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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-10 - Orange Coast Pilot• • .......... outh Laguna School Testing SACRA ENTo (AP) -Test scores Of C81llomi •s high school seniors sank lD all basic 11ubject.s last year, disappoiotinl sc:boOl officials who hoped a on•year improvement would conUnue, the state said today. The scores in reading, EnS).ish f saee and mathematics bad ~eh in 19'7!Vi6 after a five-year ecllne but dropped back in tn6-71 to nearly their low point of · wo .years earlier, .lhe state ~ Judge Rides UaulJ,orll8' ~Bias Legal Department Gf Education said. Measured against "natlooaJ averaa•" fipres set by t1!9t publishers 15 years a10, callfotnia 12th·~ fell lboit in all three sQbject.s, hiWiiC the · 42nd percentile 1n readiilg, the 33rd in Endlsb usaae Ud Ute 43rd in math. • The 42nd percentil• name. for example. means that when the ' -- \; • • . .. $20 Million ·F.-ire Told ' . 20 llusinenes Destroyed in Ti~ Blaze TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -A fire that raged through m01St ol a downtown city bloct leaYiog damages estimated as hi&h as $20 million by Mexican Insurance agents may have been sparked by an electrical short circuit in the wiring of a small clothing store, officials say. that whipped flames 250 feet Into the air. At l~ 20 buahlesses either were gutted or suffered se~ smoke and water damage, they said. f'irefightcrs battling the blaze Wednesday were hampered by low water pressure and winds More than 100 fire fighters from surrounding Baja California Norte towns and two engine companies sent across the u .S. border from San Diego fought the tire for 211.i hours r Penallty Over · Pope Lifu Catlwlic Ban WASIIlNGTON <AP> -Pope Paul VI has agreed to lift the penalty of excommunication for Roman Catholics who remarry after divorce, the U.S. Na- tional Conference of Catholic Bish.ops announced to· day. The conference voted at its general meeting in Chicago last May to petition the pope for removal of the penalty. The papal action is retroactive. . . BishopTbomas C. Kelly, generalsecretaryoft&e ,:; conference. emphasized that lltting of the exc0th-..... munication penalty does not change the church•s • teaching that sacramental marriages are indi.ssOlu .. ble. .., ,.,~ ..... ~ . . I. Nor, ~'-li!dtP~ it ~dress the question Of deny~ mg the sacrament.S to divorced Catholics who re- marry. • ·1.'hc intention of the lifting of the penalty ia • pastoral -to ext~nd a reconciling gesture to divorced and remarried Catholics and encourage them to seek' regularization of their status," Bishop Kelly said. Challenge Due I Films' Still Photos . Won't Go 'to juq. An Orange County Superior Court j1uy that already· bas viewed a number of allegedly obscene movies at the Mitchell Brothers' Santa Ana theater will not be allowed to examhle still photographs taken at that faclll~ ty, the trial judge bas ruled. 1>e10re eaDtrollingit. • 'lt was \be largest fire In Uiis border c1tY since the Aug. 5~ JS'lO blaze tllat razed the A«iua Caliente Racetrack causl.Dg more than $10 million damage. Only minor injuries were re. ported and one nreman was hospitalized with leg burns, of· !icials said. •. .. Uthe fire had happened when the stores were open for btm. nea," said Antonio EscobedO Gomes, state judicial police director, "there probably would have been no way of avoi4tng a tremendouS losS Of lite.•• ' Dorian's, described as Baja California Norte's largest de- partment store, was stocked with many polyester clothes, which authorities said fed the flames. The entire store was gutted and officials placed losses there at S2 tntllion. Escobedo Gome?; and city of- ficials estimated total damages at about $10 miWOll. Mex.lean ln· su~ance ·agents, bowevet, ~aluated tbe 1oSSes at appr-Ox. l.m.atel1 $.IPIDllllon. . The deltr9J~ ~ 1nc1uaeci dOthlnt 1ab0ps'. a reeorit StOi'e and a pbarmacy. Five were in· sured for a total~ $.5 million. About 300 employes were pat "1f of work~ the fire in a dtY already with almost 30 pereent =employed • . Altbouab rlfle·carrytac aoldicn ~ the fire u-ea located a bloet from City Hall. no looting was rePQlted. -A few businessmen ~om· plained later that Tijuana firemen were slow in arrhiq. Water pressure wu low, and it took two bours before proper autllorha.Uon wu obtained to eal1 for belpfl'OiD Americans. • JERUSAL!! (AP) -Prime Minister Menahem Begin sum- inoned U.S. Ambassador Samuel Lewis to bis office today to ex· press regret few clvlUan deaths In Israeli air ~ttaet on Lebanon. ''We are deeply concerned about the casueJUes and we are urgln& au parties to exerciSe · maximum restraint," the am·· basaador told report.eris after the bour-loqg meeting. Tb~ bOrder region was report. ed quiet 24 hours after Israeli jet- fighters retUmed from bombing and strif1Q8 miulons tA the heaviest croas·bOrd.er faahting in twoyean. t • The air ltrlteS and a massive Israell. artillery bombardment ·Tuesday we ... hrael'a reply to cuerrilla rocket attacks on an Israeli town that killed thrie civilians. Begin told Lewis that Israel would continue "to defend our people by aU means available," the prime miniater'a spokesman ~f~ Lebanon said the death toll from the air attacks · passed 100 with •bout l~O wounded. The Lebanese 1qvernment said Itrael waa aultty of •'overt qgresstOn." and said ft would bring the attack to the attention of the U .N. Security Council. • .. U the news reports are cor· reel o~ civilian casualties, we regret it very deeply, but we do not apologize for the operation itself," Begin told reporters later, repeating his comments to Lewis. He said the air force meticulously followecl Olden to choose military targets and to avoid bitting civilians. . "If there ·is quiet on the other Side, there Will be ablolute quiet on our side. If they attack us there will be counterattacks,,: Beginaatd. • F,.._PageAI SC6RES ••• . the 56th~tile_. -SllUa ;nde: Reading d 0.2 ~bat unchanged at 53rd ~le; English usage &q. 1.1 percent, spelling unchanged, and total aanguage score up from . the 49th to the 5lst percentile; .math up o.s percent and up~ the50thto~Slst~We. -TwelfU.s?D: Jteadlftiddft 0.5 pe~ and doWn from the Urd .to the 4ZD4 ~entll~; ~J:f:: usage don o.• ~~ • d01ril u ~t. and tota118ngQage sccn dOa tM 3'th':. to ttie 33:nl percen~; math down O. 7 percent and dOwn from the '4.tJ:i to the "3rd percen· tile. tomparisoo of scores showed that girls did better in reading and boys in mathematics at all levels. The difference in math was slight in grade six 8nd more· pronOUDCedm grade 12. Also, test ICGltes ~en related to panljts' fJCC:Upatioas. Children of ~ frifeaiGDal and managerial workers acored highest, followed by "semi- professionals.0 ineluding clerks, sales workers and wehnlcians; skilled or semi~skllled workers; and unskilled workers and welfare .-ecipieats. J .·1 'tlol'lege Te1t ·1· EliW Slated · .. ~"'_,,,.~~i\l;QlQl1~-1.J'OUUl::.::t•<•-=~PQente,""""'"•.a~N rnl covering a -armed by a swarm ot police day, afttl' J,"'auUIJl,, who poured out of hetdquarten motorcyclla Who r cb atthedel~•cer'acey. hlm rllbt to fn>n' 11t.epa Ute Police .aid the su,~ta were Westmwter POllcie De~attment. accompanied by two Juvenlle Once there, he wu knifed, girl1, aged 1S and 16, who al· police 1ald legedly bloc;ked the victim's The twoa~ta schedUled ror escape a• their boytriends arralpment lft Wut Or~e atalJled b1m with huntlnf knlvea County J\ld.ltial Dlltrlct OoUrt on d~awn. charc• QI Ult wtth a deadly Slashed once ln the side during weatoe dtivf99*1Y d.ldri't know the atelee, the victim, at, WU wbete tbty were 1otn1 Weemes-treated at Westminster Com- day ntOt. munity Hospital and released. Robert L Lane, 13, of Pomona, Several stitches were teken to aJld Paul D. lnnan Jr., 13, of La closethelmifewound. . ]riry'Nixed On Viewing Porn Stills An Orange County Superior Court jury tbat already has viewed a number of allef*lly obscene movies at the Mitchell Brothers' Santa Ana theater will not be allowed to examine still pboto1rapba taken al that facili- ty, the trial judge hu ruled. Judie Marvin G. Weeks' re- versal of an earlier rulin1 ls be- in1 challenged by the City of San- ta Ana today in the Fourth' District Court ol Appeals. Judge Weeb bu recessed the! trial until Monday in the belief that the appellate court will rule on the issue within the next two days. City lawyers, who paid $7,200 for preparation of the still photo- graphs taken at the Honer Plaza theater by an \Uldercover officer, argued that the pictures are as evidentiary in nature u the mov- ies viewed by the Jury. The first seven days ot the trial were taken up by the jury's view- ing of 17 X-rated films in the theater that was closed to the public while the jury, judge, lawyers, court personnel and a lone Journalist examined al· legedly pornoeraphic material. Defense attorney Joseph Rhine successfully ar1ued before .Judge Weeb that the still photo- graphs were not representative of the movies they depicted since they had been taken out of con· text. The jury ts belng asked to declare 41 movies shown at the Honor Plaza theater duriiar the Jut two yean aa obscene and declare the theater to be a public nuisance. CdMWoman Theft Victim A Corona del Mar woman re- p0rted a $6,300 ~ary Wednes- day. She told pollce it probably took place last w~. Bette South utd she first noticed a few items out ot place Saturd.,, but d.ld not tblnt much of it until ahe discovered some cash miasinf and the screen pulled off a wli>dow •ther home. lhted as atolm hl the break-bl were various pieces of Jewelry and thecasb. : 5 Antique Dolls, ' : Stereo Gear Gone Five atSque dolls valued at $1.000 and stereo equipment worth $700 were stolen Wedn•· day from tbe apartment or •. Co•l• Me1a Hhool teacher. Police~. The b_,lary waa reported Wedneedl1. afternoon by Jtatby Moon. The bl.iqltn appventbt entered bel' west -•4• ap~ent by twilthut ott th~ front door bob. ·4 Eaei OC. the five antiqUe doUs * WOrtb saoo. sJie told police. Officer Earle Grabam sald the two minor girls involved ID the case were detained and thtG re- leased to their parents following the incident in the plaza area out- side the station. He said they deCloitely in· terfered 'tilth the stabbiDC Vfc. tim 's fli&ht for refuge Inside tie police 1tation. Investlfating officers said the episode was apparently sparked by a tratfic incident on Beach Boulevard near lath Street, which leada to the Police station and municipal court complex .. The young man eventually cut in the side was forced to brake hla car abruptly and swerve as he approached the two cycli1ts stopped at a traffic aian•l· controlled intersection, police s aid. ''They apparently thou&bt be was intentionally tryine to hit them, .. a department spokesman said. , Shouting insults, the two bikers raced after the terrified Youn& motorist, police said, and be pursued the course of action be felt wisest. "He came straight to ua," said Officer Graham. E'romPageAl SCORES ••• -Third ~Ge: Reading up 0.3 percent alld up from the SSth to the S6th percentile. -Sixth ~de: Reading down 0.2 percent out Wicbinced"at the 53rd percentile; En&llsh u.saieup 1.1 percent:"apel.Uiig wichanced,. and total lanau&8• score up from the 49th to the Slat percentile; math up 0.3 percent and up from the50thtothe5lstpercenUle. -Twelftllsnde: Read!Dlclown o.s percent and down from the 43rd to the 42nd percenUle; Engllab· US&8e down 0.4 .,.rcent. spelling down 1.2 percent. and total languace score down from the 34Ul to the ~ percentile; math down 0:1 percent and down from the 44th to the 43rd percen- tile. • Comparison of scores abowed that girls did better in readinC and boys in mathematics at all levtls. 'lbe cllfference in math was alicht in cracle six and more pronounced in arade 12. . * * "*. F,.._PGgeAJ TESTS ••• upper -rr percent, a drop of four percent from a year earlier. · Twelftll crade: nJadlba, 87.S percent correct ans•ers, doWn one-half percent from lt'15-1e. Students 1ained one percent dur- i n C the year to place ln Californta 'stop 12 percent. Written expression, 66.2 per- cent oorrect. a alllht drop. Rank- lnp .Upped one percent to place in Callfornla'a upper lS percent. Spelllna. 10.a percent correct. a 1U1ht drop. Tbe district ranted in the upper ~ percent amOQI California dlamcta. a one per- cent decrease. Mathematics '10.I percent cor- rect, a oni~.;l.;reent decrease. Statewide t&ifies show the dla· trict ID the upper 16 percent, a five pe~drop. RILEY.· •• <>f La1uoa N11uel that "can ensure boualna and recreational opportunities which will be the· pride of our county ... Riley spent a county reeord $237,000 0'1hts1976 primvy elec· tion campaf gn1 • the campaip that woo him ms present two. year term. Today. he 11aJd he will s~ "considerably less" ln 1978. · However. be said, "It is leas likely there will be a campai,n reform ordinance in effect by next June than it ii likely there will be one On dfect) by then.'' Last week. Oranae County supervisors ordered Couoti Counsel Adrian Kuyper to draw up a reform ord1na.n.ce and 1.n· dlcated they will ••acr• on Uieor· dJnance when it is atven to them. But Riley aald the board mtaht •decide simply to put the relCl1Q proPOeal on the b.Uot rather tbaD enact lt u a county ordinance. Or, he said, aupel"vlaon may enact the ordQ)anee. put the measure oa the ballot and then wait for the voters' declilon. In any event, Riley 1atd, lt ls not likely there will be a retorm ord.htance lD effect by nezt June. Accordlna to Riley. lt would be unfair to candidates who mJ&ht cballqe the three Incumbent supervisors up for electtoo Dtzt year to Nddle them with i*iJbJ donatioQ and spend1q limU.· Uona • ._beli. u you, aay, w• bav• · our war •bests fUled. •• In the llrlt s1X monlba ot J.S7, the five county supervisors col- lected amonc them more than· $300,000 to either pay off past campaign debts or to put uido for future campaigns, Sail Course CancelLition Claim Denied Th• Irvine CitY Cowldl bud• nled a claim for $50,000 ID damqes filed by a Coita »•a salllng laatructor wbo uy1 f Irvine oftlcfali defamed blm and canceled a coune he wu to teach. Th• inatructor, Riehle A. Moore. ol HS Cabrillo St.. claims the coane was canceled withOUt cause last Jub' and letteta that made alle&at.icm abOut hh:D sent to h.18 propsec:the fttldet¢t. Fire swept tbroutb two partlal- ly completed houses ln the Woocl- brtd1e Vlllaie area of Irvine late Wednesday afternoon ca~ an eaUmated $235,000 damaie, ac- -cordiriJtocountytlre offtci&k. The two nearly completed bouan:wete amoac aT bomes un- der construction near the lake in Woodbrldce and were• earmarked to sell for $141 ,500 and SlN,$00, aecor4ln1to oue Irvine Pacific Developmmt· Companyoftlclal. The loss 11 believed to be in· sured, the aame Offlclal •aid. lnvesUgaU,rs were wor)dq at. the sc.,. early thia mol'Dliur to Moore atW want. tO teach the saill.og cou.rae, but malntatu tbe city baa ref Used to let b1m dolt. City Clfttdala refused to oomo ment on the matter. Tb~ alao...., fused to rele1$e a copy of the tet.-• ter Moon claim.cl detam• blm. • Tbey ul4 theWormatfon iii~ fldentill. A claim la the flnt step ii\~ proceaa leadl'1• to flllng a lawau.l~ detennlne the Ca\11 OI the S:OI p.m. fire that broke out bl Ute home belng constnieted at 22 Plfttall and spread to20 Pintail. BJ the time county~ broqht tbe blue under conti'Ol., shortly .ner • p.m., bOth s~ turea b.8d been IUtted and were tenned a tcital 1oa•b1 ore o1. flci~. They ·esumatect the two ex· pezWYO boin• were 70 perce.nt completed. . Wltneaes s~d names shooting akywud into the early autumn enning could be seen from as far away as five.miles. : ORANGE COUNTY.. SCHOOL DISTRICTS • 1976-17 District I i I Performance Results, State Percentije Ranks <Diatrict> Averaae . ~ ~ A . . : ·Anaheim Elementary .......... 74 59 74 ·Anaheim Union High ............ Brea-Olinda Unified ............ 89 86 77 · '.Bue~a Park Elementary ........ 15 58 68 Capistrano Unified .............. 77 75 75 ·Centralia Elementary .......... 78 66 57 Cypress Elementary ............ 82 69 71 ·Fountain Valley Elementary .... 85 77 72 Fullerton Elementary .......... 64 67 63 · Fullerton Union High .......... ·Garden Grove Unified ........ . 61 55 53 • 'Huntington Beach Elementary .. 77 77 77 HuntlJJgton Beach Union mgb .. Irvine Unlfted .•................ 86 85 84 La Habra Elementary .......... 66 45 44 L•guna Beach Unified ........ . 78 86 82 Los Alamitos Elementary ...... 88 90 87 Magnolia Elementary .......... 69 63 69 ' Newpe>ri.Meaa Unlfiecl .•........ 85 80 77 Oeean View Elementary ........ 73 71 72 Orange Unified ................ 79 73 80 ·Placentia Unified .............. 67 60 59 · Saddleback Valley Unifled ...... 87 .86 83 Santa Ana Unified .............. 24 15 11 Savanna Elementary .......... 51 59 41 Seal Beach Elementary ........ 88 92 79 Tustin Unified .................. 84 86 87 Westminster Elementary ...... 66 67 49 Yorba Linda Elementary ...... 60 82 74 Gradel . ·i sl. i & ~!. i .. ·• 82 78 79 78 87 70 79 80 85 73 73 75 71 73 67 79 76 84 15 73 73 52 61 69 50 61 58 73 65 69 85 85 81 56 51 51 84 83 91 90 81 88 82 78 67 73 75 73 75 70 78 75 73 77 56 70 67 84 79 84 18 lS 17 48 54 49 92 88 83 85 81 84 56 58 73 75 58 57 60 93 85 74 48 79 86 91 88 81 86 86 21 95 66 97 89 78 52 79 90 93 87 85 84 90 11 95 52 70 79 72 49 71 89 91 84 80 . 81 71 29 85 64 93 82 77 59 76 82 94 84 84 80 83 25 95 War Veteram -~~Due Hoiwrs ~~~pgCoaat BadhamRa:psCarter On ,Energy Policies ::~::The veterans of America's •:tfrars will be honored Friday in :~i'adltional and solemn ::~emooies. . :•::. Alth!>Uah a federal law lil 1969 :~~•nted the off'lclaJ Veterana :•:bay to the fourth Monday of Oc- ::':ii>ber, the traditional day ls still ~:..California's Velerarui Day and is ;•-Ob$erved by veterans' groups. :: It was originally established as ·:Armistice Day following World ;::War I . :;., That was a long time ago, but ::;"'e Veterans of World War I o( ::;pie USA, New Mesa Barracks :•J249, expt-ct a good turnout for :::their Friday ceremony. :· · Members of the group, most of :: them in their 80s and older, will ·: hold a 1.S·minute service at 11 :: a.m. Friday at the Memorial •• Gardens on the Oranf~ County :; Fairgrounds in Costa :MeH, •t :: the entrance to Gate 2 on !•Vanguard Way. The 1roup•1 :: ladles' auxiliary Will assist. :: Alao at 11 a.m. on Fnda.Y, ;: Newport Beach American :: Legion Post 291 will conduct a ;: ceremony at the post, 21S 15th st., ·: Newport Beach, :: In Lagwra Beach, Veteran.t of :: .Foreign Wars post 5868 and ~ ~.merlcan Legion Post '222 will ;. f'alse flags alon1 three main :: :roads. .. :·~ ... ~~Iowans .W elcon;ied ~t UBLIN, Ireland (AP) -The :::~ b trotted out e arraagement l:eomblninc .. Dixie'' and "The atUe ~ ot the Republic'• for t tdent Carter'• mother. Tbe. cufon Wedn~*Y maht w .. a ~~ utlng cabaret perf Otmanee 'i' vert at * Dutillri hotel ro~ M1M (,! JD arid the 250 Iowans With r on an xcbonc visit to and. County Rules Cable Firm Offlcllls olia cable televb.fon rmn which aenes 1,100 Tustin area residents were elven 60 days by Oran1e County superviaora Wednesday to find a new locati<Jn for their recepUon equipment. Officials of TM Communica- tions, a firm owned by the Times Mirror Company, installed new equipment ia the Cowan Heights area last aprin.t but without fU'St 1eektn1 county permlsaloa. The equlp_ment now lnchldes two 60-foot d1Spatchlng towen u well as a SO-foot microwave an- tl!nna and baa drawn obJecUona from hillSlde nelthlJC>n. In Aucuat pJannlns com· missioners rejected tbe eom· PJ'1Y '• request for a new pern,Jt to allow the al FLOOR SA.MPLE CHA.IR SALE·! Over 50 De1igner Chain to Select From Reg. 329. to 419. Na w 7 99. ' ' ... ' THE ALLEGA110N before the cSourt is tbat the Mitchell Brothen show dirty movies. The C?ity is trylna to convince a jury Ulat tbe&e f11ma are nothing more tbat pure J>OlDOIP'apby, depleting terrible scenes of sex with ~bsolutely no redeemina social :values. • So far, it haa been reported lbat this valiant jur,y hu been able to grit its collective teeth and sit for one and one-half weeb while witnesslne 17 X· :ated skin shows a s they ~licltered across the Mitchell Brothers' silver screen. One reporter from this sterllna journal likewise bu been most c:ourageows in covering the trial and suffering through the s ame experience. : BUT TllEllE'S MORE. The theater bas shown so many al· legedly ftlthy nicks that it would be an enormous expense to re- screen them all. Anticipating tbia problem, the rn uniclpal prosecutor, In prepar· ing his cue, dispatched one Robert McQuire, a Los Angeles vice c~p, to the theater equipped wttb swi cameras. McQuire got paid $25 an hour· for his suffering while be sat there in the theater and took sWl photos ot movie scenes. These so-called "time-motion studies" cover -or uncover it you prefer -24 other movies that the jury hasn't yet been forced to view. -It was the prosecution's plan to place the still photographs in front ol the jury, in event the jurors haven't been ~ed to enough already. ABRUPTLY, TBEaE came tbe great legal setback. The j udge bas ruled the still photos areinadm.i&sibleuevidence. · Tile theory is that the stills may show only sex and skipped any assertedly redeeming social values. Thus barring reversal upon ap- peal, our Q>unty '9&t mwiclpal forces appe.-r f.o be stuck with a whole Volume of photographs that cost. a reported $7,200 to p~ duce. And tliey can't even use them In cou.rt. You haft to wonder bow the cl· ty will unload tbil seamy merchandise and recover its tn.; vestmea1, RESIDENTS OF eastern South Dakota burrowed out frOm UDder s now drifts, too, to resume normal acUvities in the af· termatholtbe early bllnard. Two deaths in Minnesota were blamed on tbe storm, wblcb began Tuesday night. Michael Muuy; Z3 of Tbief River Falls, was a truck and killed by an industrial loader as he worked to remove snow Wednesday near his hometown. And a motorist, Sandra Kenma:n. 25, of Ward Springs, was lcilled W edoesday momJ.ng east of Sauk Centre when she was struck by a car whiletryingtoslgnalfor help. · help. COUNTY AUTHORITIES said an elderly man found frozen near Perham oo Wednesday bad ap- parenUy died ol natural causes not related to the storm. In South Dakota, Gov. 1Ucbard Kneip and the state's budlet of- ficer, Rich Garry, remained stranded in Sioux Falls today after flying in Tuesday for meet- ings with lawnlatara. ~ ~ sealed ill when the··,·~ was closed. "Hopefully we'll jC state plane over there at noon," said Dan Garry, the governor'a aide in Pierre. , . THE mGBWAYPATBOLstill was advisina against travel on roads iD tbe extreme qateru part of the state. Snow plows were hampered by cars a.ad truclm strand~ along the roadwa)'a, theysald. ScboOls eDd bUsliiesses to most of eastern South Dakot re- m8ined closed t04ay. Boctor Defenm DWi Ljq\lid Protein Meth.Cid Cillea Effective WASHINGTON <AP) -1'be doctor Whose bOok poplilariled the llquid protein .. last chaDce'., diet 1ays hll method ls still the only effective treatment for obe1ity, despite covernment cJ&itn1 that tt played a part iD the deathaof lOwomen, Dr. Robeft Unn, tbe Q.year. old e»teopath whose diet bOok bas sold two million copies, said Wedneed.IU' tie agrees With the Food and DrUg 'AdmlnlstraOon thllt people who embark on bis diet sboWd be watched closely by pbyslclans for potentially dangerous compUcaUoos. protein diet was at leut a can· tributin&factor or a cause .. ill the .sudden heUt attack deaths ot 10 women under.qe45. ''We expeet to tmd others,'' be said. "We oa1y have what we're afraid may be the Up of tbe icebera." UNNEDYUaGBDwel1bt· conaclous cmaumen not to ao on the liquid protein dlet wlthc>W. close supervlilon bJ a doctor skilled iii lta u.e: And those now on it. he Bal~ should "aet themselves into the bands ol a phyaieian" who can apot~otdaqer. JU!Jje Suspen4s ChbU1chilla Trial 0~. (AP> -The trial of three men cbar1eicl m connection with the kldna~g of Cb0wch1Ua school children last year bu SUS· 9ended uDti1 a prosecution witness can reappear Nov. 21. Tbe witness, Dr. Maurice Oberg, an environ- mental bycienist, on Wednesday began discussln1 the effeeta of heat an4 confinement on 26 chlJdren anil a bus Clriver who were buried In an under· ,groond prison. · But Superior Court Judge Leo Dee1an was told durin& a recess that Ober1 would be travel.iq to the Eaat Cout tnd would not return until Nov. 21. 2 ltere S~ Attaeb Teld . SAN JOSE (AP) -Two women, one a Catholic nun, have become the latest victims in a spree of 30 sexual attacks near San Jose St.ate Unlvenlty In the city's rough urban center. about age 40, was raped ~S'fArg· Police said a nun,(--------..) at a convent near lbe camJ)us early Wedbes· --------day. A 25-year-old woman was attacked as she walked a few blocks from . C&m{>UI Wednelday night, but escaped after a struuie, officer John Cook said today. T~ .. •la te ••• ..461 SACRAMENTO (AP) -Brand names should be banned from California textbooks unless they are absolutely necessary, a ltatecommlsalon says. The recommendation, if adopted by the state Board of Education, would abolish. from future textbooks what amounts to free advertisements for major brands of mercbandile. · S.rerliln t• •t•r11"t STANFORD (AP> -Sororities are about to be allowed at Stanford Unlversitv for the first time since 1944, when they were kicked off Tbe Farm tor- f alllng to fraternize with coed dormitory dwellers. Robert M. Rosenzweig, vlce president for public affairs, said the Stanford Board of Trustees will vote next month to allow the campus GNet system to embrace both sexes tor the first Ume 11.DcelMt. TREY FACBD a. variety of charges, in· Nttelear Pla•t Sttpported eluding felony malicious Broun'• • P.oliey Queried 'But the story quoted Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. as sa)'in.a he was unaware that the' poUey bad ~ effect on the f~ fiim. i8£ ADDED that the firm's contrlbutlona and loans to hi• political eampalgm have played no role bi the policy. ••All tblnas being equal, J try to make de· clsiona that will work un- favorably to members of my falitU,y. I have no in· volvementm my father's busl.Qeaa aCtlvities and I ha•e 110 Interest lo tbe.Dl,0 ;&he Democratic gov mar added .. * Claarlee &e7• and aoa Bair, tired otnan on the outside looldnl in -sueeeufully mtcbed from ttlevl1lon to politics -a cbaqe they feel ls a natural one. Royer, elected mayor of Seattle, i.nd Bair, elected ml)'Or of Spokane, are former television personalttles in Waabtnston'• twolars•t cities. They JOln a crowtnl number of newsmen in the Norihwelt who have moved topoliUcs -ln· cludiilg Boise Mayor Rldaml Eatdley, who won re-electfon; andformerOrefODOov. J' MeCalL * Indy 500 race wmner ..-., Umer, sa)'in& two WbJte.ta11edfaM1aliiowu arefamUY pets, pleaded ~-O:C:l_Ot ln AllJUci~~· to a Charle that be UD• lawNIJy broUgbt tlieD\ to New Mexico. The lix·month~ld fawns, wldch bad been U'rina SAN DIEGO (AP> -The chairman of a con· mischief, battery and -----------~---............ ,....._ ...... ..-~~----,-~----"":-~-...... ----~--...-. ..... ~-.,_~ ..... gresslonal committee studying the problems of trespasainl. In addition, nuclear waste disposal says the propoaed Sundeaert · W l l 1 on a n d T on Y JiuclearpowerplantprobabJ.yabouldbefin11bed. Sampson -.ere c~ed . Rep. Leo J. Ryan (0.Calif.), told a Aaembly • ~th ~ la the ach~ Subcommittee on Ener1Y bearin& here WednesClay fire mbjng, -police that shutting down ex.i.stine nuclear power plants ln aald. California would be an economic disaater. Despite the arres~, He said the San Dieeo Gu and Electttc Co.. aut~oritles 1atd ihe nuclear power project probably should flt lnto the motlv6 of the harass· "existing plants" category because of the money. medt• rem•lned a (about $79 million) which already bas been spent. . _m_~---· ----- • .t· Legal advice can be confusing, as members of altouae ;:Judiciary subcommittee have been finding out in ieeent ·days. · The committee is considering a resolution that would extend the deadline for ratification of the Equal Rights :Amendment seven years from March 22, 1979, to March 22, 1986. The proposed amendment to the Constitution, which would bar discrimination based on sex, has been ratified piy 35 of thenecessary-38 states. ERA proponents who want to extend the ratification deadline, point out that the seven-year cutoff date is not contained in the wording of the amendment, but only in the resolution that introduced it in 1972. They further note that no time limits were set for ratification o! constitutional amendments until the 18th Amendment, establishing prohibition. Since then, some amendments have included a titne limit, some have not. So the congressmen called for legal advice. The first came from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, which assured the subcommittee that ongress has the authority to extend the deadline if it ooses, since no time limit was placed in the original RA text. ~. That seemed clear enough. Then along came a former .S. Solicitor General who told the congressmen that ex- ending the deadline not only would be a "bad precedent,·' ut might even amount to a new resolution that would have be acted on by all the states. On that confusing note, ERA -and the subcommittee remain in a state of suspended animation pending urther legal delving. ~-----elpful Bureaucracy STtONG BJNrs of • Shcharansky trial, following the Praaue trial. ol Charter 77 diael~ deota, seem to be calculated ror· ~elr blackmail effect on th1a conference. · Tbus, the KremliA II aa)'ing that either the West (maloly the U.S.> shuts-up •bout baman ri1bta t1r" She~amky ii doomed in a spy-trial Unlc1n1 him to American jouroaJlstl. SbcbannQy'a sin, llke tbi ams of the awter Tl dl&aideots and carf motto r U} tlOn'lnoLl'ftll'IA r1M'IUl1- -~-~-,-~-.... .. f!r'1 c Uon on ·wf•""""'"" ••• A _ _...__,.~,woal4 Ti d ~·car• ttyfo ,...._,_ .. we • • 'iii 1 COD<litton, a retY-d• fecta and fltnou ot 1ucb key componenta u · he dlipta. ~arid btakea. Many ule4 car dealert tntentlonall1 cover up mechaatcel fautta tn Ol'der to sell the can, rrc tr,VestJaaton ha•• found. • • Tbe public. aco0rdfo1 to a FTC stall NPC>ft, "Ji conrront-• ed with tmmaeuJai. vehicles and 1m0otb-~ aaleamen wha 1trlve to aaaore the cu.te>mer that the 11eamtn1 beauties are tn 'mint condl· tion'. •• while maintainln1 a wall of aUence about def eeta • Which may ~e beneath the surf ace ... SUCH DEALERS .. mlarepresent that vehicles are defect.free or that substantial re- pairs have been performed, .. the report cbar1•. They glibly promise to fix any defect that d• velops, but when a problem occurs. they deny ·havinC made any promtsa. ''These verbal as- surances," the study declares, ''have all too often proven empty rhetoric to the buyer of a 'lemon'," These practices are especially prevalent on used car Jots th•t the study calls "ghetto rip- offs.•• And some salesmen are so familiar with the defects "that they c~ i4entUY vehicles on the lot whlcb they will not 11ell to their friend.a," but will eaeerly peddle to •tr~gers. Many dealers try to m~e old cars look brand new. Ignoring the m~banlcal defects, they eliminate signs of prevl~ wear and tear through a method called. "appearance reconcU- tionine." THEY REMOVE dents af'.id scriatebes, re-' paint the car, shampoo the tnt4rt0r, replace torn upholstery, dye the carpetin1. topatnt the enitne and spray the interior with a ••new ear amell." Some customers are even stuc)( with ''fleet" can that were previously battered• police can, tax- icabs. rent-a-cats, or driver ed\kaUoo can. The problem, OQe FTC tnvestt1.ator told OW' 1 associate Howie Kurtz, la thit one "11• tbe seller, has all the lnformaUon, and the other guy, the buyer, has almost no information. That spells disaster." As the staff report put it: "The con- sumer, in laree part, ends up buying a pia in a poke." The Bookman A Vet Recalls Youth ALL THINGS WISE AND WONDERFUL, By Jam es Herriot. St. Martin's. 432 Pages. $10. Picking up effottlessly at the point where he left off in his best-sellioa .. A 11 Things Bright and Beautiful," James Her- riot once again takes his delightN:I rC'aders on a journey back in time to the rlays when he was a youni:: VC'terinarian. World War II is raging and l lcrriot has left his rural Yorkshire practice to JOln the RAF and become a pilot. But while his ho<ly i~ Wldergoing thl' rigors of basic train- inl-!. llC'rnot's mind re- turns l'V<'r so often to bis hl•lo' Pd Yorkshire and thus his book bas only a htt It• in 1t about the war .ind has part in it and a n .it deal about the peo- ple :ind the animals that pla' l'd such an impor- tant role m his life. READERS of Her· riot's two previous books will know what to expect in "All Things Wlae and Wonderful." There 111 no plot line. as such. Rather the book is a wonderful collection of stories about the many, many things that happened to Herriot as he ~ade bia rounds tenclUil to the animals that niede'd his gen tie mln1atratl0ill. • Pfflt THOMAS AP. BoOkl &lltor Eacutlv• OfflC9i: 7812 Edi~'' Huntington Mach. CA 92947 SoutMrn Callfotnll Reglonll Olfk:n: 4140 Long lteach Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90807 8955 ValfeY \ttew St., Buena Parle, CA 90820 ~ 20715 S. AValon Blvd., Careon, CA 90746 1!!!.r 1001 E. lmperlal Hwy., La Habra, CA 90631 touAL 1095 lrvlne Blvd., Tustin, CA 92680 H00$1110 • 235 N. Cltrua Ave •• West Covina, CA 91793 UJ11>c11 ·Stephen K. Tamura, an as- sociate justic~ of the Fourth Djstrict Court of Appeals, bas been named 1977 ap- pellate judge of the year by t e California" Trial Lawyers Association. An Orange County resident, he is a former 'Orange County Superior Court judge. Dennis Mangers, D·Himtlnstoo Beach, and Ron Cordova, D-El Toro, whose two dlstrtcta at.riltcll from seat Beach to Oceanside, said they will continue their el· forts on behalf of AB 1109 durina the next legislative session which be&ina ln.January. TBZ TWO MEN made the promise durin& a luncheon meet· i.og of the Orange County Coast Association in Newport Beach. Man1en said he llntroduced the bill, but got the idea from bis predecessor, ~abUcan :J\qbert Bu.rte. He said the idea is to provide relief to beach city ~ who must foot the bill for what be described as a regional reerea- tional resource. Cordova talked about taX ~ form llDd prged the bw;tnessmen at tbe ~~ting to encourage friends ,11.vw other parts of the tate to writ9 their AasemblYmen a.bd state SenatA:n aiklna for re- peal 'd. the business inventory tu. ,.. THE EL TORO .lemlator alsO promised to ot.rocfuce a l\ew pro~y tax reform package based on a plan devlaed by Oranee Coqbty Aasmor Bradley Jacobs. Huiid It would raise the tax exemption for homeowners· and would soften the impact ol .. paper. increases" in the value of homes that4onotc~e hands. Mangen talked about the com- pletion of the Costa Mesa Freeway and the state purchase and restoratloll of Huntington. Beach's Bolsa Chica marsh. . \ GOP lmpge Changing? By JACKIE HYMAN OI .. Olliff l'llet a.ff Republicans' own attitudes about their party and their image to voters are the keys to wlruung tbe 1978 gubernatorial election, at.ate Attorney General Evelle Younger said Wednesday Ill Newport Beach. Younger, a candidate for the Republican nomination for gov- ernor, told the Balboa Bay Republican Women Federated tbat voters "acree with us on the issues" but .. perceive us as the party or big business.' t He said. "I think when we get the voters to look at the track record and ignore the rhetoric, we'reonourway.'' SltEAKJNG AT A luncheon meeting at the Reuben E. Lee restaurant, Younger said He ilS also concerned about two types <JI Republicans: those who believe Governor Brown, a Democrat, can't be beaten and those wboun- Clerestimate bis strength. Younger pointed out what he believes are Brown's weak points, saying, "He'd rather nm a presidential campaign than run our 1tate. I think our people don't want a governor who can't keep his mind o~ the job." He also criticized the budget sun>lus at the California Depart- ment of Transportation, com- mentliJg, "I contend that, if it isn't needed, they ought to stop ,, €gpress Shooting charaing the tu. If it ls needed, it ought to be apent" to complete freeways. •-oua GOVEBNOB bas SUC• ceeded in one campalan pro- mise: Jowertni the expectatiaaa of Californians," Younger said. "Right now our expectations ol our state government are lower than they've ever been." amages to be determined in trial are being demanded by the widow and family or a Cypress police Ofllcer who was shot te death Nov. 19, 1171, while investigating a bur1lary in tbMcity. prison after a jury convicted blm of first degree muider. Velma l>ennef, who prosee\itors claimed durinl the trial was her husband's lookout dur· ing the burglary, wts acquittecl Mamed as defendants in the Orange County Superior Court lawsuit filed b1·Colleen Sowma, 42, are convtctea JttDer Bobby Joe Denney, 31, his wife, V~Jma, 25, the owners of the buglared property and the Wells Fargo Alarm Company. She claims that all share ~n.sibility for the death or Sgt. Donald Jack Sow ma, 44, who was shot b)' Denney as the pair met in a doc· tor's office that formed part of the P.omeroy Art Gallery. Denney was sentenced to life in Mrs. SOwma, joined 1n the laWnlt by her cblldren -22, 20. 18 and 11- claims the Po~·~.dlnl was an "abnormally dais~" site and that poliCe bad beifa called on nume1"0US occasions prior. to the mci· dent that ended with her husband'• death. on Island • Newp ~ ... _-_ -=o -=--~=-=,,,.. =----- G'D~any Accused In Suit SACRAMENTO <AP> -A auit rited by the state attorney general charges a Marina del Rey firm with mislead- ing the public into bellev- inC a high income could be earned durinl spare tirne without any selling acUvlty. Filed in Sacramento County Superior Court, the suit names Con- trolled Marketing services Inc. and three oftieen, Chris Grah•m. FIGURES SHOW THAT in· creasing numbers of Americans in the eat·and·run soClety: ol the 1970. are choosing to dine out. Compounding this problem, in the 'riew of industry neeutiv•. ts a populatiu trend toward fewer births and more single peo. pie living atone. The Food Marketing Institute, which represents most of the DI· lion's food store chains, ii .. cemed about tbeee trends and bas biied the A.C. Neilsen Co. to conduct public opinion rese to tell the industry bow to Im prove its business. What impact will cbangin buying habits and lifestyles havtt on grocery stores? P FOR ONE THING, the wo,.J "super" might come out of supermarket. "We have begun to rethink j notion that 'bigger js better.' says Robert 0. Aders, presid of the marketing institute. And the Neilsen people say th things about supermarkets th irk people must somehow chanaed -things like Ion check.out lines, dirty &tores, employees and difficulty in f ingthings. ' Ray Perls~eio and ~~~~~~~~~~~-;;.~~~~~~~~~'""-:'~--~---------7":-'----~--::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"":""'l~~~~--~~~~~ ........ -;:~~. GJ.Ibert Ausladfl. . . A SPOKESWOMAN for Attorney Gener~U E•efle Younger, Flo Snyder, said more than SO lilveston made pay· ments of $500 t.o $1.SOO to the firm. The suit alleges the firui made un~rue or misleadlng representa· tlons and engaged in un· fair competition. ~YOUNGER SAID the firm had several levels • of participation, each re- quiring a-larger invest- ment. All the plans in· volved a contract for a con1umer-investor to -become an "affiliate," who was actually a mail processor and forwarder for an lntroducto'ry gift _..,·--·- coupon program. Younger said coupons, offerint such items u jewelry or cuUery, were printed and distributed ....... ~- to bu.alnesMI such u gas stations and car w.._, wblch W()Uld give them to customers. BE SAID a fee of several dollars would tben be malled along 'With the coupon to the af. flliate, who would deduct ~ fee and send the rest t.o "the main office. hut the firm failed to distribute more than a few· coupons, many af- filiates lost money, and none earned enough to recoup initial invest- ments, he said. TBE SUIT requests a court order against fiutber ·utementa or ac· tlona by the company wblcb, it said, Violated tbe state Business and P.rofessions Code. t Wants 'Aetiop~ • Mesa Names Legal Aide Directors of W.R~ Grace & Co., which operates the Rinker Co., Newport Beach, and Coco'•• Reuben's, Baxter Street, Gorda Llz, laldore'1 and El Torito-La Fiesta restaurants, bas decl.x-ed a quarterly cash dividend of '5 cents a share on itl common stock, payable Dec. 9 to shareholders of record on Nov. 9. • This is the 160th c:ooaecutive common .tock dividend paid by the company. The company bas Hported' an lncHue in third quarter profits of 27 .2 percent on a rl!e ln sales ol 8.6 percent ewer tbe similar period in 1976. Sal• and operatint revenues were $9&1,2'3,000 in the tblrd quarter endln1 Sept. 30, compared with $861,023,000 for the 1976 period, whlch wu reatatecl for)>OOlln&J of Interests transactions. Net lneome in the third quarter of um was $37,277,000, or $1 a common and common equivalent share, compared with $29,287,000, or 78 cents, on a per share basis, earned in the tb1rd qutr.ier ol ~an l;creuo of !'T .2 percent ind 28.2 per«nt, respecUvelY. 1'1•rlwt ... El._ a...e. Sh • Jn~rnaUonat, Iii .. DfOdu '" ot ln•ta•Qa;p. hu 1l1Md aft •1 mfl't tOr.:-n ~•ettn1 and l'tl!'b urvlo .. Wit il'keU ces lntet'QI il coro., New ach. •lees will bt let}' to p1o~IJ~tNllJ!r:~&1tribuUOQ, advertll- lnl tfttctlYtlltllt.!' o alUw and llltl ~ U0A ud llH&Ote CUI If J>l"Olrlml. ' • • r... ........... ,. .. TI'S · , Inc., Cotta Meea. ha reported sales of ... !!~ ~d a ntt Income ol SW.,617 for ti. ftacal ~at. TDlle ftaurta rep~ent a 30 percent Increase kt •al• ad a 161 percent ln~ase in net tneome eomp..nd with lut year's figures. Uonal, Iae., Newport Beach. lie was formerly with BWboard Maguine and a principal with E & D '6f1. Vtttlaing. • ltc6ert E. Smltb bu been promoted to vice pl'tlident at manufactwiQ at Panel·Air Corp., Coeta llesa, a 1ublldlary of St.ndard·Pacdlic Corp. lit ta former manufacturtnc ma.uatr • • Albert 1. Aaer. Newport Beach, ha• formed Na own dtvelopJDent codlpan1 to speelall• In •hop. plna centers and office buUdlnll.:'ffe ti former Vice · prealdent at the commercial cfMaiOft of tbe InJne Company,NewportBeacb. Thenam~ofthenewfttni iaAlbertJ.Auer&Aasoclatel. Hll ftnt project is a '8 miWan. 10!,000.aqilare- foot offtce building In Newport Beacti • • Seniors To .Hear Lectures Free ledurel coverin1 topics from tra'f'el to pbyslcal fttnea wW be given tbia month at the Newport Beach aenlor cltllen cen.tet, Fifth and Mar1uerlte avenaea, Coronadel Mar. Next Wedneeday, Donald HarwOod wUl dla-ufV ... in in '1ftfo at ~"' m lp.m.to3 p.m. 06 . 18, CoutllDe Com ty CoUec• will prestat Bill Set Vin on .. PJl)'aical Fitness for Older Adults" from 10 a.m. to noon. On Nov. 23, Walt McGra" ol the Newport Beacb Ubfary will.talk from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. about travelini . On Nov. 30, Capt. Doll Jones of the Newport Beach Fire Depart- m eJi t' a paramedic service will discuss , ••self-help In an Emer1ency.. from 1 p.m. to2p.m. The top salary for a eosta lrfeta ftrellgbter baa aon6' llom $1,)t$ to $1,412 a month follo"1Jll unanimoius City Council approval of new wa&e' and benefit Increases. A 5 percent salary Increase becomes effectlve IEmediately, with an additlOoal 9.25 rcent increase due next Septem er. Jocreued medical contributions by ttie city Bllo are inchided 1o the aareement Teamateu Local 911. wh ch repreaenta city flrdllhtera. TBS 008T TO taxpayen for the reat of tb1s f1scal year WW be '1'-000• accordln_a to City Kuacer fted Soraabal:. • l'or ~ten the sal•l"1 rqe waa increased fr.Om $1,107·11:1'5 montlily to $1.Ul-$1,412, ana Will 80 nntfalltoti,-.i,500. .. THE SAIASY RANG£ for lre engineers rote from '1,180-$1.447 to $1,25041,$19 and Will Increase nut Sept.mber to $1,J28.$1,8H. - For ft1e c•PtainS. tbe raise WN from ~39C4t,lle8 te>-·~St.180, And will tncreue next fall to~ ff MRS. THORNT()N. 47 ~ *id the son born to ber ua:Crlttmton on Oct. 1. ll , WU palm-printed. 8ted and taken to a nursery. She charged that hospital personnel brought back an lnfant lbfcb had a lighter com· lexlon an.d lower orebead, a quieter nature ancl a different ldentlficatioa tag. Crittenton ad· mintstraton said it is common for a baby's ,. #ad and complexion to f!!Chance in the ts hours ,,(After birth. They aaid tt w tap were made for the baby to correct a h1pelllng of tho .~ ~JDother•a name. COGGINS. A WBALTBT CONT&AC'l'OR run· ntn1 for a second tenn. bad UieMc:kin1 of the cltJ'• business establlahmea~ 0 1 don't th1nt qe 1111 ~ to do with tt. · any more than aex does.•• abe ntd at a victory celebratlon. "I'm aCU:p Md have a fall' del?M of lntellt1enee. Tberit were qutstiODI about ~1 .se earlier in the campa_lp, but thole wertdtapeUid u people 1otcok:Dow me.'' # Mra. Cannon, a Widow ft) has beeG actlv. Iii civic and polttlcal affairs but was mQlnl her flnt try for public office, s&ld 1be Used hef tillnia sbOei as a IM at her first cam.Pat.CD a~aran" after be.. ~called "allWeoldlad)'lntennisabOil. 0 "Everybody Just laughed," she said. "It's another one of those cllches ~old people. I don't think moat people wbo wear tennll aboea are little old ladies." Hrs. Cannon re· cetvecl 52.l percent of lbe vote in the city of 150,000. North Carolina'• capital. · Co11in1, 56. who was limited in his eam-paigntn1.because ot iall "• atone aurgery, was bit· ter after tbe defeat but ,. ..... NON wished ber luck. Cos· _.. Slns saldSbe wu put up as a candidate "by ~ or three oraanlJaUons who wan~ totake~l ot clt.1 covemmeat." IN IUSCAllPAIGN, COGGINS made public re- ferences to Mn. Can:Doie'a 11• and called her "a nlceliW•ntindliidt. h NOW CLELAND AMAZES those who see the dexterity with which he handles bla job. And be goes out ol bla way to be seen publicly, as a symbol of success for other veterans. He la eager to talk about his job and bis feelings for other disabled veterans. Cleland's deSlc looks out at the 'Wb.lte House where his long-\fme Georgia friend Jimmy Carter liws. When he is not worldJll be ; likes to drive bis seven-year-old ( battered car to a park and shoot i basketball with ftieods. He 1 performs with amazing dex-i terity. · ! l CLELAND, A BACHELOR, J lives alone in a one-bedroom , apartment where he prepares bis t own meals. A maid comes in to ; help once a week. • He has had to adopt new ways ~ of dealing with dally chores. He 1 stores dishes in the dishwasher t so he doesn't have to reach up in- .... DRESSING FOR WORK NO EASY TASK A Frtend TIH Max'• Tie• In Advance ' He overcuk the problem ol tying ~ nectues by having a fr!Amd tie them and hang them up reedy for use. Cleland tosses b1I Ue of the qy over bla bead ad adjusts the lmot. Be 1al\S he c:iould tie them lilmultbot tt would tn. longer. Cleland also does dal11 pusbups usl.De his wbee!Obalr and bed. \ to cabinets for them. / j r_. ~~~,_..~,..--..,.,..-.~~..-:~~~_,..,..r..i...-...... USC Asks Funds SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -'lbe Unlv~~Souttifina CalltOl'Dia "ufj U..-te~• CoW-tto. order the n..te to PaJ tbe un- l•enlt,y Sl million for boltf '"• ita medlcal school eni'olln:ient -money USC says It deserves by law. · FOR ME IT WAS WST the oPPoijte. communications section was a nap, but"' several math problems were perpleilna. I was. one of 37 newspaper, radio and television reporteri who took the~ Under a pledge not to reveal the questlQils. lean. say, however, that questloQI dealt wtth ~cal problems such as balaDClnl a check and determining which store offered a better 1110 price. It's no WQnder that Lee tlilnb itie WllS bet- ter in math -she worlca parttline as a cuhler in a school store. I've been eware for years of her problems with tbe laquaie, but like many parents didn't know what to do abouUt. SHOULD LEE WIND t1P amone tbe estimated 30 percent who will fall the test. her school Will put her ln a remedial pJ"Oll'am. Sbe will have two more opportunities t.o pus tb:e teat n~ year. U abe still fails, ihe11 get a GARDENCITY,N.Y. (AP> -BandleaderGuy Lombardo, wbo ushered in the naUon'a New Year with melody for nearly half a century1 was burled Wednesday. Immediately aflerwata bis Royal Canadians orchestr-hit the road for a Massachusetts sho~-must-go-onenpgeme1.1t. "We jus t lost a beautiful frier4!," said band leader and comedian Phil Barria, wbo attended the fune r al services for Lombardo at Our Holy Redeemer Roman Catholic church in Freeport, N.Y. Editor to Go to'"" LEWISTON, Idaho CAP) -The executive edi Lor oC lbe Lewiston Momini Tribune, who has re- fused to reveal a news source in court. says be will begin serving a 30-day jail sentence at noon Friday. Judge Roy Mosman of the 2nd District Court said Wednesday he and editor James Sbelledy have fme Le~ed · LOS ANGELES (AP) -A SU"7erlake man who pl~aded guilty to 10 counts of 1Jlegally ibl· portinc underaround an<,\ bootle& reeol'd album• from London was fined $5,000 and placed on four years' probation. James Maddin, 49, operated un- der several corporate names. a "gentleman's agreement" that Sbelledy will · • turn h1mself m at his convenience. The judge declined to order Shelledy to jail after a stay of the sentence was lifted earlier this week. Bay Friends Set Lecture Tours Members of the Friend.a ot Newport Bay who arc experts on the flora and fauna of the Upper Newport Bay will lead free lecture tours for the public Saturday morning. The two-hour tours start between 9 a.m . and 10:30 a.m. at the intersection of Back Bay and Eastbluff drives. G rou~ of 25 depart as often as there are enough . people to form a group. Jhe ANTIQUE FAIR 205 I MeWpart ll•d. C0ttaMna ,46-5454 . Proudly Presents Its Newest Shipment of EX'l)U1sm VICTORIAN ANTIQUES Harrdpick&Q by our buyer In Engf a('ld. . .. ' ' ,.,, . " ,, .. v.---. . .,...., * ~nl I . '· 1 .£tftl~~"'· . · .. ~W1£~ --. ~~~ • ______ --. .... -__ • --'r.....i._ ---.. -----~ -• ,.. t-.. ~= . all 42 stores join In celebrating ttie opening of Mervyn's new store in Simi Valley, California These are only a few of the over one hundred Items now on eale In our stores. Prices effective through Sunday, November 13th. "long rob .. for women I . QUllt ~ ftelol. Sizll REG. t'll S.M-L; 10-18; 7·13. ,. 3 99 .... ,.....,,.. .... ,4 .... ,,.. • Mftt. .... ,..'17418. ,...., ... salel men's flannel or wool·blend sftirtS , 20%ott • WOoL reg. 11 .••••••••• t• Aanne~ ieg. 8.99 •........ 1.91 Flannel lhlrts with 2 chest pocket.I; 100CJft oot• ton. Wool blend lhlna wtttt 2flrlp poaketa or one pocket With platket frof't: 115% wool/10" nylon/6% other flbert. Both tn I Wide range of cok>rful plaid&. FlaMiili., 1n IOUdl. Machine waihabfe and dryable. Slz9l S-M·L·XL. • • . ~ j I ~ "And after you spent all that money on obedience school!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN WE.LL I li4fff '6 1Wrr ! I 8t.£11J (('(.) 816 '!:HANCE. l I WA!:> WIDE: OPEN A..io ! DROPPED IT f '• CASEY MOON MULLINS ~ WEU. I I'LL JU5T GO BACK m 1H£ HOOOU:: AND 1EJ.. CT LIKE rT I& f I L..05T IT IN ~E St"1 ! 11·/t ~---• -L._ • -- -~--~ --~ --• _. --.... E'RIDAY SATUBDA~ St;JNIDA'f f 1 One tool, many uses f One less thi~g to worry about ·' SharPen knives, lawnmower blades, drill bits. Grind, poHsh or brush. You can do it all with this yersatile tool. Includes safety eye .shields. Model #3601. ( McGRAW EDISON BENCH GRINDER, Reg.19.99 16.99 Serves just enough-Juat right Finally, a soup pot sized for eJnglM. ne~a and small f1miliH . Thia "ProportiOn·etlil" pot Is made of durable, llghtwelght po1celald!Oft·lteel. Dishwasher 1at1. Cook.a, cleans llke Olala. Resists food odora. ataina. Whlfe Model •cs14. SOUP POT, Reg. 7 49 5.88 It could aav• your llf• This profeaalon1l amok• end fire detector ' sound• the alarm at tH4 tlttt •!On of danget. lt'a an Investment that aomedey might pay ltfe·aalllng dlvldenda. U.L. llltld. FIRST ALERT SAIOKf & r-FIRE DETECTOR, Electric. Reg.29.99 22.88 Battery operated. Reg.39.99 26.88 For turkey day, or any day Reusable. blue speckled roaster ablofbs heat -doesn't reflect rt -for laster cooking. Easy to clean. hghtweight. Cover nests in roaster tor 91sy storage. Model =0504. 1i9x1rr OVEN ROASTER. Reg. 3 99 2.28 Not available at tht Orange store. Keep comfort In Your house will 11ay cooler In summer. warm.r In winter W11h proper lntUlatlon. C8n be added 10 present lnaulatlon for economy. It's euv 10 install yourself. 24">t1"wldt. HOUSEHOLD INSULATION, Reg. 39c lfn. n. 18c lln. fl • Have extra keys made for the car, the house, or almost anything else that looks. So If a key happens to get lost, you won't be. our experts cut any standard size, single cut key with perfect accuracy. Limit 12 keys per customer. SINGLE CUT KEYS, Reg. 59c each 3for$1 No washer, no drip E~-. up to date wtttt UH Peerte .. one handle faucet. A rotating valve takea the place of a compression wathe<, elimlnattng dripping faucets. Ave v-er manufacturer's guarantee. 6 or I Inch center Includes free ..,.,or.Model #8200 P~ERLESS SINGLE HANDLE FAUCET. Reg. 26.99 16.88 •. To have ahd to liold T oug?I, 111·ourPoN d41Ct ~ l'IOIOa •lot of thl11g9 together, Uke ducting. glNanlZtd. or P.VC pipe and potylUm COYetS. Thl9 weather·realat111t tape also seals areas 1roul)d &Ir condrtlontr1 and vent ducting. 2" Dy 10 yd. tell. AANO DUCT TAPE, Reg. t.49 68c I - r ~ I I . =Author ~rospeak . ·Atocc Dr. Laurence J. P~ler. author of "The Peter Principle, .. the book which explained the dynamics of bureaucratic promotions by the principle that "a person tends to rise to bls level of incompetence," will speak Wednesday al Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa: The lecture begins al I p .m . in the OCC Auditorium .. Tickets, at $3 each, may be purchased al the OCC ticket office. The office is open Mon· day through Friday from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and on Saturdays from 8 a.m. to noon. The tieket office phone number is S56-55Z7. PUBUC NOTICE PICTIT10UllU$1NIHS HAMlf STATEMENT Tfle fol_.ng ...,_ .... dOlflO blls'--H Contemporary ·sleeper sefas . Wicker arms, print cover, multi-pillows fumiture-141 · s399 reg.$599 TA 8 PU 8 LISH I NG, TA 8 a4~~,,,,,,-~.-4--oli ....... ~ii.-..... Ljfj~ PU•LICAT•ONS. 1112 S.1-Aw.. Eureka vacuum AluntelnV .. ...,, CA'27• Tlmo«hy JoMpll Mcc.rtlly, S772 B d t ;:.;;:;:;;71~ u ge with tools ~:.::,..~· <ondVCled by • comforters U . ht T1lll ~:·~ wlltl ... Of acetate png . C:-.ty c-d Ore19 Courlty on Oc· :;;,~;f,::r,.~,·~1:= and satin. #2042, 6-pc. ~n tool set . ...... _ -~-CTIT1-~~-.':'-IN:-I $30 full, 22·99 housewmes 73 ~":.~=~~~_,_ $40 queen/king, JOSHUA HENOERSON AS· 109 99 1.a999 $0CIATES INDUSTRIAL Dl!SIGN, 29.99 • l'9g. .. • 11"2 N..i.s $&,. Huntl""'9ft Bffcll,. CA92M6 =:-:~~~~ budget storP TllJs ....,_ Is CllftdUded lly en In-,,..,, .. ::·=·~-~ ... domesti~825 C-ty Clel1tcl Of.,..~°" Nov. ~mJ. 1899 PubllWd Dr .. c.oest Pell';":::. • reg. $25 twfn ..... 10.17,M•O.C. t, 1'17 • ~17 , ROB HEA~L HOPES TO GUIDE USC TO TH~ Rose BOWL. Sporta CUpped.Short Hisle Rejects $3 Million . ,. DALLAS -Free...1eent I.lu'ey Hisle, the Te~as Ranaers' Mh· round choice hr the re-entry draft, has rejected the Ranaen' offer of an e$t1nlated 10..year, $3 million CCJC!ic Hisle's attOrney satdWedn . AC'cordlng'. ~sle's attotney, the terms of ihat qffer w~e foe a total or $3 m.Jllic>a -to~ pAld at $300,000 a year for 10 years, althoU8b lllsle would be required to play only •ix years. aaseball eon:im.J•ioner Bowie Kuhn has JIU~ RJngers ceneral managmo Dan O'Briep was guilty of tampering when be made re- marks about Raneers efforts to sign Hiale. 1 Hisle, Who led the American Leatue in run.I batted In this year for" the Minnesota Twfus, was ta~ as the Rangers' top taraet in. t.lie Cl.raft. Kubri 'a offtclala aaid the tamvermg peaalty would ~ lightened if they didil 't si&n Hisle. .l_,..rtellft•ra LOS ANGELES -It now ap- pears that Kareem Abdul-J abbar of the Loa .Aneeles Lakers will return to actioil eucUy one month after belnk tnjqred in the ttam 's NatiOUl Basketball As· sociatioo~ner. Abd,ul-Jabbar had the cast re· moved from bia right hand Wednesday and be wW probably be able to play Nov. 18, the team announced. The all-pro center broke the fourth metacarpal of tm hand in the first two minutes of the Luera• 1ame at Milwaukee Oct. 18 when be slua&ed Bucks rookie Kent Benson. 6etelrled 8reeze• • -~~u ·mlnikd min ~ ~ Huntington Beacll nvades NGW(Nl 'i:&Judi:h ~t ib. tW Sunaet Loague football ranale. GametttnebB. Despite Marina's 2·6 record (1-3 ln leqqe>. tbe VUtlnP ijave one aurprialq statbUc golne for them-they've scored more po1J1Ui than any other team ln the leaaue except Fountain valley. In each of Marina's last three outings. it has scored three or more toucbdown1. The Vilrln&s' 21 points against Fountain Valley represents the highest output by any opponent of the unbeaten Barons. Newport Harbor is 6--2 on the year and 3-1 in league, it's only loss an 18-7 defeat at the han<b of Fountain Valley last week. Marina coach Mike Henigan is concerned. •'They have an excellent pass- ing attack and lately we've been giving up a lot of points throuah the air," Henigan says. "Plus. they've got one of the best de- fenses around." The center of that defense is middle linebacker Don Barker, regarded as a solid all-league candidate. Newport Harbor has two shutouts to its credit and bas surrendered just one touchdown in three different games. On ortense, Newport Harbor is paced by quarterback Craig Lyons, who bas completed 43 of 92 passes on the season for 132 yards and four touchdowns A principal ballcarrier is Dana Wandrocke, who averages 3.2 yards per carry Marina boasts one of the league's most potent ballcarriers in Greg Karman, now averaging 7.8 yards per carry. He went over the 1,000-mark in yardage last week (total now 1,116) and has 10 touchdowns under his belt. "Karman is still feeling his bruised ribs," Henigan says, "and how much he plays is a game.to-game situation. We've also been hit by injuries in our defensive secondary so we're not quite at full strength." M.lt'INI SWrtlnt LI ....... OffeMe 0..-TE LuJan 190 1'0 H-anl LE RT R. Pl-nghm 11() 211 Gr"n LT RG H-ard 190 190 Knowl .. NG c Ptnner :ios XIS Tucker RT 1..G Grttn ,,. 170 M. PlllnQhrn RE LT Tucker :ios 17S Kl119 LB l>E TruJlllo IH 20S Ptnner LB 08 Sar1aln 17S 110 Ca r .. ooc1 cu RB Roy 190 1.0 Wood CB FB Karman ·. 1as 16S ThOrp s~ Fl.. $pr1ngei 1SS !SS Tay~. FS ....... rt Ha.-Liiie ... ~ o.t.ftte TE P.ciuln 177 1'7 ,.,,..n RE RT C.r-2•1 200 $1urQ•' AT RG Bro0-)'9r 200 1'9 AOCN1e LT c 8urM 11J 201 Blltlll LL LG Glll>H1 16S 111 TllOmPIOl'I LB LT Adamo 14S 19S B•rll:•r LU WR HtQb'f 16' 190 J Corum lB ue L~on\ 181J 1ss HllUt Cll I-ti Wanor0<~• Ill 11>.l Vtn<ltl< cu 18 John\Of\ IS• 1 .. "'°""" !<ow ~L "•'P.Jrek 110 llU K•~P4trk ~ UCI R11nners Seek Crown STANFORD-UC Irvine's cross country team bids for the Pacific Coast Athletic Associa- tion title here Saturday and a berth in the NCAA meet Nov. 21. Coach Len Miller's UCI An.· teaters are expected to battle San Diego State for the PCAA crown. The Pacific-8 meet is being held at the same Ume with the top four teams advancing to the national championships. UCI is led by junior Ralph Serna and 1enior Steve Scott. Serna captured the No. 1 spot in the All-Cal meet this year and placed third in the Stanford ID· vitational. Scott recenUy won the Biola Invitational crown. Other Uct runners competing include F.d Ablmeyer, John Kon· ingh, David Bernstein, Charlie Cbri1tensen and Don Moses. San Diego State is led by a pair of former area standout.!.11W St. John <Mater Del. Santa Ana> and Brian Hunauer <CQrC>oa de1 Mar). Huusak~ competed for UCitwo1easomaao. ••San Dle,o state. Freano State and UCI are the favorites tor the POAA champloD1hlp aDcl we tb.liuf we aJao have gGOa chUce Gf flrilalU.oa 1D the top 'J. r,'' aays 141Uer. "WaalilngtC>n ~tate (the Cl • fending NCAA Cti~lon) bU to fav tO lnq~ c •t ltooeh thein. ; And 0 u • OOd ... an. On the Lijie At Mission El Toro Htgb's Chargers and the Mission Viejo Diablos lock horns in their neree South Coait. League football rivalry ~ (8 ) at M.isskm Viejo H.tah·Wlth the winner guaranteed a CIF playoffs berth and a poalible share of the lea1Ue crown. Mission Viejo is a 7-polnt choice to push El Toro out of the playoffs pic:ture with quarterback Scott Spear, re- ceiver Mike Brawley, linebacker Dan Cb.arniblti and a host of Cood running ba,cks paving the W8'3 for coach John Murio's eleven. Brawley, however, bu bad his leg in a compression cast to stop a blood vessel injury and bis availability was listed as 50-!50 la the Diablos camp Wednesday. Spear is the focal point' of the attack, having passed for 11 touchdowns with 37 completions out of 76 attempts for 697 yards. Brawley is bis favorite tarset. having caught seven TD puses. Alan Parker and Mite Ochoa figure to do most of the damage in Mission Viejo's ground as- sault, which is similar to El Toro's system. While Minion Viejo was tabbed to win the league cbam- plonsblp, coach Phil Brown's El Toro Chargers figured to finish in the basement after early seaaon losses oo top of the fact they lost their first three quarterbacks before the seasoo began. • But solid fundamentals bave kept the C]largers improvin1 from week to week, Jeff Gibbs took over at quartp"back and has done a job (49 completions in llS tries for 639 )lards> and linemen Steve Pines, Mark McCarthy and Andy Dick have stood out. Also unheralded bu been the defensive play of Ken Beres at end, Pines at nose guard and backs Rich Brown and George Jacobo. Spear and Brawley make ?afls.. sion Viejo explosive, while El Toro's forte bas been its execu- tion and steady play. MIW.V•.llU..... 00-~ SE Brawley l&S 190 Nelsen LIE AT NefS«> "o MIO Wl\O• LT AG McOoNlcl llO 17.S O•Vldlon NG C Peat 1bS llO ea-AT LG V.11t11' 180 llO CkllcMt Ill! LT H••er 210 181 0..""Ultl LB TL Uo11ri.m 1IO 16.S HOPI> LB 011 !.P!'dr 197 1SS L•IOM R f II C•"""' 1IO 161 Bower CB TB Parur IJ7 145 R091r'l Cl WA Bow..-1•t lSO LAtvltt S EIToroStMtli.tU•- Of'-H ~ Ti< Dkk ,,. "'ewes oe RT Hus 190 170 Atll>rl-OT RC. McC.rthy 16.S 1IO Pinet N(; C H 19Qll'IClollwlm 170 190 H ttn C1T LG Pine~ 1IO 17S Fre, OE LT Mltcnelf 210 170 Ojck L8 WR GourCll,,. 180 170 A. Chengela LB OB Gibln uo ISS Brown C8 F 8 J•cobo 16.S 1«1 wemer C& TB Orlrnl 170 160 P. C~ FS FL Weaver l«I 16.S J•cOO. U "' ~ . a.,, .... ,..., ..... ANDY DICK (30) OF EL TORO P1.AYS TONIGHT. P e~eet Endi:rlg for FV? Liona l!AUlt Roadbl,ock in Barom' Path · seasop and, with cml,J one or two exceptions, nobody's moved the ball on them very well, .. Pickford says ... 'lbey're bli and strong and they have the beat linebackers we've seen all seuon." Westminster coach Blll Boswell returns the favor by spewing praise abc>Qt Fountain Valley. "They completely 1hut down the Edisori (HunUDgton »each> and N~ HarbOr offensee," Boswell says ... And their offense bas beeli ceWnl stronaer and 1tron1er. "We'll ti.Ye to ,play way Offl" our beads Just to stay lJl the game at all." l!!disoll IBgb ii ~g to aVOid its flnt losina football season ever and croes-town foe Hunt- ington BeaCb ID.gh is tfytq. to snap a five-game losing streak as the two meet tonight (8) 1Jl a Sunset League fame at Orange Coast College. Despite~ 44 ncol'd, ECliioD 1Ull bas •shot at the CIF playolfs and a berth would be more plausible jf tbe Cwgers can finish witb a victory ~ght. . presence ol all-league candidate Mai;co PagnaD•lll at quarterbaclt. . WllHtlit!', ve seen mort Mo Donald's )'OU would boUove," says • oaab Bill Cunerty. fl b.la team fo11ed over I, Wueuon. n tM Coutan don't travol 'Witb a pep band they have ed one of their own. "Wo hay cuys oa our itam who are u1tu1ul:tly talented," Cunerty sa)1. "We ~Ike iuttara with us and tftt#tmn ouratlvea as we ao." . 'lhtY al'O know how to play footbtll. With a •·• record. the Cou,ars will be flahtln1 for a wild·card berth ln tht cu· playotta J'rtday whon they make • much shorter trip to Irvine HICh for tho re11dar aeason l\nale. Cuporty f eel1 01pl1trano Vatl-r has played tho tou1hest fr~·lanH 1ched"1e ln err and backs that statement wllh some bard facts. , Tbt combined record or the Co\ll•l'I' ei1ht opponent.a 11 'C>-21 • fwo of Capo's wlns aro ovor ttaDH leading their lea1uea: Aqulpae of Sao Bernardino (DeAnza > and Bishop Montsomery of Torrance (Santa Fe>. A tblrd, Boulder City, fi!edWrd1nNtv1da at 7·3. o of the loqes havt been ct and to tJroellen' team•: Nel~s (11·19) which 11 7·1 and lmll'rial (al-la> wh ichl16·1. "I'm •ully proud of what we'ye done/' Cunerty 1ay1, "At the ,tart or th• season, we only bad two pla,fera with varalty tx· petl,enct. 81x ot the team• we've pl~ed _,.1n oontention tor CIF pla~oft birth.I 10 we've really played eame loufh compelllion." lt hun't been easy. When cawstrno Valley opon9d tta doon lor Uae flrat Unie in the fall, CwWnrwu faced wlth 1 coach'• nlglf tmwe: putUng t.oaether a . ~~~ t.un in just ~ matter of ''Tbt llnt thing wo had to do wq ett to know the ldda1 ftnd out wh•t PQlttton they were IHMlt suit· ed tor,",_ aaya. "We ro1ll1 had to bt PNt\)' baaic . .. ..,. oouldn't take ror 1rantod U.•t they knew how to block and '8clcle. Wo bad to teach them tho•e ldnd of thln11. But we became m 1ophl1Uoattd u the HIGA went on and I th.Ink then ~have dont • •ood Job ot acljua to the new sy1ttrn." WJth 'I 11, seniora on th• squtd, Capistrano was dettnlttl)' buildtna ror tb future but not toaUy llftOl'in1Uie protent. "We wanted to have a wlnnh\r sea1on," Cunerty 11y1. ''And 1inqe wt wertn't ln • l•••ue, our coal WU to llt tn the CIF playoft1. U wt w1n !'rlday, we'll end 'If 1-1 d Ull' Sbo\lld 18! \II in.'' Weathers tJae Defense Orange Coast Colle&e's Faye Weather~ hopes to mako tnQrl catch• llko the one above Saturday nlaht when the Pirates travel to Cerrit.os. Alao in the photo are ALTA LO~~atftY Coll t hu po1ttd l bm fo0tball r~d In 80 )'e&J'I I teason-!'bu' Pan· Uitra coach l\(Jk• Mtr..,dl read· lly aCf ti biS flub wm ltU\I blC • •eat eballeq§ ot tb• H11oa Saturday nigh htre. Th1\11 wh Chittty tantl with Saddleba k ht tbo Ml11ton Conference 1bowdown. Tbe wtn•' ner will advance to the Nov. • Mission Bowl garnt acalnat tbt W 11tem State Cont1r1act vlotot, Tbt Panthers come lnto tbt 1amo wtth • M record <l0tlnf • only to Citrua, 29·1). Tb1t11 tht b11t mark 1lno1 '47 when Chaffey won the Junior aose Bowl ud poeted a 1-1 seuon rt00rd. To boat Saddlebaok, Mtrandl say1 hl1 team· mtut do three ,... Mnt Beat foot•lll l\emtnl1ctnt ol Jctlvlt)• prtor to tht Santa Ana Vallt)' aame, the lt1tancla Hllh COoata M•a> &P1le11 ve preparin1 for 1 1hot at the CIF pla10fl1 J'rlday nltht Ca> wben tbtJ tan1le wTth PoothUl <TusUn> ffllh ai T'"Un Kith Crai~ Amerkharilan Oeftl and Golden Weat 1 Mark EastJand <21). GWC hoata Los Angeles CC Saturday at OCC. I ForRultlen ~ht)''ll be pla)'ing racquetball h' • 11au co1• wbero more than 400 1pectaton C«tl wltaeaa the •c· tlon lhla weekend at Kini'a Rae· quetball COurta in Wtsbnlnlter, just off the 405 Freeway on Golden w.i Street. • FV's McEwen Boasts Top Qualifying Mark llOHTH ll~ OM .-.. ;,,.: t1111e.a..,..., ....... ~ ~le .... .. IU.T04'1 11'.cMCOl 4M UO IMI ~IWltltl ...... ) aA Mf By HOWARD L. HANDY Ol IM Dally PIMt 5Uff Tom McEwen, at 37, is still going strong in drag racing and is lookille forward to next season with all the enthusiasm of a youngster with a new toy. McEwen posted fast t1m<' in qualifying runs <.1l Orange County In· ternational Raceway before rains washed out the ftnals of the Manufacturer's cham· p1onships last Saturday. His mark will stand for • the conclusion Saturday at OCIR when the race "ill be completed. The Fountain Valley drtver has the only Chevrolet Corvette- bodicd AA fuel funny car un the c1rcwt and despite missing two of the 10 races on the Interna- tional Hot Rod Associa- tion c1rcu1t, finished !>l'COnd in Points. "l c•rasbed the car in Ohio when my parachute failed to open after the run," he says. "I had to come home and rebuild the car which cost me 1lbout $15,000 plus the $5,0<'0 extra I could have picked up for winning JHRA es may be better but I have experience and l have never had any trou- ble with the Christmas tree lights (at the start of each run)." Next season, which begins New Year's Day at Fremont in Northern California, McEwen will have a new , 1978 fastback Corvette to campaign and will have FIFTH RAC« -1 furlcnol, 3 \IHI' 01<11 & .,p. Ct0Mm•1111 proce MOOOnoota. Pu.rwr SS600 MMysvllle UMrto:l ~--T--tAL Hoscr~ • several new SJ>Onsors Huem1 UIOIQ (!Uri) F09.,.ro l....-rtsl UD 115 ... HS llJ 120 OCC Surfers Nip Hostlers TOM McEWEN ·'I will have two parachutes on the car from now on," be says. "I probably should have done this before." What about the future for McEwen? "I'm :r7 but as long as I'm making good money and doing what I want to do, I will continue. when it gets to the point that I can't keep up with the growth, then I'll look at the situation," he says. •'I still enjoy racing and competing with the other drivers. I don't feel the younger drivers are any better. Their reflex- "This hasn't been the best year of my life,• he Mr. M1n1c -.1Ram1ru1 NoltoOlt,,..,..I S.lt•-4 lSt•lhRQ) Glad D•Y (A. Nc19U91 I says. "I grossed almost Brian H~, Charlie Linden and Dan Camp captured the kneeboarding $300,000 but expenses are s1xTH RAU -~ ,,.,. ... J _. Martial Crum won their heata to competition and GWC1s Susan-Collins uavarmu.ACa-•--.s. mucbhighernow I have o1o. & ..,..o .. m1ng. ""'"$1500. spark0rangeCoastCOlleaetOa82.s7 wonthe1fomen•1dlYisloa. ,,..., ... .,.,....._.,....,. done $400,000 in one year ~~~\':~~,$=~ m surfing victory over rival Gold• In~ •araity competition, OCC ~~"'"'~ in the past.·· s-M1•1 GoW!t <~> 1w West at ~ Street Beaeb ii topple-a the. RUIUen, 81-44. Heat win· a.oeuu> •• ,,.. 1M While be followed the ~J~!":!~s> ~!: HuntingtooWedneldiymorn.lng. nen included George Murillo, Mlk• ~..:!'~ uo ~:: ffiRAcircuitthlsseason, •-RunvlHan> 119 BothteamshadenteredunbeateD. PoDd and Alan Horn from Orange Tne-i.11215. be says he will probably ~:~·~·e~ ~':~1 !~ Brad Baylis wu tbe loae beet~· Coaat and Dan Tyner and Duke 5"*'-l-11:1111c...e.. • go to the Amencan Hot S.v•nn•1>G1•1 tPeu•in.> 1w ner for GOiden West while tejm.JD1te -DevinefroiDGoldeuWest. Ol:,..::.:;:J: k 9MY1Y "2• RodAssociationandNa-~~~~~~~~~~_.;.;.;.;:....:.;::;~:.:::::.:;~~~~::;::-:=:=::::::::._-=~.::::;::.::;:::=::.;::;:::::;::;~.;::..:.:...,~~----.....:::::::::::::::::=.:::::.~..:...:~__;~ tional Hot Rod Associa- tion next year. "IHRA and AHRA pay you to come to the race and compete," he says. "NHRA doesn't do this but it has a point system and money at the end of the year. "As long as I can com- pete, I am not thinking of retirement. I run about 80 dates a year and gel paid m most oflhem " CUSTOM IEtllADS $11~ Edison in Playoffs FV Tabbed After 2()..17 Win In Sunset X-country There was little de- fense but a whole lot of offense Wednesday as Edison (Huntington Beach> High outgunned Huntington Beach High 20-17, to decide second place in the Sunset League and earn a trip to . the CIF water polo playoffs. Tim Spaeth scored 10 goals for the victorious Chargers, including three in the final period, to offset an eight-goal performance by the Oilers· Dan Moorhouse Edison finished Sunset warfare at 4-1, a game behind league champion Newport Harbor. Hunt- ington JJeach wound up in a tie for third at 2-3 with Fountain Valley. which whipped winless Westminster, 13-5. Huntington Beach had lied the game twice ear- ly in the fourth quarter before Spaeth scored one goal and passed off for another to make it 17·15 with 1:30 remaining. Despite five more goals in tbe ftnal 1:12. it was those back-to-back tallies tbat finally de- cided the see-saw baWe. Spaeth. who upped b11 seaaon total to 73, bid added pressure on htm since the Chargers• other scorint leader, Dou& t>ickford, saw limited ac- tion after plck.lnl up two quiet loUll lA the ~­iD1 period. Pickford fouled in the third pertOd With Just one coat. T be t'.w o t e am s .avetqed. aoat c~ 40. teconds. Bob soe f0f'11U&1>,u,. :10 Ins etlort ~-.,,,~ lr•in• O O 2 J-• El R..-c.ho S • 3 2-1• lrvo,,. !oCOfl"9 -l. Murr>nr. P•uf Sc9o'9 lly OUM1.9rl Eu•ncoe 1 o 1 o-2 FootNll 2 0 2 3-1 E U41nco• "°''"9-R. Wy•ll. Ohl•. 5<-•Y O!Mn«"S Founl•fn V.i1.-, • 2 • S-IS 'Wtstmo-1 I 2 0-4 Fount•ln V•ll9'f icorong-Twym•n 3. N•IM>n, t~IC!lo4s 1 • u~ 2 Portct, P•...--, S<M9 • ., Qu.;111- NtwPOrt 1 • 2 •-17 MMln• I l 2 l-9 N•wporf Kart.or SCOrlnQ-0.VrtK· 3, S.r9 .. on 2, R.,.,.,,_, 2, lwnon 2, G•ull'lr 2, BuclWINn 2, GrMf. Fulls, Youn9. Alll~. ~rlna .cor1...- Hum• s. TIW~l.~YM Fountain Valley High 's cross country team was Wlbeaten in the Sunset League dual meet campaign but the Barons figure to have a much tougher time in Saturday's league finals at Huntington Beach Cen · tralPark. Defending champion Fountain Valley, Marina <Huntington Beach) and Westminster, ranked S-6-7 ln the CIF 4-A poll, all figure to fight for team bonon in the finals while no less than half a dozen runners have a shot at individual honon. Since the cha m . pionsblp is determinted by dual standings and the league meet, Marina, 4·1 in duals, could claim the title by beating Foun- tain Valley in the fmals. The Barons won the dual rneet 1gainst Marina. 24-31, by going 1-4·5~.S but the addition of four more teams gives the Vikings a fighting chance if they can get their third through fifth "runners in the top 12. lndlvidually, Brian Appel of Fountain Valley looms as the favorite alter racing through the dual season unbeaten. Challengers include teammate Kurt Buhler. Carl ADclersoo and Mall Blatt of Marina. Gordon Duft of Huntincton Beach 8nd I.John Golds- tein of Ediaon <Hunt- Jniton Deneb>. Appel came from bCblrid to ·J> Anderson by four :in th dual. tson th irls ·on, dom a that l't-11 I R" I):\\ SONAMZA ~~~~~~~.0ane·· IAV'~w:tl9 A young ector 19 lnterlltew.d fot • film patt by thNt fiunou9 I*• eonalttl9e from the Mlfy daya of HOiiywood. MICKEY MOUSI!! OLUS WAIT T1Ll YOUR PATH!R 01!T8HOME "Jamie'• Protect" 9 SESAME STREET G VILLA ALEOR! l:30 tD BEWITCHED "&.witched, Bothered lnurieted" ADAM-12 ''CIMt With A CIVtllan'' ll> FREEHAND SKETCHING ''Receeeed Thfckneea'' 8."00 G C8S NEWS DU NEWS EMERGENCY OHEI Tiie l'9ICUe of a famlly from a private plane dlaaater, the near death of a 4-year-old and a heart attack victim challenge the expertise of the paramedlcl. (;J NHL HOCKEY Boston Bn.1ln1 VI. Lo• Angel .. Kings '8 THE BRADY BUNCH "Bobby's Hero" Cl) THE ROOKIES A female oNk:er la blamed for her partner'• death during e Jewelry store robbery. fl!) ZOOM 61) AS MAN BEHAVES "Relating" ®)ABC NEWS 8:301) MOVIE **** "Charade" (Part 2) (19S.) Cary Grant, Audrey HapbUrn. A woman becomes the target or her murdered husband's cronlee, who believe she knows the whereabouts of a vast hidden fortune. (1 hr., 30 min.) m MY THREE SONS "Robbles Double Ute" Ql) ASWESEEIT "New World" A blllngual-blcul- tural education In San Francis- co; "Day Without Incident" Recommendations or Pontiac, Michigan students to change restrictive school rules. Cl) GROWING YEARS "Social Stereotyping" (I) CBS NEWS (fQ) MERV GRIFFIN Guests: Martha Tiiton, Herb Caen, Lou Levy. 7:00 D NBC NEWS 0 LIARSCLUB 0 ABC NEWS '8 ILOVELUCY ''Lucy Gets Homesick" C!) ADAM·12 The arrest of a female aho- plllter leads Ottlcera Malloy and Reed Into a tragic ohaln of events. Eli) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT Cl) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY "Deserts'' Cl) TO TELL THE TRIJTH 7:30 0 $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE A New Walton Michael Learned as Olivia Walton holds her new grandchild with great pride in a scene from the Waltons tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel 2. ' 8 NEWLYWED GAME U TME GONG SHOW 8J THE BRADY BUNCtf Greg lnvorvet the whore 'famlly In a movie-making project for achoo! but when the kJds start fighting over their roles. Greg decideG to give the who61 thing up. Cl) LETS MAKE A DeAl. • 21TONtGHT 'Getting CNcltt' '1D NEWSCHECK Cl) fN SEARCH Of' ... III MATCHGAMEP.M. 8:00 I) Cl) THE WAL TONS Both Mary Ellen and Erin suffer when Mary • Ellen'• husband, Curt, Is dratted, and Erin's for· mer boyfriend, O.W., enllsta In the Army. D CHIPS "The Green Thumb Burglar" When Jon and Pooch pursue a careening car with tM Intention of tlct<etlng the driver, they are surprised to find H.R. Pufnatuf •t the wheel. D MOVIE **'n "The Shuttered Room" Rating• Gadde IMcwlel -,...., •conti"9 to '''"' offlCe ~ ~ f« TV •re JuOged"". ult>c.) * • • • -Excellent * * * -Very Good ** -Good • V1 -Fair • -Poor (1een GJg Young, caro1 Lynley. A young couple Inherit a cutMd mlllhouM, which i. located on an Island. (2 hrt.) Dal WELCOME BACK. KOTTER '8 CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS • MOVIE **~ "The Crowded Sky'' (1080) Dana Andrew8. Rhonda F1amfng. Two p.-.nget linen .,. ct.ettried to crash • they ~o.ch each other. (2 hrs.) e ONCE UPON A CLASSIC "Robin Hood" Marion faclff- tat• the ..cape ot Robfn, after which he leads • raid on Prince John'• llave tabor camp. (Part 6 of 12) ID WOMANTIME AND CO. An examination of a . woman chart• boat captain'• day and • discussion of Or. Ulllan Rubin's vlewt aa put forjh In her book "Worlds Of Pain", a •ludy of Ufa In Bay Area mlddle cluatamrti... t.'30 0 9 WHAT'S HA.PPENINGll Q) CA089-W1TS f8 FAWl TY TOWERS .. Bull attempta to conwrt F.WC. ty TOWWI Into a gourmei•a paradlM. (Part 6 of I) G ASWESEEIT • "The PromlM" OJecrtmlnatton agalnat tndlan studenta; coun-...ang wtllt• and lndlana; ettl- nlc ~ througb mu.le. t:oO I (I) HAWAII F.IYS-0 .w.tESAT 15 "Kath)''• In T~ 8h0wer" Jamee must act • the f1mlly peacema>cw when l*l parenw Steve A.lien Persistent 'Meeting of Minds,' Hatched in 1.958, A.in ; who was our executive producer, Loring d'Usseau, put it up for local Emmy awards," Allen ex· plained. It won three Emmya, he added, and Gn the basi5 of that and the favorable mall be offered it as aeries to CBS, NBC and ABC. All praised it highly, but all tumed it down. C~ suggested be try PBS. Bingo? . . . • MORNJH<J 12l(f)e TWIUGHT ZONE ••e,. OfTINt ~" e FOAEVEA FERNWOOO ee.nor ~ Penny out~ the houw. Wileof> plota to tlkt care QfTom. • MOVJE **"' ''TM ThlrtMnth lAlt~ (1951) • Charltt Boytr, Urida o.mett. A pettOn, ~ rewnge, 8XpoMI the.,.,. of"" feflow townapeople. (1 "'·· 30 min.) 12:30 e MOVIE **** "The Best v ..... Of our Lives" (184t) Frtdt1o March, Myrna Loy. 11\rM..,... ana end their wtwa awggle to co.,. wtth post-war .t~t; '~min.) ***IA "Marjorie MomlnO-stat" (1958) a.. Kelly, Nat• Wood.A~ gift t.a. In IOYf With • middle lcied iongWrtt• ~to dlaccMr that he la a f ... \d.12 hta., 30 min:) 12:37 e ([I THURSDAY NIC»fT $PECW. • ·~ Of CcM;try MU91o AVMl'da" Pat Boone Md Patti Page C:ooh09t thJa 12th annum ~tatlon held at the lM Angelea Shrine AudltOf'Mn. Among "'°" ~ .. F*5dy Fender, Don WIM!amt, Donna Fargo, CJyatW Oajtt. Rorlnle Mllup and Mel TU11L (R) 1:00 D TOMORROW The Rev. Everett P.tlet, of the lMlted Churoh ot Christ, ~ Ger.scs Rafthoon, ~IM • ror the tetevllion com~ of Jimmy cart•. wtn dlioUilia themtdla. "f8PV Brlllnwllhed by. holtAe poww Un1D he ~ hit Mand 8oott •• tnttor, ~ .... out to munse; I"-friend. 1:308 MEWS •. MOW! ** "Eat or KlllmtnJar'O" (1882) Marth411 • Tbompton. ~ Andre. Two tclef'ltltta dilllperatety attempt '° con.; .,.,_ .,, Afrloan tribe to lnno-> °"* tMlt CetUe ~ • vtruleftt dlleile. (1 hr., 30 min.) 2:00 ·~ .. ,, .. .. fJNDON (ril'~·~.-o :-iio! ~ ~ ~Ut!'t-.-O!Mo1illiD:'3i::in who Uttered 400 years ago may help rescue the wooden 1all1ng ahlp "Golden Hind" which carried Sir Francls Drake arouncl the world and launched Britain 'a naval empire. A:. privately fmanced project aims to resurrect the •hlP wblcb became the fint Engllish vessel to cjrcumnavisate the 1lobe. Hailed by Queen Elisabeth I as a monumeot ""bieb would be preserved "too all posterity of that famous and worthy exploit, .. the Golden Hind was hauled out of the River Thames upon it.I return in 1581 and put on display in a nearby dammed-up pool. Btrr 1 .. YEA&S LATEll it bad vanished in the mud, a victim of royal ueclect, and the vandalism and earelessness of commoners who stole its Um· bers and dumped their garbage on its open decks. The salvase effort commemorates the 400tb an- niversary of Drake's departure from London in December 1S71 on a journey which opened up England'• proeperous East ln<Hes' spice trade and included. a landfall at what is now San Francisco. Peter Manden, field research officer of the Museum of London and the department of urban archeology, is leading a team of diggers who are be· ing paid by a Dutch company and a London newspaper interested in locating the historic relic. Tbe t-shirted, jean-clad dirty half-dozen are carefully scraping away at a hole in the ground beside the River Tllames at Deptford, about 10 miles from the center of London, where old maps in· dicate the ship was beached DEPTFORD ONCE WAS a backwater fishing village in medieval England. Then King Henry VIII chose its pleasant riverbank as headquarters for his royal naval dockyard and launched the sleepy Ho'lOOmb New Chief O/NOSA 7bere'• no ntomatte ,~ ..... "! ~c~11orm effecUve Jaa. J, 1971, sta at ,married ud a credit barea u joint cnCllt rue establlibed lief '.lt'l1, ca quest .... the IDformatloe be ru antelJ botbaames." eqoest"ls teyWord. U you clluie yoar cred.lt aame fro m married Jut ume -yoa eu lllll ue your m1tttH:11 name uda' tile law. Cltances are tut yov recofds wW be chaa1ed baaed on die laformatlOll )'09 &IH to Uie firms •heft 700 ~-ave establla eredlt 1llliler yoar siatle aameo Com)Ml&en <oe· ealloaal11 > are aecuate aftd th aaae cllaqe aamtier ewntllill)' eoald be pkbcl 1IP (iJollS wlUt yoar credit rating) ao ma«er wlaat yoar II.It aame. John E. Holcomb was Keep Iii mmd Ulat aay notlfleaU. Of a name elected president of the " chance la yo r various bUU P proba.bJ7 will result Newport Ocean Sailil)g In • change from )'Oar slagle a1me credit record &o Association at the annual your marriecl name. Nothlq reaU1 c uses bot meeting and brunch held you Im Jlame, U you notify e~. ~ta!~~ J:~a Corinthian ~Part •I MeWle Deal NOSA · th l DEAR PAT: Can a new mobile home be sold 18 6 organ H · without tires and wheels? This doesn't seem rea-lion that sponsors the sonable because a mobile home is classified as a famed Newport to Ensenada yacht race, vehicle, yet I've talked to people who bought their the 14-Mile Bank race coaches without tires and wheels. and the Argosy. J .W., Huntington Beach Mobile home &ires and wbeeb sbov.14 re1Dala Holcomb served on the with tbe unit at tbe time It ts set ap, acc:orillas 1e tile .. ~Curb SACRAMENTO <AP> ,--A blll plactq strict curbs CJD the ~I of prisoners baa been vetoeCt by Gov. ~und Brown Jr., 'Who says preisent state l'eltrf cUons. are stroag enOUgb. Tbe meuure waa AB ti by' Assemblyman Richard Alatorre-, <D·Loa Anseles>. hamlet into maritime bl story. Today Deptford bas been swallowed by Lon- don's urban sprawl. Its docks are nearly deserted and its existence is notable mainly for its dozens of identical concrete housing units and seYeral public higb-rise blocks decorated with the drying laundry NOSA board of directors Department ol llo&or Vehicles. U tbe bayer Wtabes, for six yean. He bas also ----------------...,..,..-......;;.._ ____ :.;._ _ __.;.. _______________ ~~- of hundreds of housewives. The excavation site, about the size of a founda- tion for a three-bedroom ranch house, was chosen partly from guesswork by Marsden, who bas been researching the Golden Hind's approximate loca- tion for the past six years. ·•RESEARCH IS SO FAR roughly limited to the 400-yard zone where the ship lay," said Marsden. "Digging along the river bank is partly restricted by a scatter of buildings of the old Deptford naval dockyard and the modern Pepys Housing Estate." Sal Garfi, Marsden's on-site supervisor who oversees the excavation while his boss is busy with other duties, cheerfully pointed to the multi-floor glass-walled high-rise housing complex 200 yards away and said: "It's entirely possible the Golden Hind is buried underneath that thing. In which case, it no longer exists. •'Choosing a place to dig within the probable zone was like sticking a pin on a map -we made an educated euess,.. said the 25-year-old amateur archeologist. MARSDEN IS OPTIMlSl'IC the thick layers of the Thames' flood silt have preserved the ship. A Dutch map of the river made in 1808 plnpointa the Golden Hind as a local curio but by 161& lt had de- teriorated into derelict condition. Horatio Busino, secretary to the Venetian am· bassador to the court of King James I, mcribed the ··relics of the ship of the famous Captain Drake which loeked exactly like the bleached ribs and bare skull of a dead horse." • Garfi said the Utter and garbage apparently tossed onto the decks of the 80-foot-long sailing ship could act as a preservative once the vessel was engulfed in mud. But 17th century scavengers look- ing for bandy pieces of wood to build their houses probably removed most of the mast. rilging and above-decks fixtures which weren't firmly attached to the handcrafted skeleton, he said. served as race commit· tee chairman and general chairman of the Enseoada race. He is a member of the Balboa Yacht Club • w}lere he has held the of- fices of secretary, port captain and is currenUy on the board of directors. Mesa Firm Gets Boat Contract The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad· ministration (NOAA) has announced the award of a $63,753 con- tract to the Willard Com· pany of Cost.a Mesa for two heavy weather rescue boats to be de- 11 vered by mid-March, 1978. The 17-foot, 10-inch foam-cored fiberglass boats, designed. by Keo· neth Rusinek, Arllqton, Va., will carry out man· overboard rescue opera- tions or work in support of two NOAA fishery re- search veaaels, the A l b at toss I V a n d Delaware II. Powered by 20-bp diesels. the two boata will have telf-ballin1 A CHARM MADE OF Golden Hind timber was cockpits aild poaltlve presented in 1662 to the Boleian Llbrary of Oxford flotatlo11. Holatlng Univendty by John Davis, master shipwright of the weight ls 2,900 pollDda Deptford dockyard. Soon thereafter all visible sips and their beams are alx ofthevesselvanhhedbeneathtbemireoftheqes. feet three Inches. They "We hope to unearth the keel, ribs, planks and • will normally be manned bottom of the mut,'~ •ail! M~e~. , by a crewaltwo. Sea Rllles CJhan This 's 1.7 5 L. (59.2 fl. oz.) REGULAR PRICE •13.75 REDUCED TO sn.99} QUART REGULAR PRICE $7.50 REDUCED TO ~.99 . I I i , I { • ( / ~Uy,......,._...., llklilllN ICMllhr Father William McLaughlin at UC/. He carries a shillelagh made from ·a blackhom tree in Ireland. Real Fans When Elvis died, Gary Pitts took his family on a pilgrimage, wrote a song, and spent $450 to make 1,000 records. By D~NNIS McLELLAN Of I,_ D•llr ftlklt St411 Gary and Barbara Pitts of Hunt ington Beach weren't extraordinary Elvis Presley fans. They had never seen him perform in person. And, in fact, they liked Tom Jones and Johnny Mathis as much as they did Presley. But \hen the King died in Memphis on Aug.16. In three days Gary, a 32-year-old lab technician and part-time karate instructor, penned a tribute song, ·'The Ballad of El vis Presley." A week and a half later the Pittses and their three daughters made a pilgrimage to Memphis wt\ere they "looked up everything we could from his birthplace to where he was buried." "We always played his records," explains Barbara, 28. "But we didn't know when Elvis was gone that we'd feel such a void. It's like somebody that's close to you died. "I told Gary 1 wanted to go and he said, 'When?' Everybody thought we were crazy, believe me. But this is something the kids will never forget." The couple originally had planned to visit Memphis last summer in part, to do genealogy research. They also hoped to stop by the Presley mansion. Pitts, like Presley, a black belt in karate, had read that there was a bet· ter chance or meeting the singer if they had that in common. "We didn't go though," says Pitts. "It's always a matter or money. But this year ·we said the heck with the money. You c;>n)Y live ~ce." They landed to Memphis m the evening, rented a car and drove straight to Presley's Graceland mansion. It was Labor Day weekend and there were dozens of people out front. •'Even at midnight there were 20 to 30 people at the gate," says Mrs. Pitts. "It was unbelievable. You couldn't get near the house or cemetery at all " Pitts. who wanted to leave a copy of his song lead sheet with Vernon Presley, gave it to a member of the family who took it to the late singer's father. "SHE CAME BACK out arid said Vernon thought it was a very nice gesture," says Pitts, who also took a tape of his song to sev,eral Memphis radio stations Using newspaper articles and boc:!ks on Elvis as references, the family found the addresses of most or Presley's old haunts including his doctor's office, Humes High School where be graduated in 1953 and the old Sun Records building where he first recorded. "Some addresses weren't in there but it would tell you what street," says Pitts. "I'd see someone watering their lawn or something and just ask them for directions.'' One, who turned out to be the man who played the tape recorder for Elvis at the 1956 Tupelo Fair, invited them into bis house. .. HE WAS TOLD be could get into (See FANS, Pa1eCJ> Solo By Cheryl Romo ... Ma~eMyth Lately, there has been a lot or media COV· erage on women's problems and the dilemmas facing the liberated female in her pursuit to com- bine career. home and social life. In many in· stances, the woman has reversed b~r stereotyped "earth mother" role and bas begun, for perhaps the first time, pursuing men as- sertively. But there hasn't been much s&Jd about bow men. particularly single men, feel about the whole thing. One of the most vocal spokesmen on behalf of male rights is Herb Goldberg, Ph.D, a practicin~ psychologist and the author of "The Hazards of Being Male -Surviving the Myth of Masculine Privilege." I visited Dr. Goldberg, a frequent lecturer at Coastline Community College, in bis Westwood office and found him to be warm, cordial and concerned about male liberation from what be terms "damaging and degrading stereotypes." He impressed upon me the !act that men, just as women, have deep emotional feelings and needs -that are often camouflaged by role play. ing because they try 10 live up to society's stan- dards of masculine-appropriate behavior. "It is time to destroy the stereotypes about men. Women have worked hard to remove the stereotypes about women," he stated. What are some of those stereotypes? Dr. Goldberg said one is that men talk about their af- fairs with women to other men. Most men are "secretive and protective -unless maybe il'a a one-night stand sort of thing,•· he said Another myth, said the psychologist, is that a man will have intercourse with any woman: "That is untrue . . . It is false that men are always horny and ready to go. Men are beginning to say, 'Look, I am not a thing; I am not a machine.'" Dr. Goldberg, who is divorced, stated most "men "feel threatened" by a one·night stand situation when they perceive it to be a demand fer sexual performance· ''A man's sexual response is a keen and im- portant barometer of how he feels toward the worn an he is with. Impotence is body resistance: your head says yes and your body says no.'• He feels many men are suffering from a "bated self image" and have lost "valuable body messages and are not relating to their emotions'' in trying to live up to a ·machoprovider ·role.•' He said he likes assertive women who are "up front with their anger" and is alarmed at the "total woman" movements m which a woman puts on a show to impress her man. He called It "destructive manipulation." He feels lhat one of the most degrading thln1& amancandoisiotoaprosUtutebecauseU "l'Cn, 1orces 1ila own hated sell image." With a •btu& he aaJd: "Moet men don't know • what tb&f. want -period. Most are living up to models ol What is expected .•• For men to act UJc:e bees ts low-level conscious .. What is bis advice for • <Se$SOLO, P. By JUDITH OLSON Of tht Dall'( Pilot St•H Hla liiah eyes are usually smiling and be bas a goOd word for everyone. He won't fot'get a name, even though he bashWldredstoremember. WUliam McLaughlin, better known as .. Father Bill," is the CaUlolic chaplain at , UCI Interfaith and u such, ha,, a parish of thousands. • · It's a rather unusual setting for a man who started off as a traditional priest in a San Fernando Valley parish, but it fits his rather unusual style of ministry. While many university chaplains work on a part-time basts or have churches ti> shepherd, Father Bill d~­ votes most of his time to the Se.dents atUCI. He wen takes some of them to Ireland each year when he goes back home for a visit (16 went this past summer) and eats many an evening meal at an Interfaith potluck. . FATHER BILL also takes a class each quarter so be can keep up with his students and can take. advaotaee of the frontiers of knowledge at his fingertips. • ., .... ~ .. I'm intrigued by the students,•• ht satd. "Working' with them gives me a chance to be a perpetual adOleseeot. •• The '2·year-old priest bas an ex- traordinary gift for zeroing in OI\ • person, learning who they are, and malrlog them feel that they are Ule moat imPQrtaot person on earth. It requires a tremendous invest. ment on bis behalf and one wonders how he gives so much and yet leelDS to take so Utt.le. He explained, ''I try to speDd « Jeut a half a day a week alone. That's my salvation. l 'm a people persca Jet J 'm very comfortable alo.ne." That time which he calls bis "personal space," is used for rdlec- tion and relaxation . Father Bill laughed. ••An my test- ing shows I'm introverted.•• · The Irishman, who shares a house in Turtle Rock with another priest. in· / dlcated that be finds warmth 8ricl friendship in his "family" at ID:~ terfait.b, both from the students an4 his fellow ministers. HIS MOTHER and father sun live in Derry, Ireland, where he 8NW up. (See FATHER, Pace CZ> , For ·Girls ODl.y Ceil Ainsworth designs successful clothes because she tests -em on kids . 87 MARCIA FORSBERG Of .. OelirPtlotSteH Little girls, from toddlera to pre- teen tomboys, like to put on a dress once in a while. And lately, it l()()ks like they've been wearing their dresses more often. One reason could be Ceil Ainsworth, a ,New York clotbiilf deslper who create. gttls' dresses tbat 8119 easy to pla)' in, c:onlfortable for. achoo), pretty for parties ahd above all, fUn to weer. "There's a lot of sportswear here <fb SOuthemCallform:a) 4tM t.bei'i's a theory that liWe Clrls don't •ear . draaes-bUttbeydo. "Chl.ld.r9' seem ~ enlb'uSI Uc about we.arln1 t,!em, .. ab said, adding that last year at Easter time .she noticed numerous dresses beinC worn in the Orange coast area. Her d.istincllve lliie of dilldnm,s · eJothing -ceu Ainsworth UCL "-is strictly for lirb frOm ages 2tO12or14 and is "about 80 percent C1res5e1:.•• 1 Ms. Alnsworth sald sbe speciiliies 1 because ot a desire tO .. do Olle tblng wen .. 1 elm 't think we can be all thfnP to all people;" THE DEYGNE.R tJSIS~eotttlU j for 1andres1ea, pinafores, ·~· lhitt dtessel and b1ou.sans. .~ • .a .~ever in ftattenns p.astelS, tiritbt. (Seil GIBl.8, ..... a> DAILY PILOT Writer's Cramp DEAR ANN LA.NJ>F;R...11\; T.b" r,rob· lem I am writing to you about is probably more common than most peo· pie will admit r1iiii~l::1 _E A.. A N N LANDERS: TIWJletter is 'tY 1.i~''W.il'-by 10))>'1ii'· old glrl'' who slrned herself, "Off The Wall in W bat can be done about a husband who re· fuses to write letters to relatives, friends, etc.? Mine won't even acknowledge birthday or Christmas gifts. Ann Landers Washtnaton." Her mother decided all of a audden to get a high· school diploma and they "1ll be in the same class next semester. , I am a healthy 16-ye.ar· If he receives a nice sweater from his mother-in-law for has birthday, I have to write the thank-you note or none will be written. I simply cannot let. a gift to him go un· acknowledged. Why is it that so many men seem to think writing letters is the wife's respoos1bility? What about this? - WRITER'S CRAMP IN ROCK ISLAND ••awfully busy" bat Ile cutalnly did appreciate that beautiful sweater and sends love aad tb s. old girl, too. too, and I had my mother in class -only she was the teacher. t really had a blast! This message is for the daughter: Please give your mother a chance. Do you honestly think she'd try to be one of "the gang"? Once she sees what goes on in those gangs she'll back off fast and you won't have anythlng to worry about. DEAR WRITER'S CRAMP: I hope you feel better now that you've shared your gripe with the world. That's all you wanted to do actually, because you've answered your own ques· tlon. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Every year I swear I'm not going to get caught in the last minute crush of Christmas buying. I haven't made it yet but this year I'm going to-if you will help me. Besides, I think It would be neat to do homework with your mom.Sign me KJRKSVJLLE.MO. I have 33 adults on my gift list and I can't spend more than $10 for each per:;on. What can you suggest that will be useful, thoughtful, dura· ble, impressive? - CHICAGO DEAR "O: You wouldn't beUeve bow many dau1bters apd mothers wrote to say "The old lady should co to another high school and J~ her daufhler en· joy her final year Jn peace." Women whose husbands refuse to write letters, even to acknowledge gifts, have two choices. Either they can sit oo their bands and let their husbands 106k like the slobs they are -or they can proted him by writing and ex· plalnln& that be is DEAR CHICAGO: A book called "A Time For Being Huma.n'' bv Eugene Kennedy. It la a beautUally written collection of euays lo wblcb everyoae will aee hlmaeU and swear Dr. Kennedy knowa him personally. And after thinking about It, I'm Inclined to agree that they just might have a polDt. Hav· lng a mom for a teacher Isn't the same as having ber for a clusmate. ... Real Fans (From Page Ct> the fair free if he ran the machine," says Pitts. "Be didn't even know who Elvis was. He said the girls were in hysterics." They also visited Presley's birthplace in Tupelo, which is now called Presley Park. "It's just a two· room house," Mrs. Pitts says. "It's so small. It was pouring down rain and still the place was packed.·' But the highlight of the trip, Pitts maintains, was meeting the parents of Linda 'Thompson, longtime Presley girlfriend. "I saw Mr. Thompson in the garage and asked ii Elvis used to own the Jlouse. He said, 'He still does ' Elvis had five houses around there that he l~t friends live in.•• ~tThe 'Thompsons were wary of vis· ltiOrs because they had been deluged },llith reporters asking for interviews. l}ut they invited the Pittses into their living room which had numerous ,l'uctures of their daughter and <t Presley. When Pitts returned home he spent $450tohave1,000 records made of his Elvis ballad. His friends Larry and Carol Ellis did the early '60s·slyle ar rangement and Rita Bevis did the vocal. Although another friend has placed it in several Long Beach juke boxes. he has yet to sell it to a distributor. He's well aware there are dozens of Presley tributes on the market and even the thought of having a stack of black discs piled high in his closet years from now doesn't bother Pitts. who has given away about 200 to friends. "I'm not going to quit my job over that record," he says with a laugh. "It was just something I wanted to do. Some people can blow 400 bucks in Vegas in a weekend." Pitts thinks he probably will never write another song He says that the record, like the trip, "was an emo- tional thing.'• ~ .. • . ••• ~ Girls Only <From Pace cu colors, many caUcos and "no muddy colors." She added that deep berry and plum are popular oow, so she uses them ln : paler shades for children. For . Christmas. black velveteen looks like t a favorite, she said. • For example, she's teamed a long :, skirt and vest in that fabric with a ~ dressy \\h1te blouse for older girls, • and a white dress with black velve· ': teen apron for the younger ones. .;: "I don't do frilly clothes but I do ~ 'litt!e girl dresses' for 2 to 6 year olds. ~ Besides, ruffly styles are strongest in 1. the Southeast." The look ls more tailored for ages 7 to U especially in • California, she said. ' f For inspiration, Ms. Ainsworth vls- f; its fabric libraries ''to see what's availabl~ and to see what pieee goocla ~ companies are currenUy presentlhg ... , SHE Al.SO GETS tnsplration by ~ ''following fashion trends." Sb• f draws on the presently popular looselooking, loose·fitUnt; blouson styles favored by women, then ldapts them for children. An important aa~ of dress d• • 1i1oln1 for younfsteri la to Jbµlk about how th& child ii 1otn1 to in the clothe., she said. :·T~ey don't like an,y fabric Utat'a scratcb)', and they don't like anything too tight or too confining. I uae model children to try on the clothes, then I get their reactions to whether or not the dresses are comfortable," she ex· plained. In fact, Ms. Ainsworth was responsi· ble for the inaugural wardrobe worn by ~my Carter last J anuacy. "Mrs. Carter had been buying Amy's clothes ln a shop I aell my line to in Americus. She wanted something special and something in velveteen. • WALNUT CREEK CAP>-For1cyears Ray Ward carved names on tomb1tbftes. .ft,!!-~!!! ~ ike, ~ !ortable Joti that took no communicaUon at all." Ward says now, strug- gling to keep his worda tlowlns. . Bob Goldman, 31, ba~dly spake at all for the first 17 years of hia life. People thought he was shy, oralow. Both are stutterers, two of an esUmated 2.7 mllllon in the nation. Ward recenUy plunged into the ape~ world and runs a small sandblasting company in San Francisco, 2S miles west of here. And Goldman, whose car license plate reads BBB- BOB, beads a group that Ward and other atut, terers say has helped. tum their lives around. The NaUmial Stutter· ing Project, now 10 • months old, bas chapters in about 15 cities, nu>St on the West Coast. It is the Alcoholics . Anonymoµs for tboae who stutter. out to boost understand· inf of ltutterlng •nd eliminate '1tbe cartoon ch~ader .POrk:y 1'18 u At local cbapt.en stut· terera 1ather to swap tales of mock~ and be- tna ill'(ll"ed,J.t> tt.ade en· couragement.; but main- ly JU$tto~. Goldman eays it also Is the first stutterers lobby. • •• Father -BUI. as do bis brothers and sister. If there is one drawback to the • priesthood, it is the "lack of ramily structures that my brothers all have," he commented. And, he said, "celibacy is a challenging way of life. There is a certain aloneness." But Father Bill takes these challena:es in stride. "The unques· tioned life isn't worth 1iving," be em· · phaslzed. A man with an unending sense of humor, Father Bill was born ln Boston and moved with his parents to Derry at the age of 4. He attended seminary in Dublin, was ordained in 1958 and came direct· ly to Los Angeles to serve. His parents were eager for him to become educated so he was one of the first in his family to attend high school and consider going to un 1vers1ly. "My mother bad been a teacher, and having lived in the U.S., they saw more clearly what education could do," Father Bill explained. HE WAS INTRODUCED to the idea or the ministry by a young priest working with youths in a renewal pro- ject near the McLaughlin household in Northern lr'eland-"near the bog side of town," Father Bill added. "I was impressed by this priest I took a liking to him. He asked me what I was going to do with my life and lf I had ever thought about the priesthood. •'I thought about it and talked to my parents. I'm not sure I knew what it would mean." Father Bill attended All Hallows seminary, which was founded in the mid-18005 to send clergymen to the thousands of Irish who bad emigrated to places such as the U.S., Australia. and New Zealand to escape the tragic potato famine. "In those days the U.S. was a mis· sion," he said ... As the church became es\ablished here, the seminary supplied needy dioceses with priests.·• · When he was asked to work 1n Los Angeles, he immediately assented. "I waa a pretty willlng person," he said. "After all, l was a U.S. citizen.•· traditional taslts of teacblng classes, prepanng people for marriage and consoling the dying. Now, he spends a lot of time counseling students and helping them learn to minister to one another. "We have a Christian community here that is growing. Youna people are coming on campus wlth a gl'e.t loneliness. They are looking for friends. I like to think that we provide a setting for this to take place." He switched to campus ministry after being asked by offlcials at California State University, North ridge, to help during the student unrest of the 60s. .. THEN I WAS called to Cal Slate Long Beach. This really appealed to me," he revealed. "l discovered a lot of thin«s. I discovered ecumenism. My confrerees were not priests but rabbis and ministers. "I got to know these people. '!be stu- dents became the object of mlnistry.'' From the youths he gains "a new flood of enthusiasm" each year, ud personal growth as bis life is enriched by students from many disciplines. Father Bill also likes being part of the educational scene because be finds 1t stimulating. His spare time is filled with diocese activities (he serves on several com· mittees>. including a poetry therapy workshop which he does with a psychologist, and jogging, which he does to keep in shape (and pre· sumably to help take off the eight pounds he gained this summer in Ireland). In the winter he enjoys skiing, often with students, and In the summer he finds solace in the nearby mountains. "I'm a also pseudo-musician," be added. "I pick guitar and sing Irish drinking songs-very poorly. My brother is a troubador but I came out short on the talent end or the family ... BOW DO~ ALL of this fit into bis special ability to personalize eaeb re· lalionship? Father Bill thought about this for a while. "It's very important for me when someone remembers me," he said. ''I think a person's name is very important. I hke to talk to people about their names and wbat they mean." Horose~pe FRIDAY, NOV .11 By SYDNEY OllAJla ] AaIE8 <Mareb 21·Aprll 19): New Moon highlights tettinC to the bottom of mysteries, re- SC>l'ring dilemma, comma tO term:. financially with one who threatens legalecUoo. TAURUS (April 20-lrfay 20): Lunar poelUOn accents· partnership, ,Contracts. Gerniai, Sagit- tarius figure prornlnently. In matters of apec:ula- ti , stick tonumber "3." GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Cbect apeetncs take nothlng for granted, be tbOro\l&h. You could be called upon, to revile, review, rebUild, re- furbish. • CANCER (June21.:July22): Accentonaaalr of heart, emotionil response,· lntenaifled rela· tionsli1ps. You could fall in love, be proposed to confided ln, have theories veriri.ed. • • LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Home. leases, family arranaements, pure base of luxury Item could top ageDdL Taurus, Libra, Scorpio figure prominent- ly. ·.-VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 2.2): Ideas are pleJl- tiful; be seleeUve. Refine techniques, defl.ne terms, be sure othe~ quote you correctly. A void self-d~on. "' UBBA <5epL 23-0ct. 2.2): What bad been de- laying cash flow is removed. Financial picture is bri&bter. You have more responsibility; cballeneeproves exhilarating. Old detitls repaid. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: New Moon in your sign hlghlipts fresh starts, chance to etase mistakes, to be original. • SAGITl'ARIVS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Wbat70u seek could be •'right behind you." Confidential in- formation is available, but you've been asking tbe wrong people. · CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): New Moon position coincides with cbaJlce for your wishes to be fulfilled. Evaluate, t>erceive what ls perm•· nent, wbatshould be discarded. AQVARIVS <Jan. !O·Feb. 18): Accent pres- tige, community projects, more dealings with profeSBional sttperion, new efforts to elevate position. BefleXibleancldlsplaysenseofhumor. PISCES (Feb. 1 .. March 20): Surprise ts due as a result of meeting which cove~ confidential matters. Aquarius, Taurus and Leo persons figure prominently. Family member mates re-qu~t related to budget, possible purchase of lux- ury item. UNov. lllsyoorblr&bday. you are intuitive, a natural teacher, sensitive and have digestive problems. A~us. Cancer persons play impor- tant roles in ~r life. You made new start this year -July was memorable. • He believes in being aenulne about his interest, however, because In· timacy is meaningful only when lt is ;F~~~~~~:;:=~~~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;-=:;; real "Intimacy is a scary thing .. be said. "We have watered •t don too much in our society. It's a bard·wo", life-Iona task.•· ,. t BECK/ FASHION It's a suit with glitter, complete with metaflic edging, glittery buttons. chain belt. A day and evening wool rayon blend suit, with gored skirt, bow blouse and V-necked jacket. ••• Golda Meir ffrom Page Cl> Shl• rl'<'l•nlly em1·rged from her voluntary n•tn·al 1n thl• political shadows to take part in the puhltt· dl'balc over lsrnel 's acceptance of a U.S. plan for rt•op1·mn).( the Geneva peace talks. She says 1t was a mistake. Breaking her self-1 mposed ban on interviews, !-.hl• spoke to two Israeli reporters, addressed a group in the Northern border town of Oiryat Shmonah, and answered questions from Am l'r1can Jc.ow1sh fundra1scrs all in one week. It was an unusual amount of exposure for the woman who vowed three years ago to do nothing hut cook for her (ave grandchildren and watch television. Mrs. Meir spent five turbulent years i.n the nation's top office . They were the years of the 1969 ·70 war of attrition with Egypt, or Palestinian terrorism 1n Mumch and Maalot. of the 1973 Oc· tob(•r War, or the first Geneva peace conference and of the bone we:irymg shuttle diplomacy of lknry Kissinger. Since her retirement she has remained f!U1ctly active. Labor Party leaders often make lhl· pilgrimage to her simple two-story duplex m Tel Aviv s suburban Ramal Aviv for consulta- tum. friendly advice and strong coffee Prime Minister Menahem Begin, a bitter t•ncmy for 40 years. called on her before his tnp to Washington for talks with President Jimmy Carter 1n July ••• Solo ffrom Page Cl) cenlly left a relationship or been divorced ? "Go into counseling," he replied. " Reach out to somronc who can help you clarify your foclin~s so you won't make the same mistakes again. So you won't humiliate yourself trying to i:cl back into a relationship that is over. Behave in a self caring and lovmg way rather than a self loathing way ." Then, "1th :i touch of sadness. Dr. Goldberg said, "There are a lot of men hanging on for yt•ars · 'iting for 'her ' to come back.·· • No longer addressed as "Madame Prime Minister , she 1s now introduced al speaking engagements as "the first lady of the Jewish peo· pie.·· Accolad<'s such as this still embarrass her Friends say Mrs. Meir's health is good, although she suffers from periodic migrane headaches. She enters hospital regularly for checkups. "Golda 1s very much in demand, but she ac· cepts few invitations," said a friend. "She wants to take it easy, to get up whenever she wants. to read, cook, shop and listen lo music. She is enjoy- ing life a lot more than when she was prime minister." Mrs. Meir dot?s not miss her seat of power. which she never sought. She'is still accompanied by three or four bodyguards on every trip outside her door, which she disli.Jces, and bas an official car and driver. Her simple life belies the fact that she has become wealthy in the last two years from her book which was translated into 17 languages. ''She doesn't talk about the money. It just never occurs to her," said her friend. "Golda didn't want to write the book. She is a very shy person and has no sense of history." Her publisher persuaded her by saying it would be good for Israel Mrs Meir works several hours a day at a smalJ office near her home, where she receives some of the dignitaries who asktoseeher. It may be a sign of her age that she prefers to let her secretary make the coffee and w~h the dishes, rather than meet her guests at home. Other than the secretary, Mrs. Meir employs only a woman to clean three times a w~k. As always. her kitchen Is her favorite room. She often dines with her son Menahem, a pro- fessional musician, and his family, who live in the other half of her duplex on a quiet dead end street. • IUAAll • . GIFTS· frUN-FOOD ST. MICMA&.'S ct4UlC:H SA TUIDA Y • HOV. I 2 IOA.M·4Pfi' Ml~ & l"Kllk Y...., Ori•• C...tltlltNr The jacket is a ribbed classic wool rayon, and the slim skirt is edged in hand crochet. ... ,.,.. ....... OAJI. Y PILOT I ;: . ' . A new line of oliday fashions bas been produced by St. .lotin, the knitwear com- pany located in Irvine. The new classic line ~ is highlighted by a new color of wheat; traditional sophisticated black and a modem European look of custom navy • blue. The collection includes 14 selections in- cluding a new opera.length dress with pro-' portioned flounce edged with a crochet • trim. A gabardine pants suit is com· . plimented by a soft and tailored satin tie blouse, longer Jength knit jacket and features new custom buttons. • A three-piece knit suit, edged on cuff and skirt bottom with a sparkling metallic trim, is new for the clas,sic look of St. John. The suit is completed with a soft and f emininc chiffon blouse. Other pieces include satin trimmed • suits and ruffled blouses to produce the - elegant, festive look of the holiday season. · : \.. . It's Driving Her Crazy The other mght as my husband and I readied for bed, he said, "Are all the cars in?" "The VW is spending the night at a friend's house." I said. "The Pin· lo had a bad night and is getting a tune-up, and the gas guzzler is cram· ming for an emissions test. · ·'What time does the van want to get rolling in the morning?" "Early, he's meet10g the jeep at the garage ... Ilurned to him, "When did we start speakin~ automotive fluently?" He thought for a mo- ment. ''That's all we talk about anymore, isn't it?" I nodded. "What's hap- pened to the American family? Our daughter never says hello anymore. All she ever says is. 'My transmission s ounds funny'." ''When was the last time our son ever sat down and discussed anything except his loose tailpipe?" "Our entire hfe re· volves around 1nsurance rates. re pairs, pay- E,.._.a Bo•beek ments, estimates and oil change. We never say anything meaningful anymore." company that offers a discount if a kid is kind to his mother and doesn't bite his nails." "There you go again," I said. "I'm sick of being just another pretty mustang. 1 want this family to have some identity again " Just then our son stopped by the bedroom, "Can someone give me a ride to the service sta- tion tomorrow? I need a tune·up." "You look thin," I ob· served. use'!" "Talk to me, son. l'ni? your mother. What bav.- you been doing lately?" "l cleaned my spark plugs, rotated my tires, and I think I've met tbe motor I want to spend th& rest of my life with." Our daughter joinecS · us. "Aren't you going t.o speak to your sister?" I , asked irritably. ., "You're idling a little _ ragged." She looted at him aus- piciowsly. "What do you want? You only talk nice to me when you want something." "All our friends do it ... at least the ones with teenagers. Do you re-:-----:-'.""":""--:::--~--.;.....-:--------------------~ ·'Speaking or weight, Dad, what oil should I alize we spent the entire weekend discussing bat· tery warranties and special insurance dis-... counts!" ··Yeah, incidenlall)', we should look into the ThrilbJJOU ttWll'b ••• RlRAllOFUS 'I ntM'IHW 1.hdt IM'f~•n•~~ "'' u n~t Se" lnorld tcr '•" 1a1,. lt14lke-t1P \. ~1 cltlell~ 'h 1120 lrvtne 81\/'d • NewPOrt Beach S.2-848.4 CR~€k Our decoralOl'S will help YOU seleet frOm hundreds of fabncs. the perfed textures. colors and designs to make your home more beautiful We then custom make elegant window treatments whid'I offer not onlv beaCJty bUt practical use Al this at a 200/e SA.VIMGS lour e•pert installation available at add1t1ona1 cost) -...---- DAILY Pll.OT Th 10.' 77 ------- - - ------------ -- ------ - Busne Co~ty JObless Rate. C~.... ..... ..., ~-:t:~~~.~,r.~~n~fi:!.::sii..~'.t!r~~~~nnn:'~ijlN';iii:~ilW~~~~~nf~~~~~~niiti~ THAT SLIGHT rise mot wlUUtpdina, the Orantt County employment picture rematntd. * * * * * * Quarter's Taxable · Business lrwreases Ta"able bqsiness transacUOPJ In Orao1e County totaled about $2.lS billion during AprU, May and June. an lncreaie of 2S.2 percent over the same period last year, a~ to flcure-released WI week by the State Board of EquaU.-Uoa. Sal• eta~ewide topp«t ••·• blWQD durint the second quarter and . exceeded latt yeu•1 •Drln1 quarter 1al• by 80 ~rcent. Iris Sankey, a member of the e<iualh1adon board, sald thl1 wu the lat"sest annual gaJn for any quarter 1n more than 20 years, exceptfor the sprlne of 1973. SHE WD employment rose by 338 000 jobf from last year, with aimost 9.3 mUllon workers employed. Statewide, sales of building materlalJ rote 49 percent and SObsidiary Due security l>aciflc Corp. hu flll· nounced plana to eatabliah a wholly owned sublldiuy named Security Paciflc Investment Managers, Inc., to complement the pension and profit·sharing fund management of the bank. automobile sales advanced b1 27 .s percent. Servlce atatlon sales lne~ased by 11,& percent and ta>cJb1e transacttona of uUli· ty companies score<l an IS pef· cent ri•e· Coata Meea topped the Oranae Coaat cltlea in taxable transa· tion11 with S169.9 milllon for the qunrter. Huntington Beach waa next wath$1.3$.3 million. Other cout citi~ tnd their taxable 1.-an1action1 lor \hJ 1prln1 Q»attor; Newport B•ach, $99.4 million; Irvine, 115.9 million; FOWlt.ain Valley, '38.1 million, La.:una Be-ch. Sl8.7 million: San Clemente, $18.3 million. San Juan Capistrano. Sl3.9 million; and Seal Beach, Sll.4 million. 't"-te'a and at ol n•ltbbarlq 'JM Anl l County. The national unemploymogt rate In October wu 7.7 percenT. CaUforn1a'1rate1tood at T.e per- cent. Jn Loi An1olos County the unemployment rate wa1 '1 per· cent. Dopartm nt labor analyat Alta Y•tter prtdlcted that the employment plcture in Oranie County would remain brltbt for tho r tbf tht year. SH WD THI&£ will be "a larae lntluX ot new ttrma" tnto the county in November and December. Mra. YeUtr a110 Hid that U. hlrtn1 by those nrma "will holp . keep the eounty'a unemploymat ratocl011to1ttcurrentlevel." , .. II there was ono dl1turbln1 JONE!BORQ, Ark. <AP> - Vern Barnett atvea the Im· pro11lon he'd llke to pull the cov· ered was:on• In a clrdo around hi• small factory hero and try to laolate lllrom tho modern world. "I wish we could all bt Uvtna back 100 yeara ln1tead ol the way we're havi~.to live now •· said Barnett, 62. "ll's too faat. ir we'd all slow down, we'd be bttter off." HJS PLANT IS called W... AU CLUIS TO SUfCtDE? aytalY GUMf, ....... Newport M;ulls Option In Business Licenses 'J'he lol owin11 are 11onni lhlnga to watch that m11hl be a forewarnlni.:. A •erlous t•hunRll m mood or boh1£v1or A change in hah1li. ;iccomp<1n1od b} deprOllblOfl A pn• oen~palton with one's health, ulong with a IObS of l'fll'rll). Insomnia am\ l'hunA:t: 111 sleep patterns ·A 1udrlen declln'1 111 economic •latui; v1.1 ~er1uub bu~1nu~s re\ l'f'JI ,\ llrcak 111 " l'lui.c l l'lal1em~h1p \n oltkr t>t•r:.on who11r ltll! .. tylt• Ill 11uddt·nly (' h a II IP' d 0 r " h ll I 11 uhruplh Id\ alone· YOUR DOCTOH CAN ,HONE t;s wlH•n you need a med1cmo. l'1t·k up your prescrlpl&On If 11hoppina nearby, or we will delh·er promptly without ('Xtra t·harge A 1reat many peoplo entru1\ ui. v. ith thl•1r preserlpUons. May we compound yours., PJJUC UOO PHARMACY ..... .,.. . .,. Hl~lloed ~lteP.48'1110 Merchants who do business in Newport Beach are ficln' a new set or business license feea in light of a 1tat.e court case that held it is Ulegal to charge flat rates for business licenses. The case, Brab1lnt v1. the Citv of South Gate, held that Oat fees cannot be charaed to busineHes that oper•te inside a city but are located outside the city. according to a memo to the Newport Beach City Council from City Attorney Dennis O'Neil. COUNCILMEN, WHO discussed the court cue last month, told gtaff members to come up witb a new busl· ness license fee schedule that fits four criteria: -It mUJt anawer the objections to tho current fee schedule ra{11ed by the court case. It must fit into the etty's existini computer program, whtch handles all the nearly 8,000 busineu llcens~ is· sued by the city. ll must be backed by the local business community. -IT MUST Bl! ABLB io aenerate about tht aamt revenu• raised by t.ht current Cee schedule, wblch wlll bring in '412,000 this tlscal yea . The current Jicense 1.ee schedule charges a flat rate of S70 for bust. nea&es located OGtlldt the city limlu and S:JO for those tnSlde the city. Monday. councilmen will 1et their first look at an ordinance that pro. poses an option for businessmen in the new fee schedule BUSINESSMEN CAN elthor goon a gross receipt basis, which will coat them S45 minimum with charg11 of 30 cents per Sl.000 1ros11 recoipt.'J for in· come• morQ than $150,000 or they can stick with the flat rate. City Manager Robert Wynn aaid he and tho city staff hope tho two-tiered llYStem will angwer the demands set by councilmen Women Sea1ion Slated Saturday A day long rtnanclal seminar ror women ls scheduled Saturday at South Coast Plaza Hotel. CQsta Mesa, with topics ran&lng rrom investments to protecting assets. The seminar in the San Juan Room ts 1pon10red by Vlrginla Shields and bank manager Sue Nlcholaon. Seminar 1ubjtcts include eoal &ettJ.n11 Htertlvousc of credit. effec\ive use of· insurance and tax return~. The $45 fee includes lunch and tht conference beams at 9 a.m. and ruas through 4:30 p.m. Re'e"aUOP$ may be made with Ms. Nlc:holsQn 1t 552.0522 . • ,........... IE ... p_,. hose Mariners Financial Corp., &l\ta An•. ow11er of Mariner Savini• and LOan M~lation. bu al\· nouncN asre.ment ff\ prirtc\plt with n off er by Ftdtllty federal Savings Cl Loan AnooiaUl?ft of Glendale to acqulro outstandUlg shs.rtf of Marlntn Ftnanctal Corp. ln oxchan14' Cor Tidcllty Fedtr-1 account.a equal to S19.&0 for QJCb ~arlners share. The tranaaction ta subJetct to necessary tax rtil· it\lt, appronla of the apprppriate regulatory authontles and approval of di tors of both com· PIO f, Mariners hu announced that for the nine months ended Sept. 30, eariUtl s were $3,329,058, compa with $1,1 ,166 durin• the JUte period In 1916. • Arlean VU1a10 and alU\Outli it• eonarete btttldlnt• are modem, the equlpm n\ la•lde l1 old. Tl\o t1nl1hed product 11 ahlny and new, thoqh from a b11ont era. Hta (1 probably the bl11eat plent 1D the oountty devoted ex· clu1ively to tumlni out wa&ON, carrlaces and other horse-drawn vehicles. . "You'd be surprised at tho number of people who buy these lbina•." aaid Barnett. "W• aeU alJ over the world. The buggy and sorrey business is really picking up "I DON'T KNOW what's hap· - Carriages 1>4ned, bl.rt the plant'• maktnc lll own way. That's rtaU)' all I caNd abOut when t lot lnto lt. lt wae Juat aornelhing to play wtth, but now tho dam thtn1'1 turned out to bG bmmess. '' Th• plw produces an array of vehicles r,apging from a Sl,300 pony·tlaed wagon to a $14..000 1t1•ocouh. Barnett aJtd his son. Charles, 40, own and operate the factory. It waa opened ln 1916 whon the elder Barnett acquired the assets or Arkla Villa&e, which had a s~milar e""'111e-raaldn1 opera· t1on near Hope In aoutt\ Arkansas. Over The Counter HASOUUifttt T.UE INllPE of B•rnett's plant, whloh hu about 15 employoet. la a collectlon of drllla, preucs, aaw1 and pll of lumber. Barn tt'• vehleln are moatty wood. In ono cornor, • 1 ck of wheel hubs, part of the acqulsltlon obn. old plan,t. cllmbl nearly to ~ • ceillns. l":noth r comer holdS at variety of unused wagon seat.s made around the turn of th• eeo· Lury. . Some of the worlcers or rew up wit.h waaons" and would .. rather work than ut back and draw th•'r penJiOJ\ , " Cbarles BarneU sold. • llp• and De..,... I aZardPa~ - Carter Reniark Fuels Stock Market Surge ·N~W YORK (AP> -A 1tron1 rally erupted in the &tock 1Parket today in the htavle.t trad.tne ln 1werat TDOntht · Thtt Dow Jcmu averaae ol ao lndUltrtal1 wu up u .ia • polni,s to832.55. Gablers overwhalmld lOltn by a f.1 martlb aoioq New :YQric Stock Exchange-listed issues. • . Tht uPIW"c• cam• •• President c..rteJt totd Illa nm eont.rece tb•t r oorta ol OOGIUct hot•-.oo hlm aDcl ltdval Jleaer~e Board Chetrrn an Arthur Bu.rm w'" erl"DDooua. W1aa1 Storlu Did -' H~W VQflK V"'I J • I ~ , • i • . . • MLl!I • HUii YOllK IAl'I •H'I' MoPl Alts ; : HEWl4¥0RK IAlll• ~ • ._,,.. llflCle ._ ""-c'-• 1111 tin lllfG ~lllft Af91frltall 'r !IM<.1r ; ·~ IM<lt'\, ,~ .. .,,.~,"~ ,,j ,...... . " +f.\e ....... 1, • • :: ~11'9'1 OI ..... '41, 2i'-+ tei'.l'h ···-·· It. ~ •••.• tr1~l•11J:t•.. ... H,1 llh .. I? " mp .,..... s1.ooo 1 + ... 1 eor .,.... ss,100 ,,~. + .a. UljM'lfllC. .. • ... 11 + "" WI.I 1111,. •••• • Q,q a.-. -It 19'4 u. .. .. o~ ~ • "° AH"• llMI .. ............... • • • Prtvlovt .. y ,,., ·••••·••••••• • • Wtek ................ ,...... • • Mlr'IU\ -•••••••••••••••••••• 2l ••• Yetr .......... , ........ , •• ,... U , • J:en:w.::.::·::.:::::·.... , ; l"rt• dett .. .. .. • ...... .. ... ,,,., • ' ; ., to OttAI ............... 4.. 1Q,1 , 1 .. k Q A Cmalorting Gesturf'! 1\nn-Margret comforts Peter Firth in a scene from the upcoming movie "Joseph \ndrews ... a rollicking, candid portrait of 18th century England. Firth plays a you~g man who rises from "' servant to dally m the halls and bedrooms of the nobility. A Plastic 'Conspiracy' New Lincoln Movie Lacb Complexities By DA VE GOLDBERG NEW YORK CAP) Speculating about con· ~p1tacies in the assassination of John F. Kennedy has been a national pastime slnce Nov. 22, 1963. Now Hollywood why not is dredging up ,\braham Lincoln's murder. Was Let> Harvey Oswald the lone assassin of Kennedy'! Was he the a:;sassin at all'> Why was behind him"! The CIA'> Just change the name lo John Wilkes Booth and the answers to the Con- f ed er ates. the War Department, the National Police and vou have "The Lincoln Conspiracy," being ballyhooed around the country as the latest word on the cvenl<; of 1865. The Civil War 1s fertile ground for corupiracy thcorn1ts for a very simple reason -there were any number of conspiracies. Even the war itself can be v1ew('d as a conspiracy by venal Southern -.lavcholdt.'rs or Northern abolitionists, depending on which side you favor SO "TIU; LINCOLN Conspiracy," purportedly ba:;cd on Jong-lost and long-suppressed documents, would seem to have something going for it. Doesn't 1t se<.'m unlikely that Booth acted only with a gang of second rate accomplices to assassinate Lincoln? But the problem with "The Lincoln Conspiracy." produced by Sunn Classic Pictures and featuring Bradford D11lman as Booth, is that 1t 1s so plasllc. you're likely to walk out of_ th': ~eater I aughing rather than Pondering the PoSS1bilit1es Those poss1b1llt1es -facts. according to the movie -arc that Secretary of War Edwin M. Stan· ton and a group of radi<.'al Republican senators con· SJHrcd with Booth lo kidnap Lincoln because they feared Lincoln v.ould impose too easy a peace on lht' South BOOTH, Tilt: IUOVIE says, went ahead and killed Lincoln and then escaped after a former Con- fed1?rale captain 1n\olvcd in the plot, James W Boyd, was killed and passed off as Booth by Stanton el al C1v1l War Times Illustrated. a magazine for Cl\ ti War buffs. has spent considerable time and money debunking those allegations, and it has done it convincingly The magazine's editor, William C. D.iv1s, sent several people over the same trails pu rportcdly followed by researchers for the movie. They found, among other things, that several com- panies depicted in the film never existed and that Boyd. supposedly killed on Apnl 26, 1865. was ac- Ziegfeld Cast Set LOS ANGELES <AP> M.J. Frankovich has turned up performers after a four-month search to play Fanny Brice, Eddie Cant.or, Will Rogers and Sert Williams in NBC's "Ziegfeld~ The Man and His Women." Catherine Jacoby will portray the Funny Girl, Richard James Shea will be Cantor, Bob Fraser ~ii\ be Rogers and David Downing will be Williams. tually slam in a gunfight on Jan. 1, 1866 m Jackson, Tenn. But even if the alleJ:ed facts are true, the movie is so Climsily put together it has trouble making its point. It takes arr extremely complex period of American history and makes it something out of a fourth-grade textbook. EVEN MORE HARMFUL to the point the pro- ducers are trying to make is the amateurish texture of the film. Though all the actors are Americans, they are so wooden, they often seem dubbed; and the beards worn by John Anderson as Lincoln and Robert Middleton as Stanton are clearly false ones pasted on about as well as those worn by children at Halloween parties The sad thing 1s that there is a real need for his· torical films if they are done well. And there are many aspects or the Civi.l War that could st.and ex· amming including hints of a plot agamst the government in 1862 by some Uruon army officers and politicians But "The Lincoln Conspiracy" can only add to the distorted impressions we have of our history. ~ •"STAAWARS"lP'GI A "SMOtCIY & ll4E IAMOIT' V '"n41 STING• IPG) • A "THE GttOOYI lUIE" IRI V "UMTUCU FRIED • • MOYtr lRI -. THE CITY SHC>f'PIN<i CENTflE ORANGE •532 $721 CITY CEHTRf CIMEMAS SA. FRWY IMANCHHTEfl fX.I O.G. F .. wv ICITY OR. EX.I Open Doily 12:30 p.m. Tilllllll .. ,. ttWll'tll ... RllAlllfUS • -- '"n4E SPY WHO LOVED MF' lPGI •O .. /Yl/SUM l:J~f 1~­ '"fROM M00H m. ll4alE'" _, .. , NIJS.f/-W..Jo.1~1 .... SD. COAST PLAZA l41Urn14HI ~ 1111 1111 •Ml.,; '"1'H! RISCUEttS" 161 f;~J· .. ,~.,,s. u•u~ ''RJDE A W1LD POHY" f;4f.tttl ... /Uff~ IL-4"4-4~~.41 S . COAST PLAZA 3410 lflfl•Ut S4Ulll 1111 r6'••"' "If YOU DOH"T STOP IT, YOU"U GO IUMD" IRI _,., ... ,,~ ..... .. CRYUMCLI" 7:1 .. lltlO .. , ... ,,~7-lttt• , I • ENTERTAINMENT I THEATER I MOVIES· ''Forty1'Carats" a.:o not a play which will be enshrined forever beside the classic comedies ol the American theater, but in tho ~~""·aft~~ilcP. a foghly entertifrilog evening. The Westminster Community Theater has come up with the proper cast More specifically, it has come up with Carol Fillan, a standout actress too lons absent from local stages. Miss FHian turns in1 a superlaUve performance in the demanding leading role of a 40-year-old, L6":..IOll:Y'+~•:l:'I t w i c e divorced career woman who finds herself pursued by a determined swain about half her age. ,,uAM The show is a familiar one, which ha~ a good deal of mileage on the community theater circuit, but M it>S Filian infuses the script with fresh comic glitter. ONSTAGE FOR NEARLY the entire production, Miss Filian is a splendid study in timing and in- flection as she gradually releases her inhibitions and allows herself to be swept into an improbable romance. It is one of the pre· mier performances of the year on a local community stage As her rich young lover. Richard Morrill overcomes a bit of early reserve to deliver a solid account of himself. His motiva- tion is believable, though he could underscore it with a bit more intensity. Tops in the fine supporting cast is Joanne Wolcott as Miss , T,C&CAIT ,.,. St.eNe't ............... , , ••• , ~, 1911 Pel•rlAINnt •.•.•• , •• ,.,. ••••••• RICJIAUl-IU a111y1oy1an .•.•••.••••••••••• J«llWI~ TrlMSlanley •• .,., ... _'\' , •••••• V-C.ll!IO llUUIMHrt'l'S •• .; ••• ., ......... -Wlkaft EeldY ldW-..... , ............ \CM PrfkW. ~'" Mel<IOl•l\IMn. LllMm ••• , Pett'/ u.i_., Mr. Latham ........ , •• ., ..... .., •• K•nN111MIO. Mn.A4e,.. ............................ Plttl14M P•tri<lt •••••.•.••••••••• , ••••••••• ,Jll'll~ reverses her mother's sltuaUon and lands herself a visiting Tex- an. The latter role as played with the proper broadness IUld rou~h­ hewn gusto by Stan Pritchard. Patty Lovelady does double du- ty, impressive both It& the office secretary and Morrill 's sw~ mother, wbo has her own young admirer (Jim Chapman>. Kea· netb Mick as her tycoon husband and Patti lble u an apartment seeker round out the Westminster cast. DIBEcroll RON Filian keeps the action movinl through an episodic 13 scenes, and the brisk pace contributes mightily to the show's succe5s since some of ita sequences are a bit on the tallty, "'THE NAKED NIGHTH 1:00 & 10: ts "THE VIRGIN SPRING" 9:30 'ESCAPE under SAIL' THI SAIUM• WOii.D'S "EHOLISS SUMM!R" IMOw PLAYWI EDWADSUDO !ATll J41t Vie Ude, .....,.,. IHdl-'7WJSO DAILY: 7:00 a t:OO SUtU>AY: l·J.J.1·t * CALLBOA1U> -Golde.i West Colleg b nnounced audiUOftS (or two u~ ptOducttons. 'With relldi~ for both scheduled for M nday and Tuesday at 8:30 .•• tryouts t r the 'mamstage allow. ~'Picnic/• Will be condlicted by director Cbatles Mltebell. Who is tooki.og force women tbJ'ff men for :tbe Wllliam loge drama ••• ~ meanwbi~ di~tor Bob ~=f~~~ will be holding readings in Actors PlayboJC for "Ral.Q, • which calls for a larc J cast ... further details are available at892-mt. . . ~ sfJS4N FORD SET ;ia AS 7Y REGUUR ,. LOS ANGELES <AP> -S~an ~ Ford, daughter of former Presi· dent Gerald Ford, will be a reg- ular on a syndicated variety television show starring Jim Nabors. Miss Ford will conduet celebrity intemews, t•llt to the audience and do photo features. iald Shanon Boyd. a apokeswomanfor the show, wbidl debuts in January. • "Susan'J charm and grace wm help everyone feel ritht at home :with us,•• Nabors said. When Welles and Wens SearM U.S. ., •. ,..,.. NOW-SVELTE BETTE MIOLER EYES ACTING Singer Survives Passing of 'Camp' Phase New Look Q: Wbo wrote illatlt:SI Onoo Welles radio abow tltat caued muy Uak'slera co believe &bere waa ae· taally u lavasloa by Mardu.s! -P1cl McGraff, Jersey Clt)', N.J. A: It was based on H.G. Wells' 1898 science- ' fiction belt 1eUer, "War or lht WotldS. • J!ut radio scriptwnten rtwrote tbe atory for 1.1.Stes»nt. not rtadina. Becaus ol ita docu~tary trea ent. the bro dcutcreati!d a"h t altiatroctecltblinatlon an<I otM:i parlrot th wor~ Arid slJ\ce "'fi\. vaders" were aupPQ$edly "I~" In New Jersey, many resldailtB were o frl~tened they actually be San to evacuate the atate. . ·' Q: 0.. tbe CarsOfl ahow I beard Myron Coben start to ~U a atory aboat a preput IS-year-old woman. But before be coaapld· ed It, lbe pholie ran1 and I aever ~d bear ~. ftDtsb. Could you W>aslbly ask r. Coben to 1ive me lbe pwieh line? -Mrs. Grace Webs, Miami Beach, Fla. f. A; "Of course." the elegant comealan. CQmments. "I enjoy taking ed'Cores. This httle old lady from Ute Bronx went ror a physical. Standing nude in a COMEH draft, the patient got impatient and started to dress. 'Wait a minute,• the doctor said, 'I want to get the opinion or an associate • After the consultation, she demanded: 'So what have I got already?' 'Mrs. H.,' the doctor replied, 'we both agree -you are preg- nant ·'That ·s 1mposs1ble.' she gasped. Tm 6S years old. I 'm gomg to call my husband.' She dialed and said. 'Hello, Morris -I'm pregnant.· A moment of silence. then Morns said, 'Who's this calling?· " 'Miss M' Survives 'Camp' Q: We miss MyrQa Loy. toa1 oar ravorlte movie star. Won't sbe ever make aootlter movie! -Mr. and Mrs. George Rusell, Miiwaukee. A: Not until the ri(bt role comes along. As bright as she's always been beautiful, the veteran actress explains: "I will not play old bags and broads ... And since the roles submitted to me were on that level, my laat picture before the TV play was 'The April Fools,· almoatlO years ago." By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES <AP> -Apparently having survived her reign as the Queen of Camp, Bette Midler 1s getting the chance to prove what some folks have long suspected -the D1vme Miss M is more than a busty crazy who can be tacky with flash. Bette got a good ride out of the camp wave a few yeac; ago, putting us on with better-than-the- original versions of the Andrews Sisters' "Boogie Woog1e Bugle Boy" and the Sbangri-Las' "Leader of the Pack." She was a caricature artist, poking wry fun at nostalgia and giving us good music at the same time. But the handle "Last of the Trashy Ladies" is anything but a ticket to superstardom. There are some lady singers who's slug you if you suggested their act was tacky. And when the camp craze passed, where would that leave the lady who sang its anthems? THE DIVINE MISS M seemed in danger of becoming a female Tiny Tim. But Bette M1dler had an ace up her sleeve Un- derneath the craziness her discovery whlle sing- ing m New York's gay Continental baths. her bawdy dress and stage antics -the lady had talent. She was a smger-actress who took advantage of a quirk in the evolution of popular music to establish herself as a solid entertainment personality. And now. with camp gone. Belle Midler's still here, and with a brand new career m front of her She has taped a Thanksgiving special for CBS and another special for CBS to be aired in December. She's just finished another album and has finally completed a movie deal, with 20th Century-Fox. f'aced with the new rush of exposure, she says, her first order of business was reduce her ex- travagant dimensions. "SUMMING DOWN FOR the great public, you know," she !laid one day recently, striking a Greta Garbo pose. "They don't like them roBUST." ''Besides," she added flaUy, "I looked like a house I didn't care for the way I looked. I couldn't get into any of my clothes, plus I saw what I looked like on theGreat Tube. It was terrifying! "I finally bad enough I lost lS or 20 pounds." A svelte Miss M says she's ready to return~ her first love, acting. "AcnNG IS WHAT I'VE always done, .. she says. "I started in the theater. I thought I would be a great dramatic actress I was 16 when I started and I always expected to be some kind of leading lady. "But when I got to New York, I tell you. leading ladies don't look like mt>, the) ·re not built hke me It was kind or hard to get those jobs because there were estabhshcd people to contend with." But Barbra Streisand changed the look of the American Leading Lady. and 1t 1s another Barbra Streisand that folks are looking for in Bette Midler. Her upcoming film -"The working title is 'Rose"' -is not altogether unlike Miss Streisand's lait epic, "A Star is Born." "It's a strong s tory about a rock 'n' roll singer," says Bette. •'It's got a lot of music 10 1t, a lot of rock 'n' roll music. It's pretty strong stuff." AND AFTER THE MOVIE, Belle's 1ot her eyes on faraway horizons "I might end up m opera. who knows? I think I'd like to do some version of 'Saloms' Strauss' one- act opera, a rock 'n • toll version of 'Salome.· I saw a real serious version of It the other day on some eheeiy chammel ('You know, the ones you hav4: to fiddle with the channel to get'). "It was sensational. This woman, this Salome, sho was great. She had the head of John the Bapt.is~ on a plate. flinging it about. It was amazing!" A more likely project for the new Milla M is a 1 mmtcalcomedy In the old MGM style. ' "IT'S WHAT I REALLY want to do," she says. "I "ally want to do a teehnicolor musical comedy -... a great-big, old-fashioned musical comedy. The 'ldnd they don't seem to know how to make any ore." Q: How come Lee Strasber&. the famous creator of tbe Actors Studio, hasn't made another movie since hlJI bela&ed debut in "Godfather II," in which be stole the show! -L.R., Phoenb, Ariz. A: The 75-year-old idol of such students CtS Marlon Brando, Paul Newman, Marilyn Monroe and Shelley Winters (whom he tausht to emote) has another film in the can titled "Brighton Beach." Q.: Is it true that PaaJ Newman hu tbe blk• be rode In "Butch Cassidy aDd the Salldance Kld" llang · ing rrom a rafter in bis Connedicui gara1e?, -B. Green, Jersey City. . A: No. Shortly after the film wa.s rele~ed, Burt Historical Role Again LOS ANGELES CAP> Ed Flande rs can't seem to get away from historical roles. He plays Pulitzer Prize-winning editor William Allen White in ABC's ''Mary White" on Nov. 19. Flanders played the ti- tle role in "Harry S. Truman· Plain Speak- . ing" and also wu the former president in "Ma c Arthur" and ''Truman at Potsdam." In ABC's "Eleanor and Roosevelt" he was Louis Howe, confidant lo President Franklin D. Roosevelt and in ''The Trial or the Catonsville Nine" he was Daniel Berriean. .,......,. ...... . RllAU.Cf US 17fl • '1CTll~ 1"01' /'VT. .• "' """·· Tef'!'.R rn.MS ........ "SILYll STIU.K• IP61 '"' "THE SDRCERER" rci 7:15 & f".JO •SMOtCIY 6 THll....,.. ,.,._, .. ___ ..... __ -ntlmMr ,,,,~f.-- U .. N• NOW AT A THEATRE OR DRIVE-IN NEAR YOU BREA f>WA Brea 529-$339 OllANGE MALL Oflriat 637·0340 CINEMALANO IOllTH COAIT PUlA Anaheim 635-7611 COlll MtU ~G-2711 LA MlftAOA UA CITY CINEMA u Mirioa Mill 994-2400 Oranot 63-.-3911 UNCOUI OIUVE-llt 'UA lWI• Buena Parll 527-2223 Wesll!kstef 893·1305 VIE.10 MlstlOn \lltjO 830·9990 'Glad You Asked That' Bachar h purchased memento lor ~lay ln Bach r ch' Rothm nn•s R•taur nt ln E st- Noriich .Y.1'he muslc· aster ciitlglt nuck¥,.+~allilMl-atHe'll.le.· In p Won amce it Mp hlm w c ti s area blt, ''RaindropsKeepFalllQlon fftad." Q: l5it'1&te Bardot, mote t.ll • d yean a10, aid •he'd retltt ftom the. at~ uaerore my be fades." How old ll DOW a d lube all waahed up! -D. Brett, ~ver. A: Obviously she assumed her woman's pre- rogative and changed her mmd. After a look into the min-or she decided not to throw the towel In. Now 43, Miss Bardot is temporarily between pie· lures (and husban,ds ). Concerning her love life, she explains: "Never do I have more than one love at a ttme. I have unfaithfulness. lt ls cheap. Yet it Is am- p08Sible to live always with the same man!" Q: Who was tt who aald, be read "pan ot It &11 tbewaytllroq.b''!-G. Taylor,Roaaoke,V•· A: That'• a quote attributed to pioneer movie producer Sam Goldwyn -a "Goldwynism." A Jencthy collection of such "Goldwyn\sma" enlivens Arthur Marx's fine biography. Other favorite faux pas: M:very Torn, Dick. and Harry is named Sam.'f"I can tell you in two words: Im-possible.'' "Include me out. 11 "Keep a stiff upper chin. 11 When one of Goldwyn's bookkeepers asked, In 1956. 1f he could destroy all of the firm's records dating back to 1945. the boss nodded, "Certainly. Just be sure to keep a copy of everything!" When invited to pen his autobiography , Goldwyn remarked: I don't think anybody should write bis autoQiography until after he ls dead." The producer also referred to a certain rum as "Valley of the Hello Dollles." "I want to mike a p,ictut9 about the Russian secret police -the GOP. ' "Our comedies are not to be lau(bed at." Goldwyn, bio· grapber Marx insists, once embarrassed a woman writer by saying "cohabit" when be meant "cooperate with me." Q: I was surprised to hear that Paul McCartney, one-time Bealle, Is a member in good standing of UNESCO. For doing what? -H.T. Maaerer, Pittsburgh A: For doing good deeds such as th1s one: fiying his new group, Wings, to Venice, Italy, and stactng a rock concert which brought $75,000 to the city to ..... ..... -........ OM~·!Nt OUMIALL IALL Y '"I ..... llA'ION lOOIONO fOI Ml. OOOOIAI ca1 AT• I • )!IS • MS e a:u e 1•» .__ __ _, ~. "°MIMS ;a) IO'f KMt•• IORCllll ,., PUil TMI llNTl .. L Ill Ml ;:~) .::-!it:=, <Sllali:Et~ M •AONO • *""" awa · IOllY DIWllLDCNt · " .. ~IYOIATM"' "look""'°' .... o.edNI" .. _ .... .......... _ ~­.,..,._...., _ .. "-~·· ~-.... ,. ........... . • • • • ~ERIT taste delivery switching Jttigh tar s1nokers away frotn age-old favorites. • By John Whitehead, Spcic:bJ Fcansiu Writer (Conton. OH) The secret to making a quick fortune in America ha1 been rtduced to a 1imple 7 atep system by an e11trcprcncur from Canton, Ohio. ll rcquiret little or no money, a 111inimum of time and no elaborate plant or CQ.U1pment. In fact, you can do it in your home or anywhere. There arc hundrtds of rap to riches 11ories each year in America. Howcwr, this one is very unique. Mcxt 1ucccssful get rich \'cnturn were spin-offs of a fornwr business or occupation. Or, someone was an the right place at the right time. You don't usually find a guy getting rich who w;u work1~ for a big company, had no money. had no experience outside his 1pcc1ali1ed JOb at the company, and did not eYen know where hewasgoarrato start. You also don't find many !)*>pie , making this much money this quick. The man who did 1t LS Ben Siam wbo b a n:al. liY1ng. breathing human beia,Jivina in Canton, Ohio, the Pro FootbaO,Hal of Fame city. As you ny into this medi~ siud Midwestern town you can see that 11'1 a compact communuy •urroundCd by larmland. As yod drive from Akron-Canton 1\irport on 1he 1-77 freeway 1n10 town you can sec the Pro Fool~ll HJll of fame JUSI oft the freeway to the naht. The Hall of 1-ame as s11ua1cd in a complex which also houses 1he cuy's b1pesl high school, a field house, one of the biggest natatonums in the nalton and one of the bigaest high school foo1ball >lad1ums in the country, the 20.000- \Cat concrecc comtructcd f awcctt Stadium. This 1' the same stadium where ABCs Humble Howard. Frank Gifford, and Dandy Don broadcast the Hall of Fame Game each year. Upon amYang in the neighborhood where Suarez hvn )'OU get the fcclina you're in the typical middle clau, m1d-Amencan neighborhood It's quiet, with tree hncd Slrttts and friendly ecoplo. Suarez nt\cr moved when he 401 nch but did fi" up bil house like the TaJ Mah.al. His neiJhbon here in Canton call it a mo\ie scnpt. One of the nei&hbon inter• ""~cd had this to say: ··It k·a1 un~liC'VOhlt. °'1l' dav M's drmnll around In o nJstrd out 'MJ PontiaC' station k-OICOn, /1111nx tn an unrar{1t'tt'd houst' that didn't t'\Yn ha~ a '11fur T V. and JITU1C1Clm1C to malct' tnds mut ltl..t' tht rt'Jt <>/us. 711t' n1• "<I dar ht's drfrlnll 111 a l>randnl'I• lm1ol11 Muri.. aJtrandntk' Mnrnrv $/Utmn "OICnn, a 5J$.()()(} GMC mmorhom,, Jur hom .. '' fl.1td up hlcl' a palorr. and hr'1 tra•·rlmg all 01~r tht' {f>U'11fl' ., '\ A close friend of SuarCT's comments: • .. H h.•n he flnt 11artt'd suymi hthO.f lfutng to thmk up a "ar to J:t'f rich quiC'k 14~ all •' la111:lwd a11d 1lio111ht ht' was N'OZI'. Man .. ... ,,. not la111•h1111 ani mo,,. lit M'OUldn't 1rll """"'""'" how ht wa.r do1f18 It for J 1rarT I IWth ht ••could ewmuallr. Ewrl'Ont' ,hh<1 mal.r.1 o htR armmplishmtm 1oorltror lain huT 10 trll tl'f'fl'O~ how ht' did it. M So, how wa• all 0thit accomplished. For that answer I went ri&ht to the hone's mouth, my main in1ervicw with the crator "4't of the ')'llem, lkn Suarel. knting the necessities but wound up loslns money and owin& the money for the rentab. which I didn't have. Then I 11artcd to buy the "get rich boob". I quickly found out th.at these are nothina but franchiJc schemes. acningjoba or stupid rtal ~late deals that uke you foreYtt to make money. I wu also learning another important fact. When you work a full time job, i1 donn'r leaV!; you tame for mucb else. When you coMider preparation time to go to work. drlvina titM. lunch, the 8 hour1 on the job •nd cleaning up and unwinding when you gc1 home. tbit takes 12 hours out of your day. Wuh 8 hours' sleep that only leaves you 4 hour• out of the day plus weekends. And &hat time usually must be spent m:iintain.ina the house and car, and spending some time with 1he family. So I was faced with this cold hard fact. If the typical AD'ICrican in my condition i• going to escape the rat nice, he will have to do it with a method raquiring VCI')'. lltlle time and money. no cxpcritnot or skills and the •ystem must make a lot of money quickly. On the surface at sounded impomblc. to make an understatement. But. when you're dcspentc you find that ncccuity 11 indeed the mother of invention. Then another thing spurrtd ~on. I read an article by the Social Sccurny Administra· tion. It related, wout of every 100 persona reaching 6S years old: SO arc flat broke. 30 arc dead, IS have a liule money and only S arc rich". I wasn't going 10 work 40 years and end up in a "home", nat broke. QUESTION: So Ibis Is ~hm you came up whh the hie systmi? ANSWER: Yes. but there is 1 little more to tt. t pondered and JCS(lf'Ched how to do it for moatbs always running into stone walls. Th9 uy your subconscience docs all your ~ c:reativc work. It dots. One night of all &.Imes when I was li!tin1 weights in my bucmcnt the solution rolled out of my mind hke 1 computer print out. It wu the ~mplest. fastest a!MI most direct way 10 make a lot or money. I quid1ly wrote it down and after a,111lyti~ ii. I.be S)'lttm boiled down lO a few 11mple rules or steps. You ute tbacstcps toUICmble~hat lean a Net Profit Generator System or N.P.G.S. for sliOrt. That ni&ht I stayed up late and assetnblcd N.P.G.S.-1. I tested N.P G.S.-1. ltiookabout2Wttb, but it failed miscrabl)'. But, c~lthough 1t failed I could see what made it fail was so111Ctbi111 not that ~tt. It simpl)' had a few bop 10 be worked O.&.lt. I modified Ahe system and assembled N.P.O.S.-2. lhe system multipliea money very ,.pidly. The more you multiply the faster you make money. I wanted 10 make it fast'° l ahowed my system to a local businessman. He liked it and put up a ~t deal of money 10 be p\11 into the rolloUl of N.P.G.S.·2 • N. P.G.S.·2 made a aigniricant turn around in the ~tcm and it almott broke even. But. it 11ill ~ money. N.P.G.S.•l took a lot more time than I ex~. about 6 months. to work out the bup &en in the sysicm. But. N.P.G.S.·l wu ~ aua:cu maklnra better than fairamount ofmOfltY· But, not cnou&h. and hardly enough to pa7 off the hu~ dtbt I had incumd by now. However, I could now see the pot of gold at the tad of the rainbow. I auemble4 the pclfccted system, N.P.G.S. .... There was no quarion th.at N.P.G.S .... could make it bis. But. we knew that nothina it totaUr P*ictable. Even IO, we did it..Wcrollcd out witti N.P.a.s ..... I atill owed a great deal of money from the n:surch in developing the pnor tystcDU. Apin I ~ to make the money as last as polliblc so apln my bus11acsarnan put up morcmoney. lfN.P.O.S .... lalled 1"'1Jdbc S70.000 ia debt and no way to npay. QUESTION: That nnat haw bHn a tf\'llt '90IDftlt 1"UJl\a for the ftlUICS tOCOlllll Jn? f ;4NSW£1h h was rcial lite 4rama 11 its hi1Kat i11wnaity. t-..... IUl&Y mid·Auauat morning w~n l waited, for tho raultt to «>mt in. l would inow that clay ff it worked or not. The pho1'8 rana with the tt1ult1. I lltoOd there wl.lh •weaty palms •nd my bca.rt in my mouth. TM newt? N.P.G.S.°"' wu a 1m .. hin1 IUCCICIS! :rbe Rm rol~ut paid off all my debts with money left o~f. ,.. ijuESTIONr '*" ·h· ,.. IWt g J1* ant ... , 1 1oariM ~ WER1 Vttt ahOrtly DD.cnva~ I pr~tea a 1 to do bi& rollo\Rs wlt t hava to put up imy snot!CY• My Tiit nitloUt Of ·l'U:.G.S.-4 DCtttd-llAY ftf$1 ~ pa~. I aiadC SS0.000 dcatt 1 nei:am..nirett .... -, ..... ....-:,..nee Suorn on tht 1p«lo1D, lllOOMd VoUN/s()/hlurtontl ltomr wltlclt.lwU/lltlllJ amttat and • pnt ltc1cM. •• .. eewn1 e.p:idf ic problctm that law plaped aviliutioa. That'• aootbcr rcuoo I am thlnkina of ret1ri111-ThCle pn>jms will require a IOt o(tlrne. Bot. lt'11omctbi111 I will enjoy doing. and. I will be abae &o do tbcnl when I want to. QUESTIONt How wll male J09P bOok ·~bit Ott a 1*11! "'IUWK MlcttAILMAA211(.J9'._ ... ,... dent Of HI;& ..... • lllllldl.C... ....... H'I' on "-Y Nowmber I. "11 In untlnQton Beech, Ce. ••••••d -.bend ot Jocef't'll Tllelme Mtatlll end • .tn.r ot O.bre Shirley •!Id Johll 1------------1 IChffl Mrezlk both of HunllllQtOf\ IMCh, C&. Al9D f•lhw MidlNI .VaiJk r. of MelMC:hvMtts, o,.. •Iller 1--..,,,...--------="'.'.'I .uber• Moore Of Peto•~ IUwr, aryl•'"'-thtff brotlMra, AllMrt fUlk of Seti Oltgo, (;a., P'rrillll fOMll Mrulll Of Attlee, Hew Yori! d E dwerd Mrlllltt al #-1 :a.el la. •• Mreilk -• Progrem Anetnt fOf' t Vu ... _ AOmlnl~lrellon. He wet llJ e ... 1wenot the b'lll Wof'IO WU eftd •rHn and Viein.tn canfllc:ta. ,._, .. rvlcea will be conduc:tfd en ,.,..,...,. 1vember 11, 1'77 et Tiie Christ tlleren Oiurch ~ S..rn• St., Lant acJI, Ce. Friends mev uio « Pl.,.c• OlheU SmllN' N\ol1INrf on Tl'IW .. ' Novemt.r 10, 1977 fnwn 4;00 to 9:00 M , Pierce Brot11eu. Smltlla' 'f\Ullry dlreclon. PAl...MROS .EORGE PALMROS, resident Of ;te Niese, ca. P•!.Md ew•v on Nov- ber 9, 19n et Ille age of 11. S.WVtvrd , "" s.on 0..-Pel,....os of Plaic:enlle, Funerel ....,,k• Ind lnlerrMnt I bf held In Fcft\t Hiiis cemetery In ca, New York. Smllh Tuthlll Lamb .le M.seMOrtuery 1nc11er11110f loc:Al •ngementJ.~ KAY •ERRY M , KAY, resident of •POr1 0.Kh, U. PeJ.WCI •wey on .. m11er 7, tfn. Survlv.o bV Ills wllt 11 Key, I«> Roei.rt Key of N-POrl >ell, Ce. -Perry K•y of Woodl- 6, C.. Slit Q<Mldclllldren. Prlv•te illy Interment at PeclflC View morlel Park. Pec111c. Vit• rhlery dlt9Cton. PEND&ROAST TEVEH A. PENDERGAST, rftl- 1 of SooAtl ~.Ce. S<.ltitlwcl by • tnu Mr. & Mn.. Dontkl ....-roest. er lt•UllMn PeMerQHI, •lao ncl99•-L.uclli. .. Forest ~n­ gell end grendtelhtr Alv•h ,worth end erendmother Anne tptiy. RKll•-of the H-V wlll ..,Id ~lurdey Nowmbtr 12, lf71 et • A.M. -Mau of Cllr1111..., Bun•• J 00 A.M. el St. C.llltront'a Ce tho I IC r<ll In LAQurw Btecll, c.. Int«· 11 .at Pacific v-Mtmorl•I P•rk. tehOf\ ~rldey November 11, 1'11 n 4 00 PM lof,00 PM.. P«lll<. V-rtueryd.reclorL ~ ROUNDS 05EPH 8. HOUNDS. rHldenl of ta Mt ... Ce P•uec:t ew•y on Nov· .,., I, t9n at the eQt Of lJ. ~ 11neral >nQtl"""" •re ~n<llnQ et Snioth n111 l.•mb C.OSte ,,.,, .. Mortuery. ..... -Deaths Elsewhere TACOMA, Wash. (AP) Marjorie Lynch, 57 ,. •rmcr deputy ad· inistralor of the nericao Revolution 1cenlennial Com. ission, died Tuesday. 1e had also served as dersecret.ary of the U. Department of Health, Jucation and Welfare >m 1975 uni.Ji early this ar. LONDON (AP) -Ted ay, 71, a lop-rnght ·itish comedian best town for his s how lay's a Laugh" on the ·itish Broadcasting >rp. national radio twork, died Tuesday. PVBUC NOTICE ,._ "'bllsllecl Orertve C.oelt Delly Pilot. '· 10, 17, 7~.and OK. 1, 1'17 .S-11 SMITH nmau. LAMa COSTA ... Si\ CHUB. 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • 6"6-<4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ana• &47_.131 •:t-.i .......... . PUBUC NOTICB PICTITIOUSBUANHI NAMlllTAT•M&ffT . ~ . . . . ·-.. • OBITUARIES I LEGALS I PUBUC Nones l'IQITIOUS.utl••s.t , .._.ITATUlllUfT • -----------.,..... .................... ...... , PUBLIC NOTICE I HUNTINGTON O"ANADA · FUND, I.TD., 1000 QMll SCl'MI, Stoll .. 1------------. MG, NewportllMtll,CeUfamletaMO P IQITlOUI BUltN•U R-ld Y. Wier, 700 Clvk OtnW HAMS STATllMENT Or11111 WHl.lllllaAnt, CA. mot TM fOli.t'-111'91 A& dDlne...... TM1.,.,_l1CGNl!dMllU._... ............... PVBUCNOTICB '='. , PICT1TIOUS M1$1Nla BACK BAY 202ua.y,....,Aw. In•~• Ol)CD cla1lJ for JOUf-·iml*IJOft. It'• a 3 bdrm home w /bardWoOd . floClnt -• Wx180' lol Offend at sn,aoo. SUJ>. ml )'llMlrtsmll. "''•llAl.TY 14~0814 llACH IETllAT $SUOO ~tc>~ an-a~ er1atal eaiad. JSa.cQud is .,., play&rou.nd. WladlD Wood•ia •alt .. 1• t 9llChaded entryt IOQr'ID ~step aon veraatlon al'ea pla fl'replaee. Sun•hio breakfHt paUo. j)OOI jaeuaal, "0Ue1ball. Garc!en livln1 al it' tlnelt. MT-8>10 OlfN 1119 •IT'S WN TOlfNIC'lf 4 TWOHOMIS SuUlM Coata ..... N lbdrlll.,2~ ba.,iot. ~ .me D...UX 0Ya6000SOFT • BJl'a. 2dma,2 ~ 11111, 2 frplc'a.;; all bltna. eep. laanib'J' nu lrover- ailed prqa. WOod • brick .at w /abake root lldda to 11'• masslv---. B\u' aa adupledor $2ff,IOO or Oda Unit can be IOld ~ Olko aCODdo) udlfor Sl4f.IOO. JACOIS RIAi.TY 67W670 • ,.__._.Tl MQW C>fa.Y $J17.MO Cool and colodul, sunny and spacious, 3 bedroom \wo story quietly located between a gol£ course and a teo.nis club! This is a beautirully maintained home with roomy bedrooms. a large kitchen, -£ormal dining, nice yard and newer:quality carpets throughout. At J117,500; this detached, single family home just might be the best buy in Orange County. A Unique Exclusive! Oynomite! (Open thas weekend at 188 The Masters Circle) u~•vur:· ti()Mr:~ REAL TORS', 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del M11r also in Mes.:J Verde .it 546 5990 1002 G....,... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• PEHIHSULA POIMT 4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities. Lovely area, few steps to beach. $189,500 UDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den, 4 baths, living rm w/cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,$0 Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR J41 lfoy\1c.l1•Drtvl· N.B. 675 -6161 WEt;LEY N TAYLOR CO. l\E1\LTOHS si n<'e 1H4(; DBRRaD'S IESTI $1 J4,SOO Best buy & picture perfect! Highly upgraded plan 5, 4 BR, FR, DR & sitting rm in mstr s uite. Really sharp & tastefully decorated. Huge brick patio w/planters. 11!2 years new. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., UAL.TORS 2111 s-JCNICplln ... Rood HEW PORT CEKTH. M.I. 644-49 I 0 NEWPORT CREST Best buy-3 bedrms, 2"'2 baths + fplc. &aut1fully decorated. $119,SOO PETE BARREi"T -REALTY- .64N200 DUPLEX Oehtte umu. 1101! course view. Z &drma each, prl•ale, quiet, large aaraf& Perfect reUre- mea&. home and income. Call 540-llSl associated - --~ e..~ HERITAGE 9R0KfRS-Ri"/IL TOR'.> l QH "" ~alboo t.71 JI• I . • REALTORS CAPICOD SSJ.000 /SJ, I SO TOTALDoWH Windln1 roadway t aoarinl 2 1tory retreat! Private P'O\llKb pn>leet secluded entry lo l•vilh Hvin1 rm. GourlJle luteben o•erlooks sun· shine courtyardt Wlnd· in1 stairway leads t swee pinJ master bedroom plus child '1 retreat! Hurry, seller ts andous. IMT-6010 BOAT SLIP At your door step. Btllly decorated beaeb rel.real only 5 )"I'S Old VI /3 bdrm11 3 baths ac frml dining rm. l''eatures ceramic We en- try, Palos Verdes frplc, decorator wallpaper, mirrored wardrobes, hand carved copper ~ht fixtures. Only $1~5.000 and you OWN the land' 646-T711 $2500 down gets you mto lb· large 3 BR ranch bom with low Interest, lo payments. CALL NOW! 898-7155 W#telc111 llEAl £~TAT! Ser.,,rng Cost11 M c.,;a lrvrnC' Huntington Be<l~~h -N cwpo rt Bt.'aCh A BIG FAMILY ASTRll Rcol htc1tc, Int . IHI 833·9781 Hester-Brown lfAllO TURTLEROCK GLIH 1''il for a King. Exec style Broadmoor with loads of ..nras. s Bdrms, Gazebo & Waterfall. Cul·d-sac st. $10,900. Call Llbby. JUST REDUCED $149,900 4 Bdrm, quiet slreet. Walk to schools. Pic- turesque wooded area view. Broadmoor 2 plan. caJ\Ubby WOODllllDGE Owner mo\ivated. Laraest Broadmoor "E" plan. Up'faded. Lake & p\inne recreation. Sl19,900. Call Tom 5.'i:l-0218 (reaidence) OPEN DAILY 1-5 a& In..,,.. Ln. BIG CANYON red hiH -. 'l5?·7r,on DANA POINT 4as-llU ....................... ~~~~~~~flEST CHINA COVE HO Larktpur, <211>m-1ou ... .,.. IMQ/S..tta 1700 18th St. <Dover at 16th l "2·8170 associated lll!O"t:N!.-llEAI TOllS Ju1r, W f!i.,,11,.,,, & '' J ""° f I'm male, strai1ht. to 3 bdrm 2 ba condo, Newport Crest across from tenrus crts & pool. $225 + ~) ut1l. Don. 631~15 ---------------t ---------.,.. JOO sq. ft. deluxe office. W. Yng woman w/l smal 19th St Costa Mesa. AlTORHIY AT LAW IWllUPTCY $95 DIVORCE $!15 Basic Dive>tte Only toddler . would Ii ke t ..!Sl.SO:::~'m=o:....' T~o~m:.:·~54().~=2200=-1';.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-;; share my house w /same. Uftl•C)lt s------------1 Or will rent l rm. lba / TY ,..,_ yng fem . s tudent NO.COSTA MESA ... ,. llt•l•d 8"2·9897 •S Rm, 803sq ft S397 mo Wilf sell lie, atock & in· •120sqftsnglofc$8Smo ventory as pactac• OR ---------r Need a Great roommate? •442sq ft lgeofc S195 mo without license. New All ground noor, fron lease avail. Aak for Mel prtta. A/C, util pd., prof. 675-8120 Cut living expenses' Call The Orange County Professionals Ho•• Mates Ullffd 832·4134 Dependable since 1971 ------ bldg, etc. ---------1 540-2200 or 540-5101 Window Cleanina Co., perfect 1 person opera· 2600 SQ.FT. ln Design tion. Good income, Plaza, Newport Center, negotiable price. Cal i n .c l d s 9 0 0 s q . fl Bay Window C.o., 64S-1624 Male to share with mezzanine, features -...;;._-------1 mature male, 3 Br dresalng rm, shower, COSTAMESA rurnished Twobae in jac, full kitcb & faces SANDWICH SHOP Park Nwpt. Ofc 836-5181, Pacific ocean. Exquisite B/W take-out. S19,S 64G-0734home office area. Ava11. Nov. w/ter'IJIS or· $16,:500 cub ---------1 ----------t 15. Call 9· s, Doug I as 545-8734 aft 6 1 .......... • 11!.--..11 Need rmmate, Groovy Stone, 714..a.4·7530 -• .._ pad, Newport bland on ---------r water S240 + ulll. O.C.AIRPORT 675-44Zlor6754892 DLXOFFICESPACE 3 Br 2 Ba in Laguna Best bide. oo Birch. Nl1uel,$1SO+. 300to900aqft. S3M8S6 Bob Dickiuon, Agt. Cal97' .. 533 435 •••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1Found 3fem ~h Ter· rieu •le Edwarda • Drl.nldna problem! can Alcohol Helpline 24 bna w l3W830 Slater. No ID'•· 142·2171 --r----..... ---• Found H B. rem dog 1<1111, bru,..ht balr + blk~bt pup.-...S ,...._ ___ ~_;;._.~~-~~ WESTCUFF BLOG I NfW. l"'lfcl f•I AClt I • ' :- Dental Lab Dell very, Part·Tfme. Good lo boUlewlves. 646-5068. ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN GU.AUS Univenal is expaadin1 iU operat.ioas in Oranae An A.fftrmative Adicia Employer JAHITOIUAL Funily to clean comm ofc. bldg. 5 day wk. 541·5032 c.ontact Peraoanel llVBLY MANOI Convalescent Boii11al ~Via Ettracla Lquna Iii.Us, CA (71') 831-IOOO F.qual ()ppty Employet • • ' . WAREHOUSE Stock Room & SblpplQI Clerks. Hrs 10am·7prn. No heavy llrtine. Must be aceurate an haodlinc small parts by part number. Good frince ,~~~~t~~~~I condaboaer Knowted1e of ahlpp_i.ag fr ~ recel•inf 6 lnv .. tory1----------1·...;.....------~ CO!\U"OI nee. VaUd eaur. GAS DRYa 130. dnvers lie. needed. Xlnt Needa a new belt opp for dependable hard 848-8579 sves. worker $Ury open. Ap· y ply at: 6ranee Cont Old Wedgewood Gas Free to • 104 Plastic Moldmc, 8SO W. Stove, perfect coodi\100 ••••••••••••••••••··~· llltbSt,CM. $35.642·7117. FreeCollieShep. PllP.P!el, -;::======::.!:=====;;::;;::;:;-1 bealthy a cut.. 8 WU. Count the blessings youha"e io otter! oJd.Ml-5'65 ~ --~c: ....... __ ~~.1!'::::: ....... ::!. ----OOJambottt :.i;-~1ilqmlOI FlOI ,._Alfa spider. Red, ex-Newport Buda ... , a11C11blttoc:kt 9'.llent cond. Ori1inal •72 BEAUTlrtJL BJ.UE • DOVZITREET · 1'JMr. AM·FM stereo. BAVARIA. $5700. Pb <NurMaMrtbar Hbod bra. 96a--08i3 17ue71 And Jamboree) NEWPORT BEACH ' Alfa, very sharp, Ctijlff 9711 IJJ.IJOO .Jllechanically perfect,••••••• .. •• .. ••••••••• ---------' $12100.f7s.3l26 '11C.pri 11. A/C, P IS, vln ll'lf 2ll*Z Dal.tun, IOaded A.a 9707 top, CUil int, AM·FM • .int. ori&IUl OW'llU • •••••••••••••••••••• caas. $t100. S52·3721. m.81JT 'U FOX 2 dr,' auto, '7t Capri 2.a. S1mroof, "'II 210Z. stereo, 111ac1 • .AM/FM, A/C, Lo ml., Blaupw:Urt a track ate air. $1775. 911-1177, m1Dt cond. 94000. 549-50.11 w 14 1 pt ra , J ea ae n . -.mt "1• 100 !.$. Auto, Alll/FM • Trlaxels. Mlcb Urea.1...;,..'71;,;;._HlZ __ Be_a_ut.J_, --.-m--/f;...m-' miles radiala AIC 100+ Wills. Silver. lo ml. .11.i 1 ..._.• ' • Xlntcond.Mt-77f7 ra,.. • •· .rnpt)'.~14. ... ?l'aAaEOM • · WAY FOR NEXT . W&KSDBJYEtlY .. COMPLm IODYSHOP ~·· MOWOPIM EXC&LIMt . . SB.ICTIOH °' .. IMWU$ALIS ' 1»tod.a1! 'lll·Z040 495-4949 CREVIER 0$ I ST & HOAOWAY SANTA AHA . 835·3171 TMI UU!MATI OlllVINO MACHlNI COSTA MESA DATSUN 284SHARBOR BLVD. 540.641 0 540.021 l •DRIVEA * *LITTLE. .. * SAVE A LOT SHOP6COllPARJt BARWICK DATSUN ..... al; iU,tll t 1p1 ~I I .11111 831 ·I J7S 49 J.3JJS COSTA MESA DATSUN ·•USED IMW's* '77 S30l 4.spd 28SSEU '7'1320la S/R 177RSK •'1620Q24spd SIR 401POP '77 32014sp 013RTP 284S HARBOR BLVD. ao.ct 0.. Sud9yl _S_4_M_,."'-4_10_5_4_0.0_;;._2_1 l__.,.......,. _____ _ ......_Hew 9100 Autos, Hew ............................................. t " M ISSION VI( 10 lMl'(>lll~ " Io• I•• • .,, -· '··-·· 8J I I 7..J8 ~95-I 10J ----~-......_ - 2YUROR t .. 24.000 MIU! I SERVICE POLICY ••• WE LEASE • 1. TllYCLANCY ... .,...,~....,. Weat Orante County school students ranked generallt far atiove st.tte averages on bulc sfiill test results released today. The blgbest area scorea were bl the Seal Beach (elementary>. Scbo.11>1strict where younpters r keel in the top is percent amou Callfornla dlltrlcts ln all areu tested. * * * .State's Scoring Declines SACRAMENTO (AP> -Test scores of Calltomia 'a high school seniors sank in all basic subjects last tear, disappoinlinl school officials who hoped a one-year improvement would continue, the state said today. Tbe scores in reading, English usage and mathematics had risen in 1975-76 after a five-year decline but dropped back in 1978-77 to nearly th.elr low point of two years earlier, the state I>epartlnent of Education SA.id. Measured against ••national average" figures set by test publishers 15 years ago, Cal\fornia 12th-graders fell short in all three subjects, hitting the •2nd percentile in reading, the 33rd in English usage and the ..ard in math. I The 4.2nd percentile figure, for eiample, means that when the erage score was calculated in 1tea, 41 percent or the children ln the nation would have done · worse than the current California 1C!ores and Sil percent would have . done better. L rnie a~e~ la 50. But Wte officials say ~e is no way • ·to compare CaJiforniallll'OIW to .,. current performa cet etsewbere_, ISnce othet ha-.e different tesUnc prosrams. By contrast, students in ~cond, third and sixth g1'tlide9 1Were above tbe .. averaae .. figures in all subjects. •nd $~owed slight improvements in ~ostareas. Tbe multiple-choice tests are dven each year to every student 16 the second, third, sixtb and 1~tb grades. This year 1.14 million youngsters took the tests, of flclall aald. . Here are the scores: -Beed grllde: Readingup0. 7 plrcent in tbe number of rtah~ itlswers and up from the SUit to . the 55th percentile in ranklna. -'l'blld ~de: Reading up 0.3 ~rceot a.lid up fro the 55th to tbe 56thpcteenWe. I l:dl ~ch: Readlu-4own · 0.-2 pen:ent but unchanged at the 5lrd percenWe; Enalish usage up ~ peftelt. gpelllna unchan1ed. total tanguace SC01' up from e 4'Sth to tbe Slit percentile; math up o.s perctl'lt and.up fl'OID tbe: SOl:htotbe5Ut ~CDtile. -'l"hlltltsnde: ReadinjdOwn 0:5 ~cent &ad down tiiom the 4'3rd tO the 42nd perceWe; \ ~-... dOWD 0.4 percent, •Pel down 1.1 perc~ and BniUa&• aeore Clown from e to tho 33rd· per:centile; th down O!'I ~reent·ud don m '4th~ the 48rd pereen- -~-· ...... 'NO RIOHT-'fO LIE' Carter Meets PreH • W.ASIUN~N <AP> - • dent .C er said tOd.,-tbit former CIA Director JUc:bu'd Helms' misdemeanor conviction for failinl to ,testify fully to Senate committee is not a "badge ol honor" and that na- tional interests Were proted.ed Jn the bancW"J ol the case. • • Helms pletded no contest Ott; 31 uf charges 'of failing to reapOlld fully to questions from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee lo 1975 about.CIA efforts to prevent· the election ot Marxist Salvador Allende as president of Chile. Helms was sentenced Frid•Y to a ~000 fine e.M a aus~ .. two-year jaU term. His defense attornet .said then Helms would· wear tM ccmvictton as a 0 ba(fie of boncQ', » and JlelmS later Bale! beagreecL lower '9 perceot Of slxtb craae Teadlog, a drop of aeveu point.a ln the1tate~. Howeve • Weatmlnster YOWllsten tallied ln tbe state•s top 27 percent ill aixtb grade math, up from a allabtl:1 below· By'l'OMBAIU.BY °' ... .,..,., ..... ~ Orange CouQty Sheriff Brad Gata bas asked the District At- tomey•s Office to investisate a· South Laguna shootiftt in which one of his reserve officen was wounded. Sheriff's Lt. Rick ~e said the decision wu taken. after senior sheriff·~ officers dia· cussed the incident Tuaday nl&ht in which two L•IWl• Beach police tnveaUcators· allegedly opened fire Oil reserve officer Herbert Will(am Kanne, ~. "It was felt that we ahoul4 ask some imjNtrtial agency to loot in- to a shooting that fram.Iy dis· turbs us," Drake said. "1bat's. why we went to th~ distrtet at-. tomey.'' Toy Rocket Uaues Fire In RB Home ·Drake QI«• Jt.Une told him from ~~till bed that be Wts asleep tn~~ becbwm Of the hOme Md a..roke lJl Ule belief that burglars Weftl tryi.q to force their WQ 1Dto the house. Kanne, clutdiliia an empty rl· fie, wa struck by two of five • bUlleb as ~ moved down tbe • Hieb. Htmttngton Beach City,• Fountain Valley, Ocean View, Seal Beach and Westminster ScbQC>l districts compared with results a year earlier: BuUllgti:m Madl t1iloe PtP: seniors ecOred from 64.8 to tB.1 percent eorrect answers, nevly identical with aco ... 1 a year earlier. Tbe diitrlct fell nve J>Qints ln state raliki.Dgs tD sPell· Ing bUt stayed in the state '1 up.; , ball~ towards the froat 41Doiw, reportl indicate. "He's good aad mad aboat all of thhi, •• Drake said. "He bad ao idea that police officers wen oa the other side of the door." Police involved in t.be incident eQ1iined tl:\at they were amt to the South Laguna home by • .,..., ............ SEEJ<JNG SECOND TEAM Supervleor Alley ' New4-year Term Eyed By Riley ,die~~.~tWfllMi' ly ',•••i"'1ftlU. """"""I.LU•'~ and Schmit'• 1&7' campaign mana1er turned into a $200-plus one-man show Wednelday. Ttlllt'WaS ~ Woodrow But- terfield called a press conference in Santa Ana. paid $1!iO to poly· graph examiner John Hall and hired a court reporter for S50 plus the cost ol transcripts to record the proceedings. Butterfield said he aho invited Schmit to respond with But· lerfield to a set of 11 Butterfield· prepared questions concern.ini Scbmit's 1974 campaign. • Butterfield ad1Pitted he,. personally badn 't invited ScbJn.lt but insisted the supervisor mew about the event. Then Butterfield alone answered his own questions. After the hour-long polygraph test, examiner Hall announcecl Butterfield passed the quiz. Thal meant, Hall said. that )le eo t r,fl w Said: -Sebmit failed to report on campai1n stater:nent& of con- tributions that Butterfteld was the true 80Ul'Ce-Of $1.3SO in eam· paign funds. -Schmit wa present when Dr. Louis Cella Jr. siped a payment. guarantee ~ money Butterfield advanced to SchmWs campalp and that Schmit signed the stat&- ment aa a witness. -That to . Butterfield's knowledge Scbinit did nothina to · earn $1,SOO a month duri.n& bis campaign from a hospital 1hen controlled by Cella. Schmit bas denied Butterfield cbar1es acalnatbim. ' Hebuamdthatbiscampaip statements as aJDended AR cor- rect. that be did not lip a Cella guarantee • a witness and that be did public relaUou work oo the hospital'• behalf during the course of his 197trace. Newport C<:Jps Weigh F1;;hG~7.':;~t.~7PL•::1 •• , _Move to Grand Jury 'Thomas Riley said today he will By IOANNE REYNOLDS 28, have entered pleas otnot gull. seek a second four-year term on . otui.o..tr,..•lutf ty in the case. the Orange County Board of Newport Beach police in· The fourth man, Jerry Peter Supervisors in 1978. vestigators smd today they are "1orl, 41, is schedUled to enter his Riley was initially appointed to reviewing the evidence they've plea at the prellminary bearl.n(. the board in 1974 after the late gathered 50 far in the Stephen Of those four, only Kulik bas county supervisor Ronald John Bovan murder investtga. been released from custody after Caspers died at sea. tion before deciding whether to posting a $7~.ooo bond. The former Marine Corps takethecasetotheGrandJury. RescoandMaroneareheldon general then won an abbreviated Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson $200,000 bail and Flori remains two-year term of his own in 1976. said 8 final decision bas not been jail~ In lieu of $500,000 ball. Today Riley said be likes being made on the Grand Jury ques-Still souiht in the case are a county supervisor and wants to tion. He expects the review to Kutlk's wife, Elsie Caban Kulilc, hold on to the job for another four continue to the end of the week. 29. and his three business years. Bovao, 36. of ~ountain Valley, partQers, Joeepb Pedorowati, "These last three years as was slain in the early mOf!Ung Joseph Shelton Davia and Boy supervisor have been fultlllin& hours of Oct. 22 outside a Chriatopber Richard. AU are beyond my greatest expect&· Newport Beach restaurant. He named u c:o-coaspiratora in the lions, .. the supervisor from was shotninetimes. murder warrants which carry Newport Beach said. ''This tlme Uthe Grand Jury is to 1et the $S00,000ballforeacbsuspect. has truly been the pinnacle of my case in which eight people have Kulik and bis partners, wbo career." been named as part of the con-operated the investment firm Riley cited as bis major ac-spiracy that allegedly resulted in Prasadam Distributing, Inc., complishment his role in reduc-Bovan's death, evidence will have been linked to the Laguna mg Orange County's property have to be presented to the panel Beach. Hare Krishna Temple tax rate "to its lowest level in 20 before Nov. 22, the date set for where all but Kulik were one-- years." the preliminary hearing for the time members: He also cited the extension of foursuapectstatenintocustody. Today Newport Beach Detec· county services into south county Three of those four, Alexander tive Al Epstein clarified a state-- areas ''that. before I was appoint.-Kulik, 2.8. Anthoay Marone Jr., merit attributed to h1m Tueeday, edtooffice,reallydldnothavetull 23, and R8ymoad Steven Reseo, Untina the 1uspect1 to the and involved representat10ll in. wrunaBeiilchtaclllt:y. Santa Ana0 a~ a major !le-Ef:!:hf 8aid tie has DQ compllsbment.. p,.... P11ge Al evfd abowing any current The 6S·year·old county direct relatklllsblp ot the invm· supervisor called "the v~ ISSUE . ment firm with the Lapna problem of the Oran1e County S Beach temple. although he noted .Airport .. his greatest cbaUeac• · • • • u dffd&vit ftled Monday in eon.; and vowed the problem ''will be nectton with• a searcJf·'Wattant addressed during th~ next few quotes a police lnfonnant 'a5 say. years .. ' ma. the tlrm ''is used by the Hare Pilot Slows Meadowlark Crash Probe Federal Aviation Administra- tion experts probing the latest air crash at Huntington Beach's Meadowlark Airport say it m•Y be two weeks before they can ful- ly interview the woman pilot in· volved. Georgia W. Davis, 58, of 6841 ShP. suffered a compressed vertebra fracture, a broken knee, fractured ll08e and facial lacera· lions when her Bellanca K7 Citabria lost power ou takeoff Monday night and fell to earth. Martin Platt, aviOJ'Uct inti.Pee· tor for the FAA out of Long Beach, said he Interviewed Mrs. Davis' husband Gootge. ·an eyewitness to the cras1'. Wednes- day. Krishna Religious Temple te launder money made from transportation and smugglJ.n& of narcotics." * * * I",.... Page Al PROBE ••• 22. Police said today that the transposition figtires in a telephone number obtained by Newport officers sent them to the South Laguna house ln the mis- taken belief that Richard was OC· cup ant of the property. . The shooting of Kanne added yet another biurre twist to an ~calating story that began with a drug arrest. then a murder and bas evolved into an eig~-~ murder investigation c out to a bacQrc>und of alleged J.n. temationaf drug dealing. Laauna Beach police were re. ported today to be conducting an independent investigation in- to the sbootinl ol Kanne. · t ..... P.AJ .. ·TESTS ••• Mesa Police Nab Suspect In Burglaries .. Costa Men pollc:e bave arnel· ed a man tbey believe is responsible for as many as 75 residential burglaries in less than three months. Robert Victor Saragosa. 28, ol 15200 Ma1nolla Ave., Westminster, was arreau.d last week. Costa Mesa police Lt. Georie LorU>o said be has beel:l linked to 17 burclarles in Costa Mesa and about 3S in the santa Ana~ . In addition, lnveati.atora believe be may have been ln· volved hi a series cl buJ'darim ln Tustin. Huntllllton Beach and Westminster. Saragosa ls due to ap~ in Orange County Superior Court this week. Tijuana llolQCaust . .. . LOss· $20 Million \ fou1ht the fire for 2~ hours befor.e control1IDI 1t:. It was the Jaraest rare in tbla border city; since the Aug. S, 1l'lO blue that raaed the Agua Caliente Racetrack causiq more than '10 mUIJoo damap. · Only minor injuries were re-- ported and one fireman wu hospitaliz.ed. with lef bums, ol· ficials said. ''If the fire had happened when the l&orea were ope far basi· ness." aaid Antoe1o Esc:Obedo Gomez. state ~'""ciat fOllce d.irectar., ''tbae~abl7 Wm:ald have bef$l ne wa.r of •"1d.Jnl a tremendoUs 1ol8 ~We.•• Dorian's, described u 8-ja California Norte's largest de- pa,rtment store, was stocked with \ t .. a•w . . . :~utae Day Hicks, :t>ace-~l leader of :~Dston's anti-busing •l'llovement, was narrow· ·l~ ~efeated in bid for r~ ' eclion to City Council. • ~· t !filompany ~ccused I 1._,sui1 S.t.Ck4MENTO <AP> -A suil nted by the $tat..~ attorney general charges a Marina del 'Rey firm witt\•mtslead· Inc the public into believ'\ ing a high lncome could be earned durlni spare time without any selling activity. FIGJ1BES SHOW THAT in· crea1lil:a numbers of Americans in the eat-and-run society of tbe 1970s are eboo6inl to dine out. Compounding this problem. in the view ol industry execuli•es, FOR ONE TJDNG, the word "super" might eome out of supermarket. ' "We have begun to retb1Dk tbe I J • How6ver, fnduatry otflclals don't like to think tha $195 blWon· per-year poeery •tore business ls facing reYolutJonaf1 cbaJlle. · "We prefer tO eaJI it •evolu- tion,' " says VictoT Hlracb, the J'iled in Sacramento County Superior Court, the suit names Con· trolled Mark e ting Services Inc. and three 6fficers, Chris Graham, Ray Perls~~in ahd _..._:_~--~__:~...,-~_;;;~.;,::.~~_..:..=-:;!.~~~~~.J!::~.;.-..;__..:... __ ~~~__;:---~....:..:...:...._,.;,;.;.;;::.~~-:---:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.:t~~~~~ GUbert AuslaJ¥. A SPOKESWOMAN for Attoruey Gen~pl B·u)le Youn a er, Flo Snyder, said more than 50 Investors made pay· ~nts of $500 to $1 ,500 to tbefirm. The suit alletes the lirni made untru~ or misleading represent•· tions and engaged in un· fat,r competition. llE SAID a fee or JJ~2 several dollars would then be malled along with the coupon ~the af- filiate, whO would deduct a fee and send tbe re&\ to ·th..e mainoffict l3ut the firm failed to distpbute more• than a few p>upons, many" af. filiates lost money, and none eamed C1M>ugh to recoup initial • invest- ments, besaid. . I S-H/F '.l'llouglat L s Angeles Supervisor Blxter Ward has suggested· a~ay for citizens to write· f eral laws through in- i atives., by acquirin.g a nttm ber of signatures to p"1ce an issue on the na- ti•n al ballot. Okays flikes ~Employees .. ~ By TOM BULEY :..-Of•hllrl'lletltatf ' ., range County ~heriff Brad Gate• has asked the District At· tbrney'a office to investigate a· lSOalh Laauna shootin1 In which .. e. of his reserve offlcen was ounded. ; §beriff's Lt. Rick Drake said (be decision was taken after nior sheriff's officers dis-· ~the incident Tuesday night in which two Laguna Beach police lnvestlgatore alle1tdly opened fife on rauve otncer Herbert Willia.in Kanne, so. "It was felt that we should •k some impartial agency tO look In· to a ·shooting that frankly dis· turbs us," Drake said. ..That'•. why we went to the district at·. torney." Kanne is reported to be doini well today in South Coast Com· e * * * * * * "Scfaool Testing State Seniors' Scores 'Sink' SACRAMENTO CAP> -Test seores of California's high school seniors sank in all basic subjects last year, disappointing school ofOelals who hoped t) one.year ·improvement would continue, · tbe state said today. The scores in reading, English u~4ge and mathematics had ri~n in 1975-76 after a five·year decline but dropped baclt in 1976· 77 to nearly their low point of two years earlier, the state Department of Education said. Measured against "national average" figures set by test publishers 15 years ago, California 12th-graders fell short in all three subjects, hilting the 42nd percentile in reading, the 33rd in English usage and the 43rd in math. I Bresident: 1 flelms' 'Lie' The 42nd percentile figure, for example, means that wllen the average acore was calculated 1n 1962, 41 percent of the children ill the nation would have done worse than the current Califomla scores and 58 percent would have done better.~ I • Si • .No Honor WASJDNGTON <AP) -Ptest.: dent Carter said today that former CIA Director Rlcl)&rd ~ms' milldemeanor convletioa for failing to testifJ fWJr to a Senate committee ls not a '':badge of honor" and that na- Ucmal interest.I were protected in tl)e handllng of the case. · Helms pleaded no conteat Oct. 31lo charges of failing to respond fU.llf to questions from the Senate· Foteign Relations Committee in 191S about CIA efforts to prevent th~ election of Marxist Salvador Allende as president of Chile. · ttelms was sentenced Friday tq." $2,000 fine and a suspended t""°·year jail term. His defense atfotney said then Helms would wear the conviction as a "badge of bonor," and Helms later said h~agreed. , ''No, it is no( a badge of hooor," Carter said in respon:1e ta• i question at his newa coo· ~cce, "and a public official aoes not have a right to lie ... -Carter said his administration lrib~rlted the Helms case and it w11 a "setlous problem that evolved in years put." But be • aa· bis admini&tratlon was· fae~ :with the need tO "uphold the la • . . to uphold the veracl· t1, the truthfulness requirement o( those who testify before the Congress and ..• to make the St 1Qdament we could on bow to pr.o; ect the 1ecdlity of OUI'. natkln. ti think the decision that wu ade by tht1 attorney aeneral, c. ntlrrned by the cou.rw, wu the ibt d islon and the best de-. qalon,l' Carter aild. "It de>a Ill 11 three of lhOse rcqWre- " ;I'he average figure ls so. But state officials say there is no way to compare California 'scores to current performances elsewhere, since oUier states have different testing programs. By contrast, studeiats In second, third and sixth 1r11des were above the "averaee" fieures in all subjects, and showed slipt lmprovementl lD most areas. The multiple-choice tests are liven each year to every student in the second, third, sixth and 12th grades. This year 1.14 million youngsters look tbe tests, officials said. Here are the scores: 8ecoad arade: Readina upo. 7 percent in the number of rllht answers and up from the 54lh to the 55lh percentile in ranldnJ. -Tblnl grade: Re~ up 0.3 perc nt 8Pd up from the 56th to the 56tb perCenille. -Stxda ll'Mie: Reading dOwn 0.2 ~rcent tiUt unctwiied ·at the 53rd percenWe; Engllah usa1e U1> <Seescoaa, Pa1eAZ> munlty Hospital and recovcrln.ir. aatlaf aetorily from bullet waUnds in the shoulder and lower baek Sheriff's reports i.Ddic to that La una Beach investigators Mikes Slusher and Don B~ flrCd five ehots into a liome at 21799 ocean Vista. The reports state that the of. fie en ama,l!hed a glass pane lri · the front door aftet they failed to aet any rapome to their knack· Fire swept through two partial· ly completed houses in the Wood· bridge Village area of Irvine late Wednesday afternoon causing an estimated $235,000 damage, ac· cordinatocounty fireotflcials. The two nearly completed ho11aes were among 27 homes un· der construction near the lake in W o o d b r i d g e an d0 were• earmarked to sell for $14 7 ,500 and $164,500, accord.Ing Co one Irvine Pacific Development Company official. The loss ls believed to be in· sured, the same official said. Investigators were wortbig at the scene early this monililg 1o determl.De the cause of the 5:08 p.m. fire that broke out iJl the home being constructed at 2Z Pintail and spread to 20 Pintail. o.llyPlllltUt ...... SEEKING SECOND TERM Supervisor Riiey F,....PageAJ RILEY ••. Turning his attention further down the coast, Riley said "ir· . revocable establishment of the Laguna Greenbelt can be as- sured by only a few more actions of county government." And, he continued, there can be .. responsible zoning" for the Irvine Coast and Salt Creek area of Laguna Niguel that "can ensure housing and recreational opportunities which will be the pride of our county." Riley spent a county record S237 ,000 on his 1976 primary elec· tion campaign, the campaign that won him his present two· H·arterm -Today, he said he will spend ··considerably less" in 1978~ However, he said, "It Is less likely there will be a campaign reform ordinance in effect by next June than It is likely there will be one (in effect) by then." Last week, Orange County · s upervisors ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to draw up a reform ordinance and in· d1cated lhey will "act" on the or- dinance when it is given to them. Rut Riley said the board might •decide simply to put the reform proposal on the ballot rather than enact it as a county ordinance. Or, he said, supervisors may enact the ordinance, put the measure on the ballot and then wait for the voters' decision. In any event, Riley said, It is not likely ther~ will be a reform ordinance in effect by next June. According to Riley, it would be unfair to candidates who might challenge lhe three incumbent supervisors up for election next year to saddle them with poss.Ible donation and spending limita- tions "when, as you say, we have our war chests filled.'· In the first six months of 1m, the five county supervisors col- lected among them more than $300,000 to either pay oft put campaign debts or to put aside for future campaigns. Since then, S\14)ervisors Laurence Schmit and Ralph Clark have staged major fund- raisers. At a breakfast last week, Riley supporters agreed to pay off bis campaign debt. And Nov. 21 is the date for a major Riley fund- raiser. Bike Course Seeks Water By PHILIP ROSMARIN CM .. Dll" ~Mall "'My question is," Irvlne ctty Councilwoman Nary Ann Galdo asktd Tuesday, "What if It doetn 'train?" DeMis E. MacLaln, aentral ,manager of the Municipal.Witer District of Orange County, asked by the council for assurance there will be water enough for new development, pondered. "Ultimately, we have to ad- mit," be said "we set our water from rainfall. "Jf that rainfall doesn't 'OCCUf,• we're not goinf to have any water to give anybody, recud· leas of what commitments we make." Nevertheless, MacLaln was able to convince four of five coun· cil members Tuesday that there will be enough water to supply Irvine Center, a proposed ?e- gional shopping center. The council voted 4-1, with Gabrielle Pryor dissenting, to approve an environmental im· pact report on the center. The re- port was held up Jor two mon~ while officials from MWDOC and the Jt"Vioe Ranch Water Dlltrlct tried to demonstrate water availabillcy. The council insisted thal before it approved the document, it should be shown that current water users won't be asked to SCORES ••• 1.1 pereent, spelling unchanged,. and total language score up from the '9th to the Sl.st percentile; math up 0.3 percent and up from the soth to theSlst percentile. -Twelfthp-ade: Read1n1d9wn o.s pettent and down from the Ord to the "2nd percentile; Enellsb usage down 0.4 percent., spelling down ,1.2 percent, and total language score down from the 34lh to the 33rd percenWe; math down 0.7 percent and down from the 44th to the '3rd percen· tile. Comparison or scores showed that girls did better in reading and boys in mathematics at all levels. The difference in math was slight in grade six and more pronounced in grade 12: Also, test scores were related to parents' occupations. Chlldren of exe<:utives, professional and managerial workers scored highest, followed by 4 'semi· professionals," includin1 clerks, sales workers and technicians; skilled or semi-skilled workers; and unskilled workers and welfare re<:ipicmts. *· * * F,....PageAJ TESTS ••• ranking climbed to the top 15 per- cent, aneightpercentincrease. Mathematics, 84.7 percent cor- rect, an increase from 61 percent a year earlier. State ranltlngs climbed b:Y 11 percent to place among cantomla 's top 19 per- cent. Twelfth grade: reading, seniors scored 67 .3 percent cor-T he Irvine city bicycle rect answers. a drop from •.2 motoc.ross course at Jeffrey &nd • perceut in tm-78. Their sta~ Barran~a roads will be fUfillsbed rankingslippedfivepercenttothe w~ter_ lin~ for irrifation ana upper~percent. drinking, 1f the Irvine Ranch Written expression, 66.9 per- Water District agrees to help pay cent correct and 1.2 percent im- costa. provement. Statewide rankinp Motocrosa ortaDJlens and sup-jaJD1ftd seven percent to become porters bad complained tbat atr thestate'supperlOpercent. ~endance at ~ course mt1bt be Spelling, 71.2 percent correct, a improved if at were spruced Ul) one percent drop. Ranklnes fell and a waterfountain provided. from the top seven percent in The improvements partially 1915-78totheupperllpercentlaat will be paid from a mo&oc"* year committee contla1ent!y Math. 69.8 percent answered fund-$1,700. City Mana1er correcUy, a drop from 12.4 per- Willlam WOOllett Hid he ~ cent a year earlier, In statewide the IRWD will PPY meter connec--rabk.lngs the district slipped 10 doD ~. The dlstrict'a Jnltial pettentfromttteuppereightper-reactlon was Wve. l;ie aaid. cent ln 1975-76 to the uppe 18 per. c~tln1971H'T. conserve more water to aUbsldlie the new development. The eowa~ll twtber approved. by a 3-2 vottf, with ¥rs. Pryor and Mrs. Gaido on the short •lde, residential developmerJt permits 'o begin planning two Turtle Rock apartment projects de· layed for the same reason. Mra. Galdo suuested, "We ou1ht to consider holding all permits until it rains." "We have reasonable con- fidence th'-t it will rain," MacLain salCI, and added that if it does, •'there's a reasonable certainty that we'll have ade· quate water supplies for at least the next decade." · MacLaln sa1d the State Water Project reservoirs have supply enough for six years or drought. Tbe dr<>U1ht LI entering its third year. ••Essentially the State Water Projed is in trouble right now." But Southern California hasn't drawn on those supplies for a year, relying on Colorado River water and groundwater basin supplies. MacLaln said there remains 50 million .acre feet of Colorado Rlver ~torafet enouch to last three Yfal'S "easily." Mrs. Pryor was unconvinced. "I think Uie-lssue i5 clear to everybody here," ale said. "It's that we may have enough water- or we maynot." Sail Course Cancellation Claim Denied . The Irvine City Council has de- ni ed a claim for $50,000 in damages med by a Costa Mesa sailing instructor who says Irvine officials defamed him and canceled a course he was to teach. The instructor, Richie A.· Moore, of 145 Cabrillo St., claims the course was canceled Without • cause last July and letters th•t made allegations about him sent to his propse<:Uve students. · Moore still wants to teach the sailing course, but maintains the city has refused to let him do it. City officials refused to com- ment on the matter. They also~ fused to release a copy of the let-· ter Moore claimed defames him. They said the Information is con· fidential. A claim is the first step in the process leading to filine a lawsuit. Missing Man's . 'J!ody Found ~ SAN PEDRO (AP) -The body of a Whittier man misslnl since Oct. 26 was discovered by a fish· ing boat about four miles from· the San Pedro Lighthouse, authorities said. Sheriff's lnveattcators said Wednesday the body, identified as that of Arnulfo Bender, 22, bad been shot once in the head. Bender, an unemployed up- holsterer, and bis brother-in-law. 32-year-old Juan V. Gralianne, were last seen by their tamwes· when they left Gratianoe's Sarita Fe Sprtnrs home about two weeks ago, saying they"d be gone a few hours, investigators said. Museum Sup~rted Th• Irvlne Cjty Cowlcll has voted to support the city of Santa Ana's efforts to e~pand that city's Bowers M*"1m. Santa: Ana offlciala bave ~tloned the County Bow ot &ipemson1 for flnanclal help. Alina Presence Human impostor Brian Moo.ring. 9, snowed up at Irvine branch llbrary as "Star Wars" villain Darth Vader. Science fiction program also included a special appearances by other Star Wars types, most of whom appeared as normal as the next space monster. More· than 1_00 children enjoyed the performances desp1t& a sense of the unreal. Vader Brian here appears to be demanding 1.o be taken to see "your leader", or at least the head; librarian. From Page Al PROBE ••• taken belief that Richard wu oc- cupant d the property. The shooting of Kahne added yet another bizarre twist to an ~scalati.na story that beian with a drug arrest, then a murder and has evolved into 'an eiaht-~uspect murder inveat11atioo carried out to :& background of alleged in· temational drug dealln«. Laguna Beach police were ~­ ported today to be conducting an independent inveaU1ation in- to the sbootlllc ot Kanne. COLUMBUS, Ga. CAP) -Claire P. Boutin didri't mince words in telling the Muscoaee County sheriff she was tired of re~ated letters summoning her for jury duty. I 'See if you can cet the knothe·ad of a clerk to put a notation alonsside my name 'old as Methuselah','' she wrote Sheriff Jack Rutledge. "I am '17 years old of age and if you want me to fall asleep in the jury box, I'll come. · "If I did, I'd vote to hant 'em all.•• ~ ! Clementean' s ; ~ Disabled . Truck Lo~tedJ ~ A San Clemente nuraerymaa : who left hb disabled truck on tis : San Diego Freeway ln Irvine tp : get help returned to find ': motorist bad stopped -not l9 : help, butt.oplunderthetruck. • j Jeffrey N. Croxson, 21, toll • Irvine police he pulled i.Dto ~ ; emereency lane ot the freewu • near Saad Canyon Avenu~: because of a fiat tire. : · When be retw-ned to the truclC. • owned by South Shores Nursery ... 366 Camino de ·Estrella, Slltl · Clemente, arter bikJng to·•· telephone, he found it looted. 'IOMISAU.EY • Ot ... °""' l'UltSUff · Qrange County Sheriff Brad Ga h asked the Di.strict At· toi'.bey's otfice to investieate a · SO h Loguna shooting in which 9ne of his reserve officers was }VOUDded. · Sberilf's U . Rick Drake said the decision was taken after il!tnior sheriff's officers dis-· cuss~ the incident Tuesday niaht . * * * ~hool Testing in which two La(Ulla B acb police invest11atora all IC 'I opened fire on resene offt HerMrt WUllam Kanne, 50. "It was felt that we ahO\ild k some impartial a1eney to lodll ln· to a shootinf that frwly,· db· turbs us," Drake said. ''T!lat'a why we went to the district at·. tomey." Kanne is reported to be dolDi well today in South Cout Com· - a * * * State Seniors' ,_ Scores 'Sink' SACRAMENTO (AP> -Test seores of California's high school seniors sank in all basic subjects la$'t year, disappointing school officials who hoped a one-year ·improvement would continue, the state said today. f)i.etlwaelah' ·~~ Excuaed COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) 1 ·· -Claire P. Boutin didn't -mince words in telling the : .. ¥uscogee County sberiff • be was tired or repeated :~ettera auo:unonint her; for. :!joey duty. ; "see ti you un 1et ti\• --~otbeadOI ael•k topuia notation alontttde my 11.•ame 'old as Methuselah'," sbe wrote . Sherm Jack Rutledge. "I : • am 77 years old ol age and ~ .!if you want mo to fall · . asleep in the jury box, I'll I ••,come. I . "If I did, I'd vote to bang ·•em all." 1 • "'· Superior Court Judge ~John Land said Mra. : ... 13ouUn would be excuaed from further jury sei"vice. . SJm,Blamed .,, . • In LB Fire The noon-day sun, filterin1 through a water bottle onto a waU, aprked a fire in Laguna Beach WfK!ne!Ctay,flremenaaidtOday. . Ftre Capt. Jerry Johnson aaid ill~ fire erupted at the home ot N.F'. Zava, 480 Thalia St. sbortlY after noon but was quickly e:1dbiaulabed by members of the teStreetfaredepartment. tructural damage was limited to f150, Johnson said, with $30 to tsotthe kitchen area. Johnson said such fires are not otnmou, but added thtrewuooe 1 the north end ol town m whicti em~y water b'ottle was set fdQ(llll a wooden porch. The scores ln reading, En1llah usage and mathematics had risen in 1.975-76 after a five-year decline but dropped back in 1976· 77 to nearly their low point Qf two years earller; the state Department of Education said. Measured against "national average" figures set by test pu blisbers 15 years aro, California 12th-graders fell abort in all three subjects, hittina the 42nd percentile 1n reading, the 33rd in Enallsb usage and the 43rd in math. The '2nd percenW& naure, for example, means that when the average score was calculated bl 1962, 41percent04 the cbildten iD the nation would have done c:u ™i a pcrctnf76<*14hlVe Tests $20 Million Fire By GARY GRANVILLE OI .. D•lr ltlll SWff Fifth Distrlct Supervisor Tbomu Riley said today he wUl seek a tour-yee-term on tbe Or•n•e County Board of Supervisors in 1978. Riley was initially appointed to the board in 1974 after the late county supervisor Ronald Cu pen died at sea. The former Marine Corps general then won an abbreviated two-year term of his own in 1976. Today Riley said he likes being a county supervisor and wants to hold on to the job for another f~ years. · "These last three years as supervisor have been fulfilling beyond my greatest expecta· lions," the supervisor from Newport Beach said. "This time 0 .. .,,. .............. SEEKING SECOND TERM Supervisor Alley has truly been the plnnacle otmr catreer." Riley eiled as his major ac· complishment bis role in reduc· Ing Orange County's property tax rate "to its lowest level in 20 years." He ~ cited the exteMiOD of county services into south county areas "that, before r was appoint· ed to office, really did not have full and involved representation ln Santa Ana" as a major ac- complishment. The 65 -year-old county supervisor called "the vexing problem of the Oranee County Airport" his greatest c:hallenge and vowed the problem .. will be addressed during the next few years." Turning his attention further down the coast, Riley said "ir· revocable estabJlabment or the Laguna Greenbelt can be as- sured by only a few more actions of county government." And, he continued, there can be "responsible zoning" for the Irvine Coast and Salt Creek area of Laguna Niguel that "can ensure housing and recreational opportunities which will be the pride of our county." Riley spent a county record $237 ,000 on his 1976 primary elec· lion campaign, the campaign that won him his present lwe>- year term. Today, be said be will spend "considerably less" in 1978. However, be said, "It is less likely there will be a campaign reform ordinance in effect by next Jwie than it is likely there will be one (in effect) by then." Last week, Orange County supervisors ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to draw up a reform ordinance and ln· dicated they will "act" on the or· dinance when il is given to them. But Riley said the board miC}lt ·decide simply to put the reform proposal on the ballot rather than . enactitasacounlyordinance. Art Students Reap ·$42,250 From Fest • Students of the arts reaped • benefits from this year's Festival or the Arts success in the form of awardJ, scholarships and grants totaling $42,2SO. , Festival board member Glenn Vedder, chairman of the scholarship committee. told * '* * E',....PageAJ FESTIVAL. • hairpieces for the pageant for 15 years, last year as department head. And board president Schmitz received a lifetime membership award for his participation on the panel for the past four years, two of those as presidina officer. more Chan 100 general members this week awards from the festival were the highest ever. Seventy-four &rants totalinl $39,400 went to Laguna Beach High School students. Last year, the board granted $32,750 to high school students. Art scholarships went to 21 stu· dents, Vedder said, with another seven awards in dance, 11 to drama students, lS to musicians and 20 awards in writing this year . Grants to other organizations this year include $1,000 to the Laguna Beach School of Art, $1,000 to UC Irvine, a $350 Festival of Arts scholarship to Saddleback College, Roy Ropp best painter prize for S400 IUld the William Martin History prize of $100. ' ~"'=-WA.SRING'l'ON <A~'~ l'Ttln· dent CM~er said today th t former~~ Director Richard Helm a• mitdemeanor conv lion foft f 8.lliri1 to testily fWb' JO a Senate committee ts not a "badce of honor" and that na· tionaJ 'lnt.eresta we"" proteeted in the b81ldliiig Of the case. ~ .... Miff ..... JlelrJJS Plead«! DO contest Oct. 31 to charges ol t~ to "8poaid f\illy toquestioosfroso the Senate Foreicn Relations Couu:lilttee in 1975 about CIA et.forts to prevent TOP TEACHER Und• Fortune tbe election Of Marxlst Salvador AlleDde as presideotof ~ . Teachers Fortune, Muntean HvnDred Helms was sentenced Friday to a $2,000 fine and a suipeaded two-year jail term. His defense attorney said theo Helms would wear the conviction u a "badge of honor," and Helms later said be agreed. "No, it is not a badge of honor," carter said in response to a question at bll news con· ference, "and a public off\clat does not have a right to Ue." Two Capistrano Unified School ·District teachers, Linda Fortune and Thomas Muntean, were commended this week by trustees as the district's t.eachers of the year. Mrs. Fortune teaches ln the Mentally Gifted Minor program, grades four and five, at the Rlchar• Henry Dana Elementary School in Dana Point. She is a graduate of UC Berkeley and Jives with her husband and children in South Laguna. Muntean has taught six years at Marco Forster Junior Hl1h in Sao Juan Capistrano, where he ls currently foreign language department chairman and ei1bth grade adviser. He ii a graduate of UC Santa Barbara and has done graduate work at UC Irvine and at the University of Guadalajara. • Muntean teaches Spanish and home economics. He lives with bis wife and son in Lake El.5inore. .Steven. Pendergast Rite~ Sei SaturdaY.' Funeral services are planned ln Laguna Beach Saturday for 19·year-old Steven Pendergast, who died Wednesday after a two.- week st.ruule to survive an Oc:t. 24 auto accident in Laguna Niguel. Rosary will be recited at 9:45 a. m. and a funeral Mass celebrated at 10 a.m. at St. Catflerine's Catholic Church. In· terment will be at Pacific View Memorial Park in Newp9rt Be~ch. Visitation at Pacific View Mortuary will be on Friday from 4to9p.m. Driving the <:ar in which Mr. Pendergast was injured was James .fbddell, 18, of20 Vista de Catalina in South Laguna. The two teenagers were graduated together in June from Lagun.:i Beach High School. Mr. Riddell died or his injuries four days after the crash. Mr. Pendergut was de.scribed by Laguna Beach High School of. ficlals as a former student who was "very well liked." He played on the varsity basketball team and participated in the school's automotive repairs program., Officials at Mission Communi· ty Hospital in MIB~ion Viejo said the young accident victim re- m ained conscious to the end. He is survived by bis parents, Donald and Diane Pendergast. with whom be llved at 30842 Drift.wood Drive lD South tquna Laguna; by a sister, Kathleen, and by grandparents. Carter said his administration inherited the Helms case and it was a "serious problem that evolved ln years past." But he said his administration was faced with the heed to "uphold the law • • • to uphold the veraci· ty. the tnlthfuloeu requtrement of those who testify before the Congress and •.. to mate the. best judgment we could on how to protect the security of our oatlon. ·•I think tbe decision ttiat was made by the attorney general, confirmed bf the cowu. wu the right decision and the best de-. cision," Cart.er said. "rt does fulfill all three of those require- meots." On other subjects: MCONOllY Carter said the nation's un· employment rate bas leveled olf at 7 percent. but that be does not think a $21 billion economic stimulus program paned by Congress this year will b&\re a Boy Nabbed In Bike Theft Fre•PageAJ A 15-year-old San Clemente youth was ln custody at Orange County Juvenile Hall todar after city police arrested him on suspicion of petty theft. Police were called tb 125 Av&. Palizada at 5 :30 p.m. \Vednesdaybysomeonereportin1 half a d<nen people fi.ahtlng in the street at that addrf>.la. \Vben officers arrived, they found the ruckus wu caused by the capture of ateona,erbJ: ac:tty resident who told police the boy had tried to steal a ble1cle from hlsbome. BASICS TESTED ••• answered Tr.7 percent ol their questions correctly and hnlreCJ in the state's upper 22 percent compared with other districts; third grade read.ihl, 91 percent correct, upper 14 percent. Sixth grade, reading, 74 per- cent correct answers and a statewide tanking in the upper 18 percent; written expression, 73 percent correct, top 16 percent; spelling, 69.9 percent correct. with a ranking in tbe upper 17 percent; matb, 70.2 percent ~or· rect ,nd top nfbe percent. * * * F,... P•,,e ~J .. ... •• aubstantial Impact bef'on 1*f~ year. ~ : The pRskleDt Hid he e~t; • to endorse within a few days f: modified version of futP.: employment lerislatlon thats$: as a loal an adult unem~IOYID~: rate no tiigliCr than .. ~~ent. , : IHDDLE EAST J : Carter expressed cone~! about "this new outbu*i· violence'' on the Iarad·Le : border, but said he was not ! demning Israel for wbat ! described as1etaliati raids; = : ... A, • SAFETY ': Carter said there are "aboqt: 50,000 dams that need to be 4':' spected wtUiout delay" to prf.: vent f\J.rtber tra&ediea like ut. · Toccoa dam COUapse ln Qe9rgli. "SACRAMENTO (AP) -A suit filed by the 1tate attorney general charges a Marina del Rey firm with mislead-ee t1l6 public into bellev-g a high income could earned during spare time without any selline activity. Filed io Sacramento County Supetlor Court, the suit names Con- iro ll ed Mark e ting services Inc. ud three dllicers, Chria Graham, llay Perlsf/ein and Gilbert Ausladfl. . A SPOKESWOMAN for Attorney General Evelle Younger, Flo Snyder, said more than SO investors made pay. m~nts ol $.'500 to Sl,500 to the firm. The suit alleges the ~irm made untrue or lnisleadlng repr•nta. ~ons and engaged ln un· lair competition. . ~ • YOUNGER SAID the firm had several l~els of participation, eectf re- quiring a· tareer inv st- FOR ONE TIDNG, the word •·s uper" mi&bt come out or supermarket. "We have begun to rethink the notion that 'bigger is better,' " says Robert 0 . Aders, president or the i,larketiDg institute. And the Neilsen people say the things about supermarkets that irk people must somehow be changed -things like lone · checltout lines, dirty stores, rude employees and difficulty in find- ing things. ~eot: ~ plan~ · ~ volved a COlltHct to a -onsumer-Jnveator to Rl!llt.:~~ \eco e an .. affiliate," who cwalb' a proc for an inttodQc coupon pJ'Olt&m. Younger said coupons, ()ffering such items u jewelry or cuUery, were printed and distributtf:t tD busfuesses such u g~ stations and car wash "hich wou14 1ive the to customers. • t . . . , HE SAID a fee of 'several dollars would then be malled alone • :with the coupon to the al· S-iliate, who would deduct ,a lee and send tho. rwst to ··»te mairloftice. Bµt the firm f alled to distdbute more than a few· coypons, many 81- tjUateS l06t mooey. an<\ none eatried enouell ecoup i~al in.est-.m tl,be • BBSIDq FACING increasid2 competition from convenUonal restaurants and last-food establlshibents, the supermarket industry aays lt ta 1pending m~ than ever for food, hired help and energy. Because of thew factors, of·· ficials cxmcede, increased com· petition isn't likely to result in any reduction Jn grocery store prices. To keep profits a&eady without price bikes, food chains must lure competitors• cbatomen, then c&d fuel and la~r costs. Of- ficials say. "The last two yeara, competi- tion bas just been)>rutal," Hirsch " says. "Every retailer is Ujing to c~ment a foothold in the market. to find hi! niche." • , . La Madera Classes Using El To~o ~h S~ool By LAURIE KASPJ;R ~ , .. 0.11, "914 IWf "Okar.,." announced the teacher. 'here comes lunch " With ~t. Karen Perkins, a marine science teacher with the Oranae County Department of Education. pulled pink, pre- served squid from a bucket and began passing them to her stu- dfn~. traipse acros.t t,lli ~lo .uend class in ooe of the ,bi&h scbQOl'J. scienu labl. Before the Lake Fore.st elementary sctiool opened in~ tember, many people feared tlit .problems would develop becftle lhe t.Wociebools were so clon. ( f Crittenton ad· iniatrators said it is moo for a baby's ad and complexion lo age in the 1S hours ter birth. They said tags were made for e baby lo correct a isspelling of the other's name. ems ; ught -1.>:. I I • The California 'As- sociation of PbyeicaUy Handicapped of S6uth Orange County ii aeelC ing used ctothlltg , household goods, toys and trivia fdc an au«loo. to be ~Nov. 1.9 froQl 10, a.m. to4 p.m. aivons Shopping Center, San , J'uanCapiMrano . I •rtllld't OlllH •• Opftt . , B\15iness Systems Friducts, Inc., lrvine, bas added a new full-servioe branch olfJce to its network... 1 • The new offtt:e local'ecl at .so E. Carson Plan· A~ ..... Ce11t.,,.. ~~ Industries Inc./ Irvine, has purchased Centuey MAchine~ Santa Ada, and moved bOtb com-, panles to a new facility at 3186-E Airw~ Ave .• Costia Mesa. Allied make5 aircraft parts for local equipment manufacturers. • • Tom Bender has been promoted to iroup pro- <!uct manager for contact lens products for Allergan Ptiar111aceutlcals, Irvine .. ,. He has been with AUei;gan fortbepastll yettrs. Prior to his new position here, he was district manager in the Dallas area. • • R. Gregg Winn, Huntington Beach, has joined the loan staff at Irvine National Bank, Irvine. He has been involved in all phases of banking lOcluding bookkeeping, ~"telMl",-nctiting, put,lic reJaUons and branch manaiement. . I • . ·' Donat.ions can be left at tbe home of Mrs. Cleova W-elnert, 33222 •PatoAJtO, Dana Pblnt. ; Arrangements fOJt'plck· llP can be made by call-· tne 496·2836. Peter L. Inman, Irvine, has been named vice president of Corporate Realty, a brokerace firm. He is {O~ ,P¥.Waeer of c~ · est.\ IF the IrVi"neCOmpan)'. ' ' · ~ ' ' He is responsible for ·~ ime cl Uie p~ fesstOl\aJ.Sales staff spedklialng 111 commercial and industrial real estate brokerage, development con· sultation ~d development of real estate properties. . . ~rgeso?, '. o Spe•\ Peter Brennan has been named to the newly created P<)6itlon of natlbnal s J}es manager at the commercial systems cijvj:;ion of Computer Auloma· U6n,lnc .• ~rvioe. He will ~ responsible for domestic sales ac- M a ria n Bergeson , tiV'tties relatl.n& to .SyFA network praceasini ho ts seekinS the 74th a.ys tems. He joined the~:H.visi~n in Ne,w york City in sembly District s~at tM'S as eistern regiorutl salo inanaaet and moved n 1978, wlll add~~ss to Ir\rloe earlier this year as western l'i!glonal sales be Laguna Nigue l manager. , epublican Women's ~. 'Club on Wednesda7 at 7ft..T • l L"' · ·-~~b~l Niguel ~pantry f. .. ~. zgue. ~ • .,r~q,p The 10 a.m. nieeun1 ., . m include election and Pl 111 u· · wtallation of offieen in Q1tS 1r.1..ee nu addition to 'Mt"s . 1 '.'!·~ , ~erseson 's ~d~ress on "'A. bushiess meetiJJi'"1f'the t..atuna Niguel Com-6:.~ RHPO!'Slb,1,hty in a rouutty ,\ISQClatioo WiU be held Monday; at 7:30 'i1'r.,ee Socbiety · . , p..p1. ift the. <ff)ces of tbe MOuttDn Niguel Water. Dis· ..... unc eon reserva-U'lct.a'7500uaPa.zltoU. UOlia , at 15.:;o per person, 1 ~actbn secretaey Susie Rine said there wlll Jnay be made by calling 1 be no speak~ at. the monthl1 meeting. For more in· u t b Ct aw r or d l?-t fosmat:i calHier at 493.0Q't(. 496·0778 or l!ou i~e1 1 , Ctarner. •95-5005. .. v ',, . ; ' 7 BJ K.\111Y CLANCY • OUlle 0.IY f'llllUt.a" Students in the Newport-Mesa Dnilied School District. acored in tl$e top 12 to 27 percesat of CJllfornia school dislricta, ac- eordln1 to res~ts of baalc akilb jest.a released today. Newport-Mesa's bi1best test ,.,9res came in 12th grade read' lilt. where seniors tested last ~eJr ranked among California's * * * State's Scoring ·Declines SACRAMENTO CAP) -Test 'Scores of California's hiib school seniors sank in all basic subjects last year, disappointing school cdficials who hoped a one-year iD:iproveme•t would continue, the state said today . • The scores ln reading, English bsage and mathematics had rt.en in 1975-76 after a five-year Clfcline but dropped back in 1976· 77 to nearly their low point of ttito years earlier. the state ~partment of Education said. Measured against "national tterage" figures set by test. publishers 15 years ago, California 12th-graders fell short 1)a all three subjects, hilting the qnd percentile in reading, the 3:tlid in English usage and the .'-'rd in math. ·~·.,..,... 'NO RIGHT TO LIE' Carter Mfft• PreH President: Co11iity Teen · Knifed iJy rair ;.; Westminster youth is ·re-Puente, were captured and d.Ls· ~overing from a •tab wound to-armed by a swarm of policemen day, after leadinc two IJ\f?Y who pour~e,ut of headquarters motoE who were cbuUlg attbedeslu1mcer'scry. him ri to tbe front atepa ot tbe Polle. said the suspecta were Wat Police Department. accompanied. ~ two juvenile 6nce there, he waa knifed, girls, aged 15 and 18, who al- pofice said. Jegedly blocked tbe vlcUm's. The twosus~ts scheduled for ea cape as their boyfriends arraltnment in West Oran1e stalked him with h\Dltlnl Jad"5 County Judicial Dbtrict Court on drawn. • charges of auault with a deadly Slashed cnce in the side durtna weapon obviously didn't know the melee, the victim, 21, was where they were going Weclnes-treated at Westminster Com· day nigbt. munity Ho5pital and released. Robert L Lane, 23, of Pomona, Several stitches were taken to and Paul D. Jnnan Jr., 23, of La · closetbelmlfewound. . . Jury Nixed On Viewing Porn Stil"ls Officer Earle Graham tatd tbe two minor girls involved in tbe case were detained and then re. leased to their parents following the incident in the plaza area out- side thestatlon. He said they definitely in· terfered with the stabbi.nf vic- tim's fli&bt for refuge wide the police station Investigating officers said the episode was apparently sparked An Orange County Superior by a traffic incident on Beach Court jury that already ba.s Boulevard near 18th Street, viewed a number of allecedly which leads to tbe l>Olice statlcln obscene movies at tbe Mitchell and municipal COlltt complex. Brothen' Santa Ana 'theater will The young man eventually cut not be allowed to examine still in the aide wu forced to brake photofrapbs taken at .tb•t f acili-his car abruptly and awerve u be ty, thetrialjudgeburuled. approached tbe two tycliats Judie Marvin G. Weeks' re-stopped at a traffic 1i1n•I· versal ol an earlier ruling is be-controlled interseeUon, police mg challenged by the City of San-· said. ta Ana today in tbe Fourth• "They apparenUy tbougbt be District Court cf Appeals. was intentionally trytni to bit Judge Weeki bas recessed the! them," adepartmenllpobaman trial unW Monday tn the belief said. that the appellate court will rule Shouting insults, the two bikers on the issue within the next two raced after the terrified YOUDI days. motorist. police Hid, and be City lawyers, wbo paid f7 200 pursued tbe course of action he for preparation ol the still J>~ felt wisest. graphs taken at the Honer Plaza "He came straight to us," said theater by an \mdereover officer. Officer Graham. argued that the pictures are as evidenUary in nature u the mov- ies viewedbythejury. FNmPflfle Al The f'U"St seven days of the trial were taken up by the jury's view-SCORES mg of 17 X-rated films in the • • • theater that was closed to the public while the Jury, judae. lawyers, court personnel and a lone Journalist examined al· legedly pornographic material. Defeme attoroe1 JOHpb JUdne successfully ar1ued beford Judge Weeks that the ltlll photo. graphs were not representative · of the movles they depicted since they bad been taken out of con· text. • • , ....... oil ."' .l The ,juy is llein1t ~ to declue u movies abown at the Honor Plaza tbeater durtn1 the last two years as oblcene and· de~lare the theater to be a public nwsanc,. , CdMWoman Theft Victim A Corona del Mar woman no ported a $&,300 burtlary Wedne&- day. Sbe told police it probably took place last week. Bette South said abe first noticed a fftW item• out Of pllei -Third grade: Reading up 0.3 percent and up from the 5Stb to the 56th percentile. -8bth grade: Reading down. 0.2 ::rcenf5ut Wicbaa:iied ·arthe sar ~~fuj·~~~-'flaseup 1.1 pereen"' · I uncuanged,, and total lanaua&e score up from the 49th to the 5lst percentile; math up 0.3 percent and up from the sotb to the Slst percentile. -TJJdfdillllde: 8eldillld0\rin 0.5 percent and down from the 43rd to the 42nd percentile; Engllsh u.u1e don 0.4 ~ent, spelling down 1.2 percent, and total languaae score down from the 34tb to the aa?d percenWe; math down 0.7 percent and down from the 4'th to the '3rd percen· tile. Comparison of scores abowed tbat gtrta did better in reading and boys In mathematics at all levela. 'lbe dlfference in math was sllgbt i,n grade six and more pronounced in grade 12. * * * P,...PageAJ FIREMEN KNOCK DOWN BLAZE THAT DID $235,000 DAMAGI! IN IRV1NE"""s..t""" Two Partially Completed Houaea In Wood~ VIiiage DfftrO,.cl ,,...P.,,eAl RILEY ••• haa trWy been the pinnacle of my career." Riley cited as bis major ac- compllahment bis roJe in reduc· ina Ora111e County's property tax rate ''to its lowest level i:n 20 yean." He also cited the extension of "County services into aoutb county areas ''that, before I was appoint· ed to office, really did not have full and involved representation in Santa Ana" as a major ac· compU.bment. The 85-year-old ·county supervisor called "the veldq problem ol. the Orange County Airport" his 11'98te&t cballqe 8nd •owed the problem ·~ be addressed durtna tbe next few years." • J Turnlna bis attention f\trtber down the coast, Riley said "'lr· revocable establishment· of the La1una Greenbelt can be as- sured by only a few more·actioas of county sovenunent." And, be continued, there can be ••reaponslble zonins•• for the Irvine Coast and Salt Creek area of La1una Nlsuel that "can enaure bonstna and recreational opportunities which will be the pride ol. our county.•• . Riley spent a county reeord $237 ,000 on bis 1976 primary elec· Uon campaignt . tbe campa.tp that woa him Dis present~ year term. Today, be said he will spend "considerably less" in 1978. However, he slid, "lt is less hkely there will be a campaign reform ordinance in effed by next June than it is likely there will be one (in effect) by tbeu. •• Last week, Orange County aupervisors ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to draw up a reform ordlnuc.e and in· dicated they will "act'' on the or- dinance when it is given to them. But Riley said the boud mtaht •decide simply to put the refortn proposal oo tbe ballot ra~ than enactilas a county ordinance. Or. be said, supervisors may enact the ordinance, put the measure on the ballot and then waitfortbevoten'deciaion. In ~ event, RlleJ 1aid, 1t is not likely there will be ~ reform ordinance in effect by nut.Jape. According to Rllei, ll ~be uiafalr to caDdJdatea wbo m.fibt cballeap tbe three tiiewnbent ·~ ap for electloa next. year to saddle them "1Ua PQlltble donaUon and s~~ Wilita· ttona '4Wbm, u you say, we baye our war chflSta ftllid ... Jn the fin\ alx n'lOntbs ol 1&'7'1, the five ~ty •'4Mlfvllota Col· lected ~ Uiem more i.Jiii $300,000 to ~ r PU off,,Ptit camp• d bti or7t,0 put 4i for futtaecam~ Sln.ee tlieit; ..:-supervisors Laurel'l~e Schmit and Jlalpb Clut have staged m~or fund· . Partlallfl f:ot11p"leted Woodbridge lITnilS Destroyed by Fire Fire swept tb.roqh two partlal- ly completed houaes 1ft the Wood· bridge VlUage area ot lrVine late Wednesday afternoon cauainl an estimated $235,000 damaae, ac· eordin1tocountyfireofficials. The two nearly completed houses were amoni Z1 homes un- der constluctloo near the1-lue in Wood br id 1e and were· earmarked to iell tor $147,500and$1SC,500, accoriJlriato one Irvine Pacltle Development Companyofflcial. 1 • The Joss. i.s betieved to btt in· sured, the same official sald. Investigators were worklnl at. the scene early tbls momina to . . determine the cause of tbe O:OI p.m. fire that broke out in the home beinl conatructect at 22 Pintail and spread to 20 Pintail. By the time COUD\f. ftrefi~ brouah1 tbe blue udder eoati'ol, shortly ltter e p.m .• both st:rQC. tures Ud been gutted aDd ""9 termed a totat~JOu by !tie Of· ficiaJJ. They esttinatecl the two a· pensive bomes were '10 ~ completed. • • · Witneat1 aeid nun• lhootlns skyward into the early autumn evening could be seen from as far away as five_ mil . A C0111f orting G~sture Ann-Margret comforts Peter Firth m a :,cenc from the upcoming movie "Joseph Andrews." a rollicking, candid portrait of 18th century England. Firth plays a you~g man who rises from a servant to dally m the halls and bedrooms of the nobility. A Plastie 'Conspiraey' New Lincoln Movie Lacka Complexitiea By DAVE GOLDBERG NEW YORK <AP> Speculating about COO· :,piracies in the assassination of John F. Kennedy has been a national pastime since Nov. 22, 1963. Now Hollywood -why not -is dredging up Abraham Lincoln's murder. Was Lee Harvey Oswald the lone assassin of Keonedy? Was he the assassin at aJI? Why was behind him? The CIA ? Just change the name to John Wilkes Booth and the answers to the Con' federates, the War Department, the National Police, and you have ''The Lincoln Conspiracy," bemg ballyhooed around the country as the latest word on the events of 1865. The Civil War is fertile ground for conspiracy thcorasL~ Cora very simple reason -there were any number of conspiracies. Even the war itself can be ,•1ewed as a conspiracy by venal Southern slaveholders or Northern abolitionists, depending on wh1cbsideyoufavor. tually slain in a gunfight on Jan. 1, 1866 in Jackson,. Tenn. But even if the alleged facts are true, the movie 1s so flimsily put together it has trouble making its point. It lakes an extremely complex period of American history and makes it something out of a fourth-grade textbook. • EVEN MORE HARMFUL to the point the pro- ducers are trying to make is the amateurish texture of the film. Though all the actors are Americans, they are so wooden, they often seem dubbed; and the beards worn by John Anderson as Lincoln and Robert Middleton as Stanton are clearly false ones pasted oo about as well as those worn by children at Halloween parties. The sad thing is that there is a real need for his· toncal films if they are done well. And there are many aspects or the Civil War that could stand-ex· amining including hints of a plot against the ·-;;;;;::::;::;::::;;;::;;;::;t:;;:;:==i government m 1862 by some Union army officers and politicians. • But "The Lincoln Conspiracy" can only add to the distorted impressions we have of our history. "f!ORTY CAllAU'' A~WJtyAl~,ClrectdfW!Oll~, ,..__. tivJlmAllM, ~l.~P•ltl I • .,,_,.ted frkit~ ...s ~r~•t•~ ~ OK. S ii .. 'Wltllm•~ ~IV TIINltt, 1211 Maple St .• WHtlltlMter. Aettn•t- ~. TMEC:A$T AnR SIMI.., • , ............ ./. ••• •• ... CMol "11i,,. Peter 1.AOIWn .................. ~lc:IYt•Mernll lllll'I' loyl• ••.•••••. ··•••• ....... Wl.......,. T 1'VM1 SUlller .............. •· i• ••, , \I-<:.er1ll9 Matode Heyn ••••••••••••. ••••••• -Welqtt EMY l!ow.ot .............. ~ •••• St,.. Pnt.cf*cl MrJ,#ef"IDlin,Mn. Lall>Wn •••••• P.ty ~ICY Mt.~ ... "' ...................... ~lllAllkal Mn. AMnw................... .. ...... P«t!Jllle PMrKk .•• , •••.••••••••. "·••\ ...... ,,....~ reverses her mother's situation· and lands herself a visiting Tex· an. The latter role is played with tbe proper broadness and ~h· hewn eusto by St.an Pritchard. Patty Lovel~does double du· ty, impressive th as the office secretary and M rrill 's swil'llin& mother, who as her own .Young admirer (Jim Chapmafl.l. Ken· neth Mick as her tycoon husband and Patti Ible as an apartment see~cr round out the Westminster cast. DlllECl'OR BON Filian keeps the action moving thri>u&h an eplsodlc 13 scenes. and the brisk pace cootribUtes mightily to the show's s~ since some of its sequences are a bit on the talky. SO "THE LINCOLN Conspiracy." purportedly based on long-lost and long-suppressed documents, would seem to h.ave something going for it. Doesn't it: seem unlikely that Booth acted only wit~ a gang of second-rate accomplices to ass ass mate Lincoln? But the problem with ''Th~ Li_ncoln Conspiracy," produced by Sunn Classic P1ctur~s and featuring Bradford Dillman as Booth, is that 1t is so plastic, you 're likely to walk out of. the theater laughing rather than pondenng the poss1b1lities. ~!Ill m :"n11 I i~~~~~~~~~~ Those poss1b1hties -facts, according to the movie -arc that Secretary of War Edwin M. Stan- ton and a ~roup of radical Republican se~ators con- spired with Booth to kidnap Llneoln be<:ause they feared Lmcoln would impose loo easy a peace on the South BOOTH, THE MOVIE says. went ahead and killed Lincoln and then escaped after a former Con· federate captain involved in the plot, James W. Boyd, was killed and passed off as Booth by Stanton el al C1v1I War Times Illustrated, a magazine for Civil War buffs, has spent considerable time and money debunkin~ those allegations, and it bas done it convincingly The magazine's editor, William C. Davis. sent several people over the same trails purportedly followed by researchers for the movie. They found, among other things, that several com· punies depicted in the film never existed and that Boyd. supposedly killed on April 26, 1865, was ac- Ziegfeld Cast Set LOS ANGELES <AP> -M.J. Frankovich has tuftled up performers after a rour-monlh search to pl y Fanny Brice, Eddie Cantor, Wi1l Rogers and B l Williams in NBC's "Ziegfeld: The Man and H Women." Catherine Jacoby will portray the Funny Girl, l'tlchard James Shea will be Cantor, Bob Fraser wtl be Rogers and David Downing will be Williams. t "STA.I WAIS" lf'GI A "SMOllY l THE IAMDIT" ~ "'1'MI STIHG" lrGI A "THI G&OOVE TVIE" Ill V ......-rucn HJED • t MOYll". Ill - THE CITY SHOl'f'ING CENTRE ORANGE •53l l121 • CITY CENTRE CINEMAS S.A f'RWY !MANCHESTER EX.I G.O. 'RWV ICITV DR. £><.I A ..... ECI OF THI ACTIOM" V "GUMMU. IAUY" IPGI •"\."'1CJKTVCKY F«llD MOVll" V "GROOVE TUU" Ill ~ "ntlllSCUIASw(G) ..., MO DIPOSIT. HO UTUI~ OP IT, A YOU"U 60 IUHD" Ill V · "'MAKID ,sou· S9ect1l ,r~ 12:30 ID 2,00 p.m lnuptS-.&~St.21 CAT cm CIMTU CIMIMASt Incept S-.. l H...,.; $1.2' Open Doily 12:30 p.m. THUTUS-'-ORAHGI CO SENIOR OTIZENS $1.50 S . COAST PLAZA >&ltlnl•llSl ~1111 rair..- "THl WY WHO LOVID ..... (Nt _.S .. J1aT/tUM 1 ...... 1 .. Ht "NOM MOCH m. THiii'" ,,.., .. ,~"--~··· l' If lritttl SI $4'111 I 1111 '*"" "THE llSCUEIS" IGt ~ .. , .... ,,,... ~lf "IJDI A W1&.D POMY" ........... , ... ,/MM 1214 .. Ji4W.4 .. 9:4S S . COAST PLAZA Jt IO 1t11111 s1 wum 1111 """"' "1F YOU DOH'T STOP IT. YOU'U. GO IUMD" (l.t 1;4'Nl(l.At~.u.M· "Cl\' "'4CLI" ,,, .. , .... .. /'4T/~-lt:le . I 14 4 ....... IUI ''"'"" "OH, GOD .. CPGJ w-.n-"4--.1t111 • "'fSl.'1- tr».llJI .... , .... 1 .. 11 CINE MALAND UIOe..,,.., ..,.._~JUI .. ,,"'.. . "RIST LOYr Cit ~111:11 ..,u.t~M:Jt ~.....amMO" littt .. /loAT,_ Joi .......... " I • By TOM BARLEY OI U. O.lly .. , ... ltfff ' Orange County Sheriff Brad . Gates has asked the District At- torney 's office to inveslifate a · South Laguna shootin1 in which one of hia reserve officers was wounded. Sheriff's Lt. Rick Drake said t}le decision was taken after senior sheriff's officers dis-· cuss~ the incident Tuesday nlpt * * * Selaool Te•ting in which two Lacuna Be•eh .police investicators allesecny opened fire on reserve officer Herbert William Kanbe, SG. "It was felt that we should ask some impartial agency to IOok In· to a sbootin& that frankly dis· turbs ua," Drake Hid. "'11iat's. why we went to the dl.istrict at-. tomey." Kanne is reported to be doing well today in South Cout Com- * * * State Seniors' . . Scores 'Sink' SACRAMENTO <AP) -Test scores or California's high school seniors sank in all basic subjects last year. disappointing school officials who hoped a one.year j improv•menl would continue, the stale said today. I I I 'I . 'Methuselah' Excmed COLUMBUS, Ga. <AP> -Claire P. Boutin didn't mince w~ in teWnc the Muacocee County sheriff she was tired of repeated letters summoning her for juryCluty. .. See if you can eel the knotbead ol a clerk to put a notation alongside my n a m .e • o 1 d a s Methuselah'." she Tt'rote Sheritf Jack Rutledge. "I am 77 yea.rs old of age anCl if you want me to fall asleep in the jury bOx, I'll come. "If I did, I'd vote w hane 'em all." · Superior Court Judge John Land said Mrs. . Boutin would be enused . ffom further jw-y service. Carter Says Helms' Rap . . No 'Honor' ) The scores in reading, Eoclish usage and mathematics bad risen in 1975-76 after a five-year decline but dropped back in 1976-77 to nearly their low point of two years earlier, the state Department of Education said. Measured against "national averag~" ficures set by test publishers 15 years •eo, California 12th-graders fell short in all three subjects, bitting the 42nd percentile in readine, the 33rd in English usage and the 43rd in math. The 42od percentile figure, for example, means that when the average score was calculated ln 1962, 41 percent of the children ln the. naUon would bav~ done worse tbian current California scores &nd ent...-ouht .have donebel • The averqe ftgure iS so. But state officials say there lino way to compare California aeons to current performances elsewhere, since other stiles have different testing programs. By contrast, 1tudents in second, third a:nd sixth grades were abo'fe tbe .. averace" figures in all subjects, and showed slight improvements in most areas. The multiple-choice tests are given each year to every student in the second, third, sixth and 12th grades. This year 1.14 million youngsters took the tests, officials said. Here are the scores: ~-...-: Readlqup0.7 percent in tbe number of rtaht anu~era and m>Jrom tbe S.th Jo the tb~ inr~. ~ : ReadlnC up 0.3 percent and W> from the Sstb to tbe56th~e. ~ anae: Readina·down <See8COBES, Pase AZ) • THE TaADl'nONAL date. Nov. U. ii aUll Californ!a'a official Vcterarus Day. Next year, the oMclal federal boli· day also wUl return to Nov. 11. To help cleu up this year'• holiday tonfusion, here's a l'UJ)down on openlqs and cloliqs this Friday. Federal offtces @cl poot offtces will be open. STATE OFFICES, including the Department of Motor Vehicles, will be cloeecl. County offices and the county library system will be closed. Municipal courts will be closed. SCHOOLS WILL also close Friday except for the Irvine Unitied School Dialrict. Most banks will be open, but indlviduall planniJla to transact business should check with their own banks. Cities that will conduct businea as usual are Hunt· ineton Beach, Irvine, Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and Seal Beach. COSfA MESA will close its city offices Friday. Trash pickup in Costa Men will be the following day for those scheduled to have trash collected on Nov. 11. Fountain Valley city ofllcea alao wlll close Friday, but trasb will be picked up as usual. Photo Skills Class Set At Toro· High A class designed to help stu· dents imfrove their holiday p1c· tures wil beiln Tuesday through the Saddleback Valley Unified !'chool District's adult education prograrn. ,. , The basic pbotoerapby skills · r~s. ~ll meet for nine ween at i p.m. in Room 603 at El Toro meh School. Handling a camera, llgbt metering, toadine and develop- tng film, making contact proof ~heels and photo enlargements will be covered in the course Students should furnish their ·own camera and film. Allhoueh there is no registration char1e, a $2 fee will be collected to cover lhe material s needed for darkroom processing. ) Further information may be obtained by calling the adult education office at 837·6270. Front Page A I ""-TESTS ••• percent. Sixth grade, reading, 74.S per- cent correct, with a ranJclna in the top 17 percent; written ex· pression, 72.4 percent correct answers, upper 16 percent; spell. ing, 68.7 percent correct, upper 21 percent . math, 6S.6 percent correct, top 16 percent Twelfth grade, reading, 67.2 percent correct, upper 14 percent ranking; written expression, 66.8 percent correct, upper 10 per. cent; spelling, 69.1 percent correct, upper 29 percent; math, 70 percent correct, top 17 percent. statewide. Capistrano Unified, second grade reading, 77.3 percent cor- rect answers, with a ranking in the state's top 23 percent; third grade reading, 88.9 percent cor· reel, upper 25 percent statewide. Sixth grade, reading, 72.1 per· cent correct, upper 25 percent; written expression, 69 2 percent correct, upper 27 percent; spell· ing, 87.2 percent correct, upper 27 percent; math, 62.8 percent correct, top 25 percent statewide. Twelfth rcade, reading, 67.1 percent correct, upper ls per. cent; written expression, 86.5 . percent correct, with a ranking in the upper 11 percent; 1pellin8, 69. 7 percent correct, with a rank- in& in the upper 21 percent; math, 89.8 percent correct, top 18 percent. Gunmen Make Baul ROLUNG IUL~ ESTATES <AP) -Two a,med men escaJ)ect with $118,000 in -"••11'1 abd $3,000 oasb W•dnesda7 alttt holdinl up a J ler, pollceaaid. t"'l~P~ F,....PageAl EXPENSE ••• location. Each of the architects Knowles, Ralph Flewelllnf of Flewelling and Moody, and Lee Kline of Lee B. KllDe, Inc. - predicted energy will COJalinue to be an expensive c"aunt ol the cl1s- trict's budget. They suuested that trustees consider cuttinl on the air condi· tioning and openina windows to provide natural cross venWa- Uon. In addition to the costs l.n· volved, Kline said, aome of today's tightly closed buildlnp are "getting on people's nerves." The trustees, however, seemed far more interested in construe· tion management, a program which some Texas school of- ficials say bas saved them both time and money. In such a program, the trustees would not award a contract for the entire construction of a proJ· ect to one general contr•ctbr. lnstead, they would plan the building in stages and award con- tracts for segments of the work as the project proceeded with tbe advice of a construction manaaer. The architects offered differ- ing opinions on these proirams .. Some, they said, have been suc- cesses and other failures. "I guess the risk you're taldng with it is a people risk," Knowles said . •' "You have to know enou1h about your business ao you don't make gross mistakes," Kline said. During the meetin&s, trustees learned that they have an addi- tional extra two acres at an Aegean Hills school site which could be sold to the county for park space or to a developer for homes. Robert Ferguson, director of planning and development, ex- plained that the site was purchased at least 10 years qo when a lareer school was planned for the community. Now, he said, the left-over land la planned as a natural area. . Several trustees .. however, asked that he explore aellinc the land. Trustee George Henry ex· plained, "We're looklna at Cadillacs and we may bave to ridelnaVW." The trustees are sdieduled to meet with representativu of two more architectural firms Wednesday. F,...PageAJ ' CHAMBER. By GARY GllANVILLE OU• Dllllf "t•Ul.etf Fifth District Supervlaor Thomas Riley sald today be wiU eeek a four-year term on the Orange Countf Board of Supervisors in 1978. Riley wu laltlally appointed to the board in 197• after the late county supervisor Ronald C11pen died at 1ea. The former MariH Corps ieneral t.bm won an abbreviated two.year term of bis own 1n 1976. Today Riley aa!d be Ilka beinc a county 1upervlaor and wants to hold on to the job for another lour years. Froa·PageAl CARTER •.•• attorney said then Helms would wear the conviction as a "badge of honor," and Helms later said he aereed. ••No, it is not a badge of honor," Carter said in response to a question at bia news con- ference, "and a public official doe,a not have a rtcbt to lle." Carter said his admlnistratton inherited the Helms case and it was a "serious problem that evolved l.n years past." But he uid his administration was faced with the need to "uphold the law •.• to uphold the veraci- .tY., the truthfulness requirement ot those who testily before the Concress and ... to make the. best judJment we could on how to protect the security of our naUoo. "I think the decision that was made by the attorney general, confirmed by the courts, wu the ri&ht decision and the beat de-. claion," Carter satd. "It does fulfill all three of those require- menb." On otheraubjects: ECONOMY • Carter aaid the nation's un- employment rate has leveled off at 1 percent, but that be does not think a $21 bUlton economic stimulus proaram passed by Confrea tbls year wlll have-a substantial impact before next year. The presldent said he expects to endorse withiD a few days a modifled version of full·· employment legislation that sets _. as a &oal an adult unemployment rate no hiper than 4 percent. MIDDLE EAST Carter expressed concern about "this new outburst of violence" on the Iarael·Lebanon. border, but 18ld be was not con· demoing Israel for what he described as retaliation raids. SAFETY Carter said there are "about 50,000 dams that need to be in· spected without delay" to pre- vent further traa~es like the Toccoa dam collapse 1n Georgta. Funds Sooght For Schools Memben or the Sa4dleNc'k Valley chapter of the California School Employees Astoclatloo <SCEA> will be 1ervln1 pancake breakfuta from 8 to ll a.m. Saturday at La Paz lntermedlate School. Proceed.I will 10 into the Gary Pedersen Memorial Scbolanbip Fund, which baa been eatablllhed to provide scholar!~' f9r membua' children arandchildren. The fund wu named in memory of member Lonaine Pedersen's son, o~, wbo died in M~ after a lonf battle aaainst leukemia. . DonaUooa for lbe breakf-.at ere $1 per plate. The public ia ln- Vited. ·'T.heac last three years as supervisor have been fuJfliJJDa beyond ·.my crtat••t. qpect . ttona," the aupervJaor from Newp0rt Beach aatd. 6'Thls t1.m has tnlly been the pinnacle of my career." Riley ciUld u his mE ac-c:ompllabment bla role reduc· tna Ore.nae County's peny tax rate "to ita lowest le el ln 20 years." • H& also cited the extension of county services into aoutb county areas "that, before I wu appoint- ed to office, really did not have full and involved repreaentaUon in Santa Ana" H a m-.Jor ac- complishment. The 6S·year-old county supervisor called "the vexing problem of tbe Oranie County Airport" his 1reateat challenie and vowed tbe problem "will be addressed during tbe next few years." FroaPageAl .SCORES ••• 0.2 percent but unchan&ed at tbe ~rd percenWe; Enillsb uaare up 1.1 percent, apelllni unchaqed, and total laa1ua1e score up from the 49tb to the 51.st percenWe; math up 0.3 percent and up from ,the 50th to the Slst percenWe. -Twelftbsrade:Readln&down 0.5 percent and down from the Ord to the 42nd percentile; Engllsb usaie down 0.4 percent, spelling down 1.2 percent, and total taniuaee score down from the Mth to the 33rd percenWe; math down 0.7 percent and dO'WD from the 4'th to tbe '3rd percen- tile. Comparison of sew~ showed that cirla did better in reading and boya in matbemaUca at all levels. The difference 1n math waa slight ln irade alX and more pronounced in 1rade 12. Viola Reifsnyder and her dauehter, R1',th Fiolt (left) of ~tlanta weep at memorial services for 88 vicU.ina who ·died Sunday when a dam burst in Toccoa Falls, Ga. The only one still missing is Paul Williams, brother of Mrs. Reifsnyder. . Filrris' Still :Pli<Jtos Won't Go to Jury An Orange County Superior Court jury that already bu viewed a number of alletedly obscene movies at the llltcbell Brothen' Santa Ana theater \lrUl not be allowed to examirie still photographs taken at that faclli- ty, the trial judge bu ruled. Judge Marvin G. Weeu• re- versal ol an earlier nillng ii be· ing cballeng4!d by the City of San- t a Ana today in the Fourth' Diatrict c.ourt of Appeals. Judge Weeks bu receaaed the! trial unW Monday In the belief that tbe 8ppellate court will rule oo the issue WithlQ the next two days. City lawyers, whO paid $7,200 for preparation ot the stlll }>hoto- grapb..a taken at the Boner Plan theater by an wide~ver Offteer, arauea that tbe plctllrea a.re as ~videnUary in nature u the moY- 275 Ecilt 17 CostaM ie11 viewed by the jury. The first seven days of tbe trial were taken up by the jury"s view- inl of 17 X·rated films in the theater tbat was closed to tbe public while the jury, judge, lawyers, court personnel and a lont journalist examined al- le&edly J>Ofn91rapbic material. Defense attorney Joseph Rhine aucceasfully ariued before Judie Weeks that the sUll PbotA>- araphl '#ere not repreaeiltative of the movies they depleted since they had been taken out of COD• text. The jury is being asked to declare 41 movies shown at the Honor Plue theater during the last two years as ob3cene and d,~lare t®tbeatel' to boa public nWJance. • POLITICS I THE LAW nnROIT (AP) -A mother ol 13 who claims a hospital gave her the wron' ba!>f says she's ·disap&>omted tbal a jury could not reach-. verdict 1n her $1 million damage suil. But ahe said she's confldmt of vlctory Jn a new trial set later this month. A Wayne County Circuit Court jury de-li~rated 21h days before telling Judge John O'Hair there was no cbance ol reaching a v<rdlct in Catherine Tllornton's suit against Ctlttenton Hospital. O'Jlair dedared a mis- trial and aet a new trial N&v.28, MRS. THORNTON, 47 ,.· sa1d the son born to ber at· Crit.t.entoti on Oct. 7. 19f9, WU palm.printed, tagged and taken to a nqrsery.·Sbe charged tlfilt hospital personnel brought back an infant which had a Htbter com- pJ ex ion and lower forehead, a quieter nature and a dllferent identiflcation tag. RALEIGH, N.C. <Al>) -Iaat>ella Cennoa, a 73-year-old political novice given lltUe chance wben she Hean a quixotic campaip 1"th a pair 9f tenrua aboe1 draped around tier n~. hu aeoncf. a JlWl- nlng upeet over incumbent Mayor Jyla Coastm. A retired librarian, Mrs. Cannon rod Into Of· flee with the backing of ~ a~ to save ···~ ~!~~~~5~~~~':~5~~~~~~~~;..-!.4...;..,;_~..:...;:.;,_:,.::~.:=.;:~:;:;:;:;;::::;;=::;;:::;::::;:::::::::;::::;=;;;::::::::;::;::::::;:~ net1hborboods from developers and a coalition of youni people, professionals and academics. COGGINS, ,\ WEALTHY CONTltACl'O& run· nin& for a second term, bad the backin1 of the clt1'a buainess establi!bment. "I don't think aie bas anything to do with it, any m<lft than sex does," she said at a victory celebraUon. "I'm actiye and have a fair desree of inteJUgeoce. There were queatioas about my .,e earlier in the campaign, but Ulose were cibpellecl as people-toknowme." Mrs. Cmnoll, a widow who bas been acUve in civic and political affairs but was makln1 ber ftnt try for public office, said sbe us~er teiinls aboes ?S a gag at her flrat camJ>aild appearance after be- ing called "alittleoldladyin tennis shoes." , "Everybody just laughed," she said. "It's another one of those cllches about old people. I don't tbink most people who wear tennis f.hOU are tittle old ladies. ' Mrs. Cannon ~·­ceived 52.l percent of the vote in the city ot 150,000, Nortb Carolina's cal>ital. · Co11ins, 56, who was limited in bis Cllm- paignint because ol i.U stone sur1ery, wq bi(-Crittenton ad· unnistrators said it is common for a baby's h4=ad and complexion to cbaege in lhe 15 hours after birth. They said n~w tags were made for tlie baby to correct a misspelling or the mother's name. t ter aftu the defeat but --~ ..... ~~A-t:.NNON =::ta~e ~·~:~ as a candidate "by ttro or three orearuzatiQDI ho wanted to take control of e.lty lonrnJDent." SATURD~Y 1 O:Oo ~ to 4:00 P.M. . ~ A factory representative will be in our store toi::lemonstrate Charrnglow gas barbeques and to answer any questlons you may have. Come in See • Charmglow Barbeques in action. Compare them with anything that cooks outdoors ••• or in • Wide assortment of tartan plaid patterns in poly /cotton cttevella flannel. S, M., L.,XL Ju•t $}600 ' Sberl4a Jones"•' told that tM tJme ~iras not right for her to recite Dr. Martlail_Aatltv Elite Jr.'• '~I Have A Dream" 1~h in • talent ~ntest. The tssue bas set off a ~tudent boyc:ott and pitched the .&own of Boynton, Okla. hlto controveray. A bout 120 of tbe 246 elemental')' efld ~Ch school students who atten~la11es in Jtoyn(o~ Jttnalned 'Out of school for the •icond day Tuesday. Represen· iativea of the town •a ,lack commu.bfty were to meet today with the all-wtllle Board o( on th~ dispute. · . ~ The ~ble be•an whea Mi.sl.Joaet, a black wenlor' aald she waS dlsc~utUed frOl'Q reciting the s peech of the late ~-vU, ta leader at a high. school talent show 1 Monday night. The _show was lndeflnllely 1*iMt ~ • * , Life prison terD)s were given by a judge lo 'former Colombian model IHbel Tabacb, her :-daughter Patricia and Federico Fr.U of Lugano, ~wilzerland, for the s tabbing death o! a San Diego U"\Uinessman. 1 .,... The body of DoaaJd B. Tubacb, a wealthy travel ~ent, was found atuffed under t .\ervinl bu in bis om e last Cbrist~as Eve. His 3e·year-old tranged wife was described by Superior Court Judge Wllllam T. Low u most to blame. (--------) "She was the one wbo ro,nLE 11olicited Frank to commit PCJ r the m urder, pressured him until he did ll," Low said. '"She felt she had money coming because or the divorce. * Nevada Gaming ConimlJsioner Peter Ecbever· rla has been electe« to lt'e bOard of directors or Caesar's Palace. · Before his irervit~ on the commission, Echever- ria wu a Nevada •atuepator..and a member of t,be I state public works agency. He ta partner In the law • firm or Echeverria and Osborne in Reno. . Caesar~s World operates Caesar's Palace in ~ I Las Vdas, plus three specialty resorts in Pennsyl- vania, re-1 estate interests in Florida a?ld coniputer \ hardware and software companies . ..... The Justice Department said that a panel or in. vest1g ators will m ake a recommendation by the end of the month on whether to take any legal action against fo rmer Budget Director Bert Lance. The department is tryin& tQ decide if Lance broke any laws when he used corporate aircraft while serving as the president or • the National Bank of Gcorela. The department wants to know if the trips were for personal or political Pt.JrpQISta and if they violated laws •gainst poUtiaal contributions b)"'banks or misappticatlons o( ba~k fuhds. Invesll~atars a)so have been e>eaminlng Lance 's bitnk records, including O\lerdr~{ls by hiafamily. Arm!;t ror.g Stx str .. • &omwb!eh to choo9e all at )Ow ---· prtcu (aounda lib Dale whatalmame Oil thoM T.V. carpet commerc:t.ab}. ENSIGN ALL 12 .. xl2 .. MORTPEIJER. TANDEM OR TEA GARDEN -It-«.: ltCA 1.311 t 7'S 2*14• ~ lt~r J.JO.'. ne 42"'°-' RCApf .... IJ •h..-111 RTE .All I U 12~• .. RattPllf «>II ,,.. 1•'111-.... Rame4' .1:11911 lOI J.lo. ..... R•ll(o I 0. 6 JO 1H1 ••••• RapldAm 9 1•9 • • ~ lttlybl 1,50!> • 44 Jll.')+ 1'111 Raymncl 1 s alt 22t•+ h Raytl\n • 1 9 ffl JI._..,, Relld8at 1 I 21-.+ ~ A"m•'I S 7011 ,.._. ,._ Re.<~ .. 1 Z3 1"11+ .,_ RNV$8 I ... S 1 2A .. • •• AelCllCh ,M 1 1' ,...,, •• .• Rel1M$t M I 2 IS + '- Re,nEI 1 . .010 f7 JI\>+ "" Re lanGp S IO lSh + ~ RelOpl ~· •• I 3''n• oh RelGpf • • 17 :isi., ••••• Ae)l11pt o\ I %1.., .. It R-.UbCp -~ 11J 9~ + \lo AepflnS UIO S 19 U'h+ l<I Ael>Mtt • • 1-..,,., =::~~ .. ::~·: ''; Ui::: t.: Ret\'Oll !!I It ISi l•lit• .... R•vcoO A>ll ,. IMIS •••• Reva,.. t ., U\lo + i. Revlon H• M 4 + II;) Rull.-n .5QIO " Ila+ "" AHnnl .IO• a I~ ..... Aeynln t .50 a Ml u "'+ ,_ Reyln pU.U.. J 7J +2 AeyMe11.io 1 M ~+I~ AeyMplA.50 .. l 7~+1 AeynSe .40a t 2t , ... + .,.. Rlcl\CI> 1.10 6 2' 15\~+ \la AlcllM•r 'Ill t JA 22!'t+ v. =::?r':n'·= ~ If :-: :: RloGrpl .IO .. :U 1~ ..... RlltAkl .n 11 D 11"1+ h lt00$11W 1.IO t 12 1t~. "1 Aclllnln 1.10 IO 1' uV fH · "" lilDOl M .32 IO 1» 10'·• • .... Ao<llG fAO I It 20• .. -.... RQll\Gpf 11,. rto 112 ·-· Allt:llTI 1.12 9 20 1 ... • Vt Rotllowr • s .a 11'11t+ "' Rock""J 1~ 1 let ll~+ 'Ill RMlfllof 4. S.. 12 10 ..... AonmH t 10 111 3~+1'111 ROl\rlnd 11 •1 .-.+ 1-< ltollin1 ,ID It 1 tl ,,_ ..... ROllMlll • • 2 :J"-+ .,.. ROPer 1 611 S 17 3'\>'J • ~. RMer ... 13 al» lHH \t ~rio ..,,. 12 n-"" R°""a" .1210 IOS 2• •th AoyCCOI 1 I 74 '11°"+::':\'l ,llo110 •.ue s 119 $7'9-.,h aubOrm .61112 2 nv.+ ,!'- tlluuT09 .1' • 431 !Mot-... Iii yoer\ . ., • m ,. ... + "' UAL UCil IT'S NOi' TOO DI FEftBNT at American Brands, which peddles Jim Beam boUrbon ott'a apple sou Jeraens lotion, Jbdrox cookies. Tltleist aolf ' balll ana Swinellne stapl 1. 0 .S. tobacco b~lnesa •ccounts fo.-onl_y 25 percent of aales but 65 pe_rceatof proflta. ln short. ma.kin cigarettes is still a wa1 to mate • pllo ot money. MarlbOro, th industry le.ad , takes in monl lhallJ • SJ billion a year. Ollowlng in"\heailea atiridlnp. •cc:Grdina to the annual survey by Busbi.eU Week: Wwton. Kool, Salem, Pall Mall, Kent, Benaon & HedC , Camel, Vantqe and Merit. Shere of market ranees from Marlboro's 16.3 perecmt to Ment 's 2.3 percent. These 10 leaden acwant for 75 percent of the indualry'ssales. The muagm of t.h.ele ccnnpuMI may loee a little steep occasionally. wondcnn1 wbe're tho ~xt attack will come from. But none ls losing aey money. "Forty Car ts" is not --=;;:=~~which ·u bo en hrlned ,... ~•oo C4 ae com • Of A Comforting G~sture i\nn Margret comforts Peter Firth in a :-.ccnc from the upcommg movie "Joseph Andrews." a rollicking, candid portrait of 18th century England. Firth plays a YOUf!g man who rises from a servant to dally m the halls and bedrooms of the nobility. A Plastic 'Conspiracy' New Lin£Dln Movie Lacka Complexities By DA VE GOLDBERG NEW YORK CAP) Speculating about COD· spiracie::; in the assassmation of John F. Kennedy has been a national pastime since Nov. 22, 1963. Now Hollywood -why not -is dredging up Abraham Lincoln's murder Was Lee Harvey Oswald the lone assassin of Kennedy? Was he the assassin at all? Why was behind him? The CIA? Just change the name to John Wilkes Booth and the answers to the Con- federates, the War Department, the National Police, and you have "The Lincoln Conspiracy," being ballyhooed around the country as the latest word on the events of 1865 The Ci"il War is fertile ground for conspiracy theorists for a very simple reason there were any number of consp1rac1cs. Even the war itself can be viewed as a conspiracy by venal Southern slaveholders or Northern abolitionists. depending on which side you favor SO "THE LINCOLN Conspiracy," purportedly based on long-lost and long-suppressed documents, would seem to hav<' something going for it. Doesn't >l seem unlikely that Booth acted only with a gang or second·rate accomplices to assassinate Lincoln? But the problem with "The Lincoln Conspiracy," produced by Sunn Classic ~ctur~s and featuring Bradford Diiiman as Booth, is that 1t is so plastic. you're likely to_ walk out o~ tJ:ie ~eater laughing rat.her than pondering the poss1b1Lilles Those possibilities -facts, according to the mo\'le arc that Secretary or War Edwin M Stan- ton and a group or radical Republican senators con· ::1pired \I.1th Booth to kidnap Lincoln because they reared Lincoln would impose too easy a peace on tht• South BOOTH, THE MOVIE says, went ahead and killed Lincoln and then escaped after a former Con- federate captam involved in the plot, James W. Bo) d, was katlt•ll and passed off as Booth by Stanton l't al <.i,11 War Times Illustrated, a magazine for Civ il War buffs, hus spent considerable time and money debunking those allegations, and it has done 1t convinringlv. The magazine's editor, Wllliam C. l><n is, sent s'cveral people over the same trails purportedly followed by researchers for the movie. The~· found. among other things, that several com- pan1C's dcpaclt.'<1 in the mm never existed and that Ho~ 11. supposedly killed on April 26, 1865, was ac- Ziegfeld Cast Set LOS ANGELES <AP> -M.J. Frankovich bas turned up performers after a four-month search to play Fanny Brace, Eddle Cantor, Will Rogers and Bert Williams in NBC's "Ziegfeld· Tbe Man and llii. Women." Catherine .Jacoby wlll portray the Funny Girl, Richard James Shea will be Cantor, Bob Fraser will he Rogers and David Downing will be Williams tually slain in a gunfight on Jan. 1, 1866 in Jackson,. Tenn. But even if the alleged facts are true, the movie is so flimsily put together it has trouble making its point. It lakes an extremely complex period of American history and makes it something out of a fourth-grade l4;Xtbook. EVEN MORE HARMFUL lo the point the P"°' ducers are trying to make is the amateurish texture of the film. Though all the actors are Americans, they are so wooden, they often seem dubbed; and the beards worn by John Anderson as Lincoln and Robert Middleton as Stanton are clearly false ones pasted on ~bout as well as those worn by children at Halloween parties. The sad thing is lbat there is a real need for his· torical films if they are done well. And there are many aspects of the Civil War that could stand ex- amining including hints of a plot againSt the government in 1862 by some Union army officers and politicians. But ''The Lincoln Conspiracy" can only add to the distorted impressions we have of our history. • "STAil WARS" U~GI ' A '"SMOKIT Ii 1Hi IAHO!r ~ "THE ST~" INI Spea1l,rtP 12;30 ro 2.00 p.m.1 lnuipt S-..& HelMytt SI.JS I.AT CrYT CIMT'll CIM844SI Inc.,. S.. & H~ SI.JI Open Doily l 2:30 p.in. S COAST PLAZA >4IUto1hUI $41111 llllPU•u"' "'nff5"WHO LOYIO MF' IPGI ...... ,,,.,(\UM·~"'....,.. --,aoM HOOH nL 1HlHM -·k4• *''"'"'°" ~1~· ·-SO. COAST PLAZA the American theater, but In th bands Ol tbe pro,PC?r cutll can be a highly entertairiln1 eveoin1. The Westminster Community Theater has come up with the proper cast. Mofe 1pectfically, it bas come up with Carol Futan, a standout actress too lon1 absent from local stages. Miss Filian turns in a superlati\'e "rformance In the d em anding J/<r~~Aii;.: leading role of a 40-year-old, t w i c e divorced career wom~n who finds herself pursued by a determined swain about half her age. ,.. IAN The show ls a famlliar one, which hai; a good deal of mileage on the community theater circuit, but Miss Filian infuses the script with fret:h comic glitter. ONSTAGE FOR NE~RLY the entire production, Miss Filian is a splendid study in timing and in- flection as sbe gradually releases her inhibitions and allows herself to be swept Into an improbable romance. It is one of the pre· mier performances of the year on a local community stage. As her rich youna lover, Richard Morrill overcomes a bit or early reserve to deliver a solid account of himself. His motiva- tion is believable, though be coold underscore it with a bit more inte.psity. Tops in the fine supporting cut is Joanne Wolcott as Miss "THE• NAKED NIGHT" 7:00 & 10: 15 • ''THE VIRGIN SPRING" 1:30 EDWADS UDO THIAltl J4St Vie LWo, ~-..~-67WJIO Dil ~: 7:00 Ii f:OO SUMO.\.,, l·J.l-7·f