HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-18 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • •
1,300·· fiUlit lake EISin.ore
A tbt IWOOped out ol
the Wettern PJalm HSa ulted
ctttea ol the urban Nortbeut
wttb snows al.molt a foot deep
toda1.s.. leavtna at leut 13 dead
from ·nus to New Yort.
Thou1apds of homea were
darkened .. tbe IDOW and fee
ripped down power Unea .
Htabway1 from Ohi o to
lh11achuaetts were Uttered
•tth 1talled truckl and can.
Scbooll cloled lo nWQeroua com-mun.tt.tes.
The storm that had dropped
snow up to 11 inches deep in
parta ol the West intensified u it
reached New En1lanct ln tbe-
early-mornlnf boun. Wltb IDOW
still faUJna, more than 10 incbel
bad accumulated at 1ucb places
a1 Albany , N .Y ., and
Williamsport, Pa. Six lncbel bad
fallen ln 1lx boUn at Concord,
N.H., with 5 incbea durln8 the
aame period at Hartford, Coan.
Two deatbl ln Texu on a rain·
slick road and one ln Oldaboma
were blamed on the 1torm,
which ln one day left el1bt times
Dow Jones
leaps toward
1,000 mark
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock
prices roM abarply in tradinl to-
daJ, resUmlnl t&e powerlw rally
of last week. • • The Dow Jonee avera1eofl01n·
duattlal atocu Jumped t .99 POlnta
to tN.25 ln the ftnt hour OI trad·
l.Df,: The blue cblp Index bu
1alDect in ftve ot the put 11.s
._•kJaafor anet1Dcreueofnear-
ly SlpOIDU. •
Ana111ta aald the market ap.
pea red to tie puabedlont&rdoalta
own momentum, rat.Mr than MY •pecttlcnewadev~menttoday.
'''l'hia bu ~ wbaUoitver
to do wttb any MWI nent, '' nld
ha1T1 Wachi.l d Bache, ~
ltuartSbllldl IDe. The Fedenl lteltrve Board to-
daJ r•~rted aomewhat dll· eour._,DtWl ln lta latnt week·
lJ r@ort oe tbe Datlon'a money c:fc'IJ· . Die ftcurea 1bow the e IDDQQ ..,a7 ctmlaald to _,.,.it ratM faMr' tbM Ult,_
... bJ' lhtai, Htlnj COD· ¢tr'QI.... .,,...~.
()ftnll ...... OUblum· __ ..__ t.to-lontbe
New YaltbclS&ac....,.•.
OU ...-. llMWl'.dJ 'boftd ..,..,_.latoday,01eatlf and·
'~ 8oud \fohune came«» 1 t1111t1 .u .. • • mtboel ....,_
a.&MftntWut. "
~'lllAI Notiliai*-:-i..nw
ha Olda!l>ma. f'our peoPJe died
in aeparate mow·rel1ted ri>ad
accidenta in Ohio, where aa
much u 71f.a inc:bes fell. Two
traffic deaths were reported in
Pennsylvania and one in New
Jersey. In 8dc:tition, a t-yeu~ld
boJ in Annstrona County, Pa .•
wu found dead in h1I backyard
•wfll:lml:na pool after be went
outaide to shovel anow. In New
York, the storm waa blamed for
at leut two de•tbl. ·
A twin-enlioe airplane pllioted
by a New York man wu report·
ed miulnl tb1a momln• over
ru11ed Pennsylvaala terrain
covered with nine. to 12 inches of
SDOW.
The first snowfall of the
season prompted Unlvenlty of
Rhode laland. students to attack
tbe police station in Solltb
Kinpton, R.I., with snowbalb.
·'They broke 11 windows and
vandalized a police car, but
there were no injuries," said
p o lice Capt. Jame• E .
McDonald.
Heavy mow and driviq wiDdl
cau1ht Pittaburp 4uriDI the
eYanln1 nub hour Monday.
Todara morntna ruab hour in
the New York-New Jersey.
Connecticut metropolitan ~a
•bowed alps of beinl a 1Jow, buardous one u snow and an
Icy crust built up on bisbwaya
overnlsbt and a cold rain
pent.ted into tHe moro.ln1. A llPt plane wu forced down
on lntentate biltiway 80 in Penn·
1ylvanla when]~ formed on lt.t
win11. The plane landed Hfely
Ilona the median strip.
Saodiill macblnea be1an to
(8ee SNOW, Pase AJ)
Cockroach
fight loat ..
TOKYO <AP) -A 31·
Y••r·old eon1tructlon worker Ml flre to h1i apaJ1...
meat, 1laabed bl.I wrilta
and wa U'relted fOf' al'IOD
today ln a lottd) battle
a1aln1t ~oekroacbe1 ,
poUc:eUJd.
Police aaid Klyo~ltlu
Watanabe r.turw "bome
from a hea~ bclul andfoand~ta hi•·~ ..... , .... at
numben,~_:rm.a Willa a ct1.,.. '*•Ill aet out to ID ...............
But bi iit f1" w Wt
apartment iaat•••· ft4HI tiOID fi ........ .ad, IP· Dir~ diRtauat fJj bit
aettiact, eUt lali l'rl1u,
Police Mid.
J oy Chun of Honolulu has to use some
push-power to get pet pig Sooey under way
for neighborhood stroll. Joy is daupter of
newly-elected state Rep. Connie Chun, who
AP---pl&DS to challenge city law that says you
can't keep livestock in Honolulu residential
are as.
18 rounds fired
coast man shot
by unseen 'glll'Ullan
He wu rel~ued today from UC
Irvine Medical Center In tood
condition , a boapltal
1pokenomanaald.
Police Sst. ~nard Ft11bt1
aald Mviball wp awue.nea b1 a
knock on bll front door and wbetl
he pulled bacll the curtains and
lookld out, an untMn •'llMd
opened nn, 1pllftttttq lbe 4oor
and laloclct.n; t .. nball to UM carpet. ..
Stt. 'll'l'UIM nut tMre WU ltO
apparent aiotive lot &be ·~ and tMt DO 1U1pec\ lila bet9 es>-preUftW Nel,....., awakene4 by tbl
fu11Uade, called police, Sft.
J'ria'bl .. ald •.
••we do have some leacli, bUl
'-e're not MIN ol a modYe at ...... Uaae,"~PriiWiNW
JlanbilJ WU *I •• alilM
•ben 'tM ••oottn' OCCUITH, police UN.
Woman, 47,
killed by car
in Anaheim
A 47-year~ld A.DaMim woman
waa ltnltk and kllled Monday
nJ1bt 11 sbe attem"'ed to croa
buay BMdl Boulenrd, ~nlbelm
policedlcL P~ iWad at Anaheim
Memorial hoepttal was Rutb
Hamitton.
A police .,. .. man •aid lbe
womR wu •ttemPUna tO awa
Beacll aeaH>ran1e.Aveaue Yibeila
the 'WM ltnlCk by I ~bound
car ctrtyec· bY Jhftl1 JCcGatb of
Norwalk. Ofllcen nld the !rictlm
waa not lo a croMwalk.
The SpoUallWl Hld an in·
vestlpdm WOukl ~-Into "' &be caUMoftbt aceideDt.
fire
7-mile
front
charred
By'l'k Aaocla&ed Preu
Fierce winds Urat fanned fires
over a wide area of Southern
California either sbifled or died
do tod Ii Ii ter '-* ~ ........ U.. lllaw lb8l ._.ve charred more than !l'O,
acrea ol bruahland and destroyed
extensive property since the
weekend.
SWJ, fire officials cautioned
that winds remained a factor.
eapeeially aoutb of Lake Elsinore
in southwest Riverside County
where a major blue, the Turner
fire, remained out of control.
Thatfire, wbichwas dellberate·
ly set, had 1rown to over 25,000
acrea today. But a force of 1,.300
fitefllbten had the fire 40 percent
contained and 30 percent con-
trolled, said Anne Harrison of the
U.S. ForestService.
"But there ls still no expected
total containment time," she
said , addin1 that winds ~ere
bloWtna aboutlO mph.
The Turner fire burned south
for eight miles from its start in
Lakeland Village, Ms. Harrison
H id.
It burned southwest along a
7-mile·wide front, takin1 with it
one home under construction.
Some structures, orchards and
Uveat.ock were threatened.
FloOd control officials Monday
were usesslns drainaie areas
around the brushfi res and
speculatin1 on potential danger
when winter ralna wash down the
now-barren hillsides into nearby
homea.
''If heavy rains come we can ex·
pect some real problems," said
Ken Kwnmerfeld. "We'll make
(See WINDS, Pase AZ)
Fair throush ·wednes·
day. l.ioM • toni1ht In the
COi . Hiihl Wednesday &8 •
alon1 the cout, 78 lnland. • ,
IN IDE TODA" :
"TM fMfnOriea Ott jlut too :
bombW," '°'' Jn'fV Parb. : dO eilOldNd oa hU wife woa
cMI ..... '*""' °" tho.l -.......... alnfrlp in IM o~ ,..,,.. """ Pcir:lca
-and 71 ~ nmvors -tM wu o tlW honor "' lf'IOW. ~ .47. #
VOYAGER PHOTO SHOWS SATURN RISING BEHIND MOON DIONE
TH•n, t•rgeat of Satum'1 moon•, upper rtght bll~kground '
:Saturn moon '2nd best'
·. Voyager says Jupiter has larger
PASADENA <AP> Saturn's
moon Titan has lost the· title of
largest natural satelhte m the
solar system to Jupiter's moon
Ganymede, scientists studying
Voyager 1 data at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory here re-
port
The lates t calculation of
Titan's size shows 1t to have a
diameter of 3,070 miles com·
pared w1th Ganymede's 3,160
Until Voyager arrived, Titan's
diameter could not be estimated
because the moon 1s shrouded 1n
dens e clouds that make its sur-
face invisible
Readings returned by several
or Voyager's experiments in-
d.Jcate Titan's nitrogen rich al·
mosphere must extend down
much further than had been pre
v1ously thought
"Titan has been dethroned as
&be lartest moon ._ the soJar
•YN•m. •• Toby Owen of the
Voyager "imaging" tea m s aid
Monday
Titan also appears to be too
.warm at the surface to allow
oceans of liquid nitrogen to
-form. except in the polar re-
Wi on s, Owe n s aid Liquid
pitrogen rains may fall from the
cloud layer. he noted, but the
drops evaporate before they hit
bie surface.
• Owen noted that Voyager data
still has not shown the moon's
.gurface. Titan's size was de
termined from indire ct
evidence.
Titan is able t.D retain its at
mospbere while Ganymede can-
not because Saturn's largest
moon is colder, the scientist ex-
plained. At colder temperatures
like those on Titan. heavier
nitrogen atoms that make up
mos t of Titan's atmosphe re
never achieve enough speed to
escape from the moon's gravita·
tional hold.
Separately, scientist Rich Ter·
rile of the imaging team said 1t
appears the mysterious spokes
of dark material seen on one of
Saturn's rings result from in
teraction between the rings and
the planet's magnetic fields.
The particles in those spokes
carry an electrostatic charge
similar to th.at which arises
when a glass rod i~ rubbed
vigorously with cat's fur,
For tbe o;J.Oet part, tbe fields
rotate faster than the rings, Ter-
' rile said.
The spokes had mystified
s cientists. because the rings
have different rotation periods
that would have quickly erased
any such features that might
have appeared. The existence of
the spokes, seen to last for
hours, defied common sense un·
til the electro-magnetic fi eld
theory was advanced , Ternle
said.
Although the most intense
hooting aeeident
.· 9-year-old admits
gun .death of pal
., ..
LOS ANGELES CAPl -A 9
year-old boy has admitted ac-
cidentally shooting a 10.year-old
friend whose body was found
after a five day search, police
said today .
The body or the missing
Highland Park boy was dis·
covered Monday by a woman who
lives next door to the 9-year-old.
The dead boy, who had been shot
in the bead, was found in some
buabea in back or the neighbor's
property.
He bad failed to return home
OAANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Wednesday, and his family filed a
re(Jbrt with police Thursday
Lt. Charles Massey said
"physical evidence" found at the
scene led investigators to the 9.
year-old. who lives five blocks
a way from the dead boy's home
The younger boy. a schoolrtlate
or the victim, told officers he was
showing the 10-year-old a .38·
caliber revolver he had taken
from his father's closet when it
accidentally discharged.
The victim's name was belng
withheld pending notification of
his father, who lives on the East
Coast..
The 9-year-old, whose name
was not released because of hls
ase. was placed in t.be cuatody or
cobnty probation autborilles at
Eastlake Juvenile Hall while the
lnvesli1ation ii conducted. •
phase or the Saturn enco1'inter !S
now concluded and Voyager 11s
following a t>ourse that will take
1t out of the solar system by the
mid 1990s, the s pace craft's
camer as will continue to scan
Saturn until mid-December.
when they will be permanently
shut down
Other equipment will continue
taking r e ading s of in ·
terplanetary space. Scientists
hope Voyager , mov ing away
from the s un at 36,000 mph, will
still Pe working when it is ex·
pet>ted to reach the edge of the
solar system and plunge into in·
terst t'llar space
Man sought
in 4 deaths
YORK, Maine <AP> -The
bodies of four people -three of
them shot at close range and the
other stabbed were found in a
cocaine strewn home in this
coastal r eso r t t o wn . and
a uthonties today issued a murder
warrant r6r a lobsterman.
The victims, t wo men and two
women m their 20s and 30s, may
have been dead since 11:30 p.m.
S unday. Assi s tant Attorney
Gener.al Pat Pe rrino said. Per·
rino said author ities arrived
shortly after 8 p m Monday and found cocaine m several places
inside the dwelling.
Police broadcast an interstate
ale rt for Andrew Weiss. 23, of
Wells m connection with the
deaths Early today. Perrino
said a murder warrant had been
issued for Weiss, whom he
described as a lobsterman
Pope flaunts
'tradition'
FULDA. West Germany <AP>
A group of West German
Rom1m Cathoh t> traditionalists
has sent a telegram complairung
about the way Pope John Paul II
distributed Communion wafers,
the chief Vatican spokesman
s aid today . The Rev Romeo Panciroh
s ald the pope distributed the
wafers into the hands rather
than the mouths of those attend·
in1 a Mass in Cologne on Situr·
day and at a U.S. Army base in
Malni on Sunday.
The spol(esman explained the
pontlfl was cUn1 according to
tbe custotnS of hls host country.
........... _ .............. __ Coastal lint
•
~Hilt• ...
TMNt• • .,.... ,,,..,..,114t••at
""-""" ~ ..... tlMll~ "',.,
T .. -.illol\t f71•)14Mm
CtaH#IH A••artlal"I tu417t
,, ........ c1o,.,, • ........
.
• - - - - -~-... ~ -1.. ~ ... --
Body identified
EL CERRJTO (AP) -A
woman 's body found t~is
weekend near a San Lorenzo
school has been ldentJfled as
that of a manager of a fast food
store in El Cenito who disap-
peared Nov. 8 with nearly $2,500
in receipts.
1i·11re11t gro...,11
Israeli troops fired on rock·
throwing Palestinian
youths in Bethlehem, wound-
ing 10 , and six were
wounded in similar episodes
in nearby Ramallah. The in·
cidents are part of continu-
ing Israeli-Palestinian West
Bank conflicts.
,,., ..........
Wortd•• tall••f "!
A man stands on a stool to
measure the height Qf Tseng
Chin-lien, believed to be the
world's tallest living female.
Miss Tseng, 16, stands 7 feet,
IO'h inches, and weighs 323
pounds. She lives with her
family, who are of normal
size, in Yuanjiang, China.
'J.R. Ewing'
blows lines
before queen
LONDON <AP ) -Larry
Hagman, wbo as the nasty J.R.
Ewing got shot in the '•Dallas'' TV
series, died the. death every
trouper fa.rs when he appeared
before royalty here. He forgot bis
lines.
On Monday night, the biggest
showbU night of the year at the
London Palla~ium, Hagman
twice fcw1ot the lyrics to "My Fav ·teSips." _ . •• r blew k well.
y coal.....S.
But his role has made Hagman
so popular here that be can't do
wrong. Queen Mother Eliubeth
and her grandson, Prince
Charles, were all smiles, and
diamond-studded theat.ergoen
who shelled out $144 for charity
'ticketacbeeredbim to the roof.
Tbey cheered again when
Hagman 's mother. veteraq •c·
tress Mary Martin, skipped on·
stage in her sailor suit from
''South Pacific" and did a aong-
and·danceroutine with her aon.
After lhee,bow. part of the ongo-
inc celebration of the queen
mother's 80th birthday, Hagman
met with the royal guesta.
''I am not going to ask you who
shot you," said the queen mother,
a devoted fan of the CBS series.
·'I wouldn't say, not even to you.
your highness," replied Hagman.
2 die in crash
SANTA ROSA (AP> -Two
people were killed in the crash
of a small plane Monday ne.ar
the Sonoma County Airport, the
Sberilf'a Department said.
WINDS • • •
recommendations on work to be done." ·
John M . Budish, 23, was·
arrested Monday and held for in-
vestigation of setting an illegal
campfire in San Gabriel Canyon
that led to a destructive fire near
the Bradbury-Duarte area, 20
miles northeast of downtown Los :I
Angeles. · l
He was being held by the Los h
Angeles CoWlty sheriff's depart-· r
ment in lieu oUS,000 bail. The fire · 7 dffiroyed 49 ex ...._
and darn. td rr oOMlfW Id u
estimated costof$25 milUon..
The 6,168-acre blue was 60 per·
cent contained late Monday. with
full containment expected
tonight.
One person died of a heart at-
tack during the blue, but no in-:
juries had been reported tO
firefighters.
The 11,000-acre fire tlaat.
traveled from the Sunland areaQf
Los Angeles over Verdu10 Hltlt.
into Burbank and Glendale was'"
contained Monday alter crewt
work~ on hot spots ovemJght.. It.
destroyed 12 bomes and fo.rced;
the btiel evacuation of 130 ~
ldences in the Elmwood C~·:
Paseo Redondo-Thurber area.
Two smaller fires that charred
about 1,000 acres of wilderness in
the Lake Elsinore area of
Riverside CoWltf were out Mon-
day, as was the Windy Fire wbieb
claimed 320 acres in San
Bernardino.
Fire also destroyed two homes.1 two bams and three cats before 11
was controlled after raging along
a 100-acre path from Malibu
Canyon to the Pacific Ocean.
One of the world's littlest known musical
aggregations -The World's Lar&est Non-
marchtng Band -plays in shopping
'center at comer of Adams Avenue and
Brookhµrst Street in Huntington Beach.
Group appeared there over weekend,
wearing masks &lld black and silver t-
shirts with "Band X" on front. Bandsmen
only show up when they feel like it; the
leader la some guy named Doug, and,
when they go to a parade, they ride in a
truclt. It's rumored tbey,re from Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa.
OCC eyes energy cuts
F ederol grant will aid computer control plan
By IERRY CLAUSEN oe_o.1..,,.....,...,
Working with a recently won
SlM,465 federal erant, Or&Die
Coast College officials expect to
cut energy consumption on their
210-acre, 33,000-student campus
by 40 percent In the near future.
"'nle National Conservation Act
erant and a matching amount
pledged by the Coast Communi-
ty College District will eo for a
computer to control campus air
conditioning, heating, lighting
and other energy users.
BEFORE APPL TING for the
grant last May, Robert B.
o.fJ ..................
SOLAR SAVER -Look:ina over a solar panel Oraqe
Coast College officials hope will cut the campua' ener1y
bills are John P. Pott.er, director of physical faclllUes and
planning, standing, and Dr. Donald Reuter, OCC pro-
fessor.
l"'ine distri~t .
Reclaimed water
<:»
program e~a~~~d
Tbe trviDe Raneb Water Dll·
trtct ii expan.dlal a pro•ram ln wbleb water reclaimed from
·Relatives and P'rienda of the
M•ntally Diaabled of Oranae
County, a new fervice or11Alu·
Uon, will meet next Tuactay
for a report bJ UC Jnlne
p1ycbiatrl1t·pharmacl1t Dr.
Larry Pl<Jn.
He will clllcuu major lran·
quJU1 r dr\lal admlnbtere4 to
1ome paUenu dunn1 the e:IO p .m . appearance at th•
MarlPoN Womeb'a Center m
8. Main St., Otanie and ~
ot a ~ tuk force study ol
tal'diva klnesl1.
Th11 ii a dlllorder cauaed b)' a '°"•·term .. !bl ~· Ol tbeie r0mPG61da oa lddl'ifduall "M
affd tMtll for treatment, ac'/
cordla1 to •pokHmlD June ......... -••1 .. rutbed •t NJ.,., for tunher Inform• Uoa. TM~ wu l'Ormed ncatlJ lit......,,....._ GI IUcll ._.. •
Dr •. ,_, J,JCI ... lttQIU ''!!° =' ol peJCbl.,, "' -·
aewaae treatment ii us*' to tr-
r11ate landscapinj lD lrv1ne.
Irvine Public Wow Director
Jtretlt M\acbow aaid Monday the
water dlltrict plam to use tbe
reclaimed water at nine loca·
tlou ln tbe city. More apenilve
potable water 11 beln• used to lr·
rt1ate tandscapln1 at tbeae
altn.
THE CIL\NGEOVE& IN the
type ol water med at tbeH loca·
Uona wlll necetaltate nearlJ
SJ.,000 iD PIPe inodlflcatlon work
ateacbalte.
Mucbow 1ald the city will pay
for tbae mocllftcatkml.
PubUc worn admlalJtrator
Robert R. DealO llid thll U· penae wW be reeove.Nd Iii ,_
than two y an tbroup red~
water cQltl. • MdcboW Wd UM city bu uM4
r1cJalm1d 1'ater to lm1at1
paru Md ~Ua fO/f' 11veral yeart. MuonUd~
are each aprtn'kleil i •ltb
reetalmect water.
TB& WATS• D a Ute Ud
UHfUl ProclUtt derl¥ed tfoal tbi
tHatlMOt of raw Mw1je, M
sal4.
Tbt DIM DIW loCailcial Wbln
the rielala>ed Jrl*° WW DOW bl 111N Mu•1 m ..._ la tM SI
Oammo,....~OM•ta Ualnra1t1 P..ark aad two ln
UDIYtnkJ Ton CtiiMf.
Moore, college president, or-
ganized a task force to audit and
reduce the Costa Mesa campus
enerCY consumption.
As a result or the study
launched in the spring of 1979, ts
buildings were "de-lamped" or
''re-limped," officials noted.
Thermostats were adjusted,
timlnc clocks re-set and campus
boilen made more efficient.
Solar enercy panels were
placed on several roofs.
College energy bills averaged
about $700,000 a year . over the
five years before the energy
audit.
FOLLOWING THE enerey-
savlng steps, the college saved
taxpayers about $115,000 in
energy expenditures during the
1979·80 fiscal year.
"It wasn't an actual savings
. . . because utility bills jumped
dramatically during the year,"
said Donald Rueter, professor of
bt•lneu titformatlon system• apl aa eaercy task force
member.
''Had we not conducted the
audit, however, our utility bill
would have been $115,000 higher
than It WU."
He noted that before the audit,
the college was "operating
buildinu at a time when they
really dldo 't ~eed. to be go!Jla.
DUlllNG nlE LATEa after-
noon hours we found that
claurooms were empty, yet
doors were open, lights were
turned on, exhaW1t fans were
operatlnl and air conditioning
was ruonlng.
"We recopbed pretty quickly
that most of our campus build-
incs were coRBtructed during a
lime when there was an energy
glut. Consequently, en1ineers
and architects over-lighted,
heated and air conditioned
them."
He said that problem has been
corrected.
Since the preliminary 1979
audit, the colle1e bu lnapected
an additional 37 buUdinp.
IT WAS DETE&IUNED that a
amatl computer would be re-
quired to effectively monitor all
>f tbe campWI' energy comum~
tlon. The federal grant and
matcbtn1 dl1trlct funds will
purcbue a sz:t0.000 computer to
be coMected wltb all major
enerty conaumln1 devices, a
spokeaman noted. The computer 1y1tem,
planned for lmtallation by next
March, ts eicpeeted to pay for
Itself 1D tmer1Y savtn11 ln less than two tears.
In addition to the computer.
the fund will buy solar water
beaten and devtces to make
beatlnl and air condilloninl un-
its more efftttJve.
WHEN FULLY operational,
tbe new computer11ed ayatem 11
expect.s to cut (\Olle1e enero
eon•\UilPtiOli by 11 much u «>
percent each year, Rueter
optneet.
"When )'OU're looktn1 at a
annual eneray btll of approx-
imately '100,000, that'• a slsnift· cant n,ure," b concluded.
Hmltln8'on meet•
oa eomumer fraua
~ fraud wm be Ute
&Opie of a HuntlD•ton Beach
Nel1hb0rho0d Watch meetinl
1l1t.d few 7:IO ton11bt ~t tbe
Ctattal Ubr~. 7111 Talbleft
Ave.·
OuHl 1p1all•r• from th ora.,. ~ty COMumtr IJ..
f altl ome. and the Coaiumer
IAAftl 'WUI .-ua bow~ 9'*-
bu1la1 fra*9uleat 1004• aftd
""'""
Subdivision
approved
in Laguna
South Coast Regional Coastal
Commiasioners have approved a
14-lot subdivision planned m the
Top of the World area of LagWla
Beach.
The commission voted 7-0 to ap-
prove the subdivision application
by Huntington Enterprises of San-
ta Fe Sprtnis. Four members of
the 11-member panel were
absent.
THE PROJECT was approved
over the objection of Abby
Alderman of Laguna Beach, who
contended that the three·acre
parcel at the intersection of Alta
Laguna Boulevard and Park
A venue should be left as open
space.
She said the development would
add to erosion, fire hazar~. traf-
fic and crime in the Tf# of the
World area.
Huntington Enterprises plans
to divide the land into Iota varying
from 6,080 to 9,290 square feet.
The property ia located on the
northern side of Alta Laguna,
where Park Avenue ends.
UNDE& THE commission's
conditions are requirements for
some af!ordablebomtq.
The developen could provide
three of the 14 lot.a for affordable
housing. ~ an alternative, they
could provide six units of such
bousipg elsewhere in Laguna
Beach.
Or, they could provide a cash
paymentfor such housing.
Exercise class
set for skiers
A ski conditionin1 program,
aimed at getting snow buffs
tuned-up for the slopes while
waiting for winter to settle in, is
being offered by the Orange
Coast YMCA in Newport Beach
The twice-weekly class, beiiD·
niog tonight ls two hours Long
The five-week session, meeting
Tuesdays and Thursday. runs
from 7 to 9 p.m
The program ls structured for
skien 18 years of age and over
For information, call 642-9990.
-. ----_ ........ ~ .. ~---......... _ -
year.
Tbe virus la usually pus~
through cootacl with an infected
dog's excrement, so experts bad
believed tbat the highest rate of
incidence would occur durinl
warm months , when dogs
generally mix more.
Dr. Reichel said vets at her
clinic continue to vaccinate
Of fiee eomplex due?
Banning school site
zoning approved
A rn· to
·of
b1e
In conjWlction with plans for
long.range development or the
500-acre Banning-Newport
Ranch, Newport-Mesa school of·
ficials have authorized changing
the zoning on their unused 11-acre
Bannrng School site.
The school-owned land i.s in-
cluded in a long-range develo~
ment plan submitted on behalf
or Beero. Ltd. to the City or
Newport Beach and Orange
County in October.
PROPOSED BY Beeco is three-ph ase development beginning
before 1985 and continuing
beyond 1995.
The school land, just inside
Newport Beach's westerly city
limit, once was proposed as an
elementary school site. De<:lin-
ing district enrollment has re·
suited in the property being
declared surplus.
School officials say there is no
potential need for a school on tbe
1lte tn tbt foresee• tutuN, but that rezoning the land doesn't
mean it will be sold forsure.
Under Bttco's plan. the school
site would change from the cur-
rent public use to a zone allow-
ing office construction.
EVEN 1110UGB plans drafted
by Phillips Brandt Reddick.
Irvine architeds and planners,
propose up to 4,829 dwelling un-
its eventually, school planners
say they doubt the area will
generate many students.
One school planner noted that
housing tmits selling for more
than $125,000 "generate almost
no influx of children until the
price range moves above
$250,000.
"Then, children are moved in-
to the more-expensive units, but
they usually are transfers from
within the district. And they
usually are the children of
families moving up in the area."
Officials also are quick to note
that Costa Mesa's Victoria
School lies near the proposed de-
velopment area. That school
was closed two years ago and is
leased to a private school. It,
ca
)3· ,-y-,
COSTA MESAt I
i i ate
in
31 ~~ ' 1of t~
,~~ le
I 0.lly~-....
SCHOOL SITE LOCATED E
At edge of Benning lend teti·
they note, could be reactivated t>rd
as a public school if required. ient
MOST. OF THE Banning ~~~
Ranch and 450 acres, lies on pro-t 57
perty tove b Oran&e Coull· I.
ty. About '° ue t• Newport "'---....: Beach. r--
Tbe acreage, one or the last '
large tmdeveloped properties in
the coastal Orange County area,
• currently produces oil. Portions
would continue producing until
after 1995, architects indicate.
The ranch, portions of which '
are planned for light industry,
commerce and recreation, lies
partially Inside western
Newport Beach.
The rest of the ranch's land ly-
ing in county territory is ringed
by a one-foot-wide Newport
Beach city strip to the Santa
Ana River on the west.
COSTA MESA lies to the
northeast and Pacific Coast
Highway to the south.
First phase development,
scheduled between 1980, and
1~. calls for between 59 and 113
dwelling units on nine acres of
non-oU bearing land.
That area includes the school
property and lies mostly within
Newport Beach between 17th
Street and Pacific Cow\
Highway. It includes 24 acres
expected to be zoned for in-·
dustrlal park development.
IN STOCK
Shady'• newest
band-ttyted shape
~
*** PUZZLING INDEED was the action of that Stn
Clemente cop who the other day became ausplcious of a
.;r----r-~~--~~
ON
I STRIKE
Ctl
'N>tl')"'•
"AndGtve My Regar<U t0Mr1. JOMunEngluh·A"
local citizen who was carrying some 1ood.s in his arms.
The suspect, the lawman explained, wu loaded down
with an auto battery, tape deck, tool boll and a hydraulic
jack.
Now I ask you, what's so unusual about that? That cop
must never have owned a used car.
I always .thought everybody walked around carrytne
spare parts. ••• FOR ROMANCE OF the sea, you can't beat this line
from Al Lockabey. the esteemed boating scribe of this
sterling journal, when it came to reporting upon the
Mazatlan boat race. He noted:
"Secret Love's elapsed time was 7 daya, S hours and S
minutes ... "
Ah well, short but sweet ... ••• HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION School District
teachers have now vowed to 10 on "a media blitz" in try-
ing to impress the citizenry that their cause is just in seek·
ing a 14 percent pay popper from ye board of trustees.
Di.strict residents will be educated on pay luues
(teachers' views) by radio commercials, mailers and
newspaper ads. You are left to wonder who decided to call
this a blitz? A blitz Is defined by Webster's as, "A sudden,
sava1e au.ack, causln1 great devestation ... in fury to
win a quick victory.
Now really, you have to figure the teachers don't real·
ly want to devestate anythin1. And quick victory? How
long bas this hassle been 1oing on, anyway? Since the
Fourth of July? ••• AND nNALL Y, this breuy headline gave you the real
scoop alona the current weather front:
"Hlgh wind dilcovered on Saturn ...
Now you know how bard tbo8e Santa Anas were really
blowing.
.
CLEV&LAND (AP> Bar·
rlri& :IWJ>rl"i, Clueland Will
emer,. rrOm defautt today,.za
.. montba after its brMJh wltb
bankruptcy;~ the tro,abl• of tbt• ~red Like·,zne port
clty. Often the tiutt of J9kes, anr far tn>m over.
TOfUy u tbe by Clty Flnanc.
Dlnctot WUHam Reidy Jr. b
acbeduled to band over 5,000
bODda tOtallnt S38.2 mllli<lft 10
manacen of eltht local banb al
a City Hall ceremony. Ill return.
the city WW aet Sto.~ mllllon to
pay oft the NJDUnder of It.a de-
faWted loans and another $25.'T
mllUoo for operatlnf revenue.
Apeed to by tbe Cleveland Ci-
ty Council 41 days before, the
tramactlon ll to set in moUoD a
three-year recovery proaram
that the city -haunted by in·
dustrial receuloo and City Hall
overapend.lna -hopes will eet It
back to solvency.
ONCE TllE CITY ls out of de·
fault, it wlll still face belt·
tl&htenlna, lncludine the pros-
pect of faytna off hundreds of
ita workers, according to Rejdy .
It will take another two yean at
the earliest for the city to return
to national bond markets, and
Reidy said additional local bor·
rowing muat sWl be arranged,
includln1 loans to meet payrolls.
Cleveland was the first major
U.S. city to default since the
Depression when iCwas unable
to repay $14 million in notes that
came due Dec. l.S, 1978. Its books
were in such bad shape that it
took more than a year to de·
Racism
condemned
by pope
MAINZ.:.. West Germany <AP>
-Pope .t"aul 11 condemned the
"perverted theories" of racism in a meeting with German
Jews. He also called on Proles·
tants to unite with Catholics
against atheism. saying "we owe
it to God and to the world . . . to
keep upthedJalorue ...
He told' 2'·member delegation
of the Central Council of Jews in
Germany, some of them sur·
vivors of Nazi concentration
camps, that "the innocent vic-
tims in Germany or elsewhere,
the destroyed or scattered
families, the cultural values and
cultural treasures destroyed
forever are tra&lc proof of where
discrimination and disreeard for
bum an dignity can lead."
Germany bas about 30,000
Jews. About 6 million European
Jews were killed by the N azls in
World War II.
The pope underscored the
theme of equality and Christian
unity at an outdoor meeting with
members of dozens of ethnic
groups and natlonallties, ad·
drestln& many of them ln their
natl ve languages.
Werner Nacbmann, leader of a
24-member dele1at100 of rabbis
and committee members, told the pope that "brutal violence,
which rendered us defenseless,
bas decimated us.''
The pope said "concrete
brotherly relations between Jews
and CJtholtcs in Germany re-
ceives a very special value
a1ainst the dark background of
persecution and attempted
destruction of the Jews in thia
country."
Snow snarls soUthwest ..
Wind-whipped drifts "battled by Texam
~-~"'---~~
.=:.. ... ,.. ......_
J4 20 ,. .
42 •
J4 JI
40 ..
• 11 u 3'
J1 " 2J " 20 ,
J1 II
TO EMERGE FROM what
Kucinicb had called a long night
of shame to what current Mayor
Qeoree Voinovich calls a bis·
torte al rttnalssance of the clty, it
is clea)' that substantial help ts
needed.
Voters Nov. 4 defeated a pro-
posal for a second tax increase
in as many years, a revenue
measure that might have eased
the crisis. As a result, Reidy
says the city must:
-Borrow another $5 million
to meet December payrolls.
-Gain City Council's ap·
proval to issue S53 mllhoo in
local bonds to pay other debts. -8e8fn layoffs of up to 6SO of
Cleveland's 9,000 employees in
the next few weeks and return to
wage bargaining with others.
If all things work right and the
city has balanced budgets for
two years, Cleveland might get
back into the national bond
market by mid-1982, Reidy said.
Chained to gate .
' Scores of Equal Rights Amendment aupportenr continue
to demonstrate in Se'attle where new Mor.J?on temple is
being dedicated. Joan Scbrammeck. 24, of SeatUe, was
one of a dozen women who let themselves be chained to
temple gates. About 20 were arrested in 'protest aaainat
church's view of women's rights.
Girl hides as ·two
~
knife·d to death
KERMIT. Texas (AP> -Just before she died of stab wounds,
police say, 15-year-old Lee Ann Wallace sta11ered to a bedroom
door and warned the frightened teen.ager inside, "Stay bidden."
Authorities arrived to find the bodies of Mias Wallace and her
mother. Another woman was found wounded, and police say they
fear for the 16-year-old girl who hid from the attacker.
Authorities refused to identify the girl for her protection, and a
Kermit police investigator would not say if detectives had a SUI·
pect m the stabbings.
Tipped by an umdentified teen-ager, police arrived at the
home and found Miss Wallace slumped against a bedroom door,
dead or multiple stab wounds .
Mi~s Wallace bad staggered back to the bedroom door after
she was stabbed and warned the cowering girl to "Be quiet; stay
hidden." police said.
"We believe in togetherness,
fresh
ocean breezes
and
Fashion
Island.''
Fashion Island .is our kind
of place. \\e find fashion
tradition in designer jeans,
western boots, hats or
sweaters, sports jackets
and, if we are ·going to that
special charity event,
elegant evenmg wear. It's
all at Fashion Island!
A
~n, to
~of
>ble
·1ca
•na-,-
!ate
sin
I 31
~rs rt~
ses •are peli·
V<>rd
nent
'\he
~nor
57
,
v
~LtFORNIA
APWl .... le
~,. 11eerefary
Robin Orr, society editor
and column ist for the
Oakland Tribune, has been
selected as press secretary
for Nancy Reagan. Orr, 56,
said she has covered Mrs.
Reagan si nce Ronald
Reagan was inaugurated
governor of California in
1967
Call 642-5678
Put a lew words
lo work lor ou.
protttt
a ael'Vke.
r uent • Id lh maJor com-
pl1 nl of Rea1an' neiahbOrs,
especially thoa.e who live on the
narrow tr t snaklnc up to San
OriOfre Drive, is the speed of the
traffic. "There's not much you
can do. lt's doWnhm, and 1ravi·
ty takes over," tbe agent said.
But some n•Jghbors are an·
noyed at having to check ln at a
secret service post before driv·
lo« up lheir own street. One resl·
dent vented hi' aneer by eun-nio g his engine after being
forced to slow to a stop to avoid
running into a crowd of re-
porters and photographers
standing in front of Reagan's
driveway. "Another angry
neighbor," said the agent.
With Reagan's transition team
now installed ii\ a house across
the .street from Reagan's home.
there is nearly always someone
nd
Rea1an staff <'•rs and
newsmobtles line one curt, leav-
ln& Justenoup room foror.e lane
oftralnc.
The gutters are filled witb
telephone cables, and reportere
can be seen booking up portable
phones and sitting on the curb
calllng ln their stories.
There are also the installed
phones: the Associated Pr<.?ss
phone ln a tree in the front yi1rd
of the tran5itioll team house, t~e
NBC phone under the mail box
next door and the CBS phone OI\
a fence down the street
When nothing is happenine. rt!·
porters either mill around in the
middleoftheroadwayorsltont11e
sidewalk and curbs like lfeOple
waitingforamoviein Westwoo1.
As the sun set Sunday evening. smoke
filled the air over the Los Angeles skyline,
making it possible for a photographer to
capture this eerie silhouette. Major brush
fires raged out of control Sunday in and
around the Los Angeles area, destroyi
more than 100 homes and causin
thousands of Southern California .residen
to flee.
2 ro11tes to s11rvival, says adviser San Francis
'Prepare fol-nuclear war'
. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The United States, with the West's
biggest arsenal of atomic weapons, Is a magnet for nuclear attack
and should prepare for a nuclear war because that "is the only war
that can kill us," says one member of Ronald Reagan's foreign
policy advisers.
But at the same time, the Untted States should minimize the
risk of war by vastly improving its civil defense and withdrawing
American troops from allied nations around the world, says Bever-
ly Hills attorney Laurence W Beilenson
These soldiers, he says, are "hostages to get us in wars" and
should be withdrawn over five years.
' "I TIONK 111AT NUCLEAR war somewhere, someplace,
sometime is probable. I hope there won't be one and I think that if
the United States take~ the proper measures, it can avoid, deter
and ameliorate such a war," 8l-year-0ld Beilenson said last week
in an interview. The author of three books on foreign policy, including
"Survival and Peace in the Nuclear Age," Beilenson bas known
the president-ele~t since Reagan's days at the Screen Actor's Guild,
where Beilenso~as organizing counsel.
JIE SAID REAGAN HAS read all of his books, but he would not
say whether the former California eovernor ap-ees with all of his
ideas. Beilenson is one of 38 members of the foreign policy ad-
visory panel.
"He believes in more deterrance; he believes in civil defense.
Whether he believes in withdrawine our troops, I don't know. I
don't believe he will begin by beine as tough as I am . . . but I
think he will be driven to it," said Beilenson.
The former Army lieutenant colonel suggests that the United
States should replace its men in Europe with nuclear arms.
"By having the only formidable nuclear arsenal in the non.
commwust world, we make ourselves the magnet of a first
strike," be said.
umE CHOICE IS THIS. We either grant the West Germans
nuclear weapons or we are doomed to continue to defend West
Germany forever. And wars have habitually started in that part or
the world." Moreover, Beilenson notes that American presidents
have reserved the option or using nuclear weapons against the Sov·
iet Union in the event allied forces are beaten in a conventional
war in Europe
"The Soviet Union has read these things. And in order lo have
the advantage of the first blow, it is highly unlikely to start a
ground war in Europe without making a first strike on the United
States," he said.
But wouldn't the Soviet Union simply give its own allies
atomic weapons? Beilenson thinks not because "the Soviet Union
would be afraid its satellite nations would turn the weapons
against the Soviet Onion "
However, he does say the spread of nuclear weapons to many
countries is inevitable as the weapons become cheaper and easier
to make. And if people believe only a madman would start a
nuclear war, he said. then they are predicting such war "because
there have been mad rulers throughout history.''
BEil.ENSON SAYS IT is a mistake to emphasize, al the ex-
pense of nuclear mighL, the ability to project American ~i~ht
around tht· world "to tight wars the Amencan people are unwilhng
to fight."
"To survive as a free people is our primary aim. We should
prepare for a nuclear war because a nuclear war is the only way
they can kill us.•· he said.
There are two ways to prepare, Beitenson said.
First, improve defenses so the bombs don't strike "IC men
were bright enoueh to invent nuclear weapons. given the necessary
resources and ureency, they would be bright enough to invent a de
fense. We OUlht to 1et about St, with a crash prolJ'am·."
Bonnie® Jog Suit,
For The Man On
The Run.
Bold & Sharp,
machine washable
& no ironing.
Royal blue,
camel, green,
navy, burgundy
& powder blue.
so.oo
Sizes:
LT-2XT
1XB-4XB
Nike®
For
Winners!
'
• man wins
at Scrabble
SANTA MONICA <AP ) -A
night watchman from San F~
cisco who remembered ho~ to
spell "xystQi" and a myria~ of
other words 1s the new Scrabble
champion of North America
following a three day ~ourna·
ment
Joe Edley, 32. a Wayne State
college graduate with degrees in
m ath and philosophy. bested 31
other U S and Canadian pla~rs
here Sunday to win the title atrd a
$5.000 prize or a trap for twQ to
England
The prize was courtesy· of
Scrabble manufacturer SelchOw
and Righter through its unit
Scrabble Crossword
Gamesplayers Inc. of Holbr®k ..
N. Y., sponsor of the 2nd arurual
North American Scrabl:He
Players Championship '
"I feel very lucky," noted~he
soft.spoken Edley, who averaled
400 points a game and who \lses
words written on cards lo prepbre
for the brain twisting competi-
tion
Perhaps the mo.,1 unusual W<lrd
he ran across an the tournament
was ··xysto1 " derived from lhe
Greek word for covered port1coor
promenade The word scored 57
po1ou ••
ark effort justified
High hopes of congressional approval of a $38 mllllon
location from the Land and Water Conservancy Fund to
lp create an 11,000-acre national park aJona tAe OrUJe r~ast have been growing dimmer afnce the election.
The park measure, ... introduced by Repe. Robert
lladham and Jerry Patterson, won House approval lut
summer, but a matching Senate bill by Sell.I. Alan
:Cr anston and S.I. Hayakawa made it only as far aa the
senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee before
the pre-election recess.
-That committee must approve the bill before It
moves to the Senate floor, and time is runntna out.
""ongress will recess for Thanksaiving at the end ol thia
eek. then return for only five days in December.
If the park bill, which President Carter baa promised
o sign, does not pass in this session it will have to be re·
11bm1tted to both the House and Senate nextJear. And no
nn" 1:-. too optimistic about the chances for any bUla with a
p1·11·t' tag on them when the new Congress moves onto
( 1p1tol Illll
Badham is busy trying to round up more Republican
Mk mg for the Orange Coast park and initial objection to
th 0 p..trk by the National Parks Service appears to have
h1·~11 overcome by promises of matching state fundina
muJ future park management by the state.
At. tlus lime the chances don't seem too brltbt, but a
·t-mmute push for approval would be a worthwhile ef·
01 t for our congressional delegation.
thouglitful athlete
Former Rams star Roman Gabriel is doing the 1tu·
cknls on his Cal Poly-Pomona football squad a real favor,
ht!ther they appreciate it or not.
<iabriel, now a coach, is concerned about youn1
thletes who are "used for their four years of athletics,
hen turned loose with nothinl to show for it." He cites
110me students who have made it an ·the way .to colleae
;rnd "can hardly write."
So Gabriel is insisting that bis players report to the
.rollege resource center to have their skills in readina,
writing and math tested to find out where they need more
cademic help.
The coach is not kidding. Those who don't report for
s ting are excluded from out-of-town games. Gabriel
notes. wisely, that not more than a bandfUl of athletes
an go on to become profe.uionals. He wants them all to
learn "how to get along well in society."
It's a particularly thoughtful approach from aomeone
ho did have great succeu u a pro athlete -and lt
.hould someday earn him the special gratitude of all of
his players, whatever their careen.
• in1ons expressed in the space abOve .,. those of the Dally Piiot.
~r views expressed on thla page are thoM of t~lr authora and
1sts Reader comment ia invited. Addreu The Dally PJlot, P.O.
ux 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642~1 . .
Boyd/Riposte
ByL.M.BOYD
This newsroom story la u
Id as Umburfer cbeeae, but
tlJl clrculatinl: A city editor,
ho wanted lo 1et Cary
rent's exact ate 1tr1laht
!tom the man bmaelf sent the
ct or the t11ht teiearam:
•How old Cary Grant?" Back
tame l.be wired reply: "Old
ary Grant, be Just fine. Ho•
YOJI?"
Oame·playln& youn11ten
out.doors yell kina'• X and
croea their flqen to tlpal
for Ume· out. Tb•t fln1er·
cros1lq 11 a youthful tetture
that dates back tbrou1b
many·poe~atlona. Certalnl1,
far beyond Uvhle memory.
Nobody know• how ~It
oriai.Dated, evidently. Or do
you? •
Jl. Greiek axe wu called a
peltkus. 1be bit blid't bed ·
looks like that. Whlcb ll •bJ it'• called a pelican. .
Dld I Hf thllt on11 eip
U ,S, ..P'!'idftlla bad IWDIS that .iflided la ••tem" 7 WJgt
about J>ivid Atcha.bn Wt.a
wup.,....Uor•daJ?
W AIRINGTON -Wtien Jim.
my Carter'• dril service nfohn
•••l1latt90 ••• enacted two ,. • .,. •fo, lb• Wblte HOUJI
ballyboOed lt •• the~·1reate1t boOD to siovemmental eftldeqcy 11ace invention Of the .,.,.r
cUp.
Competent pubHc 1ervanta
were to bit NWardecl, not Just Wltlt•~ . 1'ancS.hake
and a 1croµ1 bUt wltb COICI euh In tbt
form of
b 0 DU It I .
W'bl1Ueblow·
en WoWd be
fl Hft IDCtD·
tlvn, J)C'OUe·
tlon and
public ~Uon for ex~inl
WNte and mtamana1eme0t ot the ta.xpayen' money.
Unfoitunately, thla Mary Pop-
pin• 1cenario waan 't the way
thlnp worked out. In practice,
the cub bonuses were banded
out to entrenched 1enl9r burea~ta with political clout -some of whom were actually
involved in retaliation aphiat
lower-echelon whlttleblowers.
Virtue u lti11 pretty much its
own reward for tbe working
.•tiffs ln federal 1overnment.
TBE BANDUNG of the bonus
ldea bu turned ~ sour •. in fact,
that dllWuaioaed employees re·
fer to the proeram as "Caab for
Cron.lea."
My reporters Indy Badbwar
and Gloria Danziger have re·
viewed a long list of the reci·
~lenta of cub bonuses -some
$3 mlWon worth. ranging from
'3,000 to $20,000. Here's tbe
sorry nmdown on just a few of
these bureaucratic bonus
babies:
-Marion Finkel, assistant
director for new drug evalua·
tlon, Food and Drue Admini.stra·
tion -'10,000 bonus. For years,
abe bu been accused of harass·
in1 FDA scientists who were
deemed "adversarial" to the in·
teresta of dru& companies. A
1pecial panel of federal in·
ve1U1aton concluded in 1977
that F\nkel and FDA manage-
ment 'bad concealed the truth
and liva incomplete and mis·
leacllDI testimony in a case in·
volvtn.c the railroading of an
Earl Waters
JPDA :wtUatJeblower. The ~
found Jl\rike1'1 eonctuct "unac·
ceptable" and recommettded a
rtJ)rlmaDd.
Jack Stempler, aeneral
counael QI the Air Fore. -
$20,000. Appc?tnted by ~ldent
Nixon, Stempler directed the Alt
Force resoonae to char1 by
co11t analyst A. Ernoll
FttireraJd exposing a $2 btlllon
cost overrun ln the C-SA
tranaport plane proaram .•
FU11en.td WU ameared, fired
and -when he won relnJtate.
ment alter a ton1 court fitbt -
shunted into a do-notbln1 job.
THE SENATE .IVDICIAaV
Committee la lnve1U1attn1
Steml\ler's role ln the FttsaeraJd
har,aament . What's ironic 11
that Carter, campalaninl in
1971, repeatedly mentioned
ti1erald a &Iii kind 10/ wlllli ae,.ut Who W04iild bl ~
in a Carter aClmlnl•tra'aon.
lnttead, the ao.ooo ...Warcl ...
to one of Plts••rald'1
peraecuton.
-Claude J . Futnba, anodM(
blah A.tr FOrce omctat -'aC: Farinha WU UM bralna Ptoffft Ku, a multimillion·
dollar comR\derised manaf•·
ment.1yatem that conanuloaal
watcbCIOs• concluded wu u
wortb.Jeu u tt wu expaialve.
The Air Force, with Farinha'•
knowleqe, ecntillued to laV'ilb · money on the proaram UDtU It .;.a WAL'l'Sa MLLAua. ~
••• ~letly 1cuttled after of tilt General .S.rvtcu• .Ad~ '
critic bearinp by tbe senate ~···~·OX:.; ll
Appr ation.1 CQmmlttH ln retloDat oftlte -••· 5 ° im • waa tM aubJfft of a·
-· F.rtm von Marbod deputy Depirtmlnt av..ucat1oe ta q
chief of the Def enae 0Depart· for tilt Mtlvttlee Wbee be w• m t
ment't aecUrtty ualltance ~-lo.tn td tb Carter-llolidilaz
traultScln team. Ht ind • ..-
toetate eoobd up a way CD 'ilt '
around GSA reaaJatiou •·•·• meau ol ~transition tMm mernbeft-·u11ur~tbey wm Of.·
fidaUJ on tb• 1over1n11•t
pQ\'00. lbllftr admlta to .... I.
• "•boftM" bUt deme. ta..
WH a Juatioe Department ia-
VeltllatloD. He 1ay1 JaUee r
''looked at" the 111tem be h.s
devl.Hd to pay talary advlMlll, ·
and ooaeluded then was......,. ...
wron1.
-ltdward Scott, former:aut. tant leC!l'etary Department ol
T•an1portatlon -Slb;Oto.
Scott'I braJDeblld WU a ~
1cbeme to replace aeeretut•
(t.be c&ertea! lrlnd, not defut·
ment beads) WW. TV .. lHd eom-
puter tennlnalt that wCNld te-
c e iv e, store and dl1pente
me111q11 while busy Heeutiftl
were om to hmeb or ~ '
abeent. Scott took the boea md tbenleftpemmentaemee. ~
-Wllllam S. Reffelflnftr.
chief ~ adml.nistration at tM
EnereJ Department -sz.-.
Onetime Nixon batcbetman at
DOT, lleftelfinaer has come •·
der coniresstonal scruttn'y on
char1es be falsified h1a job re-
sume, lied to DOE lnvest.tpton
and shredded coverbment docu-
menta. DOE'a lmpeetor 1enera1
referred tbe Charlet in ll'18 to
tbe Justice Department, wb1dl
recommended adminiatratl•e
action instead of prosecution.
Justice's h•ndHn1 of tbe e .. la
being investigated by tbe Seut.e
J udiclary Committee.
'Gh~st voting' practice erodes lawmaking
The nefarious practice or
le&l1latlve &host voting may
soon be brought to a screeching
halt. But it i.s not likely that it
will be the result of any vollD1·
tary action on the part ol the
lawmakers. This despite the
deelaratlon of Assembly Rules
Committee Chairman Lou
Papan that hla committee would
1tudy rule changes to end phan·
tom enactments.
Not that Papan and the few
other lealalators wbo have pro·
tetted the II·
leaal vot1n1 aren't sincere
of purpoae.
Hts problem
wlll be eet·
tlna a sum.
dent number
of memben
to effect the
bait. Fur ·
thermore .
wttb tbe CJll&Oln& internal war in
the Aaembly u to wbo shall be
Speaker, Papan'• own fate as
chairman of the important
bouaekeeplq committee la in
balance. And even lf Papan re·
maiDI In power and secures 40
tu~ve votea lt would It.ill
leav• madone the curtailment of
a 1lmllar praotlce ln tbe Senate.
So lt may be that tbe only way
th• NpNbeollbl• and unlawful •~actment procesa, wbJcb bu
)lo11omtct in the LeaJ1lature
with the advent of the "full·time,
professional legislators," will be
stopped is by a court action
Plans to institute such proceed·
ings have been disclosed by a
Southern California public ln·
terest group which ia 1at.berinl
data preparatory to filin1 suit.
Exactly what form this will take
and on what basis it will be
brought has not yet been re·
vealed.
GHOST VOTING as practiced
in tbe Assembly Is a tonve·
nience in wbicb the lawmakers
have indulged whereby
measures are adopted by the
house despite the lack of a
quorum. This is made easy by
the fact members indicate their
"Yeas" and ''Nays" by pusbina
a voting button. When a member
is absent from bis desk durine a
roll call a he lpful seatmate
reaches over and ousbes bis VOCe
button for bim. This could be
overlooked if the "absent"
member was present in the As·
sembly Cha mbe r , fully
cognil:ant of the roll call and the
way be was belna voted.
But it bu become a common
practice for' a handful of As·
sem blymen to rush from desk to
desk indiscriminately pu.1hin1
the buttons of all ablent mem·
berl. Capitol obstrvert have
witneued a.uembllea of as few
aa 20 memben paaaln1 bill after
th• most idJodca,lly unmuilcaJ
IODI be bad ever beard, but ftat
did the old mu kn<rir! H bad
1iven up liltenlnt to the rad lo tex · cept for news brOadcPta) bY tlM
time M were U'anlported Into
ec1U1ey With "Three lddle Plih·
ea," and'then "Malny Doati,"
which 1wepl tho country like
bubonJOf>l~.
Btrr I AM 1Ull nlOlcWd lD
noataJata when I recall 1ucb
cbUdbOOid chantlea aa "Dl••
DI•• 000 ••• and "Who ThNW the
Overall• In Mn. MµrphY'•
Cbowder?'' not to menUoa that
•tirrtnl martial tune of WC.lf1f W!r. D : • .,,., BoOlle Wollli.
• le -.or tr0m<>ompa111 a."'
an aD1 ol UI tuPerimauae.d mualc k1¥en ntr fciQet "Hl&dlY
Xoo, ''or ''JI I~ ·{be ~ ou& ol
Kell1.'' or 11ll >Ja't Oomia a.In
"No Mort.•• and eepKlatb' ~re-
bill day after day, despite the
constitutional requirement of '1
votes to pus any bill. In many
cues the member voted la not
only ablenl from tbe Chamber
but often absent from
Sacramento and even ablent
from the state. On one memora·
ble occuioo a member'• name
was dllcovered on a roll call
taken two days after bis death!
W~ THE Senate does not
have a voUq machine, all voe.
bein1 cast orally whlcb
theoretically precludes votlq
an abeeot Seo.ator, ln practice it
is not true. For the Senate bu
adopted the "cute" device of
suhltttuttni'• previous roll call.
As bllls come up for pa.nap the
chair announces that ''unlea
lhere is objection SB-will be
deemed puaed by tbe prevloul
roll call.'' How c:an anyone wbo
lap "t tbere obj.at! To their dll·
honor tbe Senator• have
permitted tbie aubltitute roll call
uaa.ae to tM pO&At tbe only rul
call of the dey 11 the auendMCtt
call taken llt the o,enlni of the
da1'1 Huloll.
Th t abol.t Yotlnl lD any form
l• unlawful haa'.":been cJtarlJ
•tated bJ &be Leal•laUn CounMI ~ Umea ID opt.
nlona bOldlDI ... member mUlt
c:a1t b1.i °"' "*-in penon Md cannot autbonH any other
peraon, includl81 anoth•r
legi.llator, to call bU vote tor
him." He bas also repemedly
cited the cmstitutional prcmsion
that "No bill may be paaaed tin·
leas by roll call vote, a m~ty
of each baUle coocun."
BUT THE PUBLIC interest
eroup hoplna to atop tbe
Le&ialature'a phantom eaact-menta wW be confronted wtlb
the problem that no matter bow
concrete tbetr ftidllnee lllll1 ._,,,
that a apeclftc law wu eueted
wtthout a maiotity vote ol tlMt
Alaembly or Senate, the c:ourta
hlatortcally have refused • ._.,ID
behind tbe lecltlative record"
whenever any law t. challenpd.
Became ol that it la moa Be-
ly that tbe only way anybody
4ean briDI the leliJlaton to bteJ lD tllil matter t. to careNlly
bird-doc tbe lecblaton each day
and f!unctlve a.ctlom befClft any c bW becomea law, ln
fact ore lt la p,.,....S tot
aubmtlllnn to the 1overnor. Alld
they wl1l hav• to do Ul1I COD·
tlnually dl1 aftel' daJ until it
becoma cry1tal clear to the
lealataton tbat bllll can't be
pUAd ...... bya~roll
call ~ ot votea taken ln ptnOll:OUalJ 1ucb an eftert
Will '* . wbale ot a •• ol ·p~bUe 1upport. Good tuck, .,.~J
L'
"1'00 cotJLI) Nor tee tbe IJ'OWld,''
lald -reporter. "I\ WU Uterally COV·
..... wttll boalel. Prom the air it looked lite: pnqe dump where 101Deooe tt bedClflAd • lot,,, , •• dolls ...
llr•tWM 1bot deacl·U be and hil en·
I ~ ptepCred to return tQ the Unit·
ed _. after cbeelliq chu'les that
T=.. member1 were beinl pbya!cally. a and bariq their money COO· nr-~ed ln tbe an,.buah .. ,. three •
.....,.. 8Dd. 1.'9.mple member Patrtcla Parb. who WU defectlq aJona wlU-
-.:.....,..,.,, IOD. and~ dlUlbten. I
• memoriet are J-too bont-'1• .. '' HP lerry P..-u o( \lkiab, who •atdled .. bil wif• .... cut down in • • lullf (fl bulleta. "I don't think about "it
mueb uimore. but there are Umes,
. I
AP ........ ARCHrTECT OF MASSACRE
Rev. Jim Jon••
' when YoU're alone, when it will come back .to•you.
J aclde Speier, then an aide to
Ryan and now a San Mateo County
supervisor, 1tUJ carries one bullet ln ber
cbe1t and another in her pelvis,
souvenin of her bruah with death at
that barren airstrip. Ana she is
somewhat b6tter.
I ''Our government bas tried to mislead
the public and bide information at every
juncture t.o prevent people from setting
to the bottom of why this tragedy hap-
pened. '11ley knew all along there were
guns in that colony,'' says Ms. Speier.
"We doo't know any more now than we
did two years ago." ,
Larry ~n. a Jones loyalist, was
one of thole 1ll'J'ftted followint tbe am·
bub. GuYanese authorities this month
indicated a readintu to-dismiss murder
charges against him in an agreement
that Would send the 33-year-old San
Frandacan back to the United States to
face ch.ar1es of conspiracy in the kill·
ln1s.
The Parka family is typical of
people whMe lives were shattered by
..
their deVotioo to Jones. Prior to golJll to
Joneatown in tbe 1prln1 of 1978, ·they
cave the temple everythln• tbey owned.;
I ncludl111 title to their. home. They never Sot.it back.
Para ~ a suit pendln1 .,alnst tbe
emple -one of 765 claims totallne
some $1.8 billion. ~ majority char1e
wronlful death and have bffn filed by
relatlvee of. vtcUms.
"tt•s fr\lltratln.g," says Robert Fa·
blan, tbe temple's court-appointed re-""
celver. "People expect a return of u-
seta tbatjuit aren't there."
In addition, the U.S. 1ovemment is
seeldna M.3 million again.st the assets
to ofteet the C08t of returnln1 the bodl• to the United States.
FABIAN ALSO PBESmED over ar·
ran••mmta for the tiurlal of some MS bocSies that were unclaimed at an Air
Force base in Delaware.
"I tried to be objective and look at it
as a loli.stlcs task," be says. "The
more I IOl emotionally involved, tbe bar@r it got."
For some, the n11htmare was too
muc.b to take. Michael Prokes, a
Peoples Temple spokesman who sur-
vived Jonestown, shot and killed
himself four months later at a Modesto
motel.
Two former members died last
FebfUU'Y. Al and Jeannie Mills were
fatally shot atlong with their daughter at
their home in Berkeley. 1be Millses,
wbo operated a home for cult defectors,
had at one time expressed fear of
reprisal from a Temple "hit squad."
THE MllLSES' SON was arreated,
questloned and released for lack of
evidence. 1be crime never was solved.
pnlversity of California psychologist Cbr's Hatcher, who has counseled some
250 survivors and relatives of those who
died, says it may be a long time, if ever,
before the wounds heal.
"In their day-to-day lives, most have
achieved a degree of normalcy,'' she
said. "But for many, I don't think the
experience will every be totally un·
derstood.
Now more than ever
you need th•
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~-ft. '3f "" OF OHIO~ COSTA cJUuth \Olsf r11Zl °l:.":/.:.'::
MESA ,._..._, ..... :=:-~12te1~ .
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TBS 8UPD CRSSU llAllm' .M. ~
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THE 88 £ARCHERS also
found that while the cancer vie
llma had a 1reater sexual ur1e
than normal, they actually
tnca1ed ln leas activity than the
mel\ who didn't have cancer.
Rotkln'11 theory was supported
by another researcher's findlnR
Lawyer named
.. IF YOU TAKE an Individual
who Is deprived of sexual acllvl·
ty, he will have a buildup of pro·
static reslduQ, and If there Is
some damaae to the prostate,
such as an Infection, sperm may
enter the prostate cells and fuse
with their nuclei, givina rite to
mallanant changes." Ablin said.
"The host's immune system
doesn'J respond because the Us
sue is bathed in seminal plasma
which suppreues immunity so
ROTKIN SAID about 66:000
caset of prostate cancer are
found annually The disease is
most common among elderly
men.
An early state of the cancer may occur in prostrate cells
when a young mttn reaches
puberty1 Rotkin said, •ith a la·
tent penod luting 40 to so years
and eventually lriegered intQ
mallsnant growth b)' a buildup
of male hormones or other ac-
cumulated prostatic residues.
Ger1ld Winkler, D.D.S.
and Associates
UOI \\-OCldo. !'utte 505,
NewpOrt ~ach
Phone: 840-4100
~ ' \
\r CAU MRZI WELLS
lBOUTA SECOND
TRUST DEm LOAN
UP TO 5500,000
Attorney Ronald
Schwartz of ~ewport
Beach haa been re·
elected to the California
Trlal Lawyers Assocla·
lion board or sovernora.
.. THE
EARL'S
1111.UlfllMO•HeATINO
•••• w .... "••tlf'tt
Moving firrm
eye new law
WASIDNGTON CAP) -Americans planning a
move will have new incentives to shop around for a
mover 1Utder a law that wlll soon deregulate the in·
dustry. greatly increasing compe~ition.
The law, passed with ind,uslry and consumer
support, largely ends ttie Interstate CommercE
Commission's tight control over the household
moving industry.
S RLOIN STEAK l ~
. BINNER FOR $1.00 I.
Sot l1< 7 "6~1 Newpo~.~~ilJ!o!..~?.~!zc a Sflt•.t• 'T1,,. ""•" 11t V"\.I' Ooru
IC •II~'°"",..,.,,,, Vout 41e.i
(714) 760-6060
COSTA 11111u641·1289 .. ,., __
llllHIOH Vt&J0495-0401
2.nJCe-~ort,..
lit • Oie9D '"" et A••'Y l'owy I
Chemical Labs, yes.
Chinese Restaurants, no.
V\le've taken the ads and listings that busi-
nesses use to call each other and put them in a
separat~ book-The Los Angeles Busi ness To
Business Yellow Pages. You'll find materials,
equipment and services from finns all over the
greater Los Angeles market. And you'll find
them faster and easier than ever.
Chinese Restaurants? They're listed in
Pacific Telephone's Los Angeles Consumer Yel-
low Pages.
Changes in the law, signed by President
Carter on·Oct. 15, include:
-PERMITl'ING MOVERS TO offer bindmg
promises of what the move will cost. Movers now
give non·binding estimates under a federally re-
quired formula, and customers frequently are dis·
mayed to get a bill higher than the estimate
-Increasing movers' freedom to raise or
lower prices. Charges for similar work are uni·
form under the regulations but the change w1 II allow
companies to undersell the compeUtio9
For the one in five families thal moves each
year. the basic difference between one mover and
another has been the name on the side of the truck
The price was determmed by the weight and dis
lance moved and would have been the same for
any interstate mover.
The ICC now is framing rules on how to carry
out the law and will make them effective after a
public comment period ends Dec. 11
THE INDUSTRY IS ALREADY preparing for
the changes. One company, for example. proposed
a 5 percent discount for senior citizens. and more
discount offers are expected.
"Now, we can offer things like. 'H you move
between October and April. we'll give you 15 per-
cent off · This would reduce our load dunng the
summer, which is the peak period, and 1t would al·
low more choice for consumers," said Jack
Thorne, vice president of American Red Ball
Transit Co . an lndianat>olis-based moving com
pany
"It used to be that if we gave out a Sl ball
point pen, the ICC construed that as an 11legal re
bate. But now. you will be seemg a lot of offers
similar to those the airlines advertise Companaes
could offer a special rate between two c1t1es or of
fer discounts to corporations that agree to move
when you purchase the first one at regular menu price
That's the special coupon offer being made at all 21 Spires Restaurants
now through Thursday, December 11, 1980. Offer good anytime Sunctay
through Thursday. Dinners must be eaten on the
premises and both dinners must be the same. Bring
this coupon with you to receive this Special Value.
Tender Top Sirloin Steak, grilled to your
order and topped with crisp onion rings.
Se~ed with soup and salad, vegetable,
choice of potato or rice pilaf,
roll and butter.
Restaurant
and Cocktail Lounge
NOW OPEN!
-I the" people with that move"" Thome'""
Social security SCAMPI
. on f ·Harbour Branch. Hunting\~
~.
Ora~ge City Bank.
changes detailed
W ASIBNGTON I AP> The Social Security Ad
ministration has formally served notice that the
amount of income to be subject to taxes "'ill in
crease from $25,900 to $29,700 Jan.l
Also due to rise is the maximum amount
beneficiaries can earn without triggering a reduc
lion m the benefit payments Those aged 65 to 71
who now can earn $5.000 will be able to make
$5,500 without losing benefits Those under 65 will
have a $4,080 ceiling. the current ce1hng 1s $3,720
Beneficiaries 72 and older may conllnue to earn
any amount without reducing their Social Secunl)
payments For others. benefits are reduced $1 for
every $2 over the specified maiumum earnmgs
levels
A Uurd chage will raise from $290 to $310 the
amount of earnings needed to earn one calendar
(shrimp in herb wine sauce)
R~. S 12.95
Served with Soup du Jour or salad, rice pilaf
or baked potato Vegetable de Gardiner
SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
I I :30 to 2:30
On-the-mall at South Coast Plaza near the Carousel
on the First Level For reservations call 540-8822
year of coverage will be credited for earnmgs or ART HOPPE SA T/R/ZES
WesqUeeze
the daylight into quarter of coverage under Social Secunty. A full ( J In the
Sl.240. The current full-year qualifying figure 1s • ltJJlfl~l{l}J
$1 ,160. ----,----=====-~==:::.======================-:::===========~~~~~·!!!-!!!~~ .. kill-service ·
• ~iiiiiiii~
banking.
Extended hours with extended services. And free registered
key tags At Orange City Bank, Huntington Harbour. we're
open Monday-Friday from 9 AM to 6 PM and from 10 AM
to 1 PM each Saturday. With a friendly, competent staff to
assist you in all aspects of ~rsonal, as well as commercial
banking Dedicated to service, we're on the move, Con
strucllon 1a now underway on our Huntington Harbour
• branch. In the meantime. a temporary location at 4972
Warner Avenue s open for your convenience. And of
course. our beauUful main office at 2730 E. Chapman
Avenue In Orange roma1ns at your service. Stop by either
location and pick up • $tUrdy Orange City B~nk regl1tered key tog with your
peraonaliz d code number. hi the event of lost keya, the tag lnetructa tho
1.tnder to depOsil the keys n any mail box. Orange City Bank guAranteH the rt·
turn postage. Well keep your ke~ and your money. out of the wrong han(js,
Visit uuoon Interest bearin bec~tng accounts beginning December 31, 1980 .
... ,.
..-...... '!U"'~·~:mm::::::m111i.. -;::.. J
NEED
HELP!
-..
'°GOD8PELL" PV'l'S TllE life of Cbrilt into
tenba to whlcb tOday'a 1earetton (and very pro-
babl1 ~ next several> cal) relate, a tale of time·
less truths' for play1oera of all faiths or no faith at
all. It's subject to myriad interpretaUon.s. depend· in& on the physical resources and ineenulty of eaeh
production company.
chor.-..apbed the dancv ,.._, doubly ditrlcult •
oa auCh a small 1i.1e, and. tbele are also U ·
cellent. /
Jeryl Geary ii llnt rate as. tbe femme fat~f
th• cut, Who belts out the torehy ·~ Back, Ob
Man" to the audience and aymbOlbea m overall
fubioii the pJeuur• ol the n..b. Joe Slevcove la
an lmpoetnl comic, the tallat and· younaest (at
15) of the cast and one of the mott auspicious.
COJIPLETING TBE applaudable ensemble ln
a multitude of roles are Dennis Bryan Coppens,
Kevin I.ma. Jani~ Morain and Jnarld Starn. All
take tbeir lndlViduaJ turm in the apotllpt and ac·
quJt tbemlelves admirably.
John Simeane doe• yeoman duty aa both
musleal and vocal direetor and playa five inatru·
menta, ~ with pianist Jo Ann WlWama. Miss
Sanford deafped the inventive back-alley 1etun1
which resembles a scene from 0 West Side Story"
and contalna aaelesa 1raffttl ran11D1 from "Kilroy
Was Here" to "Wbo Shot J .R. ?"
Two more weekends remain for "Godapell,
wJth Thanblivtnc weekend dark (Jave for a Nov.
30 matinee) at the Cabrillo Playbouae, 202 Avenida
Cabrillo, San Clemente. But when •ord of ttu. one
gets around, that may not be enouab. II ever a
show deserved a holdover, thi.a one i.s it:
CALLBOAAD ....._ Tryouts for UWan }Jellman 's
"Another Part of the Forest" will be held
tonight and Wednesday at 7: 30 by the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse on the Oranae County
Fairbrounds. . .director Pati Tambelllni will be seeking a cast of eight men and six
women, including a black couple, for the
PIH~ order )·our Thanklglvln& turlley earl).
Cooked and 1tuUed with )our choice or
Deluey'1 drt"Nlnl• or Just 11tuffed and read)•
for tlae ovu. A11ln this holiday 1u1011.
Delaaey't will feature fresh drHsed local Zack) Farm• turkeye, roasting chickens, frn h fro1en
Long lslalld ducklings and geese.
.
Th1>.attrrcct" ~ Wed 11 19 thru Tue" . 11 25
•
. At San Clemente, the stage dimensions are the
only limitations in what may well be the year't
best community theater production on the Oran1e
Coast. The e)tuberance of Miss Fiabbach 's
performers la matched by their ensemble skill and
aeemina.ly effortless updatina Of many portions of
the script to sustain the "now" flavor.
drama, which opens Jan. 23 ... r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-..:...::..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..=.::.~~~~~~~--=-
Yorba'• Jesus is particularly notable, a win·
Dini mJsture ol sunshine, sinew and showmanship
that commands attention even in a superior com·
pany. In the intimacy of the SO.seat Cabrillo
Playhouse, it ts a marvelously personal
performance. .
8T&PllEN DvNBAM, WHO draws the dual
auipmenta of John the Baptist and Judas eanu hip marb for both his ainCJ.ng voice ancl the
map.Ible ol bis performance.
Tops in the realm of physical comedy are a
pair of rubber-faced comediennes, i>riacllla
Repier Sanford and Harriet Wh.itmyu, wbole
facial eontortlon.s and superb Umtng keep the show
runntni at a frenetic clip. Miu ~er alao
Cast keeping secret
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The cast and crew of
"Incubua" baa beel1 asked to lip a aeerecy asret·
mat not to talk. about the aupernatu:i'-1 thriller.
The movie, starrin1 John Caasavetes \n d
John Ireland, is winding ~roducUon in Canada.
John Hough la ~line S r Stern's screenplay,
and Colin Chilvers ii direc\Qr of special effects.
Reynolds
fete set
Burt Reynolds will be
honored by the Neaiv
York Friars Club as
their 1981 "Man Of The
Year," it was an ·
nounced by David
Tebet, cbalrman of the
event.
Reynoldl, the nation's
number one box office
11tar (annual Qul1ley
S>oll), and only the
second actor in history
to be twice named •'Star
Of The Year" by the Na·
Uonal Association of
Theater Owners. will be
uluted at a black-tie
dlDner tot more than
1,000 ~in the Grand
Ballroom of the
Waldorf-.Aatoria Hotel
nest May18.
Opens Sunday, Nove mber 23
'
Great
re
ate dby
their sauces.
The White Oak will provide
you with 20 wonderful ways
to jl¥lge us.
Sauce Beamaiae
Vineyard Sauce
bidia.n Curry Sauce
Sauce Biprrade
Dill Sauce
Sauce Bordelailie
Sauce Velote
Garlic Butter S.uce
Cucuinber Sauce
..
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... 11dq:. *"'*· .... _....,_olNl--_,....,. _.,,NI "°'*' Pr9llton. All aolrlO rodeo .... ,.._ home
tor one i.t _... end
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!fie town 11a.... totally
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KHXT (C8S) ta. Anoefn
KNl!IC (N8C) Los An•• ICTlA (Ind.) Loe MgMol
KM(). TV (Alie, LOI Ang9f91
~ (C89) Sen Diego ICHJ. TV (Ind.) Loe Angeles
KCST (MC) San Di.go
KTTV (Ind.) Lot Angeles ~~(Ind.) Lot Angeles «c:ET~'tv (,.S) La. Angtl"
KOCI-TV (PM) Huntington &each . '.
ea HAW'f DAVI
FOftlla et.1a • --#"' an auto IMCll&nlc
IMtruetOf •t Jeffereon iTMo.
••• "Ring Of~ ..
. (187t) 8emla CMay, St•
llf*! ...... ""'° hMYy·
weight priaftgh..... Joe
LOUl8 Md MM Sdlmellng.
~ off for ctlamplon-
lfljp matc:Ne In 1938 and
1938._(2 hrl.I
ty and simply reJec:tlnl it. The re-
jeeta baa around in 10ur bead like
UDll*ll pmnles. The ftnt Ume WI happened I wla
bome from sebool reeoverlq from
tomllleetomy, watdlinc a lot of TV.
Too much, perbapa. I wu aettlDS a
little 1trun1 out on a "Popeye"
festival when all of a suddeo I bad to
bow. wbo in bell ii 1bil kid Sweet •••1 S.m in 1hoee days of innocence, I
ddllk I oOuld have accepted Sweet
Pea'• WqlUmacy if only it bad been
offered u an explanaUGa. Jn fact, it
mt1ht bave enhanc9d .. Popeye's"
wulq appeal <J wu aetdnS a little
old for tbe Man ol Spinach an:ywa~).
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ftlltrnffy CIMl9 ~
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OOWCll
"TflWlllll In ep.o. Md ,,,,,... Ot. ctatt e.oan
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wood
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AND ......
ltcil9: ·~." "TIMI ,wnlly.''
eNOYA
• ''The Wllllrd Who Spat On
The Aoor'. TI\18 111111 pot-
trllt °' ~ ldl9ofl narrat•' fly 8arnard
Hl.lgllea ....... unique
... Olf l'dilOfl ~ ::P. "" im.ntlofle end
...... "" fllnily, ~-~·O
e:oo • o nNa'a OOltll'Ntt
Janet chcoYara th•t Iha
IWeat glf1 Jacll wanta to
taa• tMHna to mom ta act.._
Illy ,. ~priced -glf1. .. ..., ....... ,
Gu .. ta: Ch•rlton •nd
Lydia Heaton. Rar'9 Slk,
Aver1 Corm•n, Robin
Jaflr'80f'I
• NOYA
"TIMI WUnl Wtlo Si* On
The Aoor'' Thia "'" por-
trait of ~ E4*on
n•rrat•d by B•rnerd
HugNe IMlurM lriQUa
tO:CIO·~ MANDM,A.AND T'HI
~..,._
Country~.., a.ti.-
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.,,.,_ Ind eni.rt...,.
~ Perton aind Jofwl lctw..... tor .,. hOUr ot
mullc lll'd c«Ndy. 11:TOHMYI
JonelhM .. aclOlmed of
nuder but can't prove,.
lnnoeanoa bacauM 1111
~,_wiped out ..
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1111•rr1
"Slmplement• ~ (Slrn-
ptv .Jennff' All -6-wln-nlno fllm ~ Illa
pllgM of woman IMng In
Letlft Amlrlcen countr._
• T'HleooY ..
QWITtON
"Slaight Of Hand'' Or.
JonelMn Miia!' puta ,,,.
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context w1tt1 en aumlM-
tlon ot ttla roYll and dler·
lemallc hMl8rs ot 1M 1fth
tUIO·can·j>Cl)O NI.Wt
HOU.YWOOD ......
l ..._YWIDMM€
llPA'8'H
JOHN DARLING
Wfleft Hanry .,.. • •
van•f•rred to Totcyo.
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and cone and ~ of
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• lONIQHf • Ho•t: Jotlnny Caraon.
au.R: Doly Pattoft. Cal-
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''The °"9Ct0t'' (Pert 2) • , II OM:
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r-.cued from eixecutlon by
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(1883) ~ Woodwwd,
Rk:Mird 8aymar. Alter
~ In • lnWI town lot
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emc>IO)w end critlce. 0 WELL, Wf.'VE 8£EN ~l.YPNG
AAOUNO Al.L AF'TERNCOt...i
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BeP:o, Dollies
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Barbara Mandrell (left) tries to keep abreut of 1Uest star Dolly
Part.Go, her euest on .. Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sis·
ten," a musical spectill aii1na tc;Jnilht at 10 on NBC, Channel 4.
lt'f!d•ntl•w'•
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t t• • *"4 "l..a4aaa Frontier"
(1836) Jotwl Weyne, 8M118
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n .... ~ a *wrtti• fro• &M 8&a"1loeoeeu1 •• ,..la.Uy. FDA HJ• Uaat wlalle NIH m,a aad .._,., -~ .,..._•detl die d~ase, lt ••l•lY •11 •f· • fedW-mealeltU. .. JtyeanoldwbotMet••PGP •• , ... u.e1, ... &na1 ...,...,..
,....,.,,,,4 lawl woUI aay:
"WAaNING: TamJOQ bave auoct.tff
wttll Text~ Slloek 8yadrome, a rare d!Haae tbat
ea befatal •
.. ,. .. eaa aJmoat eatlrely a~ die rbk ot 1et· tta• Ullll dlsea1e by DO& ulDt tanapou. Yoa cu n·
dace &tie rhk lty 1a1 tampou • Hd otf durta1 yoa.r period.
"U yoa bave a fever of 102 clepee1 or more,
ud vomit or 1et dlarrbea dart.at 7oar period, re· mon tbe tampoa at o ce ud aee a doctor ritht ···~tt . Al Rnt FDA lbo•tht onJy Rely tampons, made
by Proctor ud Gamble, were responsible for the dlseaae, but the a1e"'y 1lace leaned that all
branu bave been associated with ~. FDA baa
reeently met with major tampoa manufadarera wbo bne voJantarily offered to Pllt warning ha·
fonnatlolt on or In their p,octucta (wlUle FDA re·
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1"9o ...... -~ "91'/ u"CMta•n..-Mtl
4U. am NfO !ill FILMS Rf Cf.IV(
Tlif SEM.Of TliE MOTIOf< PIC1UAE
COOE OP SfLF FliOUL.ATIOH
"lfOTEL HELL" CRI "WMEHTHE
SCREAMING STOPS"
c:::---...J I "SMOKEY & THE
· BANDIT, PART ~··
""1M1" <Nl
IC 1:.~ ~, .,.,. CM HON"
llAUOHT"f ICltOOL OIM.I' (II)
~'--~~~~--~~~
"AIAPLANI!" '"°'
"BlUES BROTHERS"
(Ill
"IDOlMAKER"
"FOXES"(R)
sian add 1to raleee •• f»fll•
DEAR PAT: I have several $1 bills Uial have a
green star after the serial number. Very few bills seem to have this marking. What d9" it mean!
J . R., Costa Mesa
A U.S., Treuary a1eat qaa.res tat sue• Haar
notes" are geaalDe le1al teeder, evn ._,.It ls a
replacement noce. ~eulollally. •lteD a dollar bill
la prln&ed, U la no& properlJ de&aUed er ... e other
defect oceun. Wbea tbl• bappeu, a star note ls
used to replace It. The agent said &bele aotea are no .
more valuable than unatarred b1Ua.
"PRIVATE BENJAMIN" ..,.,.,... (A)
"""' ...... '':11 -~ ..... ,-"""·~., ... ..
EXCLUSIVE -ORANGE
C 0 U NT Y ENGAGEMENT
edwards NEWPORT MLU COAST tfWY. & "4ACA9'THUa
•••toll7'0Cl:Jmla 644-0760
•
MON.-FAI.
7:00, 9:45
'"Al" NOTICIO~
HUST••"llAU .... ""' On Dea-S, ••. et 11 :GI A.M..
PEOPLllS INVESTMENT ANO 1.0AN
ASSOCIATION H dlllf eNOleled ,,., .... -81'11 __ , .. Detlll of
Trull feconlltd Merell 1, ""'· .. !MU. HO 7•,llooll 1»51 ...... 1t•,ef0fflci.1
Recorw, ~ 0-,: Met'lo C. Pac:lt\I
-L\KllleM. Pac:lftl,.........,eMwlle ea Jel111 r.._u a tn.tlllrl, In tM .,..
f Ke OI 1M C-r Recorder of 0t81"9 C-tr.sc...•~w1u.SKL
,
Adver:tlsement
•
Your Ince x
t •
r
~
I·'
(
t
•
' ..
It's a crime. If anybody else took a
Uo\IS&lld dollars that belonged to you, he'd
thrown in jail. But not the IRS! ·
You probably over paid taxes this year
by hundreds or even thousands of dollars
pnd nobody has said a word. You can be
fUJ'C that if you underpaid your taxes, you• d
car about it-and fast.
But the truth is, the average American
pays a great deal more taxes than he legally
bas to-every yeaf. The sad news is that
tnost people arc totally ignorant of a few
!implc tax laws that if complied with would
~t their taxes to zero or close to it.
• How big was your tax refund last year?
1f it was between $300 and Sl ,000 you were
probably ripped off. As a matter of fact,
-i u could have recel•ecl double th.at carrca .,,.,,...,, au"""
.... If'•' to fmajbic bow welcome
·another two or three thousand doll;u re-
fund would be.
Believe me, I know what I'm talking
about because a few years ago I was work-
ina as a stockbroker in Denver, Colorado. I
was makina an average salary and paying a
lot to Uncle Sam every year. I didn't even·
reall.zc I was paying that much in taxes. You
'4'C, if they take it out of your check each
month before you even get to see it, it
doesn't seem to hurt as much. If they paid
you. your entire check and then forced you
fo write a check for your taxes at the end of
the year, you'd scream to high heaven.
Anyway, back to what happened to
me. I was going along paying two or three
thousand dollars to the government each
year thinking that I was being patriotic-
besides it's the lawr Then one day I ran into
a IUY who was making a heck of a lot more
m~ than I was and paying about 10.t of
e taxes that I was. No, ht wasn't a crook f' ~en a genius. But he was smart. And I
FJd~y rei.lized that I wasn't patriotic
payiilg too much in taxes-I was just doWll
~tdumb.
' . ' . .
To Zero
•
'' ••• the average person could put thousands
of dollars in his poc"ets if he only.knew how to
take advantage of some siniple tax law~.!~
This photoaraph of Mr. Huokliea has become famous because of its appearance in thousa.nd.s of adver-
tisements. When asked why he usea this partic:ular picture. Mr. Haroldlea sa11 that It ar-Pbic:ally _
danonltrata his principles. Hit~ dr.., lflDboliza tbo workina PCf'IOll. (His material ii directed towards
thai indlvidUiJ, aDcl be, hla:lJelf wu In IUCh a catesory before achicvµi, weUh.) HJi Merceda:Bcmliidblta
the status and luxuries that can be obtaiDed throuab proper financial techniques.
needed more money-which means more average guy how to save thousands of
tax dollars, so they decided to quit telling dollars in taxes each year. Now I'm not a
you how to cut your taxes. 1be laws are still college professor or some genius so I wrote
there, however, they just dop't want you to all my techniques down in a simple down-
know about them. So today the only people to-earth, easy-to-read style. Just about
who arc benefiting from these laws arc the anyone can quickly apply the simple steps
ones that have enough money to hire high to double their tax rebate check. Since start-
priced tax lawyers and an accountapt·to tell ing my publication I've been amazed at the
them what they can legally do abOut their success others have had just by reading my
taxes. But, the people who really need to sec material and following it stcp-by·stcp. I've
them the most don't know about them. put some of their comments at the end of
Because of my dJscovery,
I was s•re that I could help
1 this n;iessagc. 9e sure to read them.
Most well written tax advice sells for
hundreds of dollan a year and up, and ls so
complicated that the averaae person can't
even understand it. Besides that, it'• written
to the person who has a huac tax problem,
not the one like I had and like you who may
just want to act an extra one or two thou·
sand dollan back from the aovernment
each year.
and if, for any reason, you don't like what
you've received, mnply send it back and I'll
send you your own uncashed check. But
that's not all, because if durina the next full
year you don't at least increase your income
by SS,000 a year and cut your taxes by at
least S 1,000 a year, send the material back
and I'll refund the entire $64.9S. That's a
promise. That's at least $6,000 as a result of
investing $64.9S. Not a bad investment in
anyone's book. That's minimum. If you
follow my material, the possibilities are
much, much greater: Zerolna la on Tues
will show you exactly how:
• Simple techniques to figure
depreciation
• All deductions you are legally
entitled to
• How to aurviv~ IRS audit
• •· How to avoid an I
future
• Plus many more topics and a
question-answer section
Dare to cledcle
Make a decision now. Don't put it off.
This off er is limited and the prfce will go up.
Study my offer carefully and read the
message below of people who did dare to
make the dedsion.
.,Unbelievable things haw happened to
me since buying Mark's materials just 8
weeks ago. Following Mark's techniques
st~by-st~, I was able, quite to my sur-
prise, to buy this building, incretl# my net
worth by S/25,000 and show a hazlthy cash
flow."
I now knew and had used the exact
step-by-step procedures that you or anyone
can use--no matter what your financial
situation is. I might add that in those 48
months, using the same techniques, I've
made over one million dollars starting from
scratch. (I hesitate to mention tl;lis because
it may sound unbelievable to you and you
may decide not to take advantage of the of·
fer rm aoing to make. Believe me, it really
happened. (In fact, if YQU'd like to veritY
my statement you may contact my accoun·
tant Charles F. Huber, CPA, S.L.C., Utah,
August J, 1980
.,/am on my way, to Join you and other
mUJ/onalra. Tluink Y9" again, Mark, for
showing~ how to "'1w a mo~ abundant
· life."
An ufra aweetner to make
1our ftnandal Ille secure.
· Besides publiahlq the tax newsletter
entitled 7Molna la on Tuea. I wrote a book
called Flttandal Genlaa-whlch tells how I
X'··· what I discovered was 4 way, not only. to
. cut my taxes to iero, but to even receive a
refund for. all tans paid over the 'JHISt '3 years. ''
or Walker Bank, also in Salt Lake City.)
Sincerity is a hard thina to put across in
written form so if you do have any ques-
tions, please che<:k my references.
Now. you see I enjoy the best of t>oth
worlda. I make a very comfonable uvt._
and pay very Uttle in taxes. In fact, one year I
paicl Jess ta.Mt than the perion who maket
S20,CJOo I year. wl ] made 30 timet that
amount.
Used inflation and lncrWcd my net worth
by over a million Clollan. SO to make my of·
fer lrremilble, when you order my tu
publication, I will alsO send you a copy of
11•1*'81 Geld•. But here's the extra
aweetner: Jr my tu advice cfoes not enable
yt>u to double your tu refund this "81',
aend It l>aek~t keep .,._.. cll.J1111.
with my compllmeots. Nonmlly my tu
P\lhlioation alone $ells for S99.95, but fola
llinltocl dlu J am offmna a one year •b-
~ tor SM.9' With nMHll' Gia•
11 a benill. JJ ...... U '°'8'N worried abOUt Mindlftl ,...95
to a.,...._~ I don't blame ,...a lf Jota
ar~·· how to JW'.GI*' ,... llhllt• ~~Finl, poat.Qle 10U1 ... I« 30
dQI. n.t Will live JOO ·a+at .,...., to
thoroudlY eclJ..., matnL l'tf hOld yOUr Chilek far hit fall tlflll
Mn. W.M. Lynn-JuM 20, 1980
· "We structur«f a MQI right out of •
Mark's material and "'1w b«n f'Ol/illg _
since... We ha~ inC1'WIS«I ow hOldi"IS to
o~r $200,0Q<! and w atW anxlous/y l0oking
for mo~."
IN THAT TIME SPACE the Hawkeyes have
rambled to a 128 wlns in 190 outings. •hared the
1979 Blg·lO Confe~e e champioosbJp wtth
NCAA Utlist Micbig and earned a trip to
the NCAA finals last arch -,college basket·
ball's supreme circle -the final four.
And with the comer turned, Olson, a former
Marina Hllh coach, says the tuk bas fanally
become-a tlttte easl~r as the 1980-31 season ap-
proaches. t
"We have a le•itlmate shot ~ eettin& the top
prospects now," says Olson, "because our pro-
gram bas re<!eived sotne national recognJtlon.
"That's what we've been fightin1. Mott lood
players want \o play against the best an the
Big· 10 is showing to be the best conference.
"We've bad a hard time extending to the
~outh and west, but it's beglnrung to chanie."
~.
The change. beaan when Olloft found till w~
back to the mtdwest after several hlab •d!Ool
jobs (the lut at Marina), pl~ ltlnta u LOOt •
Beacb Clty Collete and LOq Beacb State.
• Ol.80 WU.A MAN ready to chuck coachin1
dutle1 if thbil• didn't matertallie aoon when be
wa1 at Martna fliah. Coachin1 on the prep level
had tU. lta toll.
ONCE A PB&£NNIAL DOOBllAT. IOWA
bas now bad tbi'ee ZO.plua whi:I And a lt-1ame wtn·
nlnlt season lo tbe past five years. Prior to Olson 'a en, Iowa bad nevere~oyed a 20-1ame winner.
Olson wu ill Soutbem Callfonlia this put
summer searching for candidates -and say1
u1 was on the hlO achoo! level for U ,_an,
but lt was all of the other duttn outllde of
eoachlne that wu drivinl me out of eoachlJll,"
aayaObon.
Ro• IA•Cer, o•r f"-tfm~
Ian l'ftlr, I••••• •I• elffe6rli11
I• loM1a tlla• .ffaglt-lolutilo•.
"At the Ume I knew I wu ~ plq to be an
old htgb acbool c6ach, I couldn't be happy many
more years at that le,,el.
"Movtn1 on depends IO much on tlmlnt, btinl ·
ill the riebt place at the rtsht tim•. t tot the op-
portunity at Lone Beach City. but then Lcag Beach State aave me that next opportunity." ner eofll llP I• £e~ A •fllPfn. .._ Violations by Loni Beach State prior to
Olaoa's arrival, however, soured the~ with
NCAA sanctions ~mposed. and Iowa beckoned. It's one of his favorite spota in seekinc out the
prospective gem.
Three items make Southern California the at·
traction it ls. First, population. Second, Olson
likes the development of the 1ummer leagues,
especially the Olympic Development League.
Thlrd, players for the most part are team
oriented.
"I Ud grown up in Bll·l& atbletiCI, .. HY•
Olson, "and lt was a real thrill to get the OP·
portunity."
OllOn la belinnlng the second year of a 10-
year pact with the Hawkeyes, but he aaya
there's no chance of coanplacettcy.
''Calllomia kids are really well coached and
are brought in ln a team-oriented type game, as
opposed to the one-on-one oriented style, of say,
New.York," says Olson.
''For our style, I'd rather have a kid from
•'In coachinl. you find out in a hurry that you
never have the~rld by the tail. You just keep
working," says Olson.
"The bottom line is winning, and in a
<See IOWA, Pace 82)
• ...........
One for tire book
Co wails wasn't ..
of miJJ guy
~c.;11 11 I
A seam or"SO a10, Jane Gross
of the New York 'ftmea was in
Boston on an uaipment to in·
tervtew the All..ut' cem.r md
later Dlayer~cb of Ute Cetttes butet&ell team, Da•e Cowent.
Attet watcbln1 pneUte and queaticJaiq her 1ubject, ahe wu
offered by Cowens a lift back to
her hotel.
"Tbat ia," Cowent 1ai(
apolosetie.U,,, .. tf,,_ clClll't mbtd
rid1DI lo an old plcl'lm tnaek. ,.
••No, tbat•a fine?• 11Jd tbe
1ratefulnewswoman.
"On the way," Gross recall~.
"Dave aPOlo8ized acala beeaUM
he •aid be bad to qialc• • bJ1ef
stop. He dropped off 10me 't.blDa
at the Salvation Army. I tot t6e
feelin1 that Dave Cc>wena waa
an extraordinary person."
INDEED BE IS. Quickly now,
name another penon wbo would
walk away from half a mlllion
dollan and job security worth
an added mllllon or more
becauae be f~ be COUldn •t carry
hi.I part of the load.
In tbU ace of Often spoiled and
mercenary sports 1upetatars,
this raw·boned1 rusty-haired
product of Floria• State stands
apart because of bla basic bones·
ty and sense ol values.
DAVI! COWENI
Sports Probe cable televtalon
show on t,he USA network,
ack.nbwledpd that be atom.ct
over the declaion.
The team was on a mid·
weatem exbibitlon tour. Co1'en8
ata7ed ~up most of a night wrtt·
inl tu. resllnatloo by band on a
le1al pad. lie 1ave it to a 1porta
writer frieitd, Bob Ryan of the Bosto~ Globe, for aentepce structure and cram mar.
Oakland'$ Chris Bahr boots a 28-yard field goal with less
tt)an a ruibute remainitlf and then ,displays his emotions
8' it ;ails through ttte Up~ Monday night as the
Raiders posted a come-from-behind 19·17 victory over
Seattle. For story ;see page 82.
On Nov. 14, 1978, Cowelll was
hand-picked by owner '* Y. Brown and General Manacer
Red Auerbach t6 IUCCeed Tom
Satcb Sanden u eoacb ot the
tradltloaally succeaful Natlona.I
Buketball Asaocllltion teafb.
'thtn. Ju.st before the team
waa to leave for Evansville1 Ind., be 1ot on tJae bua and reaa
tbe f:,r.e statement, aome
Boxing's. biggest attraction .
Gold . ~longs to welterweights
• and titJe pic;tares. It seems a Duran·
H~arns match ls more likely because it
wouldn't be 1urprtsln1 if Leonard retires
after the Duran rematch . . . win or lose.
Below the Bia Five welteml1hts are
other solid pros auch aa Randy Shieldl,
Pete Ramany ud Adqlto Vlnaet.
la the divtDoa the tnost compeUUve tn
box int? "Abtolutely... said Gill Clancy, ,
Carmen Baalllo wt• the cbampwn in
1955. "He WOIJlld be competitive, .. Clucy
aaid of the brawler wbo twice held the
welter championship ,and 1pllt mld·
dlewel•bt title boUU wltb Sutar ltay
Robin.Ion. 0 BuWo would beat IAonard
because "Of b1i •trtntth. but Duran la tough
~and •mart.er."
He stped a multi-year con·
tract, reported at the Um• lb be
$300,000 a year but latet CCJO·
firmed to be closer to $500.000.
He wu to serve u both coacb
and pt.yer. a dual role that the
great Bill Ruuell bad
performed before him.
1,000 , to bis teammates.
"l set a hJ1h standard for
mya•lf." Cowas explained dur· int bJ.I weekend 1topover in New
York. :·Sure, I toMldered tbe
money. but l thought of my
family and my future."
Virdon gets
N~ Honors
"
.... ,., ..... 'Ill Fl
CINCINNATI AfW ~ ,_,. ol = ""--wtUcb • bu _,... PM.D ad 1ll'Y. ~=-::~.:':.';,?'.:.=fa wo:!.':f
about it. ~...-, "I ~ bed ., ...... to tM fact tbat be .... "'-cateb
just two t•IMI a wMk, a1tboaP ,I told him I eowdn't
paraJIUe that be .ould Dlu ..0--DOSltioD,~ Prell·
dtnt Dkk Waper Hid Molad.IY, surprt1tid
that a.ch bad aned for uotber mMUD.c. Mean1'hlle, a.net. called a nen coo-
ftrenc:e .todaJ lD wblc1' be~ to aay be WoWd like to be anatber
potlUoa CID a~ bull or tndid. BeDcb, II, W beeD cklM to Loala Nl~
pert, chief ~.of tbe Reds, Ud
baJ MW!' been .. to air bis ~
menu wttta the club publicly. ••John'• a compaay man,'' said
Reuv• Kata, Beeeh'• adviser. ''Tbll bu
MMCM been draainl out a loo& Ume. RaU1er
than 10 °""it all 20 tlmea, JobanJ tbOUabt it would be beat to
talk about tt tb1I way. It wu bll inltlatlve." Wqner 1ald be waa surprised when Bench uked to talk
a1atn about b1I positlODJ. "I 1ald, 'It's kiAd of like Act IV.• I
tbou•ht we •sreed·" Wagner said he wanted to keep Bench with tbe Reds.
"We hope that be doesn't want to be traded. If be does,
we would try to accommodate him. Several clubs have ap-
proached us about him. but we really aren't talk1n1,"
Wagner sald.
-----q..i~ ol •II~ da,,
M.L ea,r, who scored four points durint a Boston
Celtics rally after be had suffered a broken bone in his
fool : "Jotm Wayne would have been proud of me. I was
hurting, but I went down sbootin1."
Fal~i11 pla11~r11 h1trl i•g for ltear ,,._,.
Atlanta Falcons Coach Leem• 1eaMt aays O bis Natianal FootbalJ Leaiue team ia burtinl at
positions where it hasn't 1ot a lot of backup help.
Nose tackle Wllaoa Faamma will miss Sunday's
game with Cbica10 because of a bairtine ankle fracture and
placeldcker Tim MaueUI ii beinf held out of pracU. a1J
week to rest a pulled stomach muscle . . . Tbe San Diego
Char1ers signed center 8alpll PeneUa and waived reserve
linebacker Carl McGee . . . .lacl Pardee will remain, at
least unW tbe end of the season, as coach of tbe Wubinlton
Red.skins accurdin8 to owner .lack Keat Cooke. Tbe Stlos
also 11id tbey won't know unW just before kickoff whether
Joe Tbebmamt will start at quarterback against Dallas.
Phi& ue• rrrord '11:1-1,."93 l••r .4'mn eei11
NEW YORK -Tbe world champion" II
Philadelphia Phillies and American League cham·
pion Kan.au City Royals each earned record World Series abares, accofdln1 to figures released by
Comm.lllioner Bowte Kub.II Monday.
Each full share for a member of the Phillies was worth
IN.... •11~ U. ~ ~ Jal.231$.9' earned by tbe
New Yon Yank~ 1"8.
Tbe Royals, who lost the Series Ill •ls 1ame1 to
Pbiladelpbia1 came away witb $32,211.95, break.in& tbe loMn'
share recora of $25,483.21, which went to the Loe An1eles
Dod1ers two years ago. The Ull!O shares compare to the $28,236.8'1 which went to
each member of the winning Pittsburgh Pirates following the
1979 World Series. and $22,1.13.94 which went to each member
of the losirur Baltbnore Orioles. The Pbll.Ues voted 33 full shares, three balf sbares, a one-
quarter lhare of $8,613.29 to roolde Marty Bystrom, who won
five games in September, a ooHighth share of $4,338.65 to
reliever Sparky Lyle, wbo joined tbe team for the final weeks
of the season, and 19 cash grants to uniformed and non-
wilformed personnel.
The Royals voted 26 full shares and a three-quarter share
of $24,U&.96 to infielder Jerry Terrell. Pitchers Steve Busby,
G•rY. Christenson and Jeff Twitty and outfielder Rusty
Torres received ball cuts worth $16,105.97 each. Outfielder
Steve Braun got a one-third share of $10,m .31. Outfielder
Jose Cardenal received a one-sixth share of $5,368.M.
TonefU goal gl .,e• l•lfl""e• » a ..,.., Z.1
lolm Tonelli scored one eoa1 and uailted on •
another as the N• York Islanden ed1ed Min· nesota, 2-1, Monday nl&ht in a National Hockey
Leatue 1ame . . . Center Deall Mank, who
scored lix &oab lb two WubinetoD vtetortea, wu named
NHL player of the week ... Blabt-bander DaYN P ... er
wW underao suraery Sunday lD ta An&el• to eoueet a re-
currtnc lilament problem below the elbow OI bfj rlabt arm,
lbe Montreal Ezpol 1ald. . . What would be petball' the
ultimate marathon, a 3,500-mlle nm acrou the U.S. db a
total purse of ~ than St mllllCID. ii planntd for iaa. The
Geld wUl bi limited to 200 l'\llUlenJ wttb the wiDDlr eouecttn1
'250,000 lD ad4ltioa to lap prties that cou14 run tbe total to
$500,000. The or1anlJln• ll'OUP ls hopeful acb ruDJ.Mr Will
have a sponsor who pay1 a SZ0.000 entry fee plus i>fOvtdln•
support t.eaml for tbe runnen . "
•
P,luiikett
liis comeback s~a
SEATl'LI: <AP> -The amu-
iDI comeback of Jim Plunkett
eontlallied -at the expenae ot
th• Stitt.I• Seauwu.
Tile Oakland Raiders'
1torybook quarterback had a
tnedlocn puslaa came Monday
ru1bt •z:'~ thr.e quarten at teut, lt 100Sed Uke Pl'Ulkett's
lllO m._tc :wasn't lOinl to wort.
But he diil evel")'thma ritbt
wben he bed to ln tbe final
quarter In a lt-17 comeback vic-
tory over the Seabawk.1.
THE NA110N.u.LY teleVised
aame waa Oakland's sixth
straljbt triumph, all ~hind the
rejuve11ated Plunket(,-tbe 10-
year NaUoflal Football Leap
veteran Who Cot a cha.Dee to play
when Dan Putorlnl broke a lq.
"You have to liv• them credit
for hanaiill ln tbete.'' SeaWe
quarterback Jim 7.om stebed.
Oakland atayed ln sole
poaseulon of flnt place in tbe
American FootbalJ Con.fereace's
Western Division -at 8-3 -on
Chris Babr's 28-yard field goal
with 56 ~ left.
The Raiden trailed 17-7 early
in tbe fourth quarter.
"It was a 1reat comeback,"
Oakland Coach Tom Flores said.
"I'm proud. Jim Plunkett came
through in the clutch. And wben
we bad to protect him, we-did."
"TID8 GAME," Plunkett said,
"was the toucbesl we've bad in
the last six weeks. It's the rmt
tlme we've had to come back.
But we're a good football team,
and we came back in \be seeood
bait." Phmtett's statistics were niQe
completions in 22 attempts for
W yarda and no ~cbdoWna. He
bad ID lntercepUGb, lott a tum· bl aQd wu tacked toui llmet.
But wbea the Raiders
marched from their own 31 -
witb •:20 left after cornerbeck
Leiter Hayet iJ>lcktd off a 7.om pu1 -to the Seattle 10 to Ml up
Bahr'• 1ame-Wtonln1 fleld e<>al~
PlunktU came throup.
He contributed key runs of
aeven and four yards and, allo
compltad puees of 11 and nlne
yar4t ln the march. He canted
four dtnes for 19 yardl in the
game.
"That'• about u much u I
want to nm," Plunkett smiled.
SEA.TTL£ COACH Jack
Patera watched h1I team loae ltl
f ourtti pme iA a row and droP
its aetolMI 1tralaht conte.t ln tbe
final mlnute to r"lmaln winless
ln slx lames at home in the
KU11dome thll season. The Seatiawk1 nbw are 4-7
with four of their def eau comln1
in the lut three minutes.
"I don't think we can play
much better," Patera said. "We
domlnat.ed most of the game.
Everybody connected widl our
team ls frustrated because we
played pretty well.
"We've been in 1corin1 posi-
tion too many times to not win
the game. We weren 'l too
lucky." Zorn completed 19 or 3S passes
for 250 yard s and one
touchdown. He was intercepted
twice.
"It's really frustratinl to play
well and lose," 1.om sald. "I
lbou&bt Oakland played really
well but they were fortunate to
win."
, ..... r,,.•1
IOWA ON 'I'HE MOVE • • •
lea1ue like oun, at times it is
sort of frilhteniDJ. You think
you have a eoocl ~club, but .. ..
It's a picturesque setting at
Iowa City, a river flows tbtough
the center of the campus, it's
located below tbe snow belt and
Olson's team ii the bi11est 1ame
ln town all wtnterl00&.
"Webaven'tbadatlcketonaale
at the door for 2'h years," says
Olson. "Iowa fans are a unique
group ol fam. Even in the yean
· before we aot there (to tile top),
they nreeominatndroves ...
The Iowa field bouae bolds
13,700, The football stadium can
pack in 80,2.00, and tbe football
a ta di um is sold out, too, year after
year, despite 19 stral&bt losing
seasons.
"THERE ABE NO P&O
athletics in Iowa," says Olson.
"The University of Iowa Ls tbe
Rams and Lakers ln Iowa. Ron
Lester, our point-guard last year,
is more of a celebrity in Iowa than
Ma1ic Jobnsc>D ever will be in Los
Angeles."
Leiter led Iowa to a 9-0 record at
one point before l!Uuries popped up a year aao and the
Hawkeyes, were eltjoyin1 those
victories by a whopping 28-polnt
mar1in, lead the nation in that
cate1ory.
The imbeaten streak reacbflff 11
Swim-a-thon set
before more injuries killed their
chances for a Big-10 title, but then
the surge in the playoffs put them
back inthellmQiRht.
The previous year, wben the
Hawkeye& shared the Big-10
crown, they were shocked in the
first round, blowing a 14-point
lead agalmt Toledo and losing at
lh&buner.
"This past year's group was
especially pleasing because we
endured so many phys ical
problems,'' says 01.Jon
Olsan wu named Bla-10 OoaiCb
of the yearlD 1979 (they were~)
and last year Tbe Sporttna News
named him the nation '1 coach of
the year.
Pre11)' beady thinp for a fellow
toiling ln <>ranae Coast area prep
circles a few years ago.
"I llEALL Y DON'T FEEL any
different than if I was still
coacblni at Marina,'• says Olson.
"Once tbe ball goes up I'm not
awareof people."
His success has made him
aware of other things, however,
such as the easier recruitinl task.
Nevertheless, the talent 1et1
stretched pretty thin wtth bun-
dreclsof colleges seelrlnt the best.
"It all 1oes back to ti tbey play
hard eDOUlb and toaether." says
OlJon. "It's not always tbe teams
with tbemoattalenttbat win." ·
EspecialJy if tbere ls a first
claucoachinvolved.
" Prep Football'1 Top MarkS
• M
~II
(Lad .eft'1 pla,. of 5' JIJU or more> to-aeve Cech <University), interception return for
TD 83-Doul Irvine (Ocean View>. kickoff return for TD
82-Kevto Stanley (Ocean View), TD pass from John
Heinle ~ 61-Bob 'lbompson <Huntington Beach>. interception
return for TD
._Emlle Harry <Fountain Valley), TD pass ftX>m
Matt Stevena 58-Milte Moore (Huntlnaton Beach), kickoff return
s&-Brett Jeisy (San Clemente), TD run
55-Damoo Sweazy (El Toro), TD run
55-FNd Tuttle (Ocean View>, interception return .
Seuea ~-Bright (Corona del f,J.ar), Cech <University);
87-8. Bright (Corona del Mar); &1-lrvine <Ocean View );
82-Stanley (Ocean View>: 79--Moore (Irvine>; 73--Moser
·cocean View), Slouka <¥ater Dei>, Ventura (Marina>;
72-Grandstaff (Marina), Placka (Dana Hills>; 70-Harry (Fountain Valley); 69-Harry (Fountain Valley); .._
Reinholtz (Ocean View); 61-Tbompson (Huntington
Beach); 65--Buab (Marina>. Nixon (Costa Mesa>; 12-
Gteed (Dana Hilb); &G-Brantley (Huntington Beach>.
Harry (Fountain Valley); ~Urmson (Estancia). Ven-
tura (Marina); 58-Davla <Laguna Beach), 'Giddings
(Newport Harbor), Moore (Huntington Beach); 57-H¥TY
(Fountain Valley), 2; Frandsen (Marina), WeUon
(Edison); 56-Grandstaff <Marina), Mounce <San
Clemente>, Jeisy <San Clemente>; 55-Sweazy (El Toro>.
Tuttle (Ocean View); 53-Sweuy <El Toro>. D. J ackson
(Edlloo); 52-Williams <El Toro); Irvine (Ocean View);
51-Davis (F.at.ancia); so-Giddings (Newport Harbor ), M.
Jackson CF.di.son ).
Last week's statistical leaden Rasldnt .
1. Damon Sweazy <El Toro), 33-252; 2. Randy Scoh
(University), 21-160; 3. Eric Willingham CWestminst~JL
33-159; 4. Max Marold (Costa Mesa), 33-157; 5. D.J . Bell
(Edison), 22-109.
Pasalog
1. John Heinle (Ocean View), 9-14-2, 248; 2. Robert-An·
lbony <Newport Harbor), 14-35-2, 19S; 3. Bob Grandstaff
(Marina), 12-30-3, 176 ; 4. Greg Teregis <Costa Mesa>.
16-29-2, 143; 5. Bob Perry (Irvine), 11·22·1. 140.
Reeelvlq
1. Steve Cook (Costa Mesa), 11-88; 2. Dan Sauerbrey
(Newport , l . ba < llar:t >,
4-&t; .t. Bey Gubemlclr <Pouataln Valley>, Jen Fraodllen
(Marina), 4-SI; I. Jaime Alken (Estancia ), 4-42.
Seortq
1. Damon Sweazy (El Toro, 2S; 2. Max Marold (Costa
Mesa), Brett Jeisy (San Clemente), 18 ; 4. Bob Urmson
(Estancia), Rieb Sorensen <University), Doug Irvine
<Ocean View), Kevin Stanley <Ocean View). 12 each; 8.
Damon Berryhill (La"1Jla Beach), 10.
Los Al racing OOgins ..
County fair racing at Los
Alamitos will begin Wednesday
and nm for 12 days excluding
Tuesday with eight
thoroughbred, two quarterhorse
and one Appalooea race on each
day's card wltb the fint race at
noon. This is the fourth year of falr
racing at Los Alamitos with blg-
1er =and the popular Pick Sis along with six exac-
las spicing the betting. : •
The opening day feature is th
Orange Coast Handi~ap fo
older stakes horses WJth th
pune raiaed to $30,000 tl}~_year
The minimum purse tb1~ yea
will be $7 ,500 as comi>ctred
$6,000 a year ago .
The Orange County F,.1J Fai
meeting has enjoyed in~easi
success each year of ,tis ex
istence. •
LONG BEACH -Members
of the Newport Beach dlvtlicm ol
the Beach Swim Club will be
amonf tbe participants ln a
swlm-a-thon Nov. 2'1 to ralH
funds for youth swtmmlna ac.
tlritl• and t.be ArtbitU.. Foua-
College /ootball •
dattoe. -Tbe l'fewpol't Beacb 1wtm-
mera wUl be amon1 uo entrants
at the Belmoat Plua Pool, Olympic Plua, ID Loni Be~
who WW attempt to complete 2IOO
lap1lntwoboun.
Swimmers will receive
e_ledl• for eaeb 1.~J> eompleted, Baell awmmer WUI have a IOI) ot 1100 When the aotJoD bellnt at
aa.m . ·
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, ... , .. , .. y ~ • .,. ... ·--,.,. .. c..I .... .....,1 pell, Wl\11 llr\I..,._
...... II• ....... -. IHloM'I rec.tfl ....
tetet ••t111a, P•l11ta -•••• •11 •tf.16-t1 16-IS.16'1).12 ll·~P+s+).2-11
1. o-.. (ff) , .... .... t ... ,,. o.me w .... 1,llt
J.. .,,., ... SIM• m .. ,.. 1.11s ,,,..MN'-.m .. ,'° 1,1n
S Olli.••• f.t-0 I.OU
• '°'"*""' "''° m 1 PIM SUltll • 1-0 "' • ...,.._ .. ,... ns
t. Olll.....,. M.O 11t
10. Mlc"'91111 •t-O MS 11. aeviM .. ,... 112
12 S.. Glllfcwllla r-1. I t90 IJ atltlNmY-. .. ,... ... u S.UtltGlrOI-•HI 4.52
IS Net11\ Glr'ollNt • 1.0 ,_
'" W•llllllllD! •HI l41 11. Miu.I ... Matt •t.O )46
It. UCL.A 7·2-0 Ut
It F!Orid9 M-0 141
t0 VHM I·?~ 174
JUNtORCOUEOELOG
OrangeCoaat(2 .. ) 11 ... ...,_ •
0 o.lt9ll w.11
0 SUdllllatk
1 LOllGI IMdl CC
1 S.nt•Ana
10 C.trtlol
U Ml. s-t Alltonio
l1 Gr-I
Nov 12-MS... OieOOMeW
Nov 2'-Flllletton
" lO
" 21 10
24
ll
"
Golden Weat(4-2·2)
" llalertlleld
lO Ora111111C:O.$t " 0
II LAPlerce
IS EICMnlllO
,, LosA ..... CC
U LAHertlot
U LA~I
41 EattLA Now. to-.t A lo HonclO
Nov 3-S.UMonlca
.,. Saddleback(7·1)
O Ventura
lO Wes1LA
Sl Otaf9C:0.ll 1}lfi"~CC
3'Sov1_.,
l4S.n llem¥0lno UAl..erslde
No• 22_.I Palomar
" 15 • lO
" I
ll
0
0
" 10
" 11
0
OekT'" MllMMY"lallULTS
CLMlef!Mly... t 2 .. _. ... ,
l'lttt race -o.-IOllwernl. 1' JO, u 40,
UO, Oen't FOf'911 (ttawleyl, UO,' 20; 8clftd
Awllah IGtMlowsllll,IAO.
ArgamlM Open
(.e 9-a AlrM, "'9ttltiM I ""' ..... ,..... Rolf Gellt~ def Slefan SlmonHOll, .. ,,
1·5', Kelus Ebertl.,d def. GU5tavo Guerrero, •·1, •·4, H ; A119el Glme11H def Jalro
Velasco. 1·S, ._,, ClltlslOl)lle< l'reyu del.
David CM'W.~. 7 ..
ltaltan Open
tlt ........ llalyl
""'• ....... 111111" Ge,.. Mayer def. Sle111tlav 8ir11er, • •. •"'· Onny Perun def Klell Jo11e11uon, t • ... ,
M , Miiie ... r def. S .. n Poller .. l . 6 l , Jan
NOl'ba<k def. Ow PHqwler, .. 3 ... , Sean
Sore nM>ll def, TllOmat HOQ•ledt, 1 •· • · l
Bangtiok CtaHlc.
lat ........... n..1 ..... 1
ll'lnta .... SI ..... Vljey Anvttraj dei. Gelle Mahn, 6 -l, ... 1.
Doell Stockton def 8111ler Mottrem, , ... 7 .. .
.. 2, Peler A-n def Sydney &all, > ...... 1. 1 .. ; Tom Ol<ket del. Helma Sl.eloler. 7 .. .
7-l>; 8erner Plls del And•" Ma.,.re, 7 .. .
... 3. Cllrl• Oel-y def HarOOll 11me11, "''· .. ,, Lowk Sanderl def WoOQaflll "-<19·
.... 11
Misc.
Monct.y·a tranaactlona
aAHaALL
AmwkMLfftW NEW YORK VANl(EES -sent 8roa11
0.yte, MC-~11. le llw OAlll•tld A I 'OOTaALL .
•• IMt lll•JW te lie l\fmed IO<~ .. # ... ._., ...... " ...
Hrltttttal Nl!W YO•K OIANT~ -Place•100ll
Hftrtt ~f,ty, on 111111rfd reserve 11•1
Nat-ILH9W ~•Oiied s1, ... "*"'"' dtfMt•ve NO MONTfl[AL (.l(POS N•!'llff 0fMY 4Af\f 01EGO CHAltGE RS Sogllt<) ••tPll
Me11ellde1 fotkl~ol ~°"111111 Perette, Celll.,. Wah1ed C•rl McGee,
aASll.aTaALL lll'lltNU«.
N•.,_. ~f Att«8,_ cou.101 CLl!V•l..AHO CAVALllAS r-AcovetllCI MAAVVILLE COLLEG Anl\OUll: ...
Jonn L•MOert, forwero c111ter. fltlHied Int rt>1gNl10ll ol 0.11 %.efletko l\Hd 100!0811
..leto~ W111tllffd. ctnttr. coa<n
Area prep football log
SUNll!T LUGUI WMtmtnater (4-e) IMM (0..10) Laguna Hll .. (4-e) Edleon (10.0) • L•Oulllle 7 7 Vat9'1CMI 2t 0 Tw.stln 21 lht-la 1 u Pe<llka 1 0 O•n.Hllll 2' , .. 1!11-MI ,, Stnte,.,.. l 0 Cvl"M " 7 ~-u " Ulll-s.lly II l!IModllM J u OcMllVlew 21 0 L..-llMcll St 2t CotttMna u MllllMll " 2t L:T llMcll Wiiton • 21 L...-Hlllt J2 22 1,.,,1,..
J1 Mater Del 1 JI H lftl!Oll llHcll 1 0 EITOf'O 20 .. L~IMcll JI Ne--1Htr-• l Eelllott 22 ' l!lllllCla .. , 1 StnC-ta u Westml""le< l ll l'OllllWl11 Valley .. " ~clelMer 21 10 Mlulon Vle)O 2t Hllllli119te118eecll 0 " MarlM 11 0 eo.t•MHe 2t u 0.MHllls ,, ~., ....... 14 14 Hewpott He.-1 1 Ulllwnlty • 14 ~Vall.., 21 MMIN 7
CIPflll ....... SEA VIEW LEAGUE Unlve...ity (3-7) MIMlon Ylefo (1·2·1) Hov. 21-Setvll• lelOCCI Corona det Mar (M)
Fountain YaHey ( .. 2) . 1 Norw~• 0 0 Placer •• H wntlfltlOll 8N<ll 10 ll T11$1ln 14 21 s.ddl.ci.ck
10 El OorllllO " 1 SeAClemMll • 7 l...-Hlllt l4 7 T111tl11. ,. EIT-0 0 N*""*' H8"lot IS ll Oen.Hiiis 21 " EITOf'O
21 LOf19 IM<ll Wiiton " • c.,pittt-Vetley 21 14 L..-BN<h • 11 CotleMna
2• Setvlte 0 0 Kenned'( I 0 Cbsl•Mew 21 It OaneHllll
1 Lak.-.cl l , Est.ncit 10 • Cor-clel Ml>r '2 11 Clllllllr-Velley
22 Marine 21 " UnlWtlllY 9 • l!ITOf'O 11 20 Le911nt Hllll
17 Newpor1 HarbOt 0 21 Irvine 11 1 Ettencla " 2• San Qefnellte
" WHll'l'liNI« ll tl EtT-" • lrv111e 7 10 49Y11811H(fl
" Edl10ll IS 2• c.om.M9W 21 CJP.....,..,.
11 HwnlinGJOfl 8N<h • Cl .. ,...,.... 80U1.)f LEAGUE No•. 21-,..., X
CIP~ HO•. 21-~ 8"cll Ca~lltrano Valley ( .. 2) l'lov. 21-et El...,,_,
Huntington Beach (1·t> Coat• ... (2-1) ,. fitTOf'O • San Clement• (4-5) 0 CotteMesa " 10 Co<_ def Mar 14 " Sant.a-ll l5 C.•1-l l • COt,,,..delMar 1
" ~r-Valley 42 ZI c-clelMar • " Vtll• Pet1C 20 10 EIOor-ll " OctanY-It " Notlll (Al .. rlldel 0 26 EiC.tan ' 11 BOltaGt-• 27 L•-Hllll 29 20 San Oemenle 1 20 El Toro 21 " cv...-20 u MlulonVlelO 17 u MluionVlelo 11 7 Caphtr-Valley 20 13 LOI AJemltos 21 ZI Unlwnlty 0 .. OenaHlll1 7 ZI L._Hlll• 1 1 West mintier 21 0 El Toro 11 • Llt9Ufl8 8eec fl 7 •• LeOWN8eecl\ • 1 itoMrlne " IS Ellene .. lS JO L..-Hllls 2• • Ml n oon Vie to J4 0 Edi ton ,.
7 Newpor\H-27 21 lr•lne 0 CJ, .... .,."' 11 o .. ,.. Holli 0
• F-telll Valley 21 ll Co<-<191 ,.,., ,. Nov 21-Maytelr
,.Mar1na (M) El Ton> (M) Oana Hiiia (4-e) OTHERS
Ocean Vi.w (M)
31 ~·-k '20 • Cepollr-Vellev J6 20 MallflOlla 21 BoluGt-12 0 F-telnValley J " W•rreon ,. ,. ,. lrvl11e 0 20 Foothill " J4 LosAmlp 11 Le Quint• 14 1 " ...... , 0 29 Est..cla • ll MIUIOll ., .. ,0 " 19 c~,••Mesa " 1 Loar• l1 21 SanO.ment• 10 ZI Unlveollr 13 21 We•lm1111,_, •• ZI Fountain valley 12 20 I rvl11e 0 • Katelle 20 7 Ell-.C:it • " H1111tln91on Bff<I! I 11 Cbsl•Mna 0 0 Million VM!IO 19 IS Katella ll " ~Beac:ll 21 1 Newpor1 HerbOt 21 11 u"'-"'Y • 1 <Aptllr-V•l tey " " Cyptess IS
11 WHlml"lMr " " COt-dll ,.,., 2l 12 ~Hllll IJ 13 KeMedy 20
7 Ed110ll 21 21 Esle'Kit ZI 0 S.11o.n-1. 11 I Lo ... e n
Cll' """"' CIP "•yefti 28 Lo•AlemolM 22
Nov. lt-1 F011t•na Nov. ll-V•le11<1• (al MY) Laguna Beach (7·2) Newpc>f1 Harbor (3-7) Eatancla (M) Mam 0.1 (S-4-1) " Mayfelt ..
0 Meter Del 27 1 Edi10ll ll 30 Elll,_. 7 17 Ne-1Harb0t 1 Miiiikan ,, 16 L4tQUN Htlll " J2 lr•I,. 0 21 001 "'**" IS CM-clelMar 0 • SanteMe 1 • Unl,,.,llty " 10 St. Jollll lloKo 0 Lo.re 20 • Marina 29 J1 L._..Hllli 14 0 LO•Alamllot ' servile " • Oct811V-1 27 Oen. Hiii• " 1 Edl10ll ' Edl10ll JI IO Cot'ONdltMar 1 • S.nC....,_.. .. 20 BlillOllArNI 0 F-laln Velley 17 0 lrvlfte • 1 ~.-v .. le'I' • " all!IOll -llll'N'Y ll M•rllle 7 J1 Cosl•Mew u 12 MIMkllt Vle)O 10 ,, s.tollago 11 Hwnt:::f.:°" Beech 7 " Unl,,.,llty 7 CJP~ 0 St ....... 7 WHI Ml« " 21 El Toni 17 Nov. 11-c.or-def Mar " Servile
'78 a big yea~
.for young stars
ROUGH BRED
By HOWA&D L. BANDY °' tlll .,..., Nie 1Uff
Do you know which of Ole six years the Crosby Southern has been held at
Irvine C.oast C.ountry Ch~b bas been
the vintage year for outstanding
youn1 players to compete?
ICCC President Woody Smith bas
made a thorouab search of the rec·
orda and baa come up with 1978
as tbe banner year. In 1978. six
players on the current top 60 (ex-
empt) money llst of the PGA Tour
are listed and there are eight more in
the next 40 or a total of 14 in the top
money winnen for 1980.
According to Woody 's records,
there are 16 players in the top 60 Jrho
bave played ln the tournament at
Irvine Coast durin1 th<.-past six
seuona. ~ additional 13 are ln the
next 40 includlnl Laguna Niguel's
Alan Taple. who baa been exempt for
two years but missed the top echelon
this time around.
WOODY'S &ESEA&CR baa also
brouabt odt the fal:t that at least two
of &be past Crosby players bas
eanHMI over '200.000 on the Tour, Lon
Htule and GU Moraan. Addinl to the old adaae of drive ror
show ana putt for dou1b, the top four
players 1n the drlvinl for diatance
ltaUiUcal cateiorJ all played ln Ole
Cro9t»' wblle only one of t&he top 10 p-..tdns leaders, Morris Hatalslty,
played here.
To lilt the playen who have ione
oa to win a major toumament would
t.U• up too much apace but Woody
altO baa thia fipred put in bia report
OIJ .,.., Croeby Southern performen.
Wb"at dOe9 OU. all prove! 'NOl~a '"at deal except that the c~~m Golf Toumament at
I,,_ Cout CC Feb. 5. and 8 wlU ...... 1wlna 10me of tile bri&hteat
~ ltan Of the PGA Tour to this
e 652 Club support aroup of Hoaa
ff pltal 1ta1ed lt• annual solf ment f« commit• worken
ay and more than 100
~II pated In tbe action. Boarit ~'_!.:man Forest Smith, WOody'a
father and originator of Irvine C.oast
CC, had an eagle two on the ninth
hole and posted a gross 77 to capture
top scortni honors. • • •
THE AMERICAN GOLF Sponsors
Associatioo reported Ulat ita a PGA
Tour tournaments contributed
$5,113,000 to various charitable, civic
and cultural organizations and proj·
ects during 1980.
And speaking of money contributed
to charitable or1ani1atioo.s by PGA
Tour eventa, how about the Crosby
GOLF
Southern where more than '82,000
was presented to Hoae H06pital this
year? The money was used to
purchase a kidney dialysis unit. • • •
SHOW BUSINESS celebrities have
had their names associated with
PGA Tour tournaments for a number
of years. Glen Campbell, Andy
Williams, Bob Hope. Bini Crosby.
Jackie Gleason and a host of others.
But such situations are apparenUy
gotnc to be abandoned in tile Mure.
Williams has been reportedly pushed
aside in San Die10. And now Gleason
is severing his lies with the Inver·
rary Classic ln\..,Florida.
Tournament Officials sought to at-
tract a bi1-money corporate sponsor,
apparently a major car company ••
and to ea.ae Gleason out. But the en·
tertalner, who instituted the event ln
1972, says he is leavln1 before Ole
eaaln1-oot beJln.s. "To have my name mentioned a
few times on nation•I TV to a small
audience is no bil deal to me. What
my name did was help them attract
celebntiea to play in Ule pro-am."
Gleason HYS he has uked the PGA
Tour rorc permiUlon tC> start • $1
million tournament iD Atlantic City.
Then he qulppecl; "Automobile
tompam .. have enouih troUble sell·
tn1 c11n, How do they ex~ to sell a
101' tournament?"
~
II
BEGINS
WEDNESDAY! 1
ORINOE COUNTY
FALL FAIR ...
F111Uy Fun at the Fair tb1t Includes 1 Nightly
Talent 811rch. KWIZ Cblll Cfikaff. Afrlc1n
Saf1rl ¥111111. Antique Appr1l1111, Art Show
I SJle •. ind Winter Fun Ski Sbawl
Plus exciting Tborougtibred Ricing 1n11
~., except Tuea., Nov. 2&. F11turlng
tlle popul1r Pick Six and Six Ex1ct11
every dql ·
POST TIME 12 NOON
PICK SIX BETTINI
Ii <.."'
t<ATELLA AVE. LOS Al~MtTOS 90720 • (213) 431·13'1 • (714) ~12M
ON KATELlA AVf:. EAST OF THE 805 FA&J '1
..
"Marmaduke doesn't believe In waiting
for an Introduction!"
SHOE
MOON MULLINS
MISS PEACH
Y..£ R~ TLJRNING
N, Too, A5 SOON
/>8 WE STRAl<JHTEN
"T~ ~~SUP
THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane
"Guess who my name Is?;'
GORDO
by Mell Lazarius
WE WON'T ICNON
~ IA~TIL T>-4e PAPE~ ~OME:.~ OLAT' ...
FO~ BETTER OR FOR WORSE
WHRIS1HIS-A UH-HUH,11M E.N~OlllNG
NIGHT&CttOOL IN f\ CREATl\JE. '
' ~AM WR\TING COURse, '? .
DR. WOC:K
, ,..,S PONf! !
NOW WE:'L.L.
L..E:Ave i....t'L,.. eeRN•e i...e:vY HE5RE:, A.N ' we'L..L-
Pur t..l'L-MAX L..evv oveR
"f"HSR!! .'
by Gus Arriola
by Harold L~ Ooux
'IOU OfTTfR G€T TO HIM TO~Y'
l'U. T~LL OAN YOU NEED THE ~~ FARMb CAil eE:CAUSoE YOU'VE GOT A OOCTOR'f:J
APPOIN1'MENT! ....___-._
COMfCS CAOSsWOAP
llG GECNtGI
., ... ,,
''Gr11t idea, Ajax, but how are you going to ge
through all that deep snow with that?"
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
Bell'{ DANCING AND
~EfCOO<ING ~EXAMPLE-! '
by George Lemont
-rHe W ORi....c:>'s
FIRS'T" sePA.RA."T'ION OF NON-SIAMese
"T'WINS .'
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 53 0.agonal
51 ~~ ~' , 55 Flipper ~ se icon s11ce
10 Gallol*f 8 1 eposthOn
14 F'tund« 62 Am flVOf
15 E•·hkt ~ Parldt&e
1e Siege tare es 8enalltd
17 ldeat 66 Ball team
19 Trtvtl ' «17 -Ind rMIS
20 Meal course 68 Pronoun
21 '"'* Prelt• 69 Alumnus
22 SolM sheep
23 UM TNT OOWN
25 Ctlarttted 1 Ge<m111 river
Accts 2 Nee
26 Atcend 3 Veslel
30 w.. 4 The pokey
31 Heckneytd ~IS 34 Siii Prel•x bOr
36 ApPf1Md 11111ons •
38 Up Prehx WOt'ds •
39 SolM e Concernmo
dieters 4 9 Nldvs
111ords 10 0t9')efM
42 Spigot 11 fllfrow
43 Muller cvlltrs
••Cubie meter 12 Roof part
45 0tYt"9 11eeds 13 P1!1""1t1
47 Neg11tve 18 Stitt -'bbr
49 Otspot 24 VIOiin maker
50 CMmonCI -25 ~signs
51lhe end 26 Ao•t•
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Mondays Pun le Solved
I C A Cl I I A, C II l LO 0
~ . D I .. 0 ~A "'I MA II . [ A I I I . ' . 00 I YI
A•IC 101 1 LAJIS
T f •I mgYll-
->If IA A If I 1111•11
IJIOI0.•11-A OIOIPIT
D •IT 11 9' lllll-lllJIA
AITITIA II ll llllllC TIOlll!Y
T IOIOI. 111-t1t.\l ·--. ' II l •llllA • T l II
I " 0 .... t II 0 • t l" r • I y I I CI II I , I If I I
A TI II I I II "T •I 1111' .. ~II • I 11 l . ' • II l I T -
27 Abrahams Mel -'°" 46 Buttatos
28 Spec1lled 411 PMPPIC
29 Misdo 51 S•sk•n
31 Calilornta 52 Squalled
tori S3 Cothn s11~
32 Sinus ca ... he\ 54 -C11tna
33 OIHilf 55 Or 1er •
35 G1rt>age 57 1n1009
37 -Ov0<ak 58 Brrs1i.
40 Smith and 59 V01C11n9
~ 60 Ctartnel e O
4 t Gi1n~reat 63 Thon; Law
OBffUARIES
••Tu NOT tantaayl•nd," said
CO \ftp&ny s pokeswoman Sus•n
Graham. "Whenever you have un-
Thfl> ("OMpa•lf fllat
Ut ihr hot1•*'•" fJ11llf
tlte c.a ... uniCff c.ar•tr-Jt.-.
huilf f.h~ golf <-oursr.. I•
of no
Ions and m anagement there's going
to be some friction."
The violence-marred dispute has
idled 3,000 workers at the plant that
makes Hershey's Chocolate Bars and
a host of other goodies to satisfy the
s weet cravings of Americans east of
the Rockies.
Pickets walk along Chocolate
Avenue, the main street oJ the
pleasant central Pennsylvania town
where motels. hotels and schools
bear the name of a candy bar and its
originator
WHOLESALERS NOW TALK of
running out of candy only weeks
before the Christmas season, and the
company that built the houses, built
the community center, built the golf
course, is accused of no longer car·
ing.
Things have reached a point that
"the favorite expression around
here 1s, 'Oh, if Mr Hershey knew
. • · · one offi cial said
Earl Light. business ,manager of
Chocolate Workers Local 464, says
workers felt betrayed in 1977 when the company refused to make a new
contract retroactive after they had
worked three months without a pact.
WHEN THAT CONTRACT expired
Nov. l, the workers walked.
"The.way we look at it, they're one
of the few industries now that is mak·
ing it. So give some of that back to
the people that helped them," said
Richard Colon. a 16-year employee
The strikers are asking for a pay
r~e to $9.90 an hour and improved
slckneu and acclden\ beneftts. The
average wage is now S1.85 an hour.
THE STRlKE ENTERED its third
week Sunday. amid signs that
tensions were building Talks had
broken off and there were none
scheduled
..
PtCT1nwl ... MUI ..... "., .• .,. ....... ~
TNflf ......... ~•rt•llt , ................ _. .....
WllfllMI. ~-· 0 0 L 0 • N 0 It A 0 0 .. "' NIWl'OltT **• LOAW •llfA\laANT, mJ HafW ......... c• MWfiOlrT MOillle 1'-0M aAltl•l', B9 .wtlW 94""-c;.t......_ca ..a • ..,. 'd ~' f«alMI ~ ...... ~..o w.ua Gal4lle or .... IM ca ••· C.O ._....., Mo.I t.OM1 ~ 1i-v; • ,., ..
Clll._.. ~.-u . .., ...(-:= ~: ::=: = = c-,...:.-:=i:::=.., # ....... C..Mliu.C. _,, •• l-' N~ MOMI ~ .,~ Tlllt...._.11, ...... ...,.c.91. ••' Ull ,,......,., NOMa ~ ~lu.tQI -•UM W M,,U. allJ. 11 ~ ,.,...., ""Ml" Ttl!. ..,_. .,,. IV. W\91 ~O«"otlAOOff -..o.~..... C-tr OtR • ~ CflTlllliN y..-.o.'"'-lllT•oeefll NI"""°'"'~ LONt, INC., a ,,...,...,..,,,1. •
--~--~ 1' .. ,.,..._ ""' ........ ~"". '*'· ....i ...... ~ CIMll 0.lff '"4• .......... -,, ... •1111 tlle ,.,...... ...,,.tl,11,b.O.CI,, .. ~, (:IWtl. Or...-c-ity tfl Oc· ....., .......
...,,.,,,. •1-~ 111£. ~·--Or-. c;_. o.11., ~... ==· Ott.Jl.Npv ... 11111,1• ~ ~ .....
Mii.ViCi~ PllllLIC NOTICE TMs .......... -fllH Wiii\ ... • TM IOl-1"9 --It~
-'*"'IY OM! el ~----G!Mlt't lfl1••• ••' lltmTHIUllfWI••• ~maw7,.. WULllfl a. AS\OCIATt\. llAMe IYAnMllWT, ., ..... ;.~CM II .. ~ ~II. C:.
Tiii follow!"' fef-t M• •111 ......... Or ... Catll C)llty ~lltlt, Wlllltm M. Wultl, lOOt C..111 11Vtl"911•: N•.,,,11,11.IS,O.C.J,I• ~ It., ......,.9HUl,C. ~1 ..... UNIVellSA&. OeMCOlll~ ()0., 1# Tiii• Ni._t It c.oMU<..,. v~ <In
Tll•tlfl An11v., "•"'"'' ... cit, llYIMI Gll ... ml•9*1 Pl18UC NOTICE WllllMI H W\llH
OHllMI -M61N Watflltr, -_...;.~...,....-----..;_--~ 'TIUt stttwntm .... 111.0 ••UI an11l11t a1ar, N••ir>ett aHcll, fllc:YlnOUS WllNlll ::-ty Cl«ll tlC Or-'tit caup1y _. Call"""•'*° tlMMllTAT .. IWllT IOMr •• I II
O•l'•-Ari••"'"'· 15' T11ttl11 "-Nlll#lllt ,.,_ •• tlllllt ~1--~·· ....... er-,. __ 1 ... A 11, AYtflllt, ~ ~. c.tlf-ia ~v..,__.. .. ._ ._, ..., ~ ,,,..:ou•TY , ••• t.:TO .• 10•02 How 4,tt,1&,U,"IO Thll ......_ .. ~--WM -ar ... llVf'I\. 9'1111 JQJ, "IA!ltl"tlM -.,....._,_.,._.~'°"""'~
1_.._ .... _..._..,.., 11\ait a ..-:11,CA_..
~ ,.,... *-· .. .,..llwt\, ·., ':_..LW..,_r ~1 .. ml,Mltrll..,_..,.Ma<tl,CA'1M6
sweet
PICTtTIOllS •us•••• -KTtnOU. ......... MAMISTATIUd.lfT .... STA'fCMSMT Thf fojlOOlfl .. per-It ""411t buSI-T• .......,_ ,.,_ It 8'lfle .,.._
flfUO' ......... : A & K PACICAOING $U""''-'IS WOOD TaCM. eotdT•UCTIOM
CO., 11112 •t11e .C:'-10 •O, C:O .. 1ltf1 +4erOer •r••U
' Hunttntt1111 leedl, catlfOtftlattoW ~· "'""'..,.._ 9ellclt. C.lfOnl+•
REESE oFnCIALS CLOSED th~ MK-' 1t. ~..-. 1mt eoi.. °"..,.,.. ..._, ""' M•,..,
Plant fOr a day. reononlno On}y af\er ClllCO •O, HWllllll•lon •oclt, .,., .. &.aM, Munllt19ttll •Heh, ,.... • C•Ulornltti647 c.llltoneWftM6 Gov. Dick Thornburgh pledged that Thi• IMl•U la coMIK\ld DY .... lft• Tiii• _,_ ,, CMIM ....... M lflo
state police would protect workers tr •M0"11;,.1c,,...11.1MMrd ..,._..o.,.., .... ""'"""
necessary. T1111 11elJtmfllt •• 1111111 w1tt1 ':i 11111 tlllllllNllf "'" 111• w1111 "" ThO company has Changed Since CollfltY Cllfl ol 0.-ft'\OI c.uMY C:-11' o.-11 .. OfOlltll c-l'r ... ...... m ... ru,1• .... .,..-4 ,. founder Milton S. Hershey dJed ln .,..,.. ' .,,..,.
l•uc leaVl'ng h1's le<Tacy to the orphan P111111"*' 0r.,.. c.o.11 o.11y ""°'· ~....,. 0r .... cant 0.11. ""'""· _,,, • Nov ,,,u,0tc.t,t,1teo 4'02.a ...... 11.1,ss.o..1,1• •~ boys -and now girls -of the Milton
Hershey School. PVBLJC NOTICB
The old Hershey Estates becam
Herco Inc. -which owns the popular
Hersheyland amusement park, the
Hotel Hershey. the Hershey Motor
Lodge and much or the rest of the
real estate in Hershey. which has no
town government.
Tllll ~ •• fli.d Wltll tM Tiii• ...,_ .. ~ .. ..,MI~ PUBUC NOTICE c-w o.rt .i 0r-.. c-c" _. .,. .. ..,.... ~ 1,,. ... -T.,. s.in.e. --·~· .... lllCTIT10U5 MISIUU ----·• .. _.-...,. ~·· NAMa STAT&M .. fT ~TlOUI atnllfUI ,...,~Orwlit ONtt o.p,. .-tl6C. 0.0-el .. ~ ASTC>tf GAi.AGI!, CA\.IFOll Tll• IOf_.,,. .,.,._ i~ .,_,,NJ-IUiMaa'TATUelO' How.11,ll.U.O«.t,t• .... Tllh _...,... -11.-wiDI lfW 2111 H. C:r•tctnl War. Unit '
rttM •at TM f ....... 119 ,._ I• .-. ...,_ ca.t't a-. fll OrMtll GauM• Oii Oc· ,._ C:.. '29tl
JM$ ~NTEllP"ISES, 1111 ~ -.. : PUBUC NOTICE '*'"·~ Pt JOllll u...ior Enterprl ... "9Yrl 51,_1, Sllli. tn, l..alVne llN<ll, TllOJAHTAC0••1, l9'catlleletn. C.lllonlie ,orporlt-1, .... Gull duttr141\.SMCM<nllll•.Ca•lfomi.ti'n Pvbllllwd OraflOe CO.II 0.111 Pll!!i <••. """"'"" v .... Y. c.. '270I C..lllOnliefMSI PICTITIOUS •u1u1au O<t u, ... v .•• "·II.... 4.Jll-""' -•• ~-DJ.
JOfKI !IA. SlOWWI-, 31125 Cnltw'"' Jamft 0. H9Wllt. *21 Mlr-llAMS ITATSMaltT • Ortvl. LaQllN a.Kl\.C&tlfomit"'51 Court, Y9UNll9'ef, CA1111Gn'la'2617 I TM folio-1119 .,.rMM ere doal119 I por•lloft. ~ E dl!r~'~o~~· ~.,.,""In· Tiiis ~It CONM• ., a.n 111-1M1t111H1a: PUBLIC NOTICE iHT~~~?,E;
THE OHOCOLATE OPERATION Jo1W1Cs1e-""' dlvlchlelj-o.HeW11t , ... t~"~~1=v~; cosTAIMMWltTAllYottntCJ ~~~=t~udtl" which MHton Hershey began here in I this ... ,_, wts fflld with Ille Tiiis --,.., 111..S wltll , .... Calt"4"nlot»O o•A .... CIOU"'r'f,CALUIOIUUA T111• , .. _, ... ., 111-.1 wltll Counly Cl9#-of Oraftle C-ly Oft • lfl Cl ...... r~•1f0 -• ---1 .... tTI .... ... 1903 is a separate e ntity. Hershey Novemb9r 7, ltlO. CcH.tftty o.ri. Of or ..... County on ... c c II' , • .... rm• _,,_ ... ... CO\HllY c...-of or-. C:O..nly Oft Noftmlle<' 1•, ltlO. corporot~. ltoll ~st. Hunl· MOTl'9 1$ M•"••Y otv•N THAT •-r lO, "'°
Foods. In recent years, it h ~s I ,,111111111111d0r.,..eo.5t1>all~',r.:' 1114ttU 1nt•a-J\.CA1"°'1Mf2M7 ....... ,,......... '°" fu,,.1t111,.. •II " transformed itself into a more ag·
1
Nov.11,1e,u,o.c.2.1'10 4511,.0 Pwll"*9 ar.,. C::O.lt 0111y Pttot, Thi•.......,... 1' (ondUC:ted DI'•<«· l•b•r • m•t•rl•11• •qui•"'•"'· PuDll"'9CI Orange cou1 O•HY P . di if' d Nov. II, U, OK. 2. t , ltlO d,._., poretloft. tr•naportatlon, e11cl aucll •lll•r Nov,•, 11, 11, u, 1.., 01
gress1ve. vers 1e company. -Pacific Oty ...,_ tec:111ti.. • fMy .,. ,_.,.,.,. 1« .._
W'}dJ . . . I d t J $.~ CONSTftUCTIOH Of' SANITARY l y swang1ng cocoa pnces e o Deatlt Netlc!es PUBUC NOTICE e'.11K11tive vi~.,.,...,..,,, SEWER MAIN 1N llTH snuT PUBLIC NOTICE
an earnings slump in 1977 The com· --Thi• ·-..... 111911 wllll 1119 Fi.OM WHITTll!lll AVENU• TO
pany since has dtried tohshift its b,usi· OR GfioRt:Mi.". KEMP, MO '~=m:~~i:::s ~::~r f.~-~I Oronve c-.ty Oft :g,~~~~.AVENUE, PlllOJECT
ness into pro ucts t at use ess p.,..,c1 •W41von s..nct•v Novemi.r "· T,,. loflowlftt ~ •• e1111119 b<nl· PMtftl e"'9 wtu.,. "'*1-°" 1111 c:o.1a chocolate. Hence. the acquisition of 1• •t 1,00AM. Sun11ved by 1111 ""'" neu ••: P111111.-0r-c:oe1t o.ur P11o1. MeM SMttart 0111;1<1. • .tt IN ottk.9 of
h f. bl F . dl • . I W•nolo ltemp, dOUQh1 ... Olwn Kemp MACKAY MU\.Tl-PUlllPOSE ...... 11.U.OK.t.•.t• ~ .,.. City Qlr'k. n Pair clrtw. CO.to t e pro 1ta e nen Y s ice cream 01 lustln, c.. •nd ~t• "999Y COMMUNITY CENTER. mo,.,,.., ....... <:a1lfon!la_,1t,,. ,_o, 11;00
chain and the introduction to the L•rcll•r ot "'"mont, ce .. or.,,d Avo., Unit D-J, eo.ta M9 .. , co111ornl• PUBLIC NOTICE •·"'· o.c......, a. 1• .tt ... 1c1t um.
U · ed St f I E oeughler ~1111• L.Jtrc.,... of Fr ... 9262' U.y wlll lll _.... pullllcly eftcl rMcl nit ates 0 popU ar uropean mount, C• , mot .... P199y R099rt Peul T Selet1, " \.Inell Ille, •-In .. -U C""""'9n. S..IH brands such ·as KitKat candy bars o• LOftt 11o.c:11.c..., D< Kempwes.,, H••port9Ndl,C:..l1«nl•9*° PIC:Tmout1W1t•U1 ~ "*' -u. uuo of""
and Rolo Chocolate Caramels lnl .. nl•I CordlOIOOltl. H• ..... • Tiiis .,.,,,_, •• ~ .,, ... .... •AMml'T•TeMe•T --··--ofllle.,._.._no orac1u11e Of Unlwrs<IY of Cohlornl• dlwlcNOI. T"8 tollawlftt --It dOln9 Dull· -4ltllM9':!tttl"9 ~ MJ !Old The candy world's longtime top Mec11ce1 sc._, •I 1rv•n•, c.. O• PuT ~o neuo•, ,....."" ,,,_ 11w ~ dfti"t
dog also had to face up to compell· K•mP M""'4 Oft .... Jteff of \.OftO Tiii• st•--llled "'"" -SOLOEll WOltKS, ltlOJ Ml. 11-,.,..,. ,....,. ol 9'dl Mall ...... a .. cll MemorlOI HOtC>l\OI, VetMens C°""lr Cllt'll Of Or ..... Count" Ill Weallllltlon. Fauft\elft Vall•Y. turMCI to the ~ -~. It Adm1nstr•llof\ Hosc>llOI. t..ono 8e«ll Moft..,... 7, IW CAll1f0rnlat279 -.u .. .,. _.. ,.......... .. .., of 1t11
l'ICTITtOUI •Ul1Nas1
NAMI ITATaMaWt The tot1ow1no ,..rsons ere dO .... ~ ...... , WOLSTOH, 14931 Burnnll'll trVIM, C. '2714 81""4! -H, 1<1«11 eurnnem c: lrvlM, Ce. '271• H-.JollnUon, 14931 9ur c;,, , I r"lne, C. 9'2714 Tllh .,.,,,,,.n 11 ~ondltcl..S b'f llmlled Nf-llllo Blence Wofll Tll•l lltllt-WOS 1119'1 .nth
COunty a.n. of 0renoe Gaoonty °°'
Idler 24. '"° C• ond So<M Cont Modlcel Gtnl•r P...., Cll•r••• f *Gerry tUD Lo lollNff •-lflat Ill• bid Is recolvod In , ff h . i H• wH • grut m•giclan end • P\.lllflsl'ledOr.,.. GM•t a.Ill' Pliot, Col9MI. -Velloy. COi-. ,.._.tltft9. PUbll.,.., Or-Coo•t 0.1ty ' er# ey tra~ ft ~f" llft• 1 m•mD., of Ille lnl•rn•tlon•I Mo,,.lt,11.U,Dac.2,I-u..-ttJtl A let fll ...... 5-Klel l"rawlUclne O<Lll.1'1°" 4,11,la,IMO Brolll9rhood of IMOJ<ians. Geor99 L. -Tiii• ......,_ It~ ll't °" In-eftd ......... Geftar .. ......,...,_ .. -
'fl a---· 10 ··-a-a-Kemp MO, FACC ..... , F•mlit PUBLIC NOTICE dlvlclONI~~-.~..,-~ llle$ ........ ~Mn•rTMY.... PUBUC NOTICE ...,.... :I'"° •,. 11-• MOl1uofY. L...-a..dlcllrK10rs. ._._.,.. ~ --·· .....,.. el .. fllftca .. Ole 04'9C\or .c MAU 11'1mTIOUS •tn•••• c:.::~., :-: ~.,.:,.~, ": ..... k Senk-. ~ 411•,:1 F•lr -ltO'Tlca °" APf'\.ICATI<* .~·01r: the .. hare dollar JOSEPHINE MACK, pe~ ••• , NMll91TAHMa•T .._,,_.,,1... °'1"!:...c.te ••. ~.,, •• ':.!°".~ TOHU.ALCIOMOLIC•«VEltA 3 I on Ho-1', ltlO 111 Colte Mose. The fol~119 --• •rt ClelftO P\41tt4 =:;;;.... ct:;,;,;\l.Gii wtll~--T "'"°"'II Me'.!;.~-.
signs
Thefl'll .
in th-fr eflf."• Ce Slle-•~ofL.f9"MHlllt, bvslMSs•: P .... ltMclOr .... GMlll>atlyPllot. lf,..........,INll o.. y.........,n. or • C• s ... WQ llOfn In HOWft, Soutll NGA INSUllAHC• AO ENCY' #ov.11.1 .. u.oac.2. ,.. 45t>« E•d• ............ --Oft tlle 111 • .,,,,... ~ Oullerf'll h Doltol• on J.-IS, ...0 ...... ~ 10101 Slttw •216. ,,_loin Vllley. p,....... ....... llle9tS ... , ~ 111\11111 to .. Olfo9rtmeM .. A do #Ontf."f hhtg ClterlH-*""'.,... ,11 dMltl In*' COllto<nlat210I PtJBUC NOTICE r-r. ,_.w.i "' h CON!tac1 dee ... hvert00 Cmdn>I tor "41" ON Sh• 11 1urwlv•d bye deuQMlf l'l.G.•.,tNC,•CelllOml•CCWllO,..• ....:... ........ ac:~~· •£E" • WINa 190fte Flett
I Evelyn J. Worrell of Lf911M 141111, C.. lion, 10101 s1011r •216, FOIHltoln cet1N,:.. • ~· dleCtl °" 0 _.. ~•t1n9 Pl•<•I to Hll . •lcoh
•ncl •son ~Nhell MO<lt o1 ~ voll•I', c.1ttom1et2'1tll ••cnnoutlMISf•aD """ ._ ,_ ... '""" 1~ ., tM bner1gn ac 1..u BolM Olico, H
Buell. c.., ' IJf'•ndCllllWln •llCI ' Tiii• lluallwi& Is "'1dlldecl Ill' • COi'· ........ ,..,.. .. '" t., ........ -~ '° tN ,....., ...... callfoml• t2Mf orHt·or#1dclllldrtn. wvlc.t """' i. _.otlol'I. TllO follfwlftt '""'°"' .,. ..... -' pe Pwlllllhld OrenQI c...st 0.11., P I h•IO tllls ..... In HoVM,.Soutll l>akot• N.G.A., Inc:. ........_, .. , Cell.9 .,.._ ~ otatrlCJ. Ho,,... Noftmller II, I.. "61 _. ---r.:.~,~O~"' .. ...,,.m•, 2tl IUlft, ,.... -..i • ~ llftffM ec· -
tl'on from the Mars Candy Co .• which wllh burl•• 1" , ... "· Antllony 8y: 0.-A. CIS\ ... ft91\em, " VS"' "--"-~ .., _ _.. _......_., ~· Cemetery. S...vl~ under UM 8ell1 Pre&ld9tll Solille I, .._,., Gaflfonlla cdOf~;.,-......... , PUBLIC NOTICE has overtaken Hershey in sales in the B••11<t•01>-$mllt1 a. Tuthill w .. 1c1111 T1111 ,..._. -flied "'"' ,,. .,..ll•l•ll St•All•n .. 11,.0 • ,,,, N• .w.,... .. _......,841 wni.u" __________ __, fJ 'ted St t Cll•P•I Mortu•rv of Cotto Mu• CClltflll' C .. rll Of Or~ '°""'" .. .. .. ... I ,,... ... ..... "'"""'"""'"Dy Plc:TITIOUS •UllMCU DI a es. ~·371. Movembef 14, ,.._ llllllclUle, Hunlln•t•n 9HCll, .:. Colle.:.... llftlwY Of*lct end NAMa STATllMaNT "It's a matter of being concerned ,.,.,.,. eai1ffnlla~ 1t _. .,. ~ wtlfl "" -Tll• fo11ow1no __. is d<J;no
about the financial viability of the HARRY O'H~;~~·: ........... e: _N:v~'~T~~.c::' DellY~ TYll'!n~~= P•-Vltele, vi.:~-:::..."':'~~'!.ct n~s:.:EH YU ACUPUNCTU
company ... while at the same time Toro. c. ...., former1v •resident 0 Tiii• """"' '' ,_.__ .,, • ...,,........,..,.,.......,,....,, ••• CENTER. uo e 11111 StrHt, A
be1·n r1 a r1ood cornorate citizen." Cos•• M9 .. , u . ,, .. -••••°"Nov PUB.UC NOTICE ~"~'· Tlla ..... ., DIActon ot u. Coot• 22•.CosteM9s.e,c.111om1.•»,1 ,. ,., >' ember u, 19'0 ~lot' kl retlre"""I M ....... $. Sl!Va ........ .,_.._ ...-..let S said Hercospokesman Dan Kamal h•o 1>eon 1 ... proprietor 01 o Moir TllK .......,. -meet •'"' ----·-• -,_...... .,. C.
11•"0 w.,, ""· 1901 0
Some townspeople see 1t dif· Weldl"I In Cosio M9M, ca. for 27 PICTITtOUl•UatMHI c:-tyOlortl.ifOr .. c.oidYOft0c-r~•c::":.::'!:.wiu.-=='°~=lJS.West
i tHfl. H• 11 sur'Vived bY hit wll• JIAMaSTATllMllNT .... t4 ,_ ... ---te trll i. T l6 --.._ ferently. TMlm• •• -o.MI• ol •• T04'0. ca TM ""-1"9 ---.,. ...... • ...... .....,..... .. --··~ II -.. -~ -a Qrendenlld!W\. ..... lui Wltl .. ~I-: ~ 0-... QMt Oollty ~ =~..: r<:::::-.:::= = dMduola.... Wtll Yu • 1191don T~,.......,,...,tt. l•ot OLO TtMa ~HOTO, Ml MorlM ...... 11,1 .. IS,O.C.Z.t• ....... HlaMlaMtl • ., tlle Caal• M•H Tlllt --wos filed wltlt "HERSHEY WAB NICE until I ... CNpet of M<c:ormklt __...... Avtnu• ...... lllOftcl, Colllornle
about 10 years ago. Now they have L ....... 1411~ woth .-1or 8111 c~v 9*i.0.,.,. Jom•• Pourlll•r. m PU8UC N°"CE ~~~_:n...:;i:..= ~:"V:~".o".'1:, °'-'°""'' . . h ' 1, d offkl•h.,.. lnt.....-i wlll lol6-•I-" ____________ 1...,. ..,. ._....1 .,...11,_ prw1er1DM ft
dollar Signs ln t e1r eyes, Sal fl Toro t="' McCorml<k Luoonl• SlrMI, N1w .. r\ 1 .. clt, $UNlllOllC:OU•TOPTMa ......._.., ~loftea of ae1c1 Publl....0 Or ... CHs1 Oo•IY Pl
lifelong resident Kris Barker. 22. who M<><tuerv. 14111se11.-•u. cau=:~.u ,._.,, .. r. m STATaCMtCAU"°""'"PCNt ~. "°• 11,u.o.c.2.•,••
mentioned the Cocoa Inn closing "'"•IFFElll Luoonl• s1roe1. Hewper1 ... c1t. TM&~~=o• 09 .... ~~;~E
"They'll do for themselves first, c.~·.:.!o~~~c".e: •• ::':!:~~ ca.:,.~oi:.=11eon1Mtectllf6fllr1· oaoHTOUtOWCAuu 90&lllOOFD1HCT011S
then do for the people ' Novemb<lr is. 1uo Survlv.d llY c11v1dvol FORCMAMO&OflM.Ulla ~THIT:~o~~~~ douqhlorr GoDy PaulHn, J-Jenkins R-' J-,._.,*' In 1119 M9tlltr ol 1M AAl!kAtlon of •nd ..on Frenll F'l .. fl ... ell ol Min. This SIOl-1 ..,05 111..S willl 1..,. ETHEL MAlllAHN McGREGOlt PullllllleclCJr .... Conl o.lly Piiat,
' l d' nuPOlll, MlnMaot• •1111 '°" Kl ... , '°""'' ,, .... of Oron119 County Oft WALKER FcwClwftllotGI Ho-. ......11." 11111 ....... Sett e I Pftofl•r •no 1 gron«lll-~11-HOftm-14, ltlO. Tiie 1aa11c1t1011 ol ETHEL
1 •nd """" Pfe•t"'r elso of Ml--1111, fl14"11 MA It I ANN McGREGOR WALKE II tor PUBUC NOTICE Monn•M>I• H• wes • corpe«ler o PublltNd Or-C:0.11 OoHy ll'llot. <~ "' -· lle"lng *" filed lft LO<•I U"lon • , .... He .... , born on Nov. 11. u. o.c. J, '· IMO •s....O c:oun, -II -•no from MIO op. Mey1,1m1nGor,.,,.ny.H••rrlve<lin pllc1tlon 111, ETHEL MAlllANl'I Banks' merger
Very! L. Mortenseft, chaJrman of
the board of California Coastal Bank,
and Douglas E. Patty, chairman of
the board of Herltage Bank, an·
nounced that the litigation instituted
in connection with the proposed
merger of California Coastal into and
with Heritage has been settled on
amicable terms
The board of directors of both
banks have agreed to atnend the
merger agreement.
The amended agreement provides
that each share of California Coastal
will be converted into shares of
Heritage Bank having a trading
value of $11 S2 based on lbe meaa bid
and ask-in NASDAQ . prices for a
tour-week period prior to the close of
the merger.
This ~ttlement includes Califom1a
Coastal's permission for Heritage
Bank. subject to its board of dlrec·
tors' approval, to issue up to a 20 per-
c e o t stock dividend to its
shareholders prior to consummation
f
of the proPQsed merger. Rob~rt D Hoyt. president of
Heritage Bank, said , "senior
management at Heritage was very
pleased that a settlement had been
reached with Calafornia Coastal
Banlc " He added that, "Heritage
was excited about entering the San
Diego market area with the re·
sources of a $190 million independent
bank ..
llllt country In O.Cemb9r of 1'~ H• PUBLIC NOTICE McGREGOR WALl<Ell ha fllod en Uved In Callloml• fO< 11 ~rs. H• wH eppttcotJOn prcipo&lllQ lf\Ol lier NlrTM •me"1beroftNHe11tunoSoclelyend lie clla119eO to JODIE JENE
prov•lf _.r•1oi will oe Nld •I w• fl1CTITIOU$ aUllNaH WALK l!R. MAMll ITATIMalfT Now, .........,,, II ta ..,.f'lftl' orci.rod TAYLOlll Th• foll-Int perton• •r• doing •nd dlni<leel. 111111 •II.,.,_ lntlrffl· HAl£L p tHAPPV> TAYL.OR,•9• l>UslMU .. 1 eO lnMIO""'l*dO•PllHrllefor•tlM\ IA, Fl"I C<MnmuMY V111-. Colum GARCIA COMPUTING SE RV IC&, CClllrl '" 0epert,,....1 3 on !he ftll cley oin, on10 •nd tormer rHldent of 16071 Solldr• LMll. HYftllngton llfKll. of Doce,_, ltlO, at 11:00 o'CloO L•QUNI 8MCh, c. SM ,, wrv•ved DY C•llfO ...... ,_.. A.M .. of Mid dOy "' _.. , ..... .,., ntr Wiil G W Thomes of Gol-, 01110 l.•"Y Gat,11, 1'011 Se-• u ..... the •1191.Ution for ,...,.._ of ,,.,,..
1no 11o0enca Nl rnomu of Col4'mbul Huntl~ llHdl. C.llfoml•.,..., -.ild not I» ora.nt9d. 01110. 1 9ren0cnlldren •nd I grHt Tiii• ~ 11 conduct.a by an In-11 la 1ur11Wr orctend lholll • <opy ol ~r•nd ""'-SI-. w" pr«ed9<1 In Olvldull lllla Or-De ll"bll"*I In 11\e Or-~•1n lly ,,., ~ £fr1 TeylM lMTY Gerelo Co.ti Oelly Pilot, o ,,.,.,,._.., of Grevoioe Mrvoces .. 111 be MICI on Tiiis 1ta'""9l'll w11 1119cl w1111 Ille 99neret clrcul .. IOl'I, prlntacl '" M id Tllu,.oev. Novemll•r JO, ltlO •t Covnty o.nt of Or•no-Gouftty a.n c.ounty, •I •-I onu -" -•tor
J ooPM 111 Metrou •-Y. AnoM•m Nove,..-7, ltlO io..r succ•"lve -••prior to"'° ooy C• wolll Dr Artnur T•Mienstey ot· "'°'"' of Moel '-11111 ft"•""I Ptlbllllled Or..,.. C.0011 Doll• f>llet, Ootecl 11111 JR! det of N~t>er,
McCOllMICll MORTUAIUES •
Laguna Beach
494·941S
Laguna Halls
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
.C95·1776
.... 10. UWf'--..T. OllYI
Mortuary• Cemetery
Cretretory
1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
540-5554
P'IHCI HOTHIH llUllOADWAt MOITUilt 110 Broadway
Costa Mesa 642·9150
IA&.ftllKROt4
SMITH l TUTHtU.
WUTC~cMAm .C27 E 17th SI
Costa Mesa
&t&-9371
HOV, 11, ll.U. ~ t.1• 451240 1'90
Pv"aUC NOTICE
.• Those clowns being blown to bits in recent
, . Jack·in·the-Box restaurant commercials
are "alive and well" in a San Diego
storage lot. The ·chain moved the clowns
from most of its establishments na-
tionwide in an effort to change its image.
: Flµol-, Genentech.. reach pact
Fluor Corp., Irvine, and
Genentech Inc. have siarned a
cooperative aarreement to ex· ~ore the process-development
~nglneering' necessary for de·
slgnlq and constructing large-
1cale manufacturing facilities
based oo Genentech 's geneti!-
eneineerine technology.
The announcement was
made Monday by J .R. Fluor,
chairman or Fluor Corp
Under the agreement, Genen-
tech and Fluor personnel will
mutually assess bioengineering
developments arising from
Genentech's technology. Fluor
bas aueed to contribute its ex-p e r tf s e in the fields of
engineering design and con·
s tru c lion of c h e m ica l ,
pharmaceutical. and related
plants.
Fluor also has agreed to pro-
vide Genentech information con·
·$50.000 to $500,000
· INCOME PROPER1Y SECONDS
• l•tne•t -•v p11yment
•IDC-
• · •C-•nctal
·•-WetttMil
• Weekly co••l ... •ta
• Moa .. lv f11Mllae•
• 6 man .. • to S 11-,..
• So.them Calllorna.
l • •'11 IC f 11Ur
loan Information •ervlce
I ., • 111 ltnM·rtn~ n .. ed•
cernlng the economics of new
plant construction, including
estimates of capital and operat·
ing costs, market potential and
financing alternatives.
Genentech, headquartered in
South San Francisco, was
founded in 1976. The firm de-
velops and produces products
using genetically engineered
microorganis ms ~reated by
means of r ecombinant DNA
technology, or "gene splicing."
(714) 75SM515
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Recovery signs
l.Dan demand inronsistent uilh ~
NEW YORK tAP> -RJ1ln1
Interest ratea haven't •lowed
bu1tne. borrowin1. but tome
oconoPU.Ju warn that this time the traditional alp or reeovery
11 a bad omen.
Jn an effort ~ dJ1coura1e the
bOrrowiftl by banb that has
been ~ontrlbuting to lnfiatton,
the Federal Raerve Board late
last week raleed the Interest rate on ill loans to financial
lnatltutlans by one percentaare
point, to 12 percent. Many major
banks oa Monday raised their
prime lendln1 rates three-
quarters of a point t.o 16.25 per. cent.
The Fed reported that com-
mercial and Industrial loans on
the books of the nation's lar1e
banks rose $2.78 billion in the
first week of November, bring.
ing the total to $164.468 billlon.
For the previous week, a aaln of
$4 billion was recorded ln the
loan total.
ECONOMISTS said the in·
e r-eased borrowinR mll(ht reflect, in part, the need to
finance an excess of tnventories
in stores and automobile • dealerships.
"The Important thing is that
certainly economic fundamen-
tals do not Indicate there should
be sharp growth in loan demand.
It's not consistent with what
looks to be a general slowing of
economic growth," said Donald
Maude, an economist for Merril
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith
Inc .
( NEWSANAf;YSI J
David Jones, an economist
with Aubrey G. Lanston & Co.,
said the heavy borrowing could
reflect bµaJness weakness,
rather than st~neth.
.IONES N&l'ED that the Com·
merce Department ball reported
that retail sales fell 0.1 percent
In October, while the Fed report-
ed tbat industrial production
rose 1.6 percent in the same
month.
Jones and Maude said
merchants and auto. dealers
could be borrowlni heavily to
flnance excessive inventories.
The Fed Increased its intefoest
rate to ban.ks after borrowing
roH to an avera1e or tt.tU
billion ln the week ended last
Wednesday, up from Sl.8"
bilUon the previous week. In the
week ended Oct. 8, the Ii~
had been $J.248 billion.
That increase resulted in ~n
from the fact the Fed was Oft'tr-
ln1 a relaUve bar1aln by ktf P;
ini the dlteount rate -the r.wte lt charaes on lOans to banu --, at
11 percent while banks Y..tre
paying well over that to borrow
money from each other.
The Fed also SI.Id it WU lm·
poam, a 2 perceqt surcbarce on
any larae bank that frequcolly
tums t.o ft for loans.
Despite efforts by the Fed
over recent months to combat
inflaton by UmiUn1 the al1)0(ml
or money available to buslnelMs
and consumers, the money SUl>P-
ly has grown far more rapklly
than it planned.
C~mputer crime
ranipant worldwide
NEW YORK CAP> -Computer crime la runnln1 rampant
worldwide, according to a management information-systems
publication.
MIS Week reports that American losses from computer crime
is estimated conser1ativety at $100 million yearly, while the
figure worldwide is $300 million a year.
The two most clearly defmed crimes involve ateallna com·
puler time and altering information stored ln a computer.
In Canada, computer crime is so new that Canadian laws do
not yet cover it, say9 the publication.
Over The Counter
MASO U1ffRcp •
OOWMI
.~ UpPct.··1 : ,:; 8: it;,
.. , ... Up tt) + 1~ Up •. ,
•"'Up21.0
+"'Up ...
+ ""' Up lt.1 + '"' Up lt.1
• ~ Up " .. :'E ~ r,:1 ! , t: ,J1
+ ""' Up ,.., + 1\lt Up ""1 +1 Up IS.• + 1~ UO IU
+ '"' Up 14.5 + \It Up IU + Va Up ,..,
+1 UplU +7S Up 1U + "' Up IU + "' Up t2.S + 14 Up 12.J + IV. Up 12.S
u.t Ola P'ct. M -~ Off Sl.O 2~ -v. Off "·o 17Yt -J Off IU 2A -• Off ... ,
27·1' -"'i IU G -6 12.S 2 -... 11.1 2 -\jr It.I
M -fir 10.• •v. -Vt 10.0 2"-14 Off 10.0 22Vt -2Vt Off 10.0
t\lo -"' Off 10.0 ,.,., --Off t .7 --v.E •.s N -t t.J Z2 -214 t.J IM -114 Off t.I J ,.,. -"' Off 9.0 ,.. -14 Off L7 1614 -1Vt ort a.s ~-1.i.Off LI ~-"ELI ~-14 .., •w. -~ u
MUTUAL FUNDS
NYSE OMPOSI'EE TRANSACTIONS BofA president
heads 'bank
of last resort'
SAN Jl'Jl.\NCISCO (AP) -Wlth some countriet in
de.ntar ot clefault1DI on their lnterilaUonat lean.a. ~
Amertcaa blinker It sqppln• In to be..S \be baok ol lut .
IOrt, die bank tliat lenda to tbe world'a 0 'buktt c .......
Tbe chOlce ol Alden W. Clamen, lbt preeldent and cllld eMCUUve officer of tbe Bank ol America, to bead -the
,. World 8ailk comet at a time wben coacerm are 1rowaa1
over the ablUty ol many countries to pay tbelr Joau
CllUMO, lo an IDtei"Yt.W It hia of. nee here, Mid he expedl IOIDe COUD· tTlet wtll not be able to pay thetr
debt.a, but that no eataatropbe WH
br•wtnc .. for the major International
banka. And be 11ld e ytW be wtlUDt to make ao.r. to countries that could bor·
row nowhere elJe.
• In Ida 31 years at Bank or America,
Clausen worked bis way up from a tt85-a·rooatb clerk countlnc cub lo a
Hult to become tbe$790,0CJO.a.year boa cu.UH• or the .orld's lat"&est commercial bank. The World job will pay just m.ooo. . (
THE WOllLD BANK LAST year lent more lban 1,\.2
billi~n to developlna countriet, with the loans tol.Q"\o
build roads, schools and industries and finance a wide
ranee of other project.a including the search for new
enerey BUPP.lies ln poor natlona strapped by soarina
forelcn ol1 billl.
Altboueh Bank of America's international operations
have expanded dramatically since be became presidn(in
1969, Clausen says the bank's lending abroad baa been
marked by "conservatism."
At the World Bank, however, Clausen said be will be
deallnc with some of the "basket cases," countries "that
are not mtitled to credit frosp the commercial sector .
.. FOR THOSB COUNTRIES, a World Bank and ih·
ternaUonal financial Institutions th;it can step in tite
needed. 'There needs to be an Inlet national Monetary
Fund',. to lend money to nations whose balance of pay.
menta are in the red, Clausen said. •
"For development and restructuring, you need the
World Bank" and Its affiliates who \!an step in wb~ 'la
country ii reaUy behind the 1oal posts and needs to borrow
for a very lon1 time at a marlioal interest rate in order to
keep the patient alive and effect the cure,·· Clausen said. ,
The IMF generally ltllda to countries whose crecUt•lif
not in good position. baa/a reasonable chance of reco'Jer·
ing. The World Bank; with 138 member countries, lends
mostly to countrfee that cannot qualify for IMF loans.
THE PROBLEMS OP TllE world's poor countrits
have Increased since oil prlcea first sbot up in 1973'1 1974, and worsened last year when oil prices leaped ag
The oU·imPortine develoPlnl countries are expected
spend $50 bUlioo for petroleum th.la year, up from $7 billl
in 1973, and may face a $100 bWlon·a·year oil bill by •
accordlqtoa World Bank projection. '.
Tbe mount1n1 oil payments have eaten into export +· venuet tbe9e countries -•IDOlll them, India and Bram] r-
use to ftnanee dome.tic development procrams and rep4y
loaoa to Western banks.
s1.wa '" riw s,,. ......
Mltal .ttfork• Did
HEW YORK !API "°"· I'
TodeJ.
M4 -, ...
127 10
W~T ~MEX DID
NEW y()R( !API "°"· 17
Pre¥, ii. ... ., . ... U1 •
PrW
6.-, )M
llS -161 st •
HEW YORK !AP) -HMcly & H.,"l"Mn,
lllver Jlt.SOO, upto.OI
E11.11elll•rd sll,.er 111 00, vp 50.tt.
'•IM'tUIM t lhff llt .U, 11P SO 014 ,
GoW q ... ; at fo11• -
.,,,.~rrw.
S.lectod ..,-IOgolcl prices \OINt: U...: l'IW'llHIO tlak\e .. IS. 70, off IUO. ~: .,.,_ llldllll .. It.JO, Off It.JO
l'Mts: ....,_ 1111ne ..-.... ot1 "'"' Pr..-..rt; fllllfll '41US, off 11..lS,
z.rkll: -•ti-llalng 1611 IO tid, off It.JO; .. ,. 00 tilled
M..., 6 "-t Mlllne PtlC.e 161UO, off suo .
• .......,.., MHlne price" u JO, oll ff.JO •
......... : ·-ic.sllld ,,iu l61J .... ofl
SUI . .
,. . . . . ..
. ,.
{ . ~
I
... -_ . ./
LIGHTS
,-
/ ,
L.OWERED TAR & NICOTINE
Soft pack or new Fllf'lblt box.
, ,
II • I
' .
I •
poteauu project o .. r to the
Wratber Corporation for
marktdnl. Sc..,.. eClded th.at the DeW
LUde would be .. involved with mon PeoPle .. aDd tbie •tar wioWd
be !DOY.a 'from her put rural en~ to a more urt>an;.
~ awaittQf pOaidble '* ~
1.au1e n. Selulill9r -.. ldl writ· liai ,..,... ol • ,...... Colt&
Me1aa &rte Jl'relwald, u..a't wanU.C lor Wort.
B•ll'J few .-... u.ey neel•e a paebp from allea•o. ID tt ls
the bale oatliM for the popU1ar
dayttme TV lbow, ''The Yogq
iaDd Reltleli ...
• ...,.., "" ... plot llDe and
Magician's Mecca
Whatever a 5-year-old can imagine in
magic, you can buy her&
NP YORK <AP> -Want to
dffa,..,_ IOIDeODe Wttbout fac·
la1 a murder cbar••T Or m~ ju1t mate a frtend
'f ID a puft. ohmolre!
All mlUlual 1bop bidden away
OD tbe 1tla floor of a mld· E iitta •k1'tr•Pfr ta ~ to ID· Par balf.·a-ctatmy, Taaaea'• Mapcal aup,;
.... JM ... ,..~ • ....,_ 1-4 die worta *" il*IMM~ ....... Mil
...... ~ ........ r aDcf thrillar ,... .. ~.
mapelail to bitol in aufftdent •Ill• to tuwort a bulineu lib TamMD'~ Ferrero uplal.DI.
A• tbiDp stancr. Ferrero and
bl9 partM:r, Ton)' 8Pln•. Died
liot ~ abciut itar:YID.I, I
ANNBN'8 &SGllTB&I
more ttiU a IDWloD dollari in
11 ... eeeb·,...~'•t ~lllbel IOO biDob OD m.ICIC maafaetunn
manr ol t!Mi '9'fte. ilt Mlll,
eu1tom·mak• UJ Ill.st• a prof ... lanal mapelan alpt ..... -two..,.,... brim. ................... ~., ... ......,.11 ...... ~ I••...., 9tafl aitlat.t to U· ·
ltllll?:l'r dlii ~-.. INMlea· d9M ,......_It lafamom.
••T••* .. '• 11 tbe world'• ~ ..-.r OI ma,lc," ht· nro ..,. •·a lea ia ,...., ........ .. ,..... ....... ..
"&.l.~a~:....S·
.. ~ ........ ·fdelil ~
.... .,.... .... --'9ltlllt •· 1Jdt th• Brtadwa1 play ........... ,, n,:
we make a script for it," Hid
Schaefer. Beeau1e of tbe
.nee.Uy to work ahead cm a -aoap opera, Schaefer COUid tell
you What'• tit •tore for cbarae·
ten lib Nickl, Gres and ~
over the nut month Qr so.
But be won't. "Eveeybody
want. to know what'• llappea.
lq, •• N1d Scbaeler. nodDa tbat
more than 70 million ~le
watch ll09P operu oe a ~Yell weekday.
So Schaefer ll keeptnc qUlet.
"You• have to keep them
(viewers) 1oinl from day to d&)'
and then from Fdday 'til Mcn-
day.'' be ainlled ... And then tt'a
on to more amorous adven-tures."
..
Newport Beach
resident Bob
Schaefer, who
co.wrote 188 of
the final 200
'Lassie' episodes,
thinks its possible-
for the collie .
to make a comeback.
:
Becaime ~ their Iona · alaocla·
tll>n, SCbaef er and FrelwaJd
don•t have to 1pend mucb Ume
to•etMr to oraanlse the IOap'• ICriptl. •
"He'll take hi.a part and I'll
take Ill)' part," said ScbHfer.
.. ID tbe ola days we bad HJoiD·
ID• oali!ij'and aat and •tared at each~
••we•v• been toaetber 30
yean. I tblnk we're the loftleat consecutive runninc team
<P•UH) . . · . atUl llvin1," be
Joked.
Now, tbey almply take their outlinel bome, work separately
and aet to1ether • few day1
later to dllema tbei.r work.
•'We've bad a pretty aood
meJd tolether.'' Hid Schaefer, •'but we are pretty crltlcal
becawie both our names ao on
the tbiDI aiKl we abue the credit or the bfaiiie'"}"
• Tbe Schaefer/Freiwald team
baa more than 570 credits to
their name lncludln• epbo4es
of "Maverlcfi:," .. The Beverly
Hillbillies," "77 Suuet strip," "Conflict,". and a alew of westerns like • 'Hopalon1
Cassidy," ''11le IA>ne Ranier"
and ••Annie Oakle)'.''
They've allO teamed up on a
number of feature film• and aoap, includiq one that ll now
in the bands ot Stevie Woader
for conalderation. The Ont script ("Duran10
Kid") wu sold in 1.Nt, and the
duo moved on to wort for Gene
Autry and Warner Brotbert. Tbey
I bandied the scripts for "Laal'" from 1961to um.
• A brief bullneu venture toot
t' the team O\lt ot action a couple of a )'HfS back. / ~ "What we are now l• freelance I writers," said Schaefer, who
I bolds a full-tlme J(\I> with
Burklwt'• ~ Rouse Realty in Cotta M&a 1'ben be llD't at j home with bis family or out
playiq the Irvine Cout Country
Club li)lf eoune.
'"l'bere aren't many (freelan·
een) makin1 a lot of money lo
TV.'' aaid Schaefer, retenm, to
the rlJe ol la-boclle WrtUq ltatfa for mcist lhowl.
''And we tot tyPect mto Mlmal
stories, delplte au ... bad done,
but that'• part of tb4l bustn._,"
be added.
"It wasn't eu~. There were very few wrlten wbo could
write for "Laaale" ... but we
bad a ..-eat rapport wtth the people."
"It wu the m01t rewardlnl.''
aald Schaefer. "It'• been
translated in every country YoU
can DaJDe."
Even if the updated Lulle ·
concept isn't purchased,
Schaefer •uaaested be ll more
than cmtent with bla recent en-
try in10 the world of real eatat.. "It'• really not all tha\ much
of a cbanae in that on the
"Lauie" 1bow, I always ecn-1ldered what we were ae1llq wu America," be 1ald. "Now,
literally, that's what I'm doiq."
Calligraphy: in
pursuit of the
trace of the brush
·z.~~
., . . .
-.
...
Look over the evenlna clau schedule of a com-
munity college, the art shelf at your local library or the
want-ad section of a newspaper, and you're likely tC)
find a book or a penon to teach you calli1rapby. the
fine art ol writlna. Westernen have redlacovered calli·
grapby after centuries of ita eclipse lD favor of the
speed and economy of mechanical type.
Not ao in the East, where the earliest form of script
appears on Cbi0 eae oracle bones and bromes dating
from the 15th century B.C., and Where calligraphy baa
been honored ever Shice aa tM bt,...... form al art -
above painfiila, sc~ ad ceramics.
I THE SID'l'll80NIAN'S Freer Gallery of Art in Washington. D.C., is one. OI thi flnt museums in the
Weatem world to seek out Chinese calliarapby for ita
collection. A recent acquilitiOD included 12 scroU.
created by some of China'• most revered muten as
long ago aa the 4th centmy.
"'lbe art of calligraphy developed because Chinese
writing itself is pic~ue, and t.be flexible bl'Ulb is
the perfect tool for it,' Dr. Shen Fu, the Freer's
cur•to!' of Chinese art, eaplains. Western calligapby
bas a different look to it, be notes, not just because the
forms are different, but because it ls created with a
bard-pointed pen.
In China, today's brusbes -atlll baalcally the same
as those used 2,400 years ago to create the earllelt
types of written script -are made of natural hair.
Sheep hair is used to make soft brushes, which produce
a flowing, leisurely line. Stiffer bruabea, belt suited for
rapid writing, are made from 1oat.or badler hair.
A single brush can write thick, thin, curved or
angular strokes. It is resWent enouah to trammit the
slightest movement of the caW1rapber'1 body and
venatile enough tq produce any one of the aix major
stylea ol Chinese writing.
MAS'l'E&Y OF CAU.IGllAPJIY comea to a lifted
few after years of concentrated practice. Fu, a. is a
painter and calligrapher u well as a act.Olar. H1I boc>t. "The Trace of the Brush," is the deftnlUve wort in
English about Chinese calligraphy. , ·
Fu vividly rememben bi.I fint Uperiencea u a
student ol wrttina dwi.nl bi.I chlldMOd ,m China. "The
process begins in the early O'Adel of primary school,
when a child la only six or seven. I remember.the black
spota all over my hands u I praCtiCed compc>!lltlon,"
Fu says. Students receive boob wtth standard charac-
ten = in red. U1in1 black ink on their brushes, the c · must try to cover each stroke of the net
character perfectlf, with correct tirush movement,
•At first your hand II Dot steady. and your aldll la
not ao aood.'' Fu says. "Oi'8duallY1 you achieve the
contrOl and learn the tecbmci.-fordlffenntatr'ok-."
' ID ~c every chllCl in CtiUia tallel at 1Uat 1ti yean ol c aphy lD idlOOI, ~today. Tllli .,_
Vides bale triinlftl, but Dot to a.tome • master.~ reallyJm~'~an UoW m cO&Jeae,
wben serious student.,. Work ]Dde~tl)' With: calll·
•rapben ~their own cbooltiil .
WHILE REIAnYELY few piO,ple pr:acuce calll: ar•PtiY M an art or ae~ punuR, ftM ~bl ···~ been an lmpo~·-part of 4al&J ..... ru llQI. "Wbm a ChineM dodOr wrltel a ~. m it :.tll1 reqUlred by tradition to lmertl>t; It Wltb ~reftMcl
brush~." • •
"My uncle wH a doctOr ilDd ID1 ,.....atMr
fOttedblmto prac11.e ·~ """"~u.n; ••J WU f'ecnd!et to UaiR lltl mea, W ldi fM
for blm."~ Ink 11-.~-, • form to be Yeriled ad ._. wlJa.; w lltlt-
mldillWl me. "We bed la • ea1 ,,.,, a #Ir art:: aadoUr .... ••pert ,,...
pt.IJ
ALIO AftBNDING from the ~atv ll'OUP wen Allan and Jane
IUchmGOd; Jeann. Clark: houle
manapr Dlane Al11ar•. Linda Darb1 Uiil leek Holmea. Jeanne • celebrated her blrtbday at the •
Ebltnt lad WU pnHnted with ,a
oak• ln honor of the occulon.
.rac\, wtM. la • muter carpenter
and the ..... t ulpper attended wearlnl bl• colorful trademark -red, eocb. an earrtna and a atoclt· ma cap.
It was cboaen to
repreaent t.he Ch•n· cellor•a Club 'because, a apotesman aakt, tbe un·
lvenlty II a "l\W'd.lan of
th• accumulated kaowl~ ol our eocie· t •• ind eontributiom to ~. 1c:biool ensun that the
.. unendln&" process of
u1tn1 and 1.atberlna
knowled1e will be
perpetuated for lnflnity.
Eilbty-two members
and SUMta attended the rectptlon, which was
part of a schedule of es·
clualve activities hosted
by CllaaeellN Dulel G.
ANrtdl for memben of
the club. ,
It ••• held in the dance IWdio on tbe cam·
pus, a perfect place for
an evening affalr
The next production for the
theater IJ'OUp, which performs OD·
the •taae ol the former Monte Vil· ta School ln Costa Meaa, la
''Amabl and the Nlpt Vllltora."
Tbe one-aet Cbdatmu opera by
Glen-Carlo MenoW la already in
produc:tloD and will open Nov. 28.
You can call at-5110 from 1 to 5
p.m . week days to order ticket.a.
~------------------------""""' because the gleam of the
is jump-out-of :-the-cake-time
new age doesn 't fit any part of your body . . . sense of humor
goes underground ...
Birthdays are getting a terrible reputation
in thl.s country. Six of them have already been
declared "milestones'' and several others are
• under consideration.
I'm not really sure what this means except1
when you hit a "milestone" your mlnd shift.a
1ean, your new age doesn't fit any part of your
body, and your sense of humor eoes under·
1....:. ' around . ., WW m-. JIM UdDk ol WI wu a letter
jftoisa JiJi named Cll•rlotte who coa to colleae
in Vtrginja. She wrote to ask why everyone thou&ht her 11th birthday WU IUCb a bit deal.
Bet frieDda treated it like a timetable. Accord·
ing to them, age 18 la Jump~..of·tbe-eake time.
..Time to buy-beer, watch X·Tated movies and
swine whether she wanted to or not. As every·
bodypolntedout, "You'reonlyllonee.'~
I think I've bit most of the milestones and
I've always been lntril\led with the myth sur·
roundinl them vs. the reality.
Take age 21. Everyone said, "It'• the belt
year of your life." 'lbe reality: I badn't finished
college, didn't know where the tu1Uoa was com-
in1 from and according to my vocational
CUidanee ~res bad a big future in llcenae
i platee. My wladom tooth wu comina in weird, I
waa the only &lrl in North America who wasn't
1olp_1 ate.dy, and my mother said you're not
1e~ any younaer.
·At Ne 30 I wu told, "These are the years yoU.·u took back on and want to relive." Tbe re-all(J: My has band worked from dayllpt until
datt and the baby wore ort.boPedlc shoes that
COAt SM a pair and were outirown every three
j ~o-worker
weeks. I got a water beater for my birthday. 1
wanted loq ftnlemails and a dinner rinc . I
saved money for three moathl to have my bair
froeted.
Aae 40: Everyone aald, "Next week you
won't eTen remember hittina 40.'' The reality:
These stupJd remarks were made by well-
meanlnl people who were only 31 at the time. I
remembered them every time I saw my
mother's bands comJn1 out ol my coat sleeves.
Every time I used Erue for my wrinkles and
my entire face dlaappeancl. I remembered
every time I ate lunch and had to rest while it
digested. I remembered every time 1 apent $30
to cover God'• froetin1. Ace 50: Everyone aald, "You got it made.
Just sit back, relu, and enjoy lt." Tbe reality:
We Installed a revolvfna door in the house for
the returnlnC children. The dress I could afford
now only came in 1t1e 10. And the idiot who
said, "You're only 50 once," didn't know about
women.
I have not hit the I.alt "milestone" yet,
Charlotte, but I'm like you. Don't tell me what
to expeet. Jult let me be aurprtsed.
under Why ~ ~ten up your lifestyle?
Dramatically nnprM the way you look, feel and
appeal to others. It's en!OWable and easier than
ever through A>wers world famous expertise.
can today for the ~lal HolldaY course scheOOle. That~ the Si)lrlf'
llAMI #IW -Oil# AIM
1 . ._., Dljy . z. = ...• .,..,.,,... .....
3. =.,.., .. .., .... ,...., .....
4.,SM'f:'~r==~T--5. 1M tlll liat ...._. . I lydllla ..... ,.... ........ I .... Trteitll 0... ..._.'l_. .....
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11 ............ ...
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4tindon al U. 0....,. O!Mlt)' ftlltarino.Jc MY· • .......... c patraa, t.bl WCNMD't com·
mltteill bout aed d•alr•• .,... boDored wtt.b ~._....Md Wine llt U-. bome OI Dr. ud Mn.
I Daaiel Aklrteh, Jr.
41*1di, who 11 cbanHUor of UCJ, •u de· tatnect a& a m~ lA Ohio 10 tm 1'119 Jean
sreeted tbe suettl Jt lbelr ))over ..... ltolM. Attendlnl tbe .party wm Joane and Lyle Evans <abie'a pre1ldent ot tM .odety), Bob and
, Carmen Weber (ahe'a cb.ahinan of the woma'1
commiU..>, Mr. and Mn. Richard Bn•tt.Dd,
Fred aDd Eva Scbnetder and JMn T~.
Abo enjoylq th• party .. ,. Kttt1 ad
Arthur Knox, Nancy and Frank Polcb (IM wu
the ~.r'• bOlpjtallty chairman>. JGM act
Elizabet.I $tabr, Loll and DaTkl TUWer, Marse
and K.alJa&b ~11.tlch and Luey. <fa.JDOr, who
ia eJeeutive secret.ry and a foundtn1 member of the IOdety.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11
BJ SYDNEY OMAU
~~~(Mar.31-Apr.19): Take.lnttlativeln a re 1 proeram. Make necessary con-tact~. stress independence and hi1hH1ht
original approach. You 'aet what you want
throu1fl personal appearances and appeals. Aquari~. Scorpio and Leo natives n1ure promlnedlly. 1
TAuavs <Apr. 20-May 20>: Queat.ion.s pre-vioualy coo.sidered "tnd.lacreet" will now be
readily answered. Know it.and proceed accord·
ingly. Youcanexpectchanae. travelopportUll!ty,
special messages and a variety of semat.ion.s.
Letharg)' is tossed aside and you "come alive."
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Accent on
money, family reunion, obtaininc 1peclal Items
wbicb ~din beautifylna surround.tnla. TaUl'UI,
Libra, Scorpio penom ftiure promlnmU,. A
wish comes true. Take care beeame you let what
you request. Someone is planntnc to borrow
money from you.
CANCEa (June 21-July 22): DllpJay ablllty
to perfect techniques, to strea~,. and to handle added reapomtbWty. ll·
sues ch'1lf!llCe ud will be ln In your
respome .. Be coa.lldent, but dml't promlle more
tha.Q can be delivered. Pisces, Vireo natives
play key roles.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): Good moon Upect
coincides now with distance, spirituality,
publishing, communication and ability to brlq
Iona-range ambition into sharp, clear focus.
You're going .to be buy. Cancer, Capricorn
-natives play significant roles.
naoo <Aac. 2a-Sept. 22>: Stad~ 1.eo
met1a1e for lmPortant blnt. Emphall1 on
ftniabtna what you start, loold.nl beyoed the Im·
mediate and perceivina penonal potential. You
now are able to d~lve beneath tbe 1urface and
come up wttb valid, viable and profitable
answers.
LIBBA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Give otben a chance to state pollclet and express views,
Your role now should be that o«. keen, shrewd o~rver. Be aware of leaal rilbts, permlaalom.
Accent on joint efforts, brtnatn& together those
with oppoelne views. Partner or mate ftpns
promibeotly.
sc<>aPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Focus on
direction~ basis coats, time·and·motlon and let·
Uement of ftnanclal differences with older fami-
ly member. You "woe up" with anawen.
Dilemma is raolved if you follow tbroqb on in·
tultlve fiub. Cancer, Capricorn, AquariUI
persons fiaure prominently.
8AGl'ITA&IUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Good
newe replaces recent tendeney toward C)oom,
discoura1ement. Empbaaia on emotional
responses, intensified relatiomblp, cblldrell,
speculation and favorable chaqea. ID1hUpt
travel plans, lncreued social activity and aceep-
tanceof )'OW'own worth, mtnusfallemodaty.
CAPRICOaN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11): Stick to
factual material. Be aware of leue1, bidden
clauses, security meuures and poalble aafety
buarda. Put oblltatlont •urs• to f01-.front -
check a11ets, ateer away from acbemea,
1bortcut1 and substitutes for quality. If
thoJ'Olllh, you emerae Victorious.
AQVillUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11): TrtPI, calla,
letters and vlaitl dominate ucl~ aaaario. A
relative contldes apedal feeliQp ad IMb JOW'
coUlllel. In actuality, lt 11 your appMal tbat ll
beln1 sought. Be cautious about offertq .
crltlclam. Be diplomaUc wit.bout abuclolilB1
principles.
P18CF..8 (Feb. 19-Mar. 3>): llOMJ comes
·from unuaual source. Empba1l1 on
valuables, pel"IODal pouu~ abllit1 to reacll
• harmonious decl.alou With family membien. TaW'\11, Ubi'a, Scorpio oativea nsure prom· tne.-tlY. You have chance to "ftx ~" aU~e.
What bad been l01t Will be located.
•
5
6 ·
1
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' ......................
DICUTIVI
ESTATE
~ $19,t50. rantutl 'atrm. a ator.v + famll room. Prof wetbar formaJ dbdq ud Uvtna.
Oourmet ldtch. Cover patio, manicure
llOUlldl. a car 1ara1e.
t.11••1
UDOllU
NewlY remodeled traditional style a
bdnn, 2 bad\ home featuring large
rec~atlon room le 2 pat.toe. 1.Jvtn1
room has attract ve beam ceilln«,
fireplace & !rench doors leading onto
brick patio. New kitchen blt-in
appliances. Close to tennis courts,
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold Cully furnished $420,000.
Mt NOWT
We have several fine homes
with pier & slip
W.IOANMMU.A
Quality oceanfront triplex. • Bdrm. 2
bath each unit. Excellent income.
Sl.300,000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
! l' I' 'Y'•' I f>r ,, 'J '' f, '', t.ltJI
.. ,
MIM'OU llACNllll.fM ·b
Terrific townhome tn Newport c
Terrace! 2 bedrooma. 2 bmba, end .i~ . d
unit light and airy atmosphere, owner ;~ I financed at 139<. Complete community ....
recreation facilities. A mere 1115.900. ~
. . • l U~IVUI: t1()Ml:S . ;~ J ·: .
REALTORS. 675-6000 ~ l 2443 Ea,t c...t H .... ey. C.O.. ... .._ lJ.
".Y~ ~A VE 39 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TO~ •';
"" '
----------------------4 • !!!!!!!!!i!i!!iliii~~~~~ ~ . •.t • , eat. i, a/ n.wra"' :1 1 Mtlt'lrooll C~MIUM M•.ooo Onb' •.ooo down move
you lnto this charmln
patio home. Full 1ervic
Condo complex. Don'
watt! Call now'
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114""631 -6990
IPYOU
have a ser·11ce to orfer o
goods to aell. r•ace an a In the Da ly Pilo
Classlfied Section
Phone 842-5678. --·
Dramatic ri-leveJ in
h•b tropical landacaped
1ett1QJ with outstanding
recrutioD f acllllies in· cludlnl tennia, awim·
mint and sunninf. 3
bedroom 2 bath home
cloae to aboppin g.
theaters, and acboola.
Full rice only $129,1IOO.
Call 751-3191
C:SELECT
T' PROPERTIE
OPPOITUMITY
knocks often when yo
use result-getting Dally
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Oran1e Coas
market.
Phone 642-5678
IEALTOIS
'71-1111
' I .. ; l
f .,, :·
' I ~ I ,• t BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION -t'; (
TRI-LEVEL -Opulent use of glass,\...·, 1 , copper and wood. Thia \D'lique home •J f
with 3 story atrium has 5 Bednm or • • t ! + separate guest quarten and an --'
Ocean View. Owner will help finance.
Call for brochure. $749,500.
COU OP MIWPOIT llALTOIS
21111. c..tttwr .. Ce_ ......
671-1111
TWO CAI :.::~ INVESTMENT GAIA.. !·n~
BUYER' CGpdo, I car aU.ched f .. ....,. a Bdrm 2 bath"• .r
• hue• patio. raataatlc ··~ Do )'OU wch $2:5,000 t ftnandnl. •.soo. Call• ' ' lbelter, 1111. Call Mary 562S1J ·, v·1 ~
. .
I t
' •'· !71•
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""' ......... YlctorllM ~
'· .... ~ IOllllttltwyYlfd
T tm0m1w: Jet Propuhion
STAR GA'ZEK-~ a, Cl.AY I. POLLA
~ r-o.ii, .-...., c;..,. Jyt
~. Acn14'w111t to tk Sten
To .... lop~ far W..in..doy, ..ad ......is c.,,_,.i•nu to~ r · of"°"' Zodiac blnl> 1ign. . ' ,._ .. _ ••a... , .... ·-·-... ,_
~-· QUIMJ ..... "60..0-
.._ ··-··-··-·-·-·-,.._ .,_..,. "°' ·-. ._ ..... ··-.,_, -~ .. _ .. " .... .. _ . ,,_
et A ,,_ ... _ .,_ n-,,_ .,_ n-.. _ .. -~~ .. _ ·-,._ ·--.. _ ,,_ .. _ n c-.. °' .. ..._ ....... ••ow .. ,., .. _
••• ao•-.,._
1, Yew • ., v-.. ••a-,,,...,..,, .,_ uw., ZIYw .,_ a-.. _ .. __ .. ,~ . .. _.., ·-... ·-·-··-11 .. 17 '"'-.,,. ·-........ ··-·-.. °' ••
""· 12
lO-....... •Owtt
"'"~c;-1 @A<l•cnc C) 1"11
Ne"'"'!
SWEEPlll SHORECLIFF CORNER ................. y.,, ...... . .-..rt ..... , ............ , .... J
k w.iit ....... ...., ,..._A .. .................... -woe• .. , .... c ................... w flits .... .
Sll4.SOO fM. 6Jt.t400.
OCEANFIONT LAGUNA BEACH spect1e... Gee. van a ...... ,w
21td. Jlte. C•·-. rft•t oa ecen.
Gnt•f• ;rivecy. Mcwffy, ..._. &
awlnu • g pea SJ.I 0.000. ,; I· I 400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
1::~~, S{Q\\4'lil-4~!is· =· ...... W CUY L POUMt
·~ec':9Mb~~ ::
low 10 lor"' lolit 11...,i. -'*
fg Coldwelf Banker
DAMCI ALL M'4Mft'
In wide and beautiful hallways on
gorgeous irnPorted Italian tiles.
Float in custom destined atrium spa. Wat~h the sunset over the
pa v i Uon wbHe sipping your
"favorite" on view lounges. 3 BR.
custom in Irvine Terrace.
Entertainers dellabt. $815,000 Fee.
rmnaoc• tMHLAMDS
Natural beamed \l.ood
ce1l1ngs . panetan11.
warm earthtones A
lovely view. Th is 4
Bdrm Edinborough has
I everything 1nr lud1ng
xlnt £inancing S.189,000
•
RCTc1ylorCo
I '~ \ ' I ) ~ j.,j J
•
~ . BEST BUf!
l.OweSt pnctf<l (Eden) i1l '
t.ake Park. 3 Bdrma, 2
ba, eartlltone decor. As·
aumabte financing &
seller will carry. 11.29,900 .
WU... & W•lll'lt.E
4'3-21$2
"SPACIOUS"
IS THE WORD
Lovely S Bdrm 3 balh 2
story home. featunng
formal dining room and
family room 3 pauos.
separate greenhouse . new paint m and out Of
fered al $229 000 l'all
540-Wl
~HERITAGE ••• REALTORS
MEWPORT
WATERFRONT
Largest floor plan ur
fered Open, fresh and a
beautiful view Cu~lom
decor, gold fixture~ and
many upgrades Roat
slip rights up lo 45•
$749,000
JAMES E. CiOULD
'631!1532
WTBLUFFS
Undft-3 Yrs M•w
4 Bdrm, 2 baUt Formal
chnini rm Spectacular
pi-estJee home Close to everyUung
~.RED CARPET 11 754-1202
ClllSTMAS dinner In your very own
home. 4 Bdrm, 2 ba,
quiet cul-cM-1ac. $95,000.
CALL
•
RED CARPET
... 754-1202
CH.ARMIMCi,
OIUGHTFUL
Large 4 Bdrm, 3 bath +
family room, 3 car
gara1e, beautiful pool
and spa, brick BBQ
Shows like a model Of
fend al $117,500. Call
H>-U.Sl
-~ 4-~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
A l'IUIFIC IUY
Exceptional value ln thls
charmln& 3 Bdrm home.
on R-3 lot. ln prime loca-
tiClll, near 1chools and
tenni1 courts. Perfect start« home or invest·
meoi property. $'79,950.
don osen
ro·:dturo.,
San Juan Capo. SSS.000 <
Br. 2 Ba. 1'80 sq. rt 8 yrs
old. Azt 541·5032.
OWN YOUR M.H. SPACE
THE FARM
AGENT (714) 642-8377
OCEANSIDE &IGAMCI
1171 a.xeo Homette. va-
cant, truly plush &
beautiful. Country Club
aett101 for the dis·
criminattn1 I SM4963 > Call fOC' appt .
... ty Moba. "°""' 114-7070
mt~ B&AQl-llobll• Ho•• 2Br, ..,odwood
dei:k, cedar aballu,
11a1••0o0 lat, frplc.
111,MO RMP <7 14 > .....
Sbarp!Sbarp!Sharp!
Eutlide unit. aoeo Sant.a
Ana St. lmmed. avail.
Adults, no pets. 2 Br 1
Ba upgraded. new paint.
5'95 mo + security Agt
957-<1701 By appt.
2 Br l "'2 Ba Townhouse
Adults, no pets S395 mo.
755 W 18th St 646-9507
l Br. patio, w /garage, 731
W. l8th St. S350 646-6725.
~9WO Ask for Faye
E.side-2 Bdrm + garage.
m to mo, children OK
$425. Harry Frederich.
Agl. 631-1266
Avail. now freshly paint
ed 1 Br. $325 mo. J 0 .
Prop'erty Mgmt
7512787
Dma,olnt 3826
2 br, 2 ba, 1430 l br. 1 ba,
$330 Dishwasher &
stove. 661-1192
'
...... •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hawtn1 Ii Dump Jobs. AAk !or Randy.
• $&9-43118
PRO WINDOW WASH
Home & Commercial
--------- ' Free Fat. Steve 646·1957
........... ~ .... ~lw•h..,.,._ i ..... taacahu.fww. ;._.Clt1toSltare 4JOO~'~l..tcll 4400 !0fflcelentcll 4400!1nYest•..e 1MGMytoLom S02S 'IMDrt11111,Trwt
• leedt ]140 Newport leach ]869 Mlwport leech Jl'9 I Jdovini? Avoid deposits & ''THE" : 150 sq rt, ground noor, all ••••• !.~ .... J ......... 1 CASH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ I ••••••••••••••••••••••19••••••••••••••••••••-' •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Op rt.ii~ 501 5 °••••••••••••••••••••• D9idii SOJI
••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••1 cut llvtna expe s 1 Ulll ""id SllO/ o T lal · F•.rT · utlfully located 1 & 2 Larae 3 br, 2 ba, pauo, ERS Lil , • nse EXECUTIVE SUITE • r-' m · 0
' INVESI'ORS WANTED -I I Br.$.1301rup.ChUdOK.l trplc,dshwhr,newlyde· V Al · S ~~reaslonally slnctl FUllserviceomcesin , cost.(TI418'().l964 'Joinsmallgrouplnbuy-LOWIATIS MMEDIATE
Gas incld .• No pets. cor. $650 mo. Agl, ~2or-8t:;~~·~:S~0 : HouSEMATES
1
~wportCenter 325sqf\,groundfloor,all 1~~onl'b<tl of u:d~r qutCl(FUti4DIM.. ~T•F~aDhr::b~:
'IG-18S2 • I mim>, Act.675-7696or6"•1714 '1 832•4134 ~0 I util paid, $200 /mo total, 7uaUng p:cq~s~oo p~~:; lst.s~"3rd's I 11ortcqe, ~~
I u.a.•• .... -s W •., 1 I CXlSt. 840-1964 w~1s. _."5R •-QWe_t 2 Br. Apt. Garage, Adult, 2bdrm ctpt, frplc. U>OKINGTOSHARE? PLAZA pm.Stl!Ve'114/646·7374 .• Hypot.h1cauons I •
,'1112 Br. 2~ Ba. From patio, pool. Adult.s, no WestcliU&fta. • WE MATCH ROOM-' EXECUTIVE SUITES 2300S9FT. Bridges NI a Cl• ... /
$'15 . ! pets 1801 H. 15th. St. 642-11848 MATES' "There is a difference " I Beautiful refurbished PALM SPllMGS I $5,006-Sl,OOO.OOO • '-IO••/ Ll'l 3 Br. with yard $575. Newport Heights. $450. . 752.9475. I low cost office space 6 UMITS/POOL J.1.S years ' Loet & FOlillMt ·~a~Hunl. Harbour. 642-7340. s.a.-ate 3176 . ' 714/752-0134 I Pnvate & group areas ID a a ... al locat1'on. As·!, Credilnoproblem :•••••••••••••••••••••••
,....,._,, All Adult, no pets. 2 Br. 2 .... ~ ........ ~ .......... M/F shr 5 br: 2 ba h.se,I 2082MkbelsonDr.11212 'Ideal for ~omputer, re ..-~ Paymentatoswt '*•DmK••ah 5100 ~ 2ba cpl drapes gar Ba From~ Pool spa jSt~dio apt with ocean C.M. Spa. Nr So. Coast mi Business Cntr i;213 I search. design, etc. = .1!~wlt~d rf:a~~~' ~~ct.s re31a~ed 1 •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ee'ach iW~roer ~rea· refrl&e, d/washer i0nc1d:i ~wSeeE~~~ ~nEn~~!· ~64~!~lJ S22S + l /Sl ATTEHTIOH! 1 RlG1g9-~LTY mg S2LS,000feeland. caiu~nri:."Arl0zo~~
•$5:50+dep. 21.3 /587-7779 1 Acl"Oll N.B. Golf Course .• lA.AptC, s.c. t · 1 Doct L , Mkjllel MortCJCMJe L-·-·
2
B 1~ B blk ~. ! Apt. to shr, Dana Pl. 2Br.I or, awy•r, i HWP'T FROMTAGE I 809North Main, S.A. tf""'be : MSG 2~5 eth 2bdrm bd 1 lBr, freshly painted, &ood 2ba. St. wht male. S2JO' Merchant Chl•f ! 1 REKr ALS ' wale r r r o n t lo g o I 972•22] 1 ;::o_~ ~r81M:8761 lba ~~"::iri w'"a~kl' location. $2 95 mo ·I mo, 1st/last. 493-0987 &' ::i'eg8f~ bid~ .. in hB8rt ~r 1' 2 Rental Spaces Approx w/631-1400 : Call or stop in
• • 1 to beach, ·avail' 12·1.· 496-3233,498-4209 II 96M234 ---' wfs~a~fo~s o :m c~s . ~sq. fl. & up. Including : Licensed R.E. Broker
i br, den, 2 ba condo. New ' Own /Aot ua s 64 2B lB I I k li h ut1ls. S3SO & $450. .2450 I Agt on duty 7 days ,carpet, drapes, frplc, 2.
1
er a•-.>.R· 1 eves.I r, a, .super c ean,1 Sc>ectacular view. Securi· s y g ts, wetbar. con· j Newport Blvd Costa MaMytoL.oe 5025
. car gar, priv. patio, rec Near Hoag Hosp 2 Story freshly painted, carport' ty aate. Harbor Ridge.I ~lrence rm. 85< ~sq. ~l. Mesa. See Manager i ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1---------1 facU '600 86().ll.37 2 B ~Ba 0 . ·. R · & ~. good location S 14 5 I mo + I 1 t e US: super 2. sq. t j----I WANT SSSFAST7
Now You
Can
Sell
More · • · I La~ hook~~mg~-1 $355 mo . 498 ·4209.
1
housekeeping. 760-9307 ~cal bldg .. , well ap Pnvale orrice. Newport 1 ./NEED ·Any amt·lst. 2nd, 3rds· $fJS,lge,cbeery2br,2 ba, p ·1 496-3233 pe>inted al 7rr per sq rt Beach Avail immed I nex.terms-callnow! ;
blt·ins, nr ocean, 1reat l 642-6629. •tr..--1. •-JllO Promontory Pomt. ocean Fordetaalscall Si!OO mo. un!urn or $250 ! E.Starr-964-6833. ! with Dally Piiot
N ts 833 .,......, _-a-view Penthouse 2Br RED CARPET r S t I •· ill'--------• area. ope . ...,_,, Lalliel Br l Ba Ut1fum. •••••••••••••••••••••••· /Ir loft f . hed 1 893.1351 urn e cre aria "'' ./MONEY PENNY PINCHER $325 .... ,. "'-"~ 2B l'LBa 1 w g. um1s asj Recept1on1s t service ......_1 T t • ADS SClll onl) S2.
1QCB 1 Br, patio, · call-..olt """" -.-...-. {• -n 'I office I& den. $550. M/FI SJART 'Bl I avatl.6'>4212 jWWWg&!9H. nn J11Dii1. ..,..,., frpJc. '311. see sate. enc 1an1e. pro(euiooal. 813-SIOM. -· Dlicli IOl l I :a line. for 2 daya IG-9583, M2·5251. WIST MIWPOllT saomo. 5'5-29'10 aft &PM '1 ...... ....... 4450 I ....................... , onl\ Sl a day. 34c a
Lce3br,2baupperapt. T_.. llto 3Br, 2Ba In Newport ••••••••••••••••••••••• SaltlerMh).Co. I ltnl' UT1UTIESPAID No pet.a. 1675. mo. Agt, •••••••••••••••••••••••! Heichll Female, 20-30 1 RIGHT Forstore&olficespaceat • All types of real esla.le'I Advertise one or -CONVENIENT 67~170 2 Bdrm 1 ~ bat b Employed & neat , reasonable rates. caEDITHO investments since l!M9 more items ,·alued
-QUIET I townbouse'.Re!ria,bltns.I S250mo.631-l.S32. --1 wffh ~Offlces 500to2700Sq Ft. PROILEM 1 SpedallUM)ln 1 up to s 100 Each
•UEATEDPOOL Large 3 Br . Upper 2 car 1arage pool I at UdoMcrfaa M~AVERDEbR 2ftCI TD add1t1on11I line is
Far adul\s over 25, no Duplex. l house fromt Security gale s,Soo mo Lai Beach 3br hme to shr I Vllacp PLAZA 2nd & 3rd TD lo•• I 1 I only 60c for the two peta.1 Br. from 1345, 2 ocean. With beautiful! Ma. Collins, Ms-3866 or OOO·amkrprer,1.2bdrms . l.525MesaVerdeE,C M I '7M531/85S-1145 642-2171 545-06 11 da,-; Sorry. no
Br. 2 Ba. $425. 16072 Spr view S7SOmo. 675·8018 I 540-8530. I avail DOW Call Mort Spe6o' ro•es 545-412] Arranged by I c -1. .__ T.D.'1 co m mer Cl a I ads in&dale. 8'()-1065 berore 83().5330 days , 494-5613 ---. Coad Holm Loaas _, ..._.. a I lowed C harge
6Pll. 1 Br. Luxury Penthouse. Af IN.ts ,.,,..shed eves leased~ / De IS NB/CM, up to 4700 sq ft A Mortgage Broker I Amencan Mtl 953·414 l Your PtM) Pincher
Versailles. Near ocean. GI' ....,..shecl 1900 I 980 avail at prime corner .1 I WIU IUY Ad 0 r u 5 e Y
0 u r
Townhouse . 2 bdrm . Comp. redec. Vu of lush ••••••••••••••••••••••• Irvine( ~-'!·oodPbnd1 ge 38r
1
2(X}.l 200 Sq F• 17th & Newport Blvd Lowest rates av .. ailable· ~]rdi4th TD'S ~1~nakorA:.:'a~~;~::r~
loci util. Avail Dec. 1. pool, gym, rec rac. $515 ~-e I $250. 552-4046 Wet Bars, -coat·oo obligation loan ~ fund new TD S For l~. paUo, $425/mo not crtyrd & rt.n. Sec bldg. •-.Ml Vi. !'f: I urn. ,......,e oo . tennis, P 10 I mo. Free Rent 67s-a>O Free consultation No • ., ''
19934 Keswick . mo.Alt.760-8617. New 1"2 bdrm I lUrY.Female wanted lo share I W f S Newport Modem S~ore or quotes.lst,2nd,3rd's,re· immed quote, call For more information
Brookhurat & Adams, 1 houle lrom beach. Lrg adult apt.a in 14 plans w/2male, lfemale. 4 bed, orer ront ell1ng\ office. Nr post office $48 finance & AITD's. No W.l.C. AGT (714)752·8261 and to placoour ad call ::S~~Pi1~:S.:~·1.~.im~ 2Br, freshly painted. ~ $415, 2
1
bdrmt fro
1
tn 2Y.Ba, ocean front in 675-8662 s/f.JerryZl.3/477•700t min/max. Creative Private party has well , ll!j2_5671 1&25/mo 968-8263 ..,., .. + poo s, ~nn s, Newport. Yrly lae. $250, eo...ntrd cll rt1W1cing exper. Please secured 2nd TD for sale IJlt
96US8'7,S.9pm Mon-Fri. · · waterfalls, ponds .. Gas lat&laat 673.4742 Ratdt 4475 call631·2246,5C8·2089 at discount. 975-1176. ~=======~
1bdrm apt, cottage style Villa Balboa Condo. lBr, ror cooking I& beatin1 · · ........ ••••••••••••••• ;:===;;;====;J;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!.:========;;
living $32().$325 den, Bay view. $700/mo. paid. From San Diego Golf Course Apt, ocn SI'ORE. SOuth Coast wy.
' 941.3020. 752·2404 dys. S52·5477 Frwy drive North on view. wlk to bch, ten,· Latwia Beach. 600+ sq l!Ves Beach to McFadden then SIM/mo S.Cl. 499-4692 ft. l\50/mo. lat ar last.
Jac. · West on MtFadden to 1 .._3993 2bdnn, l~ba. pool,
near beach, $(95.
llM-1921 eves.
]142 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I br, 2 ba, bll·lns, frplc, l a bch, '400. 11....,..41ss
afterSPll.
.,... 3144 .......................
••••••••••••••••••••••
~e 2 8d 1 Ba in nice Sea wind Villaee Motber&Chlldtoshr3br,
area. $495/mo. Call (714)893-5198. W.Slde CM $'250/mo Call
.... 4000 ADDM6-3S50 ______ __;::..__~
beanfront, 2bdrm, 2ba1 trplc, deck, SR50/mo. Uln clean. 49'1-1125. ---------
P•chelQr a p,, beaut.
• OCMD '1aw, pvt 1arden \seUln•, woman pref, !ltOO. 49t-Q049·5. _......;,. _ _,,;..:...:...;;.:..:~--I
WEC.TCllff OLOG
l<I 'I.'" 111 I fli '"' It
A ' • llio
I 111 ..,., H1 '""•'' t
I .1 ', 1.Hll
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
J..500 sq ft Industrial apace,
wfl ofnces. 2 bath, lae rear door, l.340M Lo1an
Av, CM. ~9352. 646-0681
um Sq ft at 2W sq ft, com
I merciaJ lnd area 1n C M
Useful ror 1tora1e or
1bop facllltiu. Call
1 &a·2Sll28or 548·9035
..,. 4550 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Appro~ 6,000\q. n. av all.
In Fountain Valley near
S.D. Frwy. $1320 mo.
-Jotll558-9380,!ka·1533.
888 sq. fl. well located ..., ... W..t.d 46 00
North Colt• Mesa office. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Putr ftelrt to your door· Lootlnt for am all ho115• equipped with
NOVEMBER
MID-WEEK
SALE
For Private Parties Only
NOW through NOVEMBER 30th
You Con Place A Oasllftld Ad
To StartOn
Tuelday, W......, or Tiu1doy
and Run
FOR THE
PRICE
OF
lOFFER LIMITED TO NON COMMERCIAL ADVEATl9!ft8J . CAU: THI DAILY P&OT ADYISOI TtMAY
642-
t
551..S.
CF\·L:Jf\':.
Loll. Young 8mo. old Jlray
male cat w /white chest &
white paws. Vic. Harbor
View area. 640-0320.
Lott: Brown & While
male Springer Spaniel,
vie Barbor & Wilson,
C.M. 548--4020.
Found: White female dog.
vie. ard'a Store. Costa
.... ~O!ICM
Pound, fem. German ow enrolllni. Coat•
Sbepberd. No taU Nr Meu CbrilUan Pre-
EdilGo H.S. 983 3902 or acbool. $29 SO /w It .
tsNfOL
~ 'CllSOHNU YIMClS
l723 ...... Street .....
C.-rdillTeler .,..."'°"' espeitence PA-,.,_
~C•fonlal•ftll
ac.NalnSt. Runtlnatoo Beach
£":0.E .
00 IT NOW!
64Z..5'71
LOAN
SO:IOAIY/
PACIAGEI
' .
J
11.a.nM r 0uu.J ftar ltOl'e Deeck •1re11lvt aiore mauaw. ap ont,y. ror
lnro m4l7'lo..lt?7 foe
Miki«Bob.
ICU/CCUIM's
12 Hr. lhlft.a, wort 't day
lD a 2 week pay period.
ICU/CCU .............
RapomiLte roe lhe u hr.
operaUon of our 8 l.lllt.
RMlF.at•• SALARY
•TOS24.000
PhontWork·
Secretary
SECWAIY
COMMUNITY
Mrs. Richmond
THE llVIME CO.
SOO Newport Ctr Dr Suite USO
Newport Beach, Ca 92663
7H-6'4·321S
F.qut Oppty Emplyr
Prediction ., ,_,./
Typesetter
C..r•I
0r....,. Wlvet chr. t w1-t uphol bar 1tool1. dw
ender elec BBQ, mueh more. 751·9323
~,_.. • 8030 Muat Sacrillce for fast
•••••••••••••••••••••• sale. 1 l&e ea1r chair
Penlu llE'1 w /50mm w/otto1Nut $50/080 AU
l .6mm le,n1", 2 llSh items 2 yn old. Cub on·
meten. Vlvaw na1h l.y.631·211C15 --------~ Evenin1 Shilt. At least 7 Zoom Tbyriltor 285Pen --------=;...._-SfATIONERY STORE in ~Top pay for good tax 13Smm telepbot Must aell-wood desk, CdM need1 saleslady !Jldivtdual. ~r benefits !em, 20rnm wide an1le twin beda, dresser,
F/time, s days. Xlnt. inclla'ie medical" dental All encloaed in apeeial couch, c:otree tbl. more,
wortUq conda. Especial-l.naw-ance Ir credit union. custom cue. Serious in •Sl.315. 760-8S57
1 .. 11-u t l Ph Apply ln person between qlAriesonly. 552-9808 v •we c en ee. one: 9am-Spm Monday ~ 1070
----..:...:....;__ __ ....j throughFriday SX70 Polaroid Land•••••••••••••••••••••••
Coast camera & strobe light Man'.s 14Kt yellow gold
Piiot ~3817 bracelet, in nu111et tex-
330 y Street 80 .. 0 tured curb link, measur· ,.._ • in& 13mm In width. 8" """ta Mesa, CA !12626 -•••••••••••• •••• ••• •• length. Secured with a
F.quaJ c:2po·~3i~ployer KEESHOND Pups. AKC. concealed box clup, Champ alre. M /F. Pet & with a ll1ure 8 safety
cl up. Total weight• Is t----.....;...~=::..:_--1 30.92 permywelghts.
'
NJce infant wear. Lob of
little 11r11' dJ:•uea,
playclotb'e•, Ja~eta,
c:Nta fr ahoa, H . 1-8.
Boys' clotba, 11. 1-4. Sz.1---------l
l'\rewood Will Deliver of&
a.ct.
(l)l'la-U:U/836· 7482
Wbeel cbair-Walker·20 lb
tracllon-Altra ct Ive
Bdbrd ror twln •lie bd
....a55
Wllhr'D 1addle, 1ood con-
dbioa 800/ba offer Call
Dllrttne 9M-11Ga
CO~NEll
,_.Hf'IROl F 1
• -.. I I , '• .. ·.· \
S4b-I 100
m1rdc le
n1,lzda ......
w.,.,
OVER • .......
For Your OOOd VW. Pwltheor Audi
A Daily Pi,ot ad.number wilt appear in your ad ...
we take your messages 24 hour:s a day ... ~ou cal I
in at your convenience during off Ice hou~s and get
the responSftS to your ad ... For more information
and to place your ad call 64~-5678.
Tep Dlllar
Pail ForYoW'Car!
JOHHSOM •SOM
U.CaM U1rc.-,
21218 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 540-5630 '77 ZIOZ. a11to, alr. Dll
CREVIER
G IST 6 .. QAOWAY
SANTA ,>MA
838-3171
THI! UIJIMATI OlllllllfO ~-l
rdab, 31K ml, lmmac!
tflOSUI .
. TUUOt
HalMOW!
IXCIU.8CT
SILICTIOM!
642-5678 DAILY PILOT
IAILl•I
VOLVO
!*Harbor Blvd. COSTAll~A
6U-tl03 540.946 7
Qa+MI COUMTY
CONNEL L
C:HEVROl E:T . . '
~ I \ ,, ~
SU-1200
..... _, ,, .
II
.......................
ORANGE COUNTY'S
AM EST
l.JNCOLN-MERCURY DEALERSHIP
~ ?&ttl.I••
LINCO!.N-llERCURY
18-111 Auto Center Dr.
SD Fwy-Lake Forest exit
IRVINE 830.7000
VOLVO .... _, ttsz
EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Lar&est Volvo Dealer '65. Mustang •289. Orlg.
lnOnnfeCo\IJlt.YI owner. Automatic. 11995.
BUYOl'LBASE Phll98-1493
DJRECT -.65-M_U_S_T_C_O_N_V_E_R_T_·
JILE 289 V8. auto, p/s,
xlnt rebuilt and restored,
1111()() pp SSS-5865
' " il
j<
j
I
,~ ............ , ....
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...
0
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I
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81 J'&a>aala[SCllOEMEBL ... Dmltf .........
· A Calllornla Dlvlsloa of Forestry spokesman said today
tbe Carbon Canyon fire tllat
destroyed two boUHI and burned
1,500 llCl'el ol bnaab land was
ceused by a cilarette discarded
by. bone rider.
Capt. E•an Griffith Hid,
bowevw, that inveatlaaton at
t.bia potnt COm1der the start olthe
.
Gunshot
fYSillade
fells rn~n
-A Seal Beach ~an wu SbOt .-=f.t'!thlf~=~ w~ -: Do0.'1; an~as. · u lbot thi left thlP and d"'1 tQot duri.fta tM 2:10 a .m. bari'a.I• .at bis bomeat ~ lltbSt., Police Aid. .
Re wu releued toQJ' from UC
InJne Medical Center m aood
condition, a ho1pttal
1pokeawoman1ald.
Police Sat. Leoiaard Friable aald Marshall was awakened by a
Jmock oo bis ~t doOr and when
he pulled back the cUrtalDa and
looked out. an unaeen suspect
opened fire, aplblterlnl Ute dOor' and lmoddq Manball to tbe
carpet.
Sat. Jl'rtable aald there WU DO
apparent motive tor the sboottnl ana that DO suspect bu been ap-
prehended.
Nelebbon, awakened by the
fualllade, called polite, Sp.
Frlableaaid.
.. We di> have 10me leads, bul
we're• au.re of a motive at thlJ
time, "s,t. FrllbleaiJd.
Manball wu at bome alone
wbea the 1hootln1 occurred,
poUceaa1d.
· ·Dow Jone.s
fire accidental. He indicated It
waa not likely that criminal
charaea would be 10U1ht. Griffith declined to release
. names ol tbe four bone riden
who Weft in the area where the
fire broae...out about 11: ao a .m.
Sunday.
''They came forward on their
own and admitted u.f) bad been
1mold:ft& in the area;• Grf.ttitb
said .
lltuaoar. .
Jem llopWon, ldenttfied as
student pilot uear me mid-
air collision over San Dleeo.
. told s.tety board bearinl in la Angeles MondJU' that he
h•d "no inkHn1" of crash that killed 144 until be
landed. Story pase AS.>
State seeks
• cappuccino
seller ban
The area in which they were rid-
int1 be aaid, was not posted
aplnat smokiot, althoup be
said it wu not the "common
1eme" lh1Aatohave been clomg.
Gritfitb aaicl' the four persom,
all in their 20I, are Oran1e County
realdenta.
The fire oriatnated on the west side of Carbon Canyon Road
north ol the Sleepy Hollo'w com-
(8ee llLUIB, Pap A!)
Wieder due
in Huntington·
Oran1• Countt Super~aor Harriett Wieder will speak
before the Wat Oran1e County Lea1ue ol Women Voten.Tbun-
da1 .uilst in Huatfniton Beach.
Mra. Wieder. a former mayor
of Huntiattoo Beach, wUl dla·
eu11 affordable bou1ta1 and
transportaUon iaauef. • 01~:1i='LJ~l!fr:Ji\el
la dowo1talna bi tile Central
Library, nu T~bert Ave.
Teacher
leaflets
mailed
BJ PAftlC& &BNNEDY . . .. ...., ........
The teacben uaoc:latloa of
the Huntinaton Beach Union
Hilb Scboot Diltrict be&an a
ma11 mamn1 pro1ram Ult•
week attaekllll diltrtct expen-
ditures and polldes.
Tbe Diltrict Edueaton As· soclaUoo <DEA>. which bu re-
jected tbe ~ct'I ftnal COD· traet olfer, malled out tbouaaDda
of one pase leaflets to the eom-
mutty ·Monday complaJnJn1 •
that tbe d.latrict bu apeDt $11 mUlloa oa mxaeected construc-
tion and Jeuea~
Tbe DEA ~nda that the '8 million 1peiaY to build Ocean
View m,b Sebool in lim waa UD·
wQe becaUN ltadeat enrollment
Lt dedininl. Tbe leatlet allo erlUeilel the sa millico leutn1 aQd remodel·
iDC of Lamb Sebool to Hl'\le U
dlatriet ~uarten. Dlatrtet otficlala, however, ~t to stattitlca •bOWlne that UI• dlltriet'a six ~mprebenalve btab 1ebool1 still are ovn·
crowded and will t. for several
<S.llML. Pa .. AJ)
Sh•tlnM odds
Vegti:s .bets onJ.R. culprit
LASVBGAS,Nn. <AP)-1be
sports boot at a Strip resort bu
set up a betUq line on tbe culprit
in tbe lbootins of .J.R. Swlna, the
popular villaill on the O~TV
aeries "0.Uu. •• Tbe odds were
placed at 101·1.that bis lnfaqt aoa,
John Jr., PUlledthetriaer.
The Odds OD J .R. shooUnt
bimaelf were set at 20-1 Mday
when tbe line wu pos~ lia the
sports book It the Cutaways
Hotel, aiid many bettorl put tbelr
money on J.a., sala hotel
1poteamanl>ukelloonr. 1
Sporti boot manaaer Sonay
R.elaner eatabllabed Ewin&'•
wife, Sue Ellen. and her boyfriend
Dusty Fartow u tbe favorites at
s-1. Ma Joke. amner set Danas
Cowbo71 c:oacb Tom L&ndry at 500· 1, anCI former CowbOya
quarterbaek Roaei Staubacb at
1,000-1. . H~ aaid tbe wbole -tbinl
started u "a 1ac. •• but added.
''people arelOIDlbaDanaa. ''
* * *
"We know we could take a loss
on all this " Hoover said "so
we •ve Umltect the size of th~ be~
to $100." ·
Reimer'• line included most o(
the characten oo the series and
set tbe odds oo J.R. at 20-1; bb
father, Jock Ewing, at 10-1; bJA
mother, Miu Ellie, at 8-1; wife
Sue Ellen and her boyfriend Dus-
ty Farlow at 1-1; brother Bobby
and bis wife, Pam, at 5·1; brother
Gary atl.5-1; Gary's wife Valjeao
at20-1; son John Jr. atlOl-1; niece
Lucie at J.1.1 ; and ranch foreman
RayCrebutll-1.
Tbe llne on b&Qer VauiM
Leland was set at 4-1; Pam'&
brother CWf Baanes at 13-1; Sue *
Ellen 'a lister Kriltln Shepard u
s-,1; KrilUn'afrtendAlan Beam&
5-1; peycbiatrltt Dr. Elby at t-1;
MarlleeStoaeaU0.1; JordanLee
at 30-1; Landry at 500-1, and
Staubacb au,000-1. •
"None Of the above," was set at
5-1 wblleOdd.aon aapecific person
DOtontheliatwereaetaUO.l. ,
, .
CHJCAGO (AP)-A man aDd two woruen, their .bandl bQWid
an4 their thlyatl 1lubed, have been-found dead 1D a SoUth Side
apartment, police 1-14 today-tbeaeeoftd triple 1laytn11n the clty
lnaweek. •
Police identified the vlCUml or the Monday 1lUtD11 u Diane
Banka, lt, and Tommr Jacbola, 27, realdeatl ol t.be two-atOrr
ltameapartmentbWJdln1.andEmella5",l8,ofl>etrolt.
Ab1ww di• •• ••• t II! SAXmOBPE, Eqland <AP) -A Brttlsb rescue crewman'•
heroic attemi>t to save a U.S. Air Force Pilot ended in t.r'asedy to-
day with both drowntn1 1n tbe North S.a after tWC> U .s. Jeta col·
llded and fell, offtcl'1a aald.
As the British airman tried. in atroo1 winda to pluek the
American from the sea,,the Brtton .,parentl)' beeame ent,anfled
in the Ameri~an 's parachute cords, Officials said. RAF 1pokesQlen
said h)itially that a winch Une to the Brit.lab rescue beUcoper wu
then cut. But a spokesman at RAF beadquarters ln London said
later•that the line snapped, poutbly under pressure from the
parachute blown acrou lt ln a40-knot wind. An inquiry is to be held.
Pftesonaf lnc.-o•• ~u ...
WASHINGTON (AP)-'lbepenooallncomeof Americans in·
creued by 1.1 percent in October, wb1Jetheirapendln1rose1 per·
cent, the eovernment reported t.oday.
The Commerce Department also said Americans saved at an
llllDUal rate of $89.4 billion last mooth, compared with an-$88.8
billion pace in September.
The jump in personal income just about keep$pa.ce with the in·
nation rate.
Armed bandit
sought in 4
HB robberies
A black man armed ·Nith a
chrome plstol ls beine aoulht by
police in connection with four
street or parking lot robberies
_ Jbat have occurrerd in north Hun·
tington Beach during the put
five .
1'M ID08t re8nt tnddent Oc:·
curred at 8:30 p.m . Monday
when an 18·ye&r·old w.itreu
waa confronted by a lone eun·
man as she was walking home
near Edinger Avenue and
Wicklow Lane.
The suspect allegedly grabbed
her from behind, placed a IUD at
her neck, knocked her down in a
grassy area and fled with her
purse containing cash and
personal belon1in1s valued at
S297, police said.
The suspect was described a"
a black man, a1e 23, 5 feet 8
inches lall, 160 pounds and wear·
io1 a tan jumpsuit.
Police saJd a man flltlnc the
deacripUoo baa been responsible
for three similar street or park·
lnl lot robberies of women in
north Huntington Beach during
the past five weeks.
Edison sets
comedy play
The Edison High School Drama
Department ls presentln1 the
comedy "Charley'• Aunt" Wed·
nudaythrouibSaturda)'.
The play will be 1ta1ed at 7 each
nltht m room 330 on the school
campus, 21400 MapoUa St.
Tickets are '2.50for1enera1 ad·
mi11lon, cbildren'a are Sl. Pre·
sale ticketa are 50 centa off.
"'' DAILY PILOT
Fro• Pag~ . l I
BLAME •.•
munity near a horse rental sta·
ble, Griffith said. The four horse
riders attempted to quell the
names before strong Santa Ana
winds blew them out of control,
he said.
The fire later crossed into
Orange County from San
Bernardino County and
threatened homes in botb Olinda
VUtapan4tbe Som~etlet bout·
ln1 deftJopment. B6tb •re local·
edinBrea.
More than 500 firemen from
across Southern California were
on the ftre lines Sunday afternoon
and night when the fll'e posed its
most serious threat to life and
property.
Two homes -one ln Sleepy
Hollow and one near Carbon
Canyon Regional Park -were
consumed during the blaze.
G rtflith a aid the activities of the
horse ridera, as they have
deacribed tbem, and the manner
in which the fire started, "flt to a
tee."
He said be will tum over reaultl
of bilJnveatigatlon lnto the cause
of the fire tb the San Bernardino
County District Attorney's Office
for the final declsion on whether
charges will be pursued. .
"But it would be up to me to be
able to prove this person did it. I
don't think I could," Griffith said
e laid be ball other interviews
..:::1:ec1~t:b:•• aftemoon with
Meanwhile, Orange County~
Fire Department 1pokeaman
Chuck Murphy said the blue baa
been 100 percent controlled and
that only a few fire fi1hten re·
main at the scene to douse any hot
apou that ml&ht ariae.
Cycle rider.
VOYAGER PHOTO SHOWS SATURN AISINO BEHIND MOON DIONE
Titan, targeat of Saturn'• moon•, upper rtght INtclcground
I
Saturn. moon '2na· best'
Voyager says Jupiter hm o~ that's larger
PASADENA CAP> -Saturn's
mooo ntan bas lost the title of
lareest natural satellite in the
solar ~em to Jupiter's moon
Ganymede, scientists studying
Voyager 1 data at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory here re·
port.
The latest calculation or
Titan's size shows it to have a
diameter of 3,070 miles com·
pared with Ganymede's 3,160.
Until Voyager arrived, Titan's
diameter CQuJd not be estimated
because the moon is shrouded in
dense clouds that make its sur·
face invisible.
Readings returned by several
of Voyager's experiments in·
dlcate Titan's nitrogen·rich at·
mosphere must extend down
much further than had been pre·
viously thought.
"Titan has been dethr-oned as
the largest m()On m ttae solar
system," Toby Owen of the
Voyaier "imaging.. team said
Monday.
Titan also appears to be too
warm at the surface to allow
oceans of liquid nitrogen to
form. except m the polar re·
g1ons, Owen said L1qu1d
nitrogen rams may fall from the
cloud layer, he noted, but the
drops evaporate before they hit
the surface
Owen noted that Voyager data
still has not shown the moon's
surface. Titan's size was de·
termined from indirect
evidencf!.
Titan is able to retain its at·
mosphere while Ganymede can·
not because Saturn's largest
moon is colder. the scientist ex·
plained. At colder temperatures
like those on Titan. heavier
f 'r.1m Pugr . l I
MAIL ...
nitrogen atoms that make up
most 01 l 1tan 's atmosphere
never achieve enough speed to
escape from the moon 's gravita·
tiooal hold.
Separately. scientist Rieb Ter·
rile of the imaging team said it
appears the mysterious spokes
of dark material seen on one of
Saturn's rings result from in·
teraction between the rings and
the planet's magnetic fields.
The particles in those spokes
carry an electrostatic charge
s imilar to that which arises
when a gl•s rod is rubbed
vigorously with cat's fur
For the most part. the fields
rotate faster than the rings, Ter·
rile said.
~-Texas -t 0-New York
snows fatal to 13
By the Associated Press
A storm that swooped out of
the Western Plaini. assaulted
cities of the urban Nortt\ellSt
with snows almost a •foot dee~
today, leaving at least 13 dea<i
from Texas to New York
Thousands of homes were
darkened as the snow and ice
ripped down power lines
Highways from Ohio t o
M assachosetts were littered
with stalled trucks and cars
Schools closed in numerous com·
munities
The storm that had dropped
s now up to 17 inches deep in
Schmitz talks
today in FV
State Sen. John G Schmitz CR·
Newport Beach > has scheduled
town hall meetings toniJhl In
Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa.
The sessions. to •'provide a
forum for exchange,·· Schmidlz
said. are scheduled at Fountain
Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave
from S to 7:30 pm and at Costa
Mesa City Hall beginning at 8
pm
parts of the West intensified as it
re.-cbed New gngland in the
early·morning hOun. With IDOw sUJt .wtme. snore lO ___ ....,_ .
h utatecl at auc:b Dmj~'
as Albany, N .Y ., ud
Williamsport, Pa. Six inches bad
fallen in six hours at Concord,
N. H.. with S inches during the
same period at Hartford, Conn.
Two deaths in Texas on anln·
slick road and one in Okl~a
were blamed on the stOl'm,
which in one day left eight times
the normal November snowfall
in Oklahoma. Four people died
in separate snow•relai.d road
accidents bl Ohio, where as
mucti 8$ m int&es fell. Two
traftic deatm wfre n!ported in
Pennsylvarua a.Qd one in New
Jersey. In addition, a 9-year-old
boy in Armstrong County, Pa.,
was found dead in his backyard
swimming pool after he went
outside to shovel snow. In New
York, the storm was blam~ for
at least two deaths.
A twin-engine airplane piloted
by a New York man was report·
ed missing this morning over
rugged Pennsylvania terrain
covered with nine to 12 inches of
snow.
f'ro• Page ,, I
NIXED ...
to redesignate 46 acres ol tbe ~
parcel from commercial, re·
source production and low deosi· .
ty residential uses to moaUy ,
medium and ·high density;
homes.
R.-ideata~:~11'1:&t:~~· cbanan oui a
family homes wbich surrna• ..
the property on three sides.
Peter Von Ellen, an attorney
for Mola, claimed that be
believed the concerns were ,
based 00 selfish motives. r
"They're a bunch of rubbish," i
he declared. 'l¢
Mola said that the city council ~
and the other critics were not
showing concern for "the ailent ~
guy who is not represented and -$
who wants to live in the city.''
The change in land uae was
opposed by Mayor Ruth llailey~ _
Ruth Fiol,y, Bob Manc:Uc. John ~
Thomas and Jack Kelly. .
RQn Pattln1on and Don ;i
MacAllister voted to approve the •
land use change.
Jenrette won't quit
NEW YORK CAP) -Rep. John
Jenrette, D·S.C .• defeated
for re-election after his convic·
tion for bnbery in the FBI's
Abscam operation. said.today be <.
will not resign his seat in the
face of possible expulsion from
Congress
I
Ontt of the world's lltUest known musical·
aggregations -The World's Lar1est Non.
marching Band -plays in shopping
center at comer of Adams Avenue and
Brookhurst Street in Huntington Beach.
Group appeared there over weekend,
wearing masks and black and silver t·
shirts with "Band X" oo front. Baildamen
only show up wben they feel like it: the
leader la some 1uy named nou,, and,
when they go to a parade, they ride in a
truck. It's rumored they're from Orange
Ooast College in Costa Mesa.
OCC eyes energy cuts
F edeml grant uill aid computer control plan
BJ JERRY CLAUSEN OftllltDell., ...........
· Worldn1 with a recently won
$164,465 federal grant, Oranie
Coast C.Ollege officials expect to
cut ener1y consumption on their
210·acre, 33,000-student campus
by 40, percent in the near future.
The National Conservation Act
grant and a matching amount
pledged by the Coast Commuru·
ty Colleee District will eo for a
computer to control campus air
conditioning. heating, lighting
and other energy users.
BEFORE APPLYING for the
grant last May, ,Robert B.
... , ........ ., ..... O' ....
SOLAR SAVER -Looking over a solar panel Orance
Coast College officials hope will cut the campus• enero
bills are John P. Potter, director of physical facWUes and ·
planning, standing, and Dr. Donald Reuter, OCC pro·
fessor.
Irvine distrirt
Reclaimed water
'
program expanded
The lrilne Ranch Water Dia·
trlct la expa.ndiq a prop-am in
wblcb water reclaimed from
Talk planned
'l;ief ore new
ai,dgrqup r
1ewap treatment ii uaed to tr· rtiat. landtcapma ID Irilne.
lrVtni Public Wotb Dl.rector
.Brent Mucbow 1ald Monday UM
water diltrtct plans to UM tbe
reclailriied wat« at nilM Joca.
tJOU lD tbe city.· More ejpmll••
potable Wlter ii belnl uaed to lr-
rtsate 11nd1caplo1 at tbeae ......
TU OMHGSOVB& IN tbe
type ol wat.r uaeld at t.bete fOCa.
Uon1 will necHtltate ,iearly
$1,000 ID . pl pe mOdifteaUon WOril:
at each lfte.
MucboW 1ald tbe eity Will HJ
for tbele modlfteatiou.
Public woru admlni•trator
Robert R. DellO laid thll U• pease wU1 be reecwend U. ._
than two years ~ r.haeed
••• c:Oltl. 11..--Uhlt.M~bu ...
Nclalml'd waa.r to ln:llate
parb midif=·--~ ~-~:-r .,rr.':r~s·em r.clallilll. .....
Moore. college president, or·
ganiied a task force to audit and
reduce the Costa Mesa campus
ener1y consumption.
As a result of the study
launched in the spring of 1979, 15
buildinp were "de-lamped" or
"re-lamped," officials noted.
Thermostats were adjusted,
timing clock.a re·set and campus
boilers made more efficient.
Solar energy panels were
placed on several roofs.
Colleee energy btlla averaged
about $700,000 a year . over the
five years before the energy
audit.
FOLLOWING THE ener&Y·
savinc ltepe, the college saved
taspayers about $115,000 in
enerey expenditures during the
1979·80 fiscal year.
"It wasn't an actual savings
. . . because utility bills jumped
dramatically during the year,"
said Donald Rueter, professor of
bustneaa information systems
and an eoer1y task force
member.
''Had we not conducted the
audit, however, our utility bill
would have been $115,000 bil}ler
than it was."
He noted that before the audit,
the colle1e was ·'operating
bulldi.no at a time when they reaUycfl~·t~~tobe10~1.
DUIUNG THE LATEa after·
noon boura we found that
clauroom.a were empty, yet
doors were open, lltbta were
turned on, exhaust fUI were
operatma and air conditioning
wunmnlnl.
"We recopized pretty quicltly
that molt ot our campus build·
int• w~re constructed during a
time wfMm there wu an energy
elut. Consequently, en1tneers
and architects over-liebted,
heated and air conditloned
them."
He iaid that problem hu been
corrected.
Since the preliminary 1979
audit, the colle1e bu lnlpected
an additional lrT buildlnl•.
IT WAS DETBaMJNBD that a
1mall computer would be re·
quired to etfeetively mOAltor all
lf the campus' enero C0111ump-
don. The federal 1rant and
matcblnt diatrlct f\llldl will
purcbue a '230.ooo computer to
be connected wltb all major
enersy con.aumlof devices, a
IPok•JJWl noted.
Tbe computer 1y1tem,
planud for l.Dltillatlon by next
March, ii exped.ed to pay for
itself in enerl1 Hvinit ln less
tbaot~. Jn to tbe computer,
the fund will buy solar water
beaten and devices to make
heattna·and alr condlt1ont111 un;
Ill more effective. ·
WHEN FULLY, operaUonal,
tbe ..._ computeriMCI t)"ltem ii
expected to cut coUeae enero
eonawnpdon by u much u 40
percent each year, Rueter
opined.
"When you're looktn• at an aanual enef'S)' blll of appro-..
lmatel; '100,000, that'• a alp.Ill•
unt n,w., • • he concluded. ' ..
Subdivision
approved
in Eaguna
South Coast Regional Coastal
Commluiooera have approved a
1'·lot su)Mlivtaion planned ln the
Top of the World area of Laguna
Beach. .
The commission voted 7 ·Oto ap-
prove the subdivision application
by Huntington Enterprises of San·
ta Fe Sprtnp. Four members of
the ll·member panel were
absent.
THE PaOJEcr was approved
over the objection of Abby
Alderman of Laguna Beach, who
contended that the three-acre
parcel at the Intersection of Alta
Laauna Boulevard and Park
A venue should be left u open
apace.
She said the development would
add to erosion, fire hazards, traf.
fie and crime in the Top of the
World area.
Huntingt.oo Enterprises plans
to dlvidetbe land into lots varyinc
from 8,080 to 9,290 square feet.
The property is located on the
northern aide of Alta Laguna,
where Park Avenue ends.
UNDER THE commissipn's
conditions are requirements for
some af!ordable housing. \
Tbe de\feJopen could provide
three of the 14 lots for affordable
houaift&. Al. an alternative, they
could provide six units of such
housin1 elsewhere in Laeuna
Beach.
Or, they could provide a cash
payment for such housing.
Exercise class
set for skiers
A alti conditioning program.
aimed at eettine snow buffs
tuned-up for the slopes while
waltiq for winter to settle in, la
being offered by the Orange
Coast YMCA in Newport Beach.
The twice-weekly claaa, begin·
nine tonight la two hours Looi
The five-week session, meeting
Tuesdays and Thursday, runs
from 7 to 9 p.m .
The prosram is structured for
skiers 18 years of age and over.
For information, call 642·9990.
n1• to inGnltor lncldenee ol tbe aometimea·tital dlHue. f>reSl.
dent JarDN McKlttendr said be
personally bu ~n a ten-fold In·
creue b:l cues and thbiliCI the
matter la more 1ertoua tban tJle
usoclation'I survey todicatea.
The .aame teel'lll to be true bl
Oran1e Cowlty. At the Newport
Harbor Animal H01pltal ln Cotta
Mesa, Dr. Allee Reichel aald
veterlnartana have aeen "con·
slderably more cue1 reeenUy
than ln the summer," '
888 SAID nm reuon could
be btcame the diaeue bad )Ult
reached Oran1e County when
the warm weatlaer adlved th1t
year.
T~e virus la usually passed
through contact with an infected
dog's excrement, aG expetta1had
believed that the hiahest rate of
incidence would occur during
warm months, when does
generally mix more. Dr. Reichel said vets at her
clinic continue to vaccinate
Of fiee eomplex due?
Banning school site
zoning approved
In conjunction with plans for
long-range development of the
500-acre Banning-Newport
Ranch, Newport-Mesa sc~ool of.
ficials have authorized changing
the zoning on their unused 11 ·acre
Baonlnl School site.
The school-owned land ls in·
eluded in a long-ranee develop-
ment plan submitted on behalf
of Beeco, Ltd. to the City of
Newport Beach and Orange
County in October.
PROPOSED BY Bee<:«> is tbree-phase development beeinning
before 1985 and continuing
beyond 1995.
The school land, Just inside
Newport Beach's westerly city
limit, once was proposed as an
elementary school site. Declln·
ing district enrollment has re·
suited In the property being
declared surplus.
School officials s~y there is no
potential need for a school on the
site in the foreseeable future,
but that rezoning the land doesn't
mean it will be sold for sure.
Under Beeco's plan, the school
site would change from the cur·
rent public use to a zone allow·
ing office construction.
EVEN TROUGH plans drafted
by Phillips Brandt Reddick,
Irvine architects and plannen.
propose up to 4,829 dwelling un·
its eventually, school planners
say they doubt the area will
generate many students.
One school planner noted that
housing units sellin& for more
than $125,000 "generate almost
no Influx of cbJldren unW the
price range moves above
$250,000.
"Then. children are moved ln·
to the more•xpensive units, but
they usually are transfers from
within the district. And they
usually are the child.E.en of
families moving up in the~."
Officials also are quick to note
that Costa Mesa's Victoria
School lies near the proposed de·
velopment area. That school
was closed two years ago and is
leased to a private school. It,
they note, could be reactivated
as a public school if required.
MOST. OF THE Banning •
Ranch and 450 acres, lies on pro· ._· _
petty governed by Orange Coun· • ~e~~~ so afres lie in Newport. '
The acreage, one of the last
large undeveloped properties in ·
the coastal Orange County area, ...
currently produces oil. Portions •
would continue producing until ·
after 1995, architects indicate. ·•
The ranch, portions of which
are planned for light industry. :
commerce and recreation, lies !
partially inside western -
Newport Beach. ·~
The rest of the ranch's land ly· ·{
ing in county territory is ringed f
by a one-foot-wide Newport
Beach city strip to the Santa
Ana River on the west.
COSTA MESA lies to the 1
northeast and Pacific Coast
Highway to the south.
Flrat phase development, ~
scheduled between 1980, and '1
1985, calla for between S9 and 113
dwellinl uruta on nine acres of '1
non-oil bearine land.
That area includes the school
property and lies mostly within i
Newport Beach between 17th
Street and Pacific Coast
Hiebway. It includes 24 acres
expected to be zoned for In·
dustrial park development.
...
fl
11 I
l•.1
I'),.
)r''
"''
, ..
I •I ,,,·,
. ,. , ..
'"
...
·'·
• •
.. , ,
..... M.=..e.
OrJQ18e Coast, Wild coast
ONCB AaO\.IND TR• a&\Ti La1un• Btacb art.lit
Hal Putorillll Jr., who CNllld qul\t a nN> by parldd bll two.too sculpt ''V•UI•" on the Art Coloay'1 Maln~Biach,
hasnowcomeupwlthabtwtwllttoanoldt•m•.
Putort\AI .ow.cl to blN • CHM ror SIOO and botat
Ve1Up otf the beach tOdaf, JUlt ooe day Won our •UCUlt
Coaatal Comml11loo wo\lld ll-•b baalab Ult 11-foot
stfflwon trom tbe audl. So that la tbt uw wrinlll• lo lht old aaylna, "You tan't
nreme-lquitl" ~u ol V"ttae-on·U..beach, by lbt ••Y; elahn
they 1ave the coaatal t~J>et a lltlon bearlnl the
alsnatww ot 1.000 i.a,unana lo tl)e sculpture.
What the coaatal caan bl,Y doo't know la you can
lindalmostl,OOOLaaunanawbowlU1ipANYpeUtlon. ' ... .
CO&T~ MESA SIGHTING upon Newport Boulevard
muat IO down u the license plate bracket Motto of the
Week. It proclaims: "'-" meeu-le Co. -We Remoye You Aorta."
Th~t'a brief enou1h . ••• PtJZZUNG INDEED was the action of that San
Clemente cop who the other day became suapicloua of a
,-r-----r--------.~ ON
.STRt KE
(.ti!
"And Gwe My Regarda to Mrs. Jane am EnglUh·A"
local citizen who was carrying some goods in his arms.
The suspect, the lawman explained, wu loaded down
with an auto battery, tape deck, tool box and a hydraulic
jack.
Now I ask you, what's so unusual about that? That cop
must never have owned a used car.
I always thought everybody walked around carryin1
spare parts. ••• FOR ROMANCE OF the sea, you can't beat this line
from Al Lockabey, the esteemed boating scribe of tb.ia
sterling journal, when it came to reportin1 upon the
Mazatlan boat race. He noted:
"Secret Love's elapsed time was 7 days, 5 hours and 5
minutes ... "
Ah well, short but sweet ...
*** HUNTINGTON BEA<;H UNION School District
teachers have now vowed to go on "a media blits" in try-
in1 to impress the citizenry that their cause is just ln seek·
inl a 14 percent pay popper from ye board of trualeel.
District realdenta will be educated on pay iaauea
(teachers' views> by radio commercials, mallen and
newspaper ada. You are left to wonder who decided to call
this a blitz? A blitz la defined by Webster's u, "A sudden,
sava1e attack, cauaina 1reat devestation ... in fury to
win a quick victory.
Now really, you have to figure the teacben don't real-
ly want to devestate anytbinc. And quick victory? How
lone has this hassle been goinc on. anyway? Si.nee the
Fourth of July?
*** AND FINALLY, tbia breezy headline eave you the real
scoop a1ooi tbe current weather front:
''High wind discovered on Saturn.''
Now you know bow hard those Santa Anas were reallY
blowin1.
. ..........
Ord. ...... ,, ....
Fugitive financier Robert
Vesco has until Dec. 11 to
leave the Bahamas, a gov-
ernment spokesman there
has said. Vesco has for
seven years eluded federal
charges stemming from
Watergate and a
multimillion-dollar stock
scandal.
'IWA to hike
cross-country
air fares
NEW YORK (AP) -Trans
World Airlines says it will follow
Eastern Airlines' lead and raise
transcontinental air fares, but
continue to offer a round-trip
ni1ht coach "Supersaver" fare
of $298 between New York and
CaUfomia.
TWA /a round -trip
"Superaaver" day coach
between New York and
California will be $338, up from
$298. The apeclal ni1bt coach
fare of $298 la up from $268.
Eaat4!m'1 cheapest New York·
to-Loa Anaeles fare will be ~
beal.nnine Jan. 1. Both Eutem
and TWA have been cbargin&
$268 for discounted round-trip
nlabt-coach tickets.
Eaatem's cheapest round-tdp
fare between New York and San
Francl.aco will be $475 as of Jan.
1.
TWA's discount tarn will re-
quire purchase and reservationl
al leut aeven days in advance
and a minimum stay of seven
days. Seats are limited and no
one-way tickets Will be aold.
SnoW snarls southwest
Wind-whipped dri/111 battled ~y Texam
r~,,,...,
.... ..,,j OllW..:... . ·14 :! . • ..
•'
THE TERAN BROADCAST satd tbe tide of
battle ,..u tumed bY the arrival Monday of army
reinforcements. Up to then, the dty was bellev~
to have been defended mainly by revoluUonary
1uai'd.I and re,utan of the local garrison.
Iran alJO repeated a charge that Iraq used
"chemical weapons and incendiary bomb1"
against Susangerd and said this heralded "the use
of "aerm warfare and biological weapons." It
asked the United Nations and the lntemaUonal
Red Croes "to strongly censure the Iraqi reclme
and make it st.op Its inhuman crimes."
.Klansmen win acquitial
'Nazis also cleared in killing of five comm11nists
GREENSBORO, N.C. CAP)-A Nazi leader has
hailed the acquittal of six Ku Klux Klansmen and
Nazis as a "great victory for white America," but
the Communist Workers Party has charged that the
verdict in the slaying of five comrades "gives the
green light to Hitler-like attacks on the people or
America."
The defendants' relatives burst into tears of re-
lief as the verdicts were read Monday, ending the
lon1est trial in North Caro Una history.
THE CHARGES STEMMED from a bloody
shootout between white supremacists and dem-
onstrators at a CWP "Death to the Klan" rally
Nov. 3, 1979.
Not 1001 after the jurors announced their de-
cbion, the civil rights division of the U.S. Justice
Department said it was studying the verdict. Drew S.
Daya said the branch was checking •'to see if there is
anything we can do."
The Rev. Hosea Williams, a black civil rights ac-
tivist, called the verdict "the greatest perpetration
of injustice on our country since tbe death of Dr.
Martin LutherKinlZ Jr."
Whether 16 other people charged after the
demonstration will be brouabt. to trial now hu not
yet been announced.
The decision by the all-white jury came after
seven days of deli be ration and a23-week trial.
"From the very be1lnnlna, it wu the com-
munists who did the attackin1." said jww Robert A.
Williams. "It was the communista who started beat-
ing the cars with sticks. From then on, it was a cue of
self-defense."
''Ob, gosh, I feel like I have been aet free," said a
tearful Paula Wood, wboae husband, Nut Roland
Wayne Wood, was acquitted. 'Tm not sure bow I
feel. It's just a relier."
In Raleigh, national Nazi commander Harold
Covington called the verdict "fantastic. It shows we
can beatthe system on their own ground."
HE SAID HE WOULD annolDlce today a "coun·
ter·attack against the government'' that would be
the beginning of a "white revolution, replaclq
tyranny." He did not elaborate.
"We believe in togetherness,
fresh
ocean breezes
and
Fashion
Island."
•
Fashion Island is our kind
of place. ~ find fashion
tradition in designer jeans,
western boots, hats or
sweaters, spons jackets
and, if we are going to that
special charity event,
elegant evening wear. It's
all at Fashion Island!
-------___ _......_ ________ . ____ .._ ___ ...., ________ ~~-.. -
. '
l
An
GarfJage piling up
Man leaving his apartment building in Los Angeles eyes
the accumulation of garbage. It is the result of the second
week of no-work action by city employees, including·
trash collectors. Negotiators for the city and three strik·
ing unions continue contract talks today in an effort to
settle the walkout that has left garbage piling up at the
rate of 5.000 tons a day.
Levi wins lawsuit;
keeps 'pocket tab'
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) On·
ly Levi jeans can bear a certain
kind of pocket tab, a court has
ruled.
Levi Strauss & Co. announced
Monday it was victorious in its
s uit against the maker.s of
Wrangler jeans over the use or
the tab.
THE 9TH U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in San Francisco Fri·
day affirmed a 1978 lower-court
decision against Blue Bell Inc .
of Greensboro, N .C. The lower
court found Blue Bell guilty or
trademark infringement and un·
fair competition and ordered the
firm not to use the tab
Leva Strauss, of San Fran-
cisco, said that. since 1936, a
tiny ribbon has been sewn onto a
patch pocket on its pants so con-
sumers can readily identify the
product.
A SPOKESMAN for Levi
Strauss said the decision "pre·
vents other manufacturers from
confusing the public by using
our trademark."
The judge in the case noted,
"Blue Bell's use of the pocket
tab on the Wrangler pants was
designed to capitalize on a
market previously developed by
Levi strauss & Co."
Blue Bell argued that its
pocket tab carried the Wrangler
name and did not infringe on
Levi's use Blue Bell officials
could not be reached for com-
ment.
HE TOLD THE National
Transportation Sarety Board
panel be did not learn oC the IC·
cident wttil after be landed.
"At JlO time dJd I see any
other aircraft, although I milht
have seen a Cessna 172,"
Rossillon said.
Rosaillon, who was piloting a
Cessna UiO, said it was not Wl·
common to see such small
planes around Lindbergh Field.
but added, "I do not rec•ll see-
Lne another airliner."
THE ALPA SEARCHED area
airfield ruritit records and dls· coverf(l that Rossillon was fiy:
· ing nearby at the Ume or the col·
lision. The group turned the in·
formation over to the NTSB,
which ordered Rossillon to ap·
pear before the panel.
Rosaillon said he made only a
short filgbt Crom San Diego's
Monteomery Field to Encinitas
the morning of the crash and
knew nothing or it until he
turned on his car radio after
landing.
Rossillon, a department store
worker who is no longer a pilot,
Fraud seheme
THE AIRCRAFT OWNERS
and Pilots As~lation decrieid
Monday's hearln& as an attempt
t.o ·•cruelly an innocent man."
Francia McAdams, who pre.
aided over the hour and 20·
minute heartn1 emphatized at
the outset that there was no in·
tentlon to pin blame for tbe .
crash on any parly, and an
ALPA representative. Harotd
MarthJnsen, later agreed.
MARTHIN8EN SAID the
uilots' goal in pursuing l)\e hear·
ing wu to 1et the NTSB to re·
consider Its rulln1 on the proba·
ble cause or the crash.
He said the pilots are hoping
to itnprove procedures for iden·
tifying air traffic at crowded
airport areas over the visual
procedures now used.
"There were other means to
separate air traffic and they
should have been used ,"
Marthinsen said.
When asked if he thought he
had played a part In the crash,
he said •1a~lutely not."
Just before the collision. the
pilot of the PSA craft told con·
trollers his crew "had the
Cessna in sight a minute ago"
and he believed lt had passed orr
to the right.
Three found guilty
in land conspiracy
THE NTSB RULED after the
crash that the PSA crew probab-
ly had not complied with the
Federal Aviation Admlnistra.
. Twin disputes
close system
TIJUANA, Mexico CAP) -
Baja California was bit by twin
disputes today that shut down
the state court system and 27 of
the 31 campuses of the
Autonomous University of BaUa
California.
After a local attorney was aJ.
legedly beaten by Cederal
highway police, lawyers
throughout the state announced
a boycott of courts "until order
is restored."
A strike by 510 university
employees supported by 7,000
students has paralyzed the
schools.
••
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Three
men accused of bilking investors
of more than SS million over an
11-year period have been convict·
ed or conspiracy and mail fraud in
what prosecutors call the largest
land rraud scheme in California's
history.
The government said the def en·
dants used a company called Pre-
B u ilder Land Corp. to sell
thousands of acres of land in
Riverside, San Bernardino and
Placer counties to hundreds of in·
vestors.
GUILTY VERDICTS on one
count of conspiracy and five
counts of mail fraud were re-
turned Monday against Nick
Troy, 47, of Woodland Hills ;
Robert Koepple , 52, of
Chatsworth and Leslie Dahl
Gleave,54.ofOrem, Utah.
An indictment said the defen·
dants told customers they were
only brokers and did not own any
of lhe l~d. But the government
maintained the three had set up
Bonnie® Jog Suit,
For The Man On
The Run.
Bold & Sharp,
machine washable
& no Ironing.
Royal blue,
camel, green,
navy, ~urgundy
& powder blue.
so.oo
Sizes:
LT·2XT
1XB·4XB
Nike®
For
Winners I
-~
s hell corporations (comparues
existing only on paper) to hold Li-
tle to the property and bad
transferred parcels among their
companies, often doubling the
prices before selling the land to in·
vestors.
IN ONE CASE, the indictment
alleged, a shell corporation
bought a piece of land in 1968 for
$24,500 and sold itJor $49,000three
weeks later to another sheU cor-
poration, which held it one week
and sold it to an investor for
$50,000.
Each defendant could be im·
prisoned up to five years and fined
up to $10,000 on the conspiracy
charge and imprisoned up to five
years and fined up to Sl,000 on
each of the fraud counts. Sentenc·
ing was.setfor Dec. 15 by U.S Dis-
trict Judge William P Grey.
The defendants also are bemg
prosecuted by the Securities and
Exc hange Commission in a
separate action alleging ctvil
fraud
l
High hopes of congressional 'approval of a S38 million
af ocation from the Land and Wa.Jer Conservancy Fund to h lp create an 11,000-acre natiooal part alonl the Oranae
C ast have been growint dimmer since the election.
The park measure, introduced by Rept. Robert ildbam and Jerry Patterson, won House approval lut
miner, but a matching Senate bill by Sem. Alan
anston and S.I. Hayakawa made it only u far as the
nate Energy and Natural Resources Committee before t~ pre-election recess. _I That committee must approve the blll before it
'~'+'ves to the Senate floor, and time ia nmnlnl out.
Ctngress will recess for 11umlugivin& at the end of tbil
week, then return for only five days in December.
If the park bill, which President Carter bu promiled
to sign, does not pass in th1s session it will have to be re·
submitted to both the House and Senate next year. And no
one is too optimistic about the chances for any bills with a
price tag on them when the new Congreu moves onto
Capitol Hill.
Badham is busy trying to roun~r::f more Republican
backing for the Orange Coast park initial objection to
t hP park by the National Parka Service appean to have
1wen overcome by promises of matcbin1 state fundinl
and future park management by the state.
At this time the chances don't seem too bript, but a
last-minµt e push for approval would be a worthwhile ef.
fort for ou r congressional delegation.
tl1oughtful athlete
Fonner Rams star Roman Gabriel la doina the stu·
dents on his Cal Poly-Pomona football squad a real favor,
wh ether they appreciate it or not.
Gabriel. now a coach, is concerned about youn1
athletes who are "used for their four· yean of athletics,
then turned loose with nothinl to 1bow for it." He cites
some students who have made it all the way to coU.ece
and ''can hardly write."
So Gabriel is insisting that bis playen report to the
college resource center to have their skills in readfnt,
w11ting and math tested to find out where they need more
academic help. The coach is not-kiddlq. Thole who don't report for
te;}ting are excluded from out-of-town 1ame1. Gabriel
nm.es, wisely, that not more than a handful of athletes
can go on to become prolessionala. He want.a them all to
learn "how to get along well in IOdety."
It's a particularly thoughtful approach from someone
who did have great success u a pro athlete -and it
should someday earn him the special tratitude of all of
his players, whatever their careen.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are thoM of the Oalty Piiot.
Other views expressed on th11 page are those of their authore and
artists Reader comment Is Invited. Addreu The Dally Pllo,, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Ripoate
ByL.M.BOYD
This newsroom 1tory la u
old as Umburaer cheese, but
1ttll circutntlna: A city editor.
who wanted to get Cary
Grant'• exact a1e straipt
from the man hmaelf, tent tbe
actor the light tele~rarn:
"How old Cary Grant?' B•ck
cam~ lhe wired reply: "Oki
Cary Grant. be Just fine. How
f0l1."''
t amc.playina youn1sters
outdoot1 yell klna'• X and
cro•• their tl~ert to alpal
for time out. Tbat flat•t·
crosam, 11 a youthful ,..nar.
that date• back 't;:!t'!f: many pneraliqu. C• ,
far beyond Uvlnc memOI")'.
Noboa)'. kdowa bow lt ortctn~, eYidently. Or do
you?
A Greek U• WU called I
'Pelekua. 'lbe bl1 blrd'• bilk
loou like that. Whlcb la wb1
It'• called a pelican.
... . .,. ........
THE BANDUNG of the bonus
idea bu turned IO sour, in fact,
that dlaU.lutloned etnployees re·
fer to the prosram u "Cub for
Cronl•."
My reporters Indy Badhwar
and Gloria Oanai1er have re-
viewed a IOlll Uat of the ~i·
plenta ol cub bonuses -some sa .Jl(tllloa worth, ranclne from
U;ooG to $20,000. Here's the
1orry rundown on just a few of
these bureaucratic bonus
babies:
-Marion Finkel, assistant
director for new drue evalua-
Uon, Food and Drue Admlnistra·
tlon -Sl0,000 bonus. For yean.
1he hu been accused of harus-
lnC FDA 1cienti1ts who were
deemed "adversarial" to the in·
teresta of drue companies. A
sp~clal panel of federal in·
ve~U1aton concluded in 1977
tha\ Flnkel and FDA manage.
mnt had concealed the truth
and atven incomplete and mis·
leadiq testimony in a caae in-
volvina the rallroacUn1 of an
Earl Waters
............. Uie k1Dd OI MJlMe ........................
la • Cltter admtal1traU011.
IMteld, the ao.•1'Wanl W111t
to one of J'lt11•rald'1 ~--Cliudt J ranua. •nodMlr
blab Alt hfti omctaJ -= ranu. ..... bralDI
~roJ.ct llts, • multhnUUOD·
dollar computerbed maaa••· ..... ,...,tlaa&~
w1te.._ cOdcluded· ••· u wortbltM 11 tt wu exp1n1lw.
Tbt IJI Fore., witb Fartnh.a'I lmow..,_, CCIDttnued to laTllh
, mOJM1 OD tM profram u.aUl tt w •• qu_l~tly 1cuttl•d after
crlUcal btaJ1Dp bJ tM Senate
ApproprtaUona Comaolttee ln
1WT7. '
-Erkh •°" )f arbod, deput1 cblef of the · oeteoae Depart·
mot'• MCUrity Alllatance qen.
..
. e..JWALTD UUAVa,
of th•> Oen•tal SentcH •
rahilt&ratJGa'1 Waabla.-,~., reCJOO&I office -$1,:500. ur •
•H the •ubjeet ot • J c.
D•partment tnvesU1atlon In
for hll aetfYW• wben be w11.s
loan to the C•rt•r-Mo•4l•t•
tranatuon team. Ile aDd • *
soel.ie cooUd UD a way to iPt
around GSA repiatiom M a
meua fll pa)'in1 trualUcm ~
members anUl· tbey wt.re Of·
flclaUy on the 1overn=
payroll. ltallaur admltl tO
• ''•bortcut" but den.la tMre
wu a Jwti~ DepartmemE vestleatlon. He HY• Jua ce
.. looked at" the a11tem be
deviled to pay salary actvaneea.
and concluded there was nOCJdni
wron1. ..
-Edward~ former aMb· tant aeentary Departmeat al
Transportation -S20,04c).
Scott'I brainchild WU a eaitlY scheme to replace aecnitadeia
(th• clerleal· kind, not depNt-
ment beads) with TV-at.zed ciotn-
puter terminals that would. te-
c e iv e, •tore and d11peb1e
me11qes .idle busy exeemi••
were out to lunch or otberwbe
ablent. Scott toot the boDua l:Dd
then left1ovemme11tservlce.
-William S. Heffellin&•r ,.
chief 4' · Mbnklistratlon at the
Enero Department -$2.IOO.
Onetime Nlxqn batchetman at
DOT, Heffelflneer bu come un·
der eoneresslonal scrutiny on
char1es be falalfted his job f:oe.
sume, lied to DOE investieatons
and shredded 1ovemment dOC!u·
ments. DOE's inapector 1eneral
referred the char1es in 1918 to
the Justice Department, which
recommended admini"traUve
action instead of prosecution.
Juatice's handling of the case ii
being investigated by the Senate
Judiciary Committee.
'Ghost voting' practice erodes lawmaking
The nefarious practice ot
le1t1latlve tbolt votin1 may
aoon be brought to a 1creechln1
halt. But it la not likely that it
will be the result of any volun·
tary action on the part ol the
lawmakers. Thia despite the
declaration of Assembly Rules Committee Chairman Lou
Papan that his committee would
ltudY. rule chaoses to end phan-
tom enactments.
Not that Papan and the few
other lqialaton who have pro·
luted the ll·
le1al vot1n1
ann 't liDcere
of purpose.
Hla problem
will be aet·
Una a Hffi· clent number
of memb•rt
to effect the
halt . Fur ·
tbermore ,
wttb tbe onaotn1 lnt.ernal war ln
the Aaembly u to who 1hall be Boeakw, Papan'• own fate as
chairman of the i mportant bouebep~ commlttff ls in
balance. And even lf Papu re·
maiDI lD power ud HCUJ'el 40
1upportJve votes it would still
lHV• undone the curtailment of
a tlmtlar prutlce ln th• Senate.
So tt may·be that.the only way
th• rfspNbenaibl• and unlawful
enacta>ent \X'OC••, which bu
blo11omed In th• Le1l1tature
with the advent of the "full·tlme,
professional legislators," will be
stopped Is by a court act.Ion.
Plans to institute such proceed·
ings have been disclosed by a
Southern California public in·
terest !i which is aathertna data prep atory to filint suit.
Exactly w at form this will take
and on what basis it will be
brought hu not yet been re-
vealed.
GHOST VOTING as practiced
in the Assembly is a conve·
nience in l\(h.icb the lawmakers
have induleed whereby
measurea •r• adopted by the house despite the lack of a
quorum. This is made easy by
the fact members indJcate their
"Yeas" and "Nays" by pushlna
a voting button. When a member
is absent rrom his desk dwin& a
roll call a he lpful seatmate reaches over and pushes hie vote
button for him. Thia could be
overlooked if the ~abtent"
member was present in the Al·
sembly Chamber , fully
coanlzant of the roll call and the
way he was beinl voted.
But it bas become a common
practice for a handful of As·
sem blymen to rush from desk to
deak indlscrhnloately puabln.t
the buttCJN of all absent mem·
ben. Capitol observen have
wttneaed usembllet Of as few
u 20 memben PM•lDC bill after
the mCllt ldlA>tlcalli unm\llleal
aoa1 be had ever beard, but what
did the old man nowt He W
pV911 up u.temQ tot.be ndio (G•
cept tor °"" brofldcuta) tiJ ttii
• Um• we were tr.,..ported bdO
ecttaey with "Thne J~I• f'till· ~." and tJMri "M•lny Doatl,"
wblcb ·~ tbo country like bUbonk p&qui.
BUT I .ua 1tlll entoldlid lD
no1talata when I recall 1utll
cblldboOd rhantlff H •11>t1a
Dlt• Doo," WMS "Who 11iriiW the
Overall• ID llrt1 KutJ1'1'1
Cbowdii't" ~to rn.asa.a lb8t
1drria Dlartial tune Of Werid War 0 : '!TU Bo01le Woo.le '4aclt 1o; rrom Co"!P81!1 B." · C-u.,Ot•~ • .ac Joftrt..., forfl' •• ......,
KOo," or "lf J Dock tM L • ti Mll1.'' cw .. ll Ala\ a.a. ..
No llon, ''and •l*i~ .......
blll t'91 after day, despite the
conaUtdioaaJ requirement ol '1
votes to pass any bill. In mazay
cases the member vOUd ii not
only abaeot from the Chamber
but ofteD ab1ent from
Sacramento and even ablent
from the atate. On oae memor•
ble occaaca a member's D&ID4l..
wu dilcovered on • roll call
taken two da)'I after h1a death!
WlllLB THE Senate does not have a voUna macbine, all vcMI
belna cast orally which
theoretically preclude• voUJaa
an abeent Senator, lD practice lt
is not true. For the Senate ball
adopted the "cute" device of
1ubstltutlni a prevtOUJ roll call.
As bllll come up for puaace the
chair announces that "unleu
there ii objectlon SB-wtJJ be
deemed pUled ~ the prevtoua
roll call." Row ce anyooe wbo ·
lln 't tbere obj~? To their dla·
bonor the Senators have
permitted the aubltltut.e roll call
utaee \0 tbe polDt ~al caU of the clay la the
call taken at tbe ope 1 f1f the
d1y•11ee1ioo ...
Tbat lbolt vottiil. lft IDY form
l• unlawful bu bffo clearly
atated by U.e Le1t1lattv•
COUNI numeroua ttm .. bl opt.
iilou bo4cllni ••a member must
cut hlJ own YCU bi pel'IOD Ilia
cannot aotborlse •D>' other
person, includlna aooth•r
lelialtk>r, to cut b1a vote toi-
bim." He bu allo repeatedly
cited the conatitutional providoO
th•t ''Nq bW may be puaed Ub· ten by Rill can vote,. majority
of each house ccmcun."
Btl'I' THE PUBLIC lntertlt
sroup boplar to •top tte
Le1l1latur•'• phantom eoadt-
menta will be confronted rib
the problem that no matte¥i CODcnle \heir evlde:Dce m.,
that a speclftc law wu en
wltbout a ma,fority vote ol
Alaembly or Sen.ate, the courta
blatortcaJly ha•• Nfuled '"to io
behind the lealllatlve record'•
whenever any lait ii challenaed.
BecauM ot that it ta mo.t l!Me-
ly that the oaly way anybody
can brlq the lep1lators to bltel
in this matter la to carefUUy blrd-dol tbe 1eatslaton each 4a1
ucl =unctive actiom before
IDJ 1 c bW becomet law, ln
fact it lJ prepared ftM'
.1ubmlllkld'to tbe 1ove1'DOI'. Abd
they will have to do Ulla •· Unually day after day until it
becomes orjltal clear to the
le1l1l.-on that bW. cu't be
puled uDJ.., by a mlJorlty IUJ
call ~ ol votes taktlll lD perNG. ftoul11 aucb an effort
wW i.-a wbal• of a lot ol P'lblt~ npport. Good luck,
fellont
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
.... , --
r~. NDu1lf!blt 11 1•
BofA president
heads 'bank
SAN FRANCISCO ~AP) -With .ame eouDWlet • daaser ol delaultln1 on their lntemaUoul ao.n., u
Amertcaa binker lt 1teppln1 In to held the baU ot tut
.. sort. tfie lwaU that lends to the world'• "bauet c8"1." :..~
Tbe diulce ol Alden w. cta\»ea, the )fttideftt ..... t.
eluef eueUUw officer Of the Bank ot America, to head tbl
WMld BaU comet at a time wbea ~eerm are ll'OWU.,·,.
over U. ability of many countries to pay • " Cl&..-. ln u interview at h1a Of-
fice hen iaJd be expecta tome CC>Un·
1rlH .W not be able to pay their
debt., but tbat no cata1tropbe wa1
brewln1 for tbe major lntemattooal
baot1. A.Dd be wd he will be wtlllnl to
mile loam to countriet that could bor-
row nowhere et.M.
In Id.I 31 yean at Bank of Amert~.
Clauaen worked bl.S way up from a
$18S-a·rnonth clerk count.int cub iD a \la&all to become the STI0,000.a-year boll cuu.a• .
of the WIOl'ld'a lar1eat commerciil bank. The World B._ job will pay Just m.ooo. . ..
J
THE WO&LD BANK LAST year lent more than $!!
billion to developins countries, with t.be loans eoiDg ·to
build roads, achooll and industries and finance a wift
range of other projects includin1 the search for new
ener,-y supplies in poor nations strapped by soarint foreign oil bills. ·
Altbou&h Bank of America's international operations •
have expanded dramatically since be became presidnt ii)
1969, Clausen aaya the bank's lendlne abroad has bees)
marked by "conservatilm." ·-·
At the World Bank, however. Clausen said he will be..
dealina with some of the "basket cases," countries "that.· •
are not entitled to credit from the commercial sector. :.
"FOB ntOSE COUNTRIES, a World Bank and in. •
ternational financial institutions th.it can step in ar:.e
needed. There needs to be an International Monetaiy
Fund" to lend money to nations whose balance of P~· ments are in the red, Clausen said.
"For development and restructuring, you oeed the
World Bank" and lta affillates who ~an step in when "a
country ia re.ally behind the eoal posts and needs to borrow
for a very tons time at a lDU'linal interest rate in order fo
keep the patient alive and died the cure," Clausen said.
Tbe DIF ienerally lends to countries whose credit, if
not in good position, bas a ~'50Qable chance of recover·
iDg. 1be World Bank, with 138 member countries. lends
mostly to countries that cannot qualify for IMF loans.
THE PBOBLEll8 OF THE world's poor countrieis
have increased aince oil prices first shot up in 1973 an~
1974, and worsened lut year when oil prices leaped again.·
Tbe oiJ.IJnportin1 developlnl countries are expected to
spend $50 billion for petroleum tbt• year, up from $7 billioi
in 1973, and may face a $100 bW.km·a-year oil bill by 199C!f'
accordinatoa World Bank projectloo. Tbe mounting oil payment.a ba\le eaten into export rf(~
venues that countries -among them, India and Brazil _.....
use to finance domestic development prolJ'ams and repay
loans to Westem banka.
7 .. ~ I
+ ... +4' .,_. ..... . '"
DoK'lonr•:l rrrap•
N•W YORKCAPI Fl,..1 Oow·J-•vtL tor -.,.Y, Nov 17
ITOCICS HI L.ow CIOw Cl"ll
• Ille! °f::'. ;r.,. .... t4 •• ,._ O.ot it Trft JIG.» JtSll .... ,..,11+ US 1f I.Ill 116.41 111..61 114..111 116.»-OA U Stt J7U7 J'nM ft.IS Jn.a+ t.A1 ,,..,. ~ i~t: ...................... .... ... "Stlll . ..................... •..DS2.300
M'haf !t1ork• Did
Hli'W YCHtK CAPI H0¥ 17
Today u. .... -, ...
127
10
WHAT AMEX 010
HEW vo.-K CAP) Nov 17
c.,,., .,,.._,7_. cenll • Pouna, U.S. ---------------! dHllMI~ LHif .,..., centJ • POW>d
Pel
Zlec ~ c:.nll •pound, delivered
T ... 7.mt Me .. ls W-C--lle lb
• ..._ 16 u.111 • PoUnG. H Y
~wy lotl0.00 per flak P~1"642Slroyoz ~
Sllt•.,r
HEW YCHtK IAPI -Hendy A H.,_
stlwr 111.W, wp N.Gl•.
E111etll••d sliver 111.SIO, wp SO.OlA, feMl<aledlH-llt ... up to IU.
Up 1'• t--·-------------Up 2•t
Up 17 t UP 161 Up 1'1 Up l)J Up 11.J UP 11.l Up, 12.1 Up IO 1 Up I0.7
Up tO• Up IOA
Up !04 Up lo.J UP IU Up t .7 up u
Up U up t .J
Up U UP U ~= t:· Up U
Pel Off .. Oii ... E 7.t f ,,,
B ti •••
I ti u u u SS u tu S.t
Off t.l I SI
M ...
Gold q ... , ••..... .., ,... ~ ,.,_,
S.iecWwwtd 9'IO prlc .. -y
~: ,,_....,.. ...... 1616.!J. up .....
U...: ""'-fialfllMlt 00, llPS1A
Pane: --llal119 MU.», wp S.S 00 ftr...._.: flalftlM17.0J, YPl1 ti.
l.ndl: Mite .,..._ llalno Mtlot -. • ........ ; ............ ....-. a..._: MtllnePf'ke .. 1'.oe,.,.. 97.IJ
......... : '91111111 price Mlt 00. wp 57.ZS.
a...--1 lmriUtecl price IM0.67, }4>
17.Sl.
'
J
• \~
. ~ ... . r ,»It·~,. ,.. .
l ' ' . ~·
LIGHTS ·
LOWERED TAR & NICOTINE
Soft pack or new Flip.fop box.
• I
I I
. '
....
IJ .I .
I J
t'ate state Department of
Flaaace l1 q uestloalnt •h•
au m ber of 1tudeat1 the
CaplstrDo Unlfted School Dia·
trict ii claimlnf U' its full-time
earollment. • t'Ollowlnt a recent audit Of the
dlstriet'• attendance acrountfnl ~rocedurel by a three-member
team from the Ptnance De~
meat, the full·tlme attendance of
Dy Jl'SEDEBJC& SCBOEMEID.. Of .. .,..., ...........
A California Division of
Forestry spokesman sald today
the Carbon Canyon fire that
destroyed two houses and burned * .... *
Elsinore
infenw
• ,~aring
8,500 acres of brush land wu
caused by a cigarette diacardea
by a horse rider.
Capt. Evan Griffith said,
however, that investlgaton at
this point consider the start ol the
NB man held
in Lagana
auto search
fire accidental. He indicated it
was not likely that criminal
cbar1ee would be sou1bt.
Gritritb declined to release
name.a ol the four bone riders
who were tn-u. area where the
fire broke out about 11:30 a.m.
Sunday.
"They came forward on tbe1r
own and admitted they bad been
smottna ln tbe area," Gllft'ttla •atd.
the area in which they were rid· ina, be sald, was not posted
altaln1t SQ)Otinf, altbouab be
sald lt wu not the "common ~-nn--.. ~~li'ive beendoln&.
Griff\th sald the fo\,\J' pel'IQUI,
aU in their2Cll, are Oranae CoUnty
real dents .
. The flre originated on the west side oJ Carbon Can)'ol\ !load
north Of the Sleepy Hollow com·
mtmltJ near a hone rental sta·
ble, Qrlffttb said. Tbe four bMse
rlden attempted to quell the
nam~ befe>re ,qong Santa Ana
:.1'.JU~•r. the !t qlft
their interpretation of what con·
sUtutes lg&l enrollment.
Tboms~1.said be bell•" .. the district bad the aUtbortt1 to lm·
plement alternative eduoatJonal
rosrams wh4're student.a apeDd part of thetr day at 1cbooJ, and
part ta community aervtee.
• •Tfutl state auditors are not
educa&on," Tbomsley aald.
"What t.My are lookln1 at ls
strictly the •seat' Ume the •tu·
I dent speJldS
elauroom."
He cU.ed the distrtct '1 Crouroada and Freth Start ~ 1r1m1 u examples. Croatroacb 1tuCSent1 Qend part of the day at
acllool and tbe rest of the four•
hour mlnimum ln community work.
The Fresh Start program ls
for hip school dropouts. Under
this proeram, students meet
Y1llh a teacher for about a ball
hour each week. The)' are ...
slpecl work to do at home. 1
Tbormley said Caplstrano of.
• flctala had headed off an at·
tempt by the auditort to ch~e
the dlstrtct $180,000 In claimed
attendance for two shortened
1cboo1 days.
Thom.IJey 1ald the upCOlnlni
meetlnf wttb state Department
of Edu(atlon officials would "
probably result in more legal
(See Ct!S~, Pase AZ>
lbe south !an Clemente prop-
erty. '
But the request for a path
leadlnt to tbe Nixon houae,
wblcb la to be occupied by
partner Gari.al Herbert and bis family, wu oppoled by the de·
velopen.
They said tbe access would
create a safety and security prof>;
lem, ud said Uiey feared
1oun1llr banters would tile
away ~ of the 12-room
bulldma.: ; ..
· BUt --Lane lald tbe alternative
wowd be to deUy t.be subdivison,
and • dedsioa wu delayed to
order for the develoen to come.
up WtUa 11 WOibble proposil.
Jleprtaentatlves of Cotton
Pol.ill Ataociatea met With city
offtclab l11t wee-to discuss Lane'• condition and City
Klllaitr George CaravlllbO 1ald
the two ~upe were unable to
resolve the matter.
He 11icj the developer sees
problems with access across an
(See CMA, Pace Al>
Weather
Fair throu1h Wednes·
day. Imn toracht ln the
'°8. Hi,.. Wednesday a
alon1thecoa:.t.7C inland.
INSIDE TOD.Al"' ·
CIDCAGO CAP) -A UllD and two "<>Ulen, their bandl bOWiCI
and tbeh' Om>atl alubed, uve been foUnd deidJD a Soutb Slde
apartment, police aald today-tbeMC!ODcl triple 1la.yt.n1 la the ctty in a week.
• Police tdentltled the vlcthna ot the llQOday 1lQ1.n11 u otine
Banks, It, and Tommy Jackson, 27, retldenta ot the two...COry
trameapartmentbuilcUn,,andEmellaSee, 18,ofl>etrott.
Abaetetlle•• •ea
SAX'lllORPE, En1land CAP> -A Britiab rescue crewmu'a heroic attempt to save a U.S. Air Force pilot eDded tn tracedy to-
day with both drownint in the North Sea after two tJ.S-. Jets col·
llded and fell, offtcJala said. 1 •
As the Brit.lab airman tried in stroni winds to pluck the ·
American from the sea, the Briton appa.reaUy became entan1led
in the American'• parachute cords, officlalsaald. llAFapokeamen
said initially that a wtncb line to Ule Britiah rescue bellcoper wu
then cut. But a spokesman 1t RAF beadquartera in London said
later that the Une snapped, poulbly under preuure from the
parachute blown across Lt in a 40-knot Wind. An lnqulry ii to be beld.
re .... ., ••~••e ~U•6'i
W ASHJNGTON CAP) -'lbe persoa1l income of Americans in·
creased by 1.1 percent tn October, wblle tbelr spendlna roee 1 per·
cent, t!Mqoveroment reported today.
The Commerce Department al.lo said AmericlDS saved at an
annual rate ot '1!19.4 blllioo lut month, compared with an $88.8
billion pace in Septembet.
The jump in penonal income Just about keeps pace wltb the in·
nation rate.
Texas-to-New York
snows fatal to 16
BJ tile Auocl1&ecl Presa
A atorm that swooped odt of
the Western Plains as11ulted
cities of the urban Northeast
wlth snows almost a foot deep
~ay, Jeavlq at leut 16 dead
from Tex.u to New York.
Thousands of homes ~e
dtrkened U tbe IDOW and-.U.
ripped down power lines.
Highways from Ohio · to
Massachusetts were llttere4!
wltb stalled trucu and care.
Schools closed in numerous com·
munities.
The storm that bad dropped
snow up to 17 inches deep in
paru of the West intensified u it
reached New England In the
early-morning houri. With snow
still faJllns, more than 10 lodlel
hid accumulated 1t such places
aa Albany, N .Y ., and
Williamsport, P1. Six tnches bad
fallen in six boun at Concord,
N.H., with 5 inches durint the
same period at Hart.ford, Cam.
Two deaths in Texu on a rain·
slick road and one lo Oklahoma
were blamed on tbe atorm.
which in one day left elgbt times
Ute normal November 1nowfall
in Oklahoma. Four people died
in separate anow·related road
accidents in Ohio, where u
much u 7.,.; inches fell. Two
trlffic deaths were repor1ed lo
Peomylvania and one in New
leney. In addltloo. a 9-year-old
boy in AnmtroftC County, Pa.,
wu found dead ln bl.I backyard
l'Wimmlng pool after he went
out.side to shovel snow. In New
York, the storm wu blamed for
at leut two deaths.
A t.tn-enatne airplane piloted
by 1 New York man wu report·
eel mi.iinf tb1.i momto1 over
C"flled Penntylvanla terrain
eovel"ed with nine to 12 inches of •now ..
The first snowfall of the
season prompted University of
Rhode Island studenta to attack
the police station In South
Kin1stoo, R.I., with snowballl.
•'They broke 11 windows and
v andaliz... a pol~ etr, but
then wwe D9 1 iJ:dt1riP," tald police Capt. James E .
McDonald.
Hea-yy snow and drivln1 winds
c1u1ht Pittaburtb durin1 the
evenin1 ru1h hour Monday.
Today's mornln1 rush JM>W' in
ll'le New York·New Jers.ey-
Connectlcut metropolitan area
showed signs of beina 1 slow,
huardous one as snow and an
lcy cl'Ult built up on hi&hwaya
overnicbt and a cold rain persisted into the morning.
A liabt plane wu forced down
on tntentate bipway 80 in Penn·
1ylvanla when lee formed on its
wln11. 'lbe plane landed safely
alon1 the median strip.
Sandi.D.a machines be1an to
roll ID New Yark City late Moo·
d1y, and drivinl conditions ln
the surrounding counUes .were
htzlrdoua.
More thaJl 5 inches of snow
blanketed northwestern New
J eraey. and drlvtn1 wu
b1zardoul U/O mph winda ham·
mered the anow at motoriJtl.
Gale warnin11 were lasued
•lone the .Jene1 cout. The storm wu ••some ot the
most appreciable precipi~
in some time" tor the droulbt·
atricieo state, said forecaster
J uliua Rudy.
,.,...p..,,,.
BUME .••
ly stni JllTC'lllLL ... ...., .........
Ban ~ Ctt7 Manapr O.Orp Cara•albo Will ,.t eoun·
d.I member* Wednelid•Y to~
bu11 Oil e!U•ln1 the dty•1 • tutun. He JI ~ for ,000 to ••tddnll~ The council hal met aeveral
Umet tn t.be P8lt few mont.bS to
d11CU11 ereat.Uii'.a blueprt,nttbat
would tie tbe city's future
1rowtb wltti Uie reaourc11
nMded-1erw that powth Ud
tb• pl'efent pot;UlatlOn.
Cara.albo wlll ut tbe COunCU
to approve ttie hlrlnC Of atx new
planners and 1dmlnlttratora,
rain development feet.: to cover
the cost of t.be new empkJyees
ind renovate the cltY'• re·
development a1ency.
He aaya tie want• an ad·
, miniatraUve u1••t1nt to-~
the redevelopment aieocy aiilr•
clerical atde, ~or planner, aa·
1l1tant planner, a permit clerk
and atudent interns to formulate
1oala for San Clemente over the
next two decades.
He'd like to see that poup
wortma by Feb. 1 in order to re-
view the city's general plan, Us
redevelopment pJan and beSin a
mbfer plan for the future.
To PIY for the ext re.
employ.-, .Caravalho proposes
lncreaamg all buildlna. plan.nine
and enain.eetina fees to a level
comparable to those charted by
several other cities, including
San Juan Capistrano ind Irvine.
Key to the growth plu· is the
revlt1llsin1 of the city's re-
developm~nt aeenoy, formed
five yean ago to Improve the
pier bowl area.
The acency still receives
about $220,000 a year in property
tua. Caravalho en~i.sions using
that ~ to beJutify the older
pans ol town.
MIQ)""tn the community fear
tbe development of more than
8,000 new awelUDg unita in. the
city'• bac'k country will .drain
the city's resources and spell
disaster to the city's already de·
teriorati.nl downtown and adj•
cent.residential areas.
Caravalho says usin1 re·
development funds and bond
sales to beautify the downtown
area will spur the private sector
to make improve~nta.
''We're not tarting about
dividing the community -the
old and the new -but setting up
planning areas for the future of
the entire city;• he explained.
He says 90 percent of .the
atreeta 1n the city west ot t.be
s.._1~ Freeway and ICJ\db ot
Avenjda Plco are substandard.
Dow Jones
leaps toward
l,000 mark
NEW YORK (AP> -Stock
prices rose sharply in trading to-
day, resuming the powerful rally
of lut week. >
The Dow Jones average of 30
indu1triaJ stocka Jumped .9.73
pointa to 995.99 in the first four
hours of trading. 1be blue chip
indu bu 1atned in nve of the
PISt lix sessions for a net in·
creue ol nearly 55 polo ta.
Analysts said the market ap-
peared to be pushedfo~ardon its
own momentum, rather than IDY
specific news development today.
"Thia bu nothlna what.soever
to do With any news event:• said
Latry Wachtel of Bache, Halsey
Stuart Shields Inc.
The F_,al Raerve Board to-
dar reported somewhat dis·
couraitninews in lta l•test week-
ly report on tbe 01tion'1 money
supply. 1be fl1urea show the
basic money supply continued to
1row at rates futer than targets
set by the Fed, aairavatiq con·
cerna about lnfi1Uon pressures.
Overall &alninf lssues outnum·
bered lolers by •bout 2·t0· 1 on the
New YorkStOck Excbtn1e. on •tocks generally showed
atron11atnstn toclay'aearlytrad· ing.
Bil Board volume came to a
fairly a~ve 20.M.,ptllllon shares
in the ftnt hour, and was 53~
mllllon 1t 11:30.
~nan .held
as suspect
~in 888&U)t
.i-
No self ·•tarter
Joy , Cbtm of Honolulu baa to use sodle
push-power to get pet pig Sooey under w•f
for neighborhood stroll. Joy is dauater of
newly-electea state Rep. c.oonie Cblin, who
plans to challenge city law that says you
ean't keep livestock in Honolulu residenUal
areas.
Laguna
• ntes set
for Brian
Funeral services are
scheduled Wednesday ln Lacuna
Beach for retired Navy Cmdr.
Henry T. Brian, a resident of
La1una Ni,-uel for 14 years.
Brlan died in South Lal\ID8
Nov. 11 following a month-long
illneaa. He was 76.
Brian served in the Navy and
U.S. Navy Reserve for 20 years.
He wu an executive with the
General Motors Corp. for 30
years in Texas until be retired in
1966.
Brian was a member of St.
Mary's Eplseopal C~urch in
Laguna Beach, \be El Nll\W
Co.u trv. Clu~ ti•~ Na~l
Reaerv• ~··A.uOda~~
Oran1e CounO aild the Soqtb
Co11t Medical Center Av.xiUary.
He ii survived by bit wifeo(Sl
years, Martha Messerole Brian
and dauebten Beverly Prestoo
of Fremont. Calif., and
Barbara Fowler of Troy, Micb.
Funeral services will be held
at St. Mary's Eplacopal Church,
428 Part Ave., at 11 1.m. A
private burial will follow at \.he
Fountain Vie w Cemetery in
Altadena.
Fro• Pag~ A I
CASA •••
adjacent development and
rail~ property en route to the
Nixon house.
They also said problems with
pollcin& 111d malntalnlna Ute
public strip should be addreued.
Council members will hear the
milter Wednesd_, after 7 p.m.
in council chambers, 100 Ave.
Presidio.
Hillside estate
~opic in .Clemente
San Clemente council mem-
bers hHe three WQI to io Wed·
neaday ntabt on a request by San
Clemente Estates to extend a
subdlvlsioD •areemeot so about
50 inve•tQff won't lose their
shirts.
lnveaton in San Clemente
Estates already bave city ap-
prov al fop the 188-acre 1ub-
dl•i1ion beblnd San Clemente
Geoeral Hciispital.
But they did not betin work on
the p~ect before that asree-
ment -approved by a previous
cit.Y coanciJ-lapeed ln Aucust. That~ lf they don't 1et
an exten&'-by t.be ntlf, mere
en y :~:;--r&;;~ cµ; -~to
acratd& ~~ tt, '
srad.l.DI· ~-ud a.other aubcllvtiJlon qreement.
It'• not only environmental
matters thtt concem the praent
City Council l1le peel is IUD
shy after recetvlni elaima for more than $10 mill on. from
property owners whole homes
wet• damMect or threttened by
a landlli~ tast Jdne.
Tbe COUMll saya lt waata as-
surances f~m tbe deve&opers
that the~ property won't eo
slldlnl ~ the billaides .after it i.sde~ The ~t!l.l wW review city
findln,. re;arding the 1eology
of the site. ,
It will alJo consider a coodi·
lion that the tract Include 1
public route to · a reservoir site
on the pr0perty, whlcb one COUil·
cil member says provides a
panoramic view of the ocean.
Council membera will con·
sider one of three alternatives
when they meet:
-Eiltend the subdivision
a1reement with San Clemente
Estates subject to minor •
chan1es lo the desip. ?
-Require the investors to re· J. design the tract to take into con-{
sideration p-ading problems on :
the land aa.. a c<>ndition of a sub--~
division extemion. f1
-Revert the 188-acre paroel ;
back to 1crea1tr. meaning the • developers would hive to start i
over 11ain. :.
That altemattve would hurt, -~
the investors claim. Tb1l's ;;
beeause an onlPnal partnerablp .:.
that pre-sold Iota to tbe 54 in·
vutora bas filed for bankruptcy
and a new partnership s-.ys it
will bail out the investors on1Y if
'they can obtain tbe property
with the subdivision agreement
intact.
'Rae council will discuss the .
subdivision sometime alter 7 !'
p.m . in City Hall, 100 Ave.
Presidio.
I
By FREDEUCKSCBOEMEID..
Ol•o.lty .........
A California Di vi lion of
Forestry spokesman said today
tbe Carbon Canyon lire that
destroyed two houses and burned
8,500 acres of b?USh land was
cauaed by a ciaarette discarded
by a bOrse rider.
Capt. Evan Griffith said,
however, that invesUCators at
this point consider the start of tbi
fire accidental. He Indicated it \
was not likely that criminal
ebanres would be sought.
Griffith declined to release
names of the four horse rlden
wbo wen in the area where the
council loser
president
of chamber
Dial.a-ride service 1IGIU
hlatory -hen you can't exet11eter·
rorlam," ahe .. id. • ·vou can't aay
you only ptee CJllle aide Of violence
and never-your own."
The tact4t1 other Peace P~le
-aa they are known -re not
complicated. Tbeystayoutotpar·
ty politics arid aak for 0 perao:nil
acUoA. ••Which she ajld la "uaual·
lytbebestaOluUonyoucanhave."
ln Notthem:t~tand, wbere the
CatboUct have been la bitter bat·
ties ·With the country'• mljcrity ...
fire broke out a.bout 11 :30 a.m.
Sunday. "They came forward on their
own and admitted they bad been
amoklna in the area.;• Griffith
said.
The area in which they were rld-
ln1, be said, WH not posted
atainat 1mokin1, althou1h be
said It wu not the "common
aente"thlnCtohavebeendotni ..
Grtmth said the four peraobS,
all in their 20s, are Oranae Cowlty
residt'nta. • •
The fire arildnated on t.be west side of Carbon Can~on Road
north of tht Sleepy HQllow com-
munity near • borae rental st.a-bh ... Ga1fflth said. The four hone
dden attempted to quell the
namea before strona 'Santa Ana
wlbda blew them out of control,
heaald. . The fire later ~roaaed into
Oran1e County from San
,•rnatdino County aud ttire~ ho~es in both OUDda e
DOwJones
leaps toward
l,000 mar'k
Chase ~bank
eyes NB ,
branch
that aparkf'd t.be movement OC·
curred in 1978, when she al'ld Mrs
Corrlsan wltoeased En1U1h
soldlert in Belf aat ahoetlng a
member of the lii&h Republic~
Army.
The rnan'a car swerved oft the
road and hit three chlldren. They
tiled but the ~ace movement
started, arid soon the women tiad
10,000 women In Northern Ireland
marchlnl through the streets
(See PEACE, Pa1e .U>
s•oo.tlng odds
Vegas bets on ].It culprit
ay &lie .tiiedaled Prea
A 1tor:m that 1poopt14 <* 01
the Wg\em Pl-1n• a111wted
titles Ol the ur~n :Nortbeut
wltb IDOWI allDOdlt a foot a.es>
today, leavlil1 al 'lffil 11 d'fiCI
from Texaa to New York.
Thouaanda ot homes were
dtrkened .. the IDOW and ice
ripped down power llnes.
Hlg h'Wa71 tr om Ohio to
M aua~hiuett1 were lltt.41rtd
wlth 1talled U'ueka lnd cera.
Scbooli clOaed In numero\1& corn·
~unities. The Storm that had d~
snow up to 17 Inches deep In
parta of the West intenal!led as il
CHJCAGO <AP> -A man and two women, tbelr band.a bound
and their throau 1lasbtd, have been found dead lD • South Side
apartment, police aald today-the eeeoad triplealaYtri1 tn the city
inaweek. •
Police identlfled lbe vid.tmaolthe Monday ataytnp u Dltne
Banks, 19, and Tommy Jacaon, 27, realdeuta Of the two-atol')'
frameapartment bwldinf, and EmellaSee, 18: Of Detroit.
• reached New England in the
early·mo~ hours. With snow
'atUI falling, more than 10 Inches
bad accumulated at such places
as Albany , N .Y ., an.d
William.sport, Pa. Six inches bad
fallen 1n six hours at Coo<le>rd, N.U., wttb 5 inches during the
same period at Hartlotd, Conn.
Ab ant di• •t ••a
SAXTHORPE, En1land <AP> -A Britlab rescue crewmao's
berolc att~mpt to save a U.S. Air Force pilot ended in traeedy to-
day with both drownin1 i.D tbe NOrth Sea after two U.S. Jeta col-lided and fell, offtcials said. . . .
As the British airman tried in strona winds to pluck the
American fl'C)m tbe sea, the Briton apparently became entan1led
in the American's paracllU\e cords, officials said. RAF spokesmen
said tnlUally that a winch line to the Brttlsb rescue belicoper was
then cut. But a spokesman at RAF ~adquarters in London said
later that the line snapped, pC>SSibly under pressure from the
parachute blown across it in a40-knot wind. An inquiry is to be held.
llftlga11 J'hut• Capil••I 11111
WASHINGTON <AP> -President-elect Reaean, bidding
for Improved White House relations with Congress, began a
round of meetings today on capitol Hill. ·
Reagan's arrival Monday night in the nation's capital
prompted a series of rumors and report.a about the shape of the
administration and its programs. and 'Re.,an did nothing today
to squelch them.
Reagan, Vice President-elect George Bush and senior staff
members met with the Senate Republican leadens, includini
Howard Baker of Tennessee, Robert Packwood of Oregon, Ted
Stevens of Alaska, Jake Garn of Utah and Paul Laxalt of
Nevada, for SO minutes in a chandelier-lit room before be began
a second session with House counterparts.
SldfM baek in ~an Diego
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Flve warships with 1,400 sailors re·
turned today after six months in the western Pacific and Indian
oceans.
Some of the finest
thoroughbreds in the West-will
be off and running Wednesday to
opea the annual Orange Comlty
Fall Fair. Post time is noon. And that's
when the fair midway attrac·
tions open at the track'• parking
lot off Katella Avenue in
Cypress.
Eleven races are scheduled daily (except Tuesday) over
distances ran1tn1 from six
furlongs to a mlle and an eilbth
and fea.turlng ei1bt
thoroughbred events, two for
quarterhorsea and one for ap-
paloosas.
Harry O'Hair
funeral held
Funeral services were COD·
ducted today for Karey O'llalr,
the retired proprietor of O'Hair
WeldJ.nl in Costa · Mesa, who
died Friday.
O 'Hair, who moved to El Toro
after operat.tnc bla Costa Mesa
1b0p for Z1 years, la survived by
hl• wife, Thelma; a son, Dennis
of. El Toro-. and three
1randcblldren. Services were held in Lag\ma
Hille with burial at El Toro
Cemetery.
OftANOI COAIT s
DAILY PILOT
The fairgrounds will remain
open until 9 p.m. daily through
Dec. 1. its duration. Admission
to the fairgrounds is without
charae, but parking is $1. .
Acfmiasion to the races is
$2.25, with senior citbens ad·
mitted for $1 on Fridays, a fair
official noted. Fair midway events, centered
in a huge white tent, include a
carnival, booths operated by
charitable organizations, an
African animal village and a
petting farm.
Entertainment and contests
are acbeduled dally, includ1n1 a
ni&htly talent search that this
year bas drawn 138 acts com·
posed of 670 contestants ma.king
a try for $5,000 in prizes.
A Freestyle Ski Show featur·
inl demonstrations, aerial eki
jumps and ballet sklin1 opens
Tbunday for a four-day run.
Hiiblllht of the raclnt, the on·
ly thorouabbred meetlna in Orange County. la the $50.000
Added Orange County Handicap
scheduled Nov. 30.
Last year, the county fair
board netted $290,000 on the
meet, drawinl a 10,803 averace
daily attendance, officials aaid.
Tbey expect to top that mark
at tbla year'• fair, btlled under
the theme of a "Winter Woo·
cterland. ''
•
to the
Two deaths in Texu on a rairi-
allck road and one to Oklahoma
were blamed on the storm.
which tn one day left eight times
the normal November snowfall
In Oklahoma. Four people died
in separate anow-retaied road
accidents in Ohio, where as
much as 7'At Inches fell. Two
traffic deaths were reported in
Pennsylvania and one in New
Jersey. In addition, a 9-year-old
boy in Armstrpn1 County. Pa.,
was found dead in his backyard
swimming pool after he went
outside to shovel snow. In New
Yo.rk, the storm was blamed for
at least two death.a.
A twin-engine airplane piloted
by a New York man was report·
ed missing this morning over
rugged Pennsylvania terrain
covered with nine to 12 hlches of
snow.
The first s-nowfall of the
season prompted University of
Rhode Island studen\s to attack
the police station in South
Kineston, R.I .. with snowballs.
"They broke 11 windows and
vandalized a police car, but
there were no injuries." said
police Capt. James E .
McDonald.
Heavy snow and driving winds
caught Pittsburgh during the
evening rus h hour Monday.
f'rfHM Pagv l I
AID .. · .• . -"'
Durazo wUt be •t•Uoned in cbureh parking lots ,
neighbO'rbood centers and parks
as a cqmmuoity communic:a·
lions effort.
The staff is to include a
trained Hispanic social worker.
UCI st u~ent s and CETA
employ~ who speak Spanish·
and volunteer nuns and priests.
The 29-foot-long "outreach"
vehicle will cost $26,000 and will
be financed by the social service
agency and the cities of Costa
Mesa, Garden Grove and Santa
Ana. Hall said following Monday
night's council session that be
was "worried that we might
eive the impression the Hispanic
people are looking for a ftee
handout.
"They are a proud people,'·
said the west aide resident who
finally voted in favor of the pro·
posal.
He said he favors improvin.i
communications between the
Hispanic community and the
city.
'Ibieves get
seafood
Thieves With an appetite for
expenalve seafood broke into an
outdoor freezer and made 'Off
with the best the ocean and °'1e
Newport Beach restaurant bu
to offer. ,
Police said the crooks chlaeled
olf a metal bolt Monday secur-
ine the freezer behind Cbez
Dante of Newport Beach, 1701
Corinthian Way, and got away
witb a *'60 catch.
The bur1lars, police said,
e1caped ,..ath 5 pounds of
abalone, valued at U8.65 a
pound, 10 pounds of Alaska Kini
Crab. 12 loblter talls and some
scallops.
CM hea11ing
continued.
A public heartns oo Brli\ol
Plaza '1 plan1 \o construct two
hl1h·rlse office buUdln11 on
Brlltol Street near th• San
Dteso Feeway baa been con·
tlnued'° Dec. l
Th• conUnuance from the City
Councll was .-ht l>)'\ :lam
Olaada of ~"-PC>rt :BMcti, •
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World·• i alle•f "!
A man stands on a stool to
measure the height of Tseng
Chin-lien, believed to be the
world's tallest liviiig•temale.
Miss Tseng, 16, standS 7 teet,
lOlh inches, and weighs 323
pounds. She lives with her
family, who are of normal
size, in Yuanjiang, China.
Maneuvering
car presents
big problem
Monday just wasn't David
Lamar Porter's day.
The 50-year ·old Newport
Beach man had a few problems
around 12:49 p.m. as he drove
his 1979 white Chevrolet through
an Irvine neighborhood, police
said.
F~rst, he backed hi.$. car into
the closed door Of 8 resldeptf al
eara&e at 4035 Seton st. coll•· lat the ~ ~rd. aewr~
tb .• ponce t'ePott.
Next, he pulled bla car
forward and smashed Into a
small tree and mail b6x at ~l
Seton St. '
After stopping for a few seconds, the car then lurched
forward and slammed into the
right front fender or a car
oarked on Seton St
Coming full circle, Porter's
car ended up plowing into a tree
near the smashed garaae door
at 4035. He suffered a cut forehead in
the final accident. Orange County Paramedics,
called to the scene by Seton
Street residents who beard the
cotllsions, took Porter to Tustin
Community Hospital where he
was treated and releaaed.
To add to bis trouble, Porter
now must face drun~en-drivln&
cltarges brought by Irvine
police. Police officers said they
found a half-full botUe of vodka
in the front aeat of Porter's car.
Porter told police he 'doesn't
Kredel said police haven't de· tennu.t bow fut tbe jeep was
going when it entered the curve.
Barry Dnicl CUrtis, ~.of UMl
Port C.rdiff flace, Newport
Beach, fell victim to the curve
one and one-half years ago when
his Mercedez Benz went out or
Wallet lifted
t 'Minhlti~9'~tll .
ta mtnat10.11 at Costa ll"•'• South Coast Piasa Hotel loet
$1,025 wheai bl• wallet was
ato)en, oonce said today.
The &rand theft reported Moo·
day coat Dr. Lester A. Luz $522
in cash in addition to bis aenuine
alliaator skin wallet trimmed in
real gold and valued at $500
iUelf, pla.w bis credit cards.
He told Patrolman Tbomu
Curtis the billfold was pocketed
by someone apparently ml111Un1
with a crowd Of !!SO medical peo-
pl e around the Costa Mesa
Room while he was busy siplng
seminar registration papers. He
had laid the wallet down
momentarily.
Ero• r•fl~ A J
CHASE ...
Chase Manhattan is the nation's
third lu.gest commercial bank,
wit'1 California's Bank of
America rated fU"ll and Citibank
of New York second.
Di.Spute
cause
learned
Handing his rather a totlet
seat at the wrone time in a fami·
ly do-lt·yourselt project ap-
parenUy precipitated a t-utcber
knife· melee In which a Cotta
Mesa boy escaped but bis
mother and aunt were haelted
and slashed, police said today.
The si&Spect, Eugene Connell,
52, ended the Sunday rampaae
at 2978 Croft.don St., by pressing
the bladtJ"to his own chest and
shovioJ It home, severely iojur· ing himself after wounding hiS
wife a.ndalater·in-law.
Complaints charging tbe still-~
hospitalized Connell with two •
counts or assault with intent to ~.
commit murder and three of as-.,
sault with a deadly weapon were :.
issued Monday, police said.
Connell, a unit supervisor at •
Fairview State Hospital in Costa 1
Mesa, was listed in good condi· -~
lion at UC Irvine Medical Cen-~
ter's jail ward today, where be."
Is held in lieu of $25,000 bail. ;;
His wife Barbara Connell, YI, ~,.
remained in serious condition at ~;_
Fountain Valley Community~
Hospital with multiple stab and ~
slash wound,,. ~
.Mary E. Linville. 35, of El
Toro, was held overnight and re·
leased from Mercy General t
Hospital in Santa (\na Monetay •
followina treatment. I -Inv~ra said f m ~k·
Route 55
. . ' . . meeting topic f
A public work.shop meet.\ng to
summarize reau,lts of several
previous meeting~ throughout
Newport Beach and Costa M.esa
reaardlng the future of Route ~ ts scheduled Wednesday by
Caltram. The 7:30 p .m . session at the
South Coast Plaza Hotel's
Balboa Room, 666 Anton Blvd.,
Costa Mesa, is co-sponsored by
the Oranie County Transporta-
tion Commission.
L
remember a thing. ------~--------------------------...:-.----=-----------------------:-