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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-08 - Orange Coast PilotSti:tiulal Figure Eye!f Futur.e W ASIDNGTON CAP> -Bobby Baker, the central figure tii a Washington scandal of another era, is planning his comeback. The onetime boy wonder of Senate back rooms, the Lyndon Johnson protege who amassed $2 million on an annual salary of $19,600 before going to jail, has it figured out; NEXT YBA~ IDS book comes out. It is a sensation, nammc names and exone""~ him at last. Movia and television pick il up. Hesueseveryonewhowrongedhim and wins anew trial. .. That's how Baker de$Crlbes his future while sitting. ln a popular Wasblnaton restaurant where he can still command a quick table for lunch. , At •9. lle ls a paunchy, bal~. eray-haired man. Once he ~was a power in politics, but now he bas a. snen-count convicUoo ;J for income tax evasion, thtfl and conspltacy to defraud the cov- ernment -along with a 16-month stretch in prison -next to bis . , name. .. . . . BAKE& HE BDISELF says. was a fellow who ••always got alcms gOOd with (>6?i>le!' • Even at AllenwOod, a 'federal 'prison l.il Pennsylvarua, bi waa Uked, Baker says. "I'd have been president of my class there if there had been an election. When I left:, they gave me a standirlg ovation." . Hegotoutin 1972. • Before AIJenwood, Baker tackled Washington. He became chief Senate paee. Then Johnson appointed him secretary to the Sen ate majority l~ader, ~stJtt held frorn 1955 lo 1963. ' MANY PEOPLE FOUND IT helped to cut Baker in on a piec• · o~ lhelr busln~ and let h)m \,de his lnfiuen~e to ma.kt It Pf0$per. Once, for example, a Milwaukee businessman formed a cor- poration, and Baker bought $27,500 worth of stock al $1.56 per share. A short time later, the businessman wanted to go public and 1 needed the approval of the Securities and Excban&e Comml.sslon to issue stock at $27 per share. Baker, who stood to make $500,000 on the deal, helped pressure the SEC to approve the sale. : Baker says he sees nothm1 wront with that. 1 "WHAT IS W&ONG WITH asking someone to make a de· cision?" he asks. Baker is still promoting. In addition to bis book, be sWl has real estate interests in Charlotte, N.C. and Ocean City, Md., although be bas .sold tbe Carousel Motel, which played a m&jOr role in hb b1al. He will not say bow wealthy he is now. "I DON'T REALLY KNOW. My daddy used to aay y°" could judge a man's wealth by the size ci(Jillt debts. I owe about a mlllioD dollar&.•• His bdolt, tie 'says, will try to r~nstruct the aettinc tn wbloh · he operated, and aotne peopl4' will not like it. Johnson will be portrayed as a "coward wbo never stood up for bis frleilds.'' Ther~ wW be allegations that Robert Kennedy tapped the pboQea of John Kemledy'& loHrs. ' Police Deny . ' (]aims of CUit Oos~er Police in Lasuna Beach chum statement.I made by members Of the local Krishna Temple eon- cernin1 three ousted memben ot the sect do not jibe with police documents. . ln a press conference lut month, Krishna offlclala said former temple president Roy Cbrlatophet Richard, Joseph Gabriel Fedorowakl and Josepb Shelton Davis Ill, all or Lacuna Beach, had been expelled from th~ temple as 1001 a10 u Sep. te.a> ber 1976. But Police Chief Jon Sparkl said all three men, currently directors of Pruadam Diatrlbut· in& International, Inc., Newport Beach, have been seen in the past several months either at the Laf'una temple, or with local Krishna officials. Sparks said Richards, former temple president, wu seen at re· cently as two month• a10- dr-e s s e d in what Sparks described as "Krishna aarbh at the temple. "He was aeen by a taauna." B .. ch police officer at aboUt 7:30 a.m. Aug 24, clad in the usui.I robe and type of dress or the Krishna relict on,'' Spara said. ._.be police chief said Richard told the omcer he had been at· tending rell1loua aervlcea lnalde the temple. "They· (the sect) may have kicked him out In Sept. 19'76, but he was attending service• u re· cently as two months aao, •• Sparks said. He said Josepb Davla hH been seen, also dressed ln Krishna· garb, auendina many services at th.e local temple unUl June, 1977. And, accordlnf to police dQCU· ments, Joseph Fedorowald ac·• companied the eurrent temple p~sldent, Agni Dev, from the La1una Beach Jatl lut 8ept. 10 after the temple Oftlclil wu ar· relted on a minor dlsturbla1 the ~ace charae. Fidorowsld and llOy ClU'latopher JUchaJ'd «>n warranti ··chatatftl murder conspiracy. . · Bovan. 381 of Fountain Vall91, wu ~cunnea ·dOwn lll th• tart)' mor~~ Oct. 12 outside a Newport Beach restaurant. He WH 1botl)Jne Unies. Tb• fGUrth partner. Al-............. Kulik, WU arrested Oct. 221 m I conneetimi with tht cue and 11 currentb' ffte from eutody after poaUns a '7!C>,OOO bOnd. KWJk'1 wife, Elale CabaD Kulik, .ta alJo aouaJit on the murder warrant. Pollce have lnallted tbrou1bout the two·week In· vesUcat1on of Bovan'• murder that the case Involved the 1mua· 1Hn1 of larie amount• of narcotica. ~ y J They alle1e-that. Bovan'a murder was prompted by a series ot crimlrial acts alleaeCUY almed/t getttna to the proceeds· -aai to be" ln excess of $1 million -of that smuullng. Kulik wai arrested hours after Bovan's death allegedly 1n po1Se11ion of more than one pound of nearfy pure heroin lri· vesttgators believe wu Imported from the orient. The Y,,ee men atlll sought were all at one Ume in•mben ill th• Kriahit• temple ha ~ • Beach. Richard wu president. But temple officials say Kalik never bad any connecUon to their temple, althoulb his Wife and * * * ,,....P.,,.AI CULT ••• on current criminal cases lnvolv· in8 a'leged 1Crlsbna feet mem- bers, .. I thinlc lt 11 sl111tncant that the founder of ISKON la personally linked to Alexander Kulik 8.1\d others associated with PDI. ,,,,... ..... MOVES OUT OF. OFFICE OCT1>'• CarOI Benion An order barring ousted direc- tor Carol Benson from entertna the Santa Ana otfices of the Orange County Transportation Commission was signed late Monday in SU~rior Covrt. But the restraining order signed by Judge Harmon G. Scoville may prove to be un- necessary. Members of the OCTC staff ex- plained that Mrs. Beason, 44. packed her personal posaesalons and quietly left the bu1ldin1 ~r she learned that the lawsuit authorized by OCTC com-missioners was about to .,_filed. Judge Scoville set Nov. 21 as the date be will hear ar1u11ients against his restralnin1 order which would become permanent in the ab6ence of any objection by the defendant. Neither Mrs. Benaon nor btr lawyer could be reached today for comment on Uie lasue~ New port Beach attorney M'.arlene Fox's secret"'1 satd she expected her employer to be "out of the office all day.'' OCTC commissioners de<:lded on legal action when Mrs. Ben- son protested thAt dismissal ac- tion taken by them against her was unlawful. She continued to work at her $30,000 a year job with the a.r~­ ment that she intended to tpmam at her desk witll &be WU live an adequate reason for the firina and an opportunity to reply to charses. · Commlntoners told Mrs. Benson and the press that the,: were di.ssatisfied with her per(ormanoe since she took a.er the job u director four 11\ontba ago and further contmen.., that they •'had lost con.fldehce 1J\ Mrt. Benson's performance." Lawyers famlliar with the ia· sue commenttd today that Mris. Benson's best reecn&rJe ml~t be to fUe a lawsuit a1al.rist the com• mlssion on the grounds of Ueaiil diamlali&J. I .. The Coast Guard, which made this picture, says the sea o'ff Hatteras. N.C., is too rough to put men ·aootrd the barge to see if it is breaking up. The 298-foot barge, con- taining liquid asphalt and diesel fuel, broke loose from a tug E.riday. - TOCCOA. Ga. (AP> .. _ Some about 1:30 a.m. Surida7, selidlni collese students inspected the an avalanche of muddy water, · Kelly Barnes dam two hours boulders and trees to the low- before it broke early Sund~ and lyin& campus area of Toc~a reported lt appeared "as solid as Falls Bible Colleee. The greatest a tock," an aide to Gov. Geor&e destruction occurred at two · Busbee said toda1. Flooding trailer ~ks on the banks of Toe· froai the collapsed dam took at coa Creek, a shallow stream that least 38lives. flowed from an 80-acre lake the Tom Perdue told a news COO· dam held back. ference that David Fledder· Perdue said FledderjohPD, a Johann and seven! other stu· volunteer fli'eman and student at dents inspected tbe dam because the colleae, was responsible for of the torrential rains and they check!J)g ~e dam. He died when repotted there seemed to be no the dam bunt while teylilg to dant'er. warn residents in the trailer park THE EABTBEN DAM burst . oft.beoossilillityofdanger. ... .. . ... JI. • 87 Tbe Alileclated Presa A new serie5 of thunderstorms dumped rain on the AUantic Coi.st states today, just as the region began recovertnc from bu~ rains that caused nelrly 50 ~tbs in the South and created commuter soar la and some power blackouts in the North. Gale warnings were in effect for mott of the New Enslarid coast. Ex-tenaiv~ fog with driule covered much fl the easte.rn half of the nation. In New York City: nh:is and high winds bit the me~~Utan area for a second att t dtY Tuesday, dumpin' a.96 lnchel of rainf'all Onto flooded stteeta by midmorlilng. S:.•eral hlgbWQS leading into the cltt were elOSed. some l\lbway llites were flciOded, and t~rary pg-trer oatages were reported throughout th~ area. WIWTS (AP> -The bodies of four college stu- dents were discovered Monday in tbe tangled wreckase of a ll1bt. plane which bad been missln& since Friday, auWorities said. The four, students at. Bethany College in San Jose, were en route from coUege to Eureia, where they were scheduled to sing at. a church. The Men- doelno County sheriff's office identified the four as pilot Rick Barry, 24, San-------Joee, David Fagerstrom, ( 23,Juneau,Alaska,Terry State Harbin, 18, IJ.nwood, and ------__.; Rasaell Franks, 25, whose parents live in India. / Sle1 re a• Nl#a LNG Sk4! SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Citing questions of safety and economy. Sierra Club direct.ors have vot- Pd to OOPOSe construction of large-scale tanker tenninala to import liquefied natural gas. The directors voted 11·3 Monday to support a moratorium on site approval for LNG terminals. It was the first time tbe 147,000.member club bas set a policy on th lSiue. M• tier 8ttqteet E•ten Plea :<SA BERNAltDINO CAP) -A former ice cream vendor on probation from a sex perversion convtCtioil bas pleaded innocent t.o new charges that be ruurdered and mutilated two young women. JU:idrew E. Robertson of Collon appeared before Municipal Court Judse Theodore Krumm, wbO'R.beduled a prellmlnary hearing for Nov. 22. Tlie bodies ol the two women, dis4Ullboweled and their breasts partially cut off, were found near Interstate 10 within two weeks ol each other. Karen Litzau; *>, of Enid, Okla .• was fouud Oct. 20 near Beau0topi and Kimberly Gano, 19, of San Bern• ·nowasfo\,lDd Nov. l west of Yucaipa. ~ •• ,.,. ·-· ldetatlfietl VENI'URA CAP) -A man, drowned when a 19-loot OUtboa.rd motor bOat C8Pt'ized in rough seas a mileiOuth olVenlura Harbor, was identifie<l Mon- day as 63-year-old George Herbelln of Oceanside. A spokesman for the Ventura County coroner's office said Herbelln's body was discovered by two fishermen when it washed ubore in Oxnard on Saturday, a week after the boat capsized. Brown's Actions Polled . W~laad olW•1'es Recent strong winds churned the Santa Barbara Channel and turn'ed Santa Barbara's Shoreline Park into a misty wonderland for strollers MMe Lachieze and Laure Delesalle. Clear skies and NORWALK CAP> -Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown Jr. has pledged t.o pour up to $6.2 million into up- grading troubled ~etrop0litan State H06pitaJ by nearly doublln& the size of the staff. • "Hiribg starts at 9 o'clock in the motnlng," Brown told re- porters after the plan was ham- mered out Monday durlne a lengthy meeting with other state officials. "We're putllne the dollars behind t.be rhetoric." .., HE SAID the fundlne would re-. quire JegislatJve approval, but ad~ed: "l'm confident th,y will accept this. If the state Legislature rejects H, Metropolitan will sink back int.Q the same situaUoa we·ve had for the last few yean." In addition to &iring more staff. en, the plan will ipclude aailJ'Y lncreues sot.be ~ital Will be· better able to compete witb other institutions in attractJ.nc qualified personnel. Brown aild TOE HOSPITAL was tbi'own ;. into a crisis late last month wbeo a num~ of psychiatrists re- signed, forcing closure of three acute·care w~. · Jn aiidltion, a report was i!sued soon after charging the hospita1 with violating state regulations and usingaubstandardpractices. ' THE PSYClllATRISTS whO resigned cit.eel low pay compared to other imtltutioos and difficult Slayer Given ·µre WOODLAND HILLS <AP> -The convict.eel killer of a suspected drug ringieadet bu received a lite prison sentence for the crime. Superior Judge Karl C. Broady im~ed lbe sentence on Crist.opb K. Ladue, as. ol Woodlaild Hills, who was convicted of murder. and conspiracy Oct. 3. rt tOOk a whlle, ut range Coun y su~rvisws a t m to have got tho rn ge on cam ~form. Jt come, and it hu to come soon enough to earl')' some weight in next year's supervi$orial ele<:Uon. f.I Last week, after another round of stalllng, the pervisors instructed County Counsel Adrian Kuy,t>er to raw up a comprehensive campaign reform o.Hllilance ased on a variety of proJ)OSals that have ~n puttorward iJl the past year or two. t These include: . I -The final report of tbe 1978·77 OrQJlge CouittY Gr8J1d Jury. ' ] -A proposal prepared after more than a year of study qy the Citizens' Direction Finding Commission. -A proposed campaign reform initiative which a citizens' group calling itself TIN CUP wan ta to put on next year's ballot. -~-An abandoned reform ordinance drafted by Kuyper at the behest of supervisors in 1975. With the clamor for a clean-up in county campaign practices growing louder by the day, it's become quite clear that if the supervisors don't act, the citi.tens will. And if that action should result in voter approval of something as rigid as the proposed TIN CUP initiative pr· · dinance, it could be bad news for all future seekers of coun- ty offices, including the three incumbent supervisors who wlll face re-election ih 1978. The fact that the supervisors decided to give up on their latest stall -an attempt to set up still another com- mittee to study the problem -indicatei they may have seen the light. , . This time they'd better carry the matter through to an acceptable conclusion. For oncei Oranae County voters de- serve a clean, straightforward e ection, without the dreary follow-up of post-election revelations of fund juggling and conflict-of-interest charges. ~alancing .Benefits A proposal to add a "weeks-of ·work·• test to the cur- rent dollar earnings criterion for unemployment insurance eligibility has raised howla from some quarters. State experts admit some 78,000 Californians could become ineligible under the proposed plan. But, they add, benefits could be increased for 94 percent of claimants. More important, the so-called "career" benefit claimant who bas mastered the technique~ working just Jong enough to qualify for benefits, would be eliminated from the program. · Under present law, earnings of $750 01' more in the pre- vious year are sufficient to qualify a worker for up to 26 weeks of unemployment insurance ranging from $30 to $10il a week. · The $750, it is noted, can be earned in a matter of days by some high-paid claimants, who then can take time off and collect their benefits. And a worker making the cur- rent avera~e weekly wage of $212 can meet the dollar re. quirementmjustoverthreeweeka. Requiring cletmants to have worked at least 10 weeks in a year, in -addition to meeting the dollar reqairemen~ would save an esUmatecl $U million a year, Which could be used to increase benefits for those who do qualify. Fourteen states now have weeks-of ·work tests r~g from 14 to 20 weeks. And 00 states pay hfahet marhnnrn unemployment benefits than California. In light of inflation, the $750 earn.Ing requirement seems outdated, as is the relatively inadequate benefit available to workers in low-pay jobs. The weeks-of -work plan is opposed by actors, movie extras, cannery workers and others in seasonal trades. But a 10-week work requirement does not Jeem too far out of line. And there would be a real argument in favor of ftnd.iDi some way to get the "operators .. out of tbe unemployment benefit picture in the interest of giving the genuinely un- employed enough to live on until they can n.id work • • Opinions expressed in the lpace above are thOM of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are thOae of tMlr authOft and artists. Reader comment It rnvlted. Addreu The Dally Piiot. P.O • . Bo~ 1560, Cotta M .... CA 92626. Phone (71-i) ~1. Earl Water& A Comparison of Tw.o Tax· Initiatives vent t.be we bW from P"Owtalg even though the tax rate ls halved. the measure would freeze UMUmeats at the nlua- tiona in effect a' the Ume of lbe adoption of the proposition. '' lT'S ON L 'f HALF FULL! 11 tax burdeil from holiieownen to commerctu~. Tti• extent of tboie tranllel'8'could bt sof· tened by redueed spending and the enactment of Other takes. .. H.aU. Now lt'• up to I Uan ~\hositles to d~id• whether to JoOk under the vaat wall PalrltlDC by 010t"llo Vasarl, who remodeled the room lour cen• turlp •JO, and lee if tbe restardltn are right . ... &'VE PASSED TilE BALL to them ·at this P91h.t, .. alld Maurizio Serachlill. aclenlitic director of the )'eat·lodi project that used ultrasonic and in· !tared egwpment. Amerlcd indu.strialilt Armand HaJnmer, wbo financed the final stage of the Florence research QUEENIE ly Phil lnt•rlondi 11·8 "-"-"~ ~ <Zz .. ~. "Here comes that impossible hot-<logging turkey wilb the meat loaf brain aJ(ain ... " Shot, Fired Chief Serves Two-day Term KERMIT, W. Va . <AP> -Two hours after he became police chief or this small community oo the West Virglnfa·Kentucky border, Ben Johnson was shot in the chest while trying to quell a dtsturbance in a tavern. Two days later. be was ftred. Mayor Arthur Crl1ger said Monday that Johnson, 43, a former state trooper and former member of the police department in nearby Fort Ga y, and Patrolman Walter Johnson, no relation. were wounded during the melee Friday night at Wilma·!\ lt'rlendly Tavern CHIEF JOHNSON WAS RELEASED from the hospital Saturday. but Patrolman Johnson, 57, re- mained hosp1tahzed with a stomach wound. Crigger said Johnson was hlred as chief Friday to help clean up the town's drug traffic. The town merchants association agreed to increase the chief's $650 monthly salary with an unapecified specwl donation, he said. But on Sunday, after conducting its investiga· lion or Johnson's previous experience. the merchants· association decided to withdraw the of. fer. Cr1~~cr said. Shortly thereafter, the Kermit Town Council met, decided to go alone wllb the 'I merchants, and fired the chief. CRIGGER SAID HE WAS NOT certain what made the merchants and Town Council change thl·ir prn;1t1on on Johnson . The mayor scud Johnson was hired to help stop the drug traffic in this community of 1,100 persons alon.: the Kentucky border. Ho said the town sWl wanti; to crack down on the drugs as well u a prostitution problem and is again lookinl for a nl'W chil•L The nearness to the Kentucky border ls part or the law enforcement problem, Criner said. • LEON DO 08A~E OF Aneiari,"' com- memorating a 1«0 FtorenUno victory, wu com· _plet.ed 1n tht early lllh ce,it'1r1 durina lortnce'a brief hAltory u repu lie. lt dJ.sap Uter tbe duket t()C)k ovor and ordered V lb nmodel the hall in ua. t . • some .rt bbtoriaos bellevo IAoaarito ~ ao untried fresco *hnique and the colon faded awa7. Othera belie\'e Uie fraco was covered up becauae it alortrled lbe republic. The Vasan palnUn1 Js a battle scene that cov- ers one third of a wall of the room, whlcb ls located in the Palazzo Vecchio, lhe city ball, and la used mostly as a museum and oc klaally tar public meetings. Travers NeWU>o, an attreetoratloiiex"rtfrom Los Anaelea wbo came to Ftorence lD 1974, con· eluded trOm hiltorkal evidence that the Vasari palntlne w~ tho most Uftly ,.pot to loolt for tl\e somewhat smaller LeOnardo, but he did not have the equipment to do 10. Seracini, who was born in Florene, and 1tud1ed englneerlrig at UC San Dlego, broucbt bla team of ex puts into the hall in October 1916. FRANK SM~lH ' FOR , ·,B/AN PIG.0NE 17.th mAPDIJpatd. Screen atan Steve Me~ and A.U •acGraw, . wboee romance durta.a fUmiq ot ''Tb Ge&a-ay" led to the breakyp other JDmil.Ctl to m.ovi•,mqs&&l boo l!.v*U; iv•aeparalecJ,'aliwyerrorthe~fe •aid. One of them w 1 probably file lot divorce to end their fOUl't>'ear marria1e, Hid lawyer ltea ZUJrtn. The <!Ouple were married 1n a Cheyenn•. Wyo., city park under a cottonwood trH In 1973 by a justice ol the peace who halted hia 1011 ame to perform the ceremony. • McQueen, 47, and Miss MacGraw, 38, said their partin1 was amicable * Les Goldman, a top aitle to Energy Secretary )amea R. Sebles1D1er, rushed from the conference committee meeting where members or the Hoiase iind Senate were working on the adminlatraUon 's energy package. Rayburn House Office prnoLE . Out the door of the ( } Building sped Goldman, 6jVT · who then quickly climbed _____ ..;.... __ ~ into a waiting limousine A moment later, Goldman, looking a lltUe flustered, emerged from the limousine. He'd leaped into the wrong vehicle. Waiting to take Goldman back to the Department of Energy was a tu more modes\,S>l". * Add a 286th fireflghter's hat to the collection or 13oston Po conductor Arthur Fiedler. The 82-year-old maestro was named honorary Au~a M alne fire chief during an in· tcrmlssion of a Boston Sym- phony Orchestra concert which attracted 7,200 persons. Fiedler was presented with ah at and a fire hatchet. * Josephine Simeone, a 63· year-old victim of muscular FtEOLf.11 dystrophy. found a reason to arise from her wheelcba1r and walk for the first time in yean; She was getting married. Wearing a low cut aqua evening gown and veil for the ceremony, Mrs Simeone walked with her friends' help down the aisle of an improvised chapel m New York City to be joined in marriage to 77. year.old Benjamin Goodman. The cheers and ap- plause for her efforts were almost deafenme. thief execuUve &mcer Of 8eara, ROebUclt 8nd Co., •ffecUve Feb.1 . h "'vieep ltt n.,.,, ,_..-,( C9t!.r. ~ IC. ei: chtlirman, atnce Febru • l'.Y/11179. He aucce A.rtaur .Wood. Wood will reUre Jan. at UDdl i tbe coropany's reUrement policy. tollowbl, 32 yean of acUve mana1ement. He will continue as a dlrictor, and become chairman of the board ot trustees of the savmgs &pd profit ahnnn• fund otscan employtes DextM~ · • State Sen. Peter Bebr. one of the stature's leadm, enviroOroentau.ta, •aid woUld not run for re-.Jection in im. lmmed.la~ly after Behr'• announcement, As- semblyman Ba,.,., Keene, D·Eureka, said he would seek the Senate seat. The district coven th North Coast from San Francisco to the ~on border. Betir's brief statement eave no reason or blS decision, which a Slel'l"a Club lobbyist called "a great loss to the environmental l'.llovement. .. . * In bis first sermon as sen.Ion minister of the Riverside Church, the Rev. WllUam 810ane Coma promlsed tbe church will ~ ac· tive in basic human needs, such as food and clothfn1. 0 1t used to be we thought human rights was getting a black to the lunch counter." the former Yale Unive"rsity chaplain said. "Now we realize when the fellow gets to the lunch counter, he ought to have money to buy a hamburger." COPPIN T b e P r e s b y t e r i a n clergyman, a civil rights and antJ.war leader in the 1960s, assumed leadership of the 2,1500-member 1ll- terdenominaUonal congreaaUon in New York City from Dr Ernest Campbell, who reslped last year.' • Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. showed 60 fir&t·1rade students bow to operate a solar motor and escorted them on a tour of hJs office. The rare personally conducted tour was set up after a poster·slzed letter from the children cau ht Brown's eye in a stack or hun- dreds of letters to his office, staff analyst MooJca Gamber said. Aides said it was the first t i m e i n h i s t e r m B row n · -~~!Jll':-1\c, personally conducted such a Mrs Simeone, a widow. and Goodman, who has a respiratory ailment, are patients at the Hebrew Ilospatal for the Chronically Sick. Theirs was the first wedding at the Bronx institution in its 50·year history tour The children were from '"'OAY,SATUltDAYANO Village School in the Sacramen-suNo:!t~i~!:::·:"•11 to suburb of North High Jandl. "•-u.n ~.111.,. 1or Teec11trs," illrt1'111r r.....-, IC.O., (OIH\Mll"9 1• •sv(holtgltl, UC,.....,.," UC trv111t • Physicist I.I. Rabi was honored by world scien· tif1c leaders at a convocation at Columbia A senior at Hamburg (Iowa) Eai,,..1on _...._ ...,....,.., "''· High School has been warned by • " ~ .,~.:._~~ ~~i~.·P~':~f the U.5. lmmi*ratWn and Natw-allutionS.l'Vicebe ?!_11~1•_!':!!;: uc11~• r~: Universit:\-. Rabi: 79, was honored dur- ing the observance of the 50th anniversary of the his toric Pupan Physics Laboratories. t ·t hi $9 k · t r -..,, ,_,, ~rl( ,,. •llQ «>t,...... mus qw. s ·~·wee monune paper rou e or ace i11ro11,_,1urn.MC11,a..o. deportahort AIOAY ... DSA'fUltOAY Tb R Cb I Klrtl th NO'l.HANOU;ttAMOn . e ev. . ares er. pastor of e First . "ttll tntlhll: A,.. Acl!Wotetl ... Baptast Church m th4' small town in southwest Iowa, Tte<111,,. ~uen." "•'"" 0o11, was lead•na a nlission aroup in Nicar~ua a few ""·0 ·• '"''""'*-· £aM Lot .,,..,.. ~"«> • Coll •• A UC ntlne £wttM!en two-In has career , dunng which he won a Nobel Prize in 1944, he played key roles during World War 11 in the development of radar and the atomic bomb aad atomic energy, and served as a peacetime adviser to presidents, the United Nations and NATO years ago and befriended F~ Blanford ere. -k•llCI -· Prt., Mo,. m.; s-1 .• He invited Blanford to come to Uie United •~··12-_, 1·sp.m., ""'· U4, • Hlll'llenlllM ...... l,ICI ~ F .. : States, and Blanford rttei ved a Vl.Sa to attend Ham-m, tn<hodetf*llint. burg Higb Jut year as a junior. He enrolled a1alii this year, and Kirtley helped hiin 1et his paper route. • Prince Michael of Kent, the first member of the • Ed11tanl R. Telling was elected chairman and Royal Family to take part in the annual Londoq to Brighton veteran cl.t'lrally, finished sixth in a field Ski Touring Series Set A lecture series on ''Ski Touring," including tips on the the best local spots, lessons in reading weather arid snow condi· lions, and advice on equipment, is bein11 pre- sented at Orange Coast College, The lectures, which will be held Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon, feature Lynn Storstad, physical education and outdoor studies instruc- tor at both OCC and Long Beach City College.· Admission is free. For further information call 556-5880. Class Set On Waste of 256 starters. BELFAST, Northern freland CAP> -Police arrested at least halt a dozen Roman Catholic women during the Diibt and said · they were suspect«\ "of 1mu1· gling {irebomb,S ln their brassieres, pants suits and baby carriages into downtown Bellut. The poU~ raided Catholic areas after more than 20 firl!bombs were planted C!wiog the weekend as part of an lllcel1.· diary campat1n by the Irish Republican Army that has caused damaee estiniated at $31 mllUon this year. Army experts defusecl more iban half of the weekend bcirnbs, but sevu.J. Belfast buslnases were gutted Monday m1ht. BOOCllEVEll SAID that uJes ln the food service industry -which covers all types of restaurants as well u institutional fffdlng operations like those in the military -will total $93.7 billion in um, up 9.1 percent from .this year's estimated $85.9 blllion. Boochever did not. break down the menu price increases accordlni to 'Speeial Da;r' • " on eoucatton for mentally gifted c:hlldmt, ''The Paren~ Teacher Team for tbe GittA9d," will be present· ed by Dr. Jullasu Gensley, Friday, Nov, 18, •t 8 p.m. at. Santa Ana College.. " Dr. Genaley, professor emeritus of elementary education at Cal State Lone Beach, i1 vie•· president. of the National Asaociatlon of Gifted children. The lecture, which Is sponsored by the Gifted Children's Association or ---------!Orange County, ts free and open to the public. For further information call 897·1S29. • •u•oou . G•ISJETT• ~·N "LEONARD" AHOOES, rftl· E~TeLL.AR GltlS!>ETTE. rftldent 9ttll ot Sol!UI AM, C... Pe~ owoy on of !.<Milo 14.rw, Co. f' .. wcl •••Yon H°"· ,.._mbei' 4, "17 al the ... At! 17. •moer >. IW1 at tile -ot St. Belo-~.......,.. 9f Elitallel/I AllOOtl. wlle ot Wolloco Gr1uettt, lo111n9 fether of i.-nt G. AllOdOS ol LOf't mot1>er OI CDMI• T. GrtHllW of 5-11 llMCI>, C.. .• brW>er of Allrecl A-1 0\ 01-.0. C.., O.rl•no Br «ton of Wost £~oncll'*>=·· Wiiiiam 111-1 of Covino, ca. °"° Well.c• ~. (frluell•, L~ C..., AllOdH.ot lku'lfn9eme, Jr. ol S.nla AM, ca., alsler OI WllllOll> C.. llvtll of I',._, ca. Ethel Collins of ltl .. rMm, Co. Nellie FIMUy htwlw 4'f Cewcoa. Co. encl Flouy ol ~ta AN, ca. IM\d Julia R._ot S.n. Elh1nll of l.'°"9 &Mell, Co. Mr. AllOOtl ... AM, Ce. Funor11 sorv1c .. wllr l)t ,.,. tlMI CIM1 ~1 of Thi N1tk!Mt hotel W~y Nowmoer t. tt77 "' Assoc;lltwift of F .... , EmplOYHl, .... II 00 A.M .•• Smtih TUllllll L•mb wa • COftll1'11Ctl~ •fl91neer for 1"9 111\ortuery CN!pel with Rov. OeW~yne Ulll Mel Stet• Gollemll'I"" fo()O yHrl. 8111ter oi The CllUrC/I Of Qod In c:llrbt llOIM)' 1'9(11ed Moneloy No.,.moer 7, olflcl•llno 1ni.mwn1 will!» al Hll'bor 1977 at 1:» P.M. It tho Smllft Tulllill AUi C•mltery 1n C..te Me ... Co. Lamb Senti Ano Mortuory Ch• ... I. Srflllll Tutlllll Llml> SanH .itn1 Man Of Chrbll.,. llurl•I .,.Id Tuttoay Mortu1ryd1rec1ors.. W·41JI. No ... mbei' •• 1'11 It t.00 A.M. a1 St • .,t$~t'r.D~!J~itt~:o<fj AM'S C.tholk Church '" senle AN, Tl Q , l•I.,,.,,..,. .t Hoty Cro• C.metery ~ h In Len 41919. Ce Sn\1111 T ullllll La!IW or t e Sant• An.t Mert111ry dlr•~ttra. W-4131. KACIK MAllY KACIK. e rnldent ot Colla ~ PllMd -ey Ha..ml)tr 1, lt11. SN h "'"''"94 by • C1a419Mer, M4/ry WoOda of Coll• Mew, one ion, llay~ ~lk" N-Yon, --lister. l'rl!lkes ~Of ,...., Yori!. 1 4r1ndcllllC1r•n 1nd l 9 r••t· tr•nochllclun. Mon of Cllrllll•n l\wlOI Will be Cel-•ltCI W-t<Soy e..,_n1119 ~ IO et I 00 PM SI pnlm eemooc Cllutcll. Colla Mffa ~v•I• femlly Interment Holy Sel)uk~., Tllllncloy, Nowmber 10, IHll Br-ay MOrl...,y C..ta AoWw 01,.C'°?-n..., Wlilltftl, ti\ lieu ot fiow.rl. ~ u1ntl'lllUI• IO • IOUI SI. \llncentcle P.ui Society TMOMll'SOH TINA THOMPSON, rttlCllM of Costa Mew, Ce. f>flsed -•Yon Ho .. ml>er 1, 1971. Bel9'1•d mother ot Mertna Brindley, Fun.rat Mrvictt wlll lie hold Wlelnelelay ....,,,.mber t, 1'17 et t 00 P.M It Smlll\ Tutn111 Ulml> C:.O.t.e Mew MortllOry ~ wltn P•ator 11-rl Jecob1 ot Tiie Mew e11>I• clla.-i ftf. f1Cl1t1no llltoerment w111 .,. It Pacific Vl•w "'•"'!"I.al P•r-~•Ill Tu11u11 I.Ami> Cott• Mes. Mortuary a1reclor1. ........ TllllNIY JOHN PETE,!' TIEl'IHEY, rH-nl of lrvlne, ca. I'•~ •wey on Hov ember 7, 1911. $wviY'tcl ., Ma pere•I• Mr. a. MrL "°6ert ..... of ''"' .. • c:. . -sl.tert KAllf'leeft -el C.t• Mn.a. c. . ..,. Petric!• TieNMy ot cos\e ~.Co. l)rofNr Robert"· Noel ~ ol Irvin., Ce -•-•l:hlr P1lrlek A11no 9/ ~hUMlll. MHt OI TIW CIWI stlln e..t.I w.-..,., Howml>er t, t917 It ):311 PM •I St. Jooclllm6 t1t...i1c OU'ch. c..u ,,,.,., ca.1n1 ... ment G-S/'elJNrO c.mtiwy. a.llJ 8er99ron Cate Mew Merluery CltrK• ton. Record Birt .. SAN CLllMaNTI: Gllf~llALHOSl'ITAL Oc.....,U,1'11 Mr. •nd Mn. T omolby But,.r. Son Juan C•Pl•l•-.boy Mr. and Mn. Aocler1 HOClr10, s.n Clement•.o•rl Oc-i..nn Mr, Ind MrL Si.wn Krott, <:epi1trano BH<lt,9lrl 0c....,.v,1m Mf'.OncfMrs. Gr~Syl!M,Sel\Juon Cep1&1rano,91r1. Mr, 0"4 Mrs. Jerry 8rl1to1111, S.n C.lemenll,l>Oy 0c-u.1m Mr ana MrL Mark Gilman, S.n Juon C.api.tr•no.olrl. OclOMr:zt,1'71 Mr 1nel Mrt. Jolln Moore, Son Clem•nte,91rt. Mr ana ,,.,. l:dwerel R•IPfl, Son Juan L•pls1r1no,l>Oy 0c_.,,,n Mr. and Mn. (Nrlo• 5eutn, so.. C.l•tn•nte, oift. ,., ... ~. GATLIN, 0.~. enCI Oenosc M•rie; EASOH, y-Wllllam; lUCKEA, Oenn11 L .. aM Louro Lynrt, COLLINS, Linell A. •nel FrMmen L ; MlAAtTT, J.A. -Melli" A.: MOOR•.,..,..,,. fte&le<'1 L : MILLlA. Pr .. I.MCI Ka1Mrlne L., CllOW. ROUlll\t •n• Onld Easton; HUNTER. $uMA Ann olW l.mll; BIRLIH, Ir-Stroll •"4 Arlllur~tlld. llANHA. Jell\ A. MC .... I .I BOOHER. Oolot• 0. encl A1<1\ard; JONES. Tern L. -Got-dOft w.; C.ONlALlil. Z.ICI• and UIHll Deatm Elsewhere 8AUMAN1.~ornell• Arlette Olld f Rel1lldl U\11.IAOA, ll911olfe ene El••nor; KELLER, Gwenn 1nel Jemu, GOBEL, Sll<rtey Elaine eno Alllerl L"; JUIOLltf;, ...,..Ille a, anel f rMtclt M.; HORTH, Tiwrew F nncts O•rerelo, elia Thero• ~ r1ncnNolth-Keneloll E4'Jerd. HILLSBOROUGH (AP) -Cyril Ric bard Tobin, 97, an attorney who served as director of the Hibernia Bank for several years. died Tues· day in his home here following a long Ulneas. Tobin's grandfather, Richard Tobin, founded the bank in 1859. KRUil! Palrkla AM encl !illlbert J11mH; J0HNSOf4, Otrelcllno M, 111141 Rotlttt I>.; JACKIOH, Wayne Ii. ee Ju1nll1 M.; NAVA, CMmon M. encl Ernesto; NUNGAAAY, P•lrlcie - JtJlll, 1108EAT$, MMVo Z.. end Ken11e1h J,. 1oo•erto. Telly i.. w A ... rt H.j WOOl.BllY, t.nle A. 8f'4 Mulln, BETTENCOURT, CMr~no V 14'dOOMldl>. '- 0'111111 EH1 Mlehatl,la<llMIS.l>dl'a K•Y; WHI TJ, DIYllU .• en; Lllls ~ 8LA Y LOClt, Joell LllCltle *'6 Jol'rlta Hay; BUSACCA. ksll onO An.IA; NAG.EL, LA$!,. N. Incl H.,.,_ W.; Kll.:SON, O\lrl0$ -\lie!M1a, MG-CAMMON, ............. W. Ml Jtfle Erin Troop; MARINARO, CM1a •114 S•l••Clore; WAIGHT, Merl• OetoH119elft ~ Co•I Ell..,..rtll, GRAGG A__..Tan'YMCl......,8. HOUtliMAN, lort dnd ... ,, BELTfiA, Ov'iMIN L.-Jom.t.J .. WRIGHT, Danny Joe encl Ottlltlne q Freeclmaat 88, dted tn 11 ... ; uN1L1.., .M11111 •·~ MIO t.be Biscayne Medl~al :~~~.:::0·'"· ,_., Ellen .. MISSION HJLI.S (AP) -Former Department ~f Water and Power Commiulo'ller Natllan ~enter in Hollywood, _____ _..... ____ _ i'la. Heart Progrmn The Orance County Chapter of the American Heart Association is taklni appUcaUons for it~ 1978 Sludent ~esearchAasoclates Program. Th• pm gram off era student& the opportunity to work wtth meclJcal 1ctentl1ta durinf the summer tnontbs. Applications are available at the Heart As· sociatlon office in Santa Ana. The filing deadline la P"eb..,3, 1978. For furtber information call 5'7 -3001. 1 I l Product ReDloval Planned WASHINGTON CAP> -The Food and Drug Administration bas an- nounced plans to take off the market 11 biological products used for al- lergies, arthritis, skin ailments and respiratory ~ problems because there was no evidence the products were safe or ef- fective. · ' . The action was part or an evaluation of 31 bac· terial vaccines and an- tigens by an FDA ad- visory panel set up in 1973. Manufacturers already have withdrawn a dozen vaccines and an- tigens, and the panel re- commended that the FD A require more studies on the remaining eight products. •NEARLY ALL the products were glven by injection. The FDA said they were used by a. small number of pbyal-t cians, usually to treat , chronic conditions. An antigen is a substance, norm ally a protein, that elicits an immune response in humans. Most of the products reviewed by the panel t CONSUMER} were licensed before 19'0 when the government al· lowed druga \o be marketed without PIUt ing a strict standard for safety and effecUv.eness. The FDA is revie-Nme au llcensed btolo1lcal products, and recently announced plans to re- voke licenses for elabt skin test products. oeu,,......_,,..... NICK DUJMOVICH SCANS SOME MEMORIES. Faees Beavers . I I r ' UCLA's DonaRue: . It's Bukich's Show I By ROGER CARLSON Of ... DeUy ....... tMf WESTWOOD-One player's misfortune ls another's op- portunity and former Newport Harbor High football atar Steve 8uticb geta his cbance Saturday to guide the UCLA Bruins agai.o8t PAC-8 rival Ore1on State at the Coliseum. Dukich, who red-shirted a year in anticipation of two years of starting duty at quarterback for the Bruins this campaign and ltT8, follnd him.self in the unen· Viable })06ition of playing aeoond string to sophomore Rick Bashore, a product ·of Edison <Huntinitoo Beach> Web. ~ the Jlruins' f1nt nine pm es it has b8eD Bashore in the starter's role witb Bukicb 1etting Ui J>nly occaalonillly, nettina 88 yards on four complete puses imd 36 yards on 14 rushes. WASl-U.NGTON CAP> -In a message noting their displeasure w itb travel restrictions on American college athletet, three senators have asked the National Cqlle~ate Athletic AasociatiorttQ explam why jt won't allow. four swimmers to tour the viet Umon. -Sens. Job1l Culver. D-lowa, Richard Stone. D·Fla.. and Ted Stevena. R·Alaska. sent the NCAA a telegram Monday asking that the ortaniJatloa reconsider ita decision. All three are mem· bers ~ the Pftaidetlt's COm- misfion oa 011,Ulpic Sports and Rangers .Sign ZiSk; Jardine Out ~. ·. . f .• "oAf 't PILOT Grid Coach's Odd Move . Paying Off Ken Swearingen, Saddlebaclt- College ·s football coach, made a seemingly strange move before the Gauchos played Orange Coast seven week:S ago -and he hasn't lost since. Swpringen left the sidelines for UN scouting booth prior to the OCC gaQle and the Gauchos have won six in a row since that time. "I did it for a couple of reas- ons,". say~ Swearing~n. "One, I had Doug Minter, our offensive hne coach up there, .but we felt we needed him ~,.the sidelines to ~1ve his guys e supervtslon and prodding. "And, secondly, I can see a lot more up there," says the second- year Gauchos coach. Swearingen says the only dis- advantage is not having control -CRAIG SHEFF fver the athletes. "We have very ~ood assistant coaches, so there eally isn't any problem. In fact I on 't think anyone knew I was one the first two weeks. That hows how imp(>rtant you are, ight?" The move is unusqa}, but it's een done before -but not by wearingen. "No, I can't re- ember ever going up there in 11 my years or coachinf. But it's orked out all right, so 'm eotna o continue to 40 it," says the aucbm coach. • Golden West and Bakersfield ~olleges are close to a flnaJ bagreemeat oo a two-year football · ~ootract, 1ays GWC atbletlc ?al rector Fred Oweos. r·Tbe Rdstlen wlll travel nortll ~th years -aad probably a ~ood m"U' ae...,. after tbat - E,rlmaril)' bec:aaae or a fat check ~we wtn aet. Golden West reeelved $2,500 for playing at Bakenfteld last year (a 37·Zl Bakenfteld win> and Owens tay1 tM Rustlen will get more moaey aext year because of a moltl·year pact. GWC bopu .to play at Bakersfield In tbe '78 opeaer ~pt. t. • Dolphins Staadout Dana Hills High 's Jeff Olsen <21 > and the rest ot Ute Dolphins tackle archrival San Clemente Thursday night <7: 30 > in a South Coast League football struggle at San Clemente. San Clemente needs a win to clinch the crown -Dana Hills seeks its first-ever win over SC after four losses. Outlook ·is Grim As Lions Prepare ' Weatmlnster Hlgb football coach Bill Boswell bu a ariJD outlook for Thursday ntebt'a Sunset League finale wlth un- beaten Fountain Valle)' . "We•re going to have to pl17 way over our heads i{:~ •"1 ha the pine at an." 11 '8QL "I don't know if we cu do anytbtn1 aaa1nsf, them." Fountain Valley invades Westminster at 8. The Barons' overall ~'would be eDOUIJh of a problem, but Westminster mast alao '•o wltbout quartertiacklklcker l\on CroUeb. who 2'~ered a bee injury that bas flnlShid tilS season. Crouch haDdlecl We.tmlniter'• PQDUI\& Ud .I d IJQ~. Our ~ nu 1.0 ana· proveever)'w w19b1ve.11 . l:l Toro'• eolid i\mt\lna aame baa worked well b•blnd tha blocktnc of cuarda Mark· McOarth1 ,nd Stevo Plnea, tacldes Dal• Mitchell and John Hess and center Nick HJptn. both am. Marathon Ruliner Recal'ls the Grind 87 BOWARD L BANDY Clf .. Oelty ~..... • What ls lt like to run your flrllt marathon raoe <• mu ... m yard.a) an.only tlu'ee moatha of training at age S2 and finish 1econd in Your age divialon? Toni Hewitt of N~ Beach dld Jul1 that what she ran ln the Mayor Daley marathon race In CblcalOIA~mber. It all ~ Jr1 Teeate, a.ta California when ahe ran a JO.mile race wltll Cblcaeo televtslon penonallty S&ev• Edwards and his wit~. then wu invited by Edwards to p~otpate ln the Chicago inarathOn. Rewttt Je111 of IMr = • .. tbe • ., Ill the nee abe li-t onw three moatbl ~torun: ;!~a,... S.000 runners ol all •I• at the RUtlnl line in Cbicaeo," she recalla. "St.eve and Jane Edwards and I were way back at the start and wbm they fired tbe eumoo to •tart the race, it seem.a llkt It tOOk us 10 minutes to reach the at.art.Ing line. "For .tho rira. t 1T miles. I kept telllna !DJS lf, 'this II ~y ereat. • Then I beCab waiting fOI' something terrjble to happen. Not h•Ylni a year or two of bwe-rutmtnc af dlltances, wblcb moat people said waa necessary to. compete ln the 10are\hon, I didn't know what to expect. "~t 18 mites it be1an to loot Uke a World War ll battlefteld. People were !allln1 out with bleedtn& feet aome vomltlna and others 'h•d, )ust stopped from t&lrne ···························~·•·•·••• .....,. .................................... . Qty ••••••••••••••••••••• , •• Zip ••• -· ••••• d ... JEJlRY CRIBBS, Cost~ Mesa -Scored two touchdowns and dliected a well-executed olfenae in a 34·10 shocker over Laguna Beach. ~ MARCO PAGNA.NELU, B11Dtlastoa Beach -Quarterback Paananclli completed 16 of 28 passes for 260 yards and two touchdOWM against Marina. FllANX SEURER, Edlloli <Bantlncwo Beach> -The sophomore quarterback completed nine of his 17 ;.a5slni at· .tempts for 76 yards, •ained 70 yards rushing and ICOr{d a touchdown on~ 4S-yard run. CRAIG LYONS, Newport Harbor -It was a good weekend for, quarterbacks. Lyons completed seven ol 19 puses for 88 yards as the primary offeDflve weapon qi!Dst a tousb Fountain Valley defense. • GREG .KARMAN, Mubla <B•tlqioia Beada) -. Karman carried the ball 44 Um es for 283 yard.a and scored two touchdowns in M arlna 's victoi:y over crosa-townrival Hunflntton Beach. I BRAD PARKER, Caplatrano Valley -Carried the ball 16 tirpes for 162\yards and completed 9'of 20 pus attempu for 88 yards. A,NDY DOMINGUEZ. £1tucla <Cotta Mesa) ...-Made e.iaht k4!y blocks on end sweep plays from a num.tna back position, • • NICK IOGGINBOT~M. El TOl'O -Has been con.siatent all season at certter. Did a lfood job ot blocking against Dana Hilla. NORM ANDERSON, LafQDa Beach -Caught four passes and returned a punt co yardS for the Artists aeainst Costa Mesa . By Tbe Associated Press The state-wtde housing market is 1tab1lllinl after a period of tpecula4 ti.On that raised Southern Cilltornla home prices by more than 30 percent 1n late 1976, market experts say. A September construction alowdown was reported by 5ecWi~ Pacific Bank, which foctoHt a decline in housing starts next year. " . ... TBE MbDERA1E DECLINE in cooslructlon seems to reflect a mO?'e moderate demand for new homes, .Shirley Stephenson, assistant vice president of Seclll'ity. Pacific,. told a Effective 1977, con1nbu11ons lo Individual Retirement Accounts may be made up to Sl 750 101ntly between bolh wage 1•.irner end non·wage earning spouse (or 15% of annual earned income up 10 $1,760). The amoont is divided equally Into \WO accounts in the name o1 each individual Even tl'loUQh ~otitrlbutloos may be made as lata as 4S days after the end ot your tax year you must ~n ~r account t>y the end of t y &o allow for Income ta>C deductions. Start takll'.IQ advantage of tax taVtoga lrni'ned1etely. In additl0010 I Started Here, • ,. u ., . . · f.ttier, carrying oo a lon1 line of Willlam Claude Q4o.aedng Out , , J)(skenfield (Fields' real name>. Fields the third la a ~91-rp• , o«e-time FBI agent, now a PhUadelpbla-based u- . si~tantU.S. attorney. , Q: Dlda't Farrah Fawcett once steady-date Joe Namatlaf -aatre Susana. Loe Angeles. A: No. The only pass Joe ever made al Parrah WM on television. That was when the paJr fllmed a l slliaviag cream commercial in which sbe whispered, "Watch Joe Namath gel creamed." · Q: Recwreat111eons veMJckJal@l_.W. • wife in what you g~n term "SpU&ame." r What's the CIU'Tent atatu ill &ltelr •arrt .. e' - , I ~K .. lladlsoo, WI.a. I .. , A: It's more in doubt ttiaever. Wblle Ml~k Ud ' , Bianca roll, London rocks with rumors ot another rift. The only thing the Jaegers seem to acree on Is a mutual love affair with their 5-year-old gem, dita'ghter Jade. ~I Q: Who was It who said: "llo_.e la w~•er • . you can scratch wbere\'er It ltcbei''f -A. Wrqa. Austla. Tex. n. A: Comedian Woody Woodbury. · '(C , 'Se111bour ~1tioM to l{JI GordlNr, "Glad Yott Au.cf iJl *PO/ Udsnsw.tpapa. P.O. Bo.r JSIO, Coda Jl#O llcdrra tnd HJI qonNr wW CIMDff' GI ma.v qw.I· · o.t11wr/ eiM ._ Utm collmm, btd tlw ~'*""' oJ Mcdl penronolr~~impouUM. . . foll Dips for Carter :NEW YORK <AP> ·.me laleslHarrls poll in· .dicates the public does ~t think that, after nine ~onths in orfice, Presi· • cfent Carter ls living up t(> its expectations. Results of the na- fionwide survey, Oct. &·16 showed that 50 per· cent of 1,533 adults polled &ave the president a negative overall job rat-HJI and 48 percent said r;er was dome a goOd Tl' Tunes In DEAR PAT: At least a year ago I recall reading about bow to track a tornado by using one's telCYilion set. I didn't pay much attention then, but we are moving to Missouri where tornadoes are common. Can you Jet me knowhow it works? A.J., Mission Viejo Tbe. teleVbioii traeld•• method Ji new, but not foolproof. Tum your ... • .Peppy Puppets A Fountain Valley team has desigf!ed a men_agerie of. creative. critters. By MARCIA FORSBERG oe 111e p.11, Pitet sun When Carla Bar~la isn't up to her elbowt.10. band puppetit, she's usually up to her wrists bl chalky papier·mache. ~nd when ,she's n~ mak· · ing the puppet-head molds, sbe s working the 1trings or a marionette. The Fountain Valley woman has created a menagerie or critters --there's Woofer the Dog, Harry (a buck-toothed, fake-furred, genUe beas- ty ), a king clad in gold lame, a fiashy blue peacock, a huge orange devil-demon ancJ more. Mrs. Barela 's interest in tbe penonallty toys .bas grown since she first took an early childhood education class in puppetry at Oranae Coast Colleaf' two years ago. Today, Carla's Puppets, u her sbowa are called, books gigs at schools, diurebes, fairs and birthday patties. Sh lllld partner Marion Lawrence deslp, sew mold and otherwise mate most o1 ~eir cre~tures, then they write' whimsical flays witb songs and dances for the puppets to perform. . "I do t.fte low voices and Marion does the high voices," said Mrs. B~la. . The two met at OCC, discovered they were I neighbors and f!Ventually became good friends/ They took an advanced puppetry class and )(ti. Barela decided she wanted "to do a bi& pl'Qllfuc· IUon for our final." · They workect on It to&etber, made50 puppets and ended up disllkln& the project. as they re. WJ"Ote the whole thing, made new ~ and. satislied, performed for Hua Beu Rec1'eat1on, Parts and Human serv~ where )Ira. Bania teaches crafta and other aner .. scbool,proarams tor children. 1 "Before we even did the ftnaJ for the clus. •• ad done the show for a~l.000 cbildred, •• she rec.lled. Word cdt around,. Ille said. and tM _ two took their zoo to schOols and tbe llbrary iii HanUngtoo Beach. Love for the subject grew, and they enrolled in advanced puppeteerlng tor •ta&e production in <See PUPPETS, Pap CS> UMm, I'llmarrvtbem," .Graduate 1tudentN81fcy~dklnsh.lls written her maat•r's the.la at Unlyerstty or Calltomla, Ir\lin" on 7he risks .of waiting to have children past tlJe : , biological prime have been exaggerated~' Polio Shots Needed -. DEAR ANN LAND,ERS: Botb my sis· ter and I have three cblldren between 4 and l1 years of age. Mary says she Is having her children immunized this week against measles, mumps, rubella and whooping cough. She also mentioned polio. , I have not heard of a child getting polio for several years. I thought tbi6 disease was con- quered. Also. what about the others? Why go to the trouble if t)lere is no daneer? Please check with your medical consultants and eive us the right in formation. A visit to the doct.or's office costs $25 these 4'ays. Thank you. -CHAMPAIGN, ILL your cblldren at once. Whal elae will you do to- day tbat is as importaat! DEAR ANN LANDERS. I get along with my mother-in-law very well -until pie· tu re-taking time. For every major fami- ly event (begirming with our wedding> she has spoiled the solemnity of the occasion by insisting oo having a photo- grapher on hand. \Vhen we sealed our vows with a kiu, the camera was right under our noses Last week our daughter was baptized. My mother-in-law hired a photographer Csame one) and dire<:ted all the picture-taking. When I told her l didn't like the idea she said: "You 'll be glad to have the pictures myearstocome." I do enjoy having pie·. lures, but I would prefer fewer pictures and a lit: tie more dignity at af. falfS wbkh a.re supposed to h•v~ Tellgiou11 sianmcance. What do you suggest! - OVERPOWERED . DEAR OVE8: A lood com merclal photo· grapher knows bow to take pletqrea witllout getUnJ In the w1y. Perla .. • tbla la the probltm. lo the tuiure. U the ten your mother·ln·law that yoa Will eagage the photopapMr. Yoa cu tlln eaPie tile pboto- 1rapber of 10ur cbolee, give blJll Upllclt Wtrac· tlon1 oa what yoa wut aod~b•lYoGdoDOhr~ D~ E. A a · ANN LANl)ERS: My husband and~ have been happily married for two years. HIS son (now age 17) by hls former marriage lives with his moth.et ln-a clty ab'OUt 40 miles from us. ~ohhny and I J.1•-.>e always :soµeo alone welt -n problem. IJU.OUgh I sectplcnty or r~m or mprovement, 1 h~ve ' l'UNKYWINKERIEAN CASEY ..... .....,, Pldlll .... Or ...... ONet Delly Pl ... Oct. JS, Nft. 1,1, U, ttn PUBUC NOTICE PVllUC NOl'IC& HOTlctltOca•Dl'l"OU • IUf'HICMtCOUato•~· n A Tl cw CAU l'OttNIA Na TMr~OPOU .... .... ...,,114 Estate °' KATHLl!D d>llWIN, Oec:HMCI. ''"lton of ....... llllftld .... IMl~lt ,._ ,_.,. dtlm& .... Mt Ii y A separate 700 sq. fool cround level bachelor apt. ls included In the sale of the condominium situated above the apt. The private sun deck affordJ a macniflcent panoumic view of the bay, ocean and moun- tains. Sales pnce includes complete CClsR's, Associa- tion By-lawa, pubUc report. A nearby boat sUp ie available. ,Many appeallnc features to be found in Ulla out· standlne property are described in the catalogue. · TERMS: 107o deposit on day ot eale, balance uPon delivery of deed and marketable title. Buyer will be required to arran1e flnancln1 prior to the sale. Sales are eubject to confirma- tion of seller. R.E taxes estimated at $4500 per unit BROKER COOPERATION INVITED. f'OR BROCHURE, CALL OR WRITE. FOX AND CARSKAOON 1000 QUAIL STREET, SUITE 13() NEWPORT BEACH, CA lll2ll60 (714) 752-1321 WESl.l·:Y N TAYLOR CO. Hl·:A LTOHS :-.i IH'I ' l ~)~lfl UMOIStauc:TIO IAC« 8AY VIEW -·.Just completed! Be ·1st to live in this .N.B. lovely 2-stoey brick·trim home. 4 Spacious bdrms, f am rm for pool .. Oversize garage. $220.000. · WISUY M. TAYLOR CO,. ~TOllS 2111StilJHJ I ....... MEWPOllT CIHTa. M.1. 6"'4tl0 G..aret YAIUYB ZEROSDOWM Blke to beach from thia sprawlln1 executive estate l Quiet ttrfft leade to secluded entry. La vltb liv. rm plus 1ourmet k 1tchen I Sweepln1 master bdrm plu1 children's retreats. Separate fun lime fam. rm. Seller requests quick offer. Call14'7-6010 '4 1119 • rr s fUN ro flf"' • 1 NEW EXCLUSIYE USTING Beauti!uUy decorated Eastbluff home . with view of iBACK BA~ Ir niJbt"' lights. FabUlous f amUy room ·+ 4 bdrms., 3 tiaths, formil ainliig rm. & newly r.einOdeled kitchen. A sreat home for your fariilly & entertalni.q. Ga•r• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLEX Deluxe units. 101 courae view. 2 Bedrme each, priv•te, quiet, lar•e g&ra&ea. Perfect retire-~ llome and Income. Call M>--1151 MOVE UP to a quallty and Jpaciou.s- oeu in tJa14 outataGdiac z 1tory home on a tarse ~Jot; n. liMlilded muter eulta It 2 more bedioocna are upstal.ra 4s cithet' ol the 2 bedrOoms -~~ HERITAGE • . ffLALTORS - - Scr111n9 Co~ta MP'i.1-lrv1n~ Huriltnqton fh·.1ch NL' t'lµor t Beach Bl LL GR UNOY, REALTOR J•\I l:Suy'>•do• Q,,.,, ri 8 bl'J t 161 •a• tala V..., I OU ••••••••••••••••••••••• nbUran; Rare 'Mallba. 2 br. formal dlnio1, tam rm, patio. Xlnt Joe. 5.SM'191 PRICE REDUCED 4 BR, 1~ Ba, catbedral cell liv·nn w /CO'l'.Y brick frplc. Spacious kitch w I oceanbree1e. Cwit dee. New crpts. LQvel y I 0~1:• bckyrd. Super loc. Va Y .,,""""' In lhe Ranch $its th.la lov· el)' 4 bedloOm hOme by Pacesetter. Ideally Jocaiecf on a CW·de·SllC street. No assoclatloo dues. Aakinl $10"900. llAONinCENT S200 sq. ft., 4 bdrm .. 4~ batb home. Finest oceanfront c:ommunlty. Loada of~­tru. $3$0,000 INVESTMENT op- portunity; a beaulUul motel, heart or Laguna BeaCb. CJOH to beacbea as parks. Xlol cond. $'150,000 LIVEw~:U THEM'ID~~ . Askinlonly$S4,000for ~ Ul•2IOO this sharp Piao S in the beautiful Oran1etree --------.i area of lr'vine. Feat.µr .. include a commualty pool, spa. eym and Iota of good community lh1ns. I · cant. move In now & en I m m a c U n i v Pr k j(ly holiday season. By Twnbowse. 481", 2~ ba, 2 owner. Nothing com-frplc, cotrlA/C. Loissoc parable at $72,900. dues.2fam4sadultpools 963-5705 wtjac. Tennis crts, parks, close to :ichls &1----"'-'---.;.._-1 stores. lmmed occup. Priced to sell fast at S.000. Pb 831-0139 S&S Resale Specialists 3, 4 or 5 bdrm models avail., some w /pools, 968-4602 ·---------· Penniniton Properties ~ FOr 1be Commuter · Super priced 2 bedrm Condo. D1nlo1 area. forced air, deluxe built· ins, carpets, ctrapes. •••WOODBRIDGE n ea r ·s h op a n d BROADMOOR 3 Br. A frMW&ya, SM,500, BKR, beauty inside lc. out. callM2·25al S91,900. Owner I Agt I 551=4038 TIRDRLDEERFIELt> Twnhae · -~· • Plan I. i Br, 2~ ba, 2 ....... Ctlfonlla'• Story. ceramic tile eD· try, Jllush cpta, cstm p......a.t · wood sbuUera • Willi UUll~ 8 coverlnp, brick paUo 4s P"·vacv fireplace. !JY owner ,, $75,000. Pb 559-7219 aft Aroundoversiied loll, no 5pm. one behind you t WeUtl....;.:~_..;,_::.....;.. ____ l cartel fOC' !ao~ large 4 bedroom, forD).lll dlnln1. 1mall en\17 to livtn room wi\h flr•plaee. Room dividers and wal coverinl), S81,750, BKR Call8Ga:M FO~ESTE OLSON ........ •' .... • I C0st.Met41 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ec.do, new 3 Br 2~ 8-,~_;_ _ __. ___ ""1 A/C, 1ar, refrl1. wabr dryr, · pool, tennJ1.1rly lte. MSO mo.142·'"3 Brand new and beautiful-2 BR, 21~ ba ............. Offlcil ..... 614,.IOFTi 1117 Wl:S'l"CL)FF-NB AGT,ltl~ ISDJ WftfdrtDr. )'.wpoit PIDUClal ctr ~Pfflce S,.C• C:UoaSleMwcer (TH) MUll.1 ext JM WES TCLIFT BLDG. NEWP0RT Al ACll ' •· \ • •••'•A•• r .. 11 t.11 Ho ... a•ll t:.45·6101 l -nei ... c:~.,. l•omo Al An £any Nl't , ,~, • ._...,.....,.~.lfJ\th•nl # UCIWIMCe•~TIOM lncltwo<Nll "'"-. Plleft.I ... "-dMle "'--Mu~"·f ~:c, L1ngv•941 • O~m111at1~.tr 1.-• H&IM'utl·E o.y • Cte.a1 .. M •Open Tw N:""'1I HH..,.Aa~~~;';;~ll1tl Wl9l~· . -i:-- 1 • ~6'~~~ MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES \ • ST ARTIMG NOW Personal ln1truct1ons Co -:iplete Select100 Microwave Accessories Now offenno spec1allze(j courses • Mnlull • r...+y ,._. • • Low~ ClouH St8't S... • Clot-For twld9y MH11 Learn to really use your expensive· investment" We teach every phase of MICROWAVE COOKING .. Complete 71."1 Hour - 3 Week Course Fer hol._. ............. can 161-so11 \ MICROWAVE MAGIC COOKING SCHOOLS BEA TRAVEL AGENT Day & Night Classes For Men & Women PACIRC TRAVEi. SCHOOL 6 I 0 lat I 7tti 5trMt. Sent• AM. C. tJ7tl CAU l714J 543-t4.H Established 1963 F1nanc1al Aid PrcorarM Acc;red11ed By The Aocred1ttng Comm1as1on of Tile National Association of Trade & Tec:hn~ Schools -------- I V... T~ ....... .t fllt Mtit ~ ... ..... 10.. ... s...c.- ~IMrNt•r· , .. .,,.. ...... For .......... 5-ltt Coast Actor'•~ 3723 llrch St, lktij I 0 Mniport IHdl H7.02U Leaming Problem? ,~'up. .. " _ ..... • dlslike school or le.Jrntng • become confused ea111v ~ • feel like • failure • have poor grades • learn slow1v • davdreem on school I' WE CAN HELP I •READING •MATH •GRAMMAR •STUDY SKILLS GET YOUR PROBLEM HANDLED NOWI GDIWLOmCE •Open 7:30am·5:30pm .cau Evea.iDga 533-&812 For swing It iraveyard ' .. shifts available. , Data Procesa1ng •MO FUS COMPUTB Draperyworkroomoeeds DepJrtmeiit Clerks, EL TORITO now lo- terviewio1 for hO&tess. IM.)' le everun1 poc1Uon available. Apply IQ Persoo. Mon tbru Friday 3 to s PM. or Saturday. 1-.~~-;.-;.-;_~;_;;;;;;;~;!I=:=:::::::=:~=~~ 422.1 Dolphin Striker Way , PROGIAMMH !.x::~r~~~o~a~ ~~':ii~~~= Cba.llen&ini oppor. in ~o open. Top wa1es. pd " short term assian· expandiq syatem.t 3 in· holidays IJ vacation. IJ)eD1a TOP$$$ stallation for ao RPG IJ Medical benefit.a. Apply . pro1rammer. Xlnt 1135 Whittier Ave. "S.7" benefits. Call or apply CM or call"2·1M3 at: SANTIAGO IAHK llZ.5200 S3S E. lat St Tustin F..qual ()ppor Employer 0~ TE~lr'ORAflV tlf.LP (off MacArthur Blvd.) HOUSICUAMEIS WAHTID P /bme or full... Guar mln1mum P ht. 546-0930 SECRETARIES •Open 7:30am-5:3C)pm •Call Evenlnp533M82 For 1wtn1•1raveyanl shJft.s available. •HO FUS Salta Lady. ex per Wltb • without ab. SO Sportawear, at•ady wpm + Short •.long P/Ume, retired OK. ~ term. TOPS$$. She &hop. -..m2, Hnf1 Jkb. 6 ~ If MP•Jf1M1\ 11•. P s.J• MAY CO. MUSIC DIPT. ,,...._ 54M4H ,___...;..__ _ __..__........._.... CHRISTMAS ' Equal Oppor Employer HELPERS Do you like people & SECRETARIES mualc? Are )'ou looking • 1m2002t1 AJr conditioning, ec.reo, au~ oondltlof\I (173GOE) Al.SO I '71 2002 4 ~td. Mt06f (117REVl ,.,.,.,,ON Vol JO 1MP01>1\ 8Jr:l4M 19,.111"~ Two ot three HunUnston Beach men jailed on murder conspiracy charges in the death of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley today pleaded not gvUty to the. charges durinc their ar- raignment in the Harbor Judlclal Dtltrlct Court. Attome)'I for Rayniond Steven Resoo, 28, and An· thony Marone Jr., 23, both of 10121 Merrimac Drive, made the pleas before Judie Selim Franklin. The third man, Jerry Peter Fiori, 41 , of 19822 Brookhurat St., delayed en- tering a plea until the pre- liminary hearinc. Judge Franklin set the preliminary hearlnc for Nov. 22 ln hl5 «.ourt. Bovan was sbot to death Oct. ~ID Newwrt Beach. mLetter Confirms ~Cult J,ink B1 STEVE MlTCRELL CM ... O.lly f'll• """ Laguna Beach PoUce Chief Jon. Sparks hu disclosed a letter purportedly from the founder oC the International Society for Krishna Consciousness which ' 7 links the cult with directors ct Newport Beach-bued Pruadam Dtstributina IntpaUooal Inc. . Ttie letter. alcaecl )\. C, BhaltUvedanta Swam.I. ii ad. dru1~ .lQ .. Dear Ales, ' rd avr # Gppta. R1 Sum: . "Please accept my blesstnP. I ~ve received your invitation to the Opmlq of Prasadam Dls. trlbutl.n& International,. Inc., and I founa t nicely presented. Krishna will tive you la· telligence tiow to encase in· bones~ brllllant, elonous were on Ria behalf. Their~ ii no need to en1a1e in anythlnc di.lhonest. Krishna has given enoueb money, now earn by ho~est · means .•• " uo~ aeh City CowttU mbers grappled once atain nday nllhl with the explostve 1 ue or changing lndustrlal petty to· residential zoning DC the G9thard Street Cor· r. rter more than three hours ol ted testimony, the council e. up with decisions that .. ap· peared to otrer J!. little bit Jot everyone. The cow:acU: -Retained a 7 8-acre parcel south of Ellis Avenue and eaat of the SOUlbem PaclOc Raili'oad tracks near Cothar8 It»-in· dustrlal U$e • .!on ShenkUJan, Harriett Wiede • Richard Siebert. Norine G!bbl and Al Coen voted in favor. Mayor Bon ~ or_e lofJs Sought Dymally Presses State Qusiness Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally portrayed himself as a guiding force in creatina a better busi· ness climate in California at a Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce gathertnc Monday. Dymally, who is expected to run for re-elecUon next year, said that the stale is trying to shake off its poor rep· utation as a Rlace for do- ~ business Md that be is i,. p t b e forefront of t~at move- rn~nt. OYMALLY Re said that California must provide 250,000 new jobs each year for high school graduates, new residents and for persons com lng orr unemployment benefits. He said a good way of doing Utis is to form a coaiion of bu.si· ness. minority and labor groups. .... The total dependence oC blacks on the Democratic Party ia bad,'' he said. "It is not incompatible to be a Republican and work on this critical issue," he declared. , J:le said both the present Brown administration and the Reaaan administration must shoulder ·the blame for the state r4~ as the 47th wont atate far dolnf business. · He said that environmental re- School Board Briefing Set The Huntington Beach Caty (elementary) School District has scheduled a briefing tonight on lhe financial impact of recently enacted Assembly Bill 65. Jack Casperson, an official with the Orange County Depart. ment of Education. will spell out what lhe bill means to the local diatrict. .:rbe meet.lng will start at 7:30 p..m. at the Juk Clapp School, 20351 Farnsworth Lane, Hunt· i,ngton Buch. It is open to the public. ~ulrementa. other stiff recula· tions and business inventory tax· es all contribute to this poor record. Dy mally appeared to bo particularly miffed that the Dow Chemical Company was forced lo give up plans to locate in Solano County. "It spent two years and $10 million in trying to win ap· proval," he said. "Mer all that time, it bad received just one ot 165 permit$," he said Dymally slid the departure ot Dow shook up state officials and "got everyone pro-business " Dymally also told the large chamber gathering at the Hunt· inJ:lon Beach Inn that he favors location of a liquefied natural gas terminal in California He said if the action is not taken, gas bills for both residents and industry will increase five· foldbyl~ He also predicted that 700,000 employees would lose their Jobs if there are insufficient gas aup. plies Dymally also satd he would try to improve business conditions by working to re~al the business inventory tax arid a unitary tax that California charges on a por. tion of profit.a of corporations who have ovenseaa openttom After his talk, he denied a re· cent report that he intends to ~ for Congrets He said he was only kkldlng around with a reporter "and it boomeranged " He indicated he will seek a second term as lietitenanl gov crnor next year Suspect Tries To Grab Gun NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The man accused of wounding 10 people in a shooting rampage .Monday grabbed for a policeman•• gun in the eorridor or Charity Hospital today, but was subdued and ap· parenUy no one was hurt, authorities reported. (Related photol, A4). One shot was fired ln th• scume, a spokesman for Charity said, bu\ it dld iflot strike anyone. The spokesman said the incident bappenea u Carlos Poree, a"fonner ln· ternal Revenue. Service auditor accused ot the ran· dOm sboOtiqs around New Orleans· on Mohday. \Vas beinl l returned • to lib bo.pital room under heavy 1uard. no. ~haa,ed nve aqes of prop. erly on ~othard Street and Slater. Avtnu adjacent to the eity•1 eo~aUon yard trpm in- du•i.rtal to residenUal 1001~. Pattlo•on, Mrs. Gibb•~ Mn. Wieder, Coen aad Bartlett voted in favor. Siebert voted no and Shenkmm abstained .. ~.,Took no hnrnediate acUoa on u·.1 cres Of property. on Nicholl Street south of Slat.er because of a reported J)l'O· cedural error ln the planninc de- partment. several outbUnts spiced the zoning coatroversy hi h at· tracted a c~aclty audiem:e to city council chambers. Shenkman abstained from aet- ing on a fiv•acre parcel owDec:l by developer RObert .stellfecht next to the city yard. It was disclo1ed that the builder may be a major stockholder in Mercury Savipts and Loan. Shenkman's father-in· law, Leonard Shane, ls chairman or the bOard or dlrec· tors of the savln&$ anCl loan aa.- soctauon Shenkman said he ·was ad· vised that there WJ.S a remote possibility of an indi.rect cOnfllct and he abstained. He 1ald tOday there is no contllct ina be cOUld have voted Resident Gordon Offsttin slid the council has been tytDg td tbi people He said that industry can bring in more re\'enua than residences ''You've l;ffn runnlng around the state, spending mone~ J11 looking for ways to get new tax revenues You can start by pre· serving thls industrial land,•• be said Former MayQr Jerry Matney made a fiery return to councU chambers, asking that the in· dustrlal land remain Intact . .. Huntington Beach has the most negative image in Southern Callforrua for attract· Ing business .. he $aid Shenkman also enlivened mat· ters by lashing out at what he called paranoia and c~i>Jrao.J. on the fartotcriUcs .. whoaeethe· counci as wanUng to throw away allin4"5tri•UMd•" u Shenkman 814 that conditlons are becoming huidlous and he has ln vited concerned persoN to meet him Friday in city 118.11 to talk out problems. The council wted to table ac· lion until Dec. 6 on a proposal by Louis Grazadio to develop 17.7 acres into residences The proposal had been denied by the planning commission but there was a foulop in the appeal process which PllUlDing t>trector Edward seUch aald was his fault. The affidavits 1i1ned by in· vestigators quote unnamed sources wbo told Officers that the peop1e aought in the murder con· spiracy put up $'25,000 tO have Bovan and two other men kld· napped, tortured and killed. Pollce alleae Bovan and hlS . two co1Jeagues, Stanton Keiffer and Robert Shea, Jttdnapped K.ulik Jn Auauat, beat and threatened him to 1et hlm to re- veal the location of the $1 million cache. 0. • ..-........... PICTURED IN 1175 Roy Chrtatopher Alch•rd ,,. Jerry Peter FlorC the Hunt.- ington Beach man accused of pumping nine fatal sbota into Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley on Ocl 22, tOcJay attempt- ed to exonerate the seven other defendants. Jn a letter Flori bAnded to at· torney Philip DeMusa, Fiori said the other defeildanlf were not inVolved in the hOmiclde. He said statements impUcatlng tboie people were broutht abOut by personal animosity. DeMassa, who repNleDta ~ 'More Offensive' WASHINGTON lAP> -~c releutCfflOWhlteHOusetaPeTe- eo!'dinp about the Wa~gate acatldal~wOUJd :~ cbard M. NlXoo to embarruame11ta "far more offehslve0 than the .former president alteady 'bu suffered, tbe U.S. Supreme-- Court was told today. Nixon lawyer Willlam H. Jef- fress Jr. told the nation's bigt:.~t court that the 22 hours of tapes played at the 1974 Watergate cov· er·UP trial of Nixon's top ad- visers should not go public. J effr~s said release of the tapes, "havln~ served their purpose as evidence in tbat trial," would only serve to further embarrass Nixon. "Tapes are susceptible to uses that are far more offensive'' than trial transcripts, he said. Tranacrlpts ol the tapes were widely published during the 1974 trial of former Attosney General John N. Mitchell and ex-White House aides H.R. Haldeman and Joho D,; Ehrlicbman. Jeffress said Nixoa and oth'ers would suffer "mental an1Uiih" lf the tapes were released to "evel'ly disc jockey, every televJaion entertainer • . • to be played releoUes.sly." The U.S. Circuit Court ot Ap:- ~in Was~ rUled in Oc· tOber 1976 that the tapes coutd b6 released for broadcast on television and radio abCI copled' for sale u c di nd tape cas~eu Arg"'1ng for tho6e Who want.the ta~ retcased, WasblllttOn at.- mq F.dwm Benn tt WUIWnS of those defendants. Alexander Kulik. read the leUer durmc ar- raianment of FiOri and two othet meq, Anthony ¥atone Jr. and ltaymooo Steven lte$co, tri tbe munlcipaJ cOurt of Judie Selim Franklin. JUd1e Franklin told DeMassa the J>~C was not one in which evidence wOfild be accept- ed and Ordered the letter given to Newport Beach police iD· vesU,aton. Earlter ln his eourt •J>· pearance Fiori, ~lb his own attorney. David Brickner. declined to eater a plea iD tbe f o.flJl'lletli.ff ...... ~OMPLE'TELY ABSURD'· Krishna'• Agni Dev EB Letter ~onfirms ~ult Jjnk By STEVE MITCHELL Ofti.O.llyPl ... SWff Laguna Beach Police Chief Jon, Sparks has disclosed a letter purportedly from the founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness which links the cult with directors of Newport Beach-based Prasadam Distributing International Inc. The letter, s\gned A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami, ts ad· dressed to "Dear Alex, Bob, Drdbavrata, Gupta, Rsbdeva and Stan: "" "Please accept my blessinfs. I have received your Invitation to the opening of Prasadam Dis· tributing International, Inc., and I found it nicely presented. Krishna will give you In· teUigence how to engage in honest, brilliant, glorious work on His behalf. There is no need to engage in anything dishonest. Krishna has given enough money, now earn by honest means ... " The letter, on Krishna sta- tionery is dated Jan. 24, 1m. Chief Sparks said that while the letter has no profound impact on current criminal cases involv-in~ alleged Krishna sect mem- bers, "l think it is significant that the founder of ISKON is personally linked to Alexander Kulik and others associated with PDJ. "It certainly dispels any doubt ,whatsoever that there are 1inka between cJiRiinal acti~ty .Pit1'1· ently beMg1 lftv~ated Within tire cult itself.'' Sparks said he believes names mentioned in the swami's saluta- tion are: · -Alex (Alexander Kulik);~ <Robert Joseph SMa1 PDI dlrec· tor), Drdhavrata (unknown by police>,; Gupte (Joseph Fedorowaki); Rabdeva (Hindu name· for former Laguna Beach Krishna temple president Roy Christopher Richard) and Stan' <PDI director Stanton S. Kieff et>. ' ' ,, The letter to PDl directors from India also cites an ap.l)arent larse order ot Kriahna books f~.om the organization'• lU1akilved~ Book Trust to the N4ilVporttmn. the founder of lSKON lauds P.:D.1'• potential "door to door .. sales of the religious books, •1a1.· loc •·11 you can do th.ls it will. revolutlomu our boOk distribu- tion and affoi-d greater spread or Krishna Consciousness Uian any book distribution thus fai." the one page Jetter from the irtshna founder is addressed to fDl's Newport Beach penthouse. c t t m 00\lrt .doC~tn :president • dl. R~\,~w~o·~~~~~~~·~~~ thine h nothtn ll .. ion. We had it, I he added, Ttie 5eai'cb warrant. e ~ Mond~ bt ~e were or the Prasadam, Offtcee at 4350 VOft Karman Ave., Newport Beath ' and police selzed numerous tape recordlq devices. The war'riJ.ltl were also for Fedorowsld's bOnle ln Laguna lJeach where addlUooal t•l* and recordlnc devices were seized. . Th!» affidaYfta ~ea b1 ln· veshgators quote unnamed sources who talcl ~cen that the people aOuiht tn the murder con- spiracy put up $25,000 to have aovan and two other mea kid- napped, tortured and killed. Police allege Bovan ancl b1S two collea,ues. Stanton Ketff er and Jlobert. Shea. Jc.lda..pptid Kulik in Aufust, beat and threatened him to get him to r • veal tbeJocatloa of the Sl mWion cache. According to the affidavits, . the PDI partne~s discussed torturing Bovan, once lie was found. However, police allege that when he was found by three PDI employees -Jerry Peter Fiori, Anthony Maron~ Jr. and Raymond Steven Resco, all ol Huntinstoa Beach -he was shot to death. Keiffer and Shea are be- ing sought as material witness•. Kulik, Fiori, Marone and Resco were scheduled to appear in the Harbor Judicial District Court today to complete their ar- raignment and to appeal for lower ball. The three Huntington Beach men are being held in lieu of $500,000 each. * * * F ..... P,..eAJ LETTER ••• attorney said, Concluding the debate, Judge Franklin said be doesn't feel that ball for Resco and Marone ahould be as high as the $500,000 figure set for theirco-defeQdant Kulik. The judge noted that in Kullk's case a high bail was establlabild ~cause ol bis fear that Kullk:'s access to large amounts oPcasb would make it easy for hiDi to fiee. Of Resco and Marone tbe jtidge noted, "I don't thihk they would tend to abandon ship so readily." Guam B88e8 Hit UNITED NATIONS (AP} Vietnam introduced a resolution on Guam in the U.N. General AB· sembly's Coloniat CominiUee on Monday, hitting out at U.S. bases there. Ambassador Dlnb Ba Thi said the world knew the bases on Guam had been used against the peoples of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia and the bomblnC by planes from tbere had brou,bt great devastation and suff~. Itracl launched an artillery bombardment of Palesthilan • cuerrilla .po,slOon1 across iouthern LebanOn after severill rocket. l~e'd on the outsklrtS of Nab riya, an W'aeli Mecliterran·· ·ean resort about elcbt miles frotn the bOrder. '1'he rocket.I llhded. harmless- ly. but thrie hours late~ a 1ec0bd . barraee hit inside the city, •end· iri• residents nsh1ne to bomb shelter.a. Milltary sources in Israel said a woman wu killed and five persons we.re wounded. Two persons were killed SUn· d a when rockets struck p eya iii another vlolaUon "of tbe cease-t'lre:that ended a brtet Israeli tank invasion ot'souttiem Lebanon against Palestinian positions. The Israeli barrage. directed by w arplanee 1lyin1 over Lttbanon, aeqt thous•nds of families fleelne north to Sidon, a apokesman for the governor's of· fie• there reported. It stretched from Tyre~ l2 miles north of Israel on the Mediterranean coast, toTaibe, 20 mUea lnlirid ill southwest Lebanon. The spokesman said am- bulances and fire trucks sped from Tyre and Sidon to plck up wounded in Tmbe and nearby NabaUyeb, which bOre the brunt of the Isarell fire. He did not 1ive a casualty ftguie. • The Palestine Liberation Orf anization re~ed the Israeli shellinf struck 12 !Owns and the refugee camps of Rashldieh and Sutj el Sbemall on the southern fringes ol Tyre, 50 miles south of Beirut. Judge Sets Reco~d-for FatherhoOd :Judge Leonard Goldstein of Newport Beach has only been on the Oranae County Superior Court bench for 12Q days but it's lopa 9nou&h to establish a court record. Last weekend he became the first Superior Court judge in local history to celebrate the birth of a child while servinl on theeourt. HI• 1Wile. Renee, delivered their sev~n-pound, 11-ounce dau1hter pt Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach. The couple bas decided to name their first bOm Risa Devra. · " Judge Goldstein, 46, was ap- pointed to the Superior Court bench July 11 after strvina OD the north Orqe County Municlpal Court bench. Both appointments were approved by Gov. Edmund G. BtownJr1 'COUNCIL ••• . . Jn other bUSlness, the lrvtne Ranch Wat. Dbtrict will report that there ti "an ample supply ol water to meet present needs u well as projeded groWth," but urge continued comttYatlon. The conclusions of the wat.er district report are that, "even under the unlikely event of ex- tended drou,bt ~ondltioos, .. there will beenouib. The question or: whether enough water will be available to meet new development needs without increased conservation by preseat water users hat de· layed approval of concept plans for the Irvine Center. The councll wlll be a bd tonight to approve tho final en- vironmental lrnpacl report for the proi-ecUwo-:atory encJOita shopping mall, the first phase ol the Irvine Center project. The mall would be bum on .ia acres wlthbi the trhinJl• formed by the Santa Ana, A)l Diego i.Dd Laguna lreewa1'. 1 • A report on tu availability that wW satisfJ councilmen bas stalled the project lwo months. Also ob tonight'• a1enda are: -An appeal of resldential de- velopment pemiltS for two Irvine. Company Turtle Rock houslric projects totaling nearly 900 units. Irvine M,ayor Bill VardOulls filed We appeal, aeatn based on • resolved wa~r availabUity ques- tions. I ' . . . . . . •. .. . . . . t With Alice away and an unex- pect9d ~Ing out fot Mlk• Ind Car()f, the~ babysltt.,. evaltabl9 tum out to b9 Gr-o endMl.l'CIL .. LET'S MAKE A DEAL at TONIGHT 'Pl\ltonknn:EJ.nent 01 Rlak .. F9flowUp. • ID NEWSCHEOK Cl) THE GONO SHOW 1:00 8 Cl) ~e FJTZPATRtCKS :Jeok'• tlf'St OtUSh on a glt1 turns bltt•weet Whitt he learn• her ~nta •• dlvotelng and an. mey soon•~ t~ D MANFAOMAT\AHTIS "Shoot-Out At t..rld'a End" Marte Hanis~ tqht In a tln\9 warp wtllch pteJect• him back to the Old West wh«e he la mistaken f« the vlllalnoua Biiiy Jooea; ·•MOVIE **1,i ''TM Otilphl Bureeu" (1172) t::aurence L.ud<lnblll, Joanna Pettet. A r8Mllrch t>ureau, eupplylng Information b) the PrM!dent. hW.. a m1n g_lfted Wtth total recal~ (2 hrs.) • 0 ffAPPV: DAYS ..~.. Girt Roci< Group" Joanl• lhooll• her paremt , when she 1nalltJ on GQlng on ' tour with L..U. TUC&daro ' (Suzi Quatro) and the~. a MW rodt gtoup. (Part 1 of 2) I JOKER'S WlLO CAA0t BUA.NETT AND FRl'END8 !l~,e Started In Nap!M'' It was an unusual fishlilg expedition that landed this Detroit monster Monday in Newport Beach. Underneath that coating of barnacles, algae and seaweed is a 1966 Buick station wagon stolen ln LaJltUl& Beach in May, 1976. Newport Beach police· Israel launched an artillery m bardment of P JesUnian gerrllla po1Hlon1 acro11 them Lebanon after several kets landed on the O\ltakirta of hariya. an Israeli Mediterran- n resort about •l&ht miles m the border. Police in Laeuna Beacb claim tUtements made by members ol ~e local Krisluia Temple con· mm• thrff ousted memben ol Uie sect do not jibe with Police documents. Jn a press conference Jut month, Krlshaa~lcials said former temple esldent Roy Christopher Ric ard, Joseph Gabriel Fe<Jorows)d and Joseph Shelton Davis Ill, all of Laeuna Beach, had been ex~lled from the temple as long ago as Sep- tember 1976. But Police ChJef Jon Sparks said all three men, currently directors ot Prasadam Distribut-me International, Inc., Newport Beach, have been seen i~ the past several months either at the Laguna temple, or with local f.rubaa officials. · "Sparks said Richards, former lemple president, was seen as re- C«;nUy as two months aco-d res s ed in what Sparks described as "Krishna garb" at the temple. "He was seen by a Laguna Beach police officer at about 7:30 * * * F,.._PageAJ · KRISHNA ••• Claim Disputed: ·a.m. Aug 24, clad in the usual robe and type of dreu of ~ Krishna religion ... ~aru aakl. Tbe PQllce chief said IUctiard told the Officer he baa been a tend101 relllious services lrisld~ the temple. "They (the sect> ma1 have kicked hJm out m Sept. 1978. bi.rt be was attencnnj atrvices as re- cenUy as two· rnontba ac~." Sparks said. He said Joseph Davia bas been seen, abo dressed in t{ffShna· garb, attend1a1 many servlca at \, the local temple unW June.19'71. And, according to Police doCu- ments, Joseph FedOrowski ac- comp.med the etUTent temple president, A.IN Dev, from the La1una Beach1,Jall 1.,t ~J>t. after the temple officlal was ar· rested on a Jn,inor dlsturbtng tbe peace charge. "Fedrowski came to the jail and left with Agni Dev,'' Sparks said. . 1 Reporters were unable to reach Aeni Dev by pbooe at the .. temple for comment on the described relationships. WATER VOTlNG •• Carol Ben.sob, the attracUve blonde who was deposed as Q..ran1e CoUnty Transportation the dlstri~t would be dlsu. Commillion (OCTC> executive franchising some taxpayera. • director, alJe&edly didn't tue • • tri~t had the riaht to vote. A spokesman:lor the Rectatrar of v otera office said public agen-cie-s teldorn vote 1n elections even thou8b they are dlCfl>le. The question of votinJ ap~ parently arose late Jast week when Robert Williams, a can. didate in the Los Alis08 district, asked a Saddlebaok ad· mlnistrator what the. district does with its votes. After invesUgattng the ques- tion, the county counsel's office ruled that the dist.rjct is. both elieible mld responsible to vote ln theel~oris. Saddleback admi.J1iatrators also talked with bfficials ln the neighboring Capistrano dlat.rlct, apparenUy prompt.in& their ln- ter8-t in the issue. • Capistrano trustees voted three times before tablinf the question. Trustees split 3·3 on a moUon to i~ the eleeUon. They came up With the .-me re· suit on a proposal to have m.em· bers vote as individual' dl.lrlng them~ "to aee;U thrle in· divlduals don't pop out" as favored candidates. These CUSD tniatees also re- jected, on a 4-2 vote, a move to support the candJdecy of Bob Hurst, a former fellow school trustee, in the Moulton·Niauel district. Hurst was ~efeatecl in his bid for reelecUon last Marcb. In Saddlebaclc TrusleG George ltenry cqntend;l that the disUict has a "vested Interest" in the election. He urged that the db· trict at least vote !pr Mrs. Neustadt an.d Mrs. PhUUps• husband, John. • But Trustee William Kobltr · arsued that .. the proper:tY we're voting is owned by the entire popul1ttion in this district by their tax dollar." By vol.int. he aald, With two candidates invoJved kindly MOciday Dilht to ~ with the board, Trustee Loa served ltcal pape~ orderQ:ll ber Youn1 taid the sltgation Js to stay out of the comm!Jssloa•s ..almost uncomfortable if not office, accoi'dina to a Ne~rt downright uncornfortable. · • Beacb police report. • ,· She uid lbe hopes the district The report said that Vtben a will estabUsb a Polley ot not vot-woman attempted to serve the ing in special district elections. papers on Mn. Demon she was "Whether you cast your two "grabbed. shook and slapped million votes for me ha• no twice in the face." (Related meaolng at this point," said Mrs. story• A3). NeUJtadt. But she added "I do think we miss the boat if ~e don't take more !J)terest in the fla.n· ning and development o the county." She labeled thb lack of interest as "a bit of tunnel vision." · Robert Price, a Saddleback College tri.lstM, also is a can- didate in the Moulton-Niguel dis- trict which includes ijie coUe1t. However, the coUefe reported- ly receiv~ itf ballotitoo late for trustees to clll a special meeting and take any action on the i•sue. · she had been denied due process and refuied to aDandon her: eom· mission office. Menday ~ommiuiodlrec· tors insVucted Parker to obt.ln a court restralniDg order bani11J the woman from conami&sion o{. flees. ~JOANNE REYNOLDS QI dell,,. ......... ~ Newport Beacb police in- vestlgatora confirmed today they have'beentold by an unidenUOed source that the Newport Beach· firm linked to the murder or Stepben John Bovan bu been ac- tively involved with the Hare Krlsbna. Temple of Luuna Beaeb. .• Temple afliclals have denied * * * ~ any recent links between the rour pr incipals of PrasadaD\ Di • tributing, Inc., and tbesect. Atlidavits filed Monday In Orance County Superior Court. however, quoted the unidentified police informant u saytnc PDI "is used by the Qare Kdlbna Religious Temple to launder money made from transpotla- t ion and smuceling of narcotics.". • * * * • ·Accusea 17 ., It was an unttsUfil fishing expedition that landed tlUs Detroit monster Monday in Newport Beactl. Underneath "that coating of barnacles, algae and seaweed is a 1966 Buick stat.ion wagon stolen in L8"una Beach in May, 1976. Newport Beach police· WASHINGTON CAP) -fubllc release of 30 White House tape re- cordings about the Watereate scandal would expose Richard M . Nixon to embarrassments ''far more offensive" than the .former preslcMnt already baa suffered, the U.S. Supreme Court was t~ld today. Transcripts of the tapes were' widely publlshed durthg the 1974 trial of former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and ex·Wbite Hou.se aides H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman. Jeffress said Nixon and others would suffer "mental anguish" if the tapes were released to ..every disc jockey. every televj.sion. entertainer ••• to be played relentlessly ... The U.S. CircUit Court ot :A~ peals in Wasblngton i"uled ln ~ tooer 19118 that the tapes Codld be releaud for broadcast on. television and radio and copied EIRUT, Lebanon (AP> - lhell and Anh._.... ~~;~~~~~~=~~;;~~~l!G!•!Slill~td 1¥~~~.,_..,..~ osa the Lebanese border ~ dl&Y In the wont flthtlnt al.nee a· $ept. 26 cease-fire. One penon ~s killed ln Israel and a.Ix In L~banon. Israel launcbed an ariWery bombardment. of Paleatlnlan g'Qerrllla positions across ·s°"tbem Lebanon after 1everal T~kets landed on the outakl.rts of l'Uhariya, an Israeli Mediterran· ea,n resort about el1ht miles from the border. The rockets landed harmless. I~ but three hours later a second bitrase hit inside the clty, tend· t residents ru!hlng to bomb sh lters. Mllltary iOUrces in 1 ael said a woman wu killed five perJOOS were wounded. Two persons were kllled Sun· dwY when rockets struck Nllhariya in another violat.ioa of the cease-fire that ended a blief Jaraell tank invuion of aau~ ,,,.... r.-. AJ· NIXON ••• reproduce the tapes and market. them fOrhomesale. New York lawyer Floyd Abrams represented the three commercial broadcast network&, public radio and • broadcast news direct.on assoclaUoo.wbkh alao want th• tapes releued. • Abrams sald be wu·arautng ••the rtabt of the public not present ill the court to hear the laj>ea. . Williama araued tbat tbe court would not have to make any ironclad J'Ules about release ot tape-recorded trial exhibit.I to uphold the appeals covrt's de- ci.Jion against Nixon. WilUams also noted that any distributor or broadcuter of the tales would hove "to take the full risk" of lawaulta stemmln1 from such iue. The bulk of the 880 reels of tape recordi.Jlis )eft behind by Nixon when be resigned from office in 1974 are not involved ln the cue. 1 lC the tapes are released, they would let the public htar for the first time the actual voices -the tones and vocal inflections -of Nixon and the W alergato fi1urea discussing the scandal. Earthquake Jolts People InLa Habra Residents or La Habra, a res- idential community of 43,000, were jolted from their sleep lh1s morning by a small earthquake measuring 3.1 on the Richter scale, authorities reported. · Phyllis Brewster of the Caltech Seismolog1cal Laboratory said the quake occurred at 2:52 a.m. and was centered two miles southeast of La Habra, just five miles north of the Los Angeles county line. A spokeswoman trona the city cl'erk's office aald she was awakened by tbe jolt and sus- p~ted the worst. "I thouthtI WJS aotq through that one we bad ae•eral years ago," said Diane Parker. "I was sound :.alaeep and all of aa\ldden I felt this jolt and the bed started rockin1." r ·J'oUce said there were no re-· Ptrti Of injury ordamqe. 'J The spokesman sald am· bulances and fife trucks aped from 'I'yl'e and Sldo to pick up wounded in 'l'albe and nearbt Nabatlyeb. whJch 'bore the brunt of the lsareU fl.re. He did not alve aca1ualtyfigair~ .. The Palest ne J;ttierallon Or1anizatioa reported the Israeli shelling strUclt 12 towns aDd the refugee camps ot Rashidleh and' ·Burj el Sbema.U on the southern fringes cX Tyre, 50 miles south of Beirut. lt wu the first rep0rted abdl- war. The 'l'el fri v rees croas·border ~liDI as ac- com pan.Jed by a new outbl'Ok ol fiehtlnc in aouthern Lebanon between Peleslinian 1uerrillas and right·wtns J.;ebanese Chris· ttan forces. The Israelis, who want to prevent the te·· establfshment of Palesthrlan bases for raids into Israel. are support.tne the Christians. Defense Minister Ezer Welzman warned Monday that the border attacks could prompt Israel to tike "swf t't and ~ llamental action" to restore calm. Israel in Septem~r sent armored units acrOS1 Ule froa~ tier. They were withdrawn five weeks ago after a U.s.4~edlated truce was readlel, l>an~er ab el.Una becan anew lut \\-eek, • This is the Text <ff Suspect's Letter Thia is the complete text of the letter from mw-der defendant Jerry P~r Fiori aa tt wu read in Harbor Judicial District Court today: .. J, Jfrr7 Peter Fiori do swear that Raymond Steven Reaco and Tony )(araae Jr. were not pres· ent the nleht Stephen Bova.a was shot. "Resco and Marone called me and told me Debbie Addison called alMJ said she was al the restaurant with Bovan there. .. 1 told them I would drive rtiht over there because I dldn 't know * * * Pr0.PogeAJ KRISHNA ••• mention a $25,000 donation Kulik made totbe group in 1975. Contacted today about the slatement made in the Superior Court documeqt, current temple president Agni I>ev replied, "Well, what can I say? It's com· pletely absurd. "Tbls whole murder-dru1 thins ttas itothlnf to do With T• Uglon. We had notblng to do w'ilh it,•• he added. The search warrants executed Monday by police were for tbe Prasadam offices at •350 Von Karman Ave., Newport Beach and police seized numerous tape recording devices. The warrants were also for Fedorowski's home in Laguna Beach where additional tapes and recording devices were seized. . The affidavits signed by in· vestlgators quote unnamed sources who told officers that tbe people sougbtin the murder con· spftacy put up $:25,000 to have Bovan and two Other men kid- napped, torturecl"aod killed. Poliee allege Bovan and hiS two colleagues, Stanton KeiCfer and llobert Shea, kidnapped Kulik in August, beat and threat.eel b1JD to set him to re- veal tht locatfoO ot the $1 million cache. Accordiq to the affidavits, ttie PDJ partners discuued torturing BoVan, once be was found. However, police allege that when be was foUnd by three PDl • employees -Jerry Pe~ Flori, Anthony Maron~ Jr. anti Raymond Stevell Reseo, aJl ot Htlbtiftjton Beacb-"be }VU IJipt to d«!atb. Kettter and Shea ate~­inr soQfht aa material 'witnosaes. KuUic;;. Fforl, Marone and Maco were scheduled to ~~ar Jn Ute Harbor JtJdlclal Dlltiiet qoun today to-eoinptet ttielr ar• ralannient and \O• ap~aL for lower bait: , iJ:;b ~ aCh men JJetn helct ln It ol $:)00,000 ~ how much be knew about Debbit hvina with me or if abe wu in any danger. "I told them Resco and Marone· to meet me atR. C.Leavenwortb house in case ev~one had left the restauranl. "When I arrived at the Leavenworth house later Resco and Marone were there w.aftlilt in their car outside. · "I was in a confused state of mind and then I told them what had happened and aaJtfid their help. · "We then went over our story to have them say tbe,i were present, then I showed them where I had disposed of the tun. "We then went over the story involving the PDI. If they betray us in any way when we made our statements to the police, tt was all rehearsed to try to protect rne. "We made statements against PDI because they fired us and the investigation now involved in their personal problems tnvolv· iog the ki~g and now the shooting. ' "Also th polico ialded our 5tor1 by inalstlnc thoy wan\ed PDt and not the 'Itallana'. I swear to this statement u being the truth." signed Jerry Peter. Fiori. * * * F,.._P..,eAJ CULT ••• . w ASHING TON <AP> -Bobby Buer, the central figure in a W aahinatozl seandal of another era, la ptanntn• hlS comeback. The onetime boy wonder of Senate back room~ the Lyndon Johnson prote1e who amassed '2 mllllon oo an aDnual.1alary QI $19,800 before golDC to jail, J\U it ftaured out: ·NEXT YEAS, HIS book comes out. It ls a aeuaUon, Ji&mlnl namu abd esone.rat1n1 him atlut. Movies and televlaiCJ!nplckit up.Hesueseveryonewhowrcaieclhlmandwinla12ewtrial ••. Tbat'• boW Balcer describes bll future wblle alt~ ln a popular Wlllh!ngtod rataui'ant where be ~an itlll command• quiek table!« lunch. At 49, be la a paunchy, baktlnt, tnY·balred m~ OD.ee be was a power in polltlcs, bat now M bu a seven-eount tonYfcUOQ for 1ncome tax evulcm, Uieft and :acy. to defraQd ttie OV· ernmeot -ilon:a With a 1e.month In prlloD -nm to h1a name. · By JOANNE aEYNOLD8 Ot•Deltr .... ""' Newport Beach ppUce ln- nsUeatora conftrmect tOdJY they bave been told b)' an uiildentmed source that the Newpc>r{ Beach· firm linked to the murder ol Stephen Jobn Bovan bu been ac- tively invOlved with the Hare Krishna Temple of Laaun Beach. Temple officials have demed any recent Unkl betWeen UM foUr . priaclpals M Prasadam Dis· tribu~ JDC., and the seet. Affldavttl flied Monday In Orance COunty superior C~ however, quc:ited the unidenWled P,?lice intormant as 1ayln& PDI 'is used by the H•re Krishna Religious Temple to laUDilu money made from tr~· lion and 1mu•1llu1 of narcotics." . Two School Beartis \ . Shun Voting Pow.er Valley To 'Dial · A Ride' The Orange CountyTransltDis- trict 's Dial-a-Ride service still ls coming to the Saddleback Valley in February, OCTD directon de- cided Monday. Board Chairman Ralph Clark argued unsuccessfully that the ·door-to-destination transit service should be postponed until . later but came up on theabort end of direct.ors' 3-1 vote to proceed. Clark contended the service should be offered flrat lo more populated areas like Anaheim and Garden Grove where he said there are hip concentrati()GI ~ elderly lndpQOrresldem.wbore- 1 y heavily OD OCTD for tranaportatioa. But Direct.ors Robin Youns. Al Holllftden and William Fatrit said th~ believed the 9erviee ii justified and should proc.S as L l planned. Direct.or PhWp Anthony was absent from Monday's meet- ing. The service permits ridens to phone for door-to-destination ttanait service within their com- munltyfor a $0-centfare. Auistant OCTD General Manager James Reicbertsaid~ setvlce would bO offere4 MaDday throu1b Stau.rday from 6 a.m. to 7 p.rn . . . OCTD officials now will sbllclt proposals from fttms to operate the serrice. Reichert said the firm would have to provide 12 seven- pusenger vehicles for Dtal·A· Ride and would be paid by the hour on-aalldlng seale th OWd change depending upo tti numberolpassenaencariiectper bQ!1r. LONOON, Ohtario CAP) - A female pigeon named Pidge. who thinks she is a male duck, has been placed in solitary confintment for lnterlering with the amorous overtures of the ducks at the Univenity of Western Ontario's zoology department. . Pidge bas been with the department 12 years, the sole survivor « a flock of 100 pigeons used for re- search. And for siX years she bu been permitted to reside in a colony of ducks. · It was discovered that noce of the eggs laid by the ducks produced ducklings. 59 Bob Keith, an animal · technician. beJan s~ytni on the ducks and found that in spite of the ~~t approach by amorous drakes to fem ale ducks, Pidge would drive them away. • She set herself up as the tole lover for the duck colony, said ProfessorT.K.R. Bourns. 1'bemisguided pigeon was placed iasolltary. and Without Pitlge'* iiltetference the fem ale ducks were laymgfertlle ¢.kV tii j matt.er.or cSays. • about $15,000 s\astained major damage, Ftder-1 Aviation Ad· mlnJstratlQD Spokesman Martin Plattsald tGday. Several eyewitnesses incl\adln1 Mrs. Davis' busband, Charles, watched the plane stall and plunee to the ground after tbe Citabria'1 enginelalled. Platt, an FAA avtonlcs inspec- tor, 1ii4 be ooped toqueatlun Mrs. Davts 1n ber hospital roam today to further lnvestlgat& what c used the 4:50 p.m. crash near the airport's headquarters com· ltJC. ...... Williams said Nixon's ~SU· eots Could be redueect to tboio of. "an all~led co-complnt.lc"' fi!arlnl embarra11ment. ,.Williams was in court r presenting Warner Com· mu lcations, which wants to· rCduce the tapes and market them for home sale. ~New York lawyer Ji"loyd t\'bi'ims represented the three co~}nerclal broadcast networks, puHJlc radio and a broadcast ne1" directors association which atso want the tapes released. ~rams saJd he was arcuin1 .:th right of the public not· jt ent in the court to hear the tlpes. Williams argued that the court wo\ald not have to make any ~clad rules about release Ot ta~·recorded trial extliblts to upbold the appeals court's de· cisiop against Nix~n. Williams also noted that any distributor or broadcaster of the tales would have "to take the full risk." ol lawsuits stemming from such use. The bulk of the 880 reels or tape reco.-dlngs left behind by Nixon when be resigned from office in 1974 are not involved in the case. If the tapes are released, they would let the public hear for the first lime the actual voices -the tones and vocal inflections -of Nixon and the Watergate figures discussing the scandal. . "' School's New Stadi11m Set For Next Year A $359,2SO outdoor stadium, with an 1870-person sealing C!ipacity, at Capistrano Valley High School in Mission Viejo sbould be completed by next Sep· lember, architect Robert Hench told trustees Monday. Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trustees adopted a raolu· lion 6·0, with trustee Sarah Lipp absent, to authorize district ad· minlstrators to go to bid on the stadium. The stadium, includlnf at.eel bteachel"B, lighting, a public ad· dress system, ticket t>ooths, a scoreboard and fencina, wW be paid for eqtirely oµt o~ ii,C\ f\.iDAIS from the Mission Viejo COm· pany, Supt. Jerome Thornsley said Alternate biddinJ may alloW for additional seaUpJ, and l~ bidding for restrooms and a con· cession stand. OwenRhOOes Dead at 87 oft u employ,m y.,,'if~~""'-.....'""~~ .. -.~tienefl th~ la lo Otm co ra or neas, mmo tr ahd labor arou ·Ex-OC Aide . Accused of·· Battery Carol Benson, the attractive blonde wbo was deposed H Orange County Tr-.nsportatlon Commission (OCI'C> executive director, allegedly didn't take kindly Monday night to bei.rlg .served legal papers orderin1 her to stay out of the commission's office; according to a Newport Beach pollce report. • The report said that wh~n a woman attempted to serve the • papers on Mrs. Benson she was "grabbed. shook and slapped twice in the face." <Related story, A3). The police report goes on to al· le1e that the infuriated former OCTC executive director followed the female process server to her car and then threw the legal papet"S tt her. According to the pollce report the incident occurred ate p.m. at Mrs. Benson's home a~ 917 West Bay Ave., Newport Beach. The 'woman victim was lden· Med as Wendy McFarland, a le1al secretary to ocrc lawyer Clayton Parker. Police sald today no complaint has been filed against Mrs. Btuou as yet and Jt w u reported Mrs. McFarland bas so far declined to file a baUery charge. Huntington Car Torch«l Vandals tossed two pro· parre-filled bottles under an unoccupied parked auto in downtown HuntingtoJl Beach Monday n!ght and caused minor damaee to 'the vehicle, police fe· ported. Two witnesses saw one of the homemade bombs explode at 7:45 p .m. beneath a car parked in front or a house at 406 10th St. No one was injured, police said. Police recovered7 one of the incendiary devices. It was described as about a toot Jong With a cap at its open inc. .. The tot l Cl l>endence Of blacks on tho Democratic Patt.l' ia bad," be said. ·•It Ji not lncompaUble to bt a a,publican and work on thli rJtlcal ~.••be declartd. •fie aicl both the present Brown adrplnbtrittfon and t.be Reqan administration must 1tioulder the blame foe the et.ate r~ as the 47tb wor&t state for dcilhi buslnesl. He said that ttiYironmentaJ re- quirements, other stl!f re;vla· Uons and business inventory t.U· es all contribute to tbJs poor r ecord. Dymally appeared to be particularly rni.tf td t the J>O Chemical Com was fofee4 lo give up plan• to locate b) Solano County. "It spent two years and $10 million In trying to win ap. prov al," he said. "After all that time, it had received juat one of . 165 permits," he aald. Dymally said tbe departure of Dow shook up state ollicials and "got everyone pro-business.'' Dymally also told the large chamber gathertn1 at the Hunt- ington Beach Inn that he favors location of a liquefied natural gas terminal In Callfqmia. He 1a1d If the action 1s not taken, gas bills for both residents and inclustrY will increase five-fold by lfMO . He also. predicted that 700,000 employees would lose their jobs if there are insufficient gas sup- plies. Dymally alSo said he would try lo Improve business conditions by workina to repeal the business inventory tax and a unitary tax that California charges on a por- tion of profits or corporations who have overseas operations. After his talk, be denied a re- cent report that he intends to nm for Congress. He eaid he was only kidding around with a reporter "and It bpom erange(f." He Indicated be will seek a second term as lieutenant gov- ernor next year. Trustees ~eet Ori School's Buildiilg Plan Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees will con- Unue discussing the possible future or their building progratn with arcbitecll Wednesday. Trustees will meet with representatives from the firm of Knowles and La Bonte f.rom 10:30 a.m. tonoon. From 1:30to3p.m., they are scheduled to meet wtth archite(ts from Fklwelling and Moody. They plan to meet with representatives from Lee B. Kline's firm from 3 :30 to s p.m. Trustees are studying ways of provlding needed classroom space with°'1t creating ~lus schools in ~ future. They've also expressed concern about~ risin1 cost o! 1al>d and construe· lion. Trustees are meeting with representatives ol 'lix arcbltec· tural finns which work with the. - diatrict to determine alternatives for the future. • mention a $25,000 donaUon Kulik made totheiroQpln 197S. Cont cted t:Oday about the tatement made ln Superior Ociurt dOcwnent, current temPt• president A1ni Dev repUed, "Well, what can I say? It's com· pletely absurd. "This whole murder·drua Usina has notbl~ to do witb re- u,1on. We haCI nothlng to do with it,•• he added. The search wtirranll executed Monday by police were for the Prasadam offices at 4350 Von Karman Ave., Newport Beach and police eebed numerous tepe recording devices. The warrants were also ror FedOtOWlki's home ln Lag'Q& Beacb Where additional tapes and recording devices were seized. . The 8ffldaVlt.s signed by ln- v es ti gators quote unnamed sources who told officers Uaat t.be people souaht in the murder con. spiracy put up $2.5,000 to have Bovan and two other men kid· napped, tortured and kllled. Police allege Bovan and his two collearues, Stanton Keiffer and Robert Shea, kldnapj>ed Kulik in August, beat and threatened him to get him to re· veal the location of the $1 million cache. According to ttlc affidavits, the PDI partnets discussed torturing Bovan, once he was found. However, poljce allege that when be was fouhd by three PDI emplovees """' Jerry·Peter Flori, Anthony Maront: J~. and Raymond Steven Resco, all ol Huntington Beach -he was abot to death. Keltrer aiict Shea are be· ing sought as material witnesses. Kulik, Fiori. M.arone and Resco were scheduled to a~ar in the Harbor Judicial D1stnqt Court today to comPtete their ar- raignment and to appeal for lower ball, The three Huntington Beach men are being held in lieu or $500,000 each. Horses Captured SAN DIEGO (AP.)~ County Humane Soclety officers turiled cowboy for awhile and ~decl up eliht abandoned and U~trf ed wild horses. ' . '