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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-15 - Orange Coast PilotI I ... w ....... POLICE OFFICER WRESTLES WITH DEMONSTRATOR Throngs Protest Appe•rence of Shah et White Houae DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 15, 1977 llOL 10, NO. J1',) S~CTIC>fll, 21 P'AOlS Blaze At L ea.t 12 Hart White House Battle Erupts • WASIDNGTON <AP> -Police and competing forces or dem· onstrators clashed violently as the Shah ~d Empress or Iran ar· rived al the While House today an<ttear gu wafted onto the lawn of the executive mansion during welcoming ceremonies by Presi- dent Carter At least four police officers and eight other people were hurt as pro and anti-shah forces rushed one another just as the shah was arriving for his two-day state vlsil · Mounted police charged into the crowds, on the Ellipse just south or tho WIUte House, and forced them back toward the Washington Monument, using sticks and tear gas. Al least 10 arrests were report· ed, including two at a companion , demo~tration on the north side of the White House. Flghtin& between hooded pro- testers, mostly Iranian students, Co ast • Wea th er Some locally denH J.tJe nlcht and early momln1 fog, otber'Wlse baay sun· shlne t.biOuah Wednesday. Lowa tonllht -48 to sa. Hl1h Wednesda, aboUt 70 at the beaches. and supporters of the shah con· Ltnued in so1pe areas of the monument grdunds even after the Ellipse was cleared. There also were incidents of shoving between the two forces on the north side, at Lafayette Park. Though the disturbance was audible during the official welcoming on the White House grounds, Carter proceeded with the ceremonies on schedule. Both he and the shah dabbed their eyes, apparently irritated by the tear gas that drifted even into White House offices and those of the Treasury Department, two blocks away apologized to the shah, a prime seller of oil and buyer of tJ.S. weapons, for the disturbances. "I've already apologized to the shah fQr the temporary air pollu· Hon in Washington," Carter told reporters as he accepted a tapestry pprtrait of George Washinetoo I from the shah. ''I thought he made his apeecb un· der difftcult conditions, but with typlcal streneth," he said. Police aave no official esUmates, but it was clear that the demomtrators on both sides numbered into the thousands. Order appeared restored, ex· cept tor a few isolated fiatli&hts well away from the White Houle, wlthtn 30 minutes or .th• irutJaJ club. <See SHAH, Paa• ,U) I Sup ... ·omes· ~opaf!ga " . . Damage Severe LOS ANGELES <AP > ..... Favorable winds belpec,t firefighters restrain a canyon brush fire that has destroyed siJC homes and damaged three others. Flre officials said they might contain the blaze by the af .. ternoon. The fire. originally spread by brisk Santa Ana winds through brush-filled Topanga Canyon, drove hundreds of residents Crom their homes Monday. Estimates of the size of the blaze ranged from 600 to I,100 acres. "I told my husband to grab' some booze and our tennis rackets and get out or there," Glenda Ros en, one oC the evacuees, said Monday niaht: But the northeasterly desert " \\-Ind died down overniaht and was replaced this momlng by a cooling sea breeze and some fog. L os Anaetes PoHce Sgt. William Achens said that "unless something unusual happens like,. a big wind," the fire could be UR· · der control by mid-day. City fire spokesman Jim Jef. fery said 300 city firefighters re- mained on line, with fresh crews relieving men who worked through the night. Jeffery said the only hot are remaining at midmorning 'WU stlll at least one mite from any structures in Pacific HJ«fllinds, but he said roads remained closed in tho area. •'The lire l5 burning very lo ly right now," Jeffery said~~ wind ls favorable and 19 blowig the fire back on itself. As Iona aa it continues to do that, we tiope to makeproeress." He said fire lnvuUcater» believed the canyon fire was a nartup from an earlier .111pot. ft Mond y. But h said n9 c b d bffn determined for th n (See nRE, Pl8e AU • ,., ... 0.:.1\.. Y Pl\..Ol s !!'t·•S Bas· Boy ·!~en Elizabeth Joyous Over News ·!". • llospltal in west London. :t:.ONDON tAPl -PrlnceJI Af\1fct¥ave titntl'to a sett~ niaa:ounce boy Lod ay and Qu4'en Eni.J;abeth Joyously brmre the n..-8 aboul her rlrst grandchild. <Photo, Page A3) hospital. My daughter bu Just gWen ~ IOR.ni"_.=~~ lb Ule 11-year-old princess intd tbe bab, were ~ted "fine " :.he bab.Y~ wu born at 10:'6 ..-=a""'m~.;.,.;.lociPllme. Pbtlt , ..A1'r1v1ng 10 minutes late for an 1rwe11t1ture at Buckingham Pala<:e, thC' 51 year old queen •told the rruwd awa1llni.t her "I apolo~1ic for bt•mg late but I have JUsl had a message from the .$., The queen 'a gynccoloe1st. Geor~e Pinker, had been called to the palace at 4 a.m. when Anne went ifltto labor. After a quick ex am1nation, Anne's husband, Capt Mark Phillips, drove her in their Rover sedan to St. Mary's Pleas1•re Pit 12 Boys Vnearth Buried Pot '!) :\ll' \Lr:STEH. Okla. CAP> -Authorities thought 1hl·~ 'd gott1•1111d nl 8 1..! tons of mJnJqana when they , ' hurm·d ancl IH111t•d ttw gn1ss . Tlw-. "1·r•· "rnng '1'111: p1l '" IH'l l' l hL· pol \\as burH•d several months ago has IH·1·11r1'l' a source for local users, says Pitt::. burg County Sheri If J.B. Orr "1 •\uthorit1t•s tried to keep the location secret. but a '· hewspapcr kurncd r1f the mariJuana burning and ,, pnnu•d a p1c:1 u1 e of 11 along with an approximate loC'atwn of Uw silt• Olltt·crs st.1kcd out the silt• and arrested two teen ,, ·~ ,;.1gc bo~ s \\ho ::.pent several hours digging up 300 ·, . pounds of man 1uana Tlw onJ!in<.11 81 .:. tons was confiscated from an ·· airpl.11w th.it landco at Ardmon'. Okla Amel Development · Hearing Date Set On Mesa Initiative 11\ n Orani.:t• County Superior c;pµrt JU<h!l' has si•t l>ec 2 8'-the dale he will ht!ar arguments on a hid by th(' J\rn<'I D<'velopment ('om pan-. to s1dl•hne a decision h\ the• ('1ty of <'osta Mesa to hold ar11p1l1.1t1H' l'll'cl1on next March Judi:c lh1rmon G Scoville set l~L' date after reading a lawsuit \~ch accus<•s the Costa Mesa ctry Council ofv1olnt10g tale law ,• f'rona Page A I 'FIRE ... trC'. Arson 10\C~l,lgatAtl w~re.M .. h~ S(.'CnC'. • , , The hrc "<LS nc·i;llrd in lhc Sao- 11 Monita Mounlains Just above he Pacific Ocean. sorp~ 20 miles ,, t·sl of downtown Los Aneetes. 1-'henrr s Sgt .Jack Jnnes said 1p to :ll> pt•rsons -,ought tern .1oran rPfUl-\l' m 11n evacuation ·1•nt1·1 sd uv al Pahi;ades roeh -.1 hnol I\ fl'\\ persons clecided to pM'ld :\tondny nit:hl there or re 11 ain• Jin an· a motels, he said fi<'fon· d.iwn, th<• fire was con· o•ntratc<I in a largely unoc 1111lect urC'a of Topanga State ('ark Th<' J.(ulkd home's were located 111 a nr1ghhorhood called Sylvia J',1rk in northern Topanga Can- ' on Many evacuees came from 1 h<• mon• heavily populated l'alisad<'s Highlands district ·' 6hin Los AnReles where the r1rc l.1\<'r spr<'ad Monday afternoon. ln both neiRhborhoods houses '' ert' \\Orth as much as SS00,000, fir.· officials said. i\clress Sissy Spacek, who t1<'rame famous in the title role of the horror movie "Carrie," was • m 11ng the people who decided lo ,1t1y • We've been through this hdore," she stud. "1''or years I vc had all my hangers hanging n,the same direction, in case of a ·1r.c in which I have to grab them n a hurry. You plan for these {l(lds or things." Southern Ca l ifornia is •q>urged at this time each year w Santa Ana winds. Moist irec1es from the Pacific Ocean ire replaced, often for several l~s at a time, by the hot desert ~Ohta Ana winds blowine from ht east. ORANQI! COAST DAILY PILOT . ~O. ..... CN\I D.t•IY ~ l<ll.wll!lw'llc~llC-· ~t ...... 9'\ .... " ., .... 1....,......, ..... tw..,.. 4.ltllv&f•t'ttftiq( ....... "' •• ~ .... "" ......... . ,..,."-,. ,.,..,.,, •• ""'°""" ,,,_., fflJi ("1•1 ..... _ .... , ...................... ,._. " \I•"•• .,_,,,,..,. ~d4111•NO' Y•111y .. 'Vf ~ .... ~ Solll~C..•I °'"""°..._100 ~ I\ o.,lbf~ -.,.,.,, •• , .. ..,_.~.ff\ t~ f .,..1 ... 9U'111.._,,..,. DIM\f tt ... 1. Wif\f ... ... Go,,. M•\.I, t•···•,M•'1''' ........ w.M ~~ft~dfftt aM ll"wbflWt JK-11,(_, ,, ................. c,._,.¥0_ ni-....... . llflltf in its decision. The city council acted aft.er members of a group which op·. poses an Amel development in the northern sector of the city pomted out that they have sum - c1ent signatures on their pell· t ions for the placmg of the in· 1 t1 a ti v e issue on the ballot lf the initiative is. passed, property currently being de- veloped by Arnet would be re· 1oned to single family status, an adjustment that would compel sweeping changes in the com· pany's plan for the area. Arnel seeks to buJlc! 127 single family homes and S39 apartment units on 46 acres of land south or South Coast Drive and north or the San Diego Freeway between Bear Street and San Leandro Lane. Members of the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association were earlier sued by Arnet for S2.5 mill.Jon in damages for their actions in seeking signatures for petitions demanding lhe In· 1tiative. Arnet alleges that the city council acted on inaccurate data supplied by members of t.m as· sociat1on. The company. joined in Its new lawsuit by developers Harry Rinker and George Argyros, was unsuccessful in ils Superior Court bid to halt the petition drive. It is argued in the new action that the city is, in effect, denylni a place to Jive to members of low and moderate income ramllies and minority groups by pecmit· ling voling on the initiative. Arnet alleges thal the de(en· dants are motivated by a desire to prevent inundation of the C~ta Mesa area by low income and minority sectors or the populace and are gullly of "night to the suburbs" thinking. wa~pruea~ T ll'lephoned the queen, who talked to her dt.41hter and then went to- the 1nveatfture. 1- Congratulatlons poured ln from relatives, politicians and the British public. i''ather·in-law Peter Philllps said "I'm absolutely delilhted for them both. l was hoping for a boy." ~ Prime Minister Jamet Callaghan 1ent a tele1ram to Princess Anl'HI that Tead. '"l'he nation rejoices with you and will wish long life and happine$J to your son and to hts pa.rents... r Anh·royalist Willie Hamilton a Labor member ()I Parliament "ho wants lo do away with the monarchy, reacted with less en- thusiasm. "How charming -another one on the payroll," he said The birth announcement wu posted on the ralllngs outside Buckingham Palace, and the Honorable Artillery Comp•PY at the Tower or London fired a gun salute. F1ags were raised above public buildings. Princess Anne and her husband enJoyed a quiet eveninf ut the palace Monday night celebrating their fourth weddin& anniversary with a dinner for two Th~y were said to h~ve been disappointed that the baby didn't come on thetr anniversary. "h1ch waa also Prince Charles' birthday. A nur~ery at the palace was ready and the child will sleep in tht' ~atin·trlmmed erib made for his grandmother, the queen, half a century ago and used for every ro~ al baby •incethen. Tt\ere wti no immediate an· nauncement on the baby's name. Orange Teen Dies in I-car Canyon Crash A 17-year-old youth died Mon· day afternoon when the car he was driving on a canyon road in Anaheim overturned and tumbled down an embankment. As it left the roadway, the auto driven by Randall Scotl Steele, 17. of 507 E Dun to~ St .. Orange, s11_.,ped a power p()le, police said. As a result. a portion of the Santa Ana Canyon area in the vicinity of Imperial Hithway was without electrical power for two hours. Accordmg to police, the victim . was drlViDC west on Santa Ana Canyon Road about 1,000 reet east of Lakeview Avenue when his car went out of control# over· tuf'n.ed and skldd&d o f the roadway. Police said tbe amuhed auto came lo rest in a concrete drainage dltch alter tumblh\g down a »foot embanlc ment. .. Bias C114r8ed SAN BRANCISCO CAP) -A Justice Department investiga· tton hu accused the San Fran- cisco Police Department or "dts· cnminatlon in the rendering ot police services" to the city's lar~e Chinese community. A shortage of bilingual orficers was cited as a chief reaaon for the problem. --~~ PROTESTERS MOVE IN ON POLICE DURING OOlONITRATION AGAINST SHAH OF IAAN Faction• For and Agalnat .Vl1ltJn1 Monarch Cfalh on Lawn of Whtt• HouH E'..-PageAJ Grand Jury Probe • SHAH ••• Sw .. "S •7ault Sea·~h The eruption on the Ellipse OC· tllO ~ ~ • ~ curred almost prectsely the In · slant that the shah waa sched· Hearings Delayed Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge lryne ~lack rerused to make any rullq Monday on a bid by the operators or Swiss Vaults, Inc., to quash search warrants issued to Santa Ana police. Lawyers revealed after spend- ing most of the da~ in chambers with Judge Black that current Orange County Grand Jury ex- amin•tion or the documents led the judge to Postpone her ruling. She set Dec. 20 as the date ahe will reopen the hearing after learnmR that the Grand Jury will be discussing aspects or the re· ported Swiss Vaults robbery until at least that date. At issue ln the•hdrin& as the authorizaUon ot lo,ar~h warrants used by Santa Ana pc>)ke to seize business recordll from the Swiss Vaults offices at 1404 N. Grand Ave. The search was part of an m· vestigation carried out after the Frea Pflflf! A J DRUGS ••• Ing ... But as long as he was hold· Ing her. (the employe> 1 wasn't about to do anythln1." Police Sgt. Dave Avers said or- licers are seeking a man i-' his twenties. standing about six feet two inches tall and welahine 200 pc>unds. "The kind of stuff the guy waa looking for." Avers said, "was morphine, Demerol. Seconals and Quaaludes." What he eot Wa.11 $100 or ilb lA drugs. Lonifield said. • ~ Police said no v~cle was seen le1tvin1 the pbatmacy after the early-eveni.n1 robbery.· • • them. Judge Lae has not yet scheduled a <tale for the hearing ordered by the appellate court. repository was robbed last July 9 or an estimated $1.1 million in precious inet-11. A• affidavit now beil\tt ex- amined t>y tM Graod Jury con- tains theellqatk>Pof a Santa Ana police lnvestlaator that SW\ • Vaults operators Vincent Car- rano of Seal Beach and Jack Fulton of Oorona del Mau t11od a fake robbery. The affidavit charges that the robbery was the climax or 15 months ot "systematic embeule- ment of the matenals left on de- posit at the business." Police who went to the Swiss Vaults office on July 9 found Car· rano tied to an overturned chair. They ~id Carrano told them he went to his otrlce to keep an appointment made over the telephone. Carrano said he waa held al gunpoint and tied to his chair while 1everal men took $1.1 million in gold and silver from the vaults Santa Ana police have re- peatedly expressed doubts that the robbery described by Car· rano actually took place But no charges have been filed against either Carrano or FultOJl . .. Cella Loses Bid·to Oust DA in Case uled to greet the president after land 1 ng via helicopter nearby. The demonslrator& tbrew rock , cinder bl~ka, and woOd from an unattended pile of lumber at the police. At that ~ point, the mo\lnted officers .,. charged Into the demon1trators. Many of the Injured were taken via ambulance for em•reency treatment. There wu no hn- medlate word u to whether any were seriously hurt. The demonstrawrs halt begun~ to gather at dawn. and numbered well tnto the thousands as the hour Cot the shah's arrival ap- proached. An hour aner the disturbance, the anll·shah demonstrators began massm~ again, but police kept them well away from the White HouS<? • The pro-shah forces, meanwhile, appeared to have di~sipated . The student dem- onstrator1 vowed to keep up their cbanUng vtgn throughout the duraUon of the shah's visit. At mid-day, about 500 students were south of the White House. maintaining their steady chant of "Down, down, down with the shah ... Many carried signs say- ing .. The shah ls a fascist," while the shah'~ supporters countered with "Support U.S.-lran Friendship" and the Hke. The anU·shah demonstrators wore hoods and masks. sup- posedly to avoid identification and repnsals from Iran's secret police. Many of the injured lay on the ground at the Ellipse for up lo 30 minutes wtule police cleared the area. Then ambulances began arriving to carry them away. Both forces on the Ellipse were routed from the area by 26 mounted policemen, assisted by walls of monitors from within the ranks of the demonstrators themselves. A Park Polica official said there were l,000 anti-shah dem· onstrators in Lafayette Park and 1,000 on the Ellipse, with 750 supporters of the sbah on the park aide and 3,000 on the Ellipse ::.1de. About an hour after flebtlng broke out. police said, lhey had the situation under conlrol. Washington Police Chief Maurice Cullinane said the dem· onstration was "not too bad. However. we had a few hect.ic minutes" Proceedins• Spiced . LAS VEGAS, Nev CAP> -Tho jurisdictional battle over ·the estate of Howard Huahes spl,ced proceedings as the process = ot aelecting a jury continued lu a trial attemptin& to determine u,e· validity of the Mormon will. The jurlsd1cl1onat. battle involves California, Tex and Nevada. .. City Council of vlolaUJll state law in its decision. • · The clty council acted after members of a group which ~ t ses an Amel development 'in • porthern sector of the elty lnted out. that U..y bave 1um~ cient sipatures on their.: i>eti· lio.na tor the placing of the ln· U.ietlve lssue on the ballot. 'ifllating Citg Ball Sid Soffer, owner of Sid's Blue Beet restaurant in Newport Beach, displays three cars that he claims are classics and the city of Costa Mesa claims are junk. The Cadillacs, vintage 1960 <frol'Jt). 1947 <back left) and 1964 were towed Crom 'bis driveway at 900 Arbor Street last week. SoCCer, who spenl $130 to get them back, will have a P1'blic hearing on the issue before the Costa Mesa Plannint Com· missio N\>v. 28.. ,,.~\.!.4"1• ...... ~~a·~""· ~ $43,800 Stlldy Approved County Airport EIR to Total $261,800 By KAnlY CLANCY Of IM Pelly ,.._. S\att Orange County supervisors agreed today to spend another 43 ,800 to complete a con- trovers1al study designed to chart the future of Orange Coun· ty Airport The funds will be paid to the consulting firm of Daniel, MaM, Johnson and Mendenhall for another three monthS of work needed to revise the airport 'a en- vironmental impact. report <EIR>. That means the EIR"'s Uib Will total S2tlol!OO before the report is deJiv~red early next year. Supervisors were told last week that, even ·after tbey IP· prove the consultant's EIR, addi· It's a Boy! Princess Anne Givea Birth LONDON (AP l Princess Anne gave birth to a 7 p0und, 9· ounce boy today, crowning Queen Elizabeth n ·s silver Jubilee with her first grandchild. ;But the royal baby -born a ~m moner -will be known as just plain Master Phillipa. (Related photo Page A3.) • Cbatnpagne flowed, nags we~ ra\aed and a 41-gun salute wu tired as word reache• the roytlty-loving British publfo thet the baby had arrived. He was born at 10:45 a.m. local lime in S&. Mary's Hoepital here. A n1me had not been selected. Both the 27-year-<>ld princes. tional studies will be necessary before buildinc ·projects· take place at the afrport. "It won't allow you to actually build a new terminal buildlna the day after lt is certified by the board," said Barbar« Fox, an as- sistant director otr tb& county General Services A1ency. Norm Ewers, airport noise and environment.al speciahat, Jaid once the EIR ls approved It will ' I ay the ,round work fore ded$1on on how many passengers .00 flights the airport should handle. Then airport oftlctals can plan the kind Of facility needed to IUP- p<>rt thoae activities, and a<fdJ. Uonal EIR.s (or specific bulldiq projects 'cia be p'repar!11, he 8~d. . Supervison voted unanimous· ly today to spend the extra $43,800 to complete the airport study, althougb SupervHJot Philip AnthOn)' wia absent and did not take part m tbe ote. It was Anthony last week who uked county otriclal1, .. I wonder wheth r when thll EIR ls done lt will YlhinJ but• ament tofightbmtl\ r-e "It will.ft a documwt \0 t over.'• Ewers replied. By RICBAB~J'.'NALL Of .... ,"r:' ..... Poi'ttons of bOC!les and debrla • were found in the ocean 3\AJ miles south of Newport Harbor Jett¥. this afternoon after the mld·aii' cotU1ion or two U1f\t planea. Radio reports front U.S. Coast Guard aad Oraqge County liarbol' Patrol boats at the scene said there were .. hundreds of sharks" ln the area where a Cessna 172 crashed Into the ocean, reportedly with two occu- pants. The other plane, a Plper Cherokee, returned to Oru1e County Airport with no injuries to the two occupants. They were ldentifi~ as Paul Christopher Jacobs, a flying instructor·who lives at 28822 Carret.a.s Drive, Miaston Viejo, and hit 1tudent, Gre1or.r L. llf'9lde, 24982 Atacla Lane, t:aauni mus. The tlme Of th C!tUti w at "JUJt ~ to~:01'1~m., .. UUt tltne tbat Ute Cbe~~e pt\oi radtoed a rewl't of Uie crub. A tpecta_t()t at Orute CoQnt.J Airport 181d one WiDC of the-craft that Umped back ''looked aboUt a foot 1hort& than the o\her," Coast Guard veasel1 and helicopters beaan to comb the area in patchJ toe a •hort tJmo after the radfo report of the mid· air colli.Sion. It w~ radiO chatcer •OUJnl these aearcbliia era.fl that lit· <See PLANES, Pa&e "21 takeeto ~wlthafractmed 1kull Md WU described u in crit.lcal oondi:.~ P~ carter dabbed his eyes With hls ~mb, and tho shah used a silk b&ndkerchief as they exchlllle4 ~ of ~et­ fhf abil fri~p bib-e head· inc btlid~ the White Hollle' f fr private talkl. Carter apolo,&ed for "the temporary air pollution in w ashlnatoo •t u .,.,. sbah pre- sented 'bf rrrwlth a tapestry portrait ct Gtiorco w hiqtan. . Tb~~ .EIDp Farah, meanwfine, went to tea':? mounted piolit Wete cileutni the grounds neatist the •~ecutlve ot6ntlon Of the rt val f aettons whose abow• of 1tren1tti, orltlnall)'1 a@arated. w~re dran indtrieably ctos~r net then to the 11~ Pc:Jlnt. Ellipse was DAIL 't PtLO T Loss fb di Compl.ftf need today they will not rtoew the 18·acn land glfl lo the Western World Medical Found lion for • hospital near the UC Irvine cam· pus. . tfhe ~IDeftt HIM el .. Monday's me4Un1 of company directors. A apok•aman said "it was determined that since no contrJct.ual obll1atlohs eid1t, ln Probe FiFe Jailed ~ Hill,, Man Rel.eaaed 4fter An-eat By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of -o..Jy f'llM $tail A new twist ln the Intricate in· vestigation of the murder of Stephen John Bovan came to light today with reports of an aborted booking of Frank Rossi. 36. of Laguna IUlls. Records at the Orange County Jail indicate Rossi was bneny Jailed Monday but never went through the complete booking process and wa1; released for lack of evidence. The r ecords don't indicate what Rossi was being booked ror. Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth ~aid today he was at a loss to ex plain the situation. He said the mOV(' to arrest Rosh! was imt1at· l'd by the District Attorney's Of- fice Hossi 1s allegedly an associate or three men who remain jaJled in the case, Jf'rry Peter Flori, 41 , Anthony Marone Jr., 23 and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, all ol Huntington Beach. Those three men are accused of kllllni Bovan, 38, of Fountain Valley, as he Jeft El RaMhito r~sLsurant lft Newport Buch Oct. 22. Bovan was stiot ntne limea. Newport Bea<:h police decUned comment on reports of Rossi's booking. They referred all Inquiries to Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter who I!! proseculina the case. Carter was not available for comment It ts known that police believe Rossi, Fiori. Resco, Marone and Marone's father, Anthony Sr .. were hired by four Newport Beach businessmen who operal- e d an investment firm , ~~\ ~,··. \ -··· d'a'l ca\el' . TONIGHT ..... OCC WOMEN'S WEEK Films, speakers, workshops Feminist Ivy Bottini. "The Many Faces of Women," Fine Arts 116, l p.m 'COSMIC FRONTIER" -Dr Willtam Kaufman . OCC Auditonum, 7 p m. ''BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. B:-own lecturer. OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m. COASTLINE CC LECTURE ••Advanced Microwave Cook· ing," Estancia High Room 323, 7 p.m. WEDNF.SDAY, NOV. II OCC CELEBRITY SERIES - Dr Laurence Peter ... The Peter Principle," Auditorium, 8 p.m. "STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE" -OCC Drama Lab. Nov.16-19,Sp.m occ LEcruRE -.. Aviation Safely for Pilots," Fine Arts 11.9, 7:30p.m. Ff"091Page..4J PLANES ••• dlcnted a great number of aharka had converged on the scene. Searchlnf ve!lels also turned up debrla m the oil·1llck waters. JdenUflc Uon of the penons aboard the downed plane waa not available. .. DAILY PILOT Pra&adam Distributing Inc. 'fbe lour Pruadam partners have been identified by pollce ln connection Wlth the murder con· sp1racy Only one, Alexander Kulik, 28, has been arrest«l in the case. He was freed f~ Jail after pq.sting a fr!I0,000 bond. The other three, Rqy Christopher Richard, Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski and Joseph Shelton Davis as well as Kullk's wife, Elsie Caban Kulik, are •till. being souaht. "' Police allege that whUe Rossl. • Lab Tests Bun Fiorj. Resco and the two M arones were employed by Prasadam. Bovan and two ac· com plices kidnapped Kulik. The kid.n.&pJ>ini was never re· ported t.opoftce~ • Inv U,at.On beUev• W ftve men were hlhd td SMlll'e Kulik•• f1'4tedom. And, police. allege, the Prasadam partners put out a m.ooo death contract for each or tbe kid.o•ppera. P Uce INert that Fiori, Resco ~d the Y<>Uqer Marone killed &JQVan a11 part of that deal. • BB BUsinessman _Slwt b~ Own Gun? ay ROBEllT BARKEa °'. °"'1. ..... $tflH Huntittiton Beach tesldeftt Robert Myers, whd wh f qW"d shol t.o death near Baratow ovlff the weekend, may havel>een shot by hi• own gUJ) as well as anOdler weapon. · A Sair Bernardino County cor- oner's 1po'j(esman said that labotatory tests will be made io determine lHhat ls the case. , Myers, 57, a former long·tlme Laguna Beach resident, was shot twice in the chest but detect,lves declined t.o say if the shots dme, from the front or back. ., .:t ··we don't want t.o relealle that Information f9t polygraph <Ue test) purpeees,•• SI\. 8ol) Ed· monds said today in San -.OC Panel :.4.aks For Projectl Orange County temates are ln· vited to tell members or the County Commiuion on the Status of Women in the next few weeks what prqjects the commission might undertake In the co!tling year. About 50 wornen attended two commission forums beld Monday to off er their suggestions. Topics they proposed ranged rrom establishing an inforrnatton bank for the so-called '·recently alone" woman to studies in the area of child care and child abuse to providing help to unwed teen·agemothers. Irvine resident Nancy McLain, for example, said women who suddenly find themselves. widowed, divorced or abandoned ort.en need advice on matters many people take for gr~t.ed. such as finding insurance f.)r jobe or adequatetr-.nsportaUon. "I am thinking or tb• period when a panic sets in," stie said. Ann Peralta or Santa Ana said the suddenly alone worn an or dls· placed homemaker often loees her .home, income and Mlf • worth. Bernardino ·'Only~ suspect know a where and how many tim~ Mr. Myers w a& shot," be said. . Edmonds said there is a dist· incl possibility that Myers wu shot by his own .22·caliber pistol as well as a second weapon. Nyera apparenlly carried tl\e gun for :;elf protedion It was stHJ mlssinc today as well as Myer5 ·gold colored van. Several points batrled In· vcstigators today. M~ers was not known to pick up h1tchlUkers, although it Is still considered a possibUity. ·'There also is a good possibili· ty that someone 1nea.ked into hl& van while he was having lunch in Victorville with friends,.. Ed· mond,satd. f.:dmOnd.s also uJd that lt was possible lht Myers had stopped to help a motorist stalled on the lonely stretch of highway and may have been overpowered. Proving equally bafnlng was the fact that Myers was not robbed. Officers sald they round $65 cash on his body as well 85 jewlely and credit cards. "We can't explain that but there 1s no evidence that the murder was planned,·· Edmonds s ld. ''Our interviews indicate that Mr. Myers was a highly respect- ed and well-liked man who had no enemies,·· the hivestlcator concluded. The murder co.me toJl1bt when a passing motorist. on lntentate 15 near Baatow..reix>ij.ed seeing a body being thrown from a van at l :lOp.m. Friday. Searchers found the body the next day after 11 a.m., un· derneatb a tumbleweed. omcers, ~o said finding Myers' 1old-colored van ls a key to the case, have issued a na· Uonwide, all points bulletin for the vehicle. · J etr Finney, a student at" Marina lntb School, said be and his !amily saw a van Sunday even1n1 DCU Adelanto that may have been the dead man's vehl· cle. 1tlll 1t Y'lli n. Smttb•s off prior t.o mcnd1n1 lta accep-tance to tbe . One local physician, Gerald Stnykln. tortn r chief ol tlaff at Hoa• Memorial Hospital and a membt.r.oC ~.wt a\ t.heffhoot or midaCliii, 1ud thi1 aummer that " the land alrt la withdrawn, plans to bUlld a medlcaJ raclUty to compl~mebt the medical school w.U1 dle. In l lftw St.t to all the statr physlC:l.mu at Hoac. Sinykln not;. ed that retidenta of Irvine cur· renUy have no hospital and must uae facllidea in neitbborina com· muniUea. He alJO noted tbat many of the medical offices bullt in Fub.lon bland were leued to phyalclanl with the under'ltanelin1 tbat there would evel\Wally be a bo!plt.al on the• . taiU of the bay. Mra. Smith'• 1lft la to be used for q,pnJtruction of mote tacllUles at the UC lr\line Medlc:!al School Tbe school 'a maa~r plan call' for a SlO milll n ambul&tor)' care cent• to be t n9'Ct. Tbe W•rn World comDlu wb to lneluOe a botpllal bulft by the f oundaUon. The additlonal property woUld then have been leased for medical offlcea, with the proflta belnf. plowed back Into the holplta . The hospital • lo German/eta . Still Flying COLOGNE, West Germany CAP) -Sub· machine·sun toling police swarmed around Weal German airports and armored cars patrolled the runw ay1 t.oday u a ter· rorlat deadline for blowt.n1 up three Lufthan11 jetliners in nlpt w•nt into effect. Tbere were no re· port.a ol any incident.a. v.~ The threat.a were con· "' talned ln letters slaned by the Red Army Faction prom lslna to avenge the de- aths or three Jailed German anarchists in a Stuttgart prison Oct. 18. West Germany imposed , the tightest airport secun ly in it,.; history Krishna Head Succumbs at 82 in India The founder and spiritual head o( the Hare Krishna religion, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swarnl Prabhupada died Monday in In· a1a attheageof82 He was the leader of the In· ternatloaal Society tor Krishna Consciousness CISKCON> The leader's death was an- nounced by a spokesman for ISKCON who said Prabhupada had been 1ufferina ill health tor about six months. Prabhupada was burled today at the society's temple at Vr1n daban, near New Delhi. · The society'• eoverning body of 21 disciples will lead the aed jointly until they decide on the selection of a new spiritual leader, the spokesman said. Redlining Opposed SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The U.S. Leaiue of Savings Aasocla· tlom hu 1one on record a,alnst redllnln( -the pracUce of deny· in& loans in minority and other communities because of a blanket "bad-risk" label. S-"ta Ana M~clpal ~ ~uds' lryne Bt~k refUJed to . inake any n.allilatlonday on a bid by the operaton 'ol Swi.U Vaulta, Inc., to qua.ah 1earch warraota lnued to Santa Ana police. Lr.1yers ~vealed an.er aoend· tng ijioet ot the day ln chambers with Judie Black that current Orange CoUhty Grand Jury ex. amination of the documenta led the judge to postpone her ruling. She set Dec. 20 as the date she will reopen the hearing after learning that the Grand Jury will be discussing upecta of the re-- ported Swiss Vaults robbery unUl at least that dale. At iasue 1n the hearing is the authorization of search warrants used by Santa Ana poll~ to Ml" business records from the Swiss Vaults offices et 1404 N. Grand Ave. The search wu pa.rt or an fn· vestigaUon carried out after the repository was robbed last July 9 BattlnJ11rors arrant of ~ esUmated $1.l mtllido predoua metals. , An affidavit now beini ex1 amlned by the Grand Jury con talns the allegation of a ~ta poUce lnvesllaator t.hP,t Swis Vaults operators Vincent Car rano of Seal Beach and Jae i'ulton of Corona del Mar 1La.aed fake robbery. 1 The affidavit charges that th robber)' waa tbe climax of It "'lnonths of .. sys~mattc embeule-J menl of the materials left on de~ posts.at the business ... Police who went to flie Swis~ Vaults office on July 9 fo'1nd Car• rano tied to an overturned chair~ They aai4. Carrano told the he went to his oft\ce to keep appolntment made over tbd telephone. Cag,ano said he wu held pnp4int Ma tiei to ble cbll while 1everal men toot $1.l mllllon n gold and aU,-er fro~ the vaulta. • Hearing Ordered . ' II On Bias Charge them. Jud iie Lae bas not y t scheduled a date for the heart ordered by the appellate court. Cella Loses Bid to Ollst DA in Case . . .. . . ... ~, . .. • • Tro)' Brimhall, a Fairview psych tech and chapter pr•ktent or the California AaaoelatJon of Human Servtcts Technologists, said hia croup's ~presentatives meet today In Sacrainento with State Department of Health of· ficials to present their demands. APWln~e CONTI TIMMONS, 7, HUGS HER BLACK CAT\ OREO Crushed by Truck, Youngster Hanga On to Ute Back to LUe 'Wont ClUJualty' Recovers LA ME..<;A <AP> -"She wu one of the worst civilian casualties I have seen.·· said surgeon Victor Lidner, who served in Vietnam. Donli Timmons, 7, survived to hug her black cat Oreo, though. A BEER TRUCK KNOCKED her down and 1ls wheels rolled over the blonde youngster March 31 as she walked ho'1Te from school The force was such that Donta 's internal organs were di.I· played, most or her body fluids lost and a hole blown through her back. But, a team of doctors worked over Donti for five bours A full·bodY cast was built with holes so skin graf\g could be perrormed. On May 16, Dontl went home in her cast to be locked m it for two months. "WE REALLY THOUGHT TIIERE was a good chance that she would die," recalls Dr. Lldner. There have been three skin' graft operations in which tissue was taken from DonU 's less and thighs to repair bt\f back. She visits a rebabllltation center three times a week and still walks with a slight Ump in her corrective shoea. Donti was in school when it reopened this fall, smlling as always, her brown eyes still asparkle. When she gets older, she said, she wanta lo be a movle ac· tress. Researchers Devise Te~t for Marijuana ment or He.ith, EdOcatlon and Welfaretob ckth 1utand. The problem center• on a re· ;s:..;~~~~fi: OQ l t \ ma nctot ew ttp ederal standardl . .A state liceu· ing team, under ·contract to HEW, decerti!led Fairview last !;ummer because of "impro~ staCflng and Jack or a medic.a director," according to Arthur Kopt, auperviaor of the Ileen.sing team for Orange County. nurses, a . A• a result, the stale'• re· organization plan seta up new supuvitory positions that. must be filled by nunes, not. psych techs. At the meeUni. an open forum on federal lssu aJ\4 ~problems with federal aaenclel, psych techa will ask Patterson to help them tnllucoce the U.S. Depart· • Guilty Plea Rejected RIVERSIDE <AP> -A Superior Court judge bas refused to accept the guilty plea of a 37· year-old homosexual cbarged with three sJaylngs in the so- called "trash bag murders.·· Instead, Judge E. Scott Dales named two psychiatrists Monday lo determine if Patrick Wayne Kearney is mentally competent to understand the consequences of a guilty pita. The judge set Dec 9 for a hearing on their find· mgs. Jay Grossman, at&Qrney for the former Redondo Beach res1· dent, said after Monday's court sess ion that he opposed Kearney's request to ctiange his plea and become his own at. torney He silld his client "feels his interests are better served by pleading guilty" but would not elaborate Deputy District Attorney Dan Baealsld said he would not op· pose a guilty plea "If it's done properly and we make sure he is capable of doing it without the beneCilof cOWUlel." Ir his plea were accepted. Proud Papa However, .Brimb1U aaurted today, Fairview paUepts ''do not need a medical format. Whal Capt. Mark Phillips, husband or Britain·s Princess ' Anne, smiles to newsmen as he leaves St Mary's Hospital in London following the birth of a son. It was the first grandchild for Queen Elizabeth II. Kearney would face a Ufe prison term. The death penally was not -..------------------------ m effect when the murders OC· curred. T c E d Kearneybadbeenscheduledto Um Or ause ye go on trial Jan. 2J on char&es or murdering Albert Rivera, 21, of LosAnge1es.ArturoMarquez,24. In Gtin-. Sweetener or Oxnard and John LaMay, 17, --~ of El Segundo. ; lJe and qavid Jiill. 34. a former roomr'na~. wer' afrested lh Ju· ly. Investigators said the \wo de*r\bell,11.'~ ""'any as 21 murders in ll\le counUes over 10 years. The BtvenJlde County Grand JllrY dJd~ot lncHct Hill andhewasreleuedlnJuJy. The killings have been termed . tbe "trash bag murders .. because many of the bodles, some nude and dismembered, were found ln large plasUc trash bass dumped alOO( hl1bwaya. Officials in Loa An•eles. Orange, Imperial and San Diego counties have said they were con· s lderlng charges acatn1t Kearney for murders in their areas. Judge Granb Coast Doctor Continuance A pre-trial hearing for a '78- year-old San Juan Capistrano physician bu been delayed to Dec. 12 alter attorneys asked time for a possible negotiated . setUemenL • • · ·so\lth Orana• County• Municipal Court Judge Blair Barnette 1ra.nt.ed tbe eontln. > uance Monday la the caae of Dr. Paul H. Eull~er" charl~ with 12 violations~ the 1tatf u.&lnesa • and Proteatona Codi. The ~wm from all•a 1 lions that Elalls\Cer tllegally dla.- trtbuted amil!dn• dltt plll&. • Judie Btm alto acr J9 ask the count probJ1Uon d ~ • ment to FeP ao.Called P.N: plea probatSoft report~ A spokesman for the dlatiict attorney's office said tbe~nJJ9!t · mtgbt help attotMy'a declae on a •wtUement In the cue. E11lln1e-r bat b9en a San Juan pbntclan •irx:e the .•vly lt30I. STONYBROOK, N.Y. <AP> - Rflsearchera here said today they had been notified by the U.S. P"bU• Health Servlct that pre- liminary rePOrta showed a chew· ing gum sweetener call~ylltol caused tumors in laborat.ory animals. The taearohers from the State University of New York at Stony Brook cited the repotU ln an· nouncing they have su~pended a pro1ect in which school children had Just ~gun chewing aum con- tainln1 XyUtot. The school children, 300 sixth eraders In the Wllllam Floyd Union Free School District on Long bland, had bffn chewing the gum for only three days wen the project was halted, the uni· versitysaid. The maximum amopJlt of IWD any child bid chewed-was Din. sticks, university officl.ts said. Reqarcilen at Sf4)ny 8~• School~ d PtlDtal M'ed.lciae · bAd been •tudyJnc -the ponlble beneficial elf eds on dental decay ol two sugar·!~ cbawinc gull)I, one of wblcb wu sweetened by Xylltol and the other a natural sweetener called SotbitoL Late last week, the Natlonal lnsUtute of Dental Research, a branch ot the U.S. PubUc Health Service, Informed the re· searchers of the laboratory animalatudy. The Wm .. Wrigley Jr. Com- pany, beadquutered la Chicago, recently lntrodttced a brand of gum called Orbit containing Xylltol. • DAI\. V P\l.OT .4~ Slwoting Kills l; 1 Critical A man la dead and a woman is in critical condition today after what pollce described as a "bloody abooting'• ln a La Habra home Monday nfabt. Killed ln the onslaught of gun. fire was MJcbaet Lynn Whalen, . 34, of 871 Glenhaven St., La Habra. Seriously wounded was June Ruth Felice, 40, of the same addreaa. Police said both vicUms suf- rered multiple 1unsbot wounds and that Whalen died en route to La Habra O>mmwsity HospttaJ. ~rs. Felice underwent surgery m ttie same hospital and was reported in critical condition today. Police releued only sparse de· tails of the 11:15 p.m. double shooting and said as yet there ls no suspect In the killlng and 6erlous wounding. Arter being shot, Whalen was able to crawl to a telephone and call an operator who, tn tum, called police to the murder .scene, acconilng to police. When they arrived, Whalen and the woman victJm bad col- lapsed in a room police described as "covered with blood." Bob,,Y Fiicher . Charge. Nixed I PASADENA (AP) -Battery, trapasmna and disturbtng the peace cbarces aaalnst fonnw tets muter Bobby F\tcber will • e dropped, the dl1trlct at· , mey '•offices_,.. AHl.atant District Attorney Aarop &toVil&,,,lald Monday-that lawyen l«.Fhcbet and tor :n- year-old Holly J\Uiz have qreed to tbe actJon following an un- dl1cloaed out-of.court aetUe· meat. Mrs. Ruiz accUJed Filcber ol assaulting her at her Sout.h Pasadena ho112e after sbe refuMd to sfgn a statement qylng sbe had taped IOPle ot bia COftVUJ•· tiops without his knowledge, as~ sertedly for use ln mapzlne stories about GaMer Top Armat.rong and Amba11ador- College ~uadcna. ' i11~~~~1iiic=:Ut )JI 87Tbe Aaoc:la ... p,... !!! Prime MiniateT Menahem Beatn today offlclally Invited EIYM!an Pre1ident Anwar Sadat to vialt Israel. Be1tn sent bl• written inVlfatlon through U.S. Ambassador to hrael Samuel Lewi1. aICKY TICK\' POUTIX: The chairman of Orange County's Republican Central Committee has just announC'ed with pride that the GOP now l'Ontrols 63 per tent or the city council seats in Orange County Loia Lundberg. the GOP chairman. noted. "A recent sur vey of the 26 cities in tbe county revealed that Republican• hold HS of the 136 city council seats, with the Democrats holding 44 ~eats and the declme·lo·states holding the remaming seven.·· Wonderful. And just a couple of years back, it seems, Orange County Superviaor Ralph Diedrich stood before a Democratic Party gathering and hyped the party faithful by announcing tllat the Democrats now controlled Orange County government with a majority of mt'mbers on the l'OUnty board. Thal was wonderful too THE TROUBLE Ul'<:RE is that our local political offices. such as 1·ity council or board of s upervisor seats, are supposed to he non-partisan. This has been a long tradition for local govern· ment in California. Non partisanship m local of· fices 1s probably the one fresh breeze we have left m the Qdorous political arena. The idea, clearly, is to avoid· machine-type politics; the ward heeling and political kickbackS that have smeared local govern· men ts elsewhere in the nation But the poht1cal wheeler riealers find the temptation too great m the local arena. They must stir in ll. They must get the party hands into the pot. IN TRUTH, A polllical rn;,ichinl' did develop in Orange County 111 recent times. True, 1t ";,is not really a party machine hut rather, a curious cCMlition of Democrats and Republicans. But t hl' men who were the drivioi torccs of the machine had one 'ommon goal They wanted pol1t1cal dout They sought power. There 1s an ancient truth about power: All pow~r corrupts; . 1bsolule power corrupts Jbsolutely ,\BRUPTLY, Oranie Coun· ty's grand poltlical machine fell apart like the one.boss shay. It :.elf·destructed. Since December of 1974, 29 Orange County poht1 cal figures. high and tow. h01vc been indicted on charges of rolitical wrongdoing. It may not tie over yet So much for machine politics: organized power politics at the local level. --1 n her announcement of members of the Grand Old Party who hold local office, the GOP's Mrs. Lundberg concluded, 'These 85 GOP councilmen are the key to Republican successes in the future. · "f'OR TIIE MOST PART, they repre~ent the new, young Repubhcan Party in Orange County, and I am confident that the strength we possess in the county's 26 cities will be ably demonstrated in the upcoming election year." M ayhc next we will start hav- 1 n~ party conventions to nominate our local officeholders. l mean, really get organized We don't really seem to lear11 much from history. Even reccnthistory. In Cairo, Sadat said he la ready to go as soon ai be receives the ln· vitatlon. He called the trip, that he proposed tut week, bis .. sacred duty." Be1in declined to ahow the con· tent of the message to reporters, saying it would be dJscdurteous to divulee it befo~e it reached Sad al. • "I DO CONSIDER this trip u a sacred duty and that th1I vtelous circle we are tumine around in . . • bu to be broken," be told re- porters after a meetlne with a U.S. congressional dele1at1on at his Barrages rest bou1e outalde of Cairo. "If I can break it and don't break it, I will be quesUoned about it. By whom? By God, and that is why it is sacred.·• Sadat's proPoled trip broucht muted reaction in the Arab world and even the most militant Arab opponents of Israel were rel· atively subdued today. IN CAIRO RANDOM com ments from citizens tupported the unprecedented visit by an Arab leader to the Jewish state as a step toward peace and better times for the hard·pressed Egyp- tian people. "He really wants to get us out of this Middle East conflict so we can start fixing up the country again. He'll go, I'm sure. I wouldn't mind one bit, .. an elder· ly newspaper vendor said. On the eve ol a vlllt by Sadat to Damaacua, the official Syrian preu appeared akepUcat of hit latest initiative. ~ "WE MUST REALQE that et· preasine the desire rot peace and the wish to speed up peace efforts is one thinl. and the ruUiaUon of peace and the ablUty to lmpo1e it 11 another," said Atb Tbwara. organ of Syrian Pre5ldent Hafu Assad '1 government. Sadat is ~ted tofaee'W&m· inga of ca when be meets with Assad on ednesday. Assad, Sadat'1 leaClia1 pirtiler in the Arab conh'oQtatlon with Israel, ls known to 9-P.P<'t• WU· lateral eoncessioDI Witb tlarael that could weaken overall Arab demands on the Jewish state. SYIUA HAS CONSISTENTLY opposed partial or bHateral agreements with Israel, seek· ing anstead an overall 1olution to the Arab·lar1ell conflict. Reaction wu reserved in other Arab statea, and ~rmecl ob· servers here believed lt indlUted a desire to avoid public db· senston at a Ume wben the Arab states are prpuins for solidarity. , New York Cour.t ~ Ends Death Penalty ALBANY. N.Y. CAP l -The state's highest court struck down New York ·s death penalty statute today, removing the threat of execution agamstthe two men on death row. In a 4-3 ruling, the Court or Appeals held that the death penalty law is unconstitutional because it doesn't aivc Junes enough discretion in de<:iding when to require capital. punishm~nt. The law the court struck down mandated execution in virtually all cases involving the killing of a polleeman or prison guard, Cheerlemhr · Nixea~ Saa School JONEs, Okla. (AP) -A l&- year-old high .acbool cheerleader and junior claa5 president has filed ault against officials who forced her to drop out of school until she agrees ~o take a spank ... mg for being tardy. Rhonda Qavi1, also football queen at Jones ~b School in this communtty juat outside Oklahoma Clty, •aid ehe arrived late for the aftemoon session on Nov. 3 because she was involved in a car accident during the noon hour. It was the fifth time Miss Davis reported late for classes. THE SCHOOL handbook lives .. studenta who are repeatedly late the option of accepting a spank- ing by a school administrator or dropping out of school. Miss Davis refused a spanking. In the lawsuit flied Monday, Misa Davia seeks an Oklahoma County District Court order pro· hibitinf enforcement of the handbook provision. That pro· vilion does not allow students a hearing before they are ordered to leave school, with lallln1 1rades, for refuaing spanklnp • murder during a prison escape. or murder by an inmate under IJfe sentence. THE LAW TOOK effect Sept.1, 1974, but no executions have been carried out in New York alnce that time . The U S. Supreme Court ruled in June that a similar-Louisiana statute was unconatitullonal, and th• New York court said it was acting on the basis of that de· cisioo. The i'ullng came in the case of Joseph James, convicted of kill· mi a New York City prison guard during an escape attempt In ms. JAMES RAD BEEN senteoced to death under the automatic pro- visions of New York's Jaw, and the court said that was un- constitutional. The court. also reversed the death sentence against the only other inmate on death row, Joseph Davis, on technical grounds. He had been convicted of killin.: a Yonkers policeman in 1974. • The ruling striking down the state's law had been expected. In anticipation of it, the legislature passed a revised death penalty law earlier this year. It would have applied to virtually all types of murders but would have allowed consideration of a broad r 'a n g e o f m i t i g a t i n g circumstances. GOV. HUGH CAREY, vetoed that bill and promised to com· mute any death sentences im· posed if the legislature overrode his veto or the existing law wu up_held. . Northwest· Showered Te~rld.,._ HI Le P'A ~1 70 tJ a.i 74 l1 ll II .OI ~n ~ .. 60 ti S2 2S >O 4A .01 4l » )t ~ 4S )4 "3 IJ .C» n 42 • a.a 1J » u " "° » is .. :II .. ·2 ..... ... 2J MM .. 7' n ..s .. . 11"'• In Vlree llWntncla Wiii be WCI! ton~le"4.-ty~. lut the Noellanel WMI~ Wvke pf'Hi<tt0l.ir....ihef•ndw•l'll\tem• "'9\llfH In 1,g mor""* •11111 .. ,.,. -wllll IS ID 2J ml'""-•lleur' ,,,_leln ...... 1111•9"1 NI <OUl4 l'H<.11111 ........ tllepUN•IOtlleCM"' 1·1it11• .,,....,..Y ere upecle4 ''°"' 11"Jt0JlllU.-~ ........ .. lft Ille lllt'""91lN .. IMYJ. 111 tlM <-*el nlle\'tr.~ntvr.a Wiii re.ell 1' to If,_.,..,..,. ill -nlOWll LMNIOl'*tllltloot tllt .... o .. er, tlfT!Cltt •IW'M wlll r .,,._ ,,_,,,.,°' ..... ~,.--&lie •t11\MNQ11W¥-. c..a.atr-•Mr. ·WEA THEA I NATION I WORLD -» APTERMATH OF lsATTLE BETWEl!N NAZIS, BLACK AND WHITE D!FENBE COMMl11££ Frank Colll~, Leaning Agalnat Fellow Nait Third from Left, Among ThOM An•lt.ct .. Three Arrested in ·Brawl 2 · Nazis~ 'Bystander' IJeld in Speech Protest . RIVER GROVE, Ill. (AP> .... Three men were arrested after a brief but bloody brawl between Nazia and members of an anu: Nazi eroup that delayed a speech by Nazi·bunter Simon Wiesen· th al. Six uniformed Nazis were picketing Wlesenthal at Tnton Community CoUece in this Chicago suburb when a fight started with a dozen membera of a 11roup called the Black and White Defense Committee. EACH SIDE BLAMED the other for starting the club- swi.ngillJ brawl that lasted about three minutes. Police said about 30 people In all were involved in the fight. Campus police helped break lt up Char1ed with mob action was Frank Collin. head of the National .. . Sociatilt arty of America here. Thomas KrtJewskl, allo a Nad, was cl\araed with mob action and battery. THE TID&D MAN arnli.d was ldenlified aa Tadeuai ~m· bert, wbo said be was a bystander. He was charaed with disorderly conduct. In his apeecb later. Wlesenthal said indiWlual freedoms have their boundaries and that if . croups like the Nazis barus other people, "they should be answeredln a lanauaae tbey un· derstend." He lndleated to reporters after tbe 1peecb that bis words did DOt mean he was callioC for violeQCe "but that lt is an oblicat.lon of ... society to protect Innocent peo- ple." - Wl~SENTHAL condeinned what he d~ri bed as .:i racist, hate literature printed in the United States an4 distributed S-..!1-'• L·:...-d _ _., throughout tho woil4 and isaid Lrl.ILe ~ onesu socie\y mus'\ r.trtct extremists LONDON <AP> -Dozens or throughtawt. London firemen twice abandoned ·'To print auch propagand4 ls their day-old national strike to-forbidden in every European day to help ine1'perlenced vmY coantry, .. Wieaet.hal Nld. firefighters put out a srlfoky "The fact that it is allowed hospital blaze and a fire at an here made roany people arouDd apartment buUdJng. But union · the world laugh at President leaders in.sisted the strike was Carter :.s hum an r l •ht s not breaking up. . .speechee. 11 STATE/ SOUTHERN C LIFORNIA Killed ln Gang €lashes LANCASTER <AP> A 20 year-old man has been fatally totabbed and another wounded aUer rival motorcycle aroups clashed with knives and gum; near here, sheriff's deputies re ported. Eiaht members or both ~angs were arrestro for alleged murder, deputi<'s !\a1d, adding that 30-year·nld t'rank Marsh was reported in serious <'Onditton at \nlelopc! Valley llosp1tal ~hr:.h and the dt>ad man, who has not been identified were member:; or Sal an 's Slave1>, authonltcs said 3 De•t .. Luted SACRAMENTO <AP I At least three Californians have died of Legionnaires· disease and requests to test ror il are swamp ( __ .ST._i1_TE __ ) ing a state laborator), say stat1 officials nob "iant·t•. sp11k1 .... m:m for lht• stale D1'1Wr1ment of llNtllh. ('on r1rml.'cl '.\1ondav lht· thrct• dc•alhs reporlt•tl h\ tlw SaeramL•nlo l 'n1on. But hL• s•.1111 lw didn't hav1• details Auto Bit• Cro..,d OXNARD <AP> Norma Rodr1~ucz, 37, "as booked for In· vest1gation of vehicular manslau~hter Monday after her car struck a group of children and par<'nts at a S<'hool bus stop. killing one t•h1ld, police said. SC'V<'n others. including four l h1ldrt.•n an<l thrN' parents, were 1n1un·cl. s<11d Sgt CiL•ne Kubl The dead ~oungst1•r was 1dcntifled a" 1}('11:.i 1>ur~1n. ~, LOS ·\'\(d ·:LJ·:s tJ\1'1 GO\ Edmund (; Brown Jr says a Sup<'rtor Court Judge who rulc.'<.l the 197·1 Pohlll'al Reform Act un conslitut1onal misinterpreted both the state and federal con· :.t1tutions Judge Parks Stillwell ruled Monday lhal the initiative passed by votNs in 197'1 was unconstitu· t1onal because 1t covered more than one subject. lumping reslricllons on lobbybtt into a Jaw d<'ahng with politicians' campajgn expenses and personal finance!:-;, Faces .Jail. Te,.. Daredevil Evcl Knit•vl'l and his "'1ft•, Linda, leave court in Santa Monica Monda) after Knievel wus sentenced to s pend six months in .1ail .ind thrt•e ~ c<.irs on probation for assault Knie\ el adm1tt<.•d he beat his former press ag<.·nl, Sheldon S<illman \\1th .1 hasl'l>all bat bee au:-.e ht• d1tln 't lik<.• u hook Salt m~hl \HOit· ahollt him Hospitals Launch 'Stay Away' Plan LOS A..~GELES <AP 1 The Hospital Council -of Southern California. hoping to stave off government efforts to put a ce1hng on medical prices. is planning a campaign to keep as many people as OOSSI blc out or hospitals Stephen W Gamble, pn·s1dent ''' the hospital council, told the Lo-.; l\ngeles Times in un tntt·rvu·~ Monday that 1t will be nrcessary 1 n d ri VP down lhr n:.il1on 's soari nl.! med1l·al costs 1f hospitals hope· to spik<' Lough l'OSl selling l<'g1slat1on 1n Congress and thl' Caltforn1a l.t'gi!>lalurC'. HOSPITAL <.:llARGES, wht<'h ac<"ountPd for 40 percent of thl' Sl38 billion spent by Americans last year on health care, are the most rapidly escalalmg item tn the national health bill "If it hadn't been for strong talk about cost containment, we probably wouldn't have launched this campaign,'' Gamble said 'We should have done this years ago We have not addressed our community responsibilities to pallenls as well as we should have GAMBLE'S GROUP has published a pamphlet for pubhc dis· tnbution called "Ten Questions You Should Ask Before Gotng to the Ho~pital "Some of the answers seem uncharacteristic for a hospital association One answer ur~<'s patients to have lab tests done before they are admitted to a hospital. noting that althOURh this might be incon· veni ent it can shave as much as SlOO a day orr the aver age hospital bill $23 buys a monogrammed robe! Have a soft. plush kimono wrap robe . . and we'll do the monogramming! White, black. brown or navy 2' · script initials to go on brown, rust. light blue. navy or camel robe. One size for all, in washable Amel~ tnaceta to I nylon velour A touch of personality ... for under the Christmas tree! Men's Furnishings • EWLY,,LOT ... desert ·studied , ' I' • 1 Panel Weighs Nucl,ear Plant Im~ SA f~~~TC) J! .. ?... • ' ~ cornmillee of the state Ener1y Commission says the Sundesert nuclear power rlant shOutd be approved only i San Diego Gas and Electric Company builds u non-atomic plant as well. Sundesert would be a two. reactor, 1,900-meaawatt nuclear complex 17 miles southwest of Blythe in ea~tern Riverside County TO" BE COMPLETED tn 1985, 1t would be California's fourth nuclear power comph.'' H1chard Mnullin. chairman of the commission. and member Gene Varanlnt, 5ilting as the Sundesert nohce-of·lntent com· miltee, released their report Monday. M EANWIDLE, in San Diego Monday, the president of the en- vironmentalist Sierra Club said, ··or all the proposals on the boa¥s. SUndesert is perhaps the most objectionable one." J William Futrell told a news con ference the proposal "Is a na l1onal question The Sierru Clul-> will commit 1ts moral and physical resourCl'S to chulleng<· lhts propo~al.'" The S1l'rra Cluh ts focu'>mg on -,undescrt becau-.c its fate may -,et precedent for dealing with nuclear plants nationwide, said f''utrell, a ..Professor or land use and environment at the Universi- ty of Georgia law school. IN IT. thev recommended that SDG&E also propose an oll·fired combined -cycle plant or geothermal plant. H the full five-member com mission adopts lhe report. tl keep!i the hearing process on . ( MoJestlC Lake Tahoe Is o year 'round playground hke none other In tho WOf1d. Here you con ski challenging slopes. step Into nights fllled with gllt· tenng entertainment •.• or 11mply bfoo~e the mounto1n olr one watch the seasons change. It's all within eosy reach when you toke off for rahoe on ~r Collfomio Conv•nl•nt !\.lnJ•t servle• ~ dot(fton\ Oooge County Airport tor only ~00 (one wafl And ftvtno Air .co1 .. c ...t .. Jate ror a J~ completion date. THE REPORT al&o recom- mended that SDG&E'a aha.re of the $3 btllion project be cut from 50 percent to 33 percent. That would cut the uUllt,y"s costs by $M0 million. The uUUty h&J. been closely questioned in committee hear· inis about its ability lo finance the project. BUT TIIE REPOBT does ~ recommend uny alternative. source for that $500 million. ·Under tbc current flnandna p"°4 posat, the other halt of the f\lnds for the plant would be shared by tho Los Angeles Departmeot ot Water and Power and the mu.oicipal power division• of the cities of Anaheim, Burbank. Glendale, Pasadena and Riverside Ex-conviCt N abhed In Child Sex _Ring· SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Vice officers have arrested a con- victed sex offender for investigation ol ..at.atinc do1ena ol YOUDI boys in a homosexual prostitution and pornography rins. Police said some 30 boys, aaea 12 to 15, may hawe been involved in the operation in which naked children "were exhibited like livestock" toJ)(JtenUal customers. DENNIS M. DWARTSON, 3!, was arrested Monday night in a house where he liv<'d with a man and wom an and their rive children, police 1mid. Three or the children, boys aged 12, 13. and 14, were be ing used as proslltutcs, pohce said. Owai1.wn was being held today in City Prison on police charges of pimpmg, pandering, contributlng to the delinquency of a minor and fondling children under 14, authorities i1a.d _ \ HIS ARREST followed a week-long lnvesUeatton by undercover vice officers Police said the probe was prompted by cilhen com- plaints that Dwartson was tak.inl children to homosexuals in variQus parts of the city and displayinc them to potential customers. Sgt. George HUegte, workinl undercover, arranged to have a • blond, blue.eyed, 12-year-old boy brouebt to him, police said. THE NAKED YOUTH was dliplayed to the 17·year pollce veteran in a bedroom with Dwartaon preaenl, police aald. Hue1le said he "was nauseated and made sick to my alomach by what I saw" traveling ond more time enjoying the sptctoc· ulor recreation and cos· uol lifestyle that's so much o port of this scenic Inland seo in the Slerros. Money-saving discounts ovolloble for groups of ten 0< more. fanllles and mlfltory personnel. Sun- ier Tou11. too. Don't you wont to go? It's eosy on Alf CollfomlO fomlo meaNyo~u;·tt~""?ll!lll!.;I;~.._«liii~ •pend leas time 1 Fair-v ·ew Needs . Prompt Attention 111 a ll'nsc meeting l'-lsl week. about 500 statr member!'> at Fair\'tcw State Hospital in Costa Mesa protetited a stull'·mundated reorganization thut will shift between 100 und 200 workers around the hospital before the end of DccemlJcr Tbe reorganization 1s part of an attempt by the state to regam certification by the federal government. A total of $1.5 million in federal monthlv pavments to four state hospitals was cut off in September · It 1s clcur that some uction needs lo be taken. and f taken promptly. to restore Fmrvie\\. s certification But that "s onl~ the short·lerm goal The aim in the long run should be to guarantee the best possible level of patient care. Rt>gaining l't'rtificalion should not interfere" 1th that long -term goal. The decision b~ the state Department of Health to :-.ct up new supcn isory poern1ons and require them to be filled by reg1skred nurses before Dec 31 has resulted in a massive shiftmg uf personnel that can't help but :.iffect patient care and staff morale This situation 1s particularly unfortunate becuuse 1l comes al a time Whl•n Fairview finall;• has received funds to hire several hundred new staff members but can't find them About 150 mon· psychiatric technicians are needed Yd the 650 l<.'<.'hn1c1.111s already at the hospital sa; they set· thl• new ctnplw.s.-.. on mll':-.mg supervision as the first stl·p towani a <·utb;.H·k 111 their respons1b1l1l1cs .111d opportunilld tor ad\':Jlltemcnt The p111hlt·m 1s th.it nobod) al Fairview has :.i dl·:ir ttka of \\ht•n· !ht· st :ttl' l>t:p..trtment ol Health 1s headed. :md tht>n· 1.s ..,11IT1l' <111ul11 •• .., to "hether the departmt·nt 1tsl·ll· has planned ht•~ 111HI lht• 1mmed1ate J.t<>ul of n· ga111 111gct.trtiflc.it1011 · <;o\' Bro\\ n and tht· Dt•partmcnl of Health olficaab fl\\ e the l"a11'\ It'\\' patients. their parents. staff and thl· l'ommw11ty l\\o lhmgs .. \nd prompt!; _First E\'i<lt•ntc that they have spent enough trnw v1s1ting Fain il'w to draw up a plan that fits its special needs and the ub1lities of available staff. not a loose. across·lht··boi.Jrd plan for all state hosp1tab r~gardless of special nl•eds • S~t'ond . A J>t•rsonal vbit to Fair\'lew to cut through hurl'i.IUl'l'atic nwmos ond gin• th<' ~taff. the patients' l<1milil·s :ind thr c:ommunitv an hone~t and ele<11" 1·-.:pla11at101111f \\h:1~ tlw ~1tuatioi1 is ancl where the hospital ,.., tll'a<kd F.111\11" 11N•d.., :ind clt•s1•n 1•:-.. <1 ll''' hn1tr'i 111 \ ou1 d1n·1·t 111\01\1 .iw111 . (;m·l·r1101 Off and Running ' , ~ I 11 lht·l l' ":.i:-. .111\ d11uht Lt bout lhe dem:.ind for t.1 thoroughbrl·d horst· 1::1cmg meet m Orange Counl). lht' rcmarkahll· slll'l'l'SS ol lh<' first \\eek of the Orange Count~ f~c.ur's Los Al.1m1t11s nwl'l laid it to rest Thf' f:ur. \\.hkh haltled state.puthorities and the two ' big Los ,\ng(•ll's County race tra~s for $Orne two years before thl· l'i.ll'l' datl·S were granted, had optimistically hope<t for a daily hcttmg average of up to Sl.l million. That, olf1('1als <.'akulaCed would pay off the certain loss of financing a Fall Fair in the track parking lot required hy tht· !'\tall-as an adjunct of the race meet still leaving a profit nl some $200.0()(). And thut profit would be sufficient to back up loans for ,long -planm•d l':\.pansion and improvement of the count~ f a1 grounds m Costa :'tf t>sa. But fortun<.· smiled arMI the first six days of the 12·d:J\' mcl'l y1l'ldcd a record daily betting average of Sl.3 million. with weckl·nd belt m~ hitting SH8 million on Saturday and I $1 5 million on Sunday. The popularity o'r the thoroughbreds also enabled the track to raise pursl'S for most races, thus luring some heller entries for the final six days of the meet starting tomorrow ' There's no doubt nO\\. that race fans. both from ms1dt> and outside Orange County. welcome the convenience of doing their wagering at Los Alamitos. This may well have the effect of stepping up big-track opposition to a repeat engagement of the controversial f "ir-sponsored meet nc-.:t year But the enthusiastic patronage of the fans should be noted by the state racing board if the public Interest has any effect on its decisions. It's now quite clear that continued operation of the fall thoroughbred meet would enable the fair to move swiftly ahead with already completed plans to ~urn the Orange County fairgrounds into a Southern Cali form a cultural and recreational landmark. · It was i.l gOOd idea. and worth the legal struggle. • Opinions expressed 1A the apace above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expreaset:t on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is invited. Addresa The Daily Pilot, P 0 Box 1560. Cost& Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 I Harris I Gernu; By SYDNEY J, HARRIS Th1no1 I ~ En Routt to IAOktnQ Up OCMf-Thfng1 That althousb "1erm " 11 a dirty word to us, bactetia are the rount or all lir• without thetr presence, the continuity of the carbon and nltroaen cyclea between plant and animal would cease, and . Tueeclay, Ho"'9mber 16, tW7 Rowland Evans/Robert Novak J t; n USALEM Only a elim· mer of fundamental chanaes in Israeli psycholo&Y wrought by Prime Minister Menahem Begin ls visible today, but the boldness or that change shows that, if his health holds up, Israel will be far more formidable on the world ~tage than ever before Following 30 years of rule by the Labor coalition, flabby and scandal ridden when 1t lost the elcc· lion last May, Begin shows none or the self-conscious reserve or a Levt Eshkol or a \'11.Lhak Rabin. two of Labor's prime ministers. Israel's new mood, a. nattmng :apd revealing rcCled\Qf!DfBegin h1lflsel( is one of umnrubited militancy about Israel's place in the sun. For the first time since Israel ronqucrcd East Jerusalem from Jordan. an American official was o;nubbcd by Jerusalem Mayor Tt'ddy Kollck. and the snub made hl•adl1nl·s The issue wa s 'I rl'i.lsury Secretary Michael Bluml'nthal ·s routine request to Kollck for an ·official lour or West Jerusalem, but not East Jl'rusalcm Th~ U.S does not recogni.ze Israeh sovereignt)' 11\'er former Jordanian ler· ntor1es ALTHOUGH every U.S. of· • ricial has handled this political problem the same way. Kollek refused to play host for Blu~en· that Kollek claimed he needed no U S approval for the uniflca· lion of Jerusalem "the city was already unified. by King Da\ 1d ." Thl' rcbukl-was symbolic or Bl.'J,!1n 's militant. du..lactic politics of psycholo1-1v In Washington l:t!,t summt•r lo rnect President Carter. lkgtn was briefed by :lldl'S on 'JUt'St1om, he wou Id bu ~1skt•d on 'Mc<•t the Press · Ill· ans\\ l'red thl' first rehears<W quc·sllon with an t•vocative re· c·1tal of the fall of the second tem- pi<• an Tisha Hav. the ninth month in the Hebrew calendar. in 70 A.D. lie told has s urprised briefors Whate\·er the first estion (am asked. this will be my answer pegin ften talks about "mamlacht1ur· a word embod· Paul Harvey J yinl liberty. soveret1nty and dl&nity A teacher as well as philosopher and dlsclpllned politician, Begin above all is a true believer in the mystical 111\k that coMects modern Israel witlil the Kingdom of David and, later, the cataclysm .9f Bar-Kochba, th• doomed Jewuh revblt ag.Unst Rome in 130 A.J) wlUch ended in rtlau"htf'r ot the Jewish remnant. "The world doe:. not pity the slaughtered,·· Begin wrote in "The Revolt.•· his brilliant. chill· ing description of his terror cam· paign against Brtush control or Palestine. "ll only respects those who fight " HE HAS created a mood of ex· c1tement and purpose that re· volves around himself and bu in· reeled many of his people Cbut dismayed and frightened some>. Ke command1> the strongest Knesset majority ever: outfoxing the new Democratic Movement for Change <DMC>. headed by dovish Yagael Yadin, which 101ncd his L1kud coalitJon two "eeks ago on humbling terms r "II the A merit: ans think they art• J.(Ctltnl? a \ice president m - Y•din,'1 one B alnlt.e told us. "they don'tknow Be In "'> ,.. IN SllA.BP cont.rut to previous rovernmentl, Be1ln tot llY do"llnatet the issues he b !eves ihlportant: defen1e. forci1n Polley and. most lmportont or all, relations wl;th the U.S . Elsewhere. he dlsll ftterfer· me with his generally undls· tingulsbcd minbters, althQµ&h, of course, such major (and pollticnlly risky> decisions de· valuation o( ta. pound a~ the cut in consumer s•bsid1es •ere made in.the prime mlniater's of. fice. The change in the Knesset 1s t equally dramatic. Begin inslsts on attending all sessions ot the parliament -shunned bf, his predecessors as Ume-consathlng and boring. Naturally, his mlniaters do the same. So far, he "aa left the civil service virtually untouched, despite fears of Wholesale ho~secleaning Likewise. factional politics and playing favorites seem beneath Begin When one very import.ant Israeli ambassador started rut ting corners around foreai;in minister Mosh.-01ty11n. fur Thomat K vlll~c2itor private communication wllh Begin, Dayan ''with the expre.$s knowledge of t.he prime minister'' ordered him to at.op ONE BEGIN problem dwarfs an others ~ th41 U.S. connecUon. Significantly, Moshe Are~ a Begin ally and fourtb·ra ins member or Begin's Herut P Y. warned U1 tht• Jerusialero Post 10 days ago tbut Israel "is just at the start of a long dispute <with the US.). a contest for publlc opinion. . Wt! must decide on whnl issues we can·buy the im presslon or flexibility and on what others we must draw the red Une." Thul exactly reflects B~gin 's poliUcal strale.a,v in bis battle for the U.S. Congress. • t rn "The Revolt" Begin extols "the lighting Jew ... a specimen completely unknown to the world for over 1800 ye1m;." Ke wants American Jews to become "fighting Jews" for Israel in the political battle ahead Ir Begin's charismatic leadership here is an indicator, Mr Carter will need <.•very weapon and every stratagem he can lay his over burd<•ned hunrls on to prevail. · Consumer Will Pay for Farm Break-up Americans are the world's most efficient farmers. This has lo do partly with the evolution and mechanization or farming in the Umtcd States E lsewhere In the world, whenever farmers accumulate enough land to justify mechanizing, some dictator emerges pro· mlsing to re· distribute the wealth -to take the land away from the big land owners and give it to the pe~ants. And wherever the dictator ac- complishes this, the peasants re- main peasant11, each with a parcel of land too small for anything mote than back- breaking subsi.slence. Atnerica's factory farms, on the other hand, arc so efficient ttrat each American rarmer can feed his own family plus SO other people SURELY our government would never sabotaae that effl· ciency by limiting each rarmerto no more than 160 acres Whnt'U you bet? In the Imperial Valley of California the court.a are in the process of limiUn& each ln· d1v1dual farmer to 160 acres. They would &Ive all farmers 10 years to sell off any lands In ex- cess of·160 acres oftd the Bureau of Reclamation will set the prict. Imperial Valley farmers have been informed that confiscated lands must be sold for the price those lands brought before there was water available. Obviou.sly. $2,000·an·ac ... land could be force-sold for $400, wlp· ine out the investment of cenera· tiops. sending mortfafed farmers into bankruptcy How can the government do such a-thing? T HE CARTER Admm1strat1on believes that ownership of Western lands irrigated with water from federal reclamation projects must be restricted That the blg farms must be brok~n up in favor of small "family farms.·· In this valley 180 acres 1s no longer -if 1t ever was an economical.I)· sound'fatmlng un· it. Banks will nol finance 160· acre rarmingunlts. These farms have been ex· empt from the Reclamation Act of 1902 by all administrations and all Congresses since. Imperial Valley farmers went ahead and bunt btgcer. more errtclent, more pr~uctive!Cms. Now clal. Qf the blue comes lhlJ court order which -if it stands says the rederaJ dams which provide 1rrtgatlon water are giv· ing an Wlfair advantage lo a few, so those big farms must be bro'ken Into plec~s. And the owners won't even gel a fair market price. · Many mortg:iged Imperial Valley farmers wiU drown in their own water. The farmers, naturally, feel mi1led and double·cr~scd. WHAT ARE the odds that the court order will survive appeals? Well, farmers are no longer ~ufficlently numerous to mount much clout in WashJngton. In· dividual "riebts" these days seem to be reserved for the "have-nots" at whatever ex• pense to the "haves ... But I've news for the city dudes who think they don't need to C4're: You enforce in.efficiency in Amertcnn farming, and you'rt going to pay the difference at tilt arocery store. r B11rglMs, . . Beware BIJRNS '4SKS R41SER4LT. WASHINGTON CAP > -Fro~ the Arthur urn1 m uil on hOW not time and decided to 10 ahead with to make friends and in· work on it when a woman who fluence scaJt.ora. comes U near the house was beaten the Federal Reserve an lat.ruder about a month aao. Board cb&lrman'1 call Tb wo~ has recovered; no ar-·for •en atonal 1upJ)Ort for r"1l• have been made in the at· • eaDlpalgn to hold down tack. . salary hikes f9r federal "l started thinking about the employes. Eegant table fact that we have to 1et ntilshbors Appearlnf before ~e watching over ntl&hbor11" be Senate Banking Commtt. sald ... My assumption ts that the tee, w~oae members American people do care about alon1w1tballothermem- each other and they will be iood bera of Congress re. neighbors given the chance.•· eel ved a $12,900 pay boost .. anan~ents THE ALARM IS being installed at a ho~e he owns where destitute women lave. The house 1s situated 10 one of the city's high-crime areas COWLING DESIGNED the system with help from friends who are electronics experts He :.aid 1t cWl be mstalled for less than $200. for ~anksgivlftg · Sen. Gary l la1·t. l> Colo., has joinc.•d thr> ranks of politicians who have been hit in the face with a pie. Hart got his from a Univl•rs1tv of Colorado :-tudcnt group. .. Death Notice• : • IYND LORl::NlO ltYMU, ''"°""'of to\I• Mt:)•, <..•. ~d"t\toWS •~•'f on Nov• mot' ll, 1'117. Surv1..,..d b'f h111 v.1h ,...urm• byro ot C.o'Y Me~o. l oi. ,.un k•• Iii Uy rd ot ~n lJlt:QO, C..., O.•'N"ln Mt"',.• Jo , li1ro • •nuly \• r¥1l •\ ~ .. ,. tu hJ t .tH tiro.awtty N\of tu•t., OH•'-lo'\ MO~IJLLY MAMC.A~( I L MU~UL L' '""" nl ot ,._•wporl ltiMc.n. u . fl•u.o .. ..,.,, Ot\ r1oyett•bt·r '2. llt'11 '!tut'-'••f'O "" r~ r ,,. te,. T ruo1 Jit(k\On Of APf-'I• Y•ttr, C.d MttTlOrldl )(('f't(.:)Wlll bf' ,._,O I ut"W•y- r.ov•"'bU 1), 191/ •I 1 LIO ~ M bell brO.O••Y Mc.rtu.ll'Y c:.n.Hltl Ottu. ••l •1"'9 Wiii be .... 11'\('r COf'ir.O "-Ot'OQ'-Uit b.11 Ur040*•Y M9rh,;6ryo1rrt tor•. ,AUNOEllS 1 HOMA!> t. ~AU,..01: Hll '"'"'' nt er C.o••• Me.,. c.a P•ueo .w•y on f•Qv •mMr IJ, IY/1, :...t•• .. o br hl•1Mttnl> Altier I and Ulltr,.. ~..no•n OI ScK.111 PH•deN, c.. .• ,,,.. .. •IH•o. Lino. 8urto11 ot ""9olml,..lor. C:• • "-""Y 0•> lllla•u OI Florio. -~r ... r• 1010 Of C.ltlld•lt, C... S.rvoco .. 111 bt ~•o V.tdntSO.Y ....,,,.,...,._, 1•. 1'17 •1 / IAl P M. Btll ll<CNl(h ... Y ()wpel lnltrt>••nl Goood Sh•PfltrO (wnitlery. Botl br.,.ow•v Ni«"""'Y ""~loo lHlO,.HILUS lllChAllD Yr. lHl:.OPHllVS. ro'4· 1M111ot Co•t•Mt ... C:•. P••MO• .. •Y on r.ovtmbor lJ, 1'11 Survlwd by Ma wllo 1..-11y, IWO ;on\, lil<ll•fd ""· 1 hf'opf''lll"'>· Jr of L•k• k•v•iu. /lrllOn•. •nd O.v•d l~lllJ>OI (O\I• Mc >A, c: ... ~O\lt .,."9hltO, M•rY ... lh ,. 11m.t •nd ..... u,., M.6hter, both Of f rr rnont, C• •nd ,-.n•y 4'nO ~•ru1y 1 h•OPhllU) Of (..O.t• ~\d (4t,, hi\ rr1011\er C.•ll>c<lllW J. 1 twroplllh•• 01 J•tk\on. M1nn.•,.o\a. brOt'1ier C>'fttn lJtvlO TMOl)fl1lu•,....,.,,.. 9r-.;11110 A memtHtr of l ,.._ (AM)O ~'Wn1c f ••If'\ M•SGnlC LOOQll '°· J•c: "-\On MIU,W\01.t 1nvo1veci with u. Or-C.0<m1y Lilli. u-eu• -..... _ bell lr•ll•' Club, an ttHO<•••• Qu.itrOl.n tOO • O•UQ"l•r' of (..Ov•n• N•mor••f .. ,'VICK Wiii be V.t<lnelOtY 10 AM et th< 1-rr>byl.,••n 1.hurcn of thl Cown..nt Otti<t•h~ will be kwv. t;rut• l'urtle .af'O M•\on1c LOCIQ• U1~'4Jrr\ In hru Of t~er~ oona11on& lo llf•"'Yt" to'-"'h <..n<er • ~o<.•ttr. b.,1, htCl•O"'"' Not\u•ry [)irC(\OU1. (.llLlLLY EllNEST (, t.MllLl"• r~10.nl ol .<.ost• MP\d, CA ~•>..O •"'•V Ofl ~Ov• ember t•, 1911, ~,••WO b't 1wo Mint !<-rt c,, .. 1.., ol C.°'ld Mew, CA. tf\O lol•n Gore•l•Y ol C:O•t• -... C• .. broH,.r Henry h..-ot ~1or10t •no r.o ... i.,. Merv 1noem•n 01 l°'I• Mtw, (~ ..,4 ... ,,.., M<C.r•ll"t of FlorkM, • n1~c.• kerM Jorlf1'°4'1 01 c.. M'l«I• •no ,,.,.,,_ 010 l"Ot n••ll OI (.°'1• -M, <-•. len eranc1<n11oren, Al..,. Ml<~tl, .,...,.., LOl1 ..a M.trk Ci< .. I.., of Cott• M•t ... l• • wry, ,.,,_•rtn •no ~h•ron vroloy ol t<twl)Ol'l Ue.<11, Ct. •"" 11111 •no Roll V.11"11.,. of C:O.~ -... u .. two VrH\•VHncl<l"tlldr"', l.rlC'. -Andr""' ol C.Olla MaM, c... S<trvlu• will C>e lwlo I llut'ldav November 11, 1'11 " 1 JO l M •I 1!4111 llrCMl<lw•v Cllapel. Inter· me11I H•rbol' uw11 -rl'l«l•I l'•rk. ,IHll Broact#•rMort...rycllrecto"· 1 l'OWlll MIC:HAIL J. POWEii, Aprll 1', lUJ·Nav•mber U, Hll. 9•1ovtd '"111t>e11d at ~111 J, Power; 1ev1119 ., ... , of_,.,...,. .. _ oftCI K911y el>CI -c.r.ie of ~ .. -'"· (A. jll1to •unlwd \IV fllt""' Anh\lr l . I'•*''· 1l•l•r 9erbart tio•r •nd !IN~ ,,.,...... Power •11 of c.an~·· foo11114tr •11C1 f'ret1oe11t ol Roy•l ~·rl11t, '"'• PMI MOUnl. C... ~btr J.!Mrken wi.1t !>lemlMnt Auocl•-,_ a. HaOenlt Tool ., o .. Prtcli.141<1 llla"'"''llO lowocltCIOll. Proml111nt 1n kor• lnttrNll .... 1 & V.RA Radr>e "' ~..-· •-V 1.00 P.M. lWMNY NawM'llllof IS, 1'17 •I Pacll" V1•w AAemtrlel P•rk, HOO P.cll1C View Oflwo, h""l)Of1 keel\, C•. ~ tf Illa ,Jte1urre(t1on olebrai.o by R••· llleft!H O"Oollllell 10 00 A.M, Vttd!Wt Gay Novernotr 1• 1'11 •1 OUr Ledy el Ml , C.rmtl <:a111o11< {.l\ut(h, 14AI V.t•I IHlllM 91VO. ...... l)Ol'l bu<h, C:• .-CllROTHUS .1Wf'H$'MOITUAIY 827Maln St Huntington Beach ·53&-8639 • ·-PlaPAMILY c:o&.0Mt.4L NMllA&., HOWi ' 7801 BolSl Ave. Weal minster . '893-3525 PACIPtC VllW ..-.oliALPAU c.m.tery Mortuary Chapel 3!500 Peclhc View Orlve Ntwoort. ~llfOMia 84-4-2100 "When an intruder comes in or ('Uts a screen or raises a window ,.1 Cowling saJd he had been think· mg about. the system for some COWUNG SAID HE believes neighborhood crime can't be solved just by policemen dlivine around in the neighborhoods. this year, Burns ur1ed Sen. Adlai Stevenson, D· Ill., to "join me In brlng· ing about a lowering of your salary and mlne.' · Meet Claude McClanahan. He feels ·once you've decided to get a loati,you should get an ~erinhoUrs. Claude McClariahap. is an executiVe vice president at C~Ff ornia First. He helps set our loan policy. . . On most consumer loans we can usually RaVe an answer for a Clistomer in two or three hours .. :' Tha~_ ipeans when you apply f of an auto loan, home improvement, boat, or personal loan at one of our 103 branches, you usually know if you've got the money within a few hours after you've applied. "I know of no other bank that approves loans this f: '' \. ast. I ' We think fast , loan apprd als is just one Feas0 whyWlfrt H 0 the fastest g OWi g .),1lajor banl< int es ate. "' .. .. . \ , j ........ , .. ,1711 BOOMER UA MA1H C~t.L Mt:5" ANO 1'6U. _Mf~ •:f'b ... ""'!.EM111~ ~~L.0. ·-----FUNKY WINKER BEAN bV Tom Batiuk Record Rru.ndup-One problem with today's sensitive turntables is having the tonearm skip. If this happens you can often fix it by CASEY ma.king a fine adjustment at the base of the tonearm to make sure that it doesn't skip but atil 1 tracks accurately with a minimum of distortion ~ and flutter; IHS tJOW TUAT' W/M'TER I~ UPON US, WE'VE STA~EC> A HOU:E'( L£A~U£ AT MY SANITARIUM .... 0 MOON MULLINS If that doesn't work, try taping a rock to your tonearm! bv Ferd and Tom Johnson )bU CAN'T PROVE THAT-you Gar No 'W'I ............ -.. __ WllNE5SES GERIATRIX IT 5 STILL A ~KY 'tC{tl f'N>,N'{ CQCoCH~ WAY TO 6i;T NE. 10 YOU KNOW HAVE A ATTEND HOME· FL.~i ~ J,A,CUZZI COMING l 1U66 NA.YEP IN THE:ll(' 1-0NOR '! JUDGE PARKER WHAT WAS uu'S LAST FOST~ PLACEMENT, JU06E" ' •, .CROSSWORD./ COMg WOULO 'IOU CARE~ SEE A MENU? . , by Roger Bradfield . by George Lemont I . . • . TODAY'S CIDSSIDID P.VZ·L~ ACR088 ., ... 81Rabb1ta' re1111v11 &~Travel by wagon DOWN UNITED Feature ~dlcate ,.....""'MOHn.Oo\Y ; t 1 Mixture 12 Spu' 13 TrtllH 46Conclu011 1 a Boundary frotn evl- 24 Chain "''11' dine. 26Eur blackblfdt 48 Eicwnoea 28 S.hlf\d 61 -·-ci.ua 27 Pomme de 52-themark: ·-··:Potato Conform 29 Burdentd 53 Sn•lch tllCtHlvtly 54 Staple food 29 Ltlltt 65 Maah't 31 Condel!Md Plllntr mottture 57 A tot: tnfot. 32 Heart. •.o. ""-' 83 Half braid 58 Elbe tr1bu· 35Proper tary functlont 59 F«etatti.r 37Partoftti. 80Jallcell· bOdy Sfa1\9' 40 T tfttfltlf,ary e3 Wr11t1\ f7 TEI\Nlw.' Q\11'["' zb40 W't COt\Si ~ CORON\ bfl ~ 6+0-70'Ji YOUR WILL IS OUT OF DATE IF IT DOESN'T TAKE TI-fE 197 6 TAX REFORM ACT INTO ACCOUNT In a •tree seminar. professionals toll about todays Financial Planning During this seminar, many sub1ects • will b-0 d1scuaaed, Including ·How do changes in the Tax Reform Act affect your personal Income ·How to get tax-tree income ·How to increase income without uslrig ,1dd1t1onal money ~ ·How to double your money, tax deferred 'How to provide for children'• education •How to reduce your pert0nal I~ tax •who should own the tn1urance p01fcy 'How to 1ncreaM retirement income •How to teach wives to become widows "What you shOuld know before aee1ng your attorney ·How to avoid probate SPEAKER PAUL HANSON, JR.. Mr. Ho• ,,, ,.,., C...,.moo ct ,~,. ln111ure of Ecor>ome1 H,, obi~ n,,.-J h1 BA 01 [)(..,,,\QI\ U"'ve<"'Y• Od 17odualo we<~ 1n , °""""'· \ ot 1Ni WMor!on Scnool of FinoN:e on f'hilocfo r h.11 and <11<..,,od h•4 MBA from the ~of Chico to C.oduotc School of IMlMu He 1-tos oppi<>'ed on rod o md l~tM\1011 and lt>elured ori o brood f'Ol'9' of • wb1om cOYfln"'"J I~ ond 14nonco O'if)eC'' of 11w> ptOfl)\\ On\ rrd bu""8\I "Best program on f1nano1al planning I've evtr attended."· M. Phtller, San FrancllQO "An honest and straightforward program on the baslQ 1ub}ecl" • J WiN. Stoc~n • "Sound edvioe' from the professlonal1 ~ -G. ROblnt0n. WalnutOeek I 7P..M. Wedn91day, November 18th ~ TwitOdly, November 15, 1917 DAILY ftlLOT .4 • It's Something r-·· THESE ARE TYPICAL telephone calls received by tbe Irvine volunteer coun1ellng oreanizatlon, Sometbtn& BeauWul. MOSTCA.Ll3, MRS. Orton tayt,~·~~~!!;i~!!!~~~!i!~~~!!i!!!!i!!i!!;;!i!!!!;;.!i!!i!!!!i!!!!i!~.-are from teenacera. Many d .th •, "They're varied calls," says the or· ganlzatlon'a president, Marilyn Orton. "There's no set pattern. You never.know." · Operating out or offices near UC Irvine on Campus Drive, Somethln1 Beautiful volunteers have offered help and direction to people wtth problems since lta inauguraUon last March. Reached on a 24-hour hotline at 752·2331, they offer someone to lllten and a referral source for troubled call era. THOUGH THE GROUP'S staff of 30 volunteer counselors have no certtned training, in-house seminars are con· ducted periodically to train new counselors to handle crisis calls. aren't about problem• of ,lb caller. butw~hilpventa. " The l1'0QP ls fUnd~ tot&lly f)y1con· trlbutlona and arants; none 'ti' the staff, lncludlnC Mn. Orton, la paJd. "Mrs. Orton hu formed a Century Club of people wlWn1 to donaU. • a month to support the or1aDiiatlo6. • She 'a tryinl to cet 100 memben. ••tRJS WHOLE COMn\Unlty has paid tor wbat ~ou see, .. stit cesturea around the orcanlzatlon 's aparaely fumlsbed Town Center oftlces. Everythlng -paper, penclll, th• telephones, desks. clock• ~nd cab,f\els-was obtained by tlonatfon. Says Mrs. Orton: "It's just every body helping out m their own way That's what really makes it Something Beautiful." Santa Ana Slagi"9 Year in Jail. for Teen ByTOMBAaLEY . .. ... D.tll'f f'IMltli.ft One oC lour YOUJll Sarita Anana ac· cuaed on arrest of the murder of two teen·a1ed t.rothera ln a Santa Ana park bu been sentenced to ~ year in Orange County JaU. Superior Court Jud•e Jerrold S. Oliver ordered the jail terra for Fernando Rodardl, 17. alter a jury round him aunty or manslaughter. Rodatdl was tried as an adult. RODARDl'S THREE companions have flied guilty pleas ln coonecUon with the klllinas last July 24 of brothers Hector Colores. 17, and Walter Colores, 15. Randel Ponce, 18, will be sentenced Nov. 18 to an aareed four-year prllon- term after pleadlna 1ullty lo manslaughter charges. Steven Acala and Alex Setura. both 18, are servin1 52-day jail terms or· dered after they pleaded guilty to charges or assault with a d~adly weapon. Both men must serve three years probation after release. THE FOUR defendanta were ac- cused on arrest of beatln1, slabbing and shooting two youn1 brothers in El Salvador Park after the vlctlms jeered at the four as they rode put them on thelr bicycles. OUlcers said the Colores brothers were members of a rtval 1ant. Ad Media 'Barulanit Barulii' ~ Gets Prison Tenn Lecture I Set at UCI A Huntington Beach woman who ~came Exploitatlon ,fl( the known to lawoien as the "bandana budlt • arter subconscious ~Y ad· ahe u!led a scarf to )Ude her features dUrinl a aeries verlising med la .. 11 be of armed robberies bu been sent to state prlaon. discussed NOY. 22 Orange County SUperior Court Judie H. War- K ren Knigh~ ordered a five-year prllfA ta'ID for by Dr. Wilson Bryan ey c arol Ann Mil-evtcb, also known u Carol Ann in a l ecture titled .... ultl 1 ed "Subliminal Seduction.. Sickner, alter she pleaded cuillJ tom p e arm at uc Irvine. . robberycharaes. The illustrated lee-Miss Miloeevictb, 32, was faclq trial on six ture, scheduled for 8 counts of robbery, two of attempted bur1lary and p.m . in UCI's Crawford oneoCasaaultwtt.b~deadlyweapon. Hall, is sponsored by the ArresUna 'Officers identified the defendant as associated studenta. the "b~ana bandit" who robbed at leut 11 rast Tickets at $3-50 are food ouUets in ¥unllniton Beach and Garden Grove available a t the As· during a12-dqperiodinDecember1978. aoclated Studenta Ticket .... omce in Gateway Com-His •ca1" G mon~ and at the door the ton roup .. evemne of the concert. , . Group rates and further • · information may be ob· PJ llB B n • tained by calllne the 81· ans azaar. sociat ed st udents. 833·5547. Chairman Dr. Rowland H. Davis of Laguna Beach has been appointed chairman of the depart· ment of molecular biology and biochemistry at UC Irvine. The Huntington Beach llistorlcal SoClety la sponsofini a Quistmaa Bazaar l'J'tday and Satur- day at the Pacille Room oft.be Central Library. 7111 Talbert Ave. Money raised from a SO-cent donation for adult admission to the event wlll be uaecl to 111pport tho restoratlon of the Newland Hou~e on Beach Boulevard. 1 • The buaar will be held from 4 to 7~i0 p.m. Frl· day and from 10 a.rn. to 4 p.m. Saturday. There wtif- be planta, bake& aoods, Christmas omamenta ~ children's lffts. . · Use Air California's quick and thrifty · Jet-Frac saoAce for those special gifts. .. A Trust U$ to pro~$ the gen-for packages under 15 poonds. And S10 ships your \\ pacet between nm major regional olrpofts state wide. This ye<;6, tnake It ~ on yoUl581f with Jet-Pac. tle h<Jndllng and jet.quick deliver( you won't get onv other waf. Jet-Poe service assu~ some day counter· to-counter service · ~-· CAjlFORllA . ·We're easyJo take. SeMng Lake Tahoe, Oakland, Ontario, Orange County. Palm Springs, Sacramento, Son Diego. Son FroncliCo, and Son Jose. CcMI Jet~ae Information In Orange County, (71A) 762-7Cfl0. • Balance 7.75% ears $1,000 7.50% ears $l 000 6.7.5% ears Sl,000 6.50% ears $1.000 5.75% 3 months $500 5.25% None (Regular Acct.) $5 We wUI transfer funds from your savings to your chcck"'9 account with a phone cell. This and otb•! ?ervke1 have ttie effect of eoming you an ewn greater return on your money: Come and see us today. We're here to advise. and help. fhe retirement ac:count spaciallsts at lrvtne Sa have tax·deferred plans that can help er the &mount of Income taxes ' qualified lndlvldual1 will pay for 1977. Ask for details about our IRA Plan (Individual Rettrement Account) and Keogh Plan (Rt· ttrement plan for the Self-Employed). . ' \ . \ . ) Your dreams can become reality •.. if. you plan for them now. Whether it's~. Europe next year or.co• In ten~, Home Federal has a savings plan designed to help ~u. ~ For fle>dbtlity, use out~ SavercaM atcount You am~ funds anytline, and still earn higher ihterest than With any bank ~book tf • account For long tenn goals, we haW a .· :1.P'# that~ do~bte ~money In less .. ·/than nine~. · . ...... _ .. -_ ....,.. ...... _ .... ,_ .. , .... -. ........ ' . . . "'.. -.... """ .... . , .... ~·------...... _ .. IN ID •Busi ss •Sto,ks •Movl •Television Ex· By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of'"' OtllY "llti Steff When Cazzie Russell speaks or his recenl departure from the Los Angeles Lakers, he sounds Hke a man who ls hurt, a little angry and a little c<tb- fused . "It's tough ror me to en- vision, having started ev~ game as I did last season for a t eam that was 53.29, that I· m suddenly a castor!," Russell told the Daily Pilot Saturday as he prepared for a game of h-0·r·s·e again5t Lucy Harns of Delta State College . tor ChS.TV'• Challenge of the Sexes in Mission Viejo. Russell, an 11-year veteran and considered one or the purest abootlng forwards In the National Basketball Aa&ocla·. t10n, was cut by the Lakers at tbe outs t of the season. Altboug he's technically a free , be doesn't sound op mt.sU about the possibility of hooking on with another· team. "There may be a shp or paper going around to the owners saying I'm untouch'· ble," Russell says. "Ma)'be the Lakers want to keep me out or "" PllMt DALLAS' TONY Hill TACKLES JEFF SEVERSON. ' ' Russell supported his ' hypothesis by a~ that the Laker11 have been contacted by other NBA clubs a~ut bit• status, but.no one hu come to Russell with an offer. "The Laker• lmow I'm not nnished," Ruaaell say~, "I know I can still play, and 1 know there are a lot of clubs who could use ~as a forward rom ing off the bench. "Rut maybe they want to keep me out of basketball because I still have a contract OMYPILOT with the LaJcer1 and they have to pay me my salary, plus I can negotiate another contract wtth aooUier club," Russell uya. . ..So mayJ>e the owner (Jack .Kent Cooke> tells the other ownera. 'Listen, don't touch hlrn. Because lf you touch h m we mlc'hl not help fOCl 1et • franchii& ln .the National Hockey Le~u.: Tbat's the way tl wprka, 'RtJMell 88)11. ~Jum be aoundl, Russell sUU hMJ\ 't. thrown fn tee towel just yet. "I've-t.een workin.e out sante Lbe \I•)' ttiey cut me," Ru1sell Cardi~c Cards Hold the Aces ~DALLAS (AP> The St. Louis c.1rd1nals. back to their old cardiac finishes. unearthed 15- \'ear veteran Jackie Smith for his first touchdown pass since 1975 Monday night to share heroics ~1th Jim llart and bury previous I.) unbeaten Dallas 24-17 in high. fourth-quarter drama "l think it's obvious we've turned our season around," sSJd llarl. who rifled a 49-yard touchdown pass to Mel Gray and lobbed a 3-yard scoring pass to the.37·year·old Smith with 3: 10 to ·play for the game winner. Dallas' record dropped to 8·1 and St. Louis put some suspense back in the National Conference Eai.tcrn Division race with its fifth cons~uti ve victory for a 6·3 ledger · I nev(•r tbought something Ilk<> this would happen lo me ugain." said Smith, who was l'alch1ng only has third pass of the season ''It's great to be part of ll .. Ha rt said "We usually throw that pass to the halfback and I think it surprised them ·· Dallas, off to its best start in the 17·)Car history of the club, appeared to have lhe Cardinals well cuged, buildin8 a 14-3 halftime lead OI\ Tooy Dorsetes l·yard t.oucbdowa and a a. yard scoring pus from Roger Staubach to tight end Billy Joe Du Pree All St. Loui~ halfu show for tht first half of the nattonally televised motch was Jim Bak- ken 's 26·yard field goal. But Dallas muffed a chance to blow the game wide open when Randy Hughes intercepted a Harl pass at the St. Louis 17 only to see OuPree return the favor w1th a fumble on an ena around St Louis• Wayne Morris scored on a 1-yard t'?lJchdown run after Benny Barnu wu flagged on a 43-yard interference call and the Cardinals trailed only 14-10.· Efren Herrera's 21.yard field goal set the stage for Hart's fourth-quarter heroics. He found Gray wide open behind Aaron Kyle and Cliff Harris for the game-tying touchdown, then burned the jit· tery Cowboys defense with the pass to Smith. "We had the best feeling com ang in here that we've ever had, .. said Hart. "The Cowboys were riding hi&h and we had never won here so we turned the negative points into positive points for us ·· Cowboys coach Tom Landry agreed. "We haven't played well for the 11tst thrM or foW' weeks and " .Joss was lnevllable." said Lan· dry. • KDA• av OUA•T••• ~I lO\I•• o.o .. , ~I I. -FC. ..... tf\2• J U I If-1• IC II 0 J -11 l.J•I -Oor>efl ''"" tkefr•u ltlO I Sports Clipped Short U•I -Oul"r• 1 INM l19m ~lolll ... <I> lh•rrota lrdcll.' ~II. -Morrill run tS.ltlt•n 1t1cti.1 Oao -~(,"9•-•21 Bruins Thump At1ssies LOS ANGELES -The Gary Cunnani;:ham era at UCLA began on a winning note Monday night as the Bruins, led by forward David Greenwood, easily defeAl· ed an amateur team from Melbourne, Australia, 94·64 in an exhibillon basketball game. Cunmneham, makin~ his debut as UCLA coach, saw his Bruins come back from an early hrst half def1C1t and dominate the game the rest of the way. UC Irvine hosts the Australians Thursday mght at 8 o'clock. AU~T RAL..IA .. ,-P.1mor 17, Fo<IJ .... wai. .. ) C.00•1••" ••, ~-10 L..0091\all J, B1ne1 2 lola1>Ht1 .. UCLA o'MI (,r...,,..ood t•, vana.w..iw "• ~'"" ), 1 o .. ,,...no " H•o>llto.1 14, """"'' u I l\Oma1 I,.,.,,,.,_•. l•P!JOrl I lot•l• :1612 12 94 ~<allllm• Uc.LA ... Au•l••ll•JI fo .. ,..,.,,,, _ ....... n l otal loul\ Au•lr•ll• 11, U~lA ,. A .... ,, ... -Ra-. Sold Out LOS ANGELES -The .Los Angeles Rams·Oakland Raiders football game Dec. 4 was sold out Monday. Rams oCClclaJ11 said. The sellout of the 71,039· c.pacity Coliseum is the earliest of the season, said .Urry Wilcox, a spokesman for the Nallonal Football League team. Ile said ti ckets were available for the only other remaining home game Dec 11 against the Atlanta Falcons T~a. Teeh In Boael ORLANDO, Fla.· -Texa' Tech 's 16th-ranked Raiders will play in the Dec. 13 Tangerine Bowl m Orlando but its opponent for the football game hasn't been selected yet, the Orlando Seu· tinel-Star reported today. s~it • 1t'ln11er BAKERSFIELD -Larry Scott, a freshman at Ocean View High School in Huntington Beach, took first place jn bis division or the central Calftornia open AAU weig .. llftlng cham- pionships held her\ Saturday. Scott, 14, woo lhe 114-pound division by lifting a total Of 292 pounds. C'o11110r• 1t''•• LAS VEGAS -Ille Nastase de- feated Vuas Gerulalt..11 and Jlm- m y Connors continued hia mastery over John Alexander in Monday night'& opening round of the wcr Challenge Cup. Nastase, who won both pre- vious Challenge Cups, downed Gerulaitls, 8-S, s-e. t ·.f In the match at Caesar"• Palac .. Connors improved his llretlm~ record aealnst Alexander to six· victories and no Jouea by. domlnattni the Australian, fS-2, • 6-1. last 27 games. Pont has posted an 11 ·43 record since taking the head coaching rems at Northwestern tn 1973. Pont, 50, has been a head coach for 22 years -at Miami of Ohio, Yale, Indiana and Northwestern. ~ .... f VERMILLION, S.D. -A tour- ing Cuban national basketl>all team, led by Alejandn> Urgelles with 30 points, defeated South Dakota, BS-77, Monday night. The CUbans were ln C4hlrol through the firat hatf but dominated South Dakota in the second hall ror their second vic- tory in three games of a nine- ga me tour. Buie ta Bretoen1 MILWAUKEE -Outfieldef Larry f011le says he's leaning toward Milwaukee, and he'd Ukt to bring former Minnesota Twins teammate 1'Ymatt Bostock aloni witbhlm. • . Hisle, who led the American Lea1ue in runa ~ttecj in while With Ute TwlOl lut seuon, wu ·the first cbolce o( tb~ Milwaukee Brewers tn b11ebaU '1 receflt free·•cent dr'aft, aud the Brewen plcked Boltock on Utetr .second turn. ~IL.-Of•1~ ... u1ro,,,H•r1 ll••••n••OI ~IL:: ~rn111>Jpet6lt.m Hlrl tllaltlten •><•• Ai -M.G» • S?ATISTl'5 11. l Dal ~ 1"1 GOWft• ~ 19 I• hu~._llol•OI 4)·1~ ~IS. 1-a\>I"' ~·'°' Ill flO keturn yo1(9t )I l2 l'HMI l · 10-2•·1 11·10-2 "unu & J) ... J l'umllle>IOll I I I· I }'en~el•YltO.$ ) 11 ~>J • tHOl\llOllAL'-lADl•S RIJSHIHO -~t. UMll•, Morrt• 21-72, Nlel<•ll ·~-~. 0•1 .... ~ IHI, 0orw1c1 .. !JO F'ASSllllG-k. LOiiis, Hart '9>24-1, 10, llellal, !.lauWUl, ll•JWi&; RaCl:l\ff'<C.-'\.~L ~I.it.. Grey ,., •• -1<•11 J.:i., Otll•t. ~ ...,,... HS, PQl'Mlt WJ Rys. "I gues5 you alway• hope that somebody will pl~k )'Oll up, especially when you've bton a Cftdlt to the game for 11 year.. "But it's touab to continue to work out without a purpose,'· be says. "Of course there b a purpose, }'ou always work out for ure, to keep younelf in good shape, but. • • " His voJce trailed off. "nve been running every, day about a mile and a halt and I run 4b0ut 10 sprints ritht after lhat. Then I run a hill about five or six limes and ao shoot around for about 30 mmutes. "I really don't know why the clubs haven't picked m~ up. There was some talk that I was 'Uncoachable, •· Russell says. "But I had no problems at all in New York er Golden State." There were no publicized problems with Los Angeles, eit.het, but he hints that the way in which hls career was apparently ended by the Lakers hu left a bad taste in his mouth. The 33-year-old veteran had the Lakers' seeond best field _goaJ percentage last season rt 49&) and averaged 15.4 polota . per game. His 210 assists ln 1976·77 ranked as the second best total of bis career. Russell says he has no oef- inite plans about movin& int.c> another career because the Lakers still have to pay htm his salary and be still hopes to catch on with another club. CAZZIE RUSSELL ~odgers, Yanks Cut Record Series Pie NEW YORK <AP) -Thirty New York Yankees are $27,758.05 richer for their winning eftons 1n the World Series. According to figures released, a full share for the losing Los Angeles Dodgers was S20,899.05. The full shares for both teams set World ~es records. 'J'be ·DOa;ers cuts included a five·•ixu..tllare ot $17,415,8'7 to Boog PoWell, who was released in August; a three-quarte~ share of $16,674.29 to pitcher Lance Rautihan, who came up in mid-year, and a two-thirds share of $13,932. 70 to outfielder John ltale, who left the club at about the same time. Al Downinj and Stan Wall got $10,U9.53 half -shares, while Jerry Grote, Vic Davillllo and Rafael Landestoy, who all joined the ch.th in late August, received one·sixth shares of $3,483.18. · OOOOf.115 l'UL..I.: !HARE:S ($10#19.0SJ -Tom Ul«O., 11.0 AO.Ml. -v Ba91111, ~rtt er ...... Jll'I\. Gtlllt1", ""''°" Golfter, Cli.ltlf hk•r. Ga.nn e11ru, Aon(rf,Mll,. C..nnan, Sltv• GM'v..,, t:.o c..ocison, aurt _.,, Chtrll• HOllQll, Tommy J~. LM l.acy, oa .. , ~. •kk Monday, ~O· .,., Molt, leGOV M¥!tntz, Jollmy O•tn, Oouo Atll. AIU "-· 8111 J<u-11, R1991t s.nun. 1;.110 So~•. Don ftutlon, !I••• ~••oar, •ll lluhler, Jack Home!, Notle 11.---H Vf. SIXlh $t1"-A1< lil1,4U.17) -hog1 Po•ell. • T HR~E·OUAAT~• SHARE lt1S,'7•.2t)-:,, l.anct Atvlllltn. TV..O·H•IR06 SHAft61 IJU,t32.701 -Jotlll H•lt. ONE-HALll 5"4ftfi t'1t,u,_~JI -Al '-'ntne. 6'-n Y.eu. Cltll'.· ~l,IARTl'.R'"AIU ~.7•>-<iwlsO.-,R~ ' t<-, Tom L,efly, (wtla Sc4tt (grqufld _,_ Ohk-6oll'1H MUI.Ill. 15*,•itl-\llC ~ .;errvGroM,R.11 ... ~. 1 CA'" GRNfl$.i~~ Mc~ bt• ,,,.. ~ .iw•J· •-..a-11-.... 11111 at.ilfV ~ Sc«tv.et• INU,...S); 11.o ,_, t\T'f ;o.M••G'°""-"-U 0rm .... .11m-. ... Clat Pf4l<lkaP1lc11trs).• N•WYOIUC • f IJlL !HARE CW,79USI-8111'1' M.rtlt', 'r-' lltr••· Clo)od ....,.,. 9obClf CAil. l!tston ......_ DKll H--· ,._,, 81.W, "°" ~ ... Cllrls 1 (.llemllllu, 811elty O.nl, Eel l'lv~rN, llOll , y...an. oen c..t11t11. t-r-HN1r, Keo1 HClllUlllllll,. Jlln HIHl4tf, Rewit Jte~. 5-erar Lyle, c;.,.. '• ,.. • .,. Tll\lrtnen M""'""' Gr ... Nettles. Lov "lnltllt, 11\111 .. ltanclcMlltl, Mi<uy RIWl"I, Ff'td • ~Illy, Old T....,, MIU Tenu, Roy ~ woroe~.~MGNllen. .. T HJtHH"IAltTllt $HAJtl ($10.llUOI---• Clo. Cllll JoM .. ,,.T~O·THIRPI SH•ltlf.• J ,.11.sos.~JI -Utll A••ton. Ohl;·HAt.1- S'h A• & liU,17•) -Jim v,iy,,A; t •urman Scll,,tletr Urt1nef1; .. h.k ! Priore, Pelt Slltelly lt1.,llfl011s. tnenl. 011a. ll11RO SHARE 1'9,2SU71-E:lrocl t1tnclrld.1o,. MICkt'J' klult>l GO P•ll•non. ONE•l'l,.1H !oMARl IU,Ul.ool-A{tf--ltr. CA!oH AWllARO$: UOO-o.w 8er1Nn, ~ • l(l119M•n. o.it Loe~. Urry Mee.II, Ed ~TC $11111l1Wrnn. • • on.SllTSAMI DI ISION YrfhNl'.tlS-11.ensel Cll'I', U fult ,,_.r , "·"' 7 olllNt<•; Phll..Selphle. J4 f ... I • • .... r .,,,,..,...... ! I • Tunday,No Football Players ·'Of the Week Offeme X.ENT TUCKER, lllariDa CHanUa&lon Beu•> -Tbe Vikings' main attack with the ruahing came was over Tucker's area and he wu the team's leadlne blocker. ' . stEVE ENalGHT, Capistrano Valley - Enright bad seven key blocks to pave the way for Cougars ruuners in a 40-6 win to chnch a CU' playoff victory and ended out highest or any lineman HERB moMPSON AND GARY JONES, Irvine IDgb -Thompson completed 14 of 28 passes for 250 yards an<i Jones was the primary receiver, catching 9 pass~ and scor- ing a touchdown. DOUG THOMPSON, Fountain Valley - Thompson set a school record with 1.81 yards in passing yardage, completing 13 of 21 passes. Thompson reached 281 yards with 6.19 still left In the t.hJrd quarter. JEFF HYDER, Edison fffuot1n1toa BHch) -Caught 8 passes for 104 yards and 2 touchdowns In addition to Intercepting a pass and running it back 37 yards and made 9 tackles. MARTY GREEN, Coroaa del Mar - Green scored his team's lone touchdown, blocked well, made some crucial first downs and played one or his finest games of the season. JOHN MILLER, Laguna Beach -Miiler had 57 yards on JUSl seven carnes for an 8 1 average and made several key blocks for the Artists. Costa Mesa -Coaches say they can·t single out any particular player. so the entire team shares the offensive player of the week honors. DAVID GONZALES and TIM O'HARA. Mater ~l (Santa Ana) Gonzales ran for 105 } ards and a touchdown. whale O'Hara complet- ed four of nine passes for 63 yards in toppling rival Serv1te I Anaheim l LOUIE OCHOA and BARR\' BAKER, Mission Viejo A sophomore tight end, Ochoa caught a critical pass in the victory over El Toro, but was more valuable for his blocking Baker, amidst an entire front hnP which tilood out. was the ::.tandout with four ouhtanding blocks MIKE LEWIS. San Cll'mente -Lewis h.1d his fin~st running n1~ht of the season, gaanmg 110 yards and play mg a :,ohd game in :.ill dcpartmenls GEORGE JACOBO. El Toro Jacobo's blockm~ from has fullback position was the key to his fine performance against cross· town rivaJ Mission Viejo. TOM HUGHES, University High <lrvlne> -An all-league selection ut offensive tackle, Hughes turned in his usual consistently strong performance as a blocker. ' MITCH McGREGOR. Dan• Hills McGregor had an outstand:ng mght, carrying the ball 20 times for 238 yards and one touchdown against San Clemente MARCO PAGNANELLI and JIM THOMAS, Huntington Beach Pagnanelh completed 12 of 24 passes for 157 yards and a touchdown Thomas caught six of those passes for 93 yards, including a 16-yard touchdown play He also rushed for a 4 8 average. BRYON WARD, Newport Harbor-Ward scored two touchdowns, including a 30.yard dash, and ignited the offense in the second half CRAIG CRANDALL and KEVIN HAGAN, Estancia <Costa Mesa) Crandall was outstanding at making line calls Cspeci(y. ing the type or block for his teammates to use) and Hagan ran ror 117 yards on 22 carries, has bl•st effort in two years. Defeme Piekeroo Winners Football pro· gnosticaton, It 'a your lut chance to., do your thing for 'the 1m seuon as· l he Daily Pilot Pigskin Pickeroo contest winds into l~ final stage. And it'll be a two-fold contest with games in·· eluded for the coming weekend as well as for the Tbankseavang holi· day due lo so many key eames beln1 held next week. The next to last contest was swept by Huntington Beach experts, who all tied for first and had to be separated via the tie· breaker. A.L. Jacobson of Foun· tam Valley was also in the tie but fell short on his tie ·breaker total. Jim Plgloo is the win· ner and earns a year'::. membership in the Newport Nautilus Physical Fitness Center for his guess1n& ex· pertise. He missed on the Seat tle-NY Jets, Navy-' Georgia Tech and USC· WashinBU>n games. Tony Arne is second and missed Atlanta's win over Detroit plus the same two college games P1gloo was off on Terry Rausin is third and was off target on Arkansas' victory ov<'r Texas A&M. Atlanta's win over Detroit and Seattle's conquest of the Jets. , The two runncrsup rc- cea ve SJO gift cert1f1cates from South Coast Plaza. Athletics For Girls "'0M~N S \t()i.Ll VIALL ~on l.l•tvc> ~4h: ott l. l h w1nt l) J, U I O ~a,..l..t Ar:.• Ot.f '.>.IUdlt\..Al'-'!rl l),.),)·1),1)/ GlllLS TENNIS VAJISI TY , .......... -1111111 u ........ t~ Sl ... lft l.lranda IUI lo.I 10 "'°""'" l>-6. for Cl t 6 Hool 2 6. Orow11 11/1 1u,1 ~ o, 1 ~. th M1~'1 IUl IOst'-6. 1 ... 2·•· °"'*" C.rtve·S1llHC"n llJI IO.I to &nt•,. 8•10 .. 1n 2·6 • .,,,..terlll•ICI ~ reler 4·0, O• I <.00C1bolly•L1p~on o 1 . "-•mln•k•~AIKhrTlOOOy IJ I lo\I ""· t-6, 2·6. (Ill•.,._..._.,., UI jo, t 0•, t·•.0-• cost• M.w 1121 Ul U911N Buo SIM1ltt • Mdnwn L.) lost 10 U•rrno,.~O 6, o,.f Lvnc'. ... l•V\ I' IOSl lO (,ottlM:l'ln ... "-O\t•r LI tost O.•. ~ '· I IJ, ftt"d---•ll L J IO~l 1 h. P"90 m..tlth <•lh"<l l>'t.t1.t'Mi <Jf oorkn1u, 1~12 •· Oowbl .. 1-.iuhcn•HlnttOOO ILi 10,t I() Alg"trf'•kOIO•n O.•~ Ott 1<.nor~t C.rutnlll•' .--0, dot Ho«U "1111e • J, V.tlllk·Roth~ (LI 10,t 16, ttOn l>-•.•-a; Sm•th-... rllhy IL) IO,tll 6, Io, .... llHrtCUI 161 MIM .... V .... Sl"'lft MOl>•n IM) Ml Slffd ... 3, Ott <.•"" ~·3, lotl lo O••llt J.6. V.1ntrrs 1MI IO.I l ... l"l .. ; lAnot.or\ IMI lo· I l6,H,I .. . 0.-" Gt"''' ... " Roll\ IMI IO<.t to Prtto • smun 6·/, dott. l.O.Sd\·OICk ...... O<,·t. IHV\On Uurkt 6·~. O•vrl" lloo<n!HOn tMI. IO't t-•. won, ... •~. 111um·&-1 M1i.1 ... 1,2 ),2 • S.11 Cl-• Ill I II) 0-N Hlllt $i ...... Lund IS) lost 10 1C.rot1111 2·•. oet (,oy<il 1°6, ~I IO Aloe,..,.n 2 .. ; v•klll •SI IOSt 2·•· 0-.. ,.., Ron ·~1 lost o .. 06,0·6, 0.-." Lewls•M. SIH• ISl lost to A1c1erm•n·M<Oonel0 ..... <let. ti.ck• O'Connor .. ,_ o.f. Jonn.V.lnt•r114111tr .. , . 110$,._ •rt« t:>I -t .... ""°" ........... ; s1 .. 11*'" SIK• ISi won ... z. 1ou ... 1,wenl·). Limited time only. I FOOTBALL I GIRLS SPORTS I MISCELLANY CHARGER ROMPS -El Toro High sophomore tailback Chuck Gurley picks up some yardage behind Mike Gross o.11rr111e,....wa,..~ C70>, Rick Irwin (75) and Bob Patnode (52) in a game against Mission Viejo. El Toro Sophs Rally fol-· Title ·By ERNIE CASTILLO could have hung at up have El Toro mount a when Dan Dehnert a 20·7 deficit a1aln1t 0ttt1to.ii,,.,1e4tuo then,•· Sweaiy said 70-yard TD drive with capped a 00-yard drive Costa Mesa to win 41-33 It seemed only CltUng ''But the team had a lot four mmut~ left in the with a 15-yard TD run. A on b a ck· to· b act that El Toro High 's of pride. worked hard first half lo ta~ a 21·20 two-point conversion touchdowns late la tho sophomore football and won the rest or lead. madeit28·28. game. team• w\llch staged them." The \.1sit.ors seemed to But with 4:30 remain-GurloY <>1, 145) and comeback after com· None was more excit· have the momentum intt. El Toro mounted its Alex Jacobo CS-t. 160) eback all year long, ing -or important -again at the start of the r i n a I comeback, were the workhorses In should capture 8 share of than the season finale second half whf'n Mark mare bing 10 yards in the backfield but Sweazy the South Coast League against Mission Viejo on Joiner returned the four n:Unutes to bot.h pro-I a I d, the t • am •a championship in much the Chargers· turf. It kickoff for a touchdown duce the winning turnaround came when thesamemanner. 1 R b hd d t rt *k vid K Th<• Chargers or head was a see.saw battle all and a play ater. o touc own an ea up qua er a ey coach Chuck Sweazy re· the way until Chuck Chavers intercepted a much of the remaining finally COUDd pustns: Gurley broke a 28-28 pass time touch. " bounded from a 2·2 start deadlock with a i.hort But El Toro's defense "When the momentum However,S U7alao to reel orr five con-touchdown plunge. his stifCened. got the ball changed, the kids could gave the oflenslve line a secutive victories, in· fourth of the afternoon. back on downs and the have sold the farm, but lot o( credit. In fact •. eluding a 35·28 thriller in the final minute of the offense responded with a they didn't," Sweazy center Bob Patnode. over previously Un· ball game. 45.yard scoring drive to said. "That was relllly guards Mike Gross and beaten Mission Viejo In a Mission Viejo wiped boost its lead to28-20. an indication or their at.. Kenny Hart and tackles title :,howdown at home defi T , M' I ta' t·· .. e all year loud," -Rick Irwin and Douc Thursday. out a 14-0 1ctt with two rue to lOrtn, ass on u.u th • p cl "We lost our first touchdowns 1n the Viejo tied it up again. Earlier in e seuoq, acoa serve a1 CO· 1 ea g u e ga m 8 < 7 .0 t 0 ... s::·e:.:c:.:o~n.::d_q~u:.:arte:::.::.:r~o.:.:n.:.:IY:......:t~o--=e:.:a~r.:.:I Y:...•~· n:...:th:.:..:.e..:..ro:.;u:;,.:rth_:..;.~pe.:.r_i..;.od~...:E:..:l_T_o_r...:o_h_a_d_r_a_ll_ied __ f ro_m_c_a...;p;..t_a_i.ns_fi_or ...... t.be_finale. __ -:-_ Corona del Mar> and radio pager .WIDE AREA COVERAGE ORANGE CO.-L.A. •11.10 .:.:r=. NOD~ON APPROVED CREDIT SILE.I 2 quarts: · $2120 ~gallon:-· 1~ i You save s2.75 WIN PRIZES WORTH MORE THAN $3,000 IN ·77 PIGSKIN PICKEROO RULES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : ENTRY BLANK ! • • • • : Namt .. ~..... ............................ : : ,.. Adelres1 ...•••..•...••.•..•••••• • • • • • • • • • "* : • • • cttr ........................ ZJp. •• •• • • •• • • • • ) Pflil:liM • • • . • f • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : • . . ,. • CJrc .. tums you "'''* wlll wfrt this wetl(1 9lftllS : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I O•mH to be pfeyed Now. 11, 2S, 2t I . ! Atlanta at New Orteene : Cleveland at NY Giants : .. .. Oanaa at Pittsburgh : Denver at Kansas City i HouaJon at Seattle : • Ram• at San Franclaeo : . . Miami at Clnclnn•tl : Minnesota at Chlca~o : New England at Buftalo : NY Jet• at Baltimore : • Phlladelphla at St. Louis : • Oakland at Sen Diego : Tampa Bey at Detroit i Ohio Stat• •t Mleh gen : Cal at Sterlford i Oregon State et Oregon i Waehlngton Stat• at Waehlngton • Tenneaaff at K nluckf UC~atUSC ! Penn State at Pitt N•bra•k• at Oldahoma Navy at Army Alabama at Aubum Georgia at GO,orgla il'ech TeuaatTexu &II Arken1ee et '"••a• Tech Purdue at Ind na Air Force at Notre Qam-. Wlacon1ln t Mlnne90ta North Carolin• t Duke 11 rops Laguna Fi-om '78 Grid Sked 'Obo or Oranco County•r. lona- ncUn1 t.tadlUoru-Brea·~Wll. Beach footbaU~u seen it.a last hur- rah. Brea coach Jlm McAllister has hi&h school! and thelr "78 s1tuaUon n llfUl~ea.lllf! cllon pnor lo leaaue play. W aterlowl hunting hH been conal.stcnUy 1ood • dropped the Art.lit. from his 1978 schedule, endlna a seriea that has spanned 43 yell"I and 44 aames ... the oldest cootlnulna rivalry in Orange County bJeh school circles. SUNSET LEAGUE oil over Southern Calif ornla especially for those Newport Harbor -LB Mlllikan, hunters who find themselves shoollnl over leased Coronadel Mar, Loara, Servile. ponds. Huge flights of sprig and wld1eon have Edltoa (Uaa&ln1ton Beach) -moved into the Southland durln1 the paat eodple of Open, Plu.aX, El Modena, Mater Del . weeks and should be sticking around for atJout the Foun~ Valley ~ Redlands, Long next couple of weeks when they Will depart and Beach Wilson, Servile, Lakewood waterfowters will find a slow down ln 1hoot1n1. .. • 'La1una Beach is a poor draw and the Jack of a sophomore team creates }>roblema," says McAllister. Attendance is rislna at Brea with 1,900 expec~ for 1978, levelln& oCf to ROGER CARLSON Marina (ffuntln&ton Beach) Clubs around tbe Salton Sea, both end.a, report Bolsa Grande. Magnolia. Katella, that limits or big birds are common. At the Splatter Loara. ..S • club in Riverside, local Newport scatter ICWl- UUDti.qt.oa Beach -Garden Grove, ners Sandy and Clint Hoose, Vic Hardin and Tom Bolla Grande, Cypress, Los Alamitos Forbes and others collected llmlts or •Pris, SEA VlEW LEAGUE mallards and w~dgeon in a good shoot over deco)'s Corona del Mar San Clemente, last week. , Newport Harbor, Capistrano Valley, Unattached hunters shooting public shooting Uana Hille;. . . .treas are picking up a few birds but limits are not Costa Mesa Open, San OemPnte, l·ommon. Most shooting areas report a mixture or Dona Hills, .Mission VteJo sprig, teal. spoonies and widgeon as making up the Estaoda (Cos.ta Mesa> Brea, bulk of a huntens bae Orange, Ocean View. K~tella Big Bear Lake was closed to waterfowl huntinc El T~ro. 1:-aguna Beach, Dana Just a couple of days prior to the openlot or the Hills, M1ss1on V1eJO, San Clement«: season. Tills is a great disappointment to many around 2,300 m the next 2-3 years. But Laguna Beach coach Dennis Haryung \ says the Artists wanted to continue the series, which Brea bH dominated. 26-16-2 Irvine High -Aq uinas. Sad· huntl.'rs from Southern California who looked dleback, Laguna Bt!ach, Laguna forward each season to hunting al this no fee lake. Hills Local pressure forced the supervisors to button up Unlnrstty (Irvine> Tustin, Los Big Bear due to complaints of noise. Itta too bad that J\migos, San Clemente Capistrano sportsmen have to lose hunting .spots like Big Bear Valley Lakl' as there are very fewilunltng areas left that Laguna Beach's 9·6 victory this year snapped an eight game losing streak for the Arllst.s ln the series SOUTH COAST LEM.u~; . ,11 e open to the public to enjoy the sport or Dana Hills Los Am1~os, El 'Toro, ~atcrfowling. Costa Mesa, Corona del Mar Tht• Kern Wildlife Refuge has really cut back Laguna Hills non Lu~o. Rim of on the hunll'rs 1t allows to hunt the once fantastic Two other items of note m scanning the Orange Coast area high school football scene for '7R Fountain Valley's beefed up schedule and the sked for Laguna IUUs High, despitt> the fact Laguna HlUs will not open ap· plicalions for a football coach until after New Year's Day the World, Big Bear, I n 1.n1• .,hooting refuge on Sundays and Wednesdays, with a Laguna ~ach El fnro St An -1111 nsmum hmil on hunters set at 26 by the Depart· thony, lrvme, Brawley mcnt or Fish and Game ~ M lulon Viejo Saddl<'h,1ck l'p north. Barre Stephens reports that most of l'u1>tin, El Toro. Costa MPsa the ducks and geese in the Alturas area are local , San Clement~ Coro~a del ~or hirds and as of press time no big storms have forced Costa Mesa, Uruvers1ty. f.l Toro 4mv northern birds into the area. Stephens reels that Capistrano Valley ~lsmorl', a nugrallon should develop within the next 10 days The Barons, Sunset League cham· p1ons for 1977, hD:,ve replaced Katella 1Anahe1m) and Kennedy 1La Palmai w ith Servile <Anaheim) and Lakc"oocl. Aquinas. Corona dcl Mar: U'!1vers1t> and hunting around Alturas will be good throuih the EMPIRE LEAGUE, remainder of the season. Ocean Vtew <Huntlngton Beach> Tu le and Klamath Lakes are holding about La Quinta, Santa Ana. Estancia, 1.000.000 birds, which is about right for this time of Although many of the games have not been confirmed with contracts and sites for many arc undecided, hl'rc 1s a look al each of the area':;, Open thl' year. These r efuges have been building weekly A."GELUS LEAG E antJ shortly birds wlll be departing the lakes and Mater Del <Santa Ana> Dos contmumg'-on with their southerly m1craU6n Into Pueblos, North 1H1 vr rside 1, Central Cahfomia valleys From all indications itls Lakewood, Edison. going to ht> a good duck and goose huntlnt season ~ for all California ns, and with a little cooperation Los Alamitos Race Entries College Football 9',.lrtH fW W9ClftHCl•J (.IHr, 1'.ci. F.tU Finl l'eal NDOfl I 111n !>fio\ tA Mltttl" J 1 ot ul l Yt ~•lhno~• II• Standings I• FlllST 11Ac£ -APl>•IOO•• 4\, turlonQ\ J ., • .It olO\ ~up ll•lm1"9 1•urw UM ti.1n•troVi;r•O)JO"t1. \IX TH llACE; HQ y••O> J .~.,, ota\ 6. up (l4•mmQ J-un.t11 ti~ C1•1m1nq e>rltf' uuco AllaMI( C.O.ll CA>ftfeteftO (.oftltr-• All O•Mtl "" l T "" L I 1<u<1y koo 1J ... r••I 111 Uupe \ N 1rwr J ...,..,.~) t.euohly 1:>o< 10. u•<l!.t•• 1111 Moon 1n ltwV.to\il 10 °""'on™' ' ' lflUt" 1-(4\hl\ t1. tltOQ\.W I I , I) 1.n110Qu1n t~ tA\111101 1/0 NI' \A '1"""""'°r fl My1t\J 1.V ~I Re6<1y IJ (••-'I M•r1l•"'ld I 0't•• <.N"Q1"911nW> ti<. N•rl II/ hi.econ 10 0.lu<> D4 11e \AIMO ltr Ill. k""1lft '" Mr.1-oop.IJL..c~··· ··~ M4r•t..ffl '"' twna\• lt4 «..tt•t11e Bua (M ''''-',_, • ., l/li Li•I (OtCW"f't (Atl \A H•lriC • t C..NfllC" l,,rtJ 0 (.MOO.I• t I I• b•r I 00 11 "'09,_ZI 1••0•' [l'l<I "~,,1g1111 ~ 10 .. k tunlol • t..m.,en lnn:•I 0.M•k.l\.c' 1 t/, YtrQ"' • /. ¥\>• • I rt• I' I ' 'E;COHO NACE J)(lf~•O• J "'" ~IE V & NTH AACIE • •u"on9> J ~:~~~ .. o•Orn••d•f' •'Ur\tt'-'iv ' :OlepL.•glllly U.btl IV LAii ... _ ""' u:; 0.100 °'' (.oootr J H'tl\11 11. hOCJt.NI I lltl• OOH•' •R lle~•>I Uurdlty ~R .A.C:Wtr1 • 1pleo ( L. Mylo I <.h<lnn•I ,.., 11.>r IJ t•~tOO<"• P•aror"le dC.•"''"hHatlf !> tn<ly 'A aye I Uoy 1~ '"'"9"1 _,,. ZUI• tO C..•OOl•I .. ,., 010' C•••m1ne f ~f\t" '>ft.00 11~ , •••mingpttc_rU)()O 1t~ Norch' kt1~er AH~y<JyC~I .,. ~q>riw V•tt."f\Unt 1&alf"I Ul C..•rt"ll L•.a v. NOWe<OI 1'1 M .. 1un01!11IA.N09..eu 1n C.•'" t-eun lll ROl>Qfll •n '·~O O•ncl'f M .. _,,Intl 111 V.1nCIAn<1Lu<.._l ~.'11W1I 111 v.onat,, Br«<11V. s1e111no•I 11~ 1 •ncyOu-11!>.C..•l•l•ol koy•I f;cllCI tT ~LI llll IOI! II) llJ "" 111 ..... ..... !ti A/i)~\,tfl c.otor•O<.l U•lct ~t "•n~•\ k•nw\ ~I lJt,1u '!I Ml<fH9Afl: M1<f1 SI THlllO MCIE • lu•I-• J yr•r !E IGHTH AACE -• lurlOrlQ\ yur OIO rrutl0.111. p.,, .. \OlOO r .. o IM1•"4 old> • vp. (Je1ml11Q, "'""" $.<~ Cl41tT11n9 P<lc• \2500 I I< r'feCIOU\ f;aQI• I I' Me,,_) J.-'urou• Ill low• Hllnl~ tAllDHy<lyt~I Aunll• B•ll IJ LUOlt) V•IO( C.lo IA. Helrl<~I !>unnyrey t-la•l 1). C..>l•llol Alllnt,.,-V II 1'¥httiul !>ur•ll~l<t1f lu•,,.•1 ..... ,. C.eme ,.,. Hartl Q<Hl•n '!>un IV Merc•CIOI 111 firll e mlll•m tR. C.tl>Cl'I , .. Slltnl Po\lllof\ IR MOWll \I 1111 11ot1tsler U1111,,.1Nofloyl 11• t<h•IOO k•Oll<I f<tQI• Uu••ell HI• ll•IO Dir 1¥., ~l•lltf19•1 Ill 11• 118 Iii II) 1 IM !lb M1n~\o,1t• r..i.~c:.~~\ f"f\fi ... \fl n 11• !>url IR R....,,1re1I Oemon's ~ •M. S.11"'" Tom UOOOly !M benk•I' FOURTH RACI< -• 1 lurlong\, J ~ .. , alO•. (;lalmlnq I UI'• JUOU c.l•IMtng ptlC• U(.!00 11) V.lt\hnotn llM UCLA HI H'rH RA Cl -• ., lurl9"9t l UO yur olO\ (l••M•ng. F'ur" UlOO t.e (li1lmln9 PflU'SjOOO. \J~(. !,.tar\1010 C•l1to1n1• V.••" Y,I Or19on ~I OftUOfl ~ 1rst E<llo 0·. Ml-NI ROV•I A~ (R. lillmlrUI ~prlngl F•i. tll P ... llM) lf1«19e1ove tR. C..m!>hl D•llCIY aeron 11 NOQuetl Our Jem,. L.ynn •Auaray<•I RtPC>lllQ (lrcl<t IA N09u .. 1 MolYM b IM. S.11 ... ll M•~•Me~U,.tC. 8r09"nl llS P0<nl Ar~n• !R Ben .. I 11• 11' N•uonty "'"""'IV. M<truClol Ill UO Rolery l'l<KY IR. C..rwtcol 111 111 Amanc• •Molt>CJ•IP IR.(•mlMIU 110 UO !>l\<llm•N 1C..at09""l I II l10 Mr.JoeN •"'SUll1fl9'I II• P.rnno!tl 110 ktmerUl>lil,... fJu.r~1 110 Pa<llk.U tl'"TH RACl -• >IU<'fonQ\ hHr O<OS M•lellft llllln Cehl DUO Pl.rw Cl••mtr IAl'9Y tA.-cl If/ ~nJo\t~l ~1e1ctt-ln-r "-"'oOVr" 110 Ll;jbchY>l !>terCrt\I tit H•r11 " ti.11'1,,)I "*· O•tUeH01sly IR RMt!HI c.o .. •m•r C.-... <M !iifllenl La<IYOflhll-IA hoV<Wtl 'f'OUr lnt•nl lH. Memtrell M-OIC Etna IV -rc.001 Armorlu •R. CMr>pa•I C,r•ltlul 1 ry\l If ""'"n•I WallCla 8• tAll•df..,,I Al•h•H'• 111 ..... ,,,.,o,.,. lll TE;NTH RACE -One•nct l•l•milt l fl J ve•r Old\ .. up C•••mlnQ Pun •• 1 II 19000 Cla•mtr>g PflO \20 000. Ill '>e><1ntstl Ulonot IA "09""'' 111 Aub\oltn 110 ISU 111 ~!Ctr H1'1 ::: IHKl<Y lie Lucky <f< RM?Cirotl 11~ EYerylf11"9Lu<.ky •Ci llro9;m Ill AtkAOV.ar ... H••ll ~o•uOate 11-"""""' Prep Football I IJ Nli\a"\lppl V..o•o•• Mth" f LI VllHT" llAGa -OfW al'IO I •& mil• J 'fNroldJ ~UP. C.l•lmlng pur .. ~ C.i.lmlnQprl<Ol500. I ef\MU•I 'Vanct•rbill JUIOOll VAllllTY San b'f Ooiatten f.Clla.ott 0 1 / 16 0-ll tfunll119t11118"clt 13 o 1 o-20 •e11Mtt lOI: HIP!>, PaalOfe, INlllQ. Ot.,..dlward f.dlMll'I PAh. H-y 4. S.tety: htros. Ha TOa: {ooodm1tn, RIHner 7. PAh: Cl"6.. Le Vllllla .. ,d IF. P.CM<OI !>pecl1I WIVI (ff Ramlrtrl Burning Rrrvt""' IC. Sr~n I !>oYertlgnatt IS. C..P\lllo !>neny Rut« IH. Al U(lnl C.nltl Plawetlll (A, H0911" M •v•vlll• lk. Mlntn) Our L•nd ~.Mena) 1>.10 Wlclleel (R. 8el1QI Bornlbul tw. Mam11Q.11 llJ 110 llJ "' re••• lOI ArUn••• I IS Tu eaA'M 11J leitetlKh llJ $MU Ill H~\1011 Ill BAylOI 1Cu Ri<• 4 0 I I I 'I . ' .. I U ' 0 •• I II ~ ~ 0 I • I I • u I • 819 ltqnt c,,..,,,,,~. AUG•m•• W L 1 ""L t ~ 0 i) V I I u •• u • I JV • u c e II J I 6 J I I I Cl • ~ 0 I I 1 I t • ~ I ~ ~ ... , ... (.oftle,..OKe AllG•m .. "" L J "" l 1 I 0 ti ~ I II • I 0 v I II ~ I I 6 ; I J I I • ) I J • u ) 'u , • 0 •• 0 j • (I •• 0 J ) 0 ) ) u I ' 0 l I U v • 0 U IU 0 l'act11< I Cenlarence All (>•mu WLT ""L T ~ I 0 • • fl ; I 0 I J 0 • ) 0 • • u • i 0 I J II 4 J II I J u J l 0 • • 0 O•U 111 0 O•U t•O PUA CM>f•r..-<e All a.mH "" LT W. L T • 0 t I I 0 1 1 0 ) ) 0 llU A&O 1 l u J ) II Cl J g •• s...1 .......... "'°'lertf!< • All G•mt • WLT W.Ll ~00 ''" \OC 91 U •10 '~u • 1 0 • J Ir l 4 0 • J I 7•0\~U i • IJ ... ~ v I •cl ,. • U 1140 ,. u 0 11 I I II JHl'""etl. C...fertfl<t All Oamt• WLT Wll •00 •ou \ I 0 I I 0 410 •lO 4l0 /JO ~ • 0 •• u , J 0 •• 0 1•0 .. $0 l~O 270 010 ltO ·Jc Football Stars w.tt-Alll~K ~· AllOlmU OFFBNS£ LARRY 11ALL, Ona•e Cout -Hall cau1ht four paun fOI' 49 yardJi and was a couautenUy lood blocker ror the Pirates, LO&EN MICKLIN and MARK CASE, Goldca Wes& -Mlcklln carried Ule ball 11 tlmtl for 115 yards and scored on a 30-)'ard run wblJe CueJraded out u tho bttt of· tensive lineman the same. ,.,,, ..... i.1. lr<O• YllQ C.Ml •• I \lllo~'"t"ll Artl- Ut1!1 IM;rrMe• r,..g1p ... ., Wt,. T W L 1 •OO 110 \10 /JO • l t I l I ~ 3 0 ;I , I 7 10 ,.o 7 •0 ~•u I • 0 C • 0 0\0 110 .. ,~ CMIW""• AllG•,., .. W.LT WLT ••• 114 ,,. 120 •l• •.\• • ,p ,., •lO •'O l •~ )10 l I I 1 I 0 1.. 1. 0 from the weather it could be a great one Good DeerSeaao• Ont> of the better deer seasons in the past 10 , 1•ars ha~ JUSt finished and by the time the rlnal ;.ount IS made by the Department or Fish and Game 11 should show al least an overall percentage ln- aease over last year of nearly ~ percent. Lot.a of deer were bagged in all areu ot cauromla this season wtth some excellent shooting and big bucks l'Om1ng off the East side of the SlerTa and In the area around Tehachapi. Orange County and San 01ego area nimrods had a good season despite tinder dry conditions. Luckily we got throuih the t•nllre season without any major forest fires, but \\1th Santa Ana winds still in season, all out- !l<iorsmen should be careful in the field. Bot Q-11 B-tl .. Good quail hunting throuahout most or !'outhern California indicates that we enjoyed a gOod hatch of birds this year . Ampl4t water and iooct feed m the Southland has really cof\tdbu~ to the good hunting. There are lols o! coveys out there provld- 1n1: hunters with good does t.llat are wlWna to waLk and work for their Limit. Pheasant season opens this weekend and the most popular spot will be at Imperial Valley where some 13,000 ringnecks are schedul~ lo be released on huntable property. All of the private clubs In California are also shootlna pheaaant, quail and chukar The second half of the dove season be&lns Saturday and runs through the first week or December. If current weather holds the second part of our s plit season could be as prodU.Cl.ive aa the first , at least, over opening day Reports from the field indicate a buildup or dove io fields that have not been plowed under. .. Looks like the bandtaaled plgeon season wlll be ~ood in areas huntable in <:,!ntral Callfomla. Look to the mountains around Frazier Park and north oC Paso Robles to be roost productive 81 a good acorn crop 1s bringing the high Oyl!)K, bard to hit blrda ln. RoekCM•lte Most all landings up and down the coasUlne have switched over to fqlt schedules ol rock Cod trips during the week. ExcepUons are at Dana Wharf and San Diego where boats ro •till aetthia some action on bonito, bass, b'arracuda and Jot.a of mackerel. Long Range boats running out or San Oie~o are returning to docks with Iota of yellowtall, vellowfin tuna, wahoo, dolphin and other assorted h1g game fi sh There are still lots of openinas tor long ran•e trips during December and for more Information phone Fisherman's Landing at (714) 222-0391. Bay fi shing is fair Cor baas and some eroaker and striped bass, but fiahlng pressure Is off. Surf ang lga are catching barred perch and corblna on a v arrlty of bails, the best of which la 8aft shelled crabs, when f0Uj2d. Some good clamming tides are 1oln1 on rt1ht now with pifimo.-t being lound hom 17th Street In Newport clear up to HunUn~ Beach pter. ... ,. .... 011...., Blue and black arDn ft i a-.po:rted IOOd bet w~en Rancho Boon a Vllta th ~ape accord inf( to Whitey Ellsworth I C1a lll Newport Beach. Lot. of blt •ro ln 1 add ll looks Ukc at could bo a b~n tr".l' rot h blllfiah. Ellsworth added lli dt>hmlri a lru art hltUna good and • few rtf1f1 1to btlD hool<ed . Tb• marlin H on ls juat about ov: fi Newport anglen, but 1t bten OQe.. t we ken(!, before tho ble 'blow. 10 milnfn bti • ed In an wea off La Jolla. Jt 11P1kel>UJ1 JI ure movt.Ds Sooth, bit •WI rs or tonlns Uve biilt ln tfl• a a'.ibelw~m th 277 BJ)Clt. llkely to hopk: lnt.o ....... ,_ •• marnn. f"-•JoMC>lt~hl*" ISCMr· ., ....... u. ..... --~­Qlltorn•• '-'' T /Ill bwi1M1H It condutl.O b; en In 01¥1-1. ,,,...,.., ~'lltlllf' Tiils tllll-t ,,.... flltlO wi1f1 Ille C'.IMllY Ci.n.o#Oftlllel lbunly Ofl NOV• •nlllllr 1, ltll ;:ts;.... f; L:Of Business Did BreWmg Rheingokl Ships Uut S'.9!_ply Giant Battle Lloming Over Recorder Mod~ls OltAJ'fG~. ?9.J . lA'PJ Rbe1ngold b<'tr. The last cases and kegs of Rhein&old were trucked Monday from the brewery here to dialrlbut.ora. The f\nal draught• will b4> dell V('red to taverns and stores 1-'riday . "Wo were to tihip 45,000 cases and 700 hall·kegs last Fnday." ~tud a spoketi.woman for Rheingold president John Kuhn "What we 're :;hipping now is the leftover -what we didn't gel out lhen. By fo'riday, the last beer will be delivered by distributors " Kuhn has aald a pnrn, re Mon for the death of the 122·year-old brewery was 1ls inability to compete with national brands. T~e firm, once famous for lts Miss Rheingold beauty contest ballotan).{, was bought recently by C. Schmidt & Sons Inc , a Philadelphia brewer . In 10 Years Costa Mesa Retail Sales Quadruple Business act1v1ty in Costa Mesa is more lhan four times as much as it was 10 years ago, s..iys Ins Sankey, a member of the State Board of Equalization Hetail sales advanced from $104.l mllllon In 1966 lo $476.3 m1lhon in l97ti an increase or 358 percenl. This upsurge in sales s howed a wide nrnrgan over the stutcwide sale'i $:rowth of 143 percent for the 'iarm• 1><'1100 and is far an Jd , an1·1· of Oran).!1• Count\ ' 281 11t•n·1·nt S\"'iiKfo:\' ~.\l>t: THF. com· llll'nls \\htlc v1 ... 1trng Costa Mesa !luring the IO·vt'ar pl·raod, the number of rl'lail slores in Costa Mesa nearJ:.· doubled, gro~ing irnm 591 to 1,037. The most MJ!ntficant chanJ.:t'' 1n type of hus1M'C\'i wt're eating and dnnk· 1ng places. which .-:rcw from 120 tu l!.13 outlets, home furnashan~s and appliances which expanded lrom fil tn !01. and apparel stores v. l11ch mon• th.m doubled, from 51 t <> 12:-1 stort'' ,\s thP l'('OfllHOV of the ('It~· IH·rarnf' mor" d1v1•rsif1cci. ~1·n 1n· <•stabllshmt•nls and non· r l'lail outlc•ts t•xpurHINJ from 897 Io :! , 1:JX Chain outl<'ls anrrcased ( 111 f11 ~03 [11 ~,f;.I :--.JU-: SAJO per.capita taxable sal l's rose• from Sl ,917 rn 1966 to S7 ,506 10 1976, an increase of 291 percent. During this time, the population increa5cd 16 percent. The excise tax on cigarettes generated $442,264 for local gov· crnment m 1976, an increase of 31 percent O\ er 1966. The board re- turned $5,499,981 to Costa Mesa in 1976 as the city's share of the sales and use tax. t;; increase of :191 percent over a decade ago. The assessed value of property an Costa Mesa ($388,958.000> is more than three times as much as it was in 1966 ($119,945,000 1. The growth ln assessed valua· lions in Costa Mesa of 224.3 per· cent is significantly ahead of lhe statewide trend oC 120.4 percent but trails slightly the Orange County growth of 232 3 percent. 4 Businesses Sign Leases Four businesses have signed leases and will locate in the Rauer Place complex, 1151 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Safeguard Business Systems, Inc.; Kaiser Aetna Industrial Properties ; lntercoast Investments, Inc.; and Richard E. Johnson and Charles Caldwell, investors and developers. signed the leases. Coldwell Banker secured the agreements '77-mmkl Dat,suns Recalled Patnat Helder After 18 years of court battles, R. Gordon Gould. vice president of a small opticul fiber firm, has be~n g rant e d a patent for "optically pumped laster amplifiers." He says he never became bitter throughout the battle and now , he's savoring the satisfaction of a long-awaited triumph. Abercrombie Firm Folding NEW YORK IAP> -The en· lire inventory of Abercrombie & Fitch Co .. the store that catered to generations of wealthy s ports men. goes on sale this week. The firm founded by Ezra Fitch in 1892 is toldina. saran cloth bµsb jackets, s hearling coats, fine binoculars and the rest of the firm ·s S8 5 m1lllon inventory will be on sale bcg1nn1ng Thursday "until <'VNythm1fs gone," said Patricia Ooherty, dar('ctor of sales promo· t1on NB Agency Move8 The Sanborn Co .• ~~wport Beach advertising ana~dblic re· lat.Ions firm, has moved from it.a former location to larger quarters next door at 230 Newport Center Drive. According to agency founder and president, Martin Sanborn, "We simply outgrew our old ad· dress." WASHINGTON <AP) -Nissan Motor Corp. is recalling about 160,000 1977 model Datsuns to correct a defect! ve emission control. the En· vironmental Protection AJ{ency announced. Protection Agaln•t Cholera The defect involves a braze joint that could break and result in an exhaust leak, EPA said. The Datsun models in· volved are lhe 8210, FlO, 810, 710. 200SX and 280Z All were built before Feb. 1, 1977, EPA sald. Moel l'f'C>pl .. MVI' 1111~· lntl•ll"n un .. mployment ToXAS. Ynt. II y0<J c~keid ·.,ooc1; ym 101n thft qroal m.,jorlty of Ammie.ms (ahout80%l whti h·l1< v•· lhi,l lho Amerlcon I.c.-,nomtc Syatem 1~ l"1&lc11lly 1;.n l'>.lSI In IM world 1lio9 question •~ how do w .. ov.,r. • .• rome tM bod w1thoul d."'lroyll'IQ .JI thftaood? A I The more we 1111know11bovt /~; our ayst.,m, lhe bollttr we can DEAR PAT: My nephew. who lives in New York, Is planEan extensive. vacation in the Mid· die East. A .of mine told me that there bas been an out reak or cholera ln that part of the world. ls lhls true? If lt Is, what precauUons should he take to avoid catching this dread disease? M.M ., Irvine Cholera la 1Weepln1 tbroaib t1'e MlddJe Eut, and Ute <:eater for Dlaeaae Coattol ln AUanta warn• that the cholera vacclae ll on1J st to 7t petteta& ef. fectln. Extreme cleanllneu .. lmportut bffaaae tb1' dheue can be c:aatrac&ed only by drlAklBC or aatnc water eontalJl.laS hamaa fenl maUer, from frulta or vecetables eoo&amtaa&ed bJ stth water« from food Pl'ePattcl b1 ucleaa handa. Anyooe pin· nine a trtp co Leba~:orda.n1 Syrta, Saadl Arabia or the GDbert Ill 15 aavlled to avold eat· lac ft•lt peeled bJ anotlaer Jertoo. Eat ao vegetabla or other foocb anleu &My bave beea ~ooked tbrooshly, and be aur. to eat tllem while they're sUll bot. Drtak only bottJed mlaeral water, or If none 11 anUable, carry c~rlu or lodlae tablets to d.lllafect tap water. Do aot me Ice cebe11. Sugar co ........ pdo11 Data 'J'old DEAR PAT: I am a senior· citizen and a grandfather. I can't believe how much 11u1ar my grandohlldren consume! I tell them t.hat "in lhe good old days" we never ate anywb.ere near as much augar, but I don't think I.hey believe me. Are there any 11taU11Ucs available that can prove 1 'm rtaht7 L.P ., HuoUnaton Beach btdeed &bere an. TodaJ tM averaie A•erteH ea ta mon tltH IOI ~d• ol 1A11ar alUIUllJ. la ASHlNGTOM :tAP1 L1ke a tmll" of Sumo wrestlers, two Japanet.e in· dustrlaJ giants have squared off In what may become the blagest battle or the electronics lndustrr since lhe development or color television. Most major American manufac· turers already have lined up in the corner of their favorite, anaUnit tor authority to distribute the Japanese systems under U.S. brand namea. 'AT THE CENTER OF the dispute are different versions of the home \'1deotape recorder -the devices "'hi ch allow television viewers to watch one program while recording another for future viewing. These versions are incompatible they function in a shghtly different fashion and tapes from one cannot be used on lhe other. ThU!;, the winner or the t'Ontest could reap mllliollS, not only in sales of the original machines. but also in years of contifluing sales or tape cartridges -both those pre· recorded with moviM or other events and those left blank for home record· ing. THE INDUSTRY IS hoping that the rrcorders will live up lo their promise as the hottest thing s ince color Amcord Declare8 20-cent Dividend Directors oC Amcord Inc., Newport Beach, have approved a regular quarterly cash dividend on the com· pany's common stock of 20 cents a sllare. The dividend 111 payable Jan. 3 to stockholders or record at the cl06e ot business Dec. 9. The board also declared a recular quarterly dividend of 37.5 cents a share on the company's cumulative preferred stock. payable Feb. 1 to st.ockhold~rs of record at the close or business Dec 9. INVESTING COMPMfrU NEW YOR~ CAP) C.ncln OMct ~Ill dtQOO wr•I IO preMrvO, wh,'I f IO ct\/J l'lg',J Tuel'• why we ero oll11r1no 1tot. be couam.fMI 4.1 J)MaDd.t ol •1u c roal a.Gd • bakery prod11dl. la It'll, 1qar COU1mpdoa ol • t.~,:W U.... IUDt f...S. Jaad creaHd &e u el&l•&W 17.t ..; poud1. Part of &Jaa. btcn•M GIA ... aUdba&od to the widespread addltloa Of NllMd near .. pro- ffued feodl.. Tbb rate ol ~•PU. ud NIMfil beal~ problem• of dJabe'-' ~ •.. 0 M004 ,,. ... ,.._....a. deeaJ..f.fRlpted Ute V.8. Seilate 8ekd ComDlJU.Ce• N tS. Ud ae. .. N..O to rec. that A.merteau redaee 1asar CGe• II hooklcl IMI np~ l'l!lt'llrr ~yc1f'!ll, \I la "11~'110 re..'ld. l~!i t· ~tno-.nd lroo. Every Amencm wqh! to ~now wl1<1l 0 11.ldyD. aamp. by um uu,.eai&. . ' '(,'ftitf ..... ,, •M'1 ~ J) Rl'AT: lbavea.v at uec aM\"V• Ing di• ~t I for holldar d1mMii CJlllT. ceWn1 Ulctn out tor a pr • llYtn• cteamnc, I notS •crutq" or fioO Cf'91CD In 11.aae. · Will .:onun .._•'mu• t.hlt WOflei ind lt thw. 'I way l can nmov o9.d t.aina w thout maklns th raltbi eorrol.Dli)gth ro~_lnlnliluel • , P.W.rN~Beaeb ' oldlrdW "°' ecord· M" . l960fs. Accordint to Aud10Vldeo lntema· tlonal maeaz.tne, sales or the unlU are expected to total 250,000 this year and a half-milllon in 1978. An average growth rate of 50 percent ls predicted in 1979 and 1980. The r~rden are a biCh·prtced item, with listed prices rangine from $1,000 to $1,300 plus accessories. The tapes areo 't cbeap either at $15 to t20 each. And extras such as a black·•~ ·white camera can add as much as $500 .,,.,.,....... to the cost. Z...U• Clalel THE TAPES CAN be tf·Used, R e v o n e W although dealers report that many K · people are buying many tal>Cl' to aave 1 u c k m ~ n w a s someortbeirravorileshows. naf!led president and While various Cirms have ex· chief operating perimented in the field , the sets ap-of ricer of Zenith pearing in volume on pre·Chrlatmas Radio Corporation, U.S. store shelves are virtually all The announcement made by two Japanese .electronic was made by John J giants -Sony and Matsushita. Nevin, chairman of Fortune magazine has likened the the board and chief p~sslble battle between the two execulive officer of videotape systems to the ••cosUy z · h pitched battles between WiWam PaJey emt · of CBS and lhe late David Sarnoff or--------- RCA' over which phonograph ~rd.· the 33 11 /3 or the 45, would dominate lfl: 4¥Lt8 the m ulUbilion·doll.ar record business ._. ~ and later which color TV system would • becomestandardtortheu.s ·· To Resume SONY'S BETAMAX IS perhaps the hest known of the brands because or' CARLSBAD <AP> - 1ls extensive advertising campaJ1n. · Go1den West Alrllnes That company·s product also ls being says nleht.s begin Dec. 4 marketed under various other names between San Dlego, by Zenith, Sears, Saftyo and Toshiba. Carlsbad. Santa Ana, Matsushita sells it.s machines in the Los Angeles, Santa United States under three companies· Barbara and Oxnard tt controls -Panatonlc, JVC (Japan after flveweeks of delay. Victory Company) •nd. in a sllihtly Approval was finally dtrferent version, Quasar. lls given by the San Diego videotape version also is marketed Port Authority, which here by RCA . Maenavox, Sylvania demanded an environ· and Cuf'Ut Malhes. mental impact report. In addition to the Sony, Matsushita Western A1rl\nes will and Quasar machines, Sanyo is re· ser~lce the commuter portedly working on a fourth type of line s twin-engine planes its own. i.n San Diego. Over The Counter MASO U1tif1CJ1 '• 1~ Pln•nn IS I~ PlonHIB 1.,.,.20 ... PIHllM l\.o l"PogoPCI 2'» 11\.o Poul' '::: 't ~~~(. •' • ,.,. p,,,,a~n 9 • 10'.• PutOC.P l.I ' 3'· .. 0..-11,..,., . :!;; :;t ==t· .... sw A .,-awn 1..,_ 11• .. Aayinl><I 4\.o 4\o He<tEQP 11>1 It • Road£.• 2A 2"' A-'f t • '• AOMlon ,..., 114. It- '~ '''-Aw,SIOV 21" 11'-S.Ol"'r ..._ 1 !><anOal I~ 11\o !l<MDOH "1 1.1 ~rsDell ll•· ~ Sen.ct~ . ~' ,: ~"~r IS't I~ $np()n Tl 17'" 11 !t<>hoSIS 19"1 20'" ~IV.Ir l J ~wG•Cl> 21'-22"' Swf.ISV 2•,. l''• Sl..,O'(ft s-i. 'n $tClll•Ola U l<J 23~1 Stan,..I" 23•,. 2J ~ ...... 11'·• 11\oo StrowO ... 11 .. 11· I)~> i.•' ..... ,.,, ,. ... ,.,.., ,,,, ,,,, • 1... s1, ... I~,, .. '""• u• .... l)l,, 11 ... )I~ S•e 1 .s s·, 2 1r; 1~4-NASDAQ Swn•ory i U•• 22\o ) '11'1 2l N£W VOAK CAP) -Most OC11vt -· 6 II ... 11 IM<otHll.. slOCkt t<4JPllM .., NASO. 7 3'n .o•,. "''"" \IOIUrl'M llO AW..cl c:"1!· • 10 ... !Ooh OOrcl!Gs • m.>e>o '3"-l)'r> + -. ' 1"-1+•., P090PCI • • 1'~ ""' U • 1"t 10 16\oo ,...._ o..a-r , 1.w )." l"--1·1' 11 » ~ RenkOr •• tO .AC0 • 7·1• 4 .... '"" 12 ~ ,_ Frtnl!Lf , 104,100 2' U•ra ..... 1i 21 • 11~ MtlAa.a f),6CIO •• .,, • -~ 14 4•.,. ~ MeGtrn •• 71,li/O 1t"1 20"' ... .. IS ,... "-G\ol~rflll 70,700 7~ '.. -~.. •• ,.... ~ ~· •• llt_.ac) 1549 ,.... -"' 11 21\..o 22 FnldlU • 61,100 "" U .... -h 11 1 ... '"' " .... A-ctwanc.ed • U • •• e • • • U • t• •I•• "2A » 11"1 121.. tle<h""" •·· ...... "'"" •••• lSI 21 11'• 11~ Un</langed • .............. I.I~ n IS 1~ TOMI I•-., . ••••. ...... ••• 2,U. 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"'' 10.0 21.. -... 011 10.0 11.. -... ()fl 10.11 lO -"' Off '·' 2•• ... 041 t.1 I • -'-OH LS 2~ -... Off L.I 2 w -\o Off U 2'4 -... Ott l.l ,. .. -I Off LI 10''9 -'• Ott e.o ) -... 00 1.1 J -"" 041 1:1 u• ... -'"" Off 7• ;!~ ~ ~~ ()f~I ~i •• -... 7.1 .... -~ •.. )fW ., ... §:' ... ~.. ~ ' ~ ~ -~ I --~ _.. ... " ..... N .......................... 4 .......... ""'., ... _.-.. .,, .. __ .......... ,f'! ....... -·._ .. .._.\J .. \,""o~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Ptllnc. IAO I Y l'o111><0f I • _ ........... ,, Ptlrft 241) ll ........... Tl • ,., l'o11h l "• . ' PttlO, .. I /J II Ptlt•r ... II t .. p,,.1,0 t0ll mi Phll•l 1 I tO It "' f'f!Ulll!J.tO .. l40 .. ,, .... pi ,/).. "° l'llllE pl IV,, rJO ""''"J>I 1.1' .• uo l'n1t.S11D .• 1 ~ J>htlMr I~ II IO'lt .. ,,.,,,,0 .1• 1 •1 Phltlnepf f , ) l'nllP.t I ' SIO l'llUVh .tO 1 It PIHNC. I ... 'I 2 P .. r I ,IQ ) Z. ~=,' ::: '1 lft P1entll.I .. • 4 1'1111011 '° s n1 Plllfre -t ~ Pllbln 1 . .IO I tflS Pi.,,lht 1 ))6 PIM>lrn .QI ll >1 PIOllo'r , ''I• "' l'l"fff .-10 I PMwn.o t ) 19 Po1•ro10 ,IO 11 )II POO<lro'" tO •• PO(>e I •I .IO I IJ Pwt.c .M 8 11 TIMCilY, Mol"9mb9f· 11. 1177 ·els By MILTON MOSKOWITZ N~w products, they alway• tell you, are the lifeblood of the U.S. IJ"OC•f'Y indualry. That bctlna the cue, whleh are the mOlit tucceulul new producta Introduced durin1 the put five ye1111? The t.rado mqulne Advertialnt Aa• recenUy toted up the top 10. Here they are, lhe dollar f\1ure repreaentlo& the retail sales chalked up ln 1976: Prlncl• noo million Tender Vittles $ 81 million Decalfelnated Taater·a Choice $ 81 million Upton CUp-A·Soup $ S6 mllllon Mighty Doi $ 54 mllllon Morton '1 DonutJI S ~ million Tropicana orange juice $ 60 million Hamburger Helper $ 49 million M~wM~ S~m~oo Betty Crocker Snackin ·Cakes $ 38 million YOU W'ONOEll WHAT SOCIOLOGISTS 2S years from now wlll think ot that roster. What clu• to our culture will they find there? Just about all of these winne"' are what the food in· dustry caU!1 "convenience products." They require UtUe or no cooking. Just add wat.cr or beat. Or eat 1tra11ht trom the packaae If lhey try to deduce from lbia Hat which companies were lhe smartest, they can start with three names : Procter & Gamble. Ralston Pur1na and General MilJs. Money Tree Cincinnati'ii Procter & Gamble, which probably takes .... more money out of the supermarket than any other sup- plier. Is the company that fabricat"le Priofles so that we can have stacked crum ble·proof potato.chJpa. RALSTON P\1RINA AND GENERAL Mills each made the top 10 roeler wlth two products. General MUl1, the Min· neapolil flour Qllller, gave us Hamburaer Helper (to stret.ch lhoae low~l rraeaJa) and Betty Crocker Snacldn •Cakes <to take away our appetites l. Two cat foods, Tender Vittles and Meow Mix, ai-e tbe entries Crom Checkerboard Square. Perhaps the most st.rtkma feature of th la lial ls the wide swath cut by pet foods. Three of the top 10 new products are pet foods, Miahty l>ol being a Carnation brand that bu moved to fourth j>lace in the canned dog food aeimeol of the market Cbehlnd.AIPQ, Ken·L·Ralion and Kal Kan>~ One theory, advanced by a Ralston Purina •Ice presi- dent, WllUam Stlrttz, Is thal since families are eaUn1 more at restaurant.a. table scraps are scarcer. Result'. pet food sales have doubled in the past six years to $2.6 bllllon. The pet rooc1 population is also increasing more rapidly •than the human population. The current U S count: 45 million family-owned does; 2S nullion cats. Dow Index on Rise, Trade Pace Quickens NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market, bouncing back from Monday's decline, began climbing again today as the pace of tr~ acccleraled. The ones average of 30 lDd\lStrlaJa, orr more than 7 points Monday and another 3 in early trading today, showeda4.'2•aJnto&42.78. , Advancet h Id a 2·1 lead over declines amoni New York· ' Stock Exchanae-U.1*1 Jsau.: Bil Boardvotuinetotalled2'7. 7' mWJon sh•res. Analy•t. •aJd the fftumptlon ot buyln1 lnterest after lalt week's 35.95-polnt Jump by the Dow wu encoura1e<1 partty by aamalJ St. Lou.ls bank·slo*ertn1btU.1 prime lend· In, rate from 7~ to '7~ perc~t. t f St.~1111 I• TM Spotllght ,..Yr YOAk CAPI• s.itt. • '·"'· prl<• .... 1'1111 ~ OI the fl~,,.... ~I ... Do..,lonn1l ffr•..- '~~:t'"'111P1 FINI 0..·JoMt •-•tn I JO tna ~ .. ~u.\f: ~. ~ I -'Y-lol«k f;a<N/l09 IMll*t, lfM>ltl ...U-lly •I rnon ll*'I u . ...,..... llttt • .,.. •D,JOO Jli-o + \> c-it 0.\1........ .Ml,100 , .... , ... ~c.. •··•···· H'oo »•· ... =··~,.:·::::: :i'! ~):: Dow '11......... i '"'° ...... ,. ' ( 20 1 rn 71).JI lll 20 111 ~ 216 "~ t:» I) IJCI 112.QI 111.0 111..ll 111.M~ 0.:111 ~ 511< 711.1• ttt 01 ... OJ ffl9 Sh I.to , '"°"' .......... ............ ~ll, .. 1 ltltl • • • • ••• ••• • ••••• .•• .. • •IJ.JCO Ulllt ..................... , Uf-*• •J-St91. •·•···••••••••••••••••• t,el0,100"- Atllll • .. • .•• .. 211,000 •• + \t ~le.or~....... iot.JOO ,,.,, • • • y •••••••• lOt,100 ,.._ -'" -• • • • • ~),200 .4. + t• • 1.1• r.1":.r'·. ...... ,.,.., ~ -t1 ... , ... . ... , .. I~ ... ~= ..... ' ,.. ··~· .. u. Whaf St ~lu Did,.~. J' NE~ Y0Rk t"'PI ·~ Mllenc..1:1 ,Jri•v ~,l ~'"' .... ••• 1 .. 1• .. ...... •h k• ••••.• 1• ttw -~ N9''Wt 'YC>flk IA">· "'91, 4 p.rn, l"'fe• lllO NI C"-'OI Of 11'.f lffl ftle\I .tell ... An•ff1t•t1 !'.cotll i.•<,,.. l••Wri, ~o'JY~'.~'~~ et ,,_. :::' ~ • 1"-hrcet IM........ =:&;200 .-... + • .. Sy111v. c,otp, .. , 61,'lllO It • '-l rt to• '"° . . . . . . . .... 14. . ~· .......... • ••• ,, • +)"o 111'4l4rtn A...... 40.tOO 19 • •· ~·n•ln .. .. • a,t(IO ,.._ -~. lnlttlllooe'r (,.41, •• •• n·* JI + '"' lel•Com (o. • .eoo t 1o. • '• \tefnUror. .,,.,.. ,\IOO '"• .. t,. 0.ClfMO ... ft7 IJIKNl'eed "1 2't TOI.II I~~ 1'00 1 .. i Mw ,.,, lllQlla ., ~ "'-,,,, ·-" 11 il \ NE.Yo 'YOA"° 11'"1 ·NY MOl:a Witt . N>oroa 11...i ..... ........... 27.14'.tlO • ..,.,,._ •Y • .. • •• •••••••••• u.1 ""k fl90 ••••••••••••••••••• o4L.Jt.2 • Mo<lln ~ • •• • • . • .......... , • "'0.1 .uoe ... , .. , ~ .... -....... ....... 21, -,..,, v••" • ............... :ro, ..i..-o ~ 1 .. Gil• • • • • • • • • .. • • • 4,i.J,l)f,000 • "'' 10 .. ,. .. .. ... • • • .. .. • ·~ • .0..'9J • "71 10 .,.,. .•.••. .•. • . •,lb .. !Jt,'rlt • WAT AMU DtO Mv~• OKllNCI "Mn•"tM ...... , .... .... ,.,, ...... -'"' ~ ........ " .. l'pptOa ftr\11 '91.11 ...... 1...... 'al )IO<ll ...... _ ............. ) .• ..,.. flNll.... ..... ........ • .,.,_ Nin Yf"' ... ••••••·•·· It,-.• t \ ' ~ i i , , I I \ DAILY Pn.OT De(l)ONEWI BONANZA "Love Me Not" Q THE AVENGERS "Something Naaty In The Nur .. ry" Q) MICKEY MOUSE CLUB Cl) SUPERMAN f.m SESAME STREET QlD VILLA ALEOR& 5;30 Q) BEWITCHED ""Long Live The Queen" Cl) ADAM-12 ''A Foo! And Hit Money" Cl!> FREEHAND SKETCHING "Forming Thlckneu e:oo e CBS NEWS CJD NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI A young girt !alls v1ct1m to a drunk driver and the paramedics become the tar- ~I• of a sniper. U MOVIE * * "Var11sh1ng Alrica"Oocu- mentary Narrated by Bill Burrud. (2 hrs.) G» THE BRADY BUNCH "The Subject Was Noses" m THE ROOKJES The rookies go up against a sniper that shoots at anything In uniform. al) ZOOM al) AS MAN BEHAVES 'Group Therapy· ®)ABC NEWS 6'.30 1J MOVIE * * *' • "The Scarlet P1mper-nal" ( 1935) Lealle Howard, Merle Oberon. In disguise as 1 gentleman ol the English Court, an underground hero reacuee French noblemen trom the gull- 1011ne during the Revolution. (1 hr .. 30 min) Q) MY THREE SONS "The Ernie Report" Ell) OVEREASY Mr and Mrs. Redd Foltx; a cooking lesson; mall order shopping a\) GROWING YEARS "Child's Play" (()CBS NEWS ®l MERV GRIFFIN Guests Bobby Vinton. Chlta Alvera. Pete Barbutll. Chinese Acrobats Fom Taiwan, Denni• Mad alone. 7:00 CJ NBC NEWS 8 LIARS CLUB 0 ABC NEWS Q) I LOVE LUCY ·The Glrls Want To Go To A Nightclub" ti) AOAM-12 Reed Is accvled ot shooting an unarmed man. fD THE ADVOCATES "'Shoold We Support President Carter'• Energy Program? al) EARTH. SEA ANO SKY Jazz Show Turning Up On Radio LOS ANGELES (AP> -True, not much jazz is regularly heard on radio. But National Public Radio ls tryinl( to help correct this with a 90 minute weekly series It began last month -- :·Jazz Alive." : For $400,000, or slightly more than tbe efltimated cost of one "'Starsdy and Hutch" episode. Qie new series is a1rin& the work of both little-known and well- known ja1z folks for 30 weeks. According lo the show's pro· ducer, Steve Rathe, It's on 160 of NPR 's 201 non-commercial sta· lions, most of them FM, and was developed in response to the sta- tions· request for a weekly jazz series. : "TREY SAJD IT was thelr first priority, although nobody ever teally said why," he added. "But ·1 think lt's mainly because ttiere 'a an increasing sophlstica· tjon on the part of a very larae fUdlence which is turning from rock 'n' roll." The series, uaually hosted by pianist-educator Billy Taylor, be•an Oct. 2. It atarTed •inters Ella Fitsgerald and Stevie JWonder and veteran trumpeter R<'Y Eldrid1e. : lfh11 week'• edition hH e~- lerpt1 from the Mont.reaux Jasz eativll Bnd features pllnlat Doti ullen iii d cultarlat 1ohn Mc Lau hlln'1new1roup. Shaktl. 1;,...,. Alan Alda loses his cool at a cold. blooded off1 cer on tonight 's episode of ":\1 ASH ... at. 9 on CBS. Channel 2 "Ground Water" ([) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 0 CANDID CAMERA 0 NEWL YWEO GAME .,. 0 ®l HOLL YWOOO SQUARES Q) THE BRADY BUNCH The children get angry ot Cindy for carrying tales to their parents m LET'S MAKE A DEAL al) NEWSCHECK ([) THE GONG SHOW 8·00 I)([) THE ATZPATRICKS The festivities aurround1ng Max Fitzpatrick's First Communion are marred wnen his lather Is suspended from his job. Thalmua Rasulala. Donald MoHat, Robert Hogan guest star. 0 THE GODFATHER SAGA Michael Corleone (Al Paclno) assumes leadenhlp of the fam- ily and begin• to expand opera- tion. by establlshlng a base In Cuba. (Part 4 of 4) (R) 8 MOVIE • *.in "Cry or The Wiid" ( 197.o() Directed by Biii Maaon This documentary, lllmed In Ratbags Guide IMOVIH are ratf(I _.(Or01"9 10 bO• OlllU ell~e MoY\e\ IOr fV ere ludoecl by• crllK I •••• -Excellent ••• -Very Good • * -Good .. , -Fatr * -Poor .. ; .... hra.) • 8 0 HAPPVDAY8 "FonJJe And lMU. T\aecad- ero" FC¥We end Ritch,. lead the ...,.ch for Joanl-. Who hu left home determtntd to beoOmO a bectc-up alnger for LHther Tuac•d•ro (Suzi Ouatro) and her rock group "The 8uedel." (Part 2 Of 2) IJ JN OONCERT "Roget Whittaker" • CAROl BUANm AND FRIENDS Guest! St_.,. Lawrence. MOVIE ***'A ''The Hanging TrM" (1959) Gary Cooper, Matla Schell. A doctor kllla a man whlle r.-culng a girt •nd I• almost lynched by a drunken mob. (2 hra.) fD8PECIAL "Georgia O'Keefe'' The nl~ tleth birthday of thla major fig- ure In American art la celebrat- ed with a filmed look at her llf• end WOt1t from htr home In New Mexico and from New York'• Muteum of Modem Art. 69 PARENT EFFECTtveNE88 "Tuning In" Active Uatenlng Feedbactc la uaed In role-play- Ing and In an at-home situation. 8:30 G ®> LAVERNE & SHIRLEY "An AHalr To Forget" The glrlt begin their long-awaited vaca- tl on crulee and Shirley become• friendly with an attractive aallor (Phlllp Clark) who hint• he woold like to uk her a very Important question (Part 2 ot 2) Q) CROSS-WITS Gi) OVER EASY Mr. and Mra. Redd Foxx. a cooking leason; mall order lhopplng. (R) 9:008()) M*A*S"H An omc:.r with a cold-blooded knack for predicting cuualUea prompta a vk>tent l'NCtlOn from Hawkeye, wtille Charles auffera embenualng reaulta from the conaumptlon of a gourmet feut. D (fJ THREE'S COMPANY "Chrlaay'a Night Out" Jack rushea to defend Chrissy's hon- or when a man mlaundera1anda her friendliness and lhowa up at the apartment. No one real· lz.ea, hOwever, that the visitor la an un<Mrcover cop. 8 IRONSIDE "Who'll Ory For My Baby" Q) MERV GRIFFIN Gueata: Bobby Vinton. Chit• Rivera, Pete Barbuttl, Chinese Acrobats From Taiwan, Dennla MadaJone. SPECIAL "1'o 8a A Man" Traditional machlamo roles and valuea are Another P!ne Me•• pettOn Of denUty by •aeh lndMdual. I!) MASTERPIECE THEATRE "I. Cl1ucllu1: Famlly AHalra" Tlb«lue angena ~uatua when he meete Hcretly with Vt1p1nta, wtio he wu '°'* to divorce so thtlt fl• coold marry Augustua' daught8f Julla: 1:301J (I) ONIE DAY AT A TIME • ''The Ghost Writer" Under , • preeeure to ~ her mother and do"" In achool, ear.,.ra reto111 to d~ate measurea. Alloe Ghoatley Ot*t 1t1V1. ao SOAP • (Epltode Nine) Jodie ent•• the hOlpltal for hla operation: Burt rtvMll hit HCret to a peychla- 1r111: J...a la d~ly hurt • when ah• / ltarna of her huaband'a lndlaeretlona. (Net- work advi.. viewer dlacr .. tlon,) 10:001J (I) LOU GRANT An eccentric Superior Coort • Judge (Batnatd Hughea) pre- aJd.a over oa ... In a humor- o ua. though aometlmea deranged, manner. ea NEWa QO FAMILY •·A Matter Of lndellcacy" Buddy'• glrtfrfend Laura (Carol Jon.a) arrive• fOt a vlalt but the Lawrenoea aoon discover her tragic problem --Laura, at 15, has becom. an alcoholic. Q) GET8MART The Cht.f explains the 11m or hi• operation. fil) EYEWITNESS Transcripts and recordings probe 1'9Ceflt newa stories· a 1974' commercial jetliner crash, a man'a pr08tltutlon trial and the cue of Karen Ann Qulnlan. 6i> SPECIAL "Georgia O'Keefe" The nine- tieth ~day of this major fig- ure In Amert~ art Is e»lebrat- ed with a fUmed look at her life and WOtk from her home In New MexJco and from New York'•Muaeum ot Modem Art. 10:30 Q) m NEWS 11:00888())0 NEWS 8 HOLLYWOOD CONNECTION Q MOVIE * * "Vanishing Afrlca"Docu- mt.ntary Narrated by Biii Bvrrud. (2 hra.) Q) THE ODD COUPLE "\"he Murray Who Came To Dinner" Cl) HONEYMOONERS Attar t;ie i. challenged to fight, Ralph think. up matry IChemes to chicken out but eave flKlt at the tame time. ta OICKCAVETT Guelt: Ntozake Shange, writer, poet.and femlnlet. Gi) MACNEJL I LEHRER Laverne and Shirley (Candy Williams, left. and Penny Marshall) try to explain to Phillip Clark (right) just what they and LeMy (Michael McKean) are doing . with Squiggy (David Lander) in this scene from Laverne and Shirley, tonight at 8: 30 on ABC, Channel 7. A!PORT *** "Columbo: Forgotten Lady" (1975) Pettir Fallc, Janet Leigh. A atlll beautiful, but aging. movie queen pi.na 10 return to a Btoedway mualcal agalnat her weelthy hu1btnd'1 withes. (R) • TONIGHT Hott: Johr\ny Caraon. Guests. Chria and Cn.rtotte McBrtde, Arnold ~arnnegger, Clotla lellChman, Judith Blegen, 8 LOVE. AM~IC~ STYLE "Love And Tht NurM I Love Md The Hypnotist" eO ABCMOVlE **'A "Tht Legend Of V8*itl- no" (1975) Franco Nero. Suzann. Pleshett•. A romantic. tlctlonallzed account of the allent acreen'a famoua lover. (R) Q) NEWS G) GETSMART Max Is hurried lo a doctor alter he Is poiaoned. • CAP'TIONED ABC NEWS MOANING 12:00. TWILIGHT ZONE "AGemeOf~" m FOREVER FEANWOOO Eleanor lnvolwt Tom In her vlcloua plot; Merie lella Charlie about th• lottery; Wanda dlacutHS lnoeat with Cathy; Merle sweat• over a loan. (l)MOVJE **'h "Frontl• Gal" (1945) Yvonne OeCarlo, Rod Camer- on. A ea.loon ()'N!Wr and her huaband who have broken up are brought back together by their child. (1hr,30 min.) 12:30 8 MOVIE *** ''Running Man" (1"3) l .. FWnlek, Alan Bat.a; Attw meeting her hUaband In 8 with fraudulent ln1uranc• ~.a young woman dl$00v· .,. they're being f~ by 8n lnauranoe tnvettlgttor. (2 hraJ D N&Wa ' 8 MOWE • ~ *** "C'"nova '70" ~1"5» Meroello ~· Llal. An attraotlw boy encountera ~ lem• In his romanUo tndeeVOt1.. '~ * * * . "Plckwlc;k Papart" (1154) Hlrl'l'llona Olngold, N Patrick. 8ued on ~ t CW*, mldds..ged ~ omb11k on an ~ture tour Of Brttaln. (2 In.) ** "Not Wanted On v~ .. (1157) Ronald 8'*-, OttrftOi Jones. 1Wo atewarda; d'9g.t1Mcf ea Ate.be. Mal'ch for a atoJttf )eMI eluting a orutte. (2 htt.) ~ 3:00 I NEW8 ·~ 4:00 MOVIE I *~ "The 0111 From ~.,y• c193n Peu1 Ke11y. Fifi D'~ The atOfy of a rodeo ~ that could realty rope her man. (1 hr.,30mln.) Gategtorm 4':30m MOVIE * * "The Abducte>n" (19$~ I Vlc1or McLeglen, Fay Spain.: Grave robberl target In Ofl Lincoln'• tomb. (1 hr., 30 min.) • Wednesda8'• Dagtinae Mo.,le•·· MORNING *** "Th• Mad Doctor" (19"1) Bull RathboM, Ellen Drew. A dltturbed psychlatrtat marries women and then kl11s them off for their money. (1 hr., • 9:30 D MOW! 1 25 min.) · G» MOVIE . **"' .. WalJc The PrOUd Lilnd• (1958) Audie Murphy. ~ .Bancroft. An ~ ~ •Qfllt fight• for harmQny bet\,,..,, Apac:htia and ~­. * * * "The Deaperadoea·' (1943) Glenn Ford, Clalre . Trevor.WM• planning to atage a holdup tor a banJc«. a gun- man unexpecWdty falls In love with the bank8f'8 daught., I and also dltco\we the lhertff la a long loat frt.nd.2!30 MOV Movie** "LHt Daya Of Oo!Wyn" (19"48) Edith E>1an1, Emlyn Wiiiiama. (1hr .. 30 min.) 10:00 e MOVl.E • ,• **'A "The Third Sectet'" (19&4) Stephen Boyd, Jectc Hawt<lna. A pl)'Cho~it deughter convtnoea one ot patlerlte to help her find her lathel''a murdef'er. (2 hr•.) AFTeRNOON 1:008 TOMORROW G ISPY 12:00 4D MOVIE t ***"A Night to Remem_., (1942) Loretta Young, ~ Aheme.A. myetery writ• tirid hi• wtt. ~ • rnystety Of "Usa'' 1:3011 NEWS Cl) MOVIE ** "MllJIOn Dollar Manhunt" ( 1951) Richard Denning, Carote Matttlewa. Twelve l'f1llll01' pounds or coun..mit mon.v . made fft Getmany durl09 World War II Is treclced down by an • Intelligence agent. (1 hr .• 30 min.) 1:378 NEWS ByTOMJORY NEW YORK (AP) -Carrol O'Connor is convinced viewers will see him as Frank Skef-!i n gton rather than Archie Bunker when he plays the lead in a TV remake of •'The Last Hur- ray," Wednesday at 9 on NBC, :cbanne17. "It doesn't concern me at all,•• O'Connor said in a recent in· tervtew. "The public baa no trou- ble when an actor chanaes roles. That problem occurs more In the mind of a producer. •'If you Ci ve a aood. perlormance, ••said the mu best Ith own for h.l8 part in the j)Opular. and loni-runnini .. AU in the · Family" series, '"the public wUl aeceptyou." O'CONNOR WROTE tbe script for the two-hour Hallmark Hall of Fa111e pr•entation, helped produce tfie show and played Skeffington. Spencer Tracy wrtrayed the powerfUl, old·atyle politician Sn a 1958 movte bqed on the novel by I.be Edw)n O'Oon-nor. ''The first th1u I 4 was run out and see thtfold pJct\ll"e," said O'Connor, who 11 no nlaU<ml to the late novelllt ... After 1etlrig Tracy. I said. •aee, t wllb I ~cl play th1t part aa well u Ji• dld:' Jn the "The Last Hurrah," Skefflqtoo ia ieetin1 a fourth term as mayor of a large clty - ptesumably Boston, tbou&b lt't not ldentllled la the 1tory. Mariette Hartley Pl•Y• Skef· fin1ton·1 ml1treu • .:Patdclt W'ayao bis anged on am Burien Netedith the erf\Jl C rdlnalButk . ·their own.2:20 Btn .wrtter ~ 2:00. Q0\'11 • * * "t>Utl At Tht RIO Oiindj'•' (1SMWJ Seen Flynn. UpOn .,.,.. Ing In Mexico. the .cwt Of .a weantlY famlly flnda a. Ml rao• ... be9'I mutdar«S bY.. powetTUt dlc:tator. (2 htt.) J ~But Complex .... . ay JERRY BUCK • LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ir.evitably, two ques- 1 tlona will be asked of the new movie "Close Encoun· WI of UMs Third Kind.'' (• la Stu good as "Star Wars" anddld29-year~ld 4lrector Steven Spielberg equal bit feat with l ••.Jaw1••wtthWafllmon UFOs? I Tbe answer to both la yes -a qualified yea because the fJJma are qot really aUJce. l · "Star Wan" ban outer-space Westent, a com· I h~ 1trip that la fun to see. "Close Eneounten" ls i blucb more complex. Jt is a biblical allegory: an or· t CJlnary man hears the call, becomes a true believer, j aoea to the mounlain and aacenda to heaven. "CLOSE ENCOUTERS OF THE. Third Kind .. 1o be released nationally Friday by Columbia Pic- turea, ls a film that reaches for a much more in· tellectual and emotional level than "Star Wars." , Tbe apeclaJ effects involving UFOs from another , l world are by Douglas Trumbull and tbey a~ spec- tacular. ! ' The tlUe comes from the book ''The UFO Ex- 1 J)erience, a Scientific Inquiry," wlrtten by Or. J. Al· ten Hynek, director ot the Center for UFO Stud.Jes llltd astronomy professor at Northwestern Unlversi- 1 ty. In it he defines a tlrsl encounter as a sighting of a UFO, a second encounter as physical evidence and • a-third encounter as actual contact with extrat.er- 1 testrial beings. Spielberg. who wrote the script, said star Richard Dreyfuss' close encounters of the second i kind are based on documented cases. I I THE f1NAL ENCOUNTER -the third kind wjth extraterrestrial bemgs -is pure fiction, but 1t is awesome and awe.inspiring. "Close Encounters" could be big at the box or: fice Spielberg's" Jaws," just passed $200 mllhon in box office receipts. "'Star Wars," just now opening in Europe, ts only about $8 million behind and is ex- pected to top" Jaws" after Thanksgiving. The $18 million movi& was filmed in total secrecy in Wyoming, India, and in a giant airplane .11angar in Mobile, Ala .. selected because of its size and the security and isolation it afforded. Spielberg ·Movie Role Slated ...,... -Cp • a.Ci ' " ......... 4 d 4 "" ... .. ... . ............ RICHARD DREYFUSS ltf)ENCOUNTERS' Going Documented History One Better said he dJd not want fragmented reports that could be m1sinterprelt-d to leak out. Spielberg', Trumbull, ~ast members Teri Carr Melinda Dillon and Cary Guffey, producers Michael and Juha Phillips and Hynek, technical ad- viser, assemblE.'d at the Bonaventure Hotel on Fri· day for a new1> conference attended by over 400 re- porters. \ Geor10 S. Kaufman's theatrical cronies provid.c! some Of the best mat.trial for his stqe comedlet 1n tho 1a. a.od aos. Kaufman and Edna Ferber m11aa1ed to outrage tbe Bar· rymorea in 1921 wttb "'lbe Royal FamlJy" (recently revived both at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and on Channel 28>. And, with MoH Hart, be took aome hefty 1wtpes at ta prevailinC eaoe of the day a decade later ln "Tho Man WboCametoDlnner." • Today nearly 40 years after Monty Woolley made Broadway (and later H~llywood) ~iatory "'THaMA"WHOCAMaTOOtt11taa" A <OIMCIY..., -HM -°""99 S. K.uf,_, ClirH .... by~~ ......... by W•llY t<Ul'ltan,'<•t-w s..--... ltoflllne ,., s ...... ,, " .............. l~ ~ S.Cut· Olly •1 l:JO-~ •t 2:aa. .. Got-."'"'" CAii ... l,...., Hllnllatllon .._,., Jlntrv•llon• ft2·1711. TMECAST •~Iden Wflltnldl .............. , ••••• Joe Kartio t.orr•l ... 511e-................ ~ .. 110·<:.tWllH ~eCAAhW' ••••• •••••• •••• ·•• J•MUer 6t.-.or\ 11#1 Jef ftr-. • •••••• , •••• ••· ••• Jtfl CJltrOmeltf' MluPrHn ...................... Sllef'IGoleflllelft• Mr.Stenlty ............................ Jon~I Mrs.St•ll .. Y .................. , o.tlort1H•- BeverlyCMllGn •• , ................. !>cottWil- S.njo ............................. ~rkHtl..,.' Dr,8r.ctley ...................... JtmHerrymen Akl\lrCISl.tnlW .................... RotHnC-. June Sttnl~ ................. , • , ., IC.Im Htl- .,,ol•"°' ~II ...................... ,. 0...00ro H•rrlelStani.v •• TtnlanC...l>o/JHnl Arm•trong J-.. , ........................ , l1H1W1ll...,.,_ ~r•h ••••·••••••••••••••••••••• ~rtH-,,_11 with his viluperaUve impression of Alexander Woolcott, "The Man Who Came to Dinner" remains a "J DON'T WANT TO GET hlto discussions of clusic staple of the Jocal theater religious theology," Spielberg said. diet. It continues to reap a goodly Dreyfuss plays the ordinary man who ta driven h f 1 .... lb to find out what ts beckonane h1m. After bis fint en-s ar~ o au&Mter on e stage of counter, he ts haunted by a vision of a mountain that the Golden West College theater. draw'?> rum and Miss Dillon to Devils Tower, Wyo., DIRECTOR STEWART where the encounter occurs. Rogers aod get desianer Wally Asked about comparisons with "Star Wars." Huntoon have combined their Spielberg said he was worried at first. when that talent.I to resurrect thls comedy film came outlast May · of thinly dlacul•ed characters qultepalatabletoeudlerioesottbe ~~ties. Runtoon's aetttn1. the ll•ing room of a well-do.do Ohio family, ii a marvel of understated e\ec&ne& which atlll allows ade- quate moblllty for an enormous cut. · Roeers' cootn1>utlon, however, le lees irnpr8ssive f Ol' two prl rnary reasons. Tbe director has ;lten several ol his performers cbarac- teriiadons that to agaJnst the grain of their c:hancteri, and bla awkward st.aging precludes eye- to-eye contact on numerous oc- casions. While his producUoo pre- serves the flavor Of the period, it also preservn some antiquated blocking techniques that render the show an acting exercise for a group of individuals, with little trace of cobesi vereall ty. THE BUB OF THE Golden West production, and the key to lts enjoyabllity despite other artist.le shortcomlnp, is the presence ol Joe Karbo as the wbeelchalr- bound Sheridan Whiteside, the ln· ternational celebritv who com· "I feel more secure now ." he said. ''Our movie from the Thirt.iea and make it. 1s so many light years different from 'Stpr Wars.' --------------------I'm encouraged that 'Close Encounters' is a com· pletely original movie that will stand on its own " -;:=========--===============~ 1 For Ex-govenwr I LOS ANGELES (AP) -Former Florida Gov. Claude Kirk will make his movie debut as a crooked I senator in "Rooster," a film about cockfighting ... I Joseph Cotton Joins Richard Burton, Roger Moore, RJcbard Harris and Hardy Kruger ln "The I Wild <;;~e." now filming in Africa ... Rod Steiger • •tars an "Wolf Lake," to be filmed in Mexico then i will join Charles Bronson and JW Jrelaod in '~Love , and Bullets, Charlie" ... I Funk GorshlD plays an evil toy maker in an \.episode of CBS' '"The New Adventures of Wonder Woman" ... Dennis Bowen has the title role in ~'Archle," a comedy musical for ABC basedon the -comic strip. c-.aro will play Gabriel Met1ar'1 aunt. in an episode ot "Chico and the Man'" •.. Jane ~Jlllour, JeaaeUe Nolan. Dorrie Kavaaa•b and Dewon Erlcaoa join the cast of "The Awakenina Land" f !lmlne in Springfield, Ill. . • '11l.VO SllW" n flit . "PLAY IT ASAIM, SAii" 1:.JO NOW AT A THEATRE OR DRIVE-Ut NEAR YOU - PEA PWA Brea 529 5339 CINE MALAND Anihelm 635· 7611 LA MIRADA La Mirada Mall 994·2~00 UNCOU. DRIVE-IN Buena Pm ~27-2223 ORANGE MALL me 637·0340 SOUTM COAST Costa Mesa 546·2711 UA CITY CINEMA Orarooe 634·3911 UA TWIN Westminster 893·'\305 VIEJO M1ssl0n Vlfjo 830-6990 ........ \.,~(ill![!) \Ai"~" .~.,.,..,,, ""-"'MllolO~Ql""04'& .. , .. ......,....... • ....c. ""EMISll: ,.._HQ¥ f1 ..... ~,__,~ ........ . nc. ... ..__.. ... ..... .... MN:•.ttoo ... roc~•UtHut -~-·-----(lt)I tJM'41 nu•tP•aJ , ___ ..._.... -·--- I I ...... &OC*JNe flOI Ml. toOOff' ) .,. llA..,.. ~t1~'=-Af1 I e Jill e Ml e •U • 1:.rl 909f •• ..- ~"---~~~ . mendeen hlS boat.Y't0me aftet. an incapacltatini tumble, Karbo bas mastered both t.be puff. 'anapplab tndqlence of the t character and bls baalc bumaolty beneath the aurf ace in a at.erllq 1 performance. Another tremendous plus ls thQ I high-aloes talent of Susan o·eon.1· nell u tbeprodltory actreaa~ mooed to break up a romance that threatens t.o deprive Wbite&lde o( bbsecretary. MllsO'Cocmelllll~ ters (literally at one polnt) m Uio rolt, alvlna ber juicy lines tbe blt.. i .inrint t.batiaablmtio ' sever otherperformances. ! A aaie, tM aecretar)' who f fat for -the edltor ol the local t ne spaper <well dooe by Jeff I DI ckmeier>, Jennifer Bramon co acrou a bit too s&.aa. and I thus close to the character ol , her a erury. Her explOllvti ~ scene late tho play, however,is J first rate. i SHERI GOLDSTEIN, In the • plum role of WhJt.eslde's nurse, la • more giddy than gruff, a curious Interpretation. Likewise, Jim Harryman's mllksoppisb: portrayal of the Lown doctor is 1 overdone to the point of i caricature. But Scott Wilson as the flamboyant Noel Coward pro-' totype is hlgbly ent.erta.ln.11\&, as is • Mark Hefler, who gets high Marx : for his slapstick style as the : Hollywood eomJc. : : ..The Man Who Came to Din; ! . her" Is still a funny /lece of : theater, though It coul benefit 1 from some Judlclous prunlna, lf onJytomovethelaughllnescl~ together. Jt CC>OUnues Thursday ' throueh Saturday et8:30 and eon~ · eludes Sunday at 2:30 ln Uie Golden West CoDege theater. J I .. ... DALY :&LOT Cutting ...... ........_..._._ . Costs . Mr. A · Wa See1'8::;~4;;",'-~r:;-·~ (1/T ooll? NEWARK, N. J. (AP) -~e fitted for . t clothin• can pr t Woblemt wben JOU have WASHING TON (AP) a 52·lncb chest, a 29-lncb waist and arms that --The Agriculture reach 20 inches around, says J<>1epb Spooner Department has some -Mr. America . . help for people who · And the well-built body can cauae other want to cut food costs problems even after the tailor bas ~plied his without sacrificing nutri· custom fit. tion. Using Bureau of Labor •Statistics figures collect· ed in September, the USDA bas figured out the cost or 20 grams or pro· tein from different ~ources. Twenty grams is o n e -third the dally a mount recommended for a 2Q-year·old man. DRY BEANS were the least expensive protein sour ce at 42 cents a pound. It takes a little less than one-fourth pound to obtam 2Q grams of protem. leading to a protein cost of 10 cents. At the other end of the scale were la mb chops at $3 09 cents per pound It takes a little less than one·thirdof a pound lo get 20 grams of protein. so that wouldcosl95cents. OTHER SOURCES of protein and the cost to ob· lain 20 grams included : •'WOMEN -IF THEY DON'T know what you 're like, they fiaure that you have bie lumps," says Spooner, 29. "But when they get close to you they realize you 're like them, that It's only when you fiex your muscles that you're different.'' Spooner, a natlve or St. Lucia in the British West Indies, returned to New Jersey this summer to prepare for bis junior year at. Livingston Colleee. part of Rutgers University. Six weeks later, he won the Mr. America com petition in New York, beating 14 others for the crown. IN 10 YEA8S; SPOONEB sa)'$11e has won more than 25 tiUet and never placed lower than third in tdiy com~Ution he's entered. Hi.a· next goal is to "skip' the Mr. World competi- tion and go direct.17 tor the crown of Mr. Universe. . ''It will take me a few years of bard train· mg to get into that kind of shape because it's very tough competition. It's the guys who are mature in body building -who have been working 2Q or 25 years who actually win that kind or contest," Spooner said. Dispelbng the notion that body building is for the young and vigorous, Spooner noted that the current Mr. World Is 40 years old. He still can ascend two steps further in the body build- ing hierarchy, Spooner said, to Mr. Universe and ult1mately Mr. Olympia. SPOONER'S WEIGHT·UfTING DAYS began as a 19-year-old police officer in the West Indies. He said he went to see Rick Wayne. a well·known body builder, and "I de- cided I wanted to look like that." He says be hopes to use bis title to help dis·· pel some of the mytbS surrounding his aport -including the stigma of homosexuality that 1 was frequently attached lo the body builder. "~ybullding ~a aport which keeps you. .......... MA. AMERICA FLEXES Hl8 MUSCLEI Joe Spooner With 1e...ftlh.old Son . . fit and roeellni good all the time, .. be alld. "Ther,.•s a group of.~en who love body build· ing just as there 11 a group of men wbo love football. ll 's like every other sport. "AND TREY SAY THAT MOST hdy builders are dumb. That's not true -we have some body builders who are professor& and doctors." Spooner married a girl from St. to..11 wbo won the Miss Eastern America welabt·liftln1 crown in 1975. • "Women use much light.er welabtl than men and womep do not crow ~es ~aute they have a thicker layer of lat uD4er the skin," be aald. SPOONER JS COllPLE'ftNG a trlpt .. major at Livingston C.Ollece, atudJtaa labor relations, history and sociology, and lntenu to go on for hJ• master's degree. "I want to aet into the labor fteld iii St. Lucia, maybe an arbitrator -uytb1ac to help my peopl': gain. better waees," he •.,a. 11.. • Pl'anut butter, 17 cents, beef live r or ennchl'<l white bread, 18 cents; hamburger, 20 cents: eggs, 21 cents; chicken 23 cents; milk, 25 cents; turkey, 26 cents, pork, 28 cents; beef chuck roast, 31 cents ; A men can process cheese or tuna fish, 33 cents; ham, 37 cents; frankfurters, 42 cents; liverwurst, 47 cents: salami, 49 cents, sardinc•s, 54 cents; sirloin ~teak. 57 cents; bologna, 60 cents , pork chops, fl5 ('en ts. haddock, 67 cents: veal cutlets, 68 cents. pork sausage, 76 cents. porterhouse steak, 85 t:ents; bacon, 89 cents: Brown Leads 5 GOP Hop~fiils for Cbsslficd Ad ACTION Call A DAILY PILOT .A.D-VISOlt '42·H71 SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. is far ahead of five Republican gubernatorial hopefuls mainly because · a thlrd of Republicans polled said they'd vote for Brown, according to the Callfomia Poll. The Mervin D. Field poll of 1,058 Californians shows Brown with leads ranging from 28 percent to 45 percent over five Republicans seekinc the GOP nomination for governor • Brown's most powerfdl opponent at this point , Tile Team Wants to Arrange Af oaa ... For You. \\"S\~f .. SS We specialize in aecondary real l'ltat~ ftruincing for people who already own prime residential prOperty and fiave a better-than- average income. If you qualify, ask a member of The Ttam for details. We may he able to arrange a loan of up to 80 percent of the market value of your property -at attractive rates. Call now! appears to be Attorney General Evelle Youncer. wbo suu trails the 1overnor by 28 POints. ot the California cross-section polled by Field to early ()C. tober, one half said it would vat. for Brown Pd JO percentoptedforYounter. B~ led Loe Angeles Pollee Ollef Edward Davia 6Y36 point.a, San Dieeo lla:yct-.,._ WUsOo by 4Yl polnta, Fresno A.taemblyman)$: ii..cN1 b1. ~ • points, and state Sen. Jou Briggs Ol J:l'uUtrrtoo by '5 points. H11ghes Markets Fllied $1,250 LOS ANGELES CAP> -Quihel Markets, Jnc •• has been fined $1,2!50 for selllnc a manot·infeat.d lamb'sheadtoa woman shopper. The supermarket cbaln pleaded no com.at to two counts of olferinl adulterated fold far tale after its Venice store told tbe lamb•• head contalnl.nc maggot larvae to a woman shopper. Municipal Court Juctae Richard 11. Moore Im· posed the fine and placed the company oo 11 mODtbs probation. Aui.stant City Attorney LYQD Miller aald the cbaraes rea\llted from a count)' bellh deputm t lnveat.taatioa. that beian Aua. D aftei'. oomplllilled.. · · WEIGHTL:IFTING I CONSUMER · For fast relief from that stuffy feeUng ... MAINOFFICE At the' Plata in downtown Orange COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams IRVINE: lltWersrty Dr. & Michelson Dr. LAGUNA HrUS: Ali$' Parl<Way & San Diego Freeway . ,. "" . I ~. B7DBNNIS Mcl.BUAM Of .. DlllJ, ........ When Dan Thomu sin• bis • frequent visits to the Bulca Plus claurooms, an obaener mlcbt be inclined to think be'a atore Pled Piper than ICbool principal. Not that he doesn't 1et b1I due respect, but there's aomethl.nl about. the stocky. bearded educator that proves irrealstible to \he youne studmta. Some quleUy amlle and wave to him. Others walk up to abate Ida hand or abow bim samples ol their work. And Thomas, who aeemlncly knows the names of all 115 ol the Irvine school's atudenll, stops at desks to off er compliments on im· proved handwriting, apeWnc or math work. This genuinely friendly rela· tlonsbip between administrator and student may not be quite what one expects at a school that em- phasizes such traditional ideas as contained classrooms, letter - gnadea, firm and consistent dia· cipline and an emphaais on leam- ihg the basics. BUT THAT'S THE feeling that pervades this fund a mental alternative kindergarten through sixth grade school, nt>w in Its second year of operation in a mobile trailer complex on Main Street, in Irvine. "I try to get into the rooms anywhere between three and four times a week, if nothine else than just to see the kids," saya Thomas, 32, a former Cypress elementary school teacher. "My interpretation of in· dlvtduallzed educaUon la knowine the needs of the Individual children." The school, whose primary ob- jective is to provide students with a "sound foundation of balk educa·· tion," bas seen enrollment double since it opened in September, 1&'16 •• It ts open to any student wtthln the Irvine Unllled School District. 'However, a statement agreef.n& to abide by the program's pbilolopby and regulation.a must be slCMd by both parent and child. · Thomu ex~lalned that ln early 1.t'lS a IJ"OUP ol parenta a need to the Board that they· wOWd like to ... a traditional altenWive offend In the diltrtct. A COIDIJTl'U POUED to ln .. vest111le tho'feMlb1Jlt1 ~ • proeram. rev.aled tbat Ui e wu more community lnw.tt. "The pannll wantec! to I were a part ol the Protl'UI iur'Vln~ thelr children," aay1 Tbomu. "They wanted a more traditl(MW approach to bOmework, contaiDed apace 8Dd more comunmlcatloa with te.cbera. •• TboH IDd other tdeu were In· corporated ~the school, 1'blch not only empbulzes a atroni foun· daUon in baaic aldlll, but ensurea that each atep of t.be educational process ls ''thorouihly mutered before undertaldpg the next step." The bastes include· readln1, writ· inf, spel11ng, computatloQal ar tbmetic and lanaua1e art (spuldn1, communications and grammar). THE CUBBJCULUM foD()wa a specific procresaloo that. bullda Qll what ii learned at e•cb lenl. Mualc, aclence, ·history, physical education and other 1ubjecta are added at appropriate &rad• but without detracting from the bulc program. Buics Plus also empbulus: •Clusroom activltiea. They are teacher lniUated, direct.cl and supervised. Successful traditional and new methods of .lnstnacUoo are used. ci. •Regular homework: To en· courace independent work •nd good 1tudy habits. •Cloee par• 1upport. It ls en-~uraged on a continuing ~At least one parent coafereqce ii re· quired each semeater. . JI Tbe key to a cblld•1 auccemlul educational experience, Tbomu believes, ls three-fold: family, scbool and cblld. "Ancl the more ln· fonnadon there can.,. ucJWiaed between these three, the more el· lecUvtt\be educational dell very ... •Report cards. lA\ter ar4ldes are laaued and atudeata are fl'aded on both academic performance ancl effort. (See BASICS, P.ase Cl) ... ' l t bswer Ode to Anchovy In the olden days B.C. tBefore Canapes l. th&1 ~olumn would never .1ave been written, but .ince hors d'oeuvres, ap- >etizers, and those little >efore-dinner snacks lave become so chic, it's Jn absolute necessity. E,..a Bombeelc There are some foods ~hat do not diminish .vhen you chew them ... they grow, and I suspect multiply. One of them 1s the anchovy anchovy 111 my mouUl I have inadvertently which 1 have chewed on ·ound myself with an vigorously for lhree daya •• .Mellon <From Pase CU ing from one of subordination to one of eminence ''Women were placed in the world, not just in th~ home •.. There is room for women ln elected public office for the fi~t time in our his· tory ... More women are enterini polltlca and the greatest gains for women in California politics have been through appomtiveoffice ... She suggested women develop contacta through women's groups such as NWPC. ·'There are also, within cities and counties many opportunities for women to get involved .~ said Dr. Mellon.· ' "What is the importance of womeo in 1ov- ernmeot? What does it mean?" she asked the audience. 0 1 think it'• a sign that the roleofwom· en ii evolving and the stereotype of the macho male and the 1tereotype of the woman whose whole focus ia ln the home ta alsod1Jappearln1." Dr. Mellon emphasized she felt the women'•· movement has been "1reatly mllundentood" ~d applauded it as a movement of human libel'ation: •'Ila woman freely chooses to be a wife and mother ... if tbat'• what abe wants to do - great. If on the ot!fer hand, she feels her taleotareachbeyondtbeho.me-fantutlc.'" · . She uraed ratlftcatloa ~ the Equal JU11tb Amendmmt u a "crttleal atep .. ln the process ·"tor the UWmate end of lull equa1ity.-:-.J tb1Dk we bav9 to remember that the road to .auallty la along ahd tedious one.'• -OlerJl .. IPO .....,.......__.._ . .......__,. ... w:r--·:r~-.-~-~~-~-->-... -~---·-·----~ -.. -...... -~ ··----.. .:.~ Principal Dan thOmss: personalizing ImttYCtlon . . Basilw Pins • <Prom Page CU '1 LIKE THE gracUne system.·• say1 a ~t ... I think by getting letter gredes the child, parent and· teacher know exacUy where the child ii at. . •DlaclpUne. Thomas saya the parent. wanted consistency. "We set parameten for the children rather than givinr them 10,000 choices. OuT children are sopbilticat.ed. However, they are children.'' Adds Thomas: "We have a Coal for our school called respect for the ~ sy1tem.'! A ehiJd who bu been a dlaclpllne problem may 1et a word from Thomas to either "keep up" the good work w "get to lt, .. Thomu or another 11talf member may al.lo issue a blue "Plus Card." "It'• JUlt a re«>gnttlon on OW' part that the student ls dolng· ~oocf for btmtelf or' the school, • say1 Thomu. Tbey al.so .tuue blue cards •&Yt:at· ••you are one of the Good Guys and Gala." which 'lbomaa says ls tbelr way of saying ••your work ta rec- ognized and it's encouraged to continue.'' WHEN THE STUDY committee first outlined tts goals for the pro- aram, it admitted that many of PVBUC NOTICE ST AT llMIMT Ofl UANOO"Mll HT OflUSllOfl ' fllCTITIOU• IUSINllU N4Mlll lM 1011-1"9 !Mr-,.., •benOOMd 1he us. of ,,.. fl<llllou• lhmn•u ,...m•: GREEN VALLEY HtALtORS, 1011• Avenue Comp.ores, f-ounl•tn V•lley, Cattt«nle97108 Th41 F l<tllto<a 8u .lnf'H N~mf' r~ t1rted to .rJo\tf w•' filf'CS .,, Or•nQitt c.011111 y on S 19 II E.lmer C. I ugent 10/1& A .. n.., Comp•dr•\ • ount •in V•ll~y C.•l1tor111• tt1oe 'llll b<l>lnc•' ,....., cO<>Clll<tod Oy.,., in U•.,,tdu•t E.r,,,...c; f UQenl lh°' ,w._I .,., 111~ wllh ti• Counly C.llfk of Orenve County on <>crooer ti. "" r1uu PuOll\'*' ()r-..gie C.0..ll ~ily POOi, No•emW •••. IS. 21, 1'17 4'.10.17 4'11BUC NOTICE sul't 11101t covn or'"' n 41 Tl Of' CALll'OlllOl4 fOll THICOVIOTYOflOllAHGl NeA .. u.t NOTIC.I 01' H£AlllHG OF l'ETITIOH fOll l'llOIATI Ofl WILL AHO LITTlllS TlSTAMIHTAllY t.i•I• OI t1Alk.L C>tLL l;lLL ~COMO NOTIC.L I~ HUH llY C..IVl.N ,,.., (HloRLl: ~ M IO:;Nl<O!IN h•> lllf'O nertin • pttltton tor• rotHtlf' ot 'Wiii .net 1uu•nc.• of L•tt•r~ tnt.,..,wntMv to.,,,. PalfllonCf' rth•r-"CO to -..h1cn 1, ~ lor further jMrll<.UIM<. """ H•I ,,. llm• and P4«e ol -•no thol ....,. h•• 0<:en Ml tor l*IV. 12, 1'11, •t 10.00 •.m., .n lrte,ourlro«nOI Det>ertm<inl N•. lOf WIG tourt. ., roo C.lvlC C•n••r OrtW 'f\-ttl, In Ill• (.11y ot ~•nl• An•, <..•lltOrnl• Oal•d N~, J, I~// WILLIAM l . SI JOHN c-tYC,.r~ .JON,.VllEL A.-Y•IUW --... -M..•2'" r:~M:~~ .. """-" ... : """*-Putlll"""' O<-to.e•• O••IY Pttot. • .. ...... '· u. '"' PVBUC NOTICE l'roai AP QUPllj- PulilzeT J>rU.wln turned to hl1 family•• hom Carolina to lecture .-id to rum t..-y about the family for natJon tdevulon. "It's .Uk.a my grandmother's atDri'8 eomln1 alive. 1 look at the blt old u.es. lll.Cl11 ttUnt. the tree" HW lt all. If only the treet (Ot1l talk.•• Haley muted during the visit to Burlldgton. He recalled the years of hearlne hi s grandmother talk about bel' parents, Tosn and Irene Murray, and their life in northem Alamance Coun- ty. Those tales inspired blm to atart tho 12-year prOJCClOfwriUng "Roots." !riti!Wd:TiTO~N (AP> The Pentaaon •a apeclal war·••mlnr-a1ency has conducted aoother lo a aeries ot e:x- erclJea an )lypotbetical problems expected to arl1e if terrarilU were to steal nucle~ weapons. Tbts lndtcatea the Carter admlnlatraUoo 'a defen1e leaders are malntalalng the bl1h level ol coocem about terrortun and Its Po6Si- ( INSHORT J lltadetto~r A•siglniilent Francesca Poston and Tom Coppola take off most of their clothes, hop into bed and cover up with a quilt as they ad- vertise the product in a New York quilt shop window. The "Positions Available" sign is intended to aOcftotbe amuse- ment of passersby. Store owner Monte Dow does not think the stunt has improved business but hopes "people will re- member us for the fun of it.·· · Which Witch Which Told by the Stars Br_~LOH A~·~ SPRINGFIELD, Mus. --Lord Ted,'how do you tell which witch is whteb! "One aymbol of a witch is a star," Lord Theiodore Parker MUia ex- plained. "A white witch wears it, uses lt, with one polDt potnting sltaiabt up. U a witch wean lt with two polnta pointing up, resembling horns, that witeh Is a black · witch, a Satanist." ( ~ UE'b•r ~· ) LORD TED WEARS hia star AJJ'aLftl'-4 with one pOlnt up. He wisbea YoU well. Not that be couldn't fetch you some trouble if he wanted to, such as calling down a ralnstorm on your picitlc. But Lord Ted only uses his powers benevolently. For example, every year for tHe past 11,,.er despite what the weatherman predicted, Lord Ted hu brought fair skies to the Ma- tooD Street Arts Festival. o,n the other band, when he received a plea from a drought-plagued Texas fanner, he sent blm rain. Just like that. RE UVES IN a small apart· ment on Matoon St.reel, .a spooky old section o( Sp,.tngfteld with brick sickwaJka and old vtoe- covered brick row houses, many of thed\ empty, some aurely haunted. "I am not a ghost chaser,'' Lord Ted said. "I don't seek theQt out. 'Ibey seek me out. They DOl'll help ad.la.sting to the otherlklt·." His p.utment ls decorated with syml'IOls or witchcraft., ol astrology, of what Lord Ted calls the Old Rella.ion. His witch's altar ts Lo the parlor. .. IT'S A WORDNG a1tar.0NOC. much for looks, but functional." It id a alab of dark marblo, about lwo feet bj two feet, waist high. wUh shelves o! dark wtlOd in tiers for candles. Above .1a an imagec:ifbis. tbe Great Mot.Her. On tbe altar rats a bell for sammOnini apl.rit.1 and a bOok. the Book olShadowJ, J;ord Ted's hand-printed rlta.als or wttcbcralt, ceremonials for tbe full mi>qn. the new moon, other momentous night.a. TJIEU All A.BOVT t r cf1a nn market and 1tlll more are pl~ed, h9 uya. U. libu U. trOWtb Lo low·W' ct1arette1 ta th• boom In fllter•tlppecl clsa~etlel in tbe . • .. The rile par.Uela Ute hllter7 of fUter ct•a.rcUM, beelnnlnt bl about 19$3, .. lOoepfeT 1ald. ''Tbe curve at the momtat la pNUJ° much on the aame coune. lll '1a fUU!rs were an oddity on tbe market. Today. mt.en are 80 ~ cent ol the market. No one mo.. where the curve will go." t Kloeprer aald the cl.larctte ~ duatry .. goes alone with a. Federal Trade Commiaalon. cbauctertutlon of low-tar u yieldtna 15 miWcrams ot tar or leas per ctiareUe." TEN YEAU AGO. low-tar branda captured about 2 percent of the cltarette marktlt, be A14. "But it begJUi Jeaptaa after about l~l. And with the ~ tl~al compeUUon now evident. it's riaiqvery rapidly." "This year, low-tar will ac· countforjustunder2Spercentof the market," said John C. Max• \vell Jr. of Morgan Stanley & Co. ''That's a lot of people." A BOVT 55 MILLION. Americans, or 3S percent ol tho adult population, smoke, Kloepftr aaid. - Tbe American Cancer Society and the federal gOYerDment. bJ wamlng of tbe potential da.acers of ctg.reu., have boosted tbo demand for low-tar cl&aretla. say5 society spokesman lniag Rimer. "There's been a revoluUon ha the manufacture of cigarettes~ this country," Rimer aald. "When the Surgeon General'• re- port came out in '6', lbout8$~· cent of cigarettes on the market were nonfilter. Today, 85 percent are filters, so obviously. wbat the ctsarett.e companies are doin« ls meeting consumer's demand foe a cigarette that will do as much as (>Oalble to assure them that they are not cndangerlng their health. HE SAID THE American • Cancer Society "believes &hat U people a.re 1olng to continue to smoke that lt ta tn their beSt ln· tere•t to smoke the low-tu cigarettes. There 11, bo1wever. oo · such thing as a safe clgarttte, and the wisest tblng for any smokdr to do is notamoke at all ... I Richard BogacltJ, the tobacco analyst for Standard and Pooc's Corp .• said all m~or ctcarette companies now manufacture low.tars. "EVERY YEAR TBBY ate t.aklo1 more and more or tbe 40arket," Bosackl 1aid. "It was l& percent last year, and it11 be over 20 percent th.la fear. It may be 30 percent or more next year." Although low-tan are boom· ing. they still lag considerably • behlnd older brands in consump- tion. For example, more than S1 billion Winston cigarettes were sold lut year, compared with 12 bllllon for Vantage, the most popular of the low·tar brand.I, Bof acid said. Neighbors Learn 'Dleft Prevention· A lecture and demon.stratloo d burclary prevention met.bOdl wlll hlcbUght the 7:ao p.m. Wednesday meeting of the Ha; ln1ton Beach Net1hborbood Watch a1 Wardlow Elemel\t.U7 School, 9191 Pioneer Drive. Hunt- in1ton Beach. . 1: PUBUC NOTJCB PICTtTIOUJllUMHaM NAM•ITATtMaNT 'Tiie foflOWllll ,_,_ .,. dt4ll9 NI· .,. .. : BUll.D & GROW, 11102 C1o11 .. , )rlw, lrvlne,C..111.'2.._. '4•11etl, Inc. IC.llfornl• C...POt•· lonl, 11102 Cuh•t Drl••· lolne, :.111ornl• t'lloM Tllll blolllnna h <-Itel by e Cot'• ;out Ion Heli.tl,lnc Hoo-F.Hellell, Treu11rer 1 ho• \Id•-• w•• 111eo with 1"-:0Unty ,,.,.._ OI 0re1'91 Countr on Nov. 1,m1. _J ,...,. Plibll•hed Or.no-C.0.>t Ci•llf Ptlol 11ow. 1, u. u. n. ,,,, PUBUC NOTICE P1JBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUl llUIOfUI NAM• ITATIMAllllT Tllefollfw'"9Mf--tlllntlMIN-,,...1w TAK TUIE, 1"'9 "'ecw IU-Glr., P'ountlMn llelleY,CA'21'9 Al~l\ero._Ce. lnc.,•c.llNl'.U• cwoorellon, HIM Piecer IUwr Cir,. f0\lntelnll•llr(,CA"7• Tiii• bu•tno .. It conllll<IAlll lly .. ,.,. por1llot1. lllChltl--C..lllC.. DIW~ 'Tl\lt .i..t'"'9flt ... ftliNI .... .. County C-Of 0r.,.. c-.ty ..... a, ttll. ..... PllbllihM Or111t1 Glltt Ollly ,., ... -----------! Nov.I, U,22,1', IW7 "CTITIOUSIUSINIH MA#IUATllMIHT 1'N 1o1iowq-aon1adolnvl)ola1<1eot -----------·• u: .... THE OTHU• IMJIGE, lm:I Sl>r· lnQd•I• St'9<11, H11nt1ngton 8ucll, C.lllor•l•t2M9 Lindi (Arol Vuppe, UUI Sent• •••b.,• Lene, Hunll1tglon loch, r:elltornl•~ lhl• buMnn\ b undu<led bf •ri 1n 1fvlOUel Lind• YUPC>• l hi• >111-1 w•• lllt'd wllh the Co"l\tv C.•••lt OI O<•n99 1,.0untr on O< lobe rll, 19 II. . ,.4411 Publl•hed °''"""" to~•• t1••1f Potot, Nt Vt"ll><'r f 8 I) 11 "" 413 I /1 PUBLIC NOTICt: PUBLIC NOTICE ...._ _________ , Cl'·U7J NO Tl Ca TO ClllOI TOllS SUl'llllOA COUllTOl'THI STATIOl'CALll'OllNIA l'Olt THICOUNTYOl'OllAHGI No.A•UfU PUBLIC NOTICE "** SUl'llllOll C:OUllTO,THa nA'TI Ot'CM.IPOllMNIA 1'011 THICOUNTYOl'0411ANOI ........ NOTICI Ot' INTaNTION TOllU.llaALl'llOl'lllTY A'TPIUllATaU.L• PUBUC NM'IC& P'ICTtT10UlaUMNU6 NAMS ITATPtaNT i 1te 1011--....-••"""'illllll• ,,. ... ., f.ZEKleL ANTIOUI kCl'INl~Hlll,, llU Whittler $t., llulldl"9 C, Unit 10, Coste MeM, GA 92411 llruct .., .. .., c.ilne, UI E. 111" St. NO. 11, c;.oti. Me .. , GA '2e27 ~1.-.n CA'M All .. , tCO CllY SI .. Nt .. POrt 8HCll,GAf26') t hi> 1>u11neu Is tOflcklCled by • g11 ne r •I IMI rt,.,.ultff». linic• Allen Conine Thi• Sllt....,.nt l"H tiled ... 1111 lhe County Cltrlt of Of•noe counly on NOV 3, lf71. • • ,.., Publl$Md Or-CoeM Delly Pllo4 Nov.I, u, n. n. lt77 PUBUC NOTICE Plcn nous IM.IMHll.$ HAML$TATIMaHT PUBLIC NOTICE CP.Mll IUPaltlOllCOUltTCM'TMa ST A Tl OP CAU POfOOA fOlt TMaCOUNTYOPO«MHta • • 5 6 7 8 D A I. L y p I L 0 T •••·u~m- ' I ' ~. ., I< I \ I I I ' I'•\ .')I) I Lu11 h1 Co•~•• d,1 1111 MllDHB.'7 Jlelp JouneJf to. HNpin& selection ol ~Hopelu.ls la the DAILY l>ILOT HELP WANTED ADS Q.ASSlfllD HOUIS Adwrtl r.ers m • v f'l lt'e thtir edi. bY ttltphone I 00• m.tn~·J()p m Mond">' thru •·radJ v • Ito noon Sa1urday cogrA m :.SA OYFICF. 330W. Rav 1142 561H HUNTJNGTON RF:ACll J'lll'15Be.chRlvd. M0-1220 LAGUNA B•~ACH Jta Glmntyrt i.suna Buch 494·94"5 SADDLZBACK 2!lo20 La PH Road WIWI& Hilla ~1"3JO NOft1tf COUNTY d 1a1 rrte S40-1Z20 CLASSIFIED DUDl.ltfH Deadline for copy • kl Ila I• 5:30 p .m. the dn before publication. ex· ~ for SundaY fr Mon day F.d1llona when deldllne 11 S.1urd1y. 12 noon. Q.ASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERHORi: Advertller& lhouid chtC'k their ads dalll' Ir rtport errors lmm•dlllely. THE DAILY PILOT auumt!I llabUlty for lhe Ont in· CCllftC\ Insertion onl;.-. CANCEJ.LATJONS: When klWn« an ad be 11n to make a re<"ord of the KILL NU111RER jl)wit you by Y°'ir Id 1alcer u re«tp4. or)'our unctllaUon. This klll l!tJIT!bft' must be presen- lld ti, UM advertiser In CMlol. cllll'Ut•· CA!'ft:r.1,f.ATION OR CORRECTION OF NKW AD BEFORE JlllJNNJNG: • l Eitnv effon 11 made to kUI OI' c:orret't a MW ad ttuit l\u llftn orde~. but we anNt tueran Wltf'to do IO unlll lhe ad b11 appeared In the peper. SWllPIMG HILLSIDI VI W is only part of this 4 bedroom retreat wrapped in lovely wrought iron f~c· in.g ~rcbed in homey hillside area! ElUOY. gorgeous pool &i jacuzzi toot VA ~LE -. PRICE REDUCED .1'0$98,500. REAL m --. JlT~RS _! EASTSIDE R·2 Wlth cbarmlnc 2 bdrm bome brtncinc tneome wblle you de-veloo another unit. Cloa• to sbopptnc le transport•· non. Better take a look. 846-7711 THIS IS uvrwa.1.) . . . . Relax on your lai'ge"pa overlOok.lng the bay & ~·boat allpl Thia rare OD· the-water home has 3 bedrooma, 2 baths and t; close to achoola t l ~.MQUDll lil·!IPI•• Prapftti•• 752•1920 ~400 QUAILST. NEWPORT BEACH . CAPICOD su.ooo /$2, I 50 TOTAL DOWN Winding roadway to soaring 2 story retreat! Private grounds protect secluded entry to lavlsh 1 ___ ,__.....,.~---1•-•••illllliil-lillli(Ui,...,. ll ving rm. Gourmet l•llillliilliiilllim---•l::!::::::::=~=====::::t kitchen overlooks 11.11'· ab1ne courtyard I Wind· in1 stairway lead1 to sweeping m1uter bedroom plus child's retreat! Hurry, seller la V,~i.~I~\~N<t' -llll THE RE~~ I ESTATE RS .,,..._,._' 1'1 ll a.a· 11 'll ~!...W J.:~.., .. ~ ~ L • ' »I~~~:!!~~~~~ Tbtally remodeled Corona del Mar 2 bdrm, 2 bath cottage that is like a brand new home! Wood floors, copper plumbing, forced air heating, new water heater, stove and dispasal - plus the old Corona del Mar charm. Now the price, only $120,000f U ,_. ICJU I: t1f)MI:§ REAL TORS'. 675-6000 2443 East Co&t Highway, Corona del Mdr also in M a V1·rdl•. at 546·5990 SUMSHINE CdM DUPLEX Two very charming houses on one R-2 site. separated by large, lovely patio, assurin~ individual privacy. Im- maculate condition & i.tlways rented! :)149,500 759-0811 .·Fiul 6lut . Gwt Wuf.ilUl BUg. A CONl/tHlfNT ~NO ANIJ....c;zJ• 9[WINO GUIDl f<Hl 11* OAL o.. nu co. Bulky-Krit Beauty PAI HMO MODEL U )'OU can find & beU. buy, boy It!' BR, ram111 rm. w /frplc, 2.1tory, 3 bat.bS. Over 2200 1q. ft. Incl. land. Xllit -codd. Under marJtet at sieu, 'ISO .• ·,.~-·· HERITAGE • • REAL10RS /Jn t~llJ[L 01\11.[V & A'J5UCIA1 ES 1conc:s·r c;; OLSON tllf IJelan RtAl l \TA'I red hill.-:. . 55 2-7500 , . l . ) Mirrors & Wood .bl.QUO SEAVIEW '** s ,..,, ........ A Palermo like no other· MANY VIEWS in all dlred.iona-plua a scn.sl· ble yowia couple thal are open to negollataons lJparaded new Bar .Acreagefw•ale 1200 Harbor. Beat view.••••••••••••••••••••••• $250,000. 644-4597 .A TTEMT10M DEYB.OPEllS SOUTH COAST JNV 645-1103 i---------4 Riverside Co in Sun BIGCAMYOM --u·o·o-.S-LE __ , DOVER CONDO A blend of •ood. atucco & 2br, 2ba + den. 1800 sq ft. open beams combine to I..nwest pnce an Canyon say, it'll good to be home. Prin only. Xlnt for re· as you enter. The hvma llttd cpl or YDi exec. By room, with its large owner. ~.000.6404737 stone frplc., " view or garden patio, 1ays rein ~~ • enjoy. Why not aee · · what eJae t.h1a beauUful OPEN DAILY 1·5 home 111)'1 \o you? Call us for app't. S259,500 24 lnvemeaa Ln. u:~:::i:V BIG CANYON i~ t " tl\'11'\.UU ,-urvia•1\"'Y Sh /H Tl)ll'• IJl Ill L 001 ••!) • =~~ . ~ .......... ~ .... 1700 16th St. CDover at 1Gtb) 84.2·8170 ... ....... Cf 7100 17 Ii Accurate typist. mature personality & front ofc appearance. Able to deal pleasantly w /v11>ltor traf· fie &c heavy lelefhonea. Recentexper. req d. ST.ACOSWITCH IMC 1139 Baker Cotta Meaa 549-3041 Equal Oppor Employer ' ......... -... .~ ........... "¥" ........... ., ........ ,. • ' • fr • ti ••• .. ,,.. ; • • • • ..,. r • ,..,_., ______ P' ..... -............. _.._~-~ .... --.--.... MlalJ.glrAWCwl L••c•lll! ...................... ........... . •........ F1UD11ces aervked, call For dlaeouat Sod pric C&USOOlrlOIL, 831-:0751 VOLT ~ I ...... •1 off A j f • I f ~ tt I . • . ' , 1 l i t ' i i ' . ' 17 I . Tu~n tteem Into Christmas cash by Phtelng an 111 under o;.r DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE This size •donly $4.00 -~---~ -- Advent 1000 video beam rolorTV projector, never used, warranty hst $4000 Must sell S3200 64&-0221 ...................... ~.i. '52 •••••••••••••••••••••• Studebaker Avante '64 $3~ 536-3743 Curtiss Matheis, 9' walnut console, stereo. AM Jo'M, TV, Trntbl Xlnt spkrs. $300. ~ 7248 raaportaffon COSTA MESA DATSUN -••••••••••••••••••••••• 284SHARBOR BLVD ao:;.&M::M Ccauyws,SaM/ 540.6410.540.0213 •••••• ~............. ..... 9120 -. ----'-----l General 90 1 0 ............... 0 • ..... 68 Chevy ~ T, pk up, VS, 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Sale: Big cabover spd, campr shell. runs Ski (I. _ .. , __ .. ..,.,camper, xlnt cond. good.$1500.548·5624 p~r 1cens..,.. "~""' Reasooable. Call 536-706i _.. for 25 mo cruhe to '77 Couner 5-apd, AM·F Acapulco. Daya 673-9211 Datsun camper shell, radio. 6K ml. $3800 llig.bt.s 673-8399 complete. SJ()(). 2243 "A" 846-8772 all 6 ..._. 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S700/olr133-114G l976 Cbevy Van, ~ Ton Ctat.om Hoada 100, nds 17\._~ ,.~ .. ~--w-·1 111e:i•1 Ut ACll Ill VI> t•llNll'HO!Ot• llfl\r.t• 11.;J 1'8 I '>·If' I] U ;> IMPORT CHS ALLMODILS WI MEED CLIAM US.CARS MOW CALLPAPIY · ·s~o:.s630 1011 \'SO\' & SO\' • LINCOl N ·MlHC.UHl' '75 Fox. 26,000 ml. acarooa, AM·FM. $1150. 2U·U5·5047 eva o ~u ut.2:sodys 970t •11•sAUOH WAYFOllHEXT 'WEllCS DIUVHY COMPUTI IODYSHOP HOWQl'IH IXCEUEMT S&iCTIOMOfl CREVIER • f.8 Dart, 6 cyl, 4 dr, idn coDCL 641-20l2 or ev UPM, 541-7412 0r-ot Co•t,'• SfttlltC•tr • '75 Dode• window van. lf76C.._aa11 .._C V-8, PS, PB, air, AM· ~.,,_ FM. tlnted wjndow. SPtUI 36,000 mi. $(500. 960-1012 Wlth padded toP, leather lllt.erior Ii all the deluxe Ford ft40 ~· (212Nl?d ). • •••••••••••••••••••••• _._;.;._..,;_...;,;...;.j,.,;..:;::;.:~~..;;. ·$9888 Nabers Cadillac 2600 H.erbiir BlvcJ Cos1o1 Mew ~0.91 00 ....................... '70 FlrebJrd Es.,.;tt, •· apeed. vinyl top, &o04 cood. Beat Offer nr .==::::::::;:=E=-I Sl900 ...... i.ftiir• PK '13 Gran Torino Sport. xliileond. Sl500 1-492-J'l 10 ''6FOID 17 PROTESTERS MOVE IN ON .p()UCE DURING DEMONSTRATION AGAINST SHAH OF IRAN Factions For •n~ Ag•lnat VlaltJng Mon•rch Claah Outside White Hou.J• • SHAH OF IRAN WtPE8 TEAR OAS FROM HIS EYES Al PRESIDENT CARTER SPEAKS In W••hlngton, a Preeldentlal Apology for tf)e ..,..,,.porary Air Potlutlo"' ·.tm Pair Plead . . Blaze in To[i"'!ll_a 1 Innocent in Prostitution Yield;S tO Firemen~ relleving men who worked lhrough &he night. · Jeffery said the only hot area remalninJ at midmorning was still at least one mile from any structures in Pacific Highlands, but he said roads remained closed in the area. , TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1977 Shah's J(.isit Protested Fighting _.Erupts At White·· .BOnse WASHINGTON <AP> -Police and c~petinc forces of dem· onstrat.ors clashed violently as the Shah and Empress or Iran ar· rived at the White House today and tear gu wafted onto the lawn of the executive man'1on during welcominc ceremonies by Preal· dent Carter. At least four police omcers and eight other people were hurt as pro and anti-shah forces rushed one another just as the shah. was arriving for his two~ay state visit. Mounted police charged into the crowds, on the Ellipse just 5outh of the White House, and forced them back toward the Washington Monument, uslog sticks and tear gas. At least 10 arrests were report· ed, including two at a compan1on demonstration on the north side of the White House. Fighting between hooded pro- testers, mosUy Iranian atudent.s, and SUi>p<>rlers of the shah con· hnued 1n 11ome areaa of the monument grounds even after the Ellipse was cleared. There also were incidents of shoving between the two forces on the north side, at Lafayette Park. Though the disturbance was audible during the official welcoming on the White House grounds, Carter proceeded with the ceremonies on schedule. Both he and the shah dabbed their eyes, apparently irritated by the tear cas that 4tjned e~ Into White House Ofl\ca d tho e ot the ~reasury Oep•rtment, two blockrs aw~. . apologlied to the wab, a rnme seller or oil and buyer o U.S. weapons, for the disturbances. "I've already apologized to the shah for the temporary air pollu· tion In Washington,·• Carter told reporters aa he accepted a tapestry portrait of Georp Washington lrom the affa.h. 'I thought he made bl• spetcb lDl· der difficu.lt conditions, but with typical strength,'· be said. Police gave no oftlcial estimalel, but lt was clear that the delJlQnStratoni on both aides numbered lnto the tl)ouaanda. Order aP1>4tared restored, ex- cept for a few i.s<>Latd fistfiahta well away from the White House, within ~ minutes of tbe 1'UtJal clash. The eruption on the E;illpse oc· curred al~t precisely tM in· stant that the shah wu scbed· uled to treet the pr~ldent after landingviabelicopte.rnearby. · The demon~trators threw rocks, cinder block•, and wood from an unattended plle of lumber at the police. At that point, the mounted officers charaed into the demonstrators. (Sff SHAH, Pa1e .\2) Youth Blamed Fo~BB Fire H.B ·Businessman ShOt by own Gun? Mr. Mya-s was a blgbly respect. ed and well-liked man who bad no enemies,·• the Investigator con.eluded. • The murder: came to light when a passing motorist on Interstate 15 near Blll'.ltow reported seeing ~ body being thrown lrom a van at 1:10p.m. Friday. Searchers found the body the next day after 11 a.m .• un· derneatb a tumbleweed. Officers. who said finding Myers' &old·colored van ls a key to the case. have bsued a na· tioowfde, all polnts bulletin for the vehicle. Jeff Finney, a student at Marina Hi&h School, said he and his family saw a van Sunday evening near Adelaato that may have been the dead man's vehi· cle. Finney said the van was on its side and apparenU~ had been set on fire. · Sheriff deputles said they . would investigate the report to. day. • Deputies were in Huntlngtoo Beach Monday to Interview Myen'aurvtvon. ' They aald they were trylng to establish M~~ra' b~blts and movements lo an attempt toaolvo the case. ' ) ' EWLV PllO'f H1F By JOANNE REYNOLDS °'' .. 0.Uy f'llel 11•11 A new lwut in the intricate in· v~stigation of the murder of Stephen John Bovan came lo light today with reports of un aborted booking of fo'rank ROlls1. 36, o( Lagun& HJJts Records at the Orange County Jail 1nd1cate Rossi was briefly 1ailed Monday but never went Cella Fails ~ AtteIDpt To Oust DA Justices of the Fourth District Court of Appeals in San nernardmo refused Monday to remove the Orange County Dis· trlct Attorney's office from pros- ecution of the case against Dr Louis .J Cella Jr. The opinion supporting Superior Court Judge H. Warren I\. night's ear her ruling noted that there was no reason to suspeet Olstnct Attorney Cecil Hicks of lll'mg haased against Cella The de<-1sion now leaves Judge Knight free to act on setting the n1•w venues for the separate trials of Cella, 52, and former h11sp1tal admm1strator Stephen Hobert Evans, 32. Both men have been ordered to .1ppear Fnday. Lawyers for both -.ides appear confident that the {'ell :.i 1 naJ will be sent Lo San Diego with the Evans location de- 1 ;.i vcd until the Cella trial is .ii inost complete. Lawyers for both men are con- ducting plea bargaining neg0Ua- 1111ns with the district attorney's 11fllc e Cella and Evans race trial on multiple criminal charges con- ' ,1 aned in a grand JUry indict· ment. Both have been convicted 1n Los Angeles Federal Court of r l•lated offenses. Cella is free on appeal from a f 1 ve-year federal prison term F''\vans PoSled an appeal bond aft<'r being sentenced to one \ l'ar · It .1s alleged that both defen- dants were involved ln a con· sp1racy that cost two hospitals controlled by Cella as secretary· treasurer an esttmat.ed Cl milhon m funds. Members of the distract at· torney 's staff welcomed the Cella ruhng Monday in the light of heir det·asion to appeal a recent ruling tn another case by Super10r Court Judge Philip E . Schwah. .Judge Schwab removed the dist ri<'l altnrnt•v s office and suh· statutt·d th<• attorney general's staff in the criminal case against courty Supervisors Ralph Oied11ch and Phthp Anthony and two todefenctanL'i The prosecution hopes to have an appellate court ruling on the issue before pretrial action in the Diedrich and Anthony case re- -;umes Nov :!I State Files Suit SACRAMENTO <AP> -Three days after President Carter withdrew his nomination of Robert Mendelsohn to a Depart- ment or Interior post, the stale fa led a.r campa1~n vlolallon suit against the 39-year-old former San Francisco supervisor. 11lE FAIR SEX NOi' SO FAIR? SAN DIEGO CAP> Ban1cs at-e Calllng victim to women ban· dlts. 1Three branches of the Bank of America and a savln1s and loan office were robbed within an hour Monday -all by women. i No amount of loot was dis· cosed. • . • I ' ' 0..ANQICOAIT "'' DAILY PILOT ....-.-------·----· lhrough lhe complete booklna process and waa teleued ror lack or evidence. The records don't indicate what Rosal was being booked for. Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth said today be waa at a loea to ex· plain the situation. He said the move lo arrest Rosst was initial· ed by the District Attorney·s Of. !ice. nossl is alle&edly u-......oclaLe of three men wbo retnaln Jailed ln tho ease, Jerry Peter Fiorl,·U, Anthony Marone Jr., 23 and Raymond St.oven Resco, 28, aU of Huntin1ton leach. Those three men are accused ol killing Bovan, 36, ot Fountain Valley, as he Jen El Ra.ncbito ret.laurant in Newport B~ach Oct. 22. Bovan was shot nine Pleasure Pit 2 Boya Unearth Buried Pot ~cALF..sTER, Okla. CAP> -Authorities thought they d gotten rid of'8 1 ~ tons of marijuana when they burned and buried the grass. They were wrong. The pit where the pot was buried several months ago has become a source for local users says Pittsburg County Sherif! J.B. Orr. ' Authorities tried to keep the location secret, but a ne:-vspaper. learned ~f the marijuana burning. and printed a picture of tt -along with an approximate location of the site. Officers staked out the site and arrested two teen- age boys who spent several hours digging up JOO pounds of marijuana. The original 812 tons was confiscated from an airplane that landed at Ardmore. Okla. .. Hearse Enda At Destination -Finally SAN DIEGO CAP> -A Keystone Cops-like chase down the wrong ~ide o( a freeway ended with a the Clriver or a hearse going to a hospital for treatment or a d1abetlc condition and the cadaver inside late for his funeral. The fiasco began Monday af· ternoon when a hearse belonging to Merkley M1tehell Mortuary headed west in the eastbound lanes of California 94 OCficers said a police ambulance chased the hearse the wrong way down the freeway, followed by an off. duty San Diego policeman in his private car. several milea and two minor accidents later, the hearse was stopped and officers found Walter Day Edwards, 48, sitting in a dazed state behind the wheel, police said. The mortuary owner arrived and took responsibility for has vehicle and the damage. OIClcers said Edwards was treated and r('leased at a hospital for insulin shock due lo h1s diabetic cond1 ta on. The cadaver was taken to the mortuary and later laid to rest a lilt le behind schedule Thre~ Trcuh Statioru Set In Huntingt,on Huntington Beach re•idenls are being urged to clean their homes and garages or unwanted items and debris In order to keep fire hazards at a minimum. Capt. Roger Hosmer or the Huntington Beach Fire Depart- ment said that resldenta can now take their accumulation or un· wanLed items lo three West Orallie County trash lrana!er staOoni. The Huntington Beach transfer station at 18131 Gothard St. Is open the second and fourth Saturdays or the month from noon to 3:30 p.m. The Stanton ataUoo at um Knott. Ave. is open tbe ffnt ilnd third Saturday• from o aim. to 3:30p.m. The Anaheim lianaler 1t1Uon at 1°'2l'DoU1la.t1 St: ls open the second and fo'Urth Saturdays lrom9a.m.to3:80p.m. ~ From P.,,e AJ SHAH ••• · Many of the iajured were taken via ambulance tor emergency treatment. There was no lm· mediate Wl'rd as to whether any were seriously hurt: The demonstrators had begun to gather at dawn, and numbered well into the thousands as the hour for the shah's arrival ap· proached An hour after the disturbance, lhe anti-shah demonstrators began massing again, but police kept them well away from the White House. The pro-shah forces, meanwhile, appeared to have d1sc;ip:ited. The student dem~ onstralors vowed to keep up their chanting vigil throughout the duration oftheahah's visit. At mid-day. about 500 students were south of the White House, ma1ntalrung their steady chant or "Down, down. down with the :-.hah ." M811Y carried signs say- ani: "The shah ls a fascist," while the shah's supporters countered with "Support U.S.·Iran Friendship" and the like. The anti-shah demonstrators wore hoods and masks, sup. posedly to avoid ldentlClcatlon and reprisals from Iran's secret police Many of the Injured Jay on the ground at the Ellipse for up to 30 minutes while pollce cleared the area. Then ambulances began arriving to carry them away. Both forces on the Ellipse were routed from the area by 28 mounted policemen. assisted by walls of monitors from within the ranks of the demonstrators themselves. A Park Police o(flclal said there were 1,000 antl·shah dem· oMtrators in Lafayette Park and 1,000 on the Ellipse, with 7SO supporters of the shah on the park side and 3,000 on the Ellipse side. About an hour after fighting broke out, pollce said, they had the !llltuatlon under control. Washinf(ton Police Chier M nu rice Cullinane sail! the dem· onslration was "not too bad. However, we had a few hectic minutes." lie said both the city and U.S. Park Police were prepared for the clash. CUlllnane and other top lnw enforcement authorities were gathered aboul a half a block from where the lar1est group of antl·shah dem- onatrat()rs were shouting thelr 11lo1an~. Bias Charged SAN FRANCLCK:O <AP> -A Justice Department tnvuU1a· tlon hu accused the San Fran· deco Police Department of "'"dtl· cr\mlDaUon tn the reftderin& ol • poltco a rvlcu" to the city's large Chinese community. A shortaso of bilingual off leers wu ell~ u a chief reason fo~ the problem. times. Newport Beach police· ~eclined comment on report. of l\osal 'a booking. They ref erred all lnqulrl• to Deputy Dbtttct. AUomey Dave Carter w~s. ts pros cuune th• cue. Carter waa not avallable for comment. tt 11 known that police beUove RouJ. F1ori, Resco, Marone and Marone•• father, Anthony Sr., were hired by four Newport Beach businessmen who opvat· ed an investment firm, Prasad.am Dllcrtbutlne Inc. The four Pruad.am partMrt have been ldenUfiecl· by poll~ In conneeUon wtt.h the murder • spiracy. OnJy one, Aleunder Kulik, 28, has been arrested In the case. He was freed from Jail after postina a $750,000 bond. The other three, RO)' Cbrlatopher Richard, Jo11ph Gabriel .Fedorowski and Joteph Shelton Davis a.a well as Kulik'• wife, Eble Caban Kulik, are still being aought. PolJce alle1e lhat while Roast, Fiori, Resco and the two M aronea wer~ employed by Prasadam, Bovan and two ac- com pllces kidnapped KuJik The kidnapping was never re-ported to police. Investigators believe the five men were hired to secure Kullk's freedom. And, police allege, the Prasadam partners put out a S2S,OOO death contract for each or the kidnappers. Police assert that Flori, Resco and lbe youneer Marone killed Bovan as part of that deal. Krishna Head Succumbs at 82 in India The founder and 1plrltual bead of the Hare Kri•hna religion, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swamt Prabhupada died Monday ln In·,. dia at the aae of 12.. He wu the leader ol the In· tematlonal1Jioclely for Krishna CopsclQt.1'~ <JSKOON>. The leader'• death was an· nounced by • spokuman for ISKCON who saJd Prabhupada had been sutt ring lll health for about six months. Prabhupada wp burled today· at the aoclety'a femple at Vrin- daban, near New D~lbl. The society's aovemlng body of 21 dlstiples w111 lead the sect jointly unUJ they decide on the selection of a new spiritual leader, the spokesman tald. Faculty Vot~. Slated Today OAKLAND CAP> -TtntaUve settlement was reached early lo· day ln tho masaive Oakland teachers strike, otncials aaid. A faculty vote on ratification ot the pact was aeheduled for thll after· noon. Karen McHenry, a atafr member ol the atrlkln1 Oakland Edocation Association. aaid picketing would continue today at the distrtct•a &a schools. But she said the fact that ne1ottators would brtng the ten- tall ve settlement before the teacben Is an Indication faculty leaders "will recommend ap- proval." Trustee Pay,_ .. Issue Eyed Huntlncton ·Beach CUy <elementary) School DJatrlct truateea will cUacusa pay tor board rnembe.ra tonlihL Tbe me.t.tn1 wllFh held at 7:30 p.m. at tho Sri\lth SctioOl Cafetortum. 73S1'thSt.. Board memben do not receive any compensation at preaent. Superintendent S.A. Moffett ts recommeftd.lna that up to $20 tie paid to e 91 m r•( r h boardm • - Egyptlari Pluident Anwar ~dat sald today it la ?ils 'S4tred duty" to accept an invitation from• Israell Prime Minister Menahem Begin to go to Israel for peace talks. See sto~y on Page A4. Orange Teen Dies in I-car Canyon Crash A 17-year-<>td youth dlod Moo- day afternoon when the car he was driving on a canyon road in Anaheim overturned and tumbled down an embankment As it left the roadway. the auto driven by Randall Seott Steele, 17, ot 507 E. Dunton St .. Orange, snapped a power pole, pollceaaid. As a result, a portion of the Santa Ana Canyon area in the \'iclnlty of Imperial Hlchway wu without electrical power for twohoun. A«ordtni to police, the vicUm w driving west on Santa Ana Canyon Road about 1,000 feet wt of Lakevtew Aven,µt •ben hil en went out Of contrOl, over. turned and ekldded off tbe roadway. Poltce ald the 1muhta auto came to rt1t Jn a concrete dralnate dltd> att.er tumbling down • 30-foot embankment. . p,.....P.,,.AJ FIRE ••• maicedin area motels. he sald. Before dawn, the lire was con- centrated in a largely untie copied area or Topanga State Park. The gutted homes were located In a nei&ihborhood called SyMa Park in northern Topanga Can· yon. Many evacuee$ came fl'()m the more heavlly populated .Patisades Highlands district within Loi Angeln where the fire later spread Monday afternoon. Jn both nei1hborbooda houses were worth as much a $500,000, fire otnclals said. Actress Sls$y Spacek, who became famous ln the t(tle role of the horror movie "Carne," wu among the people who decided to stay. "We've been through this before," she 11td. "For years I've had all my hangers ban11ng In the same direction, i.n case ot a fire In which l have to grab them tn a hurry. You plan for these kilfda or things." Southero California la scoureed at thla tJme each year by Santa Ana winds. Motat breezes !rotn the Pacinc Ocean are replaced, often for several days at a Ume. by t.he bot desert Santa Ana wtnda blowin1 from the east. Driver Held . . Mter Fatal .., . County Crash [. JI: A driver was booked on SU!5Pl-' cl on off et any drwtk drlvine urly. today after t.he ~ar he was driv-: ln1 tn Anaheim allegedly 1truck: and kllled a pedestrilb. : Police identified tbe drunk; drlvln1 suspect as Albert James : Lindemuth, 20, of 1050 W. Katella Ave., Anaheim. · Ac:cordlng to police, Lin- demuth was at the wheel of the car that bit 1'imotby Hanko, 34, . or Santa Ana, ai; he crossed • Harbor Boulevard ln a crosawalk at Katella Avenue. Hanko dted In Oood Samaritan Hospital at -4:22 a.m •• tbl'ee hours after t>eln-r blt t),y the auto in one of Oran1• COunty•a bUJtest mt4:rsections, police said. Ex-boss Held In Homicide ~ SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - A former baf r salon worker was shot fatally tn the head by hi& ex-boss during an argument over $60, Pollceaald. Booked by police tor' inveatlgaUon ot murd~r in the Monday night sbooUnt ·was Htrman Grant, 48, owner of G ·n G Hairstyling in Sa~ f'rancisoo. Police ldenUOed the de•d Man as John Troupe, 33, or San .Francisco. · NOW FOR JPllOM DOES BEU TOU? 17 VOL. 70, NO. 319, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES The dlrectora or the Irvine ompany aMounced today they will nc¥ renew the 18-acre land gift to th Weste rn Wo rld Medical Foundation for ;a hospital near the tJC Irvine cam· pus 'the announcement came after Monday's meeting or company directors. A spokesman said "it w u determined that since no cont.ractuaJ obligations exist. an that the foundation permitted its contract to lapse in 197•. no addl· tional discussions with the W estem World Medical Found•· ti on are contemplated." Foundation President Alan McMillen sald'be '' extremely disappointed, but t aurpriaed by the company'sdecislon. The withdrawal ot the land of· fer had been anticipated by foun- dation officials and local hospital - backers l\ft(e this summer when Joan trvlne SmJth made a gilt ol Sl mflUon \0 the UC Irvine School ol~tdlcl ·~ ' T~t ~«;: hi ch comes in the fortn10f $100,000 to be atven the univ~rllty every year for 10 ydn, mwst be matd\ed by a like amount put up by UC Resents. A .. spokesman for ·vc1 Chan· cellor Daniel Aldrich aald today t c:ampus administration is • PROTESTERS MOVE IN ON POLICE DURING DEMONSTRATION AGAINST SHAH OF IRAN • Faction• For end Against Vlalttng MOnerch CIHll Outakfe White HouM Cella LOses Bid to Omt DA in Case • -, • Justic<'S of the Fourth District Court of Appeals· in San Bernardino refll.sed Monday to 1emove the Orange County Dis- trict Attorney's office rrom pros- ecution or the cue against Dr. Louis J .CeUaJr. The opinion supporting Superior Court Judie ff. Warren Knight's earlier ruling noted that there was no reason to auapec:t Dlstrlct Attomey Cecil Hicks of being bt"Med a1a1nst Cella. The decllion now leaves Judie Knigb\ f~ to act on setUn1 the new venues for the' se.,arate trial.I o( (;el.la,. 52, and former hospital adminiatrator Stephen Robert Evans, 32. , lioth mm have been ordered to ap~ Friday. Lltwyen for both sides· appear confident that the Cella .trial will be sent to San DCeco with the Evana location de· layed untU the Cella trial is almnt complete. l,.awyera for both men are con· ductfq plea bar1alnin1 neeotia- tions with the district attomey'1 qfftce. C.lli Q,i1d Evans fact trial on m~lUple crhntnel cb.arsu con· lned in • 'grand jury 1nd1ct- mePt. Both lia\'e been convicted hi'LO• ADPles lf'ederal Court ~ HJated Offenses. ~a ls the on appeal from l •e·1ear teder•l priaoJt term nns pOlted an appeal bond (lee CELI.it\, Pace .U) Princess Anne <Jives Birth t~ ~aby )i,,y \ LONDON (AP> -Prlnce~s Anne gave birth to a seven·pound nine-ounce boy today and Queen Elizabeth joyously broke the news about her first grandchild. (Photo, PageA3} . Arriving 10 mimrtea late for an investiture at Bucklncham Palace, the 51-year·oid queen told the crowd awaiUna her: "l apok>cizefor beln,i lat!e but I have Just had a message from the hospital. My dau1bter bu j11St given blrth to a son." • B~th the 27 -year-old princess and the baby were reported "fine .'' s , The queen's 1ynecologi1t , Georee Anker, bad been called to the palace au a.m. when Anne went hlto labor. Alter a quick ex- am lnation, Anne's hu•band, Capt. f4ark Phillips, drove her In their ROver aedan to St. Kary's Hos pit.I in west London. The ~Y wu born at 10:'6 a.m. local lime • .fhJUl1>$, wbo wu p~e1eat during the dellvery. teJepbofted. the QU4Mft, who talked to her dp.~~ and then went to tbf tnv• ture. • ~11aratulati:o1 . poured In lrom r~ati 41.t, poUtlclan.s and the;Britiah pul;llc. , \ Pather-ln·l•w Peter Phl1Ups 1aia, "I'm •blQlutely delipted foe the ~,l w.,Jaoplfti lot a )>oy ... .1 " t-• • Prime Minister J a m es Callaghan sent a tel.egram to Prloc:ess Anne that read, "The nation rejoices with you and will ~-Jong lite .m happiness to fOur'IOD andtohJ,i parent..'' Anti·royallst Willie' Hamilton, a Labor member of Parliament who wants to do away with the monarchy, rea04ed with le!s en· thuslalm. "How charming :... another one on the payroll," be aald. The btrth anaouncement was poated <>n ~e raillng1 outside Bucktn1bam Pal•«. and the <See BEia, ••i• Al) lrvine P~ys $4,241 for .Go~erence lrvln4! wpayera paid $&,241 to send 1S city officlialJ to San Fraa- clsco last September to at.tend a f our·day annual League ot Caltfontlll Cttits' col'lf«•d e, 'le· cordlnc to finance records. In a letter sent to all lhe stall physic1&n1 at Hoaa, Sinykln no\· ed that residents or Jrvine cu . rently have no hospital and must use !acilitjes in nei&hborin& c:o&n· Q\UDitieg. H.e also noted that many ot the medical offices built lS\ FashloD Island were leased to physicians with the undentandins that there would eventually be a hospital on the east side of the bay. Shah's Visit Protested ' . Mrs. smith's gilt is lo be used fo r constructio n of mcire faclllties at the UC Irv(ne Medical School. The s chool's master plan calls for a $10 mllllon ambulatory care center to b~ built next. The We.stem World complex was to include a hospital built by the foundation. The additlon$1 property would then have ~n ($ff HOSPITAL, Pace AU r ' ·F~ghting Erupts ~ it White .House· = , , -I I ' I I ' i ' By KATHY CLANC.'IV OI U.. 0.111, , .... ~l•fl Orange County bupervisors agteed loday to Jpend another $43_,800 to compl4'te a con trovenlal study d~sl&ned to chart the future of Or-.nge Cuun· ty Airport Tbe funds will be paid to the COl'\IUltlng firm of Daniel, MaM, Johnson and Mendenhall for another three months of work needed lo revise the airport's en· vironmenli.d impact report cEIR > That means the EIR's tab will UM.al $4:61,800 before the report 1i. dlllivered early next year. ~upervisors \\ere told last week that, even after they ap prove the consultant's EIR. add1- ,Lional studies will lJe nccesi.arv 'Sacr~ff But 11' Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said today it is his "sacred duty" to accept an invitation from Israeli Prime Minister Menahem. Begin to.go to 1laraeh!or peace talks. See story on Page A4. I',.._ Page Al .. HEIR ... Honorable ArtllJery Company at the Tower of London fired a gun salute. Flags were raised above public buildings. Princess Anne and her husband enJoyed a quiet evening at the palace Monday night celebrating their fourth wedding anniversary with a dinner for \wo. They were said lo have been 1;)1sappointed that the baby didn't ~ome on their anniver•.ary, T1hicb was also Prince Charles' "birthday. • A nursery at the palace was teady and the child will sleep in the satin-trimmed crib made for ftls srendmothet, the queen, half l century ago and used tor every oyal baby since then. There waa no immediate an- J\ouncement on the baby's name. • Bias Charged· berore building projects take pla<'e al the airport. "It won't allow you to actually build a new terminal building the day &.1fttir it ls certified b)' the board,'' said Barbara Fox. an SS· sistant director of the county General Services Agency Norm Ewers, airport noise and environmental specialist. said once the EIR is approved Jt will' lay the groundwork tor a decision on how many passengers and flights the airport should handle. Then airport. officials can plan the kind of facility needed to sup- port those activities, and addi- tional EIRs for specific building projects can be prepared, he ~aid Supervisors voted unanimous· ly today to spend the extra S.13,800 to complete the airport study. allhoueh Supervisor Philip Anthony was absent and did not take part in the vutc It was Anthony last w<.•ck wtio &s ked county officials. "I wonder whether when this EIR 1s done 1t will be anything but a.document lo fight over?" "It will be a document lo fight over," Ewers replied. From Page Al CELLA ••. after being sentenced lo one year. It is alleged that both defen· dants were involved in a con· spiracy that cost two hospitals controlled by Cella as secretary-· treasurer an estimated $2 million in funds. Members of the district at· torney's staff welcomed the Cella rullna Monday in the Ught or their deciSiqn to appeal a recent ruling in another case by Superior Court Judge Philip E. Schwab. Judge Sebwab removed the district aUorney's office and sub· atltuted the 4ttorney general '1 staff in the crfminal case against county Supervisors Ralph Diedrich and_.Ph.ilip Anthony and two codefendants. The prosecution hopes to have an appellate court rulln1 on the issue befo~ pretrial action in the Diedrich -1td Anthony case re- sumes Nov 21. VictimSlwt • With His Own .. Weapon Also? By ROBERT BARKER Oftllel)ally'ii.t$1411 Huntington Beach resident Robert Myers, who was found shot to death near Barstow over the weekend, may have been shot by his own gun as well as anolher weapon. A San Bernardino County cor· oner's spokesman said that laboratory tests will be made to determine if that is the case Myers, 57, a former long-time Laguna Beach resident. was shot twlc~ in the chest but detecUves declined to say if the $hots came from the front or back. "We doo't want to release that information for polyaraph <lie teat) pu~." Sgt. Bob FA· monds said today In San Bernardino. ••Only the suspect knows where and how many times Mr. Myers was shot,•· tie said. Edmonds said there ls a dlst- jnct poeslbiU»' that Myerc was shot by b1I own .22-callber pistol as well u a second weapon. Nyera apparently carried th'e gun for aetf protection. n wu 1tUI ml•stng today u well aa Myen' told colored van. Several points b•ffled In~ vestlgat.ors today. M)'en wu not knowl\ to pick up hltcbhlk_.., eltlioucli It 11 ltiU eonstdeNd.a ~albtllty. ·~hse llto 1J a gOod ponibUi· ~ that~e tneaked 'into bU van •hlle ht waa havtn1 lunch b\ Vlctot'Wle With Mends,.. Ed· mondseald. ... Bdmc:iftdj a1.sO said that 1t wu poaaible that M1el'J had stopped to help a motorist stalled on the l lJ stretch~ ol hilbwat may.l>~ w • th: fact t~~'91'8 .._ Keeping ,e9' 011 tile. Grass Lt William Hamberlin of the Richmond pohcc department displays some of the which Richmond police seized on a fishin1 vessel. Three ~pie were arrested and · · G,000 pounds of marijuana, carrying a street value of more than $4 m.Jllion, are being held on $250,000 ball each . College OKs At-1Jea Study Of'Land Sales Saddleback College trustees agreed Monday that it wu full :.peed ahead for two "r9al estate at sea" counses but they atreaaed the classes 11houldn't be a breeze. Classes on the principles and practices of real utate will be taught during a seven-day cruise from Acapulco durine the col· 11.!gc's January mid-winter breuk. ~ A mirumum of 25 students lo each class will pay $870 each for their ail' fare to Acapulco and meals and lodging on the.ship. A portion of the students' fees allo will offset the ~pepses of the two inhlructors. The only cost to the college wil!. be the instructors' salaries. Ad· ministrators said the two would be paid anyway becaute they are under a contract with the college. However, if they weren't oo the cruise, they would be involved with the college's in-service training offered each year at t.hi! time. WUUam Ja.y, the college's dean of Instruction, described the floaUng class as a "tremendous way for very busy professionals to get away for a week and study a particular course." Trustee Donna Berry ques· tioned whether the teachers are getting a vacation at taxpayers expense. Bu' administrators areued it ls not costing tbe col· lege anything beyond what the teachers would be paid anyway. Also, with 4:S hours of lnstruc· lion scheduled during the cruise, Jay said, "it's no vacation." Because the student.a will be taking the course in preparation for their etate broker's exam, he promised. the floatlnf course won't be "watered do#n. '' F,.._P.,,.AJ FIRE ••• . ~ -Ri:oi~cts SoliJlht Bx Women's Panel . ' Orange County fem-1es ·~ m-vl~d to tell members· of the County Commission an the *8tul of Women in the ne•t few weat what projects the "comml Ion migbt undertake in the co~lng year. About SO women atl$1 ed two com mbsion forum a held Monday to offer their suggesllona. Toplca they proposed ranged from establishing an lnformallon bank tor tho so-called "recently alone" woman to studies in the area of child care and child abuse to provldln& help to unwed teen -age mothers. Irvine resident Nancy McLain, for example, said women who suddenly find tt\1!mulves. widowed, divorced or abandoned often need advice on matters many people take for 1ranted, s uch as finding insurance or jobs or adequat.etransportaUon. • ·"I am thlntmi o( th• G"tod when a panic sets in,·' she said. Ann Perall.a or &iota Ana said the suddenly alone woman or dis· placed-homemtker often las• her home. fncome and self· worth Bearing Re-set She said there is a need ln th• couhty for a central cl"1'1111 house ol iDtormaUon to help such women over thell lniUal period ot panl~l'' AmlM& tholie in Monday"a au· dienejl were critics of tbe com- ml11ion iwho have comptalritd that lt i• an UMete11ary county ·advisory panel. One crtUe, Korhtn Bogdao~vieh of Huntln.fon Beach, told comlnllstonen they should not study tax•aupported child care centers, for exam.,le, contendln1 m<>11t county women are opposed to uslne tax dollars to support such centers. However, Leslie Carr of Santa Aoa, aald U\ere la a •:crylna need" in Oranae ~Ly tor dJ.Y care centers, particularly !or the lower-income woman. Other suggesUona of!e.red ~· day incl~ various ltudJ.a\;>f employment for:"9men. reviews o( school textbOoks used,Jn the county, expanding opporlUnlUes for disabled women and IW'ftY- tne county scbool1 for: com· pliance with federal 1ntl·lex dla- cri minatiOJl legislation. Ruling Refused On ' Vault Warrant Santa Ana Municipal Court Judie Iryne Black refused to make any ruling Monday on a bid by tbe opera-. of Swlu Vaults. Inc .• to qaaab search warrants issued to Santa Ana police. Lawyers revtaled after spend- ing moet ol ihe day in chambers with Judge Black that current Orange County Grand Jury ex· aminaUon ol the document.a ltd thejudeetopostponeher ruUng. She set Dec. 20 as the date abe will reopen the bearln1 after Jearntn1that the Grand Jury'Wlll be dlscmsln& upecU. of the re· ported Swill Vaultl robbery unt.ll at least lbatdat... ... At Issue in the bearlna is the abtbOriuUou or Hatch warrants und by Sant.a Ana J)O.llc• to ff.lze ~usillet• records ltom the Swiss V1\Uta olfic at."°' N. Grand Ave. 'l'he r,earth was part ot an In vettl••Uon aarrild wt alter the re;potltorY WU robbed lNt July 9 ... ' of an estimated $1 .1 million fn precious metals. An affldavlt now beln• ex-amined by the Grand Jury t:on- tains the allegation of a Santa Ana police infeatJgator that Swlas Vaults operators Vincent Car- rano ot Seal Beach and Jack Fulton of Corona del Mar staged a fake robbery. The affidavn cbartet that the robbery was t.M ellma of 15 months ol "systematic emt>enle- ment of the matertalt lelt on de· posit at the b111lnesa." · Police "'1h0 went to' Che Swtu Vaults olflce on July t found <lat· rano tied to u OYertuned chi!r. They said Carrano tbld them h~ went to lds omce to ittp an appointment m e over tbe telephone. Carrano 1ald Ile 1'11 htld at eunpol# and tied to ht• chair whtJ• Hvnal men toet $1.1 million tn aold and •liver from the vaults. robbOd. omc satd they found '85 cub on his bOdl 1 w 11 as JewlWy t.e • '.,.;.:. "1t'J,j~lr~tm, "W t JG1n th .!t tbel'9 net that the nnatdm,:w ea." ltdm Hid. 1J • Irvine Bors)ary Neta Two Goldfiili ., Irvine polJce are ln¥e1tJ1a t the bur1lary of an JPlrtment if 3901 ParkVlew Lane Monday, In which the bural1T's tOt.i1 boOty was two 1oldftah in a largel>rao- dY llHt. L •.. ' VicUrD Sandra F. •BoOtfte. 38, • aaluwoman, nld th• tbief tu2ock~ a nower pOt Into the kitchen sink Whtie ~llmblng throu1h ran open window. She valued the ldclnaPJ)ed neb at tto. ' 1 . . QM u.. A A-l 2HI 14 U ,. , I~ I ti Jh• ~ Al. t•» , ... •• ~ .. 'I ~ ...... • • •• ..,.. »l<t• .... A 0 41 .. ~+ "9 ~ ...... : .'. 2 .. ''"':·::f =:111111 .»e • 10 •~ .... .. 4-ftll ..... ~ ..... .. AtlMl:.I 1 • • &10 ~ ... \.. 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'so. 219 ---"' i~ .. , 1.toti II ...... , • ot .atu 70I •>4-+ .. .... 1 1 ,..,._ ~. ll~ll( I ' IZ2 2l -\,. •~ ..... 141111 )2~1-~, • ·'°'' 21 s.~ •• "' 1•11 I. 110 )II .,qh • 1 ... •.. " ... "' . . \,, 8.\~0IP •• 1' 2w ... 1• IS4titG I ... • I U -11 llOllC.19 ... t 6 1-.+ ~. el'"' .010 l 27 • loo ,.lb .... II <121 7A .. I. tt I'll" .Jilli •11 ~ .. n 8etl11'1 .llOU If! ~ ... ,._ : '·''*.~ 1a ·~~: t ' • Ill ,, ...... 14 ----~ • ....... DAtLY PU.OT 'Convenjei:ice,' Pets 1Rank High 81 JlllLTON MOSKOWITZ New pft)ducta, thef always tell you, are the llfeblood or tho U .S. 1roc1ey lndualry. Thal belna tho cue, wbJch are the MOit 1ucccsaful new products introduced during the paat five yean? · · The trade maraalnt Adverttsmg Aae rec:enUy toted up the top 10. Here they are, the dollar Ci ure repro&entin1 the retail 1ales chalked up In 1976; Prin1la Tender Vittles Decafftlnated Tuter'• Choice Upton CUp-A..SOup MlgbtyDOg Morton 'a Doouta Troplcana 01'&nl• Julee Hamburger Helper Meow Mix Betty Crocker Snackin • Cakes SlOO million $ 61 mllUon S 81 mUlion S 56mllUon s 5' mlllion S UmUli9Jl $~million S 49 mllllon $ 46 million S 38mllllon \'OU WONDER WHAT SOCIOLOGISl'S 25 yoars from now will think of that roster. What clues to our culture will they find there? Just about all of these winners are what the food Ul· dustry calls "convenience products." They reqwro little or no cooking. Juat add water or heat. Or eat atraiaht from the packa1e. rr they try to deduce from this Hat which compan\es were the smartest, they can atart wlth three names : Procter & Gamble. Ralston Putlna and General Mills. ' Money Tree Clncinnati '• Procter & Gamble, which probably takell more money out of the supermarket than any other aup· plier, ia the company that fabricated P"n1les 10 that we can haveatacked crumble·proofpotato chips. s I , ' s I , , ' ' • J ' v j I • 1 i -~ I , It . 1":1 'I r..., •• I( ~AUTON PURINA AND GENERAL MUia e.cb made ,111 the top 10 roeter with two products. General M.1111, th' Mln· •JI neapolla flour mtUer, gave us Hamburger Helper (to a~tch oi. those low-co5t meals> and Betty Crocker Snackln" Caku (to , 1~ take away our appetites). Two cat foods, Tender Vittles and 1 1 e1 Meow Mix, are the entries from Chec:kerbovd Square. 1• Perhaps the moet strlt.ine feature of this list la lb• wide •. , 0 swath cut by pet foods Three of the top 10 new product.I are pet foods, Mighty 001 beine a CarnatloD brand that has moved to fourth place in the canned dog food ae1mtnt r4 the market (behind AlP<>. Ken·L·Rallon and Kai Kan). One t.heoor, advanced by a Ralston Purina vice pteat· dent, WllllanJ SUrlta, is that since f am ill es are eatln1 more at restaurants. table :scraps~ scarcer. Result; pet food sales hne doubled in th~ past alx years to ru bUUon. The pet food po,pulaUon ls also increaaln1 more rapidly o' than the human popuhatlon. The current U,S count: 45 1 1 million famUy.owned doa11: 2S million cats. Dow Index on Rise, ,. i Trade Pace Quickens NEW YORK CAP> -The stock mark•&., bouncina back from Monday's decline, began climbiJ'\1 again tod•y u the. l pace of tradinj accelerated. 7 points Monday and another 3 lri early tradlns today. showeda4.421a1ntoM2.71. The Dow Jones average of 30 lndUltrialt, off than I Advances held a 2-1 lead overdecline1 amon1 Ne.w York Stock Exchan1e-llsted l11ues Analysta said the rH\lmpUon of buying interest after lHt week's 3!U5-polnt Jump by the Dow was eocouraaed partly tiy a small St. Louls bank"s lowering of its prime lend· P lnl rate from 14'• to 71,; percent 0 JAL~J 'oue to 1ate·tr1n1mls.s10n~ today's listing wlll not as>pe~r 111 the Oalty Piiot. ~ ,, WftAT AMIJI e1e "'""" ~OR~ 11\f'I .., . .,, A•~•n<.. :.,...,, ~' O.tll....0 l., Jif \IMlltl>OM 1flj, Ht fol1I IUllff 92' •~ "'-1mn1t11a ~ jj ht• tt1 '°""' t I AMllt S.l.9t Due to late transmfalon today's fisting wm not appear In the Dally Piiot. · . . Geld 4 ... , ...... . ..,,..._111 ... l'w'tt• DAIL 'f Pal.OT .'l'lJ ESDA \' EVENING 11:00 I) 0 D (J) 0 Ntwa 8 BONANZA "Love Me Not" T 0 THEAVENGERS "Something Naaty In The Nurtery" Q) MICKEY MOUSE CLUB Q) SUPERMAN 8l) SESAME STREET m VILU ALEGRE 5:30 ID BEWITCHED '"'Long Live The Queen" Q) AOAM-12 "A Fool And Hla Money" 0!) FREEHAND SKETCHING "Forming Thlckneaa" e:OO fJ cas NEWS OD NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI A young girl fella victim to a drunk driver and the paramedic• become the ter- ~ta of a sniper. 0 MOVIE * * '"Vanishing Afrlca"Docu- mentary Narrated by Biii Burrud. (2 hra ) Q) THE BRADY BUNCH '"The Subject Wu Nosea" Q) THE ROOKIES The rooklea go up agalnat a sniper that shoo11 at anything in uniform EJl) ZOOM '1!) AS MAN BEHAVES "Group Therapy" OJ) ABC NEWS 6:306 MOVIE * * * •,,, "The Scarlet Pimper-nel" (1935) Leslie Howard, Merle Oberon. In dlagulM u e gentleman of the Engltlh Court, an underground hero reacuea French noblemen lrom the gull- lot1ne during the Revolullon. ( 1 hr., 30 min.) Q) MY THREE SONS • The Ernie Report" al) OVEREASY Mr and Mrs. Redd Foxx. a cooking lesson; mall order shopping m> GROWING YEARS "Child's Play" ())CBS NEWS ~ MERV GRIFFIN Guests Bobby Vinton. Chila Rivera. Pete Barbuttl. Chinese Acrobats Fom Taiwan, Dennis Medalone. 7:00 0 NBC NEWS 8 LIARSCLUB 0 ABC NEWS Q) I LOVE LUCY "The Girla Want To Go To A Nightclub" Q) ADAM-12 Reed la accused ol shooting an unarmed man ED THE ADVOCATES Should We Suppof't President Carter's Energy Program? 0!) EARTH. SEA AND SKY Jazz Show . Turning Up On Radio L OS ANGELES (AP) -True, not mu('h Jazz Is regularly heard on radio But ,..National Public Radio is trying to help correot tt11s with a 00-mloute weekly Sl•raes it began last month - '•J au Ali ve." F or S400,000, or slightly more than the estimated cost of on~ "Starsdy and Hutch " episode, Ute new i;erics is amng the work ul both little·known and well· Jchown Jazz folks for 30 weeks. A('cording lo the show's pro. ducer , Steve Rathe. it's on 160 of NPK's 201 non.commercial ala· (Ions, most of the m F M, and wu \eloped in response to the gta. ns' request for a weekly jazz ries. "THEY SAID IT Wal th~r llrat gtiority, although nobOdy ever ally said why," he added. "But think it's ma Inly becauie ere 's an increasing aophltUca· on on the part of a very large dleoce which is tumtn1 from r«k 'n' roll." ~ e aeries. usually hosted by anflt.educator Biily Taylor, an Oct. 2. It 1tal'l'ed 1ln1ers l a Jl'ltzgerald and Stevie onder and veteran ~trumpeter y Eldrtdae . .,..Thi• week'• edltlo11 bas ex· ~pu l'roln the Momr~aux Jaaa Uval arid featurt1 planllt Don ul\en and JuJtarl t John cLauiblln '•new 1roup, Shaktl. Alan Alda loses his cool at a cold-blood ed officer on t o ni g ht 's ep lso d e o f "MASH, al 9 on CBS: Channel 2. "Ground Water" ()) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:3011 CANDID CAMERA 8 NEWLYWED GAME G 9 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES Q) THE BRADY BUNCH The children get angry at Cindy tor carrying tales to their parents. Q) LET'S MAKE A DEAL 81) NEWSCHECK ()) THE GONG SHOW 8;00 6 ()) THE FITZPATRICK& The fettlvftlee 8Urroundlng Max Fltzpatrk*'a First Communion are marred w'*' hla father la suspended from hie job Thalmua Raaulala, Donald Moffat. Robert Hogan guest star. G THE GODFATHER SAGA Mk:tlael Corteone (Al Pac:lno) u.omea leaderahlp of the fam- lly and beglM to expand opera- tions by Ml1bll1hlng a base In Cuba. (Part 4 of 4) (R) 8 MOVIE ***'!\ "Cry Of The Wiid" (1974) Oirected by Biii Mason. Thi.a dOoumentary, filmed In Ratings Guide IMOlll" ,,. ra!ld ..:cordlno to bO• olllu Ml~t. Mo•IH for TV ••• JllCI~ b'f • ulllc I • * * • -Ex~ellent * • * -Very Good • * -Good •• , -Farr • -Poor ' ~•n.,. ~•...V ~11..a, :,....,~......_ 6.rfa~IOr.C'paftema of wolvee, dl•s*llng many falM belleta. (2 CbellenGtd ®".'lfft~-=t~~~·~~~~~~~~1~:Q~~~===~;:::_::;::~~· ue to change, necelllltattng a 11:30 9 Cl) CBS UTE MOVIE 2:00 MOVIE personal aearch for Identity by *** "Colwnbo: P:orgott *** "Running Man" (19t3) each Individual Ledy" (1975) Ptt• Falk, Janet L .. Remk*, Alan Bat•. Antr hra.) fl 0 HAPPY f?AVS "Fonzie And Leather Tuacad- ero" Fonil• and Ritchie lead the ...,~ lot Joanie, Who hu left home determined to become Ii b•k-up llnger for Leather Tuac:adero (Suzi OUatro) and her rock group "The Sued•." (Part 2 of 2) G INCONCERT "Roger Whitteker" Q) CAROL BURNETT ANO FRIENDS Gueat: Steve Lawrence. e MOVIE ***t,.i "The Hanging Tree" (1969) Gary eoop.r, Marla &hell. A doctor kills a ,,,.,, while reawlng a girl and Is almoat lynched by • drunken mob. (2 hra.) SPECIAL "G80f'gla O'Keefe" The nine- tieth birthday of this major fig- ure In American art la celebrat- ed wl1h a filmed look at her life and work from her home In New Mexico end from New York's Museum of Modem Art. ID PARENT EFFECTIVENESS "Tuning In" Active Llatenlng Feedback la used In roi..play- ~ and In an at-home altuatlon. 8:30U9 UVERNE&SHIRLEY "An Affair To Forget" The glrla begin tti.lr long-awaited vaca- t 1 on cruise and 8hlrley becomes friendly with an attractive aallor (Phlllp Clati«) who hints he would like to Uk her a very lmPQrtant question. (Part 2 of 2) Q) CROSS-WITS Gi) OVER EASY Mr. and Mra. Redd Foxx, a cooking lenOn; mall order shopping. (R) • 9:008(1) M•A•s•H NI officer with a cold-blood.d knack for predlctlng cuuattlea prompt• a violent reaction from Hewk9)'9, wttlle Cha.rtee suffers embatrualng results from the c:Qnaumptlon of a gourmet feut. 0 (ID THREE'S COMPANY "Chrlaay•a Night Out" Jeck rulhet to defend Chrlaay'a hon- or when a man mlaunderatanda her frlendllneu and ahOW8 up at the apartment. No one real- lz ... however. that the visitor Is an undercover cop. G IRONSIDE "Who'll Cry For My Baby" Q) MERV ORIFAN Guetts: Bobby Vinton, Chila Rivera. Pete Barbuttl, Chinese Acrobata From Taiwan, Dennie Madalone . fD SPECIAL "To Be A Man" Traditional machismo rolea and valuel are '9 MASTERPIECE THEATRE i.,.lgh. A 1t1n bNutltul, but mteflng hat twsban\i In Spain "I. Claudlua: family Affalr1" aging, movie q""" plant to with fraudulent 1n1uranot Tibetlua angett Au9u1tu1 when return to a Btoadway mullcal money, 1 young woman dl!IOO\"O he m .. t• Horetly with against Mr weelthy husband'• et1they'rebelngfollowedbyan Vlapanla. who he waa foroed to wtanea. (A) lnturaoce lnveatlgatot. (2 hra.) divorce ao that he could marry 8 TONIGHT I NliW8 •' Augu1tu1· daUght•r J\llla. H~t: John~ Ceraon. Gunt1: MOVIE 9:30 8 {I) ON! DAY AT A TIME! Chrl1 and Charlotte Mc:Br1dt, 1t *if/I "CaatnOYa '70" ( 1&ea) "The Ghost Writer" Und« Arnold Schwlrunegger, Cl0tla Matoello Mutrolannl, Vtma • pr ... ure to pi.aae her mother Ltec:hman, Judith Blegen. Llal An attractive playboy and do well In achool, Barbara 8 LOVll, AMERICAN $TYL..E encounttrt psychologlcal pr~ • r,_orta to desperate meaur... "L.Ow And The Nur .. I LOve lf!fM Jn hit romantic~ Ab Gh08tley gueat It.,.. And '1M ~oet" (2 hra.) a 9 SOA,. • a A80 MOYie • Movte (Epltode Nine) Jodie enter• the **"'"The l.9g8ftd Ot Vllentl-* * * "Pickwick Papera" hospll•I for hla operatJon: Burt no" (197&) Franco Nero, (1954) Hermione Glngold, Ntoef) reveals hit aecret to a payc:hia-8uz.anne Pleehette. A rOMantlc, Pat.rlc:k. 88Md on 06c:ken'a trtst: J...ica I• deeply hurt fletfonallnd eccount of the claallc, mlddi..aged ~ · when aha learn a of her tllent tereen'a famoua lowr. (R) embe,O( on an adWnkJr• tour of husband'• lndiacretlona. (Net-NEWS erttern. (2 tn.) · work advt... viewer di.cf• Q) OET SMART * * "Not Wanted On Voyage'1 10:00~& LOU GAANT ~~=·to a doctor aft• =· :=:~:w~=~ An ec:c.ntric Superior Court 9 CAPTIONED ABC NEWS u Arati., aearch tor a stolen judge (Barnard Hugh .. ) pr• MOANING Jewel during a c:ruJM. (2.hra.t.,:.:' aldea over ouea In • humor-12:009 :TWIUGHTZONE 3:00&> NEWS ·~ oua, though 1ometlme1 , "A Game Of POOi" 4:008 MOVIE deranged, manner. / CD FOREVER FERNWOOD *~ ''The Girt From Calgary"{ 8 8 NEWS Eleanor lnvolwa Tom In Mr (1937) Paul Kelly, Fm O'OfuY,1 D 9 FAMIL y vlcloua ptot: Merle tell• Charil• The 1tory Of • rodeo ~ "A Matter Of lndellc•cy" /--~out the lottery: Wanda th•t could , .. ny rope her man.; Buddy's girlfriend Laura (Carol ~ dlacuaea lnoett with Cathy; (1hr .• 30 min.) Jones) arrtvea for a vlllt bU1 the Mw1e tweata over a !OP. G•le Stonn • • LawrenCM soon dl.COver her • MOVtl .. :30 G» MOV&! • •1 tragic: problem -Laura, at 16, **~ "Frontier G.a" .(1946) ** "The Abduct~1957) has becQtne an alc:ohollo. Yvonne Deearlo, Rod Camet-Victor Mql.aglen, · F'Wf. 8p4ln11 G> OET 8MART on, -A ..ioon OWMr anct her Grave robberl targtt In Of\ Ttie Chief explalne the aim of • hUll>and who have bi'oken up Lincoln'• tomb. (1 hr:, 30 min.) •hi• ~~ess , .. brought back together. by ..,ed. ne· •· ~at1'• thetrdllld.(1hr.,30mln.) n1 a Tran1orlpt1 and recordings 12!30 9 MOVIE probe recent M.tts .ior•: a *** "The Mad Ooctpr" Dpgtltne /ffo.,ie · · 1974 commercfafftttlner Cf'Uh, (1SM1) Bait Rathbone, GUen a •man'• prostitution tr~ and Drew. A dlat\lrbtd P9'/dllatrllt ~ the case of Karen Ann Quinlan. msrlM ~ Ind ttten ldlla • 9-.IO G MOVl • I U0 SPECIAL them otr tor thalt money. (1 hr.. • **IA "Waite The PrOUd I.arid~ "Georgia O'Keefe" The nine-25 min.) • , (195') Audie Murpfty, AM91 tleth birthday Of thla ma}or fig-• MOVIE .Banctoft. An honeet Indian ure In American art Is cMbrat-. * * * "Th• oea,,.radoet" agent fight• for harmony ed with a filmed look at hat lift (1~) Olenn Ford, Claire . bet1 ""' A~ and ~ and work from her .. h<>me In Trevor.While ptannlng to ttage (1hr .. 30 min.) • : New Mexico and from NeW a hofdup for a banker, a gun-10:00 e MOVIE York'• Muaeum of MOdern Art. man uneicpectedfy fella In low **'A "Th• Third 8ecr9t'• 10:30 com NEWS with the bank«'• daughtet. (1964) St.phen Boyd, J 11:00 fJ D 8 ()) tm NEWS anchlto dltcoYWa the aherlrt la Hewtclna. A paychoanalytt 8 HOUVWOOO • a long Iott frttnd.2:30 MOV daUghter oonvlnoet one Of hle CONNECTION Movie** "LHt Daya 01 patients to hefp her find het D MOVIE Dotwyn" (1949) Edith &v*'8. tether'• murderer. (2 n,..) * * "Vanlahlng Afrlca"Oocu· Emlyn Wiiliama. AFTERNOON mentary Narr•ted by 8111 1:00 D TOMORROW Burrud. (2 hra.) G I SPY 12:00 CD MOVIE Q) THE 000 COUPLE "Lisa" ** * "A Night To Aernemb«" "The Murray Who Came To 1:309 NEWS (1942) Loretta Young, ~ Dinner" a> MOVIE Aherne.A mystery wrft• , anti' t8 HONEYMOONERS * * "Mllllon Dollar Manhunt" hit wtfe unoowr a mytt~· c*· Af1er he Is challenged to fight. ( 1957) Ndlard Oennlng, Carole their own.2:20 Ben Hunter Ralph thinks up many IChemea Matthews. Twelve mllllon 2.-00 • MOvtE • '* to chicken out but aave face at PoUnd• of c:ounterf*t money. ** "Ooel At The Rio Gr~ the same time. made In Germany dt1r1ng World (19&4) S-, Flynn. Upon • fD DICK CAVETI" War 11 .. tr8cked down by .,, • Ing In Mexico, tt'9 ton ot et Guest Ntozake Shange, writer. lntelllgenoe ao-it. (1 ht., 30 weelthy famlfy find• that '* poet and femfnlat. min.) , father hee been murdenld ~ a ~ MACNEIL/ LEHRER 1:37 8 N£WS PQMrful dlctetor. (2 hra.) ~ f - · By TOM JORY NEW YORK (AP> -Carrol O'Connor is conrinced viewers wlll see him a~ Frank Skef· lington rather than Archie Bunker when be plays the lead 1n a TV remake of "The Last Hur- t&)'," Wednesday at 9 on NBC, .Chaonel7. • ''It doesn't concern me at all,•• O'Connor aaid 1n a recent In- terview. "The public baa 110 trou- ble when an actor chances.roles. That problem occurs mol'e tn the mind or a producer. Another Fine lfln• "If you gJ ve a 1ood. performance," said the man best known ror bis part in the popular. nnd loo1-runnin1 ••AJI In tbe Family" series, ,.the publlc will accept you ." Laverne and Shirley (Cindy Williams, lert. and Penny Marshall) try to explain to Phillip Clark (right) just what they and Lenny (Michael McKean) are doing with Squiggy (David Lander> in this scene from Laverne and Shirley, tonight at 8 30 on· ABC, Channel 7. I • • ~ J(' Seniors' ·Show Debuts J PROTESTERS MOVE IN ON POLICE DURING DEMONSTRATION AGAINST SHAH OF IRAN F8Ctlon1 For and Agaln1t VJ8'tfng Mo!i•rch Claah Out11de Whtte Hou•• HBMan Slwt With Own Gun? By ROBERT BARKER OI tlW o.tlty root~'"" H unlington Beach resident Robert Myers, who was found shot to death near Barstow over tbe weekend, may have been shot 1 by his own gun as well as another weapon. A 51111 Bernanltaq ~t)' cor- oner's spokesman sala that laboratory tests will be made to determine tr that 11 lhe cue. Myers, 57, a former loa&·tlme Laguna Beach resident, was ahQt twice in the cheat bu~ detecUves declined lo say if the shots came from the front or back. "We don't want to releue that Information for polygraph (lie lest> purposes," Sgt. Bob Ed· m ond s said today in San Bernardino. ''Only the suspect knows where and how many times Mr. Myers was shot," he said. Edmonds said there is a dlst· incl possibility that Myers was shot by his own .22-caJiber pistol as well uasecond weapon. Nyers appareoUy carried the gun for self protection. It was still missing today as well u Myers' gold colored van. Several points baffled in· vest11atontoday. Myers wu not known to p~k up hitchhikers, although lt ts atlll considered apossiblllty. "There also is a &ood pos1lblll· •· ty that someone sneaked lnto hb van while he wu havlne lunch In Victorville with friends," Ed· monds said. ' Edmonds alto said that It WU poSJlble tllat Myers had stopped to help a motorist stalled on the lonely striteh of hlchway and inay have been overpowered. Proviaa equlll.Y baffllne was the tact that 1'M1er1 was not robbed. Officers •aid they found $85 caab on h1I body as well a jewlely aria credit cards. "We CllJl't explain that but tr.ere ts no evidence that the murder was planned," Edmondl .. •aid. ·~ interviews bldloate Ulat. <See TESl'S, P11e AJ) • Pulled Kaile f 41guna Pharmacy .Hit; Man Hunte{I The nervous customer walked in and out of a Laguna Beach pharmacy three time• before pulling a knife on an employe and demanding narcotics Monday night. ''He must baa ... g for lbe customers to leave," said P-armacht WllliaJR"·,<:. Lonlf)tld, owner of Boat~ PharQlacy, t16 Nortb Coast lU&hway. fbe clean-sba~en suspect eA- tered the front door of the pharmacy for the lut time at about 5:20 p.m., grabbln• a Cemale employe and holding a large butcher knife to the back of her neck. "I want Class A narcotics," the koife·wleldine bandit told Longfield. The pharmacist said the as- sailant pushed the woman to the back or the store and forced her to lie on the floor. Longfield saJd he gathered up a small amount of drugs in a box for the man, as well as $277 from the eash reaister. ".Ht was .., nervous as we wen: 1.ilh~eld iata lhte mom· inc. "But as toac u he Wall hofd.. lne ,her, Ctheif.lQYe) I wasn't · aboattodoan n1:• Police Sgt. te Aven said of. . flcers are seekin1 a man in his twenties, standing about six feet two lncbes tall .00 weighing 200 pounds. "The kind of 9tUff the guy was looking for," Avers said, "was morphine, Demerol, Seeonals and Quaaludes." What be got was $100 or so in drugs, Lonlf\eld sald. Pollce said no vehicle was seen leaving the pharmacy after the early-evenlna robbery. B~aze ~n Topanga Yiel~ to Firemen LOS ANGEI;ES CAP> - Favorable winds helped firertcbters Jlestrain a canyon bru1h fire that bu destroyed six homes and damaged three others. P\re offlctal1 said they might contain tbe blau by the al· temoon. The fire. orillnallt spread by brisk Santa Ana 'Wind1 throuib bru•b·flJl'MS Topan1a Canyon, drove btiDdredl of reaidents from CWSDSeeb· TEN CENtS I · Fig~ting E-npts ·At ·White House • • • t WASIUNGTON <AP> -Police and eompeUne forces of dem- onstrators clashed vloJenUy u the Shall and Empress Qf Iran ar· rived at tile While House today and tear 1u wafted onto the lawn of the executive mansion durtn1 wetcomtne ceremonies by Pr~l· dent Carter. At hast four police ofttcers and . eight other people were hurt as pro and anti-shah forces rushed one another just as the shah was arriving for his two.day state visit. Mounted police charged into Lbe crowds, on the Ellipse ju.st south of the White House, and forced them back toward the Walhington Monument, using sticks and tear gas . At lept 10 arrests were report- ed, tncludin1 two at a companion demonstration on the north side of the White House. Fightir\& between hooded pro· testers, mostly Iranian students, and supporters or the shah COCk • tinued in some areas of th~ monument grounds even after the Ellipse was cleared. Thero also were incidents or shoving between the two forces on the north side, at Lafayette Park. Though the disturbance was audible during the official welcoming on the White House grounds, Carter proceeded with the ceremonies on schedule. Both he and the shah dabbed their eyes, apparently Irritated by the tear gas that drifted even into Wbit.e House 'Offiees and tha.e of the Treasury Department, two blocks away. apologized to t.be ahah, a prime selltt ol oil and buyer or U.S. weapons, for the disturbances. "l 've already apotogi1ed to the shah for the temporary air pollu- tion in Washington," Carter told reporters as he accepted a tapestry portrait of Georse Washington from the 1bah. "I thought he made his speech un- der difficult conditions, but with typical strength," he said. Police gave no offJcial estimates, but it was clear that the demonstrators on both sides numbered intothethouaaoda. Order appeared restored, ex- cept for a few isolated flstfl1hts wetl away from the White House within 30 minutes of the lnttlai clash. The eruption on the Ellipse OC· curred almost precisely the in- stant tbat the shah WU IChed· uled to ireet the president after landing via helicopter nearby. The demonstrators threw rocks, cinder blocks, and wood ' from an unattended pile of lumber at the police. At th.al point, the mounted officers charged into the demonstrators. Many ot the injured were taken via ambulance for emersericy treatment. There was no im- mediate word as to whether any were seriously hurt. # The demonstrators bad begun to 1eather at dawn, and numbered <See SBAH, Pace AZ> DIE FAIR SEX N<Jr SO FAIR? Parldnt M'9Jlagement Program in Laguna Beach which proposes construcUon of two or three park- ing •tructures ln the downtown area. -Hear a request from the L&t&un Ctaft!Ouihl tO!hold-eigbt cran shOwa on Maln lttach Park for 1$78.. Tbtee ot thosec.dates were to have been held on the Festival Of Arts pounds. but Craft GU.ild PNSldent Tom Leslie aald the G\lild cannot meet terms tor the u.tecf thaai'ouftd~ Gives Bir.th ro. liririJli Heir . .. IQ,te Enilorses :.~oad Projects "'' By WILUAM HODGE OI Uoe 0.lly l'Uot U•ll While state h1ghwuy com missioners have endorsed two south Orange Coast highway im provement projP.clb, a CalTrans official was doubtful Monday that the planne<J roadwork will be completed on1tme. The two proJects a $400,000 Ortega Highway project and a $22.6 million freeway widening JOb in San Clemente-are bogged down in state and federal ap· prov al procedures. "Everything is conllngent up- oillfinal approval by the F'ederal ll~hway Admlni ~tration, .. Masao Karriida, CalTrans proJ- ecl engineer, explained. "Our final EIS <Environmental Jm. pact Statement> on the San Clemente project as up at our headquarters in Sacramento a wailing approval right now. ''Jf it doesn't get approved and roqies back lo us, we'll have to do more work on it and re·submit at." Time becomes crucial, Kamida said, because nght-of- way land for the widening work College OKs At-sea Study Of Land Sales Saddleback College trustees agreed Monday that it was full speed ahead for two "real estate at sea'· courses but they stressed the classes shouldn't be a breeze. Classes on the principles and practices or real estate will be taught dunng a seven-day cruise from Acapulco during the col- 1 e g e's January mid-winter break A minimum of 25 studen.ts in Pach class will pay $870 ~ach for thetr air fare to Acapulco and meals and lodging on the ship. A portion of the students· fees also will offset the expenses of the two instructors The only cost to the collef(e will . he the instructors' salaries Ad- 1 roinistrators said the two would be paid anvway because they are under a rontr<.1rt with the college. lloweVl'r, 1f they weren 't~!:! _ttie cruise. thev wou.,. b¥11t~ with the collegtt' •J,,!"1!r:Yit::e training offered each year at this time. W11liallfl Jay. the college's dean of instruction, described the rloating class as a "tremendous "° ay for V<.'ry bu!'iy professionals to get away for a we~k and study a {>articular cours~.' -Trustee Donna Berry ques- tioned whct'her the teachers are getting a vacation at taxpayers expense llut administrators argued it is not costmg the col- lege anything beyond what the teachers would be paid anyway Also. with 45 hours of mstruc- llon scheduled during the cruise, J l'lY said, "it's no vacation '· Because the students will be l:tking the course in preparation for their state broker's exam, he Ptom 1s<.'d, the floating course won't be "watered down ... Stm Juan Thief Gets 81,000 Loot Youthful soccer enthusiasts are invited to attend a clinic sponsored by the San Juan Capistrano Lions Club on Nov. 22 tr6in 6to8p.m. The clinlc will feature films a~ talks by visiting professional so ccr players. The event will ta e place at \he Rancho Del A\lion Traller Park Clubhouse, 32""2 Allpaz in San Juan. Admission is free. °"ANGI COAIT 1.:sc DAILY PILOT must 11tll1 be acquired. a process that taks 14 lo 15 months after federal approval The San CJemente proJect 1s presently scheduled ror the fiscal vear beginning July 1, 1978 ' The critical date 1ts I see It now to get the project in the 78·79 fiscal year is next Dec~mber," Kamida explained "The project has to be approved by the federal government by at least December to be complett!d m 78-79 .. Kam1da said once the EIS is i.ubmilted to the federal agency, approval can take from one to six months A state highway comm.Jssion- endorsed S400,000 Improvement plan for Orange County 's dangerous Ortega Highway 1s also being processed through state and federal transportation agencies The Ortega proJect is included an fiscal year 1979 to 1980 highway commission plans, but Kamida is doubtful the funds will ever be spent. ''We're on a much tighter schedule with that project," Kamida said. "But the traffic on the Ortega Highway in San Juan doesn't warrant four lanes, so we're proposing a two·lane safe· ty project." That means, according to Kamida, most of the proposed work will be done because San Juan Capistrano is requiring de·. velopers to dedicate and build improvements to Orteea Highway as a condition of de- velopment. "Most o( tbe improvements now proposed (or the Ortega Highway will probably be done by area developers before we gain approval or our project, .. Kamida explained. "The de- velopers out there have pretty much done a lot of the work already.'' ,.,.... Page Al SHAH ..• well into the thousands as the hour for the shah's arrival ap· proached An hour after the disturbance. the antl·shah demonstrators began massing again, but police kept them well af.tay from the White Rouse. The pro·shah force:;, meanwhile, appeared to have dissipated. The student dem· onstrators vowed to keep up their chanting vigil throughout the duration of the shah ·s visit. At mid-day. about 500 students were south of the White House. \ m aintairung their steady chant of ' Down, down, down with the shah " Many carried signs say- ing "The shah is a fascist," while the shah's supporters countered with ''Support U.S -Iran Friendship" and the like The anti-shah demonstrators wore hoods and masks, sup- posedly to avoid identification and reprisals from Iran's secret police. F,....PageAJ SCHOOLS. • ' Ofil( ,. ... 1-..1 ,NW YOUNG CARPENTERS PIN TARPAPER TO WfNDOW FRAME Instructor Wamsley Oeft), Jack Fanou, Tom Gorin- ·Kids Learn Nuts, Bolts of Carpentry By STEVE MITCHELL Of Uoe o.u., ""-' ..... Les Wamsley's construction crew doesn't have the flair of most work crews. Has young workers watch their boss with furrowed brows. They pound nails hesitantly, not with thl• assured swing of a carpenter. They ask a lot of questions and• accomplish their tasks at a de· It berate pace ·'Put a couple of 16s in that two- hy four," Wamsley growls to a 17 year-old youngster. The boy fumbles m has white apron fortlnr appropriate size nail and begins to pound it in wood. "Naw, move the board up a bit," Wamsley shout& over the drone or a power saw." Wamsley. who calls himself a !iem1·retired contractor, teaches ronstrucllon to youngsters in the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified Districts· Regional Occupational Prosram <ROP). His nine students at the Aliso Elementary School site are t.oes- mg up a room ad<l\llon to tiou.se the school cowuelol' and a speech therapist. Wamsley calculates that the students are saving the Laguna Beach Unified School District about S3,500 in labor costs for the 200•square foot racllity. "Thal leaves only about Sl,500 for materials," he said, checking his figures with a pencil on a dls- c arded piece or lumber. Hts nine workers are La1una Beach High School juniors and seniors and they come to AliJlo School on Monday and Wednes· day afternoons. . •·or course, the turnout de· pends on how the surf looks," Wamsley laughed, adding the boys mur;t drive by several popular surfing beaches on the way to the South Laguna school. The 49.year·old Dana Point man says he grades the youngsters by \he skilla they ac- quire over the year. · · 1 do lhe layout and they do the construc;:tlon,'' he explained. Wamsley said he qulues the stu- Explorer& Raising Funds for Hawaii dents by havine ·them Identify difCerent. cuts, studs, rafters and JOISls. Not all or the kids go Into con-struction, he added. "Most of them wi 11 probably use the trainmg for their own room additions later on," he said . The full·time Instructor said his rouJ{h estimates over the past year place about 25 percent of his former students In the con· struction field. Another 40 per- cent go on to college, he figures, and a few more worked at con- struction last summer then went back to school. Gradual~ oflhe year.long pro· gram receive up to 200 hours of credit and a Ceri1Clcale which says they're ready to at.a.rt work as apprentice carpenters. By then they can slam nails in- to lumber w1\h the best of them. Fro• Page Al TESTS •.• Mr. Myers was n highly respect- ed and well·llked man who had no enemies,·· the Investigator concluded. The murder came to light when a passing motorist on Jntorslate 15 near Barstow reported seeing a body being thrown from a van at l : 10 p.m. Friday. Searchers found the body the next day after 11 a.m ., un- derneath a tumbleweed. Orticera. who sald finding Myers' gold-~tored van is a key to the case. have issued a na· t1onwlde, all points bulletin Cor . the vehicle. Jeff Finney, a student al Marina High School, said he arid his family saw a van Sunday evening near Adelanto that may have been the dead man ·s vehi· cle. Finney said the van was on Its side and •PPaHllUy had been set on fire. Sheriff dtpullea ~aid they would .inv•U te the report to· day. Otputies were ln lluntlnit.Qn Beach MOftday to lntervlew Myera• survtvor1. They eild they were tryina to est,blllb Myers' habit• and movements tn a.a atttmpt to eot ve thec11e. Annexation ot 81 Dana. JGU• homea by the Capistrano Bay Parks and RecreaUon DlatricL wUI be tbe subjtct of a public he~rlntTbunday. The meelin1 la planned at 7:30 p.rn .. It Del Oblspo Park. ~ Del Obispo Road tn Dana Point. The homes involved, J>art ol the Pacesetter development near Dana Hills Hilb Seboot, are t Cella Faiils .InAilenapt To Oust DA Justices of the Fourth Dlltltct Court of Appeals n San Bernardino refused Not\aay to remove the Orance County Dl•· trlct Attorney's o(fiee trom ~· ecutjon of the cut ••oloat Dr. Lollls J. Cena Jr. The opinion 1upportln1 Su~rior Court Judi• IL Wa~ Knight's earlier rullnl noted that there was no reason to suapect District Attomey Cecil Ricki ol being blued asatnst Cella. The decision now leavea Jucf&e Knight free to a~t on setting the new venues for the separate trials of Cella. 52, and forme.r bospital '"'m.iniatrator StepbeO Robert Evans, 32. Both men have been ordered to appear Friday. Lawyers for both sides appear coofldent that Use Cella trial will be sent to San Diego with lhe Evans location de- layed until the Cella trial ls al moat cotnplete. · Lawyers for .botb men are con· ducting plea bargalnina ~gotla­ taons with the district at y's office. Cella and Evana face trial on multiple criminal charges con· tained in a grand jury indict· ment. Bocll have been convicted in Loa Angeles Federal Court of related o(fenaes. Cella is free -on appeal from a five-year rederal prison term. Evans posted aq appeal bond a(ter being sentenced to one year. It ls alleged that both defen- d ants were involved In a con· splracy that cost two hoapltals controlled bf Cella as secretary- treasurer an estimated $2 million in funds. Members of the district. a\· torney's r;taff welcomed tbe Cella ruling Monday in the light of their deciaion to appeal a recent ruling in another case by Superior Court Judge Phlllp E. Schwab. F,.._P.,,eAJ FIRE ••• ·'The fire is bumiog very tlow. ly right now," Jetfery sald. ''The wind is favorable and is blowlnf the fire back on Itself. As long as it continues to do lhal, we hope to make prostess •' He said fire investigators believed the canyon tire was a flareup from an earlier spot fire Monday. But he s•ld -no cause had been determined ror the first fire Arson investigators were on thescene. • The fire was nesUed in the San· ta Monica Mountains just above the Pacific Ocean, some 20 miles west of downtown Los Ange.Jes. Sheriff's Set. Jack Jnnea saJd up lo 30 persons ~ouaht tem· porary refute tn an ev.,cuatton center set up at Palisades High School. A few persons decided to spend Monday nl1ht tMre or •· mnlned In area motels, ~e 16id Art Associatioll Seta O~n Houae Krisfula Head · The founder and spiritual bead or tbe Hare Krishna religion, A .C. :Bhaktivedanta Swaml Prabhupada died Monday 1o lri· dia al th•ageof82. He wo.s the leader of the In· tematiopal Soclet:r for Krishna ConsciOUfnCSt (ISKCON). f The leader's death was an· nounced by a spokesman for ISKCON who said Prabhupada had been eutterin1 Ill health for about six months. Prabhupada wu buried today. at the aodety' tempto tt Vrin: daban, near New Delbl. . ... ~ . .L The soclety'1 · sovern ne ~ of 21 dlsclples will Jead \be sect Jointly until they detide on ithe selection of a new aplrltual leader, tHespokesman said. p ,.... r Ofl" AJ HEIR ••• AnU-royallal Willie Hamilton, a Labor member Ot Parliament who want.a to do away with the monarchy, reacted with less en· thu1ium. ''How charming -another one on the payroll," ho said. The birth announcement was posted on the railings outside Bucklnaham Palace. and the Honorable Artillen Company: at the Tower Of LOndon fired a run salute. Flags were ralaed above public builcfin&a. Prince11 Anoe and b•r husband<elljoyed a quiet evenJq at the palace Monday night celebratine t.beir fourth weddiftl anniversary with a dillDer lor two. They were said lo have been disappointed that the babyClldn't come on their anniversary, which was also Prince Charles' birthday. A nursery at the palace wu ready and the ebild will •leep in the ••Un·trtmm.a crib made for his erandmother. the ql.leen, half a century ago and used for every royal babysfncelhetl. · Thero was no hnmediat6 an- nouncement on Lbe baby's name. I thtt the focmd,.Uon permitted ita backers since th.ls aummer when cbntract to lapse In 1974, no addl· Joan Irvine Smttb made t 'lift oJ ti on al diacuuions with the $1 mtlllon to the UC Irvine SCbool Weatem World 'Medlcat Founda· of Medicine. lion are contemplated." That gift, which comes ln the Foundation President Alan form of $100,000 lo be aivtn the McMilten Hid be 1a extremely uo1veraity every year for 10 disappointed, but not surprised years, must be matched by a like by the company's decision. amount put up by UC Re1e0ts. The withdrawal of the land of· A spokesman for UCl Chan· fer had been anticipated b1 foun. cellor Daniel Aldritb said tod~ dation officials GIHueaJ hosplUJ~lM campus Rm iilitratlon PROTESTl;RS MOVE IN ON POLICE DURING DEMONSTRATION AGAINST SHAH OF IRAN F.ctlona For •nd Ag•lnat Vlaltlng Mon•rch CIHh Outafde Whtte Houae By KATHY CLANCY Ol IM Oelly ...... Statt Orange County supervisors agreed today to spend another •43,800 to complete a con- troversial study designed to chart the futW'e of Orange Coun-ty Alfport. The f\Uld.S will be paid to the consultina firm of Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall for another three months of work :r.eecied to revise the airport's en· vironmental impact report (EJR). ' That means the EIR 'a tab will total tl61,MJO before the report ii delivered early next year. Supervisors were told last week that, even after they ap· prove thecooaultant's EIR, addi· tional studies '#ill be necessary before building projects take lace at the.airport. , ••Jt woo't allow you to actually lKlild a r>ew terminal bulldine the Oay after it ls certified by the bOatd, ••&aid Barbara Fox, an U· ,,11-tant director of the C!O\mt)' General ~ces Aaency. NorlD~. alrJ><t't noise and environmental s~ciall1t, aald • 0nce the ~R is apP-roved lt will' lay the ~work for a declsloa on how many pusen1ers and ,lll1b the}llrports~ld bandle. Tben ~mon ortklali can Plan kliid Qf~(acillQI needed tO _1up- ctivlties, and l:ddl• dcin 1 for .a~c b\i.Udillt proJ ;ta a.n M .PAP ad. • said. Supervisors voted untnimous· ly today to spend the extra $43,800 to complete the airport study. although Supervisor Philip Anthony waa absent and if Id not take part ill the vote. It was Anthony last week who asked cowity officials, "I wonder whether when t.hls EJR is done it will be anything but a document to fight over?" "It will be a document to fight over," Ewers replied. -'It's a Boy! ,, Princess Anne Git:1ea Birth their fourth weddint anahersary with a quiet dlnner·fot•two at BuckingbaJJl Palace. They were said to be dlaappointed the baby didn't come on Monday, which was also the birthday of Prince Charlet, ttie princess' brother. At 4 e:m., Anne went into labor and the queen's naecololist, George ~. was called to the palace. After' a quJct examina· lion, Phillips drove hla wife in their Rover sedan to the bospltal. After the batiy was t;;Om. Ui army cap(aln telephoned the queen, who talked to her Clau1bter 8nd thfn went to the 1D· vestlture. No courjlera attenCSed the btrtb, 6nlVAMe•1 bu.band. ' still studying Mrs. Smtth'• offer prior to reeommendibC Its accep. tanee to the regent.a. • r One local physician, Gerald Sinykin, former chtef of atf at Hoag Memorial HOCPi*81 and a member of the atalt at the acbOol of medicine, s'a{ct this summer that If tbe land gtn ii withdrawn, plans to build 1 ft\'edical fadt~!a o c.0J1u1te.ment lhe me school wilt die. ~ W ASMNGTON (AP> -Police and comp«ing forces of dem· onstrators char&ed one another out.side the White House today as the Shah and Empress of Jr an ar- rived for a welcome -and an apology -from President Carter as tear gas drifted over the 5cene. At least 20 police officers and 86 people amid both sup· porters and critics or the abah were injured as LJie two groups clashed Just u the 21-sun salute was sounded from the south lawn of the executive mansion for the ruler's two-day vlalt. A l\oaDttti spokesman rePOrted "a lot o?'bloody faces .. and there was a report of al least one sertoua inJul'Y. The disturbince lasted at least 30 mln.tA aDd ~the ~-'11 o( liil' au tO Uie .. i»reiident and his aueats, .,s mhled within eanbot ol t confrontation, Carter IM)p()loglz.td tor. wb•l be· terqaed the "teQUIOratY air. pollu· tioa," ae bothleiU!ers wiped their eyes. · Despite police lines aimed at keepin8 the rival demonstrators· apart, the two trouPI c01Jver1ed on one anotber. after their num· bers bad twelled to the thousands just bef«e the eh ah '1 arrtv•l Some threw o~ks, cinder blocks and wood from an unat· tended pile of hamw. Several pollee were hit as mounted of. ficera cbarged into the crowd5 in the gruay cu-e.s known u the El· lipse, Just aouth of the Wbit.e House. Ustn1 .Ucks and tear 1as. the bitter, chent1n1 (actions were moved back toward the W asht.ncton llanllment; At least 12 arreata were report- t!d, includhiJ two at,aa companion demonstratkm on the north side ol the White House alon1 Penn· sylvanla Avenue. Later, lhouaands of the anti- shah demoostratora 'massed a block from Blair H°"5e. tbe cov· emment guest quartera acl'QfS from tho Wh.lte Hou.ae, aa the Iranian leader left to au.end a luncheon at the State Depart· ment. But the shah'• route of travel took hlm past a aroup of cheer· n , n ·waWi1 ~·· HIS motorcade waa ccoml>Uled bY a lar e esc9rt ot.~.policc motorcycl and Sentce cpnvertlble or mm d with a gen ' ( I ipg. tp s~ the 11Janning com· ml•~ approval. Tfle pr0Ject, to be develc>Ped by Innovatlve Develop_ment Con· ceptl ~ctl ia lel4li'ag the one- acre p8Ml from the kvine Com· pany. cans for construction ot two blllldings which will have a total of 36,000 squate feet or omeo apace. ' REPORls ON CRIMI! N•wPort'• J•me• ~!!•• CRAMENTO -Retired M Port Beach poUce chief B. '•°'a Gin• said today that CaUronua hu Malla-type crime but "ltaroouuenot.deep." Glev WU com01enUn1 ln b1a t new role u thalrman or °'e at· t.onltY leaer.i'• organised crtme. control eoa:ombaion. ffe 1ald the commlaslon has found -evidence of crime S)'n· ' dloatea ln all regions of CaJlfornia With po special concentraUon in anyone area. But be refused to discuss •pectllca or say whetber or-1~ erime ts increaslni or decreasing. '1J wouldn'tcaretominimizeor maximize the lnfluence of Malla· type cnme at this Ume," Glavas told reporten al the openln1 of a closed ·door commission bearing. ''The roots o( organized crime are not deep in the tradltlon .. sen1e lo Calif9rni.a pot In the vein as exemplified in 'The God· father.' We do have Mafia crime in California, "be said. Glavas aaki the commission is "•n fair acreement we. haven't had a 1reat deal of the traditional organized crime type activity in California -extortion, inroads in gambling, protection. · ''Thia type of thing we believe to be al a fairly low level. But we have what seems to be consldera- . ble activity in the l"ltimate bus I· ness Qtea,"headd~. Glavu aaid some or the crime involvement In business la for the purp~e of launderln1 pronta from crlmJnal acUviUe11. som ln· volvu taldoa over firms Jnd ··s pencqna t)um lnto' bankruptcy • by driilolng oft as- sets, and some Is for investment "like anyone else." He listed botel5 and theaters as an area ol criminal investment. but he refused to gave further de· Laila. • . Glava.a also said there was a great deal of criminal activity In druai trafficking, bul that "lhtte are a g~at many independent.a, with only here and ~re a CPMet· tion." He said In part because of the great number of unrelated aroupa deaUn1 lfl drugs, the comml on will requ• an tXt.enaiO!\,Jn Uie one yeer Jllowed to coriclucl lt.a study. Glavas sald the C9ffimls•lo" ta investiaatinJ crhnlnat Uet w ~ labor organitationa, but he re· fuaed to~uss J~lcs. . Asked if. the commlasion had round evidence ~poUUcaJ cor· ruptton. Glans replied, "We havd®nd noae." IAck of Evidence ·Frees Bovan Susnect By JOANNE REYNOLDS O"lle 0.llf .. , .. ,SI.ti! A new twist in the intricate in- vestigation or the murder of Stephen John Bovan came to tight today with reports of an aborted booking of Frank Rossi, 36, of Laguna Hilla. Records at the Orange County Jail indic~te Rossi w~s briefly jailed Monday but never went through the complete booking process and was released for lack of evidence The records don 'l indicate what Rossi was beinf booked for. SherUf's Capt. Robert Griffeth said today he was at a loas to ex- plain tbe situation. He said the move to arrest Rossi was initlat- ed by the District Attorney's Of- fice. Rossi is alletedly an associate of three men whO remain jailed' in the case, Jerry Peter Fiori. 41, Anthoay Marone Jr., 23 and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, all or Huntington Beach. Those three men are accused of killing Bovan, 36, of Fountain V•lley, as he left El Ranchito · t~staurant 1n Newport Beach Oct. 22. Bovan was shot nine times. Newport Beach police declined comment on reports or Rossi's booking. They referred all inquiries to Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter who is proseeuUng the case. Carter wu not available for comment. It is known that police believe Rossi, Fiori, Resco, Marone and Marone'• father, Anthony Sr. were hired by four Newport Beach businessmen who operat- ed an investment firm , Battin J11rors Biased? Wurt H~~ to Air Prejudiced. Charges Allegatio09 th.at sev,ral Jurors who convicted IOf'JJ>e'f" Or.nae County supervisor Robert BaWn were biased will be aired at a hearing to be held in Superior Court Judge Kenneth E. L"e, the 1urisl who sentenced Battin 48 lo 30 days in jaU and f.lned ·hi~ $.1.500, was ordered to hold the hearing by the Fourth District Court or Appeals In San Bernardino. Cella Loses Bid to 0"18t DA in Case Ju1Uces of the Fourth Distrlcl Court of Appeal · ln San Bernardino refused Monday to remove the Orange County Dia- trlct Attorney's office from pros- ecution of the case agalnst Dr. Louis J. Cella Jr. The opinion supporting Superior Court Judge H. Warren Knight's e~ller ruling noted tbal there was no reason to suspect District Attorney Cecil Hicks of being biased against Cella T~ decision now leaves Judge Kmght free to act on setting the new venues for the separate trials or Cella. 52, and former hospital administrator Stephen Robert Evans, 32. Both men have been ordered to appear Friday. Lawyers for both sides appear confident that the Cella trial wUI be sent to San Diego with the Evans location de· lfyed until the Cella trial is almost complete. Lawyers for both men are con- dUcllna pJea bargaining negoUa- tlon1 with the district attorney"s otflce. Cella and Evans face trlal on rnuJtlple crimlnal charges con- tained in a grand jury lndlct- rqent. Both have been convicted iQ Los Angeles Federal Court of rtlatocJ ol'f ea.aes. •Cella ii rree on appeal lrom a nve•year federal prison term. Evans posted an appeal bond after beln1 sentenced to one ytal'. t t f - DAILY PILOT N The jury verdict was delivered after it wu testified that Battin ml1u.ed COUJ)ty manpower and materlab in bis supervisor's of· rice while he was running for lieut~nantgov~rnor in 1974. The appellate court granted the hearing demanded by Bat- tin 'a attorney alter being advised that several jurors were prej- udiced because of his political background and commented that be was guilty before the trial began. An affidavit siened by juror Gloria Godfrey of San Juan Capistrano contalna her ~m­ ment that jurors bid tbelr true f et~lnp from the court when they were quest.toned durina the jury selection process. A defense motion for a new trial, based largely on Mrs. God- frey's post trial comments, was rejected by Judge Lae prior to the appellate court action. Assistant District Attorney Jack Ryan, wbo prosecuted Bat- tin, said his office bas Investigat- ed Mrs. Godfrey's allegations and has found no substance to I',.... Page Al HOSPITAL •• them. Judge Lae has not yet scheduled a date for the hearing ordered by the appellate court. VictimSlwt With His Own Weapon Aho? By ROBERT 8ARKER Ol IM Dell\t ...... '"'" Huntington Beach resident Robert Nylt'I, who wu found shot to death near Barstow over the weekend, may have been shot by hl,.own gun as well as another weapon A San Bernardino County cor- oner's spokesman s8ld that laboratory tests will be made to determine lf that is the case. Myers. 57, a former tong-time Laguna Beach resident, was shot twice In the chest but detectives declined to say if the shots came from the front or back. "We don't want to release that information for polygraph Clie teat) purposes," Sgt. Bob Ed- monds said today in San Bernardino. •'Only the suspect knows where and how many times Mr. Myers was shot," he said. Edmonds said there is a dist- inct possibility that Myers was shot by his own .22-<:aliber pistol aswellasasecondweapon. Nyers apparently carried the gun for sell protection. It wu sun missing today as well as Myers' fOld colored van. Several po1nta b•rfled in- vestigators today. Myers wu not known to pick up hitchhikers, although it ls still considered a possibility. Pruadam DastribµUng Inc. 'fhe tour Prasadam partners have been identified by police in connection with the mUf'der ton• spiracy. Only one, Al~"aoder Kulik, 28, has beert :Arrested tn the case. He was freed (tom jail alter posting a $7~>.000 oond. • , The otheT 'three, Rot Christopher Richard, Joseph Gabriel Fedorowsld and Joseph Shelton Davis u well as KuUk':s wife, Elsie Caban Kulik, are still being aouah~. Police alleie that whlle Rosal. Fiori. Resco and the two Marones were employed 'by Prasadam, Bovan and two ac- complices kidnapped lCuUk. SHAH ••• Righting between the hooded protesters, mostly Iranian stu- dents, and supporters of the shah continued for about an hour In some areas or the monument grounds even alter the Ellipse was cleared. There also were incidents of shoving between the two forces on the north side. at Lafayette Park, and two student protesters were handcurCed and led away, shouting "Down with the shah, .. all along On the Ellipse, m~ics fought through the Imes to aid downed demonstrators. ''Let '1 keep thes people back." yelled a firoai~ "We don't know who is for us or who as against us ... A police sergeant wiped away the blood gushing from beneath his left eye, saying "I knew someone hit me in the arm, but lhey say someone sot me in the face with astick ... "They should shoot them all ... screamed a woman carrying the Iranian national flag Ex-boss Held In Homicide · SAN FRANCISCO IAP> A forme·r hair salon worker was shot fatally in the head by his ex-boss during an argument over $60, pollceaaid. Booked by police lor investigation of murder In the Monday ni1ht hoollnC was Herman Grant, 48, owner or G ·n G Hairs.tyUng ln San Francisco. Police identified the dead mln as John Troupe, 33, of San Francisco. ·Th~ kidnapping wu never re-'S~refl Dld9• ported to police. • Inv t.l•ators believe the five mon were hired toaecuro Ku.Uk's frtedom. An~ police. aJleae, the Prlaadam partners put out a $25,90(> death contract for each ot tb• kidnapPers. Police a&sert that l'iori, Resco artd tho younger Marone kllled Bovan as part of.that deal. Santa ;Ana Municipal Court of an eetlm ted . mllUon inJ Judae IrYne IU~k_,.refused to precious metals. · ._. make any r:uJW or.idly on abld An alfldaVll now beln« u~ b~ the ~·~ot ~wlas aults. amlned by the Grand Jury ~l I~ tQ. quasb at.,-ch ttanta ta ins the allegaUOn or a Saota.Ati irtued~sani. ia,;oltce. pollce investl0,tor that S"wh , Lswyen revUtW.a~er ·~ Vaults operators Vincent Car· inl most~ the UY lh: chambers rino of Seal Be~b atsd JaCk• .with Judge Black that current FultonotCoronaClelM"c1tqedalf Orange County Grand Jury ex• fake robbery. amination or the doc\lmtntl led 'I'he affidavit chpr1 :i that the the judge to postpone b•r tullng. robbery• was the climax of 15' She set Dec. 20 as the date she months of "systematic embes1le.:f will reopen the hearina after ment or. the materials left on de .. learning that the Grand Jury will po11it at the business." be discussing aspects or the re-Pohce who went lo th~ Swiss' ported Swiss Vaults robbery until Vault! oNtce on July 9 found Car-• at least that date. , rano lied to an overturned chair. .At Issue in the hearing is the 'I'hey said Carrano told them1 authorization of aearch wartants he went 4> his offj<:.e to keep an! u1td by Santa Ana police to~eiie DPPolntrta 'ht made over tie• business recordi from the Swtss telephone. Vaults o c~ at 1404 N. GraQ.d } Ave. The search was part of an in- vestleaUon carried out .after the repository was robbodJast ,JulY'9 Projects Sought By Women's Panel / ()range County fenfates are In vtted to tell lft!lanbers of the County Oomrrtlaslen on the StatwJ or Women in the next rew weeks what projects the cornmisslon ruitht undeiuk ta th comjng year. About 50 women attended lwo corn mission forums held Monday to offer their su1ee&&lon1. Topics they pro~ed r~ed from establishing an inlorniatlon bank for tbe so-ealled "recently alone" woman to studies in the area of child care and child abuae to providmc help to unwed teen-age mothers. . lrvine resident Nancy McLain, for example, said women who suddenly find themselves widowed, divorced or abandoned' often need advice on matters many people take (or cranted, !'uch as finding insurance or jobs or adfquatetransportation. ··1 am ttunking or the period when a panic sets in," she aaid. Ann Peralta of Santa Ana said the suddenly alone womaa or dis- placed bomemaker often loses her home, rncome and self. worth. She said there is a need Jn the county tor a central creartna house of Information to help such women over their lnlliaJ ~oa or panrc. Among ~<me Jn Monday'1 au· dlences were critics of the tom· ml&alon who have complalnecf that It i9 an unneceuary county idvl11oey pllllel One crlti<?, ~orleen Bosdanovlch of flustt'tn1to1t Beach, told oomrnlsllontra the1 thould not 1tue!1 tax-•u•ported )\Ud bat9 ttntera, fbr e11mpl~ ~ontn mOlt c t1 •om• are op~ to U$ ax.dollarg to 1upJ>Ort such l PROTESTERS MOVE IN ON POLICE DUAINO DEMONSTRATION AGAIN~ SHAH OF tRAN Factions For and Against Vlaltlng Monerch CIHh Outside White House Cella Effort Fails .. Court Won't Drop Hicks From Case Justices of the Fourth District Court of Appeals in San Bernardino refused Monday to remove the Orange County Dls- 'rict Attorney's office from pros- 1 ecution of the case against Dr. J..ouis J . Cella Jr. The opinion 1upportlng Superior Court Judge H. WaJTen Knight's earlier ruUoc ~ that1 there Wat' ftO ealill t0 -~~ District Attorney Cttil Hicks of J>eing blru;ed aaainat Cella. . . .£11.... The d.~UI~ oow leaves J~ Knight free to act on aettirig the new venues for the separate trials' of een,, 52, and former hospital admlrtl•trator Stephen Robert Evans, 32. ' J l Both men havf! ~n ordered to • appear Friday. Lawyen tor both sides appear conOden't that the Cella trial will be Ubl' to San Diego with the Evans 1~aUon de- Jayed until the Cella trial is almost complete. Lawyers for both men are con· d1,1ctlng plea barulnlnc negotia- tions with the distri~t attorney's office. Cella and EvanJ tace trlal on m,ult)ple crlrnlJlal charaes con- tained in a grand jury indict- ment. Both have been convicted in Los Angeles Federal Court of related offenses. Cella Is free on appeal frotn a five-year fed~ral prison term. Evans posted an appeal bond after being sentenced to one year. lt is alle ed itiat both defen- 'f (f't I ~ a.I dants were involved m a con- spiracy that cost two hospitals controlled by Cella as secretary· treasur~r an estimated S2 million m funds. Members or the district at· torney's stair welcomed the Cella ruling Monday tn the light of their decision to appeal a recent See~LA. Page AZ> • t ~ • • ' ·Winds l&d .Firemen hi. Canyon Blaze·.· LOS ANGELES (AP) - Favorable winds helped firefighters restrain a canyon brush fire that has cl~tl'))'ed !ilx homes and d•'-1,JeG' three others. Fire -Officla'-' said they might contain the blaze by the af· te.-noon. The fire. origt,nally spread ~ brisk Sant. All' wlnda tbrouth bi'uah;tilled to.-nga Canyon. drove "\lndreds oh·esidents from their homes Mondll)'. Estimates of the •ize or th~ blaze ranged rrom 800 to 1,100 acres. ··1 told my 1nasband to grab some booze and our tennl1 racketa and . get out of there," Glenda ftoaen, one 61 the evacuees, •aid MOnday nigllt. But the nort1'euter1y deatrt wind 1Ued dOWri OYemtght and was replacect WI momln& by a coo lint sta brefte aiHI some,.g. 140fi Anieles Police t. Will rn Achena 1ild that .. HS aomttllifta ubsual happens like a big Wfnd,"· the flre courd be un-~ t • • .. WASHINGTON <A P> -Police ond competing forces of dem· .9nslraton charged one another 'C>utaide the Wbite House today as the Shah and Empress or Iran ar. rived for a welcome -and an apology -Crom President Cart.er as 'ear gas drifted over the licene. At lea.st four police officers and a score of people amid both sup- porters and critice or the shah were injured as the two &roups clashed just as the 21-gun salute was sounded from the south lawn or the executive mansion for the ruler's two-day visit. A hospital spokesman reported •·a lot of bloody faces .. but there were no reports or serious injury. The disturbancejasted at least 30 minutes and brO\lght the sUng of tear gas to the president and his guests, assembl~d wlthlo earshot or the confrontatioJl. Carter aopologized fGr what he termed the "temporary air pollU· tion," as both leaders wiped their eyes. Despite police lines aimed at keeping the rival demonstrators apart, the two croups conver&ed on one anotho,after their num· bers had swelled to the thousands . just before the shah's arrival. Some threw rocks, cinder blocks and wood from an unat- tended pile of lumber. Several police were hit as mounted of· Cicers charged into the crowds in the grassy areas known aa the El- lipse, Just south of the White House. , Usinc stick• alld tear 1as, ttte bille~. chanUng ractaons were moved back toward tb~ W aihing&.on Monument. At lebl 10 arrests were report- ed. including two al a cornpanJon dt'Dlonstration on t'he north alde of the White House along Penn- sylvania l\venue. Later, Uxlisirids of the anti· shah demonst{ators masted a block from Bhur House, the gov· emmcnt guest quarters across from the White House, as the Iranian leader len to attend a hln~heon at the State Depart- ment." But the shah's route of travel took him past a group or chffr· ing, flag-waving supporters. His motorcade w~ accompanied by o 111 rge escort of police motorcycles and a Secret Service col\vertlble crammed with agents. Fighting between the hooded protester5, mostly Iranian stu· dents, and supporters or the 1hah continued for about an hour in some areas or the monument grounds even after th~ Elllpse was cleare<I. There aho were lncident.s of shoving between the two forces on the north side, at Lafayette Park, and twoitudent proteilers were handcuffed and led away, shouting "Down with the ~ah ... all along. • • • On the Ellipse, medics fou1ht " <See .SHAH, Page A.J) FAIR SEX J, NUF SO FAIR? .. --"lf!!:~~!::::ec-=":!~~~~~-=--· t•· -""'" ... "" ~ . .. ............. ..._.._...,. .,, By JOA E~EYNOIJ>8 • flos1tl 1$ llllegedly an asaoc(ale ,,. ... ,,,~ .... ., or three men who remain jailed /. new tw1" lo the intrlc~n an the case. Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, v~tleatlon of the murdt?r of Anthony Marone Jr .• 23 and Stephen John Bovan came to Raymond Steven Resco, 28, aJl of 1.i,ght today with reports oft an Huntington Beach i.tborted booking or 1''rank Rossa, · Those three men are accused 36, of La&\Ul• HH!s. of killlng Bovan. 36, of Fountain Records at the Oran1e Counly Valley, as he left El Ranchlto • Jail lndieat Rosal was briefly restaurant in Newport Beacb jailed Mo If but never went Oct. 22. Bovan was shot nine through the complete booking times process and waa relca~ed for Neowport Beach police declined lack of evidence. comment on reports of Rossi's The records don 't indicate booking. what Rossi was being booked for. They referred all inquiries to Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth Deputy District Attorney Dave s~d today he was etl a loss to ex· Carter who is prosecuting the pl1lm the sltuatjon He said the c;.ase. Carter was not available move to arrest Ro:.~! was 1nitiat· ror commenl. ed by the Dastrn:t Attorney·~ or It IS known that Police b~heve flee. Rossi, f'lori, Resco. Marone and Rites Set For Slain Policeman Funeral services will be con· ducted Wednesday at 10 a m. at the Garden Grove Community Church for Santa Ana policeman, Daniel Allan Hale, 31, of El Toro, who was shot to death Saturday 1+h1le investigating a burglary. Following the services, a pro- cClision wiJI escort the body tot.he Los Angeles Airport for tranJ(er to Lafayette. CalU., for graveside memorial s41rvices at Oakmont Memorial Park. Officer Hale resided. al 22181 Leo Lane. El Toro, wfth his wife Judith and lhree children, Suaan, Barbara and Daniel. He ls also survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hale, of San Francisco. and three sisters, MarJone Mae Moss, Pittsburg, Culif., Carole .Jane Esterly, Allentown, Pa . and Judy McGee. San Remo, Calif A native of St. Louis, Mo., Of. fi~r Halt' had laved in California 25 years. He was a 10 year police veteran and for the past two years was a member or the Santa Ana pohcc fon•c Donations can be made to the Daniel Hale Memonal Fund, in care of the Santa Ana Pohce Benevolent Association, 1509 North Main Street, Suite #I, San· ta Ana, 92701. Orange Teen Dies in I-car Canyon Crash A 17 year-old youth died Mon· day afternoon when the car he was driving on a canyon road in Anaheim overturned and tumbled down an emb~nkment. As it left the roadway. the auto driven by Randall S<:ott Steele. l 7. of 501 E. Dunton St., Orange, sn•pped a power pole, police said As a result, a portion or the Santa Ana Canyon urea 1n 1he \ 1cmity of Imperial Highway was without electrical power for two hours. According to Police, the victlm was driving west on Santa Ana Canyon Road about 1,000 feet east of Lakeview Avenue when hls car went out or control, over· t\lrned and skidded off the roadway. Police said the smashed auto came to rest In a concrete dtaina1e ditch after tumbling down a 30-foot embankment. Ex-ebief Charged FRESNO (AP> -FJred Police Chief Harold E. Britton has been aecu1ed ot f al1lfy)ng a report of a tdllrtc accident fnvolvln« Dls- tltct Attorney Wllllam A. Smith. ottANQICOAaT sa DAILY PILOT Marone's father, Anthony Sr .. were hared by four Newport Beach businessmen who operat· ed an investment firm, Prasadam Distributing Inc. The four Prasadam pdrtners have been identified by pollce ln connection wilh the murder con· spiracy. Only one, Alexander Kulik, 28, has been arrMted in the case. He was freed from jail after posting a $750,000 bond. The other three. Roy Christopher Richard, Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski and Joseph Shelton Davis as well as Kuhk's wife. Elsie Caban Kulik, are sllll being sought. Pohce allege that while Rossi. Fiori, Resco and the two Marones were employed by Prasadam, Bovan and two ac· eomplices kidnapped Kullk. The kidnapping was never re· · ported to police. Investigators believe the five men were hired to secure Kuhk's freedom. And, police allege, the Prasadam partners put out a $2.5,000 death contract for each of the kidnappers. Pohce assert that Fiori. Re!'ico and the younger M aronc killed Bovan as parftof that deal College OKs At-sea Study Of Land Sales 5addleback College trustees agreed Monday that tt WH full speed ahead for two "real estate at sea'' courses but they strened the classes shouldn't be a breeze. Classes on lhe principles' and practices of real estate wall be tauf.(ht during a seven-day cruise from Acapulco during the col· lcge 's January mid-winter break A minimum of 25 students in each class will.pay $870 each for their air fare to Acapulco and meal,'> and lodging on the ship. A portion of the students' fees also will offset the expenses of the two instructors. The only cost to the college will· be the instructors' salaries. Ad · ministrators said the two would be paid anyway because they are under~ contract w.ith the college. However, if they weren't on lhe cruise, they would be involved with the college's in-service training offered each year at thu time. William Jay, the college's dean of instruction, described the floalin& class as a "lremendOUB way for very busy professionals to eet away for a week and study a particular course.•· Trustee Donna Berry ques· lloned whether the teachers are getting a vacation at taxpayers expens&. But admlnlatratora arsued it Is not cosuna the col· tege anything beyond what the teachers would be paid &n)LWay. ~~so. with 45 hoprs ot lnstruo- tlon scheduled during the cruise, Jay Jald, "It's no vacation:• 'Becauao the students w1U ~ ta,dng \he coUrse in preparaU!'A for thelr sta\e broker's exam, hO promlRed. tM floattnr cour.e won't~ "watered ~own." Keeping ,ena Ott tlle 6r .. • LL William Hamberlin of the Richmond police department <Uspla)'s some of the 6,000 pounds of marijuana, carryinJ a s t reel value of more than $4 mllhon, HEIR •.. ·~ "flow charming another one on the payroll," he said. The birth announcement was posted on the railings· out.side Buckingham alace, and the llonoruble Artillery Company at the Tower or London fired a gun salute. Flags were raised above publle buildir1gs. Princess Anne and her hu!'lband enjoyed a quiet evening at the palace Monday night cl'icbrating their fourth weddint anniversary with a dinner for two They were said to have been disappointed that the baby didn't <'O m e on their aannl versary. \~ h1<'h was ulso Prince Charles' birthday A nursery at the palace was ready and the child will sleep in the satin trimmed crib made for his l'randmother, the queen, hair a century a~o and used for every royal baby since then. there was no immediate an· nouncement on the baby's name. Cnuuton Aaka Support For B-1 Funding LOS ANGELES' <AP> -Sen. Alan C ranston said that President Carter must resume s pending for the B·l supersoruc bomber ~ause Congress has not upheld hill impoundment ot B·l funds as required by law. The California Democrat said Monday he would aak the state's Republican senator, S. I . Hayakawa, to join him in asking Secretary of Defense Harold Brown to release funds for the completion of three B·ls ongmally approved by Congress. T h e B · 1 s were t'o be manufactured in California by Roekwell·lnternational. Congress in 1976 appropriated. runds for the construction ot three B·b, but Carter ordered a halt Lo production earlier this year. argulni lhat the B·ls were too expensive and not necessary to the nation's defenie. F.romPqeAJ FIRE •.• -Projects Soug"4f By .Women's Panel Orange County rem ales are in· vited lo tell members or the County Commission on the Status of Women ln the next few weeks what projects the commission might. undertake In tbe coming year. About 50 women attended two commission forums held Mondar to offer their suagestions. Topics they proposed ranged from establJshlng an information bank for the so-called "recently alone" woman to studies In the area of child care and child abuse to providing help to unwed teen-age mothers. Irvine resident Nancy McLain, for example, said women who suddenly find themselves widowed, divorced or abandoned often need advice on matters many people take for granted, such aa finding insurance or jobs or adequate transportation. "l am thinking of the period when a pwc aets in." she said. Ann Perilla Of Santa ~na said the suddenly alone woman or dis· placed homemaker often loses her home. income and selr· worth. She said there is a need in the county for a central clearinf house of informat.iol) to ~Jp such women over their initial period Of panic. Among thoee in Monday's u· diencea were critics of the com· mission who have complained that it is an unnecessary county advisory panel. One critic, Korleen Bogdanovich of Huntington Beach, told commissioners they should not stu<ly tax·supported l'hald care centers. for example, contending most county women are opposed to using tax dollars to support such centers. However, Leslie Carr of Santa Ana, said there is a "crying need" 111 Orange County for day care centers, particularly for the lower-income woman. Olher sugaestions offered Mon· day included various studies of employment for women, revte of 1chool textbooka \lied 'n th~ county. expanding OPPotluniUcit for disabled women and survey- ing county schools for com· pliance. with federal anU-se~ dis· crt m lnaUon legislation. 892,000 Too Bigla Bids Could 1Delay Scho~I Building Construction of Sad4Jeback Valley Unified School D"5lrlot's lBtb elementary school -whlch was scheduled to open in Sep. tember-may be delayed. The lowest bid for conilruction of the Aegean Hills school, ls $92,000 above the state 1ctlt>ol building allowance. Dhtrict trustee• were scheduled to award a contract for the construction work Wednes· day. But now they probably will be a1ked to bold off on any action. according to · Robert Ferguson, the district's director ot plannln& and development. He eicplalned that he and the archltecu are trying , to de· I SC'a Jacl,ky Elected ~ Top term ine If they can ne&•tialt for changes in theatate ellowaneeor take some ol the items out or the work order. The state. has allowed $1,528,789 for canst,rucUon o! the school at Arced.Ian -.no Lindley streeu. However, the lowest bkf, made bY Steed BroU>ers ot LOI Al1Celes, tOtalled $1,tit,6'0 wllhoul deductibl• alternatives. Th~ biibest d lour bJdl on lhe work was ll,12.IU~. Fet«U1on ad.milted tM school probably will not be opened bl September DOW. But if trwit.- can award a ¢antract IO• <.'Oh• stnictlon can start by Dec. 1, he ' sald, lhere is a chance the facllt· ty will open on time. Otherwl.e, he said, t.he children probably wtU b& bused to emptf classrooms Jn other achool1 wit .. tbel~:.'.Ht\iaa teachers until tho new 1chool opens • 'nie~ eti .12 daHrO()mt and · deraart l'OC)Ql, signed to tiOUM a d•nw. ,.,,.... Page AJ SCHOOLS. l<it> .... , .. \IGl ,_ c.~ ._,,. i JIO II ~. 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J .,,. ... .. f'lt Ml,. 2 M , ... , 1\1\t t50. ~ ~~ ~. I Pr •• U n .... ,, If MOJ 2 t1~ .. U •llJ »f IJh• I ,. .» .. u~ -~ vrli~t r,r ~:~::: ~td ~et!~ ~·'9 "~· tclh• =~·4' . .... .,. ~··~ .. · ... ,. i·~-·· .,l:: = ~·" nr.~.= .. ~ '9-11.e .,._ _,. ailh•"' ..._."' '°""' .. "' l11io+I tO ~ l::!.t ""'· .... It • ~ ~+h ~·~ r. .... . ll~i-.... . n""~"4;' 1:+-:-~: ,,~ •..... , ..... ~. u..-w 2) ••••• $1 • 11.oo If.\. t ... •'.--w , ....... ··~· .. \ .. 2'•·-... ' ..... 1-4. + ~· JSh ..... iii'~ ••••• t w+ '"' II ··•·· .. ~ ...... ,~ •• h 22 ..... Convenience,' :f!'ts Rank, lligl\ 'aCbolce $100 rollllon $ 87mlWon $ 81 mllllon l ·s MmllUon $ SC mllllon· $ 52mUUon $ SOmlWort $ 49mlllion $ 45 million S 38million YOtJ WONDER WHAT SOCIOLOGISTS 2S yean from now wlU think of lhal roster. What clues t4 our culture will they find there? Ju.st about an ot lhese winners are Wbat the food in· dustry calla "convenience products." They require Utile or no coo~. Jult add water or heat. Or eat slral1ht Crom the package. Jf I.hey t.ry lo deduce ·rrom this ll&t which companies were the smartest, they can st.art with three names. Procter & Gamble. Ralston Purina and General Mills. Money Tree Clncl.MaU'• Procter & Gamble, which probabl~t more money out or the supermarket than any other~ti · plier. is the company that fabricated Prinales so that we ~ can havestacked cn.imble·proof potato chlps. · •J• RALSTON PURINA AND GENERAL Milla each made ''" the top lO'Toster with two products. General UIU1. the Min· , f. neapoUa flour miller, aave us Hamburcer Helper (to 1tretch Ji'\ thote low-coat meals) and Betty CrockerSoacldn' Cakes (le> ""~ take away our appetites>. Two catfoodt. T.ader Vittles and ti.1 Meow Mix, are the entnes Crom Checkerboard Square. • 111' Perhaps the most 1trikln1 feature of \his list la lbo wlde , 1 aw atb cut by pet food&. Three ol the top 10 new product.a are r.~ pet foods, Ml1bty Doe beinl • CarnaUon brand lb.at has • 1 moved to fourth place in the canned doc food ae1me:ntof thoufv market (behind AJpo, Ken·L-Ratioo and KaJ Kan>. · :. One theory, adv.anced by a Ralston Purina vtce presl· dent, Wllllam SUriu, Is tba\ since families are eaUna more J at restaurants, table scraps ~scarcer. Result: pet food sales have doubled in the past slx yean to $2.6 billion. , , The pet food pC)pulation ts also lncreuini more rapidly than the human population. The current U.S. count: 45 1l million family-owned do&s: 25 million cats. Genera~ Telephone Offers Free Films Sol>hlJllcated uies of luer Uibt: youth'• Involvement -· with cfrup: moutb·~outh res-uacUalioo; Jook!n1 for •1 lint Job and fallout protecUon are amona the educaUooal pro1ratn1 provtded rree by General Ttlephono Co. of California to more than 2, 100 schools. 1 More tban 1~ rums cover subject• ranainc from career cbolcea tA> how electricity is produced . tn addition. a tpeaker·s bureau preaenta various lecture demonstration.a, and bandoull include brochures on the hli? t.ory of the tet.pbone, tlps for job seekers and books wlt" safety hint.I tor ~oun«sters. One proiram emphasizes' l pedestri1n sat~. Films and programs may be scheduled by calllnc the local General bualDest oCflce. · · Huntington Bank VoteS Stock Split rt Shareholders or Paciflc City Bank, Huntlnaton Beaclt, bave approved a thrte·for-one stock splll. The •pllt wu recomrDended by mana1ement. the bank la at Golden West and Edinaer and at Magnolia and Adami Jn Huntinfton Beach, and wlll 1oon have an otrice at Valley View and Lampson ln Ge.rden Grove. New Housi,ig Starts. . .Decrease 4 Percent Ntw housing •l•IU In California decreased In Sep· tem~r to a aeaaonalty adjusted annual tat•ot 2'1,000 unit.a, Bank oC Alnerlca"potted. This wu d°"" 4 percent from the Aull&lt rate of 2$1,000 • unJts but waJ '8J> H percent trotn 8e~mber 1978. -Jot theljnt 1\llle months ot ltT7. bank eeonomlsta aald, actual bOualil atarta ln Calif orma are up 40 percent f?Ot'tt tbeiaeme Piii~• year a10. · EVEHINQ ' 5:00 D • Cl> 9 NEWS . . 80NAN1.A ''Love Me Not" G THEAVENGERS .. Something Nasty Nureery" G) MICKEY MOUSE CLUB G) SUPERMAN fD SESAME STREET e:!) VILLA ALEGRE 5:30 tD BEWITCHED ""Long Uve The Queen" g) ADAM-12 ' A Fool And His Money" 6!) FREEHAND SKETCHING "Forml~ Thickness'' 6:00 I) CBS NEWS DD NEWS U EMERGENCY ONEI A young girt falls victim to a drunk driver and the paramedics become the tar- ~ts of a sniper U MOVIE ** "Vanishing Afrlca"Docu- mentary Narrated by Biii Burrud. (2 hrs.) G) THE BRADY BUNCH "The Subject Was Noses" (!) THE ROOKIES The rooklea go up against a sniper that shoot• at anything tn uniform. '1l) ZOOM a!) AS MAN BEHAVES 'Group Therapy" (1]) ABC NEWS 6:308 MOVIE * * *', "The Scarlet Plmper- nal" (1935) Leslle Howard, Merle Oberon In disgul .... a gentleman of the English Court. an underground hero reacuea French noblemen from the gull· lotrne dunno the Revolution (1 hr. 30 min) W MV THREE SONS The Ernie Report" EE) OVEAEASV Mr. and Mrs. Redd Foxx; a cooking lesson; mal~ order shOpplng. '1!) GROWING YEARS Child's Play' CJ) CBS NEWS (fOl MERV GRIFFIN Guests Bobby Vinion, Chfla Rivera, Pete Barbultl, Chinese Acrobats Fom Taiwan, Dennis Mad alone 7:001J NBC NEWS D LIARS CLUB 0 ABCNEWS WI LOVE LUCY "The Girls Want To Go To A Nightclub" (!) AOAM·12 Reed la accuaed of 1hoot1ng an unarmed man. ~ THE ADVOCATES "Should We SupPOrt President Carter's Energy Program? al) EARTH, SEA AND SKY azz Show ~urning Up On Radio LO ~ ANGELES (AP> -True, rtot much Jan 1s regularly heard op radio. But National Public ~d10 is trying to help correet tl}is with a 90·minute weekly eeries it be~an last month - •'Jazz Alive · For $400,000. or slightly inore a.an the estimated cost of one "Starsdy and Hutch" episode, the new series is airing the work c4 both little-known and well· ~own iazz folks for 30 weeks. According to the show's pro· due er. Steve Rathe, it's on 160 of NPR 's 201 non·commercial ~ta· Uons. most of them FM, and was developed in response to the sla· Uons • request for a weekly jazz ries. , ~~~=;~~~~~~P=~~==-~===:~~;;~~~~~r.~ 4lapelllriQ many ,.... ~. <2 pottonal ch fQt ldtntJty by • .,, • 'COiumbo: Forg0tttft Alan Alda loses his cool at.a cold·blooded officer on tonight's episode of "MASH, .. at 9 on CBS. Channel 2. "Ground Water" I !0 TEl.L TtiE TRUTH 1:30 C,....DIO CAMERA NEWLYWED GAME G ([I HOLL YWOOO SQUARES ID THE BRADY BUNCH The children get angry al Cindy for carrying tales to their parents m LET'S MAKE A DEAL e:!) NEWSCHECK Cl) THE GONG SHOW 8:00 8 Cl) THE ,PTZPATRICl<S The festlvttlee M.irroundlng Max Fitzpatrick's Aral Communion are marred when his father la suspended from his Job Thalmu1 Raaulala, Donald Moffat, Robert Hogan guetl star. G THE GODFATHER SAGA Mletiael Corleone (AJ Paclno) allllmee leadenhlp of the tam· lly and begins to expaod opera- tion• by ..tabllahlng a baae In CubL (Part 4 of 4) (R) 0 MOVIE * **'"" "Cry Of The Wiid" (197") Directed by Biii Muon. Thia documentary, filmed In Ratbags Guide 1-lft ere rated ~(Otd1119 lo bOw office_.,~. MovlH 10< Tl/ •ro 1 ""9t'd ,,,. • c rt llC I • • * • -Excellent * • * -Very Gooo * * -Good * •, -Fatr * -Poor hrs.) .ach lndlvld1.18'. ,.. 4'd)"' f 1876) Pet• F , Janet a a HAPPY OAY8 a MA8l1:A~Ece THEATRE Leigh. A atilt beautiful, but "FOl'We And LMll'* Tuecad-"I, ClaudJu1: Ftmll)I Artair•" ~. mcMe ~ to ero" FQn2M and Rltd\19 leed Tit>etlu• anger.-Augustu1 wtltri tetum to a Broadway mcillcal the ..arch tor Joanie, who haa he mHt• Hcretly with aget'Mt ttw iOllthy hu1btnd'1 left home determlntd to Vl"*'la. who h4t waa foce9d to 8 ..rlhef: (,..UT b«ome • Nctc9'6p llno« fOf dtvorce so that hi CX>\lld matry LTOfOOn 1 Leather Tu1cadero (Sua:I A~•tue• daughter Julla. Hott: Jottnny Carson, Oueetr. Quatro) and her rock group 9:30. (I) ONE OAY AT A TIME Chris and Charlotte Mc&nde, "The Suedu." (Patt 2 ot 2) "The Ghc»t Willer'' Under Ainold SOhWetzenlOIW, Ckltla 0 JN CONCERT • prUIYre lo ple&M her mother L..ctlmM, Judith Bi.uan. ''Roger Whlttatcaf'" and do well In tchool, f.arbara • LOVE. AMEJ\ICAM 8TYU! CAROL BURNETT AND ratOIU to delperate IMUUl'M. "LOYe And The Nut• LOY9 FRIENDS Alice Gholtley gue.1 atara. And TM Hypnotla1" Gueat: Steve Lawrence. G 9 SOAP · '\ G 9 ABO MOVIE cm MOVIE (Epleode Nine) Jodie entera the **~"The Legend Of,VaJanU ... ***'n "The Henglng Tree" hospital for hi• oper.uc>n; Burt no" (1875) Fr.nco Nero, (1959) Gary Cooper, Marla reveall hla teeret to a ptyetil• • SUZll'\M PlelKette. A romantlo, S<:hell. A doct0t kllls a man trltt; J...ic. Is d"PfY hurt flctlonahzed llOOOUnt of the wttlte rescuing a girt and Is when •he tear"' of her an.it ecrt!ln'I temout lovet. (R) alm0tt lynched by a drunken hu1band'1 lndltereUona. (~t.-NEWS mob. (2 hrt.) wM< adVIMt view. dlaa• a> OET8MART e SPECIAL lion.) Max" hurried to a doctor after "O.Orgla o·Keete" The nine-10:00 8 (I) LOU GRANT h6 la pollOnld. tlath birthday ot this m1l0t fig-An acoentrtc Superior Court • CAPnONED AllO NEWS ure In American art I• oalebrat-Judge (Barnard Hughee) pre-~RHINO ed wtth a tllmed IOOk at her Ute •Idea o'tl8f' cuea In • humor-12.-008. TWJUOMTZON! and work from her home tn oue, though 1ometlme1 "AGameOf Poot" New Meldco and from New deranged, manner CD FOREVER f'ERNWOOO Vork'a MuMUm of Modem Art. 11J 1J NEWS Eleanor lnvotv-TOM In her I.!) PARENT EFFECTIVENESS fJ Ill FAMILY vldous plot; ~ tel Chat11e "Tuning In" Active Uatenlng "A Matter Ot lndellcacy" about th• lottery; Wanda Feedback It uaed In rol~lay-Buddy'• girlfriend Laura (Carol dllCUllM lnoett with Cathy; I~ aod In an at-home attuatlon. Jonet) arrives tor a vlelt but the Marie awMta owr a io,n. 8:30 D 9 LAVERNE & SHIRLEY Lawrenoee soon dltcovef her Cl) MOVIE "An Affair To Forget" The glrl1 tragic problem -Laura, at 15, **IA "Frontier Gal'' (1~5) begin their long-awaited vaca-has become an alcoholic. Yvonne Oeeatto. Rod Camer· lion crulH and Shirley m> GET SMART on. A aaloon owner and her becomes friendly with an The Chief explains the aim of huabend who have broken up attractive Nllor (Phlllp Clark) his operation. are br~ht back together by who hint• he would llke to ask fll) EYEWITNESS their child. ( 1 hr .. 30 min.I her a very lmpcrtant qu..tlon. Transcripts and recordings 12:309 MOVIE (Part 2 of 2) probe recent new• ttOf'lea: a * * * "The Mad Doetot" G) CROSS-WITS 1974 comrnercial letllner crash, (1941) Baal Rathbone, Ellan e:!) OVER EASY • man'• proeututlon trlal and Drew. A dleturbed pavchlatrlat Mr. and Mrs. Redd Foxx; a the case of Karen Ann Quinlan. marrlu women end then kill• cOOklng leuon, mall order e:!> SPECIAL them off tor their~. (1 hr .• shopping. (R) "Geo<gla O'Keefe" The nine-25 min.) • 9:008(1) M"A"S"H tleth birthday of this ma)0t fig· G) MOVIE An otflcar with a cold-blooded ure In American art Is celebtat-*** "The 0e9petadoea" knack tor predicting cuualllel ed with a fllmed look at her lite ~ (1943) Glenn Ford. Clalre • prompts a vlolent reaction from and work from her home In Travot.Whllt pfannlng to a\aoe Hewkeye, while Chartee 1utfe<1 New Mexico and from New a hddup for a banker, a 911i- emban"8Nlng results from the VortC• MUMUm of Modern Art. man unexpectedly fill• In love contumptlon of a gourmet 10:30 G) m NEWS with the banker'1 daught«, feut. 11:00 II G 9 Cl> 9 NEWS and asao dltcOWn the sheffff la d 9 THREE'S COMPANY U HOLl YWOOO a long fost fl1etld.2:30 MOV "Chrluy'e Night Out" Jack CONNECTION Movie** "Laat Day• Of rulhel to defend Chrissy's hon-6 MOVIE Dolwyn" (1949) Edith Evant. or when a man misunderstand• ** "Vanishing Afrlca"Oocu-Emlyn Wllllam •. her frktodllneaa and showa up montary Narrated by Bill 1:00Q 'rOMORROW at the apartment. No one real-Burrud. (2 hre) Q I $PY lzet, h~e<. that the vllltor la G) THE 000 COUPLE "Lisa" an undercove< cop. "The Murray Who Came To 1:30 II NEWS CJ IAONSIDe DlnMr" cm MOVIE "Who'll Cry For My Baby" Cl) HONEYMOONERS ** ''Miiiion Dollar Manhunt" tD MERV GRIFFIN After he la challenged lo fight. (195n Rlehard Denning, Carole Gueett: Bobby Vinton. Chlta Ralph thinks up many IChemes Matthew•. Twelve million Riwfa. Pete Barbuttl, ChlneM to chk:kan out but .. va fee. at pound• of counterfeit money, Acrobat• From Taiwan, Dennis the tame time. made In Getmeny durtng WOf1d Madalone. fJ!) DICK CAVETT Wat 11 ta tt*:ked down by an • fD 8PECCAL Gueat Ntozaike Shange, write<, lntetllgence agent. (1 hr., 30 "To S. A 'Man" Traldltlonal Poat and femlnltt. min.} machismo roles and values are a!> MACNEIL I LEHRER 1:37 8 HEWS AnOtlaer. Pine Ifie•• Laverne And Shirley (Cindy Wllllams. left, and Penny .Marshall) try to explain to Phillip Clar.k <right> just what they and Lenny CMlcnael McKean) are doing with Squ1ggy (David Lander) in this scene from Laverne and Shirley, tonight at 8:30 on ABC, Channel 7. \ NEWS MOVI ** ~ M .. (1'183) Lee AemlC!c, A1al'I Bat•. Aft meeting her hutbtnd In $palo with fraudulent tn1urance ITt()My, a ~l'IO woman dJtQO¥. era~,. being followed by an lneurenoe lnYMtlgator. (2 hra.) .~ G H6WS q . 9 MOVlE 1..'I *** "ceMl'lov• '70" f"'51 M~ MU1'°'4nnl, V Lit!. •Ao attractive ptyb4f• ~ .. p.ychologlul ~ ""11 In hJa romantic ende9v0ft.\ (_~hrs.) G MOVIE 1 * * * "Pickwick Pap~~?: (195') Hennlone Oll'Qold, N~, Patrick. 8aNd on Dtclcen' 1 etualo, mlddle-eged bum~ emblrl( on an adventure tQUt ot Britain. {2 tire.) • ·~ "Not Wanted On Vt¥tt0e''· (1t&7) RMald Shiner, Oriffl\H J<>MJl Two ttewardt. dltgu~, .. Atabs, aeareh fOf • atOltiil Jewel during a crulM, (2 hra.) 1' 3:00 NEWS • • 4:00 MOVIE *'A ''Thi Olr1 From Calgary'.'.! (1937) Paul Ketty, Aft D'Ortey.o The story of a rodeO ch~ that could teelly rope her man, ( 1 hr., 30 min.) • ; Oa&a Storm 4:30. MOVI! •, ** "Thi AbduetOf'I" (1957) Victor McUiglen, Fay spa1n~c Grave robbeft wget In on l Llncoln't tomb. (1hr .. 30 min.)'• Wednesda11'• ... Daytime lff o.,~s ' MORNING ·h · 0:30 G MOVIE , I . **'-""Walk Thi PrOUd l.and'~I (1856) Audie Murf)hy, An"9\( .Bancrott. An honest lndl&n 911ent flOht• for harmoey i between Apachel _,,d whli.. I (1 hr., 30 min.) 10:00 a MOVI! • ··~ ''The Third 8tctet .. (1"4) St.phen ~. Jeolt Hawl(IM. A peyohoanatyst~ daughtet convtncee one of "' patlenfa to help her fbid "-' father'• motd...,.. (2 hra ) AFTERNOON . • 12:00• MOVJE ***"A Night To Remtmbir" (1~2) Lotetta Young, 8'1ao ~~Wi1tAlranct ' hill Wtft Uncovtt I mye1ery tJl i.o tMlr own.2:20 Ben Hunter 2:00 D MOVIE c * * "Duel At Tbt Alo Gra~.,· (1964) &ean Flynn. UPon ~: lnO In M~. the IOft "' • I WMlthy farnlly ftride that w. f•thel' hat .,_, murdere,t bY a powerful dk:tator. (2 ht't.)