rolad ete! IER eRe ah Washington By THOMAS KENT MOSCOW. (AP) Bitter relations between - the Soviet Union and have sharply changed the life Moscow’s Chinese community. of The: shrunken corps journalists diplomats, ‘of \ ; i ate mnt TK a eran et ry AP Reg 48, THE HERALD, Tuesday, April 4, 1978, PAGE ¥ Chinese i in Russia live sheltered. life ‘and bksinessmen who carry on China’s f ew the Krem contacts with live in near isolation in a city filled with anti-Chinese ‘Naty rarely leave the “Many ra leave heavily-guarded Chinese embasay compound on Friendship Street, named at a timdof- warmer So- yiet-Chinese relations. Growing and importin their own f and travelling little, the Chinese seem to stress selfreliance and = in- sulation. “I would like to go out more,'’ one emb assy resident acknowledged recently. ‘I need to im rove my Russian, to to know the city etter. But wider the present conditions, of course, this im- possible.” — In friendlier years, L.A. hillside strangler wrong man “LOS ANGELES (AP) — Evidence against a av year-old hand questioned in the side pale ler case is in- cient to charge him ih taurder, the district auomey s office said “There is insufficient - evidence to prosecute,” Deputy District Attorney Roger Kelly said. ' Prophet moral SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP) — The man Mormons believe to be a BS ofl fet ecause a Binoy is mortal is no reason to reject him President Spencer Kimball, 93, closed the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ 143th Annual General. Confer- ence members to kee ournais, plant , work hard and reject homosexuality, Sq drugs, abortion, divorce and. profanity. - arte said people will find any excuse to dismiss the words of a prophet of God. Mormons. believe Kimball is God's mouth church plece on earth tradition sintid Testement prophets. “Prophets are always some ‘8 son or somebody’s neighbor, Under California law. Jones must be soe § by tonight if no charges. are brought against There was no immediate word on when authorities . planned to let him go. The man, Peter Mark Jones, was arrested Thursday later booked tor investigation of murder in the deaths of 18-yearold Jill Barcomb picks on issues chosen from among the people, not transported m some other planet, dramatic as that might be,” he said. DISSIDENT JAILED communccated Mormon Byron Marchant who, a church spokesman anid, out ‘ passing literature on ‘Temple uare where | sessions were being Police said church ‘security officers alleged Marchant was trespassing. Marchant, a 36-year-old former cus , was excommunicated. last year after he cast a lone dissenting vote against a church leader during the church’s October con- ference. - And in the NEWS... Pee le. In The News aera (AP) Georg sence Hive ‘George Holly wood aa yet Robert. Evans have filed for divorce to end their year-old marriage. The divorce suit was filed Friday in Los Angeles Superior Court, It was the America and who now is a sports an announcer with ‘For ie ‘ab year-old - Evans, former head of . Paramount Studios and now an _ independent ‘producer, it was his ‘ourth marriage. ‘The pair were married. last Hila, Gali in Beverly NEW EW YORK (AP) — Many movie stars are by foe their . mseberh Taylor says le who try to rush up r are looking for “wrinkles and pms imples. ” “And I don’t them: this face has around a lot of years,” the 46-year-old actress sald in a story in the cur- rent issue of Us - "People want to see if my ‘eyes are really violet bloodshot or both,” Sia Miss Taylor, ‘who was recently voted one of 10 most, beautiful women inthe ‘U.S. by another magazine, Harper’s Bazaar “Once” they check me > out,’ ” she said, “they can ome and say, ‘I saw pork ‘Taylor and you now what? She ain't so hot!’ you know what? And . They'rer reright! She ain’t.” PHILADELPHIA (AP). . — Rock musicians and ‘other entertainers ‘arriyed here Saturday ‘cheer on the Philadel vie Fury at the North - American Soccer League . team’s season opener at - Veterans Stadium. | Several Fury owners are associated with.- music: world, includin formers Peter : ‘ampton, Paul Simon and ‘Rick ‘Wakeman—all of whom were on hand for the, match. against plomats. Tmey: ‘arrived at sbth Street ‘Station. ‘here the train, a h of ttt cheerleaders chanted greetings. His supers chumsnPeter Wolfe of the - rockngroup Gi Giles, formerly t Band, and er James t Taylor stop: to sign autographs for a few TAMPA, Fila. GP) — The local vice squad, the. Florida Citrus: Com-. mission and even Prin- cess Grace of Monaco are and. 17-yearold Kathleen gral savings of the 13 attributed: reali Hillside after investigators said an acquaintance, George Francis Shamshak, implicated him in the deaths of the two women. The Los Angeles police department's Hillside Strangler Task Force, meanwhile; was called to an alle today to examine ly of a woman. But i quickly determined that her death is not connected ‘the Chinese accusin thousands. of:: Chinese officials ‘and’ students loscow and close friends with local people. Until the early 1960s, bilant — Soviel-Chinese iendship rallies were common in Moscow. . PARTED WAYS IN 1960 The two countries parted ways in the 19603 over ideological and political differences, with Soviet Union of | rev the teachin and ideas of Marx and have been no mubie ‘a dications of reconcilla- tion. The isolation of the Chinese community dates from the midde 1900s _ Moscow. The Chinese students led from Mos- cow and several hostile Soviet demonstrations took Place 9 outside the Chinese embassy. . Now just over 100. when were ex people live and work in. the Chinese embassy compound, which was de- signed for many more. There are no Soviet restrictions on the Chinese mo’ around et po- lice guarding the em- bassy do not. interfere with employees ‘and. many Russians who meet Chinese are still friendly. “When sometimes we po aut, to places like the in Museum and other exhibitions, I think the ‘Sasquatch to be proven "COEUR COD ALENE, Idaho (AP) — Only a few hundred sasquatch exist, and the large human-like apes arenon-violent, gaye Washington Univeraity rae at Grover Krantz, - | associate professor of res at WSU, said Sun e hopes to prove the beast roams the wilderness of the Pacific Northwest by finding a tint carcass or iguring ou how and where to shoot the animal. : TO not killing the sas navocate kee lag thm @ a myth,” said He ‘said the a eatures have lived in wild areas from northern California to British Columbia and have been seen in -nor- advocate . thern Idaho and westera Mentan crindings indicate ‘faa uateh are either or just don’t give a gerne will just walk right me W: wi by without paying any attention, ” he said. Krantz said me avoids the term Bigfoot, calling it a “California white man’s title.” “Bigfoot is a limiting title. The creature has big feet, big knees and big hands, so what does it really mean?” he said. NO SIGHTING : Krantz said he has never seen a sasquatch, but has taken footprint casts of two members of the species and in- terviewed 29 people who say they have seen the animal. ‘Tm m pre tty sure half of my contacts are | me, but I can't say bat about the others.” he said. “Organized science is ested in anything new. They are only in- terested in working out the minor ¢ details in what has eadx been established, ” he said. Keep pressure down-live i in East One of the simplest ways. to avoid high blood pressure is to be born ve and die on a smal Pacific atoll. In industrialized .. countries blood -pressure rises with age. But the villages of many Pacific - atolis “are among the smail — societies—also found in eastern and be central Africa, B of m Asia and New Guinea— whose inhabitants’ blood pressure does not in-| crease with age, and who do not suffer’ strokes and heart ‘disease inn a He New. Zealand, who was innGeneva’ recently for ' meeting of the World Health Organization’ 8 (WHO) wapert Com. mittee on ension, has made these islanders his g special study. He said he believes the state of mind of residents of the small societies may 88 important in them resistant to, bypertons a itesty 28 their e Token islanders ‘im the central Pafific, for exercise b ming and , cy nes protein. (fish) ; wees aaa & on ‘egoutle’ fat Peony Adam division’ NHL undecided By GLENN COLE The Canadian Press Buffalo Sabres’ and s have tional or S oaeae and it is costing them dubious winners of the dearly annual “‘Barefoot and Pregnant” awardf msored' by Tampa’s pter of National P nization for Women, e awards — go “those who have done te most in the past year to denigrate women and continue their ‘second- class status." The citrus commission was. cited for its Christmas-time decision “ta omit the line ‘Don we now our gay apparel’ 2 the score of its Deck the Halls with Boughs of Holly Christmas card.” — The commission was try- ing to cool the swirl of controversy around Anita Bryant’s. ante — homosexual crusade when, it struck the line. “for her noranee about the tigh _ the working omen,” Princess Grace was dubbed with the international award. -CARRABASSETT VALLEY, Me.. (AP) — For the. third time, 387- pound Terry Tyler of e World Heavyw Ski Champion. /The 46-year-old Tyler outraced more_than.-20 gomp petitors -Sunday— including his husky three sons—to Win the 1ith run- ning of the competition at arloat Mountain. yler’s closest com- peitor was 274-pound son evin, who finished second, with 257-pound Brian finishing 6th: and 275 ound Terry Jr. ing innat 10th. Tens tors hed to weigh at least 225 | pounds. “They raced in a dual ; slalom event which fea- “tured two downhill runs. from fans, “The Sabres. have lost. four consecutive games, something they had not .done since 1974, and the Red Wings now have had any hopes of home-cce advantage in the Stank y Cup Playotts dashe thanks to a three-game losing ‘streak. The Sabres, who blew their hopes ofnwinning the Adams Division title,’ period a 42 decision - dro ; Sey night to Atlanta Flames, one of the NHL’s hottest clubs in recent weekf, The Red Wings were beaten 5-2.by New York Islanders; Boston Bruins, led by Wayne Cashman’s four oals, hammered ork Rangers 83; Dittsburgh enguins defeated Toronto Maple Leafs 6-3; Cleveland Boronf stunned Chicago Black Hawks 42 and Washington: Capitals and Montreal Canadiens battled to a 4-4 tie, the first. time the Capitals have taken a point away Montreal -. in 24 gam is BEAT ‘BOSTON Saturday canadien. ‘led ra Pierre Bouchard’s two-goal, one-assist effort, smashed Boston 7-1; the Flames — blanked . Rangers 6-0; Toronto eg . Buffalo °3-2; Chicago blanked Detroit 20; the Islanders de-. feated Washington 32; St. Louis Blues outscored Cleveland - Philadelphia Flyers beat . Los Angeles Kings 4-2 and Colorado Rockies downed Minnesota North Stars 4- * he: ‘victory “by. the. Rockies ° before 16,399 the largest Sm club is having: without crowdnto watch an SH : fineado sole possession orado sole ion of second place, in the ythe Di schedule: The Rockies have 56 points, two ahead. of. Vancouver Canucks, and both clubs have three games to play. . The Flames, 9-1-1 in Cree thelr bast hockey t: e of the season. at the me ment, som which delights coacl Fred Creighton. “Tmis is the best we've played for an extended noted. “If we can keep this momentum — this week, we'll get well off in the playoffs.” Bkffalo coach Marcel Pronovost said that his technical and and paychological ‘ LOOK FOR PUCK “Nobody likes to skate you. don’t have it, you start looking for it and eben play the man. en you're having'a ‘time, some people get jown on themselves. I certainly. hope’ we can come up with something in = three games remaining, an Sabres, . whose © The longest losing streak last year was three games in January, have not lost four in a row. since January, 1974. They have failed for ths. third .con- secutive year to unseat Boston as Adams Divi- sion winners and now must. get set for the preliminary playoff The Red et were flying last week, th a igh in h over the Sabres last Tuesday, the hi t of a streak that carrled them’ into second place in the. Norris Division... on-heading . into the final week of the: this season,” he.. and very low in salt. ‘Prior noted that they jufter litte stress, as are not personally ambitious but live in a zohesive community in which hardship. and: shar age. The Maoris, of. New Zealand are another group, not Tokelaus in and weight, ihe, have — _ Europ ean. “ite. Pol othe bat ; atvied since the beginning of the last century. “HIGH RATIO “They “have: a.notabl higher mortality ratio from hypertensive heart’ disease neuen ene a ropean New anders, particularly in females where it is ar to 10 times higher in the 33-44 age roup,” Prior says. ere is also a three to four times higher death ratio from coronary heart disease in Maori, . more. Eu-. “that social a compere’ to European, Maoris. are. moving ‘to cities, with all -the changes in life-style this They smoke and drink. -more, om more meat and dairy pro prod more salty anodes. They tend toward ol besity te wil Ste bors for bs, money and possessio ons. ‘fokelaus also. are migrating from their ram. a hurricane in the -area in 1964. This migration gave Prior andhiscolleaguesa ill chance __ to Tokelaus’ blood pressure before and after moving. upheaval nflict, such 8 aa ation, cultural co that caused by can have an: _ Hood pressure: Cross: -napping comes out those in: . iniewel by Deschenes and ‘an assistant were Jacques Cossette-Turdel and his wife, Louise Lanctels who - ticiapt in. the kid- napp! in 1970 of James Cross. Cross was released by the FLQ kidnappers after 60 days in return for their safe passage to Cuba. Other participants in the Cross ki Jean-Mare Carbonneau, Jacques Lanctot and Pierre Seguin — were last reported to be in France, where the considered pol tical e@ puck, When refug ent The justice de the in- spokesman sail terviews were part of e’s . work in “reconstituting the file’ of the October crisis.” . wrote Premier Rene Levesque last fall askin the Quebec governmen to dro es against them for -"‘*humanitarian snapping - FRASO! ns, But .. Justice - Minister Marc-Andre Bedard said ‘there would be no special treatment for the couple. any ac hut a return to but would have to face criminal charges still pending against them. _embassy, examine’ m gests to Priog ect on. ussian le we rammed Reale bgpele us,’ an embassy em- ployee said. “This is true even if the situation between our two coun- tries is rather sharp.” But the Chinese still stay inside many Limit outside trips to receptions given by other foreigners. One staff member makes regularnrounds of Moscow atores shopping for other employees. AVOID THEATRES The staff generally avoids concerts. and ballets that attract: other foreigners in Moscow, employees say., They spend more time.at the organizing a lot and. table tennis tournaments. playing basketball, Haging amateur theatre aiching movies sent from Ch The embessy com- pound, built in the 10508, the size of a city block, It includes a palatial of- fice . and building, two apartment houses, mmunal dining hail staffed by seven cooks, a pond anda small farm that supplies cabbage and soybeans. The official Soviet press claims constantly at Peking-is plotting with forsign imperialists to destroy the Soviet Union. . Past protestor lives quietly _ NEWARK, NJ. (AP) k Rudd, the Mar student radical leader of the 19603 who emerged from hiding last fall to face long-standing es, now leads a quiet life while his lawyer tries to get one remaining charge against ed— marijuana possession. Rudd is “working a8 a construction worker or something,” says Rev. University's Splacapal iversity’s 0) chaplain and a ticipant in a 1968 lumbia student strike Ted by Rudd. He ‘says Rudd, 30, has promised to a "at a program marking the anniversary of the strike April 2. am to show a going The Giumbia Strike and a par- . series of people who. were involved, talk Mark, are going to sada, who was. @ fugitive for seven years until he surrend authorities in New York in September, ab! headlines as a leader of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and as a member. of toe SDS 5 6 splinter group, (pound. Now he avoids reporters. ef Nee Aa ything m’t BAY an his name will someday resume to be that of an son," said Rudd's lawyer,” Gerald Lefcourt. Rudd pleaded guilty to a charge of aggravated battery in Chicago -in connection with the 1969 radical “Days of Rage” Millions fraud found costly weekend police raid were ! d «in. court - toda hanged in. court today defraud the government ot millions of dollars in al social-security and cal-eare payments, Police estimated the ‘racket, which centred on the. Greek immigrant community in Sydney, cost fhe government more than $9 million last year: They. said they store order after police shot and killed four persons in anti-police rioting, reports from the , rioting, rep aeat least 2 other. per: sons were wounded in the violence, touched off by protests against the alleged rape of a woman and the fatal beating of her husband by police last Thursday, the Indian news agency Samachar , Similar riotin ia inst week is report to have killed one person. P.N. Rado, transport chief of Hyderabad, a city of 1.6 on people 1,300 kilometres south of here, Veitch won't step down — Elwood wveiteh so— urnaby- on said aby Willingdon no in tention of res an nie position ap ch e British Columbia legislature’s committee on Crown corporations. Veitch made. the. ‘ statement in reaction to a - -gall Friday by Norm Levi (NDP-_Vancouver- F Burrard) for Veitch to step down because he hiredntwo of his former campaign workers as $30- an-hour consultants for the committee, Levi sald Monday he tabled a motion in the. egi asking the recommend’ “house committee that Velteh not be re-appointed a lature on Brida og : the Gepree sunday for his ex- chairman. The motion won't.be called. until today at the earliest, ‘Levi Tme controversy ‘in volves Norman Kelsey, a former Lower Mainland director. of the Social Credit party, and Lerne Fingarson, a former campaign worker for the Velich said Monday It’f wrong to exclude persons king. ‘ for goverment just because they happen. to be Soctal.. wor! He noted that Kelsey worked as a consultant for the New Democratic Party’s public works in 1873, The consultants’ work should be completed by the end of the week, Veitch said. HENRY — SUBS. FOR . : FORD NEW YORK (AP) — Former. state secretary ney ‘Hissinger. ac- honorary boas, Gerald Ford, at the annual dinner of the Rabbinical College of America. Ford cancelled “his. appearance and flew . home Friday to hel wife Betty cope ths a cold and the ures ofnmoving into their new home. ‘years it was y existence, A government prosecutor alleged. | that the four Gree 5 recruite persons from “community; the doctors’ and | fraudulent certificates for government benefits. The agents. received an $1,000 from patient, the prosecutor said. The doctors then were reception © ome — Raid by & the government ' fake ‘examinations on which could not estimate the so" ‘the Sf. loss for the sev patients. _ Anti-police riot kills four Indians . - NEW DELHI (AP) — said the rioters burned 10 Army troops were or- buses and damaged 60 dered. into streets of others, and all public the central Indian city of transportation in the city Hyderabad today to re- was shutdown.” -- Authorities ordered a two-day curfew there and . in the. sister city of Secunderabad. The government of the state of Andhra Pradesh requested the troops in an ph arent effort ‘9 calm ou ublic feelings against ihe police. i - Manilla fire, . 21,000 homeless MANILA (AP) Flames tore through the - Philippines capital's ane estreving 29 Square a uare biecks of. stineks and about 2 and leaving . out eat O° persons : ether were no report one, of but - hospital tai sald it treated 16 injuries. Many. residents saved only what they Feremen. were pered by a shortage of water and by narrow . srosta and alleys clogged : iled- the with « thousan onlookers and the essions homelea eas. Some fire victims went to refugee centres in schools offichals‘naid, while about t 5,000 000 ‘others packed a vacant lot on the Pige of the burned area. ham: certified the J ‘ir tees 1