The Michigan Daily-Saturday, June 16, 1979-Page 11 Family follows Wayne's request for simple funeral FromAP and UPI NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) - John Wayne, who lost his battle with cancer at the age of 72, was buried in an unmarked grave on a hill overlooking the Pacific Ocean at a sunrise ceremony yesterday attended only by members of his family, a family spokesman said. The simple funeral, kept secret until after it was finished, was held at 6 a.m. at Our Lady Queen of the Angels Roman Catholic Church in the nearby beach resort of Corona del Mar. "And from there Mr. Wayne's body was taken to Pacific View Mortuary for interment," said Tom Kane, an executive with Wayne's film company, Batjac Productions. "Just the family was in attendance." MUSIC FROM many of Wayne's movies was played on the organ throughout the services, including the theme from "The High and the Mighty." In a rare appearance, Wayne's estranged wife, Pilar, attended the funeral with all seven of Wayne's children: sons movie producer Michael Wayne, actor Patrick Wayne and 16- year-old Ethan and daughters Toni, Melinda, Aissa and Marissa and gran- dchildren. Father Marcos G. McGrath, the ar- chbishop of Panama, who visited Wayne about a month before the actor died, conducted the service. WAYNE CONVERTED to the Catho- lic faith on Sunday, one day before he lapsed into a coma and died of cancer at the age of 72. The gravesite was a simple plot overlooking Newport Bay in Orange County.about 40 miles southeast of Los Angeles. The bronze casket was covered with flowers. The family asked that no marker be placed on the grave so that sightseers would not flock to the cemetery. PLANS FOR the funeral, in accor- dance with Wayne's wishes, were kept simple and secret. After the actor's death Monday, family members considered several suggestions including proposals that he be buried on a ranch in Arizona or that he be cremated and his ashes buried on Catalina Island off the Southern California coast. Wayne's seven children apparently made the final decision in a family meeting Thursday, mindful of his Catholic conversion, his love of the Southern California coast and his desire for a "low key and dignified" service. "DAD HATED funerals and attended only those of close friends," his son Michael said. "He delivered quite a few eulogies for friends out of consideration for their families, but he never liked to do it. "He would rather have had a few drinks with relatives and friends and talk about the person and the good times they enjoyed." Cemetery officials refused to show a reporter where the grave was, but it was believed that the actor was buried next to the 21-year-old son of one of Wayne's friends. The young man also died of cancer. Wayne Gov't offers relief to striking truckers Survey shows consumers complain most about cars From theAssociated Press Working truckers were targets of more arson and gunfire yesterday as independent drivers continued a shut- down while federal officials unveiled a measure aimed at helping the owner- operators pay rising fuel costs. Tractor-trailer rigs were parked in more than 30 states in a shutdown protesting fuel costs, the 55 mph speed limit and state weight limits on their loads. Blockades thwarted food and fuel deliveries and threatend to jack up con- sumer prices. There was no early indication of how truckers would react to the Interstate Commerce Commission's announ- cement yesterday. that the nation's 100,000 owner-operators would be allowed to collect a 5.6 per cent rate surcharge to help defray fuel costs. ICC CHAIRMAN Daniel O'Neal said he felt the surcharge would send drivers back to work, but the head of an independent trucker group called the plan "garbage." Mike Parkhurst,., president of the 30,000-member Independent Truckers Association, also termed the measure "crumbs off the table." He said he would urgeindependents to expand the strike. Later Friday, Parkhurst said in a telephone poll of striking truckers holding meeting in Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Texas, Iowa and elsewhere found that "100 per cent" said the new surcharge was not enough. HOWEVER, ARNOLD WILDER, president of an Alabama independent trucker group, said in a prepared statementgthat the ICC decision was "the relief we've been seking." He said he would ask truckers to end their stoppage. Protest leaders also met in Connec- ticut and Colorado to discuss the ICC announcement. Meanwhile, aides to Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) said he and President Carter agreed to propose a trucking deregulation bill next week that would ease entry of new truckers into the business and encourage rate competition. SPORADIC ACTS of guerrilla violen- ce continued to mar the work stoppage yesterday. In Missouri, snipers fired on two truckers and a truck was burned. In Alabama, two trucks were hit with gun- fire. No serious injuries were reported. Strike-related violence was reported yesterday in Tennessee, Kentucky, Iowa, Montana and Utah. Blockade and other actions were reported in the New England states, Oklahoma, Illinois, Alabama, Pen- nsylvania, Indiana, Georgia, Arkansas, South Dakota, Colorado, Tennessee, Washington, and Florida. The drivers' blockades of fuel depots, truck stops, farmer co-ops and grain terminals resulted in ft od and fuel shortages in some parts of the nation. The strike could mean price increases for some consumer items, including beef. LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan Consumers Council said yesterday automobiles provoke the greatest number of complaints it receives over its telephone hotline. New cars, the agency said, rank No. 1 on its list of 10 top consumer gripes. The other top categories of com- plaints about products or services, in order, are car repairs, general household merchandise, other motor vehicles, landlord-tenant problems, used cars, home repair and other builder-contractor complaints, mail order sales, retail sales and warran- ties. THOSE RESULTS were tabulated after three months of operation of a phone-in service the consumers council operates to help consumers solve problems with goods and ser- vices they purchase. Linda Joy, executive director of the council which serves as an ad- visory agency to the legislature, said the results showed Michigan con- sumers are very similar to those across the U.S. "Leading the list of consumer complaints we've received are new cars and car repairs," she said. "National surveys of consumer problems show this to be a common problem all over the country." CINEMA II PRESENTS HARD TIMES (Walter Hill, 1975) No one directs and orchestr tes physical action like Walter (THE WARRIORS) Hill. In New Orleans, during the depression, Charles Bronson is an anything- goes street-fighter taking on opponents for money. These fight scenes are more like an American ballet than a boxing match. HARD TIMES is by for the best of Bronson's films, for in it he embodies the physical intensity and heroic code that has merely been implied in his other roles. James Coburn plays his fast- talkin a ent with style. Also starring Strother Martin. "Sheer delight"-Pauline Kal. (120 min.). 7:30&9140 Aud A An eII Hall Tomorrow: Jean Vigo Night, L'ATALANTE & ZERO FOR CONDUCT CINEMA 11II presents JEAN VIGO NIGHT When Jean Viqo died at aae 29 of leukemia, he had finished only two feature films, ZERO FOR CONDUCT and t'ATALANTE. In both films, he established himself as one at the world-s most sensitive and poetic filmmakes. indeed, without him, as Truffaut has said, neither the French New Wave nor French film in general would have progressed and developed as manifested historically. His politics and approach to film were of an anarchic and revolutionary nature. Cinema It is pleased to present this double-feature. LATALANTJE (ean Vtgo, 1934) Ostensibly, LATALANTE appears to be a very conventional and realistic film However, just beneath the surface, it is a dream-like film, highly roman- ticized and absorbed in the beauty of love and nature. Physical love is exoressed through the use of sensuous imagery aboard the barge L'Atalante. "Jean Vigo's pictures never hurried and they never dragged. Theymanaged to convey the same kind of excitement as a fine novel, a superb play, or a lovely poem." -New York Herald Tribune. (89 min.) 7:30 ONLY ZERO FOR CONDUCT (Jean Vigo, 1933) ZERO DE CONDUITE tells the story of the oppressive life in a French boarding school and of a revolt by the students. This film is a monumental piece of art which created critical furor and physical altercations, as well as inspiring such films as THE 400 BLOWS and IF . . . On the grounds that it was a vicious attack on the French educational system. ZERO was banned in France until 1946. "For aurity of purpose, for unforaettable marks of humanity exalted by children, ZERO FOR CONDUITE is virtually in a class by itself "-Parker Tyler. (44 min.) 9:30 ONLY Aud A, Angell Hall single feature $1.50 double feature $2.50