HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-03 - Orange Coast Pilot"t3arter Vows
alts, Rapes 'No Polities'
' ~ Irvine Woman With. Hostages
VOL. U. NO. -t HCTIOMS, U l'AGaS
...
. ,..,,,.....
KHOMEINI AUTHORIZES HOSTAGES TRANSFERS
AddreH•d Mllttanta Todey In Tehren
NewMaelaiae
NB · Police Copter
Crq,she~ Inti> Sµrf
By STEVE MARBLE
Of•OMirl'tllleS..tf Two Newport Be•ch police
officers walked away unharmed
from the wreckage or tbeir
patrol helicopter which they
were forced to crash-land in the
surfllne Sunday afternoon in
West NeWPOrt.
"EAST MEADOW, N.Y . (AP)
-A teen-qed woman wbo set
benelf .an two weeks ato and
ran .enm ~ fiel4 durinl a
i .tcbool IDCCel' match bu died at ·Jf ... a ComtJ Medical Center,
;llolDltal oftldaJI 11td. .
~: f •llY Hayta , lt , of ~llfewcoaset, parked he r car
belliDd tbe Great Hollow J unkJr
. Hilb Sellool on ,Oct. n , set ·,.erHlf ablua aad tho raa
• .eron tbe atbletlc field, offtclals
~iu Hayn, a student at Suf. • ., folk County eomiaun1ty Collete.
(:wu burned o.er 15 percent of
r bod1 IDd was liven oalJ a 25 ,, ,.,Hiit dmlct ot 1vvtftl when
....... • ........... ltolpttaJ of.
, : ft~lall uid ... died Sunday.
Sgt. Richard Miller , who was
pilotlng the brand new Hughes
helicopter, and bis passenger,
Officer Todd Selders, crawled
from the banged-up cr aft and
waded to shore following the
3:0 p.m. mishap n ear Fem
Street .
Swimmers and lifeguards in
ttie area dra11ed the helicopter
out of the water and back up to
the sand.
~ number of sunbathers along
the crowded s trand reporte
1eein1 the patrol bl.rd fiyin1 low
alon1 the coutllne and then
suddenly spinning out of control.
Police reports indicate Miller
arid b1I partner were on routine
patrol at an altitude of routblY
150 feet and bad Just completed
a llO deuee turn when the
aircraft belan to vibrate. ·~ •
At oo· polnt, police 1aid, the
helicopt er started splnnint
c lockwise, rapidly lo1ln1
altitude and dlvtn1 towanl a
aroup ol IUl"fera-and 1wlmmen.
Sst. Miller, police continued,
was able to nune tbe divinl
helicopter away-from the crowd
before aplMhlnc into the OCMD~
lniUal reports lDdicated that
the ..,,000 Mlk!opter ma1 bave
developed proble1n1 with lta tail
rotor. A 1tabllllin1 rotor on the
·\ cleie corrsa. ra1• AJ>
Militants
Release
~ustod}"
~ BJ TIM A.uodated p,_.
Iranian militants met with
s piritual leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini today and
t h e n turn e d o v e r
"'responsibiUty" for their ~2
Ame r ican captives t o t he
I r a nian gover n ment . U.S .
officials. ~ho are considering
l rani an-terms-for"'thetr f reedorti ,
said 01e deyelopment W@S a
majo r breakthrq_qgh toward
their eventual releD'e.
''We will from now on
delegate responsiblity ror the
hostages' safeguarding to the
government and will engage in
t he most Import ant c urrent
issue of the revolution. defense
of t he Islamic homeland,"
Te h ran R adio q u oted a
statement from the !Jlilitants as
saying.
The militants were referring
to Iran's border war with Iraq .
Plahs for the physical transfer
or the hostages will be worked
out follo~g a ··meeting before
midnight " <m id -da y PST )
between the government and the
militants. officials of the Iranian
prime 11'\inlster's office reported.
The militants' statement said
t he government during that
meeting wouJd "introduce their
representative for delivery or
the American spies.·'
T he aides to the prime
m inis ter .said A)ge.r i a was
delegated to handle talks with
Washington and the captive$"
release if the U.S. government
qleets Iran's dema nds. 0 They
said that in the meantime Iran will continue to have custody of
the hostages. who will "remain
where they are," presumably
me aning the U.S. Embaasy in
Tehran.
. In Wuhington, White House
pr~H secretary Jody Powell
ONE YEAR
Irvine W oman
Beaten, R aped
By Int r uder
A 19·year·old Irvine woman
was beaten and raped e arly
today inside her Universit y Park
home. according to poli ce.
She told police a man in his
early 20s burst into her bedroom
at 3 a.m. and assaulted her. She
said she severely bit ttle man's
hand.
Police Lt. Bob Lennert said
t h e wom an told• hi m t he
assailant entered t he house
through an unlocked dW.r. The
suspect was a lone w1 th the
victim for about two hours.
"We combed the neighborhood
with police Cjlrs but didn '1 turn ·
up anything." Lennert said. "We
d o n 't h ave a n y furt he r
description or the suspect. The
house was dark.·· .
He said the woman suffered no
major physical injuries ..
There were no other witnesses
to the assault. 1'
. said the transfer "is something OPEC Meet we have seen since the very
outset as being an important
st ep toward their eventual p d
release. That's something we ostpone .
ha¥ labored lonl and hard to
get this spring and tbou1ht we had it there for a few hours and . BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -Iraq
did not. So lf UUa happens, it's a announced today the lndeftnlte
very encouralina sip." postponement of an OPEC sum·
RepreaentaUvtl of the Ishnnlc mil conference scheduled here
ml lltant1 who ulaed the Tuesday on the oll cartel'• JOt.b
American Embuay and its 1taff anntven•ry and said several
NQv . 4, 318 days a10, met for two cartel memben requested tbe
hours today wUh Khomeini move because of the Iran-Iraq
followlftl the approval ~a)"'· war.
* * * Car ter Vow *
II
*· *
'No Politics '
.
With Hostages
WASIUNGTON (AP > -President Carter, vowing his hostage
decisions will not be a ffected by politics. left the White ~ouse
today for a final campaign swing while Ronald Reagan flew to the
West Coast to' end bis campaign, confronted by the issue bts
advisers reared the most.
White House aides said developments in I_ran would determine
whether the eresident wouJd keep to an election-eve schedule that
included stop!" in Akron, Ohio; Granite City, Ill.; Springfield, Mo:;
Burbank. Calif.; Portland. Ore~ and Seattle, Wash. Carter then IS
to flv home to Plains, Ga .. where he wilJ vote Tuesday.
Reagan's final day or the 1980 campaign included an outdoor
rally in Peoria, 111., and then stops in Portland, Ore., and San
~Diego before returning to his Los Angeles area home.
IN AN INTERVIEW BROADCAST toda)'. ~n . NBC, the
Republican presidential candidate said he was opt1m1st1c about his
election prospects. .. . "I believe that we've done everything we can do. he satd.
If he loses. Reagan said. "This would not destror me_ as a
person I would be deeply disappointed because I believe in the
need r~r a change in the direction thi~ coll!l~ry·s been goin_g in." .
Reagan, seeking votes Sund8:Y m cn t1cal Midwest mdustn~l
states, shied away from commenting on the latest devel~pments tn
Tehran and kept up his criticism of Carter's handhng of the
economy.
CAMPAIGNING IN DAYTON, ORIO, HE co~ntrRt~afor economic Issues saying, "Carter economics have e.n .. :i _ ,y.
tragedy for many American familie~ : . . Eve~y time interest
rates go up one point. another 1.3 million Amencans have been
shut out of the housing market." But at Marietta College in. Ohio. Reagan acknowl~dge~ th~t
"We all have on our minds the matter of the hostage situation m
Iran." , ., l:F> . i Then the Republican candidate added that "this ·~ not the t me
or the place for me to be addressing such a sensitive matter.··
The Uth·bour shift of the campaign f&cus b.~ck to the hostages
was on Reagan's mind in recent months'wblm ~ spect.ll2'ted there
(Sff CANDIDATES: Pa1e AZ >·
Seamen Strike
' British Ships
Coas t
Weath er
Continued sunny. Lows
tonight 54 aJong the coast,
62 inland. Highs Tuesday
74 to 78 at beaches. 82 to 86
inland.
I NSIDE TODA"
COfttrowr~ contmue• over
tM •l/«ff of the Three Mil• llland ftMCWor occjdtnt. See
1torie1,,,,. A1.
bl Ute Ma.Iii•, Iran's parliament, Iraq and I.ran exported a com·
o tenm tor ."9 ...... of the btned tDtal ol about I .I mllUon l •tlex
Americans. Tf91l!'an Radio Hid bUffll of OU per da, before au ---..att .......... u
one militant read a 1tatem~t to 111....-.. ..,. llalt8d bf the . ~-Ir R d d' L.M....,.. "' M1"911 ........ Kbom e lni a1kin1 tl he warover~oltbedlapua.d ~e ecor e * ....... aw •U
t to rel.eve the. Shatt al-Arab waterwar and ~ .., .. ,. ~ ..... ~ 1overamen BERKELEY <AP> -A mild --mllltant1 of respon1lblllty for other terrltorJ. . euth=ueM rated at l .t on the :::;.. 2: := ...,. .. .:: the boatq• and allow them to TIM ,.apoaelMM wlll dela, ....... . ....... .... ..._ au "-•...,... u
join the war a1aialt Iraq. 1UU fwUllr tbt oll urte1•1 ef. llleMlr tcale llMoll puU of -,..,... "' ,....,..... ..
Tehran Radio Hid Khomeini forh ta Naell .. '"meat oa tut Su l'ranelaco Ba1 ana =-• =: := 9::
thanked t.be atudenta and added: lonl......, fridnl and produc-Buday. No IQJUl'tel or damqe,_ --\..~-~~~11~,,.~~·~--;;:: .. : ..... ;::::;:.w;..-
(leell08TAGD. Pa1•AZ>-_....,.-._ -, -~· --•~ ~
I
~ast · of Movie
............. JOHNWAYN~
' ""·-SUSAN HAYWARD
Two Scouts
_Hit by Cars
·In Irvine
Two Exflorer Scouts were
injured lu weekend when they ·were hit by can while dlrect1A1
traffic in the parking Jot of the
Orange County International
Speedway in Irvine.
James Slikker, 17, of Costa
Mesa was treated for dislQCated
ribs Saturday after a car backed
into him and knocked him down,
said California Highway Patrol
.Of4cer Wall Lamb.
, Dean Norsworthy . 18, of
Orange was taken to Saddleb:tck
Co munily Hos pital with a
cracked verte bra a.fter he· was
struck by a pickup truck, Lamb
said.
The driver of the truck
r e p ortedly f led after the
incident.
The young men belong to
E x p l.o r e r P o s t 4 4 9 l h a t
emphasizes law enforcement
duty and is sponsored by the
Orange County Sheriff's
'Department. Both injured youtfg
·men were on duty and weartng
un!lrom.s when they were hit.
Riots in Spain
SAN SEBASTIAN. Spain <AP>
-Some 10,000 demonstrators
took to the streets of this Basque
capital to demand an end to
terrorl•m by Baaq,ue
separatists, but they were
attacked by about 350 Baque
miliJants s upportlsr1 the guerrilla war of terror, police
said. 10 •
<>f'ANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
'-·· _...... ....... , .... -...
ClloneoM.i.-Ault~~ ... ldltor
Offtcff
c .... -.. "'-··' .. ..... "-lee<~· 101/ No C:Ntl H1 ..... er .................. ~ ,,., ..... ~ -... .
T~el7t4)~
a .. ,.., Aft•rtMMI ..a.1111
"'-'-"' .. _ 4#tlOO
NEW YORK (A P >.-AUeuttl
of the m cut and ·crew me111·
bert ol a 1111 movie ftlmed 137
aala.. from tbe Yucea nat, Nev.
atom1c *tifta ranJ• llave eon·
tracted caaeer and 41 ba¥• died ,,... it....,. hOple •acu:ine. 'he ...... lnelude the ..,. ol ''TIM~.·• John Wayne
and Suaan Hayward. its pro-
ducer-4irector, Dick Powell, and
character actreas Aanea
Moorbead. • Another player in the film,
Pedro Armendaria, survived
cancer ol the kidneys four yean
alter the ftlmlna, tbe maaulne'
aaya, but tilled hlmaell in 19SS
when be learned be bad termlnal
cancer of ll]e lympb system.
NEWPORT BEACH POLICE CMWMEN INIPICT DAMAGE AFTI!R THEIR HBJCOPTP CRASHED IN IURFUNE·
Preltmlnafy l~attptlon lndlcatff ........ Rotor..., tt.ve F•led, :&p1n .... M1cNM lntothe ...
Wayne's son Michael, 45, who
visited hla father. in Utah on the
set of tbe film about Genehia
Kahn, was treated for akin
cancer ln 197~. His 41·year-old
brother, Patrick, and Mias
Hayward's son, 35-year-old "nm
Barker, who also were visit.on
to the desert set, have bad
benlp tumor:!\ removed.
People said sevenl memben
of the movie's 'CUt·and crew or
relatives are considering
lawsuits against the govern· .
ment.
Actress Jeanne Gerson, 76,
who has survived skin and
breast cancer and is still un·
dergoing chemotherapy, re·
portedly has hired a lawyer to
brina a class actien, hoping
othen involved in makinJ the
movle -a box-<)fftce bomb -
will join ber.
No atomic teata were made at
Yucca Flat durtq tbe ftlminc in
St. Georse, Utab, ID the aummer
of 195(, accordin& to People. But
11 bomb9 bad been exploded ln
the atmotpbere tbe year before. People quot.ea Dr. Robert
Pendleton, a former Atomic
Enero CommisaioD researcher
and now director of radiological
health at the Univenlty of Utah,
•• sayin• that radioactive fallout was "very abundant" in
the area in 1954. Snow Canyon,
where much of "The Con-
querer" was filmed, is a natural
reservoir for· windblown mat·
terial, be said. · ·
•'With these numbers, this
c a se could qualify as an
epidemic," he said. "The con·
neclion between fallout radia·
tio'n and c~cer in individual
cues baa been practically im·
poqHale to prove COQeJUaively,
but an• 11N uu. .... JOU'd •· peel only 30-aome cancen to de· velop. With 91, I think the tie·in
to their exposure on the set of
'The Conquerer' would bold up
even 1-a court of law.
Mld1ael Wayne is quoted say·
ing that "suing the government
isn't .l eoiq. to briq my father
bac,." But People quotes
Barbr a nytng tlrat tr ~noucn
peopte get angcy about pollutiop
"maybe they c~ mtnimiu the '
harm for the future."
I Reports last y'ar from three London newspapers that atomic
fallout o., the test~ile may have been· linked to he deaths of
Wayne, Powel and Mi'u
•Hayward were \reeled with
skepticism.
I
A apolreaman for Wayne's
family said then be had heard
the reports and consiidered them
"absolutely not true.'' .
f',...PllpAJ
HOSTAG~S DUE HOME? •..
1 "The service which these yowig interfere in Iran's affairs,
peof le rendered by 11ei1.ing and released all Iranian uaeta froze
ho ding t be a e corr u.p t in the United States. cancelled
individuals eliminated the fears all American legal actions
Mesa Council
Mulls Police
Pay Package
in the minds of the peoples, aea1nat Iran and returned to
nations arlf governments and Iran all uaeta of the late Shah A police pay and frin1e·
the pieture they bad of the Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and benefits package averaging 10.4
spectre of the great powers'." hi• cloee relatives. percent a year over the next two
Meanwhlle,_,Prime Minister These were the same years is expected to be ratified
Mohammad All Rajai met with conditions made ln September toni1bt by the Costa Mesa
Al1eria 's ambauador in by Khomeini. But the Majlu CityCouncU.
Tehran, and the two •treed said If all the conditions were A so-called memorandum of
Algeria would take care of the not met at the aame lime, theft understandin1 between the host~•es, Pars said. It was not the bOlta&es should be released Cosi....._Mesa Police Officers As·
immediately known lf th•• in sroups. As each condition wu sociatlon and the city was
m4J!ant tbe captives would be fulfilled. "a number of criminals ratified last week. an asaoeiaUon nown to A11ie1a 01 "temain in will be released with the apoteswomansaid.
lrantmderAl1erlansupervtalon. approval of the Islamic Concestnons to the officers
''In this .meeting it was government." And if the U.S. would include a 5 percent salary
decided that the Moslem and government failed to meet all or increae becinnin1 Nov. 2 with
brother country ol AJ1eria WW some ol the cooditlona, lran'a two additional 6.25 percent times ualre care ol the U.S. losta1es," judictaJ 1y1t.em "will carry out m 1911. P~.n said of the IO·Qllnute its duty and punhb the B4teilminl Dec. 14, the city
se11lon between Raj al and criminals." would ptcll:: up tbe remalnln1 re.
Abdul Karim Gbaraib. The U.S. 1overnment will tirement contribuUona made by
''In reply, the Algerian ha-.e no trouble meeUn1 the officers at the rate of 9 percent
ambuaador said we wish that demand for a pled1e .of of each'• pay annually. The
AJ1eria will be able to do all it non-Interference in Iranian move creates a fully pald retire·
can to fulfill the desires of the affaln, a ~e that Carter bas ment plan ·for offic:en, an ar·
government of Iran and to ' made l'epl'eatedly. But yean of rangement recentry approved
safeguard Iran's interests and judicial actions in the U.S. for other ctty employees.
expand bilateral relations as courts would probably be Al.lo belinninl Dee. 14, police
much as poulble." required to meet the other could receive time-and·•·balf
Th e a m b a s s a d ors of conditions. pay fOI' overtime with the excep-
Switzerland anad West Germany ' lion of "voluntary" commit· also met with Rajai this While Carter by e xecutive ments.
morning, Pars said. During the ' actton can unfreeze the billions Revisions in disability com·
meeting, the Swiss ambassador of dollan in Iranian assets be pensation also are included in
Submitted a message from frot.e after the hostages were b · I d ' th th ld till be t e agreement. inc u 1ng e Presi~t Carter to Rajai, but taken, part of is wou s provision that officers on long-
t he r ~e re no immediate fro&en by lawsuits filed ••ainst term, job-related disability may
detai1S1·t'he aaency said. 'it by American ftrma cJalcnlng now retire medically.
· A aenior aide to Raja! aaid the 4 8 m age 5 f 0 r P r 0 Pert Y The city alto would absorb all offl lal -. .• u.b lan • ...,. of ~a&ed or contracts broken c -....... · &U~1e ,,_.,. ._~ the N.YO. lutionary reiimethint rate ~rea.M!9 in medical i• the condJUons whlc• the Majlia ~ surance coveraae. agreed oa for the release ol the · D coaneetion with the Dave Broob, president of the
Americans would be given late d,.e m a n d , t b e s t ate association, said the agreement
today or eary Tuesday to the o~--a tme t's 1 ,. 1 off' e is si "Aifies mutual res pect Algerian Embassy for deUvery .... r n e.a •c · • to the U.S. govemment. P eparing legislation to clear the between the officers and the ~Y for consolic!atina the 268 city. Algeria· handles Iranian suits filed in America and "Lengthy disagreements over · int~rests in the United States anoU.er 100 or 80 filed abl'Qad salary and betlefit negotiations wh~le Switzerl~d represents the and to authorize the government tend to undermine tbe con· U1ut~~ Tehran. -.-i owouo.,;1 semearentrwttb tM ftftlfc.'H-Of tiOUf"emptoye~ anct-
R a J a i . ~ aide s al d h 1 s ••• ftllnian tovemment. But that, employee," he said. g?vemme~ h-;&no plans to deal too, will be a lone process. And Officers said the Police As·
directly with-the United States the only leaal way tbat Iran can social.ion was formed primarily
0 r l o i n c I u d e U · N . recover the American aaseta of as a phihmthrople orranhatiolr-
Secret a r Y ·Gener al Kurt the abah and his family is to sue which off en scholanh~pe and
Waldbetm in the ne1otiations, for them tn the American courts, supports and spomors athletic
which presumably will be another Jone process with an teams and~ or1anJuUodl.
channeled th'touah the Swill and uncertain outcome. Tbe Mesa un.lt wu formed in
Algerian aovemments. He said In • brief televised spetth 1968, the same year tbe state
Iran would be represented ln the Sunday night, carter assured Myen·Millus-Brown Act uant·,
negotiations by a committee the American people )hat any ed city and at.Me employees the.
made up of the prime minilter,-action by their 1ovemment "will · right to Confer regantln1 work· se~ior officials of· the Forelp be in full accordance with our tng coodiibJns and wages.
M1nl1trr and Bebzad Nabavj, lawa and with our Constitution."
the maniat~r o f state for He l aid the "1n!ted States, its Fi-on Freewiy executive aff&Jrs. ,. people and the leaders of both ... ...,
T h ~ M a j 1 i s t u r n e d political 'parties are. "united in LOS ANGELES <AP> -Three
responaabillty for the crisis over desirin1 the early and safe separate fires erupted in
to the government after returo ol the ho9ta1e1 to their downtown Loi Ao1etes over tbe
adopting the recommendations holnea, but only on a basis that · weekend, caualn1 $2'75,000 in
of a 1pecial par-liamentary preserves our aatlonal honor dama1ea and 1njurlng one
f'rw.P ... AI
COPTER •••
rear of tbe bird, police said, wu
somehow jarred'loose.
The crumpled helicopter later
was hauled to Tallmanti Aviation at John Wayne Airport
whehl it will be studied by poll~
investiaaton to determine the
exact cause of the mishap.
Federa-1 Aviation Admlniatr~aon officers aal4 they do not vesUgate aceidmta
involving pu lie aircraft unleat _ . N
invited to do . . (
Two year ago, a pair of ~w offic n escaped inJUl'J
w their atrol helicoptet
down on a remote dart
road on tbe Ruch. ~;
Mira
Do in
le
OK
LYN\¥ (AP) -An
8·pound b• y girl who
earned .the me Miracle
·~~~.in.~! JP lll]eD IDl--ol ber ...,,. ,. .. ln •table
condition tOday at St.
Prudi limpMal.
Mlnde~eJeu
Lewis ••• born by Caesarean~ to Sl·
year-old Maetielle Hood on
Friday nilbt.
Docton were unaware
the fully de"leloped baby
was posl~ outside tbe
uterus WlliJ ~very when
it wu ~verect that Ute
fetus bad ~*1.e.attacbed
to Hood's •J?aJtinteatine.
Such births occur about
once in eved 15,000 to
20,000 births, dOeton said.
"I would suspect that Wayne's
death wu caused by smoking
before it wu cauaed by anything
elae," Utah HHlt~ Director
James Muon said ai the time.
"I don't see bow any~ne can tie
the type Of cancer he bad to
radiation.induced ca"ncer. It
would have to be awfully bot dirt
(radiation)."
comtbittee named to draw up andournationalintegrity." flren..w-. •
terms for the release of the -----------------.,.......,--::;.~;;~;::------------T----captive Americans.
,
Fre• P.,,e AJ.
The MaJUa s,.aid the bostaies
should be h ed if the U.S.
gove rnment pledge d not lo
CANDl~ATES C~AIGN
might be an "October aurpri.N" that could tilt the election to
Carter. The Repub~an nominee expected Carter to try to achieve
a dramatic breakth ugh ln the situation.
But the moveme t that occurred wu Initiated by the Iranian.a,
not the White Hou.ae. \
CARTE& AB&UPrLY HALTED A CAMPAIGN trip add
returned to Waahlnston~Sunday momln• to confer wtU. advile~
on bow td respond to th cODdltlona Ht by the Iranian flarUamtpt
for releue of 52 Amerlc Jwld boltal• alnce Nov. 4, 1911.
'l1le :::n 1980 ele campalp eDdi OD ~ wbell more than IO ~ Amerlc 1 are expected to decide t.be outcome of
thous..-of !.testa for l1lel ran.ma from t.be White Houte to
loeal oftlcet.
Voters · Ill elect 4 a~natora, the edtlre House of
Repreeept.ativea and 13 10 . If the poU.ten are ri and lf tbe lrulan hoata1• altuatioo
doesn't ca11H ~ lut·mlnute 1t1r1e to OM cand&clate or tbe otMr, the
preaict.ndu nee loob too c; to call. 8 bUcua. an mAIU about tlMlr etaanc. to pick llP flve
or tlx 1::te aeats ~t leat 12 HcMM 1eats. Neltber taln would
be ~ to ead a aeaeraUon ol Democratk: coatt; of botb
le1i1l1Uve bodlea. I
ROWSVEa, TBS POl'tNnAL ISNAft vktlmt mclude
veteraa Democnta Warna 0 . Map.,. o1 WuldaltGe, Oearse
S. McOoYem of Soutb Dalrota, Frank Cbu.rch of ld&bo and Blttb
Bayh of lndJana. and Jacob Javtts ol New Yort, a Mlllor
Republican.
Allo tbre•t.ened by tOUlb oppotiUon thil 1•ar an aucb ~ ffoUH Demottata u Jlm -Wnpt ol Tlul, tbe m~tr Juder:
Jolm ......_ .. ol IDdlanm, tbl wa.taat m~ ...._.: Morrie
\JdaU al ANona, chairman ol ~ Interior Commiltee. aad Al Ullman ol Oreaaa. cbairm• ol tM Wayt aacl MMDI Comattt..
-
·ti' •.
The Garage Brings it Togeth« for Falf
Here we feature our own mid-wale cord pant,
with a pre· finished plain bottom. accenrect
by one of our many easy c,are plaid SPOrtShlrta
and a great sl)awl collared pullover sweater. .
'
ALSGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(71~) 644-7030
_ ..... __ .....
Ora Cea st
VOL. 71, NO. 308, 2 SECTtONj, $2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1980 C TWENTY-FIVE CENTS•
Carter Vows ·No
WASHINUTON tAP> -President Carter. vowine his hostage
declaianl will nol be affected by poUUcs, left the White House
today for a final campaign swing wt1ile Ronald Reagan flew to the
Weit Coast to end his campatgn, cQJlfron\ed by the issue hts
advisers feared Lbe most.
WhUe Houae aides said developments i11 Iran would determine
whether the president would keep to an election·eve schedule that
included stops in Akron, Ohio: Granite City, Ill.: Springfield, Mo.:
Detroit, Mich.; Portland, Qre .. and Seattle, Wash. Carter then is
to (ly h(>me to Plains. Ga .• ~ere he wlll vote Tuesday.
Reagan's final day or the 1980 campaign included an outdoor
rally m Peoria. Ill .• and then stops In Portland, Ore .. and San
Di~go·before retUflling to his Los Angeles area home.
* * * * Hos·tag_es
Review Ordered
CoUrt Reje.cts
,,,
Death Law Ban
WASHINGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supreme ·court today set
as ide a ruling that blocked
California prosecutors from
seeking the death penalty in
$1 Million
'Shopping'
list Made
A Costa Mes a citizens
committee i"es ponsible ror
recommending priorities for
s pending $1 million in
anticipated federal housing and
community development f\mds
has completed its 1981·82 wish
list.
More than half the anticipated
income -$528,000 -would go
for acquisition of more land for
government-subsidized rental
units.
In a simi l ar a c quis ition
program using funds received in
recent years, the city acquired
3.2 acres of land in west Costa
Mesa's Wallace Street area at.a
cost of about Sl.6 million.
Much o f those a cquisition
costs will be returned to the city
n ex t yea r ·as the
townhouse · rent at .unit s
developer pays the city back for
prope rty used in the project,
said Tony Cannariato. city
housing coordinator.
The citizens group, officially
ca lled the Housi n g a nd
Commun ity ·Deve lopme nt
Committee. has recommended
that those returned funds, about
$680,000. also be earmarked for
tuture low·incom e' family
.housing land acquisition.
Tb e seco nd l ar ge s t
expenditure proposal is $75,000
to r emove b a rriers to the
handicapped.
Included is about $40,000 for
an elevator at the Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Club'~ning
facilitv.
The third largest s pending
_propos al would be $75,000
toward acquisition of a public
park for the city's west side, a
project urged by residents of the
area during a pair of public
bearings before the c~m 'ttee. The next lar gest nks of
federal grant mone would go
for senior-cit~en hou~ng-,
Pomona Elementary School
arter·sch ool recreationa l
equipment and housing repair
<See LIST, Pa1e AZ>
Pets Rescued
"especially heinous. atrocious or
cruel" murder cases .
By a 6-3 VQl.e. the justices told
the Califomfa courts to restudy
decisions striking down that
portion ()( the state'-s capita
puni s hm e nt l aw a s
unconstitutionally vague.
The court's brief order said,
•'The ju'dgment is vacated and the
case is remanded to the Court of
Appeal or Califor~ia, First
Appellate District, to consider
whether its judgment is based
upon f e deral or state
conslitutional grounds."
Justices William J . Brennan
Jr .. Potter Steward and John Paul
Stevens dissented ....
Onder California Jew . a capital
case jury first must' decide
whether a defendant is guilty or
first -degree murder. If the
verdict is first·degree murder.
the jury determines whether the
crime included one or more
''specialcircumstances. •·
One of tho se s p ecia l
circ umstances states. "The
murder was especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel manifesting
exceptional depravity . . . a
conscienceless or pitiless crime ,
which is unnecessarily tortuous to
the victim."
State prosecutors attempted
last year to introduce that special
circumstance in the separate
cases of two Santa Clara County
murder defendants. Allen Leroy
Engert and John Wayne Gamble.
Engert was charged in the May
16, 1979 strangulation of Adria
ManninginSanJose.
Gamble was accused of beating
a 2·year-0ld girl. Shanean Hall. to
death in August 1979
Both Engert a nd Gamble
challenged the use or special
circumstance. attacking it as too
vague to meet constitutional
due ·processstandards.
A state trial j udge agreed and
barred the introduction or the
special circumstance. May 1. a
California appea ls court ruled
that in the context or the state's
capital punishme nt Jaw the
special circumstance's "vague
I anguage cannot withstand
constitutionalscrutinF
'the California Sup'teme Court
on June 25 refused to review an
appeal Crom that r uling t)y the
state attorney general's office.
May 19, the nation's highest
court used a Georgia case to rule
the states may not impose the
death sentence on a con,vict.e"d
murderer for a n "outrageously or
w.antonly vile , horrible OT
inhuman" crime unless the
m·urder victim suffered "serious
physical abuse·· before death.
IN AN INTERVIEW BROADCAST today on NBC, the
Republican presidentiPt candidate _said be was optimistic about his
election prospects.
"l believe that we 've done everything we can do," he said.
If he loses, Reagan said, "This would not destroy me as a
person. I would be deeply disappointed becawse I believe In the
need for a change in the direction this country's been going in."
Reagan was joined at a morning rally in Peoria, JU. today by
comedian Bob Hope, former President Ford, vice presidential
running mate George Bush and fo rmer amabassador Anne
Armstrong.
"We have more than a president who has fai led. We have a
president who refuses to admit his policies had anything to do with
* * * * * '-*
Nearer to
o.ily l'lilllt Slaff -
HAWAII-BORN COPS SAY 'ALOHA' TO MESA FORCE
Sgt. Jim Green (left), Rosco• Broad Retht1t9
Two Veteran Cops
Bid Mesa FarelVell
By ARTHUR K. VINSEL
Ol IM Oollly Po'°" Staff The t)oys on t he force said
goodbye t o Th e Whis tler
and The Rock as the two veteran
policemen wound up their
careers in Costa Mesa.
Between them, Pa trol Sgt.
Jim (The Whistler) Green, 51.
and Senior Patrolman Roscoe L.
<The 'Rock) Broad, SS. put in
nearly 60 years of law enforce·
ment in their native Hawaii and
the mainland.
Broad is a onetime pro fool·
ball defensive tJlckle, hence hls
nickname. He was at Pearl
Harbor and island ·ho.Rl>~d
across the Pacific as a ~ U.S.
Army Ranger gue rrilla in·
filtrator. He disposed of enemy
sentries with his bare hands.
friends confide.
Broad won't talk about that, but
t h ose sam e h a nds -as a
policeman-:delivered seven
babies and steer ed many a
youngster off a head-on co)tision
course with trouble. Some of those
now-grown "kids" still address
him as ''Uncle Roscoe.··
finish his obligations there. and
the other in Costa Mesa_
He ran smack into the first
murder in Costa Mesa history, a
grisly shotgun slaying, on his
way to becoming one of the city's
most seasoned tactical situatron
commanders. Men under him
soon became accustomed to his
quiet whistling to ease stressful
situations. Arthur R. McKenzie waspoltce
chief. when Green joined up in
1954.
Today's chief. Roger Neth.
was a rookie himself at the time.
''You feel a Uttle sad seeing .
guys lilte Rock and Jimmy go,"
Neth said. "They are dedicated.
pr ofessional officers, t hough
they each go about lt in a little
dit I erent way ... he told a
gathering Friday of fellow
oHicers and civic leaders at the
M esa Verde Country Club
t ribute and roast.
Green and Broad came to
Costa Mesa from the Santa Ana
Police Department alter begin-<See VETERAN. Pa1e A.2) srr. 'Gteerf recalled Friday I ~---------his first long day (16 hours) on
the job in 1954. He worked a dou·
ble shift -one in Santa Ana, lo Miracle
Doing OK
Mesftns Adopt 2 Dogs LYNWOOD (AP) -An
8·pound baby girl who
earned the name Miracle
after she developed In her
mother's abdomen instead
of her uterua was ln stab~
condltlop today at St.
Franct.a Holpital.
Two small dogs who were
rescued from near-starvation
nine lnOfttht a10 have escaped
death aleeondtlme, than.kstotwo
Costa Meta tamilles.
Oranae ~ AAimal..sbelter
officl• ukl the two fan'libn,
who bad read of the do1s' pU1ht in
1 Dally Piiot artJcle. adopted the
clop s.turday. AceonllM io poll~e, the peu...· were clilcoWrecl near death Feb.
1· after hevloa been • bandoried ln
a ff UAUneton Beach home.
Th• pell were held at the
IMltar u evidence In an anlmal
erueltycae •lalMl tbelr 1nillln1
After the owner was arrested
laat Wednesday and surrendered
ownerabip of the do1s. offlclals
said the peg probably would be
put to death ii they were not
adopted within a week.
• Antm11 contror omcer Al
Garcia saJd the shelter received
m any calla about the does but had
to obtain format release papen
(rom ~r former owner. which
arrived late Friday.
''When we o~rrtd at 10 a.m.
Saturday. thed1 were two
f a mmea walUn1 for them,"
Gar~laaald, "They bot.b h•d read
the artJele and were happy to 1tve
lbemnewbomet."
u ·e s aid the 3·year·o ld
dachshund mlx was adopted by a
famHy. while the 3·year·old
terrier·poodle mi x w u
pure hued by a woman to serve as ·
companyforhermother.
Garcia added that the Oranae Le11ue. which 1lso read or the
dot•' pb&Jrt. a11*d to pay the •P•Yina r.-rtquired by the
county.
The arumal control ort\c~ also
said that whUe these t~o Ooss
have been uved, many oUter peta
at the 1helter till an ln neell of
newbomet.
Miracle Sttphanle Jean
Lewi• wat born by
Caesarean aeetion io 31·
year-old Maebelle Hood on
Fr•day nllht. .· · Doctorl were unaware
the lully developed bllby w 11 p09iu.ed out.aide the
uterua untK CS.livery when
It ••• dllcowted tllat t.be
let• h4ld beconM attached
to Hood'• amaU la•llM·
Suell ~ OCMftll' _......
once In e"ry 15,000 to
20,000 btrtm, dOcton 1ald.
'Politics'
those failures," Regaaan told thec.rpwd.
He stres'ed Carter's alleged economic I allures ln his speech. and
avoided any mention of the latest developments ln the hostage
situation that could affect the outcome orthe election Tuesday.
. Reagan. seeking votes Sunday In critical Midwest industrial
states. shied away from commenting on the latest developments in.
Tehran and kept up his criticism or Carter's handling of the
economy.
CAMPAIGNING IN DAYTON, OWO HE concentratf'rl "" economic issues saying, "Carter economics have been a !"~!'!r
tragedy for many American families . . . Every time interest
(See CANDIDATES, Page .\%)
* * * * * Freedom
Militants.
Release
Custody
By 1be A.asodated Pttss
Iranian militants met with
s pi rit_ual t"eader Ayatolla h
Ruhollah Khomeini ·today and
t h e n tur n e d ove r
"responsibility" for their 52
Am erican c aptives to the
Ir a n ian government. U.S.
officials. who are considering
Iranian terms for their freedom,
said the development was a
maj or breakthrough toward
their eventual release.
·'We will fr<7m now on
delegate responsiblity for the
hostages· safeguarding to the
gonmment and will engage in
the most important current
issue of the revolution. defense
or the Islamic homeland, ..
Tehran Radio quoted a statement from the millt.uta aa
sayln&-. ·
The militants w~re referring
to lran~-border wafwfth Iraq.
·Plana '°'the ph:Y•lcal trl08fer of the hostages will be---worked
out followin1 a "meeting before
midnight" (m id·d a y PST>
between the government and the
milltants, officials of the Iranian
prime miniater's office reported.
The miJitants' statement said
the governm ent during that
meeting would "introduce their
represt>ntative for delivery of
the American spies.•·
The aides to the prime
m inis ter said Algeria was
CJelegated to handle talks with
Washington and the captives'
release if f the U.S. government
meets Iran's de mands. They
said that in the meantime Iran
will continue to have custody of
the hostages, who will "remain
where they are," presumably
meaning the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
In Washington. White . House
press secretary Jody Powell
said the transfer "is something
we h~ve seen s ince the very
outset as being an important
s tep toward their eventual
release. That's something we
have labored long and hard to
get this spring and thoughL we
had it there for a fe w Murs and
did not. So if this happens, it's a
very encouraging sign."
ONE YEAR
Gems JI a!u~ \ I
A.t $227,000 f
Stolen in NB -.J \ --.
Burglars ldcked their way into
a Newport Beach jewelry sboP
e'rly SW1day, smashed open rune display cues and escaped
with at least $227 ,000 worth of
rings. brace le ts a nd gold
charw .
P olice said employees· at
Brett· Wa lker Jewelers in
F a s h i o n ls l a n d_ a r e s till
computing the actual loss.
The intruders. investigators
s aid, kicked loose a sheet of
bullet.proof glass near the
~hop's front door at about 2:30
a.m ., triggering a burgla r alarm
in the process.
Once inside, police said, the
crooks used a heavy object to
crack o~n display cases and
scooped up at least 250 gold
rings. three $700 walch.e.s as well
as charms. bracelets and gold
money clips. f In their haste, invesr1gators
noted, the burglars dropped a
number or items. leaving a trail
or jewelry from the cases to the
point or entry.
This is the second major loss
Cor th~ Newport Beach jewelry
shop this year. Last March, a
pair of armed bandits held up
the shot> and es.aped with
1500,000 in jewelry. c
Two men later were arrested
in connection with the stick·up. Representatives or the Islamic
mil ltants who seized the
American Embassy and its staCf.. 8225,000 Fire
Nov. 4, 366 days ago, met for twlr BAKERSFIELD <AP > -A
hours today with Khomeini fire of undetermined origin following the approval Swiday by the Majlis, Iran's parliament. caused an estimated $225,000
• # damage to a department store of terms 1or the release of the · here to day . City fire in· Americans. Tehran Radio said one militant read a statement to vesttgators said the blat.e ap.
{C h 0 m e i n I a 5 k i n g t h e parently started at a sandwich
government to relieve t he shop located on the first floor of
militants of responsibility for Ted's Department Store.
the hostages and allow them to .
join the war al(ainst Iraq.. . . t' Ora•de Tehran Radio sald Kbometru •-a Coast
thanked the students and added:
·'The service which these young
people rendered by selling and.
h o lding thes e corr upt
lndlvldua1s eliminated the fears
in the mJnds of the peoples,
natlone and governments and
the picture they had of the
spectre of the 1reat pe>wers."
Meanwblle, Prime Minlater
Mohammad Ali Raja! met with
Algeria '• a mba ssador In
Tehran, and the two 'a*reed
Algeria would take care ot the
hostaces. Pars said. It wu not
Immediately known If this
meant the captlvet would be
Clown to A1lten or ... remaln ln
Iran under Al1eriu au.,.rvi&ion.
"In thla meet1n1 lt •aa ·
decided that tbe Motlem and • •rother cowslr)' of Al1ena wUl
\all• Hre of the u .s. holta ... "
Part Htd of ·the 'O-mlnutt
unton between RaJal Ad
Abdul K1rim GharaJb:
Weather
Continued sunny. Lows
lonlgbt 54 aloo& the coast,
62 inland. Hilha Tuesday
74 to '18 at beaches, 82 to 88
Inland.
INSIDE TOD"~ •
Cont~q COlllMWI owr
ti.-elJ«ft of tlw Thrtl MU.
ltlortil nucl«ar ocdckftt. Sft
1tori11,,. A7. •••JI ••.,_..,...an a.\Mlllft •
l..M. .... MWRI • ....... ...., . c........ u ...... ... c........ ........... _ ..
CIMlkt AM =-. CIN& a• . aM 'I .... ..... au .Miia~ .......... ,.........,_ M ............ ,.... ...... ........... --.
.. 11 .. ·---M
l&lllUT. Le..._ (AP' -Jraa, wldtla haa bt&d 52 A•~ Milar. for a )'Mr, lllvoUcl "all ln&eraaUoaal cod ..
11M1 r...aat-.· today ln dtmaacliai tlM Nleue of lta oil • ......-. ""'° wu eapt...-.cl by Jrecar fOl'MI on the Abadu ~.
8'll ~. •Weill NPOrtM the capture of Mohammed Jawad Baca*~• and flft-..... rrilar. aaW the captives were ~ war. TM demand for their releue was made by
lraai&D Prime Miabter Nobammad AU Raja!, wbo allo plan.a to
lake part ln ladlrect neCotJaUou OD the American boltat•·
a~·· office Hid Sunday that h·an WH "hcD>red to flnd It.a otnct.i. ambushed alon11lde the DeODle •bile aat-.urdlu the
«Iorio.-revolution." It called on Iraq to emure the offlclaJJ' welf~.buUaidtbeywereready\OHCrille.tbeirlives.
n .. 1a sr C•••rellefl
SAN F1\ANCJSCO (AP) -A four-alarm blaze on a
roe-shrouded waterfront pier of creosote-soaked pilinc•.
poaaibly caU1ed by partying nshermen. was broqht under
control t.oclay after four hours.
Richard Kucich, a San Francisco arson investigator, said
there were siacns ~f a party near the spot where the fire began at
6:30 a.m. in choldn1 foe on the city's ~•t side.
Deputy Port Director· Anthony J. Taormina said the lire
apparently began In an old, rotting fenced-off section of Pier 70
on the weat side of the citf . ·
....... KlaR•l•~Nne ....... . . .
HERMITAGE, Pa. CAP) -Relatives of some U.S. hostages
in Iran held hands in the chilly dawn today as tile 366th flag
~rking-e.acb-day or the Americans' captivity was planted in
this northwest Pennsylvania town. (Rel at~ PhotO Al) ·
Richard Hermening. or Cudahy, Wis., whose SOD Kevin is .
one of the 52 hot.stages, unfolded the-i flag, attached it to a staff
and planted the pole in the 1round u about 300 watched and a
high school chorus sang .the '.'Star Spangled Banner.··
The new banner took its place in a forest of red, white and
blue flags that have beeri flying at Hillcrest Memorial Park
since the lOOtb day of captivity in February. A new nag has
been raised each day since. All the ba11ners have been donated
and many have been sent by relatives of veterans who died in past wars.
l'r•• P-.eAJ.
CANDIDATES CAMPAIGN
rates go up one point, anotb~r 1.3 million Americans have been shut out ol the housin1 market.•'
But at Marietta College in Ohio, Reagan acknowledged that
"We all have on our minds the matter of the hostage situation in Iran." .
Then the Republican candidate added that ''this is not the time
or the place for me to be addressing such a se~tive matter."
The 11th-hour shift of the campaign focus I>ack to the f\os~ges
was oo Reagan's mind in recent months when he speculated there
might be an "October surprise" that could tilt the el~tion to
Carter. 'J'!le Republican n~minee expected Carter to try to achieve
a dramatic breakthrough m the situation.
But the movement that occurred'was initiated by the Iranians not the White House. . • '
CARTER ABRUPTLY HALTED A CAMPAIGN trip and
returned to Washington on Sunday morning to confer with advisers
on bow to respond to the conditions set by the Iranian Parliament
for release o(..$21\Jnericaws beld hostage since Nov. 4, 1*79. •
The long 1t80 election campaign ends on Tue,sday when more
than 80 million Americans are.expected to decide tbe1outcome of
thousands of contests for prizes ranging from the White House to local offices.
Voters will elect 34 senators, the entire House of
Representatives and 13 governors.
If the pollsters are right and if the Iranian hostage situation
does!l't c~use a last-minute surge to one candidate or the other. the presidential race looks too close to call.
_Republicans are optimistic about their chances to pick up Cive
or sax Senate seats and at least 12 House seats. Neither gain would ·.ibe enough to e~ a generation of Democratic control of both ~egislative bodies.
HOWEVER, THE POTENTIAL SENATE victims include
vete ran Democrats Warren G. Magnuson of Washington, George
--S. McCovern of South Dakota, Frank Church of Idah0tand Birch
liayh <?f Indiana, and Jacob Javits of New York. a senior Republican.
Also threatened by ~ougb ~pposltion th.ls year are such ranking
House Democrats as Jim Wnght of Texa~. the majority leader;
John Brade'!las of Jnd~ana, the assistant majority leader; Morris
Udall of Arizona, chairman. of the Interior Committee. and Al
Ullman of Oregon; chairman of the Ways and Means Committee.
Jailed AttomeY's
·License Suspenkd
A Tustin attorney who chose not
to fight prosec .. tion charges that
he pocketed more than SSQ,000
belonging to clients has ~n
s uspended by the California
Supreme Court while }le is serving ti me in prtaon.
Martin Goldberg,. who prac~~ at fl EJ Camino.Real,
DAILY PILOT
·-... -Prftidt"'•"" '°'Alli-
"'-'"-..... -
Cot4'• "'" Offtoe lllOW.•I l•P"-Mollll ... .._, ... "0 ... '* .,.~
. T ..... H{71•)....., I c:e1ulfl1•w..,,,.,.....,.
c
IS c urre ntly tindeqpbing
diagnostic, tests at the California
lnstltullon for Men at Chil)o.
He pleaded no contest on.July 2f'4
to charges filed by. the Orange
County District Attorney's Office
and la duri>atk in Oraote County
Superior Court Jan. 7 for formal aenten~lftlonthecharges. ,
Pros'ecutlng Deputr District ·
Attomey Doug Woocbmall said
today that Goldberg was
originall y charced with
wron1fully keeping money
entrusted by, orduefive clients be
rep__resel)ted.
He said the sums totaled aboul
$60,000, with tbe bulk of lt
represented b)""ooe count 1n th'
grand theft case in wtJiol\ tM
attorney wu convicted.
Goldberg could be placed on
probatk>ll dependJna on rftultl ol
hia to-day evaluation at Chino or
sentenced to •pend more time
behind t>.ta tor the grand theft
convletJoa.
A pleJ ol nolo conteadere or no
conteet, lt not an admlaaion bl
•uUt, but tri 10 pleadtn1 Ute
defendant 1tand1 coavtcted.
However, hll convletion cannot
be II.Md lo dYil court u eridlDce
b)' UJODI 1ulne IUm u a NIUlt of
the '-ricbW cbara•.
• Oot•n1 II ooe of lt la~ mr:.=-.:-Calllonla .J: ............ ~ E,.. ce.n, '":a· 1 -----..... ~" ...... .....-. .
A pollce pay and frln1e·
beneftta paekace averatlnl 10.4
percent a year over the next two
yean ii expected to be rat.lfied
toni1bt by the Costa Me._a
City eouncu.
A •called memorandum of
understandin1 between the
Costa MeH Police Officers Al· soclation and the dty was
ratified IMt week, an association
spokeswoman said.
u~,..._
SUSAN HAYWARD
Conce111ons to the officers
would include a S percent salary
increue belinninc ,Nov. 2 wtth
two additional 6.25 pe1cent b.lkea
in 1981.
Movie Locadoft Re8POftalble for Canc.r?
Beainninl Dec. 14, the city
would pick up the remalnin1 re·
tirement contributions made by
offlcens at the rate of 9 percent
of each 'a pay annuaJty:' The
move creates a full)' paid retire·
ment plan for otflcers, an ar·
rangemenl recently appro.ved
for other city employees.
Radiatio·n Caiae
Of Wayne Cancer?
Also beginning Dec. 14, pollce
could receiye time·and·a-half
pay for overtime with the excep-
tion of "voluntary" commit·
men ts.
Revisions in disability com·
pensation al~o are included in
the agreement, \ncliading the
provision that officers on long·
term. job-t:_elated disability may
now retire medically.
The city alBO would absorb all
rate increases in medical In·
surance coverage.
Dave Brooks. president of the
association, said the agreement
s i gnifies mutual respect
between the officers and the
city. •
"Lengthy disagree ments over
salary and benefit negotiations
tend to undermine the con·
fidences of both employer and
employee," he said.
Officers said the Police As·
sociatJoo was· formed primaniy
as a philanthropic organization
which off~rs scholarshjps and
supports and sponsors athletic
teams and SOout organizations.
NEW YORK CAP) -At leut 91
of the 220 cut and ere~ mem·
hers or a 1956 movie filmed 137
miles from the Yucca Flat, Nev.
atomic testing range have con-
tracted cancer and -46 have died
from it, says 'People magazine.
The dead include lbe stars of
"The Conquerer, .. John Wayne
and Susan Hayward. its pro·
ducer-director, Dick Powell. and
character actress Agnes
Moorhead.
Another player in the film,
Pedro Armendariz, survive~
cancer of the kidneys four years
after the filming, the magazine
says, but killed himseU in 1963
when be learned he bad terminal
cancer of the lymph system.
.Wayne's son Michael, 45, who
visited bis father in Utah on the
set of the film about G~nghis
Kahn, was treated for skifl
cancer in 1975. His 41-year-old
brother, Patrick. and Miss.
Hayward's son, JS.year.old Tim
Barker. who also were visitors
to the desert set, have had
benign tumors removed.
· ·People said several members
of the movie's cast and crew or
relatives are considering
The Mesa unit was formed in
1969, the same year the state
Myers·MiUus-Brown Act grant·
ed city and state employees the
right to confer regarding work·
ing con~tions and wages. Riley Seeks
2-~eek Delay VETERAN ..
rung police eareersintheirnative On Proposal
Hawaii, where Broad was one of
' • F,....P•~AI
Green'ttrauungo cers. -t>Tan1Je-:-ColJ~-SUJ>el'VlS-ot
Broad. the All·Hawall pro foot-Thomas Riley saJd today he will
ball lineman, though be weighed seek ~ two.week delay Tuesday
only 190 powM1s was named 1968 of actaon on a proposal to give
Costa Mesa P~liceman of the ff ~ man Ser vi c es Agency
Year and originally became a Direct or Margar et Gri e r
lawman June 1. 1946, sworn in expanded duties as director of
the day of his father's retire-the county m e n t a I h ealth
ment. department.
Broad's late father was
Honolulu Patrolman John E.
Broad, who qn successlve_d~p
in 1938 ROscoe watched in action i~ .the tough.St kinds of situa·
lions a cop can faee~ . • ..
His father whipped a ~cious
criminal twice his size in ooe
confrontation, and the next day
talked a crazed mental patient
clutching a ~ and holding a
screaming infant hostage lntc
tearful surrender.
"I still remember my father's
advice. He told me to help J*>-
ple, doo't just prosecute them,
and remember they are all
human beings," says Broad.
A former Scoutmaster of the
Year, Broad's only son Paul, an
Eagle Scout. died in a 1976 traf·
fie accident.
"He is the classic exam~le of t.he real street policeman.' said
Chief Neth. "Rock is the type
who knows bow to calm troubled
waters. And believe me, there
are a lot of troubled waters out
there. -:.:.But he knows how to handle
11trl>ad guys, too," Neth added.
Broad and Green, who both
live In Colla Mesa with their
wives, Lorraine 'Broad and
Beverly Green. were prea_ent.ed
1Uta and retlr4!men\ badges at
the ceremony. .
Both aald they are going to re·
lax awblle. Broad, a youth
leader in his church, St.
Joachim's, as Green is in his.
Mariner's, want to becolJle
counselon ol delloquenta.
As the tribute neared an
end, Broad recalled bow a )'OUDI
rookie, Colla Mesa patrolman
Matt CoUett, volunteerff. to
work for him one recent
Cbriltmal.
Broad called Collett out of tbe
audJenee. He PNMDted him wiUa
his treasured, polished
Hawallan toa wood baton, a tool
of \be tnde tbey Uled to call a
rUlbtltift. ' I .. It'• been u1ed on a few
bead•," . 1rtnaed tbe retlrint
Riley said he would seek the
delay, at the reque§l of the
county-Meeta l Health Advisory -
Board. The bo,.rd recently voted
15 lo~ again s t th e
r ecomme ndation that• Mi ss
G.r ier be give11 the dual
appointment as HSA director
and mental _health directpr,
Criti~ of the proposal have
c harged that me ntal health
programs require the attention
of a full·time administrator. And
they have clai"'AA-~ ... ~ly'5
mental heattrf system has
suffered in the year Miss Grier
has held the mental health
department directorship on an
interim basis.
Riley pr e dict e d the
continuance of the item will be
approved by the board. The new
date for action would be Nov. 18,
he said.
lawsuits l\,Jainst the govern·
ment.
Actress JeaMe Gerson, 76,
who has survived skin and
breast cancer and is still un·
dergoing chemotherapy, re·
portedly bas hired a lawyer to
bring a class actjon. hoping
othe!"S in\tolved in making the
movie -a box-office bomb -
will join her.
No atomic tests were made at
Yucca F1at during the filming in
St. George, Utah, in the summer
of 1954, according to People. But
11 bombs had been exploded in
the atmosphere the year before.
People quotes Dr. Robert
Pendleton, a former Atomic
Energy Commission researcher
and now director of radiological
health at the University or Utah,
as saying that radioactive
fallout was "very abun~ant" in
the area in 1954. Snow Canyon,
where much of "The Con.
querer" was filmed, is a natural
reservoir for windblown mat·
terial, be said.
. "With these numbers, this
case. could qualify as an
epidemic," He said. "The COD·
neclion between Callout radia·
lion and cancer in individual
cases bas been practically im·
possible to prove conclusively,
but in a group this size you'd ex·
pect only 00.some cancers to de-
velop."
F,.._P•~AI
I 1IST ....
gr'ants and loans for low·incom.e
homeowners.
Each program would get
:S0,000.
Other proposed a llocations
inc lude c onstructi~n o f
sidewalks along Victoria Street,
$25,000: downtown Recreation
Center .repafr, S20.000; energy
conservation. $15,000; · blighted
housing ins pection. $10,000:
f hUd day care, $25,000: seriior
citizens aid, $20,000; emergency
housing for the destitute,
$%5,000; alJocatJon s to the
Or:ange County Fair Housing
Council, $7,000.
. A bout $15.000 has been
earmarked for contingencies,
a nd SlS,000 is proposed for
administration.
The committee has scheduled
another public. b.ea.rio& at 7:30
p.m., Nov. 13, in th-e City Council
Cha mbers, 77 Fair Drive. for
comments or recommendations
regarding the proposals.
An application for the $1
million will be submitted to the
federal ·goverpment In April. If
approved, the funds would be
available next July, Cannariato said. ·
a, ITBVE 11Aa8LE --........... . two Newpo,n a.ieJa poUee officen walbd aw.., ....,....
from the wreckate of theil'
patrol ..btlicopt•r •hlda. ttie.)'
were forced to crub-land ln the
surfline Sunday after.noon ill we1t Newport.
S1t. Richard Miller, who waa
pilotiq the brand a.w llUlbet
helicopter, and au. ~
Otncer Todd Seiden, crawted
from the banged-up craft and
waded to shore followint the
3:·U p.m . mishap near Fern
Street. -~
Swimmers and Ufe1uarda In
thu\e area dragged the helicopter
o or the water and back up to
the sand.
A number of sunbathers alont the crowded strand res>orted
leeing the patrol bird flying low
a long the coastlipe and then
s uddt:nlY spinning out of control. ·
Pohce reports indicat~ Killer
and his partner were on routine
patrol at an altitude or roughly
150 feet and had just completed
a. 180 degree turn when the
aircraft began'to vibrate.
At this point, police said the
helicopter s tarted spin~ing cl~ckwise , rapidly losing altitude and diving toward a
group of .~~ers and swimmers,
Sgt. M1Uer, police contmued,
was able to nu• the ·diving
helicopter away_ from the crow.d
before splashing into the ocean.
Initial reports indjcaled thliil
the $80,000 .helicopter may ha\'t
developed problems with its tall
rotor. A stabilizing rotor on the
rear of the bird, police said wai
somehow jarred loose. '
The crumpled helicopter IatAf was h au led to Tallmann
Aviation at John Wayne Airport ~here. it will be studie.d by police -c:o
investigators to determine the
exact cause or the mishap .
Bogus Thief
Topic of
Mesa Talk
C::heck fraud, quick-change
artists ~nd counterfeit money are
to be discussed at a seminar for
Costa M~sa business people Wedn~a . -
Co.sponsored by the Cosra
M_esa ,Chamber of Commerce and
Fadehty Federal Savings the
"You Catch a Thief" progr~m is
to be held at Fidelity, 18S5 Harbor
Blvd .. at5:45p.m .
T_he sess ion is especia'lly
designed for the Christmas rush
when crimes against business~ ri~e dramatically, a spokesman saad.
Call 645...--4420 for reservations he added. '
Crash Hurts
NB Cyclist
A 24-year-old Newport Beaclt motorcyclist, injured dwin1 a
traffic collision in Cost.a Meaa u
East 17th Street and f.rvine
A venue, was reported in good
condition today at Fountain
Valley Community Hospital.
Paul James · Smith of 333
Amethyst Av~ .• suffered serious
head injuries, police said, •• hlt by a car a.s he attempted te
make a left tum at about 10:30
p.m . Saturday.
.
. polJcema-. MHr alludlna to
bow IUQ tllMI be bad found
other n11 to :handle the lkua· ------------- - - ----- -
Uoa. '
The Garage Bnngs 1t Together for Fall
Here we feature our own mid~wele cord pant.
with a pre· finished plain bottom4 accented
by one of our many easy care plaid sp0rtsh1rts
and a great shawl collared pullover swearer.
ALS GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644·7030
•
Voter· Polls Agree: It's a Coin T_,ss
..
Wlth U.. deciakm Ollly ~ •••1: undecldtd Amnleana tUU ""la 1wln1 the victory to leacaa or Carter. aa the ~t
.... aarrowed ia lM tradftloe ol '8nl·foucbt PNlldeallal race1 ol
,..,..put.
AU lbe natJonaJ poU. ••acme .
tb•H tlDal days were tatea
bef-. .. lac.t aeries of de· velop..-, Sunday concemiq
t.be Amerieana held boetqe ln
Iran. 1boee development. eouJd
away millions of votes, matins
thNe polls only of historical ln· tereat.
ne latest national aurvey by
CBS News and the New York
Tlmea taken Oct. 30-Nov. 1,
cave Aeaean ·" percent and Carter 41 pereent. lnc!ependent
prealdentlal candidate John An·
derson drew 8 percent. Otben
and undeclded made 'Up 5 per-
cent or the 2.28' re1l1tered
voten interviewed.
A new Gallup poU said Ke8'an
bad the backiq ol 4' peteent of
the Ubl)' voters, •hlle Carter
waa auppocted by 43 percent. In· dependent presidential can-
didate John Anderson drew 1
99rcant; l pettent IWMd ..._.
and I percent ol tM _.. ..._
S,500 PtrlOOI 1atentene1 fNID
Oct. JO tbrouch Nov. 1 were Mt ave.
_R 1llsr-•t1rr•p ,
By alloeatlq th• undeelded vote, the Galfup or1antuttoa
Hid tbe poll put the ftaal atand·
tnaa at Rea1an 47 perceut:
Canu tt perant; Andel"IClll 1
percent and othera l r.rcent.
73rd Assembly
Race 'Hostile'
., IWBERT BAaKEa
Of .... Delly ..... ftlft The campalan in the 13rd
Assembly District bet1Veen
Democratic incumbent Dennis
Mangers an,d Republican
chaUenier NQlan Frtzzelle bas
turned holtile and hard h1ttin1.
Both aides are firing barrqes
of campaign mallen. Both are
well-beeled and articulate.
If they share anything in
common, it is an apparent and ~earty dislike for one another.
The bitter race is expected to
10 down to the wire Tuesday in
the West Orange County and
Costa Mesa district in which
Democrats hold a narrow voter
registration lead.
virtually turned his back on the
state lnherttance tax repeal. and
that be faJled to vote on letting
tbe controversial measure out ot
a committee and before the full Assembly.
~angers says that the action
would have violated the rules of
the house. "Many didn't vote on
it because it violates an orderly process.''
He a lso added that be
co-authored a compromise
inheritance tax repeal and ls
co-directing an initi,Jtive on the
matter to go to voters next year.
Friuelle says, however, that
Mangers dldn 't vote to get the
bill out of committee because it
was consigned to ·Certain defeat
in committee and that was what
Assembly Speaker McCarthy Waring for 1'ear
Tb9' late1t av.I able ABC
Hew1-Loui1 Harris poll put
Re-.111 at 45 percent ud C.,..
at '° percent. ADdenon drew 1' percent, 1 percent named otben
12 HOSTAGES MAY SWAY ~
MIUJONa OF VOR"8 M
and 4 percent were not sure.
That poll, conducted Oct. 11
tbroup Nov. 1 is baaed on in-
terviews with 2,91M likely voters.
A natiaaal poll conducted by
the Wuhiqton Poat put Carter in l;be lead. The survey of 1,000
reeutered voten done Oct. JS.27
put Carter at 42 p ercent·
Reagan at 39; and Andenon at
7.
A national poll taken for
Newt ... bad almost identical
reaulta to the CBS-New York
REAGAN, CARTER
HOMES PROFILED-A10, A12
wanted. ·
Mangers ~!aims Frizzelle's
c a mp a i g n i s h a n d I e d a n d
direcfed by a firm associated
with State' Sen. ff. L. Richardson
A portion o~ 365 American .flags waves in breez~ at Hillcrest Memorial Cemetery in
Hermitage, Pa .. one flag having risen for
each day of captivity for U.S. hostages in
Iran. New developments give caretakers
hope daily flag addition will cease soon.
Times poll ; Reagan .44 ; Carter
43; and Anderson 7. Thia survey
was conducted Oct. 29-30 by the
Gallup Organlulion and la
baaed on registered votert
weighted for turnout.
The margin or error ror the
ABC-Harris, Gallup and CBS-
New Yorlt Times surveys ia J
percentage points; It is 4 percen.
taae points for the Newsweek
and Post surveys.
MA.Noa•' • Pa1naLLa
frizzelle, a 58 -year-old
optometrist who lives in Costa
Mesa, attacks .the 40-year-old
Maniiers as a liberal big spender
,who operates wider the thumb of
,Assembly Spt!aker Leo
MeCarthy.
•. Mangers calls Friuelle a :desperate man who failed in
~bree previous attempts at
1election for lieutenant governor,
0Ntnge County supervisor and
:assemblyman.
. He claims that Friuelle is a ·
key fiaw'ie in an attempt by right •wine extremists to take control .or the moderate assembly
:cliall'lct.
.!l'hat'• fer-openers.-Tbq•w:
both fired salvos on about all
other issues . but Friielle
claima Mangers struck too low
in a recent mailer ,(:haracteri%ing him as a
:despera"' man. · "I've campaigned on Dennis'
.record," Friuelle claimed. "He
:has engaged in a personal
;attack."
: The mailer alleges that
:Frizielle is_ uslng a Costa Mesa
:apartment ~ a c•01paign base
within the district while his real
family home is in Mission Viejo.
Friuelle denies it. He says he
'has lived in Costa Mesa for 3...,
years ancf.t.bat the Mission Viejo
,residence is maintained by his
wife's former husband so that
-her children can continue their
schooling at Saddleback College.
Friizelle brands the char.ce as
a distortion and innuendo.
; Those are the same terms
Mangers uses to portray
Frizzell 's attacks on his voting
record and performant'e over
the last four years.
Friuelle claims Mangers has
sidestepped voting on about 370
measures in the recent session
-deliberately so on a number
or controversial items.
Mahagera declares that's a
cheap shot. He says he has
earned a reputation ,s one or the
hardest working members or the
Legislature. He also says be was
named the most lndependen·t by
the California Journal.
and the gun lobby.
Frizzelle says that Mangers
has shown a softness by not
voting for mandatory penalties
for the sale and distribution ot
PCP, a highly dangerous drug.
Badham, Bergeson
Predict Victories Mangers claims extensive
endorsement by local leaders.
inc I uding the ma yo rs of B STEVEM•JlB Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa Y oiu..oau,,.1.:1 .. " LE work on his campaign, has
and Seal Beach as well as other Congressman Robert Badham recently found himself defending
city council members and school • and Assemblywoman Marian the fact that he missed the Oct. 20
board officials. Berge.son. both Newport Beach f jJ in i date fol' campaign
But Frizzelle said these are re s id en t s r e p res e n tin g statements.
the kind or people who run to Republican drenched districts, Dow claims he has received
Sacramento for help in solving are predicting easy victories over verbal permission to file his
local problems. · their Democrat challengers in statement late and plans to do so
·'They are enamore.d of Tuesday'selection. 'oon. Hesaidhedidn'tevenbreak
Dennis and the bureaucratic But while Mrs. Bergeson and the $5,000 contribution mark
process. l haven't solicited their challenger Jack Baldwin have requiring such a statement until
support. kept on soh gloves during their early October. '
"They'll tiave to bite the bullet bout, the contest between While Dow claims he'll Ukely
and mate decisions locally if 1 Badbam and Democrat hopeful unload up to $25,000 in his bid to
am elected."· Michael Dow bu been wanning get to W as bing ton D . c ..
l'riuell&-•aid--Manaera votes-up .d~ t.lae linaHlayt;Ol-tlM!~~ad.ham..'.s _ataff sa1• th.
for. increases In the Jize of race. congressman will only spend "as
1-overl)ment and increased Badbam also la facing muchashen~towin."
spendine. He cites ~ansers ' competitiOft frem Llb4!rtlrU1n And , ·lb-;y pr6dic:j, t'bat
opposition to Propoaition 13. Dan Mehaffey and write-in shouldn't be too much. They Mangers counters that he does candidate Robert F~rraro. contend Badham will coast to an
vote to reduce spending and has Dow, an Orange County deputy easy victory and by a wide
voted to cut the business District attorney · and Balboa margin. ' •
inventory and other taxes. Island resident, is reiterating hJs "I think it will be close," Dow
He said he now believes that ~hargethat Badham spent$10.000 says. "I think people are tired of
Proposition 13 was a good thing ·~ campaign contributions in a B a d ha m · s c Io s e d · m i n d in that it succeeded in getting six-month period to cover travel 'closed·doorapproacb.." '
the attention of the Le-etBJature. expenses rorhisfamiJy. By contrast. the race between
He said j.oO much financing ~~ .contends the veteran Assemblywoman Bergeson and
depended on property taxes. Pohllc1anspent$4,414forhiswife Baldwin, a Mission Viejo
·'There also was an obscene and daughter to take a one-week Democrat, seems very tame.
'state surplus." he said. trip to Washington D.C. last June Libertarian Sue Waltman is also
· · l did oppose J a r vis·• and spent $2,687 for his wire to in the contest.
motives." take a trip to Parts last April. Baldwin, saying he 'II spend
He said he supported "And that's just the tip of the roughly $3.500 on his bid, has, for
Proposition 4 which put limits on iceberg," charges Dow, "He 's the most part, only flattering
govemmentspending. amassed a huge stockpile of things to s a y about Mrs .
A more recent controversy contributions he can just dip Bergeson.
has developed over campaign into." "l think she's a dedicated.
signs. · Badham supporters, including c ommitted per son ." says
Friizelle and his supporters his campaig• chairman Don Baldwin, "but we still disagreeoo
clllm that about 300 of their Mcinnis, the former mayor of most every issue."
signs have been demolished. Newport Beach, claim money Mrs. Bergeson's campaign
''His slgna are still up and spent on trips has come from s t a f f e s t i m a t e s t h e
mine are not," Frizzelle asserts. funds raised by Badbal'n boosters assemblywoman will spend up to
"It is ob~ous · ing it, the forthatverypurpose. $25,000 on the race. which. they
facts ar ut there on the "We have been aware and say, is a "very quiet and very
streets. o do you believe?" approve of the funds being used strange race."
Mangers says his own aiins this way." Mciwli,s said. "We feel
also are disappearing. Mrs. Badham M8id accompany
·'Night after night my signs the congressman as often as
vanish and my workers ask ii we possible."
can take down his (Frizselle'a). Another.spokesman pointed out
"I tell them no. You know our Mrs. Badham accompanied her
rule, poeitively not." husband to Germany last spring,
"I don't permit that kind of not Paris. ~
Mangen fCknowledgea n_gt
voUng on isaoes but be said 1t
was because he was working on
s~arate measures important to
hla dlstrict at the Ume.
thing and I am sure be doeac~ • · "It was a cheap shot," said a
4-,tber," Manien alld.-s spokesman for Badbam. "Tbis Is
Friuelle says .be is a thetypeofthingthat'styplcaJofa
Frluelle says M.angers
2 Shootings
Involve Cops
LOS ANGEJ,.ES <AP> -A
man who alle1edJy threw a
butcher lmUe at police wu. abot
to death and another man who oolnt.ed a p at a •bertt1•1 depu-
ty was W0\11ded ln teparate of.
flcer·•avolved •hoot1n11.
autbo.rttiel 1ald.
Pedro A. Zutoke, 31, wa1
f ataU1 llMlt ta the ebat by a
PGlict ce.r dUl'tq an alt.ere•· Uon ...., at ' Weatcbielter .,.. ............. ~
t.bat-... -. lllt, lak.lD a ....
of eat .. N.ot+flL!:::Olr•. ·'f!T~Ati1tr.
d•patiel rwpcllMflaf '° I call t.Mt ............. ftNd la tM
IMIDOK an. lbat llld woUIMled a .. ,. ........... after tbe D>ID
repGlt • -polatell • l\lll at the depa&J .. nfllHcll to drop it.
conservative Republican -candidate w~n he gets
.. very conservative." desperate."
"I believe ln the basic tenent.s Do)V, wboalBocfiarges Badham
9f <he CooatitutJon protectin1 the uses bis congressional staff to
people from excessiv e
regulations."
He says he is not an extremJat.
·'When I was president or the
Ca lifornia Repll...blican
Aaaembly, both extremes opposed me. '
· 'Tbe John Birch Society said I
was not far enouch to the fitht
and the liberal faction said I was
too rilht. wtn1.
''The extremes on both sldel
oppeaecl me. I'm not one or the
other."
• Malllert ~DU ~.
"I 've been uaaultect'by a rttbt
wln1 mall blitz. It 1i1nala the
reaur1ence of the rlabt wln1
extremitta.
• 'The1·11 UY anythlP.C to
blamirch my character .ud
r~~ ~t ia Wnc '°)
botly coatHtecl Include• the clttea ot co.t. Mesa, ff~ •
S.acb, Fountam VaU.y, !eal
Beach, Sunset Beach and
Rotamoor Lelture World ln the
7Srd A.Nembly Dittrlc:t.
The district bu 12 ,tu
Demoe rata •nd '?t,2U ftepubllcaaa.
Town Hall
Gets Luxury
FORESTBURG, N .Y.
(AP> -An era bu come
· to an end In Sullivan
County.
Since the tum ol the cen-
tury, resldedU ol Ulla town
wbo attmdecl meetin.11 at
thelr old town ·baU bad to
use an outboun at the
back of tbe bu1Jdiq when fc::CU111oaa clr•"10'1 too
;tat all -.CS Smaday
..... ............. Re<>-
ple turned out t.o dedicate
o a HW ...,. hall built With
tbe btlp of hOO,OO(J lD
f.cleraJ f\lnda.
• 'ADd it baa Indoor
plumbtn1," Hid one of
ForHtbur1'1 500 rul-
de"t..
..
• -
No Rights
To Elvis
Marketing
The exact figures for the polls
do differ. But many of the dif.
ferences are smaller than the er·
ror margins to which all ~lla
are subject. This means that
moat of the polls cannot be said
to put either man in the solid
poaition aa the frontrunner.
In addition, the close race
spotlights the unique system of
WASHINGTON <AP> -The plc.tinc a p.resident -the elec-
U.S . Supreme Court today re-tion is decided by who wins the
fused to bar anyone from trying moat electoral votes, which are
to make a profit from Elvis awarded state-by-state. It is
Presley's fame. possible in a close race that a
'-candidate could win the most '.1'1.e justices, without com-popular votes nationwide and
ment, refused to review a ruling still la.e the electoral vote to hla that Presley's "exclusive rtcht ponent
to publicity" ended when be died op Of~. every election la de-
tbree years aco and was not ln· J:lded by who ioes to vote. Bat
herited by bla beln. the poUa tbia year demomtnte
'' dea&b, tM OppommitJ<--tt>ab~a~t ~ ..................... ~afH&.alrtMMMltl&lll-til-lllM--~ for Caln abllt8 to tbe public do-critical than ever.
m aln, where it ii equally open to
all,'' tbe et.b U.S. ClreUJt Court
of Appeals 'llled March 8.
That spelled defeat fot Fac-
tors Etc .• one or the natiou's
largest ma.as merchandisers of
novelty items. Ft~l"S in 1977
paid $150,000 for Uie exclusive right to sell Presley
memorabilJa.
Presley died Aug. 16, 19TI, at
age 42. During most or bis legen-
• dary s.i$n1 careet, Presley's
exclusive right to market his
fame in the form of postel"S, T
shirts and all the rest was-held
by his manager. Col. Tom Parker.
In 1974, Parker and Presley
transferred that right to Boxcar
Enterprises, a Tennessee-based
company. Boxcar sold that right
to Factors two days after,.,~
Presley's, death, with the
approval of Presley's father. Vernon.
A non-profit organization
called the Memphis Develop-
ment Foundation commlasioned
• a sculptor in im to deaip and
cast a bronze statue or PresleY.
I.
M11mmified
Body Found
i:LMONT, N.Y. (AP) -The
mummified remains of an ...
y;ear-old woman who bad not
-been seen for four or five
months haw been found ln the
bedroom or her home, police
said.
Police said they discovered
the remaina or Ju.lie Spath on
Saturday aft.er other relatives of
the woman told police they bad
not seen her since May or June.
Police said the woman apparent·
ly had been dead for several
months. The cause of death waa
not immediately determined.
A nephew by marriage, 46-
year-old Everett Oest, and bis
two daughtel"S, aged 12 and U,
had been livinl with the woman,
police said. Police would not
comment further.
afall~tJz."' ..
• -
...... ~··•••I!
NATION I WEATHER
Global ··Event
Tally Pressure On
ll.Cl18U. 1Xct11£8: Pit.¥ the laHardly citizen of
our coutal re1ion wM> la lookinl for an excuse to stay
away from the ballot box tomorrow. It mi1ht be toug" to
ftnd a reaonable way obt.
C<lalider. for example, tbe weather. Elsewhere, the
elements mill¥ aid the sloth-like citiaen who would rather
remain l" a state of repose in front of the boob tube rather
than 1et out and exercise his franchlle. .J!n Miami, he might be able to claim the brid1e washed
out between his house and the votine booth. They've just
bad a pretty 1ood deluge down in Miami.
Meanwhile in the Pacific Northwest and northern
Rockies, the excuse for not voting mi1ht be that the family
heap got stuck in the mud. More rain .baa visited those
re,rions.
NEW ENGLAND WEATHE& is a bit snappy down in
the 30s. Just yesterday in Burlington, Vermont, they bad
a hieb of 37 de1rees and a low of 30. At least it's consistent.
And Don't li'orget He Means the Daughten. Too
BJWALTEa a. llEAU
... ~cei-........ .
W ASIUNGTON -As it beaan,
so It enda: a presldenUal eam·
pal1n clouded by the mass kid·
napptn1 and captivity of
Americana wbote 1overnment
could neither protect them nor
free them. lt was a campain
marked at crucial moments by
decisions made half a world
away, in tbe col.ancib of a hostile
re1ime.
The story. of the American
hostages seiud in Tehran one
year •to this election eve la a cen·
tralchapterlnthestoryoftbeU80
campaign. ·
In the crull of their capture,
President Carter began the come·
back that restored him to the
Democratic nomination. Because
or it, he avoided a Democratic
campaign debate and did his cam·
paignlng for nearly six months in
the shelter of the White House.
On Tiaesday, the voters wiU de-
Detectives
Seek Thiefs
Stashed Loot
BOULDER, Colo. <AP) -A
You suspect the non-voting resident of these climes bragging young burglar who de-
could always claim he couldn't get out because he lost his lighted in breaking into homes
overcoat and misplaced his longies. while the owners slept may have
It's going lo be a lot tougher here, however, to blame been responsiblefor2,000theftsis
the weather for failure to hit the ballot box tomorrow. keeping police guessing even
Consider what happened thi~ weekend. The beaches afterhisdeath.
Sunday looked like the Fourth of JuJy. High temperatures Paul Hass, 22, who had been ar-
along our coastline were said to register all the way from rested several times, told
73 to 82 degrees. .--,0----1-___ authorities with ride that he was
You s uspect the mus " the North Shore Burglar of Long
have been doing it underwater. This was a shirtsleeve ISl<\nd, N. y ., the Gun barrel
weekend. Or less. Most folks along the shoreline were less, Buf'glar of Colorado and the
ABOUT THE ONLY weather excuse we'll have for
staying away from the polls tomorrow will be a case of
sunburn or sunstroke. Maybe you could say you'd be
unable to read the ballot because of perspiration of the
brow.
All this: aside, latest word on the presidential race is
~hat i~'s too close to call. That ought to raise enough
mcentive to gel all the partisans moving in the precincts.
actually boil down to the results here in Orange County?
It's ~s'ible. It would probably mean that the north state
would have to go heavily for President Carter with Los
Angeles County pretty much dead-even. •
Could the presidential election this time come right
down to California as the decider? If it's as tight as the
experts seem to believe. it could be. Last time out 9n the White House race, California
didn't figure as being very pi votal in the outcome.._ This
time it might be different.
COULD THE OUTCOME in California's electoral vole
actually boil down to the results here in Orange County?
It's possible. It would probably mean .that the north st ate
would have to go heavily for President Carter with Los
Angeles County pretty much dead-even.
Then indeed it might come down to Orange County.
In that regard, we can certainly cast up a little prayer
to~ay for Orange County's often-maligned vote counting
system. You will recall it did an enormous pratfall in the
June Primary. When they plug it in tomorrow night. let's
hope it doesn't light up "Tilt" again. ·
It wguld be most unfort411ate if Orange County's
election results kept the White House wailing this time.
Ma Ii bu Burglar of California.
"HE WAS A premier burglar "
said Boulder County sheriff's d~·
lective Carroll Allison, who
tracked Hass for weeks in 1979
during a rash of break-ins at ex-
pensive homes. "That was his
profession. Just as some kids
grow up to be a doctor, Paul Hass
grew up to be a burglar.'' .
· Hass was slain Oct. 21 , when
W~stport, Conn., homeowner' Irv-
ing Kayeshothimonceintheback
of the head during a break-in. of·•
flcials say.
NOW POLICE are trying to
figure out where all the loot from
his burglaries is stashed.
Lt. Bruce Goodman of the
Boulder sheriff's department
says he's convinced Hass rented
safe deposit boxes throughout the
country. Some of them may never
be found since Hass often changed
identities, using sfolen driver's
licenses and other identification
cards, Goodman says.
''If we could put all our cases
together, I'm sure we could solve
1,000 to 2,000 burglaries," said
Sgt. Ronald Rafferty of the Suf-
folk County, N.Y., police depart·
ment.
Col:!,.,.Snow CJllll East
Most of V .S. Swmy; Rain Scattered
C.....alRMilwr
Sunny T-y
CoHUI nl9fl 7• to II, low S•. 1n1-
"'9111Ho ... low•J W•l•r,•J .•
~1 .. wn.ro, llont vartabl• winds
1on1ont 11Komi"9 -.sl to MUii•~' a
lo "•nots T-y alt..-n_, Two "
1t:1~o'" lool-•terty .... 11. Mosllyla1r
Mostly """'' and continued warm w•alher was upec:teo tnrou9noul
50,utfwrn C..lllOMia Oii Tuesday, the
Nallonal WNtntr Servi(• H id.
Tne n1gn temperalurt Ln Lo• ,4\ngele$.lllOu4d be nHr N. Velley
temperatllf'ef ,..,. .. _tea to r ange
IMtw"n l"e mid IOI to 1-90i Tue1·
day.
LOUI -11WHt wind• ot u lo JS
ropn were forecast to bl-lhrouor>
tne mo11nteln1. R•IO•t level 111gne
,..,. ~kted to range lrom .. 10 ''·
Tiit aoulllern dtwrtl -'• lort<aU to IM the .Uta•1 --ll with niOnt
rea<lllno IMO trw mld-40$ T.,.Mlay
wnllt llW nonntrn MHrli ll>Ould
"9•1 111> IMO Int mid.OS.
I.I.& S1•11111arw
hm-aturft and 1'9flt 1now ltll tft
tile llortlltHI to<lay, wltll •arly· ~1119 rMCIHlel as•-as S 4-0'ttt
111 (4tfllral New YMlt., Slllet were
eta..-••--•. ••(• for a lew pa1c.11esot ral11.
lll11rrltt -·• ••11e<te<I to la" lllrwgll IN day In New llft91ancl -New·v .... 11.
Wlllte Old For .. , N.Y., lft llM
•<1lton<1ao MOlllll•ln•. rePO<tea s
deerM1, Albelly'I Zl-cle9<" rtad1r19
matcM4 • recor<l 1-lor IN data .. 1
111 117S.
0ftrn'tll't, Ulert w..-t wl4-ly Kat• ler•d 1nowet1 ov., 1ou tne rn
..., ....... wy ........ ,.
Mon1111·~ro04y II Y9U 00 r>Ol .......
rOU< r•-oY 5 30 D "' call "'"'• 1. 0 f'PI •"Ct "°'" COOV "A-ttl M Ott";·'~
Sati.•n1~ ~nn 5unoo II you oc "01 ,~,¥"· .,,,.,, (C)Oy o, 0 • l"f\ , ..
flfto<• ' I • m l'td '°"' COily '""" Ot dtttve•eo
Alat>•m• and Into M>Ulllern M1H•H•l>-
pl, from nortntastern Soutn O•kot•
tnrou9n -..-n NM>rallla, •nG •10"9
the coasts of northern 0re9(111 an<I
lOUO••rn W..,.lnQtOll.
More , .. ,. WB Pf'HIC-ror the
Orut ...,,," .,_ -1/19 nennern part ol trw Ohio Valley, and 1n tne
nortn.rn Rocky Moulll•in•
hmperatur .. ¥ound lM n•hOf'I
tatly •-Y rellQ9CI from " 1n Con-
Cfl'd, N.H., to ., In IC.ey WHt, Fla.
CALll'OlllNIA
8oe·n 11et0 " $• 8 1Y111t ., u ........ " .. Monterey •• lO NHdlH U 0.kland It $.<
S.cramtllto " tt S...la ,.,_a IJ ,.
Sloekton 1$ lO
Thermal N "
Gypsy Moths Active .
BOSTON (AP) -Peaky, leaf-eatlni l)'pty
moths have chomped their way throuth thousands
of acres of trees in New EllJland tbla year CIUI·
ln1 record clamage to forests in Maine and 'Rhodt
lal1nd, agriculture officials report .
w U.S: Department of Aaricukure etnclalt allo
say the Northeut could •uffer even wortt d1ma1e
next· year becauae the reconl. Q~ber of tM ln· aecta l.tt behind a reeord number Ol •111.
Federal olftclall H)' s.1 million acret of forest
from Maine to Maryland were damatect by the
motb.a thll year. All 1tepa to Jaa1t t.be advance of
the lDMCt have failed.
8•rstow lJ 51
lt•\P\00 ,. 2' C•l•hn• n n Et Centro .. 50
LkArr--.. l6
L0"9 8e.c:n 11 " N•wPo'1 a .. cn 73 u OnlarlO as S4 PalmSpri"91 '° u
S•n 8ttrrwr-~no •• « San Jou H .. S•nt• M1r11 /) .,
h n<M Vl lley •l l•
:ll1co
l'ANAMUUCAN "· ,, °"' .. II
8e1muo1 . 1• 10 03 8090ta •• Curac ... '° to ,., .. _, .. 12 .oa
Ouecl•"t••• 19 S4 .OJ
Ou-10.,.. .. n Hav•n• )u 1• Kln91to11 llO 11 .OI
Mon1t90 l•y .. ,,
Marall•n .. ...
Me fide u IJ
Mo-Ice City ,, " Menltrrt, 1) )) NUMll .. 1• " Sall Ju•n " ,,
SI ~1111 llO " ..
T .. 11< ... I ... ,. OJ Tr1111-IJ v..-au u1 " ., .,,,..,..,..
~oftdlOw TOO•Y
""''" 11
le<Oftd"lth •t111m •••
TUllOAY ,,, .. I_ Ui$1em °' , lrtl llltfl 7.Ua m t . Se, ....... 1.»p"' •• $e<-Hltfl 1.Mpm U
S4;11 rl .. t •• U IA'I,. .. It 4:Jf 1J,M,
,,._ rl-111' A.I'll., ..... ""·"'· .,, .......
t ,. 10
t I 10
t • u
.i 4 ll
Swell: Aver at• lltltllt Jn tut,
m•lmllfll MltM 1111 .. t, •trec.tltft.
I t •w ' , '" ) I IW ,_, w
cide whet.her the hosta1e altua·
tion will wqrk one lut Ume to the
advantage of tbe Democratic pre·
sldent. Ronald Rea1an'a
atratelists fear that it mi1ht, in a
close contest for the White House .
Carter said his decisions on the
hostages, and terms for their re·
lease, would not be affected by the
election pow h ours away .
Reaaan's aides and 'his running
mate, George Bush, said they did
not suspect that the administra-
tion was trying to manipulate the
situation for political advanta1e.
Indeed, it did not seem Carter
could have done so even had he
tried; the episode has been one of
U.S. frustration and powerless-·
ness, not of control. With 52 U.S.
citizens in the hands of unpredic·
tabre captors in a volatile, revolu-
tionary nation, the administra·
lion could only react to events it
could not shape.
That had been the case alt
a long. The election e'e signals of
a possible break in tile stalemate
did not stem from American in-
itiatives but came fi:om an alien
parliamen(, which affirmed de·
mands first posted six weeks ago
by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
Carter said he couldn't predict
whether the hostages would come
home before or after the election.
.It is hardly likely to happen in the
few hours that are left, and that
may minimize the impact of the
s ituation on the voting.
An Associated Press-NBC
News poll, conducted prior to lhe
les&.--developments, indfo-ated-
persistent, widespread dis·
satisfaction with Carter's handl-
ing of the situation. By a margin of
S3 percent to36 percen(. the public
disapproves of the way Carter has
de~lt with it. That s urvey was
completed Oct. 24.
Nonetheless, the developments
Sunday are likely to be of some
help to Carter, who has cam·
paigned all season as the man who
is doing the job now, the man who
has to deal with crises as they hap-
pen. )here is no better place for
an incumbent president to cam·
paign than at the White House-if
he can explain a stay-at-home
strategy, as Carter did all spring.
Vice President Walter F. Mon·
dale made the point Sunday as he
campaigned in Carter's stead. "I
am sure that you would agree
with him that these developments
require that he. especially, as pre·
sident of the United States, be in
the White House representing all
of us today."
That is essentially what Carter
said as the campaign year began,
explaining his turnabout decision
against debating Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, and U~e'? f~ing off his
challenger's compl~ that he
wouldn't leave the Rose Garden.
C{lrter said he had to be on the job
to deal with the hostage cri~is.
and he stayed put for nearly six
months.
Struts Stuff ..............
R.D. Gromer strikes pose on Gladstone, Mo., stage before
pane~ of w?men judges in benefit male leg contest.
Despite obv1ous-effort, and added flair of stubby cigar
Gromer finished • 'outd the money.'' '
Fearful CoDimunity
Relaxes at Arrest
FIFE, Wash. (AP> .!...-Residents of this small couim1.mity were
"breathing a little easier" today following the capture in Ari20na
o! ~man sought for -questioning in nine rapes and-beatings here,
pohce say. ·
Fear had gripped the community of 2,000 for much o( October
aft~r a bearded man beat a woman and her two daughters with a
baseball bat and ~sed sha.rp objects to brutalize others, including
two lJ.year-old girls. Police persuaded parents to keep trict-or-
treaters indoors on Halloween.
On ~turday , Daniel L. Rybolt, 27, already sought by police on
the basts of composite drawings made from descriptions by the
victims. wa:s arrested at a motel in Glendale, Ariz., authorities re-
ported.
"IT'S A RELIEF not having to go to bed with a gun under
your pillow," said Mike Portmann, a Pierce Coutny sheriff's
deputy.
No. Wasbin.gton state warrant had been issued u of Sunday, acco~g to Kmg Co~ty Police spokeswoman Trish Berg. Rybolt
was bemg held on Anzona warrants charging him with two counts
of escape, four counts of sexual assault and two counts of armed
robbery officials said.
. J:Ie had ~n ~ught aner: escaping from the Maricopa County
Jail. m Phoenix, ~nz .. according to police. A tip from his father lect
to his arrest, police said.
BAIL WAS SET at $56,000 on one escape charge, but no ball
was set on the other charges, said jail officer Geri Thacker
Fife police reported they had found Rvbdlt's wallet in the area ?f an apartment where a man was s-potted Oct. 24. The man
Jumped from a second-story window and disappeared into a crowd
of football fans, police said.
. Many residents had said they slept with loaded guns within
auick reac.h and placed cans of Mace around their homes. The mood was hghter after word of Rybolt 's arrest was received.
PROPOSITIOil 10 ·-~
Ci' IS DAD REVIEWS, c
A 'Regu/atdry Can of WQmts.
" ... Prop. IQ rnay be worse than was Prop. 5.
~ca~ its vagueness about enforcemenC
leav~ the .door wjde open for over-
regulation ~Y government. · . . .
"We do not need more regulation
• by governrpent of the lives of people
in California qr anywhere else.
"Surely this is a matter for private
solution. that does not need the clumsy
hand of government in it:'
... San FrancifCO Examiner
Foolish Attempt To
Write Social Behavior.
.. ll is a foolish attempt to use
legal restriction to write social behavior
that is best governed b common sense
and courtesy~ Odj/Omia Labor Federation AFL-CIO
leave it to C.ommon Sense.
" ... the initiative leaves the
~lution tip ro the common sense of~tate
health officials. But irstril<es us that its
better to leave the solurton or such prob-
lems to the common sense of the people
involved '.' long Beach Press 'Rkgram
An Are11 of Personal Decision-Making.
"We find Proposition 10 as
objectionahle as Proposition S.
"The issue is very much the same:
Whether ... toh~o sm oke is a problem
critical enough to warrant a significant
extension of the regulalory powers of the
state into an area of personal decision·
making.
"We recommend a ·No' vote on
Proposition to:· Sun Diego Union
noon
Californians A1aln1t Re1ulatory EJtcffl, 1833 E 4lh Street, 13811. Santa Ana, CA t2'101
Contact: Eileen P•d~rl and David Beraland. 71415S1,9100
...
•
Gunman ..
Hijacks
RTD Bus
CARSON CAP > A rt-year.
old Loaa Reach mo ••• booked
for lnvt1t11adon of lddnapplftl
•nd battery in c~tlon with
t he 46-minute hlJaelring of a
Rapid Transit Dl1tricl bus,
autboritle11ay.
Michael Muno1 boarded the
bu. in downtnwn Los An1etes
Sunday and stayed on board un-
til it reached the end of the line
in Carson then told driver Cora
J ones, 29, he had a gun and or-
dered her to drive him to bis
rather's houu in Wilmington. _...,,,,.,.45
WOODLAND HILLS CAP) -
~bout 45 high school students,
many of them dressed In heavy
uniforms, collapsed from heat
Sl'ATE J
> exhaustion dw;ing a ··Battle of
~ t he Bands " competition-at t Pierce College.
, Los Angeles city fire Capt. PosttRan Never Rang
.,..,,,._...,.
LOS ANGE.LES (AP ) -
California voters will be wooed
by both major presjdential can·
dldates today as public opinion
polls show only a f~w tantalizing
points separating them in the
state on election eve.
The nation's largest electoral
vote prize of ~ votes is at stake
as President Carter and former
state governor Ronald Reagan
m ake appearances in Southern
California.
Both fampaigns a lso will
s pend hundreds of thousands of
extra doUars in the state, Most
or the money will buy more
~television ads which wi ll appear
on top of commercials already
on naiional TV.
T H J: FINAL FLURRY of
presidential campaign activity
in California appears to stem
dire c,tily rrom the dramatic turhar~und in voter preference
polls.. \
Kenneth Dameron said 30 stu·
dents were treated at the scene
Sunday anq an additional l5
were taken in ambulances to
local hospitals where they were
treated and released.
San Francisco barber Ron Gomez holds
·two months' accumulated mail, ·induding
$3,000 in overdue bills. The letters were
held by the post office because a new
mailman on the route couldn't reach the
mail slot through this protective gate. Now
Gomez' phone has been disconn~ted and
he is on the edge of eviction because the
postal service did not notify him they were
holding his mail.
Four months ago. Reagan had
a 31 percentage point lead over
Carter. But in an independent
poll two weeks ago, Reag~n ·s
lead had dropped to 7 percent,
and a Carter .sponsored poll last
week pagged 1l at4.S percent.
That put the ~late with more
electoral votes than any other
into the doubtful column in most
pol1t1cal analysew. SINN w .. a• D•e•
OXNARD (APl -A 37-year-
old Oxnard woman who was shot
outside her home by a man
wearing a gorill a mask has died
of her wounds, police said.
The attack, which occurred
Halloween night, took place
afte r the man came to the home
of Refugia Benavides and asked
for candy. With her 6·year-old
dau_ghter Sonia looJring_on, Mrs..
Benvides said stie dido 't have
any candy. But when the woman
went out to her ('ar lo bring in a
bag of g r oceries. the man
grabbed her around the neck
and shot her. She succumbed
Sunday.
It'---~ 83, Slal•
LOS ANGELES CAP > -A
63-year-old woma n was slain
and then her body set afire in
her home to cover up the killing.
oolice said today.
Firefighters answering an
alarm in the Wilshire area of the
city late Sunday found the
woman's boclY in the home. A
· coroner's dei>uty said s he bad
been tied and assaulted.
Violations Seen
In Gas Pricing
LOS ANGELES <AP> Oil industry analyst Dan Lundberg
says a significant number of gas stations -particularly those with
full-service pumps -continue to violate federal gas price ceilings
established more than a year ago.
However, the weekly Lundberg Letter says its surveys in
dicale that fewer operators are charging above the federally man-
dated ceiling now than were doing so a year ago.
THE DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY established unirorm price
ceiling regulations in August 1979. Currently. retailers cannot
charge custom ers more than 16.8 cents a gallon above their
wholesale price. .
. .. .But in a survey conducted Oct. 24, 24 .S percent of the stations
selling regular gas at full·service prices were charging higher than
the federally-mandated ceiling.
FulJ.service prices for unleaded gas were above the ceiling at
27.4 percent of the stations and full-service premium gas ·pnces
were above the ceiling at 28.1 percent of the stations.
IN CONTaAST, A LVNDBERG surver conducted Nov. 16,
1979, showed that 40.1 percent or stallons selling regular gas at tull·
service prices were over the 15.4·cent re.tail marg~ that was ln
force at that time. Unleaded gas full-service price violations were
round at 42.2 percent of the stations.
Paid Political Advertisement Paid Poht1cal Advertisement
,
Probe Widens
ABC President lrwestigated
LOS ANGELES <AP) ·The Securities and Exchange
Commission is inves tigating ABC President Elton Rule's
real estate partnerships with a number of producers who
supply progra ms to the network, a newspaper reported.
Today's Los Angeles Times said documents filed with
the state and the county show Rule's partners in three pre·
viously undisclosed red estate venturl!s include Leonard
Goldberg and Aaron Spellin~ whose Spelling-Goldberg
Productions is ABC's m ajor program supplier.
Spelling and Goldberg are currently under inves tiga.
tion by the county district attomey·s office for possible
criminal fraud stemming from allegations that Natalie
Wood and Robert Wagner, among others. were cheated out
of their share of the profits for the "Charlie's Angels" TV
series.
It is not illegal for officers of public coroorations to
enter into unrelated investment partnerships with outside
suppliers, but the Times said the SEC is investigating
whether Rule disclosed the extent of his personal invest·
, m ents lo A~C's board or dir ectors and its 15,000
shareholders. .
ELECT RE-ELECT CONGRESSMAN
MIKE DOW · BOB BA·DHAM
f.OR
Congnss,
40rn ~:Urlfrlcl --
END9RSED BY:
ASSOCIATION OF
SANTA ANA HEIGHTS
(Re•ldent• Of Impact Are9)
Paid for by: Association of Santa Ana Heights,
M ona Odeg6ard, 1632 Pegasus, S.A. H~ights.
l
,...------------------------------------·· Paid PoUtical Ka vertisement
On Tuesday, November 4th
Make Your Vote Count
For A CHANGE!
WAITE~IN
ERlrAllO
-·
-tr Bob Badham supports..income and business.tax cuts * Boo BSdham is o•pposed to a peacetimft~raft
4-Bob Bad~m supports a strong national defen~ * Bob Badhsm supports eliminating retiree earnings limits * Bob Badham supports a balanced budget
I .. •
011 Sunday. independent J*
B . Ander son-ended hl.-
California campaign with a
whlsttestop train tour or tbe
state.
Secretary o f State Marf b
Fong Eu >s predi<:ting that 9
million of the state's 11.3 million
registered voters will caal
ballota Tuesday. '
A TURNOUT OF 9 million
would set a record for the
number of individual~ voting in
a California election. but as a
percentage it would be the
state's lowest in a presidential
election in half a century.
Californians will also be cast-
ing ballots in 43 congressional
races, 20 state Senate races and
80 state Assembly contests. plus
the U.S. Senate race between in-
c umbent Democrat Alan
Cranston and Republican PauJ
Gann.
There are al5o 11 ballots prop-
ositions. The most hotly con-
tested is Proposition IO, a second
attempt by smoking foes to limit
smoking in offices, restaurants
and most public buildings.
CRANSTON IS SO heavily
favored to win a third term that
the ,Nationa l Republican
Senatorial Committee decided
not to send Gann a planned final
ch~ck for $439,000, s~ying it was
s hort of its fundraising goals and
th_at Gann was too far behind.
Anot her overw helm in g
favorite for reelection is Rep.
Clair Burgener. the Kepubucan
pHled against state Ku Klux
~Ian G r a nd Dragon Tom
Metzger in the San Diego area.
M ctzger won the Democratic
nomin'!lion for Congress in last
June·s primary, but has been re·
pudiated by most of California's
top Democrats.
· One ot Uie dosest, most bruis·
mg and costliest congressional
contests is in the San Fernando
Valley, where anti-busing leader
Bobbi Fiedler. a Republican, is
attempting to unseat 20-year
congress1onal veteran James
Corman. a Democrat.
Sil~r Stolen
U.S. House of Representatives
40th Congressional District
UNITED STATES
REPRESENTATIVE
m odel. in brown pin tlo1 or navy s tripe. Coat,
vest and trousers. $370
40th Dletrlct Vote tor One
DAN lllAHAl'NY, LID.
f'r• MMtcet Businessman
MICMML P. DOW, Dem. oe..-Dtstrkt Atterftey
YOU-'MAKEA
DIFFERENCE!!
0
0
D
Use vour 8r<1oks Brothas charge accoum nr Amt'rrcan Express.
RC>BERJ E~ BADHAM
. REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS
,,
0ranoeeon10 •• 1vl'i1o1 Editorial P~e -·--~·.,· ·--:;,::~::"::-.."'":.=.,.-----------------~~--·----;... Tuesday eanOt
Reeommenclations
For the put HV.rtJ ...... tbe Dally Pilot bu
atiadied and analysed twklatel ud propoettlon1 to be
,_.. Illy "'*-8 ln tomorrow'• .a.etkm.
~"'· eonel•&ou ud recommeDdaUom hve sporadleally durtnC tlaa& period ud today
an 1ummarlaed for voten tnterelted in UM Dai11 PUot'a vJiewPG6nt. , 1be Daily Pilot 11 otferina no reeommendatloo for the.
Qlnff ol pree.ldent. Tbe oftlee ud tbe e.Ddklatel have
IUiltb bi.ah visibility aad receive 1\adl coatia.....,. examloa·
tioG that we see no likelihood tbat an evaluatlon by tJlla
newspaper -or any newepaper -can add &111'blnl to
the information.. and undentandin1 that tbe voten
ti.ready have available.
·• Such is not the case with the other officea and the t>~llot propositions. They command lea attention from
~oters, especially in a presidential election year. We hope
i1pd believe the Dally Pilot can offer some information
analys\stin endorsement editorials that may not be
available to the voter and aa such be of some assistance
in helping the voter make those choices.
1 • For these offices and the propositions, these are the
Daily Pilot's recommendations. 1,·.
j', V.S. SENATE
·•• The Daily~Pilot endorses Alan Cranston, incumbent.
V.S. REPRESENTATIVE
\r1 4otb Distrld: The Daily Pilot endorses Robert
Bedbam, incumbent.
'J 34tJa DIMrlet: The Daily Pilot endorses Dan Luncren,
lftcumbent.
STATE~EMBLY
~·. 73rd Dtstrfc&: The Daily Pilot endorses
mangers. \Jlcumbent. .. .,, 14th District: The. Daily Pilot endorses
Bergeson, incumbent.
Dennis
Marian
STATE PROPOSfflONS
Propoehlan 1: Pan•aw. This state bond issue to
tinance acquisition and development of state and local
' parklands, with special eml>beais on coastal areas, is of
special interest to Orange -CoUnty which would receive
the second largest share of the funds, aiding efforts to
secure the Orange Coast National Park.
Vote FOR
P~ltioa Z: Lake Tallioe 8-da. State bond iS&&&e to
help acquire wideveloped land and stem pollution of Laite
Tahoe.
Vote FOR
Proposition 3: laaaraa~e Gaaraatee. Allows the
begislature te create an insuran~ guarantee fund and
permits tax deduction for con\.ributing companies.
-Vote NO
Proposition 4: Property Ta~ 1'atver. Allows local
governments with a two-thirds vote of the people to use
property taxes for needed capital outlay such as public
safety, sewetage and school facilities.
Vote YES
Proposltioa 5: Property lleaueumettt. Would ex-
empt properties from re-evaluation for tax purposes
when owner is forced to rebuild or relocate as a resli.lt of
natural disaster.
Vote YES
Proposition 6: Jury· Sile. Would authorize the
Legislature to mandate an eight-member jury in
municipal and justice court civil cases.
Vote NO
Proposition 7: Solar Eaeray. Would exempt prop-
erties from reassessment when solar energy systems are in-
stalled.
VoteYFS
Proposition 8: Water ·Development. Places develop-
ment restrictions in the Peripheral Canal Bill into the
constitution, expedites State Water Project litigation and
could speed delivery of water to the Southland.
Vote YES
Proposition 9: Drtnlda& Water. Amen~ Safe Drinking Water Law to permit state to use bo funds for
grants to communities needing rehabilitation o domestic
water systems.
Vo YES
Propoei ... 10: Smoida& aad Noa-1mokiaa Sedlou.
Mandates establishment ol smoking and non-smoking
seclions in all enclosed public places and private busi-
nesses.
Vote NO
Proposition 11 : Jadgn Salartn. Would equalize
salaries of judges of equal rank and eliminate discrepan-
cy due to their date of appointment.
VoteYp
LOCAL MEASURES
\ ' -Measure L, Newport Beacb: Would allow ctty to
update an agreement forlbe extension of the Corona del
Mar Freeway, in coqipljance with City Charter 'requiring
voter approval.
Vote~
Measure E, Lagaaa lleHlt: Initiative requirinl
specific restrictions for blufftop development.
Vote NO
Meuure F, La1ua Beaell: AdV'iJory vote on the San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Station urliog conversion or closure of the plant.
No recommendation
Meuure G, Lagana Beada: Would allow develop·
ment of low -and moderate:income bouainl in Laguna
Beach provided no city general fund money ii uaed.
Vote YES
LOCAL CANDIDATES
Saa Clemell&e City CD di: The Dally Pilot endorses
Patrick-Lane and Alan Konen.
COUNTY 8\JPEaVllO&
19' IMltrtct: The Dally Pilot endonee Roser Stanton.
SUPEIUO& COV&T
omee No. 8 -James L. Smith. llunlclpal t:ourt
Judie. Offtee Np.11 -Robert D. Cbattertoe, Jjeputy Dlatrtet
Attorney. .
onlee No. 14 -James Wr\lllt Cook, llunld~
Court Judi•·
AndYROO..ey
A TedioU:s System That Worlt8
We're all tired of the ~lltical camp._. We're complatnlnc
tbat it'• IOIM oo for too aaa,,
Ul•t a kltof lt la DOGHUe, ud tMt
lt'••---oltlJHud money.
We complain, but do we really
OWlk ao? -And if w~ r.uUy do,
are we ri8bt? ·
If you1et to
tbe point
where yolt'
• can't stand
the thouabt ol
bearln1 one
m(> re can·
dldate make
one more
1a1eous ,
fence-1traddlln1 statement,
coaalder the news from Italy
l .. t week. They have juat bad.
. tbelr 40th aovernment since
1M5. Dwinl tbe Ume we have
bad seven, they have bad '°· U
W! ~ad bad 40, al.I sorts of people
would lutve been president of tM
United Statel (or abort periocb
-Geoqe and ffenl')' W ..U.ce,.
Geor1e McGovern, 8arr1
Goldwater, Eu1ene and J~
McCarthy, Hubert Humphrey,
Robert aod Ted. Ken.nedy,
Nellon Rockefeller, Kdl•l StevenlOft, Strom Tbpnnond.
· Some of them mi1bt have been
quit• IOOCI. but we wouJd have
the kind of. chaoa ln 1overnment they now have in Italy.
WREN SOMEONE suiaesta
we chan1e our system, I tend to
pull back. 'lbere are all aorta of
things wrong with our system
and a lot or specific changes
sound like good ideas, but it is a
lood thins for all of u.s that built
into our system is a series or
bdfles. hurdles and time·
consuming devices that makes it
very difficult for ua to chance
that system. It does not
aell-destnlCt. •
Even this tedious proceaa by
wblcb OM candidate eventually
1aln1 ucendency over another
and wlas at the polls la No-
vember bu snarvtrtue, hard aa itmaybeoa.,..
One of our chief complaints is
the apparent hypocriay of tbe
candidates. We know perfectly
well what We th.ink they beUeve ln,~nd uMm they begin to hedle on that and we're not ao sure
where they stand after au. I'm
in an upbeat mood today and
I'm goin1 to try to polllt out wby
that works to our advanta1e.
A CONSEKVATIVt;, rlgbt-
wing candidate like Reagan who
is generally in favor of less
spending on social programs, ,
less help to cities, less govern-
ment, lower taxes and more
1pendla1 .on mllltary proJeeta.
flnda that the people •bo sup-
port him wboleheartedly oo
tboM aunds are not eDOUlll to
set bhn elected. He 19 accllMd
by too away p9ople ol a..-. a
warmon1er, a (~end or 8'1
Bu.alneu 8'd an enemy ol the Common Man.
No candid.te can win u elec·
lion ln tbia country if those .
opinions about him are
widespread, ao the candidate,
Reapn in this cue, sets out to
cban1eJbe opinion people have ol
him. Hebacuolf. Heatal'Ubedl·
inc. He 11)'1 that Isn't exactly
what be meant. At some point be
even bu to get apeclflc and aay
what social pro1ram1 he ,will and
will not S\lpport. Because be
needs votes, be doesn't usually
end up saying he'll kill any social
program we have, includiDI
Welfare or Environment. And he
says he wants to help the cities.
NOW T~E THE other can-
didate, Jimjny Carter. He's a
more or less liberal Democrat.
He's thought to be In favor of
managiftg the economy through
fiscal steps taken by govern-
ment agencies. He's considered
·anti Big Business. He's seen as
sort toward our enemies and
weak wher) it come5 to taking a
military stand in intemaUonal
matters.
I Carter knows that he can't win
if that's what people th.ink of
him. so be sets out to chanse hU
image. He wants to help Big
Business· and Small Bualnesa.
He wants to take tougher stands
where be was soft and softer
stands where be was tbugh.
-,
Richard Reeves
The reason all th.is ia good fon.
the rest of us is that both Carter
and Reagan, no matter wb.at
else you think of them, are
honorable men. The~ feel com-
pelled to try to do what they've
said they'll do, and to this ex-
tent, in office they will be led by
their own rhetoric. They will
bear their own campaign prom-;.ses ringfug in their ean and
they'll try to make good on them.
AU the b~ talk doesn't go for
nothing.
celebrity COnnections Help in Politia!;
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. -1be
crowd bad been waiting almost an
hour for Ronald Reagan and they
burst into app~ause and cheers
when be arrived. After all, he
walked in with RogerStaubach.
Staubac h , the former
quarterback for the Dallas
C owboy s, ·
made h.ls first
political trip
with the
Republican
candidate-or
president dur·
ing this cam.
paign. It may
not be his last.
A lot of people
in Texas think
that Staubach, now a sports com·
menlator for CBS, will be a can·
didate for the U.S. Senate in 1982.
Roger the Dodger sort of denies
that. "The reason I'm here is lbat
I am a voter," be told a crowd
later in Corpus Christi. ''I'm not a
Republican; I'm not a Democrat.
I'm a concerned citizen. 1 am a
grass roots guy."
KEALL Y HE'S an Astro turf
guy. Staubach is the moat famous
Hoppe
guy in Texas, an authentic hero
after years of football bravery for
the Cowboys apd, before that, for
the U.S. Naval Academy. And
celebrity is the coin of the realm
these days in politics. Ask Jack
Kemp, who went from
quarterbacking the Buffalo Bills
to Congress -and Kemp wasn't
JS good asStaubach.
Or, ask Bill Bradley, who went
from plavin« buketbalL for the
New York Knicks to Congress.
Or, ask JObn Glenn and--garnson
Schmidt, the astronauts in the
Sen ate. Or, Jess e Helms ,
television commentator turned
senator. Or, John Y. Brown, who
found out you can become gov-
ernor of Kentucky if you marry
someone as celebrated as CBS's
Phyllis George. Or, Reagan-...
wealllmowwherehecamefrom.
IT WOULD BE going a bit too
far to say that the country is 1oir)1
lo be governed by actors, pro-
f essional athletes, anchormen
and astroatfuts. There will always
be rQQJn for famous sons ,
particularly sons with names like
Rockefeller, du Pont. Heinz,
Stevenson, Brown or Kennecly.
This -year. candidates a.round
the co\Dltry include the sons of
Thomas Dodd, Alfred Gore.
Richard Daley, Barry Goldwater
and Hubert Humphrey, and the
grandson of Ernest Gruening.
The daughter of Alf Landon,
senator Nancy Kassebaum is not
up for re·election and the
daughter of Ronald Reagan~
Maureen Reagan, doesn't plan to
run (.for senator from Califomia)
until1982.
It 'i at least as old u John
Adams' son, Job.r.J Quincy. Name
recognition is the name of the
game. We juat have different
kinds or celebrities -and more of
thein -these days. And they don't always win every time. You
can never set hard and fut rules
-after all, 1Jess Myerson, who
was Miss America before Phyllis
George. Jost her race for the
Senate in New York. Tom Hayden
coulCln 'l make it to the Senate
even with Jane Fonda at bk aide.
But it did work for John Wamer
and Elizabeth Taylor.
CELEBAITY IS not only rel-
atives, it's relative. To win lowe1
offices, you can trade on fame of a
lower order. Barney Frau, a
Ma11acbusetts legislator who
ju.at woo a eoacreuional nomina-
tion without ever having bis own
television show, told me that the
new group Surnin.g up in state
legislatures is high school football
coaches.
Anyway, it was a pleasure to
watch Staubacb in action, as it
was for 1S years on the field. He
seemed sby at rirst,"'but be WU
"soon into the .awing ot thlnp,
sbatj.ng two bands for every one
Reagan grabbed that day in Tex·
as. "At a rally in a city park," one
newspaper reported, "Reagan in·
troduced the distinguished plat·
form guest to the crowd. (Gov-
ernor William) Clements, (former governor John) Connally
and (Sen. John) Tower were
greeted in silence; Staubach re-
ceived tumultuous applause."
"We need stability-in this coun·
try." Staubacb said. "We need
leadership.•: Well, he led the
Cowboys to the Super Bowl, didn't
be? No one asked him about
anything else, usually they just
wanted to see bis Super Bowl ring.
No one, that I saw, tried to kiss it,
although a few looted tempted.
Parent-Child Relationshifl8"1Defy ·Solution
Experts ke.p pre,lictth, lbe de-
mise of lbe trad.itionaJ pu;pt-
chlld relatiomhip u 9fe tiave
come to know and love it. U
they're right, what will we talk
about at dinner parties?.
some nice fellow her own age and
get manied ... But she just laucbs
and says she's not ready to settle
down.··
da the other evening and sbe Just
turned ~ 'Boogie Wonderlllbd'
and began dilco dancing. 'Tou·
jours gai,' she said. 'To..uc>ura
gal.' ..
,
Hcta. I mean I wish" he'd do
. more, but l dod't'want him mat-I . inl •fool of himself."
~
"I COULDN'T agree more.
I
I
Take the other e\oenin1: "My
husband and I are worried to
death about
Brenda," the
lady on my
rt1ht said for
openen. "She
ln111ta on liv·
Int in that
apartment of
"THEY'RE SO darned Ir-
responsible at that age," I aald,
shakin& my bead, sympathetical-
ly. "One minute mlne's talld.n1
about runnin& off to live on lbe
Left Bank. And the next, h~ts to buy a sport.I car. The Wt.:/ be
drives, be lbouldn't be' let out of
"Gosh. they're scatterbrained
at that age," I s aid. "They're
always rorgettln1 to return over·
due library books -or cloee the
windows when it ralna. And
tuJUble, too! I'm always afraid
that mJne'e iolnl to nm off and
They simply won 't think or wbat j
could happen to them -getting • ,
sld in the middle of the nicflt lft' 1 · finding a burglar in their bedroogi
or ... Ob, I so wish Brenda would ,
move into a place where she could • 1
be withpeopleofberown a1e. ". • I'
hers all by ~ herself and
it's really not .l.
a 1 a f e . ' nel1hborhood:"
"I 1""°" they just want to u -
aert their lndependence at that
a1e," I acreed· "I have one like
that. U. won't listen to a thina I
tellbhn. Butwhatcanyoudo?"
"Suffer, I 1ueu. We've told
Brenu there'll •lwaya be room for ber ln our family nest, but abe
doetn 't care. Now 1he'1 mad
aboutPOWna.'' "I WiMa mlne were. All he does
la alt around watcbln1
l4levlalon."
"Yee but Brenda'• alto m8d
•bout the ..,U.r. And M'I a no-IOOd bum wbo muat be about fifty.
f lcMp ~her lbe oqbt to flnd
the 1ar.,e.'' •
"Brenda, neither. She wouldn't
be a Nd driver, tiut 'abe's too vain
to wear her lluaes. I can't even
1et her to wear a pair of aeuible
aboes. Sometimes it aeema •ll•be
evertblnlra•boutlaherhalrorber
malceup or Mr clothe•. And her
clothes! Short 1kh'tl, low.cut
blOUHt ... ''
"Mine'• the oppoelte. Doetn't
ure what be wears. Talk alloul
sloppy! And I'm sure b• eata
noth.lq but junk rood. J know he'd
never take the time to prepare a
decent bot rneal tor blmHlf. One.
I atked blm lf He'd bad a deDta1
cbeekup lal4ly a.ad be u mti u
U>ld me to mind my own butl-
neaa. ··
0 Ya,. ftlJ:Y hate us inl4rfer·
tn1, don'l the)'? M1 buabucl tried
to explain the dlffereot tll&erelt
rate.onsavinp aeeouata to Bno·
Join one of these kinky rellP>ua
tt'lclu
"Yes, I've su11ested that to
mine, too. But he won't have it.
'No old folu home for me,· he
1ay1."
"Brenda's the same way. But
despite all the worries she causes
us, 1he'1 been a wonderful
mother-in·law. ''
"WeU, I love my Dad, too," I
•said. "But the fact is that neither
ofthemarecapableoftutn1c1re
oftbemaelvea atthelr aae."
•Y DIN'NEK companion
amUed. "Do you thlnk we should
be talldni about our parenta like
thla!"sbeuktd.
"Why. not?" I tald. ''They
talked Uke this about us for thlrty
yean. I just hope we can ·io on
tallc&q like th1I about them lot
anotJlef' tblrty."
••And )'OU know what • I
hope?" the Hid. "I hope &bat llil
WrtJ :rean our chlldreft wW be
tallc"'f thla •!*'t UI. ''
1
•
NATION
Placid
Nllke Plant
Fears Wall
MIDDLETOWN, Pa <AP> A run u"'u~
nuclear reactor terrified this to.wn l!J monthi. ago.
but fean have faded and most locals· ha vt.• otht>r
thin11 on \heir minds
• ''lbe outside world thinks that we should bt'
thinking about nuclear energy. But we Ii vi ng hert-
think the big thing Is the economy," sa)i. Mayor
Robert Reid.
"We have the sa m e problems ttiat oth1.•r com
munities have, except for that om• little thing s it
ting down there that gives us a· un1qu~ pos1t1on "
THAT "ONE LITl'LE TIUNG" is the Three
Mile lsland nuclea r power plant Ever since tht·
March 28, 1979, a ccident, radioactive water and
other conta minated waste, including the re<1ctor
core, have been festering a t the site
But this middle-c lass, conservative commun1
ty considers itself "back to normal " The ttirongi,
of reporters and rented cars have disappeared A
single elderly volunteer directs rush-hour lraffl<'
on Union Street . the m ain avenue lined "'ith
elaborate Victorian houses.
People quietly pursue their Jobs al ~'"·ern
ment installations and private firms: I l<:rs he)
Foods, Bethlehem St eel. the Mechanicsburg Naq
Depot, the New Cumberland and Letterkcnn\
army depots and the state capitol in nearh\ ll.11 risburg. ..,
THE ACCIDENT'S PRIM/\RY LEGACY
seems to be what Heid gently labels "mixt•d ft't·I
ings" toward nuclear powe r and the planl
operator. the Metropolitan Edison Co
The cris is spawned a band of fervC'nl ant r
nuclear activists who pa rticipate rclig1ousl) 111
hearings on utility rates, cleanup ac·tivilit>s and ttw
future or ~ undamaged reactor al the plant s1lf'
It also prompted formation or ~Frienrls and
Family of T M r." And outside town, on the• 11 V<'I
road to the nuclear plant, occasional hlllhoar<.b
proclaim ''More Nukes. Less Kooks" and "Refnr1•
You Say No Nukes, Know Nukes."
Associated Press interviews with do\\.n ln\\.n
....
.... r • -· '
I
' ' I ,_
I
..
AP W111photo
M AYOR ROBERT RE IO STANDS IN BUSINESS DISTRICT OF M1DDLETOWN, PA.
Local Terror Has Died Out, But Others Keep Actively Protesting
~ho1>1·•·r, I 1u11d th<tl 1 \ • 11 111 l"h1 l'l \l ilt-f!..!J nd'«
liad,\,11tl 111.111\ '"'' r .1n• 111d1fl1•1•nt and mtb t
:1 1c 1in1 u...,111~ ..i.m1l'11-.1r ~.1nbt1rk lo rm:asun• the·
l'andul.ltl' ...
,\~ Sll F H H.Qfo.ll ('l.OTllES ill ii local l:.i un
<1111111.11 \Ii.· n un• .111 ..i ·1:! \car 11hl P r on Stal.l'
..,111<11•111 ,.;,11d •h, 11 ult,nt :in<I its <·1111tinu111g Jf
ll'l l1l.1lh Ii 1d 1dde<I .... 11·1'"" to lwr hft• nut wh1•n sh1·
.l1 •1·11fr .., fo1 \\h11111 .... 1,,. \ill \t11l· 'iht' ..... 111J, "Nul'l1·ar
flfl\\"~ \\ill ht· p.1rl 111 11 hul not lhe \\hole·
I' 11·k:H '
'>1w 111.111 .• 1 '1!1 ''"' •11\ 1•1 nml'nt ••m plo) 1·1• \\ho
"orl.." '' 11 ti 1(1( .ti t 111• 1·i.:1·tt•'.\ planrwr .... i.uid \he al'
ctd<'ttl li.1, 111.1111· l''"'f'll' 11101. ii-...ar1· of nudt•;,tr
1•n•'1 •\ ._ 1•11\1 "'i;1I d 11Htl'r~ lml I rlon'I twheve
• lh 11 ~;I I hav1• .1n\ 1hir1).! '"di \lllh 1111 pr<'..,11lt·11L1al
"''" •11111
Ca •
Thl· Hcpuhltcan mayor . com·erncd about local
ht•alth a nd welfare. asked Pres ident Carter this
m o nth for fede ral aid lo de<:ontammalC' the pl<1nt
Hut he i,ays he intend5 to vole for GOP hopefu l
Huna ld Reagan
Both ma1or pa rty candidates have supporte rt
nuC'le<4r energy. and hot h have stressed the m·ed
for careful adh<.•rf'nce to sa fety regulations Carter
ha~ s aid he favors other energy sources. e ... pecr:.Jll)
..,1) I a r llt)V. er
DOMINIC Dt:LCl'ORE CONSIDERS nu<'l<•ar
power nec<'ssar y "unless they come up "1t h
som ething better .. Mt>anwhJle. his thoughts art>
fix ed on economic m atter~ bus1nes~ <1l -h1s lwo
pizza re~raurant~ has dropped l:.i tel~ tx·causc ~l t.>l
Ed l;ml off hundred~ of cleanu~ "'orl..ers al lht:
pl:.int
Moms Suffer
Others Cite
Stress Woes "
PITTSBURGH (AP) -The Three Jillie lslnd
nuclear plant accident produced some long-term
emotional problems, especially ror mothers of.
young children. say researchers who contend a
feder al Study to the Contrary W'5 wrone. •
Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh-.
Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic said that
the mothers were the hardest hit by mental streai,
and t heir proble ms lasted through the first year
after the March 1979 accident, the worst in the na•
lion's commercial nuclear history. ,1
~.
THE STUDY CONTRADICTS THE report 9'
the Kemeny Commiss ion, a blue-ribbon panel
which investigated the a ccident at General Publj,:
Utilities Corp. 's nuclear plant at Middletown.
The commission said, "The most severe
health effect or the accident was severe mental
stress. which was short-lived."
"I think our study shows that they were
wrong," s aid Or. Evelyn Bromet, principal re·
searcher on the study. "There were long-term ef.
feels."
The study was commissioned by the National
Institute of Mental Health at a cost or about
$375,000. The state Welfare Department called the
~tucly "the most authoritative.and detailed" or any
so rar 011 th<' health effects of the accident.
T HF. PROBLEMS FOUND IN 25 percent of
the 6U Three Mile lsland mothers included sleep-
lessness. loss of appetite, indecision a nd other
!'>tgns of depression. Ms. Bromet said, adding that
12 percent of the women sought professional help.
.. Most of i l happened right after the· accident
\\h<•n the stress was very severe." she said. In
interviews a year after the accident, the women
said the problems were present but less severe.
"Three Mile Island is n't over for the people
who live there," Ms. Br;omet s aid.
There were nearly twice as many cases of
anxiety and stress among mothers living within a
fi\e mile radius of the damaged reactor, compared
to mothers in<\ control group living near a nuclear
power plant at Shippingport.
..
...
'
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ON THE FUNDS YOU USE FOR CHECKING.
• . •
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J
0AA.. 'f f"ILOT • CALIFORNIA 1
Worries· AbOut Critics GENERAL B.ECTill .
~/Id Autlior J'ieaas Worb Seriomly NOVEm 4111, 1• SAN FRANCISCO CAP> ,
W ith ••r nl n11 from bH
beat • ll tn1 tl r1 t novel.
"lDttr'Yt wtth the Vampl,..," ~ IUc. hat traveled over \M
world and HQWll~ly furalibed
Mr Vidorian home.
Vet, 1he can't fully aavor the
1uc:ce11 because ab• worrle1
\ha\ many cr\Ue1 don't tab her
-and twr wildly lma1lnaUve
wort -tenoualy.
Every tlme l 1et confid.nt and
bappy about a really tood review,
I &et dlsmlued by somebody who
woo't even read It," Mn. ft.lee
Hid, aitUnl on a curvint IOf a ln' room filled with art obJecu found
In her travels
II as. RICE lamented that
reviewers assume her workt are
"pe riod pieces" lnsignlflcant
to the shaping of literature. "Jt'1
Just out of fashion to write
aerious novels in a historical •
setti.n1." ··
Vet her work is lramed with
eiab o r a t e d e tail s and
painstaking ,..research. Twelve
ye&l"s of documentation enriched
her second novel, ''Fea11t of All
Saints." But a l her work 's
center are vivid, sympathetic
portraits of he r h e r oe s -
comple x c hara cte r s who
struggle with morality viewed
from unusu al vantage s In
hiatory. As the title says, "Vampire"
Is an inJimate profile told by the
m y t h i ca I m on s t er . a
surprisingly likable creature of
whom reade rs know almost
e'verythlng after 3'6 paperback
pages.
"FEAST" BRINGS alive the
pre-Civil War world of the "gena
de couJeur Ubre." descendant.a
of wtu1e Louisiana planters and
their black mistresses. Freed
from bondage but enslaved by
dark skin. the offspring created
.... ,, .......
·HllTOftlCAL W•UTIR Anne"'"
a ilUb world Of ariaUrnnacy MOii
artillt r y , a brier yfl t rid\
clvlllaalion largely untout hfld by
writers and history
Her third no vel , n~ul ni
completion, probei; the hlaarre
world of t he cai.tratl, 11th
ce ntur y yo uths wh o we r e
caatrated so that their eoprano
voices could be preserved for
Italian opera While the a uthor 's bend
toward alluring but forbidden
worldB may be obvious to some,
Mrs. Rice said It wasn't unUI
s he began her third novel that ahe
recognized a common ·'thread.'•
.. All three b oo k s a re
esse nti a lly d e a lin g with
outsiders. The vampire was a monstrous sort of outsider. . . .
The people in "Feast " are like
· Study Shows M3ny
Lack Health Funds
WASHINGTON <AP> -Three p a r ed with 11.7 pe r cent of
or e very four Americans see a whiles. the s u rvey ro und.
doctor al least once a year and Med ical assistance programs
one in 10 is hospita lized, but ·for low-income persons. such as
millions of people have no form. Medicaid, helped n arrow this
of health insurance lo help with gap. the costs. says a government Persons with le s s formal
survey. education also were more likely
Prelimjnary results of the sw.. to be .uncove red. The s urvey
vey. termed the m ost com · found that a mong persona older
pre h e n si ve e ver d o ne o n than 17 years of age, 15.S per·
personal health care and ex· cent with less than 12 years of
penses in this country, were re-educ atlQJ\ h ad · no insurance,
leased al the American Public compar~ with 8.9 percent of
Health Association 's annual those with more than 13 years'
meeting in Detroit. schooling.
' In other categories, more than
THE SURV EY, which looked 160 million people -75.9 percent
a l the health-ca r e habits of of the 1977 population -had al
carbon ~ ol .mite bour•eola socl.ty ..• and yet ... U..y'r.
not admJtLtd to white Ute.
.. TBS CAAT&ATI became
very f•mou1 opera 1tart. . . .
lleo and women would fall ln
love wtth tMm. Vet they could
DOt m•rrr Md or courM they
couldn't b.ave children. Tber
were doomed to bt tta. monet.n
of t he •\•II -beautlful,
tlittertnf, p1eoua, flamot'OUI monatert."
llrl. Rice. I H ·Y••r-old
mother, preoccuplt1 hel'111f
with "outllden," but Mr rno1t
vibrant PHHIH come from
within.
Sbe talka H clt9Cllr. warmly ol
her etuJdhood In New Orl .. NI
whert1 for Hvtn centa, sea. rode
t.be &. Chari• A venue 1treetear
ind 1pent hourt watchln1 ahJpe
load al the wharf.
"I realised very. verv voun1 I
wu llvln1 In a very unuaual
place. To walk throu1h that
areM, to ro le) church WH to PHI
buutllu thln111 •l tivti ry tul'n of
the eye.
... NICVICa GOT Nt1W Orlean11
out of my blood 11nd t1verythln1 I
write , aoone r or litter. the
r huicten wind up In New
Orhu1n1."
Mn . Hice la •lrontieat when
wrltl nt of what la rloae to he r
heart, 1md one dear to her 11
M aroel , the protaaonilt In
"FeH t," who'• a1 aplrlted and
drl ven a IOU.I aa Scarlett .O'Hara
In · ·oone with the Wind.··
"1 flaure thla cut COil me aboUt flfty dollars an ounce,
r&curtnt llllOnl, room and board, aweaten ... "
Viaitor Marriages Down
RENO, Nev. CAP> -It appears that fewer
people are 1otn1 to Reno for lnatanl marrtaaea.
•lthouah local weddlnc chapela say bualnea re·
main• •ood·
Throu1h September, 28,2'74 marrtaae licenses
had been luued In Re~. Juat over 10,000 fewer
than the 38,305 Ucenaes lisued in the Hme period
one year aao.
Like other 11pect1 of the area's tourist·
oriented economy, olflclals blame the bl&ber coel
of aa.al.lne and the economy for the deeUne. Wblle
known for lu short residency requirement for
divorces, Nevada requires no waitln& period for
marria1e, maklnl it a popular bltctun1 spot for
out-of·llaten.
Paid Political Advertisement
NOTICETo ·
ORANGEcouNrYVOTERS
The nomes of tt. palffcd ,.tin wwe
...,.•lated on 'fOS' wu;I• 11 •ots met
... Clbbn•iated on tht offlcW Wafs.
The li1t IMlow i1 a key to tht ...,...._.
tion1. .
Los nombre1 • lo5 pcrti«N politicos
fwr0tt abre•i'ados • ... · balqfas •
iftuestra y es tan ... viodM ett -balotos
oficiates. ta lista .. siCJ1e H la cta.e
para las abreviociOMS.
IP · AMEllCAN tlllPBllNT PMTY
Dem. · DEMOCRAlE PMJY
Lil · LIBEITARIAN PMTY
Plf ·PEACE AND flfftl1 PMYY
Rep. · REPUBLICAN PMJY
lrll · INDEPENDENT
••
RELIEVE TRAFFIC CONGESllON
VOTE YES ON PROP8SIT-ION "l"
Proposition L on the November • ballot is a
major step fOfW&rd in Atfieving Newport
Beach traffic congestion. We urge your yes
vote.
I. WHAT IS IAU.OT MIASUU '"I.'?
A.I•-· Ballot Measure 1.. 1f 8'>Qfoved. will authonz.e the
Newpcn 8each O ty Council to negotlete an •mendment to the
existing Corona del Mar Freeway agreement with the Stet• of
Callfornie Department of Trensportetlon
J. WMY IS AM &8C110M I •? I A.aww. Tile Newport Beach Cty Charter prov1deS 11\at the City
Council ny not enter Into or emend • freeway agreement with
the Stete of California unless at'ld until authorized to do so by a
majority of tile City's electors voting at a general or special
election. .
l. WHY IS AM AMIMO..-.T TO T.. MMWAY
..... ,,, ... ?
Study the following questions and answers
about this vital local propoamon. and join the
civic leedets. listed below. who endorle a
yes vote on Proposition L.
6. WHAT•UtlS WU.1Mlfllll'WAY
COWSTIUCTIOM ,.O..U
..,.... Trattlc congestion 1n the atN north&rly of Upper
Newport Bay 11 beid at pr ... nt and f'llPidly getting ..,,.... The
freeway extenelon will provide ICAJltantiel 1'911ef In the lltM: wtth
particular benefila to Bristol Street: and to ~ Ori~. lryine
Avenue. and Jllmbc>ret ROlld neer Bristol Su.\:
1. · WIU. THI flHWAY COMSftUCTIOM ALSO
...._ lll.tJIPIC co11•1S110M OM PAC911C COAST
lleHWAT7
AM-. Yes. In the Upper Newi>0rt Say-John Wayne Airport
area. there is a dist111ce of ov. five miles between Coat
Highway and the San Diego Freeway. The Upper Say at'ld the
airport sever the ~w•y syttem: and the Carone det Mer
Freeway.Btistol Street corridor la the only through highway ·
facility parallaJ lo the coast in that antir..-ere..-Sucn-----1---N
high-caipeefty parallel faclhty w(ll be able to relieve congestion 3 7 , o o O p e o p I e ..i n l 4 • O 0 O least on~ physician contact that
households during 1977. will take year. )II.
years to analyze fylly.
i..a-. The existing agreement contatns designs for ramc
connections. etc.. which are now over 15 years old. The designs
need to be updated to conform to CtKrent traffic needs and
engineenng standards.
on Coast Highway during peak periods.
But the National Center for WHITES MORE THAN <>Oler
Health Services Research said races, females mor e than males
ea rly findings give some insight and persons over 65 years of age
irf\o how ~mericans tally up:$200 more than t~ •young~r were
billion in health expenditures more likely to see a doctor.
each year. Doctors' fees varied widely,
·'One surprise of this study but the mean figure was S23 per
w ~ t h e la r ge numbe r of visit.
persons wh9 reported being un-Families and individuals pa.id
insured -26.1 million persona 65 perce nt of these costs
or about 12.6 percent of the themselves and private health
civilian population," said the insurance picked up 15 percent.
agency, part of the Department Medicaid paid large proportions
of Health and Human Services. of doctors' fees for low-income
persons and those olber than
THERE WAS NO difference in whites, the survey found.
ins urance coverage between About 10.3 percent of the 1977
men and women, but there wu population, 21 million persona.
a racial difference. bad stays in hospitals that year,
E ighte en per cent of non----.cith a UJean length of st ay being
whites had no coverage, com· 7.ldays.
.. THE OVERALL MEAN
charge for a hospital sta y ln 1977 Rotary ~·res WU Sl,127 for those where ~ hospital charges were kne>wo."
• · • • the survey said. Study G an•a · "' Private lnsu;rance paid 53 per·
. ~ . cent ot these hospital charges
The Newport-8 boa Rotary
,Club baa contri $15,000 to
It.a inlematiooal oundatlop for
grants for adv need 1tudent
study.
Jim de Boom, realdent of the
local Rotary c apter, said the
funds were ra in the put
year. He a1ao Uiat 11 local
memben and£the wife of one have been . amed to the
Paul Harris F lows .
Named wer Frank Andenoa,
Keith Carey, Edith Carver, Joe
Carver, Fr nk Gebhard, Hal
Gray. Wo Cly Linton, Dean
Reavie, ard Friboura, Gree
Myers, Bi Van Natt• and Bob
Stoettel.
P a ul arris founded the
Rotary pilab 78 years a10.
and Medicaid paid f.8 pertent, it
aaid.
Wheo lt came to getting dental
1ervices, about 43 percent or the
population had their teeth
checked at least on~ that year.
Whit.es had more dental visits,
being almost twice as likely to
do ao than all others.
Gas Paill8 Grow
PARlS (AP) -The French
1ovemment bu increased the
price cl gasoline and fuel oU un-
der ill policy of pualng on crude
oil price rtaes to the consumer.
Premiwn guoUne wm COit the
equivalent ol $3.18 a 1aUoa, a
rise. of 1.8 percent.
L IS A fV1'ml IXTIMSIOM 0#; THI MllWAY INTO
CO.OMA D& MAI,....,,_,
4. WILL IAU.OT MIA.Silm '"I.• At•• TMI c:m CHdlll McmslOM ...,... •• A YOTI 0. THI
PIOPl.I POI AUTHOlln TO IMTll IMTO A
.. HWAYA•••m
.....WW. No. There 1s l'leither planning nor funding for any
extension of the freew•v into Corona del Mar. Instead. the City
of Newport Beach supparts a conMCtlOO of the Corona del Mar
Freeway to the proposed San JMQuln Hlllt T,.,,aportMIOO
Corridor. This transportation corridor would extend doWnOOUt •t a distance of llbout tour miles northeatefly of Co.st Highway.
and would be entirely outside lhe Oty of' Newport Beed\. A.a-. No Any ~ frffway agreen'lent or revrlion to th&
existing agreement would still require a 'IOt• of the C*>Pfe. The
City Charter Is not amended in any way by Ballot Measure ""L. ·
I . WHAT Pdf 0. THI CoaoMA D& MAI fllllWAY
IS NOPOS• flOI COMl1IUCTIOM7
t . D01S IA&.LOf ..-AW .,_. IMC&.UDI THI SAM
JOAf'IM t&LS ~A110M CCM'AWOI?
.u.-. All extension of slightly over one mile In length from the
present tenninue westerly of ~ Ori~ to a connection with
M•cArthur Bouleverd on the westerly lide of San Diego Cfeek 1n
.__. No. a.llot M ... ur• .. L .. netther helpe nor hinderl !he
propoted future connection of the f1'9eway to the transportation
corridor.
10. WHO IS OPfOI• TO IALl.OT MIAIWI '"I. ""a the City of Irvine Is proposed, · • ._ __ There 1s no known Ofgenlzed ope>C>Sition to the menure.
YES ''"ON PROPOSITION "("~COMMITIEE
P•ulB.George
Gerald M. St\ew
Don Mcfnni9
Claritat.....
John L Curci
William C. Ring
Pauline 1'. Gilten
O•n Rogers
Shelli Rogert
JeueluM
Rlchatd Spooner
GlfY Burrill
Robert W. Wlcox
BobW.,_
Dick~
P9te 8lr't9lt
Vin JofVfl _,,
~ Rothmen
TheodOte Robins. Jr.
• Aobett M. Miium
Paul T. 81161111
Oen Kllmet
Cecil H. SNper
C.A.Hlt*
A. Kenneth 8M1')IOn
Ralpha.M
Walttf O'utttndef'I
Robert F. McCurdv
Lea Stwnes
Don K. Port«
Carol South
Rudy Baron
Suiy Beror1
M•fY~
Gordon H. west
Kathy Miiier
Jemeto.te
Chuck HlrlCh
Leon John90n
Shirley P9c:>P1ng
Lyman Faulkner
P1t KroM
LM NJ/Ii(
Fred Fortter
Jon Loeb
FrenkJlnk
Hal Plnchln
TimP.-
Rlohatd HolmgfWI
lctt Ql'Of'9ky
ErinelOoP
Mike MunC
Rl~Jecklon
RatphCCmlng
Mike Stoctcstlll /
GltY Poelatra
Barbara Sfollt•
Irvine °*'1beC' of C0mtnerCt
•
Nawpe>ft HartJor Ch•mbtr of CommefCle
NewPoft c.nter Al90dftlon
Gr•attr IMne lnduetrt•I Leegu.
Hal Thor'nM
Jackie Heether
Orange OolJnty Tramport8tion
Commitlion o.e. '"Bud" 9c:M>eder
Mike Gering
V.L."~"G,.y
Timothy L 8tr9der
Jbhn Vlrtu.
l!dld-*
MIU!yo.w8'd
Jean Witt
Sen. John Schmitz
MltY Sdwnlti
W1llyZ1gter
BUI Dwnell
Tom Molrteeev
E.M. Van Ren1M11er
Ron NOfton
•
Paid for by Yee on Prop. L Committee. Ohrmn. Mike Otrin•·
40'7 Evenin1 Sl•r Lane. Ntwport Beach. CA tlllO
Pat Stl'OflO
Key Earlaon
Tome~
l..ew Ad<ennan
H•nkDemell
Rober1 w. Bein
tom Fuent•
Tom Alley
Evelyn Hirt
Paul Hummel
Phil~
F0<d MtQeOICe I
Communication Core:,.
Debra Allen
Georve~
Ps1.1l a.lall1
Allan leek
Helen Mc:Uugnlln
Walter Gerker\
MulneMlnk
Roaali9Gltd
E.P. a.neon
Detta 8lnloc\
Authetyn Ptummet
John Oolc
. '
CM. y l'IL.Or
• Paid Political Advertisement
I
I
'l , I
'
•
Arter all the talk, all the charges,
all the political proposals of this -...
year's presidential campaign, it
makes sense to do one final thing
before you vote: Look at the facts ...
compare the actual records of the
two candidates for President ... and,
based on their past and current
performance, determine who offers
the most promising future for
America.
What Carter didn't
do as President.
What Reagan did
as Governor.
tJ
When Ronald Reagan be-
came Governor, the State had a
$194 million deficit. When he left
office, there was a $554 million
surplus.
When he entered office, the
State's Medicaid program was in
the red and underfunded. By the
very next fiscal year, the program
was in the black.
When he entered office, the
State's welfare program was sky-0 When Jimmy Carter ran for rocketing in cost and numbers of
President in 1976, he promised an people on the rolls. His reform
inflation rate of 4% by 1980. It's program cut more than 300,000
now 1980; and the inflation rate is people from the caseload, while
12%. benefits to truly.needy recipients
D He·promised to "never were increased by more than 40%.
increase taxes for the working peo-When he entered office, the
ple of ourcountry and the lower · State was spending $1 million more
and middl.e income groups." Since per day than it was taking in.
he took -office, taxes from all When he left office, he had turned
sources have increased more than tho~e numbers around, holding the
70%. real increase in the administrative 0 He promised to "never use cost of government to a tnere 1.9%,
unemployment and recession as a even while the cost of state govern-
tool to fight i~ation.." Today, ment was continuing to rapidly
nearly 8 million Americans are un-late 1 h . . . esca e sew ere.
employed-and inflation continues In short what Governor
.--1---to run rampant.T _ Reagan did ~as.nothingif not re-
e pronuse to a ance t e markable. He attracted citizens ~udget within four years ~fte~ tak-with ideas to help solve the prob-
ing office. T~e ~980 co.mb1ne? lems of government-citizens will-
b~dget deficit ts the biggest in U.S. ing to serve as volunteer members
-~history. of task forces, not as paid bu-
0 He promised that interest reaucrats. During hi's two terms,
rates and mortgage rates were he vetoed no less than 994 bills.
going to come down. Yet over the He froze the hiring of State
last few years, intere~t rates and employees. He implemented a
mortgage rates have 9oared, and, property tax relief program
today, the percentage of first-time totaling $2.4 billion ... a school
homebuyers who can afford to buy district rollback tax of nearly
a house has decreased to the lowest $550 million ... a $214 million
point since the Great Depression. property tax relief program for
0 He promised a "national, senior citizens ... a $230 million
-
unified, long-range and ~om-income tax relief program for ~
prehensive energy policy." This renters ... a one-time $335 million .
year, his own Energy Department sales tax reduction ... and income
• admitted that government policies tax rebates amounting to
will "have only:b.relatively small $720 million.
impact on energy prices and.oil · · And here's the mo8').remark-
imports in 1990." ~ able part of all: even while doing so
...
O He promised to maintain a much to reduce taxes, Governor
strong American defense postuse Reagan was incr~asing aid to the
in the world, in order to deter ag· State University by 105%, the
gression and thereby help to keep ~-State College system by 164%, the
the peace. But he has allowed CQmmunity Colleges by 323%, and
America's defense capabilities to primary and secondary systems by
deteriorate, and a look at the rec-105%. In addition, he increased
ord-Angola, Ethiopia, South scholarships to needy students by
Yemen, Afghanistan, Iran-re-500%, and increased State spend-
veals the results of his policy ing on student loans and scholar-
failure. ships by a stagtering 915%.
I '
So much for Jimmy Carter's On top of all this, he was able
record. Now let5 look at Ronald to claim such varied accomplish-
Reagan'B record as Governor of menta as an environmental pro-
Califomia. gram praised by many an envi-
/·
ronmentalist, and an increase in .
unemployment insurance bene-
fits from $65 to $90 per week.
If California were a nation, it
would be the seventh largest eco -
nomic power in the world. For 8
years, Ronald Reagan was Governor
of California. The kind of Governor
he was says a good deal about the
kind of President he
will be.
What Reagan will
do as 'President.
Just as he did as Governor,
Ronald Reagan will, as President,
call on the finest minds from busi-
ness and labor to assist in the
development of programs-and
then ptit together the finest team to
make them work.
His economic program will be a
co mprehens4ue one, and will couple
carefully phased-in tax rate cuts
with common senee·control over ·
government spending. To help ac-
complish the latter, he will dupli-
cate his California action by placing
an immediate freeze on federal hir-
ing, and act to cut out billfons of
dollars of waste that have become
part of the government's operations.
He's done it before. He'll do it again.
His program for those in need
will never be lacking in compassion
and concern. ·
For senior citizens, he will act
decisively to strengthen the Social
Security system and improve t.he
quality of health care.
For unemployed workers, he
will sponsor job retraining and
placement programs, while work-
ing to achieve the type of economic
growthf.hat can create new jobs-
always aware that economic growth
is the only real answer to the unem-
ployment problem.
For Jarpilies, be will act to
transfer, wherever possible, feder
programs back to State and local
governments-along with the tax
sources to pay for them-so more
effective progress can be mati@-in
the areas of neighborhood preserva-
tion, educational quality, and im-
proved housing.
For women, there wi 11 be
strong support for equal rights and
opportunities in the key areas of
greatest conc~m-the employment
area, to name just one.
peace is key.
And for all Americans, he will
wvrk for peace in the only Way any
sensible President should work for
peace-by combining three essen-
. tial requirements into a foreign
policy that will not only gain the
peace but maintain the peace.
They are: 0
1. The revival of America's
economy to the level of strength it
used to enjoy-.a necessity because
any nation that is internally weak
cannot hope to have a foreign policy
that is strong:
2. The restoration of America's
defense capability to the poi nt
where there is once again a margin
of safety, and the all-important
ability to deter precisely those ag-
gressive, adventurous actions in the
world that threaten the ~ace.
3. The establishment of much
closer ties with our allies, and a
system of much moredirequent com-
munication with our adversaries.
There must always be a readiness
to talk, to plan, to negotiate, to
work' non-stop for the world's great-
est cause: the cause of peace.
During this year's presidential
campaign, there were many oppor-
tunities to explore the precise
positions of Governor Reagan on
every single last issue. Hopefully,
you did ~-If you didn't, you can do
so now. Because itds.important that
you not only know his positions on
the issues, but be aware of his per·
formance on the job. And it is es-
pecially important that you take
that performance and its promise
for the future, put it alongside
J irumy Carter's-pe~rmance.and its
promise for lhe. future ... and com-
pare.
Tu compare Ronald Reagan
with Jimmy Carter ... hone~tly,
thoroughly, critically ... is to )earn
what you .need to know before you
vote tomorrow.
It is also to realize-as more
and more-Americans who have
made the comparison have come
to realize-that the time is now
for Reagan.
The time is now
, ... ,.,. . ..
·.~
... ,
•'I ,.., .. ,
·, .. •
. )
. •.
..
....
..
--1
. • . .. .
..
~!or strong leader~hiJJ.
~ .,,,.,_......, .. _-
. '
I •• DAil V PILOl ~.~3.19111> .
Hometown BQomirig
Reagan andidacy tirs Patriotism, Profit
DIXON, lll tAP ) The place '
looks remarkably likt the open
Int chapter c;f "Babb tt "
dram a tics and everything. '·
Th tower of Otxon aspires
above the mornlna mist. austere
aod afurdy a a chN, not a
ctturch or hospital but u building
more at the heart or things -
tbe bank.
"Dixon." says the billboard
beside it, "Home of Our Next
President. Ronald Reagan •·
ON FIR T STREET, where
blue and white "Dutch" Reagan
ba nners nutter in the wind, the
confidence is contagious The
ca·s h r egisters are r inging.
Prosperity IS just a round the
corner.
"This is going ·to open doors,"
sa ys Darwin Burke, m a nager or
the Chambe r o-f Commer ce.
"He 's Crom our hometown and
we'r e not going to pass up
som ething like this."
Welcome lo Dixon . 18,000 solid
citizens, church goers, goon
fellows, prosperity boosters. hve
wares and go.getters. Sinclair
Lewis wrote 60 years ago about
a mythical Midwest cit} called
Zenith "Zip Caty, Zeal, Zest
and Zowie." An d here it is, sur·
vived somehow across half a
century
Here are the t>ld houses with
the mansard roofs. t he copper-
d o m e d courth ouse , the
American flags fly ing every·
where with unabashed s malltown
patriotism.
HERE IS WHER E Reagan,
Republican candidate for presi·
dent, grew up in the 1920s. The
place is ·rairly booming these
days, thanks to the hometown
boy made good
"They're on fire for him,"
said Lane Adams, owner of the
Christian Bookstore, where a
paperback about Reagan has
joined the Bibles in the front
window. "There is a great sense
of anticipation.'·
And nowhere is the anticipa-
tion keene r than a m o ng
downtown merchants .
At Jim's Place. the menu's
Reagan sandv.rich is a reuben
with ham inst ead of corned beef.
The sign out front. ··Ronnie Ate
Here, Why Don't You·'," actual·
ly refers to Ronnie Helms a
local firem an. Rut nohod) ·~com·
pla ining. not here in Ht'agan
Country where frre enterpns<' 1..,
not just a virtue, but a hil?her call·
ing.
"IF I FILL THES E pockets
with money, I'll just get 17igge.r
pockets," says Mary Ba rnhart,
who owns the restaurant and
relishes the idea of Dixon becom·
ang the next Plain!., Ga.
A souvenir shop has opened
down the street offering buttons.
key chains. posters aQd T shirts
A local printer is peddling a
46-page booklet extolling the
town where Reagan grew up.
And up the hill on Hennepin
Street. at Reagan 's boy hood
Panning , . .
6f Gold.
Stopped.
FRESNO IAP > A
t: S . District Court
judge here has ordered
n ine families lo s lop '
mining gold bt'low a
M a d era Coun ty re·
servoir until a second
hearing on lhe matter is
held Wednesday
J udge Edward Dean
Price issued the ruling
at the reque9'a of a U.S.
attorney who said Che
ramifi es were on land
be low Henslev Lake that
is unde r the ]unsd1 ct1on
of the Army Corps o f
Engi~rs . .:-.
AP W1<&pfl0\0
PRIDE OF DIXON , ILL.
Ronald Reagan
home. the pilgrims are alread y
driving by to look at the place.
Wayne and Joanne J anssen,
who li ve across the street .
couldn't be happier.
"There's talk that they want
(o t ake all thesc .houses around
here for parking cln.d whatever,"
s aid Joanm•. "If we can make a
few dollars on this place. I'm all
for it."
REAGAN'S FAMILY moved
here when he was 9. Reagan was
born in Tampico. a small town
23 mile5 away. the son of a shoe
salesman who locals remember
"had quite a bout with the bot·
tie" and a highly re ligious
dressmaker who saw to it that
young Dutch regula-rly attended
tbe First Christian Church.
He dated Margaret Cleaver ,
the preacher·s ~aughter. whom
e verybody just called Mugs .
These days, Rea~an is remem·
bered as a likable. industrious
and eminently popular boy.
"A real mixer , he really was,"
said He len ,\f iller pow hea d
librar ian at the Dixon Public
Library "fie had friends on
both sides of the tracks. Yes sir.
a real citizen from the word go "
H E WAS PRESIDENT of the
student rounc1 I. 1>res1dent of the
dramatics club and Heap Big
Chief of the annual Junior semor
banquet. Beside his picture in
the }earbook, as a mem ber of
the Dixon Dukes football team,
is th is n otation . "Reagan,
gua rd. Dutch as the lightest and
fastest guard on the team, won
his letter through sheer grit "
Classmate Phyllis Landis. now
70 dad hi~ book reports fo r
En~lish
· lie d g1\<.' m<.• a library book
and 1 ·d read 1l. writ~ the book
report and he'd copy 1t,"' she
said. "lie didn't have time lo
read with football and sports and
At Dixon High, Reagan was
the lead in the senior play,
"Captain Applejack.·' and the
juvenile in "You and I," an
early play abQµt the generation
gap.
LOCAL LEGEND RAS it'thal
he notched a log every time he
pulled someone from the Rock
River at Lowell Beach where be
was a lifeguard for seven sum-
m ers. The log is gone, .but a
plaque in a local museum com·
memorates the feats.
Nobody s wims at -Lowell
B.each anymore. The river is too
polluted. A boat marina has
replaced the old swi mming·
area .
Two bridges span the Rock
River al Dixon. one named after
Abra ham Lincoln. a nother 11·
linois Republican. The other is
the Ronald Reagan Bridge.
So overwhelming 1s the s up·
port for Reagan here that the
Democratic Party he adquarters
doesn 't even have a poster of
J immy Carter in the window, or
anywhere in,.de for that matter.
DIXON IS Al.SO a part of
John Anderson's congressional
district. Anderson was born just
35 miles up the Rock River at
Rockford. but his independent
campaign headqu arters here
amounts to Greg Brooks' van,
f~tooned with bunting and
ptfsters and parked whenever
possible across the street from
GOP headquarte rs.
What's it like to be Lee County
coordinator for the Anderson
campaign? "Lonely, very lone·
ly." says Brooks.
All that suits Richard Durkes
just fine. Durkes is president of
a local bank and is the town's
leading booster. These days ,
boosting Dixon means promot-
ing Ronald Reagan.
"It seems we all remember
the presidents' boyhood homes
lnde~ndence, Mo.; Abilene,
Kan.: Plains, Ga . " he said. ··sure. we·re using Reagan as a
vehicle for putting Dixon on the
m ap.··
TO THAT END. Durkes and
some of the town·s more well·
heeled businessm en sat down
on(• morning with a represen·
tat1ve of Dorcmas & Co .. a na·
tionally known public relations
firm
The public relations man pro· 1
posed a campaign to peddle Dix·
on 's story. including a slick
media packet with photos and
background stories describing
Reagan's boyhood home as "a
hive of enterprise. hard work
and industry." '
The businessmen asked how
m uch it would cost. For openers,
$23.000. They had the money by
noon.
Pa10 Poht1cal Announcemenr
Judge Ragnar R. Engebretsen
for Superior Court Office #8
;Tough-Firm-Fair-Conservative
Appoint9d A Judge In 1972 by Reagan
EHDOISID IY:
· Orange Counry Deputy 01stnc1 At,.orneys Assoc1a11on
Orange County Deouty Shen Ifs Association
Police Associations 01 Santa Ana. Huntington
Beach Fountain Valley Orange. Seal Beach. Stanton
Peace Officers Research Association ol Gal1forn1a
CHP-775 Ctuo. Sanra Ana Area
Community Criminal Action Committee
Calt1orn1a Repuo1tcan Assembly
C 0 'P E AFL·ClO
H1gti1y ~ By The Bar Association
VOTE FOR THE IEST CANDIDATE ., •
ELECT JUDGE RAGNAR E. EMGEBRETSlN Pau~ Goodale. an .at·
to rney with the San
Francisco law firm of
Melvin Belli, argued the
mining should be al·
lowed to continue until
the hearing.
I .... ,.
He said the miner s
were .. ilmateurs whose
interest is to pan a li'ttle
·go ld . make a .little
money to feed the ir
families.··
TV Police
SAN JOSE (AP)
Merchants in San Jose
are askint the city coun-
cil to spend $250,000 to
have te levtslon cameras
installed on downtown
buildings in an effort to
!!i~•rt holiday~rime. _ t
.. TU .. 6'S ..... OltAI. • , I
ACUPUNCTURE
Dl. AMllOSI, S.C.
UM
HtW.t .. ....._. c... ..... u
Ha.7270 w 642·2111
Pa.a l0t o~ C()IMl,,,H 10 1:1«1,/\aoQe A•ll'\I• E_.,..., Kalil f !1bbotta C~·-· 2628.J C.boO Ao UIJuN H•llt. /1&-1•8 I
Need 520,000?
It's Yours For
Just 5160.17 a Month! I~
When you need a
larger Joan. your house may
hold the answer. We can
often help with a homeowner
loan. Count on us. Other f am-
ilies and businesses have for
over65y~.
On a $20.<XX> loan,
monthly payments are for
L20 months at an annual per·
centage rate of 18.00%. Total
of payments: $43,244.40.
We'll find a way to
help. Call us today.
NO POINI'S. NO BROKER FEE.5.
COfv\ME~IAL CRJDIT C~TK>N
® '"""'" ..... l£NOER
A loon ot SS.lXX> am over must be secured
by a combination cl reaLand penonal pr<>perty.
" COSTA MESA • 370 E. 17th Street • 6'5·8i00
HUl\Tf GTON BEACH • 16oi5 Colden Wet St.• 3l7·iiil ·
MISSION VIEJO • 21.395 l\licia Padt~ay, Suite 2E • 770·2651 '
Ali cia To"'n Plua
SANTA ANA • 1'22-l Ea1117t.h Sl(eet • S-l7·5871
••ll•ldi 1t 111.a1a • •mun .ILCUN..Lw-
\
I
..
Paid Polltlcal Advertisement
November 4th •
VOTE YES
ON PROPOSITION 1
HELP CREATE
THE ORANGE COAST .
•
NATIONAL URBAN PARK
YES ON 1
YOUR YES VOTE
GETS ORANGE
COUNTY ITS
...
FAIR SHARE OF PARKS
Friends of the Jrvine Coast
Box 714
Laguna Greenbelt·
Box 960 .
•
Corona del Mar. CA 92625 Laguna Beach, CA 92652
Fern Pirkle -President
2202 Santiago Ave.
Santa Ana, Ca 92706
Carl Johnson -President
220·2 SaotiagO" Ave.·
Santa Ana, Ca 92706
Paid Political Advertis~ment
PUZZLED ABOUT
HOW TO VOTE?
,
Based on a deep concern for the well-
PRESIDENTIAL
TICKET
being of all United States citizens, the
Active Ballot Club of Retail Clerks
Union Local 324 -comprising a major-
ity of this union's members -respect-
fully recommends that you vote for
these candidates on November 4 : ..
CARTER & MONDALE STATE SENATE
District
31 ....• Robert E. Fronke (0) U.S. SENATOR
35 ... Louis D. Velasquez (0)
37 ..... Paul B. Carpenter (0) Alan Cranston (0)
CONGRESS STATE ASSEMBLY
District District District
52 ... Louis l . Dominguez (D) 70 ....... Kevin O'Rourtle (0)
54 ....... Frank Vlcencla (D) 71 ........... Chet Wray (0)
57 ........... Dave Elder (D) 72 ..... Richard Robinson (D)
58 ........... John Allen (D) 73 ...... Dennis Mangers (D)
63 ......... Bruce Young (0) 74 ..... Marian Berveson (R)
~ ... Christian Thlerbach (D)
31 .....• Mervyn Oymally (0)
32 ... Glenn M. Anderson (D)
33 ....... Fred Anderson (D)
34 ............. Simone (D)
35 ........... Jim Lloyd (0)
38 ....... Jerry Patterson (0)
39 ... Leonard L. Lahtinen Ul>
41r' ..•. : .Michael F. DoWf{O) ·-,, .:
COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
Los Angeles County Orange County
4th District ......... 'YVOMI Bum 1st Dtstrfct ........ Phlllp An1hony
Whatever your cftoice, please VOTE -Nov. 4
(Take this recommendation with you to the polls.)
The Active Ballot Club of
Retail Clerks Union Local 324
(United Food & Commercial Workers, AFL-CIO)
. ..
, 8530 Stanton Ave ., Buena Park, CA 90620
Bob O. Gabie, TreHuttr ==--==--~-k-=-.-:===!!Jl:!ilm!l¥:;:3••L:
EVANS ~ND NaVAK
Rowland Evan. Md Sobett. Novak
tNm tO examine the pO!itlcal
acene •• It affects
the nation.
I
• •ae• c PreJeet Yet1r A.,••
Gi ant SOiar Plant Reveftled
DAOGrM' CAP> -Sometime latene:at
)'Mt, DNtl)' 2,000 1lant mirron wilt
roua. ....tly u they aearch out tbe sun
ud foeua u MIOl'Q)OUI eoncentraUon of Mat OD a cylinder perched 300 feet above
tM llojave Dllert.
Wat# clrnalaUq inside the cyllnd.er
wlll •arm to 900 de1ree1 and aend steam
l"UftlDI ~ turblnel dea~ to pro-
duce 10 mepwattl ot electricity and the
world's lartest solar' power pJant will be
otf and runniria.
THAT'S MORE THAN a year away.
But 1ovemment @nd lnduatry officials A Ta.... aathered laat weell ln tent.a raised OD the
Kermit the Frog, one desert about 12 miles southeast of
of the PoPUlar Mup-BantowtodedicatetheslteofSoJar<?ne.
peta, is-chaJrman o( Thomas E. Stelson. assistant U.S.
UNICEF's Halloween eneray secretary for conservation and
. 1980 campaign. He •8 solar power, told more than 200 people the
hoping fund-raising $139 million pilot project "is a key step in ·JI a lon1 sertea of steps desiped . . . to WI surpass last make a siplficant impact in the whole
year's record oC $3 nationalenergypicture."
million. The site, little more than a ·shallow.
C.11142-5171. e11-shaped depression now. is to pro-
Put a few words duce 10 megawatts of electricity that
to work for ou. will be fed into Southern California ~::========:'J!!"""=!:==~__.:
Edi ion '1 power lines for uae ln bomea
throughout the area.
"WHAT WE LEARN here at Daggett
wUI influence tbe development,of solar
energy for years to come," sa.ld general
manager Louis Winnard of Loi Angeles
Department of Water and Power, another
contributor to the project.
''With desert areas literally at the back
door of many metropolitln areaa," he
said, "we in the West have a snat op-
portunity to lead the nation ln develop-
ment of solar energy and to fulfiU the
promise ot Solar One."
When completed. the 100-acre site will ~ covered with 1,818 mirrors, each one
looking like a gigantic butterfly with
reOecting wings 20 feet hi1h. Near the
center will be a tower rising nearly 300
feet high that will hold a collector of
nickel·steeJtubes41 feet tall .
DlllV.EN BY COMPUTER· controlled
motors, the mirrors will spend each day
tracking the sun across the sky and focus-
ing their combined light on th@ tower top
to generate steam that will produce
enough electricity for about 6,000
famiUes.
The massive project is a cooperative
venture with the U.S. Department of
Enerey putting up Sl 18 million and other
firms and a1encies, primarily SoCal
Edison, chipping in another$21 milllon.
The electriclly will cost somewhere
between 4 and 10 times as much as power
from conventional plants.
But Richard Schweinberg, project
manaaer for the Energy Department,
said, "We never planned this to be
economlcally competitive. What we
want to do here is demonstrate feaaibWty
and environmental acceptability.••
HE SAID 'I'll.AT as the cost of oil con-
tinues to increase and as mass production
and improved design brinp ~wn the
cost of solar power, "We hope to be com-
petitive with coal and oil by the 1990s. ''
After all, he adds, "the fuel cc>sts for a
solar plant are zero.''
Stetson said he foresees a future with
dozens of such plants scattered about: at
least inltially in the Southwest states
from Texas to California.
"It won't be OPEC's fault if solar
energy isn't developed in this country."
he said. "It will be our fault."
Crft~
Educator Clark Kerr
calls federal student
loan program "na-
tion al disgrace .""
permitting so m e
middle-class families
to Ii ve pleasantly
while relying on
federal aid to
educate children. · --------------
R eson
Sued/or
LAS VEGAS <AP) -
An Oblo bualoeHman bu filed a ctvU lawsuit
ln U .s. District Court
clalminl a contest l"Wl
by tbe Del Webb re.orta
violated a copyrilbt law.
John Run of Canton,
Ohio, owner of Great
Games, said that be con-
cel vep a game called
• •, P o t K en o • ' a n d
copyridlt.ed it in 1976.
He said the "One
Million Dollar Free for
All" instituted in tbe Del
Webb botela oo July 1 in-
fringes on bis copyright
since the games are
similar. . Named as defendant
in the case in is Sahara
Nevada Corp., owner of
the Del Webb resorts.
. .,
..
f
Proposition 10 Gets Foiling Grodes.-
A Regulatory Can of Womas.
.. . . . Prop. 10 may be worse than was Prop. 5.
because its vague~ about enforcement
leaves the door wide open for over-
regulation by government.
... We do not need more regulation
by government of the lives of people
in California or anywhere else.
''Surely this is a matter for private
solution. that does not need the clumsy
hand of government in it:· ·
San Francisco Examiner
leave it to Common Sensl!.
" ... the initi~tive leaves the •
resolution up to the common sense of srate
health officials. But it strikes us thut its
berter to leave the solution of s4c:h prolr
lems to the CQmmon senlit! of the ~ople
involved:· , _ 0 _,. h n... __ -r..l LAJng ~c TI~-,-.: egrum
A Talent for 0.'t'rkill
"You can credit the o;ponsors with
good intent ions-protecting non-smokers
from1he smoke of others. But. you've got to
credit them with a talent for overkill too.
" ... why burden the books with a
broad new (aw'! KNX urges Californian<; to
take a deep breath and vote No on
Proposition 10:· KNX, Los Angeles
Foolislr Attempt 10
wn·te Social Behavior.
"It is a foolish attempt to use
legal restriction to write social hehavior
that is best governed by common sense
and counesy:· '
OJ/ifomia labor Federation (AFL-(:10)
._; A Mistake, ~and Sittrpk.
·· ... if it were possible to write a
w1:~h. Proposition 10 would be a good one.
But as a law ... is a mistake. pure and simple.
"Unfortunately. it's impossible to
pick and choose J>f!rtS of an initiative-you
have to take it all. So we're forced to
say 'No' to Proposition 10~
KNBC, los~ngeles
£rodes lndiWI®/ Rigltts. )
'·Far better. we believe. ~pend
on the inherent courtesy of most people ...
than 10 pass a la w that would be unneces-
sary. almost unenforceable. and inevitably ,,,
erode individual rights. We urge a 'No'
vote on Proposition 10:·
Sacramento Union
It Tl Mean War.
"If Proposition 10. the no-smoking
initiative. pas.<ies. the state will get
involved in the sume contest of the will
that th e U.S. tried during prohibition.
"What wilt happen in fact is rath~r
hard to imagi ne..... ,
Los Angel.es Herald-Examiner
How Far Should Goa-emment Go?
"If Prop. 10 pa<&:s. a state
hureaucrac\ will decide exact fr where
people will he allowed to smolte. and
where thev will he told ·no-smokim( .. ir
you are tx)rhen:d O) a further extension
Df govemmenr re~ulat ions. you will proh-
ally \\ant ro n11e No on Propo'\ition 10.
·-rm corn.:emc:d ... so rm \ orinl!
Noon 10:· •
KFWB, Los A11ge/eJ
Not Jioo<J for Law Enforcement
... ~ot gOod for 17re "l'uhlic.
"Proposition 10 would ha\e an
adveN: effect l>n law enforcement
officiuls in this '\late.
"Proposition IO is not good for
law enforcement and is not ~ood for the
public. We urgt! voters to reject this
proposal on Nov . .i:·
Peace d}Jfoers Research Association
of California
Would Mak cops Smoke Detectors.
"Proposition 10 would tum the law
enforcement agencies of California into
smoke detectors in hotel lobbies. student
lounges. offices of private companies ... "
Monterey Peninsula Herald
An Area of Pn-sonal Derision-Making •
MWe find.P.r-0position 10 as
objectionable as Proposition 5.
1lle issue is very much the same:
Whether .... tobacco smoke is a problem
cri1ical enough lo warranr a si&'Tlificanr
extension of rhe regulalory powers of rhe
state into an areu of personal decision·
making.
"We recommem.1 a ·No' ,·ote on
Proposition 10:·
San Diego Union
A Graµe Misiak.
.. ... it would be a grave mistake 10
involve govl!rnment in so sensitive an area
of human conduce
Van Nuys Jlalky News
Would Create an unfortunate
Bureaucratic Mess.
"While we fully understand the
feelin~is which motiva ted this ml!asure. we
think 11 would create an unfort unat e
bureu ucratic mess:·
··Given the tough time th e police
already have trying 10 respond to ... serious
crimes. we just <lon·t think they need 1his
uddil ional hurden. .
"We recommend u 'No' Vote on
Proposition 10:·
KABC Radio, Los Angeles
Creates more Problems than it Solves.
..... a law is a law. Sections in
Prop o!'.ition 10 clearly stute that if you Cfln'1
designate smoking and no smoking·soc:
tions. then the entire area w.i,U:be declared
a no smoking area ... fJropositon lO
creates more problems than it solves~
KCST-TV. San Ihego
Big Brother Alreildy Too Much .
"Big Brother. in the form of
government regulation. is already too
much a part of our lives. Let's not make
things any worse. Vote Noon Propc>sition 10:·
KPIX, San Francisco
This PropiJsitWn shOuld be Defeaud.
h ••• such regulations could be
expensive for businesses to implement.
Moreover. police and court personnel
would be required co enforce the plan and
thus would be diverted Crom their present
law enforcement du1ies.
"The Times Recommends A 'No'
Vore On Prop. 10 on Nov -r·
, San Mateo limes
A Mi5use of Government.
··No one has found a way yet l o
pu1 such a social hahir reusonahly and fully
under government cont rol ... Cuming
lhe smoking hahit ewer 10 the srate is a
misuse of go~emmen1 :·
Santa &rbara News-Press
Another Meddlesome Proposirion.
"We"ve cor 10 quir running to
gove rnment for th e solution 10 every
pmhk m. especially problems rhat can he
alle' !att:tl ~)y c:oo.l?erarinn anti mutual
con<,1dcrat1on. ...
£/ Cajon Daily Califomian
Proposition JO is11 t lhe AnsKJer.
..... Proposition 10 would ser restric·
lions in places that would be neurl y
impos.sible to cnf orce. such as small offices.
husi nes.<;CS and factories ... Proposition 10
isn·1 the answer. We urge you lo V(Jte no:·
KGTv, San Diego
Goes Too Far.
·· ..... realistically speaking. it is
imprncticat: would cause more bureau·
cratic costs and confusion. and would be
difficult to enforce .
"fls mandatory provisions would
be counterproductive and incite more
friction. particularly due to its hazy
enforcement guidelines. We'd pref er more
voluntary agreements ... Proposition IO
goes too far and could get ~ed in
costly. chuotic legal challenges.
Peninsula Tunes 'IHl>une
Join these Californians
have· read the fine
.
'
·,
11
-"'-··-
I• OM.'f PtlOI
Pre id itt Lo ing Hometowii Backers ,
PLAIN., Ga. IAf' 1 These
h t.r• not euclly halcyon £toy• for
the c aii.r t lan ul Pluln•
Rr~r Btlly has movtid to the
next oounty, Miu Lilllih ho a
broke n hlp, nephew Wllllam
arttr Spann Is back In prtaon
and drou1hl <'Ut the peanut
harvest something uwful lbis
year
What's worse, the Rea, an ~l~s have opened a county cam-
. paaen center deep In the heart of
Carter C...•untry ·
''I SAY 38 PERCENT of those ,
who voted crlor ham last time
won't vole for hini again," said
• Ralph Wiggins, a lean and corky
'little man who built Jimmy
Carter's house and has known
the family for years.
Wi ggins is voting Republican,
which Is not only unneighborly
in this part or Dixie, but
downright untraditional. So·
staunch are folks m their party
arfili at ion that ·they 're called
··Yellow-Dog Democrats."
m eaning t hey would vote a
straight ticket even if a yellow
dog led the ballot
Ho~ neighbor Jimmy Carter
will do is not so clear.
"Four years ago. we thought
we were electing some body bet
ter than ju~t another Yankl'e
poht1c1an." said Glenn Godwin.
"But he was n't better. Maybe we
expected too much. I don 't know.
But I do know this country's oot
going right."
GODWIN VOTED for Carter
in 1976 but says he's tired of
watching farmers go bust from
in fl ation a nd I ra n m a k e
America a laughingstock This
time. he says, "I'm going to
grab the Republican lever and
pull it straight down ..
So much for neighborliness
and yeUow-dog democracy.
Lots of thjngs seem to have
changed since 1976 Four years
ago. Main 'Street was spilling
over with people. After almost
every primary. the hometown
boy returned to stand in triumph
at the depot.
There was a wild magic in the
air then the Carter boy was
about to become president of the
u nited States
AFTER THE ELECTION,
thousands of pe<1pll' came. I0.000
some days They£11p.ed up for 30
minutes to fill tletr tanks al
Billy Carter's,ga station and they
bought with renzy -peanut.
shaped as ays. potholders em·
bossed wi h Jimmy Garter's face.
pres1dent1al ke\ rhams C:tnd ny
swatter~
The tourist shops an· still
here. but the tourists a ren't On ·
I> a couple hundred a day on
average pass through now
"lt was crazy for awhile, ·
said Albert Williams, who owns
the other peanut warehouse and
the other gas station 1n Plains
"Before the ele<'t1on. this one
guy came 1n here •:ind said he'd
pay $750 a month for that gas
station over there I said. ·ora~
up tht> papers·
WILLIAMS LAUGHED and
adjusted h.is seed corn cap
.. H e wanted to sell little
.,..,,.......
NEIGHBORS DISAPPOINTED
Jimmy Carter Lo••• Favor
peanut plants. He didn 't last
ver y long." •
Four years ago, Carter 's ad-
v 1sers made Plains the'backdrop
fo r his pr esidential bid. The
J!reen a nd white sign on the
abandoned depot st ill says "Jim-
m\' Carter Presidential Head-
quarters." but this year the re-
eler I ion campaign is being
' han~ed m Washington.
Now. just before the election,
<1bout the only activity in town is
the thrum or t ractors pulling
pea nut w agons through the
streets And. standing at the de-
pot at mjdday. you can hear the
crickets m the high grass along
the railroad tracks .
"Sure, we miss it," said Max·
lne Reese, one or the town's big-
gest Carter supporters .
S HE RUNS A GROCERY
store north of town with a 450·
pound S t y roroam -and-
c hi ckenwire grinning peanut
outside.
By October four years ago,
s he had a lre ad y l ea~ed a
passenger train for $8'f.QOO to
car ry the volunteer Peanut
Rrtgade to the inauguration.
There are nll such plans this Oc·
to her
"Last time. we had a large
part to pl ay because he was
'J immy Who' " she said. ·"But
we don't need to do that now."
There are still Carters here. of
course. among the 640-odd
c1 t1zens. Sisteit Gloria Carter
..;pann li\'es here So does cousin
llu ~h Cart e r. whose brid
an liq ue sn ap anchors the west end
of the block.
HE'S F\JLL OF stories about
-;kinn~·dipping with the future
president as boys on Kincha·
rl)onee Creek . selling 1cr cream
1n Main Street a nd rPndezvous-
ing at Ross De~n·s undertaking
parlor fo r a day of J ove hunting
with the men.
lie recalls. to i. how Jimmy
Carter. the sma1 test boy in the
senior class. lost his scholarship
t'> Geor gi a Southw es tern
Cc,llege.
"Lonnie Taylor got almost all
the fellows in the senior class to
play hooky on April Fool 's Day
In UNI and go to a movie at
Americus in his car," said
Hu1h.
As punishment, th'e superin-
tendent made Tennie Ratliff
valedictorian instead, a n honor
whicb always carried with it a
\cholitrahlp, he said. Carter
went to Annapolis instead.
OUT-OF-TOWNERS don't see
1t , but there is a feud here. It
began a long lime ago when the
president's rather, Earl, began a
peanut warehouse business In
competition with the Williams
· rami!Y·
Plains still has two peanut .vare~ouses, one owned by the
Ca rters, the other by the
Williamses. Two warehouses,
two families , two different
points or vie~. ·
When deacon Jimmy Carter
tried to persuade members of
l'he Plains Baptist Church to
abandon its white-o nly mem-
bership policy four years ago,
deacon Albert Williams led the
opposition. And won.
Before that, when school
board member Carter tried to
Improve trans portation for.
black chHdren. Williams '°ught
him there, too. ·
"IT GOES WAY back ," said
Williams iit his slow-c ured ,
ruminant manner. ''Goes back
to integration. But my opposi-
tion to him now is right doWn the
line -on inflation. government
give-aways, roreign policy.''
They chose up sides a long
~i me ago in Jimmy Carter's
hometown the New South on
one side, the Old South on the
other. And Carter is expected to
carry the county just lik'e he .did
rour years ago.
So in a sense, things have not
changed. It is still a region of lit·
lie wbite·steepled churches with •
names like The Old Corinth Bap.
lis t and the Hepzibah Primitive
Baptist.
It is still peanuts, red dirt and
loblolly pine.
WHEN THE TOU RISTS
came. seeking some hmt of J im
my Carter 's pas t. expecting
somehow the dark m ystery of
Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha
County of James Dickey's
"Deliverance," they found
Souvenir World instead.
The fact is, it was here all the
~ime. All the old prejudices, the
old values. the old Southern
Hyle.
"We got no restaurants open
at night, no motels or hotels,"
5a1d Maxine Reese "So ever¥
night we reYert to like it used lo
be."
Presidents come and ~o but
there are still prayer meetings
o n Wednes day ni g ht and
preac he rs still preach the
Apocalypse
Boys still swim in Kincha
Coonee Creek and dusk still set
ties over Plains with a faint
blue-silver light in October and
nothing changes, not really, not
ever.
PROPOSITION 10 GETS ·DAD .REVIEWS,
CONT'D. .
Not good far law £11forceme11t • • .
... Nm go<HI for nw P11h/ic.
"Pmpo-;itinn 10 would hm·e an
11th cr.c cff cct on hi\\ cnfurecment
official ... in this ~tutc.
.. Proposit inn 10 is nnt good f nr
la\\ enforcement and I'\ not ~ond for the
puhli1.:. We url?e \Oters to rCJC<.:t this pn>po~1I on N<l\: 4:·
Peace Officers Research Associ<m'o11
of Califomia
How Far Should Goremmem Go?
"If Prop. 10 pa.-;.-res. u stute
hurenucrat'\' will decide exw:tl\' where
people:" ill be allll\\ed to ~muke. and
where the) will be tl>ld ·no·srnoking'. .. if
you urc hothercd by u (urthcr extension
of go\'cmmenl regulations. you will pro~
ahly want to vole No on Proposillon 10.
"I'm conccm~d ... so I'm voting
No on 10:· KFIYB, Los Angda
-------
.
A Misuse of Goaiemme11t.
"Nn une has found a way yet to
put such a social ha hit rcusonahl) ancJ f ult)
undl!r governme nt coniml ... turning
the smoking hahit nn~r to th1: -,tali: i~ <1
misu~ of go\'ernmem:·
· Santa &rbaru News-Press
Goes Too Fur.
..... realistically speaking. it is
impractical. would cause more hureC:Ju·
cratic costs and conf usinn. and would he
difficult to enforce. ··Jrs mandatol) prorisions would
be counterproductive and incite: more
friction. particularly due to its hazy
enforcement guidelines. We'd prefer more
volunlT.ry agreements ... Proposition 10
goes too Car and could get ~ed in
costly. chaotic legal challenges.'
Pminsulo 1im~ Trihu11e
Join these Califomicrls 'Nt"1o have read the tre
l.mul~: ll:ru1" &lrnJ'..i amJ lhl.'1r \.h1ldrl·r1.
11.'ll .inu "'11,lcn.
Assemblyman Dennis
Dear Friend<..
My wife. l 1nda. and I would like to thank the t•nters uf this district for
th eir support during m~· 1.•ears 0( public .... N1 •1ce
As a legi,/otor I hat•<.· tcorked lwrd to ml"et the h1ql1 standords of
honestv ond 1..•ffe.rt1Pe11ei,., tlwc vu11 lw1 1t-' o riql1t tn d1 •11111r1d As a 'family -
man. I om proud of m1.· e(forr., tCJ nwJ...e our < lJtH111111 1111, 11 h1 e r place to
live and to presen1e·quol1r1. uf 11/e t/1111 hmtiqtll ,,... hew
I will con1111u1· rn .,eek 1. crnr od1 "l' u ... 1 l1rnw rn tlw pe1<,t nnd expect to
be fully occountohle (or e1'f:ffy ocr1on I toke a-. your representa11ue in the
State Assembh
Pa id Political Advertisement
. Propos1t1on 3 1s designed to give life
and heallh insurance policyholders an ad·
"'..tJd measure of security without rncreas·
mg insurance costs or taxes
The meas·u re wrll give lhe
Legislature broader au thorrly to establish
a new kind of insurance guarantee lund to
assure full payment of Qenel1ts 10
policyholders, even 1f an insurance car·
rler becomes insolvent Fed~~al and state
programs already stand behind bank and
•
savings and loan accounts and fire and
auto insurance. Propo§1t1on 3 w1tl simply
pave the way to extend this kind of pro-
1ec11on to·lrfe and health in~urance. and
allow the Legislature to provide for a tax
offset to protect insurance consumers
from having to foot the brll for insolvent
companies. and provide a~d incentive
for the State Insurance Department to
take strong pr.eventive measures to
eliminate insolvencies.
on
For -an added measure. of security
E11dorsed by:
Callfornla Taxpayers Association ,i Afflllated Committees on Aging of
Callfornla Labor Federation, AFL·CIO Loa Angel•• County
Callfornla Farm Bureau Federation Older American• Social Action CouncM
Loa Angeles· Chamber of Co11111\•rc' San Diego Taxpayers Association
San Dtego Chamber of Comm1tc1 Cautornla Republican Party
Freano Ch1mber of Commerce Westside United OelJ'ocratlc Campaign
C111forn1, Cong,..11 of Senlo" State Building Trades Council .
,,. ON ,~llTION t COMM1n11 "'~ w "''' 8..., ... ft ',40' LO\ ... /IQ<.. (4 • 1r ('\.t ........ ,..., l
t
•I
Sunrey ShOws Accident Yictims Not .Wearing Restraints
Falt. in . MCIWl&NTO tAP > -TMn
. Sltot Elli
\ .... u.e ...... m u.e uaeotseat Mine SllWt ==-ace~:~c~':.-at
Tit• June aunple included 25,an
occupants ol Ul,182 vehicles that
were lnvolved ln 10,742 accldenta.
Three QUt or four ~ wore
seal belt.a, 14.8 percent wore
co m bination belt-shoulder har-
nesses, 5.4 percent wore only
shoulder harnesses, and 3.2
percent used other devices. Air
bal• accounl,ed for 1.2 percent.
other a pa.uenpr'• inertia reel,
the CHPsaid. or t.bc»e Uliftl the restraint.I,
21.7 percent were tllj vred oddlled,
compared to ~.4 percent ol the
non-users.
reduced the freqoeoey Md
severity ol .... uriea for M. 7 percent ·ot au oceupMt.I. .
OU RAY. eeao. (Ar> -TM callfomia Hipw.y Patrol leoaty·tbrH yHr old ,.1,uect the latest quarterly
.... ,,, rran Kuboek• ,.port 1n lt.1 contlnulna survey al
waata bis •lk back. the UN Of seal belts and other
The CHP aald only 13.8 i>ercent
of ell thole .' persona used
restrainu . ud 68.5 percent did
ool. No restraints were available
to 9.8 percent, and ~a1e was
u.nknown for 7 .9 percent .
The CHP aaid mote womeo than men uaed rea tralnta •. pro ·
portlonla t ely and -also
proportiopat4!ly -the use ol
reatr-.... increased witb ate.
Kullmltt aakl be WU ~ near <>uny on
..... , ..... Two failures were reported: One
was a driver's buckle, and the
The lnvesUgatin1 orticen said
that in their opinion, the restralnll
either did reduce or would have
Mouat Hay d••'•I ~ou1hkeep1le Gulcb
when he lbot a bull elk I
.• that bad almoet aeven points on lts antlers. ,
Amoq bun&en , any elk
wltb m ore tba n six 1
polnta ia ccm.idered to
be "royal," be aald.
But before KuboakfJ
could claim his booty.
the elk alid down the
m ountain and into a
mine abaft. He bu hunt-
ed on Mount Hayden for 1 years, Kuboske sald,
and that shaft is the only 1 hole on the mountain.
Kuboslte wants the elk
back to mount its head. I
The Colorado Fish and
Wildlife Division told
tum it would recover the
elk at t he end of the i
bunting season. but
that's not soon enough
1 for Kuboske.
He 's offered $500 to
anyone who will get the
'elk out of the mine shaft
before then.
Al80TT
CLARENCE EMORY All80TT • r••i.M 04 Los Al"JI._, ICM' ti .,..r~.
P•U•CI •••'I' Oct. 2'. He w•s •
member o! IN M-.llO<I" L.od9e • ~ I for 21 .... , .. He WH • CllSO.ICl•r ICM'
•7 v••r> for P•<•flc Eleclrlc, •
member ol ll>e Gem Cll•b. He ••
surviveel by J bf-rs. CN rley Al>Oott I
of An•IW•m. Er,,..t Al>Ootl of Gteno..te •4'11 Ells -n o1 s.... o~. A ,,, .. ,
Nor• ,,.15c_r of -•sll•. • sl•P
O•Ulllll•r Helen Edw••CI• ol L••• 1
I s•belt•, l Step or•nCl<"llClren •nCI
sewr•I nieces -MpfMI•~. S.rvoces -r• ,,.,., _..,,.,, No•. lrO •1 l PM •I
1 ... H•rbor u wn Memorl•I CNpel
wllll Rev. W•ll•r l(orne .ison
ofll<l•hnQ. Interment ••fl be MIO •t
H.,bor Uwn Memoro•I P•r• •nCI
service•_,,.,. "lre<lio<I of H•'110r l.•wn -I Olive Mon.,.ry. S40-HS4
IUICICMAN THOMA$ L 81.ACll.MAN, rHIOenl
of New~ a..cft, PHtoeCI •••'I' No• \ survl~ by "I• wife ESll>er, 2 sons,
Ron Pl•Ckm•n of Newporl Be.ell,
l<ennetll Tom 81.cam•n of Lemon
He'911ts, CA.'O.uQ111er Sybil car,...,. of
Irvine,• .--11uoren. Rowrv w111 1141
IWICI Tu.., HOv. 4 •I 7:lOPM iot St.
Joeclllm C.tl\011< C11urc11 In Coil• Mew. Meu ~ C/WISll4111 tourl•I weo ..
Nov. S •"AM •t SI. J...Cl'llm 's In 11 ... o f f lowers f•m ll y 1u9g esu
controbUllons, to TN Ameroun CMKer
Soclet.,, PO llOa Ull, "Mier Clly, CA.,
t H O•, Attn : Jufle Anele raon.
1 &ftlombm ent •• P•<illc Vt•• I _ M•morl•I F•r •. P•c lflc VI•• l Mo<t ... ry DifW(~ ... ,,., •
-
••• J Cl+41f tttCHl.110 ttllA, ,......... .. ~ 9Ndl, CA •• ----· I. lorn O.C. JO, lt'i I In Spirit L•-•·
l.S.llO. $Wvl-..., ..... --a. .. twoll>er °*1ft o ..... Of EIV. Nev., Memori.I serve.• wlll be N ICI 2PM.
Tues., Nov. •. •I P•clflc View
Mortu•ry "-'· lntermef'll P.Clli< View~ f'-. H--' 8H<.ft
Pk Ille v-lilot1u«Y Olreciors.
STaWAltT·
STl!Ll.A VILLA STEWART •99 11.
ruldent of Merlin... CA ~••MCI
•w•y In 0-t.a MeM on Ocl. JI, IMO. She wH born In CAnYo" City, Ore.
N11r<h 14, I~. 51.e IS survl...O oY I
CleUOhter, "'-toe l<encS.tfl of NewllOM
Be•<ll, I or•nCI cnllCI Aobt ln
Wllll•m-' of $Miiie, WUh. •nCI l
greal 9r-4ldren. $erv1Ce\ Woll be
Tws., Nov.• al 2PM, at Ille CM«mo..n1
Cemetery c,,.,..1 wllll lnlermenl •t
O•kmount C.-l•ty, uF•v•lle, CA.
Se rvices under In• Cllrectlon of
8 •111·Boroeron. Smllh ~ Tuthfll
WHICllff C ....... I -.u.ry • ..._.,,.
llHIT AL8ERT L. WEST ,,_u eCI aw•y In
Or•nve. CA., on NOY. 2no. H• IS survlveCI by ni. wofe Lei• w .. 1 of
Founl•ln Vall•Y. • "'" Harry Wesl ol F•llbrook, 1 C1augr11ers, Virglnl•
HOOCllcll of Fount•ln V•llo •"" Ellen Slrllon of MlcNgen. IS or-nuoren
•nd 17 gre•t g r•nClct•llOreft T•o
,1s1•n , EOiln K•tner and A9nH
Sulllffl-04 West Vir91nl•. S.rvous 1 •ill be N ICI -·· Nov. s "1 llAM •t
tM H•,_ l.-' Memort•t P•l'll wit"
Rev. llruce Kurrrt olllcl•tono.
Services -tne .irecll-ol 11•rbor
uwn -Ohve MonWMy, )40.SSS.
,.., ..... y
COlOMAl M•Al
NOMI
7801 Bolsa /4.ve
westm1nster
893-3525
rAClflC Yll W
..-.OltALrAll •
Cemeterv 1.Aortuary
Chapel
3500 Pac1f1c View Drive ,.
NewPort Beach
644·2700
McCOllMICIC MOITUAllH
LaQuna Beach
49'·9'15
LaQuna Hiiis
768-0933
San Juan Ceplsttano
495-1776
HAllOI L.AWM-MT. OUYI
·MonUlllV •Cemetery
_. Crerretory
1625 Gisler /4.ve .
Costa Mesa
540-555-4
,.
..
•
r
Paid Political Advertisement
Dear Laguna Friends,
We are writing you because of our concern about Measure
'E ', the Bluff Top· Initiative. The initiative, written by Gene
Atherton, had the admirable goal of "saving the bluffs ." Un-
fortunately the initiative creates more problems than it
solves. Those who oppose the initiative were not notified in
time to write the argument against Measure 'E' for the
Voter's Pamphlet. Please bear with us as we point out only
some of the ramifications of 'E'.
Briefly, the most alarming aspects of 'E ' are these :
1. Your home may be affected by this measure even though
you are not on the bluff. 'E' states "other
environmentally sensitive areas to be considered for
specific plans are : (A ) areas of uniq.ue archeological
significance .'' All -of Laguna is described by
archeologist~ as ''archeologically signifi~ant . ''
2. Variances. A home owner could need a variance to build
such incidental items as a small patio, a porch, or even a
treehouse for his children: The kicker is the variance could
be granted only by a vote of the people in an election at tax-
payer's expense.
City staff analyzing'E'say it isa"vague,Jtmbiguous ... in·
adequately drafted piece of legislation ••. and would:prove
particularly difficult to administrate." ·
""3. 'E' is unfair. Those home owners affected by 'E ' would
be required to get two separate geologists' reports ,Jfor
an improvement as simple as a brick path in their yard.
Rich apd Unda Farnell
J ane and C.H. Putnam
Jean Angle
A home owrier affected by 'E' could be required to
donate a public access across his property as a
condition of a city permit to add on to his home.
4 . 'E' does not Pf~vent high rise buildings in the central
bluffs. An ordinance was passed by voters several
years ago limiting heights to 36 feet . This current
ordinance protects Laguna from a Miami Beach
appearance. 'E' does not change the 36 foot limit.
5. Preservation of the bluffs is everyone's business. Much of
the erosion and destruction occurs when out of towners un-
wittingly climb the bluffs rather than use .tPe public
walkways. Tbisiss1ieisl\(\t.add1>eE~d.inJ E!,, -· -.. · ~ · ·
It is unjust to single out any segme1;1t of society, as'E 'does to
those home owner~ covered by 'E'. Lagunans can work
together to find· a better way to protect our-bluffs Without
penalizing those who live there and who. take pride in the
beauty of this n~tural setting.
Please joiri us in voting ·NO on 'E '.
Sincerely, .t'l
Na ncy and Bob Sternfels
Jay Hillgren
Dr. & Mrs. Ray Contino
Betty Sutton
Olin S. Hutchison
Delta M. Wood
Gay Kerins
Mary Bayramian . Pat and Heather Sparkuhl
Dave itnd Sandi Carter
Barbara Mathewson
Lillus and Allan Black
Janet Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. V. Hom casUe
J im and Peggy Kittell
Dav& and Arline Isaacs
John and Lee-Childress
Annabelle Killian
Ruth Rader
Cy ~nd Betty Nugent
Dorothy M. Willetts
Mr. & Mrs. John Hefti
Betty Healy
Bill and Doris Shields
Glenn Vedder
Peter Sovenkerud
Nancy and David Bushnell
Mr . and Mrs. Ben Smith
Ganell Baker -
Earl and Barbara Rippee
Doolie Brown.
Yvonne Johnson
Doria and John Bolsseranc Ron and Lana Blumer
George Turner
, .
•
..
LAG IJN A FlllSTi Bll.iftops Committee,
Nancy Snyder Chairman. 365 Third St., Laguna eeach, CA
..
Cl ¥ ::::::P: -..
Pauleen and Ken Simpaon
Marrl and Walt Ottmen
-...
' t ••
•
&JT A5 U50Al,CllR ~NC.IPA&...,
MR .~ I llJRNED IT DOWN!
• II -:!>
"Thumping me on the head Isn't the best
way to remind me that It's dinnertime!" ,
St:fOE
•. • ~MOON MULLINS
~MISS PEACH
#HE DOCTOR
;a.t>ME TO
SLOW DOWN.
by Jeff Ma<Netly
· by Ferd & Tom Johnson
HE t>IDN'T
5/N TO COME
TOA FULL
STOP!.'
by Mell uzarius
} 1t) AN~WE~ 'YOIAil QIAl:5TION/ t~, YE'5, YOLA..
~ MAY .161( ME A
~P/Sllt . MY
Q(AE.5TION 1-;,.:
~ QIAE5T'ION .
by 811 Keane
"The trees ore going blank."
DENNIS THE MENACE
.
'
.A~Te!Si?' I A~I<:' THI~
G?uE-emON , MAY r A~
YO(...( ANOf1-1e~ QUE5110N ~?
GORDO
TUMBLEWEEDS
SOLIP SQOIRft.Et:
ANl7 HIS
sv~PA"fCP SKl~S Ht:R.Ei
NANCY
THERE'S THAT
RICH LADY
FROM CE~R
STReEr
.
' I
l
I $
,, . .,
FOR BEJTER OR FOR WORSE
ANO··E.R· I FIGURED
TuAT SINCE I ·UM·
WORKED FOR '/00, I
SPDL)LD GET ..
OR. SMOCK
PAID ?-SURE, 'r\~Y
IF YOtJ'D LIKE A
PRYCMECK,11"\AT'S
flNEt
ANc:> "fHIS I S
"fHI!! L.AS°f ON!!.' L..1!1"'5 ci..ose 'eR UF', GANIS/
··-SHE HAS
TO BE RICH TO
GET THAT FAT
by Harold Le boux
WEU.. HE COut.O ~ PRETTY MON ... E5f'£CIAU.Y WHEN
fHERE WM> A WOMAN IN·
VOl.VEO! AND THI~ ONE
Vf~e:> ~THI~ Ei~!
,_...._ _ _._ _______ ~ ... ..-1........___._ __ _..._......,. .J.-~..,_....,_ ._._,, .... ......,,...,...,,,.
GREATt-AND
'IOU Cf\NCRLL
rT A BUS1~E.SS
EXPENSE~
-.. .. ' ,-'-:;... ~ --_____ ,, --. ------,_ --
l
~t l ..
I ' 0
by Lynn JohnstOn
1 IHINK I'll CALL
1t AN CXJNCE. OF
PREVENTION.
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 59 Counted
1 H8tJM!f, e g 6 1 St.uglltlf .O
5 &Kn 62 Undltturbed
10 Fling 63 Interrogate
14 Siupor 64 AnnilP()ll1
15 Mountain Uh lf\lt
16 Pier as s .. u etcner
17 Preposition lie Prem1ture
18 Destroyed 67 lowly worl!er
UNITED Feature Syndicl1e
S1turdey"a P\a:1le SOived
20 Quit DOWN ~~~.-C
22 Entombs 1 Cicatrix
23~1 2Cwry
2'4 Smlll 9foup 3 M1n'1 neme
25 Vertigo 4'Sword
28 Ad\'OUte no 5 Flgurlllnd:
*otloC 2 worda ..
32 Festiwl 6 Adorn
33 Ungullte 7 lnllmld1ted
35 Godwtt'a kin 8 Oisflgur•
36 Boulld1ry 9 WllOlt
38 Sclndin1vi1n 10 Comic.
40 Polly 11ientlah p1111-
27 Progr"': eround
2 words 47 luue
28 R«epa 49 Con<:4udes·
41 Between '*' 29 Doorkeeper 2 words
4~ Rods ano -12 UK money 30 Leftwerd s 1 Relteve
45 Siikworm Abb<.
46 Undergar· 13 Young on.,
ments: Br. 19 Entitles
48 Warns 21 Pac.
50 WTleel pans 24 Pithy
S1 Stupefy 25 Pepaa llld
52 Eaa1tf twnl
55 RIClrt ~ Resjna
31 Mr. Canou ~ Ocy musure
34 f1alffax and • 53 Math bren<:h
HOUltOOf"' , 5'4 Dec:tH
37M~ • SSMo,...
tr~. 56 Other
39 Happily 57 Wnter'n"ETf('
42 Soer 56 CygnY\IS
44 Swing · 60 MICl'lll
'
ti s ,,
s
sl
Cl
l<
e•
P'
it
rr
M
VI
l\
f<
Cl
01
ir
01
01 •
g1
Ct
tl .
l-~ u
p
d
l
" It
h
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\II
ti
p
0
S1
s
-
WHAT HAPPENs WHEN
PEOPLE DIE?
Children uperience death In many way.. Wh«n a pet dtci or
perha.-a relattw dla lt'1 Important to answer the chlld'1 qua·
dons directly and honatly, and not to uy that tti. penon went
away or went to sleep. An Indirect an1wer may cauM children to
become angry at the deceased for havtng gone away, or ansrv at
God, or they may ewn be a&atd of 1leep. Hiding death from chll·
dttn ts not helpful. Direct and honest an1wer1 mean saying chat
the person or pet has di~ and wtU no longer be part of our Uva.
1(1 helpful to tell the c hild that death Is natural and that when we
d6e our bodies don't fttl anything. A child should be allow~ to go
to the funttal home, but never forced.
Harbor Lawn· Mount Olive
Men101ial P-dlit · Mortuary ·
·Mausoleums · Crematory
1625 Gisler Avenue ! Costa Mesa • Phone 540-5554
Co.ta Maa'1 Onl~ Complft~ Funeral FacWie•
Paid Political Advertisement
"0N
NOVEMBER 4 YOU
CAN ELECT THE
RIGHT JUDGE, FOR
SUPERIOR COURT, ..
OFFICE #14"
Judge Jarites W~ht Cook •
JUDGE COOK HAS THE ENDORCEMENT OF:
•Los Angeles Times, Pailv Pilot, Daily News Tribune
-Community Criminal A~tion Committee
eOrange County Committee for High Judicial Standards
•Orange County Association of District Attorneys
•Orange County Association of Deputy Sheriffs
•North Orange County Trial lawyers Association
•California.Highway Patrol, C lub 665, Santa Ana Area
•Peace Officers Associations of Anaheim, Brea,
Buena Park, Fullerto n, La Habra, La Palma , Orange
and Santa Ana
•Orange County Central Labor Council, AFL , C IO
•National Woman's Pohtical Caucus
Thonw 0 Stodeel. Chalnnan
jeanefflt Mutphy, Tr~~'
Don R. AdklNOO
Fredmck P. "iuirn
Wylie A. Aitken
RobmS.&ma
Mr. & Mrt. Roben.F. Bcavn
Or. Amold,p.8rdunan
Roland E. BllD'lttt
Mr. & Mn. Jeck 0 . BilllOO
Mr. & Mn. Pi>Yk Bowe
Allan L. 8ridiJbd
EdnwndA.~
JllPU w. Butch
.,..,ichol. c. ByhowtT
Phil C.mpbell
Omnia E. C.rpmttr
Se-n. P1ul C.rpmttt
l..l'Wftnu P. C-.,
WtltttB.~
Or. L.E. Ouifrin
R.ohtnN.~
Ralph & J_.ync Claw
WillisJ. Clernona
)tlC':C.O., • Mr. & 1111-Lnlie Cotton Oeoflt~l.St.
WhitOomwell
H.L. nue.1
Rep. Wiii• o..n,.,._,., aeo. E. llttthMl'Y
Oril & Jan o.nc.n •
l..alie N. 0...,..
Dt. john •t ht HuibntC.~
Fnnclla> f . Plrmtt
Oon6"-F0ir
Elizabeth&. Ralph Frarn Franm J. Nipp Aon. Irwin M. Fried C. Anhur N1uon
Rex G~ Jama Palm
Hon. &. MB. Sal F. Gambina Lylr Parks, Jr.
l.«>natd Oubrr J. Elron Pacridee
Drde &. Edward Ginier Jamn F. P,nMY
Or. John M. Gorrit" John C. Pmnry
Anhur W. Onv Mr.&. Mn. Mn Pollnc
Frank Hall · Michael D. Punrll
W. J. Hanq Col 1 Mr.&. Mn. Km'Rnfmydtt
Otnnis Harwood Mrs. William 0. Redfkld
Dennis K. H•IY 'Jay l . Rttd '
Ailttn M. Holto.wll Or. & Mrs. Sanky Roberu
Mr. &. Mn. FranJ. Hoplclru Clamicr & Hrlen• Sc!hwara
Rrubcn Paul Hushet Frank&. R111'h Schweian
Vtmon Hunt, Jr. Robrn S. Schrimmrr
Nonn1n P. Kamin ' Karl 0 . Schwab
Mr.&. Mn. How.rd laughnd E.dwin K. Shand1tw
Yon1 T. Lee Ray&.SmdvSharp
Mr. & Mn. E. Rohen lmlkln Don F. Smith
Mr. & Mn. J. Neil k Vecu IUy L. Smilh .
Mr. & Mn. JllMI Lock.haw Mr. &. Mn. Richard Spootvr
JK.k IC. Mandel Robnt S. Sudman
F~ck T. Maeon Gilbert & 8«tty Stnw
Or. Geocp Mebuyama Dick & Phillipe Tucket
Luckn L. MiMf, Jr. Minne Van Tllbura
Or. & Mn. M.urlce Mulville Dair V1mrr
Mturke L. McAlil«fr Hon. loult v,i..qucr
Don & Beth McBride John A. Vm.on
Dr. Chria A. Md.-.. Tony Vll1elli
Or. and Mn. ""lip H. Mcfarland °'· & Mn. O.vld Wallcl"CfO'I Wllll1m ~y .....----.. Robrn E. Ward
Hon. ""Uip Mc<Jraw C.IOI D. WlddJe
ftlchtrd K. McNabb Or. &~n. Wllll1m Wlckrn, Jr.
Jack & ~Murphy Duft Wl'ntm .
Mr. & Mtt. ffuold MlllCOC 8aNrdo M. Yort.
Eart V. Nellom Thom.a A. Zener
.... v..... ............. "" ....... ~ ....... ,....,_°""_ .. a...-, ... .-..... QI ,..,... .... : ~CMlrw-.
K~ tt'l•frrfltff
DEAR PAT: I've decided to insdlate my cabin
at Bil Bear. ICY problem is tbat I aee a lot of con-
ftlctlq infonnaUon about wbat IU8d of wulatiGe
should be placed in awe Roan and noon above
cold apace.. What sbou1d I uae?
S. l:., crVtne
.._...._ la rate.I .. , a -.11en. ,... a ......... , ........................... . Y•"" .._--.en la NeH1••••1• a ... . !Mn ._._&lie teee••mt1d111 Mft daqM ............... rec..& ,.,. ...... _ .....
are..., ... ....,_ .. .,__.._...._u,....aa. Ueno..aa..a ...... waa.a. ...... a ..... .
!Mn ue ,_._..fer e9lll dblatea. a ... .
ben ue ·••t1we, • &U& twe pleeee el &·It .. ... .................. a ....... ..-ees. .... .. reeo••=••• fw ...._. • ·11ie W'Uten llalf el &lie Ulllted SlaU. ... fer ~ la die HMllen
llalf &laa& are laeated by oil or elee&rldty. OU......_, me at lent a.u.
.ffairf•• "pflf,.., w .....
DEAR PAT: I recently inherited several love·
ly ivory stat\d. What should I use to clean them "
I've beard that ivory should not be soaked i~
water, but the pieces are so old they've developed
a yellowbb tinge. I think they would be more al·
tractive ii I could restore them to a Upter shade.
B.C., Corona del Mar
A ~ yellow &lap • 1...., la lllenta·
Me. Wife l"'Y art •Jedi cleu wllll a da•p
•,.PO•I• alld dry care(ally witla a -••braaln
clat.lt, __. u u .W T -alalrt. Neftr Mak la water
heaue tMia will ea•ae &M lnry layera to
...,_, AM&Mr faftl'l&e 1....., eleuer la •llll.
..... .,._ la ..ate '-l'tO!Me ,._ ie1a. Gemde ~le ..... .._ Iii t.perta.111 fw •art.le. lleplu
elea ... 1 wl&• a feat•er du&er la prefened lteeame dry elotlt d..U.1 aay,..... ..U ..._ ._ •lll'f•ee. a11111•1q tale .. pe•der •lite Hl'faee la a reeo•••W•etllle4_, ........ ,,
DEAR PAT: A friend of mine always eats
chocolate when she feels down and out. She claims
that cboeolate cures htt "blues" and ma~es her
feel better. She says sh~ even read that there's
something in chocolate that substitutes for a mood·
elevating drug. ls thia true?
T.G .• Newport Beach
~y· ....... cMeeblte •aJ ··-... pal•. &eaearellera at tM New Y•rll State
Pa1eMautc ._... ... "'911 ibt eMeeb&e ia ...... ~--~--a .............. cuakal ibt Ulla •ep;;;;J .,utU. ne. a
,. ...... pardnlarly ll•PPJ· ... u ........ -ae ia • ._ left," &lie llN'aa. ,.., ... eea dlla dtemleal _........... ..-.ny, M& .._a~ la rejeetel.
&lie ..... en8 •a1 lie ca--' '1 &lie-... .......
ftUlq ell lta pn•eu. fll ,.._,...., .. ..._ •
apee "q • l&a keu•wa. fte cllNtilate W.1e •••1 ....-IO• •Mil Aftert.ma njedlm e.ld
* PARTY GOODS * CRAFT SUPPLIES * CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS * GIFTWRAP & RIBBON * POLY & SILK FLOWERS * WEDDING ITEMS * BASKETS & DRIED FLOWERS * FLORAL SUPPLIES
6862 EDINGER
(at Golden West)
(NEXT TO ZODYS}
WATCH FOR
OYR (GRAND
OPENING .·.: . . ......
,IOYElllER 2""; ....... , . ' .. . . . ........... ~ I~.:...:~•:.'•'• .. • • • .... • •. 11:•: ... :;-~:.· .• , ·····' .•.. • •• ,., •.• :-r: O:····. ... :·· •
be tllelr atle•pt .. replealllt ...................... _
•lae batl to e-.aaae a. u.e111uca-....... --------------------------&o'laaft enYlap fer Miier aweeta. fte reeeudlen , ....... , ,. ........... ..re clleend .. .,., complete New York Stocks.
Delivered same day
elaeHI*, &lie ................ *"P laM Ill·
&le Impact, bat dn11a IJ•Hlal die elle•leal
'-readMn GI. plaeQlftllyta..a.e were effedl.-e. ftla ·tnYlq fer eMalate .._ Ma u .wtetln
qHIJ&y lhalla'r to .. at oftell fomd ....tat.eel wltll fresh to your doorstep
aleollel er edler *-••·
....
Paid Political Advertisement
PRESERVE OUR
YIS
Deor Fellow Logunons,
"I
BLUFFS
I
~ .... -
R~ber the initiative petitioi1 to preseNe our bluffs circulated at the suf:,'ermatkets? ThQrks tQ.
3.000 Logunons the initiative hos qualified for the 'November 4th ballot os Measure E.
\
YES on E will put the initiative low on the . books to protect our coast os only on initiative con.
The initiative prohibits destruction of coastal bluffs. and requires a safe setback of buildings from
the bluffs edge, a bluff wolk'eosement solely along the comme<cially zoned higH"bluffs between Main
Beach Pork and Sleepy Hollow (Vocation Village). and a specific pion to protect the uniqueness of these
largely ~veloped central bluffs.
The city hos authorized destruction of coastal bluffs. and unsafe, development close to ard on the
face of bluffs prone to collapse, indeed. where pna landslides hove occurred! Two houses have fallen
from the central bluffs. Bluffs hove collapsed on the ocean front neor Legion Street. ond below the
Riviero Motet ot St. ~n's Drive. Two landslides occurred years earli~ at Crescent Boy.
• Great savings will result from avoidance of landslides such as occuned at Del Mor Avenue rcost to
City OVet $800,CXX)).
Vote YES on E to preserve our bluffs . . don't forget help is needed!
Cordially yo~s •
...
-~ ~ '""'==--~114;...i;
Gene Atherton, M.0 .
.
,_. ... ., .. Aa1 t•IHClff• .. ~ ll,&.11
-~: ·--:~.
.... CW..V"-OT
Nation
lporing
Eomet
NIAGARA FALL&, N.Y. JAP>
-TM federal IOYWD--..W
•• • hnportaat td..ufte op. pwtualt1 41 it doea _. tUDd
IWdl• ol Hall•y's COm•t'a 1•
..... put Earth, • lr'OUP "' le'-1Wt lau warned. n. -* Jut made a cbe
~to &artb in 1110. A re-
Hardl project durinl the 1818
appearance could live aclenUata
wlM> ltudv the comet'• nucl"-8 fU4a..,..al information on the
ori~ matter of the universe,
aclen\i.a.a say.
. JAPAN, THE Soviet Union,
l"rance .and several other na·
llou plan to have lnatrumentS
ready in space when the comet
draws near, spokesmen for the
Third Colloquium on Planetary
Water said during a meeting
here. Dr. D\&wayne Anderson, of the
State University of New York at
Buffalo and coordinator of the
colloquium, said the National
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration has a comet ren·
dezvoua mission under con·
side ration, but doesn't appear to·
have money to fund it.
"The Americans will be the only major scientific community
in the world not to 'show up' at
Halley's comet," said Fraser .
l"anale of the Univers ity of
ffawaU.
0 M08T OF THE other coun·
tries will perceive this as
eVidence that the U.S. cannot do
It, or at least as a l09s of will on
tbe part of our technological
community. This will be bad, a
real turning point for the U.S.,"
be said.
Fanale said the United States must come up with the money in
next year's bud1et to make a
Na90Dable scieatittc-stUCly ollJle-
cemet.
Failure to join the interna·
tlonal effort would mean more
tban a loss of face-, s aid Everett
Qlblon, ~researcher.
• •wE NEED TO understand
the realm we live in, how we
evolved," he said in a prepared
statement.
...
,, ,
• I
0 Plllllj Moms II"'. 19'0
Rare Photo
This study of Count Leo Tolstoy, the Russian writer. is
from a rare 1908 photograph taken on his 80th birthday.
The photo appears in the first issue of Camera Arts
magazine.
Bilingual Phone
Service.Deillanded
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Pacific Telephone . Co. 's $789
million rate hike request has been challenged bl"• coalition of His· pani~ and Chinese-American groups demanding more bilingual
services,_ _ ---
The 16 groups and 221 subscribers asked the state. Public
UtiUties Commission to ~eny the rate request or grant 25 J)ercent
rate reductions to Spanish and Chinese-speaking people.
The 1.6 organizations want bilingua l inforrnation operators, as
well as billing, eme rgency, repair and other services available in
Spanish and Chinese.
PT&T already provides many bilingual services, according to
Lee Cox, division m anager for residence planning. He said a 1975
study estimated that the services demanded by the groups would
cost an extra S33 million.
....
Box: Less than
0.1 1118 tar._
•
Warning: The Surgeon Ge~ral Has Determined
_ That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Less than 0.1 mg "tar:' 0.01 mg ,,.,_ .. Q...-...--.~-'~==~~=~~-----.._--__. niCQtiM 1¥.pefcl9¥1tttby FTC Mttflod.
Qfficial
'Loaned' .
To Fund
Costa Mesan Ron Renisb has
been loaned by the Communica-~
tloiis Workers of America Union
to serve aa a 1980 United Way of
Orange County North/South
loaned executive.
Reoiab and ao other selected
company representatives from
throui,bout the county will be
crucial in achieving this year's •10.a million 1oal, accordlng to
Cart· Karcher, campaign
chairman.
Lo'aned executives. he said,
are chosen by the chle( elf'
ecutive officer of his or her or·
ganiiation and relieved of reg·
ular job responsibilities while
serving as full-time United Way
campaigners.
Renish is a shop steward with
the union.
llPW~
New postage stamp emphasizing c~sumer education
will be printed in English and Spanish. No denomination
appears because stamps will not be printed until new
postage rates are determined. ·--------~----------
American
Technology
Action
Cadillac. 1981. at
~ COSTA MESA
(714) 5 40·9 I 00
(2 13) 587·8266
Paid Political Advertisement
RE-ELECT
~mbly\\Olllan
• Marian Bergeson led the fight for a
permanent lid on inflation • Income Tax Indexing.
• She sponsored crime control legislation
for Attorney General George Oeukme· Jlan.
• She is concerned for youth and wants
every penn y of school funds spent for
direct classroom education.
• She is against duplication of control at
all levels of government which results in
waste and excessive taxpayer costs .
/
..
We want Marian Bergeson to continue her
representation in Sacramento. She cares. -She gets
things done. She's a proven leader. She has our
endorsement for the 74th Assembly District.
0e11r•A•1en AUIMll & I,_ Grtllttll
Jim Oodlb
Wllll•m S. & S.r• 0. Alclrl09e
J.A.1 1-•
A-r1S. l rown Erte A. E919 Mr1. David Ar1u
llllle•t h ,.111
MrL Sl-'r Na°" Al•nV.-.W.,M O.
Oon• Fr-lin
M•lllM I. ""'llMllUI Mr ... MrL R-.-i s .........
Or ... M•L Arnoldo. ••o ...... A-r1 W. lleln 1(.,..,, I(.., c.riton
::.r1·~c: •. __ ,
Cllrl1lle F. "-r
O•yle J-
Mr ... MrL ~ ... .,"·Mat .. ,, Coalson C. Moult
C11er1 .. -Mr. & MrL E.W. Scllun'IM:ller
M•rhn C. SNel•'r L.ot\arCI~
c.<11 H. SNrM E llH O.tll SlodderO
Mr & MrL Gi.n E Sl•H-11
Wy1teR.W1MIY
P•tlCrOtle TllOmH 8. VunCll
M•urlceJ. 0.W•to
J emes """"' Hen<y E-
Mr. & Mrl. 0...10 S,_r Ootl•IO Ayrn He11<0<k ...,,,,,,. Ill
AOMI 81omqu1st
Bot>Goodwtll
WllH•m G. GNl'CIY
Goldie JOWClll
Oor"n -'11\ell Cerl N•I~
Mr,. -_.E Outnn
Gtorl•Z~
Aulll SI""
Mr. & Mrl. Oun<•n T Stew•rt Mr. & Mr1. JOftll T Bova
G•rv """' ......... r Bowl•
Or. O••HI llutwwll
Gar., w. &u<v•H
Mr. & Mr1. JOhn'~lllOll Wtll1•m(;'-1
/1rvu E. Outwo.
ernl<• Ellll Mr. & Nit's. fUrry F-r
Tim H elcllnger
Or. & MrL JOhn H-1
Or. LOrenH .. tMr
Mr ... MrL Otv•I Hot,.,,.,, 't::: :::~ ~;.';'.;. .ir.r:.:~1c.
M r & Mn . R-t l(r-°'· P•ullC-Mr. & MrL Woltiar11 LM19 .. 0ll Mr . & M"-R_,, LUCH 0w.,. ... ,.,,..,
AnthOlly A. Mo4M
JOl>fl 0 . O'Donnell Or. AossM. Palen NaCIA.~
Pa111 T. S.late
L" C. 5M?wni1 AICll•rO s.-11
Mr ... Mn.. Akl\enl 1Ce111..,
A Aom. Solll Wl'\lt•-l Rtl.l
Phlj Scllf<19el
C•rter Mc0on.t10
Mr I. Mr.._ R-r1 H. H11ll
Alltje Hill Murial Grill111'\
Ellaallelh E<kl>e<Cll. Pel 0 Pr9d H. Bice Mr I. Mrs. E. S. P•'1>lfY , Jr
Oet>r• E. Allen 8 t1t1e E . 8utUe
JOl'\ll & ~ L..e_,le91W
W. V Wllll~. OOS
Ellen Wll<Oll EOwuCI H.S-
LloyOS.111-Em•I J. AoCtl
COi. G.neA. R-s
Wilham H. P-er 8er1Nr• J . H«tl> M,., E•rle E. Newt>ar1
Alcl>ard W. Miller. Jr.
J. L•le L.-IO. M.O.
W•rr•n G. Kr.,.,..r, ~o. lllice & Cene<' Klrvet1
Mr. & Mrs. Oonalcl W ICllll•n. Jr.
... _. & a.-"11 IC~
EOl'rll R. Har1
Mr. & MrL E*' --MrL 51~ l'U°" Owenu..,. Collilll
Mr. & Mn. JKk a.t ... us Jolln WftHloll, O.V.M. Or. & MrL W•rren L. lostlcl<
Sl•nlord & l.<ICllle Brimnall
B•rO.r• y-p eul I. Gerri si..ro
•r••nc.a--
FULLY INDEXED STATE INCOME TAXES are only In ef-
fect for two years.-198C).1981 beCause permanent fuU Index-
ing was vetoed by the Governor. If your Income felled to
keep pace with.Jofletlon you know how Important this
measure Is. Taxpayers who have the most to gain are in the
middle Income brackets -young people, young families,
those on fixed incomes. The LeQlslafure t\as failed so now
the people must-take on the task to put the measure on the
June, 1982 ballot. WH,A-YOU HELP?
,-----------~----------------------, I aupport Mllrtan 8erge8orl'a ...,,_,.."' Income Tax lndealftll
0 0 0
lnlllattwe , ~
You -r ... tff'/ MIM tDf enda,......nta. ......... , ............. ,... ....................................
I·
I
. INSID•: •Sports · •lnteNlnment
•8UllM11 •Claulfled
Albert .
SchWe.itzer
Collectioit
•1 ruona OUON °'-~ ........... Wbat may be the moat comprehensive
Albert Schweitzer exhibit west or the Mlaaisaip-
116 now U. ln place at Chapman Colle1e ln the Thur~ Clarke Library. ,, •·
It contains photOtfrapha and memorabilia of
the renowned doctor, who served in Lambarene,
l1l tile Gabon province of French Equatorial Africa, for many years.
The collecUon was donated by Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Ellerbrock of Covina, who worked with
Schweitzer In Africa and served as his
administrators.
ABMNGEMENTS FOR the donation were
made by Valerie Scudder, a Newport Beach
resident andfrtend of Schweitzer.
She took a few moments recently to wander
through the displays and talk about how she met
Schweitzer and what impelled her to know the
famous physician.
Mrs. Scudder said she had read or
Schweitzer's work for many years and had a de-
sire to go see for herself what be was ac-
complishing in his African hospital compound.
"In 1961 I went to Africa to see him," she
said. "And I asked what I could do. I worked in
the vegetable garden and took the children for walks.··
Schweitz.er , 86 at that time, was hospitable to his visitor.
Mrs. Scudder said she was impressed by
the "atUtude of serving and loving" she found
in Lambarene.
YOUNG DOCTORS and nurses came
to study and work with Schweitzer, and
everyone cooperated-to keep the rather
primitive hospital going.
Schweitzer, the moving force behind
it, was "a talented versatile, modest
man with a wonderful senu of humor,"
Mrs. Scudder said.
His first operating room was in a con-
verted chicken house with no electrici-
tv. she recalled.
Schweitzer accepted labor and
foodstuffs in return for the patients•
care, and the families or the sick would
often be found outside the hospital wail·
ing and cooking meals for their loved
ones.
Schweitzer, a renowned authority
on Bach and an extremely talented or-
ganist, played the mmic of his favorite
composer on two beat-up pianos at the
hospital compound, Mrs. Scudder said.
~'At tim11t• our own
:.1"-li9~f 9ou out
an~ ie ntlti"nd!eA b~ a
•par-k from anoffJ•r
p•r9on. ~acq of u•
l}aa C•U..tr fo flJina
cuitfJ dup 9s-atituoir
of tftose wqo 1-J•lre
H9qfir~ flte fl:tme
\nit~ in us.
8BE OVERHEARD THE doctor playinc !heh in bis home during her visit and stopped, to
llslen.
Mts. Scudder made a second trip to the com-
pound in 1965, just six weeks before Schweitzer's
death. and again was greeted warmly.
"He was a tremendous person," she said. "He
was goal-oriented, perserving and unswerving.
He loomed like a tremendous luminary on the
horizon. There was ari aura, a vibration about
Mm. Youjustwantedtogivehimabug.
"HE SEEMED SO honest and sincere. He
was so fulfilled himseif he could afford lO be gen-
tle."
Mrs. Scudder, who earned her B.A. in
psychology at Chapman. wanted the Schweitzer
collection at the school as "an inspiration ror the
students.''
Fwiding was supplied by The Fashionables. a
support group for Chapman led by Mildred Mead.
The secret to kite flying, says
Gerald Hacquebard, is mastering
tl1e winds and the heavens
'at wm .. ·.
Mildred Mead (abov-e
left) and Valerie
Scudder view
plaque commemorating
exhibit. Schweitzer
memorabilia are
below while
photo of the
doctor is at
left.
This Rol(s-Royce will be leased to a lucky bidder tonight
at the Christmas Company opening Adrriring it are (from
left) Mike Manahan, Shelley Kaufman, Richard Liv-
ingston, Nancy Hansen, Martha Ruor and Robert Ruor.
planners and supporters.
By MARY JANE SCARCEU.O
Oldie o.ilv l'llet S~ff
H un!er green and red ribbons
with ecru lace and spr:igs of
babies ' breath will herald
"Reflections of a Christmas
Past" when the Christmas Com-
pany opens tonight. _
The Junior League of Newport
Harbor will celebrate its tenth
anniversary by contributing all
its net proceeds from the event
to a new shelter for abused and
neglected children in Ora~ge
County.
P)NE TREES with· tiny white
twinkle lights and four old
English leather sleighs will com·
bine with white mums and red
poinsettias to decorate over 18,000
aquart! feet of display space al lbe
Oran1eCounty Fairgrounds.
Shoppers will have no ex·
cuae for put:Una off holiday gift
buyln& until the lut moment,
according to Nancy Hanson,
chairman of the event.
A gaJa, ~per-person opening
night is planned tonight from 7
lo 11 with holiday fashions
mo.deled by Saks Fifth Avenue,
wuisine b y Romanoff's and
dancin g to Webst e r 's
Unabridged.
HJGIBJGllT OF the evening
will be lbe auction of a one-year
lease on a 1980 Rolls-Royce Silver
Shadow II.
Tuesday and Wednesday shop·
ping hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
and an After Five Shop and Dine
from 6 to 8:30 p.m., will proVide
a Ught supper, wme and door
prizes for late browsers.
Thursday hours a re 10 a.m. to
5p.m.
Red and green plaid awnings
with red canvas backdrops will
accent each of the 30 booths
representing unique stores from
many parts of the country.
A'!'ONG THE shops at the
Christmas _Corru>an_y wjjl be
"Chocolate Moose ," "Ap·
palachian Craftsmen," "The Red
Flannel Factory." "Tom Ranch"
and" Friends Again Boutique."
C hildre n 's gifts are the
specialties of the "Sand Castle
Construction Company'' of San-
ta Barbara and "Ragamuffin"
from Sausalito.
"What's Poppin"' offers -
what else _:.. gourmet popcorn,
and men's gil'U from Beverly
Hills are available from '"'l"he
Price ol Illa Toys."
THE JU~IOa Leaaue SUI·
tainera will serve soups,
cheeses, breads, fruit.a, putries,
beverages and wine in "A Wee
Bite," a Scott.lab tearoom, and a
shopper's lunch wiU be sold
from 11 a.m. lO 2 p.m. each day
for larger appetites.
Christmas photos will be taken
throughout the three days, Santa'
wilJ visit, and Jim Gamble and
his. puppets will appear at 3 and
4 p.m. Wednesday.
ADMISSION tickets purchased
in advance are $2, and those
bought at the door are $3, with
children to age 16 admitted for 75
cents.
Special events will be extra,
and reservatt'ons are recom·
mended. For information, call
640-1450.
Here Comes the Kite Flier
,, .
£DITOR'S NCYI'E -You don't
ha~ to uU ~rd Hacquebard to
fJO /ly a kite. At tM merest hma o/ a
brene, M'U ~ ovt there ~
tM •kJI Ulith OM or two, or a doem
kite• -and plafling mtuic /or them.
And talking to them, too.
B1USESTONE
WESTPORT, Conn. (AP> -Every &mday in the Liverpool
of his youth, Gerard Hac·
quebard's mum packed a wicker
b.,ket with hmch for him to carry
to bl• Uncle Fred and Uncle
Albert.
Every Sunday be found them
in a &liltenin1 meadow with a
doien other chapa ny1n1 ldtee ~ade at home from pa1ea ol \be
Dally Mall and the Llver'P09'1
Express. The temptation al the
roast potatoes and ale In hla
cbar1e facU111. Gerard would
leall on the fence raWn1, "look·
in& up at tbe aky In contemplat.loa
uacl 1Jory. '' There wu born bis
pa11ioa.
• SACHGOsas IN tbla
IOUilnNstern 'Coftneetlcul town
today are acealtomed to the ar·
rival ol tbe sllver·h81red com·
merc&ai naJ •tate execuuve.
Oa , ........ days be vent..,. I fortb from hia brother-In-law'•
bome e.n wttb a tnmldolld ol
pluUc ldtel, and with a ftourt1lr l often tbem to t.be .Jlea.YW -
on~. two, up to ·12 atJilti.
"When I'm not scraping the
sky with skyscrapers," he saya,
"I 'm scraping it with kites." Bia
ablllty to put up to a doien kites
throuah graceful, parallel move-
ments has won him a number of
contest ribbons. And ll has made
him sometbint of a Pied Piper
of the Winds \0 school children
in and around New York.
He plays music for his kites,
or coune, from a tape recorder
in the saNs. "The Blue Danube
Waltz ii the kites' favorite," be
says with the teaslnt smtle of a
sbOwman. "Da da da da da.
brmp brmp, brmp brmp . , .
and In that time tbe kltel will
ban done two ftpre et1bta. And
.. erybody'1 bappy. Tile)' say, I
can't believe lt. I '*1• I can't
either."
BB TALKS TO HIS kites, too,
at tbe crtUcal moment when
they are launched in tanct.m. "II
lbe1 don't ltart up, I say, 'Come on red, tome on blue.' You baw
to talk to your kit.es .......
then people tn the crowd
watc~ you 1ay, 'He1. be'• talldqtohllld~.·"
But when bl.I bands, arma and
1plrlt ..,. qa1ed, be wanta no
mon taa. "I aboWd bavt a""' on my Nels: PleaH .daa't llll
quettianl. l'Dl fb1DI a.kltt. "-
.J -.. ..
"On a dare I ollce new a. kite
from the top of a pyramid in
Egypt," he says. And there w'as
the St. Patrtck'sDayinNewYork
City when, on another dare, be
sailed a Idle bepa a bright
ireen shainrock from the root of a
70-story building on Lexington
Avenue. A crowd of gawkers
gathered Ul!d traffic slowed, and
three or lour police cruisers
pulled up. ..I took a do.wn
elevator," bes~. He left the kite
tothecope.
"IN Ul'E n. YING you have
complete control of an art, and it
ia an art," be says. "It's a sreat
throughout history. and Hae·
quebard may have pioneered a
few.
''THECBINESE used to uaethe
kites for weapons," he says. The
kite'sorillnbubeentracedtothe
Han Dynasty, B.C. 206-A.D. 220,
where wan1on loaded them with
firebombs and floated them over
the enemy.
Hacquebard once tau1bt ldte
Oyin1 to a group of mental pa·
dents, who normally stayed in·
doors, and returned weeks later
to find lbem ~Yln& the out·
doors.
freedom, it's mental therapy, lt'a HE RU USED KITES to loft
a thrill feellna that you are, in a bJ• aurf-cast.inf Ible bebind the
manner,controllingablrd." breuen and baa landed atrll*I
Tbe IOD ot Eq.Uab and Dutcb ball, ldDlftlla and, once, a four·
parents, Hacquebard wu born pound blaeftlb. One time be •1
in GalveMclo Tuu. After bi.I literally carried away by
father died, he and hla motlier Sl,000 ldte be bad riQed to tow
moved back to her bome, boat on Lone ll1aDd Sound.
Liverpool, Eqland, where be He bu taucbt a man in a
earned penna. from churm by wbeelehalr to Ry a ltlte, and • •IDOllltnltial bil Soatbem ac· one-armed man too ... The _...
cent, aad w1'ere he became secret ii m8'terinl the wtncW.
enchanted wttb kltes. Today he heavens at "'11." Aut minlll--. ltv• and woru In Mubattan. wltb &be 1ehoo& cblldnn, wlllo I ~
P'or Uu'et 1ffll eow be ba vtte blm to their anaul "14'
WOta tbe top prise In tbe New day. for whlcb t.beJ mall• tW'
York late CompeUtlon, and Udl own k.ltel, oft.a ho~.,.
1ear be plut to compMe • tM pa~"· brtnll lllm a JQJ.
IM'9•1w U.S. coatett at Ocean •They '" me comlnt and
Clly, lld., for,. top prtae ot •· tbey &bout, 'Hert 9ae ll, tbe kite
Kl\ea ..laaw• bacL.&uy.. UIM -Oierl 'l'beJr:l .. ftMrJ "' -· .. '
,,
... '
J
Oranae Coast artist Richard Harris. who
painted a portrait of former Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger, present~ it to
Kissinger recently during a $1,00-per·
couple dinner at Ambrosia, pan of an
evening of fund-raising activities for the
Republican Party.
Make Checklist
When Seeking
Child Care
J
W ASl«NGTON <AP ) -With the kids back in
school many wives may be looking for a job to help
'balancethefamily budget, andiftherearestilllit-
tle ones at home that means finding day care.
Indeed. there are plenty of Americans looking
for day care services, not just wives returning to
the labor market. ~nd finding a good service
can be a hassle.
THE NATIONAL council or Better Business
BurHus · says parents looking for child care
should put together a checklist of specific require-
ments, then visit centers, talk with the stall and
imped the facilities.
' When looking for local daycare services there
are many sources to check. Many employers, for
example, keep li sts of available services and
someevenprovidedaycareata weeklyfee.
Local civic and church groups also may offer
service, and you can get referrals from depart-
ments ol social services, child welfare offi.ces,
schools, the YMCA or YWCA and other groups.
CAREFULLY CHECK out the range of
services available, the bure,aus say, including
nursery schools, baby sitting services, communal
care or informal care by friends and relatives.
Here are some things to look for when conaidering
day care service, according to the Better Business
Bureaus:
-ls the center licensed? Many states require
licenses and set requirements, usually including
minimum health and safety requirements.
-The center should be well-lighted, sa~ and
in good repair. There should be adequate fire
extinguishers and well-marked exits, as well as
smoke alarms.
-Is the staff professionally trained and what
is the att itude toward discipline and
supervision?
-ls the atmosphere pleasant? Does the staff
listen and respond easily to the children? Do the
children seem content?
hivetbnent
Dressing I
Key·For Fall
WASHINGTON <AP)
-A 1overnment e&ot.hi.ac speclalllt H)'I
tlae key for women's
faabklll tbll fall will be
• 'invtltlnlnt clrelablc. ''
EleMOI' I'. Younc of
Ute Asrinltan Depart·
meGt'1 Cooperative Ex-t...._ Servi• MYI Ulla
refen to bu1ina feftr
but more ellpenahe
wardroM lt.ema to com·
tMae witb suitable ••r-
meau -.lready ln the
closet.
Several factors are in-
volved In um trend, she
report.a, inchadine:
-Today's fashion
scene Is conservative
and fairly stable
because coaaumen are
re1istin1 complete
changes of wardrobe on
a yearly or seasonal
basis.
-Relatively ex -
pensive clothes can be
expected to last longer
than less costly items,
thus ~lr coet per wear-
ing may be less.
-With the job market
highly competitive. it
pays to look well·
dressed, not over -
dressed. '
-Cnergy -con·
servalion conscious-ness during the winter
mon~ has resulted in
the need tor warmer
clotKea. euch aa wooleu
alld other textured
fabrlca, lncludin1 cor-
duroy and velour.
-Women are tencllnl
to buy venaWe, street-
lenath dresses of eood
quality that can also be
auitable for evenin1
wear.
"We are sc>lnl back to
the personal values
which' exi•ted prior to
the social upheaval of
the 1990s. The current
faeblon story is a
rapome to a new value
system whi~h includes
emphasis on marriate
and family structure,"
said Ma. Young. F o r y o u n I
women, sbe su11ests
bringlnl beck the plaid
kilt skirt combined with
a b'utton-down oxford
shirt, Shetland sweater,
corduroy bluer, loaf en
and colored knee aocks.
Other options, she
said, include active
spo-rtswear, coat-
dresslng and suit s .
Pants are malting a
comeback but skirts are
still more po1_>ular and
more fashionable, said
the Uni,ve r sity o f
Maryland -based
clothing specialist.
FireuxJod Buy
Isn't Easy Tl1$k
WASIUNGTON <AP) -'the arrival of cool
weath·er means the need for heat and many
Americans are turning lo wood -either
fireplaces or wood stoves. Buying wood. though,
isn't as easy asfallingoff a log.
The federal Office of Consumer Affairs says you
have two basic alternatives, either ~ from a dealer you're sure you can trust, or become an
educated consumer.
THERE ARE FIVE things you need to consider
when buying wood: the amount of wood, the
species, the moisture content, the degree of pre-
paration and, finally, the price.
Generally. wood is sold in cords. A full cord is
128 cubic feet, measured as a pile 8 feet long. 4 feet
high and 4 feet deep.
Many dealers, however, sell what is technically
a "face cord," which is 8 feet long and 4 feet high
but only as deep as the length of the cut wood,
usually 1 to2 feet. This me•ns it contains less wood
than a full cord, and should cost less.
BEWARE OF vague terms such as a "truck
load." This depends on the size of the truck. A
standard pick-up will hold one-third to one-half of
a cord.
There will often be small variations in the size of
wood piles. Most dealers are local people with a
reputation to protect and will colTe<!l substantial ~rtges. If "ot, call your local consumer protec-tiOooffice.
You can get a free list or these offices from
Consumer's Resource Handbook, Dept. 532G,
Consumer Information Center, Pueblo. Colo.,
81009.
Jerry Still Hasn't Written
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I loved your open
letter to Jerry Lewis -written after you had
w alched him on the Muscular Dystrophy Telethon_
'where he smoked one cigarette after another. It
was a beautiful plea asking him lo quit 1mok1n1 or
I
...
I
.
Ann
~ander•
at lea.at 'not to smoke on camera. 'Ail'you potnted
1 out, so many young people tdoUie him and ml1ht
• gettbeidea ltis the coolthln'I to do.
: I have been walllnf for a follow-up. Dld you
ever hear from Jerry? I'm •UNro"!~~
re.eden want to know. -GRAND ""'° "'''" FAN
THE Homst SHORT IN TOWN
. .
IQ.NE PAIR ONLY$ 7 50
· . with this ad
OfW ...,,._ II IU/91
'!!.!!f!B!..!'ffHI
td Q ~fl'omltle ~blOlf\-
DEAR GRAND: I rttelved many tOD·
gratala&ory letten •boat my plea ao Jerry. They
came from every atate la &lie aaloa, CHada and
even Mexico. . • bat not a word from Jerry.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: All I need from
you u a one-line reply. Please don't fail me.
A friend of mine telephoned over the
weekend to say she had Just flniahed addressing
the lnvttaUons to her wedding and she Is five ln-
vltatloaa abort. There's no Ume to have more
madeup. ·
The question: Would I mind if I didn't get
an lnvttatlon? , ·
I said, "Of course not." My mother s~s I
shouldn't 10 to the wedding because I have been
lnauttecl. Accordina to her, l am ten important
than the other sue-ts. Yes or no? -MEXICO,
MO., QUANDARY
DUil QVAND: SenJ, I ..... apee. You
trtnd II • a pldtle. 8llle ealled ,.. lleeaue •
ftC•nd,.. were••_.,.. ... ,,....... Doa't .............
25%0FF
hw1¢t' I ,. .......
.
Gitt Box
Mrs. Roy Beahm <left> .and Mrs,.Ray
Bullock check items to be offered lOday
through Friday at the Gift Box Fantasy
benefit sale for Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Open from 10 a.m . to 8 p.m•. through-
Friday, items for sale at the gift box in
the hospital lobby range from clothing to
perfumes, baked goods and jewelry.
Scrabble On Board
Scrabble players from the Harbo'r Area are
back at their boards again.
Play takes place at the Newport Beach Tennis
Club at 7:30p.m. thefirstandthirdWedneadaysof
each month.
Interested persons m wit call the tenni.9 club al
644-0051 for an invitation.
(
Bazaar is Nov. 8
A Country Christmas Bazaar featuring
homemade gifts will be held from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m . Nov. 8 at the First United Methodist
Church in Huntington Beach.
ll was incorrectly reported that the bazaar
would take place on Nov. 7. The Daily Pilot
regrets the error.
Horosf!ope
TUESDAY,NOV.4
By SYDNEY OMAJlB
]
BUSINESS/ FEATURING
BUdgets Based 1
On Current I
LDollar Fatal
., IOHN CUNNIFF I ............. .,..
NEW YORK -By almoet any meuure of I I">~~~' accounUne finance or re--. Oae federal t ~ 1.1 a meas, perha Pl beyond eorreedaaewn by the awesome poweroflhe preaideney." · , 1 In the past six yean the budget baa ~ jft the
red by more than $290 billion, amld prom"'"1made '
almost weekly that lt would be balancect. One such
promlle lasted three weeks before bein& &ed by reality.
What it amounts to is that nobody can n,ure out
how lo simultaneously rai.., revenue and c• spend·
ing. thus maklne the figures
match at the end of the year. Too
many factors Including the
P1l51dency, intrude.
A brief list conveys the point:
Mt. St. Helens erupted, hur-
ricanes roared, tornadoes blew,
the Cubans dum~d a pile of refuaeea, and the administration
bouallt up grain rather than let the Soviets tiave it. "
The list doesn't end there. of c ""''""
course. There was inflation, and while many people
believe politicians create it, the fact ren.ins that it
does have a big impact on the budget. So do high in-terest rates.
RISING INFLATION AND interest rates throw
all budgets askew, yours and Uncle Sam's. l'jobody
likes to believe things will cost more tomorrow, so
~hey devise their budgets in terms of current dollar
power. lt'sfatal.
When those factors rise Uncle Sam p.ays more to
borrow money. He pays n:aore to finance those things
that are indexed; such as Social Security. He pays
more for military hardware. He pays more for food
stamps. ·
You have observed, of course. that in some-of
this there ls a self-perpetuating cycle. An existing
budget deficit.. for example, leads to another budget
deficit becaule it costs so much to finance. and it
costs so much lo finance because inflation and in· lerestcosts are high.
SIMILARL V, WITH SOCIAL SECURITY pay-
ments, which must rise whenever inflation rises-at
mid year, beneficiaries received a 14 percent raise-
beca use they are indexed to the inflation rate.
But there is still another important factor that
tends to throw budgets into imbalance, and that is the •
Office of the President itself.
Prof. Ed.ward R. Tufte of Yale University tells us
about it in his book, "Political Contr<M of the
Economy," which details federal expenditures de-
signed to provide voters with a sense of well-being.
RE FOUND THAT FEDERAL spending in-
creases averaged 29 percent higher in election than
in non-election years during the period 1962-1973.
He found that of nine increases ln Social Security
benefits in the years 1952-1974. six occurred during
election years, three of them in the month or Sep·
tern ber, in time. you migh say, to influence voters.
During eight of the nine election years in the
period 1947-1973, Tufte found that real disPQsable in·
t."Ome accelerated in eight. In only one of the ~ '
years in that period was there a sharp rise in real iD·
co ml.
TUFrE ALSO FOUND THAT in the recent past
-his book was published in 1978 -unemployment
tended to follow a four-year cycle that reached a low
poi~t at the lime of the presidential election. Coin-
cidence?
Yale Hirsch. publisher oi t:.e "Stock Trader's
Alm!nac," doesn't think so. He cucnments that "The
makiflg of presidents, we have long observed, is in·
variably accompanied by an unsubtle 'manipulation
of the my.'' ltdisturbs him. "The piper must be
paid, 'hesays.
ASIE8 (Mar. 21·Apr~ 19)~ YOUl' ~la_ -I years past. Hirsch notes, the payin& of the
sought regarding policy· publicity· promotion or piper has been tough on stocks. creating the "post-
advertiting. Define terms, find out where you presi entiaJ year syndrome." 'when most• 'big, bad
standlDareuofromance,partnenbip. *ar arkets began -1929, 1937, 1957, 1969, 1973,
1977 . 'i TAU&tJS (Apr. 26-May 20): You f!t added It the Tufte and Yale observations carry the
compensation for performing familiar tasks. significance they seem to carry. then the presidency
Meam your wor1' u appreciated, job 1't1 done· itself '1\lght be one oft.he bi' reasons why the country
and general welfare improves. has b\idgetdeficits and the mflations that follow.
GEMINI < May 21 -June 20): Lunar aspect pro-
motes romance, creativity, style and ability to ex-
press and receive love . Reach beyond current ex-
pectations. What st;ems lo be a setback is tem-
porary and wtll rebound m your tavor.
CANCES (June 21-July 22): You p6erce veil
d mystery -you'll ba~e knowledfe d "inner
workings... Emphasis on territory. security.
buildin1 plans, relationship with older in-
dividual. including parent. You'll be offered a
new deal -=-and il is good.
Dr':!Woes
~id Rampant
SA~ JOSE <AP) -Experts say drug problems
are rampant in the Silicon Valley electronics in-
dustry, but few companies are interested ln the LSO < July23-Aug. 2a.>: Idea can be developed
into viable concept. Hunch pays off-display con-
fidence,. coura1e-of convidiooa. ·Trip wrttt.en
material and "nervous relative" dominate
scenari~.
problem. 1
' "You IO out and try to talk about employee p~
vaoo <Aua. 23-Sept. 12>: t>tepla)' wnaWt·
ty -look beyond the immediate, open U.. d
communication, Gemini, Sa&ittadw Pd'IQlll .lbY key role1. Finuclal J'llOlpecU are brt..._
'tlulnori&inally anticipated.
UBM (Sept. 23·0cl. 22): Revtle,reriewand
rebuild on a more solld base. Accent OD penonall·
ty, personal appearances, initiative, new atart.a ln
new directions. Circumatancea fav0r your efforts
-you'll be at right place at cruel al moment.
SCOaPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Beawareofwbal
occurs beb1nd the acenea-aomeoneil fruatrated,
tnviOUI and could attempt to "take it out" on you.
Cycle high -you 're on brink ol major iiacovery.
8~GrrrAa1vs <Nov. 22-Dec. 2u : Good
Moon upect now means you successfully '"1Uae
powers of penuaalon. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio
penoaa nsure prominenUy. Good news in connec-
tion with bualneas activity. Family member
makespeace1esture .
CAPUCORN (0.C. 22·Jan. lt>: Emphaallon
reputaUon, career ataadlnt in oom•nty. ~' Vlrfo penooa plaJ tmporumt rola et.' dear of Khemes, self-deception.
AQVA&l118 (Jaa. JO.~b. 11): Wbllu ..a
out.-of·reaeh beeomet clole-you have chance to
...ueept added teapomlblllty and opportWllty .fOI' fllwtdalude~lrewardl.
· PllCBI <Feb. it-War. JO); Gtt rid of bQrden
not .,.. own -iomeone wau JOU to paJ Md
pil. &DOW WIMD to flailb ud to ...... :r:r" 1•~-latere1t ......... wW ~
lema, and It 'a Jmt like pualDC out Bibles on the
Klondlke'Trall," said Davi(l, Hanner. who works
with Santa Clara County drug and alcohol abuse
programs. •
I
I ' l ·~n ian't their trip. They're into bucks." I
A San J06e newspaper reported that dr\lgs are
widely available at worksitea. It said payment was ~
sometimes made with stolen parts .
CCJl 1 1CTORI 1'11119 ••r WIDE AREA
COVERAGE
. OrUlf c..a.,. LA. C-. ., ............ c.-cr. RtwenMt (".....,.
'lf.i5
Orange ()oast
11ERE ... ARE
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Local, county, state,. nationa I and
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No other newspaper bri ngs you
more news of your-city -G'i>uncil,
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~ Laugh, ery or get 7J smart
Advice from Ann Landers, humor
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features on people, opinions, ~ ........ inf~ma~Jye c~lurl)ns and I . co~ic~ brighten ., , I . I_
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.. --Tele1'isioia TONIGHT 'S LATEST LISTINGS
.. ,to:~
Won09f WCIMMI .. 'I"' Ii.
world 11 Oftl 4111 ... t1 !tie
W'llen V\41 ••IKIMt • '"1111'' tH•n • rnetnoo (If ~llai'IJ"'ll
1Md111to ooid
• NP\. l'OOTaAU
Cl\te(l(>O ~,. al c; ........
'4lt\d 81 OWfll I TIC TAC DOUGH
W'A'f'H
A tlrooo w1111Jt101m <111111<.1•
Ille -t>ers ol hie <I07Ttn
on vwy1ng way•
• THE KMNY Hill
IHOW
AutltA/W8 ""etc;omes homu
a aoldter hero '"""' wine women ano song the
Three Mu1i..e1eera •l<:te
~am
till 3-2-' COHTACT(R)O
~ PROJECT UNIVERSE'
'Stellar B11ghtr1eh
(I) CBSNEWS • 1:30 0 IWLLSEYE
... WELCOME BACI<.
IC OTTER
· Fighting Mod
fhe SweattlOC)~ 1toc1< up lo•
W!Hhtngton wh•'" Wood
man accuse~ '""' or .:toe.11-
tnQ on a exorn
Q) GOOD TIMES
Ftonda plays 1r1a1chmUkf!•
for Wtllona a10<1 " mate
fuend ot Jame~
M ichacl La ndon trains for a battle with
a punch-drunk traveling prizefighter in
tonight's episode of "Little House on the
Prairit!." airing at 8 o'clock on NBC,
Cha nnel 4
fEI DICK CAVETT
"ElechOn Eve Wllh Anlho
ny Lewis And Ji;no Bryant
Quinn m 3-2-1 CONTACTCRlQ
Cl) .fi'•A'S'H
Psych1a1us1 MAIOt Freed ·
man comes 10 1he osylum
that is the 40771h 10 c1e111
his head ar>d t1nd' rrlPase
'" us un•Quo fo1 mot 1115.nni·
l y
7:00 i) C8S NEWS IJ NBCNEWS
Q HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Mel'\on Ir anslor ms her sell
onto a veiled beau1v whcf•
sf\e fears she might 1o•w
Howard to a yo1Jngor won
an 0 JOKER'S WILD
ti) M'A'S'H
Hawkeye's face •S badly
burnt wt-en a ~1ove M 1s
trying to loa explodes
Q) 8ARETTA-
The murdet ot a promonent
a1torney's wile open!'. a
can ol worms about her
na1fy hh• uHJ 111 ,,,o,
cJoubh a t.m111 t1Pr c:u•ath fil OVER EASY
Guttsl "''"~~ Rum Got
don U ail M~CNEtL I LEHRER
REPORT
8 TIC TAC DOUGH
7:30 i) 2 ON THE TOWN
H O"ifS S lt•vP f cjw.1rd6 J1uJ
Mf'IOdy H<l(}!'IS 0 FIGHT BACK WITH
DAVID HOROWITZ
l op•G5 oncluOe Aubbe1
maid Rough Neel< tr a~h
c11n commercrat. macr
credit cll•O!> and credit
on tor matoon bur eous
Poli>nd Sp1t1"\Q Watr>t W•~o
W1k1 po1a10 chops 0 SHANANA
Guests Jnn and Oean 0 FACE THE MUSIC ID ALL IN THE FAMILY
Edith conv1ncM Archie to
rent ou1 G10,.a's old room
to bring in some e•fra
money
ID MACNEIL / LEt1AEfl
REPORT
ChannPI Lilrling11
i) KNXT 1C8$) Los Angeles
D KNBC (NBCI Los Angeles u KTLA 1lnt1) LOS Angeles
0 KABC-TV :ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San D iego 0 KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Anqele~
@) KCST (ABC) San D1P90 m KTTV (Ind I Los Ahgetes
Q) KCOP TV (lno l LOS AngelP ... fEI KCET-TV t PBS~s AngPlt>.., m KOCE rv 1P B S1 Huntington BPd(.lo
ail CONNECTIONS· AN
Al TERNATE VIEW OF
CHANGE
The Wneet 0 1 F nrtunP
James Burl<•' traces the
de•Pfopmenl ot Ille mod
ern produclton lme trom 11s
uneirpecced ooq1n ... in my"'-
tocosm ano i1~1to109y 1n1 ()
< 8 P.M MAGAZINE
1V cnmmPrC-1,,I Cf11l<J "lilt ,
1NtndSurl1ng e·oo e I FLO
'
Farley. Fto s t1Ql1lwad
mortgage holder who is
runmng ror ofhrp pron11s
.,~ tree 1>eer from Flo s 111
C•Changf'IOr votc5
0 LITTLE HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE
Cnaries cQf1cOCIS a pla11 In
nurse an aging bo•er baci..
lb healll\ ano start htm on
the load to a new tote tR)
i MOVIE
• • •, · Gable And Lorn·
bard" {19761 J1'Clle5 Broton,
Joli Clayburg!\ Tn1111es him
"arit Clark G&blo ond Car
010 Lombard d1scove' 1n;i1
11e11her Ille movie moguls
nor the Amerocan publl(;
are ready 10 .Jc.cppt thtt11
1lhC•I oll--screen romance
12 hrs ) 0 MOVIE
• • • ·caproco ( t 9671
Oo11s Day Richard Harns
A woman tr flv6:1'\ incognito
10 track down lhl! narcot-
_,, •CS nng responsible for her
lather's death t:1 nrs I ID P.M. M1'GAZINE
TV comrn'--"'c•a' cn110 "'~:H'S
Mndsurl1ng ,. Lll.._ with
Amy Holland. CNM T911
toll• pie cruat, Or Wua>
has e QUtl on e11e1 ~
• touOGOU>
G""ll Glad~ KniQ"t AN!
Trwi Pops, Steve Allen,
Tanye Tuc;ker. Oueen. Hell
Ano 091ee, Eddie Altbbltt. f» CA&.JlfOAN&A'I
WATPC>lllf#'t..:
~· Cotlosts Clete Roberts tfl
lOf A,,geles and Spencer
M1Cllaet1 1n San Fr~o
1:30 ti ()) LADIES MAH CD CAAOL IWRHETT
AND FRIENDS ~ Bill MOYERS'
JOURNAL
"Cempaogn Ae1>9rt· Elec-
hon Eve Spec••!" Bill
Moy9'9 wr•ps up tile cam-
pelgn end views on rile
etectton onciud•no mtet-,,.._s wolh citizens from
around the country ano
prole111onet ol>aetvers
8:45 fJ (fl) TO BE
ANNOUNCED
9:00i)CI) M'A'S'H
Col Potter rushes ofl on a
secret mission and Hawk
eye os appointed tempo-
rary commander (Al
fJ PAIO POLITICAL
PAOOAAMMINO ID ME.AV GRIFFIN
"The Ouke And I · A collec·
loori ol 1nterv1ews wolh the
late John Way11e are fea-
t ured Guest director
Andrew Mclagleo
II) HEEHAW
Guests Tom T Hell.
Jeanne Pruell Heriny
Youngman
ID QREAT
PERFORMANCES
"Tinker Ta1101, Soldier
Spy' Gl'uoge Smiley \Alec
Gu.nt•OS5) uncovers the
odenhly ol 11\e double
agPnl and the somewhat
notoroou!. Mrs Sm1tey
finally makes an appear·
ance IParl 610
1tO, DONCORfELL
9:30 i) I I) CAMPAIGN 'I!():
PAE-ELEC'!'ION SPECIAL
A summary ol deve1op -
men1s as lho pres1dentoa1
ano congrenoonal cam-
paogns conclude will l>e
presented 0 TO BE ANNOUNCED
®)MOVIE
• • • 'The Last Oetall"
t 197•) Jeck Nicholson.
Otis Young A paor ot
rowdy shore patrolmen
attempt to teach lhet1
emo11onally withdrawn
prisoner lhe lac ls ot tote ( 1
tu 30mln l
10'.00 i) PAID POLITICAL
\iROGf'AMMINO (J HEWS
M OVlE
• • • '> Slither ( 19731
James Caan, Peter Boyle
An e•-<:ori llnds himself
being followed by two
slrange vans when he sets
out 10 recove1 a cache ot
1001 c0nceated by hos for-
mer partne< t 1 hr 30
rntn I
I NATIONAL HEWS
111U. MOYEM'
JQUflHAL
'Ca""*!1f' ~ Etec-
toon Eve Specl•I" Bill
Moyers wraos up the c111t»
pa1gn. taa1u11ng 1n1erv1aws
will! clliz.na from around
the countty and prolft-
aoonal observers
m MARK RU88ELl
Amari(.• s 11ar-spangt110
a&lortst klCk S oft hlS &ulh
season of stafld-up son9s
and b1par1tun zingers
from the l(athertne Cornell
Theater at the UnoversHy ot
Bullalo
rO:ao atCI) NEWS
'1i) STAN FREBEAO'S
FE>EAAL REVIEW
11:00 8 D Cl) NEWS HOUYWOOO
80UAAES 0 HEWl YWEO GAME ID M'A•S•H
B J borrows $200 from
Charles 10 send to h•s wile.
only to have Chatles take
ad•antage of hom on v1tfl·
ous ways
II) ONE STEP BEYOND
Return 0 1 M1tcheN Cam
p•on M1lche1t Campion is
ordered to take a Jong ,
•Ocatoon alter rec:overong
trom a near tatal accident
ail MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
"Prode And P1e1uo1ce M•
Collons seel<s a 1econc11t11·
loon wllh Ille Bennet lam1ty
and Intends 10 choose one
ot the girls for a wote 1P1111
2)0
I 1:30 f) !)) CBS NEWS
SPECIAL
The status or lhP Am,.11-
cans who were lakt!lt hOI·
toge 1n Iran on Novf'mber
•. 1979. is reviewed
0 THEBESTOF
CAl\SON
Guests Buddy Hackett.
Sally F1etd tA) 0 PRISOHE~ CEU
BLOCKH -
The future of Hallway
House os placed 1n )eOp·
ardy wtoen the pottce con-
tinue thitir 1n1err09allon ol
00<"!' fJ NEWS
JOHN DARLING
.TUBE TOPPERS
ABC D G:OO -Monday Night Foot-
ball. The C hicago Bears visit the
Cleveland Browns.
KTLA 8 8:00 -"Gable and Lom-
bard.' James Broun and Jill Clayburgh
portray the famous screen lovers of the
Thirties in this movie based on their
brief life together.
CBS 8 9 :30 -Campaign 180 Pre-
election Special. A final look at the can-
didates and issues in the presidential
election before it goes to the voters.
0 GUNSMOKE
A vengeful ••-conv1ct
seek' repnsal against a
former parlne1-1n-crtme
who ran out on a train
hOldup
ID HOGAN'S HEROES
Hogan &no hos me11
arrange to blow up a room
full ot Na11 brass
II) IT TAf<ES A THIEF
Al Mundy Is assigned 10
fond out 11 a bolf1ona1re
rec;luse is ~1111 alive
ID CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
M ABC NEWS
11:50 09' PAID POUTICAL
PROO RAMMING
-MIDNIGHT-
12:00 i) <fJ QUINCY, M.E.
Ou•nct suspects a mercy
killer at a san1tanum Is
respon~1ble 101 the prema-
ture deaths ol two ~pless
and lefmlnally 111 patients
Q TWIUOHT ZONE
A hes-been lrumpel player
'attempts 10 make a come-
\back
fJ A8CNEWS ID YOUBETYOUAUF£
Buddy Heckett meets Greg
EIN!jan a lemale whale
tralnef and a man Who per-
tarms a ~~~-o_ance
81) CAP\IOteU A8C
NEWS
12:20 U MOVIE * *' r "Crowl\avefl F81m"
( t970) Hope Larige. Lloyd
Bocl1ner A woma" ltnds a
maelstrom or w11crn:rett
and terror awa11tng her
when she m11ero1s a New
England farm (2 hrs I ·
12:30 0 TOMORROW
Quests· ac1ress Gloria
Swan.son. c:otumn11t O.ane
McCteltari 0 DONAHUE
Guest Dr Patrick Steptoe 0 THEFBI
"TM Man Wt>o Went Mad
By J,41stake"
ID YOU BET YOUR LIFE
Buddy Hackel! meets a
woman Wflo toores male
e•otoc danoers. a ch1h h1s-
tor1an and a man trying 10
save tt1e English tanguage 6it NATIONAL HEWS
12:50 Oll tAOH8IOE
A tO·y•ar-otd witness 10 e
murder dangorou1ty
re11ats.lrons1de's ettorts 10
make him talk (Part 11
1:00 II) MOVIE * • ', "Act One" (19631
George HamNton. Juon
I
\·
Robardt Tiie lute ol .._
al« lite pr-,00 ttr°"'
IOf' e Jewl8h boy ( I lw • 30
min.) •
l:to8(1) THaNIW AVIHGIM
A demenlael (leflJUt plot•
to t.ite over Ille w0tld
'*!Cl en ar111y of bl<da.
• t:ao .... THe UN MNGM
"Dud Men't Cfleal"
2!00D .._
2:2088 NIWI Z:*». NIW9
t-M8 MCWll
•• .,. ''Loci!. Stook And
Barret" ( 1970) Ttm Mathe-
ton. Bellnda J Montgom-
My. A S*t of young lov.r.
llM tfle ll'lp ol 1helr Pl'-
enta In an M\empl 10 llna
~.(2 bra.)
11 I· -,11 \ Y
Taw•da•'•
I Da111 l•e Ho.,le11
I
I
11:00 6it * * "Red Rive<
Range ( 1938) Jo"n
Wayne. Ray Co.,1gan Tne
Three Metqulteers sat out
lo nab a gang ol cattle
thtilvH operallng along t"e
~ flov\lf t I hr )
-~-
12:'00 ID • • * ,.., "Each Dawn I
Dte" ( t9391 James Cagney.
Geor~ Rall A crusadlrig
reporter '' framed and
sent 10 11111 . •
II) * • * "Alo Concnos"
( t96'4) Alellard Boone. Stu·
art Wn11man Four men set
out acro11 the Te•••
desett alter the Civil Wat
to recover stOlen Army
nlles eerlnarked ta< sale to
the Apaches 12 "rs)
a:ao O • • "Death Dream"
(1972) JoM Mertey, Lynn
Carlin, A family receives a
telegram from the QOvern-
ment notifying them ol hlS
death. but he returns the
same noghl d .. ling death
to1 the ommunlly (2 lw"s I
by Armstrong • Betluk
1 CAN'T REMEMBeR
WHEN ~'l/E ENJOYED
A GAME I'S MUCH.'
·~ 'Scared Straight' Retains Impact
-
I
Soaper in Gree~e
Ka thryn Hays visits the ancient Te mple
of Poseidon in a sceM. from the CBS soap
opera "As the Wo rld Tums," sequences of
which are being filmed in Greece, a firs t for
any daytim e serial. It airs weekdays at 2
p.m .
-FOUR DAY FILM fESTIV AL
r::i. WOMAJool ALMMAIC•S OF Ill.UM 1
MOM.. TUIS .. WID .. lHUIS.
•DMISSIOM RH
~..,
UCt & .. W'POlT HACH Aal°S COMMISSIOH
TWO PH.MS IACH EYIMMG
7:00 P.M.
HIGHTLY
V'
111110 litllD m.i·l·AI .
FASHION ISLAND • N~;EACH
-------~-..
By JERRY BUCK
LOS ANGELES <AP> -"Scared Straight
Another Story" op€'ns with the same stark. brutal
impact as did the Oscar-winning documentary on
which it was based
A cocky youth swaggers into prison only to
find that he ts like fresh meat being thrown to the
hons His defiance qui ckly turns to terror when the
other prisoner!. <;tart vyi ng fo r his sexual favors.
A GUARD. LOCKING him into a cell, tells
him, "This ain't prison. This is a room for the
night. Prison starts when they open the door and
you have to step out.side.....and face them..... He
throws a-thumb toward the inmates outside the
cell . howling and whistling.
The youth. dubbed the "Woman of Mystery ...
is raped repeatedly. and the prisoners swap him
about for five packs of cigarettes.
lie hangs himself in the prison machine shop.
and it's his death that inspires several inmates to
organize the "Scared Straight" program for
juvenile offenders Youths are brought to the
prison to hear "the facts of life" about prison from
hardened inmates in s uch brutal and graphic de-
tail that it literally scares them into going
"straight. ..
''SCARED STRAIGHT -ANOTHER Story,"
to be broadcast Thursday night at 9 on CBS. Chan-
nel 2. stars Cliff De Young as a probation officer
and Stan Shaw as the ilnnate-organizer of the pro-
gram.
he original "Scared Straight" documentary,
~ , ~
-------AIOUT
produced. by Arnola Shapiro of Golden West
Television. told of I.he highl y successful program
at Rahway State Prison in New J ersey. The
documentary inspired other prisoners to set up
similar programs. and went on to win an Academy
Award.
"We got a call from CBS the morning after it
aired." said Shapiro. who also produced the movie
and now is in charge of movit> development for
Norman Lear's T .A T Communications.
"THEY SAID THEY didn't know what we -
wanted, but they wanted a rnovre ba~d on m
documentary. We had a meeting with them, and
John Reynolds said he wanted 3 commitment to
take it all the way to filming. That's a rare deal.
Usually you get only a commitment for a treat·
mentor a script CBS agreed to it in 72 hours."
Rey nolds is t he head of Golden West
Television, a nd a for mer president of CBS
Television.
The movie has a raw force and power. lt 's like
wailing for a ticking bomb to explode. Ilfollows three 4'
black youths who think they'\•e got the system
shipped, and a white youth and his gi rl(riend who are
heavily inlodrugs.
Shapiro, who wears an Oscar tie clasp given
him by his parents. said he believes the movie can
have an important role in preventing crime.
what happens before your camera. But lo fiction
you can tell a story. So in a way. the movie is a
more comprehensive look at crime and how people
deal with prison than the documentary."
Shapiro said he screened the documentary for
the cast and crew before they started product.ion.·
"I wanted to show them the importance of what
we were trying to do," he said. "And throughout
the production, we had that extra punch. People
cared -I won't go so far as to say inspired -but
they did care ."
The d~ume.nt..ary cont-ained language-ne·~r-r--..•
before heard on televis ion, and the movie will
make a few breakthroughs itsell. It will not have
the four-le tter words, but will have s trong
language that helps build its explosive power.
"THE CONFRONTATION sessions are as
powerful as the documentary," he said. "even
though we couldn't use the same words. It does
have the same emotional intensity and the same
thing terrifying surroundings. Language becomes
secondary." ----------
"TIDS IS A TOTALLY fi ctional story." he Wflr'.K rvmt'
said. "We wanted to do something different from .. •
the documentary. It may have more impact ~ ~J be:•• >rilh a doc:enlacy , """ can only lilm •11 PRO-FOOTBALL NIGHT
Giant Screen TV, Free Munchies,
50d Hot Dogs, Giant Hamburgers.
MARGARITA NIGHT
Giant Margaritas, Chips,
Salsa for $11
- - --- - - -Free Carnation for Women with
AIOU' en order of
I s1 aaGREAT . I • 17 'DINNER
() Q GOOd tor th•ee P•eces ot 1u1cy goicien Dto wn Kentuclt.y
C Fu ed Ch1c~en ptus s•ngte setvings o l cote slaw.
• ; MS. NIGHT
their favorite bewrage. ~_,.o_ •~ ~~~,'.!!~~~!~~' ~!!.....-_-~_'_PPY_~E_~_:_~-~-~-·N_9_1;_:_:_ic;e_s_, -~-::-11
Fried Chtelt.en, with 1111 rolls. plus your cno1ce ot either a g
large cola st1w Of e 111ge mesneo PolatoH, end • small U 01' ITllSl180 Potatoes 1no gravy ano 1 roll L'm11 two ottetS
per cOYPOn pet cu11omer Cusromer Ply5 alt appltcl -
lz Die u ies 18•
I
CIC Offer eicp1res November 30. 1980
P11cn may v1ry at
Plt11C1p1lm9 IOCI
ltons GOOd only
1n Southern
C11itorn11 where
you 111 Ille
Colonel s tact
w1ndo111t banntt
gravy Limit two 0U1<a per COUl>OI' per c1111omef C C
Customer pays 111 appltceble saltt tu. '
Olfet •~Pitts
November !JO. 1980
P1ice1 may v1ty al p11
11c1p111ng 1oc111ons
Gooo only 1n Southern
Ce11lom11 w11e1e you
... Ille ColOMI a '"' w11100w banner
WINE TASTER NIGHT
Any wine on ,.nu it $1 a glat1I
We'll open any bottle of your cholc;e.
I • ' ~
By n .. A•ltffA•tt'd Prf' •
The followtf\I ue 8Jllbo~rd 'I hot rel'ortl h1t!\
f<-r th V.N>k 1tdin1 ov 8 a the)' u1o111t-iu in th11>
v. i°k 's · ue of Biiiboard ma(l'1tint'
HOT . I Gu;s
l "Wonuan an l.ov " Rarbrn Streisand
olumbtu>
2 "UU Kcnriy lto~ert. < L.1btort~ I
3 "He'll So Shy ' Pomt~r Sisters 1 Plunl't>
.i .. Anotht>r ·Ont'. lhtei-lhto Du~t Queen
l Elektra >
S ·The Wandt-rer l)onnit Summer <GeCCin 1
6. "I'm Coming Out" Ou.ma Ross (Motown 1
7 "Never Knew Love Like This Before "
Stephanie Mills <20th Century>
8. "Master Blaster" Stevie Wonder ITamla 1
9 "Real Love·• Ooobic Brother i. !Wa rner
Bros.i
10 "Upside Down " 01ana Hoss C Motown I
TOP LPS
1 "The River" Bruce Springsteen (Columbia I
2. "Guilty" Barbra Streisand <Columb1a 1
3. "One Step Closer" Ooobie Brothers l W1.1rnl'r
Bros J
4. "The Game·· Queen <Ele ktra 1
5. "Greatest Hits" K('nny Rogers <Liberty l
6. "Crimes or P assion" Pat B{'natar
CChrysaUs>
7. "Diana" Diana Hoss I Motown 1
8. "Pans .. Supertramp IA&M 1 "'
l • .....
'''""'''' 994·2400
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"4·2llOO
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THI FllST DIADL>Y SIN 111 l,l.h lle4.-10ill0 "'"' ,,., ••. ., nu ONION JllLD (IJ
•.l .. J:JOel :I S ""'" h lJ .. ~10.lO
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LOVING COUPU 1..01
f,l,Jo4H•JO.l•H lrflo 12 •M .O .. >o MIDOU·AOf cun II )
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THI IMPIH STlllUS IACK (POI .,,_., ... --·-r-o.1.,. -..-lt:~.rao..11-..:itJ.to-•.s
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,.IVATf llNJAMIN 111 12.»1 »-4.•S.1:-t·U ·ll U
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"AT WT, Ml. WllOHO"
IT'S MY TUIN 111 1i.M.2.,...,-...-.»10,ao
"PRIVATE BENJAMIN" R -,·,•••11-00 ( I •-1=----~-·--
"THE ELEPHANT MAN .. ::::!::!:!°.:., oo.e 10 (PG)
.,_. O.ltnwtllt ...
•ADI TO ILACK 111 PUii
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• • • • • • • • • • • •
.. -Monday, November 3 1980 CWL Y fl'l.OT
Dionne Out to Expand Her 6areer
By VARDE~A ARAR
I.OS ANGELES CAPJ D1onnt-
Warw1ck has won four Grammy
a wa rds 10 the last 12 years two or
them last year alone but she still
feels the mantle1>1ece is a bit bare r
"I am in the process now or th1n1<
ing a bout three awards that I don I
have. and lbat I ttunk l deaerve" she
says "I'm going arter them That s
the Tony, Emmy and th<:' Oscar ··
Tha t blunt announcement 1s
som ehow surprising coming from a
worn an who as a suiger comes arros!>
with more elegance •and class than
a lmost anyone else in the business
tune wie recorded wltti Tom Bell -
was not a Bacharach-Da\lld effort. In
fact. there were no cnore Bacharach·
Davld·Watwicll. collaborations after
1972, and Bacharac h 'and Da vid
broke up formally two years later
~i:.s Warwick 's 1976 b reach of
contract lawsuit against her erstwhile
soogwrite rs prO<Juceri..w ~~ settled out
or court. but that didn't help her get back on the charts nor d HI the late
'70s dt~co craze or a management
shakeup at her lahel. Warner Bros
The n Arista Re cords president
Clive Da vis signed her and teamed
her with Rarry Manilow as producer
BUT MISS WARWICK speaks with
the quiet determination or a person
who is going to work h ard to gl"t whnt
she wants She 's alrcad} making m
roads as hostess or her first eHr
telev1s1on series "Solid Cold." a syn
d icated sho~ that focuse~ on t urrcnt
music hits
~
Relaxing betwee n .. Solid Gold"
t aping sess1oni-m a cozy dressing
room suite, panc<ike m akeup still in
pl ace and white-frost ed hair perfect
ly coiffed, Miss Warwick rec<1lls that
.it firsl she wa sn't. that ea~er to work
v.ith Manilow, who had volunteered
for the job. A p WI r•OhO•o
SEEKS EMMY. OSCAR
Dionne Warwick ·•1 DID TlllNK that beins: an art1s l, And she ha~ a track rt'rord for ar
complis hing t he d1 fftcu lt 1n hN musical car('er by scoring a comt·
l>ack la:.l year to nv<tl ner man)
successes m the '60s and early '70<;
llal r1,n1d son~i. that have since
IH•ronw stani1ar<1i. .. Walk On Hy ·
him~elf,. first a rc('(>rd1ng arust
a nd a songwr ite r and pro<l1w1>r of bis
ov.n albums. I hat.l all k1n<b ol rc>s
er\' a lions a~ to w hl't ht> r 11 \\ oultl !Jc.• I Sa' a L11\I.-P1 ,1\t'.r. I II Never
Although she had recorded ~tead1h
thro ugh the lai.l decade, It lookC'd ror
a lime like she would nenr tou<·h lhl
record huying publi c thl· '~a~ '>he <fol
s111 gint.: dozen~ or Burt Bat•h;irat·h
I· Jll m l.Al\I \g:11n · I Jo 'rou Knov. to my a dvantage to have.• ... omeonto
ltke that do an album with m~ th•· \A oi\ Tfl ~.in Jo-.t•' llw lisl ~oes
orl ,1m.l 1in
l r11n11· ti I~ her on!' \to
n>n I · I hl'O 1 • :11111 \ 11u
rt'
a 1'171
·Beca use when you 1e into
~ours('lf thut mut·h . it 's lC'f) 1J1ffieult
to 111-.ac;soctat<' \Our,t•lf from v.hat
Flit•k Misses Mark
'Fade to Black' Oughi To ·
By ARTllt.;R KNIGHT
0.eHotlywOOG A-rte<
If you've ever seen the c-ult1sts
on line at thl' T 1ffan\· for 1t " r1•L!
ular Salurd:.i~ n11dn11{hl -.np1 n
ing of "The Rocky Horror l'tclure
Show." you have u clue lo thl·
c haracter played by U('nn1s
C h rist o phe r i n Am e r ican
Cine ma's"Fadeto Black ..
He's a movie nut" hose sh•ndt'1
hold on reality disol ws when hi'
Marilyn ~on.roe look ·a hkf• i:1rl
friend I Linda Kerrid g1• 1 -.t<1n1I"
FADE TO 81.ACK
tAm•ric.•n C1f\~••
f.itf.l()U{ff\ Ut'Of'\11 • fjr.,,,n .. tttm .. . ... ,,,
ftt H .l ttn ,.,+• ! 1.~v t
N ,,,. .. 01tt ~·.Jlf •It, f\•jll I lltffh kU
P•MYl\fon ~tr• Cet•r
f d ·' Ut-nf'I\ •. Of1,fOPf""-r I 1
t.titynne l..,11'Dt"d l •ndd ff• 1' •Uu•· M11• 11•1
P•u11 J4'f'nl'\ Lu•'' E~f! ht .. nl t. '"
Runn1nq t m.c i'lu ,..-.. r•~lt \
MPAA R•l••CI A
him up on a movie date and his
j(ray.haired aunti~ {Eve Brc·nt
Ashe l smas hes his movie proJ<:(
tor ·
From then on . it 's De nnis
a gainst the world. with the im·
pec unious youn g man im ·
probably donning the often
.:i~~~ft.l~llltil'~~'lfr-!~· • •
.
"t-~'"*-""-'-+t -.J,. ............ .;.. -
546-171\
EXCLUSIVE SHOWING'
"WHY SHOOT
THE TEACHER?'
Starts Friday
,,,. ....., HE .. ,,.. •o"'•
"HALLOWEEN" '"' 1 :lS.3:00-4:45
6:30-8:15-10:00
• • • • • • •
"THE ·THE AMITYVILLE
HINING " HORROR"
l »,... u »-• 00-t ..
OH,GOOt BOOK II ~ 3:30 . 7:45
URBAN COWBOY
1:QO . ~5 . 9~30
MOViE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
t•lahorah· n ·g<1li.1 11r h 1 f~•VO.,l(.·
fll<H II' tll'rU('' " t l' -.1 b . .t!MlUI
rtJ..hl Hll-,111 tlu \\ 111ro~·' r 1 .11 .in.I
1niaµ11\1•d, thJt h.1\ 1• l11·1·11 tl11n,. tn
him 1111.tli•ud
l'ht· filni 1-.. 11• 1tlw1 • "1lclh
1 J m I \ as l!t11 I ' 1101t01 111ir ;10.,
1 lt•\.t•rl\ n1.1n1pul.1t1 • .1~ ,,1\
l hlth('(lck ' l'q 1'1111 \!though
1l ba.::. pltlll' ol I orr or dl m~nl-'
)?Otng fur 1t t'"'') t11111 '\nt•'r
<h ret·t11r \ 1•r111111 i'.11111n 1•rnit1n at
tl'1npt:-t111•n\11I t , m11\ 11 cl"''"'
hkt• H1d1.1rd \\ 1tirn.1r ll -,tul\ mg
.in uhl luth tn 11,•1 "'h"tlcha1r
00\\ n ,I 01~h1 OI I llr'-lll hC'r d1 .1th
wt•n n•m1n1\\·d ho.,., mu1·h hct
t1•r 11 "a' clun1 ltw f1rsl llm<·
,1ro11nd
·\mong '"uni• Ch-.tophl'r·s
oth1·1 ht'r111., 1n· prPth<'tahl)
Drac ula .rnd Karloff s 'ns1un of
"The Mum m~ The f1n alt' takes
place aLOp the < hmt.•-.f' Th<·ater
where Christophl'r 1 <ind Z1m
m erman! think they're redoing
Raoul Wnlsh's .. White Heat ·
They're bolh wrong.
Produced b} t wo )'O ung
1' ro-. fr•im th•• rt 1·ord hu'>tnci--..
<:t·11q!t' 1; Br aunst ein and Ron
11.imaih 1t makt''> ,1 good a rgu
n1t'11l f;1r st1ck1n~ to "h1.1l you
know best Produrt1on <1spects.
'"' lud1 ng Alex Ph11l1ps .J r ' ':.inwra \.\tirk and Craig Safa n"
«•1n• ne' t•r quit•· .. om·t·al J rwn
"' pinching li11tlgt'l. nor d(H·<o
Zimmerman ever m<1kc 1t mor('
1h.1n a ~ri ... J~ pt nm <lrt•J<Hul
<:hn stoµhl'f . \\ho "'d~ "o .tp
l''-".1l1n~ in ·BrcJktng \w<.t~ ·
f .111-. l 11 I 111 d .1 II \ I h I fl ' ' \ I It
p:Jthc:tie. mud·1 11 . ..._._ (•n1k .. n nJ! in
h1'' harJrt1 1 prohahl:o ht-\ uu..,t'
it ru~t v.m.n I th1·n • in \he first
J>lac·o•
\ n<l tht• rt ma m<lt>r of t ht-t dl>l
l':1n mo:'t ch<111talil\ ho • cll•s1·ntlt'd
.i" .... orknianhk1· . f'X«(•pt for
i\ ui.t ralt a born Linda Kt'rn<1gl' I l
mJ\ ult1m<1lt>h· prove hN wh1lt'
j.!1rl s hurden to Jnok "''uncannily
Il k~ '.\fon roc. but when(•H•r she's
o n thesc·reen.1t sizzle!>
The bcggest swap meet on the
Orange Coast 1s found every day
'"' the class1f1ed ads 1n lhe l •!J![I~ !{1)1
642-5678
GINA ROWLANDS
''GLORIA .. 11•0
'
"IT'S MY TURN"
'"' I
I "PRIVATE A
BENJAMIN"
I "THE ELEPHA~T
MAN'' •O•
I 'THE EMPIRE :~
STRIKES BACK'
"O •..SSfS
"ORDINARY
PEOPLE"
1,1
, .. ,
r-----.., I MOTEL HELL 1•11
"WHEN THE
SC~AMING STOPS'
l _J
I 'SMOKEY a THE ·
BANDIT. PART II"
"1941" 11'01
r :=..:i I "THE BtUE LAGOON'
·'-~~~-~~----'
"---------------·-----·-.
'THE ELECTRIC I HORSEMAN" 1111
I "AIRPLANE" Cll'OI
"BLUES BROTH~RS"
(I'l l
t.ll lfJ) ~ 4,.0 fk.MS IOlClll/£
'"f .. EAi. ()f 111£ ~OTION PIC Tu~E
COOE Of SlV IUGUl•'oO"
•1 AM NOT AN ANIMAL!
I AM A K1JMAN BllNOI
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"'ow Pl AYJNG ........ c••Wlll
(
~, ..... ,,_, ..
'actnO'I IWTll COHf "'911N ltlC~ 4t. 1&14 ... -. Ot••flO ,,. '~~)
INFORMS 1n the
1111•••111u,w• ,,.,, '"n
,.ClflC I ....... ,,. OlllWl•411
V.11tl..,,nlltr 17141 I'll 311'3
•Huu~u• ..., ... ,_ ... ,
DAILY PILOT
"HALLOWEEN" 1111
"THE ~EARSE" ,,.oi
All OfllVl-*1 ~1111 t JO l'tol HIOtfl\. 'I'
CHIU)lllN U-11 It '1111 •IUOO!t PU 'l'OllOUNO
you 're doing as an artlJI\ and put
YO\l rself into anotber-beh'8." ~
But &he wa s ta lked into 1iving
Man1Jow a s hot, ~·and the rest 1s his~
tory, .. Muss Warwick says.
Indeed The "Dionne" album went
platinum arter about silt months, a nd
Miss Warwick won best female pop
and rhythm and blues Grammys for
her perlormitnces, respectively, or
"I 'll Never Love This Way Again"
and "DeJa Vu."
.ANOTHER ALBUM. ''No Night So
Long," and its title c ut are both com.-
fort ably ensconced on the 'r ecord
charts Because of Miss Warwick's
and Manilow's crowded schedules.
the new a lbum was produced by
Steve Buckingham. but she expects
to worlt with Manilow in t he future.
Her recording career back in full
bl oom . Miss Warwick is well·
pos1t1oned for her planned assault on
the acting profession
Actually. sh£ admits. "Solid Gold"
require$ lilll~in the way or acting :
·· f' m 1ust required to read well. a lot
of cue cards <1nd tha t kind of stuff ...
But it'h valuable weekly exposure
for l\t iss Warwick .whose previous
lel1.>v1swn e:oq1crtcnce includes u
number of "fll'Cia lo;, a guest ap
. pl'aranC'(' on "The Rockford Files"
•Jnfl a 19fiO-. fil m. "Slav('s "
,
Goodness for a 31-0 Lead
Rams Hold OJI Sainu, 45-31_; Ferragamo, Haden Unhappy
ay IOllN ISYANO ........ , ......
Quick, whleb it the WOl-.t tum ln the NFL?
0'"8 Bay, the New York Wanta or New Orleana?
''I can't really tell you an honest answer to
that," aald linebacker Bob Brudd.bakl when uked
about tbe team's notoriously alow second ball
starta.
don't care if the score is 50-49. If we win, that's the
maln thin&.'' · Malvasi decided to substitute Haden for Yer-
ragamo.
Anlwer: who cares. What'• more important is
that the Rams have been bleated by beln1 able to
play all three ol them ln a •lnlle season.
De9l1lte a monumental charity effort ln the,
• MeODd half, the Rama scored too much and too
often Sunday ln whippln1 the bapleaa Saints-the
NFL 's only winless team4~·31 at Anaheim
••All I know ls the third quarter la usually. bad
.for us. It was the.same way last year, too."
MAYBE THAT'S the t:ase for some of the
Rams . . . but not all of them .
"Yeah, we lack a killer Instinct," said one
Ram piayer. "I don't know, why. I guess it's
because of all the (bleep) that's happening. IT'S NOT JUST the third quarter the Rams -1~e play hard, like we did tast year, and
have to worry about. it's the entire second ball. In theres no reward for us. What Incentive do we the nine sames played so far thla seuon, the Rams •have to play better?"
· -Mind you, Ferraeamo was e~itine the game
after t.o&sing five touchdown passH for more than
250 yards. Malavasi, naturally, didn't feel Fer-
ragamo needed any more work. He felt Haden did, though, and inserted the Rhodes Scholar for his
first appearance since jnjuring the Index finger on
his right hand in ~irst game of the year.
Stacllum.
THE SAMS BUILT a 31-0 advantage before
the Saints couraceoualy · mounted a charce that
aaw them aet as e-lose as 38-24 before falline meek·
ly at the end.
Tbe Rams, as has been the course lhis seuon,
bad to fight themselves again In this one. Whether
it's juat a mental let up, or lack of concentration,
or· no killer instinct, or all three, it's become ap-
parent that the Rams don't know what to do with a
bi& lead.
ba~e out.scored their opponents, 184-57, durtn1 the Obviously. the incenUve toward being first in
first 30 mlnutf:S of play, and have been out.scored the N. FC .West isn'l enouoh, althouoh the Rams 122· 79 durlnc the last 30. • t ed th AU tt tl Clearly something Is wrong. are 1 WI anta in that position at 6-3.
"We just do some stupid things-.lite what M~NEV, A~URANCE, security, those are
happened against Atlanta and Tampa," said the things th~ players are looking for. If you don't
Brudzinsk.i, IOQkine for some explanation. "We think that's true, the Vince Ferragamo·Pat Haden
UNFORTUNATELY, HADEN'S comeback didn't last long-three plays to be exact. It was at
that point he was blind·sided while going back to
pass and the ba ll squirted out of his hand and into
the wailing arms or the Saints' Don Reese, who
rambled 34 yards for the score.
atARUESIMMEA
Gela 14ttt Oo•I
Thompson
Too Much
-For Lakers
INGLEWOOD (AP) -David
lbompeon bad himself quite a
weekend. Mainly because be
did, tbe Denver Nuggets picked
up a pair of victories they didn't
figure to get.
Thompson s cored 43 points
Saturday night as the Nuggets
won al Seattle, 123-118. On Sun-
day night, the former North
Carolina State standout put
through 31 points, including a
decisive pair of free throws with
two seconds remaining. as
Denver topped the defending
National Basketball Association
hampion Los Angeles Lakers,
·121.
.. , ED. MY quickness to 10
to-Ute hoop tonight." s aid
"'1'hompsoo. "We've executed
well the last two games. There
were a lot of negative things
said about me and my abilities
last year. I'm not out to prove
myself this year and show them
I can still play the game."
Thompson showed Denver
Coach Donnie Walsh a thing or
~wo the past two nights.
• 'Tbompeon is one of the most
unique talents in the 1ame,"
laid Walsh. "He's In the same
class with Julius Erving and
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar."
hut give up the bl& plays. 1 can't explain it." continuing feud ought to clear up matters.
''We jump off to big leads and then we have a The latest in their bitter battle occurred dur·
tendency to relax," exJlalned Jim Youngblood. ing the latter stages of the third quarter. Obviously
"I'm not concerned about it as long as we win. I s atisfied with the team's 38-14 bulge, Coach Ray
9-1-1 Record
Kings Acting
Like Contender
• NEW YORK <AP) -It was a
tale of two cities, one on the rise in
the National Hockey League, -the
other headed toward oblivion.
The Los An1eles Kings, geo-
graphically -Ole westernmost of
the NHL 'shave-nots, completed a
wonderful weekend in the New
York area wi!h a 6-3 pasting of the •
Rangers on Sunday. That victory
followed by one day their 7-3
triumph over the Islanders.
For the Ransers, the Sunday
defeat completed a lost weekend
-they fell to Montreal 7-4 on
Saturdfiy.
THE KINGS HA VE the best
record in the NHL, 9-1-1, their
best start ever. They've taken
the first two games of what ap-
peared to be a killer five-game
road swing a nd head on to
Washington, Philadelphia and
Montreal with confidence.
"We're surprising a lot of peo-
ple,'· said super center Marcel
Dionne, who bad two aaaist.s Sun-
day. "I tblnt we have lots ol con-
fidence every night and we're up
tothechallenge."
"We all play with confidence,"
added Charlie Simnfer, whose
14th goal of the season gave him a
point in every Kings· game this
season. Simmer leads the-NHL
with 27 points after tying for the
goal.scoring title last year with
56. He had four goals Saturday
night against the Islanders.
"WE'RE MAK.ING the least
mistakes in the league. The power
play is working well. Ws almost
like a dream."
Thia season has been ghtmare
for the Rang«!ra, 3-9-1 and bac1ly
depleted by injuries. Against Loe
Angeles, the Rangers were
without forwards Don Duguay,
WalterTkacmk, Ult Nilsson, Don
Maloney and Dean Talafous. And
goaltender John Davidson was
anvthin~ butaharp.
"It gets frustrating •.. my
nerves are just abj>ut shot."
The Rangers got good
performances from some of the
stand-ins, most notably center
Dan McCarthy, who scored twice
against the Canadiens and once
against Los Angeles . Ed
Hospodar and Barry Beck also
scored for New York Sunday.
BUT 11IE KINGS were in con-
trol from the outset, .as they've
been in most of their games thYA
far. Rookie defenseman Larry
Murphy blasted a slapshot from
the point p,.st Davidson during a
5-0n-3 Kings advantage at 2:46
a nd, when Glenn Goldup
culminated a 2-0n-l shorthanded
break with a goal at 7: 91, the
Kings led for good.
Murphy scored again before the
first period ended, then Simmer
and Billy Harris -one second
from the buzzer -beat
Davidson in the mtddle session
,and ffan1a HOred Alain in the
third.
"I doft't know if we ever won
two games on a weekend in New
York," said King's Coach Bob
Berry. "It'sstill early and there'll
be some ups and downs. But I'm
encouraged.''
tllrilled might be a better word.
RfflE BOWL BID
AT $7 .. 25 MILLION
NEW YORK (AP) -CBS won
the preliminary round of bidding
for the Ul83 Rose Bowl, ptllting
the pressure on NBC to match
an estlmat«l S7 .25 million offer
for the prestigious New Year's
Day i•me. It was learned Sun-
day. I
All three networks may bid for
the oldest of the bowl games, a
longtime staple on NBC, which
now bu seven days to match the
CBS offer.
That one play d1dn 't knock Haden out 01 tne
game. though. It was Drew Hill 's f\lmble on the
ensuing kickoff a nd the Saints' subsequent field
CSee RAMS, Page 87)
"The injuries to key person-
nel," noted· Phil Esposito, who
along with Andera Hedberc
seemed to be doiq triple duty.
"But they're no excuse ... even
though it would make a good ex-
cuse.
lndultry sources expect NBC
to bld to keep the popular game,
bat tbe lteep price will make it a
lo9lnl ftnanclal propoeltion. THE RAMS' ELVIS PEACOCK TAKES A HANDOFF FROM VINCE FERRAOAMO.
:~r.~~::~:t~.T~gFi~~ -Ram Dalfbaek Uontroversy Deatm• g U ., · Jabtiar nusaed a Jump shot of P •
about 17 feet as lime expired. ~ · "
THE NUGGETS trailed 65-55
at halftime and were behind
• 101·91 entetlnll the final period.
Peacock (92 Yar.ds) Says He's Proved Critics Wro~
But with Thompson leadin1 the 1
~~v,er cau1ht the Laken
midway through the quarter at
113-all.
By'l:DZINTEL ~ .... Del., ............
Now that all the "adversities" are
behind him, Elvis Peacock says he's
ready for the NFL. And the NFL just
mi1ht have to 1et ready for him.
I
Sunday's Soores
Sunday marked the return or Wendell
" Tyler. But five yards on two carries was
hardly anything to brag about for the -
former "Wendell of Westwood." In fact
Tyler, obviously not in a talking mood,
took a quick shower and left Anaheim
Stadium minutes after the game had
ended.
Pec'1liarly,•not all of the {lams .Qew
who would start or if Tyler would even
play. Bu~ that dldn 't seem to matter.
"I can't compare the two," said
fullback Cullen Bryant. "That'd be like
comparing my two brothers. You just
can't do It. They're both great backs. As
lone as I make my block, I know they'll
both get the yardage."
Tbe Laken led by as many as
four polnta in the late aolnt but
tile Nuaets kept comln1 back,
tyta1 the eame at 121-all on a
abort jump shot by Thompeon
wjtb 35 seconds left.
Jlm Cbones WU fouled with 17
aecondl to 10 but mlued two
free tbrowl, livin& the Nu11ets
tbelr tlnal opportunity. .. Tldl wa a peat wtn for ua,"
aald WUb. "We have a youne
team tbllt'• developln1 into a
1oocl wortdat team. Tbe lut two
1ame we've played very weU . .. Six ol our seven loues bve
bNa ...,. cloH 1amn. What we
tried to do tonilht worked. We
re ke1in1 on Kareem and ••n the)' went to him at the ~ we bad him well-covered."
ALU l!NGLIBB and Dan Ja-
l added It and 21 point•, pedlv~I)', for tbe NUICN,
ooHl-HI al'e' t •T for the IHIOft.
aalith allo led au rebounden
With 14.
Jamaal WllkH paced the
ken, wbo are now t-1, wttb • fOblu. Norm Nixon added 21
tata ud 10 ... ltu for Loi ....
'' Aa the sonc 1oes, •Ain't no stoppin • me
now'." said Peacock followU. the Rama•
45-31 win over New Orleans "Sunday, an
Important 1a.m~ ln which Peacock played an important role.
Peacock, the second-year runnln1
back out ol Oklahoma and tbe Rama' No.
1 draft cboice in tm, sat ln tbe locker
room after Sunday's 1ame and reflected
on what bat tranapired in bit abort pro
careerthU1far.
"I BAD TO overcome certain ad-
veniU. myfint t.O yean," tbeD-year·
old resklmt of Hmatlnston Beach said.
"I'm taUdaa' about lnjuriea and people in
1eneral. No oae tbouabt J could make it In
this 1..,.... They tboutbt I wu ove"at-
ed. Tbey said I was In.Jury-prone. But
1ame·b1·1ame, I 've proved them wroq."
Indeed, .be bu. Sunday, PMcock ran
for et ,... Oil ., cam• to lelld all
1'111bftw. He mo tatb*ed ID• •1ant
toacbdown ~ fl'Om Vince hrr~amo
ln the leeaad ca""1er tbat 1av• lite ....
, acommandl91M-Olead.
• l'oru.....-. Peaeoek barutW for m ,..,. • 111 cam• tar • •·• aver.,._. ftn aa.lldo .. to lud &bl
teamlabada.....,....... .
Rams4S, New0rleans31
Atlanta30, Buffalo 14
Detroit 17,San Francisco 13
Baltlmore31, KansasClty2"4
Pittsburgh 2~1 Green Bay20 Tam.,. Baiy;,u, NY Giants 13
San Ofego31 , Cincinnati 1"4 DallaS27.i~t. louls2"4 Houstoniu, Oenver16
Oakland 16, Miami 10
Mlnnesota39, Washington 1"4
NewEngland34,NY Jets21 Phlladefphla 27, Seattle 20
T ....... t'10.me
Chicago at Cleveland <Channel
7 at 6 O'clock>
•NFL Summaries, Page 88
•NFL Roundup, P898 89
And be'• done that ln Uatber HUOD
marked by injury. Peacock pulled a
1rota ID practice three weeks 110 and
• milled the Sq Frucilco ••me.
BS CAiia MCK aiainlt Atlanta,
however, llld'lained a modesU5 yards on Heam.. .
Of eoune someone who wuo'tisnorln1
PHeodt all Uall time was Wendell TYier wlaoM poUtlOD Elvll quietly stepped Into
after a cllllocat.d hip kept him out for the
ftntMlfoftlleNIUlaTHUGG .
T'YLE& BAD complained of pains in
his hU> during practice last' week but a
doctor's report following Sunday's 1ame
indlcat.ed that Tyler felt no pain af-
terwards.
The plan, as Coach Ray Malava.si in-
stalled and both running backs un-
derstood, was to let Tyler start Sunday
and •'play It by ear.'' However, Tyler was
pulled out ln the tint quarter after just
threeolfenalveaeries.
· Ferr8'(amo threw to Tyler twice but'
sU.1..bUy underthrew hhn both times.
Tylir wu able to get his hands on the bail
both times but wu unable to bold onto
either.
"I took Tyler out because we got a
qulck lead and I lhoulht this would give
him another week to real," said Malavaal
afterwards. ·
80 PEACOCK was front and center
a1aln. And he responded well. ·
"I w• well aware that Wendell wo\lld
start.-· Peacock said. "U'• Ray's pollcy
to let injured 1tarter1 return to
their palttlans. I a1ree wltb tbat policy and 1eeesitlt. ·•
Offensive tackle Kent Hill agreed.
"Both Wendell and Elvis are Instinctive
runners and both possess a lot ol tal.:'l1• actually didn't know who wu ata ,
nor did I care. Our asslpment.s pe the
samenomalterwhlchone'splayln1."
BUT Clll11CS have claimed there ls a
big diffe rence between Tyler and
Peacock -namely. blockln1: Tyler ls
considered a good blocker, Peacock Is
nqt. ·
"You have to re alize that pla)'inc col·
te1e ball at Oklahoma, I didn't 1et mueb
of a 'Chance to paas·block. I know tbat'a
my weakness. I'd be the nm to adlDit
that I blew two blocklna aulpunentl
las~ week that led to quarterback aacb.
But I'm setting better and better at it
each week."
Peacock said that the srobl dldD't
bother hlni Sunday. He aald he felt more
freedom ln h1I runnirur beca_. be didla't
weara protec:t.lve l•I wrap lib he bad ID
the prft'toulfew pm ...
SPOfllTS 8AEAK I F0019AU: •
A Cap1ule Report From the World of Spor1a
Br nt
· To 'A
\l lc om Vie wers
th " orld T Oms'
F rom.\PotJpatcWt
NEW Y.ORK Brent Musburger welcomed us [i]
to •'As The World Tums,'• Jimmy ihe Greek assured 4. •
us t hat neither Don King nor Bob Arum cared to
promote any rematch -al)d Phyllis George
smiled and rang the bell for Round 2.
What it all meant was that "The NFL Today" Sunday
had a lot of fun with the well-publicized one-punch fight last
Sunday night between CBS cohorts Musberger and the Greek.
· The Greek ~s s aloon punch that
launched a thousand words and headlines
around the ~ountry was milked for all it
was worth during three pre-game shows
the NFL Today team aired al different re-
gional times Sunday.
"1 tho ught the day we nt terrific," said
• Musburger, the anchorman who parcels
out airtjme to his NFL Today colleagues.
''The Greek even bad a big winner -
' Atlanta."
MuHulllou / .. ·1~. was like nothing bad ever hap-
. pened, sald the Greek, who was upset
with Musburger last week but said their differences had been
patched up. "I was upset coming on today but Brent handled
it right. He f ame right up to me and said, 'When you got
something, you're gonna say it."'
"It went as well as any or us could have hoped for," said
Ted Shaker, the producer of the show whose constant job is
soothing ruffled egos on the tightly timed show. "E verybody
was watching and we had to fool around with it. There were
many different ways or handllng it with humo r. [ think we
guessed right.'' Then he paused. "Seven more weeks to go."
. .The underlying cause of the dispute was the amount of
airtime the Greek was getting on CBS' lead-in football show.
It's still an unresolved iss ue.
"We're a creature of our time limit," said the Greek.
But.they ha_d a lot ~f fun with it on Sunday. Mustrurger
toyed with a pair of boxing glo ves during one element or the
show and called the Greek "Jimmy the Knockout."
At one point, Musburger. on tape, asked former NFL
quarterback Roman Gabriel, now a college coach. how he
could lose so b3'!1y two weekends ago. "Brent,·· Gabriel
replied,· 'how would you like a nother punch in the nose?··
And 1£ anybody dis puted the connection between
television sports and show business, just check me-rattrrgsf or--
Sunday's show.
Hey, wasn't that Irv Cross. the forgotten fourth man on
the team , jokingly whining for more ai rtime as the show
closed Sunday? ·
Tune in next week.
Qtat•e of the Dafl ------
"l don't have a better way to do it. And if you don't
have a better way. it's better not to gripe · · -Houston
Coach Bum Phillips, on the NF'L's controversial schedul·
ingsystem.
Capita& Co•~ ••~" ie 11e la•
Goals in the fioal two minutes by Rick Greea ~
and Jeaa Pronovost allowed the Washington '
Capitals to salva~e a 4-4 Ue with the Winnipeg Jets ·
Sunday in National Hockey League action. Green's
goal came on a quick wrist shot from 10 feet at 18:29 and
Pronovosl's with rive s econds" remaining ... Al MacAd•m
scored twice and Steve P a)'lte scored one goal, bad thre-e as-
sists and ignited a four -goal second period as Minnesota
wa lloped Calgary, 8-3 ... Larry Pat.ey
racked up three goals, with two coming in
s hort-handed situations. to boost St. Louis
to a 5-2 win over the Chicago Black
Hawks . Paley's first two goals fueled a
ra lly that e rased a 3-0 Chicago lead
... Buffalo's Danny Gare notched his
seventh goal of the season to snap a 1·1 tie
in the second period and propel the Sabres
to a 4-3 win over Vancouver. Dave "Tiger"
Williams gave Vancouver a brief l ·O lead
with his seventh goal at 3:09 of the second
""°"ovosT p e riod ... Rick McLelsb scored t wo
goals to lead Philade lphia to a 4-2 win over Boston and extend
the Flyers' unbeaten string to eight games ... Lucien
Deblois scored on teammate Mike McEwen's rebound at
12: 25 of the third period to Ufl. the Colorado Rockies to a 5·4
victory over Quebec. Goaltender Al Smith was superb in the
Colorado net as he faced 41 shots, while his Quebec coun·
terpart, Michel Dion, was tested 28 times
H•..,•~r ,,..,.. 1t11• "....,.... 0..1 ...
TAMPA, Fla. -The manaaerial future of • Ol~k Howser. who '1 103 aames u a fint-year
skipper with the New York Yankees in 1980, re-
m_ained cloudy today after Sunday's short meetinf wit~ owne~ George SteinbreMer apparently failed to clear up their differences.
"We had a nice meeting. talked tblngs over and ex·
changed ideas,'.' Steinbrenner said. "We will probably m ee•
again in a few days."
HOWSER
Howser gave a much grimmer assess·
ment, a t least from his polnt of view when
he. said. "I'm trying to be optimlstic' about
this, but to tell you the truth this is all
starting to seem so unbelievable."
Howser flew to Tampa from his winter
home in Tallahassee, Fla., to meet with
Steinbrenner and General Manaier Gene
Mic hael. But the Yankees owner kept
Howser waiting for nearly slit hours before
he a rrived at the Bay Harbor Inn hotel
from his horse farm in Ocala Fla.
. "We had a meeting and we kicked around ideas. I'd
ra~her not talk about the area of the ideas we discussed "
said Howser. "You'r e going to get a lot of no comments troitt me from here on itf ...
D_espile the Yankees' high victory total and their
Amencan League East c hampionship, they were s wept by
K~~sas City in the playoffs and Steinbrenner has made
critical statem ents a bout the way Howser handled the club in
his fi rs t year as manager.
Then last week Hows er aroused Steinbrenner's ire when
he criticized the team owner for not consulting him about the
possibility of hiring Don Zimmer as a coach.
J ,Jltnso11 .fieore • -10 .. Bud.:Ji ttln
. Marques J ohnson scored 40 points .to lead the m
Milwaukee Bucks lo a 135 121 National Basketball
Assoc!alion victory over the Indiana Pacers Sun-
day night. The Bucks pla yed without the services
of center Bob Lanier who rested his chronically sore knees
. Jim Paxson le d a s urge late in the third quarter as
Portland broke a four-game losing streak with a 102-96 vie·
tory over Cleveland . With million-dollar rookie Ronnie
Lester facing possible knee surgery. Chicago Bulls general
manager Rod Thorn says ~uard Ricky Sobers ""had a ll but
agreed to come back" to the team that declined to s ign him
after last season
. Lutz Capture • CologneCatp
Bob Lutz of San Clemente took just 58 minutes '3
to.defeat Nick Saviano, 6-4, 6-0. lo win the Cologne
Cup tennis tournament in West Germany Sunday.
Lutz. 33. seeded No. 4 and ranked 35th in the
world. appeared to have an easy lime ... Jimmy Connors
defeated Tom Gullikson, 6-1, 6-2 to capture the World Super
tennis tournament in Tokyo .. Chris Evert Lloyd staged a
brilliant rally to beat Vlrdnia Wade and IP ad thP t JnitPf'i
States women's team to a · 5-2 victory over Britain in the
Wi ghtman Cup. Lloyd fought back from a 5·1, 40-15 deficit in
the final set for ;i 7 5. 3-6. 7.5 victory
l'arborollfJh Wins in .4danta
Cale Yarborough, ma king a late-s eason •
charge for a fourth NASCAR Grand National
championship, held off Nell Bonnett to win the
Atlanta Journal 500-m ile r ace Sundav. It was the
second straight win for Yarborough ... Two veteran Detroit
Lions have cl-aimed that General Ma nager Russ Thomas'
tough stance on contract negotiations is hurting the team's
performance. Qua rterback Gary Dan.lelaon and tackle J ohn
Wood~k. who walked out Wednesday, are the pl.flyers in-
volved ... World-record holder Henry Bono led from the
start and ran to victory in the 6.2-mile,1 fifth annual Phoenix
lO·K North Bank run ... Gary Bdteldlauea captured the
1980 U.S. Auto Club dirt car champioaabip when be won a
100-lap race in Terre Haute, lnd ... Bold Troplc led nearly
a ll the way in winning the Carleton F. Burke Handicap before
a crowd of 36.343 at the Oak Tree meeting at Santa Anita race
tr ack.
Tnerlslon,flladlo
Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings
!!tre:, •••excellent;• ""°worth watching ; / •fair;. forget
I •
9 6 p.m., Channel 7 ./ ./ ./
NFL FOOTBALL: Chicago at Cleveland.
Announcers : Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell and Don . Meredi th.
. The only way the Browns might lose to the Bears, 1n the
op1n1on of many experts, is for the team to have a let-down after
~aling Super Bowl champion Pftsburgh last week, 27-26. Brian
Sipe had a big day with 349 yards passing including a club
record 28 completions a nd tour touchdowns. The Bears
meanwhile: were losing their fifth game in eight outings to
Ph1ladelph1a , 17-14. The Browns are favored by siic points.
RADIO
Football Chteago at Cleveland. 5. SO pm .. KNX (1070)
0•••¥ Pilot PltotO or P•tt,(IC 0 Oonnell
THE RAMS' FRED DRYER ICES HIS BRUISED ANKLE.
f 'rmn Paqp B6
RM'IS HOLD OFF SAINTS • •
goal lo dost• th<! mJr,g1n to .JX :!I
thJt <hd that
Nervousl>, :\l•ilavas1 quick I~
rt!benc I'd 11~1di•11 anrl r!'lurned
F e rra ;.imo tCJ th 1,;.~rt1 nµ
line lt'_)Y~1n g both
4uartl'ro . i:fpscl nv<'r t \e 1 urn
of e\ t·n~
"I FF:EL LIKE l "m th<> quin
tes scncP of \1 u rph} s L<t ~
<which 'it ate-,. "If anything r an
go wrong. it wall . , _.. i,atd -.
downcast Haden. ·~atu rall>
r·m disappointed, but that"s life
. ""I. was looking forward to go·
m g m and gelling the feel back
But those things are all Ray's
decisions. Th11t's why he's the
head coa<'h 1 "All I kno\f is l"m definitely
not ready to lplay if they need
me." tie addeji. "I'm not getting
enough work ~n practice. I 'm on
Jy throwing six times a day But
I'm not complaining ..
Haden may not be, but Fer
ragamo is
\ "I OON'T FEE L I should have
come oat. .. explained Fer
ra gajno sternly ·'If the'
<coaches > take you out becaus(.
they th.io.JV you're way ahead,
then the) should keep you out
··Jf we ·re up h~ 30 point~ with
five.c.. minutes lo pla) that's 1ml·
thing. Rut to substitute ~1th HI
m1nutt>S ~e~t in the third qu<trter
""I dtdn"t hkt• it and l "m 'l'r\
d1 sturb<'d about tl. · added th(.
NFL 's top rated quarterhilt·k.
who finisht>d his 1la\ "s v.ork completin~ 15 of 26 passu. for
?10 vards anc1 five TDs . ~h1ch
1mpron;-d h1!> raun ~ to 104 J
"They I ('Od<'hE'S ' 0('\"('r put Ill<"
.
in "'llh IO mtnuh·s left 1n the
third
""All I know 1~ I \.\.,JOl to play
tht· ''hole gamt' J don't kno"'
W 1.· Ii·",. a l.!flOcl d1·f t'll!>t'. mJ_vbe
that ~ \\h\' thf'\' made th1· move
Or nl.t.'lX· lh1;, \\anll'd Pal t11
J!el in '-Ome work ·
II ;.id c n c•n u Id n · t f 1 n rl an
answt•r . 1•1tlwr
·I don"l kno"' "'ht•lhl!r 1·m un·
luc•ky. or II' rate or I'm a v1c-
t1 m . or what It could be an)
numbet of things.·· he said.
""l "m not ready to forget t he
sea:-.on .'et . but 1 'd like to
for~~t lht' fi rst haU."
Clippe r s· S ign
Ex-" SU St a r
SAN DIEGO CAPl -The San
Di<>go Clippers announced the
signing Sunday of 6·7. free agent
forward Ron Davis. a former ·
Was hington S1:1tc standout who
wa~ lhl' top scorer 1n the Con
tinental Lea~ue the pac:;t two
\'C<.l/''i
· To make room ror Da v1~. the
'\at 1onal BaskNba I I Association
l"I uh wa1\ ed rookie forward
Ton.' l'nc(! of the l 'niVNSll) or
l'enns\"h ania
lhn j., was the his t play<.>r cut
b:-till' St.>ahll' Sonics this fall. lie
avt•rag<'d 29 9 and 32 point:; per
J!mTtc the past two seasons with
l\nrhorage and was named the
l'on11 ncnt :1l L c .1guE,., Most
\'aluabll' Pl:n·cr l<.i:;t vear.
lit' ~<IS :1° fifth round draft
•·hmu• ot lhl' •\llan\a Hav.ks 111
1!176
TIH•
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NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct. PF PA
Phi la 8 1 0 889 234 114
Dallas 7 2 0 .... 778 255 157
St. Louis 3 6 0 .333 181 187
Washington 3 6 0 .333 137 173
NY Giants I\ M u . 11 I lltl :t64
Central
Detroit 6 3 IJ .667 210 154
Tampa Bay 4 4 1 .500 1S3 176
Minnesota • 5 0 .444 l~ 180
Green Bay 3 5 1 .389 132 188
Chicago 3 s 0 .375 113 124
West
Atla nta 6 3 0 .667 231 162
Rams 6 3 0 .667 263 179
San Fran. 3 6 0 .333 197 270
New Orlns 0 9 0 .000 147 276
AME81CAN CON t'ER EN('E
E ast
~ W L T Pct. f>f-' PA
/'iew En_g 7 2 0 ' 778 254 t83
~uffalo fi 3 0 . 6fi7 193 !SI
allimorr 5 1 0
Miami 4 5 0
NY ..l,et~ 2 7 ll
Cl'nlral
Houston ll 3 0
Cleveland 5 3 0
Pittsbgh 5 4 ()
Ci ncinn 3 6 0
West
Oakland 6 3 0
San Diego 6 3 0
Denver 4 5 0
K.C. 4 5 0
Seattle 4 5 0
s-.,·,o•m•• M1e1T11 •I llatm
.556 194 18.1
.444 123 l7i
222 152 212
.667 157 144
625 174 159
.556 238 193
.333 125 159
.667 231 2Q2
.667 272 184
.444 160 185
.444 169 190
444 165 198
O•ll•s •I N~• YO< ll G••nh
P1lhbu'9ll"I f•M1>68ay We~nlngton •I Cl>•<.oqc>
S•n Franc 11co "' G rt"n O•.-ll M11w•u•H 1'11enla •I SI LOUll Clne1-•• Ba111mort Oelrofl el M111n.too1• Bullelo et N"" Yorlt J•1> C•n<ln,..11 •I O.kleno ~:~~~ ~:.~:. ~~ri,.
Pn•l-'llN• •' N•,. Ori.•11~
M9MaJ. "•"· IO N•w Env••NI •I"°"""" .
NEW
MARK HOWARD
VOLKSWAGEN
EXCLUSIVE
RENT
A-RA BBIT
~or only
1 .3 !~
FREE
MILEAGE
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IS.2 .. 1·210.
RECE IVING -N-Ori.-, Cll8ndlor s..t, WlllOl'I 5-42, w1111om1 4-SI, Horris a..s.
Roeors 34. l...06 Aneelos, Miller •·SJ, l ryont
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Felcona 30, Biiia 14
k-."OMnen Atlanta o 10 10 IC>-JD
Butfolo 7 7 O C>-14
lul -Lowis 11 p ... s from ForeulOf'I
IMllP.e·M8yer ak:kl
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Atl -FG MAUllttl SO
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IS-24-).lti. Buffolo, Fffl.,_, :ro.27.).170.
ltl!CEIVINO -Ati.nt•. Jonlllns +7t.
Frencls >-44, ""'*-' 2.JO. Butlolo, 8vtler
t-l:H, leMt'41, Crll*e).27.
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Dot -Sima 41 POii lrom O...lolaon IMur· ray ll<kl
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Dot -FG Murroy 32
SF -FG-Khlne >6
SF -FG ~lllne 3'
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Oenlol_, U-32·2·2'3. 5'<18den., 1·1+1'.
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W-s 4-5', Y~ .._., '-' 4·1L Ooll'olt,
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Min -FG o.rwntlor JS
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Jo<kaon •21. PASSING -Ml..,,. .... , 0 111 lt-2'+2llO
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8rown •·11, S.nMr 1·21, "$". Wlllt• l~
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Monk 4·S4.
Cowboys 77, Cerdlnela 24 ka'w • ., Qloerton
0.11... 0 10 J 1-27
St. LOUii 1 J 1 1-l4
StL --.11 I run CO'Ooftogtluo kick I
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D•I -FGSepUon21
5tL -FG0'~42
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TllmlN Boy 1 " 0 7-JD Ta -... 121"'" CY_...,IM lllclll
T8 -ftG YoprwnlM :t2
Tl -flG Y....,-nlM l7 TB -SCftllfNnn u ,.,. lrorn WllllOIM
CY-....... 11.k kl TS -FO y...,_., U NY -Slllr1I I ,_, fr.., Simms (kick ...... ,
Tl r .... I run (Y_...,len llkkl
NY _....._, 1"'" Co...tokkkl
A -M,Ut • i.......u..n
ltUSHINO -.... Yorll, Teylot 14-J6,
Heotor J.1 •. Tllmfl• Soy, .... U ·UO,
l!c•...., l+Jo&,.......,. 1-12.
PASSINO-,.._ Y-, 51,,,,,,. U..)4..J.115.
T_,,.. ...,, WllllalM IJo.u+lta, IECll ... .. , .....
1t•C•IVINO --Y.,11, Te.,ler 11.,, Slllrtl ~ T-.. .,, .. II )..JI, '-Jo.21,
Sc-2-41, Halllnt 2.a.
htlMr1 ... ehewbJO ._..,...,,.,.
"""-ll'No • , 10 10-Z7
s.ottl• • o 1 1-ao
S.. -P'O twrrer• 2t SH -FG ...,_e JI
Piii -~lelcl 1 run tFr.,klln kl<kl
SHr l.M'l'fll27 PMsfrtf'llZOfll (Horror•
kl< kl
Piii -SmUlt IS poH from J•-nkl
c Frenklln kk lll
Piii -FG Fr-Un Jt
So• -OOomlnll t run (Herrero lll<kl
Piii -~ield S P8M lrom J8_.I t FrMklln llkkl
Pill -FG Fronlllln U
A -•1,CM7
t ......... c.-..
llUSHING -f'tll.-il>l\I•, Horrll IJ.Jt,
Horrl~ ~. SNttlo, Doomlnk l-44, Zorn
.. Jt. PASSING -Pltll•clolplll o, Jeworut
tt-JO.l·.Hl, ~ l-l+ll. s.011 ... Zorn
10-u+tso, w.o ... r~l44.
RECE IVING -Pllll-ltllllo, Smltll s.109,
Kropllo ,4-61. SNlllo, l.8rgent .. 101, Rolblo
J-4l .•
R.....,.1t:Ootptttna10 "-" .. ....,.. Mleml o l 1 6-10
0811COllO • 10 0 6-1'
0•11 -Cheater 13 pus from Plunkett
(11ICk lo!IOCll
Ml• -FG won Scllomonn :U
'-.. Ooll -FG 8811r 41
' -Oek -CNndl.,. 11 pus from PlunMtt
IBollrkklll •
Ml• -Rc*ltlllo 2 run '"°" S<llo"*"' klO)
A -4',l1t .......... u......
RUSHING -Mloml. Robhkle 11·21.
Ooklond, vM IE..,_.. , .. ,., Wllllllneton
•~ss. PASSING -Mloml, ~loy IH .. 2-JS,
Sir•<• l ·f·l ·Jt. O•klond, Plunkell
1 .. 2'-).ISI.
RECEIVING -Mloml, Moqre 4·30,
Rot>lslllo ).24, Wllllernt l-10. Oolllend. Whit·
llftll'>ft 4-52, King 4-22, Bronc.It ).23.
Petroln St, Jets 21
k-cwo.-.... NY Je ll 0 14 0 7-ll Now Enoi-17 14 l C>-lol
NE -Fr8n<:I> 3l pon from Groeon
(Smllll kkkl
NE -J-7Spunl return (Smitltlllekl
NE -FGSml11121
NE -Moreant-strom G.._ tSmltfl
ktO I
NY -Berllurn 27 -·from T-ILHllY
kick I
NY -Horper 11 -· lrom T-CLe811y klO l
NE -I.WV I run ISmllltlliOll
NE -FGSml11121
NY -Lono 3 run tLAOf'IY klckl
A -.. .2'7 , ... ,, ..... Le..,.
RUSHING -"-York, T-~·lS, Lo/le ll·JI, Newton l·ll, Horpor t -u . Now
Englend, Cel"°"" 11·50, Fer9uM>n 13-lO, ..... , ..•.
PAUING -Now YMll, T-lt-»-J.UI.
Now E,._, ~-12·»--l-IM, J«kmw> H+u.
1t•CEIVINO --Y-. H..._ ..... B•rll11111 ..,., <MffM't 2-12. H..-2-lt.
Now I!,,...., Morgon s.M, Froncls ....
Offe'9 20, Broncos 11 ka'w.., O..rton
Houll'>ft Denver
0 1 • 7-20
• ) 0 7-1'
Don -FG st.lnlor'I 0
Don -FG Stolnfort 20
Hou -Cempbeil I run CFrltKll kit kl
l>on -FG S-1"'°"1 21
Hou -~It run Cak k fell.OJ
Hou -Cerpienter 2 run Cl"ritac,., ••<kl
Don --*'Mn I-· from Mor16n 1s.o1 ...
Ion klell A -74,717 t .......... u-.n
RUSHING -Houslon, Comc>Mll a..-1S7,
Cerponter •·t7. Denver, Preston 1~41,
JenMn .. tt. AITM11'°"9 S·17. ..
PASSING -Houston. St-11~-lt.4, Denver,~ 1'·U•16t.
ltECEIVING -HOUiton, Burr°""' >-1,
B.1-Dor 2 ..... CerPOnter 2·20. Oonwor. J-•
+JO, Pr_ lo .. , UP'llW<lt 2·l7.
Cob 11. CMets 24 ._..., Olleften
8elllmore
KonMSCllY KC -FG~.,27
I 1 U )-JI
2 u 1 C>-24
Bol -l*c.41 II _, from .,_. IMIU-
Moyor 1110 1 B•I -l*GeuleY 1 pou from J-. (Miile-
""°"°" ll~l KC -Bolton I run (~Y llklll
KC -Fuller 1 run l~Y kklll
Sol -OtCllO., 2 run (Mlk•M8Y9r a1ckl
KC -Botton J run ti.-ry kl<kl
Sol -Dl<lle'f SI run tMlu-M8Y9r kk kl
.. 1-FOMl .... M8.,...21
A$2,3U ........... u.-..
•USHINO -88tllmore, OkkO't ._.., Sltnt
f.4J, Fr.-iln 12-ll. KOllMS CllY. Bo•-u.-, FullOt J.U, l*Kni9ftt t-24.
PA$SINO -a.IUlllOt'O, -· 11·2'"1·211. K-IClty, Fuller IS.2t-l-2l'-1taCEllflNG -Boltlmoro, Corr .....,, 8wtlor ,...., M<C.11 245. K•nHS Cll't.
McKnltMMt,5fftltt!Mt, MonM412·l7.
~ SATU•.J:~.KOHI
0111-St.1S,SonD!o90SU C•• LutNron20,C81 Poly tl'Ol'nOnOl lJ
C81 POl't (SU)) ii, Nortllrlclge 51. •
OCc!OOMol21,~J •ed1.,.ao, Whittler IS
S.ntoCw•)ol.CJco.vrs17 N.Arl&ONJO,N.ColOr.0013 \
ld•llOJl,W-rSt.•
M<N-St.JI, Tou .. Arll"91'>ft II
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s.t'wltl• ..... X llJ
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Ketel .. ~ '--.,_.... .. w .... "" ,,, ..... = .. =··-p ... ... , .,
Gr ..... HllliWL l'eoi:lfk.et ..... Gr-
.lulllOr Coleae 8ot.edu .. <-.-.•1:ll--~1
IATU•OAY s...c.eec.--. G.....,...,.. ot Or .... C.0011
F..it-•Sont•AM
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GolCIOfl Mii ot LA 5owt11Wost
LOS ,,.,,.... CC .. hll LOI ""9ol0$
Mlle'-C.W.Co S.n 94fMl'411M VOll•'t ot s-1-11.
Soutlt-enl M ltover-
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Vent uro ot ,,.,,..._ VOiiey
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S•nte 8or11Mo CC 01 Moor.perk
MIV9Nf"8IO c. ..... 8ek.,.lltelcl ol Telt
LA VOiiey ot El CMnlno
LA Po.,.co 81 L01111 IH<lt CC
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lmporoOI vooo.,ol Mt. Son J«onlo t11
MoroColle ol Dowrt
HIGH ICHOOl. 9TANDINOS
SUnMtle..,_
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•·L T W LT P' PA
EOlton J 0 0 • 0 0 216 4J
Ftn. Volloy
Morino
Wutmonsl.,.
NwplH8'110r HnlQlOfl-lt
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120 SJOUOt2'
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I 2 0 2 • 0 SS 144
0 l 0 1 1 0 71 14.S
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Ceron41CIOIM8r 2 I I 4 0 .. Cosl•Moso I , 0 I 0 120 lrwlno 0 3 0 0 0 n Unlwonlty 0 3 II 2 • 0 ..
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"-Aile-
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MltslOfl Viejo ~ n o ' I I llS
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Son Cl•-• 2 I 0 J 4 0 110
OonoHlll• 0 3 0 4 0 IOI
i..euneHlll• 0 3 0 s 0 130
EmpnLeque
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K8telle 2 0 4 4 0 114 ic;onnody 2 0 j ) 0 130
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W LT WLT Pfl lltllOPAmol 2 0 0 • 0 0 m
SI.Poul 1 0 0 1 0 0 ITS Motor Del I I 0 s , ' 111 Servile• I 2 0 2 • 0 41
Montgomery 0 l 0 4 4 0 .,
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... T.ltN CONfllE•l!NCB ......Df .....
WL Pc·L
San Antonio 10 J .1 ..
Utolt 1 s .513
Housl'>ft 4 j ....
IConw' Ctty s • .115
Denver • 1 ....
Dollu 2 10 ... ,
P«llk Dlvhlefl
P-nl• 10 I ·'°' \All8n t ) 750
Golden St.et• 1 s .Ml
Soolllo ' • .115
Porll•nd 1 .Jt-4
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PltlledelPllio t .eta
New Y-1 .111
80110f1 • 4 .600
New Jerwy S I .115
WHlllntl{on 2 t .112
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Mllw-• IS5, l"""erw'l21
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Dolroll •1 Mllw..,.M
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I llOIOl'llt M ""°°"la
N.-e. 12', Lee.,. 121
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U , T~ JI, 0.-&, ltcKM J, 0--
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AWlll•J...., 22, Joli,..... II, Nlaen D , c:eo,.er a, l..OACllOI,... t, Holl-s. Touta
~J IS.tt 121.
Sc-. ....... " Oonvor U lO » J2-12l
Loi Aneelet ,, l2 • 20-121
FOUIOCI out -'-<, Wiikes, H.,..._
TOl81 llMI -Oonwr J4, LO. 'Aneelos J2.
To<llnlc;MS'-C-t. A -11,Atl.
NHL
'°"2:!·:::!:9 3
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Ny lt8ft91" t 1 1-J "'"" ...... I. LOS A .... 1 ... L. lllW,,..'t J (l(etOll,
DlonM I, J:-. t . 1.M Afl9flH, ~ 2
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4, 11:27. ,._....-Vlellor .. NY, 1:0t/ Sllll,
NY, t:M; McCMtlt\I, NV, St4'; OlaNw, LA,
6:-9; Uf19or, LA. t4:41 I C-, NY, lt:Ot. ...........
S. LOS A,..ler., lt-f 14 (01eftM,
K«••l, 7: .. ._ .... Y ..... 8Kll t tAlllMll.
c-1, n:u. 1. '--..._. .... "•"'• ' IH01U1IM, U,..erl, tt:St. l'enelll•• -~. LA. 4:•; Wtllt. LA. S:OI; L.9 ..... ,
NY, U:•. "*',..,... ...... y ..... Mc(.lrtl'ly' to.rtl. •:ta.'· 1.M ~ H8r'tlt 4, t:St. ,........, -
.. 11 •• LA. -ier. , .•. .......,, ...... llllftw...,_, t :tl; !( .......... , NY, "'"I
DaWll ..,_,,NY, 17: .. ; Uftltt, ~' l11a..,
..... 8fl .... -Lea ,,.,...... tf,sl .. 1.a
.... y ...... .....
OM .... -'--......... OfellefM, -Yarll., ~A-11.40. .......... ....... ...,. ......... .......... .,, __ .
~ ............... c:ew-.. ~· IC.Ullllt,Ok.-J
M'-1, c:a191tY J ......... ~ ,......,. ............ ............ --·=-:=·---~·
FOR THE REOOAD I f90'8NJ..
•• ••• ----.... -. -· I
MMtalOO Cet~ .. ,I T ... , ....... .ii ......, I AtlaMI -I
•.w1111 1we•ur ..... ~••-"••-•.,...lflfftPll: 1. <••• verMre11111, c1tewr•••t, "'· 131. ltt. ,
2 ...... --.en.~ ....... ue.
>.Ow~, Cllewrolot, n1. 4, 81N1dy ~. 81110, :121.
J. Torry~-. C110vro1ot, J27. t . J..., IUlley, Ford, J26.
7. L-y....., Cllewrelot, .126. • I.._...,......... <;Mvrotol. U 4.
t. ltk,_.CN...,_, c11evn>1o1, n•. 10. SIM a.fWtt, Cllewrolet, JU.
11 .• ....., Arr.......,., Oodle:aao.
If. •oew ....,..,, 0.wrolot, Jtt,
IJ. SleW Meere, CllewMt. Jll.
14, J-HyltM, CMwr~, :111.
U. T°"1 o.to, Fonl, JIJ.
it. C,..,,I• ~. 8ukk, 1tl.
11. J.D. McDuffie, Cllo•rotol, 2 ...
IL lill Elllon, Mercury, 2Y.. "· cio., v-.. owan-i.. u s. 20. Jimmy IN-. CllOV"¥01, 2t.4.
JI. Rk llOrd "'"''• Cllevi-Olet, U•. 22. !>eve~·~. ClleWMI, U S
U . J• Milll•on. O.vrolel, 114.
24. L811• 5-1, O.vro••\. lOt.
25. CKll Gotdan, CllOvro_,t, IM,
26. 0-11 Woltrltl. CllOvl-~1. ICT. 11. Connie S.ylor, Cllevrolet, IJI
21. Miao Miiier, Ford, 123.
H . Tim Rk'-'d, Cnovrolol. 110.
Womeft'a YoleJbeN
.... ...._oT-•111•1 , • ..,......_.cc1 ""'" ... Goloen -al. Co41o9e of SoQ-01, IH ,
lS.12.
Oro,... c.oe~1 at. Soni. Bot-.r•, 1s.t.
lJ.U,IW. .......... Golden-Clef. Long a..t.11 CC, I s.7, 14-.. ,
IS.10. Oreneeeo..tc1ot.EIComlno, 1S...J, 1S-9.
Tlllrl ....
O••neoeontc1ot:Goto.nwos1, 1s.u. 1s.12 '-' ....... GoldonWottc1ot.Sectte•-•e.1s.,, 1w.
CM .......... OroneoCOestc1ot.Gotoenwos1, 1w , 1s.e.
M-.i.1r11n-M V P-J11llo 8•rtl•ltl (OC:Cl; All• .IOUfMY~ Hllffmon tOCC:I. Wolll't
Hoo•or tOC:Cl, Sue HoboOer IOCCI,
Joltnotto T•r•nee IGWCI, aov Ll•yolf tGWCl,~Mcl.Aon tGWCl.
9-@T,.. MlllOAY •••MILTS
Ct••.._.,-U I .. _....,
First r--~ ... r 8111 l"-roll, U,IO, e.oo. u o: s.cr .. AIM< COreDoWsllll, 10.00,
iM; Lo '-'ol (~ml, t.90,
Sec-r.u -M8r Nostrum CH•wteyl,
4.00, l .». UO; Plfto ltulOr (Terol, '-00, 4.JD;
Sllllfflll'll tl"lfrtol, J.20. $2 dolly _.e INI
P81d.st.40.
Tlllrd roco -A .. u Cc.ti-I, 1Ao0,
4.00, J,JO; Miw Forget (111\<Gurn), S.20, JAoO,
Flrtl VlclilfY IUPNml. 4.00.
Fourlll r«• -Boou vu ... (ToroJ, U .00,
S.00. 2.IO; t..oromlo tHowleyl, UoO, lAoO.
Cltlef LlnM .._I~°"'· 2 «I . Flftll ,.. -Ned Wolk .... IMterwl, t .oo.
s.20. •.oo; OuallfkOllGh tSlloom .. orl, •M. S.20; Tr~ tTorol, a.60. is u eci. 11 .. 1
pold 11u .io.
Slallt roc.o -Molor Soo<'1 I Totol, 11.IO,
4.IO, 3.10; M-Jttr L9910ll IH•••ul. 3.20. 2.fO; Contemplelo tM<Gurn1, l.OO
Sovon111 r«• -lloou Moro I Toro!, 3.to,
2.60, 2.:IO; TllrM &Its (0olellOUH41.,ol. J 60,
2.40, T9'1Todr 1111\erwl, l .60. U exe<l8 IJ.Sl
potd u s.oo.
U Pock Sia CJ.4+1 .. ·ll pold 12,32•.60 lo 60
11,,nnint lk:kott C1ta fl<>rlffl. U Pltll Sia con·
M>lollon ,...o '51.60 10 7tl wlnn1ne li<kelJ
Clive ltOrMSI. U Ptek S•• >eret<lt PoOI l>Old
_.. 40 lo 471 wffvllne tkkels Clour l>orMS ond
o 1<rotc111.
EogMll roce -·Bold T9'11<: tSt1o.m4IMrl, s 20, l .fO, ).20; Bolze< 10.1-.. ... yol, 3.40.
J.00; ~ll (()llworotJ. 4.10
Nlntll roe. -Pierro t..o -.1 IHowteyl, •.20. 4.00, 2.IO; El AOl1mo tMcGurnl, 12.00.
S.20; Wlllw 5Prl .. 10.l-H8yol, 3.:IO. '5
e•0<:18 CJ.SI pOld ,,., 00.
Atlendonce -3',J4J
WlatlbMn Cup
'81'--*lll
·~-----... 11 ~ Cllrl5 Ewort Lloyd IU.S.l O.f. Virginie
W•do 18rlleln>. 1·S, U , 1·S.
Tonight's Ga•e
Browns~ Sipe
•
Face ChiCago
.......
A1111• ~llll·IC•tlly J......, cv.1.1 •1
w~ e.r, t-4, 1.s.
WiNld 9uDer Toumey Cet~ ..... .............
Jimmy c-tws -· r-~Iii-... , ..,. cc--. winl ...... Ovlll•-wW '14,000J, .,.....,. ... ,
Victor AIN~H.,. Pll"or ••· MettY •UetMn-SMr-Stewort, .. ,. u , , ..
tA111•yo-Pflslor •Piii 111,•oo. 1t1e1Mn
Stow•t1 ~It IUOOI. ca•occ• c•c.a-. ..,_.,, ...... ,. ....
l ot> Luiz•· Nl<ll S.wl-..... ..a. tLAltJ
win• IU, IU, S.v'-•"'-16.SUI. .,.....,. ....
Andrew Poltlton·••rnlo Miiton ••I
Tomu Smit-Jon K-. M , "'·
PetteTourney . , .. ~.,_, ....... ...... Brien Goltlrled def. Aclrleno Pon.tie, .... •·>. .. ,, , ...
leoc:ldtolm Open
....... ,, ... 1
Heno M8ndllkO¥o def. Bollin• Buneo •.. 1.
.. 2. tMMdlllOVo wins 112,000, Bunee •Ins
'6,0001.
OellMell'IMI
Mom• JOU\OVe<·Vlrglnl• Ru1lcl d•f.
M•ndll-ovo·Bolty Stove, 6-2, .. ,,
Misc.
SUftdey'a Tranaac:ftona
aAS••AU. ................ SAN DIEGO PADRES -Added Erl<
Show, Slew FlreovHI, Tim Hemm •nd '""'"
Howkln•. 'pilclle<1, ond Doue Gwooz -Ron Toneley, <•ICIMtl. Reoul9n0d Fred
Ku11 ... 1 .... pit<: ...... Rk ll s-t. cotcller -
Brion G,,.... -Don ltey-. outfleldlen,
to Hew•ll of the P«lfk ea.st Le ......
a.u«aTllALL
.................. ~'8"811
A TL.AIHA HAWKS -•••llwoled s-
Howu. tonler·forturd. P1o<ed Cro le
Sllolt'>n,f-.nl,'>ftlllolnlu,..rosorvoll$1.
SAN DIEGO CLIPPl!RS -SleNd -
Dovh, forwotd. W•lvod Tony .Price, t fOf'WOrd. -
POOTllALL ................. "-PITTSBURGH ST~LERS -ActtwolOCI JClftn Stell-.Jlllldo r«elwor.
~ ..... ~C SEVlbLE CLEVELAND CAP> -The Cleveland Browns
baveoneofthemostpotentpa.uingattacksintheNa-
tional Football League, but they are wary of the
strong defense of the Chicago Bears for their na·
tionallytelevised game tonight.
Leather covered seating. 50/5() dual comfort 1eat11.
AMI F'M stereo w/lape & Astroroof. Cll2TJE).
"TbeBeanarethekindoft.eamtbateveomakes
practice complicated," said Cleveland quarterback
Brian Sipe, "because there is so much we've bed to
prepare. But I'm confident tbat once t.bey dlacover
we are ready, t.bey will 1et CM.l of all the different
lookaandgobacktobeln1moreconvent:ional."
Sipe, the America.n Football Conference's top-
rated passer, has been well protected by his of·
ONT" Te•I..,
a. ..... ~. 7 •••
fensive line and baa been sacked onl~mes this
year.
Cbicaao, however. is amonc the league leaden
insaclrlnetbequarterback, witb28inei1bt1ames.
. "One of the thin1s that we do best is th.row the
ball, and obviously what they do belt la ruab the
passer," said Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano. "So
_it's cert,aJ.nly.aoinlto.be a cballeo1e,"
Sipe said be thinks Cbica10 s varied defensive
formaUom can be overcome by studying their
formations closely ahead of time.
''When a team is prepared, the Bears are
vulnerable, and they know it," Sipe said. "But we
sWI have to execute, and there's noway we can beat
tboee auys unless we are successful tb.rowlnl the ball
-though 1 am not saying we will put all our e11s in
onebuket.
I
l
I
I
I
I
I
$8995
~ V_ ,,,___&.nott~ A-A.Moa.. _,... r. ,.,_ _ AU"'-l'lwTv•i.-
Annual yield on on'e to three-year
Investments. From $1,000 to $500,000
secured by California real estate.
Investments available for:
lndlvktuals• Pension Plans• IRA-Keogh
Call difKt O< collect fOf lnlonnalion
(714) 9!5-1010
I
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I
I
I
I
I ''The best thlng we do is keep other teams off
bat¥ice. What may appear to be chaos makes a lot of
sense tow. I &uess the best way to say It is that we do
a lot of planned ad-libbing."-
The focus q& the 1ame likely v.-;.:1 he a CQDfroata.
t.ion betwem the Browns' bJth·scortna offense and
the Bean' StlnlY defense, since Cleveland'• defense
and Chica1o's offense have been unimpressive, for
the mostpart, tbuafar.
Diversified
Financial
Consultants, Inc. I 4690 Mec:Arthur, Suits 120 Newpof1 a.ch, 'CA ntlO ·1
Rt.mni.nl back Wal~r Payton bas been forced to
carry the otfenslve loa-q fo,.Cblcaio since veteran
Mike Pblppa and Monday ni&bt 's starting
quarterback, Vince Evans, have been unable to.
mount much of a passing attack. Tbe Browns' de·
fenae bu bad success a1ainat the rush, but bas been
vulnerable a1atnat tbe pa11.
Cleveland baa a 5·3 record, whlle Cbicag" is 3·5.
S~nsor
Rejected
WIMBLEDON ,
En1land (AP > -The
All-Eqland Tenn.11 Club
Monday turned down an
offer o( au million to 1pomor tbe Wimbledon
toW'Dammt.
TIM club's eba.lrman,
Air Cblef llarabal Slr Brian ..,._, rejected
I.be bid wttboul even ,...
fentai It to Id.I maaap·
meat oommtu.ee .
"It .. DOt IOIDetb1q we would eaulder." be
Hld .
Wlmblldan, OM of the
moet flourtlbiDI sporta
•••at1 la ti•• world ..
alwa11 bu NfUHcl to baft _,....to clo wttb ., ......... ,,.,..,it
,paw oat -.u11a prtn
moaeJ .
1 Name:_The __ Compa ___ ny_'_' _,,._ya_li_o_K_n_iow_. __ _
~ .~~::s~-•-Y-~~~~~~-E-w_e_n_i_no_•~-------~----~-~~-~--~-----~··-
I
I
1...:lty S tole ___ Zip J
"....................... 0-..,., -------
THE
ROADSTER
Steelers R~~o~p
~m JV°' Un-Pituburghlike ·
,.._APD' 11tc• It ..... vwy 1t1U1b. IA fee~. it WU very WI• PMea••r"u. But 11 wu eooulb·
"We tat a wta. It '1 been a JQODth alace the tut
.... ,.. ,.. ........ " det...l" tackle Joe a,..,.
•.W "'-U.. l&Mt.en, 1UU tn the uncomfortable ..UU. of I Jlrlaee elMwMre t.ban nnt, eodecl I tluw·same talltpin -their wont la four aeaaon1 ·
-by edciGI the Creetl Bay Packen D ·IO Sunday.
"We woe. I 41on't care how we did it. It's a lood feeliDI and hopefully it'a a tW'11.iq point."
8dded Plttabu.rlb quarterback Terry Bracll.baw. ln
faet, tbey won It by the maf'lin ol a safety, one of
•two fint·q_uarter blianden by rookie Buddy
1 A.ydelette ol the Pac:kers, wboee errant anapa of
Ute ball. ln punting situations led to nine or the
Sleelen' polnta. --..._
A 1011 Sunday would .have matched
Ptttlbuqh'a toniest nosedive since 18, when
Chuck Noll became the Stffler's coach and becan
,hla od.yssey with a 1·13 season. "We'd 108t three
1ames in a row," Noll said. "Alter that, any kind
'of victory is impressive. We 're headed in the rithl
direction. We are starting to set lt back." Elsewhere in the National Football Lea1ue it
•was Houston 20, Denver 16; San Die10 31, Cincin-
.nati H : Oakland l&. Miami 10; New En1land 34,
the New York J ets 21; Atlanta 30, Buffalo 13:
Philadelphia 27, Seattle 20: Dallas 27, St. Louis 24;
Detroit 17, San Francisco 13; Tampa Bay 30, the
New York Giants 13; Baltimore 31, Kansas City~.
and Minnesota 39, Washington 14. Chicago visits
the Cleveland Browns tonight.
"I thought our team played dam well," Coach
Bart Starr of the Packen said. "It's unfortunate
that nine points came as a result of breakdowns. It's aometbing we have lo live with and do our best
to oven:ome."
Bradabaw gave Pittsburgh its first touchdown
with a second-period seven-yard pass to Lynn
!Swann, returning alter missing three games with a
'cracked rib. And alter Matt Bahr kicked two fiekl
1oals to put the Steelen on top 15-14, Bradabaw
gave them what turned out to be the winning TD
Boating
Raff Wins
Dana Race
Rick Raff of Capistrano Bay Yacht Club
chalked up bis second straipt Dana Point Harbor
Cbampfoosbip Saturday and Sunday, sailin1 his
Range)'-28, Holo Kiki, to a t.bree-quartera ol a point
win over runner-up Mike Wathen in tbe Wylie-34
Stin1er, a19o, out ol the boat club.
TW beck-to-beck races were sailed Saturday
In U&bt. nuty wincls, the ftnt over a Gold Cup
course apd the second over an Olympic course.
Sunday'• breuy race wu a 17-milef around the
buoys oft Dana Point Harbor.
The reeatta is invitational \o previous winnen
of races sailed out of Dana Point Harbor durinl
the year. Third place went to lnnovader, sailed by
Bruce Anderson. Capo.BYC. ,.
8VC81e ..... 8erle9£.-.
The weather soda took Balboa Yacht Club
~ertoualy in the renewal of the club's ann~unkist
Series Saturday and Sunday, provtdiq warm awn-
mer weather and moderate breezes both days.
Small boat classes sailed.courses inside the bay
on Saturday and the Performance Handicap classes
sailed inside-out.side courses Sunday.
C••-lnne<ss.turOAr SNIPE-1.Pwt9N-e,aCYC;2.A,....Hi11"'\~KHYC. L.ASER -Gordan Wel\lau, BYC; 2. °""II Teulle, 8YC; l, JOhn PemlO ,
aCYC. •
L.ASEJ1110-Plus-Cnuc1t F-ler. c-evc. L.IO().U-1.a.-ee Fulton, SSYC, 2. OonWecib, ave;). Wiii T~lon,
B'l'C. !>ABOT J r -I. Jey S!Otft, BYC; 2 ~ Honnall, BCYC; J. Jim Olll,
L.AYC. AOUL. TSABOT-JaOleSmlley, ave . o.ttiMCle-PHRF·A -1. H-Ho. Mofrle IC Irk, 8.,C; 2. $rlllle1<t911, ~elpll Wlnlr-.
BYt,;HllF·B-1.Summtr MI, 8obMar~t1·$collS<l'loO, NHYC.
PHRF-C-1. V-•111, 8r..ceTw1<r .. 11. VYC.
Mertt-25 M••IM 811111-••
MARINA DEL REY -'lbree Mt:rit-25 sloops
dominated the lint Southern Callfomla Cham··
piombip regatta ror the Midget Ocean Racing Club
()IORC> at Marina del Rey Saturday and Sunday.
ll.ORC yac;tits are offshore racers 30 feeJ and un-
• dir. 'nle winner was Dead Earnest with skipper
Tom Leweck and his wife Barbara an.d son Crail
as crew out of California Yacht Club.
Runner-up was Moonbeam, skippered by Cbrla
Lee, CYCio':,d third was Taxi, sailed by John Karatzu, HarlSor Yacht Club. r•
-Nineteen boats turned out for the event
apomored by the Association of Santa. Monica Bay
Yacht Club&.
G•r"11ePWhulf• ... rSnfa
LOS ANGELES -Bert Gardner'• 37 -foot
aloop Blnlo. a Cius C .entry out of Loa.c Beach
Yacht Club Wound up as the overall con-ected time
wttmer Sunday 1n Los AnceJea Yacht Club'• three
race Harbor Series.
Thia year's aeries drew more than 50 boall 1n
the l11ternatlonal Off1bore Rule (10~
Performance Handicap Ractnc Fleet (PHRF)
...... Oeean Ra~ Club <MORC) dlviliou.
SUD4ay'1 Goal race wu tailed 1n 1 . bla# of aum·
m•weatber. RllllDll'·QP bl IOR wa1 llldniot SaD, tailed by
mch&rd and Marl 11ebae, LAYC, Md tblrd WU
KlndNd lplrlt, )(lit and MartJ vo.-1. LBYC.
Overall winner In PHRI" wu SUDltreak,
Prank LafforlUe, Seal Beadl Yadat Club; teeODd
wu Umited EcUUoa, Tom Sb..,..·ltof Cuadltf,
LBYC; tblrd WU Glnser Ale II, Andy A,ak.
·ABYC. 1'be llORC wtwr wu Smaldn J , BW Mn·
nln••r, LAYC; 'HCODd WU Bad ..w .... Stan
I SoNMmt, ABYC, ... th1rd WU Dagw, Rick
llatlillpr.
17:.~T.;.. ...,._1_!~ ... Na UYC:I. fllM*A;c-, ._..,,
I f"-~IYC:I. ,......_, _A'9M,. e'tc. .a -t ......... .,_,ale ....... ....,_~ LAYCI I.,,....... . · = ......,. ... .,~: 1t ......, •• ~ ...... eve.. .. • l~OclU"ll'll LAYC. l -t,~Uill• , LIT(; 2, ~ 9lelr f.-, LAY ,._ DftYC. N -t. , JM& ...... -' '9YC; t ..........
.. c.lllMW, '-'""" -·t. ~~LeYC; 2 • ...,.., flt• rlf'~-~ •. ~=~~~c Ul!lllUt ..... '~:.a..UYC'.1 1. ... --.-..,_,Alt'C; :;·.iC'i~ .... "IC.
oo a four.yard pap to Rocky Bleier with leas than
five mlaut.M.to play. Lynn Dickey p....S for all
thne Orem Bay TO..
•'When )'OU •et a chance to play, you dQ the
bat you ean, • • said Bieler. who replaced bobbltns
France Harria and ruabed four conaecutlve limes
for • yards before catch1a1 Bradabaw'a TD toss .
''Other backs are blcaer, they're atroncer, they're
faater and they're youneer. They ahou.Jd play,"
Bieler added. "But l have an opportunity to con-
tribute and be a benefit to the tetm In aituatiou
like that.''
On Green Bay's first poesaaion, Aydelette
anapped the ball way over the bead of punter
David Beverly and throueh the end zoae for a aafe·
ty and a 2-0 Pittsburgh lead. And 1n the second mriod, Aydelette's soap WO high, Beverly jumped
•9)· NFL ROVNDUP
up and caught it and, rather Ulan try a punt, threw
an· incomplete pass. The Steelers took over in
Green Bay territory and wound up with Swann's
TD catch.
Olien ZO, Broacoe ti
Houston's Earl CampbeU was a mile high
against Denver's superb rmhiq defense. He
didn't become the first NFL player ever lo gain
200 or more yards in three consecutive 1ames, but
he sained 157 yards and scored two touchdowns.
''There are a lot of im\)C>Stors, but there ain't
but one Earl Campbell," said Coach Bum Phillips
after the Oilers took sole possession -temporari·
ly. anyway -of first place in the American Con·
ference's Central Division. They're a game ahead
of the Steelers and one-half ahead of the Browns.
Cbargen 31, Beagala H
The AFC Central is the only division to have
just one team with a losing record -Cincinnati.
The Bengals double-covered San Diego's game·
breaker, John Jefferson, in the first bait, so
Chargers quarterback Dan Fouts picked them
apart with passes to tight end Kellen )Vinslow.
Then, when Cincinnati's attention shifted to
Winslow, Fouts killed 'em with TD tosses of nine
and 16 yards to Jefferson in the third period.
'nle only "failure" in the same was Fouts'
failure to match his own record of four consecutive
300·yard pass1ng games, fl.niabinS with 270 yards.
"We're not in this game for records," be snorted.
"We're just trying to win games."
Raiden H, Dolplllu 10
Oakland, written off before the seuon as an
also·ran, remained in a first-place tie with the
Chargers at the top of the AFC West as Jim
Plunkett, written off a few years ago as a washed
up quarterback, continued bis remarkable come-
back. He threw fint-balf touchdown passes of 13
yarda to Raymond Chester and 17 yards to Bob
Chandler to p.ide the Raiders to their fourth con-
secutive triumph aince taklnc over for Dan
Pastorini, out for the year with a broken leg.
Pa&rloU 34, Jeta !1
New Enal-.d moved into first place all by
ltaelf id tbe AFC 'Eut, compliments of the Jeta
and Atlanta.
Tbe Jets dug themfflves a nice little bole
before the 1ame was more than 12 minutes old,
falling beb1nd 17-0 oo Steve Grosan's 33-yard TD
pass to Ruaa Francia, a 75-yard punt return for a
TD by Roland James and a field Soal by John
Smith. It ballooned to 24-0 in the second quarter
when Gro1an and Stanley Morean teamed on a
nine-yard TD toa.
FaJCoa. 3t, SW. 14
While Buffalo was falling out of a first-place
tle, Atlanta was stayin1 in· ooe, wittt .Loa Angeles
in. the National Conference West as Lynn Cain. ran
for two touchdowns and Tim Mauetti kicked three
field goals for the Falcons, who wiped out the
Bills' early 14-point lead.
Eapn Z'7 ......... zt
"Eight years 1n this league, and I haven't had
an easy ooe yet,'' Philadelphia quarterback Ron
Jaworski said-alter bis five-yard paH to Billy
Campfield put the Eagles ahead of Seattle with
2: 43 to play and kept the Eagles the team with the
best rerord in the league, 8·1.
Cowboys Z'7, Cardinals Z4
Dallas, one game behind the Eagles in the
NFC East, cut it even closer as Danny White
fiipped ·a 28-yard TD pass to Tony Hill with 4S
seconds left to beat the Cardinals.
It wiped out St. Louis' lead built on Jim Hart's
34.yard scoring pau to Mel Gray early in the final
period.
Lloa117, ften U
Detroit's Gary Danielsoo alao played it '19ZY,
scerin~ on an el1bt-yard quarterback ltffper With
3:42 left 1n the game to vault the Lions past San
Fl'anciaco. Danielson also teamed with rookie run-
ninl back Billy Sima on a 41-yard scoring pass in
the first quarter.
Bae1 3', Glaau 13
Ricky Bell ran for 130 l~ and a pair of
touc'bdowns and Garo Yepreii\lan kicked three
field eoaia u Tampa Bay banded the Giants their
eighth succesaive setback.
Cotta 31, CMef• Z4 .
Lat week BalUmore•s otfenaive lihe allowed
Bert Jcmes to be sacked 12 times In 1 loa to St.
Loub. Tbla time the Colts protected him perfectly
and were rewarded by him with two scorln1 puses. And the Baltimore defensive line 4ld ita
abare wttb 10 quarterback aacb •Cain.st Kansaa
City.
VW.,.39, ......... 14
'!be Vlkinp, whole acortq 1JU limited to just
one fteld .,al ill their lut two 1ame1, turned to
Steve DUI 11 their atart,lnq t'!:rrbact *•~of Tom1111 Kramer'• l!Uured . DUa, ill h1I Orat
pro ltUt ewr, came tbroap with two TD ,.....
•1•lnlt tbe lledaldal. . "I'm jUlt 111urpriMd u anybody," be aald.
l)aily Pilot Top 10 .
019Po.i.Q Paw ~nthl 8"hlP
.... Team ,..... 11'11111 ...... :··-1. l:dlnl <M> FO"Dt•i• v (T-1) I . ..,.,_. (M, .. SI.,.... (T+U
I. l'oulUID Valley ('7·0 ~ (M)
4. Loara C'M> Oeeu View (W)
I. rootllW ('7·1) a.Ma ADA(~) •· m llOdlne <•2> 8aDta Aaa V.U., (J.I> 7 ..... OM (1-1·1) lenlta (2 .. )
I ...... Viejo <•t·U Saa ClemeDta (M) t . Sf.,_.. (T.O.l) ~ (t-0)
lt.C ...... wV.U.,('·l) ~8'Mla(5-I) ' .
·--
Plent9 of Saek ftllle
Kansas City quarterback Steve Fuller hits
the carpet a fter be ing sacked by
Baltimore's Herb. Orvis Sunday. Fuller
Al'Wlr..-e
was sacked 10 times during the game as
the Colts beat the Chiefs, 31-24.
H1•rd Takes Marathon
WASHINGTON <AP) -Mike Hurd was de·
termined that no one would defeat him in the 5th
U.S. Marine Corps Marathon.
In fact, he even got sick in his effort to take
the 26-mile, 385-yard race around and by the na-
tion's most historical monuments and buildings.
Hurd, a 34-year-old member of the British
Royal Air Force from Suffolk, England, made sure
he didn't finish 27th, as he did a year ago.
"I was well rested for this one," said Hurd. "I
didn't race for seven weeks. Last year, I was tired.
"This year , the longer the race went, the more
confidentl got. ''he continued.
After the 15th mile, the race became a three-
man affair, with most of the field of 9,307 dropping
way behind.
Mike Greehan, 24, of Hanover, Pa., running in
his first m arathon, said he decided to take the lead
at the IS-mile mark and actually acted as a buffer
from the wind for Hurd and Will Albers of Fairfax.
Va., who finished in fifth place.
"I guess that shows my inexperience." said
Greeb~. "I was blocking the wind for them and
they just stood behind me."
Greehan also said he thought he had the race
won just alter 23 miles because of the e<>mments
from people along the route.
However. he added, "At 23 and a half miles ,
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICIE O~ AVAILACIL.ITY
OP ANNUAL ltlE~ltT
Purs-IOSKllOI\ •I041dl of IM I ...
lernal A•-Co*, -•<• IS ,,.,..by
91w n 11\AI Ille amwl reporl lor ti.
F11ee1 -July I, ltl't to Jun• )0, "'°· of ABE L.ITROV encl MllCE SCHUL.Tl so+oulASHIP TAU~T. a
prl••t• '-*'""'· 1~ ..... ne111• et ti.. to;indetlon'l )M'lntlpel office tor in·
-<tlOI\ _,,,., rt9'11•r busln.u no .. n
lrom 1:00 A.m. 10 •:ll 111.m. by al\y
cltlren ....., ~" II wlll>in 190 oeys ell"' the -of \Ns publlcall°" -TM ,__.,., prlntlpeT oftlQ 'It
localtd •I 11620 FllCll St., .,.., .... ,
CeljtornlA.
Tiie prlncl.,.i ,...,_, ol the IO•""
daflon It -wn G~• "'•-••· uon.
-----------
PUBUC NOTICE
Hurd was five yards behind me I looked over my
shoulder and he Just smiled. Then I understand he
got sick. .
"The ne1Cl thing I know he passed me and beat
me in the next two miles by 57 seconds.•·
Defending champion Phil Camp, a Navy of·
fi cer stationed near San Diego, finished in t hird
place at 2:18 :02. He set the course record, broken
by Hurd, last year with a time of 2: 19: 35.
Gimme Shelter Too
"ins Women's Race
LONG BEACH -Linda Barrow, Voyagers
Yacht Club. continued her winning ways in
women's sailing regattas Sunday, sailing her sloop
Gimme Shelter Too to a win in Navy Yacht Club of
Long Beach's Footin' Foxes Invitational for
women sailors.
Barrow was the winner in Class A. Class B
winner. pending a protest, was Stellare. Peggy
Gregory, LltUe Ships Fleet. and the Class C win·
ner was Toad Stool, Isabelle Lounsberry, Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club.
------------
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
....
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DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED_ ADS
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ference, limitation, or1 s BR. 4 Ba, custom sundeck. two fireplaces, formal dining, except. the normal buyer s expenses. with pier &slip. $197,50().
diacrimination based on1 waterrront h ome1 two bedrooms. 21., baths and a cozy B e a11t1fully landscaped. Great for
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THE ~EAL ESTATE RS
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s.les calls with big rt.'· Clas lrlt'd Ads To pince
adttshlp »nd bi& resulb • ~our ad, roll 612 5678a11d
1'o pJace your cla11lflcd le1 11 Cla !illied Ad.\"lsor
lid. call today ~2-_56_i_8~ ~u _____ _ -·-· --______ ,
COMDOS!
'"TOWHHOMES"
IRADFORD 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, 2 l'.al'
garage. pool. $88.500.
VACANT 2 Bdrm. 2 bath. $78.950.
Pool , s pa. clubho use
$I 0,000 DOWH 2 Bdrm. owner
will help fin an re. $88,950.
$69,900 2 Bdrm. 1 s tory . adult.
20' r down. $.598 payments.
We have many more .
call for m ore information
546-2313
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
JUSTUSTID!
f''t\'C Bedroom. Three Bath Home On Quiet
Cul ·dc-Sac In Newport Beach. Two Bnck
Fireplaces. HV Parking. Patios & Sun Deck.
Be Settled For Christmas $217.500.
HA.llOtt Ht• .... MDS
Ou ts tand1n1t Home For Good Living &
t:ntertalnlni!. Warm Wood Paneling. Three
Bedrooms. Three Baths. Plus Uen10 uest
Bedroom Gourmet K1tch1m & Breakrast
Room Beautiful Patios . l'roresslonully
l.undst·aped. Ower Wiii Consider· Trade f''or
Units A MustSeeAl$19'1,SOO.
IACICIAY
Rare Two-Story Condo ln This Lovely Area
Minutes To Freeways . Three Large
Bedrooms, Living Room With l-'lreph1 ce. Sunnv Privale Patio Swlmmlnf( Pool! &
RecreulionArea. Only$142.500
® ·--tt••····~··
-.......
759-91• flC_,... ....... ........ ~
...
I
1'
.-'J -'fi!!W ~-
.
REALTORS
675-SSI I
COLE OF NEWP O HT REALTORS:
Join a progrt>ssi ve company with a
great future . We arc lucking for 2 or 3
sales people to round out our s taff
Call \"odv or .John at fl75·55 11 and let
us talk 1t ·aver.
COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona det Mew
675-SS 11
I SAORUB r I r I I I FELTU I
.._..I __._.I _r ..._.I l
I A C E 0 Y 11 I withdrew 1om• mo"ey .. -1--.1....-.... 1.,-1-ffom my Hvlnge and toen. I••· . . _ . . i peeled • penalt~. bUt I wa1n't ..__........_ ___ __.._ ••PKtlng the ~nk guild to
I C L 0 P I E 1 .~~~ ....... _ <"·-••• •---"
j I I I I I' . ;;1:1;_. .:.-.... n,;W"ll ~
· • --• yov de¥•1oo lrom ,..,, No 3 ~
• rt1Nl NUMIUlO lflftH IN
1Hut S9U='!U rrrrrr1
I I I 1~1 1 I I
B. TORO HoaSI COUMTaY
4 Bdrm .. 3 baths. ranch styl e ,
mini-estate in oran e roves. $240,000.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
SHOR£CLIFfS. CORNER ........ _.... ...... .., ......... ..
.....-t~, .. 1 ..... ,.., ...... 2 .... . .............. ...,,..,._t .................... ,, . .....,
ere.ti•• .......... cw"' ... lllll.e.
SJl4,SOOfle.631·1400.
EXCEPTIONAL LIDO BAYFIOllT
'"~~ arpt .. 4 .... 11111••••• z..t.y..__ .. WAT8_."MA*
IA y 1llW'" etf II ,_ai11q wll•lt _.
............ 0,.. ........... ,_.
l•cl .... ., ... ,.... .. .....,. wtHI
fL11t1mr._..,..._.,.., ._, .... ,
... .... J ..... ..... ... ...
flt1pl11 ............ delet.O--
wll .................. t ,.
................. 000.
WATERFRONT H OMES, INC
REAL ESTATE
~~' Rtn1.M•. P••JPl"•h ~m.n•
243& W Co.tt1 H\11\1 31~ M.i11rw Ave ~· 8-;h &lbc» 1.i.nc1
Hl·l4N 67Wtl0
associated
BROkER', 5'1-/\lfi'"''
l (J}. .,. t!<J t'> J f ' ' • ,..
.tOPINDAK.Y
216 ...,_M•s.ooo
1co11.1 ......
$1,100,000
WflAa f1.t/WllMlry
67M900
"1n NIGEL
UAILEY ~
ASSOCIATES
!OMEOF
AKIMD!
Exqui.aile CasUllian sly le
caatle home close lo sboppio1 yet combines
privacy • elegance in a
superb fashion. Central
air. lUe roof. over 2600
sq. ft. of Uvin1 area.
Fnlastlc rlnanclng a~ailable •only 1210.000.
~9411.
a..ct...
'""tTrHt
Make your own Cruit pies
when you live be r e !
Gorgeous 3 bedroom with lar1e play room,
fittplace, and custom de·
cor tbnt-oul. Perfect for
kids, wllh a lovely lar1e
yard. $119,$00. See it to-
day, call TARBELL,
REAL TORS, 5-t0-1720
i F.ASrSJDE 2 ON A LOT I
: CUle ta.es in xlnt cond .. I
PftUY cul de sac loc:,, I $137,500. Owner wlll
carry. Devin 4c Co, . 1142,ca
EXCLUSIVE
AREA .
Eul1ld• c harmer Owner wUl carry lar1e
2nd. z Bdrm. Z car
1 ........ Only SlJt,500. • Callt6tW ·
/'(. . ti'.'',' I
I/\_ __ -
r
... .. ttn .... .. jth •• Pw a. 1•h11n ,_. S. 1
1thu1n ,_. S. IOlller.... ..... I ~~~~·!!'•~s•!!!':! .. ~'~3,~1!!!•~~~-~~..2!~~:!?!--[11. !i&l!~:·:·~·•:M!-• ,eeeeee•e ••••••••••••••• ••-••ff••••-••-••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• I•••••••• •••••••• •••••• #' ===--:T . t! • ... ....... • ... Mtc&zsl ..... "" ... , ........ "" ~ '"'..... 2000 C*lr....... . .. .......... I. i., 1118 I It .... .... .. -··········"·-__ ................. 1--····-·.········ .............. ,......... ........... ·-···· ... I e•eee•eeeer ee eeeeeeeee• ................ _ ... P. ..... ._._ ......
...... -O.W · I k , I N t'rlh..... C-.Mlle HJ4 ..... JM4 ..._. OWO. w/UOIC ~·II, PA1IO~IOMI .... ~ 14H _ ................ --.......... _. ..
..... 0PD anl 11-4. I ... ISIN. ' •All•.AMI ·-................. lllaA VDOS: I ..._ CAN Y 0 N V I IC W ,
.... ,.,_, ••••• L11r1t 4 lldrm, 3 bath + I bMb. JOOL a.t;,;'4 ~ IW>GS. ••:--• farat11 room. 3 car!.~ 1-~o'le POltl.IAll to •1-. Wa..,,.._t ...._1'4111a,Searpr,' ..,..... beauUtul pool """"'-..=.:· D· ... _ I ......... 2 ... _... .... .... a&·IAOO aVIM ......... ,,.._ OI
MIWPOIT WATBROMT
Larc.,t floor plan offered. Open. fresh
and a beautlrul view. Custom decor.
•old fixtures and many upgrades.
Boat slip ri1hts u.p to 4.5'.
end •P•· brick BBQ . .._ anovn . ._,,, -.-Lii m.-.•l·MM. Sbowt Wte a mocMI. Of. wbbop, wood buralD1 home. Miatl .. Lat .. aa&DUPl.'sx. Canalde.•----------_,,
ftred at Sltt..500. Call ~. Olll1 I montbll Countr)' Club. Goll· 2 bl. dialnr8aW. patio, WOODIRIDG E up · ~llll HW. Sl17,sot. Call tamla·pool. Beautltull)' ,.,. .... m..a. ll1lded J Bdrm. 2 ba,
791a>. landacapecl, no malD· frplt, au. dbl 1ar, pvt
leDaDte)'ud. E.Sde 0-..les Zbr, 1ar, patio., taso. '41MAIO,
'
'-\I 1 ... -1L mocallbhcNM Rd. cbUdree '*· 11t11ut. + m.aoXll. Y~"' DIMrtRotSpriJ111 tee. -/mo. loci utU. ---------
Bl .._CE ZU.17 .. 15'72 Joaa •·5402 or Bertt B&AunnJL 4 Bdnn. a ~..... AGT801Z15 beth. 900/IDO )'rly. PaOPBTllS• •---------i Wat.front Homet
--! ~ HERITAGE
IH.Al fOHS
lo..-.......... $749,000
J..-1. .aa.D Sell/P'1m Sprinp/Rent Luxurious condo, 2 Br, 2~ GJ.1400
6ll·IUJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• to,."' l:H P.M.I Ttllllil,pooll. IOll. 1pu. be, 2 car sar, a&ato drop· ---------..._.. Ho..t 1100 Fatrwaya, Golf Club, ar, trpk, pool, Jae. •15, 1'st.lerock coado, beaut
,..,. 917,'100, Ph: .... orM1·1545. view, 3bclrm. no pet1, ..................... • • • ..,.., MIW 2CGmcb f'unallhed •· 851-«183 or t75-CM77 . ....,..,..ID i•.., 1s.n Juan Capa. ~.ooo. 2 Smoketree Baquet Club Lovely E/Side S br, 2 ba ~ ~ 1 Br.2Ba.1410sq.ft .8yn. 6UMITS E Palm Cuyon ;, hm\ly home, all Woodbrldae. 5br, 3ba, I IO D•.. tlW old. ,._. 541 5032 2 Br un.ita w /aarapa. i.t S · i .....,... Huse bkyrd Pr9cott Model, fa.an rm. -· owner beneflta. Great unr ae . Ul ,tOO . Nopeta s7oo 'll0-1916 · din rm. A/C 2 frplc1 3
2+2 condo+ boat slip. owN YOUR M.H. SPACE re n t a I a r e a i n ~tive floru:~ ~ . . . car aarase .. Aaan du~s.
World R.E. 543·2591. THE FARM Wf.8tminller. Owner will p ~ml . 3 br condo, 2 ba. 156S/mo, Gardener. No pets. Mo.
AGEN'T(n4)64.2·13'17 help finance. Asent or · · pool,refa. r tollo.trl5.Act541-50IZ ~ Beach duplex. 631·7300. · · MS·mB · Fewatepstobeach.Good Newport Beac h . 28 ' PALllSPIUNGS · Luxurioua condo. 2Br,
ocean view. Invest In Layton with Cabana., I UNITS 2 ccndoa lor aale or re':'t• Qileie Pan 3 br, 2 ba. 2~Ba. a.Ir. call aft. &PM·
_;;...---------1 lllot. lncome property. Good park. Near beach. Westside Costa Mesa. ~-Ire{; furn. l~n~, lovely home. Co~umbia •MM.
o..fo Wll ,.•c• ........ laecll ~ t 04' 4Br, 2Ba, upstairs; 2Br • call u. '53-sotS. ~ IOOd condition income ~· 10 • car ava . e St. lat. last, depoe1t. S595. ---------
2 8d 2ba Dix Irv. Terr.1 ••••••••••••••'•••••••• lBa downstairs. Income I MO BOO yr Pric~ 54-45 000 fairways on golf club! &1.l-9305 :txlrm, 1"'1ba, end unit, nr DllAM ' Ccmdollll.OOO l_...0829 ' -rrom rentals or about 0n' payment S130 'ooo' drive. tn.7oo * * * * * I IJOC>' le tennla. Children YOUI DllAMS! I ONTIIE BEACH·Moblle $20,000/year . Open EXCITING I OWCbalance. atu%. · Smoke Tree {lacquel Mesa Verde 3 Br. 1~ Ba .. OK. -25.640-~7eve1.
I
Home 2Br redwood Home Sat le Sun or call • e Club on E. Palm Canyon Lovely yard. Double1
lo tbi• New Eo1land deck, ced~r sha kes , (or a .. 673-8851 3980 e PR€HIG€ at Sunri~e. ·~9 .900 ., g~ra1e. MOO mo. B.I w.,..vac;.,...
•yledhomeenvelopediD hardwood in t frplc .
1
Se ::· 0 NB 8 ~.., . I HOM€~I creative f1nanc1n1 ok. Eilert.sen, Owner/Agent., 2 ~ condo, SS50/mo. •ccbarm" warmth . t!8900 (n 4)499•3816 u re r. · . Y Beautiful cu1tom11ed t Call owner (71f )6f5·2963 ~2373or7'1~ Avaal.now.Call Roceror atbedral ceili n gs, ..._......... • • · · owner. . 24'x60' Vlklnc Home . • orP.S.325·1321 j . Fr«t55&-MOO.
at r I 11 m • m ore . I Woodbridse z er plus: j 2Br . 2Ba & e nclosed ~Estate Investments I 4 br. 2 ba, frplc, blt-ins.1 •
·BeauWulble.ndof color j den, 2V. Ba condo .'Lar&eComer Lot Rl. Ow.BMU~TSEl.L !porch. In Laguna Hills! l333W.Coa.stHwy,NB •Outof~ !dblgar.Nice residential •ll•1~F.f~"'.;
111 • style. Aak about tbe 1 "Brlibton" B Plan .. l&ornlnpideDr.S67_3970l s8dnn,3Ba gianthome.1 nicest 5 s tar park . 645-6646 . I Prop1rty 2550 area . Nr sc hool s .1 a..• :. ·~~
loan takeover. Asking I Larp mas.ter bedroom S46-t94 j Alawne lat Sl25,000 at (JE13.58). Pl t lei .. Offl ............ •••••••••••• Gardener incl. $750.1 R TORS
Slm,000.545-Nil. suite. &uuly kitchen onl or · U%1et25,0002nd at t 4%. • Hnrpotf leoch 1 '0 ., 1• ce 2 acres ol gracious coun· I 751·7310 I
,. -cul-de-sac.1214,SOO. j OCIMRONTPARI( I Due 1995. $215,000., .... ..,lltTow11 I Ml .. ,,.rri-r trylivln&.Thisbeauliful! . Nice 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, dbl
' 2Br, cabana• trlr, sµb· R.H.R., Agt, ask for1 l!X55 28r, lBa, front I °'"9pC-'"f bone ranch is only 20 ,E. ~1de 2br, lba, g.ar, 1ar. Fncd yrd. '650/mo
' W ..... VI.... · lettin1 allowed, 3 pvd "Beau, S73-7300. i kit.chen. Home to have 1 Loe......_ min. from Or. Cty. 3 : paUo. "25/mo. I w/cardener. 8 mos to 1 yr I Uniquely and beautifully bcbl., pool 6 raahinJ pier. HUIRY! ~T I! 1 oew exterior supplied by j . Bdrm, 2 ~ & family rm .; 645·3148 I lse. Park Really 551·5000
---------1 up1P'*d9d 3 Bdrm condo .. SM,900. (714> 499-3816 J Rare Cliffhaven condo seller. All for S20,000I Under construction , ~tom built home, over· 'Sbdrm lba E Side !VIFW goll lake moun-aSIDI DUPLIX I Choice' corner across: n.11G STU&. 2Br den 2frplc ove~ (006464). b_ric.k English Tudor ~e· s1~ed detac~ed farag~: Adult~ only n~ pets .. t~: Supe~ 2br den con· • ' from park with mountain . 1 1,ooO ft c m ' n'ty' CLASSIC , sign. 14,000 sq ft. Pnn. w carport, rg sta j · " do t ' B d
TW9 J ... u.ltt II view. Offereda\$112,500 • Dana Point duplex, 2 br.1 pooi.5'169 o~o .m~~t . MOllU.HOME
1
. only. Completion aftert barn. 2 tack rooms, Ir ~. 5, !sr· last + sec. I ~ ~~ys :e~~r $;~ St4Z.500 •.1 ba upper. 1 br lower.1 6'7>3'7&7 6".3802 I ftrstolyear. 752.1920 · 1r,eenhouse. Lots of · vemes1. 1 • • • MJ.8 RIALTY Nortltwood 1 new crpt, fresh paint,j or · SAUS • ~-~ to appreciate 12 Br den _u..1 V ! _6'4-_2932 __ . ------i · beamed ceilins• frpk Z706Harbor Ste206·A ' '-'U .._IL this uruque property All + · -mo. ery 546-0814 I 3 Br Zin Ba sine le family I dinina area• enc't. patio'. S40.Stl7 I y A . this fOI' only siu,900: By , clean. pool. , clbble. Avail l 'IURTLEROCK
---------,detached home. Many ;OfferedforonJyS1'4000I SEAYIEW _ I p• •CE j O wne~. 646 .6 28 5 .1 11115.Bkr8Z8-3311 1 2br, conv den. 2ba, lg
Ill CD.Dos 1 • Scar garage.-FULL PRICE' • I I ~ 147~. , . •I brite 1/r + d/r, fp. Cath ~ION R0EAL TY Port ~oy~I Model OWNER ANXIOUS nice: PROPHTIES•• • 1 Brand New· Ocean View· Clngs . o/ s. dbl I a r · ••-SIOIC...... 1 Paooranuc view, ocean.-. 1 ,o.tofStaM 3 Br 2~ ba condo.) pool/rec $745 851·2206 w• -· 494--0731 1 city lights le mtns. 48,r. dbl wide. close to ~n. 10,.. Tllt:JO P.M.I • Ptop1rty 2600 : S875/mo. 968-4456 o r; . · · ·
ZS12SantaAnaAve. j 1 VllW!VllW!VllW! i 3Ba, FR, formal din ! pe~K. $3~~13 r., '•••••••••••••••••••••••• 982-0alSask forGlnny ,Woodbrid1e cottage, new
2 Bil. 2in ba, contemp. ' . Breathtakin view ofi area, upgraded, shu_l· I 847 •eves -4 4 ' l.o A scenic Oregon Coast. i j 2 br, 2 ba, ram. rm, dbl
demip.Slll,000. 09 . Pac ifi c f:om Sa n ters, cpls? eotry, s~lid ,A.creepforS. 1260 . Electricity, fenced. out· 3 br, 2 ba, newly ~edec, gar. • or lake. lease, ~5096 646·6 l ' IY OWMll ... l Clemente lslaiid tol ~panelling le mold1ng 1••••••••••••••••••••••• ' It~ view. accessi·' frplc, feaced yd, children • IR50/mo. 548-8684 Dick or · I llFOlllUST 1 H II ood H'll f 'liv rm., cuatom made -...... uuD .. 2 II .... 1 R"'c-'TAURANT ble owner492·2'99 'OK. 00 pets, $700, lse. Steve. , MA ... FICIMT . : o ,'I'll I s rom spa, pond, waterfall, a ' __....~... • --~ • lCA> • ! -.mJ . ---------Turtlerock home . 3 . thiaa~culate3Bdrm .l gas conversation pit,, :.>Ccndounets.approved.; BALBOAl~LAND AS p IM .._I I A 1 Univ.Pk.lge famkitch.,2 MISA YEIDI Bdrm, 2b~. 1700 s /f,• ~ faamly ~m home., dedts, custom landscap·• somew/ocnv1ews. Close! Excellent Main St . loca·1 :4br; 2ba, Mesa del Mar,; BR 2 Ba, attached dbl
Repablic Home featur· I freably J..••nt~d . covd 1 Arrud towe.~ng pines. Ing, pvt gate guarded. to everything. $65,000, lion. Includes land.\ $115,000 Will consider option.' gar. Very pvt., cozy & int, loada of imported I patio. ove in cond .. Beamed ceilings, com-l community w/pool, ten·· will handle. OWC at 10%. blcfcs, all rixtures. clien·: New 4br, 2.8ac, 2fm,in to 1 li.'50/mo.640-0008 ! woods w 10 refrig incl
IUlian We • a backyrd $170.000. Pb 557·7010 or , plet~ly redecorated. rus crts. spa, BBQ's. ! int o nly. Bkr. ( 714) 1 t.ele + 1 Bdrm apt. Full I world best s. k lln.1 ! I . Ls . ~7oo • Afl 5 ·
that looks like a park. I &n~ I Stlt.SOO. , F o R s ALE 8 Y I 4.13-1723 l price ssoo.ooo. Owner I Collect eves S1mpk1ns ,NEW 3 ~R 3 Ba condo,: ~~l7 : 955-~ •
1 Two frplcs, gour~et , THIS IS ITI ! • OWNER/BKR . Xlnll a.-~---..... 14001 will car ry b alance! (303)923-4417,AGTSok. fpk, patio, dbl 1ar. Nrl 'kitchen four spac1ous 1 ; t-• aH_.....,,. ,_ ... ..., /_....OOOd , • ..._ t1185 mo No pets.I I ...,.___ •' ' Pri ed t . • .......... ,,.... """""'· ••••••••••••••••••••••• '. w _,.,, own. ' -....-. . ' '-rttl LAKES" .,...... more. c a 'Here 1s a home with1 Balboalsland 1 ·~ I Alt. 760·1 2 11 o r l• IC.Jll ,_ .. °'-~·"0 l ""·b cmly$205,000.MS-9491 I I t d 1e ~R€(TIG€ ---'213--.GI08•1'l5PM ......... e.-wca. c.ur ~ a spac ous com or an , I 1213 N. COAST HWY O.. of Udo's flttest · lease for sale. > ....................... , • m water. no peta or kids.
ft am ~yol s.:.c:si:o:!i0:f:. LAGUNA BEACH 4bdrm. 3ba, formal din-' 6n-73'72or548-8535 --HOM€\ i..._..,.. ... d :3 bdr, tin ba, Sant.a Anal 2atryw/frplc,t&OO/mo.
f arge b f • 497-4848 I ing rm li ke new le 1....1 I ·•••••••••••••••••••••••• Hcts duplex fenced --. . en eooucri space or I deg • Th . I - : re-I Rea.I Eatale Investments I c.-........ J '22 yard.' prap, ~hild OK, i 111 J..ake Pines: lBr' lba,
P bd •-Realty67S-1854 .......,. . ......... ,, , ··-··. ••••••••••••••••• -~· .---..... -family bobbies• recrea· ..... ,..,. IHclt I 06' ant. "95.000. ayer
1
• .,.,.,+., 1600 I -w "---t ffwv NB I sm,-·-. no-·,_,., ... _, •~/mo. ---------1 lion. hur 4 rms, • 1 •••••••••••••••••••••• • . •••••••••••••••••• • • • •• 645-6646 I ON_._ B'"' .. CH --
fam. rm. and an excep-. JN C t C d j • •a.11-...•1 .. ..;,CH ·~ eon ...-. -DI . 252 Pine View· 2Br 1in
.
M fl __ .._. 1040 I tional cul-de-sac loca-1 ... ' fi8-.l.a ! ewport. res 00 0 • _ __..~ -1 2 Bdrm duplex, view, -·-· ......................... tion. ........... plan 4, U(>p-aded. ocean I ''"sq.FT.. avail. 'til 12/15. All. 4 ... I Ba. Family rm. ti., 2 stry w/frplc. Kida
hA&PllAYCOND02Br ~toy ~.U;!'bbilhYedo·:I view, t:ll0,000. Asumable. 14 Leased commercial· ~T~--,..,.....,.__, -=*· .. ~. deeor.1a-1e•. <»C.~l n;.>~~'15/:,_oulre adea in. ...m blk -.. · •, klima.Byowner.646-4015. indultrlal unita located r..--....--• -..-•• I .. ~-•~Ir 1 · own tbe land. Greatt 1 00 one ol LalUDa'a main ... ,. • .._. JI 69 er lncld. sno. /I.Mt + SIOO aeeurtty
dulla .1ev-•. m rrora, ---'·• s1• 500 · bi..., B· .. w •-1 re •--Jlent rental area •-•••••••••••••••••••• ...... ,-,_, ....... ...... dep wallpapen micro·wv ~ .... -_. • -WACIOUS.. -••Y•· ... au • -.. ~ ... ·---·--·-·· . --trasll compact 3rd' ~ ~bwY\ ceat1y remodeled. High two m inutes Crom UDOISLI F.acb unit bu acce11 to Jbtr, vaulted be•~ cell: a Co I 1Sn9WOID delmnd .area, Partners freeway.~ down will Completely furniahed -. Verde, 4 br. 3 ba, teania. poo l, jac uzi,
1.._.SLal$0.0wnerwtll U>Vely 5 Bdrm 3 bath,~ want~· offerin1 very handle. Seller wlll with everytlain1 you fam. rm, pool, pool saima a.net bas laundry t-.iP finuce. Call for 719•9221 story bo;'De, featuring. llttnlcttv~ flnancln1 on a finance with 12 ~ % . need. Remodeled Ir de· maiat. at 1ardener, 9800. hook
\.aopt. Ninfa Jarvia formal dining room ~nd total pnce of SS75,000 Four-pin traders. don't ccnted..3Br.den2bath. avail. now. 9'19-5814, Ast'f0..GUreiardlng orBrien 642.8850 . John I family room, 3 patios, wtlbSle&.750down. misathi.sone! 752-1920 Monthly. Bill Grundy.I m.zm ta1a
<:oombeRealtor. -.523 CAMPUSl>adRVIME separate _creenhouse. Rea.looomics 675·6700 1 Rltr,11$-6181 ~ide. lBr. 2.Ba bouae. °"i~Cewhr
THI a.UPFS I ~~ ;~CX:.\;~j J 9UAIL 3 Bdrm, 2 bath. Peoin. Pt. I Fenced yard, garaie. 2 rr.,rt1a1 _
•oooDOWNbNoquaUfy-Upper bay view. Most ~ll5l MIWPOaTllACH PLACE home. Mo to mo . or,kid1 ok . No pets . 117-0211 m,.Nrbuc .NewZaty, WOYllM detired original area. Prime C·llot57x120 wltll winter lease. $6'15 . ISOO/mo.&66-3'20. 3 br, 2in ba. $181,000, ,..... ~ 3 bdrm+ bob Id t b d S1850/mo. 960·1217, COMOITIV'I"' nd . ff. . o er wo e room PttOPHTllS .. 6n-2113. NICE ..__ 3 b I II 3Bdrm.2Ba. TurlUerock. Terrific family home. by room, e wut. uge home. Conspicuous ly , ...,, r, 1e.. v New paint, & carpet. No
51M565)lct. located in Collete Park patio. $250,000. Alt.I located on Old Newport 10,-Till:JOP..M.I ..._..U.flia.W.d I ~ ~m, d: dw /w,.:t peta. $150. Sierra Mgmt.
Condo: Huntington Con-area. Featuri n g : 4 l40-S580. Blvd. S2SO.OOO. Agent, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~u. ~ · ~· Co.Ml·uat
tinental. 3 BR. i i,, ba, Bdrm&, larie family 63l·'l300. ! ..... hlmd 3206 ~eves,Mz~~ ' · IM--ne--N-o_rt_b_w_ood __ "_T_h_e
forced air. W/D, bltin room and booua room. llC>ltSALllY OWMH !s..--eo.t.W...Trf..a.x •••••••••••••••••••••••i----------1
stovelcrefrlg. Access to Near park a nd pool. Giant S Br. 3 Ba. Oolyt' c:.p.tr.o 1071 MnttoMajor._. Owner's Unit h:S-Jbr, llOQ.4br,3ba,den.dlninl F t•Y*Y 32J4 Lakes''.Dehixel Brlofl.
poollrjac. ~% auuma-Loe.a may be. lakfin sub· 12119,500. Owner will •••••••••••••••••••••••! 5,350~ f\. Commercial 2ba, frpk, patio. dbl far, rm . 2 2 'I Co ra I • ••••••••••••••••••••••• End unit wltb frplc.,
ble ln .. S97,000. -P b 1e« to eidatin1 tnanc-carry at $1500 monthly TWOC,.....DOS lBlda· 1 Blk to Pacific •sundeck. ~.000 Owner 2J3...-..Sll. I HOMEFORRENT wata"ways,tennls. pool. '"~ ,.._ 3723 lftl. Offered at Sl'IB,OOO. with ...., 000 down No V1"' Ocean Sell S3"0 000 ---------4BdrmCondo1575. etc. CaU wkdys 5"-l434. ~,,_, call540-Wl .,..,, . 2 Bdrm Owner bought . ,. . . F\naneina ~oasibl~ ~all-.--------Wknda831-6914 . .
UIST credit needed. (714 )1 otherp~r\y and mustj Le&sel2,140Moot.h. Todayolthisnewlisllng. -"'-YllMTALS Gara1e. Fam1l1es. ________ _
LA c A M0-1914. sell. $79,000 ea. Agl. w..,M. T.yto..Co. Won'llast! AGT731-146& I u·~. n.d· L I pleue, kids " pe~s Townhouse: 2br + den.
llAUTY «i-3500or493·7492 •••• 644-4910 4r••y .... •LEX I B~r~ 'a~t.' u:l~~n~j' =~A<:.'~:8t~~or tie kitchen w/all amen. 3 Bdnn, 2 ba, frplc, 1 .r.........._ "'-I 010 Jtvr .,...... Gar(Smlcar> SSOO. •· dttk, 2 car gar. nr a
atory . Be a u tifully 'I _._ ~%0ME ~.Inc. 120.100. As· Bea~fulZ story 3 Bd.rm l1W ... ••ecll l240 ' lake/ park. $750. mo. laodlcaped, wood deck. ••••••••••••••••••••••• otder home, garage and j swne Sl.SUC. 11%. 29% holne, unfurn, dbl gar. ••••··~··••••••••••••••! ~1ll
Shown byCaP1f t.Shon/Y· ••1'11-LIYIL Assume VA loan. 11'7c,i ham will produce some down. Great Anaheim 5. close to So. Ba_y. 5 blbto~an. Eleaant 21--..... -""-TL_ER_OC_K __
S109,000. a a er Beautifully decorated . r owner want.a out, $7500 income while you plan l loc. 2·3Br 28• -" Z.2Br bdrm f • d 'v n Realty ._lllO a nd maa'nta 1·0 .. d cash t o loan. New new development . 8,950; 2Ba. Ajenl 7141957·4021. ouaroomJ.SllOO tn ·l · am rm en, u12-sty,4Bdrm,3Ba.3 .. 4........ int 631 2600 Ev ~.....,... c util. I ($125 mo>. Plush crpta · 1 ln l . .,..,._ I 044 Briarwood mod.ft. This c .. ~-P• · -· sq. lt. ol land near 18th & es_._. __ Z'llt ba. cedar Ir alass. car gara1e, x l ocat1on.
....................... ero.dmoor home is air WAC. 4 IDIM. ~ ~T:.r :eC::co. MIWPORT llACH IA YRIOMT llNT ALS Dbl car pvt 1ar, fu\Jy 950. 833-1800 ·--suM•ILI conditioned, haa 4 CuJ·de·sac. Lge yard. ..... __,"" A .... -1 ... l rim'"' pro Several Available Now malnt. y~. Adults. no1Movelnnow! Woodbrid1e ~ .. Bdnm, 3 Batha, over OoeetoSo.Coast.Owner •••• 644e49t0 ,,.rtj_;!Tfu!Tn~plex~ 2·Ut4Bdnna. petl.1Dqlllre at52'7l8th. 3 br t in ba view of a Bdrm Herit.a1e Park 3lOO 1q ft, atrium, and · ..-Wi 1 f -... St 714 /HO 6331 orl • · tow....,.. Relu la your llllh landlcaplna. Shows will help w /financio&. PLUS 1 dupl.ex in superb mur euea rom _,., · · mountains, nr park, ~75.
own private bot tub sur· like a model. Call for Beautiful· 4 be droom SJ.25,000 a.Ice e ..... Lot condition. LARGE AS ·1 Yrly leasa from 11200 llllCM33L 5SM3m •
rouaded by redwood appt. • home has been upgraded 631·2242 Prime area of Newpe>rt SUMABLE LOANS! HOM~ FOR RElfr deddn&. AUiDI S132,SOO. • and cuatomized. 5 doors (....-.. -• ] Beach. Useable 2000 sq. C/21 Mewpott C...t« LOMINdlhl & Attoe. 3 Bdrm1. S550·$650. New 2 Br. 2 Ba'rten, up·
i.t T.D. of Sl'l,000 at gut....-.1b Id toa private beach. Con· ~Sun~ Rralt_~ ft.bldgorplansforl0,000 640..5357 · '7S.JJ31 Fenced y ards and aradeddecor.f d,fTOO·
W,'l(, ..,able fTU moo· ~I """" r CJe lact BiUFeeney\ ~ • sq. ft. bldg. Agent. • . 1ara1es. FamJ ll ea mo.S62-2QQQ.
ble RealtU '73-1020 631·7'300 San Clemeate triplex: 2 C"' t-•eclll211 please. Kids ~ pets llt4TALS •
5 ... 1. """" ... .,..... ._. I 069 blb from beach & center •••••• ;................ wekome. Call 9";2$81 or 3 br 2..._ -15 ~ -1----------1••••••••••••\•••••••••• of town A11umabl m.21r11A• f -•• .m 1rr•~u Pt1w1.1rvi-C aad1 mtlll... f i 0 an c 1·n 1 t er m 9 Beautitul.S br. newly dee, ••·•no ee. 3 br 2\4 ba •
...... fer $17T 509 TEK Corp · tDC1. pi\io, bup yd~ all 3111' boGae Lrt kitchen 3 br2in ba $750-SI=
wooOlllMI
~. Awa.rd wiD· niDI model with all the l"f!."D!mnt of fine de·
corat1n1. Spacioua 3
Bdrm ud larie yard.
t.~ uaumabl• loan I
SIG.IOO. IAmTT 11ALn..-.ST11
Ml-1200
macnab I Irvine
realty
A _,..IDIAltY Of'
T*l 19'VINI COllftANY
W001e1•e1e~TOM1
Ideal ll"fMIPbelt location from acro11 the lake • private beacb I
Prof•••lonally d ecorated tbrou~bout . Lan.d1captn• by
"Ro1er I Gvcteu." L::..prlvate paUO · .uat-&lr and morer
tlM,loO. YOUDl'Parlt551-870D. (MO)
~···· ,.,..,. c.iil ...... ~ VII D 61deu (...,
.J?Uz /) ~n . • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1...:m4orl-4111-8118 .. , ~ ~':~br:en:.~: w/bltin na'.. Ga'raae. nr. :~=tt:: +bo:SlllOO V.::J«, Lan,-&~~~Z.E! Avail. 11 /1. 831·9303, beech. IMO.e'15-l585dya, Sbr2ba Tualln-.SO
Elegant. Luxurious, 48~ _Custom
Home. Lofty Celllngs, ...,;1erestory
Wlndowt, 3 Fireplaces, Glamorous
Maater Suh.e With Jacuu& Tub,
Drenlng Room, Walk·ln Closets,
Formal Dlntn1. Large Family
Room Pool With Waterfall And Se_a Are onty A Few Of The Many Ex~ltlna Features fo Thll BeauUf ul
Home. si.200,000. LA ~
Homeafrom "3.500 PRIDE --arsi&-'1115evea. Kidl•pec.aokay
Paril Orleaaa offen an * 14 UNITS* c... .. w.r 3222 Immac. J Br. 1~ Ba. 1~ •brr~~ter~~dM
atJcirdllble anawer to the 1~ yra old, a a k lnt ··~··•••••••••••••••••• mile from beach. New lllb co.t ol renlln1 . and -.ooo with $190,000 cln, lmmedlate occupancy. cU'P9l, frplc. No pet1.
the haflaUoo·fltbtln1 OWC Call Teel or Bill P'antaatlc 110 dearee '"5 mo. Walker • Lee rl _
beneftU ol ownln1 7our DAVIS & Cl.All ocea.o vtew-cltti1bt1 nt,9.Wll. U'~ own home at pr1~ from ..__ all 28 D
juat 913.500! The "cit)'" 111·1666 -fa=-6 d la~: NrbMch,SBa,2Ba,rrplc , 'l•-4' ...
location in Oran1e ia 8>0/mo Wtndl 6 Evea ......,., paUo, '150 mo. &.I')' areat -ekJle to · major • eo.or74 freewa1t Fubion Oca•1 SOlllll ...W, WkdysM2-S'157 1-----------1 e ·86QO ~uare, the Mall of 2BR1~Baeolldo.Cpt1,l•s.o1Hwy ~aaUlla 1 ~.a ... 2inBa.Famny 1 • <hale. Town •'lld Cou· drlll, buUUna. (Over 40 br + FUa nn (Could be Rm. Laundry Rm. 2
t11 • ti.•Ltlea• comialt*·1 aciallcommwait)'.) Pool., atir> l\.ilbe r~tc paUo I ~. dlabwuber • ..snCAMMDa!~
•· The moct.m, •dull Jecoul, clubhouae .. wMb/dry .a.. v'acent' refri ... trub compac·•---------
condomlnluau art ••oool 11"' flDanclaa.~ •t Slf.lWSal •,tor. Illume 6 BeauUful .......... 3141
a•lillb&e "'*". ooe or two Near 1ar1e. 1boppln1
1
Ill!· I ..... ft. OwMn Ulll. t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......._,patio or deck, enter and bus atop. So. ol Hway, J br, 1 ba, la ' Gemllll R.M.lt.y Sll·DOO 1COIY OCEAN FRONT daluae bullt·lo kitchen. ac...lda. 714.0S·MD IVI nn frple II kit no j 1Bl 11~ Home kn°'· I ~. drapes, mlr· 1 ...,..., i1,_..;,2.e1,:,.r ........ aBlllBa,lcarl ty.-llll.frple,pYlbeh,
j rored wardrobH IP ..... 1100' •tmo ..... nlO. 1 l•U'•I• w /openu. A ...... trJOmo. (71t/
• maat.-1\llt.e and much -••••••• .. ••••••••••• tnal)t 1oft1Y hoalt. 1 mll• __. more. Th• quiet park 1 .-.-lbctrm, _, oe.u. ~le. to beach. NM lacla ____ ..._ __ ....,.,....
1urrollndln11 include I ·SA~.. parUan1 furo. kllcll. wam. cau ll•lta at!ONM 11a1, pf\ '*Dm
1 private ucre•Uon. . Aull Dee .• 1. 11so . •-or-.u» l "'' &xceptioeal hom aa--. now.n a c:eatr•I ~ CO.t1 · Dua •un ..._ .,a.., Md alltbe charm ~ Oteaa ,,..,,, lot. · l8AHO New J lw. 2 u . WJe •"'.,..a •laU fl U. Old New OrleaM ;a• 1• lal wl\lt tlnatobMdLJBr.-J-... t-.i.c. (._.,,pool,! r.cfMll . .., ......-.Querteir .... Utll ..... Ow•r. fp, ..,.., •• paUo. No c:lulMe).,.. .-. Sftol1 O.U.._odten. •
1.-,A6CPropertlet ..... · ...... -... -.-. -. 0..IJ4 .... MIO '---u-• ~veniOll f --...-__, I .....,. ... _,.
I \iWDT ...... 1 I I _..,, -t .... 1114 I • 4'7·1 ''' I Put OrtePI : UH!"-"•••• .. •••••••• IVt •-· • ID. elMMU. 1 bit , ....................... ._. .., ..,., t\.ilM Nut ii? 1141 ! l'tAMl'AITIC ~ •"• .t tb• OardH ..... ,. nx•oo alee ~ ....._ 1ear..,,1 .. _ .................... ..,. •• ._..VII·
l
Grove PraewaJ la ; .... IM la .. ........,tii. Ne.,..•·--. an j.._ ~ ar H-.i 1&.Ja.&ll•-*• llla'b
Or-... r. ..................... , .. 1ft91a, &. .... ""' ................. ,.. Dtilaa t ~···· .. ,., ••• -----· mlt mt••~. ; .-PP.~ __ .._, 1 •11n....... 1: --
~~ .......
--,._. -·-.=.::..---.. -=-----. ... •., I -' --~-==*~~~~;;;;;::::=:.,~
...................................................................
Dave'• PaiDUDI, ser11in1 Sliarcio • ~ P•leb, lbpen ltwff &ervtee
area ' ~l"I, mml rea1. oo job too 1m qwcll • a.tucco, l*da. • ,..
lmured. c'd. 588-8425 deM MM303, l4Hl• 1 r:,:ir f>a'OOID l\:ltloo1 ll 1111• .. Pa\nUn1 •Papering Neal e tches" texturu !Tree~ Prol work Free esl. ,,... t. lfJ-14lt • •••••••••••••••••••••• Rsnbl. Steve. S47·4281 BJLL·s ., ... ,. ........
Fine extJint painting by All Types $38-7113 TREE TRIMMING Richard Sloor. St. li e. lrCLEANUP. Free est.
11\S Try me 836-~SS, ~ Lath&,. ...... $40-1031, al\4:30
hn All type1, Int/ext. I TREE DESIGN: -845-5680 ' AGAPE FORCE ' Ornamental prllninl.
Painting Company ....... , I Sculpturlnc. toppin1.
3 Generations-Of ••••••••••• ••••••• • •••• tblnnin1. removal. gen
Painting Excellence Plwnbin1 refalts i made cllan·up. 644H845
53&-6701 simple, cal Ra mond Tr &Sh bTri 1 &
Painting mt /exl for fur Worth 645-5113 ~ ru mm ng removal, Yard clean·
prices call Jack ) ,,O. lo• l...+ah ups, hauling. 645·0118 or
~793 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 846-1413 Jim. ---THE,OSTIOX T"°"*J E~te~or Painting 3857 Birch NB·OC Airpt Spec1ahs ls·s tucco re. A ·1 24 h 7d ••••••••••••••••••••••• I vat now· rs· ys . pair, wa~erproofing Message&pkgservice T\!TO~·Math, Set, E!t&·
sandblast m g. c us to m 1 549-2287 494.5901 Spamsh, Study Habits.
work . romp et it1 v e ----~5176,548·9S70FrS3. It
WESTCLIFF BLDG.
NEWPOFH BEACH
C0tne1 W.\.t£Mt l>H•fll •"'" lt"n• A"•
./.llrC-ION"9 ./c __ '°"',..'"'
.IMoiN< ,/ , ........ ,/,~-./x..oo ..,_. .;'.._,.., ....
Call Mr Howard
6 4 5 · 6101
•Janitorial Service &
Ulllltles lntluded
•Adjacent lo Airport
It Reslat.ll'anl Row
•Access to 3 Major
Fl'M ways
·-·· ~IM_;,,..,,._oT .....;.. ••a'.., · i~•• • ,. ...... ..,,, 1111 ......... ·1111 ..-w 1&• 11oe1111awu1a• 1111•11w-.. ..
. ..-~~?ill~ r)•( .... v• ·,.··=~~~~~~,·.~,~ ...... ;:~·;·~·~-.;7~·;r~;::~;;;. ..... ~;;;;;· .. ·~---;&, ...... ·~· ................ ........, ,aj;c,......... ........., ~ .. ..._ .._. ....._,. *• , nau • Olilil&s,. ...... -.. la· .,...,.. r,,.,~~411M•M::co~•'91•NICCI n..-a.. ... ,,... ......,,.. Miil'llzAWlt " *· -.C-.. ,........ .,., • .._, •r• -·,••c••••r1 1IWPll, • ......_., ...._ & ,.,..., ~ sut•· 1 •01111 IMI X· .. aftPallle. Pie.,. •••ll~~oa1, maat applleuu .... •~• PMITaim ......,. 1 .,..._ .. • we wUI .ni. .. 1 ald ,.,. Tlllldlil ..,._..., m. ••·· ...._ io t.raln 6 nera,. 1p~lll•1 • wetc&af, r .. u&al a.c,11. ....-S ._....11, ·.,,j...; u ltt•• t · u ••h · ., , Crear ....... ~.... .,._ar lklU., word .... te ...,_ ....._ -I==~....,,.... . .. ....... .,. ...... __ .......... ....,... ltutoflex. 17111.... Ull lPa r lh:tm 'n••mamt,...... bec:ll.,..... --~.:"J' ,,,,. .. ,_ OUIEIC98 ~· rer ._ .. 1U RUI Our ~ .. C.,al .. eeat ~-· ~ .. Me+w,....a.ua. .... ..... . .,._. ..... .. tO
%.. :;:;.~ft :::::~ .. ,,'.'°!~~ ;t:..'.~b::r'L~~ .c.;r:;;i'~~.r.':'.1t g:_&-"· ,,. 1"4. •· ...... MClll'AIY ~U~· ,~:11,.:•::~.~~1 ••i·.-.~un. alrlrr, .... ~v•·• ~ .. On••• --&O.L . --ATIOM .....,......._ Whh or CTM>•-1!!!!~:_~~-..;;..I Ml!M _. Oat,y l . • · Ptr Oolml.-Gut. C.lf. • f'M'a • + a •• no ...._. llilofthaDd. T•m·
... .;mlll ... 1 Print• room, N8 lo,\fplkaot i.._. HUii. Ftr pre· crtdll a.. dowaa, exp pansy 6 full time. Cati :::.:= •HtM Im ·.· ·,........ ..,.,,, la&an opH. call: ,...... ; _._IApaa llWI. M prefettff, will train. Tods.rieeeat~ . Part or fWI'
Cell .... 8.a.. fw lar ...,...... . .. &LYM'I 1ftl ,._. eeeded. ~ -IOY Sll.-ot. .(:al17Sl"°"l· l ttnhw. collect. • ..._., ! M••Wr Alf Gab'. Cl9'e •tn-•• opealap In SICa'fAmS .,.. , ,..._.... 119N....,.Ctr .. Dr. NHded for case In a..n, 175 Pa~o ourfamll)',.t.uruuat SALf.8 Pf!RSO.N F /Ume W w/carforwtc:ker
WM.... • S.N ._.. W•ltlDIHt•r. Fu II • Aft, C.lf. "14115. wrbJ loeatJona. We ,.. for utlquutore in La1. LI " 1 f9r ~Ile~ lwaeh .. rvlce •
._.. ~~~~~~~~~ p/time ..-ttlou avail. PUICHASll• quire 80 prevlou• ••· 8cb. llut wort wluada. ACll•111? l .»a.IOPll. •oa.·Pri.
l . ..... .. ,.,,. ' till u ......... ..__ H I IGr v.-. shin,. Call ~ ... otartri•Dd· ~ Sat. It Sun. ll'r•6&.0 .E. ,Dni as.suo w.Oly., -.'41rWllRiaCCIOllPM· we -· •per for rppt .• Upjohn ~I•• Jr bu.yer ._.. ·eo.. ... utto· 31115 IAluu Cyn, Rd,, IMllePertciGDelA•ney kbeDHt,ptnOeable Orlw cW Mar.• br .... lOmo.. o¥ &lrl. No Healtllure Service wl .. f.a JJ'I up, In W;;aJ.W.11 14Beb. •E.111.h.Co.talleaa dd ener1et1c. Call Eapr. oaty. a.t-1400 ,....,.., •-lfaalal')' + &.O&. 1-.... ' purdaMiq. Able to work ,.......:_W~·-W•De Ml·l•TO ~47 aft. lOAll for dt.YI. • ,prtvlte robin wtth OWD • .... pr'WUl'f. lllVH· -----Salelperson WHt~ for <?tr---........, ar. waDll# •~!!!~~~~~~;I.!!~:__-__ :.....,. __ bed&..,.. taryooatrolaaa6"7la1 . C:...Tr•sr• new 1portln1 1ood1 1r:::. -..a.<ax4> J
o..al -· OUSIJKEEPEB·Lhe· OfTICSP08lTION· of com,,_.,•, oltloe, 6 C1 ,Uan aporta wear store in La1 '
1't .... .., Clllt It woadtrful couple, (DO MAID OI tt0U5-AH ~-aldUa IMCelHry. malateapc:e 1up-"ea· ~ Avaida de la Jilli. P /time It f/tlme. Semit.-~rep Yachtl, lAl . OS _,,.._ chUdreft) Med woederful to:_, V....,_f laaaaruce, HB, Able to a»edi&e all or-Carlotta, t.aauna HUia Aft.•; .-r-4732. nPtSTS _a, CM
............ ~ hounkHper. We a re -...u. dera. Full company mll'~iqarH.B. Needed lmmmd. We
Full time, mual be lookiltl for an Im . thhhn•c•W.. beeftta.541-210l. 801.llanuertte SALIS have open1a11 for ex-Women needed for
anilaWe ev• Ir wbcb. imculate exper ladf of P\111 Um•. Company 0, utls• Pen•••I ll1sUon \'iejo I.I. Uc. ~·cl per'd. aecretariea It ~uaecleanln1 work.,
£x rieaced referred. 1U1h late1rity to keep a,.aer)t1. Applf Pen-B a c fl . u p W l r • a.I...._ SeWnc bu.ineuea can be lyplata. G4IOd pey, fuU time, Call 420Gln·hou.ecom· beautiful Nwp( Bch D)'Slver. lllO Placentia Operator /Baek -up HIWUC .. SI? lbemostrewantinaand· lCIO'JDFree Robbie'• Ra16 Mop:
home. lluat be non . Ave. C.11. OUW..-needed for wlde· excltin& of any ulea Ace I I M•tle1 !i4t4757, ..._.,,c-AHei11l1•t smoker aad have refs. .... ... --.. ....... Cl 'r. known brokera1e ~aattrJeommerclal pmillonifYoubave: PenoaMIServleea 1-----.-----~ ,..__\, "'" ) ......, """"'""'' _..,,_" f rm. lmmed o-aJao: real eltate? We provl~e uoon. •• u N B WOl\I) PROCESSING ~ tiineb & part1 tim1e. ~~· 14 8Sl·.,..., • 9-5 2 opench. ... _. ID .Newport call Helen MeOlnle•y all of the utenain tram· llll'AIL SToal · ~lion to auc-AU i;'K'ar~n · Day or Evenin1 1bift
. . -ut ~ av a 1. ab e · Bea l part time, Sat. 6M-2m ial you'll need to be a Radio Sbacll baa flt #ZAbilit to beo b f 11 &.mo E o E avail. 8 hn. a day. lla1 wtmdl. HOUSIWIM ·~" lfull time. Good . profHlioaal. lneome, care.-CJlllty. la p/t job ._._ ... ..' a r u . . . . a , Sarin IOO or Arlee .
. •t ..... se.. Clerll salary, xlnl. beneflts.
1
'Al4T SALIS draw 6 benefttl. Call for Ollllt.1 OllelliDa up now! .. -· Call7SM1234 . .' Full 'time Must.be Uyouarefriendly,cona-CallLUSlotten·:841-18UI. Part time Tues Sto9 aDappoiatmeat for ln· 11-,oU&remlUtary re· nsdleduletoworkSfutli---------11---------
• available w°k~. Cash ~t' !i ~:rc!'::~~~I E.O.E. · 11 /F Wed. 9 .ti, lPM. Some terview. Realonomic1 tiredoracoUe1e•rad,or ~to follow.up on SICllTAIY ~ rePlt.er e&per'\ence pre-1 lighlful restayraot. 9.4 MAIKBIM6 1 exp . Ker m RI ma m.t'JOO. are CUITmt!y attendln& new numerous listing!l S0-70w1nb, some stat. ••-•••••••••••••••••••
fwnd. • . · · wkd,ys. We. qaln. Apply ' No neeeua hi h 1 Hardware, 21181 Harbor collele • hith!Y motivat-, leadl. ~ Memory, aome fit. tJ ...... 1005
P\eaae call ~r ~n appl., lo person. Stooemill Ter-I ~. n 1~· b I : Blvd. C.M. 'Realr.,ute ed for lacreued earn-· I ma. di.ctapbooe. Ex~ell .•••••••••••••••••••••••
1 73:58Mon.-Fr1, 8:30-5. 2915 Redb'll CM eommmlOO, ex e n , · . ' lnp baled oa em9loy-1 ._ 1... I benefits. tl50 to $95o.._11•-------• .i.i race, 1 • weprovideexpertlJe in 3partnenfor1mbus.ex-:See our ad under ment pJeaae apply at1..,.•Ma .. aotbor-1·00E CallAnn 540-8055""
'Houstiwives P /T , earn ~ldeadenbip. Free '. panaion. Basic con ·i T~ work or call 30230 Crown Valley! Nr eo.laa Penocmel Agen'. WES'l'lllNSTER • 'T •'-~ l'xtra money doilli what \l'ainina. Self-motlvated : aunabies P/f. Earn upl 851-1881 ftrwy.._La-"ii.~~l . . ' cy,2790Harbor Bl.,CM ABBEY I ~rr j yo u ·know bes t , ~vsc " 1couples. ~all I to Sl.000 per mo. Great. R E A L £ s T A T EI ..... II 1 Call f« 1ntery1ew. Bud l NEVER A FEE E.0 .E. I ~ly~E. ~~ ,. I houseworli;. Call Suds'n o:·eio:v cn1ton.Ph UI ' Opp!·842""300Amwer·Ad!' ACQUISITIONS ATandyCor,>. EOE I Hanson: .Business Op., I C\oeedTue.day " · .J:: ~ '1 Stl.if.S42·0IJM. be~re i2 ::~· or 0arT ; #a4,3'hn. Comfuyaearcbln1fora j ROOFERS WANTED 1 ~~.'::e Intern a -; 11751WeetmlnlterAve.
Indoor plant·· m aln-. 4.PM.832·9253 ·parta Counterman Expj coUete lfaChaate to b4:1P Shi.qlen It Hot Man.I I s..t.)Mecla. Oper. G~Grove 554-8103
.......-..... 1 tenance. F\alltime& Prr MATUllWOMAH I Pref but will train Fff. ~ "pun:hue m·: Experience only. Apply! S•lwldl/Salocl · 1 Ellper. pref'd. but wlll~-------Ga48A1. umCE I available. 770-9565. • Boatawaim Locker. 2431 · come property· Real In penon. Weneda Roof· F\alltime. Private club.: tr.8:ln rifbt individual. (RECEPTIONIST) Unencumbered, no exp W.CoaatHwy,N.B. : Estate license not lftl 174 W.llth.C.M. NwptBeacb.1133-9561. ; Biliqua a must. Call Delb, buffet, ball tree,
1\' 1'ype 65, spell, excell I IHSPICTOI nee. flex hn. Npt B~h • neceuary. Xlat aalary + . • Robin, S40-8055, Coastal roll top, boollcue, piano.
pbooemanner, dress like Receivln1 Inspect or ! !«· ll1nt pay, aft. train· Part time help at Oran1e1 bonul. Send detaifed re-s~ ... W..t.4 s..t.C'-W..ted I Peilonnei Agency, 2790 pletures, clocks, H • pro(essio~al. enj~y minimum 1yr. exper. ih ' tng.Ml·l_.,673-5388 l County's most unu1uali ~toVilla1eProperty j 642-JZ60 My home, &PM Dec.'I HarborBL,Cll ceuories,art,UledAan-
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/ ~ at deta11,; inspection or related 1 bot do1 stand, Peel M,-mt. Inc. 10082· ::.Mth. Phone 545-0150 art._ NEVERAFEE E.0 .E. liquem.s..mz
. tltude~'r~m~b~~~; bfield.1 ~ust be ~ble tho used I ll EC H A N I C A L '. !'!~~.: .. ~.' night_~., ~007nly . Gufield Ave. Hunt. Bch. 's.ae. . I : 6PM. , • -10 I 0 . , • off' ....... . as c an1pect1on an t · ENGINEER · _,...., penoa........ . Ca. 92641 . Attentio n : HICKORY FA MS Shi . 10 __ . i St k ••••••••••••••••••••••• .or my ace . .....,.,; UJols It have a general G-" . t llaril Dorian I i 11 SECIETAllAL , PPllll ~e•v ng oc ·1 Calll.idor·appt. 'lmowledgeolbl!Mpriots.' ""':' ... opportunt~ . Opportuo ty t o se ' •clerk. Wi ll train . Wuher" Dryer, late L • Ot'f.ia·ReindersAgeney ·Call Mrs. Coplan JMS I A ra.pidly expanding PAllTTIMI j'Beceptioailt wanted. No prmetfoodalt1lrtsfor! Pro1ressive optical! Pro1ressive Medical model, lood cond, Sl25 .MB1Bircb,Est'84EOE 'F,quipment 28Cl5eArnn-' medical compo.n enl, exper necessary 1 holldaya. Fie• hrs . rmnl.iacturing company Device mf1. Apply in ea.846-519
N::a=t/833-8190/Free !'ca Rd. Irvine, s.5&-6901 .. ~ct~rdf~mr~st . EV841M6S , Newport Beach Com:· =:':~·=2· in Irvine ii in need of a ! penon: 3194 Ai rport '-18-.-Fri-.Pd-w-·r_e_t_ood __ con_d_
• E.O.E. -I ~~m tn YI ua . 0 AduJta OVet' 21 with C?Ut·. pany.Goodbeaefits. S7SO ! · secretary with some, LoopDr .. Ste.C,C.M. • · ---.---.---1 . . streqthed en1iaeenng , standin1 attraet1ve1 lta1iDI. PCll ID-l3l3 'S A L E S / A R T . personnel/bookkeeping . Waaher It dryer, elec.
GIRL Friday, exp cl Typ., lmtaUer tCableTV> I functions. lncludea de-.. peraoulitiel who enjoyj • · CCESSORIES Fl I back1round. This in-l SHOISALISMAH 1_531-_t_m ______ _
"' ~· fiUng, e~ci. ·Start i mmediately ·I sip. draftin1, material•' workinir wttb kida. St ~r. IM:&'i ,ITYPIST I :..decor nee Fiex :;,.e dividualsbould be able to! We bave an opening for 'GE Automatic wa b r ...,.,--'-&J~~8 .... -1.o.:c.-LC"-Telepeompter-Gable TV . t-ttn1 a'"' 8 6 D pro-brUrJ.au w .o:n Eltt1 "-II time;'-Wed:Su -i ' · · · · type--IO--w~t-ak-e-l 1n aperieaced. full ~!·! _ _! e_. • Yl'4-893·5847 days , !1>1W.16lbSt,N.B. ':Jida.·A dea'ree ls pre-,· 250betWeeo2and8Pm.: pvt country cluba.Li~~lllp earnfoJ•· WTI •shorthand. Company of-parttime uleaperson. IQOlttoad.SISO. ~ 9912-5607eveltwknd ferTed with 1-3 yean ex-AltforLod. I bo~kkeepina e~per.I train.-.l461. ; feneoQdstarting salary' Apply in person, ask for M8-8812 'Girl Friday, P/1', 'nexible Insurance .
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. perience: however , re-= OlwlpC__. helpful. $5/br. SM-3000 ;s.a. Couple Wanted to' ~~Ill for .right ln-·
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· Mr. Cannon, Hemphill'• •rdta IC>20 ~.Newport Beath. I . CLAIMS cmt araduate:s with 1ood ! .,.., ..... I f« appt. I menace a mall business I di victual. Apply In pe~ Sboel. 5' Fashion Island, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-642-5212· ~.._.. rel~ wtU . aleo re· I F.qual Opel! Employer ' full or part lime. so.-5 I or se~d resume to. I N.B. 644-4m. Schwinn Breeze, 3 apd , · ._... .--· ....... , IES oeive eooa1derat1on. - - -• I ..:.noHIST · Pyramid Optical Corp . .1 lirl's bike bhae like new · · i;lllt!.J..RLr.GU. YS I WITHSIMTaY j Gru,topportumtytojoin 1 Looldnc for a mature.-Salea : attn Pat B~ss . 1732 !Sboeeales,fulltime wl~h cooditio~. sis . Call ~tftiilll'W . ~ ! Sentry i1 an intern•·· an ex.citing lea m .. experienced, Ir responai·, .. JOY S8.UM67 , McGaw, Irvine 92714.' or w/~t exp., or ~ill M8-8088.
1111 17 & OVEI I t1ona1 ·multi-line com· I Qualified ap,plicants , '9rfrDlrwctor/ I ble peraon. Jluat be: WOULD UKICOMM? I 557-3114. ~:, '?ood co. be9nefills.;1---------. panyspecializingincom ~· seodreeumeto: · I Caar••• fMhionable as well. For1 • • I"""' m person .am u ~Stinlray, yellow, TRAVEL merci al , prope-rty, I Olief Engineer ; Unueual opportunity to ! buay; ele1ant, bi Sh-' We are now lnt.ervaewang 1 Secretary /Sales . 1lam Mon tbru Fri. Stan-chain Incl. $40 obo.
I* to expansion Viva casualty. It life · in · I 2311111 Via Fabricante : make a It mall:e Jolly at faahion aaloo. RICH~RD 1 f 0 r d.e Pe D dab le 'I Fantastic. Oppty with; da.rd Sboe1, 3077 So. 665027 aft 3pm. I . Prod~cts bas immed ·~· & w~ h1~e im· MissionViejo.CA9'le91 ! ChriatmH time by r':'D·I ~~ETT~e:~~o:r,., ~es:$~ 's!\~~~o~:i !:w!::~i~. ~~~~~~~ Briltol,C.ll. .,,.,....._..1025 op1n1.ngs for 20 4:"· mediateoP,en1otis1nourl. ,niqpromotjoaalpart1es l ewport ·1 baveF/fooeninis1n· . lh ooct 'SfA'llONERYSTOREin l••••••••••••••••••••••• I thfust1c neat appe.anng Senta.,o\naOffice. . , f« children. We'll ban·· N.B. ,._-· penon mus ave g I d . I r.ePle who are single & •EXAMIMH · MEDICAJ.. Recpt. Assist .. die the promotional i . . . . Men •.shoes 1 orpniz.ational abilities, Cd1!f nee s saleslady !Angle iron, .10'x21/• x
j· i.:to·travel to Las'We 'need someone who llw)' Npt. Ctr. practice·• upects you'llhandlethe•Receptioniat,goodtyp1n1I W~a •boes I be r esourceful . &I F/tn~e. 5 days . Xlnt .. 2V.x3/16,S7ea.new,..pvt:
1-Denver, Chica10 haa a mlnimum of 2yrs ' needs resp .. sba·r/ ~~ It arrange-I skilll . ._ ortbo office .. W off Men T'uita l I energetic, & enjoy work· wortdng ~·Especial· I party. $41·3070S.A.
I ~boutUSA •llh experience as an ex-penoo. Exper. pr~f'. ments .6 make sure l llature,31MOyn.Sday 1 r:un:i'n~~u:nx~'!i'i 1 incinasalesrelateden·!lYfineclientele.Phone:OlrometoweJ ban and • abal1> fun group. Hi&h aminer or Reid adjuster Typing. Part/F\IU tame. tb~rrled out. week.80-Jlln. bmeft&.a ! vlronment. Must have: ~1D10forappt. pap.er bolde ~ .
"'-. ~ casual wo~ktq bandliDI auto bodily ill· .-2023· . Br in cbartty or
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1 · lllC..-.oMST THI MoADW A y 2)TI. ~p. A type 80+. ! STOCK e&.aK del' wbolee~· Appro":-~~..., ... • .... lOQ-• make UlU ID jury claiml. Thia )Senon War' wttb Children No&&nokerlSl-2131 I . · . ideal oppty for the will bendle litiiated IO!DICAL ASSISTANT· llelpftil. Call 111. llabia1 ..._.. PG9itlon with PAIHIONIS&.AMD . We w 111 tr a I n . lmately 550 uaitl. Bulk ~ set. No· exper clailDI with averaae to ham ~ce. eape.r .ntt. llt'1Sl..W weekdal! I public~ for per:son -HIWPOllT llACH SIC"Y ,IUCIPT I MacGftlOr Yaebta, 1131 sale only .....
qetmary. We train you. larleloupotmtial. Full·t1 m_e po11taon ., -~IOOdtnm1/clencal f'twe apply ill pel"IOD, For front oifice. Needed Placelltia,CM 'c-&
Ml trans porlation l •Q.AIMSSBYICE Lacuna Hilla area. 837-• ~· "knowled1e of lCH1:309m or call for for Newport Beach CPA STUDB4TS -~ at 1010
furnish,d. Onfy' those1 •llS8CTATIYIS TJ0.&113 · I PAYIOUCLBI · dactae!'_~ne ,!!!;,~scrip-app't.6M-12U. 1 firm . Salary com -and ...... _ ~ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• wbo are abJe to start to· """ -. . I 'nle J~ Rocer Inc .. an ~ """'"-w.,.,...g c~n-E.0 .E. mensurate w /exper. . u•ucn n..,.,... part . W need apply. Apply In we need peo~le who have Medical Assist, front of-
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establiabed r eslauran.t ditions 6 frinie benefits. I I 714-833-.!1862 . time. Apply at or call . ~m miacellaneous non to Mis$ Sands.' 2-lyrs upeneoce b~ndl· fice, for G:P .. exp pre· cbain,buanopeninafor Forappt.,714-557-1316. , Balboa Cinema. Eves"' eqiapment.318llMtrays. ·~icana Motel, 1540 Ing casualty claan:is. ~.mailresum~of-apayrollclerlltoworkin 5a1ea SICtlnARY wknda. 709 E. Balboa ,Safellal\t.For~lac~aod
So. Harbor Blvd. c& .~peoplewillrece_ive flee .manager : 351 a3pef'l()Ddept.Abilityto R!,X;EPl'IONISTPff12·S Receptiooist near O.C. Bhd,NB.87~ white developin1. lY.
ICatella). Anaheim. Mon cla!m r eports , 1n -Hospital fld, Ste 118,1 handle expensive phone Xlnt Phone Manner 4'1 lllTB. Giff SHOP Airport. Real Estate pllons each A Ir B CCK.1·
thnaFrilOAM-5PM. vestipte~processtbem N.B.921163. communlcalionaamust. 40+ wpm. $4.24 /br to Peopleoriented reliable knowled1e belpful.1 STUDBn' centrate. 3 galloos.fu --.-tooompletion. • ~t.lnlorpayrollex· start. Xlnt Benefits. needed 't . k Salary adjµsted to ex I PAlrTTIME concentrate. 4 pints
GUARDS · * C L A I M S Medic al Secret.ary per. t?elpful •. but will Falb bl Loe. Call 9-3:30 ::C:,boun. sa!uict0.be l perienc e. Call Pauil Ak'Je..Drtver-Companlon hardener concentrate.
fqll" pa.rt time. All PllOCUSOIS . w /at~ong medical train an 1Ddiv1d~al who M-F J~e Griem New uleaodentedandableto 41n.z:m M.00/br. Must have car F\rstl30takesall.
ifba.Uniforms rurn·d. We'needindividualawbo terminology bac k -baaUmlttdexpenence6 YonLife844-1230M/F e>peratecHb reilster. . bil enoucb f or 788-5837 ,_.. 21 or over,.retired c an . f i ~ e b 0 -t-b ground/knowledge, for a dellre.IO leam. Salary EOE Enjoy excellent com-SECRETARY -A1rp~rt wheelc.bair.840-2746 Dam 1040 ~. Noexper. nee. alphabetically & bulyplasticsurgeonsof-copsmen1urat~ w /ex-_ _.......,.IST PAQY beneftt.t. Apply la Law firm, 1ood sll:1lls. -=-•••••••••••••••••• ·At>PIY : Univer s al numerically. & who can fice in Newport Beach. perlence. Apply in · __. .. """" . penoa tA.11-Noon Mon· bript, or1aniud, non-TEACHERS KEESHOND Pup AKC ·~ion. Service, 1226 type 3Swpm or more. Som.e preparation of ~ between 8All It With or without typing Frl, Penonnel ' smoker. Joeie8Sl-9025 SUIS....,._I a.amp sire.,.,;: Pet.; Jll. ~St., S.nl4l Ana . In-CRT ex per. would be medical le1al reports; M, or send resume to: needed. Top ~Y · Tem-MAmOTT HOT& , 111v1 b p
" terview hrs.:. 9-12 & 1·4, belp(ul. • tramcriblng Ir varied E JOLLY ROGER porary 6 full time. Call IOONewportCtr Dr SIOPllDAY ~-iM,s ft~ Pt Y ·
Mon-Fri. • typUic required. Salary INC. TodServicesattrft-ltOO v-eea~h · Sec'y/Woid P'rocessor Wanted l Qualified · a pm.
x ( U you are lnteres•..,. in ... .. t I • l'nM2 Gillette Ave. ·---• T-p •y s "-Utut T b .. _, .. • .. _. Pu ·I ... HAllSTlLIST • . ~ cv~me .. sur• e w ~· Irvine CA92'714 Receptioaist-good front F,qualOppEmplyrll/F --,,_ I u... e eac ers lo -~a Apeo P 10 \) t-t> . F 0 119. w-1 n g : mal:in& a ~itive career penmc:e. Xlnt: benefata. 71.._~1 otftce apprearance. Typ. Zerox IOO or-850, artec • teach bitb school atu-wlai lllnt pedigree Sire-
t &autiful Stores ·C.M. move wit a dynamic ·For appt., ~all 644-1260, lnl A ieneral office ex-exp!d. Full or P T. j deDts in the event of a American/Canadian CH. ' ltB. Heavy Advertiialnq, =t=e::iid· com-::.Mbn. PIX~YICE perience required. •SALIS• Newport Secretarial• work llop&a1e o r MOO Yvonne 844 -1313 I:.· . Ablolut.eTop %. for good MAAY IOI.I llodelin1. ~mmerclals., ~for full time r~-p I ea I a D t p b 0 n e =~w':l.w~e-.t: WJ::! Services. 7S2·2m a'll:c:i,11 a;~to:r:. .,.,m.smeves
. . ~t«.S:.0.-•1 71 .... JMIJ6 tilaa, extru. Need new liable mature person, peraonality. Newport ..... hU or Part time.
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1 Sec:eel•lesl.eglil 1radu 9 ·12. Va lid Keeehound puppies. AKC .f' uumv.MAN orsend)'OUfresllJDeto: · faces. All a1es/type1.' nnl ble 1'rs. Costa Bucb. Ste-a.. fl\ooc time req. In and Immediate openin1. califonUa c.redentJal re-rec.,SboU.
' · ~iaSERVJCE sen"IYIMSUllAMCE n4-957-G2a7. 11-.a, Eileen.142•3013• Rmtal a .. eirt, very buy outaide aaln! Contact1 Heavy lltl1ation n · Ql&red. Apply and sub-M'1·Jl'l2.
l ~ lt11 .. 4tllSt ~ Mr. Chambers at perience. Good .1flills. miteredentlalinpenon, . oarpantry, paint · • ..:._ ·r-•• Photo Fashions ..,,~•TOI olftce,Ucemereq. 84.1.a.91 1tron1 or1anizationalj Huatinaton Beac:b Union •POODLE PUPS* ~'.:. taue'b·UPI. minor.repairs S...._,CA9Z7M seeks new modelin1 ..-.,.vr_,.. 41MolM. abilities. Initiative It Hi•h School Diatricl, Cllriatmaadepc»ita. ti n e 1JOrhome 1 pi n 'Equa1Em,()ppo'!!'"1Y fac;er.Callt71-Sln. Part Time. Reliable SALES willin1ne11 to take 10251 Yorktown Ave., T1 CUpeal8o.$46-a. • ~ anae Co. h. mDloY-...-with plea1ant It R.ESALES Uyauana1iressive and ~ibillty essential. llB. or call to be re· · ~· ' NOON DUTY Al.DES eO\deal pboae manner lookiDI for a future In re· Excellent benefits. giltered 714·984-3339 uy ""41ae 1010
1 :ui.. ... needed.for p/Ume sub· Deeded to joha OW' PBX A c•.tn tail mtmt W /lood co. Salary open . .,Call Linda ~ includln1 Sat." Sun. ···-·················· · _..._.. SGIH lnt.erlor Deli1Der, must stitute Coo-call) 6 every-dept. Apply la penon Ml.Ul bellllftta apply la person Ru 1se11 co 11 e ct Deadline Nov. 15, lllO. 2PC SeeOonal Sofa Mint
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.· ~~ \r~l~w~ftt:. !~fu:Jt!:er~tor!re~~;· ::.~aaa:~~,!49!~ ;¢,11..;.:_:n. Mon-Fri. I IOI. mATE? ~~S::.~ ~~:~rviews Telephone ~·~°"=dot~~ ~CoaatHwy,CdM. =·_.,Good o,p~ f: '1,lld* Valley Scbooi MAmonHOT& '1Dd0utitl&'lforyou So.Briltol,C.11. <R.E~l:i.c:~eqRYulred> SS0·$75/ea. B~ut.
· _.,c persona e . · Dist., corner Talbert;• 900NewportCtr. Dr. ~ --._,.. ••SICalTA..S• * ~ =me Plate Chan-, '' liB.I' HllDED dlvdl. ~leaae aflly '" ·Newland Sta. Fount. Vly. Newport Ueaeh ~ .,.. Saa. • beat offer over 915 •
. ~ ,oman wit" lite ~.tS~~n. et~;~ E.O.E. . . • F.QllllODDEmoiYrll/F ~~~~ ~~~~l'!::na ~.=~rm:: SALARY . 17WMS ~~It eoJtpPt:a'ontaylpfbnagclta Westc ti Dr .. NwPt Bcb. Nurab:ll ~: I PIJP.SIC. 'Y , HORSd'0£UVl\ES Bdl • C.11. Great fiay, ~~J108.800,9!00 Buutlf\11 l'renc:b antique ' m-• • . . 646-1878 • · CM II"-A: di I b j .... ~ • _ __._:..._z ,. door-I ... b r.roujid· ex p . ·in Aidt We offer xlal co eon tona , ene ts. Ua A1eacy ~w,. en ••
. , ..... lllowocw11;·worlcta1~1th Wei-lw°""""' "MOO.._ benefit•. Sal. com : .C.::O:O~ues ~==bl:~'X~~t GOllreb~t 'AEOE SAIJJY ~~ed mlrrora .
419ilM'· 673-4757 Model home expr. Must • 1-· . I menaunte w /exp.' 6 •Trifnin• poUmtial. •ra. Trablsb NewportJm..lllO/Free · ..'~'-Ill• Store have portfolio. College 8. paklaa ~1!; :~-ability• ~,P~I SSWPll orllr. Edwardl: SS'J.1579 That'artpta weekly Kenmore, 6 mos old
la L B la d 1rad. Irvine area . :m. Ba . c • ftpn apU\Ude rraaanl ~~~11.. '••·1011. I washer It dryer new
ltrlp.aAoun!pr."n.:.e:uT ~· • ~a!~::i. ;:;! = Nl~r.·E;~r •:;,~r C:e:lsyJI tw :w.m;: Lookinl for that' Srucl•t $1,010 ALA RY '150, sell for•M.50, i· '°!a ... -..3084 . Janitor. nl1bta, for 'lhlrtp, C.11. lln. Far-• •tmMlouBatrdSu~ RSVP .... 7'3t very apecial sales 504Dapaw/aomeaccts. UO, new S~ar 1 ';tb·ds I.......... private country club. r91: ta-3505. E.O.E. I •ca. 1401 Dove. St. Suite penoa. Port o· Call parable exper. Prerer ,· cenhouu:e ~. n~'!'
... r.'I'!"' SC.:.> pr tu-. Call bet. 9-2. «JON.B. EOE 115-'lllO • ~ W/PfOP. m1mt.. . :"'."T"'' ae ,or-· ot ..... r or elder\)' couple in Moo-Fri ror Interview HUllstM6 I Reltllll"Mt bldllrouDd. Call Vlcflf ...... ,......,. I lteilll. day 841-0380, ev
l.Nuu Hilla. prepare M4-541Q4 · An you k>okln1 for a Pr-.eboolalde. llonlap, 9GT. PEPPERONl'S 9a1ea I 51Mi55, eoa.,w Penoa'. U,... lib talk .. on the 41t5111 ai.. Ute bsll:pa. • ron ...... ..._TW&Dtlomake okler' women preferred I . PIZZASTORE lloclelil "Tou: Gulde I Dll Al/llllJCJ 27to Harbor ~ .. aad makin1 a _.._ ______ _
........... aPM·7PM Mon·1 Jewelry . I a dlffeNaff? Ralel1bl 5eN11tllrU•s · Nowlllrilttf•f\alWapart r •· a <21 ' IDochalarywitbunlimtt· Olllom a.de queen 1l1e . t~I . Wk l.Y JJ'a )' + i Fine J ewelry Store in Hij1I Holpt .. ma.y aull l pm. ua. ap-tur at Joea. llrilll&. yowaa, aura~lve NiViilA l'B& EOE .s ...._ potaaUal ou water bed with solid
ti'ifaiporutao.n al -I Newport Harbor,area1 )"0llf.-..Wearelook· PllDCHOOtAIDS Uw ar b{ Airport. =:e.:;:•Jlo •how. l q\ldfyfCll'apoelaioa~a wood boollabelr bnd·
tolruce. Call now for !neel)IF/'J;'talle-lnpenon1i'' ror ~u'a lit y lntDe.PtrAlloratt.r-V...._.claJS6bn Ideal uaaarea.l (rltll'owu.aNwptBeacb ~••ttnu,heater,
· •t. Upjohn Health for ...,e'r dept, day1o1 Re1i1t•red 1u•se1 to. -.111-14M · ~al lacoi.. for !f'!'~"P« ..-.. ~f I·. SICllTAIY a.fr..atati oftlee. Sorry I = pedded rrU, com· Ah Sef1icet:· 7S2·09tSI lloe·Fri. Write P .O. Box ' work In ou ·N••r.rt, lllaewlv. • .......... -· _... llOI,.,.. orl •MASSIST. j muimum Hlary 151,000 1 .wttJa matebbal S ft . ...... r . ·15418, 'Newport ,Beach,• r.:: Al~llll Re ab.: 0..-PNll-'•• ll'OWla• ...... ck. . Or1•al1td pu1on; par~ I dMllt of 5 dnwen, botb 'lAJ I _,. ' ty . ..,...,n 11 a.re l ••s••ll 1' ~y off~ oppt,...... 'W/toocl HC'J 1tll11 I 11mlPOllH0W. W. new, .... AaUque ~-' --• j l for the ll·T a bl ft .RR lair adYaaeemellt "* Need P /T •up• r l eafttaa runlture .;. Far an appolatmeDt to mphacanJ ca&lnet wlth
.' • CASHIB "=",;!d'Pp=lo~; ~dr.eve0r~~1 Jlbr~·=·~ n.I on your Job •\ r«IOD for rulllon l coD1tru'ct1on ••per .. ti.r our~ OD 1your; ~=':ti'° a':9
te OMllinl .._. : SUO/lu' tp atart: Male I = ... ~ alalft dlt· llllO oftlMI& : ...... Aa;ply ,.rformaoc:e. ~eaaanl ~· ••!;J"~a~' ~t!°m~ l~n"! AlarJ ~-1.:ow . I ! I I •· ~of aTi.d
•ra.-,_-Nlial>..-.ptrton , phorefer~•SdA .• Wo rkpln111 ll .......:a..t .. t!:u ~~I':~' in peuu between I :-:--o~Ap:.~ t (TM)..=.1..-. rurm. afr. Call K.H .. T T .. O I j q "ted be41prud, wttlil pl••Unt ebone ura: to 1 __ __.. • • , ...,_. • ow rue-. r vera, ....,..,.,... colon tsao
· ·• aptitude '(Q,.. I LcJd'a Kltc:tlen, 3'77 So. ~·· Ntlrem .. i ro·' C... "::~ . ...._ BrialOI SALD PU.ION· ...... ' -I ........, ~perteac9d on·: CiiiiiHOom ' . ·
.__. ...,_,,... llOD•Prl, IPll·tf'll,1 , ly. lliut uve C.lf. area. f
.. -~~D::-':> perm'aHnt poe•uoa.I llaaluf,..._ I ..... .oeeontor ru119: L IV
ffallDrll Part7 9'op. Caner oppt..1. la fut·1 ""'• I Room D /R 8clrm + I g.O.E. -.187 I pec..s N)ll," llclL lnvut· .. '' . ....._, otMr ltema bom
miiliiii1Milln•••iirai1· • . IDfll& ftnD. Recawrer Lop~ IPll-IP'M t d.corator'tl *'•••. ll 1 Umt l9 plan for that Jlllt st#'\in• up In a ltul· *1111 (1111119d to~.:_~ 1 11WP•. .. allortlaaod, .,..... • ...... MO
cadiUattio<Jo.C8rts i ••llOn !rip, Fot 'ittra 1 -ol)'OWOWn1 A~ U) ..... '"" appU~ .... above Y\ta.bllNplatll.:
What••«ll•F .. d C.h, why not ....... ~· t.o tell people llaout _,..., •t.t'1 • eol'•1 avera1e tP•lll•I lt .-----------
Rall 'emotfthemarket . ti those Items )'OCI dOft't j lt l• with a low·t!oat ,....., -.... Mtptlll.I arammar a11ui-. word1Tt1e futwt drew l.n the
WkbaClaultJed Ad t DMll wit.II a Cla111fle4 Clauilled ad. P•one Clll:_... t ....._... Ndlrowad Wfal. .• a Dall)' PUot OONoW!MUt1& M !IQ.M71. --. r • ....,.._.,...._ ~ Ct ... UledAd.ta.5171.
-.....----· .-.. -·-.,. ___ ---t-~--.. --L... ---'r--I ~·---·----
• ~· Ncwembet 3. 19IO
, A Daily Pilot.ad number will appear in. your ad ...
we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call
In at your convenience during office hours and get
the responses to your ad .. : For more information
and to,place you~ ad call 642-5678.
642-5678 DAILY PILOT
' I a IMI lt•11'1 • • IMO ,._. to41 ~ ,,...,.. ti 70 •-tl70 Alllos. l•111•rW ]~·..,,rt.cl , 1.,auhd ............................................................................................................................................................................................................. ~ -** 1 IUY ** AMP COLLECTIONS 'IDTLUl-'12, •try 111111'. fvnJabed, older. WO..Vaa.lcyl, 31pd. W 9707 IDahm 9720 9760 ~-9t (~
Glmll ... ,......,. • PURCHAIED Dave fall,......,, on dedr bait -. Newly renota'-1. Ddl little work. '900, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
:.:
-Oa I Ill a..-.... _., tek, MW lot. 131,500. l40CabrUJo. ~aft5pm. ieAlld. i lOOLS, •lnt CODCI. 19710.... 240% lflO SUI "II 1». white, t-top, JBi
aMea • Ntwport Yacht Ex· ... ..__W,_._.. 9 .. 90 very clean 47 ooo ml -..-.. VI, 21 mp1 . lo nlJ,:.>
111•-...fwYou oap-on aide cab. 3 cMalt.,._llOO lOllO'. furnished. ---• I rdall SZlll5.5oM-J.300 · Brandaeweaaine S5000 •--J..-ded •to0 551500'KT' MAl'ml AUCTION drawera, 1 ahelf, locka-, , SlZ,000. 140 Cabrtllo.,••••••••••••••••••••••• · · 7•5837 .... MOWI : ' · ·
... 1611alJM6JI Ille, SSC ~C· 11,. tw/JSO MMT25.Alltforf'aye. ~~!,~P~LLAIR "11 FOX. Ilk, •pd. IOK 1,80 200SX Coupe IXCILl.8fT Clll•1•t tt20 Sl40 ,7 •• S117 Md. r •w •. 5 aen.. .or ...... -cars-.orep, ml 1r-eea/bei1e 1d • ..----...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOlll me *'• flna iuer VHF, fatho. 1umlo1, IO' Travelette, Mlf-coat,I dommtica or claulea. lf l cle'aa cond. Am i rm bl.ack/.Uver, auto trans, -"""' -a...CITATtOH', .,n., aattre11 wltb TV tourn brldl•. a tall can be pulled bycompactt )'OUr car la extra ·cleaa, llt4ftO iape, anrf: A/C. radar det~or, bur1lar 'IO~ C ... .,,.
"Ill ti 1 eoi1 boa •Pr· tbowet'. Reduced .,,500. car, SHOO. 8'5·0120, wua FIRSf! $CI00.8'Jl.500t,6lS.-780S. alarm. crwse contr~I. llACH IMPORTS 1
bap, Dn•r 1&1ecl, atm DECODERS Nwpt Yacht Eub s:n-aoe ~ sn.rf,Am/P'm slereo. air. 841DoveStreet tt.lc .. 1c.k! ,, pw+s.Jd, ~ IUO. ln· RecieA lat.eat l' lo 175-llOO • . ..W t712 5,600 mi. Lik,e new. NEWPORT BEACH AW>. trans .. air coao.~
ddllWW7-· Cub OG· ve mO¥ ea '1121'ComfortlnSpace,st ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19.150. P.P . 770-S173, 75z,.0900 econ. 4 c:yl1. • bQW
ly )Qlfhome.NC)moelhly32 • BAYLINER · Bcb,GreatVacatioAor le For the beat deal la 60-2322 mile1! Cute caf.,1
· -.aJ, cbarp1. -The Beat tor Su b id · FW Wlmd 99000 ~~~· ------!=-:----~~-;-U•XRK>. 1Au.M0-31110anytlme, a r 1e. ao. C, 1pot. 541·41t1 ... <>ranee County ... Come o,.t. 9765 -.-y ...... ,5 . WATBIB Volvo's, auto pil~, 1m j.,.s.,.,1c4t ,_.. #I .. o.-pc:...ey SeeU1Today!! ,_.,_. 9721 •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ---· ·~
,_.. New Tappan Touch/Con· dwn or trade-take over &Acatll;._1 9400 282S"HarbOrBlvd. ~ ........................ "1t5upra S.pd, xlnt coad, HOWAlDCa.....-.
Beautlf\al t.aJDed ood trol Microwave Oven payments. $49,500. •••••••••••••••••••••••' COSTAllESA ~ •67 Ferrari330GTC lomi.Jea1ePP. Dove •QuaUSU.
moo•ed :11b oo ~ 12 Utt_Prlce ~Sell forl Newport Yacht Exch. SSAYISAVIS II 979-2500 I 29.000mi.mint cond. 642-5392 NEWPORTBEACH.
draw• r p e d et ta I. "15. ~ Size C~tom 675-lBOO. WITH US1D PAITS . SA.DOI H Cl( 631-0&00 or MS·6367: '78 T Co ll 2d HJ.OHS
Boolltbelf head'-oard Bedtpread Is Plllow,21· Ciber1lass Tu1.' Im c•• I A oyota ro a .. r.
,.
with mirror. lncludea Sham '80. 640-2746 Islander Weekender or! portedlllPO-RTparta WI IUY VALUY IMPOITS ;Fiat 9725 ,. aW> trans. gd mpi. Id SH US FllST! ....... u tt I c• ..... M c•as I 21402llarcueritePkwy. ; ••••••••••••••••••••••• c:ond. 12995/BO. 9&0.6388, w ha ood I ... lo..l. :;'id~~~~I ma res1 St er II n I p I at w are • ! Charader Bay Launc~. AUTO SUPPL y..,., ~ . llluiGa Viejo ! '71 AA T I 21 l sas-0121. o; N v~ ;..1 Is U ~"E..D.,
lluttSeU'M . Ea1terlin1.9 full 6pcl 6mo. old. VW Rabbit. lOlN Manchester AMDTIUCIS 1.131·2040 4tl-4t4f '! "cy"-.. er."speed.33.000l•_n_1_y_h ____ 9_7_6_7_ Chevrolet.I! eausis.~;mc place settings. service &I Dietel. Full galley ·i Anaheim 775-9900 . .. ...... .. 11
Ext 23' xtru. slvr wt. about 8bt:. stove, relri1eralor, dbl.1 I : Clmed Sundays I miles. .•••••••••••••••••••••••
AlkforDonReil 100 01. S2800 /0BOI berth. head, c:omplete.j 4"•11dZ I • I $3499 1'66 Spitfire: Restore d
orcall780-0ll7 ~10 . Slt,S00.646-1887.
1
lr•llllllllo. QassicinXlnt cond. Reel
I 4'-~ ~~d='o« :. wilh1 wire wheels. Must
COUNTRY FRENCH •Japanese swords <91. aej3 3 • V .1 KIN G . 1. 4 • = milcellaneous240Z, I ~ T~~ •'see. $2500. 536-2890
COt-4HElL
CHEVROLET
:x...,.., If .t, ' •. 11 '
' ' "'I \ \1 r , .
541>-I 200
Curio Cabinet Li1hted I armor w/box to be sold• toumbrid1e, teak pulpit.. parts I $1 sr .. aao·---·v HONDA Iv--9770 ' ' I fish . 2 tali C02 761-5837 ' .. --~ 18AUTOCENTER DR. _ __,.. Glass Front• Side1.1all to1elher only ., equap .. s oos, 1 . i SA•HA AHA ·••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 fmpala2-door,
Qoeed c~rd Below •. «·2511. I system. twin Crusaders., Tow bar universal type: tMH IUYH 835 3171 1 IRVlNE 830· 7600 ~.,6 Sci 1 . Ch . Aakinl $1500 XJnt Coad s.t50 S46-Qfll • $62,500. Newport Yacht' fts II I t i Top dollars for Sports ' . roc:co. o ma, am s.t9-3027 Aft. 6PM ewe · Soay Ree I to Ree II Exchange675-l800 : ~a . cars comp eel Cara, Bqa. Campers.,. THt"9'"'"no1uv1HO .. •c!l•Nl '74 Flat 124_ TC Wagon :f;. Ed .. clean. t.:tust
RecorderS300. Bookcase· • M.22!23 , 914'1,Audi's •USIDIMW * need• a htlle work.. .'15-0850 '7S Monte Carlo Landau,
COUCH• cbr, washable $20,!f1plfilhaquarium.132 LUHRS. 1973, ~wn ,AlllaafwS. I AlkforU/C MGR I '723000tiiw/s/ (io:l)~OBOM0-2691 po VW fastbac k xlnt 3SO V8, air, Am. /Fm
Ivory uphol. SlOO for comp. $120, Stereo: FWC, Cbrys. auto pilot.· .IMMAalMO '733.0cl4lpd (~) · I cond totally rei1·able stereo, elec windows 4'
both. '1oor 6 tbt. lamps, am/fm cass $100, tools!' natural 1u 1alley, bold·'·....................... VOUCSWA&IN I · f727 SJ.SOO. 546-4195 • seats. cruise control, f~·
SJ.Oea. M1·9121 ' misc. SlO. 979-S300 days in& tank, $37 ,500. Nwt ! IMPORT ANT I ·-Be h Bl d ' ~45~~(!J!c ()0332) '••••••••••••••••••••••• ! . ly loaded. S21600. 848·4105.
I o.Jellecli I YachtExchan1e675-1800' NOTICETO uull ac v · ! • -..._. ! i.; 1'66 VW camper 1600c c Queen ailed sofa bed, . . . · READERS AND I HUNTINGTON BEACH 1 1?630ctlhpd. s /r (0366) · l dual port motor, $1250: C llM .. al HJO
awivel rockini c hair, IDugluproot your home. MOTEL 10 pr est111ous ADVERTISERS I 142-2000
1
. '783000. st~•p.(1571) I VISIT YOUI 545-0T70 •••••••••••••••••••••••
rouad cocktail table The ine•penslve way ! Palm Desert. Will lradel The price or items!· "11320iaaar,<51•> , OltAM&ICOAST ' lt72UMCOLN
7SOC11. ' Mac. 548-1444 'I pertofSlOO,OOOequily for j advertlted by vehicle! TOP DOU.Al :::4•=·(= <6917>i HOMD .a, ,Sharp '78 DASHE R MAKE OFFER
, houseboat o r motor deaJen ia tbe vehicle PAID FOi 1 •· I A , Hatchback am /(m 8trk 675-2013 llovi.!!LSale~Fr. Prov. Very_ Reasonable! Area . yacht. 714 /346-9707. ~ claaalfled advertisin11 ,.~&c• ••N I :::a41~~~1m> J .... OOVAITHS ; stereo s /r, lo ml. $-t950 din. rm set w/6 lufiecl RUg 9 x ,iz;-Laarpil. Db1 : cohmmt-doet not include~ ~ . _...,... , ro u s t s e I J IDoclgt 9tJ5
cbra. 1tereo console, SofaBed,EndlsCGC:ktail 1977 26 : Toll y_c ra~ll ~ay applicable taxes.I USIDCAISI : ~ TODAYf!! f 557.eou/645-0189 •H•••••n••••••••••••• miac.furn.5'9-0566 1'blt ~ Hdbrd etc.I w/moorang. Price 1s license, transfer fees I • '67DART2dr 6cyl auto ~ ' I rilhl. Call 673-1158 aft i rmance charges, rees ro;' I HO IMW 5211 . ...VRSITY '73 VW Bug. Good cond. · nds body ~9rk ' s.t25' AMTl~IS ; 6PM. I air poUuUon control de-I ., Automatic trans., sun-SALES6SERVICE 12750/080. io&4 • ·
Whole bouaeful. MuatlrvineRaquetClubMem-: . . : vicecertificalionsorde·! r !'or.-f o1 ll1h.ts . Ot.DSMOllLE 1 157.2433 O
aell cait-.5203 bership, szoo. ISearay 80. 197V, many aler documentary pre-1 I pimtripes, leather 1at.. HOMDA Fwd 994
• • 1 497.2515 ex1raa llhra. new, w/trlr1
1
pmratioa charaea unlet11 air cond. 6 full pow~r ~ &MC TIUCKS i'73 VW Bug, rblt en1 lo •••••••••••••••••••••••
dn Formica• Ch.rome ~llZO. Elecdry~r $20,i.63 Chris C aft 18• /t 1 tbeadvertiaer. 21 ...._ llY4 1 $11,6'5 ~llarborAll!_!Avd. 1 1221115/080. 497.3034 PriDted• Balanced, W-11
Dinette Tbl w/4 swivel! . 642-s.2 otherwise specified by; (0180). I 1 lllnt cond. SUper clean, "'10 RANCHERO 351 Blue
$'15 Roll-a -way Bed 4W ' Kitch tbl $20, cnbSSO., · r w r r., · ,..__.._ .._. __ 64 .. 5700 · --. .,.., 1 Traaa lla11 $1500 ma'ttnu uted 1 week I se-0107 Jack Lavertue I Asking $3500642-2091 :"""""/ ! _. --..,. I lflO IMW J2ot j 54o.9640 '78CONVERTJBLE 912.mi after 4PM · 125 111-3515 :. . , : Cli111fc1 9520 · I Like new, 24 ,000 ml, . . ; j 11IMP17'n Ski ~at1••• ..... •••••••••••••••! WANTED! ,SUnroof.alr~ .. alereo ........ 97JO S1500. will lake VW inF\esta'78,1ilver,sunrQQ(, WATERBEDS Kini 6 lid ... IOll with Mere. 1/0 . Trailer.: 1'70 CADILLAC ' LM.e _........_, T aad l cassette. pantlripea 6 i~••••••••••••••••••• I er.de. 1-'JT9o..IS20. lltrM, $1115. Dbl-•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9113-e551. ,. ___ VllJ.I . v .-coyotul I pjrima~QNJ). : 76 XJl2 SIDAM I 54MIZ3
-. Director boa _.. ,. o v o •. a us S• 995 I 1vw 11 C Ubl .. J ~ ~ witllcue. Ell~coa~ "1t!ldpjacll,JO'opea,.ful· • .., oriliul mU.. • TODAY!!! -'-Lomi, ... m.'130I d.-ic·n::;,r:ck, e~'....... 9t4i ... -.. .. -s. 1055 ditim.Sl00.81S-80Uafter b' .. uipped wtth trader, ._...I llustbet.bebnt lf791MWJ2ot Mwx•s._ 9740 • trM, ao mi. mint cond. -·~·-••••• .... •i'•t
·•••-•••••••••••••••• IPll. I Sll,toO. After Spm. -ampleoltbltmoclelin Slmrool,airciond .. at.ereo '-•••• ............. 154l-'5GI 1111.artt V, Cuti«, wW. , .. zmtl•"*-(n4>JD.727J or wkday1: I Orale Co. 1 previoua e....u. • BBS rima.1••11>. l..-y/bamboo, I ....... cream puff. 110-
r ---,_ COW. GIRLwutal ('1H>G7·7-ult for llr., owner • p e rfect ! (-) • 1 JSIDl.WW7.deea. V.... 977Z b .17$-lSID. 7 9 tr11•ProfeuioaaJ to ae.m country fiddle. Huber. (TIMVA>. SIJ.ltl ' .,..,. 1••-•••••••••••••••••••1----'-------=-w-·1c... cauJC1111 <H B >1114141 SMll l VOLVO !Mwcwr t9H •• •c.t.belrasmul · · INh. s.I ·· · 9060 1_ --· -Mercedes. lt71 450SL. j T ••••••••••••••••••••••• •MA•SALI . 8'mdy Oboe for tale, e•· ___ ............... 1"'' IMW 13• I P.P. ll,7'0ml. Abeolute ORANGE COUNTY'S',
lw • eihre! ceUent condition. Call ' ALEJUELA-1977 PORSCHE$ Aaamatic b'W., stereo atiCIODd. in •out. New SA''S. SBYICI I '*-ST s.t&8"a. Novl•t ~ZIZI World Crulaln&, fut, dbl casMlte, .V.coad., alloy llidtelin Urea, polished Ale LIASIM6 LINCOLN-Ml:RCURY'
tAllto4Pll ender, d•I. a ba1s ofl rims • full power. wt.ela.speedcoatrol,aJI OVERSEASDEUVERY DEALEBSHJP I
CE.BeySt,C.11. ~~1te-$1p51: •• Nceawaepaade~ ..U., betNter than"ne~; WANTED <'5ZPQN)S7. ftS poulble elltru. Best of-EXPERTS We welcome your coa-....... --• 1111.-. ewport .. ac.J; fer over Dll.000. 955-132' tri...._ for re-11le. All •·-...a Exch. 67~1.IOO. 1 Allow • tbe opportunity --or 780-8165. EARLi •t
pro c e e d 1 I o to ....... • & Ericbon 32• ·15, 6 s ails,! ·~r::. :::-= to comider the purchase IOI Mc&.AllM11 VOLVO ~pfund. '' 1, ,.. 1015 whl, knot, VHF, many A Town Sedan 4 dr ~'Ch!ikwr,U!e~n IMW ·:,:'!oo ~E /~197 ~= 198&Harbor Blvd.
1'1111t '1 .... 1065 ....................... mu. Custom int Is ext. n!llklnd. Ideal ior 1tu'. Toda 1 • w s 850N. Beach Blvd. f!Vea /wtr:Dldaay . 6...t1...r.C90STJOJASll4~9A467 .... -.. -• .. u••••-•o llll&ed. JBll Mag Card better than aew. Offer. dmt.flO,ooo.67u 161. y. LAHABRA ._ -
.._......... II . W i ii lease o r -.7a,-..o872. ~ (511i.No.olSAFrwy) '•1182000. Good cond. QIAMAIC....aa.-v . purchase. CaJI 152·0234. '311 FORD Coupe Deluxe, ';J£. 1714'52Z..5J3J Air . Aut o trans . ___ ,.. ..,.,...... • Secattr Sys.._ . 17' Bay Saller Trlr. Main. ,,.. put, zu Chevy ., SUDda b A 714f13Mnl dya, 544.9121 VOLVO
~?t.tlll~i
LINCOLN-llERCU R"Vt i.11 Auto Center Dr. "
SD Fwy-Lake Forest ail
IRVINE
130-7000
........ t912 ....................... nre•t.beft. 751-5113 ru1 et cab1anest3• 5 drawer, 6 new~ Slp~/OBO oril-.,_ Straisht body. --;-,.;-~ 8...., Y Y ppt. ewa. EXC.USJVELY VOLVO
.__._ 1070 •era • paper. m..GKl•ner6 .. Sl,.500. 541-&113 aft 6Pll o.mno-•M a.am OIAM9ICOUMTT'S ---., shredder $350 -U89 "1t 45C&£, a black beau-I.arsest Volvo Dealer '75 llu1tan« II. Oaly ....................... • · · · ...... !JfJ/ ~ 6"-8233 dQa. aak lor OLDIST ty with polished alloy inOran1eCounty! 33,000mi. 4spd. Xlat. •
Perfect 1.00 VSl pearPltney Bowes 600 ~-· f070 JUD ,..... & wbl. ... bambooint.Pow~r l B~~~~ASE ~~:S~~dcys•:J diamond, GIA ap-pc»taae machine. a ....................... a.a........ -r everythinl 23 ooo ma
praiMd, beat ca1h offer, cxmd,llll0.67}4000 SLIPSNEEDED Yellldtl 9530 Pail Am/Fmca.~sat~eo.ele~ ~·,~rit~,,~·~ &l0-0864eves .. pYtperty.Sue,IMHIOU. llinolta Electrographic 25'•..UP ....................... ForYou.rCarl Salea-Service·Leaaln1 snrf. $33,950. 833-2211. ~ ·1~ Mlistan1 Ghia, 6 cyl,
Ge nuine Burmese 101 Copier, •Int cond, 67~noo DUNE BUGGY llyera JC>tefSOM&SOM ~CGr"¥er,lllc. :i57..J542. • • au. Cully loaded, one
RUBIES. Your choice, llllO.l13-4000 TO .Mallll Body, BW C1tm L.__• M . owner. lo ml, xlnt cond. cmlylZOeach.MO-Mll WANT BUY Newport Ena .. 12 volt, Str eet -4eNWf RoUI yce BllW '79 30C?CD lo miles, Mint 2025 S. Manchester 14000. 640-1813 dys'.
U .... D.. 1075 Sp ........ 10t4 ~·..!' or tonier. lepl, 2 topa, tow 0bar0. ,._.~~a bOr 8!~~·~-~BeJaamchbo"!!. ......... Cond.iU°'.! • .,."_., Anaheim 750-2011 181MXJ11 eves. I ·--M-••M•••••••••••••• ... ••• ,.,.ys_....,vl llutt Sell: $2150/ B .._.___ _,._.,., ....... ...,.. _....... ...., .-c. W•••••:·;~··P••••t•••••r••• Reminat!'n 30-0I auto, Moori.nl apace avail. 21' 811-1151 WeP-Ma 9742 '12 142, Air, caas. new '7C9h Mustl .. _Jade Vgra. ant~ ... ··•-a1unuWrellaor new, 1lin1. Bausch • to 36'. $9.50/(t. /m o. 4 Wlllel DrtYel fSSO -r '••••••••••••••••••••••• ••-, -'-t sh• ..... $2,750. a mo s In l .. ·8 • ~ -Y. Lambe power 1cope. Coil Ardell.· 642•5735 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OVER IOI McLAllM'I 76 M& MINET ... a. ...._ ...-loaded. •Int mech. &
Ewa: (2U)705-0144. =price $i1ZS. 675·5491 · · '1'1 Dodce u• abortbed, ....... . & . Jl&Rt Sell! Future OB0.6'11-6649all5PM looks. $-t950. 638-8439,
Mii t II II• 1010 ' put tbipe, PS .. PB, For Your Good Cluaic. Needs Cleaa-Up. 1983 4-dr sedan. Good ....:642-973 _______ _
....................... Head Sklia 200cm with ...... Sia 1 I totO ..-0'1900. M2·023t VW, Pondleor Audi • llechanlca TLC. SUJ85 fllline. Needs body re-Cl+ tll1 9tll LU88AG~TAGS Tyrolia 350, bladin11 -·::;=;:•-;;;~1:·;1:~ ,,_.. t560 ..• 7soo.> palr."'50.541-7349. • ..................... .
fromJ'C)Urbutmes1eaJ'd. S l 5 0 I b I l 0 r r . ~-port Dunes, 1131 ....................... '. 850N.BeacbBlvd. , ..... t741 '80 Recency cpe, loadei,
s-1 one eard for each cn4~ZDI Back Bay Dr. NB. '78 Toyota SRS Loo1bed, LA HABRA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....._ Us4td . ~ ,,..:1. nice, $7800. tac plua one apare. We Golf clui. with baa and ....a510 ~. A/C, am/rm, West VW-PORSCHE-AUDI (5111. No.of SA Fwy) ORANGE COUNTY'S G•••••,·• .. •••••••••••,•9••0•1•1-----------
return permanently rt ""0 Call Kurt Coaal mirrora, mlnt 64SE.CoutHJway 1714llJZ,.533J PEUGEOTDIESEL -• '80 TORONADO D' "-' tealecl attractive tat 6 c,a . .., . , -i.. _, .... toole&or at Bayalde Drive su.day by Appl. •••••;••••••••••••••••• 1e ....
ttr eetiDI alrll e ---·-ar· NewpirtBeach ,11~ ~ARTERS ~ ••• OVEA S/r + llore. 5,000lllJ', I Dap, °:t ta pa ........ ••••••••••••••• cuttom wheels, rad al ""'', Sl3.500536-39S4 . -=-·=~I ·F;e~ ...... Aila• ttlO Uret.Jalthan lT,OOOmi. Premlwnpricea "1U.OCSEuro.Nupt.Nds lfl01051 $4995 --"..-l e.ebe tM.Shf'90 1091 •• _ ................. ff750.14Z;m1 _ p&idforanyuaedcar (4--•'"-MI '77 Cutlass Supreme1 ---aa ••-•••ri'•••••-•••••• .. ~ordomeat\4:-) la&sior.lluataeU."500. -~· 39000 mi all power wallpaJ>er, fabri c or ...... , ....... RCA_ .. color 119 •ech •••keteer, '74 LUV llilado, Cleaa . , _ _....___.,.:· meit. tal.._..W•.!.• ,..'.__ .,.....;,,....,,_,. 6 ' "Doty Glo" paper• we.............. -freed m'cllpM 1IO Llcomill1 ..., Me-t720or642-534J ... .,._ .. -...-. ... on.. ~ c-. ........ -... er pm.
wW beet " trim your ~. 2 yr wrnty. e-•DI. 2 Com •D a ••• aftsWll seeu. Pintl "11BllWDH.1em cond. '78 Delta .. CO UJH!,t
Ulp. Or try two cardt livery. ~.141-l.,.. ti-; t11.W ..... 210t •fl • air, can. 18,000 ml. llACH IMPORTS DIESEL. Showroom
bKktoback. TV tPll. 11 Dattu Kln1 Cab, Sl0,800.815-4836 •DoveStreet 1ttUHH ST. 1 cood. All features lneli
PRICES: C IFS. S./ 31,000 mi. sa.ooo. '72 Ford '74 Bavarta. Air. auto, NEWPORT BEACH cosu MHA S49-••1 leath er & moonropf ••• ,,. DECODERS ... 9120 P.U., Jdnt conct. S2.000. JSZ,.OtOO jAMC . ttOI 9113-655l. ,
4(1tap$1.eoea. .._, ....... •••••••••••••••• Call 847·55t3. 1-lpm, "500. l/lta11*1.50ea. laNI : 9G-271M,6pm-Ulpm. 497.aot Pw1ct. t750 ....................... "1t CUl.laaa Calais dleMlt
10Gl'IDOl'eS1.40 ea. NakamlclU 2IO auto cata "°'* Camper thell,I ....................... !...,.,Hornet htcbbck V·6 27mpe white aandviaJI
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Draw JOUr own or send orbttolfr l75-Clll3 -Refuled. Leave mesaa1e ...-92. m.ZIOleves•w-kends. , map, radlala, 1 owner. ~LS W.-• addresl. pbooe • · · t ... •llMI .... fl40 j MO-Zl74 lean, truck.I, vans run· c.,a t711 SZll50 bet of.fer. 139.7299 • c
w U make cme card per N.w ao.e 1111 Splsn. Akal ·-•••••••••••••••••• t mnc or not. Will pay caah ••••••••••••-••••••••• "1t '5GSLC, a black beau· .w.. PWli tt•t tc.Add»each. caHette. Int. Amp. llODed bl k •11 8 i• '7t 'Ford FUO a XLTj uptoSI00.551-1780 , ·-ty, wtlb polished alloy ••••••••••••••••••••-• Sllldc:Mc:kormoaeyor· Tuaer •• turatable . <VIP/ ;:,.coad a::.,I Raacer, beaut z tone 74C~"I whla,bambooint.Powerjlllktl f9to -r.4PlatoRunabout,aut6 cllfto: ...... !._.->'). __ • bran a belte. loaded.j ..... l•••rW Radial Tira. All/FM 1 e•erytJUa1. 21,000 mt.I••••••••••••••••••••••• air,xlnlcond,ll8,000ml! PILOTPllMTIU• · -· Am/Fm 1tereo, a /c,1••-• .................. ...,,M,OOOml.. Am/1'1Dcwttereo,elec: '17 Buick Skylark, ruu 531-JZM •""''
P.0 .llo•tm !!........... , PUet1 Ila.id. 2 HP. Xint1 14,0llO '-'· auto, crutae.,........ 9701 SllllO Ul .... j urf, $11,950. ISS-2211 ,• lllnt, lood cond. SIOO.. mMt: 99..r ea.aa ..... c..... _, -cmd. . I ...... taow 6 COQVeD·1 ······················· t7ZO l 51'741G. I 1..-.1152 nJU.. .. -~---'-----1-..e•-'"•"'-••"•••••••••• l I l •7 ts _, ....... •aao••o ! •••••••••••••••••••••U -a~c • _. fOIO ••l,M5-.... t OD& t r~ • 4 . ran,..."'"""'ft r. -••••••••••••••••••••• c-.--.-I 9fll "'-•• 1-1 • •2Zll.55'1· . a.L\llANCE • 1• .-<:. SHver w/tUS!-·-.. 'U BARACUDA ti
......... ·-·················· tbt :1••/ I I ALL'111JIUSTOOI f ...... Grt eoftCI. ss.soo.:······················· ...... .mt coed . ........ ,. ... Pa1Dt l110,DC111bf0tbelt••to1 Ill -ON 9110 w......uona1 P.U. for, "We'rel>ealla"' l m.... im Sl Do ... do, cream P,odable. BHl off . • .... ,._ °"" tt.._. 11111oww ............................ ortnde. : -I : s-11. blk·blk, 111000 nrm. m.44'12ot,.,..m1 ~::.~...-~.:.ta:t ! 171-911 1 -'11£AIW~~":na ~ MZ·lm j lfll U••I ,~~~n:.r=·• G5-l.DO. I,..._ t9 ..
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1
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I Cad•r epolll• •bHl MA:aDISa.a;raJCIAft I ' ,_................, .... f ... .. -,;,.... rt ... $Ito for '°'b·I GlldUWOltl Call MllwN Iii .. / •~,._Chevy PU Utll.1 • .,.,....._ t;; C ttr7 • --.Mii ... --t• a .-..-....-11 ., ... /II 111 fHI ' Bad. A.IC, auto. tood NnPOll'l'a&ACll ! ... ..,. t716 j • · • • ' --••-•••••••••••• tp.. --I J~ ft.•--••.& .1• .. -.. •••••••••••••• 1 ••-•••••••••••••••••• •'71 l,loaliac 11.atJoa 1 a...••··· :a--I ... l . II' Lua Motor' I "1Tuwu-......... •tDUlfl IN us.• '71 camaro, I owMr, SIO ' an pwr,..,.. ne.. 0 ... 1 -•Jml9we•i. rt toll .....: alp& I. Mar·eoel. "71llAIDAPU,•lat .. LB, "rt SPRINT VSLOC&. 4dr ..... ,lom1, I m ' ' 1 YI,~/ am/t~1 tteNO mllHI•· NH 0 • =fll·---· ................ 1$21t /wk +l•/ml l..._a.dlall,ater90. A llU lla LOW -.m.7m.al. JR ·~ eoM.••keol· ....-. ....... ll_Ued 1D11t 111Mw, (0.Al·i--. . ............ INTSRSl'I' L&AIS. I AIVll 1 rw. -· "11.'. .. ..._ 6 ,_ onl • .. -> a,..,., I , ... ....._., 1 .,..., ICI.., heel Ad• ne ti•• 1 lal.S·llOYCl ~. =~•I ••••HI•.; .,. i'rue1Uc ...... 1,._ Al'row 11. M.• al, larp. ln 1hoppes'1 read .UO,. Ii ONLY u!...•' anlww 4o a HCcettful ._...,._ ; If ~w·~ toolclna for a btt .......... :.......... •
IOf 9=r ff·( ... •> t'fl. 1111•'••·· roof/a ir, •tull,'IMllttleadtlllClqaUled ..._,.__..,1 ~.0 1...,.orr.,.. .... !lt'•i .....,.IN<ll \:tjob.~ouwon·twant&.o j'tU••lr.11Hble
euloa. We ••I •er· 1 ••II!!•, U I/ e •·I ,.rf. ·._ ••. , tU,nt. rtl'llarly. And tht)' 011d , One at 17S·OHI or a batt• way to tell more ...... miss the emptur ment 1 ~Ian_. ...
llMlll • • J ~~1111. 1-.-r. t 1:'-~tl-ac:*ln1ror. •am. 1*11le! I u~~~~' .. ~~~~:c~~1~_:._j-~~~---
Wam.ng The Surgeon General Has 01111mentd
:rhat C111tette Smoking ts Dangerous ro Your Hllhh.
0 1MO A.J. AIYNOLOa TGllACCO CO.
• OF YOUR CHOICE -·_*
VANTAGE
· Menthol
Winston
LIGHTS
'· ....
NOW lOO's. MENTHOL lOO's: 2 mg. "tar". 0.2 mg. nicoune. SALEM ULTRA: 6 mg. "tar", 0.4 mg. nico11ne, SALEM Ul.TRA lOO's: 6 mg. "tar". 0.4 mg. nicotine. VANTAGE ULTRA LIGHTS. UL TAA LIGHTS lOO's: 6 mg. "tar". 0.6 mg. nicotine.
VANTAGE. CAMEL LIGHTS: 9 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicoune. WINSTON LIGHTS113 mg. "ta(, 1.1 mg. nicotine. MORE FILTER. MENTHOL: 21 mg. ·:tar".1.8 mg. nicotine. av. per cigarette oy F1C method;
NOW SOFT PACK FIL ltR. MENTHOL: 2 mg. "tar''. 0.2 mg. mcoune. VANTAGE MfNTHOL. SALEM LIGHTS1 11 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine. SALEM LIGHTS lOO's 11 mg. "tar". 0 9 mg. nico11ne.
VANTAGE lOO's: 12 mg. "tar". 0.9 mg. nicot1ne. WINSTON LIGHTS lOO'a: 13 mg. "tar", 1.0 mg. nicotine. CAMEL LIGHTS lOO's: 13 mg. "tar";l.1 mg. nicoune. av. per c1gare1te, FTC Report DEC. '79. ~
Take this 50¢ carton coupon to your store for the carton
of your choice. Then, send us the end flaps from the carton
you just bought with the mall-In-offer on the right, and we'll
send you a dollar-off-a-carton coupon.
-1 I
·.'"
•
Bunta.gton Beaeh
Foa•taln V!,,~0~y
* VOL. 73, NO. JOI, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS·
Carter Vows No Hostag.e 'Politics'
WASHJNGTON (AP> -President Carter , vowing his hostage
decisions will not be affected by politics. le~ the White House
today for a final campaign swing while Ronald Reagan flew to the
West Coast to end hts campaign, confronted by tbe issue has
advisers feared the most.
White House aides said developments in Iran would determine
whether the president would• keep to an election-eve schedule that
included stops in Akron, Ohio; Granite City. Ill.: Springfield, Mo.:
Burbank, Calif.; Portland, Ore .. and Seattle, Wasb . Carter then is
to flv home to Plains, Ga., where he will vote Tuesday.
Reagan's final day of the 1980 campaign included an outdoor
rally in Peoria. Ill., and then stops in Portland, Ore., and San
Diego before returning to his Los Angeles area home.
• * * * H ·ostag,es ·
Mari•a Quern
Janet Coles , a 17-year-old
senior , is the 1980
bomecpming queen at
Huntington Beach's M artna
Hig h Sch ool. S he is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Cole.
Citizens
Chastise
Anthony
Death
t
Ruling
Delayed
WASIDNGTON (AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court today set
aside a ruling th at blocked
C alifornia prosecutor s fro m
seeking the death penalty in
"especially heinous. atrocious or
cruel .. murder cases.
By a 6-3 vote, the jus tices told
the California courts to restudy
decisions striking down that
portion of the st ate's capita
puni s hment l aw a s
unconstitutionally vague .
The tourt's brief order said,
''The judgment is vacated and the
case· is remanded to the Court of
Appeal of California, First
Appellate District, to consider
whether its jlldgment is based
upon federal or state
con11tttudcmal grounds.''
Justices William J . Brennan
Jr., PotterSt.eward and J ohn Paul
Stevens dissented.
Under California law. a capital
c a se jury first must decide
whether a defendant is guilty of
first -de gree murder . If t he
.verdict is first-degree murder,
the jury determines whether the
crime included one or more
"special circumstances ."
On e o f th ose s p ec i al
circumstances st at es, "The
murder was especially heinous.
atrocious. or cruel manifesting
exceptional depravity . . . a
By GLENN SCOTT conscienceless or pitiless crime °' uie o.11, P'llot su11 which is unnecessarily tortuous to
One after another at a recent the victim."
meeting, residents of a poor State prosecutors attempted
section of Santa Ana m ar ched to last year to introduce that special
th e front of a h a ll t o pose circumstance in the separ ate
a ccusing questions to Phili p cases of two Sapta Clar a County
Anthony a bout an unpopular murder defendants. Allen Leroy
P'roposal to move a rescue Engert and J ohn Wayne Gamble.
mis_slon to their neighborhood. Engert was charged in t he May
A f t e r ea c h c h a r g e, h e 16. 1979 strangulation of Adria
patiently stood from a folding ManninginSanJose.
c ha ir in t he frQnt ro w. At Gamble wasaccused ofbeating
6-feet-4-inches, he was the tallest a 2-year-old girl. Shanean Hall . to
person in the room. He tried to death in August 1979.
explain he didn't have control The details of each crime. as
over the location. The city of recounted by state prosecutors.
Santa Ana does. are gruesome
Then another citizen would Both Engert and Gamble
s tep forward with 1lnott\er ~challenged the use of specia l
question designed to chastise circumstance , attacking it as too
and challenge the First District va gue to meet constitutional
Orange Coun\.y supervisor. due-process standards.
The grilling was supposed to A state trial judge agreed and
be part of a question and answer barred the introduction of the
Bession for incumbent Anthony special ch:cumstance. May 1, a
pnd his chaU.-ger in Tuesday's California appeals cout\ ruled
aupervisorial election, Roger that in the context of the state's
Stanton. c a pital punishment.. law the
Stanton couldn't come. He was s pecial circumstance's "vague
teaching a night class at language cannot withstand
California State University, constitutionalscrutiny."
Long Beach, so lie sent a n The California Supreme Court
<See ANTHONY Pa1e All on June 25 refused to review an ' appeal from that ruling by the
.------------. state attorney general'soffice.
Coast
Pets Resru€'d
IN AN INTE RVIEW BROADCAST today on NBC, the
Republican presidential candidate said he was optimistic about his
election prospects.
"I believe that we've done everything we can do," he said.
If he loses, Reagan said, "This would not destroy me as a
person. I would be deeply disappointed because I believe in the
need for a change in the direction this country's been going in."
Reagan was joined at a morning rally in Peoria, lll. 'today by
comedian Bob Hope. former Presidenl Ford, vice presidential
running mate George Bush and former ama bassador Anife
-Armstrong.
"We have more than a president who has failed. We have a
president who refuses to admit his policies had anything to do with
* * * * * * Nearer to
AP'Wl ........
KHOMEINI AUTHORIZES HOSTAGES TRANSFERS
AddreHed MIHtenta Todey In Tehren
Library Backers
To Launch Protest
Supporters of the Huntington
Beach library system say they
wi ll protest tonight the recent
co nsolidation of the librar y
department into the community
ser vices department.
They claim they were never
consulted about the action that
t hey believe will downgrade the
library. They also charge that
similar mergers have been tried
but found wanting in othe r
California c.ities.
George Williams. president of
the five.member· library board,
said that the action will take
important functions out of the
hands of a librarian.
OpJJIO'ition to the merger that
was imple mented earlier by
interim City Administrator Ben
Argello. also was voiced by the
Frie nds of the Library, a n
o rga nization o f a bo ut 250
volunteers.
President J anice Pelis said
the mo ve e nd a ng e r s the
library's sense of identity while
also developing another layer of
bureacracy.
L i bra r y Direc tor Wa lte r
Joh nson fo r merly repor ted
d ir ec tl y t o th e cit y
a dm inistrator. He now will
a ns wer to Vince Moorhouse.
d i r ector of the com m unity
services department.
Moorhou s e als o ove rsees
beach and har bor operations
and r ecreation depar t me nt
operatjons.
"We are conce rned there was
not enough study and that the
decision was made at the spur of
the moment," Mrs. Pelis said.
She s aid volunteers put in
about ·1s.ooo hours of library
1er vice over;the past yea~ and
that the vofunteers ma de it
possible to keep three branch
libraries open.
Mayor Ruth Bailey, however.
has indicated that the merger
has the strong support of the
City Council bec ause it will
tighten admini s tra ti v e
procedures .
.
Weather
Continued sunny. Lows
ton11bt M alonf the coast,
62 lnlud. Hllbs Tuesday 1• to 11 at beaches, 82 to 86
Mesans Adopt 2 Dogs
inland. •
IN81DE TODA,.
COftt'NWrlll conttnuer ovtr tfw •ff«:U of IM Three Mf~
l1kind nuclftr oc~. S.e
•tOrWI, ... A1. ..• ,.
.... _..,,.. ... a.L...-n a.a .
~ ............ ........ ..... ... ..
~ .. M9"'9 .... . ~ ................. .. = AM=-.. e.--... d AM .... ......... ., ....... ....................... .. ,, , .... ,....... .... ................... .... M
Two small dogs who were
rescued from near·starvation
nine months aao have escaped
deathuecondtlme.thankstotwo
Costa Mesa families.
Orange County Animal Shelter
oUlclala said the two families,
•bo h..S readolthedo11' pUpt in
a Dally Pilot article. adopted the
dot• s.turday.
Accordin1 to police, the pets
. were dllcovered near d~at.b l'eb.
8 after havint been abandoned ln
a Huntinl'OG Beach bome.
Tbe peta wen held at the
1l9elter u mdence in an aninaal
erplty cue a1almt their mlu&na
owner .
1\ft ... tMt WINI..,.,.._ ur-.ct
last Wednesday and surrendered
ownership of the dogs, officials
said the peta probably would be
pot to death lf they were not
adoptedwtttiJn a week.
Anlmal control officer Al
Garcla aal~ the shelter received
Paet Reached
SCon'SDALE, Arb. CAP> -
Orerhound Unts In~. reuhed a
tentative contract settlemenl wltfa a bul drtYSI' URlon with taat three boun to spare, bled·
•• off a ..UC.wide walkout for the~·· ...... t lateqt.ate ..... ....., .... ..
many calls about the dogs but had
to obtain formal release papers
from their forJnfr owner, which
arrived late Fr1dty.
·'When we opened at to a.m.
Saturday, .there were two
f amilles wait1n1 ror them,"
Garciaaald. "They both had read
the •rtlde and weN Mappy to 11ve them newbomei. ••
Ht said the l ·ytar·old
d1ch1hund mix wu adopted by a t•mlly, while the I -year-old
terrler.poodl• max wu
purcbued by a woman toHrveu
colbpanyfor ber mollaer. Oatcta ldclld tbat ...._ <>nnp
ca.na .... ~·
those failures." Regagan told the crowd.
He stsessed Carter's alleged economic railures in his speech, and
avoided any mention of' the latest developments in the hostage
situation that could affect the outcome of the election Tuesday.
Reagan, seeking votes Sunday in critical Midwest industrial
states, shied away from commenting on the latest developments in
Tehran and kept up his criticism of Carter 's handlinl of the
economy.
CAMPAIGNING IN DAYTON, OIOO, HE concentratf"rl cm economic issues saymg. ··carter economics have been a .m~<_>r
tragedy for many American families . . . Every time interest
(See CANDIDATES, Page J\2)
* * * • *
Freedo1n
Militants
Release
Custody
By The Associated Press
Iranian militants met with
s pirit ual le ader Ay a to lla h
Ruhollah Khomeini today and
t h e n tu rne d ove r
'"res ponsibility'" ror their 52
Americ an captives t o t he
I ra nian governme nt. U .S.
officials, who are considering
Iranian terms for their freedom.
s aid the developme nt was a
major breakthrough toward
their eventual release .
"We will from n ow o n
delegate responslbllty for the
hostages' safeguarding lo the
government and will engage in
the most important current
issue of the revolution, derense
of the Islamic homeland,"
Tehran Radio quoted a
statement from the militants as
aayillt.
The militants were referring
to Iran's border war with Iraq.
Plans for the physical transfer
of the hostages will be worked
out followiq a "meeting before
mid night" <mid-day PST>
between the government and the
militants, officials of the Iranian
prime minister's office reported.
The militants' statement said
the gove rnment during that
meeting would "int roduce their
re presentative for deli very of
the A~rican spies."
TV aides t o the pr ime
minis t e r said Alger ia was
delegated to handle talks with
Washington a nd the captives'
release if the U.S. government
me ets Iran's de mands.' They
said that in the meantime Iran
will continue to ha ve custody of
the hostages. who will "remain
where they are." presumably
meaning the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
In Washington, Wh ite House
press secretary J ody Powell
said the transfer "is something
we have seen sin ce the very
outset as being an im portant
s tep towa rd t he i r eventua l
release . That 's something we
have labored long and hard to
get this spring and thought we
had it there for a few hours and
did not. So if this happens, it's a
very encouraging sign."
Representatives of the Islamic
mi l ita nts who s eized the
Ame rican Embassy and its staff
Nov. 4, 366'<iaysltgo, met for two
hQ.ur:s. today with Ktrome lni
following the approval Sunday
by the Majlis. Iran's parliament •.
of terms for the release of the
Americans . Tehran Radio said
one militant read a statement to
<See HOSTAGES, Page All
ONE
YEAR·
Woman Dies
In Beach
Accident
A woman was killed and a
man seriously injured when
struck by a car in the Bolsa
Chica State Beach parking lot.
Debra Ewell, 21, of Anaheim, died at the scene at 7:20 p.m.
Sunday. Randolph Terrell, 26, of
Anaheim , was in guarded
condition today at Huntington
Beach Inte r -Community
Hospital, according to a hospital
spokeswoman.
The two we re hi t while
walking on a service road in the
s tate beach parking lot . a
California Highway P atrol
s pokesman said.
The driver of the 1966 Volvo,
Connie Hammons , 21, of Long
Beach, was not held, authorities
said. The case still is under
investigation.
HD School Pact
Sets l 6 o/o Boost
The 600 classified employees
<janitors. bus d r i ve r s .
secretaries. gardeners, cafeteria
workers) of the Huntington Beach
Union High School District have
agreed to a new contract calling
for a 16 percent raise overt he next
two years.
Because of a typographical
errpr, a story in Friday's Daily
Pilot incorrectly stated the
percentage figure . The Daily
Pi lot regrets the error.
Strike Looms
,VISTA (AP) -North County
Transit bus drivers, mechanics
and other employees say they'll
go on strike soon because· they
have failed to win a favorable contract.
Ribbons Tied
Club Remen1 ben Hostages
Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club members
today tied yellow ribbons on non·bearing pear treH in the
courtyard at the Civic Center.
"We're tying the ribbons oo 52 trees in support of each
of the boetages held by Iran," said club member Linda
Griffitbs.
uwE WILL LEA VE THEM up until they c~n serve u
a welcome home symbol when the hostaaes are-releu~ -
whlcb ~hope II very sdon, '' ahe sald. The ceremony. at\ended 1)y Mayor Ruth Balley and
Councilw9man Ruth Finley, w11 held on the flrat
annlvenary of the selture of the hosta1e1 al the American
Embuay,
• .,,. 18 A oan.ras to show famUin and holta&es
"That we baven'tJorfotten and aN llMPlAI ~faith," lteOIJ
8alt, pree&dent of tbe woman•a club, aakl. · n. City Co•cll l• .cbedulecl toft'-t to adopt a
l'ffOlutioll honorln1 tbe or1anlJatktD tor lta remnabnnce.
BEJRUT'. L•bapon <AP> Iran, which llaa held 52
Amerkau hot~• for a year. Invoked "all lnteroatlonal eodea
Md refUlatJonl · today ln dtmandlnf the. releue of Its oil mlnlater, who wu captW'ed by Iraq forces on the Abadan
, bat\lefroot
But Iraq, which report*1 the capture of Mohammed Jawad
Baqulr Tunauyan and ftve .W.. P'nday, said tbe captives were
prlaonen ol war. Tbe demand for tllelr releae was made by
Iranian Prime.)llnlater Mohamma.d AU Rajal. who alao plans to
take part in indlrect neaottatJoos oo the American boltaaes. ,
· R-.ial 's olfice said Sunday that Iran was "honored to find ilJ
officials amb1A1bed alongside the oeoole wbJle aafe~uardbul the 1lori~ revolution." It called on Iraq tq ensure the officials'
welfare. buts aid they were ready ~oaacelllcetheir lives.
lla•OaHd Slal•
................
ATLAJffA (AP> -A 9-year-0ld boy whose body was found
on a riverbank apparently died of asphyxiaUon, making him the
11th black child found slain in the city in 16 months, police
reported today.
The body of Aaron Jackson Jr. was found Sunday on the steep, wooded bank of_ the South River. Public Safety
NEWPORT BEACH POLICE CREWMEN INSPECT DAMAGE AFTER THEIR HELICOPTER CRASHED IN. SURFLINE
Prellmlnary lnvetttgatlon Indicate• Stablllzlng ""°'May Have Falted, :SplnnlngMechlne lnto~S.a
Commissioner Lee P. Brown told a news conference today.
Brown said a preliminary autopsy report indicated the boy was asphyxiated. F,.....PageAJ 2 NB c ·ops
Unhurt in
The child, who lived with his father in southeast Atlanta.
wai; last seen about 7 a.m. Saturday, Brown said, but the father
didn't report him missing until almost 20 hours later because he
thought the boy was visiting a friend.
ANTHONY OPPOSED • • •
Conrictlo• Sf a•d•
WASHINGTON ( P ) -The U.S. Supreme Court today
rejected Rep. Michael Myers' challenge to the grand jury
indictment lbat led to his bribery conviction and expulsion from
Congress.
• The justices, without-comment, left intact rulings that the
indictment was valid and did not encroach on Myers'
constitutional ''speech and debate'' privilege.
Myers, a Democrat from Philadelphia. was convicted of
takin a $50,000 bribe from undercover agents posing as Arab
businessmen seeking politicaJ favors in the FBl's "Abscam"
investigation. He was convicted along with New Jersey State
Sen, Angelo Errichetli, who is also mayor of Camden,
Philadelphia City Councilman Louis Johanson and Philadelphia
lawyer Howard Criden.
.... Pf~r Bia:~ Rag~•
e mi ssary w.,.o opened her
remarks to the lanzelv Latin
crowd in Spanish.
It seemed a clever POliticai
move. but almost all the
ques tions were aimed at
Anthony. It was as if the
candidates night was only a ploy
to force Anthony to be pressured
into supporting the neighbors'
cause.
To that extent, it worked.
Anthony promised to fight the
unpopular location if the . group
remained opposed to it. And
when the session was completed,
it was Anthony, the ersatz
enem y of the neighbors, who
drew the loudest applause.
It has been that kind of a 'race
for the two candidates. The
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A four-alarm blaze burned out of
control today in a fog-shrouded waterfront warehouse full of creosote-soaked pilings, as firefighters hacked at the pier ln an
attempt to halt the fire's spread.
Fire Chief Andrew Casper said the blaze began between
6 :30 a.m. and 7 a .m. in an old warehouse on pier 70 on the west
side of the city. He said the cause had not been de1ermined, but
fires like this often begin spontaneously.
"This pier's gone," said Casper, peering through the dense
fog at the gutted warehouse. "It's in really b,.d shape. H's
basically a manpower fire. We've got men us ing jackhammers,
chainsaws, axes and crowbars ... ""e're making good
progress."
..._-&EK>tlight.-ha~ed-fixed OA
Anthony,_and his incumbe_pty
has been particularly noticeable
in the race. He has held a lock
on campaign contributions.
outdrawing Stanton by a margin
better than 20 to 1, and he has
won endorsements from the four
other supervisors who will serve
the next term.
E'r•• P.,,e A f
CANDIDATES CAMPAIGN
rates go up one poin.t. ~other 1.3 million A~ericans have been
shut out of the housing market." • But at Marietta College in Ohio, Reagan acknowledged that
"We all have on our minds' the matter of the hostage situation in
Iran."
Then the Republican candidate added that "this is not the time
or the place for me to be addressing such a sensitive matter."
The 11th-hour shift of the campaign focus back to the hostages
was.pn Reagan's mind in recent months when be speculated there
migtt.. be an "October surprise" that could Ult the election to
Carter. The Republican nominee expected Carter to try to achieve
a dramatic breakthrough in the situation.
But the movement that occurred was initiated by the Iranians,
. not the White House.
~. CARTER ABRUPTLY HALTED A CA MPAIGN trip and
returned to Washington on Sunday morning to confer with advisers
· on how to respond to the conditions set by the Iranian ParJiament for release of 52 Americans held hostage since Nov. 4, 1979.
The long 1980 election campaign ends on Tuesday when more
than 80 million Americans are expected to decide the outcome of
thousands of contests for prizes ranging from the White House to
local offices.
Voters will elect 34 senators , the entire House or
Representatives and 13 governors.
If the pollsters are right and if the Iranian hostage situation
doesn't cause a lasl-.mioute surge to one candidate or the other, the
presidential race looks too close to call.
Republicans are optimistic about their chances to pick up five
or six Senate seats and at least 12 House seats. Neither gain would
be enough to end a generation of Democratic control of both
legislative bodies. -HOWEVER, THE POTENTIAL SENATE victims include -
veteran Democrats Warren G. Magnuson of Washington, George
S. McGovern of South Dakota, Frank Church of Idaho and Birch
Bayh of Indiana. and Jacob ·Javits of New York, a senior
Republican.
· Also threatened by tough opposition this year'are such ranking
House Democrats as Jim Wright of Texas, the majority leader;
John Brademas of Indiana, the assistant majority leader; Morris
Udall of Arizona, chairman of the Interior Committee, and Al
Ullman of Oregon, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee .
Said Anthony : ··As a n
Incumbent, the people can look
at your record and see if you're
qualified. I've tried very hard to
work with the people . . . I've
trie d to work hard to get
results."
Stanton also h ~s made
Anthony's experience' in office
an issue by tying it with the
legal problems that have
haunted lb" supervispr almost
since he took office in 1976 .
"There are a lot of issues in
the coUllty, but the issue in this
race-is who is going to be able to
serve out the term." said
Stanton.
Anthony h'as endured a wave
of publicity. in connection -~1th indictments filed against hi 'on
three conspiracy charges of
laundering ca mpaign
co ntributions in 1976. An
indictment does not assr.e guilt, and Anthony still h n't
gone to,1rial in the matter.
On Thursda y . the st te
Supreme Court turned down his
appeal to throw out the case.
Stanton immediately Interpreted
the action to mean Anthony had
run out or appeals and will have
to stand trial.
Military Rulers
Ban Dissidents
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -
South Korea's military rulers
introduced a law today to ban
peo9le it dislikes from politics
until June 30, 1988, when the
preside.nt's term expires. One of
their courts also upheld the
death sentence against dissident
leader Kim Dae-jung.
The new law was lbe first
major action taken by the
Legislative Council fot. National
Security, an interim bod>: of 81
members appointed to usher In a
"new era" under President
Chun 000.hwan:
ORANGE COAST HF E',.......,,.AI
DAILY PILOT
·-" .. _ .. ~., ...... •ftd ~l\M/
HOSTAGES DUE HOME? • • •
Khomeini asking the
government to relleye the
rnlli,ants of res~naibtlity for
the hostages and allow them to
join the war a1ainst Iraq.
Tehrm Radio said Khomeini
thanked the students and added:
•'The service which lbese young
peorle rendered by seiitn1 and
ho dinl these corrupt
lndJvlduala eliminated the fean
in the minds of the peoples.
nations and aovernments and
the picture they had of the
spectre ol the 1reat powen."
Meanwhile, Prime )flnlster
Mohammad ·All Rajal met with
Al1erla'1 ambassador . In
Tehran, and the two ••reed
Alteria would take care ol the
boetaaes. Pan said. 1t wu not
Immediately known if tbia
mHDt UM captive• would M IJowa to AJPen or rtmaln ln
f ran ....... Allerlan ••rvllioa· ''ID Ulla meetla1 U waa
dftlded tW I.be llGll•m IDd
brotMr Ill .. ., ~ AllWt• wtll
take ~fl tM U.S. lloltalel."
Pars said of the 30-minute
session between Raja! and
Abdul Karim Gbaralb.
·•In reply, the Algerian
ambassador said we wish that
Algeria will be able to do all It
can to rwnu the desires of the
government of Iran and to
safeguard Iran's Interests and
expand bUateral relations as
much as possible.'' •
The -. m baa a ado rs of
Switzerland anad West Germany
also met with Rajal thta•
mornine, Pars said. Durint the
meettnc, the Swlu ambuaador
submitted a meua1e from
Prealdent Carter to RaJal, but
there were no lmmedlate detalla, tbe qency aakl.
A Hnklr Ude to Bajal Hld the offtdal "",,, .............. tdl ol
the cqndWom "1dl tile llaJla
a1fffd OD for tltl releaM fl tbt Amerteal would ..... y. late
tod•J or ..,, 'l'ueldiy to the
Al .. rl• ....... , for diUYel'J toUleUA~t.
Stanton likes to point out that
if Anthony is convicted, he
automatically loses his position
and Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
is responsible for appointing a
new supervisor.
Stanton hesitates to talk about
his chances of winning a Brown
appointment. something he
claims the voters don't .>Vant.
Instead he says: "By electing
me, they don't have lo worry
about a governor appointment."
To Anthony , howev·er ,
Stanton's attack on him has the
appearance of "a cheap shot."
"I've served out one term with
these charges there all the time
and I think there is good reason
I can serve out another term.··
he said.
"More-than-t.bat...-the charges
are terribly inflated and you'll
see that eventually it will be
shown that I'm not guilty as
charged."
Anthony also refutes Stanton's
charge that he next will "stand
trial on the Ca mp aig n
Laundering charges.
But the crux of Stanton's
campaign remains Anthony's
precarious legal s ituation.
Anthony charged Friday that
Stanton bad mailed a "crude"
flyer to voters in Fountain
Valley, Garden Grove and Santa
Ana that was a montage of
newspaper headlines describing
Anthony's legal situation.
Anthony .. who •a id h-is
campaign has been "squeaky
clean," said Stanton's mai.l~r
wJts a last-minute smear.
Stanton, who sent out an
earlier mailer warning voters of
an eleventh-hour smear by
Anthony, claimed his mailer
doesn't qualify as .such.
''To warn voters that Anthony
is under indictrpent is not a ·
• smear," he said. "That is a fact
and a smear is a lie."
_ Among. the influeJllial who
have endorsed Anthony is Sth
District Supervisor Thomas
Riley. who has said publicly that
he approves of Anthony because
he supports Riley's approach to
1·s"S"U es s u ch' a s s e tt li n g · ·
noise-problems at John Wayne
Airport. Anthony has said he
won't approve any expansion ii
it creates more nmse for airport
neighbors.
Stanton, again o n the
offensive. said he doesn't like
Anthony's position to "study it to
death." •
'1My decision is to make a
hard decision one way or the
other." said Stanton. "Whether
it would be to expand the
airport, I don't know. I'm not
ready to commit to any decision yet. ..
Air Crash
By STEVE MARBLE
Of-Deity~~, .... Two Newport Beach police
officers walked away unharmed
from the wreckage of their
patrol helicopter Wbich they
were forced to crash-land in the
surfline Sunday afternoon in
west Newport.
Sgt. Richard Miller, who was
pi loting the brand new Hughes
helicopter. and his passenger,
Officer Todd Seiders, crawled
from the banged-up craft and
waded to shore !ollowing the
3: 45 p.m. mishap near Fern
Street.
Swimmers and lifeguards in
the area dragged the helicopter
out of the water and back up to
the sand.
A number of sunbathers along
the crowded strand reporte
seeing the patrol bird flying low
along the coastline and then
suddenly spinning out of control.
Police reports indicate Miller
and his partner were on routine
patrol at an altitude of roughly
150 feet and bad just completed
a 180 degree turn when the
aircraft began to vibrate.
At this point, police said, the
helicopter started spinning
clockwis~. rapidly losing
allltude and diving toward a
group of _s~ers and swimmers.
Sgt. MJUer, police continued.
was able to nurse the diving
helitopler away from the crowd
be.fore splashing i~to the. ocean.
Initial reports indicated that the $80,000 helicopter may bave
developed problems with its tail
rotor. A stabillzlng rotor on the
rear of the bird. police said, was
somehow jarred loose.
The crumpled helicopter later
wa'S ha•lled to T-allmant z
Aviation al John Wayne Airport
where it will be studJed by police
investigators to determine the
exact cause of the mishap.
F e d e r a l A ·v i a l i o n
Adm~nistration officers said
they do not investigate accidents
involving public aircraft 'unless
invited to do so.
Two years ago, a pair of
Newport officers escaped injury
when their patrol helicopter
flopped down on a remote dirt
road on the Irvine Ranch.
The Garage Brings It Together for Fall
Here we feature our own mid ·wale cord pant,
with a Pf•·ftn1shed plain bottom, accented
by one of our many easy care plaid aponahirts
and a gr_.1 sNwl collared pullover sweater
• I
Fro•Pa~Af
PETS ••. _.
County Animal Ass istance
League, which also read of the
dogs' plight, agreed to pay the
spaying fees required by the
county.
said that while these two dogs
have been saved, many other pets
at the shelter still are io need of
new homes. ..
Trio Soµght
In Robbery
Of _Jewels
:(.
-'
~ ..
W eg.t..m-"'6-t ff -po Ii ee-aF4J----.-'--
searchlng today for three men
who lied up the owner and a
clerk at a jewelry store and fled
with thousands of doUan worth
of valuables from the di.splay
cat1es. Officer Earle Graham said the
total value of the Sunday loss
has not been computed but said
the thieves "cleaned out" the
store.
The hold-up took place at 4:45
p.m . at Royal 14-K Gold, 14272
Beach Blvd., Westminster.
Graham said three black men
in their 20s. one w~ring a green
rubber mask and one armed
with a hand-gun, entered tJle.
store, lied the owner and clerk
in a back room, removed the
iewelry und ITed.
Miracle
Doing· OK
LYNWOOD (AP) -An
8-pound baby 1irl who
earned the name Miracle
alter she developed jn her
mother's abdomen instead
of her uterus was in stable
conditjon today at St. Francf.i Hospital. ,.. ·
Miracle Stephanie Jean·
Lewis was born b y
Caesarean sectioa to 31·
year-okl Maebelle Hood on
.Friday night.
Doctors were unaware
the fully developed baby
was positioned outside the
uterus until delivery when
it was discovered that the
fetus had become attached
to Hood's small intelline.
Such births occur about
once in every 15,000 to
20,000 births, doctors said.
' ALSCARAOE
56 FASHION lSLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
•
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Ml:lndlr. ~r 3.1980 CWLYN.01' •
ChaFm P.oWers· .
~Asian Airline
8y MILTON M08KOWVITZ
"Coffee, tea or me .. was an expresalon cotn.d ~
describe the porno1r1pby or alrllnea promotln1 tbel
aervice by selling the virtues of their 1te•arde11e1
Women's Ubbers U5ed lo declaim milbUly apimt taQ
form of promotion. their ire being particularly aroused b~
the old ''Fly me" campaign of National Airlines.
It's probably not fair to credit the women's Ubbert wttht
the disappearance of National Airlines, but there It la: Na~
tional Airlines no longer exists. '
The airline that once had such a visible presen~e on UletJ
New York·to-Florida run has disappeared into the !olda ~
Pan American World Airways, which has emeried trium·
pbantly u both~ domestic and international airline, one of
the tour supercarriers
ol the U.S. airline ln·
dustry Cthe others being
United , T W A and
American). l Meanwhile. the .. Fly
me" campaign has dis·
appeared. too, and it's •
Money
Tree
not likely lo be resurrected by Pan Am. However, Pan Am
may soon be locking horns on international routes with an
airline that uses a sophisticated variation on the "Coffee,
tea or me .. approach in the sale of jetliner seats. This car·
rier is Singapore AirJi.nes. and it's no joke. It is, in fact, the
world's fastest growing airu,ne.
Both Pan Am and ~ingapore Airlines are scheduled to
open new routes next month. Pan Am will be resuming a1r
ser vice to China. a route it pioneered. It plans lo fly three
flights a week tp Peking -one from New York. one from
San trancisco and one from Los Angeles. All three wotild
slop in Tokyo, a destination already served by Pan Am.
SINGAPORE AIRLINES, which would like -but has
not yet received permission to fly to China, will be in·
auguraling a new route out of Los Angeles on Dec. 1. It will
be flying nonstop to TolCyo three afternoons a week (Mon-
day, Thursday and Saturday J -and then on to its home
base in Singapore. This service will compete directly with
Pan Am and Japan Ai r Lines.
Touching down in t he U.S. is not new for Singapore. It
already has two nights a week out or Los Angeles. going to
Taipei and Singapore. And it rues out of San Francisco
four times a week to Hong Kong and Singapore.
Many may not realize that Singapore is a country. It
split from Malaysia in 1965. Singapore is an Island nation
with a land area that's only a little more than hal(. the size
of Los Angeles. It has a population of 2.3 rpill.ion, 75 per.
cent of them ethnic Chinese. But i.n eight years it bas built
-up an airline that now ranks among the world's 25 largest
-and if it keeps going, who knows where it will end up?
HOW HAS A SMALL country been able to field such a
successful airline? Location helps. Sitting south or Viet·
nam at the point where the Sound China Sea meets the
Strait of Malacca, which leads to Burma, India and Sri
Lank.a, Singapore is the "hub or t.tie Orient.". It's equidis·
tant from Hong Kong, Calcutta and Perth in Australia. It
bas loog been one of the world's major ports and with the
advent of air travel, it became an important atop for
airlines.
Thirty airlines now touch down in Sin1apore. And that
waa the wedge Singapore Airlines uaed. For the rule oft.be
international airline business la: if your country's airline
stops in my country, roy airline should have a right to land
in your country. Singapore Airlines now rues to 37 cities ln
28 countries .
Singapore Airlines bought planes from Boeing (its 1979
order for 13 74/s was the biggest single order Boeing bad
ever received). and it went to the San Francisco design
firm Landor Associates for instruction on bow to present
itself. Landor's advice: Be modem but retal.n some of the
mystery of the East.
Singa pore Airlines has done that with its "Singapo,..
girl'' promotion. The face this airline presents to the
public. in print or broadcast ads, is that of Its female fllgbt
attendants. But there's more than hype al work here:
Singapore Airlines does not ~long to the internaUonal Air
Transport Assn., and it can lhere(ore go its own way in
providing amenities to passengers.
THE THEME IS PAMPER the passenger. The
Singapore Airlines jets carry. more fli~bt attendants than
any other airlines do. Cocktails and wme and brandy are
served without charge, even to coach passengers. Th~
menus are lavish. And there's s uch attention to detail
that the passenger is startled to find the night attendant
callin g him by name as soon as he boards .
It's no wonder that Fortune magazine c~lled it an
"airline powered by ch.arm,." And Chi~a~o Tnbune tr~v~l
editor Kermit Holt said Smgapore Airlines makes air
travel a pleasure again." . . .
Results speak for themselves. Singapore Airlines falls
more than 70 percent of its seats, beating out every other
major international carrier in th.is important category. It's
Asian sex appeal that's rilling those seats.
Gold, Medal Quotations
Gold
London: morning fixing $634.30, up $5.30.
London: afternoon fixing $640.50. up Sll.50.
Parts: afternoon fixing 5634.94.cofC S2.04.
Parts: a~emoon fixing $640.63"." .._
Franllfa.rt: fixing 5634.94. off $2.04.
Zwieb:-$636.00 bid, up $7.00 ; $639.00 asked.
New York: Handy & Harrrtan mid· morning $640.50 up $11.50.
New York : Engelhard selling price mid-morning $640.50, up SU.SO.
New York: Engelhard fabricated gold mid·morning
S662.92, up $11.90. •
... ilt•er
NEW YORK I AP t -Handy & Harman silver today $19.400, up S0.500.
Engelhard silver S19.350. up $0.050. fabricated silver $20.370. up S0.525.
H.-fab
NEW YORK CAP > -Spot nonferrous metal price today:
Copper 98~·1 OH4 cents a pound, U.S. destinations. Lead 4S cents a pound .
ZIDt 37~·39~ cents a pound, delivered.
Tia •.1993 Metals Week composite lb. AhualRm 78 cot.a a pound, N.V .
MettWY -.10.00 per (Jaak.
Pllllln• S65'7·*3 troy oa. N. Y .
~ ...
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•
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Get more value for your c:lmt
with tht famous Dunt-Mine
ads whlr'I iteml ~ up 1o S50 Saturday in ,• . ~· the DAILY PllOT
..
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.... lrOOft .,. Oii etlale
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leldtnM>~ • 9 Wl. POOTUU.
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A at10ftt lllMcMIOtrn •lf.C:11
Ille rnernMt"a ol the 4077th
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atO#
Autlren4e ....ic:-hOme
a IOkll8f h9fo with wlna,
wom•n end song. the
Three Mu1ke1eera ride
i el;.a.1 CONTACT(R)O
M0JECT UHIVEAU'
"Steltat Btighlness
Tel.UIOn
A.my Holl811d; Chef T ..
1oll1 pie Cl'\ilt; l)r, WMCO
a ow on diet pllla.
IOUDCIOlD
ts Gladys Kn!Qht And
TM PIPt, StaYe AllM.
Tanya Tueller. ~. Hall
And Oat". Eddie RaOblll. -~·· WAT'll' DI IMMA·
PROP08ITION •
Conoell: Clet• Aoberll In
Loa Af19411" encl Spencer
MlchH111n 581' Frane19c:o
l:IO I Cl) ~MAH CAIQ. llUANETT
AHOl'NINOI
Ci) llU. MOYEM'
JOUMAL
"Campaign Rapof1: Elae-
tlon Eve Spec;lal'' Biii
Moyett w1apt up IM can\·
palgn and views on tM
tllec:tlon 1nch.odlng Int.,·
views with cltl.ten1 from
around the country and
profeulonal ObM<V8fS.
1:45 8 aJ) TOM
AHf4()UNCeD
t:OO IJ CIJ w·A·a·H
I NATIONM.._.
9LLMOYWW'
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"CMI08iQll Reoott: tlee-
llon Eve Special" 8111
Moy«a Wf'C>9 UC) I~ eam•
pelgn INlucJng lnlerviewa
with c111ten1 hom eround
the country end ptOIM·
alonelo~•
"1!J MAN<MJMIU
Amerlea'e 1t•r·11>11t1gled
Mtlttsl klells ot1 hiS sixth
Muon OI 1te.nd·up llOngl
end blptrtlsan zlngefl
from lh1' Kllherlne Cornell
Theelar at Iha Univetslly of
8uttalo 1
iO;aO •• NIW9 ITAN ~'8
fEDERAL..WW
11:00 ID Cl) aJ HEWS HOU.YWOOO
80UAMI
fiJ HeWlYWE> GAME
• M•A•t•H
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
TUBE ~OP,l!E
ABC D 6:00 -Monday NI1ht Foot-
ball. The Chicago Bears visit the
Cleveland Browns.
KTLA 8 8:00 -"Gable and Lom-
bard." James Brolin and JW Clayburgh
portray the famous screen lovers of the
Thirties in this movie based on their
brief life together.
CBS 9 9: 30 -"Ca mpaign '80 Pre-
election Special. A final look at the can-
didates and issues in the presidential
election before it goes to the voters.
0 OUNIMOl<E 1r11nec 1111d e man whO per-
forms a sword dance
.....,.,.,..._._ ....
..., ... ~too "'°"' .. • Jewlltfl Mr. (t ......
"*'·' 1:•e<1> ,,.._
A\:WJ-· A......_, ...... plOlt
toUlll•---~
uelnO Ill M""f ol l*dL
'*I .... 1"1&.0Nl--
"OMd .... '•C:..." .......
1:11 ...... ......... 1:11 MCWW
*'*~ "Lodi, SIOcll And
Bettel" (lt70) Tim....,.._ '°"· Belinda J, ~ ery. A 11eit of young io-t
,... the ll''P of ... l>W·
entt In 1111 lltempt to fllW
~.f2hta.)
I I I -..1 > \ ) • i CUNEW9 l:30 •uu..aEYE
Wl!LCOME BACK,
KOTTl!A
Fighting /tlad
Col Pott« rushes oll on a
secret mission and Hawll·
eye 11 appointed tempo·
rary commender (R)
B.J borrows S200 from
Charles 10 MnCI 10 ms wile.
only 10 have Charles take
advantage or h1m in veri·
ousw1y1
«I) OHE STEP HYONO
"Return 0 1 Mllchell Cam·
pion" Mitchell Campion 11
ordeted to teke a tong
"8Cel1on ah., recove<ing
lrom a near fllal acclde.nl.
A vengalul ex-convict
Mells reprisal against a
lormer partner-in-crime
who ran out on a lreln
holdup
Cl> CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
12:20 0 MOYie Ttw•d••'• . oa,,, ·-~ •• ., ... The SweathOQI Stick up lor
Washington when Wood·
man accuses him or cnaal·
ongon aeaam
., 0000 TIMES
Flot1da plays matchmaket
ror Wlllone end a mate
Irland ol James.
Mi chael Landon trains for a battle with
a punch-dnmk traveling prizefighter in
tonight 's episode of "Little House on the
Prairie," airing a t 8 o'clock on NBC .
Channel 4.
0 PAID POUTICAL
PAOORAMMINO
G) MEAVOAIFFIH
.. Tne Duke And I'' A eollec·
l•on of intltfViews with th•
late Jann Wayne ere •ea·
lured Guest· dlrector
Andrew Mcloglen
" '1:) MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
G) HOGAN'S HIEAOES
Hogan and h•s men
arrange to Dlow up a room
fuU of Nazi brass
Cl) ITT AKE.8 A THIEF
Al Mundy 11 assigned 10
lond out 1t a blHlonaire
recluse 11 11111 alive
• • ·~ "Crowhaven Farm"
(1970) Hope L'"09. Lloyd
Bochner A woman finds a
mllelatrom ol wllchcrah
and terror awa111ng her
when she inherits a New
England farm (2 hrs J
11!00. * * "R9d R,_
Range" ( 1931) John
Wayne, Ray Corrigan. TM
Three Metqu11-. ... OU1
10 nab a gang of c.ttle
!Neves operating along the
Red River. (1 hr.I 8D DtCK CAVETT
"Election Eva Wllh Antho·
ny Lew11 And Jane Bryant
Quinn"
'1l) S-2·1 CONTACT(R)Q
Cl) M•A•S•H
0Psych1atr111 Major FrffO·
men comes lo lhe asyluOl
that 11 th• 40771h 10 clear
his head and 11nds release
In 111 unique l0tm ol on'8n•·
ly
early life and In turn.
doubts 1bou1 her death.
fm OV£REASY
Guest actress Ruth Gor·
don O
'1l) ~EJL / LEHREA
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC OOUOH
7:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN
• Hosll Steve Edwards and
Melody Ao0ers fil FlOHT 8ACK WITH
DAV10 HOAOWITZ
7!00 8 CU HEWS D NBC HEWS
Top•c• include Rubber·
maid Rough Neck trash
con commercial: mace,
credit cards and ctedll
lntormat1on bureaus;
Poland Spr.ng Water, W1k1
W1k1 POlltO Chips
"
D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Marlon translorms herself
Into a veiled oeauty when
She IHrs she might 1ose
Howard 10 a younge< wom·
an 8 JOKER:S WILD at M0A•S•H ·
Hawkeye's raee is badty
burnt when a stove he 11
!_Tng to Ila eaplodes m IAAETTA
The muroe< of a prominent
auomay's w1111 099ns a
can of worms aDoul h.,
D SHA HANA
Guesll Jan and Deen.
0 FACE THE MUSIC
Q) AU. IN THE FAMILY
Edith convinces Archie to
rent oul Gloria's old room
lo bring In some extra
money
&l) MACNE.IL / lEHRER
REPORT
Chann~I L t.t i ng•
8 KNXT ICB$) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Lc»s Al\geles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV(ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
fiJ KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angeles
l1J) KCST (ABC) San Diego ID KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles m KCOP·TV (Ind I Los Angeles
11) KCET· TV I PBS) Los Angeles '1'i> KOCE·TV tPBSI Huntington Beach
'-\ .. -
·~ y
~
• I
/'
... I \ _., . ~-~ " ..
/ t ~
Soaper in GWeeet!e
Kathryn Hays visits the ancient Temple
of Poseidon in a scene from the CBS soap
opera "As the World Turns," sequences of
which are being filmed in Greece, a first for
any daytime se_tial. It airs" weekdays at 2
p.m. ~
FOUR 0 4 Y FILM FESTIVAL
WOMAM ~IRS°' lllUH
MOH.. 1'UIS.. wm» .. THUIS.
ADMISSION FltEE ,,......,.4.,,
uca. HIWPOtlT 11.ACH Alm OOMMtSS•°"
TWO FtLMS IACH 1n1t•te•
7:ff P.M.
Hl•tm.Y
'1:) COHNECTIONS: AN
Al TERNA TE VIEW OF
~HOE
"Tiie Wheel 01 Fortune"
James Burke tteces the
development ol the mod·
em producllon hne from its
• unexpected 011gins 1n mys-
ticism and astrology IR)Q
GI) P.M. MAOAZINE
TV commercial child stars.
windsurfing
1:001) FLO
Farley. Flo s lightwad
mortgage holder who is
running lor ollioe, prom•&·
es free beer from Flo's 1n
exchange for votn fil UTTLE HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE
Charles concocts a plan 10
nurse an aging bo.-er beck
10 hoallh and start him on
the road to a new hie (RI
i MOVIE * * '> "Gable Ai'ld Lom·
bard" ( 1976) James Brolon
Jill Clayburgh Th1rt1es him
-~rk...Gable and Cai,.
ole Lombard discover that
neither the movie moguls
nor the American public
ore ready 10 accept lhetr
1ll1c11 oil-screen romance
C2 hrs I
0 MOVlf * • • Caprice" ( t967)
Oorls Day. Richard Harri&
A woman 11ave1s incognito
10 track down the narcol·
1cs rmg respans1Dle lor her
lather s death (2 hrs >
Q) P.M. MAOAZJNE
TV commerc•at child stats
w1ndsurhng a talk with
Q) HEEHAW
Guests Tom T Hell.
Jeanna Pruett Henny
Youngman
Sil OREAT
PERFORMANCES
"Tinker. Tailor, Soldier
Spy" George Smiley (Alec 1
Guinness) uncovers the 1
1den111y of the double
agent and the somewhat
notorious Mrs Smlley
hnally makes an appear-
ance (Part 61 O
®) DOH CORfEU.
9:30 IJ Cl) CAMPAIOH '80:
PRE-ELECTION SPECIAL
A summary of develop-
ments as the presiaenttaJ
and congressional cam-
paigns conclude will be
presented fil TO 8£ ANNOUNCED
@)MOVIE
• • • .. The Last Oeta11'
( 197~) Jeck Nicholson.
Otis Young A Pllf of
row<ly shbre patrolmen
emp1 10 teach tne1r
emotionally withdrawn
pflsoner the facts or hie ( t
hr , 30 min)
10:00 I)(]) PAID POU TICAL
PAOORAMMINO
00 HEWS 0 MOVIE • * * •,., "Shiner" ( 19731
James Caan. Peter Boyle
An ex-con finds himself
being followed by two
strange vans when he sets
out to recover a eaQ!e ol
1001 concealed Dy his for-
mer partner Ct hr . 30
min I
"Pflde And Prerudlee" Mr
Collons 1aek1 e reconc::1lra·
t1on wolh the Bennet lamily
and intend• 10 choose one
of the g1rls IOf a wile. (Part
2)0 .
fJl) CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
@; ABCNEWS
50 @) PAID POUTICAL
~RAMMING
11:30 I) Cl) C88 NEWS
SPECIAL
The stalu• ol the Ameri-
cans Who were taken hos·
lage 1n Iran on November
I -MIOHtGHT-
4. 1979. 11 reviewed
fil THEBESTOF
CAA80H
Guests· Buddy Hackell, •
Sally Field CAI 0 PRISONV.: CEU
8l.CX:K H
The future of Hallway
House IS placed on J90P·
ardy when the pohee con-
tinue their 1nterro0ahon of
Doreen. 0 HEWS
JOHN DARLIN.G
12:00 I) Cl) QUINCY, M.E.
Ou1ncy suspects a mercy
killer al a sanitarium is
respon11ble for the prem•·
lure death• or two helpless
and terminally 111 patients
0 TWIUOHT ZONE
A has·been trumpet playe<
attempts to mike a come-
back 0 A8CHEW8
tJ) YOU BET YOUR LIFE
Buddy Hackell meets Greg
Evigan a female while
12:30 fil TOMORROW
Guests: actrau Gloria
Swenson. cotumntst Otana
McClellan
8 DONAHUE
Guest Or PetrlClt Steptoe. 0 THEf'lll
"The Man Who Went Med
By Moslalle"
Q) YOU BET YOUR WFE
Buddy Hacllell meets a
women wno nirH male
exotic deneers. a chili h1s-
l0t1an and a man trying to
save the English language.
61) NATIONAL HEWS
12:50 9 IAOHM>E
A to.year-old witness to e
murder dangerously
rljlsts tronlkle't etlorts to
make him le.lk (Pert lJ
1:00 61) MOVIE • *'"' "Act One" (1963)
Geo<f8 Hamilton, Jason
-AFTERNOON-
12:00. * * * '"' "Eacti Dawn I Die" c 1939) J-Cagney,
George Rell A eruuding
report., la framed and
Mnl to jail. • *** "RloConctloe" t 1964 J IUctlaro Boone. Stu-
art Whitman. Four men Mt
out ecro11 tM Teua
~ ell., the Civil Wer
lo recover llolen Anny
rifles -merlled for .... to
1ne Af)eehee. (2 lwa.) • a:ao a * • "Oeattl o._ ..
(1972) Jorvl MMWy, Lynn
Catlin. A len111y ~ a
t9111gram from the ~
men1 nollfytng tMm Of hie
deal"· bu1 he ,..._ the
-nigtlt clMllng dMt" ror the ommun1ty. (2 In.I
'Sc·ared Straight' Retains Impact
By JERRY BUCK
LOS ANGELES (A P l -"Scared Straight
Another Story" opens with the same stark. brutal
impact as did the Oscar-winning documentary on
which it was based .
A cocky youth s waggers into prison only to
find that he is like fresh meat being thrown to the
lions. His defiance quickly turns to terror when the
other prisoners start vying for h.is sexual f.a vors.
A GUARD, LOCKING him into ·a cell, tells
hjm, "This ain't pr ison. This is a room for the
night. Prison starts when they open the door and
you have to step outside and face them." He
t hrows a thumb toward the inmates outside the
cell. howling and whistling.
The youth. dubbed the "Woman of Mystery."
is raped repeatedly. and the prisoners swap him
about for five packs of cigarettes.
He hangs himself in the prison machine shop,
and it's hjs death that inspires severa l inmates to
organize the "Scared Straight" program for
juvenile offenders. Youths are brought to the
prison t.o hear "the facts of life" about prison from
hardened inmates in such brutal and graphic de·
tail that it liter ally scares them into going
"straight."
"SCARED STRAIGHT -ANOTHER Story,"
to be broadcast Thursday night at 9 on CBS, Chan-
nel 2, stars Cliff De Young as a probation officer
and Stan Shaw as the inmate-0r1anlzer of the"lJro· gr -~original "Sc."8red Straight" documentary,
'r
produced by Arnold Shapiro of Golden West
Television. told or the highly successful program
at Rahway State Pr ison in New Jersey. The
documentary inspired other prisoners to set up
similar programs. and went on to win an Academy
Award.
"We got a call from CBS the morning after it
aired," said Shapiro, who also produced the movie
and now is in charge of movie development for
Norman Lear's T.A.T. Communications.
"THEY SAID THEY didn't know what we
wanted. but they wanted a movie based on that
documentary. We had a meeting with the m. and
John Reynolds said he wanted a commitment to
take It all the way to filming. That's a rare deal.
Usually you get only a commitment for a treat-
ment or a script. CBS agreed to it in 72 hours."
Reynolds is the head of Golden West
Television . and a former president of CBS
Tel&vision.
The movie has a raw force and power. It's like
waiting for a ticking born b to explode. It follows three
black youths who think they've got the system
s hipped. and a white youth and his girlfriend who are
heavily into drugs . Shapiro, who wears an Oscar tie clasp given
him by h.is parents, said he believes the movie can
have an Important role in p\ev~nting crime.
"111J.S IS A TOTALLt, fict~al st ory," he
said. "We wanted to do aometbiJJg~'differelR from
the documentary. It may have more impact
because with a docuntefttaryf·you can only film
what happens before your .camera. But in fiction
you can tell a story. So in a way, tb'e movie is a
more comprehensive look at crime and how people
deal with prison than the documentary."
Shapiro said he screened the documentary for
the cast and crew before they started production.
.. I wanted to show them the importance of what
we were trying to do," he said. "And tbroug.bout
the production, we had that extra punch. People
cared -I won 't go so rar as to say inspired -but
they did care." ··
The documentary contained language never
before heard on television, and the movie will
make a rew breakthroughs itself. It will not have
the four-lettl r words, but will have strong
language that helps build its explosive power.
"THE CONFRONTATION sessions are as
powerful as the documentary,': he said, "even
though we couldn't use the same words. It does
/have the same emotional intensity and the same
t hing terrifying surroundings. Language beromes
secondary."
MARGARITA NIGHT
Giant Margaritas. Chips,
Salsa for $11
-------AIOUT
1 s1 89GREAT
. I MS. NIGHT
-------FreeCarnationforWomenwith an order of
AIOUT their flYOt'lte hlwr•· ~,,.._ •~~~,~~~~~~i 1-!!~·-Happy-· P-..E_:'.o_p~-~-~-·N_:,u_G~-I :_l_...cu"""'.~~-.. I 9 DINNER
Good lor three p1ects 01 1u1cy golden brown Ktnlueky
Fried Ch1c~en. p•u• 11ngle aarY1ng1 of col• slaw.
mashed potatoes and gravy 1nd •roll L1m11 two oCCers
per coupon per customer Customer oeyl all epplica •
Oller expires November 30. 1980
Prices mey v11y at
PlfhC1C)aliftO loc.A·
11on1 Gooo only
In So11thern
C•hlo1n11 w~1•
you H• 111e
Colonel'• ftc•
window banM1
Fried Chicken, w 1tl'I stx fOClt, plu1 you1 elloice of eit"9r a g
1.,oe col• 11ew °' a ta1oe m11hed poca1oe1. and a amall U
g1avy llrnl1 two oUttt "r coupon "' cu1tomef.
Cu1torne1 pay1 all applleablt aalH ta• C1C
Oller expues I November 30. 1980
I PfiCH may v1ry at r>er
11Clptllng tocattont
Good only In Sout,...rn
I C111to1n1a wh9re yOIJ
'" tn• Coton11'1 face wlnOOw~nMf
I
WINE TASTER NIGHT
Any wine on menu ts 11 I 911111
W1'H open .,y bottle
of your choice.
AND DON'T FORGET THE SUPER IO
OF BI LL EAICKION,
APPEARING MONO~ Y • SATURDAV1
~ .. ,,~ COITAMW
3131 .,..,, Ph. 9 7.3000
VOL. 73, NO. D , 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL-I FORNI A MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
Carter ·· Vows No Hostage 'Politics'
WASHINGTON (AP> -Pre.ident Carter, vowing his bottage
declaions will not be affected by politict, left the White House
today ror a final campal1n swing while Ronald Reagan flew to the
Weal Coast to end his campai,n, confronted by rhe issue his
advisers reared the most.
White House aides said developments in Iran would determine
whether the president would keep to an election·eve schedule that
included at.ops in Akron, Ohio; Granite City, Ill.; Springfield, Mo.;
Detroit, Mich. :-Portland, Ore., and Seattle. Wash. Carter. then is
to fly home to Plains, Ga .. where he will vote Tuesday.
Reagan's final day of the 1980 campaign included an outdoor
rally in Peoria, Ill., and then stops in Portland, Ore .. and San
Diego before returning to his Los Angeles area home.
,,* * * *
Ho·stages
---------~ -
Death
Ruling
Delayed
WASIUNGTON (AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Cou.rt today set
· ling_tha~ blocked-
C a Ii forni a prosecutors from
seeking the death penalty in
"especially heinous, atrocious or
cruel" murder cases.
J
t .
IN AN· INTERVIEW BROADCAST today on NBC. the
Republican presidential candidate said he was optimistic about hls
election prospects.
"I believe that we've done everything, we can do," he said.
If he loses, Reagan said, "This would not destroy me as a
person. I would be deeply disappointed because I believe in the
need for a change in the direction this country's been going In."
Reagan was joined at a morning rally In Peoria, Ill. today by
comedian Bob Hope, former President Ford, vice presidential
running mate George Bush and former amabassador Anne
Armstrong.
"We have more than a president who has failed. We have a
president who refuses to admit his policies had anything to do with
* * * * * * Nearer to
By a 6-3 vote, the justices told
the California courts to restudy
decisions striking down that
portion of the state's capita
punishm e nt law as
unconstitutionally vague.
PROPOSED 24-STORY HOTEL OVERLOOKING THE OCEAN IN SOUTH LAGUNA
Developer• Say A1ymmetrtcally Stepped Proflle to Soften Impact •
The court's brief order said.
•'The judgment is vacated and the
case is remanded to 'the Court of
Appeal or California, First
Appellate District, to consider
whether its judgment is based
upon federal or state·
comtttutJooal aroµnds."
Justices William J. Brenniln
Jr .. PotterSlewardandJohnPauJ
Stevens dissented.
Under California law, a capital
case Jury first must decide
whether a defendant is guilty or
first-degree murder. If the
verdict is first-degree murder.
the jury determines whether the
crime included one or more
"special circumstances."
One of tho s e s pec ia l
circumstances states. "The
murder was especially heinous.
atrocious. Qr cruel manifesting
exceptional depravity ... a
conscienceless or pitiless crime
which is unnecessarily tortuous to
the victim."
Stale prosecutors attempted
last year to introduce that special
circumstance In the separate
cases of two Santa Clara County
murder defendants. Allen Leroy
EngertandJohnWayneGamble.
Engert was charged in the May
16, 1979 strangulation of Adria
ManninginSanJose.
Gamble was.accused or beating
a 2-year-old girl. Shanean HalJ, to
death in August 1979.
The details of each crime. as
recounted by state prosecutors,
are gruesome. Both Engert and Gamble
challenged the use of special
circumstaa&e attackin~ it as too
vague to m~et constitutional
due-process standards.
A state trial judge agreed and
ba~ed the intrqduction of the
special circumstance. May 1, a
California appeals court ruled
that in the context of the state's
capital punishment law the
special circumstance's "vague
language cannot withstand
constitutional scrutiny .• '
Miracle ' .
Doing OK
LYNWOOD CAP) -An
8-pound baby 1irl wbo
earned the name Miracle
after 1hl developed ln ber
mother'• abdomen lnltead
of ber Ulerul waa In stable
condition today at St.
Frandl lbp6tal.
· Kiraele st.pbanle Jean
Lewlt wa1 born by
Canana MdJon toll-
1••r4ld MMbeU. Hood on
l"rlday nlpt.
DoC!ton were unaware
tM full1 developed baby ••• poetdo9ed qutalcle tbe
ater111 .W dellftl"J wben
It WU .......... tlaat tbe
fetm W bleome attaebed ro Hood'• ...n ....une. 1Mb'611Milie• about •ee la....., 11.000* ............... Nld.
High-rise Fight Looms
County to Review Hotel ·in South Laguna
By STEVE MITCHELL
OftlleO.itr,.IMtlutt
Oevelopers of a proposed
24-story Ume-share hotel
overlooking the ocean in South
Laguna expect to have a touah
time of it next month when their
project comes up for county
review.
But partners Be rnie Syfan,
Merrill Johnson and Ed Stanton
have faced· opposition before
when they proposed high-rise
units on the ocean front .
The three were partners in the
construction of the Surf and Sand
Hotel in Laguna Beach before
selling the rune-story complex in
1972.
City Coaneil
That project, amon~ others,
sparked heat ed debate and
resulted In the approval of an
initiative in 19'71 that limited the
hei1ht of buildings in Laguna
Beach. This time, the trio faces
members of the vocal South
Laguna Civic Association, which
opposes the proposed 285-foot tall
structure in a Treasure Jslan<t
Trailer Park.
Syfan , a long-lime Laguna
Beach contractor and engineer,
says opponents are placing too
much emphasis on the size of the
600-room complex, 18 floors or
which would be visible from Coast
Highway.
Cl~mente VOters
To Pick Members
Voters in San Clemente will go
to the polJs Tuesday to elect two
, c ouncil m emb ers 'ti> s erve
unco.mplicated terms lasting
until Aprtl 1982. The election was called
following . the r esignations
earlier this year of former
MayoT Roy Hawm and
Counrilman Roy Hqrlbut.
The remainder or the City
Council appointed two veteran
council members to fill those
seats \UlW Tuesday's election.
And while both Patrick Lane
and Thomas O'Keefe said in
June that they bad no desire to
seek additional years on the City
Council, both subsequently
changed their minds.
Their names. along with the
names of-J.0 other contenders,
will appear on Tµesday 's
aeneral electJoo ballot.
O'Keefe, 43, has lived in San
Clemente for 18 years and has
been a council member for a
dosen.oftboH ye.an.
He said he "was persuaded to
return to the City Council"
after reallzlnl the need for
"harmonloua diversity of
opinlon and the experience that I
can provide."
The Stanford law achool
1raduate •aid lie wu dlttnlMd
by CO\md1 st.rife ln the put few
yean and the reslpatlon ~ top
l'evel clty ma-na1ement
penonnel. Lue. a1lo an attorney and a
four-year ctty Council Yetenn,
eeboel 0'""'9'• eoncem that
1tablUt1 be returaed to San
Clamenle pollda.
8'-\ bt allo touts tbe Deed fOC' atrtct contre>la oa· new
deve lopment in San Clemente,
where 8,000. new bomes are on
the drawing boards ii' ttte·cll.)'.:s
back country.
''New developgient must be
strictly contrmled 'So as to
prevent adverse financial or
environmental impact. ui>QQ th~
existing community." he said on
a recent League (){ Women
Voters questionnaire.
Edward Beyer, a 49-year-old
Industrial designer. says he is
concerned about what he sees as
"a deterioration or our streets,
homes, yards and morale In San
Clemente."
The three-year San Clemente
resident says he also sees an
abuse of power in the city
council, and he says the current
politicians "intimidate the
entire town and ill employees."
Former radio broadcaster Jay
Durkin says the present city
councll IJ not paytn1 attention to
priorities ln San Clemente, such
as the pli&ht of downtown
mercbanll and the conditions of
city atreeta.
The J.t.year resident ls a past
c tty traffic and parklna
com mluloner and past
president of the Citiun's
Committee for Paramedics.
He aalcl hi 11 eqaeemed about
pre1ent and future 1rowth ln San
Clemente, and returntn1
credUlllltJ w the city,
Garry Fuller, mana1er ol a
flnudal ftnn, ii the youn1•t cl
tbe dosen candidatal at 21.
ff• has ltNIMd care for San
Clement•'• older dUa.., at
caadlcl1te1' forum&, acldJn1
......... ,..adfewermt&l.ts ( .. OOO'NCO.. Pap Al)
He says the hotel complex will
cover only 2.5 acres of the entire
27-acre property, leaving more
than 24 · acres for public and
quasi-public use and open space.
·'That means only 9 percent or the property will contain the
hotel." Syf an said.
Ir the 600 units were spread out
on the property at one story, the
complex would cover nearly 12
acres, he said.
And he said the impact of the
building will be softened and
diminished by an asymmetricalJy
s tepped profil e, like an
irregular-s haped pyramid,
ranging from three stories at the
sides to24f\tories.
He argues that :notorists on
Coast Highway currently have a
view or mobile homes, eucalyptus
trees and the horizon.
With more than 90 percent or the
parcel devoted to open space and
public uses, the new profile will be
one or landscaping, views of G<>rr
Island. and the ocean, with the
central focus or one building
complex."
But the size of the time-share
hotel is not the only issue that
concerns South Lagunans.
In a critique of the developers'
environmental impact report for
-T reasure Island, the civic
association "disputes figures that
show the 'new complex would
generate only 2,220 vehicle trips
per day.
They point to a recently
complete4 ~ La.guna Speclfc
Plan report tll'it lndicatd 6,216
trips per day ls more realistic,
and say the project will contribute
•'to the predicted disaster traffic
congestion" forecast for Coast
Highway.
Syfan says a time-sharing
complex would generate less
traffic than a rekular hotel or
mote l comp I ex . add l n g
shareholders would use the
beaches on the site, walk to
markets near the complex, and
probabl y u s e publ ic
transporation to visit Laguna
Beach, rather than use their cara.
He said he bued the traffic
figures on studies conducted at
the year-old La1una Shores
time-share complex in Lapna
Beach, and a similar project in
SanDle10.
But opponents say comPartna
the Treasure Island 800-untt
complex with Laguna Shores,
which contains 34 condomlnlum
unite, i• unreall1Uc.
They 1ay tbe L•aun• comple.x ls
within walktnl distance of 1hope
and reetaurant1 a1 opposed to the
reinote location of Treaaut•
II land. ADd.1-the~ __ aa1 "tM conch•km
tba& m....-tenanll of Treuun
bland .,. to1n1 to ue public
traaaponaUcift,'' la ridleuloul. ,
(let nGBT, Pa1eAI)
those failures," Regagan told the crowd. ,
He stressed Carter's alleged economic failures in his speech, and
avoided any mention of the latest developments In the hostage
situationthatcouldafrecttheoutcomeoftheelectionTuesday.
Reagan, seeking votes Sunday in critical Midwest industrial
states, shied away from commenting on the latest developments in
Tehran and kept up his criticism of Carter's handling of the
economy.
CAMPAIGNING IN DAYTON, OHIO, HE coricentratPd _ f\n economic Issues saymg, ··carter economics have 1>een . a !'l~<?r
traifdY for many American families . . . Ev~ry lime interest
(See CANDIDATES, Page AZ> ·
* * * * * Freedo01
Militants
Release
Cust.ody
By The Associated Press
Iranian militants met with
s piritual leader Ay atollah
R uhollah Khomeini today and
.Lh u r n e.....cL __o_v e...t..
·'responsibility" for their 52
Am e rican captives to the
lra.nian gove rn men~. . officials. who are co 1 iig
Iranian terms for their reedom.
s aid the development was a
major breakthrough toward
their eventual release.
''We will from now on
delegate responsiblity for the
hostages• safeguarding to the
government and will engage in
the most important current
issue or the revolution, def~
of the Islamic homeland,·
Tehran Radio quoted a
statement from the militants as
saying.
The militants were referring
to Iran's border war with Iraq.
ONE YEAR
Anthony,
St~ton
Contend
Plans for the physical transfer By GLENN SCOTI'
of the hostages will be worked Of..,. 06Ur,..... • ...,
out following a "meeting before One after another at a recent
midnight'"' Cmid-day PST>. meeting, residents of a poor
between the government and the section of Santa Ana marched to
militants, officials of the Iranian the front of a hall to pose
prime minister's office reported. accusing questions to Philip
The militants' statement said Anthony about an unpopular
the government during that proposal to move a rescue
meeting would "introduce their mission to their neighborhood.
representative for deli very of Afte r each charge, be
the American spies." patiently stood from a folding
The aides to the prime chair in the front row. At
mini s ter said Algeria was 6-feet-4-inches, he was the tallest
delegated to handle talks with person in the room. He tried to
Washington and the captives' explain he didn't have control
release if the U.S. government over the location. The ·city of
meets Iran's demands. They Santa Ana does.
said that in the meantime Iran Thel\ another citizen would
will continue to have custody of s tep forward with another
the hostages, who will "remain question designed to chastise
where they are," presumably and challenge the First District
me aning the U.S. Embassy in Orange County supervisor.
Tehran. The grilling was supposed to
In Washington, White House be part or a question and answer
press secretar y Jody Powell session for incumbent Anthony
said the transfer "is something and his challenger in Tuesday's
we have seen since., the very supervisor ial election, Roger
outset as being an important Stanton.
s tep toward thelr eventual Stanton couldn't come. He was
release. That's something we teaching a n ig ht c lass at
have labored long and hard to California State University,
get this spring and thought we Long Beach . so be sent an
had it there for a few hours and e mi ssa ry who opened her
did not. So if this happens . it's a re marks to the lanzelv Latin
very enco uraging sign... crowd in Spanish.
Representatives of the lslamt~' It seemed a clever p0litical
militants who seized the mov e. but a lm ost all the
American Embassy and its staff questions were aimed at No~.4.366days ago,metrortwo AnJ.hooy. It was as if the
hours today with Khomeini _..,eodidates night was only a ploy
following the approval Sunday to force Anth9.(lY lo be pressured
by the Majlis, Iran's parliament, ihto supporting the neighbori'
or terms for the release or the cause.
Americans. Tetft'aW' Radio said To that extent, it worked.
one militant read a statement to Anthony promised to fhlht the
K h o m e i n i a s k I .n g t h e <See ANTHONY Page .\%) government to reheve the •
militants of responsibility for
the hostages and allow them lo ,
join the w\r al(ainst Iraq.
Build Code
Changes Top
SC Agenda ·
La1una Beach City Council
memben Tuesday will recelve a
recommendation to adopt
chan1es in the city's bulldln1 ,
code and to add pidellnes for
local 1eok>Cical rniew.
The counc:U meeu~at 8 p.m. at
City Hall.• ..
Council members will receive
the Mcommendatlon for
adoprlOn Of the 19'71 Uniform Bulll~~. to comply with
atate ataadardl.
The OD CtOlollcal
re port• would eetabflah
proeedura of the California
Slate Dlvl1ioa of Mine• 1ad ,.Oeolop for 1eoJocical review .
Coast
Weather
Continued sunny. Lows
tonisbt 54 alon1 the cout,
62 inland. Hltbs Tuesday
74 to 78 at beaches, 82 to 86
inland.
INSIDE TOD~"
COfttt'Ol)ff'~ comtnw1 owr
IM :!JI «11 o/ tlw Tlwtf M•Jei
lllo ltUClfor acddnt. Bff
1toriff, Pa., A7. •••• Al'l-..,._A ...... ...-.. •
L.M ..... M -----....... ... . .. ~ "' ......... :.:,::.::'. = I{' J ....... Atl -81 ._ M .. ==I... ... ..... .. ...... . .... ..
_,
t
Iran De.mantA RetUitl
'Of lapture d Oil Chief
8ElllUT. Lebanon <AP> Jra~; wblch has held 52
Ameriew holtaa for a year. Invoked all intetnatlooal code.a
aad reculatiooJ" today lo demandlnf the release of its oil
mlniater •. who waa captured by Iraq forces on the Abadan
battWrom.
But~aq wblch reported the capture of. Mohammed Jawad
Ba ulr uyan ind five aides Frida~, said the captives were ri~onen 0 war. The demand for their r~l~ase was made by f ranlan Prime Minister Mohammad AU RaJal, who also plans to
take part in indir~ct negotiations on the American bosta1es-
Rajal's office said Sunday that Iran was.' 'honored to find its
officials ambushed alongside the oeo1>le while saferhuar'»\'~~fs~
glorious revoluUon." It c~Ued on Iraq _to ens.ur~ e 0
welfare, butsaid they were ready ~osaceUicetheirlives.
a..taee IU• Balae·.~ne n.,,
• ,,....p .. AJ
• ~-~resident.a •. tDINV9IOR.
ruJler..,. tbat, •bile be ii a
frtndtotbl IMllin•• community,
be 61 toeeemed about the effect of
future development in San
Cle mente:
Alan Korsen, a 38-year-old
management consultant. says
future development in Sa9"'
Clemente ia the bluest problem
faclngcurrentresidents. = -
He says the~dlrectlon in which
t h e city ndles futurf
development wt l determine the
'llfestylei,s of San Clementeans in
the years to come.
Korsen continually pointed out
the limits of fire. police, water
a nd sewer services, and
increased costs the new homes
will bring. adding strict &uidance
by elected city officials will be
mandatory to keep San Clemen~
a no at. ,
Af!WW""9'9 u,.,,_
JOHN WAYNE SUSAN HAYWARD
..
Radiation Cause HERMITAGE, Pa. (AP> -Relatives of some U.S. hostages
in Iran held hands in the chilly da~ tod~>: as the 366th n~g
marking each day of the Americans capt1v1ty was planted tn
this northwest Pennsylvania town.
Richard Hermening , of Cudahy, Wis .. whose s~n Kevin is
one of the 52 hotstages, unfolded the nag. attached It to a staff
and planted the pole in the ground as about 300 wa~ched and a
high school chorus sang t he .. Star Spangled Banner.
Ray Maddocks, 61, is manager
of the Capi.strano Beach Sanitary
D1¥rict, and he likes to joke that
"we're not the district seeking a
ssooa month pension ...
Jn the candidate's forums ,
Mad docks has ca lled for planned
growth in San Clemente, with
proper use of the land at no
increase in taxes to current
residents.
· Of Wayne Cancer?
The new bann.er took its place in a forest of red, ~hlte and
blue nags that have been flying at Hillcrest Memonal Park
since the lOOth day of captivity in February. A new fl ag h~
been raised each day since. All the banners have been do_nat
and many have been sent by relatives of veterans who died in
past wars.
F re• Plllfll! A f .
CANDIDATES CAMPAIGN
rates go up one point, another 1.3 million Americans have been
shut out of the housing market."
But at Marietta Co_lledgsethi~ ~~~~rR::~:: h~~~~~;~~~~~o~h~~ "We all have on our mm
Iran."
Then the Republican candidate added t hat ·:~is is not th~ time
or the place for me to be addressing such a sensitive m atter.
~ nth-hour shift of the campaign focus back to the hostages
was 00 Reagan's mind in recent months wben h~ specula1~ed_therle
might be an "October s urprise" that could till the e ectioi:i o
Cart.er. The Republican nominee.ex~cted Carter to try to achieve
a dramatic breakthrough in the situation.
But the move'llent th at occurred was initiated by the Iranians,
not the White House.
He said he would also bring
better relations between the city
c9uncil and city employees.
Candidate Melanie. Vansell, a
six-year city resident. said she
would bring a fresh approach to
San Clemente problems.
In talks before citizens groups,
Mrs . Vansell had accuse
businessmen and c itizens of
making tourists feel unwelcome.
She envisions the town~ as a
stopping off spot for motorists en ·
route to San Diego or Los Angeles
and s ays citizens' attitudes can
make that a reality.
Bill Wa811er, a clock maker.in
San Clemente, whose late wife
Myrtis was a council member, did
not attend the several candidates·
forums held last month.
CARTER ABRUPTLY lfALTED A CAMPAIGN trip and
retur ned to Washington on Sunday morning to confe_r with a~visers
on how to respond to the conditions set by "e lraman Parliament
for release ol 52 Americans held hostage since Nov. 4, 1979.
The long 1980 election campaign ends on T1;1esday when more
than 80 million Americans are expected to decide the outcome of
But in a stat,ement prepared for
the League of Women Voters
q uestionnaire the 61-year-old
c andidate s aid ,
over-d evelopme nt in San
Clemente is his m ain concern.
-"I believe building s hould be
allowed only when it meets our
rules and regulations and shoufd
be phased to our capabilities to
provide water, sewer, police, fire
anti other services." he wrote.
· thousands of contests for prizes ranging from the White House to
local offices. Voters will e lect 34 senators, the entire House of
Representatives and 13 governors. If the pollsters' are right and if the lran_ian hostage situation
doesn't cause a last-minute surge to one candidate or the other, the
presidential race looks too close to call. .
Republicans are optimistic about their chances to pick up five
or six Senate seats and at least 12 House seats. Neither gain would
be enough to end a generation of Democratic control of both
legislative bodies .
HOWEVER THE POTENTIAL SENATE victims include
veteran Democ~ats Warren G. Magnuson of Washington, G~rge s. McGovern of South Dakota. Frank Church of Idaho and Bt~ch
Bayh of Indiana. and Jacob Javits of New York, a ~emor
Republican~ . Also threatened by tough opposition this year are su_ch ranking
House Democrats as J im Wright of Texas, the majonty leade~:
John Brademas of Indiana, the assistant majority leader ; Morns
Udall of Arizona, chairmaq, of the Interior Committee, and ~
Ullman of Oregon, chairmartof the W;tys and MeAns Commltt!e.
,.,....rap Al
ANTHONY OPPOSED • • •
unpopular location if the group
remained opposed to it. And
when the session was completed.
it was Anthony. the ersatz
e nemy of the neighbors. who
drew the loudest applause.
It has been that kind of a race
for the two candidates. The
spotlight bas 1'emained fixed on
Anthony. and his incumbency
bas been particularly noticeable
in the race. He has held a lock
on campaign contributions.
outdrawing Stanton by a margin
better than 20· to 1, and he has
won endorsements from the four
other supervisors who will serve
,the next term.
·Said 41lUloo y : "'As tn ~ tfi'cumbent. tli"e ~pie can look
at your record and see ti you're
ORANGE COAIT
DAILY PILOT
,......It ...... .. , .. ,_, ..............
~-l~Htler
ClwtMt1.L-. ••Ol-,.._,,,. ......
qualified. I've tried very hard to
work with the people . . . I've
tried to work hard to get
results."
Stanton also ha s made
Anthony's experience in office
an issue by tying it with the
legal problems that have
haunted the supervisor almost
since he took office in 1976.
"There are a lot of issues in
the county. but the issue in this
race is who is going to be able to
serve out the term,·' said
Stanton. Anthony has endured a wave
of publicity in connectiol\ with
indictments filed against him:...on
three cons piracy charges of '
lau n'd er ing campaign
contribution s in 1976. An
indictment does not assume
guilt, and Anthony still hasn't
gone to trial in the matter.
On Thursday , t h e !!l ate
Supreme Court turned down rus
appeal to throw out the case.
Stanton immediately interpreted
the action to mean Anthony had
run out of appeals and will have
to s tand tnal.
Stanton likes to point out that
if Anthony is convicted, be
automatically loses his po6lU4Ml
and Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr.
is responsible for appointing a
new supervisor .
Candidate Robert Kusln, 42.
has entered several city council
races, and while fa ring poorly.in
them all, contends San Clemente
needs to energetically promote
tourism.
One of the planks of his
platform is for the city to
purchase La Casa Pacifica and
turn it into a tourist attraction.
Instrument technician Stephen
Rackleff says crim e in San
Clemente is a major concern, and
he believes the city should b.ire
extra police officers, and set up a
foot patrol of the pier area and the
south endoftown.
Bob Brennan, a 53-year-old
financial consulta nt, did not
attend the several candidates'
forums, and says he is running for
the council seat "because I care."
IA>sses Heavy
In Laguna
Burglaries
8.urglars entered two Laguna
Beach homes through bathroom
windows and made off with nearly
$6,000worthofvaluables fromone
residence and more than $4,000 in
belongings from the other.
Police said the two crimes were
not necessarily connected.
Officers said a burglar forced
open a bathroom windo~d
entered the home of John August
Flotho bf Loma T errace.
s ometime between 4 :30 p.m .
Friday and 8:.20 p,m. Sunday and
ransackedthehouse. · ;
T he s uspect took currency,
jewelry, office equipment,
household items and liquor
totaling SS.980.
Police also reported tl;lat a
burglar entered the home of
Phillip Eugene Burkhardt, of
~guna Can yon Road, by
breaking the bathroom window
with t hevictim'stow chain.
The suspect took currency.
jewelry and household items with
a total valueofS4,080.
Break-in Try
Brings A~rest
NEW YORK <,AP>-Atleast91
of the 220 cast and crew mem-
bers of a 1956 movie fill'Ded 137
miles from the Yucca Flat, Nev.
atomic testing range have con-
tra.cted cancer and 46 have died
from it, says People magazine .
The dead include the stars of
"The Conquerer ," John Wayne
and Susan Hayward, its pro-
ducer-director, Dick Powell, and
c h aract e r actress Agne s
Moorhead.
Another player in the film,
Pedro Armendariz, s urvived
cancer or the kidneys four years
after the filming, the magarine
FlGHT ...
And tenants an the present
266-unit trailer park say the
developers have set aside only
60 of the hotel units for rent to
longtime residents of the park.
They say the remaining 206
tenants are being neglected . and
will be forced out of their mobile
homes when the project gets
underway.
But Syfan says letters were
given to each new tenant in the
park since May of 1977. advising
them that the hotel complex was
proposed and that, jf approved,
the tenants would be required to
vacate their mobile home space.
"We "re offering to rent hotel
units to the permanent. longterm
residents at the same monthly
price they are paying on their
mobile homes," Syfan ~aid .
He said there are about 60
residents of the trailer park that
fall into th e pe rmane nt .
longterm category .. and expect
there will be fewer by the time
the project gets under way in the
next few years.
Syfan believes the advantages
to the project far outweigh any
problems e xpr esse d b y
opponents.
"We're talking about turning
what is · n ow a ·c l osed
community, a trailer park, lnto
a project that is open to the
public," he said.
H e envision s a s m a ll
amphitheater on the property. a
meandering blu ff top
pl'omendade, a restaurant on the
rocks overlooking qMf Island,
and public access lo the beaches
adjacent to Aliso Beach Park.
And he thinks the community
will get behind the project when
it comes before county planning
commissioners lale next month.
'·we want our cards on the
table and we want the public to
know exactly what we are
proposing.·· he said.
.....,._, hecti ottio.
1011 No Celll"ltl>•••
Stanton hesitates to talk about
his chances ol winning a Brown
appointment, sometblnl .he
claims the voters don't want.
Instead be says: "By electing me they don 'l baYe to worry
abOut a goyernor appointment."
San Clemente Pollc:e arreaa.d a ·--in: ...
....... OMeee
-ii;~-=~~~,~-=·~-.: ....
says, but killed himself in 1963
when he teamed he had terminal
cancer of the lymph system.
Wayne's son Mich ael, 45, who
visited his father in Utah on the
set of the film about Genghi s
Kahn. was treated for s kin
cancer in 1975. His 41 -year-old
brother, Patrick, and Mi ss
Hayward's son, 35-year·old Tim
Barker. who also were visitors
to the desert set. have had
benign tumors removed.
People said several members
of the movie's cast and crew or
re latives are CQll!ts id ering
lawsuits against the govern-
ment.
Actress Jeanne Ge rson, 76.
who has survived s kin and
br.e.ast.~-anceP-and-i~ stiU -un-
d e r g oi n g chemotherapy, re·
portedly has hired a lawyer to
bring a class action. hoping
others involved in making the
movie -a box-office bomb -
will join her.
No atomk tests were made at
Yucca Flat during the filming in
St. George, Utah. in the summer
of 1954, according to People. But
11 bombs had been exploded in
the atmosphere the year before.
People quotes Dr. Robert
Pendleton, a former Atomic
Energy Commission researcher
and now director of radiological
health at the University of Utah.
as saying that radioactive
fallout was "very abundant" in
the area in 1954. Snow Canyon,
where much of ''The Con·
querer" was filmed, is a natural
reservoir for windblown mat·
terial, be said.
"With these numbers, this
c ase co uld qualify as an
epidemic," he said. "The con·
nection between fallout radfa·
lion and cancer in individual
cases has been practically im·
possible to prove conclusively,
but in a grpup this site you'd ex·
pect onfy 30-some C?ncers t<? d~· velop. With 91. I thmk the t1e-m
to their exposure on the set of
'The Conquerer ' would hold up
even in a ~Q.urt oflaw.
.. 'Michael Wayne is quoted say-
ing tfiat "suing the government
isn't going to bring my father
back ." But People quotes
Barker as saying that if enough
people get angry about pollution
"maybe they can minimize the
harm for the future."
Reports last year from three
London newspapers that atomic
fallout on the test site may have
been linked to the deaths or
Wayne, Powell a nd Mi ss
Hay ward were greeted with
skepticism.
A spokesman for Wayne's
family said then he had heard
the reports and considered them
"absolutely not true." ---
~27,000
In C.ems
Bur1lars kicked Uielr way into
a Newport Beach Jewelry shop
early Sunday, smashed open
nine display case$ and neaped
with at leut $227,000 worth of
rings, b r acelets and gold
charms.
Police said employees at
Brett· WalJce r Jewelers in
Fas h ion I s land a r e still
computing the actual loss.
T he intruders, investigators
said , kicked loose a sheet of
bulle t-proof glass near t he
shop's front dQOr at about 2:30
a .m .. triggering a burglar alarm
in the process.
Qnce inside. police said, the
crooks used a heavy object to
crack open display cases and
scooped up at least 250 gold
rings. three $700 watches as well
as charms, bracelets and gold
money clips.
In their haste. investigators
noted. the burglars dropped a
number of items. leaving a trail
of jewelry from the cases to the
point of entry. ·
This is the second major loss
for the Newport Beach jewelry
shop th.is year. Last March, a
pair of armed bandits held up
the shop and escap ~d with
• $500,000 in jewelry.
Two men later were arrested
in connection with the stick-up.
Two Newport,
t Cops Escape .
Copter Crasli
By STEVE MARBLE
Of u. l>Mlf ~ .... , ....
Two Newport Beach police
officers walked away unharmed
from the wreckage of their
patrol helicopter which they
were forced to crash-land in the
s urfline Sunday afternoon in wes t Newport.
Sgt. Richard Miller. who was
piloting the brand new Hughes
helicopter, and his passenger,
Officer Todd Seiders, crawled
from the banged-up craft and
waded to shore following t he
3:45 p.m . mishap near Fern
Street.
Swimmers and lifeguards in
t he area dragged the helicopter
out of the water and back up to
the sand:
A number of sunbathers ~
the crowded strand report'e
seeing the patrol bird flying low
along the coastline and then
s uddenly spinning out of control.
Police reports indicate Miller
and his partner were on routine
parrol at an altitude of roughly
150 feet and had just completed
a 180 degree turn when the
ail'craft began to vibrate.
At this point, police said, the
he licopter s tal'ted spinning
c lockwise, rapidly losin g
a lti,.tude and diving toward a
group ohMers and swimmers.
Sgt. Miller, police continued.
was able to nurse the diving
helicopter away from the crowd
before splashing into the ocean.
Initial reports indicated that
the $80,000 helicopter may hatre
developed problems with its tall
rotor. A stabilizin~ rotor on the--
rear of the bird. police said. was
somehow jarred loose.
The crumpled helicopter later
was hauled to Tallmantz
Aviation at John Wayne Airport
where it will be studied by police
investigators to determine the
exact cause of the mishap.
To Anthony. bow ever,
St anton's attack on him ha• the
appearance of "a cheap sMt."
Camp Pendleton Marin• early
thla mornlna after residents or an
,apartment comple~ reported
seeln• the man bre~lnl into
---------------------------
"I've aerved'but ooe term with
these ebarlet there all the time
and I tblnk there t.s 1ood reuon
I ~an leJ'Ve out another term,"
hetaJd. I
"Mon tbaa t.bat. the chart• are a.ntlQ lallated and you'U
... Ulll t'nllluUy lt will be
1bown tUt I'm DOt pllly-.. ....... ~ ................. ~ .....
Hveral can and dwelllnl•· · loel Lyeva, 23, ... captured••
he allepdly attempted to remoye
louvered wtndowl from a biailcl1li1
at 15* Ave. Del Mar a( ~bout 2:40
a.m. Pollet were summoned by H veral wltDelael wbo said lMY
saw the snan prowlln• around the
complex .
The Garage Bnngs It Toge1her for Fall
Here we feature our own mid wale cord pant.
with a pre-finished plain bottom. accenJed
by one of our many easy care plalO sportshirts
and a great ahawt collared pullover sweater
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VOL. 13, NO. JOI, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE <;OUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Ye•rH•••t•••
Dall,-N•••11a ... r
TWENT;v'-FJVE CENTS
Cart~r Vows No Hostage 'Politics'
'
WASHINGTON (AP > -President Carter, vowin1 bis hostage
decislons will not be affected by· politics, left the WIUte House
today for a tinal campaign swtn1 while Ronald Reagan new to the
West Coaat to end has campaagn, confronted by the issue hlS
advisers feared the most.
White House aides said development.s in Iran would determine
whether the president would keep to an election-eve schedule that
included stops In Akron, Ohio; Granite City", Ill.; Springfield, Mo.;
Detroit, Mich.; Portland. Ore .. and Seattle. Wash. Carter then is
to fly home to Plains, Ga., where he will vote Tuesday.
Reagan's final day of the 1980 campaign included an outdoor
rally io Peoria, lll .. and then stops in Portland, Ore., and ~an
Diego before returning to his Los Angeles area home,
* * * * Hostages
----------~~
IN AN INTEB'VIEW BllOADCAST today on NBC, the
Republican presidential candidate said be wu optimistic about his
election proepect.a.
"I believe tbat we've done everything we can do," h.e said.
If be loses, Reagan said, "Thia would not destroy me aa a
person. l would be deeply disappointed because J believe in the
need for a change in the direction this country's been go)ng in."
Reagan was joined at a morning rally in Peoria, 111. tqday by
comedian Bob Hope, former President Ford, vice · pres idential
running mate George Bush and former amabassador Anne
Armstrong.
"We have more than a president who has failed. We have a
president who refuses to admit his policies had anything to do with
* * * * * * Nea-rer to
NEWPORT BEACH POLICE CREWMEN INSPECT DAMAGE AFTER THEIR HELICOPTER CRASHED IN 8URFLIN£
PrellmtMry tnv•dO•tton lndlcaat•• 91abtlbltfttl "°'°'Mer Nev• Felled, tSpln'*'IMaohl•lntothe&e•
,Cops Due
Tasers
\"\eapon
NB Police Copter
) Crashes ·Into Surf ..
Irvine police Lt. Gene Norde.n
said today the poUce department
has bought two Tasers,
non-lethal weapons used to stun •
violent suspects.
He said the weapons will be
By STE-VE MARBLE
Ol \lie o.lty ~•lo« Stlltt
Two Newport Beach police
officers walked away unharmed
from the wreckage of their
patrol helicopter which they
were forced' to crash-land in ttie
s urfline Sunday afternoon in
west Newport. ~dded to the departments Sgt. Richard Miller. who was
inventory of non-lethal wea~ns piloting the bran<l new Hughes s~ch as mace, nets and night . _helicopter, and his passenger.
s ticks. Officer Todd Seiders, crawled
Irvine poUce Capt. Jerry Boyd from the banged-up craft and
said the weapons will be used waded to s hore following the
only by Taser-tvined police 3:45 p.m . mis hap near Fern
officers. Street.
Swimmers and lifeguards in
the area dragged the helicopter
out of the wate r and back up to
the sand.
A number of sunbathers alon~
the crowded strand reported
•seeing the patrel bird flying low
along the coastline and then
suddenly spinning out of control.
Police reports indicate Miller
and hls partner were on routine
patrol at an altitude of roughly
150 feet and had just completed
a 180 degree turn when the
aircraft began to vibrate.
At this point, police said. the
he licopter started spinning
clockwise, rapidl y losing
altitude and diving toward a
group of ~urfers and swimmers.
Sgt. Miller. police continued,
was able to nurse the diving
helicopter away from the crowd
before splas hing into the ocean.
Initial reports indicated that
the $80,000 helicopter may have
developed problems with its tail
rotor.
''The Taser utilizes small
powder charges to fire small
metal darts which are connected
by fine wires to the weapon's
battery," explained Boyd.
"When the darts make contact.
they jolt the target with a high
v o I t a g e , 1 o w a m p e _r a g e
electrical chatge. This stuns the
subject and c.auaes a temporary
paralysis. OMV Seeks Office
•'Test.a have shown that use of
the wea~ produces.n'Llasting
M.rmful effects. During the
period of temporary paralysis,
the vtolent subject may be safely
approached .a.ad take n Into
custody," Boyd'!tiid.
Miracle
Doing OK
LYNWOOD (AP> -An
I-pound baby 1lrl wbo eam.ed tbe name Miracle
after lbe develOped in her
mother'• abdomen iDltead
of bet ....... wu ln stable
condition today at St. rrudl Hospatal.
lltnei. Stephanie Jean
Lewl1 wu born by Canarean HCtioD to 31· year~ MaebeUe Koocl on
FridaJ~ DodDrl wve un1ware
tlM ~ ~i~aby
WU ..-ak!Md CMUICltl the
uiel'UI mdiJ dlllftl')' Wh•D it ........... tbat tM
fec.Md...._attacbed
to lload't tmall bate9UM.
hell llb1lll °""' about _.. la ner1 11.000 to
......... doaton Nld.
.. ,4
-Building .. in Irvine
The state Department of Motor
Vehicles wants to build an
11,000-square-foot district office
in the Irvine Industrial
Complex-East. according to city
Community Dev«! l o pment
Director Larry Hogle.
He sllid OMV officials believe
the ofrlce ls needed to serve the
needll of the growing population in
southeastern Orange County ..
A one-story building .to be
constructed on the southeast
corner of Alton Parkway and
Jeronimo Road would be Osed for
normal OMV actlvitles and would
include a motorcycle. testlng area
and 15lparktnlspaces.
Ho1le aaid construction Is
tentatively scheduled to start in
January of 1182 witb occupancy
expected ln June of 1983.
Ho1te said he la concerned with
the amount ot traffic that miaht be 1ener1ted by the fpcllity.
''By the year 2000, the propoeed •tt• wtll pnerate approldrnate.,.
2,200 automobile triPI per day,"
be laid. •'Thi• flrure I•
•l1ntffcantly b11her tba.n the 111et allowed ln tbl1 area of the
Industrial complex.1'
He ukl that the OMV currenUy
la ae--. to buy tbe 1.T·~ 1ltefO..U.tdldlD1.
...
ronimo Rd.
• I -----~-'
o...., ...... .._M-.
PAOPOllD OMV Im
Too Mefty Trtpe?
The DllV muat 1et a
conditional ... permit from the
city PlannlnJ Commluloa ln
order to build tbeofftce . A· ne1aUve declaration on the
project (meani8' tbat lt-wlU bave
no 1ubltutlal envlroamental bir~~) bu bMll ru.d by the
Aceordinl to Rocle, tM cMy bat
unUJ Nov. I) to di~ commeatl
onU..nepUvedeclration.
'
High Court
Sets Aside
Death Law
WASlllNGTON <AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court today set
aside a ruling that blocked
California prosecutors from
seeking the death. penalty in
"especiaUy heinous. atrocious or
cruel" murder cases.
By a 6-3 vote. the justices told
the California courts to restudy
decisions striking down that
portion of the s t ate 's capita
punishment law as
unconstitutionaUy vague.
The court's brief order s aid,
·'The judgment is vacated and the
case is remanded to the Court of
Appeal of California, First
Appellate District, to consider
whether its judgment is based
upon federal o r s tate
constitutional grounds."
Justices William J . Brennan
Jr .. Potter Steward and John Paul
Stevens dissented.
Under California law, a capital
case jury ffr~ must decide
whether a defeooant Is guilty of
first -degree nfurder.· II the
verdict is first.degree murder.
the jury determines whether the
~i m e Included one or more
'•special circumstances.•'
O n e of those s p ec ial
circumstances states, "The
murder was especially heinous,
atrocious, or cruel manifesting
exceptiQ.nal depravity ... a
conscienceless or pitiless crime
whlch Is unnecessarily tortuous to
the.victim."
State prosecutors attempted
last year to introduce that special
circumstance in the separate
cases of two Santa Clara County
murder defendant.a, Allen Leroy
En1ertandJohn Wayne Gamble.
En1ert was charged in the May
16. 19'19 attangulaUon of Adria
Manl\lnalnSan Jose.
Gamblewaa accused of beating
a 2-year-old glrl, Shanean Hall, to
deatblnAuiust1m. n·oth. En1ert .and Gamble
cballeqed the uae of apedal
clrcumatance, attacklna lt u too
va1ue to meet constitutional
due·prc>ce111tandardl.
A state trtal J9dl• qreed and
barred the introduction ol tbe
1peclal clttumlta.nee. May 1. a
Callfonala appeall court naled
that in the oaetnt ot lite Nte'•
capital =-=nt law the apeclal ee'• "~acue
l••1ua1• eaaaot wltb•taH comUtulloMI~. ''
those failures,•' Regagan told the crowd.
He atttued Carter's aUe1ed economic failures in his speech, and
a voided any mention of the latest development.a in the hostage
situation that could affect the outcome otthe election Tuesday.
·Reagan, seeking votes Sunday in crfUcal Midwest industrial
states, shied away from commenUni cm the latest development.a in
Tehran and kept up his criticism of Carter's handUn1 of the
economy.
• CAMPAIGNING IN DA \'TON, OHIO HE concentutPrl fcn
economic issues saying, ··t:arter economfcs have been a ~~.C!r
tragedy for many American families . . . Every time interest <See CANDIDATES, Page A%)
* * * * * Freedo1n-
.•
Militants
Release
Custofdy
By The Assodated PrHs
Iranian militants met with
s piritual leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini today and
then turned over
'"r esponsibility" for their 52
American captives to the
Iranian government. U.S.
officials, who are considering
Iranian terms for their freedom.
said the development was a
major breakthrough toward
their eventual release.
"We will 'from now on
delegate responsiblity for the
hostages' safeguarding to the
government and will engage in
the most important current
issue ol the revolution, defense
of the Islamic homeland,"
Tehran Radio quoted a
statement from the militants as
sayin1. . The mllitanta were referrin1
to Iran's border war with Iraq.
Plans for the physical transfer ot the bolltages wiU be worked
out following a "meeting before
midnight" Cmld·day PST>
between the government and the
militants. officials of the Iranian
prime minister's office reported.
The militants' statement said
the government during that
meeting would "introduce their
represt>ntative for delivery of
the American spies."
The aides to the prime
minister s aid Algeria was
delegated to handle talks with
Wash ington and the captives'
release if the U.S. government
m eets lr.an's demands. They
said that in the meantime Iran
will continue to have custody of
the hostages. who will "remain
where they are,". presumably
meaning the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
In Washington. White House
press secretary Jody Powell
said the transfer .. is something
we have seen since the very
outset as bein~ an important
s tep toward their eventual
release. That's something we
have lab9red Jong and hard to
get this spring and thought we
had it there for a few hours and
did not. So if this happens. it's a
very encouraging sign."
Representatives-of the Islamic·
militants · who s ehed the
American Embassy and its staff
Nov. 4, 366 days ago. met for two
hours today with Khomeini
following the approval Sunday
by the Majlis. Iran's parliament .
of terms for . the release of the
Americans. Tehran Radio said
one milltant read a statement to
Khomeini asking l he
government to relieve the
militants of responsibility for
the hosta1es and allow tb~m to
join the war against Iraq.
Tehran Radio said Khomeini
thanked the students and added:
"The service which these young peof le rendered by seizing and
ho ding these corrupt
(See HOSTAGES, Pase AZ)
Two Cops
Promoted
lrvl.ne PoU~ Cblef Leo Peart
·announced today that police
offlcen Phil Povey and David
FrMd.land bave been promoted to
the ranlrof Mr1eut.
PoveJ bH bH9 •ltb the
depanmeat fQr tbne yean. He
wort.cl lw tJM Su Frandleo
PoUee l>lpmtmeat forftnJ.Mn. P'reecflaad eam• to lb• .. ,.rtment -two ... on•·'•tr· 1•an•aft81'wertlnlt .. ,..,.. n aa Oraa•• C..tJ depulJ IMritr. •
ONE ·
YEAR
Woman
Assaulted
In Home
A 19-year-old Irvine woman
was beaten and raped early .
today inside her UnJversity Park
home, according to police.
She told police a man in hls
early al9 burst into ber bedroom
at 3 a.m . and assaulted her. She
said she sev~rely bit the· man's
hand.
Police Lt. Bob Lennert said
the woman told him the
assailant ente red the house
through an unlocked door. The
s uspect was alone with the
victim for about two hours.
"We combed the neighborhood
with police cars but didn't tum
up anything," Lennert s aid. "We
d o n 't have an y furth e r
description of the suspect. The
house was dark.•'
He said the woman s uffered no
major physical injur ies.
There were no other witnesses
to the assaulL
Seamen Strike
Briiish Ships
LONDON CAP> -About 12,00CJ
British seamen halted most
s hipping from Britain
today with a one-day s trike
J>rotesUn1 moves by the Cunard
line to put two of its three cruise
shlps under a Bahamian flag of
CO'fj\'enience and hire lower-paid
foreign creM. ·
The walkout halted mo
ferries operating with British
crews between England, Ireland
and the European continent. It
stranded an estimated 300
passenger and cargo vessels,
i n cludina flve operated by
Cunard, in British pof'U.
Coast
Weather . ,I
Continued sunny. Lows
tonight 54 aJonr the coast,
62 inland. Hilbl Tuesday
74 to 78 at beaches, 82 to 86
inland.
INSIDE TeOA ~
Cont~ c:'Ofltiftw1 over
tlw 1//«11 o/ Uw Tlarn MU.
l1"'1td IWltar CIC~. Sn '
ltOrWI, P"f1f A1. ••••
..
r,t:= ot Ute peoples.
$227,000
In Gems
BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP) Iran. whlcll lau held 52
Americans '*ta,e for a year, ll\voked "all IDternatJonal. codes and ,..uiat1m1• today ln demaodinl th• eeleaae of its oil
mle!tter. who wu cap\llred by Jraql forcea on the Abadan
battJelront. Bu& lraq, wb ch repurted lhe capture of Mohamm~ Jawad
Ba<,iu.ir TuntUY•n ud llve aldes Frtday. aald the captives were
prisonera of wa•. The demand for their rele•se was made by
tranlan Prime Minlater Mohammad All RaJai .• who als.o plans to
takt part in indirect negotiations on the Amencan boata1ea.
Raja!'• office said Sunday that Iran was "honored toflncl ltA
offh:ilals ambushed alon11ide the oeoPle while safeiuardln• th~
'glorious revolution." lt called on Ira~ to ens~r~ the official•
wetrare. but said they were ready ~sacetficethetr lwes.
f1re la SF C'••' relied
aattons ind 1overnment1 and
th• picture -tbef bad of th• speelfe ol the ..... l powers."
Meanwhllt. Prime Mlnlater
Mohammad All Raja\ met with
Al1erl1'1 ambassador l n
Tehran. and the two a1reed
Algeria would take care of the
hostages. Pan said. It was not
Immediately known If thla
meant the captives would be
flown to Algiers or remain In
' Iran ~er Algerian 1upervlaion.
•' ln thls meelin1 i\ was
' decided that the Moalem and
brother country of Alaeria will
take care o/ the U.S. hosta1e1."
Pars s aid of the 30·mlnute
sess ion betwe en Raja! and
Abdul Karim Gharaib.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A four-alarm blaze on a
fog -s hrouded waterfront pier of creosote-soaked 'Pll\nga.
possibly caused by partying fisherrrten. was broUShl under
control today after four hours. . . Richard Kucich. a San Francisco arson mvest!gator. said
there were signs of a party near.th~ spot w~ere the.fare began at •
6· 30 a .m. in choking fog on the city s west side. . .
· Deputy Port Director Anthony J . Taormina ~aid th~ fire
apparently began in an old, rotting fenc~-<>ff secttOf\ of Pier 70
on the west side of the city.
"In reply, the Algerian
ambanador said we wish that
Algeria will be able to do all It
can to rulfill the desires of the
government o f Iran and to
safeguard Iran's Interests and
expa nd bilateral re lations ft8
much &!'I possible."
The ambass ad o r s of
Switzerland ansd West Germany
a lso met with Raja! this
morning. Pars said. During lhe ·
meetina, the Swiss ambassador
s ubmitted a m usage from
President Carter to Raja!, but
the r e we re no imm e diate
details, the agency s aid.
R adiatio n Cam e
Of Wayne Cancer?
IJd1 O.Hd Slab•
ATLANTA (AP) -A 9-year-old boy :-Vh.ose body. was.found
on a riverbank apparently died of asph~'>Clft:tiOn, makmg him ~he
11th, black child found slain in the city m 16 months. pohce
reported today.
Bag Pier B(az~ Rage•
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A four-alarm. blaze burned out of
control today in a fog-s hrouded waterfront warehouse full of
creosote-soaked pilings, as firefj 8hters hacked at the pier in an
attempt to h·alt the fire's spread.
Fire Chief Andrew Casper said the blaze began between
6:30 a.m. and 7 a.m . in an old warehouse on pier 70 on the west
side of the·city. He sajd the cause had not been determined , but
fires Uke this often begin spontaneously.
"This pier's gone," said Casper, peering through the dense
fog at the gutted warehouse. "It's in really bad shape. lt's
basically a manpower fire. We've got men using jackhammers.
chainsaws , axes and crowbars ... we're making good
progress."
Hostage Kl• Ra!•~ .\letD Flag
HERMITAGE . Pa. CAP> -Relatives of some U.S. host.ces
in Iran held hands in the chilly dawn today as the 366th nag
marking each day of the Americans' captivity was planted in
this northwest Pennsylvania town.
Richard He rmening, of Cudahy, Wis .• whose son Kevin is
one of the 52 hotstages. unfolded the nag, attached it to a staff
and planted the pole in the ground as about 300 watched and a
high school chorus sang the "Star Spangled Banner."
The new banner took its place in a forest of red, white and
blue flags that have been flying at Hillcrest Memorial Park
since the tooth day of captivity in February. A new flag has
been raised ea ch day since. All the banners have been donated
and many have been sent by relatives of veterans who died in
past wars.
CANDIDATES CAMPAIGN
A senior aide to Rajal s aid the
ofricial English-language text or
the conditions which the Majlis
agreed on for the re lease of the
Am ericans would be given late
today or eary Tuesday lo the
Algerian Embassy for deli very
to the U.S. government.
Alge ria handl es Ira nian
interests in the United States
while Switzerland represents the
United States in Tehran.
Rajai 's aide s aid his
government had no plans to deal
djrectly with the United States
o r to in c lud e U .N .
Secretary -Gen e ral Kurt
·Waldheim in the negotiations,
which presumably will be
channeled through the Swiss and
Algerian governments. He said
Iran would be represented in the
negotiations by a committee
made up of the prime minister.
senior officials of the Foreign
Ministry and Behzad Nabavi,
the m i nis te r of s tate for
executive affairs.
Th e Majli s turned
responsibility for the crisis over
to the g ov e rnment after
adopting the recommendations
o f a s pecial parliamentary
committee named to draw up
term s for the r elease of the
captive Americans.
The Majlis said the hostages
should be freed if the U.S.
governme')t pledged not to
rates. go up one point. aoo<t1er 1.3 million America.As have been Interfere ·an Iran's affairs,
shut out of the housing market." released all Iranian assets froze
But at Marietta College in Ohio, Reagan acknowl~ge~ th~t in the United States. cancelled
··w e all have on our minds the matter of the hostage s1tuat1on m a ll Amer ican legal actions
Iran." . ,against · Iran a ad retui:,ned to
Then the Republican candidate added that '"this is not the time Iran all assets of the late Shah
or the place for me to be addressing such a sensitive matter... Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and
· • The Uth·hour shift of the campaign focus back to the hostages his close relatives.
was 00 Re aRan 's mind in recent months when he speculated there -. • T he s e were.,. th e 5 am e
might be an "October surprise" that could tilt the electio~ to conditions made in September
Carter. The Republican nominee expected Carter to try to achieve by Kflomeini. But the Majlis
a dramatic breakthrough lo the situation. said if all the conliitions were But the movement that occurred was initialed by the Iranians. not met at the same time, then
not the White House. ' -tfte 1tostages should be released
CARTER ABRUPTLY HALTED A CAMPAIGN trip and
returned to Washington on Sunday morning to confer with advisers
on how to respond to the condiuons set by the Iranian Parliament
for release of 52 Americans held hostage since Nov. 4, 1979.
The long 1980 election campaign ends on T~esday when more
than 80 million Americans are expected to decide the outcome of
thousands of contests for prizes ranging from the White House to
local offices. Voters will e lect 34 senato rs . the e ntir e House of
Representatives and 13 governors. . If the pollsters are right and if the Iranian hostage situation
doesn't cause a last-minute surge to one candidate or the other. the
presidential race looks too close to call. . . Republicans are optimistic about their chances to pick up five
or six Senate seats and at least 12 House seats. Neither gain would
be enough to end a generation of Democratic control of both
legislative bodies. . "'~
HOWEVER, THE POTENTIAL SENATE victims include vet~ran Democrats Wa rren G. Magnuson of Washington, George
S . McGovern of South Dakota. Frank Church of Idaho and Birch
Bayh of Indiana, and J acob Javits of New York, a senior
Republican. ~ . I
Also threatefAM by tough opposition this ye~ are such ranking
H"Suse Democrats as J\m Wright of Texas, the majority leader;
John Brademas of Indiana, the assistant raajo ty. leader; Morris
Udall of Arizona, chairman of the Interior mmittee, and A1 Ul~man of Oregon. chairman of the Ways and '!'f/ ans Committee.
O"ANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
~·"'"'' .. ,_,,. .........
Mo~•tlnqldiW
\.
"'"'=~~.dltat •
MilitarJ Rulers
Ban Dissid ent 8
SEOUL, South Korea <AP> -
South Korea's military rulers
introduced a law today to ban
people \t dislikes from politics
until June 30, 1988. when the
president'• term expires. One of
their courts also upheld the
death aent.ence 11ain.st dlasident
leader Kim Dae·JWll·
The new law waa the flnt
major action take'n by tbe
Le1i1latlve CouncU for NaUoaal1 Security, an interim bod>: 01 11
memben appointed to usher in a
"new era'' under Prf'lldent
Chun Doo-bwan.
in Rroups.
Attorney
Suspended
In Theft
A Tustin attorney who chose not
t.o fight prosecution charges that
he pocketed more than $50.000
belonging to clients bas been
suspended by the California
Supreme Court whHe he ls serVing
time in prison.
M a rlin Go ldberg . wh o
practiced at 301 El Camino Real.
i s c urrentl y undergoing
diagnostic tests at the California
Institution for Men at Chino.
He pleaded no contest on July 21
to charges filed by the Orange
County District Attorney's Office
and is (,fue back in Orange County
Superior Court Jan. 7 ~or formal
sentencing on the cha~gea. .
Prosecuting Depu\y District
Attorney Doug Woodsmall said
today that Gold\lerg was
ori1lnally charged with
wron1fully keeping money
entrua\ed by. or due five c Uents he
represented. He-t,aid the sums totaled about
H0,000. wlth the bulk of it
repreeented by one count in the
cr1nd theft cue In which tbe
attorney wu convtcted.
Goklberl could be placed on p~batJon .S.pendinl on reJult.1 of
hi• ~ay ev.lu•tion at Chino or
aentenced to spend-more Urne
behind ban for the 1rand ~
conviction. .
NEW YORK (A p ) -At least 91
of the 23) cul and crew mem·
bers of a 1956 movie filmed 137
miles from the Yucca Flat. Nev.
atomic testing range have con·
tracted cancer and 46 have died
from it, says People magazine.
The dead include the stars of
"The Conquerer," John Wayne
and Susan Haywar~. its pro·
ducer-director, Dick Powell, and
characte r a c tr e ~s Agnes
Moorhead. Another player in the film.
Pedro Armendariz, survived
cancer of the kidneys four years
a(ter the filming. the magazine
says, but ki114!d himself in 1963
when he teamed he had terminal
cancer of the lymph system.
Wayne's son Michael. 45, who
visited his father in Utah on the
set of the film about Genghis
Kahn, was treated for s kin
cancer in 1915. His 41-year-old
brother Patrick , and Miss
Hayward's son, 35-year-old Tim
Barker, who also were visitors
to the desert set . ha ve had
benign tumors removed.
People said several · members
of the movie's cast and crew or
Riley Seeks
2-wee·k Delay
On Proposal . . .
Orange County Super visor
Thomas Riley said today be will
seek a two-week delay Tuesday
of action on a proposal to give
Human Se r v'ice s Agen c y
D i rect or '.M a r ga c.e t Grier
expanded dt.fties. as director. of
the c ount y m e nta l he alth
department.
Riley said he would seek the
·delay at the request of the
county Mental Health Adv.isory
Board. The board recently voted
1 5 to 2 ag a in s t th e
rec omme nda tion that Miss
Grier b e g iv en th e du a l
appointment as HSA d irector
and mental health·director.
Critics of the proposal have
charged" that mental health
programs require the attention
of a full-lime administrator . And
they have claimed the county's
mental health s ys te m ha s
suffered in the year Miss Grier
has held the m e ntal health
department directorship on an
i'bterim basis.
R i l ey p r e di c t e d t h e
continuance or the ite m will be
approved by the board. The new
date for action would be Nov. 18,
he said. ·
r e la tives are considering
laws uits against the govern·
ment.
Actress Jeanne Gerson. 76.
who has s urvived skin and
breast cancer and is still un·
dergoing chemotherapy, re·
portedly has hired a lawyer to
bring a class action, hoping
others involved in making the
movie -a box-office bomb -
will join her.
No atomic tests were made at
Yucca Flat during the filming in
St. George, Utah, in the summer
of 1954. according to People. But
11 bombs had been exploded in
the atmosphere the year before.
People quotes Dr. Robert
Pendleton. a former Atomic
Ene rgy Commission researcher
and now director or radiological
health at the University of Utah.
a s saying that radjoac tive
fallout was "very abundant" in
the area in 1954. Snow Canyon,
where much of ·'The Con·
querer" was filmed , is a natural
reservoir for windblown mat·
terial, he said.
"With these numbers , this
c ase could qualif y a s an
epidemic," he said. "The con·
nection between fallout radia ·
lion and cancer in individual
cases has been practically im-
possible to prove conclusively.
but in a group this size you'd ex·
pect only 30-some c~ncers t~ d~·
velop. With 91. I think the tie-an
to their exposure on the sec or
'The Conquerer' would hold up
even in a court or law. · ·
Michael Wayne is quoted say·
ing that "suing the government
isn't going to bring my father
back." But People quotes
Barker as saying that if enough
people get angry about pollution
"maybe they can minimize the
harm for thtduture."
Reports last year from. thrt!C
London newspapers that atomic
fallout on the test ~ite may have
been linked to the deaths of
Wayne , P o we ll and Miss
Hayward were greeted with
s ke pticism. ·
A si)okesman for Wayne's
family said then he had heard
the reports and considered them
"absolutely not true."
"I would suspect that Wayne's
death was caused by smoking
before it was caused by anything
else ." Utah Health Director
James Mason said at the time.
"( don't see how anyone can tie
the.. type or cancer he had to
ra diation-induced cancer . h
would have to be awfully hot dirt
<radiation>." Hundreds of St. George.area
residents have filed claims
against the government, con-
tending they or relatives got
cancer alter nuclear tests sent
radiation over the area.
27 Face Death
A pS.. of nolo contende~. or no
C!OQld l1 not an admission of
cullt. but In eo ple1dtn1 tbe,
defendant 1tand1 convlcted.
However. hil convlctlon cannot
be uaed in civil court• evidence ,
by anyone 1uln1 blm ai a result of
the or15a1 charce. Gol 1 la one of l9 lawyen
a1alnat m the C•Hfomla Bar AteoclaUon hu recently taken
aetlon throUCb tbe Calllornla
'':.r;m• Coun, th• a1ency
W ailllll l8'poR ID)' pllla19'
The Garaoe Bnngs It Together for Fall
Here we feeture our own mid·wete cord pant.
with a pre·fmlshed plain bottom, accented
t>y one ol our many easy care plald spcrtsh1rts
and a great shawl collared P,Ullover sweater
· lnUlated b bu 1~10~!-__:_--~-_......__.,,.___. lQfftllJM... .
Burstan kicked lbek" .,,y Inti>
a Newport Beach jewelry ~
early Sunday. smashed O.,efl
nine dlsplaf cues and escaped
with at least $227 ,000 worth ot
rings. bracelets an~ 1old
charms.
PoJice said einployeH at
Brett-Walker Jewelers in
Fashion Island are still
computing the actual Jou.
Tbe Intruders. Investigators
said, kicked loose a sheet of
bullet-proof glass near the
~hop's front door at about 2:30
a.m .. triggering a burglar alarm
In the proc~s.
Once inside. police sald. the
crooks used a heavy object to
crack open · display cases and
scooped up at least 250 gold
rings . three $700 watches as well
as charms, bracelets and gold
money clips.
In their haste. investigators
noted, the burglars dropped a
number or items. leaving a trail
or jewelry from the cases' to the
point of entry.
This is the second major loss
for the Newport Beach jewelry
shop this year. Last March, a
pair of armed bandits held up
the s hop and l!s caped witb
$500,000 in jewelry.
Two men later were arreste<l
in connection with the stick-up.
Two Scout s
Hit by Cars
In Irvine ~
Two Explorer Scouts were.
injured last weekend when they
were hit by cars while directin1
tramc in the parking lot of the
Orange County International
Speedway in Irvine.
James Slikker, 17, of Co&ta
Mesa was treated for dislocated
ribs Saturday after a car backed
into him and knocked him down,
said California Highway Patrol
Officer Walt Lamb.
De an Nors worthy . 18, of
Orange was taken to Saddleback
Community Hospital with a
cracked vertebra after he was
struck by a pickup truck, Lamb
said.
The drive r of the truck
reporte dl y fle d after the
incident. The young men b elong to
Explorer ,Pos t 449 that
e mphasizes law enforceme~ /
duty and is sponsored by the
Orange Count y She riff"s
Department. Both injured y~g
men were on duty and weanng
ahiforms when they were hit.
OPEC Meet
Postp oned
BAGHDAD, Iraq. <AP) -lraq
announced today the indefulite
postponement of an OPEC sum-
mit conference scheduled here
Tuesday on the oil ·cartel's 2IOth
anniverf ary and said several
cartel members requested the
move because of the Iran-Iraq
war. Iraq and Iran exported a ~m
bined total of about 3.8 rmllioo
barrels of oil per day before
shipments were halted by the
war over control of the dilSpUled
Shatt al-Arab waterway and
other territory. The postponement will delay
still rurther the oil cartel's ef.
forts to reach agreement on
Jong·tertn pricing ahd prodUC:·
lion policies.
AL S GARAOE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(7f4) 644 7030
VOL: 73, NO. 308, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALI FORN I~ MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1980 1 N TWENTY-'FtVE CENTS
~arter · Vow~
. ' No H~stage 'Politics'
WASHINGTON (AP> -President Carter, vowing his bostaee
declaklna will not be affected by politics, left the White House
today foe.a final campaafn swing while Ronald Reagan new to tbe
West Coast to end hts campa1gn, confronted by the issue tus
advise.., reared the most.
White House aides said developments In Iran would determine
whether the president would keep to an election·eve schedule that
included stops In Akron, Ohio; Granite City, IU.; Springfield, Mo.;
Detroit, Mich.; P ortland, Ore .. and Seattle. Wash. Carter then is
to fly home to Plains, Ga., where he will vole Tuesday.
Reagan's final day or the 1980 campaign included an outdoor
rally in Peoria, lll., and then stops in Portland, Ore., and San
Diego before retumlng lo his Los Angeles area home.
* * *
IN AN INTE&VIEW BROADCA'ST today on NBC . the
Republican pres,idential candidate said he was optimistic about tus
election prospects.
"l believe that we've done everything we can do," he said.
It be loses, Reagan said, .. This wouJd not de•troy me u a
person. I would be deeply disappointed because l believe in the·
need for a chan1e in the direction this country's been going in."
Reagan was joined at a morning rally in Peoria, Ill. today by
comedian Bob Hoee. former President Ford. vice presidential
running mate George Bush and former amabassador Anne
Armstrong.
"We have more than a president who has failed. We have a
president who refuses to admit bis policies bad anything to do with
* * * * * * Hostages. N ~arer to
Candle lig ht
~rch, Y ig il
Set· Saturday
NB Po lice Copter
Crashes Imo Surf
Vote Slate d
On CdM
~~e~war. __
A .. caridlelight walk th;ougl\ the
streets of Corona del Mar,
aimed at focusing a ttention· on
religious persecution in Iran and
other countries. is expected to
draw more t)lan 1,000-persoM
Saturday evening.
The after-dark walk, said
members of the Newport Beach
Baha'i Local Spiritual Assembly, will lead participants from
MacArthur Boulevard down
Coast Highway and then to
Corona del Mar State Beach
where a silent vigil will take
place.
David Langness, a Newport
resident, said the candlelight
walk is a response lo the recent
execution of seven members of
the Baha'i faith in Iran.
He said persecution or Baha'i
c members in Iran has intensified
41-the pe.st two years and that as
• -many as 300 have been jailed.
"We don't know ir they are
sti ll alive or n ot ,'' said
Langness, estimating there are
more than 2,QOO Baha'i members
in Orange County.
B)' STEVE MARBLE -
Ol U. 0.11, l'ii.I S14111
Two NewJ?Orl B~ach police
offi cers walked away unharmed
from the wreckage of their
patrol helicopter which they
were forced to crash-Ian(} in the
surrline Sunday afternoon in
west Newport.
Sgt. Richard Miller. who was
piloting the brand ne w Hughes
helicopter. and his passenger,
Officer Todd Seiders. crawled
from the banged-up craft and
waded to shore following the
3:45 p.m. mishap near Fern
Street.
Swimmers and lifeguards in
the area dragged the helicopter
out of the water and back up to
the sand.
A number of sunbathers alonJI?
the crowded strand reported
seeing the patrol bird flying low
along the coastline and then
suddenly spinning out or control. ..
clockwis'.e, ·rapldly lbsing · . . .
altitude and diving toward a VotersmNewportB~achwallbe
group or surfers and swimrpers. asked. Tue$day lo deca~e the r~te
Sgt. Miller. police continued, o~ a city !Deasure seeking to gwe
was able to nurse the diving city bffi caals lhe power to up<tate
her 0 le way from the crowe.~ an agreement for the extension of
IC P ra . n theCoronadelMarFreeway. befo~e splashmg into ~he ocea · Measure Lis the only Newport
lmtial reports lndtcated that city ballot measure in Tuesday's
the $80,000 helicopter ma~ hav.e generalelection. d~~~lo~t:~~~r;igs r:;~~ ~~ ~l City ofricia~ need a voter ok.ay r · . . . to update their agreement wtlh rear of th~ bard, pohce said. was Caltrans. which was written
somehow 1arred loos.e. nearly lSyears ago.
The crumpled helicopter later According to the Newport City
wa.s _haule d to Tall~antz Charle votersmustapproveany A v1al1on at John Wayne A1rport . . r, . where it will be studied by police c1ly. mvolveme!'t. with fre~w~y~.
investigators to determine the In this case. omcaals explain, at 1s . necessary for them to have a exact cause of the m1s~ap. . .._voice on where onramps and
F ~~er~ I Av 1at 1 0.0 offrampswill extendinlothecity. Adm1nistr~t1on officers. said State funding for the freeway ~hey d~ not mv~stl~ate accidents extension, which will take the ~nvolvmg pubhc aircraft unless freeway from its current
invited to do so. terminus near Campus Drive to
.Two year,s ago, a pal~ or MacArthur Boulevard, has been Newport off'lcers escaped inJury approved when their patrol he licopter ·
flopped down on a remote dirt Strike Loo ms road on the Irvine Ranch.
He said there's no particular
significance for staging the
Candlelight walk in Corona del
(See MARCH, Page AZ)
Police reports Indicate Miller
and tus partner were on routine
patrol at an 11IUtude or roughly
lSO feet and had ju.st completed
a 180 degree turn when the
aircraft began to vibrate.
A police inquii:y hito the
mishap will be c<?f\ducled in an
• attempt lo determine the exact
VISTA CAP> -North Cowity
transit bus drivers. mechanics
and other employees say lbey'U
go on strike soon because they
have faJJed to win a favorable
contract.
At this point, police said, the
helicopter starte d s pinnin~
IJ.S. Supreme COllrt A~tiota
cause of the accident.
(See COPTER, Page AZ)
n ·eath Penalty Issue Delayed
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Under California law, a capital
U.S. Supreme Court today .set case Jury first must decide
aside a rulln• 'hat blocked whether a defendant ls guilty of
California prosecutors from flret-degree murder. If the
1eeld n1 the d,1th penally in verdlct la first-decree murder,
.. eapeclall:v helnoul. atrocious or the jury determine• whether the
cruet" murder cases. crime included one or more
By a 1-8 vote, the Justices told ''1peclalclrcum1unces.''
the Calllomla courts to restudy 0 n e o f t h o a e s p e c i a I
tleelslou 1trlldn1 down that circumstances states, "The
portion of tbe 1tate'1 capita murder •u especially beiooul.
p u n I 1 h m e n t I a w a 1 atrodoua. or cruel manlfestlng
unCODltltutlonallyva1ue. exception.I 'depravity •.. a
The eMW&'• brl4f order aid. eon1elenc:eleU or pttlleu crime • 'Tbe Juq...,.t 11 vacated and the which la UDMeetHrlly tortU<Ma to
caM fl NIDaded to the Court·of the vletlm." Appeal of California. rtrat State p~utora attempted ~· Dlllrict, to ~ lut year to lnt.roduee tbat •l*lal
.. Ila J•ment t. bued cfrewtuee ID tbe H=
• p o a ft d • r a I o r 1 t a t e cun al two Santa Clara
..... 4t••'IJ'CIUnda." auarder cW--.m, AUen Leroy J.-1'bam J. Bl"tnDU En1ertaJoaWayaeOambll. t.·,=:.=~·~~~P!!1 .. -tt~:r=~=-·~J:.
M ann.inginSan Jose.
Gamble was accused of beating
a 2·year-o&d girl. Sbanean Hall, to
death In Aupst 1979.
Both Engert and Gamble
challen1ed the use of special
circumsi.nce. attac~nl It u too
va1ue to meet coastltutlonal.
due·procdl st.anclard1.
A 1tate trial J\Ml1e ••reed and
barred t.he lntroducllon of the
special cireumaiance. May l, a
caurornA• appee~ (0"'1 rut~
that in the context or the slate's
capital punishment law t he
special clrcumstance1s "vague
language cannot w ithstand
conatltutional scrutiny.'•
The California Supreme Court
on June 25 refused to revtew an
appeal from that ruUn1 by the
state attome,y cenerat 's office.
lihy 19 the nation's hlchest
court G.ed a Geor1la cue to nale
lbe atates may not lmpoee the
death aentence on a convicted
m urderer for an • 'outrateoualy or
wan tonl)' vile •. h orrible or
lnbuman" crlme unleu lbe
murder vletim 1ulfned "Mrtoul pb11~alabule" befondeatb. TM court aakl Georala comu
aled that WGl'diQI ln a POl'tlGe ot -.M l&Me'• dea&b penalty law lO
l•PGM u. dMth Hatnff tn an
ta•Wwarrway.
thoee failures," Regagan told the.crowd.
He stre.ssed Carter's alleged e.conomic failures ln his speech, and
avoided any mention of the latest developments in "the boeu1e
situation that could affect theoutcomeoftheelectlon Tuesday.
Reagan, s~klng votes Sunday In critical Midwest lnduatrial
states. shied away from commenting on the latest developments in
Tehran and kept up his criticism or Carter's bandlin1 of the
economy.
CAMPAIGNING IN DAYTON, OHJO, HE concentrated on economic issues saying, "Carter economics have been a major
tragedy ror'· many American families . . . Every time interest
<See CANDIDATES, Pase AZ)
* * * .* *
Freedo1n
Militants
Release
Custody
By The Associated Press
Iranian militants met with
s piritual leader Ayatollah
R uhollah Khomeini today and
t h en turn e d over
"responsibility" for their 52
American captives to the
Iranian governm e nt . U.S .
officials. who a re considering
Iranian terms for their freedom,
said the development was a
major bre akthrough toward
their eventual release.
"We will rrom now o n
delegate responsiblity for the
hostages' safeguarding to the
government and will engage in
the most important current
issue of the revolution, defense
of lbe Islamic homeland,"
Tehran R adio quoted a
•'8"4mmt from ~ mlUtuta u
sayln1.
The militants were re£erring
to Iran'• border wa~ with Iraq.
Plans for the pbysical tramftr
of the hostages will be *Orited
out following a "meeting before
midnight" (mid·day PST>
between the government and the
militants. officials of the Iranian
prime minister's office reported.
The militants' statement said
the government during that
meeting would "introduce their
represt-ntative for deli very or
the American spies."
·The aides to the prime
minister said Algeria was
delegated to handle talks with
Wa shington and the captives'
release if the u.s./ government
meets Iran's demands.· They
said that in the meantime Iran
will continue to have custody of
the hostages. who will "r4!main
where they are," presumably
meaning the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
In Washington, White . House
pr~ss secretary Jody Po.well
said the transfer "is something
we have seen since the very
outset as being an important
step toward the ir eventual
release. That's something we
have labored long and hard to
get this spring and thought we
had it there for a few hours and
did not. So if this happens. it's a very encouraging sign.··
Representatives of the Islamic
iailitants who seized the
A"!flerican Embassy and its staff
Nov . 4. 366 days ago, met for two
hqur.s today with Khomeini
follbwing the approval SWlday
by the Majlis, Iran's parliament,
of terms for the release of the
Americans. Tehran Radio said
one militant read a statement to
Khom ei ni a s k ing the
government to relieve the
militant.a of responsibility ror
lhe hostages and allow them to
join the war against Iraq.
Tehran Radio said Khomelni
thanked the 11tudent.s and added:
·'The service which these young
people rendered by seizlng and
h o lding th ese corrupt
individuals eliminated the fears
in the minds of the peoples.
nations and governments and
the picture they had of the
s,ectre of the great powers."
Meanwt\ile, Prime MlnJster
Mohammad Ali Rajal met wlth
A I ceria 's am ba11adqr In
Tehran. and the two a1reed
Al1eria would take care of tbe
hoata1ee, Pan said. It wu not
•immedlatel)' known U thl•
meant the captives would be
nown lO AJiiett or rem ailt ln
Jran under Alterian 1upervllloa.
ONE
YEAR
Gems J7 alued
At $227,000
Stolen: in "I' B
BurMrs kicked their way into
a NeWport Mach jewelry shop
early Sunday, smashed open
nine display c~es and escaped
witb at least $2Z7,000 worth of
rings , bracelets and gold
charms. • Police said employees at
Bre tl-Walker J e welers in
Fas hion I s land are still
computing the actual loss.
The intruders, investigators
said, kicked loose r sheet of
bullet -proof glass ne ar the
~hop's front door at about 2:30
a .m .. triggering a burglar·alarm
in the process.
Once Inside. police said. the
crooks used a heavy object to
crack open display cases and
scooped up at least 250 gold
rings, three $700 watches as well
a s charms, bracelets and gold
money clips.
In their haste, investigators
noted. the burglars dropped ·a
number of items. leaving a trail
or jewelry from the cases lo the
point of entry.
This is the second major loss ·
for the Newport Beach jewelry
shop this year. Last March, a
pair of armed bandits held up
the shop and escaped with
$500,000 in jewelri-. ,
Two men later were arrested
in connectl&f'with the stick·up.
· 8225,000 F ire
BAKERSFIELD CAP> -A
fire of undetermined oriein
caused an estimated $225,000
damage to a department store
here today . Cfty fire ln·
vestigalors said the blaze ap-
parently started at a sandwich
shop located on the first floor of
Ted's Department Store.
Co ast
We a t h e r
Continued sunny. Lows
tonight 54 alone the coast,
62 Inland. Hilhl Tuesday
74 to 78 at beaches, 82 to 88
Inland.
INSIDE TODA t'
Controotr-w COftl•M• o~r
,,.. •II«'• Of u.. TltrH ""• lllond -.c&Nr oceideftt. SH
ltOrWI, ,.,,. A1. .....
•'In tlal1 meetla1 It was
decided tlaat the M•a.m IDd brotMr tcMmlrJ of Allena will
tak• tan cl tbe U.S . .._. ......
Part Hid of tb• IO-mlaut•
H11lon betweea Raj al !'ll~d~~.teiiiiiii....:;;.:'..i!C..illlllaJ~~".11-·""4 • AtJdat Slrtlf"GtlantlJ.
ISJllUT, LebaHa (AP> -iran, wbicb bu beld 52
A•tritaM hoe~ for• 1ear. mvoktd "all ln~maUO.W eodta IUl4l ,..WatioM' lod.ay ln dtmancliQ the nileue of lta oU •'H'MM, who wu ca_ptu.d by lrecaf fott .. on Ult Abadaa .....,..._
hi Ir .... wl*b l'QOrted the capture of Mohammed Jawad a.qu1r ~an and live aidel rrila)', said the captives were
prboMn of war. The «Nmand tor tbeir release was made by
lraaian Prime Minister MoMmmad Ali Rajai. who allo plans lo
t.d• part in iDdirect ne1otiatioaa on tbe Am-"icu bo9taaes.
Rajal'a office said s~ that Iran WU "booored to find its
offtclall ambuahed alon11ide the DeOPle while safe~ U., ldorioua revolution." n called on lraq lo ensure the officials
welfare. but said they we.-eready ~oiacrlfice tfleir Uves.
ftre i. St' €eatrellefl
SAN FRANCiscg (AP> -A four-alarm blue on a
foa·•hrouded walerfrpnt pier of creosote-soaked pilin1s.
po11lbly caused by p•rtyln1 flshermen, was brought under
control today after four hours.
Richard Kucich, a San Francisco arson investigator. said
there were signs of a p~rty near the spot where the fire began al
6 :30 a.m. in choking fog on the city's wes~ side.
Deputy Port l>irec~r Anthony J . 'l'aormjna said the fire
apparenUy began in an old, rotting fenced-0ff section of Pier 70
on the west side of the c ty.
• I ...... Kl• Ral•~ Neee Flag
HERMITAGE, Pa. AP> -Relatives of some U.S. hostages
in Iran held hands in the chHly dawn today-as the 366th flag
marking each day or the Americans' captivity was planted ln
this northwest Pennsylv,nia town. ( l_telated Photo A3 )
Richard Hermening, of Cudahy, Wis., whose son Kevin Is
one of the S2 hot.stages, unfolded the flag, attached it to a s taff
and planted the pole in the ground as about 300 watched and a
'high school chorus sang the "Star Spangled Banner."
The new banner tooi its place in a forest of red, whlte and
blue flags that have been flying at Hillcrest Memorial Park
since the lOOlh day of captivity in February. A new flag has
been raised each day siqce. All the banners have been donated
and many have been sent by relatives of veterans who died in
J>ljt wars. ~
rCANDIDATES CAMPAIGN
'rates go up one point, another 1.3 million Americans have been
• shut oat of the housing market.•'
But at Marietta College in Ohio, Reagan acknowledged that
"We all have on our minds the matter of the hostage situation in
Iran." •· Then the Republican candidate added that "this is not the lime
or the place for me to be addressing such a sensitive matter."
The 11th-hour shirt of the campaign focus back to the hostages
was-on Reagan's mind in rece.nt months when he speculated there
~might be an "October surprise" that could tilt the election to
·Carter. The Republican nominee expected Carter to try to achieve
a dramatic breakthrough in the situation.
But the movement that occurred was initiated by the Iranians,
not the Wblte House.
. . CAaTEa ABRUPTLY HALTED A CA,.P.UQN irtp . and
. returned to Washington on Sunday morning to confer with advtsers
on bow to respond to the conditions set by the Iranian Parliament
· (~r releue of 52 APlerical)s llf!ld b~t-.Je tin~ ~v. •• 11979. • The long 1980ielectloti campaign ends on Tuesday when more
than fK> million Americans are expected to decide the outcome of
thousands of contests for prizes ranging from the White House lo
local offices.
Voters will elect 34 senators. the entire House of
Representatives an<l 13 governors.
lf the pollsters are right and U the Iranian hostage situation
doesn't cause a last-minute surge to one candidate or the other. the
presidential race loots too close to call.
Republicans are optimistic about Uieir chances to pick up five
or six Senate seats apd at least 12 House seats. Neither gain would
· be enough to end a generation of Democratic control of both
• legislative bodies.
HOWEVER, THE POTENTIAL SENATE victims include
veteran Derpocrats Warren G. Magnuson of Washington, George
S. McGovern of South Dakota, Frank Church of Idaho and Birch
: .Bayh of Indiana. and Jacob Javits or New York. a senior
Republican. ~ Also threatened by tough opposition this year are such ranking
1 House Democrats as Jim Wright of Texas. the majority leader;
John Brademas of Indiana, the assistant majority leader; Morris
Udall of Arizona, chairman of the Interior Committee, and Al
Ullman of Oregon, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee.
Jailed AttomAy's
. License Suspended
A Tustin attorney who chose not
~o fight prosecution charges that
he pocketed more thab ·$50,000
belongin& to c9';1tts has been
su1peoded by the California
Supreme Court while be is serving time in prison.
Martin Goldberg, who
practiced at 301 El Camino Real.
• ..,
DAILY PILOT
T1t1i.t111" (714,.._.
Ol111•1•Aft.-'11I ......
as currently und~rgoing
diagnostic§! at the ~aliJornia Institutiop ~at Chino.
He plead no contest on J.µIY 21
to charges fil~ by the Orange
County Diatrict Attorney's Office
and is due back in Orange County
Superior Court Jan. 7 for formal
sentenclngonthecharges.
Prosecuting Deputy District
AUorney Doug Woodsmall said
today that Goldberg wu
originally charged wllh
wrongfully keeping money
enlrustedby,orduetiveclientahe
represented.
He said the sums totaled about
$60,000, with the bulk of It
repreaeftted by one count In the
arand theft cue ln which the
attorney wu convicted.
Goldberg could be placed on
probaUon dependln1 on resulta of
hlJ ~ evaluation at Chlno or
sentenced to 1pend more tlme
behind ban ror the trand thd
conviction.
A plff ol aolo conteachre, or no
conlelt, ll not an admlNlon ol
1u11t, but. in •o pleacUn1 the
defendant stand• coavfcted.
However, bil convlctloD c.-.ot
be ..,.. ln dYll court 11 evidence b1..,_•ulDI bbn u • neultol
tbeonstuldlarse·
Qo .......... o1 .... .,.,.
qalalt wbom die Calllanda Bar
Alloel ........ reeead1 ..... aetlanth,.....ta..'~• ourt, tlM .,_., ... ~..,····-11 IL~F·~ IHOCllUOll
•
COntena
81 GLENN 8COTT ... .,..., ~ tUlfl
One alter another at a recent
meetlftl, resideota of a poor
section ol Suta Ana marched to tbe front of a hall to poH
accuaina questions to Phlllp
Anthony about an unpopular
proposal to move a rt1cue
mia_slon to their nei&hborhood.
After each ch a r & et .• he
palielfUY stood from a folCIU\•
chair in the front row. At 6-feel-f.inch~. he was tbe tall•t
person in the room. He tried to explain be didn't have control
over the location. The city of
,Santa Ana does.
Then another citizen would
step forward with another
question designed to chastise
and challenge the First District
Orange County supervisor.
The grilling was s up1>0sed to
be part of a question and answer
session for, incumbent Ant.bony
and his challenger in Tuesday's
supervisorial election, Roger
Stanton.
Stanton couldn't come. He was
teac hing a night class at
Ca lifornia State University,
Lon~ Beach . so be senC an
emissary who opened her
remarks to the lan?e lv Latin crowd in Spanish.
It seemed a clever political
move, but almost all the
questions were aimed at
Anthony. It was as if the
candidates night was only a ploy
to force Anthony to be pressured
into supporting the neighbors'
cause. ·
To that extent, it worked..
Anthony promised to fight the
unpopular location if the group
remained opposed to it. And
when the session was completed,
it was Anthony, the e rsatz
enemy of the neighbors. who
drew the loudest applause.
It has been that kind or a race
for the two candidates. The
spotlig~t has remained fixed on
Anthony, and his incumbency
has been particularly noticeable
in the race. He has held a lock
on campaign contributions,
outdrawing Stanton by a margin
better than 20 to 1, and he has
won endorsements from the four
other supervisors who will serve
the next term.
Said Anthony : ·•As an
incumbent, the people can loo.k
at your record and see if you're
qualified. I've tried ,very bard to
work with the peo_ple . . . I've
tried to work hard lo get
r~sults."
Stanton a l so ba s made
Anthony's experience in office
an issue by tying it with the
legal probl e ms that have
haunted the s upervieor almost
since he took oftice in 1976.
·'There are a lot or Issues in
the county, but the issue in this
rac.e is who ls going to be abl~ to
serve out the term." s aid
Stanton.
Anthony has endured a wave
or publicity in connection with
indictments filed ag,ainst rum on
three conspiracy charges of
laundering cam paign
contributions in 1976. An
indictment does not assume
guilt, an() Anthony still hasn't
gofft! to trial in the matter.
On Thursday, the stale
Supreme Court turned down his
appeal to throw out the case.
Stanton immediately ioterpreted
the action to mean Anthony had
run out of appeals and will have
to stand trial.
Stanton likes to point out that
if Anthony is convicted, he
automatically loses his position
and Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
is responsible for appointing a
new supervisor. Stanton hesitates to talk about
his chances of winning a Brown
appointment, somet hing he
claims the voters don't wan" Inst~ad he says: "By electing
me, they don't have to worry
about a governor appointment."'
To Antborv , however.
Stanton's attack' on him has the
appearance of "a cheap shot."
"I've served out one term ytith
these cbar1es there all the time
and I think there Is &ood reason
I can serve out another tertn,"
he saJd.
"More than that, the char1es
are terribly infiated and YoU'll
aee that eventually it will be
1hown that I'm not guilty as
charged."
·Hoine Looted
In Newport
I
A Newport Beach man.
retumlna home early from a
Halloween party, dllcovered
bur1l•r1 bad looted his
apartment and took a sultcue
pNIWMbly to carry out their
'9500ha~. · Rlcbard GNIOl'Y Purvta told
police tbe erookl made off earl)'
S.turda)' wtth "" tokl --valued at 13.• u w.ll u two
wate .... , jewelry and ta5 ln
eaall. ·Police aatd tile bur1lara
•tend die .tdtm'a IHJllM• °""l:' ..... hlon:bll .-a Joe IHdlnc ,.._ door.
. I '
u~·~ JOHN WAYNI SUSAN HAYWARD
MoYte location~ tor Caft09f'?
Radiation Came
Of.Wayne Cancer?
NEW YORK <AP) -At least91
of the 22lO cast and crew mem-
bers of a 1956 movie filmed 1.31
miles from the Yucca Flat, Nev.
atomic testing ran1e h•e con-
tra~ted cancer and 46 have died
from it, says People magazine.
The dead include the stars of
"The Conquerer," John Wayne
and Susan Hayward. -lt1 pro·
ducer-director, Dick Powell, and
character actress Agnes
Moorhead. . Another player in the film,
Pedro Armendariz, s urvived
cancer of the kidneys four years
after the filming, the magazine
says, but kilJed himself in 1963
when he learned he had termmal
cancer of the lymph system.
Wayne's son Michael, 45, who
visited his father in Utah on the
set of the film about Genghis
Kahn, was treated for skin
cancer in 1975. His 41-year-0ld
brother. Patrick , and Miss
Hayward's son, 35-year-old Tim
Barker, who also were visitors
to the desert set, have had
benign tumors removed.
People said several members
of the movie's cast and crew or
relatives are co nsiderin"
Actress Jeanne Gerson, 76,
who bas survived s kin and
breast cancer and is still un-
dergoing chemotherapy, re-
portedly has hlred a lawyer to
brmg a class action, hoping
otb'en involvecJ in ma~ing the
Irvine Woman
Beaten, Raped
movie ~ a box-office bomb -
will join her.
No atomJc tests were made at
Yucca Flat durinl the filming in
St. George, Utah, in the sum.mer
of 1954, according to People. But
11 bombs had been exploded in
the atmosphere the year before.
People quotes Dr. Robert
Pendleton. a former Atomic
Energy Commission researcher
and now director of radiological
health at the University of Utah,
as saying that radioactive
fallout was "very abundant" in
the area in 1954. Snow Canyon,
where much of "The Con-
querer" was ftlmed, is a natural
reservoi'r for windblown mat-
terial. be said.
"With these numbers, this
case could qualify as an
epideritic," he said. "The COD·
nection between fallout radia-
tion and cancer in individual
cases has been pr~cticaUy im·
possible to prove conclusively,
but in a group this size you'd ex-
pect only 30-some cancers to de-
velop. With 91. I ttunk the tie-in
to tbetr exposure on the set of
'The Conquerer' wouJd hold up
even in a court of law.
Michael Wayne is quoted say-
ing that "suing the government
isn't going to bring my father
back." But People quotes
Barker as saying that if enough
people &et angry about pollution
•'maybe they can minimize the
harm for the future."
There wu no comment from
the government, People said,
adding a Senate panel is to bold
hearings on the test next year.
B · ·1 l d · Reports last year from three y n ru er London newspapers that atomic
• • , ~llout oo the test site may have
A 19-year-old Irvine woman been linked to the deaths of
was beaten a nd raped earl~ Wayne, Powep and &(iss
toaay in.side her University Park Hayward were greeted with
home, accordjng to polic~ .. ~ s)cepticism .•
She told police a man in his ..
early 20s burst into her l>edroom • A spokesman for Wayne's
at 3 a.m. and assaulted her. She family said then he had beard
said she severely bit the man's the reports and considered them hand. "absolutely not true."
Police Lt. Bob Lennert said
the woman told him the
assailant enter ed t he house
through an unlocked door. The
sus pect was alone with the
victim for about two hours.
·'We combed the·neighborhood
with police cars but didn't turn
up anything," Lennert said. "We
don 't hav e any further
description of the suspect. The
house was dark."
He saJd the woman suffered no major physical injuries .
There were no other witnesses
to the assault.
F,....P~AI
COPTER ••.
Police said they would like
eyewitnesses to the crash to
contact them. There has been
some concern, police said, over
reports that the helicopter
allegedly was bein1 flown in a
reckless manner and that one
person in the copter was waving
to the crowd on the beach.
e Garage Brings if Together for 'Fall
re we feature our own mid·wele cord pant,
Ith • pre•finrshed ptaln t>onom, ICC*lt«t
one of our meny MIY care P'8ld aPOnatiirts •no 1 Gfllt 1h1wt cotllnld pu1'°*' awe11ar
' Oran1e County Supervlaor
Tbomaa Riley said today ht will
seek 1 two-week delay Tund.ay
of action on a proposal to Clve
Human Services Acency
Director Martaret Grier
expaaded dudes as director of
the county mental health
department. •
Biley •aid be ,..ould seek the
delay at the request of the
county Mental Health Adviaory
Board.·Tbe board recently voted
1 5 t -o 2 a g a i n s t t h e
recommendation that Mias
Grier be given the dual
appointment as HSA director
and ment41 health director.
Critics o( the proposal have
charged that mental health
programs require the attention
of'a full-time administrator. And
they have claimed the cotmty's
mental health system haf
suffered in the year Miss Grier
bas held the mental health
department directorship on ari interim basis.
Riley predicted the
continuance of the item will be
approved by the board. The new
date for action would be Nov. 18, ·
he said.
FrotaPag~AI
MARCH •..
Mar other than members ol the
Baha'i faith in Newport Beacll
fell it was appropriate. ·
Arrangements have bee.a
made, he s aid, to kee.f
participants from interfenoa
with traffic or blockini
intersections.
Langness said the walk and
the vigil are "symbols" of the
Ba hi 's concern for the half a
million members of that faith in
Iran.
But he said, Baba 'i member:s
aren't necessarily opposed to the
Khomeini government in Iran.
··we aren't involved in
partisan politics -we are
well -wi s h e rs of our
governments. whereve·r we live.
What we oppose is killing and
persecution of innocent people."
The Bah.a 'i faith, he explained,
i1 an independent religion that
began in Persia in the midd)e of
the 19th century and since baa
spread to many areas of the
world.,
The Khomeini government in
Iran, according to reports,
regards the Baha'i faith as .a
political enemy of the Islamic
revolution.
The Bahlfi faith teaches that
men and women are equal, a
teac hing in cohtradiction to
fundamental Islamic ,t>eHefs.
Crash Hurts
NB Cyclist
A 24-year-old Newport Beach
motorcyclist, injured durint a
traffic collision in Costa Mesa at
East 17th Street. and Irvine
A venue, was reported in &ood
condition today at Fountain
Valley Community Hospital.
Paul James Smith of 333
Amethyst Ave., suffued serious
head injuries. police said, when
btt by a car as be attempted to
make a left tum at about 10:30
p .rri. Saturday.
t .. •.\
...... , ..
C ...... Prieee.
CLOSING 917.20
Asian Sex Appeal
Charm Powers ,
Asian Airlfue
# By MILTON MOSKOWVITl
"Coffee. tea'' or me" was an expression coined to
describe the pornography or airlines prom0Un1 lbeir
service by sernng the virtues of their stewardesses.
Women's libbers used to declaim mightily a1ai.nat t.hU
form of promotion, their ire being particularly arouaed by
the old ''Fly me" campaign of National Airlines. -'
It's probably not fair to credit the women's libben with
the disappearance or National Airlines, but there it i1 : Na-
tional Airlines no longer exists.
The airline that once had such a visible presence on the
New York-to-Florida run has disappeared into the folds or
Pan American )Vorld Airways, which has emeried trium-
pha ntly as bo).h a domestic and international airline. one or
the four supercarriers
of the U.S. airline in·
d us try (the others being
U nited , TWA and
American).
Meanwhile. the "Fly
me" campaign has dis·
appeared. too. and it's
Money
Tree
not likely to be resurrected by Pan Am . However, Pan Am
may soon be locking horns on intemaUonal routes with an
airline that uses a sophisticated variation on the "Coffee,
tea or me" approach in the sale' or jetliner seats. This car-
rier is Singapore Airlines, and it's no joke. It is, in fact, the
world's fastest growing airline.
Both Pan Am and Singapore Airlines are scheduled to
open new routes next month. Pan Am will be resum1iii ili
service to China. a route it pioneered. It plans to ny three
nights a week to Peking -one from New York. one from
San Francisco and one from Los Angeles . AU three would
stop in Tokyo, a destination already served by Pan Am.
SING"PORE AIRLINES. which would like -but bu
not yet received permission -to fly to China, will be in·
augurating a new route out of Los Angeles on Dec. 1. It will
be flying nonstop to Tokyo three afternoons a week (Mon-
day, Thursday and Saturday) -and then on to its home
base in Singapore. This service will compete dirtttly with
Pan Am and J apan Air Lines.
Touching down in the U.S. ls not new for Singapore. It
already has two nights a week out or Los Angeles, going to
1 Taipei and Singapore. And it rues out or San Francisco
rour times a week to Hong Kong and Sinaapore.
Many may not realize that Singapore is a country. lt
split from Malaysia in 1965. Singapore is an island nation
with a land area that's only a little more than half the ala
of Los Anaeles, 1t has a population of 2.3 million, 75 per·
cent or them ethnic Chinese. BuUn ei&bt years it hu built
up an airline that now ranks an\Ofll the world'• 25 lar•est
-and ifit keeps going, who knows where it will end~?
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. I
\.
81 CWl.V,._,OT ........ ,..,. t•
TONIGHTS LATEST LI
lllffy HolMd: aw T ..
rolll pie etuit; Dr. W..co .... .., °" .. .,....
• eolJD 90L.D
••noMM. .... llU.~-JOUIWll. • TUBE TOPPERS ....,.. Tiie U. 01 .. ...... ,,_ .. ..,..
1o1 •.....,.a.or.''"'·· ao .. , ..... --WCMAM ~.W_,..W.lhe
au. .. Oladyt l(nlgltt Md
The Plpt. SI-Allen,
Tltlya TUclc•. ~. Hiit I
Alld <>et•. lddla Rlltlbltt.
• CMlj)llgn ~ lleGo
tlOn Eve lpec;lat" 8111
~~SiWllpl up theCMI• I
P'lgn, ,..,urtno Int~ I
With cllliena from .,~
the counlry and prot.a-I tlor\al Ol>MfWr•
ABC • 6:00 -Monday Ni_..t Foot·
ball. The Chicago Bears vlait the
Cleveland Browns.
r 111111.) .
11••(1) '"9..W AWtJ••
lifottO Ir-Ill 04I «I• .,._ .... ..,,....a
-t l'Mtl\Od OI t.lwlnf"'O
-.OllllOfOld e a --.~ CNcaoo ...,. a• c....._,
IWl<llfowna •TICTAC~
M"A"l"H
A tnrong w1no11orm altec.1•
the me1nbefa of IN 4077th
In YatYlflO waya
• nta llllNNY HIU.
INOW
AuOfanla --':c>mff hom•
a aoldMlt Nlto Wtlh wlna,
won>en and eong· lhe
ThtM Mu•k•IM•• rid•
I
I
• CAI lflDMIA'I
WAT9'D1•"1•·
~· CoflcNlta: Clef• Robena In
Loa Angalea and Spencer
Mlc:Mel9 In San F'ranc:laco.
l:IO I (I) WJm MAN OMOLeuMETT AND,,... G llU. MOYIM'
JOMAl
•'1AN<.....u I
America"• atar-..,angled
.. 11r1a1 •ldr• ofl f\la tl•th
MAIOtl of lland-up eono•
and bipartisan lingers
ltom Iha Kalhe<lne Cornell
Tt1e1ter II the UniYerllty of
Buflato.
IO:ao •• NIWI ITAN" I IM'I l'IDIML.~
11:00 I a Cl) a NIWI
Kn.A e 8:00 -''Gable and Lom·
bard." James Bronn-and Jill Clayburah
portray the famous screen Joven of the
Thirties in this movie based on their
brief life together.
CBS 9~: O -Campaign '80 Pre-election ial. A final look at the can·
didates and issues in the presidential
election before it goes to the voten.
A damenled ..........
10 ,.. -.. WOlid
uelng Ill.,~ of ....
1 ........ '"'La.~ "Dead ...., •• ce-1"'
l:008 NIWI a:ao ee HIWI
a:ao .... 2:• MOYll
1·=~
t:aO 1 .. St-==neas"
WILCOME MQ<,
KOTIVI
I
I Flglaflng Mad
"Cllll'IC*on Repof1: Elec-
llon Eve Special" 8111
Moyera Wf~ up the cam-
palgtl and vtews on the
Melton Including Inter-
~ With Citizens from
around Ille ~try and
• proteulonel ob--.
Ml•O TOM
ANNOUNCID
9:008 (1) M"A"l"H
Col. Poller ruSNIS on on a
MC141t mlssaon and Hawtl·
Aye 11 fPP()inted tempo-
rary oommancser. (RI
HOUYWOOO
IGWMI 1 --'t'WID GAUi ......... -
8 J borrows 1200 from
Char.., to Mnd 10 "'• wtl•.
only 10 hi~ Charles take
advantage of him In va,..
oua ways
G OUNIHOKE
A vengeful •!!-convict
Miika reprisal '!llainsr •
former partner-in-crime
who ran out on a tra.n
hOldup
,,.._and a man ..no per-'°'""• -d dance. -~MC
. NEWS
12:20 8 MOW
••'A "Lode, SIOCll And
Barrel .. (1970) Tim Mah-eon: 8ellnda J. MontfO!ft-
ery. A pelt of young ~
flee IM grip of their par.
111t1 In an auempt to flllO
h~(2hn.)
I I I -..1 I '\ \
Taw•dat1'•
Da11'••~ Mo.,lr• Tfla s ... 11h0gs SIK:k up for
Washington when w ooo
man ac;cu ... horn Of Chell·
1ngonaaAam
Cl) 0000 TIMES
Flqrlda plays malchmakf'r
10< w111ona and a mare
lriend of James
fl) DO< CAVETT
"Elecllon Eve Wllh AnlhO·
ny l ewis And Jane Bryant Qoi~n" •
Ii) S-2-1 cONT ACT (R) Q
()) M "A"8"H
P1ych11lrl1I Ml jOt Freed·
man comes 10 the 11sytum
lhal is the 40771h 10 clear
his head and finds •elease
in Us umque lorm of tnsan1·
ly.
Michael Landon trains for a battle with
a punch-drunk traveling prizefighter in
tonight's episode of "Little House on the
Prairie," airing at 8 o'clock on NBC,
Channel 4.
early Ille end 1n tum
double about her death
fm OVEA EAS ...
.. . Gueat. aQlress Ruth G0<-
don. Q
'1!) M~CHEIL ~ LEHAEA
REPORT
(() TIC TAC OOUOH
7:30 I) 2 OH THE TOWN
Hosts· Steve Edwards aod
MetOdy Rogers . D FIGHT BACK WITH
DAVID HOROWITZ
Ii) CONNE.CTIONI: AH
AL TE.RNA~ vtE.W CW
CHANGE I
"The Wheel Of Fortune" •
Jamee Burke tr-s the
development of Iha mod-
ern prOductlon line from lls
unexpected 0<lgln1 1n mys-
ticism and u trology (R)c::;l
()) P .M. MAGAZINE
TV commarclal child sti rs.
windsurfing.
8 PAID POUTlCAL "'°°"•t VW40 • MEWGIWFIN
"The Duke And I" A cOllec·
tlon of ln19'Ylew1 with the
llta JOhn Wayne are IH · lur~ Gueal d11ector
·Andre"' Mclaglan.
Cl) HHHAW
Guest•. Tom T. Hall.
Jeanne Pruett. Henny
Youngman. Ill GMAT
~
., ONl IJTlP 8EYONO
"Return 01 Mlteh41n Cem-
pt<>n" MllChell Campton IS
ordeted to take a long
vacation atlet recovering
from • near fatal accident
El~
THEATRE
"P11de And P••1udk;1 ' Mr
COiiins _.. 1 a raconclh•·
Uon with lhe Bennet family
and Intend& to choo&e one
or Iha girls tor a wife (Part
2)0
11:30 II (I) CM NEWS
IPS:IAL
• HOGA.N'S HMOU
Hogan and Illa man
8ftlnge lo blow up • room
luff of NUi brass
., rT TAKO A TMEf
Al Mundy ls HSIQned 10
find OUI 11 a bitltonalre
rec;luse ls still alive fD CAPTlONEO MC
Nr#8
(II) MC NeWS
11:llO (II) PAID l"OUTICAL
PAOOAAMMING
12:00 IJ Cl) OUINCY, M.E.
-• •·~ "CrowllaYen Farm'
(19701 Hope Lange, Lloyd
Boctltler. A woman find••
maelstrom Of wltehcrt lt
and lettO( a ... alung her
_, aha lnllerlla a New
England farm (2 hrs )
12:30 D TOMOMOW
C}uaalt: act~en Gloria
Swaneon: columnlll Olene
M<:Clatlan. 9 DONAHUE ,
Guetl: Or. Pllrlck Steptoe.
C1J THIEIW
"Tiie Man Who Went Mad
By Mistake··
1':00. • * "Red River
Range .. (11138) John
Wayne. Ray C0<rigan. The
Three Mnqu1•-· ,., OUI
10 nab • Ot1f10 of cattle
lhievn operallng atong the
Red River. (1 ht.).
-AFT£RNOON-
12:00 • • • • •.;, "Each Dawn I
Ole" ( 1939) James Cagney.
G410tge Raft A crusading
r8t)Otter ta framed and
sent to jail.
Cl) • • * "Rio ConclloS"
7:00 8 C88 NEWS D N8CNEWS Topics include Ruooer-
mald Rough Neck tfash
c111 commercial. mace.
cred1l eatdS and e<ed1t
111forma11on bureaus.
POian<! Spnng Water. Woki
W1k1 potato chips
•:00 .. Cll FLO I Farley. Flo's llQh lwad •
tnQflgage hOlder WflO Is
running for office prom11-I
es free bee< from Flo s 1n
ecehange 10< vol"
"Tinker. Taller. SOidier,
Spy" George Smiley (Al~
Gu1nneu) uncovers the
ldenllly of the ,:touble
agent and Ille somewhat
nolot1ou1 M t1. Smiley
finally makes an appear-
1nC41 (Part 610 .
The status of the Amau·
cans Who were taken hos.
tage 1n tren on Nov11tT1ber
4 19711. 1s rev-.d
D THEIUTCW
CAMON
Quincy auapec:ts a ma<cy
killer et a san1tar1um It
respons.ble for the Pf&m•·
lure 04lalhs of two helplesl
and terminally 111 patients.
tD YOU 8ET Y<>Uft LIFE
Buddy Hackel! meet• a
woman who hire• male
••otlc dancer•. • chUI his-
torian and a man tty1ng 10
N ve Iha Enghah language
• NATIONAL NEWS
( 11164) Richard Boone. Stu-
art Whitman. Four men set
out acrou the Te•••
d-1 alter Iha ClvM Wet
10' tKOY8f stolen Army
rifles earmarked for sale lo
Iha Apaches (2 tits I
-
• D HAPPY DAYS AOAIN
Manon transfOfms herMtff
into a ve<led ~au1y when
Sh4I fears sh• might 10,.,
Howard 10 a younger worn·
en
(iJ J()t(EA'S WILD
• M "A"S"H
0 SHANANA
Guests Jan and De.Jn
(iJ FACE THE MUSIC Hawkeye s race is oadly
bum1 ,..,en a stoY11 he rs
!!}'•no 10 t1x e•p•Ode~
gJ BAAETTA
The mu1de1 ol a prom•nen•
l llO<ney s wtl!' apens I
can of worms about ne<
«D ALL IN THE FAlt'ILY
Edith oonvonces Arch•• to
rent out Gl0<1a'a old room
to bung 1n some 11111ra
money
tJ;) MACNEIL I LEHAE.A
REPORT
Channel Lbting•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC 1NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind 1 Los Angeles 8 KABC; 1V (ABC! Lo<> Angetes
CJ) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
U KHJ· TV (Ind 1 Los Angetes
lllJ KCST (ABC) San Diego at KTTV (Ind 1 Los Angele<>
., KCOP· TV (Ina ) LOS Angeles
Ill KCET TV I PBS) Los A n geles
El KOCE TV 1P BS1 Hun1inq1on Beach
•
•'
r .
-
D UTTl.E HOUSE ON
n4EPAAIAIE
Cllarlea concocll 1 plan to
nurM a.n aging bO•er Dack
lo health and st111t hom Of'
the road 10 a new Ille (R)
i MOVIE
• • '" "Gable And lom·
bard'" ( 19761 Jamee Brolln
Jiii Clayt>urgll Thlrtlet film
stars Ctark Gable ano Car-
Ole Lomoard dlacover that
ne;thef "'8 movie mogul•
nor Iha Amer~ public
are ready 10 accept their
HhcH ott-acreen romaf'\C41.
(2 hrs.)
(iJ MOVIE
• • • "CaprK:e" ( 1967)
Dorta Day, Richard Har111
A woman !revels Incognito
lo track down the na1col·
K:S nng reaponstble for hef
lather's death (2 hrs ) «D P.M. MAGAZINE
TV coml'lefc1al Child 111rs,
w1ndsurf1ng, e lllk ""'h
(!)) DON COA't£U.
t:30 8 (I) CAMP"'°" 'to:
PAE-a.ECTlOH ~
A aummaty of develop-
ments u the Pfasldenual
and congressional cam-
paigns eonctude will ~
presented D TO• AHNC>t INCIO
®)MOVIE
• • • · The l ast Detail"
( 1974) Jack NK:hOlson.
0 111 Young A pa11 of
rowdy shO<e patrolmen
anempt 10 teach lhelr
emoloonally withdrawn
pt1sonet Iha IKIS of life. ( 1
hr .. 30 mm I
10:00 9 Cl) PAID POLITICAL
PAOOAAMMING DO NEWS 8 MOVIE • * • "• "Slllher" (1973)
James Cean. Peter Boyle
An H -GOn finds h1msell
bemg followed by two
sit anoe "ans when h8 set&
out to recover • cache of
1001 concealed by his for-
mer partner f1 hr . 30
mint
Gueats Buddy Hacken,
Sally F l4lld (R} D PN80N£A: CELL
BLOCKH
The future of Hallway
Hou&e oS plKed 'in 141<>1>-
ardy when Iha pohce CQ<\·
t.nue llleor 1nterrogAhon of
Doreen
fJ HEWS
JOHN DARLING
D TWIUGHT ZONE
A hU·been trumpet player
a11emp11 10 make • ~
back.
D MCNEWS ID YOU 9ET YOUA LIFE
Buddy Hact<ell tnMIS Greg
Evigan. a temale whal4I
12:909 ~
A 10-rut-<lld witness 10 •
murder dangerouSly
•-Sit Ironside's eflO<ls 10
make him talk (Part 11
1:00• MCME • *'"' "Act One" (19631
George Hamilton. Jason
3:*1 U • • "0 .. lh !Kearn"'
I 11172) Jotln Martey. lynt1
Catlin A family receives a
lalagl'MI from Iha gcwwn-
ment notifying lllem of his
death, OUI 1141 retutM 11141
same night dealing death '°' Iha ommunuy (2 hrs.1
by Armstrong Ji Batluk
1 CAN'T ~EMeMSE~ WHEN T.'\IE EN.JOYED
A GAME /1>6 MUCH/
'Scared Straight' Retains hnpaCt
• ' l • .. • .. -..
By JE RltY BUCK
LOS ANGELES <AP > -'"Scared Straight
Another Story" opens with the sa!Jle stark, brutal
impaet as did the Oscar-winnid'g dbcumentary on .
which 1t was based .
A cocky youth swaggers into prison only to
fihd that he is Like fresh meat beiog thrown to the
lions. His defiance quickly turns to terror when the
·other pri90ners st art vying for his sexual favors .
A GUARD, LOCKING him into a cell, tells
·produced ~Y Arnokt Shapiro ·of Golden West
Tel~vision, told of the highly successful program
at Rahway State Prison in New Je rsey. The
documentary inAJ)lred ot'her prisoner-s lo "set up
similar programs, and went on lo win an Academy
Award.
"We got a call from CBS the morning after it
aired .·· said Shapiro, who also produced the movie
and now is in charge of moY'ie devel91>m ent for
Norman Lear's T .A.T. Communications.
him, "This ain't prison. This is a room for the "THEY SAID THEY didn't know what we
night. Prison starts when they open the door and wanted, but they wanted a movie based on that
what· happens -before your camera. But in fiction
you can tell a story. So in a way, the movie is a
more comprehens ive look at crime and how people
·de-al with prison \ban the documentary"."
Shapiro said he screened the documentary for
the cast and crew before they started production.
"I wanted to sl;low them the importance of what
we were trying to do,'' he said. "And throughout
the production, we had that extra punch. People
cared -I won't go so fa r as to say inspired -but
they did care."
you have lo step outside and face them." He documentary. We had a meeting with them, and ~~!~=1~-throws a thumb toward the inmates outside the John Reynolds said he wanted a commitment to
cell. howling and whistling. take it all the way to filming. That's a rare deal.
The youth, dubbed the "Woman of Mystery... Usually you get only a commitment for a treat-
The documentary contained language never
before heard on television, and the movie will
make a few breakthroughs itself. ll will not have
the four-letter words, but will have s trong
language that helps build its explosive power.
I I ~ 2
is raped repeatedly, and the prisoners swap him mentor a script. CBS agreed to it in 72 hours."
about for five packs of ci1arettes. · Reynolds is the head of Golden West
He hangs himself in the prison machine shop, T e levision, a nd a former president of CBS
and It's his death that Inspires several inmates to Te levision.
organize the "Scared Straight" progra m for The movie has a raw force and power . It's like
"THE CONFRONTATION sessions are as
powerful as the documentary ... he said, "even
though we couldn't use the same words. It does
have the same emotional intensity and the same
thing terrifying surroundings. Language becomes
secondary.•· juvenile offenders. Youths are brought to the waiting for a tickinl born b lo explode. ltfollows three
prison lo hear "the facts of life" about prison from black youths who thjnk they've got the syste m -.----------11111111111111-----~--. hardened inmates in such brutal and graphic de-shipped, and a white youth and his girlfriend who are ,.
Soaper in Greece "straight." Shapiro, who wears an Oscar tie clasp given ............ I --I ~ l\.~Yi.EY r1 ~-. tail that It liter a lly scares them into going heavllyintodrugs. I ~ I --..... .
him by his parents, said he believes the movie can .... m· \~ ,~. Kathryn Hays visits the ancient Temple "ti::ARED STRAIGHT _ ANOTHER Story," have an important role in preventing crime. · • .. ,... .... ~ • L ~
of Poseidon in a scene from the CBS soap lo be broadcast Thursday night at 9 oo CBS, Chan: ~~~ ~>-; ~~g ~~~~d T~~:e::.4~e;.~: f~: ~~~ 2s~~tu~~f!s~~e~~';:;:t:~:g:~z~~tio~nt:!'~~ said~·~ ~!nt'e<t ~~~~~~e~~~n:l,f!~~' ~~~ ~ ~!
any daytime serial. It airs weekdays at 2 gratn. the doc;_umentaty. 1t m ay have more impact ,........ •• 0 ~~
The original ''Scared Straight" documentary, beca usd:with a documentary, you can only film p.m . --I ~.
FOUR DAY FILM FESTIVAL . G~Mt Sen.en TV, Free Munchies,.
~==~~=~~~~~======~~·~~~-~-·-----~----------------~I MO·FOOnALLNIGHT ''
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MOM.. 1UIS.. wa.. THUU.
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• CtC Ofltl ••Pl'" Noveml* 30. 1980
Pflces m1y 1111y 11
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1t01ta Good on1,
tn lout11tfll
• Ca111otn1a .,..,. rov ... , ...
CO!otlef'• •act
wtfMIOw lleN!ef.
MARGARITA NIGHT '
GiMt Margaritas, Chips,
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