iad. ~ Christina, Smoking Can Be Good For Your Health-If You're A LEBANON, Tern. (AP) — A bumper crop of marijuana plants plucked from the ground near four car washes has prompted police to start keeping a keen eye on the dumpirg of cigarette butts from car ash trays. Patrolman Joe Eatherly and Detective Terry Ashe acted on a tip and found about $0 plants—one nine feet tall. The illegal weed Page 2. THE HERALD, Thursday, Auaust 10. 1978 was growing in soil littered with cigarette butts, “We believe they were growing where people had dumped ashtrays from the cars,” Ashe said Tuesday. “I don't think they were planted.” No arrests have been made and. authoritles at- tributed the plants’ healthy - growth to a regular supply of seeds from the preci JACKSONVILLE BEACH, Fla, (AP) — A surfer warned several times to move away from the Jacksonville Beach fishing pier found the reason why the hard way. Police said the surfer, 23- year-old Charles Harkins, became entangled in the fishing line of C.A. Thomp- son, : Thompeon helped extract the fishhook from Harkins's leg and then arrested him for violating an ordinance forbidding surfing within 100: metres of the pier. ‘ Thompson {s a policeman who was fishing on his day + PHILADELPHIA (AP) -~- You cannot rush the typlat at Philadelphia’s Chinatown —_ . News. __ It took six months for the federally-funded, English and Chinese newspaper— which published its first edition last week—just to get hold of a Chinese typewriter. ping a story consists of guiding -& handle over the 2,000 characters in search of theright one. A handle has to be pulled to print the character on to the paper. “You have to be very let, very patient,” sald in Fong Lee, the peel an typist. ‘'You can't have someone yelling, zHurry up! Rusht’ You have to take your time.” ’ PALO ALTO, Calif, (AP) ered - Dog-pow skateboarding will continue unleashed cn the streets of Palo Alto. | Carter’s U.S. Meet With Begin And Sadat — | Could Be Most Historic Since WW II WASHINGTON (CP) — By summoning the Egyptian ‘and Jeraeli leaders to the United States for a Sept. 5 mummit meeting, President Carter may have launched one of the moat historic post- war diplomatic drives. The meeting could fall apart, leaving the same sad legacy of hostile rhetoric and petty haggling that followed Egyptian President Anwar Sadat’s dramatle journey to Israel. Or it could be can- celled because of an up-' foreseen crisis in Lebanon or elsewhere. But the meeting, if held, could also open a new stage in Middle East diplomacy, the United States into full participation in the area’s troubled politics. Sadat has said that what moved him to agree to the Sept. 5 meeting was the prospect that the U.s. is finally willing to became “a full partner” in peace negotiations, Such U.S. involvement would mean final aban- donment of the fading pretence that the United States is only a mediator be-. tween Egypt and Ierael. Veiled pressure on both parties, using military and economic ald decisions, has already undermined that posture. PRESSURE ISRAEL Abandoning the formal pretence of being purely a Christina Onassis Reported Upset At Rumor Third Husband May Be Russian KGB Agent ’ ATHENS (AP) — Greek shipping heiress Christina cect" by puolianed reports upse pu repo! the: her new husband was a member of the Soviet secret ec. 27-year-old daughter of the late Aristotle Onassis, arrived in Athens alone irom Moscow Satur- day, interrupting boneymoon plans “to attend to urgent business for 10 Gays,” a relative aaid at the {] , She married unemployed shipping bureaucrat Sergei . Kauzov, her third husband in seven years, in a civil cere- mony in Moscow Aug. 1. The couple had been expected to leave for a honeymoon at a Siberian resort a few days later, ; A source close to. tha family, which opposed Christina’s’ marriage and stayed away from the ceremony, said the 27-year- old millionaire ‘became terribly upset after the reported allegations that Sergei was a KGB agent.’’ “She's here to discuss with her relatives the reper- cussions it might have on their relationship,’ the source said. Alexander Andreadis, Christina’s second husband, visited her Sunday and was reported pressing her not to return to Moscow. They were divorced last year after 19 months of marriage. In Moscow, Kauzov, 37, said he is not sure when Christina will return to him, but he insisted she is coming ba : ck, . “We don’t have the date set yet, but she will return, there is nodoubt about that,” Kauzov said in a telephone interview from the two-room Moscow apartment the couple were to share with Kauzov’s mother until they gota place of their own. Two Yr. Old Legally Dead After Father’s Sexual Assault ‘ DES MOINES, lowa (AP) — Doctors say two-year-old Matthew Schrier has been dead for a month. If a judge agress » and allows removal e support equipment, murder charges may be filed againat his father. Richard Schrier, 24, is ac- cused of first-degree sexual assault in an alleged attack dead. on hig son, Last week, Schtier escaped from state Mental Health Institute th Clarinda where he ‘was sent for psychiatric testing following arraignment. He surrendered to authorities Tuesday. “He is brain dead,” Dr. John Bakody testified about the child in Polk County juvenile court on Tuesday. “Already four doctors have indicated the patlent is The boy's grandparents, the Richard and Shirley Schrier, want the judge to prohibit doctors at Iowa Methodist Hospital from removing the support system. They are for custody while challenging the con-. stitutionality of Towa’s new law on the legal definition of death. . WIN PARTIALLY The Sehriers already have won a partial victory. Judge Richard Strickler issued an injunction July 24 preventing Matthew from being removed from the system until legal tangles surrounding his custody and the law are resolved. A hearing on whether to remove the support system continued today. Linda Schrier. 31, belleves her sonis dead. She contends" her in-laws want the boy kept on the support system so murder charges cannot be filed against Schrier. In an interview with the Des Moines Tribune, Mrs.. Schrier said. het husband’ was sent toa mental hospital at Fulton, Mo., a year ago because of another sex- related incldent. She said neighbors had complained that Schrier had forced her sons by a previous marriage, then 10 and six, to have sex “with neighboring ‘girls aged seven and eight. | Schrier was released May 23 and the family returned to Des Moines. Mrs. Schrier said she filed for divorce on June 27, the day before _ Matthew was ‘taken to - hospital in a coma. Philedelphia Mayor Calls For Death Penalty PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Mayor Frank Rizzo, reacting angrily after the. city’s conflict with a band of self- styled anarchists ended in the death of a policeman in a gunfight, called for return of the death penalty and said he would pull the switch. Rizzo denounced the members of MOVE as “an uncivilized foe that fired the first shot” in a clash with police sharpshooters Tuesday. The battle ended with bull- dozers and a crane levelling MOVE's three-storey building after 12 adults; 11 children, 22 dogs and an unknown number of rats were flushed from the cellar. ° Inside, police said, they found a dozen loaded weapons and 1,600 rounds of ammunition. All the adults, held without bail, were charged with murder, attempted murder and conspiracy at a heavily- guarded hearing that MOVE spokesman Delbert Orr Africa—all members take Africa as a surmame— ridiculed as ‘Aa legalized lynching. “Get that death penalty back, and put them in the electric chair andT'll pullthe pe switch,” said Rizzo, a for- mer foot patrolman who rose to pollee commissioner before becoming mayor in 1972. Pennsylvania has no death penalty, but a bili is pending in the legislature. FIREMEN INJURED Six other policemen, five firefighters and two MOVE members were injured in the fiveminute gunfight, ~ Afterwards, another 25 Je were arrested in rock- and brick-throwing skir- mishes with police near the MOVE compound, in a rundown west Philadelphia neighborhood. MOVE claims to be a back- tonature group with an _ announced goal to overthrow . the U.S. government. It had Lambeth Bishops Against Women CANTERBURY, England (AP) — Bishops of the worldwide Anglican Com: munion rebuked United States Episcopalians and three other member chur- ches today for ordaining women priests and told the churches not to act 30 in- dependently in the future. The four member chur- ches in the U.S., Canada, New Zealand and Hong Kong "US. WASHINGTON (Heuter) — The United States House Ot Re ret rte ard Sib a rec hillion defence bill that in- cludes funds for another nuclear-powered. alrcraft carrier which the Carter administration does not want. Legislation, creating the have ordained about 150 women out of a total 43,000 Anglican clergy since Hong Kong ordained the first woman priest in 1971. ; The rebuke came in a resolution approved at the Lambeth Conference of 440 Anglican bishops. The resolution, initiated from within the Church of England, advised member churches not to act on issues of concern to the whole Anglican Communion without consultation with the Lambeth Conference or with the primates. The primates are the presiding bishopa of the 25 Anglican provinces. The Bishop of London, Gerald Ellison, who offered the resolution, said women’s ordination “has had a very disruptive effect within the whole Anglican Com- munion.*: The Church of England, the Anglican mother church, and 20 of the other provinces have deferred a decision on admitting women, to. the priesthood. Women priests have not caused problema in Hong Kong, Canada and New Zealand, but they have deeply troubled some of the three million U.S. Episco- been cited for violating the city’s health and fire codes, and rejected court orders to # vacate the premises where garbage and human wastes composted in the back yard. MOVE members will not say what the letters in their group’s name stand for. The shooting erupted after police in a pre-dawn raid battered down a wooden barricade, punched holes in boarded-up windows and began flooding the basement. Priests palians and resulted in a way movement there, There are strong movements for and against women priesta in England, and the Roman = Catholics and Eastern Orthodox churches have sald if Anglicans continue to ordain women, decades of talks toward eventual Christian union wiil .break down. Votes $119 Billion For Defence biggest defence bill in U.S. history, provides funds for weapons procurement, research and development and other defence expenses for the 1979 financial year beginning Oct, 1. The House refused to cut $2.1 billion out of the bill for a Nimitz class carrier deepite administration pleas that the ship was too costly. Aconference committee of the House and the Senate al- ready has approved funds for the nuclear-powered earrier in a separate authorization which establishes spending ceilings for the 1670 financial year. Three of the U.S. Navy's fleet of 13 carriers are nuclear powered. A fourth is under construction. Backers of the proposal to build a fifth vessel argued that it was necessary to counter growing Russian naval strength. Thebill alao Includes funds for further research and development’ of the B-1 bomber, the successor to the aging B-52s; for three air- borne radar system aircraft and money for research and development of a cruise missile carrier. The bill, which provides actual money for the hard- ware, gives the ad- ministration $52 million - more than it requested and now goes to the Senate. Seven Years For Asia’s Most Dangerous Man NEW DELHI (AP) — Charles Sobhraj, considered one of the most dangerous men in Asia, was sentenced today to seven years hard labor for the fatal drugging of a French tourist in the Indian capitaltwo years ago. Sobhraj, a 33-year-old FrenchVietnamese, who has been ona hunger strike since July 22 to protest jail con- ditions, said he will appeal to the Delhi High Court. The sentence ended a courtroom drama which began in July, 1977, with the completion of police in- vestigation nto the activities of Sobhraj and his alleged accomplices. Asian authorities say Sobhraj headed a drugging- and-murder ring that operated in ihe region for several years, preying on young tourlsts, drugging and robbing them. The ring is al- leged to have had a hand in a8 mary ag a dozen in Indla, Nepal, Iran, Pakistan, Thailand and Singapore. DIES OF DRUGGING Sobhraj, Marie Andree Leelerc of Levis, Que., and Jean Dhuisme of France were charged with robbing and drugging Luke Soloman, 29, who died at a New Dethi hospital two days later. Leclerc and Dhuisme were acquitted while Sobhraj was convicted of robbery leading to injury, drugging and “culpable homicide not amounting to murder.” Sobhraj was arrested on June 7, 1976, after hotel employees In New Delhi saw him allegedly hand out what he had sald were water- purification tablets to a group of French tourists. * None of the group died. But within days Indian police had picked up four of Sobhraj’s followers and linked soma of them with Solomon’s death. ; There are still five other cates pending against Sobhraj in India, covering charges ranging from robbery to murder. “For the lonely one even noite is a comfort.” Friedrich Nistzsche mediator would be more than a superficial change; in practice, it would mean stronger and more visible U.S, pressure on Israel. U.S. officials have been in- creasingly irritated by Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin's hard-line attitudes, particularly his encouragement of new settlements in occupied ter- ritories. One ominovs sign for Bagin was the statement of State Secretary Cyrus Vance that the Sept. 5 meeting would be in the context of United Nations Resolution 242, which calls for with- drawal of Israeli forces from occupied Arab lands. The U.S. believes this resolution calls for withdrawal from all U.S. treo cluded in a future Middle East peacekeeping force. | Such a move, coupled with politically-unpopular pressure on Israel, would create severe domestic con- troversy in the United States, damaging Carter's alreadyshaky status. Even the fact of the Sept. 5 meeting is potentially harmful, since i¢ will raise expectations and emotions © and create the risk of nevertheless remains both responsible and necessary in view of the greater dangers involved in doing without such an initiative, | After nine months of. no result from his dramatle trip to Israel, Sadat: is in’ a- vulnerable position, lsolated from the rest of the Arab world and under increasing pressure to take a tougher approach against Isragl. Greater urgency is added to the situation by the ap- proach of the Octeber deadline for renewing the mandate for the observers who are supervising Egyp- tian-Israeli disengagement the Simi. Th psychological deadlines also important— the an- niversary of the October war and the November anni: yeraary of Sadat's decision to go to Israel. Thus, with candor, the White House stated that the summit meeting was arranged ae because the prospec: peace were £0 good but because the risks have in fact rizen.” political The city council has Tejected an appeal to ban dog-powered skateboards, despite a complaint from one woman that allowing a dog to pulla skateboard is a danger to life and limb. ‘Are the sldewalka for the pedestrians or are they excercise tracks for people on skateboards being towed by dogs?’’ asked Jane Mangold. Marijuana Plant Tn a letter, she said she ob- jected to 16-year-old Clark McElfresh being pulled around the neighborhood on askateboard powered by his family's dogs, ’ But the council agreed with Clark's mother, Jacqueline McElfresh, who asked: “Are we going to legislate everything a kid can do, in this town out of existence?” Cantab. Praises Pope CANTERBURY, England (AP) — The Archblahop of Canterbury, Dr. Donald Coggan, said pioday that . although the late Pope Paul VI was old and frail, he was a strong man spiritually. The comment, made for Italian television, will be heard by an estimated one billion viewers and listeners around the world when Pope Paul's funeral is broadcast from Romé Saturday. The text was released today. Coggan visited Rome last to discuss ways to try to tring about eventual reunion between the 64-million- member Anglican church and 650 million Roman Catholics. Tn his tribute, Coggan said that the Pope was a man with a deep concera for the unity of the two Churches, the Third World, the deprived ‘and im- tallowing area: 3329 Iavenue, * In August 14, DISTRICT OF TERRACE WOTICE LAND USE CONTRACT Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held on proposed Land Use | Contract By-law Project No.ADP-02-7625 The proposed contract Is concerned with the Lot 15, Block 11, D.L. 361, R. 5, C.D., Plan (4722 Lazelle Avenue) The general intent of the proposed Land Use Contract between the -District of Terrace and Michael Andrew Johnson ts to provide @ for construction of a building at 4722 Lazelle Tf “aecordance® “Wwith’ requirements of the development plan of the & 4700 Block (north side) of Lazelle Avenue. The proposed Land Use Contract may be viewed by any and all persons required more specific information, during regular business hours at the Municipal Hall, 3215 Eby Street, Terrace, 8.C. The Public Hearing will be held in the Municipal Council Chambers on Monday, 1978 Any and all persons having an interest in the & proposed Land Use Contract By-law Project [ No. ADP-02-7825 shall take notice and be governed accordingly. oned. “T think he inherited a very difficult task," Coggan replied when asked how he would judge Pope Paul's reign. “He followed Pope John, a man who was out- going, simple, straight- forward, perhaps not fully realizing what he was letting his great church in for. Pope John opened the windows and winds biew in. Coggen said Popa Paul’s 15-year reign covered years of insurrection and rebellion in the Church. “You may criticize the decisions he made, but he made decisions, very strong decisions and he kept to them. “Whatever the world said, and other members of his chureh sald, you didn’t easily move Pope Paul VI—a strong man with strong views of his own,” the at 7:00 p.m. E.R. Hallsor Clerk-Administrator