or improvements could be made to attract
more riders.
The answ('rs indicated that most of the regular
riders are ra1rly happy, find the buses comfortable, the
drivers helpful and the price right. Almost half the
riders said they hve w1th111 a block of a bus stop and 80
percent said they are familiar with the bus schedules or
can get the information easily by telephone.
But less than a third of the non-riders knew where
or how often the buses stop and only 40 percent kn~
that the fare is 25 cents and thattransfersare free.And while
36 l>ercent of the non-riders thought the buses seem empty a
lot; of the time, only 19 percent of the regular riders found
th»t to be true.
A majority of the non-riders said they'd use the bus
orily as a last resort, with almost half saying they'd
rather get a ride with a friend if their car wasn't
av a liable.
And. perhaps understandably for car-oriented
Californians, both riders and non-riders expressed most
concern over the distance they walk, would have to
walk from bus stops.
The survey makes it pretty clear that it's not easy
to pry Orange Counlians out of their cars, but at least
the detailed com men ts of OCTD patrons and
non-patrons offer some guidelines for spreading the
good word.
Still More Warnings
Apparently undaunted by the fact that health
warnings printed on cigarette packages have had zero
effect in cutting back cigarette use, federal and state
authorities plunge ahead with demands for still more
warning labels.
Now the Food and Drug Administration wants the
Treasury Department to require labels on alcoholic
beverages warning pregnant women that consumption of
alcohol during pregnancy can cause birth defects.
And here in California a state Department of Health
official wants warnings to pregnant women and nursing
mothers printed on the labels of all over-the-counter
drugs, whether or not they have been proved harmful.
Hie theory is that the use of any drug during pregnancy.
should be avoided in case later research reveals a risk
to the fetus or nursing infant. '\
This is all very fine, all very expensive and
probably all very useless. Since a vast majority of
pregnant women and mothers of inf ants are under
medical care. it would seem that a face-to-face warning
by a physician would carry a great deal more weight
than fine print on a label. That's still the most effective
tum-off for cigarette addicts.
Earl Waten
Tlpplna his mltt at a recent
meetina of the county
1upervl1or1, State Finance
Director Roy Bell indicated the state ta movln1 towards accep-
tance of a 1reater share of
reaponslbllltr for wellare P•Y·
menta. The idea ls part of Gov·
ernor Jerry Brown's solution to
the property tax problem cur-
rently boued down ln the
Lerlslature.
Although presently financed
with a combination of federal.
state and
local funds ,
the amounts
of welfare
payments are
largely dictat-
ed by federal
and state
laws . And
because
welCare pro-
e rams are
mandated upon local govern-
ment lt is logical that the costs
should be borne by those calling
th~ tune.
As a practical matter whether
Jack Anderson
th• admhllstratloa now mov• to
asaume lta obUcaUon or not i seem a only a queaUon of Ume Wl·
til it'is compelled. For &hero la Ut· tie dlflerence ln the applluUoo ot the CONtltuttonal equal pro.
tecUon clause between tbe •ilt
well are flnanctna ayatem and~
system of public school flnanoln'
which bl'6Ulbt about the S.rrano
decision.
In tbat, almply stated, the
court hela that ehUdren were en·
titled to the aame dollar quallty
of education atalewld•. Tbe
dollar measuremenl of quall\Y S.
much more pronOUllCed ln 1
welfare matters than I.ft educa·
tioo.
~IDE F&OM that, many bave
IODI contended that property tax·
es should be levied onlr to"pay for
those 1overnmenta aervlcv
whlcb are property related.
Welf.are does not quallfy in that
cateeory.
And It 11 Just one of a number of
pro1ram1 which, althou•h belna
obU,aUOD.I' of the ai.te. bave
traditionally been paid ln I?•~ by
U.S. Rite Honors ~ . .
Hitler SS Troops
WASHINGTON -The U.S.
Army provided a military band
and a chaplain -the music and
the prayers -for a macabre
meeting recently of U.S.
veterans with former Nazi shock
trOQps at an SS graveyard.
The Nazis once belonged to
Adolph Hitler's dread Waffen 5.5,
whic h was
haled even by
the regular
German
army . The
Encyclopaed-
ia Britannica
notes that
Gestapo chief
Heinrich
Himmler. the
Nails' most ruthless exponent of racism and
terrorism, founded the SS.
According lo tbe en -
cyclopaedia, this elite force
became "an all-embracina em-
pire within the Naii state, at once .
the embodiment and the instru-
ment of <Himmler's> ra~ial
theories··
Yet uniformed members or
America 's Eighth Infantry
Division band tootled funeral
music as veterans of the U.S. 70th
Division laid wreaths on the
graves of dead SS troops near
Bucholz. West Gennany, on Sept.
26. And a U.S. military chaplain,
believe it or not, pronounced an
invocation over the 11raves.
This strange aatherina was in-
spired by an encounter in the
United Slat.es a year ago. Three
German visitors from tbe SS
Six Mountain Hunter Division
met the brother of a dead 7oth
Division soldier. After some ~r
drinking. a reunion was planned
In West Germany.
Notices were published 1n
U .s. Army Reserve publications.
All veterans of the 70tb Dlvlslon,
known ln. World War II aa the
Trallblazera, were invited. About
80 signed ttP for the trip to thelJ'
old batUeffeld.s ln !'ranee and
Germany.
The notices mentioned only
that they would meet with the
Sixth Mountain Hunter Dlvlslon,
without adding ll was an SS unit.
Some of tht' 'former Gia,
therefore, may not have known
they would share their rewtlon
with ex-Nazi shock troops. But
this seems unlikely 1lnce the SS
unit opposed the '10th In both
ll'1'ance and Germany durln1 lbe
war. The Americans met the HiUer
veterans formally for the first
time in the French town of
Eplnal. The SS men laid a wreath
on U.S. graves ln a mllltary
celn-etery near a battlefield
where \My had once toueht.
Then the Americans, who had
invaded Germany to free Europe
from Nazism, journeyed with the
Fuehrer's finest across the same
border to Bucholz, where the
high point of the reunion oc·
curred. -
FIRST THE mayor or Bucholz
threw a r~epUon ror the former
enemies. Then they 11athered
together at the graveyard. This
was followed by a dinner-dance
where tbe men of the 70th
whooped lt up wltb tbe SS
veter am.
Gen. Geor1e Blanchard, the
U.S. Army fommaoder in
Europe, must have bfen aware
of the odd reunion since be met
local 1ovtrnment1 and !u' •dded to the overtulril of p.. ,eny for non-property re ated
aervices.
Auemblyman Ken Maady
atread)t has ttrudt at one of
tbes-, propoflna a complet•
takeover by the state of court
flnancln1. Under the present: practi~ the state P&11 only for
the apt)ellate dlvlalon1 leaVln1
the trial coUrts to be partlillY.
funded b)'. local aoveromeata
despite the f.ect all are a part Qi
tbe si.~udfolal ayatem.
An6tb«r ~ lD wblcb the state ls q.caplnj'ft.t ~po111lblUtlell ls
in hi1be'r eclucation. While the
eoata of eome '50,000 lludentl at
the Uh\veralty of C orota and
in the atate colle1e.; are funded
by tbe •~te without local conm-
ment coatribu&ns, over half Of
the costs of m9ft than. l Y• million 1tllaenta croU~ lD tbe two-ye
:\ colleaei remain on °''barb or thep~own~
TflAT BVBDBN Jiu bffn ria· ina rapldly, nearly do\lbtlnf ln
alx years, and, at ov•r $800
ThotYNtl KMvfl/EdltOt'. .-
·million, now rep~ta neady aa •
1reat u amowit on the tax roUa aa doe• welfare. '
C0Hlderln1 the atate has·
alway1 pald for lta colle1ea and
university It Js difficult to f at.bom
the reason th• communJty col·
Je11e1, onee Ju\own u Junior col-le1es. have been allowed to ct..
velop u local aovernment opera.
Uo,ns. However lt happened, it b
on\rart to the pracUce of m.o&t
other stat.a which fully nnao.c;e • allpubllc~teea.
Ttte tranaf•rrlnl of all welfare'
coata to the M.ate theretoro W®ld ·
be a 1lmt •tel> ln tile ri&ht d.lnc·
lion for property tu relief wblch
should be auamented. by the as-
sumpUon of t.be other proaruns
now partially carried by local
eovernment but rightfully the
responstbillUes of the state lOV-
ernmeot.
Such a shin however would all
be for nought unleu the eovernor
can also aohleve hls plan of im-
posing strict limltaUona on tbo
revenue ralalnt powers of local ,
government.
"""A,..J --~ ·~
'' Wt'~a here to kup i""pe.-lA1~sm ftem ritut'ni~."
the next day with the '10th
Division veteraris. The highest
ranking U.S. officer at the SS
meeting, retired Brig. Gen.
Theodqre Mataxls, told us: "All
lt was was talk among people
who fouiht 30 years ago."
M ataxla is now assistant
superintendent of the Valley
Forge Mllitary Academy in
Wayne, Pa. He told us be was
aw•re the Germans were. an SS
unit. but noted that they had been
family pony wu abot because of
aneer at a slln or if one of these
armed and lncompetent natur6
lovers coutdn•t tell the difference
between a llttl& ahetlud and a
1,200 pound mOOM. In bunter in· teated areu, rou'll see all the
livestock pf us the f amity '*'
beribboned with orango pJ.utlc
streamers ln hopes of convtftctn1
these ahootlng fool• that tbe
ruminant quadruped in yondet
meadow 1J a cow, not an elk, not
ad~r.
I know a woman who debatAKI
over pu\.tina a Day·Glo atre.,ner
oo htr catl bUt dec:i4ed qatnst lt
betauat tM bunters arowid blr
place lft ao mean tbty'd rather
ahoot a domesticated Hlmat than a wild one. I my_aolf have
seen • bUntet paaaln1 bY In a car
abrltk to a atop, Jump from hll
:vehicle Ind blOw the realhtl'I olf
a t&me Pbeeact eatlnl sralns OI
com two,_ tnm t!Jj load Md
30f• ttrOmabOulo.
combat troops. At the Nurem·
berg trials, the SS was con-
demned en maase with few ex·
ceptlons, as a criminal organlza·
tlon. And for years, meeUngs of
SS veterans were banned in
postwar Germany.
toot.note: At the Pentagon, the
U.S. Army did not hold back on
the facts. But a spokesman said
lbe particlpatlon of the band and
chaplain wu the extent of of.
flclal U.S. involvement.
-. '
Drama Critic Scorned
Is Star's.Appearance Fair. Game for Candor? • '81 HUGH A. llUWGAN Af" ..... Clrft I t ,
NEW YORK -Broadway, wMre there la a
broken lllbt bulb for every heartless drama criUc.
is lo a wrllt-alapplne snit because New York ma1allno'1 John Simon hU auaesiect that the
luminous, Indefatigable Liza Mlnnelll bu "blubber
Upa," a laee llke "a beaate" and ... noae en route t.o
b4'~omtna a trunk."
In addition to everything elle, Uke Mrs. Lincoln
at Ford'• Theater, he didn't think much of the pl•)'.
POR SHOOTING DOWN "THE ACT," Ms.
Mlnnelll 's tireless an4 at tlma tiresome new star
turn at the Majestic Theater, in termJ so personally
unflattering to the performer, the League of New
York TheatAlrs and Producwa has called on the-
press agents to deny critic Simon his free
sharpshooter's seat on the able atfuture openings.
Both the Drama Critics Circle and the Drama
Desk, the approved eun clubs of the first night as-
sassins, have protested the leape'a action as dis·
criminatory, and all aorta of people like gossip col-
umnist Uz Smith and producer Harold Prince have
heaped scorn on
Sim on 's ·'rampant
machismo" in calling
attention, whether ac-
curately or not, to the
star's outer shell rather
than her inner fire,
' All of which begs
the question or whether
a performer's physical
appearance ii fair aame
for a critic's candor
and·or vitriol.
Superstar Minnelli
would not spend more
than half the evening in
a sequinned leotard cut--... ...
down to the Canal Zone
1f she were resentful of
the idea of being confused with a sex object by the
learned critics, any more than MGM put Lana
Turner in a sweater so movie goers could aduUre
her diction.
When Bing Crosby called Bob Hope "old ski
nose," he was being physical and personal, to say
nothing of inviting two decades of counterattacking
banter about his own lack of scalp protection.
WALTER KERR, SURELY THE tnost
i::racious and kindly of drama critid, once
rhapsodized on the "calllpyglan charms" of dancer
Gwen Verdon, which was gettine physical below the
belt.
Calllpyeian. according to my Oxford English
Dictionary, means "having shapely or finely de-
velOped tiU:ttO(kl." fro t!io n e or a am~
atatue ol Vtnus. CrtUc Kerr, ln fact, was 10 taken
C~ ~; t):a~:~on~~·~~
' ~4' medlcal term and avoid St'l off enae, he wanted to _ -~ have them cut in a mold
., aad huni over $hubert
Alley aa a IOrt of rear' euard Mount }\ushmore.
But what, may one ask, would propriety and
professional candor require ot the criUc wbO had
some if• and but.a about the VerdQn butt. or, for the
sake of argument. the Mlnnelll probos~ls?
MY MOTBBB, WHO WAS A GtEAT movie fan
and even went on nieht.s when they weren't alvinl
away dishes, would have aoae alons with wbat
Simon says. Her critiques tended to be very
physical s ince she never could remember the
names or the stars, only what they looked Uke.
"What did you see tonl1ht, Ma?"
'''The Pirate.'"
''Who was in it?"
''Rat Eyes and Lantern
Jaw.•' That meant Judy
Garland, Liza's Mo°1, and Geae
Kelly.
Clark Gable, he.-idol, wu
'tTaxi Doors," beca\lse she aald
with those ears he looked like a
taxicab with the back doors
open. June Allyson was "Weepy
Eyes." Bette Davis: "The
Screecher." Leslie Howard: OA•&.•
"That Chinless Englishman," John Wayne: "Pine
Knot" and Wallace Berry: "Pudding Face."
SHE SAW "ROSE MARIE" WITH "EH Head''
and ·'Needle Nose,'' which meant the Nelson Eddy·
Jeanette MacDonald version. She couldn't abide
·•Popeye,'' not the cartoon character but Kirk
Douglas, but doted on "Chicken Neck" and "Patent
Leather," respectively James Stewart and Georae
Raft.
In most cases Mom was not putUne the knock
on people she nicknamed. Her physical
pseudonyms eenerally added up to more gentle
criticism than emanated rrom Percy Hammond,
one of the theater's more profOWld observers.
"I could knock everythlne about this play," he
dismissed a dlamal musical, "except the cborua
girls' knees, and nature anticipated me there."
JUST THE OTHER NIGHT. down at the local
pizzeria, a critical contretemps ensued over which
or "Charlie's Angels, 'I new, old or any, really could
act. It mattered not to one or the savants which of
the lour was at tier dramaturelcat best unfettered
bya bra.
"I like the one with the bow te11," be opined'
without indicating which antel was ao underpinned.
Denied the physical approach, the· arguments
ad peraonem, political cartoonists and caricaturlata
· would be an ehdangered species, and Sardi 's would
have to decorate its walls with men's room 1rafltti
or X·rays of Cher's poitrine job.
Vietnam Vet 8eized
In Night ClUb Shooting
OMAHA, Neb. CAP> -The nleht
club was packed -mosUy parents
and children -for Dave Wlngert's
puppet show. The lights were dim-
ming, and Wingert promised
"'something new and different."
Then came a 1ound like
firecrackers -and a stunned mo·
mentor two before it aanlt In that this
was not part of the show.
ONE CLUB PATRON lay dylna and
25 others wounded aa J)6lleta flew
from six shot.gun blasts fired by a
well·dressed gunman.
Another patron was suUering an ap-
parent heart attack.
}JorriCied, the patrons dove for
cover.
Ten victims remained hospltallied"
today in conditions ranelng from eood
to fair.
A DISABLED VIETNAM veteran
was ·arrested early Sunday al his
home in Omaha and booked on suspi-
cion o! fll'at-deetee murder and shoot
ing with intent to kill or maim during
the shooting at the Club 89 on Satur·
day night.
Douglas County Attorney Donald
Knowles said he would file a formal
murder charge today against Ulyaaes
Cribbs, 32. Knowles said he would uk
that bail be denied.
Atnong those injured in the hall of
shotgun pellets was a preenant
woman, Patricia Alllaon, 27, of
Omaha. She remained hoapltallzed
early today in fair condition and un·
der close observation with multiple
pellet wounds.
THE MAN SHOT to death WU 8ll orr-
duly sherilf's deputy, 39-year-old
Dennis Upari, who was shot in the
head.
His wife, Ruth, 34, lost her left eye
and may lose the sight of the other
one, according to Bergan-Mercy
Hospital officials.
Third Grader: Lucky. to lJe Here
"THANK.8GIV1NG IS apeolal
becauu I eet to 10 to my
grandmother's howse. She always baa
a meal waltlnt for us. Sbe bu tome
turkey and mash l>C)tatoes.
·~~~-----------------CRmc·s CHOICE
Dancer OW.n Verdpn
la:nguage
T~ting
'Awarded'·
.'GUILTY'
LOS ANG~ (AP)
-A former automobile
1mo1 device lnapector
has pleaded 1ulltr to
three felony counta of ls·
sulne counterfeit and
forced smog certificates
to used car dealers.
NEW YORK (AP) -
The P ta h Pbilllp E . Laraon, 44, en gon .. won nf ~arson, pleade<l ·ull~· the 1977 "Doublespeak "' "' A ward" of the National to three of 10 charges -
Council of Teachen of legine viol~Uon of the
Endlish ror referring to Motor Ve))lcle Code. 0 Larson had had his the neutron bomb as "a license revokf!d a year ~aed~;!l~~. enchancement before hla Aueust arrest
The a~atd for twiaUns.. for failure to properly
the English lam&QJltr check can.
also cites the Energy ----------Research and Develop-_______ _..._,_.
ment Agency for ualne
the same phrase.
THE NEUTRON
bomb ls capable or kill·
ing all tile within its
range while dolne little
damage to buildings.
The Central In ·
telligence Agency won a
runner·up award for the
name it reportedly gave
to its experiments ln
human behavior con·
trol: ·'The Society for
the Investigation of
Human Ecoloey."
A SPECIAL
Doublespeak award
went to Virginia Slims
cl1arettes for what the
Council tertned "ag.
gressive exploitation or
young people" in Its ad-
vertl.ling.
..:
t
•• v
r
.. ,... .,
OT Mondl!J.~•1m ORANGE COUNTY I POLITICS I OBITUARIES .. ~
QUEENIE PoHtie!al Notes
Canal 'Foe' in Fold Bua drtvera for the
Oral'.tle CoWtt7 Tfanatt
Dlltrict (0CTD) picked
up nearly 25 percent
more puaenser fares
last month \b.an durtni
Octoberl~
By O.C. HtJSTINGS
Of .. 1>..W .........
U.S. Senator S.I. Hayakawa IQS be nowfavon
uUflcationofth• Panama Canal treaUea.
"I believe there I.I a area&er advani.te in bav.
lng the Republic of Panama than reapon.JtbWty
with the U .S. for the coaltnwid operation of the .
canal than by refusln1 the treaties and thereby in·
curring anlmoalty in Panama and the rest ol Latin
America," aaJd the California Republican.
It wu Hayakawa, who, while campal1nln• in
Oranee County last year, quipped that the U.S.
ought to keep the canal because "we •tol• lt fair and
square."
*
OPl'OMETRIST NOLAN Friuelle has an·
nounced that be will nek the Republican Nomioa·
tion in the73rd Aasembly District.
· The current assemblyman from that dlatrict ls
Democrat Dennis Manaers.
The award wu p~aented by the N~
itarbor-CO ta Moaa d9ard of Realtora:'-liba.
Bar1e100 Ii a Carmer New~M•a Unlft~ ScboOl
1»atrlct ttmtee ud •orved u P!'Wdent Of the
CaUforula School Boards 41soclaUOn.
* ~
OCTD dlrecto,_ we~ told that rlderablp
reacbod nearly t. 7 million W. dlU'lna Oc-
tober, tbe second hllbest
,eaasenier month ln OOTD hllt.ory.
CONGBF.SSMAN ftOBERT E. 1'adham, R·
Newport Beach, wtll lntroduce the rum '-rhe Priee
of Peace and Freedom" Thunday at a mfftlng ot
the Republican Associates of Oranae County tn tho
Monte Carlo Roo1D at the Newporter Jon in Newport
Beach. ----:----~~~-----------------------Badham, a member or the Hause Armed
Services Committee, wW be on hand to ans..-er ·
questions. The film deals with the relative strength
of the NATO forces venu.s the Wan.aw Pact naliona of Europe.
*
..
•
., D
"All I know la be aays he'• a man ot letten and be hu a Dr. FrizzeUe, who haa been acUve ln Orange
meua.ie for vou." County Republican politics for many years, plans a THE SOUTH Or.onae County DemocraUc Club
bu elected a newtSOard ol diNct.ors. --------------------press conference Tuesday. He practJces In Newpc)rt Elected were: chairman, Dennis Smith,
Lasuna HUia; secretary, Mary Enser, San
Clemente; ueaurer, Pauline Leonard, Sen Juan
Capistrano; at lar1e, Helen Mills, Misslon VleJo;
membership, ·Lola Drake, 5an Juan Capistrano;
program, Milce Michaels, Milllion Viejo; tnt.erclub
liaison, Tom Plante, Dana Nnt and public rela·
lions, NormaZlene, Mission Vt.io.
1 Beach, butllves in Costa Mesa.
For the Record
.J
Df••olutlon• 01 Marriage
l'llWNowmMr1' lllnc:ent t..eon; VODDEN, Raymond A.tEllEOO, Frank Sliva •nd M•r L. •nCI EllPbell\M .• FINDLAY, Lori
Jorie L.oulle ; PtTTIGRtW, tllen •nd Thomu M l,hH I;
Stephani• y. and wayn• L <..ARLAND, CllarylA.•nCIRONldW.
JtN$tN,Ctatk OwblnanCIJUnntlle MIL.E.S, Sl>lrliy Ann -Emmon1
Nt.ry; ROllERTSON, John P. •nd JoM; HATlE:R, MArda L.H a nd
UMla L , FORBtS, J•mH •nd ferry c;ene; EAlON, Lewis Vfilmot ~role tlalne; 01; LEON, Richard Ill and Ulla Raul BARCLAY, R-y >.rthur-.tone~y;HUMl!.rON, Alan end Corrine Marv Jkelyn R. and Ooneld L.., HO~SI, SCHLESINGER, Alyna Mlldtad -
!"olanley J . and Mery Loulu, R"hard Oii-, O'AGOSTINO, Vin·
GOLESlANI, ..._ -Vi<lorl• uni end MM911ret A.; CHAVEZ, Cl~
L.M Corwin; KENNY, l<.•tnryn M. dy And A~CI. GIBBS Pamela s.
..., Paul J. -Jofln o .• HOLBROOK, Wendy BREKHUS, Stanley Au\h and an4 FrederK PtUr; PO'WE A, A-rt
01-e Hervrave; JOEB, Be!IY LM ..,., C.•11 C.., SOUTH, Mary M. Mid
-Hor"*I O.vld; LARKIN, CYn• R"harCI e
t II I • a n Cl J a m • I L . ; s TEELE, Roy Lawrence an• HEL.PHINGSTINE, Cl•r•lff ROM M•ro••et Lynn, CAMPOS, Genoveva
end Ga le Euoena, ALL.EN. M •nCI JOH A . ARMSTRONG,
Mer9\0ltrlta U,.,. -R-rt L... Oe1>or•h K and w1111am C.;
aAU.INGER, Clwlr-,,, .... and WILLISON, Joyo Meu•noar and
Death Nod~e•
ARAUJO
• MARIA ARAUJO, r1ttldenl of (.0>la
Me ... Cl P~MCI away on Novoml>er ». 1tn 11 u.. -oe Of 11 Lovlno motner
of lndaledo Ma""'° Araujo ol C.O.ta
Mesa, Cl. and Natalia ~reno Ar•ujo
Of C.0.la Mew, ca, -•UrYl\'ed by OM
oranCl,llild a nd tw o o•••I
gra11d,hllClren. Mau ot Chrl•ltan
ti11rlll on Monday No,..mber 21, 1'1 /II
t:IO A.M. al St. JOl(lllms C.lllOll'
Cl11i"h In C.0.ta l'leM, C.. wllh fnltr·
..._,1 II Good SMpellirCI C.metery In
H.,..tlnoton e..c11, C.. Smllll lutholl
l.afnl> Costa MeM Mortuary Cllr1<.tor•. ..........
SMITH
CLARE SMITH, rutelenl ol CooUI
Mew, C.a. Paueel aw1y on November
21, 1'11 •I the ~ ot M . F11ner11
aarvtus are penotno at Smith Tulhlll
Lam I> ColCAIMeMMOrtuary .....
LARCOM
MILDRED KATHERINE LARCUM,
fl\ldlnl el Tu.tin, C. P-eway on
Hovemi.r 25, tm •I the -of ... F-rat Mnk .. wlh be held on 1 .. ._
clay Novetnllff 2', 1'71 et 10 00 A .M. at Smith Tutlllll Leml> Sa nt• Ana
Mortu.ry with~-Donald Slur-of
Irvine, CL o111<1at1no. lnter"""'t wtll
be at •no-Perk Cemetery In
1noi.-. ca. Smtll\ Tuthlll umo
S1nta Ana Mortuary e11rutorJ,
S41·41l1.
WILKIE
£LLIOT RAYM()tjO WILKIE, rHl·
dent ol Leoune Hills, c.. P .. ..., away °" Novemlllr », 1917 el Ille -of e1. LOYlng l•lher of Georoe Wlllcla of
A..tlurn, N-York, fel,..,r of Doris
N"ot 01 Well•vllle, New York, b<olher
of Laura JolwlM>nof Cotta Mesa, Jeu1a ~tara 01 Ro,..rwoa. CA Also survived
l>y five grand,hlldren. funeral
..,,YI< .. will l>e held on lhurMlay
O.uml>ef 1, 1911II11.00 A.M ••• , ...
W•verley °""'h In ~I• Ana, C•. Of·
tl,lallno w111 be Dr. Dorulkl Sturoeon o1
trvtne, Ca., with Interment at
Felrlleven Me..-lal PArk. Smith
l uthlll LMnb Costa MeN MGf'llHry dlrKton. '*'..._
IUDDILL MARY ELLEN RIDDELL., re&ldent
of S.n Clemente, pelMCI •W•y NCW· •mlitr 14, 1m. SM Is wrvlw.t by lier
llllsbanel H41nild, IOft MlclWel, d.uoftl«
P.,.,.11, &ISi« Htwtt. All'ICJll of Sen
Cltrnenlt, atep.fMfler Glenn Douollly
of South CMollN. 5111 •n• m~ol
American AMOCM!tlon of un1,,.,.11., w-. l'..,..ral servk .. wlU i. 11;00
P•ul tClwon, C.OODWIN, MartM
Lynn •no Fr•n .. R•vmond,
HOLLAND, lreva Alleen and Dani.I
J•Y. WEL<.H, K•nnetn Paul •nCI
f,,1-•n 0.IO<U, RUMSEY, Arll>Ur
Jonn 111 •na Mell• .. Gayle, MOORE,
xotl t119trw -Tvrrl Lynn; CHAP·
PUIS, (.lyela U..•tne• ""° Franc:u
L•Vonne
NtWl!lLL. Wllll•m c. and Donna
C. YOUNG, i.-C. and R-rtC.;
OWEN, VIRQnl Josac>ll -S/llrley
M•ri•, WALio.. ER, Donne l.oulM -H1nry Jowph, LINDSEY, Martha
Ann Ind Carroll Mason; LOPEZ.
Sylvl• I. and All redo G.; LIGHT, Al•n
1 hom•• and Bul>ata Dl•na;
HORSFALL, Cl•lre Ann -EclWard
Allred; <.ox. Gtoroe R. Jr. •!'<I
Kathryn L.; MELLEN, Gary M. a.i'cs
K•tt,.rlna C. ..
HlllEHA, Gtorolan1 1nd Jeua ;
1000, Judith Lynn and Lull•
tuoene, SIMMONS, Evelyn and
Hon• Id L.eroy. POWER, S.rb11r a A. ...,., Jamu M., M<CANN,Jean L. and
Gary; LINN, KathlMn Marl• and
MarlMll F,. Ma<fARLANO, Gene B.
and J1an; AHIAS, Ralph R. Jr. -Roi• Franc:H; Ot;ARMORE, 0..A~
na ana Rkky A., HAlEL, Marilyn
Jun -frll'C'• L.ARgy.
YOUNG, Sendra -Eu .. EOWatd; GUSTAF~. c.r,1 Nl(I -A-rt
PtllHlp; BRYAN, Richard ..... -
Crystal f>entse; )IAUY EN, Nghla
lrQftO enq IUl'eft •-"'i BATTIN,
Mar.,arat A. -Bl-.. "OfTls, CAH·
FIEL.0, CenllMC.e I. -1.nrlS R.; AR MU RONG, SU.MO,,.. 0--;
SCHULER.~C:.....-Mark. l.dwans; DICKEY, ey,,wa L. -
Ray E. 11, W't EISS, ElllMlllll A. -
HowarCIM.
lOAO, Oenlte A. -Ralph Paul;
DAVIS, Vl<AI '"" and Steven B.;
SIEBERT, SI..-. J . and ~rd Al-
len, SINGl..ETOH,OavlclJ.endOe.,..
NI L.; TAYLOR, Mark s.. -uure
L.f HA\'S, J.net R. and Urry G.;
DOODY, Llncle J. and Jolln M ;
KLAUS, JK-lyn M. ancl l•I Earl,
FURROW, Floyd E. -Hiida F., K EL.LY, JodY-Uwrenc:e M"ll .. f.
GRAJEDA. J..ile E. -EOWard;
COHRT, T~a F. and CMroO J.; MYERS, Paul DIYld •nd Joann
Celute; WEBER, Anlt• H. and
Wiiiiam; ORTEGA, K1lhl"n arKI
fred; 8ROWH, Vlrolnt•-George.
PISARSOH, IMr .. ret A. and John R.; RAYNOR, H•ncy •no Ralpl\;
COL.MAH, Debt• auen -JOMPll; SIMMS, O.VlclM. WIO P .. leJee,,.U..
~~~"~::=:12:.:',r.9;:,~ I Deatlu
View Mortuwy OfrKlon.
MAYMUM E'-he ROLANOS.MAYBAUM,ret.lelenlof £3~ re
Sant• AM, ....--•Y Nowtnber ». lt11. Ht I•~.,....., lllswHe Francff
Mavl>l<im ~ u. '*'-· 2 da"tl!ttr• LANCASTER P Gall SI"* Of '°'*"8, C:.., Dome _ , a.
CAW1rec1 et s-t• AM,• 91'enddli'*tn (AP) ~ Doaald B: Watt
and I llfHl .. reftClchlld. l'un•r•I cu f d fth E ·' servlcu wlll i. ti.Id e11 Thune!.., .,., OUn er 0 e Xperl·
01Kamtlff1at11:00AM .. 11a....owey ment in International o.a,.1. •ni.rmtrit •1 Plltlflc view Li vino died Sunday Memorlel P.,.._ Fr1al\lltmeyc-41111,_ • •
monuerv • MdNldey io:oo AM to after an illness ln a Lan· e:a PM ... II Broacl\Qy MarWery Caster hospitaJ OlrKl«L •
PACIACYtlW
MIMOltALPAll
Cemetery MortuatV,
Ch1pet
3500 Pacific Vitw Drive
Newport,
California
844-2700
*COIUiltetr
MOITUAlllS Laaun1 e.acn
494-9415
Laguna Hiiis
7'88-0933
Sin Ju"n C4ipl1t,.no
40S.1778 -IALft4IHllOM
N•ALMOMI ~~'Met 873-0450 Cotta Meta Mft-2~4
-.&. llOAOWAT MOatVAIT
110 lroldw1v
ColtaMeaa ··~91&o
*
THE EXECUTIVE committee of the California
Democratic State Central Committee will meet
Dec. 3 and 4 at the Disneyland Hot.el in Anaheim.
On the agenda for the meeting will be a Satur·
day luncheon featuring candidates for the state at·
torney general's office.
•
CALIFORNIA ATTORNEY General Evelle
Younger, a candidate for the Republican nomina·
tion for governor, will attend a Dec. 3 reception
sponsored by the Oranee County chapter of the
California Republican Assembly.
The reception will be held at tbe Westminster
residence of Dennis Catron.
MARIAN BERGESON, a candidate for the
Republican nomination for the 14th Assembly Dis-
trict seat bas been given an award for her 13 ye.ars
of service lo Orange County schools.
'Ad.less'
Benches
Will Cost
Additional Information about the club ls avails·
ble by ulttni -'98-38SC or 831·3268.
THE COMMUNITY advisory committee for
Assemblyman Ron Cordova, D·El Toro, will meet
at 7 :30 p.m. Thunday at E.F . Hutt.on and Co., 2S2IS
Cabot Road, Laauna Hilla, t.o diacu.ss tax relief
legislation.
Information can be obtained by calline Shirley
Gray at 955-2478.
A guide to community church••
and their event• appea,. Saturday•
loth• DAILY PILOT
Standard Insurance company is current•
ly crediting 8.25% interest on funds under
l.'R.A. (Individual Retirement Account)
and Keogh Retirement Plans.
Federal Income tax on the Interest earn·
Inga Is def erred until you retire.
Calf your Standard representative today
for more Information.
Jack N. Ward Ill B•ktr St, Suite m
Colt• Meu, C1. Phone: (714)7114'11
Standaiut==.=
~-...... /ltMo-
Let Us· Help
Officials from 10
Orange County cities
who don't allow advertis-
ing on benches placed at
bus stops can get bare
benches if they aaree lo pay 20 percent of the
$200-apiece cost of the
benches.
... A father discovers his adolescent daughter 1s experimenting with drugs. He doesn't know what to do.,
... A lonely wife sobs into a p1Uow . Her marriage 1s breaking up. Her elderly parents have become a
Oranae County Tr81U1lt
District (OCTD> dlrec·
tors plan seek federal
grants for about 1,000
benches if city officials
agree with those condl·
lions.
Director Wiiliam
,i'arris cast the lone "no"
vote, contending cities
should pick up the maln-
t.enance coat, but OCTD
should provide th~ local
share of purchase cost.s.
burden. She can't cope. ·
. .. A middle-aged man with a good JOb shakes uncontrollably as he reaches for a bottle of booze. Ha
tried to stop drinking, but failed.
(
These scenes are c~mmon everyday experiences. All of us have problems and we search for their solutions.
Sometimes we succeed. Other·times we can't. Then we need professional help. Where to find this hel p
can become a problem. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helps people find answers to their problems.
PROBLE~ TALK SHOPS are free counseling and referral services located in Orange County.
PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are here ·to offer. you help ·through counseling and referral. There is no
'Charge for our service to you. We refer to both public and private agencies in Orange County. Facill·
·ties to care for individual~ are available on a 24-hour basis . That mean~ we can help you whenever you
'1eed help. Appointments are not necessary. If you prefer to make an appoin~ment, day and evening
·.hour$ are available. (OffJce hours: 8 :30 a.m . -5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. In extreme
;emergencies. a counselor can be reached after 5:00 p.m.: and on weekends.) 1
Alcohol and Drug Problems -More and more
people are becoming · dependent on afcohol
and other Cf rugs. Spec;ial ized medical care and
a treatment program are needed.
lndividufl Psychiatric Prc;>blems-SometimM w
feel that our world·is c.aving in on us. Tension.
anxiety, and fear may keep us from copi11g
effectively with everyday life. Psychiatric help
may be your first steP. toward healthy" liv.ing. •
t
•
,_
• l t
NATIONAL
MRS. CLA•A KING MADES tbe best·
· mincemeatple in the land-nay, the wbole wor14-
and at. thla aeaaon of the year abe makes enouah ao
that enfl'body 1he'knowa m~ have asllce.
The lady blushed.
"No," Mn. Clara Kini said in all modesty, 141
really have never tasted betta'. But it la not my re.
clpe, it is my irandmother'a, Mn. Ada.It Emmons·.
· She made lt every year at
(
_____ ..,. ---) butchering time back in
. AMERICA Cisne, JU .• where I wu born. My Fraodmother taugbtme.•
Jn tbat tradition,
Mrs. Clara King bu puaed alq the cherlahed re.
. cipe. •
THE OTHER DAY, llER TWO daughters sum-
moned their dearest friends. They chose a com·
modfoua kitchen at the home of one of them here at
Mill Creek, not far from Mrs. Clara Klng'a home,
lartherdown the Buffalo, and set to work.
Under Mn. Clara King's patience and tutelage,
the Jadiet peeled a couple of bushell of apples,
ground ateat quantities of meat, diced plies ot
pineapples, measured, sc:ueeaed, i1tirred and
chopped, all the while laughing and carrying on like
schoolgirls.
At nightfall it was done. They sat down with
their husbands and their children at two long ·
candle-lit tables, offered a blessing and enjoyed the
best of company and the best, without doubt, of
mincemeat pie .
THE GUESTS OF HONOR, MRS. Clara Kine
and her husband Forrest King, sat side by side.
When sbe was 14, which was in 1920, Mr'". Clara
King came to Arkansas with her parents, a farm
couple, and eased into the uncomplicated life of the
hamlet of Gilbert
Forrest King well remembers a special mo·
ment shortly after his own arrival there a year
later.
"We attended chul"Ch in this old log buildine.
not a reJular church," Forrest King said. "One
Sunday I notlced a gtrl I had never seen before. She
got up, went to the or1an and beean to sing. •
"I TURNED TO SOME friends and said 'Look;
boys, tbe Lord has turned an angel loose'."
Now, alter three children. 13 grandchildren, 4
great-grandchildren and uncounted minecemeat
pies, nothing has caused Forrest King to change his
first appraisal of Clara.
It must be noted that Mrs. Clara King is not on-
ly the best maker or mincemeat pie in the world -
nay, the universe -she also is the best maker of
baked apples, which were in abundance at that re-
cent love feast, and of apple butter with cinammon,
also in abundance, to be heaped ~ com bread.
Band Pays $5,000
In .Hotel Damages
LAKELAND, Fla. CAP) -The Rod Stewart
band has paid for $5,000 ln damages two guitarists
allegedly caused in a hotel here.
"They paid for everything, all the dollars in·
volved," said Bill Johnson, manager of the Hilton
Morotlnn.
Guitarists Gary Grainger and James Cregan
were arrested and charged with malicious mls·
chief, a third-degree felony.
A sheriff's department spokesman said cur·
ta Ins were tom down, ceillna Wes were broken and
a lamp was thrown tbroucb a window, sbatt.ertn1 a
car windshleld in a parking lot.
The men were freed on $1,012 bond each and
performed in the band'• one-maht show at the civic.
center.
Bars Pay Settlement
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Two Minneapolis
taverns that aetved liquor to an intoxicated man
before be committed suicide have agreed to pay bis
family $15,000.
Judge Donald Barbeau of Hennepin District
Court said the ne1ot1ated settlement for survivors
of Charles M. Nelson was in line "with the mod•rn
trend ... Uyou serve someone, you're reaPonstble
even tor what they do to themselves."
Nelson, 57, was a car washer and mechanic and
father of five children. Court records indicated be
drank heel' and brandy for about 11 boun ~t U,. JOO
Club and the Rainbow Bowl and Lounge before he· jumped off a brldae into the Misal.asippl Rl ver.
t, the Best
IF YOU WANT to be
sole foster parent to Bunter, the price ta
$2,~. Or lf JOU want all
of TrllhA or Mary, tbe
rate if '1.800eacb.
That ii What it Colts
th• ioo to feed them for a
year. By becoinlne •
''Brookfield ZOo Parent"
)'OU help defray the IOO'I
aplrJlina annual food bID
of S2SO.OOO and also aet a
Christmas pactace of a wln~ow decal, an adop-
tion ce'rttticate and an
iron-on T·shirt decal of a
mother zebra and her '*"-• RULED baby. .1. IQ
"BUNKER EATS D"Dr.•r•n'r~ 5,800 J><M,UJds ot mackerel R.£1.1..11.,.Vt.Ja.:J
Monday. November•· ttri
.... .._.. and blu~ runners a NEWARK. N.J, CAP)
MINCEMEAT PIE BEST IN THE LAND year," a zoo spokesman -A federal court judge
Wh -KJ Do t •-Ml_._ Occ said. •"Jbe polar bears hu ruled that the •n ""8'• ng " """"'"• r--...• ur eacbdevour't,OOOtot,000 "aclence ol creative ht·
DAil. Y fttl.OT
and of any other delight she chooses to make. When pounds of boraemeat. teWgence" -a booster
Mrs.ClaraKingputsonherapron,miraclesoccur. bread . a PP I es, name for Transcenden-·.regetabl~ and tl9h." tal Meditation -ls re--=::::======:::......=====-----___.
IT 18 THAT SPECIAL treat that we celebrate Tbe Christmas deal Is 11£ious lQ nature and that P------------------
today, though, and here it is, Mrs. Clara King's an of h hoot of a tovernment-sponsored.
Richly Regal Mincemeat Pie: '' B rookfleld Parent'• classes at several N6w
· campaign started ln Jersey sc:bools are un-Cook three poundl of Cood beef. Grla4 lt up, ·March to relieve an consUtutlonal.
Add t11e following: a powacl Of raw lrOCIDd aaet. two economic bind cauaed by J u d g e Curtis H.
boxe1 of light ral1lna, a box of dark raltbla, ltalf a inflatiQll. Or1anizat1ou, Meanor of the U.S. Dis-
bashel oleft.ber Joaalban orWIDe.apapples, peeled indlvlduala and cluaes trict Court declared the
and chopped, three No. 2 eau ot fredl pbaeapple, of school children made program. which used a
seven pounds of sugar, Lbne &eupooas ol 11ft and 2,500 adoptions lnvolvlnc $C0,000 grant from the
a can offrozen lemon Juice, wldcbmustbnebee1u more than 1,500dUferent U ,s. Department of
problemforMn.Klng'•1randmotber.AddtbejllJee animals. The campaJan Health, Education and
of 3~ large Florlda oranges. Grtnd ap &be orange brought in $129,000, of-Welfare, "violates the.
rind• and add them, too. Add two &ea~as of ficials said. eatabllsbment of ttliglon
IF you think there1
•
nothing new In
Clvfstm• Canctvand i.-
Food Gflta, then
you haoen't been to
The Nut Kettle yet.
clove~. 2~ teaspoon• of nutme1. 1 &easPe>on of BUNKERANDTrisha clauae of the U.S.
cl11namoo.Bollll.Addoneguldelessgrbuadabeap-and Mary were among Constitution's First "---n--eryday L··-'--YardP'-lng meuureofgenerou11ty. ed Amendment." 'V'Y"" •• '~ ~ •
those not yet adopt . Wed.&t. till 9 pm 384 Fonet A.-. -
Thank you Lord, for these thy gifts, and ·adopted was the zoo's .C.11 642-5871. It And, yes, we do!!!!!! Lag\ma!each • Nowbowyourhead. The first animal to be -
especially, Lord, thank you for turning an angel costliest eater, Olaa a Put• few word• · Jl~~~~~~~~--~~~~--~--~~-~~:·~to~n~w:a~l~rus~·--~~~::~to~wo=:'.:rk~~:':o~u:·::::.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· .-oose. men.
people drive neW cars
without b · them!
....
Jtaer,,.i .... PeUq Eqlfd..n
: DEAR PAT: I phoned Gunlv$'1 restaurant lD
Irvine on a Wedflesday requ"6nJ reservatlona for my wife and myseU for that Friday eventni. I wu
told that the only times open were 5:30 or 10 p.m.
:llhese times were un~cceptable, so I qkecl that. the
rtservaUons be made tor the followlnt B'rid.ly. I ,
was then told that it was not Gulllvers poUey to take
reaervaUona for only two people, but that we.could
~ome in and wail for up to two houn. Thi.a policy .
.aeems unreasonable. In other restaurants we have
been seated al a table for four and the other place set·
tln11 have been removed.
D.K .• Balboa
Cheql Rapp, maaa1er of Gallhen, 1ay11oa
~•• make reservation• for a party ol two. b9& Oll1J
two or three weeks .. advance for a Friday or
Saturday evenJ.a1. Gulllvera does see& partle• of
two between I and 10 p.m., bat raenadou an re-
q11lred. Thia restaurant ts "booked soUd" several
weeks ill advance now. Walk-bl llsta are kept. bat ap
io two hours mast be expected before service
without a reservaUoa.
4Jlare' R~rd Mq Be \'allleleu
DEAR PAT: I have the original recording of
"Mississippi Mud" by Bing Crosby and the Rhythm
Boys with Paul Whiteman. This record is in ex-
cellent condition, and I would like to find out if there·
is a current market for it and what Us probable
value would be.
R.M., Newport Beach
George W. Moore, record coUeetor since 113'7
and long.time member of the Oran1e County
Record Colleeton Club says hi.I copy of tills record i. priced at $15. Moore knows another collector who
qaay be interested In baylng your reeord, ucl be
suggests you attend the next meeti.nl of tile l'ffOrd
dub <tblrd Sunday of each moot.It at l p.m.) at Mii.
Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove. Re atreaed.
tbat a ~rd Is worth only what another penoe ii willing to pay for It, and many so-calle4 colleetor'•
records selJ for 10 or 25 cents became lhe7 are not la
demand. As you probably know, rasnou.."slngle" '18
tpm records have been rec:orded. •• lonctplay
albums, with original master record.bags held by
record manufacturers. You can contact Moore for
-addlUonal information by wrttlnc to 1205 Katby
1-ane, Garden Grove, Callr. 92640, or b~ pbonlog •
~'1·0162. --•
Banlcrupfefl U•flet'S oa Htt9rt&
• DEAR PAT: Seven ye~"' ago my husband filed
Ur bankruptcy in connection with a divorce action.
He has held the same job since then and I also work.
We filled out several department store credlt card
applications recently, and were turned down cold
on all of them. We ~earned that this bankruptcy ac-
tion Is still on my husband's credit record. And we
were told that it would remain for a total of 14
yellrs. Do we have any recourse, or mus• we do
without credit for another seven years?
J.B., Costa Mesa
Neae Frona Schock
The Shad Turner designed Sahtana 525 is the
Jatest addition to W.O. Schock's line of
sailboats. According to Tumet, the 525 was
designed for speed, beauty and comfort and
promises to be a. good one-des,ign racer as
well as handicap racer. It has a spaciolis and
well-accommodated interior. ·
Ken Stevenson of Mentor, Ohio, wo~ the
modified unlimited division ol the um Outboard
World ~amplonship at Lake Havaau Saturday.
Three hours of racing were sclieduled Friday
and again on Saturday but Friday's sessloo was cut too~ bour. 41 minutes when the Coast GU111'd hoist· ,
, ed a b1-ck flag warnint of hllh winds. Several taoet&
m~~d. because of th• winds and chOppy watet. NO
serious Injuries were reP<>rted. t, · '·' I • ~
Stevenson, piloting a Molinari bull, completed l~ tape over a ~·mile eourse <>n the Colorado Rtver lake. SecQ~ place Onisber was Buck
Thornton, Richtn()nd. Va .. 138 laps, and third place
went to'l'om Posey of Plano, Tex., with 119Japs. '
..
Credit card parcbuerattuaeeaared deb'--ud ~.ur husband'• bankruptcy reeord probabl)' II Ute
reason that department stores are wary of crut1D1
credit lo yeu. You aboald coulder apeakl•I
personally to credit penoDDel at the stores where
vou aoplled for credit and uk for Uml&ed eredl&
based on your current blll paying record and steady
employment. Or, you could apply for credJt In your
own name. Your credit applicauou mut be COD·
aldered separately and your busbud'1 baaknlptey
should bave no bearln1 on your cred.lt Nllablllty.
The credit bureau Is wltb.ln lta rtpta retalnlnl
your husband'• badkruptcy record for 14 yean.
t.aws ults, judgment& and tax Uena can be kept on . \
tUe for seven years.
\'acadon Sermee W4'rdt tt'Mlef
DEAR PAT: I would lik•to warn y0ur re-aders
about the phone company's vacation service. Their
advertising states you can use lbls "senice"' and
pay half your re1ular montbly rate. Wllat they
leave out ls that there is a $5 charte for piattin1 your
phone on vacation service. 'fhis neeates any aavine·
except for an extended vacaUon. The only service
extended is to intereept lncomin&calls. Anyone can
still call out on your phone, poastbly at your expense
and without your knOft'l&IJge. "
E.B.O., ~an Clemente
· A Pacific Telepbone tpokesmp exPJatu'dae $$
ts a labor cbar1e for service cbu1ea •W at tile
ceatral offtce. The re1ular aentce rate red11cUoa II
offered only wbea a peraoa ~ &llt 1aea&loa
service for a fall month, ao a. ls lillieade4& Ill H·
tended absence rather than for oae or two weeks.
Tiie 1poke1man added that oalloiaC ea~ caa be
1topped by requeat, but tbl• Is llQ!t...adv!IM d~ to a
·po11lble emeraeac' "* tbe .t;aoa.M --rt· a ~e
woald be necessary. Vacation sent~ abo eaa be
arranged to refer lncomla& tall• to another
, ~mber.
'
• AP .....
COLTS OB BEAT JONES IS SACKED BY LYLE ALZADO TO St.OW -._ &CORINO DRIVE.
l ~Georgia
~Grid Trio
•
f RecaUed
J ll 's the time or year when fool· I ball fans begin thinktng serious-
ly about a co\.\ple or r:pajor
events: the l\®e Bowl and the
Heisman Trophy. l Tying th\Jse two together we
f come up with an interesting
: story; one whiclr began to unfold
, nearly 35 years ago when the
Untv~rslty of Georgia was select·
f ed to make its only Rose Bowl ap·
1 pearance
' And OPPoSing it in that Jan. l ,
11943 game was a school making I its first tt1p to Pasadena-UCLA.
The story, however, foe~
1 Georgia.
The Bulldogs or coacb Wally
• Butts had three players whose
names remaln on the honor roll ..
0 1.IHN WHl"I'
WHITE
WASH
or rootball and military hi1tory.
They are Charlie Trippi, P'rank
Slnkwich and George P~~fmer.
In that 9-0 Rose Bo l win over Broncos Topple UCLA, TriJ>pl had 2S carries fQr ~ 130 yards and completed 13 of 29 ..... ~.-~
passes . Sinkwh:h scored
Georgia '1 only touchdown.
And PosChner, playln1 on two
bad ankles, was a standout ... ass
receiver and tough defensive
end.
With a month of practice and
tournamenll yet to be necotlated
before thlnas cet teriou• lq Ulo
Sunset Leaaue buketball ta •
Fountain Valley W•h'1 Barona
are the cholce to repeat as leaaue
champions.
And although that ts what the
outlook showed prior to laat
year'• hostilities, it's a dilferent
situation thla time around with
Marina CHunUnaton Beach> and
Edison <Huntincton Beach)
given much more realistic sbota
at upsettin& the dope sheet.
Here Is how it shapes up for lbe
Orange Coast area's live teams
with non-league and tournament
play beginrune Thursday:
F-talft'l'alletf
Re turning starter 1\ocer
Holmes, a 190-pounder on a 6-4
frame, leads the Barona in their
quest to repeat as leacue cham-
pion. Holmes averaged 15.1 points on
a team loaded with scoring talent
last year and popped In 33 points
in a CIF playoff game aaalnst
Thousand Oaks as the Barons
raced to a 26·2 record.
··we'll still be running pretty
good," says FV coach Dave
Brown, "but we may not be quite
as explosive. Holmes is a team
player, has good moves, was our
leading rebounder last year and
has a good basketball mind. He
could play guard or center if
needed."
Other guns in the Fountain
Valley attack Include 6-7 Mike
Heide. 6-4 Chris Mack. 6·4
Cha rli e Reiff a nd Mike
lsr aelsky, a 5·11 point guard.
Heide was the backup center
as a junior and has great quick-
ness, while lsraelsky takes
George Barrios' place.
"Israelsky is a good passer and
penetrator and gets the Ol*l
shot," says Brown.
Al10 flewinl ln Brown 'a plana
are seniors-Scott Stmon (S·ll>
and Stan Shibata (8-1), Junior
Mussy &Poelhelmer (8·S> andS-,J 1aaJQr Milie McCarthy.
Eppelbelmer was a G4 percent
shooter at short ranfe as a
sophomore and has been Im·
pre11lve in workouts. BroWRi in his ninth year at
Fountain Valley, baa had the
Barona in the playoffs 1ix times,
twlce • ~ champiooa and
once with the Irvine crown. ' ,,,.,.._
When the CU' 4·A playoff•
be1ln, the Vikhles are a 1ood bet
to Cl) be bl them <a> be con·
sidered the inost improved team
iothel~.
That•a because the junlor·
laden crew or coach Steve
Popovich mil)' star~ slowty, but
with experience, lh1s could be the
best team in the league.
J unlor Jlaody Heidenreich
(6-7) is a returning*tarter, as is
6·3 senior Lelat(d Bruce, a
~wln1man who averated 10.9
points luL yea.r. Heidenreich bad
an 11.2 averaae and ripped the
neta for 2S points in the finale over
Westminster.
"We're eoine to be playing a
lot of people with the depth we
have," 1ays Popovich. Off last
year's 21·5 JV team are juniors
David Tiez.zi ($.8), Kevin Olsen
(6-4~). TruiU Hatton (6-1) and
Mike Spivey (8.0).
Holdinl a big key la the pres-
ence ol sophomore Keith Dawson,
a 6· 1 f orwudor point euard.
"Dawsoo.is going to be one or
the best to ever ceme out or
Marina," says Popovich. "He's
1ettiD1 better every day and l.s an
excellent shooter."
Senior euards Rick Mielke
(5·11) and John Bohm (6-2) also
fiaure ~rominently in Manna's
plans.
"Weit be playing at a faster
temPo thll year.'' aay_I Popovich.
"We're m11cb quicker, dffl)V
nnd figuN to p a a Jot Oft de·
feote. •
0 Heldenrelcb bas llbproftd
physically ai ns pounds and
Br"'ce's pas11.D1 and ball han·
dUna 1kllllarelmp~v1n1."
l'Alb..-I
The Chai-a re ot Edison eoacb
Don Leavy have four ~lA.lrn~
starters In the lineup froCQ a
team which mined the CIF
playoffs by one basket.
"I think we'll be In the bunt.''
says Leavy, "but others wilt too.
We're anxious jo cet coina and
feel we 're Jo a poaitlon tO
challenae."
• Leavy'• optimism betina with
a strong backcourt combination
tn 6·2 senior Glenn Garrity and
6-1 senior Mike Mccourt.
"We'll try tokeep~me motion
in our of tense with aome wrinkles
and with our qu1ckneas and we
think we can extend our man·lo-
man W!fense," adda Leavy, i.Q,.
bia second year at Ed.Ison.
Forward Steve Pavis, a 6-3\.t
Junior who played in Edison's
secondary on the football t.ea.rn.
leada the Cbataera' froQt lln~
an area where question mar&,
arise wben_ro111et put Davla.
The f~ retumiu atarter la
John AJJen. who U'aoafetted ln
from Mountain View. Allen nw
action in 14 camee as a Junior and
is in ll fleht for a 8*.artJn1 berth .
with 8·5 Jeff Tutton and 6-4 junior
Darin Bowen.
Other individuals who could be
factors in Ed.tlon succeas are &-t
Junior Kre11 Kanemaru, S.11
senior Mike Gu1te, 4J.1 aeniOr
John Greer and W aenJor Paul
Freudenberc. '
............ ftld
First-year coacb l\oy Miller.
one ol the It.an ot the Olien'
champlonshlp teams in the late .,
The Script Is Diff eren-t:
Cowboys ·Scalp Redskins
Rookie Tony Dorsett smashed
over from the one-yard line for a
fourth-quarter touchdown as vis·
iting Dallas edged Washington.
14-7, to virtually eliminate the
Redskins from the National Foot·
ball League playoffs.
Dorsett'• plunge came one play
after Roger Staubacb sneaked a
vard lo pick up a first down on a
tourth·downsituation.
The Cowboys snapped a two.
game losing streak and moved in·
t.o a 9·2 record while the Redskins
arenow&-5.
Staubach tied the score at 7 in
the third period on a 4-yard
,touchdown pass ~o Golden
Richards. Joe Thelamann 1ot the
Reds~tns oq the scoreboard ln the
first ball with a l·yard plun1e.
Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday:
NEW ORLEANS AT SAN
Fa~Nasco -Ray Wenching
_tdcked a42·yard field foal u time
ran out to stve the San Franclaco
49ers a 20-17 victory over the
Saints.
Werschlng, who bad beaten the
Saints with a 33-yard field coal in
overtime two weeks earller1 aot
the opportunity to wln Sunaay's
game after an interception by
New Orleans cornerback Ernie
Jackson was nullified by penalty.
New Orleans rQOkie Mike Fultz
crashed lnto Jim Plunkett after
he released the ball and a
roughing the passer penalty gave
the 49ers a first down at the New Orleans29.
MINNESOTA AT GREEN
BAY -Bob Lee passed'° yards to
~mmy White in awirling snow
for Minnesota's go·ahead
touchdown and Cbuck Foreman
ran for 101 yards to lead the Vi -
kings to a J.3.8 verditt over the
Packen.
Fred Cox added tfetd goals of21
and 31 yards fort.be Vlklnp.
The VUdnp overcame a S-0 de-
ficit u While raced doWhfield, got
past corlerback Willie Buchanon
and caqgbt Lee's 40.yard scortni
pass. Two plays later the Vlkiftas'
Jeff Siemon recovered a fumble
One Pass Backfhaes
For SeahaWb' Zorn
•t the Green hy o, 1etUna '-1P Cox •121-yard field 1oal. . ..
NY GIANTS AT QNaNNA'ft -Ken· And"enob tired three
tlrst-balf toucbdowa paaaes.
ineuctJni a SS.yard bom'b to Billy
Brooks on Cinclnn.U's .ftnt play
from 1crlm111a1e, and tbe
Benula buried tbe New Yodc
Glanf.U0-12.
The Bengal•' other scortng
came on a lO·yard run by Booble
Clark and a 25-yard field goal by
Chris Bahr while the Gianll llt ue
the 1eoreboard on .. nv .. 1anl
pass from Joe Pbamk to Jtmmy
Robinson and a one.yard run bf
Pisarclk.
' Twelve kaddleback Collece
foOtbaU plCyen have lded All· Misalon Oonferenee fint ttam
berths, u aelectA!d by the ciiCUlt
coacbe1.
Saddlebact quarterback Blllf
Y ~ncy WU picked as the C>Ut·
atUdlD& Player in tM conference
anjf tbe Gaucboa• Ken Swear-
m1en ... tabbed .. the coacb ot
year. ~--,......,.,.Clllllllt ··-,...~t fP 211' w~ 1111111r,11Uttt ... .,. tl-Oftl~CJ'"'9
T ........... ~lllP•1• ,...... . ....... e _,_,.....,,· IS" ~
0 -lt-----~ c$!~•••u• II .......... :••I ... .-.....Olefh¥ --~ ........... 1111 .....,.,_,.,"a• "'_......._,. tr • di •
P....Y I •tUAI A'
"'· -... "' s.. ... 5-. t1S ..... ... -.....
., s.; -..... .....
SA.. "· "' ... ta .... .,,
s. -
Newport Harbor.
champion of the Sunset
Leacue and see<led No. 3
iQ, tbe girls CIF 4·A ten·
nls play~s. Will travel
to1Elitanaia tush <Coeta Mesa> Tuesday (2 p.m. >
for • secoad ro1nd
match.
ln other tennis playoff
actloi:a Involvina Oranre
Cc:\aat area team• Co~ona del Mar will
travel to South HUis
<Covina) for a 2 o'clock
match with t.lie
Sierra Lea1ue cbam·
pion.
Caplafrano Valley
High, after drawlnu.a nrat round bye as a me
lance elltrant tn the 2-A •
pl1yotr1, wtll tie at bOme
<2 p.cn.) to Walnut HJ1fl,
champion of thG Haclen·
daLea,ue.
Money
Tree
T8B l'IN~ PaICB DEPENDI ON wbat combtnatloa
of olU• ~put toaether -federal tax rata .... l:Utber on tntem•kmat rupu -but the mast 1CIU woaJ4 pq la AU. tbe mtntmum. Sl9'. · .
hdndh1tbeverbOtenC.nld.l1n ctepln•UOm, ~ bave 101 ciU.tocboONfrom. ~· ilWQ"S aome klnd of cat.eh to bar•atn ralel, ri1btt 1.'beN are e1tcbel here, too. Eutem naturally doesa 't want its reaular puaenaen -aa1. tra"1J.fte .. •
salesmen -to be able to use Ulll fare. So there are tbeu 'r ccmcllUom:
-YOU CAN'T PLY ALONE. You muat be Aecom· 11
panied b7 UOther adult (for the ent1re trip), or an adult can
ll1 wit.la two children <• child'• Uckit co.ti between P>O and SZ11). • ' ~. •
-YoomuastopoTerln at leut u.re.ewe..
-You tnUlt RHS'Ve allCl bu,y your ticlua at least 1' dQI lJS WvaDCe.
-Your trip must be at least seven daJa and DO mwe Uwl21~ • Evenwttb these reatrieUODi, jou cu see quite a blt of~
WOf)dfor*300,
BOW RAS rr WOKBI> our 80 far? Eutern reportl
that beton1be fan went 1ntO effect, t\ had more tban $,000
. booktnp. Ai ol Nov. 1, tt had ·~ more than 40,000 bootJngs-Md 15,000 l\ad already flown.
TIM ~ com• in the .met of. tltne, uaumtna the alrlbl• cu C&l1'1 tbese bu111D bunters pJO!ltably. EUten,
beade4 bY form• asuonaut Frank~ JOit $50 iDUUon
ID 1'73 .S another $50 mlllloo ha U"1S. Ith\IAI beet 1.ato the
profit column last year Wt even Wl:tb tbe hap a.& Joa lt •a
earrytns farwud; Eutenl suffered a at pucnt dedlne In eanalDp fortbeant D.lDf m9Dil11 of um.
lle~n: Hoil:sirq:
Starts Contirwe
• EVIHING . 1!001~0 NEWS
"lt't A am.II World" D THIAVEHGERS
l!mma matrlM 8tMd. WhO
beoomM a proud fattwr.
I MICKEY MOUSE CLUB
8UPERMAH
"Tin Hero"
Si) VILU ALEGRE
S: 15 I 8E8AME STREET 5:30 ABC NEWS
GI BEWITCHED
"That Wu No Chick. That Wu
~Wit."
• AOAM-12
"Trouble In The Bank"
It!) HOOGEPOOGE LODGE
"Nature From A -Z" (Part 1)
t:OO II CBS NEWS D NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI
At great COit to their ego., the
pafamedlct endure klddl~t
the station and hospital when
they buy a Junked 1932 fire
engine. 0 0 NFL FOOTBALL
The Buffalo Biiis wilt take on the
Oakland Raiders at the County
Collaeum.
(iJ MOVIE **'A "Then Came Bronson"
( 1968) Mlchael Parks, Bonnie
B~ella. A runaway bride meets
another soul-aearcher at Big
Sur when he arrives on his
motorcycle. (2 hrs.) GI THE BRADY BUNCH
The Brady kids audition their
act for a televlslon amateur
show.
Q) THE ROOKIES
A rookie cop struggles with a
grim reallty when he shoots
down an unarmed suspect.
6l) FOODS FOR THE
MODERN FAMILY
"Quick Breads"
8:15 fl) PLEDGE BREAK
Regularly scheduled program-
mb)g may be delayed due to
ple!ge breaks.
8:25 8D OVER EASY
Dick Shawn; sleep patterns,
Insomnia and snoring; employ-
ment MrVlc...
8:30 fJ MOVIE **Y. "Stranger On The Run"
(1987) Henry Fonda, Michael
Parka. A murder suspect la
ruthleuly hunted by a New
Mexico lawman, unconcerned
with hi• gulll or Innocence. ( 1
hr., 30 min.)
GI MY l>iREE SONS
Robbie tak .. on a heavy work-
load of waiting on tables and
other chor.. ao that he can
rent a room awtf'/ from home.
G FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Economlca In Manlage"
(I) CBS NEWS
7:00 D N8C NEWS II LIARSCLUB GI I LOVE LUCY
"JealOU9 Of Glrl Danur" C8 ADAM-12
A apllled bottle of perfume In
their car signals a bad day for
the officers.
fJD MACNEIL/ LEHRER
REPORT
I!) YOOA WITH MADELINE
(J) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:30 D GOVERNMENT: A PLUS
ORAMINU8? 8 NEW\.YWEOGAME GI THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg get.a caught amoklng by
his alstera who tell their
~eni.. e LET'S MAKE A DEAL
• L.A. IHTERCHANGE
"Popoom" The premiere of
KCErs new WMkrilghtly newt
and publle affairs program fea-
tures a potpourri of never-
befo,..aeen..on-televlslon fllma
and vtdeotapea. ~ I!> FRENCH CHEF
"Meet Loaf Masquerade" (R)
(I) t100,000 NAME THAT
TUNE
8:00 8 ())' C88 MOVIE
"Retum Of The Incredible
Hulk" (Premiere) BUI Bixby, Lou
Ferrigno. The further adwn·
tur .. of David Bruce Banner, a
solentlst whoH radiation
experlmenft turned him Into •
homeleee wenderer and raging
beut looklng for a c:1.1re for the
ray's mon.trous effe<:ta.
D UTTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRfE
"MMt Me At fhe Fair?" At the
Mankato fair. C11ollne's plcklea
win first prtze; Laura I• taken by
8 pea QatM artist; Maty II
Ratings Gulde
• IM<wi.. ere r.ted e<<0<dl"O to be•
office attenNn<e -.. , tor TV are
J~byHrftJc)
• '* • • -Exeellent * • * -Very Good * * -Good
• •, -Fair
• -Poor
by Ferd and Tom Jotmson ·
'THAT Ff<iUff IS-weu.. f)fl.AW Mi . A~.
ALL ALONE -Rita Coolidie
: •Ann Landers
•Horoscope
t,.. Latin Ameriean.
~Literature ·
' Since 1960, Latin American authors are showing the way
t 1 instead of following. c I
By JUDITH OLSON
, Ol lllt D911, P'llet ·~· ~· B u e n o s A i r e s , B o g o t a , f • Guatemala City, Quito and San.
• Jose.
' Nice places to visit, most people n would say, but nowhere to look for
literary stimulation.
This may have been true in the
Jast, according lo Seymour Men-
ton, PhD, a professor at UCI, but
; today, Latin American writers are
t 1 setting the pace in literature. I Dr. Menton, an authority on
Latin American literature, said
, that "in the 19th and 20th centuries, :l Lalin Americans followed the ex-
1 ~mple or Europe. But since 1960
' 1 they are the ones who are showing , .. the way." · fl The boom ls, to a certain extent, t "a reflection or the Cuban revolu· I don, which put Latin America on
t the tntemattonal acene.
"At the same time, the Latin
American writers be&an to think of
themselves aa International
writers," Dr. Menton explained.
"They began uslnt more
sophilticated techniques and more
universal archtypes."
Traditionally, novellats in the
Latin countries have been from up-
1 per class families, he uld, but the
picture la broadenina because
more and more youna people are
c beina educated.
TH£ adOKS of the tov Writers
are resuJarly reviewed ln such
• publlcatl~>ns H the New York
Review of Books and the New
Yorker, and there Is "a much
grftaler awareness of them today,"
Qr1 Menton added.
Another indication of the soarin&
1At.trest In Latin American work.I Is ttl& focus of the recent Great Plains
Wt1ters Conference In South
l>•1'ota, where Dr. Menton was in·
'vtted to be the featured speaker.
Hli topic was "Literature of the
Plains in Colombia.••
.Dr. Menton'• interest ln LaUri·
:A~erlcan llteratyre becan wberi
bit wu an undertl'aduate ma,Jorfra1 S $pan1.ib at City Colle1e of New
Yotk. , He apent a year in Mexico earn·
Ing his master's degree and ""ll in
love with the Spanish cultures."
Had it not been for Wqrld War II
and the German occapaijon of
Paris, Dr. Menton might have ma-
jored..ln J'rench and pursued other
llnef'or interest, but "it made more
sense to study Spanlab," be ex· plained.
HIS LOVE FOR forel1n
langu_ages goes back to the a1e of
10 Wh\m be stttdied Hebrew. "I
liked thal. very mucb," be said.
"And, I grew up in New Y«k
where. we ba4 an Italian barber
and a Yidclitb tWbr acrou tM 1 street. It was'4.1Jlelt1At)'pl.'
Dr. Men~arso •tUdJ•~LaUn and a llttk German in e e and
lt!arned some Italian in~ co. He
additlonaHy J~aks Portu1ueae
and teache* it•t UCI.
-Dr. Menton's special Jove la Ddt
the laJ\IUqe o~ the Latin American
countries. Uloqah,-but it• prose Ile·
tlon -the sbott stories and,nove1'
of the 19th and 20th centuries.
. "My first ~earch lx>9k was a
hlsto!1 <1' the Q'uatemAlan novel," hesald. ·
Thii book 'jnvolved three sum·
mers in Gua\Aiinata, .. dilatnl up
old books."
BE NEXT .SPENT • year ln
Costa Rica establi1hln1 and direct·
Ing thejunioryear proaram for the
UniveNity of Kansas and dolnJ
work on the .~ J\lcab abort
stoty. • i
tlJ• molt fJiuq .. ts ;i
Cuen to bllp~noamerleano," a
critical antbolo1y of Latln
American works, wlalch w11
published ln M~xlco and now la t;e:
in& translated mto En101b. It it a
baste tt»tt 111. the U,. ., La.tin
America and E\ltope. •
Some of Dr.' Menton'• mOlt ln·
terestlng researeh bu -.0 don
on the CU ban novel from ~to the present In 1975he publlabed a book
about the Cuban workt. wtilch be •aid f .U into four PVIC>dl, eaeb reaectlng chanies ln-thla:attstudeof
tbe 1overnment t«>•ar tbe aru
-Aristotle
fif •
"What happens when the condpotor i>uts down. his baton?" Ruth Hamel asked
the squlrmiqg preschoolers. She hoped they
would stop playing their tri:Jles, drums
and rt;sonator bells Ji~e g orchestra meml>ers. .
The Kmdermusik progr,am was in full
.swh:ri at st. Andrew's Presbyterian Church .
. As tlle exdternent level of the children rose,
so did the soUnd of their music.
Mrs. amel is very proud of the pro·
gress of lier preschoolers, however. By the
tlme Otey finish the tour semesters of the
program they will be able to read notes in
the treble clef and simple rhythmic notation
and recognize simple themes from classical music.
Many will go on to study piano and
other instruments, Mrs. Hamel said.
Kindermusik, or music for tJte very young,.started in Germany in the late 60s
and WQ brought to the U.S. by Dr. Lorna
Lutz· of Greensboro College in North Carolina.,
• -
1
. . f2 DAILY PILOT Monct.y, ~ •• ttT7
•
(Prom Pace CU
(A• tb• reviewer of Central • e rican and Caribbean boob fof' Handboo?: ol Lalin American 1 udJes, be atlll reauiarly receives ~Cuban novell aa aro ~~ jptrou&h the Library of CQn1reu.) .
"THE FLOW of books continued
•after the revolution,'' be said, "but
ftlS the years went by I realised
•ttlere were slplficant thln11 hap-
pening."
Through the novel• be saw the
}M>llcy of the sovernment chaniint
from no policy (llS!MO) to a focus
'On the revolution (1961-86), a
liberalization of the policy (1866)
and the end of the liberallzaUon
(1968).
Approximately 200 books by 7S
authors were publl.abed during this
period, Dr. Menton said.
"In 1961 Castro met with the in-
. tellectuala to formulate a policy
ioward the arts. It waa 'Within the
revolution. everythin~. Outside the nvolution. nothing.• • Authon bad
freedom to write about anytblng
they wished within the revolution
but they could not critlcl!e lt.
. The liberalization in 1966 was "a
:.reflection of Cuba 'a adopUn& a
more independent posltloo via·a-
' via the Soviet Union," Dr. Menton
!Hid. "CUba was attempUn~to lead
1the Third World and there was an
explosion of literary production.
"There was much freer literary
·experimentation, lncludin1
linguist experimentation and books·
that put the revolution lnto
perspective."
AFTER 1918 authors and artiats
.were required "to contribute
positively to the creation of a new
socialist man," and the now of nov-
els from Cuba has "practically
stopped" because of this restric-
tion, he added.
Though he continues to follow the
Cuban literary scene, Dr. Menton
currently 1s finishing a book oo the
Colom b1an novel.
From his research, done on an
Orgamzation of American States
fellowship, Dr.Menton has isolated
what he calls the four "planets" or
that literature, or the most slgnifl-
cant novels, and six to eight other
·works which are "satellltes."
"In addition to providln1 new in·
terpretadons of these novels' I'm
attempting to lay the groundwork
for determining what makes one
novel greater than another," he
.said.
The four "planets" are "Maria,"
a romantic novel published ln 1867;
·:The Vortex," 1924, which "set the
pattern for a large number of nov-
els all over Latin America." These
deal with the strucgle of man
against the land and the vioJent
forces of nature," Dr. Mentoos&id.
THE 011IER MAJOR worka are
"One Hundred Years of Solitude,"
a 1967 best-seller by Gabriel Garcia·
, Marquez and ''Frutos de Mi
•· Tierra," a realistic novel from
1896.
Three of the four works are
available in English translations,
Dr. Menton said ("Frutos" is not),
' and he recommends all of them to 1 ·students of literature.
•I'
J. ,,
-Ju
·QI
f
•UI
c; •
.. Books
Lalla American •orka baYe
followed tbe 1eneral literary
lffndJ d ~land and the U.S .• the
prof euor Nld. "LaUn American writers d the JOtb centuey are veey
tamlUM witil Am rican ~t§a __ _..___..;..,_.-. ... _. ..... ...__.;..;_;:.....__;:,;..y
and rea4 them." .
One of the moat~·1atert1tlnc
tblDI• about. authors from the
South and Central Amedcu coun-
tr1e1 ii the fact tbat tbe "5t usually are pt'deulonala such •• doctors
and e~ who write on the
alde.
"The moet famous novel out of
the Mexic~ RevOlutlon wu writ-
ten by a doctor," Dr. Menton com-
mented.
4NOTllER STUTUNG fact iB
that the U.S. bas better criUcs of
Latin American literature than the
countries themselves.
"Each country bu a literary
center, which is the capital clty,' •
Dr. Menton explained. "All the
critics and writers know each
other. It's difficult to be objective.••
Some Latin American countries ba ve "greater traditions in
particular senrea," he added. Mex-
ico bas been noted for its novels
and Colombia ls the center of
poetry, while from the 1950s on,
noveliJltic producUon bas soared in
Colombia.
Argentina, with its famous
Writer Borges, has been a center
for the abort story, and Guatemala
bad A "fairly grand history of the
novel" until 1954 when many
·wrlt.ers went into exile for political
.reasons.
"BORGES JS UNIQUE," Dr.
Menton asserted. "He bas been
able to present, within a few pages,
the metaphysical and philosophical
problems of today. Short stories
were previously 'something that
happened."' ·
Latin American novels, Dr. Men-
ton said, have "a wonderful sense
of humor which is often lacking in
many other novels,'' and a
"panoramic aoope." lo contrast to
American ancl Ew'oJ>ean novels,
which tend to be more centered on
the individual.
Wben bis work on Colombia ls
finished, he will wrlte about
"magic realism," a ter~ Which is
used loosely by Latin Arperican
writers and meau .. the portrayal
of reality with a stereoscopic pre-
cision that makes reality seem a
little bit magical."
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: Your reply
to Jerry ha Yonkers. (wbo
hatea world was 111-
tereat:ln.g. A lot of peopl.,
hate work and in·
t.elllgence has notbinl to.
do wit.bit. ·
I aPl 261 have a Cenlua
IQ, 1raduated collele'
with bonora and have a
1ood bit of ccnnmon
sense. I still bate work
and live for the day when
I can find a way out of
this grind. 1 am bored to
death, even tboutb I'm
kept busy. I have many
interests and talents
which 10 ienored
because I must work. By
tbe Ume 1 eet home I'm
exhausted and have no
energy for the things I
really want to do.
1 'll bet people like you
who say they .. love"
their wo.rk have no out-
side interests or they use
work as an es~·from
unplea&ant home life.
Personally. I tblnk
"work-lovers" have
done a super Job of
brainwashing.
My parents and their
parents before them
worked bard and they
can't stand the thought of
anyone gettln1 away
without workins.
Tell Jerry that, at 23,
he should not be con-
t ro 11 ed by what bis
parents Udnk. rve been
trylna to please mine for
26 years and no matter
what I ~it's never
enousb. -~-dFLED
DEU STIPLED: I
1m.-wbere )'oq're com-
lnl from ud tile prob-•
lem ls -yoa're bl the
wroni job. l'or a aealu <•ttla commoa aeaae
yet) you're pretty Wck-
alcu1led not to~ b. You could alto aae
some cou.uelhll. Yoar
letter re{lecta a
ne1atlve, 1oat, UD·.
fullllled approacla to IU•
-and at it, tllat'• Ule pita, Baddy.
..
iirata ...
Should I tell bim to
cool it, that I am not Im-
pressed .Sth hJ.a foreign cling, tblnklna lf l trl"4
language? Or would It be a.a rd enoutb it would
betterlfllookedupaome work an.d at leaat ·1
Latin pbraes on~ own wouldn't hurt aayoae
and gave blm back a lit-e. Now~ 1 ook at
tle of ,wtiilt be is llvlnJr our w·edd1v1 plctur. rm.
me? -SUlPLE SALLY •urpriaed I could amlle.
DEll SAL: A Brya Deep down I wanted to
llawr colle1e ahdeat die.
bad a llmllar pJ'Oblem a Three years . aco a
wlllle badt and llere la tnprriace counselor aaid ·
bow 1be ~Jt. Site we oeeded help. My
wrote -huaba~ told him to IO to Wbat'• pat IA LatlD bell. Tbln&I were a mess
Or cble la Greek but I maoa1ed to keep
I al•ayadMbpllh aotoa. I am DOW ~O
M ore c 1ear1 y I a ,pounds overwelabt, have
E••llsh. ulcers and can,t re-
DEAR ANN: I've de-memMl' a time wbtn I
'cided to type thla letter want4!dtollve.
because I'vt tri&d to T hankr. for the
write it several tlrnes eboulder Ann. If YC»U
'Md my hands sboolt and t.blnk WS Jetter la,wortb
the tears messed up the. prtntht•,"J>leue ftx it up 1
ink. be.caua• l'tlt too UJ;llet to1
I refer to the miniater write t Oftl". 111 "81
who spoke to the Jl'OOQl meua1t ii that "* a wlth cold feet. I wun't person ba1 cold feet
the aroom (I wu the about • wedclinr. be
bride), but my feet wet-e 1hoald listen to h1I feet:
cold ~ and they are bot. his friends. -WISH l
colder now. It's been ten HAD years a.me. I married. DEil WISH: I urse
Next month I'll be 29 7oa to talk to your
years old with three e I er I 1~ a' or a
children. t.berapbt ~·alae la 1
I remember loin to a awfally JOUI to &lve ap
few people and tellln1 oa Ufe. Pleue doD'& Jut
them I waa having lit tbere aad live oat
second and tbtrd 1oaryean1Da1oay.DO·
.thoughts-about colng IOMETIDNG.
ahead wtth the weddlne.
My best friend pld she
WU SO thrllled to' be a
bridesmaid abe'd clle lf I
cbao1ed my mlnd. Dad
lectured me on what a
gre.i IUY I WU l•tting
aDd bow "lucky" I wu.
When I tried to live the rlba back, the .. alee
Wedding and engage.
ttient announcements run
on Stmdat/ in t~ Daily
PUol. P'orrru are otiOiloble
ot all DaU11 Pilot ol/ice• or
by colUng the ~tlrts
D~JMfd. so-c321.
Writers and artists noted for this
technique are Andrew Wyeth,
Truman Capote, Bernard
Malamud, Jerzy Kialnski and the
French writer, Alain Robb•'
Grillet. ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l'm a senior -. ;.;.;..;.-:---.-~..-....---------~-~,;,;_,;;,;.;;;.~;;,;..;;;....::;.;.:;;_;.;;;.:.:..;:,:;~~;...;:;;.;.~~::.:;...;
Dr. Menton, who has a full
academic load and serves on many
university committee!\ besides,
seems to be forever busy with
books, but occasionally "el traba-
jo" becomes too much and he
escapes to the tennis court
The professor also admits to dab-
bling on the piano when he's home
relaxing, and he apparently has
other talents which he's too modest
to mention. "You should bear tum
sing," marveled one or his col
leaeues.
in blgb school aDd am
now correspondlna with
a fellow who went Eut
to an Ivy Leque colle1e
in September. He writes'
twice a week and I have
to look up WOl'ds in the
dictionary. CHe never
talked this way when he
was home.)
Lately be bas started
to use phrases like "a
fail accompli," "jole de
v1vre" and ••persona non
. ..
Sinclair; "Dickens Of London," (Mac-
millan) by Wolf Mankowltz: "Samuel
Johnson," Harcourt Brace Jovanovich b)'
W. Jackson Bate, and "The Diaries Of
. Evelyn Waufb," (Little, Brown) edited by'
Michael Davie. . ..
Reference book buffs, and there are
many, probably will enjoy k>ac1nl throUib
such tomes u "The Random House En-
cyclopedia," which la a one-Yolume
blockbuster of words and pictures; 0 Dlc·
Uonary Of The DecoraUft .\11.1," (Harper
& Row) J>y John Fleml~i and Hugh'
Honour; '"the Encycloped{i Of Duce &
Ballet,•• (Putnam) by Mary Clarke ·and •
David Vaucbn~ .. The En~cl6ptJclla~ ot ~
World 'l'Mater t (Scrlbnet 1) edited b)' ' Mart.Jn Esalln; '1978 Yearbook Of Science ...
Ir: The Future,'' (Encyclopaeclla Bi'Uan·
nica) edited by DaveCalboun; •en..Atlasot
Mer.cury," (Crown) by Charles A.~ Uicl'
:Patrick Moore: "Great fttea1uey o,
Western Tbou1bt," Bowler 9dlttd by,
Mortimer J. Adler and Cbarlel Vu DoreD ·
"Ro1et'1 lnternaUodal Tbenurut -&lb tdf:
tlon," Crowell edited by Robtftt ~ ~ mkn, ana 0 P•r'a Quotatlom, .. <Konow>
by Dr. Lam'eflceJ. Peter. • • •
g/oua~aMU~Avs ...
, ·Theres still time to
"Sltape-up''.for the hor d~!
~ .
.. It all begins with your trained figure counselor at Gloria
Marshall's. She will give you a comptete figure analysis
to help you set your weight losing goals. She wUI work with
you, •• using the exclusive Gloria Marshall figure-shaping
equipment ••• following a plan of nutritional guidance
designed just for you. There's no need to disrobe, and there's
no shot$, pills, strenuous exercise or starvation diets. It
takes SQ llttle time and effort-you might even come In
on your lunch houri Call nowl Discover Jhe fun of a slender; ·
• slimmer holiday with Gloria Marshall.
7
PEOPLE I NATION/ BUSINESS Mondmx· NCMmMt .. 1W7 DM.Y"'-OT C8 !tJ
-------__ ru_auc __ Mm_ ..... c_a_ 1 __ r_uau_.:;;.~-N.-;onc--..._E __ 1.Exports
woncaTOc:aaonoH U-Mfl MUlfl01"41.CCMlllTOPTN• •"H.._ CDU•TO,TI48 MOTIQ 1'•Cla1Dtf0th '-OIA .... ~JUDK.IM.OllT•ICT STATaOll'CAU~ANll IUPal COWITOll'TNa ._..,._....... Dr
TMICOUWfYCH'OllMO• ,,., ... CAUlllOllllMA"ff ., ....... ~.... op to _...._. TM C**TYCH'oaANa IUMUC*I ll.ttet• el JOHN M. kll.I..¥. ......... c.e ......... ~1$HlllllY01VIN11tt'-• t!ttott •t IOY t', CNSION, ...UV•""f' CJ'Mlwa .... ....,.. __ _..,... ~ l"le~llf. ll ... NaT'Hf'. ltUMIVllO
, ... , ell ..,_ -w.e (~ .,..._.. NOTI<• II HlltllY GIVIN.. .... ~ .... M. AU ca ,.NOL•V.. New ID._,.._ __ ~..-'---Aft.er a !S-)'e&r 1overnm t caner, 1••• .. . u..-.e.--r-..il'tdtefli;l ''"'ttrt .. t•--_.,,.? JANa •kl~LIUI, llW DA .. A ,., Jr Ill C.Nw ti -6&..t-of= ...,.,1,....,. _,.,, ,_,.,... Iii :::' ~~-:::..C "::,:::. flWf ~~Sl.vLO' .,. oon 1 "" ~ • w 1.w u•I as couiml&slontr • ••fie.., ... ,..,..,..,....,...,.: ti.n1,w1 .... _.,_._~..,. ..oT1c11v•o-••u••TN • WASHJNGTON (AP) represent wor .-liHluali1ill* oa at-Stcurttnnd'lVOtlate--. ---uueueun.w•.,._.._,w1t•u. ll!ltetfKuftM<w••N----'"'' .......... .,...,.... 1 memorial •ler~CH for ••1mall I• be•otlful.. ;:vate bllllnea wbUe 1eWD& ~._,---.1e-.."'*ft19llM t111Mcevn.w•,........ .. n1,wtt1otl'le -.... -..,_ ..... ...,~ -Tbe'OnltedStates ~· .-_,.,.ga "' .. _ 000 ...... acova-ma...•
• 1 ... e1i1ca., MC lllNH• a Fil· necHNt"Y--=twa.t•t11ellftdw..._. ;.;.. ,.._ .................... corded the lar1ett """ono....-.... 11 ac-r. ' a y.._ on -.. -
TIHG, '4U WllWllA aoutevarc1,. Let ••1t1e1•we1ilcaotJtmeta WW1ttme1 ....... hl tr-.a-.a-ft-' 1 ThoDemocraUcpvernw1Wb01reQuenUycltea pen.atoo. •n~1•'"'-·wllkel .. u.11Nctei11W1· te1Non a. ANl>t!RSOH 'teno N«t" Av1io1u .... .._._..,,,,,,,. ... •• 1 mont Y -'"' ,...t n Scbumacber'apbDOIO~~announCedtiatbewould Cardwell, 5$, concedes. ~~.~int~ 1""*"0 1 ... ~ '" .. • .. " 14"'9!.."c"•· ,,......y, ,..... Office ... m. s..te ,,._.., ,.... -.cww cam• vc. ·..., U.a blatory In October U -...a 4 f orlal i.. ....... ..... .... • .. ...,.._ ... ,. • ca111orn1 n1011 W1t1C11 1 ,,,. d 10 to .-...,an or a ay mem service •omethlng 11 out.of waca ..,. .... :;!i,~:l:::' .. ":::::= .. ._,._,~, ... ~.otMl,..:, .. .,._.,...,:..111 =::;.r.:' .. ~1 6
1 todoc,!'v~ .. e ~ ~_PIY for tbe ecooomlat and author at Westmi.Mter t--e federal retirement and
oe1.0Nov, m1 •11 matw•...,..;:r.• ... •• ... ., ... ..._. h "lllAl'V"""• '-'N _,m. Cathedral. Social Stcwity 1yatem1. ff be =~~~.!l~t'e:e' :~~~=:=:.::a1•. <~~.J:..=,~.:.0:~~;..~~~ ~ce J)ep.rtment •ald The 1overnor'1 offlc1 announ'*' that Brown stay1 at bh new non·
Mc1t ... ~l':~:;'*'c1K..... 0""~~ •i:.-:,;:;:;=1
1.,1,1 • ...,11• T~~-oaUon bou&ht ~.l will speak as a reapreaentativoof~ induatrtallsed government $53,0CJO.a-year job
am.,..,..............., .. .,._ A.., 1t. .,_,.,. ..., "'"'" wiwn111•yuft« 111iu;im • bll ll 1 ood nations, and President Kemletll Kaim4a of Zambia for IV. years be also wW bl elld· ~1~~-" ~rr.:= .. w111e1 := !'.!fn:' .,:_:.: .~~.~h:: 1 than °i~ i:dr:br!ad~ sur~ wm speak on behalf of the deveJoPtni naUou. CA110W•u. blo for Soelal Security. al~
..... ...., ..... _.. ~ , .. ...,.~-.c.w.t. IN '°"'111 .. ,,.. 111 • JUllk• c--t, >°°" i th i • u a 1ovemment employee ho bu Mver bad to pay
P1.*11"'9d0r1n1110-10..1¥ P11et ,,.,,,.. •• ......., ,,_1111ewH1>11Wc.owtew1111en.....,.. paaa n1 e prev ous A Gala11toroa11t palntlnc, .. A Wooded lntolt.
_,, ,, , •• 21, • 1m s. • :'e::~~,:.:.~~ua ~_: 1~..,.,: :Ct'.:'~:!:::; hlghd dofl S2t .31 billion re· Landtcape wttb Herda men, Cattle and Sheep b7 a "There are Iota of people of sisnlflcant meaoa _________ 41.;....•_71_,a..u• .... CA.•Jnl com,ie1n1., w1wn JO .. n ••ter '"" cor e as une. Pond," aold at ChrtlUe'a auetlon house lD London clrawin& that mlnlmwn benefit from the 1yatel'J):•
PU•• "'C NOTI Teti ,, .. 1-.1111 _,,_,,,1.-....son-1. Economllta said ex· D&A' CE ""......, ... c:..c---. b. UnleM ........ r..,..e, y-... rt ti l •1-th for $324,000. be aays. -
-----------• P11t111"*' 0r-c-st o.11y P11o«. 1...-1w11111e __ Ufl0".,..1cA"-et 1 po ers. an c P8 '-"'I e Tbe palnUnt ls con
P1ctmou.au1tNl1S NOvernw1•.21,21.-o.c.5,m1 111ep1e1n1!41-11>1.c0W1,....-n1 ... ·two-month-old dock sldered one of the finest ( ) •
Tne 101==~.~--••-11 =:n-=:=.:,~~ strike, sent many of their Gainaboroudll to come PEOPLE
,.....,. rew11111 .. ~otw•e ... i.1n1 good1 abroad ln Sep· on the market In reeeut
H I w PO i. T MA " 1 H l PUBUC NOTICE Of m-y • ,....,,y • otller relief•• ______ ..__.-
E HTf.RPRISl ,, )OJ i<nt 1a111oe -tM11n111ecemp111n1. ( ) years. It wu put up for
01Vd .. ll••-.c.1110011 .. i..1 ,.1a1nova1u11Maes ... ' .. ~~·..=.. .... ~== IN SHORT sale by llldael Aa&or.
JoHpfl MH;llHI Rlcllnt, 50) £. MAMlllTATSMl .. T ·--• ,_ •-61 ~'d ~ttth I •-nd •--•-A to o••-•11111.,lelbM,c.111orn1•tM1 The, .. .....,.. __ 11 ....,.-. .... ..__.. .. t111t ,_ -''* ·Y•at"\11 son VI e a ... seeo ...,.v n..tol'. a r
1an Fri.t. 50S e se1ooe s1vo .. -"' , ,.._.., .. .,...-y11ie1f6M .. .._. iaaformermemberof Parliament and a landowner e·;~·~~=!·~c.:.,._1.., by. Reow1No GLAH c11AFT, sio 0•'"~=~~~~c .. ,. tember, when exports wbofarmsl,OOOacreaofOxfonlablNcountryaide.
",..,.1 P«Wrt1111>-,.,,, ~~·n":.":1~1:'.'· f:o"s:.~~ er o.,..,.. ...... ~Y to ta led a strona $10.9 The painting from Gain.eborouih •a late Bath
JowcillM. A1d1,.. .,,_, °" ..... ,.__, ea1Hon11e <SEALI billion. lo October, they lod ... bo .. ht b "' E ll b !nil "•Hmenl .,, .. lllH wllll 1 ... 917.. KallNITNl".llUMIUllG,llOo. per W.,. U~ 1 80 aooD.,mOUS DI I
CountyCle•ILOfOranQaGo<lntYOllNOV. Tlllt'-IMYIHANMN<MCS•venln-tJWYeMlir• ....... , ...... 11. fell to '9.2 bllllon, the privatecollector. .
1, 1w 01v1d ... 1 SMr-o.u,c.11,...'1411 smallest amount since •
,.u" Merv1ttH.e•1¥11i. .. ,.~........... M h ·-a wh th Publlalled o .. nga C.0.11 Delly Pllol, Thi• ... ...,.,, .... llled wltll .... ·Tiie ~ "'•mtM•lllt" '"''"*' arc A.VI , en ey Air Force Gen. Da11lel Jamet Jr .• the m.llltary•s
Nov.1,1•,21,Jt,1t11 m·w =•:,~,~or-..c:o.antyet1No_v· ~==.:..:~:;;..":.~. were $8billlon. bighm ranltlng black officer, la belnJ reusiped ----------1 1m ... : ''"'"' ,_.,. ........ llllttltlt' ,.,. for health reaaon1. the Penta1on
h«llllNCI or.,. c-1 o.i1r P11o1. ~= 1:::.:~_.~.-:a~ ANrtloa 88'1ced says.
... v. 11• 21• enct o.c. s. •i. "" ~n • D I ffi l ls d nied
---P-ICY-1'1-0Ul--.-" .. -N-.U---4 ~:~·.::.~-:.."::~::.::. WASHINGTON (AP) e ense 0 ca e a NAMUT~TSMHT "UM <ei ....... • ......... c-t. Yew -A spedal taak force on publiJhed report that James is ... ~ ..... ~ .. lcMlllO,......,, .io1no 11uu· __ P_UB_L1_c_N_011 __ c_E __ ~.:=, S::::. ':!':... ~ teen-aae preanancy baa beina punilhed for opposing re-
fcTo fAIR, is.. ..._.,.., """'·· ~ ........ __ 11 told th He ltb Ed or1an1zat100 ot hls Aerospace
c.ott•Meu.c.t"-1N•»v NoT1caToc1t1ono111 :::.::.~....,_,':: ... Nc11",:C..,.. ti ... ~dew-~ • D uartca· DelenaoCommand.
Jolln Alc11u·4' Waller, 11151 ..._A-fUtl tHl-••••••y .. attw-ey.Tlle on an IC'U&re ep " James. 57, suffered a mild
oeven1000, ,.o;i111a111 ve11ey, suP1111oacou11TOl'THE u .... wllff • ,,..,._, It ... "'" ment that abortions are h t. c.111om1•'2'M n•T•M<AUl'Otl111•,01t _.. ... ....., .... Y •• ,, .... Ml"' "essenU'al to redu"'e •he eart attaeir. in September, de-
ais ....._ .. _'" ..,.,. 1n-THICOUtffvo,.ouNo• .. _ ....... .,~ r,:•....,,.., ... "" fenae offlctals said. Ortitnally
dlvle<iel. In the Matt.er ...... f.alett Of Af.BA ... C<P4U..MU1r...,..4h. . numbers or bl Cb· risk •cb ... duled to retire in April.
Thlt :.:.!,~91= lllef wllh HIS TEO. elUI REii.A SMl'ltf HISTEO, PubttaW OrMOI C.O.st o.lly ""°' adolescent births." 0
" , _ _.Y# ......... •0r-°"""v.,. ...... eeA1 HliTEo,o.c: .. wct. HOv.1,1•,11.11."n It th d k ,,,..., James will leave bis command ,,_. .. -· -._ • NOlke It M19by gl-to Cledtton .,,.,, W8S e 5eC0n tU i CoJ-.Z.. c..N ...... Cot 'ft.a-6 d t emoe~ 17, "77. .. MVl"9 Ci.I-•IMI IN ...... -.. rorce set Up by HEW n ~ ~· ....... o .• on ~. an ~tum 0
Publ..._.Otw191 ODu• Deily Pllo -110•11esalfc.....,.1n111eo111e.eof --------~Secretary Joaepb A. WHhlnatonformedlcale*valuatlon.
Nov. 11,a•o.c.s, 12. 1'11 .,.._ ltw <lerl< Of UW -Helf~ w lo ~~--....;.....~----r::k:".!.i:::..•,..~=.;:~,: PUBLIC NOTICE Califano Jr. to take a FilmStarRoberta.dfordcanceledaacbeduled
PVBUC NOTICE 010....n, "'-VI ......... '°' o.....~ 1----------1 poaltion confllcting with campailft appearance ou behalf of Se wuu
_________ Orio, Sull• ZOO, H-porl 8Hcll, llOTI<• ~·:::OITOltl ht s a Q d pre 1 l dent Ratla•••r D .. alne cltln1 A l-D. am
PICYITICMnlUSIMIU Cltllornl• nMO, wNc:ll latlw olfiu " Carter·s ort.stated op-• ·w • uu·
11AM•nt•TM1 .. T '"•fl•ce Of1>u1in.u~uwlM>dert1~ suP••1oacou1tTOl'TH• nn11ition to abortion. agreement on an environmental T,.,. fOttowint per-It ..... ~ ine I ma11Hsper\e4,.1191owld•lete. STATaOPCALil'OltlllAPOll Y""' COntrove-y •. MUH: Swell c1a1m1 Wiii\ tne n•C•u•rr TNICOVNT'YO,.OltAH•• ...
o 1 "SVH1110G£ oavELOPMEHT vouc:tlafa mw• • .. ..,or pr..,.'".. ...,,._taa» G wr•.-at-~ Redford, who acreed lo join
COMPANY 121 SUH .. IOGI! ••w•M14witlllll .... ,,__.,, ... u.. EUllt OI MA"Y CONGOON ,..NS ..... ~ Hatba-ayaa.t.• ... tofbonorata
MAHAGE.MENT COMPANV, ... w. ttrslpublk.allOnoltlllanettc.e. HOl.LING«lt,0.CR.ad. ·-..... .
lllh $trM4, e.otie ~ ... camorn•• D•ted Nowmtw•. ''" NOTICE 1s HEAeev r.1v1N • '"' BONN, West Germany $50-a-~!'500 f\lnd-ral1ln1 recep-mu L<M,,,_IM crec11tonotu.aboVene......,GKHMlt (AP) M h D ti 2 l p tl d Oon•ldHenry<iOOl*'.uiw 11111 t:.wKu1«o1111ew111 111a1e11w--1ne<1alm•"•IM1 -os e ayan on ec. n or an , an·
s1rH1,CMteMHG.c..111orn1an•11 011110~1 ttw ••Id c1ec:.a.n1 •r• r_.ir.-t• 111. walked stifny pa.st the nounced he was chattflng hla llllallvt"'"51a~IAldbyanln-Pi.AllKA.~OMIN ttwm, .. llh!Nne<HNryVOYCtwra,!11 gTaSS·lopped hiJloc1•• O( plans a1 ter he tat ed by dlvlOiial. DLOMINANDOl.qMIN , ... oll~ of.,. cle<ll ol lM •bove.... -I ' Oone1f Henry (ioOoen Al\NMY1 .. Law II lied CO<il1, Of' to prlwnt lllem, wllll the maS8 graves Qt the Sile Of telephone to the left&tor.
Tiii• 1~1eman1••111ec1 w1111 ,.,. toioeverDrfve ne<Hw•v-.,.•s.tottwunc1«11.10ned the Nazi death camp al Redford eald bla decl•ion Co;inty Gltfl<tl Or119 c.o..ntyonHOY· S..llelM al 11\e l-Oltkaof THOMAS L. L.OAO, ember\1,lf17. New,.nlMQl,CAtiW r...ll• 211, 2lS21 p-de Veleecl•, Bergen·Belsen where was prompted by hi• opposition HD,..O
Pvt11i111ee1 0r.,,.. c.oaat oeuy"= .. : .. ,i;::~,c;1:.~.C::; Oe111;.1:~;; ~;:'~~·~!'..'::.'~~~~ 50,000 people -most of lo and Hathaway·~ support of the Dickey-Lincoln
Nov. II, 21, _, Otc. 5, u. "" ..,..11 In all rnettenpwtelnln9 lo1Mfflllaof them Jews -died in hydroelectric project in northern Maine.
Mld0t<......,w11111111-month9•11otf world war II ttw llral O<lbll<.IUon of Ito notlc.e • oetadN_.._1,1tn Putting Arab·lsraeli
PUBUC NOO'ICE
PUBUC NOO'ICE
Gloria Joae11. the American •tnier wbo wu
British rock star •arc Bolaa'1 &lrllriend, in_, be
proaecut.ed in coaneeUon with t.be September au.to
crub that took Bolan '1 lUe.
"Il has been recommended that Miss Jones bl
prosecuted for drlvt.oc while unftt throu1b driat
and po611bly wltb an excess of alcohol in the
bloodstream ... London police said at an Inquest.
A Battenea Coroner's Court jWy returned a
verdict of accidental death aft.er bearln&. bow the
compact car erubed into a tree.
Mill Jones, 28. who lived in London with Bolan
and their 2·year-c>ld son, attended tbe bearlnc an
crutc;hes. She ta recovering lrom Ww1ea 1W'fered
in the accident in aout.b London. • The man wbo wu mayor durtq Detroit'• ct.
vutatlng 1987 riot denies reports tbat the dla-
tutt.ance wu plaDhed •
•Former Mayor Jero•e
Cavaaap aaid there waa no
foundaUon to t.be report• of a
con.aplracy In the riot that luted
five days and left 43 people dead,
657 injured, 7,131 under arrest
and thousands homeless. More
than $S0 million in property wu
destroyed.
AllegaUons that a 1roup of
con.apirators planned the riot in uv...,...
advance by stockpiling rifles, pistols, ammunltloa
and drums ot auoUne were made to the FBI by w-
iden tilled Informant.a, accorc:lln1 to rues made
public. There wu no lndi~atloo of bow reliable the
FBI considered its informants. ..
Marvla KracterJ who heads RomAmer
Pharmaceuticala, a Lae Ve1as·based Orm licensed
to distribute and sell Gerovitat tn Nevada. aays be
will purchase contro1Un1 Interest ln a California
gold mine.
Krattet said be wUl pay S2 million for 50 percent
or Yuba Gold Flelda out.side Yuba clt~.
Gerovttal Is a purpo!Ud rejuvenation dru1 Uled
widely in Europe. The dru1 was le1allied tn
Nevada last May.
o-g1c.11o111,., politics aside for the mo· ~...c..::::=::-menl, Israel's rorei&n
TMOMAIL.U.D minister started a four· W•ttl . auz_,_..,.._.. day orficial ViSll to ~HU-.CA...., Germany Sunday with a
Tet: cn4i11t..a. Hebrew prayer at the
County Finns Report
. PUBUC NOTICE
AttwMr11ra-.-Pve>1l111e11 0r...., Coe•• o.11y Piiot, towering stone memorlal
_...,.,.. ,.,21•21·-0lc.. 5• "~H' for Bergen-Belsen 's vic-
tims.
New Buaina1, Gaim, DivUlend8 Highlighted
PUBUC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS IVMNIU
NAMI STATIMANT
Ttte tollewlng penon la dol119
b<llltWH•t: TO'IWHSEHOS, tU Soutll GNtl
471f.17 iwY.,L119UNBekll.CAn.51 Virginia RHp, IM., tlS Sovtll
, C:O.ttHwy.,LA9<1Na..c.t1,<A•:i.JI __ P_U_B_Ll_C_N_OTl __ C_E __ . ,.::c::.~:.!'9'• '\..conctuc:IH t>y •
PUBUC NOTICE
Plc:flfiOiii &UllMUI
NAMe ITA.,...NT llle fol._...,.,_ It Wlfl9 ....._ ....... :
HANK'S 5WIMMINO POOL·
P118UC N011C£
v1ro1nta.A. At'9, Pn110tnt
This tl.e-.t WM lllecl wllh 011
co11111y c1w11 ot Ofan11 <..ou1>1y en ,....,,,,,,.... i. 1tn.
'847M
Publltfled OraftQa GO.Ht o.lly PllOt,
"~v.1. 14. 21, 11. lt11
Ceal TaUc A•lced Tteo,..... Repertm
WASHINGTON <AP) Two loan commitments totaW.ng M,955,000 on
-Federal mediators, in· office buildings l.n the Irvine Industrial Complex
dlcating scant bope for have been announced by the New York Life
averting a nationwide lnsuranceCo. coal strike on Dec. 6, are The largest development, $.1,480,000, ls on the
asking industry and northeast corner of Michelson and Dupoat drives.
union bargainers to meet The proposed two·slory olflce building wlll contain
Tuesday in an effort to 85,780 rentable square feet. and provide on·alt.e park·
get stalled contract talks ·ing for 374 cars. CompleUon la scheduled for
restarted. February 1.978.
Offlclals of the Federal Prqjed develo~r ls Warren L. Bauer of Bauer
Mediation and Concilia· DevelopmentCo. lion Service intervened The second mort1a1e loan of $1,C75,000 was
in th" negotiations Sun· negotiated by Capital Reaources. Inc. of Newport
day lo summon both Beach. sides to the session. The development l• at 1300 Bristol St. North.
\'Ult p ......
BRUSSELS. Belgium
CA P) -The Belgian gov·
emment has agreed Ln
principle to a visit by
President Carter Jan. 6
and 7, 1overnment
sources reported today.
The sources said the
-dales were still subject
to chanae.
The t~story office bulldlnl will contain 32.340
square feet of rentable •pace. Ort-1lte parklns for
156 cars will be provided. Completion la scheduled
for sprtnc of 1978.
Project deve&oper ls Lanpton and A.Nociates
Ltd., a limited partner1blp with William E.
Langston as aeneral partner and Edker and
Blanche Pope, Wllllam E. Lanptoo. Roy H. and
Ga)'le Jones, Donald c. Snyder and Charles E. Grif·
fin as limited partners.
lrei1te St..U. Ope.u .
Trudy White, Irvtne, bu opened ber own In·
tertor desip atucJto. Custom lot.erton, ln lnrlne.
OntU recently uaoelated with Interior Deaip
Develap.ment, Newport Beach. •he hu studied and
practiced interior deslan for 12 7eara In Japan.
ThaUand, Iran and An'lertca.
Seltoel Af!fledrM NitU~aJ Sya~m• OOrp., Newport Beacli, bu
announced ~\l.lllUon of Accelerated Pilot Train·
ln11. Joe •• Santa Barbara. a acbool tpedlllllnc In prepatln1 pllotl for c•rtltleatloa tutl by the
Federal A'flatlon A4mlnlltl'atiaa.
Tho acqulaltloo mvolvet pa~ent of an un·
discloeed amount of cub and '*-to APT'•
founder arid president, W.L. TrQ'lor. wbO WtU con·
tlnue u pre1ldcnt ·
A PT wlll operate as a subeldiary ot another Na·
Uonal Systems subsidiary. Spartan School ot
Aeronautics of Tulsa. Okla.
Datat,... Repert• ~
Datat.roa, Inc., Irvine, hu reported an increase
in net lncome, aalet and per share earn.lqa for the
first quarter of fiscal 1978 over the first quarter Jut
year,
Net sales for the three months ending Sept. 30
were $2,092.5.15, compared wttb $1,333,857 for the
same period last year. Net lncome for the quarter
waa $20C,341, compued with a ION ol $1SS.002>at
Sept. ao, 19'7s.
Per share eaminia, baaed on 1,198.539 shares
outstanding, were 11 cents. compared with a loss of
10 centa for the prior year. baaed on J,811,5.19 abares
outstanding. Earnings for the tint quarter of 1m
renect an extraordtnary credit of 5 centa on a
$84,800 real.i.ud benefit of a tax loss carryforwud.
Datat.roa manufacture. tape edit1n1 equlpmeat
for the video industry. sem.icondvclor teat equip-
ment, panel dltplays, indicator components ud.
lbrouch its laboratories, provides pre-cood.itloninl
and testing of electronic components for tbe uaen
of semiconductors.
OAl\.Y~OT Mond9J,,.,..... 1m e
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
SU l'llUCMt COU1t1' 01' TM•.
NOTIC• TOCR•DITOIU ITAT•~CAl.Jl'OtlNIAl'O•
SUl'•RIOI' C0\11,'fOI' THI THI COUNTYOllO"""H
STA'HOl'CALll'OANIA ..-Olt -A"'"'1•
TH•C:OUNTYOl'ORANOI NOTIC• 01' NIA•INO 01'
Ne.A ... t l'ITITION POlt l'RC>aATI 011 Wll.&.
U late of HUGH M. WOLl'LIN, ANO LITTIRSTllT~NTAAY oec .... o. .. •••• of LAURA HINCHLl,.l'I
NOTICE IS HERlBY GIVEN lo the o.cuMd.
(reOllOrl Of lht •DOY•,..,,_ o.uoent NOTICE IS HEREBY GIViN tllet
tn.t all pertoflt haYlnQ clalml ~alnlt ROlllRT H. HUCKiNl'AHLIR llH
tht H id O.C-nt •re req .. lreo 10 Ille lllect llereln • s-tltlen tw P.-. .. el
11 .. m. with the neceuary YOUChtrt, In Will end 1..-. Of Latltn Ta~
'"" olfl~• of IM cl«tl ol tht •DO•• •n· tary to ttw ll'ltlti.n.r ,...,_ • Wllkll
1111ectco11rt.ortoprewnllh<tm,wllnlh<t 11 m.ct. for fwttwr partlQilen, MMI
neceuarvYOU<tttn..loU..-stQMd that IN time mid pt-. fl -1111 Illa •t the •Ille• of BURTON. GAULDIN, M m• ........... for o.c.. •• 1t17, .i THOM SON ~ NEL50N, 7U4 so .. 1n 10;00 a.m .. In _ _,,..,,., Oeplr1o
l'a111t•r A .. nwe, wnmt.<, CA w111cn ,, menl Ho. 3 of Nici c-1, -' 700 Clvk u.. ptaoof.,.,..neMofllle"noerllQMd CAHlt•r Drl .. ~111 .. GllYel._.
1n all metteru•rtalnlnt IO the Ut•t• 01 AN, C.lllelml6. ~1oo.c-.wltnintOW'monll•••fl•• D a ted November U , 1977
tn• flrll l>Ullli<allonot lNl nol1<e. WILUAMl.llJOtlN
0 •110 NOY l, 1'77 CAIUNY CMf1I
GlDRGE Ll!WISWOLFLI N ROllRTH.._~UCJ(INPANLI•
EUWIOtolltwWlll n 1•He,_ ...... 1411tell Dfthe~NmtOll«<Ot>nl (.MlaM .... CAn.•
I U llTON,OAULOIN, THOMW>N h l. OH i S.-11•1 ..... , "'•'ly Piie( & NIL.JOH P..oll ..... Or-,,_.. .....,
A11 ... 1101atLaw Nov.11,U.Jl.lf17 .-.n
UH S.ulll P'lltnt•r A-.n.,.
Wftlltler.CA.
"Ttl;UUH-1 All•r,..yt fw 1-vtor P~Ollthed Or-C.0.\1 Dally Pliol,
l<OY 7, "· 21, II, It//
PVBIJC NOTICE
PUBUC N0'11CE
ROH ALO •• WIKSIU. A•-y.tW.
11'71 l•tl ,,. .......
Tvttltl, CM...,.,_
P11bll""9d 0r8'191 Coell C>all't Piiot,
Hf,,. 21,:11,andDK. S, 12, lt17
• s
6
7
8
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........... Motlu:
All real at.at. adv•rtlted
ln U\la ntwtpaper la '"b· Jed to the 1''ederal Fair
)loualnC Ad ~f ltH which makea It meaal to
advtrtlH "•ny pre· ference. llmllatton, or
d.lacrhnlnaUoft baaed on
race, ~1 relllllon, sex. ~ nauon&J on11n. or an lnlenUcm to make aoy 1uch pmerence, limit•·
Uon, or dlacrimlnaUon."
'Ib1I newspaper will not
know inf ly accept. any advert 1ln1 for r ea l estate which ls in vlola-
tlon ol the law.
HouMtforSale •••••••••••••••••••••••
·oclAM VllW Price slash $25.000
Owner wants action. This 3 bdrm
home with f amity room overlooks
the blue Pacific & of fen the dis·
crlminaUng buyer a place in the
sun for himself & hia family.
· Priced at $100,000 Call 640-6161 4 MISA VllDIS FIHUT and loweat
priced 4 bdrm & f amlly room
home at only $79,900, but make of-
f er anyw•Y· Highly upgraded, new
r9o_f 1 carpets, drapes & paint.
CALL NOW 5~ I 41
Se1vinC) Co~l.i Mc~a -lrvinr
Hunt1Pqton He.1r:h N f'wporl ll•!<iCh
G•"nl • I OOZ Generel . I 002 'Ge•ral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
l .. CRIDllLE
V~UI
3 Bdrm, fam rm. 2 ba,
1uper aharp ho me.
Owner will consider VA
or FHA. New carpet, new
paint, covered patio.
Profe11lonal landscap-
1n1. brtck fireplace Bet·
ter call on this one.
M&-7171
31R~IA
OCEAMFROMT
Rl1M on tbe Bluffs.
wat chlnl c tubln g
waves, Catalina ac •n oc·
catk>a.al pualn• whale.
Prof. decorated T'ModeJ''
SHHHHHHHI
JUIT USTIDI
Another great Harbor Realty ex-
clusive in the original Bluffs. Quiet
corner location, beautifully de-
corated. 4 Bdrms.. spacious tile
patio -you •u love to show it off.
Call to see. $174,500.
673-4400
DMMoa of M..t.or "" .. ._.Co.
condo Iii SUI Cleme"te ·GelMral I OC>J .G••ral I 002
w/all the bltnl. & private ·••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ·••••••••••••e••••••••H
stairway to ~ach. MESA DEL MAR
$ 184,500 V /A TBMS Bil 5 bedroom 3 bath 2
.JACOBS REALTY ~ IDRMS 1tory In top ~ondlU~n. 675.6670 F\replace, wood floors, Owner la closing e1crow double gara1•, large on a new home &: m ust
yard,tM.750. sell at a baraaln. loyMc~ Reduced to $98,000. 111 ~:a-:::.l•d. CsS:-~cT .
541·772t I PROPERTIES
11AunFUL In POOi
HIWPORTDUPW 1-------•1 Now'• t.tit tlme to bu,v.
CORO MA
. HIGHLANDS
j-SUrprit•I A 2 bedroom
1 home with 11mall Income
: unit Oe1al > to help pay
· the costa. Also a 1reat
· swlmrialna poc>l for your
pleaaure 41 relHIUon.
COLIOllMIWPOIT
. REALTORS
'7S.HI I
REDUCED $2,QOO!
Sale prt~ ~w $61,500.
Completely re(urblshed
thruout with TLC by 1*>·
pie that caret New cpt,
net.' cab~. new paint.
4 br, + lam rm + 2 ba.
Bil fl"(>lc, 2 paUoe. MJnY
fruit treel. Gov'mt. ap·
PJ' a.1aa1 In at
$86,000
OVER65? Wow!!
Own a home too valuable ·
to aell without huvy ·1@WESTS1DE'IWf-I tut ~n why not aee ~ ·
one or our trained Mt-2323
counaelora for WllYI to
reduce "'xe1. No cbari e I
OinftdenUall Phcnlt for appointment I
. 67Mt61
'n9CAWSOW CO.
REALTORS 2819 Newjlort Blvd. N.D.
~ Walk1:r 1: l 1:1! Two lie 3 bdrm, 3 ba un· COIOMA D& MAI Extns 1atore, super 3
Its In very rare coodltion. CAPt COD-DUPLJ:X, 2 bldtoom pool home. In· Real Eatate It look• new. Private bedrm. fireplace, front vtUq dlnlnl area, faml· -~...:;.;;.;.;;;.;.;;..;;....;.... __ _
paUOI for each unlt, two lrllt, enclosed yard. Up. I fresh'.. lnted •u CM IJTllAT car caraae for ei ch unit, per unit-beamed cell· Y room, 1o1 pa • -SS•.IOO wood burnlnl Oreplaces, ~· 1 beclrm. Walk to tra.ll« or bOat parldna,
Mmcantlluntry. Much aboppina le beach. Aak· Bier. •.SOO.call~l720 steps to pOandlnl turf
more.Callu.s fordetail.s. lnf$J.54,500.8'4-7270 , ...... 1.~ and cr1etal ••a•. 1 -Backyard ls bar are.a
8:,N
1,?f •• ,,1,IJl'lro11t,,<t' lV"f:-:fic1• . : planrouad. WladlDI ·~ • ·-c-t="'-.. woocl•n walk••1• to _ ...... w_"'--~-~,_~~ atcluded enlf7~C
JUNITS
EASTSIDE
Thia ldeall)' located in·
come pfWtrtY may be Juat what you are looklnll
lor. One a bdrm, 2 bath" two 1 bdrm unite close to
lboppl.na " tranaporta-
Uon. .. 7711
~ Wal km & l er.
RulE&tale
ldtcben. atep eoG• REALTORS veraatlOA arta plus OCEAN VIEW flroplaH. Sanabln•
IR MODEL breallfut patio, pool,
.Uy ... ,-...... FORM Jacu111. ,,oll•~ball. "' ••-" Beaut. 8uccola bullt. oardtft ll•lns at It'• A HOMI . hOme wltb many :ittras. ftneet 8'NI010 Uae that VA on tllll lm· QUoy the breathtaklnr . Of'fN ;1i'1•1f,nMt0atNd•'
macUlate Costa Mesa 3 view from the 1undeck of
bdrm, 2 bath be•uty. All tbe Paclllo 111naet.1 a.
new kitchen, new coppet' Catalina. Lars• ' bdrm, plwnbln&, new carpet, a bath, famlly room
new drapes. Lattice home. ·treat for the
areeMo1¥11 (rult tret9, yOWll executl... Tbil
&arden.1'hli one la a win· won't lutll Call DOW I
Dtl'. Call bOW 648-7111. . 84$-0303 ~ 111 •." l fUN to If 1ticc1
f-U~L5 TC
OLSON
~. . .
·"~-=
~~1'f lHf. HEAL .
~ ESTl\lt:RS ---
'
NMMSULA POINT
' Bdnn., 2 ba. bo e. All amenities. Lovely area, few 1teps to b.,acb.
$J.8',:i00
. UOO ISLI •
Newly remodeled "4 Mnn.. den. ~
'baths, living rm. w/c1tbedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950
llG CAMYOM 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beauti!ully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
large lot. $a25,000
Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR
Ji 1 \l11y· ... 1. tJ""" r~ t\ ol'> 6161
• ...
......................
CAPI COD VICTOltlAN
$13,000/Sl. I 50 llAVTY ~I $54,000
TOTAl.bOWM C MUA Fant.uUc opp. to owo tc. $158,500
Wtadinl Toadway to Paoc>ramlc ~ Ylew. S7J,000 2btcondow/ceotralali', Dune i.ome-Unlv. IOMinJ a 1.ory retreat! Priced to Hll in Old I Bedrm, buC• tot. bllo appllaneet, In· Put "Kealiocton" mat.
Private vo-dl protect O:ll'onldc1Mar.8ackoo Oxnpa.wwtthbArdwood clud'I. d•h•nbr. w/pooJ, Jacuat Is air. J..owatDliqdPlaa1t5fn MChaded Uk)' &.o lavllb market & 10Uer It &DX· floor, d&l car, covertd QiJJdreo welcome. Short c.tm. ooal ~. 2250 tht Willow• area ol
llvlat rm. Gourmet lout. .,.& llq&Ut at.Net. Out •alllLoclubboute, PoOIA 1q . ft. ·Mlnl·bllad1 lrvlne. Tbla au&.lt"'1 4 kttctle ~8liooks 1IUfto 4'MIJIY-oh*t1aow ... 11Md1 abopplna Seller _to PU ~ ~.coot. bedreea boma-tu&ures
abine courtyard! Wind· medi.teaale.8-.lperb"-Y· for 1 yr home warranty top ~eihish,-•trium, upended carpoll
tn1 atalrway le•d• to b~t CallM-IMIO + '1,000. cpt fl drp. aJ. auto. apriDJclmi " Utea. ~ho1& wlth a MW
• •. DM.YKD('
s•ee pl n1 master lawance. Ownt/Aft.5'CHS4e diahwubet'Mid~al.
bedroom plus child'• 714-1100 UNIVERSITY Park, Ox· Haa a tarfe ~09toaed .-
retreat! HWTY. seUer la --#-a. fiOrd a br, Z~ be, bonu, paUo.ltlakloaJJ,ilocated ~~...,_~.._~......,~ .. &J\ltioul. 847~10 ~I tbF. •IHlt~~r rm. __ ... N-cpt 11_ near new part wtt.b pooe.._ ______ _
Ol'fNlll9•11SllJNro11N1Cf1 llf, *Dll + 1 br ~ _..,..n ~.. • -'"'1 ...... ,,.t.ed.. PrlCed n=::~iiiiiliiifi•• ~ 84().'1030 drpa. Steps from mjr, e&_.U _... I . ,.,, = JUST MOY.llSTIQYS ~~-.. :::::,..$
-=~~~~~~~~~~~~! WAllCUMG POOL 2 BR In fl'Ollt ls l BR to MARRIED? ALSO llMTALS wtth t.hll Plft' Condo in 4 IATHS ...: 1118.~ will give you • 3 rear, beautifully re-done • L Vacant. 3Br, 2ba on= Oran1etr~ teonl• "
G1Mr.. IOOJ brbome. Very clean, inda & priced to aell. Ownet S d C'--'~t • !:'o11f:r.•arreoty: '51, :!: =~~~~ :::..~ Fab&llous OM of a kfnd~~~~~~~~~.~
DEllJIB.D'S llG PLAM 5-4134,500
Highly improved 4 BR 2-atory with
FR, DR, 3 full baths & sitting rm
in mst.r suite. Contemporary
elegama! Vaulted ceilings, lge
kitchenlfw/breakfast rm. Huge
brick patio w/planters. Beaut.
cptng & drapes.
WISLIY M. TAYLOI CO.., REAt.TORS
2111 S-~' Hl•Ro.t
MIWPOln' C M.I. 644-49 I 0
good netghborhoo · arudoua. pen .. ,.. mu "' a 2. Vacant. 3Br eondo, looUc,.., Mlt,9". Columbia In Colleter.
HWTY, ll ls priced to aeu Iii!. home of YoUr own I Veu park·llkeaettlna. $5?.800, '6A.Ay-s--.-Park. ldea\ for pro· , faat.C.11546-2813 ~ WbO take bOPle $370. submitoff nn l'"V 'll'""""S f ... lOD&l per .. D Wl&.h • ._......_. 1051 Inf
01""'"'.9,· .,,s'""'"':u""' •. 1• R!Q\ • ,~1 4*b week may quallfyl v ert · 8 •Lb bapplneu? You'll find it l•-e fem" ... Homo baa ;:r-•••• :;:?:::••••-••• , . v. Low down! 3 Bedroomal 1 acan · ' ri 2""' a here In tlria 1Jlarp 4 ~ cut~ to ln· • .. ) lgBf 1111~m1 !JI New emu • palnl! condo. Form. dln. rm. bdrm. deft Jebath home elude OVfll' IO addWonal PRIVACY! ""' ,~: JiQIJI C-.Meto 1024 ;:llozR D CARPET, f'N~~~':1~.:'rW:· 4Br, ~ Gi=!f d~a~!. iaUOO:.du. Ad:tn• =l~~ta'f~·m~ •
•••••••••••"•••••••••• 2\4tba, i.e lot $1CM,SOO. h a;d patio: large yard, -·c··•-•· .... -u.nd .... bf MES .a. VERDE MIS .... VIRDI 5. lBr condo. Nr beac . 1u BBQ 4" much morel ._ ""'"" .... •v ~
A A u ... -... lSs tsl,500 freenbelt, located Oft •-1 SPECTACULAR VIEW n.-r..-.n Co . store & lcl 8 SJ.OO.~ IEST IUY IN corner ouuiet cul-de-Tbe Golf Club .with a CATHIDlA&. la flnd1na a Gr~nbrook 6 ... .!!'.?'1 ·Sal I 0 er LOVIMGLYK.,. NC. Prl to aell a• ell• ~·S '-----lived In byS:p'-rm nuu: . e or eue. Sq·~-" •· W'-"--WOODUl~E • 11parklin& late fa your ... _ .......... ..... c•........ .,....y c ... ao -r ~ '75.900 (M) back yard. ~ acre. Lvly 3 bdrm bome who care. Taftet 'I de· ..._, __.96._3229 model; perfed for 1
Spanish 5 Br. 4ba. Open w /frplc in la• fmly rm eor'd. tbruout w/1rounda _.a___... 11m&les. couples; living A B rt a r wood -•
house Fri and Sun only or otr ldtchen. Low main· fitfor • klnt OWnr. has rm., farcn kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 3 baths. apllt
by appt. 1790 Panay Cir· tenance gardeu.. Nicely bouabt anol r home & SANT A CRUZ bdrm a ,, 2 bath a ; level Uparaded wltb de-
cle Ait. 540-0608 landscaped. Thla la a musuell lmmed. La ~La wltb mauive UnlveraltyPatk. '76,900 coratOl' mlrron, lush
must oo your Ust. Call 754-7100 Spanish Ule roof. COMPAll ca~•· drapu and
4 IR + POOL oow. $85,500. 545-IMSl Cathedral oeillDl! create with smaller modela at lev • Ph.w a loot U.t
Blke to e:~~0r~m thi. (~1~mmgaa1m1 r=r~~t b~~i~l. ~~~.::~r: ~::r:m= .. ~~1.-...... ~., ..... ~~-.... ...
beaulllul garden home. ' Real &late u1 't • 1 d' ol th.la 3 bd~ .• 2 bath, pertie9forquicllaale. LAKIFOllST
Best buy in Huntington uq si e aorma me. family rm., den, at WaterfronLLoweatprlce _;
•!!!••l!!!r!! .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 0!!0!!2!!G!!!......a!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I O!!O!!l!I ~~h:m~~~Y0~!;: NU~'cb!~tahr ~2p1~ 31 ~ ~: ~~·2c°b; ~o~~o~ ~3:=~t:i:~r:!t~ $B5,BOO. ~ I ~b~a11:!'1~-nll~~ : ~
menls. Hurry I Call ... ~c""'w ... a · oo • p · 1• c Bkr/Aot ••a •. •uy to-'-wl holne ........ .,ace ... v ... , .,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-6767 spa. 875-4912 Broker rime o . .. . ..... ... " •&e 552-7000 . rm~ muter bedrm. Br-....
BO'ERTAIMMENT IALIOA PEHIH. Qf1111 ,, o .. , iu1<11oa1,..<r• MS-*6 Bkr536-9311 lna your aaHboat. ,
SPECIAL Jusl reduced! 6 1Jnits, 1~1l1Jj·1fll M~~:,Lo MOOaHOME P'ORSALEBYOWNER THE · -$119,1185. ~~~=~ ce~~~r ai~ ~r~~ ~~r~sio~. ~u!t 'Qt .Jiij !lfj ~~~~o~at~. nt,,~~ raec;:roosHm E\~::t:r:~ lt~tfJis . . . W:~~=:n PETE BARRETT
youra in U>a prestige steps to beach. OW!ler clean, hard to !lad 4 7 Mo old model home ln )lB.988-97CMorM7-4t127 -REALl'Y-
home. Mate anolfertbal motivated' S425 000 ---------i bdrm unit. Abundance ot moat deairable area. WALMUT$9UAll OODBRIDGE Beaut. z f42·52IO '" will keep the pool table. 673·3663 · 542.22sJ Eves b b M 8 R t Owne t II tb' Ov 1 Rd: ~~a! Ji~~~ ac~;;I fo~ DUPLEX " NO ~~~a~:;~~~c10:: tr:;1~al atrfu'::.
0 ;rot Pric!~~:S to.:.~: =Y~~i~ba . .! .-: ~ :::;ez ~a~=: ,:.~ an appt. 546.2313 West Newport. 3 Bdrms toacboola &1boppln(. To lndscp'd •decorated. ~. 3Ba, 2500aq ft. 4 bl.ka ln1t rm.; central alr; On comer lot, nr. lake, ........ _
1
___ fo
10
,
7
... 0 llftNJ11 9•11 s 1uN•o~1"'''' 2 ba each unit, onr inspect, call now lor Call962·7788agt. &.obeach,bltr968-3S58. cov'd. patio. Extr .. l pools. iacoul "future_... • I I w frplc Extra largl' appt.545-9491 BrldgemanacBrtdgeman Makeolfer. teonlsclub.2$BlueJay, ....................... "'A lliJ~ilf\\I bldg & lot. Xlnl sum CREDIT [ollilJ!lli11•Ull1!i WHY MOT SEE Hunllr-AOll LIASl/OPflOM SJ.O?,OOO~l-96!5 a Br 28:-•dcarpedt,
1
drpsd, , ·~Jiiji!;J:t mPnecredtw.1lnStle89r,500rentalb . _,,!:!,!.·~:-~.:~ Makeyourcommhment ~...., 1042 Driveby:i4031ovalRd. patio, .n acp , nc,
., ---.. ·-·--u ReaJ ""·•a•A oo a Bdrm home. Save. ~ Neat 2 BR, fba., family •----. IO:..I ~ut3725vlow. MT·IU> or _ 673-3663 675-4777 ~. "" Owner. Call 8•6·3490 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 1r ...,,.....__.... .. .....,. •--------. 227 SHRDWOOD PL -1ct1S RIGHT Se .,. s...t Mel rm .. central a • New ............. ••••••••• '""' NEEDED '""' 5pm-8pm. • O f.:~!d. Pretty patio. llVBA · . SUPER IEACH IUY (Between Santa Ana & Pvt party, must aeU one Offet ed at $60,0 0 pouep. '6"900
0
.,.. usavlS ........ ltd 1169 -
·1mmac. new carpels. 22nd Sl., Costa Mesa> of two propertle~ on ... "'-last tale of EVB.YMCOPUHD -.-•••••H••••u••••H•••• new paint, alry S bdrm, Lovely Eaat.aade 4 bdrm., Flower St. ln Eaat C.M. 1 RENT ,_ lllOdlL RIALTOI 55J~434
batll, breakfast nook . family, lanai, pool home. $68,000 dho~!!~" . ...!r .. 22 lot w /2 --.-.-1 •R.a.Ln. . Lae double ear. TeMltl, Cul-de-sue street. Owner ~ ... .,.._, 11l YOURS ... _.._... -BY OWNER·RSJ 2Br +
pool" rec, 230 Luaorua very amuous! Sl35,000 C714tl46Jl41 den, btfl vJew, coop
Nwpt st>ores. Open Sun 67J.3663 67:HI086 BIG 4 BDRM CM Trfple• 3 Br, 2 ba, enclosed patio. w/bkra *'11 000 559 5388
day 1-8 2 Br e•ch. xlnt'income. & Walk to all acbool.s. top EAMFR OMT alUPM ~ ' · . 1800sq rL + + 4 br, 2 ba location Sl20,000. Bkr. area. Owner anxious, ~.r~·~·-l~U"-1]·.'1'.1·1·1·~FO~R~JM~·. 11111111 ~~~t.y ~~p~:bTn~~s~ _645-_2632_17_5_2·90_23 ___ ~~.·ell . Call now ~HED'$150000 ,...---tale , fruit trees .1-------CENTURY 21 .a.MOD ... H Ml beaul1fully lndscpd .. 2 Wklen/19' .. StOf"I 1044 ~ a.
car Jar. Luundry rm. Eastslde Costa Mesa. 3.2 Wesfdlff R-.Mu 1 year new 2 atocy rusUc •................................. ~ ... I F•m1ly area. Move·ln bedrm homes It room for ~~~~~~--~·,~~ rooderu QPlOX. 2400 aq. cond. 1 will carry con· more units. 300• deep lot. :: U.P. $119,000 ft.. GipoUc bdrma &c 3 -----===---io:::::=-s::,....-~l tract al 812"{.. For sale Hurry-lots of potential .,_PoW 1026 Kuch aouabt after Kar· baths, ete1ant Uv ft1l
by Owner I Agt. Ed here! CaJIS46·S880. ••••••••••••••••••••••• queue. Garden entry. ~~ ~~~rpl~:
A COHVtHifHT SHOPf'INC Al>IO
SEWIHQ CUl0£ fO" THE
GAL OH THE CQ.
cape 1',overs All! Smart Cromet!
7481
t,,A6dT3~
Chernow fl46-8(Wj() La e . f a m i 1 y r o o m rm w /wall.a of .llua onr·
.. LI.TOP w/Crplc. Patio overloob looking ample back yard ..,.. HERITAGE ·~· REALTORS DAMA rOIMT rollm& hills. 2nd Story w/room for pool. HeavY
CONDO boats 3 sumptuous _.__ .. oot•-lltvc .... I 007 bdrms. Call now 752-1700 ........ er ... qua , -·· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----Beautiful, nearly new 3 Ol'f"'"'9.,,HUN'o"""'' 1t.n.icU004J\Quie~cul-de·
MESA VERDE bedroom, 2\.AJ bath, 2.
1
• I sac 1tre't.. Jlot,ivated Beautiful JBr & den, 2Ba. 4Ur 1'4Bn, lg comer lot, atory model Wood burn . ,~~-·11·~ seller PRJCEJ> WAY
'40rk,hnp & :.lora Ac s uper sharp w/many ing flrcpiac~, pool: ;: ~' J: BELOW MARKET (Qr
hutlding, rt•c·rntly rl' xtras,al11ol\Vorboalac· tllunaa, jacuzl!t. Lovely l=~d~:!-~-~--~fl!·=~~~-~~~1 (alt. sale. C&ll DOW «Sr derorali•d 111 " n·d Ir\ CC!lll . sas.soo. Bkr Mr. oce.n breezes. qtlRRY! .!: you·n recret It Jatlfr.
nwner ~h11>A11 h\I appt Black898·7879 188,500 OHMY~SH Century 21 All Wa.lk·)n ooh S21~ 000 i.7'.i '>418 .,_, Realty848-8080.
C -· · ......::..__ n_ ch 1018 Like new Colleee Park <C Fee land. New carpetin1
aptsn--a Br2bn pool S89 900 b)' Just Installed. WeU local· WOODJRlDGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• P · I ,,;., 3729 3 .... ~---'Li.BavPla'"" ed. 4 BR., 2"' ba., family CR088ING Oc"' ....... FRONT ownr. nn on Y ""'"'" ,..tJO.lln:Jl " -"""' l Wood ~" Lasuna Ni&uel rm. home, ollly $109,...,.,. The V llece of -
LIVING FIXER UPPER! 496-7222 lll..Oll6 Wow! brid&o. The beat of both ' r(lrc CtncJ •rn Beach Uae your lma1loationl worlda. AMlllleclurally
Hoad 3 HR, 2 HA home With paint, carpet 6 unique 2&3 bdrm• at·
ln\11tmg :-our! & \and at some fixin' you can turn fomal• Valef ,034 tached &: detached rte·
your door-step. $300,000. this bas le ally aood 4 ·················~····· aldences from $96,990. bdrm home Into a LOCATIOHI 1..:.;551-:...:...;:U:;:.:6:..:.l _____ _
AMCHOUGI showplace. A large fa ml· Pubic Holle• LOC .a.TIOM' IHYISTMEHTS Jy room, pool ahe r lb • ' bnck)'ard, well bullt Take advaistaf.e 0 e
'-==='=7=1=4=1 =4=9='-=7=7='='::i back fence It mucb new FHA 1ov \ Jnaured Terrace Cambrid1e, end -""-11 •a""""' loan pro1ram vcltb loans unit. Desirable mornlnt I 022 more.""" _......... \IP to ll0,000. •~% lnL & aun kltch. nook. Loads of •••••••••••••••••••••••
HOUSIALONE
Is worth tba price. But •
you can live near the
beach in Corona del Mar
& have teQants bel
pay ... 1175,000.
MORINS REAL TY * 494-1057 *
CDMCOnAG8
wrTH POTIMTIAL
2 BR, 1 BA charmer.
Live ln beautiful front
unit, while buildinl uni
9n rear or lot. Orea fevora1e. 10% Down OK.
Only 1134,500.
955-0350
II ,, ••t I \I l •
•.. .. , . , • , . , , I
.----- --~-_J
··• LOWER down pay· upgrad•. l yr. warran·
men&a. (Olli)' '1950. down ty. Vacant. & move in FO~ES r E
OLSON ... ,. .. ,,
, °" 960,000. price). We cond
bave 10 choice bomea ·
from ssa.ooo to $74.600
with FHA terms. Cf ll for detalt.. .
'31·5800 l.rlUMttworit
CHATIAU ILAMC
2 br. 2 ba w/lar1e bonlSI
re d hil l ~
55 2-7500
HOKE • INCOME. tlm•-----· ··• UniU, downtown LaJUna VIEW ON ..:I Beacb. a Commerelal, 3 ...
realdentlal. Fant .. lc THE BLUFFS · ocean vt.wa. $.'5195,000. .,~ ••
OPPORTUNITY OF A
LlFE'l'lllEI Oceanfront
reat.aurant; heart. o( Lacuna Beach. All new
oqulpment. tBS0,000 •
MYSTIC .Jlll,LS . Ovea1ook1DI 1.aaun~a i 3,000 -.. ft., Chna AO.. dealcned 5 bdrm. bome.
A rare opportunity at
JJ'75,000.
Noam LAGUNA. Walk
to beach. a Lar•e units, beautifully land1caped1 witb ocean views. Pric.a
rilht at $2111.ooo.
Open Saltltcb1 l · 5 '-'
405 Plat.a. Newport lkh " " Owner lVlll accept re .. ~;
asonable otters. Ex~ltlns .oil
Trtna end plan witb un-" :s wuat HClud.ci atry. i .. ~ Br, 2~ bath. Hu choice , •
BJ'Mnbelt Jocatlon with A
Baclc Bay vlewJ l.1e1~
wrap arotutd patio ••.J
feat.uret expenalve tiled 't
Jacuul. Special 04Jtdoor •• lllbUna effect. I& flreplt ... nits ttds boale a true ,.,
winner for Ute beat in en-tetta1n1n1. 1167,1100.
AISOP .,_., ;.~
Qlijl>oaorllelen ... Otc7!1"'9U~ ...
MAGNinCENT 3200 ~.f!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! · ..
fl., 4 bdrm., 4~ bath * ~ * ·;:,. home. Flnat C)Ceanftoat ., 1.11 •
community. Loads of ex· •CLASS* ···· tru. $150,000 Fabulous Palermo tun
LARGE .a bdrm., fa!DD)I w/Jacur.,il auto Umer, home. El Toro, clote to eltfll\t matr suite,
scbools • aboppln1. llasMd·infrp1c'a.
t!P,500 PA~~c':AST --
BUILDma•s attentJoo. PROPJ:RTll:S . '&:a R:ol~· i:,~ 1:: 631..0400 ...,. ...
'95,000 ***
,.
•
. ••••• ., ' PllYATI COMMUMITY
''' -Tllr•• Ar•ll ••r· OmtG9dl .. . ,,. ................... , F :··l ...... ,~ ...... ~ .....
w .. INr ..t ftra~oce ... HW.t ..... 97 ' CJ U•ll" 4 •241
;. SOliTH LAGUNA DANA
l'OINt
493-UU
.i:11 LAGUNA NlGU~L
ti• I 4!W-4~1 49$.1728 •
fWwport INclt I 06' Ttatin r OtO •••-'••••••~•••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••• -------"-'---I .,.. Luclrv $77,777
"-111 TOWNHOUSE One of lowe•t priced ~ !1 ;:. Newport .. ocll homes ln Foothill Hl
1.,.1m.ooo. Walk to west.curr area.'3 Br, l~ llJ&. Im·
·IJA Pla.&a, 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, maculate.
dlnini room. cus tom
~,.. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS MobltMolllll1 -------1 ForW.
l" ~·ocEAN VIEW
REDUCED!:·
$Thousands$
Reduced for hist sale
,. Vac<1nl & l>eller 1s onx-
lous' Beaut. 2 bdrm end
unit t'Ofldo w ,fa replace
, ..
•I•
1 ..
.... IAY VIEW
I,, 2br, 2ba Mobile Home in
ACNOIJ9 fof'.. t 200
···•·····•·••··•·•····· --------------FtVEACRES
South ot Corona, fan·
t"5tlc r.:1ew. Full pnce
$12,900. QKR.
(714) 676·5717
-----------·
..
_,ti:t.tHllml
I I •' _. 1 1 I
'• .......
~
GARDENAPTS
CORONA DEL MAR.
2 Br Townhouse. frplc.
Pool, tennla. Some ocean
It Catalina views. Cloee ~~lnllrflnebeacb.1._~--..-----
..
.......... ••••••••••••••••••••••
8ab)lllttln1 tor worktn1 motbera. Harbor
Baker. area1 t4y home.
Daya,s.8·7M7 . ... ~ ....................... .
2 Br. 1 ba le garage,
ctuldren ok. Walk to
beach. $275. 962·3SS8
•IRAHDHEW•
Deluxe2brapt. nr. Hunt.
Hbr. & shoppane. 840·2080
Lap.a leach 3141 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Luxury penthoWle, 2 br, 2
LilGl'1&2 ll
FIOM$26S
Quiet bldJ .,,.. ,lbea11tiful
lnd.8cp1. cov'd eatagea,
D&UXI OfflCll
Comml • tnctal aoacca. •Cd 2000 •ct. tt. Ai Tow .S3Paq. ft. 1AgNl1uel If
Minion Viejo areu.
.M2. 2000 Sq Fl W/OF-
FlCE. San Clemente.
496-5601
MOM JOTO
I ,000 sq. FT. CREW.
MANAS EIS P/tlme eve11ln1• fr
Saturd•>'• mana1l111 Junlot Sale• Perao111 aelll111 aubacrlptlons
cb>c' to door. Requiru
van or lar1e station
wa1on. Phan. coU~t. •----°"'--------• ZU·UT·OSH. Aftter ~"!"!'!"'""'!""'-------5:00pio.21......U'1S.
· Factory Workers
4 Day Work Week
40 Hours
Apply ln Person
Icier a.dustries
2101 Dove Street
Newport Beach
Across From OC Airport
FACTORY WORKIEIS
Lite monufacturln&
plant n~ help. Coll for
mfo. Mon, Tues. Wed.,
betwn l-4pm, 646-8244.
FINISH CARPENn;n,
mu~t be 1ood. Own tools
not required. Top wages.
645-3720 or 759.9423
Gtrl t'ridny wanted for 2
mon ore. Typing & f1hnit
<X: airport area. Call
751·8453
Rec:.TIOMIST
Ol!:N'LDEN'l'ISTRY
N1'Jlt Beacb-Expt'd.
&f.4.0CJ.'12
UCB'TIOMIST
Gtaeral otc duU•, typ-
lq, err.act.. Fwa olc. --~----..:...;...~ APJl7 J'9'fx O•velop-ment, or call 511-2581.
L&SALU Youn• exeeutlna In ------;.....:_-~-• commercial ntl ut•te
SECRETARIES.
& lYPISTS
..
..
USE THE DAILY PILOT
CHRISTMAS
TREE
GIFT PAGE
TO SELL YOUR
HOLIDAY GIFT ITEMS
OUR PAGE eppeara every Thunlday nm Nov. 17 thru Dec. 15. 1lw more
rou run the I••• you pay. For
lnformltlon 6 h•'-> In pJactng your ad
catlrour •
CHRISTMAS AD-VISER
142·5818
..
8MW '67 R69VS run~ and
looka fine. $800. Honda
'76-750, over $800 in ex
tras. $1.800. Jim 493 781 t
'72CZ400cc MX or desert.
Good cond., mechaniral
typerfect. S4~ 831·72611
'74 HONDA Elsinore
250MT, 2400 ma, xlnt
cond. ~ or bt'st orr
Days 213-595-4673, eve
714·960-3404
250CC HONDA Elsinore
'73. HardJy used, Jmmac
$500. 551·5821
MokN' HoftlH, Salt I
Rtllt/ShMoge 9160 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Rent a 1977 Excut1ve
Molorhome or Mini·
mot.orbome from Herb
Friedlander. Call any or
these numbers
191-6777
537.7777
8ZM8H
MOTOR HOMES
FOR RENT
From $100. wk. 1f0..0844
RENT Fireball 23' Self
cont. Auto/air. CC, CB,
ltereo, lllpe 86'5-2283
29 ft. Apollo motorhome.
Must see to appteclatel Call John Fetter'at
"'2-00lOor 540-8211.
Trdltn. T,_.el 9170 •••••••••••••••••••••••
11' Flreban '85. 'Self·ront,
dbl ~ alps a, fully eqwp '1400 or orr
IC-1190
. ..
IARWICK DATSUN
:-· .. 111 Ju,111 l"ap1~1r Jnu
831-1375 493.3375
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
546-1200
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS
lt your car la extra clean
6ec us r1rst.
IAUHIUICK
292S Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 979-2500
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CL~
~-~·:i
'1111 )' l'.1 •••• ,,, ,,
tt lf,J1t,,1 l 1 r.111 i\ 11
1\ 1 ' 'I • l i (
. ,. . . ,., . --.
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
NEWPORT OA TSUN
'78 Mon~ro VU{a1nlta · win w/I full aeata, C,
•t.et90 radio; 11.11 rack ...
Alktnl S:UOO cub. Nu
lilt price '6400-646-91'19 •
tf IZ
• -. ,_ 4liii H•YfiliA ili'Ml R-..
I .
. ..
.
1 . '
Night .
By &OBEaT BAaKEB °' .. ,,..., ..... Matt Huotinl(ton Beach Mayor Ron
Pattinson said today he would try
to halt nieht flyinc at Meadowlark Airport followlnl a
crash near the private airfield
Wednesday ni&ht. • Pattinson said that he doesn't
want to close the facility. He Just
wants nlf}lt nlghta halted.
"I don t think that it is rl1ht to
jeopardize the safety of so many
for ·the benefit ot so few••• be ..Sd.
Pattlnaon, wbo vlalted th•
aceneofthecruhthatinjuredtwo
persons, aald be hat not yet bad a
chance ta ult alrport owner Art
Nerlotoprobiblttheni1btnlpts.
He said that if agreement wtth
Nerio la not forthcominf, be
would aak the cl cy council to take
step• to halt nilht operaUona at
Meadowlark.
Nerio, who could not be
reached for comment today, pre·
Gates Accused
vloualy has opposed cloatn1 the-
airl)ortatnt(hl.
Patllnaon said that three
crubta bave occurred ai or near
the airport •Ince Au1. 1 and they
all have bapPened at nilhl.
Pat.tli\SOll. added that he thinks
the runway t. too abort and the
area IS ·too coa•estid to permit
niJ,ht flllbta. 'l'm'fD-favor'ot t\lrnlnl off all
the runw~ ll&bta, ''he declared.
That proposal has been op.
. -
Wonian ·PriSoner
By TOM BARLEY
Ot ... 0..1,P!MtltaH
Oran1e County Sheriff Brad
Gates was accused today of prac-
licl ng discrimination a1alnst
women prisoners serving sen-
tences at the county jail in Santa
Ana.
Cop's Brother
Attorney Lawrence Buckley
claims In h.ia Superior Court
la wauit that also names the coun·
ty Board or Superviaora as-defen-
dants that male prisoners ace be·
in& elven benefits denied to
women inmates.
SherifC Gates' secretary com·
Teem Slay Man
To Shoiv 'Courag~'
MIAMI <AP) -A aana ot
teen••era from .. mlddle-clus
nei1hbc1rhoo4 W'llo boasted that
they had the courage to kill lured
a postal worker into a home,
murdered him, dumped bis body
in a canal and took bis car on a
joy ride, officials Hy.
''These children certainly
thought out what they were 1oing
to do and didn't hesitate," said
Metro homicide Detective David
Simmons. "On prior occasions
some of these juveniles and their
friends boasted about havlq enough courage lo kill someone.
The way they did it wu quite
brutal." •
Police said an uninvolved
teena1er who had beard sketchy
accounta of the murder called
police.
An unidentified 16-year-old boy
was char&ed with flnat-dearee
murder In the slayin& of John
Henry Sime, 37, of Hialeah, a
Ex-BB Aide ·
Hospitalized
Alier Tnmhie
postal woriter-. whose brotbu
Glenn Shne bas . w~n ,.._.r.i
honors 'u a pohcenun in
Hialeah.
Another 17-year-old boy has
been cbar1ed with beinl u ac·
ceasory by helptn1 d.iapose of the
body in a canal. Police said a
number of other teena1ers, aaed
14 to 18, were being sought and
some alao would be cbaraed with murder. The ldentitles of the
youths were withheld because of
their ages.
Police said they did not know
whether the teenagers knew John
Slme's brother was a policeman
but that at least one of the boys
knew the victim.
Simmons said the teeoa1ens,
all from the same neilbborboocl plotted Sime's death, then u;i
the body with electrical cord,
hurled it into the water and
dumped t1res and crates of dead
chicken remains on the body to
camouflage it. They used the vie·
tim '• cac for joy-riding until they
wrecked lt. police sald.
Simmons said that evidence
showed the )'OUDPterl want.eel lo
rob Sime but aJao planned to kill
him fromtheatart.
Police said the teena1ers used
Sime'• car to attend partlea and
socialize with frienda In the
neltbborhood. But they 1m••hed
the car Into aeveral trees durlnl
heavy rain Thanks1lvln1 Day
and abandoned th• wreck.
Police stopped and questioned
some of the youths but they de·
nied behll int.ht car.
The car traced back to SJme,
who btad been reported ml.ulna
by hi• brother. •
The body wu found Fnday by
an elderly man wbo waa dump-
inl tr uh near tbO canal:
•
•
meitt to condemn 41 movies
shown at the Roner Plaza theater m the 1a1t t.-o years to be ob-
scene and without redeellllDI social value. ...
lf the jury reaches that t'erdict
lt will pan Cbe way for the city to
cloae the theater. A rulinl ol ob--sceility Would al.lo lead Clancy to
uk tbe jury to aueat dam..-
•8•lnlt the 11.ltcben brothers.
(flee X·RA'l'.BD. Pap AJ)
A.I OAll.Y PILOT HIF
Stork
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -An EaypUan
woman gave birth to a healthy aeven·pound bOy today
while traveling.on a. Sabena Boetn1.1il..lllah,.Jr0m -
New York to Brussels, the Belgian nationaf airlines
reported.
A gynecologist who happened to be aboard the
plane delivered the baby with the aid of a stewardess
and a steward. The infant. who was named Jimmy,
was born about 74 miles south of Dublln, Ireland.
The mother, Mrs. salem·Makker, was en route to
Cairo to be with her husband. When the plane landed
at Brussels airport, mother and son were driven to a
nearby maternity hospital.
Officials said the stewardess will probably be the
baby's godmother.
County Names New
Transit Director
By KATHY CLANCY
GI .. Del,., NeeMatt
Tom Jenkins, director of plan·
niDI and en1ineering for the
Orange County Tranalt Dlatrlct
<OCTD> wu named executive
director of the Orange County
Tran1portat.lon Commission to-
day.
Jenkins, 38, a Miaaion Viejo
resident, succeed• Carol Benson,
who wa.s fired from the com·
mission post earlier this month
after four moot.ha on the Job.
Mn. Benson, .U, at first re·
fused to leave her commission
post with the argument that she
should be given an opportunity to
reply in public lo commission
complaints against her.
Commissioners told Mrs.
Benson they had "lost con·
fidence" in her performance.
Commissioners later oblalned
a court order barring Mrs.
Benson from entering com•
mlsslonofftces.
Jenkins has held bis $33,000.a·
year ocro job for the past 3~
years. He previously worked as a
consultant.
He was hired for the com·
mission post from a list of those
who had originally applied for
the job.
Commissioners agreed to pay
Jenkins $33,000 a year and lo of·
fer him use of a car.
Mrs. Beruson had been paid
$30,000 a year.
The l~month old commission
has review power over transit
and local road build.in& projects.
FroaPageAl
AT&T •••
the courtroom.
The Justice Department's suit
charges AT&T and lta sub·
sidiaries, Western Electric Com·
pany and Bell Laboratories, with
violating Sherman Act ~nlilrusl
laws by attempting and eonsplr·
ing lo monopolize lelecom·
munications service and eqUip-
ment in the United States.
The suit named the 23 Bell
System telephone companies
wholly or partially owned by
AT&T as co-conspirators.
The AT&T network of com·
panies was charged with ob·
structfng interconnection of
other communications com-
panies with AT&T, obstructlne
the interconnection ot customer·
provided equipment and refu.s·
mg to sell terminal equipment to
Bell subscribers.
The govemmenl 's a ult seeka to
have AT&T stripped of its con·
trollin& interest In Western Elec-
tr i c, the world's lar1est
manufacturer ot telephone
equipment. It alao seeka to divest
Western Electric of aome
manufacturing_ .Jsseta to Insure
competition in the production
and 1ale of equipment.
The covernment wants to
separate AT&T's Lonf Ltnes
Department from the 23 opera\.
ina Companle1 "to the extent
ne<Jll~ary tO insure competition •
in elecommunlcaUons ser~ce "
a equipment." / ·#
Dell .. ,.. .........
HIS TRANSFER PUNCHED
Minion VleJo'• Jenkin•
Diet Fraud
Pair Lose
Court Bid .
WASIUNGTON CAP) -lfwo
California men each aenteoced to
90 years in prison for defrauding
some 28,000 would-be dieters out
of more than $160,000 lost their
bid today for U.S. Supreme Court
review of their convictions.
The justices refused lo hear the
appeals of Conrad L . Germain
and Robert W. Kane, whose legal
problems began five years ago
with the mass mailing of an ad·
vertisement that began: ''Want
lo Lose Weight?''
The two and their Hollywood
firm, Outpost Development Com-
pany, were indicted on charges or
sending out a fraudulent ad, the
one in which consumers were told
they could learn a secret weight·
losing regime bf sending in $.5.95.
The federal government
charged that the ad repeated
fraudulent material published in
the dlet·plan booklet.
Specifically, the eovernment
charged that it falsely stated that·
by following the diet plan, "'the
fats in the foods you eat are
changed Into energy instead of
fat."
Also, federal proaecutors
charged that in many instances,
ordered booklets were not mailed
to persons who sent in their $.'5.95,
and that many reqaested refunds
were not honored.
The diet plans were advertised'
as being discovered or devised
by two people -Lydia Feldman
and Brenda Hardy. The govern·
mcnt charged that no such
persons exist. .. •
Germain ~d Kane were con.
vlcted of fraud and sentenced to
90 years each and fined $18,000
each. Their firm allo wu fined
$18,000.
Both have remained fri• pend·
"'" lng appeals. '
DAILY PILOT The diet booklet, In 111ence, In·
structed readers to three tJm• a
day drtnk half a cup Of rrape
juke, half a cup of apple Juice
and a laree mashed banana.
JERUsALEM {AP) -Primo
.Mlnl1ter Menahem Be1tn
formally announced today that
Israel will 10 to Calro next
weekend tor a pnllmlnary peace
coaf erence and Dal!led two
tenlor oftlclala u Ianel'• del·
e1ata.
They are Dr. Ellahu Ben·
Eli11ar, dlrector·1eneral of the
prime mlnilter'• offtce, and Meir
Rosenne, tbe lorelp Mlnlatry'1
legal advtler.
Be1ln made ~ appointment.a
in a speeeh to the Knesset. or
Parliament, dlacuuln1 tbe af.
term atb of Prealdent Abwar
Sadat's blatoric trip to Israel and
Sadat's invitation to all parties ln
the Mldeut dlapute to come to
Cairo to prepare for a•full-d.rea
Geneva peace·conference.
So far, only Isrdl has ac-ce~~~~ disclosed that Sadat's in-... e-ROlllan Statuarg
vitation and Israel's acceptance
were exchanged tbrou1b the
Ecyptlan and llr~U am·
bassadon at the U ted Na-
tiona, A. Eamat Mes ld and
Chaim Heno1, ratbei than
throu1b U.S. embualea br &Q)'
Six pieces of terr a cotta"9tatuary found last
week at Pratka di Mare, a village IS miles
south of Rome, are shown in a photo which
became available Saturday. Archeologiets
who unearthed the lif e-aize figures on the
site of ancient Lavlnum sald the statues
were offerings made by pre-Romans of 25
centuries ago to the goddess Minerva.
" other intermediaries.
In other Mideast develop· menta: Disaster Drill Set
-In Cairo, acUni EIYPllan
Forel1D M.lnlater Butro. Ii. Chatt In F • V-'l J ~:~~:i~tou.:::~::~u::~ 011nta1n uney
the PalHtlne UberaUon~ e,r~=~~tioo. to "ad deleptes )_, S l mu 1 at ed disaster is
PLO 1pokameo have deelaftd acbeduled to strike at. 8 a .m.
their deleaates will not attend tbe Tuesday when a 1cbool bus encb
Cairo meet1n1, but tbere bu ~ at the foot ol an embankment
been no cl1reCt retpome from iJi'Pountain Valley, reautttn11n a
Arafat. variety of injuries t.o 30 people.
A apolceeman for Belln laid But by nl1btfall, all the
Sunday Iarael will not ,0 to Cairo casualties .W be well ud the
1f the PLO does. But ln his wbole.thlna will be over ncept
Kne11et 1peecb the prime for analysU of how emeraency
mlnlater save no tndlcaUon serviceslnvolvedreacted.
whether PLO presence would Fountaht Yalley Fire Depart.
keepthellraellaoutofCalro ment BattJUon Chief Tom
-The Aralt antl-Sadat iront Flreabend, operations officer,
stiffened with an announcement sald the 30 simulated vtctlms wUJ
by Syrian Prelident Halez Aaaad be taken to Fountaln Valley Com·
that he was ready for a recon-munity Hospital and Huntlniton
ciliation with nelghborine Iraq. lntercommunJty Hospital.
"We are all factn1 tile same
dancer," Asaad 1ald, who bu de-
nounced Sadat's unilateral peaee
moves toward llrael.
Assad told a news conterence
that he would penooally attend a
conference of hard-line Arab
leaden in Tripoli, Libya, oo
Thursday.
Barmaid Held
On Gambling
Ring Charges
Ema Joyce Tavares, a Hunt-
ington Beach barmaid, races ar-
raignment Tuesday on bookmak·
ing and conspiracy charges
which police allege are linked to
a lrl-county football betting ring.
Miss Tavares. 46, 1s scheduled
to appear in West Orange County
Court. Records indicate she
turned herself in to Huntington
Beach police Nov. 11 after five
others bad been arrested on
gamblin& charges. She is free on
her own recognizance.
Police have charged that tbe
football betun1 operation wu
pullln& 1n $15,000 a week.
The five ot.bera arrested on
similar gambllnc charces face
arralanment Dec. 1' in West
Oran1e County COUrt. They are
free on •.ooo ball each.
The football bett1n1 alle1edly
was opera~ ln Oran1e, Loi
An1eles and San Dle10 counties.
Body Found
Along Beach
~Victim?
Coast College
Student Board
Member Eyed
The first student represen-
tative to the Cout. Community
College Dlatrtct will be selected
as soon after Jan. 1 u pouible,
trustees have decided. .
The atudent body presidents of
Orange Coast Collect lD Colta
Mesa and Golden West Colle1e ln
HunUniton Beach will be asked
to draw Iota to determine which
colleee wlll select the first
representative.
Spokesman Kevin Moloney
said trustees last week decided
the nm. slx·month term will be
filled by OCC or owe. After that,.
all terms Will be for a full year,
with the fltlt to be ftlled by the
colle1• that loees the lot drawtni
and the second by Co11Wne Com·
munity College. •
A noo·v«IDJ atudent member
muat be added to the board under
a new state law.
Trustees also decided to leave
up to the at.udent leaden of each
college bow they will select their
representative, .Moloney said.
The drill is a test of a new
system, the hospital Emergency
Admlnlstratlon Radio (HEAR),
coordinated by the county.
The bloodied vtcthm ln what Is
called a trla1e exercise will be
made up with true to llfe aore and
wounds by makeup apeclallsts
from the Fountain Valley Hlib
School drama department.
Participating emercency
aeencles will include Pounlaln
Valley Fire and Police Depart-.
ments, Huntington Beach Fire
Department, the state's Office of
Emergency Services, the
American Red Cros1 and the
Orange County Commanlcations
Center operating the HEAR van
which is based at UC Irvine
Medical Ceater in Orqe.
The dlsutu drill will be C!On·
ducted d1rect1y bebiDd Fountain
Valley Hllh School, on Dawson
Street near Slater Avebue and
BuabudStNet.
Chief Fierabend said apec·
tators aren't being dllcouraaed
because io a real disaster
emergency acenctea must. cope
with them.
Heavy ~keper
Kills Boy, 9
NEW YORK CAP) -A 9·year-
old boy who bad cerebral palsy
died of apparent suffocation
when bis mother's boyfriend fell
asleep on top of him, police re-
port.
Pollce said William Brown,
who was 0 about the size ol a a..
year-old," was discovered lYinl
uncooactous under Paul Alex-
ander, 28, in the living room of
the apartment ln the clty'1 Far
Rockaway section, where they
both Uved.
The boy's mother, Teresa
Speller, "5, was ln her bedroom
asleep when bet older eon, Vin·
cent. 16, found the boy and Alex·
ander on tbe couch about 12:30
a. m., autboritlessaid.
,,,.,. P,.e Al
X-RATED •••
Dr. ~ta wood t$1tlfltd today ,
that he c:OWd ftnd not.blot ob-
scene ln other fomu of sexual ac· tivity depleted ln the two Marilyn
Chambers movies.
"Most of this kind of thinl is
foreplay that leadi to reeutar
sexual intercourse, .. he said. "It
IS not unusual and II very com.
monly lndul1ed m by adults."
The wlto••• ntd medlcal
· schools aN tncreutocty -tundq
to the kind ol fUm.s screened It
the Honer Pl.za theater lD an at-•
tempt to enhance the sexual
education ot medical students.
.. Doeton were l••vinl medical
school with praetlully no
knowledge of sex," he aald.
''TheH Ulma have been a
tremendous help to us in correct-
ing that sltuaUon."
Dr. Spoltlwood sald be alSo
sLron1ly recommends couples
experlebclna aexual dlfftculb' lo
view the films viewed by t.oe
jury. The panel of seven women
and five men has seen 17 of the'1
mories coademned by the cit)' u 1 oblcene. ,
CoediJ Vying
For Val,ley's
Junior Miss
Seven senior hJgh school eoeds
will vie for the tiUe of Jwuor
Miss Fountain Valley Thqnday
night. ·
The Juntor Miss Pageant wilt
be1tn at 7:3o p.m. at Los Amigos
High School, 16Se6 Newhope St.,
Fountain Valley.
The Sirls Will be JUdJed on
their scholastic achievement,
mental alertneu, poise, ap·
pearance. creativity and
performance in the competition.
Fountain Valley gJrls compel·
ing in Tb.urada7's pageant are:
Lisa Priester, Barbara Lipot,
Tammy Kahler, Susie Curtia,
Gretchen Radtke, Jane Bell and
Jerren Record.
Tickets are available at the
door for $2 Cor adult.a and $l for
children. ~
,
. ..
J ·all Bitts Against ,
l ~ ;
By 'l'OM BARLEY ty Board of Superv(gors u def en· °' .. ._ NMIUff danta &bat male prisoners are be-
Orange County Sheriff Brad in1 ilveo benefits denied to
Gata wu accused today of prac-women lomatea.
licfn1 discrlmlnaUon aaalnst SberUf Gates• secretary com·
women prisoners .servlne sen-mented today that Gates wu
tencea at the county jail ln Santa boldina a meeting In his omce
Ana. and was not available for com·
Attorney Lawrence Buckley ment oo the Buckley lawsuit.
claims in bia Superior Court Chief Deputy William
lawsuit that also names the coun-Wallace's secretary commented
that Wallace wu bolcllnJ a &neet·
inl wltb county J*IODDel and
·slmllarly was not av.Uable to
comment oot be dlacrlmlnatlon
laaue.
Buckley filed the lawsuit ca behalf of Barbara Dret1ka
Molar. 42, of Anaheim, who wu
recently sentenced to one year in
the county jail after beina con-
victed ol dnll cbarJes .
•
AT&T Loses Bid ,
Antitrust Suit Allowed by CoUrt
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court refused to-
day to thwart government effort.a
to dismantle the American
Telephone and Teleeraph Co.
The justices let stand rulln1s
by a federal trial judge and the
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
here that the Justice Department
may sue AT&T for antitrust
violations.
'foday's action is a majof' vic-
tory for the government in its .at·
tempts to have the antitrust
lawsuit it filed in 1974 reach trial.
AT&T contended that it could
not be sued on antitrust char1es
because it is heavily re1ulated by
the Federal Communications
' MORE AESPON8181UTY
.r UCl'a McO.ugh
Dr.McGa•
Promoted
At UC Irvine
Com mission and slate agencies.
Lecal review of that contention
has postponed any progress in
the government's cue.
In other actions today, the
Supreme Court: ,
-Let stand a lower court's rul·
in& that test pilots in their SOI
cannot be taken off the job slm·
ply because of their age.
-Agreed to review a decision
by New Jeney'• highest ~
that the state has a ri1ht to pro-
hibit the dumping of out-of-state
garbage within its borders.
-Said it would decide whether
the companies that built the
Alaska oil pipeline are entitled to
crude oil transportation prices
that the aovernment cont.ends
are exorbitant.
-Let stand the conviction of a
Louiaville, Jfy .• man who COB·
tends he did not receive a fair
trial because be apparently was
under the influence of drugs in
the courtroom. The Justice Department's suit
cbarees AT&T and its sub-
sidiaries, Western Electric Com·
pany and Bell I.aboratories. with
violating Sherman Act antitrust
laws by attempting and coaspir·
lng to monopolize telecom-
munications service and equip-
ment in the United States.
The suit named tho 23 Bell
(9eeAT&T, Page A!)
FansBa•le ·
One Kilkd Over Ga~ on TV
DENVER (AP) -One person
wn abol to dea\b and two othen wounded ln a dispute about
we~ -the DeDYeJ' ~
Baltimc>re Colts pro football
game on• televialon in a Denver
bar, police said:.
The tbHe peraqns sbot w..ued
to turn co the juke box atti.e An·
bian Bar during the ftnal mtnutes
of Sunday's National Football
Leacue game, officers said.
Broncos fans turned otr the
juke box several times and the
two men and a woman finally in·
vited the three Juke ~x f,ana out·
side to fight. Ponce said one of
the footb8ll fans pulled out a
handgurt and staJ1ett sbobtJn,g.
Richard Savage, 41, was pro-
nounced dead at Denver Generll
Hospital. Gilbert ~ 47, u4
Dorls Deitz, 44, were reported ln
fair eonditl9tl h>ctay at tbe
holp\tal., Police il.ld Richard Garcia, 2',
was armted 1 short tlme latet
for investigation of homicide and
assault. A bartender told reporters that
all involved ln the fight were
regular customers wbo knew
eacb other. There were aboQt ao
persons in tbe Arabian •t the ume
the di'lput.e itarted. The Broncot beat the Colts
27·13 to ao 10.l for tbe ~ea.son, auarantee~e Denver a place in
the ~rt. P.layofta tor the first time in the club's 17~j'ear·
history.
Irvine's Council Sets
ElectWn for March.
I
l
. . •
'
' 1
• I
U ONl. Y PILOT .
Irvine
Two Wood dp VWace CIDO·
dominlum /rojecta totaUn,1 nt
homes an two neithborbood
parka In the nonben:i lrvtne area
of Northwood 0 VlUqe are belnl
submitted for •JIPIWal b)' ~
I"ine Planm .. coautd11loa.. -
The commlulon 11leetlf at 1:30
p.m . Tuesday in City Council
chambers, at city ball, 11200
Jamboree Blvd.
Developer WWiam Lyon Com·
pany ll asldn1 approval of cood.l·
tional use permit.I for 92 COD·
domlnlums on an 8.4·acre site
west ol Jeftrtt7 Road and east of
East Yale Loop, and for l3a COO•
dominiwm on 11.6 acres near
Irvine Center Drive and Jdlrey
Road.
The residential developmenl la
permitted under existing zonlnl. subject to review by the city.
City planning staff recommend
approval of the pennlta.
The neighborhood parb ant
belnf designed by W armiQltoa
Development. They are, rapec.
tinly, 2.6 acres and 8.8 acres.
'fhe smaller park, on Fremont
street, would be next 1-o a_ pro-
posed elementary sc'bOol,, Ptao-
ners recommend that them~
ty or the park be left ID open
landscape until future ecbool
recreational actl\'itlea are
planned; in Irvine, local parka
orten are phuioed in a Jomt use
arrangement with schools.
A tot Jot is proposed for the
northern sec:Uon of the park.
The other park a~ on Lewis
street, is at the crouroacb of two
bicycle traila. A biker's rest
area, with bicycle parkinl racks,
a covered shelter lllld a bench, is
planned.
A tot lot, open fields and 18 ran-
domly sprinkled picnic tables
a lso are propoaed.
Southern boundary rows Of
eucalyptm t.reea would remain.
F,...Pa,,eAJ
PARK •••
border guard towe~.
"I can just see our lltUe uni·
formed policemen euardlng the
entrance to the tower,'' Burt.on
envisioned. the flre depart·
ment periodically running out
there with nets."
Sharon Sircello, a member of
the communiLy aervlcea com-
mission, irritatedly remarked
that the coundl SMmed more
concerned with potential injury
lawsuits than with the park.
"They dldn 't deslfb the Lean-
ing Tower of Pisa thia way," she
complained. "We have made the
world so safe that our children
are out there creating danaer for
themselves just to bring some ex-
dtement into their lives.''
Mrs. Pryor retorted, "Floren·
tine children were subject to a
ereaL deal more danger than our
kids with their tower. Some of
them survived. A great majority
did not."
Burton remarked that a lean·
tog tower m11ht not be such a bad
Idea, havin1 the advantage that
If anyone fell otf they'd at least
fall straight to the ground,
.. rather than bouncl.n1 off the
structure."
The track-and·field discussions
came with the architect's pro-
posal to locate tennis court.a near
Venado School, on school district
property. for joint use by stu·
dent.a and city residents.
To do that, the district had·
asked· that a 75-yard run, Jong
jump pit and shot put plt It had
planned to put there be located
elsewhere in the park.
Siila, a marathon runner,.
thought that inappropriate. Not
many people, be said, practice
either the long jump or the abot
put.
"I don't know IJIYone in the Cl·
ty of Irvine who owna bis own
shot put," Silla declared,
Shot pd entbualaat WooUett .
meekl~alaed hl• haod, sll<l, ••My s put la eurrent!f alttlni
tn the ei ball atrium.• ht he
conceded be hadn't worked out
wlth lt al.nee 1968.
~ ,:t> -
Farrah Fa~-Major& is shown with h• mother, Mrs.
Pauline Faw~ett~ at a party in ~~ actrb•' honor hi New
York. 'lbe former ••Aneel" $~work on het'DeW mov·
ie, "~me}>odr tmled Her Hysband, tt jhls w~k.
•
. ..
:\JE~M (AP) -Prtme -ID Cairo, acUnc El)'ptlan
llh,lite• Menahem Beclft Forel10MiniltcBu1rolB. Gball
fonnall1 annouaeed Way tbat eonftrmecttbat an tmttatacm bad
ltrael wlll co to Cairo next been1enttoYulrArafat,beadol weehnd for a preUmlnaey peace tb e Paleatlne Ll ber atlon
conference and oamed two·"' OrpntzaUon, to aend deleptei
semor ontdala u Jarael '1 del· ·to CaJro.
e11ta. PLO apoteamen baH deelared Th•I are Dr. Ellatiu Bea. thelrd.eluattewtllnotat.t.ndtbe
EJ"8ar, dlnctor·coneral of the Cairo meetlni, but there hu
prisne mlnllter'a office, and Meir been no direct response from Roaenne, the Foreip Mlnlstry'1 Arafat.
Je1al adviler.
· Be1ln made the appointments A 1potesmmi for Befm said
lo a •PMCb to the Kneuet, or Sunday Israel will not 10 to Cairo
Parliament. discualln1 the af. if the PLO does. But tn bis
termath of President Anwar Kneuet 1peecb tbe prime
Sadat'• hiatoric trip to llrael and
Sadat'a lnvitaUon to all parti• tn
. ' .. -.... ,.. ........... _ ~ .
minister aave no · lndlcat1on
whether PLO preatnce would.
keep Ute llreeU. out of Cairo.
-The Arab ~tl·Sad•t front atiffenecl with an cnouncement
by s111..., President Jraf 11 Aasad
• that he was ready for a recon-
ctllaUOti wltb netgbbotinc Iract.
.. Wt are all f ac~ the same
dancer," Auad said, who baa de-
nounced Sadat's unilateral peace
moves towud Israel.
Aaaad told a news COb.ference
that he would pefl()Dall.y attend a
conference of i.ard·llne Arab
leaden In Tripoli, IJbya, on
Thursday.
the Mtdeut dispute to come to
Cairo to prepare for a full-drela
Geneva peace-conference.
So far, only Israel bu ac·
cepted.
Beein dlacloled that Sadat's in·
vitatlon aJtd Israel'• acceptance
were excbanfed tbrou1h the
E1yptlan and Israeli am-
baaudon at the United Na-
tio"', A. Eamat llecuid and
Cba1m Henog, rather than
through U.S. embusles or any
other intermediaries.
Viejo Resident Set.
For Tiramit Board
In other Mideast develop.
meats:
B1DTBYCIANCY °' .. ....,.......... .......
'
Nlgl,t . ~lights .to End?,
I • • ' •
Tom JenJdna, d1rector of p..,..
nin1 and en1lneertn1 for the
Orange County Transit District
<OCTD) wu named executlv.
director ol tbe Oranae Counb'
TrauportatloD Commiltloo to-
day.
Jenkins, 38, a Mission Viejo
resident, succeeds Carol Benson.
who wu fired from the com·
mlsalon post earlier thla month
after four months on the job.
Bmt'tihgton Mayor ·µaonches Safety Effort
By aoaEaT BAaKE& Ci .. .....,~
Hunt.lutoo Beach Mayor Ron
Pattln.aoo aald todaY he would try
to b alt nl.gbt fly inc at
Meadowlark AirpOrt folloWUlll a
crash near the private alrfltld
Wedneld&1nlcht. ..
Pattin.saQ add that he doesn't
want to~ tbe facility. lie just
wants DiSbt fllahtl ba,lted. -
"I don't think that it b rtcbt to
· jeopardize th!? safet,)' of 10 many
fok' ~ be:neflt of so few,•• he Hid.
Pattinson, who vlalted Ute
• aceneaftbtcramthat~•adtwo
persona, Hid he bu~ ytt bad a
cbanu to ask all'lM*t owner Art
Nerio tollriJUhtfthe.lll&htfliibtl.
He 841d \,llat~ acreementJ1vith
Ne fl t\Ol lorthcomlnf, be
wou.ld. Ilk the cf '7f council to take
etepa toJWt nl&ht OlllllraUona at
Meadowlark. , Nerio, who could not be
reacb.44 for eomment today. pre-
Stork Soars
BabY Bom on 7 47 Fl:ight
BRUSSBLS, Belgium (AP) -An EgypUan
women gave birth to a healthy seven-pound boy today
while traveling on a Sabena Boeinl 74' flight from
-New Yark to Brussels, the Belgian national atrllnes
reported.
A gynecologist who happened to be aboard the
plane delivered tbe baby with the aid of a stewardess
alld a steward. The infant, who was named Jimmy,
was bom about 74 miles south of Dublin, I~eland.
The motber, Mrs. Salem-Makker, was en route to.
Cairo to be with her husband. When the plane landed
at Brusaels airpOrt, mother and son were driven to a
nearby maternity hospital. Officials said the stewardess will probably be the
baby's godmother.
EX:.Newport .. Chief
Won't 'Seek Oflii:e
Former Newport Bffcb pollce
chief B. Jam• Glavu tald today
he baa decidec! not to seelt the
74th Assembly Dt.strict seat for
•'purely aelflab" reasons.
Glavas said earlier thlJ lall be
was c~ qmning a1atmt Ma~lao Ber«eaon for. the
Republican nomlnaUon foi-.the
eeat curremly held by l>fmocrat Ro~ Cofdava:
However, the tetlred eblef tald
he baa decided he doesn't want to
spend his time ralaln1 tunds and
... kin.votM.
viously has opposed elosina the
airport at night.
Pattinson aald that three
crashes have otturred at or near
the airport since Au1__.,1 . and they
all have happened at maht.
Pattinaon added that be tb1nb
the runway ls too abort and the
area is too con1ested to permit
night ruetits. 'Tm in favor of turning off all
the runway lights,'' be declared.
That proposal bas been op-
posed lo the put by those who
favor keepinl the liahts Ob to
handle emertency lanclinp.
The airport bu lotil been the
source of controversy.
' Nearby restdentl claim that It
is unsafe and have demanded its
closure. Nerio and pilots have
fou1bt to keep It open.
. City official.a aay that their
hands are tied because the
airfield ls Hcenaed by the
California Department of
Transportation which had held
that the airport is safe.
City Attorney Don Bonfa said
the city_ does have an ordinance
prohlbUJni nlcbt ftylng, but had·
deemed it unenforceable ln U&ht
of previous court decisions.
Airport opponents say they
may seek a court injunction to
halt fllpts unW it can be de·
termine&i if the airport ls safe or
not.
. Tom Uvengood, a member of
the city's airport committee,
blamed th6 city for its .aoDlna
policies 9'bich permit develop-
ment near the airport.
In Wednesday iUpt'a crub, a
Ces~na 150 reportedly I01t power
altar takeoll and hit power lines
near tbe airpQrt at Bolsa Chica
Street and Warner Avenue.
It cruh·landtd in a vacant
field about three mllu !tom the
airport.
Mrs. Benson, "· at llnt re-fU1ed to leave her commlalkm
post with the arcwnent that lbe
should be ovea an opportunity to
reply fn public to commllalon
com plaints aca.lnat her.
commuraro11ers totd 111'1.
Benson they bad .. lost coo·
fidence" in her performance.
Commlaionen later obtained
a court order barrlnf Mrs.
Benson from enterlnf com·
mission offtces.
Jenkins bu beld bis $.13,000.a·
year OCTD Job for the past 3~
years. He previously worked as a
consultant.
He wu hired for the com·
mi.salon J)Olt from a Ust of those
who had orilinallY applied for
the Job.
Commisaioaen aJJ'ffd to pay
Jenklm $33.000 a year pd tool·
fer him uaeol a car.
Mrs. Benson bad been paid
$30,000 a year.
The to.month old commlulort
bu re\llew power over tram.it
and local road buildhls projects.
F,...PogeAJ
X-RATED ••• • foreplay that leada to relUlar
sexual intercourse," be said. "It
II not unualUll aod ll very com-
monly lndulced in by adul~."
The witne11 aald medical
schoola are increasln'1Y turnlne
to th., kind of fUma screened at
the Honer Plua theater ln an at-
tempt to enhance the sexual
educaUon of medical students.
"Docton were leaving ipedical
school with practically no
llnowled1e of sex," be said.
"These film1 have t, .. n a
tremendcltls help to us in correct·
iDI that situation.''
Dr. ~ood Hid be also
1troo1ly retommends CO\lples
experiencing sexual dlfflculty to
view the films viewed by 4.oe
Jury. The panel Of seven women
and flvemeahaa seen 17of the41
movies coademmd t>Y the city u
obffeoe. 1
....., ................
HIS TRANSFER PUNCHED
Mlallon Vlefo'• Jenkin•
Arson Blamed
In IBM Fire
SAN JOSE (AP) -Plre ot~
ficlala say an anonist 1et a Sl
mlllton blaze ln a four·•tor.Y
bulldJna bouainl mM offices. •
Fires were iplted early Su.Jl ...
day cm two floors of the bulldiq.
according to Ca.ptalo Ron
Del1ado ot the San Jos~ ~
Department.
One blue was set on the ftm
floor in an IBM offtce that con· 1 tained $3 milllon worth of spare
computer and typewrlter parts,
Del1ado aald. The second be1an
on the fourth Ooor in an at-
tomey'aofflce.
Y lndiaJi Maidens
Planning Boutique
Hand·crafted items, cooki~.
cupcakes and refreshments will
be sold at a holiday boutique Dec.
3 to ralae money for Irvine's Y·
Indian Maidens, an or1anlzation
for gltls in 1rades one throuah
three.
The children and their mothers
will be distinguishable from
donors to the day-lone sale;
The7'll be the ones in Indian COS·
tumes. It's at the Alpha Beta
aboppiJil center at Culver and-
Mlebelsondrives.
On top of that,
!lHt•m ru1bt1 cover
tbe Cartbbun lalandl -,
Puerto Rleo, JamalH, J rr
Martinique, th• Vlr1ln • , • · · !t{ ~!~ttc~~:'~1~~n tO Bermuda, th• Bahaa.11. Mexico ~:.
Clty and Acapulco. ·" ··
THE FINAL PRICB DEPENDS ON what oomblnaUon
of eltla you put to1ether -1-.,11 tu rat.ta .,.. hither on
lDternaUonil fllChta -bt4 th• mc1t you would pay la 8323, the mtnt.mwn, $299.
Exchldi.nJ tho verboten CanadJan datlnaUOna, ~ hav.
101 ctUestoc~from.
Tbere'I always some ktnd of catch to ber1aln rates,
ri1bt? 1'hei'e are catctiu MN. too: Eutem naturally
doon 't want It.a reaular puaencen -ea1, travellnc '> • talttmen -to be able to use U\11 f U"t. SO there art tbese ~
condlUan1: 1; :r.
• ' t· :
---lCOlJ~~ FLY-ALONE. You mmt be accom· l · ·
panled by anOther adult <for the enUN trip>. or an &dlllt can • Oy wttb twothlldren Ca chUd'a Ucket eottl .,.tweeo GOO and
$215).
-You muatatop over ln at leaat tbree clUu. -You must reserve and buy your Uckttt at leut 1'
day1 in advance.
-Your trip must be at least seven daya and no more
than 21 daya.
&ven with thMe reatrtctlonl, you can '"quite a bltoftbe
world for $.10(). •
HOW HAS IT WORICED OVT 90 far? Eaatem reports
that befon the rare went into effect, It ha4 mo.r• tban 5,000
bookings. M of Nov. l , It tlad accepted mpr• than 40,000
bookln.p-and U,000 had alread>' flown.
NEW YORK (A Pl -The atoc:k market Ju.stained a mild
setback today on the new a ot a record U.S. t.r&de deficit last
month. The Dow Jones aver.,• of ao IM.ustrtai., up e.tt poiftta
lut week. dropped back 4.SS t.o839.57.
toeers held a T·5 lead over 1atnen amont Nt York
Stock Exchan1•U.ted luues. Volume waa 11.57 million
sbJre•.
. -· . IV'ENIHG . 1.-001~ H!W8 •
"H'a A Small Wend"
G Tti-= AVENGERS Emma man1M Steed, Whc>
IMoofnN. proud father.
I MICKI\' MOUU CW8
8UPERMAH .
"Tin Hero" G VILLA ALEGRE
5:15 I 8UAME 8TREET 5:$0 ABC NEW8
BEWn'CHED
"Thet W• No Chick. That Wu
MyW"-''
• ADAM-12
"Trouble tn The Bank"
• HODOE.POOOE LOOOE "Natur. From A-r· (Part 1) "°°I C88 NEWS
:ENCVONB
At great coet to their egoa, the
paramedlca endur9 kidding at
the station and ho9pltal when
they buy a Junked 1932 fl,.
qtne. • 0 NFL FOOTBALL
The Buffalo Biiia wtll take on the
Oakland Raider• at the County
CollMUm.
IJMOVIE **'A "Then Came Bronaon''
(19e8) Michael Parka, Bonnie
Bedella. A runaway bride meeta
another aoul-... rcher at Big
Sur when he arrive. on hi•
motorcycle. (2 hn.)
• THE BRADY BUNCH
The Brady kid• eudl1fon their
act for a televtllon amateur .now. q) THE ROOKIES
A rookie cop atruggfea with a
grim r..Uty when he lhoota
down en unarmed auapect. tB FOOOSFORTHE MODERN FAMILY
"Quick Breada"
8:159 PLEDOE BREAK
Regularly acheduled program-
ming may be delayed due to
pledge break•.
8:26 E OVER EASY
Ofcl( Shawn; steep patterns,
Insomnia and snoring; employ-
ment Mrvk:es.
8:308 MOVIE * *~ "Stranger On The Run"
(1967) Henry Fonda, Michael
Parka. A murder auapec:t fa
rvthlesaly hunted by a New
Mexico tawman, unconc:er~
with hi• guflt or fnnooanoe. ( 1
hr., 30 min.)
• MY l>tREE SONS
Robbie tak .. on a heavy wor1t-
load of walHng on tables and
other c:hot9e IO th•t he can
rent a room Wlay from home. GD FAMILY PORTRAIT
"Economlca In Marrtege"
Cl) C88NEWS
7:00 II NBC NEWS
8 UARSCLUB
G) ILOVELUCY
"Jealous Of Glr1 Dan<*" m AOAM-12
A apllled bottle of perfume In
their car algnala a bad day for
the ottloeB. 6B MACNEJL I LEHRER
REPORT
.• t.·
Jackie Gleason and the HoneytDoone'rs 'present ~ version
of "A Christmas Carol" that Dickens never dreamed of
tonight at 8 on ABC, Channel 7. From left are Jean Kean.
Audrey Meadows, Gleason and Art Carney.
8i) YOGA wrTH MAOEUNE
Cl) TO TEll THE TRUTH
7:30 D GOVERNMENT: A PLUS
OAAMINU8? D NEWLYWED GAME
• THE BRADY BUNCH
Greg geta caught am<*Jng by
his afsten who tell their
parenta.
G) L.Er8 MAKE A DEAL
9 LA. INTEACHAHGE
"Popcorn" The premJere of
KCEra new WMknlghtJy news
and publJc anan progr.,,, fea-
tures a potpourrt of nev.r-
befor-.aeen-on-t8'evlalon tilma
and vtdeotape9. 8i> FRENCH CHEF
"Meat Loaf Masquerade" (R)
(l)--t1GO,OOO NAME THAT
TUNE
8:00 8 (I) C88 MOVIE
"Return Of The Incredible
Hulk" (Premiere) Biii Bixby, Lou
Ferrigno. The further adwn-
tures or David Bruce Banner, a
scientist whoH radiation
experiment• turned him Into a
homeleu wanderer and raging
beast looking tor a cure for the
ray's monatroua effect•. D LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRA1RIE
"Meet Me At fhe Fair?" At tl'le
Man~o fair: Caroline'• pickles
win flrat prtze; Laure 11 taken by
a pea game artlat; Mary II
Ratings Guide
IMIMe -r.tH -Cc.onllftg te llO•
oftke ~· MOvlft -TV ere !IOllOed Ill' • utk.) * * * * -Excellent * * • -Very Good
• • -Good * ., -Fatr
* -Poor
I Laguna/Soot
VOL. 70, NO. 332, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
By TOM BARLEY oe• Mty f't!MIUlf
Orange County Sheriff Brad
Gates was accused today of prac·
tictnc discrimination against
women prisoners aet"Vfng sen·
tencea at the county jail ln Santa
Ana.
AUorney Lawrence Buckley
claim• in hia Superior Court
lawsuit that also names the coun·
that WaU.ace waa boldlnl a meet·
tng with county personnel and
·similarly wu not available to
comment ont be dlacriJPlnatloo
ilsue.
Buckley filed the lawsuit on
belaalf of Barbara Dret1ka
Molar, C. ol ~, wbo wu recently aentencecl to one year ln
the county Jail after beinl COO•
Yicted otdru& cbaraea.
AT&T Loses-Bid
Antitrust Suit Allowed by Court
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court refused to-
day to thwart government efforts
to dismantle the American
telephone and Telegraph Co.
The justices let stand rulings
by a federal trial judge and the
U.S. Circuit Court or Appeals
here that the Ju.slice Department
may sue AT&T for anlitf\4st
violatlom. .
Today's action is a major vic-
tery for the government in its at·
tempts to have the antitrust
lawsuit it filed in 1974 reach trial.
AT&T contended that it could
not be sued on antitrust charges
because it is heavily regulated by
the Federal Communications
Commlsalon and state acencles.
LeJal review of tbat contenUon
has postponed any proareu ln
the government's case.
In other actions today, the
Supreme Court:
-Let stand a lower eourt'Oul·
ing that test pilots in tbelr fOs
cannot be taken off the Job aim·
ply because of their age.
-Agreed to review a declatoo
by New Jersey's hi1hnt court
that the at.ate bas a right to pro-
hibit the dumplna of out-of -state
garbage within lta borden.
-Said it would deetde whether
the companies that built the
Alaska oil pipeline are enUtled to
crude oil t.ranape>rlatlon prices
Fans Battle·
One Kill.ed Over Game on TY
DENVER CAP) -One person
was shot to death and two othen
wounded in a dispute about
watching the Denver Broncos•
Baltimore Colts pro football
game on a television in a Denver
bar, police said.
The three persons shot wanted
to turn on the juke box at the Ara·
bian Bar dW'ing the final minqtes J I or Sunday's National Football
League game, officers said.
Broncos rans turned off the
juke box several times and the
two men and a woman finaUy in·
vited the three juke box fans out·
side lo figbl Police aald one of
the football fans pulled out a
handgun and started aboollne.
Richard Savage, 41. was pro-
nouncecl dead at Den.er GeDerll
Hospital. GUbei't Lopea, 41, dd
Doria Dell&. , reDar1«1 lrl
fair eondltlen to ay~"'1ati~tfle boapital. .
. Police said Rlcbd Garcia. M,
was arrested a 1bott time later
for investiptkle ot Monilcicle ad
aauull . t:
A bartenda' told "porters that
all involved ln ~fiPt were regular cuatome who blew
each other. There ere about 30
persons ln the Arab at th• tlme
the dlspt.lte etartec.t. The Broncos t the Colts
27·13 to io 10.1 fo the season,
guaranteeinl Den r a place In
the NFL plaYoffl 01' tbe tint
time ln the clu '1 17-year·
history.
Suspects Captur~Q,
f
.In Lag4na Bur,gl<g:y
Two bureJary auspeetJ, who
police believe used a rubber
mallet to break Into a Laauna
Beach shop early tbla momln1,
were captured momenta later by
sheriff's deputies near Crown
Valley Parkway.
Deputies arrer.ed Richard Al·
ten Crook, 32, and brother Roaer
M. Crook, 28, both of San Diego
County, shortly att.r the 2:50
a.m. barglary at tbe Radio
Shack, est North Coast HlehW&J.
La1una Beach Police Sat.
Dave Avers said otflcen believe
the two brothUi •ed a larc•
rubber mallet to bRak ID a 11-
doOr at tM atereo 1bop, ltat'b\I
minutes lat.er with tout cw.sen
band radio aeta, three or tour
A
that the eovemment contends
are exorbitaot ..
-Let stand tbe convlctlon ~a
Loulavtlle. Ky., man wbo con·
tends he did not reeelve a fair
trial beuuae be apparently wu
under the influence of druaa in
the courtroom.
The Justice Department's suit
ch.araea AT&T and ill sub·
sicllaries, West.em Electric Com-
pany and Bell Laboratories, with
vlolatlnl Sherman Act antitrust
law1 by attemptinJ and consplr-
inl to monopolise telecom·
munlcatioaa eervice and equip-
ment ln the UDii.d States.
The 1ult named tbe 23 Bell
(SeeATAT, Pace.U)
A )Ollbg woman'• body found
Saturday along a lonely stretch
of Coast Highway -north o1
Laauna Beach may have ~
the victim ~ a drul overdoiee,
Oran•e County coroner's of·
flclala said tbday. ·
The unidentified woman was
described as about 23 years oldt
flte feet. flve inches tall and
welcbing about 120 poundt.
Coroner's officials said the
woman bad a tattoo or flowers•·
circliDfberleft wrist.
She waa wearinc a blue Jacket,
, blue jean pant& and black boots.
Coroner's offlclall said the ex·
act c;ause ol death ii under in·
veatlfatklft. 'l'bey said, however,
the victim appeared to have been ~umped at Smaahlne Cove by the
roadalde by 10meoM wbo ctJdn't
want tog~ lnvalved in her death.
While follts ln other parts Qf the nation
were freezing their tootsies, this family of
fishermen was enjoying an outlnJ on
Newport Bay Sunday in ahirtlseeve
weather. Continuing Santa Ana wind COD·
ditlon wlll mean continuihg, unseasonably
high temperatures along the Orange
Coast, tbe weatherman say,. To see how
toll<,a elsewhere are doing, tee Pages A3
and A4.
BRUSSELS, Belgium CAP) -An Egyptl&D
woman gave birth to a he4Jthy seven-poundbOy today
wblle ·traveling on a Sabena Boeing 147 fliaht from "
New York to Brussels, the Belalan nationaf airlines
reported.
A gynecologist who happened to be aboard the
plane delivered the baby with the aid of a Ste~ardesa
and a ·~~ard. The inlant. who was named Jimmy,
was born about 74 miles aouth of Dublin, Ireland.
The mother, Mrs. Salem-Miller, w• en route to Cairo to be with her husband. When the plane land~d
at Brussels airport, mother and SOD were drtwn t4 a
nearby materirlty hospital.
Officials said the stewardesS Will probably, be the
baby's godmother .•
.
Teewi Slii,y _ Man
'Eo Show 'li:Qura;ge'
It. 15-,ur-old WbltUer JOUth
wu arrested iD Lacuna Beach
Sunday after police received
compralnts of two purse
111atelllnC inctdentt within mo-
ments of each other.
A wmpan told offtcera a 10una
mall tried to tirab her purse ~
Cout Hipway and MYrtle Street.
at about u:ss a.m., but failed
when. ~.diOPPod biJ &UDalaues
on the ;round. ,
Filteeb minutes later, Ruth
Hutfm_, 458 Cliff Drive, aald
abe lOlt bet purse to a youn1 bin·
dit wtM> fled 01.1 toot with the
woman'tii bbtl)Urlult.
Hu! PQrtet minus #SO worlb of prescrlptioir ituaes, wu fowMl
mo~enit i;ter by a passerby •
• Tlie teen~•~ IP>~ u hour
later near Qilqulta Street by Of. ncer Lbida Pblllips, wbo erreat·
edbiD) witboutlncident:
The 1~ter was· eha~
with ~~ 1t.Olell propert.J
and "'o COUnta of attempted. fOb::
bery and turned over to the custodyot~mother.
JI.I DAILY PtLOT
Hughes
Will Case .
Trial S'et
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) -
Trlal betan today on a com.
plicated question that could de-
cide the fortunes of aome reJ.
atives or Howant Huthet aodo( a
youne man In Utab who ,.,. be
once1aveaweahbJreclaMartde
in the Nevada desert. Tbe c ... la •
expected to laat six to eiabt
months.
Tbe question is the Yalldlty of the so-called "Mormon Wtn .. -a
three-page bartdwrttten docu.
ment dated March 19, 1"8, and
purportina to be the Jut will and
testament ol Hughes, wbo lived
at the time in a penthouse suite of
a Las Ve1Ja5 hotel.
Tbe penon orrering the will for
probate ln Clute County District
Court Is Noah Dietrich, once the
closest aide to Hughes before a
fallln1 out in the 19508. Dietrich
wu named executor lD the will.
The molt lntJitulnt bequest lD the wm b to llel\'ln ,Dummar,
wbo waa a service atatlon
operator in Willard, Utah, when
the will bJr'Ded up about three
weeka after Hu&hes died April S,
19"16. The will leaves Dummer
one· sixteenth of Hughes 's estate.
The will makes little mention
or Hu1hes's relatives but leaves
part of Hughes 's estate to the
Howard Hughes Medical Foun·
daUon in Florida, several un-
iversities, the Mormon Church
and Dumrnlar.
At the trial, Dietrich's at-
torney, Harold Rhoden of Bever-
ly Hills, ls expected to p~t
handwriting experts who will say
Hughes wrote the will. Rhoden ia
also expected to call Dammar to
testify.
The relatives of Hughes say the
Mormon Will ia a forgery, and
that they have handwritinJ ex-
perts who will tesWy to that.
Oum mar at first denied having
had any knowledge of the will
before it mysteriously surfaced
a t the headquarters of the
Mormon Church. But later he
said that the will was delivered to
his service stalion by a stranger
on April Z7, 1976, and admitted
that be was the one who delivered
it to the church offices. The ad·
mis sion came after the FBI
found his thumbprint on the en·
velope that contained the will.
Dummar denied writing the
will or knowing who did,
however.
As to why he was named in the
will, Dummar says he picked up a bedraJ~ o..a • cn••·'ID'IUile
Nevadai14 rt aboutl~fft"91•10
and gave m a ride to Las
Vegas. The man identlfled
himself as Hughes and apparent·
ly waa grateful, Dummar has
said.
&NB Chief
Bma Outof
Assembly Race
f'ormer Newport Beach police
chlef B. Jamea Glavas said tod4lY
he bas decided not to seek the
74tb Assembly District aeat for
"purely selflab .. reasons.
Glaves said earlier Ulla fall be
was conslderlng nmnlnl against
Marian Bergeson for the
Republican nominaUon for the
seat currently held by Democrat
Ron Cordova.
However, the retired chief saJd
be ba& decided be doean '( want to
spend bis time raislni funds and
seeking votes.
"I'm goine to spend a little
lime catering to my own needs
and desires," Glavas said. "l
just thought I owed a little bit to
myself end my wife."
He said that, at thla time, be
does not Intend to acUvely back
any candidate tn the election.
Imtead. Glavu aald he wtn be
worttnc oa bis boat, which be
deambed aa ·~a yaebt."
lD addition, be will continue to
be _4Cthe as chairman of the
ata" Ol'lanlsed Crime c.ootrol
Comanlaalon.
Santa's Here
Santa Claus arrived in San Clemente over the holidtly
weekend, riding on board an old fire engine with young
friends. He will be available to children for pre-
Cbristmas counselini in the Emporium at the Old City
Plaza, lll W. Ave. Palizada. His schedule is available
by calling Pacific Shore Realty, 492-5300.
l'roraPageAJ
GANG •••
hurled it into the water and
dumped tl~ and craw of dead
chicken remains on the body to
camouflage it. They used the vie·
tim 's car for joy.riding untU they
wrecked it, police said.
Simmons said that evidence
showed the youngsters wanted to
rob Sime but also planned to kill
him from the start. ·
Police said the teenagers used
Sime's car to attend parties and
socialize with friends in tbe
neighborhood. But they smashed
the car into several trees during
heavy rain Thanksgivlnc Day
and abandoned the l'J'eck.
Police stopped and questioned
some of the yoat.hs but they de·
Died being in the car.
'ProBpector'
Strikes Out
DENVER <AP) -
Rosana Vigil says she was
on her way t.o mail a letter
when a man rushed up,
pried open ber mouth and
yanked out her falae teeth.
Mrs. VlgU, 60, told
pohce, "He sald, °There
ain't no gold here, so here's
your teeth, and be gave
'em back." Loula Bendy, 39, wu ar·
rested and booked for ln·
vestigat.ion of assault and
theft, police said.
North Campus
Overseer TogJ
Board Agenda
Saddleback CoUeie trustees
will be asked tonight to autboriie
the hirine o( a conatrucUoo
manager to guide the develop-
ment of their new northern cam·
pus.
Trustees are being uked to ap-
prove a contract with C. V.
Holder, Inc., at a fixed fee of
$162,500. The fee is 6.~ percent ol
the estimated budiet tor the proj-ect.
Trustees previously aereed to
develop the campus throqh a
cons ructJon manaaement pro-
if am. nus allows the trustees t.o
act as general contractor and
piece the project together
themselves with the advice of the
construction manaier.
Trustees also will be asked to
award three contracts totalling
'63,284 for work to be done in r:e·
modeling the colle1e'1 library.
In other aeUon, trustees will
consider a calendar for the prep.'
Jratfon of tbelr bud1et for the next fiscal year and a contract'
with the collece's chapter of the
California School Employees As·
aoclation.
The ~ • bualness meeting
will beain at 1:30 p.m. in the col·
lege's library. However, trustees
will meet in a public session at 7
p.m. to hear a repon from tb•
colJege 's Divl.11011 ot Counaellnl.
County Names Ne:w
Transit Director
By KATHY CLANCY Of .. Dljfy ..........
I
Tom Jenk:im, director of ptan.
nine and enctneerin• tor the
Orange County Transit District
<OCTD) was named uecuUve
director of the Ora111e ~
Transportation Commlulon to-
day.
JERUSALEM <AP) -Prime
Mlnlater Menahem Beein
formally annOUDe~ today that
Israel wlll go to Cairo next
weekend ror a prelbnlnary peace
conference and na1Ded two ·
senior oftlclala u 1arael'1 del·
esate1.
They are Dr. Ellahu Ben·
Ellasar, director-1eneral of the
prime mln.later'1 office, and Meir
Roeenne, the Foreip Mlniltl')''S
le1al adviser.
Be1ln made the appolntmenla
ln a apeecb to the Kneaaet, or
Parliament. dlscuasin1 the af.
terp:tath of President Aowar
Sadat's historic trip to Jara el and
Sadat's invitation to an parties ln
the Mldeaat dlaput• to come to
Cairo to prepare for a full-dreaa
Geneva peace-conference.
'romP.,,eAJ
X-RATED •••
jury. ..It's common amon1
animals as anyone wbo has spent
any time around a monkey caae'
will quickly confirm."
Dr. Spot.tswood is the final de·
fense witness in a trial based on
legal action taken by the city ot
Santa Ana against brothers
James and Artie Mitchell.
City attorney James Clancy
will ask the jury in his final ariu·
ment to condemn 41 movies
shown at the Honer Pl au 1heat.er
in the Jut two years to be ob-
scene and without red"minc
social value.
If the jury reaches that verdict
it wlll pave the way for the cltJ to
close the theater. A ruUn1 of ob-
scenity would allo lead Clancy to
ask the jury to aaaeas damaaea
against the Mitchell brothers.
Dr Spottswood tellt.llled today
that be could ftnd nolhinl ob-
scene to other forms of sexual ac-
tivity depleted ln the two Marilyn
Chambers movies
"Most of thla kind of thlng is
foreplay that leadB t.o regular
sexual int.ercounie,'' be said. "lt
is not unusual and la very com·
monly indulged ln by adults."
The witness said medical
acbooll are lncreasln11Y tumlft&
to the kind of fUma screened at
the Honer Plan theater In an at·
tempt to enhance the aexual
education ol medical students.
"Doeton were 1e .... , medical
school wlth pr•cUcally no,
•knowledge o( sex," he aald.
"These fllms have been a
tremendous help to us lD correct-
ln& that situation."
Dr. Spottawood aald he also
stroncly r~1Dmenda c:ouplea
experlenclna sexual difficulty to
view the films viewed bf '4e Jury. The panel of seven .,omen
and five men bu aeen 17 of the U
movies condemned by the city u
obscene.
SchoolDtm£e
f'..Dncert Set
So far, only Israel hu ". cepted.
BelQl dltelosect Uiat Sadat's In·
vltatfob and l&rael •1 accepW\ce
w•re exch.an1ed t~roufb the
E•1P,i•n and laraeU am-baHadors al tbe United Na· tlon1, A. Eamat Me1aJd ud
Cbalc Heraof, rather tbaa
throu O.S. embNSl•• or aD,Y other termedtartes.
Jn other ~ldeaat develop~ menta:
-In Cairo, ac:Unf EIYOtlan
Foretsn MlnJater But.rot s: Gball
coaftrmed that ~ lnvltatlon KaCI
been 'I'° vu1r Ararat, ttead0t tbe ale1Une Ltbel'atlo1t
Orsan ion, to selttt delecatea
to Cairo.
PLO tpOkesmen have declared
their delerates will not attettd the
Diet Fr~ud
PairLOse
Court Bid
· WASHINGTON (AP) -Two
California men each sentenced to
90 years in prison for defraudin1
some 28,000 would-be diet.en out
of more than Sl.60,000 loct their
bid today (or U.S. Supreme Court
review ol lhe!r convlctiona.
The Justices relUsed to bear the
appeals of Conrad i.. Germain
and Robert W. Kane, wbose le,al
problems becan five yean q0
with the mus mallln1 ot an ad·
vertiaemeat tbat began: 0 Want
to Lose Wetiht! ..
The two and their Hon_11!00d firm, Outpost Development Com·
pany, were lndloted' oo chariee of
sendlne out a fraudulent ad, the
one In wblch conaumen were told
they could learn 1 secret wetlht-
Josing regil!'Je by s!'ndll\1 ln ~.95.
The federal government
charged that the ad repeated
fraudulent material publlabed ln
the dlet·plan booklet.
Specifically the 1ovemment cbar1ed that ll f allely stated that
by following the diet plan, ''tbe
rats lD the foods 10U eat are·
chanied into enerty ln.atead or (a,t."
• Alao, federal pro.eauton
cbar•ecl that ta ml.QY IDltanct9.
ordered booklets were not maDed
to persons wbo sent in tbetr ~95.
and that 11W1J requested refUnda
were not~
Some vent~ ot the booklet ne·
omme.nded that the '6toolc" be
taken before meall wbl1e otDer
versions urtM tbat tt be UHd as
a sublUtute for meall.
Docton testlrYinr tot the (OV•
emment aa1d that lf the tonic
were taken u a meal supple-
ment, il would cauae a wetatt
gall\ rather than loss. The doc·
ton tatUted that ta)um lnltead
of meala, the tonic woulcl lead to
severe mineral and protein def!·
c1encies.
The diet plans were ad\>ertbed
as being discovered or d•viled
by two people -!4dla Feld!Ull
and Brend.a Hardy. The covero-
ment char1ed that no such
persona exist.
Genna milt KQe war. con-
victed ot trau4 and sentenced to
90 years each. ~ fined '18,000 each. Their ft.Mn also wu ftDed
$18,000.
Cairo mfft.loe. but t.Mt-e baa been no dkott rapcmae from Ararat.
A •~man for Belin •aid Sunday Israel will uot eo to Cairo
tf the• LO does. But Jn hla
KneHet 1peech tbe prime
mlnt1ter cave no lndicatlon
whether PLO presence would
keep the laraelll out of Cairo.
-Tbe Arib anU.sadat front .UrtonecS with aa u.aouncemat
by Syrl P,re;lde11t Hafu Mud
that he :w• teadY for a neco·
cillaUon. with aetcbbodnc lraq.
"We are all factfta uie aaine
danaer," ASaad uld, who bu de-
nounced Sadat's unilateral peace
moves toward Israel.
Assad told a news conference
that he would peraoQalJy attend a
conferefti:o of hud·llne Arab
leaden n Tdpolf. Libya, on
Tbur1&17. •
AT&T ••.•
Syatem telepbone companies
wholly or partially owned by
AT&T as co.coosplratora.
The AT&!f network of com~
panles wu cbarsed with ob-
s t.ruct.ini interconnection or
other conimunlcattona com·
panles with AT&T, obstruet!ni
the int.ercaa.neetlon ot c:uatomer· provid~ eq,ulp!Qent •• and refu.
inc to ..U termln.al equlp1Dmt to
Bell 1ubllcriben.
Tbe ~t'11ult 1eeb to have ATl/r stripped of Its can·
trolllnl interest {Ji Western Elec:·
trte--; ttlw-wol'tct--. lnCQt"'
manufact.,.rer ot telephone
equipment. Jt alao aeeb to dlvest
Wes,ern EJectrle of some
manufacturinJ assets to tnsure
competition in the product1on •
and sale of equipment. 1
The government want.a to l
separate ATlir'• LOnc Lines Dep~ rr,,m Ute 21 operat-
hll COtilpanlee "'to the extent
necessary to lnaure competlt.icln
1n telecommunicatloQs aervlee
and eqwpmeat... i
Mmie Boosters
Bel for Fmids
Tbe Music Boottcrs of Dana
Hilla Hl1h School •lll meet t
Tburaday to make pJ&Q to ralse 1 $1,500 needed tor musical hiltru.
1
mentsfot band members.
Another -1 Of the ffbool ~ eanJzatloa .. to n.ile tllOO ,~
choir Wllform• andLMOO for •
scbool band unllon.oa. Them-. t
inc wlU be hekl in tbe f aculb' 1
Jouna• at the blab IChool beahl· •
ninf at 7:aop.m. 1
For more infonnatlon, c:all 1
president Ed Bieacbke at· t 493-7870.
2 Burt in Brawl
PACOUIA (AP) -Two
policemen were inJued and
seven perllCIDI arrested ln • It&·
Uon boulo brawl lnvolvtna tbe
famw .. ol t• ~who were
1>tln1 releaae<t from cuatody,
authorities say. About 20 rel-
atl vea wbo ume to c•t the
youib• beeaa 1curtuna wttl> police Sunday at Footbtll
DlvJ1loo beadqcaart.n, Police s~d. •
P~t Tii"ger
Injures
Tiro KitU
TUJUNGA <AP) -Two
C1no1a Park children have been
lnjured by a defanaect.. declawed,
400·pound pet ti1er owned by a
woman their family wu vlaltJ.ni
over the weekend, accordlog to
the Loa Angeles County aherilt'a
office.
John Applewhite, hla wife,
Colleen, apd thelr three children
were at the home of Dee Arlen in
the Angeles National Forest near
Los Anaelea on Sanday when
Mrs. Arlen's tiger, B.C.
(Beautiful Cat), r.-i from the
room it shares wlth her and into
the living room where the Ap-
plewhite farnily was sleeping, the
sberilt's deputies said.
THE TIGER Jumped over her
head, Colleen Applewhite told the
deputies, then landed on the
chest of her 7-year-old dau&bter
Elizabeth with one foot in ber
face. The animal then pounced on
~-year-old John.
Part of the boy's right ear was
torn oCI and bad to be stitched
back on, she said, and he also suf·
fered scalp cuts, otflciala said.
He was listed in serious but sta-
ble condition at Pac()lma
Memorial Lutheran Hospital.
The girl suffered superficial
facial scratches.
Mrs. Applewhite described the
tiger, who w/ls placed in 14-day
quarantine al Mrs. Arlen's home·
after the incident, as "not that
fierce but sometimes overly
friendly."
HE OPPOSES PLAYING BRIDGE FOR MONEY
Expert CharlH Goren Nlxea Gambllng
3 Men Held in Kidnap,
Rape of 2 Teell-l\gers
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-Three men have been
arrested in connection
wilh the kidnapplne and
repeated rape of two
high school girls rrom
Azusa they allegedly
held for six days, of·
ficials say.
Shertff's deputies said
John Welterlin1s, 19, and
James Donald White, 23,
both of Baldwin Park,
and Larry James Allred,
23, of Hacienda Heights
were booked Sunday for
investigation of rape and
kidnapping and were be·
mg held in lieu of $..'50,000
bail each.
Punch
-· _J_
The three men alle1ed·
ly picked up two girls, age
16 and 17, in the Co
vina area Nov 17 and of-
fered to take them to a
party They then took the
girls to an abandoned car
wash in West Covina, a
cabin at Arrowhead and a
house in Baldwin Park
where the alleged rap.
ings occurl'f:d
The girls were re
leased in Az~a W ~
day and the men~.-..
ed after one of the 1Jr)s
led invest.ieators to Wet·
terlings' Baldwin Patk
home, authorllles aald.
WetterUn11' mother
. ;
Ruth, 48, was also
booked for investigation
oC compounding a felony\
deputies said
Liquor
ealer
ailed
1 SAN FRANCISCO
~P) -The state Court
Appeal has refused to
tay a five.day jail term
and a $2,000 contempt
fine a&ainst an Oakland
llquor dealer who had
been selling alcoholic
beveraaes below fair
trade prices.
Robert Lee, who
operates Warehouse
Wines and Spirits, bad
iasked that rulings by
Alameda County
Superior Court Judae
John Sparrow be held in
abeyance pending ap·
peal.
LEE HAS until Dec. 13
to further appeal the con·
tempt sentence.
A preliminary injunc·
lion was granted Nov. 18
to the Cal-State Package
Store and Tavern
Owners AssociaUon and
four individuals.
THEY ALSO were or-
dered to post $10,000
------------------bond to cover possible
losses abould Lee prevail
in bis appeal.
\
DAILY PILOT • U'
TIQI; 11NITBD ST ,\TE8 lnvfta·
tional llrtd1e. Clan c, wbtcb wait to have been ~d Ul1i mObth .. , ~ Vega, ~ C'IOteltid '4MD~ t SUNNY\f ALE <AP) -In a revolt aaalnst their lntemaUonaJ or. tiaUy because DOfenoush PeoP&e flcers, members of Machlnist.s union Local ~ approved a con·
signed up to pt•f, sald t.o. · troverslal contract and a return to work at LockbMd'a Mtuiles and
Anseles bl'id1e promoter SpaceCompany'aplantbere.
Thomas E. Gibbe. But it's really The~ on the three-year packa1e wu held Sunday de1ptte a
not that simple. move by tbe lntematlonal union auspendint the local'• top officials
Charles Goren, whose books from punulnl 1$eparate nea<>tiatioos. Tbe local represecta about
and magazine columm oa bridge 6,000 Lockheed employee..
have revolutJonhed and
popularized the eame in the last
40 years, Is opposed to money
bridge because it co*l.lld
dramatically change the at·
mosphere of the aame. ~
other bridge ex~rts share his
feelings.
1'WE'RE TRYING to attract
the better elementa to the game,"
the 77"yeu·old Ruasian·born
brJ.dae master sai4 in '111 in·
terview. 16and if you offer too
much money you mlsht set the
B0111 LOCAL and company officials here balled the a,reement
to resume work today as a welcome end to tb• 4May-old walkout. "'
"We recosnize lbia as a valid settlement," Geor1e MWhem.
company spokesman, aaid in an interview. "The people here voted and they're coming back to work.••
But international union officials dlsaer•ed. They said about
13,000 members in locals at three Soqtbtrn California tacllltles and
the Marietta, Ga~. plant remained on strike. Thef called the Sun·
nyvale vote "illegal" and claimed tbe walkout atilt waa ln effect
here.
LOCAL .-.UIDENT Ken Benda, amonc tbe SU4pended or.
t\cers, aaJd .OOUt 8$ percent of an estimated 2,600 members at the
meettnc Sunday voted to approve the contract and 10 back on the
job.-·
• 3-Cycle Wah Selection
Normal Wast\, Short Wash,
A inse snd Hold.
• Normal Power Saver Cycle.
• T11ffTub9 Interior.
l
• Full-Extension Cushion
Co~ R•cks.
• R'in~ Aid Dispenser.
• Dual Detergent Dispemer. ·
,
·o,•n11e0aest0a11vPt1o1 Editorial P~e
----~------------ll!llml .......................... _. ... ..
R~rt N. WHd/Publlsher Tl"lofN• K .. vll/Edltor •
a.,.,.,. K,.lblctvecmor111 P-oe Editor . ~.~.1m
Ne\V State Laws
Hike Trash· Fees
Carrying out the family trash in Oranae CoWltY -
a ll two million tons a year -is aolng to cost more in
the future than.ks to two new state laws county officials ·
s ay they neither want nor need.
While county e xperts don't know yet exacUy how
much the legislation will cost taxpayers, they s ay
residents should expect to pay more for trash disposal
either through property taxes or higher monthly refuse
.collection bills.
One of the new measures requires that trash be cov-
e red over with mote dirt and compacted more than in the
pa&t Before Orange County can comply with this require·
mfnt, about $842,000 worth of new equipment must be
pqtchased and five new employees hired.
The second law could force the county to pay a
2>cent-per-ton trash premium or $.500,000 a year to the
state for recycling and litter clean-up projects.
That law also could impose fees of $10 to $30 a year
on retail firms and force manufacturers of such it e ms
as newspapers and soft drinks to be assessed $200 to
$2,000 each year.
4 Orange County residents haven't had to worry much
a~ut trash disposal in the past thanks t-0 a well-managed
county operated system. It appears now the state
Legislature is trying to help manage the job by imposing
expensive new regulations but unfortunately it doesn't ap·
pear the Legislature is offering the county much help }Jl
paying for them. (
Bus Service Views
A survey of 2,000 Orange Countains has pointed up
some marked differences of opinion between people who
regularly ride Orange County Transit District buses and
people who rarely if ever ride them.
The OC'fD invested $40,000 of federal funds in the
two-month survey in an attempt to find out how the
citizenry is reacting to the county's bus service and
what changes or improvements could be made to attract
more riders.
The answers indicated that most of the regular
riders are fairly happy, find the buses comfortable, the
drivers helpful and the price right. Almost half the
riders said they live within a block of a bus stop and ~
percent said they are fa mi.liar with the bus schedules or
can get the information easily by telephone.
But less than a third of the non-riders knew where
or how often the buses stop and only 40 percent knew
that the fare is25 cents and thattransfersare free.And while
36 percent of the non-riders thought the buses seem empty a
lot of the time, only 19 percent of the regular riders found
t~at to be true.
A majority of the non-riders said they'd use ·the bus
only as a last resort, with almost half saying they'd
rather get a ride with a friend if their car wasn't
available. .
And, p erhaps understandably for car-oriented
Californians, both riders and non-riders expressed most
concern over the distance they walk, would have to
walk from bus stops.
The survey makes it pretty clear that it's .not easy
to pry Orange Coun out of their cars, but at least
the d e t a ile d co m e ts of OCTD patr•ns and
non-patrons orrcr some guidelines for spredding the
good word.
Still More Warnings
~ .
Apparently undaunted by. the fact th health
warnings printed on cigarette packages have had zero
effect in cutting back cigarette use, federal and state
authorities plunge ahead with demands for stiff more
warning labels.
Now the l'"'ood and Drug Administration wants the
Treasury Department to require labels on alcoholic
beverages warning pregnant women that consumption of
alcohol during pregnancy can cause birth defects.
And here in California a state Department of Health
official wants warnings to pregnant women and nursing
mo\hers printed on the labels of all over-the-counter
drugs, whether or not they have been proved harmful.
Hla theory is that the use of any drug during pregnancy
should be avoided in case later research reveals a risk
to the fetus or nursing infant.
This is all ve r y fine, all very expensive and
probably all very useless. Since a vast majority of
pregna nt women and mothers of inf ants are under
medical care, it would seem that a face-to-face warning
by a physician would carry a great deal more weight
than fine print on a label. That's still the most effective
turn-off for cigarette addicts. . ·<· • OplnJons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are thOM of their author• and
artttts. Reader comment la invtted. Addreta The Dally Pilot, P.O.'
Box 15a0, Cost• Mesa. C~ 92828. Phone (71 .. ) 842-.4321.
Boyd/lloax
BJLM.BOYD ·In 1135, It wu. P . T •.
Barnum, the world's treatest
•hO•man. "°u onl7 2S yean
old. He hired an elderly black
womal\ named Joyce Heth
who wa1hed but " 1>0unds. Ht l4 t.bat ah was 111 yean
old and bad been the nurse
that had brouabt Geor1e
Wublnlton lnto the world.
More than 10,000 people went
to ae• her at Nlblo '• 1ardon lD New Yo~ Clty. It waa hla
flnt t\l<cePf\al hoax.
.
State Should P:a! fO~ Welf~re
Tlppin1 bi:I aliU at a recent
meetlnc of the county
s upervi1ors, State Finance Director Roy Bell indicated ~
state ia movin1 towards accep-
tance of a treater sbare of
reaponalbility for welfare -pay.
menta. The tdeJ la part of Gov·
ernor Jerry JJrown'• solution to
the property tax problem cur·
ren tly bogged down in the
Le&islature.
Although presently financed
with a combination of federal,
stat e and
local funds,
the amounts
of welfare paymenl-' are
largely dictat-
ed by federal
a nd state
laws . And
because
welfare pro-
grams are
mandated upon local govern-
ment it i.s logical that the C05ls
should be borne by those calling
the tune.
As a practical matter whether
Jack Anderson
, the admJn.lftrat.loa oow mov• to
auume lta obU,aUoo or not lt
seem a only a guesUon of Ume UD·
tU lt ii compelled. l'or tbore ll l1t.-
tle differenef. iD the appllcatlc!n
of the coaat:Autfonal equal pro.
tecUoo clause between tbe ftbt
welfare flnanclnc ayatein and the
system of public school fiDandnl
which broucht about the Senaoo
deciaion.
In that, simply 1tated, the
court held that cblldren were en·
titled to the same dollar quality
of ed\lcatlon atatewlde. Tbe
dollar meuurement of quality la
much more pronounced in
welfare matters than ln educa·
lion.
ASIDE FaOM that. many bave
1001 contended that property tax·
es should be levied cmlr to pay for .
thoae 1ovemmenta services
which are property related.
Welfare does not qualify lD that
cateeory.
And it la just. ono of a number ot
pro1rams which, altbou&b beiJ11
oblleatiooa of the state, bave
tradiUonally been paid ln ~~by
U.S. Rite Honors
Hitler SS Troops
. WASHINGTON -The U .S.
Army provided a mllltary band
and a chaplain -the music and
the prayers -for a macabre
meeting recently of U.S .
veteran.a with former Nad shock
troops at an SS graveyard.
The Nam once belonaed to
Adolph Hiller's dread warren SS,
wll l ch was
hated even by
the regular
G e rman
army. The
Encyclopaed-
ia Britannica
note1 that
Gestapo cldet
Heinrich
HiD\mler. the
Nazis ' most
ruthless expon~t of racism and
terrorlam, founded the SS.
According to tbe en-
cyclopaedia, this elite force
became "an all-embracing em-
pire within the Nazi state, at once .
the embodiment and the iMtru·
ment of (Himmler 's) racial
theories."
Yet un.ll~med members of
America's El&hth Infantry
Dlvislon band tootled funeral
music as veterans ohhe U.S. 7oth
Division laid wreaths on the
graves of dead SS troops near
Bucholz, West Germany. on Sept.
26. And a U.S. military chaplain,
beUeve il or not, pronounced an
invocation over the graves.
This strange gathering was in-
spired by an encounter ~n the
United Slates a year ago. Three
German visitors from the SS
Six Mountain Hunter Division
met tbe brother of a dead 70th
Dlvlslon soldier. Aft.er some beer
drinking, a reunion was planned
in West Germany.
Notices were published in
U.S. Army Reserve publications.
AU veterans of the 7oth Dlvi.sion,
known in World War II as the
Trallbluers, were invited. About
80 signed up for the trip to their
old battlefields In France and
Germany.
The notices mentioned only
that they would meet with the
Sixth Mountain HUDter Division,
without adding it was an SS unit..
Some of the former Gls,
therefore, may not have known
they would share their reunion
with ex-Nazi shock troops. But
thi1 seems unlikely •inc• the SS
unit opposed the 7oth in both
France and Germany during the
war.
The Americana met the Hitler
veterans formally for tbe first
time in the French town of
Epinal. The SS men laid a wreath
on U.S. graves in a mllltary
cemetery near a battlefield
where they had once foutbt.
Theo the Americana. who bad
invaded Germany to free Europe
from Na.dam, journeyed with tbe
Fuehrer's finest acroaa the same
border to Bucholz, where the
bJgb point of the reunion oc·
curred.
FIBST 111E mayor of Bucholz
threw a reception for the former
enemies. Then they aathered
together at the graveyard. This
was followed by a dinner-dance
where tbe men of the 70tb
whooped lt up with the SS veterans.
Gen. George Blanchard, the
U .S . Army commander in
Europe, must have been aware
of the odd. reunion since be met
Nicholas Von Hoffman
local 1overnment1 and tbUI
added to the overtaxi.G1 of Pl"OP" ,erty for non-properly nlat~
1ervlc11.
Auemblyman Keu Madd1
already bas atruck at one ot
tbtlt, propo•ln• • ~omplet• akeover by tbo atate of cwrt
ttnaocl.Di. Under tho praeat
practice the state P•Y• only fet
the appellate dlvillOftl lta~
the PiaJ court. to be partially .
funded by local 1ove111meat1
detplt« tho fact all are a part Ot
the •tate'a Judlclal ayatam.
Another area ln whJcb the state
iJ Neapinl it.a ret&>OD1ibW tlet II
ln ht•w educatloa. While the
costa of IOQle '50,000 students at
the Univ .. uy ot California and
in tho state coUe1e1 are t\iDdecl
by the state wit.bout local 1ovem·
ment cootrlbuttom, over half of the cost.I of moH than 1~ mWion
atudenta enrolled lo the two-year
coll•&• remain oo tho baeb ~
tho prol*'b' owners. .
THAT BtJaDEN bu been ril·
tn1 rapidly, nearly doubllq in
alx yeara, and, at over $ISOO
·million, now represel\ta nearly u
ereat an'amount oo the tu rolla
~ doea wellu..
Conalderlnt the state bas·
alway• paid for Its colle•ea and
unlvertl(y It J• dlftlcult to I athOm
the reuoo the community col·
leau. OQC-S known u Junior col-
letn, ha.e bem'l allowed to de-
v~lop u local aovemment opera-
tion•. However tt happened, it ls
contrary to tbe practice of most
otber states which fully flnance
all public colleges.
The t1'8DSCerrin1 of all welfare' cost.a to the state therefore would
be a giant step in the rl&bt dlrec· tion tor property tax rell~ which
should be augmented by the aa-
sumpUon of the other procrams
DOW partially curled b)' local government but rightfully the
reai>0nalbWtle1 of the state aov· emment.
Sue • &bl.ft bowevet' would all
be tor noudlt unless the covernor
can abo acble.ve b1a plan of Im· poame &trlct Umttations on the
revenue ralaine powers of local 1
government.
~A.iii..#~·~
\'We'~ here to kaep itttpet'iAl~srn f~ rcfuntif~."
tbe next day with the 70tb
Division veterans. The hiibest
ranklne U.S. officer at the SS
meeting, rettred Brig. Gen.
Theodore Mataxla, told us: "All
it was wu talk amonf, people
who foaght 30 ye.an ago. •
Mataxts is now aaslatant
superintendent of the Valley.
Forge Military Academy in
Wayne. Pa. He told ua he was
aware the Germans were an SS
UDlt, but noted that they bad been
combat troops. At the Nurem-
berg triaJs, the SS was con·
demned en masse wlth few ex·
ceptions, as a criminal oraaniza-
tion. And for years, meetings or
SS veterans were banned in
postwar Genn8lly.
Footnote; At the Pentason, the
U.S. Army did not bold back on
the fact.a. But a spokesman said
the participation of the band and
chaplain wu the extent of of.
ficlal U.S. involvement.
Thoughtless HuDters· Pl~e Rural Residents . . .
nimroda. Better U> flaht off an
infestation of btpples' cooties.
. While there are doubtlea mant.
man¥ excepttooa. too many
bunten behave 1.D a way that
marb them u aemJ-criminaJ
traab.
Bonnte and Clyde confined
tHeir llleeallttea to ate&J..lu from
ttie rlcb. "our tveraa• hunt. will tNplU Oil *1t)'bod1'• prop. my. 116 aaaumea eaCb property
owner buys land aDd pay1 taxes
on lt to provide ni wtt.b a h•P\)Y
huntln1 pvU.rid.
NM' ON'E bunter ln SOO will uk .
perm l11lon U> 10 on land b•
doesn't owu. Wbat11 mol'9. many prope~ownen wlU tetl 10\I tbiy an afraid tO ~the& land wUh No Treill>uslni or Ho Huctinr 1\ani~'.._N"ot~onb wm tho blr
~01ltM frOm sabatbla lhOot tbt-stp fW.l at t>ucuhot and,
natut1U1, ip~re thelll, but they
have btel1 mown to eomm\i re-
tallatorY actaoha.Ddan.m. ,.
Th 1.t al1tt Ii to bW that lt'• somtUIDll dllftcult to uow ll the
7
.VOL. 70, NO. 332, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
By TOM BARLEY OI .. Deity Pl ... a .. tt
Oran1e County Sheriff Brad
Gates wa.~ accused today of prac-
ticin1 discrimination against
women prisoners serving sen·
tences at the county jail lo Santa
Ana.
Attorney Lawrence Buckley
claims ln his Superior Court
lawsuit that also names the coun-
ty Board of Supervllore •• def en· danta that nuale pri90ner1 are be·
Ing eiven benefits denied to
women inmates.
Sheriff Gates' secretary com·
mented today that Gates was
holding a meeting in bls otnce
and was not available for com·
ment on the Buckley lawsuit.
Chief Deputy William
Wallace's secretary commented
that Wallace wu boldlnl a meet-
lnl with county pert01U1el and
·similarly was not available CO
comment ont be dlscrtmin•tion
lssue.
Buckley filed the lawsuit on behalf of Barbara Dretzka
Molar, '2, of Anaheim, who was
recenUy sentenced CO one year in
the county jail after being con-
victed of druC cbarg~ .....
Fishin' in the Sun
While folks in other parts of the nation
were freezing their tootsies, this f amtly of
fishermen was enjoying an outing on
Newport Bay Sunday in shirtlseeve
weather. Continuing Santa Ana wind con-·
dition will mean continuing, unseasonably
high temperatures aloni the Orange ·
Coast, the weatherman says. To see how
folks elsewhere are doing, see Pages A3
and A4.
Worker Hurt
ln25-foot
Sooff old Fall
A construction worker fell 2S
feet onto the concrete flooring or
an enclosed vault under con·
e;truction in Irvine at a sewage
rec la ma lion plant expansion proj-
ect orr Michelson Ori ve today.
Orange <.;ounty paramedics
said the worker. identified as Bill
White, 50, or Anaheim, may have
suffered several fractured bones
in his fall from a scaffolding atop
the ironwork vault.
White was taken lo Tustin Com-
munity Hosp1lal, where doctors
wereattendingh1matpresstlme.
The construction worker had lo
be lifted out of the vault by a 14·
ton crane hastily connected by
paramedics lo a wire carrying
basket.
The basket was carried in by
paramedics who scaled the
structure.
A crane operator swung the
still-consc1ous White up and over
the vault waJls directly onto a
stretcher positioned outside,
paramedics said.
The foreman at the job site said
today was White's first day on
the job.
The sewer plant ls a project of
the Irvine Ranch Wat.er Dlst.r\ct.
· Psycliiatrist Sa~ . ... .
Porn Flicks 'Help'
jury. "It'• common among
animals u anyone who bu spent
any time around a mooltey cage•
will qulckty cooflrm."
A San Franciaco psychiatrist
testified today in Orange County
Superior Court that be found
nothing obscene in two X-rated
movies screened at the MUchell Brothers' Hotter Plaza theater in Dr. Spott.swood ls ~e final de·
Santa Ana. feme witneu in a trial bued on
Dr. Maurice Spottswood told• . legal acUon taken by tbe city ot
jury in acting Superior Court Santa Ana aptnat brothers
Judge Marvtn G. Weeks ' Jame1andArtlt!Mltchell.
courtroom that the m•UlY forms Clty attorney Jame~ Clancy
or 'Sexual activity depicted in wlll ask tbe Jury in bls fmal ar~u-
"Behind the Green Door .. and ment to condemn 41 movaea
"Resurrection of Eve" could on-shown at the Honer Plaza theater
lybebelpfUJtotheviewer. in the last two yean to be ob-
"Sex should be fun,''.the white-scene and wltbout redeeming
haired witness teatlfitd. soclalvalue.
"Without the right appro~ch, If the jury reaches that verdict
sexual,!tttercourse can be qwte a It wlll pave the way for the city to
chore. clo!se the theater. A ruling of ob-
The witness told defense at-scenity would also lead Clancy to torn~y Joseph Rhine that be aaw ask the Jury to assess damages
noth1ne offensive in the homosex-agaJmt the Mitchell brothers.
ual activity depicted ln both mov-
ies among members of both
sexes.
"Perfectly normal behavior,"
he commented. And be told the
jury that his profession hu now
abandoned its previou.ly held
belief that homosexuality ls an
lllness. •'Homosexuality h an
alternate lite style," be told the
Dr. Spottswood testified today
that be could find nothiA• ob-scene in other forms of sexual ac-
tivity depleted in the two Marilyn
Chambers movies.
"Most of this kind of thing ls
foreplay that leads to regular
aex.ual lntercourae ••he said. "It
ls not unusual Ud ta •etJ com·
monly 1Ddul1ed In b"1 acSulta."
Viejo Resident Set
For Tramit BOai-.d
The wltneH aald medloal
1chools .,., 1ncreaain1l1 turftlni
to the )dDd of films 1cfeened at
tbe Honer Ptaaa theater in ao lt-
tempt to enhance the sexual
ed\lcatlon of medtcal atudenta.
&NB Cldef
IJou:M Out of'
AsaemblyRaee
TH ~ent'11Ult Heb &I
ha.• ATlc'l\ltrii>Ped of tts ~
trolltn; lilteNst fri.Wtetena Etee-trlc, tbe world'• lar1eat manufacturer of ttltpbon' equlpm·ent. n alJo Mb to cllnlt
WHt•rnt BlecJrlc of aome mu.ufaCWdnl~ asaeta to t.uure compeUttOl\!.ID tbe producUop
and aileotequlpntent.
Tbt 1overnment waotl to teparate AT~·· Loni Linea
Department from tbe 28 operat-
ing ~-"to tbe utmt ne<easary to tnaure competiticm tn telecommunioatlons 1ervtce and equtpmen~., . .
Hugh.es Win
•
.Trial Opens
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP> -
Trfal began today on a cocn-
pli C'Jl ted quesUoo lhal could do-
cldt; the fortunes of some rel·
atives or Howard Hu1he. andol a
YO.Wlg man in Utah who sa)'I he
onu gave a wealthy recluse. rtde
in ~e Nevada desert. The cue is
e ir;pected lo last six to eight mppth.s.
The question is the validlty of
. ttte~o-called "Mormon Will"-a t~ree·page handwritten dQCu·
malt dated March 19, lQU, and
pu.rportlna to be Ute Jut will and
testament of Hughet, who lived
LB Body
Tied to
Drug Use?
A young woman's body found
Saturday along a lonely stretch
o f Coast Highway north of
Laeuna Beach may have been
the victim of a drug overdose,
Orange County coroner's of-
ficials said today.
The unidentified woman was
described as about 23 years old,
five feet, five inches tall and
weighing about 120 pounds.
Coroner's officials said the
worn an had• tattoo of flowers en·
<'ircliog her left wrist.
She was wurlnc a blue jacket,
bl ue jean pants and black bools.
Coroner's officials said the ex-
act cause of death is under in-
vest1gallon. They said, however,
the victim appeared to have been
dumped at Sunshine Cove by the
roadside by someone who didn't
want to get involved in her death.
Newport Eyes
Business Tax
Law Changes
A proposed change in Newport
Beach's business lice.nae tax will
be considered by cliy cQuocll
members tonifhl.
The chance is .nes:eaaary t.o -
comply "ith a reCt!hl court de·
cision that held that there must
he an equitable relationship
hetween the proportion or busi-
ness activ\ly taklne place within
the city and the tax: imposed, ac·
rnrdmg lo City Attorney DeMis
O'Neil.
The current ordinance charJes
an annual ree of $50 ror all busl·
nesses within Newport Beach
<1nd $70 for th<>se located outside
the city but doing business wlthln
it.
Under the J>Toposed chan1es.
businesses could choose either a
flat rate or a fee based on a
percenta1e or gross receipts
from income earned within the
Ctly.
NB Planner
Eyed Tonight
The Newport Beach Cit,y Coun·
cil will be asked t.on11bt to select
a plannla1 commissioner lo
replace Larry Lynch, who re-signed last weelt.
Lynch's resignation had bM1J
requeat.ed after new clty couocil
conOict-of -interest rules were
pased and council members aald
they believed Lynch would be in
violaUo.a of tbQse rules,
Npmlnate4 to fat for the
vincy are Ttm Hakllnaer and H n ~LauahUn. The meetlq
wl belln at 1 :30 p.m. at City H .
al the lime in a penthouse suite of
a Las Vegas hotel.
Tbe person Qff erina tbe will for
probate lQ CJ&rll .CountY District
Coun b Noah Dtetrlch. once t"'8
closest aide to Hughes before •
fallin" out in the 1950s. Dietrich
wa.a named execu~r ln the wiU.
The most intriguing bequest ln
the wiU is to Melvin Dummu,
wbo was a service station
operator in Willard, Utah, when
lbe will turned up about three
weeks after Hughes died April 5,
1976. The wlU leaves Ownmar
one-sixteenth of Hugh ea 's estate.
The will makes little mention
of Hu1bes's relatives but leaves
part or Hughes's estate to the
Howard Hughes Medical Foun·
dation in Florida, sewral un.
1versilies, the Mormon Churcti
andDumiuar.
At th-. trilll, Diet1iCh's at-
torney, Harold Rboden of Bever-
ly Hills, is expected to present
handwriting experts who will say
Hughes wrote the wlll. Rhoden is
also expected to call Dummar to
leslify.
The relatives of Hughes say the
Mormon Will is a forgery, and
that \hey have han<twriting ex-
perts who will testify t.o that.
Dummar at first denied having
had any knowledge of lbe will
befo~e ll mysteriously 3'P'l'f aced
at the headquarters of the
Mormon ChUl'ch. But later he
said that the will was delivered to
his service station by a stranger
on AprU 27. 1976, and admitted
that he was the one who delivered
1l t.o the chUl'ch offices. The ad·
mission came after the FBI
found his thumbprint on the en-·
velope that contained the will.
Dummar denied writing the
wi II or knowing who did,
however.
As to why he was named 1n the
will, Dummar says he picked up
a bedraggled old man in the
Nevada desertaboutlO years qo
and gave him a ride to Las
Vegas. The man identified
himself as Hu&hes and apparent·
ly was grateful, Dummar has said.
Pair Seized
In Theft Try
Two men were. in Newport
Beach JaU today on bur1Jary
charges after plainclothes policemen trailed them frotn an
abortive home burglar1 Jn
Coronadel MarStmday.
Joseph Hubert Oliver, 28, ol
17301 keelson Llult, H\lllttn.tod
Beach, and 20-ye•r-old KJrlt
Konrad Wirth, who llaled a
Granada Hills adresa, are both
beina held in lieu of $10,000 ball.
POllce said the palr were ar·
rested Sunday artern4>0n on
Newport Cent.et Drive alter they
alht1edly tried t.o· break into a
nearby residence. Police
followed Oliver's car and took
the two men into custody.
Pope, R~ to Ueet
ROl(E (AP) -Polish Com·
l!lUnia\ leader gdward Gterek ar·
rived tad&)' for a three-dar of-
ficial vi1lt to Italy and a meeilng
with Pope Paul Vl. No other
leader of Poland's Communist
regime has ever met with the
Roman Catbollc ponUIC.
-..
• •
'Daree Women Burt
Paramedics aid victim of two-car collision
Sunday morning at intersection of Jam-
boree Road and Bison A venue in Newport
Beach. Maria Dutra. 20, and Kathryn
Arnold, 26, both of NewPOrt Beach, were
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital along
with 18-year-old Louise Hernandez or San-
ta Ana. All three victims were treated for
cuts and later released.
~oasting Teens Kill
Wp's Brother Lured to 8011113, Slain, Dumped
'MIAMI C.\P) -A gang of
teen-aeers from a. mlddle·class
neigbborbood who boasted that
they had the eourage to kill hared
Traffic Light
Modification
Under Study
Modifying traffic si1nals to
respond t.o bicycles as well as
large vehicles is one of the
projects on a recommended llstof,
1977·78 traffic signal priorities
that wlll be presented to the
Newport Beach City Council
tonight.
The modifications for bicycles
would cost about $20,000, city
engineers estimate.
Total cosl to the city or all the
recommended projects would be
$197,000, with the state paying an
additional $30,000, developers
chipping in $118,000 and other
cities and the county paylnc
$S(),000.
New signals would be built at
the Irvtne Terrace entrance on
Coast Highway, Birch and Quall
streets, Superior A venue at
Hospital Road and Birch Street
at both Von Karman A venue and
Jamboree Road.
City, School
Meet Slated
A three-way meeting to discuss
"intersovernmental rela·
t ioa&bi~" \• acb~duJed for
Wednesday rupt between New-
port Beach cU.y councUmen and
trustees from the Newport-Mesa
U oified School and Coast Com-
munity College districts.
Declining enrollment ln the
Newport.Mesa District and Its
potential effects on the Coast
Community District ls Ukely to
be discussed.
The pubUc dinner meeting wlll
be1ln at 6 :45 p.m. at the Cap-
tain '11 Table Restaurant on the
Orange Coast CoUe1e campos,
2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Tbe opeiooal dinner cost.a ts per person.
a postal worker into a home,
murdered hlm, dumped his body
In a canal and took bJs car on a
joy ride, officials say.
''These children certainly
thought out what tbey were goJ~
to do and didn't hesitate," said
Metro homicide Detective David
Simmons. "On prior occasions
some or these juveniles and their
friends boasted about havine
enou1h courage to klll someone.
The way they did it wu qUit.e
brutal."
Poltce sald an uninvolved
teen.ager who bad beard sketchy
accounts Of the murder called police.
An unidentified 16·year-old boy
was charged with flnl·deg:ree
murder in the slaying of John
Henry Sime, 37, of Hialeah, a
postal worker whose brother
Glenn Sime has won several
honors as a· policeman in
Hialeah.
Another 17·year-old boy bas
been charged with being an ac·
Math 'Profi~'
Lecture Set
How lo use mathematics for
fun and profit is the subject of a
UC Irvine lecture acheduled
from 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday in 178
Humanities Hall. Publlc ad-
mission is $4 .
Lecturer Edward 0 . Thorp, a
UCI mathematics professor, ls
the author of "Beat the Dealer,"
a book which encouraged
Nevada casino operators to
change blackjack rules to Im·
prove their chances against
Thorp 's caJculated str.le or play.
He's written a stm1lar book on
playing the stock market.
The lecture is sponsored by UC
Extension.
Mourners Injure~
JOHANNESBURG, South
Afrlca (AP) -Police wounded
three people when they opened
fire on mourners at the funeral of
an 18·year·old black who died In
Jail, the Rand Daily Mall report·
edtoday.
cesaory by helpina dupose of the
body in a canal Police said a
number of other teen·aJers, aged
14 to 18, were being sought and
some also would be charged with
murder. The identities· of the
youths were 'Withheld because of
their ages.
Police said they did not know
whether the teon-agers knew
John Sime's brother waa a
policeman but that at least one or
the boys knew the victim.
Simmons said the teeo-acers,
all from the same nelabborbood
plotted Sime's death. then tied
the bo<Jy witb electrical cord,
hurled it into the water and
dumped tJres and crates of dead
chicken remains on the body to
camounage it. They used the vie
tim 's car tor joy-riding unlil they
wrecked it, police said.
Simmons said that evidence.
showed the youngsters wanted to
rob Sime but also planned to kill
J\im Crom the start. ·
'Police said the teen·a1ers Uffd
Sime's car to attend parties and
socialize with friends in the
ne1ghborbood. But they smashed
the car into several trees durina
heavy raln Thanksgiving Day
and abandoned the wreck.
Police stopped and questioned
some of the youths but they de·. nied being in the car.
Youth Joh
Workshop Set
Workshops for teenagers seek·
inf Jobs have been scheduled at
the Youth Employment Service
of the Harbor Area, 542 W. 19th
St., Costa Mesa.
The workshops, taught by YES
adviser Ann Boyer, cover tech·
niques of nmng out applications.
making appointments for in·
terviews and being Interviewed.
The free workshops are open to
all Harbor Area residents
between 14 and 22 years of aae.
Re11ervaUons may be made by
caJIJng 642-0474. YES is• private,
non·profit acency affiliated with
the United W~.
Sadat's
Proposal
Accepted
JERUSALEM (AP> -Prime
Minister Menahem Begin
form ally announced today that
Israel wlll go to Calro next
weekend for a preUmtnary peace
conference and named two
senior officials as Israel's del-
egates.
They are Dr Eliahu Ben·
Elissar. director-general of the
prime minister's office, and Meir
Rosenne, the Forelgn Ministry's
legal adviser .
Begin made the appointments
in a speech t.o the Knesset. or
ParUameot. dlscuaainc the af·
termalh of President Anwar
Sadat's hlatorlc trip to larael and
Sadat 'a invitation t.o aU parUes ln
the Mldeut dispute to come to
Cairo to prepare for a fUll-dresa
Geneva peace-conference.
So far, only Janel bu ac·
cepted.
Begin cllsclosed that Sadat'a ln·
vitaUon and Israel's acceptance
were excbanaed tbrou1b the
EaypUan and laraell am·
baasadora at the United Na·
Uons, A. Esmat Mecuid and
Chaim Herzo1, rather than
through U.S. embassies or any
other intermediaries.
Jn other Mideast develop·
menta: ·
-lo Cairo, acUnc Eeyptlan
Foreign Minister Butroe B. Ghali
confirmed that an lnvttaUoo bad
been seat t.o Y aslr Arafat. head of
the Palestine Ll beratlon
Oraantiatloo, to send del~ates
to Cairo.
PLO spokesmen have declared
their delef'ales wUI not attend the
Cairo meeting, but there has
been no direct response from
Arafat.
A spokesman for Begin aaJd
Sunday brael will not 10 to Cairo
If tbe PLO does. But in his
Knesaet speech the prime
mlnlster aave no lncUcatloa
whether PLO presence ~would
keep the Israelis out of Calro.
-The Arab anti-Sadat front
stiffened with an announcement
by Syrian President Hafez Assad
thllt he was ready for a recon-
ciliation with nelihbortng Iraq.
"We are all facing the same
danger," Assad said, who has de-
nounced Sadat's unHaleral peace
moves toward Israel.
NB Burglars
Get Jewelry,
Rare Coins
Thieves broke into a Newport
Beach home while the owner was
on Thanksgiving holiday in Palm
Springs, hauling off an estimated
S8,525 in jewelry and rare coil18
in a shopping bag, pollce re-
ported.
The burglary was reported.
Saturday by teacher Betsy Lewis
Helle.
Police said the burglars ap-
parently entered the backyard of
the home through an unlooked
i;arage, then boosted themselves
through an unlockfJd kitchen win·
dow.
Once inside. the bur1lar1
dumped garbaae from a shop-
ping bag and used It to ClllTY
away coins and jewelry, includ·
ing a tanzanlte. eold and
diamond ring valued at $3,200.
Police said an investl1atlon
will continue, but noted that the
burglars took extra care ln wtp-
ine off rmgerprlnlS.
' .VOL 70, NO. 332, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
111-' 'l'OM BARLEY °' .. ~ ...... ,...,
Oranae County Sheriff Brad
Ga tea wu accused today of prac·
Uclng dlftrimJ.nation agalrtst
women prisoners servlne sen·
'-ncea al the county jail in Santa
Ana. Attorney Lawrence Buckley
claims 111 bis Superior Court
i.wauJt ~t also namu the coun·
ty Board of Supervisors as defen-
dants that male prisoners are be.
ing given benefita denied to
women lomatd. Sheriff Gates' seeretary com·
mented today that Gates was
holdinJ a mee\.lng ln his office
and was not available for com·
ment on the Buckley lawsuit.
Chief Deputy William
Wallace's secretary com~ented
Ft.fain' in the Sua
w ...
that Wallace was boldlnl • fn•·
lng with county personnel and
·sitililarly was not avaUable to
comment onl be diacrimlnaUon
laaue.
Buckley filed the lawsuit on
behalf of Barbara Dretzka
Molar, 42, of Anaheim, who was
recently sentenced to one year .lJ)
the county jail aft.er belng COil•
victed of drug cbarg~. _.
While folks in other parts of the nation
were f reenng their tootsies, this f amity of
fishe rmen was enjoying an outing on
Newport Bay Sunday in shirtlseeve
weather. Continuing Santa Ana wind coo··
diUon will mean continuing, unseason~bly
high temperatures along the Orange ·
Coast, the weatherman says. To see how
folks e~where are doing, see Pages A3
and A4.
Worker Hurt
ln25-foot
Scaffold Fall
A construction worker fell 25 ~ l feet onto the concrete flooring of
an enclosed vault under con-
Hruction in Irvine al a sewa.ce
rec ta mation plant expansion proj-
!Ct off Michelson Drive today.
Orange County paramedics
said the worker, Identified as Bill
White, so. of Anaheim, may have
suffered several tractured bones
In his fall from a scatfoldiDi atop
the ironwork vault.
White was taken to Tua tin Com-
m unity Hospital, where doctors
.,,.ereattendlnghlmatpresstlme.
'fbe conatrucUon worker bad to
be lifted out of the vault by a 14-
c.on crane hastily connected by
paramedics to a wire carrying
baskei.
The ba!tet was carried in by
paramedics who scaled the
structure.
A crane operator swung the
•till·conscloua White up and over tbe vault walls dlrecUy onto a
stretcher postlloned outside,
paramedics said. The foreman at the job site said
today was White's ftnt day on
the job.
The sewer plant ls a project of
the Irvine Ranch Water Dlatrlct.
. .
·Psychiatrist Says.
i>Orn· Flicks 'lielp'
A San Francisco psychiatrist
testified today In Orange County
Superior Court that be fQUnd
nothing obscene ln two X-rated
movies screened at the MtJchell
Brothen• Honer Plaza theater In
Santa Ana.
Dr. Maurice Spottswood told a
jury in actln1 Superior Court
Jud 1e Marvin G . Wee ts•
courtroom that the many forms
of sexual activity depicted In
"Behind the Green Door" and
"Resurrection of Eve" could on·
ly be belplul to the viewer .
.. Sex abould be fun," the white·
ha ired witness testified.
"Without the right approach,
sexual intercourse can be quite a
chore."
The wttneu told defense al·
torney Joseph Rhine that be saw
nothing offensive ln the homosex-
ual activity depicted in both mov-
ies among members of both
sexes.
"Perfectly normal behavior,"
be commented. And be told the
jury that his profenk>n bu now
abandoned lts prevloualy held
belief that homosexuality la an
illness.
''Homosexuality ls an
alternate life 1t)'Je," he told the
jury. "It's common among
animals as anYone who bu spent
any time around a monkey cage•
will quickly confirm." ,
Dr. Spottawood la the tlnal de-
fense witness ln a trial bleed on
legal action taken bY the clty of
Santa Ana again•t brothers
James and Artie Mitchell.
City att«ney J•mea Clancy
will ask the Jury itMdl ftoal ar,u.
ment to condemn 41 movi~
shown at the Honer Plaza theater
in tbe last two ytan to be ob-
scene and without redeeming
social value.
If the jut'y reaches that verdict
It will pavethe way fortbe city to
close the theater. A ruling ol ob-
scenity M>Uld alao lead Claacy to
ask the jury to URS• damaeea
against the Mitchell brothen.
Dr. Spottawood testified i.day
that he could ~d notblng ob· scene in other form.a of sexuif ac·
tivtty depicted in the two Marilyn
Chambers movies. "Moat of this klnd of thing 11
foreplay that leads to recular
sdual int.ercoune," be Hid. "It
11 not unusual and 11 very com·
mouly 1ndu1Je4.ili bV adultl. ••
the HoDel' theater ln an at.-Viejo Resident Set.
FO.r Transit Boar.a
Tbe wi\nea& tald m•dical
acbooli are mcr•aslnJIY turnins
to the ~ screened at
./ tenapl to hence the Hxual
educatioft ol medical stui:Jene&.
.....
.. Dodon wen leavinf medical
school wlth practically no
knowledae of sex:• be Hld. "Tbese fthn• have been a
tl'emendoiul help to u1 ln co~t
lnl that '1tuatlon."
He sald Gates should Im·
edlately be ordtted to make
aucb accommodation and
prlvUege, available io woa>.O prlloDers. ,,. . ..n ts dlfftcult to ~
Al'ow, in:.• ~tr rte0cnlled for Its bfJh ~of lhin1 ud it.I
relaflYely tolerant at U~de
towatd eoclll crowth. that a coo-
dltioo abould be permitted to R-
.. .
WASSINGJP?f (AP) '""'\ The tends .. did nof receive a fell'
U.S. Supreme Court refUltd ~ trial.because he •l>Parently WU
day to thwart tovemment efforts und~ Che taauence ot druCI ln to diamanjle the Amerlean tbecoartl\ic>Ql, •
Telephone and Teleira&>b Co. itie JIJIUee DeP&l'taMllt'• ~
The jusUces let •tand rullap charfH ATlcT-a.ad It• h..-
by a federal trial Juclle and tbe sldlartes, Weistern Electtlc Com· u .S. Circuit CoUl'\ ot Appeals paq,y ~ Bell Laboratories, 9Ub
bere that the Justice Department violatm, Sbennan Act aaw.t
may sue AT&T for antitrust law1 by attem~ and comp1r.
violations. inc to inooopollse teleeom·
To<fay s acUOO Ts a-ml}OrYlc· ~~ aervlc-~
tory for the government lil lta.at· : ment in the Unit.cl States.
tempts to h .. e tbe antltruat · Tbe aUlt nam"4 the 23 ~
lawl\lititflledln 1974,-e-ch trial. System telephone companle1
AT&T conteoded that it coWd wh•llY or partlalJY owned' by not be sued Ob etitrual cllartM ATllr ueo-~Pi!at.oA.
because it ta beavtly tegultt'.td bt The AT¥£ 11et?1ort ot com·
the Federal Communfcaftons pules wu ~Ced with ~
Commlsslon and ~tat. a1enciel. structlng tnterconnectlon of
Legal review of thlR con~UcO other commµnlcation1 com·
has postpooed any pro~ Jn pules Witb A.Tl/r, obltructlna
the aovemment's c110.
In other aetloo.a today, the
Supreme"Cowt:
-Let1tand a lowar toUrt'•n\I·
ing that test ~'°" ill their 50I
cannot be taken off the Job &bu·
plrbtt-e ., •. -Asreed to revlew a dedlklll
by Nd Jen:eJ~ lllKI~
that Ua.e .tat. baa a rtaht to pro-
hibit the dumpiq ol out.ot-mte garb.ie within its borders.
-Said it would dedde wMtber
tbe companies tbal built tbt
Alalk'a olJ ~pellne .,-e •mltled to
crude oil tnnlportatlcm Prices
that the govenuneot eoniencla
are exorbitant.
-Let Bland the conviction ol a
Loulaville, Ky., man who con·
OA!l. V P\LOT
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP> -
Trial began today on • com-
plicated quesUoa tQi could do-
cide the fort~ of some teJ.
atives of Howardt:luaheaandol•
yo14ng man in Utah wbo a&YI he
once gave a wealthy reduae a rlde
in the Nevada deeert. Tb• cue la
ex peeled to Jut. 11& to ellbt
mootba. . •
':fhe que1t1on tJ the valldlty of
the.so-called "Monn.on WUl"-a
thr.ee-page handwritten docu-
mept dated March 11, lMS, and
pur.,porting to be the wt will and
tes&.ament ot Hughes, wbo lived
at the time in a penthou.le aaiteot
41 Las Vegas hotel.
The person ofCering the w1ll for
proba"' in Clark CoQntJ District
Cbnrt is Noah Dittstch, once the
closeat aide t.p HUlbee bel«>re a
falling out In tbe 1850a. Dietrich
LB Body
Tied to
Drug Use?
A young woman's body found
Saturday along a lonely stttt.ch
of Coast Highway north of
Laguna Beach may have been
the victim of a dru« overdose,
Orange County coroner's of·
f1cials said today.
The umdentified woman was
described as about 23 years old,
five feet, five inches tall and
weighing about 120 pounds.
Co roner's offtcials said the
woman had a tattoo of fiowers en·
circling her left wrist.
She was wearing a blue jacket,
blue jean pants and black boots.
Coroner '11 oflicials sald the ex·
<ict cause of death is under in·
vcstigation. They said, however,
the victim appeared to have been
dumped at Sunshine Cove by the
roadside by someone who didn't
want to get involved in her death.
2 Men Hunted
In Mesa R'ape
Of Two Teens
Costa Mesa police are seekin1
men who reportedly raped a pair
of 15·year-old Costa Mesa girls
they pie.Iced up hitchhiking.
Police said the girls were
hitchhiking at the lntersectJon of
19th Street and Harbor
Boulevard wh en they were·
picked up about 12;30 p.m.
Police Sgt. Sam Cordeiro aaid
the two men in the 1967 or 1988.
station wagon wore described as
male Caucasians in their late20a.
The men drove to a rural area.
possibly in Irvine, where one of
them displayed a pistol 'and or·
dered the gtrls to undress.
Sergeant Cordeiro sald.
Tbe men then raped them in
the back seat, be saJd.
Afterward, one of tbe «irla re-
portedly peniuaded the rapists to
releue them. 'l"bey walked totbe
house of a friend and C:alled
Police,'SergeantCordeiroaaid.
He said police are particulary
particularly concerned about
women hitchhiking now because
of the recent series of murders 1n
Los Anlele5.
Pope, Red to Meet
ROJ,IE (AP) -PoUal\ Com·
munist leader Edward Glerek ar-
rived today for a t.brte-da, ~
fictal wtt to Italy and • m~ we Pope Pauf VL No ot.llr
Ieicler of Polancl'• OOmmwilat' r me bas ever mtt wltb tbO
R au ~poattft.
was n~ execvtof JD \he will.
T}Je moet lnlrilu.ln• ~uest in
tb• will Ja t.o JCtlvin Dummar,
w.bo •u a servlc• ,ttaUoa operator Ill Willard,. Utah, when
lbe will turned up about three
weeks after Hughes died Aprll 5,
1976. Th. will lea•ea Dummar
one-1lxtecdl of Hu,lhea 's t1tate.
The will mabt little meotiosa of Hqbes's relatives but Jesvea
part of Hugbes's estate to the
Howarcl Hughes Medical Foun-
dation ID Flodda, several un·
iveralties, the Mormon Church
and Du.mmar.
At tbe trial, Dietrich'• •l· torney, Harold Rhoden of Bever·
ly Hills, is expected to present
handwritint experts who wills~
Hughes wrote the will. Bbodeo ls
'llao expected to call DWIUnar to Ultify,
Tile nilatives of Hughes aay the
Mormon Wlll ia a foraery, and
that they have band.writing ex-
perts who will testify to that.
Dummar at first denied having
had any knowledge of the will
before it mysteriously 5urf aced
at tbe headquarters of the
Mormon Church. But later be
said that tbewill was delivered to
his service ataUon by a stranaer
on April zr. 1976, and admiu.d
that be was the one who delivered
it to the church officea. 'lbe ad-
mlsalon came after the FBI
found bia thumbprint on the en-
velope that eontalned the will.
Dammar denied writln& the
will or knowing wbo dld,
however.
As to why he was named in the
will, Dummar says be picked up
a bedrauled old man ln the
Nevada desert a boat 10 years ago
and rave him a ride to Las
Vegas. The man identified
himself as f{ugbea and apparent-
ly was gatefuJ, Dummar has
saJd.
Yottths Seized
In Heist Try
Garden Grove police 8J'l'elted
thrq youtblul armed robbery.
suspects SUnd.ay nJabt as they al·
legedly attempted to rob a small
market.
Police said one 1U1J>9Ct wu a
13-year-dd boy armed with a tire
iron. The s~nd suspect was
idenWied u a 15-yur-old boY'
who carried a bUtCber lr:nife. Ancl
the Wrd auspect was slid to be a
17-year-old Prl armed with a
pelletsqn.
Officers IWJ>Olldinl to a repcb-t
or a robbery in. progress in tho
market at 13682 Euclid Ave. te-
pQrted ~ wbeft they~ at ~e-~aclerk•ub'tneface
down on Ule floor with the iru-· alleg~d robbers standing over him.
Gas Station
Worker Slain
DECATUR. Ga. CAP> -A
stnice statl09 attendant waa
sbot and tilled JQ an 8J'IUlllent
with a C'Ultomer over a Pf!D.D1'• worth of psoUne, authorlttea •Said~
A spokesman for the DeKalb
County Police Department aald
Leroy Clarence Smith, 34, ~
Atlanta, died from a ~unabOt
WOWltUn the left sh0u1der.
NetD Water ·Guardians
•
:c
' .JERUSALEll (AP) -Prime l
Minlster Menabein Bettn
formall,y announced todQ tut
llrael wUl 10 to Calro ant
weekend for a pnllmliaUT peace
confer~• aa« named two·
aenlor "'•la u llrael '• del· eaatet.
They are Dr. Ellahu Ben·
Elllaar, ~r-feoenl of tho prime mlniaiet'a cal•, and Meir
Roaenne. thie ~ Jllnlatr)t•s
legal advtaer. .
Mario Durante (left), President of the
Costa Mesa Cotmty Water District Board. of Dlreet«s, gives oath of office to newly
elected directors Thomas Nelson (center)
and Hank Panian during recent
ceremonies. Panian and NeJson replace
former board meDlbers Alvin 'Pinkley and
Nathan Reade, who served OD the board
for a collec:tive 25 years.
Be1lu ll>ade the appolntmeata
in a speed\ to t.be Knesaet., or
Parliament. cUlcusstDi tho af.
termath of President Anwar
Sadat's bistaric trip~ Israel and
Sadat'• Invitation &o all parties in
the JrUde&St dJJpute to come to
Cairo to prepare for • f\lll-dress
Geneva peace.conlerence.
So fU'. ODl7 larael hu IM> cepted. Belln dllclaeed that Sadat'et.
'fltatiOD and larMl'a a~ ( were ud:lu1ecl tbroul.b the EcypUan and J1raell am• ba,.adon •t the unttect N_.
tiona, A. Eamat Jlecutcl Uld I
Chaim Heno•• rather thn s
throulh U.S. embauiee OI' ._ c
o~er intermediaries, ,
· noasting Teens Kill
UJp's Brother Lured to Home, Slain, Du:niped. •
In· other MtdeHt develop.
menta:
-lu cairo. •ctinf EOPUm • Forelp Mintat,u But.roe 9; GbaU
MIAMI CAP) -A 'an1 or
teen·•lert from a mtddle-clua
ne11hborboocl who boasted that
they bad the covaae to kll.l lunid
a postal worker Into a ho.me. murdered him, dumped bia body
in a canal and took his car Oil a
joy ride, ollldala say.
"Theae children certaloly
thou&ht out what they were going
to do and dldn't hesitate," said
Metro bomlclde Detective David
ShomQSW. 0 0n prior oceuiOM
some ot these juveniles and their
frieQds boasted about having
enou1h couraae to kill someone.
The way they did it was quite
brutal."
Police said an uninvolved
teen.ager who bad beard sketchr
·accounts of the murder called police.
An unidenUfied J.B.year-old boy
waa chal'ced with fint-de&ree
murder lo the alaylns of Jobn Henry Sime, ~. of Hialeah. a
postal worker whose brother
Glenn Stme baa won sneral
honors as a policeman in Hialeah.
Another 17·year-old boy bas
been charged with beinc an ac-
cesaory by helpioa dispose at the
body in a canal. Police said a number Of other teen-aien, aged
14 to 18, were being sought and
some also WOQld be charged with
City, School .
Meet Slated
A three-way meeting to discuss
••intergovernmental rela-
tio11ships" is acbed1uJ•d ·for Wednesday night between New-
port Beach. city councilmen and
U'Uatees from the NewPOrt.·Meaa
Unified Scbool and Coast Com-
munity Collep dlatricts. '
Decllnin1 enroUment ln tbe
Newport-Mela District and its
potenUa.l eff edl on the Co.tat
Community District is ltkely to
be d..llcusaed. The public dhmer meeUna will
begtn at 8:45 p.m. at the Cap-
tain 's Table Restaurant on the
Orange Cout College campus,
21c>1 l'airvl.ewil\oed, Costa Mesa.
The optional ditlne:t-costs SS per
person.
murder. The ldenllties of the
youths were wtthbeld because of
their aces.
Police said th-., d.l4 not bow
whether tho teen·aeera knew·
John Sime'• brother waa a
policeman but that at leut one~
the boys knew the vtctlm.
stmmaas Hld the teen·acera.
all from the aame nelahborhood.
Math 'PiY}fit' .
Lecture Set
How to use mathematics for
fun and profit ls the subject of a
UC Irvine lecture scheduled
from 7to10 p.m. Tuesda'y In 178
Humanities Hall. Public ad· misslonia$f.
Lecturer Edward O. Thorp, a
UCI mathematJc1 profeuor, is
the author of "Beat Uie Dealer:~
a book Which encouraced
Nevada casino operators to
change blackjack tu.Jes to Im-
prove their ebaaces a1ainst.
Tborp's calculated alyle of play.
He's written a similar book on playing the stock market.
The lecture is sponsored by UC
Ex"'nsioo.
tae•• r ca\end8
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING
COMMI$ION -Regular meet·
inf, City Hall, 8:30 p.m.
TUESDAY, Nov. 29
, ••BEHIND THE
HEADLllttS" -Dr. Gil• T.
Brown lecturer. OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
COASTLINE CC LECTURE -
.. Advanced llicrowave Cook-
lnc," Eltancla Hilb Room 321, T p.m.
plotted Sbne'8 death, then tied
the bodY with electrtcal cont. hurled lt lnto the w1Ker and
dumped tlnl and crat.i~ derd
c:hlckell remains OG the bo4J to
camouftap tt. '1beJ med tbe Yic-Um'• ear for Jof ·ricllng unUl tbeJ
wrecked tt. police said.
Slmmam aald that el'tcleaet
showed the younpten wanted to
rob Sime but--.0 pJ•nnecl &o kill him from the start. •
Police said tho teen..,era used
Sime's ear to attend parties and
socialize with friends in the
neighborhood. But they smashed
the car into several trees du.ring
heavy rain Tbanksaivhlc Day
and abandoned the wreck.
Police stopped and questioned
some ot the youths but they de-
nied being io tbe car.
Youth.Job
Workshop Set
Worbbops for teenaten leek·
ing jobs have been scheduled at
the Youth Employment Service
of the Bubor Area, 5CZ W. 19th
St., Co.ta Kon.
The worbhope, taupt by YES
adviser Ann Boyer, cover tech·
niquea ol fllllnc out appllca.tlons,
making appointments for in·
terviewa and beina inter~ecl.
The~ work.shops are open to
all Harbor ~rea residents
between 14 and 22 years of age.
Reservations may be made by
calling 642-0474. YES is a priva"'-
non-proflt agency affWated with
the Upi~.Way.
Ministers Named
eonft.rmecl that all blfltatiOli bad c
been HDt to Yastr Arafat. be*lol
the PalHtlD• Llberatlon t <>raentAUoa. to MIMI .,.,._. • to Calio. . l
PLO IPOleanea baft deemed 1 their~ wWDOtattmdtbe f
Cairo meedD1, but there laa >
been DO dJreCt ~ fft>m Arafat.
A apolr•man fOf' Betln USd
Sunday Israel will not to to Cairo
lf the PLO does. Bat in hi.-1 Kne111et epeecb tbe prime
mlntater •• .._ no lndlcaUon
whether PLO presence woald
keep the laraelia out of Cairo.
-The Arab anti-Sadat tlont
stiffened with an announcement
by Syrian Presideat Hates Aaad
that he wu ready for a recon-
clllatJon with neJibborinc Iraq.
"We are all laciJaa the aame danger," Alaadlald, wbobalcte.
nounced Sadat'• unUateral peace moves toward llrael.
Assad told a newa conference
that he would~ au.eta
conlerenee of bard-Hoe Arab
leaders in Tripoli, LibJa. on Thursday.
Routed Thief
Flees Police,
Leaves Loot
A buritlar escaped but left bfa
loot beh1nd Sunday after a Costa
Mesa policeman noUced a bar
door pried open and went to tn··
vesttgate.
Police said Sgt. Max Wllsoo
was on patrol at 4:15 a.m. when
he noticed a door ajar at the Reef
Bar. 820 W, 19th St., and called
for backup wilts.
When tbe1. arrived, potlce
began sear~ the premises.
• Durln1 the search, one olftcer
TOKYO (AP) -Prime, looked out and noticed a man
Mlnister Takeo Fukuda named a runninf out of Carol 'a Bar nm
new cabJnet today to try to llOlve door at810W.19tb$.
Japan's mounttnc economic Further investigation revealed
troubles at home and abroad. 1t stolen property from the Reef
was bls first government Bar piled up lo Carotts Bar.
shakeup since be took office lut Police 1ald they belien the
December. buralar tied empty·bande4.
1
Saddlebaek
VOL 70, NO. 332, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
By TOM BARLEY
Cll lllt Dally l"liet Si.ti
Oranee County Sheriff Brad
Gates was accused today of prac·
ticing discrimination aeainst
women prisoners •ervlng sen·
tences at the coWlty jail In Santa
Ana.
Attorney Lawrence Buckley
claims in his Superior Court
lawsuit that also names the coun-
ty Board of Supervisors as defen-
dants that male prisoners are be·
ing given benefit. denied to
women inmates.
Sheriff Gates• secretary com-
mented today that Gates was
holding a meeting In hi• omee
and was not available for com·
ment on the Buckley lawsuit.
Chief Deputy William
Wallace's secretary commented
that Wallace was boldlne a meet-
ing with county peraOPnel and
slmUarly was not affilable to
comment ont he di.lcriminatiOft
issue.
Buckley nted the. 1aw1ult on
behalf of Barbara Dretzka
Molar. 42, ot Anabelm, who was
recently sentenced to one year in
the county jail alter being con·
victed of drug chartes.
•
.. • • t
AntitrUst Suit AllOWed bj Court
W.ASHJNGTON (AP> -The
U.S. SuJ)feme Court refused to-
day to thwart government efforts
. to dismantle the. Ametlcan
Telephone and Telecraph Co.
The Justices let stand rulingl
by a federal trial Judge and the
Oommiuion and state aiencit!I.
Leaal review of that contention
bas pGlt.poned any procr~ In
t.be coveriunent's cue .
Jn other actions today, the
Supreme Court:
that the iovernment conteft9
are exorbitant. •
,, U.S. Circuit Court of Appeall
here that the Justice Department
may sue AT&T for antitrust
violations.
-Let st.and a lower court's rul-
inJ that teat pUots la \.heir 50a
cannot be taken off the Job stm·
ply betause of their aae.
-Aereed to review a decision by New Jeney•a blghest court
that U.. atate---.ntbt-to-~
bibit the dumpinc of out-of-at.ate
garbaae within lbf borders.
-Letsta:nd tbe conviction of~
Lo\tiaville. Ky., man who e_otl-
tendt be did not receive a f.U-
ttial because be apparenUy was
under the lnfluence of drqs bl
tho courtroom.
The .IUitlce Department•• suit
charaea AT&T and Us 1u11r
aldlarles, West.em Electric Com·
l'Uions of Sugar Plunu
One.year-old Marlena Aro is held by her
father Glenn Aro so she can get the best
view of those ornaments that will sparkle
through another Christmas season.
Marlena is admiring the recently decorat-
ed tree at La Paz Road and Chrisanta
Drive in Mission Viejo.
'Boasting'
Teenagers
Kill Man, 37
MIAMI CAP) -A gang of
teenagers from a mlddle·class
neighborhood who boasted that
they had the courage to kill lured a postal worker into a home,
murdered him , dumped his body
in a canal and took his car on a
joy ride, oCficials say.
"These childrea certainly
thought out what they were going
to do and didn't hesitate," said
Metro homicide Detective David
Simmons. "On prior occasions
some of these juveniles and their
friends boasted about having
enough courage to kill someone.
The wa1 they did it was quite brutal."
Police s aid an uninvolved
teenager who had heard sketchy
accounts of the murder called
police.
An unidentified 16-year-old boy
was charged with flrst-degree
murder in the slayln1 of John
Henry Sime, 37, or Hialeah, a
postal worker whose brother
Glenn Sime has won several
honors as a policeman ln
Hialeah.
Another 17•year-old boy has
been charted with being an ac-
cessory by helpln1 dlspcise of the
body ln a canal. Police said a
number of other teena1ers, •led t•· to 18, were belnl 1ou1ht and
some also would be charted with
murder. The identities or the
1outb1 w,re withheld because of
·thelt aces.
Police aald they did not know
whether the teena1en khew .lohn
Sime'a brother was a Policeman
(See GANG, ... , IU•
••
Viejo Resident Set
For Tramit Board
By KATHY CLANCY
Ol Ille Dally l"IMtS&a"
Tom Jenkins, director of plan·
ning and engineering for the
Orange County Transit District
<OCTD> was named executive
director of the Oranee County
Transportation Commission lo· day.
Jenkins, 38, a Mission Viejo
resident, succeeds Carol Benson,
who was fired from the com-
mission post earlier this month
after four months on the job.
Mrs. Benson, 44, at first re-
fused to leave her commission
post with the argument that she
should be elven an opportunity to
reply in public to commission
complaints against her.
Commissioners told Mrs.
Benson they had "lost con·
fidence" in her performance.
Commissioners later obtained
a court order barrine Mrs.
Benson from entering com·
mission offices.
Jenkins has held bis $33,000.a·
year OCTD job for the pas\ 3~
years. He previously worked as a
• consultant.
He wu hired for the com-
mission post from a Ust of those
who had originally applied for
the Job.
<See \'IEJO, Pate A!)
Strike Continues
I
OAKLAND (AP> -Thouaanda
of bus riders in Eut San Fran-
cisco Bay mwit flnd makeshift
transportj,Uon aaatn today as a
strike aaainst the Alameda·
Contra Cofta Tt'anslt District en· ten 1'1 atcond week.
°"'~ ... , .... ,....
HIS TRANSfER P.UNCHEQ
• Ml•alon vteJo'• Jenkin•
•
Today's actlon 11 a major vic-
tory for U.. iovenunent in its al-
tem pts to have the antitrust
lawsuit it filed in 1974 reach trial.
AT&T c:onteiided that It could
not be sued on antitruat charses
because it Is heavily regulated by
the Federal Commvni09tlona
Israel OKs
-Said it Would decide whether
the -comranles that built the
Ala1k1 ol pipeline are entitled to
crude oil transportation prices
pany and Bell LabOratorles. wttb • vioiattnc Sherman 1\~itttfwtttt!t&St~~-1
law1 by attemptlnJ and ~·
inc to monopolise telecom·
munlcaUoas aemce and equJpo
ment tn the United States.
The suit named the 23 Bell
<See A'flrT, Pace A!)
~ . . Peace Talk . o,.e. Killed Over Game on TP ·
• , • • t
l · (A. ) ir 0... ,ptaGD u..c dUCI i.t' DeQver General :0 • wu abOt to death .nd two 4tbtrs Hospital. Gllbert LOP«tz, •7. and n t,;/air.o wounded In a Ct1spute atMtut Doria Delts.'4, were ~in.
' ,.,_.~ die J)eliVer Broncca1-fllr eondltton today at the
JERUSALEM (AP) -Prime Baltimore Cotta pro football hDspltal. •
Min l st er Men a be m 8e1in game Oil a televillOn in a Deftver Pollce aafd Rlcbard Garcia; M.
formally announced tOday that bar. jOU~Ufd. ' · ' wu afrestid a sbOrt Ume later
tstael -.ttll eo to Cal1"o next Tb ~ bot uted tor mv~&Uon Of bOmfcide and
weekend for a preliminary peace e persons 8 ~ uaawi: conference and named two· tot.umaathejukeboxat Ara. A buUndertoldreportersthat
senior officials u lsraers del-bian Bar~ the final mlnutel all lnvOlved in the fight were
egates. of Sunday 5 Nati~ Football recular cUJtomera wbo kneW
They are Dr. Ellahu Ben· Leaeue-1ame,offl.eeniald. each other. There were about30
Elissar, directo1'·1eoeral or UM! Broncos fans turned off the penom in the Arabian at. the time
prime mlnbt.er's ornce. and Meir Juke box ~veral Umes •d the thedlspUteatarted.
Rosenne, th$ Forelp Ministry'• two men and a woman finllly ln· The Broncos beat the Colts
legaladvlaer. vlted the three Juke bo:I( fJDI out-2'1·13 to go 10-1 for the season,
Begin nu~cfe the appointments side to' tlet. Police said OQe of •u~rant.ee1n1 Denver a place tn.
in a speech to the Knesset, or the f90t68ll fans pulled out a the NFL playoffs tor the flnst
ParUatnent. dJs.cuaaing the af. haoOeunandatartedsbOOUna. lime in the club's 17•year•
termatb of P,eaide~t Anw.r JUdtard Savaee. 41. was~ ~tory.
Sadat •s hl'U>rlc trip to lsrae~ ind
Sadat's mvttaUon to all parUis tn
the Mideast d11j>ute to come (0
Cairo to pl'eP&J'e for a full-dress
~neva peace-copference.
So far. only l•rael has ac-
cepted.
Bealn disclosed that Sadat'• tn·
vitation and larael.'1 acceptance
were exchanted throuah the
E1y9Uan and llraell am-
ba11ador1 at the United Na·
tions, A. Eamat Me1uid abd
Chaim Heno1, ~ather than
tbtou1b U.S. embaulu or ~1
other intermediaries.
In other Mideast develop·
.ments:
-Jn Caln>, actin• EJypUan
Foretcn Jllinlater Bdtlos 8.' Ohall
conflrmed that an invitation bad
been sent to Yulr Ar&fat, he.&4 OI
the Palutlne Llberatl6D •
Organization, to atrid d•let tell
to Cam>. • ;.r
PLO spokesmen h•ve.d'eelaled
th~lr deluat.es wtU not attend tho
<See IDA.Elli •••• Al) .
Saddleback Colle1t truatees
will be ..Seel tonight to authorise
the btrinc of a conatructlon
m~nacer '° auide the develop. ment of their ne'1J ~"1 cam·
pUI. • •"
Trultees are'belnl u~tcl to ap. .. prove a contract witb • c. V •
Holder. IQc,; at a ftxed fee ot
$112,500. 1be fee ls 6.J percent ot
the ~tlmated budcet for the proJ·
ect. ~ pnvlously ~to dev~Jop the campus throup a
C<>n4ttUct1on manaiement pro. ,...__ 'this allows th~ tt'Ulteel to
act as ce.oeral conttactot and
pl•c• 'tbe project toc•Uier
DAI\. Y "'LOT
Flights
At Night
To Bait?
BJ llOBBBT BARKER a .. INiitt ....,....,.
Huntinlfton Beach Mayor Ron
Pattinson said today he would try
to hall nl1ht flylnc at
Meadowlark Atrport f0Uow1n1 a
crash near the private airfield
Wednesday niaht.
Pattinson said that be doesn•t
want to close the faclllty. He just
wants nif!ttnig}ata halted.
"l don t think that lt la rt1bt to
jeopardize the safety of 10 many
for the benefit of ao few," be said.
Pattinson, who visited the
scene of the crash that injured two
persons, said be has not yet had a
chance to uk airport owner Art
Nerio to prohibit the olcbt ntghts.
He said that it agreement wtth
Nerio is not forthcomlna. he
would ask the city council to take
steps to haJt night operations at
Meadowlark.
Nerio, who could not be r~acbed for comment today. pre·
v1ously has opposed closing th& airport atol(ht.
Pattinson aald that thre&
crashes have occurred at or near
the airport since Aug. 1 and they
alJ have happened at night.
Pattinson added that he thinks
the runway I.a too short and the
area is too congested to permit
night flights.
"I'm in favor of turning off all
the runway lights," he declared.
'.fhat proposal has been OP·
posed in the past by those who
favor keepina the Jight.8 on lo
handle emergency landings.
The airport has long been the
source of controversy.
Nearby residents claim that it
is unsafe and have demanded its
closure. Nerio and pilots have
fou1bt to keep it open. .
City officials say that their
hands are Ued because the
atrfleld ts hcensed by the
California Department of
Transportation which bad held
that the airport is safe.
City Attorney Don Bonfa said
the city does have an ordinance
prohibiting night flying, but had
deemed it unenforceable in light
or previous court decisions.
Airport opponents say they
may seek a court injunction lo
halt Clights until it can be de·
termined Jf the airport Is aafe or
not.
Tom Livengood, a member or
the city's airport commlttee,
blamed the city for lts zoning
policle. which permit develop-
ment near the airport.
In Wednesday night's crash, a
Cessna 150 reportedly lost power
after takeofr and hit power lines
near the airport at Bolsa Chica
Street and Warner A venue.
It crash-landed in a vacant
field about three miles from the
airport. ·
E',....PogeAl
AT&T ••.•
System telephone companies
wholly or partially owned by
AT&T as co-conspirators.
The AT&lr network of com·
panlea wu cbar1ed with ob-
structln1 interconnection of
other cotnmunlcaUons com-
panies wttb ATllr, obatruct.ing
the interconnecUoo of custorner·
provided equipment and refus·
ing to sell terminal eqwprueat to
Bell subscrlbers.
The 1overnment 's 1ult seeks to ·
have AT&T it.ripped of Ila con-
trolling interest in Western Elec-
tric, tbe world's lar1est
manufacturer of telephone
equipment. It also seeks to dlvest
Western Electric of 1ome
manulectwiaa u.seta to insure
compeUllon fn the production
and aale of equipment.
The aovernment wants to
separate AT&T'• Lona Llne1
Department from the 23 opera~ 1n-. Companies ''to the extent ne•11ary to Insure competltJon
in eleeommunJcatlon1 aervlce a equtPment. ..
CMtANOI COMT M
DAILY PILOT
While folks in other parts of the nation
were freezing their tootsies, this family of
fishermen was enjoying an outin1 on
Newport Bay Sunday in sbirtlaeeve
weather. Continuing Santa Ana wind con-
dition will mean continuing, unseasonably
high temperatures alone the Oran1e
Coast, the weatherman aays. To aee how
folks elaewhere are doine, see Pages AJ
andA4.
Glavas Retrkves Hat
Former Newport Beach police
chief B. James Glavas said today
he has decided not to seek the
74th Assembly District seat for
''purely selfish" reasons.
Olav as said earlier this fall he
was considering running ag8U18t
'Slipshod'
FM Hit
WASHINGTON (AP) -
A California congressman
charged today that the
Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration bas wasted up
to $S0 million in recent
years on programs that
failed, equipment never
delivered and contract. ir·
regularities.
Rep. John L. Burton, D·
Calif., also complained
that the FAA is clinging to
a ''see-and·avold" concept
for averting mld·air col-
lisions, relying on pilots'
eyesight instead of modem
electronic 1ear.
, Burton, who is planning
two days of House hearin11
this week into FAA
policies, accused lhe agen-
cy or "slipshod and highly
questionable" practices.
H11man Bones
Found; Police
Seek Identity
An anthropologist was called in
today to assist Orange County
coroner's officials trying to iden·
tiry human remains found Satu.r·
day 16 miles east of Interstate 5
along Ortega Highway.
Sherifrs officials said the re·
malns were a human skull and
various bones. The remains were
discovered by a l!Oup of
weekend picnickers who had
stopped by the roadside.
Officials said the bones ap-
peared to bave been In the area a
Joni time but they could not
estimate the gender or age otthe
remains. • "It may be the remain& of an
old Indian crave," a spokesman
speculated. ..Sometimes t.bue
bones can be preserved re·
mark ably well."
The spokesman said sheriff's
investigators are hopeCul the an-
tbropolo&Ut can estimate the age
of the bot1ea and determine the
gender.
F,...Page.41
ISRA~L •••
M arlan Berge~on for th~
Republican nomination for the
seat currently held by Democrat
Ron Cordova.
However, tho retired cblef said
he has decided he doesn't want to
spend his time raisins funds and
seek Int votes.
"I'm going to spend a UtUe
time cat.erlnir to my own needs
and desires? Glavu said. "l
1ust thought I owed a liWe bU to
myself and my wife."
He said that., at this tlme, he
does not intend lo actively back
any Cfllld.idate in the election.
Fre.aPGf18AJ
X-RATED •••
scene and without redeeming
social value
If the jury reaches that verdict
it will pave the way for the city to
close the theater. A ruling of ob-
scenity would also lead Clancy to
ask the jury to usesa (lamaaes
against the Mitchell brothen.
Dr. Spottswood teaUfled today
that he could find nothln1 ob-
scene in other forms of aexual ac-
tivity depicted lo the two Marilyn
Chambers movies.
"Most of this kind of thing is
foreplay that leads to retular
sexual intercours~." be Hid. "It
is not unusual and la very com-
monly induleed in by adults."
The witneu said medical
schools are increasingly t.umina
to the kind or films screened at
the Honer Plaza lheat.et in an at-
tempt to enhance the sexual
educallon of medical student.a.
"Doctors were leavln1 medical
school with practically no
koowled1e of sex," he aaid.
"These films have beeii a
tremendous help to us in correct-
ing that situation."
Dr. Spottswood said he aJso
stronsly recommend• couples
experlencinc sexual difficulty to
view the ruma viewed by 6.oe
jury. The panel or seven women
and five men has seen 17 oftm941
movie. condemned by tbe city as
ob1cene.
Math 'Profit'
~Set
How to use matbemaUcs for
fun and profit ls the aubject of a
UC Irvine lecture scheduled
from 7to10 p.m. Tuesday tn 178
JlumanJUea Hall. Public ad·
mtulonb$1. ·
Lectuiw Edward 0. Thorp. a UCI mathesnatlca professor, ls
the author of "Beat the Dealer, ..
a book which encoura1ed
Nev•d• ca1ino op•rator1 to •
change blackjack rulea to lm·
r>rove theJr chancea afaln1t Tho~'• calculated 1tyle of play.
He • wnu.n a similar book on
pla:rtn• the ltock market.
tltt lectuN lt fPC1MOJ'ed by UC ExteiWOD.
lnatead, Glavas said he will be
worlcin1 on hla boat, wblcb be
described u "not a yacht."
In add.iUon, be will continue to
be active u chairman of the
state Orcanhed Crime Control
Commlsalon. ·
Body Found·
Along Beach
Drug Victim?
A yoana woman's body found
Saturday alona a lonely atretcb
of Coast Highway nQrth of
Laauna Beach may have been
the victim of a drul overdoae,
Oran1e County coroner'• of-
ficials said today.
The unidentifie<I woman was
described as about 23 years old,
five feet, five inches taJJ and
wei1hing about 120 poundl.
Coroner's officials said the
woman had a tattoo ot nowen eo-
circlln1 her left wrist.
She W&ll weartn1 a blue jacket,
blue jean pantl and black boot.a.
Coroner's of1'1clals ntd the ex·
act cat.11e of death 11 under in·
vestigation. They aaid, however,
the victim appeared to have been
dumped at Sunshine Cove by the
roadside by someone who didn't
want to 1et involved in her death.
I KidS t,o See
'Amahl'Show
AU fourth, fifth and sixth arade
student• in the Saddleback
Valley Ub.llled School Dlatrtct wm attend a performance of
"AKnahl and the Nllht Visitors ..
Wedneaday ln the Good Time
Theater at Knott's Berry Farm.
The opera will be performed by
the Paclftc West Cout Opera
Company. student.a from El Toro
Hilb School 'a Choral Depart·
ment, however, will be featured
wltb th• cut of profe11lonal
mu1tclana in the performance.
The production baa been
planned u the culmlnatlon to the
youna1tera' •tucb of opera.
LAS VEGAS~ Nev. CAP) -Trial bqan today on a com-
plicated questJoo tbat could d •
cld• the fortuna of 1ome ry:I·
aUves of Howard Huahes and of a ·
youn1 man in Utah who aay1 be
once save a wealthy recluse a rlde
in the Nevada desert. The case i.
expected to la1t 1tht to eS,bt
mgotba.
The question la the valldlty ot
lhe so-called 1'KormOC1 Will'' -a
three-paae handwritten docu-
ment dated March lt. ua. and
purport.Inc to be the lut wW and
testament of HUlhes, who Uvtd
at t.he thne in a penthouse 1uite of
a Las Ve1u hotel.
The person o!ferina the will for
probate In Clark County District
Court b Noah Dietrich, on~ the
eloaeat aide to Hu~ befor. a
falllnf out In the 1950s. Dietrich
wu named executor In the will.
• The molt lntrt1Wn1 bequest in
the will la to JlelvlD Dummar,
wbo was a aervlce 1tatlon
operator tD Wlllard, Utah, when
the wW turned up about three
week.a after Hua1-dJed Aprll 5,
1976. Tbe will leaves Dwnmar
one·tlxtlJentb of Huahu '• estate.
The will makes little menUon
of Hushes'• relaUvea but leaves
part of Hulbes'• estate to the
Howard Hughes Medical Foun·
datlon In Florida, several un·
1ven1Ues, the Mormon Church
andDummar.
At the trial, Dletrlcb'1 at·
tomey, Harold Rhoden of Bever-
ly Hll1', 11 upected to present
handwrlti.n& aperta wbo will aa.y
Hupes wrote the will. 1\bodell ia
alao expected to call Dummar to
testlty.
The relatives of Hu.1bea say tho
Mormon WW ii a forpry, and
that 1bey-~ritlnl ex-perts wbo will tesUty to tbat.
Dummar at ftrlt dented bavtni h~d any knowledge of the will
before it myaterioualy 1urfaced
at tbe beadquartera of the
Mormon Church. But later be
sald that the will was delivered to
hls service station by a stranger
on April 27, 1976, and admitted
that he was lhe one who delivered
it to the church offices. The ~d
misalon came after tbe FBI
found bis thumbprint oo the en-
velope that contained the will
Dummar denied writln& the
will or knowlDI who did,
F ... P.,,eAl
GANG •••
but that at least one of the boys
kMw the Yictim.
Simmons said the teenaaers,
all from the same netabbol'bood
plotted Sime's death, lben u;i
the body with electrical cord,
hurled It into the water and
dumped tires and crates of dead
chicken remain.a on the body to
· camouOqe it. They used the vic-
tim '11 car for Joy·ridina untll they
wrecked it, police said.
Stmmons said I.bat evtden~.
showed the younpten wanted to
rob Simo bl,lt also planned to kill
him from the s&art. •
Police aald the t.eenaaera used
Slme's car to attend partle1 and
soclallie with frtend1 tn the
neithborhood. But they smashed
tbe car into several trees durln1
heavy rain Thanks1lvln1 Day
and abandmled the wreck.
Police stopped and questioned
some of the youths but they de;
bled belna ill the car.
~
' ' . ' • i I
I
'
' I
J
however-. I
As to wby he was named ln the 1
1 wUJ, Dwnmar s1y1 bo picked up
• bodr Hied old man ln the
Nev acla desert •bout 10 years aao 1
and cave him a ride to Lu '
Veaas. The man ldentlfleCl
hJmaell aa Hu&bea and apparent-
ly WU atateluJ, Dummer has
said.
Diet Fraud
Pair Lose
Wort Bid l I I
WASHINO'roN (AP) -TWo I
Calif oi'nla men e~h MDtenced to r
90 yeara ln prllon for defraudinl l
IOmo a.ooo wout~-be cUeten out 1
of more than ueo.ooo lost thdr
bld todl)' for U.S. Supreme eoutt l
revlawolthelrconvtctlona. 1
Th• iustictl refJaed to bear the
appea(a of Conrad L. Germain
and Robert W. Kane, whole JeU1
problems beaan live yea.n •eo
wlth the mus malllna of an ad·
verUtement that becan; '-Want
to~· Weight?''
Tho two and tbdr. Hollywoocl I
firm, Outpost Development Com~ I
pany, ~lDdicted on ehars•at
aendiDI out a fraudulent ad,, 'the
ooe in whJch conswnen were told
they could learn a 1ec:ret wd&ht-! t lollnc~e bra~1lll ~es.
The federal 1overnment
tbaraed that the ad repeated
fraudulent material publlabod 1n
the diet.. Dian booklet. 1 Speclflcally tb ccwemment ~ charaed that tl lalaely stated that
by followtnc the diet plan, "'tfte
fat.a ln tho foods you eat are
cban1ed into ener1Y instead ol
f.t."
. Also, federal prosecutors
charted that ln many tnatances.
ordered booklets were not malled
to persons who aent in thelr $5.95.
and that many requetted refunds
were not honored.
Sotne venlona of the booklet rec-
ommended that the "tonic" be
taken before meall wbUe OUter •
versions u.raecJ that Jl be used as
a aubstitute for meals.
Doctors test1ryln1 for the 1ov· ~
ernmeot said that lf the tonic
were taken u a meal supple-
ment, lt would cause a wefekt
gain rather than lou. The doc-
tors testified that taken 1nstiad ot meab, the tonic would lead to r
severe mineral and protein deli·
cl en des.
College Team
Due Honors
Saddleback Valley Chambe!' of
Commerce and Excbanae Club
member• are 1pon1orlna a
luncheon Thursday to honor the
Saddleback Colle1e football
team at Barone'• Restaurant.
24031 El Toro Road in t.atuna
Hlll1.
The event bellm at noon with
each member of the two or-a an lla tlon s aponaorlag •
member of the team for lunch.
The price of a meal la $3. 75.
For more lnforn:aatlon ancl
reservaUona, pbone83'7 ·3000.