HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-06 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • •
·Teachers 'Pitch at Big A' ~
12 Bllllo• Jo~
-.-Reagan Power
._:!·
,_Shift Begi~s
WASHINGTON (AP> -
S41utpped wWl ..-mil,._ la fed-
eral money end ... en floors of
federal office space, aides to
PresldeOt-elect Reagan already
are at work on transferring the
power of government.
Telepbcnes were installed and ·
tiUes put on doors Wednesday in
.the Washington office building
· -five blocks from the White
House -that will serve as bead·
Names Spice
Ballots On
Electi~n Day
By Tiie Auocla&ed Preu
Without going into detaU, here
are the highlights of some of the
elections for Senate, House and
·eovernonhips.
Brown, Gray and White won.
Green and Black lost. ~
Pickle and Pepper won .
Bacon, Rice and . Turnipseed
lost.
Kindneas and Peaae won.
Hope lolt.
Winners: liart, Roe, Crane
and ~lab . Losers : Drake,
Bt~ver, Canary, Fox, Wolff and ~oodcock. ~ Fountain and Fields won. So
~ Glenn, Stump, Rose -nd
...... Lake, Bowe.rs, Brooks, atoll~ Hill and Moore all loat.
'.I<.. Lee won. Grant lost.
~ Chappell woo. Church lost.
k Ireland and Holland won. So
:.4Ud J'l'Cl9t and Snow. A winner
~ •u EarlJ. A loeer WU Furst. ~: w._.. were Youns, Frank
Cjacl Nobel. LoMn were Stron1, ~. Swm and Sot•e. • ;· le.....,_ won, DI.son lost. ;-: lo it went OD Election Day.
quarters for the 250 people wbo
will tOmtitute the Reagan tranal·
tlonteam.
President Carter made about
2,200 appointment. when h~ took
office, and Reagan will have u
many as 2,700 top-level jobs to
fill, all listed in a government
Other electlOn and po8t·
election cover•oe eppeera
todey on.-_. A3, A4, A12,
81•nd82.
publication known unofficially
as the "Plum Boot."
Reagan chief or staff Edwin
Meese said be hoped the new ad·
ministration will be able to lure
business executives who milht
otherwise turn down govern·
ment jobs because of federal
salaries and the insecurity of an
appointive post.
E. Pendleton James, a former
Nixon administration personnel
official who rum a Los Angeles
executive recruiting firm, will
be the. chief talent scout, Meese
said.
The transition team also will
begln work on executive orders
Reagan milht want to issue SQOll
after taking office to set the tone
of his administration, and on
domestic and fOftign policy de·
tai11.
The team itself may offer the
first~lue to the type af persons
Reagan will attract. ..ag
And unlike Carter, who
brought to Wahington a group
of Georpa confidant.a foreip to
federal aovemment, Reagan ls
uaemblln1 an experienced crew
of advtaers to Republican presi·
dent.I before him.
Many of them could end up
with key spots in the new ad·
ministration, includln1 such
familiar names u Henry Kin·
in•er, William Simon, Alex·
ander Haig, George P. Schultz
<See •EAGAN, Pase AJ)
Girl, 11, W in1 $500,000
~INCINNATI CAP) -AIJ ll·year-old 11 iuaranteed AS,000 a
. 1ear far lbe next 20 yeara, courteay of a radio atation that want· td to IDMe a name for lt.aelf.
Bui Ille '800,000 stveaway, wlUcb WYYS.FM bWed u tbe
· larllll ealll pn.. ID tbe lliltary of broadcutln1, bu caUHcl a
; 1maU _. amoaa CIDeinDati broadcuten.
om ..... ttaticMl doubled tM pdM wl " earoUIDc u.tenen ... ~ton 11 mmton. MotMr ltdoa. Wlaicb pnrioully
ft ftll ....... priHI, decided tUl Qae wW. UW., WM '9t·
-" bud aail Mid lt wuld put lta ....., lido JWOll'UD· .
I Surfing the .Jetty .I
CMNy ........... .., Lee,.._
Large surf We<jnesday allowed .surfers l9
ride waves breaking on the Big Corona
side of the ~~t jetty at the ~trance to
Newport Harbor. Surf of 4'-7 feet ia forecast
along the Orange Coast through the
weekend, depending )on which._ way the·
beach is f ~g. Weatber foredstera 1ay
the source orthe surf is a storm about 2,000
miles out in the Pacific Ocean.
Devil Death
Retrial Due
WICIDTA FALLS, Texu (AP)
-A woman who contended
spirit urpd her to cut out her 4-
year·old dauchter's hurt re-
maim Jailed awatttn1 a coartdate
for retrial on a murder char1e.
Her ftnt trial ended lD a mil~
trial, and Diltrlct Attorney nm
Eyaaen uked •late Diatrict Judie
Keith Nellon on WednftdaytoMt
a retrial date for JS.year-old
Patricia Ann Frazier.
Harold Lerew, lawyer for 11111'
Frailer. become• eoutr al·
tomey OD Jan. 1 and wW be~
hiblted by {aw from .,_...
her after u-a ... l!:JIM9 Mid ea>
polntlnl new coumel ~ ..._
the retrial.
CWna Pleaaed '
B•111a111eHuaate tl•e: le•
Spyglass Slaying
Probed in N~rt
Newport Beach detect.lva an
attempt1a1 to determlae tbe
facta beblDd the 1bootln1 death
of a ~-old mu wboae bo4J
WU bmd tllil monial ID Ida
Sp1,._ Hill bome. PoOce aaid
beb8d ..... Matlatbebe8d. Pollee. wbo wttllMld tM .... m•'•ume.s:-= ........... ofnntof ~lt-............................ u.
muwaemunltendar..-11611 owallle. ·
la•..U1a&on. eal ... \o U.
DUIDltlr I J8de ~ lltllllll la tbe "pn-41awa ..._,. ....,,
NMIU.,IUfttakea*-.. "t •aleroo-••a.oe.M.., ... q ..................... ..
wltllbelll. ' ·• Police 1ald &My rffelN a
call at about a a.m. from tbe
dead1UD'1rqommate. Hetoldof·
ftcen be wu watcblnt televiakln
wltb tbe victim, tot up to IO to tbe
batbroomaadbeard a11-11oe
. H• told offteen that ..._ be
beard tM eraek of .-nn, be
panleked, crawle4l out tile
batbroam wtadow ..s ,.. '° • ------·
Leaflets
Readied
A.tGame
BJ PA'ftlC& KENNEDY oe•Dellf._ .... Hunttnctan Beach Union High
School District teachers,
frustrated bJ-stalled coetrect
talk.a, say they will seet ~ munity support al the Edison·
Fountain Valley high school
football game Friday night al
Anaheim Stadium.
William Bianchi, director of
the West Oraqe County United
Teachers Aasociation, said
about 10 instructors will hand
out 12,000 leafleta urgln1 paren~
to telepbooe 1cbool trustees m
support of the teachers' contract
demandl.
The teachers' association,
represmtinl IOO lnatructors, re-
cently rejected tbe district'•
"flnal" offer of a 16 percent
raiae over the next two years.
Jaatead, the usociation b uk·
inl for a one·year raise of 14
percent. Tbe average teacher's
salary is S21,000, according ':P
district officials. The MVell·SCbool district COil·
tends it cannot me~t tbe
teachers' salary demands
because it is on a fixed income
from the state.
Bianchi said the association
decided to pass out the leaflets
at the F.dlson-Fountain Valley
game because the contest is ex·
peeled to draw between 20,000
and 30,000 sp•ctaters to
Anaheim Stadium.
Both teams, intense rivals, are
tied for the Sunset League lud
with 3·0 records and are re·
<See TEACHEll8, Pa1e AZ)
Coast
Weather
Low cloudlneaa ni1bt
anf1 mon;Pna Cleartn1 to
moeUy auany Frjday af .
tel'DOOD. Lowl ton11bt 5'7
at the beacbel, 82 l~d.
HJ1ba Friday • alOal the
coaat to 12 to 'le tnland. j •
. j
I
I
N£W YORI< <AP> M~
bukl ral.Md t.helr orlme lead.lai rates by one full percent•l•1
polnl lo u .s percent today, the
M&h .. t llDce May.
Catue 11...Uttan Bau. which
\nltia\.ed the move from the pre· ~
vaiUn1 t•.5 percent rate, aald
the increase wu spurred by re·
cent sharp Jµmpa ln Ill eoet ol tundS: ..
''General marltet rat.ea IDd
the coet ol fl&Dda to banks bave
rhJen sharply ln recent w..U, '' ·
the nation's Lbir<Hartest com·
mercial bank said ln a care com·
ment on \ta move.
''Indeed. tbi• iQ~ftU• dot 1
TEACHERS ..
cognized among top teama in tbe
county.
Bianchi said the leaflets would
lis t the telephone numbers of lbe
school board members, com·
plain about the large number of
students enrolled in clusrooma,
District Superintendent Frank
Abbott's performance and the
board's budget priorities.
Bianchi added that the flyers
may point out that without a
contract, teacher s are less
motivated to become involved
with after school activities, such
as coaching organized sports.
"There woo 't be another game
this important in the Huntington
Beach·Fountain Valley area this
year," Bianchi said. "It's a
great, inexpensive way to get
our message to the public and
ask for community support."
Bianchi said the leaflets may
be given out at other high school
games in upcoming weeks.
"The board won't listen to the
teachers," Bianchi said. "But
you can't beli_eve how they'll
respond to the community.
"We won't be giving the flyers
out to students, and, of course,
we don't want to interrupt the
game."
Flames Kill
_-Celebrator
. LONDON (AP> -A young
mother roasting potatoes in a Guy
Fa wkes night bonfire, the tradi-
tional commemor ation of the
Srillsh gunpowder plot of 1805,
was enveloped by names and
burned to death, police s aid to-
d;ty. Her husband was burned in a. rescue atte mpt and was
hospitalized.
The woman, described as being
ie> her 20s, was roasting the
potatoes while her husband was
ins ide the couple's house in
Garforth, Yorkshire, in northern
England, police said.
Guy Fawkes was the leader of a
group of Roman Catholics seek-
ing to avenge harsh treatment of ~atholics during the reign or King
~ames I. They flotted lo blow up
the Houses o Parliament on
Nov. 5, 1605, but were betrayed,
Jrrested and hanged.
.
Mafia Trial
I
Pebate Continoe8
t LOS ANGELES CAP) -1be
~Y weighing charges ag.._
e reputed Mafia rt1ures en.
rs its third dar of deliberations
oday after sitting through a re-
tition of test.lmQDY from three
osecut.ion wibH!liet.
r The paneust.s, who appeared
(o be de~ting char1es or extor·
'1on befo~ moving on . to other f punts, sat quietly in court Wed-
lesday as a 1.tenovapher read
ack lo them testimOhy of an ~
erworld informer, a porno·
raphel',iand an FBI aaent. • • ·~,,,-----------OfllANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
,_." ........... ... ......,.._
QWMM.i... ,...,,_-...... •.. , ...
Offtcl•• C•l• WM UI W.sl •• , •-1
"'--" 1111,... ~ .. " ..... . -""'°" ..... 1ms ... ., ...... _. I
"r ....... (7141eo.ua1
a • .,. •• ....,e......~
"-'-"' .. -.......
not fully renfft the lntnued
coet ol funds to Ch .... Nor doll
thl• increase portead UM dine·
u&un movem•ta. lD U.. -°"' tbe ... term, •• ..... r.-JumplDNnb'eolt
of fundl wM ~ tlda
morala1 wben tb• r&&• on
federal fund.I -uaeommlt..S re .. rv• tbat bank• lend ooe
another -aoared to 15.5 percent
before tbe Federal Reserve
Board lntervtlMd by addiq re-
serves.
Soon after Cbue aonouneed
ill rate lncreue, Cblcalo'a Coo·
tin,ntal IWnola National B_,. II
Trust Co. and '1rat Na~
Bank of Botton matcbed UM
aew, =rate. Other~ Nab Nault. · fte prime II die raa. bMb
cbarf: • "-9 to beat-rl1k car· pora cunomen, uauall1 for perlodl ol no more than OM
year. Odair, 1maUer buta.Ma
w.ually pef at leut oae petten· taa• po6Dt above the prime. Tb• prime rate doM not atrect
CODaWDlr loan ratet, but 11 COO·
eideNd Ill lndlcator ol t.Nlldl la
all klndl ot bur•t' ratet. When the prbM ..,.. up, other rat.et
often foUoW 1n the aame dlNC·
Uon.
hlereasesGraatetl
Six Top · HB Aides
Top $50,000 Pay
Six Huntington Beach city de·
partment directors are now
earning more than $SO,OOO per
year following a round of wage
and retirement pay increases
this week.
Topping the list al $57 ,000 per
year are interim City Ad·
minlstrator Ben Arguello and
Public Works Director Paul
Cook.
Other earnings include:
-Vince Moorhouse, director
of community services, $56,419.
-Police Chier Earle
Robitaille, $53,971.
-Fire Chief Ray Picard,
$51,828.
-City Attorney Gail Hutton,
$59,883.
Library Director Walter
Johnson makes $42,882; Person-
nel Director Ed Thompson,
$42,425 and City Clerk Alicia
Wentworth, $33,000.
The department beads were
given an average 5 percent pay
increase while the city al.so in-
creased its share of contribu·
lions to the employees' retire·
men~ JJyslem by 1 percent. . .
evaluaUona by former City Ad·
mlniatrator Bud Belsito.
Tuesday, the City Councll
gave a s percent pay increase
and 7 percent retirement pay in·
crease to City Attorney Gail
Hutton and City Clerk Alicia
Wentworth, both or whom are
elected official.a.
The raises were opposed by
Mayor Ruth Bailey who said
that the city charter prohibits
job evaluations of elected de·
partment beads. . She argued without support,
that pay increases should
therefore be set by voters who in ertect are the sole evaluators of ·
,be performance of the elected de-
partment heads.
In addition, all department
beads receive medical, dental
and health insurances for
themselves and dependents and
other fringe benefits al .city ex·
pense.
The City Council last year
passed over a s~ary increase
for Mrs. Hutton.
,,... • ._.Al
•
ud Alan a ...... .,.,
Zven ltefore tbe election.
Rea•an •PPIHnted 2S tuk forcea
oo domeatlc and eeoaomlc
poUcy and Z5 more on forelp
poUey 11ues.
G reent\>a a, who was
ebalrmaa Of tbe Council or
&co•omlc 'Ad•laera under
former PNlldmt Gerald Ford,
hHd• a domMUc tuk force on
tb• buq« ud la amoa1 thole
mentioned for Hcretary of tnuury. lo IN llmon, wbo bu
Mid the JOI& under Ford, and
Chart• S. Walker, who wu
deputy aecretary of the treuury
unct.r fOl'DMI' Prelident Ni son,
The head of Rea1aa' 1
economlc:£cy tuk force ii lelaulta. .,.. MC~ ot
treullr)' Nixon. He ii re·
ported in line for several poll·
tk>u ln a Rea1an admlftiltl'a· tJoa, lneludlna secretary of State
or po11ibly a Cablnel·rank
dom..UC policy coordlaator.
.Alto under comlderatioa for
secretary of State are Kium,.r,
who •at national Hcurfty ed·
vlHr to Nixon and secretary ot
State under Nixon and Ford, and
Hai11 the former NATO com-
mander who wu Nixon's chlef ot •tatf.
Cuper Welnber•er, who was budat dfrector under Nlxon, ii
on t"M uac for ...... poaiUoa
under ae.,an.
RetlrJn1 Sen. Rlcbard
Schweiker, R-Pa., ii amOOI can·
didatea for secretary of health
and. human services or boulln1 .
and urban development. Former
HUD Secretary Carla Hills aJao
could be in line for a Cabinet
poll.
Anne Armalrollg, former am·
busador to Great Britain, may
become U.N. ambassador, and
William French Smith ,
Reagan's personal lawyer, is
among possibilities for attorney
general.
Crewman Dies
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich.
(AP ) -One crewman was
killed when a tugboat sank aft.er
colliding with a disabled 400-foot
tanker it was towing on Laite
Michigan, the Coaat Guard said.
Crewman BUI Stephan, 51, dis-
appeared after the 98-foot tug
Lauren Castle crashed into the'
Amoco Wisconsin before dawn
·Wednesday and sank In 300 feet
of waler.
,
NEW YORK (AP) -The
•toek market declined lwoedly
today 11 tbe rally that followed
Ronald Reqan'• eleeUoo vie· torJ faded, TIM Dow Jones av•rac• al•
lDduatrlall, which ~umped Mar· 1Y .Jt polatl Wednfllday, •f.U 1.41
lo ..... 71 ln the ftnt bour today.
Loten took· a J..J lead o.er
1alaen •IDOlll New York Stoek
Exebaqe-Uatecl lauea.
Tradin1 slowed from Wed-
Deaday'a record pace. Qpalna-
bour volume on the Bil Board
totaled 13.et million shares.
· ·Wall Street.en we'9 1eoerally
1Ull elated over Reaaaa's
laadallde victory ln the presidm·
tlal race and the bll gain•
re1i1tered by the RepubUcana ln eon, ......
But they said investors' atten-
tion was beginning to return to
the 11oc>my outlook tor inflation
and interest rat.es in lbe im·
mediate future.
Analysts agree that the
Federal ReMrve ia almoet cer·
tain to ralJe·the discount rate -
the charge it imposes on loana to
member commercial banb -
from the p.resent 11 percent. The
only debate about it focuses on
the likely timinc ot the move.
1 The latest reading on lnfiation
is due Friday with the govern-
Reagan Gets
Russ Note
MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet
President Leonid I. BrH.bnev
sent brief. formal congralula· ~ions toda_y to President-elect
Ron~d Reagan. The new Soviet'
premier, Nikolai A. Tikhonov
expressed bope for "c;omtruc·
live" policies from the new U.S.
administration.
Brezhnev, fu a two.paragraph
telegram , add r essed to
"esteemed Mr. Reagan" and re·
leased in English by the Soviet
news agency Tass, said: "Ac-
cept congratulations on your
election to the post or presi~nt
of the United States of America.
ment'1 moalhly report • Jll'Dai
dueer price..
MeaDwblJe, 1old prltH
tumbled u much u .....
owace • WOl"ld martr.U tedaJ!
Wblle the doUm' WU mlaed altJ.
po1tfnl = WedDelday ID tbe wake ol an 'a Yletory.
In Loodocl, told traded t~
"33.75 an ounce, don from·
S85'1.75 at the cla.e Wedne9day.
ID Zurich the precious metal
I was tradiq for around .,,sf
an OUDCe, down from 9155.IO.
Earlier in Haq KODI, Sold pri~ dropped Sl.8.81 an ounee
to ClOM at '838.82.
SUver WU quoted in London at .
$11.IO an ounce, down from :
$19.90. .,.
:.. .. Councilman
Doesn't Need:·
New Glasses
u·. difificult to miss a 42·i.nch •
high block wall, especially when
you're lookin& for it. ·:
But that's what San Clemente t
councilman Robert Limbers did
this week.
Tbe council member said nary
a word Wednesday night aa a
citizen's request to be allowed to
keep a block wall be bad in.ad·
vertently constructed la tbe-·
city's right--of·way wu read w · the~. ""':
The planning commwion bad.
recommended tb·e wall come
dowp and council members were:
to bear the item Wednaday.
But a city otftcial said theft . {
WH DO need to proceed wtth the '
issue, because the applicant bad
taken the wall out without wait-.
in& for a council deciBion.
"I'm glad you told me that,"
Limberg said. "I went out to the
house to look at the wall and I
thought aomelbing was wrong
with me."
Policeman {
Fatally Shot Together, the two factors
mean that the department heads
received increases equivalent to
a 12 percent pay bike, which is
about the same total that all
other employees received in con-
tract settlements earlier.
Areuello, Cook, Robitaille,
Moorhouse, Picard, Jobnaoo and
Thompson were given pay ral.les
on a newly instituted merit
system. The size of the increase
was based on performance
Pacifica Owners
Charge 'Blackmail'
"I express the hope that your
activity oo lbla high poet will
beJp improvin1 the relatiou
between our countries for tbe
sake of the Soviet/and American
peoples, and for the sake of the
consolidation of peace."
Wild Parrots
Invade Citv
NORTH MIAMI BEACH, Fla._ -=::
<AP > -A North Miadlr
i liceman was fatally shot while
ping arrest a suspected car:.
et but before dY"inl be wOUDdecl
the tuspect to keep him fron\.·
escaplnc, officials said.
Policeman Carl Meree&. u;
shot the neeing man in the Jet
before dying from three bullet
wounds Wednesday, lllllit. said..
Lonnie James Walket,r'u, ol
Atlanta, was arrested while
stru11ling with a police dog. Re.
was reported inf ai.£ condition in a
local boepjtal 's priaon ward.
Doctor. Set
For Honors
Dr. Bernard A. Turbow will be
presented a humanitarian
award tonight from the National
Conference or Chriatians and
Jews.
Dr. Turbow was nominated for
the award for hia services to the
United •Jewish Welfare Fund,
work in the Freedom from
Hunger program and volunteer
services with the UC Irvine
School of Medicine.
He operates urolon practices
i n Fountain v,11ey and
Westminster. He iB a resident of
Garden Grove.
The awarda banquet will be
held at the Marriott Hotel ln
Newport Beach.
Car Stalls;
Duo Rescued
PICO RIVERA (AP> -Two
men were ..-cued from their
stalled c;ar momenta before an
oncominf tlatn bit It and carried
it more tban 1,300 feet, the1
sheriff's department said. ,
The car with the two imlcle
was beina driven oo the railroad
tracks Wedneaday until It•
wheels atucll 1n the rails and
gravel, deputy Pat Soll aald.
The new owners or Casa
Pacifica walked"1nto San
Clemente City Hall Wednesday
ni1bt prepared to arg\le against
having to provide a public
easemeul to the beach below
Cotton Point.
But by the end of the hour-long
discussion, George Argyroa
faced what be called a
"blackmail" ultimatum from
the council that be provide bicy-
cle and pedestrian access to the
12·room former Nixon home.
Arnn». aloq with partnen
Donald Koll and Gavin Herbert,
purchased the 20.9-acre Nixon
estate lu. t year from the former
president. 1be three men all are
from the Newport Beach area.
Tbey propose au.bdiviclinl the
parcel into 16 lota, keeplne three
for themselves, including the
Nixon bome, and selling off the
remainlnl 13 lota to individual8.
Investor Herbert plans to
move into the Nixon bome,
which would not be accesaible to
;the public, except perhape to
other new property owners In
the subdivided Cotton Point
Estates. · !J'be council met Wednesday to
weigh tbe advantaaea and d.lnd·
vanta1• ot requ.iri.nl· the .new
owners to provide an easement
to • beach below the property.
The l,IOO foot loeg pedestrian
acce11 would rud' alona the
Orange County aod San Dlee<>
line.
COtmcll memben Wedneeday
appeared to asree the owners
1bould pro¥lde an .. Irrevocable
offer" to cledlcate a 15-foot wide
· 1trtp to tbe city ll tbe need ~or
Pension Told
Carter to Get $69,6SO ·a Year
W ASllDCGTON <AP) -Wb1D
Pres6dlM Carter Inv• lfllc9
Jan. •· be wlU ree.lve a •·• annual .,...._, a 1ban ta •1
IDWJOD lor edmbdltraUv• blip
in wlndlDI up bl1 ~ffalra ,
1150,000 a year for omce ltalf,
and Secret Service pntedJon
for Ute.
e11pew ID ftnl1bln1 tM1r ol·
ftelal t.2*••· ,.,_. IDW1 lau been aatbortled by Coqnu
•Del ......., wlll ... •ppropri•t·
...... tile ....... a..te
Nt11ta ma ..-tor tWr PGlt·
•leetlon ........... said.
In IMldlUaa, for tbe ftnl IO
mo11tha alter bl• pr..Sdeaey
••d•-. Carter 11 eaun.. to •uo.• a ,.. for awr llllp.
....... -·· tUt cleen•• ·==~....,.. ... l"llflMl .... h .. ,. ........... = :.-1.:t.ca':-":J .. u. ,.... ..... ........, ... , ...... .......
access is ever sought in the
future.
And while the property owners
appeared willing .to make ~al
concession. Councilman Patric~
Lane tossed in another condi·
tion.
"Don't you feel the public
should have access to the Nixon
home," be asked represen·
talives of the owners?
''I'm not talldnl about going
inside-the house," be said, "Un·
less the owner wants to invite
people in for a drink."
The request appeared to sur-
prise the half-dozen represen·
tatives of the Cotton Point
Estates . They said they f e ared
"souvenir hunters" would walk
up and take chunks of the old
Nixon home, and provide a
security problem for the new
resident.a.
SAN DIEGO (AP> -As many
as 20 wild parrots at a time are
flying low or perching high ln
the San Die.ro area.
Authorities suspect most were
freed by bird·smugglers fearing
capture al the border.
The colorful birds are mosUy
green Ama10N although others
are native to Mexico and Central
America. Several hundred are
believed at liberty in the San
Diego area alone.
Carolyn Nielsen, a deputy San
Diego agric ultural com·
miBsioner, said she spotted ll in
a pecan tree but they've been
seen in "almoet every commuui·
ty of any size."
... tt'• ""' for your layaWaY
Walker was charged with first,
degree murder, grand theft and
possession of a firearm durina
com mission of a felony .
16kes by Exxon
NEW YORK CAP> -Enon
Corp. 's wholesale prices for
home beating oU, diesel fuel and
kerosene have 1one up by a pell·
ny a gallon on the East, Gulf and
West coasts. The world's Iars-t
oil company also raised \;he
wholesale price of jet fuel One
cent a gallon nationwide.
Avoid the holldov crunch ~Is year by
Shopping at Brett 'f«>lker now. Let us help you·
chOOse me peffect g ift toe mot special person
rrom our seleetlon of tine jewelry; ond. with a
smOll deposit, we will hold It fO< you
untU Chrlttmos. •
--
,,,,.~
3& Fashion lllond • Newpo<i Beach, CollfomlO ~
•
-
Oraage Coi1$t
EDITION
VOL. 73, NO. 304, 5 SECTIONS, 41 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, fALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER'6, 1980 C TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
Wm Me8a Firirilly D11Ulp the Diteli?·
a, .IP!!_ CLA\J8BN ___ ..........
CoMa ..... Botariana lad.lcat·
ed WedNlday they'd like to see
traffic coq•tlon relieved on Newport Boulevard, but they
questioDed the wladom of dis·
ruptiq downtown bualneu to
set the Job done.
The club ·sponsored a noon
public session for review of Cal·
trans proposals for possible re·
construction of the boulevard to
handle traffic expected to double
over the next 20 years.
The Caltram staff preaeota·
tlon of studies undeT way now
for more than a year is just one
of at;oul a doaen expected to be
held into the first of next year
throu1bout Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach.
Court Burrel, senior Caltrans
engineer, reviewed ninie
alternatives proposed for
Newport Boulevard, ranging•
from doing oothlng to extend.in& ...
the Costa Meaa Freeway
lhroulb the heart of the city to
Paclllc Cout HJ1bway.
Pushed by Rotariau whether
any kind ol project ever' would
be funded f~r the buay
thoroughfare, Burrel noted that
the job would be competinl for
funds only a1ain1t ••other
Orange County project.."
He alluded to the recenUy ap-
proved new highway funding
district formed for Oranse Cowl·
ty by the state Legislature.
RegardiJlC Caltrans director
Adriana Gianturco's thou1hta
about the project, he said, she
baa stated only: "U anythlnc
comes out ol thit study it will be
what to do with the ditch."
Tbe a.foot-deep "dJtcb" wu
dus between north and IOUlh·
bound lanes of Newport
Boulevard in 1973 to provide
earth for the construction of por·
tlons ol the exiatlnM Coeta Meaa
and Corona del Mar freeways.
Early plans called for COD·
tinuatlon of the Costa Mesa
Freeway (then called the
Newport Freeway) through that
depreuion toward the cout.
Several propoeala still,call for
utlllutlon of the "ditch" to
carry traffic.
Othen call for merely widen·
inl Newport Boulevard by one
lane each direction at a total
cost of $2 million, the least ex·
pensive project for handling
traffic over the next flve years.
The most expensive proposal
calla for a full-blown freeway
along the dJtch to 111 end at San·
ta Isabel Avenue and then •winl·
ms west at surface level alonl
Bay Street to continue south to
Pacific Cout Hilb way.
That plan would eliminate
l ,031 homes, more than 1IO buai·
nesses and would coet about $215
million.
Other plane call for conllnulnl
the ditch down Newport
Boulevard through the
<See TUFnc, Paae AZ>
Re~agan Offers Hostage· Talk ~d
'Doctor'
Murder
Trial Set
Trabu"Co Canyon res ident
Gerald Barnes, who is accused of
masquerading as a doctor and
causing the death of a patient he
saw al an Irvine clinic, pleaded in·
nocent today in Orange County
Superior Court.
Barnes was ordered to stand
trial Jan. S in Superior Court
Judge Everett Dickey's Santa
Ana courtroom.
Barnes, 47, a Coto de Caza resi·
dent, bad been ordered to stand
trial by Harbor Court Municipal
Judie Donald Du1Qf8Jl lut week.
He is charged with murder. po&· iDJ as a doctor and falsely pre·
1ertblqdrvla. B•rnet1 preaenUy is free on
Sl0,080 bail, and Chief Deputy Dia·
trtct Attorney James Enright said
this morning he wanted to see bail
increased.
"I think he (Barnes> is as culpa·
ble u any person who goes into •
Uquoratore and pulla a robbery, '1
EnrlPtNid.
''What be WU doing," Enright
said, "wu playing the game ...
hew as doing it for money.·•
The charges against Barnes
stem from his employment at
. Pacific Southwest Medical Group
in Irvine, where he worked rortwo
years until his arrest in August.
While working at Pacific
Southwest, prosecutors contend,
he treated a diabetic patient who
died two days after being ex-
amined by Barnes.
· Enright said he is pushing for a
second degree murder conviction
as a resultorthat death.
Defense attorney David
Brickner told reporters after ar·
raignment proceedings this
morning in Superior Court Judge
Richard Beacom 's courtroom,
that bis position would be that
Barnes did not engage in pro-
fessional malfeasance and was
not responsible for the death of the
By STEVE MAaBLE
Of• o.ity,..... SWf Newport Beach detectives and
Explorer Scouts were combinl a
Newport Beach neighborhood to.
day for the murder weapon
police say was used to fire one
bullet through the head of a 45-year-old psychologist.
Stanley Donald Espinda,
police said, was found early to.
day sprawled in the family room
of his Spyglass HJU home at 8
Jade Cove.
Police said one bullet,
believed to be from a .22 caliber
weapon, had been fired into the
man's head. ·
Car St~lls;
Duo Rescued
patient. PICO RIVERA (APJ -Two
Although he declined to go into men were rescued from their
bis trial strategy, Brickner said stalled car moments before an
the cue evolves down to the opi· oncoming train rut it and carried
nion of whether treatment given it more than l ,300 feet, ther
tbe patient wu adequate, lnade· sheriff's department said.
quateoraomewhereinbetween, c. • The car with the two inside
PS'osecutors allege that was being driven on the tailroad
Barnes la apharmacllt who lost tracks Wednesday until its
ll11 license an Dllnois and came wheels stuck in the rails and
weat to practice medicine without gravel, deputy,J>at Soll said.
· a UceDH. Two pedestnana who saw the stalled car ln the train's path,
·Brickner s aid there was Emory Zeena and Ruben
!'atrcas evidence" to su11est be Hurtado, risked their own lives
• wua't a doctor, but be would not to pull the two pusengen from
. ~mment u to wb,tber bi• client the car ju.st before the train
wa11.DdeedaUcenaedpby1lclan. struck it, Soll said.
Investigators said they've
taken the man's male roommate
into custody for questionina. He
basn 't been arrested and bis
name hasn't been released. Police said they received a
call early today from the dead
man's roommate reporting a
gunshot.
The youthful roommate, de-
tectives said, told officen he
bad been watching television
with Espinda, but left the room
to wse the bathroom.
Once inside the bathroom, be
told investigators, he beard a
single crack of gunfire, panicked
and crawled out the bathroom
window, running to a nearby
residence.
From there, police said, the
man phoned police.
Police said Uiey dismissed the
theory that the mMl might have
taken his own life when they
were unable to locate the
weapon that tilled rum.
They said they are concentrat·
ing their search for the weapon
in the house and a garden area
below the house's courtyard and
pool. InvWJ1aton ••id there w~re no 11 .. of forced ntry iato
the home. -China Pleased
PEKING CAP> -China
praised President.elect Rma1d
Reagan today aa a "iqoderate"
and a "pTa&matiat" who wanta
friendly relations with Pekiq.
Banks Hike
Pri01e Rate
I Percent
NEW YORK <AP> -Major
banks railed their frime le~ rate.a by one ful percentaie
point to 15.S percent today, the
hi1best since May. .
Chase Manhattan Bank, wruch
initiated the move from the pre·
valllng 14.S percent rate, said
the increase was spurred by re-
cent sharp jumps in ita cost of
funds.
"General market rates and
the cost of funds to banks have
risen sharply in recent weeks,"
the nation's lhlrd·largest com·
merciaJ bank said in a rare com·
ment on its move.
•·Indeed. this increase does
not fully reflect the increased
cost of f\Dlds to Chase. Nor does
this Increase portend the d.irec·
tion of future movementa in the
prime rate over the near term,"
the bank said. ·
The recent jump in banks' cost
of funds was underscored this
morning when the rate on
federal funds -uncommitted
reserves that banks lend one
another -aoared to 15.5 percent
before,..\be Federal Reserve
Board i.ftlervened by add.lq re-
serves.
Soon alter Chaff announced
ill rate increase, Cbicato'• Con·
Unental I1llnoia National Bank•
Trust Co. and Finl National
Bank of Bolton matched the
new, hilber rate. Other inlJc>r
banb followed ault.
~()ops . to B~e Buses Free?
· "-' need to be worked out. Board
members told Blancq to be •~
to speak to all law enforcement
1roup1 before the pact la
ratified.
Board attorney' Kennard
Smart Jr. ·~ Uablllty mipt be an luue, but 11.D molt c.,. tbe
dlltriet wouldn't be nspamlble
U a law ..tore.met offtcer ad· ed~•board.
Board memben, wbo noted
that puce oft'leen alwa11 an
HpecWi to prew• Crime, Mid
U..1 liked the eatra aeeurltJ
1a1MC1 lD ... tnde. ~·But UM 1ubtl• ,.,,.._
that GM or mote poUee JiAllMil•
ml1bt bl oa board u P,llllldt 1 '"Tlldl will cwt••l1 u.p oar wW 4Nlld1 ••aoe .... ...._ row4Uel from dolal .. ,..._. oJ trillll --~ ... ....,,.. • ........ ,,,.. tllllr ,....., Ile...... l'O.,.,,..., ........... , •••••
Pl•...._ Ud ._....-. OCPD ....,. CMfnua ...
plle.U-• tbe _.. 1111 Qut.
'
Will Help•
In Talks
If Asked
·LOS ANGELES (AP) -
President-elect Reagan said to·
day he will do all he can lo help
gain the release of the 52
American hostages in Iran, but
"we are not going to intrude" on
the negotiations during the final
months of President Carter's ad·
ministration.
· "Foreign leaders must be
aware that the president is still
th~ president," Reagan told a
news ccnference ln Los Angeles.
Reagan abo said that be will
"belln immediately OD the job
of tramlati.ng campalp prom·
ilea into reality,.. aacl named
Willlam Caley, tbe New Yorit
..,_ wild. manaaed Ids .,....
~·to Owellee 0.. tr .... m to a ltepMllcan admlalltraUoa.
He named three prominent
Democrats to his foreign policy
advisory committee -Sen.
Henry M . Jackson of
W a1hln1ton, former Sen.
Riehm Stone of Florida and
Washington attorney Edward
Bennett Wtlliams.
"I will work hard to rebuild a
bipartisan base for American
foreign policy,'· Reagan told his
first news conference since his
landslide victory Tuesday.
Reagan also thanked Carter
for moving quickly to set up a
transition team of bis own to
smooth the changeover.
Reagan named Edwin Meese.
his campaign cruef of staff, to
direct bis transition staff. He
said transition work i& under
way.
"We've already begun the
work of putting together an ad·
ministration," he told the news
conference, broadcast na·
tionwide.
Meese said Wednesday that
Reagan and Carter would:worlt
in cooperation for release of the
hostages.
Reagan did not indicate there
is any arrangement for such a
joint effort, altbou1h be said
he'd help where possible.
<See •EAGAN, Pase .U>
* * * Documents
Destruction .. ,
Story Denied
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
1pokee1D11D for White House na·
tl~al aecurity adviaer Zbipiew
Brae&inald denied a publlahed
report today that Bnel.inald or-
dered lntelll1ence documenta
destroyed after Pres.ldent Carter
was defeated by Ronald Rutan
in Tueld.ay'a electloa.
The New York Poat quoted
tbree unnamed staff ald• to
senior Republican memben of
the Senate lntellit•ce commit·
tee u ~ they were told ol
tb1I by em))lo7ea ol the Na·
Uoaal Security Council, which
Braelimld heads.
Bul NSC spokesman Leonard
Lefkow denied the It.or)', HY1ne: .. It'• ablurd non1en1e. It'• biaarre.•• .
Sen. Barry Goldwater of
Arhona h tb• rankln1
Re"bllan member of tbe in·
t•llllHH panel. Hi• pre11 .. .....,. Tau Sml\b, lakt ...
clcRllUll tbet Goldwater ~
be aware ol .., 1ueb 1ltu.tloll
• ......... bMD ....... lD
• tlON ....... for re-eleetkm. a....-Devil, ,,... ......
for the C!Ommlt'", HMI after ellee~ wWa olMI' 1taft' mem· ...... Ill tbe puel: .... Dow
............ alMNttt."
Al>Wl~
HEAl>ING STAFF
EdwtnMeeM
Devil Death
Retrial Due
WICJDTA FALLS, Texas (AP>
-A woman who contended
spirit urged her to cut out her 4.
year-0ld daughter's heart re·
mains j8*J4!d awaiting a court date
for retrial on a murder charge.
Her first trial ended in a mis·
trial, and District Attorney Tim
Eysaen uk~te..Dlstri~t Judge
Keith Nelaoo oo Wednesday to set
a retrial date for JS.year-old
Patricia Ann Fraiier.
Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness nl1bt
and momin& cleartns to
motUy IWlDY, Friday af·
ternoon. Lows toaiabt 57
at the beaches, 82 litland.
Hl1ba Friday 88 alon1 the
coast to 72 to 7S inland.
IN81 DE TeD~ Y
II '• "° jolle: Tlw cUt1 of Clntlaltd ., ,,,.._, to Im·
prove fU ...... SH PGQe
DJ.
• • •••
\
I =::±-
TfWfle lhll~li L•.,erftl
WASHINGTON (AP) -A coatinuini decline ill oil Imports totbe
lowest level ill more than five yean cut tbe U.S. trade deficit in tbe
third quarter by 15 percent, the Commerce Department Mid ~
day.
Tbe value of exports increued 3.1 percent dunn. the JUly·
September period, to a record $58.4 billioe, with bJ1her prices ac·
cowat!q for the entire Sl. '1 bWloa cbanee. Jmporta f'll s percent, or
•$3billloa,to$58.lbiWoa.
That produced a deficit of·$2.'1 billloo, lowest al.nee a 1.9 billion
gap in the tbJrdquarterof lt71. 1be third-quarter deficit eompared
with a revised S'1 .8 billion In tbeaecood three moathaoftbeyear.
c:-1-,._•wr f'lee•
CRYSI'AL BAY, Nev. (AP) -A muked awaman robbed a
cubier at Cloud's Cal-Neva Loc:tie today and escaped on foot with an ~loeed amount of money, the Wubae Coullly 1heriff'1 of-
fice Mid. ·
... ,.zw~,.efl
Newport Church
Seeking New Site
Officials of St. Andrew's
~reabyterian Church in Newport Jl"eb have unvelled tentative
plam to build a new church on a
10-acre aite oo the Cutaways
property overlookinl Newport
Bay. .
• Putor John Huffman Jr., wbo ~d tbe relocatlon puab bepn
more than a year aio, noted that
-·. tbe church'• membership hu
-voted to ne1otiate with tbe
ln'ine Compul)', ownen ol tbe
IS-acre c.taways property all
Dover _Drive near Coast
•
footh Sought
• In Attack on
·Mesa Woman
. Police are searching for a
Y,oung blood man who reportedly
mtered a Costa Meaa woman's
a'Partmenl at lmifepolnl Wednes·
day afternoon, took $300 in cub
and then belted ber with hi•
flbow.
: Jeanette Mathilda Bauwln, 22,
qf 1984 Maple Ave. told ofticen
"1at when 1be answered a knock
qn her door at about 12:40 p.m. a
aeigbbor woman and the youth
were there.
· She told offlcen the youth held '° eisht-lncb·lOlll buntini lmlfe f.o her throat and demanded:
"Where'• your money? I know
tou have money, 'cause it'• rent
time."
Ma. Bauwin said abe led the
\fttruder into her bedroom and
produced $300. Thell, she 1aid,
the uaallant demanded more
money and hit her with hi•
flbow.
Tbe youth, described u about'
II yean old and wearili1 only
Levl1,' fied on foot wlth the
ilei1hbor woman from the apart·
meat area. .
' • •
DA ILY PILOT
c
Highway. 'lbe property, which
overlook.a the Coast Highway
Bridge over Upper Newport Bay,
ii named for a restaurant that on-
ce stood there.
Huffman said lbe S,000·
member church baa agrem to
enter a 10-month option·
relatloatblp, starttn1 this
December, for purcbue of the
parcel.
He aaldtbe chief obRacte at this
potat ii mone)'. Tiie cllureb'• con-
rre1•tlml. be .nt, b• tidied rouPIY $1.4 millioll, · aboat cme-
lbird ol the uti.q price fOf' tbe
Janel.
Huffman said the reuon for
the proposed move is simply
that the church's membership
bu outgrown the current facili-
ty acro11 the street from
Newport Barbor High School.
St. Andrews bu beetl localed
at 800 St. Andrews Road, a 2.8-
acre parcel of land, for the put
30 yea.n.
Meanwhile, N~wport city plan·
ners are assisting Irvine Com·
pany officla.la in puttiJlg together
environmental lmpact reports
for tbe entire 65-acre Cutaways
aite.
No formal proposal oD tbe
property bu been submitted.
In addition to the church, de-
velopment on the 1ite would like·
ly include low-demlty realdln·
tial and five acl'a devoted to
either recreation uae or marine-
related commercial outlets.
Huffman aaid be wants to U ·
sure church members that
negoUetkJm for purchase ol the
10-acre lite will not Jeopardlu
St. Andrew'• current location.
Officlab said It ii too early to
speculate on what would bllllP'D
to the cbui'cb'• current loutlon
If tbe move la ultimately com-
pleted._
.,,
·crewman Dies
TRAVERSE CITY, llicb .
(AP) -One crewman waa
killed wblll • tulboat ·-after co~ 1ritb a cJl.Mbled 400-foot tuker 1t wa1 towlnl OD I.Me
Klcbll-. tbe eo.t Guarcl uld.
Crewmm BUI .._ ... 51, dis·
appeared after' tbe •foot WI
Lau.rm c..u. crMbed Imo tbe
.Amoco Wiacwla before dawa w .... d., aad .-la •feet
ofwats.
Nl:W YORK (AP) -Tbe
1toek market declined broMly
today u the rally that followd
Ronald Rea1an'1 elecUon vic-
tory faded.
Tbe Dow Jcmee averqe ol IO
l.Dduatrtall. wbieb Jumped near-ly 11 .-.. WedMlday, fell22to m near tbe cloalDI.
LoMn -* a 5-1 lead over ...... ...., New York Stock
ke......-UMecl tuuea.
Tradin1 •lowed from Wed-
neaday•1 record pace. Opaatni-
bour volume Oil the Blt Board
totaled lJ.8' million shares.
f're•P••rAI
TRAFFIC ...
downtown business sector or·
ralain1 traffic out of the ditch at
Bay Street via viaduct and over
the exlltin8 boulevard to about
Industrial \\'ay.
These projectt' range in price
between S'IS million to $8'1 million.
The resultl of a Wednesday sur-
vey by taltrans employees·
showed Rotarians favored a
plan that would widen ,Newport
Boulevard by the' proposed two
lanes and route major biaecting
atreetl over it at a coat of about
S33 mWion.
Their second choice called for
contiDuin1 the ditch route
tbrouih downtown to about .Jn.
duatrial Way at the" $8'1 million
figure .
Leul favored were plans call·
Lag for no wort on. the busy
route, just widening Newport
Boulevard and cooatructloo of
the full·fled1ed freeway to
Pacific Cout Highway.
Althouah many favored the
"depresaed freeway" through
tbe ditch, aeveral RQtariam ~
jected to the plan because it
would temporarily disrupt
downtown buainels while under
construction.
Tbe Caltrans presentation is
scheduled for a formal public
bearing Wednesday at '1:30 p.m.
at Southern California College
under sponsorship of Costa
Mesa.
Police Seize
Suspect.in
Mesa Theft
A Santa Ana man was arrest-
ed Wednesday afternoon oa sus-
pi cl on of burglary after
neltbbon called police to report
they ·~ a man pry oft a 1creen and crawl through a win·
dow at an Orange Avenue home.
Held in Costa Mesa Jail ln lieu
of Sl,000 bail la Ricardo Monte
Albai, 22.
Police said their helicopter
hovered over the burglary scene
unUI a man, later identified u
Albaz, came out of the house
carrying a radio.
Police patrol ·units coaverifed
on Albu u be walked north
atone Oranie Avenue at 4:'5
p.m.
Band Seeking
Old Papers
Old newspapers piling up are
worth more tban tbe paper
they're printed OD to members
of tbe ~ewport Harbor Qlgb
School Band, which needl 'all
you cao brlDI Saturday to belp
aend It to Camel• next •PriDI·
Jan Laadllrom, NHHS '8nd
Booeteu ·president, aay1
youn11ten wlll collect paper
from I a.m. to DOOll OD the cam·
pus partdnl lot OD Utb Street
acro11 from St. Andi'ew's
Preabyteriao Church.
The drtve will belp runct the
band'• trip to the Ulllvenity of
Brlliab Columbia in VAMPUver
Memorial Day Weekend 1* for
a four-day Performln1 Artl
Abroad Pf'Oll'UD·
One newspaper drlve per
month wm be held \hroa1b
April.
w•.-••layKid ,
c..ia .... -.. •WHI'" ...... , MAlll ... -11,,0 .... 1 .......
OMoee •
~ ............ a......, """'' .......... ~. ,,.,, .._ ...........
T•••••nefn•J..., a1 r11.w. ... ., • .....,.
, Girl, 11, Win• $500,000 . '
CINCINNA'ft <AP> -All 11-year-old ii paranteed .... a
,.ar 1111' .. ..-• ,..rs, coaN9J of a nctio naUoD tbat •ant.
edto ............... .
.. ........ ....,. ~ WYYl-Fll bllled u tbe
....._. ................ Mltiar7 " ............ Ml ...... a ... ..,...,a...•tn•df ...... o. m.a ............. U. prtle ................. ..
,.. .................................. ftiell llf••...., .... ....., ,., ...... , ........................... ... ..... -................ ,. ....... , ........... .
~u, ... .w,1Marr ac,-t11ata.ta.••..._br ~ftllltlll .. fllllllw•8 1 .. fllPID•IM•a'actlwlllll .,.... . .•..
INllY f'llllC ..... lty Lee ... ,,_
Large surf Wednesday allowed surfers to
ride waves breaking on the Big Corona
side of the east jetty at the entrance to
Newport Harbor. Surf of 4-7 feet is forecast
along the Orange Coast through the
weekend, depending on which way the
beach is facing. Weather forecasters say
the source of the surf is a storm about 2,000
miles out,in the Pacific Ocean.
f'ro• PtlflP AJ
REAGAN OFFERS AID. • •
"Like everyone else, we want
the hostages to be returned," be
said.
But be said everyone must un-
dersf.and that Carter is in charge
until Jan. 20, when the new ad-
ministration will take power.
Carter, talking about the
hostages situation Wednesday,
alto carefully pointed out that be
will be president another 211a
months.
Reagan gave much of the
same answer when asked
whether be planned to com-
Other election end po81·
electton cov•r•ee •ppe•n today on p_. A3, A4, A12,
81 . B211ftd85.
municate with tbe Soviet Union
during the transition-period.
"No, l don't," Reagan said.
He s aid h e would not do
anything that might indicate the
nation is not unified or that "we
are trying to speak with a dif·
ferent voice" while the Carter
administration remains in
power.
Reagan said the Iranian gov-
erment should not think it can
gain anytbjng by waiting until
he takes office to negotiate re-
1 ease of the 52 American
hostages.
"I hope the lranlan.s will not
have any idea there will be any
profit to them in waltin&,"
Reacan said. Answering questions about
what role he might play in tryi.n
,to win release of the ho8tages,
Reagan emphasized repeatedly
that the "president ls still the
president.•'
Reagan added t hat be
wouldn't offer his own ldeu on
the hostages "U I thought for
one minute that it could for one
mi.Dute" delay th.eir release.
He said be is willing to do all
be can to help win freedom for
the S2 Americans, held in Iran
for more than a year, but •'we
are not going to intrude" on the
negotiations during the final
months of Carter's admini.atra·
lion.
Equipped with $2 million in
federal money and seven floors
of f~ office space, aides to
Reagan 8.lready are at wort on
transferring the power of gov-
ernment.
With 99 percent of the vote
counted. Reagan bad 43,201,657
for 51 percent and 489 e.lectoral
votes; Carter blld 34,911,058 for 41
percent a.Del 49 electonl vet.es;
John B. Andenon bad 5,581,701
(or 7 percent and no electoral
votes Liberatarian candidate Ed
Clark had the other l percent.
Two Arrested
In Burglary
Two Costa Mesa men were ar·
rested Wednesday for suapicion
of burglarbing a neighbor's
home July 14, invesU1atora said.
Held in lieu of $10,000 each are
Don Richey, .22, and Davie
Teague, 25, of 758 and 774
HudaooAve.
Investigators aatd burclars hit
the home ol Wayne Conklin in
July, laking about $4,521 worth
of beloncinp after forcing open
a rear window in bis home.
Wednesday's . arrests, i n-
vesUgaton said, followed a tip.
... H'a time tor your layaway
Cops Nab
Suspect
In Theft
One employee at McConahay·s
Rodeo bar in Costa Mesa pro-
bably never will be guilty of say·
ing: "There's never a cop around
when you need one."
He discovered at 2 :40 a.m.
Wednesday that his car, parked
in the bar's lot, bad been broken
into and that his jacket, cbeclt -
book, wallet and SlS were gone.
He told police he searched the
parking lot to see if credit cards
and identification papers may
llave been discarded by the
thieves. .
Behind a large tras._
dumpster, be spotted a man·
crouching with the jacket and·
wallet at his feet.
The burglary victim told
police the .crouching ._.got to
bis feet and began walking non-
cbanUy into the darkneaa just u
a police patrol unit cruised into
the parkinl lot. ·
Officers arrested Rlcbanl An··
tbony Soliz, 21, of 9'19 Post Rolld,
Costa Mesa, OD suapicion ol
vehicle burglary.
Soliz ii being held in Costa
Mesa Jail in lieu of $10,000 bail._
1The stolen property was re-
covered, investigators said.
Prlitoners Freed
DAR ~ SALAAM, Tanzania
(AP > -President Julius
• N y e. re re pa rd one d 1 , 919
prisoners to mark the start ol
his fifth successive term Wed·
nesda,y, the Home Minbtry an-
nounced.
Avoid tt'le holiday crunch tt'lls yeoc by
shopping at Brett w:Jl\<er now. Let us help'you
chOOSe the pertect gift for tt'lot. speclol person
ftom our seiectton of nne Jewelry: and. with o
small depOslt. we will hold It for you
until Christmas.
SACIVJ&&NTO <AP> -A.llembl~ Speaker Leo McC~• he la •lvint up the n,bt to keep th. e ape .
f M 1"8t WecbMtday, the day after the ,~ eledAcm, clile...in, wltb 1upponen bow to 1alva1e IOIDetbial from hi• expenaive and often bitter 11·
IDOllth ~with Auemblyman Howard Berman, D·
Loi Aateles, who won the votes to take the
1peakenlalpawey from him.
la tbeelectlon Tuesday, McCarthy Joet the sup-
1
port be needed to keep the office. considered the
atate '1 moet powerful alter governor.
, ••• RoC"k• 8a1f . l rra
1 RICHMOND (AP) -A powerful explosion at an 1 industrial district plant that was felt for 10 miles
l nearly destroyed a large building and shattered win-
dows within a lO·block
-1 ( STATE J.J~:i:a~therewerenoin·
_ _ · The explo.sion Wed----~~~~~~--"· n esday nig~t al the
I Puritan-Bennett Corp .• an
air reduction plant, occurred while a worker was
l transferring nitrous oxide, commonly called
~. "laughing gas," from a storage tank to a tanker ~ truck, fire officials said.
\ Though the blast blew out the sides of the three-
' story, corrugated metal building and sent slivers of sh eel metal more than a 100 feel, the worker, Roy
Janice,37, was not injured.
Rule l..i111its EnebNiftnN
LOS ANGELES <AP ) -A rule approved by the
state. Air Resources Board will reduce smog.
producing nitrogen oxide emissions by glassmakers
by up to seven tons a day over the next five to seven
years, officials say.
Glassmaking plants are conaidered a prime
source of smog-forming nitrogen oxide emJssions
because of the tremendous heat used in manufactur-
ing furnaces, the ARB said. The furnace can reach
temperaturesof3,000degrees Fahrenheit.
Affected by the rule, which will require changes
in liClassmaking furnaces will be plant.9 that make
bottles for beer, wine. medication and foods. .
Largest Beer Stark
After 10 hours of stacking, 10.~ cases of brew stand at Sacramen·
to's Liquor Mart, making it the world's largest beer display. The
volume of the 120,960 bottles contained within the cases represents
20,790 gallons of beer. Representatives of the Guinness Book of
World Records were on hand to certify the record Wednesday.
Win Over Klansman
Breaks Vote Record
52 Arrested in Anti-Reagan Rally
BERKELEY (AP> -In a campus
scene reminiscent of the l9IOI, poJJce
led and dragged dissident atudeota
and others out of the Univenity of
California admlnbtratlon building to
break up a sit·in sparked' by Ronald
Reaaan'•election.
Campus police arrested 35 student.a
and 17 noastudents Wednesday nllbt
folJowtng the 5~·bour protest oo the
Berkeley campus. No injuries were
reported.
All 52 were charged wilb misde·
meanor trespassing, and in addition,
10 were charged with resisting arrest.
AL 11IOVGB THE demonstration
bad Reagan's presidential election as
a "catalyst," one protea tor said, it
later drifted into a general protest
centering on campus causes of long
standing. At one point, inside the
building. communist literature was
handed out.
'Tm doing It just to make a point
about what's going on," replied one
student when asked why he had
participated in the spontaneous,
mostly nonviolent, demonstration.
The noisy occupation of a stairwell
be1lna to cut back social Procr ...... ~. Durina the oc:cupaUoa, bowevtf',
the diuidenta were talkiaa a9*at
cauaea Jdrift on the cam..,_ f4)1' ye an -lncludlne denunc .. tkia ot ~
campus ROTC and dema~ for It. re-
moval , more demand• that UC
Berkeley quit supportinJ nucl•fr
weapons research for the aovelJl-
ment. support for a campus child
care center and Increased Tbltd
World enrollment.
Campus police chief WUliam Beale
told reporters the demonstration wu
legal before the bullding's recutar
closing time at 5 p.m. After that, tbe
demonstrators were warned they
were subject to arrest. Police pa-
ti~ce ran out 21h hours later.
Library Retains
Display of Gay
Books, Photos
between the first and second floors of HAYWARD (AP) _ A con ·
California Hall started about 2 p.m. troversial display of homosexual-
with 150 student.9 and nonstudent.9. oriented books and photographs wUl
Police sealed off the building. Two remain al Hayward's main library.
men were arrested then for aJJegel(fly despite protests from some residents.
tangling with police. the city's library commission says.
AS THE PROTESTERS walke<J in· The commission's 4·2 vote Wednes-
lo the building. most of the UC ad· day night to keep the display drew . . applause from about 80 people, most m1mstralors walked out, but some of whom identified themselves as be-minor damage was reportedly done to the walls near Chancellor Michael ing gay.
Heyman's office. "I AM OPPOSED to censorship,"
Later, supporters outside attempt-said lesbian Kriste.n Loomis, a VaJJe.
ed to toss food and other items jo librarian and one of 32 people to
through an open window to the pro-speak at the meeting. "Ten percent
testers. of our population is gay. These
SAN DIEGO (AP) -86.4 percent or the vote platform or white About7:30p.m., when more than materials should be available to
Breaking a 40-year-old over Tom Metzger . a supremacy, tightening of half the protesters had left voluntarily them."
na\ionaJ record for total state Ku Klux Klan U .S .-Mexican border after several warnings, police waded Tilled "Out of the Closet," the dis-
votes. U.S. Rep. Clair leade r running as a restrictions and support in and led away those who would walk pclay is sponsored by the P.aci(ic
Burgener, R-La Mesa, Democrat. · forworltingclasswhltes. ontheirownanddraggedawayothers enter for Human Growth , a
.. Poll Oo•ingN .ff tdl.-d says his landslide victory · Unofficial but final received 45,623 votes. or who went limp. Berkeley mental health and social
over while supremacist vole totals Wednesday 13.Spercent. The occupation was preceded by an services agency for homosexuals. It
SACRAMENTO (AP>-CaliforniaSecretary of Tom Mel'Zger was "a gave Burgener 292,039 anti-Reagan rally nearby at Sproul features photographs and books by or
State March Fong Eu says she may seek nationwide firm rejection or the votes. surpassing the Plaza, which for nearly 10 years was about gays.
·. simultaneous poll closings to keep a president's ear-philosophies of the Ku 2 6 7 . 8 7 3 c a s t r or Cuts Invalid the roca1 point of sometimes fierce LEADING OPPOSmON lo the dis·
·: ly concession from cutting voterturnouti.n the West. Klux Klan." Republican Leonard Hall confrontations accompanied by tear play was a Hayward parent, Darlene
Ms. Eu,aDemocrat,saidWednesdaytherewas Burgener. in winning in the lst Congressional SAN FRANCISCO gas and truncheons. By comparison, K. Bogle, who demanded immediate
"a dramatic fallofi ln voter participation" Tuesday his fifth consecutive 43rd District of New York in CAP) -1be state Social Wednesday's e\tent 'was a love feast. removal of the display. She said it
after the television networks began projecting the Congre.ssional District 1940. Services Department was not suitable for children and it
victoryolRooaldReaganaspresideot. term Tuesday, received The record was cannot reduce the SPEAKERS TOLD A small crowd advocated homosexuality, which s be
Normally, about 15 percenloftheCalifornia vote ---------... achieved in the nation's a mount of money paid to "make sure Reagan can do as lit-viewed !ls against Biblical standards.
comesinbetweenSp.m .andtheclosingtime,8p.m . ~-s ~LL largest congressional under the Aid to ~leaspossibleto hlnderhumanrights Mrs. BOgle was joined by about a
The network projecting began between 4 p.m. ands r~~ 4'M£ district. with almost a Families with Depen · in the country." dozen people representing church
p.m . ~L~ !nco~ST million people, spanning dent Olildren program -Joe Lambert of the Berkeley and other groups who denounced the
... ~.. most of San Diego Coun· because an unrelated Progressive Students Organization, display as immoral and un· 0~ .-~£ ty. parts of River side adult male lives in the announced that the demonstration American. Traruit f'a~.-11 C:halle11gr aS.1 County and all of Im· household of program was called "to build an educational 'J'be month-long display was 1'1.all~ia~-, perialCounty. recipients. the Court of movement against Reagan ... when authorized by the commission last
:• L'OS ANGELES (AP} -Loe Angeles County's ---------'"" Metzger, who ran on a Appeal has ruled. Reagan reins.tales the draft and March by a 5-2 vote. approval of Proposition A's sales tax increase could _____________ ;;..__ ______ ----------------------------------------
spread a $3.6 billion mass transit system over the
sprawling county -if it survives a potential legal
challenge.
1be county's Transportation Commission said
·· Wednesday it hopes to have some of the electric·
powered line operating by the end of the decade and ., the whole system in place in 35 years. barring major
technical, fmancial or legal problems.
..
..
.· ..
Gaitg \'iol.-nC"e .'Joar11
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gang violence in Los
Angeles nearly doubled in the first nine months of
1980 compared to the same period last year with
robberies alone up a whopping 212 perc~nt a
police report shows. '
Statistics cited gang involvement in 2 683
crimes committed through September compared
to 1,439 gang-related for the nine months in 1979 -
an increase of 86.4 percent.
Robberies soared from 221 in 1979 lo 690 .
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
THAT EARN INTEREST. ASK US !
Eicecutlv• Ofllc•s: 7812 Edinger Ave., FSiJ<:
Huntington Beach, CA 92647 --· ---
Southern C11Jfoml1 ~lon•I Offices ---··--
~n E. LAI Paf"'3 Ave~ Anaheim, CA 92807 89!1& Valley View St., Buen1 PllX, CA 90620 1850 Arnell! Rd., C1marlllo. CA 93010
20715 S. Avalon Blvd., Caraon CA 907'6
23021 Lake Cent" Or .. (Lake ~oreao.~ Toro, CA 92930
1001 E.lmlltfJllHwy_LaHabra,CAOOl31 Gl l140 LonO'S..Ch Blvd., Long BMch, CA V0807 -• 22938 Hawthorne Blvd., Torrance, CA ll0605 108& lrvlne Blvd., T111tln, CA V2e80 lQU~l ~ 23& N. Citru1 Ave .• Wttt Covina, CA 91793 MOIJSINC
"llllert:ury Room" •~•1l•ble ofl • r.,erved basis LlNDl~
6MONTHS
FREE
HAPPY "HOUR"
Our restaurants
will treat you with
complimentary "Refreshments"
Every Weekday Afternoon From 3 to 5 p.m.
NOVEMBER 5-14
Arnato·s
(Upper level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary European
cappucino with purchase
of dessert Back Bay Rowing &
Running Club
(lower level / Bulloci<'s wing)
Caffe Pasquini
(Upper level I Saks wing)
Complimentary dessert with
purchase of lunch.
' C91ts Jr. (Low,.,~Sears wing)
Complimentary soft drink
with purchase of hamburger.
Complimentary scoop of Haagen·D~s ice cream with''
purchase of a meal Kaplan·~
(lower level I May c;o, w1~)
Lindberg's
(lower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary cake and
coffee with purchase
of lunch.
Forty Carrots
(Lower level I Saks wing)
Complimentary fresh fruit
shake with purchase
of entree.
Magic Pan
(lower level I Nordstrom wing)
Compllmentary mousse with
purchase of lunch. Rendezvous Cafe
(lower level I Carouser Court)
Complimentary popcorn.
\lie De France
(Lower level I Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary roll/croissant
with purchase of coffee or
Complimentary desser1 with
purchase of lunch.
Riviera
(l ower level I May Co. wingy
Complimentary danish with
purchase of beverage.
Pronto
(Upper level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary pastry and
coffee witfi purchase
of lunch.
Salrnagundi
(l ower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary beverage
with purchase of soup
or salad.
20th Century
(Lower tevel I Carousel court)
Complimentary European
capPUClno with purchase
of dessert.
,.
..
, ...
Newport-Mesa School IM.trict bat folloftd two dlf·
ferent lnterpretationa of the 1ame It.ale Mueatlon Code
secUao in closln& four 1choic*J over the patt three ,-n
a& district enrollment coGtlnuet to deelille.
Two were ctosed ln 1'" utlliainl a 1tat.NC1uJ.Nd
clt.iffM committee. The board cbarsed that coamdttel
with reooml1)ending wh1cb 1cbooll alaoWcl be cloled u
"Mell as bow the vacated lites lbould be Ulled.
Wock.ing under a dilfeftftt tnt.pretation a year later.
a school clolure committee wu cbar1ecl oab' with reeom·
mending use of two school sites ordered eloeed by t.be
board. ·
The district n()w faces closin1 up to more than elJbt
additi()llal schools over the nest nv, lean. ~ board hu
•• not yet determined what ~poulbllltiea to hand a new
state· required closures comnuttee lb.ii time ..
• The problems are more complex. Pouibillties in·
dude the closure of middle schoola and blab schools as
well as elementary plants. ·
District administrators first recommended that the
.idtizens' committee not get involved with which schools
··should be closed because of complex curriculum
· l>Ossibilities. · The administration subsequently reversed its stand
and suggested that a committee study of schools to be
closed could produce more community response.
The board should get the best and most responsive
recommendations it can out of a citizens' 1roup. But ln
t he end, only the board can make those final and sure·to-
be controversial decisions.
Suit Da01ages ACLf!
A lawsuit alleging that Newport Beach Police Chief
Charles Gross is directing officen to sµrreptitiously at-
tend public meetings in order to spy on those in
attendance. was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union
recently.
The suit, detailed by ACLU members durinc a press
conference last week, was fired off after one Newport of.
ficer was tossed out of an ACLU meeting at Newport Harbor
High School.
Members maintain that Officer Richard Long failed
to identify himself as a policeman and had, in fact, in· 1
filtrated the meeting.
Gross, answering the charges later, called the suit ~specious and an attempt on the ACLU's part to cover up ~its mistakeofbootingoutOfficerLong.
t He said Long's Constitutional rights bad been
'· violated.
; Chief Gross appears to have a valid point and it's dif.
C ficult to understand the ACLU's allegations when the t meeting was public and Long had paid to get in.
: Long, the city's community relations offi~r, said he
; attended the meeting only to keep abreast of what is go.
• ing on in the community. ~ It should be pointed out that the meeting was public f and tttat the ACLU was \.asing public f acillties free of
.: charge, an offer extended only after a threat to sue the
f. school ctistricL
-~ We fail to see the merit in this lawsuit and mu.st
agree with Chief Gross when he suggested that action
& s uch as th.is damages the name and reputation of the
r AC LU.
~ It strikes us as a "much·ado-about·nothing''
~ perf or171ance in an effort to get attention. ,
~ Narnico Justice lags
!-J ustice is not a lways speedy.
Nearly si x months ago, Narmco Materials Inc. of
:· Costa Mesa was charged with polluting the air in its Vic·
:· toria Street neighborhood.
:: The misdemeanor complaint, scheduled for prosecu-
:; lion by the Orange County District Attorney, could r:esult in ~ a relatively small $500 fine it the Celanese Corp. subsidiary
~ is found guilty. .
:· The firm was scheduled t.o plead guilty, not guilty or f, no contest to the charge on May 30 in West Orange Coun·
• ty Municipal Court. ~ Hundreds of hours of expensive lawyers' and judges'
: time later, Narmco still has entered no plea.
~ Postponements have resulted from requests to
: change the action to Harbor Municipal Court, defense
: contentions that the charges are unconstitutional and
! continued requests for postponements.
• Without a plea entered. the case rests now with the
' Superior Court in Santa Ana after Narmco attorneys con·
:· tested the Municipal Court decision that the law go\fem-
: ing public nuisance odors is indeed constitutional.
: Perhaps the less-th.an-speedy action and dogged de·
: fense tactics might be attributed to still another somewhat.
.. , relat.edcourtactionfiledagai&tthe Mesaplutlcsflnn.
That class-action suit filed in Federal DI.strict Court
contends in a more drastic claim that Narm~'s opera·
tion in a residential .neighborhood has damaged resi-
dents' health.
Regardless of other issues, it's high time the air
~ pollution charge was resolved.
• r Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Oalfy PllOt.
Other v•ews expressed on this page are those of their aut"°'9 and
artists Reader comment 1s Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O.
, Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) &42·4321.
Boyd/Politics
ByL.M.BOYD
This moment occured when
Woodrow Wilson wat IOV·
, ernor ol New Jersey. A U.S.
I
Dear
Gloomy
·Gus
If All Routhan were to
don ale hi• "Peace
Tower" to the cil7 lt
would etlmlnate a
1aw1wt. plus the meed to aptnd ll0,008 of la&·
payers' moae7 on a
aculpture ror tb•
downtown t!mter.
M.W.
~' 0.. ,__., .,, -"'""' ,,., .... ,. ..... '"' ___ ,. .. Nll«e -...... ...
~~'ltl" ,_.
senator from bis state died.
The man bad been a cloee
frte11d of Wilton. A Jersey
polltldan within minutes
telel>boned the 1ovemor, and aald. "I'd like to take the
,senator'• place. 1lr." Wilton
paused, then said, "Yoo may
quote me 11 uyln1 It 11
perfectly qreeable to me \I
It'• atreHble to tbe UD· dertoer."
WASlll.NGTON -O..pite the
•e•r·la,aterlcal rbttorlc
.....
1 I from ~ lru and
Iraq; tM -.n eonftlct IO far
b• Mia a.a than total y,ar. But
U.S ......... ct 1uly1ta aay
th•re .,...._.,of acalatlon in a
· parUcwarly 1rueaome area:
ebemlcal watfare.
The rea1on chemical or
blolofical weapons have not
been used
m a y b e
almply tbat
th• balance of
terror in tbJi new field la
clearly in
Iraq'• favor,
and the lr11qiJ.
have be&a
dolnt well
tnou111 with
conventional forces -so far.
But if the fort\Ules of war should
chance dramatically. Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein may
decide to stave orr disaster by
resorUnt to chemical weapons.
Mailbox
, lr•n hU 4one relatlvtl)' little
to develop ,cMmlcal warfare
capablUtr. or delena• acalnat
1ucb a«acu. But ff u11ein Is
khown to conalder chemlcala a
useful mlllt·ary tool. Iraq'•
modeat atockplte of
chemlcal·IMo&ollcal weapona ii a
le1acy from ill yeau H a
mllllary client of the Soviet
Union.
The Iraqi• beun actively
acqulrlnc a chemical warfan ,
potenUal ln the mld·lt'10I. AJ a
aecret Defenae lntelli1ence
Acency report put it, Iraq
embarked 'on "an aureulve
chemical·biological· radioloCical
p r o g r a m , l n c l'U d in I t h e
construct.ion of trainin1 facilities
. . . modeled after Soviet CBR
ins taUations."
INTELLIGENCE sources
discovered "at least 15
locations" in Iraq where CBR
obstacle courses had been
constructed with Russlan help.
The extent or these training
laclUt'ea .ibl1hll1hta lhe
lmportance (tM lraqla> place on
belnt prepand to operate In a
contarnJnaled environment,"
one secret ... port 1tate1.
The obttaclt courae1 were
uaed aa part or aeneral Iraqi
army tralnln1. "In these areas,
troops are lnatructed to bypau
or move throultl contamtnated
obttaci. and perform normal
combat dutlcs whlle wearing
prot.cUve clothin't the report
note1.
"Each lraql division haa an
oi1anJc chemic.el company that
la equipped primarily whb
Soviet·manulactured materiel
auch u the truck·mounted
ARS ·12 and DDA ·53
decontaminat.ioft apparatus," an
intelUgence report states. "As in
the Soviet Army, the Iraqi
ground force hat a chemical
branch, and CBR doctrine is
moat likely based on Soviet
concepts."
. Betore relations with lbe
Kremlin cooled following
WHY.JES .... ~
I GUc~s A SKELETCft KEY
J§ ~™ER APPROPRIATE!
HOMO HO!..~~! WAAT M
IHM SENSE Cf HUMOR
YOU'VE GOT TMtRE ·-h\R. RJT... . ______ ,
Hq1Hhl'1 crackdown on Jraql
communlttl ln 1171, UMt Sovteta
reportedly aupplled small
amouata ol cbemluJ warfare
8ltDtl for trainlq ...
TBS ·~-HAD ••no known cbemlcal twarf•H production
capability, altbou1b tbe
technolocical tiue required to
produce nerve acenta edata, and
an atlelppt bu reportedly been
made to do ao," accordlnf to an
lnteltlgence analya 1 . It
conch.Idea ominously:
"The Iraqis realize that, once
acquired, weapons of t.bia type
could be used a1ainst . . .
potential advenaries, sucb u
Iran and Israel. Numeroua
weapons systems already in the
Iraqi inventory are capable cf
delivering CBR munltiolll,
which would have to be
externally auPi>lied."
Intelligence sources told my
associate Dale Van Atta that the
Fre nch , who replaced the
Russians as Iraq's major
military supplier, have not
provided chemical weapons. But
the Iraqis have built up a small
stockpile on their own.
EXPORTING TRAGEDY ;
Manufacturers who run afoul of
stringent federal safet y
standards have a callous option
available: Like the companies
that found themselves with
stocks of baby clothes treated •
with Tris , the s uspected 1
cancer·ca~ing flame retardant,
greedy manufacturers can
dump their goods overseas.
Now there is evidence the
federal government is helping
the United Nations fob off a
controversial birth·control drug
on unsuspecting women around
the world. The substance is
Depo·Provera, and tests have
linked it to s terility and
congenital heart disease in
women.
In a private letter to Rep.
Mario Biaggi, D·N.Y .• officials
of the Agency for International
Development admitted that,
despite attempted safeguards,
AID Funds may be helping to
underwrite a U .N . program that
is distributing Depo·Provera
abroad.
Strings Attached to' Affordable' Housing
To the Editor:
In response to tbe Oct. 22
editorial entitled ''County
Tackles Housing Shortage.'• if the
Board of Supervisors were to
wave a maiic wand and create
10.000 \Ulits of.affordable bouaing
tomorrow, the demand for "af.
fordable" housing in Orange
County would not be met. As we
watch the supervtson perform
their miracles, rememberthatall
their grandstanding is at the ex-
pense of every property owner in
Orange County.
The buyer of an "affordable"
house can only sell that unit al a
price determined by the County of
Orange and that price la not to ex·
ceed the ~aae prtce plus the
increase iJl tbe median income lD
Orange County. In addition, the
county can decrease the sales
price by the amount necessary to
repair any damages as de ·
termined by the county. They can
clean and paint and repair
without UmitaUon and charge the
sellerofan "affordable" unit.
Tiii:~ take up to
five moat.bl to exerciJae their ~
lion to purchase a home and at the
end oft.be 150days fail to conaum·
a ate tbe pw'1:bue ud not bell•·
ble ! ~ !M!lkft' ot one of these ao-
caUed "affordable" units can
not aell tt "B~ Owner .. or tbrouab
the realtor of h1I choice ... be must
aeU lt tllroulb the Orante County
Houal.q Authority. Tbe worst
pert of this wonder cure la tbat the
buyer of a CO\lDlY·IUbaidi1ed
home will bever be able to afford
t.o buy aft1thinl but another sub-
1idi1ed home.
A repr.-ntalive of t.be .atate
Dep1rtmeatof Housln1 and Com·
malty Development bu stated
that Udl= ol resale restriction
should a y to all boualnl -not
just '' Ordable" housing, not
juat aublidlUJd houalng.
All cf tbele iad.I make 1overn·
ment aubeldiled affordable boul· int the mo1t espenalve boUl1llf
available today. Other, leta COit·
ly, approaches to the problem
are avallal)ie.
VJ RO IN IA CIECK
Prealdent, Newport Harbot'·
COM.a .... BoardolRealton ....,,. .........
After all, the students will not
only learn medicine . science. am. etc .. but about democracy,
human rights and religious
freedom. which are items the
present Iranian government
wants nothing to do with.
Give us the host.ages and sen<l
the students home!
JIM deBOOM
...... ,, Dh·idf.'•
To the F.ditor:
Perhaps no better way could
be ,devised to divide races,
create confusion and destroy
public schools than forced bus·
ing. ls lt possible jud1es like
Egly who rule in favor of bus·
ing are really on the other side
after all and are only doing the
work ol those who want racial
clhislon and private scboola?
B.TAVLIN
C'onot'"o Rtt!epo11d•
To the Editor:
A column by Milton Moskowitz on ·CodoCo•s Lal>or Day ad has
Just come to my attention and
deserves a reply. Mr. Moskowitz
notes that our sales and earn·
ln11 have ll'OY'll aub9tanUally
alnce W10 btrt tblt employrnent
bas grown only modestly over
this interval. Both observations
are correct. But his conclusion,
that "capital is d<iing great for
lts owners but. not so marvelous·
ly for the work force," ia incor·
reet.
CONOCO'S WAG E8 and
benefits per employee in Im
were 2.7 times what they were ln
1970; dlvtdenda paid on common
stock were up sU1bUy leaa dur-
lng that interval -2.S limes.
The conawner price lndex ID·
creaaed 1.8 Umes in the 1'10-71
pertod. So •hlle both emplor989
and ltOckholders enJoyed ,..al A
financial gains from Conoco's
growth, employees rared propor-
tionately better.
When it comes to new jObs,
Mr. Moskowitz fails to consider
that capital·intenslve companies
such as Conoco typically create
more jobs outside their com·
paniea than within. Here are
some examples:
-A new joint venture to ex·
pand a petrochemical complex
ln Texas created 3,200 construe·
lion jobs al its peak and SUS·
tained an average or 1,750 con·
struction jobs for four years. But
these employees worked for our
contractors, not for Conoco or its
partner company.
-Conoco wiU buy 144.000 tons
of steel in the U.S. in 1980. This
creates jobs in the steel industry
and in lbe industries that supply
steelmakers. but it doesn't in-
crease Conoco's employment.
-Conoco wlll invest $800
million in the search for oil and
gas in the U .S. this year.
Substantially all of these expen·
dltures are made lhfough driU·
Ing coauactors with their own
employees -not Gonoco's.
Thousands of new jobs have
been created thls way in recent
yean -but they don't appear in
the employment records of ma-
jor oil companies.
We stand by our claim that
stronger earnings can provide
the capital to create more and
better jobe.
EDWARDJ. MULLIGAN
To the Bdltor:
What ta tbe matter with tbll
generation ol young people? I
know we uk this question over
andoverandhavenoanswer.
On Halloween someone al.Ole
part of our porch decorations. We
had a skull which •as painted
with fluorescent paint on a table.
A black light shining on it made a
spooky effect and the cbild:ren
who came to the door seemed to
appreciate the display. Now it ii
gone.
THE SKULL WU part ol a col·
lection from my past! lly fat.her
was in special eUeda at MGM
Studio and we always bad fn.
teresline things for Halloween
and FourthofJuly.
The atull wu made of plaster cf
paris and w19 fragile. It bad bulbs
in the eyes so that it could be elec·
trically connected. I'm sure
whoever took It will break it and
just toss it out.
lsn 't there some way young peo.
ple can be taught to leave things
alonethatdoo'tbelongtotbem?
BA,RBARA WEBER
Upi•••••··
To the Editor:
~ It is difficult to understand, I
told my wile, over breakfut.
lite levee Md broken aewral "'a~ys ago. The water was backed
up behind a railroad embank·
ment.
There was worry that the em· bank~wOuld hold, and tbat tbouaandrbl acres of fann1aDd
would be f\ooded, but tbey ap-
parent]y did not atop train traf.
fie on that atreteh of track.· A
train WM on the embankment
when It broke.
· Tbat ts easy to Ulldentud,
my wtfe told me. The scwei:n·
ment la helplna to run the
railroad. SomeoM waa trylq to
pbone the Jroper 1overament '
.,eacy all the •h1le. Tbe coe··
aeetloo wauJd be broken, tMn
they wouJcl eet a busy line. Tbea
wben they sot throu1b. they
woald be put on bold for t.m.
hours. 1'beY would ftnaUy find out tbat'ttiey bad the Wl"OQI de-
partment. ney would be dlred·
ed to .-...... department, and
tben the proceaa wou.ld start over. ·
In a few clap,!+ miaht baft
almoet blld tJMtr e eompJM.td,
when the fret1h trata was
bactecl out oa &M embwlrm•.
and It broke.
That mabl ....... I tokt ber,
tbanb tor the euluaUoa.
JMISS BOLDING
FV Mulls
Stanton
Vacancy
FOuataut Valley olftclall· are
ltlldY"lnl lelal Nqulre...U and tune fact.on u they ponder the
means ot ~ the City eo.cu
teat ol ftocel' Stanton, Wbo WU
elected Tuelday &o tbe Oraqe
County Board ol ~pervbon.
Mayw Al Holllftden said the
eou.nclJ can either appoint a new
member or aet a special election
to fill the remainder of Stanton's
term. which extends throu1h
April, 1983.
But the mayor said the council
cannot tak=a action until Spot.on officially resigns, which
be must do e before tak·
ing his county post in January.
~ Holllnden said a recent state
law mandates that special el~·
tiona can Oftly be conducted in
14arch or November.
. To bold an election in March,
1081, the council must take ac·
lion by Dec. 1, Rollinden said-In
order to meet this deadline,
Stanton may have to resign at
the eotmeil's next meelinl oo
Nov. 18.
·Uthe council misses the Dec.
3-deadline, the city cannot bold a
speciaf election unW November
1981, requiring candidates to nm
for what would amount to a six·
nionth term. ... , penooally lean to the elec·
live Procell (in filling Stanton's
aeat)." HoUinden said. "But if
we have to wait until next Nov·
'ember, that doesn't strike me a.a
a,lvilable." . Contacted Wednesday after· n0oa, Stanton said he would be
willi.ng to l"fl8ign before Dec. 3 to
facilitate a March elecUon for a
succeuor to bis council poet.
"I would. like to see it ftUed by
eleetion." Stanton said. "I think
the people would prefer to see
that. too."
Jlunti.,gton'~
Jean Jenkins'
-(lites Sunday
: Jean Crea Jenkins, SS, a
former society editor of the
Cbicago Tribune and a Hunt·
lost.on Beach resident since um,
died Monday at Pacifica
Hospital.
Mn. Jenkins and her huaband.
J.obn, who was automotive
e(litor· ol the Tribune, both ~
tired in 1850. She moved to the
Tucson area after her husband's
deathinllm. She was a member of the FlrJt
United Methodist Church ln
Huntington Beach.
Survivors include a grandlon,
Jay C. Norris, and a grand·
daughter, Candace J . Ngrria.
both ol lluatinatOG Beach; and a
slater Eloile Orr ol Milwaukee.
A ~al service will be
conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Flrat United lhthodiat
Church of RunUnston Beach.
Burial will be in Skokie, Ill.
: Tbe family suaesta memorial ._tribut1-a to the Finl United
·~etb.6dltt Church Building ,_dr
~Lillian Home
1. AllBRICUS, Ga. <AP> -
LUllan Carter, tbe...-mdent'• h -7ear-old mother, la back
•ome today after a 35-d•y
lloepitalltaJ ror a bi'oken bfp. ·
be -....... altboqb Illa .,...... added Uaat the q1lanataoe1
would remala lD ef(eet ,......
D.wbeartnp.
UCI ••liven the ~·--uoa ol a Level 1 facWt,y ~Y tbe boud
oa llay 7, meaDbll Uiat all com·
pllcated trawna easea requirill&
reattacbmeot of aevered limbs
.............
........ ~gAre1•1d
Max and Moritz, six-week-old baboon twins, are curious lit·
tle animals and they're trying to figure out what makes a
camerawortintbeCologne, WestGermanyzoo. The monks
are tbeonly baboon twins ever bom in a zoo.
Probation Asked
By James Earl Ray
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP> -
James Earl Ray, serving a 99-
year eent.mce for the 1988 aa·
aauinatioa ol civil rigbta leader
Martin U&ber Kini Jr., bu ftled
for prolMd:ioo, officials aay.
Parole Board Chairman Nevin
Trammel said Ray's applic.aion
for a routine probation bearinl
ud 30 paces of supportiD1 docu-
ments wine reeeived in the mail
WedMed~. .J Tbe fonn wu malled to Ra,
tut IDDlllh wbeD be wnM to the
board requeetinl • bearinc:
Trammel said he bad no idea
bow long it would be before Ray,
wbo baa served nearly 11 years,
would be iranted a bearing.
However. Gov. Lamar Alex·
Goldwater
Pulls It Off
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -
Democrat Bill Schub con·
ceded defeat to Republican
Sen. Barry GoldwateT. Tl, who
won a ftftb Senate term by leas
than 10,000 votes in a race that
remained too close to call until
20 hours att.er_wlb closed.
With a baDdfu1 ol ballots re-
maining to be counted, an un-
olficial tally gave Goldwater
430,191 votes to Schub'•
'20,871. or 50 percent to '8 per·
cent.
Schulz led in returns as late
u WedM9day mom.inc but
conceded at midafternoon
that~ could oot aurmount the
incumbent 'f lead.
"I think it's fair to__!!Y that
'Barry woo the electftift!' said
Scbv.Ja. a multimillionaire•
apai\mentdeveloper.
ander recently announced
guidelines for executive clemen·
cy and probation which would
preclude probation to prisoners
whotrytoeseape.
Ray escaped ror 54 'Al houn
from 8ruaby Mountain Sfate
Prlaon in um, the state's max·
lmum eeeurtty prilon in moun·
talnoua e.-tem Tennessee, and
tried to escape on two other oc·
cu ions.
He waa a fueitive from a Mia-
aoarl prilOll when Kine wu slain
in MempblaonApril4, 1•.
Ray plMded fUilty to the alay·
ing in March 1989, after his arrest
in London, but recanted and haa
been trying ever since to win a
new trial or hearing in the case.
Woman Killed
In Cypress
Auto Crash
A woman waa killed in a traf.
fie accident in Cypress Wednes·
day after she apparently drove
through a stopli1bt and her car
was smashed by a truck carry·
ing a 10,000-pound load.
Marina Jacard, 43, of Cypress,
died in Anaheim Memorial
Hospital about two bours after
the 9:30 a .m . collision at Moody
Street and Orance Avenue in
Cypress, said police Sgt. Ray
Petenon.
He a~d officers believe Ms.
J a card drove ber 1978 car into
the intersection when the light
was red, and a tractor-trailer
driven by Troy Gregory, '5, ol
Anaheim, bit on the driver's
aide. 'lbe impact bocked ber
car completely out of the in·
leraection, said Peterson.
GrelOI')' waa not burl and wu
not cited in connection with the
accident, Peteraoo said.
0r treatment of Mvere bww
would be automaUcally referred
to tbe medkal ct9ler reprd· leu of where the accldent oc-
curred in tbe county.
The 8anU Ana·Tmtia 00.pilal
waa aiven a leas preatiaioua
Level 2 rankin1, meanlna it
Battle
1ly!dw, Nemb1t t. 1E
would serve cmly a liaited ,_.
arapblcal area.
Both BATCH and UCI were
amonc ftve boepit.ala picked by
county 1upervUorl to offer the
apecialbed medical caN DMded
for persona who suffered
serious, multiple injuries.
In thelr oriainal complaint,
S..ta Au·,.... amctall .....
lh•J u well •• ;::::..--bolpltall wbleb IUG .,.....
P"ala were never tel• t.11eJ could aim for a Level l ..._._. UOe. ..
They claimed SA TCH •M bet-
ter able to provide l.Avel 1 can
tbu UCI.
1 •• ID ·46th Day· 1
Fight Continues for Abadan ·
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP)-The
rain ol Iraqi artillery and mortar
fire on Iran's beaieced refinery
city ol Abadan resumed toda)'
after a brief lull, Iran reported,
but neither side. claimed any
major change in battlefield posi-
tions u the Persian Gulf war
went into ita 46th day.
Iran claimed at least 265 h aqis
killed Wednesday and today
along the 300-mile invasion front.
and Iraq said more than 110 Ira·
nians were killed or wounded dur·
ing the period.
Tehran radio said lraql troops
held their positions on the Abadan
Mahshahr road, about two miles
from Abadan and on the west
bank of the Bahmanshlr River,
despite suffering considerable
losses. It reported heavy fight·
ing Wednesday along the river
and in the Zolfaq a r and
Fayyadeyeh districts of the
city.
"We can cross the river onto
Abadan Island immediately if we
are ordered to do so, and capture
Abadan City and its refinery
without any difficulty," Iraqi
commander Col. Ahmed Hashim
told AP Correspondent Alex Efty
inAbadantoday.
"But since we have s urrounded
the whole Abadan island com-
pletely, our political leadership
prefers a policy or weakening the
enemy down until they are forced
to surrender."
The Iranian command said to-
, day Iraqi troops had been cleared
from the Abadan side of the
river and 'that its forces repulsed
an Iraqi assault o n the
beleaguered refinery city.
It 8lao said victims of the Iraqi
shelling included patients at two
hospitals, nine or them killed and
37wounded.
The communique, broadeatby
Tehran 1'8dio, said Iranian forces
were ret\U'Dlng fire from IDakle
Abadan. at the southem end of the
invasion front and Iran's last
stronghold CJD the disputed Shatt
al-Arab estuary, Iraq's only
waterway to the Persian Gull.
But jouma.liata who spent five
hours in the area said they aawoo-
ly one Iranian shell explode from
Abadan, while Iraqi mortar fare
beat asteady hail on the city.
The communique also claimed
that Iranian forcea 1tlll controlled
the eaatern part of Kbor·
ramahabr, tbe port 10 mil•
northwest of Abadan, ud were :
prevent1qtbelraqlawbotoakthe. rest ol the city two weeb .., ..
from breakln• lb.rough to the
Khorramahahr·Abadao hilbway.
Two S•speets Bel•
14 Taken Hostage,
Released Unhwt
STOCKToN CAP ) -Fourteen
people, including two policemen,
were taken hostage in an
elaborate plot .to rob a depart-
ment store here, but all were re·
leased without harm and two aua·
peels were arrested, authorities
reported.
The arrests followed a two.
hour standoff at Gemco store.
The third suspect stole a car in
Modesto 30 miles south of here
and is being sought, police said.
The incident began when the
three gunmen entered the
Modesto home of Charles Flan·
nery Wednesday night and took
his wife, Bre nda, and two
da.ughter s , ages 8 and 13,
hostage. -
While the man who later
escaped held the family at gun-
point, the other two took Flan·
nery to the Gemco store, where
Flannery is a department bead,
Modesto police said.
"Employees fell something
waa wrong when be (Flannery)
came to the store alter cloainl
with two individuals they did not
know," said Stockton police
Capt. Delbert Mentwan. Alt.er nan.nery ordered ..,._
workers to teavey the cunmen
took eight employees hostatee.
One employee who left naued
down a passing patrol car.
Two officers entered the store
and were taken prisoner by the
men, Melligan said.
The g\mmeo obtained an mi·
determined amount of cub and.
demanded transportation. One
officer left the store to get a
vehicle and was ordered by
supervisors not to return. The
other officer escaped on bis own, Melllganadded.
When one s mpect emerced
from the store at 11 p.m. with
four hostages, he was conf!Ulled
by the police special weapons
and tactics squad. The SWAT
team fired tear gas and bullets
to disable a car the suspect waa
heading for. The man wu ar·
rested.
The other man was arrested
when he tried to leave a abort
while later. The two arrested
were identified by Modesto.
police as Robert Richard
Rodriguez, 22, and .bis brother,
Je.ua 0.car Rodri1ue1, 2S, both
of Stockton. •
The man boldin1 tbe tbre4t
family members bosta1e in
Modeato too1' Uie Flilnneryat _
second car udleft. In~
said the car wu later found aban-
doned in front or a north Modesto
pizza parlor.
Grand Father Clocks and
Assorted Wall Clocks On Sale
At 20% Off A 6ood •election
toc~•efrom
: ! ~ I I
Jle• .. • Baaell Nellrlty
' :· ~Town's Future Altered
;, I
room ~ HolidaJ Inn, said
Wednelda,y. ·•we expect a kJt
more media in the future.
'WlaUe JDuldm HJI there ls
....... ....... for npaukJn to
bddle tbe inllWl, be MYI it ll ullt.tJ to ottur. Tbe GoM&a van., .._ a llmlUd •uPDlY o1
................. afftctU.-wW
DOt lm{ell ...... ....,. nap&
toreplaceeldC...
o....a N~ baa belD
workla1 wltll radio aad
telnlllm 1&11&4-, u well •
..... .....-. to meet t.belr .......
political and entertainment
atardom -aaddlea, weatern
bat.a and numerous palatlap
and line drawinp ot w-..
aeenea .
A amaH traller aear the
kitchen door provides accom·
modatlona for a f•ll·li••
caretaker· who loob after
........ U.S.~ ........
a cSo.. catUe. On tM bUI llD-
med1Uly beblDd tbe ...,._ II a
atable, taell room, •'::\l
worllabop asad a111otber 1
trailer 7 lb• Seeret Se~
commad Poll. · .............. ecmftrmedtlllt
tla• ·raaela wlll beeom• Ilia w..-..... ao.e •• CleaEJEIE WM M ~ M\a• ................ =., tbatl!il........ ..... .. =.· ... ,.... ''• ..... .. ..
,
J
I -=
·I
Move Seen as Easing Financial Tangle FALL.I CHURCH, Wa.
(P) --, I la a dla· ecMIDt drt' ...... _..
First Things Fu-st
• ,_ aoAD osn. -<>ranee C..tJ te8den taa've
dcl9e erwWtrable c1'0wina la reeent Um• oww tbe faet tMt
our relkm will DOW aalD its own 1tat.e bifbway cliatrtd.
Tbe IMue wu, and la, hi1hway cub. ..
Up to now, Ora.nae County bu beeD lumped into the
CalUomia Department ol Tramport.tloll'• Di.ltrict 7 whm
it comes to dividin1 tbe rinaocial melon ror public
h11bway1. Diatrict7 alaoincludelLol~eleaCounty. .
THE WML no• ova county ta tbe put hu been
tbat when it comes to sllcinl that melon each year~ Loe
An1eles Cowlty always got the meat and Orao1e County
1ot to keep the seeds. .
Now, through bard work by aome or our Oran1e Coun·
ty otncials and with appfe?val or the Leeislature and 1ov-
ernor, the money-splitting process ii eoinl to be more ob-
vious. Orange County will have its own district and the
cash allocated ror transportation work here will be clearly
obviou..
Loe Angeles will get its bucks and we'll have ours.
Thia ii all dandy. But now we'll come to the real issue
in all ol this.
Arter Orange County gets allocated its state
transportation dollars, how will it be spent?
IN RECENT PAST YEARS, it seems that the state
transportation people, known as Caltrans officials, have
been preoccupied with spending the cub on all kinds or
new people-moving concepts. Diamond lanes have been
tried oo the freeways. Metered on-ramps have come to our
r~gton. Expensive studies have been undertaken on -
alternate ways of moving people around.
I think they call these "transportation modes" or
some other gobbledegook like that. No matter.
Meanwhile, however, our principaJ lifelines of
transportation in this region have been going to pot in
potholes. This is our freeway system.
THE LIGHTS ARE GOING 01JT on our freeways. You
can't see directional placards at night any more. Overhead
illumination has been doused on many on-ramps and off.
ramps. You don't drive lhe freeways any more; you probe
them, on a search mission.
Then there's the pavement itself. They should change
the name of the Santa Ana Freeway to Washboard Alley. You do more traveling up and down than you do forward. I
suffer real pangs of pity for the hapless commuters or our
region who are forced to bounce up and down its corru1a·
lions every working day of their lives.
So now Orange County Is going to get its very own
Caltrans district with the money earmarked for traaaporta·
tionneedahefe. --
YOU HA VE TO ISSUE forth a little prayer that we
won't inaugurate the new hip way district by taklnC all
the dollars and spending them on 90me kind of a atudy
called something like "Multi-Modal Alternative Move-
ments." Let's take some of the cuh and screw 1D 10me new
light bulbs on freeway signs. Let's fix aome pavement.
Lees finish some projects like the Corona del Mat Freeway
-the current Route to Nowhere. Let's vacuum the house before we s~p for the new
furniture.
B~JBUT, Lebanoo '(AP> -
lru'1 cmUal bak director says
.... .... wUI bollbr it.I ftnandal
oblilatlalll aDd repa7 between '1
billion llld 11 billion in loau from
the Unl&ed State• and other
Wnten.eetklaa.
He .... Nkl tbe United States
owea ..._.much u a .s billion.
He said tbere were unpaid oil
debts and apparenUy referred as
well to unfu!ftlled contracts for
mllitaryequlps,peol.
All Baa Nolari, a 32-year-0ld
U .S.-edueated economist. told
The AHociated Presa in a
telephone interview Late Wednes·
day niClll tbat escrow accounts
could be Ml up in a neutral coun-
try ·auch u Alleria so both Iran
and tbe United States could be as-
amed ol aeWing claims.
NOBAa1·s STATEMENTS
were seen as Ii positive sign that
the tangle of claims and
counterclaims resulting rrom a
U.S. freeze on Iranian assets
could be resolved.
Iran is demanding a lifting of
tbe freeze imposed by President Carter in November 1979 in the
wake ol the seizure of the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran as one or four
condit.iooa for releasing the 52
American hostages .
. Nobarl estimated Iran had out-
standing Joans amounting to $800
million in the United States and an
additional $1 billion or so in loans
from Europe and Japan.
Asked about lhe possibility of
setting up aceounts in a third n.a·
lion to iuarantee .payment to
firms and banks in both Iran and
tbeUnlted~tes.Nobarisaid: .
"TI08 18 P0881BLE for us, to
bave eaerow account aQd the two
parties U~ation would be iorted
outtbere."
Wife Claims
Overwork
Killed Hubby ·
NEW YORK (AP) -A
woman who contends her
husband was driven to suicide
by overwork has filed a $6
million lawsuit against Exxon
Corp.
Rose M. Seymour of Queens
filed the suit Wednesday lo
Manhattan State Supreme Court
on beball ol the estate of her late
husband, Wllllam. Seymour wu
in cbarse ol the cargo-freight
section al Exxon's international
division until bis suicide on Jan.
31, um
Mn. Seymour contended Exx·
on bad been informed by a
psychiatrist that her husband
had mental problems, worsened
because be was burdened with
too much work.
A spolJesman for Exxon said
an internal investigation showed
"we are not responsible." He
declined further comment. Psychiatrist Francis Kane
was 8l.ao named u a defendant
in the suit. He also refused com·
ment.
Strike Averted
LONDON (AP) -Britain's
Seamen's Union and the Cunard
Line today settled a dhpute over
Cunard's plans to transfer two of
its cnlile ahipa to nags of con-
venience. The agreement averted a threatened national shipping
.strike.
Nol1hwest ·we~ Windy
4t
SlfDw Falling From Mi~at EtJ1Jtward
llmmr., 11'.-ller
LeW ,....,... """' ... "*'"'"' Mwl ....... ,. _, _, Fr~y .,._
CMtUI .... l.w J7, I Nanci llltfl 72 .. ,,,,_ta.w-..ta.
111M..,_., lltM qrf ..... WlflCll
llltM ... l!Wrl'llfll -.B. OM tot-1..--"U,,._~ ......... _ ... twetDfWrfMI ...................... ~-.... Nlcota ,.._., ~Mrl'J' ..._,1 .. aa---.......
................. -· ..... <loud!-
-.......... """ -11ol ettof'. -c.--..
A*"Y ....... ........ ...... ........... .. ~ ....
FORECAST
b
SJ JS 11 41 ... u
... )4
12 41
13 " st JO .. u
• '2
4S D
)4 •
'2 2t
7S 4S S1 ,,
71 ..
62 u • u
SS JI
'2 62 .. .
J7 u
61 JI .IJ
77 .. " . .. '2 ., u
... 50 .. .
But he adllecl "it 1-a two-tided
claims (altuailon). J•t u ~
u they bave tlaima asaimt"• ..
baveclai111Sqainattbem."
He said lran'a DefeaH llim.trJ
bad claims ~f:~nat tbe United States &mOW1 to u mueb •
$2.5 btWon. He appareatlJ re-
ferred to Wlfulfllled contracta for
mllltary equipment.
Nobari allO referred to out.
standing bWI for the purcbue ol
Iranian oll.
"TBEaE 18 AIMKJT 11 billio9
in oil money which Mr. carter
dldn 't Point out in bis 1.u. t •• Hid
Nobari. "These are WI')' lmpor·
tant amounts which abOuld be let·
tied."
He apparently referred to a
note rrom the U.S. adlllinUtration
delivered Monday .to)!w Irani.an
government by the Swiaa am-
bassador in Tehran, who bandl•
U.S . ...._. wtt.b Iran beea ..
the United State. and Iran have
DO diplomatie ties .
To settle the claima, lDvolytDJ
unfulfilled contracts and *k
loam, Hobart •ui1eatec1 an ac·
count t'CM.lld be opened in a third
country, and teehnlcal com·
mi11iona set up to Judie tbe
merltaof each case.
M EANWl{JLE, Tehran
radio said today tlaat 70 teams
from the caatra1 bank and central
revolutionary committee cloMd
all forei&n ucban1e olflcea ·in
Iran and CClllfilcat41Cl foret111 cur-
l'er'~Y.
No reason ror the action wu an· noun~ on ttie state-nm radio.
Iran's currency, the riaJ, bas
1Upped badly &1alnat the dollar
since the Iranian revolution In
February 1979. And on the black
market a dollar often can bring
twice the official rate.
iDI WP' 1 lllll a lll'a. ... woaaaa ....... ._,...
l•1198d ol ..,....,,a
leather Jaebt ...... w
skirt, tbe unldeatlfled
wo.-w• ....... .....
tbe door ol u.. ..... .... ~keel to open ber budbU. Sbe declared abe would
prove ahe was not a
sbOplift«.
Aa elerb ud emt .. en
stared, the womu tlMD
took off ber skirt aad
.en~-. aeept Mr
bra, wlti m•aakl .
..
Tbe woman, about «>,
then dr9led and departed.
"Sbe made. a apeetaele,"
said Tom LaMotta,
manager al the Syma store
IA tbia Wu~ suburb.
''I ·-told her U wasn't
necesaary .''
But shopper Susan Kalla
said, "When she started to
·strip, some people Juat
went looking for a com·
fortableaeat."
Reagan
Ponders·
Cabinet
· N&WYORK(AP)-Presideat·
elect Ron.aid Rea1an wu q\.IOled
by Time Magazine today u say-
ing bis cabinet will include "a lot"
or surpriling choices, probably rrom the private sector and
probably some Democrats.
In an interview appeartnctn the
issue ol Time dated Nov. 17,
Reagan said bis fint priortlty as
president would be. 'to set lntotbe
things that I think could begin to
t urn the economic situation
around."
Reagan said be would like an
early meeting with Jordan's King
Hussein to dhcuas probleml in
the Middle Ea.st; be repeated bis
deter~atioo to renegotiate the
SALT Il treaty; and be said tµs
National Security Adviser would
"not be a rival to the secretary of
state as be bu been in the past."
Oaallfll•g ........
Discussing administration
appointments, Reagan said, ac·
cording tO Time: "My buic rule
is that I want people wbo daD"t
wnt a job ln l'0"(1UIMlll&. 1.-
people wbo are ahed1 • ._.
cesaful tbat they would l"eld a
government job as a step down,
not a step up . . . Out there in tbe
private sector, there's an awful
lot of brains and talent ta people
who haven't learned all tbe tbinp
you 'can't'do."
Wax model of president-elect Ronald Reagan is lifted into
position at Madame Tussaud's waxworks in London. It
displaces President Carter model, which will be placed in
storeroom at Wookey Hole in Somerset. * * *
GOP Gets 'Dom-again' Vote
NEW YORK <AP) -Bom.a1ain Christians
turned .,-a1nat President Carter and beJped give
RonaJd Beqan his overwbelm•n1 Victory, but tbe
heated debates over abortioD and ti* Equal Rilbts
Amendment didn't swiJll tbe presidelltlal elec:tioa
this year.
An Aaloclated Prea·NBC News DOil ol voters
leavtne pollin1 places Tuelday al8o lhowa that lD·
dependent candid.ate John Aadenoa took votes
from iroups that should have been fertile ground
for Carter. But Reagan's vtetory wu so lar1e that
Anderaon'slmpaetwunotcrucial.
The vote ol born·a&ain Protestants appe~
to swin1 dramatically. It wu unclear, however,
whether that stemmed rrom Reaan 'a support by
the new Christian ri1bt, which undertook a
massive re111tration
drive on his behalf, or ( J from a 1eneral dhlike of ',.;an~ t\ .ft t·.~1.s
Carter's policies. . _ _
Of tbe evan1elical
~ Chrfst1ans who voted
Tuesday, 50 percent said they had voted in 1976 for
Carter, who ii "bom·a1a1D," and r7 percent said lf:IY votedrorGerald Ford.
BUT THIS YEAa, 56 percent voted for
Reagan and only 39 percent for Carter.
Amons white evan1ellcala, the 1wtna wal even
more dramatic: from 46-41 Carter in 1'16 to 82·33
for· Reagan tbii year .
The poll showed that nationwide, voters ap-
proved ol a woman's ritbt to abortion by 70 per-
cent to za percent. Even Catbollc ·voters aaid they
favored that rt1bt by a 2·1 marlin.
But those wbo favored abortion voted for
Rea1an by 49 percent to 41 percent, evm tbou&b
the Republican Party platform includes support o1
a comtitutiOllal amendment to outlaw abortion Uld
a stipulation that u president ill candidate would
appoint only jud1es who oppose It.
THE PoLL SAID the ERA had a bit more impaet
on the vote than abortion.
Nationally, voters approved ol the ERA bJ a
margin ol 45 per~bt to 38 pereent. AIDOlll tboM
who favor the amendment. Carter bad tbe edl•
54·33. Amoag thole •bo oppoee it, ...... took ...
votes 75-22. But that sentiment didln 't appreciably
dent Reqan's marlin.
. These two issues -both important to womeD
-may help explain Rea1an's failure to do u well
amon1 women u men. Ilea becked ae.aaa bJ a
56-36 edge, while women split, with Beqaa 1et·
ting 47 percent ol their votes and Carter 45 per·
cea&i. Voters who said they voted for Carts or
Reagan because Andel'ICJll bad no cbaDee t.6 wt. I 1
went 56 percent for Carter and .0 peremt for
Reagan. And 56 percent al the AndM-ftten
said they were for Carter in 1f79 and • percaat
said they bad voted ror Ford.
. . Bronc Rides
11.00 on l>Uc*lng
n'llchlne With w..twn
fun daYI thru Sun .
• , It Hunttngton Center
~'ve t*en the ads and listings that busi· •
nesses use to call each other ... put them in a,
separate book-The Los Angeles Busine. To
Business Yellow Paaes. You11 find materials,
equipment and.servia5 from firms all owr the
greater Los Angeles market. And 10u11 find
them faster and easier than evtt.
Air mattresses? They're listed in Padfic
lelephone's Los ~Consumer Yellow ...
Speakership
Fight ·Over
SACL\MSNTO (AP> -Aa-.mbly Speaker Leo
1 lleC$;y' be LI 1lvtn1 up the ft1ht to keep the a peak . I II •pent Wedneeday, the day after th,e
•lMlm, dlleuainl with 1upportera bow to aalvaae
I 10metbtai from hla expenalve and often bitter 11· ! moath flcht with AaHm blyman Howard Beraian. D·
1 Loa Aqelea, wbo won the votes to take tbe '
speakenhipawayfrom him.
I In the election Tuesday, McCarthy lost the sup· I port be needed to keep the office, considered the
1 1tate'1 moetpowerful after aovemor.
i
J ... , R•N"•• Ba11 . l rra
RICHMOND (AP) -A powerful explosion at an
1 industrial diatric't plant that was relt for 10 miles
'I nearly destroyed a large buildinl and shattered win·
• dows within a 10.block
f ( J
area, but there were no in·
Sf ATE juries. The explosion Wed·
' · nesday nig ht at the
, Puritan·BeMettCorp., an I air reduction plant, occurred while a worker was
transferring nitrous oxide . commonly called
"laughing gas, .. rrom a storage tank to a tanker IM....._st Beer St__.~
l truck ,fireofficialssaid. • D-' W.-::K
' Though the blast blew out the sides of the three-
story, corrugated metal building and sent slivers of sheet metal more than a 100 reet, tb.e worker. Roy
Janice,37, was not injured.
R1dt-Lindt~ E1Mis1dn1u
After 10 hours of stacking, 1o:oeo cases of brew stand at Sacramen·
to's Liquor Mart, making it the world's largest beer display. The
volume of the 120,960 bottles contained within the cases represents
20,790 gallons of beer. Representatives of the Guinness Book of
World Records were on hand to certify the record Wednesday.
.!Ber1/teley f>l-ptest
52 Arrested in Anti-~~~
I BERKELEY <AP> -In a campus. be&lnl to cut back eoclal ,.,.......... •
scene reminiscent of the 1980I, police Durtq the occupatioa
led and clr81&ed dissident studenU the dluldenta were talktn, ab;A
and others out of the Univenity ol causes adrift on the campua rot
Callfonda adminiatration buUdiQI to years -lncludinc denunciation of llMt
break !."'-a alt-in sparked by Ronald campua ROl'C and dem.-fot its re~
Rea1an Hlection. moval, more demands that u
Campu1 police arrested 35 students Berkeley quit supportlna nuclea
and 17 nonstudenta Wednesday n11ht ~eapom raearch for the eovem
rollowtnc the si,c,-hour protest on the ment, support for a campus chll~
Berkeley campus. No injuries were care center and Increased Tbir
reported. World enrollment.
All 52 were charged with miade-Campus police chief William Beale
meanor treapUaiog, and in addition, told reporters the demonstration wJ
10 were charged with resisting arrest. legal before the bulldJn1'1 resuJal
cloaln& Ume at 5 p.m . After tb.t, ~
AL'l1IOUGB THE demonstration de monstrators we re warned the)l
had Rea1an 's presidential election q were subject to arrest. Police pa
a "catalyst," one protestor said, it tience ran out 2~ hours later.
later drifted into a general protest
centenns on campus causes of long
standtna. At one point, inside the
buildinl, communist literature was
banded out.
"I'm doing it just to· make a point
about what's aoing on," replied one
s tudent when asked why be bad
participated in the. spontaneous.
mostly nonviolent, demonstration.
The noisy occupation of a stairwell
bet ween the fint and second floors of
California Hall started about z p.m.
with 150 students and nonstudents.
Police sealed orr the building. Two
m en were arrested then for allegedly
tangling with police.
(
Library RetaiWJ
Display of Gay~
•
Books, Photos
HAYWARD (AP ) -A con;
troverslal display of homosexual~
oriented books and photographs will
remain at Hayward's main library,
despite protests from some residents,
the city's library commission says. .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A rule approved by the
state Air Resources Board will reduce smog-
producing nitrogen oxide emissions by glassmakers
by up to seven tons a day over the next five to seven
years, officials say.
Glassmaking plants are considered a prime
source of smog-forming nitrogen oxide emissions
.because of the tremendous heat used in manufactur·
tng furnaces, the ARB said. The furnace can reach
temperatures of 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Win Over Klansman
Breaks Vote Record
AS 11IE PaOTESTERS walked in-
to the building, most of the UC ad-
ministrators walked out, but some
minor damage was reportedly done
to the walls near Chancellor Michael
Heyman's office.
Later, supporters outside attempt-
ed to toss food and other items
through an open window to the pro-
testers.
The commission's 4·2 vote Wednes.!
day night to keep the displa~ d.-e"'
applause from about 80 people, most
or whom identified themselves as be+
ing gay. '
"I AM OPPOSED to censorship,"
said lesbian Kristen Loom is, a Valle·
jo librarian and one of 32 people to
speak al the meeting. "Teo percent
of our population is gay. These
materials should be available to
them." Affected by the rule, which will require changes
<in "lassmaking fumaces1 will be plants that make !·boltlesfor beer, wine, meoicationandfoods. .
SAN DIEGO (AP> -86.4 percent of the vote
Breaki ng a 40·year-old over Tom Me tzger, a
national record for total s tat e Ku Klux Kla n
votes. U.S. Rep. Clair lead er running a s a
Burgener, R·La Mesa, Democrat. ·~Poll C101dn911 JI tdlt-d says his landslide victory Unofficial but final over white supremacist vote totals Wednesday
· SACRAMENTO <AP>-CalirorniaSe<:retary of Tom Metzger was "a gave Burgener 292,039
··state March Fong Eu says she may seek nationwide firm rejection of the vo tes. sur passing the
'1simultaneous poll closings to keep a president's ear-philosophies or the Ku 2 6 7 • 8 7 3 c as t for
r ly concession from cutting voter turnout in the West. Klux Klan.•· RepubHcan Leonard Hall
Ms. Eu, a Democr at, said Wednesday there was Burgener, in wiMing in the 1st Congressional
'.'"a dramatic fallofi in voter participation" Tuesday his fifth consecutive 43rd District of New York in
·:after the television networks began projecting the Congressional Dist rict 1940.
.. victory of Ronald Reagan as president. ter m Tuesday, teceived Th e r ecord was
"' Normally. about 15 percent of the California vote ----------achieved in the nation's ~·comesinbetween5p.m.andtheclosingtime,8"p.m. -"-• "1.\.L largest congressional
;. The network projecting began between 4 p.m. ands r-~ '041 district, with almost a
:p.m. lii.L:~~ £ coa..S1 million people, spanning ~' ,.. m ost of San Diego Coun-• o --
f' Traruif Fa~t-11 Challt-11p
• LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles County's ~·.appro)'Al ol Propoeition A's sales tax increase could
1~_pread a $.1.6 billion masa transit system over the •• pra•liD& county -if lt 1urvtves a potential le1al .,ch.u..e. . .
Tbe county's Transportation Commission said ~Wednesday it hopes to have some of the electric· ~j)Owered line operating by the end of the decade and
::the whole system in place in 35 years, barring major
: technical, financial or legal problems.
Ga"fl l'iolt-nt•t-.-..,ar•
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gang violence in Los
Angeles nearly doubled in the first nine months of
1980 compared to the same period last year, with
rob.beries alone up a whopping 212 percent, a
pohce report shows.
: Statistics cited gang involvement in 2 ,683
· crimes committed through September compared
' to 1,439 gang-related for the nine months in 1979 -
. an increase of 86.4 percent.
,. Robberies soared from 221 in 1979 to 690. r,
},:;::::=========================~
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan associa tion
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
THAT EARN IN TERE ST. ASK US !
Ex.cutlv• Offlcet: 781~ Edinger Ave., fSLic 'Hu,,tlngton Beach, CA 926-47 _ ~
Souttt.m C1/ffom/1 R~lonal OflicH ; -..... -... ·-
6e17 E. La Pelm:1 Ave., Anehelm, CA 92807
8956 \11fley \II-St .. Buene P1rk, CA 90620 1~ Arnell! Rd., Cam1r1110, CA 93010 20115 S. Avalon Blvd., Carson CA 90746
23021 Lek• Center Dr., (Lake Forffti. El Toro, CA 112630
1001 E. lmperlel Hwy., La Hebr1, CA 90631 Gl
4140 Long e .. cll Blvd .. l.oflg Beach, CA 90807 •
22811 Hawthorn• Blvd., TOfrance, CA 90eO& 108& ltvln• BIYd •• Tu•lln, CA ll2eeO
235 N. Cltru• Ave., WHI Covina, CA 91793
"Mercury Room'' 1111//1bl1 on • flHIW<I bl•I•
=------
£QUAl
HOUSING l£110C~
fd~ , a!:: ty. parts of Riverside a_S.~ :, _; \\iti\(\Il County and all of Im·
----perialCounty. ._ ________ ., Metzger, who ran on a
6MONTHS
FREE
platrorm o f wh it e
supremacy, tightening of
U .S .-Mexican border
restrictions and s upport
for worting class whites.
received 45,823 votes. or
13.5 percent.
Cob Invalid
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -The state Social
Services . Department
cannot reduce the
amount of money paid
under the Aid to
Families with Depen·
dent Cbl1dren prosram
because an unrelated
adult male lives in the
bouset.old of pro1ram
recipients, tbe Court of
Appeal bas ruled .
About 7:30 p.m., when more than
half the protesters had left voluntarily
after several warnings, police waded
in and led away those who would walk
on their own and dragged away others
whowentlimp.
The occupation was preceded by an
anti-Re.agan rally nearby at Sproul
Plaza. which for nearly 10 years was
the .focal point of sometimes fierce
confrontations accompanied by tear
gas and truncheons. By comparison,
Wednesday's event was a love feast.
SPEAKEas TOLD A small crowd
to "make sure Reagan can do as lit-
tle as pouible to hinder human rights
in the COlmtry. • •
Joe Lambert of the Berkeley
Pro1ressive Students Organiutioo,
announced that the demonstration
wu called ''to build an educational move~ a1a.imt Rea1an . . . when
Rea1an reinstates the draft and
Titled "Out of the Closet," the dis-
pla y is sponsored by the Pacific
Center for Huma n G rowth, a
Berkeley mental health and social
services agency for homosexuals . It
features photographs and books by ot
about gays.
LEA.DING OPPOSITION to the dis·
play was a Hayward parent, Darlene
K. Bogle, who demanded immediate
removal or the display. She said it
was not suitable for children and it
advocated homosexuality, which sh~
viewed as against Biblical standardsi
Mrs. Bogle was joined by about rt
dozen people representing church
and other groups who denounced th• d isplay a s immoral and un.
American. :
The m onth-long d isplay wu
authorized by the commission last
March by a 5-2 vote.
HAPPY "HOUR"
• ¢..'\
Our restaurants
will treat you with
complimentary "Refreshments"
Every Weekday Afternoon From 3 to 5 p.m .
NOVEMBER 5-14
Amato's
(Upper level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary European
cappucmo with purchase
of dessert
Carl's Jr.
(lower lev6l t Sears wing)
Complimentary soft drink
with purchase of hamburger.
Back Bay Rowing &
Running Club
(l ower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary scoop of
Haagen·Dazs loe cream with
purchase of a ~al.
Forty Carrots
(l ower level I Saks wlng)
Complimentary fresh fruit
shake with purchase
of entree. -Li ndberg's
(l ower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary cake and
coffee with purchase
of lunch. Magic Pan
(lower level /"Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary mousse with
purchase of lunch. Rendezvous Cafe
(Lower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary popcorn.
Vie De France
(Lower ~ I Norost rom wing)
Compll"*'t•ry roll/croissant
with purcti•se of coffee 'Of
Oompll"*'tlry dessert with
purchate of lunch.
Riviera
(lower level I May Co. wing)
Caff e Pasquini
(Upper level I Saks wing)
Complimentary dessert with
purchase of lunch
KJ!p)an's
(lower levl!lt'l May Co. wing)
Complimentary danish with
purchase of beverage.
Pronto
(Vpper level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary pastry and
coffee with purchase
of lunch.
Salmagundi
(Lower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary beverage
with purchase of soup
or salad.
20th Century
(Lower level I CarouMI court)
Complimentary European
cappuclno with purchase
of dessert.
I
I I
-1
•
R• .... a1 a H,...._ IMcli ,,.wse _... v~~·..,...·m1r'"=.l..,.._ ,.,
I flirt ;;:-er.;--...:~=..:=,..·-......
... f.-.... -WU ..e•Yil&ed ,... ia ••bJ -· '4omlnlum development. · : ·
· It wu clue up and moved 8*t to.UW r.~.-.iM111a 'fNilW
. Bark near Beaeh Boulevard ... M11at1· A._.. 8fo'. · -.reotlY became it eontabaed a beaYJ ii8lut paae• _.
• · bobody lmew what to clo wltb lt. · · • ' But it bu caUMCI a lot al caaoen to U.. ~ nil· ~nta, many of whom are elderly and IOl9e 8o eomplala •Pl breldalnl problems.
· Rmklenta NY tJle dirt bu J>e"-pd the paft ...
. ihey alao fear that it may came floodlnl when raiD1 eome .
y clouina storm drains. · . -,11. Cityolftctals say the dirt wu piled tbereilleplly.
But the pile has 1rown even larpr delptte fr.q\leDt
····complaints. Offi~iala have managed to avoid the pleu
., ~til recent days.
• ot • The city recently bu threatened to pl"09eCute the I .'5,uilders who at last say they will be·movtna the cllrt ~
I ~.lay now, as soon aa it is detenniDed satilfactory for COla-
paction at a landfill.
All th.is time, approximately three months, the nai-
dents have had to put up with the unsightly and potentially
hazardous nuisance.
It is incomprehensible that the city bun't acted
sooner. By their lack of action, officiala bav~ succeeded
in creating the impression that they couldn't care Iese for
the wel!are of the mobile home park residents.
•.
False Assurance
Much to her dismay, a yomig mother learned that the
emergency call box telephone system in Huntiniton
Beach Central Park wasn't all that it should have hem.
She recently took her small st>na to tbe pan to &et
some fresh air and feed the ducts.
But the outing soon was shattered by a partially
clothed man who confronted her while en1alin& la• l..,s
sex act.
Believing that her sons were threaten~ she ra to a
call box to call for help.
She said the phone rang at least 20 times before it
aa answered by a police ofCacer. And when 1118 61
answer, she said his response WU leu than satisfactory.
She said later that the emersency phone lyst.em
gives a false sense of security. "What happens if you
have a heart attack or are in real trouble? You think you
can get help right away but it f.sn't true."
Police say they were swamped with calls at the time
and that there were a number of reasons for the un-
satisfactory response. .
To their credit, they also concede that it should never
have happened.
Police have since up1raded the emer1ency system and promise prompt response no matter what tbe
problems may be. And it i• sood that they will.
To be accosted at the'~ II bad enoup. A deal ear
'to a plea for help in an emierceney ls even wone.
Warning in Order
Frustrated local activitists sometimes complain that
most people ran't be bothered with City Rall until trouble
pops up in their own front yard.
That has certainly been the case in the cable
television furor that has erupted in some sections al ff•·
tington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster.
I The cable project developed over the put 10 years by
these cities finally has reached ~ construction sta1e.
Crews are ripping up streets and lawns to install cable
television conduits and connection boJles.
Understandably, some residents are u.nllappy, chars· ~ ing that the conduit work has weakened atreeta, and that ~ the boxes blemish their lawm.
!: Many residents said they received little or no warn-
) ing about the construction; some voiced fean that the
'city fathers arefoistmg an miwanted booodo11teupoalocal
residentS.
.. As city officials pointed out, the cable plam have
been aired in public ofteo . .And the lawn boa inatallaU..
are legal because the cable fum baa access to utility
easements.
Still, the uproar indicates a few community relat6-
shortcomings. The cable company cannot ~t tA> be
greeted warmly by .local reeidenta -their proepeetive
customers -when it fails to properly prepare
homeowners for construction.
In the lone run, the cable ,,._. &ft aa t '=
to the communities. It is betnc lmtalred Ill • eoet to ·
payers -indeed, each participatin1 city will reeeive S
rcent of annual gross revenues -and eventually, tM
cities will own the system. ,
But at prese~t. city aEcl• aad DickinMD·Padk
Cablesystemt.i..need to improv• net~~
procedures ~ shQulcrmue a atron1er effort to .se.i with community concerns. · ' · • inions expressed In the space abov. are thoae of the Oal,Y ,llOt.
her views expressed on this page are thQee ot their authot'I ~
ertlsts. Reader comment is invited. Addreea The Oaity Piiot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (114) 842·'321.
Boyd/P.olitics
B1L•.80YD
Tim moment oecured when
Woodrow Wllaon waa 10•· el"DOr ol New Jeney. A U.S.
Dear
Gloomy ,
t .GU8· .
~o l .P .V. <Gua ','
Oct.JO): Appllcatlon1
for tlle HB .,,. Dept.
"hat drawlnl" were N ·
viewed oal1 for mhrimum quallllu-
Uou. I f« one far n -
. effded them and wua•t
laeky 1aou1b to be
drawn. K.I .
.... 'I ... "'~ -·· .,., .... ..... ":JI::" ........ a..'=.v..::.-:
...
.. a. tram bll state ~.
Tbe ............ a dole
frind of Wllloa. A J.....,
polttl,lu wlUala mlautea
te~ ta. ......... -• .t~a.totMetlait ............ w. ....... ................. y .. ._
caHt• me .. •.a1••1 It ta
""""' ._... ... to .. ., It'• All'tle•ltle to tit• U · ~.··
W A.IHINOTON -.,..,.._ tbe
••ar·bJlt•rleal rlaetorlc eme ..... ,._ ._.. Ina and
(r841., ............ et IO f~
lau ..._Im tllaa total war. 8.t
U.I. lllt "Wwe aaalJlti UJ
tMn II ....... ot Meal1Uon ln a
partlealarly 1rue1ome arH:
ebemleal -aria.re.
Tiii• reaaon clllemlcal or
blolo1ical weapons have not
been u1ed
m a y .b e
•imply tbat thebaluetot
t•rror ln tlUa
new field l•
clearly In
Iraq'• favor,
and tbe lraqla
have been
doln1 well
enou1b with
conventklna.l forces -to far.
But If tbe fortw,e1olwar1~
chan1e dramatically, Iraqi
Pre1ident Saddam Hu11e1., may
decide to stave off dlsa1ter by
reaortlna to chemical weapona.
Mailbox
lru bM done relatively UtUe to de"lop ehemleal warfare
ea.-MUty, or def••• a1alnat
Hd attacb. But HuHeln la
UOW8 to conakler chemicala ·a
uHful mUitary tool. Iraq's
modeet atocll plle of
cbemieal-biolollcal weapons la a
le1ac1 from It• yeara as a mmt_,. client of tbe Soviet
Ua6oft. Tiie Iraqis be1an actively
acqulrtnt a chemical warfare
potndal ln the mid-11'10.. Aa a
Hcret OefenH lntelll1ence
A1•acy report put it. Iraq
embartied on "an a1•r.ea1ive
chemical·biolotkal· radiololjcal
pro1ram , lncludln1 the
eoutrueUon ot tralnln1 faclUUes
. . . modeled after Soviet CBR
ln.tallat.Jona."
INTELLIGINCE sources
dlacoyered "at leut 15
locat&ona'' ln Iraq where CBR
ob1tacle couraea had been conatruci.d wlttt Ruaalan help.
The Htent of these tralnln1
facl lilies "hi&hllghta the
importance <the Iraqis) place on
bein1 prepared to operate ln a
cont•mlnated environment."
one secret report states.
The obttacle courses were
uaed u part of general Iraqi
army training. "In these areas,
troops are instructed to bypass
or move through contaminated
obltacles · and perform normal
combat duties while wearing
protective clotbin4," the report notes.
"Each Iraqi division bas an
or1anic chemi,al company that
ls equipped primarily with
Sovlet·manufactured materiel
such as the truck·mounted
ARS -12 and DDA -53
decontamination apparatus," an
intelligence report ·states. "A3 in
the Soviet Army. tbe Iraqi
ground force has a chemical
branch. and CBR doctrine Is
most likely based on Soviet
concepts."
Before relations with the
Kremlin cooled following
IWt'JES .... .U. t
I GUcSA SKELE~ KEY
!§ PA™ER APPROPRIATE!
HOMOHO!.JEOIJf ! WAAT m · !! SENSE Cf HLMJR
IW Jt; OOT THERE MR.RJT... .
------~
Hu11eln'1 crackdon oo lracal
communlata in 1'78, the~
reportedly supplied 1mall
1moun1.1 ol chemical warfare
a1enta for trainini use.
'l'HE lllAQIS IL\D "no known
chemical warfare production
capability, altbou1b the
technological hue required to
produce nerve qenl.I nJI&, Ud
an attempt hu reportedly been
made to ct:> to," accordint to an
in tel lite.nee ,ana I y1l1. It
conchldea ominously:
''The Ir .. realise tba.t, once
acquired, weapons of this type
could be used against ...
potenliaJ adversaries, such as
Iran and Israel. Numerous
weapons systems already in the
Iraqi inventory, are capable of
delivering CBR munitions,
which would have to be
externally supplied."
Intelligence sources told my
associate Dale Van Atta that the
French, who replaced the
Russians as Iraq's major
military supplier, have not
provided chemical weapons. But
the Iraqis have built tfP a small
stockpile on their own.
EXPORTING TRAGEDY ;
Manufacturers who run afoul of
stringent federal safety
standards have a callous option
available: Like the companies
that found themselves with
stocks of baby clothes treated
with Tris, the suspected
cancer.causing flame retardant,
greedy manufacturers can
dump their goods overseas.
Now there is evidence the
federal government is helping
the United Nations fob off a
controversial birth-control drug
on unsuspecting women around
the world. The substance is
Depo-Provera. and tests have
linked il t o s terility and
congenital heart. disease in
women.
In a private letter to Rep.
Mario Biaggi, D·N.Y .. officials
of the Agency for International
De ve lopment admitted that,
despite attempted safeguards.
AID Funds may be helping to
underwrite a U.N. program that
is distributing Depo-Provera
abroad.
Strings Attaehed to' Affordable' Housing
To the Editor:
In raponse to the Oct. Z2
edltorlal entitled "County
·Tackles Rouaine SborUge," if the
Board of Supervisors were to
wave a magic wand and create
10,000 units ot affordable bouaial
tomorrow, tbe demud for "af.
fordable" hou1in1 in Orange
County wwld not be met. Aa we
watch the supervtaors perforDJ
tbelrmiraelea, remember that all
tbelr ~I is at the ex·
peBR al eftr'Y property owner ID
Oraaaeou.ty.
Tbe -.r ol an ''affordable''
"°'8ae cm only aeU that uatt at• price determined by the Coulity al
Oraa,. aM tlult priee la not tou-
cftd tlae llUftlaue price phm tlae
lnen-la the medlaa lnC!Ollle ta
Oraqe County. In add:IUGD, lllt
couat1 c• cltcreMe dM aalel
price bJ u. amount ne~•uY '° repair any dama1ea •• de·
termiaed bJ dM C'OmtJ. They CM
cleaa aad palat aad repair
wiUtoutUIBltlltiaa• t ':Z:ta. sellerohe".,,...th ..
After all, the 1tudents will not
only learn medicine, science. aru, etc., but about democracy,
human rights and religious
freedom, which are items the
present Iranian government
wants DOthlnC to do with.
Give us the hostages and send
the studeata home!
JIM deBOOM
' ...,••••rldr•
To Ute &dltor: ~ DO better way could
be d .. laect to divide races, ereete coef\llioa and destroy
· ,.aMtc Hhoola daan forced b4D...
laf. II It pauible Jud1es Wie U1 ..., Nie 111 raver of tJw.
lal an rully on the other side
after all aad are only dolnt the ...t al daoM wbo want racial chtam ud private achooll?
B.TAVUN ......... ,, .. ,
will get only Sl,000 if the contract
"offer" is ratified.
TRIS IS PARTLY responsible
for the discontent, distraction,
and disappointment. Teachers
are discontented with contract of·
fen that keep them one or the
lowest paid districts in the county,
when we used to be one or the
highest. We are distracted by the
uncertainty of whether we will
have a contract this year or even a
job, since last year the
superintendent re com mended
that 168 teachers be fired and
tbey rehired aJI but nine or them
by the flftb week or school. We
are disappointed thal the
superilltendent places such a
low priority on clas sroom
teachers and supplies that
individual school budgets are
cut by 10 percent to 12 percent
while .the district oUJce
increases its budget this year by
A black light shining on it made a
spooky effect and the children
who came to the door seemed to
appreciate the display. Now it is
gone.
THE SKULL was part of a col·
lection from my past! My father was in special effects at MGM
Studio and we always had in·
terestlng things for Halloween
and FourthorJuJy. The skull was made of plaster of
parts and was fragile. It had bulbs
in the eyes so that it could be elec·
trically connected. I'm sure
whoever took it will break it and
jU!ttossitout.
lsn 't there some way young peo-
ple can be taught to leave thin.es
aloaethat don't bel~ to them?
BARBARA WEBER
12 percent. To the F.ditor:
As a teacber, 1 care what hap-It ls ditftcult to understand, I
pen1 to the students and the told my wife, over breakfast.
teachers in this district. I know Tbe levee bad broken several
the paz:m_U care as well. We care days ago. 1be water was ba.:.1.
for a top quality staff wbo are up beblnd a rallrpad em '·
acltnowledled leaders in +a· met.
ttonintbecountyandwecaretbat There was worry tAat the em·
the top quality staff bas a top ... 'banlrment would bold, and that
qualltycontract. thouaanda of acres of farmland
CHARLESGLF.NN would be nooded, but lMJ ap-
\ftid• L.r••••
To the F.ditor:
What ts the matter with this
generation ot young people? I
llAow we Mk Ws question over
andoverandbavenoanswer.
On Halloween aomeone stole part of our porch dttoraUona. We
bad a stuD wtddl was painted
with nuoreteent paint on a table. ... ~ ..
parently did not atop train traf.
Ile on that stretch of traell. A
traln wu oa the embankment
when lt brolre.
· That Is euy to undentand,
my wife told me. Tbe IO"ftl·
ment la }'elpjnc t4f run tllle
railroad. Som8bne wa {ryial to
phone the ..,...t pvemmeat
a1mey all of la. -'IJe. Tbe CGD·
aecUoa would be blollen, tbm
tbey would aet a busy line. Thea
when they sot tbrou1b. they
would be put OD bold for three
boun. Tbey would ftnaltJ find
out tW tliey bad tbe .,.... cte-·
partmeat. Tiiley woehl be direct·
ad to anotblr departmeet, ad
then tbe prGHea would ltart
O\'ef',
la a few da11, tMJ mlPt bave
almGll Md IWr eall .. -...-.
wb•n tM fret1lat tralla \was
backed out OD tM embeak.-t, andtt ......
Tllat makea ...... I told bet,
U.anbfGrtbe ...... atloe.
JAMI:& BOLDING . '
-
I ..• . .
Ol•er A••rh••• -1ru'llill .. ~1n .W ......,atbfn
Iii ............ ,..,. -.... '° .............. ~ -·-"',.,.et ... .,..... .......... ,...... tlaaD tltey.
·y ................. etupto
........ -. IMt .. tM bul, would opea .... ._ .......... belp the
...._ dtlaml aerau \be 1treet.
But it la Im, aDd UUnaa have
ell ..... au,btly. Today beN i.a
tile advice
........... to
• e D and women in
tbelr IOI and •
70.:
"If you 1et
1rabbed, take
your fingers
and atlck
them ln the
IUY 'a eyes.
Jam thole flngera ln as deep as
you can, and start to goufCe.
Scratch with all your ml1ht.
Don't worry about hurting the
other person -it's you or him,
and you have to ~ ·u cllJtt •
YC>U can."
Tbe penool pviq that tender
aclvlce la Frank Lena, a black
belt in karate wbo bu started
conduc tin1 1elf-defen1e
temlnara for senior clUaem.
Lena -wbo operatn a martial
artl 1cbool -said be decided to-
a111l1t the oldsters beeauae ol the
alarmtni rise in violent crimes
11alnat.the aaed.
•'The theory la that tbefe is
respect for older people," said
Lena, 31. "But that theory la
wron1. When I was a boy I bad
total respect for my mother and
rather, my grandmothers and
arandfatber. Today that's all
chanaed. A lot of young people
see senior citizens as easy
taraets -fraaile men and
women who can't fltht back." • .
So Lena has d evised his
self-defense meetings ror elderly
people. He realizes that there
are certain limitations inherent
in the project.
. "We don't try to give them the
full course-in karate," he said.
''I tell them -~·· lace it, fC!'I are beyond the,.,. of leamiq
real karate. You're not limber
enoqb to llll your lea up to kick
eomeone in the bead. You don't
have enou1h force to smash
someone in the face with the full
tbru1t ol your band.' But there
are aome tbbi11 they can do."
ONE OF THE techJliqlles ls
the eye-IOUllnl. As horrible as
it sounds, Lena aays it is a very
effective technique for an old
man or woman to use aaatnat a
young assailant. Amona bis
other recommendatJoQs :
-"Kick the IUJ ln the groin.
If you're pbysfcally fit enouah to
lirt your foot or knee as blah as
his groin, jam it In there aDcl do
as much damaee aa you can. I
know that some of you b,ave
arthritis and a lot of pain in your
legs, but if you 're being attacked
you foraet all about pain."
-"U you're grabbed from
behind, take your head and
drive it directly back into your
attacker's face. The back or
;our bead ii one of the btrdest
parts o1 your bodr: and If '°" do
it juat rllbt you can break rour attacker'• DOM very euily. •
-''Tak• your .......... 1muh
it down on your attaeker'~ foot.·
Some ol the mo.t delicate boDea
in the ~Y are ln the foot, .net
you'd be 1urpriaed bow easy it is
to break tho8e bonea."
-"When your attacker pub
bis band• on you, take hill
rtniers and pull them directly
back. Don't thlnk about it -J..m\
pull them back unW they an.ap.
They will."
LENA aEAUZBS tbat it does
not si>eak too well of modem
society to bav• to recommend
such tactics to older Americana.
But he ls not a socioloalat; he ls
a karate expert. And he is
convinced that lf elderly people
count on automatic kindness
from younger people, too many
of them will eventually end up
robbed, muaged or worse.
·'Sometimes a little old lady
will tell me that she always
'
Veteran's Day Sale
a Ru~h-W'Dtlcl
carri• a wbllUe.to b1oJir 6a c... o&der ,..... la ......, a, ..L
of trotlble," Lma ... d. ·~"• dowa. •• ol•er ,.~; fine. Carrylna a whlatle la a tradlUcmally won't flCtit ,_ u
aood, idea .. But 1omet1Qlet bani, M o1c11r perlOll ia U1aa11J
tbe,. • not IOIDI. U) W _,... more "-Ille. Beeame 111 ......_,
around td'hear tb9t wbllde: I WI tbey set ta• Mhantase ol . ..,...-
tbe older people _strallbt • -Frank Lena 11 ld tiAt,
'I'm bereto1 .. ellroudaedktlelt 1urprl11n1ly, the older abe littlt tedmlqu. I can. I want JOU bu talked to are not 1boc to
tohavetheedteovertbecreepe." bear bJt me11a1e. ','Tb re Kathy Sauter, a police offtcer, ready to ~cept lt " be 1u.t. bu worked with Lena ln "They re-.. that lb. worJ1 ii
trainlDI elderly people in not perfect an)'lftOre and $at
aelf-defmse. She, too. said that there are bad ~.Pl• OD ~ it mu• her lad to have to do it, atreeta who are wtlliDt to IMart
but th.at in today's society It ia them."
neCfJSlary. Lena' empbulses to the aea.r..
"It's sbockl.ng, some of the citlzem tbat the beR pol6ey Q \o
crimes that are committed avoid violent cOGfliet -to, Ill
aaainet elderly people," ·Sauter away frosn an attacker . r..._.
said. "It makes me unhappy · than fl&bt it out ln the 1treetAlut
that they have to worry about ii the attacker per,lltl~ he aap,
leami.q techniques like thete, aometlmes there 1-no cboiee ..
but lf they're aoin& to t>e safe on "Let's face it ," he aald:.'f"ll
the streets it's probably you're 615 or '70 years old, y~'re
necessary. not fCOln& to be able to do RYinl
sidekicks into y~ attacker.Jlul
"IT'S JUST NOT realistic for you're not helpless, either,~
older people to usume that no you should be aware of exlletly
one's got.n«i to hurt them. An what you can do. ·,
•(
Super v·alues for you, your farnily, ''
I
your home ... and for gift giving .. . ,
Sporty and warm
pant coal•
CauaJ looking single, double
btWlllfld and wrap styles In
wooll ny#On blends.
ml#tMcoats27
.... .,,.aal
Alex Colman .. ,,.,., ..
S.w. ~ on boucJe blazers, classic
trouMrs and pleated bow blouS6S.
Slzw 8-18. Choose yours early.
aJex co/man 110
11.91 lo 49.99
...-$26-$78
fit1•at1% on
to8ty cardigan•
T...o .,_:middy collar with turn-
bM:k cuWa QJIPMtlOM&OIJar with
f'll/llM .,..__Sizes S-M-L.
boullNard knitwear 109 a1.• reg.$28
W•nn btv•hed
... PflOWn•
WMm and lllJhtwel(}ht Dsmea
«*ai.lnylOn IJOWM hsw. ,.,,.
Mtd .,,,brolt#ry det•lla. S-M-L.
-~$04
••• comp. v.I. $11
Shop all stores today 10 a.m. 't/19:30 p.m. •
(•••l»PI downtown I.•. •nd ,,...-,,. 'Ill I p.m., .. n t»rurdlno, montct.lr, oxnard, ~ •nd cwrlltM 'ti/ I p.m.)
UH your Holh:My Shopping C.d :." you won'I I» 11111«1 'Ill F#I. •1.
Essentials sale:
bra._ and panties
Choo$6 from plunge, criss-cross
and aporttl bra. Psntl6s In brief,
hipster and biklnlhugger styles.
lingerie 28, "'
3.lllJ ,,,_ .,,.-1
SISM t11 reg. a.a-. panties
14K gold chain•
and bracelets
Great time for gift collecting/
Chains: 15", 16", 18", 20", 24",
30" lengths. 7", SW' bracelets.
authentic jewelry 13
19.99 lo 280.99
reg. $40-$562
Shoulder-•lyle
leather bags
So slfor~ you Clln ha.-. one In
every color. Choose plum, .,ne.
navy, brown, tan or black.
handbags 485
15.99 wereS24
Health-lex®
forboy•and
g,lrl•'
Topa s,nd pant• In dur~blfl. euy-
care fsbrlca. Girl's .a. 4-1",
boys' 4-7. Stacie up now and save.
Hetllth-tflx' 160
5.411 •....
comp. val. 17-13.50
VanHeu•en
knit •hlrl•
s..-. 2Cr.4 on Splendor I'
Interlocking polyftter knit shirts
with• t1MtWMll '•flt. S-M-L-XL.
,,,.,, •• ~ 526
.... rwe. 12.50
Young men'•
pullover•
Lightweight washable acrytlc
pullover sweater shirts with
collared v-necks. S-M-L-XL.
mike's place 450
9.99 special
Young men'•
belted •lack•
P'-tfld styles from RPM.
Polyester/cotton/wool blends In
camel, navy Kiikenny twefJ<J.
mike's pis~ 409
... 16.99 were$25
Men'• Levi'•®
Action pant•
Shsrp, trim look• of comlort•blfl
Dllcron~ polywter. Walat 32-42;
in ... m :J0...34. Fall colon.
• ,,,.,, •• .,,ortlWflllr 188
18.15 '~· $25
Your choice:
breakla•I •pec:lal•
One low pr~ for blenden, crock-
pots, coffell makers, juicers,
toasters •nd coffee grlndenl.
""'"" «:OnOmia 7 4
' __ .,..., ~ chok» .,,.as/
O..lgner 3-pc.
towel••I•
Oscar de Is Renta 's 'Wlndrush •
from Cannon's• Royal Family«.
Cotton-face jacquard terry
patterns.
linens 35 -sll •tOffltl ex<»pt
pssadena, C6rrltos
11.99 3-pc. Mt spec/sl
200-thread
prlnl•hHI•
Super-smooth cotton/polyester
Supercalfl Plua• In ¥fl/low
'Christian Dior Im' pattern.
linens 34 -all storee exc.pt
puadena. cerrltos
6.99 to 11.119 eomp. vsl. $14-$30
S.t1e 33" on
S..ly••t••
Firm to ultra firm ,,,.,,,... •ts
with born# b«J trMN. '
tumlture 145 -•11 •torw •xcept . ,,,,._,,,.
113 oH f9(/UJsr prk:#
~Ov#IP Md king._ MM a '
..,. only {k/ng41a,.. 3-pc. •t)
·,
Sale: 18th century ~
cherry furnltµre
5-pc. dining room sets and 4-pc. t>
bedroom sets In brown cherry
....,,..,. on hardwood.
furniture 142, 143 -all stOl'ea
'·
.1{
Mt:ept pasdens, cen'ftos, s
I' ~o.J{· (~
.... ~ I ,.,,,_, dining r(J()m Mt reg. $1509
$1~ bedroom set 11216
t I J r
Ladl••' a•.arted
velour top•·
Cottonl po/yetlt11r ~In CIWW,
tun/fl •nd v-IHICks. Rich f•ll
~In lsdk#' S-M-L.
budgM •tOf'e .,,on ... , " , -"".tor.
Ut»pt cemte», 1000 Ollk•, ml#lon vNjo.
lll}OIM. paMd«I•. ~ Olllr•
'J
••• special • )
· Queen and king
down pl/low•
P•mPfN yourNlfl Down-proof
cotton tlcklnga.
budget store llnensldOfnfltllta
H5 -al/ store:1 ex<»pt Ill cajon,
fox hills, brea
32.99 4UHft reg: $50
170 king a.# 4 ..
..
. '·
J
J
S•r• ao" to 40%:~
electric blanket•
First quality wiring •nd controla.
Wahabl9 llCl'yllc In lllx ~.
TWIM, ""'-• qcJ#na, kings.
~ •""9621-.. mw.ut»pt
cwr#O&,., ~·bt99. loK ... 1000
... ,,...,,, Wejo, .. Joi'-...... , ...
If,,.,. ""'""'
.I
bluff-top,................... l Tiie Newport Danes plan, eoYertna the lalOOQ
and iU 1~ Jall& eMt of Paclftc Coast
H11bway, baa been tbe subject ot close scrutiny
from both the City of Newport Beach and thtt com·
puy that bu a leue for the site unW the year
2009.
Newport Beach oftlelala ba•• p~• ed·the motel, but Riley 1Ud NIDOYllll It._.._.
development plan w11 "luppropriate." Oii •
other hand, he said, the prlYIY company ftnt ....
posed a more lotenaive use ol the property. ''net
would have caused Ne~ lk!ach to beoDme
more militant in ill obj*~L' be said.
Riley ealled U. !>JU ~.._ plan. ..._. .a
part ot 1 more compr..,_..ve tpeeUk plaa. oM of
the "joy,'' of bia term lD oftlee. Ha aaid tbe pa.._
.... the support Qt boUa bil devtloDen aDd local
ralclenU, • two yean alO bid 'd1Vided lllto their /
ownfactlona. ~ . 8llPUYl80a THOMAS Riley, whose 5th Dis-
trict IMI.._ the bay, said the county'• pe»itioo
refiecta a c,mpromlae between Newport Beach and
the private lessee, Newport Dunes, Inc.
The 115-acre Sumet .,.... are• is nearly de·
veloped with beacblkle homea and a aspall t:OJD·
mercial diatrict. County project manaier ken
Winter noted that 70 acre• are publlcly-oWMd and
In Caplatrano Be1cb, the couta1 clotelJ
follows exJatina land uaea. ~r IOIDe &Md
dealcnatiou are chanaed from commerical to
residential uaeto allow for more boualna.
I
COlJN'l'Y GOVl!aNMENT II responsible for
plan• for ill unincorporated coutal commumU..
Plafll adopted WednMday covered 5'...t Beacll,
Santa Ana Heiahts. Laiuna Nipel, Dana PoiDl,
Capistrano Beach and Newport Dunes.
Tbe adopted plan allows a motel, called the
"Family lno," with up' to 350 units, an expanded
marina, an overnl1bt camp site, improved
facilities for recreational vehicles and a road and
bikeway system to relieve traffic COOJeation alon•
Pacific Coast Highway.
used for parka and schools. .
Most of the plannlni for the Lqulla Nlpel
area previously was approved by the couaty in
1978 and· the coastal commllalon in 1'79. Avco
Community Developers are prope»lnS retldential
development, which will include a aoU course and
THE SUPERV180&8 B&EEZED tbJ'ou&h the
plans in leas than an hour -mostly because the
propoaala had been picked ·~ durtn1 lencthy hearinp earlier this fall at bcitb county .,lan.nini
commiaaion and local nel1h~ meet.lnca.
1st. District Race
New Offi~ial
Praises Foe
By O.C. HUSTINGS 0t .... o.i,,r .... _..
Orange County Supervisor-ele<:t Roier
Stanton, who bedecked his political CIJ:ll1)iign
with derisive barbs for opponent Philip An·
thony, had nothing but praise for the incum-
bent on the day after the election. ..
Stanton said Wednesday that Anthony
called him to offer help in making a smooth
·transition in the 1st District omce.
"For him to do that is a marvelous state-
ment in his behalf," said Stanton, who aeroed
in on Anthony's legal
troubles to win the elec·
lion.
Added Stant.oil: "He's
apparently big enough to
put the campaign behind
us, which is what I want to
do, too."
Stanton said he also
received a Wednesday
morning call from 5th dis-
triCt Supervisor Thomas STANTON
Riley congratulating him and volunteering
help to set up shop. Riley supported Anthony
during the campaign.
SUPERVISORS HARaJETI' Wl_EDEa
and Ralph Clark also called him, Stanton
said.
For the latest electee, the sudden support
must have seemed unusual.
Stanton talked at limes like a reformer
during the campaign, when he railed against
political practices he said protected incum·
bent supervisors.
Stanton, a Fountain Valley city coun-
cilman, raised $30.000 in his campaign, mak-
ing his successful run a model of austerity
compared to more than $225,000 collected in
June by another supervisor-elect, Bruce
Neslande.
Btrr STANTON COM PLAINED that he
couldn't raise more money because big con-
tributors, belting on the safe aide to protect
their interests, s upported the favored incum·
bent.
Stanton, a college professor. now faces
the sensitive diplomatic test of bow -or if -
he wants to challenge a system be bad
described as unfair during his campaign.
Stanton said he already has worked out
an agreement with the administration at Cal
State Long Beach, where he is a manage-
ment teacher, to take a leave of absence
beginning at the semester break in late
December.
Stanton also will have to forfeit
bis seat on the Fountain Valley City Council. .
LEARN!!
Defe~e
Cla1JS Set
A self-defense class
featuring the use of
mace and tear gas can-
nisters will be offered by
the Orange County
Marshall's Deputment
Nov. U •t tb• Sad·
dlebuk V~y YMCA.
GradUUil of tbe 7 tot
p..m. clMa .tll receive a
state license lo carry
such deVices.
Regiltration may be
made by calling the YM ·
CA, 23131 Orange Ave.,
El Toro, 830-9822. Fee is
$33, payable on the night
of instruction.
'Art Show
Benefit
The Orange District
Junior Membership of
the California Federa·
lion ol Women's Clubs
will present an art show
featuring the work of
Robert W. Anton on
Nov.16.
The show will be held
from 4 p.,m. to 7 p_m. at
the Anaheim Ebell
Clubhouse, 244 North
Helena St. in Anaheim.
Proceeds from the
event will benefit the
Women's Transitional
Living Center, a non·
profit organization sup-
porting and offering
temporary shelter and
counseling for battered
women and the i r
children. Admission to
the 4 to 7 p.m. show at
Anaheim Ebel!
Clubhouse, 244 N .
Helena St., Anaheim, is
$100.
Africa Talk
Politics in Africa will
be discussed by his -
torian Giles Brown at a
luncheon meeting of the
Wom e n 's C lub of
Laguna Beach, Friday
at 12:30 p .m . at the
clubhouse, 286 St. Ann's
Drive. Further informa·
tion may be obtained by
telephoning Janet Hull,
830-1987.
HOW YOU CAN
LEGALLY PAY NO
TAXES IN 1980
. AND RECOVER TAXES
PAID IN
\977' -1978, 1979
J UST THE WAY 14 PROFITABLE AMERICAN COMPANIES WITH
PRETAX WORLDWIDE EARNINGS OF OVER 3.5 BILLION DOLLARS
PAID NO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES AT ALL! ON'tHE LIST OF NO TAX
COMPANIES. ARE U.S. STEEL. GENERAL DYNA~11CS, AMERlCA:--J
AIRLINES. OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM. BOEING AND J .P. MORGAll' &
CO. cReportChanglng Times. October 1980>.
DON'T WAIT UNTIL THE END OF THE YEAR.
CALL NOW AND LEARN HOW TO PUT YOUR
TAX DOLLARS TO WORK FOR MORE INCOME
FOR YOU!
PHONE: 644-2507
(Ask for Seminar Director) AND ATTEND ~
COMPLIMEN.TA-RY TAX SEMINAR ON SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER I, AT s~oo P.M. Refreshmenta wtll be served.
c Seminar Speaker
Mr. Gerald L. Kozak, Tax Planner
Newport Cea~t
3SI San Mlpel Dr., SUl&e 110
Newpert Bea~. CA.~·
f
Rearvatloat limited.
AM/FM Clock Radio with
Extra-Large LED Display
Chronomatlc • -213 by Realistic
~~~37~~
• LED AM, PM and Wake Indicators
• Fast and Slow Time Set Controls
VISA
CHARGE 11
tMOST S TORES•
Wake to buzzer or radio! Extra-large LED clock display can be read
from anywhere m the room. Clock features snooze control and
sleep switch. Radio has 3112'' speaker. AFC on FM. earphone jack.
Hurry and save $10.07! 12-1s20
6-Band
Portable
Radio
CB with Channel 9 "Priority'~
l r -'' • ~· • • ........... . . ~ ~ .. ·. : -:~ ... . . . . . ·.
Patrolman · CB-60
by Realistic·
S •t h TRC-427 WI C by Realistic
Save
•30 @@
t=====1 I•• ! <> -.1, ·-·. • '.
~~~-tt~--69!! -~-~~~re
30°/o Offl. 99.95 Save s5095
Bane•-es e•••a
Hear the excitement of police and fire calls. a1rcraf1.
weather stations. CBers. plus AM and FM. Squelch con-
trol eliminates noise between messages. All-band hne·
tuning for easy station selection. AC battery operation.
12·7M
Save 36% now. and save someone 9900 you care about a lot of time and trou·
ble this winter! Priority switch lets a-.
them go directly to Emergency Chan· • -v·
nel 9 when calling for directions or 139.95
help in any emergency. 21-1534
Reg.
18.95
At $4 ott. it's lime to 1495 save! Features 24-
hour alarm and
snooze control. 63-122
Low-Noise Cassettes
ey Reil1111c Save 25%
60-Mln. .. 140 Reg.
26-Range Multimeter
By Mlcront1 • Save
20% ..--...1 :Sis 3995
Reads AC and DC
volts. current and
resistance. Hurry
for $10 savings!
22·209 Banery e•••a
\'ti; n .. t•!.'\ 90-:". ~:. • · · • ~ 1 2.59 Enjoy 33% savings now
B•Heriea extra and give compact. por·
Stock up now! Ideal for voice or rape table entertainment for
One-Piece Electronic
Mini Phone ---
ET-100 by Radio Shack
Save20°/o
Reg. 49.95 39aa
W.tJ.Y Rent? ~
Own Your Own Phone!
~
I ,,
The smallest phOne we've ever ottered!
. "One-button" Auto-redial of"last number
entered. Universal Dial System.
43·214, white 43-215, brown music recording. No limit! 44-6021803 not 1ne~ years to come! 14..ao3 .... _ ....................... .
Hand-Held Mini Computer
Games Now R~uced 25%
extra
Reg.
39.95 Each
Exctttna action for one or two ptayersl
Football game plays four complete quar·
tef9. Bueball game lets you surprise oPPOfl8"IS with different pitches.
M1..atlr
By Science Fair·
. .. . .
.... • ........ ,. ,... ..... ,.., 0... ,,. .. ......................................... .. .... ••1••11 .. c ................. .,,,,,, flW'=s .. ,., ,Aav ......... an.. C.... ...... P.O . ._ •• C-. llet11. CA __ ._....,. __ < .............. .
._. ,.._, ti• 11'• or wn.r. 110C •• ..... UV ,..... .. ,.._. . ...,. .... ~ -
.... C-' .. ., ... "~ 1'Mtcolwcw-r•da6· .. He.fl fr 1 &J't:' ......... , ...... ..
DBAaaUDSU:-.tlim ... a•..._,_.
...... """' ... tflll lJ.8. c-........ enrdl ... ,....,.....,.,......,.,.. •• 011_..,_.
a&a .... tlat111Me ... ..,c • ., .......... . ........... ,, ......... .., ........ .....
A ... ,...IUt ... , 0 Y .. r Yitai Pa,.re
..... M*; .. .., ............ •Uillt ..,. ,.. un • • .... _. lacU....,... ... ..-.w1
c•DdlalJW...._.
hMI h• ~ Adlea ,_ bd1' adw1 Matarlty
CAIM), a •-rer el ................ JJN1n•1 ... • ........ ...... ., .... -'-le• Ameelau.
el ...... Pw11•1, U.. .... 1111 Cl 11111 el ZI
pa1n. 8p9ce la'""-:-~• Nftnl 111ela le· l•r•a.._ u ldrUl date, , ud S.CaU. ol
reff ... ; au.....,. ; '"' ... ud S.Clal SecutaJ ....._ • .._; •eee.I, --.I da&a; cl'Mlt cam, c...,..e aceeuu; Im ~ ,._., _..
a.era, c.,&ada; baald~I .......... , detal11; ··r::::-·.......,; ............... ; .....
na _. "9eta.-,..... ll ..-... ee .. "'* .... ,_. ,.._..,. by ftllllll • ,..,. family tree.
fte ....... ~ ,ndleal ....... ta:&el,
aantww-.nu, wOla ... ..aata. Te ...... a cepy ef uy..,. Vital Papen
1A1Mllk," __. a clteck or .._., erder for $3.15
&e : Alll Letbeek, P.O. B•• ltZH·Sl•. A,
........... D.C. zem. E.....,en ... eqaaba-
U.. CM ...... m.w,le ~ a& ••uti&Y dis· couu .
.Ml•n•• ••• .. .,.r E••I'
DEAR PAT: I've been usin& e11 shampoo
because I like it. conditioning effect. I'd Ute to
know just bow much en ta in e11 abamJ>C?O. la
there a set amount or ia It up to the manufacturer!
S.J., Lapna Beach
WIMa ............. a .............. ...
Dnll M·h'•nU. ~,__ .. Ille ..... ~·•u"•._ ............................... .. ..a1 If tl9ere .............. ., ........... fw ••di ..... ., ............ c ...... r ...... , ..
............. laltelbJ.-lallta1e..Uu •
......... .... ... ~ -.. , •• Ftrs ..... ~If ... a. .............. z ,., ........ ,,..... .................................... ceee . ..._n .. llla....-e .... ._. ........ ,...._.
............... ft,"llMelaalrll .......... .
, .
DEAR PAT: Would you p&eue atve me some in·
for .. _•tion about Ulverfilb? II ~re aD)'WDC that can 1ile med aucceulully to eradicate ~ pests
tro._ a home? What do they lift OD? It ..... that
I ftad them iD cloMt bl boxes witll boob and
papen, and crawllne oa't.be ceWno. .
B.R , Huntiqton Beach
A YS la lelldbtt ........ ..._ .. ,_ IN• lite
Cooperative Exteu._ Ulll 8. Bart.er Bl•d., .u.w. tZMI). Tltled "Sllftl'ftalt ud Ftreltnu:
Bew .. Ceatb"el Tiie•," &Ida lealW (No. Zllll) Mse.._ ..._ lMeeta' laalllSa _. wMn lMJ are
,...._ Tiie fem tJpel of H9lnt a._ are esplable4.
· A• ,_ lane .eked, sUftffWa Un ud de•elep ·a.~ .._P placee. Tiiey an,._. la ...-euee,
e--. ud pl19cee wllere boeb, e..._1 er etller prote.. atarcla, or sa11r feodl are anllable.
Ae.....a ..... ,., bait ,.ek.U. lllka tel·~ .....
er ltork add pewder are lite •ala alberfl* cea-tnl materials. 09ee , .. 1et dd of &laeee lueda,
,.. CM pftYetlt rea.festa&lla bJ ae,iq bue-
•eMa, .._.,. ,..., ud baam..a eleu ud dl'J. Plq or .,.UJ Wea or 1pecea .,.... pipes
aad repair leaks or drl,. la p1 .. w.1. Cleo Old
elMeta periMkall.J ... 1et rN el .W ma1u11Ma, ~ ,.pen ......... Oecu ... aDJ,-.e._...,._.
l8 a .... cue. Keep 1-. la putrles er kJteMu
la coldta.en wKla uPt Uda.
t\esa \7erde
\Jine and ~q,uor
SAN MARTIN WINE SALE!
SAN MARTIN
1978 FUME' BLANC
Silver. Medal Orange County Fair
Reg. ss.oo*3. !9
\
" SAN MARTIN ~
1978 PINOT CHARDONNAY
Bronze Medal L.A. County F8ir
Reg. se.oo '4. 99
SAN MARTIN
1978 SOFT CHENIN BLANC
Low al'cohof. luedoul. white wtne
Reg. 1&.0013.99
AH 7150ML-
The _.,.., ..... 9t a.n Martin II GenMn-bOm Ed
Friedrich who brOught the toft. low atc:ohol
......... -.. IO Clliitom'9.'You'H kNe ltl .,
... ,.. • i.Ntv °"'*' "°'9 and lcM to .... fine wlnee • ...,_._. ..._ INY're Pttoed • H .00 and
under. WI blllewe that fJne CllllflDrnla wtnee ..
.,.....,.. .. ,..,,,..,.. prtcee and "* you don,
,_,. to .,. welltfty or a wtne MGC> to ._ IM!"·
CDmeontnandM11'1tllkWlf'9f .
NEWI 41 IMPORTED BEERSI .WHOM·
~THMIOR-· ~
OROVILLE (AP) -Butt.e eo..mt1 vat.rt )ave
rejected ooe meuure to preterVe fann land .
Tbe meuure, defeated 3-2, wu aimed at pre-
veatiu leapfrot development, but ~g wd
It would aquekh srowtb .
T1le-OlllJOHllb raised more than tlJ0,000,
mutb from dnelopen, builden and re,.t ..teee ...
tereltl outside tbe c:ouaty, while the propoeml•
1enerated only $12,500.
....
'· ,.
4 i
1 I
•• t
The Sony Betamax SL-5400
records up to 3 days in advance. So
you can go away for a weekend
fishing trip and be sure you'll catch
your favorite televisioa enteltairunent.
The Be~ SL-5400 also gives
you all.these exciting features (who
coold wish for more?): '
•Sony BetaScan: search in fast,
forward or reverse, at an average
10 times normal speed, while
maintaining a picture on your TV
• 5-hour recording capacity on a
single Betarnax L-830 videocassette
• 20 consecutive hours record/
playback with optional AG-300
BetaStack Changer
• 3X Fast Play for quick review
• Freeze-Frame, to stop the action
instantly
• BetaScan Remote ControJ.
Commander. to activate BetaScan
and Pa~/Freeze-Frame ~
•Double O§pJ.ay Clock shows
CUJient time and the day and
tirfle you've pre-programmed
• 14-pushbutton Express Tuning
•Beta-I playback
•Audio Dubbing, to let you record
commentary. music or sound to
previously recorded videotapes
Always Bring Your Membership Card
It hen You Shop At Fedco.
..
,,_
You may never have another
chance like this one to enjoy all these
Sony Betarnax features and Sox:iy
quality at a price like this. In fact, at
this price there's no longer any
excuse for not owning your Betamax 1
today Come in and pick one up, and
,get ready to go away m~xt weekend!1
SONY ~:
:rHEONE -
ANDONY
·&TOAi! HDUAll . .
Lt\ C91NEQA. IAll9 ~ AHD MM DIEGO 810MS
MembershiP. Department Stores ' .
•SDCO LA C• ... GA/3535 S . La Cief'l988 Btvd., Los An8eles 90019
nDOO Mii ••••11101570 S . Mt. Vernon Av• .• Sen Bemat'Gino 92410
•9800Ull ... M /54tf' & Euclid, Sen Oteso 82105
PSW elfi'llTM/11525 South Str .. t . Cerritos 90701
PWO W1'A WA/3030 Harbof Blv~ .. Cost• Mesa 92929
. Pl8ioO fAIAMllA/3111 E. COlor8dO Blvd .. Pa•adena ~1107
,_WUlllUYl/14820 R•Y"*' Street. Ven Nuys SU«JS
., .......... , .....
CERAIT09. COSTA mSA. MIAom,A AND YAH MUYa 8TOM8
\.-·-t2:tO ........ t:OO,... .
SATURDAYS . SUNDAYS
All ... tO:Ol a.-. ••• ,.,... Al --,. ....... to 1:00 , ....
. . All F1•co .stores ire ftOW '''"
llVll dlYI I Wit~ I'
unlll Chrl1,m11 .
1
et Care Course
o Begin at GWC
RelbtraUon ror a bioJoey coune dealinJ with
cal'.'fl is beina conducted at Golden West Colleae untinaton Beach.
Tbe nine-week course belins Monday. lnatruc·
Candace Donnelly has deaiped the course for
~· pet 1tore per;nn-1 and veterinary Uala·
Tbe coune will focus on varioull domeltlcat.d
alt lncludln& honea, birdl, raeeoom, !>oa
tricton1 rabbits and fttb. Nutritional needs,
lt8 aDd pet ctiMlllea wUl tiii ~. -' R~ will continue tbroulh the ftnt
k ~the clua in the admlaaloas omee. ~
I
CABTERPURl, Ind1a
(AP) -A tracUtiaul In·,
dlan celebratloa with
1weets cll1tribute4 to
you.as and old WU CUl·
celed bere wben All·
India Radio ·~ Preaideat Carter's de·
feat in bis bid for N ·
eleeUan.
EARN INTER~
ON ALL
YOUR MONEYI-...;
SCUDIED t
"We wded all Di&bt
tor the news aDd our
.... Yillqe Pl'Qed to
God llr. Carter ...... be selected," aaldKarlail
Sblp, a couneilmaa et
~hamlet that raamed
ltaelf Carterpuri, which
meaaa Carter Place,
wbea Pnsldent anc1 Kn.
Carter visited here Jan.
S, 1"8: "Now everybody
laaad." ·
1 -' ..
ESPANOLA, 1N .M .
(AP) -A scl•Dtlfic
study ol tbe a...,.tldty
of the Shroud of; Turin
should be complete
within three rnondla, ac·
cording to Ra)tmond
RoteN, a apoktamJln
tor the reeearche-,. • "Ma. CARTER was
The shroud, ~tich is here just for one hour
purported to tie the but we have been think·
burial cloth of\Jeaua In& of him Jlke a
Cbrl1t, bean dae like· member ol the family,"
ne11 ol a bearded man Sln&tf 1aicl, •bowina re· wl'" 1hts 't' •w· .,.•·nu..~. _ ........ f the Bible says were suf· ell'• album ot photos of
fered by Jeaua. the Carten and letters
I > 1 I
: . ·~1 ,
Trio Settle Suits
Preliminary reports and p-eetinc cards frolD
by some ol the 18 sclen· the White House and the
Usta lnvolvcid in the American Emb ... y in
study cut doubt on the New Delhi, 20 miles
authenticity of th e away.
1 shroud. Dr. Walter Tbe ..,.....s and dis· , ,t:au-f-jn!~. est ~l the rate of 5Y.% per Qe ready on January 2! Open your ac·
• McCone, a Chicaao appolatment were 1to i; .-d"'d d ·1 b 1 • · • I h k d NEW YORK (AP> -'lbree former employeea microecopiat , aafd the reflection asaid'l' lYllf~' 0 un c on your aa Y a· count now -your 1mba c ec or er
LM Dutch Airlines have accepted lifetime cloth probably dates President-elect Rea&.-;" ts" . ·~~~~ 1 ~nning .. Janl\ary 2. 1981. No. \fill be complimentary and your money
t passes for themselves and their wives in ' rrom about 1400. 'f • •{ino~vaguely .. Je .. j '\,....me"th'y ~a~ If~ balance is $750 ~ill earn at 5~% -our replar Pass-
ol a sett.lemfl!ll of their ace dlac~mination • ; "'·• onethpe fllpi •c'o~, ' orl'mp r e;1'.,ominal fe~ or $3 per month ~k rate -until your c hecking service
• t!Je9state Division.al Human Riabta ad· Reappomte~~ .~. :.-".:-· · , tf.y~a'8nce isfower·NOMINIMUM hegin~onJanuary2 1981. ced. u · ·-1f wa a almp*e ihaU.~ 'f ~"':..a,.,,· ' ·
Robert Kunze, 50, of Massapequa, Charles 1 SACRAMENTO <AP> of tbe Carter ~ _ ..,. &.,._. .. ~z and over .
hersky, 56, of Brooklyn, and Vytaulcaa ' -Gov. Edmund Brown baying bestowed ~ ~.. ~~c,. • , 1
lliauakaa, 59, or North Babylon, will alto re· , Jr. has reappointed Carterpud a slipt edllif\· ..... : .~.r •" t;' ~-• _ .:. 76~~ •
erly commissary employees for the airline. ' Tahoe City and Walnut villages in the frantic ~~ e $17,SOO each rrom the airline. All three were Dwight C. Steele of over 575,000otber Ind1an ~'II~~ ~
The airline, in agreeiq to the settlement, 1 Creek to the bi-state scramble for official
e no admission of violatinl the state's Human • Tahoe Regional Plan· favors in tbia poor COUD· ~ AND LOAN ASSOCIATION · I -~ I
hts Law. ning Agency. try. " 1!!J BALBOA BR~CH FSJX
Create four OWi) . .
HOLIDAY WREATHS
With thH• 1peclal Nvlngs and -rith th• help of our trained d::rt.n-
.,$,you too c:.n crHt• tho.• beautiful wreath1. Ol1cov ... how easy,
fun end rewarcang It la to "~IT-!OURSELF."
UNOECORA T!IO •
STRAW .
WREATHS
12"&14"" 99•
1 e·· & 22" 1..44
IT'S EASY .,. COVER A WREATH
WITH AlllON. INSERT HOLLY
AND PIH~ P,ICKS, ADD A IOW.
OR A HOVEUTY OR TWO. STRAW
IAOOMS ~LSO AVAILAILE
FOR DECOA~TINO.
ALL ARTIFICIAL
HOLLY & PINE
PICKS & SPRA VS · 20% STYRO WREATHS
20% OFF OFF Cover w1lh picks. garland
or r1bb0n and add a bow
100% PURE
POL YES'tEA FIBEAFfll
11bbeg 188 reg 2 59 •
CHRISTMAS elf'\.~ 2,l~~RAP 1.19
'8ESUR£TO
SEEOUA
MANAGERS
SPECIAL
ASSORTED COLORS
_"_sp_R-IN-K-LE---... SA TIN
o-lf!~~~~~:. ". 2~1~Bg~F
jUSI about anything
MTJIUCTIOM FREE A~I
MOD PODGE
•·oz Matte or g.lou
reg
t 59 gg.
CRYSTAL
GLIT1EA
4-oz 1 •s reg 2 29 .01
8·oz 2 44 reg 2 99 •
Falt and Chrlatmas
Pwty Goods Now in Stock
#3, 5. 9 (100 ydl I
#40(50ydS I ....
,,
ALL
MACAAME
CORDS ..
OUR
HUNTINGTON
. BEACH
STORE ta
OPEN NOW
(Ofefld~
NOV.22
1--IOO EHt Balboa Boulevard, Balbo., CA 92681(714)673-3701 l--·--1 Ll!ND•" , ,_....__ .. , •• Additional offices in · ·
VALLEY
Lagur\a Beacn 4~·7541 • Laguna Hills 586-5100 • Glen Avon · 681-0111
San Clemente 492·1195 • Lake Elsmore 674·2191 • Belmont Shore (213) 438-9421
Laguna Niguel 496·1201 • Olive/Orange 998-8400 • Murrieta (opening 1980) 677·5632
' PUBLIC MEETING
Td
DETERMINE YOUR OPINION
OF
PROPOSED ALTERNATIVE PLANS
FOR
NEWPORT BOULEY ARD (ROUTE 55)
Fr .. woya{-•••• IRVINE
,
COME TO l;HE WORKSHOP ANO TELL US YOUR IDEAS
••
LEGEND
C°"'pleted
Adopted
Callfornlo Department of Transportation (Coltrona) ond City of Coato Meao are co·aponaorlng a
public workshop. The purpoN of thla worilahop la to dlaploy olternotlve tronaportotlon ldeoa to 1ol._
problem• Identified during earlier worilahop1. It provide. you the opportunity to dlKUH ~ own
views regarding tronapartotlon olternotlv•• olong Newport Boulevard (Route 55). . . . ,
Thia workshop 11 being conducted 01 port of a study on pre~nt ond future tronaportdtlon problem•:
along Newport Boulevard. (Route S5). The aegment of th!• route belpg atvdled e.-ndt from flaclfk
Coaat Highway (Rout• 1) ln~wport leoCh to the end of the Newport Freeway near lrlstOf Street In
CostoMelO. 1
The workahop la scheduled ot the followlng locotlon;
,a Weclnesday~ Now .... lter 12, 1•
South Cotld Coll-
; Room 111 ~ Ad111l•ldrt1tlon llull4111-.
SSP•lrDrlwe • ..,_ _Jw ___ Ccllt ___
FOR YOUR
OFFICE AT ROME
• Desks of Every Description
• Wall Systems
• Book Cases,, , " , • Desk Accessories :.tJ~"<· · »:
Solid .Oak
ANTIQUES
All the items in our
store are handmade
by true craftsmen of
the past --and have
traveled over 7,000
miles from England
and Scotland to be
here with you.
Meme>rY ··
Tickler
SOLID BRASS BEDS
NAME BRAND
TRADITIONAL, com~"
COUNTRY DINING &
BEDROOM FURNITURE MATfRESSES
AND BOX SPRl~~S
Brass Plated Headboards
King-, Queen,. Full or Twin
$29.95
6 Furnltare Stores
In One Location
·'Furniture You Can 'Be
Proud of At Prices
You Can Afford"
Custom Draperies
•Mini-Blinds• Woven Woods
Armstrong Floor
Fashion Center
• Vinyl • Hardwood Flooring
• Carpeting • Ceramic Tile
Wallpaper
with companion fabrics
Custom Mirrors
~~~Discover the luxury ol l'ae
6 ~ •
tl'jdltional and contempor~ry ' .. ' . ' .. . . ... . " -'
12 SPECIALTY FURNITURE CENTERS
. .
•TRADITIONAL GALLERY
• DINING & GAME SETS
·.MIRROR GALLERY
• SECTIONAL CENTER
•CONTEMPORARYCENTER
•FAMILY ROOM CEN.TER
• LEATHER GALLERY
• SLEEPER CENTER
• BEDROOM GALLERY
•.DINING-CENTER
!Free Delivery -Good Service & Low Prices
-
I
I
1
Menate Po-wer
l
I Shifts tO GOP
WASJUNGTON (AP) -The power shift in the
United States Sen'ate will be far more sweeping
Utan the numben that show the Republicans tak-
lna control for the first time since 1954.
The Republicans' capture or the majority in
the Senate gives them the chairmanships or Senate
eo~mittees and other leadenhip positions.
That abilt may be most graphically illustrated
by the ucenaion or Sen. Strom :rburmond or South
Carolina to chairman or the Senate Judiciary Com-
mittee, replacing Sen. Edward. AJ. Kennedy or
Musacbusetts.
THE FORMER DIXIECRAT WILL move into
one of the Senate's most powerful posts, while the
liberal Democrat Kennedy will slip into the role or
rllllkina minority member or the committee.
, For Kennedy it will be yet another blow in a
difficult 12 months.
. Committee chairmen are the barons of the
Seaate, a body that lovin&ly observes all the per-
quisites of power. And in one sweeping Republican
landslide, all the Democratic barons suddenly
fCMPMI themselves out in the cokl, their power soon
to be turned over to Republicans.
No longer will Sen. Russell ,Long of Louisiana
be the imquestioned ruler ol the Senate Finance
Committee. The new chairman of the committee
will be Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., who was elected to.
the Senate in lM&, two yean after Long gained the
chairmambip of the Finance panel.
roa·TBE MOST PAaT THE party shift will
mean a mucb more conservative group or commit-
tee-cbairmen in the Senate.
One exception will be the Appropriations "Com·
mittee, formerly headed by Sen. Warren
Mapuson of Washington, one of the Democratic
victims on Tuesday.
Had the Democrats retained control, Sen. John
C. Stennis of Mississippi, a conservative, was in line
to bead the powerful committee. But witb
Republicans in control that chairmanship passes
to moderate Sen. Mark Hatfield of Oregon.
Along With chairmanships, the leadership of
the Senate also will shift with Sen. Howard H.
Baker Jr. or Tennessee becoming majority leader
and Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia, finding
bimselfleaderof a minority.
THAT MEANS BAIER HAS the say in decid--
ing who will be the Senate Sergeant-at·Arn;is, the
Secretary of the Senate and who will get scores or
other patronage jobs.
Here are the other likely changes in chairmen
in the party changeover:
Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina replacing
Sen. Herman Talmadge as chairman of the
Agriculture Committee; Sen. John G. Tower of
Texas replacing Stennis as head of the Armed
·Services Committee; Sen. Jake Garn of Utah tak-
in& over the Banking Committee from Sen.
William Proxmire of Wisconsin; Sen. Bob
Packwood of Oregon taking over the Commerce
Committee from Sen. Howard Cannon of Nevada;
Sen. James McClure or Idaho becoming chairman
of the Energy Committee, replacing Sen. Henry
M. Jackson of Washington; Sen. Charles Percy of
Illinois to bead Foreign Relations, replacing Sen.
Frank Church of Idaho, who was defeated, and
Sen. Alan K . Simpson replacing Sen. Alan
Cranston as chairman of the Veterans Affairs Com·
mittee.
SOME CHAIRMANSmPS ARE UNCERTAIN
because they will depend on the choices senators
make when they have more than one option.
Sen. Robert T. Stafford of Vermont would be
in line for chairmanship of the Labor and Human
Resources Committee or the Environment and
Public Works Committee. Sen. Pete V. Domenici
of New Mexico is in line to bead the Budget Com-
mittee, but if Stafford decides to take Labor and
Hpman Raources, Domenici could take over the
E'1vironment and Public Works panel. In that
case, Sen. William Armstrong probably would
take over the Budget Committee.
c::> lr. -
Britain HolJ!)n
P.reiiiier Author
LONOON (AP) -One of Britain's pnmier nov-
ellata, Mar1aret Drabble, bu been dubbed a
D•me Commander of the Order ol tbe Brltiab Em-
pire by Bucktqham Palace, and "commander"
~ ber three children.
Tbe author of "The Garrick Year," "A Summer
BlrdeA19" and the current ''The Ice Ate" re-
Ctfyed her award from the Queen Mother at a
Nlaee ceremony. -Tbe nonnally serene Ma. Drabble, 41, mother of
Ulne cbildren, author of nine novela and editor of
tllia Odord Companion to Ent)iab Uterature, con-feMed lhe wu "very, very thrllled and a bit
•liaky" after the ceremony.
.,. ......
~• .. AT1"0 . ._._ ... ....,.
f 91 Lo< ft 7957
: s.r1ttcit Ttmt S"ttt ••Yow' Doot ~ tc ... S-'--"4 y-ArHI
: CMTA_,"'41·1211 . , ......... .....
4
..... tcLC .. 0401
-~~ .............. ...., ........ ,
for your
tire ...
7-plece antique braH Ht with
hooded pukt\aln ec:reen. 2 andlrona
& 4-pc. tool Mt. 11200. Reg. &US
5911
............... ab.....,...
Gae log look• llke 1 giant piece ot
drlf1wood from the Pacltlcl 24" on
cuetom aand-burner. #RCD-24. Reg.
54.95
4181
Arvin economy el.ctrlc heater with
auto-thermo1t1t. 18'14'x12'h"x8".
#30H23. Reg. 24.99
1911
. .....,
In .. ....
·a.r a.by' alnk Mt with cnrom•
plated faucet .... mbly and PVC
plutle In Are Engine Red or Butter-
cup YellOW. Reg. 39.95
21''·'
............. d
of ........
MD extruded alumlnum door
ttl'99hold with repleoeabte vtnyt ln-
Mft. In A*:tOIM onty. 31" long. IX.
Reg. I.•
3''----
SANTA ANA
$on OMgo-lrwy.
..
D
D
n1111111
thelCl'llll lelt
,.
IACllAllDTO <AP> -Tiie ...... Ylllllllful Oftell .. -....... ...
............. c......._c:A
141-7271 w Ma.Jiii lf-···=•O...,
bu t11111MW memben,
a crllllAaaJ Juatlce lee· ·
lurer ..... a former pro-
baUoe oftlcer. Tbe an-
nouneement by Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr. aald
they are Wlllie IWllon,
50, of Saeramento, a lee·
lurer lD tbe Criminal
Ju1tice Department at ~==========~~L--,,.., _____ _J
Sacrammto State, and ... -------
Moniea Herrera Smltb, L M. BOYD
42, of Placentia, a I••••••• former deputy probation
officer for Loe Ana•les
County.
JACK ANDERSON .
...... ..............
4-pc. blectc & br ... ftr9Mt
with poker. bru9h. ehOvel
and metctllng ltand. 118. A:ea· 11.98
Elegant 5-pi.c. ttreeet ln-
cludH ahovel, tong1,
poker, brush, and
matching black stand. 1354. Reg. 24.95
....... .. ........
DAILY PILOT
/
I
Gidden Spred HouM P.,nt ooea on
eully, drtee qulcldy. Durabte flat
, ftnllh, r ... tta blleten and peeling.
Euy Wlltef clMn-up. Reg. 15.49
10•• ....
EJegant flr..:reen wtth 4 folding panete. ~ 13" wide. Pollhed
brus arch top, 32" OWl"8I '*9ht. 2 hendtee for .-y ltfttng •
.. 73. Reg. 34.95
88·
........ ,... .......
OAP'1 top qu.My Fumlt&n Cere Kit
contelne • ....mMll ...,. for fut-nttwe reftntlhlng 81'14 ewe. Reg. 11.N
. .... ,... .......
ru1•la11J ~-!!!!!!!!!-111r11d1N 1
EJCtertor ..,,... ..... gklee HouM &
Trtm '*"' from GMdclen. Goee on wtth ..... Ch.,ll-f'Mt8ttlnt ftnlatl,
quldl-drytng. Reg. 14.51
11•• .... . ...,
111 lill WlllJ
!MrgJ-eavtng gaa water
heater with high-
...,,.,...,,. etlut-off, .....
llned tanll, and 30-oal. ~.Aeg.119.N
10911
'·
..
J \
8rPAftlCKUNNllDY ....... ,... ....
Sl1••l La•dmarl& lac. la
If" 111 ..... ta.. &Mt ol a MrtM ol dlaeu1loa worhbop1 on Ill tine cmtroYenlaJ development propoeall fw UM .._ CMc:a
...,...~.
aepr•entatl.e• of 8l1nal,
wlalell owm U. 1,-.aere manh,
wW lllOld tM pultMc .... 1oa at
HuaUn1ton Seacllff Country
Club, 3000 Palm Ave., Hunttncton
Beach, between'I andtp.m .
Tile ptc>pCMlala -an 1,800-slip
boat marina, a bi1b-deoalty bous·
lnl development, or a lar1e scale
manb restoration project-were
Has Angie
Avocado
Allure?
The Newport Beach-
based California Avocado
Commission members
think that Angie Dickinson
will be able to stimulate
sales or the thick-skinned
tropical fruit.
That's why they hired
her lo pose alluringly in
avocado advertisements
that ask, "Would This
Body Ue to You?"
THE COMMISSION is
trying to get across the
message that avocados
aren't high in calories and
cholesterol, said com-
mission spokesman Alan
Myers.
"These are widely tield
miscoo~ons," he said.
"We've just 6een able to
get the American Heart
Association to change ita
recommendation against
the avocado."
He said the commission
hired Mias Dickinson
because she bas the
charm· and ability to
change a lot of people's
minds.
PEOPLE SHOULD
know, Myers sald, that tbe
avocado la hilb i&·
.ttamiM and minerals.
It is al8o known for be-
ing high in price.
Last year, the pear-
shaped fruit with the large
seed was sellinac for as
aubdt&ed u • 1neral plu
...... t la July to tM OrlDle
Couat1 Plannlq Departmmt, ae· ~ .. to Wayae Clark. Sitnal .......
TB. 80L8A Chica, located
... t OI Waner Avenue a.lonl
tM ~aldeol PaeilleCout
Hl1bway, currenUy bu more
lban JOO operatiJlC oil welll • lt.
ll la in county territory
bordered on three sides by H..mt· ·
inllon Beach. Clark said a marina has the best
chance of getting Orange County
approv•l because It ls
economically sound and fulfills a
bigb as $1.59 The price
was caused by a bad
harvest, Myers said.
He claimed that this
year's harvest will be tbe
86 Million Asked
1173 land 1wap a1reemenl
between 9'pal and the state.
This concept, Clark said, would
include bulldin& 8,000 nearby
homes and vartoas commercial
cenlen, reroutin1 Paclfic Coast
H11bway 1nland around the de·
velopment and Pouibly c&.attlq a
channel from Hunt1n1toa
Harbourtothenewoceanoutlet.
•AmNA PEES and auociat·
ed commercial business would
generate revenue to pay off
bonds floated for 'construction
costa, estimated at about $12t
million, he said.
The 1973 agreement, Clark
bi1geat in history.
A voe ados are selling for
about 39 cerits each; and
might remain there
several months.
Coast 'Highway Funds Sought
Newport Beach city officials
have applied for $6 million in
state funding to widen a portion
of Coast Highway between
Bayside Drive and MacArthur
Boulevard.
The first in a series or public
bearings on the proposed road
widening iject is to be held at
J ]
, J 1
l
f)
7 :30 p.m. on Nov. 1~ at the
Oasis senior citizen ~enter in
Corona del Mar.
Public works officials caution
that an environmental document
still must be prepared and that
other alternatives ror easing the
traffic cnmcb on Coast Highway
will be considered.
Coast Highway between
Bayside and MacArthur is four
lanes wide and the scene or daily
traffic snarls Caltrans will
have the linal say on the project.
City officials said the proposed
road widening would not alter
the width or Coast Highway east
or MacArthur, through Corona
del Mar.
• l • , '
4 •
Old fashioned, romar1tic dinner-dancing is back in style.
... and tht' <!rand Port~e now oft't:r.. you
2n n'Cfllntt to c:ompete with your famrite memory.
Soft tlnkllntt dinner 'music.
C'l~t candlc:Uc tahk sculfl(ts. 1hc wan<Jeur of flamlntt ahlt.'Sldc: cookery.
The ulclmactr danccahlc Ok'k P\nt•<'ll Trio Is katu1td
·. • :nunday throuch Saturday 1 lo u . and soft piano ocher C\~.
\
aaya, calls for the state to build a
marina wtUwl n•vlsable channel to the aea by 1987. In retum,
Sipal would grant the state UUe
to 100 acres of marsh. Thal would
put the total acre11e of atat.e·
owned marsh ln the Bolaa aitca
aUOO acres, be said.
Clark said the Oran1e County
Board ol Supervt.ora could Put
one of the proposals in ita state-
mandated Local Coastal Plan
(LCP> which seta development
guidelines for the coastal zone.
HOWEVER, EVEN if one of
Signal,'s proposals is incorporat·
ed into the county's coastal plan,
the LCP must ultimately be ap-
Cop~er
Crash
!~~~.wM ID
spection of the crumpled
wreckage of a Newport Beach
police helicopter to determine
why it plummeted into the surf-
line near a group or swimmers
Sunday afternoon.
The two officers aboard the
city's patrol helicopter escaped
injury when the aircraft sudden-
ly started to vibrate and then
dropped, splashing into the
water off West Newport.
POLICE, WHO'VE asked that
Federal Aviation Administration
inspectors look over the bangea-
up helicoptel', believe it was the
craft's stabilizing tail rotor that
caused the crash.
Authorities also are trying to
locate witnesses to the mishap to
get their version of the incident.
Several reports emerged aft.er
the accident from witnesses who
said it appeared thene1icopter
was being flown in a reckless
manner.
Police said nobody bas con-
tacted them making such allega-
tions. They s uggest observers
who felt the helicopter pilot was
"clowning around" may have
misunderstood what they saw.
TllEY SAID AFTEa the
copter began vibrating, it al.so
started spinning in a clockwise
direction, losing altitude at the
same time. ..
Reporta that the passenger in
the patrol helicopter was ob-
served waving to the crowds oo
the beach also were-dismissed
by police.
Police said it's standard policy
for the observer in a police
helicopter to wave while patroll-
ing the strand. They said it is
considered good public rela-
tions.
Sgt. Rick Miller, who was
piloting the city's new $90,000
Hughes helicopter, was credited
with nursing the spinning copter
away from swimmers and sur-
fers in the area.
MILLEll llEPOllTED that he
and partner officer Todd Seiders
were on routine patrol and were
in the process or turning the
craft around when a "massive
vibration" started.
He reported that the
helicopter began losing altitude
rapidly and, finally. splashed in-
to the ocean. Police believe the
water acted like a cusb.ion and
saved the officers from serious
injury.
proved by the State Coutal
Com million.
And lut March. UM CoNtal
Commiuloa declared Bolaa
Cblca a natural wetlancla, pn>-
t.ected from moat development,
includlnc a marioa ..Dd bomia1 project.
Clark 1aid Slpal curreatly ii
challenitng the commission's rul-
ing in court.
Clark said a high-density bous·
Ing plan -calling for more than
10,000 homes -Is "politically in·
feasible" because or environmen·
tal concerns by local activista, the
Coastal Commission and As·
sem blyman Dennis M an1ers.
Tia• •••lro••••tal •• · Amllol de 8olaa Qalca la
poeeil to.., ..............
manb. Orciup IPOUlm• llaa 1troa1l1 erltlclaed eaell
Slpal'1 clnelopment ldeu.
But Clark aald tbe W
alternatlYe poled by Si ....
callln& for tbe It.ate purcb ..
restoration of 840 acres of mania
-would be too ce1etly to tu•
payers. .
,Clark sa1d the project ..uJd
coat about $lU million and ~
be totally abouldered by tu•. -said the Bolsa Chica land ~
valuedatabout$100,000anacre.
Target"ftndldate!J
Liberals Hit
By 'New Right~;
'" · .. r.
~··
. t!
•I
WASHINGTON <AP) -The "New Right" coalition or wealthy
conservatives and fundamentalist Christian political activiata suc-
~eeded in gaining the defeat or most or the half-dozen liberal~
senators it targeted for ouster on Election Day. ·
In an interview six weeks ago, preacher Jerry Falwell of c.
Lynchburg, Va. ticked off a hit list of Senate Democrats who had
run afoul or his evangelical political rorce, the Mora\,l Majority:'·
George McGovern of South Dakota, Frank Church or Idaho, John C~lver !'r Iowa, Birch Bayb·. of !ndiana, Gaylord Nelson of '
W1sconsm, Alan Cranston of Califomaa. '·
ON n.JESDA Y, ALL BUT CliNSTON were shot down alone
with sev~ral other liberal Senate Democrats in an Election Day '
barrage that irultalled conservative Republicans in their place.
Falwell's 16·month-old ftmdamental Christian movement can·
not claim sole credit for the Democratic massacre, but it can boast •
a major role. ·
A network or conservative groups, from''
wealthy businessmen to Falwell's followers,
worked in concert under the banner of the "New
Right."
It was done with early organization, plenty
of money, vigorous campaigns that kept the
targeted candidates on the defensive andt
perhaps, an ability to prophesy the nation 's
political mood better than the opposition.
~ ANOTHEll VICTIM OF THE New Rlgbt's
bit list was Democrat Warren Magnuson of
Washiqton. ·
Moral Majority also takes credit for helping defeat Alaalta;
Sea. Mike Gravel and Alabama Sen. Donald Stewart in their
Democratic primaries. Stewart bad a conservative record dUrin&
bU ooe term in the Senate, but Falwell's l~P opposed Stew~
for vCJtinc for a new Department ol Education. Both stat.ea were-
won by Republicans, including a Moral Majority-backed can-
didate, Jeremiah Denton in Alabama.
Moral Majority is not Invincible, though. In addition to
Cranston, Thomas Eagleton or Missouri survived the COD·
servatives' fire, and of eight House candidates supported by the re-
ligious group, only two were elected.
ANOTHER MAJOll FORCE that worked for the defeat of
Senate liberals was the National Conservative Political Action
Committee <NCPAC>. a well-financed group based in suburban
Arlington, Va., that organized five years ago to defeat McGovern,
Church, Bayh, Cu lver, -
Cranstoo and Eagleton. ( . . . . . J In addition , the \EJJ."i I\ U.l ."i/."i
Republican National Com---___ . .__ ___ _._
mitlee jumped in with its .
own Democratic b.it list that produced another cuuaJty, Sen. Jotpa
Durkin ol New Hampshire.
AU told, with help from the independent conservative forces,
the GOP knocked off nine of the 13 Democrats it targeted, fallinl .
to get Cranstoo, Eagleton, Sen. Gary Hart or Colorado and Sen.
Patrick Leahy of Vermont.
TERllY DOLAN, CRAJ•MAN OF NCPAC, estimated last
month that his group grossed between $3.S million and $4 million
this year alone. Between $2 million and $2.S million was to go as
direct contributions to Re'publican challengers and the rest was to
be spent on "negative" campaigning against the targets. Dolan
said. •·
Several New Right spokesmen bragged about the voting re-
sults 1n a Wednesday news conference. ~
"U I were a liberal politician running for re-election in 1982, I
would be quaking in my boots," Dolan said. ·.
GOURMET
MARKET
DELANEY BROS.
SEAFOOD
Fresh Red Salmon <whole or haU > •••. Z.98 lb.
((lown In fresh to Delaney's from the north>
Fresb Center Cut Salmon Steaka .... 3.41 lb .
Lg. Jumbo Green Shrimp .......... 5.18 lb.
Repeat of a Sellout!
MEAT DEPr.
For yo• beef lovers we'U a1ala lllne thoee detldom prtme
ribs, •led at leaat JI day1 ..
the peak ol perfecUoa ud prepared
for your easy tabletide carvla1.
Boneless Staffed Chicken Breaat .... 2.41 lb.
<Stuffed with Delaney's famous apple dressln1>
Oven-Ready Meatloaf .............. t.• lb.
I Pleaae or*r you ftaau1l•la& tney early.
Cooked ud 1t•ffed wltlll r••r tlllolte or
Dela11ey'1 ch"! rl .. t w J91t ....... ud reMly
for &Ille one. A1al• 111111 MIWay HH••· '-
DelHey'1 wtU feal•re frnll ........ lecal latky
Far•• hlrtley1, ......... ffka.. fl'ftll f...a IANll blaad enla11 a .. IMW.
Tirecl of tralftc J•tPaT Doll't for1et to c k wit• u alMMrt ...... r free llome ·delivery
service -oompletely ref rlgerated.
MOR~NG FRESH PRODUCE
Large Lecal Beefa&eak Tomaton .. 4k lb.
Fresh HawaUu ~ap~ ........ lk lb.
LIQUOR DEPARTMENT
Deluey'1 Private La .. I
CbWla•Vla a.e ('150mtl> .•.. 1 ••
Berlqer 1'lllee (750 m ) ,
CHlrla lllallc res. 6.95 .................... J.•
Scoresby Scotcb < '750 mil> 5.55 ...... liter l.U
~la•y's Oaampapae 11~ mJ11 •.•••••• l.ll·
(A.II ....... ~HI ...... llK .... laS)
Pia.., a lllllMay •ht~ pr~ a ,..t111 ... -e.11 ov CO"'Plete l.,.,IMt catertq ..nlGo,
1'11-uzt. ud ati for Tom Martla.
New8&oreeo.n•1,a111d8-llar
.. Ne ........... , Ne..,.n •8d
• 673 -5520
(
,..r
ula Hawkin!, new-
elected U .S .
nator from
rida, grins broad· alter she faced the
as election nieht.
he defeated
emocrat Bill
· ter.
Call 142-5171.
Put • few words
to work for ou.
Reagan's California
Support Widespr.ead
N&W YORK <AP> -Ronald ..... w. ...... , ........ ...
,... tG ... WMte llouH ... ... °" ........... •-..ort "' ...,., all 1fOUP16a11111 lilome atate, aeeordlq
to tb• AP·NBC News poll ol
CaUfomla vo&.n.
Tbe poll ol llDOC'e than 2,IOO vown'
Indicated Carter won majorltln
amona blaeu ud blapanlca, • ..u as Jewlab voten. But be lo1t
n.umel'OUI other poupe Uaat normally
cut a ~ ol tbelr "'-for the
Democratic caDdldate.
aEAGAN nN1811ED with the sup-
port of a m~ty of union members,
with a majority of blue collar
•orkera and with mar&tna amon1
every a1e IJ'C)Up. Students gave the former
California covernor a slicht ma·
Jority.
Reagan carried every income
classification except tboee who said
their family income was less than
$8,000 a year. And the GOP nominee
got a majority of every education
group except those who never en·
tered high school.
Tb• president clearly failed in
ll1I au.mpt to paint Reapn u a
mu wllo would 1et the United States
Into a war. Jmt 1T pereeat ol the
voten cited that fear u a reuon for.
tbelr wotea, compared to 44 percent
wbo aald a major reuon wu that
Carter bad done a bad Job.
CAllTE& E•E&GED u far leu
truatwortby than Reagan la tbe
mlnda of Callforniana. A total ol 5Z
pereeat uld tbey thoUgllt Rea1an
could be tnllted to ·c1o the rtcht thine
all or most of the time. Tb~ figure for
Carter wu 21 percent.
Rea1an voten evidenUy felt ' lot better about their votes than Carter's
supporters did. Ol Rea1an'1 voters,
57 percent said they stron1ly support·
ed him, 32 percent admitted to some
reservations and just 11 percent said
they voted for the leut objed.looable
candidate although none were very
good.
By contrast, 31 perce~t of Carter's
votea came from str0n1 supporters,
39 percent from those with reserva·
lions and 30 percent from voten ·who
said they disliked all the candidates.
-------a.n
I •t11GIEAT "· I I DINNER
(") o Good fOf """ p1eeet of 1u1cy. go1oen t>town Kentucky c Fried Chicken. plua s1no1e strv1no• of colt 11ew,
O~ maahtO potatoes 1no 011vy. 1n0 1 1011. Limit two ofltra
per coupon per cu11omer ~atom11 p1ya 111 11191tc1· z l>leHlet tea
I C1C Oller .. ptras November 30. 11180
I
•
.Amil z
Gooo for twtl119 pleeet of juicy. golden bfown Kentudly ·9
Fr1td Chicken. with 1111 rolla. plua y°"r chole. of tlthet a ~
111oe colt alaw Of 1 11roe maaheO pot1t0et. end a amell 0 e gravy. 1.omll two Oflera ptf C°"pon per CUllomtf.
C111tomer pay• all appllc11>11 aaln tax. _ CtC I
Oller eaplret l'I I November 30. 1980
I Prices may vary 11 per·
tlc1patino l~t1on1.
Good only 1n Southern
I Cahl0f11la where you
'" the Colont l't face window banner.
I
Nine reasons
~:your ne-w. phone directory 1nay be the
· tnost useful book in your hotne.
~
&:· . ~· 4 .TheCustomer
·s: Guide has convenient ~.... listings of local
~. emergency numbers. .,.
~ ~ ~ ~= • :· ··: ....
2. The Cuscomer Guide
showfyou rhe rimes
, (~!• phone rates are lowest-
\ so you can save money.
~ ' .
.. -. ~ -
5 • The Cusmmer Guide tells yo u
how to deal wich annoying,
harassing or obscene calls.
---c '
------
8. The Custo~r Guide has
a special Survival Guide with
instructions for handling ---many ftr'St aid situafions.
1. Your directory has a new Customer Guide
which tells you everything you need to know
about calling long distance {including
ToKYO rates to most anywhere).
J •The Customer Guide answer
all your questions abour
getting phone service
or new extensions.
'9•
7. The CuscomerGuide
shows you how ro read
your bill. , ~
I•
-
':'HONE ~WUT ~O~f
~ •
~
6 . The Customer Guide liscs
/. important numbers for the
' elderly -from Medicare
-information and Social
Security to senior
citizen progr~ms.
9 •The Customer G uide includes
important local community
service numbers -from dog
licenses to tax advice
W:~W..c~i:'l!~WllN'M~ to counseling centers.
"'---------~--~_:___---~--~ ..
Your new telephone directory has a lot more to offer than phone
numbers. It has a new, complete Customer Guide to help you use your phone
efficiently. And it's right in the front of your directory where you can get
to it quickly.
This year we've made The Survival Guide part of the Customer Guide.
It's loaded with critical information about assisting almost anyone requiring
fa.rst aid. There are even step-by-step safety procedures to help prepare
for and survive major eanhqualces. If you'd like an additional copy of the new
Survival Guide, just write to this address: Survival Guide, c/o Pacific
Telephone , P.O. Box 77910, San Francisco, .CA 94107. They come in
English, Spanish and C,h.inese, ·
So, when you get,.Ym.~r new telephone book, take a moment. Find
out all the reasons why your directory may be one of the best reference
books you have.
.. -
•
.
t
:1
I
COAST HWY.·
''Dohenv Pan Plom'' OPPOW Dot91Y PAU
DANA . .
POINT
v .. ._... w• ~expect to ... ~ • .. of ttn WM Ana cHlisTMAs ... wt... steca
... ••flhlad md 1tw ...._ ..._ pktred o•er. THIS IS MOT THI CASI!!! 0.. stores
w•, Good bmlll1~ I clcl•s ..._. .. ,,__. _. _..,. SZ,000,000 ,..._.
....... tory by at .... t .! ,,_ .................. d ,nc.. .. ••trf .,. ,_ .... . _..et ad wtlli lllAMO 9*W .. ISH CM>OOS ........... .._... Mw .,_. .. .
.__., ...... ._ ~ ~ S.... a. ...... H0w.¥er, we 9oofed! We ........ too
to ,,._..QUICK & POSITIYI DISPOSAL ••. of tllle ~ stodl!
MEN'S LEVIS oua 1tm11 HU•• sTOclC
Styles l11e... bells, .... fl_.1,
......... ...,.. c ...... ,. ** to flt. .. Sbes llto JI ...... .,,....lleW, ::r:. ....... ~12.88
Cor•~ 512.88 Mtnoos ...•..••.•
lAU ~ToalSI
SOCKS
~AMDIOYS' ... ..,... ......... , ...... a:..t ........ .
for*"s.c ..... mdsports,•
colon. .... SZ.00 to $3.25.
OUIBmUHUGI
STOCK IN ALL STOltlS
40°4 OFF
MEN'S BELTS
Delae ta• 1 • by "'Le¥h" a. .-, ..,....
113•F
lAU SToaESI
BOYS'KMIT
T-SHIRTS ........ .. ~... •• ....... -IOINJ
llHn. Al Colon a. shes S, M. L XL
:a,S:.~1 ........ 53.88
TERRY SHIRTS
"H11111l11,._" "L•ft lmll" "O.P."
.. J ............ ...,.. --·· .... ........... ..,... .... colon. .. ....._-... stt.oo to u1 .oo
1/3 OFF
fAU STOIESI
MEN'S PANTS
"O.P." "Aa .. ls Fll9lih" "lolt"•
"&old•• w..... "Mo•I•' o.~· .... " .................. ,..., .... ..
CCM .. op. •11tf•, brm•1d •tt11 M, fe-s.elc. ........ ..,... .........
SIMI 21to JI.
stteclll ....
.... 1t.t1 SA 88 SAU NICI •....... ...,, .., e
::::~ 512 SAUNICI "..... e
::;c:~ 51•'88 SAUNICI ..... •
Mlse111&29dJ.U112Shres
'
BOLT JEWELRY
loth shtr mMI gold MCldaces. ....
$2.00 to $9.00
1/3 OFF
lALL STOIESI
MEN1S KNIT
T-SHIRTS
"Swfers" "J.cks" ......... LCIRIJ -
sltort llH••· AH colors, II sises.
S-M·~XL
Specl• Gralp. $ 88 ::tEt;:c:•... . . . . . 4.
SpecWGrollp. $ 88 .... fo $12.00 6
SAU PIUCI . .• •. •• e
fAU SToalSI
MEN'S SWIMSUITS
"O.P ..... t:t-g 1'• .. ''G 11•111 w..,. .. 111
..., ....... ..,... .... ,... ... Sbes
21to31 .... SI 4.00 to SI f .00
40% OFF
lAU SToalSI
M ... 'S UNDERWEAR
..... ~ ~ IMt•en. T·IMrh,
........... Siies ZI to 40 5-M-L-XL
1/3 OFF lAU. SToalSI
MEN1S SHIRT SPECIAL
"Spl,.." "J_..... short mMt IOllCJ
slHn *"' tMrts ill all colon. Sbn
S, M, L XL
1/2 PRICE
IAU STOIES EXCEPT JACK'S II
MEN1S & BOYS'
110.P." SHORTS
D.tue poly-cottoR COi ct.i OJI lft a We)
•criety of co6on. SiMI 11 to JI. ..,..
rs u• o ~ .
'::t1ts,:c~. 510.88
Me11'1
5': .:?. .. 512.88
lAU. STOllSI
MEN'S SPORT
VELOUR SHIRTS
"Off Sllore.. ....... .... • • ., ... .... ....... _ ............... ...
c ................... ...... s,.cw-.....
.... SZf,fS s 18 88 SAUPllCI ..•. e
JAf:K'S #2 .
1160 I Naill St. CAt IHcll m.cLI
FIYI POINTS CIMTB
HUMTIM•TOM llACH
BUY MOWAT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS IEFORE CHRISTMAS!!
BOYS' .. LEVIS"
D .... la.ts 9d COl .. OJI ill IMh,
··-· ..... to flt. sa.. 2 lo 14. SA.
SllH2to7 ....... ~ •
SJusato 14 ••••
510.88
lAU STOIESJ
GllU.::· & LADIES' DEPT.
GIRLS1 PANTS
"Jordoclte," "Sat tH," "lotllor."
"log City ........ "C..._.. De ,..., "
"lrlttcme." Al brmld new, •ery W..t
styles _, colors IR sbes 7 to 14.
RecJ. $17.00 to $31 .fS
1/3 OFF
CALL STOUSI
LADIES'
SWIMWEAR
"HalMJ T.,." "Isl.cl We•" "lrit"
"Spudo". LarCJ• stock l•cllldH
bUd.U1, I CMd 2 piece, etc. In ...y
coton ..ct stytes.
RecJ. $19.95 to S29.95
OUI a.TIRE HUGE STOCK
50% OFF
lALL STOliSi
LADIES1 BLOUSES
& TOPS
"O.P." '"lolt" "Colows .... S...t laby
........ ~dllo ... l11dd11 .......
••ort ...... blOH H , klllt tops,
•••.._,. tops, T ·IMrts, .... , ..t
c.....a fGps IR a e.g. Mlectt.. sn..
S-M·L -a ..,, •-.. sa.oo to S32.oo
1/3 OFF
OPEN DAILY
9:30 to 6
SUNDAY
9:30 to 5
JACK'S #3
34311 Ptaelflc Coast ..... _,
"DOMINY PAIK Pl.Ali0
• DAHA POIHT
WOMEN'S TOPS
SPECIAL
"Ha•CJ TH" "Spint" "ETC.". All
Colon.•shM.llstytes.
51.D
I JACK'S II OML YJ
LADIES' PANTS "C..._.. De ,... ......... _.... "lrftt"
"Jord•clte" "Sasso•" "Iott"
"loRf 09'" "Spirit" "Row Hips ... I OO's
llP°" IOO's of the •"'Y lclhtt styles.
newest colon llldu 111 ,..,..... 1etJ1.
hi aRd low riw, few. IN u•d • I ,
pn-washtd few. .tc., etc. Sbet l-4
to 15-16 .
OUR '"'111 HUGE STOCI(
1/3 OFF
lAU. SToalSJ
DAMA POiMT STORE OMl Y
. SKIBOOTS
CAIC>a 260 s54 88 l9fJ. SIOS.ts
SALi PlllCI • • . . e
TECMICA
P1to.aACtMG$ 9 .... $225.'5
SAU PllCE • 16 .88
SURFER SPECIAL
''Mon(' loo9e
~':s.oo s29 88 SALIPllCI .... e
loog&.Lnltlu s4 88 .... $6.tl
SALE PIJCE ... .• .. e
SWIMMERS' SPECIAL
"Cltwdlil'' swhfl fills. al shft.
R99. $26.91 s 19 88 SALE PRICE .... e
MEXICAN
LOPEZ JACKET
All sir.es. clffet NI colon.
le4J. SIS.00 SA 95 SALE NICE •.••..• ...,, .., e
11teM ita1M 0111y .t: J.a's I _. II,
Mike's II CMd 0.. PoW loc...._
RUNNING SHORTS
Ooe,•h SIMrts
•-.. s14.oo SA 88 SALi NICI •••.••• ...,,.., e
SPALDING ::. ~~:o.oo 579 88 SALE PllCE •.• . e
YAMAHAAIS
:::.os11s.005129 88 SALE PltlCE • e
YAMAHA
~~SS~0.00s109 88 SALENtCE . e
CEMTUIY
~~S~L~5 139 88 SALE NICE . e
DYMASTAR SPRIMT
MIDIAM s1
.... Sl60.00 15 88 SALE NICE . e
BINDINGS
~;r~r s39 88 s PltlCI. •• . •
naOUA 250 s49 88 l9fJ. SH.91 ,
SALE NICE . . . e
ROLLERSKA TES
Iott. -& •-1119'1 top le.ttMt-boon wlttl ~·--tndl ....... Md pnciliOll ....... ...... ..
R99. s•°'·'s s79 88 SALE NICE .... e
CHIGA TANNIS
SHOE SKATES
Reg. $69.'5 $ ~ ~ 88
SALE PRICE ...... .
SPORT SHOES ~-·r--5 17 88 ~:11 S::i~~ . . .. . . . .. . • !~5 .......... 5 17.88
Mike Twf St•
Socc.r Softball Shoe s 11 95 SIHI 1·12. R9C} Sll.91 •
SAU ,..CE ......... .
w11.-1 ... .iw-·1
:;~i ...... : ... 5 16.88
WARM-UP SUITS
~::-~;~ 1/3 OFF colors. _
TENNIS WEAR
"Cowt C ..... " "J_.._ .. ~·25% OFF sNrh •..+a. . • •
JACK'S ANNUAL SK.I SWAP
SA TURDA y I NOVEMBER 15-SUNDAY I NOVEMBER 16
DAMA POIHT STOU OMI. YU
PLEASE NOTE
.w hied _.. W • 1 ;Ii:-_. .... llocll. Meftll I NMrfe4.
ll0flal11 Wd e.ct&! ..... cw, ....... "*-.... ,nc.. ... ~to
.. 111, ...... ~ ......... ...
-mu.!!£'•
...,.venial 1ewer u ..
MQ•L·tlim&wouldn.alaac&M .,._... NeWIJOft Ba)' II ........... v, ........
..... lt.,..... up for a .... Om•'•'-¥Ole Mon· la........._8each.
• ~ Bay tnmk 1ewer, u
propaeal la called would ex·
d froin the baaln of Bil,
on IOUUI alon1 Back Bay
Ye .. Newport Duae11 where
WCMilll Mclk into p e&J.ati.na
er line.
A a1mua propoul was
• out in 11'71 by atate
cominiuionera after the
It Coaty SaaltaUon Dia· 'project received
11ion from city, water
and other 1tate officials.
~ "Thia la virtually the aame
ftoject that wu rejected three
)tars aio," contends Newport
f vlronmentallat Frank·
binlon, who was instrumental
blocking the sewer llne in
7.
l Robinson ar1uea that the
1ewer line would disrupt habitat
areas of endan1ered species
~
irvine Police
Slate Auction
4 he Irvtne Police Department wllll C<lftduct a public auction Qec. 6.
'The department periodically
a11ctioos unclaimed property re-
Cfvered by police otticera.
:~The 10 a.m . auction will in·
~hude 100 bicycles, sports equip-
teent, car stereos, household
items and auto parts, which all
can be purchased by check or
cash.
ud, ,_ tUt reuon. la a viola-
Uoa ol the Coastal Act. Pr~ lllleDta of tbe project II)'
U.. bar ...... line remalm tbe
... t eeoaomical aDd reUable ••J to proride aewer· capacity for the recently built-up area
UOUDd Bi• c~ and nearby
Harbor View HUJa. ·
Tll8 ML'K &\ Y line, accont-
laa to •vlfamnental doeumeata
fifed by aanltaUon officl•l•.
would ec.t l"OUlhlY Slll,000 to
build md abc>Ut sz,ooo a year to malntald.
Other alternatives, such u
puttln1 the •ravlty-now line
•lon1 Jamboree Road, would
coat more. That. route, ll i1
eadmated, would coal U .1
• million to cooatruct.
SanitaUon officiall maintain
new 1ewer cap•c1ty la needed
becau.. the exlaUn1 pump ata·
tion and the sewer 11"'8 it ties ln
with are operatin1 at seven
times the desiped capacity.
They HY periodic overflowt at
the pump 1t1Uon aplll raw
aewa141 into Bil Canyon from : where It eventually i1 washed into
the bay. 11'a*1s happened u re·
cently u lut July, they said.
Laga•a Nlg•el
Altboush lt baa not yet
become • point of contention,
the new bay line would •ceom·
inodate an adclltloQl populatJoQ
tn the arH of •bout a,ooo
Cnone or mon than 1,000 new m ...
Altboulh coastal commiaalon
plannen are recominendmc ap-proval of the bay line project, u
they did three yean •IO before
it wu denied, they alao have "'''ested that a lenltby lilt of coadltiom be attached.
Amona the cqaditlom 11 a con·
1tructJoa Umetlable ao that work
won't lnterfm wt th plant life or
with the neatln1 aeaaon for
several blnll.
The eodaqered •J>ffiet that
frequent the bay Include the
Callfanlla Leut Tern, the Beld-
in•'• Savmnab Sparrow and the
L11bt·l"ooted Clapper Rall, a
lon1·leued manllland bird.
ENVl&ONMENTALIST
Robil\ICft, who said he'll be on
hand Monday to oppose the
sewer project, contends the bay
line not ~ly will disrupt the
lives of thele 1peclea, but alto
the people who 10 to the bay to
enjoy them.
Coast Commission
To Rule on Units
The South Coast Regional
Coa s tal Commission Is
scheduled to rule Monday on a
request by Broadmoor Develop-
!Dent Co. to build 405 housing UD·
its on a 212-acre par cel in
Lalluna NiJWel.
domlniwn unit. and 18 affOl'da·
ble housing unit. on another 55
acres. About 141 acres is to be
left in open space.
•• /..~orthern
_,··· ~thern • L -. :........ .. .. ... .. .. .. ··~ ~
Alignm~nt
Alignment
Big
Canyon
JOAQUIN
0 HILLS ROAD
~ a:
w w a: ~
:? < .,
Newport
Center
,
Princess
•
Expects
21ul, Baby
LONDON (AP> -PrlDelu
Anne II npectlq ber 1.-d
child nnt aprtq, Bucldn.,..•
Palace ba anaomacecl.
A •Poblmu 1aid tbe bebJ
WH cfue ID May and that tbe
prUice11, d•u1hter of QUHB
EU1abltb II, wu In "exeellmt
health". He 1aid ahe would be
carrY1nt out all forthcomln1 public _,.,emeota already .,.
ran1ed.
Tbe palace laid the queen md
her husband, Prince 'Philip,
were told t.be news when they nJ.
turned to Britain from their re-
cent atate vl1lt to Italy and
North Africa. They were 1aid to
be "delipted ...
The new baby will be the lixth
In line to the throne.
Princes• Anne's first child,
Peter, wu born three yeara qo,
one day after her fourth weddin1
anniversary to husband Mark
Philllpe. Peter was the queen's
first grandchild.
The princess's pregnancy will
be handled by George Pinker,
tbe queen 's gynecologist.
Peter's birth in the private wing
of London's St. Mary's Hospital
was trouble.free .
Plan·i Burglarized.
In Co8ta Me8a
Thieves took 901a11ons·or floor.
in1 resin from California
Decorative Coatings Co., lm
Whittler Ave., Coeta Mesa, early
Tuesday, police report.
Entrance to the firm, officen said, apparently wu made witba
key. Vahte of the resin was listed
•t S2,CllZ5.
If will be held in the Irvine
~olice Department parki.ng lot.
The merchandise will be availa-
ble for inspection one-halJ hour
before the auction begins.
Profits from the auction will go to the Irvine city general
fimd.
• For information call 754-3726.
Lagana Beaeh
· The site -of tbe proposed de-
velopment is west or· Crown
Valley Parkway adjoining
Pacific Island Village at Pacific
Island Drive and Talavera Drive.
. Broadmoor wants to build 28
single·family dwellings on a
15.3-acre parcel, plus 281 con-
Join a club
that'sstm
i-Man; Winthrop
City Attorney
·• . Marc Winthrop has been named city attorney
: of Laguna Beach, succeeding Bill Keiser, who
: Joined the Long Beach City Attorney's staff.
: Winthrop, 32, of Laguna ~ach, served as as-
: sistant city attorney prior to his appointment. He
• also has served as assistant city attorney in La
: Palma and deputy city attorney in Yorba Linda
: and Irvine.
' A 1'74 graduate of UCLA law school, Winthrop ~ has been with the Santa Ana law flJ'1D of Rutan and
: Tucker since 1975.
·: Winthrop will attend both City Council and
• Planning Commission meetings, whereas be and ~'Keiser had previously shared those duties.
alent Bank
MOVES UP IN LAGUNA
~· Aide Winthrop
Center First of Kind
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
-F.B., DallasJ,e:1aa
·• Con~ernlng tile mer.it, 1yatem,
aahincton Month'¥ edl,COr 'Cbarlea
etera ••YI 1ettin1 a 1ovemment Job
only the moat modest relaUon to
erit.
In bis new book, "How Wuhinlton
eally Works," tbe lawyer-Joumalllt
rites "For non-veterans, the trick la
1et tbeJr namea requested from
e Office of Personnel Manqement
tbe .,ency ruun, the Job, and the
•Y to do that la to know someone in·
de the acency. People already la
e system are the flnt to know
t>out a Job open.in1, and lmowlnc
tbe applicant and the job the1 taUo1' U. Job deecriptioa 'to ftt
person they want to hire. So tbe
vll service •• a r•troaa1e Mal
aaed not on po ltlc1 but on
endahip. lnalden call lt the 'budd1
)'Item'.'' .
( __ CARE_ERS_)
Deaiped to be a "one-atop recruJt-
ing information and referral service
lhat will locate mlnortttea and
women for. bard-to-fill JolM,.and for
Jobi in wblch they have previously
been ueludtd," the center'• founder.
Von Payton, beraeU a federal penon-
nel apedallat; aay1 the nationwide,
federal 1overnment·wlde center la
the flrat of lta kind.
OPEN TO ANYONE except white
malea, the center alma to circulate
appllc.Uom amon1 vario. a1encl•
and 1lve help in ftlllnl out federal ap.
pllcatJoa fonm and advice on bow to
make a p>Od impl'ftllon dwtq ln·
terviews. IMFRA soon wtU publl1h,
in En• and 8panl1h, a ,.m. pblet
Oil bow to pt I Job in the federal IOV• em meat.
Tb• ~aoo or 10 r.uueal cream
Jobi "aehedul• c· appointments
are UeW ~ what c11uaU)' ll called
tts. "plum book." Th• ornelal name
la "U.& Ooffrnmnt Polle1 and 8up-
po r t111 Poeltlon1 1 " IN ou.-....1. You 1hou.ld be 1blt to
order a IOP>' ln .ruu1r1 from the luperln&•ndeat of _Dooument1, W11~,D.O.toa.
in its infanq;
but growing fast.·
Our own kind of rock group
The Cradle Club at Huntington Inter·
community Hospital is open to all ex-
pectant parents regardl ess of where
they plan to have thei r baby.
One of the nicest things
about belonging to the Cradle Club is
that you a nd your husband get to know
others who are preparing for a new
baby. too. You 'I I have a cha nee to meet
with other members the dav you visit
Huntington lntercommunhy Hospi·
tal and see where hundreds of Hunt·
ington Beach babies get their start
every year. Cradle Club members of
Huntington lntercommun1ty Hospi -
tal meet here fo r classes. tours. coffee
and conversation.
Pinning down little details
As a member you'll receive a Cradle
Club certificate, be invited to enroll in
our classes. tour the hospital's Mater-
nity Wi ng, plus meet and discuss with
other expectant parents the many ex-
dting new experiencl:!s coming up.
You'll learn everything from prepara-
tion for childbirth to the changes a
baby will make in your lifestyle.
Baby Booty
Cradle Club members receive a plas-
tic identification card that entitles
them to receive special considerations
that range from s ur prise gifts to
money-saving discounts on items for
mother and baby. These little extras
come from local merchants who've vol-
unteered to be Cradle Club Sponsors
• . .. to hel p you celebrate the happiness
of havi ng a new baby.
Cradle Chit-Chat
You'll have more than your insti ncts
to follow a s a member of the Cradle
Club. Every month <from the third
month on l you'll receive a special Cra-
dle Club Newsletter that zeroes in on
those things you should be doing a nd
plann ing for as your pregnancy pro-
gresses .. They're fi lled with timely.
expert informatidn on everything from
the latest maternity fashions to pack·
ing for the hospital, to preparing for
your new baby's homecoming.
Education is a must!
Doctors. educators and parents agree
that formal preparation for ch ildbirth
can make each step meaningful and
gratifying. Our classes at Huntington
Interrommunity Hospital encourage
your understanding a nd participation
by giving you knowl~ge. confidence
and accurate expectations.
Membership is free
To join the Cradl e Club. just clip out
and mail the coupon below as soon as
possible. ~
~ . Sign up now!:· ,r----------· ,
:1 I Mothd• No m• I
-111 ~~~~~.~.~~~;·-1
1
Home Phone Business Phone--------
1111 Ph~!~!::::,:n' ; ;: Willd8dt.ln~~:~oom~ 8 :9
1
1
PleMe send me your schl.'dule of' f\rening cl asses. I undentand that membenihir.
I 1n the Cradle Club or ollcndancl' 11,1 P~pered Ch ildbirth Classes does not obi • -5 1 gnte me to deliver at Huntington lnlerrommunity Hospital. I
6 Signature Date lP I L------------C:..·
Huntington lntercommunity Hospital
. cltADtE~CLUB~
17772 Beach Boulevard, Huntington Beach, CA 92647, Tel.ephone C714> 842-1473 ...
I
I ;~
~~ . ,,_., e1•..,.-•~'"" _...,.._
"What are you up to out there'! Harry! Can you hear me,
Harry?"
DOctor Discusses
Sex in Sports
By DR. PETER STEINCR(jffN
Dear Dr. Stelncrebn: I have been hearing con·
flicting repom. Does or doesn't engaging in sex 24
b,.ours before an athletic event decrease the
athlete's efficiency?
I think this information w_ould be valuable for
thousands of athletes -and interesting to millions
of spectators or sporting events -Mr. E.
Dear Mr. E.: I had my own vague ideas on
this subject until I recently received a news re·
lease from the American Medical Association th11t
is interesting and informative. Here are some of
the observations:
The Minnesota Vikings played the Pittsburgh
Steelers in Super Bowl X. The Steelers were al·
lowed to spend the night before the game with
their wives in their hotel rooms. But the Vikings
were sequestered from their wives for several
daya_Guess wbo won' The Pittsburgh Steelers.
THE CONCLUSION OF DONALD L. Cooper,
M.D., expert on medical aspects of sports, was
that the outcome depended upon superiority of
game-play; that having sex before the big game
had absolutely no effect
DOC~OR IN " on the eventual outcome. . , . Dr. Cooper believes
THE HOUSE t.hat the idea of not
., engaging in sexual ac·
--------tivity because it will take
away from an athlete's performance "is one of the
many sports myths that has crept into our society
and bas been around so long, it is widely accepted
as truth."
Most team physicians feel that a normal pal·
tern of sexual practice is not detrimental as long as a proper amount of sleep is obtained.
YET, SAID DR. COOPER, 'THE myth was
and i8 strictly adhered to by managen of prize
fiabt.en who tried to keep their boxers away from
their wives and girl friends for months and weeks
at a time."
Dr. Cooper concluded that if It would help re·
lax some tension and make it possibJe for the
athlete to sleep better, sex could possibly be con·
sidered a slight benefit. •••
Some doctors believe that every case of obesi·
ty should be considered one of potential diabetes,
says Dr. Steincrohn in his booklet, "Watch Your
Diel Because Fat Can Kill You." Fot a copy write
him at Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626, enclosing SO
cents and a stamped, self-addr essed envelope.
JENKINS g ran<lion .Hy C. "'°''Is and erand-
JEAp.j CREA JENKINS, ave IS, e daU911ter CendoKe J. p.jorrls llOll'I of
rwotl"'8 of Monlicallo, llllnob. Paued Hunllnvton e..cl'I, Ca., I sister EIOIH
•••Y on Monday, ........... _ l , 1• •I Orr of M ll•aul<•, WlKonsln. She w••
PKlflc• HOtpltal, Huntington e.11e11, prece<led In dMtll by• daugllter Jun c.. M n. Jeftklns...., been the Society Norris II\ 1tn. Marn0<lal MrvKet ••II
Edllor, and l'ler llus!Mnd Jol'lf\ '-· be conducted on s..nday, "'ovember '· Jenkins, l'la<I -n tl'le AutDMollv• 1'90 el l:OOPM •t 11\e Firtt Un1led
Edller for -Oii~ Tri-. l>Otll Metl'lodl$1 Cl'lurcl'I 01 Hun11ng1on tetlrln11 In 1950. She moved to the 8Hcn 1n1erment will lake PllK• •I
Tuuon arH alt ... Mr. J..-.llln't o .. tn Memoroa l Patll Camelery In Skolue. 11·
In 1'S2. She,.,... to Hunllnoton Beach, llnoll. Tlw family suogHts con1robu·
Ce. In 197l. 51w was • member of lions 0. made to ll'le Forst Unole<I
U.. l"lrst UNla<I Matl'IO<llst Cllurcl'I of MelllOd•SI Cl'lurcl'I Bulldong Fun<!
Huntlnoton BelKl'I. Survlvong ••• a P1eru Broll'len Smit"' Monuary
---------Cllrecto<l.~.
,._FAMILY
COL.OMAL FUHYAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
'"'AClftC YllW n4
MIMOllAL 'Alltc <Amltery Mortuary
• Ct\apel 3600 Pfcific View Onve
Newport Beach
644-2700
McC:oaMICIC MOITUU•S
L,unaBeach 94·9415
~unaH1lls . 768-0933
Sin Juan C.p1strano
495-1776
HAllOI LAWM-MT. OLIVE
Mortuary• Ce~terv
Cr.,,.tory
1625 Gi9* Ave .
Costa M ... ~""
,_Cl llOTHllS
m&.MOADWAY MOITUAaY
110 BrolldWav
Costa Mesa
942-9150
IALft ..... OM IMITN a """9LL WlllcUllJ CHAP& , -~!: f'hli St
Cotta Mesa 848-937'
:-; Deaths
Elsewhere
SA'N DIEGO (AP) -
Paal Beerma•, 76, a
former member of the
Metropolitan Water Dis-
trict and the state's
Water Pollutlon Board,
died Saturday. He led
the fight to move
Feather River water
from Northern
California to the San
Diego area.
LB Gardeners
Meet Friday
Members o f the
La1una Beac,._ Garden
Club will meet at 11
a .m . Friday at the
Neighborhood Congrega·
Uonal Church, 340 St,
Ann's Drive.
Further information
may be obtained by call·
Ing 497-\344.
•
UHTHI
\AILY PILOT .... ,,
llSULT"
SHYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642·1671
1st.HJ
~s~D 24!!20 .k:=::=::!!::;:.-.. ..,
DETECTOR se.oo
WITH REBATE
ESCAPE LIGHT
Deal includ .. Mail in coupon for
rnanufacturer rebate. Eat.ape light rnodel
includ•• light that goes on when alarm
gou off. Bot.h include batteri ...
McCULLOCH
GAS
CRAIN SAWS
good safety
f .. turem llUCh ..
"wraparound chain
brake/ hand guard,
rnuffl•r llhi•ld,
.afety trigger, guard
. link Mfety chain.
POWER MAC 320-16"
2.1 cubic inch •noin•
with euto eh&rp.
POWER MAC 610-20"
3.7 cu.bic: inch enlff.n•
with electronic ign ition.
MIRACLE
CRAii SAW
SBAIPENER
777
16497
22997
Heavy duty rnetal con.truction that fit.a
all ~ .. and w· electric drill.. Each tooth
sharpened equally.
.,.~~~ JOBE'S TREE FOOD ~~ _ -; SPIKES i aa i,~·-1 ·-S PAK ••••• ~l~:. WM' 20 PAK •••• 6 66
For tree, e•er~n and fruit treea, put
th ... in ground and they feed nice s.nd
M8Y·
TWO GALLON PLAITS 4••
Did you know that palm.
an not native to California?
My uncle H.rky brought thern
from Indiana and Michiqan.
(Ha.) In Sago Palm..,. Pygmy Date
Palma. AMorted F•rN and
Philodendron..
KELLER
GUEIBOUSE
Wftf DOWS
Diapla.w your
plant.a in lot.a of
119ht and air. Solar
ec:reen bloclu mo.t
of 8Uft 'fl ecorching
ra,.. BronM finiah.
ONE SHELF 3'~"a34W' •••• 9999
OR SHELF 46~"•34~". 11999
1ze••
STAILEY DELUXE DIGITAL
ELECTRIC GARAGE DOOR
OPENER
Thi.9 h .. to be on• of the handiest thingia
rnan h.aa ev•r corne.up with. Thia h .. ~
HP motor and 3 rninute light ti.rne delay.
~QU~KER . QUAKEI 20/50 WT.
STATE MOTOR OIL
~76~ \4CYI'OR Of I,
Quaker ia good and it'• a good price. If
you change your own, why not take uMd
oil to collection center?
MECRAXICS BRAND
YOUR CHOICE
5 LB. OIL ABSOUENT
OR
30 OZ. GARAGE FLOOR
I DRIVEWAY CLEANER
79~.
---Garage floon and driveways
should be kept cl ... n to rrevent
tracking oil in the houae and
•lipping accident.a. TheM will
do it.
TR· 3 CLEANER
I POLISH
2 1!oz. =RT 277 GLAZE 160Z.
Forma a protectiYe •hi•ld for your auto
fin.iah and the nein glaae helpe restor.
the original lustre.
CHOICE OF:
4-DOOR
2-DOOR
BUCKET SEAT
OR
IUOH-BACK
BUCKET SEAT
· STAILITE
SLIP-ON
SUT COVERS
K-·tux .
HOMETOWN
BRICK·
BOX
GOOD LIFE
FLAT LATEX
WALL PAINT
59!.
Ezc•U.nt paint for the rnonelJ. In colon
and white with a 1 year warranty. Made
for ua by America'• leading paint
cornpany.
KRYLON
INTEllOl/EITEllOR
ENAMEL SPRAY PAllT
1-~~7-Dri• fa.rt, corn.es in lot.a of colon. It h ..
no fluorocarbon..
r1 BONDO INSTANT -w GLUEPEN
II 66~GRAMS
Over 750 drope (I wonder who
counted thern?) and it bonds in ~ MConds. For c•ramica, car trirn,
fingernail., jewelry and toys.
27" DUAL
WORKMATE
54~!009
The folding leg• gin you.
a'aclt & llel"L•n. two work height.a, 31 ~" ~
DIO u• .,1hu. and 23~". Can hold wedge U •hapea, pipe. and object.a up
to 21" diagonally.
•/2" DRYWALL
2!7
-.p ~all tM .... and tum ol Nal . P'• tier? (You do, then JOU m\Ut M "" OW-tbu\-..)
..
-............
....... Ill • ..,
-··•-~et"................
, ----·---., . ..-. .,_ ~
~~I)
.... MOGll8¥
lee ...... l<"'tl 111 ll'NI .,.....,.,,.,. ..........
ftl II 11 ~~
,..,. 10 "'-· 4071ttl IO
..... l(ClfW\ WW COl\dl•
... <'•121 &:-__,HU
9afvl~ DWo't'I e COWl )"ttlf
Md IOOfl lotM hil heaCI
WI~°' l<ojalt 1 ..... , CONTACT (Jl)Q
...-.rov°"" NIALTH
"~t S.x1Aallty" 0
• P.M. MAOAZIN9
Me.i S111ell ll\lf~ll Of
.. ~ p~ •• detlQ*·
out !NIN tlUl'll 11\et leoted,
ea ~ Old ottvsklen Or
Mary fulstone. Cllef Tell
mak" .,..,ry rnn., Juell
M15Mll has e Utdlo-•eSC-
ulet 1•ue1c:1aa . Joyce
l(ulhew1k IOOlts at lenll
(D MOVIE
• • • '1 Olal M FO< Mut-o.' 11954) Ray Milland,
G1ace Kelty Olrec:ted by
Allted H1lchcoclo. Alie•
loaming of hll w.la s inh·
!Miiiy • man declCS.S to
llev• hef eliminated (2
hre.) fD 21TONIOHT
"Public School, .. Ho\! C111
, Ware d1scu11e1 tile
Increase of v1otenoe 1n
!Khools (Part 3 of 4)
~ OAAMA:PlAY,
PERFORMANCE AND
PEACEPTION
'Shaw's St Joan
1:30 (D CAAOl BURNETT
ANO FRIENDS I == .. -.OOM9 Ma<.
"°""' Straight Talk
fr) GREAT
PERFORMANCES
'Live From Lincoln Center
Cinderella' Gloacc1>1no
Ron1111 !l three-act ope<a
kberino mull d.c:lde 11
Ila INlt.llO compete 1n • tel·
ant conJest 0< ega1n11 his
new·lound love. Cusy
(PW12)
• GOOOTIMU
The moll popular gltl 1n
hlglt IChool turn• J J Into
•-wom•n'man
Bill Sanderson <left) portrays a convict
who offers tough talk to a group of
juvenile delinquents in the new TV mov-
ie "Scared Straight: Another Story"
tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel 2.
La Cenerentote is pre-""'ed from the stage ol
the New Yolk State Opera
at Lincoln Ct>nler Beverly
Sills 1• the on-camera host
8:00 0 KUNG FU
I I
I
~
I
I
• OOCOAVETT
0.-t RaQU411 Wlllc:h
• W•1 CONTACT (A)Q
()) M"A"•"H
MVtl«loua h~lnga in
; the 4077th -to c;on.
litm tholl KOfNll belief In en
,-un-•orld of demons
I and anci•tral tplrill. " _ I llARNIY MtUEA
·• C88NlWS .CNlWS
• .HAW'f OAYS AOAiH ·~ • Fon1le matches blldel
with • French fencing
-ct1an1p1on whO llret lneultt
AIMttca end then Joanie .•
I A8CNEW8
M•A•a•H
TM long-emouid«lng feud
• '*-'Hot Ups and the
, --In her command
• cor..-to • h4lad -&he conllnM one Of them to
!lat tent.
• llAMTTA
8er9tta 18 deliber'ately put
• In prteof1 to get Information °" a ~ heist attar two
..apecfl and up dead.
-~MSY "Second Marriage"
OU.ta: 0-ge Sheeting
ano hUI wtle EH,., marnage
counsel<>< Dr Paul Kifl9S·
lay 0 m> alACNEIL I LEHRER
RE POAT
TIC TAC DOUGH
QJ) MEW GRIFFIN
"Salute To Cowboy Art"
Guests Burt Reynolds
Snuff Garrett, Sieve Rose.
Gery Niblett, Michael Cola·
man. Joe Beel8'
7:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN
Hoeta Steve Edwards end
Melody Rogers lour HOW•
erd >Hughes' businesses ...,
Loa AngeleS: take a rare
IOoll at the Spruce Goose.
• llilll lo Anzooa State
Prlton whet• the mo111e
"Scared Straight" or1g1-
neted: an awning at one of
LA'a busiest llre S1atoons.
I f'AMILYFBJO
ftCANANA
G~t· Troy Dona.hue
-~L08
HfCVlfS
Paul Moyer end lne•
Pedrou meet Andy Buma-
tel. Hawaii'• ...... and hot-
1•1 S1~p c:omic. inte<-
vieo# a former secret 1¥-
viea !Jlan who has beCo(Tla
CJaa1111ft ......... .
• KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
• KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
I KTLA 11nd ) Los Angeles
KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego
I KTTV (Ind ) Los Angele!>
KCOP·TV (Ind I Los Angeles
• KCET· TV I PBS) Los Angeler. 81> KOCE-TV (PBS) Hunlinqton Be;icn
one or Ille na11on s highPst
paid rnr;dcls 3flcl give l•t''.
tor 1110 ~ma1our Blottqock
1unk1es
0) ALL IN THE FAMILY
Arch10l has trouble ad1usl·
mq to Etlotn ' ~ud<len lame
alter sho &.1vtn .1 llh•
fD MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT m NEWSCHECK
i]'J P M. MAGAZINE
A dangerous movie ~hint
thal falt11t1 86 yeftr olel
phys1c1an Dr Marv Fu•·
et one
1:00 t) ()) MOVIE
"Scared S1ra19ht Aoot11cr
Story" (Prom1Pre) Clltt
DeYOj.lng Stan Shaw A
juv&n1le probation officer
becomes involved W•lh a
progr;tm run by hard·hne
coov•cts 10 scare ruvanil11
ollende1s Into going
straight 0 N8C MOVIE
Alca1taz The Whole
Sh~mg Story f Ptem-
iere) Ari Carney, Telly
Savalas lmpflsoned on
Alcatraz la< hie. Clarencf'
plots the hrsl successlul
f'SCope lrom !he no1or1ou1
Island 1a11 jParl 21
0 KUNOFU
'Blood' DI The Or..igon"
Ce1ne 1S 5talkeo by twn
d&Bdly,""d•ersarres The
Order'o1 the Avenging Ora
gon ano tho mot,.8r(h rtl A
ranching empire f Purl IJ
O ®.i THArs
INCREDIBLE
FetHured ~ wnmdr who
hve<\ in cl hOU1iA wtlh •4
PGhfJf OU\ ~nJ\kf'•i Un'''"
t.~ "';II. '/'1h1f•r~ PP'liJf wlH>
commit ' nmr .... """''' wuh•r
1h·· .ntt11MC• ot r:ano,.
Blood 01 The Orngr;n
Ctt•nt'I .it la~t conh onls lhf'
unom1es who have 1009
searchoo for ll>e Shao Lm
pr111s1
0 @) BARNEY MILLER
Barney tries lo get hos
men·s des•gnotign i&!t a
si;ec1olly murder squad
rtNer!>ed (Pat! 210 0 JOKER'S WjL[j
(D MERV GRIFFIN
"SlllUlf' 10 Cowboy Ari"
Guest! Burl Reynolds
Snulf Garrett. Steve Rose.
Gary Niblett, Michael Cole-
man, Joe Beeler
~ SLIM CUISINE
"Filo"
9:30 fJ ®> rrs A LIVING 0 TICTACOOUOH
~ U.S. CHRON!Ct.£
·Old Folks At Home" Jim
lehre• '1nvesllga1es the
problems ol housing lor
lhe elderly and senior c.11-
zens e1tpress then feats •
over """9 taxes anc:I lnlla-
toon
t~ tJ (]) DALLAS
With most of the 111m11y vis·
1hng Joe.k's hrsl wile m a
san11ar1um. J R uses lhe
time to set up an even l>IO·
ger deal involving lhe As1-
11n °'' lields (R) 0 LASSIT£R
An orwes11gat1ve repone•
(Burt Revnoidsl goes
undercover 1n on elfa<I lo
c•ear an honest cop ol
Char~S OI COrruphon
00 NEWS
0 110) 20120
Q) NATIONAL NEWS W NEWSCHECK
t030(D@ NEWS
W THEBODYIN
QUESTION
The.,,..,,, 01 Th,; Malll•t
~
fCSP ANning the Scene
,; ..
~ ~ ... .... Cable Coverage Catches Every Wt>rd
,,, • By PETEil J . BOYER
..; • LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Viewers have heard ~tant analyses, tidbits or speeches, projections
;.and results since the Iowa caucuses last J aouary. •and must by now reel completely politicked·out.
••• Yet, in the long course of the campaign, the
network news organizaUons didn't televise a single
•• ~plete speech, outside of conventions or paid
i ~tical Advertisements.
/ ..
" ' NETWORK COVERAGE SEEMED over-
~ helming, but when you peer through the haze you
~ the bare bones of what commercial television ;,settles for in covering the political process. ~ It is understandably thus. Commercial '~vision points its cameras where the dollars
are. and the realm of public affairs isn't exactly a
uure chest. That's why Walter Cronkite is
ays saying that citizens should use network
news aa a headline service to be suppletnented by
newapapera and periodicals. ~ Or, they could watch cable TV. Viewers or the
~le SateWt.e Public Affairs Network could have
~ full speeches delivered by every presidential
.
~Cinderella' Set
1
··J>n KCET Tonight
l ~"Uve From Lincoln Cent« 1" the awai:,d· nninC aeries o,_ live telecasts' of the performing
, will present the New York City Opera's pro·
uetlon ol the Rossini <?pera, "La ·Cenerentola''
(\!Cinderella") tonight at 8:30 on KCET1 Channel •
· ~Beverly Sills, general director of the New
piy Opera, will be the on-camera hostes11
the t.elecut. The opera wlU be sung in English
7 meuo·soprano Susanne Marsee. tenor
ockwell Blake. baritone Alan Titus. baritone ames Bllllngs, soprano Gianna Rolandi. mezzo. rano RoMMarie F renl and bass-baritone Ralph pa:uett Tlte production, directed by Lou Galterio and
uded by Brian Salesky, wiU be presented in
9cu. Miu Sills will conduct Uv~ on-camera mews wtth some of the principal performers
DI \he two mtermlsa1ons.
CC Production .
tarting Tonight
l·and1datt· 1nl'lud1ni.i the Cu rnm11n1ty Party
nominee
LJ\ST WE•:K , <.:SPAN v1t>wcrs were able to
walch full length rerlays of the Carter-Reagan de·
bale, both as it happened In Cl£'veland and as ren·
dered by Cable Ne"' s Network, with John An-
derson edited mto lhc debat<>
CSPAN is a Washington based cable tndustry·
s ponsored service that began as an expenment in
new television. TV lhal didn't need or mean to
grab a udience It was there to be used It began in
March 1971. with daily coverllgc of the U S. House of
Representatives. ·
This year, CSPAN President Bri11n Lamb de·
cided to expand coverage to include speeches
made in Wash1n~ton hy lhe various candidates and
their representative" "The idea was, rarely dur
ing a campaign does any nct"'ork give the public
an entlr(.' speech We gavt> s~ches of all the can·
didates. and their running mates. major or
minor "
THE SIX MILi.iON suhsc nbers to the 850 ca-
ble systems that lake CSPAN had access to an un-
common amount of poht1caJ matter before voting
thi~ week, including the Federal Election Com-
mission's hearings on whether John Anderson
could get a bank campaign loan On Tuesday,
when the polls closed in the East, CSPAN went off
the air.
•rour job was complete then. We set out lo give
any American who happens lo be hooked to one of
these cable sy!llems the chance to see a lot more of
these qndidates than he· c.t see anywhere else.·•
Next week. CSPAN returns to House coverage.
Lamb would like lo further expand CSPAN to 24·
hour·i--day coverage of public affairs, but his en-
thusiasm isn't shared through the irtdostry
THE CABLE INDUSTRY would do well to
watch Lamb and his e xperiment. as It's the
cheapest programming in cable. Local cable
systems pay only a penny a month per subscriber
to s upport the 14·person operation.
Besides. CSPAN 1s good public relations.
When ABC 's Leonard Goldenson spoke to the Na·
tional Press Club in September. railing agamst the
deregulation or cable. the only television cameras
in the place belonged lo CSPAN.
Among Goldenson's gripes was the fact that
cable Isn't required by the FCC to broadcast
public affairs programs.
Says Lamb· "We played it three limes, in full .
start-to-finish "
FOUR DAY FILM FESTIVAL
WOMAM ALMMAUIS Of 1.L ..
MO_M.. 1'UU.. WID.. ~
ADMISSIOMMH
. ~"' UCI • HIWPOl1' i&ACH Aan COMMllSI<*
TWO IACMW9••
ion
Or Jonlltl\an Mil* k>c*I
at Iha IM.Mt Clt<:olatlon,
blood pta-.re and QPafl
'-t-~o
11:GO I a • <1> o NIWI ~YWOOO
IOUAM8
• Nbl'lYWE> GA"9I
., M"A"•"H
KW 8 6:00 -NHL Hocley. 11te
Loa Anailes Kin1s take on the
Philadelphia Flyers .
Alter • delay of llve _.. ••
five aac1<1 or ,..... 1111 .. y
amve et the 4077th
Q) ONE~ elYONO
"Front Runner" 'T'weflly
Y••ra eoo. jocitey Ronnie
Wetaon fouled hos teachef
•nd t>enelec1or, jockey
Sam Barry
NBC e 8: 00 -"Alcatraz: The
Whole Shockittg Story." The coocltldlnl
segment ot this new TV movie about a
teen-age youth imprisoned few life with
Art Camey and Telly Savalas.
11:3CI 0 C1J THE JURRSOHI
Lio"•'· alra1d to tell
Ge0rge hOw the l1tndet on
the delivery van got
ballhed In. mekH up • 110-
ry that 94111 George In
deep trouble. (R) D TONIGHT
KCOP • 8:00 -"Dial M for
r.turder." Ray Milland and Grace Kelly
star in Alfred Hitchcock's thriller about
a man who hires a killer to murder hia
wife, only to have the plot backfire.
Hott Johnny Carson
Guesls Rona Barrell.
Tony Randall
0 PRISONER: CELL
Bt.OCKH
Pat learns David has
e'ICaP41d lrom prison
0 01.J ABC NEWS 0 FAC£ THE MUSIC
(D HOGAN'S HEROES
Cartet niasquetad~ as a
dele<:IO• to learn the loca·
hon 01 a chemical factory
Q) IT TAKES A THIEF
Al Mundy mu&I recover tne
5tolen Cycad Scrolls 10
P•event ihe couap~ of nn
emer9m9 Alncan nation
~ CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
11:50 0 (lg) CHARLIE'S
A NOELS
Kelly and Kfls go u"dor.
co1111r di beauty contes-
lanls to learn who 1~ try1no
to make sure ll1dt a certain
girl ~·ns n beauty contosl
tRJ
~Ml>HIGHT -
12:00 t) (f MCMILLAN &
WIFE
Mac and Sally attend his
20-year college 1001 be"
reunion dinner but the
event ends 1n tragedy
wherl one of the lot met
players 1s lound slain 0 TWIUOHT ZONE
"Night Call" 0 BULLSEYE
(D YOU BET YOUA UF'E
Buddy HaeluJU meets 1
spider lady, a lemale ••I•·
guard and a tax!CMirm11t
JOHN DARLING
• MASTERPIECE
ntlATM
"Pride And Prejudice" Mr.
Colline Metes a reconc:Mia-
lion ,.;111 the .e.nnet family
and Inlands to Choose one
of the girls f<>t a Wtte. (Pat1
21Q t2!30DT~
GU41sis comedy writer and
author Gail Parent: -..
man Teet Koppel
U MOVIE
• • • "The Nanny" ( 1965)
Bette Davis. W11Uam Ou A
doslurbed child and his
nanny reS«\t each othet
lor lheor responalbillty in
the dealh of lhe boy's sis-
ter ( t hr . 55 min.)
Q THl!FBI
"An E199hent Is like A
Rope" m Ml88K>H:
IMP01818l.E
The IMF I odes a young
pnnce from aaaassina by
dl90Uialng him u a 9YPIY
iD NA TlONA1. NEWS
1:00 8 0 POLICE WOMAN
Pappat Is kidnapped by e
trio of bank r0bb4W• (R)
• MOYIE
• • "M.,te" ( 11170) St•
pMl1 Boyd, Merlu Melt A
young girt tries 'In va1n to
dlecovar tile '""*-bouts
ot hat mi9'lflg twtn slstet.
12 l'lfa.)
• CAP1lONB) A8C
NEWS
1:30 Q THE LONE AAHOEA
"CtlmelnTime"
• MOYIE * * '-' "Tne Brolhett Rico"
11,1157) Rlchlfd Conte ,
Di.,,,,. Foster A Florida
~twnan alrM IOt Iha
top In hie allemot• 10 P'•
_,, a crime syndicate
from. murdetlng hie btotll·
.,, I 1 hr • 45 min I
1:468 NEWS 2:008 NEWS tJ MOVIE
• • "Pretty 8qy Floyd"
( 1960) JOhn Erlcaon, Joan
Harvey The life end times
of one ot Americe s moat
notorious Deprasston out·
Ut'#9 .,. lolled With Ylo-
lence. l 2 hrs.)
2:108 NEWS 2:208 MOv. * * "The Big Street"
( t9,2) Henry Fonda,
Lucille Bell. A s•lllah
nighlclub singer takes
advantage of a bus boy's
lc>ve. l 1 hr .. 50 min.)
2:218 NlWS
2".IO 8 MOVIE • * "Klondike Annie"
(111361 MM WMt, Vlct<>t
Mcleglen. A MIOorl singer
lak• a deed mluionarfa
ldentlly end rune otf with a
-c:aplain, wtth the police
llOt on her 1rall. ( 1 hf., 25
mir"I ,_.MOVIE * * "Hot'r<>t RlMs F1om
Tne Tomb" (1970) Paul
Nachy, Emma -cohan. A
young French couple
.,,,_it a cune from thalt
ancesto1a when they
Frid••'• o .......... ., ... .
11:00. * '-' "Tllf• T-
Sleera" ( 193111 John
W9Y"9. CerOle ~ A
cowboy rldea 10 the reec:ua
of. young -wflo Na
been ltlrNtened with !fie
lou Of her ranch ( 1 hf.)
-AFTERNOON-
tt:00 ...... Johnny Come
Lately" C t1M31,,.,,_ C-o-
nay, M.,jotle Main. Two
vetetan ,_..,...,., ~t>-
119heta join fof'cee In a fight
against • loc:el town boea.
(I hr., 50mln.) • * * * 1;, "High Noon" ( 1g521 Gary Cooper, Grace
Kelty. A murdetat ind hl8
bfothel'a attempt to .....,.,
the SCOia ,.;1h Iha sheriff
wflO aent him to pmon. (2
l'lrS.) a.@••'-' "Savage"(1972)
8art>are a.In. Martir! Lan-
dau. A ~ court
nominM la in-tig.ted by
a TV ,_ commentaty
1Nom. l t hr .. 30 min.)
S:30 8 * * "Slllelto" ( 1989)
Alex Cord, Britt Eklend. A
dltt1¥:1 attot'ney !rm to
ne11 • ~ count wflo It
klllnQ U1U01 on bef\elf of •
~-trtoend. (2 In.)
by 'Armstrong a Bduk
LOOK, 'l KNOW "THAT ~IER
IN THE WEEK 1 PRECi'ICTEO
0E.TIER WE""THER ~ iHE
WEEKEND .•• 0UT ms ~
HORSEFEATHERS!
IM~~T00€
ACCu~TE ON A Fl'IE DAY F'OREC.-GT !
l
Birdnaan
Art Camey plays convict Robert Stroud, the
"Birdman of Alcatraz," in the TV movie
"Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking Story"
tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4.
{,10PH/!,1T1CATW PROORAMMINB ..
Bellulilul ~lereo M~ie
New~ Mar;ne Wualher-
£/look Markel Reporl~
Con~umer Reporf~
Sho"1 Follows
Caribou Trek
The grueling, danger-filled 2,000.mile annual
trek of 125,000 caribou is revealed on "Caribou:
The Incredible Journey" airing Wednesday, Nov .
12 at 8:30 p.m . on KOCE. Channel SO.
The program tells the story ol the annual
caribou migration which begins in ARJil, when the
caribou set out as one gi1antic herd toward t.be
rich feeding grounds and calving areu ol ~
Arctic Ocean, and ends when they repeat their
a rduous journey to return to their wintering
grounds in Canada's Ogilvy Mountains.
"Caribou" is the first of three "Survival
Specials" airing on KOCE which loot at the
c!angel"OU.1 and rigorous existence of animals living
in the wild. "Mysterious Cutles of Clay," a
glimpse of the intrigulni world of the African
termite. airs Wednesday, Nov. 19 at 8:30 p.m . and
"Leopard ol the Wild." the story of a tame leopard
who eventually returns to the wild. airs Wednes·
day. Nov. 2J6at8:30p.m .
The "Survival Specials" are a presentation of
the Public Broadcasting Service.
I ..,..,...,.. ............ -.--1 · ~ ......................................... ~
-
STARTS TOMORRO\\'
I
.Just Ll~e Dad
Her father started out acting with chimps,
and in two months he'll be president of the
United States. Patti Reagan Davis is follow ·
ing in his footsteps, appearing with canine
star Boomer in the premiere episode of the
NBC television series "Here's Boomer," to
air Dec. 7.
4!.>A 1!>1 4
't ..... . .,., .... ..
494·1~14
···~ : ... .
I •, ._
.............. ,. ...... .,
'"' , .. , DIADl y .... 19, •.a.•n;•;:eg: ""' .... .-... •. ...,.-11 .. ,. .. r.~'!.:l ••
........ -NIVAft llNMMIN 191 ltt»,....1M I tM.U.tl•
....... _ ..
PllVAft WJA ... 181 .~ ...... , .. ,,,,,
·arLUt.-.-
'" ., TUllH.., ,, .... -.......... ..
"PRIVATE BENJAMIN" ...,.,,...,..,11:11 (R
--~,-,_, ... , ....
"THE.ELEPHANT MAN" ==:.1-(PG)
-..... ..
NII VMll•
I ~ ...
--na'i.T~ ------· ~-·-· -·""'"
..
Ttlurld9v. No~~, 6 , 111()
. Powerful 'Buffalo' on seR s11r1ge
Tiie ae•dy, tntbb)' world of 1ociety'1
tbrowMekl, loHn with a comwnial need to U · ••rt tblmlelves amona their own kind, I.I captured wlU. polpant clarity in "American BuffaJo" on
South Cout Repertory's SecoDd Staie. W• a atudy in futU1ty and fruatratlon by one of
tbe theater's hottest new playwrithts, Davld
Mamet, whole ''A We in UM
Tbeater" lnauaurated the
Second S..1e Jut season. Thia
time bl.I focm la on a trto ot
small-time would-be boodlwns
and tbeir twnbllna attempt to
or1an1ae a bur1lary plan.
In Mamet's eraphica.lly de-
tailed account, the three do
not fail beuuae they come into
contact with superior forces in
life. They are simply lnept in u•oo..
themselves, and their constant struggle for self·
assertion only renders them more pathetic. It is a
brilliant work of theater by a playwri1ht with an
uncanny ear for human expression.
DIRECl'OR MARTIN B~NSON has mounted
the SCR production with a gripping flavor of im·
mediacy, btailding character in three men whose
motives are rooted in ambiguity.' One Is a junk
shop owner, another a drug addict, tbe third a
''dealer" of underined vocation whose bitter quest
for recognition consumes much of the play's time on
stage. .
Art Koustik, in his best role since "That
Championship Season" six years ago, enacts the
junk dealer with natural ease born of satisfaction
in his minimal achievement. He is tough talking
but soft of heart, a caring person in an uncaring
world, and a role or multiple dimension for the
veteran Koustik.
Intermission
Tom Titus
SCR newcomer Jim .. Staskel plays the slow-
w I tted t misshapen jul\kie In a bravura
performance which, thou1b a bit heavy handed in
Ill physical characterization, is riveting in ill Im· ..,,..
• "AM••tCAN eU,,AUY' Apt•v1tvO.•MIMMMl,dlrect..i1ty~n...,_, .. 1111111ty"'-"'
Donnelly, lltflllnt tty S..wn T"°""· .,......,._ Tuetdrts ttw°""' S-.
O.yl •I 1:30. $el1HIMV -S..ndey •lllr.-.s •I l, .t So.ltll CMll
Repertorv'l ~ 514>Qo1, H S Town Cefller Ori,.., eo. .. MtM. ,. ... , ..... 1on.ts1-4033"
.. ~
1ret t. that ''American BuftaJo" did not take up
resldenceoaSCR 's lar1er ma•wa,.. ·
Perf~ancea will be stven nilbtly except
Mondays tbrou1h Nov. 18 in th• downatalrt
theater, SM Town Center Drive, Colta Mes.a. It de· ~ervei; a more extended engagement.JI
BACKSTAGE -When Olive!' Hailey 's
"Father's Day'' open.1 its four-weekend nan at the
Newport Theater Arts Center. there will be a
special guest in the audience -Oliver Halley ...
the playwright and hls family will join Lhe flrat
nighters al the 8 p.m . curtain at the theater, 2&0l
Cliff Drive, Newport Beach ...
"The Firebird," a play based on a Russian
fairy tale, will be performed for young audiences
Saturday, Sunday at)d Nov. 16 at 2 p.m. at the
Irvine Cultural Center. 1730'l·A Daimler St., lr\oine
: .. reservations are being taken at 979·1582 ...
CALL.BOARD -Golden West College has
sctieduled auditions for two stage product!~
Monday ... tryouts for both "Father's Day" and
"A Christmas Carol" will be held at 7 p.m . ln the
pact. Staskel's agonizingly deli berate delivery un· Actors Playbox, with readings for "Father's Day"
derscores his character's desperate efforts to rune· also scheduled for Wednesday at the sam't' lime
tion,eveninthecompanyoflosers. ~ . ~Auditions for the comedy "Perfect Pitch" will !
be held by the San Clemente Community Theater !
THE TIURD MEMBER of the triumvirate, Sunday at 2 and 7 p.m. and Monday at 7 p.m. in r.
the hyper and haranguing "businessman," is a the CabriUo Playhouse, 202 Ave. Cabrillo, San !:
singular triumph for Hal Landon Jr. who, like Clemente ... director Dick Vara is seeking three f:
Koustik, finally has a role befitting his talents. men and three women for the show, which opens 1·
Landon mixes rage with capitulation ii'I a Jan. 15 . . . :
performan<'e of s ustained intens ity that re· ___ I'
verberates on the small, horseshoe stage.
Mark.Donnelly's setting, a symphony in clut-
ter, is hiahlv realistic. aided nicely bv Susa.n
Tuohy's detailed lighting effects. One's only re·
Berginan to 'Go ·Home' Again
STOCKHOLM Sweden CAP) -Film director
Ingmar Bergman is planning to shoot his first
movie in Sweden since 1976, when he was hauled
off a stage here by police in a 'tax case which he
eventually won, movie officials have announced.
Bjorn Henriksson, production manager at the
state-owned Swedish Film Institute, confirmed re·
ports that "delicate negotia·
lions" are under way for the
shooting of "Fanny and Alex·
ander" from a script by
Bergman.
The world famous director
went into exile in Munich, West
Germany, atter the clampdown
by tax authorities nearly five
years ago, and has slnce been
making movies and stage·
directing abroad. He won his H•GMAN
drawn-out battle with tax authorities in court last.
November.
Henri.Uloo said the film wtitute, Bergman's ~wedisb mm company Cmemato1raph, and a
numberofforeign backen areworkingoutdetailson
fmancingofthe SB.4 million production-an all-time
hilb in Sweden where the average movie is budgeted
at about..,,000 .
HENRIKSSON WOULD NOT identify any
foreign financen, sayint "details have yet to be
clinched, and people get irritated when things
come out during negotiations." He added that the film institute would be the
central sponsor of the production, planned to start
next summer in Sweden.
, Newspapers said the Bergman movie would
star Norwegian actress Liv Ullmann and Swedish
actors Max von Sydow and Ernst Josephson -all of
whom participated in several previous Bergman
productions .
Bergman was in the United Slates toward the
end or October for a Scandinavian film festival
Town Asks More
staged in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles.
'.fhis wi_nter, Bergman will set up three stage plays
in Muruch.
THE "FANNY AND AJexander" project re·
portedly is drawing inspiration from the 62-year·
old director's suJrerings as a child. His father was
a priest described b y Bergman a s an
auttioritarian.
"It is a vt:ry good script, but I would not in·
terpret it for Bergman. I leave that to him, just
like the casting." Henriksson said.
Bergman suffered a .nervous breakdown and
was hospitalized for shock after police dragged
him off stage during a rehearsal of Strindberg's
"Death Dance"inJanuary 1976.
MIRAMAR THEATER
COAST HWY. AT PICO .... ~----.....
LAST SHOW1NG
"THE BLUES
BAOTHERS" (R)
7:JIN
plus "THE JERK" ,_,.
STARTS FRIDAY
"HOPSCOTCH" (R)
• "CADOYSHACK" (R)
EXCLUSIVE SHOWING!
"WHY SHOOT
THE TEACHER?"
"ITS MY TURN"""
"ELECTRIC
HORSEMAN" ll'GI
I "PRIVATE 1111
BENJAMIN"
I "THE ELEPHANT
MAN" ll'OI
I "THE EMPIRE 1"°1
STRIKES BACK"
-lfO~M••-
"ORDINARY
PEOPLE"
Ill
YALE, Okla. CAP> -After getting a glimpse Sterts Frtdey
of celluloid immortality two years ago when "Five· ... ---------•
Faces of Terror," a low-budget horror movie, was
shot here, this central Oklahoma town -with its
one motel and three cafes -wants more.
To encourage film crews to pay a call , the
town of 1,500 has organized the first local film
committee in the state. It will work with the
state's year-old Film Industry Task Force.
"These movie people are legitimate busi·
nessmen. After they leave, you hardly know
they've been there except the mo.tel owners are
counting money and the restaurant owners are
counting money,'' said Jim Potts, a task force
member.
n. ........ ··-.,._. . "HALLOWEEN" 1111
,,,..,.~,..
·~·16-lt:tO
"'THE "THE
SHINING"' AMITYVILLE
2:30-7:15 HORROR"'
12:30-5:00.9:45
OH,GOOf 800IC II ~
3:30.7:45
REAN coweo
1 ·00-5:15-9:30
"IT'S MY TUAN" 1111
"JUSTICE FOR ALL"
1111
I "MOTEL HELL .. 1111
"WHEN THE
~A~MING STOPS"~
I .. SMOKEY & THE
BANDIT, PART Ir'
"1941 .. l~I r -::::::> I .. ~n:~~~GR~N" I
HORSEMAN" I'll •.__ ______ ___
I '"AIRPLANE'" ll'OI
"BLUES BROTHERS ..
1111
"HALLOWEEN~~\
·'THE HEARSE" 11>01
AU. DIWft ..... ~ .. ,,.,. ...... ,'-'
~---,·-..-PU ... ..,..
"W11h .. er ••• "
Goulfltet Coffee SJtoppa
Keeps you
on top of the
e ntertalnment
scene, Fridays
In the Huntington Beach
Pedfk COMt Hwy So. o1 Pier
"I All ftOr Alf AlfDIALI
I All A HUllAJlf mM>I
LAIL.lt.11/t.N I"
_.. .. ft.Ill ---=r.t ......
15 Conve.nten1 Loc111tons
Newport Beach
1400 Pldk Coeet Hwy DAILY PILOT
_. .... IUIA
lrtl HHQI c 1111111
......... ,
""""' INclt '44·0190
......_ 11141 ••·MN .,_..,,. 011noe 63• 2$S3 -· __ ,
~"1393~ .,__... .......... _ .. •'91-9
.
=ANO&LD <AP) -1'MN'1a ... Wepboae
ertlAlela .. tolC.....,..wtdftecM&ld ,..~ .............. ,, .. ,,Uy,
"91 90 looklq for Ma 1111 fllr WI w . 1be ::CJ afteriaa U.. MW r.._ II llCI Teleeom· bn El lat., a lJ·y•ar-oW w~. D.C. ftN._. idM kMll·dlltl.Dff .. ...._.Mrvlce
corporatJona, lacludlq aome of tbe .
rt-"81 aavm,a ot ao to eo percent on
all•. deJ!ndlna oa where you call, .,.,.. Jallr wwhen. 'ftle eom~ ,.,,
HJdlte l'P8Ddb\1 more than 825 a month on lon1· Her calla will probably eave money wttb their
Mlwlee. MCI doean 'toffer local aervice.
OlJ CAN'T CALL EVEaYWHEaE with the
atem. but il doe1 reach about S,500clUeein15
metropolitan areas acroA the country. Com·
plftciala estimate SS to 70perceot of the nation's
phqMs are covered by theirayatem.
, ~alllomla, anyone In the 213 or 415 area codes en MCI, as can moat residents Ln the 714 area
. code: service is also available in parts of the 408
aatr '16 area codes, but not In lhe 707 or 805 areu.
MCf 'tpokesman Gary Tobin says lhe company is
ad~areas all the lime. though, so the new rates
miy available soon statewide.
CI charge.a a $10 monthly fee for its service and
Y°'!n\ust have a pushbutton phone to use it. Making a
caltlnvolves dialing MCI's local number, entering a
pttldnal identification code number and then dial·
iol t.be call Itself. If you make a mistake or the city
.... r .
Artist Quizzed
Go 'Doonesbury'
• ·>NEW HAVEN, Cono. (AP) -Cartoonist Garry
'l\wleau, normally a bit of a recluse. (pund himself beial questioned about a controversial epiJlode in his
.... •bury" comic strip when he appeared in
~here.
, • .tlrudeau was called to Superior Court lo testify
iJt,\M cue ot a Hamden man 1ccused of possessing
•f' 20 original "Doonesbury" strips
allegedly stolen from the car-
toonist.
DEFENSE ATTOaNEY
Charles Han.ten asked Trudeau
if he considereCI bimseU "more
as an artist or a political idea
man."
"I would think of myself as a
Ta'fMAU comic stria? aJ"t!st." replied-the ·-... Pulitzer Prize wt.oner.
''Would a 10.yt!ar-old enjoy your st~p?" tbe
Btjdgeport lawyer asked.
;•1 Many do," Trudeau said.
~~.Hanken turned to the series, in recent install-
ments or which a television reporter takes a tour
thi1()ugh Ronald Reagan's brain.
"LAST WEEK YOU HAD A STRIP about the
diminution of brain cells of Ronald Reagan. Did you
write that assuming that 10.year-olds would ap-
~iate it?" Hanken asked.
-;--''I would not speculate," the cartoonist
auwered.
. Several newspapers which carry ''Doonesbury"
declined lo run the Reagan series on their comics
paies.
Trudeau was testifying in the trial or James Con-
ti, who was charged with possession of stolen
pr~perty.
Mars, Venus Data
·Aid Scientists
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. <AP>-TwoHarvardpro·
fessors say recent space probes of Venus and Mars
have provided data that gave them an interesting
ttaeory about how our solar system might have been
..(ocmed.
. -By measuring the a mount or particular gases
found on Mars, Earth and Venus, they have de-
termined that Mars was formed first, then Earth,
then Venus.
.-' "This is sort of like a complex detective story. bot now we think we have the puule solved," said
Michael Mc Elroy.
' llE A.ND A FELLOW PaOFESSOR, Michael
Prather, explained how vastly different amounts of
•'oqble" gases -such as ar100. neon, krypton and
~f.Jle)n -could exist on planets that moat
_...Jronomers believe were formed from the same
. dOutloldust and gas.
·-.,Jf""llcElroy said the relatively small amounts of
tMeoble gases on Mars suicest that it formed flrat
wbeD it.a materials were melted and condensed by
hat.producing aluminum-218, expellin& m011t of the
'· \''*"origlnallytl'appeddurtngcondemation. ~·'\'1lytbetime Earth and Venus formed, mottor au
if"the aluminum-218 alreldy had dilappeared, and ·~ plants were able to hold mto the gases. which · weri~ frozen into the rocks.
('~; \-.... . ~ v.J"ll& 8CIENT18TS SAID OUR solar ayetem was
Je'Jlled when a giant •tar exploded, sendin& a shock
jtaw and a load of debris through a hute pusin&
,llOadol dust and eases.
~ · 'l"be explosion caused the cloUd lo collapse, and •at belan'1piralln1 inward, It formed ad.lac of hot
tftl.erials that eventually formed planet.a, the pro-
'! lllf.lon said.
·.·"'These three planets have cone throu&b some ~r different histories, from the point of view ol
• .--cu content." Mc Elroy said.
· "Kan melted and d.lfferentiat.ed (expelled ill
'81fS) very early," be aald. "Tbe Eartb II in·
fimilediate, bavinc not melted (but also not bavina eeOected much of the solar wind material). And
~ never d.lfferentlated. Ill material sat around
... ping tremendous amount.a ol eolar wind ,.,..,
~pared to its companions."
";>', 1BE SAID SPACE caAn probes lo Man and . dua were crucial in puttiq the new lbeon
~· .,
,... "There is no way we could bave found th1a out by
..-m,atonlyoneplanet,"beaaid .
• .!J~ ..
10 Mi llion Donated
"' DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -JobQ Broob'f'uqua. a
-educat.ed Atlanta lnd1.11trtalllt, bu donaW tlO
on worth ot cub, atocu and NaJ lltate to Dub
• enity'aGraduateScboolof9•lwe. n ~-the lerc••t 1lft to .tbe wa¥tty llDee M mllllon endowment 1Ya 1tlM ~ Jamee B.
e, the tobacco aod raill'Ot.l11tapate.
..... "We plan to uae thl• ~ 11 • .,.,,....._t •·
meat," Duke president Tftfy SUford said • •
you wan& isn't on tbe MCI aetwork, a computerjaed
voice .Wsoinlorm rou .
MANY CONIVMl!U ..,llA&B A lot of lonl·
d.latance calla make them to tbe ta.me nwnben -
u.aually nletlv• or friendl -IDCI tbe MCI 1yatem
can be i .. expenalve for them. How much leu ~
pendaontbeind.lvidual'1pattemofcalls.
MCI ii amonc a number of companies enterlne
the teletommunicatlons buainela on the couumer
level and you may aee similar 1ervicea aoon from
otlMt•llrma anchuJ.'l'T andBCA-
Paciflc Telephone concedes that MCI's service
can be cbe•per for some people and aaya that's
because it.a lone dlatance rates 1ubeidi1e other
telephoneserviceailmu.atoffer.
,.,..~
AF1RIT
Judith Piper
Guard Unit Gets
F ~male Chaplain
~ . SACRAMENTO <AP) -Tbe Califonala Na·
lion.al Guard bu •WW1l.ln ill ftnt female cltepleta -tbe Rev. Judltbann Crail Piper, a ~
putor from Berkeley.
Mn. Piper. a former rnember ol tM ArmJ
Reserve, ii uaianed to the 148lh Combat Support
Hospital in San f'ra.ncl1c9, an element ol tbe ltab
Medical Brt1ade headquartered in Saeramento.
Her father had beeo a cavalry oftlcer, M4 1be
served with the Army Nune Corpa durtq UM
Vietnam War. Sbe hu done medical work wttb tlae
NaUoaal Council of Churches llicrant lliniltrJ,
campus m1011try with fnter·Vanttr Chri8Uen
Fellowsblp and chaplaincy lna federal prbon.
Mn. Piper, awom in by Maj. Gen. Frank
Schober, reticles with her husband, Dr. Daniel
Piper, and their three children.
-89DDINO •P) -
Slaute CcMiab lau Of·
••red ti•• &0Hbur1 Luabtr OD. to pAJ far
about si.-1a....,.... at • loUlal eamp .....
about 45 ledlw "" been Uvl ... for fl••
yeara. Tia• Boer41 of
Supenilon ..... UDl.D·
lmou1ly despite the p.,.... ol eompany at·
toraey Dan Pralt tbat
the ladlam an tn.pau •
ln1, and U.t the repa1n
would '-9 a waste of .....,,.
Call 142-1171.
Put a few word•
to work for ou.
C -·-"•1¥-M-..CCOOO•
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health .
' 20 CIGARETTES
lv1enthol Fresh
Salem
UL[!J4
Ultra LON Tar
Menthol Fresh
sa1em
ULTF]A
!Obs
Ultra LON Tar
'
'
DAlllTllOU~ ttn lllClt UIMOll&
"" WILL.le .. nalfl
""
nev•DAYll
""
Edison Has Dominated FV Series
11 Previous Games Marked by Upsets, Big Plays, Frustration for Barons
• . 1ty aooEa CA&LSON
DftMDelly .......... Game No. 12 ii on the line Friday night at
Anaheim Stadium between Sunset Leacue football
rivals Edison and Fountain Valley.
Whan sacked Svoboda before he could releue bis
pass attempt.
Haynes took it from there, running 71 yards
for his touchdown.
tenor and Dave Bienek fell on it to preserve Foun-
tain Valley's f1111t victory.
It's a serieis marked by upsets, big plays, de-
fense, emotions and for the most part, happiness
at Edilon, frustration for Fountain Valley.
Edison's e motional victory, spurred by
tragedy (junior varsity player Mark Naylon was
killl!d in a lea~ue game and Sam Fuga was sent to
a wheelchair for life with a spinal injury), was vic-
tory No. 4 ln what was to be a ~game winning
streak for Edison.
Haynes picked up 139 yards in 14 carries and
Edison dominated the statistics to the tune of
342-146.
Edison had led, Z4·21, in the fourth quarter,
but Dan Troup capped a drive with a two-yard run
with 1:36 left to get the lead for Fountain Valley.
Edison leads the series with eight wins, two
losses and a tie. Here is a capsule loot at the past: 117t -EdlllOD Z8, Fouatala Valley I. There
was no upset thia time. The Chargers, on their way
to the CIF 3-A championship and a 13·0 record,
lt7Z -Edh09 zt, Foutaill Valley 7. An over-
flow crowd at Westminster High saw the Chargers
made it four straight, keyed by quarterback Craig
Way.
1174 -Foutain Valley t, Edi.-t. In a
rugged defensive battle, each wu frustrated with
missed opportunities.
F0tmtain Valley missed on field goal attempu
from 28 and 30 yards out, one ending a 90-yard drive. 1• -Edl110D, z1, Foamala Valley zt. Out of
the blue came Edison's seniorless Chargers in
their first year of existence -led by the nucleus of
Huntington Beach High's 1968 Bee team.
dominated all the way. ' ·
Moxley, quarterback Jerry Hinojosa, Whan
and the rest of Coach Bill Vail's Chargers breezed
into the playoffs, while Fountain Valley's season
ended.
Fountain Valley moved to within 14-7 when
Bill Ogden scored on a 90-yard touchdown play,
taking a pass from Bill Hatfield. Edison threatened al the FV 16 at one point,
but Kent Yomogida stopped Nate Ching on a
fourth-and-three situation to end the threat.
Edison lost a 66-yard touchdown pass play from ·
Ching to Steve Hines on a penalty. Neither team
could muster 200 yards net for running and passing
in the hard-hitting standoff.
Opposing the Chargers in their first-ever cam-
paign, were the Barons, a team which appeared on
i~ way to the CIF 4-A playoffs and a portion of the
Irvine League championship after shocking Loara
the previous week in a 21·21 tie.
Way, however, directed a crisp 62-yard scor-
ing march at that point, capped by a 45-yard
touchdown pass to Mark Weatherbee.
1'71 -Edl908, zt, Foaatala Valley I. Fountain
Valley entered as co-leader with Estancia (eaclt
was 5-1) in the Irvine League, but Edilon spoiled
title and playoff dreams again.
1m -Fomtala Valley ZS, EdJaoe Z4. The
trend had been established -Edilon bad the
Barons'nurnber,soitseemed. 1175 -EdJaoe 11, FomtaJa Valley 1. The
Chargers crossed up Fountain Valley by util.Wng
quarterback Rick Bashor~·s running ability, in ad-
dition to bis passing.
Edilon erased a 14-13 deficit with a touchdown
and Jim Mox.ley's two-point conversion run in the
third period, putting Edisonontop,21-14. This time Mark Harmon, Whan and Jack
Haynes ran for Edison touchdowns. The key play
came when Whan stopped a Fountain Valley
march at the Edison 22 with a solid tackle.
And it appeared that way aeain as the
Chargers were on a relentless drive in the closing
seconds.
Fountain Valley's John Svoboda passed to
Gary Valbuena for a touchdown with 8: 17 to go,
but the two-point conversion try failed as Rocky
Edison moved 59 yards to the FV two-yard line
with 38 seconds left, but the Barona fanally got a
break as the Cha.rgers fumbled the ball in the in-
Bashore ran for 103 yards on 20 carries and
<See EDISON, Page C4)
NoDUd on Field
!Juddridge Sparks . 49er Attack
A Deflected SINN
BJ JORN 8EV ANO °' .. ....., ........... When balfback Dan Duddrldee
lines up for hla flnt play from
1crlmma1e this Saturday at
Anaheim Stadium, a lot of tblnp.
will be fla1hln1 tbrou1h the
1enior'1 mind.
P'lnt and foremott will be a
Lone Beach State victory over
Cal State Fullerton .which will
enable the Gers to remain un-
defeated in the tough PCAA cao-
ference race.
Second will be the importance
of having a IOod game personal-
ly, a goal Duddridge is strivinl
for the last three weeks of the
season.
AND FINA.LL Y, his mind just
may drift over the past 12 years
he's spent aa a competitor oo the
football field; a period of lime
he relishes fondly and is sorry to
see end soon.
"It's been a good year," said
Duddridge as he sat comfortably
on a bench within the Long Beach
campus. "Any time you 're in con-
tention for a championship, it's
flood ...
Washington goalie Mike Palmateer (right)
knocks aside a shot on goal by the Kings'
Charlie Simmer as Bengt Gustafwon comes
in to help with the defense. The Kings
won their faith straight, 5-3. See story, page
C2.
After a rocky s tart that
sidelined au runnlne backs and
left the 49ers with a 1-3 record,
Long Beach finds iuelf ridinl
the crest of a four-1ame wiDDina
streak today which bu vaulted
NFL Free-agency to Be Tested
..
Winner~ B:tndzfu~ki or Ra~?
. By JOBN8EVANO
Df .. D.tlfy ~ .........
The repercuulona of Bob Bruchlnaki's
walkout at Rams Part Wedneeday may be
felt around NFL circles for yean to come.
Tbat'a because Bruchinakl, lf be sticks to
Illa current threat, ta 1oi.nt to try to set a
precedeat by being the fint player to truly
tell the Nn free aient market.
••UDZINS&J, TB•OtJGB bit •cent
Howard Slalber, lDformed the Rams of bit
dedalm bJ way o( tbe NFL omce W~es
day moniq.
Frulltrated. acconlln1· to hla a1ent, by
tM 1aek ol IOOd faith shown 1D ne1ot1a-
tioaa by the llama, Broddmki decided be
1 bad fulfilled bll coatract obU1ation by '..D1aYilal nine 1am• of the lf.pme aeUOD, i8d d9dd.d it would be ln b1a .... l.Dteresta lf
._ ,.,_ tbe remainder of the year Oft the
..... llnel.
· •••r. Brud1la~ki'1 ictlona were
WII Hat.I by tbe lnleaaltive, un-carlnc
................ •tutude penonllled by " ........... ...,..., not cmlJ toward llr.
............ llU&otMI' uluallle memben ol .................. part"' • ....,....
~ lllued by 11..aa.r•1 atftceWed-
·•11r11e11J, nat tt mew Al contract
l @IJlll-lnte doWD ud tbb WU
-
0 I 111'1 Cllllr altllulift ............ all .._, tM , ftnt U.t tlal four.,.ar
........ -al °"° ........ walked -'9-· ~·-ty
HE DID 80 IN September. too, just
prior to the team's opening came with the
Detroit Lions. That leave of absence was
brief, however, as he Jett Sept. 2 and came
back Oft the 6th. ·
Matters don't look as prom.laing this
time, tboulb. Brudlinaki1!eportedly earn-
ing aomeWhere between ~7.000-$75,000 thil
season. was Jut liven a contract ofter by
the Rama Sept. 29 <reportedly in the
$200,000 ranee>.
though, and be made a counter propoeal a
few days later. That waa refused by the
Rama and a llalemate developed.
•'It was an , excellent offer and J think
Bob realbed bow much we wanted him to
play for ua," explained Rama General
Manager Don Kloeterman. "But it was re·
Jecled by bit agent.
"He <Brudzinaki) thumbed bla DOH to
the club and b1a teammates. It's recretta·
ble." ,
I
·lT aEALLY CO•U u no co&nctdnce
that SIU1ber ·11 tbe a1ent beblad this
walkout. He leadl the leque lD that de·
partment with aucb notabl• u Sam Cua· nbapam (New En1lud, hallbeck, did DOt
report to camp lhil HUOD u part of ~ 1
famed Foxboro l'our boldou£ Jobn Woodooell (Dlarait, clefwlw , wtao
walked out al tbe Uoea' eamp IMt ...->;
Tom aledaD) (Detroit, ,... ud No.
2 plck, fto aat out the 'n ...._ wt\b eoe-
traet prolllems after belal drafted bJ
C...._.); .lollD OUttoe (llaJUmon, de-
femive end, wbo sat out llA aeuon.a; Dan
Fouts (San Di~go, quarterback, wbo sat
out 10 games of the 'TT campaip); and
basketball star Gus Williama <Seattle,
cunently s1Wnc out this aeuon) all under
Slusher'• services.
And, to make matten more complicat-
ed, the Rama are dealine with an in-
dividual in Slusher who doea hla
homework well. Slusher bu made all the
nece11ary steps to make Brudliuki '1
walkout OD the up-and-up to try to explain,
but here ii the crux ol the altu.tioo:
-SBPT. •, SLV811B• held a .,.,.. COD·
ferenc:e to NY Bruddmki would retum to
the Rama with the option ol leavt.aa a1a1D
lf be (Sluaber> felt ,_qotlatklm had re-
ached an impaue. ~Sept. 10, SIU1ber malled Jaostennan a
foor-Ddat memo stati.DI, iD •••ce, that
the ffnal!:tf: CGDtnct talb would be Oct . '1 ud lf WU J"tllOlved lt would be to
tb• ~ "' bcM.h partlea iDwolftd if
Bmd""ld wa traded by the Oct. 14 Nn. tradiqdeMllM,
-Nov. 2 marted tbe halfway po&nt lD tbe
HHoe wblcb, acc6rdla1 to Sluaber,
aatilfted the play*'• ~le contract acree-meet thereby releulq Bruddnald from
b1a obllptklu U a Jlam ud, tbUI, declar· Ina ldm a tree acent. 1 Of eoune, tbe Rama an aow la a
damJMd,.if • ..,., dam~..U-...... 't po-
altioe. JI they ~Ide . tl(ey walll to pay
f ( .. Nft.._, ... Q)
~4~--'.: ---....
DANDuooRIOGE
(
the 49era to the top of the PCAA
standlnp with Utah State.
Surprising? 4Maybe. But not to
the 49era, and in particula.r Dud-
dridge, who knew of the team's
potential all ~oog.
and he leads the 49en in rushing
with 491 yards Oft U4 carries (4.0
average) and two touchdowns.
"I JUST TRY and do the best
1 can," says Duddridge quietly. -
"We have a lot of good backs on
this team. I don't make too
many mistakes when I'm in
there, though, and that helps."
Duddridge has already sur-
passed bis junior totals in tenns
of carries, yardage and
touchdowns (US, 405, 0). And.
he's accomplished the feat by
splittlne bis time. as he did last
year, with teammate Ron Set-
Ues, a two-year junior letterman
from Banning High.
"I'm glad we came around,"
says Duddridee. ''Thia team is
definitely showing added con-
fidence with each win. ''
The 49ers, who completed 1979
with a 7-4 mark, could Improve
their numbers to 8 -3 if
they could sweep the.il' remain-"'
ing three games.
NAnJULLY, THAT'S a goal
the team is striving for-and
nobody is trying harder than
Duddridee, who would lite to
end bis career with a nourish.
"I've really bad a fun time
"WE ALWAYS had the talent, here," exclaimed Duddridee, u
we just weren't together at the the reality of bis football career
be1innin1." explained Duddridge ending gets closer and closer.
of the team's slOJt' start. "I cer-"That's why I really want to
tainly didn't expect to be 1-3 at play well these last three weeks.
that point." "I've thoulht a lot about it
Injuries were part of the (not playing football) lately and
blame ... and Duddridee I know I'm going to miss it a lot.
wasn't excluded from the list, But I also know, too, that I'm
either. He suffered strained Uga-getting older and I don't know
menu in bit left knee after the how many more years of this I
49era' first contest and was co~ld ~ke," ~ adds with a
limited in bil action for the next sm1~
couple ol weeks. Other backs "I just want to go out and have
suffered cartilage damage, a seUClll 1 can be provCI of,"
cracked rtba and chipped aaya the Costa Mesa Hi&b and
elbows. Needlesa-tb-say, \lie &... Oran1~ Cout Colleee product.
fenaive backfield hun't been the "That'f why these last few
49en' ltrenltb tbia year. I 1ama are so important to me.
SUll, however, Duddridge bas "The football team winning
manued not to miss a 1ame comes first. I just want to help
(deapfte bis It.nee problems>, any ~ay I can."
Wit• P•tllles
Green Signs Pa£t
PHILADELPIDA (AP) -lla.nacer Dallas Green, wbo
piloted tbe PbUadelpbJa PbiWa to their first World Serftl
triumph ID tbe team'• •year hlatory, reached a one-year I
a1reellllllt with the National Leape club Wedn~ay, a I
lpMeam.Ul aatd.
Tenm ol the contract were not dlaelc-.cl. I
A,.,....cement of the P11Ct coallrmed a atory report.t
Monday by the 'Jibe A110dated_ Prell that aald GrMD
would return u maaa1er lD 1111. Orem and Paul Owena, Phll.Uea 1ener-1 manacer,
scheduled a news conference fOf' lhil momLnc to formally
UllO\meetheqreemeat. Green bu made D9 aecret t.bat lM would prefer a job in
the fl'Gllt olftce, trbere be wortred until Aue. 31, 1m, when
be replaced DMIU' Oaan u mana1.,.. ·~But the money la rl1bt, '"'IQ four Umea what l can
make normally. It'• dlmcult to turn down. The Umln1 jU1t
doeaa 't eeem,Plbt fot a move,'' be aa.ld Monday n11ht.
• L
~
I
~
a
•
. .
,.._ Al' ......... .
NSW OAJ..&ANS -,,_ 1M1t ...... ror tbe m Rot..r\o Ouran·Suiar Ray Lecmard rematch at the
Superdome IO for t1,ooo, but promoter Don K1q
aaya they'U be worth t.
''Tbat'a a small prlce fOf' aucb &D i.Dcredlble fi1ht," K1DC
said while here Wedaeaday, accompanied by beavyweipt ,
cbampion Larry Holmes.
lri hypin& the Nov. 21 ftpt, Kina predicted that it woWd
be better than the lint meetine wbetl Duran took Leonard'•
WBC welterwei&ht UUe.
He said that Leonard ol Palmer Park, Md., will not bave
to prove this time that be can stand and trade punches with
Duran.
. Duran took Leonard's title lo a 1.S-round declaion and
critics said Leonard may bave made a mistake ln trying to
stand loe·to-t.oe with the touah Panamanian.
"I think this fight ia going to be even better," King said
after a news conference. "The monkey is goin1 to be off
Leonard's back.
"He will deal with It as be bu to deal with it rat.bet' than
trying to prove tu the world that be can stay in there with one
of the best fighters of all time."
King predicted that the fight will be "a knockdown
brawl."
The qrlier Duran·Leooard meeting wu hailed by fight
~ enthusiasts as one of the best welterwel.abt fltht.s of all time.
Holmes said it waa too early to predict a wiDDer because
he has not seen the two fighters preparing for the bout.
But Holmes agreed that Leonard, an Olympic gold medal
winner, will have to move more than be did in the first ficht
with Duran.
The heavyweight champion bad. high praise for both
fighters, but said in a championabip bout the winning athlete
often baa just a little something extra on the night of the
fight.
"Duran had it last lime," be aaid.
.------QllNe •I llw •••------.
Notre· Dame Coach Du Deviae, explaining Blair
Kiel's 8().yard touchdown run from punt formation: "It's
something we talked about before the aame. I gave him a
band gesture, a little shake of the wrist, anct he knew exact-
ly what I was t.alldng about."
Silas H I•• 18,098-p of "' Pim ram·
.Jamee Siias. struck for a season-high 30 point.I m to apart San Antonio to a 114-6t victory that
snapped the Phoenix Sum' eight-same Natioaal ~asketball Association winning streak Wednesday
, night. 1be scoring outburst included a 1.S-foot jump shot in
the first quarter that put Silas over the 10,~point mark µi
his eight-year career . . . Lloyd Free scored nine point.I in
the final five minutes and finished with 30 to lead Golden
. • ,
p •
~ . ~ t " }
! i ~ ,,
•
SIU.I
State to a 106-98 win over Cleveland
... Guard David ,.....,... scored 39
points, 15 in the fourth quarter, to help
boost Denver to a J.25.-117 victory over
Seattle . . . nu SmWl scored 2t points
and San Diego recorded the final eight as
the Clippers defeated Houston, 111-104
. . . .1911• Ervla1 scored 38 points and his
tap-in in the final minute gave
Philadelphia its ninth straight victory, a
107-103 decision over Detroit. Erving put
the 76ers in front with 52 seconds remain-
ing, 104-103 and Darryl Dawkim added
three insurance markers ... OU. Bl..._I scored a game·
high 29 points to power Kansas City to a 111-102 win over the
New York Knicks ... Jletlie 1'lna scored 28 point.I and
Chicago outscored New Jersey 15-8 early in the final period
as the Bulls posted a 120-105 win over the Neta ... Larry
Bird led a first-half charge and ~ Ferd took over in a de-
cisive third period as Boston rolled to a 104-87 win over the in·
jury-riddJed Atlanta Hawks . . . Rookie a.&clll Carter of the
Lakers was placed on the injured liat and Toay .laeboa was
added to the Los Angeles roster Wednesday.
Toronto S11ap• 1t'l11le .. SC1 ~-Z. f
JolUt Aadel'Mll scored one &oal and set up (ii
Laurie 8Mcbmu'1 game-winning score u Toron-'
to snapped a four-game winless streak with a 2-1
National Hockey League victory over Pittaburch
Wednesday night ... Benle F•rb scored one 1oal and
l'et up linemate Brtu S.uer for two otben, g{via1 Federko a
club record for assist.I and sparkin1 St. Louis to a 8-1 win
over Hartford. Federko now has eight atrai&bt games with at
least one assist ... Third-period goal.a by &eat NU-, Bric
Vall and GQ a.o.alard lifted Calgary into a S..5 tie with Win-
nipe~ . . . 0..., Gore scored Buffalo'• first goal and aaailt-
ed on the next two to pace the Sabres to a 5-4 will over
Colorado . . . Grut M.i"J'• second gOal of the same aad
eigb\b of the season midway tbroUlh the third period enabled
the Chicago Black Hawks to tie the New York a.sen. 1-3,
and take over second place in the Smythe Di..W. ... A
fluke goal by IYu.acllm midway tbroacb the ftnal period
capped a Vancouver comeback and can the Canucb a~
decision over Edmonton. Bold.lrev IOl the winner when b.b
s hot from the side boards deflected into the Edmonton net off
Oiler defen.seman Jolua Bqlilee.
Dftl"~• AN•fre119 fo iffla Ola1 F• Tii i
OU. Armstna1, the Denver Broncos' leadiq Ill
rusher, wtll mw Sunday's NFL same at San
Diego because 6l a neck inJry, Coach lled •Iller
said' . . . Former W-BC beavywelpt champion
Kee NortGa comes out of retirement Friday nisht for' a fi&ht
with undefeated Rudall ''Td'" CelllJ who bu lmoeked out te
of bis 17 proleuional foes . . . Tbe Purdue-Michlsan football
game Nov. 15 will be telecast natlonallJ with die HCODd ball
of the double·beader featurtna Notre Dame at Alabama
. .. Oregon State UnlHftity bead athletic trainer Al
.a.M..U.. who also aerved • trailrer for the 0 .S. team in
the 1964 Olympics, died of a beart attack in the trainiq room
at the school ... LanJ 0.111••• alped a one-year COD·
I tract with Philadelphia • • • All 1nq.,i mto'the death of boa•
er 1Mm1 0.. of Waln wu ordered by tbe IA» Ante.lei
County coroner . . . EYODe G.aaa-1 CawleJ will be una-·
ble to defend her Wimbledon tiUe next year because she la ex·
peel.inc her second child in May or June ... The U.S.
l
equestrian team won the Natlom Cup elaaa with a perfect
score in Madiaoo Square Garden.
T~11,•adle
Followlno ere the top sports events on TV tonl911t. Aattnos ue: 1111 excellent; 111 worth watchlno: 11 fair; I forget It. , t
f
• p.m., QlanMI • ./ ./ ./
NflLHOCKEY: Kings at Ptllladelphla •.
AnMllllCart: Bob Mlll•r and P9te Weber.
The Kings wltl be after their thcth stralgtlt victory tonight
but It wlll bl ea-Inst the Flyers wtto hOtd a Jinx over the Los
Ano•les squad. The l•st victory for a King teem ., ... the Flyers
was In 1t74. Since that time, tN Kings record la 0.1f.4 with the
last vktory a S-3 v•dlct on Oct. 10 that YMr. With the hlgho-
scorlne trio ~f Mercel Dionne, Cherne SlmtMr •nd Dav.
T•ylor, the Kings figure to chanOt ttwt tltUlltlon tonight.
RADIO
Hocby -Kings et Phll..,pttla, 5:05 p.m., KOGO (600).
Newport,
. OV.Grab
Crowns
Oee• View Hip School sur-
pr..tted tw0i top 10 team• to
capture the Empire Lea1ue
water polo champiouhip and
Newport Harbor, to the 1~
of no oae, wu tbe winner lo the
Sumet i.e.,. at ~l•iaD ~
both drCultS WedneMay.
1 Oceaa View toppled eichtb·
ranked Buena Park Friday, then
came beet with an M verdict
over No. 10 Loa Alamito. Wed-
nesday to capture the leacue
crown, despite an un-rated
atatua.
In other a~on in'the Sunset
Leafue, Fountain Valley took
second place by defeatiac
Edison, 15-6, and Marina
escaped the cellar with an lHI
win over Westminster.
Ocean View fl.nt:abed the year
with a 18-3 record and 6-0 in
league play. Scott Nady scored
the 10-ahead goal in the final
quarter after the score was
deadlocked three times, the last
at 5-5. Kevin KJ:auae added the in-
surance marker.
Newport Harbor completed its
domination of Sunset League
foes wtth a 17-3 triumph over
Huntington Beach with Diay
Riley bittinJ six goals, Jeff
Wilson four and John Gifford
three. Ian Marksbury bad 11
aavea in goal for the Tan, the
No. 1 rated team lo CIF.
Fountain Valley's ~ons
finished in second place · th a
4-1recordand13 ... overa ark.
Scott Ca1ho\m scored four goals
for the Barona and John
Dempsey added three with
balance of the scoring by five
otbe?' pa.yen.
Junior Steve Miller/ hit five
.coals for the Marina Vikings
young team that figures to be
much at.ronaer next aeuon. The Viltea started three sophomores
this year and will have most of
the 1tarting team back for
another campaign.
The CIF playoffs be1in Wed-
nesday with pairings to be made
tbla weekend.
,..,....r.9~c•
NFL F R EE ..
Brudzinaki, Vince Ferragamo
and Jack Reynolds (two others
on their option years) would be
gone the next day. And if they
don't, the team is forced to sit on
its bands and let a possible court
action decide the outcome.
EITllE& WAY, the free agent
route has never been tested in
this manner according to Ed
Garvey, who is the Director of
NFL Player's Association.
•'It 'a not been tested in foot-
ball as it bas in basketball,"
Garvey explains. "It most cer-
tainly would go to arbitration.
Certainly it ( Brudzlnski) would
be a teat case because it hasn't
arisen before."
Unfommately, other than the
prepared state ment from
Slusher's office and the counter-
remarka by Klosterman, none of
the principals were around to
elaborate on the tum of event.I.
Brudzinaki was in biding,
Slusher wu tendinl to buainela
in Phoenix, Coach Ray Malavasi
had a standard "no comment,"
and Georgia Fron~iere was wor·
ried about her first prodtion.
AcnJALLY THE only quote
to make any senae came from
teammate George Andrews, who
stands to inherit Brud1inski's
spot at right linebacker.
"Tb.b lan't the flnt time it's
happened," be said, "ao I've
learned to take things otle day at
a time around here."
For the Rams, though, todays
·seem like yesterdays with no
tomon'OWll.
Volleyb all ·
Tryo u t s Set
Tryouts for t.he South Coast
Volleyball Aaaoclation stria
teama will be held Sanday. from
6·1 :90 p.m. at San Clemeate
Hilll 8ellool Gym.
A ftn&.time tryout will allo be
beld Sunday, Nov. 16 at the
aametimellDdplaee.
Tryouta are open to all prla
(lt year• and under> from
Oran1e Comly with teams belDI
formed oa three aae 1roup
levell. t •or adelJUosaaJ iaformatioa,
call G'l·$l0l, ext. Jl5 durinl the
day or.__, in the evenlnl.
Sellout for s·urf?
LONG BEACH -The
Callfonlla 8w1 hu 10ld 1,258
~tickets for tta North Am.nean
Soccer JDdoor 1Aa1ue opmer
wltb the Vancouver Wbltecape
No•. tt; ad club omct ... .an
predi~ a Mllout. . Tbe Surf will play ita lDdoor
1am• at tbe Loni Beach Arma
wlUcb can accommodate 10,•
faa1 for toecer. B•t a 8u.rf
) 1poke1man said aa HdWcmal
IOO Hau cowd be ad~H If
aeeded.
i
SPORTS BREAK /WATERPOLO /POL.O ~~-
l
" ·•
LANDOVER, Md. <AP>
Maree& 06ame, lt8r ..a. IDr •
the Laa Mill• Siw, II -I above •w+mc alMMll * •a·.,..:1
Cut tbll ....ty ta tM •11• ~
After K'OrinC t.hrM .,... to I
lead the KlDp to lta 10tb Yidor')' ,
Wedneaday Dlabt -a 5-3 verdict
over the WaJbiqton CapiUlll -:
Dionne allowed himself the :
pleuure ot poederlq the Na-
tlonal Hockey Lea1ue cham· ;
plon1bip.
"Why not," be ,n1poaded
when asked lf this year'• K1nll 1
could win the Cup. "You eat to ,
think positive. We have the COD· ·i
fidence now." . ;
While the Kings have lost only. :
one same um season en route to :
the best record in the lea1ue. the .
Capitals have loet five, and Wed--.
nesday's game was the seventh
straight without a win.
"We just haven't been able to
put the puck into the net," said .
Capitals Coach Gary Green ·
after the second straight lou to
the Kings. "When you get JS
many shots as we did tonicht, .. ·
. " he said as his voice trailed
orf.
The Capitals bad plenty al op--
portunities, pelting Kings eoatte :
Mario Lessard with 37 sbotl, in-
cluding several on six power
~ plays.
.,...,.......-"He (Lessard> played very .
Recidaia9 l•r r ..
San Diego's Brian Taylor goes high with a driving leap to
score a basket against Houston as Robert Reid and Rudy
Tomjaoovicb watch. Tbe Clippers won, 111-104 .
McGraw Becomes
51st Free Agent
NEW YORK CAP> -
Baseball's 1980 free agent class
ia complete.
Relief pitcher Tug McGraw,
whose hairbreadth late inning
adventures punctuated
Philadelphia's mad dash to the
world cbampiOMbip last month,
filed for the re-entry draft on the
final day of eligibility Wednes-
day along with out-fielder Steve
BraunoftheTorontoBlueJays.
THAT BROUGHT the total
number of. players elil)ble (or
the draft to 51 and the liat in-
c ludes such stan as ouUielders
Dave Winfield of the San Dieeo
Padres, Ron LeFlore of the Mon-
treal Expos, and Dusty Balter al
the Los Angeles Dodgers. 1bose
three, along with McGraw and
pitcher Don Sutton of the
Dodgers s hould generate the
most interest wbe.n the bidding
begins.
McGraw , one of
Philadelphia 's pos tseason
heroes and inch_bitting
specialist Del Unser, who bad a
couple of big hill in the World
Series, were the only Phillies to
file. Kansas City signed infielder
Dave Chalk Wednesday to
retrieve him from the pool, leav-
ing the American League cbam·
pion Royals with four players on
the list -catcher Darrell
Porter, first baseman Peter
Lacock , outfielder Jose
Q. Bow maay Loi A•telea
Rama remala from Geer1e AJ.
lea'• ftnt term u Ram coacll! '
Cardenal and pitcher Marty
Pa ti tin.
McGraw. who finished the
season with a 5-4 record, 20
saves and a 1.47 earned run
average, outlined bis position in
a statement in which be charged
that the Phillies are not willinl
to pay him at the same level as
the team's other top players.
"I HAVE ENTERED the free
aaeat draft as of tbla afternoon.
Nov. 5," it aaid. "My reqQl!Jl to
the Pbillies was this: My con-
tribution to the first world cham-
pionabip in f11 years was equal to
that of any person or player on
the team. I want to be in the
norm with the salaries of these
players. To date, the Phillies
have declined to make me a pro-
posal al salary comparable to
those salary levels of the other
key players of the team. I didn't
want this, but at this point there
was no other choice."
McGraw is not exactly anx-
ious to leave Philadelphia. With
that in mind, be and his financial
advisor, Phil McLaughlin, will sit
down to talk to Phllllea officlala
•lain today.
All clubs have witil Monday to
sign their potential free agents.
After that, each team could still
retain negotiation rights to their
players, but only after the draft
when up to 13 other teams could
select and bid for them.
well for us tonight," said Kinp
Coach Bob Berry. "But it was
not neceaaarily his best came
this season. He has just been
playing exceptionally well for .
us." . :
W aabinaton had goals from .
Jean Pronovost , Pierre
Bouchard and Ben.rt Guat.affaon.
Leon ard Bout
T o .Be Shown
In An a h e im
WAY productiom are baclt in
business and will sponsor the
closed circuit television showing
of the Roberto Duran-Sugar Ray
Leonard middlewei&bt cbam-.
pionsbip rematch at Anaheim
Conveotioo Center on Tuesday
ni•ht, Nov. 2S. \__..__ • r. Tbis will l.e the ~ ,..... ;
ahowins ~ "8 ftpt m Orase
County," says Bill Kaplan, WAY
fight promoter. "Tickets will be
on sale al Tlcketron and at the
Convention Center beginning to-
day."
Way is sponsoring a live in-
terview sesakm to get the nicht
of three championship fights un·
der way with Jesse Burnett
among tbme to be interviewed
live at 5:45 that night. Burnett
bu been promised a tiUe fight
with the winner of a
cruiserwei1bt championship
match between champion
Marvin Campbell and Carlos
DeLeon on the Nov. 25 card from
New Orleans.
The third title fi&bt will
feature champion Maurice Hope
and Carlos Herrera in a junior
middleweicht battle.
Ticket,J sell for '25 for re-
served ducats and $20 for
general admission.
NEW
MARK HOWARD
VOLKSWAGEN
EXCLUSIVE
I
A . Only two -·m iddl e
linebacker Jack Reynolds and
center Rieb Saul. Both were
rookies in Allen's last season,
lf110. Reynolds WU a No. 1 draft
cboice~t of Tennessee and Saul
made the team aa an eiebth·
round pick from Michigan State.
Allen had a 49-17-4 record in five
·years wtth th, Rama. Two other
Rama from the '70 team -de-
renaive linemen Coy Bacon and
Diron Talbert -played for Al·
ten at W uhlngt.on and are atlll
with the Redsklna.
several polls, the NFL and NFC
defensive player of the year.
Dewey has started all but one game in bis last three seasons
after switcbinc from defensive
tackle to in.aide ~backer. He
was voted second-team all·pro in
'79 and b~ tackles.
~
Q. A&lu&a •lacelllcker Tim
Ila.al eqh1hd • &lie IC9e
I• '71. Wlla& tlld •e do _.at
M.._ te a....e a celekt&y
u4 wtaa& .. M .. a. '71!
. I
Q . Tampa Bay'• Sel•~• ~nUteft -wlllclll Wal dnftM
••1•er aad ••w laave &lllelr
careen,,........,
A. Lee Roy Selmon WU the
Buc1' No. 1 choice la 19'71,
Dewey wu taken in the MCODd
round of tbe same draft. Both
played for the University of
Oklahoma. Lee Roy earned all·
pro boaon·IUl year and WU, ID
A. Mauettl was tending bar when Atlanta summoned
him after the start Qf the ''18
HUGO. He could do no wrmc,
kicklnl two 1ame·winnin1 field
1oa.ll and providJ.nl the point
differential in five resalar seuon 1amea plua a wild card
playoff victory over
Philadelphia. He led NFC
kickers with u 11.J percent
mark ClJ-of·ll). Lut seuonl bowever, be slumped and bi
only 13·of·25 field 1oal1 ud
mlated six of 37 convenion at-
tempb.
11111 .
IAll
For Giiiy
13!
~4' FREE
MI LEA&E
I
I
.,..,,., .. .. ... = .... ... o 11111• u. ar ••tlr ., u.. • o...... ~,--=--= ........ tie ...... .... ,.... • ..... iieiii·
tea• ftlM ..... Will cem..,.. at °'8llel Collt
CollqeDle.M .
WCrbadl Collet• wiU be ~ f-lta
MMM •H '" ••tt:9r'U ..... UUnl la
,.., "919. •• 10., • o ..... · =u ... U. ._. ~. &antow. = V . , Mt. Saa Ad 'D. LA Soulia--. of 11 ud
C.OCblle.Aria.
"We bave a very •troGI fteld UUa year," 1ay1
OCC Coedl T: Glllla, w1aa1e Pir.._ were de· f•ated by Seddck, M-11 la mt y..,.•, cham· ~....... .
. ''I ... for Saddleback and Sant.ow to be the
teama to bu&. but I think they'll be pmbecl by LA
Southwwt, llt. San Antonio, Imperial Valley and ourselves," GUU.. continue..
The Eaton Cluaic, now in its lotb year, in·
clud" tbe defend1q state small acboola champion
Bantow, and tbe larce school's state semifinalist in Saddlebac~.
"Imperial Valley tells me they have their best
team ever. Mt. San Antonio baa three starters
back from lut year's team, LA Southwest is
always touah and Colle1e of Marin has a 1-11
center .• " Gillis says.
OCC opens with Marin on Dee. 4inan1:30 p.m.
match. The 1ame is preceded by LA Southwest
versus Barstow at 2:30, Mt. San Antonio a1ainst
Cochise at 4:30 and Saddleback -vs. Imperial Valley in a 6:30 match.
The final round will be played Saturday, Dec.
8, with tbe fifth-place 1ame set for 4:30, tbe third·
place battleat6:30and thetiUeconteatat8:30.
* * • Persons planning to attend Golden West's
Southern Cal Conference football bout al LA
South~ Saturday shouJd take note that the
1ame's hours have been changed.
It seems Southwest was scheduJed to have
lights installed al its stadium by DOW, so a night
game was scheduled. The li&bts aren't there yet,
and tbe game is now set for 1:30 p.m. • • * The OCC crew will bold its annual art auction
Pre p Stats
Barons' QB
No. 1 Ptuser
Fountain Valley Higb's Matt Stevens, who set
a school record last week when be passed for 284
yards with 13 completions in 19 attempta, bas
taken over the lead in Passini and total offense for
Oran1e Coast area football plQen.
Stevena baa DOW completed IS of 1'7 ~ for 1,329 yards and eight toucbdowm.
A1ao moving into the No. 1 apot in bis catecory.
r\aabing, ia F.dbon Higb'a D.J . Bell, who is one
yard away from tbe 1,000-yard plateau.
Costa Mesa Hip's St.eve Coot bolds a com-
mand.Ing ed1e in reeeivin.I wjth 51 reeeptiona, 23
more than bia nearest rival. Tbe leader la total
yards fer reeeivine, however, la Fountain Valley's
Emile QalT)', who bas a 2S.I yards per catch
avera1e, netting 739 yarda on 31 catches.
..... .....,.., ........ b...:le 22
....... Devis.~ n • ..._..,_I Gl*lil'l9l. ..._, 22
f'Myer, Sc-.. -" -. Aod,,H'I. _., It
Bell. E.-UI 9" •.l ~II'"· -Ir It S-er,, El Ton1 1'2 _, S. I He<ktr, C4M f1
w1111........,_ Wm I.. t'2 S.2 Wllllem1, El Toni 17
GlffG,0-Hllll 175 ... S.I --r.0c .... v-17
Hl .. lns, llW!er Diii 1l0 10I S.• Swer1'*11. COM 17 'Vtnhire, Merine 100 700 1.0 C. 8rl.,._, C4M 1'
AICMrcb. FV 1l0 Ml 4.t 11-o. ow.. Hiiis "
Mero1e1, c:.1e -* no u &«ry • ..._, u Urmson. E.tt..cle 1.. S» l.I Twntr,....,, 8dl IS
l"'tftt, ~ V-IOI 5AS S.O Kalrn • ...._, IS
Moler,~ V-ID ~ •.O Moor9, lrvlftt IS
L111tt1. Merine IO soa •.1 Melson, C..te -IS ,._..,. ,....__,....,
l"tay#,lc-.. .. llC ,.
Stevtns, FV 147 • 7
Heinle. Oii 141 M I
M<Calllll. Est 10 .. • I(~, HI Mt ff 11
Herrl1, Wm 1J1 .. • Slnlow. DH 11' M s St-ert, L8 13 Jt S
" .. 1,129 I
I.AIM.
1,054 •
Nl•Oft,CateMIU IS
Ev_,..._, IS
Gonuol..._ H8 I•
Clerlste. Oii u
At,_11. Oii IJ
O.w-1,DH ll
"·~-I) ............ y_.. 1)
J. Gaal,..._, 1J .._....
.. 1'.0 > 4S1 11.<t ' m IL• 3
141 I J.O I m 12.S I m 1•.0 I
22J IU 1
JOI 12.2 I
J/01 11.J 1
1S1 t .I I
121 I.I 0
211 14.0 I
10J ll.S 2
1'7 1).1 2
I .. 12.t 0
"' 11.0 1
!SS tO.l 0
121 1.0 0 ,.., 11.s 2
2JI 11.0 I
Ztt 22.t I
261 20.1 1
us .. .. l
Ul 11.7 0
I• 11.l 0
Toalleff, Uni 111 ff 12
ISt • U2 •
1"2 •
1Sl 10
14$ 2
117 •
.,,. 4
l'layff, Sc-.. ............
Grl'ldll.tf, MM 109 .. I
Twcker. COM 1:u " • Ooutl-... ET IOI 42 1
Ter .. 11, CM 110 '° S Mefor, E.._, 101 SI •
"° • Ml 7
'33 J
s-erv, El Toro 13 2 1 2 ,.
a.ii. EClllOft 1• 0 0 0 ..
WllllntMm. _, 10 0 O O .0
Davis, ~ t o o 1 St
UrmMft, Est...:.. t 0 O 0 U
&«rylllll, L..-• I 11 1 SJ
T ... ~ 0-10-Hllls I 0 O O • ,,...._,..,_, C-,0...Mtsa 1 0 0 1 ..
l"UJ9r, le-.. .... .... l9t H~~~~V .. ley 1 0 0 1 .. Stevena, FY -It 1,m 1,110 ~~9!'· Merine 1 o o o 42
Stewert. UI 414 7SJ 1,167 Stel,_, Aft. Velley o I U 0 Jt
Holnlo,OV a U•t 1,ISI trvl~.~V-• 0 0 I ll
G<..wtstett. Mer -111 1,00 Ale~ An. Velley • 0 0 0 » Mcc.11111, Est ~ 1,os.I 1.011 Go<-.~ s 0 0 0 JO
... ,, E.._ "' O "' Vtntwe, --S O o o lO S-uy,EIT-_, 0 M Moler,~V-S 0 0 0 JO
WlltlftlMm. Wm .. 2 2J ---· Y.., t I 2J 0 26 G!llM, 0-W HlllS ... .. 154 M<Caf!rey. L...-l 1 l o 2• I(..._, ""'"8cll ~ ISt m ~·· S.. Omnle l 0 • I 2• ll•low, OH t m 101 Kee,"-..,. 8Mc.tl 0 S t 0 2A .T .... ff, UN :rt 1•5 n l ... .._ ~ Diii l 1 1S O 2'
... rrl1, -... 112 7» Trol:r:, Metef' 0.1 • 0 0 0 2A Mal*', ~ tS 6Ja 111 Alke E~ie J 0 0 2 22
T-efa. CM 11 '4 11J Wei , MerlN O > 16 O 22
H....,... MO 1GI 0 1GI CleA, ~ J 0 0 I JO
............ ,.. • "'~· ~ l 0 • 0" ~ ..... c:-l 0 • 0 " ._..... ,_ IMO,..... J 0 0 0 11
• ...._., ..... , "· (Giie Miu 1 0 12 0 11
................. llC .. ... • • ., ,Cd!M J 0 0 0 .. c..-. c-Miu • 622 10.7 1 ~Mllew Dtl J 0 0 0 11 Tl"9ttw, ..... O.I IS •1 11.4 • H ...... o.t J 0 0 0 11
Herry, Fin. ..... ..., JI m 211 7 TlltU ~ V-I l t 0 11
0..M, SMO.....IS ,.1 ti.t l G --' J o o o It
CM...._,~ JI as tU 1 Fr 11W1N J O o o It
JIJNIOR COLLEGES
and 1IUnultiaDal award-winnlq artilta aucb u
Couie Kial. Nonna Rockwell, Salvador Dau,
Le~ Nelmaa -Jolm Kelly. ne pnriew bellU at T p.m., with tbe auction
set for a. U tMr-. are 250 people at tbe OCC
boatboule wlMD tbe aueUoD beCIM. tbe Plnte
crew wU1 reeeive $1,000 from the auctiaDeen, ud
will receive • .-emt ol tbe total sales. Proceeds co toward tbe purebue ol an ei&bt-oared 1bell to
replace tbll one deltroyed by a flablq boat in
Newport Beach lut week.
Larry Moore, OCC's auiatant crew coacb,
sald the auetloo becomes the No. 1 fund-ralalq
priority tbis aeuoo since the crew will DOt sell
Cbriatmu trea as ln the put. OCC actually Iott
•money on tree sales lut year .
• * • GWC water polo coacb Tom Hermstad
reached a m.ilestpne Tuesday wbm bi.I RusUen beat
Cypreu, 10-8. Tbe victorJ wu llermltad's 80tb ln a row ud it cllnched the RUltlen • l2tb 1trai&bt
Southern Cal Confere,ee title. It waa also
Hermstad'a 300tb victory. H1s record now atarlda at
300-90-S for a . 7fn winning i>ercenta1e.
llenmtad'a record over the put three yon la
97-2. Ills teams have picked up three state Utla
in tbe lastfour yean.
* * * Sadd.leback's men's croa country team com-
petes in the Mission Conference champiomhiJNS
·Friday at Sali Bernardino Valley Colle1e.
The Gaucboe, co-champions with MiraCoeta in
M i11ioo Conference dual meet actloo, bad a
OIL RLllR
WRENCH
INSTANT
WINDSHIELD
CLEANER ___ .. __
cbuee to wtD U.. 8outMna DlYllm CNWD IMt
week, bu& bowed to lllraColla, aM Prtdu. .
.. We d6dn't nm real ...U,'' lllUd ......._.
Coach Jay Roe1-. "I bave to tab mudl ol U..
blame for it. I aot us to tbe meet too early ud I
think our pys laet a lot of......_''
The top alx teams tn tlllit ecmfe.-.ce ellam·
plonahi111 qualify for \be Saul .... California m.et
-whicb wUl be held Nov. 15 at Loi Ale•• D ValleJ Colle,.. . * • •
South Cout Cooference sporta lnformaUoa
directon bav_e plcked Santa Au u tbe early
favorite to win the 1980-81 buketball ebam-
pionahip.
The Dona return just two lettermen off lut
year's club that flnlabed D-1 and Dlaeed aeeCJed ID
th4' ftoa1 IWMH)lp, but Coaeb aoDud Todd la
aayin& he's got tbe best aqu.ad ln Santa ADa't bis· tory. ·
OCC la tabbed for f~ place lbis season,
Fullerton ls picked for the No. 2 spot ud Cerrltoe
baa been selected for tblrd.
........
~:.'" 49c
JOll..OP -
Rtmovt rNO
"""' *'"'"
Clf~ns & t0n0•1IOlls Btooe
Ql'iCW>lt
PrOIKIS & l>t~rllllH Wlyt
ltllhfr ~S11C & lub~I
187
...... u
.JJ ~ .......
FUEL
REGULATOR
U•TS QI PAO fUlL -f...., .oiusi
.. bit PftUUlt HllonQI Help
-lloooono ..._... .... II"'« l*lo'!Nnal fOf fOfllQll
J110 Oomtllrc fntrnH ~ 10
reeuco -6 ... Oii """ ..,. ~~Pl'\S 819 ~ 16',.
lr5$ fAaf
f,5 REUTE •• YLV·ANIA
HALOGEN
HEADLAMPS
"' .. o..-· ... .,_ eMcW u .oo ....... c...-
.,.,. _ _L1... _,
A ---
2 1 PIECE%" socKn sn
SAf Of in«nc soeltl 5d Orop-
toroed •Hor •tat 11uteo &
ftt<U l·Cftrotnt•Pilltd VOUH
CHOICE SAE ut ~l or
"'"'"' ... eos414 8!9
-....... ---... ....... ---...-· .,..._ .. _,..,._ ..
'"""-• ., ''"'" ... ,. ,. ... ,.. ~·=598 1
IAOt
-"·-12• :=:..!..1-,-.-698 _. ... -IACH
-•i...--IACM -,.·-12• ... .... ,..,........
..-IACH
... ...... FIT
078at• l t.00 36
E70•1• 17.ICI 50 ,.,.,"
F70xl4 23.00 !>5 )J ,,,
01178113 11.00 32 11.•C•w•u
'C78••3 1700 JJ
·on.14 17.00 36
0E7ta1• 11.ICI 311
°"' ....... __ ,_
·590s 1~ 11M 31 Wt~ ~OOIC.O ,,.,.ltOf'll Of 100 Qljl#•tr
'I00'*5>15 11.IO 31 ~· •. -. ~:· ,._,~ ""'"° mrtnt ..,•14llO'ol • Of\~ ,lf~I ctu .. •IJ ·0111.1s J4,0IJ 45 lhOfOwQftt, fl'ttO.-Cled <•••"0' ... 'L18•15 :i..oo 50 i•teeted tO' ovt '•treao•no ~octn on ·~ ... 10UAS A I l>O"MAH S• ~
...................... w..-y .................. .
........ ......... _. .... rteh, .... r•,l•c•••-• .. •• WAllllAlft"f 1 /12".trflowl/12" ..... _.Me ...... ef~ef
llot ,...._ •-.. 2112", ... dl•tl-•t •* M .......... 2112".
FRONT WH•l!L
PACK .--. ..... ,...... c:... _..,...
4~• ....... Dltwc:...
....... ¥..., -·-A•t _,.,..,t
ffMl••· .. 11 ....._ ,., . ._...,
~--;o·
Puce
""-•--·•11c:w11M hdrl. l-. •ltfllCt ..... .. ,..,_ ........... ..... .............
' .. °"'......,_ ....... ,...
~ .............................. .
'~' "• .~--r~, • ""'"H• ~,., ....... ,.., ......... " "' ....,._ tU ~//II lW~"-~ ......... .,..., .,
,.. 'IOU. ..... Fl' -• .....,,_
~~ ... ~, ...... , "-• .. ... ,... ~, ..... ~.,. ..... ~~ . ..,, "'"-..
......... , ... ~ .... Dtcr~z,.o•""' """'~' ..... ~..;,..t••''"lfl"IP ·-""'""'~, ....... ,.,l"'ot~t· .. .,,.-
WMITDMLLI
FET Size
3Cl.50 1 76 F711·14
12.50 185 G78·1•
33.50 1 96 H78·14
32.50 2 05 G78·16
USO ~03 H78-15 ,
35.50 2 21 L78·1!>
~63!!~~f s 117
r~ ".,..,, ""• ..... ,<Of'• •• ,, ..... Nit~,....,, .... y,~
(OUOt•Of\ ., •• •••l'l't•l'lOh MOI~
<'0""~'"'9 PG•t' IOI' M01t C:O"t "'''°'""'..._...,.,~
"v ...... ' '"' :llll... t •VI .......... '·"'""' J) ,._.. .......
.,-J•X. ·•w ..
rit1 Wo}llot .. -4l'l(l'~.-I .~-: ,:e; '""'" .. 478 8) Wf~ laa _____ ,,.
Pnoe FET
•• '4) 2S7
31.50 254
•1.50 279
lllT[llO'fllt.llllCS -,. -ANnu11 1•cl ,., .... un • ....... o.o,. .... _...., ... ......, .......
fldt JU1tC1 VIS ... lllJ Oft IM
~-.f.0-•
PASSENGER c;AR
TIRE CHAINS
IJ • 00 (1111 •l )A
14 -700 --~ OlllO '"'° Cll,. DI',. ,~,. 288 8 1~11 Gl\71 14'-Hflll
II I 00 11111 ~ 130ll f~IO Gll10 HlllO Hllll J•lt P'Alfl
WMfftWAUS
PRICE F.E T .. ,.~ ,.,._,)
48tlltl•U t "'b ft"U 1l•llPl•••1
~,-,. , ... , .. , ..
'°11\~U
(GAJ'ta.l•t
~,, 11'Ul
tO'll .. 1S, ,.m ,,..,, , .... ,..,,.
$2.00 .....
I0.00 .....
If.II
70.00
2 02
2 33
2"
251
2 75
2 93
NO TRADE·IN NEEDED -.~~,~~.·,• 14.00 3 '1 eo.50 2.62 euo 2 84
'4.50 :113
"·~ ..................... -·'"' "°"°aka ............ IUlloA I .... UMieed ._...., ~
::: ;::!!,~--::::..:::;..~:::.:~ -...:-.=::.:= ... -................ , .... -.... .... .. ...... ' -"···· .... a..--·-.~ ............ ...,.. ............ .,."" ,, ... ·-...-_ ..... ,,.,,. . ...e
......... ~ n.., • .,.... ....... ,,.. ..................... ~ .. ..... ..., .. , ................................................. ~ ........ ...-.... ~ ................. """"' .............. _ .. "' e-. ...... ...,.. .... _
---•J!t( 1nas. ......, ,_ __ °""
... a.-.
111)\(, ... "\ .... ..... ,,.., ... ,..,,. Jll •• t 'I
Or 90 Days Same As Cash
in 3 moc~ with .,.:>roved (25.00 min.) Of
terms to hi your bUdget..
1£ =
~ l
I I
: I I ! I
I
..
~elebs ·Play
AtNBTC
BJ EDnNTEL ................
W\tb • all·atar caat tbat 1Acludes oama auc:b
u Oeae Wiider, Wayne Rocena, Pat Paullen and
Tom LaUlhlin, the courta at Newport Beach Ten· a. dllll Saturday wUl look like backataae at a
wood movie studio.
eYnt that will draw tbese and other
levillon aad fthn personalities to the club iJ the
!IMICJIM!!r Memorial Toumament, a beneftt for the
<IDrana deJ Mar Hilh sports acholanbip fund, aet
ill memory of the late Bob Spooner, a former
~ t.enni,a player whodled in 1977of cancer.
JO&DAN OTl'EaBEIN, a former CdM Hilb
udent body president and tennis standout, ls put·
i
' t , • .. TENNIS
. I •
EDISON-FV •••
compleMd 12 ol 21 .,..._ for 111 7Udl ....,.
• 11.• at Anabel• ltedbam-tbe ftl"lt ta..~
two1DMattbeBliA. \
.......... aeored -.. IMlow. ~ ,_ •notlMrmdWMale.s.r•tbe-•n•d•rJ.
Tbe eliDebi.nc toutWowa la 1119 IM'tla...,.... wa a •·Yard pua from Ba ' n to Dia Wbaa
witb 1:• remainiq.
tm -S.... Q,-Psvt+ Vds7 L f'owdeia
Valley bed trampled aevm atrallbt 9ictlma, four
by abutoub and was tbe CIP'a No. 1 team. B.t
twice·beeten Ediloa aboded tbe Barona md nlll
on to win tbe Sunset Leap title by virtM ol tbe
decision.
Jeff Smith caul)lt a 4tl-ya.rd touchdown pul ;
and bis interception set up Jim Judd'• c1iDcblq ' three.ya.rd touchdown run. • :
steve Rakbabanl's 31·Ya.rd keeper and a M· !
yard nm by Rey Cano were alao key on-Ive ef. !
forta for the winners, who also iDtercepted' three l Fountain Valley passes u the Barona' vauna.d ol· 1 tenae was held to .118 yards. :
im -Foutata Valley t, ~ s . The I Barons fmished the year 10.1 and outscored the op.
position, m.ffl, but were extended to ~limit
against F.dison, which finished $-5. I
Willie Gittens got the ooly toucbdowb of the I
game with 3:19 left as be skirted bia left aide. J
I j.
I Ung on the tournament matching the celebrities
"tltb local tennis pros in an all·doublea format. The I t.Ournament will run from 10 a.m. · 5 p.m.
! l "Bob (Spooner> and I were good friends in
b,igb school," said Otterbein. "He wu a senior and
I•was a jlD'lior the first year Corona del Mar won
OIF in 1975 (CdM has won Jive straight titles
since).
Edison had led since the first quarter on Mike
Haney's 24-yard field goal and appeared to have J
the Barons' number again with three recovered 1 fumbles. .
Gittens carried for 141yardsoo2t carries in a :
defensive struggle before 15,429. :
.f I
"I got a letter a few days ago from a childhood
friend of .Bob's that just kind of summed up what a
gr.eat pet.on t)e was. This friend hadn't known un-
til just recently that Bob had died. He just told me
bow sorry be was to hear the news. How he bad
chertabed Bob's friendship. What a zest for life
Bob bad."
Otterbein hopes to raise $3,000..$4,000 from the
event which will be turned over in the form of a
scbolanhip to an outatanding senior tennia player
at Corona del Mar next year.
IN ADDl110N to those already mentioned,
other celebrities who will play Saturday include
Ron Ely, Michael Dante, Pat Harrington, Bert
Convey. Bernie Kopell, Lyle w.,.oner and Bruce
Wayne.
"All of the stars will be available for auto·
graph.a and picture taking," said Otterbein,
bimaelf a celebrit}' of sorts -haviq appeared in
Hveral television commercials. "I'm happy with
the response we've bad on this thing." ~
The celebrities will be teamed with area pros,
some of whom include Bob Perez, one of the top
. senior players ·in 'Southern Cahfornia from
Newport Beach; Robyn Ray. one of the lop 35 singles players in Southern California and the
bead teaching pro at the Newport Marriott Hotel;
Ken Stuart, a teaching pro from Costa Mesa; Den·
Dis Trout, the coach at CdM High when Spooner
was playing and for three years after that; Steve
Warfield of Irvine, the pro at the Tustin Hills Rae·
quet Club; and Ted Winston. the current coach of
CdM's boys team and the pro at Newport Beach Tennis Club.
, Ad.mission is $4 for adults. $2.50 for those UD·
der 14. Tickets may be purchased at Corona del
Mar High or at the door.
In addition. a limited number of special re·
served $50 box seats (eight seats lo a box ) are still
available but are selling fast. For information,
contact Otterbein at 644·6347 or (213) 557-0533.
Mllds•rfiag Aet._.
Lionel Broderick and Scott Carter de·
monstrate their skills in a windsurfing competition recently. 'lbe sport is gaining
in popularity along the Orange Coast.
30 Boats Compete
In Mazlltlan Race
BJ ALBION LOCKABEY
DllMyNll ....... Wrtew
Top yachtiq interest centers
in Los An1eles Harbor this
weeteod as Loe AJ!l~les Yacht
Club sends. 30 crack Intern•·
tional Offshore Rule (IOR)
Yachts away at nooa Saturday
on the lltb renewal of the bien·
Dial Muatlan race.
Included in tbe fieet will be
five yacbta representing Orange
Coast Yacht Clubs.
Small boat sailors who usually
could care less about the big
offshore sailin& yachts will be
busy in Newport Harbor :with
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's
Laser Invitational and Dana
Point Yacht Club's Tbanksgiv·
ing Re1atta with small boats
sailing inside the harbor courses
on Saturday and Performance
Handicap Racina 'Fleet yachta
racing out.side on Sunday.
Abo in the Los Angelea·Long
Beach Harbor complex, Long
Beach Yacht Club will conduct an
invitatiooal race for all classes on
Sunday, and Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Club will feature an invert·
ed start race around the Point
Fermin Buoy for all classes oo
Sunday.
In inverted start racing yachts
start according to their ban·
dicap rating with the lowest rat·
ing (slowest) boats starting
first, thus providing a boat-for-
boat finish.
Regatta schedule in other
Southern California Yachting
Associations areas:
8all&a M-ica Bay
South Cout Corinthian Yacht
Club -Ladies at the Helm race . Saturday.
King Harbor Yacht Club -
Fall Regatta, Saturday.
California Yacht-Club -Ceo·
terboard Regatta. Saturday;
Marina del Rey Home Port
Regatta. Saturday_. ·s.. Diego
Coronado Cays Yacht Club -
Classic Series No. 4, Saturday.
Oceanside Yacht Club -In-
dian Swnmer Regatta (PHRF,
Sabot) Saturday, Sunday.
Coronado Yacht Club -
Longst.ret.ch Series (invitational
handicap) Sunday.
San Diego Yacht Club -Rum
Series (IOR> Saturday.
Boating Topic:
Boat Show
Attendance
Increases
The 1980 Southern California
Sailboat Show iJ biatory and pre·
liminary reports indicate that it
was biaer and better than pre-
vious sbowa.
The sponsoring Southern
California Marine Association
said atfftl(lance at this year's ex·
position was 21 perce.nt higher
than at ~previous shows at the
Long Beach Convention Center.
Part of it was due lo the better
exposition of the large "glamor
yachts" which drew long lines of
prospective buyer\._ plus the
usual curious "bull fhumpers,"
according to Phil Thurman,
chairman.
Sales at the show were also
brisk among the small. medium
and large size sail boats,
Thurman said.
The SCllA sailboat abow baa
grown to be the largest dryland
sailboat show in the nation, at·
tracting both domestic atld
forel1n de&igns. SCMA also
sponson the Southern California
Boat Show in February which
features mostly power boats of
all sizes and designs.
ProfessionalisID
lt'18-Edi.o.11, Fou&alll Valley 7. The Barom ;
were to win the CIF Bie Five Conference cham· !
pionsblp, recording a 12· 1 record in the process-but .
it was rival Edison which tarnished the Barons':
season.
Before an estimated 19,000 fans. Rick Stepben.a :
kicked a 33-yard field goal with SO seconds left for .
the winning margin. :
FO\Dltain Valley stormed back in the waning .
seconds, but a 31·yard field goal attempt failed as
Steve Davis got a hand on the ball and the kick
went wide. ·
FO\Ultain Valley was at the Edison .13 ln the ·
fourth quarter only to be turned away by a penal·
ty. Sam Centofante scored Fountain Val&ey'a ftnt.
period TD from 10 yards out, but Rob Mlluek:y
evened it at 7 · 7 in the third quarter oo a 25-ya.rd run. :
Mike Dotterer wu the leading nmner in the 1ame, ~
getting92yardsool5carriaforl'.dison.
lt7t -~ JS, ~ lala Valae7 7. The
Barons were just another milealoDe for EdilloD'a ·
CIF Big Five Conference champions and Samet·
League titlists, as Kerwin Bell scored four
touchdowns and the Chargers led 20-0 with 8:08
sWl left in tbe first quarter.
Dino Bell took the opeoiog kickoff at the eight,
banded off to Duaine Jackson at the 15, and
Jacksoo went the remaining distance. The 9'l·yard
play toot 16 seconds. Bell toot a little longer and
finished with 30 points. Bell rushed for 184 of hiJ
222 yards in the first half.
Japan Leads U.S.
KAWANISHI , Central Japan (AP> -The
Japanese team swept into a su·st.roke lead over
the United States today in the first round of the · -
$160,900 U.S.-Japan professional eolf match,:
despite the heroics of defendln& cbampk)D Tom ! Purt.zer. •
Purtzer, the defending champion, fired a .
course record-tying six-under-par 66 and took a
one·shot lead in the race for the $28,570 individual
first prize.
Purtzer sank six birdies on the par· 72 Sports
Shinko Country Club course.
. . . . .
~ . ,.
~ .. • . . .
We've taken the ads and listings that busi-
nesses use to call each other and put them in a
separate brok -The Los Angeles Business To
Business Yellow Pages. You'll find materials,
equipment and services from firms all over the
greater Los Angeles market. And you'll find
them faster and easier than ever.
One of the stormiest sessions in recent years Is
expected at the United States Yacht Racing Union
Annual Meeting in Newport, R.I. Nov. 21·2' when
the subject of professionalism in yachting comes
up for the umteenth time .
Local representatives of the Southern
California Yachting Association are already mull·
ing the contenta of the report from the Committee
on Professionalism, details of which have not been
released to the general yachting public. Inspired by a '36 Mercedes Benz. this
classlc new beauty has a GM 3.8 titer V-6
~and GM chassis. The Centaur
IS .most entirety handmade. Sculpting Of
the body. interior leather detailing and
st*'6nQ of the lncMhlck aolld mahogany
dash aiw hand done as are most of the
THE
ROADSTER
Soda Fountains? They're listed in Pacific
Telephone's Los Angeles Consumer Yellow Pages.
awlllble1n
BlllCk. Oerlt Brown.
Med. Brown. Lt. Tan
and Navy Blue
•1 26
avelllble tn Bledt.
Brown and Camel
•12s.
"But from all indications. the discussions are
likely to be comparable lo a Force 10 storm," said
Ted Hlnabaw. SCYRA representative from Lido
Isle Yacht Club, Newport Beach. '
The more tranquil aspects of the meetings will
include the election of new officers, a review of
what happened at the International Yacht Racing
Union and Ocean Racing Committee meetings,
and the presentation of national awards such u
the Herreaboff and St. Petersburg trophies.
RV ShO\,,Begins SatUrday
LOS ANGELES -With over 80 mobile and
modular boma, u well as over 800 recreational
vebiclea on dlaplay, the 28th annual Mobile Rome
and R...atlon VeblcLe Show will be held at
Dodier Stadium for nine days bestuln1 Saturdiy.
All products oo display will be the 1•1 modell,
unveiled for the first time to the public.
The abow wU1beopenfrom10 a.m.·t p.m. on
SaturdQa, 10 a .m .. 7 p.m . on SUndays and DOOD lo
9 p.m. on Sbndaya.
I . ...,.
1'1118'
WIDE AREA
COVERAGE
On8lt C..C,, ~A. C-. ., ............. c.., .
.......... ('...a,.
'17.75
luxury as>POintmenls.
Standard equipment includes; automatic
transmission, PQWer steering, disc brakes.
air conditlouiog. chrome wire wheels,
AM/FM sfereo cassette. Delivered, in
C&lifomia.. for $29,600. Tax, lioense and
documentary lees are not lnduded.
&b Lc'*'re, ll)C.
13800 Beech Blvd., Westmlnater, Ca.
..... Of -Mr. Joe.LHry -Mr. Ken Vent ttYql (714) 136o2:500 (714) ll:Mli1
. NOW OPEN ·in
FASHION ISLAND
Orange Count)l.'J
Most Complete Ski Shop !
SKI BOOT SALE
REG. SALE
• SAN MARCO (1980 Models)
VENTURA ....... 148.00 7 4.88
G LO ......... (LS) 128.00 64.88
• RAICHLE
VIVA .•......... 175.00
DAVOS ••.•..... 140.00
• TECHNICA
ELITE ........... 175.00
PENTAX ......... 150.00 * Somt! Models limited in Sizes at
Some Stores.
-129.88
89.88
FOR THE AECOAO I BUSINESS
oooe ·~...,., ...... ,
•PL ._. .. _ _..,..,
..... _.... • ._, ,_ .. y
nfl6J tO-'New V«ll Olattt>
CAI<• Mii o-WMM11t110tt Ml_..u iYt -0.lfOil
AllAft\A 2 _,SI L.owl>
.. t .. ,,_. IVt•-CleWIAnd
Gr-.. y •-r &tft Fr_l.._o 1 .. ttale~o-..._ Vork Jei.
s.ft O._ l \lt o-Denver
S..Ule>-"-Clly
~ ..... _.. t \lt o,.., Nt w Orleant
0.-1-•Vt-r CJnc1 ..... 11 Ho!UtAlfll-~=1-
USG 7 -S-ford UCL.413-rOr...,.,
· Notre o.-io-r Oeorol• fa<ll
Gffrtl• 1-N0.10 l'IOrlda
FIOrleloe Sl•te """er lllrtlnla Tac11
NMraKA VI. 1(-SIAlt. no-s
AlaMr'nA 20-UU
01110 S!Ate ¥$ llllnol•, no odO•
PUii~ VI. l..ou1tv1llt, no-·
Penn Stace 11-Nortl\ CA<ol1na St•C•
Oki•-.. over K•MA> MIC Ill gen It ewer Wl><on••n
llrlOf'am VO\lft9 "'-Nortl! Tu•• State, no
acid• North CMollna ,..., over Cl•m•on
So"tll CMollna n . Cll-1, no odd•
Baylor• over Ark.an~
Purdue t• over tow•
SMU , .... over RIU
Mlu1ulppl Slal•. Idle
Nfl. StmtlttlCI
INDIVIDUAL. L.IADl•S
&..eM11191' ..... ,.. l'C Ym. Ave. TD
Ferr .. -, R-JIO IU 1,171 I.ti It
Jaworski, Pnll 23' 140 1,92• 8.1• 11
Wtlil•. Oallas 270 Ill l,IOS 1.IO 17
Sipe, Cle• 31• 1e. 2,09 I.II 17
Montan•. SF 118 I• t•• • t? 1 Bradshaw. Poll 211 Ill l,92S I.II 11
O•n1el'°"· Oet. 219 111 1,IJI I.JS 9
Fo1.11s, so ll2 190 2.71S e 18 n
earlkwsa, All. 2l8 l:M 1,1e. 1 !O 1•
Pl..,.kell, Oak. ll'I 11 l,Ol8 I •l 12
....... ftl PH\ Ra<elvtr•
CooSMr, SF
Jeller\Or\, SO
Won•low,SD
Tilley, SIL.
Clara. SF
Hofer, SI'
Joiner, SD
C.rr. 8all
L.ollon, G8
CrobC>s, 8ul
l'C Ym . A .... TO
S2 JM 7.0 J so u s ••. , 10
SO I" IS.I 1
., ..., ll • •
44 SU 11 t • 41 4'7 II . ,
40 •» I• l l JI •11 •• ,
JI 601 H I
31 Jll ••
IAMlftlR-• . No. Vth. Av •. TD
C.mp«>ell, Hou
Sims, 0.1
Payton. Ow
Anderson, SIL.
Andrew•. All
Cribb•, Bui
114 ™ s 1 1
l'IO 890 • 1 9
M. Pr .. 111, Cle
Klno,Oak
l'N«<ll.•-C.in,AU
la.I 791 4 l
110 140 ••
12' •4' S.l
179 .,. J .•
14' •2• .. J
111 "° *.9
IU U• •·• 14' SU l.• ........ ,..,,,.en
• 3
10 s
J s
' No. Vth ......
Jenninos. NV Glanli S2 1,...i 47.1
G"Y, Oak l7 1,•22 '3.t
Prestrldoe, Oen 41 1,792 '3.7
Rollarl>, M4a SO 2, IJt 42.1
Ramsey. NV ~" u 1,11t •1.1 ........ -R .. w-• No. Ym . A ....
J. T, Smltn, ICC U 340 14.1
Bell, Pill U 117 11.•
Solomon, SF u 1u n .s
James, NE 12 10 12.t
Nelm" wasto. 20 2H 11.•
........ l(kll•lf ""-· .... Vm. A ...
Ivory, NE
Owens. SF
L.•wls, Saa
Mevtl,NO
Wr(Qlll, Clew.
U t!O Jl.I " ..,, ,, ..
11 190 2•.• ll ,., 15 1
JI SIO 1•.3
~ .. k -n
"-·SMllh,NE k·M.,rra v. O.t
k·BenirKN<a, SO
Slms, 0.1
Crl~.Bul k·altll•r
~ . ' I I ., ..
FrH Agent Llat
~
'° 10 .. .. ..
Major le-pla.,.,. wno ,,..,.. declared
their ''" aeen<Y and are •llOlt>le lor IM r•
anlry draft NOv. 13:
AMI RICAN L.RAGUR
BAL. Tl MORE -Pel Kelly, oullleloer. L. ..
Mery, dftlQnaled Niter.
llOSTON -Jim ow.,.r, OYtllelder•llrSl
DeMman: O.w R-r.u1<11er.
CHICAGO -Glenn Boromann, calclwr
CL.EVEL.ANO Dan Splllnor, pltcMr.
KANSAS CITV -MArty Pellin. P•lclltr.
Peler uCoclt., lint wsaman, Dav• Chalk,
Infielder, Darrell Porter, uitcl!er. JM•
Ordenal, oultielder
MIL.WAUKEE -8•11 O stro, pllcl!er, VK
Harri.. outt1e1oer, 8111 Travers, P•lcl!er
MINNESOT"" JOM Moreale>, Ofll(INlt·
aCI llltttr; Geoff Larin, PtlC\lef, Mike C-
DeQa,lnl-r. NEW YORK -GAylord Perry, p1IC11er
Johl!nnv Oatu . c atcner. oo .. o Bord,
p11<Mr, I.uh Tlanl, pltcl!er.
OAKL.AND-JIMEulan,cMCN<
SEATTL.E -J.,.n Beniquez. outtle-r,
8111 Stein. Inf•-•. p11<11er Daw R-rts,
Marc Hill, uilchet
TEXAS -R..sty Sta..O, de•lon••ect l\lller,
a .. d Harr•IM>n, lnlle lder. Ed F•guero•.
pitcher; De'"' R-rts. catcher
TORONTO -Stave Br•""· outlltide<,
Roy Ho..,.11, Infielder
NATIC*Al..L.I AOU•
A TL.4NT A-CNrle•Sttlk ... 011tltelder
CHICAGO -Un Ranclle, Infielder ; Olek
Tl•row, p1tc11er1 l.,ury 8111na r, llr\I
M .. mAn; Mic-K•llelltr, Infielder.
LOS ANIH!L.l!S -Oon Sutton, pitcher,
OultY ........ OYlfielder. MONTREAL. -Wlille Montllna1, llrsl
M,.m•n; Stan ....,_,,, pltclltr; Jolln D'Ac
qulsto pltcN r;RonL.el'IOt'9,0Utlleloer. NEW YORIC -c1a.,..1f was111ne1on, out·
tfeleler; Jarry Mor ..... 0&1tlleloer: Rey Bur·
rltl,p ltt!lff. •
PHILAOEL.PHIA -Tuo McGra w,
pitcher; o.t ~. out11a1oer
• "P1TTSIURG+4 -Jof1n Mlinar, OYtftelO.r·
llrsl 111...-; Jes• Jefferson, pllcl!ers.
SANDlliG0-0.,.. Wlnlltld,oull1t1oer.
SAN FRANCISCO-Mike~-. calcher
IN ctlllolm Open .................. •i.ni ...... T-Smkl, ..... •4; "'" H~l.C9t.H¥0!d ~.•·t.•·I; V_,
1110 ......... ~ Krel\ll, '"4, H , 6·1; P ... I
Mt...-41tf. HeM Pfltter, w, t.-2, ,....i
YIOlt "'-' ... C-11\ O .... y. t.-4, ..... ;
H-ti-.... R*" v.,n HM, .. t, M ; 9rlM Otnfr'IM ... Melt Wlllllllltr, J.7,
1·S,t-I.
Thl8 WMk'• Trout Pt•nt•
I.OS AN81 I.IS -819 Rock C< .. ll,
CHt•IC I.••• Crystal U.kt, El Oor.00 Park.
Laka, EU.-111 '-"""· H-n ••••VOi<, J•O-I.Me. Pyr...-id U.ke, San GM>rlel
Rfvar IEaJI l'orlll.
O•ANM-1..AO\ina Nl(lual Park L.ek•.
SAN •••NA•DINO Mojave N•rrow•
P1r• UQ, Sllve.-RHetvolr
I llll•SIDI -Slllnner L•lle.
YINTU•A -Plrl(l..Ake.
SAN DllGO -c .. yamaca Re .. r•olr.
OcHlna Pond, s.n VIC.nit Reservoir
Deep Sea Flatllng
NIWl'O•T IDevey'1 1.ecllerl O
anei.rs: n 11onho, lS bass. 131 roci. cod, I cqw Cod, 141 IN(Qrel. ,.,, •• U~I -n
anolars· t IM$l. 2 mecurel, 112 rock cocl.
DANA ....... -63 anolen. 2• Deu . JI
rock li\/I, JlO mackerel, 10 rock <Od.
AVIL.4 UY (~ 5-Ltlltl -ll •"Ille".
lll rock cod, I lino cod, 1S rna<lleral.
SAN DllGO (l'I_,_.,, H&M La•
I .... l'eilll '--' -9 4'ft01e"' I DOnilO, l2
l>au . Ml mackerel, 11 rock hsll. ChlAMli•I -
•1 anoler> W DOn1lo, llO m•Cke<el, 11 calico 1>au. IS. rocl< lis.h, I 11"9 coo. ••Srock
cod. OCIAN"DE -,. •nole r> JO..,.., WU ••
calico l>au, 9 rock llSll, 120 nwckerel.
L.ONG llACH (Qllfffl'1 Wllarfl .1'
•no1er1: 37 #1\lte SH bass. no ca11co wu.
lS n•llt>ut. ,_ Pieri -11 •nol•" lOO
roc9' COCI, 1 COW COCI
SAN l'EO•O (UM SI. L.llMliftll -10
1119leo: l w1111e ... oau. a tl•lll> .. t, Ill
<•lico Den . (l'WU 0 ' C.111 -SO ar191ars IH
1>onllo, 82 calico bass. ltl rocll cod, lit
mKkerel, Ill rock lt$h, 1 blrr•cuda ..
S••L. aliACH -'1 a119lers S.S roo cod,
1 so mu•erel. ! calico ban. RIOOMDO -SI anolers 1q5 DOn1to, lit
callco baH, US m•ckerel, us roo llSll.
.. ,.. -JI anolers: JIO mackerel. 101>onllo,
U rock lls.h. MA•INA OIL. REV ]1 anglers J1l
ro<k'Cod, 17S nwckerel, 120 l>onolo. IS u11co
oass.
SANTA MONICA U7 an9ler\ ,,,
m•ckerel, 45 send wu, 17 1>on1to, 3 hahl>UI,
102 ""'"'n. MAL.laU -!O anglers: l!O ro<lt. cod, 15
c•llco ban . 10 ....0 l>aU, SO rock 11>11, JO
m•<•eret.
NBA
WESTERN CONl'ERINCE
~Divilleot WI. l'cl. Ga
SanAnlonoo
Ul•I\
Denver
HOYston
ICans.sClty
0.11 ..
11 J .le. a s . .is 21-i s 1 '11 s
••. 400 5
' ' .400 511; 2 II .IS. t i'>
Pacific Olvi•lell
Pllo.nl• 11 2 .... -
.......... 10 l .1•9 1
Goloen St.ti• t s .6 IS l s.n 01eoo s 1 .• 11 s•1t
S.alllt • 9 .400 • Portland • I .333 6'h
IAST••N CONl'IERIENCI.
A ..... lcDl.,llleot
Plllledelpllla 10 2 .133 -
New Yor1< 7 3 700 2
Boston 1 • .t» l \I'>
N-Jartrt S 9 .»7 6
WaSlllnoton l ' 150 1
c.Mn1 DlvlslM
Mllw ... k .. .... , ....
ClliCA90
"""•nl• Cleve,_
Detroit
II l / ..
I S •IS JV;
S 1 .411 5
s t JeS 5'n • 11 ,., ,.,,
2 II 1S4 IV. •• ~··Sc..lloston ICM, At'-nlA ti
Cllk-t20, -,,., .. l' 10S Pllil-pflie 107, O.troct 103
S.n .-.-1u , "'-ni• 14
KaMUCJty Ill, Ntw'YOl'k 101 S.n~l11,"°"'ton 1C)ol
Goloen SIAC• '°'· 0ew1-,. S.attle 12S, Oen.,... 111
T ....... o-
Dallas at W..,..ift9lon
Clevel-alUt.all
l'riMy'•O.-
uunat 0.11 ..
Mllw-" •t eo.ton
K•n$AS Cily •I PT\il-lpl!I•
0e1ro11 a1 W..,..inQlon
At1a111a •• Chi090 New Vorl< al Denver
Golden SIM• ., Poflland
San 00990 at Seattle
College
All!lelH In Acloon 61, Ne••d•·Reno lS
NHL WA~SCONl'ERENCE
Nwril DIWl•I•
Kl ... s
Hartford
Montreal
Pltut>ur!jll
0.lroll
W L. T GF G"" Pb
10 I 1 6J lS 21
SS l 4'1 5'U
s • I !O •1 11
• 1 2 S060 10
2•t .05'5
-~ 11 .. 11.10
MlnMM>I•
Toronto
Outt>ec
Bo\lon
• 2 2 0 JO 11
1 1 2 0 1'1'
1 I SS SO IS
I ,
CAMl'IELL. CONFEllENCE
Patrl<ll DMti•
Ptliladelpl!la
Ca1941ry
• J • s s s NY l,tlal')dars
WatlllftQIOfl
NY Ranoer1
.. , s
3 9
SmytM Divis!•
SI. Louis
Vancouver
Chlc•oo
Color-
Edmonlon
Winni-
• 3
1 • s s
5
I •
...,.., •• S<MM
ICl119t 5, WASl'llft9lon l
Tor onto l, PltuburQll 1
llullalo S, Celor-3
Naw Yori< RAngers 3, Ctllc-l
St. LouiU , HArllwd I
Ca1941ry 5, Winni-s
V•nc-r•,Edmontonl
T""""''•Geft>ft ICI ... a l PTlll-lpllia
New Y-ISianders •I Bolton
MootrMl al a.troll
Hartford al Color-,.,...,__.
Ed..-en et Winni-
Min-a at VAn<ouver
1 SI ll II
l SI SS IS
J '9 SJ ll s Q., 11
2 •7 ...
l n '' 1• , s. ., ,.
l S.S4 1S , •9 51 .. s J'1 ... ' • 0,. •
0.lc T,..
WIONHDAY'' •Hiii.TS CIMll .. D-MY._1 Ii'• .. ......._,
l'lrtt •«• -9H<h W•I• (Pt.re•>. ''··· 1.00, • . .O; !Utl,.. ""411• IV•leftl~l•I. 1.•,
1.40; ICnlQllUy AM-(,,_I, 7.60.
Second r ace -lloml>a y eomlller
IOltvArHI, 6.«I, l .IO, J.IO; lmorntlve lllfft
(llalen1\itlal, l.60, 1.60, SOldler't O.nur
CLlpl\aml, l.«I. U Dally Douo1a C~I paid
Mt.60.
Tt\lrd •«•-Fort Royal IC..nlr;olal, 11,«I,
S.40, · • 40, Ol"lllOUllMd Genl IL.IPNml,
s.20. S oo, Vent C.k• IOllvarnl. U.IO.
Fo.,rtll r.c• -00n·t Forget cTorol, 4 . .0,
J.20, 1.IO, Donelle (-). 1,IO, 4.IO; Ret~
cent L.IMIY IP!tr'ell, 1.60
Flttl\ r.ca -Gorni<N H11uy ITorol, •.JO,
l.IO, 2 . .0 • .R•vlno (51-rn.k•rl, •.oo. UO;
F1orde11woa COltvarnl, l .ii U eucta (W I
p.old lll 50
St•tl\ ra<• -I Goe 5-d (Jone>), 9.00.
S 40, l 60, Pete'• 0.vll IOllvareSI, IS.IO.
1 60, R•Del!Olli L.u IL.IPMml, 4.00.
Sa••ntl\ ra c e -Tra lllc ·P•ttern
(Ramlre1I, t oo.• .O, 1.IO, Once For Slew c Pierce I, s 00, l 00. Ocean C11amp
(Cu1ante1.i, 1 .o U .. ac1a U·l l p.oid "°' 00 U Pio Sia (4-1119 4·SI e>a•d U,OS1 • .0lo19
.. 111n1r>0 1ooe1> l>1• 110r-1. U Pio Sia,..,.
~lallon p.o1d lJ0.20 to Sii w1nn1r19 ll<ltell 111•• norw>I E1911tl\ •a<• Obratt>ovy lll•len1w1a1,
11 IO. S.40, ,,IO, TomDO IC•stantda l, t . .O,
l.40. Ha,... ins 5"9c1al IJonHI. 1 10
Ninll\ reca No snrink> ccauaneo.1, "·'°· I «>. s IO, El P•ncho ... noel ITOl'OI, J .0, l .loO, 1Cran•w1l1 CWa<kerl. 9.00 UH·
•cta (l-101 paid1131.SO
Attendance IS.9lS
Hollywood P1rk
WIONISOAY'SRESUL.TS
UJtll el 7t-Mie ,._,_, -Untl
Flr>t race Primitive Streak IC•lonl.
2,80, ,,40, 2.20; MlcllHI Rlnoer IK...Olerl,
J.20, 1.80, Jtny Dots Helen ISonnevllle),
4.IO. $3 euct.t If.SI PAid l!S.JO
Second ra<a Flnal Gem IGr .. nc1v1. S.00,
J.20, 2.60. Mister G (L.19h1Mll. 2.IO, J .loO.
Silver> s1ar1e1 CL.onool. l 00
Tl!ird raca S,,,.•wd Andy IL.ackeyl, l.«I,
1 . .0, l .10, RIQ1d V•nk .. IAncMrson), 4.00,
2 . .0. ClasSIC Sotclal (Copel•ndl, 2.IO. " ...
•<la IHI paidSll 50 Four ti\ ra<e R•-<l!en (EMJurl. 9.40, 5.60,
•IO. EKUOt<O A ICr0911an), 4.60. l . .O, Can·
ny 8rel N IWllllam>I, t.20
Flflll r«• Olrecl Gold N (Parurl, 2.80,
, 20, l 10. Tiie Yank A I Rownl, 2 • .0. J.10,
Bu .. tor1 N 11cue1>1er1, l 40 u eHcta 11.))
PA1d '11 50. S1v111 race A Andys Foroell•t>le
101 .. nl, 11.60. J 80, 4 oo, Ou« Un Dale IEMlv·
IUSI, l 00, 1 80. A -AlldVS Un.,la
(Goular1el, 11 loO, J 80, 4.00 A-Coupled
S.ven1t1 race -l'll\HI Dert>y IP•rkerl,
s IO, 4 eo, l 40. Jame> MIH•on (ICeaysl,
1• . .0. I 40, ~r IC99 N CL.onool, 7.00. ll
Hacta C~JI p.old $322.SO
U Po<lt Sl• ll·l·S.1·1 SI PAIO '41• 60 ""'" •t
wlnn1r19 tlCkels (SI• norwsl u PIO Si• c-
wlallon p.okl 511.0 w1tl\ 61l wlnn1no tlc•et$
Ill•• llOr\oe\l U Pklt 51• ,.;ralctl conSOI•
lion paid W .60 will! SI• wlnn1no tlcui.
(lour llor--scratch I. El91\1h race -8ye Bye Arnie,,.,,.,.,_,,,
1 40, 2.40, 2.10, Tiie Ttllily Tl!avage
CK.,.l>lerl, 220,1.IO. c...1 .. 11IBAkerl.2.10.
Nlnttl race P-r•ll• (8er1raml, Sl.00,
15 . .0, 9.lO; HOiy Gord IL.onool, 11.40, •.10;
M191\l\I L." N (Rlcl!moncU, l.20. lS u acl.a
(•·IOI pald ,I, .... 00.
Tenln race -Wln•oma Boy A !Son·
ne•1liel, 9 olO, •.to, 2.IO; Sir N"119nt 18ake<I,
J.IO, J.00; Brlillanl J.ckie (Pan<erl, J.60. U
u act• ,.._,. p.old '11.00:
Alllndiln<e -S.191.
Women'• Yohyball
cou..IEM UC l<•lne oet ~ State Oomln-r Hiii• •
I S-t, I Soll, ls-4
JUNIOR COl.Ll.01
0 r •"911 C:O.St def Santa Ana, 1 S.9, I s.11. , .. ,.
,
Weter Polo
HIGH SCHOOL.
~View •• i..e. AIA ... 11 ...
Lo• Al•mlt01 I 1 I , ....
Ocunllltw I I l ~
Ocean lllew scorlno l(ra1.1w 1. Nady 2,
Wallace 1. K•rl I, Soul• I
'"'-111, HIMtl .... 2
Hunt1r191on Bffcl\ 1 I O 0-J
NewPor1 Har110r S • l S-11 Huntlneton B••ch uoring Andel1n l,
Wrt91\1 I Newport Hart>or scorlno 0 •111•11• I,
Riley •· H•nun 1. Gollord l , WilM>n " Woolfolk 1, Salva1ore I
-V•lleY U, Edi-• Ed•M>n l 0 1 2-t
l'ounl•ln Valley 1 J 3 J-IS
EdfSiOn 1o<«•nQ Gr•n..m 4, PeterJOn 1,
Sutton 1
l'o .. nlaln Va ll•Y ><o,,n11 CAihoun •.
O.mpMy J, TWY"""' 1. Elder l, O.rYQ> I,
FOl'd 1, 9r._,.1,~ I
~11,West-I
Marina J I 2 S-11
Wulm1r11t•r J l t I-I
M•r•n• tcorino M iiier S, P•nom J, Oen-
ney l, Rel!M 1, M Hill I. B
Misc.
Wednead•y'• TranHctton•
8ASIULL
~ ........
KANSAS CITY ROYAU -Slontd Dave
Cll•lk, lnlltlder, lo a -ve•r contr.ct .
NatleMll..e ...
PHIL.AOEL.PHIA PHIL.LIES -Sloned
L.erry Ovlsleftt«I, pltcller, to e OM·YMr
contract
IASIC•TUL.L. .. .._ • .-.It • ._ .. t ....
L.05 ANGEL.ES l.AICERS -Pl«aCI 111*11
C.rter, ....,d, on tN lnJIHeCI lltt. Attlveteel
Tony ,IKkt«I, OV-nl.
W-lll'tF1 ... 111eMt ......... H._....
MINNESOTA FILLIES -Wal-OcNWY
Slmt, lorwcM:enter. NEW JERSE\' GEMS -Wal-Re.-
llenj1mln •nd Di•"• 911>er, torwerth;
El•llle C..roll, ~; And C.Uty 1 ........
evard•l-anl.
ST. LOUIS STRl!AK -Slo"" ,...,1
Moore, torward·o.,•rd. RtlHMd Marie
Riley, lll'Afd.
l'OOTIALL
MatleMI ..............
OlllEN llAY PA<;KERS -PIKacl .....,
AnoerlGll .,.., Gtot"ea Cllmt\', 11,...o•n.
91iddy A)'dei.t\e, eff-lve lint-; ...
Sfeve At-Ins. "'""4ft0 tNtk, Oil IM 1111.,,...
• , ... ,... ll•L ........ Slim HUM .... •r1an
C-•I, 1i-•ert. Actlwa lM .. Jao-.
9111rd, and Vk•o lt•Y ...,...,Mil, r1111lllna
~-. SAN 01eoo CMAltGeM -1'1-.cl ~.ml
Klflt, llntW<•tr, °"Ille 1111"'" ,. .. rve Ila.
•"lvaltd c;.,1 MCO... llftfllllOer . ..oac•Y ........... ..., .........
ou111:c; NOROIOUH -L....O a.try Hart, ... -. to ...... lc .. 11 .. tlle
•-ri(Oil---'lf.=.
...,. ,._... 19Ccw L.Nill9
ATl.ANT,A.(Hll" AC-"ltff P ... 1 C1111• ......... ,,_ ... c:.i,.ry ..._..
Ill'• 111111..,_,. "91 .... Cfltke .... c.-,
Lot Al'tMLP .AtTICS -A.-..e , ............. Of ....., SM<t, elrt<W .. _. ...... .,.,..._ ..
~.NcMmberl, ,..,
•• A. IWf•aa bu been appointed dirfftor of material for MSl Data Cbrp., Colta Meta.
&• Geeli•H la natJonal sales mana1er for
ARCHIVE Corp .. Colta Mesa. 'Jbe nrm makes and
market. ~bnoloCY tape products.
Onge Cl&J 8aak bu opened a . Huntincton
Harbour &ranch.at 4972 Wamer Aw.
... 8-hleu Partl, Huntinetoo Beach, baa
been purcb&aed for $S million by 1h• RoMDberg
Real !'.It.ate Equity Pundl Corp., San Ffancllco.
MleUel Eaen, Dana Point, ii vice.president
of property manasement for J . R. PbllUpa Co.,
Inc., El Toro.
Kana Ace.&• is production mana1er for PC/W
Advertisinc, Santa Fe Springs.
Cows May Aid
Energy Crisis
From tbe Busleeu Wire
LOS ANGELES -Cows, doing what comes
naturally, may bold part of the answer to America's
energy crisis.
No, scientists haven't figured out a cheap way
to run cars on milk. ·
But at an experimental facility in the Imperial
Va lley, scientists from Southern Callfornia Gas
Co. and Pacific Gas & Electric Co., San Francisco.
have been awarded a federal grant to evaluate the
commercial prospects for converting cattle
manure into methane, the principal component of
natural gas.
THE PLANT RAS BEEN operating for two
years using the wastes from 75 to 100 bead of cat-
tle. Employing a process called anaerobic dig es·
lion, the facility produces about 7,00<k:ubic-feet of
methane daily from a ton of manure.
The U.S . Department of Energy recently
authorized a J32'7 ,000 grant under the synthetic
fuels act to expand this research program to study
the economic. technical and environmental
feasibility of building and operating a commercial-
size plant.
Such a plant would produce as much as 1.8
miJlion cubic feet of methane daily from 100,000
bead of cattle. The gas would be dist.ributed by
Southern California Gas Co. and could supply up to
67 percent of the utility's residential customers·
gas needs in the Imperial Vall~y.
PRODUCING METHANE from cattle manure
bas an economically attractive benefit.
Once the methane has been extracted from the
manure .. what's left is a virtually puturhed by-
product that ii roughly equivalent in food value to
high-fiber alfalfa bay and could be used as a
livestock feed supplement .
A recent study shows that methane from
man~ can be produced for aa low u $2.11 per
million British thermal units, with credits for the
by-product. Thia compares to $2.40 per million
BTUs -the current average cost of purchased
gas distributed by Soutb4'm California Gas. Co.
If research of manure-to-methane conversion
continues to show positive signs, cattle may be
contributing more than just meat and milk to
California families.
Air Fare Down
OAKLAND (AP) -World Airways has an-
nounced lower fares on its flights between the
United States and London. The Oakland-based
airline s aid thjs week Its one-way coach fare from
Washington-Baltimore would be $270; from
Boston, $250; fron New York-Newark, $260; San
Francisco-Oakland or Los Angeles, $375 and
Honolulu, $480. First class fares were not changed.
Mini Office
For '20 Mo.
P 0 B ox Msgs. Pl<.gs & Sec
3857 Bitch. 0 C Airport
M•wport IHCh
Ca 92660 7141 S.9-2287
The Post Box
radio pager
WIDE AREA
COVERAGE
Or11Ct Ceuty. L.A. C...
Cy. SH .,..,.. .. C..ty.
RJnni* <'..-Y.
'17.75
ilil~'(,f ( 1 ll 'I' ,
• , , , r 1 1 1 t i t t' •it ~'\of
'' ~ \ 11 I ''I .. n,.
C•a;t'w A .... aU.. IM., lrYiM, • .....,,-.a
it baa llped an aareement for .. •c•ed c:d7
line wtUI United Calllonaia &Mk, I.GI Aqel•. Tbe
a1reement, effective Nov. 1, "Plaeet a previous
loan commitment with S.Curtty Paelftc Nat.ioDal
Ban.It and cttJbank, accordial to a re'leue from
the firm. ·
International .Maintenance Or1anl:utioa Ltd.,
a FlllOl"-Dudel company, bu been utabllahed to·
perform Indus t rial maintenance services
worldwide. Daniel and Fluor UC are 1ubllldlariea
of Fluor Corp., Irvine. :SA
WMUED
DIAMONDS • GOLD
Jewels by Josepl'I purchases diamonds gem-
stones gold and Stiver from P_t111ata ind1111<1u1la
and estates Careful e11arn1nato0n and evalu.
toOn by our experts Hignest prices paid 10-9
daily Sat t0-6 CIOsed Sunday Phone today
Ask tor Betty Grace or Doug Kennedy
• JIUO<llO'< OI l•U\I r()f. Ovl~ o0 •IAM
Jf:Wf:LS by .JOSf:PH
South Coast Plaza. Costa 540-IOH
Mercedes-Benz
Inventory Cl~arance .·
D ue to the immine nt 3rrl\al of 1hc 1981
models, we can now mak,· !>Om t: \ef ) spi;cial
in\estment opponunitiC'i 3\31l:thk to those indivi-
dual-s who 4uality. Y 1lU can CnJO) dri\ing a n1:w
Merccde,·Ben1 right no'-' for less tha.n you
thought It that prop,1-;ition intrigue-. you .. then
the tc:st dri\le will show you the perfect 'olu-
tion to transporation inflation. Att n..i~
M~~,~!,~~~-~~~ ®
28701 Marguerite Parkway (1·5 Avc1y)
(714) 831-1740 (714) 49~-1700
CALL MITZI WB1S
ABOUT A SECOND
TRUST DEED LOAN
UP TO 5500,000
Newpor~E~~~~~0!,.~~1;,!:'c •
(714) 760-6060
$50.000 to $500.000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• lnlere•t oftly P9V8Mftl ., __
•C-•ncial
• R-W-tt.I
• Weekly co••ltaetlt•
• llton .. 1ly t.ndlnt1•
e 6 -•It• lo 3 V-H • Sotltltern Callfornu
( If l1U f IUf
lo.,1 lnfona.llon -rvlce
lnr \.our hn.tnC\ntj Ot"l'd'
(714) 759-1515
AllllflUCAN HOME llllORTOAGE 130 Newport Center O•••e On19n Plaza
N••P0'1 Ba1ct1 Caillornoa
92660
Earn Money Market rates ·
ancl get ca5b lWhen JOU need it.
Bonow up to'°" of JlDW INllance on any $1,0 14. 79 for an annua~ percentage rate
certificate or Money Market account with our of 9~.
Savings Account Loan. Vou avoid the interest Stay Uquld and fle.xlble in times of money
penalty for earty withdrawal. And your entire market rate changes. Have ready access to
savings keep earning Interest at their estab-your money for the next opportunity. We can
llshed rate. transfer funds by mall for you from banks
R...r et an annual ln..,.1t r.te of and ot.her savings associations. Call or write
)Met t" more then ~ ec:count ..,.... today.
'For eompte, borrow $1 ,000.00 from an ,. ... , •• ,..,iet1t111 r..,,,. .. 111 1n1arffl ,.,..ny • ..,,,
60 ba k wlVMtrewei fNm C8fttfl<118 act-ll. Mlnlm11m ifttarnt 81 account. days later you pay <: <MttH111e<tlftttA<c_.L._,, .. ,,oo.
REPUBLIC ~~J.!.~LSAV1NGS ¥
~ ~·,
aNffAAl'(A 17th St. West d Newport ftttwey (714) 541·~86 ~
I ~ 202 AMhefm Pl.IM.~ N. Eudd St.fil714) 9'6-8290 f§=LJC-· LMU'tA "9GClll. 30212 Crown v.leY ~ 714~'° .. ,......,.. 134 Westml~r f!W/Botu G fwy. (714) 894·5347 ::::::::::
"-4 Oftlce: ALTAOEl"1A .U46 N lAke Ave. (213) 791-1281 / 681-6611
ALT~·~• NJtCN:N.. • IU!Wt< • ~ • ~ HVClHT1 • ~ NIClOfL • LOIN'ULES ~~·~M ·l'tCOM£M •SN'O'A~·WEST--TfJl·~ttJ..LI
.I
lassie Car Backward takes ita message
1.r_,,of protest forward recently in
.... -i Williamsport, Pa. The car, a COIDIJlaation
,.t· .of a 1929 Model A Ford and "Woaclie" 1ta-
ti on wagon, bas the body mounted .........
I~
I
I
I
Annual yield on one to three-year
investments. From $1,000 to $500,000
secured by California real estate.
Investments avaUat>le for:
lndtvtduals• Pension Plans• IRA-Keogh
Cell direct °' collect '°' lnfonNtlon
(714) 975-1010 I:
I W Diversified
Financial
Consultants. Inc. I 4590 MecAnhur, W'9 &20 •••port ...... CA-I Name _The_ CompMy It Pays To Kno..
L-I Pnone Oay ______ Evllnings _____ _
• Address ----------------~1~~·;... _ ..:,:.. .:. ..;;J
bac•warct livinl an appearaaee that the
car is...., t>.ekward. 1be e,,_-eour.at.ey
Eapry Tour• ia betq t*en to proteR,
apomon ~ the ear 1ay,. th! direetioa of
tbe ~·· mero policy.
' ...... , ...... to•umta
... t ..... ~··· -, .........
-co....a.1•• ........ \ .
Tak.-eemmttmeet .....,._ .....
wltll'--
•0ranse County Properties
~and Lt>ms up to t year
50% ~ .,...aiaal
-Up to $750.000
Heritage Bank
2171 CAMf'US OAIVE
llWINE. CALIFOAMA 12113
CONT ACT: .IE.FF JOHNSON
( 714) 133-3700
V\le've taken the ads and Ii.stings that busi·
nesses use to call each o ther and put them in a
separa te book-The Los Angeles Business To
Business Yellow Pages. You'll fi nd materi~Js.
equipment and services from firms all over the
greater Los Angeles market . And you11 find
them faster and easier than evn-.
Dining room sets? They're listed in Pacific
'Riephone's Los Angeles Corwrner Yellow Paen.
·'L!.~ ~:I• I.""·. Ar ..
In thlt wondtrf•l
eouat)' ot oun all ot • ere 1uar•nteed men)' rllltt• end prt.U.,. not en]o)'ed everywhtte .••
ean wortblp whom we pluie, apeak our mlnda
without fear and our
property eaanot be 1elsed
without due pniceaa of
law.
Another oee of your
MH)' freedcuna la tM rl1ht to chooae the
pertlcul•r ph1rm•cy you
want.
Wben a phyaldm pr.-
aerlffl • meclJ~IH h• un ellber piton• tit•
particular phanuey you
with or tw cu ~ tlle
prt1crlptlon to that
ptaarmaey fOW'Mll.
1 YOUR i>bt'TOI\ .. CAN
PHONE US wbeti you /lftd a medtdnt. Plt'k "P ··1our prHerlpUon It ......... ....,..,,., -.. •111 · cle1lHr promptly wttltcNt extra .,_., A trt•t m•nJ · peopt ..
tfUruat U1 wltlt t•tlr
preHripltoN. llay Wt """,....,_.., ......... ,, ...
.... ~ f.\ ............. . ., ....
~p·tf OOd~k ~NJ;tt
_'.' E~, Popu/.ali,on 1Wea to ContUa.
.' I or..,• Coat,, reeoverin• The 1rowtb will be fut.er Ulm fw lncllcated bf u wmplor• ••1 ,,._ u.it ._ ......-lD con-tbe rest of California, but •lower rate averqtns cloM to 4,....
1tn.U. 8M durable 1ooc1t than previous yean, Jallow COD· tn 1181. lledia famllJ law II
.................. Hped.ed to teodl. Hpeded to rlM pMt --.. ..--,e.~~eount)' The need for •killed qd pro-1181, ---to U.. toree.t. iaCihfalilalied Rove· feealonaT worl:en In nduatry teeptnc tM county naked tllArcl
• ._........... wlll remain 1tron1 In 1•1, and amoq tbe atate'• major ar.a.
'"ftil ...e,y wUl be a m.-touriam in tbe area ta expected Retail aalel wtll lm · wtdt la•m. or eommerelal develop· to keep employment relatively a aublltantial p1a ol ~CWlll
••· fonlp taveatment and hi·~· to reaeh a volume ol mon than toraaUea al lldlll·teelmoloa in-Oranae g ounty economy Sl2 billion tbe report eotea ...,._ • tbl year alMad.'' Dr. created 21,000 jobs In ltlO, and ' · aa,.-JaUow, 1enlor vice another '3,000 will be added in "Tbe outlook for Ol'aqe ea...
r.1111 1 Md elalef eeonom1at ol 1111, mostly in service_.\Jn-ty In tbe •• la favor•._ lD
..._. Califonlla Bank, laid in duatries, li&bt manufactuna1. terms ol sreater bul..._ op-
U.. tt.M'a ~c forecast re-and wboleule-retaU estabU.b· portunitla, more fOl"eip an.t-
leaaedtbla week. menll," Jallow said. ment and lar1er ftnandal re-
A ~ labor market will be source.," Jalk;>w 1ald.
·~because ~lnl
COlta haft rtleD Rbetantially It
it udbb tbt 1111 will brinl •
atroa1 reeovery fort.be comty'1
.._ ... laduM.ry," Jallow laid.
• 'Rou•i•I permits are
foree ....... to iMntaae 12 percent
l• tMl from the low 11,500 Mtlm....S for 1*, and ~inl priees'will~uetocllmb. •• 11tat wW belp accelerate the
tread ol the )Mt decade, when ta. eouaty Malted to 1bif'l from
Ml•I a "bedroom community"
for COllDllMlllel" lnto 1.-Anteles
-t• betas a job center, with wonen eommaunc to jot. la
Oranp County from other
aelJbbot'lat couatlea, the eea•••• .aid.
•1'90tJOll tJda tread will COil·
tlaue bl 1111, population will eoatiaue to 1row rapidly. naehlal 1 • ., .. -ln 1181 and Oft!'
··-·-..,. ..W-1-." be said.
U.S. Harvest Pace
Ahead of Last Year
WASHINGTON (AP> -The harvest of the natioo'1 grain cropa
continues well ahead of laat year. particularly for tbe con
harvest, which ls nearing completion, the AaricuJture l>epartmmt
reports.
Some heavy rainfall in the eastern half of the natioe lut week
slowed field work, but most farmen are ahead of schedule, of.
fictals said.
The department said that the com harvest in the 17 majot pro-
ducing states wu 86 percent complete by tbe end ol tut week.
That is well ahead of last year's pace of 54 percent at t.bil time, u
well aa ahfad of the average of 71 percent. .
The progress in all 17 com belt states was ahead of last year,
and tbe Great Lakes states com harvest, wllicb had hem slowed
by wet conditians this fall, was also makine rapid procr-.
However. some fields are still wet.
Over The Counter
MASDU...,.
~
C1'4 Pct. + 1 Up 400
• '"' Up Jl.S • s Up u .o
+ ·~ Up ,. ' + ~ Up 20.1 + .,, \JP , .. ,
+ "-Up 17.6 + Vt Ut1 16..1 + 1\lo Up ~ + , .... Up ... , + 1\lo Up u.s + ''-Uo U.1
• "" Up 15.0 + lolo Up IU + \l'I Up H.1
• '-Up l•.l + V. 1JC1 IO l + v. Up 1'.l + 'Ii. Up ll.6
+ v. Up ll.l +S.16 Up ll.1 + IV. Up ll.O
+ \lo Ut> 11.S +,,.., Up 12.J
+ Vt Up 11.1 + Vt Up 11.1 + IV. Up II.I
~114 -°'-Off Pc.til.1
... -I Off 11.1 l'h 'h OH '4.1 J -Vt Off IU 2A'li. -i:it:__a;r-' I 11 2'-~(;ii IJ.S l ~ Olf 11.1 2 -\lo Olf 11.f
211+ -"' OH 10.0 •v. -Vt Olf 10.0 •v. Vt Olf 10.0 JV. -~ Off u
sv. -· 16 Olf t.J ~.,,, -"" Ott •.•
1Vt -\lo fJ •. , Uh -IYt U 1'--.... 1.7 2'11< -Ito OH l.J 17 -IV. Olf I.I
ltali -l:W. Ott I. I J~ -'4 Off 1.0 , -... Ott 1.1
IJVt -I Olf 1.o
JV. "' Off 7.4 l llo -v. ()fl 7.1
HI. HI. HI. HL
HI. HL HI.
9U81NIS8 I STOCKS
I I r I
' I
I •'
I
,, ........ ,
.JENNINGS SAID llOat: chief executive offtcen 'and
preaidea&s have been fired durtnc the past four years than
in any JO.year =lnce lJHB, when be be1an auclkinl and publlabinl a on auch cbanaea.
. "It is an increu sly perverse world in which there
are more ways to foul up and fewer waya to make thincs
come out right,'"aald Jenntnat. And boards of directors
day, 2*Nld. are Yer)' MUIUvetofouJupe.
Of the m8jor cha111ea takinl place. he oblerved,
are at the board.I of director level, but with fallout
ing aQ eucutive personnel further down in tbe co
ra.nb. He lilted these cban1es:
-DuaJNG at:CBNT YEAH the average siie
boards of major corporations hu decll.ned from 20 ml bera to about 12 today.
-Teo yean alO mo.t board members were corpor
insiders, or officers of the company. Today, the majorit' from outside the company, and less likely to have an -
grained company viewpoint.
-Ten years ago the board usually serve2 "legitimatise" executive actlona -to validate exec
decisions -except on. rare occasions when it bad to m
management cha.nae• under critical condition.a. ~
TODAY, THE TYPICAL board is increuiJlaly l .
volved in and spending more time on manacement. It~ up more committees and undertakes more responaibiliti .
-Ten years aco 70 percent of chief executive offi
held the title of president. Today. 70 percent or chief .
ecutive officers are chairmen. ,,
Doll"loftn.-1 rrra
N•W YOl .. CIAPJ FIMI Oow.Jolws ...
Woc.tT·· ...... s. ' • .... ~., :r,. ~~., • Tm 11"" m.» w .s1 •At+ IS UU llJ.40 114.12 111.10 111.41 ~ .. ~~.~:~.~~.~f.· Tr.ft . ..• .. .. .. ......... ... '· ~~ . ::::::::::::::::.: ·:::: ~:.
M·haf Slof"k• Did
NEW YORK !API -· S 1
AdY-T~lJ
OecllMd QI ~ = ·~, -A-..,--rf-r-.-.-L-r-.-,,.--,..--:: =' '7: ~
WHAT AMEX DID
HEW YORK (API Nov. J
T~
2S4 '" 112 27 s
·tfs!a(•
C:...-... 11.0114 cents • """"4. u.s.
deSllN tlona •
.._ 4S ClenC•. -"'·
II• J711>1tl't c-• • P'IW'd. dell"'8red.
Tltl ... JIOO #Mt81l W.. com_I .. lb.
Al ...... 7H.,.U8P'IW'd, N.Y.
MercwyMI0.00_11 ..... ~"'57·1 .. Uroyoi.N.Y.
Sllvrr
NEW YORK (AP) -H-~ & H.,,,_., .i1...,w••....,t11.•.-to . ..e.
""•••her• ... ,,., Sii.HO, off w .... l.wlu ... .,,_sit.tu. oH to.•2.
. Geld q ... , ....... . ,.,..._.....,.....
S.tect•~90lelprlusW-y.
~: ........ l hllftl ...... oH $6.10.
L9" .. : •118r-ll•lnt1 162'.oo. "" SIUO.
Pffb: cio.. Ol'9 to l\olld•y.
,, ...... , ,, .......... Off f1 .en.
ZwlC•: s.n.oo bl•. off sn.oo. s..1.00 """· · M•• Y•r•: H•n•y & Harman mi..
mHnlftl ..,..00. off SU.,.,
N-Y-: Eftetlfwr• M4llft9 ll'ICe rn16-
,,_flf119 "19.00, off$ IUO.
I Ii
'I
I.
...... ..,.. -
The Best ·for the Brightest?
By JOEL C. DON
Of lM o.11• "llM S!Mf
It's rather odd to hear Michael
jlichalchik talk about mediocrity
f!Uld reaching one's full potential in
,ne same breath.
That's because the 13-year-old
Newport Beach resident has always
tried to fend off the former and strive
for the latter.
Michalchik is a high acadcrni<'
achiever, a mentally gifted minor un-
der a program recently abandoned
:t>y the state.
The name has changed, and the
tcope of special education services
for bright c hildre n h as bee n
broadened.
f
' THIS VEAR, Mi chalchik begins his
lacadernic career as a gifted student,
under the newly mandated Girted
}lnd Talented Education CGATE> pro-
igram.
l GATE was designed as a reprieve
ifor state-supported services for gift -
iied children. The gifted student pro-
lgr a m was nearly doomed to extinc-
"tion in the wake of overwhelming ~riticism from educators, politicians
and parents.
• '·My particular objection to the Men-
tally Gifted Minor (MGM) program is
1hat it makes children feel they are ~eculiar or different," said the parent
'>f a gifted student from Newport ·~each. "Being mentally gifted should
be a status sym bol. It is not in our
society."
Politicians . in the spirit of ProJ>OSi·
lion 13. argued that the statewide
_program was wasteful of state tax
m oney. Many echoed the sentiments
~ parents of non-girted students:
udents with special mental ap·
ude and abilities are going to be
uccessful, with or without special
educational programs. 1 Cr itics or state-s upported gifted ~rograms also charge that it smacks
of elitism lo offer special services to
jome. and not all, students.
I• FOR INSTANCE, A GROUP of
4ifled students from the Newport-
Mesa Unified School District went on
exclusive field trip to see the King
ut exhibit in Los Angeles. Parents
f non-participating students 'Were
io\is. They felt all stude11ts could
ave benefited from such out-of-
lassroom experiences.
Field trips, under the new leglsla·
ton. are not supported by state
ds. ~ "They (parent critics> didn'l com-
pla in about rem edial read.Ing ~tu·
clents who went out of the
classroom," asserted Martha Gut-
i eron . past president of the Gifted
Children's Association of Orange
County, a parent advocacy group.
ALSO, camcs SAY the use of IQ
a nd achievement-test scores as the
ajor determinant for s tudent
eligibility in girted programs is limit·
bg. And minority educators argue
that the various intelligence and
i h ieve ment tests a re culturally
ased, geared to white. affluent stu·
nts .
•The word gifted. by popular defirti·
Hon, carries the connotation of having
p ecial a btlllles, a ptitudes and
uperlor lntelllgence. But for some
rsons, the word signifies being bet·
er. Gifted children have long felt re·
entment in the form of stereotypes
haracterlzing them as odd, ega.
eads and as computer-llke
achtnes.
·•A lot of people will take their
hildren out of the (~ifted) prosram
ecauae they don t wan\ th•lr
blldren to be labeled weird or dif.
ereot," tald Mrs . Gutteron.
"I knew I was dJtferent from th
lnute I e ntered elementary
r.
school." said Michalchik, a freshman
at Corona del Mar High School. "But,
I think the MGM program helped me
rit in better. I wasn't the only one
raising my hand when the teacher
asked questions."
The GATE program, to be funded
for four years. is a test : It's set to de-
termine if school districts can design
programs to answer criticism that
MGM does not meet the needs of a
wider speetrum of gifted students.
The federal Department of Educa-
tion has c onfronted the e litist
criticism by issuing a new definition
of gifted to include performance
p otential beyond I Q a nd
achievement-test scores
THF UROADER DEFINmON m·
eludes children who demonstrate
ca pabilities in areas s uch as
leadership, creative or producti ve
thinking, visual and performing arts
and a ptitude in a specific academic
discipline.
The state. through Assembly Bill
1040. has borrowed some guidance
from the iederal definition. GATE
calls for school districts to identify
a nd serve one or more of the follow-
ing c lassifi cations : intellectual ,
c reative, s pecifi c academic, high
achievement and visual and perform-
ing arts talent.
-THE PROGRAM WILL be funded
with SIS million to start. An annual in·
flationary a<ljustment is expected tcf
bring the total to $19 million in four
years. • ,,
The new legislation ls viewed as a
challenge to the educational system.
Educator's realize the survival of gift.
ed education is hinged on developing
programs to identify gifted car -
toonists and young physicists, oboe
virtuosos as well as teen-age computer
geniuses. ·
fnterviews with nearly two doien
s tudents. parents, educators and
state officials revealed a sense of ex-
citement about the GATE program.
teache r s especially feel ~he
challenge : They realize they have
four years to answer public criticism
and prove the necessity of special
education for the gifted.
AND THERE IS special interest in
developing a program that serves
students with gifta other than high IQ
or test scores.
"I do not reject the IQ test as a
meaningful tool." said Assemblyman
Dennis Mangers (D·Huntlngton
Beach), chJef sponsor or the new
legis lation. "I t hink It's CIQ l
something we need to study mort
about."
Mancers1 a former teacher and
school administrator, noted that the
le1l1laUoo was also desicned to over·
come fundln1 lnequlUet riddled
throulhoul the MOM pro1r1m.
Under the oJd fundln1 formula,
school diltrlct.a were supported on a
r pupil basis.
National esumatea Indicate that
anywhere from 2 to 5 per'cent of the
s tudent population is identified as
gifted.
Aggressive sc hool districts,
however. have admitted more than 10
percent of their students into the gifted
education programs. Others fall below
the national norm, providing special
education for less than l percent of the
student population.
THUS SOME SCHOOL districts, by
virtue of their commitment to gifted
children, have over-identified gifted
children. Ma ngers s aid.
Under the new legislation. funding
is computed by a complex formula
based on the individual district's
1978-'79 program income and
aver age daily attendance of the total
district student population. The fund·
ing formula also is based on an as·
sumption that about 3 percent of the
students should be il!entified as gift -
ed, according lo Elinor McKinney.
GATE program manager with the
s tate Department of Education.
The fuftding formula. s he said. 1s
de s igned to encour age unde r ·
identified districts -most notably
Com pton Unified -to boos t
participation to about 3 percent. With
reduced funding, over-identifi ed
school districts -including Newport-
M esa. Laguna Beach , Irvine and
Ocean View -may have to tighten
up admissions to their gifted educa-
tion programs .
Districts with 10 to 20 percent or
more enrollment in gifted programs
sbould think in terms of gearing up
the entire academic program for all
s tud&nts to highe r achievement
levels, Ms. McKinney said .... ""
THE 'STATE Education Depart·
ment will pro~ide t echnical as-
sistance for schools that have long
neglected gifted students. she said.
School districts are not obUgated to
immediately implement all of the
state's categories defining gifted stu·
dents .
Most districts plan to develop suc·
cessful programs based on the
specific talents and abilities of the
student population.
"And success means lo provide a
program which meets the needs of
the students rather than building a
pro1ram and fitting the students into
lt," Ma. McKinney said. "It means a
job of educating the educators."
Some school districts. s uch a s
Irvine Unified, have elected to SUP·
plement state funds with local money
II\ order to avoid student cutbacks
lrom the gifted program . Some plan
to keep the same number of students
with reduced funding.
La1una Beach school district bas
planned, for example, to taise the IQ
cutoff from 132 to 135 to trim the rolls
of borderline g!fted students.
''I HAVE .\ PROBLEM tellin1 a
student (lne year you're gifted and
one year you're not," said Judy
Cwlertnla, GATE coordlnator for the
Newport·Mt1a sc:bool district.
"What I am advisin~ the districts to do is to try not to stretch money as
you continue to identify students,"
said Assemblym an Mangers, who
believes norma l attrition will help re-
duce the number of gifted students.
"A program with only $19 million
can't meet every gifted student in the
state. It was not designed to do so.
"What everyone needs to realize is
a program that involves 300 out of
1.300 school districts in the state
c learly is designed to be an ex-
per imental program ," he said. He
n oted. howe ver . that the 300
participating school districts encom-
pass about 90 percent of the total
state enrollment
Mangers cites the school dropout
rate among gifted s tude nts -
estimated at 20 to 30 percent -as
one major impetus. for continuing
gifted education.
Without special attention, he said.
gifted students fall prey to boredom
apathy and depression. The classes
move at what seems like a snail's
pace for students who are ready to
propel themselves academically at
the speed of jack r abbits .
ON THE OTHER HAND, the state
sees fit to guarantee s upport for di s-
advantaged and.disabled children. he
noted. This year . the state will spend
about $106 million for physically han-
dicapped and mentally disabled
services. more than seven times the
budget for gifted children.
"We are very concerned about
m eeting the needs of the children at
the lowe r end of the <academic)
spectrum." said Ms . Cwiertnfa "We
don't always consider the children at
the upperendofthespectrum ...
She noted that Newport-Mesa
school district's gifted education fund-
ing will be cut from. $148.000 last year
to about $135,000 this year. With
declining enrollments. that figure is
expected to drop to $123,000 for next
year's gifted student allocation.
The legislation calls for greater
participation of parents in a n ad·
visory role. Parents will help the dis-
trict set priorities a nd needs of the
district programs.
Funding cutbacks to the district
will put a serious dent in its ability to
meet current demands of the ~
gram , she said. '
"I F IT GETS WORSE ~nd worse,
you have to say for ~.000 we're not
goi ng t o k eep the program
.anymore," said Or. Mary Kruse,
director of Instructional Services for
the ·Newport-Mesa school district.
"They can't keep giving you less and
demanding more."
··Four years is better than extinc-
tion." countered Lorraine Bostick.
state parent council chairwoman of
the California Association for the
Gifted. "It's difficult for school dis·
tricts to see that.·'
The association , made up of
parents and educators who support
special e<\ucation for the gifted, is en-
couragina parents to play a wider
role In the development of GATE
programs.
''We have a chance lo prove that
girtett education is viable." she said.
"We are fighting government reports
and myths. We have four years to see
if the program can work."
Ms. McKinney, of the st-._te Educa-
tion Department. agreed that parents
have and will play a key role In pre-
servinC stale-backed 1lfted educa-
tion. ''There are too many people that.
think that belnc 1lfted Is enouch and
they (brithl students> don't need
anythlne el.le," she aald. "P~ple In
1eneral don't reallae the damaae that
can be done to the 1lfted child whose
needs are not met." ._
,
Gil t e d Cliildren
.......... ~,,_
est Lafayette, Ind. -For the gifted
child, boredom and frustration with
s chool often begin u early as first
grade.
"The child who came to ldnderg~ with a
calculator" is an example of the bril t student
who may rapidly lose Interest in sc 1. says
Prof. John Feldhusen, director of Purdue
University's Gifted 'Education Resource
Institute.
"Alt.hough we have been aware of the needs
of gifted children for more than a century, pro-
grams for them have often been in.adequate or
non-existent," Feldhusen observes. But things
are looking up, he adds.
"In the last 10 years there has been increas-
ing funding for the gifted . But even so," he
adds, "for every $100 spent on the handicapped.
ther e is roughly $1 spent. on the gifted."
I roni cally. it was the same law that was
written for the handicap~d <Public
Law 94 -142> which today may assure the
gifted child equal opportunity to excel.
This federal law states that "All children have a
right to an education commensurate with their
needs ."
The traditiona l thinking on special pro-
grams for the gifted has been that "Bright kids
can make it on their own" or "The cream
rises."
But Feldhusen disputes that viewpoint. In
some communities, he estimates, roughly 30
per cent of the high-school dropouts are pro-
bably gifted or talented. And some prison
literature indicates a high proportion of inmates
were once gifted or talented children. There are
also many gifted children who have become
severe underachievers, Feldhusen notes.
S ome gifted kids probably will make it
on their own. But while this works for
some with advantaged backgrounds, it
does not work for those from disadvan-
taged backgrounds -those from poverty or
educationally unstimulating environments, he
says.
Most studies show that gifted children are
likely to be from we ll-educated , a ffluent
families. Feldhusen contends, however, such
findings may be a product of the failure to iden-
tify the disadvantaged who are gifted.
"Better than 50 pe rcent of the gifted
c hildren from disadvantaged backgrounds
a ren't even recognized as such through chan-
nels such as test scores," he remarks.
It may be mOTe difficult. but not impossible.
says Feldhusen, to identify a &ifted child before
be enters school. With preschoolers, he believes, •
parental assistance is vital in the identification
process.
0 iftedness may appear in a variety of
forms, the professor explains. A child
might be a rtistically gifted {music.
drama. art), intellectually strong
Cm ath. science or la nguage). verbally gifted
(reading and writing), creatively gifted {in·
novative) or gifted in leadership.
What are some indicators to look for in a
preschooler? Early ability ta read is an ex-
cellent s ingle index o f giftedness, s ays
Feldhusen. Others include early development of
e xceptional ver bal ability, early walking and
great energy for physical activities. less need
for sleep than the average child, perfectionist
tendencies, extreme sensitivity. the ability to
think abstractly and an exceptional memory.
Parents who recognize such charactefistics
in their offspring can help the child develop
them in the preschool years. Feldhusen points
out. ·
"This is a crucial time in the child's de-
velopment. and interaction with parents is
critical in this period."
He suggests parents provide numeroUs ex-
periences to stimulate the child's thinking and
sensory development. Field trips are a good
w ay -to a historical museum. a local
veterinary clinic, a park or library.
r eldhusen says programs for the gifted
see m to be more abunda nt in
met ropolitan areas and fo certain
states. In Illinois and CaUfomia. 'he
notes, most schools have s~cial classes at the
e lementary level. A bri1ht ~hild might, 'for in·
stance, spend a day a wee~n· projects with a
special 'roup. In some casea, the profe~sor
adds, it 1s the only time for the participants to
be with children like themselves.
"Being with other 1med children ls vital to
good self-concept development for the ilfled,"
he remarks.
The educator says most or tbe pro1rams do
not segre1ate the gifted chUd fOf' "more than a
few hours a day" -long enou1h. be believes, to
nurture the need for learning that goes beyond
the average classroom.
Feldhusen beads one of the few graduai
level programs of ·study on glfled education
the cooot.ry. Recently· he initialed a worllaho ,
called "Super Saturday," ror tlfted chUdren
the community. Children who attend the eilbt·
week workshop are challen1ed by an lntrlcate
schedule ol activities, lnctudin• compui.r work.
The orl1ln•l Reuben'•
rtstauraat on Pacific C~ut
Hll)awa,, in~ Beaela, Jult
dowa the atnet fr'OIP the Reuben I:. IM, la JO years olcl -can you belleft tllatT A .-• .., eelebraUoo wu
la order fGr tbe brabacbild ol
,.... "ch' b, Im GnJ and
8111 •e1::1re, 1be orl1lnal ......... it ... hl1hlllh'ed
by a naPalstc dinner Monday at
tbe nataunnt.
Tbe rep1u' menu wu Mrvecl
la HWll"al ... tmp, but special
blvttatiam wwe sent tC\) many
frimdl ol ti.e trio and to f atthful
cuatomert. . Nearly 500 dinners were
served dUl"iq tbe eveninl, to
both invited ruesta and drop-in
dinen. .
It wu quite a cel,brlllUon. The
three pu1J)en and thelr wives,
Aaaa GrU,..,.., •e..._. and ..., ' re, were there,
1lttin1 to1etber, and many
fol'mer mua1V1 aath,red to
talk over olcl timel iD the bar.
Two ori1inaJ employees are
stJll there -waitreues •u1l11i Bn•• and Nita Gree•, and
they Neelved diamond watches
for their service.
The three founden received
pewter platters and tbelr wives
each Sol a doaen l'OMI. And 699
... ,., ,_.,al manaaer ol Far
West Services, who started u a bartender at aeuben'a,~ received
a silver platter.
A hu1e ice carvi111 of two
swana and the words 1980-i-.
Beat Wishes, wu the focal point
of the decor, and there -.re bou-
quet. of fresh Oowen every·
where and red carnations for
all 1uesta.
Steve Header•••, the
manager, dressed up in a white
dinner Jae.Itel and ·• red bouton·
Diere, greeted the 1uesta. One
family, be noted, baa been din-
in1 at the restaurant every
,,.,......~ ........ ,.
Saturday for tbe put ao yeara.
llallllu, the m•Jlcian who
re1ularly entertaJDS' customers,
was there to do some of bia
"miracles," and Fre4 De..i.nl
and Iba SIM celebrated their
birthdays durinl the evenin1.
Mclnt08h. asked the secret ol
succeaa for bia Reuben'• and
Far West restaurant.. said be
thouebt it wu simply "the ri.-,t
thins for the ri1ht area at the
ri&ht time" lleube~·· was named for
McJntc.b (it's bis middle name)
after be anCl Gray ntpped a coin. ns.1 had decided that whoever
WbUe--~I IOIDI cm fa Newport .,..~
dant ....... p&Me
ibe Ori1119 Comt; Patn11'4Mi-lt ........... Dlabt f«
ChrtatmM eom.,...,, tbe
fund·ralaiaa evmt for tbe 1 Le••• ol Newport a.nor. nm buc• •al• bu .,ue. to.le
IO popular that ope&bil .. t
w •• compJetely 1old out -
around 3,000 cwta e1VwMd Ullo
the 'falrlf'OW\da bUild .. I to~
wined and dined and then do a
little holiday 1boppin1.
Specialty atort• from atl
acrou the country aend tdilr
wares for this sale and then In ·some \mUlual items available."
But by the time you read this,
it will all be history and you're
goin1 to have to wait until next
year. Opening night was a fancy af.
fair, u usual. Music for dandDg
' was provided by Webster's
Unabridled. and the sumptuobs
buffet was catered &y
Romanoff's.
There was. a huge table of
cheeses and fruits, another....on~
laden with exotic dessert., and a
booth dispens ing saus'le
sandwic&ies.
You could sip cappuctno or Ill·
joy a drink as you wandered
throurb the boutiques. •
Thia year 's theme W'lls
"Reflections of Christmas
Past."
Guests included SHH a ..
REUBEN'S BEARS *S MIDDLE NAME
Jolla Mlcbel, Sa•dy aad Betsy
Saaden, ltGaaJe Lawrie, lln.
AleK Scott, Dr. Meredl"
Beaver, 801 a8d Joaa Alllrk'
and their daughter. Ardl&ll Mer·
redltll, Domlalcll aad Joy
Bertoae, Ll•da a•d Dick
Beriolle, bdy a8d Jolua C.yae,
lack ud .leaa McS..aa, J ...
a•d GmclJ Rullell, Judith ud
Keltll Swayae, 8'1pervll1or ud
Mn. Tom lllley and Nancy Uv·
Mr. •nd Mra. John Mctntoell •t Afft8ur8nt'• Anntverury P•rty
Solution to Deteriorating Vb* Ethic
Dirty Ba~eIDents Hold Key
PROVO, Utah (AP) -'lbe solution to the
deterioratina work ethic in tbia country just
ml1ht be found in the back yards and dirty
basement. ol the avera1e American home,
says • piofeuor ol Organiutlooal Behavior
at BrilbaJD Youai University.
Dr. David Cberrinlton. wbo thiDQ it it
important that the YOUDI develop a atroot
wort ethic, believes it la in jobs around the
home that most children learn bulc priD·
ciples about work.
TllE PSOPS880&, author of a book to
be pubtiabed IOOD, "And Jolllmy Can't Wort
Either: Teacblq CbilclreD to Work," says
popular cbild·reartn1 theories have aer1ouaJy
confuaed most parent.a. They are "ao UDcer·
tain ol the proper course that tbey teDd to
avoid the iaaue and do notbiq."
Studies by child paycbo&oeiatl cooalatent·
ly indicate that cliacipline and Mlf·control are
essential to the development ol moral values,
notet Olenin.gton, who bu found that these
same two characteristics were also
necessary in. the development ol the work
ethic in younpten.
"But dlaclpUne is not the same u punish·
ment," be stresses. "It is creatin1 firm ex·
pectationa ol what a child should do and en·
forcing tboee expectations with penonal coo·
cem fct the child.
"TllE A•E&IC~ aeciety 1enerally
provides a broad usortment ol educational
and recreatlohal experience for )'OUlll peo-
pl~'but society does not provide )'OWll peo-
ple with the opportunity to work," be pointa
out. Ar. a result, parents must be adept at
creatin& jobs that give the child a sense of
accomplishment and make him feel useful,
be says.
Accordin1 to Cherrington, properly as·
slpinl a task la nearly half the battle. When
children are younaer and les1 experienced, tbeJ need careful lutructiom on bow to com·
plete a job. As they 1row older, they abould be
&lven repomibility for the outcome and left to
decide for themselves bow todothejob.
Eacb .talk abould be reviewed u lt pro-
1re1aes and upon completion the child should
be encouraced to evaluate the work, Cber· rinston auaesta. PU'altl lbould explain why the job needs
to be daDe, in order to help children develop a
MOH ol responsibility, undentand what is
expected ol them and feel that they are doint
aometbinlthat la necessary. ·
But, Cberrtntton adds, parent. who use
this approach should not expect their
children to do the wort without regular re·
minden, and should occasionally take a
minute th talk about the importance of the
work and bow it ii progressing.
He says it is equally important that
parents avoid uaianin1 all the unpleuant
jobs to cbiktren and that they not pve them
too many taata, with the result that children
will be afraid to be around their parents for
fearofbeingas1i1Ded "another job."
HONEST P&AISE and providing a good
example are essential, he declares.
''The positive effect.a or praise have been
so clearly shown that the value ol tellln1 a
child be baa done a 1ooct job -when the job
baa been done well -is second only to being
a good eumple," Cherrington says.
Loeen were wta.en wbell the Weilht
Watcben ol Oraqe Comity preaeated tbetr aa·
nual bmcbeon aDlf falldGa show, "If You Could
See Me Now."
Thirteen members, includiDI a family of
three, modeled fubioo.a for fall and showed off
weiaht lolaea raniinl from 18 to 1.50 pounds with
"before" pictura for proof.
Area models included PhyWa Gillen of
CQlt.a Mesa, Tbfresa Vinciguerra ol Huntincton
Beach and Unda Wylie and KatJllil.P IJSI• of Irvine. <2°:"
Can't Sleep for Ealing
CLOVIS (AP > -procea we're throwin&
Nelpbon want a drive-out the baby with the
up window banned from bath water," aaid Coun·
a fast food restaurant c i .1 m • n G e n e
bere became the sound Papenbamen. "I really ....., ... O'.._. of motorl1t1 orderlnl · feel that we in the city
lletadit lleeital
Pian.ii& WlWam Van Overeem (left) will be
performinl •tan I p.m. recital Sunday at
the Mark Cross boutique, South Coast
Plaza. 11eketa. at $10 each, are available
by eaWna .-.1533. With Van Overeem ta
Lorraine Uppold of the Lyric Opera Aa·
1oclation of Oran1e County. which will
benefit from proceeda of the performance.
bot doc• and bam · would be in a very
bur1en at niOt la keep-awkward poaiUon."
inltbemawate.
But tbe clty council
bu refuled to approve •
pl ...... eommtulnn re·
commendation which
would bave eliminated drtve·u~ws from all fut out&etl.
"It aeems like in thla
The CIOUDdl inttnacted
Lu stair to draft a rec·
ommendaUon that will
meet the needs of the
reltaurant to serve it.a
customers and the
net1bbon to 1et some
sleep.
Edwin H. Riedell, M.D.
An~• the Openmg of hit office for. tM Total Health Care of the
adult patWnt bicludmg:
. • Of/I« G~colom/
• Arthritil Voe~ TMTOpf/
• NutrWon & HVJ10Ql11cemia
• Ph11~ Ezamfnotjau ,
4120 Birch St., Suite 119, Newport Beach, CA 92~0
955-388S
Sensible Gun Owners
Cast Lot With Landers
DEAR ANN: I've read your
column about the National Rifle
Association and guns which we
published recently. I'm sure you
are right. You will get a lot of
an1ry mail.
May I give you some tbougbts
from the other aide? I, too. am a
NRA member -a life member
at that, for 30 years. So I know a
little bit about the NRA and
firearms. Let me give you three
import.ant points:
1. Just because you subscribe
to a publication doesn't mean
that you agree with ill editorial
policy. As a newspaper
publisher I certainly know that!
So the concept that every NRA
member supports the organiza.
lion's policy on firearms control is just loony.
2. I, personally, know rqany
sportsmen wbo wouldn't own a
"Saturday Night Special" and
would unquestionably support
legislation to outlaw their im·
port, manufacture or transfer.
Some of these people, like me,
are alao NRA members.
.-t ....
Lo11der•
der the theory that next they'd
com e after granddaddy's
s hotgun! Their policy just
doesn't mate sense, but yours
does -and I thank you for
speaking out. A lot of sensible
gun owneR are on your side.
Yours sincerely -BARRY
BINGHAM JR., EDITOR AND
PUBLISHER, THE
LOUISVILLE COURIER·
JOURNAL AND TIMES
DEA& llOSS: Titan yH for a
flae letter.
Aad ...., I wtU tile Nau.at
atne Auedatlea ...w I• bes
aad ....... of tile, .... Mme-
It de..-...&ed la tile 19*.
.. ,.ao..
Harbor Day School has in·
augurated a Headmaster's Cir·
cle, an organization recognizing
famllles · who have given "ex·
traordi.nary" financial support
to the Corooa del Mar school 'a
capital and endowment funds.
The new members were feted
recently .during a party in the
Big Canyon home of Tony aDd
Mell ... Mollo.
Among those r eceiving
awards of appreciation from
Trustee Moiso and He.dmu&er
Jolt• Manier were Alice O'Neill
Avery and &lcllanl O'NeW, Jolm
L ... , Barry ud A.aa Early, a.
aad A... Marie Feell, Vlace-
aad Joy McG.-.... and BUI
aadJlldJaa.ata1.
Also Bjane aad Hope Qofa.le,
Do•I ud Ju Sim...-. N._1
Baldwta, Kettla ... Jaaet ...
ta1 • ...., ... stm...-, aw •
Ju Bder, Sam aJMI Fr~
................... S...y Bl·
Uott and Jolm ud N ucy Caret.:
3. The irony is that the NRA
is, "itself, inconsistent. In the
1930s the NRA supported legisla·
lion to outlaw the possession of
sawed-off s hotguns and
machine-guns. Why? Because
they had no conceivable sporting
purpose. Their only use was to
kill people. The same theory cer·
tainly applies to the "Saturday
Night Special," which also has
no conceivable sporting purpose.
But I guess the NRA would op-
poa e a law preventing the ownership ol hydrogen bombs un~
Alcohol Talk Set
Ella.,,
IWl-slZE ......
JH ......... ctltl .... ............. •·w-... n ...... me11 Ml=••< .... ........ .. , .......
The public is invited to attend
an evening with Father Joseph
C. Martin on Monday, Nov. 17 at
7 :47 p .m . in the Crystal
Cathedral, Chapman at Lewis
Street in Garden Grove. The
topic will be "Symptoms of
Sobriety: What To Look For In
Recovery."
Father Martin is nationally
known for bis wort in the area of
alcoholism. He has been pre-
sentin« lectures and workshops
for more than 21 years on the
disease.
Ticket.a for the Father Martip
talk are a tax deductible $$
donatioo and may be purchased
at the door. .
Co·sponsoriog the Father
Martin talk is the Cr yst•l
Cathedral and its pastor, Dr.
Robert Schuller. For further in·
formation oo the Father Ma.rt.iJ1
talk, contact Bob Smith at
759·1888.
~~---------------------
FINAL TWO DAYS
BASS
SPERRY TOPSIDER
FLORSHEllV '
COLE·HAAN SADDLES
Dl::X TER
WALKOVER
NIKE
ADIDAS
TRE TORN
STREETCARS
BARE· TRAPS
KEDS
MIM'S
LADIES'
CHILDR&l'S
CLARK S
9-W6ST
LIFE STRIDE
NATURALIZER
NICKELS
FAMOLARE
SBICCA
THRU SAT.
NOV. 8 ONL¥'
BUSTER BROWN
MISS CABEZIO
LAZY BONES
DECK SHOES SLIPPERS""'
PLUS OTHERS
Inventory
on l'land
only
..
'• ..
'nvllllllllr· ... b ........
~Death b' lnstrliction
( "'1. r" J•l eo.• .., wtth a wonderful
~--..... all • .,.. I.At ....... 8¥9 •...uc.. 00 bow to set .._,., ,..._ ... Me .... w(U M 1ble to ft9d ll. I
lave )'tl to laUoW die~ ol uy mu and 4od up ...... I'• ::rlDMCI to bl wlt.houl stop· ltl"• m a ..... UM way.
1 Some~ cllrecOoo overklU. I call It dHlb •1 lutnlcl.kla. I am llMdAq llMN wllh my ear keyu la my
aDd ..._ I Id my lauband, "How do I set to
t new ftah market on~ SlNet!''
He~ down h11 paper. ''Olla¥, you 10 west
• SHwr Street two block• and then turn north ~tll you reach the treew,ay. At the freeway, go' ••t and ... " (,....._ ''EalJbh! En1li1h I You know I can't speak
oompaM. Sebabl1 leftorri1ht?"
"I have lried 1 iv ln1 you dJrecUoaa in left
and rlpt.''
I ··And?"
··And you insist that whe rever you are east
i' always on your rlaht and wett is always to
~r left." ··So? ..
"So that's not t ru e . Look, I'll draw you a
rp ap."
• ·'Oh. Lord. Fo rget it. Just ~ell me when I
iet to the. e nd of the str eet, which way do I
turn?"
"N orth . . . r a the r right. Then turn right
again and il you 'r e blinded b y the sun you are
going in the wrong dir ect ion ."
"I thought \the sun always came up in the
ea st.''
"Not at 4:30 in the afte rnoon."
. "Why do you always try to confuse m e? C
think you do that to make yourself important.''
"And why c an't you have a little patience?"
. ''Al my age, patience is not a virtue ... it's
rjs ky.'"
Where ve r lost wome n gather, at service sta-
tions, in obsc ure cornfields and on exit ramps,
-~
Horoseope
FRIDAY, NOV. 7
By SYDNEY OMAllB
we talk about t his thinl that men have about
glvina dlrec:tiooa. One woman told an unbelievable story one
day about being lost. She stopped at a s ervice
station and said, "I am tryin1 to find whe.re my
·son's bueba.ll team is practicing. I'm lookin&
for Prindle's Field."
The man s troked his chin and said,
"Prindle1s Field is about three miles west of
Dake's Comers olf the Hans expressway using
the Mill Road exjt. You go by two stop signs,
make a rig ht at the overhead and there's a
c hurc h o n the c o r ner that u s ed to be
Presbyteria n , but was bought out b y the
Me thodiat.s. Y ou take a Joi in the road and
follo w tt through td' a d e ad encl, then tum left
a nd you'll see a little rilling station called
'Fred's '."
She looked ufhnd s aid, "That's the name or
this staUon. Where's Prlndle's Fiel<l?"
"That's what I'm getting around to telling
y ou. You're there . It's behind the station."
Me n !
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTHY
'*""'•W...t ........
ltJZ..-..ll•d.
Cott• Mete -541·1 I H
C•ll 642-M71.
Put• fewworde
to work for ou.
Baldwin
Pianos
and Organs
lESSON~ ·INSTRUMENTS
TAPES RECORDS
Yllll ~~.:~~R
Fostllon lalond 640-9020
DAILY 10-4 SU" ll S
MOH ~>tUllS ·'Ill 10.t
PUBLIC NOTICE
~•UC NOTIC:. rtCTl'nOUI ..,_,.
TMtt wOl .. o ...... " lltWlftt 1ft IN MAMalTA..-.Jt ... , • .__ellOtOc-lllow ""'°' T,.. lollewlft9 ~ , ....
Olt1r1, •• ...,. ·• ~. H\#141~ 11on1i;-:1•sAMtllv ,..,, "41,.._, e-11, c:.o.. ...,, • nw ... ., • ....,. .._ c.»w.
o"'M( U, H ... ot P:W '·""'· .. , ~· ............ ,,..,,....,~~... ....-. .. r•lllt u. flatrkt·i _..lltftel Oll· ......,. ...... *"..,..., __,
fllt._,...__., ...... ~·-· "--------~--• ... --•trio M.ee 1.t, -CNt• HllM~.:.:...~~ ...... ~ o. ... ..,..,_ ~ .,..,_,l "........ ~~ P11911-OrMft CMt1 o.llY PllO\ Tlllt -',..U la C~ •1 I Nov S • t 1• • ••6..: eeMI'., ,.,_-. • • , • • -lttMllN .....
PtJBLIC NOTICS Tlllt....,,... _fi ... •19 ...
~· Clenl ., Or .... CN!Cy .. Cjk-...., a .1• f'ICTlftout eViltlCSI .,._.. .., ...... CIOUllTW "'8
...... ITATIMeNT i-.-.1-Or.,,.. CMM OollY Pllet, ITAIWW CAUN ....... M•IA,..
TIM 1o1io.1ne --•• ...,.,,. ..... 1. 0c1. '°· ,...,, •· 1a. •· 1• .-. ••-*"f• notsH: .. ...... ROHltT MAH, W. Vie o..rio. P1JBLIC NOTICE llOTla ..... .....,TOMU HOw"'1 ~. Colltornla~ •• .....,.,, ..... '*.
Jee-L ~. aa .....,.o ... , PICTl'10UI '"'...... . • AT PlltVAT8 ...... trvlM, CMltonMft71A • •AMA ITAHMllNT ..... flltfCJWAllO f', MOWRY Ao
n 1, ,.,._. ,, Ulft4MMd •Y e11 111-TIM,............,..,. •t ~-..... PUBLIC NOTICE Howa•o •o••v .... "· ~. dMd.ut -•t· MOWRY, o.....t.
Tiii• ~~y lllelll Wltll IN GRAPHIC CONCEPTS, tt1ll "":·--,ll-CT1_Tl_=--..,..--..... -----1 NOTIU .. HIR••Y GIVEN .....
C I "~.._.~ unt Hlll'llnetOfl .. _ ........ .,_..._ ... T "' « efllW ~to, tW, ol tM County Clorti: of Ote1191 41¥111¥ Oft c;;;;:'-*-... ' ' -..,,_ law ~ fl ~ oM OMti. Al· MovelMer•.1• ,.--, Mui l llHMtll ...... o,, 20111 Tllo ..................... deift9 .. , ... , ... I.OW, Ula Welt CNtl ·--S.fld,1111« ....... HllftllflllOll -..Cll llllotl-•: · H..,._y, lllMe •t, ~ aNcll, PllOll,_ Cr .... CoOtl Dally Piiot, C.llfetNo,,._ ' ' A, i-. St400'TIHG ACC8150RleS, ~lf0tftl., t11f ui•ral .. d , ...... f'. Hov.6, 1$.21,21, I.. '40lolO Tlllt ~ .. It~ ay on I,.. l t .. S Cole' River Cr., l"oilntllft .... ,,, •• _...ff flO Wiii of .. dlv!Oual. YoHtY, ~ftNI ... .,. . .....,.. ~. •Ill toO ot
PUBUC NOTICE Mort•.s.i. lftlerMlfaft ._,... __ lfto t:'9111P-~,.,_ ................... _...._. ....
Thlt ,.......,. .,... tllOd wlltl tllO MMl c..w-... l"'5 Coloy Rl'4oH llllNtf, ...... •<eM~,,.. W ..i.t FICTITIOUS •UMMIU CoUftl' Ctorll of o..,... Cowlly Oft Ct ........... v-.., Cltll....-.W•'"" .s¥po(ler c-t, fll rlPI tltl•. ln-
MAMa ITAT•.UMT . No ... -•. 1-. TMt ...._It~ ... •'i o CW• lWOlt ...... ti .... ~ ol
The lol'-'---II doin9 l>VSl· 1'14'JW porotlon.. tllo ·-............... r19M. II· -·• .._.Or ,.__ Dal Pl lnt'I ~lllt ti .. .,.,. ......... lllO ..._ llM «·
M S) ea: PllOI ..... ._.tt ly .... t: ........ CM.. ..,,,., ., o•oratltn Of I•• or WEST .. N REFRACTORY Hov.•.1a.a .21.1• ...,7-tll ~A.AwoftlNro. OVlorWlte ............ "' ........ PRODUCTS, 111tl Illa llor-. Irvine, -SocAIMv IMI of ..._ ~ 1ft 011f 10 tMt
ColilOtnlotVU; P.O. 90• *'· lrvfllt, PlJBUC NOTICE Tiu\ t&O--• fl-wltll IN conolft -1v ._....,In tllO Clty of GtllfoNl&oft1tl ' ____________ , C-ly a.rt of Otonoo c-IY Oft O<· Ht•jlelf1 9Mcll, C:-y of Ore1191,
Lo""9Co M. Olllllft, \lnl ..,,. -f'ICTITIOUS 9UMHU -21, 1-. SIOIO of Colllotnle, doter I Md n Vera...,INillo,CoH ...... '711,S NAMaiTAT&Mt: .. T ,.,.,,., ....... ,
Tiiis ...,_ It < ........... ll'I en lrt-Tiie loll-Int "°'-~ fllt Ool"O Publl"*' Orenge C:O.tl o .. 1y Pilot, i..oa-•t 1-.sl 1f1 LAOM NIM dlv~i..ti--1111. °"""' ~SM: O<t. n , a .-.•, 13, 1• •nl,. JOft-'f It, 1_, IW - -u. Thi~ ~•ts llled .,,1111 tllo Ill TOMMY'S 01' HIWl'ORT -trvl,.. C:-, e '#Ht \llrtiftlo e«-C-IY Oortl of Or.,,..'-"'°" Oc-REAL ESTATE COHS\JLTAHT, m PUBLIC NOTICE poretlon, H Loso•. encl Mecco T 0 M M y . s 0 F H E w p 0 A T GorpOtetlon, e ......... c.orpwollOft, 1-11.1--1'147144 RESTAURANT CONSULTANT, U.5 OftdH•..-ln--Co.,0'91'11W•
0 I Pl lllClorl• StrMI, .... "· Costa ....... -.nu1 ''°"· ---Oft ,....,_.y IJ, ltaJ in Pulltl"""Or ..... Coo~ e ly lot, C.Ollfornlo'2621 · NOTICE Of' SAL• OF look UJO, ..... 71', of Olllcl•I Oct. n . JO, HOY .•. u, '"° o-.eo Thome• c. Uotla, jU Ilk tori• •EAL ANO PCRIOllAL i-ROl'•RYY Rteorfl of°' ..... c;.e..cy, Gollfoml•;
PUBLIC N.OTICE
FICTITIOUS •U .. MllSS
MAMt: STATEM•NT Tho lol ... "'9 POflOM ere CIOl"9 D<Jtl·
M ISH .
ti) CUSTOM FRAMING av AEEO. (21 CUSTO M FRAM ING e v McCLELLAN, 1/SQ Ha rbor aovd., Suite 61, Costa Mew, C.lofornla t1616
Str"I, Ho 19, ea.to Mew, Ctlilornla AT NIVAT8 MLI whlcti !ft ..... -ol&ieNd IO.,Mll .. t· t2627 No. A•tllMI SHri.t ~Ion C.. 1W Oft_.,_ Tllh -ines.a ,, COftducleCI by ... In· I• ......... c:-t .. -,.,,..., NIOd AM<cll 21, ltU, rtCMded CllvlOliol. ...._ .. ~...... April I, 1"5 In '°'* 74lj, Ptet »J, ol
T-sC.Llolta ••-c..llr"Or.... Oftlcltl korctt ol sold c:-.ty; oncl Thi\ si.t'-1 was tiled willl tlle In Uw Molw of tM Ettalo of Mnt wlll<·h 1~ -as•i9MCI to Howard County Clerk ot Ortnoo County Oft C. R-ao. C:-r¥Oteo. I". Mowry •nd Morie II. Mowry. Nove mbor •. 19'0. Holl<• It ,......, given thtl tllt ""' husoond end wl,., by .,. •S91-nt ,.1...., del'$igMd wlll Mtl •I j)rlv•t• sole, to ooted octooor 20. ltU, re<o,.dtCI PuDll\hod Orenge Coest Dally PllOI, lllo 11191*t end llHI bidder. suC>te<t ~ FO!lruory 4, , ... ln looll 7131, P-Nov. 6, ll, 20, 21. 1'90 U60-IO C-lrmttloft of seod Superior C:O..rl Oft 120, Of Otfl<ltl R-of UICI County;
PUBLIC NOTICE
or •lltr Ille l?UI Gey of Howmoer, '"° onc1 wlll<ll ue. Is of rttl Pf0tl0'1Y In t i Ille oHke of Stonley S.vlllo, 10203 the Cily of ..._, 8Hch, c-ty ot
Soni• Monl<.t tlouioverd, Lot A,...lff, Oronee, SC.It of Ctlllomlt, dffcrllloCI ·------------1 County of Los An9e1u, Stet• ol as Lot u. of Tract Ho. •n•. •• .-.. f'ICTITIOUS .u....... Colllorn4e, •II ,,,. ri9ftt, tltlt -In-Oft. Meo rec:or-Ill looll IS7, Peen
JOM W. AMcl Jr., 1-,.22 Slerr• Lune -RoaCI, Irvine , Ct llfornl• U /U
Florlndt M. R~ 1'422 Slerre LUM Rotd, lrvlno, C.lltornle '121 IS Tiii• llu\lnou 11 conoucteo b'
llU sbond encl ......
Jdtn W. RoeCI Jr. This ..---lllod wllll Ult County· Clorll of OrtftOO County on Ho ... ,,_.,, ...
Pl ... PuClll-Or-C.00\t Otlly Piiot,
Nov. 6, IJ, J0, 11, '"° 4ltl-tll
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOU• •us1 .. 1u MAMaiTAT•MllMT T,,........,. ,..,_"-. ..,.,.
M U a.t! SUSAN G, 1llS CornollOll .,,...,.,
ltAMa •TAT•Ma•T torut of sold~ ....... In -IO •II I 10 ,. ln<llltllHI of MIK•ll•-· Tiie follo.l119 llOrtGfls tr• doln9 Ille certtin , .. , -pet\onel pt-r1'1' Meps, Rtconts of o.on .. County, llu•lntu ot: tiW.W In Ille c-.ty of o..,..., Sitto Cellfornlo. R & A CR&ATIOHS, 2102 Wtll· of Cellfomio, -1kul0tlJ clHCtillOd ts Tllo ,,_a, It t M"9lt l°"'llY r• 1ntl0ft A_,.., ~ .Ant, C.llfomle foll09S, kMrit: ..-•• -It It <°""'*"J k-ti '2711 C-rotlw rosldtntoel Unit ot , .. , Gtltlrt Orlwo, "-' 11eoc11. Rk -.i s. u-... 2111• Owlet 6tl-C A-$evltle, ~ Hiits, Cellfomle. o ... Ottw , El Toro, c..lltornio tl6JO Cellfornle ,_ __ ll't ltuidoftt Tiie SOie Is -..Ct IO current ttMl,
R. ltotco l*w-. 2102 -llift9\4ft Me~ Cot'llfl<• Ho. Jilli of cow~. ~. rMlllc:t-. re·
•-· SMlo ...,.._ c..lllomlt '2101 Golden RMI\ l"..-.Cioft of L..o9<IM aorvotlon$, r111Mt.. rigtlls tt -.... -Tiiis ..,.,,.., It c-c-b' e Hlllt, ..... --~p Cet1Jfko .. No. Hte.....,ISof rocont . ..... rel ~. 1·11·1 of UN-~ Hill• Mut ... 1, 1141 or~.,.. lnvi'9d tor said Ri<,_d ~ -O<c_, ,..,_I -od O<· -tty -.....,i be In wrlt1119 ...., Tiii' ~ -s fll•cl .,,ttll U. 10 .. r 21, lt7j from SK-.....,... ,.O'f a. detlvorod to th<t eu <utor County Gl•rll of °' ..... County Oft HlllsMuNOI. __.,.,or IO -offl<.e of II".,. Ho ... m-•, ltlO. Terms of .... CAlll'I 1n ltwful -'I' tor-1, ~ -OioR, lm Wnl A&IF.8 (Mar. 21·Apr. 19): Emotional in·
vofvement is c onstructive -if you maintain
balance and permit room for logic. Leo·
Aquarius persons figure prominently. You learn
wflere you stand where money and love are con·
-;=====================::;;;;;;;:::\1 Ho.1.eor ... •1-.Ctllforftf•~ I Ctlffomltt1625
Fl-1 ol Ult UNlilcl ~Oft conflrmetioft of Cotti Hitlflwoy, Surte 401, Newport Pullll\hod 0r.,. Coast °"''' Piiot, w1e. Ten lie< ~of _, tlld to tie lttell, c.tlitorlllt, or mey .. fllof in HOV 6, I), 20, 21, 1'90 4370-tll ~tod .... llicl. t ... otfla of I .. CIOf1t of IM '-<iw
ctmed.
' TAURUS (Apr. 20·May 20): Go slow, lie 'row. Check with individual wbo aided you ln
pist. Respect experience, but don't sacrifice
your indivuality. Aquarian figures prominently.
You could "wake up" with answers. Legal
5 MINUTE DRESS
• No Stitching • Only One Hook & Eye
Send $4.00 FOr Plinlm
llW'S wur••, P.O. 111 512, Sa. Liem. CA 12111
Suteft Goede<-•· 201 C•nallon Avenue. No. 1. Cor ona del M•r , C&lllorni• n.2S Thi•~ I• cc1t"""MCI lly en in· dlvldutl.
S.-.. Goed•O• Tiii• tU.fomont we' m..i "'1lll tllt Count' Cterk Of Ottn91t County on O<·
PUBLIC NOTICE
81ch or ofton i. lie in wrlllnt tncl Co"'' et MIY time titer llW first
w111 .. --ot tllo otorntlc:I offk• puDlkotlon tt Ulls fttltlc.t -toeior• •• a11, time•-t11o llrtt putllkoll<ln ,,,. mOlllnOof tllo Mil. ------------ih<treof-a.tonclaloofwlo. Tiie IOn'M end ~ltloM or ..i.: f'ICTIT10US eust••U O•led INS 210. de'( of O<t-r. '"'° <tsll "' _. ~ -...,, creel II, tlle
llAMa STATaMllNT ~· R. C:O.• wms .. IUCll c.l'Holt to be tec.tl'Uble Trte ~ 'Plll"IOM <trrcso-GclftWrvetor ot IN to tht ......,......., oncl to""' ~lor
lluSl,,.ssts: Est•IConaotvelorSlllPI Co .. rt; ten per cent 00'11.I of Ille DECOR & OECOA, 1 .. 11 -M Of so.d Conwn•-emovnl 111c1 lo e«-J tlle offtt, F'l4'lt1 Lone, Hunllngton Betell, Calllornl• St•leY 5ov111e •ncl 1119 Miene• 111 bit pelc:I ._. ,.,...
Puo11"'°" Orenge Coast Oe1ly Piiot, ~ AlterMy .. I.AW llrmot1on of ••I• b'I' IM Superior
100.rlt , 1'90
Oct .JO Nov • IJ 20 '"° O~IO Jose A. A-'-· 1 .. 11 _,.. Pullll-Or.,... Cout Otlly Piiot, Court hllH, rents, -rat1n9 encl · ' · ' • ' L•M, Hunhngton Beotll, Celllornle ..... .JO l ~ -·~· -maneuver boomerangs -you'll benefit.
GEMINI <May 21.June 20): Some as-
sqciates, colleagues e xpress gratitude and ad·
miration. These sa me persons, in recent weeks ,
w~re skeptic al. Bask in new-round popularity -
another G e mini and a Sagittarian play impor-
tant roles. Work conditions improve.
,,... ......1. . I,-·· a,•-·-..--m•lnl•_..,. oa-, -premium~ ~:A PUBLIC NOTICE Aobono E. R-I-, l'Mtl M•uno on Insur enc• u c.eptaDI• lo I~• i ' PUBLIC NOTICE purcha-. "'°'' be prcro1ec1 •• 01 -. e ·.. .... . -Lene, Huntonqton &.tell, C•lilornl• Ae•• ot ,~~oino ol conveyance. SolCI 4L1 • ~ FICTITIOUS •U .. NEH ,,... v ~ ....,.. HAMI STATEMENT Frloo S-R-·-· , .. " lliWuM D-1611t !:~o=:~. m-upon Ille UtU•I n·:..,...S and Cards~· ~·)I.I. ... ~ The ro1iow;119 119<1on Is 00tnt bu51 L•no, HunllnQtOft &.tell, Co111orn1• NOTIC•CWDll'AULTAMO i...-nus°' .,... •L•CTIC* TOS•LLUMOER Tiie .,,_tty " to De IOICI on on . ., AOE & CO • 29.JO Unit J, G••~* JU<111'1 C. R-1-. l'M 11 Mauno DelO CW TRU•T I\" Dall\, n<eot •s to tot le. •nO t,_ "'" Lene. Coota Mew. C.llrornoo •26:i. LtM, Hunllnqton lkt<ll, Ca1ororn10 "IWCMITAlfT MOTICE" Cltrtl.,..O '~ ti. rl9"t to rei«t
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Personal
magnetism soars -members or opposite sex
are drawn to you . Emphasis on romance .
sp eculation, ability to make creative changes .
In matters of spec ulation. s tick Wlth number 4.
Yt>u could be asked to apply personal touc h to
Sont~9::!'. ~I~:;,,::' W Sunflower, 91~1, !>V)lneu " <OftCIY<tecl b'f o ~~H~~ji~" '"ti:,:·~~ JO, 1"°
• feetun ...... bum. for Chrtebne• Tll1t DuSIMSS l\Condu«ed by •n ln· ge .. rtt~ip I F YOUR PROPEATV IS IN A-F.~. . .._ cllvldY•I. .-R. R-i-FORECLOSURE I ECAUSE YOU EM<_,oflM 3404-C~o1,,.lGO:_"::;-::.,ao::.::::--· C:uh~:, ~oe~:.:·eo"'~~J 1: =~;.~Or=-l~~I:,~ !i::O~~!i)~:T~:~l~~ =~U
--:;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==============,:-! Novembor j, 1'90. 1'1•1tt .,_ moy -...... I r..,.. to..... "· F'.,,,,,,.,,.,
completion of w ritte n m aterial.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ch~k le gal r equire -
m e nts. r e ntals. leases and m ortgages. Older in-
dividua l o utline·s security requi r e ments .
Aquarius. Taurus, Scorpio natives figure prom-
i n e ntly . S o m e one is try ing to tell )'ou
some thing -b e sen s itive to hints .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22): Spotlight on
family, trips, concen;is associated with pay ·
m e nts, inte rest rates and property values.
Taurus, Libra , Scorpio persons play significant
r ole s . d v· LIBRA <Sept. 23·0 c t . 22): Stu y 1rgo
m essa ge. Prot ect valuables. Be aware of
budget, incom e pote ntia l. See places-, people as
they are, not m ei:ely as you wis h them to be.
Dis tinguish b e tween fantasy .and ha~d-core
facts cormected w ith your f10anc1al secunty . .
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 22>: P ower-play m -
d icated -and you a r e in driver 's seat. You are
a t r ight place , you get mo re res ponsibility -:--
• you 1ain financ ial advantages. Love also is
part of exciting scenario.
SALE OF FURS "EXPERIENCED"
QI\ 1 J f Some of tile mos1 tooulous fur\ os I\~ I ,. \JY • seen on 1 v and 1n the mo111es ore \JY now riere tor vour selec lion
W£ OlfY YOU TO OlfFUtEHTIA Tl
THE MEW OHES fltOM THE ltESAUS.
Tha larg .. t Nlection
of luxury ture ••
haw• ewer ehown.
, Including deeigner
1 ture and ONE OF A
KIND 1peciala.
SAGl'ITARIUS <Nov . 22-Dec. 21): Let go of
e motional "security blanket," despite ini~al I 8A V
trepidation. Focus on .tempor8.I")'. solitude,. time .. ay
Imagine buying a lone
fur stole tor under
$200 .. a fine monk
1acket that was only
worn once or twice or
a monk coat that was a
prize oo a T.V giveaway show They're an llere
lor youi selection now
II you know lurs you
can Ouy a tamoty rieor toom tor a fraction
of its value for reflection, realization that being alone ll ~t t'al•A V
s ame as being lonely. You compete tranaacUon N•~· 7
anct many views are vindicated. . 11 •--Ne'ier t>efore nevef
CAPRICO&N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Rig.blight • .-again w111 so many
independe.nce . initiative, willingness to :·pioneer valuable turs be
a trail." Romance, fulfillment of des ires and olfeted 111 sucri d b ridiculous pr1<:es It good money o r career news all c row usy, ex-makes sense 10 ouy a
c iting agenda. Leo, A~uarius ~rsons figure line rental or
Fl-Put>11.-0r-CO.II 0t11y Pilot, v-r tecount In -4 stancl"'9 ll't PtY· ___ ..._
PuDh\hed Or-Coosl Oolly Piiot, O<t JO, -· •• tJ, 20, '"° 13''-'0 '"' •II of -_. -.,..,.....,.. p lu\ A__.,. el I.AW Nov. a, IJ, 20. 21, 19'0 ••i..-111 pormltl>ld costs -•--5 wllllln ::.·-~ N.,_y, PUBLIC NOTICE '"'"........,,.'"""Ille-. tlll• notice M•9-' llMdl, CA,,.., of deltult -roconlled. Tllh -i• '1.~.70 .. of O<· Toi: 17HI -FICTITIOUS•USIHES.S _, 16, ._ -wtll lnet•-until A-yttorE--
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •U5111t:H NAMllSTATEMIMT your tecount -curnnt. You Publi-Or-Coolt 0 .. 1., Pho!,
NAMtl STATIM.llT TM followino person " -... l>Ul•· .... , .... -to ... ,, IN .... , .. -ICI Nov .•. 1, u. '"° ·-Tiie I01lowl119 porlOll It -"9 l>Ull MU OS. por11oft of .,_ -~. -1"°"'91' ness es: lal TAURUS EHTEAPAISES, (DI lvll .,..,,.._ -• ~. but ,ou YOURSOUACE,IOO•Cro,.Cor· TAURUS REAL EST ATE AN O ,.,..,tpeyt,_a,,_tJtoteda-e.
cl•, Fountoin \loll•'· C.lllornl•'210I MORTGAGE, 10160 Werner A .. n.... Unl•U Ill• o•llt•llon ao1111 CllorlH Wiiiiam Green, 1042• Suitt 203, "-1.otn Velle1. C.llrorni• foroclosecl .,pon permit• • lonoer Cr•n• Ci rcle, Fountain Valley, fllOI ~lod, you lleW Ille 199111 r'911t i. llOP C.llfornlot'JIOI Cllerl-0. E .. "-1•-,.S Kowo1 tht tor«lolut'tl only 11y peyl119 Ille..,. Tiiis llUJinHt Is <onclueled bJ tn 111· Court, F-teln Vt lley, C.lllorn .. tire •mount oomtnded by yo"' dlvlclutl. t'JIOI creditor ""'""" .,.,_ montllt eltor tht OlartosO.-"" Tiiis DUtl,.ss I• c-.e1w br •11 on-CS.I• of .-c-.tlon of tl\lt do<um-.
Tlllt sta-t was lllod with the CllvlClu•I. wll l<ll Cl•t• of recoroln9 •PP••rs Counly CIO<tt of Or..,.. County on Oc· 0-1-o. Even ,,.,...,.,,
•-r t '. 19'0. This •-_, lllod w1111 Ille To find out ,,. trnOUfll you mey pay, P1471t2 County Clerlo ot Or-Couroty on or 10 err-tor peymem to ttoop -Publl~ Orenge C:O.stJ>tllv Piiot, Novom-l, 1-. ,_,_, or If .,..., -tty It In Nov .•. u. 20, 21, 19'0 4'l60-tO Fl-fo...C:IOWA lor -Olhor roeton, COft·
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"ICTITIOU• •u•1M•U NA.Ma STAT ..... MT Tiie 1011ow1,,. por101u ••• Clolno l>Utlness • . THOMAS K. MIRA AHO AS SOCIATES, ltlU Mac.Ar111Ur Blvd., Suite 2U. ,,..,,,,.., C.Ollfornlo•i.:16 T_.._ K. Mire, In<., o Cetolornlt
corporahon. 9)9 Go1oenrod Or•••, Cont• --.. C.lltornoo fl•» Tiiis _,." Is conOUC10d by • cor
PofOlion. TllClmtl K. M.lre, In<. T-..K.Mlro,
Preldlnt Tlllt t&O-w .. Ill• with Ille Co..nt y CJor1I of Ot-c;.ount' Oft O< ·
Pvbll"'°" Or .... CO.•I Otlly Pilot, Itel: Hov,6, ll,20,27, 1• ... s,., Avco Flnoncl•I Servlc•• of
PUBLIC NOTICE
Soulhtrn (Mtfomio, In< .. C/O Newport Escrow Compeny, ISO PeulerlftO, lulldl119 I, Suite IJO, C..~ MoM, CA t26U, Atln: Delora lonfontl 0141
W ... RICMl COURT n, .. .,_ Of' CALJPOtl ... A II '(011 ha .. •ny QUOtUOftt, yo..
CIC)UMTY CW CMUUtO• sllOUlcl c-.ct • 1-t or ,,,. 90V· oRoa• TO MtOW CAUM ..,._,,, _,, ·Wflkll ,,,.., have "'·
P0$1CM,.,...0f'll-• sur'H rour -. CANMUM9aRA•141 llemember, YOU MAV LOSE 111 -~-tt .. °"""kelion of LEGAL Rlc;+iT'S IF YO\I 00 HOT PAM ELA JO SC6 PACASA. For TAKE PftOMPTACTIO... Cl•..,..of-. In ocldlt lon to tlW t.........C , .. ..., Pe t lllone r . PAMIE LA JO -.lllOUICl-prlor lt .... 11 .... ,or SCOPACASA, hM fifed • petltltn In encumarencu •• Clellnciuent or tlllt coun lor ., "'*' .. ._.,,. pell· aoc-dtll~t. -IN ..., ,., !loner to cl\tn .. lier ... me from .. ,..1..-.c•. ulddRH-let mull PAM ELA JO SCO PACASA lo be c11f"od e e condition of rolMIOI•
PAMELA JO FL.OWflt'S. "'"''· 1'1401.. It It _...., ordetOd INI .. , per....,. NOTICE IS HEREIY Gl llEH: TllOI
PuDll-Or-C:.OOSI Oolly Piiot, lnterotlod 111 llw mtttof" .--seld -NEWPORT ESCROW COMPANY It
•-u .1•.
Oct. 30, -· 6, 13. to, 1• 4231-tll peer llOforO llll• <-' In Oellertment duly eppolntod Trvttft Vftder lh<t Ho. J at 700 Ovle C»nlM Dtlw w.-.. follo•l,,.dllKrilleddHdof t,,,.t:
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
N-nu• NOTICE OF DEATH OF
LUBA GORBUNOFF AND
OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A·10'417.
To all heirs, ben-
efic iaries, c reditors and
contlnQent creditors of
Luba Gorbunoft and
persons who may be
otherwise Interested in the
will and/or estate:
A petition has been filed
by Tanya Towle in the
Superior Court of Orange
County reques ting that
Tanya Towle be appointed
a s personal representative
to administer the estate of
Luba GorbUnoff of Costa
Mesa, California <under
the Independen t
Administration of Es tates
Act). The petition Is set for
hearl"9 In Dept. No. 3 at 700
C ivic Center Drive West,
Santa Ana, CA 92701 on
November 25, 1980 at 10:00
a .m .
prominently. Long·stand1n1 debt is re paid; unclaimed fur Some
AQUA&IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You re on furs labeteo "used" SUPCRiou:ou•T
m or e •"'lid ground·, additional funds,..,. re made have only oeen troed cw CALiflOtt•tA
Softl• Ant, c..lllornlo, on ...... "· 1•. T RU STOR: ROIERT I LAI HE et 11:• O'ckKll e.m., -l,,.n end TUOOR AHO ELSIE MAY TUOOR,
t!MA .-. -· H .,y.,,..., lleW, HUSIAHOAHOWI FE wflJ .... pedt1911 fer dwlnOO of nemo IENEFICIAftY: AVCO FINAN· .-1e1not11t•-· CIAL SIRlllCt:S OF SOUTHERN
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting ot the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearl"9 and state
your objections or f.ile
written objections with the
court before the t\earing.
Your appearance may be
'7Y h &i on, worn less than CIOUllTYOf'OltMe9 a vailable. A~ent on repu~ation. o r , c areer most rumers' new oaoeaTOIMOWCAu••
and willingness to reach beyond current e xpec· -stock F1r5'ocome first "°" CMM4MI °"MM•
tations. lnt\i,iUve intellect rings bell Of 8C· $erved basis A small fn ,~:-:.:::=u.: of
CU r &Cy.. · H 1o1 toed11 CatOl Wt kct~I T1ta4 IM deposit will hold yo\JI Gt:Ol"l"Rt:Y ALAN HA.C>Oo<:K, 7HO
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Restrtctl411s are .. 1'°' "' c!tyaway =:;~":;·=~•,.ter, c..
removed; opportunity exlata for change, travel ~E\\'PORT~R I~~ o~OFPHY..ALAH HADOOCK ,_
and numerous, valuable contact.I. Social activi-Paelfle a... :~.~.!::"' .:,,:~nc:!'..; :~
ty increases -personal hotisona broaden and I le'f .l••••re• ..... Ne..-rc lleaela.. -"• '""" oe:o""Rt:Y ALAN HAO· Jy~o~u~h~a~v~e:._:~~a~li~'d~r~e~a~s~o~n~to~be~~o~pti~m~it!t~i~c:·~~~~~~~;;==~~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ooc:K•o«Of!Pa•Y ALAHWuLF•·
I
BE AN ICE SKATING ~
at an /,'
ICE CAPADES CHALET
• NEW CLASSES STARTING •
REGISTER NOW for internationally famous Ice Capades Chalet
Ice Skating School. Whether you've ice skated before or never
ice skated in your life. one of these classes is for you.
• BEGINNERS WELCOMB •
Call Hot Line: 979-6351
2101 Harbor Blvd.
Harbor Ir AdaJJJS Costa Mesa
·a
AOOOCH.
It It_., WdHM ... t ell --lft-ted In .. ,....._ .,_Mid ~
"9« ........ Wt ~ In DfWtMe!ll
Ho. 3 et,.. 0 ¥1< QnWt 0..1 ........
s.M• AM, C-Mwftle. Oft .._.r
2S, 1•, a tl:•e'cloO e."! ..... -OM t_.. ..... ~. If MIY tlwy M•, 'llt¥f ..... lllMI IW <-.it of _ ............. ., ......
111 • .-~-·~" lftlt WW to.,_~ a.,_.., ...... Ill 1M Or.... c.ell Dolly ll"llM, e .,.., • ._., " .... rel e1r<111et10t1, _.ttllM In tlllt~'f el INSt GMe o
_.. 19{ -,_1111 ... .wk• ~I« totM..,fll..._..,. ..... OotMOOIMrl .. I ...
MA1ttC ,._ IOOt:H •
J""9 .... ........ C-' i-wel9Md Or ... CMtl 00!1¥ 11"1 .. t
Oct. ll, n. •. *"· •. 1• . "~
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTIT10UI MMN8N MAMm ITAT&MCtrr
TllO '°''°"""" ..,._ I• etlfl9 Wtl• MMOt: c••TURY ti 111.L ~-o. 14ltl C11lver C>rhe, 11111• L, 1rvl11t, Coll!Orflll ft7M 0..... Wiii'-.......... '81' u Alfto,.10 A-. lf-r.lfl ll•ltt¥,
COllfWllll ft7'1 Tith ........ It clftW('" tty on 111-
t lv...,._ '•
11 It~ ...... tNt O <OP't ot Ql.LI FORHIA, IMC., e c.lllOnllo <or· thlt ordtr tot'-~ b\I putllltNd poretlon In Ille 0r-.. <;DOit Dolly Piiot, • Rt<otWd OCWl9-Jt, 1m .. IMtr. nowsootlO" of .. ,.rol clrculollon. Ho. •'31 In riooto tBIS. PolO M9ol Of. ...,..1...,.lft tlllt courotyot,_lon<•• 11c1e1 Re<orch In tM office Of tile _.for fOur-uUw __..prior Recorder of 0r..,. C-y; Mid ONd
to 1110 day of told MM .... Oottd Octebor 6;'1•. MARK A. SOOEH JudltoflN
~Court MICMA•LS. McCARTI• ..,. ............ JI•
~--.CA•• T .. : 17141 ... 1911 Pu«llllMf 0..Ml!I C-t Dally Piiot
,of trust -lllet JM ... ._ .... -perty: In person or by your
attorney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a
contingent creditor of the
deceased, you must fJle
your claim with the court
Lot 7' of Trtel Ho. 3111, Ill tfle City of Sollr. AM, County tf Or ..........
of Collfomlo, °' tM.n Oft • Mop lllOreof _.."' ...... p .... ,,
tllfouefl otD mtacol'-~. ,...
cordttf .... °'.,.. c-tv • ..W*W of trvst --Ultteln olll ... llolw ln-CIUfl"I -Ml• lor Ille tum of ui.nuo. -----------:--1 TllM IN aonotk ltl IMOf'Otll llM9r
Oct .... ta. JO, ........ '"° .,...,, or present it to the
personal representative
appointed by the court
w ithin four months from
the date ot first issuance
_11 ..... fllllnltl ........... ....
t«un4....,, .... ...-tty llolf •Y Vie,..,. ... led; ~ o IN'M<ll of, ..,..
.... 11 If\ -............ tor """"" -II _., of trvd It -wlty hOt «·
cll<f9cl 111 tNI pe'(mft "" ,... Ileen ...... .. : Tllo 1,...f_.,. of prlneljlOI tM Interest wtlkll llKMM fllO J-I,
tW , eM aM 1ut11et:JMt ..,..,..tfMMI
ff ,nnc:lplll ... !Merott. POJ!Mftl ff • ...._... .... ~~""'*-·· If -Y· p..,_, .... ,._t , ... , tttate ..._ If-· A<Cr ... lftttrett
W.lfltN..-flll~.».
Tllot .., ,..._ '"°'"'' tllO Yll·
of letters a s provided In
Section 700 ot the Probate
Code ot California . The ,
time tor flllng claims w ill
not expire prior to tour
months from the date of
thehearlngnotlctabOve.
VOU MAY EXAMINE
the tilt kept by the court .
If you ant lnter•sted in the
estate, you may flle a ~ -· '*'Ofklflf'f ""*' wth ...... I,.""·-"'" -dollvtrH to Hlf ful., ., .. lflttf Ttu•tM. • ••tt1011 0e<1•r•ll•11 ., requ.st with the court to
0otoutt.,. o-oM..,. ......... "" receive .tPtClll notice ot
...,.,., .. wtt11 .. Id -.1, ..,..,.. .. the lnvel\tor~of estelt T rut•, wtll ... of ,,..,.. oM Oii
ORANGE COUNTY MCUMOflll evltoMlftl o•lltotltnt e SHtS and of t petitions~
N<uf\d.....,,_... .... ...,..,. accounts end reports
.... ........, -.claf't °'1 -· .__.,.. described In Sectl°" '12()0 == :O.:r",: =:.::= of the Cetlfornla Probete
.. cou .... """......,.Y .. • ..._ •o Code. • .. ..... tllt 01tll1•t1•11• .. , .. , ••
"':,'!t:ae-rt.1• ,_,.C. Twuy, A..c• ,._ ... S-.lett A..., .. L.-w,
979-8888 ~
PUBLIC ICE SKATING EVERY DAY, LOTS Of FUN
FOR YOUR MONEY, ONLY A BUS RIDE AWAYP.
~ ........ ft Tlllt ......_. ,_ llltf wltll -c-4¥ OW&" ONtllt c:o-ty.,. OC• _...... , ..... Of.....,. Col.._ ... '"'· ,. •:..4!1!,l!o.t'=' ...
.... J.CllllO!I. ----~ ~~ CJt•)tn-*' .....,...,....,.,
......... a... OloMI Dolly ""· .......... Or .. c:... .,.,., Nil ......... OIWltt C'.Mlll DMIY ~ ou.•.NllW • .,,ta.a.-~ Oct."' n. .......... ·-.,,.... ........ 11... ' .....
I I I I ·
l I
I
I
I
I I
COMtCS I CROSSWORD
MAltMDUKI
\ "Can't you pass by here without stopping
in to get a drink?"
~HOE
I .. ..
MISS PEACH
-
PEANUTS
0
I
I
I FUNKY WINKERBEAN
by Jeff MacNeUy
--------------------
by Mell Lazarius
by CMrtff M. SclMltz
DRABBLE
l'M KINO ($ ~IW
AS()Vf fw tS Alb£&RA E1.Nit
'fl>OA'f ... r-------t
00 ~\) 1'tUNJ:.
11" i.>ILL &£
t>1~r1 c\JL:r ?
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
ELL)', THE ~OUBLE
WITH you IS THRi
'lou'Rc TOO E.RSIL'{
I NFLUENCE.D B'{ I
OIBER P'EOPLE •
DR. SMOCK
OON'T LE.T f\NNC. AAD
'JottN t-'\AKE. 'IOU
FEEL GUILiY FOR
DOING WHITT YOU _
WRNT iD
....oo~
I~A/ )CU SAY YaA~ P.A~EN~ A~e ~IN6 ~16N~ OF ACC.EPTING YOlA INTt> T HE l='AMILY ? ~ONl!THIN~/
T HeY'VE IN VITED
S O W HA-r
PO YOU
"T'H IN t<,
POCTOR. ?-WHAT "'~NS ?
THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane
"These letters aren't even in alphabetical
order!""
DENNIS THE MENACE
. . .
/Y\E. TO M OV£ BACK' ONT?J
i l-E PllOPeiz!.TY WITH MY
T fiiNI ....
GORDO
JUDGE PARKER
NANCY
I TAUGHT
MY DOG
TO Pl.AV
COWBOY
~~
/!J()~IAl/!'!!>5
RW<*E
ltAlf.J CtOD
~ ~rOWJJ!
PLE/VTV
TlfC(J&J..E
IFTA~
VUN .F~ ~AIJD 'NAnJi
FROM Pl!OPL.ll/
THAl WAf> A F'RIENO Of OiET'!1
CAUJN6 FROM THE H0!1Pr1M.!
THEY'VE TAl<EN ~IM INTO M
Of'EAAltNC::1 ~,_. TO DO
6 RAIN WRC:>ERY!
~r o 600 .
WO I
LllCE i ae .
J.ITTLE f
.FIC06 •
l>J r "'6 l CIT'/ i
POI.JO'-• ~
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
by Ernie Bushmiller
~.No ..... ,.
BIG GEORGE
"Nol DON'T c1ll TV Repair!" ·•·
by Kevin Fagan,.,
-... EM'/ ~ PIE .''
MifM ~1'110t .. f $ llA'/£ A · · '"0 ~~ Cf IW~O~.
~~
by George Lemont '
~'M c.JU S"f' -rHe M AN FROM t-1 N eN s u F>P1,,Y cHe cK1 N 1
t...A UNPR.Y MAR.KS
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 48 Good thing
, Otsney""' 49 e..u monde
6 Having win9S 50 Tar
11 Bloctl 52 Spigots
14 Woodwinds 56 Man's nlCll·
15 Quibble name
16 Anger 57 Of tacts end
17 cnm1te !iQures
knowlfd9e-60 Negrllo
1blt 61 Learners
19 Thrauoh 82 Greek letter
20 Smooth· 63 -Aviv
bfN1hlnQ 64 Jotnts
21 Hawk 65 Read,ust
22 C.Oer prod· OOWN
uc1 1 Rose -
2• Dregs 2 Busy as -
26 Puts ewey
27 Thinner 3 S1d sound
UNITED Feature Syndicllt
Wednesday's Puzzle Solved
.. c i A I T I I I A II
• 6 I I C I U I 0 I
IO •• • I I • I I L I I
Ii iii "rt ii If I I :t • -·· . ···-1 0-
.i.r. .. .. _, , u L L Y
" .... tlll • TI 00'
~ •-nu • ·-I I
' & II -· I 11 I I I
I ii ilJli i:n • I I • 1 1• ll'il ,,_ ..
D ~ Lt. T I 11 0 n: ~i r •• L I V I I
" ii lliill i • II A ¥I
s I ~ Tll ll o• 0 II ...
..
,.
30 Lively d1nces
32 RetClnd
4 Astringent 23 Dance 42 Also ,.
33 V1tll «9111 3~
Sun
37 Ott copy
38 Ad0ted
39 Rodent
40 Torrid
4 1 R1ltw1y cir
42 Monlse't -
m1te
43Supposes
45 Sh«es
48 Er1chc1te
seed· 25 Fish u K11c11e11 item
2 words 26 Pung 45 Army beds
5 Sort of Sutt 27 Scourge 46 Send PIY·· ,
8 F11m unilS 28 ln11er Pret ment • •
7 Grtssy area 29 Of bodlff 47 Oveqoy "
8 Eager 30 Presents 48 Gl1dness •
9 Poellc con· • 31 Asseverate SO FDR's
traclion 33 Single mother • •
10 Voter 35 Keyway S 1 -bomb •
11 Oiatrtctiona 36 Decimal units 53 Carda
12 Originate 38 C1n·US bor· 5• Foho "·
13 Ham Ind der 55 Spllne •
beef 39 lntenm SI Fasten ~·;
18 Constantly 4 1 UndresMS 59 Ont city
•
I
. 1
I
--.
... ·-
I,
I'
1
'
. " . .
•
~-., ..... ,.,
•
Soft pack or new Flip -1bp box. t
,___
.,.,; '~ , '-' ,,,
. c· .... .,.,, , • ~ . .
I AA .....,, , ~ . ~ TE R CIGA RE-TTEJ .
:~ FIL ........ -•. , ' .., ... --s ~ ~ .. ;it,, ,.~-~-~--~---. "'~ , . "' ~ • ~ \ -"'14 i.~ µ~· -: ·""<;\, .. ~ ~.. }.• .,_ , . '·· 1,_ ·~! ~ -•.J ., 1.' ".,, ,.,..., ._..J. ( ~; ·~f":-' 1~ " ft
...... • 'jj.' -~
j I' j • ; ...
L I G HTS
LOWERED TAR & NICOTINE
I
The spirit of Marlboro in ·a low tar cigarette.
• •
Warning : The Surgeon Gen eral Ha s Determin ed
That Cigarette Smoki ng Is Dangerous to Your Health.
'
12 mg ' 'rar'. • 0.8 mg nico'tine av per cigarette. FTC Repon Dec'.79 ;..., ____ ...-~-----------"!"""'-------' Box: 12 mg · 'tar:· 0.8 mg n1co11ne av. per cigarette by FTC Method.
·.
' .
•
.)
I'
Thurldlly. "°~ .....
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You C•n Sell It, Find It,
Tr•de It With a Want Ad (842-5878) One Cell Service
Fast Credit Approval
~..... ..._.,,_s. .._. . ..,.s. , . ..._..,_,. ,.._..,_We ,..._..,_We · ..._..ForW. jHn1nForW. H111M,_.W. • ......•....•...........••••...................•........••.......•.•••.•••••.•...........•.................•.......•............••.••......••..• , .•...........................••••..••.••....•...............•••
_ I OOZ .... ,.. I 002 •••r.e I Qi02 I 002 ........ I 002 I 002 .... ,.. I 002 ••• ,.. I OOI ...•.•..........••...........••••............. , ..................••......••..•.......•••..... ···········••······•••· .................................................................... ..
TOIACCO IOAD Ln"S I Sllt,tlO MAKI• DIAL
That's exactly what this LARGE ASSUMABLE
I Ea11l1ide triplex loo k1 LOAN AND SELLER like. but, oh what a deal! WIIJ.CARRY 2ND. Lov· 1lV"ee l Bdrm units. New ely 4 bdrm home, 2 large
EQU.al HOUSING root. SUper. super terms. master bdrmst breakfast I ,.. Call now room. 2 mi to oeach. On·
OPP OAT UN IT Y @ ly $131,llOO. Call today I mS110. •
,_..,. ar'1 Moffce: A
AU re.I estate advertise<l LLSTA TE· I in lhia newspaper ia s ub· , _ I,..
Ject to the Federal Fair SEA COVE .,,.A""'Plil~•T•OM~-1 Housing Act o r 1968
which ~kes it illegal tu PROPERTIES COSTA MISA PltlMI I re~::~t·r,~:~a~ron~r~r 1J4-631-6990 I Gl'ftflbrook s bedroom:
discrimination based on j with pool, ~pa and close•
SHORES to everything. Assuma·' race, ~or, re!1~ion. sex. 1 ble fi a Ing and offered• or nauonal on gm, or an · ' m. nc 1
intention to make any ' $135 900! I atonl) SlB9,SOO.S40.J666 I
such prerert;nc~. li.mit.~· 1 Charming:' upgraded • v·--... I t1on.ord1scnmtnat1on. beach home in Newport! w11eaan I
i Shores! 3 BR-2 BA .1 Real Estate This newspaper will not 1 Decorated war mly. New1 I
knowinJlr accept a ny 1 carpets and wall paper. I
adver t 1s!ng f~r ~eu l : Just listed won't last!! BEACH .
• REALTORS
675-551 I
Built by architect -owner. The
ultimate in modern design. Wood
burning fireplaces . Re cess~d
controlled lighting. Stained glass
accent windows plus unique jalousjes.
Custom French doors in each unit
with POiished brass hardware. Private' patios and rich landscaping. Offered
at $28.5.000.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 I. Coast Hwy .. C--.. W..
675-5511
"' . I .... ,~ ... ~ ····~· ~· .. ..,.. . .. _,... .,_ ,.. r n =t~n1 ··~·· rn ··11 1 ···~ -.. . . I . I
run. PICIC A.. rwnel!
Irvine Terrace 4 bedroom with putting
greens, numerous fruit trees and a
sparkling pool. Country decor with
wood floors. French doors and copper
hood in the kitchen. Good value at
$349,500 and an 11 9c assumable loan!
U~l()UI: tiUMI:~
REALTORS. 675·6000
2443 East Cout Hlghwey. Coron• d~I Mar
WE llAVl-:<1·1 OFTHE B~H .Ll..S'flNG~INTOWN
UDO ISU .
Newly remodeled traditional style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation room & 2 patiOI. Living
room has attractive beam ceiling.
fire place & French doors leading onto
brick patio. New kitchen blt-in
appliances. Close to tennis c.ourts.
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Now
available. Call for appt. $420.000.
IAYNOMT
We have several fine tiomes
with pier & slip,
B. TOllO HC>aSI COUM'l'IY
4 Bdrm .. 3 baths. ranch style,
mini-estate in oran roves. $240,000.
estate which 1s 1n v1ola· 1 Call now 752· 1700 I tionofthe law.
1
·: COTIAGE , ____________ _
-S: Ad .... , .... !I fiJ;~fbnl jj ~~~.w.;:•~:~~,':~'. !
~!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!lm-1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!'!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!1!~ I Trade· ~uur old :olul I l'or: . ne w ~ood1l'1> \\1 th a
Sell \\Ith EASE ~ It',. a BREEZE
L'lu:-~1flt'<.l .\ds ~2·5618 Little is Big!! Classified 1 L'la.-;sifit·d .111 f>-12 56iX I
1 fl'· 1111w 10 plan for that ads are r eally s mall '
-L-....1...1 L.--L &L~1 ch 1 uruque home. One or a
-C~• ~ ' a EXECUTIVE · kirtd. Best buy, beach ,
M, mMI report •r·; VIEWTOWHHOME I property. ~wner ex· ,... -.dlately. The . I tremely motivated. Take
D"'11y PILOT .... , I ~end unit. Step down, advantage. 963-6767 -as llvmg room, leads to s un• I ~for tM first I. filled kitchen, overlook·! I ? -. 1 ·
\ at·allon tnp Fur extra · ··people to people'· sales
t·ash. wh.' not i.cll sum~ calls with big readership ·
, of thOSl' item~ ~·ou don t and big results~ To place
need with a t las~1ricd ,our classified ad, call .
ad'! 642 51l711 ioday 642-5678. ·
' cornet lnlt'ffoll Nly. 1 ~~~~~~~\ l~r~~;:~l r:!i;tg~j-;¥1
1 sized bdrms upstairs.I. . 1
CORO.._. & D El Pool and spa l~ ! Owner CDM DUPLEX I "A 1 says be flexible on 1 MAR
1
. ftnanci@ng. Dial now. 4 ~~lti!H~.d 2j
MIMG,_.D_. ~ Bdrm .. South o f• 3 Bdrm seashore home of• PCH ... Priv ate bri ck:
yest eryear . Stain ed courtya rd ... 4 car
glass windows, beamed I garage ... Oak pla nked r
ceillngs in m aster suite.' SEA COVE f I oo r s ... It a Ii an'
Not a bad way to go
for you 10 lake
and 1t s an easy route
Alt you have to do 1s develop the Ctass1hed
habit Read and use the llltte ads 1n Class1f1ed
to hnd buyers for items you hke to sell.
tenants for vacancies you'd hke to fill or who's
selling lhOse items you·d hk_e to buy C hee q r rr e p I a c e . 1 unow·1e ..... Su. per t erms ... Ca 111 minutes from yacht club., PROPERTIES
tennis and golf. $229,000 11 ~ 631 6990 m '
Fo<appl. 613·""° ' ... • w ! Start today to save time and money the
Classified way• i t£*tR~li ·~:.~.?,~~
• 1 Clean-refurbis hed! SEA COVE PROPERTIES
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
PHONE 642-56 78
$2
c•.-+JCMI
$100
all ff talws 11.
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
3 lines for 2 dan,
onl\' SI a dav 34c· a line · ·
Ad ,·ert 1~e o ne or
more ilem~ \'alued
up to SIOO Eu C'h
add1t1onal line 1~
onl\' liO<' for !he '''o
d a'i. Sorr' no comm!'rc1a·1 adi.
allo\\ed Ch ar ~t
Your Penn~ PrnC"her
:\d or us e ~our
Bank :\mert<'a rd
Visa or :\taMercard
Call toct., mid '" yo•r ad IR prh•t
to111orntw!
c• ... ...., "'"' fri*y 1:004M .. S:JCH"M fw
•d .., .• ,.... w eel
e.r--~for 5-dey'•,.....
"642-5678
DAILY PILOT
I Prime Costa M esa
'duplex , priced to 714--631-6990 l sell-$120,000! Financ-
1 ing!Hurry!646·7171 ---------.............................. ,. ..... _ l l t:;;;~tR~l 1· ~~~:~!
1• . Take adva;rtage-onlyll
. S2SS.OOO! F antas tic 4 NIWPO.-THllGHTS Bdrm-only 90 · to .. xa I Newport oceanfront .
Bring YOW' s hovels and! vie~ too!! Beautirul
. paint b~hes lo cash in stained gla~s.. wood I onthissensatiooalvalue., beamed ce1l1ngs , 2
1 Huge corner lot, bostsi fittplaces.Call646·7171
this 3 Bdrm 2 bath ex·1 1 I I ecutlve home. Country1 it.tf.;•::!tt -~·~ :
I k1tc~en. livin g room. [#i&iJlf'8FJ I , ram1ly room, den and _--------__ 1 I spa too! Cash in and call . .... •
now ' I LitUe Miss Muff et sat on a
I @ Tuffet, along came a
spider and read· m the
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
1'14-631-6990
Dai!Y Pilot Cl~ssifted '
section about Miss Muf
fer~ Tuffet and bought it
ror Rl.95 You can sell
your tufret and lots or
other t hings t hrough
Daily Pilot Classified
Ads. Call 642-5678
STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS?
A CONV£HIENT SHOPPING ANO
SlWINC CVIOE FOii THE
CAlON THE CO
For • Ad !ft w_.•, Wortd
Cal S.• 642-5678, Ext. 330
Lacy Pullover
According to C•lttornl• BuelnH•
and ProfeHlon• Code (Sec. 17900 to 1
17930) ill person• doing buelneu ~ f"\n 1':) _ n ,.
under • flct~• n•m• must .... • hfllu o~
•t•ternent wtth-t.,,. c.ounty Cter'i"S'nd
have It published four time• In • "' lop ott skirts or pants with this I
new•p•per Mrvlng the sr•• In whlc~ I lacy tona·slttved tunic . the bu8'ness Is loc•ted. Oram111c ~uare neckllne 1t'lc
The et•tement I• required by l•w mteo by an allove• des1an of
•nd Is necesa•ry In protecting your preuy p1nupples Crochet 1un1c
bualneu n•me. Most b8nka require j ~~et~'s0~ ,~~~,~~a ~~1101::,~-
proof of flllng to open commercl•I • Paneen 759C S11n 8 14 encl
•ccounte. I SUS tor eKh pattern Add SO< The DAILY PILOT provide• both I uch pattern foi lust elm a11 11 L.1ff,_.,;_ 1ff~'T.-
flllng · •nd publlc•tlon service•. We 1 mail and handlina Ste4 i.: ""/
h•v• •II th• neceaury forms •nd 1 A1ict ~ I
I I
$1.17 per DAY
That's ALL you pay
fora
30dayad
lnlhe
m•lnt•ln • ally Mrvlce tO' the Or•nge I NHdlec:r.tt Dept. 105 i Delly Piiot lhe holoda~ are on the way 1 County CourthOuM. Either ltop by one t .. IU, ON C...... Sii., "" ' euns what you• skirts and pants
DAILY PILOT
SEIVIE
llECTOIY
DO IT NOW!
642·H71
OPPOITUNITY laViclca ot\en when ~·ou
Ule rn ult·1euinll Dall)' '
Pilot Cluslfil'tt Ad • to
teach the Or11n1e (.'011&t
m1o1rtltt. Phone 842 $678
of our convenient ottlc•• Of phone the I are ullona IOI Blouses blouses
LEGAL DEPARTMENT 142-4321, Ext. ; ::!.!' z,1:.1 ~~111~11~':: : bloum1 Su r t~m my
332 for more lnfonmltlon Ind forms. : ~tch on to lhe mil boom' Seno femenene styles '°' owtate d'V
-----------------• ' IOI ou1 NEW1981 NHDlCCRAH I Printed Patte'" 9132 M1sws
Acaoll MOM PAIS
Lusk built 3 BR, I amUy home in
Eastblutf. One level ·with privacy &
large f am1ly room. Formal dining
room. Fenced yard for children.
'22$,000.
I CAIALOG O.e1 112 0es11ns J ' Sun 8 10 I Z. 14 16 18 20
tree 1111111ns 1n\lde SI 00 I Ifill Sim 1011 1211 14'1 161r
I AU CUfT IOOllS. .Sl.75 MCll 1811 2011
, IUf•11111t11M Qllllti111 ! StM Sl.75 ._ "'" "*"1· •
I IJZ-Qlilt Oritlll* W. 5M .. Mdt ""9r1I .. i Ill-~• lllc* Qllilts lint·daa tlnNll. hff4lli11'" , lJO.S .. tetf..,...Slnlll-5' · StM tit lzt.Glllcl 'ti''*',,.....,.
I lza..f ...... '*~ Qllilts • lllMWI MMTl"
I tz7 ...... 'ti' Diiiie ,lttern Dept. 442
; 12'·~ Crlfty ,.._, · i Delly Pttot
· US.Ptlll 0.1111
I 124.w, ch ·•· °'1111Mftta m w.t l• Sl "" '"" u l2J.Sll1d1 '11' Pltd 0.1111 ; 10011. Prillt •*· ADOllSS,
. lZJ.Slllft '11' P1ft 0.Ats ZIP, SIZl -STYLI •UMMR. ,
IZl·Pilllw $lltlt.Oifs Prices too h11ll' Send now lor I llf.l.., Alt tf ""'91 Crodltt 1 our NEW FAll·WllHlR PAnERN
lll-•lftJ F1ftr Oliltl CATAlOC-sew. SHt Ind cet bet •.
llS-1119 Alt tf ll"" Cttelltt ' tet q11111iy1 Owl 100 slyfu free ; IU c.....-Cift .... 1 P1ttttn Co11pon (wOtth SI IS} 1
11 .. l& liftt=-Stlld for CatalQ& Sl 00 I
...... T .... ....IM.ll I uu ......... Qlitlilic Sl.75
1~ UI.._ a II.a QiiiMI . Sl.75 112·-• Qtllll ' l~Sim Jl.56 Sl.75 Ill ... ~ l 1 l~bl ,,....,. Sl.75 ------------JVZAWWPv.@l?..#W4J44?_
I
I LINDA ISLE
I 5 Br. 5 Ba. huge master suite. '
maid's qtrs. beautiful light
t decor. e nter taining. home.
Room for 65' yacht. Consider 1
• option. Priced at $1.100.000.
Bob or Dovie Koop. 631-1266.
' Res. 760-1580. I
I RE/MAX
_I
CE
llDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
OUTST.....-IAYNOMI' NOMI
Lovely <;ustom Built Home On Promontory
Bay. Living Room. ForR\al Dining Room.
Den 1 Library . Spacious Master Bedroom
Overlooking Bay Has Fire place &
Luxuriously Appointed Bath. Three Other
Bedrooms & Maid ·s Room & Bath. Pier &
Shp For Large Yacht Sl.850.000.
MEW IAYROMT U~
Gor11eous Modem Home With A Delightfully
01stinct.ae Old World Interior With Imported
Furn1shin,1ts . Handsome Wooden Mantels.
Hu.ite ··Carved Wood .. Bar So Many Special
A men1ties Automatic Sprinklers. Air
Cond1t1 o n 1ng . Security System
Professionally Landscaped & Proressionall)•
Oe~oratcd . Dock For 50' Boat. Private
Beach. Sl.600.UOO By Apporntment Only.
759-9100 #2c..,.. ........
M.wport Cewter
-H.L COM><> OHLY SIZl.\00-
Cltet d I l lil*m llw. ~ to
... ac•. ,..,, & leaals. q.l.t c.e • •• 0--_...., ~.
.... , WlllH w., .....
2744 E. COAST HWY.
COIONA DR MAI
759-1&1& , ... '" ....
I '.
NEW METICULOUS DESIGN
AbuW1ty tllle ...._. ctwfl t' _.. ....., ..... -............. .ei.-.
Lar9e .-cl well pl--4 2-stwy. 4 t..•11• .............. cW! Lec•d ........................... ...,.
to 2 ..,... ..... C... lty .............
yo.r .,._., L._... ASSUMAIU LOAM.
$495,000.
WOOOS, WAIMTH-;-.U!
lewllMly ~ Z-shry c.amd9 wllla
fk••I•• & Z .......... S•Hl1• 3 M4. .......... cla. ,.. c .......... .,..
loc ......... ,....... vu. $217,500.
EXCLUSIVE BAYSHOIES
, ...... 1oc ................. ...,., ...
......... ...., ...... ~.Cll 1111,1
...., ......... l ..... 3_ .....
..... ,. .... ..., ........ i:e4to
$410,000. '3I·1400.
WATERFRONT HOM£S,1Nc.
REAL EST A TE
So.oV•. RN"1l4l1t Prc;ptrl~ M.n.geme~t
2436 W Co.>~I Hv." N•'" p011 s..,.. h
631-1400
315 Mdnnt> Ave &lboa l~land
'7Ut00
THE 1~ NUMBER TO SEE
NEWPORT HILLS OFFICE
2670 SAN MIGUIH. DRIVE
1714)759-1501
llG CAMYOM VIEW
From this fabu lous SO M E RSET
model in H AR BOR V l EW HOMES.
This completely refurbished home
features 5 brs. family room. frplc.
large ya rd. view, new ever~· thing &
cul·de·sac location for S289.000.
WA TBtAtOMT rAltADISI
C h arming 3 br ho me localed
smack on the ocean w/private
stairway to the sandy beach for
your enjoyment! This exquisite re-
s idence is offered at only $790.000.
CltEA TIVI AHAHCI~!!
The sophisticated owner of this
property is flexible on terms! This
outstanding home features 4 brs.
parquet entry. 2 custom patios.
frplc. family room . greenhouse
window. French doors & more!
$136.950. OWC 2nd or AITD.
Walker&lee
1·aal Eatata
,,...... ......... NATION
~leve~nd Tryirig to Poli,sh TarniMhed fm(J/le ., '
'Campaign Centen on lndt•try, Commerce
•
l
CLSVZLANO <AP> -'l'he
a1• on Uae video playback
aelWM la familiar -aetreu
ar1aret Hamllton, her craalY
ace brin1in1 back childhood
emorie1 u ahe aaya :
"HJ. You koow me beat u the
lc lnd witch ln 01. But
levelaad is rny hometown.
"Cleveland remiodl me of the
tory al 0.. Everybody in Oa
aa looldna ror aomethin1 out·
ide tbemaelves. The scarecrow
anted • brain. The Unman, a
eart. The lion, coura1e. And
ey round they had those thinp
aide themselves all the time.
1:••AND YOU KNOW!
l!Jveland is finally reaU1in1 it
s the brains , the coura1e and
heart to be what it wants to
r.:;;;e imaae fiickera away and ~•mes McEntlre , vice president i t Griawold·Eshelman Co., says ~ith satisfaction: "Our obJec·
jive is to chan1e attitudes and to
1epoaition a city whoee position
~as s lippecl, You h ave to
•ene rate advertisin1 that a
mass ol people can identiry with.
pie want to be J>09itive. And yet
l:e want to be honest."
Cleveland haa invested more an brains, courage and heart lll a sophisticated ad vertisln1
c· a m pa i g n , co mpose ti by
G r iswold·Eshleman -an
·~enal ol media weapons aimed
t,brough national magazines,
bewspapera, trade journals ,
direct mailings, and television
11nd radio at what some people
consider Cleveland's biggest
problem. 'lbe Image Problem.
· · WITH FINANCIAL default,
police and teachers ' strikes, a
m ayoral recall vote, court·
,~rdered school busin g and
scraps at City Hall, Cleveland's
• r~putatioo seemed to reach its
nadir during Dennis Kucinich's
,po-year term as mayor. But
corporate and civic leaders who
direct the camp@ign insist that
Cleveland's image needed re-
furbishing long before Kucinich.
McF.ntire wants to completely
transform Cleveland's shabby
reputation. From joke capital of
the United States to Midwest
cultural center, from the MiJI.
talre 'lD the Lake to a corporate
m ecca, from a polluted in-
du1trial backwater to a coutal
tourist attraction.
In lDIPY ways, the bad imaae
belles reality. Thouah a vtaitor
may flad Cleveland'• dowrito~
unclamorous, wJth its low,
motley architecture and mean
u piraUona, the clty is ln better
shape than people think. Its
diverse economy embraces not
ooly heavy industry, like steel
and auto parts , but also
manufacturtnc. computer com·
panies, insurance, banking.
metalworking, advertisln1,
aerospace and legal firms. .,
WITH 1' FORTUNE 500 head·
quarters within the city limits, it
is the third largest corporate
center in the country, tied with
Pittsburp. "
But Cleveland also faces the
same proble ms as other
Northern industrial cltles. Its
population declined in the lut
decade from 750,000 to 532,000,
according to the U.S. Census
Bureau -an unexl)4'cted 29 per·
cent decrease to its lowest point
in 70 years. The northeast por-
tion, mosUy black. has had a
particularly hillh attrition rate,
and the central city is depleted
aa wealth moves to the subW-bs.
"A great deal or o~r popUJa-
tion loss is. because the reeion
has been stable economically.
People have relocated
th~mselves to better housing,
because much of Cleveland's
housing is obsolete," says John
Wilbur , c hief planner for
Cleveland 's Community
Development Department.
"WE LOST POPULATION on
the east side in the aftermath of
riots in the ·-· Shopping and other services moved into other
areas. There were fears of rein·
vesting business dollars in those
neighborhoods."
Cleveland's .downtown has a
s mall residential population.
The back-to-the-city movement
here is light compared to areas
like AUanla, which has actively
courted residents with high-and
low-priced housing d evelop-
ments on downtown urban re-
new al land.
Cleveland, however, rests on a
steadily eroding tax base, a re-
sult of population drift and in-
dustrial pullouts. Mayor George
• IMAQI MAUR
Jemee Mcintire
Voinovtch, who views hi• potl·
tlon u analoacoua to a corpora·
tlon bo11, h u propl)Hd a n
au1terity pro1ram to overcome
the clly'a $110 mllllun deficit; "
33 percent Income tax hike,
higher utility rates, and l •yolt•
of up to 6:iO city worken.
THE PIAN 18 Intended to con
vlnce lhe rLnancial community
that Cleveland wanta to re1aln
respectablllty.
Says William Kelp, Ohio's
director of Budget and Manaae·
ment: "What's important is not
what the public thinks . It's what
the~~ ln the New York bond
rating agencies think."
The vehic l e for the
m.etamorpboaia is a privately
funded or1anization called the
New Cleveland Campaign. It
was founded in 1977, but didn't
begin firing its heavy artillery
until December 1979, just l\ft,er
Kucinich was defeated for re·
election by Repub lican
Voinovk h. "We were waiting for
the city to get its political ducks
In order," says a former ex·
ecuti ve at Griswold-Eshelman.
FOR MORE THAN a year,
Clevelanders h ave viewed a
series of print ads and television
commercials touting t he city
and its "New Generation." The ads are low-key pep talks, a
fashionable boosterism that off·
handedly notes Cleveland's bad
breaks, but urges a "positive.
constructive ouUook."
_Plantation Home Open
Public Tours 64-room House Built in 1859
. \\'.IDTE CAS~L~, La. CAP) --:--After 121 years, the biggest pre-C1v1l War plantation house in the
South -and possibly the biggest antebellum home
in the qation -is open to the public.
"We were dying for them to open this place "
said Delta Hernandez as she and her husb..;d
sipped iced tea in the downstairs restaurant after
a tour.
Speaking in Cajun French, she continued, "We
arew up about six miles from here and we've
never been here befcre -they never let us in."
THE 14-ROOM HOUSE, WHICH overlooks the
lltssiuippi River about 15 miles south of Bat.on
Rouge, ~as built in 1859 for John Hampden Ran-
dolph, bis wile, and their 1.3 children. It is stunning
but was purely as~ding when it was new.
It's not ju.st the size, though Nottoway's three noon and attic include more than 1.2 acres of Door
apace .-about 20,000 square reet more than
lladewood Plantation, iu closest competitor wbicb
aita about.15 miles to the south.
It bad comforts almost unheard ol: closet.a in·
stead of chiffarobes and cabinets, runntn1 water
..... every noor, hot running water in the kitchen ,Ml lichta inside and out, and three fiuab toilets. '
• Water was supplied from a l0,000-1alloo cis-
tern in the attic. On~ or ttie two pipes to the kitchen ran through a chimney. Outside the house were a
p~t which heated specially prepared resin to pro·
duce 1u and a sewage treatment plant. ......... ..
" IT WAS OPENED TO 111E PVBUC this sum--
mer by Arlin K. Dease, who made about $500,000
renovating and selling three other antebellum
aansiom.
• He said Ode11a Owen, a reclusive widow
whole father.in-law bought the mansion In 1911
'Pt in touch with b4m after reM!n1 articles about
fte Myrtles, the tint plantation home be bouabt
aod restored.
"I wu :in the market f~ a new restoration,
and sbe had the rrandeat and btuest in the South.
Jib.e blld blld many orters -I don't know why I sot "'ll;• be said.
• •• The sale included an qreement that Mn. Owen could keep her room1 u '°"I u abe lived.
1ttue bu a separate apartment upstain. ...
TRI! OWEN FA•ILY WAS ONLY the second ._...wn Nottow•1. Until 1•. when It wu Jeued to
a:•v=tompany hop1q to take edvantqe of
.... al advantqe, the Randolpha tlved .-.re.
·~., • Randolpll blmaelf WU a IClon of the Vlrlinla
•aadolpM, ... lated to Georae Wu~on and 'ftomu Jeftenon. Illa father, John Randolph of
t)t4;anoke; led aoutb•rn plan&ert in Contreaa,
wltbettna opponeota with acatbiq lnveetlve .
. He came to Louillana from Nottoway County, *· ln tbe early 1MOI to ... bla fortUM u a IUI•
I( ~•ne plant.er. And he found lt. ~ . Wttbl.n 11 yean, be oWMd four adjacent plan• ~ -50,oOO acrn. But lOfti befon tlNla, be•· bf:~ wu foln1 to have tbt ftnelt bcMIM poui· . ~ .
IT TOO• 111 YSAal TO GST all tbe
••t•rl•I• -fine cedar board• from bla
swamplands, bricks made by bis slaves, iranite
from Europe for the curled stairs. Building the
house took another four years.
When Dease bought it, be had crews of 40 to 60
men work 12-hour days and in mid July, three
months after his p urchase, it was opened to lhe
public.
You can take a candJe·Ugbt tour and eat fried
mushrooms in the dining room. Soon there will be
overnight lodging -with breakfast. Already
scheduled are several banquets and weddings in
the ramous white ballroom.
"It's not a museum," said Stephen Saunders,
who did the research needed to all four of the
homes Dease renovated and bad listed on the Na-
tional Register of HJstoric BuUdJ.nes.
''A.llLIN HAS NEVER BAD ANY ropes, never
had any plastic, because rigbt away it's a bar-
rier," be Mid of Dease's approach to viaitors.
Saunders, an art history major whose re-
search showed Nottoway is the bi11est antebellum
home ln the South, said lt may be the bl1test in the
nation and bas written tourist commisslom ln
virtually every state to aall: the sue of their bl11est house rrom that era. • .
·At Nottoway so far, two hallwayi adi:lalf a
dozen rooms have been put on tour -refurblahed
and furniahed with period pieces rrom around the
world. The Randolphs traveled a lot and filled the
house with goodies to ahow' where they ._d befln.
Largely becautie of detata. fl'QQ). a diary kept
by one of Randolph'• teen-ace dauptert, the tour •
talrea a 1ood hour.
Saunders and Dease don't own the diary -the
Randolph papen were~purchued 10me Ume aao
by Loulliana State University -but they hope to
get it reprinted eventually.
--~~~~~~~~-
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
They use material like a toil· in• CCIDltructkJn worker and a
blaek theater director and .
celebritles -Mias Hamilton,
Bob Hope, Perry Como and John
OavldlOft -wtth tlet to the city.
Tbe campailft ii also adverti.-
lnt nallonally In ma111inea and
oew1paper1. Of all the city's
aelf·promotiona, these ada are
' tbe moet sophisticated: crllp,
prote11lonal and without a trace
of seU·mockery.
NEARLY ALL THE cam·
palan's $3.5 °'llllon was ralaed
from biJ business In the city.
One lar1e contributor is TRW,
an electronics firm which head-
quarters in the city, wblch bu
contributed SlOS,000 over thr.ee
years.
"Primarily, we think the cam·
pai1n Is aoln1 to help TRW at-
tract and retain talented peo-
ple." says Tom Branl1an, the
company 's d1rector of communl·
ty affairs.
One critic of the campaign Is
Norman Krumholz, who for
three put city admlnlatrationa
directed the City Planning and
Community Development de·
partmentt. "We 're a very self-
conaclous com munity." says
Krumhok, now a professor at
Cleveland Slate University. ''l 've-never worked in a place where
there'• been more concern ex·
preued by lhe civic leaders u
to thla lma;e thine .
"TKE IRONY 18 that the busi-
ness and corporate types who
wring their handa about how
desperately awful everythini Is
e n joy a very good life
themselves."
Krumholz believes the cam·
paign ia peripheral to social and
economic problems -poverty,
racism, unemployment. high
crin!e, a population shift to the
suburbs and a declining lax
base.
TAXI CARRIES POSITIVE ATTITUDE SLOGAN
City W•nt9 to Coft'ley MeHege
"If the people in the New
Cleveland Campaign, writing all
those nice ads. really cared
about the people who needed
help, they wouldn't just run the
ads. They would find a job for
the kids in the central city. They
would find a way for their lives
to be more meaningful. They
would find a way for them to
walk the streets or their own
neighborhoods in safety."
BUT THE NEW Cleveland
Campaign, with corporate and
civic support, will llkely endorM
the kinds of changes the admen
talk about: s hopping malls,
more hkels, lakefront develop-
m ent and fashionable restora·
tions .
"We've lost our sense of
humor," says Warren Trafton,
director of the Convention and
Visitors Bureau. "We've lost the
ability to say, 'Hey, let's have a
little fun with this place.• Why
carry the burden of a nation's
social problems to our grave?"
But Krumholz disagrees.
"Cleveland is an industrial
town. It grew up over steel, iron,
metalworking and coal. Those
l are grimy attributes. They doo't
lend themselves to spectacular
acti vilies.
'"YOU MAY BE able to
change Cleveland's image. And
you may be able in time to dis-
place the coal and steel and
paint and chemicals and to
restore the pristine purity of the
Cuyahoga River.
"But at that time you will
have lost the reason for anyone
to be here at all, except • a
vacation resort. And we're bard·
ly a vacation resort."
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
THE COASTAL ELEMENT
NOTICE IS HEREBY Gt VEN that a public hearing will be held by t]le City
Council of the City of Huntington Beach, in the Council Chamber of tfie Ci vic
Center, Huntington Beach, at the hour of 7:30 P.M., or as soon thereafter as
possible on Monday, the 17th day of November, 1980, for the purpose of con-
sidering the Coastal Element, a proposed addition to the General Plan
which indicate the kinds; location and Intensities of land uses In the city's
coastal zone, shown as the shaded area on the city map. Discussion wlfl be
held on November 17, 1980 and may be continued to December 1, 1980 and
December 15, 1980.
Copies of said proposed Coastal Element are available for review in
the City Clerk's Office.
All interested persons are lnvlted to attend said hearing and express
their opinions for or against said proposed Coastal Element. Further in-
f ormatlon may be obtained f rorn the Off Ice of the City Clerk, 2000 Main
Street, Huntington Beach, Callfornia 926..a; tel: (714) 5,36.5227.
s~:,u
Ot::AGtl
DATED November 3, 1980.
CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH
By: Alicia M . Wentworth
City Clerk
Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot Nov. 6, 1980 4419-80
--/
• Nf.•PORT
U•;A<.1 1
' .
I
I
•
l
d
\
•
It
I
~
J
" nhr.. jN1 aMhr.. lhu••'-.. ·1-1ttlerS. 1'N llf"r S. ..._.,Fors. j ~.No"'9mbett.1110 CWL'fllLOI' -........................ ....•.................. ....................... ................... . ............ ·······················...... ..... ' I•• II 1•1111 11 1111 1112 10011 M_. IOU C..... 1014 ...... : .... ~ ....... ·~'-W. ,.._.. ...... -.-······--··.. ••••••••••• ............ •.••••. •.. ..••••.•••.. ........... ............ .. .. . . . . . ...... ····-········ ... ...... .,.,.. , °"' I ........ ············· 1·········---..... c...e 1t:x..,.50' Power Bo.l A&tnctlvepoolduplex + 21 .-wPOITHTS.RZ ....................... Ml~.._. 1069 tl6t o..ilr wMI ..U ee t·oe· XJMC-1, for ranrh, lo ~rentals Prhne loca·I BYOWNER fO ••• .................. ••-.. --rr ~ ~'t.\J .
1
~prop.,elc.MM40$ I -.ooo.64<Mt99 ; r::~ho~=.·t~ Bt~~ ::r.0;:~1~;1 &, , Can .._ .... ._ t•ll"... JI I .,..._a.Drfvel'e1t l Courtyard, PrUll Trtts, Rm. 2~Ba. TURTLE • All·•-.,._ b .. -1..~LIX2 b ,.,._ Act fut: won't last. Detached Gar on Alley. ROCK GLEN ~me, Spa Man
I £o9C ,WM' ,._ ...... peal terms $256,500 as· $90,000 Auumable at ctr M~ Suite. Opeo '-: ~Its only 1 bl~k to su mable. S325.000 11 ..-,IJ. Mull See at "°'*Sun.12·S.14WaQ· 'f-tirach Open beTm·I owcllase price. Darrell 1139,to0J30 E.-Ulb $t.J dedn& Rill, 97S.Ot'79. Will
I ~~!~af:~0c;:.reo.erp 1~t~1 .l>asti.A1t.~t-t286 __
1
S48· l rooperatewtbroker
, I' 1 \ 'l' I . ( ) I { ( :o .1
\ ------~
llACNWALI
lxt'lllltMlully aUrHtive
2:IOO aq f\ t.owalM>m• wlth
4 ol ao 19'1tant home.
Onat ameruu ... wa.lk to
beaeb. Priced to sell quickly. 1182,IOO. Thia b
truly an opportunity,
Olll751-3191
•
SELECT
PROPERTIES
WATm .. OtilT HOME
5 BR. 4 Ba. c ustom
waterfron t home
w/11x31' pvt dock Price Sl.39S,001>. Builder !
wltrade for Palm Spr· I in&S Estate For details !
on this l'lome and ar pl to I see, call Carol Hof . agt. •
631-00N I
llGCAMYON
L ove l y M c Lain
townhome. Golf course I
location. 2 Bdrms+den I and it's a wonderful end '
unit. Excel. financing & 1
priced to sell. S300.000 1
* .# I Cote Realty ·
& Investment
640-5777 I
-------~~1 ln•"tor's Special '
3 Br home, lrplc, lge I
yard, great area for kids . ,
Excellent rental proper-
ty. Priced for quick sa le! · Owner transferred & will
help fin an ce .. 'Call I
~l.82 .
IMYISTOIS
We have assum. in ·
vestmt. homes in O.C.
SJ.OK to S2SK. Prin. only.
6.18-4860 Agt .
-i
~e'T~ ~~~~a~. l
,...._ Nr So. Coast Plaza 2 I
Bdrm. 2ba. 1500 sq·. :
Airlc, sec gates, comm ;
pool. Bar1aln at Sl 19.900. ,
c.entury 21/Westcliff I
64S·7221
associated
BllO>'fll', llF/11 ''>llS
l I v-it f! ,., '"' '"'I
MA...-.CIHT
IOOOS/F
MA"'4SIOM wittl VIEW
Sl.750,000
Rick Alderette. Rllr
832.()440
NPT HElllS I
$139 500 s Bdrm.2 baa. fireplace.
large lot. roof 2 years I
new. Call 645·9101 I
11Pf N HfllJ\f
RI Al I l I
~~~:
OCIAM 1/J ILOCIC !
/
DeJux.e duplex. 3 Bdrm. 21
bath and 2 bdrm units.
fireplace eacb unit. j
Ol:ean view Crom upper I
untt. 0n1y '265.ooo! I ..... llry .... op. I .........
•'71-7060•
,,........... i
Super aharp 4 Bdrm 1
ramlly room. atrium. j secluded locatlon. pro•
fe11ionally decorated.
An excellen t bu~· at s:no.ooo.
Pl.cial a Cluslfied ad la
.... )' .. diallftl 10UI'
..... Give ua • uU
"'•'Udo the ttlt. M2·N'71 -----· ------
•MATI NOMI a IMCOI •
Prime East Coata Mesa location near
2l1t & TusUn Ave. You will love this
charming separate 2 Bdrm home of
redwood siding on wide lot, plu.s two
2·.Bdrm income units. A beautiful
woodsy private patio w/ BBQ and huge
e xpensive s pa. Quiet, peaceful &
picturesque. Call for appointment
today.
WISUY M. TA YI.Oil CO.. llALTOllS
...... ~z .. 11911 s. Jn c 1 ... t.M .....-olT CIMnl. ..... 644-4910
macnab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
M!WPOltT CRIST!
A "Best Buy " e nd -unit
condominium w/vtew of ocean &
greenbelt. Many decorator
upgrades and it is immaculate!
Owner will lease w/o'l>tion to
purchase. $179,500. Be lle Partch
752-1414. (0-65 )
LEASl-HAlloa VIEW .. LLSl
4BR. 2 bath home w/formal living &
dining rooms. Family rm & eat-in
kitchen. Gardener & water included
-$1300/rno. Immediate occupancy.
Sandie Fix 644-6200. (0-66)
752-1414 SSJ-1700
(omp!J1 Vokv (en1e< Woodbndqo. Ce nte<
642-1235 644-6200
COMBATANT
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
4 Bedroom in Phase III. OCEAN
VIEW. many e xtras including
alarm system, tinted windows .
au tomatic s pri nk lers . Near
community pool and tennis. Submit
terms. $296.000
THE 1~ NUMBER TO SEE
.
NEWPORT IEACH OFftCE
204JW..tclff0r. .
1714) 646-7711 .
SJZ0.000
WATmROMT cOMOO·
~absolute dream come true, right
on the water! ! No . . . it's not a
mirage ... It's reality! Has its
own boat slip. 3 large bdrms, 2ih
baths, fireplace & best or all it's
fully furnished. It's been used as a
second hom e for 8 yrs. IT'S
IMMACULATE!! #261
StJ,000
YA TllMS
Move right into this beautiful 3
bdrm hbme. Lovely yard, gardens,
trees & excellent location. Find out
today ii you qualify. If 10u're not a
Vet, you may qualify for our
"absolute minimum down"
program. Either way we bave a
program & a home to meet your
needs. CALL TODAY FOR FREE
COUNSELING !! #~
Walker&Lee
. 1111 Eit1t1 .
terms 1249,SOO. Try 15'l 1Duptex for sale. 3bdrm. MISA YlllOI • BUBBLl.._.G •
down. 2ba + 3bdtm . 2ba. LOWOOWM l "
1 Iii',.. REALTY S'ZSS.000. 617 Marauarl\e. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, appra.iaed FOUNT AIM ~ 675·S726. U 0-'17l O. atS11.5,000.Aa1ume•K andMaUbullghtlngadds• '71-6670 ~U.38. .. OWC 2nd. 841-18331 charm to the plank and I
AS SUMI LOA"'4 c:o.t. MeM I 0~4 Broker l>lock multt-le,·eJ patio. 31
Beautllul 3 bedroom 21"2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• College Park charmer. bdrm. 212 ba. fai:n. r!"'. I
bath Brookview condo 3bdrm, 2ba. den. gd Edinburg Mf?del in VIII.!
that measures 16oo a ft YA. MO OOW"'4 cond. frplc asummable 1· The seclusion of a cor· 1 Cl · · ' ner Lot makes this an It features a· laundry Where else can you find 3 loan, Sl.21S,SOO. 957-8457. ideal family home .
room, gara ~e door Bdrms , 2 bath s, 1
opener. 3 patios. com· fireplace. new builllns. TlllMS munlty tennis & pool. As· double garage, big yard. Seller wants offer. WI
swne existing loan and j shalce roof and hardwood trade for condo, units or
owner wlll carry a large noors in North Costa S.'>7,000 lo assume exist·
2nd. Full price S132,500. I Mesa for only $110,000 ? ing loan. Pym ts o( Sl ,307 Calls.56·2660. "He who hesitates has mo. Beaut. cust , 3 yrs
T details. mlle to ocean. . .SELEC I lost"! Call 540.us1 for new4 BR hme. less than
PROPERTIES OPEN SUNDAY 1-5
I 1132SEA BLUFF OR. 'Z ' I OR ttS 3 CAMflVSDa:IRVlflE
<>r...,.11 leautiful ! , m .ooo or less to assume ________ _,
This property presents a i I exec condo next to the supe~ ol?po~unit_y for t he ' sea where Nwpt & Costa 1
chscnmmatmg investor., E-SIDE DUPLEX Mesa meet. We have S
You'U have special pride• Two 3 Ir UMtt I other assumables. .\gt , ~ m owning this duplex ' • 1 Viv Riley, 631 -1511 ;1
1 located In Orange Bolh l Sl42.SOO ! SlB-1.511 I units have 3 Ir~ Bdrms. 2 , Rlu.Elt REALTY DGM--,-_.----1-0-2-6
1 Baths. dbl car garage!>,· 546-0114 :
1 and a huge patio for en·; --- --_ •••••••••••••••••••••••
ll.'rtammg Super rents·• O
1 motivated ~eller. Asking i NEW COMO S VIEWS, VIEWS , l Sl&S.000. . EASTSIDE C .M. Ocean harbor lites are '
• j B AL B 0 A ~ S LA ;:-.; D' 2512 Santa Ana Ave , spectacular when viewed :
./ IESTIUY I
W~UT SQUARE I
Nice 2 story 2 Bdrm "C' '
µIan. Freshly painted .j
central air. Priced below
comparable sales for im-1
med. action. $96,900. •
Cal 644-7211
/JD.NIGEL
GAILEY &
ASSf:lCIATES I ~~3~8~00y : 2 ~R. 21 • ba, contemp., from this 4 Bdrm 2 Ba ; , _ _ design $11S.OOO. mode rn hom e . Jus t ,L.apla---.. --h--1048 f SOMETHING I 64'-5096 646-6093 sz1_,.-:n3311.00022. 0Qpen 0Sat/Sun. ••••••••••~•••••••••••:
SPECIAL ---"· aaoa r. : SALE OR TRADE T H E FISH I NG ·--------•
• A super duper 2 Hd rm 3 BR 2 Ba fixer $llO,OOO 1 REALTORS ON TIIE BEACH-Mobile
l h omt!. Pr i de of. Ownrtagt.6421523 497-1666 Home 2 Br. redwood owners hip. Nice quiet. dec k, cedar s hakes,
loc-. Owner may carry ha rd wood int. r r p 1 c ,
, 2nd Community pool . 3 BEDROOM Fo.t• Valley I 034 $59,900. <714 ) 499-3816
, $117,500 Ca ll now; Eastside. quiet location .•••••••••••••••••••••••~~~.~~~~~~
979-5370 I but close to shopping. $15,000 down . patio home.1-,
I New roof, copper plumb·• 3bdrm. 2't'Jba, dbl gar.' OCEAHFllONT PARK j
LLSTATE ing, hardwood fl oors. frplc. mirror ed wall.: 2Br. cabana & trlr. sub· I,. plaster walls, good con· 1 A gt P r inc 0 n I Y. letting allowed. 3 pvt ~
Elegant. Luxurious, 48~. Custom
Home. Lofty Ceilings, Clerestory u
Windows, 3 Fireplaces. Glamorous,
Master Suite With Jacuzzi Tub
Dressing Room. Wa lk-In Closets'
Formal Dining. Large Family !'
Room. Pool With Waterfall And Spa
Are Only A Few or The Many':
Exciting Features In This Beautiful'
Home. $1,200.000. 11
1032 w•st.
La Jolla CA '2037
• 714-459·2641 c•e-
BEAUTIFUL
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
CUSTOM HOME
Builder/ Owner-Partial View
Xtra-lge rooms. fine features. fine
cond. Low maint. yd. Formal din.
rm. fam. rm, 3 br, 2 ba. country kit.'
AC! filtered. $395,000. Shown bY.,
appt onl y. 645-66 19. ~
REA TORS • dilton. Sll0.000 with an · 963-S535. bchs. pool & fishing pier. 1
---------assumable loan. HatlltwJ°" leoch I 040 524.900. <714 > 499·3816 --------1 HURRY! LAST I! .• Roy McCardk, RJtr. '....................... BE A P'11•11lllla D ... x Rare ClHfhaven coflAi>. '~ Dalebout ; 548-7729 1111.<XX> DOWN, No qualify MILLIONAIRE Completely refurbished. 2Br. den. 2frplc , o,v,r
B Beach I ing. Nr beach New 2 sty. . one blk to beach You 1 2 000 sq ft Communjb ' ay& 1 3 hr , 2112 ba $187.000. ln ~us~ lO yrs when you own the land Great! pool s1s9.ooo. Ng't
Real Estate I •FOURPLEX * • $1650 /mo . 960-1217 . bu)lhiscustomhomelo· fmanctng.$199.500 67S-':r7R7 646-3802 "· I I "° DOW ' 5.1&-6565 agt day for $395.000. Sweep· ~ , or . I MALfSTArrua,U!HCESIHC[rH t 2vJ/o N 1ng o~ean & can}on ~ Steve Dunn HEWPORT CltES~·-
u"RIOR I C:O.to Mesca lluffs views. Owner•bldr will . ll C.O r-ont ,,_u
' ~ SI 89.900 COMDO fmance Drive by & look·' " ~ .....-unn '•! 1 HIGHLANDS I SUCCESS REALTY FOR INVESTOR 1.535 Morningside Drive.1 ! FUii 180 deg ocean and • A super va lue. Four; Beaut 2 bdrm end unitl &W-1721. 759-9221 I Catalina view. Absolute· bedrooms. family room l ~49-7991 I) prime loc atio..n condo in H.B. Fresh • TI MESHARE .------, .... 0.000. ' and den. Entertainer 's I W """' : back yard with spa.1 * FOURPLEX * pamlandnewwallpaper., Ne~ Concept in vaca -'FOllSALEIY 0 HER . -·'· 'Firepit. Gas BBQ. All , Closelobeach.shoppmg t1ons Admiral unit Giant 5 Br. 3 Ba . Only , 3Rdrm.Close topoola'nd
: new kitchen with built-in , 200/o DOWN &schools. $99,900. ! available for ultimate m · $269.500. Owner w i 11 j tennis courts. S179,SOO '
; microwavf. $239,500. I Cotta Mesa llwffs WATHFIOMT YU luxury. $12.000. Call for c~ at SlSOO monthly, C/21 Newport C...ter
; 631-7300 N.l.1 SI 19.900 details. I with S20,000 down. No l 640.5357 · ·'
I . ! SUCCESSREALTY i l'OOLAMDSLIP ~VillocJeR.E 'cr~d it needed. 1714 ),liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiia
.
1
549.7991 I Beau~iful Christia na Bay 497-1461 I 84().:l964. I OH WATER .,
IMFLA TIOM I EAS'l'SIDE 2 ON A LOT ;'~1~:~~:;~:~ 1~~ ! THI 11'9 STEAL I °""SPACE •••
C
... IE Cute houses in xlnt cot'ld.. entertaining 1~ .this 3. Dana Point duplex 2 br I EASTBt.UFfS Lovely redecorated; 4 . A" pretty cul de sac loc.,: Bdrm. ~ormal.dming rm 1 1 ba upper. 1 br iower: 1 u.det' 3 Mew I bdrm hom e, 2-s tdry YOUR FRIEND I $137 soo. Owne r wi II home Wllh patio ~nd boat I new crnt fresh paint : yn . W/C~arm. ,teaded ~Ian. -· I ' · I dock. Owner will lease1 ... • • • 'I 4 Bdrm. 2 batb prest1ve1 Mexican tile. tge Uvibg Make I~auon work r_or car ry. Devin & Co option or exchange.i ~~med ceilings. frp~c . j home. Close to ever·l rm w it h p atio aod -
YOU wtth these 8 units ~ _ SISO 000 j dining area & encl. patio •. 2. I master bdrm deck Walk on 2 lots. and !>teps to1 · Offered for only Sl<14.000 ' RED CARPET I •· be h
beac h o r b a Y ·' IOMUS ROOM! i-~ATI Hll<CJ'l I f1JU. PRICE! 1 I lo ~ tennis "' ac ·
Re8¥>"ably priced l Super4 Bdrm 2 bath with i HOt-U " Inc. j MISSION REALTY j -754-1202 -$24 · ·
. Super. I bonus rm. incl pool tbl ~ REAL ESTATE , 494-0731 WATI:RFRONT
Summer-Winter I New ceramic u le. drps & r 87'3-e900 OPEH HOUSE ! -, HOMES
Rentals ! cpt'g. $137 500 1 BJ OWNER REAL ESTATE CALL TODAY ' I So. ccilf. ·Realty I -SAT /SUMOA Y 12-5 : 631-1400
546-5605 11m. · 1044 326 Mepolia j 4bdrm, ram rm. ·---------1••••••••••••••••••••••• GREAT NO . LAGUNA Palermo mdl, country!---------! MESAVERDE ASSUMABLE LOC Walk to main j French . t.otall y _______ _
1 SALEIY OWNER. • 3 Bdrm Heritage Park beach & downto"."n from , customized, Jae. Fee.! IESTl'llCED
Sto townbo R l · ttus unique Spanish style 1 Call to see. 204 l Port CA"'4AL FI0"'4T : 2 ry 4 Br plus den. 2' -z I ~e. e ax m your home 0 3400 ft . . I Bristo I. 6 44 . 5 9 6 5 .) '-vely 2 story 4 bdrms
l baths. large formal din-own pnvate not tub sur-. · ver sq ID • 644e 7697 1 ...., ing. eating area in k1tch. rounded by redwood cl g 4 bdrms. 4 . baths. 1 _ • completely redecorated
10'\I S
Iii \I I ) I'~
I '''4•
built-ins . bonus room : decking. Asking $132.500. ram rm. wet bar. hb~ary ·, OWHY MUST SELL I m subtle earth tones. with Franklin stove. 2• Isl T.D. of $67,000 a t 2 frplcs. ced~r li ned I . I Two fireplaces inclu~·g --------~ covered patios. l w/spa ' 9"'.i'h payable $713 mon· closet. Ocean view r~om 1 6 ~· 3 Ba giant home.I one in master s uite
Largi! corner lot with! thly1s assumable la r ge master s uit e .I N;~ume lst Sl2S.OOO ,at Large deck and patio
d d . I Enclosed courtvard and 11· r & S25.ooo 2nd at 14 • . h p " r . l shaean frwtt~ees .RV l)a ti o O WNER I S ' Due 1995 . $215.00o. :~dst:teemegtv~r :r:;: •
access.Ownerwill carry , I MOTIVATED AND ! R H.R .. Agt. ask for f'urn1'ture ava1'lable
I Fir.;t Trust Deed. Price . , . . S225.000 with $45,000 . WILLING TO HELP I Beau.673-7300_. __ --ReducedtoS229.000.
d 0 w n , p A y m e n l s FIN~CE. Offered by 1 -.
' amortired at 30 yrs with , Sheme Saber. ' IEST IUY WATERFRONT
I lO yr payoff. MOVE IN I DOHENY REAL TY I ' HOM ES
CONDITION Please call 661 ·735.5 OM LIDO I REAL ESTATE
l 54.5-8091 * *SIMflL( STORY I SPACIOUS HOME Seller Motivated~ Pme 631-1400
I --------na I I slashed by SlOOK' Best -
OWHER WILL CARRY ' 4 BR 2000 SQ n I 3 lge Bdrms. 3 baths. bU\ on island 1-:xtru l~e ! ist. TD with 29'. cash • fplc. wetbar .. dbl lot Sun I lot. LDvel> 3 Bdrm home. _______ ... _
, down. Nwpl Hghts area ! lde!!ll Y .located in the I deck. ful l pnc~. 5223.00? j "'1th sepa'rate a pl Q.IFfHAVEH
I :-.lew condo 3 Br 2•., Ba California Homes area I IO'' down. Assume lst I $33.5 000 firm Onginal owner had 1t
lSJO sq ft. Sl39,500. Call Uu.s customized plan has TD. ''•'< mt. Ja~k Hardy 1 Open Sat 1Sun l 5 built with quality a nd fi·
Agent 642-5722 for info a loan balance of S82.000 R 1 t Y • 7 14 · 6 1 S·898 21 223 Via Ithaca nesse Beautifully main·
....,_,._ V--..a-at J..2'", interest with mon· 213-867·5107 C/21 Newport Center tained 3 Bdrm pool b<Ulile ......... ...,....... thly payments or $848 1 640.5357 w 1th re at u r es t oo
- _ _ -----Immaculate executive 4 only S146.500 Whitewater View 1 -:. and believe' S.150,000.· I Showplace und a~sumable As king .... IM Oce• ~~~~~~~~~~ numerous to count. See it
l6oa l.a-d 1006 bedroom home with 3 . 3 Bdrm 3 Bath. s pacious --------IAIRETT ' baths formal dining 2 REALTY REGISTER •••••••••••••• ••••••• • • , hearty fireplaces. a huge study, 2 vaulted ceilings. SEAVIEW .
I fanulv room. & a ran· wood floor . bullt-in 64~5200
1 ./<>PIM DAILY tastic· gourmet kiJ.chcn' bookshelves. tile entry. Port Royal Model 216=cs.ooo Call today a no see. bri(tht custom kitchen & I Panoramic view. ocean,
I
$169 ,900. TARBELL! diningroom. 752-1920. •city lights & mtns. 4Br. ---------: 3Ba. FR, forrT)al din
$1.100,000 _R_E_AL_TO_RS_._54_0-_11_20__ WOODIRIOGE I ' ~UAIL area. upgraded. s h ut
Wat -f t/Soll""' I THI '"UM-C0"'4"0° ~ ters, cpts. entry. solid err• ry MESA YHDE "' , PL .._CE oak panelling & molding 673-6'00 l'RIC!llDUCED A llv rm., custom made
CAPICOO TO $131.000 ,._.TIES'" 1 spa, pond. watenall. a Larwe S Bdrm. 2~ bath. A delightful 3 Bdrm. vr-""" I gas conversation pit.
LOU BRECHTEL
CMdAttoelahs .... , .....
Sales & R...tals
229~A •. l .I
675-3331
comer lot. RV ac·cess. ad u I t o c c u p i e d 10,. TV t:JO ,,,..,I . I declts, custom landscap. sprinklers front and Creekwood Aspen plan . , ing, pvt gate 14uarded1 NEWPORT .r.
back. Asking $182,000. on low traffic cul-de-sacl : community w/pool. ten·I WATllFIOMT -;
I Owner will carry Isl TD. street. The lowest pri~e1 •-M&-a 10r.2 !' nis crts. spa, BBQ"s Largest noor plan ·'11 Call 540-1 lSl detached residence in ~ .~..,..... ., F O R s A L E B y 1 rereci. Open. fresh and a
Woodbridge. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWNER I BK R . XI n i-! beautiful view. Cuslioan ~HERITAGE I CalllOW 644-7211 I SPANISH SEA Vl EW ; terms. 644·9260. l decor, gold fixtures...1Md
1 TOWNHOME l many upgrades. W>f t
..........__ •--.1----•-I 007 ·~~~~~~~~~I I Good existing financing I I sUp nghts up to 45'. ' ,_,..__ ,_ · and motivated s eller S749,000 ,m.
1 •••••••••••••• ••••••••• ~ · 1 I make this 3 bedroom. 2..-.i : : JAMIS E. GOUL CHAAMIMGHOME ·A.ssumeSB0.600.4 br,3 ba. , bath Me diter r anean , 1 ~4>
. .• REALTORS
' 3Br 2Ba + apt lg lot I fam. rm. 2147 sq fl I I stvle villa a must to see I 631-IS32 ••
. quiet at.' Penin~ula n;' $134.900. Owner/agt I I s:z29.to0. 495.1120 I
Bay Is I e . R en ted .1 7Sl-0223. 751·3191 I WOODllllOGE I ~By owner. Newport Crest
1
1255.000 limited time By New Townshousel 2br. I L• I I condo. plan 4. 9%·40·
owner. Good terms. (714 ). NO 2ba. 2 car gar. frplc . 1ngo ' sum able loan. 0"991
673-1610 i I oven/stove. d /w. 1362'. -..i&An view. motivated to sell.
i eoro-.. w.. I o221 QUALIFYING I ~ !! ~~~r.·m1 !:~l : 1198.000. NMOU.
....................... I 1prin1. 673-4415 2·4PM ........... ..... I''' R E .. LT 0 R -;z T •
1 G0.000 d.n could do It 2 . i•••••••••••••••••••••••I "-•••• POOL A"'40 YllW I sty 4Br. 2~Ba, AC, 1 yr IY OWMH ll' IHI SI~
IRYIMITHIACE old. pool sited lot, totally l llPOll I usf· '"SPACIOUS" • Beautiful 4 be droom 3 Bdrm up1raded ~
A coiy 3 Bdrm. torm1.1I ' upgraded home. Assume I Turtletock ho m e . 3! ISTHIWOIO
1
. home tJas been uparaded; f\.pMio townbome. 2 car
dlnlnl rm home with ~ exist. Loans &seller will Bdrm Zba 1700 ~It 1 and cuat.omJied. s doors, garaae, walk to bay1'l•· POOi and highly expand&·· help finance. Ask for Bill freahly painted covd 1 Lov9l.Y 5 Bdrm 3 bath. 2 to a private beach. Con · sumable ton. Olr
ble \'lew of harbor & · Valley Reall)' 770-1700. tlo Move In ' cond ' st«)' bome, featuring:• tad 9111 Feeney. i will help rlnaoce. r
oce:40. A new Uallng at EASTSIDE t870 oOo Ph ~MOlO 0 ;' lortnal dining room a nd: '73-1020 1 says bring offer. 752.
onl>' mJO ooo tee · · · 1 family room, 3 patloa, ~~~~~~~~~ CALL QU lCK . 2 duplexes on l lot. high : 831-6407 1 separate I reen bouae, 1 -
644•7211 : aasum. loan. Sent• are Tu RT L e R 0 c K • new P&lnt In and out. Of.. .... ..... CllR ' ftl 1Alti
• low. Income $14'0 mo. SP I f BR "b I fved at $229,000. Ca ll1 3 8 d p I v l T~ I ~ 000 Principals onl>· Beautl ul 3 . c;, a .' M).lll l rm a n . p• .._C · · Brotdrnoor home·fac1n1 , ~tor'a own homeo.1 IJll
p&eue. ~7-0554 agt. . parlc. Upsraded, rno,·e·ln ~pert) oet•n view from, PIOPll~
11.ivesomething rou want ' cood. SlU,500 lnc l 'R l~b&lcony, ,~
• to sell~ Classlfled ads do I and X 1 n t term 1 I C~ I Mew~ C .... r . to,. ft l:Jt' .. ,~ --"'--~----' hwell.Q.U-5878 __ m._ -~l _ ___ __ d=~=-=~·~4~~~-~~~l~~-==--~-~:===~=~=c:.:::::
_.._ .. -
~···· .... ,,..
IH11111Uzfu 't • 1H•mHUz,. a •• ......_.,.,., ... .._~ IN..u.Uwfw 'th• ,,., ..... ,. I I • ~ ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• l•••••••••••••••••••••••I~;;;;;; ......................... ••••• ...... ••• ... ~•e1•N•• .. M•M1ie81••~11e1 ••..... ~~ ........ ,~~.~~ .. :... ..!~.~~ ...... ~~ ....... ~~?~ ~ ............ ~~~-~,~~ ..... ~~~ ~:!:'.~~ ... !~~ !~~~!~-.. ~~! ............... ..!!~! ... ,.1..... "" ·~" I tcrl&Dewt. • ~VERDE:' Bdrm Bf.Atrnnn... Bdrm, a Ocean view 2 8r+den, 4 3bdrm,2•,ba.ll50.Da) .............. 0 .... beacb~uanlaa, Iara• i Br . .... _ ................... ~ t-..... , J4 0 Jb.ah. POOL. Reduce~ be&.ta.900/mo yrly. dedrs,tae S700 Nopets • .,...._tv .. 1 lpl.~bU11owater.IBr a.din ,\pt. Pool.~
Clf9e1Aa.Y .. -•••-••••••••••••1 ••11•11•••••••••••••••• to 950/ino Waterfront Wa.i.froet Homes Dave.ait.8+4·7211. 142-D. l bt. M21tmo wloter. -. -·no W. lltll. •
.......... a.-""'"" ., Id Iii Bur TS.XIOO okej Homes,lno.f.ll·HOO Ql-1400 Oen View 38r + den a-.__ -Jmo Jrly, Utll a.cl. 91_. _____ ....... .__ Ut 1 la 0 ._.. .,.plea •~>''• o • level lot In Su1adoaf. · --•srto .. ~~1 :!!! 11:S uwner help rtnianu W ... u.dw/1dacr .. 1.8"ndNt w!OceanViewl :blrm,11.\ba,endunJt,nr 2 1t8a, 2 aty, 1pa , C"ltt1-3271 -------.,..,--1 mile to b .. ch . lbr -. .... -.A-"''tro,;. owner'• unit )hr. 2ba, m.aoo.PP.nf-dl·JT93. 3 Br 2\AJ ba condo. OOOl6ttMl1. Children microwave. USO m o ........ ••••••••••••••••. =• carden apt. dlabwatb. :&"?.l··· lf.':'8Ke .. •• frplr.dfl»cbedduplu ln CWefCia ty 117$/mo. H1·44H or <'.1<.m> '40-064Teve1. ?eo.tl58e
1
2 Br. 1 Ba. with view o nf&._. ... ,,i , 8BQ.M25/mo.1••tt
'"'2br, tba lll0,000 dwn ~.,.rt, JISO "912-0498 ask for dlnny W ... Y ... ,.... lApl9 Hiit 3250 FoothJlla. Gara .. with1 ....................... PALM llESA \PTS
••••••••••••••••••••••• I 6 2 Bdrm. P'\1111 6-.
WMsf,.ftocn ... a~ ~~afteraPM -!••••••••••••••••••••••• a.c. New 3br, 2\AJba CON·' 2 8d condo, S560 tmo •• .. •••••••••••••••••••! r~il~e~~n::;h~~:~ ............ ll06I 151• ll•a Dr
....... U~l40I ._....... ta~,... of 1racloul coun·, 00. 2cer 1ar w /elec ) Avail. now. Call Ro1er or Cont~· 3bctrm • 2ba ·1 fenced yarJ with i·ov, ..._Me t ... · ....._. t MO j l.tY llwlna. Th~ beautiful 1 open, micro, 1aa bar·b· f'rtd aa.ttOO. w11...,r /dryer • 1ar' no ettd patio. l'onvenlent to
....................... ........................ horle rancho· one'' 20 I que. •mall 1>1llo: VI( Id I .-c.t. 1&7&/mo 6lll-l7tt. F'rwy " complete shop· Deluxe Ba)'front 3bdrm . 26e. refrlliJ:K.lc. adults.
tum. From 1125. M . Call Ml<-. WAC.4...... ..._tobe vtdto our' m.bt. rrom r. ty. 31 hook·up.wiw cpt•drpt, ~........ UIJ I pan1. IOS mo. 30771
II'° Y Bdrm.28allfacnllyrm,j d w avail ll /1/1() ••••••••••••••••••••••• Paaeo El Arco. Work N•·ur L•• yard lal J br, l !Ma. at\ICCO U · ~tom Wit home. over· 1700 1 831. 7100 REALTORS Nll(Uel Shor" 3 Br + den m.ttM. Home 768-4608. I no =· /mo yrly. -,"4·5J.9 AVAIL. now. 2 BR. pvt
deck overlookln1 1011 l.AYROMT CIOUr'M, new cpta •paint. Nlce2 Br 1 ba w /allp M25 mo. Call 54'-SllO,
a.itoSO CMIM Owner Ceri~ Approx. 25 yra 1laed detached 1ara1~· m 1>. ' a.an» home 1750
' Will lilelp w flHocln1. olcl.&ou.dcond. I will.re-w/carport. lr1 • 1talli 642-2001 -. ruRn.EROCK .. 4'4·945.1 . s.t.A.a UIO ~1115,000 I rod. llOOO. 111111 movtn1 barn 2 tack rooms • 1 MISA YMDI 2br, coav den. 2ba, 11 •••••••••••••••••••••• • SlOOO/mo. 673·5335 ask for BUI or Pam
UtUe Island. yearly. Lr1 Lower 2 Br. 1 Ba. In 4· fl airy !bdrm, SSOO/mo.
6lt..J14J roR.t . ..a.z.. areenhouse. Lots' ot 4 B 3 Ba r II , brit.e l/r + d /r, tp. Calh 8o utlrully derorated Bradford Condo nr. S.C. r~ . ] .__,...,.rty 2000 trees. See to appreciate wet''bar. prota':elor ";; Cln1a, O/I, db_1 aar. ~aq. ft. 4 bdrm home Plaza 2sty. 3br. l '2ba, t::?:SunlMM Ri'lllt) ....................... W. unique property. All lndlcDd. 3 ur 1,araae. pool/NC, S74S. IJS1 2208. w1central a i r l'llnd. dbl gar, pool, lge patio
-• llAMDMIW thiaCoronly S149,900. By Oarcfener Incl . 89t0. UQl Pk 1 k' h 2 waaher/dr)er. ranae. area Im mac . $550 Avail immed. 815·3412. Plex. 171 E. 18th. Pl. s:t.50
mo.Call~.
1 Bdrm unf«irn. charmer Roomy 3 Br. Townhouse on canal. S550. Rum bold
~ ---lotO UHITS Owner. 6t6 ·8275 , 7'1A/1'7o.ll0tt,"4·7Jl7. BR·2 e.••:t~~h~~ ci'bl rclt11. Avail :'olov 15 on 968-VZZ2or842·8349
--•••••••••• ••••••••• 6 1'881·-0ISS. "•r Verf pvt cozy & yrcy lease at f7~ mo Q,,.• ... Jlng clean co•u 2Br 2 Br unlta w 17araaes. 1st QI of Shih s Br. 2 ba, rpt1/drpe, nr ~Y w 10 r'errig Incl c •I I Dave ca u d I e . ....,.. " • •J
SIQ.UDIO, owner bene Its. Grf!al •w*r 2600 WUaon/Placentla. Fed Lae s7oo mo Art 5 ' 831·&.W. ~·~cdkyearr·d.hNoema'reE.dlnBgiegr Realty. 675-4822. Apt. in quiet Adult
SNCIAL rent a I a r e a 1 n n-....,..-1n1 yd. l&llO 983.o1777 aft 5 • · • - ---~ .,., Complex. New~y re·
:.Sunshine and c harm Westmjnater.OwnerwUI •••••••0 •••••••••••••• --• &G-2917:9$3088 Mlt"°"Vlelo 3267 & Ma in . S-450 /mo . Utt.le Is . L1e 1 Br. Year-decorated, rt replace.
• .lbruout this. 3 Bdrm help finance , Agent 40A scenlc0regon Coaat. 2 Hr Sln1le Ba. Fenced .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 63'7·'1'918. ly. Mature 2 adlta. no enclsd patio fl gara1e.
home, In frestigioua 631·7300. Electricity. fenred. out· )Td. attarhed 1ar Pet Ir "THI LAKIS.. HOME FOR RENT w-"-.-"'-.. -,-..,.---3-2-9-1-4 pets . ut II pd, 1425, Sorey no pets. 1495 mo .
67).9473 645-3381 or81S.5949
Peacock HH . :"oles tied In at and.Ina view. acrestl· 1 chlld OK. 1490 iho. Call 56 Lake Pines: 2Br 1 k~ldb• 3 Bdrm. 1550. l'enced ••••••••••••••••••• •••• t l d h b .u .... ITS ble.owner492·2499 &0-? onw.t•.nopet1or • ,ardandaara"e,,.·14mily maw-e reesan s ru s . " 1-....., 2atryw1frplc.l8001mo please. Kid; & PCll 1> 3-4 Br. 2Ba, new cpts &I ...... , ....... 3107 2 lid.rm. 2 Ba. Townhouse .
providint cool shade and Westside ~.ost'a Mesa. tt.til..... 3 br, 1 ba, garage. Ira I ~ekome. Call 004·2S66 or l paint. aarage, 1695 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• All Adults. Attached
garage, fireplace, pool, complete secl usion ~ rond1hon. income W..ted ZtOO rd -960 Oak St 118Lak Pl 18 Ill 8461358 846 579'l
... T 968-83118 91J0.1503 nopttsorklda. ~/mo ~------~-I Huge separate family ,llOO yr.Prlce •..:45,000.: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ya · _,.,, · e nes . r. u,I !'7J.2971Aat .. no fee 1-· · · Avail Dec. 1, 2bdrm, lba.
2 sundecks. ~ar . spa. M50 mo. Call alt 3.
~110/mo, yearly, a ulil 631""984.
pd.645-~. 2 Br. 1 Ba. S400 to 1425.
"?>mwilh wet.bar.open· On pa~menl Sl30.000.1Pvt party would like tol • · , _ ,2Br +den.2Ba cond o...___......., •
1 iaJ to sparkh!'g swim·! OWC balance. at 11"k · I 1ease w. option lC> buy • K Side duplex. 2Br, yard.1 252 Pine View :tHr I'" (;omm pool 1s11a -Allso U.fwwilhed 1425 · mu~a ~I .with bn r k /i?' fR€HIG€ homelnMlss1onVlejoor t gar .. quiet s treet. ba,2stryw/frplc Kld11I V1lla1 S5~0 incl ut11 •••••••••••••••••••••••1 LOVELY l br, walk to D/washer, aarage.
bch. no pets. S350 incl. 548.3394
utils. 6i5·6160 agt. S350 mo. 2 Br 1 Ba, 2860
·.~t10. Shining kitchen ---Costa Mesa. 548 -9464.i Ouldrenok. Avail. now. OK,nopel'>.1575/mo. 4lJ7·3034 j Forrent,co.ndo.2Br.Hun-
1
with new noors Perfcrl HOP1€~ 646-0034 • triOO/mo. llt"last +sec., All rent ala require! -·---. langlon Land mark.
·-:country est ale. S229.900. I Real Estate Investments i....... I Joan 4'7-5"02. 1' lat/last + 1200 security ' Mew,_i hach 3269 r Adults over 40. $5501 mo.I
._ ...
don osen
( ,.,, ! 'tl l'"I
lTI'H AT PROSPECT
TUSTIN
731-3111
Olhet-Real E1tat• •••••••••••••••••••••••
1100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3br. 2ba, y rly $650/mo Hickor y Pl.' Mesa
frplc . 406 E. Balboa Verde. No kids /pets
Blvd. 675-7367 ,675·4912 Refs req'd. Agt. 559-6221
Co zy. co mf ~. im Eastaide 3 l~rm. 2 ba. No
' ' dep. . ••••••••••••••••• •••••• 213-347·9745. • 3333 W.CoastHwy,NB •••••••••••••••••••••••1,·-11 p kJB I" b ---------1 64s-6646 ........ ,.,...lhed ,.....,ege ar . r. ~a,, -'BLt;l"f"S, 3bdrm. 212ha . ~xesFww 3650 ,
• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t dbl gar, $575 incl. grdor 1 Each unit haa a~cess t.o fam rm. frplc. patio. nr ••••••••••••••••••••• •• · MUSTSELL! .........__1_,_~ 1106 64S·2062 days; 838-40751 tennis. pool. )acuza.1 pool, school $79~/mo Cl Zb 1 blk f I - -es SAW\a and hus laundry. 640-8146 ean, r r.i rom 1 2houseson2duplexlols.1•••••••••••••••••••••••1ev · --I hooltu I --·--bth. covered deck-ln·1 maculate. Must seel pets. S575. lst +dep.
I C.M. Best. offer fakes.: WINTER RENTAL I New 2sl~ 2br. 1"'2ba, frplc , Ask ror Gil regarding Newport Shores 2 br. 2 ba. rant OK. Yrly $575 mo beach dplx. C'lose lo B.13-93189
l0?.-financmg.Own/Agt.l 2Bdrmhome,quiet st.nr· w d, dishwasher. self t lheserentals I den. newly pa inted & lst.S300 set.548·509l4719· trans. & s h op1>ing . ----------~9666. l So. Bay. Lovely private: clng oven, balcony gar 1 I •Ctftf • crptd. Nr cluhh~c 5675 R1verSt NB <upstalrs1 1 675-8720or985·5822 E. S1rleC.M. ~br. in four-
patlo, dbl gar. 5600. Matura adults . no pets . I "!_=:'" ' mo 631 2991 -; I plex. lge patio. dbl gar. I B h I & • "' n-• .a IE.. 1 h d COl'OftO def Mar 31Z2 1 adults/no pels 645·5512 . PRIDE ' Lou 6r7ei ~e~31Assoc '1 l'i00tmo642·7125 I 15 -OZ 11 1' COttN.Elt CHARMER nfl tNnh rwm s • ....................... , 64S-Z331 r~~ •••••••••••••••••••• • •' 21 Bd 2 b f I di · ----------14 UNITS • •E Side Broadway 3br i ---3 Bdrm s +d e n , • ........__p....t.... II 3707 2 rms. a , rpc, s BG de s II * * ....._,,Mtlllla 3107 . l.ba frplc no ch'1ldren1:i 3Bdrm .. 2 Ba.Turlllerock. heautifullv appointed -ewwws•a ; hwshr. No. of PCH 2 .r. ar n Apt. ma · •· N J ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'Cl\1mo. 1st/last, secun·. child OK. 1375 mo. San Juan Capo. sss.ooo. 2 1 ~ yr s ,old , askin g:•••••••••••••••••••••••! pet~ 1575·/mo. 645.446 11 Newpaml. ~carpel o, home w 13UOO .sq. ft
1
.,,,.,,
Br.28a.1480 sq.(t.8yrs.I tll3$,000w1thSl90,000dn,lw 1nte r , oceanfront , 1eavemessage pets.S'150.S1er ra Mgmt.I Avail. 1115180 up to 1 BAY FRONTAGE . ty.Availnow.673-2282,9 546·9950.
-oldAgt541·5032. 1 OWC,CallTedorBill I 2bdrm, 3 car prking .' I C.0.641-1324 yea r lease Agent. ~~~5o~~di~.8~.n~JO~• lo5pm 2bdrrp, l \"aba, bit-ins, pvt
OWNYOURM.H. SPACE DAVIS & CLARK I between B & C st. 1625. •2 Br. Duplex. Garage.i Jrvlne Northwood "The 67J.7JOIJ. --E Edge w a l e r !New 2 bdrm. l :Y• ba ·I ~k. gar. 1450 lse only.
THE FARM 1 15l-t6H I 645--4345. 1 ~-u~~M~a~~~na l Lakes". Deluxe 1 Br loft 38r, 2Ba Home, pool. ten-1·871·2866. w/vie"( & 2 car pkng.1100-0489or760-0409.
AGENT (714) 642-8377 1 CodaMffa Triplex tC.-det Mw 3122 ! ig · · End unit with. frplc .,• rus, rlose to bch, S695 mo Walk to ocean & bay., S'150/mo Isl & last plusl2 Br, 2 Ba condo, tennis
Own 'l h 3Br I••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Brandnew2 BR 2 Ba con-' waterwa,·s. tennis. pool. 673-6210. La 3 Bd 2 b ""')()' S250 dep. 975-0142 week crl s pool 5625 mo 35 fl lral'ler for sale · ers uni as '1 ONTHE CH I ... Call0 kd c.•4 1434 ---rge rm. a.""' ' days 67., gc:92 eves & · ' · · '! 2ba, frplc. patio. dbl gar.. BEA . do. lge rms, dbl gar. lge ..,.c. w ys""' · · MEWPORTHEIGHTS \Tly 675·4630Agt. · ~· ~ I 974·3148 work599·0975 Localed I blk from bch.1 sundeck $19SOOO Owner' 2 Bdrm duplex. view, side yd $650. Nancy . Wknds831-6914 . I . • I weekends. I '
• S40IX> or best offer. 72041 financing po~sibie. Call avail. 'lil 12/15 . Agl.1 631.-00 ' Townhouse· 2b d I 3bdr1m. 2boda. 11redg yrd with 2 Br 1 Ba. bay vee w.~2 Br 1 b f le new Avail. now, freshly paint· , Csl Hwy, No. 28. Calli toda on this new listing I Faye. 640-9900 / . r + en.I poo . rem e with all decks S59S wntr $695 yr-1 • a . rp , ed 2 & 3 br apts, J .D .
.. before 5PM 642-8450. woo1tlasl Agt 731.1469 · Nic-e clean 2Br, tBa. fncd lge kitchen w/all amen new kitchen SIOOO/mo. ly Ask for Connie A. carpet, etc. So. of hwy Property Manaaement, . Al'ler5,645·7996. Ask for · · 11.ovely2bdrmhome.com· y d . ga rage , 2029 deck, 2 car gar. nr a: Lease. l~cl gardener & 67~0 I SS2Smo.Agt.675·2373. ;51.2787 .
.' leff ' V de I pletely furn, secluded Wallace-B MOO mo. lsl & lake/ park $750. m o I pool mamtenanre_ No --. . ----------
•• • I Mesa er patio. 2 car gar. Couples1 last +SlSO sec. 548-2778 I 5.5EMilJ1 pets 642·24B;Z or 95, 1166 1 BEACH FRONT IN:-.!. LowtSt~IO ~pt. No cooking 2br,sep. unit, frplc, patio,
Hemet Valley. 10 x 54 F _.. 2 I I preferred. 640-9228 after "---p=w •226 -l r ef . Av a i I a PP r ox Winter rates-$90 up wk .· facil. Kitch area w /fng. carpet drapes 2636 M bll H 'th 1'Yr-1 • r 6p j--~ TURTLEROCK j 1115-80 675-8'740 1 nucpts. S285. 675-9431 Elde 0 1465 s4s-60l9 0 e o me w i 1 Bath built-ins closed1 m. •••••••••••••••••••••••! Lrg2st 4Bdrm 3Ba 3 ~ · I n ' ' · C!.abana & carport. Sell or tarages separate gas "'IM.wnn.rt hach 3169 j 2 Bdrm 1 ba, frplc, dining car g~:,· e xlnt l~catio'n IN E W PO RT l' R EST Costa MHa 3724 2Br. lBa. ocn view. frplc' ....;646-6789 ___ . _____ _ trade for older home on' 1 ct · · 1 .. r-rm hrdwd nrs W ID hk·1 ' 3bdr 2, b d dbl 1tcu. mo to qwet non· Ea . d C M 1' e e n c meters, awn ••••••••••••••••••••••• kuP SSSO 49S.oiz7 S850. 833-1800 m, , a. C'on o, . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ . Bachelor. E'side loc. sts1 e osta es a. sprinklers. $205,000 w~hj UDO ISLE I . . . : . ' 1 elec gar. ldy. wet bar, SUS CASIT AS i smoker. &40·89-15 1325. No pets. ~ ' cbwn pa.ymenl of 29 ,,., Completely furnis hed ' DUPLEX : Xtra lge JBR' Move ID ~w . W~bndge1 ~mall ocean \IW. pool. F\im 1 br a pt . S350 & up Costa MHo 3124 548·0908
· Prelpftiy 1600! 2nd TD at 13'1< interest need. Remodeled & de-cpts & drps. Fenced: mountains, nr park, $575. eves. 2.1 Landfall Court pets · 2110 ·Newpart' Bl • NEWLY DECOR. J Bdrm, 2 ba, frplc, gar. ecw.-rclal ' owner will carry. $56,000, with everything ~ ou 2Ba lower unit Plushl 3 br. ~ 2 ba, view of! tenrus, elC'. S775 559·8053 Encl gar Adults no·•••••••••••••••••••••••1
•••••••••••••••••••••••! only~or 4 years.Replyto cerated 3Br den2ba th 1 yard someocnvu close! 552·4368 OpenHouseSat Sun. S-18·4968 betwn s ·JO &1 B pd 1 nrSo.Cst Plaza.No pets.
LAGUNA IEACH . I Daily Pilot . PO Box 1560 Monthly. 8111 Grundy, i to bch & shops. SS95 Ph RENTALS !Waterfront 2 Br. luxur) SPM d/washer. pool. Adults •--·--------' class1f1ed ad ii723, c /o · : · 1 • •
1
--1 · 1 r. gas . enc gar. s.s50 644•1103
9600 Sc;>.FT. · Costa Mess. Ca 92626 Rltr. 675-6161 I e1490, 499-2237 3br2 ba $775 with rabulous water & c1·. 2 br. 2 ba ~esa Verde. 642·5073 V1UA MADYA
14 Leased commercial· .3 Bdrm. 2 bat.h, Penin Pl.',.,_.. v•y 3234 1 3br2V. ba $9251 I~ lights view S2000 mo , Adil~. no pets. S450 2 .. I la Apt 2 Br. 2 Ba. gas stove &
Industrial units localed' SUPER4-PLEX I home Mo 10 m o o r '•••••••••••••••••••••••i 3br2"'2ba $750-$1 400 ancldulils.581·2932 838•4921 1 N 1 d G ds hwhr in c l. En c l
on one of Laguna's main! Ass ume 119< loan Ex-
1
· want ~r lease $G 75 I HOM E FOR RENT 4br21'.lba S900·S1250 --· --1 ew y ecor. as pd. garages. Couple pref.
highways Building re· c.ellenl Anaheim loca-· 4Bdrm CondoS575. 4br 2•t:i ba +bonus S9001Avall Dec.I , 3bdrm. 2ba 'Stunnang large 1 Br encl gar.pool,d/washer. Children OK . No pets
cently remodeled. Highi Uon. 2-J's & 2 2's. 11 X 673-2113· ~ Gar age . Fa mi Ii es 3 br 2 ba Tustin S650 house. Newport Shores . I garden apt pool. rer l Adults. 642-5073 $450. Util pd. except elec.
demand area. Partnersl gross $230.000. Sell oruoo ISLE: 2 br. 2 ba., ple ase . kids & pe ts 1 Kids&pets okay $750.968-9110. area S385 no w 18th.I 3 .. TowahHM 2324 Elden.642·1213 want out. offering ver~· trade for house. Agent S'72S rum S6SO unfurn •welcome Call964-2566or 4br2i,;,ba S2250CdM St I
attractive financing on a1 7 14 /95 7. 4025. Eves Diamond R E 645_7573 'I 973-2971. Agt. no.See. I furn winter rental NPT Shores duplex 3 br, 1 • Newly decor. gas pd.. Large 3 Br. 2 Ba. 4-Plex.
total price of $575,0oo: ~3604 . . 1 I 2 ba. or bch. $600 m o I urge 1 Br Furn Nrl e n c I 'a r .. p 0 0 I . . withS166,750down. I · llAUTIFUL 1Hwillaq011hach 3240 Yrly 581·0384 ""'--1 all t'I d d /washer . Adults patio, garage. n ~w
Realooo 675-6700J ASSUME VA J ••••••••••••••••••••••• · --1 s • ...,...,. poo · u 1 s P 1 542.5073 carpet. 1040 B Valencia. mies I IA Y FRONT 5 blks to ocean. Elegant 2 2 hr, pauo. nr bear h. new· 1 1884 Monrovia. 548·0336 $485. No pets. 545-7983.
NEWPORT IEACH I ~PC~em~e~up~ I room. On water with (S725 mo>. Plush crpts. -198-2195 I:;;; .. :: ............... Pool, laundry rm. crpts. 2A~~ l \"a Ba . To;use
I $7,900 DOWN 1 Forever view from every I bdrm. ram nn & den. j ly dee. no pel!->. ssoo yrly. I Hi AilM)tOR leach 3740 1 su~S465. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt
Prime C-l lol 57xl20 with! 105. 1· !_ dock for 45 · boat 4 2"2 ba. cedar & glass. ., H l 's RNEST I drps. Adults only. Cat• ts, no pets. mo
older two bedroom Deluxe 8 units c M As-' bdrms. 4 baths , 1m-1 Dbl. car pvt gar, fully BAYCR~ 3 Br. 2 ba .
1
· . , OK. TSLMgmt.642·1603. _&i& __ 9507 _______ _ · j · • ·1 maculate. $2500/mo. ma1nl. yd. Adults, no fnnl dining. enrl yard. Spanish Estate ~1vmg . . . home. Cons p1 c uo~s ly sum. loa~, at 11 '. OW( Waterfront Homes Inc. ! pets. Inquire at 527 18th. greenhse. Gardener incl. Beautiful par k·hke sur-.Spaaous Family 3 bdrm. SPACIOUS 2Br. ~dull apt ..
localed on Old Ne~portl 2nd al 12 , w/25'fi down Realtors 631-1400 St 714 960 6331 I roundings . Terraced! 2 ba. $395, 2. bdrm $3-40. Open beam ce1h~gs, lots Blvd. $250,000. Agent., Bkr.979-4383. 900-6331. pool. Sunken gas ~bq,1 P layground & pool. ol wood. Incl. rnnge. No 631·7300· , tta..t u.funtished HOMES spar kling fountains .; S48·9556from 12-7PM. pets. S'385/mo. 673-8803 or
••••••••••••••••••••••• Sp a c 1 o us roo m s .1 ! 548·7356.
ca.alee ConMr Lot
Prime area or Newport
Beach. Useable 2000 sq
ft . bldg or plans for 10.
sq. fl. bldg. Agent,
631-7300
180 OMITS .._.Isa.ct 3206 3 Bdrm Separate dining area.,'38r.2 Ba.NearOCC.$4SO --------" Fenced Walk·in closets, home-mo.Upperapt · EASTSJDE. lge re · Prime East.side location.••••••••••••••••··~·~··• garage Wte kitchen & cabinets• 641-8657 modeled 2 BR 2 Ba. nr
90 ooe bdrm. 1 bath apts. 8>0. 4 br, 3 ba, den, dining please. Walk to Hunt 1n glonl'
8
C d SC shopping, S4SO per mo.
and 90 two bdrm. 2 bath rm , 2 2 7 C o r a I . welcome Center * 2 r. on o '!ear &&2-6368
apts . Large pool and 213-395-3511. 973-2971 A 1 Bedroom-unfum S400 , Plaza, SA Tenms, pool, ----------
clubhouse. <APPROVED 1 Bedroom furn from! spa. 1$48().SSQO. No pets 1 Br. Stove. Private patio.
rpR CONVERS ION .> YIAILYRENTALS ·'::~~Ta 5430 1 549-3232or641·1460. gas paid. Adults. Ref's.
SI ·100·000· UtUe Island. Large 1 • Fi l 2 Bedroom furn S490 I wx11•y LIVl .... G ms. 64&-0983. rep ac Twnhse-unfurn from . -" OCEANSIDE 17141673·4400 Bdrm apt, unfurn . refrige. S5l0 In quiet Adult Complex. 2bdrm. 2ba condo near
IJIJIUl -JUI Gar(Sml car )S500. tor. lmma Adults.no pets. 1 ~cious t BDRM. APT. S.C. Plaza. pool. rec SH 0 P P I M Beautiful 2 story 3 Bdrm :mclsq. fl l:Lilities Free ~ I Dishwa~her, flr eplare. room. laundry, all blt·ins
R home, un!urn, dbl gar. Q?mini R I pvt. patios. pool & spa. & refrig, water & gas pd CT • paUo. close tQ So. Bay .I LAQUINTAHER \IOSA NOPETS.S39Smo.&up Kids O K . no pets ln area of recent growth Spacious rooms. SllOO an-F'or lease 16211 Parkside Ln. 1 blk MESA PINES ssso mo 645·2016 dys.
Room to expand :\lo5ti} ~ d util gaarage w opener A• 2 Bdrm and den single OC EA~FRONT 3 W of Beach,J blksS of l 2850HARLAAVE. e.3736eves &wkends. tnple net le11ses EZj ! trul} lo\'ely home 1 mile r a mlly Broa d moo r .... _. 2 ba, bnck frplc, F..dmaer 1 SPMC 549·2447 () .... _,.. ...... R11r.o..1T ... LS .. h $590 · 1 home. vaulted ceilmgs. uuuu ., managem ent wner. · -'"""'"' '"" "' lo ueac . 1n C' s · S6 5 lge front patio. very I 847·5441 12 bd house ..... 50/2 bd PINEBLUFFAPTS f g $700 000 Max i Several Available Now water. Call Monika al fireplace. atnum-7 1 •. d d A 1 · .,.
SantS::".:!' a r l . b k r . A 1111 ''"'" ot 2·3&4 Bdrms. ....,...cc<>cor963-1139 mo. Agt, 675·6000, ask for c ean "'unfpgra e 300va1 . Jbr 2ba lovely lge unit inj duplex $470/ 645·8103. 333 Spac. 2 Br. 2 Ba . Adult " Win I f S900 "'""'..._, Natalie furn or u urn. Sl /mo 1 p1' c' Is t i E 2J St c M C.Omplex. Patio, view. 714-434·4111 11 ,111J1u·1m~~•ml'nll'o ter eues rom yrly lseorwill C'On!>ider s 4· ex. e too~n. enn Sj · · · · frplc, enc l, gar., gas C--~-,..1,.1.,'!'~Tow•· YrlyleuesfromS1200 3br. 2ba, fam rm. frplc, taJ I courts. & joggmg lrak.I stove, dis hwsr, spa, -• sta ve. refrig, dis · mosren '$650 t6672Algonquinj
i.-..tor l 700 LOlllncllhl & Assoc. hwasher. covered patio, U.. lwl"IM. . I BEA''TI FUL VJEW .' 846-511 1 or 846·5531 K. mleatiBJlll I Sl.MryPMCrm. Prom S500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ssoo 3•2 .. 9.6 v • • .... 631·6107 BEATTHE 675-llll i mo . .. ..... · Several homes fumi~hed Harbor View Homes 3 _!~n APARTMIHTS ---.------
RENTSQUE:EZE' ~ UMITS 856-1884,838-9900 & unfurnished ; pnced Bdrm, 6 ba. POOL. $2950 tr.N 3744 Beautiful garden apts . Immediate 2Br E side.
f .. A f $63 500 In Coata M•aa Onlv ...._. ~ b b f from S60 0 /mo to' rmo p 1 •. Adults no No pe t s S375 Seef -.mes rom . "' · tt"'" eor...Ull"OMW ~z22 5 r . 212 a , am. rm. Sl2SO /mo. New listings ' pe . ••••••••••••••••••••••• oo "' spa • · · .
. J>ark Orleans offers an r~~ ::s~:16fall Be y ·········~·············I '1erpk, ~!~!m7 med. S800. comlng daily Call for UP · Wat rfr.-4 H-s 2Br. IBa . adlts. pool. ten· pets. ~i:!.:r 1620 Tull p atCordable i1n1>wertoche S.o(Hwy,indoorsauna,l • .ue . ...,.,..,.,.. to-dat inf t' • -........ rus SSSO mo I yr lse · "high COSl of renting · an1I I e orma ion Inc. 631-1400 ~· · · Bach. S330 , the inflat1on-f1g hl1ng br +Fam rm. <Could be POOL&SPA-4 Br 2 Ba 551-8700 -. . -0412 161E.18th,642·08S6 Nice new adult lBr 2 br). 1~ ba. frplc, patio, · · ....._ ..a 1e--.. 1769 garden apt. for rent. benefits of o~ning your wash/dry use. vacant, . across from Cen·j .....,....,.... _.. ~ d k 1425 0 642-ssee awn home at prices from 9S/mo. SJ6.14 ·sSal I PIU"k. Desi rattle ·HAllOl RIDGI ••••• .. •••••O••••••••• 2 Br. 2 Ba. n ec · · arage. . Jllllt 963.500' The "city" nt ghbelfiood rfSO ml> . 3 b Avail approx Nov. 1st. , · 'location In Oranae Is So.ofHway,2br,1ba,lg "~·1622,0~•.79.s . Magnlftcenl news 500r'1 548·M75 ·days 760-1418 S37S mo. 2Br, l~Ba .. ,.., .,.., view, condo. Sec. l , . eveslswk.nds.' studio, drps, cpts, Mr. great · clos<' to major lvg rm, frplc. Ii kit, no Steve957·1900 I Clark (213) 596· 1631 .. -,free wa ys, fas h lon l.GhferS. J200 peta.,lapatio.2-cuaar 28r.1Ba.Ooublegarage. br 2ba Child OK R 102
Squa re. the Mau of ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,1mo. &M·77l0. · 1475 mo. Near beach. EXECUTIVE HOME Versailles I Br cond~.1 ne~ ca~ts "r:~apes: 7140:.,.':tw' · 0 r
Oranae. Town and Coun •SACRtffCI-Clean. 847 4900 or 1\atle Rock Rldae 3 br, S550 /m~. includes a 1 like new lhruout. com· ---------
try & business romplex 48lllltobeach.3Br.2Ba. ••1 2,,.. ba, 3 car gar, avail. amenities. 640·2081, l'tlWlitypool"amenllies. Deluxe2bdrm, 2~ba con-
es. The modern, adull Orange County . Dana fp, earage, patio. No ,.......... I mme d . 979 . 2560 . ~ 1500/mo. 892·9713 . do, gar, pool, children ~~:i~~1'!' ~~thu0~50r~~~ Point. Ocean view lot. pets.1'195 mo. 642'5290· .....;;;, JZ4Z 851..Qll0,861·3965. L~E: ADULT STUDIO I 842·7711. Ask for Larry OK. 1875/mo. Call moms
'bedrooms, patio or deck. Only 115.000 for lot with 2 Bdrm, 1 ba, frplc .1 ••• .... • .. •••••••••••••1-..-Tree PaUo Hme CONDO-Nr Hoag Hosp. YEAA·ROUND llUN: Metzcer. . . I orevesS48·3561. lt«Wuxe built·ln kitchen. approved plans. Owner.I Comer of Begonia 6 lat. Cbarmial H•nUntton j~wS$50/mo Adults, 0( n v I e w : from Soci11 Actlvltlea DI· 1llE VICTORIAN . 2 Br. MIWPORT
··u.rpet.1.nc, drapa, mlr· 714/631-1814 -=io.call675-9'31 ......._. Wrm. 2 MU.. •·DIS 7__,Tom clubhouse . 10 min walk rect'lr•Free Sunday w/ear Adtts cpts drpe APAITMafrS
l"Ored wardrob e• In Two r buJo\&I I l l I ''* .. ,,.... tandy • toocn Guarded gate, U.0· Brunch. BBO's •Plr· blt1'I i cd d t pd' · ~ .1ulte and much a v ew 0 j 'lrvine Terrace-ocean beadl • ba)'. llove·ln ORANOETREE 1 BR 1 derground secu.rity park· tles •Pluamuchrnore. • n Y · wa er · l Br. a50 + uUI. 2 Br.
t 9eor•. 1'11e quiet p.rk =~iMu:• .ru~fci:,I view, 3bdrm, 2ba, walk ccad. AnU NO\'. 30tlt. Ila. lnd unlt 00 water. Ina. Pool. sauna, ex-GMATAICMATION: -~~iC\ori St 1370 aoo mo. ln.tant!!cs°'.\ly. No
1urroUndi!ll• Include ~1 • I to Balboa Is Fuhlon $1000 mo. IHl. ~ner. 'IWmia couru pool Jae en:iae rm no pets 1430 Tennla•FrH t.auona • · · pets, no water 1 .
-priote recreation.I ~~c:;a~ri~f,~:a.~~~~! Iall.od. ,Avail Nov. 15· ... ulJ daya; "'6·11.Jt Avail 1211. 'uso imo: mo. ca11' Realtor. Bob (pto & pro ahop)•2 6neat2 Bdrm, nice 3'50~~lvd. _.,.., nowtn, 'centralt f lcMdaiJy Dec. ol 8l at Sl.200/mo. ~ 5SH1GI Hindman (714) 645·3474. tWlth Clube•Sauna• area. ut.11 rm. Older cou· •-------'---rt'..._, Ullll .U Ule charm ""° • '1 875-091 or675·2SOO. . '"'21 J244 , tr no ans. Mr. Hoffman Hydrome.-gt•Mft-pie pref. Lols of nice 2 Bdrm 2 Ba, E.alde, 2 yrs :'!~~-~rt4tw ~~etah'!'I...._..._ U..-A..A28r 2Bahouael•••••11••••••••••••••••, ...... .._. 3241 &-1657 mln9•Drlv1n9Rlnge 'nelahtH>rs . S395 /m o . old, 1490. $57·4700 ext.
•->it:UO.-u""'-er~ 111 l'lwt& 2300 .,..-~ ' C ANYON VIE W •••H•H•••••••••••••••1 IEAUTIPUL APART Waterfront H ornes 2312 days . 840·2426 ."'1aJityA•CPropertles ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /prlvate ya rd as TURTLEROOK RllV:lE' COZY OCEANFR ONT 4bdrm Spanish VIiia, M!NTI: Sln"lea, t ,· 1131-1400 eves/wknda. ~minlum conversion · carport. 1875/mo. Avail. &#"\ • lBr lloblle Home knol· country kitchen wood • · ---------
• ~munltytoda.yl '1 ~·&;:~~:~;,~~~-; thru July 15th (negoll•-1 =n::!!r·:J.~•:r iy-alMtnt,frplc ,pvt bch. peUtd floors. '1uded 2 Bedrooms • Fur· 3Bdrm.2'a.bacondo. Dis· S,.C'-llr.2 ... ~-S:.ai1~:~:nns 1 blk i ~l'bidSt. 536·9922 ': ble) · Bell Y Kerr · as1.oe10.u1.i'94. ! di-Only. 1750 mo. <7 141 £:: window. french ~=: jvl~,~~~~ hwshr. frplc. 2 car aar., P~1 carpels, drapes.
QOrth or the Garden • ft I 673-1111. -.11 . Unda 631·6990 or • Model• Open d1ily Pvt It. Avail now.' la.afor.,...,..eouple
Grove Freeway in.•• ... Deteri. tS500/mo 2br. tba, 1.,,,WOODBRIDGE up ·l ........ STICVllW &4$7307agt . SI toe 812$/mo.lat/laat.secun·I or mabllunld rvoaamatea.
Or e For lnformatl I ..... 2400 d 1 d anded 3 Bdrm. Z ba,I r"'"'"' t.)'. Avail now. 873·2212, 9
1
No c ren, no peta. ca1f.lf1i4l532·6875 on, ........................ ~n ry , :ndc . yr • r:·· frple:au. dbl 1ar. pvt: I Bdrmoe•BuenaVlf· Newport Creal, 2br. 2ba. O•kwood to$pln. Private • Hclud•d. · · · I PALM SPRINGS etz0f.d e oceana e paUo., llSO. H• 1480, ta. Xlnt 19c•Uon. HllhrY dbl aar. tennis. pool,· Garden Apktmenta Newly decor•ted. srrs .
......... , 2conc1oe roraaleorrent,1 • ~XII. I ~~ded . HSO/m o . m~1mo. 752.2209 after • 01.-orTU--
.. Sele 1100 1 turn key, turn, tennis. c.e.MeM J2J41 ..... _,~_ ... __ ..,_ ..._autl 7pm. "Newport .._,./No, I Sn•l-1 Ir Apt. -···················· r::: oll II Th ~~· aJOUU, """ ·-1--'--I ... . ..-;-~ I ·• ,carava · •·•-••••••• .. ••••••••••• view. 3bdnn, no peta, .... a., fam rm, frplc. _, ,...,. T >lace essaae Gar den . pool Apt. · Jooo/.DtwHletlow airway• on aolf club!2BROOPLEX.Ea1talde.l 91.~1.-aart7S.CNT7. 1tove, refri1, dla · • THllLUH$ (t111c111 01 t>el:!rt~ !Carpet•. drape1 . •'flEW f'OlJAPL£X: All 2, drive.117.700 • * * * * 2 bl. dlahwuher. patio, ........,, cov...ect patio.I c--doua ei 1 tleu 3 <714> ...,.,,~ l.ldl bit ucludt d. UU mo
Bdrm Ulllts. clot• to San Smoke TrH Racquet! ..,. .... 815..QllG. We>Mbrld.J•·. ~br, Iba,• llOO/mo .. •u.oo ., ~ 2~ batl:nd unit Newport ._.,lo: rt n1pu c. 831-0llllot73l·'829. Btmardlno City Center Club on 1:. Palm Canyon ~"'*'·fa'" rm,. 116-lllt ..,..9800 with pvt patio on "The ;00 teth ~1 0 ~r0~j1 'r1ut1tan•. A/C, Pl\lo •'a& lunrlH, .SH,100, Oa1Je9t Pule 3 br, 2 ba. clll rm. A/C. I tr;aa, I ' Greenbelt •'" In our ce>o.eut ltlfll • • y ot I ~ ••.500 I I erwethe rtnanclns oll:. lowly home. Columbia Cir ..,...., Alm d .... ••Lowr· I Anlb Bay, 21 ortllnal area. Aull. now (1l•) ..,.,,, aa.alfied.M2-58il 11'1nd wb•t you ~.,. In ··k~ . ~-~-P.S.k-~.~~-. ~.•~.k ~~~~~-~-~·~l~~~~m~O~-~I ~~-~··~¥~·~~~,~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; ~~~ot~u~• 1~1611 --I• Art. --I IU i "t91J!!J" -
.. -·
r
... .,._........ j6f I 11h .._. ·t .... te se..nt 4MO OHIM...... 4400 jW..WtoL.o.. 1011 nu.dlW .... ......, .. 1llO ........................................................................................................... ~;;~;1 ••••••••••••••••• 4 -. ••• &miifM._.. 1141 , .. ••rflMlll Jl6t l,.tn111e roommattJ w.nt· ~atDedoffJooc••v•cr"·1 {NEED A'-••••••--~•---llhh 11oo lla..ltl,._, 1110 1,_ d ..... -................. ~•••••••••••••••• ••••••••• .... •••••••• •• e cl t o 1 h a re n e w ... ml)UI r. -Mi· l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••M•••••••••••• ,.
1 ••111 ._,.,..,..,. •• <~. lbd,., lba.ihdrm J>"n 1ha u1• rurnlshed 2J:Sr condo. WWd1vide.llO'peraq.n . INHdlOOoverwl'llhli>eo·jFound: Mal• Cochr PULAW...._.lliiid•
• "-~ .. Achatt on· fr,plt. dtrll ..... Q/mo \., r a •' 11 t • co ndo I t>ool. jacuul, 1ara1e. ~ &et'V~~·.£e.urteay lo• pie tor new prosram Spulel. Golden cir. Ap m.ooo. WID do .. ,.._., ~· ..... , -mo .. ~ulHn..!" l'fll _ 068 3791 evH 89~ 12221 ao.~. .,,.,..en.~...-. {MONEY 'CaUG.tlMt, I proic t mo. nea collar Leaal. ConfldeDtlal W'6lo. c.u ..... n ..... •pt a br l"' b• dat• ,--............. 4450 I Vic: PauJarino" Babb, DVll po. Boa SU2.
llr. l 1t •.tlUoAaaSa • .......;qlilet. very p1ce: V-;,._alli.t L: J;-78r ~~:e~m~tr co;:~~1··••••••••••••••••••••• ft'lllll 1 m ~.540-2m _NB 9*1. NI~ Small dot N. La1una. adulu' SM5 vte., µool ·spa, HC'. U40 j i30·3188 day SS1 ·2441 Forsun&olficespaceal I ti"~ llAMAH ~lckr•d. 1410 mu 183312"1 mo.760-8390 I eve rusonablerates. • .. lu.tllrH it.OST; ~llten 2\2·3mo1 I llUU~ ~-" ... ,,.. ----I S00to2700S.ft. I Nt.l"tll.-, male, Siamese w /whl Be pam~red wlct a
~ ... da •P4 MH Ol'UI\ view pvt ·~rdcn bc:h s EW 2 br d w' I qiaet. non-smkr 2br 2ba PLAZA rROILEM I Mter -Outbid -Placentia reward ror In· .,. ... ,.by 12 of tk . 8a4·helor apt. buut , \\'AIL. NOW 3 lits to 30's businessman see\s MESAVE!\DEbR ClllOITMO Falter -Knave -paws. nr . Shalimar/ personal rel a'~'
mltamiltGn t ~·O.n ta 41U30U·S 1 112.S yrty.64S·7S73Agt. I 546-8728 · S4S.412J 2.ad&lrdTDloMI j 61gn posted in front of \\hereabouts We m111 California. J an , .... lollU paid Aduha Httin1. wom110 &lr1:r.1 frph ... ldry fac. gar lwc a.ptw1bayview's200.,' U2.5MesaVerde E.C.M. I AFF~RD fo. leading to his ll1•t 1irls In Soutl
--;;-"" 1 tir •"' rrplc ------1 1•1 auuna etc. Open lOGn· .._IM5 2 Br. l O. Apt ,_... .... . • lBr. Sl1S mo. )'rly S32S,G.-9"f NBICM. up to -1700 s<1. ft um 7 ~a lfeek VJ•· ea,.,.i., drape., pool. cl06el!> .... be1~~· \ltew. ,,inter. l blk to Bo.y Oen far-.... 4 350 avail at prime corner, at. a/M'.c . Atlantis Heakb
l8*y rm lmm•d oc "'" · Ag\ 673-6210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17th & Newport Blvd ar. Spa, 2112 Harbor B~d. ~) A4'*1t• only, cal ~... 3150 --•On Balboa Peninsula next 675-mOO 31. CO.ta Mesa. 645-3433 8r·
Oll.TSL M1111t.642UI03 ... •••••••••••••••••••••S.c:Aea• 3176 ' tof\inZone.(1012x20111). r . ing this ad fot:t fQUr La au n a HI t l 1 N ~ w ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673 2943, 673-3930. Newport Modern Store or 993. spe('taJ gift. lf.50.$495 2 Br 1 "i Ba . lakeside 1 fir. 2 sty. Con· 1 ''1 y e a r s n e w , office. Nr post office 548 _..._..-:..;~:..._-___ _
Twnhse All built Ins. do. lort. f rplc, al BEAUTIFUL!! spl\t S50. Storage only See at s f.Jerry213/477-70ll COVER ~11·i~ Pat.lo. yard Lndry rm amenities. $595 \ 2131 level. ocean view. -3 3'lS J 17th Pl 646·5137, o...: H bo, Bl d C an V It 5-n ~hild, sm pet OK 2.83-4879. bedroom, 2 bath . afl.llAM.) .-.. me ar .r v · osta a. •OUTCALL •
lrnmod. occupancy TSL carpets, drapes, bui It· 1 --. ------Mesa loc:auon. 2.000 sq. 9 96.3-0778 MCJVliA M'""'l M2·l603 Mt..,.,. leech 3169 in.s,2encloeedcarports. Huntington Beach gar. ft. $1500 mo. 548·1156 '
•··· · --••••••••••••••••••••••• laundry facilities, public <213> 433-2435 , Box 449,, day, or 675-2213 eve. * • .
NEW BREED APTS 81• i.KWMRT golf course.and tennis 1 Seal Beach90740 C:-'at th SPRITUAL R'E(\DINGS
lBdrm•Bach. ,..,.. """rv courts r ight behind pro·l'OfflceR...._. «OO I .... ~· 4475 °1 lOam-lOpm. Fully Lic_'d.
Frplc. rec room. pool. LIVIMG Ylmng. · ~ · monl /1 . I S Camino Real. San. From S3l5. COUMTIY CLUI pe,!'~Y. , f1~~00e to evehr· •••••••••••••••••••••·· i· •••••••t11••••••••••••••• ag -l92· 7296 or 492·9034. JllS
j a c u a ii. en closed Singles. l&2 bedroom lease. Available Nov 1 ~semen~ ,~ace ftva01. lOA~I .aPM ll..ost or found a pet. Call 1W&t : M Siamese Cat with <.:'lem. ,
1ara1es Gas&waterpd apls,&lownhouses. ;=.0~h Call owner! w~;,~oot.NB~t.2.4·644~j ..b.ew WClftted -5030 An imal Assis tan ce! Jewel collar. L.ag Beach. TOMMY'S Ad ults, no pets. 393 ~om5'49 644·19001 j • -, • League.537-2273.Nofee Buena Vista area
Hamllton.C M 645·4411 . -,Studio apt with oce.11n ./»c---. llndllltriatRental 4500 1N••eed•••••••••••••••••••••1L.os StOO d F' -49!1·5055 . OFNEWPORT • --Oceanfront for Wmter l . I ~~~,,-..1o1 •••••••••••••••••••••••! S30.000for3)rs Will t rewar em ---· ---._ I ESCORT ~,.. J IZ6 Rentals. f\irnished & un· ''1ew. Elec. furn. ~75 ~f.:"-Prime U ht manufactur pay l6' ··Doris 95S·0809 Germ Shep. hlk w1th,l ait. Golden Retriever & 752-9368 '•
••••••••••••••••••••••• ,rum. Broker.675·4912. I mo. SeecMlc 332 Encinoi ,,..,...., ·-"*-· ing, 1600,sq rt Frontage.·~ •• Tnnt . w silver t.an marks. 1 G~rman Shepherd. \l('I ;
l as 2 Bdrm. Garage. Lil.Apt . . . ./--..ic. t Laguna Hills. 38 ' DMcfi 503 5 mo. E. Costa? Mesa area l Br~hurst & Yorktown . TOUCH A CLAS~.
D/washer. clean. Close I VILLA IALIOA ,..,__._Rh Fu • h d , ~-... ,..,.,. 951·3267. I••••••••••••••••••••••• I &lS-4846. Info· RE~.\RD. Please con· I ESCORTS
beach . From $345 I CONDOS 1..,.-;;::L-t_a..'.:"d"3•900 II ,-----I SatfferMta C o 'Lost · Beautiful Fem Cal 1ac1scott963·0712 I :MHRS. 752-0917 ~Aft. SPM. Mr. I Of'WWYW'TA-2500 sq ft. next to Irvine 7 · ' · . . 1-------Blain. . 1 Adult only ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ _ __ 1 Industrial Complex at All types of re<il estate part Calico Tiger stripe. wound· ~g shorthair hlk I
_ l Br. 1 Ba. w/o~ean view
1
f'---: • 11617 We::.tclirr. N 8 Want f'r\HS 5 & 405 :\lulti te·: investme~ts !>mce }949 lg hair. wht flea collar. cal \\ col I a r . s an 1 a ~ C°"'fl..Y.•
lbdrm apt $.160. 2bdrm ' l Br +I den l i. ba w /o·. .lNwtftd VIiiage fmanc1al inst 7000s I nani. bldg S8 50 mo Spec1ali1iftCJ '" last seen near Heliotrope I ,\na 15th. &12-1938 ESCORTS ';' apt $4SO 5860741 1 cean vew I .... I · bl. 2ndTDs I &2nd CdM 75!! 1146 1-I ...
768 ·4541· • I 2Br.2Ba.wroceanview New lou; bdrm luxury lst.noor.Agent 54150J2 , Terms negot1a e. Am·• !---·--------Found ,0 unt: rriendh I 24Hrs. 641-~ · · ! FromS600Mo. adult apts in 14 plan~I-----'pleparking.6i5·5880 642-2171 545·0611 iLost Brwnrwh1te Spr bl· ck ·1.1 ·a l 'l Cash/ChKk1 ••
Lge3Br,28a,frplc,deck.1 JRLProperties I Crom $415. 2 bdrm from ' KOLLCENTER !stOloge tt50 . Costi f TD ' -tn!lerSp_anrempup \"ic :I n~ E~~~th St \c~1 'i AmExp/MCfVho s525 m 0 . M art h 8 j 645·4566 645-64591 SSOS + pools, tennl::.: I . MEWrORT •••••••••••••••••••••••, or • ·I Placentia & 18th. C~l , IH2·4035 i·~~~~~~~~~ 661-1161, 494-3672 , waterfall~. ponds!, Gas I 1-.legant executive suites ! . . i~mencan Mt g 953·41~-' Nd s med I r at Ion .1--------MEAR IEACH fo~ cook mg & hea~ln g • in prestige location With Lp to lOOO sea. rt '" In ine , • Rewcird. 548-6131 'Found. Samoyed rem ale Oct. Special Massage SlS
2or3br.back yard.big Lge3br.2baupperapt.,paid. f'r~m San Diego l·omplete su pport ;Skypark Circle ar.ea.1 CASHFORT.Ds ---,·Also Siamese Blue int i per 112 hr. STEV E 'S
sundeck. garage. w d.; No pets. $700 mo. Agt. F'rwy drive North o n , ser Yl<'l'S 549.4733 wkdys. 559-6062, , •F'AST ACTlON_• HEWARD· Lost ft·mdog re~le ~ew rt B~l'h ! HAIR HAPPENI NG.
view, new c ar pets &,biS-8170 I BeachtoMcFaddenthcn 7141851 ·0681 l e~knds __ Cambn_aMtge 95,,.3454 in vie. or AearBaker 1A · .1 5·h 1 ~6443fic6 'Wom e n Wel co m"'•
noln '"'"" 9 I West on McFadde n lo ---Sls s II h t b ' nima . e t~r. .. ' ~· . .,......t . ...,.,., mo. 4 4·2798. OCEAMFROMJ ' S . d V 11 . '125 soo rt d fl . Rentals Want~d 4600 W1do\' has money for 2NU . ma "' s or rown . -----646·9636 ------7:»9AM. 494·1755. 4 8 2 Ba D 1 W d (7e1:)~ ~198 1 a 8 e I t:I J!>QF'r S85Lrn _7
1
9· ••••••••••••••••••••••• T 0 No credit check no' hair Tail curls up 13 yr5 IFOL:ND. I Silver gre~ I --. · r. . up ex. oo .,.,.,.. · u 1 s pc om up • , . · · · old. "Sugar" 979-0!165 j o·at Mesa Verde CC \'I C I Psychic Consultations Large private studio. pvt: beam ceilings. carpets.:1 · 4 000 1 W 19th St. C M Tom : Responsible local family pnlty F'or al'ti~n l·all after :JP\I 751,'6191 ·'I J ack
yard. $325/mo '" drapes. all bu1 ll·ins OOIM I 957-1900 needs 2Br house w t~ ard r\GT673·7311 an~ time ------1 ----556.1178
495.0227 1 Enclosed garage with!•••••••••••••••••••••••,--. -I C.M. area. Xlnt ref5 - -WILL IUY --Lost. lrg neutered male ILust: M wht W lhghland washer/dryer. Furn. oriOnNewport Beach. Beach I Medical or office suite for 548-175-4. shortha1red cal. white I Terrier Hunt Beach re · UTILE AHMIES ~ ........... ..__.••och 3840 unfum. SlSOO. lmmed. ~otel room s mall lease Downtown Laguna . ~3rd-4thTD'S chest. bellv & legs Lrg 1 ward 962.1998 ' I S
•••••••••••••••••••••••, occupancy TSL :\l gml j kitchen. 2306 W Ocean· j Be a c h Ii 56 sq rt Two r~sponsible males . Or fund new TD'S For gra~ black patches on 1--, ESCORT
Very large 2 Bdrm. new 642·1603. front. S260 & up + S260 S623/mo Ample pvt 1?0 kin g fo r ~ouse 1mmed quote. call 51des & back. Yellow Lost s m a ll F Gold AllMajor Credit
cpts/drps . Patio. Gar.•NEW ; sec&deposit 673·4154 I parking. Owner . \\/large garage. good re WI C AGTl714l152·8261 e~es. lost \IC 23 rd &I Rel Lab. burr color,' Cards Accepted
lddsOK. $395. 847-4803 • r I cpts d2rpsblk. 3Bbr.h2BNa. Laguna Beach Motor Inn 1 497-2351. fer.968-3330 .-.:ewPort Bhd on 10·29 needs med' cat I on . 895·1676 rp c gar s c o · ----• Pmdte part~ ha~ well ~B C M 6 4 6 6279 I -Brand new I & 2 Bdrm. pets: S675 m o y~ly .i 985 No. Pacific Coast Cd.M Deluxe Suites. 1100 iMisullaHous 4650 ::.ecured 2nd TD fo r salt." Please call &12 8890 after 9&J-0974 · · EMPTY u .HAUL TRUCK
Pierpointe Condos. Poot.1 645-l6S2 j Hwy, Laguna Beach I sq fl AC ampl pk" Util Rentats a1d1sc 975·1176 Spm -------1----Leaving for ;\lichigan · · Daily Weekly Kitchen · · ,... ••••••••••••••••••••• • • · sp11, tennis. garages . 1 . · . . pd 2855 i::. Cst Hw y.· Allnouncenwnts/ 1 Found blk Afghan. F . Lost: M longha1red cat. Want personal or com· (213) 586 .. 7202 dys : <714 ) ;very ruce 2br. lba frp_k. available. Low winter, 675 6900 . Fenced ~ard . 10,000 sq ~t Penonali / Jlso tan Shep pup.pies. I gray w/while muizle. merc1al merchandise to
842-472leves. bar b·que. lge pat io j rates.494-5294 ' -All or part Wkd)s Lostlrfotind ' F ;-.; B Animal Shelter chest. belh . feet Vic deli\er East. Posstble
Spa , 2 B A .1 $500 / yrl ~ 675·35(14 !Room with kitchen-priv "THE" ~;::.~1 or e\' wknds ••••••••••••••••••••: ••. 644·3651i · Brookhurst & Atlanta.• room on return trip.
CIOUS r. va1 now 675-2897 ' EXECUTIVE SUITE 51 00 -H B 968.0998 I 497-5610 . $315. Private patio. 2 , I Near bus & shopping! . . I • l ~etM"ts Found ,·oung female '---·---1 ----------Kids OK. 17401 B Keelson ,Versailles luxury 2 Br. 2 center. Adults only. l::\'es 1 FUii ~r~ice offices in 1 llllMssfln•est/ •••••••••••••••• •• •• • • • s 1 am e 5 e ca t , ,. 1 c 1LOST. Penny's I rash1on , We a I l h y H B . bus i ·
Lane. 1st. last + securi· Ba. Condo. Only $590 mo. 6-9:30orwknds. 962·7520 I 'e t'o.'1.g~nter 1 RR.ce Fairway & Del Mar I Island) J ewelry Pouch nessman seekin~ attrac
ty. (2 13 1598 ·5326 I 213 /912·9352 Eves &!CDMunr room&ba p~! --;;;;;................ NOW YOU C~l 642-38Ql · containing 2 necklaces I tiveyoungladyforafter·
831-«JOO · Wknds .. 714 t 547.74511 entranc~ S200/mo. .. 'PRIME HU~TIHGTOM ~-it 5005 1 ~EWARD! 673-49'27 I ~'!dat~_ 536·9898
I Mrs.Luc1anowkdavs. · 0 . I BEACH -,...--._.. 'f found . key s . v1 c I • Wuner Rental. $800 Mo. 3 j · .I 64 ·6110 . . ...... ••••••••••••••••• C Cruversitv & Redl;inds ILost cat. Br/orange lon11· IYoung man needs SSPQO
Bdrm. 21 ~ Ba. Condo.;NO FEE! Apt. & Condo'iPool close to OCC Non Office space u_va1lable CENTRAL CALIFORNIA an t:.M 556·984o. ·1 haired tabby. Swan Dr.I Payback +15~ within90
Ocean & Bay view. 20' 1 rentals. Villa Rentals. smkr Sl60 mo 545.25101 ~500 sq. ft. Suites. Call I C 0 A S T C l T Y : . CM, 751·6928 days. Secured form or
boat slip. Comm tennis! 675·49l2Broker aft6 · · 714/891·7951. Restaur ant & Bar + Sell F'ound : Bird. area of!--c·ollateral646·9858
courts, pool. Washer/ · IAlRPORT AREA. Birch , ~al Estate. A.bsolut~I~, Magnolia & ~dams, HB. Found. 4 mo old blk kit· 'I
Dryer. 2 car garage, 3 Bcirm. ~ ba .. 2 story dplx Vacatiolt lewtal1 4250 I & Bristol. 225 to 750 s . ft. I pnme_property in superb. Call & descnbe 962·7185 ten, NP & Bay. 645·9137, INTRO SPEClAL
w /elec garage door• apt. D1sh"shr . frplc.1 •••••••••••••••••••••• \ F'r S200 N 1 q 1 location . TRIPLE A More aft6PM Rm22,eves. · p · · laund hookups gar 12 MOU~"l""'VIEW . om · 0 ease re·! trus fness Original • M.\SSAGESlOW/AD :ne:~ r:va~~1 1P~~~: blk to bcti. s7so1m.o .. 1 "1 •" I quired. Callss7-7o10 owner. Sl900K gross. Long Found: ~bandoned puppy Lost: 'ray Persian Kit· MYSTIC MASSAGE siderr:.642.1603. I isltlast. security. Ava1tj .._!'.l.LAS15CLUI I PLAZA I term. ~olid i~vestment I \\It h Dally P i iot '! nds _lovmg home. Blond ~itd~~ 0~e\SthRS~w~·: \ 556--4656SantaAna now.673-2282.9to5pm. '""""'" t EXECUTIVE SUITES · Quahhed pnnc. only. PESS\" PISC'llER w big ears 4 mos old. 67< • r · G and 0 . Lr1. lBr condo; 1mmac;I l NearPalmSprings .1·2&• .. · . .. F'°" confidential details.· Housetrained 49~·3712 .,..:ntS.eves. I r pemng. M~n &
Sec bld1· cpl Id rps . Lux condo penthse. 1 Br. 3 bedroom villas ava1la ' There is a difference. ' call i14 '548 7813 eves \OS Still onl~ S2. e"es or -197-5494 dys LOST c· t ht , bl ' Women. for relaxauon & · · ' · 1 I b W kl ' I a · w e \\ u" s11mulat1on try "Touch patio: dlS washer : cov-new crpt. drps. sec bldg. le. ee Y· m~nthlY 1 714175 2 0234 Birr :i !In(·~ rm 2 da'::. . eves. gra' ears. feet & r CI \t & s ··
pool; sa~na : rec r m' I no pets ssso m o. tennis courts. Close .to• 2082M1chelson Dr 11212 I ffffl 1 lint• I fluffy fema}e kitten. \'1c CdM 64().4239 · I~ Beal·~, Blvd. H B
rd prking· luxury grnds. pool. clubhouse. adults., and annually 7 lighted • • I tment ' onh -.1 J 11.1\ 34r a Found be;rntiful blk & wht tail Vi c . Spyglass Hill o ass assage pa
MZS.714.848.47723sk for Ver sailles Sa nd t Rancho Mirag e ::. 2021BusmessCntr!l213 Opportwlity 5015 .\IJ\H\l'>l' unt• or Myrtle ~t . Laguna ~9172 \\~accept all
Nyle or Lenny or' 67a.2749. Restaurant Row Agent,S ----!•••••••••••••••••••••••: mun· slc·m:. \Jlu~d Beach 494·i346 .494-4060 Found M Basset Hound ., credit cards. open 7
2U S · I (TI4)328-4097. ublet choice Newport INVESrORS WANTED VIC Hell & Bolsa Ch days ·329-7535• Mr hane OCEA .... FRO .... T' .. Beach location · Design Join small grotip in bur llll 1" '1"" f:Jch ica , --. " " IHawau Waterfront House Plaza ss1s1mo 644·2260 iog control or under .iclditinna l linl' 1" 846-l272art 5pm_. -SINGLE? Meet sincere.
Beautifully located 2 B_r ·I 3 Br. 2 ba. duple~ com·: at Kauai Surf Hotel ----· valued public co & m , onh 60c f11r ttfto l\\o Found Youn blk Sh people-like You~ t.ow
$375 lBr. $330. Gas ln·1 pletely refurbished.,· BASSETT 768-0548 <Xfu::e itiatmg acquh1tton pro . '' •'' ~ "v1 '\ nu I w1bl d g k ep I Fee Ca ll DATELINE cld.,Nopets.842·1652 Yearl y lease S895 S l·75PERMO gram.Steve714646.7:r7 1 111mm1•r1•1Ji .id!. Tus _on e mar ings. free!l()().4513245
2Ae:~r:~ager =~~r~~~t.,2 Bdrm 1 Ba avail N Pool table. color TV. 21 furnished ore cubicle+ MaReytoLocml 5025 1 Your f' .. un, P1nC'lwr iPlf"ICMCllb 5350 I desire W r 21-40 wbo
673-2113 ~ LgeBigBearCabin I Incl udes an s'xlO' .dln\q·ll (°hJrlll' l ~~a 544262_0 __ -.
H d d fl N I ls ~ • I . \ frpk. sips 14. 545·6916 elec recept telephone •••••••••••••••••••••••' \<I n r u •.i· \ "u r i ••••••••••••••••••••••• needs tenderness & loucb ~~h~~-536~~~· r "7~3.1.$5 mo yr y Ocean Bluff Kauai Condo,, answering "ronferen~e n Jn k \ ml'rll<• r1I '.Professional Therapeutic! & lo be o~cass!onally
llB. Lux. new condos . 1 & Vt•I)' nice lrg l.11drm, in I wk,.6 5450 Golf. tennis. kitchen. _Jamlonal sves SURE WITH A N•m• S1•1•m•n1 lll•d onb Ste\e 548-2817 what each other needs 1 wk/2 S2SO. 1 wk ,4 S3SO, 1 rooms. ~o p1n~ fa c11. YOU CAM IE \''"'" 11r \Ju,lt'r<Jrtl A Ftclflfou• eualneu I massage Li c'd NR Apptl free ~e might JUSl be
2bdnn. $500-~ Adul~s. garden sett.tfig. pool.I etc. Dec 15.May lst adcl ~xecu t1ve Garden s BANK For mor .. 1nf11rmJt wn :!~:'c,1;::, Ti!~n;:.~•:!.!! ---8.:'l.'l~l92. __ _
no pets, pool. Jae. tennis, qwet. secure. adult ~rea . $50perwk. 673 75!15 ~,7.115_1 __ __ and \o pl .. ,.~ your Jd l'Jll which tt m• continuing * fQXY LADY * , Endoynwnt &
elC.S46·lS26. -~ ~~ul~.11~~ ~~:L~'.~7~~e Sun Valley. Jdah~.full>' _2 300SQ.FT I ~~~11~::,:~1~~:::~~ OUTCALLOt"LY I Prepcliatioft
Lovely 2 & 3 Bdrm $465/mo. equipped house. Sips sj ~gineer. arch1t.ect. re· 2nd TD's 642·5678 I only II lh•r• .,. , •••••••••••••••••••••••
Townhouses. garage. comfortably Close lo ski search. ~dvert1sing. de· t I c11en9H. Call th• L•o•t * 972-1138 * Schools &
patio, laundry rac. $4SO&!Large 3 br. 2 ba. patio. lifts & town Avail Dec sign. Off1Ct!&drart'g_rm 1 REDUCED RATES 1\.\'hen \OU call L'IJ,,.,1f1t•d g~~~r~m;;~o·; :~~ • lmtructioft 7005
1575. Call 213 /596·7202 orl frplc. dshwhr, newb de· 27 thru Jan 10 ror 1 or 2 Dlxspc. Hoag Hosp vie. I Santiago lank 1111 µlucc• iJll Jd ·' 11u·re a~ I t n 1 or m ••ton • n d 1 FIRST LADY j ••••••••••••••·•.•••••••
714/960-1347. cor . S650 m o Agl. weeksrenlal WnteBox 979-8533 714_.32•5200 1 ,ur cd 01 J fril•ndl\ necHHryf0tm• I Esc ort.Models. Big rig drivers needed
New2 Br 2°"' Ba Condo 673-9060. 39. Ket('h um . Idaho. RlGJITREALTY :\sltforLinda Flynn 1 ~elc·urnl• Jlld ht·l11 in I 642-4321 PartyD I Get a Class I Uc now.
Din. rm .. Micro.wave, "<Niel 2 Br Apt. Garage. 83340. -300 SQ rt. prime H B or Karen Linn W<ord111g \uUr .1d fur be!.1 . Ed. 332 ancers. ~:J:> 975-1107 ext 41 ror
trash compt., elec. gar j patio. pool. Adults. no Refttds toShore 4300 1 ground floor location. Equal Housing Lender ll''lll)n'l' L'Jll '''\\' 1 1 * 972-1345 *
opener.Tennis.Racquet pets 1801 H. 15th. St.•••••••••••••••••••••••, near beache,, all ulll I l •>l.!.:.tri11 l \\an\ ~dRl·-uh ·_~..J2-.'>6i8 ; ~&VISA ~ccepled Now enrolling. Costa
balJ, pool. jac. s~una No Newport Heights S450 MoVlng~ Avoid deposits &I t.uces. etc &n('l S200 mo Mesa Christ ian Pre
pets. l or 2 Kids OK : f>U·il.aO cut livtng expenses' ~1964 --1 I sch oo l S29 50 /wk .
Sl000mo.Call964·2566or. I d t P rofessionally s ince 900 r H B NOVEMBER II Includes hot lunch & 973-2971Agt.,noree. ::.qt. prime sna~k s 646 -5 423 . ~round floor locat ion. \ ' Al A ult, no pets. 2 Br 2 1971. Ba. From $425 Pool. spa. Lge28drm,oucpts/drps. TES near beache~. all util. ,. 646-_5930_· ______ _
patio. litr· Kids OK. S395 laxes. elc tncl S575 'mo ~ W..t.d, 7015
HOUSE.MA rernge. d washer meld.
Across N B. Golf Course. 832·4134
7911Holt.847·4803 HARE? SW-1964 I•••••••••••••••••••••••
ROOM ATIEHTIOM! MID WEEK SALE i Englishman.higblyqual
54.S-48SS. LOOKINGTOS
Spacious 3bdrm, H~ba. 2
s&AJry, community pool.
spa, tennis. n o pets.
t57S/mo. 962·8668.
3 br, l V.. b•, pool, water
paid. $650, 892-3351 or
960-9007 Eves.
BEACON BAY, 2 br. 2 ba
apt o r BAYF'RONT
home, tennis a ' ail. utils
Incl. S780/mo ' rl ~
675-86QI
Prestigious Versa1't1es
condo, 1 mini br. Interior
decor. & furnished
(213)941·2372
l B/.,P ent hou se
Versa Illes. Nr ocean,
Adull . ss so. Agent
700.8617.
Vllla Balboa lux 2bdrm.
WE MAT C H • ~ks valet houseman / Doctor, Lawyer, • I housecleaner ppsilion· MATES
752·9475 Merchant Chi•f ! 1 Lag1ma area Xlnt refs
mm a te Elegant bldg , 1n heart or 213·4m·4769.
Br hse on H u n t 1 n g t o n B c h .
Female ro o
needed to shr 4
beach. i\' a 1 I 548.g.uo Dec l w is pal'lous off1t·es -
skylights. wetbar, con
erence rm, 85< per sq. rt 1 luu super 2.000 sq.ft. medical bldg .. well ap-
pointed at 75• per sq.(t.
FE~E to sh are ni
So. Coast
9016 eves
hse same nr
Pina Teri 556·
Prol. M /F to s
Condo N B. s
3bdrm pool · t
jacuzzi $375
497·5388
F.or details call
RED CARPET
893·1351
For Priv~te Parties On~y Http~ 7110 •••••••••••••••••••••••
AD AGENCY
Lookin g for exper ..
talented artist, Grapi!lc
Design/Illustrator for
free lance position. F IT .
Must ha ye ref. Contact:
The Simple Way Adv.
Agy .. 964· 1194
2ba. ram rm. rrplc.1
skyUte. micro-wave. up-•Fem. roommat
grades: view from bat. l bridge Townho
• a · 0
I I
I' ,,..... ,......... ...... -,~ ... aiflliiiii 'zsNs ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••I•••••••••••••••••,••••• .... •••••••••••••••••• ............... ~ ..... ~ ............. .
Dale ~ PhllllPf, run •YaYlOWPltlCES• tfandyman Scrvlc:u Very thoroulh 6 reliable. Movlnl' The Stan:la PalnUnc Prof, •&· MIW d .......... ..,._ ~t rt\.SWU') No Job On landtc:•pe mu in rti50nrtble, call 011n R.ff11 avail .L H, 541 IOl'I Colleae Stu~nt• bav ter/lnt•. ~oaun't, ,..., If .. n.w at ttar llelJ
tc.ioemall ~B·2Ura I h'ru,n<'t fr.:~rS1tlrfl1ale.a 893 3934 btf. Sam. Jl'OW'll, •&m• &d Mrvlce ~-·DO apray. reu. Daa ~12· ...a.., Mie. " G -ITUM38ln.s.141-1427 _ R M OO~L ft t .VAI R Child c_... •1 yr tiipent•ncc: ·eor.i~ Haulng Pralse Lhe Lord 1ome one ---------t
\DO 1au.tll) ~IJI k ?ttd ....................... 549 20l$ ....................... ls here to do house~ork . , ....... /P .. riltt ......... ---;a.,.-------t ..... ,
-
1
~ l1ldr. l1yr•10 11fl1'11 t'h1ld n H e . n1> C' ~t OardeJ\inl( t.undi.c uping Huuhn~& numµJobi. hse sit. dog sit, personal •••••:••••••••••••··~· ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• y:;:;;•91~~·~·~~~·~; JC ... 11..,per l\•ll lQ LH Mr P • 1 um b hotne rurmt·r prci.rhool ·r rt'e Tr 1mm 1n 11 & fl•k tor Hand) care. honest &r reliable. Daves .Paintioa. Hrvan Slucc:o 6 Pluter Pitch. 9'llCueco patch 6 ,..
i-. • M'COUl\lt In my llllytlm\·~ 11 • .n• tearher 631 SZ!>l Jlt>moval MaJur Clt•Jn 5"9·.t36K Top Re~ 979·~v~ area 9 yrs,. most reaa. no job too am. quick ti pair. rOC,m adcUtlona .
.._. MJ 1154 N1nt'y t: fi' ' 1' I ln5Uttd, llc d. 586-M?iS clean845-4203, M5·4199 C.U o...-.JO&a
• -..111 CUSTOM I \UJNl':T & Tl. C for )our Chd<I P . r~f> :it nf!JC Haul movt!·l'lt!<1n up Con Exp lady to clean ~our ----------'--t _________ -1 ----------tillY j UOME Ftet'AIH Int •1 1-'•·•IC'~d 'd lirN1kfo •t J't!113ive 7si 13'19 crete rl!tnoval Dump home Reasonable rates. Painlina&Paperin& Neatpatc:hes&rtexture1 'Tit •
--•••••••••••••••••• •" I C tr A H lloll.und1t' R~<·n:11t1011 t r uck qu i c k serv 64S-900lorS45·9292. Prof.work.Fteeesl. ,,,...... lfl-1439 ••••••• ... •••••••••••••••• Driwwayw Parkln1 lot 1 R~OVATINli tU5 .oa•1
1
K.1r n64tl n!l:ll C:ardenin11 t'lcanup .; li42 7638 R.snbl Steve. :'>47·4281 IW';f;• ...... tr•r1 Sulcoattna Tree t rlmio•n)t. 1na1n Superb Housecleaning .,.._........... ,._
A•phah 1146 4971 I "'A'fflt:ll&d;()N eo..trador tmafl<'e. f'l e~ c:>t J\rnle \o .lob Too S mull Or Spectacular results, Flne ext/int paintina b AllTypes 531711.3 -
Lk'd. C11rpenll). ""~ • , ,. •••••••••• ••••••• • ••• • • :,48-8.114 t.arge' t-'ree E.'>l1mate~ 673-CXIOS. 642-4439 Richard Sinor. St. lie • New ceramic: Ule im·
model Pl1tn." 84'1 711611 Hour11 •<Id ,,. 11111111• I Call ou~e a_t 545 !I046 1 Lmdtc:.-i-:----'"-"· Try me 836·SMS. 2 Laee. & "-hr proves a ppearance • ~I I 1·1mom hou.<11·11 1.1t• 1·1111 Expert Clean·tapt I ....,....., hrs A1J types. Int/ext. val&ae at reaa. c:o.t. Pree
••• •••••••••••••••••• <lenctal l'•q11•nlq . t111t'lor .\48·078'1 frt.'("SloVi>t"'I rt'mm<•<J Haulln1c .cl ean upi., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64$-56e0 est. • 1u11eat ona. DID mother to take care Oon r a . S k 'JI.' ll h I ". L.a~o renovoh·d 751 J47G 1ta rages, yardi., Junk Reas rates. lawn ser\ ice. AGAPE FORCE IM.2·3020 1754n Gothard,
ci()'OUl'cblld1n m)homt1, Re model•. 9'1uon .. Mwwlllt11Con1trvctlon , •. • , . I 1r:1sh.d1rt.i1hruhs,trees landscaping. s prinkler PalntingCompany . ,.... .. , H.B.
Bnlboa laland are11 , Mon· Decks. P1tll1111 IWS :n~ <kn ronlr. Cou111h1tl••M 101 ·lt\I ANt:St.: G,\RJ>l',N bit l rl mm tHl r l' m ove d installation &sf'epair. Ask 3Generaliona Of f1~i·~p;j,;··~·;3;, __,Ceraml,..._-.,..c:""'T""i""ie_,,,Se_rv__,l_ce_a_
fti. 1'7S-TI59. 1,.--_. S le fllti8h I.I<' & fnl! 1% AAI I {'lt•unu1.1. ~u rden 1·11 rr !162 t1S-W1 for Marvin 9'19-5814 PainUna Excellence simple, call Raymondl Free est. 494-5887 berore -P""· ... ,.. • tnin 213 532 74!95 -----S3S·6701 9amoraft5pm .Charlie. aaby1lltln1. my home •••••••••••••••••••••••• 9.ctncol I ' I UAVLING/tLF.i\NING Hauling, moving. clean· WorthMS-5113 • ~1~.c~reH ~p~~·:7~ I Why Pay lilnrn "' iCl'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• GtMral SerYlco Ta-e trim & 1'~1nting up I )'a rd w 0 r k & Exterior Painting r.o. ... ....... T .....
____ .. _r_. · · Ru)' lhrouah t'UrJJt'I in .,;1,.,;<,'UICI N l'rl• l•1I ••••••••••••••••••••••• or ... , Ra). :}64-4276 landscaping. 631·4264 Specialists.s tucco re ··~uJt.•••t.•••it•••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
-Ii l 11 I I c r I " r I 11 1 l"hl Ir<'" C11tl 1 nrnt«' un l':xpericncl'd all m .11 kl'l u ___ 'f at' wat p oof · g nt t"Olll IJOJC Servrce
My hom .. "OM • 1 "' 11 brl , , 1 l t·1~~ t 1 l111·1H• m l'lt0all J11hi; 111~: 1•xcrull\•1· w • f'l•·<l1,1 ll11ullnl(. Vu rd ClNtn·1111s, ••••••••••••••••••••••• s andblasting, cu.s t.om ~ ECst Hw'-· Cd.6·NB C!~·ruah. Study Habiti. LJCENSED DA v CA n"' WHOt.F.SA 1 ..: I .. J --~ " .., ' •• -EMAIL ROOM ''"ln;roa-Malh, Sci. Ena.
. ... '-'"' nl( tll.llllP l'K r r.... I.It• •:13'1;!.\I fl7:l lW1!I t•X1)('rh•p1·1· w Ill trl'ull• Handy ma II Jolls Valley Masonry. Custom k .,,,.,., ~ "' ~ tull/natttime673 294!1 1 w rk •11"r"11t I d k wor · compel•t. 1 v ,,.""' .. "or "~~.4481 • ~Sl76..S48·~70Frl3. __ _,r='-· t·~ Q Ii .. ~' t•t•t 11r11ll u 'f tullr l'l111~ Jcff.Sllh !lllil fireplaces. Bnck. block ri l.i bo d d .............., ....,. Al-.o 1•1u1x-t ht\\'tl & 11• l\•Jt •11111h1' 1li·111•11duhlt• .. ult ... h•ttrr .... rJt110 -.pot~. Qu 11 k P ces. c. n e ·ms. T--'--W.k
S.bysltting, lunchel> & pu1r1'tl Ju} 7~ 65!10 !ft•nu•1• llt•u, 'l't1t1111 It• 111·w111C'th·r~. ha m•h tirPs Hous9cleanlnCJ stone. 3 ty wor · 642·600S a...... & lt.,..r .!?":::'.••••••~•••••••••
•cks Incl, O.C Airport Stwm1l00 & steun) d ean \I'll 1''1tt'1 ~H ~.ii·.~, 1111111' It 1'1ill H75 l:!:io ••••••••••••••••••• ••••
1
1 Lac 11390882 963.29 RALPH'S PAINTING ~;tiGt~h;~;~£·;~i~1 F• accurate l~ ping on ~a.s.u.~.~54395 Color lln~htenl'fl< Ylht ""---'--1 "'-A.. Huusedt.inlrtlt + 1 :"'owla_n_d M ;;-on r ~ Prompl,24hrs.lic.,neat 0~t ... -, Spacious Addi-IBM Correct/Selectric. · ~ '"J ·---,man what'' 1·J11 S1Hh'n Mufi! custom blk wor k & re• ...,. "0
Blbyslt, my homt'. loving q11:1 Ill man hleal'h ( lcun \.••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••• •••••• 1 refs 962·4701 lions. Cabinets, Int/ Ext other secretarial work. care, 'Sprinadule & t-:d hv. din rm. hall SIS \ \'1(•1 ca...--.-,/uaulln9 llll' delaab. fl.I<! !00\.I tlllJ\i ng walls. Free est.. ----Painting !IS6· 7065 Call business letters. re-• -~ n llunw 1m11111-.•m1•11I 2;, s:B-7958 Coll S d 'd t>-lOPM
IJ\ler,H.B.846·4768 ~1 G~u!ildr' cl'ol~mt·~ns11t~' t1~':.~·1 '1' u dw n !'\ ··,• ' I '1 1 \'' t''Cll•' "'""'''"~ w,"',,',1t1'S~"'K?t-;:~1.111.'<·1 ·1.1-,: \~ i . ---i int~::1. ~unyej~~~~~es~~ ----------i !,~~!!· etc. Karen . M•ui ""' • .011 i.i·ape 'rt''' ""' l"•pt>r11lu lllt• 1:11 12/d 1 •....... a .inl( 1,11111 f'rplcs. brtl'k paving.' Alexu,.5198 D..---.. u•OI"~ odor. Cpl rt•1rn1r l:'i \rs 114:.!.!J9ll7 (' 1 L~ t .,.u 5l"'' k J .,.,,,. ._ • ....., I Cle .1-. ........................ nx""r Do work 01\'.•elf •• r . rrcceh .,..J '-> \('Ol.'C(, stone wor . 301 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wllldow•1119 .,. .,.. ,, ll1·l1• 1111 Jure• 1111 11 h loo 89 CteaUveEnvironments ftefs 5:!1 ou>I · fWa.c; rutl·:. laYln "'"wt· "11,,11 l'lni•, HOUSECLEAMIMG !
1
Yr.t.l.'xp_3·37~ _-! "Ame~~an P_a1nllng Repair & Reroor. Al~•••••••••••••••••••••••
Construction, St ained, --landscu11111~ 'l11111ld• 1 Hll 'l l!i l 11ndcwork Small J obs 1 Decor Res1d 1Com m . types-s hingles· rock i "Let The Sunshin e In" GI.pa Remodels, Sr1as. f l-1nd wh~11. '<1u '' .1111 111 1m.tnllut 11111 & rc•p111r ,\,k 1 cf,, S20, wk up 'l57 22:i:i I Newport. Costa Mesa & t Free Est a II work shakes . comp<>·tar. Freel Call Sunshine Window ·•37'2:8 : f!ui~ P_i lo1 C'h1~~•llt•d, for ~an m 979 •11114 \.\.i111 \1 1 111• uh •.i m1< ·1.1"1f1t•d \1h • .. .! ;,1;7x Irvine 675·3175 eves guaranteed. 646· 1460 , est. 5"1·5930 Fin. Avail. · Cleaning, Ltd. 548·8853
An&mOM!
/lidl) mecha nic:, exper. on
Datawi or Toyota. Good
119Yilbebefits. 642.2434
...
·-
..
Mlli.w a1 • 1111.....,.wa1 • 11H M.r,w.-. 11 M 1....,w.-4 11oo :M11pw..w 7tt0 1M11p w..tec1 • 11 00"1 lbi#ldlt.Howlmbiil&.1• ..,.,"'°' ~ .................. ~ ................. 1 ....................... , ....................... 1....................... ....................... .
... .. ..... L Ol'f'ICEP08TI II* I :: St.tloa ......... 1001 1 ~•-· 1 010 ,,..., ..... ,....., '""' ,"· ON PHOl'O PRUlllTER, ltn· RI AL !: s TAT £ ~ .... •no...• 1 .............................................. ····-········ .. •••
H • • • H • a.teal 9'Ulil NCWary IMd optnlnf, ••per on 1 ACQUISITIONS --" Al-I U• Arco I DOR011fY Ell ERSON & 11
... ,.._ .... ,.._" •Hta, I:--~ Y.....,, l...,.we. HI, ~ pri11ter. CNord I Company aearchlnr ror a Eam leOO + • week, no 1 Mon lhrv Fri, 40 hr wk DON NOL.AN PRESENT * * I BUY * * UMMl~M T .a& -~-.._...1.,. .. 1•&.1. MMtll ftl41 OIJ FIT, l·IPM (C)llqe 1r1du1te to b_elp credit tlU'O down1. up Hrl nex. S4 per hr Lido 1 Good UMd Fu.mtture 4c ltom ~ buai..ifeifi. 177111 ... , Q Ill ' I Non •"'*er ApplJ at rwattb • purcbHe In· preferred. will train., .vco.aeooNewport Blvd.1 EXPO & SALE Appllanre1 -0R I will Smd ~ tard for_.. ~aAkal .......... •IF •• 11'11WH Odil• Photo1rapllllc1, come property. Roi s.11-4501. N'B873-10Z3 I A CiaDt penormam4 ot .UorS£UAor You I t111 pl• OM~··~•
...,..., a-. 1 • e es · u • W l re DD HaJ'bor Bhd., V1tlt I E1ute llcen1e not' . antiques lo tht colMc.' MASTaS AUCTIOH return pera.uoea4J1 ! • • t: • o • • tq OpuatorJ la fk up £.-3,C.M. I XI t 1 !Saletperson wanted for Sblppln1 • recelvln•, tkm ol over 100 selette<tl 646 1616 I lll·t 6z5 eealed attrad1\·t ••t;.•
':.r.:1 U Uve ~/~ j CullW wded for wide· :'a~~ 3et~~1!ctry,:.; -=~:~for!~ .• ~! ~1:j!: ~~1u 5f::W, ~Ill! dealen... strap, meet Ina air c
• .._ me poa I 11)' ho1wn brollera .. 1PreKhoohlde. MoroJn&.S. I iumeto Villare P. ropel't" HU'·. P/ti'm• •. f/llme. pmonly.
1
...._,, 6 7 I ._ 9 Cwtom made queen slH ID. requirements ~· ~ .. • fittD •• .. d o,.alnc ' <**' women preferred. I r .. .. "' "V • • • • • • water bed wlth aolld vtnt lost & theft! Por .> -ACTION Call Helen McOlnley NO-silJbetUc5 pm. )f1 mt . Inc 10082 8151·7'15.3 Thurs. t'rl.S•l. Y.oOd boolcahel( head· penonalbed l., encl.6ff Pww ullenh• 1 Mt--. I Ca.rtleld Ave. Hunt. Bch. SHOl SALESMAM I H OPM. Sun 12·6PM hoard Mattress heater wallpaper, f;.1br1e itr
ofQl'MleCouat)',lae. . --Ca, 92646. Allent,lon SALESWOMAN. C .M . We have an Ol)enlne for INTHE liner padded rail com: "Dey Glo'' paper ...... e .,..~.,.Or #TIO Deak Girl. anawer -Pl-r=HllllU Mark Dorian. half size s hop. Warm. an experienced foll orl' COMMERCE BLDG. plet · 'th tch'ng 5 ll will tHick &· trif'() ~1ll.' ~.... S.S·OSOO ,....._, aome llllna. -~lft friendly, w/apparel exp. parttlme uluperson ORANGE CO. e Wl ma 1 · tags, Or ti') two ca"'9 MUat have Id haMwrit· u ......... t , Receptionist for 5 at-Steady p/llme. SS ok. A&>l>ly In person. ask ror chest or 5 drawers, bOth backtoback. •••.
-... AMM needed for ta1. Call 1·5, Plcwlc:k f'OC' double wldlb Harris turney office Fash ion 991-7670 . Mr. Cannon, Hempblll's FAIRGROUNDS like new, $300. Antlt1ue PRICES: ....4J
private chu y <'are (or PaperM9-ll57 l.680 offset preas. Appl" laland. Tut>s & Thu. Shoes.54Fashion lsland. A.dm.iaa.12.50.orwlth mabo&fny cabl\)e~ with 'S2eaor 3/5.'> -~ ._. la N..-,ori Beech. I b t J Sorne typing. Pay ac· Sehl .. Drl•en N .. B. 644·-1223. ad, S2.25ea. , original RCA rad10 and 4J5tap 11.60ea. ,,;,J. ............ p I t . t • n per1on e wee n AMPL"" d I till k ' ~ e.a. Moo t"rt, ref an er or pa111 e r s cocd.loability.640·6160. PART TIME. Qualified . . "' recor Payer a wor · 6/9tapS1.50e9. ·-•
ng C.Unowtorlllpp't. helper, 836·5555 .. Ca11 llam-4flm applicants will beShoe sales.fullt1mew1th FREEPARKlNG ing !!S300.0 neof a klnd 10ormoreSUOea . ..:J
UpJohn Holth C are betweent67pm. e>r.pCocut RICIPT/CASHllR trained and He'd for Im· or w/out exp., or will De i GI Cl b r quilte d beds pread . SalesTuxlnc-ludeA,.:t'
Services TU OtU D.lvPlot PARTTIME.979·11880 med. employment. Call train. Good co. benefits. press on ass . u 0 earthtone colors. S350 NOl:ARO? "4
E.OE.M/F. · ' p PAIMT
0
TSALIS 33J)v/.8&ySt Maturepersonprel. Capi~trano Unlried Apply In person 9am to H.B. presentsChnstmas Call714·642·0138 Draw your own or S'\9it
art me, uea. 5 to 9, Coeta Mesa Ice Capades Chalet School Dial. Transporta· uam Mon thru Fri. Stan· Glass Show & ~ale. Sat. .-CO-UNTRY FRENCH name, address. phone,&
Nuniq Wed. 9 to lPM. Some Equal Oppor Employer 2701 Harbor Bl . GM tion. 496·8312 for In· dard Shoes, 3077 So. Nov. 8lh, l980 atthe Hu~-we11 make one card:'.fll!r M. certlfiecl ex P Ker m R I m a RIC-IOMIST formation Bristol c M linat.on Beach Women s Curio Cabinet. Lighted. tag. Add 2S< each. · .• ........... Hardware, 2lle6 Harbor _., · • • · -Club. 420 10th St. H.B Glass Front & Side s . Send check or money.Qt.
Blvd. C.M. Prinlinl Looking for a mature, Secretary.Legal. family Smail computer manu!ac·I Admission Sl.00 Hours Closed cupboard Below. derto: ~I Sl.71,llw. Pressman wanted. Must experienced, & responsi· law practice, sole pr acli· turer has openings ror 10AM-4PM Xlnt t:ond. $450 546·6398 PILOT PRIMTIN•~
We will traln. 8 paid be experienced on multi ble person ~l ust be tioner, Fashion Island, I assemblers & general eves P.O Box 1560
holidays, be•lnnlng as PAITTIMI presses. llek exper fashionable as well .F'or yr law office exp. Good fa ct ory h el p C all SLOT MACHINES --CostaMesa,Ca.9262'i
soon as hired, benefit•. .v-...1~5 helpful. 4 day wk with 55 ·busy, ele.gant. high. skills req. Salary open. weekdays: 714.895.8000. Mills & Jennings, xlnl ANTIQUES ---·
Bayview Convalescent P "'IR"' ~ yr old compaoy In fashion salon RICHARD ~160 c ond . Pvt. part y Whole houseful. Mu st CERAMIC
Hospital. 2055 Thurin. A.duk.a over 2l with out· · ,. J OUELLE1'TE SALON. · SNACKBAR -Food pre · 67S.1907. seU.Call4005203 TILE llS"UE . C "" 1tandln1 attract ive LagunaHills.9<>1·9500_ "" .J1 .... Mrs . Fa rrell. I 200 NeY.port Center Dr SECRETARIAL paration. Opening shan. 6 6" 2S< p •m 642-3505. E.0 .E. JlK'l()Oalili.es ~ho enjoy 'Production Worker. 1st I Ne. )1ature Seacliff Country .. AMTIQUE SAU Klng·size hdbrd. dresser, &x •• per piece. tl~r'·
worltlnl With kads. $4 per shift. fuJI lime loading · · Desks bufJet hall tree 2 Side tables, dk \\OOd, gaze your O~O Q Nurstn& hour. Call 642·4321 Ext . cftr• ... ta tanPS Apply in I RECB'T/SEC 'Y I Progressa.ve opt I ca'! Club. 53811866 I II top' ..._.... . • best offer lakes. 851·0263 Good for ceraf'!l•C shot)&
C rtl•-~ 250 bet 2 d 6p I ~" ..-· manufactunng company, -----"? · ......... case. piano. or pn vale parties to ijat er...., w~ an m., per so n · TH El For front office or local! in Irvine i.s in need of a STATIONERY STORE an pactu~e s , c locks a r ·• 975-0477._ __ your a rtisllr abrlilies
HwwtAa. AskforLon. I CREATIVE WORD . certified public account· secretary with s ome CdM n~eds sa leslady ~nes. arts. used &!Large Mahogany dmrng 534·753.1 ·,,
$4.00fhr. Or-..D..U.. PCHooast 17885 Sltypark Circle. 1 in&ol'fice. Secretaria l ex personnel1bookkeeping1 F1t1me, 5 da)':. Xlnl I ~aques: 5-18·9882 _ table. 4 chairs. round,. • ~
8 paid holidays, begin· -, t Ste. 11B.2 . Irvine.' per. req'd ·Bookkeeping b~1~kground. This in·: wor~ang ~onds Espec1al·!Applimtees 80 Io I hlock wood kitchen table 2 .ca~dr s poke w ~~
ning as soon as hired. I Equal Oppor Employer t 5'9-0138. I exper. helpful but nol re : diVldual shouJd be able lo: ly fine chentele Phon<' :j •••••••••• ••••••• •••••• w chrome, 1 chu1rs. call ri n:s · S 100 ~or boL
benefits. Bayview Con· I . I q'd.492·1l2S forapp_1._,, t~pe 60 wpm & take 67S·lOIOforappt Washer & Dryer late s:n.5.988. 1 839-~l/839·9_3:!0 __ ,.
vatescent Hospital, 2055 PAYIOLL ,.1 ERK JProductaon . 1 shorthand. Company of.I -· I ---.
Thwil'I, C.M. Mrs. Far· """-Joll -I Help wanted purt time.! RICEPTIOMIST recs good starting salary I STOCK CLERk I ~.Jisood cond. $l2S ,G:\ME Table & . • vinyl
1
Lov~ Balloons j ~U· 642-3505 E o E .,.., Y Roger Inc., an Mall room. Mon. 5PM 'til . & benefits for right in· We w i I I t r u i n . ea. -_ chrs. Xlnt. cond. SJ50. Send someone you lov.(t,11
• • • • • 1 esl~blished rest~urant ! finish. Tues. SPM 'Iii I Congenial med sized NB 1 clividual. Apply in person MacGregor Yachts. 1631!1\la,\tag washer & gas' 556-l..2S8 bouquet. of 30 mult i POI_..
Stttrtlng
a New
BualneH
A cccotdl119 to
CaHtomla ......... •ftCI ~."°"' Code (S.C:. 17100 to 17130) 111
penone ~ tiu.iMe• .... ,.~fie-
"'"'' Ille • 11•1•-nt wtlft llM County C1eftl
a11d h•ve It pwW11"9d
tou t tlni•• In a
-~--..IM e re a In which the
bwelNM .. locatff..
The eteteM•nt 11
""IW•d by ••• •net II -•HfY '" jlfOleC:tlng your ltu1ln•11 n•M•.
Moel lt•ntl• r•qulr• ,.,_, °' flllng .. OtMn co .. ~_...
Tiie DAILY ,ILOT prowlde1 lloeft flllng encl
pwllketion _..,. •• W•
... .,. ... tM -Maly
fer1W1 encl melllteln • delly ,.,wlce to th•
Oren 9e C,o u nly
Court'"'-. 0..... 1109 lly o ne o f o u t
conw•nlent o"lc•• or
p llen• t ft• Ll!.GAL
DEPA"TWNT Ma-4321,
EU . 332 tot niote '"'°""etlon 9"d lofme.
• cham, has an opemng foq fin ish Apply lfi60 11;:;; Fi~m seeks s~arp ; or send res u m e to : Placentia,CM dryer. avocado. goodlf' . 1 . C b 1 21 ored h~humhalloons tfelr" 'a payroll clerk lo wor k in • Pt t: CM . I v walh exper. Light I Pyramid Optical Corp.. I cood SJOO r 646·8086 or sa e. apt. .e< ·-with nbbon & your ~n 'a3person dept. Ability lo I acen ta, ·' . w I ty ping. Non -smoker.' atln P a t Bass. 1732· STUDENT . p --drawers. 4 _shelves. S15. I person ;i I m ~-; s a,ge ! handle expensive phone . Salary commensur~te ' ~lcGaw. Irvine 92714.1 PART TIME G E F r o s t F r e e Phone964-5305 ' Perfe<•t ror e ,·e ry oc
commun.ications a must.· rtt04iRAMMER j w/exper. Good benefits. I 557-2414. I A.Ide· Driver Comnan1on Refrigeralor . Xlnl Cond 'King.,,z xtra firm 1n <'as ion We cl e,li v er ! Accounting or payroll ex· j A"·...,LYST 714·752·6841 I .. 080 · · f;'7J.411!.I per helpful b t -11 , """ Secretary/Sales 54:00/hr Must have car SIOO/ 556-9882 n er s pr 1 n g ma 1 t I trahi an indi~iduual =~o 'I TRAINEE ., RECEPT/PT .,· Fantastic Oppty with, b I g e n o u gh f o r SEARS r . w/match coil hox sprgs. STAMP COLLECTIONS
' has limited experience & Front ofli~e appearance. fast growing computer wheelchair. 640·2746 hwasher ~n~~ eco~~~ • never used. still pkJ(d. I P UR C H ASE 0 Dave
I a desl~ lo learn. Salary I CALL ! Detail on ented. Strong I software firm. The ideal, TEACHERS tion644·S499 worth $.520. ancl .. deli v I <.:oorier g.al).2387 .•
commens urate w /ex·. 760-3400 1 clerical skills. Some bk-1 person must have good S238. cash only t.;:.ualh
perience . Apply i n I k Pg kn ow I edge organizational abilities ,! SUISTITUTE Rl'frin. & Washer home.640-8087 • 1snaµ on side <'ab.: 3 person between BAM & · . I beneficial. Small con· 1 7 , -------• drawers. I sheU. locJ.:a·
·5PM.orsendresumeto: ,PIT CounterGirl,C.M.&.genial office.Corona del l be re~our c~ful , &I SIOPEttDAY Sl.2Sea. 646·5848 )lus1Sell.L1vmgRm Set, ble ,:
THE JOLLY ROGE R I Laguna Hills. Ftr pre·I Mar location. For in·t ~~getic.&en1oywork·, Wante d ! Q ua l i f ied Washer. clean. wor ks , Stereo Console. Dang tbl Sl40 768·5"17
1 INC. I sser for Laguna Hills 5·6 ! terview call 673·9151. I ~an a s ales related en·, Substitute Tearhe rs to good. $75. 548·8513 or w1chrs. Lamps 548·9646 - ---
1 l700GilletteAve , yrs exp needed. Apply · , varonmenl. Must havel' teach _high school s tu 5"8-4485 ---Very Re<1!'.0nable' ~r;fa 1 Irvine CA 927l4 I AM only Civic Center 1 Rental Agent, very busy 2}'rs. exp. & type 60+. dents an the event of ;i -Sofa. 10 ft lon)l S275. end Hug ll x 12. Lamps. Dbl
I 714.546-0331 aeaners.' 675 Paularino I olfi«. license req. Non-Smoker 851-2131 " work stoppa ge or Gas Dryer. works good, tables S75. electric ad Sofa Bed. End & Cock1.o;t1 l
. Ave, C M 751-3ll5 494-6594. I SEC"'/IEC~ 'I emergency DJ th pay clean. $65 548·8513 or , Justable twin bed S250. This. Queen lldbrd. e•c :PBX Answering service · · · ' · • g" • ' S80 Six high schools. 548-4485 dbl bed w/heudboard 55fl•.290
:FT graveyard. Exp.! PURCHASING I RESTAURANT l Forrrontolfice.Needed' grade~ 9·12 . Va l id --!s100. chair 550. Also. -:··
helpful. Will train .;0pening for a jr buyer ! Hostess/cashier , rull &·(~Newport Beach CPA California credential re . luildiac)Maffrialsl02 5 lamps li73 2287 o r Aquanum. pump. f1llfr.
j MahaeaduJt.540·1777 •with 2.3 y rs exp 10 J parttlme. Day & nighl l firm . Sal a r y c om -'! quired. Apply and sub ••••••••••••••••••••••••,67:>-8410 sland .. SllO GJs dryer
1 ! purchasing. Able to work shift available. Please: me nsurate w /e xper rrut credential 10 person.1Chrome towel bars &1,._Sat. S20 Kil table. ~o
, ~IX SRVIC.f Wlder pressure. lnven·; apply in person, Mon.· 714·833·9962 I H~tmgt~n Beac~ y~aon paper holders 40'. under '::7.:-7." ••••••••••• ~~~.~ Reing, S2u I love Pat
, Looking for full tame re· , tory control exp & buying , Fri., 3pm·6pm. Crazy l1)e /R t . . t I High School Dis t ri ct .! wholesale . Approx1malc-548·0107
: liable mature person., ol components, office. & ! Horse Steakhouse. 1580 cretary _ecep ion is ·1 10251 Yorktown Ave ·I ly 550 units Bulk sale on·• ~wport Harbor
I Flexible h rs. Costa maintena nce supplies . Brookhollow.SantaAna. I ~~ srl~~f· l ~pmg ., l~.B or call to be re·, ly.646-6096 Business&Proress1on;il Rant•ho San Joaquin
! Mesa. Eileen. 642.3013. Able to expedite all or · 1 c era ca . s 1 s ... or a gastered 714·964-3339 ;in~ C & WCMNn's Club F<1mlly M em ber:.h 1p
.
1
j d F 11 , , .Restaurant • responsible pos1t1on anl da\' including Sal & Sun I -ras th , 1 Al h I e t I r <: l u II PIXSEC'Y ~~fits ~-~~mpan-)j SGT.PEPPERONl'S ~ Electronicsale$.957·6916 oe'adllneNov.15 .. 1980 iqi,i,...nt 8030 announces earannua Sl25+transfer fee
We o ff e r x 1. n t co · j · · , PIZZA STORE I E.0 .E. . -: ••••••••••••••••••••••• GARAGE SALE 644-6579
benefit s . Sal. com · · Now hirlngrorfull &part l' I TEACHERS 1Darkroom miscellaneous '-91insGalore! --------
mensurate w /exp. & Real Estate 1
1
ume openings at loca· ~flookbeper SUISTITUTE ! equip!'"ent.3 18x24trays ! Sat&Sun.Nov 8 &9 1John Wayne Tennis dub.
ability. T~plng SSWPM I MEWUC&ISE? . l ions nr OC Airport. ~ob an~olves heavy ~YP·1 Wanted ~ Qualified sub · Safelighl. For~lac~a~d 9AM to4PM I Family Member s.h.11)
1 figure aptitude pleasant
1
Why not try comm.-rcial , Varied days & hrs. Ideal mg. hte ~kkeep1ng , stitate teachers to teach I white developing . 1 ", 401 E. 'Bay St, C.M $1~644·1~----. I olfice N.Y.S.E. Member real estate? We provide ; siq>plemental income for I general offi ce work, Reali grades K·8 stude nts I gallons each A & B co!'·; We w_elcome your con· . 1
Firm. Call for .• appl. j all ol lhe extensive train· I housewives & students , F.atale exp necessary I Sl5/day. In event or a centrate 3 gallons fi x i tnbutions for re-s ale. All Ladies .dresses $3 & ~. 2 :~9704Joan8airdSu~ro ingyou'llneedlobea Our ressive rowin ',8 :30·5 Co_ntact Mr .1 wo rk s toppa ge orl concentrate. 4 plnls1 proceed s go to prlad1esbools$.5prryew
· &CQ. 1401 Dove. St. Swte professiona l. 1 ncome. i com7ng offers g 0 l ! Turner Tra·Co Realty1 emergency, l'J~ rate will• harclener concentrate 1 ~cholarsh1p run~ , DoAA•e house nee<h doJ? ________ __, 400N B. EOE draw & benefits Call fn.r : f Pd Y bpp Yd loc. 645-0621. I be $80tday Vahd Calif I f1rst S30~altes all W d . k & $15 One pr lacl1es µumpi-
1 1&.1&.. 1_ ai.-at • . . or a vancemenl ase d . 1 f d i68-5837 o o "' o r 1 n ~ ~ f'iri:: e)(t on~wsher ss wnww ... _,,.. an appointment for an .. on y o u r j o b Secre\ary for Newport ere entaa pre e rre · :\l erhanlcs tools Air · · Cluallied Ads are really Just starting up in a busa terview. Realonom1cs1 · I wilJ process paper work Cats 8035 ·. · net:ds rt-lrll Rollaw:J\ smaU "people to people" ne.ssofrour own:' A good Corp,675-6700. performance. P~asanl Be~ch CPA farm. Xlnt for emergenc~ creden·1·•••••••••••••••••••••• com P r es s ti r . cart for n · SS Butch.er
--•-calla 'th ·b· wa' to tell .....,.. 1 bo t , working conds. Must be lYPfJ\& & lO·key addlng1 1181 ii n--'ed Applv & • Beds corner Group & I block < ullmg bot1rd $S
adershipandbloresults' at is wath a I . t Tr:; .. _ . or over . PP Y tn 5 1 req._ ea~e ca s ubmit credential 1n oc er ... ee arro"' Coleman camp stove Siii ......,. wi ig re-I · "'"~Pe a u 1 18 A I k'Jls Pl II """"' · · Be au t B I u e P l j R ·k \"h lb •
To la " · I ow cos _..., )pur old stuff for person· 644-61.56 for interview H 1 ma I a Yan K 111en ~1 Household items & Misc • P ce your classified Cla:.s1f1ed ad. Phone new goodies with a 2300 So E B I · person.73514th SI Hunt · Papers Sl 50-Sl7S W CX f' GwtarS20 Carrad10 SIO
ad.,calltoday 642·5678. 1642·5678. Classifiedad.642-5078 ' Sa . asHt .nhsto Secretary. local church. mgtonBeach.536-885.2__ ~3192 . '6610 ean ront Bird cage SlO 548·1911 nta Ana eag ts . N B 2002 Wallace St c ost.
cNextlo McOonalds > rnature.~rson. trpm~ A Teache r's Aitle, P T . Persian kitteris & adults f'r1 Sat Sun l04 Mesa · a
NURSING i E.0 .E. t ranscnbing skills am· Ge rbe r C h ild r e n ·s CFA "Shaded salvers ':j ~-----. -·------
1
portant. Exp necessary. Cenler, Newl>'Jrt Beat•h Si5 <shots 1 542_2727 Si11ne ternf1c JUAk & s tuff j XMAS Boutique JOS Cedar ~·UTA AMI JUSTIN cn1111111n HOSPITAL Restauranl . Call631·2880 Askfor Joru644·0232. up • Sat Sun 9-6 18599 Santa ~ewport Shores Nov. 8th '1Rftl. M UlllWIU .
1
Fullorpartt1meevenang Docp 1040 , • .\ndrea. F"V off Pac Csl Hwy & I 00 I Nortll Tlllfill A•-cook. Exper . prefer red. , Teacher's Aide. a fter ••••••••••••••••••••,•• R . Q Prosnoct ..._ 540-2244, Se< y/Word Processor noons only. KEESHOND Pups AKC . edecorat 1ng ! u a I __ ..-_____ _..:::;o.1•
S.ta A-. C•fonlia , . TOP PAY 646·l444 Champ sire. Mi F. Pel & F\lm. Access. clotha hg. Two sax foot the:itrt IRet~l clerk. Costa Mesa 1.erox 800 or 850, artec . s how p vt P t ) hsehld items for salt> lights, t·ables. controller.
RN's
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS -LET'S TALK
FULL TIME. PART TIME AND PER DIEM
At Santa Ana Tustin Community Hospital, we have
excellent nursln.g opportunities available for professional
individuals with their future in mind. We are a modern 300
bed acute care facility and te.C:hing hospital providing
quality health care to Central Orange County Residents.
We offer excellent salaries and benefits. The following
opportunities are currently availabre:
OPERATING ROOM R.N.'s
EMERGENCY ROOM R.N.'s
ICU·CCU R.N.'s
Salary L:evels Available -Dependent upon Experience
and Educa1ion: $ S . I. 17 -$2.138
6 Month Operating Room TrainldQ Program A>Gilable for
Inexperienced A.N.'s. Next Cl-~begtna February, 1981 .
$1, 178 per month for first four months. ..
• Paid Trauma Nursing Class for O.R .• E.R.
and ICU-CCU Nurses
• O.A. Staff Meetings Weekly
• Special O.R. ln·Servlce Meeting Monthly
•Free CEU's Available
OTHEI IDlflTS
,
-Time and On•half for Weekends In Exc:est w .. kend Hours during a 4 week pay period.
-Half Time Pay for Call Time
-Oltferentialt:
3:00 to 11 :00 Shift $154.90
., 1 :00 to 7:00 Shift $371.1'6
Aak about our 32 Hour Work Week
with full pay and Benefits
for the 11 :00 P.M. to 7:30 A.M. Shifts .
.-Dental Plan Paid by the Haepttal
-Medical I Hoepftal lnauranoe paid by Hoapital
-Money and Ga Saving Vmn Pooling Program
of 32
S.,.olat area Include Mlcroeurgery. Open Heart Su'lJlfY,
Total Joint Aeplaicement, Vltreqtomiee Md Neurosurgery.
W• h8Y8 the new•• In equipment and ktJ)pliel. 9 Room•
In Surgery wtth Plana for ExPMtk>n. ~
·Fo r more Information call Nuralng Admlnl1tratlon
153-82 or Operating Room~.
St11t1oners, 270 E. 17t~ St. exp ! d . Fu 11 or p T . Techn1C1an 21J/lln·lJ45 an 6 pm Mesa Verde Or East lo $675 :.i fl 6 64 s .63:1 9 I Costa Mesa. Full tame. Newport Secretarial LAIORATORY · -San\ar to Pemba (2936 Charbe
Apply in person 10·12. Services. 752.2377 TECHNICIAN I •POODLE PUPS• Pemba1 Sal Sun ----
s.1e ..... Wonted .,~-....A-....t • I wl To operate computers & Christmas deposits . 'eoy Seoul park HI~ lol 2 Ton F'1oor Jack. LarJ,:c ~•-..,.-experimental elertro T. Cups also. 546-2848 Frame 642-3260 Immediate openin g . mechanical instruments sale. boats. trailer. misc iSI 896i
SALES Full t ime for I locaJ jewelry store. Co.
, benefits . Wiii train I ~9485
I SALES j If you are aggressive and j
1 lootlng for a future an re·
I tail mgmt w /good co
benefit.s apply in person
~m lo llam Mon thru
Fri. Standard Shoes. 3077
So. Bristol. C.M
I SALES
SLOAM S
R8'USIHT A TIVE
to call on ~anks and
other related businesses
for public relations with
, growing 2nd T.D com ·
pany.. Some sales expr
~·ry. R.E . lie pref.
WUl .traln. Xl.nt opport &
comm. Call Equity I.
731·2.825.
SALESMAN
Territory. Orange Coun ·
ty. Salary open. Call Al·
len Brown for appl. Will
I train right perso n .
~1.
I Tomqui1t Mach. Co
Brea.Ca .
Heavy litigation ex Should have at leasl Shi-Tzu Puppies 8 wks equip 9am·4pm. Sat.-11 fl -----
perience. Good skills. l<*u's college phys ics & AKC Blk /Wht S275 only 3811 South !War St. Firewood
strong organizational chemistryor equ1valenl 644-9571 SA <Behi n d SC Orange,Split$150cord
abilities. Init iative & Small medical instru . . Village I 499-5548 afler6PM
willingness to take mentcompanynear OC..4 Female AKC p1r1u~e , responsibility essential A 1 r P 0 r t x 1 n t · perfect Cocker Spaniel s.1 Outrageous Garage Sa le '
Excellent be n efit s . medical dental plan I 7 wtt.s old. 546-0010 d~s., Handcraft items. sports
Crib "' matlrE."'n·.
ma l ch1n~ pla.' pen .
h1ghcha1r stroller ~175
.ill 1;.is..t1200 aft 5
Salary open. Call Lindal Call lor appl Laslonl 768-17ll eves 1tei:ns. furniture. hshld &
Ru sse 11 co I I e c I Scienttfir Corporation.I office goodies books. I Brown Lab female 5mo radios. beautiful lad1ei. 2131556-2000. Interviews
in Newport beach. ;
••SICRnARJES• •
Legal /corp IN oShll6.800
GOfc/Recpt/BriteS14,400
Sec/Sh80/EngSl4;-400
G Ofc /l'60/0ursS10,800
Liz Reinders Agency
40'20 Birch Est '64 EOE
Newport/~190 I Free
Secf!hry /IUc.
Career oppty. In fas t·
paced Npt. Bch. invest·
ment firm. Requires top
skills (shtbnd 90, typing
75 >. Sound professional
exper .. maturity &c cor·
porate bkgmd.
Cal I: 640-0123
helpful.
SICRnARY
3PM.SPM
545-9-'36
Tow T r uck D ri
Aluminum a"'n1'11g
12X42'. ssoo or btst offer
needed
Papers. SSOor near offer rlothing. s 11.e 12. & much.
\'e r s 673-3614. much more Sat & Sun
d on· Shellie puppies. sable & 9AM-4 PM . 266 V1llano\•:.i Experience 963 0078 :
area ...... , MF Rd. C M. ne ar fair wmte, . $150 \\ a ter F o u n l a in . good
646--7603 grounds. rond.. 3 upnghl ~w!lns. ----frHtoYCMI 8045 GIANT SALE! All Wl'ek. loest o ffer 6-10-10117
Live-••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Joann St. Aµl 10, CM. 640-ll29._ _ ___ _
I} Must 11,e C ~I
646-9638
TRAINEE
Show horse stable.
_!!.__ Toy poodle. 112 to a good 6.1l·0945._ John Wayne Tennis Ctuh
am·I home. Papers. GIANT SWAP Sat Nov reg members hip. $2000
in. 338-1011. or 244·22
each 631·3647· 8th 8 2 K1ltfi'brook e 759-1550. -
·1555 Free nuffy kitten lo go<xt ~hool 31~~ K1 lybrooke. New1>9rl Beat:h Tei:>41()~
home. 12 wks old, shots. C-Osta Mesa c t u b F ;am I I y M Hn .
btwn 64.S-7491 4 white spoke; wheels . bership. Bel!l offer · .Jfp
M . FREEFlREWOODLBR To}ota . Ne w· Bell 540-9461 --,;.__
3001 Lots of it, but hurry! helmet. Enlaraer w /lens I Miscel•eous
Ste m-0391 & all other darkroom W..t.d •0•1
-------.--gear. chair & ottoman, •••••••••••••••••••••P•
I AFGHAN. male. Cream. surf bbard. other. 1!100 •WANTED: Niagra; Ad A~prax 3 yrs. Gentle. Beryl Lane.NB. _ I JUStable Red. 76()..t458•or
1631 1 friendly . 631 -1030 .Honn 1 060 631-0760
I ~~ -·--••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ical
r orl ~tale Black Lab. 8 mos .. •Sale/Leuse. Ju mper· IMtiwnh 1 013
ork. Hasallshot.s s how . Sl OOO ta c k .•••••••••••••••••••••••
Travel Agent, exp,
med , Newport B
Airport area. 754
u k for owner.
Waitresses. Apply
9 A ~I & l 2 p
CHARLIE'S CHILI.
Redhill Bldg. #2,
#73>. C.M.
WR.DH
MacGregor Yachts.
Placentia. C&f
Women neede d
housecleaning w
pay Call 897-4647 495-4486. 495·6735. NN . ~
I apphcanu need above i • • j L'O Dtrertor trofT\..,.ne
avera ge s pellinf ac: Robbie 5 Rag & Mop., Loving Lab·Sh ephe r d Jewetry 1070 wtlhcase Excellen~i:on
i"ammar skills. word : 548-07S7. m i x , 6 m 0 spayed •••••••••••••••••••••• • dition, $100. 675 8052 !(I.er
T5WPM. no shorthand. Good . full time !Sales
· PAaTTIME 1 GHAT HOURS! 1 processl11g background •
1
WORD PROCESSING I female, loves small kids. G e n u I n e 8 u rm es e 6PM. · • i
fAM TO 2PM I helpfuJ. 752·02:M Day or Evening sh ift 552·5139. RUBIES. You# choice. n" -r------~ 'a ail 6 h d M only $20 each. IM-0·8618 -Q.IW1..4fo.£JLS>, v rs. a ay. ag . Terrla·poo 9 mos Benji· Student "" 4'M TO tPM SICRITARllS • U, Savin 900 or Artec. 1 type. To' good family 14 carat Gold'. Wide R.UTE l I L.......... Call752-0ZS4. 1 631-3147 I bracelet with unus uall Olds Ambassador
I Joln the Los Ao1e les AC••i•77 Mii ih••.. . , c harms . Appraisedj COmpletely overh•ulccl.
Times Cl.rcul•tlon le am . "'•as E 0 E •••••••••••••••••••••••I White Shep/Lab fem. 5, S2 . 7 so , u 11 S l , o O O • realigned, new pads. ne w
, and adapt your work ~rvinePeraonneiAi' ency _,, .. 11 \IOOI mos. all 11\oU, friendly,. TM-6494. I case. Sl50/0UO. cve11 s c h e d u l e t o y o u r • I loYea kJds. 770-4200 · . 646-9100 I Ufeatyle. Work 5 hrs per 4118 E.17th, Coeta Meaa ••••••••••••••••••••••• Diamond rl111. 3~ ct . 141 ~~~~· ~~~~~~
I c:t.-y in a Tlmff Clttula· §!!..~~ --~•'!'! Kini ala xtra firm Inner' atones. 2 star shapes, -
Uon Salea Otllce near &.<a.M4<a<w:+> WESTIUNST.l!!R 1 •prina mattress wllh SlOOO. S45·3498 res .• Marshall 100 watt~~
: your home and have SICllT•IY ABBEY matclainl coll box 1pr·I 83'MJOOwk. I lcod brttln, tt?'T el.
: more Um• for your faml· ,.. ANTIQUE MALL tnp, never uted , still I LookJ like nciw. n ly
I ly, •tudlee or lelllU'e •C· ANH. ASSIST. DlaUy ICM, Fri IO·t packated. worth '520. In· Man's 14Kt yellow gold used 165(). Jbane& cl~ric
' th1llea. We pay hourly Or I a n I u d pe ra on aa..clTUMday I d delivery G2(). Caah on· bracelet. In nu.net t•lt·! guitar. Profuah a I
I wqeaandcommlulon.a. w/1ood HC1y s kllla, I U111 W81&1nlu&erAve , lY ~ hared curb link, meas ur model with Tree 0 Ire i draftlnc. fur-nlture. "j 0...-Grove llot.fl03 · · 1111 13mm In width. 8"! eoina up to th~ 1 c k
&.. •11 tnn..1 conatructloa exper. . Utti. Is Bia!! Classified '8n8lh. Secured with •1 Wood•raln body with 1371 s-leww A••· I helphal, to handle ordtrt • ada art really s mall concealed box c laep. bard aht'll case s.soo c..t. 4a cu1tomer1. Irvine ~1tbo'*"Peot>I• ! ·•peiop!e to peOple" sale$ wllh a n1ure I aafet)· 841_.. • ·
1 .. 0.0 ..... JOI• I Furn. mfr. Call K.H. That's.tiatthe cailt with bl& readtrship clup Total wel,ht Is' ---
.. ~-.. DAILY PILOT and bl& results! To place 30.812 Ptftll)'Wtlfl\tl. AP· Trade )OUt old atulf ,.,r 1 t'ind what )'Ou lll'ant In I ER\1CEDIRECTORV 1 )'OW' c:lb IOed ad, call• praised O\'er 13.000. Sell new llOodtu with a
: Daily PllOl Classlri~. . ~s~l aboutl l~ M2·S678. for11.D> 64 HM104 1 t:lu.~ltieJ ad ~R
---r
• ..... -
A · Daily Pilot ~d number will appear i n your ad ....
we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call
in at your convenience during office hours and 9et
the responses to your ad ... ~or more informat1ori
and to place your ad call 642-:>678.
642-5678 DA ILY PILOT
,..
lltt 1 . ......... ,, .. , ....... ..._ S.J .... tHO .... W..e-4 tno1 ......... cried ..... 1., • ..w ~1 ... .-. lif -· 1011 .......................... JS•-~ fl60 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••••••
_.... .... ••:••••••••• ~7i .. eM V11n zt' d lesell ....................... '7• LlN Mikado... Cleu -..W f712 MG 974Z ,........ f770 Qeg~wnr••11tl tfJO ft-.A~dl' Guilar 120, Sport1f11her . ru t ly Rent: 22' Lux. Motor GOOO. 641-'720ol'lM2·5341 -WAM"Jll>! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~ 1Uon M-1418(M equipped 531 7730,1 Hme. sl1>1 6, aell·COl)l. aftertlPM La~modelToyotasand '76200l,xlnt cond.41pd, '7'MGMIDC'91T '79 White Co n vt . VW -a....CfTATIOM
_..unoonS1S 775-7125 I SUO/wk . +8'/m i. Volvo1 . Ca l l us air, aunrf, $5600. PP. Mus t Sell ! Futu r e Beauty Rima, Am/Fm 'IOCWtC ...
,_..._.. & r 84().11515 '79 Ford F lSO a XLT TODAY!!! 631·9560 Claaaic.Needa Clean-Up. casa 7000mi, $9000/0BO H.tcllllecllt
f 1., 1015 13 • W h »le r , 2 5 H P , Wl b 1 4'r Rancer. beaut 2 tone .76 BMW 200:2. sunroof. && Mechanics TLC. SlSOO &eC).0297 Auto. trana .. air cond ..
•••••••••••••••••• f.vinrude. t rlr , new cov 173 Z1 nne aao. a r ' brown IL bei&e, loaded, AM/FM stereo cass. only 759-0080 econ. 4 cyls . " LOW ~ IRM Maa ('ard erlU·ZUS aitntr•tor , telf contd. Am/Fm stereo. a /c , 35Kml.~.675.5751 ..._ 9744 74 Super Beetle, runs miles! C u te ear l
r Wl 11 I u .. • ~ 0 r 52.000 ml, •wnln1. new 14,000 ml. auto, crujse. •••• .....__..__ ...... good, need4 drivers door, <-XRK). "• ~ " M t II -ooo pb •-...__ • r-.& t715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... .u•.-11. .,.,., u C.:all 752 OX14 BOST~ u'9. ua ie . -· • . i:-, a now • conven· C••• ...... ._...,..' ·-MG B Class1· c Good _.., '""""' OHL y $65'5 ~ 080 $51.-7723 tlo n al tfres 17495 '••••••••••••••••••••••• 'QllJ · -' · · ,._64•·Ullw'40.un Cond.BestOfler 68 Bug. high milea1e. HOWAltDClae•,... otYmP!a lyJ*wrltt1r 71 <' WH.6.1 ER T,......,TN• .. 9170 tm.Z21l.M7·3542. --· ·74 Capri 4spd am /fm. 673-3458 good condition, SlOSO. Oove•Q\.lallSts. t::lt~ v~0~. v~~di:: ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHARP-'69 1 lon flatbed Cars. t rucks. vans run snrf. xln~~12 l-6'18-H98. NEWPORT BEACH
1>1..u.0. C11mpul"r . cl•1k11. l0x33', fumlahed, older.I Chevy , 11675 firm . Dinaoroot.Willpaycash l --·n MGB, xlnl cond. 26 G d 133-0555 ""'-... ... m>O Newly renovated ...... ""'"" .... ,, .. 120 S300 u:a 9760 ............. _ 97ZO mpg, new top. lug. rack. '66 . VW BU . Restore . ---------
# .. ..., n ••••••••••••••••••••••• custom rims & tires. Mint con . S2100. a SH US FIRST! l •v cha1lr11 & lbl" 1"11 ... "C•b-'llo . --·-ii up to . .....,... -I d c II
C»btncllc. t·r~dc•nzn. 10 ... 0 . ru ••lllh•d '98 '\lt Ton Chevy P U Util Wanted Honda c ar, • Really beautiful. Low 552·3818af\6 h 87 kl .... "' .. ·• I ---------We have a 1ood selection ,ae "'" i.1111· I 112.000 140 C.:11brlllo I Bed. A /C . auto. good 197~72. N·600 with blown m.i ~.496-1858 '64 VW CONVERTIBJ.E. or NEW & USE D r;:.i::,\~~~o49 3m6~,I ~. I IWU?~.A•ldurf'11y'4 I llf'e! lll3·3S30 ---1 engme.53l·880l_ --·73 MGB GT Xlnt cond. xlnt cond, $2600. PP. Chevrolet.'l! .lPQ. Iv ml'lllNllill' I I IO' Tr»vtilctlh' , !ltllt rout. '78 MAZDA P U, xlnt , LB.' ... ...._ be rt~.. Snrr. cassette, 13200. 631·9560 C OMMEU
C HEVR O LET 5. 1hell. Radials stereo. --. ....,.a wu 642-1016. ---------i ~tc (urn, 101 1 1111ru 1 1•110 IMi pullC!d Ii} romp11r11 14 400 831 SS48 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73Super Bug -new paint,
1
'
'I •••. rr ll:JI ll:Jllll I '74 Ui\TSUN PICKUP ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ·······················1 968-4856 '*. I C)l'o ~·111 0 l'I I ---------
............. I 1 ' • '
L ~I \ \~ r-..._ \
~4~ 1200
~lr. ottomun, luhl", 'I c·11r. llflllll 046 011 20. · ·-· - - _ G1Mr.. 9701 I 10pef 9746 new upholstery . Call
.y112 MI-'. Tfl:e uo11;, fll/aP..t l'7ll:.w!'<:omrorllnSium •t1t • i\uto Tran11. first S20001'76 Buick S k yha w k , 1·12 Opel GT. great littlel''80DieselRabbit dlxmdl. -~ + wk1:nd11 1' l'\oJu I......__.._,... ..... , lkh Ora11t V11callon cir !_ilXt!ll. ~,5 124 Am/Fm can. snrf_. auto, -s~rts car. auto. gd g~s 1 d d I t . 0 I '70 MONTE C AR LO _......, -~ ' I many xtras lo mileage 1 1911 D.._2401 ·mileage 50 000 m1 · oa e w x r as . n Y 1017 1..-d .... w JohttaOfl Wlmil •11ot Sll(IOCJ541411707 :14 l':I C1tmlnu, :i.c,o, 4·liP . Id cond. sharp S2600'. c Sl .675. o~ be.s t olfer:1· 4100mi.$7500.637-6863 JSO.V8 Am/fm 8 ~~ck
• '•••••••••••••••••' IOH' ' 'Ill • u ... I nuw un11lne/llrt'"· mustj 646-5349after5pm. ~randnewenglne SSOO I 49t·7'942moms. . VWB rf F 11600 A·I Condition I IA ,-,1111111 r t'. "u111111 II 768 5837 , I 73 ug sn Am/ m .,.., 251• C.•1rit1 for u le, rtid I "1111. hest orr.,r 631 <e034. ----· , . • · .....,. .. . .._""'& II l.c11ot1h<1n 1111111111 11 STOii 111' h1•11 1 11fr1•r -jAltalomto 9705 . --1.....-9741 , stereo. new eng, 52000,---------
.. ~ ~e ow" I t'111lto:\'e1dl1fl!Hlll!'I 11'11t-14117 ·77 fl unchno 01', very1•••••••••••••••••••••••1 68Datsun Roadster,r uns , .• ••••••••••••••••••••••! firm.675·82-10. c:or..... 9932 1 174 1 d t111n, Stu1·kton 11he ll. Jo1NALALFA ROMEO I "".ell. sooo. or best orrer. ORA:\GECOUNTY'S I 1 ~7•••••••••••••••.••••••
,...;;;&0,.....1 1090 l'to.h.Sell 9060 :!~:.~!~~·! •••• ~!!~ l11ullt1 d, uklnw S34U!> CLEARANCE .:_im67S.4629 PEUGEOTDIESEL '79VWVan .7pass.Dark,62 Corve_lle original
•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••~•••••••••••••••••• ~111129 ALL '80llMUSTGO! 174 82lO 56 · . b t' HEADQUARTERS brwn/tan. 13,000 m i. Gdl 59,000 m1 , runs x lnt cuttie s I l w I l Ill' l'rl1111lti i'ut w ll'lllh1rllJt lll\y lrulltir . 1r11 ilttr "W . D r .. . m .. •mmac es I ond $6900 4949456 S7,000.842·1784Eves. ffn, :xre~ r~eo~d , ~~;~ I full} t'l,\Ul~l W1111 lib 111·iu1 111!,c•h t:uotl llrnh !lllHI v-fS70 e re ea in I ot (er. orig. o wne r 1' I c . . . or ~ .., w ~"' u nilti r r t•llltt! l\4!lotXH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 27·39mpg,67387~ _ 1980 505s l eves•97·3498 '76 Veue_. T-top. mags,
I hMlw l 11n 11 oo~Sll tt9H 1.,... Ser•lce Perts um ~'ord <;11mper van, 1 1981 SPIDERS ,67 Road.st . lGos & D5.Hll 71 vw Bug, reblt engine, 57,000mi S6,000/0BO. ~au G d 5'9" 11 k I ' llln I rh d h II to HERE .... OW'" j er . no engine.' HERE OW 1 rr ~ .r1tn ) 111· '·It I \ill Ii Acc••Mri•• 9400 wove ea I e p. " ••• xlnl body & hardtop best1 N !!! I good trans. Best o er. ---·------$4 .300 640·0505 o r I'"'' 1 lo&, 1n11 ~r. m1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Neworr ro.d suspen1lon. __ o(( 760-8375 · I , 631-0401. Fwd 9940 aa.-. :oll l:i, unit llu1"· 11111 SSAVISAVIS 'hou~or~. desectBm•ic1~· llACHIMPORTS ' er. -· BEACHIMPORTS 1·12 vw st t ' w ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'91it~'Emers on :1quur e :::..·SlSl~f1175 !t7IO 1 wmtUSID,AITS ~tt~~~rHps4.!~g:I 8480oveSt reet I ~·::,,o~~unF~10·d 848DoveStreet ! clean , r!~~~ e na:o~ Fiesta '78,silver,sunroof,
b9by grand Ivory keys. ~a.~.,... tOlO lmJX)rt.-dnr p»rt11 oost $12,500. 1 owner. xlnt' NEWPORT BEACH $3850 ' 675 824~aK ao . • NEWPORT BEACH I radials, $2000. 492·0268. xtras, 13395.
-i, hand curved _.. IMl'ORT cond SHOO or be s t I 75~0900 l · evin 75Z,.0900 I 548-6623 ~ .....,.,_ 080 '-•••••••••••••••••••••• AUTO SUPPLV a .7409 'I , -------·--"'_ I SLIPS NEt;Dl!:U lOlN Manch.,stt>r . A.1111 9707 : 77 280Z. gold /~~l int ,1 Pot"ldw 9750 64 VW, looks & runs 1978 Fiesta, stick shirt, ~•'Gra nd , perreN 2$'&UP Anaheim 776·9900!AlllolW..ted 9590 •••••••••••••••••••••••' loaded,xlnt cond1t1on. . •••••••••••••••··~·· great.S1400. gold w/sunroof, cute,
12.000. See in CM 675-7100 -... ~ z ~•••••••••••••••••••••••I 975 AUDI I OOLS I 661"6799· ''60 Porsche 356.W!IJ'od ___ 642 __ ·5920 __ . ___ Dl00.963·5054· at. 9502 -~ -I ,...,......,._ WE PAV TOP OOLLAR SEDAN Ferrwi 9723 '. cond. 675·6970 wltdys ; ·73 VW Bug. xlnl cond. Mwcsy 9950
. -Slip. 25ft. Water. elec. ~ission fortop~cars·foreign,1 Sunroof w ith ai r .& •••••••••••••••••••••••i 67:>-2208eves &w·kends . I $3,000. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• s, D 11wg Goodi 8094 ' locker. S200/'mo. · Also nuscellaneous 240Z. domesucs. or classics. H1 automatic. Origin a 11 '67 Ferrari 330 GTC. 1 • • • • ' 641·8604 ORANGE COUNTY'S ·-.. •••••••••••••••••• 640-5335 I 200z parts your car lS extra clean , fi . h 1 1 d. . 29 000 • . d n 914. 34.000 ong m1 , 1m ·1
Vl·ng Eqwpmenl· 768 5837 see us FIRS"'t ·1· INS • ove Y con it1on. . m1. mint con . . mac best offer Ah er VolYO 9772 FINEST ~ ~. · '· tl39PEN) 631--0600or645·6367. I · . 's Small Nylon II -a.Sid ~ 9010 I I
1
$2495 ,.,._..
9725 1 5pm846-7435 'i ••••••••••••••••••••••• UNCOLN·MERCURY
W..4at Suit. Regulator. Wanted: '5Sto '59 ~ ~ . ----VOLVO DEALERSHIP G'&u2es. Dive Bag & •••••,•••••••••••••••••• Chevy 12T slocktruck k JIMMAllNO i'••••••••••••••••••••••·i·79~orsche924 rnew 3i80l.
ScUbaProTank 751·8967 16' Outbrd boat w /45 hpt parts. 536·7674 . VOLKSWAGEN '71FIAT121 stall under wmty. ~unrl. s•• 1r.s, SERVICE ~--?t.t/J•e
motor . Jus t overhld.I 18711 Beach Blvd. .1. d . d AM1FM cass, 6,000 m1, 5 -~ SC\!IBA GEAR. tank. reg. m a n y a ccessorie s . For Sale : Dod ge Van RUN'l'TNGTON BEACH I 4 cl 1.n er.4s pee · 33·000: spd, met. gm & special· ANDI.EASING UNCOLN·MERCURY
1aua'ts. B.C .. hack pack, SL500/ofr. 675-5785 I Seats and Rear Pop.Out #I "'or-.. Co.ty 142·2000 1 nu es. $]499 . pa.int. F1awless. 673· 1093. OVERSEAS DELIVERY 16-18 Auto Center Dr .
ete: 962·0048 -~ S.___ 9090 : windows 968·1457 --l 2925 HarbOr Blvd ·I t1 642-6244 EXPERTS SD Fwy-Lake Forest exit ~ ,_..-.,.. for s-1-COSfA MESA IMW .9712 ---TY' laclo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Aulol _. · ~ ~·~ J-~ o...-che '69 912 o e EARLE llCE
VOLVO tM,Shreo 8098 Ory storage a vailable.1••••••••••••••••••••••• • For the best d eal in . I SspeedAM 'fM SSSOO ' ' ., 979 2500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • c41~e n11" • n owner'
.. --••••••••••••••••• Newport Dun es. 1131 , IMPORTANT Or v-, C 1 HONDA 714-640·2608
Beautifu1RCA25"color Back Ba y Dr. N B .' NOTICETO WEIUY 1 ange'--oun,l~ ... ome l 18AUTO CENTER DR.' -1966 HarborBlvd.
'IV, 2 yr wmty, free de 644-0510 ! ~~¢~~¥~~~~ i CLEAN CARS I SeeUs Today. IRVlNE 830-7600 ;~!l!!~~ ••••••• ~!~.~l 646-c9rot5~~;467 tl~. Sl24. 646'1786 T rtati I The price 6f items' AND TRUCKS I .r!i
1
.78 124 Spyder . red con\· • #l DEALER IN U S.Jl. j ........ u-. .. COU ... TY
TV rmup0r Oft advertised by veh ic le! ~ Ster AM/F M cass. mags. I ' ~ '"
•••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ dealers in the vehicle I ZOOO, 213/964-6231 VOL VO DECODERS C:C:::"· Sale/ 9120 j classified adve rtising SADDLHACIK ..._.. 9727 1 I EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO
IRVINE
830-7000
S'l\RONG-Re liable ·beat.
'65 Wagon. manua I. 3 spd
lrans S350 549-1426 aft
i PM
•;5 Mercury Monarch .
new tires. new brakes.
ver~ lo m ileage. Gd
rond. $2500. 963·6188. 840_3680 •••••••••••••••••••••••I columns does not include VAUIY IM~ORTS r.~-;-.;;;••••••••••••••••• i Largest Volvo Dealer
I any applicable taxes. 1 28402M_arfuen~e.Pkwy I inOrangeCounty' New Bose 901 Spkrs Akai For sale: 8ft half·cabove r license. t ransfer fees.: Mission Viejo BUY LE.,"E
cass ette Int Amp camper. Stove. sink. finance charges. fees fo rl 131-2040 495-4949 I VISIT YOUR . I or ""' '76Marquis sta wag. Ful·
Tuner • l u rn lab I e icebox. carpeted. sleeps i a!r pollution control de I -HIGH IUYER Closed Sundays I ORANGE COAST I ClOSED SUNDAYS DIRECT ly equipped. Mint cond
64(M6l5. ~~~~:~~~~18 to a P .. ~ce c3rt1ficallons or de -Top dolla . f S t I HONDA !Saab 9760 I ~·,·~7M~*f!l!~I*~ fs';_:. right at 12.500.
2S"COLOR T V SH8 ___ ·_ ·~ :,:..~ti;.c~r;:aer~::Yu n~!:s Cars. Bu~!. C~m~~s~l 1 ....................... • ! • I YearWarrant~ For Sale 1971 • ton otherwise specified by 914's,Audl's HEADQUARTERS 1910SAAI -----_____ '70 Marquis 9 passenger
642-5340 camper s pecial .F ord the advertiser. Ask for U/C MGR TODAY I 11 TURI01 2025 S. Manchester Station Wagon. $600.
------pack-up With 1977 King or ! I JIM MARINO & I Sf & H OAOWAY ••• 673·2297
sans ui Amp. tuner, ~m~~d ~~-~1~nt~:~~~ ~.::U, 9520 VOLKSWAGEN s AHTA AHA UNIVERSITY H~~~! Anaheim 750-2011 tt.t-. 9952
speakers & turn table 18711 Beach Blvd. 835·3 I 7 I SALES & SERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• $400. 548-0184 eng and trans. forward I••••••••••••••••••••••• HUNTINGTON BEACH THE umM•n oArvtNll MACHtNE OlDSMOllLE SB.ICTION! 1963 4·dr seda n. Good
• • air, roof air. lots or xrras . 1970 CADILLAC 142-2000 HONDA engine. Needs body re · ~::':;M 673-7495 COUPE DEVILLE •USED IMWs• GMCTitUCKS BEACH IMPORTS pair.t950.548·'7249. •• ::r;••••••••••••••••• Motoriudlllcet 9140 39,967 original miles & TOP DOLLAR ''122002tiiwl s/r (206l ) 2850HarborBlvd. 848DoveStreel "i9 242 DL. air, auto.
G ... r.. 90 IO ...................... • loaded! Mus t be the best ·73 3.0cs 4 spd. C 0559 l COST A MESA NEWPORT BEACH stereo cass. 13,000 ·
••••••••••••••••••••••• Puch Maxi. 2 HP. Xlnt ' example of this model m PAID FOR '74200ltils /r t0332l 540-9640 752-0900 m i.
9.9 Jotvison elec. OB. 12' cood. Orange c!>. 1 pr,eviotu~ GOOD & CLEAN :1775 ~. (4003Spd) I (0366) $76.W. 644·7300.
,.., .. ""'"l.645·9494 o wne r "" per e c . USED c .a.as! .....,.;SI s . s r ~ I '79 H d c · . SAAITURIO I fiberglass boat, $1000 fl' ,,...,......., (770AVA ). A i62002s/r 4sp.(1578) ... aw ess on a IVI~. .....-.. u-.....1
'75 Mustang II. On ly
33.000mi. 4spd. Xlnt
c o n d . S2 9 5 O. Cal I
Richard: 640.2092 dys or
640-(8;4 eves. .
'66 Must. 289. ps. pb.
needs paint, 11700 OBO.
5411-5186. 675-6439 di 2 d.r h t hb k 1 '78 99 2 dr, s un roof. _.,., -ngy, bes t offer over Motobecane Moped rid· $3411 '78320ia air . (5169> a c ac • o ~1. M FM 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $100.846·4658 I · '79 320i4 spd sunrf (6917l'I reg. gas, Hondamat1c, A I .·.stereo. a .0 Y G .. 9901 1·75 Mustang II . l o --·den 3 mos. great cond. .78 .,...,.a,a·ir.(609Sl air. roof rack, radials, It whls. Silver wi red ml. IMS .1 d d ..,"00 "' ' I t S 3 O O "'VI Xlnt cond $7 195 firm ••••••••••••• • • • • • •• • • • mi eage · g con · ...., 13·.,· DORY & 7'2 H/P r uns s rong . I I '79528a4 spd 11944) blue.S4895.548·0470N.8 . .-.oc'..a., · · · ~...aovER orbetoffer.661·28llafter Johuon w/tank New 557·1378,540"0019 I ..,........., ""''"",,.._ painL eng runs gd -, '79528ias/r C2615) '79 CIVIC T--a.. 9765 . $4995 6.SS8-4221.ext25,days.
5400/obo. 831 ·8416 ·79 Moped. xlnt cond. • I 21 IO tt.iter llYd. I Closed s-day1 v•-t cond. '"2·0924 -r"""' '67 Must, xlnt eng. & bod)'. S350 or orrer IC....W...645-5700 ......... o..1.11'!.ECOU .... TY'S .IUll .... •••••••••••••••••••••••! ...... Maiud enance/ 642-6107. ~ ""' ·79 Supra Sspd. xlnt cond. must sell. 51250· 642·L896•
SerYice 9'0 2 0 .,.Mofou...,..,.~-e11·dn/ '46 Ford Woodie. restorg OLDEST
1~.c~a~r~1 ~i::~. ~~~ lomilea~~!~~ 754
·
2933
••••••••••••••••••••••• Scooe.rs 9 I 5 0 Sll.000. ALSO '29 Mode PORSCHES offer, 960-7108. U"U. .-.c. '67 Must V8 auto. PS, 8
MA.Ri:NE ELECTRICIAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• A Town Seda n . 4 dr ~ '78 Toyota Corolla. 2dr. 1as U KElt ST. track. xtras. must sell.
: ~tyWork.Call All Motorcycle Swap restored. Ideal for stu WANTED \;, '76 Honda CVCC Wagon auto trans. gd mpg. gd COSTAMESA Mt-t at S1900.Ph494·9622
2S20alter 6PM Meet, 6·llpm. Fr i. Nov. dent Sl0.000. 675·6161. Sales-Service-Leai.ing ~:=~e;~~~..\?tns cood. 12995/BO. 960-6388. O.•d1ll1 9955
90ATREFJNISHING 14. All indoor space Allow us the opportunity Ro C I 53S-Ol21. • Alio4C 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -tri d available Or ge Co '53 Cadillac, must sell to -·Ider the purchase Y 1 crY•r, nc. pm. 77~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._JI pes, top s1 es. . . an S600orbestoffer ... .,... 1 Rolls Royce BMW --'70CoupeGreal Economy '75 AMC K l 4d '80 Reaency cpe. loaded. 11q11Feldd,super /struc -~airGrounds.C.M .24hr 644•9500. ortrade-mofyour c ean J.540Jamboree Wanted Ho nd a car Car $.'i00/0BO ome , r . low m i. nice, 17800.
tsts refs 842· 7413 info. 831·5116. Porsche. Check with Us Newport Beach 640-6444 1'70.. 72. N~ with blown 494-8890 xlnt cond. 11800. 988.Q290
__....,29 _ .......... "' Today! eft"'fte ..... 1-8801 962-3433. ---------
...... --1_ 73 Honda 500, 4 cyl, xlnt ~ M_.,. •oeu• -'78 D It 88 C ...
........,_ '·I h ni 11 d ·-------•......__...._ 9731 '80 Tercel SRS lift.bac k. Mell 9910 e a oup..,: ,...... 9030 cond. $700/best. Call "~ a ca Y restore · -DIESEL. Showroom .._,~,!~••••••••••••••••• afters. 960-6682. 'Also S2SOO in new unuse IOI McLAREM's ••••••••••••••••••••••• white. 5 s pd, am i rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• cood. All features incl.
w u.1wo Rw:-FrN1$HING cosmetic Nrts My bod~ • ., .. Ma-""a. Good cond. 1 cass, fact. air, only, 350 '75 Electra 4·dr hrdtop, leather && moon roof. ""'~· ~ . '74 HUSQV WR.400 man hu s lttp.ped. Yo & ,.. '9 £U mi. (213)593·3963 day, new radial tires. 59K ac· !llllt aMl.'latripes, lop stdea, owner. 111100. ua1 · 968 60 983-6551.
1 -*1d, super / struc· Goodcond, $450. can have all for S39 Cal1S48·3S55 (714)673-3652 l rru. 646·7416, ·61 ---------
tune! ref's 842· 7413 551-2395 cash. 546-5000 wkday .80 Celie•. Sspd, top cood, aft 5:30. '19 Cutlass Calais diesel. I !J!:' p 9040 '75 HONDA SSOc c lo miles, _9-_Sp_m_·-------1 T• Dlllar 850N. Beach Blvd. ~.~!' .... ~!~.~ lo mileage, several xtras C M•c 99 I 5 11 mpg. white, sand vinyl ow..-ext ende d forks, x lnt c...... R.c•, 9P LAHABRA lncl.Call545-0953. ••••••••••••••••••••••• top , sunr oof , ai r , ..... ••••••••••••••••• ..... ~ t 0 LW '68 MB 200D. Good cond. .79 Brown Eldor ado Paneeonic stereo. 18700.
21t n b ergl ass Tug , cond.Sl000759·1114 after -54 r--<5 Ml.No.of SAFwy) Air. Auto tran s . '77CeUca. Liftbk. clean. 963-5515 i.tmlder Weekender or 6PM •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 17141522-5333 114n39 6728 d S« 9129 Biarit.z, 20,000 ml. take ---------
·r;cter Bay Launch.. '73 Courier P U, header, ForYourCar! ~y by Appl. eves... ys, . ~':'1S:.:.~slereo.air, overleaaeormakeoffer. '79 O l d s C ull ass
• old. VW Rabbit 75 Hon 400 four 13,000 mi. Weber carb. Mild cam, JOHNSOM & SON I•-••••••• 559-S51M Broutham, a ll elec, 4 !tr~!'ull ga lley, gd cond, nu lires $800. offer. 641·3295 s he ll, u.c• H1rcwy '79~. a black beau· '77 Toyota Celica GTl19'19 Seville, loaded , top speaker stereo , velour ~.'.aerator. dbl. 631-7292 chrome w h l s . newl 2IDllHarborBlvd. ty, Wlth polished alloy llflback xln t cond cand $ll eoo lnt.552-1570.
d, complete. Must Seil .72 Vespa and ~·:ut"~~~~~fte~ c.o.taMesa 540-5630 ~ whls, bamboo lot. Powe1r Am/Fm ~adio, heater:i .. s4o..M6i. ftl-111-.-,-.... -----9-9-6-0-
-.imo.646·7887. sl-'-car. ... •.. ....:-• ·1 WeP.., "" everything. 23,000 m · aJr auto tr ans s bade1 r ~.-...-------ur ,...._, Am/Fm cas1stereo,elec lo~vera , lo mheage ,:1910 Sev i lle D a l ,~··••••••••••••••••••••
Y '80, 19'1V, many 675·2963 4wt..IDriYn tHO I . OVER AHIQUAUTY anrl, $33,950. 833-2:211.: oran ge metallic .! silver/blue 2 lone, all 'IS Gol<fi Duater , 6 cyl, ,::U 1.3hn. new. w/trlr Motocross helme t & ....................... , ....... llSALIS SS'7·3542. I 864-41878,. I xtru. 540-3931 wkdya bfr =~ =~
---------boots. Never used. KRW '74 GMC Jlm my Sierra! ForYour Good 197,7331 "79 300CO lo mlles, Mint v•...-9770 5PM • af\.Spm.' ·
.--...... Crafl 18' w/lrlr. mediu m , full race. holds 4~al. Radl•l•.1 vw. Ponc:beorAud l "'-'"''l' I c 0 99171 -· j ell '•-Sl''" U _,,.,. o ...... ....,. Qny wired interior. 4 ......,,... '°" 1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ,....._ 9965 ~$3500642·2091 Y aw ...... ts: "'· se : _,.,/ ............., ·· &42·5392 '71CONVERTJBLE 1 •••••••••••••••••--••••• . lit I 175. Scott boots. Site 10. , U I , speed trans. && f ully 1 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ p 17 ..... Ski Boat , •·t Sl80 11 1 00 63'JeepPick p · 1 equipped (1>2'3) , Like new, 24,000 mi, 'Tl C.maro, l owner, 350 •77 T ... _
... ~ . Tlll .... I : • se : 1 . • . • lt.77 J20t 89280SL.2tops, snoo. will take vw in• va. a /c, am/fm. stereo ,__
" ~ere I /O. Trailer.1 714-1113-7589. I Xlnt Cond. I VW·PORSCHE-AUDI I I •·•pd. rblt eng, trwle. 1·771'85i0. i casa, Id cood. Make of·, Power 1teertn1. brakes,
1. ,7tmo .. 173..-445E.Coaat Hlway I Li&bl b lue w /ta n n -$14,<>0t.493-8~ • fer 494•1805 ·I wlndow1. Power door
OY-ha ''79Ford 1 1 4 alBayaldeDrive tenor. 4 1peed trans.. VW 71 Convertible l · · loclca nar window d e·
pjack. 20' open, (UI· vu co tanJt 3 . 7 aa I, I ca mperapec • • . Newport Beach 673·0900! sunroof, air c ond .• '67 MBZ 2505 .• charcoaq duaic . white/black, ex> "116cyl wit top, new tires.I roaer. 18 MPG with 403
Pj*lwith tra iler.I plutlc fenders && lug· wheel drive, 3000 mlleat I cauettelsalloyo.(4782). aray. looks Is runs ad. tra, lo ml, mlnt cond.' SC'100 V8. AM/FM 8 trac k.
100. After 6pm l a•P rack. 2600 m iles.; ..umeleue.864--0IOO I Premhunpricea 19762002 92.950.649-4$48. 1 565421 I 6Sl-4886 95300.
)552•7272orwkday1: ll.200or'lrade.Callafter1111i CJ7 Re n ecadel peidforanymedcar ·Silver W/blue interior. j 1 • llM411
·'136S uk for Mr. 6pm. '71-5740. '. q.-atrack 10 m l ort1.' <foret1nor dom .. t1c) I Jncludea air cond ., 73 ~. good cond, new 1ForSa.le Hot 163 VW new. '70C.maro. Looks &ood &L
'78 YAMAH. A400 XS·E
1
1 war t ., ln ci. soft 'op In'::'~~:~· cauett e le allo y•. paln t /llres, 2 tops .I (llt, reb eng, gd tnn1. tw11pod.1t450. 1 1'72 PwltiK Station Wgn,
6 apd, rack as alny bat, w/aun.roof, ba rd t o p ! <8MPVC>. 760-85t6 days, 955·1632 Many xlraa Must See, 14&-aee2 all pwr, Mini flne. Good
rd aport fl1hu, new battery• tlre. 9.000' w/1teel d~ra. SH OO, --' aflerSltw/enda. 1 8IOOl6W079 '75 Monte Carlo Landau, 1 mllHI•· llOO OBO.
contole. inarlln • freeway miles. ver y ,_fll._..,_______ IOYCAIVa IMW '73 •Coupe Xlnt Cond.; '75 Rabbit, a ir, new 3.50 VI, air, Arn/F m . --"
outriHtr&. balt1 clean. rellable. S5 Mp1,ITN1111 tl60 ~~i}.~~ All Ammu. 992001 bfakel. 4511, x.1.nt cond, at-.o, eaec •lndow• "'" th 11114 tt70
, $11,SOO. D•Y•• •or Best Offer. '-·-·••••••••••••••• 752·2'0. d1y1, 552·1477, .. firm.~ aeets, cnaiaec:ontrol, '"'·'••••• .. ••••••••••••••••
,evu673·1095. G l-0141 541'°9951
•14 EL CAMINO No 641-6444 ewt lylollded. lllOO. 844106. j 'II No Reuoeabi. Otrer I I 0 Bar1atn s hoppe rs read Rlf\Md, Leave m ... a11 Ccaft Seaaklfl. Honda $00-4 Xlnt Coad. R euoRable ff er Sloi. 71. fully equipped, MB 'ts aoo6£ Cpe, A/C
1
. tbeUtlleadaloClasslfied '1' MONTg Ca.rlo. etr. M U l14 . , ocra. RDF.
1
Low m1lM rebuilt n 1 • ~Leaveniestac•I nuueu.rnoo. S1rf, t7K. wht /r t d . ,...Warly.Andt.heyfind j A.Mini stereo. 11.llO.j--------)
SIZ.lll0 • ..0..0814. e.totrer-tr•de642·2ZTI . •117• -----------==='94.m2==--·--~.~~1411 . wbelt.bey'nlook!!!!,~or. 1 -.tm 1lellldltltema IOS1I ' -------·--·ft ··-·--
} r
"·~·•--•te••. Dally N•••IN.I .. •
.
VOL. 73, NO. 3CM, S SECTIONS, "8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
HD ·Teachers Will 'PitCli' at Big· A
BJ PA'NJCI( KENNEDY ... ...., ...........
Huntiqton Beach Union Hilb
, School Dl1trlct teachera,
fruatrated by 1taUed contract
talk•, uy they will aeek com· munity support at the Edlaon·
Fountain Valley high 1chool
football game Friday night at
Anaheim Stadium.
Wllllam Bianchi, direct.or of
th& Weat Orange County United
Teachers Auociation, 1aid
about 10 instructors will band
out 12,000 leafieta ureing parents
to telephone school trustees in
support ol the teachers' contract
demands.
The teachers' associaUon,
representing 800 instructors, re-
cently rejected the district's
"final" offer of a 16 percent
raise over the next two years.
Instead. the association is ask-
tng for a one-year raise ol 14
percent. The avera1e teacher's
1alary is $21,000, accordin« to
di1trict officialf.
The seven-school district con-
tend 1 it cannot meet the
teachers• salary demands
becauae it Is on a fixed income
from the state.
Bianchi said the associatiop .
decided to pasa out the leafleta
at the F.d.ison-Fountain Valley
game -•uae the contat la ex·
peeled tb draw between 20,000
and 30,000 1pectators to
Anaheim Stadium.
Both teama, intense rivals, are
tied for the Sunaet Leaaue lead
witb 3·0 records and are re-
cognised amon1 top teams in the
county.
lUanclli said the leaflets would
list the telephone numbers of the
school board members, com-
plain about the large number ot
students enrolled in classrooms,
District Superintendent Frank
Abbott's performance and the
board's budget priorities.
Bianchi added that the Rye.rs
may point out that without a
contract, teachers are less
motivated to become involved
with after school activities, such
aa coaching organized sports.
''There won't ~ another game
I
thl• important in the HunUnctoa
Beach-Fountaln Valley a.rec tbll
year," Bianchi sald. "It'• a
1reat, lnexpenaive way to 1et
our mesaaae to the public and
ask for community support."
Bianchi said the leaflet.a may
be given out at other bl&b acbool
games in upcoming weelta.
"The board won't listen to the
teachers." Bianchi said.
6 Top $50,000
...
·HB City Bosses Get Pay Hike
"Suriiag the 8ett"
Six Huntington Beach city de·
partment directors are now
earning more than $50,000 per
year following a round of wage
and retirement pay increases
this week.
Topping the list at $57 ,000 per
year are interim City Ad -
ministrator Be.n Arguello and
Public Works Director Paul
Cook .
Other earnings include:
-Vince Moorhouse, director
of community services. $56,419.
-Poli ce C hief Earle
Robitaille, $53,971.
-Fire Chief Ray Picard,
$51,828.
-City Attorney Gail Hutt.on,
$59,883.
Library Director Walter
Johnson makes $42,892: Person-
nel' Director Ed Thompson,
$42,425 and City Clerk Alicia
Wentworth, $33,000.
The department beads were
given an average 5 percent pay
increase while the city also in·
creased its share of contribu-
ticma to the emplOJ .. ' retire-ment system by 7 percmt. . .
Together, the two factors
mean 'that the department beads
re<:eived increases equivalent to
a 12 percent pay ~·z which is
about the same lOt&.I that all
other employees received in COO·
tract settlements earlier.
Large surf Wednesday allowed surfers to
ride waves breaking on the Big Corona
side of the east jetty at the entrance to
Newport Harbor. Surf of 4-7 feet is forecast
along the Orange Coast thro\lgh th.e
weekend, depending on which way the
beach is facing. Weather forecasters say
the source of the surf is a storm about 2,000
miles out in the Pacific Ocean.
Arguello, Cook, Robitaille,
Moorhome, Picard, Johnson and
Thompson were given pay raises
on a newly instituted merit
·system. 1be slu of the increase
was based on performance
evaluations by former City Ad·
minis trator Bud Belslt.o. ·
Negotiations
At Impasse
On Contract
Administrators In the Hunt·
ington Beach City (elementary)
School District have declared an
impasse in contract negotiations
with the teachers association.
•'The process is moving too
slowly and it appears to have
become stuck." Assistant
Superintendent Patricia Clark
declared.
The major differences center
on a salary dispute in which the
teachen asked for a 12 percent
pay increase in their latest re-
quest. 1be district is offering four~t. "'• Hours of employment as well
as a number of other Issues are
-:beinl CGDlelted.
. Teachers and trustees ap-
proved a three-yea contract in
October ol 1979 but left the way
open for future bargaining.
The mediator will be provided
by the Public Employees Rela-
tions Board. In an apparent signal of
teacher WU't!tl, 22 memben of
the faculty at Gialer School re-
·ported they were slck and
~stayed home lut Friday.
Tbe district bu subiequeoUy -oven Superintendent Lawrence
·Kemper emer1ency powers to
deal with poulble incidences ol 1ueb li~. '
Valley Plans
'Turkey Trot'
........... will be cond~ ~No¥. 12 for runners wbo nit to guticlpate ln the "SK
key Trot•• planned by tbe
llDlalD Valley Parke and
ertatloa Department and llalll'nMaurutl. ftt nee will be~ at I a.m.
""· " 8l tbe db'• a.e.,.adoe c..... = llrookb .... . " .. ~ .......... tar
., .......... from ... JJ --~ ..... ti .... older.
Reagan Be.ginning
Transition Move
Tuesday, the City Council
gave a 5 percent pay increase
and 7 percent retirement pay in-
crease to City Attorney Gail
Hutton and City Clerk Alicia
Wentworth, both of whom are
elected officials.
The raises were opposed by
Mayor Ruth Bailey who said
that the city charter prohibits
job evaluations of elected de-
partment heads.
WASHINGTON (AP ) -
Equipped with S2 million in fed·
eral mooey and seven floors of
federal office space, aides to
President-elect Reagan already
are at work on transferring the
power of government.
Telephones were installed and
titles put on doors Wednesday in
the Washington office building
-five blocks from the White
House -that wiJl serve as head·
quarters for the 250 people who
will constitute the Reagan transi·
.lion team.
President Carter made about
2,200 appointments when he took
office; and Reagan will have as
,.Jllany as 2,700 top-level jobs ~
fill, --all listed in a government
Other etectton and pMt·
election cov•r•ee eppeera
todey on Pegee A3, A4, A12,
81end82.
publication known unofficially
as the "Plum Book." •
Reagan chief of staff Edwin
Meese pld be hoped the new ad-
miniatratioo will be able to lure
bullnesl executives who milht
otberwiae turn down 1ovem·
ment jobs because of federal
aalari• and the insecurity of an
appointive po1t. E. Pendleton James, a former
Nixon actmtniatraUoo personnel
official wbo runs a Loa Anceles
executive recruitina firm, Will
be the chief talent scout, Meese
Hid.
Tbe tramitioa leam ai.o Will
beliD work on execuUve orders
Rea1an might want to iAue IOOD
after taJdnl office to Mt the tGne
of bl1 admini1tratloa, and on
dom..Uc and lorelp policy de-talll. • I
Tbe team lttelf m•Y offer the ftrit clue to the type ol penona
Rea1an will attract.
And unlike Cartu, wbo
broaPt to ww.m,t.oa_ a poup ol 0 ....... canftdaatl ,..,.... tO
federal ~ • .::f-II UHmblial an apert cnwi
ol. adYllen to a.,ubUeu snal·
deatlW..blm..
Many of them could end up
with key spots in the new ad-
ministration, including such
familiar names as Henry Kiss·
inger, William Simon. Alex·
ander Haig, George P. Schulu
and Alan Greenspan.
Even before the election,
Reagan appointed 23 task forces
on domestic a nd economic
policy and 2S more on foreign
policy ssues.
Gree n span, who was
c hairman of the Council of
Economic Ad~sers under
former President Gerald Ford,
beads a domestic task force · on
the budget and la among those
mentioned for secretary of
treaaury. So are Simon, who has
held the post under Ford, and
Charles E. Walker, who was
deputy secretary of the' treuury
under former President Nixon.
The bead of ·Reagan 's
economic policy task force is
Scbults. who. wu secretary ol
treasunr under Nixon. He is re-
ported fu line for several po1l-
liona In a Reagan adminiatr•
lion, includin& secretary of State
or possibly a Cabinet-rank
domestic policy coordinator.
(See aEAGAN, Pase A!)
She argued without support,
that pay increases s hould
therefore be set by voters who in
effect are the sole evaluators of
Doctor Set
For Honors
Dr. Bernard A. Turbow will be
presen,&ed a humanitarian
award t&ligbt from the National
Confe~nce of Christians and
Jews.~
Dr. Turbow was nominated for
the award f9r bis services to ijte
United Jewish Welfare Fund,
work in the Freedom from
Hunger program and volunteer
services with the UC Irvine
School"of Medicine.
He 'operates uroloty practices
i n Fountai n Valley and
Westminster. He is a resident ol
Garden Grove.
The awards banquet will be
held at the Marriott Hotel in
Ne.wport Beach.
Wealth~ Kid .
Girl, 11, W in1 $500,000
CINCINNATI (AP>_: AD 11-year-old 11 iuarant.eed '25,000 a
year for the next ~ 1ean, eourteey ol a radio •lat.Ion that want-
ed to make a name for \tlelf. .
But tbe $500,000 ilffaway, wblcb WYYS-Fll billed u tbe
lar1ett cub.prise ID tbe ldltorJ ol broadcutlq, bu eaUMd a
small WU' amoai Cllleluatl tnedeut.n. One rival 1taticla doubled tbe prise and la eDl"OlUq lllteMn
Jor a chance to win •1 mWloD. AaatMr •UoD, w'6eb ,,..._..Y J•V• away modellt prbel, dlddld Uaal tbe wtao&e lbiq wu 19t·
Uq oul ol h4nd ud laid lt would put ... dloney IDeo Pf'Oll'am·
m1D1.
Tbe u -,.ar-old, Lan lloaday of Btkria, wu cboMa by
WYYS.Fll M tbe .. ot U.. moMbl ol Pi'Omat'"el aetl.W.
by tbe...., rock·m_.. ..._
lhe performance of the elected de·
partmentheads.
In addition, all department
heads receive medical, dental
a nd health in.surances for · themselves and dependents and
Reeo•at Eyed
other fringe benefits at city ex-
pense.
The City Council last year
passed over a salary increase
for Mrs. Hutton.
Allen, Wray Race
Still Vnsettled
Doris Allen, Republican
challenger for the 71sl Assembly
District seat, said today she will
ask for a recount if as-yet·
uncounted ballots do not sbow
her victorious over incumbent
Chet Wray. ·
Wray, a Democrat, currently
leads Mrs. Allen by 568 votes out
of 9',JU cast from all precincta.
About 12,000 absentee and
ballots rejected for some reuon
by counting machinery have not
been tallied.
Al Oltoo, Orange County re-
gistrar of voters, said about
l ,SOO ol the uncounted ballots
could be from the 71.st Assembly
District. He said those ballots
would be isolated and counted
first, with the final result known
by Friday night.
Mrs. Allen, president of the
Huntington Beach Union High
School District board, also at-
tacked Wray's last-minute cam·
paign mailers as "blatant lies
and smears" of her politicial
positions.
OCTDRoutes
She said she will take her
complaints to the slat e Fair
Political Practices Commission
and possibly take legal action
against Wray for alleged libel.
Wray was not available for
comment.
Mrs. Allen, who had been pre-
dicting an easy victory over
Wray. said the incumbent's bar·
rage of campaign literature cost
her several thousand votes.
She said the literatute er.'
roneously implied she was in
favor of court-ordered busing
and increased spending in the ·
public school ystem.
Mrs. Allen, 44, is the co·
founder of the anti-busing group,
Orange County Bus-Bloc.
·'Obviously his campaign
literature is full of bl•tant lies,"
Mrs. Allen charged. "I should
have taken legal action against
Wray two years ago when he did
'the same things in that cam·
paign."
Wray, 57, defeated Mrs. Allen
by 9,000 votes in 1978. He was
first elected in 1976.
<See 7lst, Pa1e AZ>
Free Bus Rides
Possible for Cops
By GLENN SCOTI' °' .. Deltf ~Sutt The· 3,000 sworn law enforce-
ment officers in Orange County
probably will soon be riding
Orange County Transit District
buaesfree.
In exchange for the free rides,
the off-duty police, sheriff's de-
puties and marshals will be
available to q_uell disturbances
on the bmea. ~
The proposal 'is stiJl in the
talking stages, but law enforce·
ment officers reportedly support
it and the district's Board of
Directors unani mously ap-
proved the coocept at a meeting
today in Garden Grove.
The officers, who normally
commute to and from work in
civilian clothes, could 1et free
rides by showinc bus drivers
their Identification cards, said
John Blancq, chief security of.
fleer for the district. ·
Blancq noted that the district
doel not have the serious crime
problems piquing some other
sy1te1111, such u the Southern
California Rapid Tramit l>i•·
lrict In Los Ancel• CoUnty.
"But tbe subtle 1u11estion
that OD1 or more pollce olficen
might be oa board u puaenpn wm .,..Uy enhance the ima1e
of transit security and safety,"
be added. .
Plaa specUlca and le1al lm·
pllcatlonl fOI' the procram 1till
Deed to be wwbd out. Board
memben told Blancq to be 1ure
to speak to all law enloreement
aroups before the pact ii
ratified.
Board attorae1 Kennard
Smart Jr. lal4 liability mllbt be
.. ialue, but lD molt c: ... tlM
diltrlet woWdD 't be .... Doel&bl•
lf a law enforcement offt-=-act·
ed ael)ipatlJ oa board.
Board members, who noted
that peace officers always are
expected to prevent crime, said
they liked the extra security
gained in the trade.
"Thi.I will certa~ keep our rowdies from doing anything
above and beyond their regular
rowdyisms," observed a pleased
OCPD Board Chairman Ralph
Clark.
Coast
Weather
Low cloudiness night
and mom.In& clearing to
moetJy 1unny Friday af.
ternooa. Lowa J.oai1bt 57
at the beaches, S2 iniand.
ffilba Friday II along the
coaat to 72 to 78 inland.
IN81 DE TODA V
11'1 "° job: Tlw cU11 o/
Ct.oelaftd '1 trpag to im·
prooe "'·~. Sn p~ 02.
•••• •
ar:.t:t.:dar= =~n
I ,,..,,...:,..------....,.---
.ti WYfll.Ol M > 9 M
~-----JVST llll&«llft; ~~ ...........
LiiS ... /Piillt
ffijtJl!lt~r• Force DC-9
To Cuba; 62 Aboard
Prime
&osted
By Banks
·Mllrket
~lhies.
Broadly
CAR.ACAS, v ... aMla (AP) -Hijack•n fOft!M a DC·t v.....aan AVENIA JM pa... ~II aboard to Cube todQ • 1polr..,...forLbealrU..,......... •
· TbeplaMlandldatUleKH1U&lrportaftera2~·bourretueliq
atop 1.80\arae.o, Dukb ADUU., U..1pobeman1alcl.
lie Nld U.. plw •u eom•trt.aend U awud• after It took off tram U-. Caracu airport fw t 4f.mlauta ftJlbt to Pu911o Ordu in
eutena Veoe&'6ela. He aaid UM p&ue carri..t $'J palMlllera a..d a cnw ol five. Their identltiea were not ctiacloaed.
'1111la1•ll.,. S..._ aeee.u
ATLANTA (AP) -Sen. ffermui Talmad1e will uk for a re-
count oNbe Tueeday votiq that 1bowed him an upeet Joeer by
24.198 votes to Republican challenger Mack Mattincly a Talmadte aide 1aid today. ' .
Unofficial results -with 100 percent of the vote counted
showed the veteran Democrat, who bad been aeekinc a flfth
term, with 78'7,911 votes or 41 percent to Mattin1ly'1 '7tZ,107
votes or Sl percent.
T.....,. Dellf'lt Loaeerftl
WASHINGTON <AP ) -Acontlnuin1decllneinollimportatothe lo~est level in more than five years cut the t!.S. trade deficit in the
third quarter by 6S percent, the Commerce Depatt.ment aaid to-day.
The value of exports increued 3.1 percent durin1 the Ju)y. Septe~ber period, to a record $58.4 billion, with biJher prices ac-
counting for the entire $1. 7 billion change. Imports fells percent or
$3 billion, to$58. l billion. ' T~at produced a deficit of $2.7 billion, lowest suice a 1.9 billion j~P in the third quarter of 1976. The third ·quarter deficit compared
with a revised $7 .6 billion in the second three months of the year.
Ccuf11e •••IH>r Flee•
CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. CAP> -A masked gunman robbed a cashi~ at Cloud's Cal-Neva Lodge tQday and escaped on foot with a.~ un~losed amount of money, the Washoe County sheriff's of-f1cesa1d.
Campaign Cost
Orozco $40,000
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Gt t .. Dellr ~ Si.tt
Orange County Central
M'unicipal Court Judge Richard
Orozco spent at least $40,000 in
his unsuccessful attempt in
Tuesday's election to remain in omce.
According to financial dis-
closure statements filed for the
reporting period ending Oct. 20, ,
Orozco drew financial backing
from fellow jurists and at-
torneys in his unsuccessful elec-
tion bid.
The judge, an appointee four
years ago of Gov. Edmund G.
B,rown Jr., was defeated by San-
t a Ana attorney Bobby D.
Youngblood.
Orozco was one of two judges
who were turned out of office
Tuesday by voters in the central
municipal court district. Presid·
ing Judge John C. Teal, an ap-
pointee of then-Gov. Ronald
Reagan eight years ago, also
was defeated. •
Orozco's disclosure statement,
filed nearly two weeks ago,
s howed contributions from
Orange County Superior Court
Judge James Perez ($100) as
well as well known attorneys
such as Terry Giles ($500) and
James Stotler ($150 ).
'Other large contributors in· ~uded the Orange County Mex-
ihn-Amertcan Bar Association
"250), the Laborer's Intema-
t!onal Union of North America,
Local 852 ($1,000), and the
Orange County District Council
of Carpenters ($250).
Financial. statements for
Youngblood's successful cam-
paign were not available
because be had not yet filed
them as of Wednesday.
Deputy Di.strict Attorney Jean
Rbeinbeimer said s be has
notified Youngblood that his
statement is two weeks late and
that he could face misdemeanor
protecution. Mrs. Rbei.nbeimer
said abe woufd give him another
10 days or so to file hh forms.
The Youngblood-Orozco race
was perhaps the most bitter on
the Nov. 4 ballot. Youngblood
beat the judge 52, 721 votes to 49,269 votes.
The tWC> had run against one
another 1n the June primary
when Orozco initially appeared
to be the victor by about 200
votes out of 70,000 cast.
Youngblood challenged the
computerized vote totals, and in
a later band r ecount, be
emerged as the victor by IS
votes.
However, Superior Court
Judge John K. Trotter Jr. voided
the election and ordered
Tuesday's rematch because of
ballot lrregularities.
The two candidates bad run a
blistering campaign in the fmal
weeks. Youngblood accused
Orozco of perjury when he was
appointed four years ago and
Orozco claimed his opponent
was \Dlfit aa an attorney and
should face pohible disbarment.
There also were racial un-
dercurrents to the race because Hikes by Exxon of Orozco's biapanic heritqe. t ' On Wedrieiday. thr Judge said
• NEW YORK (AP) -Exxon be believed Youngblood bad nm
Corp. 'a wholesale prices for ~"partisan ... racial" cam-
•ome heating oil, dJ~el fuel and 1111ign against Jllm.
lerosene have gone up by a pen-Youngblood baa denied any b a gallon oo the East Gull and auggeat-onA be appealed to
Wept coasts. The~orld's largest racist lnatincta in voters.
ell -compa'Dy also raised the Orozco said be'WOUld return to •
ft'boleaale price of Jet fuel one· private law practice in Fullerton
eent a gallon nationwide. when he leaves office in Janu~.
HIF
DAILY PILOT
NEW YORK (AP) -M.ior
ban.kt raised their prime ....._
ratet by one full percenta1e1
point to 15.5 peswnt today, the
h.ll)Mst Uc:ie May.
Cbue Manhattan Bank, which
initiated the move from the pre-
vallinl 14.5 percent rate, said
the iDcreue wu spurred by re-
cent abarp Jumps ln it.a cost of tunda~ .
"General market rates and
the COit al tunda to banb have
riaen ab.uply ln r,cent weeb,''
the natian'a tblrd-lu1est com-
mercial bUll: aald in a rare com-
men& on ita"move. ''Indeed. tbia lncrnae does
not fully reflect the increased
coat' of funds to Chase. Nor does
this increase portend the direc·
lion of future movements in the
prime rate over the near term "
the bank said. '
The recent Jump in banks• coet
of funds wu underscored this
morning when the rate on
federal funds -uncommitted
reserves that banks lend one
another -soared to 1s.s percent
before the Federal Reserve
Board intervened by adding re-serves.
Soon after Chase announced
ita rate increase, Chicago's Con-
tinental Illinois National Bank &
Trust Co. and First National
Bant of Boston matched the
new, higher rate. Other ~
banks followed suit:
The prime is the rate banks
charge on loans to beat-risk cor-
porate customers, usually for
periods of no more than one
year. Other, smaller buai.nealla
Wfually pay at leut one percen-
tage point above the prime.
The prime rate does not affect
consumer loan ratea,•but ia con-
sidered an indicator of trends in
all kinds of interest rates. When
the prime goes up, other rates
often follow in the same direc-
tion.
Nt;zmes Spice
Ballots On
Election Day
By 'fte Auectatecl Preu
Without going into detail, here
are the highlights of some of the
elections for Senate, House and
govemonbipe.
Brown, Gray and White won.
Green and Black loet.
Pickle and Pepper won.
Bacon, Rice and Turnipseed
!oat.
Kindness and Pease won.
Hope lost.
Winners: Hart, Roe, Crane
and F ish . Losers : Drake,
Beaver, Canary, Fox, Wolff and
Woodcock.
Fountain and Fields won. So
did Glenn, Stump, Rose and
Boggs. Lake, Bowers, Brooks,
Noll, Hill and Moore all lost.
Lee woo. Grant loet.
Chappell won. Church lost.
Ireland and Holland won. So
did F.rost and Snow. A winner
was Early. A loser wu Fu.rat.
Winnen were Young._ Frank
and Nobel. Loeers were Strong,
Stark, Swank and Sogge.
Icenhour won, Dixon lost.
So it went on Election Day.
Car Stalls;
Duo Rescued
PICO RIVERA (AP) -~ -
men were reteued from their
stalled car moments before an
oncominl train hit it and carried
it more th'n 1,300 feet, thei •
sheriff's delfartment aald.
The car with the two inside
waa belne driven on the railroad
tra~ta Wednesday untll its
wheels stuck in the ra.iia and
gravel, deputy Pat Soll aatd.
Spyglass Slaying
Probed in Newpprt
JllMl•tlC"°'" lfllor .,_ ..... ........ ""' .... , .... ....
~"·'--AW .. tiel~ltll ...
-..:=.·t:::::: ...
........ MllOft .... OMoe • 17'7f ..... __ ..
""''""'.""'"''~0. .. ••-
0ftlNe ~~ ':J::..<~&:::"•
T111,hoM fn•)..._,
Cl t'ftNMHolftl ,...,.
--....... c...~ ... ... ,.
~'C:. °'Ac.:.=.~ ;;r."(1•~ •t ~~l\ft Mrel1t NY ' ===-· ·-··· "'"''"' ...
... -•1"1 "" ... ~, .... c ......... . '-'IMfMe ,_,... ..... , ..... , .... ., W • ' , ... -"'v ... ,,..,,",..,. -··· ... •-'"-• •IUI f · -
Newport Beach detectives are call at about J a .m . frolD tbe
attemptin1 to deterlDlne the dead man'troolDlD&te. ff•toldol-
factt beblnd the tbootln1 deatb flc•n he WN watch.ln1 tel"11XJD
of • 45-YMl'-old man wboM bod>' witb the Ylctim, 90t up to IOto UM
wq fOWMI thlt morntq ID bl.a bathroomandbearda---a.... Sp111 ... mu botne. Police Mid •-·
bebadbemtbotl.atbtMad. ff• told officers that wbeD be
J • PoUee, .tao wltbbeld tbt Maid lMard tbe crack ot 1unllre, a..
man•a name peadial DOWlelldoG pan I eked, crew led out tbe
of ant ot kin. •aid It bu 6ot batbroom wtnclow and ran to a
beea ..iabllalMd wbetller tbe ael1bban bouH.
mu Wiii mardend. or took ldl o..u.-Mid .-u.., .,... 0Ta!:utaton, Called to tbt riHd Ga tM .... , tMJ ..
numbw I Jade One , • .._ce eo.tnd UM deed m.aa •awt..s. la the __ ... __ .. ___ .. _._
1
ftff down, OD tbt Uvtq room
.... .--..... -----• ftoor.'nleJNldtbey'" ....... ,Hid tbeJ Mft lat• tM .... alMtoloeateanyW9apoa. m•I• roommate IDto ealtCMb b'
q ........ Ria 8UM allo -PoUee Uo Mid tb9N nN DO ·=· ... .., ........ ------...-·-=.P · .Cl( lomL.tDto ''* ....
Democrata were diuoura1ed in equal nwnbera.
Huntiqton Beach Mayor Rut.b "It ii fine to report the nen
BaUey aaid today abe la very but it doesn't make much aenae
perturbed by election events and to do IO before lt becomee a re-tbat ahe wanta to try to make alitjo."
some chances. Mn. Bailey said abe hoped
, Aneertq her were projections that her letters, ,tombined with
by NBC analyat.a of a RAlGaJd the concerna from, othen, mipt
Rea11m vict«y at $:15 p.m:anc1 have an effect.
Preaident Carter'• conceuioa Menwbile, Man1era, a two. speech tbat came more than· an term UMmblyman popular with
hour before polls closed in local officials, previoual1 llnked
California: ' bia defeat to the nationwi"e
''Lota of people have told me 1ur1e'for Rea1an, the early coo-
tbat they dido 't go out to vote ce11lcm ,peech by Carter and ear-
beca uae the election already ly projectiona by televlaion
wu decided. : networks.
"Thia really makes me angry. Man1er1 said Carter's re-
Califomia is the most important maru discouraged Democrats
state in the West but we have from voting. He said be wu sur-
been virtually diaenfranchiaed. prised that the President cared
"It seems like our votes doa't so little for lower run party can.
count." didates that he would make his
Mrs. Balley said she is prepar-statements while the races still
ing letters of protest to NBC and were undecided.
to the White House, asking them
to try to find some way to bold
off projections and statemen<.s
that may alter local electiooa.
A possible solution, she sug-
gests would be to change voting
hours, perhaps starting earlier
in the West and later in the
East.
A Republican who supported
Reagan but is also a strong
backer of defeated Democratic
Alaemblyman Dennis Manien,
Mrs. Balley ackowledged that the
premature activities may not
have altered the outcome.
"After all, Manl(ers lost by
4,000 votes or so and perhaps
Republi cans as well as
fl're• Page~ I
REAGAN ..•
Alao under consideration for
secretary of State are Kissinger,
who wu national security ad-
viser to Nixon and secretary o(
State under Nixon and Ford, and
Haig, the former NATO com-
mander who was Nixon's chief of staff.
Caspar Weinberger, who was
budget director under Nixon, is
on the list for the same position
under Reagan.
Retiring Sen . Ri c hard
Schweiker, R-Pa., is among can-
didates for secretary o( health
and human services or housing
and urban development . Former
HUD Secretary Carla Hills also
could be in line for a Cabinet post.
Anne Armstrong, former am-
bassador to Great Britain, may
become U.N. ambassador, and
William French Smith
Reagan's personal lawyer, i~
among possibilities for attorney
general.
Debate Continues
Over Mafia Trial
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
jury weigbinJ charges against
five reputed Mafia fitures en-
len its third day of deliberations
today after sitting through a re-
petition of testimony from three
prosecution witnesses.
The panelists, wbo appeared
to be debating charges of extor-
tion before movin1 on to other
counts, sat quietly in court Wed·
'nesday as a stenographer read
back to them testimony of an un·
derworld informer, a porno-
grapher and an FBI agent.
Cable TV
Esthetics
Blasted
Familiar complaints about
street excavation and lawn boxes
-ale>Qg with a few favorable
comments-were aired Wednes-
day night at a Fountain Valley ca-
ble television forum.
More than 100 residents, who
paclred the City Council Cham-
bers, listened to 1lowing predic-
tions from representatives of
Dickinson Pacific Cablesyatema,
then charged that the cable con-
struction project has weakened
and blemished local streets.
Several residents described the
system's lawn box as unsightly
and claimed they will devalue
local property values.
Council members Ben Nielsen
and Barbara Brown, the city's
delegate and alternate to the
governing Public Cable
Television Authority. conducted
the information session. They
repeated assurances that no ip.
payer funds are involved in the
project and that no resident will
be forced to subscribe.
No formal action was taken, but
council members promised to
make additional information on
the governing authority, made up
of council members from Hunt-
ington Beach, Fountain Valley
and Westminster and the cable
company. available at the city
clerk'soffice.
Art Rosene, representing a
group of Green Valley develop-
ment homeowners, said the cable
project should be subject to a
citywide vote.
However, legal advisers for the
city and the cable authority have
said that the city would be
vulnerable to high legal damages
if it decides to renege on its cable
contract.
Leonard Santoro, representing
the Green Brook tract, said an in·
formal survey of homeowners in
his community revealed that 95
percent were in favor of the cable
project.
David Edwards , general
manager of Dickinson Pacific
Cablesystems, said a hotline
number bu been established to
field cable questions and com-
plaints. Calls can be made as ear·
ly as6:45a.m. at891-6788.
... H's ttm• for your layaway
NEW YORK CAP> -Tbe
•tock mart• dee lined broedlJ :· today u tbe rally tbat foUa•ed
Roaald lteaaan'a .a.cu. •·-to faded. : K! Dqw Jonea avera,. ot Ill:
induatriall, which jumped near· ·
ly 11 points Wedoeaday, fell 15.11
to 138.05 id tbe lint three bourt ,,._
today. "
Lo.en took a 4-1 lead over :
1alnera amoq New York StoClc
Exchanse-llated iuues. .~
TudJn1 slowed from Wed~·
neaday'a reeord pace. ~
hour volume on the Bla Board-
totaled 13.84. milllon ab ares.
Wall Streeters we.re generally
still elated over Rea1an .,·.
landslide victory in the pretlden-· ·
tial race and the bil gaw··
registered by the Republicans in
Consresa.
But they said investors• atten·
lion was beginning to return to
the gloomy outlook for Inflation •
and interest rates in the im· ·•
mediate future.
Analysts agree tbat the
Federal Reserve la almost cer-
tain to raise the discount rate -
the charge it imposes on loans to
member commercial banks -
from the present 11 percent. The
only debate about it focuses on··
the likely timing of the move.
The latest reading on inflation
is due Friday with the govern-
ment's monthly report on pro-
ducer prices.
M eanwbile, gold prices
tumbled as much as $24 an
ounce on world markets today
while the dollar was mixed after
posting galna Wednesday in the
wake of Reagan's victory.
In Londoo, gold traded for
$633. 75 an ounce, down from
$657.75 at the close Wednesday.
In Zurich the precious metal
was trading for around $837.50·:
an ounce, down from $655.50.
Earlier in Hong Kong, gold
prices dropped $18.61 an ounce
to close at $638.82.
Silver was quoted In London at
$18.80 an ounce, down from
$19.90.
7lst RACE • •
Tbe 7lst Assembly District
takes in parts of Westminster,
Fountain Valley. G·arden Grove,
Anaheim, Stanton, Buena Park,. -
La Palma, Cypress, and LC»~
Ala mites. '
Both candidates are from
Westminster.
Wild Parrots ·:
Invade C~
SAN DIEGO CAP) -As many
as 20 wild parrots at a time are flying low or perching higb in
the San Dielilo area.
Authorities suspect moat were
freed by blrd-smuiglers fearinJ
capture at the border.
The colorful birds are mostly
green Amazons althoUJb others
·are native to Mexico and Central
America. Several hundred are
believed at liberty in the San
Diego area alone.
Carolyn Nielsen, a deputy San
Diego agricultural com·
missioner, said she spotted 11 in
a pecan tree but they've been
seen in "almost every commuui· ty of any size.•'
Avoid the hOlldoy crunch this veor by
shopping at Btett Wolker now. Let us help you
choose the perfect g ift f0< that special person
from our selection of fine Jewelry; and. with a
small deposit. we will hold it for you
unttl Christmas.
Speakenldp
Fight Over
SACUMENTO CAP)-AaumbtySpeakerLeo
ll~Cutb aaya be ll 1lvlo1 "p the n1ht to keep the ...... ~,
McCarUay spent WtdnMday, the day after the
electkla, cli8eU11la1 wlth I UHOftert bow to aalvage
som=from h1a ex~nalv• and often bitter 11·
moeth ft with Aa&emblyman Howard Berman, D·
Loa ~celn, who won the votes to take the
speakenblpaway from hJm.
In u.e electlon Tuesday. McCarthy lost the sup·
port be needed to keep lhe office. c:onsidered the
atate '•most powerful after 1ovemor.
~ ... , Jl•wk• 8 a fl . t rfl'a
RICHMOND CAP) -A powerful explosion at an
illduatrial district plant that wu felt for 10 miles
nearly destroyed• large building and shattered win·
dows within a 10-block
( J
~re.•. but there were no in· ST ATE Juries. The explosion Wed-
--~~~~~~~--· n es day night at the
Puritan-Bennett Corp., an
air reduction plant. occurred while a worker was
transferring nitrous oxide, commonly called
. "laughing gas," from a storage tank to a tanker
truck, fireofficialssaid.
Though the blast blew out the sides of the three-
story, corrugated metal building and sent slivers of
sheet metal more than a 100 reet, the worker. Roy
Janice, 37, was not injured.
R11lfl' Li•i•~ E tniNNif.tlN
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A rule appro~ed by the
state Air Resources Board will reduce smog.
producing nitrogen oxide emissions by glass makers
by up to seven tons a day over the next five to seven
yean1, officials saS'.
rGlassmaking plants are considered a prime
source of smog-forming nitrogen oxide emissions
because of the tremendous heat used in manufactur-
ing furnaces. the ARB said. The furnace can reach
temperaturesof3,000degrees Fahrenheit.
Affected by the rule, which will require changes
in dassmalting furnaces will be plants that make
bottles for beer, wine, medication and foods. .
Poll Clmdng• ti ullfl'd
SACRAMENTO CAP) -California Secretary of
State March Fong Eu says she may seek nationwide
simultaneous poll closings to keep a president's .. ear·
ly concession from cutting voter turnout in the West.
Ms. Eu, a Democrat, said Wednesday there was
"a dramatic falloff in voter participation" Tuesday
after the television networks began projecting the
victory of Ronald Reagan as president.
Normally, about 15 percent of the CaWomia vote
comes in between 5 p.m. and the closing time, 8p.m.
The network projecting began between 4 p.m. and 5
p.m .
Tran•if f"n~fl'!l Challrugp
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Los Angeles County's
approval of Proposition A's sales tax increase could
spread a $.1.6 billion mass transit system over the
sprawling county -if it survives a potential legal
challenge.
The county's Transportation Commission said
Wednesday it hopes to have some of the electric-
powered line operating by the end of the decade and
the whole system in place in 35 years, barring major
technical, financial or legal problems.
Ga"fl \lioffl'ttt•e .ftoar•
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gang violence in Los
Angeles nearly doubled in the first nine months of
1980 compared to the same period last year, with
robberies alone up a whopping 212 percent a
police report shows. · '
Statistics cited gang involvement in 2 683
crim es committed through September compared
to 1,439 gang-related for the nine month$ in 1979 -
an increase of 86.4 percent.
Robberies soared from 221 in 1979 to 690.
MERCURY SAVINGS
a11d loon association
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
TH AT EARN INTEREST. ASK US!
Executive Ofl/ce1: 781 2 Edinger Ave., fSLJC
Huntington Beach, CA 92647 --· __
South•rn C11/forn/1 R~lon1/ Olflcfl: ---.. ·-
5en E. La P•llT'3 Av• .. An1helm, CA 92807 ,
8955 V•ll•y View St .. Buen• PMk CA 90620
1658 Arnelll Ad., C•m•rlllo, CA 90010 20715 S. Av1lon Blvd., Cuaon CA 907'8 23021 Lake Center Or., (Lake Fo1ti111. El Toro. CA 92630
.1001 E. lmperl1I Hwy., La·Habf1, CA 90631 Gl
4140 Long"BeacJI Blvd., Lon_g a.~111 CAJl0807 • 22939 Hawthorn• Blvd., Torrance, CA 9Cl9l6 . ,1
1096 Irvine B~d., Tuttln, CA 92680 • ... "-(QUAl .235 N. Cllruf'f(ve., Wast Covin•, CA 91793 ..-a• HOus1"c "llA•re~ Rdom" •v•ll1bl1on1 t.HN.rl bu/a ttNocR,
Largest Beer Stade
'Tluldllt. NoVMllMlrt. ,..,
Berkeley Protesi
52 Arrested in Anti-Reagan
' BERKELEY <AP) -la a nmpus
scene reminiscent of the U.S. police
led and draued dbaident atudenb
and otben out ot the Untventty of
California admlniatration build.inc to
break ~ a sit-in sparked by Ronald
Rea1an 1 election.
Campus police arrested 35 atudeota
and 17 nonatudenta Wednesday ni&ht
followlnl the 5'h·hour protest on the
Berkeley campus. No injuries were
reported.
All S2 were charged with mllde·
meanor trespassing, and in addition,
10 were charged with resisting arrest.
AL TROUGH THE demonstration
had Reagan's presidential election as
a "catalyst," one protestor said, it
hater drifted into a general protest
centering on campus cJuses of Iona
standing. At one point, inside the
building, communist literature was
handed out.
'Tm doing it just to make a point
about what's going on," replied one
student when asked why be had
participated in the spontaneous,
mostly nonviolent, demonstration.
be1lu to C\ll bads sodal _ ...... _
Durtna the oceupadoli
the dluidenta were taikiD; a
CIQIQ adrift OD tbe e ....
years -lncllldlAC dteuaea.ttcin ot
campUI ROTC and dema.adil for lts
moval, more demand.a tbat U
Berkeley quit supportlDI .nucle
weapoaa researcb for the aov
ment, support for a campu1 c
care center and increuecJ Thi
World enrolhpent.
Campus police chief Wllllam Be
told reporters the demoQStration w
legal before the bulldin1'1 regul
closini time at 5 p.m. After that.
demonatrators were warned thf were aubjeet to arrest. Police p ·
tience ran out 2'h boun later.
Librory Retai't
Display of Ga,r
Books, Photos !
After 10 hours of stacking, 10,~ cases of brew stand at Sacramen·
to's Llquor Mart, making it the world's largest beer display. The
volume of the 120,960 bottles contained within the cases represents
20,790 gallons of beer. Representatives of the Guinness Book of
World Records were on hand to certify the'record Wednesday.
The ~Y occupation of a stairwell
between' the first and second floors of
California Hall started about 2 p.m.
with 150 students and nonstudents.
Police sealed off the building. Two
men were arrested then for allegedly
tangling with police.
HAYWARD CAP ) -A col .
troversial display of homosexu~-
oriented books and photographs ~ remain at Hayward's main libr •
despite protests from some residen ,
the city's library comminion says.
The commisston's 4-2 vote Wedn ·
day night to keep the display dr
applause from about 80 people, m~t
?f whom identified themselves as be·
mg gay. I Win Over Klansman
Breaks Vote Record
AS 11IE PROTESTERS walked in-
to the building, most of the UC ad-
ministrators walked out, but some
minor damage was reportedly done
to the walls near Chancellor Michael
Heyman's office.
Later, supporteMI outside attempt·
ed to toss food and other items
through an open window to the pro-
testers.
"I AM OPPOSED to censorship!"
said lesbian Kristen Loomis, a Vall~·
jo librarian and one of 32 people &o
speak at the meeting. "Ten perceft
of o"r population is gay. The'e
materials should be available lo
them." SAN DIEGO (AP> -
Breaking a 40-year-old
national record for total
votes. U.S. Rep. Clair
Burgener, R-La Mesa ,
says his land.slide victory
over white supremacist
Tom Metzger was "a
firm rejection of the
philosopl\ies of the Ku
Klux Klan."
86.4 percent of the vote
over Tom Metzger, a
stale Ku Klux Klan
leade r running as a
Democrat.
Unofficial but final
vote totals Wednesday
gave Burgener 292,039
votes, surpassing the
2 67 ,873 ca st for
Republican Leonard Hall
in the tsl Congressional
District of New York in
1940.
The record was
----------achieved in the nation's ~rLl •U.. largest congressional
Burgener, in winning
his fifth consecutive 4.3rd
Congressional District
term Tuesday, received
r-Hi district. with almost a
•LO_.G 1 co•S1 million people, spanning .. ~£ most of San Diego Coun-~1£1 '6 ~''4 ~£.~, ty, parts of Riverside ~5.,1 ~""' County and all of Jm-perialCounty.
6MONTHS
FREE
Metzger, who ran on a
platform o f white
supremacy, tightening of
U.S . -Mexican borde r
restrictions and support
for working class whites,
received 45,623 votes. or
13.5 percent.
Cub Invalid
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP> -The state Social
Services Department
cannot reduce the
amount of money paid
under the 'Aid to
Families with Depen-
dent Children proeram
because an unrelated
adult male lives in the
household of program
recipients, the Court of
Appeal has ruled.
About 7:30 p.m., when more than
half the protesters had left voluntarily
after several warnings, police waded
in and led away those who would walk
on their own and dragged away others
.who went limp.
The occupation was preceded by an
anti-Reagan rally nearby at Sproul
. Plaza. which for nearly 10 years was.
the focal point of sometimes fierce
confrontations accompanied by tear
gas and truncheons. By comparison,
Wednesday's event was a love feast.
SPEAKERS TOLD A small crowd
to "make sure Reagan can do as llt-~le as possible to llinder human rights an the country."
Joe Lambert of the Berkeley
Progressive Students Organization,
announced that the demonstration
was called "to build an· educational
movement againsl Reagan . . . when
Reagan r einstates the draft and
Titled "Out or the Closet," the <ID·
play is sponsored by t he Pacific
Center for Human Growth, 1~
Berkeley mental health and social
services agency for homosexuals. Jt
features photographs and books by or
about gays. :
LEADING OPPOSmON to the di··
play was a Hayward parent, Darler1e
K. Bogle, who demanded immedian
removal of tbe display. She said t
was not suitable for children and t
advocated homosexuality, which s~
viewed as against Biblical standardl.
Mrs. Bogle was joined by about ia
dozen people representing churdb
and other groups who denounced llie
display as immoral and UQ ·
American. I
The mo nth-lon g display wits
authorized by the commission last
March by a S-2 vote.
HAPPY "HOUR"
ou:r restaurants
will treat yoµ with
complimentary "Refreshments"
Every Weekday Afternoon From 3 to 5 p .m.
NOVEMBER.5-14
Amatos
(Upper level I Carousel Court)
Compltmentary European
cappuc1no with purchase
of dessert
Carl's Jr:
Back Bay Rowing &
Running Club
(lower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary scoop of
Haagen·Dazs ice cream with
purchase of a meal.
(l ower level I Sears wing)
Complimentary soft drink
with purchase o f hamburger .
Lindberg's
(l ower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary cake and
coffee with purchase
of lunch
Forty Carrots
(lower level I Saks wing)
Complimentary fresh fruit
shake with purchase
of entree
Magic Pan
(lower level I Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary mousse with
purchase of lunch. Rendezvous Cafe
(lower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary popcorn
Vie De Fran ce
(Lowe< level I Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary roll/croissant
with purchase of coffee or
Complimentary dessert with
purchase of lunch.
Riviera
(l ower level I May Co. wing)
Caff e Pasquini
(Upper level I Saks wing)
Complimentary dessert with
purchase of lunch
Kaplan's
(lower letel I May Co. wing)
Complimentary danish with
purcnase of beverage.
Pronto
(Upper level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary pastry and
coffee with purchase
of lunch.
Salmagundi
(lower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary beverage
with purchase of soup
or salad
201.h Century
(Lower level I Carousel court)
Compflme,,tary European
cappuclno with purchase
of dessert.
False Assurance
Much to her dismay, a YOUD• mother learned that the
emerpncy call box telepllaM 1yttem in Huntiaitoe
Beach Central Part wun•t tit tbat it lhould have been.
She recenUy took ber small IOll8 to the pan to set
some fresh air and feed the ducts.
But the outing soon wu shattered by a partially
clothed man who confronted her while m11alfti In a lewd
sex act.
Believing that her sons ~~ threatened, she ran to a
call box to call for belp.
She said the phone raag at least 20 times befOl'e it
'-as answered by a police officer. And wben be did
answer, she said his reapome wu leu than aatiafal'tory.
She said later that the emeraency phone system
gives a false sense of security. "What happens lf you
have a heart attack or are In real trouble? You think you
can get help right away but it isn't true."
Police say they were swamped with calls at the time
and that there were a number of reasons for the un-
satisf 8ctory response.
To their credit, they alao concede that it should never
have happened.
l Police have stnce u111nded the emergency system
1 and promise prompt mponse no matter wbat the I problem,, may be. And lt ii &ood that they will.
i To be accosted at the park la bad enou1h. A deaf ear
~ 'to a plea for help in an emercency la. even worse.
I Warnin~ in Order
Frustrated loea l activitiata sometimes complain that
most people can't be bothered with City Hall until troul*
pops up in their own front yard.
That has certainly been the case in tile cable
television furor that hu. erapted in tome sectiom ol Rwa-
tington Beach, Fountain Valley and Yt'estminlter.
The cable project developed over tbe put 10 yean by
these cities finally has reached the CObltnactkm 1ta1e.
Crews are rippinc up streets and lawns to install cable
tele vision conduit.I and connection boxes. i . Understandably, some raidentl are un.bappy, cbarg-i mg that the conduit work hu weakened street.a, and that ;f tbe boxes blemish their lawm.
• Many residents said they rtteived tittle or no wam-~ ing about the construction; tome voiced fean that · the ~ city fat.hen are foisting an lD'lwanted boondog1le upon local
': re1identa.
~ • As city officials pointed out, Ute cable plans have
• been aired in public often. ADd tbe lawn box lnatallatioM :! are legal because t he cable firm hu access to utility !J easements.
) Still, tbe uproar indicates a few community relatiom
,; s hortcomings. The cable company cannot expect to be
; greeted warmly by local reeidenta -their proepeetiw ~ c ustomers -when it fails to proper ly prepare
t bomeownen for construction.
·• In the lon1 run, the cable •)'Rem appnn blneftetal J to the communities. It ia betnt m.talled et no coet to tu-
j payen -indeed, Heh partielpatJni cit. y wW reeetve 5
'I percent of annual 1roea reven-. -and eventually the l cities will own the 1y1tem. •
4 But at present, city officio aad Dtcktnloe-Padftc
Cablea)'Btema need to impmve neillaborhood notifleatton
proced'ures and 1hol41d make a 1troa1er effort to &tel
with community concema,t'l . ,
U1ions expr~sAd In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are tho1e of their 1uthot1 •ftd
artists. Reader comment la Invited. Addresa The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 15e0, Costa Mesa. CA 92828. Phone (714) &42·4321.
Boyd/Politicll ·
81L•.90YD
Tbb 11111m1ntoenrtd wlMB
Woodrow Wlllon Wat IOY·
.,.... ol New JtrMJ. A U.8.
Dear
Gloomy ,
• Gm
To •,.P .V. (Gue,
Oct.N )i ADlilltaP.1 ......... , ........
·~ut•....,, . ..,.,. ••••11• o•lr · for •l•l9•• •••Hltea-u... 1 • -tar ta· e11 .. d tMID mid w..a't l•e~J eaou1b, to be ..... K.8.
r.cc;-:.~ .......... .......
MD.W from Id.a etate died. TM ... Md bMe a e1aee·
frieDd ol WU... A JerMJ poUt~daa within mtnutet t•~ the IO'f•rDOr, ... .. ,~ lill• .. tall• .. ........... plKie, tlr ......... .................. v ...
41uote me •• H7ln1 It It
perfMUJ .......... e. .. II lt'a qrqable to tM ull· •"-'it."
...
WAllllNGTON -0..-the
•••r·bJaterlcal rbetorlc · •••M' ... fnal bedl Iran alld Ir... die dlMlt ealdllet to fu haa beea ... titan tatat •ar. But ' U.8 .... ....__. aaal11ta u,
lMre la~ ol Me•latlqft ln I particularly 1ruetome area:
clNmlcal •ufare.
The reaton chemical or
. blolo1lcal weapont have aot
been used m a y be
•Imply that
thebei.c.of
tenor ln um
new field Is
c leerly . in
~q 'a favor,
tbe lraqla
have been
doln1 we ll
enou1la with
conventional forces -so far. But lf the fortunes of war abould
cha nae dramatically. Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein may
decide to stave off disaster by
reaorttna to chemical weapons.
Mailbox
lna .._._.relatively Uttlt
to ••••lop c~mlcal warfare ,eapabltitJ. or defense •lainlt fHlt attaelLI. But Huttein la ~ to ..,._, chemlcala a
uHfut mllltary tool. Iraq'• •••••l 1todspl\e of .ebe11Ucal·btolollcal weapom la a
le1acy from it• yeara aa a
.-mtary client. of the Soviet
Unloll. · ' Tba lraqlt be1aa actlvely
aeqwrial • chemical warfare
poteDtial in the mld· ltTOI. M a
aeeret Defense lntelU1ence
A•ency report put It, --freq
embarked on "an a11resalve
cllemlcal·biok>&ical· r9Cilololical
proi.ram . lncludlnf the
comtrudloft of tralnln1 f aciUties
. . . modeled alter Soviet CBR
instaUaliom."
l~T£LLIGENC£ sources d tacovered •'al l eas t 15
locallom" ln Iraq where CBR
obstacle courses had been
constructed with Russian help.
The extent of these training
.,,,, I
f aclllU•• ''bllblil hta tile Importance (the Iraqis> place on bein1 prepared to operate ln a
contaminated environment,"
one secret report states.
Tbe obetacle couraea were uaed .. part of eeneral Iraqi
army training. "ln these areas,
tr<>c>p& are instructed ·to bypass
or move· lhrouah contaminated
obttaeles and perform normal
combat duties while wearing
prot,ctive cloUtin~." the report
notea. "Each Iraqi division haa an
or•anic chemical company that
is equipped primarily with
Soviet·manufactured materiel
S\ICh as the truck-mounted
A R S ·1 2 and D D A -53
decontamination apparatus." an
intelligence reJ>Ort slates. "As in
the Soviet Army. the Iraqi
ground force has a chemical
branch, a nd CBR doctrine is
most likely based on Soviet
concepts."
Before r elations wi(h the Kre mlin cooled following
,
Hu11ela'1 crackdown OD 1Rq6
communlltl ln 1'71, the Soviets
reportedly auppUed amall
a mounta of chemical warfare •sent.a for tralnin1 uae.
THE IMCllS llAD "no known cheml~al warfare production
c ap,.blllty , altbou1h the
technololical baae required to
produee nerve a1enu exlltl, and
an attempt hu reportedly been
made '° 4o ac>." accorclin1 to 1111 i ntelli1~nce a nalysis. Jt
concludes ominously:
"The lraq!a realize that, once
acquired. weapons of this type
could be used aga inst ...
potential adven ariea, auch as Iran and Is rael. Numerous
weapons systems already in the
Iraqi Inventory are capable of
delivering CBR munitions .
whi c h wo uld h ave t o be externally supplied."
Intelligence sources told my
associate Dale Van Alla that the
F rench . who re placed the
Russians as Ira q 's m a jor
military supplier , ha ve not
provided chemical weapons, But
the Iraqis have built up a small
stockpile on their own.
EXPORTIN G TRA G EDY ;
Manufacturers who run afoul of
st r i n gent f e d era l safe t y
standards have a callous option
available : Like the companies
that found themsel ves with
stocks of baby clothes treated
wit h T ris , the s us pect ed
cancer·causing name retardant,
greedy manufacturers ca n
dump their goods overseas.
Now there is evidence the federal government is helping
the United Nations fob off a
controversial birth·control drug
on unsuspecting women around
t he world. The substance is
Oepo·Provera. and tests have
li.n k ed it to sle ri ljty and
congenital heart disease in
womt>n. In a private letter to Rep.
Mario Biaggi. D· N. Y .. officials
of the Agency for International
Development admitted that.
despite attempted safeguards.
AID Funds may be helping to
underwrite a U .N. program that
is d istributing Depo-Provera
abroad.
Strings Attached to' Affordable' Housing
Totlte Edit.or:
In responae to· the Oct. 22
editorial entitle d "County
Tackles Houllftl Sborta1e," iftbe
Board of SUpervlsors were to
wave a mack wand and create
10,000 units ol affordable bominl
tomorrow, the demand for "al·
fordable" housin1 in Oran1e
County would not be met. M we
watch the supervisors perfonft
thelrmlracles, rememberthatall
their srandatandinl ls at the ea· pense of every property owner in
OranieCounty. Tbe buyer of an "affordaMe"
house cM only tell that watt at a
price determined by tb• CowKJ of
Oranp and that prtce ls not to ex-
ceed tbt purdtue price pNI the
lncreue ln tbt median Income la
Oranse County. In addition, tbe
count)' can decrease UM sales
prlH by the amount neeeuary to
r epair any dama1H u de·
termined by tbe county. Tbey can
clean and paint aad repair
wttbout limitation aDd cllarp tbe
aellerof aa "alfonlable" unit.
TllS "°'1NTY can taJre up to
fin maMbt to eurciae t.beir op-
tkm toputthue a home and at tbt
nd of tM UDda11 fall to CODMm·
mate tlte putthaae and not be Ua-.
bl•! 1'e Mller ol one of these 1e>-
t1U .. "affordable'' .,..U,ta~p
not ••U It ioay Owaer" or tJwoUih tJle reelW ol bla eholce ..• be mutt
,ell It OlrcNP the Orbl• CoUntJ HoulU Authority. Tlle wont
partottldtwoMtrcurel• tbatthe luyer of a eounty·1ubttdl1ed
lllom• wtn never be able to .nor.I to ...., ~ but aaotMr .....
1tdlaedhome. • A r•11aetauve of tM ttaw Dl~of Houltna aadCom·
muaatr O.V•=t laat ...
U.attbia= r.ale~ AouN toaUbomlal-DGl J•t .. .... .. liloUtlftl, not
J•t ....... ..., bouthl1.
All ol U... faeta mete .......
ment1•t111-'aftord•IM.._·
Int the IMlt _,_a" In ..... available todaJ. OtMt, ltll ewt·
ly, approeches to tM pNblttn
art avail .....
VlllOIHIA CllDCK Prt1lden~ewport JlarNr· c.ea 8oardef 8Hbl n
After all, the students will not
only learn medicine, science. art., etc., but about democracy.
human rithts and reli gious
freedom, which a re items the
present Iranian government
waata Mlhinl to do with.
Give im the hostages and send
the student.a home!
JIM deBOOM
..... ., ••rldr•
To the Mtor: Pertla .. no better way could
h devlaed to divide r aces ,
create confusion and destroy
public achoola than forced bus·
blf. II It pouible Judtes like
Blly who Nie ta fnor of bus· me are really Oil the other side after aU and are only dolnl the
work ol thoee who want racial
dlvtaion and private athools?
8 . TAVLIN
... C-.MfrNI
will get only $1,000 if the contract "offer .. is ratified.
THIS IS PA.RTL V responsible
for tbe discontent, distraction,
and disappointment. Teachers
are discontented with contract of·
fers that keep them one of the
loweatpaiddislricts in the coWtty,
when we used to be one of the highest. We are distracted by the
uncertainty of whether we will
have acootract this year or even a
j o b . since l a s t year t he
supe rintendent rec om mended that 168 teachers be fi red and
they rehired all but nine of them
by the fifth week of school. We
a re disappointed that t he
superintendent places such a
low prior ity on classroom
teachers and s upplies that
individu al school budgets are
cut by 10 percent to 12 percent
w hi le t he distr ict office
increases its budget this year by
l2 percent.
As a teacher, I care what hap-
pens to the students and the
teacbers in this district. I know
the parents care as well . We ca.re
for a top quality sta ff who are
acknowtqed ·leaders in educ a·
tion inthecom:ity and we care that
the top quality staff bas a top
qua llty contract. CHARLESGLF.Nlll
, . ...,af..r##Oft
To the Editor:
What is the matter with this
generation of young people? J
know we ask this question over anCloverandbaveno answer.
On tlalloween someone stol e
part of our porch decorations. We
had a skull which was painted
with nuoracent paint on a table.
A black Ught shining on it made a
spooky effect and the children
who came to the door seemed to
a ppreciate the display. Now it is
gone.
THE SKULL was part of a col-
lection from my past! My father
was in special effects at MGM
Studio and we always had in-teresting things for Halloween
and FourthofJuly.
The skull was made ofplaster of
parts and was fragile. It had bulbs in the eyes so that it could be elec-
trically connected. I'm sure
whoever look it will break it and
justtossitout. Jsn 't there some way young peo-
ple can be taught to leave things
alonethatdon'tbelongtotbem?
BARBARA WEBER
E.qtl•••• ....
To the Editor:
It la difficult to mldentand. I told my wife, over breakfast.
The levee bad broken severaJ
days ago. The water was backed
up behind a railroad embank-
ment.
There was worry lbat the em-
bankment would bold, and that
thouunds of acres of farmland
would be fiooded, ,bu.t . they ap-
parently did not atop train traf·
flc on f.bat stretch .of track. A
t.raln was on the embankment
when It broke.
· That la easy to understand,
my wife told me. The aovem·
ment is helpin1 to run the
railroad. Someone was trylna to
phone the Jroper 1ovemment a1ency all the while. Tbe con-
nection would be broken, tMd
they would 1et a busy line. 'lben
when lbey 1ot throu1h, lbey
wowd be put on hold for three
boun. They would flnally find out that ttiey bad the w.._, de-·
partmeet. Tbey would be direc:t· ed to another department. and
then the proceu would 1tart
aver.
, In a few days, tbey ml1ht have
almoat bad tbeir tall Nmpleted,
when tb• rrel1bt train ....
backed out oe the embankment, andlttnb .•
Tbat mu• ..,., l told htt',
Olano for the aDIUatloft .
IAlilSS BOLblNO
I
J·
..... /S011th £out
\ VOL. 73, NO. IM, 5 SECTIONS, a PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A .THURSQAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1'IO
Casa Pacifica Owners Blackmail
Ttae a •• owners of Caaa
Paclflca walked la&o Saa
Clem-. City Hall weawday
Dlpt......,..... to arpe aplnat
havia-1 to provide a public
.... men~ to the beach below
Cotton Point.
But by tbe end of the hour-lone
dl1cuaaion, Geor 1e Ar1yroa
faced wbat he called a
"blackmail" ultimatum from
the counc:U that be provide blcy-
cle ud pedestrian access to the
l2·room former Nixon bome.
ArlYJ'OS, alone with partners
Donald Koll and G~vln Herbert,
purchMed tbe 20.t-acre Nixqn
estate lut year from the former
president. The three men all are
from tbe Newport Beach area.
They propose aubdividinl the
parcel into 18 Iota, keepin1 lhrM
for the maelves, lncludin1 the
Nixon home, and aeWn1 off the
remainlq 13 Iota to indJviduall.
Investor Herbert plau to
move into the Nixon home,
which would not be accessible to
the public, except perhaps to
other new property owners ill
the subdivided Cotton Point
Estates. ·
The council met Wednftday to
weich the advantages and diaad·
vantagea ol requiring the ~
owners to provide an euemeot
to the beach below the property.
The 1,800 foot loq pedestrian
a cce11 would run alon1 ttae
0raop eounty anc1 San DietO
line . Council members Wedneeday
appeared to aaree tbe ownen
sliOuld provide an •'irrevocable
offer" to dedicate a 15-foot wi4k
strip to tbe city if tbe Med for
acce11 ia ever sought ln tile
future .
And while the property ownen
appeared wl1liq to make that
conceulon, Couneilmu Patrick
Lane tmeed ln another ecmdi·
lion. .
"Don't you feel the p'blic
should have access to the Nixon
home," be aake_. · repreaen-
tatlv• of tbe owners? .
"I'm not talk.Ing about loiftl
in.aide the house," he said, "Un·
Jess the owner wants to invite
people in foe a drink."
The request appeared to 1ur-·
prise tbe balf-dOMD rep,...
tatlve1 of the Cotton Polnt
f!1tate1.
They said they hared•
''souvenir hanten" would walk
up and take chunka of the old
Nlzon home, and provide a
security problem for the new
residents.
(See ACCESS, Pate AZ>
Will Festival uit Laguna Bowl?
Tra••eeMa•
Phony Doctor
Guilt Denied
Trabuco Canyon reside nt
Gerald Barnes. who Is accused ol
masquerading as a doctor and
causl.q the death of a patient be
aaw atanlrvineclinic, pleaded in-
nocent today ln Orange County
Superior Court.
Stocks Dip
After Rally
Barnes was ordered to stand
trial Jan. S i.n Superior Court
Judge E verett Dickey's Santa
Ana courtroom.
Barnes, 47, a Coto de Caza resi·
dent, had been ordered to stand
trial by Harbor Court Municipal
Judge Donald Dune an last week.
He la charged with murder, pos-
ing aa a doctor and falsely pre-
scribingdruga.
Barnes presently is free on
$10,000 bail, and Chief Deputy Dia-
trict Attorney James Enright said
lhla morni.DI be wanted to see bail
increued.
F R "I think be (Barnes) ia uculpa· Or ea a an ble .. any person who loel into a e liquor store and pulls a robbery,"
Enri1btaaid.
NEW YORK <AP> -The "What be was doing," Enright
stock. market declined broadly said, "wu playing the 1ame . . .
today u the rally that followed he wudotngitformonef ."
Ronald Reatan 'a election vie-The charges a1alaat B~ tory faded. stem from hil employment at
The Dow Jones averace ol 30 ~acific Soutbwest Medical Group
industrials which jumped near· an Irvine, where be worked for two
ly 18 points' Wednesday fell 15.11 years until his arrest in August.
to 938Jl5 in the first th~ee hours While wo r king a t Pacific
today Southwest, prosecutors contend, ~ took a 4-1 lead over be treated a diabetic patient wbo
gainers among New York Stock di~ two days after being ex-
. Excbanse-liated issues. anunedbyB~es. . I Trading slowed from Wedl Enrilbt said he la pushing fo.r a
neaday'a record pace. Opening-second degree murder conviction
I hour volume on the Big Board as a reaultofthat death. totaled 13.84 million shares. D e fens e a ttorney David
Wall Streeters were aenerally Brickner told report.en after ar-
1 still elated over Reaga n 's ra ig~mt:nt pro~eedlngs this
landslide victory in the presiden· monung m Supenor Court Judge
tial race and the big gains Rich~ Be!lcom'a courtroom,
repatered by the Republicans in that hi.a position would ~ that
Conveu. Barnes did not engage m pro.
But they said investors· atteo-feaaional malfeu ance and wu
tlon wu bec:Lnning to return to not _responaiblefor tbed'eathofthe
the t1oomy outlook for inflation pattent. .
and interest rates ln the im· Altbouih be declined to go into
mediate future bis trial strategy, Brickner said
Analyata ~1ree th at tbe tbecase evolvesdowntothe opi-
Federal Reserve ia almost cer· nion of whether treatment given
tain to raiM the discount rate -the patient wu adequate, inade-.
the charge it imposes on loans to quateoraomewbere in between.
member commercial bank.I -Proa~cutora al~ec.e t.bat
from the preeent u percent. The • Barnes ia a .Pharmac11t who lost
only debMe about lt focuaes on hia license 1!' IWno~ . and _came
the likely timlnl of the move. west to practice medrcane w1tbout
Tbe 1atelt reading on inflation a license. •
la d&11 Friday with the 1ovem-Brickner said there waa
meat'• moalhly report on pro-"strong evidence" to 1u11eat be dueer prtce1 wasn't a doctor, but be would not
lleanwblle, •old pric es comment u to whether bia client
\ambled aa much aa $Z4 an was lndeedallcemedphysicUID.
. oanee OD world markets today ·-.lllle tbe dollar wu mixed after P°'""I pim Wednesday in tbe
-'Wake of Raqan'a victory.
la LGDdoa, 1old traded for
.. teu.75 aa ounce, down from
. ..., .11 at tbe clole Wednesday.
Oaina Ple~sed
PEKING (AP> -Chlna
praised Pr91dent-elect Ronald
Rea1an today as a "moderate"
and a "praamatiat" who wants
friendly relationa with Peldna.
Large surf Wednesday allowed surfers to
ride waves breaking on the Big Corona
side of the east jetty at the entrance to
Newport Harbor. Surf of 4-7 feet ii forecast
along the Orange Coast through the
weekend, depending on which way the
beach ii facing. Weather forecasters say
the source of the surf is a storm about 2,000
miles out in the Pacific Ocean.
Reagan tBeginning
Transition Move
WASHINGTO N CAP ) -
Equipped with $2 million in fed·
eral money and seven noon ol
federal office apace, aides to
President-elect Rea1an already
are at won on tramferrlnl the
power ol pel"Dflf-'8t.
Telepbonel wl'ie U..tallecl and
title. pu& OD doors WedneldQ in
the Wubiqton office bulldins
-(lve bJockl from "the Wbite
House -that will serve u bud·
.quart.en few tbe 250 people wbo
Will comtitute the Reacan transl·
tionteam.
Preaklent Carter made about
2,200 appointments when he took
office, and Reacan will have u
many aa 2,700 top-level Jobe to nu. all lilted in a govemmeat
publication known unofficially
•• the "Elum Book." " Reaaaai chief of ataff Edwin
Meese said he hoped the new ad-
miD.btration wlU be able to lure
busm-eueutins wbo mlPt
othenrlae turn down 1overn·
meat Jobi because of federal
1alarl• apcJ the imecurlty of an
appolntift po9t.
E. PendletGD James, a former
(See aEAGAN. Pate AZ)
Brzezinsk,i
'Shredding'
Denied
WASHINGTON CAP > -A
spokesman for White House na-
tional aeeurtty adviser Zbipiew B~ denied a publlabed ~report today that 'Bneahiald or-
dered intelli1ence documents d•troJtd after President Carter
waa defeated by Ronald Reacan
in Tuesday's election. 4
~(;ops ·to llide. Btues Fre~?
The New York Post quoted
three unnamed staff aides to
HDlor Republican members ol
the Smate lntelli1ence commit· tee u aayiq they were told ol
tbil "by employeea of the Na-
Uoaal Security Council, which
Brset.IDUi heads.
But NSC spokesman Leonard
Lefkow denied the story. saylq:
"It'• absurd nonsense. It'•
bilarre."
~· need to be worked out. Board
memben told Blancq to be sure
to apuk to all Jaw enforcement
1roup1 before th• pact ii
ratlfted.
Board attorney Kennard
Smart Jr. aald liability mllht be aD iuUI, bat lD moet eutil tbe
dlatriet wouldn't be "9DODlible ll a law enforeemeat oltleer act· eel.....,_., aa board.'
Sen. Barry Goldwater of
Arilona ii the ranll:ln1
Republican member 'of tbe in·
tell11enee panel. Hl1 pre11
seeretary, TODY Smith, sUd he
doubted that Goldwater would
be aware ol Aft1 such 1ituatiol_\
became be has been _,a1ed h\
a elOM bettle foe re-eleetloa.
5penes Davit, pNU oftleer
for tbe committee. said after
..._ ho --cbecki81 wttb otber staff !MID· Board mem.,.n, w -~n ot .~~l: .... know
tlaat ,._. aM~ alwQI are alleolu&el)' llOUdlll about It."
upected to .... ,,. erl .. , NW AeeordlD~ to th• Pondat tbey l1Ud UM extra eeewitJ "But UM subtle' auu..U. ia&Mdtatbetnde. 8nedMlll le1ecll7 orde
that .e or mon poll"._.. Uaat la addltaM to baYlaa NIC mia&M•...,..•P••••n • .,,. wW eertalal7 blf _. t~ bun or abnd In· wtO ...-U, =bnee IM ..... rowtMI from dolq uJUdal -........, be dlrtct· ot wwll wurttJ ... .....,,.. aboft lild MJGDd their ,...._ td .at to ~ ... wttb 1M ......._ • ,..,.,.._,., olltened a pl1M1d ......... ol .... u I trneWOD p._ ~e. _. lapl ... OCPD ..,,. a.a11pa ..... &um, Ila ftOlat'-ol a,....._ -
p1&c..._. tW1M ••w 1111 ~ ___ ...._-.:... __ ~c=-~atta.
v
Irvine
Company
Site Eyed
By DON CHAPMAN
OI -Oe6ly Nit ..... The Laguna Beach Festival of
Arla and Pageant of the Masten
might be packing up and moving
out of town in the next decade.
Festival officials say they are
exploring the possibility of mov·
ing the annual festival and
pageant to Irvine Company pro-
perty when the festival's lease ol
city~wned land expires in ua>.
Festival president James
Schmits and general manager
Paul Griem have held "in-
vestigatory" talks with Irvine
Company officials about tbe
potential move.
And wblle there bu reported-
1 y been no empha1l1 on a
apeelftc location, the mo~ la be-
inl ~dered. festival oftleiala _
say, because more room l•
needed for the annual Pageant
of the Mutera.
"The Irvine Bowl itself is in-
adequate because of the number
of seats and the demand for
tickets," aaJd Sally Reeve, the
festival's public relations direc-
tor.
The Pageant, which reereates
works ol art with live models,
baa been sold out annually for
many yean, and tbouaudl ol
ticket orders are turned down
each summer.
Any expansion of the current .
six-acre festival grounds could
r esult in compounded Partin&
and traffic problems for Laguna
Beach, Mn. Reeve said.
Irvine Compllny spokesman
Jerry Collins said his firm is
"neutral" on the proposed
move. "We'll wait until they <t.M
festival board) are "'"dy with a
firm proposal." be said. "If
anything is transacted, it is pro-
ba bly several years down the
road. Right now it is largely COO·
ceptual."
"It is an opening of thinking ol
future requirements more than
anything focused," be added.
The festival board presently
rents the grounds on Laguna
Laguna Beach, which, in tum, la Canyon Road from the City ol J
guaranteed a percentage ol the
organiutlon'a groaa receipts.
In recem years, the city bu
received about $200,000 in an·
(See MOVE, Pase AZ)
·~
Coast
Weather
Low cloudlne11 ni&bt
and mornln& clearint to mostly sunny Friday af.
ternoon. Lows tonltbt 57
at the beadMI, a inland.
Hitha Friday ea alont the
coast to 72 to '18 lnland.
IN81DE ..... AY
It'• "° jolol: Tlw cU11 of c i.11elGlld ... trp.g COL hn·
"°"tu ·~. SH ·~
DJ. ··-·
, CA&AfU• v .... uela CAP> -Hljacltva tweed a OC·t VH1r .n AV&NIA jM p&w wttll G ......... te O\IM today a ••--a&MairUM......... '
TM ..... ludedat U..Hav .. a&rportafter alMl·MurN\lellq ...... a.r .... Dlllc .. Aa&Wm ............. Nld.
lleMlllU.plww• eom••d11Nd II••--•rlt&oMotf ,.... ... C8ne• *'*1 lor .......... fttlll&to PMrtoOl'da lD ..,..,. Ywla. lie 1ald the plw carried ITPM•-.•n .... a
enwafft'N. ,,..,.ldl&UU•_..aotcU.ea..d. ·
T l11• ... 8~R•~_,
ATLANTA CAP) -Sea. Herman Talm941Ce will uk for a re·
'fOtlllt af tbe Tueedu votlq tbat lbowed bim an upHt loeer by
1 14,lM "'-to Republican challea1er Mack llattiqly a
Talm8dlea1cle1ald today. '
Unalftdal reaults w,ltb 100 pereeat of tbe v<M couat.d
abowed tM v«eran Democnt, wllo Md been ... ttn1 a Mb
term, with m,tu votes or • pereeet to llattiqly'• m ,1cn
vot. or Sl percent.
TnMle II.flt-IC ~•.,,erftl
WASHINGTON CAP)-AcaMln•rintdeellnelnollimportatotbe
lowest level in more than five yean eut the U.S. trade deficit in the
third quart.er by 15 percent, the Commerce Department aald to-day.
The value ol exports increued 3.1 perceni durlnl tbe July· « Sept.ember period, to a record '51.4 blllloa, with biper prices ae-
countiq for the entire Sl. 7 billion cbaqe. lmporta fell 5 percent, or
$3 billlm, toSSU blllion.
That produced a deficit of S:l.7 blWon, lowest 1lace a 1.9 billion
1aplnthetblrdquarterofl9'18. 'lbethlrd.quarterdeflcitcompared
witbareviaedf7.8billlonlntheaecondtb.reemontbloftbeyear.
· .. a.Ille ...... r Fl~~•
.; CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. <AP> -A masked IUDJDan robbed a
cashier at Cloud's Cal-Neva Lodte today IDd escaped OD foot wttb
, an undiackJMd amount of money, tbe Wuboe County 1beriff'1 ol-
flce1alcl.
.
!• Campaign Cost
Orozco 840,000
By DA V1D IWTZJIANN
Ol•Delty ...........
. Orange .County Central
Municipal Court Judie Richard
()rozco spent at leut $40,000 in
lils unsuccesarul attempt in
'tuead.ay'a election to remain in
otfice.
. ,Accordina to financial dia-~\osure 1tatementa filed for the r~portiq period enc11D1 Oct. 20,
--Orosco drew flnancial backin{
-from fellow jurists and at-
tbrneya in bis unaucceuful elec-
tion bid.
The Judie, an appointee rour
)tears qo of Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr., wu defeated by SU-~· Ana attorney Bobby D. y oungblood.
: Orozco wu one of two judges
.-ho were turned out of office
Tuead.ay by voten in tbe central
municipal court district. Preaid-
r.ig Judie John C. Teal, an ap-
tointee of then-Gov. Ronald
1lea1an eight yean aao, also
flas defeated.
• Orozco!• diacloeure statement, ~led nearly two weeks aao,
~bowed contributions from
(i)ranae County Superior Court
tudae James Perez ($100) as
fell aa well known attomeya
ucb u Terry Giles ($500) and
ames Slotler ($150).
Other large contributon in-~uded tbe Oranae County Mo-
an-American Bar Aaaoclation
$250), the Laborer'• lnt.ema-~al Union of North America,
ocal 152 ($1 ,000), and the
anae County Dialrict Council bf Carpmten <'250>.
Financial statements for
oun1blood'1 1ucce11ful cam-
aitn were not available
cause be bad not yet filed
em u ol Wedne9Clay. DeJM&y Dlltrict Attorney Jean
belnbeime'I' aald 1be Ii••
ottfied Youn1blood that bl1
tatement la two w..U late and
llJlat be c.oald face mlldemeanor
the Nov. 4 ballot. Youngblood
beat the Juda~ 52,721 votes to
49,289votel.
The two had run acaiDlt one
another, in the June primary,
when Orosco initially appeared
to be the victor by about 200
votea out ol 70,000 cut.
Younablood challenged the
computerized vote toUla, and ln
a later band recount, be
emeried u the victor by 15
votes.
However, Superior Court
Judge John K. Trotter Jr. voided
the election and ordered
Tunday'1 rematch became of
ballot trreeularities.
The two candidates bad nm a
bU.t.eriDI campaign in the ft.Dal
weeks. Youngblood accused
Orozco ol perjury when be wu
appointed four yean aao and
Orozco claimed his opponent
wu unfit u an attomey and
should face pouible disbarment.
There also were racial un-
dercUl'n!llla to the race because
of Orozco'• biapanic herita1e.
Arts Festival
Set to Name
New Board
Winnen ol three seats on the
nine-member Laauna Beach
Featival ol Arts board will be
·r runced at a 1eneral mem-
lm81dp meettn1 Moeday • U. 1-ttY.alP'cwdl.
Ballot.a were malled to tbe
2,000 votina memben of the
Featlval of Alta in Octobft, th~~~::mu
NEW YORK (AP) -Major
bankt railed thelr orime leMin«
rates by one full perceata1e1
polat to 15.5 percent toda)', tbe
bi1u.t llDC9 Kay.
Chue Manhattan Bank, wtllcb
lnttlated the move from tbe pre-
valUnt U.5 percent rate, laid
tbe lncreue WU IPWTed by re-
cent lbarp Jumps lD its coat of
funds.
•'General market rates and
tbe cGlt ol f\IDdl to banks have n... lbarply lD recent weeks,"
tbe DllUaa'1 tblrd-lar1eat com-
merdal bMk tald la a rare com.-meat• IU move. .. IJMIMd, tb1t U.~r.tte does
not fully nfteet tbe qacreued
C09t ol f\mdl to Cbale. Nor does
tbil inereue porUnd tbe dlree·
lion of future movements in the
prime rate over tbe near term,"
tbe bank laid.
' The recent jump in bank.a; cost .
of f\mda wu undencorea t.biJ mornlnt wben tbe rate on
federal funds -uncommitted
reserves that banks lend one
another -soared to 15.5 percent
before the Federal Reserve
Board intervened by addine re-
serves.
Soon aft.er Chase announced
lta rate lacreue, Chicago's Con·
tlaeatal Illinois National Bank &
Trust Co. and Finl National
Bank of Boeton matched the
new, blCber' rate. Other major
banta followed suit.
The prime ta the rat.e banks
cbarte OD loans to belt-riak cor-
porate cuatomen, usually for
periods of no more than one
year. Other, smaller bulineues
1.&1ually pay at least one percen-
ta1e point above the prime.
The prime rat.e does not affect
consumer loan rates, but ta con-
1idered an indicator of trends in
all klndl ol interest rates. When
the prime 1oes up, other rates
often follow in the same direc-
tion.
f',....P11pAI
REAGAN •••
Nixon administration penoanel
olflcial who rum a Los Anleles
e:11ecutive recruiting fmn, will
be the cbief talent scout, Meese
said.
The tnmition team also will
belln won on executive orders
Reaaan might want to iaaue llOOll
°"* ••••• •nd ..... •tec1toft'co••r899 •PP•.,. tod8y on p_. A3, M , A12,
81 •nd112.
after taJdDe office to set the tone
of bia administration, and on
domestic and foreign policy de-
tails.
The t.eam itaeU may offer tbe
fint clue to the type or persons
Reagan will attract.
And unlike Carter, who
broupt to W uhington a IJ'OUP
of Georala confidants foreign to
federal government, Reaaan ta
u1emblln1 an experienced crew
of advllen to Republican presi-
dents before him.
Many ol them could end up
with key spots in the new ad-
minl1tration, including such
familiar names u Henry Kiaa-
lnaer, Wllliam Simon, Alex·
ander Haig, George P . Schultz
and Alan Greenspan.
Even before the election,
Reaaan appointed 23 tut fOtte9
on domeatlc and economic
policy aDd 25 more OD foreip
policyu.-.
!Proeecutloa· Mn. Rbel.DMlmer ~ald Ille would live bim another
JlO days or ao to lUe bll forms.
• Tb• Youqblood·Orolco race
~wu perbapa tbe most bitter on • : --~~~~~~~ ...... ----1 OM .... OOMT l.llC
James Schmit& of La1una
Beacb1 Helen Kelle}' of Lacuna
Nipe1, IDd Bud Sebroed9r of
Newport Beaeh, and art1at Jae·
quie Moffett of Laauna Beach.
The board i1 1chedulecl to
meet in the Featlval Board ·
Room at 4 p.m . llODday, tbea
receaa uatll I p.m. for tb•
' 1eneral membenbip meetlnl at
the F•tinl Porum Tbeater,
where tbe eleetion results will be
announced and aDDual nparta
will be pven.
Greenspan, who was
chairman of the Council of
Ecoaomic Advlaer.a under
former Presldebt Gerald Ford,
beads a domelUc task foree OD
the budlet and la amont t.boee
p1entloned for secretary of
treasury. So are Simon, wbo bu
held the poat under Ford, and
Chari• r. Walker, who wu
deputy aecreta.ry of the treuury
uaderfonner PrealdentNiaoD.
The bead of Rea1an'1
economic policy task foree la
Sebulta. who WU secretary of treasury \Dier Ntxoa. He la re-I I
..
DAILY PILOT
--... .., ,,.._.A ....... .................
a.. ... .... ---...... .. ....
After that.. the board wU1 '° back to Its meeti.Dt room to
aeleet offtcen for tbe eomial
JeaJ'.
ported in line for MYeral PGll· tlou Ir a Reaaan eclmin•*8·
U•, includbal teereta!'J of aate or po11lbl7 a Cabinet-rank
domeldc policy coordlnator.
·weatt•y Kid
Girl, 11, Win• $500,000
CINCINNATI CAP) -AD ll·JMl'-old la suarantMd .... a rear far tbe ant• .1•an, courW1 ol a radio ltaUoa tbat want·
ed to ........ for ttlelf.
But tM -·-li•eaft1, wldcb WY\'l.N billed M the w1e1t clllll sin-ID 1lal lllmr7 el '"•deutlzS, baa aa....t • •••U ..-...,a.llie• lll'Gale .. n . . o.. rt..a ..... ta1at1d 1111..-_. ll.,...... llll••n for•...._ llO w1a 11 e111e AM&Mr' ltadm, wblela Pl•"-b •·"..., ..... ~ .......................... _.
--" ............ It ...... Ill...., lrllO ,.,...,... •
...,... 11.,... .... Lan ~--af ............... "' WYYl-ftl al .... -,,, ..... ..,. .. ., ,. • ..... •• adl ..... .., .... ...,,.. ...... ....
. .... .............
POLICE DPlOMR 8COUT8 CGm tll..L ... IN IURCH l'OR DllATM w.nae Newport~lnvHll t1eQu1ll1nRoo ..... 111•u••ot8'w11111Hi.._
Spyglass Slaying
Probed in Newport _
" .
Newport Beach detectives are
attempting to determine the
facts behind the 1hootln1 death of a ~year-old man whose body was found tb1a morning in bis
Spyglaaa Hill home. Police said
he had been shot in the head.
Police, who withheld the dead
man's name pending notification
or next of kin, said i~ bu. not
been established whether the
man was murdered or took bis
own life.
Investigators, called to the
number 8 Jade Cove resicleace
in the pre-dawn hours today,
said they have taken the man's
male roommate into cwat.ody for
queaticJnlng. His name also was
withheld.
Police said they received a
Board l'eteraa
call at about 3 a.m. from the
dead man'aroommat.e. Hetoldof-
ficers be wu watching t.elevlaion
with the victim, 1ot up to go to the
bathroom and heard a gunshot.
He told officers that when he
heard the crack of gunfire, he
panicked, crawled out the
bathroom window and ran to a
neighbor's hous~.
Police also said there were no
signs of forced entry into the
._home.
Detectives said when tbey ar-
rived on the scene, they dis-
covered the dead man sprawled,
face down, on the living room
,.floor. 1bey said they've been un-
able to locate any weapon.
Rites Set Friday
For Louis Dunning
Funeral services will be held
Friday for Louis E . Dunn.i.q, a
member of the Dana Point
Sanitation DtStrict Board for 22
yean.
Mr. Dunning died Monday in
South Laauna F0Uowtn1 a kine
illDesa. He WU 80.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Com-
munity Presbyterian Church.
32202 Del Obispo Road, San Juan
Captatrano.
The sanitation board veteran,
,.,....Page Al
MOVE.-••
nual !estival receipts.
Moat of that money goes
toward retiring the debt on the
Main Beach Park development.
Fifteen percent of the city's
share goes for cultural, artistic,
and community organizations.
The Festival of Arts moved to
its current location at 650
Laguna Canyon Road in June
1941. The first year's attendance
was slightly more than 2,000 vis·
itora. More than 300,000 people
visited the festival 1rounds lut
summer.
·along with the board's four other
members wu served with recall
papen two weeks aco in connec-
t.ion witb a controversial pension
plan the board adopted last
April.
Mr. DuDni.ng is survived by
bia wife, Eleanor; his son, Paul
of Laguna Beach, and his
daughen Valerie of San Juan
Caoistrano and Alison of
C~pi~.
He also is survived by bis
mother, Hedwig Dunning or
Dana Point. and his brother,
Willard of Anaheim.
Mr. Dunning was a resident of
Dana Point for 21 years a.ad wu
active in numerous community
organizatloaa. He served in the
Marine Corps in both World War
II and Korea.
He was a • member of the
Doheny Volunteer Fire Depart-
ment for 20 years and also was
involved witb the Little Leaiue.
Boy Scouts and the Dana Point
Civic Association.
Mr. Dunning also was a
member of the Community
Presbyterian Church in· San
Juan Capistrano and the San
Juan Hilla Gold Club. He also
•served u recreation director at
Camp Pendleton for 24 yean.
. .. H's ttrne for your layaWaY
,.,.... •• _..AJ
ACCESS •••
But Lane persisted, 1u11eatial
the council might reject the
owners' entire proposal if the con·. dition ianot met.
Argyros responded angrily,
sayin1. "Mr. Lane, what you are
su11eating ta that we take your
condition as a part of this
blackmail or b·e denied
permission to subdivide the pro-
perty."
"It's not blackmail," Lane
said. "We are charged with loolt-
inl out for the beat inlerelta ol the
·c1uzem.''
But several other council mem-
bers appeared uncomfortable
with Lane's proposal, with Coun-
cilman 'Ibomaa O'Keefe saytnc,
"I have llOme problems witb al-
lowlna the public to come • private property. It's not a riCbt
that existed before.••
Lane countered by sayiq,
''When Nlxcm lived there :_ 8l
considerable public expense-be
said the estate would eventually
betumedovertothepubllc."
Councilman Bill Mecham 1ug-
1eated th.at perbape the public
''couJd be allowed to see the house
one day a month, or some other
alternative."
Councilman Robert Limbers
said the new owner of tbe cua
might put up a "grilled fence"
near the property so people can
view the house without disturbinl
the new occupants .
Councilman
Doesn't Need
New Glasses
It 'a difificult to miss a 42-incb
high block wall, especially wben
you're 1ookiq for it.
But tbat'a what San Clemente
councilman Robert Lima.erg did
tbis week.
The council member said nary
a word Wednesday nlgbt u a
citizen 'a request to be allowed to
keep a block wall be bad inad-
vertently constructed tn tbe
city's rilbt-of-way WU read to
the counetl.
The planning commiuion bad'
recommended the wall come
dowp and council memben were
to bear tbe item Wednelday.
But a city official said there
WU DO need to proceed witb tbe
ia1ue, beca.-e the applicant bad
taken tbe wall qut without wait-
ipg for a council decision.
"I'm glad you told me that,"
Limbert said. "I went out to tbe
houM to look at tbe wall and I
thoutbt something was wroac
"1th me."
Avoid the holiday crunch this year by
shopping at Brett Wolk8f n<M. Let us help vou
choOSe the perfect gift for that special person
from our selectton of fine Jewelry; and. with a
$('0011 deposit. we wtll tlold It for vou
until Christmas.
\84111 <WJM 91~ ,,. ,.,.,.,'1
35 Forhlon lttond • ~ hoch. Callofnla ~ . -
I
ay•
Speakersldp
Fight Over
SACRAMENTO <AP) -AIMmbly Speaker Leo
McCarthy ,.YI he i• llVlnt up the n1ht to keep the 1peu-*1p.
McCarthy 1pent Wedo.Say, the day after lbe
•let"-. dlleuuU.1with1upporten bow to 1alv•1e
tom.udq from h1I expeuive and often bitter 11·
month ftcbt with A.uemblyman Howard Berman, D·
Loa Antelea, who won the votes to talte the
apeakenhipaway from him.
In~ eledion Tuesday, McCarthy lost the sup.
port he nieeded to keep the office, considered the
state '1 IDOlt powerful after governor.
... , llfH-lc• ......... .
RICHMOND CAP> -A powerful explosion at an
induatrial district plant that was felt for 10 miles
nearly destroyed a large building and shattered win·
dows within a 10-block
( J
area , but therewerenoin-Sf A.TE Juries. •
The explosion Wed· ---~~~~~~~~·n esday night at the
Puritan· Bennett Corp., an
air reduction plant, occurred while a worker was
transferring nitrous oxide, commonly called
"laughing gas," from a storage tank to a tanker
truck, fireomcials said.
Though the blast blew out the sides of the three-
story, corrugated meta1 building and sent slivers of
sheet metal more than a 100 feet. the worker. Roy Janice,37, was not injured.
Helle Lbtdt" Entb,,i1tt1N
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A rule apiJroved by the
state Air Resources Board will reduce smog-
producing nitrogen oxide emissions by glass makers
by up to seven tons a day over the next five to seven
years, officials say.
Glassmaking plants are considered a prime
source of smog.forming nitrogen oxide emissions
because of the tremendous heat used in manufactur·
ing furnaces, the ARB said. The furnace can reach
lemperaturesof3,000degrees Fahrenheit.
Affected by the rule, which will require changes
in glusmalring furnaces will be plants that make
bottles for beer, wine, medication and foods. .
Poll Clo•fngN .ff11lled
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Calif~mia Secretary of
State March Fong Eu says she may seek nationwide
simultaneous poll closings to keep a president's ear·
Jy concession from cutting voter turnoutin the West.
Ms. Eu, a Democrat, said Wednesday there was
"a dramatic fallofi in voter participation" Tuesday
after the television networks began projecting the
victory of Ronald Reagan as president.
Normally, about 15 percent of the California vote
comes in between 5 p.m . andtheclosingtime,8 p.m.
The network projecting began between 4 p.m . and 5 p.m .
... ~ ..........
Largnt Be
After 10 hours of stac g, 10,080 cases of brew stand at Sacramen ·
to's Liquor Mart, m ng it the world's largest beer display. The
volume of the 120,960 ties contained within the cases represents
20,790 gallons of bee Representatives of the Guinness Book of
World Records were hand to certify the record Wednesday.
WinO
Breaks
r Klansman
ote Record
SAN DIEGO CAP) -.4 percent of the vote
Breaking a 40-year-old er Tom Metzger, a
national record for total ate Ku Klux Klan
votes, U.S. Rep. Clair ader running as a
Burgener, R-La Mesa, emocrat.
says his landslide victory UnoHicial but final
over white supremacist rote totals Wednesday
Tom Metzger was "a ave Burgener 292,039
firm rejection of the tes, s urpassing the
philosophies of the Ku 6 7 • 8 7 3 c a s t f o r
Klux Klan." epublican Leonard Hall
Burgener, in winning the 1st Congressional
his fifth consecutive 43rd istrict of New York in
Congressional District
term Tuesday, received Th e record was
,.------~---chieved in the nation 's _,,.-c .. \..L rgest congressional ~.-.. '041 istrict, with almost a •LC>t6G .. S1 ill ion people, spanning
O_..,.cil ~ ost of San Diego Coun-
p~ of white
supremacy, tightening of
U.S. ·Mexi can border
restrictions and support
for working class whites,
received 45,623 votes. or
13.5 percent.
Cuts Invalid
~.~ .. , ..
BERKELEY (AP) -In a c=
scene reminilcent of the lJIOI, ee
led and draated di11ldent ltudenll
and otben out of the Univenity of
California admlnt.tration buildlnc to
break up a sit-in sparked by Ronald
Reaean 'selection.
Campus police arrested 3S student.I
and 17 nonatudenta Wednesday nieht
following the 51,.'.a·hour proteat on the
Berkeley campus. No injuries were
reported.
All S2 were charged with misde-
meanor trespassing, and in addition,
10 were charged with reslstinB'a.rrest.
ALTHOUGH THE demonstration
had Reagan's presidential election u
a "catalyst," one protestor said, it
later drifted into a Jreneral protest
centering on campus causes of Jong
standing. At ooe point, inside the
building, communist literature was handed out.
"I'm doing it just to make a point
about what's going on," replied one
student when asked why he had
participated in the spontaneous,
mostly nonviolent, demonstration.
The noisy occupation of a stairwell
between the first and second floors of
California HaJJ started about 2 p.m .
with lSO s tudents and noostudenta.
Police sealed off the building. Two
men were arrested then for allegedly
tangling with police.
AS 11IE PROTESTERS walked in·
to the building, most or the UC ad·
ministrators walked out, but some
minor damage was reportedly done
to the walls near Chancellor Michael
Heyman's omce.
Later, supporters outside attempt.
ed lo toss food and other items
through an open window to the pro·
testers.
About 7:30 p.m .. when more than
half the protesters had left voluntarily
after several warnings, police waded
in and led away those who would walk
on their own and dragged away others
who went limp.
The occupation was preceded by an
anti-Reagan rally nearby at Sproul
Plaza, which for nearly 10 years was
the focal point or sometimes fierce
confrontations accompanied by tear
gas and truncheons. By comparison,
Wednesday's event was a love feast.
SPEAKERS TOLD A small crowd
to "make sure Reagan can do aa lit· tie as possible to hinder human rights in the country."
bealm t9 eut back social Dn18111m1111 Durtnc the oceupaU•. ,
the diuldenta were talklq at.Mt
cauaff adrift on tbe camfua 116r ye~ra -IDCJldnf denunclatkin ot dtl
campU1 ROTC and demandl for ill,...
m oval, more demands that up
Berkeley quit 1upportin1 nucle•r
weapon1 research for the aov•r:f:
m ent, support for a campu1 C~fl!
care center and increased Th1'9 World enrollment. ,
Campus police chief William ~
told report.en the demonstratJon w
legal before lbe build.int'• re
closing lime at S p.m. After that, tJfe
demonstrators were w.amed tbv
were subject to arrest. Police pa·
tience ran out 21,.'.a hours later.
Library ·Retai~
I
Display of Gaj,
I
Books, Photos ~ . ~ HAYWARD (AP ) -A con·
troversial display of homosexual·
oriented books and photographs will
remain at Hayward's main library,
despite prbtests from some residents,
the city's library commission says.
The commission's 4·2 vote WedneJ·
day night to keep the display drew
applause from •about 80 people, mOft
of whom identified themselves as be·
ing gay. ·
"I AM OPPOSED to censorship,"
said lesbian Kristen Loomis, a Valle·
jo librarian and one of 32 people to
speak at the meeting. "Ten percent
or our population is gay. These
materials should be available to
them."
Titled "Out of the Closet," the dU>·
play is sponsored by the Pacific
Ce nter for Human Growth, a
Berkeley mental health and socittl
services agency for homosexuals. Jt
features photographs and books by er
about gays.
LEADING OPPOSmON to the dip·
play waa a Hayward parent, Darlene
K. Bogle, who demanded immedia(e
removal of the display. She said it
was not suitable for children and it
advocated homosexuality, which she
viewed as again.st Biblical standardl.
•
IEI v .,_ •~ 'y, parts of Riverside Tron11it Farr• ChnllPH~ .5 .. , ~~"*~rllt ounty and all of Jm.
~L-.i ...... 1 1 erial County.
SAN FRANC ISCO
CAP) -The state Social
Services Department
cannot r edu ce the
amount of money paid
und er the Aid to
Families with Depen·
dent Children program
because an unrelated
adult male lives in the
household of program
recipients, t he Court or
Appeal has ruled.
Joe Lambert of the Berkeley
Progressive Students Organization,
announced that the demonstration
was called "to build an educational
movement against Reagan . . . when
Reagan reinstates the draft and
Mrs. Bogle was joined by about :a
dozen people representing church
and other groups who denounced the
display as immoral a nd uq -
American.
The month-Jong dis play was
authorized by the commission last
March by a S..2 vote. LOS ANGELES CAP) -Los Angeles County's ----------Metzger, who ran on a approval of Proposition A's sales tax increase could
spread a $3.6 billion mass transit system over the
sprawling county -if it survives a potential legal
challenge.
The county's Trwportation Commission said
Wednesday it hopes to have some of the electric·
powered line operating by the end of the decade and
the whole system in place in 35 years, barring major
technical, financial or legal problems.
Gmeg "lolrn(•e .')oar•
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gang violence in Los
Angeles nearly doubled in the first nine months of
1980 compared to the same period last year, with
rob.beries alone up a whopping 212 percent, a
pohce report shows.
Statistics cited gang involvement in 2 683
crimes committed through September compa'red
to 1,439 gang-related for the nine months in 1979 -
an increase or 86.4 percent.
Robberies soared from 221in1979 to 690.
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan nssociation
Executive OfflcH: 7812 Edinger Ave.,
Huntington Beach, CA 92M7
Southern C•llloml• R-olon•I OfllcH·
st.n E. La Palmo> Ave., Anaheim, CA 92807
8956 Valley View St .. Buena Parle, CA 90620 te!!e Arnell! Rd., Camarlll9. CA 93010
20716 S. Avalon Blvd .. Ca~on CA 90746
23021 Lake C.ntar Or., (Lake Forest). El Toro. CA 92630
1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 G>
4140 Long Beach Blvd .• Long Beach, CA 90807 • 22938 HawthOf,,. Blvd., Torrance. CA 90506
1086 Irvine Blvd., Tu111n, CA 92880
236 N. Cltrua A¥e., Wfft Ccfvlna. CA 9l793
"Mercury Room" •v•ll•bl• on• r•••rvad buts
IQUAl
NOUSJllC: LfljO'(R
•
HAPPY "HOUR"
Our restaurants
will treat you with
complimentary "Refreshments"
Every Weekday Afternoon From 3 to 5 p.m.
NOVEMBER. 5-14
Amat o's
(Upper level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary European
cappucino with purchase
of dessert
Caffe Pasquini
(Upper level I Saks wing)
Complimentary dessert with
purchase of lunch.
Carl's Jr.
Back Bay Rowing &
Running Club
(lower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary scoop of
Haagen-Dazs ice cream with ·e
i."turchase of a meal. Kaplan's
(lower level I Sears wing)
Complimentary soft drink
with purchase of hamburger.
Lindberg's
(lower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary cake and
coffee with purchase
of lunch.
-Forty Carrots
(lower level I Saks wing)
Complimentary fresh fruit
shake with purchase
of entree.
Magic Pan
(lower level (Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary mousse with
purchase of lunch. Rendezvous Cafe
(lower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary popcorn.
Vie De France
(Lower level I Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary roll/croissant
with purchase of coffee or
Complimentary dessert with
purchase of lunch.
Riviera
(lower level I May Co. wing)
..
(Lower level I May Co. wing)
Complimentary danish with
• purchase of beverage.
Pronto
(Upper level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary pastry and
coffee with purchase
of lunch.
Salmagundi
(Lower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary beverage
with purchase of soup
or salad.
20th Century
(l ower level I Carousel courtf
Complimentary European
cappuclno with purchase
of dessert.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
, --..,-....... --
i
new thinking to the
Speculation Unfair
San Clemente voters have elected two men who both
say they will bring independent thinking and stability to
the City Council. Alan Korsen , who game.red the most votes Tuesday,
and Patrick Lane, a former council member who has
served as an interim councilman since summer, join
Mayor Karoline Koester and Councilmen Bill Mecham
and Robert I.imberg on the panel.
1be new council makeup has the potential to make
progressive and thoughtful decisions affecting San
Clemente's future.
Fears that Korsen will join Koester and Mecham to
form a special interest block determined to halt develop-
ment· in San Clemente don't appear justified from what
we have heard.
Korsen, who outcampaigned his opponents to win the
election, vows to "work together with all four of the other
council members."
.;·: And Lane, who candidly expressed concerns about a
~three-vote block, said he is willing to keep an open mind
~on the new council make-up.
( So should those who would create dissent so early in
~the ga~e.
~ompromise Helpful·
• . Saddleback College trustees and teachers hive ~reached agreement on a contract that provides for pay
hikes of 9 percent, 9.5 percent, and 10 percent con-
secutively over the next three years.
The salary increases for the 1.980-81 year will cost the
district $664,000.
1 While that is no small amount, the agreement i r=~~~nts a reasonable solution for the college and
.. The trustees eliminated the top five doctoral steps
from the salary schedule, thus cutting some cost to the
: district. ln exchange, teachers received assurance of'a con-
. tract through the 1982-83 year. ~ The two sides had been negotiating since May .
• While 40 teachers voted against the pact -many ap-
: parently because of the elimination of the five steps -a
: faculty spokesman noted that the agreement is a com·
:. promise between the inflation rate and limited funds.
i The contract also will give the teachers time to con-
; centrate on education for the next three years.
;. It looks like a reasonable and equitable settlement.
} .
! Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
! Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ! artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily P1101. P 0
: Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
·------------------------------------------------·-.
. .. Boyd/Politics
• ByL.M.BOYD
This moment occured when
Woodrow Wilson was gov·
emor of New Jersey. A U.S.
senator from his state died.
The man bad been a close
friend of Wibon. A Jersey
politician within minutes
telephoned the 11overnor. and--, .
said, "I'd like to take the
senator's place, sir." Wllaon
pauaed, then said, "You may
quote me as aayina it is
perfectly a1reeable to me if
• it's agreeable lo the un-
' dertaker."
Q. Can you name the only 1 word that's pronounced wrong
; by everybody whole primary
• lan1uaae ls English?
A. Won't blte, sir. The word
; is " wronc. "
t That room backstage where
actors wait between ap-
pearances before the au-
. dience la called the "1reen
room, ti clearly, becauae lt't
" cuatomarily painted 1reen.
Question artla u to why that
, particular color. Green wu ~ II
t " l Dear ' ,
Gloo1ny
Gu8
UnlHrtltJ ttudenta
WbO nua leGtrapby
qut .... put Nlcara1ua tn tbe a.an of Africa,
etc. may 1tlll ba ve pro_.... caNen -u
cllplomall. D.11.
long thought to be especially
restful for the actors' eyes
They felt they needed special
soothing treatment after fac-
ing those bright lights.
Q. A full· grown cow belch~
as much as 2SO gallons of
metbane gas a day. Meth.,,.
is nammable. My query: lf a
herd ol 40 dairy cows were to
belch simultaneously during
mi,.ini t(me at the moment a
' hired band was lighting up a
cigar. would the barn blow
sky high?
A. Don't know. Will ask
around.
Certainly helps lo have good
vision in both eyes rather than
ln just one. Hold your band
about half an arm's I en 1th out
from your face. Point your.
foreflncer strai1ht down. Wltb
tbe foreflnler of the other
hand pointed strai1bt up,
make a swoopln1 mot.ion wlth
your r1Cht arm to brinl Ups of
those two forefln1ers
toaether. Nothln1 to lt,lllbt?
Now try it with tbe left eye
c:loeed. Theowttbtherilhteye
clOHd?Youmbaed?
Cotta the avera1e workln~
man ln China three months
pay to buy a bicycle.
llare is the American wbo
has not '"" a picture of Ellaabetb ol York, wife of
Heney VII of ~ud. ltlt ber u11e ..... uaada ctedondlll
foul' q._ la 1tadard
p1ekotp1Qtnseardl. ·
Jack Andenon
l
Iraq Chemic
WASHINGTON -Despite the
near -hyaterlcal rhetoric
emanaUna from both Iran 'and
Iraq, tbe d~ connlct so far
has been leu than total war. But
U.S. lntelllaence analysts s•y
there la dancer of escalation in a
particularly gruesome area:
chemical warfare.
T he reason c hemical or
biological weapons have not
been used
m a y be
sl mply that
the balance of
terror in this
new field is
c learly In
Iraq's favor.
and the Iraqis
hav e b een
do ing well
enough with
conventional forces -so far
But If the fortunes of war should
c hange dramatically, Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein may
decide to slave orf disaster· t>y
resorting to chemical weapons.
Mailbox
Iran bas oone rel ely little
to develop chemic warfare
capabiUty, or defe a1alnst
such attacks. But sseln ls
known to consider mlcals a
useful mllitary t . Iraq's
modest stock lie of
chemical-bloloelcal pons ls a
legacf from Ha y rs as a
military client or e Soviet
Union.
The Iraqis bega actively
acquiring a chesnic warfare
potential in the mid· Os. As a
secret Defense In lligence
A1ency report pu it, Iraq
embarked on "an 1tesslve
chemical-biological· JologJcal
program , i nclu ng the
construction of tralni faclUtles
. . . inodeled after let CBR
installations.''
INTELLIGENC
di scovere d "at
locations" in lraq
obs.tacle cours e s
constructed with 'Ru
The extent of thes
sources
as l 15
re CBR
d been
an help.
training
la,cilitles "hithliCbls tbe
importance (the Iraqis> p1ac:e on
belnl prepared to operate ln a
contaminated environment,"
one secret report states.
The obstacle courses were
used u part of general Iraqi
army training. ''In lhese areas.
troops are instructed to bypass
or move through contaminated
obstacles and perform normal
combat duties while wearing
Jtrotective clothing," the report
notes.
"Each Iraqi division bu an
organic chemical company that
is equipped primarily with
Soviet-manufactured materiel
such as the truck-mounted
ARS -12 and DDA -53
decontamination apparatus." an
intelligence report states. "As In
the Soviet Army. the Iraqi
ground force has a chemical
branch. and CBR doctrine is
most likely based on Soviet
concepts."
Before relations with the
Kremlin cooled following
Hu11eJn'1 crackdown on 111141
communllll lo 11'11, the Soviett
reportedl)' auppUed 1mall
amount. of chemical warfare
a1ent.1 for trainlnt use.
TBS IMQl8 HAD "no known
chemical warfare production
capability, altbou1h the
technoloci9l bue rfql.llred to
produce Mtve a1ent.1 exilll, and
an attempt bu reportedly t)een
made to do ao," accordiq to an
lntelll1e11ce analysis . 1t
concludes ominously:
·'The Iraqis reaUae that, once
acquired, weapons of this type
could be used against ...
potential adversaries, such as
I ran and Israel. Numerous
weapons systems already in the
lraql inventory are capable of
d e live ring CBR munitions.
which would have to be
externally supplied.•·
Intelligence sources told my
associate Dale Van Atta that the ~
French. who replaced the
Ru ssi an s a s Iraq 's major
military supplier, have not
provided chemical weapons. But J
the Iraqis have built up a small
stockpile on their own. I
EX PORTING TRAGEDY;
Manufacturers who run afoul of
s tr i ngent feder a l s a fety
standards have a callous option
available: Like the companies
that found themselves with
stocks of baby clothes treated
w ilh Tris, lhe s us p ected
cancer-causing name retardant,
greedy manufacturers can
dump their goods overseas .
Now there is evidence the
federal government is helping
the United Nations fob off a
controversial birth-control drug
on unsuspecting women around
the world. The s ubstance is
Depo·Provera, and tests have
linked it to s terility and
conge nital heart disease in
women.
In a private letter to Rep.
Mario Biaggi, D-N. Y.. officials
of the Agency for International
Development admitted that.
despite attempted safeguards.
AID Funds may be helping to
underwrite a U.N. program that
is distributing De po· Provera
abroad.
Strings Attached to' Aff ordahle' Housing
To the Editor:
In response to the Oct. 22
editorial entitled "County
Tackles Hou.sing Shortage," ifthe
Board of Supervisors were to
wave a magic wand and create
10,000 units of affordable housing
tomorrow, the demand for "af-
fordable" housing in Orange
County wouJd not be met. As we
watch the supervisors perform
their miracles, remember that all
their grandst.anding is at the ex-
pense of every property owner in
Orange County.
The buyer of an •'affordable''
house can only sell that unit at a
price determined by the County of
Orange and that price is not to ex-
ceed the purchase price pl~ the
increase in the median income in
Orange County. In addition, the
county can decrease the sales
price by the amount necessary to
repair any damages as de·
termined by the county. They can
clean and paint and repair
without limitation a nd charge the
seller of an " affordable" unit.
THE COU~1 can take up to
five months to"'exerciae...their op.
lion to purchase a home and at the
end orthe 150days faO to consum·
mate the purchase and not be lia-
ble! The seller of one of these so-
c a lied' "al(otdable" units can
not sell It "By Owner" or through
the realtor of his choice ... he must
sell it through the Orange County
Housing Authority. The wont
part of this wonder cure is that the
buyer of a county-subsidi&ed
home will never be able to afford
to buy anythin& but another sub-
sidi&ed bome. A representative of tbe state
Department of Houainl and Com·
munlty Development hat stated
that thlt type ol resale restriction
sbould apply to all bouainl -aot juat "affordable" housing. not
juat sublidl&ed housing.
All of these lactl make 1ovem-
ment 1ublktlaed affordable boua·
ln1 the .-t expenaive boulU.,
avallab&e today. Other, leu COit·
IY, approachea to the problem
are available. •
VIRGINIA CIECK
Prestden$, Newport Harbor·
eo.ta Mesa Board of Realton
Sfttfl Tit•• ff••• 1
1o the Edlt.or:
Andy Rooney (Pii9t. Oct. 31)
la rllbt: "Let's make aome de-
mana. of Iran."
If lren want.a Amertca not to
latervme lD tM internal atraln
of Ir~ thin let's demand &bet ., .. a.a t.ck all of 1tl ., .....
ln tbe U.S. u part of tlae boltal• ...... DMnt. •
After all, the student~ill not
only learn medicine. 1cience,
arts. etc., but about dell()cracy.
human rights and rligious
freedom. which are itms the
present Iranian govtnment
want.$ nothing to do with
Give us the hostages lld send
the students home!
JJM 1eooM
B1•lng Dh·I~•
To the Editor:
Perhaps no better w could
be devised to divide aces,
create confusion and . estroy
public schools than for bus-
ing. ls it possible jud s like
Egly who rule in favo f bus·
ing are really on the o r side
after all and are only g the
work of those who wa racial
division and private sch
8 .
To the F.ditor:
A column by Milton M
on Conoco's Labor Day
just come to my attent and
deserves a reply. Mr. M owit& -
notes that our sales an earn-
ings have groWll subst ially
since 1970 but that empl ment
has grown only modest over
this interval. Both obser Uons
are correct. But his con ion,
that "capital is doing gr t for
its owners but not so ma lous-
ly for the work force, ti i
re ct.
CONOCO'S WAGE and
benefita per employee l 1979
were 2.7 times what they re in
1979: cllvidenda pald on mon
stock were up sU1btly le dur·
ing that tn&erval -2.3 mes.
The consumer price 1n
creased 1.8 t1met ln the
period. So while both em
and stockholders enjoy
P1111cla
financial gains from Conoco's
growth, employees fared propor·
tionately better.
When it comes to new Jobs,
Mr. Moskowitz fails to consider
that capital·intensive companies
s uch as Conoco typically create
more jobs outside their com·
panies than within. Here are
some examples:
-A new Joint venture to ex·
pand a petrochemical complex
in Texas created 3,200 construe·
lion jobs at its peak and sus·
tained an average o! 1.750 con·
structioo jobs for four years. But
these employees worked for our
contractors, not for Conoco or its
partner company.
-Conoco will buy 144,000 tons
of steel in the U.S. in 1980. This
creates jobs in the steel industry
and in the industries that s upply
steelmakers. but it doesn't in·
crease Coooco's employment.
-Conoco will invest S800
with fluorescent paint on a table.
A black light shining on it made a
spooky effect and the children
who came to the door seemed to
appreciate the display. Now it is
gone.
THE SKULL was part of a col·
lection from my past! My father
was in special effects at MGM
Studio and we always had in·
teresUng things for Halloween
and Fourth of July.
The skull was made of plaster of
paris md was fragile. It had bulbs
in the eyes so that it could be elec·
trically connected. I'm s ure
whoever took it will break it and
just toss it out.
lsn •t there some way young peo·
pie can be taught to leave thinis
alone that don't belong to them?
BARBARA WEBER
mllJion in the search for oil and To the E;ditor:
gas in the U.S. this year. It ls difficult to understand, I
Substantially all of these ex~n-told my wife, over breakfast.
ditures are made, ~hroug~ dnll-The levee had broken several
Ing c<W.racto~ Wlth tb~u own.~ ... daya ago. The water was baclted
e mployees -not Cono~o s. up behind a railroad embank·
Thousands of. new J?bs have ment.
been created this way tn recent There was worry Lbat tbe em-
years :-but they don 'l appear ln bank~t would hold, and that
the employment r.,cords of ma-thousinda of acres of farmland
Jor oil companies. would be flooded but they -.p-.,.,,, ,
We stand hr our claim that parently did not stop train traf·
stronger earrungs can provide fie on that stretch of tract. A
the capital to create more and train wu on the embankment
better jobs. when It broke.
EDWARDJ. MULLIGAN · That la easyt to understand,
To the Editor:
What is the matter wlth thia
generation of young people! I
know tM9 uk this question over
and over and have no answer.
On Halloween someone stole
part of our porch decorations. We
had a skull which was painted
my wife told me. The 1ovem-
ment 11 helpln1 to run the
railroad. Someone was tryinl to
phone the proper 1overnment
a1ency all of the while. The con-
nection would be brolten, theli
they would 1et a buay llne. 'J1Mn
wben they 1ot throu1h, they ~
would be put on bold for three
houn. 'Ibey would finally find
out that \Hey bad the wron1 de··
partma. 'J'taey would be direct-
ed to another department, and
tben the proceu would start
o•er.
In a few days, tlley mlabt bave
almoat Ucl tbelr ea1I compaeud,
wben tbe frel1bt train was
.,_eked out oa tM embaak ... t,
and itbrob.
That mak• ...... I told her,
lhaau'for the explanation.
JAMBS BOLDING
r
I
_...._ __ . •
CONSUMER
Keep _ _, PfleCa •••••
DltAaltUDEllS: -.IM9UUa•Wlea.-· • eadl.,... ...... V.8. C-....... aeue• 11ar.-.. .. ...., ........ -...... ...
a& a ....... nt.li t.Ha .. 811e7CM'& ........ 1-· .............. ,..,.. .... .., ........ ...
A ••• .-waeauea, "Year Vital Papen
........ ~" •87 ... a ................. ,.,. ,..
laHe all a .. 11t..a lada, n...-... ••ftlWY
c:99&adl I&,... ............. Pz'M be• by AdiM ,_ , .. ,,, .. ,., Matartly
<Alll), a .....uer _, ,,. ............. .....,..,. ...
a .... ,...-.. vllllla of &lie AIHrleu AmeelaU.
of ae&lrei ....... , tlae ........ CHlllU . el 29
,a, ... Apaee la pnrid~f• • ~ 1ae• 18· formatlaa u blrlll date, ace, ud loeaUea OI
reHr*; lH ..... ; , ..... ud 8-elal
Seeutty 1a1 .... a&1oa; •Mkal. MMal data; eredl& cam, eltarse aeceuu; a..... telkJ ....
bera, eoataeu; b••lda1, lavea&meat ••Ila;
employmeM. laietory; ed.ea&lea, •arrl•I• ; wllla,
real el&a&e ... .....U. TMn la ev• apaee .. pat
.._. ,_, • .,....,, by fWllll • ,_.. fa•Uy tree. ne ........ c1ata ... pndkal IMhke -taus,
aanlYW belteflu, wtlla ... ••&el. To obtala a copy el "Yeu Vltal Papen
Le1Mell," ...S a clteck or IMMJ oNer for $3.91
to: AIM Lo1book, P .O. Box ltZll·Sta. A,
Wa....,._, D.C .... Empl9Jen ... or1aab•·
"9111 cu order malUple copiel at ••udtJ dfa. ceaau.
Sit•.,.••• '01'er E•••'
DEAR PAT: I've been uain& eH shampoo
because I like its condiUonlne effect. I'd like to
know .just bow much e11 la in ea shampoo. Is
there a set amount or ls it up to the manufacturer?
S.J ., Lafun• Beacb
Wlaell ..... tacladed }!I ............... ...
Dra1 MelelatraU. rep&a&lllll penal& Ule _.
"•••" .. be_. .. Ule ...................... .. -.17 11 &Ml'e .. Ule .......... ., -.we ... ..
...... .,. -tlte lat.el bJ .......... .. I eaek "••r 111a1•• ta u.e ulltalller. Ba ••J be
"llla•poo w1t1a ea" er 0 u11ta1ee ea"..., If ea
-e.al<lltee at teal& Z pereeat el tlae •ndllet.
a.•elDer ._t pnteta ••terlala ... e&Mr eeMI·
deMn • .... ,... e ..... ,_. ... laalr ,.U • mue tlle laalr ••a.11.e ••• alllce laalr ......... .
DEAR PAT: Would you please give me some in-
formation about ailverflab? Is there anythlna tbat
can be used successfully to eradicate these peats
from a home? What do they live on? It seems that
I find them in closet in boxes with. books and
papers, and crawling on the ceillnp.
B.H., Huntineton Beacb
A YS la aeedbal btfonaatlaa .. 1• fl'Om Ule
Cooperative Est.euloa O• S. Barber BIYd.,
t\aaltelm IZIM). '11Ued "Slherftala ud Flrebrata:
Bow to ~trot Tlaem," &Ids leaflet <No. ZlttU
deserlbes tlleM lueeta' ltablta ud wltere dle7 are , ..... n.e foar types of c..vol allo are esplallled.
. A• YOll ltave DOtleed, •llftrf'lall Uve ... •ve)ep la eooA. damp plaeff. Tiley an r...& la beekeues,
cloeetl, llld places wltere boeb, e......,1 w o&Mr protein 1tareb, or aa1ar foods are •••liable.
Aeroeol IPflY•, baU packeta, II.Ilea 1el·bued Oita
or berk add powder are tlte mala .UftrftA em·
'"' ma&erlala. o.ee , .. &et rW ........ laledl,
'" cu prevat rebtfea&atlla bJ ..,.... bue· ••ta. .. ....,., ............. ~ deu-ud
drJ. Plac or ,.UJ ltolea or ,.. .. .,..... plpel
aad repair leab or drl,. la plamlllq. ~ .. eat
eloeetl pertodlcaU7 ud &et rtd of eld •apdlles,
papenUdbeeU.Oeeuleaall1,1HYe.....__,.....
la a .,_cue. Keep leodl • putJtes or klklteu
la eoMalaen wt&ll tlpt Uda.
t'\esa \7erde
\J iqe and ~qupr
sAllfMARTIN WIME SALE!-.
SAN MARTIN
1978 FUME' BLANC
Silver Medal Oranoe County Fair
Reg. ss.oo'3. 99 .. _
SAN MARTIN
<"
1978 PINOT CHARDONNAY
Bronze Medal L.A. County Fair
Reg. '8.0014."
SAN MARTIN
1978 SOFT CHENIN BLANC
Low alcohOl, lueck>ua. white wtne
Reg. sa.oo•J.99
AU750Ml. ..
The wl'*'** at S.,, M-'ln It Gonnln-tlofn Ed
Friedrich -"° brought the 80ft, •low alcohOI
wtnometdng 1tyto to c.Mtoin1a.'vou'1t IO\le 1t1 ~
•
...........
Symblonese
L i berat i on
Army member
Ru11ell Little
uked tbe Court
of Appeal in San
Fr.ancisco to
suppress
evidence which may be used in
bis secood trial
on charges he
murdered
Oakland School
Superintendent
Marcua Foster
ln 1973.
.
Meaaure to Save
Fann Land Nixed
oaoVILLE <AP) -Butte CCMmt7 ..... baY•
rejeeW one meuure to preaerve farm laDd.
Tiie meuure, defeated 3·2, wu aimed at pre·
v-=.lealltrot development, but opponents 1aid
it 1queleh *1'0Wtb· Tiie opponents ral1ed more than SU0,000,
mucb from developen, builders and real eatate ID·
terHta outalde the county, while the propoaeata
1enerated only $12,500. ,
$789.87
At this price,
·yotl Cafll fi stop
wishing for a
Betmnax .
I I If It t {I -. --------------. ----------------~-------·--. -. -------------.
•
• 5-hour recording capacity on a
single Betarnax L-830 vide~tte
'
j
.. • •
'!be Sony Betamax SL-5400 ca
records up to 3 days in advance. So
you can. go away for a weekend
fishing trip-and be sure you'll catclr
your favorite television enterta!unent.
• 20 consecutive hours record/
playback with optional AG-300
BetaStack Changer
• 3X Fast Play for quick review
• Freeze-Frame, to stop the action
initantly t
• BetaScan Remote ControJ
C.Ommander, to activate BetaScan
and Pause/Freeze-Frame
•Double Disp~ock shows
current time and the day and ··
time you've pre-programmed
, . . . You may never have another
chance like this one to enjoy all these.
Sony Betcunax features and Sony •
quality at a price like this. In fact. at :
thi,s.price there's no longer any ·
excuse for not owning your Betamax :
today. Come in and pick one tip, and
get ready to go away next weekend I ·seNv The Betamax SL-S400 also gives
you all these exciting features (who
could wiSh for more?): • 14-pushbutton Express Tuning THE ONE
AND ONLY
• Beta-I playback .. •Sony BetaScan: search in fast-
forward or reverse, at an average
10 times normal spe~. while
maintaining a picture on your .TV
•Audio Dubbing,. to let you record
commentary, music or sound to
previously recorded videotapes
'
Membership Departmeht Stores
•a.oouoeeROA/383!5 s . La Cleneaa Btvd .. Los Ana ... • 90018
•mlOOIAll ..... AWM0/'570 9 . Mt. Vernon Ave .• Sen ~relino 92410
•IW MM -00/&ilth & Euclid. San 06eao 92105
STORE HOUA8
LA CIENEGA. SAN 8EANARCMHO AND SAN DllOO STOMS
11:00 .. "'.'°1:00 '-"'· ~ I
CIAAfTOS.,COITA MllA. MIADDA MID YAN MIY8 aTOlllD!
12:00 noon to t:OO P."'· f
' I
. SATURDAYS SUNDAYS I
Alt .... tO:OO........ ... ....... Al ..... ,..··"'·'° 1:00 ..... :
All Fedco stores are now o'en j
· seven days a week 1
until Chrl1tm1s. j
.
i.
w=.=,....------...---...... ---···--............... ------,..._~_.._.~~~..-"'-... ......-..~....,. p _____ ..,._ ...
~ast l/aiC!etW1
no Harvey leads fake wtlcom to recent
ebate on whether such animals
ist. Debate was conducted at Orange
oast College in Costa Mesa between
ollege forensics team members and
representatives of the Mensa Society. Mrs.
Harvey and friend showed up during the
debate. It was revealed later that the
"unicorn" was an imposter. And a good
time was had by all.
Suspect
Break-ins
e of two'" suspects in an al·
burglary team that ranged
Ventura to San Dieeo. hit-
small businesses in office
plexes near freeways, was
, charged with rilllnc 11
port Beach firms near John
ne Airport.
ses from the firms amount·
about $1,500 in petty cub
postage stamps, police as·
ed.
ETECTIVE SGT. Jim
son said a Portion or the
ey and stamps was re·
red Tuesday from two cars
e El Monte home where one
the two suspects was ar·
ed.
even Sanchez, 23, was taken
cuatody by Los Angeles
nty sheriff's deputies.
vestigators s aid officer
vid Cox and a trainee
trolman were crusing the
nty airport area about 3 a.m.
sdaywhen they spotted a eold
rt car parked behind an of.
IT WAS TOO late for the
tor crews and they didn't re-
ize·it as belonging to anyone
knew had any business
e," Sgt. Carson explained.
e said the orficers staked out
car for some ti me, then
an searching the surround-
omce complexes, findini
ea burelarized with front
rs pried open.
e car was gone when they
med.
ey bad passed each other
' ewbere in \here amon1 the
ldings ," Sgt. Carson con-
ed, adding that a record.a
ck showed the car regUtered
lMoote.
Dana Repair Jobs
On Agency Agenda
Orange County officiala will appear before the South Coast
Regional Coastal Commission in Huntlnston Beach on Monday to
request permluion to make storm drain and street repaln in .
Dana Point.
Environmental Manaeemeat Aeeocy olftclala want to replace
a coocrete storm drain south ol Santa Clara Avenue between
Violet Lantern and Amber Lantern atreeta to allow a sreater
amount ol nmoer.
THE P&ESPIT B'l'Oa• DllAIN la 40 inches in diameter. The
county wants to install a M-lnch system.
County olftetala maintain the old system la not sufficient to
take care ol all the runoff that is eeaerated. The new system la to
be comtructed in the vicinity ol the old drain.
In addition, the county wanta to repair a portion of Santa Clara
Avenue damaged durine heavy rain UU. year.
STREET REPAIRS WILL REQUIRE about S,000 yards of fill
dirt plua repairs to the surface ol the roadway and sidewalk. Some
restoratkm ol the storm drain outlet also will be required.
Total C09t for the project is expected to be about $300,000.
Irvine Re••est
Council Chamber
'Cleanup' SoughJ
Irvine City Council cbamben
are due for a uttle spruciJll up,
says City Clerk Nancy Rowland.
She aays wood panellne should
be iDltaUed on the front ol the
council dais aad on the wall
behind the council seata.
She eddecl tbat an exislinl aerial pbotoeraph of the city
could be mounted behind the
press table and a projection
screen could also be placed near
the 1>botoerapb.
The Greater Irvine Industrial
Leagueplanatodonateacityaeal,
which could be mounted on
another wall.
Mn. Rowland is asking for
comment from the council mem·
ben on the plan, which would
coat an ealimated $850. City
employeet would do the inatalla-
tion work.
~ ollce said Sanchez remamed
~ ewport Beach City Jail in I of Sl0.000 bail and would be
aiened in Oran1e County
Slwppillg Cart Price
Fixing Charged in Suit
,. bor Municipal Court.
reams Rout
se Th~ef:-~
ben Christina Jordan
eamed, two youne men
bed aft.er the tbJef who stole
pune near Ralpb'a Market
lleaa'sHarborCeater. .
e thief eaca~. police aald,
he dropped Mn. Jordan'•
rae in front of Edwards
ema in the center as be fied
oot al abolJl 5:50 p .m . rs. Jord.,n. of 1924 Port tot Court, Newport Beach,
offle#I 1he was waltlq to
parked c.!ar with her amall
trben a man deacribed as
20 years old bit her ln the 11 ol the ~ck.
blow, she said, made her
the pune. The thief picked
the ba• and ran south from
supermarket area wtth two
dentifted snen in pursuit.
ANGELES (AP) -1be
Hforala Departauent of
~Uon appr'°ved a te·
luUoa permanently bllDlllnl
r or more aal• truck.I or
ck trailer rla/ from th•
cU\c eo..t Rl1bway between ant• Cmyon Boulevard and cker ..,..., The baa ~
ttm..-Y true9' ~-ch )ad been in efffftt ltDCe
ay 1'1, 1171•
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -
Five ftrma that make and sell
1hoppin1 cart• coaapired to
raise and tis prices, Safeway
Stores, "f.nc. all•1es in a federtl
civil ault.
Tbe pant supermarket chain
1eek1 unspecified treble
damaeea aealnst Roblin In-
dustries, Inc., Buffalq,. N.Y.;
Uaarco lndu1trle1 Inc.,
Cblca10; Gleuon Corp.,
llllwaukee; Technlbilt Corp.,
Burbank, and Tote-Cart Co.,
Rockfonl,ru. TechnJbUt la DOW a
dlmkln of Gleuon. Tbe suit al.lo
aeet• an IJUunction.
Safeway, which operates
Subdivision
Plan Weighed
For Laguna
Re1lonal coastal com·
mwlonen OD Monday will COD·
alder plam for a l4·lot aul>-
dlvlaion at tbe LDteneetJoa ol
Alta La1uaa Boulevard and
Park Avenue la La1una Bffeb.
....................... at. a.m, la .......,_ Beadl CltJ Council .. _..., a-. .-.a.
Huntlqtoa Sat.erprla .. ot
Saata Pe lfrlap ... to dl'fkli
lM't.luw--lat.MTopoftlllil
" ..... lato loCe • .,.,... .............. , .....
~ ............
... ol Aha Lqma
• wtaen Part A.-
• •
nearly 2,000 supermarket. lo
variow puts of the country, al·
leeea it purcbaaed sboppin1
carts directly from one or more A the defmdanta "at prices ln-
• "ftaled bJ the Ule•al aC?tlvtties."
The auit, filed last week, aaid
the defenilanta from 1• to 1977
accounted for more than 15 per-
ceat ol all abopptne cart aales ln
the Ullited Statea. Their ••·
1re1ate dollar yolume of cart
sales for 1172 tbrouJb 11'71 was
about '30I> !D1Won, the suit aaid.
AN INDICT•ENT was• re·
turned cm Sept. 4 a1alut the de-
feaclaau ln New York, and tbe
clvll suit ii bMed ID part upoo1be
alle1atiml m.cle ln tbe crimiaal proeeedlap.
SafewaJ .U..• that •tartlnl ln 1•or-8Dd coathualq at least
unUl JulJ 1177, defendaata and~
complnt.an -.a1ed ID • CGD· aplraey ID mareUGeable ,..,..._
ol trade. It claimed muufee-
tmen qreed to, ud U.. ln·
CNued, ~ cart prices IO
t b e '1 ~· a t D 0 D • compelJUYe level• wltb prlc.
compedticm curtalled.
'IV, Stereo Taken
I In Meaa Burglary
9ar1lar1 ••t•red DebH &:::'=~.:: ~-:.= wind aad •••• ,.,, ., ...
with 1lon Ht ••• 1tereo.
PoUeoe said the window blld
bMa.left op.a a crack to..,.....
moclaa. tbe W.vllMD utmna ca·
bl• ~to the top of the aper\-...... ..,..,.. .
LOCAL
62ANOOVER-
NOMINIMUM
BALANCE!
EARN INTEREST
ON ALL
VOUR MONEY! -
I
Earn intere:-.t at the rat<' of 511"0 ~('r
" year, compounded on your daily bal·
anct•, b eginning .January 2. 1981. No
monthl.v <·harge if your balam·e is $750
or more1 a nominal fc>e or $:1 per month
if your ba lan<·c i~ lowt'r ; :-\0 MIN IM l ':\J
for those 62 and (l\'(•r.
Be ready on January 2! Open your ac·
c·ount now -your initial check order
will he complimentary and your money
will earn at 5W~· -our r egular Pass-
book rate -until your checking service
ht•gin-.on .Ja nuary 2, 198 1.
_{l~UAa7~g~
~ ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION r ···~7 -, 1.:.1 BALBOA BRANCH I FSLIC
·--600 EHt Balboa Boulevard, Balboa. CA 92661 (714) 673-3701 1_;:_. _ _..~:: L.~HOaft [_7: \"" ........ ,,.._.., Add1honal offices 1n --
Laguna Beach 494-7541 • Laguna Hills 586·5100 • Glen Avon · 681--0111
San Clemente 492-1 195 • Lake Elsinore 674-2191 • 8e1mont Shore (213) 438-9421
Laguna N1gue1 496 1201 • Ohve 01ange 998-8400 • Murroeu1 (opening 19801 677-5632
PUBLIC MEETING
TO
DETERMINE YOUR OPINION
OF
PROPOSED ALTERNATIVE PLANS
FOR
NEWPORT BOULEY ARD (ROUTE 55)
COME TO THE WORKSHOP AND TEll US YOUR IDEAS
freewoy•{-••••
IRVINE
LEGEND
Completed
Adopt•d
IN
Collfornlo O.PeJiment of Tronaportotion (Caltrana) ond City of Coato Meso ore co-sponsoring o ,
public workshop. The purpose of this workshop la to display olternatlve tronaportotion Ideas to solve
problems Identified during earlier workshops. It provldn you the opportunity to dltcuaa your own
views regarding tranaportotlon olternotlvea along Newport IOulevord (ltoute 55).
Thia workshop la being conducted oa port of o 1tudy on present ond future tronaportotlon problems
olong ~port loulevord, (Route 55). The 1egment of this rout• .,.Ing studied e»etends from Poclflc
Cooat Highway (Route 1) In Newport leach to the end of the Newport Fr99WOy near lrlatol StrHt In
CoetoMeto.
The workshop la echeduled ot the following location:
Wetlnesday, NovemMr 11, 1W
South CCN11t eou-.
•00111 111 • .Acl111lnlat~tlon 8Ulltl1"1
SIP•lrDrlve c.t••·-..
'vblk worklhop1 .,.. conducted 01 port of the'contl-wlng Cltlaen 'ortlclpcatlon ''°''°m for the Route '
SS Transpotto11oft Study. Thie 1tvcty wllt produce o Ont~ lnvtror.mentot lmpect Stotement, ~luotf"lj
aev.,.I ,.-11ble aotutlons. Th.M Include hlghwo~. 1trHt and tronalt oltemettvea and theft,.._.
tlve envlrOl'ntentat lmpoct1 . -... For .,..,loftt or fwther lnfonnatton. pfeoM contoct Court .,,,.,,, ~ ,_.,, .. ;fer the atud,. et
the CCllh•• office, 1• I . Sprint ..... Loi Anplel, (21') ......
MEN~S LEVIS
OUI ..... HUM STota st,'" ....... w ...... ...,. .. ·--r:.. ...._ "' .. ., ........ . .... llten.11 ......... . E: ....... !12.a
c .... °" s12 • ................. .
CAU ~oalll
SOCKS
...-SAlelOYS' ................ ,_ .. .,,.. .. -..r"
for ..... c__. -...........
............. $1. .... $3.21. oua..rmw
STQCIC .. ALL STOltlS
40°4 OFF
MEM'S BELTS D..._ ..... ,, lly ............ _, ..,....
1/3 OFF '
CALL STO.ISI
BOYS'KMIT
T-SHIRTS .......................... -....
..... Al ailerl ....... S. M. L. IL
:a.=. ........ 53.a
TERRY SHIRTS
"H.::::r•" ''Left ...... "O.P ... .. ,_ ..... ...,.. ....... ... ............ ..,... ........... .. .au.. .... Slt.00 te Ul.00
113•F
CALL STOltHt
,
IOLT JEWELRY
...................... llL ....
U.OOte St ...
113•F
CALL STOUSt
MEN'S KNIT
T-SHIRTS
"Swfw• ............ .._.. ...... ...
... ..... Al alen. .. ......
SM L-XL
S,1cW.... $4 • ::ti~........ • s,......... I&. • ~=. ........... .
CALL STonst
MEN'S SWIMSUITS
"O.P .......... T• .. -e •"• w.wt" le)I
.., ...... ..,... ......... llL ...
21twJI .... $14.00 te Sit.to
40% OFF
CALL STo.Ht
MEN'S UNDERWEAR .. , .. ...,. ................... , ........
aj1nMrlL Sllila 21 te 40 IM lrlL
1/3 OFF CALL STOUSI
MEM'S SHIRT SPECIAL "Spire" .. ....._ .. ..._.._, .... .............................
S. M. L. IL
1/2 PRKE
CAU STOltlS DC.,. JACrS It
MEN'S & BOYS'
"O.P.'' SHORTS
Dellln ,.., wMw w • .,, .. • lllt
ww lety .t ......_ Siles 11 te )I. .... .
'3 a,• c ............. SAU PllCI •••. -I •
W.'• == 512• SAUPllCI .... e
• CALL SToalSt
:nA:. ....... ' ..... MIN•s S!ORT 1, ......... $12 • VB.OUR S'RIRTS
.... SJl.IO "Off............. .... I Jflll" ...
IAUPllCI ·..... • ..._ -.._. ..... 1hnea. 1,.......... • ................. Al ....
..... UJ.fl s14 1•11111 ....
IALIPllCI ••••. • . s II • ..... 1a2 _. ~ 2 .._ .... at.fl SAllfllCI .... •
IOYS' 11LEVIS"
D .... '"91 _. c.•or• .. IMll. ..... _. ........... -.2 ..
14. SA.
Sbn2te7 ............ 7 •
51 ...... 1 ......
510.a
IAU STOttlSI
Giil~' & LADIES' DIPT.
GIRLS' PANTS
'' Jor4eclte," "S.S..," "i.ler," ..... Cllr ...... '"C•1 ti De ......
........... Al ........ ..,, .....
..,... ............... 7 .. 14.
.... Sl7.00 te Pl.ti
1/3 OFF
IAU STOltHt
LADIES'
SWIMWEAR ....... ,_ ... ,....., w.., ...........
"SpH4o". Ler.. ltocll IHI .. •
........ l.2plece,etc. .. .., , ......... ..,....
.... Sit.ti tw szt.tl
OUI IMnll HU61 STOCIC
50% OFF
CALL STOttlSi
LADIES• BLOUSES
"O.P.'" -..r ':la'!~~ '"Sweet a.,
'-" '"Cq .......... I .......... •••rt tlHYe M-•••· bit ,.,,, .......... , ........ ...., .. ........................ "-'
1-M-L • ..... oo .. $32.00
113•F
OPEN DAILY
9:30 to 6
SUNDAY
9:30 to 5
WOMEN'S TOPS
SPECIAL
"H-. T•" "Splf'ft" "ITC.". Al c ............ ..,.....
51.• IJActrs 11 OM&.,,
LADIES• PANTS "C••• De,_ ............. ........
"Jer.t•c••" "S•••••" "lelt"
....... .. .. SplrW' .............. IOI'•
.-1 ...... .., ...... ..,....
............. hwt t11 ::l' ...._
..........................' I ........ 1~te-.etc..etc.Sll9tM
.. 15-16.
OUI i9MTla HUM STOCIC
1/3 OFF
IALL STOttlSI
DAMA N>IMT STORE OMlY
SKI BOOTS
CAIOll 260 su • I Siii.ti slb·twc1 .... •
TICMICA
No.aACIMe$ 9 88 ::t.:1
. 16 •
SURFER SPECIAL ..... .,.. ..... s,... s29 a • ... $41.11
SAUPllCI .... •
...... ...... 11. s4 a :a.~....... •
SWIMMERS' SPECIAL
''Clew W' ...............
1-..sz6.t1 s11 • IALINICI .... e
MEXICAN
LOPEZ JACKET ...................
.... Sll.00 IA 95 SALi NICI .•..•.. ...,,7 e
n.te ..._ 0111r et: .,_.., I _. II.
M••'tH_,O.. ...... lec .....
.RUNNING SHORTS ~
D ........ ....
a ... s14.oo SA • SALi NICI ........... °Ye
COAST HWY.
''Dolwnv P.tc Plaza'' ~DOl•fTPAa
DANA
POINT
SPALDIM6
I Sl40.00 aAJJO s79 88 S~NICI .... e
CIMTURY
2.IM .... J.5s139 • :lt.'=· •
DYNASTAa SPllMT
~"-005 115 a SALINICI. e
BINDINGS
nlAUA ISO s39 88 .... Sit.ti
SALi PltlCI .. .. e
nlOUA HO s49 • .... SH.ti ,
SALi PllCI . .. e
ROLLERSKA TES
....._,_wptop....._~ ..... ,_ ...... .,. ............. ,._ ... ~ .........
1.._ Slot.ti s79 88 SALIPllCI .... e
CtilGA T "NNIS
SHOE SKA TES
1.._sH.H $~~ •
SALi NICI . • • . ...
SPORT SHOES .;:=r .......... 5 17.a
$:5 .......... 5 17.a
Hlll•TllrfSt• ~:..:=~ .. 5 11.95 SALi PllCI ....•.....
W"'-1 ... •w-· . ~r.i .......... 516.a
WARM-UP_ SUITS . ........... ..
w ••••. ,. All 1/3 OFF sl'Ha, OI.,._. ,.... -
' TENNIS WEAR ·
''C..t C:....... . .. ~ ....... 2501 ........... /0 .,
JACK'S ANNUAL SKI SWAP
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15-SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16
DAMA POINT STOii OM. Ytl
PLEASE .NOTE
............ W •I s·i:-_. ...... NeRl t ,........ =..................... . ......................... ..
-~............. .
l
-
D111&.'tN..OT .a.AC .
Proposed Sewer IJne \ HasslE,.Brewb;lg
N~ ActWUi Citea Endangered Species
., .......... . ..............
eoatrov•nlal H••r UH tUt would ,.. aloQl lhe
el Upper N•wport Biy it
;•11"1.a to .Ur -.., eavlrolunen·
ti wfMD It com.. up for a
tal Comm.laioe vote. Mon·
in Hunu.p.a BHcb.
Baek Bay truat Hwer, as
l ropG9a1 ia called would ex·
from th• b .. ln of Bll. yon south alona Back Bay
9rive to Newport Du.nea, where
it would hook into an exillinl
Mwerline.
A SJMILAa propoaal was
tbrowb out in lt'f 7 by state
coastal commiaaloners alter the
Oran1e County Sanitation Dis·
trlct project recei ved
permission from city, water
quality and other state officials.
"Thia Ls virtually the same
project that was rejected three
years ago," contends Newport
environm e ntalis t Frank
Robinson, who was instrumental
in blocking the sewer line in
1977.
Robinson ar1ues that the
sewer line would disrupt habitat
areas of endangered species
Irvine Police
Slate Auction
The Irvine Police Department
will conduct a public auction
Dec. 6.
The department periodically
auctions unclai med property re·
covered by police officers.
The 10 a.m . auction will in·
elude 100 bicycles, sports equip..
ment, car ste reos, household
items and auto parts, which all
can be purchased by check or
cash.
........ tUt ........... a vlol.a·
doe ol tbe Co.atal Act.
Propcmenta ot the project HY
&be bay Mwer line re111alm t.be
moet eeoDOllllcal and ,..liable
way to prcMde Mwer capeelty
for tbe reeently built-up .,..
around' 8'.I Canyon and nearby
Harbor View Hilll.
TB& &\CK MY line, accord·
IDI to environmental docwnenta
fll41d by sanitation offlclal1,
would ~t rou1hly $818,000 to
build and.about Sl,000 a year to
maintain.
Other altemaUve1, 1ucb as
puttln1 the 1ravlty-flow line
alo.q Jamboree. Roadl would
coat more. Tbat route, lt is
estimated, would cost $2 .8
million to construe~.
Sanitation o(flc1als maintain
new sewer capacity is needed
because the exi.stinl pump sta-
tion and the sewer ·11ne lt ties in
with are operating at seven
times the designed capacity.
They say periodic overflows at
the pump s tation spill raw
sewage into Big Canyon from
where It eventually is washed into
the bay. That's happened u re-
cently as last July. they said.
l.agaaa Niguel
Altbouab lt bu not 1•t
become a polnt of cootenlion,
tb• new t.y llDe would aeec>m·
modate a addltloUI population
In the area of about 1,000
Cnom or more tban 1,000 new m•.
Altboulh coutal eommluklll
plannen are recommendlna •P-
proval ot ~ bay line project, u
tbey did tbne years a10 before
it wu dented, tbey <also have
su11ested that a lenltby liat ol
conditloaa be attached.
Amooa the condltiom la a con·
structlon timetable so that work
won't interfere with plant Ule or
with the nest1n1 ~eason for
~everal blrda. .
Tbe endanaered species that
frequent tbe bay Include tbe
California Leut Tern, the Beld·
in1'1 Savannah Sparrow and the
Li1bt-Footed Clapper Rail, a
lon&·leaed marshland bird.
E NVJaON MENTALIST
Robinson, who said he'll be on
hand Monday lo oppose the
sewer project, contends the bay
line not only will disrupt the
lives of these spec.iea, but also
the people who go to the bay to
enjoy them.
Coast Commission
To Rule on Units
The South Coast ~gional
Coast al Com m ission is
scheduled to rule Monday on a
request by Broadmoor Develop-
ment Co. to build 405 housing un-
its on a 212-acre parcel In
Laiuna Ni1n1el.
dominium units and 96 afforda·
ble housing units on another 55
acres. About 141 acres ls to be
left ln open space.
Chlorine
/Northern
'···"··~. ,,.·· ~thern • L ,. :... ..... .. .. .. . ..... • •• ·~ ~
Alignment
Alignment
Big
Canyon
JOAQUIN
0 HILLS ROAD
~ 0 a:
PROPOSED SEWER ROUTE
Controveray In Newport
• Newport
Center
LONDON CAP> -PrlDC918
Aue la apeetlni ber MCl9d
cbtld ant 1prtq, Buekinp1m
Palace bal amaounced.
A ~m• aald the baby
w11 ue in May and that the
princ,... dau1bter of, Queea
.Elisabeth II; WU in "excellmt
health". He aa1d abe would be
carryina out all fortbcomlDI
public enca1ementa already .,..
ran1ed.
The palace 1ald tbe queea ad
her husband, Prince Pbutp,
wer.e told the DeWI when they re-
. turned to Britain trom their re-
cent 1tate vlalt to Italy and
North Africa. They were 1ald to
be "dellpted."
The new baby will be the llsth
in line to the throne. · ·
Princea1 Anne'• firat child,
Peter, wu bom three yean .,o,
one day after her fourth wedd.iq
annlvenary to buaband Mark
Phllllpe. Peter was the queen's
first grandchild.
The princess's pregnancy will
be handled by George Pinker,
the queen's gynecologist.
Peter's birth in the private winl
of London'• St. Mary's Hospital
was trouble-free.
Plant Burglarized
In Costa Mesa
Thieves took 90 gallons of noor-
i n g resin from California
Decorative Coatings Co., 1781
Whittier Ave., Costa Mesa, early
Tuesday, police report.
Entrance to the firm, officers
said, apparently was made with a
key. Value of the resiJ) was listed
at$2,02S.
Consumers Asking Milk ·Cut
It will be held in the Irvine
Police Department parking lot.
The merchandise will be availa-
ble ror inspection one-hall hour
before the auction begins.
The site -of the proposed de-
velopment is west of Crown
Valley Parkway adjoi ning
Pacific Island Village at Pacific
Island Drive a nd Talave ra
Drive.
In Water SACRAMENTO (AP) -A He said it would reduce the
consumer organization is asking milk surplus, and reduce the
average prices are expected to
rise a few cent.I to about $1.03 in
Los Angeles.
Profits from the auction will
go to the Irvine city general
fund.
For Information call 754-3726.
Broadmoor wants to build 28
single-family dwellings on a
15.3-acre parcel, plus 281 con-
..
Lagana Beaeh
:::Marc Winthrop
::city Attorney
·· Marc Wintbrop has been named city attorney
'of Laguna Bttach, succeeding Bill Keiser, who
foined the Long Beach City Attorney's staff.
· .-· Winthrop. 32. q,f Laguna Beach, served as as-
sistant city attorney prior to his appointment. He
llao has served as assistant city attorney In La
Palma and deputy city atU>rney ln Yorba Ll.nda
·and Irvine.
· A 1974 graduate of UCLA law school, Winthrop
bas been with the Santa Ana law firm of Rutan and
Tucker since 1975.
Winthrop will attend both City Council and
Planninl Commission meetings, whereas he and
Kelaer bad previously sha red thoee duties.
MOVES UP IN LAOUNA
L-1 Aide Winthrop
Talent Bank
Center First of Kind
By JOYCE L KENNEDY ... ·'· ;:_;,!Dear Joyce: I am a womu wtao .,ta a~ civil aenlce or pollUeal ~ _..~di .... ,. .... Ad·
. ce!
'. • · ·....IC'f'.B., 0.llaa, Tes:aa
:~-:
: • Concerning the merit 1ystem,
' a1hiqton Monthly ~tor Charles
ten aays 1ettin1 a 86.,vemmeat Job
only the moet modest relaUon to
erlt. •
In b1a new book, "How Wuhinltoo
eally Works," the lawyer·joumaliat
tea "For non-veteran.a, tbe trick la •et their names requested from
Offlce ol Penonnel Manqement
the aiency fllllnl the Job, and the
way to do tbat la to know someone in·
lllde tbe .,ency. People already in ~)he 1y1tem are tbe fint to know
bout a Job open1.n1. and lmowlnc ..,..Jlotb tbe applicant and the job, they eu taUor the Job deacrlptlon to ftt
penoo they want to blc.. lo t.be
vii Mrvlce la a f atrona1• rtna
aHd not OD po ltiCI bat OD
~D. l!»lden call lt Uw 'buddy ~ 1,at.em'.f' ,. .
~ SYSN MlalNG 108 freaea, t.be
·,J1a1 ... people let in " tllroulb ··DI...,......, or part-time routee;
'part-time can be • boun per weell imd tnlDGl'8l'1 ... be like tM man
wbo came to~. • Mtde from eultmUnc lalkll belp, ;.!~ polttlUDI H •mplorment .... q~ln· lia lont .... al ' tderal Sob 1n1ormauon ~.L-~ aW1 wttb U. MW IMrKA •. ~,....c.,.. eeae.-..... • ... if ?! 7 I I,,'..,.. ......... .: 18! o.c ..... ,,.. d .. ter•afeDCJ lllDOrltJ an remale
ll.cndW'I AllOdadoa-'1
J
( CAREERS )
Designed to ~"one-stop recruit-
ln1 information ""'i'lfd referral. service
that wUl locate minorities and
women for bard-to.fill Jobe, and for
Jobs in which they have previously
been excluded," the cent'9r's founder,
Von Payton, berseU a federal penob-
nel 1peciallat, aays the nationwide,
federal 1overnment-wlde center 11
tbe f1rat of lt.s kind.
OPEN TO ANYONE except white
males, the center aims to circulate
appUcaUom amon1 varloua a,encles
and live help in fillinl out federal ap.
pllcaUon fonm and advice on bow to
make a iood lmpreaaion durlnl ID·
terviewa. JIUl'RA aoon will publlab, ID Enlllah and Spanlah, a pamphlet
on how to 1et a job in tbe federaJ.1ov·
ernmea&.
The 2,500 or IO ~UUeal cream
~~~U.~:1:atc~u::~~!~~~
UM "Plum book." The offtctal DalM
ta ··u .8. Government Polley IDd a.ap.
port1n1 Po1T tion1 ," SN
OU-O'ICM15'31-1. Y~ 1hould be abM to
ord•r a copy ln January from &be
Superintendent of Documentl,
Wub•npm,o .c .llNOa.
S thestatetocutfourcentsoffthe farmers' incentive to over-U8peCl price that the farmers get for a produce.
half gallon of milk. But farm groups opposed such
M I A M I ( A p ) H arr Y 'Sn Y d e r o f the a cut, and denied that the sur-
U n r e leased cancer Consumers Uriion made the re-plus ls more than they can han·
s t u d i e 5 f u r t b e r quest Wednesday at a Maring of die. Some said they would ac-
s t re n gthe n the link the California Department of cept a cent cut as a public rela·
be t ween h e a vi l y Food and Agriculture. lions gesture. But they added that
chlorinated drinking The department d irector , the real answer ls a cut in the
Three years ago the price wu
68 cents in Los Angeles, 72 in
San Francisco, and 69 in
Sacramento.
water and cancer, ac-Richard Rominger, delayed a federalsupportprice. decisioo. BAKERSfl.ELD CAP) -Aft.er cording to a member of In September, milk waa eight boun of diacussloa, the
the U.S. Council on En-SNYDER predicted that such selling for 99 cents a half.gallon city council here cboee usbtmt
vironmental Quality. a cul would increase t he sales of in Los Angeles, 94 cents in San city manager Phil Kelmar to The studies, based on 'lk b 2 t th . F . d 92 t i replace retiring city mana"er analyses of thousands of m1 y percen -e increase ranc1sco, an cen s n •
cancer deaths lo North -=g_oi_n~g_to~the--=poo~r-·~~~~~~~S_a_c_r_a_m_e_n_t_o_.~T_h_e~O_c_t_o_b_e_r~H~ar_o_ld~Be_r_g_en_·~~~~~~
Carolina, Illinois ,
Wi sc onsin and
Louisiana , "should
make believers of many
of the scientists who
have been disbelievers
In the past," said Dr .
Robert Ha rris, one of
three members on the
president's council.
HE SAID THE report
will be released as part
of a nationwide study of
drinkinl water quality.
Harris told a Miami
chapter of the Sierra
Club that studies under
review by the council
"a dd substantially to the
evidence that there a re
measurable adverse ef·
fects from the chlorina-
tion of water."
The wide practice of
chlorin ating pub lic
drinking water appears
to Increase the rtak of
1utrointestinal cancer
over a penoo's lifetime
by 50 percent to 100 per-
cent. Harris said.
MANY U.S. CITIES
use high l e vels of
chlorination to kill b•c·
terla In their water
systems and to bleach
out brown colors.
,.
If your kids
saddenly start
reading your ·
daily newspaper,
. it may ·be our
I fault!
~1 ~ • ~ 4 • We 're worried about the growing rate of
illiteracy In America. Concerned about our
young people. Interested in the quality of
education in our schools. And we're doing
something about it. We have invited teachers in
more than 175 schools along the Orange Coast
-A
A link between cities
that heavily chlorinate
dr i nking water and
cancer mortality bas
b e en difficult to
establish·
to Jearn how reading the daily newspaper can add to
students' confidence, credibility, and self esteem.
Me88 Student
\Vim Honors
Dave Wensley, a
...Uor ~lnell major at
tJSC uid IOD of Mr. and
Mrs. David \Veasley of
Co1ta Mesa, bu been
1elect,e4 to the Order ~
Ome1a. a national honor
society.
Wen1ley 1raduated
from Eatancla High
School in lt'11.
o .... Viewed
COALINGA ~AP) -
ID an effort to keep
1prlDf runoff from
damql.nl the San Lult
Caaal MU' bere, the U.S .
~.of~OWM a..o.'9 lentte ma1
•pend. mllUoa to build
fo11r dam•.
Newspaper in Education is a significant
advance in education. More than a catchall for
current events, this unique program provides
an exercise In comprehension, perceP.tlon,
values, and practical llfe experience. So If
your kids ask you for a daily newspaper, say -
yes. Remember -knowledge is power. And
we're a mighty pQwerful piece of reading.
DAILY PILOT
'
I •••••• \
-~~~~"''l';;:tft~ ua:••----·~~ _...,..._.~-~
-
081TUMIES 1 LOCAL ,,.....~1;1lllO
Doctor Discusses
Sex in SjJor~
By ~R. PE;TER STEINCROHN
Dear Dr. Stetacrohn: I have been hearing con·
fiictlng reports. Does or doesn't engaging in sex 24
hours before an athletic event decrease the
athlete's efficiency?
I th.ink this lnformation would be valuable for
thousands of athletes -and interesting to millions
of spectators of sporting events -Mr. E.
Dear Mr. E.: J had my own vag\le ideas on
thla subject until I recently received a news re·
!ease from the American Medical Association ·that
as interesting and Informative. Here are some of the observations:
The Minnesota Vikings played the Pittsburgh
steelers in Super Bowl X. The Steelers were al-
lowed to spend the night before the game with
their wives in their hotel rooms. But the Vikings
were sequestered from their wives for several
days. Guess who won? The Pittsburgh Steelers.
THE CONCLUSION OF DONALD L. Cooper
M.D .. expert 00 medical aspects of sports, wa~
that the outcome depended upon superiority of
eame·play; that having sex before the blg game
bad absolutely no effect ' DOl"ftl'T,OR IN .., on the eventual outc~me.
"' 1' Dr .. Cooper believes THE HOUSE that ~he idea of not "" ~ engagang in sexual ac·
---------tivity because it will take
away from an athlete's performance "is one of the
many ~myths that bas crept into our society
and bu been around so long, it is widely accepted u truth.''
Most team physicians feel that a normal pat·
tern·of sexual practice is not detrimental as long
as a proper amount of sleep is obtained.
YET,. SAID DR. COOPER, "THE myth was
and la ltrlctl)t adhered to by manaaen of prize
nahters who tried to keep their boxers away from
tbelr wives and girl friends for months and weeks at a time."
Dr. Cooper concluded that if it would help re-
lax some tension and make it possible for the -a~blete to sleep better, sex could possibly be con-
sadered a slight benefit.
* * * Some doctors believe that every case of obesi·
ty should be considered one of potential diabetes
says Dr. Steincrohn in bis booklet, "Watch Yo~
. Diet Because Fat Can Kill You." For a copy write
him at Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626, enclosing so
cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
ISJMINS ereno.. ~., c. North -er..,.
JaAN CltaA JENKINS, ... u •• oaupi.r ~ J. Ho<'rlt llolll of
....... "' MIMklello, llllllO!a. Pe.-HllMI,....., IN<ll, c. .. I slslaf ElolM _.,on.......,,~ J, '"°et Orr of Mii-•, WIK-111. Siie WIK
Peclllce ~. HUllll,.._. lleecll, prec9Cle0 In dNlll by • ~r Hall
Ca. Mrs. Jelllllfts...., -tN Society Norris In 1'71. Memorlel .. rvlcn will
allltar, -... , llUllNnll Jotln I.. lie C...oucled on Sunday, Hovetnber 9, Jenlllnt, llecl llMh Ille A11tomotlv• tteo •I 2:00PM M me ,.lrst Unllecl
a111tor tor Ille Oii~ Tri-. llolll Metllodl1t Cllurcll of H11ntln9to11
ratlrfne 111 19'0. si. movact to Ille a..c11, Inter,.... will tau Ille<• et T~ -ef1IW Mr • .,.,...,,.., cleetll Memorlel P-Ge,.... . .,.., In s .. 111e, II•
lfl lfU. 11'9 ~to HUfltl"lton 9Hcll, llllOIL Tiie family ..,..._,, r.-itlW-
Ca. IA 1m. SM -• -of 110111 be -to ti. ,.lrat un1tect
Mle "'"' UN• Metllocttst C...Wcll of Matllodflt Cllurcll 811llct1119 ,..,net. H11ntfft411M a..dl. Sllrvlvl119 ar• • Piere• Brothers Smfllll' Mortuary
----------CllrectorL ~
l ' Arraignm~~t Del~yea
Court Confuaion Slou. Slaying Ctue
By DAVID KlJTIMANN
Ofllll90eMJ ..... IUff The Oranae County Superior
t Court arn.ipment of two sua·
J>4!Cla in the so-called freeway
Jllllinp ol four youn' males wu cut short when c:ontualon aroee
over who wu to represent one ol
the defeadants. ·
Proeeedin1s were rescbedUted
for Friday.
But as a result of Tuesday's
delay, neither Vernon Butta, 23,
or Downey, nor Gregory Miley,
19, of Houston, Texas, was able
t-0 enter a plea in Superior Court
Judie Richard Beacom 's Santa
Ana courtroom.
THE TWO men were indicted
separately by the Orange Coun-
ty Grand Jury last week on
charges or murder and kidnap-
ping in connection with the
brutal slayings or four young
qien whose nude bodies were
found near roadw'ays between
August, 1979; and April of this
year. Butts is charged with
three killings and Miley with
one.
Also contained in the indict·
ments were special death penal·
ty allegations against the two.
However , efforts to arraign
Butts and Miley Tuesday were
unsuccessful because of the un -
cert ainty over who would
represent them, particularly
Butts.
BEVERLt' BILLS attorney
Larry Steinberg a ccepted a
special appointment by Beacom
in MUey's case.·
But most of the confusion had
to do with the slender Butt:s, who
also faces murder charges in
Los Angeles County.
His attorney during earlier
Los Angeles proceedings, Joe
Ingber, was involved with
another criminal case in
Pasadena Tuesday and was una-
ble to come to Orange County.
ARRAIGNMENT POSTPONED IN FREEWAY SLA VINOS
Su8pecta Gregory Miiey (left), Vernon Butta
Deputy District Attorney Jay
Mosely said Ingber told his of-
fice that case could last up to six weeks.
BEACOM 111EN attempted to
secure court-appointed counsel
for Butts, but both the public de·
fender's office and attorney
John Barnett cited conflicts of
interest in turning down the re-quests.
Barnett worts for the firm or
Giles, Callahan and McCune,
hired by the coWity to handle in·
digent cases the public defender
cannot.
San ~uan Creek
The firm, however, a lso
represented another. freeway
killer suspec~, William George
Bonin, during earlier proceed-
ings in Los Angeles, thus creat-
ing the conflict or interest situa-
tion, Barnett said.
Finally, Beacom said he
would select attorney Larry
Bruce to represent Butts, but
since Bruce could not be present
in court Tuesday. the arraign-
ment was PQStponed to Friday. I
THE DELAY. the judge said,
also would give Ingber a chance
to appear in Orange County
Superior Court. if he chose. to
represent Butts.
According to the indictments.
I
Contract Awarded
On Chanrwl Walls
An $84,8216 contract to raise the
height of walls along a portion of
the San Juan Creek channel in
Capistrano Beach was awarded
by the Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
The board's action was the
latest move in a multi-agency
tug-of-war oo bow to deal with
potential flooding problems that
might arise because of buildups
of silt near the mouth of· the
channel.
THE COUNTY and the state
Coutal Commission are still at
odds over the county's original
plan to hire a contractor to re-
move the silt.
Coastal Commission decision
and have threatened to sue the
state should a more favorable
decision not be forthcoming.
Meanwhile, county officials
argued emergency work was re-
quired to prevent any
floodwaters that might race
down the channel from pouring
into the creekside sewage treat-
ment plant operated ,by the
South Eastern Regional
Reclamation Authority. Such an
incident occurred during last
wint er's heavy rains. The
sewage agency has sued the
coudty for $1 million as a result or
the flooding.
Butts is charged with the
murders or Mark Duane Shelton,
17, or Westminster ; Darin Lee
Kendrick. 19, or Cypress, and
Robert Christopher Wirostek. 18,
of Newport Beach.
The as p i ring magician
already has been charged with
the Kendrick and Wirostek kill·
ings by Los Angeles authorities.
The indictment against Miley.
who once lived in Bellflower,
charges him with the murder or
James Michael McCabe, 12, of
Garden Grove.
The indictments againU Butts
and Miley allege they acted in
concert with Bonin in the string
of homosexually-related slay-
ings.
2 Sought
In Slaying
Of Student
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A
couple aougbt in the slaying of a
Sacramento State University
fraternity member and the dis·
appearance of bis girlfriend ap-
pa rently fled through Reno,
police report.
Officers said the car in which
witneaaes last saw the victims
was found in the parking lot of
the Circus Circus casino in
downtown Reno.
Police said they are seelrine
the person to whom it was reg.
istered, Charlene Galleeo. 24,
and Gerald A. Galle10, 34, who
they assumed to be her husband.
MISSING IS Mary Beth
Sowers, 21. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Hal L. Sowers of Redwood
City. ,.., ...... ,
COLONA&. fUMHAL
NOMI
Under the county proposal, the
: sediment would have been given
• to the contractor for resale. Gobblers Key The body of her boyfriend,
Craig Miller, 22, t he son of
Roberta Smith of Sacramento,
was found Sunday near Bua 78Q Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525 ~
rAc.ec Yllw
.-..OllA&.PAH
Cemtterv Mortuary
Chti>el 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach
944-2700
Deatlu Sucb a move would have sub-
1 stantially reduced the county's Elae1A1here : ~fesatr:i~ having the channel
The Coastal Commlssi<>n re·
Jected ~ plan, claimlnc that
the sand was property of the
state and that all removed sedi·
ment would have to be deposited
at Doheny state Beach located
where the channel empties into
the sea.
S~IEGO <AP) -
Pa•I leer•a•, 76, a former member of the
Metropolitan Water Dis·
trict and the state's
Water Pollut1on Board,
dled Saturday. He led
the flaht to move
Feather River wat~r
f r o m N o r t h e r n·
California to the San
Dleaoarea.
LB Gardeners
Meet Friday
llembert of the
J,.11uu Beacb Garden
Club will meet at t1 a .m .~y at the
NeiaH Con1re1a·
tlonal Church, '40 St. Ann 'a Drive.
Further information
may be obtained by call·
ln 4tT· .
UllTHI
DAILY PILOT ..... ,
lllULri•
IMYICI
DlllCTOIY
Por..Jl•ult.-Sen1-, ... Call
641-1671
1111.111
COUNTY OFFICIALS con· tend removal of the sandy
material for redepoeitioo on the
beach would cost about $580,000.
They have .filed an appeal ot the
Road Work
ToBe~n
North Coqt fflabway
between Myl1le Street la
La1~a S.ach and the
IOUtbera Umlta ot Coron.a
del Mar wW be reeurf1ced
bellnalN llonclay. ome lanu of the ........ , wtll be elMM
duriq tbe faeellft, but not ~ peak tr.me lloun, ~conliDI to Cal Tram of.
ftetall.
The won trtll be -. br v..,. PaYiq Com·
~-.. ~ .... -. ........... comp .....
.., "'-~ fll U. ,..,, •
• --'"' ... . To Smokeout
A tu.r~ race w411 hiehlleht UC Irvine's No'f. 20 obeeriance
of the American Cancer
Society's 1980 Great American
Smokeout, a day in which people
are encouraR_ed to qui~ smoking.
The festivities will beain 1t
11: 30 a. m. at the UCI Campus
Park. Local busineaaes and stu·
dents and faculty from UCJ will
be spomorlng costumed turkeys
partlcipatine in 1 race.
For information call 752·8800.
Students Get
Hal,/ Day Off
If )'OU Me an unusually larae
number ot Lquna Beach Hlah
Sebool atudeDtl on the beach
Monday att.rnoon, don't call the
truant officer. The blah
aeboolen l9l ball the day off
Monday .. tbetr teaclten ud
other lebooJ employ ... prepa ...
an accreditation report. a...
wlll be ....... to • miD1ltel .. eaa • tile ftnaJ bell will rtnc.
at 11:• a.m., offtelalJ at tbe
hlab ldliool mmounced.
' Nuke t'alke Held
• e&HllYA; 8wttnrt1nd (l\P)
-U.S., 1811 lovtet ne1otlaton
TuHd•J b•ld th•lt Hventb
meettq on Umltln1 nuclear mil·
sites ln Europe. ,
• • t
·•Lake JI El Dorado County, abot
three limes in the head. He still
had bis wristwatch and wallet,
104 b8on the clothes be wore
td the Sigma Pbl Epsilon party
at a suburban Sacramento
restaurant Saturday ni1bt.
Placer County Undersberiff
Don McDonald uid an air and
cround search failed to locate
Miaa Sowers, a petite blonde
Who WU Wearinl a noor·leqtb
peasant dreu, a necklace bear·
log the lnaipla of the Alpha CbJ
Ome1a eon>rlt.Y. and a dlamood
and ruby ring that Miller hid given her.
A MElllBEa OF Mlller'a
fraternity told police he saw
M Uler and Miss Sowen ln the
back seat of a car lo the
restaW'&Dl parkin1 lot 1t 12:30
a.m. &nday.
Poli~ said they dete~
that the car wu. drtven by
Charlene Oalleao. and ~ Gerald Gallego w• in the
seat.
The frat.rntty memDer said
oaneao warned blm awa1 from
the C!!!J . and that Miller told
him. '-.wall ao place for you."
Polle. LL II.al Tarlor Mid of •
ftcen bl,...U,attq a mlll&q peraon1 report 'flied by tit• paHnta of Miller aad lllH
lowen qn•thMd Mn. GaiJelo
later ...-, at w apartmmt.
T•1• 7jii.:-abe Ud ..._ -Sdldla't taownatW .
After I WU die·
COHNd, aftken .......... to tllia
OallelD .._., but Mra. G.U. udblrcarwere,_., ,
Pageant
Renetm
• 'Tarzan'
ATLANTIC CITY,
N.J . <AP> -The former
televlaion Tarsan who
replaced muter of
ceremonies Bert Parka
on the 1981 Mias
America Papant bas
aotten b1a contract re· newed.
''I'm deliibted to be
back," said lton Ely, 40,
ol Amarillo, Texas.
l!ly wu the 1Sth man
to play Tanan and the
first to play the ape man
on television, starring
on the series from 1986
to 1989. He's the current
host or the syndicated
1ame show "Face the
Music." ·
On Sept. 8, Ely pre-
sided over the corona·
lion of Miss America
1981, Susan Powell of
Oklahoma.
G...n.._
Forty-four years of
service in Q>ngreu
ended with election.
def eat of Washington
Sen . Warren G . ·.
Magnuson. Powerful ·
Democrat told sad
backers he 'd been
"put out to pasture."
Losers Bl'1$t
Early Speech
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Stung by a COD·
servative Republican landslide and fierce anti-
Carter sentiment, several old-guard California
Democrats who went down to defeat say that
Carter's early concession speech cost them at the
polls.
Those hearing the political death knell ln·
eluded Lionel Van Deerlin, an 18-year veteran of
the House from the San Diego area, who loet by
more than 9,000 votes to a Republican opponent ln
the 42nd District because "we didn't take blm
seriously.''
EARLY IN THE CA MPAIGN. said Van
Deerlin assistant John McLaren, "we bad a 81 per·
cent to 22 percent leaa in our own polls. But by lut
Thursday we were down 43 percent to 40 percent.
We would have lost anyway, but the concession
speech hurt us."
Harold "Biu" Johnson, a Sacramento·area
Democrat with 22 years in Congress, went down to
defeat before GOP state Assemblyman Eu1ene Chappie.
••But there should be a change in the law. Tbe
last voter should have a chance to vote," before
the ballots are counted, Johnson said.
Democratic Rep. James Corman, defeated bJ
anti·bmina school board member Bobbi Fiedler
by only 8,564 votes out of 148,000 cast in the Zlst
District, also blamed his defeat partly on Carter's
early concession, which was telecast in California
more than an hour before West Coast polls closed.
CODI.AN SA.JD HIS REACTION to Carter's.
statement was "disappointment squared . . . I'm
disappointed that Mr. Cart~rlost and I'm disappoint·
~that be conceded before8p.m. California time."
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said the
president's early concession was "unprecedented
and certainly odd. There was defmitely a tide
moving out on Democrats ln California and t.bia
dido 't help.''
White House press secretary Jody Powell said
Tuesday aides were aware West Coast polls were
still open when Carter conceded. He said they
didn't want to interfere with other races and -.,
bad j>lanned to bold off till 8 or 9 p.m. P.5'1'. but
Carter didn't want to wait.
Aides were not available Wednesday to ex· plain why. .
At 5:15 p.m. PST, NBC announced its projee·
tions indicated enough electoral votes -270 -for a Reagan victory.
I
J
,.
1.
• l'.M.MM1'189 ............... ................ ,.....,.
-f'llcMI .._. 11'91 • ....,:
....,.., ... ~ Dr.
Mety ,...,.. Olllf Tel
..... ~ .,-. JI.-......., NI•~llMlf )U.HfCIM; Joyce
~ ............ .... ***" "Olilll M,., MIK• ., .. ,, ... ,._ ........
Gr-.~.~by Nf'9d ~.Anet
~ ........ In ... 41i1Y I_ • ...._ IO
,...,.. .. ...,., .... (2 ... ,
• •TOllllff
""*lo ldlooll" Hoet Cljl
Wafl dllOUIHI 1111
.,._.,,~In
~(hrUof41 •
• DMIM:.UY, ,.,O......,._NIO
rw11CM .. ._, •••• Joan'" ... cwa. .,,..,,.
MID .....
• GNAT , •• c .........
Blll Sandenon (left> l)OJ'tra)'I a convict
who olf en toqh talk to a lrotaP of
Juvenile dellnquenta in the new TV mov·
le "Scared Stral1ht: Another Story"
tontlht at a on CBS, Channel 2.
'"U\le ''om Uncdn c.nter· Clndlfllta•• Olo.cctilno
Aoulnl'• llW-..ct °'*' '"La CenerlntOll'" .. pt•
Mnled from the ..... of
1111 New voni ai. .. Opera
.. llneoln c.nter ~
Slit 11 t111 ~· holl.
... KUNGN
and hie wife Ellle. marrlllge
counllllor Or. Paul l(lng ..
·~'~ ~
(I) no TAC DOUGH 9MBW..,..
"Salute To Cowboy "'1"
0-.• IMt Aeynolde.
Sllufl 0.,,.1, s ..... Ao.a.
0.,,, Nlbf9n. Mic:flMI Coll-
man. Joe a.... r:ao. I ON nm TOWN
~· ··-Edwlird9 Ind ~,,...,_How-
lld Hughee' ~Ill
LOI Anoalll: Ilka I r-
loolt .. "" ~ 0-;
1 Ylelt to Alilont Stet•
Pfleon ..._. "" movie
··seared Strligllt" otlgl·
l'\oti.d:M~1toneol
l .A '1 buaMlt tire ltlllone.
I PlllAY rlUO
IMANANA
G~t: Troy Oonlflue e rtlWtn•I LOe .......
Paul Moyer end tnei
P9droa""" Ar4y aurn..
tel, H-a11·1 tint Ind hot·
tMt •tlfld-up oe>mlc; inter-
vtew • '°""" MCt9I --vice """ wtlo ,,.. become
0..RRftl l..bll•••
I KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
I KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles
KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB !CBS) San Diego e KHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego
I l(TTV (Ind I Los Angeles
KCOP·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
KCET· TV (PBSI Los Angeles
• KOCE· TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
-of the ~1on·1111gM11 paid __. and glY9 tlpl '°' the "'*-llladljlldl Junll.... .
• AU. .. n. PlllAY
ArC'llle lies trouble ldJust·
Ing to Edith'•~ 1-aner e111-a 11M -~'~ ~ -~ Cl) , .... MAGAZJNI
A dlngetous moYle atunt
11111 flllld: M-year-old
~ Of.1 Mery Ful-
'40ne. . aeoe(I) MOvm
"Scared Streight: Another
SIOflf" (Premiere) Clltf
O.Voung. Sien Shaw. A
...._.. ptobatlon omcer
~ lnYOIY9d with 1
ptograrn run l>y hltd·Mnl
c:onvlcfa to KM9 Juwni4e
o ff111d1ra Into going
ll;light, D .CMOYIS
"Alcetru The Whole
Shodllng Story" (Pfern-
llr•I Art Carney, Telly
S1vllla1. tmprl.oned In
Alcltru for Iii•. c1 .. ence
plota the fht -tu•
eec;ape from the notortoua
ltllnd )all (P"1 21
• KUNOl'U
"Blood Of Thi Oregon"'
Cline •• atllllld by two
deedly ld¥1r.., ... ' Thi
Order of the Avenging Or ..
gon Ind the metr\Weh of a
ranc:Nng empire (Part 11 e O THAT"a
INCMD9La
F•lured • wom111 whO
....... In • hou• with 35
pO<&onOUI an•M. '"'PU·
'" M<)'dtver9; people who commit crl,,,.. wt\lte uoder
thl 1nnuence ol candy
••Blood Of Thi Oregon"
c.in. ., lut contronll the
-W.. wtlo have k>nQ
""c:hld kw thl Shao Un
ptllat, e 111 M..-v MIUaA
Bemey trlM 10 gel I'll•
men·• dlllg!Mltton n •
IC*illtY nM'ber tQUld
r-Md. (Part~
•=--GM'AN "Slkne To Cowt>Oy Art"
0-11: 8ut1 Reynolds,
Snuff Owrett, S._ AoM.
Oety Niblett. Mlcllell Cole-
mtri. Joe 8liler. ..... ~
"'Fiio"'
9M I 9 lrt A LIW«I TIC TN: DOUGH
u.a.~
"Old Follt1 Al H-" Jim
leitirer 1n.,..tlgtlH t"41
ptobteml of hO<»lng tor
Ille llOwty anc:I Mnlor citi·
zena •·~-their ,..,.
OV9t riling IUH and lnft•·
non
10M8CI) DAUM
With most of the tarn11y Ytl·
11'"9 Jodt'a flrat wl .. 1n •
-Wtwlum, J R u-the
time to Ml up an IYltl blO·
9" dell lnvoMng the All·
an Oil fleld9 (RI
D LAl8fTP
An 1n .... tlgltlve repo<t ...
(Burt ReynotdaJ goea
un<Sercover 1n an elf0t1 to
CIMr an hO!MSt cop ot
lchari' :rup•IOn
NATIONAL. Nr#9
NEW9CHKK
tO:*I • ..wt
THl900VIH
ouanoH
"The H..n Of The M111.,.·
..
SP ANning the Scene
Cable Coverage Catches Every Word
'
. By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES (AP) -Viewers have beard
tant analyses, Udbita ol speeches, projectioos
· result.a slnce the Iowa caucuses lut January,
muat by now feel completely polltid:ed-out.
Yet, in the 1001 course ol lbe campa1p, the · on news or1anlzatiooa didn't televise a •ln&le
pMte speech, outside of convent.iona or paid
tlcal advertisements.
NETWORK COVERAGE 8EE•&D over·
~lminc, but when you peer throulb the baae you
the bare bones of what commercial television
t11es fori.n coverine the political procea.
It ia understandably thus. Commercial
points ita cameru where Jhe dollan
, and the realm of public dain lan1\ exactly a
ure cheat. 'lbat'a wby W~r Crookite ii
aya aaytnc that cltbena abouJd UM netwrork
wa • a headline service to be supplemented by
ewapapers and periodicala.
Or, they could watch cab&e TV. Vlewen of the
le SateWt.e Public Affairs Networll eould have
Ml apeecbea delivered by eYft'J p...ucs.t111
inderella' Set
KeETTonigM
"Uve Prom Lincoln Cent.er," ·u.e award·
1111mllll 9'ri• of live telecaata of the performma
• will sw-ent the New Yon City Opera'• pro.
Oil ot the Rouinl opera, "La Ceaereatola"
laderella") ton11ht at 1:30 on KCE'I', Cbauel
lewrly Siiia, l•Hral cllntd.of ol tbe New
Qty Opera, will be t.be oo-eamera bolt.la
Weeut. The opera wtl1 be ..., bl Eqllah
me110-aoprano Suaanae llaraee1 . t~aor kweM Blake, barttoee A1a Tltm, Dan\clM •1941• IUlbao, IOPfADO' 0'*-8 lt.oluMll, meao-
1 RoMllarte f'ma1 ............... Ralplt
trodue'UGn. directed by Lou Oatt.eno Md
• ..... lai.Q, ...... ,.. ........ llill Mia wtll ~ llve-.e...,..
wttb IOID• of tM prtactpal performen
the two l.nterma11aoaa.
candidate, including the Community Party
nominee.
LAST WEEK, CSPAN viewen were able
watch full·lenlth replays of the Carter-Reqan de·
bate, both as it happened in Cleveland and as ren·
dered by Cable News Network, with John An·
denon edited into the debate.
CSPAN la a Wublnstoa·bued cable industry·
spomored service that betan u an experiment in
new t.elevtlioo, TV that didn't need or mean to
rrab audienee. It wu lbere to be Uffd. It besan ln
March 1977, with daily coverage of the U.S. House of
Representatives. ·
Thia year, CSPAN President Brian Lamb de·
clded to expand coverage to lnclude speeches
made In Wuhincton by the varioua candidates and
their repreHOtatives. "The idea wu, rarely dur·
ln1 a campaip does any net~rk give the public
an entire speech. We gave speeches of au the can·
dldatea, and their runnln1 mates. major or
minor."
TD sa .U.UON aublcriben to the 850 ca-
ble systems that take CSPAN bad acc ... to an un·
common amount ol polltieal matter before voting W. week, lnc:IYllinl the Federal Election Com·
mlaalon '• heartn11 oa wb«.ber John Andenon
could 1et a bull campa.lp loan. 0. Tuetday,
wben the poU. ck>Md In the Eut. CSPAN went off
the •ll'. t • 1'0ur Job ... complet.e UMD. We Mt out to 1tve
aay American who bappea1 to.be hooUd to one of
U.... caW. •,.i.IDI the chuee to ... a lot more ol tbnec~ \han he'd ... uywht,.tlae. ••
Next .... CSPAN retUl'lll to HOUH OOYtraie.
Lamb woWd ll.k• to furtMr expand CSPAN to 24· bou,.•-day cov•ra,. of p.abllc attain, but bil en·
thualaam tlb't lhand throqh tbe lnduatr')'.
TIU CAal.& INDUl'ftY would do well to
watcb Lamb ud hi• .. ,.rlmtnl, •• it'• UM
cbeapeet pro1rammln1 t• cable. Local cable
1y1t.e1111 pay Giiiy a peMy a month per au .. crtber
to 1uppoct the 14-penon ~.
... ldee, CIPAN la Pod )ubUc relation•.
Wbtft A.8C'a Leoeard Ooacllmon •POk• to UM Na-
Uonal Prtu Club In September, raillnt a1alnlt \he
derepledon ol caa.a., tht GDI)' ttlevlalon eameraa .
ln th• place beloft1ed to CSP.AN.
A~ Ooldeftlon'• ptpea wu UM tact 'ibat ~•bl• "8 t '911utr.s by tM rec to broadcut
.publlc ~-~f'O@tlha. San Laa ! •·we play~ lt th"" u .... la "'11.
•t&rt·tO-ftnlah. '
, .
Dr.-.... ... ... .. ... ~ ....... , . e::,,._-.... ,,.,.T<i;i ....
MOU.YWOOO E~~UMI
After I Oeie, of fM .......
.... ... °'Ill.it~
""'"' ... 4077 ... ea.n...vOND "''°"' """'-" T-ty ,_.. .... !Odlev Aonnll
W..-follllld Na llldllr
Md Mftflfector, Jockey
S-9My n••(I) ltm&ib IONI
LI01111, 1fr1ld to tell
o.or .. "°" Ille ...,. Oft the d•t1ver11 van got
.,...... ......... up ... ~
,,, ..... .... George In
....., 11°'*9. '"' • TOllllUf
Ho11: Jon1111_, Cereon
Oueete: AOfla 8errett,
T °"I' "-'dal. • rru1a1m1: c.u. &OCICH
Pat .. .,n• O•vld hH
~ lrom ptlM>n
l <llMC ....
'Am THI MUllO .
HOCIAW8 HIR09I
Cetter IYIMCll*ldll • •
dll9ctor to INt1I thl IOcl-
tlon ot • ~ •actory
• ff TMCU A TMllJ'
Al Mundy mull recover the
atOlan Cyud Sc;rOll• to
prlYttnt Ille C01UipM di an
-glng Alroc:tn netlon
• cunote> A8C ....
t1:toe 9 ~· AHMl.I
Kelty and Km go """* ·
~ 11 MMity cont-.
tanta to i.trn whO la trying
to mu•-· thet • ce<llln
gift wina • bleuty contnl
(Al
~MDIGHT-
12:00. Cl) MCMll.lAH &
~
MK and Siiiy l llencl 1'111
20·Y"' co-. footl>lll
reunion dlnnlt but the
event Inda In tr'91dy
when one of the tor....,
pllyer• ii lound ....,
• TWIUOHT ZONE
"Night CaN"
·~00.-UR Buddy Hec:kett -· I spldet lldy .• ,..., ..... , ..
gutrd and • l1J1ldlrm1st
JOHN DARLING
Bird•aa
•
TONIGHT'S LATEST Ll8TtNG8
JOU • e:oo -NHL 11ocu,. Tiie
Lo• Ant~e1 Kln11 take on tb•
Philadelphia Flyen.
NBC e 8:00 -"Alcatraa: Tbe
Whole Shockiq Story.'' The c:oacludln• aeameat ol thil new TV morie about a teen·••• youth lmprUoned for Ill• wltb Art Camey and Telly Savalu.
KCOP • 8 :00 -''Dial 11 for
Murder." Ray Milland and Grace Klll)J
1tar ln Alfred IOtehcock'1 thriller about
a man who bllW a klller to murder bl.I·
wife, Odly to have the plot backft.n. ..........
THIATN
"Pride And Ptejuda" Mr
Colllne ....,, • recondlil-
tlOrl wfftl lhl Blfvllt family
and tntencta to~ one
of "'9 olr1e IOf e wife (Par1
t~~OMOMOW ·~,, comedy -11 ... anct
eutllOr 0811 P11ent, -.. man Ted Koppel. .MOIM * * * "Thi Nanny" ( IH61
81111 OI Yll, Willem DIX. A
dlSlurbld chold ·and his
nanny r-t ..ch other
lor their respoftsitMllty In
the death of the boy'• ....
-(1 IW •• 65 min.) .THI,.
"AA ElepNont ii L•e A
Ro91"
• fiMllOM: ~
Thi IMF t Ides 1 young
prince from-• by
dllgulelng 1-.n M • llYP'Y
i NATIONAL. ....
1:00 (fl l'Ot.a WOMAN
Pepper ii llldnlppld by •
trio of l>al* robbera (Al
.MOvm * * "Mar11" (1970) St ..
phen Boyd. Mlriu Mell A
young gift trtea In vein to
dtlc:O¥er Iha whwNl>outa
of '* miQlng """" !Mater.
(2 !Ira I
• CAl'1lONR> A8C ..wt
1:30. THI LONR MHQP
"OlmelnT-··
• fllOYil ..... "The 8'\)Chlre Alco ••
111&71 Alcllard Conte .
~ Foeter. A~
~ ..,.,. tor the
l09 In .... I I"'"'* to Pf•
"'"' a crime ~ from murdlr'lng llil bt.,..._
-( 1 "'·· u mill.) 1:All ..wa HO ....,.
fllOYil * * "Pretty Boy FIOy(S"
( IMOI JoM ErlceOll, :loan
H""9y Thi hie Ind tlmM
of one of A,.,,..te1·a most
notorlj)ya OeorlNl<>n OUl·
lawa ... htted with VIO-
ience. (2 hra.J
t:tO ..... l::.IO MCWW * * "'Thi Big StrMt"
( 1942) Henry Fonda ,
luc:il.. , Belt. A Hllleh
nlglltclul> singer ••~H
advantage or • bua 11oy·a
IO\le. (I ht , 50 min.) 2:111 .... t:IO MOY9
t * '"Klondllle Annie"'
(t93e) MN Weat. Vlc1or
Mcl.lglen " Uloon """" llk• • died miMlonlry'a
Identity and rune off with a
-c:apteln, with"" pollCll
hot on her trlil. ( 1 "', 26
min)
1:00• MOV9
• • '"Horror Ai-From
Thi Tomt>" ( 19701 Paul
Nllc:tly. Emme COhln A
young French couple
inflef-tl a c:urM from lheif
1nceetor1 when they
. """••'• ···••!IW •• ., ...
U:OI. *'-''"'""-To•
ltHre"' ( t93t) Joll11 w.-. CAroll Landis. A
cowboy rldel lo Ille,_
of • yOl'f'll ~ .no "" .,_, thr•tlnld with lhl
lou of her ranch. (I ht.I
-AFTERNOON-
,,. •••• "Johnnlf Come
la1e1y·· ( 1M31-'-Clg-
ney. Mat)oril Mein. T-
veteran OIA IP9Plf put>-
llehlrl join kwc:ee In • fight
IQM\at • loc:ll town t>oee.
(t "'··so min I • * * * ,.., "High Noon"'
I 1952) Gwy Cooper. Gr-
l<ell'f A """darer Ind Ne
l>tothera attempt to ...,.,,
the acore with thl aheriff
whO aent Nm to priaoll. (2
l'n.I
a:OO(ll **~"S•YIOl"(t972)
lllwl>are Bain. Mlrtln l.-n-
deu A 141C>r'-COUl1 nome.. le lfweetlglted by
I TV -commentary 111tn. (t hr., 30 min.I
l:IO G * * "SllleUo" ( 1989)
All• Cord. Brill El<IMd. A
dletric:t •ttorney trill to
nlll • ~ count wtio le
·~ thugl Oft beflall of • ganoater lrllnd. (2 rw..1
by Armstrong a Batluk
HORSEFEATHERS/
Show Follows
Caribou Trek
The grueling, danger-filled 2,000-mile annual
trek o( 125,000 caribou is revealed on "Caribou :
The lncredible Journey" airinc Wednesday, Nov.
12 at 8:30 p.m. on KOCE, Channel 50.
The program tells the story o( the annual
caribou mieration which be,U. in April, wbea the
caribou set out u one litantic herd toward the
rich feediq arounds 8ftd calvine areu ol the
Arctic Ocean. and ends when they repeat their
arduoua journey to return to lbelr winterint
grounds ln Canada's Ogilvy llountaina.
"Caribou" ia the fint of three "Survival
Spedala" airine on KOCE which look .at the
daneeroua and rtioroua existence ol anlma.la llvt.q
In tbe wild. "Mysterious Cutles of Clay," a
gUmpee ol the iDtrilui.nl world ol lbe African
termite, ain Wednesday, Nov. 1J at 1:30 p.m. and
"Leopard ol the Wild," the story ol a tame leopard
who eventually returns to the wild, ain Wedaes-
day, Nov. 2J8 at8:30 p.m.
The "Survival Specials" are a presentation ol
the. Public Broadcaatin1 Service.
Art Camey plays convict Robert Stroud, the
"Birdman of Alcatrn," in the TV movie
"Alcatraz : The Whole Sbockln1 Story"
tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4.
~OPHl~TICATW Pf((KJRAMMINC ...
BB:lulilul ~!emo Mut.WJ-•
NeW!:-Marin e Wealher-
~lock Markel Reporl~
Con~umer Rtlp(Jrlr
'
·--------~ .... ~ ... ,.... .........
. I
"••r ••••t•••·'
Dally N••••• .. r
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
1 rim, Masquerade Charged
I Jan. 5 Trial Set
In 'Doctor'· Death
Trabuco Canyon resident
Gerald Barnes, who ls accused of
muqueradin1 u a doctor and
causing the death of a patient he
saw al an Irvine clinic, pleaded in·
nocent today in Orange ~ly
Superior Court.
Barnes wu ordered to stand
trial Jan. S in Superior Court
Judge Everett Dickey's Santa
Ana courtroom.
f'
Barnes, -47, a Coto de Caza resi-
dent, bad been ordered to stand
trial by Harbor Court M unicipaJ
Judie Donald Dungan last week.
He is charged with murder, pos-
ing as a doctor and falsely pre-
scribingdrugs. •
Barnes presently is free on
$10,000bail, and Chief Deputy Dis-
trict Attorney James Enright said
this morning he wanted to see bail
lrriae Proposal
Funds Need Cited
For Arts Theater
A lack of funds is blocking
plans by Saddleback Community
College and Irvine to build a
long -awaited performing am
theater in the city.
Paul Brady Jr .. Irvine's assis·
tant city manager, said this
mominl available funds fall far
abort of the $6.5 million needed to build the _proj>OSed 600-seat
tb,ater on the college's Irvine
campus.
"Even a 400-seat l}leater
would not be viable with exiating
money," he said. "The staff bas
eatlmated minimum require-
ments would be at least $3.1
million to construct basic
faclHtles . A very spartan
400 -seat theater without
-amenities could be built for
about $2.4 million."
Tbe city aDd the colleae
to1etber presently have $1.8
million to build the facilJty,
Bradyaald.
The Irvine City Council mem-
bers lol~ Brady on Sept. 9 to
begin negotiations with college
officials on a joint-powers agree-
ment for construction and opera-
tion or a theater.
The joint-powers approach is
the latest in a six-year-old series
of attempts by t.be city to build a
theater with park bond money.
Irvine currently has $1.3
million to construct a perform-
ing arts theater and Saddleback
Community College has $SOO,OOO.
Last summer the Irvine City
Council set aside a proposal to
build a $1.3 million am -
phitheater in Mason Regional
Park in favor of the joint-powers
appl'OllCb.
Irvine Company represen·
tatives voiced concern over the
amphitheater proposal, sayin~ it
would create traffic and ooase
In residential neisbborhooda
planned to be built near the
park.
The Irvine City Co'uncil will
meet Tuesday to consider the
performing aru theater iuue.
Dow Slips Baek
Market Declines .
After Reagan Piish
NEW YORK (AP > -The
stock market declined broadly
today u the rally that followed
Ronald Reagan's election vic-tory faded.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials, which jumped near-
ly 11 pointa Wednesday, fell ll.95
to 941.21 ln the first four hours to-
day.
Losers took a 5-1 lead over
gainen among New York Stock
Excbange-U.ted issues.
. Tradinc slowed from Wed-
nesday's record pace. operun,.
hour volume on the Big Board
-tot~a.d 13.M lDill.ioo shares. · Will Streeters were generally
•till elated over Reagan's
landslide victory in the ,,_.iden·
'lat race and the bac cains
~ ~lfatered by the Republicans in
. CoD1r.a.
But tbef Hid investors• atten·
Uon wu beainninc to return to
. the cJoomy outloot for inflation
~end ln&ere.t rates in tbe Im·
medJate future.
~ Aaalyata agree tb11t the
Federal Reserve is almost cer-
tain to raise the discount rate -
the charge it imposes on loans to
member commercial banks -
from the present 11 percent. The
only debate about it focuses on
the likely timing of the move.
The latest reading on inflation
Is due Friday with the govern·
menl'• mont.bly report on pro-
ducer prices.
Meanwhile, gold prices
tumbled as much as $30 an ounce
on world markets today while the
dollar increased after posting
eains Wednesday in the wake of
Reagan's victory.
In London, told traded for
$627 . 75 an ounce, down from
$657. 7Sat thecloee W edneaday.
In Zurich the precious metal
was trading for around $632.50
an ounce, down from $455.50.
Earlier in Hong Kong, gold
prices dropped $18.81 an ounce
to cloee at '838.82.
Sliver was quoted in London at
$18.80 an ounce, down from
$19.90.
increased.
··I think he (Barnes) is as culpa-
ble as any person who goes into a
Uquor store and pulls a robbery."
Enright said.
"What he was doing," Enright
said, "was playing the game ...
hewasdoingitror money."
The charges against Barnes
stem from bis employment at
Pacific Southwest Medical Group
in Irvine, where he worked fort wo
years until hjs arrest in August.
While working at ' Pacific
Southwest, prosecutors contend,
he treated a diabetic patient who
died two days after being ex-
amined by Barnes:
Enright said he is pushing for a
second degree murder conviction
as a resultorthatdeath.
Defense attorney David
Brickner told reporters after ar-
raignment proceedings t his
morning in Superior Court Judge
Richard Beacom 's courtroom,
that his position would be that
Barnes did not engage in pro-
fessional malfeasance and was
not-responsible for the death of the
patient.
Alt.hough he declined to go into
his trial strategy. Brickner said
the case evolves down to the opi-
nion of whether treatment given
the patient was adequate, inade·
quateorsomewhereinbetween.
Prosecutors alle(e t.hat
Barnes is a pharmacist who lost
bis license in Illinois and came west to practice medicine wit.bout
a license.
BrlckDer said, there was
"strong evidence" to •U11est ~ wasn't a doctor. but he would not
comment a& to whether his client
was indeed a licensed physician.
Documents
Destruction
Story Denied
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
spokesman for White Howse na·
tional security adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski denied a published
report today that Brze:rinald or-
dered intelligence documents
destroyed after President Carter
was defeated by Ronald Reagan
in Tuesday's election.
The New York Post quoted
three unnamed staff aides to
senior Republican members of
the Senate intelligence commit·
tee as saying they were told of
this by employees of the Na·
tional Security Council, which
Brzezinski heads.
But NSC spokesman Leonard
Lefkow denied the story. saying:
"It's absurd nonsense. It's
bizarre."
Sen . ..,arry Goldwater of
Arizona Is the rankin1
Republican member of the in·
telligence panel. His press
secretary, Tony Smith, aald be
doubted that Goldwats would
be a~ of ., such situatJoa
because be has been en1aeed lo
a close batUe for re-election.
Spencer Davis, press officer
Cor the committee, said after
checking with other staff mem·
ben of the panel: ''We know
absolutely nothlne about it."
Large surf Wednesday allowed surfers to
ride waves breaking on the Big Corona
side of the east jetty at the entrance to
Newport Harbor. Surf of 4-7 feet is forecast
along the Orange Coast through the
weekend, depending on which way the
beach is facing. Weather forecasters say
the source of the surf is a storm about 2,000
miles out in the Pacific Ocean.
Reagan to Iran:
Carter StiU-·Cbief
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
Preslcleat-elect Reacan said ·to-
day he will do all he can to help
gain the release of the 52
American boetages in Iran, but
"we a.re not going to intrude" on
t.be necotlat.ioos during t.be final
montba of President-Carter's ad· ministration.
"Foreien leaders must be
aware that the president is still
the president," Reagan told a
news conference in Los Angeles.
Reagan also said that' be will
·'begin immediately on the job
of translating campaign prom-
ises into reality/' and named
William Casey, the New York
lawyer who managed bis cam-
paign, to oversee the transition
to a Republican administratJoa.
He named three prominent
Democrats to his foreign policy
advisory committee -Sen.
Henry M . Jack s on of
Washington, former Sen.
Richard Stone of Florida and
W aahlngton attorney Edward
Bennett Williams.
"I will work hard to rebuild a
bipartisan base for American
foreign policy," Reagan told bis
first news conference since bis
landslide victorY Tuesday ..
Reagan also thanked Carter
for moving quickly to set up a
tranaition team or hl• own lo
smooth the changeover. J
Reaean named Edwin Meese,
hi• campaign chlefo-of staff, to
direct his transition staff. He
said transitton work is under
way.
"We've already becun the
work ol putting tocetber an ad·
mlniatratJon," he told the news
conference. broadcast na·
Uonwide.
Meete said Wednesday that
Reaian and Carter would work
in cooperation for releue of the
hostages.
Rea1an did not indicate there
is any arrangement for such a
joint effort, alt.bough be said
he'd help wh~re possible.
"Lik'e everyone else, we want
the hostages to be returned," he
said.
But he said everyone must un·
derstand that Carter Is in charge
until Jan. 20. when the new ad-
ministration will take power.
Carter. talking about the
hostages situation Wednesday,
also carefully pointed out that he
<See REAGAN. Page A%)
Laguna Art
Extravaganza
To Relocale?
Ice Cream
Vendors Aim
Of Proposal
Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart
has come up with a new or-
dinance proposal aimed at pro-
t e c ting youngs t e r s from
criminals peddlin« snow cones
and popsicles.
Ice cream vendors would be
forced to obtain a special license
from the police department un·
der t.be ordinance.
In order to get the license. the
vendor's background would be
checked for violations relating
to narcotics, indecent exposure,
crimes against persons, dis·
trlbution of obscene matter or
bookmaking.
The proposed .ordinance is the
second attempt by the police
department to regulate Ice
cream vendors.
Last month the Irvine City
Council members refused to sup.
po rt the first proposed or-
dinance, saying it was too
restrictive.
Police spokesmen say some
ice cream peddlers are suspect-
e<t of doing everything from sell-
ing drugs to shortchanging
children.
Police also say that the tinny
music played from loudsputters
on Uie trucks is a nuisance to citizens, and they add that some
or the trucks are driven wreck·
lessly.
The Irvine City Council is to
consider Tuesday the latest
police department attempt to reg-
ulate ice cream vendon.
Coast
Weather -rr::ops ·io-llide Buses. Free?
l
Low cloudiness night
and mornt.ni clearing to
mostly sunny Friday ar.
temoon. Lows tont1ht 57
at the beacbee, 82 tnland. •
Hi&h• Friday 88 alona the
cout to 72 to 71 lnland.
INSIDE TeDA '1
lt't llO jolot: TIN dl~ o/
cin.IMd .. ·~ to im·
prow fla · m.a,.. SH P• DJ. .
••••
t
llijacker• Force DC.9
To Cuba; 62 Aboard
CARACAS, v ... a ... 11 (AP> -Hijac•en forced a DC·t
VeHaUlllu AV&NSA )et plue '#ttb 11 aboard to O\aba today, a • .,. .... ,_. ...... ,,Uae,.....W.
The pl ... la.oded at the Hanna airport after a 2~·bour refuellq
atop lnCutatoao, O,tcb AaUU.., U.1pok .. maa1a1d.
He NAd the plw wu C!Olllm11• .....S IJ alDUMI after It toot oll
from theCaracu alnort for a61-miautampt to PuenoOntu, bl
..... ,.. VtDnuela. He tatd tlw plw-cant..t 11 pw..,•n ud a
crewolftve. TheiirldeatltJ•..,..'*dllttoMd.
T.ra111tlpS~•••.,._,
ATLANTA (AP) -Sen. Herman Talm~ will Mk for a ,..
count ol the Tuetday votlnf tbat Mowed bim u "'*' klMr by
24 .191 votea to Republlcu cballeacer lilactt lilatttacb. a Talm~e aJde1ald today.
Unofficial reaulta wltb 100 perc:eDt ol tM vot. counted
• abowed the veteran O.mocrat. wbo bad bMD '"t1ni a Mh
tetQ\, with 787,tU voca or • perffDt to MaW..,ly'• Tll.107
votes or Sl percent.
Trwdtt Dt-tlrlt ~•111•rftl
WASHJNGTON <AP}-AcootJDulnCdecllneinolllmportatothe
lowest level In more than live yean cut the U.S. trade deficit ln the
third quarter by 65 percent, the Commerce Departmeat said to·
day.
The value of export.I increaaed 3.1 percent durtn1 the July-
September period, to a record '51.4 billion, with hlcher prices ac·
t counting for the entire tt. 7 blllion chuie. Importafell 5 percent, or
$3 billion, to$59.1 billion.
That produced a deficit of S2.7 billion. lowest slnce a U billion
gap inthethirdquarterof 19'76. Thethlrd·quarterdeflc\t compared
with a revised $7.6bllUon In the second three months of the year.
Ccul1H• RofJfHtr f'l~tt•
• CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. (AP) -A masked 1unman robbed a
cashier at Cloud's Cal-Neva Lodaetoday and escaped on foot with
. an undisclosed amount or money, the Washoe County sherlrt'a of·
~ficesaid.
l..est Jttdge Raee
Campaign Cost
Orozco 840,000
By DAVID KlJTlMANN
, OHN o.11, 1"4i.t 1Uff
,Ora n ge County Central
M:unicipal Court Judn Richard
Qrozco spent-at least $40,000 in
bis uns uccessful attempt in
Tuesday's election to remain in
office.
,According to financial dis·
elosUTe statements filed for the
reporting period ending Oct. 20,
,...... qrozco drew financial backing
f~om fellow jurists and at·
tqrneys in his unsuccessful elec·
tfon bid.
The judge. an appointee four
y.-ars ago of Gov. Edmund G.
ftrown Jr .. was defeated by San·
ta Ana attorney Bobby D . ~oungblood.
':Orozco was one of two judges
w'bo were turned out of office
Tuesday by voters in the central
rdunicipaJ court district. Presid·
illg Judge John C. Teal, an ap-
ppintee of then-Gov. Ronald
~eagan elght years ago, also
"!as defeated.
• Orozco's disclosure statement,
rUed nearly two weeks ago,
sbowed contributions from
Orange County Superior Court
JUdge James Perez ($100) as
\fell as well known attorneys
s»ch as Terry Giles ($500) and
J_.ames Stotler ($150).
Other large contributors in·
cJuded the Orange County Mex-
i~an-American Bar Association
C$250), the Laborer's Intema-
ijonar Union of North America,
~ocal 652 ($1,000), and the
Orange County District Council
q( Carpenters ($250).
• Financial s tate ments for
toungblood's successful cam-
jaign were not available
••cause he had not yet filed
Chem as of Wednesdar.
; Deputy District Attomey Jean
flheinhe ime r said she bas
Ootified Youngblood that bis f tatement is two weeks late and
Jbat he could face misdemeanor
f
rosecutlon. Mrs. Rheinbeimer
aid she would give him another
I 0 days Or SO to file hil forms. I The Youngblood·Oro1co race
1
1 ras perhaps the ll'IOSt bitter Oft
1 ..-~~------------~--
DAILY PILOT
the Nov. 4 ballot. Youngblood
beat the judge 52,721 votes to
49,269 votes.
The two had run against one
another in the June primary,
when Orozco initially appeared
to be the victor by about 200
votes out ol W ,000 cut.
Youngblood challenged the
computerized vote totals, and in
a later hand recount, be
emerged as the victor by 15
votes.
However, Supe rior Court
Judge John K. Trotter Jr. voided
the election and ordered
Tuesday's rematch because of
ballot iirlgularities.
The two candidates bad nm a
blistering campaign in the final
weeks. Youngblood accused
Orozco of perjury when be was
appointed four years a10 and
Orozco claimed bis opponent
was unfit as an attorney and
should face possible disbarment.
There also were racial un-
dercurrents to the race because
of Orozco's hispanic heritage.
Wild Parrots
Invade Citv
SAN DIEGO (AP) -As muy
as 20 wild panou at a Ume are
flying low or perching high in
the San Dieflo area.
Authorities suspect most were
freed by bird-smu11Jers fearin&
capture at the border.
The colorful birds are mocUy
green Amarona although otben
are native to Mexico and Central
America. Several hundred a.re
believed at liberty lo the San
Diego area akme.
Carolyn Nielsen, a deputy San
Diego aericultural com·
missioner,aaid abe spotted 11 ln
a pecan tree but they've been
seen ln "almott every commuui·
ty of any aiae."
Talk8 Break ~Down
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Talkl
broke off 8'aiD lJl the five-week
old pilot'• autke aaalnat Pactftc Southwest Airlines after only
three days ol l'elWDed neaotl•·
tlon1. Spokeamen from both
aide• aald the talb encMd Wed·
nesday with no Pf'OINU and no
further meetinl• scheduled.
NEW YORK (~P) -Mljor
baakl ralMd lhtlr ortme I....._ rat•• by one lull percentace1
p0lnt to 15.1 percent today, the
hllh .. t liDce May.
Cbue Mubattu Bank, which
ln1tlated the move from the pre.
valllnc 14.1 percat rat.Laald
the inc,.ue wp apurred 111 ....
· cnt tharp Jwnpe ln lta coet ol • tundl. .
"General market ratn and
the CCMlt ol f\IDdl to baok.t have
rlMn ~Y la recent weeks,"
the naUon a t.hlrd·larfnt com·
merclal buk said ln a rare com·
mtnt on lta move.
"lndttfd, thl• lncre••• doel
not fully refl~t the lncr-.&Md
cott ol fundl to Chaae, Nor does
thi• lncreaM portend the dlrec·
lion ol future mov•menta In the
prime rate over the near term,"
the bank laid.
The recent Jump In bank•' coat
of f undl waa undencored thJa mornlni when the rate on
federal f~ds -uncommitted
reserves that banks lend one
another -soared to 15.S percent
before the Federal Reserve
Board intervened by addlna re -
serves.
Soon after Chase announced
lta rate increue, Chlca10'1 Con·
tlnental Illinois National Bank &
Trust Co. and First NaUooal
Bank of Be>ston matched the
new, hJgher rate. Other ~or
banka followed suit.
The prime Is the rate banb
charge on loans to be1t-ri1k cor·
porate customers, usually for
perloda of no more than one
year. Other, s maller buslnesaea
u"ually pay at least one· percen·
ta.ie point above the prime.
The prime rate does not affect
consumer loan ratea, but i1 con-
sidered an Indicator of trenda In
all kinda of Interest rates. When
the prime goes up, other rat.es
often follow In the same direc-
tion.
Ji',... Pop Al
MOVE •••
firm proposal," he said. "U
anything is transacted, it is pro-
bably several years down the
road. Right now it is largely con-
ceptual."
"It is an opening of ~ oC
future requirements more than
anything focused." he added.
The festival board presently
rents the grounds on Laguna
Canyon Road from the City of
Laguna Beach, which, in tum, is
guaranteed a percentage ol the
organization's gross receipts.
In recent years, the city bas
received about $200,000 in an·
nual festival receipts.
Most of that money goes
toward reUring the debt on the
M aln Beach Park development.
Fifteen percent of the city's
share goes for cultural, artistic,
and community organlaations.
The FeatJval of Arla moved to
its current location at 650
Laguna Canyon Road In JWJe
1941. '!be fint year's attenduce
was slightly more than 2.000 vis·
itors. More than 300.000 people
visited the festival ground.a last
summer.
Devil Death
"Retrial Due
WICIUTA FALLS, Texas (AP)
-A woman who contended
spirit uried her to cut out her 4·
year-old daufhter's heart re-·
malnajalledawaltlna acourtdate
for retrial OD a murd« charae.
Her flnt trial eaded In a mis· "
trial, and Dlttric:t Attorney Tim
Ey1aeo uked•t•te Dlltnct Judie
kelth Nelloa OD Wednesday to set
a retrial date for U·year-old
PatriclaAnn Fruler.
Harold Lerew, lawyer for Mill
Frazier, becomea county a\·
torney on Jan. l ud will be pro-
hibited by law from defendin&
her aft« then. EyNeD said ap-
polntlne new coumel will delay
the retrial.
Wealt•y _Kid
'=·.~;.,.Tr.:"
ClleotnM, i.-
'IUIMM!-......1"1•
Offtcee c .. ,. i....... •• w.11 ••• llAtt 1.-.. Kii. IOJ1 Ne. CNtl "'-' """'1"910fl e.ec1" lltlJ .. Kii --· _,
T~e(714I..,_.
a..-.. ..............
Girl, 11, Win• $500,000
CINCINNATI (AP) -AD ll·yeat-old l!staruteecl $15,000 a
year for the next 20 yean, eourtesy of a r ataUoa that want·
ed to make a name for ltaelf. But tbe '800.000 tiYUWQ, .tdcb WYYS.1"11 billed u tbe . la.rlelt ceab ...-la tbe bllltary of broedcaatlnl. bu caUHd a
•mall war......; cmcmuu lnede.-.n.
Om rival atatioD clDubled tbe prt• ud la emoWA• Iii....,.
for a Glawe to a '1 •'Die ADotlMr etatiOn, wblch prnioully t•" away •dell prlW, dectclld Ulat the whole tbJAa WU pt·
Ulal oat of U8d Dd Wd lt would put lta IDOMJ lnto prosnlD•
~~~:.;:.-a~-:r~c~ .., ................ ..
•
Spyglass Slaiying
Probed in Newport
l're•P•pAI
REAGAN •••
will be president another 2~
months.
Reagan gave much of the
same ans wer when asked
whether he planned to com-
municate with the Soviet Union
durln1 the lransltlon period.
Newport Beach detectives are
attemptlnai to determine the
facts behind the shoot1n1 death
of a 45-year-old man who•e body
was found thla mornlnfl in his
Spy1lass Hill home. Police said
he had been ahot in the head.
Police. who withheld the dead
man's name pending notification
of next or kin, said It has not
been established whether the
man was murdered or look his
own life. .
Investigators. called to the
number 8 Jade Cove residence
In the· pre-dawn hours today,
·said they have taken the man's
male roommate Into cuatody for
questioning. His name also wu
withheld.
Police said they received a
flits T¥, Carter
call at llbool 3 a .m . from the
dead man'• roommate. Hetoldof-
flcera he wH watchln1 televl1lon
with the victim. got up to go to the
hathraom and heard a gunahot.
He told officers thMt whtin he
heard the crack of A!U.ntlre, he
panicked , crawled out the
bathroom window and ran lo a
nttllhbor'• Mw.tt
Pollce also aald there were oo
1lgna of forced entry Into the ,home
Detect1va said when they ar-
rived on the scene. they dis·
covered the dead man sprawled,
face down, on the living room
n oor They said they've been W\·
able lo locate any weaPOn.
"No. I don't," Reagan said.
He said h e would not do .
anything that might indicate the
nation la not unified or that "we
are tryln1 lo speak with a dif·
ferent voice" while the Carter
administration 1emains in
power.
Reagan said the Iranian gov.
erment should not think it can gain anything by waiting until
Other •tectlon end poet-
electlon coveree-•PP••ra
tod•y on ...... A3, A4, A12,
81,82•nd85.
he tak~ office to negotiate re-
1 ease or the 52 Americ an
hostages.
"I hope the Iranians will not
have any idea there wiU be any
pront to them in waiting."
Reagan said.
HB Mayor Irate
At Election Events
Answering questions about
what role he might play in tryin
to win release of the hostqes.
Reagan emphasized repeatedly
that the "president is still the
president."
R eaga n add ed that be
wouldn't offer his own ideas oo
the hostages "Jr I thought for
one mintue that it could for one
minute" delay their releau. By &OBE&T BA&KER
Ol_o.if, ...........
Hunt.ingtoo Beach Mayor Ruth
Bailey said today sbe is very
perturbed by election events and
that she wants to try to make
some changes.
Angerin1 ber were projections
by NBC analysts of a Ronald
Reagan victory at 5:15 p.m. and
President Carter's concession
speech that came more than an
hour before polls closed in
California.
"Lots or people have told me
that they dido 't go out to vote
because the election already
was decided.
·'Thia really makes me angry.
California is the most Important
state in the West but we have
been virtually disenfranchised.
"It seems like our votes don't
count.·•
Mrs. Bailey said she is prepar·
ing letters of protest to NBC and
to the White House, asking them
to try to find some way to hold
off projection! and statements
that may alter local elections.
A possible solution, she sug·
gests would be to change voting
hours , perhaps starting earlier
in the West and later in the
East.
A Republican who supported
Reagan but is also a strong
backer ol defeated Democratic
Assemblyman Dennis Mangers,
Mrs. Bailey ack.owledged that the
premature activities may not
have altered tbeoutcome.
.. After all. Mangers lost by
4.000 votes or so and perhaps
Repu blica n s a s wel l as
Democrats were discouraged in
equal numbers.
.. It is fi ne to report the news
but it doesn't make much sense
to do so before it becomes a re·
ality."
With 99 percent of the vcu
counted, Reagan had 43,201.6S1
for 51 percent and 489 eledor&I
votes; Cart.er bad 34,tll,051 for U:
percent and 49 electoral YOUs;:
John B. Anderson had 5,511;701
for 7 percent and no electoral
votes.
Flames Kill
Celebrator
Mrs. Bailey said she hoped LONDON (AP) -A young
that her letters. combined with mother roasting potatoes in a Guy
the concerns from others. might Fawkes night bonfire, the tradi·
have an effect. tlonal commemoration of the
Meanwhile, Mangers. a two· British gunpowder plot of 1805.
term assemblyman popular with was enveloped by names and
local officials, previously linked burned lo death, police said to-
his defeat to the nationwide day. Her husband was burned in
surge for Reagan. the early con-a rescue a ttempt and was
cession speech b y Carter and ear-hospitalized.
ly projections by television The woman, described as being networb. in her 20s, was roasting the
Mangers said Carter 's re· potatoes while her husband was
marks discouraged Democrats inside the couple's house in
from voling. He said be wu SW" Garforth, Yorkshire, in northern
prised that the president cared Englaod,policesaid.
so little for lower run party can-Guy Fawkes was the leader of a
didates that he would make his group ol Roman Catholics seek·
statements while the races still ing to avenge harsh treatment of
were-undecided. Catholics durin.r the rei~ of Kini ----~--------James•~·---------
... lt'a time for your layaway
· Avoid the holiday cruoch this year by
shopping ot Brett Wolker now Let us help you
choose'the perfect< gift for ttiot special person
from out selection of fine jewelry;, and. with a
small deposit. we wlll hold It for you
until Christmas.
•
fSMll ®'/JeJ CJl11ufi'~ c-,,,.. ,...,"I -
3S Fashion 111ond • N~ e.oct'I. Colltomlo 92660
Speaker-Ship
Fight Over
SACAAllENTO <AP) Auembly Speaker Leo
llri:artlu' aa)'I M la 1lvin1 up the naht to keep the
1peoenhlp.
· lleCanhy •pent Wedneaday, the day alter lhe
~. Hcwembet 6, 1NO
·.B~r.keky Protest
52 ~rrested in Anti-Reagan R8lly
BERKELEY CAP> -ln a campus
scene reminiscent of the 1980il, poUce
led an4 dragged dissident students
and otkra out of the University of
Califonlia administration building to
break •P a sit-in sparked by Ronald
Reagan's election.
bethu to cut back soclal procrams. ••
•lecU.. dleeUlllnl with supporters how to salvage
IODl.thinl from hla expensive and often bitter 11-
moeUa n,bt with Anemblyman Howard Berman, D-
Lo1 Anselet, who won the votes' to take the •
<;ampus poUce arrested 3S students
and 17 nonstudenta Wednesday night
following the 51h-hour protest on the
Berkeley campus. No injuries were
Durine the occupaUoa, however,
the dJuldenu were talkln• aboUt
causes adrift on the campus l•r
yeara -includ.lnt denunelatiOn ol ~e
campus ROTC and demand.a for ita re-
moval, more demand• that UC
Berkeley qult supportlnt nucletr
weapons research for the gove".fl·
ment, support for a campus cblJd
care center and increased Thisd apeakenhip away from bJm. .
In~ election Tuesday, McCarthy lost the sup-
port he needed to kffp the orrice, considered Ule
atate 's moat powerful arter governor.
.... llo<"lc• aa,,.' rea
RICHMOND <AP) -A powerful explosion at an
induatnal district plant that was felt ror 10 miles
nearly destroyed a large building and shattered win-
dows within a 10-block
( J area, but there were no in-
Sf ATE juries. The explosion Wed-"-~~~~~~~-"'· nesday night at the
Puritan-Bennett Corp., an
air reduction plant, occurred while a worker was
transferring nitrous oxide, commonly called
"laughing gas," from a storage tank to a tanker
truck, fire officials said.
! Though the blast blew out the sides of the three·
1. story, corrugated metal building and sent sliverS'of sheet metal more than a 100 feet, the worker, Roy
Janice,37, was not injured.
Ra"e f..i111i111 Ett1b11ituu
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A rule approved by the
state Air Resources Board will reduce smog.
producing nitrogen oxide emissions by glassmakers
by up to seven tons a day over the next five to seven
years, officials say.
Glassmaking plants are considered a prime
source o( smog-forming nitrogen oxide emissions
because of the tremendous heat used in manufaclur·
ing furnaces, the ARB said. The furnace can reach
temperatures of 3,000degrees Fahrenheit.
Affected by the rule, which will require changes
in Ji?lassmalting furnaces1 will be plants that make
bottles for beer, wine, meaication and foods. ~
Poll Clo1dng11 'ti ad led
SACRAMENTO <AP >-CaliforniaSecretaryof
State March Fong Eu S&)'S she may seek nationwide,.
simultaneous poll closinles to keep a pn!Sident's ear-
ly concession from cutting voter turnout in the West.
Ms. Eu, a Democrat, said Wednesday there was
"a dramatic fallofi in voter participation" Tuesday
after the televisi<V! networks began projecting the
victory of Ronald Reagan as president.
Normally, about 15 percent of the California vote
comes in between 5 p. m. and the closing time, 8 p. m.
The network projecting began between 4 p.m. and 5
p.m.
Traruif Fa<>e11 C'hall~ttgt-
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles County's
approval of Proposition A's sales ta" increase could
spread a S3.6 billion mass transit system over the
sprawling county -if it survives a potential legal
challenge.
The county's Transportation Commission said
Wednesday it hopes to have some of the electric-
powered line operating by the end or the decade and
the whole system in place in 35 years, barring major
technical, financial or legal problems.
Gallfl \llolrttt•e Soar•
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gang violence in Los
Angeles nearly doubled in the first nine months of
1980 compared to the same period last year, with
robberies alone up a whopping 212 percent, a
police report shows.
Statistics cited gang involvement in 2,683
crimes committed through September compared
to 1,439 gang-related fC1r the nine months in 1979 -
an increase of 86.4 percent.
Robberies soared from 221 in 1979 to 690.
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
THAT EARN INTEREST. ASK US!
EKttcutlve Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave.. £SOC
Huntington Beach. CA 9~7
Southtm Ctllforn/1 Rtglon11 Offices. --·---· ... -..-.... _
5917 E. La falm:i /wt., Anaheim, CA 92807
8865 Valley Wew Sit. 8utna Partt12A 90820
1858 Amell! Rd., Cam•IJo, CA 90010 2071& S. Avalon Blvd .. Carson CA 90746 23021 Lake Center Or .• (Lake i!'or-est). El Toro. CA 92630
1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 G)
4140 Long BHCti Blvd .. Long Beacti, CA 90807 •
221139 Hawthorne Blvd., Torr.ance, CA 90505
1095 lrvln• Blvd .. Tustin, CA 92680 235 N. Citrus Ave .. West Covina. CA 91793
"Mtrcury Room" tvt//10/1 on• re11rv1d bHlt
£QUAI. HOUSl~C ll~O!R
Al'Wi ...... le
Largest Beer Stade
After 10 hours of stacking, 10,<8> cases of brew stand at Sacramen-
to 's Liquor Mart, making it the world's largest beer display. The
volume of the 120,960 bottles contained within the cases represents
20, 790 gallons of beer. Representatives of the Guinness Book of
World Records were on hand to certify the record Wednesday.
Win · Over Klans111a11
Breaks Vote Record
SAN DIEGO (AP) -
Breaking a 40-year -old
national record for total
votes. U.S. Rep. Clair
Burgener. R-La Mesa,
says his landslide victory
over white supremacist
Tom Metzger was "a
firm rejection of the
philosophies of the Ku
Klux Klan."
Burgener, in winning
his fifth consecutive 43rd
Congressionpl District
term Tuesday, received
86.4 percent of the vote
over Tom Metzger, a
state Ku Klux Klan
leader running a s a
Democrat.
Unofficial but final
vote totals Wednesday
gave Burgener 292,039
votes. surpassing the
267 ,873 cast for
Republican Leonard Hall
in the 1st Congressional
District of New York in
1940.
The record was
----------achieved in the nation's largest congressional
district, with almost a
million people, spanning
most of San Diego Coun-
ty. parts of Riverside
County and all of Im·
peri al County
'------------' Metzger. who ran on a
6MONTHS
FREE
platform of whit e
s upremacy, tightening or
U.S .-Mexican border
restrictions and support
for working class whites,
received 45,623 votes, or
13.5 percent.
Cuts Invalid
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -The state Social
Services Department
cannot reduce the
amount of money paid
under t h e Aid to
Families with Depen·
dent Children program
because an unrelated
adult male lives in the
household of program
recipients, the Court of
Appeal has ruled.
reported.
All S2 were charged with misde-
meanor trespassing, and in addition,
10 werechllfged with resisting arrest.
AL 11IOUGB THE demonstration
had Reagan's presidential election as
a "catalyst," one protestor said, it
later drifted into a general protest
centering on campus causes of long
standing. Al one point, inside the
building, communist literature was
handed out.
"I'm doing it just to make a point
about what's going on," replied one
student when asked why he had
participate~ in the spontaneous,
mostly nonVlolent, demonstration.
The noisy. occupation of a stairwell
bet ween the first and second floors of
California Hall started about 2 p.m.
with 150 students and nonstudents.
Police sealed off the building. Two
men were arrested then for allegedly tangling with police.
AS TIIE PROTESTERS walked in·
to the building, most of the UC ad-
ministrators walked out, but some
minor damage was reportedly done
to the walls near Chancellor Michael
Heyman's office.
Later, supporters outside attempt-
ed to toss food and other items
through an open window to the pro-
testers.
About 7:30 p.m., when more than
half the protesters had left voluntarily
after several warnings, police waded
in and led away those who would walk
on their own and dragged away others
whowentlimp.
The occupation was preceded by an
anti-Reagan rally nearby at Sproui
Plaza. which for nearly 10 years was
the focal point of sometimes fierce
confrontations accompanied by tear
gas and truncheons. By comparison,
Wednesday's event was a love feast.
SPEAKERS TOLD A small crowd
to "make sure Reagan can do as lit· ~le as possible to hmder human rights
mthecountry." ·
Joe Lambert of the Berkeley
Progressive Students Organization,
announced that the demonstration
was called ''to build an educational
movement against Reagan . . . when
Reagan reinstates the draft and
World enrollment. :
Campus police chief William Beale
told reporters the demonstratioQ wts
legal before the building's regular
closing time at 5 p.m. After that, tbe
demonstrators were warped th~y
were subject to arrest. Police pa-
tience ran out 21h hours later.
Library Retains
Display of Gay:
Books, Photos
HAYWARD (AP) -A con-
troversial displa)' of homosexual-
oriented books and photographs wfll
remain at Hayward's main library,
despite protests from some residents.
the city's library commission says.
The commission's 4-2 vote Wednes-
day night to keep the display drew
applause from about 80 people, most
of whom identified themselves as be·
ing gay.
"I AM OPPOSED to censorship,"
said lesbian Kristen Loomis, a Valle-
jo librarian and one of 32 people to
speak at the meeting. "Ten percent
of our population is gay. These
materials should be available to
them."
Titled "Out or t.he Closet,·· the dis·
play is sponsored by the Pacific
Center for Human Growth , a
Berkeley mental health and sociaJ
services agency for homosexuals. It
features photographs and books by or
about gays.
LEADING OPPOSITION to the dis·
play was a Hayward parent, Darlene
K. Bogle, who demanded immediate
removal of the display. She said it
was not suitable for children and jt
advocated homosexuality, which she
viewed as against Biblical standards.
Mrs. Bogle was joined by about a
dozen people representing church
and other groups who denounced the
display as immoral and un -
American.
The month-long di s play was
authorized by the commission last
March by a 5-2 vote.
HAPPY "HOUR''
Our restaurants
will treat you with
complimentary "Refreshments"
Every Weekday Afternoon From 3 to 5 p.m.
NOVEMBER 5-14
Amatos
{Upper level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary European
cappuc1no with purchase
of dessert
c;'.au'l's Jr.
(Lower level I Sears wing)
Complimentary soft drink
with purchase of hamburge1
Back Bay Rowing &
Running Club
(Lower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary scoop of
Haagen·Dazs ice cream with
purchase of a meal.
Forty Carrots
(lower level I Saks wing)
Complimentary fresh fruit
shake with purchase
of entree. Lindbe rg's
(Lower level I C4rousel Court)
Complimentary cake and
coffee with pur<:ha se
of lunch. Magic Pan
(Lower level I Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary mousse with
purchase of lunch. Rendezvous Cafe
(Lower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary popcorn.
Vie De France
(Lower level I Nordstrom wing)
Complimentary roll/croissant
wi~h P4-1rchase of coffee or
Complimentary des~ert with
purchase of lunch.
Riviera
(lower level I May Co. wing)
Caff e Pasquini
(Upper level I Saks wing)
Complimentary dessert with
purchase of lunch
Kaplan's
(lower level I May Co. wing)
Complimentary danish with
purchase of beverage.
Pronto
(Upper level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary pastry and
coffee with purchase
of lunch
Salmagundi
(lower level I Bullock's wing)
Comphmentary beverage
with purchase of soup
or salad.
20th Century
(lower level I Carousel court)
~mpllmentary European
cappuclno with purchase
of dessert.
-----SeB~H COASJ=........-.-
• •
nt Hi~M Hit
Senior Citizem·
Res dtmh. uf th Meadowa Mobile Hbme Park in .
Irvin" h»\ll' .a lot to be unhapfy about these days. They c·t-t-el\•ed notice las month that their apace ~n-'
lat had been mrreased by an averase of 17 .5 percent.
{tent h1k d o f l h h n ature are. in the best of
cirr u mst anre:i, unwelcome.
Rut the r~i.ldtnts of the Meadows Mobile Home Park
are far from beang m the best of clrcumsttnces. Their
toaches art' becoming old and hard to move. And there
seems to bt! nowhl're for them to move, since most of the
mobile home parks in Orange County are already full.
Yet another disturbing problem for the Meadows
Mobile Home Pc.irk residents r~volves around the fact
that most are senior citizens on fixed incqmes. In order to
m ove Into the park. o ne must be 55 years of age or older.
Some of the elderly people have been fo.rced to take
• news paper routes and other su ch jobs in order to make
ends meet. Othe rs. less fortunate, have had to sell their
coa ches and no" fare the undesirable prospect of entering
the Orange County housing market.
Given thl· predictable impact of the I7.5 percent rent
hike on tht' mobile hom e dwellers, the owners of the park
s houldn't be surpnse d that an Irvine city councilman,
Larry Agr a n, is now proposing that the City Council
adopt a m1>bllr home park rent stabilization ordinance.
The l'Ounc il ts to decide on Nov. 11 whether Irvine
will havt• <tn ordinanre preventing mobile home space
rentals from being increased by more than 10 percent.
T he ordinance would be retroactive to Oct. 1 and would
expire on Sept 30. 1981.
Agran :..1r j:!ues that the action by CMT Investment
Trust. owner ... of the Meadows Mobile Home Park, calls
for a response by lht! city.
lie also nolts t hat other cities such as San Juan
Capistran!) anrt Cars on have mobile home rent control.
IL 1s nol too late for CMT Investment Trust to roll
back t heir t'i 5 pe rcent re nt hike , which doubles past
yearly n •nt increases a t the park.
A µrl' .1tt-ly :'H'hieved resolution of the matter would
certainly ht> bt>t lt•r than a City Council imposed solution.
A Fair Solution
The Jn mi· t 1t y Council has passed a resolution that
!>ays peoµh• v.hu "AOrk in the city should be given priority
.-\vh cn ll rnm<'" to doling out affordable housing units.
~ Only thosl' d wellings fitting the "affordable" label
: will be affectt·d bv the resolution.
:· ln adopt 1 ng th<-' resolution, the council was careful lo ~ ass ure th ~1l t hl· grneral public wasn 'l being overly ~ rest rittPd in favor of Irvine's work force.
For cx:l rnplc. under the plan two lotteries wo uld ,be
set up for rwoplt> inte rested in buying into a 200-unit con·
: dominium proJ c<·t built to fulfill Irvine's affordable hous·
~ mg reqwrerncnts Half the units would be placed in a lot·
• tery for tlw general publi c and the other half would be
~ placed 1n !I JH 1nr1l\ lottPry for people who work in Irvine.
~ Th1!-.qipt•ur.., to be a good approach to distribute
• scarce affordable housing in Irvine.
_. And th<' re are good reasons why people who work in
Irvine s hould he g ive n a n enhanced chance of living in
the cit>-
P l'f1pl1· \\he work anrl li ve in the same c ity can use
less ga"o11rw C'r< ate less pollution and be more civically
mvolwc1 than pl'ople who must commute to work.
• Tht 11•!-oh111<1n seems a reasonable effort to balance
the ne1'Cf, nf I 1 "inf ~ wo rk force and the general public.
.· Co111prornise Helpful
t
'
Sadd l1•t1 •l'k (.'cJl le ge trustees and teachers have
re acht'<.I .11 •11 ·1 rrw11t on a contract that provides for pay
hikes of ll pl'r't l'nl. 9 5 percent, and 10 percent con·
scc utivC'I~ "' ,., the ne xt t hree years.
Thf• ~al.in int·rtascs for the 1980·81 year will cost the
rlistri<'I w .. t ,110()
Wh1li· t hat is n o small amount, the agreement
rcpre~(·nb :i n•a son able solution for the college and
fac ult\
Ttw t ru:,1 1·1·:--t>ltmanated the top five doctoral steps
from thl' "alarv schedule, thus cutting some cost to the
dist rid In <'X<'h;rnge. teachers received assurance of a con·
I ract th1 uu~h the 1982·83 year .
Th<' two ~1dt>s ha d been negotiating since May.
While ·HI H·a<'h<'r'i voted against the pact -many ap·
parently bct:.iu::.e or the e limination of the five steps -a
faculty spokt-s rnan noted that the agreement is a com ·
prom1!>e lx·tween the inflation rate and limited funds.
The contract a lso will give the teachers time to con·
centratl' on educatio n for the next three years.
It looks likl' a reasonable and equitable se ttleme nt.
• Opinions •'«P'" ,,. cJ m lht' space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Othe1 view» t'xpr'!'>'>ell on this page are tho~e of their auttiors and
artists At~ad(:r comment is inll'llted Address The Daily P1tot, P.O
Box tS60 Costa Me:.a. CA 92626 !Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Po~itics
ByL.M.BOVO
This moment occured when
Woodrow Wilson was gov·
em or of New Je rsey A U S.
# senator rrom his stale died.
perfectly agreeable lo me if
it's agreeable to the un·
dertaker."
Q. Can you name the only
word that's pronounced wrong
by everybody whose primary
language is English?
• The man had tw>en a close
• friend of Wilson . A Jersey
• politician w1lh1n minutes
telephoned lhe l(overnor. and
u id, "I'd hke to take the
~ senator's place, sir " Wilson
paused, then said, "You may
quote n'le as savinit It is
llt~ar
Gloon1y
A. Won't bite, sir. The word
is " wrong.··
That room backstage where
act ors wait between ap·
pearances before the au-
dience i4 called the "rreen
room," clearly, because it's
customarily painted gree.e:
Question arises as to why Ui~ • particular color. ·areen wu
Iona thou&ht to be especially
restful tor the actors' eyes.
They felt they needed special
100thin1 treatment after fac·
University s tudents lntthoeebrt1htlifbta. ·
who flunk aeosraphy
quluH, put Nicaragua A black brldC• aero.a UM
In the heart of Afrtca, Thames River In London wu
et c . may 11tl ll have the scene of numerou1
prom\•lna careers -as aulcides. AutboriU .. palnted
Jack Andenon
' • II:
Iraq· Chemieal WM. ljse Feared
W ~NOTON -De15plte the
near-hys teri cal rhetor ic
emanat.tni from bolb Iran and
Iraq, the desert conOlct so far
has been lea than total war. But
U.S. lntelU1ence analysts say
there ls danger of escalation in a
particularly gruesome area :
che m ical warfare.
The reason chemical or
biological weapons have not
been used
m a y b e
simpl y t h at
the balance of
terror ln this
new field Is
c l ea rly in
Iraq's favor,
and the Iraqis
hav e b ee n
doing we ll
e nough with
conventional forces so far.
Bul if the fortunes of wa r should
ch a n ge dramatically, Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein may
decide to stave off disaster by
resorting lo chemical weapons.
Mailbox
Iran bas done relatively Uttle
to develop chemical warlart:
capablllty, or defense asalnst
auch attacks. But Hussein is
known to consider chemicals a
useful militar y tool. Iraq 's
m odest s t ot kpl l e of
chemical·biologlcal weapons ls a
legacy from Its years as a
military client of the Soviet
Onion.
The Iraqis began actively
acquiring a chemical warfare
potential in the m id-19705. As a
secret Defense Intelligence
Agency report put it, Iraq
embarked on ·•an agaresslve
chemical·biologlcal· radlologicaf
pro gram , i n c lud i n g th e
construction of training facilities
. . .modeled after Soviet CBR
installations."
INttLLIGENCE sources
di scov ere d .. a l least 15
locations" in Iraq "where CBR
obst acle cour ses h ad been
constructed with Russian help.
The extent of these training
fac i I Hies 1 ·h ighllghts the
importance (the Iraqis) place on
being prepared to operate In a
contaminated environment ,"
one secret report states.
The obstacle courses were
used as part of general Iraqi
army training. "In these areas,
troops are instr:ucted to bypass
or move through contaminated
ob1tacles and perform normal
com bat duties while wearing
protective clothing_,'' the report
notes.
"Each Iraqi division has an
organic chemical company that
is equipped primarily with
Soviet-manufactured materiel
s uc h as the truc k-lllounted
ARS -1 2 and DDA ·53
decontamination apparatus," an
intellJgence report states. "As in
the Soviet Army , the Iraqi
ground force has a c hemical
branch, a nd CBR doctrin~ is
most likely based on Soviet
concepts."
Before relations with the
Kre mlin cool ed foll owing
( ~YfS .... MMAAA ~
I GUcSS A SKELE~ KEV
!§ ~™ER APPROPRIATE!
HOMOHO! .. ~HEH~ ~TM
IHH SENSE OF HUMOR
YOU'VEGOTTHtRE. ~ -MR.RJT... .
------·
Husaeln'a cUckdown on Iraqi
communists In 1971, the Soviet.a
report e dly 1upplled •mall
amount• of chemical warfare
aaenta for trainin1 uae.
THE lllAQIS HAD .. no known
che mical warfare production
ca pability , although the
technological base required to
prqduce nerve a1enta exlata, and
an attempt has reportedly been
made to do so," accordins to an
I n telligence analysis. It
concludes ominously:
·'The Iraqis realize that. once
acquired, weapons of this type
could be used against ...
potential adversaries. such as
Iran and Israel. N umerous
weapons systems already in the
Iraqi inventory are capable of
d e livering CBR m unitions.
whic h would h ave to b e
externally supplied."
Intelligence sources told my
associate Dale Van Atta that the
Fre n ch , who r e placed the
Russians a s Iraq 's major
military s upplier, have not
provided chemical weapons. But
the Iraqis have built up a small
stockpile on their own.
EX PORTI NG TRAGEDY;
Manufacturers who run afoul of
s tri n gent f e d era l safety
standards have a callous option
available : Like the companies
t hat found themselves with
stocks of baby clothes treated
with Tris . the s u s pected
cancer·causing flame retardant,
greedy m a nufac turers can
dump their goods overseas.
Now there is evidence the
federal government is helping
the United Nat ions fob off a
controversial birth·control drug
on unsuspecting women around
the world. The s ubstance is
Depo· Provera, and tests have
link ed it t o s terility a nd
congen ital heart disea se in
women. In a private letter lo Rep.
Mario Biaggi, D·N.Y., officials
of the Agency for International
Development admitted that.
despite attempted safeguards ,
AID Funds may be helping to
underwrite a U.N. program that
is distributing De po· Prover a
abroad.
Strings Attached to' Affordable' Housing
To the Editor:
ln response to the Oct. 22
editorial e nti tled ··county
Tackles Housing Shortage," ifthe
Board of Supervisors were to
wave a magic wand and create
10,000 units of affordable housing
tomorrow, the demand for "af·
fordable" housing in Orange
County would not be met. As we
watch the supervisors perform
their miracles, remembertha~all
their grandstanding is at the ex-
pense of every property owner in
Orange County.
The buyer of an "affordable"
house can only sell that unit at a
price determined by the County of
Orange and that price is not to ex·
ceed the purchase price plus the
increase in the median income in
Orange County Jn addition, the
county can decrease the sales
price by the amount necessary to
r e pair a ny damages as de·
termined by the county. They can
c lean and paint and r epair
without limitation and charge the
sellerofan "affordable" unit.
THE ~UNTY can take up to
fi ve months to exercise their op·
lion to purchase a home and at the
end of the 1.50 days fail to consum·
mate the purctrase and not belia·
ble ! The ~lier of one of these SO·
called "affordable" units can
not sell U .. By Owner" or through
the realtor of his choice ... he mu.st
sell It through the Orange County
Housing Authority. TJie worst
pa rt of this wonder cure is that the
buyer of a county.subsidized
home will never be able to afford
to buy anything but a nother sub-
sidized home.
A representative of lbe state
Department of Housing and Com·
munity Development bas Stated
that this type of rd ale restriction
1hould apply to all housing -not
Just ••affordable" housing, not
Just 1ublidbed housing.
All of these racta make aovem·
ment sublldbed affordable boua·
o 11\1 the most expen1ive bouaint
available today. Other. leaa COil· 1Y, approaches to the problem
are available.
VIRGINIA CI ECK
Preatdent, Newport Harbor·
COila Mna Board or Realtors
Srl1d Tit~ Ho•~
To the Editor: Andy Rooney (Pilot, Oct. 31)
la rilht: "I.At'• make some de·
mattcta of Iran."
After all. the students will not
only learn mPdicine, science. arts, etc .. but about democracy.
human rights and religious
freedom , which are items the
present Iranian governme nt
wants nothing to do with.
Give us the hostages and send
the students home!
JIM deBOOM
Bt•lng Dh·ld'"
To the Editor:
Perhaps no better way could
be devised to divide races,
create confusion and destroy
public schoots than fo rced bus-
ing. Is it possible judges like
Egly who rule in favor of bus·
ing are really on the ..other side
after all and a re only doing the
work of those who want racial
division and private schools?
B. TAVLIN
fA•Hf,,..fJ fff•#pfHld#
To the Editor:
A column by Milton Moskowitz
on Conoco's Labor Day ad has
just come to my attention and
deserves a reply. Mr. Moskowitz
notes that our sales and earn·
lngs have grown substantially~
since 1970 but that employment
has grown only modestly over
this interval. Both observations
are correct. But his conclusion,
that "capital is doing great for
its owners but not so marvelous·
ly for the work force," is Incor-
rect.
CONOCO'$ WA GES and
benefits per employee In 1979
were 2. 7 limes what they were in
1970; dividends paid on common
stock were up sll&htly less dur·
lng that interval -2.3 times.
The con.sumer price index in·
creased 1.8 times in the 1970-79
pe riod. So while bolb employees
and stoc:kbolders enjoyed real
Panela
financial gains from Conoco's
grow(h, employees fared propor-
tionately better.
When it comes to new jobs.
Mr. Moskowitz fails to consider
that capital-intensive companies
s uch as Conoco typically create
more jobs outside their com·
panies than within. Here are
some examples :
-A new joint venture to ex·
pand a petrochemical complex
in Texas created 3.200 construe·
tion jobs at its peak and SUS·
tained an average of 1,750 con·
struction jobs for four years. But
these employees worked for our
contractors. not for Conoco or its
partner company
-Conoco will buy 144,000 tons
of steel in the U.S in 1980 This
creates jobS in the steel industry
and in the industries that supply
steelmakers. but it doesn't in-
crease Conoco's employment.
-Conoco will Invest $800
million in the search for oil and
gas in t he U.S . this year.
SubstantiaUy all of these expen·
ditures are made through drill·
ing contractors with their own
employees -not Conoco's .
, Thousands of new jobs have
been created this way in recent
years 7 b~ don't appear in
the employment records or ma·
jor oil companies.
We stand by our cla im that
stronger earnings can provide
the capital to create more and
better jobs.
EDWARDJ. MULLIGAN
To the Editor:
What ls tbe matter with Uua
generation ot young people? I
know we ask this question over
and over and have no answer.
On Halloween someone stole
part of our porch decorations. We
had a skull which was painted
with fluorescent paint on a table.
A black light shining on it made a
spooky effect and the children
who came to the door seemed to
appreciate the display. Now it is
gone.
THE SKULL was part of a col·
lect1on from my past ! M y rather
was in special effects at MGM
Studio and we always had in·
teresting things for Halloween
and Fourthof July.
The skull was made of plaster of
paris and was fragile. It had bulbs
in the eyes so that it could be ele<:·
trically connected. I'm sure
whoever took it will break it and
j usttoss it out.
Jsn 't there some way young peo·
pie can be tautht to leave things
a lone that don't belong to them ?
BARBARA WEBER
E.rplanaf 1011
To the Editor:
'
It is difficult to understand, I
told my wife, over breakfast.
The levee had broken · several
days ago. The water was backed
bp behind a railroad embank· me~. ~
• There w~ worry .that the em·
bankrnent would hold, and that
thousands of acres of farmland
would be flooded, but they ap·
parently did not stop train tral·
fie on that stretch of track. A
train was on the embankment
when it broke.
· That ia easy to understand,
my wt!e told me. The govern-
ment ls helplna to run the
railroad. Someone was lrylnt to
phone the proper government
a1ency all of the while. The COO·
nectloo would be broken, then
they would &et a busy line. Then
when they 1ot lbrou1h, they
would be put on hold for three
houra. 'Ibey would finally . rmd
out lbat ttie)' bad the wronc de-·
partment. 'Ibey would be direct·
eel to another department, and
then the process would ftart
over.
In a few days, the1 mi1bt have
almott bad their call completed,
when the frel1ht train waa
bac.iked out on U.. embankment,
and lt broke.
That mak• """· I told ber,
thanlm for the explanation.
JAMES BOLDING
dlJ>lo..mat.t... ' it areea. ILi 1uldd .. declined ~ lf.ll.-. ...,..,_ "by moiilhiiiat•nf __., __ .., If Inn want. America not to 1nttntt'1111n""ttle-tnternet.,.....
·of Iran, then tet'1. demand th1l
Iran take back all ot Ill students
ln th• U.S. u part or the boltace ,
•trffment.
=J :,•o,,t::.r:,•~~~ .. ~·. ':!, ...,.., ... ,..1ee, .,,. ·-· .. .. Costa lhe averqe worklq
"' • ._..., »M ,_ ,., ....... • man In China three montbl' ~·~'*'' ....... pay to bu)' a bk7ele.
~
Ora•1e Coast
EDITION
VOL 73, NO. 304, 5 SECTIONS,• PAGES ORANGf COUNTY, CALI FORNI A THURSDAY, NOVEMB~R 6, 1980 N TWENTY·FIVE CENTS
Reagan·Offers Hostage-Talk Aid .
Newport
Church
Moving?
Officials of St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church In Newport
Beach have unveiled tentative
plans to build a new church on a
10-acre site on the· Castaways
property -overlooking Newport
Bay.
Pastor John Huffman Jr., who
said the relocation push began
more than a year ago, noted that
the church 's membership has
voled to n egotiate with the
Irvine Company, owneni of the
65-acre Castaways property off
Dover Drive near Coast
Highway. The property, which
overlooks the Coast Highway
Bridge over Upper Newport Bay,
is named for a resta urant that on-
ce stood there.
Huffman said the 3 ,000-
member church has agreen to
e nter a JO -month option -
relaUons bip, s ta r ting this
December, for purchase of the
parcel. .
He said the chief obs tac le at this
point Is money. The church's con-
gregation, he said, fias raised
roughly $1.4 million. about one-
lbird of the asking price for the
land. _ .
Huffman said the reason for
the proposed move is simply
that the church's membership
has outgrown the current facili· •
ty across the street from
Newport Harbor High School.
St. Andrews bas been located
at 600 St. Andrews Road, a 2.8-
acre parcel of land, for the past
30 years.
Meanwhile. Newport city plan-
ners are assisting Irvine Com·
pany officials in putting together
ebvironmental impact reports
for the entire SS.acre Castaways
site .
No formal proposal on the
property has been submitted.
In addition to the church, de-
velopment oo the site would like-
ly include low-density residen-
tial and five acres devoted to
either recreation use or marine-
related commercial outlets.
Huffman said he wants to as-
sure church membeu that
negotiations for purchase of the
10-acre site will not jeopardize
St. Andrew's current location.
Officials said it is too early to
speculate on what would happen
to the church's current location
if the move is ultimately com·
pleted.
Stocks Dip
As Election
Rally Wanes
NEW YORK (AP) -The
stock market declined broadly
today as the rally that followed
Ronald Reagan's election vie·
tory faded.
The Dow Jones average of 30
~ala. wttTcb iumped near-
> llpointl Wednesday, fell 17.75
. tsS.40. '
Losen took a 5-1 lead over
(alnen amoog New York Stock
~acbaQfe-listed issues.
Trading slowed from Wed-
De1day'1 record pace . Openinc-
bo\lr volume on the Blg Board &oUled J.J.lt million sbnes.
MIY~•IUff,,_
POLICE EXPLORER SCOUTS COMll HILLSIDE IN SEARCH FOR DEATH WEAPON
Newport Beech lnveatlpton Quedon Roommate In Shooting Of lpyglaH Hiit Man
Murder Weapon Sought
Single Shot Kills Spyglass Hill Man
By STEVE MARBLE
OI -o.lly ~-StMf Newport Beach detectives and
Explorer Scouts were combing a
Newport. Beach neighbortlood to-
day for the murder weape>n
police say was used to fire ooe
bullet through the head of a 45·
year-old psychologist.
Stanley Donald Espinda,
police said, was found early to-
day sprawled in the family room
of his Spyglass Hill home at I
Jade Cove.
Police said one bullet,
believed to be from a .7+ caliber
weapon, had been fired into the
man's head.
Investigator s said they've
taken the man's male roommate
into custody for questioning. He
hasn't been arrested and his
name hasn't been released.
Police said they received a
caH early today from the dead
man's roommate reporting a
gunshot.
The youthful roommate, de-
tecti ves said, told officers he
bad been watching television
with F.aJDda, but left Ute l'OOQl
to use the bathroom.
Once lnaide the bathroom, he
told investigators, he heard a
single crack of gunfire, panicked
Newport's Annex
Of Triangle OK'd
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors acted Wednesday to
allow t h e ann ex a li on b y
Newport Beach of a 61-acre
triangle of unincorporated land
the city surrounds.
City officials need only file a
certificate of completion with
the county and work out an
agreement to share property
taxes to make the annexation of-
ficial.
The unincorporated island
near Hoag Memorial Hospital is
bordered by Superior and
Monrovia avenues. It has 91 land
owners and 430 registered
voters, said Newport Beach
Planning Directo r J im
Hewicker.
The Newport Beach City Coun-
cil approved the annexation
Sept. 22.
The 96'7 residents of the area
never voled o the annexation
because the state's Municipal R~rganizatioo Act doesn't re·
quf re electioms fo'r annexations of
leasthantOOacres. -
That state law expires on Dec.
31, though, so city officials are
hurrylnc to complete their
paperwork before then.
Of the total 61 acres, 39 acres
are in residential use, 11 are va·
DaMyf'll9t.._M-.
AREA BEING ANNEXED
Some Paperwork to Do
cant, seven acres are in in·
dustrial use, three are used com-
mercially and one acre is devot·
ed to office use, Hewicker said.
T he area in c ludes t hree
mobile home parks. A cJirector
for a large mobile hoinMne~
association told count~
s upervisors Wednesday hla
group supports the annexation.
Earl Lane of the Golden State
Mobile Homeowners Lea1ue
said bia memben want to beloftc
to Newport Beach became dty
services will be more acce11lble.
and crawled out the bathroom
window, running lo a nearby
residence.
From there, police· said, the
man phoned police. •
PoUce said they dismissed the
theory that the man might have
taken his own life when they
were unable to locate the
weapon that killed him.
n,ey said they are coacentrat-
io1 their search for the 'Weapon
in the hotde ·and a sarden area
below the house's courtyard ana
pool. lnvestigatoni aald there
were no sips of forced entry into
the home.
Major Banks
Raise Prime
Rate 1 Point
N\;w YORK <AP> -Major
banks raised their prime let~ rates by one full percentage
point to lS.5 percent today, the
highest since May.
Chase Manhattan Bank, which
initiated the move from the pre·
valling 14.5 percent rate, said
the increase was spurred by re·
cent sharp jumps in its cost of
funds.
''General market rates and
tbe cost of funds to banks have
risen sharply in recent weeks,"
the nation's third-tartest com·
mercial bank said in a rare com-
ment on its move.
"Indeed. this Increase does
not fully reflect the increased
cost of f\Dlds to Chase . Nor does
this increase portend the direc·
tion of future movements ln the
prime rate over the near term,"
the bank said.
The recent jump in banks' cost
of fundl w~ undenico*<l this
morning when the .rate on
federal funds -uncommitted
reserves that banks lend one
another -soar.eel to 15.5 percent
before the Federal Reaerve
Board intervened by adding re-
serves.
Soon alter Chase announced
its rate incre~.
' Will Help 1
In Talks
H Asked
L OS ANGELES (AP) -
President-el~t Reagan said to-
day he will do all he can to help
gain the release of the 52
American}lbostages in Iran, but
·•we are not going to intrude" on
the neeottationa during i he fmal
months of President Carter's ad·
ministration.
"Foreign leaders must be
aware that the president is still
the president,·' Reagan told a
news confer~nce in Los Angeles.
Reagan also said that he will
·'begin immediately on the job
of translating campaign prom-
ises into reality~" and named
William Casey, the New York
lawyer who managed bis cam -
paign, to oversee the transition
lo a Republican administration.
He named three prominent
Other electlOn and pHt-
•l•ctlon coverage appea,. .
today on ~ A3, A4, A12,
81,82and85.
Democrats to his foreign policy
advisory committee -Sen.
Henry M . Jackson of
Was h in gton , former Sen .
Richard Stone of Florida and
Washington attorney Edward
Bennett. Williams.
"I will work hard to rebuild a
bipartisan base ror American
foreign policy," Reagan told bis
first news conference slnce his
landslide victory Tuesday.
Reagan also thanked Carter
for moYilt& quick:lf w eet 'IP a
tramiU. team Ol bia own to
smootb the cbuaeover.
Reapn named Edwtn Meese,
bia eampaign chief of staff, to
direct bis transition staff. He
said transition work i1 under
way.
"We've already betun the
work of putting to1etber an ad·
miniat.ration," he told the news ·
conference, broadcast na-
tionwide.
Meese said Wednesday that
Reagan and Carter would work
in cooperation for release of the
hostages.
Reagan did not indicate there
is any arrangement for such a
joint effort, although he said
he'd help where possible.
"Like everyone else, we want
the hostages to be returned," be
said.
But he said everyone must un-
derstand that Carter is in charge
until Jan. 20, when the new ad·
ministration will take power.
Cart er, t alking about the
hostages situation Wednesday,
also carefully pointed out that he
will be president anothe'r 2'h
months.
Reagan gave much of the
s ame answe r when a sked
whether be planned to com-
municate with the Soviet Uruon
during the transition period ..
"No, l don't," Reagan said.
He said he would not do
anything that might indicate the
nation is not unified or that "we
are trying to speak with a dif·
ferent vol~" while the Carter
admlnistratlon r e mains in
il'Wer .
' Reagan saMI the Iranian gqy.
erment should not think it can
gain anytblng by waiting uoW
he takes office to negotiate re-
lease of the 52 American
boatages.
DIRECTS TRANSITION
C.mpalgner CaHy
HEADING STAFF
EdwtnMeeM
Band Seeking
Old Papers
Old newspapers piling up are
wo rth more than the paper
they're printed on to members
of the Newport Harbor ffigb
School Band, which needs all
you can bring Saturday to help
send it to Canada next spring.
Jan Landstrom, NHHS Band
Boosters president. s ays
youngsters will collect paper
from 9 a.m. to noon on the cam-
pus parking lot on 15th Street
ac r oss from St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church.
The drive will help fund the
band's trip to the University of
British Columbia in Vancouver
Memorial Day Weekend 1981 for
a four-day Performing Arts
Abroad program.
One ne wspaper drive per
month will be held through
April.
China Ple a sed
PEKING CAP ) -China
praised President-elect Ronald
Reagan today u a "moderate"
and a "pragmatist .. who wants
friendly relations with Pelcing.
Coast
Weaiher
: Wall Streeters were generally ~till elated over Rea1an 's
landslide victory in the presiden·
ttal race and the bil 1aina
re,latend by the RePubUcam ln eon,,...
IJQP• t~ _Ride J1'8e• Free? Low cloudiness night
and momini clearing to
mostly sunny Friday ar-
temoon. Lowa tooigbt 57
at ·the beaches, 62 lnland.
Hight Friday 88 along the
coaat to 72 to 7S inland. But they said lnveston' atten-
... Wiii beginnin1 to retunt to
die 1JooaaY outlook for ia.Oation ad ......._t rate• in the Im-
mediate tuture.
a, GLENN 8C01T ..................
Tbe 3,000 aworn law enforce-ment officers in Orange County
probably wlll soon be riding
Orange County Transit District
bu.set free.
Jn exchanae for the free rides,
the off-duty police ahertff's de-
puties and mar1bal1 wm be
available to quell diaturbanca
OD tbebQla.
,,The proposal J1 atlU ln the
talklDI 1ta1es. but law enforce-
ment oftlcera reportedly aupport
lt and U.. diatriel't Board ol
Dlrectora ynantmoualy •P· ·John Blwq, clalef MeartlJ Of-
, proved tbe ccmcept at a meetlq fleer fGr tbe diltrtet.
• l today la Garden OtOYe. BlaMll .... tUt tM dlllrtct
1 ._ ..... _. • Ue, •0 d prlcH Tb• otneen, wt.0 normally doel mt bave ~ MrlGm ertme ~· ._., • 9IO aa omee commute to ..cl from wort In Ill-,. • .-.. ...... ~
..,.....tod•J•b.lletM clvWu clol.Me, could set tne :=: ..J'ieu.a ....,i;:
after ~-br_HniM_~rl'fWI Calllanla Rapkl Trwla DAI· U.dllna their~ Ei • M11 -m-a-111t.wA111i1twOJJat:J.··-
••Bat tM aubU• au•1..uoa
that aae or more polltie Oftleen.
mt_,bt be OD boa.rd U,..........
wl'1. IJ'"UY enbaDff tM l .... of trllBlit MCUritJ ud • .,., t It ..........
, .. aped8el .... llCal ... ,....,_ -.......... ..au
I
need to be worked out. Board
memben told Blancq to be au.re
to 1peak to all law euforcement
1roup1 b efore the pact la
ratified.
Board attorn'y lteonard
Smart Jr. said UabWty IAilht t.
an issue, but in moet ca1e1 the
d11tria· wouldn't be rapomlble
If a law enforcemeat officer act-
ed DelllcmtlY OD board.
Board membera, who noted
tbat ~ omcen alwaya are
to prevent crime, Niel
t Ubd the utra HCurit1
I lat.be tr•. ,
''TIU wW eert&baif keep_ our
'rowdl• from cWD• aaJUdnl
abo•• ..... ...,... tMlr .......,.
rawdnlw,"oM&twd ...... .. OCPO 8oud ewr.. Ra1pb am.
IN81 DE TeD" Y
. .....
l
·1
!
I
I • I
CARACA.a1 V--•la CAP> -llijaeken foreed a DC·t v ....... AVSNSA Jet .... wiUI. aboard to Cuba today, • • .-..... roru....,....,........
TMpluaaa..IM9&tMHav .. 81rportafteraJ~ . ....,.,.., ... u._.
•too laC\lraeao. o.Mll A.M.Wm,tM•,.... ... Mld.
II• Nkltbe plw wu eom=ar t lrtd lJ•INd• .a.r lt took on
frcm U. C•ac.,: airport fw .......... ,..... .. ..__Ordu, ln
eutera V~a. II. 1ald .._,._cant.d n ,..._..,.and a
erewofftve. TMll'ldentJU..wenDOtdiacloled.
r .... .._. s..,,. •.-ee..,
ATLANTA (AP> -Sea. lfenuD Talmad1' will ask fw a re-
count ol the Tuelday vo&lal tbat llilowed blm an UlMlet loler by
24, 111 votea to Republican eballea1er Mack MatUqly. a
Talmadle aide 1ald today.
Unclftelal results with 100 percent ol tbe wt. coaated
showed the veteru Demoerat. wlllO Ud beea teekiDc a ftftb
term, with 717,tll vota or• peremt to MaWalb''• Tll,107
votes or 51 percent.
E..r-FBI Otllt-lal• c •• .,.ft..,
WASl-DNGTON (AP> -A federal court jury tb1a afternoon
convicted two former FBI olftclala Of violatinl individual civil
rights by authortnng warrantlels searches at homes of friends
and relatives of members of the radical Weather Undercround
during the early 19708.
W. Mark Felt, who once was the No. 2 official in tbe FBI,
and Edward S. Miller, who beaded the bureau's intellicen.ce
division, were found guilty of a sin1le count of violatin1 in-
dividual civil rights after a trial that luted nearly two months.
Both admitted autborinn1 searches of homp in lbe New
York and New Jersey area in the early 19708, but the defense
contended they had legal authority to do so.
ean .. ·aolJwr Fl~•
CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. (AP) -A masked gunman robbed a
cash.ler at Cloud's Cal·Neva Lodge today and escaped on foot with
an undisclosed amount of money, the W uboe County sheriff's of-fice said.
Lest , ... ~ •.ee
Campaign Cost
Orozco 840,000 .
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of"'9DeHy~ ........
Orange County Central
Municipal Court Judge Richard
Orozco spent at least $40,000 lo
his unsuccessful attempt in
Tuesday's election to remain in
office.
According to financial dis-
closure statements filed for the
reporting period endinl Oct. JO,
Orozco drew flDaDCial backlne
from fellow jurists and at·
torneys in his unsuccessful elec-
tion bid. •
The judge, an appointee four
years ago of Gov. £dmu.od G.
Brown Jr., was defeated by San-
lf Ana attorney Bobby D.
V:-oungblood.
: Orozco was one of two judges
who were turned out of office
'I)iesday by voters in the central
municipal court district. Presid-
i13g Judge JQhn C. Teal, an ap.
pointee of then-Gov. Ronald
Reagan eight yean ago, aJao
was defeated.
Orozco's disclosure statement. flied nearly two weeks a10,
showed conlributiona from
Orange County Superior Court
Judge James Peres ($100) as
well as well known attorneys
such as Terry Giles ($500) and
James Stotler ($150).
; Other large contributors in·
cfluded the Orange County Mex-~an·American Bar Aasociatioll
($250). the Laborer's lntema-
yonal Union of North America.
•
Crewman Die8 .
Local 152 ($1,000), and the
Orange County District COUDCU
of Carpenters ($250).
Financial statements for
Youngblood's successful cam·
paign were .not available
because be bad not yet filed
them as of Wednesday.
Deputy District Attorney Jean
:\heinhelmer said s he bas
notified Yountblood that bis
statement is two weeb late and
that be could face misdemeanor
prosecution. Mn. Rbeinbeimer
said she would give him another
10 days or so to rue his forms.
The Youngblood-Orosco race
waa perb.ape tbe moet bitter on
the Nov. 4 ballot. Y OUlllblood
beat the jud&e 52, 721 votes to
49,21S!f votes.
The two had run against one
another in the June primary,
when Orozco initially appeared
to be the victor by about 200
votes out of 70,000 cut.
Youngblood challenged the
computeriaed vote totals, and in
a later band recount, be
emerged as the victor by 15
votes.
However, Superior Court
Judge John K. TroUer Jr. voided
the election aad ordered
Tuesday's remateb became of
ballot ifnCulai;ties.
· The two candidates bad run a
blistering campaisn in the flnal
weeks. Youngblood accused
Orozco of perjury when be wu
appointed four years ago and
Orozco claimed bis opponent
was unfit as an attorney and
should face posaible disbarment.
There aho were racial un·
dercurrents to the race because
of Orozco's bi.apanic bertt.qe.
.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
epok..,... for Wblte Houle na-
Uoeal MeW'lty advtaer ZIQaiew
BraealDlld denied a publlabed
report today that Bneliaakl or·
dered lnte1U1eaee doeument.t
deatroyed aftei' President cart.-wu diltMted by. Ronald Requ
ln or-day'• election.
The New York Poet quoted
three unnamed ataff aiclee to
senior ~can members ol
tbe Senate lntelli1ence commit-
tee u .. .Ylna tbey were told ot
tbia by employees of tbe Na-
tional Securtty Council, which
Bnelinlld beads.
But NSC spokesman Leonard
Lefkow denied the story, aayiq:
"It's absurd n'Onsenae. It's
biurre."
Sen. Barry Goldwater of
Arlsona is the ranking
Republican member of the ln-
te lll cence panel. His press
secretary, Tony Smith, said be
doubted that Goldwater would
be aware of any such situation
because be has been encaged in
a close battle for re-election.
Spencer Davis. press officer
ror the committee, said' after
checking with other staff mem-
bers of the panel: "We know
absolutely nothing about it." ·
Allen Vowing
Recount Bid
In Tight Race
Doris Allen, Republican
challenger for the 11st b-Ssembly
District seat, said today she will
ask for a recount if as-yet-
uiacounted ballot.a do not show
her victorious over incumbent
Chet Wrav. Wray, a Democrat, currently
leads Mn. Allen by 568 votes out
of 96,214 cast from all precincts.
About 12,000 absentee and
ballots rejected for some reason
by coimt.ing machinery have not
been tallied.
Al OllOli, Orange County re-
gistrar of voters, said about
1,500 of the uncounted ballots
could be from the 71.st Assembly
District. He said those ballots
would be isolated and COWlted
fint, with the final result known
v Friday night.
Mrs. Allen, president of the
Huntingtoo Beach Union High
School District board, alao at-
tacked Wray's last-minute cam-
paign mailers as "blatant lies
and smears" of her politiclal positions.
She said she will lake her
complaints to the state Fair
Political Practices Commission
and possibly take legal action
against Wray for alleged libel.
Wray was not available for
comment.
Mrs. Allen, who bad been pre-
dicting an easy victory over
Wray, said the incumbent's bar-
rage of campaign literature coet
her several thouland votes.
She aald the llterature er·
ron'°usly . implied she was in
favor of court-ordered busing
and increased spendiq in the
'public school ystem.
Mrs. Allen, 44, is the co-
founder of tbe anti-businc IP'OUJ>,
Orange County Bus· Bloc.
·'Obviously his campa11n
literature is full of blatant lies,"
Mrs. Allen charged. "I should
have taken legal action against
Wray two years ago when be did
the same things in that cam-
pall(n."
~ TRAVERSE CITY, Mich.
(AP> -One crewman was •med when a tu1boat aw after
iolliding with a diMbled .. foot t~er It •u towtq on Lab
Mich.lgan, the Coast Guard 1aid.
Crewman Bill Stephan, 51, dl8-
tppeared after the •-foot tug
Lauren CUtle crashed into the ~moco Wilcomln before dawn
fledne9day and sank ln 300 feet ff water.
.... !lfedlri•~ .. ·~~.. .-.
•
' • ..
·~~~~~~~~~----
DAILY PILOT
---·-~ .. ~ ~· .....
a.... ....... A .. 1•-,,,_._. elll*
, ......... (114) ....
au sra•MW1t1 .......
..
· _Trial llate Slated -. ~
In 'Doctor' Death
Trabuco Caayon resident
Gerald earn., wbo la acemed of
m.,........uadodorand
catllina tbe deatla of a pau.at be
aaw ata lntneelbUe, plad9d ID·
DOCeat todaJ la Oranl• c.omty
SaperiarCourt. •
Barnes wa ontered to ltaiid
trial Jao.. 5 lD Superior Court
Jtldce Everett Diclley•a S.ta
Aaa courtroom.
B-= 41, a Coto de Cua..-.
dent, ... ordered to l&aDd
trial bf Barbor Court .... dpal
Jud1• o.aldDwaau lut week.
Helaebarpd with murder,,.. lat ... doctor ud f alMly pre-
aertblaldrvel. . Barw pr11eDtlr ii tree on
ttO,•W,aadCllWDeputyota. trtctAUomieJ Jamee Snrllbtuid tbll IDat'llUllbl'waateclto ... ball lnerealed.
"I tllll*lie < ...... >"ll•eulM: ble • M1 penoa wbo INl l.afo a ............ pulll. robbe"y, ••
Slll'llMNld. ..!' .... be ............ l:llrtPt ..... ,. ................ . .............. =•·" n. .. c .... .... llW ,,,...,..:.: , ........... ......
-~~!* .. MW ... lllllll I ~lllllllllllUTMtbaA ..... ~ . .
While workln1 at Pacific
Soutbwest, proeecutors eoatend,
be treated a diabetic patJent who
died two da)IS after beiq ex-
amlne,d by Ba.mes.
Enrilbt u1d he ii puabiq for a
NCODCI ...,.._murder conviction
u • resultoftbatditalh.
Defeaae attorney David
Brickner told reporters after ar-
ral1ameat proeeedin11 tbia
mor'lliq la Superior Court Judie
Rlcbard Beacom'• courtroom,
that bll pOlitlon w6uld bit that
Barae1 did not eftl•le lD pro-1 ... 1oea1 malfeaau;aee and wu
aot respcmlble for the deatbotthe
patient.
Alu.ou,h he decllned to 10 illlo
bi• trial .trate1y, Brickner aakt
the c ... evohw don to tbe Olli·
alon of wbetber treatment llv.a the ptltltnt wu adequate, l.aade-
quateoraomewberetn between.
P roHcutora all•C• tbat BanMI ii a pbarmacllt wbo lalt
· Ide u._ ID IUlnoU tlDd came ••t topnetlc. medidae ...... aUnm1e .
Brickner aald tllere wH
"ltroal ~" to .... , ' .. . . .. ,.--............ . ......................
wu ...... allewedpb,..._
~
Large surf Wednesday allowed surfer8 to
ride waves breaking on the Big Corona
side of the east jetty at the entrance to
Newport Harbor. Surf of 4-7 feet is forecast
along the Orange Coast through the
weekend, depending on which way the
beach is facing. Weather forecasters say
the source of the surf is a storm about 2,000
miles out in the Pacific Ocean.
At Pacifica Talk
The new owners of Casa
Pacifica walked into San
Clemente City Hall Wednesday
night prepared to arrue against having to provide a public
eaaement to the beach below
Cottoa Point.
But by the end of the hour·loog
discussion, George Argyros
faced what be called a
"blackmail" ultimatum from
the council that be provide bicy-
cle and pedestrian access to the
12·room former Nixon home.
Argyros, alone with partners
Donald Koll and Gavin Herbert,
purchased the 20.9·acre Nixon
estate lut year from the former
president. The tb,ree men all are
from th-. Newport Beach area.
They propoee subdividing the
parcel into 11 lots, keeping three
for themselves, including the
Nixon home, and selling off the
remaining 13 lots to individuals.
Investor Herbert plans to
move into the Nixon home,
which would not be accessible to
the public, except perhaps to
other new property owners in
the subdivided Cotton Point
Estates.
The council met Wednesday to
weigh tbe advantaces and dlsad·
vantages of requiring the new
owners to provide an easement
to tbe beach below the property.
The 1,800 foot loq pedestrian
access would run along the
Orange County and San Dieeo
line.
CoWlCil members Wednesday
appeared to agree the owners
should provide an "irrevocabte
offer'" to dedicate a ts-foot wide
strip to the city if the need for
access is ever sought In the
future.
And while the property owners
aps)eared willing to make tbal
concession, Councilman Patrick
Lane tossed in another condi-
tion.
"Don't you feel the public
should have access to the Nixon
home," he asked r e presen-
tatives of the owners?
"I 'm not talking aboUt going
inside the house." be said. "Un·
less the owner wants to invite people in for a drink."
The request appeared to sur·
prise the half-dozen represen·
ta ti ves of the Cotton Point
Estates.
They said they feared
"souvenir hunters" would walk
up and take chunto> of the old
Nixon home, and provide a
~ecurity problem for the new
residents.
But Lane persisted, su.ggesting
the council might reject the
owners' entire proposal ifthecoo-
dition is not met.
A rgyros responded angrily,
sa ying, "Mr. Lane, what you are
suggesting is that we take your
condition as a part of this
blackmail or be denied
permissioo to subdivide the pro-
perty."
''It's not blackmail," Lane
said. "We are charged with look·
in1 out for the best interests of the
citiz~ ...
But several other council mem-
bers appeared uncomfortable
with Lane's proposal, with Cowl·
cilman 'lbomas O'Keefe saying,
"I have 90llle problem• with al· lowing the public to come on
private property. It's not a right
that existed before. "
... It'• time for your layaway
Thieves Flee
Newport· Cop,
Leave Loot
A pair of burglars shook oft the.
tackle attempts of a Newport
Beach policeman early Wednes-
day and escaped leaving behind a
pair of thongs, two empty beer
bottles and the officer sprawled
on the ~round.
Prior to the officer's arrival at
about 1:30 a.m., the manager of
an apartment complex at IOl Lido
Park Drive had held the men at
gunpoint for nearly 10 minutes.
According to reports, manager -"'
Bruce Angus spotted two men
creepinl t.brougb bis' a~
and he quickly pulled out a .S.
caliber revolver he bad tucked UD·
derhismattress.
He told officers be pointed the
gun at the burglan, cocked it and
told tbem to freeze. They did, be
said.
Keeping the gun trained on the
intruders, both thought to be in
their mid·20s, the manager
walked the men to the apartment
security office and pbooed police.
From there, be told officers, be
walked the intruders out to tbe
street to wait for the arrival of
police. And when a patrolman did
arrive, he reported, the men
madeabrealrforil.
The officer said be tried to
tackle one of the men but wu
knocked to tbe ground. Re said
both men dropped the beer bottles
they were carrying and one scam-
pered out of the tbonp be wu
wearing.
Police seized the thongs and
beer bottles aa evidence.
Avoid the holiday COJOCh this year b •
shopping ot Bren WOlker now. Let us help you
choose the perfect gift for, that special person
from our selection of fine jewelry; and. with o
small deposit, we will hold It for you
until Christmas
\'/31111 CZ(J,/J,4 . <J/1111/wl ,,,..,..,.,,.
36 FoehlOn lllond • Newport Beoch. Collfomlo ~ " ---· . --.,
-.......... ,..,,..._.,. ...... ~ . .. --...
I
)
•,
lle€artlay Say•
Speakership
Fight Over 'tj
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Aaaembly Speaker Leo
McCarthy saya he la 1lvln1 up the fi1ht to keep tbe
apeakenhlp.
McCarthy apent Wednesday. the day after the
election, dlacua1ln1 with s upporters how to salvage
aometbina from his expensive and often bitter 11·
month ftsht with Aaaemblyman Howard Berman. D·
Loa An1elea, who won the votes lo take the
spealcenbipaway from b.lm.
In the election Tuesday, McCarthy lost the sup-
port be needed to keep the office, considered the
state's moat powerful arter governor.
ma11t Rot-lu Bay lrea
RICHMOND <AP> -A powerful explosion at an
industrial district plant that was relt for 10 miles
nearly destroyed a large building and shattered win·
dows within a 10-block
( )
~re.a, but there were no in-ST ATE ,Juries. The explosion Wed---~~~~~~~--· nesday night at the
Puritan-Bennett Corp., an
air reduction plant. occurred while a worker was
tratBferring nitrous oxide, commonly called
"laughing gas," from a storage tank to a ta.nker
truck, fire officials said.
Though the blast blew out the sides of the three·
story. corrugated meta) building and sent slivers or
sheet metal more than a 100 feet, the worker, Roy
Janice,37, wasnotinjured.
Rule Li•ih Emis,,ifuu
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A ruJe approved by the
state Air Resources Board will reduce smog-
producing nitrogen oxide emissions by glass makers
by up to seven tons a day over the next five to seven
years, officials say.
Glassmaking plants are considered a prime
source of smog-forming nitrogen oxide emissions
becau5e of the tremendous heat used in manufactur-
ing furnaces, the ARB said. The furnace can reach
tern peratures of 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Affected by the rule, which will require changes
in ~lassmaJting furnaces will be olants that make
bottles for beer, wine, medication and foods.
Poll Cl01dng" .ll uUed
SACRAMENTO (AP)-CalifomiaSecretaryof
State March Fong Eu says she may seek nationwide
simultaneous poll closings to keep a president's ear-
ly concession from cutting voter turnout in the West.
Ms. Eu, a Democrat, said Wednesday there was
"a dramatic falloff in voter participation" Tuesday
after the television networks began projecting the
victory of Ronald Reagan as president.
Normally, about lSpercentoftbeCalifomia vote
comes in between 5 p.m . and the closing time, 8 p.m.
The network projecting began between 4 p.m. ands
p.m .
Tr0ruit f'a.-e" Challengr
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Los Angeles County's
approval of Proposition A's sales tax increase could
spread a $3.6 billion mass transit system over the
sprawling county -if it survives a poteatial legal
challenge.
The county's Transportation Commission said
Wednesday it hopes to have some of the electric·
powered line operating by the end of the decade and
the whole system in place in 35 years, barring major
technical, financial or legal problems.
Ga"fl \'iolenee SoarK
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Gang violence in Los
Angeles nearly doubled in the first nine months of
1980 compared to the same period last year, with
robberies alone up a whopping 212 percent, a
police report shows. •
Statistics cited gang involvement in 2,683
crimes committed through September compared
lo l ,439 gang-related for the nine months in 1979 -
an increase of 86.4 percent.
Robberies soared from 221 in 1979 to 690.
MERCURY SAVINGS
atid loan association
CHECKING ACCOUNTS
THAT EARN INTEREST. ASK US!
Execuli'le Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave., FSLIC
Hun'tington Beach, CA 92647 --· __ _
Southern Celllornl• Region•/ Olllcei:
56n E. L8 P•fm;i Ave .• An•helm, CA,92807
8055 Velley VJew St., Buena Partt, CA 90&20
.... --····-
tlf 16!56 Arntlll Ad., Cemarlllo, CA 93010 291TS$:-Av11ton:Bl'<ld;;-G9'-...C~ 90746 ~ 2302t Lelle Cel\ttr 01., (Lelle Fore11), El TOfo, CA 92630 toot E. lmperl•I Hwy., Le H•bta. CA 90&3t G:t 4140 Long Beach 8 1¥9., Long Beecll, CA 90807 •
22939 Hewtllorne Blvd., Torrance, CA 90505 t095 lrvlne Blvd., Tustin, CA 92680
235 N. Citrus A11t~ West Co11fne. CA 9t793
"Mercury Room" 11111/101• on• renrved OH/s
--
llOUT A SECOllD
mlTEDLQUI
UP TO .•500,000
'Newport &,uity.-~li
CQUAl
HOUSING l(NO(ll
. ...,._ ........ _
. .
.-... --.... -..--·
Thurldly, Nov9mbef e. tllO
Berkeley P~otest
BERKELEY (AP) -ln a campus
scene reminiscent of the 19808, police
led and dragged dissident students
and others out of the University of
California administration building to
break up a sit-in sparked by Ronald
Reagan's election.
begins to cut back aoclaJ pl'Qll'ama~ . Durinc the occupation, boolrev ,
the dlsaidenta were talkina a t
causes adrift on the campus r
years -includ1n1 denunciatiOn of t'9
cam pus ROTC and demands for ita re·
moval, more demands that UC
. . .
Campus police arrested 35 students
and 17 oonstudent.a Wednesday nJghl
following the 5'h·hour protest on the
Berkeley campus. No injuries were
reported.
All 52 were charged with misde·
meanor trespassing, and in addition,
10 were charged with resisting arrest.
B. erkeley quit supporting nucl~r weapons research for the 1ove .
ment, support for a campUS c d
care center and Increased Thl d
World enrollment.
Campus police chief William Be9'e
told reporters the demonstration w~
legal before the bulldin1's reguJtr
closini time at 5 p.m. After that, tie
demonstrators were warned th•y
were subject to arrest. Police J>J·
tience ran out 2"2 hours later.
l •
' j • •
~-,r , . -• •
.. ..
APWI...,.. ..
Largest Beer Stack
After 10 hours of stacking, 10,<8> cases of brew stand at Sacramen·
to's Liquor Mart, making it the world's largest beer display. The
volume or the 120,960 bottles contained within the cases represents
20,790 gallons of beer. Representatives or the Guinness Book of
World Records were on hand to certify the record Wednesday.
Win Over Klansman
Breaks Vote Record
SAN DIEGO (AP> -
Breaking a 40-year-old
national record for total
votes, U.S. Rep. Clair
Burgener. R-La Mesa,
says his landslide victory
over white S\lpremacist
Tom Metzger was ''a
firm rejection of the
philosophies of the Ku
Klux Klan."
Burgener, in winning
his fifth consecutive 43rd
Con gressional District
term Tuesday. received
86.4 percent of the vote
over Tom Metzger, a
s tate Ku Klux Klan
leader running as a
De mocrat.
Unofficial but final
vote totals Wednesday
gave Burgener 292,039
votes. surpassing the
267 ,873 cas t for
Republican Leonard Hall
in the 1st Congressional
District of New York in
1940.
Th e re c ord was
----------achieved in the nation's largest congressional
.district. with almost a
million people, spanning
most of San Diego Coun·
ty. parts of Riverside
County and all of Im-
perial County.
Metzger. who ran on a
p l·a tr 0 rm 0 f while
supremacy. tightening or
U.S .-Mexican border
restrictions and s upport
for working class whites,
received 45,623 votes. or
13.S percent.
Cuts Invalid
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP> -The state Social
Services Department
cannot reduce the
amount of money paid
under the Aid to
Families with Depen-
dent Children program
because an unrelated
adult male lives in the
household of program
recipients, the Court or
Appeal has ruled.
AL TROUGH THE demonstration
had Reagan's tjresidential election as
a "catillyst," one protestor said, it
later drifted into a general protest
centering on campus causes or long
standing. At one point, inside the
building, communist literature was
handed out.
"I'm doing it just to make a point
about what's going on," replied one
s tudent when asked why he bad
participated in the spontaneous,
mostly nonviolent, demonstration.
The noisy occupation of a stairwell
between the first and second floors of
California Hall started about 2 p.m.
with 150 students and oonstudents.
Police sealed off the building. Two
men were arrested then for allegedly
tangling with police.
AS 111E PROTESTERS walked in-
to the building, most of the UC ad-
ministrators walked out, but some
minor damage was reportedly done
to the walls near Chancellor Michael
Heyman's office.
Later, supporters outside attempt-
ed to toss rood and other items
through an open window to the pro-
testers.
About 7:30 p.m .. when more than
half the protesters had left voluntarily
after several warnings, police waded
in and led away those who would walk
on their own and dragged away others
who went limp.
The occupation was preceded by an
anti-Reagan rally nearby at Sproul
Plaza, which for nearly 10 years was
the focal point of sometimes fierce
confrontations accompanied by tear
gas and truncheons . By comparison,
Wednesday 's event was a love feast.
SPEAKERS TOLD A small crowd
lo "make s ure Reagan can do as lit-~le as possible to hinder human rights m the country."
-Joe Lambert of the Berkeley
Progressive Students Organization,
announced that the demonstration
was called "to build an educational
mbvement against Reagan . . . when
Reagan reinstates the draft and
Library Retai~
Display of Gay
Books, Photos '.
' HAYWARD (AP> -A co6·
troversial display of homosexudl·
oriented books and photographs wtll
remain at Hayward's main library,
despite protests from some residents,
the city's library commission says.
The commission's 4-2 vote Wednflfi·
day night to keep the display drew
applause from about 80 people, m06t
of whom identified themselves as be-
ing gay.
''I AM OPPOSED to censorship,"
said lesbian Kristen Loomis, a Valle·
jo librarian and one of 32 people to
speak at the meeting. "Ten _percent
of our population is gay. These
materials should be available to
them."
Titled "Out of the Closet," the dis-
play is sponsored by the Pacific
Center for Human Growth, .a
Berkeley mental health and social
services agency for homosexuals. 1t
features photographs and books by or
about gays.
LEADING OPPOSmON to the~
play was a Hayward parent, Darlel)e
K. Bogle, who demanded immedia~e
removal of the display. She said i t
was not suit.able for children and ~t
advocated homosexuality, which she
viewed as against Biblical standards.
Mrs. Bogle was joined by about a
dozen people representing chur~h
and other groups who denounced tbe
display as immoral and uo-
American.
The month-long display was
authorized by the commission last
March by a 5-2 vote.
HAPPY "HOUR"
Our restaurants
will treat you with
complimentary "Refreshments"
Every Weekday Afternoon From 3 to 5 p.m .
NOVEMBER.5-14
Amat o's
(Upper level I Carousel Courl)
Complimentary European
cappucino with purchase
of dessert Back Bay Rowing &
Running Club
(l~ lefel /'Bullock's wing)
e&r1'pllmentary scoop of
Haagen-Dazs ice cream with
r Carl's Jr. purchase ol a meal.
(l ower level I Sears wing)
Complimentary soft drink
with purchase ol hamburger
Lindberg's
(l ower level I Carousel Court)
Compllmentartcake and
coffee with purchase
of lunch.
Forty Carrots
(lower level I Saks wing)
Complimentary fresh fruit
shake with purchase
ol entree.
Magic Pan
(lower level f Nordstrom wing)
Compllmentary mousse with
purchase of lunch. Rendezvous Cafe
(lower level I Carousel Court)
Complimentary popcorn.
Vie De France
(Lower level f NOfdstrom wing)
Complimentary roll/croissant
with purchase of collee or
Complimentary dessert with
purchase ol lunch.
Rivie ra
(lower level I May Co. wing)
s ~
Caffe Pasquini
(Upper level I Saks wing)
Complimentary dessert with
purchase ol lunch.
Kaplan's
(l ower level I May Co. wing)
Complimentary danish with
purchase ol beverage.
Pronto
(Upper level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary pastry and
coffee with purchase
of lunch.
Salmagundi
(lower level I Bullock's wing)
Complimentary beverage
with purchase of soup
Of salad.
20th Century
(l ower level f carousel court)
Complimentary European
cappuclno with e>urchase
of dessert.
SotJTM-COA~J:Ark; .
•
i
Orange CoMt 0•1lv Pilot
uit Mo Help to
A'.CLU Reputation
A lawauit alle1ln1 th.at Newport Beach Police Ch&ef Ch~ Gnu ll dlrectlna om~ to aurreptiUo:ual.Y •t. ten!..:bUc meetlna• CD order to •PY on tho.e ln •tt IM'e, wu flied by tbe American Civil Liberties Union
reeeatly.
The 1ult, detailed by ACLU memben durlq a pnu
oooference tut week, wu fired off alter one Newport ol·
leer wu tossed out of an ACLU meetina at Newport Harbor
Hi1bSchool
• Members mail'ltaln that Officer Richard Lona tailed .., identify himself as a poU~man and had. in (act, in-
.filtrated the meeUna.
Grou, answering the charges later, called the suit
apecioul and an attempt on the ACLU'a part to cover 'up
:its miatak:e of booting out Officer Long.
He said Long's Constitutional rights had been
violated.
Chief Gross appears to have a valid point and it's dif-
ficult to understa.nd the ACLU's allegations when the
meeting was public and Long had paid to get in.
Long, the city's community relations officer, said he
. attended the meetin~ only to keep abreast ol what ia go-. mg on in the community. It is unclear why Long should
be any more compelled to announce what line of work he
is in than, say, should a doctor. lawyer or a reporter.
Long was, he says, known to some of the ACLU mem-
bers present.
It should be pointed out that the meeting was public
and that the ACLU was using public facilities free of
charge, an off er extended only after a threat to sue the
school district.
We fail to see the merit in this lawsuit and must
agree with Chief Gross when he suggested that action
such as this damages the name and reputation of the
ACLU.
It strikes us as a "much-ado-about-nothing"
performance in an effort to get attention.
Road Plea Impractical
After months of learning to live with a ripped-up
street. a group of residents along Bayside Drive in
·Newport Beach have come to the conclusion that ripped-
up is better than smashed-up.
1be homeowners suggest that when a long-delayed
;;oieanitation project is completed and Bayside is put back
~ together, the street should be turned into. a cul-de-sac at
, Carnation Street.
~ The proposal has hardly been welcomed with open ~ arms by city officials.
I The Bayside residents argue that their street has
become a mini grand prix for lead-footed sportcar
drivers who enjoy zipping through the curves and around
, comers.
~ Th~y .say they're tired of seeing smashed-up cars and
: people lllJUred. They worry that one day a car will careen
~ into a house. f Although the residents' concern is understandable,
closing off a through street in Newport Beach is hardly
·• acceptable.
-Bayside Drive is a safety problem and many efforts ~ have been advanced to slow traffic on the tight turns.
1 These measures have helped. but residents still report
; problems.
• But turning a safety problem into a traffic problem
t isn't the way to go. Newport's road system is barely ade·
~ quate now. Ta king a key link out of operation would only
~ intensify the jam-ups on other streets.
{
i
2 School Closure Choice
; · Newport-Mesa School District has followed two dif · • : f erent interpretations of the same state Education Code
: section in closing four schools over the past three years
' as district enrollment continues to decline. ~ Two were closed in um utilizing a state-required !: citizens committee. The board charged that committee
; with recommending which schools should be closed as I l well as how the vacated sites should be used.
I 1 Working under a different Interpretation a year later.
: a school closure committee was charged only with recom-
• :-mending use of two school sites ordered closed by the
l board.
: The district now faces closing up to more than eight
; additional schools over the next five years. The board baa
~ not yet determined what responsibilities to hand a new
state-required closures committee this time.
• 1be problems are more complex. Possibilities in-
• elude the closure of middle schools and high schools as
well as elementary plants.
District administrators first recommended that the
citizens' committee not get involved with which schools
should be closed because of complex curriculum
possi bill ties.
'The adm,iniatralion subst!quently revened its stand
a.nd suggested that a committee study of schools to be
closed could produce more com'munity response.
1be board should get the best and most responsive
recommendations it can out of a citizens' group. But in
fhe end, only the board can make those final and sure-to-
be controversial decisions. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other vietts expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address Th~ Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
· Boyd/Politics
arL•.BOYD
Tb1I moment occured when
Woodrow WlllOft WH COV·
Dear
Glooniy
t (fua
J .ll. (GUI, Oct. JI) ls
n•ht about Newport be ~
lnt • boom town -
IOfttc, that la. I let the
ffflln1 SPON l1 POlt
thlap, malnlY trylnf lo
.... a little or the
nelthborhood.
emor of New Jeney. A U.S.
senator trom h1I state dlecl.
The man bad been a cloM
friend of Wllloa. A Jersey
poUticlan wlthln mlnut11
telepboaed tbe 1o•emor, and
said, "I'd like to take tbe
senator'• place, slr." Wilton
pauaed. then said, "You may
quote mt •• HylDI lt ll perfectly qreeable to me lt
lt'a •treeable to the un-
d•:::er~"tbe ) ertcan who
hH not seen~ picture of
Elizabeth of York, wife of
HenryVJlolEniand. lliaher Ullcenea that la eted on the
four queem lft standard
pack otpla)'iq eardt. ·
COit.i the avera1• wortl~ man ID China three moatbl
paJ to buy• bicycle.
\VASHlNGTON -Despite t.he
nearrhylterlcal rhetoric
emanaUq from botb Iran and
1 ... q. the desert conruct 80 tar
has been lea than total war. But
U.S. inte1U1ence analy1t1 say
there la ctancer of escalation ln a
particularly grueisome area:
chemical warfare.
The reaaon chemical or
blolo1ical weapons have not
been used
m a y b e
simply that
the balance of
terror in this
ne w field la
c l e arly in
lraq's favor,
and the Iraqis
hav e been
doing well
enough with
conventional forces --so far.
But If the fortunes of war should
change dramaticall y. Iraqi•
President Saddam Hussein may
decide to stave off disaster by
resortlng to ·crtemical weapons.
Mailbox
Rot»rt N. w..GIPubtlil.er
Barblr1 Krtlbfcf\llcllOt-.i ~ ... Ecltor
•l Iran bu done relatlveJy little
to develop chemical warfare
capability, or defense a1alnst
aucb attaclcs. But Hussein ls
known t.o c:onalder ~hemicals a
useful mllltary tool. Iraq's
modest at·ockpile of
cbemlcal-blolo1lcal weapons ls a
le1acy from Its y~ars as a military client or .the Soviet
Union.
The Iraqis began active ly
acquiring a chemical warfare
potential in the mid-1970s. M. a
sec rel Defense Jntelll1ence
Agency report put it, Iraq
embarked on "an aggressive
chemical-biological· rac:Uolo1ical
p r osram , In c luding the
construction of training facilities
. modeled after Sovi et CBR
installations."
INTELLIGENCE sources
di scovere d "a t least lS
locations" in Iraq where CBR
obs tacle cou rses had been
constructed with Russian help
The extent of these training
facilities "bigbllgbta the
importance (the Iraqis) place on
beins prepared to operate in a
contaminated environment."
one secret rewrt stales.
The obstacle courses were
used as part of general Iraqi
army traiflina. "In these areas,
troops are instructed to bypass
or move through contam.lnated
obttaclea and ~rform normal
com bat duties while wearin&
protective clothing," the report
note.s. ·
"Each Iraqi division baa an
organic chemical company that
Is equipped primarily with
Soviet-manufactured materiel
such as the 'truck-mounted
ARS -1 2 and DDA -5 3
decontamination apparatus," an
intelligence report states. "As in
the Soviet Army, the Iraqi
ground force has a chemical
branch, and CBR doctrine is
most likely based on Soviet
concepts."
Before re lations with the
K rem Ii n coole d fol lowins
(~Y£S .... ~ \,
I GUcSS A SKELETON KEY I
!§ ~TMER APPROPRIATE!
HOMOHO! .. ~~~WAATM
IMPISH SENSE OF HUMOR
YOU'VE GOT THtRE. ~ ~
MR.RJT... t'
Hu11eln'a crackdown oil lr94I
commun.ll\l ln lt78, the Scwieta
reportedlf tupp~led unall
a.mount. of c:beft)leal warfare
qenla for trahilaa uae.
THE llAClll RAD .. no a..nown
chemicJI warfare productlon
capability, a l t>hou1h the
technoloilcal bue' required to
produce nerve acentt exl1la, and
an alleft\Pt bu reportedly been
madt to do ao," accordlnc to an
in te 1111 enc e' an a I y 1 ls. It
concludes ominously:
"The Iraqis realise that, once
acquired, weapons of this type
could be used against ...
potential adversaries, such as
Ira n and Israel. Numerous
weapons systems already in the
Iraqi inventory are capable of
delivering CBR munitions .
which would have to be
externally supplied."
Intelligence sources told my
associate Dale Van Atta that the
Fre nc h, who replaced the
Russians as Iraq 's major
military supplier, have not
provided chemical weapons. But
the Iraqis have built up a small
stockpile on their own.
EXPORTING TRAGEDY;
Manufacturers who run afoul of
s t ri nge nt fe deral s afety
standards have a callous option
available: Like the companies
tha t found themselves with
stocks of baby clothes treated
with Tris, the s us pected
cancer-causing name retardant,
greedy manufacturers can
dump their goods overseas.
Now there is evidence the
federal government is helping
the United Nations fob off a
controversial birth-control drug
on unsuspecting women around
the world. The substance is
De po-Prover a. and tests have
link ed it lo s t e rilit y and
con genital heart disease in women.
In a private letter to Rep.
Mario Biaggi, 0-N. Y .. officials
of the Agency for International
De velopment admitted that,
despite attempted safeguards,
AID Funds may be helping to
underwrite a U.N. program that
is distributing Depo-Provera
abroad.
Strings Attached to' Affordable' Housing
To the Edit.or :
In response to the Oct. 22
editorial entitled "County
Tackles Houslng Shortage," if the
Board of Supervisors we re to
wave a magic wand and create
10,000 units of affordable housing
tomorrow, the demand for "af.
fordable': housing in Orange
County¥ould not be met. As we
watch the supervisors perform
their miracles, remember that all
their grandst.andlng is at the ex-
pense of every property owner in
Orange County.
'The buyer of an "affordable"
house can only sell that unit at a
price determined by the County of
Orange and that price is not to ex·
ceed the purchase price plus tbe
increase-in the median income ln
Orange County. In addition, the
county can decrease the sales
price by the amount necessary to
re pair any damages as de·
termined by the county. They can
clean and paint and repai r
without limitation and charge the
seller of an•• affordable'• unit.
THE COUNTY can take up to
five months lo exercise their op-
tion to purcbue a home a.-• at the end of the 150days fail to ton.sum·
mate the J>Wchase and not be lia-
ble ! ~ aeDer of one of these so-called "affordable" units can
not selljt "By Owner'" or through
the realtot,pf his cholce ... he must
sell it throu1h ihe Qrange County
Housing Authority. The wont
part of this wonder cure Is tbat the
buyer of a county-subsidized
home will never be able to afford
to buy an)'lbln1 but another aub-
slclized home. A representative of the state
Department of Houain1 and Com-
m unity Development has stated
that t.hla type of resale nistricUon
should apply to all boualna -not
just "affordable" housin1. not
Jusl 1ub9klized housing.
All of tbele facts make govern-
ment aublldlled affordable boua·
in1 the molt expensive boualna
avallabae today. Other, leu coet-
ly. approaches to tbe problem
are available. ·
VIRGINIA CIECK
Pretldenh Newport Harbor·
CMa MfH Boardot Realtora
,,.._flTlttt• ff••tt
To the Edit.or :
Andy Rooney <Pllot, Oct. 31)
is rt1ht: "Let's mate some de·
manda of Iran."
If Iran want.I America not to
Intervene In the lntemal aft'aJra
of Iran, then Wt'• demand that
lrltl t• ~le au of tu students
In tb• U.S. u part Of tht boalale
a1rNIDIDt.
After all. the students will not
only learn medicine . science. arts. etc., but about democracy,
human rights and re ligious
freedom. wh.ich are items the
present Iranian government
wants nothing to do with.
Give us the hostages and send
the students home!
JIM de BOOM
8Mln9 Dh·lde11
To the Editor: '
Perhaps no better way could
be devised to d ivide races.
create confusion and destroy
public schools than forced bus-
ing. ls It pos.sible judges like
Egly who rule in favor of bus·
ing are really on the other side
after aJl and are only doing the
!Work of those who want racial
division and private schools?
B. TAVLIN
. ....a.~ Pmdf le•"
To the F.dltor :
Concerning your editor ial,
Oct. 16, "Conflict of Interest
Charge Seems · Farfetched ": If
you care about the appearance ot fair government,· about voten
believing that only money
makes a difference and conse-
q uenlly dropping out of 'he
political process, then surely
you must reconsider your moral
tudgment ln this case.
. Tbe Koll Co. spen\ $32,413 ln
the April city election -more
than 100 times that permitted by
ordinance. The Koll Co. had a
lar1e project at stake. It ls c:Uf·
· flcult fo believe that $32,413 was
spent for purely altruistic
reasons.
OUR CRAaGE was l,bat
"there was an appearance of Im-
propriety" ln conlUct with the
intent and purpon of our cam-
p•IJn law. H that law ls valid,
and we believe It ls, then the
riCbt of the public to a fair and
open declalon la what we want!
You a1ree that c1mpal1n
flnancln1 lawa are needed .,
evidenced by your editorial ot
10/ 14180, ''Campai1n CHh
Keeps on ll'lowtna .• , You oplned ". . . JudlW trom the hunclndl
•of ttaou..ndl ot dollan that have
flowed Into lhh year'•
tupenlaorlal umpat1n1 ...
much Ol It from UM development
aector . . . -.·re atlll a coa·
alderable way from ltHlnt llft
aad aaae campaitn flnaaclq.''
Tht clty'1 -orillnance is in·
tende.f to~alla~ic llmlll on tbl a bllltvtdall may
COltriMt• IO H.,..... for ~tlnl oftle.. TIMI pm pw .. to
pre·vent cor1'uption or the ap·
pearance of corruption in the
political process and to equalize
the relative financial ability of
persons to infiuence the outcome
of m wlicipal elections.
To s pend that a mount of
money, the Koll Co. must have
bad reason to believe its project
would receive a positive vote.
The appearance of impropriety
is clear. Given the $32.413 ex-
penditure. the inequality of
relative ability to finance
municipal elections is also clear.
If· we are to retain confidence
in our political system, our con-
cern must not be called
"farfelched. ·'
GEORGE INGLES
BUNTYJUSTIN
BARBARA LICHMAN
BOBBY LOVELL
DAVE FRI~
JEAN WATI'
SPON Political
Practices Committee
lllNJd E.rl ~t1-'••t1
To the F.ditor:
We have presented a cue to
the City Council of Newport
Be ach in regard to the extension
of San Miguel Drive across
MacArthur Boulevard into
Fashion lsland0 A traffic study
was used by th,e City Council
people wbo were in favor of this
·extension to show that a small
decrease in traffic at San Joa-
quin Hills Road and MacArthur
would benefit the traffic now of
Newport Beach.
The way In which these
figures were obtained wu not
presented and the report waa
quite sketchy and bottom-Une.
We felt that the larger \r.tfic
plan which is being worked on
for Newport Center and which
will be presented in abcK.\t six
weeka, Which wtll involve all of
the roadl leading into and out ol
Fashion Island and Ne,,port
Center, would be a documeot whicb cOWd teU us the belt uni-
fied plan for the movemtftt of
lraltic.
NOT ONLY did we feel Uta&
lh• netative declaration which
••• pnsented in May of 19'19 to auppe>rt thla roait w11 lDada·
quate, but we telt tha't It 1..-.cl several upects whlch required
an envt~tal impact report.
Htah walll would be NQulNCI,
no(M S.V.Ja would be above ai·
lowable 1tandard1, addltlonal
pollution wu to be bl'OU8hl to
the homeowfter11' doontep, and
lncreaeed traffic wu to be •· C'OIU'qllt ~reect;-R .......
\b• lamal tM Cit.)' CcManell ...
tenDIM tM Impact of tbla rMd
upon us at this time, which was
unable to be appropriately done,
we caJled for an environmental
am pact report to do this in an ap-
propriate manner.
As a s implistic conflict
between increasing road effi·
ciency versus the homeowners
wanting to protect their homes,
most people wouJd s ay g~ the
traffic moving. Our point la not
to oppose that position, but to
say that we do not know whether
San Miguel is the best w._·y to
improve the traffic flow around
Newport C.enter. The ap-
propriate study is in preparation
and is to be reported out shortly.
ROBE RT S. ROSENBERG,
M.D.
To the Editor :
Thanks to Debbie Allan
<Mailbox, Oct. 30) ror correcting
my error in calling the recent
Planning Commission approval
of the Koll hotel unanimous. Not
only was she absent but Beek
and Thomas voted "no."
However , none<..of the com·
mission mem&n were orlgmal·
ly appointed by the current City
Council as the earlier Stabler
had charged.
I'll try to follow Mrs. Allen's
suggestion and be constructive
about· future Planning Com-
mission decisions.
SINCE WEBSTER states:
"politics Is the science of JOV· ~rnment" it might be helpful for ·
PC memben to base their votes
on facla rather than emotional
b lnts that Newport could
become like a city in Florida
some five Umes larger.
Webster: "Faction is a ll'OUP
of people in an organiaation
workin1 in common cause
a••iftlt the main body." Since Debbie recently hosted the an·
nual meetma of a group which
has labored lmptacably a1aiftlt
proJeda olfertq aome relief to
N•port'I trattlc problems.
perhape 1be could encoura1e
troup memben toward more
po1ltlve future actioM.
I hope my error dldn 't hurt
Beek or ThomH with their
1roupe.
LYMAN S. FAULKNER
.Corporations'
Values Straine4
I .,. IOBN CUNNln .,........... t: NEWYORK-CorporateAmedea la~ atrou
period la wtdcb betu. will be foqbt with votes, proai• w
suits IDd pUac:e revolts, says a coaftdante ol eucutlv•
miptbelDwhed. •
'"IWre la not one value lD our corporate culture tbat la
not betn1 strained by some Jroup inalde or outllde. however well-lntenUoned," sai Eu1ene Jennlnp, Ibo
pioneered In moblloarapby atudl•.
Mobllotrapby is the aclentiflc examination of ex-
ecutive movements In the corporation, deacribinl tbe
routes taken, the techniques used, tbe obetacl• encoun-
tered, tbe succeues attained and the prices paid.
Jenntnp, a professor of mana•e ·
ment at Michigan State and conftdential
advber to beads of corporations, has ex-
amined tbe changing corporation for
more than 30 years, .nd now be sees a re·
volutklnoccurrlng.
"lt is chaneing the power base in
corporate America,'' be said after a
meetin& with a larce group of ex-
ecutives, "A.a this balance of power
swing5, many a career ~ being made or
broken sometimes overnight."
. CUNNll'I'
JENNINGS SAID KOaE chief executive officers met
presidents have been fired during the put four years 6n
in any 10-year period since l!MI, when be began audif'I
and-publishing findings on such changes. * "It is an increasingly perverse world in which
are more ways to foul up and fewer ways to make
come out ript, ''said Jennings. And boards of directo day, be said, &Nveryaensitivetofou.lups.
Of the major changes taJdnc place, be observed, mlnY
are at the boards of director level, but with fallout af ••
ing all executive personnel further down in tbe corpo'lte
ranks. He listed these cbaniea: t
-DUaING aECENT YE.AU the average silf board5 of major corporations baa declined from 20 m .
ben to about 12 today.
-Ten years ago most board members were corpol!e
insiders, or officers of the company. Today, the m-.jori is
from outside the company, and less likely to bave an ·
grained company viewpoint. t -Teo years ago the board usually serve to
"legitimati•" executive actions -to validate exec e
deci.aMJnl -except oa rare occaalom when it had to e
manaeement changes under critical cond.ltioos.
volved in and spending more time on management. It -
up more committees and undertakes more respomibili .
TODAY, THE TYPICAL board is inc:rea.singlyi
-Ten years ago 70 percent of chief exeeutive offi
held the tiUe of president. Today, 70 percent of chief x·
ecutive officers are chairmen.
Sf fH"li• I 11 Th• s,.. .......
_,
-IV• -" -•11 -~ -1~
.ff Pf Ob
c:...,.r -.11.0111, cent• • povnd, U.S.
0Ht1 ... 1io...
~u~.--.
ZMc Jn'>.Jfl'> G9ftb. --· .... ,,.,..,, •Tie ti-1101 ~I• ~-<-Ila IO
Al-'-1'<Mlb a _.s, N. Y .
M9f'CllrY MIO.GO .... ''-· ~.,..S. .. JOll"OYOL N Y
E119tlllard Sliver "' uo. off IO. IOS.
faOrl<alld 111 ... r '"·"°·Ott IO. I ICI).
U...: mot'fti1111t11t11111 ~.7S. off 511.U.
L•.._: aflerftOOll fl•lne a.J2.00. off PG.•. l'M'M: ....,_ fhdnett.».60, off SIUI.
,. ........ , flltllll 9634,Sl, off N l.44.
l.llfka: ~1.00 llld, off •H .00; 5'M.OO ....... . .
••• Y•rkl H•Mr • Hf{.m•~'l'lll .. _,,,,,. '611.00. off ... oo. r-
... Y ... : EftgtlMnl .. 111"9 prk • ~
...., ............ Off U0.00.
•-Ywtl: E.fteal,..,_ I-luted .....
"'' .............. 16'4..11, off ... It.
-.
OAILVPtlOT
The Best for the ~rightest?
By JOEL C. DON
Of I.lie o.lly ~I ... St.ti
It's rather odd to "hear Michael
Michalchik talk about mediocrity
,,itlld re.aching one's full potential in
•.the same breath.
That's because the 13-year-old
Newport Beach resident has always
tried to fend off the former and strive
for the latter.
Michalchik is a high audcrnic
achiever, a mentally gifted minor un-
der a program recently abandoned
by the state.
• The name has changed, and the
scope of special education services
for bright child ren has been
broadened.
THIS YEAR, Michalchik begins his
academic career as a gifted student,
under the newly mandated Gifted
and Talented Education (GATE> pro-
gram.
GATE was designed as a reprieve
• for state-supported services for gift·
) ed children. The gifted student pro-
4 gram was nearly doomed to extinc·
lion in the wake of overwhelming uiticism from educators, politicians
and parents.
''My particular objection to the Men·
'tally Gifted Minor <MGM ) program is
·that it makes children feel they are
.,,,eculiar or dUferent," said the parent
of a gifted student from Newport
Beach. "Being mentally gifted s hould
• be ·a status symbol. It is not in our
society."
Politicians, in the spirit of ProPoSi·
lion 13, argued that the statewide
program was wasteful. of state tax
money. Many echoed the sentiments
of parents of non-gifted students:
Students with special mental ap·
Utude and abilities are going to be
• successful, with or without special
educational programs.
Critics or state-supported gifted·
programs also charge that it smacks
or elitism to offer special services to
some. and not all, students.
FOR INSTANCE, A GROUP of
gifted students from the Newport·
Mesa Unified School District went on
an exclusive field trip to see the King
Tut exhibit ln Los Angeles • .Parents
of ·non-participating students-' were •
furious. They felt all studen~ could
have benefited from such out-of·
classroom experiences.
Field trips, under the new legisla-
tion, are n•• d ported by state
funds. . "They (par~nt critics} didn't com-
plain about remedial reading stu·
dents who went out of the
classroom," asserted M artba Gut-
teron, put president of the Gifted
Children's Association of Orange
County, a pare.nt advocacy group.
ALSO, camcs SAY the use of IQ
and achievement-test scores as the
major determinant for student
eligiblllty ln lifted programs la limit·
ln1. And minority educators argue
tbat the various lntelllgence and
achievement tests are culturally
blqed, ieared to white, arnuent stu·
dent.a.
The word gifted, by popular defini-
tion, carries the connotation of having
1peci1l ablUtles, aptitudes and
•uperlor intelligence. But for some
ptr'tonl, the word sipiftes beifte bet·
ter. Gifted children have lone felt re· aentment ln the form of stereotypes
cb1racterbln1 them H odd, e11· bead• and u computer-like
machinel.
.. A lot ol people •Ill lite lbefr
chHdren out of the (~lfted) Pf'Oll'•m becauH they don t •Hat tbelr
cblldnn to be labeW wtlrd or dlf· ferent~" Hid llra. Olltt.roa. "I lilDew I wq dtnerent from the ate -l~•~e.d ale.a&A.LU.r
school,·· said Michalchik, a freshman
at Corona del Mar High School. '"But,
I think the MGM program helped me
fit in better. I wasn't the only one
raising my hand when the teacher
asked questions."
The GATE program, to be funded
for four years. is a test: It's set to de·
termine if school districts can design
programs to answer criticism that
MGM does not meet the needs of a
wider spectrum of gifted students.
The federal Department of Educa-
tion has confronted the elitist
criticism by issuing a new definition
of gifted to include performance
p otential beyond IQ and
achievement-test scores.
THF UROADER DEFINmON in-
cludes children who demonstrate
ca pa bilities in areas s uch as
leadership, creative or productive
thinking. visual and performing arts
and aptitude in a specific academic
discipline.
The state, through Assembly Bill
1040. has borrowed some guidance
from the iederal definition. GATE
calls Cor school districts to identify
and serve one or more of the follow-
ing classifications: intellectual,
creative, s pecific academic, high
achievement and visual and perform-
ing arts talent.
THE PROGRAM WILL be funded
with $15 million to start. An annual in·
f'IAtlonary adjustment is expected to
tftling the total to $19 million in four
years.
The new l~gislation is. viewed as a
challenge to the educational system.
Educators realize the survival or gift-
ed education is hinged on developing
anywhere from 2 to 5 percent or the
student population is identified as
girted.
Aggress ive school d istricts ,
however , have admitted more than 10
percent of their students into the gifted
education programs. Others fall below
the national norm, providing s pecial
education for less than 1 percent or the
student population.
THUS SOME SCHOOL districts, by
virtue of their commitment to gifted
children, have over-identified gifted
children, Mangers said.
Under the new legislation, funding
is computed by a complex formula
based on the individual district's
1978· '79 program income and
average daily attendance or the total
district student population. The fund-
ing\ formula also is based on an as-
s umption that about 3 percent of the
students should be identified as gift·
ed, according to Elinor McKinney,
GATE program manager with the
state Department of Education.
The funding fo rmula, she said. is
d esigned to e ncourage under·
identified districts -most notably
Compton Unifi e d -lo boos t
participation to about 3 percent. With
reduced funding, over-identified
school districts -including Newport·
Mesa. Laguna Beach, Irvine a nd
Oce an View -may have to tighten
up admissions to their gifted educa-
tion programs.
• Districts with 10 to 20 percent or
more enrollment in gifted programs
should think in terms of gearing up
the enbre a'Cademic program for all
students to highe r achieveme nt
levels , Ms. McKinney said.
"What I am advising the districts to do is to try not to stretch money as
you continue to identify students,··
said Assemblyman Mangers, who
believes normal attrition will help re-
duce the number of gifted students.
. 'A program with only $19 million
can't meet every gifted student in the
state. It was nQt designed to do so.
"What everyone needs to realize is
a program that involves 300 out of
1,300 school districts in the state
clearly is designed to be an ex-
perimental program," he s aid He
n oted , however, that the 300
participating school districts encom-
pass about 90 percent of the total
state enrollment.
Mangers cites the school dropout
rate among g ifted s tudents -
estimated at 20 to 30 percent -as
one major impetus for continuing
gifted education.
Wilbout special attention, he said,
gifted' students Call prey to boredom,
apathy and depression. The classes
move at what seems like a snail's
pace for students who are ready to
propel themselves academically at
the speed or jack rabbits.
ON TIIE OTHER HAND, the state
sees fit to guarantee support for dis·
advantaged and disabled children, he
noted. This year, the state will spend
about $106 million for physically han-
dicapped, and mentally disabled
services. more than seven times the
budget for gifted children.
"We are very concerned about
meeting the needs or the children at
the lower end of the (academic>
spectrum."' said Ms. Cwiertnia. ··we
don't always consider the children at
the upperendofthespectrum."
She noted that Newport-Mesa
school district's gifted education fund·
ing will be cut from $148,000 last year
to about $135.000 this year. With
declining enrollments. that figure is
expected to drop to $123,000 for next
year's gifted student allocation.
The legislation calls for J{reater
participation of parents in an ad·
visory role. Parents will help the dis-
trict set priorities and needs of the
district programs.
Funding cutbacks to the district
will put a serious de,nl in its ability to
meet current demands of the pro-
gram. she said .
programs to identify gifted car-THE STATE Education Depart·
loonists and yoUJ'\g physicists, oboe m ent will provide technical as·.
virtuosos as well as teen-age computer slstance for schools that have long
geniuses. neglected gifted students, she said.
"IF IT GETS WORSE and worse,
you have to say for $120,000 we're not
g~i ng to k eep the program
a nymore," said Dr. Mary Kruse,
director of lnstructional Services for
the Newport-Mesa school district.
"They can't keep giving you less and
demanding more." fnterviews with nearly two dozen School districts are not obligated to
s tudents, parents, edlfcators and immediately implement all of the
slate officials revealed a sense of ex-state's categories defining gifted stu·
cltement about the GATE program. dents.
'te·achers especially feel the Most districts plan to develop sue·
challenge: They realize they have cessful programs based on the
four years to amwer public criticism specific talents and abilities of the
and prove the necessity of special student population.
education. for the gj/ted. ''And success means to provide a
program which meets the need.a of
AND ntERE IS special Interest in the atudent.s rather than building a
developing a program that serves proaram and fittina the students into
students wtth gl(\s other than hiah IQ it," lh. McKinney said. "It means a
or test scores. job of educating the educators."
"I do not. reject the IQ test u a Some sc~ool districts, such as
meaningful tool " said Aasemblyman Irvine Unitaed, have elected lo sup·
Dennis Manaers < D-Huntlngton . plement state funds with local money
Beach), chJef sponsor or the new in order le? avoid student cutbacks
l i 1 ti "J thl k It' (IQ) from the ai.fled ~ram. Some plan eg s a on. n s to keep the same number of at\ldenll aomet~ we need to study moi. with reduced funding.
about. . La1mua Beach school diltrlcl ha•
Man1en. a formei.#Oher and planned, for exampl•, to raid lbe IQ
•cbool adminlltratorMi-e;rU.at t.be cutoff from 132to1J5 to trlm tbe rolls
le1ialatioa •• a.lao de1lsnecj to over· of bor*rllne 8llled •tudenll .
come fundln1 tnequltref' riddled ... .. -oa·LDM 111-throullaout the 11011 Prot.r•m. . ''I RAV., ,. .-. , • tt 1UUI a
Under the okl fundlnc formula student oae year you re '1fted and
1cbool dlllrtcu were 1upported on i one year you're not,'' Hld Judy
per pupU bula. , CwtertnJa, GATE coordlnl\Of for the
. MMi••I elthn~Mlft\e that N•w~c;.baolllJaJ.dtt,
J .
t ff"
'·Four years Is better than extinc· .
lion," countered Lorraine Bostick,
state parent council chairwoman of
the California Association "for the
Gifted. "It's difficult for scnool dis·
trict.s to see that.·'
The association. made up of
parents and educators who support
special education for the gifted, ls en·
couraging parents to play a wider
role in the development of GATE
programs. "We have a chance to prove that
gifted education Is viable,'' she said.
"We are fighting government reports
and myths. We have four years to see If the proeram can work."
Ma. McKinney, of the state Educa-
tion Department, •creed that pa.rents
have and wm play • key role ln pre·
tervlnt state·backed 1tfted educ•·
tlon . "There are too many J*>PI• that
think that beinC ,itted ls aoucb and
they (br\lht students) don't need
anythlnl elH,'' she 1a1d. "~ In
1rentral don't n1U1e the dama1e that
can be dOne to the ,,i/t~ child whole
"need• an not met. ~ _
Gifte d Childre n
Ofte n B eco01e
Dropouts
'-........ o.i.,~
W est Lafayette, Ind. -For the &ifled
child. boredom and frustration with
school often begin as early as first
• grade.
"The child who came to kindergarten with a
calculator" is an example of the bright student
who may rapidly lose interest in school, says
Prof. John Feldhusen, director of Purdue
Uni versity's Gifted Education Resource
Institute.
''Although we have been aware of the needs
of gifted children for more than a century, pro·
grams for them have often been inadequate or
non-existent," Feldhusen observes. But things
are looking up, he adds. .
"In the last 10 years there has been increas-
ing' funding for the gifted. But even so," he
adds, ··ror every $100 spent on the handicapped ,
there is roughly $1 spent on the gifted."
I ronically, it was the same law that was
written fo r the handicapped (Public
Law 94-142) which today may assure the
girted child equal opportunity to excel.
This federal law states that "All children have a
right to an education commensurate with their
needs."' ~
The traditional thinking on special pro·
grams for the gifted has been that "Bright kids
can make it on their own" or "The cream
rises."
But Feldhusen disputes that viewpoint. In
some communities, he estimates, roughly 30
percent of the high-school dropouts are pro·
bably gifted or talented. And some prison
literature indicates a high proportion of inmates
were once girted or talented children. There are
a lso many gifted children who have become
severe underachievers, Feldhusen notes.
S ome gifted kids probably will make it
on their own. But while this works for
some with advantaged backgrounds, it
does not work for those from disadvan-
taged backgrounds -those from poverty or
educationally uns timulating envi ronments, he
says.
Most studies show that girted children are
likely to be Crom well-educated, arrtuent
families. Feldhusen contends, however, such
findings may be a product of the Cai lure to iden-
tify the disadvantaged who are gifted.
·'Bette r than 50 percent of the gifted
children Crom disadva ntaged backgrounds
aren't even recognized as such through chan·
nels such as test scores, .. he remarks.
It may be more difficult, but not impossible,
says Feldhusen, lo identify a gi f\ed child before
he enters school. With preschoolers, he believes,
parental assistance is vital in the identification
process.
0 iftedness may appear in a variety of
forms. the professor explains. A child
might be artistically gifted Cmusic,
drama. art>. intellectually strong
(math, scrence or language), verbally gifted
(reading and writing), creatively gifted <Jn·
novative) or gifted in leadership.
What are some indicators to look for in a
preschooler? Early ability to read is an ex-
c e 11 ent single index or gi ftedness. s a ys
Feldhusen. Others include early development of
exceptional verbal ability, early walking and
great energy for physical activities, less need
Cor sleep than the average child, perfectionist
tendencies, extreme sensitivity. the ability to
think abstractly and an exceptional memory.
Parents who recognize such characteristics
in th'eir offspring can help the child develop
them in the preschool years. Feldhusen points
out. '"This is a crucial time in the child's de·
velopment. and interaction with parents is
critical in this period."
He suggests parents provide numerous ex-
periences to stimulate the child's thinking and
sensory development. Field trips are a good
way -to a historical museum, a local
veterinary clinic , a park or library.
r eldhusen says programs for the gifted
seem to be more abundant i n
metropolitan areas and in certain
states. In lllmois and CalifQmia, he
notes, most schools.have special cla5ses at the
eleltlentary level. A bright child might, for in-
stance, spend a day a week on projects with a
special group. In some cases, the. professor
adds, it is the only time for the participants to
be with children like themselves.
"Being with othe r gifted children is vital to
good self-concept 'development for the gifted,"
he remarks. The educator says most ol the programs do
not segregate the gifted child for "more than a
few hours a day" -long enough, be believes, lo
nurture the need for learning that goes beyond
the average classroom.·
Feldhusen beads one of the few graduate-
level programs of study on gifted education in
the country. Recently he initiated a workabop,
called "Super Saturday,'' tor &tfted chJldren ln
the community. Children who au.end the el&ht-
week worbbop are challenged by an Intricate
11cheduJe or actl\titles, including computer work.
A lthough the pro1Hm has been a auc-
cess, Feldhusen e mpbasilea auch
worbhopt cannot replace achool pro-
1rarna for tbe clf\ed.
On the other hand, he obaerves, "lheN •"
some achoolt wttho1,1t special pro1ram1 &bit
nenrt.heteea have aueh rlch and .hl8b·left1
tecoodary pro1ram1 that they .and up, tenitl t.be needs of alfted children M weU.' CoU.Ct
commun.IUes ar. •often prlm• examples.
But for parentl who live ln are .. wt~
apeclal procrama fOr tbelr filled e~,
recommend• u1bln1 to ••t them 1tart • :-., .. ,..._.;.i~
·lnnuendal.
---· ..