HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-19 - Orange Coast Pilot.,. . ....,....
An American soldier rappels down a rope from a
Blackhawk helicopter as it hovers over the desert during
rapid de9elopment exercises in Egypt. A 1,400-man U.S.
force is in the country for two weeks of desert training.
Teen sisters vletims
. ...----N ewpo lit man guilty
of sexual cri~s
A Newport Beach man bas
pleaded euilty to sex
perversion cbar•n lnvolvlnl
tbrH JOUDI •laten he met at a
Rtvenlde County nudls1 camp
earlier thll year. ~ (
Seane Ray Brooubirt, p, en-
Envoy 8lain
in Columbia
By AJlTllUt a. VINSEL
Of•o.Hy ...........
A preliminary bearin1, de-
layed by a key witness' demand
for immunity from pro1ecutioo,
re9umes Friday ln the cue ol
two punk rock enthusiasts ac-
cused of the near-fatal gradua-
tion night knifing of a limousine
chauffeur on a Newport Beach
streetlast June.
Oraqe County Superior Court
Judge Richard Beacom sran-
t~d the request by Bridget
Sheinlein, 20, of Orange, the
glrlfrlend of defendant Jlon
Glenn Sherrard, 19, of 20661
ltorizon Lane, Huntington
Beach.
He and David Paul Owen, 19,
of 8121 Munster Drive, alao in
Hunlingtoo Beach, are accused
of Involvement in the stabbinl of
Daniel Harms, 25, of Cypresa.
Tbe suspecta, who remain free
on bail, were arrested in mid·
September on charcea of assault
with inte11t to commit murder
stemmina from the mid-June at·
tack.
Preliminary hearing for Sher-
rard and Owen is scheduled to
resume at 9 a.m. ln Divisicn 7 of
Harbor Municipal Court, with Ma . Sheinleln s cheduled 14 testify.
The two defendants have
pleaded innocent. to the char1es '•
that could send them to state
prison for alleged roles in the
stabblne that hospitalised
HarmaincrlUcalcondltlon.
He told police tbe eroup of
el1ht pUnlt rockers klcied and .,
beat blm, la\llb4Ml, Jeered and
poured beer over h1I head in ad-
dition to plUDlina a blade into
his c;hest .In tht coilfroatatlon on
W afnut Street.
Newport Beach Police Detec-
tive Bob Hal'dy later called in an
Oranae policeman who
specializes ln dHP hypnosis to
put Harms under a trance and
help him tecall details.
These were crucial In provl4-
ing information leading to the
arrests, investigators say.
Detective Hardy said at one
point after Sherrard and Owen
were charaed that Ma . Sbelnleln
faced the p.,,_pect of Pl'OMCU·
lion as an accessory for alleted·
ly witbboldini inlormatlon about
the crime.
<See PUNK, Pa•e A.2)
Willie "the Actor" Sutton, a
bank robber who became
one of tbe most highly
publicized criminals of the
century, is dead at 79. Cause
of his death, in Spring Hill,
Fla., was not disclosed.
~orrific'
LEEDS, En1t1nd (AP) -Bri-
ta th'• moat notorlo'11 mau
murderer, a tnUe-wleldloe
killer known u "the Yotbbire
Ripper," bas claimed bla 13tb
victim, »year-old lanluage stu-
dent Jacqueline Hill, p0llce said
today.
Her. body waa found by shop-
pers Tuesday in undersrowth on
waste cround near a
supermarket in this northern
textile city, where the Ripper murdered his fmt victim, pros-
titute Wilma McCann, on Oct.
30, 1975.
Police said Ms. Hill'• injuries were "horrific'' and bore the slashlnt trademarks of being in-
flicted by the Ripper.
As in all the Rl,pper slayings,
police refused to detail the in·
juries for fear of copycat tillings
that will hamper the manhunt.
13 facing charges
of 'bilking' 800
Tbe Ripper last struck 14
months a10 in Bradford, a
nearby lnduatrial city. He bu also killed in the aeighbortng
cities ol Preston, Manchester,
Huddersfield and Keighley. A\
least four women have survived attacks by tbe Ripper.
Nine ol the Ripper's victims
have been prostitutes, but three
were respectable women ap-
parently ldlled at random.
Police reported that lh. lllll
also was "a respectable YOUDI
woman."
BOSTON (AP) -Two film
producers, etibt lawyers and
three other people face mail
fraud cbaqea for alletedly bllk-
inl 800 investon, lncludln• Elvia
Presley. out of $20 mlWott In a
tax •helter tebeme.
Federal proMCuton unveiled
the 1ecret indictments ~Y
as five ol the men appeared at a
ball bearing in U.S. District
Court here.
The men all!fn~Y aold In·
tereata in coal 1 riahta on
22,000 acres they claimed to
have purchased In Wyomln1 -
even though most of tbe land
was own~ by tbe federal aov-
emment.
Because the land wu not pro-
duclnc Ul1 coal, they claimed
hu1e loalel arid tOld hive.ton 1
that ttiey could deduct $5 from
their· federal income toes for
eacll dollAr thaf tbe)' tnve.ted.
In all, they tOok iil more tbU $20
mWloa from l.ilveston .-ad .old
approslmatel1 $150 mUUon
worth ol frauduleot tu deduc·
tlou, a~ allejed. TIM.~. lnriia· JlrJV,
-15, and ........ R. ~,
4', both ot Hft Yo~ CltJ, ao
the otber deftbct.DU were -"
cbaraed Wltb II ~ ol mall Ira.I .. TM two m US* 11">-d-.n ottW IDOM -••Amie''
aid .. Bnllida ltarr.'' M•-tlMIO, ·JMJ .._., .aalMd ...... tnm .. -•aL Aeeoe.llM to eoart ,.,.n, ........... ..,. .............. ... t.... .... eno.•· la the ............. •••11iiil•• ••• ft* .... ftliril laCDll'p
tu.:;
Al rt liti V.S. Attione~fld •
G••111 ftfl•lld.lllD far t•• .., ..... ta ......... . ... 1911'1 .. __.. .. ...
tr1. A I w49re or••r•d b7
(~IL-.... AI>
'
The Ripper takes bis name
from ".Jack. the Ripper," who
stalked the ~treeta of London's
Whltec.,:t.Ja.1iiatrict for several weeu in . He killed at least
aix p tutel and his Jdentity wu nevei dilcovered.
Getting his attention·
That's the purpose of this mannequin
outside a second-band clothing store in downtown Portland, Ore., and it seems
to be accompliBhing itl mission. Per'laps
she's related to the, headless horseman?
Firefighters ~nnlg
Elsinore blaze majorc hiudle remaining__
. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Relief
as in sight for fire-besieeed
Southern Calllornians, accord-
ing to state officials who say
they've nearly extinguished the
fires that ravaged more than
50,000 acres.
A 23-vear-old Azusa man
John M. Budish, was to be ar:
raigned in Wes t C 9v1na
Municipal Court today for inad-
vertently setting the most
destructive of the fires, the
Bradbury-Duarte blaze tha t
destroyed more than 6.000 acres.
burned 55 homes and da"'aged
27 others for an estimated $25
million loss .
One man died of a heart at
tack u • result of Ute blalt" that wu etill buminl northward into
the .Anieles National Forest on
Tuesday nicht.
Diminishing winds allowed
firefighters to contain most of
the blaze Tuesday. but full con
tainment was not ant1c1 pated un-
til tonight at 6 because of un
predictable weather condallons,
Human rights
\,
'drive in gear
WASHINGTON (AP) Presi·
dent Carter told th e
Organization of American States
•that hia drive to protect human
rilhtl has become "a historic
tnovement" that wm outlive his
administration.
' "Some claim that Jimmy
Carter elevated human rights
Jnd democracy on the inter-
.American a1enda and that the
agenda will cban1e when I
leave," Carter s aid "They are
wrong."
Vance praised
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Cartel' on Tuesday night
praised Cynas Vance as a man
of "unshakable inteartty" at a
reception honoring the former
teerelary of slate who resi111ed
b1s poll because or his opposi-
tion to the aborted American
mllsloo t.Q.rescue the hostages in
Iran.
OAANOI! COAST
DAILY PILOT
,._ .. ~
Ma ........... 1¥
a...tM .. ~ ....
Mil ~ ~"' Ullor
Office• C.•• Wt. IJlO W.et hf 11-1
'-AHtl\' 1011 "• C.•114 ...... fp Mul!t ......... 11 11911-(1\--·
, .. .,e.one C11 •> MMS21
CIMellled Ad••~..,....,.
'""""""''·-....
said U.S. forest ·Service
spokeswoman Jean Schwabe.
Only ooe other major blaze re·
mained, the Turner lire south of
Lake Elsinore. where guatiD1
winds still ~aused proble111s. That fire, however, was 55 per-
cent contained and SO percent
controlled in steep terrain.
The Riversjde County Board
of Supervisors posted a $5 000 re·
ward for information leading to
the arrest of the person who set
that 28,000-acre blaze, and the
WETIP citizens group chipped
in $500 more.
Winds to 40 mph at higher
elevations made it impossible to
pr~ct a coota.imnent time.
Farefigbters 1,_ San Diego
County were having little dif.
ficulty with a 30-acre blaze that
threatened expensive home1 for
a time in the Raricbo Penas-
qultos area 10 miles south of Del
Mar, the site of the county's
worst fire last year,
The Latuna fire that had
burned 12.500 acres of the
Verdugo Hills between Sunland
and Glendale also was con-
trolled Tuesday.
As the fires calm~ down, of-
ficials turned their attention to
watershed damage and possible
future flooding problems from
anticipated winter rains.
.. ,
Fatal .Irvine crash
parallels another
T.be traffic accident that
claimed the lives ot a Huntintoo
Beach woman and an Irvine
woman on a curve of Univentty
Drive near UC Irvine is almost
Identical to a fatal crash there
last year.
In the Sunday night traeedy
Ellis Mari Earley Smith, 20, oi
18181 Lisa St .. Huntington
Beach, and Karen Ann Ziealer
25,. of 15418 Cberbourg Ave.:
lrvme, were killed when their
Jeep ran off Univenity Drive
and flipped end over end.
Police found their bodies and
the smashed Jeep on brush·
covered land near the intenec·
tion of University Drive and
MacArthur Boulevard, the same
place where a demolished
Mercedes Benz and a crushed
Newport Beach man were found
June 'Z7, 1979.
Bah)o David Curtis, 26, of 1941
Port Cardiff Place, Newport
Beach, was ejected from hla car
and crushed by it one and one·
half yeats ago when his
Mercedes Bens went out of con-
trol and fiipped over near the
curve.
Plant work OK'd
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ~The
Califomia hblic UUllti~ Com-
mission refused Tu"4fa,y to set
uide certificates it aranted for
construction and operation of
the Diablo Canyon nuclear
power plant near San Luis
Oblapo.
The unlighted curve, marked
by reflector warning signs,
follows a mile·lon1 relatively
straight stretch from the in-
tersection of Campus and
Univenity Drive.
Fro• Page Al ·
ELVIS •..
Mactst.rate Joyce London Alex-
ander to surrender their
paHportl.
Also appearlng at the bail
hearlni were David Garfinkle, ae. of Framinpam; b1s bl'Otber,
Paul, 42, of Fort Lauderdtle,
Fla.; and Pblllp S. WeinsWD,
35, of Lynnfield. All are lawyers.
Bail was 1et at $500,000 for
Paul Garflntle, $250,000 each for
Meyer and Friedman, $50,000
;.,,or David Garfinkle, and $20,000
for Weinstein. All were released.
The whereabouts bf the other
eiabt defendants were not
known immediately. No date
was tel for arra1111ment.
Also accused in the case were
Geor1e Osaerman, a Boston
lawyer; h11 brother, Rfcb.,-d Os-
serman, and Barry Witcbell,
both New Yotk lawyers;
Carmen Penta of Vienna, Va.,
and bll brother, James Penta, of
Alexandria, Va., both lawyers;
Melvin Sowards of Houston;
Manball Sterman of Be~ly.
Ma11., and Martin~.~
address was not lilted in the in·
dlctment.
Fro• Page AJ
P~K .' ••
She bad besun to tatify tut
Friday but the proceeding wu
stopped at \be adviQe of bel' at-
tonley, who filed a naotlon ln
Orange County Superior Court
granting her immunity ln the
case.
Harms told police .-burled
beer bottle struck bls rental
limousine as be and the FAi.oo
Hilb School gl'aduatea from
Huntinaton Beach cruised
through the Newport Shores
neighborhood on the night in
question.
He parked and 1ot out to in-
vestiaate whereupon be was as-
saulted by4be crowd of crewcut, Dead remembered
leather-jacketed punk rockers and knifed with a blade that 0 A K LA N D . ( A P ) -A
nearly nicked his heart. memorial service was held
Harms stumbled back to the Tuesday at Evergreen Cemetery
limo and collapsed into it, ask-where some SOO of the 913 mem-
lng his passengers to get him bers of the People's Temple who
medical help, whereupon one died in a mass suicide in
youth drove to a hospital. Jonestown, Guyana are buried. ====== ........... ~~~-=-~~~~~-
Largest
selection of
fine desks in the
area.
Desks from •
Drexel, Heritage,
Henredon
and more. (
LlTrt.E ROCK, Ark. (AP) -
The bod.let of two baby lirls
were found ln the Arkansas
River, and pollee said they we1*.
aearchina for a man susi>ected
of throwlna b1s two dauahteri·
off a bridge to watery deatlp.
North l.Jttle Rock police U .
B.D. Canoll said .-Tuesday the
bodies were found on the Little
Rock aide of the river, not far
from the Main Street Bridge.
Taxi driver Carl R. Palmer
told police that a passenger baa
him stop on the bridge Sunday
niabt, and said be saw the man
throw an infant into tbe river.
UN1VEA81lY DRIVE -IAYINE.COSTA MESA CORRIDOR
DeaCS..nd means you can't get there "from her•
~ Managers of Orange CoWlty's
J»ond program creatina below-
~artet-rate housing loans will
.end letters this week invitin&
local cities to become involved.
Currently, only housin1 de-
velopments in unincorporated
parts of the county can
S»articipate in the proeram de·
Jlgned to offer '2 billion worth of
loans. The nine developments
1lready selected to offer \he
loans are all in the raptdly-
developing south county.
-By lettinf cities join the pro-
IJ'am, though, the loans could be
applied to developments
anywhere in the county.
Mrs. Watkins
The County Board o(
Supervisors agreed Tuesday to in-
volve interested cities.
lobn Gibson, administrator of
the revenue bond program, said
a few cities, such as Anaheim,
La Palma and San Clemente,
had shown a "tentative" interest
in joining.the program.
An ortanizational meeting for
city representatives will be held
soon to explaiq how cities can
get involved, be said.
The county has sold one rev·
enue bond series for $150
million and is preparing a
second series, which officials
hope to market early next year.
Gibson said cities could join in
that sale or in later bond sales
proposed by the county.
THE SECOND BOND sale
was set for $50 million, but
supervisors agreed Tuesday to
modify the sum to range from
$40 to $75 million, depending on
market conditions and bow
many cities seek to join the pro-
gram.
Gibson said each city would be
responsible for admi,ustering its
portion ol the bond money, bl.it
sald one sale Will be mpre e~
cient than expecting each city to
cooduct Ila own1
The home Joaps are generated
by selllna ta~.Jree aovernment
bonds to inves~rs. who are ~
paJd through monthly mort1a1e
payment.a by bome buyen. No
tax money is used to finance the
loan1.
The first bond sale raJsed
money for 1,800 county-
sponeored 1o•ns for famlUes
with annual lbcomea leu than
$27 ,600. Mortca1e rates for tboH
loans r~e from 8. 75 to 11.5 per·
·cent.
The Naauel Art
AuoclatJon and invited
1ue1ts will be shown bow to
make their own paper at the
association's m eeting
Thursday
The demonstration wiJJ
be held at Republic Federal
Savings and Loan
Abociation, 30212 Crown
Valley Parkway in Laguna
Niguel, at7:30p.m
For information, call
495-5000or493·0799.
Drill team
• • auction aims
at uniforms
The Los Amigos High School
drill team booster club will
sponsor a fund-raising silent
auction, beginnine at 7 p.m.
Saturday, at Columbia Savings
and Loan, 2213 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa
Orgaruzers or the event are
hoping to raise $1,200 for uniforms
and training camp expenses. The
drill team is made up of 36 girls
attending the high school in
Fountain Valley.
BORS D'OEUVRES and
non-alcoholic beverages will be
served at the auction, and
participants may bring their
own wine.
Local m~rcbanta b~ve donated
I varioua auction items includina
food items and certificat~ for
1porta equipment, hair care,
1hoe1, clothing and flower
arraneementa.
PARftCIPANTS CAN stroll
throu_ab the display of auction
items and bld by reetsteiingtbeir
name and an amount next to an
item.
Thoee wl1hin1 .to dooate
add.ttlonat it~m• to lhe auetloD
1hould contact Sue Decker,
7'15·2H3; Joe Davia. 531·8118. or
Dot G1P,e,838· 7'169.
50.mtfee
THIS IS OTHER END OF ARTERIAL ROAD WITHOUT TARGET
Ec:ologlcal reMtve continues at heart of controversy
Tbe coet of air travel anct tbe
slumptnthenation'aeconomyare continuing to affect air passenger
trafflcatJobn Wayne Airport.
A total of 1,996,9218 passengers
passed through tb' airport
terminal tbroufh Oct. 31, which
was 8.7 percen fewer than dur·
ing the period .iJa 1979.
The number of passengers
that went throu1b the airport in
October was higher than Oc·
tober 1979. But airport officials
noted that the increase is mis·
leading because Hu1hes Airwest
(now Republic Airlines) was on
strike one year ago and the
airline's operations we r e
curtailed.
ACCORDING TO THE
statistics released Tuesday,
176,416 persons passed through
the airport in October compared
to 162,471 during October 1979.
The amount of air freight that
moved through the airport
terminal during October was 211
percent more lhan October 1!779,
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certifitd Gtmolo6i•t, AGS
LARGEST PEARL
chatlge1 handl
The 'Pearl of Allah,' which has
been bllled aa the world's
lareest pearl, weighs over H
pounds. 1t waa bought recently
by a Beverly Hllls jeweler. He
paid $200,000 to the estate of
archaeololiat Dewell Cobb, wbc>
recently pasaed away. The
pearl was aucUoned by tbe
heirs to bis estate. Cobb
claimed th.a< the etant pearl,
which meaaW'ed atmoet 10 by $
inches, bad been takm from a
bute Jfrtcidlia clam which bad
ktlled tbe Philippine fi.lberman
who hid t.Uen IC CON> iald he
ltrat tried to buy tbe pearl ln
1934 from • tribal ctuer in the
talanda, tiUt the cluef retuaed
bficaUM he believed the pearl to
be sacted. Later, HYI CObb, the
chief chanled hla mind aft.er Cobb tured _, ~ldtf11 aon of
maU.rl•• rr,.e ht1to.r1 and
lntrlpe 1urroandtn1 the bll "arl, bp made lt a le1end
amoni J>••rh10tledan M with au. •. ._ '11 • ..., .. H"'*' It
bi'Wp • ~ ..... ·'° tbt penon Who ow. It, CM .JOU lm•ame Ult llae ol Uae elem tbat produe d tbe PearJ of
All1h?
but officials once again attributed
the increase to the Hughes
strike.
For the year through Oct. 31,
however, the passage of air
freight was down 24 percent.
Private aircraft operations,
which accowtt for 91 percent of
the activity at the airport, con·
tinued to show declines. The
number of takeoffs and landings
of private planes were down 14.5
Laguna slates
seniors movie
"The Grass is G reener,''
starring Cary Grant, Deborah
Kerr and Robert Mitchum, will
be shown free to senior citizens at
2 p.m . Friday at the South Coast
Theater in Laguna Beach.
Tickets are available at the
Senior Center, 515 Forest Ave.
Th~ program is presented by
Laguna Federal Saving§ and
Loan Association.
percent through Oct. 31 com·
pared to the period ln 1979.
FOR OCTOBER ALONJ;,
private plane operations were
down 30 percent.
Total airport operations, in·
eluding both commercial and
private air c raft operations,
were down 28 percent from year·
ago levels.
''This appears to be a continu·
ing reflection of the high costs of
fuel and air travel in general('
acco~ding to airport officials.
Volcano show due
Photos, slides and video tapes
of the Mount St. Helens eruptions
will be presented Wednesday at
Orange Coast College by
gPologist Wallace D Kleck. His
lecture, Crom 7 to 10 p.m. is
scheduled tn Room 207 of the col -
lege's Chemistry Building.
-.9t ~ never loo . etu/'I
lo ~ltul l~intilUJ aloul
•
,
Cfu.i6tm'"
'
. ' . . .. ,, . .
I
here and there. Several somebodies, as a matter of fact.
Despite fairly lousy weather on some of the raclne
days, last year's average daily attendance totaled nearly
11,000 bonefleab lovers. And they poured a net of $290,000
across the bettiDI counters.
Nobody reported bow much they took home.
THE RECORD DOES SHOW, however, that Orange
County baa been a Iona time 1ettln1 a thoroughbred racing
meet, despite the fact that Los Alamitos is one of the finest
tracks for runnlnl nags you'll find anywhere in the uni-
verse. Somehow, or: County moguls could neveT con·
vtnce the racln1 a rities that our now-hefty population
deserved a chance to see the premier nap go to it on the
local track. 'lbua, somebo-'; the big races always seemed
to remain in Los Aneeles County or Mepco. or anywhere
butbere. · '
CE&TAIN stJSPICIOVS TYPES tot the idea that
maybe lt all boiled down to one tJUni: The Money. Loi
An1elea liked the bettinl bucks. They like Orance Countlanl
travelin1 up there to flow their cash tbroueb the
parimutuel windows. Clearly, LA people like to lteep their at1ractlOM at
home. Like the Rama. Every now and then they lose one . '
You're left to wonder ii the Los Alamitos track had
been located in Anaheim would we have gained dKln>uebbred
bone raclna a lot aoooer? Anyway like the Rama, the blue-blooded nae• are
bere now Md you 're free to 10 lay your hard-earned bucu on
the line lf you so desire. A.a for me, rn stick with the fat
man in the camlval tent. I never wu much for shed4lnl
dollan )Ult because my bone had a headache and couldn't
tell me about it.
l'M PAaOClllAL ENOUGH to fiaure, however, that lt
-LA County doesn't want us to have tborou1bbrtd hone
raclnc in Oran1e County, then by blaiet, lt'a a lood thlnl
we went out aDd iot some.
So let'• set •em off and nannln1. Wblch way do YoU polnt OM of these be&1ll, anyway1
Where'• the 1teertn1 wheen
.. ~ .......
Fu11t1v1 flnancler Robert
Veaco hu unW Dec. 11 to
leave thl Baumu, a 1ov· ernment 1pc>kt1man tbere ha1 1atd. Veaco baa for 11ven y an eluded federal cbar1•• 1temmtn1 from Wat1r1at1 and a
multlmllllon·dollat 1tciclt
1c1ndal.
YO=~-= (AP) -A~· .... a tiaJlar totummer.,..... time ua coot. ap. t...-iMad .. tbe bMdt ........ "' ,.,...., UIMW' tbe lnfluente of York. O,uqal\ aDd Well1. eoe.-mot aad stabbed four AuUa'ttMla 1Ucl dleJ .._'t "°'" *» death in W. eouta1 kaow&bellMltJvefOl'tbeklUIAO. Nlort town, dMil dtOve 40 mil• ,..... ..uda fON>Wellt benn
to a moe.a ~ w»Mre he kUWd aft.7u.e bodlet o1 two mtia~
lalmaelf with a drua ovel'doM, two women were fOUDd llODd•y
autbOtttieil aldd. DJpt at a bOme in tbe ,_ c.;, .:a=~e:·~ w~:~e:; :,~::::.::~~= room at PeabOcly, llaat., aald and on• w11 stabbed. IQ·
Aaabtut Attorney General Pu· •etttaatort lt1ued a murder quale t>emDo. warrant for Wew after 1M1
Wu• bOdy WU found"-TUa~-"'-_-found bl.I ;plC~\IP tnaek •ban·
d11 by lluaaebuHttl State QOGed ill the driv•a1 ot Urie Police def autharitles teeelVed bom~. Owned by Robert IJIOtte,
a :Up lbM. be mllht be bid.lq at one ot the viethDI. ~·1 llllito
• the motel, about .0 miles IOUth wu mtatq.
OfYotk;Perrinotaldoalythatthe JNVBSTIGAT0&8 said co-Up eamefl'OID "a.n informant"
PE&aJNO 8~ Welu had
taken an overdose, but IAld be clJdn 't lr:nOw what clrull were in·
volnd.
The quadruple 1layin1 CJOe of
the wont matt murders ln
Maine b1atory. ~ place in an
ealne wu strewn around tbe
dwel.Uq, and Qsunqult Police
Chief WUllam Hancock told re-
porters lt appean!'d that Wela
wu under the Influence ol co-
caille at the time of the kllllnaa. \
In addlUoo to Uzotte, St, of
York, state police 'tald the other
male victim wat Gre•ory
Kliin-smen wiii acquittal ~ f~e
N . 1. 1 ared • 12;.!lli 1. 6 . .lai·Jees told. az1s a so c e m "' qg o ve common•sts fb·0-:-
oREENseoRo.N.c . <AP>-ANut1e~bu TbeRev.11.o1eaWilliama;abt.actctvnr1ibtaac· Y '}~WA
balled the acquittal of six Ku Klux Klaalmen and tlviat, called the verdlet •'the ~at.est perpetraUoD
Nasla aa a "IJ'Ut victory for white America," but of injustice Oil our COUDtr)' siDee the death ol Dr.
tbe Commmmt:Worten Party bu ebarted that the MartlnLutberltlnilr.''
verdict in the alaytn1 of five comrades "liv• the Wbttber te either people cbar&ed after the
creen lllbt to HiUer-llke attacb on the people of d,emomtratiOD WW be tpooupt to trial now bU not
America." )!let been aDDouneed. • ·
The def~tl" relatives bunt into tean of re· ~ by the au.wbfte Jury came after
Uefutheverdictawereread,endin1thelon1eattrial aeve-ofdeliberationaDda2S-weektrlal. in North Carolina bi.story. .,. Tb b t d f bl d "From the vel")' be~, lt waa the com-e c arces s emme rom a oo 1 m··-' ... ·wbo..a'dtbeattac ,"taidJlll'Ol'RobertA. shootout between white supremacistl and dem· w.u.-..-U&I onstratora at a CWP "Death to utt Klan" rally Williama. "It waa the communists wboatarted beat.
N in& the cars with sticb. From tben oa, lt wu a cue of
ov. 3, 1979. aeU-defeme ... Not 1008 after the juron announced their de-cision, the civil rtgbts division of the U.S. Juttlce "Ob, 1oah. lfeel like I have been set free," said•
Departmentaaiditwasstud)'iDltheverdlct. Drews. tearful Paula Wood, whose husband, Nazi Roland
Dayuaidthebraitcbwaachecklng ''toseeiltherela Wayne Wood, was acquitted. "I'm not sure bow I
anytblngwecando." feel. lt'sjustarelief."
R•appeca~re
Saylng the Ume la ripe for 1plritual convenion of en-
ttrtaln n , evan1elllt Bllly
Graham ii in Lu Ve1a1 for
a rore ucond cru1ade. He
1eldom conduct.I cruude ln
H m t clty twice.
~------
All's ~ll that, end,s ~ll
AURORA, N.Y. (AP) -All's
well that ends well at Wells
College, where school officials
say tbe1've struck au in a well
the school ii drt11.ln& near cam-
put. Offlclah of the 525-atodent
women'• coUep uy the Well ii
the flnt. in the country owned by
a colle1e. The 2,800-fopt well is
about 100 yuda from the cam·
pus lD a field owned by the
acbool.
Colleee otftdala bOpi to re·
duce tbelr aDDual $250,000 fuel·
oil beattna COltl wt.th natural
1a1.
NEW YORK (AP) -Tr&
World AlrllDee tayt lt JriJl folk
Eutern AlrUnes' lead aDd rai
trantcCmtlnental air fares, b
continua to olfu a round-tr illCbt coach •'Supenanr" fa
of S29I between New York ar
Callfomla.
TWA '• round -trl
"Superaaver" day coat
between New York a
CalJfornla will be $338. up fn>
$298. The special Dilht coa
fare of $2118 ii up from $388.
East.em's cheapest New Yor
to-Loa Angeles fare will be $4
beginnin8 Jan. 1. Both Eaate1
and TWA have been chargiJ
$268 for discounted round-tr
ni1ht-coach tickets.
East.em 's cheapest round·tr
fare between New York and Si
Franci.sco will be $475 as of Ja
1. TWA's discount fares will ~
quire purchale and reserv
at leut ..ven days tn •
and a minimum R&,J of aft\
days. Seata an Umlted and
one-way tickets will be sold.
Rain ahowera predicted /or Paelflc Northweat
•Well, maybe 10 ••.••..
• lut talk I• ao ct.••P -·~•o tran11tory. -
• When you went tood b•"•ln• -prle•• you can count on dey In and
day out. th• proof I• In pftnt ••••• In th• 1rocery ad1 In th• Dally Piiot.
• ConfuMd by •II th• contllctlnt claim•?
• lhOj! th• Dally Piiot, •t th• feot•. comp•r• ...•. then vou know
you re feelty 11•tlt"9 tM mOet for J041' motley.
i
Man leavma hia apartment building in Los Angeles eyes
the accumulation of garbaJte. It is the result of the second
week of no-work action by city employees. Strikers have
been ordered back to work today, with officials of three
mWUcip81 unions saying a settlement is very near.
I
Three found guilty
• in land conspiracy
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Three
men accused of bilking investors
of more than $S milUon over an
11-year period have been convict-
ed of consplracy and mail fraud in
wbat proeec:utors call the largest
land fraud scheme in California's
h.t.tory.
The government said the defen-
dants used a company called Pre-
B ullder Land Corp. to sell
thousands of acres of land in
Rlvenide, San Bernardino and
P.lacer counUes to hundreds of In-
vestors.
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,SOOand sold it for$49,000three
weeks later to another shell cor-
poratioo, which held i1 one week
and sold it to an investor for
$50,000.
Each defendant could be im-
prisoned \J\> to five ~ears and fined
up to $10,000 on the conspil"acy
charge and imprisoned bp to five
years and n.ned up to $1,000 oc
each Of the h'aud counts. Sent.enc-
inl was set for Dec. 15 by U.S. Dis-
trict Judge WUliam P. Grey.
GUO.TY VEaDJCJ'S on one
count of conspiracy and five
counts ol mail fraud have been
returned a1ainat Nick Troy, 47,
of Woodland Hilla; Robert
Koepple, 52, of Chatsworth, and
LHlle Dahl Gleave, 54, of
Orem, Utah.
An indictment said the defe~· · BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A Qa.ta told cUltOmera the)' were i;oliceman fatally shot a man
Gdly brikera .ad did a.ot own any wbo reporte(l.ly wu ~der the ln-
Of the land. But the covemment nuettce of drup and pointed a
maintained the three had set up gun at the officer, the depart-
sbell corporations (companies ment said today." Neal David
exlstlng only on paper) to bold ti-Futch, 30, was shot once in the
tie to the property and bad chest by OtCicer Gary Trent,
transferred parcels among tbe_ir __ J>O_ lice reported.
For Men
s4211
Reg. $49.99
For Women
s39u
Reg. $46.99
.
Solo student thnies seemg ill,..fated PSA jetllner
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
·21-year-old man who was fiying
lnear San Diego's Llndbereb
Field at the time of a 1978
airplane colllsJon that kllled 1.W
people contends be played
"absolutely" no part in tbe dis·
aster, the worst such accident in
the nation 'a hlatory.
Jerry Roeslllon, ol San Die10,
a student pilot w'bo •as on a solo
flight whe"1 the Pacific
Southwest AirllDes jet collided in
the air with a sinite-enaine
Cessna 172 on Sept. 25, 1978, told
a federal panel this week be did
not recall aeein1 the PSA
aircraft durinl bis fiight.
BE TOLD THE National
Transportation Safety Board
panel he did not learn of the ac-
cident until after be landed.
••At no time did I see any
other aircraft, although I might
have seen a Cessna 172,"
Rossillon said.
Rossillon, who was pilotina a
Cessna 150, said it was Q,91 un-
common to see such small
planes around Lindbereh Field,
but added, ''I do not recall see-
ing another airliner."
Wben asked ii be thought be
had played a part ln the crash,
be sald "absolutely pot.•• ·
lutt before the collllloa, the
pilot ol the PSA: craft told eul-
trollers his ereW' ·'bad the
Ceaana "in •laht a tnlnute aco"
and be believed ij blid paqed off
to the rilbt.
TOE m'SB &VLED after the
crash that the PSA crew probab-
ly bad not complied with the
Federal Aviation Adminiltra-
tion's "see and avoid" safety
procedure wben controlleri.
warned the jetliner that a
Cessna was nearby. ~ PiJot organizations such as the
Alr Line Pilots Association
criticized the NTSB ruling, con·
tending the control toweulid not
give the PSA crew enough in-
formation. They alleged that e
third aircrart -·the Cessna
piloted by RossUlon -may have
confused the commercial
airliner crew.
THE ALPA SEARCHED area
airfield flight records and dis-
covered that Rossillon was fly-
ing nearby at the time of the col-
lision. The group turned the in-
formation over to the NTSB ,
which ordered Rossillon to ap-
Vet finally
gets medal
ST. LOUIS <AP) -Earl H.
Russell waited 36 years to re·
celve a Purple Heart for wounds
suffered in World War U. but
says the delay "didn't bother
me.''
Ruasell, 61, was a B·l7 runner
with the SlOtb Qomb•rdment
Squadron when bi.I plane was
shot Bown over Getman7 in 1.M4. Re wu struck in the· face by
shell fragment.a.
A 7ear aao. 'l'hlle inquirinl
about eomJ>tQaatiou tor a new
artiftclat eye, tie mentioned be
hadn't received a Purple Heart.
An official certilled RuaseH 's
wound and worked with tbe Dis-
abled American Veterans to ar-
range for the tardy citation.
pear before the panel.
Rossilloo said be made only a
short fiigbt from San Diego's
Montgomery Field to Encinitu
the morning of the crash and
knew nothing of it until he
turned on his car radio after
Janding.
RossiUon, a department store
worker who is no longer a pUot,
said be had no idea anyone
would want to ask him about the
air crash so ''I did not report to
the board or the FAA."
THE AIRCRAFT OWNERS
and Pilots Aasociation dttried
Monday's bearing as an attempt
to ''crucify an innocent man."
Frucis McAdams, who pre·
sided over the hour and 20-
minute hearing emphasized at
the outset that there was no 'in·
tention to pin blame for the
crash on any party, and an
ALPA representative, Harold
M arthinsen, later agreed. -MABTHINSEN SAID the
t>ilots' goal in pursuing the bear-
ing was to get the NTSB to re-
consider its ruling on tbe proba·
ble cause of the ci:ash.
He said the pilots are hoping
to improve procedures for iden-
tifying air traffic at crowded
airport areas over the visual
procedUHS now used.
"There were other mean!; to
separate air traffic and they
should have been used ,''
Martbinsen said.
Medical sclwol
mirwrities down
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The percentage of minorities in
CaUlomla medic-1 schools bu dropped over a three-year period
that started just befOH the Allan Bakke ''reverse discrimination'' cue, acCOt'dina to a new state report.
The California Postsecondary EducaUon Commission bas been
told by it.a staff that while oveilall enrollment1at the state's slx
public and three private medical schools exceeded 4,000 for the
<f'lrit time in 1979, minority enrollment bad declined as a perceo-
ta1e of the total.
From 1975-76 to 1978-79, the report said, black enrollment
dropped from 1.3 percent to 5.2 percent of the total at UC medical
sc:boola, and from 5.a percent to 1.9 per~nt at private schools. Tbe
numbers of blacks alsO decllned.
Hispanic enrollment dropped from 9.1 to 9.2 percent of the
total at UC medical !lCbools but increased from 4.7 to 5.4 percent at
private schools, the re.J>Ort said. It s'1d the number of Hispanics
increued at both types of institutions. . . . . lsearsf -. th1antities and assortments are lintited. so hurry in!
•
. .
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merchandioet• from ~.,.,, B .. r.eil ancl 1111 11i·1ll' "''''" fornwrh nfft·n ·<I h' ('ntaloi.: or in man'
Cfttalojt f>i,trihulion "•··"' Ht'l.111 ,,.,,..., .1r1111nd lhc• c uuntn
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S TEXTURE PAINT
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ftAINT PAD KITS
~~e ~ow 4.44
PORCELAIN-CLAD CAST IRON
COOKWARE
10 pc. Set
WAS89M
NOW
SNOOPY SKI BOOTS
~~~eNow10.99
' BOYS'
SKI JACKETS
.. WERE
~ 14
" NOW8.88
I '. I
l
tfax load off balance
Middle income Americau-prebably don't have to be
minded that their income tax load seems to aet heavier
d heavier. In eue tbere'e any doubt, an analysts of tas returns
ade by tbe Internal Revenue Service this year reveals
at persons in the SJ.5.000 to-$50,000 income range paid
.1 percent of all federal income taxes for 1979. That's e blaest proportion yet paid by middle income wage
arners.
Taxpayers with incomes under $10,000 paid 4.4 per-
ent of all 1979 taxes, leaving 35 percent to be paid by those
th incomes in excess of $50,000.
According to a study by the Tax Foundation.. the out-
k for the middle lncometiti.zen is not improving.
In 1979, a worker with a median income of $20,000,
upporting a spouse and two children, paid $4,814 or 26. 7
cent of his income in federal taxes. His tax tab for will be $5,441, or 27.3 percent of bis earnings, accord-
g to the study.
The experts blame inflation and the prevalence of
wo-earner families, both of which push taxpayers into
her tax brackets, for the increasing burden on the
ddle income class.
These· are the unhappy facts that will force the new
dministration to give top priority to tax cuts that will
able workers to retain a decent share of their rightful
arnings.
pening the doors .
Beginning in January, a new state Jaw passed bt the
glalature and sighed by Gov. Brown, will open the oora to a range of governmental activity beretof ore
rgely closed to the public.
The law requires all state boards and commissions,
ong with their subcommittees and advisory bodies, to
nduct their meetings in public, with advance announce-
ent of the agenda where feasible.
Tbe new law not only requires open meetings, but
ets forth specific rules to provide full public access to
e agencies' activities.
These include-providing the public with background
ormation on aeenda items; guaranteeing the public
e right to tape record open meetings; prohibiting
hargine any fees form~ notices; requiring that the
eneral reasons for a closed session be announced: and
uiring tba\ confidential minutes or recordings be
en during closed sessions to insure against illegal dis-
ussions in such sessions.
Existing laws have been successful in opening meet-
s of elected bodies and ol some state boards and com-
sions. 1be new law is significant in that it opens the
oors to all agencies whose members are appointed,
ather than elected, and who wield enormous power in
tate government.
M a welcome afterthought, the law wipes out the
rm "executive session." From now on a meetine cl<>11ed
the public for legal reasons will be called, in plain
glish, a "closed session."
• nlons expressed In the space ~ve art/ those of the Daily Piiot.
r views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
lats. Reader comment IS Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O.
x 1580, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
. Boyd/Centuries
Q. Who tbou1bt up the idea
dlvldlq our centuries into
ye&r1 B.C. and A.D. T
A. A monk name'd
onyaus Exleuus. He lived
JtalJ about A.D. 525. What
wanted to do wu figure
the l"llbt date for Easter.
urcb men bad been areu-
about that. He arbitrarily
the date or Cbrut's birib
t Dec. 25, tn the year '153
UC-1bat AUC la a L.,u ..
bbrftilaticln for ab urbe con-
ta -trom the foundation of
Dear
Gloomy
the city, meantna Rome. He
bad oo Idea be ,raa 1ettln1 a
new timetable for the western world.
Complicated, that
cbemiltry 1ame. Sodium 11 a
metal that explodel When lt
comes into the contact with
water. Calcium la a
polaonoua IH. Put them
toaetber, tboutb. md you 1et
the ordinary table salt •
neceaaary to human e:a-
iatence.
Remarkable the tbln11 people collect, Tete
FriJbeea. John KirklaDd <JI
Santa Barbara, Calli., re-
portedb bu 13,000 of them.
Worth $250,000 or
tbereabouU, it'• claimed.
Physical f(tne11 experts'
contend a 15-yeat'Old lltl, lf
avera1e, la at the J>'U other
strength.
Eiahty-five percent ol the
people who are Jaine suffer
the atfllcUon Oll tbe rt1ht · '
alde.
That Napoleoei kDOWO u
tbe Uttli CliCll'pol'U WU 1M
• conoral; pJeaae note. ,
Earl Waters
-TRUCKS LEASED ~
S.msoo were involved in a ma~
jor environmental hazard on
Staten llland last year. The trucks hauled poi.Ion-saturated
industrial filters to a dump site operated by the Chelsea
Trminal Co. The waste wu then
deposited in bina owned by
Jersey Sanitation Inc., which, in
A.._. N W.../,._,..I..,
-~-...-.All .. .... for ....... ..._
II~ -NI Sir ........ Ml •o. ................ .
A LON&Y ftaVGGLSr PW
tbe.pNl ftYa ~ •• ~· f •llln1 World .war II) ~an
Hmed ~ AIJMJ 19¥ '*'1
tt1bUn1 W'Hblnstoa, pqUce
a utborlU• elql.itandedly for
the rtlbt &o malDt.ela • IOUtary
vjall OulaWe ~ baild·
inaa. He bet bMll atrilted 22
tllhu tor IWa CJae.omu cams*in to prick bureaucratic eona-clencee.
Jo fact, except for brief
perloda ibet°""o eourt-oidettcl
releue ind •ubieiciueat u:rat.
Abney baa spent tbe 1.,t N
montht iii tbe Oiatrict ol eowm-
bia jidli.
The •year-old Ahuy eame to
Wa1hinaton from Te&H to
pursue bla claim that tbe
Veterans Adm.inJatratlOft owes
him compensation for ailments
be says be contracted WbilE.
serving in the Army. The VA re-
jected his claims, and Abney
be1an his lonely vilil in .a park
across from VA headquarters,
near the White Hduse. There he
was arrested 12 times, but three
subsequent convictions were n -
versed by the U.S. Court of Ap-
peal,.
When be moved his viell to the r
Capitol steps in 19'18, Capitol
police continued the arrests,
-and officials pasaed what is
known as tbe "Abney
Ordinance," forbiddinc anyone
to Ue down on the steps or other
''improved portions" ol the
Capitol grounds. A Judie ruled
recenUy that, while the police
were within the law. there was
UtUe justification for its exercise
Ln the absence or heavy traffic.
Five hours after bis release,
Abney wu arrested again.
Abney isn't the only loaer in
this revolving-door battle. Jail
expenses, court costs and legal
fees have cost the taxpayers an
estimated $80,000.
MYSTERIOUS MALAD\': When
the Russians· Afghan puppet,
Babrak Karmal, extended bis
visit in Moscow, presumably for
reasons of health, State Depart-
m e nt Kremlin ·watcbers
s peculated that his illness is
political -a nd might be
terminal.
Now that he has reappeared,
with the announce,me.ot that
myat health probl
.wer.tlll..& ................
back to ~ the analyRI are
still mystified. The speeul.atloe
is that the Soviet leaders
couldn't come up with a pre-
placement for their belea~red
satrap but are still looking.
Californians in line for national offices
While the election of Ronald
Reagan la Important to those
across the nation who see better
days ahead by reason of less
government regulation, lower
taxes, a -balanced budget, and
stronger foreign policies, it prom·
lees to be even
more lmpor-
t ant to
Callforiana.
For there is
small doubt
that for the
first time in
the nation's
hbtory a bigb
percenta1e of
top federal of-
fices will be filled with Califor-
nians.
Thia mlpt have been expected
to happen when the only other Callfomhm ever eleeted Presi-
dent IUchard Nixon took office.
But Nl.Jtop bad spent his entire life
after colle1e away from
California, fbott In the Navy, then
as a Coqreaalnan, U.S. Senator
and Vice President. He didn't
know anybody in C.Wornia. AU of
h11 cloee auociata were of the
W aahlqtoneatabllabment.
Rea1a. oo the other band, ia
Uke JISDJQY Carter. He doeln't
know the people in D.C. and
furthermore doesn't trust them.
He displayed this same distrust
or people.Jagovemment when be
took office aa governor. In mak-
ing bis appointments then, be
drew heavily upon people from
private enterprise and can be
expected to do the same now.
HOWEVER. be has strong
loyalties for those who have
helped him in the past. Also be
la more comfortable around peo-
ple be lmows best. For that rea·
aon it can be predicted be will
be fillln.I many posts with those
who served blm well while be wu 1ovemor.
Tbls seems assured by the
very fact that he has already
named Ed Meese, Casper Wein-
berser and Verne Orr aa three of
hi. top advisors to aid in . the
aelecUoo of thole who are to fill
the cablnet and other top federal
oUicei. All three are Callfor-
nlana who held blgb poelttona in
state aovemment durl111 bis ad·
mlnlJtntion. Meese, 1n fact. wu
the chief executive while both
Wetnberaer and Orr dld stinta u
hi• cllredor of finance amonc
other thinp. ·
Na~ or otben who served
blm tn California to mind. Ra.y
Arnett who was Director of Flah
and Game will certainly be of-
fered a top post in the federal
wildlife management agency. He
not only proved to be the best fish
and game director the state bu
ever had, but continues to stand
high with sportsmen 'a oreani.a.a-
tions as well as conservatives.
Another is Bill Giannelli wbo
waa.,J>irector of Water
Resources and could be picked
for the bead of the Cederal water
management a1mcy. And there
is William Penn Mott, Jr .• who
although a conservationist.
pleased Reagan u bis director
of Parts and Recreation and can
be expected to be chosen to bead
the National Parks, if not an
even higher poet. Aluiost certain
to be picked for an important
position In connection with
federal welfare pro1ram1 is
Robert Carlson, who wu the
architect of Reagan's welfare
reforms in California.
OF OOU&SE, be 1"on't be able
to transplant bia entire former
team. He bas ouWved some who
performed stellar lervice for
him while otben didn't prove all
that saUdactory;and still others
,.
may not be interested inm~
moves. And , despite bis feeliop
about the Washington establllh-
ment, he will have to have some
who are experienced in the wa.yii
of Congress and tbe
bureaucracy.
Still, having been sorely stuni
a few times while governor by
appoint1n1 people be didn't
personally lmow, cbooaing them
strictly on \heir "records," be
will be doubly cautious now.
I
BE MAY EVEN reach out t.o
the California Legislature to find
some of his appointees. One who
might be picked is Senate
Republican leader Bill Campbell,
who as ao Assemblyman enjoyed
good rapport wltb Rea1an.
Ironically, defplte bia con-
servative leaninp, Reaaan prob-
ably won't make any offers to
the two most bard core "ri.lht·
winters" ln the state Senate. BW
Richardson and John Scbmita.
Althou1h they unc'loubtedly
would be iooct cbofce1 and do ex·
·cellent Jobe, both hue irked
Reaaan lo the past, refusinl to
aupPort him on varloUJ l.uuea.
Still, Reqan'a election pl"OIDilea
to spark the 1"9ateet lran.teoa·
Unental m11ratton slnce tbe
C9era came West seekln1 -*·
Ref. Price '35.98
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deep-down wrinkles
GE COMPACT 1200
GOv..DRYER .
1200 watts of go drying POwer Two
separate SWllChes lor hear 'air flow
llex1b11t1Y Fold-up handle carry in handbag or gymbag
GE COFFEEMA TIC~ I 0
CUP .
DRIP COFfEIMAIER
Brews 2 to 1 O ( 5 oz.) cups Automatic.
Keeps-warm unit. uses disPOUble
paper filters
Each pair of slots operates
independently Two separate toast
color selectors Heat only hall the ,
toasters or toast two shades at once
GE ELECTRONIC
DRIP COFFEEMAKER
Dual Brew Starte~ 24-hr electronic
d1g1tal clock 111mer. automallcally
starts brewing cycle Lets you make
coffee in YoUr sleep
EMERGENCY INFORMATION
J WAY Cl IADto
HB.P! IS HERE
Full power 40 ctlannel 2 way CB with
magnetic antenna cigarette llgher
adapter. trantoe111er untt and ruoged
case Eas1ty kept hidden an~ handy-
like emerveney flares Vialbte ooly
when muse
• GI HOME SBnaY•
IAnBYOPERATID
SMOIEALARM
Continously monitors air enterll'\O
unit Has loud 85-db alarm. Battery
operated Works dunno power
fat lures
GE FOOD PROCESSOR
Slices. chops. shreds. grates. crumbs.
mixes yeast bread dough. 2-11'?-1
reversible Food Process or Disc
Stainless-Steel serrated edge knife
blade On 0 11 and Pulse-On
Switches
Ex Ira capacity oven.
broiler, tOJ' browner.
automatic 4-shce toaster.
bakes. broils. shuts off
automatically
GE B.ECTROHIC
DIGIT AL SCALE
Compact contemporary scale
Easy·tcrread d1g1tal display Weighs
25·300 lbs electronically Battery
operated
GEVERSATROM' ..
EUCTIOHIC
COUMTERTOP OVEH
Electronically controlled with
automatic timer Bakes toasts. broils
roasts. reheats and top browns
FM 1AM electronic d1g1tal takes
tess space than typical clock radio
Forward & Reverse time and alarm
setting Sleep Switch Snooze
Alarm. Power failure 1nd1cator
Green time dlsplay with adtustable
brightness •
,
Ref. Price •17.98
Sale Prjce •13.87
•tHA11 'S.00 ..
NRPl.ICE
Ref. Price 159.95
Sale Price •43.97
•REIATE '7.00
NETPl.ICI
536'7
Ref. Prtce ••9.98
Sale Price '39.•7
*REIATI '5.00
NETPlllCE
NOW
ONLY
s2991
Ref. Price sa9.98
NOW
ONLY $6891
Ref. Price •36.98
Two ¥WsM up tunes. 3 wake up
options Memory for e radio swtlons. se1 and forget operation
I
! ··~.
OPAi:
7·· de•anct frcb
cont>usctit ufo.
Availblt In 2A ...
list, Ued with Seattle at
15.3.
People editor Richard Oulaban tested the
waters 8long with tru-.e
wine experts.
Cft".'f PIAJlfNm !&J.; tbi ...
itri -,....._~JP! .. Hit probablJ •tll ~
tht'oqb ~ ...... -~ ula1 Planaln1 Co8'mf11loa
Mlllom ""'~.-.-· ......
IJ)fflal J -~! City pllnDen ~ that
.th. e 1eoera1 plan b compaMd three-MCtiom . uad lb
1oall, the paramount tlllll
Ju.st bow bl• uad deme
lleaa will become by the JM1
2000 ' . .
On band at Sat\ll'da7'1 ITT llCID
were propcmenta of .o srowtll,
alow "1'0Wtll uad full cfnelop.
D\eDt U'l\.llq ~Clm ........ from a b8lt to-development tMt ~ •
''rulnlna''the dtJ,tot\evelopmeQt ~r_apJdupoulbi..
Plannln1 comml1~~en ll'lued that _.... .. ct.
velopment of umaiahll
acrtcllltural ~ -moet GI it owned b;~ Se1eratrom family -may ba•e been
. ~
, Mum parrot hinders
~unership claim
SAC&Allb'l'O <AP> -Elbabetb the parrot refused to talk in a. clllClkt attAllrMJ'• oftlee. A Judie___. the cllatrlct attorney to allow RoJln RoWna, 34,
ace941d ol Neel.tu the blrd u 1tolen property' to try to eet
l!UulMdl to ldenUfJ lier u tbe rilbtlul owner .
... lloUlm • .,. BH111:ieUi bu a vocabulary of more than 30
abort inteaeet, -ut 1be refused to utter a word with the ~pr·•· Ila. BollbMI Hid it wu beeaUM 1be wu not allowed to handle
tlle bird aad beca .. tbeJ wouldn't remove a strange parrot from £llublth'1 eqe. ... ltoUlai wu to be arralped on charges of receiving stolen
P1'0l*tJ'.
CUSTOM MADE
FIRE SCREENS
FLUSH MOUNT
AffiDTOYOllR
FIREPLACE OPENING
ORDER NOW
-~ . ·~ --
POLA.NI, ~ aaovua at
council ••iicmt. •aid that mak· mi tapes -· pUbllo _.ell pro-~t.ltttiaiproldbtt1".
Clty Clerk Eileen Pbtuey
be1an ~ $'1.lt u hour IOi'
tbetapeaOd. 5. ID a dlnetive, the ctty note4
tbat recordlnp made by tbe'cltrt durtna councU Mlliom are ctty property and can be bandJed only
by cltypenonnel.
The bOUrly cw1e la baaed on
clerical emJ>)oy ... • hourly rate,
plus frtnae beneflta.
POIANS TOLD eouncU that
tapes are coeUnc him t15 to$20.
He •uoested a simple ayat.em
attached to the city tapln1
network so that up to six. cusette recorders ~t beplUQediD.
He Mid recordlna• made from
the audience are fllled with back-
groundnoiae and are unuaable.
BAIL SAID THE· au11ested
system would be disruptive and
that such installations 1bould be
at the rear ofthe cbamben IO that
enthualasta would not "parade"
to the front of the cbamben COD·
tinuously.
That kind of system, Hall sue-
1ested, would co.t about $2,000
and should be destined to
guarantee that the official tape
would not be damaged.
~ersgo ape
Brad Drage and individual known only u Mr. Ape round
turn and bead for finish line in Americp Cancer Society
tricycle and wagon race in Newport BeJch. 1be race,
sponsored by Houlihan 'a Old Place Restaurant. netted
$200 for cancer society. The ape and bia atdeiick lost
their beat, citing a problem with fur dragging on ground.
Park ranger impersonator fined
LOS ANGELl:S (A
-A I'*• 1a11 JM ovtrturnfa• ~ 1taw Air
RelOUJ"dl Boaid •tan· duda b' rWtUr dioade
ancl 'Sutf ate •ml1.1lon1 biteauee the ARB failed to prove th•J were
neceaaar1 to protect
publlc beattb.
-In. a me,moi-andum of
llltended ded.tm on • ault llled tn lfll by
Mobil, Gulf, StaDdard
OU of CaUfomla ad Ill·
dependent oll lJC'Oducen,
retired Superior Court Judie EuleGe SU allo
found that tbt ARB It.an·
darda 10 beyond the
state Healtb Depart·
ment'a recommenda-
tlona and were adopted -lJl vlolatlon ·or proper
procedure and without
1ulficient consideration
of economic impacta.
BUT OB apokesman
BW Seua aald the board will appeal and tbe ltaJl.
dard.a wlll remaln In ef-
fect peodiq outcome of
the appeal.
Su wu called out of
retirement to bear the
case under special com·
miaalon because civil
courts were too bu1y wi$h other cues.
SULFATE Al& pollu·
taota result from
chemical reactions in· volving sulfur dioxide, a
gas emitted when fuel
oU contalning sulfur la
burned.
KNOXVILLE, Teno. (AP) ._ A federal
mail.st.rate bu fined a member of the Hare
Krilboa aect $100 for poeiq u a part raqer
while di.stributin1 rellllolll itter.ture in the Great
Smoky Mountains National Park.
park ranger. Coffin, wearlq a pith helmet, khaki
trouaen and work 1boes, wu arrested after a
tourlat ftled a complaint wltb part ottlciaJI.
Tbe tow1.lt said Coffin approached him about
bu)'inl a book on American Indiana for ft. The
tourist brouaht the book, which wu about the
Krishna relillon.
Altbouab federal stan-
dards allow sulfur diox-
ide emisalooa averaamc
up to .14 parts per
million parts air over a
24-hour period, lbe ARB
allows only .05 .99111 over
24 boun and no more
than .s ppm for a one-
hour average.
There is no federal
standard for sulfate
emlssionl, but the atate
limits them to 25 micro-
gram per cubic meter
of air over 21 boura. Sam Coftln, 3f, of Pi..,a Foqe, WU cmvict·
ed two weeb a10 on charaa of lmpenooattna a
GOURMET FOODS
ANO SPIRITS
. .
•
PtPIA·HfJDllECK IXTM DRY CHAMPAQNIE S.W eight dollar8 on thla Wortd crua Spwtiter,
7!i0Ml ~
RED.TAO • ~·:;"~
LANCl._U ROii Thia
wine'• .bluah of color Ind
friendly fla'lcn make It '
weloorn!a on eny tabte. ~~ ... ·• 319 RED TAG
Prices effective through Sunday. Nov. 30
Hurry I Some llmlted quantltle•. In the event of an errOt' the legal minimum price wlll prevail
C.C. VtNIYARD
CHAMPAGNE Thi• bubbly
la aa delightful to drtnk u
It le ... Y on your 17I Pocie•tt>O<*. 79llMl
RID TAO
ZELLER ICttWAflZI KATZ 1111 {~1 The Moeet
wine of the fabfed Blaek C...!i delicately fruit~.
A ... aov ...... 389 :'TAO
~=.:"~~ ltlr'Y c~ ,wtie itr• . . ... .
ZEE DIE.CAST
ROUGH RIDERs
• llC'Clfl I fJ •
Entertainer Jackie
Gleason has dls·
associated himself
from annual Inver·
.,.rary Golf CldSsic in
Florida because
tournament is seek· ing sponsorship from
automaker "~oaned my ~me t raise
money for c arity.''
Gleason expla ed. --
Benefits
age limit
• may rise
WASHINGTON (AP>
A presidential com-
mission tentatively has
recommended raising
the retirement age for
full Social Security
benefits from 65 lo 68
early in the next cen
tury.
The President's Com-
mission on Pension
Policy suggested Tues
day raising the r~tir'e·
ment age by three
months each year from
2000 lo 2012. The panel
also suggested rais ing
the age for early. or re
duced, Social Security
benefits from 62 to 65
over th<' same period
"THE CHANGE
would affect the baby
boom cohort and follow
mg generations. but age
65 would be retained as
the normal rellrement
age for current middle
aged a nd older
workers." said the com
mission in its second m
teri m report
It urged the1t Congress
enact leg1c;lat1on for th<.'
future change in th<' re
t1rcment age 'to pro
v1dc sufficient advanc1·
"arnmg to the younger
workers that there wi II
he a gradual move up
ward ·
ITS RECOMMEN
dat1on on raising the
Social Set'urity retire
ment age follows similar
recommendations from
other rederal advisor}
panels
Prt•s 1dcnt elect
Reagan's task force on
Social Secunty also ten
I at1vely agreed that the
age should be gradually
raised to help th<•
system out of its f1nan
cial troubles
Top books
./
for kids
compiled
WASHINGTON <API
The Library o f
Congress has selected
what 1t thinks are the
1,000 top children '1
books of lhe '609 and '70.
for inclusion in a new, ii·
lustrated blbllo1raphy
called "The Best of
Children's Book1 .
1964·1'78."
The 90"J)a1e volume
wa• complied from the
library's aMuaJ 1uldea or children's literature.
first published ln 1965.
The book dlvldea ltt
entrlea amon1 the
catef01'1et qt picture
and plcture.atory bookl ;
1torle1 for the middle
1roup; 1torie1 for older
bofs arid &lrla: folJdor•;
poetry' pl•)'1' and sonaa;
arts and hobbles; blo· fraphy~ history, people 1
and placet: natur• and
-crence; and pe)'cholo1y
anct'soclolo1y.
•
tl·depres aota, lhe Food and Drut
Administration noted tn Its warn·
Int Tuesday J
It cited statistics aathered
through the Con1umer Product
Safet)' Commiasion 's national ln
Jury surveUlonce system, which 1how~d that about SOO of those
children required hospitalization
and that 10 children die each year
Mo.tAnatl tn tM trtcycllc anti· depreaunt ute,ory are prt·
1crlbed few depr.aatd adult.I. BUt
one known u lmlpramln• li u..ct to trtat childhood btd· etUn_,1,
The FDA nottce aaktd th•' pbyal• The two me>1t widely preacrtbed
clan• wam t.N!tr P•lltn\I of the adult antl·depreuanu are
PotenUalharmt.hel1dru11cudo. 1mltrlptyllne and doupin
Pharmaclau were reminded lo lmtpramln•, the bed-wettln1 treat-
pack111 the drut• ln b<lttln with mtnt tor chltdren a and over. is
child·retlatant caps. ,. told under the brand names
Th warn.in« wu tnduded ln t.he
FD A~' I , mo n t b I y J'UI
Bulletin, which la mailed to den·
ti4ta, nurses and other health pro-
f esslonallt, aa well as to doctors
and phal'macista .
I
SAVE 2oe
I.
CAl!tiNG OUAltn
a,, GAL.
ROUNDS
....,_._._ ........ ~--~------~~-
18"x25 ft. . SOI.Ills & coms
Ass't flavor' ••MO.,....,.,,,,, "Mii' wn•1r011t
IOUYIDtl. ICf cmMil .. T IY&UAI U
IUSf..S 1.11 JIO PAK
Of 60
SAVE s1.oo
HEFTY
fomm Disposable
PLATES
9" SIU
SPECIAL!
SAVE 5.00
~ i..lltf A'''9f "'f '0tf A•t u,
l XI(\\ \\OOK
I 1i\1 I 11\>.;0\~ ~
~.,.
'
LATCH HOOK
Wall Hanging
KIT
SAVE 18'
BUMBLE BEE
Chunk Light
TUNA
'" 0 ., ...... ,,
BUY 3aSAVE 17c
KAL KAN
M.P.S
CHUNKS
Doa food
Au I ll1n•I
3il.OO
,
CORNING WARE
12" OPEN
ROASTER
./ -
S~1 1 tno. l~
1J 1 011: or
J'tt I 1~ft
SPICE or WllDFLOWER1 0 9 9 EA PATTERNS •
,
MIRRO Sil•er StOfle
BUFFET Electric
FRY PAN
'1f C1llfrt111 11 """' p1•
••ta 1~ "'" ~1~
domr "'''
DAK fmJC)f'ted D111lsh
ASll AMllJT O\JR CONYfNIENT
lf.\f .'.7.~_\I; r.,:J
10 l. 01•po"t ~old• your
~~lf'C't1Nt hi Dre 2411•
1 l11Utr.,MOM \ 1 01 DO•Wt -----zw .....
52. 91" ggc
•CUP'S 7 °' 59c •'••or 11
• ,UTCS 7·· or 9" 59c ,,u ora1
• NAPKINS o.-· l·" 69C !'All. or 161
• llA'klllS IM«._ .. ., .. .,,, 59c
('111 or 201
MOULIN EX '. la Machine TM
FOOD PROCESSOR
11 SA "" cm 1s1m 11 n • ••1 u1n
24% LEAD "LUNA"
CRYSTAL
IMPORTED ntoM YUGOSUVIA
• I or WJflC CLASS
• II or DOOILf ot.D fUMIOll
• 7 , •1 SMUICT CNAM'1GNI
•,,,or wana 001Ln
YOUR 199 CHOICE • u .
• '7 OOCOU"'Otr\ U &U "'-Oll""'U09lUOI
tOU9 ltUTf Ott!lCt ,._ -.out...:&
SAVE 2.00
. -·~· .....J
ANCHOlt HOCIUNC
"ARLINGTON "
18 Piece
Punch Bowl
SET
l•cf..itl t11rl llflt I 5 ti
Cots w•t• 111~crrs
DUR ANO
DIAMANT 1 PC.
Salad SET
lrrH lu11IJ11t Cl.ftl•lrt
lt"hwl & IS"lowlo
6.99
SAVE2A1
f0
~ --...-.. I
' . DURAFWAE':.a Cotormr
BURNS APtROl
7 MOllRS
SPECIAL!
WHITMAN'S
''Favorites 11
Asionmen1 ef 11c~ mil~ 3 49 1 1111\ dloc~lf CO.JI"(\
RICHARDSON 1 ·LB. BOX •
MINTS
• Art.r 01rwtet •I utter
• 1•111 • Aniu
SAVE 6.00
KODAK
EKTRA 200 CAMERA
-1 .. • '"' \ ' t ,, D
lnc•uMI •dm a•d fl1pll11~
18.95 KODAK KODACOLOR II
FILM
C 110 1• !IP 2. 09
2.00 REBATE
''The Button',-<;:.,_' =-
LAND CAMERA
1 from POLOROID
•11"01 ·~ :.:. ~.:, 22 95 ttU1 •
LIBBEY
Crystal
PINE TREE
CANISTER
"' 10'•" HIGH
40 oz .
1.69
• °"' ..... ~,-. • ""\~~ ·~·._,.•Ull 0"91r11Ht1 ... ••
(
f
(......,..-= ...... )
2.00 REBATE
-
onald McDonaliJ, ballOt cl!eates doubk-deei fif~or in LA
SAVE 1.80
PAPER MACHE
BANKS
6.99u.
YOUR CHOICE!
MENNEN
Millionaire
rr:. 6.00
COlOGNE lll----.a
. 3.5 01. 7.50
SAYe 8.11
~ES'
Parkas
le ru fy ltr WI
.. ectllll *"" MN••n JICNts ·~ 11111
,..., 11111. '*" .... ~,
UDIES'
Velour Tops
s.n •"'111 """" ""' ......... , F .. .,. ..... Hets
SIZES
UH
10.88u.
~ Mbclllll ""'
SIZES
1-M·L·XL
-~
< ..;:,/ .
' ' ) ' '"". ,./ ~.,,.
··, DR. DENTON
' • _.._ ,_ BOYS & GIRl.S \I~~,, 1t. 2-Pc . Sleepers
·<1 1/~, .~, ftltf4 ,ajllus cWHI •II ~" ~J ~ :v.:.:.. -:r.:.-::: .... .,.. ...... ,
\ SIZES!... SllU 4-7 & , ...., 4-ll ~ 1-_~ J.JJO 6.00 ·
~ ...o:g~ 7.00
BUY 2 ,..._a SAVI! 7 ac ,
~~~EIJIJ~/EMe
.. . . "IMDWOO'r -2f 3.00
SPECIAL!
Asft f ......
BONUS
we m. ant at a joke. Char1e1 d "penury •temrnlna rrom aueh a caafl lnvolve "several yeal'I bl
•Prbon." he added.
To tt1tster. voters must alp
sworn afftdavita. In hrvestia•·
tlona , the atfidt.vit. are cro1s·
checked for evidence of fraud.
''It it pOlnta to fraudulent re1·
iatration, then we ref er lo tbe ,ry-
-:. -.--.__ -. ,
. I <'
. .,. . . . (~
12 OJ. , 4 .
SIZE • 2.81 121 ,~J
18 oz .•
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1Gth THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 22nd.
i~llE!~~~T 10.88
MATEUS
WINE ,,.....
.-OlmJGAL
"ROSE"
BACARDI
P'UHTO ltlCAN
RUM
JERGENS
LOTION
BONUS SIZE .. ,, .. ......... I
1. 19 u .15 oz.
SAVE1.36
NORTHERN
"CENT\JRY"
Heating
Pad
3 lie.it nn"'Cs 1111-91111
lrl'lt l .. •ftlrHI
RllllOU!lit wtSJutllc
COOi
5.99 •1111 ~l~~I. LIQUllUR 8 49 750
ML 299
UPIOOf 750ML • -----------------------.
Southem Comfort 5 gg Ll~UR IO F 7SO~ •
Chivas Regal · 1199 SCOTCH
It NOOf' 750 ML. •
Canadian Club G 49t
CllNADIAN WHISKY
II ftttOOF 750 ML. •
Count Vasya G 99 VODKA IO .. ROOF l .75LT. •
Canadian Reserve g 29 CANADIAN WHISKY
IONOOF l.75LT. •
Foster Creek 8.99 90UR80N WHISK l!Y
IONOOf l .75LT.
"E & J" Original
BRANDY 649 IONOOf l LT. •
MacKinnon 's 9 29 8COTCH IOPIOOf l.75 LT. •
Blue Nun 129 Lla8,RAUMILCH 1tc•t1 W.t 750 ML.
'~--~~-----Sibastiani
MOUNTAIN WIN•S 249 ••tOll •CllAIUI
• IUICIUllDT 1.1 LT. b
Gallo Wines
'AVE NOW!
Chivalry Glassware
ltwtJ ....... Wrty 1111) l••1
silMfl n• Mi IMI C••Mt•
10 oz.
ltOCKS
'AKOF4
16 oz. COO LEI
.. AKOF4
12 oz. IEVEHGE
.. Ak0F4
2.49
2.79
2.59
SAV.1.84
LIBBEY S.Pl£C£
Wine Set
SAVE 2.00
PUSH· TOP
Pitcher .. ., ... , ... a.._. "'tlliltt lltt . '"' ...... ,., &ill I"~
SPECIAL!
• ,ICkalt S.1lln1 Tape
I ,· I •OO
YOUlt CHOICE
99eu.
SPECIAL!
~ ~l~~~n~~~I• ~
HAND CREAM I •.
,:.. 2.69 1./
Natural Sesame Seed
BODY Oil • OI. 5.99
SPECIAL!
jYNTHETIC
LAMBSWOOL
Seate overs
For Your Auto
• lllMITY IU~ •WI toll • .-. .... ·.'.::. 259 M ~ur-~_·•_111 .. 1_6_._9....,5 _____ __, ..._ __________ _
8AVB48°
ALKA· SELTZER
G111f ..-1111t-11
France's leadin g
Marxist philosopher.
Louis Althusser , has
admitted killing his
wife, police said.
Althusser reportedly
has s uffered from
mental problems re-
cently
Court
blocks
prayers
NEW YORK <AP) -
The "mere appearance
of secular involvement
m religtous activities"
may indicate state ap-
proval of a specific re·
ligiqus creed, a federal
appeals court has ruled
in barring a student
group from holding
prayer meetings in a
public school.
"We must be carefu l
that our public schools,
where f un damen tal
values are imparted to
our children, a r e not
perceived as institutions
that encourage the adop-
tion or any sect or re-
Ii gious ideology," wrote
Judge Irving R. Kauf-
man in the three-judge
panel 's 23-page un·
ammous decision .
A GROUP OF students
cal led ''Students for
Voluntar y Prayer," from
Guilderland High School
near Albany, asked
school o ffi c ials for
perm1ss1on to hold volun
Lary prayer meetings in a
classroom before the
~la rt of each school day
When the board denied
the request. the students
sued . contending their
const1tut1onal rights to
practice freedom of re-
h~1on were abridged.
D1stnct Judge Neal G.
M cCurn dismissed the
students' suit in April
The 2nd U S Circuit
Court of Appeals upheld
that de(•ision
THE JUDGES wrote
··To an impressionable
student, even the mere
appearance of secular in·
volvement in relieious
activities might indicate
that the state has placed
1ls imprimature on a
particular religious
creed.
·'This symbolic ref·
erence is too dangerous
to permit.··
However, they alao
wrote· "Although we af-
firm the dismissal of the
students' complaint, we
cannot be critical of their
objectives. lottoe~ctlve activity that seeks to
strengthen the moral
CJ ber of our nation 's
youn1 adults deserves
our support, but only in
our role u private
d &izens"
l i
I
'
.. _ -· ..... --:,....
""O!N!RATION ITUDINT HIADS FOR CLASS
Roa.rt M. Hfuon Ut uphold9 tredttk>n
~ '!Stwood campus
jr.Ut family a// air
Newport Beach's Robert M. Hluon Ill has school official.I at
UCLA cbecltln& their record books. They believe be may be the
firat fourtb-eeneration •tudent to enroll at the Westwood campus.
Hluon, a araduate of UC Davia and a former football star, en-
tered UCLA'a eraduate school of manaeement this fall.
His e:reat-srandmother, Mary Hi:uon, attended Normal School
-UCLA's earliest ,1>redecessor.
Then came Robert M. Jliaon, of Pasadena -the Newport .stu·
dent's trandfather. He was a student at the Westwood campus
when it was still Jmo,m aa the University of California, Southern
Branch.
H1a parenta, Robert and Nina Fletcher Hixson of Newport
Beach, also are UCLA 1raduates.
.In Santa Ana
Bus garage site
approved l>y OCTD
Plans are under way to
build an Orange County Transit
District terminal on a triangular
piece or land at the southern edge
or the Civic Center complex in
Santa Ana.
The transit district's Board of
Directors selected the site Mon·
day. It is at the comer where San·
ta Ana Boulevard and Fifth Street
merge at Ross Street.
The terminal •ill be the port for
up to 19 OC'TD buses. and it will
have a two.story enclosed
passenger waiting area.
THE DISTRICT also plans to
sell air rights above the first two
floors to the City of Santa Ana,
which can in turn lease the
s pace to a private developer to
build four more floors of office
space
The transit district's Brian
Pearson said construction of the
firs t two floors will cost about $6
Blue ribbon
• awmts worst
SJC sneaker
The San Juan Capistrano
Recreation Department will
sponsor a rotten sneaker contest
Thursday at Bonita Park across
from Marco Forster Junior
High School, 25601 Camino del
Avion.
Contestants must be no older
than 12 and are required to
model their sneakers durin& the
finals in front of a group of three
judges.
The sneakers will be scored in
six categories -tongue, sole.
eyelets, heel , toe and smell.
Snealers must be worn from
use. not abuse
The winner will re<:,eave the ti·
tle of "Rotten Snealters of the
Year," and will receive a trophy
and a can of foot powder.
For more information call the
Recreation Department at
493-1171, extension 247.
million, much of which is to be
paid for by a federal grant.
The terminal could be in opera·
lion by 198.1, he said.
The board members approved
the site on a unanimous vote.
They also set aside $250,000 as
eventual payment for architec·
tural services by the firm of
G rillias, Pirc. Rosier and Alves of
Santa Ana.
THE TERMINAL will serve
as a primary meeting place for
many of the district's routes.
Currently. there ia no such
tertnina+ Instead. the buses line
the curb6 at the west end of the
C1v1c Center plaza on Flower
Street.
The new building will be adja
cent to a park-and·ride garage be·
ing built on Fifth Street. A
pedestrian bridge will link the two
structures so pedestrians will not
have to dodge buses or cars leav-
ing the garage
District officials aJso are plan-
ning smaller terminals in other
parts of the county, including
Laguna Beach , Huntington Beach
andOranee
Opiwn poppies
in abundance
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -
Opium and heroin traffickers ex-
pect a bumper harvest of opium
poppies from the Golden
Triangle region of Burma,
Thailand and Laos and are
• ·,ellin& oft their stashes,'· caus-
ing a glut on the market, accord-
ln& to U.S. narcotics officials
here.
A two-year droueht in the re-
g Ion bad caused an annual
harvest of about 240 tons of pop-
pies, the officials said, but the
latest reports forecast a crop of
about 700ton5 in January.
The bumlaer harvest is expect-
ed to glut U. world market even
more and bring down heroin
prices in the United States, they
aaid.
BOSTON <AP) -Tennii IM.tfft
in 'Newt.On. ooo o( llalHcbusetu'
richest commlll:iltlet, may ~·· to pay to play on the \Own
courta.
Offic:lal1 ln Boston are •ua·
pendtnc projects totallnc $45
million, lbcJudina a fl. 1 mlWOP
nre •taUon and a Ma,000 ex-
ec-.tlve dinln' room for City
Hall.
lo 'Lowell, the Industrial
Revolulloo mill town undereotni
a revinl, City Manager Joseph
Tully asked that city employeea
be U.sted b)' seniority -be may
have to lay off 500 of them so the
budeet can be cut by $3.8
mlllloo.
Propo11tlon 21h i.s sinking in.
TWO WEEKS AFTEa
Maasacbusetta voters approved
a meuure alaahlng property
and auto excise taxes, state and
local olftclals -and the public
-are sUU trying to grup lta
dimen.slons.
"People don't think it ii real,"
says Honora Kaplan, a member
or the school committee in
Newton. "They will only think it
is real when we say hockey ii no
longer being offered."
What is clear is that vot"ers ap-
proved, by a 3-to-2 marg41, a
measure Umiting the propt.-ty
tax to 2'12 percent of ~sessed
valuation -it previously
averaged almost 4 percent
across the state -and reducing
thl! car exclle tax to $25 rrom ~
per $1,000.
EVERY SIZABLE town aod
city expects to lose millions of
dollars in revenue; statewide
estimates range from $800
million to Sl billion next year.
The law, with some excep-
tions, aoes into effect Dec: 4. Of.
ficiala are predictine heavy cuta
in police, firefighting and school
services to keep budgets within
the bounds of shortened
revenues.
"I 'd really like to get 400 peo-
ple . . . who voted for Proposl-
llon 2t,;, etve them a budget
book and let them make the rec·
'>mmendalions where to cut,"
said Denn.ls McNamara, school
committee member in Dracut,
where a 6,60.6-to·2,967 vote
favored the proposition.
Many officials say they hope
the Legislature will amend, even
repeal the law.
THAT'S NOT LIKELY, says
slate Sen. Alan Sisitsky. 0
Springfield, who learned the
hard way that the voters were
serious. The day after the elec-
t ion, Sisitsky s uggested the
measure be Npealed -a state·
ment that brought a barraie of
anirY, occasionally obscene
telephone calls
Sisitsky changed bis mind
a bout repeal but not his opinion
of the new law: .. When the con
sequences are clear in late '81 or
'82, 2'h will prove to have been a
disaster."
In Amherst. which voted
8,603-to-2,726 against Proposition
21h. officials already are looking
for ways to circumvent it
Town Manager A. Louis
Hayward says he hopes the
Legislature will add a home-rule
clause to the tax -cuttine
measure, giving citizet'ls the
power to override the assess-
ment limit.
"AMHERST SHOULD be able
to determine its own destiny.•'
said Hayward.
But state Sen. David Locke, R-
W ellesley, believes he has an
easier solution.
·'What I see happening is that
Proposition 2'h will force cities
and towns to go to 100 percent
valuation," said Locke, refer.
ring to a goal ordered by the
state Supreme Judicial Court
but not fully Implemented.
Reiner 8witches
LOS ANGELES <AP> -City
Controller Ira Reiner, who was
expected to run against Mayor
Tom Bradley In April's
municipal election, bas changed
his straten and disclosed he
will run for city attorney. That
leaves Bradle~ as the only an.
nounced mayoral candJdate.
"Once tblt hsppen.a, UHIMd / p~ ve cut a k•Y 0 .oo"
valua will riM to the l•vtll they vote when ID adYlaory board ~
1bould be. I don't '" anybOdy fued to ~de more money for
1etUnc hurt by lb.la." Bo9a'• mau t.ranstt ·~•tem.
But the prophecies continue'° Gov. Jl'.AIWUd J . Klnfbad totuue
be lrlm for bit and 1maU. a proclaln.atScm for a ~day ataw
takeover of the system to keea-!t
BOSTON PIGVaE8a.louof'9'7 runninf.
mlllloa IA tax reveouea for the The trault critl• ii a lone·
next fllcal year •nd Mayor Kevin nmn.lok dliPUU not directly re-
Whtte bat plannen 1cnat1Dlam1 lated tb ~1Uoft 2'111, but tM
Boaton'a $310 mUUon operattq board'• vote •tal.Mt overapencl.
budget. int eleatl)' reflffted the mood of
Over tbe weekend, Wblte11 the votes: at least part o( any
San Juan
art event
• neanng
The third annual
Villaee San Juan Arts
and Crafts Faire will
take place Nov. 29 from
9 a.m. until dusk around
the village clubhouse• on
Sbadybrook Road in San
Juan Capistrano.
ln past years• the faire
was limited to sellers
living in Village San
Juan, but this year it
will feature the work or
crafbmen from all over
Orange County.
Profits go toward
funding various com-
munity events.
To rent a booth for the
faire or for information,
call Kathryn Fisher at
•~or -...n.
Genealogy
class due
Clauea ln genealogy,
aimed at helping
persons trace their
family roots, are being
offered Thursday mom·
ln~s through the Oasis
senior dtisen center in
Newport Beach.
Classes start at 10 and
run lo 11:'30 a.m . For in·
formation call 759-9471.
The senior center is
located at 800
Marguerite Ave
Corona del Mar
Plan panned
MARTINEZ (AP) -A
planned "saew city" in
Clayt.dn would bulldo~
through an Indian burial
ground containing as
many as lS,000 bodies,
an Indian activist
charges. "Ten thousand
years of California his-
tory would go down the
drain for a boutique
and a s winging
hotspot ," claimed
Wayne Robertson after
a meetine of the Contra
Costa County Planning
Commission.
r
Opens Sunday, November 23
Great
restaUrants
are judged by
their sauces.
The White Oak will provide
you with 20 wonderful ways
to judge us. '
Sauce Manala
Sauce Cashmere
Saua: ViennoiJe
HollandaUe Sauce
Saua: Au Poivre
Sauce Jua
Mint Sauce
Red MMrow Sauce
Fisherman's Sauce
Sauce Maison
Sauce Bearnaise
Vineyard Sauce
Indian 'Curry Sauce
Sauce Bigarrade
Dill Saua:
Sauce Bordelaise
Sauce Velote
Garlic Butter Sauce
Cucumber Sauce
Sauce Chasseur
Judge for yourself.
Serving luncheon weekdays,
dinner nightly and Sunday Brunch.
New at The Newponer Inn
110_7_J_am-boree Road, Newp:m Beach, Cahfom1a
Phone (714) 644,1700
'
"'--
•
It's a compl~te packag& df financial sel'.Vices. including 51h96 interest on
your checking account. The interest compounds daily for an effective yield
ot 5.4 741. on unused tunds.
..
' •VISA 1rith no monthir or annual .... $500011mlt.
. •t200 Chect Guarantee CcDd.
• Inltctnt litlerveJor oqn11aft
'" ·, pIOtectlQJ) qp to $5000.
All these servtces' are available to
qualltied customers.
I
And start earning interest right
away. We'll print 200 personalized
checks tree. And we'll get them to you
so you can start writing checks on
December 31 . And best of all. you 'll
avoid the New Year Rush .
l More Incentive
Collect your Grand Award by
opening a SY.% Interest/Checking
Account. And tor Just $7.50, includ-
ing tax. you can purchase a credit
card size calculator. It computes,
tig'Ures. and remembers Just about
everything. It tits in your check-
book cover. Handsome case
included.
J
SAVINGS ANS LOAN ASSOCIATION
. . Whhi·yotUe a llJlk wber.
Southern Cailloftila Offices •Glendale •Azusa/ Glendora i Bellflower• Beverly Hills •Big Bear take •Blue ~ay •Buena Park
Costa Mesa• €ulver City• EUllerton • Ir:vlne• LaQ\lna Beach• Lake Forest• Long Beach East• Long Beach• Newport Beach/Baf$lde
Newport Beach/,Weatclt1f •North Hollvwood • Northridge •Placentia• San Pedro• Santa Aha• Seal Beach • Sherman Ow ... ,/ Stanton• Torrance• Van Nuys •West Hollv:wood •West Los Angeles• ow open in talm Desert. Opening 1oon in Arcadia . ., \ .
I ~
I
PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT
On Nov. 6th, 1980 Raciti
Jewelry Company Announced
Giving A.way S"l.00,000 In
Discounts On 'All In Store
Items. To Date, There Have
Been 528,669 In Discounts
Given.
~ ~~ .. ~~~t~.~~:g ~ 1838 Ntowport ~ard • Cosui Meui. CA 92627
Olal 646-7741
'
The Exceptional F acuity
at National University
Study for your Bachelor's or Master's degree
under a faculty with sound academic credentials and
extensive professional experience in their fields.
Or. Patrick Boarman earned his Ph.D. from the
University of Geneva. Switzerland and was
previously Senior Economist tor 'General
t Electric Company and the World Trade '~ lnstltu. le in New York, and Dlrec. tor of 4t-" Economic Reports for A.T & T before
, starting his own international ttrm.
' Patrick M. Boarman Associates,
International Business Consultants
Dr Boarman has written several books on national and international economic
.tllbjects and 1s a frequent lecturer for professional organ1zat1ons
At National University, the curriculum is geared to mature adults who
need flexible scheduling m order to attend school You study one course each
month attend evening classes On-going reg1strat1on
Register just once for your entire degree program
For further mformat1on call:
!(714) 957-6245
·~at1ona1 University ~!112 Busmess Center Or . Irvine
~,...,.,_,°"' , """ k> .ti~ q.,..1."90 •l'P'l(.l~t •d~t 't9•tG 10 ra<e
ff...0 .4~1'1 ... ("' •tt~f\ ... ,,..9'" AOO"o-IO fOf" v•••'•"" AOOf0.9'1i .,, t• ..,.n • "'tJe l\..oat•" .. f"der'~ qi p~, """'~., ~""°"" \l'f"' ... tt-ty .~ A,(('1.cf·~ bl °NH .. ,,. 4-MJC.•efrQn ~ $(~ ~
!C:.o-litQn ' S.'•I('..,..,, • Oooor1~·ty C.Ol'-91
J4ATIONAL UNIVERSITY
We a,re proud to
announce a personal
appearance by
PEARt NIPON
Designer for
Albert Nipon.
She will present her
holiday and resort
collection on Friday,
November 21, 1980
Informal modeling
from 12:00 to 3:00 p.m:
In the 9esigner:. Salon,
Upper Levet.
t h M .a r ~ 1 a n d • u b u t b 1 o t Burcer aet•• bamburcer hu l3S five ID the ~er CMf ooe Md &hfte
Wublnct9P. calorie, ana 35 mUll1ram1 of In Burser'JC1d1 s.
A ~r With cbeeae bu 588 cboJe.terol, wblle ill Super ~ bu H 1 T Slo f ... d rt •• calorle!.z_~.compared with 470 ln 529 calottes and t3 mllllsrama o.f • • ver 0 -• pa "*'• s Burier \#nef'a Bil Chef and m ln a cholesterol. nutrient compo1itloo laboratory•
Bll Mac, the1tudy aa.ld. On re1ular hambureera and auperviled the •urvey, •a.id fut<lood
The NPC>rt eald nutrient eompoei. cheeaebur1era, the department aald, f~~~e;.:. ':11:~ =,.Y
Uon II llkely to vary ~ven more the con4imentl' added by all lhree •d ..t;.... --'-ti •-food between atmple •· .. ctwiches •ucb u chalna -rm ally amount to fewer r a .. ..,.. v...... ona UI prepare. -· .. .... Uon miethodl, eaUna habit.I and the bambur1en and e~eesb"'*", ~. than ~taJori~. _portlonsOtmea'lathroWD,away.
apeclaJ sandwiches. Altbou&h potatodirt.hemselvea con· Slover said the study wu not ln·
The Burger Kini tlamt>uijer, for taln U~or no fal, • serving or t-ded to Judie the quality ol one example, ooatatn. Z10 calort9 and .o frendl -vera1ed about 12 milli· ~··
mllllgrama ol cboleete.ror whlle ita 1ramt of cholesterol, lDdicatinl the product over another.
Double Beef Whopper b 1 862 use of al fat in deep fryen, the In February 1979, Sen. Georae s.
calories and 1'75 mUU1rams of department said. ...... McGovern, chairman of the Senate
cholesterol. The n"psber of calories In Nutrition Subcommittee, said that
A!!d while Md>ol'lld's tuunburler McDon'-ld's apple turnover, for in· deaplte ita reputation to the contrary
averaps '280 •Calories and 33 mllli· rstance, was 287, compared with 2189 in raat food ts not Junk food. He said
1rarn1 of ebolnterol, the Quarter _ Burier Cbef'a and 2J8 In Burier "fut food establishment.a' products
Pounder witb ,cheese bu 5$9 calories· Kint'a. CJK>Jesterol content was 17 are a nutrltloua addition fo a
and 110 rnllllgrama of ~holesterol. milli1ranu in the McDonald's pie, balanced diet."
"Got a problni? TMTI write to Pat Dwn. Pat 1Dill
C1d r«l tape, getting the an.n.oeTa and. ~Ion JIOU need
to .olw ineql.ci&1 in gowmmm and busiMaa. Mail
11our quutions to P.at Dunn, At Your Service, Orange
Coa1t Daily PW>t , P.O. Bor 15«>, Cona MelO, CA
92626. M man11 letter• cu pouible will be ONt.Oered,
but phon#Jd traqufrW1 or ldter• not mcludmg tM
reader'• /14ll name.addreu and ~ts hourt' phofu
number cannot bec~eci. Thiacolumnopptoradai-
l11 e:rcqt Sundaya."
.w~n 111a11 <-nhanrf' llftl.illflll
DEAR READERS: A YS a1ain ls,, publlshins
ao"'ces for locating pieces of out.dated china pat-
tema. Specific inquiries may be malled to these
dealers with a self·addressed. stamped envelope
enclosed:
James L. Hasty, The Jewel Bos, P .O. Boa
1'5-MaJD St., Albertville. Ala. 35150; Erale Brea-
Hmaa. Z3'5 N.W. tm St., Oklat.oma CKy, ~a.
7S11Z; David Tlalnk. Cima Oauen lat! •• P.O .... !14, D•woody. Ga. mas: Warrea lloudltJll;Pat-
&eras \Jllllml&ed. Wed1ewood StaU. -P.O. Boz
15%38, SeatOe, Wull. tens: Glean Boe. Old China
Pattierm L&d., P.O. Boa ZM-Weat Hill. Ontario.
Canada MEI 41U;
Allo Edward Ettlemu, Ettlemu's, ltl N.
KUgore St., Kilgore, Tex. 7511%; Mn. Dorotlay N.
Roblmoa, 517 N. PeDDSylvala Ave., Morltnllle,
Pa. 19067; Geary's, 351 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly
Hllll IOZH; Mn. Mary Dexter, P.O. Boa 17143, Saa
Diego 9%117; J. Allen Murphey Jr., Patterm of the
Past, 513 S. Maln St., Pr~ceton, Ill. 11356;
Locators Incorporated, P.O. Boa lZSt, Little
Rock, Arll. 7%203; TopeLCo., 58 Uada Lane, Tllfln,
Ohio "883; Mn Carol M. Ulrey, UDlque A.atiques
Ir Glfta, 7119 Navajo Road, Su Dlelo 9%111; Eska
Lee o.le, Tbe China Mater, • W. Carloe Boad, Memplda, Tna. 38117; Jlon. .Jewelen, 117 N. Secoad 5'., Ford Pierce, Fla. 13451; Bycor be., 55
Monroe Ave. N.W., Grud aaptda, Jllcll. 4951%;
Hell's Antlqaes, Wpway 4', Da.rtaamYUle, N.Y.
13054; Franda Rlake, Abe~ Crockery Store,
511 S. MalD 5' .• Aberdeen, S.D. 574'1: Otben are Dinner Bell China Shop, 3309 E.
Cardinal Drive, Oklaboma City, Okla. 731%1
<Norttake); The Old Toll Gate Antlquea, Route
5-P.O. Box 7X, MUaa, Ill. IB14 (Norltake>; Ms.
Judy Hope, Judy's Home of ~· zztl Ecbo Hills
Circle N.E., Atlanta, Ga. 31MS, Old C1alaa Match·
Mates, ZZ Shirley Crescent, Scarboroa~b. Oatarlo,
CHada MDI lLl (Spode, Royal Caaldroa, Royal
Crown Derby, MlDto, Royal Doulton, lloyal
Worcester, We4aewood>; Mn. Fruk J. Rosan,
3171 Belleview, Kana11 City, Mo. 14111 <Picard ex-
clulvely, Woodmere 1155), and Charles B. Smith,
ZH3 Chestnut St., Phlladelphla, Pa. 19103 (Wedgewood).
.~folen tray •ay h~ ffJIOld
DEAR PAT: Perhaps you or one or your
readers can help me locate a stolen tray ror m y
Oneida tea service set. The pattern ls melon. I've
beard there are firms that sell replacement pieces
for silver Oatware, but I don't know where they
are located.
S.C .. Laguna Niguel
A YS will U.& aoarcea for 1Uver and sUver plate
replacemeat. Qaes&lou similar to yoan are ask~
by\ readen eacb year at Ulla Ume ID anttclpa&loD of
tbe •peomlac llolldays. U anyooe Imo.. or a
aoarce for &be partJcalar pleft you want, you wlll
be coataded.
Beverly Antiques, 88Z7 Beverly Blvd., Loi
Anaetes MCI, earrlet a lar1e aelectloa of carrea&,
active aad bladlve lterU.1 aUver paUeru. Mall
or pboae orden (plloff: (ZIJ) ZTl-8517) are accept-
ed. Malled orden should lDelade a trac1D1 of lite
allver ud blade description of lmlves. IDclade tbe
manufacturer, pattern name and year of
parcllue.
Aaodler soa:rce .. Cllarlea Faller, P.O. Box
UZS, Main StatkMI. Saa Frapclaeo Nltl. Tbla firm
lau u la•a&ory of pattens daUq from 1m to
&Mae reeeatly cl.lacoatlllaed. Provide ldenUfytag
laformata-... laelwle a a&ed. aelf-acldreued
eanloDe for eaeJI patten list reqaes&ecl
Oder fltms filclade •· J9Cl1 Rope, .lady'•
Boaae of Hope, zztl Ecu Billa Qrele N.E., Atlu-
ta, Ga. -.; Jallu Geedmaa • S., UJ Macll8oD
· Ave., .P.O. Bos 41.S, •••Didi. 't.._ Jilts <a&erl·
lal Oll11>; Jeu•1SU•enmDia,11 W. Udl St .• New
Y.rk, N.Y. lMSf <1terU•t oaly); T•• Jewel
Bos, P.O. Bos 1u. Mala &&., Allaemtlle, Ala.
IStSt; P:rau •• Pallller, M7 N. Malak, P.O llH
ttT, II&. Ve19M, OMe allt; CbrloUe B. Wetclle,
Wuelili1 AlidqMS, -N. Orial•. Ori ..........
hlll (a&erlbt• Oab'>. aad fte 861"1' a.ea&; P.O. Bex 2lf1!. J>eayer, Colo. lt2lt (alherpla~ -.tJ).
~~~~~~~...--~~~~~~
.. You'll like the
Interest Best
at FAR WEST
12.935%•
ANNUAL YIELD
12.000%
ANNUAL RATE
Effective Nov 13
through Nov. 26
It's in your best interest to lock in this high
interest rate today, with a 30:month Treasury
Certificate.
Your savings earn .25% more at FAR WEST
SAVINGS than in a comparable account at any
bank! Interest is compounded daily.
It only takes $100 to open this account!
,, .... ,._.._, .............. ""'" ... "I
_..., ... ..,., ....... ...1 .. ---·-1
SAVINGS INSURED
TO $100,000 FSLIC ·-·-·--.-· ..
FAR WEST SAVINGS
27 OFFICES STATEWIDE
NEWPORT BEACH
4001 MacArthur Blvd.
Near Jamboree Road
Serving Californians Since 1889
The White Oak
Thanksgiving
A beautiful, new restaurant
carries on the tradition of
holiday dining at the Newporter.
Roast Young Tom Turkey ...... 8.95
Prnenw-Apple drernng, giblet gravv and cranbtrry .sauce
Prime Rib of Beef . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.50
Au 1us '41th ~'Teamed Horseradish wuce
Minted Trout ................ 10.25
S1 uffed w11h mini, V.'rapped in bacon and gently sau1eed
New York Sirloin Steak ....... 13.95
Choict' rut of fine beef p-repared IO ;your order.
Broiled Lamb Chops ......... 13.50
Tlroiled IO perfernon and ~en•ed tmh mmc 1ell-v
Children imder 10
Turkey ...................... 6.25
Prime Rib . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.50
Entrees include choice of soup or salad,
fre sh vegetables, dessert and beverage.
Please make reservations early ... phone today
(714) 644 .. 1700.
Open weekdays for luncheon,
dinner nightly and Sunday Brunch.
\'lglu rid #r
Florida Gov. Bob
Gr a ham got a close
up view .of crime in
the streets as he
spent two rughls rid
mg with Dade County
police. One call in-
volved an attack on a
75-year old \.\Oman
by teen-ager~
Auditing
of teen
dropped
CANBY, Ore <AP1
The Internal Revenue
Service has changed its
mind and won't audit
the 197!i tax returns of
17-vear old Don P1t•rce,
wh·o earnt•d less than
$2,000 as a grocery boy
\'
BIC SHAVERS
PACK OF 5
DISPOSABLE
REG .,,C 1.19
Stock up now ond really sove
II
EVEREADY
f,Jl1ERGIZER 2-PI. C or D
OR ONE 9 VOLT
~~:, ··~
"AA" sm. raa Of• tlG. >. "· .. 1"
POLAROID
2 PACI TIME-ZERO
SX -70 FILM
SALE 12'' PRICE ~
T otol of 20 ••posures
QUALITY PAPER TOWELS
100 SHEn ROLL
REG: 44c 630
Sove now I 2·Ply 83 sq. It.
GRANDMA'S
PURE HONEY
5-POUND CAN
SUPER 339
PRICE
While Slodu Lost I
7-UP
REGULAR OR DIET
2 uTER aonu
SALE 1'' PRICE
Non returnable
lastyear I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The I RS had told
Pierce an investigator
would come to h1...,
parents home Tue...,d.1 ~
to audit thl· return..,
which con!-ll'ilcd of t WO
W-2 forms attached to a
short-form rc•turn
P I ERCE AND his
father. Mike protested
that it "as a "tremen-
dous waste of taxpayer's
money" t.o audit a teen
ager who earned so lit-
tle, paid taxes and got
back a refund . He
earned $1,772 26 and was
selected at random for
an audit.
On Monday, while an
ABC-TV network film
crfw sat m the Pierce home to do a story on
th• audit, the district.
director of the IRS.
Ralph Short. telephoned
Mike Pierce
AQUANR
PROFISSIONAl
HAIRSPRAY
REG.99c 1.29
13-ounce con bvy now ond sov•'
J&J
BAND-AID
ADHESIVE!STRIPS
REG. I'' 1.59 "He said. in so m<.1ny
words, that the national
office informed him that
on his desk Tuesday will
be a telegram saying
that they are suspending ·------------•••timm•••• all audits of a like
nature." Pierce said
"So we won
HE SAID Short dtdn t
g1 ve a n•a!>on for drop
pang the audit. but su'>
peeled the na11nnal
publicity given the aucl1I
triggered the action
"I wa..., !-.Ort of d1:.ap
pointed,· the young<'r
Pierce ...,a11l \flt.>r all.
the't said 1t "as going to
be -educat1onal But I m
also gl.HI 11 ·., tl\ <•r <111'1
done w1th ·
H ealth
c ours~
o ffered
A course on providing
health St>rv1ces durmg a
disaster wlll be offered
Dec. 5 6 b> the Orange
Count~ Red Cross for
volunteer nurses
CREST
FLUORIDE
TOOTHPASTE
SALE 119
PRICE
7 oc Regulor or M •nt
VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE LOTION
REG .11•
1.84
10 01 Re<;J • Herbal, X Strength
The course, Lo be held .. --------.... •"'lllll' .... •1.11~'111111 at Santa Ana-Tustin
Community Hospital,
will focus on the role of
the volunteer nurse 1n
disaster preparedness
and the impact of dis
aster on a community
The first segment of
the course. f'riday, Dec. _..,......,..,,,....-,_.
5, runs from 6:30 to 10
p.m. and from 9 a.m to
4 p .m oo Dec. 6.
There is a $.5 fee to
cover course materials.
For information. call
835-5381
Mail class
set by UC WMIU noas WTI
I POLYSILK
1FLOWERS
· fEG. 2s ·1 69C •
IA FOR
So reol loolcl111t II'• hord to
• tell. ~•~h ltote, Oolsy.
~. Mums ond """·
BABY 8 IC
BY BEACON
~
IFPllRCT 2'' l .ft.J.tt
WNIU noas WTI
40"X45" or 36"XSO'" In 100%
Acrylic Of Acryllc Polye1ter lllelld
Ptl11tl. Sllght lrregulotltl••
SUPER -BUY.
DRAKE'S BAY
WINES
• CABERNET SAUVIGNON
• PINOTNOIR
•ROSE
•RIESLING
• CHEMIN BLANC
750 ml
YOUR CHOICE
59
fOI TiffS
QUAlln YOU'D
lXPICT YO PAY
DOlUISJAOIE
While Stocks lost'
~ ..... ~q.,-. dtl
i ANACIN -~~-·~
~ -,N RELIEF --· CALIFORNIA FAST PA . "" .... • •
....... C*ot -·"' .... -SHouss ra1s1ns
ANACIN
100 TABLn BOTIU
FOR PAIN RELIEF
REG.
2.19
LW MFI. MAIL-
IN lllAn
lOUlfHW
con
,,
1''
DEL CARA
NATUR4l SUNDRIED
SEEDLESS RAISINS
SUPER19c PRICE
11-oz wtille Stodlf lost'
Wlm.I noc:UWt• 43 PC. nAINLBS mil 7-PC. wt IRON AND
IRCHIN INSEMBLI WOOD UANDHD COOllYAll
19'' =.:ti'' Set !Mliidet S.pc. ,,,_,ing .... -
32·p<. flotwor• ut & 6 pc. uten· 1I2-0t eove~~~· •·, tllMt. Ot.co~pot, 10' •klll•t.
CISTA ID FIE• fAWY w• YAWY mr•ra .._, ....
............ 111•1ldlr11r...-llilllt It Tlllr1 ...... , .. 11 Mill... 21111 Ila N 11 ....
FIRESIDE
SAL TINE CRACKERS
16 OZ. BOX
SUPEl19c PR la
White Stocki lost I
SUPER
PRICE
LIBBY'S
LITE CHUNKY
MARINERS
COVE CLAM CHOWDER MIXED FRUITS
SUPER' 3 c SUPER67c PRICE PRICE
IS 01 While Stocki lost'
COORS BEER
12-PACI
SALE 3st PRICE
OtMr 112-eol llovora. 1.49-1.79 .......... ., ..
16 01 While Stocki losfl
n tu noas WTI
24 % LEAD CIYSTAL
ITALIAN GlASSW~
SPlctAl 1·~ l'UICHASI EACH
Quollty you co11 .... Compor
wltti the lead cryttal 9louwore 1
111deportment1tt1,.1.
•
I
e're going~our r 1
with more bu8Js
.to more places
than ever b_efore. · • -
Afore people are riding the bus to work, school and shopping because we've
made it so easy with new buses, new routes and improved service.
New Express
Route
Cypress to Anaheim
Via Kate/la
Riverside Frwy.
Knott
V111/eyV11tw y
u •
.! -1----:! ~
• Bloollhurat '
Garden f
Grove Euclid l
Herbol • __
Orange
402
Anaheim
New Local Route
Tustin to Seal Bch.
Via 17th &
Westminster
62
\. , =~-=O=r•rtd~;::~ s.n• ~ FrwY· (5J
_.,,,,, _ ........... ;.;.;.;;.M••;;.;_n __ Santa Ana
J
Improved Local
Route (
El Modena to Hunt'g Bch.
Via Chapman Ave.
El Modena
Hewe•
54
Pro1pec1 Tustin
Orange
Santa Ana
' . .
50~ is all it costs one way
on regular routes, and never
more than S1.25 to go ..
express. Exact change,
please.
For information on routes
nearest you
CALL:
636•RIDE •.
Se hab/B Espanol.
t NSID ·: • tocll •Busl •
•MOY •Tel"'l1lon •
..
DAILY PILOT
Playoff DlatCllups intrig11ing
One of the better one. figures to be CdM vs. Lgguna
MATI' STEVENS
Fowetaln Valley
CHAIS VENTURA
Marina
•1 aooe:a CAU.SON oe .. ....,,,..._
Champion.a riak thelr pnsUie and t.boM wbo
dldn 't make lt Lbt nm time set abOt.ber chance u
tb• i• CIF football playotr1 untold Friday. Amooa the entries are SUnaet Leque cbam·
pJon Edilon, SdutJt Cout Le.,-ue cio-cbamplon
Le1una Belch and the tri-champe Jn the Sea View
circuit -Eltancia, Corona del Mar and El Toro.
Here is a look at each ot Friday's contesta in-
volving Orange Coast area teams:
Servlt• ve. Echon
Coach Ron Smeltzer'• Servite Frian (3:7)
have endured two forfeit losses becauae of an in·
eli&lble player and came through wltb a 20-14 Yic-
tory over Mater Del ln their Angelus League finale
to gain third place and receive a bid to the playoffs.
Gino Angellci is the key to the Friars' attae'k.
The Servlte quarterback la a twin threat at nmnlnl
and puainC, althou&b the Frian have sbown a ten·
deocy to stick to the 1round-wbich would work into
the bands ol Ed.iaon 's rugged defense a1aiost the
run.
-When they do go to the air -it is Todd Hart
and Paul Reilly usually on the receiving end. The
running game, although not spectacular, bas
shown good basic fundamentals.
Edison, meanwhile, enters with D.J. Bell at
the top of its offensive list, having rushed for 1,168
yards on 206 carries (5.6 average) and 14
touchdowns. As a team, Servile has scored 11
touchdowns this year.
Edison, 1().0 on the year, has proven toughest
on teams dependent on the run which is
Servite's case.
Fountain Velley va. EIMnhower
Eisenhower's Eagles await at their 7,000.seat
stadium on the school campus with a team which
prides itself ~th its pass defense.
In fact, the secondary is labeled as the Eagles'
best asset by Inland Empire observers.
The offense. however, has been bogged down
with the loss of two of the top backs because of in-
jur ies, although Junior Bryant, a 180-pound
linebacker, has been filling a big void well .
Eisenhower was 2-2-1 in league and 6-3· 1 over-
all, which includes a forfeit victory over Riverside
Poly. Fotmtain Valley is 8-2.
Baadieap ean't aop tlds lelloee
bined ror 13 tackles and 3' llllst.I.
Friday'e football schedule. Marina (f-.C) enters with a dubious 1tut1n1
lineup. Cluia Ventura. t.be VlklnlJ' No. 1 runner,
mlaaed the lut two aames with a bee lil.JW'Y and
bla availability is not known . ·-111,.. It J:ll) ne• Diiie
Edison by 8
f tn. Valley by 8
footw by 10
hen
Neff by 7 capo by 7
Ptus X by 3
El Toro by 1
Servite vs. Em
Ftn. Valley vs. Eisenhower
Marina vs. f ootaia
Cdm YS. i.aglN Beach
Estancia vs. Nett
Capo Valley YS. Mayfair
Mission Viejo vs. Pius X
Valencia vs. El Toro •
(b1ge r.oast r.ollege
Elsemowef
Footaia
lag\lla Beach
la Mirada~
BellfkMer tigh
Pius X
, MissiOOYiejo
CoroM al Marve. LagUM hltdt
Tbls ls perhaps the moet intereltiDf and beat-
matcbed came of tbe week involvint Oranee
Cout area teams.
Tbe Artists of La1una Beach, 7-2 overall,
South Coast League co-cbamploo and seeded No. 4
in the Central Conference playoffs, enter wllb de-
fense atenclled in their foreheads, but al less than
full streqth offemively because of quarterback
Lance Stewart's oaggine shoulder btjury.
Fountain Valley Coach Mike Milner sees his
team's task as similar to atopplna Marina's veer
opU_~L~ ls wary of Els~wer'a speed in the
sec~ and at wide receiver.
Matt Stevens, a.ltboUlb banaecl up comlderably
lo the victory over Huntinston Beach, la espect.ed to
be ready for hil duties u the Baroaa 'quarterback.
Corona del Mar, meanwhile, which bas a.een
its offense move into hl1b sear since running back
Bill Bright was elevated to first·Une duty, appean
to have an edge offemlveJy. Four stral1ht wins
have turned a nightmare lnto a M record.
"I thinlt we're two touchdowns better than last .
year's Corona del Mar team," says CdM Coach
Dick Morris. Corona slipped past Costa Meaa ln
the Sea View League finale to grab a portion of the
championship and did it despite the lack or three
linebackers normally counted on.
"We'll use our basic defensive tacUca, ·• says
Milner. "Eisenhower bu good speed and tbe down
people and backers cet to tbe football quickly. But I
tb1nk we're a lot more physical on both sides of the
ball."
Linebackers Randy Reyes (surfing accident)
and Mike O"Haney (ill) are still doubtful for Fri-
day.
Merine va. Fonblna
The Steelers pose a formidable obstacle for
Marina Higb's Vikings, boasting an 8-2 record, the
Citrus Belt Leaaue championship and a defensive
team averaging 187 pounds per player.
The Artista, still buoyed by their first ap·
pearance in the playoffs since 1968, operate behind
a double wing offfense with wingbacks Mike
Mccaffrey and Eric Clark, in addition to wide re·
ceiver Mike Davis, giving Stewart plenty to aim
at. Among Fontana's arsenal are running backs
Randy Colbrunn (5-10, 175 jr.) and Wayne Carr
(5-9, 157 sr.). who average 5.0 yards a crack
between them. Colbrunn has scored 10 touchdowns
and quarterback Steve Waters bas added four TD
strikes with 61 completions on 129 attemplll for 778
yards.
Damon Berryhill keeps the defenses honest
with his inside work at fullback.
"Th.is game seems close in a lot of respects,"
says Laguna Beach Coach Walt Hamera. "Corona
del Mar's scoring in league was 89-65 and ours was
90-60.
Greg Eskridge and Ron Carter alternate at
split end and between them have caught 49 passes
for 643 yards. Additionally, punter Mike Logsdon
bas an average of 41.8 yards on 30 boota, including
five 50 yards or better.
·'And we know our freshmen lost to Corona del
Mar in um, 31-14, and the 1978 sophomores lost,
50-25. So, they've thumped us twice."
Among the defensive standouta are tackle
Fernando Garcia (247), Jake Dayton (6--0, 198) and
Mike Gelfand (5-10, 173). The latter pair has com-
Morris says Laguna's offensive tricks are
nothing he hasn't seen before, although he does al·
low it is an unusual system.
"The key is Laguna Beach's defense, that is L
where they've won their games. They've forced
(See PIA YOFF, Page 83)
Magic sidelined
Lakers fac~1g
.a big challenge
INGLEWOOD (AP> -~ake away one of their star players,
Md tbe Lakers can shake up their
r~ of talent and roll out a temporary winning combination.
But the Laken mllhlhave to eo
through the rest of the seaaoo
without Earvin "Magic" Jobmon
-a winning combination all by
himself.
The 6-foot·9 Johnson, averallng
22.4 points, suffered a knee btjury
Tuesday night after scoring Just
two points Taking up the
challenge for the Lakers in a
107-94 victory over the Kansas Ci-
ty Kings was Jamaal Willtes,
sinking 15 or 24 shou to finish with
34 points.
THE SUSPECTED tom knee
cartilage suffered by Johnson will
be examined today to determine
how much time will be missed by
the Lakers' leading scorer-their
third-leading rebounder at 8.5 per
game -and the National Basket·
ball Association's tops in assists
with 8.9 per game.
Johnson was on defense early in
the second period when, he said,
'•I went to cut. to pick up my man,
and the knee said, 'I'm not going
with you.' It dido 't. I beard
somethingpoporcrack."
the bard work -42 points and 15
rebounds -in the sixth and decid-
ing game of the league cham-
plonahlp last May when the team
had to play without center
Kareem Abdul·Jabbar, voted the
NBA regular season most valua-
ble player award for a record
sixth time . John son 's
per(ormance earned him the
playoffs MVP award, the first
won by a rookie.
"God forbid, if Magic is o.ut for an extended period but if he's
gone a short time we'll hang
togetber and work it out like we
did when Kareem was out "
Wilkes said. In addition to miss-
ing the deciding title game last
spring, Abdul-Jabbar missed 2"'2
games with an eye injury this
year and the Lakers kept winning.
"WE HA VE the ability to play
on a different level when a player
is injured," \)'esthead said. "Jim
Chones, Wilkes and Norm Nixon
all responded when Kareem was
out, andl'msuretbeywillnow. ·•
Nixon bad 18 points. Chones 16,
Abdul-Jabbar 15 and Michael
Cooper 14 against the Kings.
He was born without part of his right arm,
but it hasn't stopped Tom Southall of
Steamboat Springs High from doing bis
thing. Here be bowls over the opposition og
the way to part of 1,600 yards gained this
season. He also competes in basketball and
track for the Colorado school.
Laker.;' physician Dr. Robert
Kerlan said X·rays and other
teats will be conducted today to
see whether the young Laker star
did suffer a suspected ·'tear of the
posterior born of the medial semi·
lunar cartlla1e·' ln the left knee.
Guard Otis Birdsong led
the Kings with 26 points. followed
by Scott Wedman with 17 and Joe
Meriweather with 13. The Lakers
brought their record to 15-3, and
KansasCityis9-13.
No awesomes this year
Bu~ USC-UCLA still a big one
LOS ANGELES (AP) -This is not a year or
awe10me football teams, says John Robinson,
coach ol the 12th-ranked Southern Cal Trojans.
Vulnerablela more the word,
"There are no overpowerina teams lo the
country Ws year," Robinson said Tuesday at his
weekly meeu.n, with reporten. "We're not, UCLA
la not, Notre Dame ii not and Alabama is not.
·~ sood teaJJ)s these da11 are just more
vulnerable than in the past. Power used to
dominate, but skill ls mor~ of a factor now."
Tbe Trojana, 1-1-1 and comlnt off a frustratln1
»10 Jou t.o Rose Bowl-bound Wublneton, face 18th··
raoll9d UCLA Saturday for the "city cham·
plc)UNp."
'IOVTllEaN CAL. wbicb saw a 2l-1ame un-
beaten streak end lD tbe lOll to Wub.lnttan, would
appen to be Pardcolarb' vulnerable aolnl lnt.o the
1ame •liliDlt the Brutu.
Thia Trojan.a Jost. 1tartlna quarterbaek Gordoft Ada~ their walt~n from Ne~rt Harbor HJab,
to a ec>lle1e career .. ndlna me. 1DJU1'1, la th
eCOa4 quarttt q&lnit the Hulldea and WW •tart
l"upeteneed IOC>bomore &Olt TIDaley a1almt
UCLA. RMlici\ ed lft aiDce former bl1b
cbool quartet~Ck and ClU'ftftt \ISC tailback
llarc:U1 clrll a 1$-)ard tcorlnJ pa
against Washinaton, the Trojans might consider
going to something fancy for UCLA -like a
shotgun with Allen at quarterback.
Robinson chuckled and replied: "Let'• aee, it
we started working on a shotl'JD now, we m11bt
have it down by March 1. It would take unW at
least Cbristmu to get the pass from center work-
ing right."
TllE TllOJAN COACH 1ald tbat despite bav·
lni a new quarterback, Soutbem Cal wUl Juat co
out and "play the football eame the way we
always try to."
Tinsley threw three intercepdom in tbe loa t.o
W aablnSton, and on the year be hu eompltt.ed ab
of 13 J>UH1 for 131 yards and two acorea.
"Be'• a very com&>etltive penoe and a loOd
leader.'' Roblnsoo 1a1cl:"1 tb1nk be'U play v rJ wen. we.woo~ chan1t au ol our~ about I wbatwedo, wewon'taoconservative."
RobimoG Hid lt'a imp(la\ble to predict bow
the USC-UCLA pme may Co·
.. 11"8 GOING TO as a oat 1boW. • sreat fl&ht between two IOOd foot•U team.s," be aaJd.
"OblJ .. _~'1 tnoW bow tM IUM'I fokll &o IO· A11)'1JOQ,J' who tella you what'• .au &o bapPeD la
lhll pme Juitt doab't _., Wtaa1 he'• talkln.I
about.
"Our guys played a beck of a
game." Laker Coach Paul
Westhead said, "After bein& dis-
oriented and confused after
Maeic was hurt, OW' guys bad to
gut it out and work bard.''
APPRECIATIVE NBA fana
will recall it waa Johnson who did
BRUINS SHARP;
TOP ..41.4, 89-66
WESTWOOD CAP) -Senior
Michael Sander• 1cored 19
points and aopbomore Michael
Holton 18 to lead Lbe naUon'1 No.
8 rated colle1e team, UCLA, to an ._. victory over Athletee ln
Act.loo In an ftbiblUoo buket-
ball 1ame at Pauley Pavillon.
FrHbman center Kenny
FieJd8 .eared 11 polilta fOr lbe
B"1u, WbO open tbeir eollqe
leUOD oat weekend with bome
1ame1 .,atnat VlJ'llt;lla Military
tnaUtu Ind Notr. Dame. AJA.
now 42 qatnat coll 1• teama
th.la fall, wu led by former
Arkan1a1 forward llanln
Delph W'ho acond a •am• h1ib
25 ·p0tnta. No Other AIA ~
had mGl"e thU el-"• Po\DU.
Drifting around
in wind f!,nd surf
B1 llOWA&D L. HANDY Of .. o.i,,~ .....
Sometimes lt'1 bard for Lisa
Gonsales to find time for the
clasaroom In between her
workout and competition
ecbedules for-two sports at
Oran1e Coast Colle1e.
But 1be seems to manage the
11tuatklll with unruffied couraae
and conviction and enjoys her
outalde actl.Wes aa well.
Li1a pta up early in the mom-
tn1 to train with the OCC 1urfio1
team and bu been a consistent
winner tb1a fall. She al~ ii one
of the top runners on the Pirate
c;ros1 country squad that will be
I no red to capture the state
champooahip Saturday at Grif·
ftth Pan in Loi Audet. When 1be •raduated from Hun~ Beach Hilb 1n me,
ber •ROl't wu 1wlmminc and ebe
como«Od for one aemeata at
Golden West CoUe1•.
But the llrl• t.o travel and Join the •urtlna crowd in HawaU clW'·
inc the winter months caused
her to 1.-ve achool.
•'I waa a Ufe1uard lD Seal
Beaeb dUrtnl the 'umme a.ad
spent several winters •
Hawaii," she says. .~
''In Hawaii everybody wu
runniag and I joined them ..,bei
I wasn't surfing. But Hawatl irt j
just the place to be for aurfln
aod Lt was a great experience."
She's also been to Sout
America and Australia h1
pursuit of her surfing actlvtttes.
"It'• funny, you run into th
same people all the t.ime rel*~
leH of where you are. They J~
seem to drift around with
surf.
.. I feel J WU pretty lucJl::Y
spend wintera to Hawaii
summers in tbit area u
llfe1uard.
.. But I alway1 knew I woul
return to 1et an educaUo
Sometlmel, lhOqb, I feel U
have too many Irons lft tbe tlriL
Cross country hH like
become a way of We tor her
Barbie LudOriM. They b'.ave.. tb• e>a.tft l'UllM1"I 00 tM
teaui all eeuoa bav•
won tbe:lt ahare ol nc• Ujt
other bu beebck:leebehlnd.
,
COryell blieten Aztecs:
blind, stupid, mn't aee
Fro• AP DUpatebet
AN DJ~GO -San Dle&o Slate's Cla\&de •
Gilbert, n1Uon'1 alatb wlnnlnseat active col· •9• ltte footblll toach, wa1 fl mt Tuesday, and the ac·
t on p:runptly tri11ered heavy crttic19m, inchaclln1
a blut fn>m former Aztecs' coach Don Coryell.
GUbert, head coach tince 19'13, will nnnain for lbt ftnal
two bome 1ames a1alnat New Melieo and Utah.
Tbe dianuasal, which Gilbert predicted last week. came
Monday, two days after lbe 2·8 AJteea de·
feated Texas-El Puo 28-7, endiDa their
lon1est losln& streak since J.N2. Durina an emotional news coolerence,
Gilbert's ~man football squad appeared
ln a show of support and applauded loudly
when Coryell, coach of the San Dle10
Chargers of the National Football Leaeue,
accused the school's administration of be-
inf{ "blind . . stupid."
An angry Coryell told the large crowd:
"They've (the administration) 1ot their
con1u. heads so far ln the ground they can't see.
This community should take stock in itself and decide what
the hell they want."
After delivering his bitter attack, Coryell slammed b~
fiat on the podium and stalked out of the room. On the way to
the door, he was embraced by Gilbert, bis assistant at San
Diego State for six years.
Showing no bitterness, Gilbert, who entered the season
with a 58-18-2 record, told the group the dismissal was "pain-
ful" but said he and his coac~g staff "are proud and we can
bold our heads up.··
When the season ends, he said, "I'll drive into the moun-
tains, talk to a cow, watch a butterfly, then find an old coach a
job coad\ing."
Three members of the Aztec team went to the podium to
request that Gilbert, one of the school's most successful
coachea, be retained
,. "If be leaves, you 're taking the heart of our program."
senior safety Johnny Moore told reporters.
After hearing the appeals, Athletic Director Gene
Bourdet confirmed the action, saying the move was
necesaary to "turn the program around."
Bourdet defended the action, citing a ''devutating"
decline in attendance from an average of 40,000 last year to
27,000thisseason
------Quott» of ihr day ------.
Mychal Thompson of the Portland Trail Blazers,
talking about his nickname for stocky Kelvin Raa1ey,
who signed a lucrative four-year contract: "I call him
Mrs Butterworth because he's thick and rich like the syrup."
Roger Carlson
.......... ~ ... ,,.~
Lea l~ff • , .. _ ICClftd 16 pGlnt. aDcl m Dl~1-1• lldded 21 to IMd Jl:boeb pall Da , taz.tl, to matntatn ill l~••me lead Offl'
the Laken lD the Naticmal Baakttball Allocta· ..,
Uoa'1 Padftc DtvWOo. It wu tbe 17th Vldor'J ID JO ltarta tor
Pboeni• . . . ldu Sntq 1cored IO. polotl to paee
Pblladepbia pat t.be New Ycri ICDlcu, 1lMI • • . IDdlana
&ot .Put Detrott behind the play OI ceoten a. .. ,.._
and 1 .... Uwanla, wbo bad bot baDdl
down the atretcb . . . Sddle 1.a...
•cored 23 pojaila, melqd!q tbt clincher
with '-0 ~ left to ;tve Atlanta • ..,_..,
w1D owr San Antonlo . . . l.MJd ,.._
and I• 1-u combintd for 55 polnta and
13 aaatate to IJ>Vk Golden State to a lo.1-'7
victory over Wu.binitc>D ... LarrJ BIN
1cored four pOinta, made a key lteal and
1rabbed three reboundl ln the ftnal four
minutes to lift Bolton to a 118·112 triumph
over allea10 . . • a ... , SmD acored 25 .. .,.. pomta u Cleveland topped San Dle10,
19'-N ... M011e9 Maloae tallled 33 pointa and b.ad UJ rebounds to
lead Hus1Co to a 138-118 win over Seattle . . . SlaeJ M..el'lef
cameofftbebeocbtoacore21po6ntaforllilwaukee,al21trl3wtn·
ner over Utah . . . Indian~ broke on top early and beld olf •
Detroit rally ln the tlti.rd period to capture a 102·97 win over
Detroit . . . .11.m Puoa scored 18 ol Portland 'a flnt 21 points as
Denverfell, 122-lo.1.
Reau' .•~G•a•••• •• , tor .,ear
Ed MeG...._, a center-pard tlaned by the •
Rama last week, will be loet f« tbe balance o1 tbe 4. •
National Football Leaeue aeuon became ol a bee
injQry . . . Nortbweatern Unlnnlty athletic
director Jolla ._ and football coach llld Vesmt were
fired Tuesday lD the wake ol a wiDleu leUOD marked by a
revolt ot black playen . . . Deo•er Broocoe q~ck
Craig ....._ bu been holpitallled ataln beeaute ol atomach
nu ... Hl&hly recruited runniDJ back Br .. Grtme bu left
the University of Mlaaouri and plana to withdraw from
school . . . Four quarterbacb, lneludlnC Roee Bowl·bowld
Tom FUell of Washineton and reeord·breakina pauer Neu
Lomu of Portland State, have been selected u the Weal
quarterbacks for the 56th Shrine Eut-Weat Game scheduled
Jan. 10 at Stanford. The East will ~ve Tim Clifford of In·
diana and Jay Veamo of Walle Forest.
BaUIJ119 Biii• get •q11al'ftf Cll"8fl
WEST SENECA, N.Y. -A West Seneca Town •
Court justice Tuesday night dlamlaaed chartea of •II •
dis orderly conduct. agaioat Buffalo Billa
linebackers Jim Haslett and &lab Robertaoo.
The pair, arrested for figbtini ou1.lide a Weat Seneca
tavern early Mooday, were warned not \o &et into trouble
again in this Buffalo suburb.
'"lbe Neanderthal approach la fine on the football field
but not in society in general," Justice Richard B. Scott told
the husky performers, who roomed to1ether the weekend
before the fight u the Bills knocked off Cincinnati 14-G ln a
road game.
The judge reprimanded the players several times but
also joked that be bad dropped the cbar1es on the condition
that Haslett and Robertson contribute to a victory Sunday
over the Pittsburgh Steelers in neighboring Orchard Park.
Robertson, a 6-foot·3, 225-pound former AU-Pro, earlier
said the fight resulted Crom a misundentandimr.
Laguna Beach
nips Santa Fe
no-lose situation? Laguna Beach Higb 's
women's volleyball team swept
into tbe CIF 4-A semifinals
following Tuesday nitbt's 15-12,
15-12 triumph over visiting Santa
FeBi&h.
When someone has been riding high for
everal years, 1t 's not often you find him squirm·
g about anything >: But circumstances have come about where
l,.aguna Reach resident Ron Davis 1s findmg
Eself m a ticklish. situation, although he is main·
ning he 1s m a no los<' _c;1tuation
Davis. a long time supporter of Laguna Beach
Bh's premier wide receiver, Mike Davis, has ~en in command of an athletic system that has
roduced numerous league and CJF cham-
onships.
-lndeed, he was singled out last year as the
ate of California's No. 1 athletic director. for his
complishments at Corona del Mar High.
And, it is Corona del Mar High which is send-
g its football team to Laguna Beach Friday night
bere the Artists await as South Coast Leaeue co-
ampions, and in the playoffs for the first time
nee the glory years of 1968
If you haven 'l figured it out yet, well Mike
a vis 1s Ron's son
llON DAVIS MtK• DAVIS .. AllSEL
in front of what stlll must be the all-time record
crowd in that gym.
Mesa's teams of that era, composed of such
standout.s as Tom Read, Craig Falconer, Bruce
Chapman, Bart Carrldo, Steve Turley and others,
were a group to remember.
All of which leads up to the fact they'll return
to action, u a group, Monday night at Costa Mesa
High, where they'll test Coach Tim Parsel's
1980-IU Costa Mesa varsity, beginning at 7:30.
Coach Mike Q\JDUD'• Aniata,
led by middle bloeker Shelly
Sutherland and Sue Dawson,
surged form a 10-2 deficit in the.
second game to claim the vic-
tory and qualify for the
semifinals Thunday night.
Laguna Beach upped ita re·
cord to 18-1 in the process.
Anteaters bombed
WESTWOOD -UC Irvine's
women's basketball team 1ot
the 118).81 aeuon off in a rocky
way Tuesday night as the
Anteaters absorbed a 91-30 loss to
UCLA at Pauley Pavilion.
Deniae Curry led UCLA with
27 polnts and 13 rebounds in lbe
opener.
.. .,., ,...,. l•l••flen .. tep
.... ._, poUNd Urie IOall ud ... Sil ...,_ aoond twloe to lead tM New Yan lilan· ' •
den to a 7·2 N~l RockeJ Leque 'ti~ emir
SL Louil~ DJ&ht, "'Mi«'\N New v,n-, aa·
beatco itreU to eta.ht camea • . . J:cr -.w MGl'tid
the wt.amnc eoaJ ba lM Meoad ~ M DIC r•eed to a W trlumDh ~·r w~ . . .,.... ud ...
MarWa blasted ln power pl&j IOall a N&DeOu•• ftnd a
club-record 51 aboU at.two Wbmlpes MUiilDden WI f.1 ...SC·
tory. . .NHL le1end C... 81a1tM. wbo buU the Maple Leal
Gard-and formed the Tarult.o Maplt Leda club. died at
the ap ol SS at bit Toronto bome.
.. t....,,..'1a.,11z do•• an1101W C'Clttf'
PHILADELPHIA -The Army-Nav1 football •
matcbup, once one of the 1ame'1 annual claulc1, 4. •
baa fallen upon bard Umea.
Navy baa dominated lbe aertea tho put aeveo
yean, winnlng sill Umea to even the 8C)..year-old rtvalry at
37·37, with six tiea. The Middles' proeram appean to be more
stable than lbat of the Cadets.
Despite lbe dimlniabed national interest ln the aervtce
1ame, both Navy coacb Geor1e Wellb and Army coach Ed
Cavanaugh aald lbe rivalry wu u heated u ever at the
academies. .
"1be same intensity, the same navor exiata at Navy aad
Army," aaid Webb Tuesday at a pre·1ame newa conference
here.
Cavanaugh described the 1ame, scheduled here Nov. 29,
as "what college football la all about.
"It's just a game amooi youn1 men seeking colle&e
degrees and also playing football," Cavanau1h said. "Some
coaches forget that football is part of the educational
system."
Cavanaugh said he hears coaches of major powers com-
plain about the intense pressure on them to win to bold their
jobs.
"The Army.Navy game has just as mucb pressure,".said
the first-year head coach. "It's just as exciting as it was 50
years ago. The same intensity and eUort go into the game."
.SllOIC'den pay• uni.,er11lty llfNok
Fred Saowdea, the University of Ari1ona •
basketball coach, baa repaid lbe university $499
for a 1B18 airline Ucket tbat lbe school paid for
twice, according to a school official. The state
Department of Public Safety, however, aaya it will "stlll in-
clude a review" of the-double payment . . . The Univenity
of San Franci.aco has been placed on one year's probation by
the NCAA for illegal recruiting which led to the resipaUoo of
basketball coach Dan Bell•mJal and bla uai.atant earlier
thU year . . . The agent for Lee MaJ, a deaipated bitter
and fust baseman for Baltimore's Orioles, saya he hopes to
open negotiations witb Kanau City . . . Uolventty of
Kanau basketball star RJek)' a.a bu left lbe club for
"penooal reasons." The~ l(Ual'd will not return accordln1
to Coach Ted Owens ... The New York Yankees announced
the acquisition of infielder Larry llllboane and a player to
be named lat.er from Seattle for catcher Brad Gil.Idea and an
undisclosed amount of cash.
Tefe.,bio~ radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Hockey -Winnipeg at Kings, 7:30 p.m., KOGO
(600).
MVP lanthlith
All I really wanted -Brett
KANSAS CITY, Mo. <AP) -
George Brett was taking Ufe
easy in Palm Springs, far from
Kansas City's harsh Novettiber
wind.I, wbeo be learned~
that be'd fillally won tbe awwd
be wanted mmt..
In a Jabdallde, Kansas City's
27-year-old third baseman was
named the American League's
Most Valuable Player
.. It's like the Cy Young 1f ·
you're a pitcher," Brett said
from his vacation retreat. "This
is the one I really wanted."
Although honors and awards
have poured in since Brett ended
his spectacular season, he was
apprehensive about his chances of winning lbe MVP.
"There's a little anxiety, you
don't want to build your hopes
up too bigb," he aaid. "I re·
member one year (1976) I
thought I bad a good chance at it
and didn't win. That left me a
UtUe upset. Thurman MWlSOO,
Yankee catcher got it. So I
learned not to be too confident
about winning "
Brett won even. tboueh be
pla19d lD only U7 1am... l&-
JuriM ~ed blm three dlf.
ferent times and forced bim out of mon: • .,,.., 40 games.
Neverthe':::ss, be challenged
the magic 400 batting average
until late in the season and
finished at 390, highest in the
major leagues s ince Ted
Williams hit 406 in 1939. With
ll8 RBI in 117 games, he
became the first player in 30
years to drive in more runs than
games played, with a minimum or 100 RBI.
He also became the 15th
player in AL history to win bolb
the batting crown and the slug-
ging percentage title in the same
year, leading the league with a
.664 slugging mark. Only
Milwaukee's Cecil Cooper, wilb
122, had more RBI.
And, both coaches Dick Morris at Corona
Mar and Walt Hamern al Laguna Beach -are
timing Davis· services
Says Morris· "We're gomg to sneak Davis
wn to Laguna Beach to look around He's in our
mp."
That 19M team. incidentally, is tbe last
Mustang team to qualify for the CIF. Some are
saylnglhatdry spell will end in February. • • • Football signal,s
Says Hamera : "We're sending Davis lo scout
Corona del Mar "
Former Costa Mesa Hlih athlete Brian
Rono Davis is takUig gas from both sides and
s hesitant to declare himself, but flnally he re·
ted
• "Blood is thicker than water," says Davis.
h those thoughts on his mind. he was reported-
seen in a Laguna Beach wind-breaker with a
'pboard, snooping around the Corona del Mar
Bullard, who was active in water polo, swimming,
soccer and track for the Mustanp, ba.s been grant-
ed a $1,000 scholarship by the Orange County
Sports Celebrities for the Costa Mesa Kiwanis and
Rotary clubs .
ctice field Monday
Bullard, Mesa's 1980 valedictorian, is currently
competing in aquatics at Claremont-Mudd College.
* • •
ti "Actually I'm in a . no·lc~se situation,·: says
vis "Whoever wins, I ve sh\1 got something go-' , ...
Nuggets have a way of getting lost in a bag of
gold -aucb as Edison High punter Troy
Richardson, a junior.
Richardson's statistics are eye-popping to say
the least. Consider the following : He has punted «
* * * times and bad three returned for a net of 10 yards.
There is no doubt about it, Orange Coast None have been blocked, three have been to the
llege's basketball gym is the largest basketball one-yard line, nine have been lnaide the 10 and on-
ility in the world ly one has found the end cone. .
It has to be because 1 can't rind anyone with'-With a han& time in the 4.S range, Richardson
Orange Coas't area basketball backgroimd that "'5ports an averase rivalln1 40 yards.
not witness the 1966 CIF 4-A playoff game • • •
tween Costa Mesa High's Mustangs and the Are high school athletics small time?
ckrabbits of Long Beach Poly Well, Edison and Fountain Valley drew 11,581
Remember? Coach1 Jules Gage's racehorse to their game. The followi.n1 night at A.nabelm
w battled that talented Poly quintet nose-to-Stadium l...oni Beach State and Cal State Fullerton
e throuth a half, but finally succumbed, 10&-31, pulled in 7,000.
trim foe, 9-7
ranc Coast CoUeee'a water
lo team raced to its loth vie
y ln 11 starts thla season,
tlnl a e-1 South Coast Con-
ena dee~lon over lone·time
•I Fullerton Collett Tuesday
th• winner'• pool. a~b Jack Fullerton used al,,.
4U'tllt playen in the scoring
umn to put the Hornell away.
addltlon to o aterllnc de·
lV!, effort by 1oalle Jack ben.
ranse , COut led the entlre
e, bul 1t wu atm a nlp.aoct.
df air, u ua. Pirates Upped
overall record to 23-2.
Jeff Young waa the lttdl.Dt
acorer '{'tth three goals for the
winners, while GUet AWaoo eon·
tributed two.
Jerry Wyatt, Gres• Bortuk,
Gree Carroll and Jdf Dcmnell
added one goal apiece.
Herbert bad nine aavea for
Coaat.
Oranae Cc>ut clOHt out the
regular M!uoo Friday at Sii.Dta
Al\_a.
The Plrat.ea are txpttl clDI
on• of their moat 1ucce11ful
water polO 1taaon• lti r.cnt
yeare, althou1h tbtY alw•Y•
1eem to f\eld •at.roof team.
OCC kickers
to host GWC
Oraqe Cout Colle1e opeu
the southern CaUlornia Com·
IDunlty Collef• IOCCet pl.,.
with • famWat foe Friday after.
noon e>n tho Buca • fteld -Ooldm
West.
The nr.t·toUDd playoff battle
I• Hi for I ,p .m. occ. CO·
cbamptob or tb• South CoUt Conf~ wttb FWlertcJG, t<lm·
plfted ftlWar HUOll play wtUl
an 11.a.2 overall ,nark. A 1·1 Ue
, wttb the Hornet• 11ve t
Plratel a ~ Ol tb• tltle.
-'rr ,
!!
IU..EOAL ,OAWAftO MS& one hand waved beNnd beck.
ii
r.
j
f
I • ! )
.. u•. .......
' l C 11 hope tu
utb rn Cal Con·
wd >wu wHh S1u1la
oolc.a CC a t~'O wet•ta with a
' ct r. OVt!r Rio Hondo Thurs·
da) nlaht, wh l . Sadttlet>ark wall
just JO throu1h tht• motlona
Sat\.lrday nl1h&.. ga1n1t last·
place Paloma" '1n lht! Mh1i1ion
Conference toot ball Hnalt'
Oranae Coa:,l tnvels tu San
f>leco M'5a when.~ tht' P1ratei.
hope. lo prolong their modest
one game wtnnine stresk m
South Coaat play.
Here's a look at this week 's
battles.
Golden WHt VI. Rio Hondo
Sporting a 3 0 1 conference
record, Coach Ray Shackleford's
Rustlers huv<> a chance to not
only remain undcflated but put
themsclve:s 111 pl'rfc<'l Pos1t1011 to
knock off undefeated Santa
Monica Nov. 28 at OC<.:.
Rio Hondo, which plays all of
it:. home ~ames on Thursday
evenings at Wh1tt1n College
<this week I' no Pxceptwn) 1s 1 3
in conferen1·1• play and 2 6 0
overall. Tht Roadrunners havt•
put only 62 point:. on the txnrd
this st•a-;on
The Hoadrunn1·rs art' rommg
off a 39 8 thrasl11n1; • I the hand:.
of Los An~elcs CC. while G•lldl'n
West tunicd in its best sconng
night of the year la!it week an an
equally one sided 48 7 tnumph
over East Los Angeles
In Rao Hondo, the Rustlers
will probably be up against the
b_iggesl passing off<'nse they
have faced this year Rio Hondo
QB Rich Aranda throws the ball
often. He has compocted 67 of 152
passes for934 yards and fourTDs
But the biggest lhn•at for the
Hoadrunners eorn1•s from CJ ll
purpose man I>onru·ll Cooper
who leads the• <'Onfrrc.•nec 111
kickoff returnr-. and rPr<>1 v1ng
A sophomnre trnnsft•r from
Cal Poly (Sun Luis Obispo>.
Cooper has a k11·koff n :turn
a\'erage of 20 '! yarcb II<' has
also haull•d 111 ·n tal<'hes for 5'i'.>
yards and thrt'l' TOs till!> -.cason
.. We've had prell) good luck
against them <Rio Hondo) tht-
past four or five years," adnuts
Sh :i ck leforcf "1'hf'\ • v<• bfof>n a
little mcons1stent this year '
GWC wtU rounter with Sam
Aiello at QU A1E>llo h:is <·ollcctr d
981 yards in'"" .11, tornplt:lm~
83 of 14ti p<ts~• (11111 of wh1d1
went fur l'lh
Orange Coast at SD Mese
ll is nm 11nvc1ss1hle for Coarh
Dick Turkt 1 ·s Pirates to fini sh
in a tie for second plact· in the
South Coast Confcrcnec
In order lo do that. lht> Rul·'-
must stop M1•i-.a Saturday night
bid
nd then t'loeo oul tho 1 .uoo
with a victory over 11 rt.on.
They would al.lo n ed a aeries ol
upseta ln «h r 1am in the
final two woeu or play
StlU, Tucker will Just be happy
lo tak tht• two wlns.
"l thiok we've played pretty
well once we iOt into leaaue,"
be adml\s "TM team la certain·
ly gaining more confidence."
The Dues bne been reatinl ror
the past week Two weeks aao
they downed Grossmont, 31-19
for their first eonlerence Vic -
tory
In SD Mesa, they face the Jut
team in the conference stand-
ings <0-4--0, 2-6-0) Lal year, the
Olympians cruised to a s+o
conference mark and a 9·2·0
reading overall. Amongtheirwins
was a 16-2lriumpboverOCC.
The Olympians are Jed by run.
ning back Mark Kennedy who
has picked up 196 yards on 53
carries
SD Mesa has been a pass ing
team tlus year with QBs Mark
Edgar and Pua! Berner sharing
the s ignal·calling duties
Between them , they have
thrown the ball 201 times for .
more than 1,300 yards.
The Bucs had four players
sidelined with the rtu this week,
but all are expected to play
Saturday. In addition, Tucker
has two running backs complete
ly healed after missing games
with injuries.
Tom Frink and John Kapsner
are back, and they 're expected
to see plenty of action behind QB
Charlie Boss who has moved up
to fifth place in passing and total
offense in conference play He
has completed 71 of 148 attempts
for 810 yards and three TDs.
Saddleback at Palomar
With a Mission Bowl appear
ance assured by virtue of last
week's 23-0 wtn over K1verside
CC. the Gauchos head for Vista
High where they face the punch
less Palomar Comets.
Even OCC ha s beaten
P alomar The Comf'ts, suffering
a miserable season, finally
broke into the win column last
week with a 13-6 triumph over
Southwestern
"That s houJd help tbem emo·
l10nally," says Gaucho Coach
Ken Swearingen. "I imagine
they'll be up for us. Beating us
would make their season . "
Saddleback, '1 -1 overall,
chnehed at least a tie for the
Mission title with last week's
victory San Bernardino ,
Riverside and San Diego are all
lled for second place but the
Gauchos have beaten all or
them
Palomar has only defeated the
Gauchos once m the 10-game
history of these two teams That
occurred m 19 71 when the
Comet s pulled off a 25 21
verdict. Last ye ar 's •34 .10
Gaucho win was the closest
~core in the series smee 1975
'
.,
Malavasi
satisfied
with Ra01s
From AP Dbpatdles
Clearly, the Rams aren't the
happiest team in the National
Football League, but that
didn't stop them from recording
a big victory last Sunday.
"It was probably our best de·
fensive effort of the year," said
Coach Ray Malavasi at his
weekly meeting with reporters
Tuesday, referring to the Rams'
17-14 win at New England.
"When these guys have to, they
will win."
The victory over the Patriots
raised the Rams' record to 7-4
and kept them one game behind
Atlanta, the NFC West Division
leader The two teams play at
Anaheim Stadium on Dec. 21 in
a regular·season finale.
Among the post-game com-
ments following the New
England game were the follow-
ing from middle linebacker Jack
Reynolds:
"We have more talent than we
know what to do with. We took
out our aggression because we knew the Rams' management
wasn't going to pay us. This is
the first time in 1980 we've
played defense."
Cornerback Pat Thomas said:
"They didn't give us inspiration
so we played for ourselves. We
put the pay scales behind tis."
The Rams won despite a less-
than-brilllant per{ormance by
quarterback Vince Ferragamo,
who completed 14 of 26 passes
for 164 yards and one
touchdown He wa§ itlt~rcepted
twice.
"Vinnie didn't do too bad or a
job,'' Malavasi said. When
asked if be conslde~ ma.king a
change at quarterback during
the game, the coach shot back,
''Nope"
Running back Wendell Tyler,
the Rams' leading rushet last
year . sat out the game Tyler,
who suffered a serious hip injury
in an automobile accident last
July 4, had played in the pre-
vious two games.
No defense, no depth
Mulli~"" nol happy with UC/ scrimmage
lh JOH!' :-.l:VAl'iO
Ot uw O.a1•'f' •'160I \L.lft
Kt•\ an M:.t~c1· sr• 1rint: :il ix11nls 1n UC lnme·s
Rluc• Gol<I ba k·•th:.ill st·nrnmagt• Sunday 1s fine
and danrlv. hut somf' !>crinus prohlems were ex·
posed as a n•sult ·
Fu-st or all 1101 <t !illlJ:!f -.hr<'<i nf d<>fenst· v. as
displayed by t>1tl1n ~1rh .ind that ts eausmg Coach
Hill Mulligan <-om<• <011sll'tn 1t111n
And s<'rondh. lhl' depth Mulligan thought he
had d()(>Sn 't sN•m to be t her<'
"Then• wf're not so many surpnses as their
were disappotntmcnls " Mulh.ian admitted Tues
day "We don't thmk we have the depth we thought
we had. Hopefully, we'll getdowntoeightpeoplewhc
can play.''
OFFENSlVEI.\', AS FIGURED, the Anteaters
appear to have no problems Defense is another
matter. however.
"Our ofCensa 1s different than most others,"
said Mulligan by way of explanation. "We pick on
the ball and most pick away from the ball. As a re-
sult, we have a hard Ume defending ourselves.
"Some people feel you can't play defense and
do some of the other things we're doing. Obvious-
ly, I don't agree with that '
Actually, Mulligan won't know for s ure
whether hi• tenm can or can't play "D" until the
Anteaters start the regular c;eason schedule in two
weeks. ,..
ronference are going to take a stand of "prove it to
me first . and then we'll believe "
"Whal I really got a kick out of is when they
<coaches) talked about everybody being equal and
lumped together I certamly don't believe that
1ble<'pl,'' said Mulligan
"I mean 1f we were to lose Magee or UOP
1 Univl'rs1ty of Pacific> was to lose Ron Cornelius,
how even or lumped together would we be then?"
For the record the writers in attendance
picked the Anteaters to finish sixth in the conference
UC IRJ/INE REPORT
(Utah State was picked No. 1). OI course, that didn't
please Mulll&an tremendously, either.
"It burns me to be picked sixth," was
Mulligan's comment. • • • The broadcasting magnet of Orange County-..
Roy Englebrecht-has struck again.
After already neatly packaging the UCI
basketball program for K-Wave radio (108·FM),
Englebrecht's company has now aoo adfied UCl's
water polo final in the NCAA championships to the
t>rogram. assuming the Anteater squad gets that
far.
The contest, slated to be played Sunday Nov.
29 at Belmont Plan pool in Long Beach (7 :30
p.m.), will be carried live by K-Wave, with former
UCI All-American and Corona del Mar water polo
coach Jim Kruse bandlln1 the play-&y-.,laJ.
Incidentally, the announcers for the basketball
contest.a are 'Mike Ke.n.nedy (who called the foot-
ball and buketball play-by-play for Long Beach
State lut year) and color man Kent Bl'lqa (who
d.ld b1s radlq wort at the Uaiveralty ofNebruka).
A third member of the team-:-Mitcb llusey, a
Newport Harbor Hl&b and USC gradf#&\e-.-Ul
handle.halftime featore.1.
BJ the way,11ponsortbip •~ ltUl avaUable for
tbe UCI b ketball cootesta. Four mlnutel Of tb• lt
allOtted per aame are sttll left. r
En,1lebrecht ls also look~ I~ a 1ponaor tor a
"Blll Mulli1an Pte·1ame 4h0w' 1ejment1wblcb ht bo"' to air prior to every Anteatef' broa cast.
..
mltt.akes fro odlef teanu and c111tW1ted.'' •llYI
Morris.
·~just really Set after )'OU ud play with a
lot ol detlre." ·
!•nclava.N4'ff
Eatancla Hifb'• Eap bave a touab aut to
crae.k at ti ada S.tadlum where Neff Hlih'•
TroJ~ await. A ~remilal Suburban Leque power and tri·
cbasopton with La Mirada and Mayfair, Neff
boattl an explotlve attack, seared around Gres
DeLaMare and Leo Briones, wbo have combined
for 25 touchdowns.
DeLaMan la a S-10, 176-pouod aen or tailback
and Brlortea ta a 210-pound fullback. Each is
averagln17.7 yards per carry out of the TroJau' t-
foriqatioll, behind quarterback llarkAnnijo.
A~ bun 't gt>ne to the air that much. in
tact he usu.ally eoes upstairs only about elcht times a 1•me, but throu•b n1De ga1J1es be completed 50 --------~~---,-----;
percent of bis puses for $03 yards.
Ndf had a 1even-1ame wlnnln& streak eolng
until falling to La Mlrada lut week, 13·7, seUllng
for a 7-2-1 record. Estancia ls 6-4.
Estancia, meanwhlle, geta better every time
out in the pusina department with qu~rback
Jim McCahill dlretUnl the attack. Ria fa~rt.le
tareetaareAbelCacbolaandJamieAikea.
Estancla'a l'WlD.inl game bas raUen off last
year's pace, despite the presence of 1979 All.sea..
View League tailback Bob Urmaon. The primary
reason for the decline is the decline 1n boles made
available fot Ql'mloo.
Defense, too, ia a eoncem fot Coach Ed Blan-
ton, who saw &.ls' team unable to contJin El Toro's
strong nanning game a week ago in a 27-%1 loss.
c.piatr•no V•lley va. M•yf•lr
Capistrano Valley's 8·2 Cougars, \bird place
finishers in the South Coast League, will be trying
to get off on the right foot behind runners Eric Fox
and Steve Lanham.
On the other side will be Coach Merlin Driggs'
Mayfair unit an unpredictable sort -the
Monsoons were 40-0 losers to Neff, yet defeated La
Mirada, 15-14, to gain a share of the Suburban ti-
tle.
Ml11lon Vle)o vs. Plue X
Mission Viejo's Diablos will get a true test of
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R~l>IO 11 l I PHO'I
'tl(\I( I I'(
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$ PAY N/J TAXES $
IA/ eo t:-11 ~ 1 , 'f.'I IV!UTE-Or,r .fr/J.'-
A/All--'8.!'. C ltl.L WALT r~elTA(; ""..--"JS;;&
t1restoneg COSTA MESA
CorMr of
Harbor ltvd. & WU•on
Acroufrom
TALIN THE Tl.REMAN 'ft!MY'• Shoppinc) Cntfl'
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QUALITY SERVICE • • • FAST HOUlS: MOH. THllU RU. 7:JO AM TO 5 PM
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OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 21, 1980
MacPHERSON .
STRUT $99
REPLACEMENT
CARTRIDBES .~m.o
e Deluxe Champion . 4-Ply .
Polyester Cord Tira
.,
As a a~lal enticement, ~lebredrt la ofter-
lnl lwo roa.nd trto Ucketl to TabtU for the tln&l
1pon1oreblp, Anyone lnterea&ed ean reub ~~~t~~~~~~·~d ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~--~-~--~~ UOl. I. ~
.-\\i.
-~-..... cin-......... _0.1 .. ....... --. _ .. ., .....
~ -*-I ~·-"" .... ~~9"11'~ ..... "' .... ._ .. _.. .. ~ ..... ---.. ,~ .. ,,_r°""I
a.wMM1"-a.-.ci
Jll &..-. • -K-. City M-.....1~-0r.-.. Y
°""'-~-...... OtllutM-rW~ e.ai. u~•-ucu .....,.,""-~· ....... c:.-•-c•~ ....,,.. c.r•tiie ,,_ ~
Ml(llltM ... 7 -·-· Ye•O-H.Wv.,f ........ ,,_,,...._
T-t-ICer.tw<ILy • .....,.. ... , _ Y"9111i1
#HI VlttW• 1-t Str•llM c;.,119111•-r MIUll .. .,
MlllMICM I~_, Wltct111ln
1111191 .... IC• 1-r MIMl•lelll
SMUS-~ Oil'-...... _,·-141141 Ml-Ill-~ ........ ,_~
THel~10-rTC:IJ
Hw•••-' Teu• Ttcll .. ylot t _, Teu.
Wellll"""" t-W•li,,.._ IC1"9 Ari_ W _ °"9911 Melt
0....,. '"" ..... -"'-11. LSU•-T"'-w
PCAAIHdere
TOTAL0tltl8MH
. ·
......... A ...
c:i•rk-,S...i.eS& uc 1.w m .o
Maf'uy, Ulfte IMtll $t au '·"' "" 0..11-. UUlfl St. ~ l,.,..t 1M.I
11. Jee.-. CS Fullerton SJ4 Ud IU.11 Tote-.,..._ St a. '·* , •.• R091n,f'alfk JP 1,01 1IU
ltUIWINO
TC Y*
Wlll1111e,SM.JOMSI n::t 1,111
lteylonl. CS FllllertOll "' 70 Se111H, Leno llM<ll St tt J1S
OuddrldQlf.1.'"'9 &e.Ch St ts• ~
T-len. Fr-SC 122 S20
ti ASS I NO
ttA ttC
ClerklOn, SM JoM Sl Ill IGll
Geell-, Utafl St. ~ 1-" Stal'lley, ~ llHcll St Ht 120
Rogers, P"lfk 197 ISJ
SC. JlKque&, CS Fvllerton 2t4 1•
Ceffrey, CS FullerlOll 70 J7
Toscano, FrHnO St 241 IJt
1t•C8IYING
ttc Y•.
Murpny, Vt.rt St
Wllllllte. S... Jou SI
_,...,...., Pallic
R .. tonl, CS l"ullerton
TllomPIOft. UI_., SI
Torosl•n. Fresno SI
SJ .. ,
SJ 41.3
S7 '°' •• n• 0 .. ,
0 441
Pactflc-10 leect.rs
IUISHINO t..•AD••S
A ....
'" 1 ,._,
•. u ,. ..
SJ.
......
1,-.S
'·"' 1,120
1.a1
1,AG1 ... ,,.,.
A .... u
S.J
S2 ••• •.S
' I
TC Y• A ...
""'"· U!>C Jt7 1,4'1 1..S 7 Mc Nell. UCL" 161 MS IU 4
Nelson, Sl.,lord UO .. • 1
ROOlnM>n Or-St 191 7.. IS J
8rown, Or-150 ..0 1l.l
t..•ADINO PUSUllS
PA PC Y• TD
El•o, SIMlforG JJS 271 2.•37 16 Ram1oty UCLA Ill IS I.GO 9
C.ml>bell C..I 27J 1'3 2 OU •
Flotk, Wa\Nnglon 2.. I.. tM7 12
run<lill ""'""" 122 11 m 1 LEADING •ECEIVE•S
Tyler St.,,ford
Nol•on, St..,torG
M•ro•rum ~ttntOfO
BovH C..I
ttC Y• TD
SI 711 1
•7 SS2 •
'' ... II .... , l
Mistler Aruon. St 41 S.ff ~
TOTAL OPtll'.NSE
Elw•y. StantorCI
C.mDt>ell. Cat s.m .... We.nlnQtOn S1
FllO, Wailllngton
Allon. use
""°" Y•. 409 2.•n
JOI I, ...
JOI I.tit
114 I.IOI
l" I S-411
High echool ranking•
Clf' 1'11 Flft Ceoller""'•
"•• re .... --1.Efl_, ... ,
2 SI PIU4 (~)
J, .. _.....Valley 11~11
• F onl.,.. (f.21
S 81Shop A,.,.t (9 II
•. I.OS Altos C•ll
1 Walnlll 1•21
I SI JoM llo\<o .. 2 II
9 Collon Cl JJ 10. St fr~os , ... , 21
(tlel M•rlM IMI
Wei El--r C .. J II
CIF c-traC CMI.,.-•
ttfl. TNftl, --~. ~~~~=(~.'~,'
3.Breal11 ll
4.Mlulon\IC.JOCM II
S Capl~r-ll•lley Cf.ti
• l~llH<lll12 I
1 Pius X 11-11
I. \laltncla ( .. JI
9. Nolf 11 2 II 10 ............ y 1 ... 11 cu•-..c-•-• ..... ,...,, --·• E•-1•21 2 l.yn-(MI
l . Lo•ra lf.21
• Sunny Hiiis ltrll
S El R....,llo 1•21
• W•rr.., C6-4J Cllel Foolhtll 11 J I
I An-1m1•21
9. Oowney(._.I
10. S.nl• AN 16-4)
South CoHt Conference
........ Alla.-
A ... 161.J
JAH ,., ' llO,
1no
-141
·~ ,.
94
86
II .. • " • t •
--140
llf> ..
12
IO ,. ..
JO n ••
Pb. Ill
IJO
IOI
1()4 ..
S4
S4 ...
40 ,.
W LT W LT ttl" PA
Cerrito• 0 0 1 I 0 16t IZ3
Mt. Sen Antonio I o • 2 O 171 t1S
Fullerton I o s 3 o •• 1t Orono• C...•I , 0 2 • 0 IS m.
Gros~ • 0 3 S I 110 1'7
S.n Ol990 Mew o 4 O 2 • O U• UI --.,··o-o .... Coul et Sit! Oleoo l!N'le
-Cerrito. 01 Fullerton
Gros-•• Mt ~ Antonio
Southem Cel C9nferance
1..Nto19 All 0-..
S.nl• Monie•
GolOenWhl
East LA
LA So<llllwftt
1.M"-l•CC RloHOftllo
W LT W LT ttf' ttA
0 0 • 0 0 140 .z
0 I 4 t 2 107 11S
210 260 t61'5
J J 1 J 4 I !ti Jl4
2J02SOtJIJI
1 J 0 ' ' 0 ., 111 I.A ... ,,,.., 0 4 0 I 1 0 Ito 2111 ,._., .• o...
~ W.t w ltle Hondo •I Wllllllot
Cell• .......,..o-
t..o• Anoalft cc 411 Sente M O!Wca
LA H-et Eetl Lot A-1•9 ~Coift.rence
L....-AllO-
WL T WI.. T Ill" ttA
Seddl.i..dl 4 I O I I 0 23' n
SM Sorntnllno J J 0 1 1 0 111 IV
Sen Ol ... CC J J O • o 112 •~ Cltrw• J a o S o JIO 1•
Rl119nkla CC J l 0 4 o tU IOI
$Wtll-tern I 4 0 6 1 llJ 1$1
P•-.r 1401707'21' ...... .,. . .._
$llOCll.-cll -1 ~--IH Dl•CCM.~11
a.in ~i,o;tlllh•t!'-'cleCC
I
record
NU "':::'~.:.' .. ce •"i" a.11A11tellle 1• •· -u .. 11 11 •. I HMltlOft ' •• IClllNI CllV t II .•
l>ellfff ' 11 .... 0.1111 I If , Ill II
.._lffcDI---=• n : r.: i; Qtldlfl ..... II • ."1 I~
... ltl• ' II .•II 1\19 ~tlllM • u .116 ..
w110.... • u "•" llAIT81tM eott'8A8MC8 Atl..u&DI....._ .... ,. ... """ .. , ..,
New Von II S 10t I ... ltfl II S ... Si...
New .Hr .. y I II ,4JI I
Wellll..... I It .JM t
c.Mrel l>lwllMll
Mllw .......
lllllltM Cltlceoo All~
CleftlaM
Oetnll
,, , ,.,
11 • ·'" I u ·*
' u ·'" • I U •• 10 . " -""" T--f'•iafM .....,.101, w.-..,,a1y .. '°"'...., 122, Oltnwfr 10) Pllll-lpllla IU, -York" p • .., ...... 104, Sift Oleto ..
Golden State 103, W..,,lllflOll t7
AllWllA '7, S... Anl-9'
lndlena IOZ, Detroit '1
P,_nl• 103, 0.llH ti
eos1on 113, OMceoo 112
H_ .... 1». 5Httle 110
Mllw--11', Utlll '3
T..._.10-..
Boston el lnd'-
S.n An!Oftlo et -Jet1ey &oldafl Stele ti Plll._IPlll•
Lak .... 107, Kint• t4
llAMSAS CITY -IClllQ t, W-.n 17.
Nlerl,.eetller ll, 81rd•ono 26, Ford 1,
Oovoles 2, GNnl•l<I '· I.Key •. Wllltrwy t .
TOl•h 43•11 t4.
LOI ANO•L•I -Wllkn n, 0-1 1•. "bGul-Jeb04tr u, Jollo•on t, Nl•on It,
Cooper 14 8'-r 2 C.rtff I fote11 .. •11
101
SU.. loy Qii..wten
Kon•H City 20 21 2' 20-..
LO• A"9'1M 16 21 J4 ~ I01
Tllro•polnt goe11 -N-Fouled out -
None Taul fouls -K...US City 1•. UK
A11911ft IS A.10,1 ..
Tiie loP 20 t .. ms In The AUOCl1led .........
pr .... _, COl!e91 i......tbell poll, Wltll fl,_.
place -In --· 1 .. 1 _., recor~ end tat• llOlrlb
... ' I tcenhKkY (JOI 'f. QePou+ I Ill
·i • '· l.6ul1vllle m · • • ,,_.ry1-m ~ lncl'-121
• UCl..AUI 7 Or99011 S,toeo 111
I Ylr~o 111 t . Olllo Stele (I I
10 NOIN0.IN " .. ,_,
1 J Loulllienl Slot•
I] Hort" CMOltN
1• low• 1~ TH .. A.A.NI
i. George-. 0 C
17 St .John'•, N Y
11 erllfhMn YCIUn9
1' SyrKllM
20 Arken ...
:It-. , .. 2
J3. 3
1•· 1
21· •
U-10
, .. 4
J4·10
JI· I
22· • »-' 2 ...
21 I 2)-10
2 ...
2'" •
24-s
24-s 2 ....
21· •
Aloo reuhlng votes en al.,...bellcol orclltr
Alab•m•·81rmlngham, Arl1on• Stato,
llredlty, llowllno G'""· C.llforlll•, Cef>.
11•1 Nll<"'91n, o.-. c;.oior-; Conrwc·
tkul, CT.........,,~. lellem K ... woy,
Florida St ... , Fr-S4ete, Oe9rw11, II·
llnolt; •-. IC.,,...., KaMll Sllle; MM-
quatte; ""'"'-· Ml.-sol•: Hel>r .. u ; He•llde·La• II-. Honh CerOllN Stet•. Northern llllrol1; Penn. PIKdve; Rlllgen,
St Jot..,il'1, Pe .• Sen Frencltco SoUlll
Alab.I,.,., StanforG, TenNtU•e, Ton·EI
P .. o, Toi-. UIOll, VIII-••. \llroCnl•
T•<". W•k• Forni, We~lnQIOll Sl•t•, Weber St...,, Wlclllte state, Wyomlno
WOMHI
UQ.A "•UC lt¥1• •
U Ct.. A ""'"' 11, Joyner 2, '""""-I ,
Wiiiie 1. ~ 12, Hopttln1 •. SwenMll 4, Horn 2, E....., II, Tl""''°" 10.
UCI -McC.roo I, Lolbfreld "· /INiet •• WOife 4, w.I"*' 2. Nltcllmen 2, llenfWO 1
ll•IUme UCLA, U.U
Tot11 foul• I.IC INlno 11. UCL.A 20 fleuled
out. Joyner IUCl.AI. Attendotn<• -S,000
~ I I . .
'f •
•
-•'1. ~ .J
WM.llt&H..ca /.MfWll~ w ... ,. .........
l<tn I 11 • l 1' 61 U
¥tll1r'MI ' 1 , " ... Hlrtftn e t •ft M 14 ""'~ • .. ' ., a " Ottrell • • '' a .. 1t t A*'-Dlwlt6M
MllUWMU 10 ) 1 1'J ... U
S1tff•le t I t .. d 2J
Tor..,.. • s 111 .a• .. ttWI St JUttlJ °""-J 10 ' ... " CAllollt18Ll..COHttlltaNCI
Pt.11-lphle
HY lllendlan
C.l .. ry
WHlllllQton
"'Y 111enoer1
St Louis 11.nc-
CelCH'-
Chl<eeO ~ton Wlllnlpeg
ttlltrklDlwhl•
ll •
11 s • • s •
'12 ~OlwllMll " . 10 • • • • • •• I 11
T-...y•1 .sc.r..
OutllK '-Wllllllfllllon l
HY I~ 1. st. LAM111 l
Y111e-4, WllW!lpee I ,. ....... .__
WI 11"""9 IC Kl-.. Phlll4tlpllle at HY ,._,.,..
Ml"'*'* .. Pl~ Oelrell et Ql.9bK
"'-'ttrMI IC T«Cllto
IUffelo .. Oii~
YlllC-•t Edmonton
2I041•
•13102' ..... ,.,
7tl!f11
J 15 .. "
J ,. 14" l ,. u 2J ......
I 74. 11
I JS .. IJ
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lt811en lndoorloumey
let ...... ) ..................
llorn llort Oef. lt-1 Ytn'I Hoff .... 1.
._,, Jen__. dlif ....... T-zy. '"'· , ... '"4; Ulrkll ,._ ......... ~.
M, M ; "°"""Of--VfMellfl Clef, .HI! Kode1 ... 2, M , R-SI""*"' Clef. ICl~ll llubel, 6-4, 44, M ; f'llCM ~def .......
NlcNllNe, ,.._ W ; f'ewl Slozll Clef 1111 Scanlon. , .. , W.
9englaok Ct•ulc:
i.c ........ 'Riii ..... ) ..................
Ivan L.Md def. S.... 11.rVlowltJ, 1 ..... ,
&rlan Teec:Nr def llloeert •enc-r, , .. , ._.
H , Kim Werwl'k def. Georve Hardie, 1 ...
M , Fenll TIY991\ «lei. ROii C.M, M, 4-4. .. l; Rametll l(rlSlllwl Ott 8r1Ke Minton, U, .. J, .. 2; JoM Austin def 511111 _,_ , .... ,. _,_""'"'def Geoff Mesten.
.. J. , .. , ... 1. 1Nr11 E-0.f Anand
AmrCtro1. 1 ... U, M
Argentine ~n
c.t8-tAl,...1 ......................
Hant Gllclltmelltff def Alvaro e.1 ...
court, Ml, W, dlflV41; ltk erOD c.no led C1u10 Motte, S-4, INrces llockevar ceo
RIO Fegal. 4-J (ral11 0llayedl
WotMn'• voa.p.11 "*IOtl COLL•N Golclitft -*I IEMt LM A-le•, IJ-1,
IS-S, 1$4.. "' ... ~ ICI,._....,....,
LAOUM 9Mcll def. s.nt. .... IS-12, lS-11
Mire c .. 1. O.f lltllOI> Montgomery,
IS-12, IS-II.
II T-def 5-u Berllere, 12·1', 1 .. 14 , ....
M•ltr 0.1 def '-'ta~. tS-10, IS.IJ
ClttM,._,....
LOllllWllledef. Cerpln&Hlo, IJ.4, IS-7. .... Olllao Cllf ..... 0..-lel, 1~1'. 154,
15-0 ~:'=..=:..~,~~·t~~ ~t~i.
Misc.
·,
PUBLIC NOTICE
lllt41111 PlllMllllM Orl!lle Caetl 'Dally PllM Hov. J, II. 1t, •, 1• 6tt1• ._...;...; _ _..;.... ___ .-.. ___ _,t'
MOnCll TOCa.OfnNtl ~aul&TaAMSPea lllG. ,..._.. u.c.c.t
PUBLIC NOTICE
ttlCTITIOUI 8UllN .. t
...,... aTA ~IMaWT
Tiie klffoWlllt _._ la lleint 11u111· -· OICIC DAY ASSOCIATH, 112AO
Telllart 11,...1, f'ounl•ln Valley,
Celltomlem.
••rlll• Hull Oey, 14.U2 leecll
ltvd., No. ICD. W.Cmlfl-. CellfOf'lll•
f2'a
This ......,_ Is 'onclY<ttcl Oyen If!.
fl111<11H11.
lertMN.Dey
Tf\ls llllamant ... 111..S wllll 1111
Co11111y Oen o« or.,... c-•Y en
Novem-1, ••
PUBLIC NOTICE
...nn• IUP•••o.t COU•T or TM•
ITATa OI' CAUPOaMIA. "°" TMe CDUNTY ott otlAMa 1'9Q¥k~Ort .. ....
.......... CMl ..... ft101
PLAIHTlttF: AHH MAltOA•l!T
Al..llltT end PAUL ALH.ltT
0.,,.HOANT; AltLIHE MAltll
SIMAHll. o•°"o• HMANIE, Md 0011 I .,.,...,.,. •• lncllllh•
SUMMOtd C.AUMUMH•~
MOTIClll Y• ........ MIM. TIM '"" ""'.a. ........ yell •I-,_...,.. ........... ,.II .......
•ltlllll••P.lt&M ............. ... --· II you wlsll Ill -k 1111 IOVI<• of ...
llttrney In tllh melter. you -uld Oo
•o prompll• 10 tllal yovr written
r•-ae,ll1nv,meyt1elll8donllme.
AVllOI U.... ... ..._ •1111 ·-· II ~ _.. ._...,_ c.ere U4..
U.......U.•-.. IH.r-.... u. ....... LM I•......_ , ... _._.
SI Uslecl -IOllClter II coruejo Oe
un •botAOll en nte Munlo, detlerl•
haurlo lnmeGl•l•menta, Go •II•
mane,., au r_..,u -rtte, 11 ll•y
•IQune, _..tar regl•lreN • tlemPO
TO THI! DEFENDANT: A <1 ¥11
com~alnt Ill• -llled by Ille pC•ln-lllf 191lntl you. II you wlsll Ill Oeleftd
1111• l•ws.vll, you mllM, within 1:1 MYI
ell•r 11111 ~ 11 -"'"' on you,
hie wltll 11\lll C-1 • ..ntlOft •-• lo Ille compleiftl. uni-you OD to,
yo~ O.flMlll will be entered on lfll>lka•
lion of 1111 plelntlff, wlll<ll covlO rewll
1n o•rllllllment of •IOIH· t•lno Of money or -1Y or ouwr rellel , ..
Hov 11, It. 2', Dec. J. ,_, Uu-tO Loi A. 8r...c:11.
------------Clerk
H•U<e la .. , •• , ...... to I
credit•• « alNHll Ill. M0•1t
Tr-··-·._ IMlll,,_ ... u IUU M•lrlc ... 1111•. Cltr
W"tnllNW, Cllul'&y ti 0reft09, .. c.ei ,..,.... ........... ,.,..,
,_,. .. • ll'Mlt ta .,_,, HWM•• ,, ........... .._ ...._. ..,, .. a
Tr•v.I I.Mii USA, City Clf ,,...,,.,., Col. t" el o..,..., ,. ... ., Cll!Himla.
TIM~w•tr~ •te11-.. 111 llM<tl .. , All neck
tr ... fhlU'el, ........... .,,. ..
•Ill of °* Mn<ke 1'91Mft MIM
known •• TEXACO STATION ~·a
IOC•led et lttS ~lw AWft .. , 'I
., Coale MMe, c.nv "Or ..... 54 of~lfwnla. ~ The bulk lrlnlllff wrn .. , ..
molef on w after llW ltlll dey •
Oectmit.r, 1tl0 •I IOiOO e .m. l.
P R 0 I" 8 SS I 0 NA L I SC R 0 it
SElllVICIS. -ectdl'HI Cs tt H~ln "-· t l'MtOffke a.re t U'7 I. S.nte Al\e tl1t1 (92711
c.tfforflll
Tllet .,,. l•t de'9 for llllno c1elm1 1>e
Ille Ol<row rtferred to llertlft Ot
Oe<embel" tt. ••.
So far .. h -1• ltll Trt111fer•
ell bolsl-• nen.s..., .--.,..r,
by Ille Tr-.Nfw tor 1111 pest '"'\ts .,. ....... Semo.
0.1.0: Octa11er n. 1• In·
Enotll Hutcllcrell
Tr-ferM ~•OJl81110MAt.. •sc•O'
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~Off-... 0-
._ ... ,CM ...... tull
·---~, . Pllbll-Cir'-CMM o.lly Pllo
... _ "· ·-.. :IA-t
PUBLIC NOTICE •••
111-Qve\led l11 uwcomp1a1nt Pvoll~ Or-Cotti Dally Piiot, i OATl!O ~-y ,,, ,..,
PUBIJC NOTICE =Y si1v1, ... ,..,
------ELD•ID & O'•OU•lll l"ICTITIOUI aUlfMHI 11-IJ... A-Mya .. uw NAMa ITAT&MaNT
PICTITIOUI IUllNl'.11 UI Nertll er.. II..._, ,..!:!:oll-"'O --11 -,.. bu•~
NAMalTAUMIMT '411te• lal CHAPMAN SHOWltOONI Co blt!~~:!CT: :;:"2:;:,~.: ~r:r:;::--•tt• f:1A~~t~!s~i"1:~~,:~~=
Avenw, 1.....-, CMlf.,.,,,. '2714 ~-AIWt -Mein 51,..1, lrwlno, Cellfeml• tVI• t
Sk•to• Com11enlH, Inc • In ,_A...., L••-F -~ M.. llol• ""'-etad 111 Si.ta el Del•..,.. 1099r. , ... S..0-llto Dnve, Wl\lttier
Tiiis ~ h '4111C1uc"41 b'f • CM· Puoll"'"' Or-C.0.11 Dally Piiot, C•llfornl• -PCH'•tklfl. T1111 llltlllnou It ~ '" • $ILAQQll COmpMill, inc Hov 1• 12• !t, 1', ,., «ll-tO dlwkluela (H-& Wlf•I
~!: ~.~;.'°'"' PUBLIC NOTICE Tnis :.:= ".!"1':::'r.,t11 ,,..
Tlllt ... -.. •M filed wllh uw l County Cletll ot Or-County 01 County Clerk Of Ore-County en llOTIC:S UIVITI ... a1D1 Nove-10. 1•.
Novemtl«S 1• RECEIPT Of' P~l..S: '"... 1"14'11t • . .. ,.,. PtoPOWll wtll ... received by 1111 City PUOll-Or-C...11 Delly Piiot
PvOll.-Cir' .... Coell Diiiy Plio., of lrwlrw, 0wnor of llW Won!, In l?w "· Hov 1', 1', Dec.1 •. 1•. t• ~
Nov 12 tt 1' o.c:. J ,., 11.>1• Ilea of .. City c-ti, loQiled IC 17100
' ' ' ' J•mllOrM R-. '"'lno, c.tltornl•.
PUBLIC NOTICE '211•. uncll 2 00 11.m , on Nowlnll« 15,
,,.,, !or uw ~•rucll.., of Sc>e •Gell PUBLIC NOTICE
tlon, Ttw Ill• of _.. ,, lo<ltld al l"ICTITIOUI au11N•fl M·1Jl1' 1 Cul•ordolt Community Auoclotlon N.t.Ma STAT8MINT
JllCTITIOUS IUSINalS Park J7.M Hamilton Street, Irvine. Tiie lollowlng perM>n• ere Go1n9
NAMe ITATIMIENT CA !MnlnHl H
Tiie lollowln1t perM>tU '"' dolnQ OESCRIP'TION OF WORK AOdl CANYON OE\IEl.OPMENT CO
Oonlnn•• hon of 5" cpoo11 -re1ate0concrot• JHO CaGllloc Avanue, Su11e C
THE WARMINGTON GROUP. flat worll -l'"'lno EHGC,..EER'S Cotta Me .. ,C.tlfornlatlU•
llO" Fllcll A-lrvlne, Celllornl• EST I MA TE $17,000 Norman l(aufman, u Rot ~ y
'1114 OPENING OF PROPO!>ALS Tlw Knoll. 1rv1ne.C.llfor11lat27IS
THE 8UO WARNIC NG TON p<.,_.IS .. m °"publicly_,.., -Ger-40 J Souu, nl61 Wallu>Qtoro
COAPORATIOff. • c.atlfoml• corpor reed •I 1 00 p rn. on Nowm""r 2S, L•ne. Hunllnglon Beach ca11tqrn1•f
llon, 1ll061 Fllcn A•enuo, Irvine 19'0, al Ille -.-..110fted oflk• of ·•2M6 •
Cellfornl•'l?lt• tno Ow,_. I Tnl• bu••neu h conClu<leG oy •l't Sandy Slr!Ollng .. A"4Klaln, • 0 8 T A I N I NG c 0 N T RA c T "",,..,., P¥1na .. 11lp
I Callfornl• a>f'PC>t•llon. ''°" Flier• DOCUMENTS Tl• uie<Jflullon• are Hor,,_, H Kovfman #
itwn ... , lrvl,., Cehfoml•t2714 ent1lled "CulftrGol• Community Thh slot-I wn llled w1111 ll>f
Tiii\ IKl•lnou I• <°"""cteG Oy • Park * --CIP *'" · Pl..,. County Clerk 01 Orenoa County on
-r•I __....,..., '"" •pec:lllcetlont end •II contr•" No .. mlMr u , ,,., TIWludWermift4110ftCorP docUINl!b _, ... -llWd ,....,,. .... FlffJM
• Callfomlo <WP«•llon I 1>99Mtment of Pullll< Wortlt, City of Pv1>11.-Or-c...11 Delly Piiot. ~G WarmlngtonJr Irvine. 11200 J-Aoed, lrvlno. Hov tt 2t OK.l 10 1• 441..ao ............ Call .... -. A_,,.,...., ..... •tS ' . ' •
Tllff ........,. -flMd wllll IN .ill lie~..,~ Mt" -.C. . PlJllUC NOTICE ~ County Oertl of Or-C-ty WI "'9flts. tit---"lul,_ .. 111 lie
I Hove-s. ,., ~ ,.,.,..., tor en eclllltloMI ,,,.,Ill' of U
NOl'ICI Ott HU•INO -" PROPOSAi.. GUAltAHTEE Eo<ll .,ICTIT10US BUSlllffS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\111 Publlllwd Or-.ge Coell Delly Piiot, pt-81 "'911 lie acom-led by • NAME STAT•M•NT
tlw Boero ol Supervl....-• of the County I Nov u. 19, 2', O.C: l . '"° ·~ <er11fllcl or cMlller'• Clw<k or bid OOlld Tiit follow1no person• ••• Clo•no-
ot Oro-. Stele Of C.ltfornlo fie• l>Y ---------'\ In llw •-of 10 pe~enl of the lof•I t>u~•U ·~
Resolution a.led Iha "" G•Y of Hov PUBUC NOTICE "'"price_..,.. to.,.. City of '"''no ~Al/RANG HOME MOVIES tJOO
omber. ,.,, dlc:lorecl Its 1n1..,11on to a•• 0._.,. .. ll\llt the-· 11 llll Ad•m•. •21H, Coste '-Wu. C.. 91~1•
onneM Iha •ullo<y OIM:rl°"" below IO l"ICTITIOUI •UllNEU pr~l 11 K<APled, •Ill prOmplly ... , Kulel<p Slngll 8"°9fl, IJOO AGam•
Orange c-tty $trHI LIQl>tlnQ Main-NAMI[ STATl!Ml!NT KUii .,.. contrect, -vr• payment of II 21H, C.0.141 Mew, c.. '2•2'
lenenu Oblrl<I No 10, or>J llH ll•e<l 1 Tiie 101-lno penon I• doln(I IKlol Wor•m..,•• Ctlmpem•llon ll\l4.lranca. HavlnOlr Kour Bll•mb,.. llO<I
Weone1G1y lllt 10th Gey ot n.u.. ond lurnhh • aall•fa<tory Fallllful Adam•. •27H. C.OS141Me .. ,C. '26I•
OClumbl<, t•. 11 llw ~ of t lO JUI.ES ET CIE 110 Newoorl Pertor"*"° 8oftcl In tho .,,_t of TIUl _,,.., " '°"""''" Oy ""
O'CIOO A.M. of w•G .,.., In -°"'"' Center Ori•• Suitt :IOO Newport 100 per~ of Ille IOCll l>ld prl<o -• lndl•lduoll--•Cl•I
I
tiers of, .. lloarG Of Super•tl«l Of llw 8ea<" Collfomle 92..o l.100r end Molerl•h 8ond In Ille N K 8hembro
COV'ltf of Or-In Ille Hall ot AG· I J.;11• Anne Clln.. 31171 Coral amount of 100 percent of -total lllcl Tnll ll•l-1 was fllocl •111'1 11"
mlnlllrotlon, 10 Civic Cini•• PIAI• Pla<1.l.-N19\Ml,Celifom1ati•ll p<l<t County Clerk ot Oronoa County o
Senta AN, Callfornla, .. , .. 11 ..... ..., T"I• llUllneu •• conduelld Oy an In WAGE AATES Al r-lre<I ""SK No11emt>or •. ,..,
pl•co for -M¥lfll voon Ille qunt1on GlvlOuol hon 1713 of llw CeOtornla LI-C-. Ft I Of ••IO .,,.,. .. 1ion end all OOje<llon\ JvflO Ch,. tno 0w-i.. -mlnoo llw _,.I PuOllll\ed Orenot C...•I 0.oly PllOI
llM.relo Al *"IC" time and pta<e all 111 This •t-1 ,. .. flied ,.Ith .,.. prevalllfltl rates of._. In ltll l«all-~S, IJ, lt,11, 1"1!1 «
t>••rG No""m.,... I, ltlO perfornwo. CAlpleo of Mid WA9fl rete I
tarul.O PlnoM .nay •POe•' •ncl be I County Clerk of Oro-COV'llY on ty In .. 111ch Ille work 11 lo b• PUBLIC NOTICE
AGdlllonal lntormaUCW> m•y be oo ttl.-il c11ti.rmln.lllloN ere melntei,_ M Illa
telned from F G Mclella n at Publl-OrenotC...110.llyttllet, offkHofUWOwnor ..... .,.ll\lell*e "CTITIOU1aU11N•1S tel~-17141 IJ.l.J4tl Hov n, tt,3'. Dec J, ,,., •J».tt -,_,., Ttw Centrector slWlll .._. STATaMSMT
"' .ny time prior to .,,. time fl•ed _, • ~ Of Mid~ ., Mell The fOll-no --II dol1>9 .......
tor lle•rlno. WIY Interested persoftl 1 PUBLIC NOTICE l lob••• n. ClafltrKT• AIWI..., tub-noun
s-rvl-. of tlla County ot Orange ------111en llw _., .... ,....,,.111no rll• of TING, t.>41 11\dvttn Woy, Unit NI. mo,111ew1111111ec1or11otttw8oordof l contrKlor-hlm-flpeyftOllHI PERRVS AUTO IOOY & PAIN·
•rlllen objeetlon• to -pro_..s An• JllCTITIOUI •UllN•H waon to •II _....., ..........,... ... llw w .. 1mlNler, C•fltoml• •JIG
,.. .. lion, -objecllom wlll be con· MAM« ITATIMl!NT eucllll_, ol Ille contrlCI Perry Wl"lem Elwood. U S71 S..,._
•tOlred by ... IOtnl OI 5-rVIM>n Al Tiie loUOWl"9 """'" .,.. dot"9 PROJECT ADMINISTRATION All nycrut l.n Hunllnoton II••<"
tlw 11me -P'K• ll•e<I tor nearino bvsin .. ses 1-11-rw111t1 .. I• 1N1 pnle<t prior CllHorlll• .,.., A·-· dHerlptlon of WIG t•rrlloo l•I CUSTOM "PPl.IC ... TCOH to llw Ol*Wne. lllcbslWlll beclCracled Thia -i .... I• conov<lld bY ... In
11 conlllrwd In R-lullon No IO·lllt, SYSTEMS, 121 C.A.S .• MO Canter to Project NleftAQff. Ootpart,,.,...t of dlvlOueC
d•led N-.. ,.., of Ille loarG SlrMt, Calle MH•, c.ellf<>r1'11 .,.,, P..OllC ---. Qty of lrvlno. Petry w l!l-
of Supervl--, on ll10wilft1tw CC.rk of Ke ...... J."'*'"'811,_C_r OWNE•'S RIGHTS ltESERllEO T11C1 llOl-1 w• ICl..S with"'"
Ille......,. s..tperwl-1 Tlw terrllory SlrMl,t..•te-.Celltomlet2'27 Tlw 0..... ~Iller..,,. lo reJ«I County Cler" of 0r•"99 C-ly on
11-... y-rl-HfOfl-1 Lerry Gorlln, JJt I I Windward .ny or .,1 bids. to wllw My lf'lformell· November l, ltlO.
Seid .,.... .. 1ion contl•ls of •Po Wey, El T-. Calttorn .. tK:ID I'' In a llld, -lo,.,.... awerdt In tlw Jlt41S11 proalmotecy 11 ecrel,. locatecl on "'" Tiii• blt1lno11 I• c'"ductlCI by • 1n1 ... e11 of Illa Owner. PuOllllwd Or-Collt Diiiy PllOI,
IOUlll llCM Of Bryan Awn ..... ,_~ general P1'1norlhltl. D•lt Nowmberl.19'0 HO• "· u, Dec: l, 10, 1• -~..,
Y•i. A--Jelluy ROIG In tne K-J N-lfnon CITYOF 1•VINt! PUBUC NOTICE
Korth 1rv1M .,... n.1.s ... ..._.. "" "'"" """ 111e •v •-t... Otl...,, OAT•O· Ill•• • .,. oey of Nowm""r County Cieri! of Orange C<Mlnly on ~City CICtrtl ,., HOftmll« 7, ,., PubllllWCI Or-Col•• Delly Pllol --.. ICTITIOUI •u•1NIU
IV OROE• OF THE BOARO OF 111 ..... , NOV IJ, If,'"° 44'S-aO NANll! ITAT•M•NT SUPt!•VISOR& OF OAANOE COUN· Publlllled Ot-Coel1 Delly Piiot, -----Tllo fotlowlng perlOll II doift1I ""''
TY. CALIFORNIA Nov n. "· ... Dec J, I~ -•~tMO PUB UC NOTICE ....... JU ... EALEXANOER -THE PACIFIC •ESEAACH
ISEALi Cieri! ol lh• Board at PUBLIC NOTICE -,.:-117J2 INSTITUTE, Sulle IOO, 1613S A'-t
S11per·vl10t1 ol Oronge COuftly, HOTICETOCltlDITOAS quln Stree1, Huntington 8e•Cll,
C.llforlll• ·117" OJI IULlt T.......... Calllortlla.,...
' Ptlblltned Clr'Mge C.0.ll Delly Piiot, IU~l•ICM COU•T 0, CALIPOltNIA lien. •tt1 .. 111 U.C.C:.I JAn lAe Sleftns, llS-S c.lllorlll1
Nowemll« It.''-IMO •*'80 COUMTY OJI OllANOI Nolke la llerebo/ O\Wft 1• <reclllCH't of St,..et. Huntington Be.ell, Cellfornl• , .. Clw c-on...... Uw wlllllft ,,.,...., tr-•ertal ,.,., • ~
PUBLIC NOTICE
·-·
..--. ~ fml "11-1renmr 11 ~ to be moo. on '"''....,._cs~-by en ln-
MAltltlAGE OF penonal property heralnoltar dlvldUal.
PETITIONER: aEYllltLY lltlE cllttcrl-.
ltESttONOl!HT; MICHAILO. BREE Tiie Nmet end bltSllWU -rnt Of
IUllMllC*I CttAMIL Y I.AW) tlw lntenclltd tr-feror> ttre ·
CAM NUMlltle 0.11WU •O•ERT 0. 81.ACK&U•N, Jlt
NOrlC•I •nd MARY ALICE &LACICSUlllH,
Y• ._ .,._-'-n.. ~May t16i... -;,,. A-, lel-lal...O.
_.... ....-,.. ..... ,_ ..-. c.111oml•'*2
llMN --,_ ....... wtlMll • Tiie ne"'" end bull"°'•..,, .. , Of NP. ... _._._ ..... Ille lnlended tren ... reH ere Oo bel
If.,_ .... ta_. ....... ef • JOSI"" J. ltElHV INI OAYLI!
JwilAeSl•Wfta Tiiis 1tet_. Wft llled with llw
Count, Clerll of Oro1191 County on
Hovem-11,IW ,,,_,
Pvl>ll-Cir' ..... C..9i Delly Pli.t,
NOW "· •• Dec. J, ••• ,,., .....
PUBLIC NOTICE
_......,Ill ... .-,,,_ ...... • AEZHY, U•Vr -1nt A.,.., .. , &el-tt1CTIT10UI aUJIN•U • ........., • .. ,_. r...-. W lsllfld, CAllManU '*2 ...,_. STAT811i11MT
......., .. _,,,....,,........... fllel -~y llffllnoftl -et• Tiie foll-Ing perMn1 ere -nt
AVttol ' la detcrllled In .....,e1 e1 bUllnoH et
Uute lie llf• .. ,..eafefe, •1 All tlecll In tr-, lllltwel, equip. DINl~O WITH DUKIE, ,._ YI• .,....... ,_.. .-c.llMr __.. U.. IM menl •M fDOCI will end I• IOC.ted •t· Oporto, Hewport 9Ncll, GI. f2'U
..,.... .. • -... W. ,......_ 1141'1 """"'° A-... , ... 161-· Lovu Oenlll Ftll•ca••. 4MI ..... ........ l.M .. ......_ ... CellfornloftML Potrlle A-. No--1 llNCJI. C:.
.. ...... TIW llUll-. n1me -by -Mid t2fl4J _,.,_. .... ~:i.c.-111• 1ren1teron et Hid 1ec:atlon II Morletl Ellloll. oQ02 ttetrlel ltOIMI, w ...... • .... ....,... ALICIA'S :IOGO BllAUTY SALON "''"port 8"dl, GI. f2M) ••nrl• ...... , ••• -.... .. .... Tllat ..... llvflt ,,...,.r It In~ to Tiii• MlllMS II (OllCIU<led by •
,,......, • ,,_... • ~-. • co111111n-teotl ti 1111 office of llmlled 1Mf'l_.alll11 .. , .......... -......... • WllSTll•N 111\UTUAL ESC•OW LNIO flell•••
........ COlttlOltATIOH. Lt Hellrl, Thia llllWNnl -fMM wllh Ille
1. TO THI ltESPOllOSNT C.Hloml•. Oft or .,., ~r "· C.W.ly '""" .. ~ .... Ceunlv ... Tiie ,_...._, 1191 ftled a pet!Ueol 1M .._ -
co11terl!llll f9W ,.,.,,. ..... If 'fOll fell TM -IM..,,_" ow.,.,..., ve-•, 1 • ,, .....
ta flit • ,_.... wltllln • .. .,. ef ti. wltll •'*'1 clelmt fMY lie flllld la ,.~,.,.. Or-CM•• O.lly I'll« .... ht WI _._ I& _,,.. M o.r.tll, __.,, alt W. U H.Mrt H S 1• It a t• , .,_ dlfMt _,, .. ""'""~ tlwf,, (lt.O ... Ml, Le t4Hre, :.;.6;;.";.;·..;.:.•~"';;_.;.:.•,;.;.;.•..;.;... __ .,..,._...-.-. = <eton _., --........... -CelllArfll• tc!Wl, .,... tlle 1•1 ...., .... I P1J8UC NOTICE ""''"' llljllM'tlw., -.r.,.,. ,_ tnlllt ,...,.,. ..., My ,,...,,., llNll ...
anllflt ........ ..,....ny, 9"11 .. , o.c-.n• ".:'°· wM<ll I• tile ....i. tttCTITIOUt aUllMHI ..,._.n, dllle ~. ~.-.rt. -· INlfOn --IOll dele I _.,..., ITATaMIWI' """"'' ..... <--. .... ..o...., ,. '"'"'".....,. ,.__ I .. H llllY .. .,.,.,.. ... lfw -'• te Ill• II -ta Mid ltll.... TM lei._... W-II ...... ~
TM .. INV-lt ef ...... IMllll " ,,_,.._ _.. .-.... TrMM•t ._ .... It I C 4 8 )t e CU T 1 V e ~ W ~fty, er .... , C-1 ~ ........... Mlllt.wt """'-• ..,.,_.,_ .......,.. fNY , .. ,._ MIMI.,_...,.... w+tlllft 1M """ ~•O,l•TIH IH CAiL.,,OltJUAI,
'"" ¥"" .... jNlltl "°"11. 1tMi We'tlflttltll a..-., HllnllHt..-
otlH ~11>,1• o. ... ,,.._...., .. ,. ~~.="::':::: .... , ... ~ .. ,.,
LMA. ~ =~i"y W..,._,.. ..._, -.&lne'ltlliMacll.
::..-....... 1,...T,...._ C..1"4'1119_.
o.utY ' •• .., ••• •UT UAL uc•ow Tllh ..,,_. .. ~..-...... '"
llUQtAllU .. ~IL COAP. ..~ ....... • ...., "' ... """*" ... _.. -J~ ... .........,~~ • Tith ........ -,..., •1111 ... .... t.-~.o..... . ~:.~•Or .... c:.;llytAOc• ......., •••• u .... · ...... -..~.., ...., ... ,. ... ~o..-.. c:.ea. DeQY _,..... •-:.;:.:. =:' c.9* o.tty "'"" ..,.....,.. ar.., Ol9tl DttAr/••IO'.
... ,, 11.lf, .. OK.a,1• 411HI ~tt,1• ..... ""·"·•· t16.t• .at.a
------- -- ----------
....w111V • GU W aEN"I' 101t oittOov.
E4 UDd Bron Jr. aDd his comJllJ•lon eh<tnan,
former attooaut J\uueU "Rut.y" Seltwe~art.
Diplomatic Sehwelekart hu linee aalwd 10cne
OI tbe IDJmoslt.y toward the commlllton, P•~f by
ldml privately tbat cha.nae ia indeed l&l order,
So unday at a beariq ln SU P'n.nclleo,
let. ekart will alt down witll a three-member
Senate subcommittee to diacusa eb.iance. ADd be
Will brina aJon1 the comml.sslon't own p('Opoeall
for cbanitnl ltaell.
TWO OP THOSE MElllBEU have been tbe
commiaaion'a moat strident critics.
The chairman ia Sen. Barry Keene, a
Democrat from Elk on tbe north cout who aaya
ener1y ii vital for jobs in his district. It la Keene
who led the aaaault last summer. He accuaed the
com miaalon of extractint more than $100 million
from the electricity rate payers ln five years
"without providin1 California with a ain&le watt of
energy."
The commission is supported by a surcharge
on everyone's electricity bills.
Member Sen. Alfred Alquist, D·San Jose, ia co-
author of the Warren-Alquist Act that created the
commission -but seeing what be had wrought,
look lo calling it a ''Frankenstein monster."
THE TIDRD MEMBER, conservative Sen.
Marz Garcia, R·Menlo Park, is notoriously hostile
to bureaucracy of any kind.
Keene's bill last summer to reorganize the
commission won a majority of Senate members
who apparently agreed with the "$100 million
sting'' description by Michael R. Peevey, director of
the Califo~ia Council for Environmental and
Economic 8'l~ce1 n:iade up mostly of businesses.
many energy\>nenUIG.
But the bill ran aground m an Assembly com-
mittee, the commission bemg defended mostly by
environmentahst groups
TIDS TIME AROUND, however. Keene says
he hopes an attitude or cooperation will prevail.
Keene said in an interview, "Some of these en·
vironmental groups are taking a chance of being
stopped in their tracks. They just can't go on say.
ing 'No' lo everyone."
He said he and Schwe1ckart have been getting
along well, ''and I hope we can expand such a spirit of
cooperation to others.·•
THE COMMISSION WILL propose reorganiz·
ing the basic structure of state government -the
commi'8ion and other agencies, says its executive
director, John Geesman.
It will also emphasize the problem or liquid
fuels in the 1980s m the way that the commission
addressed the problems of electricity in the 1970s,
Geesman said.
In fact, the commission's biennial report, to be
out at the end of the year, "will largely declare
those problems in the electrical sector to be re·
solved," he said.
TRIS WAS DONE MAINLY by reducing the
annual forecast.a. When the Warren·Alquist bill
was be~ debated six years ago, the electrical
utilities were predicting that the demand for elec-
tricity would keep right on rising about 7 percent
per year.
Commissioner Ron Doctor, who was then testi-
fying as an expert witness from the Rand Corp ,
the Santa Monica "think tank," estimated that
meeting such a demand would require 100 or more
power plants which, if strung out along the coast.
would have to be located every eight miles by year
2000.
FORMER COMMISSIONER Alan Pasternak
now calls that projection ''nonsense," and adds. "I
think Rand should forever be ashamed for letting
thatgetoutthedoor with their name an it. . "
But Doctor's projection made headlines and
obviously won support for the bill. Since then, the
commission's forecast has shrunk to 1.5 percent
per year as electricity consumption has decreased
This, plus the lowering of the utilities' reserve
margin capac ity that can be tapped if
something breaks down -has relieved Califor-
nians of having to support investments of $30
billion to $40 billion. s ays Schweickart
KEENE, WHO IS ANTl·NUCLEAR, says the
concern for the coast contributed heavily to anb
nuclear opinion "Many coastal people said, I think,
that for that reason. we've J{Ottostopnuclear ••
The coaat also was -and still is -a high
priority of the other CO·author or the Warren·
Alquist Act, former Assemblyman Charles War·
ren, D·Los Angeles.
Warren later headed President Carter's Coun·
cil on Environmental Quality, and is now with the
new Alliance for Coastal Management, composed
of users of the coast, environmentalist.a. de-
velopen and local and regional officials.
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
•Residential up to 4 units
no takeout commitment required
•commer'cial Buildings Takeout commitment required aklng
With leases
•oranie County Properties
•tand Loans up to 1 year
50% or appralaal
--
such u the Air Resources Board on ener11 quea·
Uooa,
·~re J) dlsasreement. over wtlat needs to be
done to meet need.a • . . The decision ma.ken are
unclear aboijt POU.CY direct.loo.
''I bad hoped the commission would provide
such l\ddance to the utilities and the public. But I
don't aenae it la being effectively given." Warren
aaid.
Keene's bill lhal waa defeated in the Anembb'
last year would have apllt. lb commlulon into a
stale departrntnt, under the governor'• authority.
to run programs such as conaenatkm and a com·
mission to approve utllltlea' power plants . The remedy, said Keene: 'Decision· malting has
Df.ff erent eras meet
Campus meets
forbidden
PALO ALTO (AP> Stanford University's
graduate business school -one of the nation's
most respected suppliers of executives -ha.a
forbidden a management consulting firm from in·
terviewing students on campus, officials reported
The Boston Consulting Group admitted that it
interviewed 14 first.year foreign students before
recruitment officially begins in February.
Stanford has limited interv1ew time because
the administration considers some recruitment
disruptive to study by first year students.
Recrwters for Boston Consulting, however,
were permitted to interview first year students
outside the campus and to continue on-campus in·
4.erviews of setond year students
LL
CORNER Rare Coln• & Stamp•
GOLD & SILVER
Prtcea for 11-18-aO
lllY .. 0 .911.H Co·existing within stone's throw of each
other in Evanston, Wyo., are (above)
trailer parks and new apartments. Fast-
growing communities have been spawned
by boom in oil and natural gas. Stacks of
Laramie H1ver power plant near
Wheatland (below) rise Wtexpectedly ad·
jacent to farm and grazing land as two
forces compete for open space.
..., -$636 ~
tu!. ~u"·'° .. 11 so
'767. n• nu,_ u1s'
f,ac9DMil l(t"'9tf",.0. H~ Wt
CellllHc-~
'Weighty' issue Mini Office
For '20 Mo.
NEW YORK (AP) Retaining long-time P 0 Box Msgs Pio.gs & Sec
385 7 Birch 0 C A1roort employees "who are no longer carrying their
weight" is one of the major reasons why com-
panies run into trouble and often go out of busi·
ness, says a management consulting firm. A. E
Getzler & Co of New York
Mewport Beach
Cc1 92660 7141549 2287
The Pos1 801t
AMAZllG llEW
GAS-SA 11110 DEVICEI
'MY PAGER ANO I ARE PARTNERS '
My business deals n \f'•v•ce 10 ltlf'
public t>t•no avaolab e al all hmes 1s a
musl Ansv.tt Pdgt fnsu1es lnis My
Nger ano I are panners us sa1ary· •
1vs1 a lew aollars .i mooin Tl>e rest
15 muie•
H C Murpny
H C Mu1pny Plumbrng
Bu~n.i Par~
"E¥81 wmt fWIKJI II TME TllUCIC..."
• II' s hU hav•OQ eomeone Ill! YoU on 1111 shoulder
to Nyyoua,.wanled ·
··Aly A Cumbefllnel
AC&R Air CondrtlOlltfs, Attriger aton
Gardin GfOYt
"DURING THE GASOLINE CRUNCH
WttAT MORE CAN I SAY?
w'll>Pn 9~· oaQ"d ~ ,,,. es lrom
lh• oll••e dn(I un bl rout
10 aMlhr• customer rear lhal
•ou 11on Ar•swer PaQe pays
011 lo •Is h•Qh~\I degree An<I
wolh my buson~ss 11 napPf!nS al·
mosl 11a1ly I 11 tit k>~t wlttlool 11'
JonnS [)jmmlf
A<IOl>f Eog1neer5 Ill(
Downey
"WE HAVE GAIHE'll ACCOUHTS "
Answer Page ,,,s PIOVldeO us
mstanl conlacl with our men tn lhe
liel<l We 11a11e ga1ne<1 accounls
by being able lo get to eme1uency
c.ills and QM! our customlfs quick
'leMCtl wllen lhl'y NMI a problem · •
Jtm Cronk
Hydm 1'9sl Control Co
lOsAngtllH
"THE ONE THING THAT SETI ME APART ''
In re.ii es1a1e your calls trom tlltnts are
your hleblood One 111109 1,,,1 sels me aparl
lr!JT1~1Sl!lill l!'f c.lilsg!l to f'f9N(JNI '
··Ed.Jones
Century 21 11• Ettitt.
lll<twooel
"1'111 HOT 801HG TO MISS OEllV1:RING A IAIY .•• "
I can rtlU outsldt ot nomro .1nc:t ollic. kl'O'#lng
lhat I m no1 goino 10 miss dehveung .1 bib'(
when I m 'bflW9t
1oca11011s·
Eugene R SolllT\ln. M 0 taflOQ.I Par!(
An9N« Page can *1 )Q.I to ~ ptooe f.alls 24 hrurs a day in Lm AfV!leS, Orange,
Rlvef'Slde, San Bernardino and parts Of Ventura counties There Is no limit to the number of
''beelll'' YoU can ~· and no extra phone charges Of special ecjulpment to lnslal. wt.fl ~wants yoo, Just dial oo arrt phone. It's as easy as trait ca11 us tOOay kx al to
details! Rr.iSWBl ffi(jE
... ~-·--,
radio
pager
WIDE. AREA
COVERAGE
Orangt Coanty, L.A. ('ollll
ty, San ~runllllo Couty.
IUnnlck Couty.
'17.75
&otal mo. cost
no depOsrt on
credit awovaJ
ORA,CI C OlJ"H
UOIO HllPttO..,f
\fl\'l(t l'I,( '°1 S SANTA FE
SANTA ANA
835-3305
(714) 556-6850
Souths;,.o.:!!.~!•e!!r ~!ll•ge
IAcro.1.--""""I
YES
you co n afford
o Cac:lilloc
~ COSTA MESA
(7 14) S 4<H) l(X)
(:.!I ·~) S87 82()()
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to wo rk for you
EARN 16%·18%·22% ON 6 MONTHS TO
ONE YEAR SOLIDLY SECURED 1ST T.D. NOTES
$1000°° MINIMUM INVESTMENT
1 ST TRUST DEEDS AVAILABLE TO $500,000
Ask US ABOUT IPHA
INDEPENDENT PRIVATE HOUSING ASSISTANCE
Our 16% 1st Trust Deed Program.
WHY IPHA?
• We back lndependeftt Private Housing Assistance to
assist in res1dentiaf home sales
• Single family residences only -buyer arranges his own 10% to
30% down payment for purchase
• FHA, VA, FNMA, appraisals only
• 70%-75%-80%-90% Loans Available to Home Purchaser
Your money Is deposited with a title trust co. f)nd trust deed
recorded to you. "TITLE RECORD D."
Call Direct or Collect for
Details & Free Brochure
VN'%VERSA.L)
S'INANCIAL
,\)11ol tt.'-
HUNTING TOH HARBOR
1 IMOO ~ COMC HtgtrtlfeJ
Huntingtofl 8-:t\, CA OM48
(7141 848-65e7 (213 592-3557
Offices in:
ORANGE 1083 H GluMll Ave
Omioe. CA 1126e7
(714) 171-6440
ONE Of THE NA TIOH'S
LARGEST SECONDARY
LENDERS FUNDING OVER 100
MIWOH OOLLARS
YEARLY
HOURS
Weekdays 8 to 6
Saturdav 9 to 1
NEWPORT BEACH eeo New1IOf1 c.nw Dr1v• Suite 250
Mew1)0f1 BMd\, CA 92980
(7141 044-1923
Upland, Pasadena, Walnut Creek, San Joae, Oceanside, Citrus Heights.
San Diego, Palm Springs. San Bemardlno, Los Angeles, Hayward,
Encino, BurliflOame, and San Francisco
---------------------~ Pl.EASE CONTACT ME AT
HOME
NAME
-----BUSINESS
''WE INVEST
IN CALIFORNIA
FOR
CALIFORNIANS!"
••••••
t
Winter's petroleum
supplies ~qyate
TULSA <AP> -U.S. retlnen will bave "more than adequate"
abWty to meet lbe country'• demand for fuel oil th1a wl.oter Wlleu
IUPPli• lrom lbe Yldclle Eut.,. further diuupted, the OU and Gu
Journal report..
"Instead ot feelln1 comlort.ble with record levela of crude and
product stock.I, reflnen are holdiq their breath. Tbey know tbe
1ltuaUon could euily chance with an lnterrupUon of crude oil 1up.-
pllea from tbe Persian Gulf." tlM weekly buslneas ma1aalfte re-
ported.
Worry over the Iran-Iraq war ii ovenbadowln1 other va.rlablea
in the winter fuel outlook, the Journal said.
Although the U.S. Imported a small part of ita oil from Iran and ·
Iraq, a more widespread conflict would affect 11upply aareementa and
spread the shortfall amon1 all the natiooa ln the International Ener1y
A1ency's 11barin4 prorram, the ma1aline said.
d clVi~J!im•~n•t ..........
WHICH CLOSING COS1"S DEDUCTIBLE?
Expenses connected
with the sale of real
estate over and above
the selling price are
known as closing cos·
ts. Some of these are
deductible from your
income tax -others
are not.
Property taxes are
usually pro-rated so
that both the buyer
and seller each pay
the taxes for the por-
tion of the year that
each owned the pro-
perty. each may de·
duct this amount -
and only this amount
-even though one or
the other pays the en-
tire amount.
Another deductible
Item that appears tn
closing costs, is in-
terest charged to you
on the mortoaoe up to
the date of closing.
Also deductible as in-
terest Is the amount
charged as points -
provided they are
charged as a pre·
mium for the loan of
the money -not
when charged for
services.
Non-deductible CIOS·
ing expenses are fire
insurance, FHA
mortgage insurance,
and charges for rent
for occupancy before
closing.
963-8182
Business Money
$5,000-$250,000
Loans & Lease Transactions
Preliminary Commitments
Within 48 Hours
Funding Within 5 Days
Information Taken Over
The Phone
CALL (714) 752-1411
l•IBUSINr§~EY I
tll6l-...r.c~a._,,()IUIY1: .. , 1WM CA•7tt0 f1••>7V-t•1•
IUl.SOAA'f'"l_CUllWlv,.""'-"ft~f°" ~1'!0YftllJV§9A.ll()tt
~t..Qilrrlrie, ..... CttOOJlll~O.:Wl~I OM90wf:""«»•••~O .. ,,Mtf .. lllM.#ll)~~
You Canl Bil Iha Orange Coast
Wilhoul Iha Daily Pilot
Ancl Coast Life.
Bron~ liooterg
The urban oowboyhas taken a bow-legged stride all the way
to the Blg Apple. Evidence of the growing trend tq_ward
western wear is this boot store in New York CitS'. Al
Martinez, left, and Robin Steakley, co-owners of store To
Boot, showoff display of expensive footwear.
Over The Counter
MASDu..._..
• •• • . ,, 1~ellt_
MOSCOW <AP> c..:;;: Tbe
Ualou II expected to a •
IOOD ~ blitell lin.le ~
WHt bwlloeaa deal -a tu
bllllon, 2,400-mlle pJpelint to
aupply Weatem Europe Wttb
natural 1u tor the n1t ol;the
century. Some Americana cauUon
tbat completloa of lbe
WMlern·flnanced pf'Qject, tllree
tbnea the len,u. ol the Alu~ plplellne, eowd make me
of tbe Western defenae com-
munity dependent on Sotlet
enero and make them vulden·
ble to what orie source called
"pollUcal blackmail at the tum
of a awttcb."
But weatern Europe•n•,
senaltive to the problema ot 1m·
port.Inf oU from the politically volat le Middle East, llre
described as anxious to ~m
plete M&otlatJona OD the IU .line that will start In the froien fl~lds
of. northwestern Siberia and dip
1oulb lnlo Poland or
Czecboalovakia for subseqUent
connection to West Europe.
By 1990, if projections prove
accurate, Western nationa in-
volved in the deal could ~ive as much as 25 percent to 3S oer-
cent of their natural 1as -and
about 5 percent of all tlieir
energy from tbe Soviet Union.
The price for the gas and
the interest rates on Western
loans are stlll possible
roadblocks to completion of tbe
deal.
DOWNS
Q>Q Pel + 6lh Up • t + 1~ Up JO. + l\l'i Up 27 J + 1 Up 1'.1 +t-1• Up 25.1
+ m Up ll.O + Wt Up 2S.0 +I l)p?$A •-VPU.. + \l'i UP 11.1 ... IJp ...
:~~=:: • s i:ii ,. ..
+ J VP 1'A + IV. IJp 1U + ,,,.. Up 11.S
+ " UP 115 • " Up ,, , • 1·~ Up 170
+1\l'JUp 164
• " Up "' + I Up 16-0
+ °"' Up U.1
+ "' Up 15 7
Last 0>a Pc1.
4 -2 Off IJ.J 2 -.... Off 20.0
'"' -" Off u .o 11 -J Off u.o
27Vt -'"' Off 14.1 1014 -'"' Off 12.1
"' -"'Off 111 J-. -.... Off IU
2 -'"' i 11.1 1 -\4 11.1
,"' --1(1.1 214r \4 10.0
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' -"" t .1
2\11 -\4 '·' I _ _." 1.6
Ni -\4 u
IMll -1111 ;-1..3 N -Ill 1.J "" --'·' ... --Off ,,
'
·~
BJ 'O CVNNlrF .\
& ........ ~ I ')
NEW YORK -smau tuln r11~ builileas, u
10 ooo or more fatlunt a ,.... attest, but that anm. ho
s>e'rsonal 1tatittlo tell• hilt • put of what lt mea • ttr
small ln today'• volaWe ~my.
"We have been In bUalneSI for one year, nine mqnU.,,
and now I with l aover heard about· the small bu$lne ..
world " writes a Wilconaln buslnett perton. "I have never ' UI .. been so broke In all my •· · A CallforQlaeotrepre6e\lr report., "1
oeed more rental eq~p ent, but due to uncertain ffODC>mk c ndlt.lons in the
future and bJ&h tnt.e rates, it makes lt
prohibitive for me to buy the equipment I
need."
An upetate New Yorker. "Due to
taxes, financing and interest rates, ~
nauon, sbortaaea ol fuel and cost -an
that order -we have been unable to
continue to run the bu.slnHs. I have ob-
tained worll outside the business to sup-cu10,.,.,
port my family.'' . . . .
From Idaho: "The incentive to produce ts being kii}~
by taxea from all government bodies " From Texas. "I fllill
be aellin& out . . . before the end of the year. I've had
enough." Missouri: "If things aren't better by January 1.
1981, we are closing the buaineasdown ··
THE OWNERS OF A small business on the Ohio-West
Virginia line write: "If good and faithful employees
weren't dependent on this business, we'd get out. ..
A certain amount of griping is common to small busi-
ness ranks, since the game played is a serious one of bag,
hopes and often small results. .
Their comments were culled from a random sampli
of the 620,000-member National Federation o~ lnde~nde
Business. Results of the sample, the federation said. P
sent a gray picture for small business.
"111E SO-CALLED 'recovery' from the 1980 recessi
which began in the third quarter was o~ly a term u~~d
some, but certainly not by the small business owner. sa
Professor William C. Ounkelberg of Purdue
Dunkelberg. an economist. who w1th Profert
Jonathan A. Scott of Southern Methodist University, 1
terprets federation data, comments that "at the bottom
the recession, wtaen small business s.~ould have be
bounding back, nothing much happened.
The implications extend beyond the small-business co
munity. Consider employment, for example, and the ~o
ments made about it two years ago by the House Comm1tt
on Small Business
MORE TRAN 88 percent of the commercial estab~s
ments in this country a re small businesses," the comm1~te
reported, "but small businesses employ less than two·th1r
of a U private sector workers
"Therefore, it Is surpnsing to some observers tha
between 1969 and 1976, small businesses ac~ounted fo
what can be considered virtually all the new pnvate secto
employment in this country."
SttH-"'• I• Tltr DoarJoHf»#. l l"f»!"Oflf»
NEW VORK(API f'lrwot Oow·Jo~s oos Spodlflltl tor r_,,, No• •• STOCKS
£P) kle T l>t'lc• Ooen HIQll LOW Close OIQ NEW YO.-lt Id., -· tltt!:... ::ti .Uw lO tnd 4"11" lOOS 10 9'5.'2 ,,7.0 • ll ... -net d>elllit JO T rn ,_ 92 410 01 ltS 91 401 16 • \J . .S ,._ v.::.,.~, ,,!,"!':,,'u"". IS Ult lll.4'1•11•9 11'71 1ll l4• 0.'19 ,, ... ,,.. "•,..,... 12 _,_ \ t5 Slk m .. 311.lO l1ao1 -.. ., + 1.0t
....... l llMe .JOO ~ • -. tnd\IS S,113,100 T..-In< I~ l-\II Tren l ... 1,7CID Sitet•lt-l77 700 '1 + 1 Ulllt • 1121.IOO ~~ ,... _,;. ~ : 1"' ..S SllL •• l,•7..->
laM 113,JIOI ""' ..... Booing, m.100 ..o • '" ~ :.ic ~t· .11 ..
Ge<> El« -·-st..., • ''• a..,..eo 6».-u., • • ,.._c.n pr8 sn,100 ,... + •l•
SI-Co S.-.0 IJ..., • "' PftlllPS ... 1 •.JOO ~ • I Gn()yniem 1 4J),-O 42\.oe • 11.-..
NEW YORK IAPI Nov II
AdV•n<ed 0.ChneG Unctwnotd Toe•••~ New h~ H•w IOW\
TOO.y 10..
HI
lJ'1 , .. 2
249 II
WMAT AMEX 010
NEW YORI( tAPI Nov II
Ad••r><.cl ()Kiined
Vn<h•noe<I Tol•l•-New 1\191'1 "'•w lows
ll• .. •ob Tueis.cta" • Co, ... r H.,_ 97.,_ CPnl• "
<IUhn•IK>n\
L.u4 o~s cent\ • poun11
Pr,,.. .. , ... ....
•11 9
line. )t•,.~3'9-\1. cenh • pouno otltVf'rf'O
Tin SI '371 Motel\ Wttk <ornPQ>11e lb
Al•ml-. I&''"''• pound. N V M•r,ury M 10 00 per tt•\"
Pl•U"""' S6•• .. 7S lrov Ol N y
Sllrflr f.,..s.s.v
NEW YORK IAPI H.-.Cly
"Iver Sii l.o up SO 014
EnQtl~ero ...... , ,,, S•O VP
u:CISt I i,__:•.:•;-.:tlf:,.:l<~•:..:led=.;l:.::ll~W:..:r...:S:.:.":...:::•::.;...:· U::P;,,:Ml=..;.":.:2;__ __ +:
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Up 1' 1
UP 11 1 Up II S
Up IOt U p 10 I Up 100
so 02
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• OW!ltl" plN S GcwJWlfA l~nt
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Tiie I ltlllfllld Oilalr
~a llllgl\ a "'"'ta IW
l ..._eua llnWI
='~ ' Whtie Owarll And AM ,. ..
C..NIWI
A90HIWI
.. IUU.llYll
waOOM£ Met<.
l(()TT'8'
Third degree
• 8000TIMU
J•mH euepect• lht l
tlwlr• • mot• than ,,_\•
1M eve wflen an old boy·
nood fl'lenel PIY9 I Yle•I
• DeCKOA~
'LlletalUte ~ By
Ila Crtlic." Oueata Jtck
8HUy Allred l(uln, John
LeonMd. JemM Wo+coll
(Pett I ol 2)
Robert Urich. 1 prlvat lnveaU.ator Dan
Tanna. qu Uon mlatre• tJlU S{. John> of
the mnn ha hot ln l\'lf dC'f nu ln "Sudden
Death" l\.)niatht on "V\'llllS" an Channel 7 at
10 .
a.a. t COt4T ACf (fill c:;J
(I) M'A'l'H
l<IW>Qef and Flthet ltlul
cahy 111111 11Wt1r hYN 10
recover ••olan medlet l
auppl!M lrom • n .. rby
bofnbad~l,tellool
(II MAHSY MILU!R
7:00 8 Cl8 MIW8
I N8CNEWI
HAPftV DAYS AGAIN
Howlltd -· FONte whe11 a ploeon coop ••<>o ,,...
i~C.Y9 In lhe root
MC NEWS
JOt<mf8 WILD
• M'A'S'H
When 8 J ellempls h.>
cornfort • nurse who llU
matrlaot 1roub._ he dts
CO\'IWI • romantoc problem
of his own G) BARETTA
A pohc• 1nv .. 11oaung com
mtlle examine. 1w11mony
1ne1 Barell• 11 acc91>1t110
peyolta 1n drug 001"
• OW9'~Y
~I• 1·1e<tneltel MINI•~
Kall <C>mn\I..._ nl ll\tl
Soc..i S«u•ll-, All""''"-
1ra11on W1llam °'~J? Cli> ~/ " NtPOAT
(I) TIC TAO DOUGH
~ Ml!lllVGMIM
Guealt Nina ~Nlf'd.
Tuny Spll\.itt, Pim Hunt
l~t<lfl, 01Y1d Whha
1:301J 2 ON THI TOWH
SleH and Melody vlan
plat•• around los A~•
w1-• Laurel end Hard)'
made thelf lllma 0 fAMM.YmJO 9 SHAMAMA
GUMI T•-·-8 HOl.LYWOOO
90UAAU 0 FACE THE MU81C
Q) AU. IN THE FAMll Y
ll1e Bunker llome 11
raveoed er, tire ·• lllWI by
Arch,. •• lfl ari elton to cOI
tecl rno<e 1nl11Jrence mon
et ff,) MACNEIL I lEHREA
REPORT
ChannPI Lb• ing•
I) KNXT 1CBS) Loo; AnqPleo;
0 KNBC 1NBC1 Los Angel~'<
" KTLA (Ind I Los Ar19Pleo; U KABC TV 1ABC1 l os Anqt>lti<,
((J l\fMl:3 (CBSI S.m 01eqo
0 KHJ· IV (Ind) LO'> Anqelt''> ®l KCST (ABC) San 011•on
GJ KTIV (Ind 1 l c1•, l\nqPlet;
Cl) KCOP TV (lnrJ 1 I o5 Art•Jl.'I"'>
fJi> KCEl TV 1PB~1 I 1<; Ariq1•l1><; m> KOC( TV 1PB">1Hu11t1nq•r11 ljrqcll
HITOHOC>Ott
l'~lt ""'*'ton review• 11 .. c .,_ ul Altltld Ht\ClhCOClll
ll'l•""*l)h ""'4: *I t\11n cltp9
'"'"' .. llM of ,,.. ,,..,
H~ld dlfMlllf'a ~I
temau• n111 ..... !Mid recx>I
t.ctl<ln• b't' tne •••11 wN>
WCUke<l IOI htnl II')
Li l ,,M. MAGAllNI
A l\9hlnd·lhe ~ 1C111e.
•• \he Natk1MI tnq11\1t<.
COITIP\lllf8 \hM 1111\
1:00• INOI ' noa 1 nd 1111 i. 111 •••I0•..0 to ll4H1> • ltlltlele dltlrlCI 1110111ey 1nve1ll·
0-1• a caM 1n110Mno the
indtc•I• I'll.AL~
t.t<>VMI * * * ·~ BuHllt" ( 1"8)
Steve McOuMn Robe<'I
Vaughn A SAn Franclaco
delectlw trlel to prevel\I
11'141 mu10tf o• • P<Oll>IC·
11111 Wll,_. lor I pollttcel
riear•no 12 hr• ) 0 91 ~18
ENOUGH
Tommy 09ts a jOb II I
nightclub apec:jallzlng In
male llrtppe<I 8tld SuN n
and her t>•by move back
home O 0 MO\'IE * • '> 'The Oay The Flah
Came Out ( 1987) C•ndice
Bergen. Tom Courtenay
l wo pllolS search I~ a loll
a1om1c t>Omb dropped
near • Greek resort laland
(2 hrs) GJ P.M. MAGAZINE
A behlnd-the·tcenft look
Bl the Nellonal Enquirer.
computer5 11111 talk, Cher
Tll INll9 • Cl DI ll!t11
~or.w .. on..--ac==roe•IC!lne * * * .. The l1epl.,d ~ .. (11111 KdwN
...... flaM~A
,,ouft8 Ce1a1tUl•1t ~
....... illodafft ......
.,,...... ..... riltloe4k•
~recy encl •tr•no• .,,,... .. ~......,..
bOttlOOd ..... --their ~~(21ft)
•• ,..,. .. Hf
(l)'INI~
"I A"' Ourioua. QHg" l:IO. CAl'Ql ... llTT """......,. Sillt: ''t.tlldrad ~ ..
• Hm:IHOOCK Clift Aober!IOll ,........ the
OAIW Of A.lf....s HltcllooC*
lhfough IMlltct9d "'"' dipl from t101M ~ lhll greet
~ dtreetOl''I mGlt
lllMCM mcMel end NOOl-
leotloM ~ ....... wM
.,...... lor h!M. (A)
• MMYIY~
''Myltwlotole c.tM Ot
Cl•y" Th• IHcln•tlno
~ Of tht Altican --inll• -• ~ WhlCh
._ In llfenOe· ~· tur .. conlr~ Mrtllen
IMUftda UC1 to _, ... In
~111 -la uploted °''°" W .... narrateL c;i (J) K...-. NOf'l.I HO. (J) ..cMI
"Homeward 8ound"
lPtemlere) Otvld Soul.
lhtnetd HughM A tarml·
I\~ Ill 1-.eg91" end Ille
dlYOroed 1•\lwlr ~ IM
boy' I IUI I"'""*' with 1119
Mltlll\Ql9d gu1ndfettw1r.
G OW WT ITRC*d
Atnold llkM e tlOte owner
10 emell clalml court atler
tie NII• him • dateci1tve
iii TAXI
(Seett>n Premier•) Louie
gon off Ille deep end
wl'lan he learns that hit
girlfriend Zen• 11 .... no
anottlWmen.
• MBWGNmH
Questa Nina BlenCNttd
Tony SplMlll, Pam Hunt-
ington, David White, Ingrid
Anderton. John McNeil.
Jennlter Lauman. t:ao G ~FACTS OF UA!
(Seuon Premier•) Some
ot Mr1 Oarret1'1 gina steal
8 Vllll fo< • ioyrtde and end
up 1n a pola atetk>n (Pll1
l)Q_
fJU &OAP
Corinne re)ec;ted by
Dutch, mo-10 C.ilfoml•
and Jodie ditcovwS lhe
baby gone and • kidnap
note In lier crib
&i) MOVIE * .. • • "The Man Who
Knew Too Muell" (1934)
Peter Lorre. Leslie Banks.
Olrec1ec:I by .Allred Hl\c:h·
cock The d1uot11er of an
Enoll•" couple la kid·
napped to p<llYenl them
from revNllng whet they
know tboul • planned
On T\! tonight
cme1:ao-2 on the TOWn -Steve and elody vlalt places around Loi
An.le! · here Laurel and Hardy made
theirtuam. ·
KCOP • 8;00 -.. The Stepford
Wives" -Katherine Roa and Paula
t>rentl.U. A younc Connecticut housewife
with modem ldeu is appalled at tbe robot·
like accuracy and atrange smiles with
which neighborhood wives f uJIW their
domesUcduUes.
CBS 8 -9:00 -"Homeward
Bound" -David Soul atan in the pre-miere film about terminally ill teen-
aaer and hi.a divorced father who spend
the boy's last summer with his
estranced grandfather. (Story and
pbo1o below).
t1rr1•netlen. (1 hr.. 30
INI\,)
• ll'Olln'9 ANINCA
"Nol~ °'*' lquMtt T~""-"
10!00 a QUNrt' •
A stucMnl ~ to be a
IMdlcat ...... ,.._,. "* • WMran llt9ft doclor .. oowtlr'CI up. f'NKder
11:.
Dan'• •ttempt to ln-U.
oete u. pMt ot • "' bUf· .., he kJlad It t"-'led
by the dl9trlc:t •ttornev'•
office.
• ltalBaDl'HT'
HETWOMNIWI
1o:aD Q). NIW9 e 008MOI
"Trawll In S~ And
Tl"'9" Of. Cati Seo•n
talc•~ Into Ille p .. 1
and the futtKe for e look 11
the Oflgln ol the tolar l'f9·
tem. atllf' pllltma and Iha
plan.II of othtr 81.,.1 n
11:00 .... (I) lll NEW& D HOU.YWOOD
IQUAM8 D NEWLYWB> GAME GJ M•A•t•H
H••k•Y• tnd Trapper
attempt 10 retr...,. • top·
ply ol nydrocortlaone
1101en t>y t>l•ck-mark· --· JOHN DARLING
• OHi 8TIP IEYOND
"The Hand" A nlgh1duD
piM\o player .. ~ by
• ft1gh1•11t111 phenom•oom
after he lt.ebe • girt •
• TOUMn'I
~THI!
MJOOet INTNJOIA
Narrator .l..:k Lwnmon
dllo11-Toure«e Syn-
drome, • comp1u eond.,.
llon '-"lnO from • dieor-
der of the cenltal -
ayt*ft,.-0.•~
ta1.IOn ot IOI W:tlma of the
di.....1tom~to
lldull.
11•8(1) MOW
* * * "Hell In The Paclll<:''
(1949) L• MWVln, TMNro
Mllune. A J~ naval
olflc.t and WI Amertcen
marine .,.e atranded on a
PllClllc l9land end dl9c0Yer
lhey nMC1 MoOll oti-10
turvlve G TONIGHT
Ho•t. Jollnny Carson au.t: Aic:ky Schrc>O.
• PNIOHER: CEll
91..0CKH
Jim'• wife trlM to warn
Meg~ Geof1 Butlet eo AacNEW8
·~ A. cnidd»-eged -~t.8'n g..... up the ... and
decldee 10 ... lie near
OodQeClty
ANO NOW rr5 llME. ~
IHE \NE'AiHE~ WITH PHIL THE FO~CA45oiER!
. ..,...,.. .... ......,,...... ....... Ille._. .. _..... .. _
=~l'ftml .,~ .. .,,.........,. ........................ ........... ~
.TOMYtAllll
Afoo'90ftlle .... ~
nolDgy ...... "*"" . and ••utta wtio .,. ••&Cflltlm .......... ~II hU\dtup• te
~#Id--
• qu1111y ecti ur.,,. 11 ~ .....
-~MIO ....
H:IO. 9 LOYI llOAT
"The Cepialll And Thll
Lady C.,,laln" Bonni.
Franklln: "Oenltffold"
Meredith 8u1er lllfnay.
"OM If 8y \.and" Jimmie w-..,,..,... 9)41•. IA)
-~-
12:GO • 1WIUCIHf J'ONI
Two lmllltJtne ptomol.,..
find that Chelr tight• can·,
mMf 1111 ~I In the
ring
• YOU_,. Y<Mt LR
Buddy Hec:Mlt IMett •
~cowc:Hp~
.,, • &llul ulMmen Md ""
()tymplc dMng champion
• CAP'T10NID Aac
NIWI
12:IO G TOMOMOW
au.ta. poet I llOl\gWfittr
Jim Cerroll, AIM l'lll'IMll.
Aon 5--. end Jett
Wiid. ~ / l'r\Afl8Qetl
of f-""°"'*'· ec1,_
Ulll Pllmer
•• MO\llt * *'At "Tiv.. OUM FOf
Tent" 11981) M•vlll•
Brand, ~ Bl'own. A. trio ot Tex• Rengefa fight
lhelr wey·from one t1ell to
the ~xi. ( t "' , 55 min.) D nttNt • •••ot MP08ltkl
The IMF mwt keep I llu·
dant congf-frOfn being
uMd .. • rubber •tamp by
• repl'eulve ptamler lr,..,.•w WOMNIWI
1:GO. 0 '°'-JCE WOMAN
Pepper 0C-~
10 breelc U9 • bufglaty ring
rot>blnQ mllllon6 °' ~ In 111 and valuat>IM trom
Th11rsda•'•
Daflf l•e Mo.,les
11:0). * ... "1.aw191 ,.... ..
(1935) John W•Y"9· 8Nila
M~1.
-AFTERNOON-
12:00. • l't'Y. "Thll Mummy"
(1969) Peter Cu•lllno.
CtvlelOphar LM.
• **'At "W•Ot~ WH~ta" (1943) ~ w.-.. M.w1tll 8c$.
l:GOO *** "HaatW~'
(1974) ... Murphy ......
8edella.
a::ao D ••.,."The~
Nevy Of Sero-rt O'F9r·
,.... ( 1M8) 8oD Hope,
Phylll9 0....
by Armstrong a Batblk
0UT THe.N 'vou KNOW
HOW "TH06E CLOWNS S"TIO< "TOGE'TH~!
.'Homeward Bound' poignant ~"!':.-:.-Y Kay : I
will make bis
TV dramatic de-
but in the CBS
specia l
"Skokie" whicb
tells how
citizens of
Skokie, Ill.,
faced con·
troversy involv-
ing a neo-Nazi
group.
ENTW1MEO IN 'HOMEWARD BOUND'
MooeM Ofter, left, Bamard Hughe• •tar
BC takes ~f·irst
n 11.eti~vrk race
NEW YOJtK (AP) With a solution to primu
m e 1V's most prominent mystery Who shot
.R.? just a week away, CBS' "Dallas" wiped
ut the competlUon in the weett ending Nov. 16, but
C won Ole network's three-way race by haU a
nt, figures from the A.C Nielsen Co. showed.
It was ABC's flnit No. 1 finish In t.he weekly
eepstakes In u month, and came despite the fact
at CBS placed five 1'hQws In Nielsen's Top 10 for
he period
THE RATING FOR ''DALLAS" WAS 35.7.
lelacn says that means of nll the natJon 's TV
ulpped homes, ~ i percent saw at least part of tb'
to1nm. · J .R. Ewln1fs assallant will be ident.llied ln t.he
ov. 21 episode of "Dallas," and t.hat abow la
most aure to become one of the moat-watched of n time. ABC 1ot a booat from a n'iovie broadcast on
levl1io11 for tho ftrat time, "Saturday Nilhl
ever." ln flfth place for the week, from the key
FL Monday Nl•ht Football'' match·up between w E:ntland and ffouaton. No. 8 tor the week.
NBC LllTED ONL y ONE SHOW '" the nnt , a repeat of the Burt Reyuo\ds mov\t, ''Smc>key
tbe !•ndlt'' tn ntnth place.
ABC 1taUn1 for the week ~a9 20.eto 20.lforCBS
d1'7.•forNBC. BOth CBS and ABC malntaln th 1M0-a) prlrn•·
me Muon, d layed by the 10-week acton' tt.rtk•, Pl\~9ct· r'I, wbUe NBC claims It bell.b p •
1mlr\.l.al for the tan Sept. 1.5. By the CBS·A&C meuure, CBS la No. 1 for th
HIOft llN thin two polnta over nannerup ABC.
BC II lri ft. l plac lot tM period that btllO
• 11 ana lftcJUckid the work'• broadcut of
1tb&U11 World "· I
~
LOS ANGELES (AP> Burt Prelutsky
moved to Carmel, Calif , \fi;t year to write t.he
script for a movie and founCI that he and the town
were meant for one another
"Carmel seemed small, quiet and boring,"
said Prelutsky. "Well, I'm small, quiet and boring,
so we were suited for each other "
The movie he wrote in that California coastal
community was "Homeward Bound," and boring
it is not It is t.he story of a man who reaches mid·
die age alienated from those around him, and is
unable to express his love for them. His son is dy-
ing and his father doesn't want him around.
DAVID SOUL STA.RS AS a 40-year-old man
trying to make connections wlth his son and father
before It's too late And if you think of Soul aa the
second halC of "Starsky and Hutch," take a look at
"Homeward Bound "
Soul offers a most credible and movln1
portrait, UB do Barnard Huaht>11 aaa lhci 11randfather
and MOMlc Orler as the ion
"Homeward nound," dlr<'l'lttd by Rlchard
M1 C'hnt'I"· will be• hroadra11t tonh&ht •t U on ('hann•I
:z
"I w1•nt to Curmt1l mUAtly tu 1•t aw11y Frum
L I\ , " 1111ld Prttlutaky, who I" ctlvorrf'd "I \\v..t
hrn• fu1 :W Y<'lln, but I nn•r llkctd lh• 1lh1t1rnC'ff ••
Tiit: tlKA.llDl':I> WIUTICk IUCUAN hl11 r•Ntfl
dolna& movie rovl11w11 for l.011 Anll•IPI\ rttHUltttt
II• alM• wroteo n wnflk Iv c'tlh1111n tor thtt I .NI
l\ntct'h· 'l'tm••"·
l'l\S llPPf"\llll'ht•d l11'l'lU\llk)' with 11111~ ""' 1.-n
for "llom•'w•rd Houmt " It wn11l$t(I • 111t1rr ith•m' i.
dylna boy who h•IJ111 rnroMlltt thw tMlhttr ttnd
arandfathcr.
"I t.hou11ht abOut dctln1 It C1th11h1," htt ••lcl "1
tbou1ht the father wuuad bcri 1 man who '"d
chan&C'd hla name. 1'hoy dldn'l want U t\hnlo. Ro I
drove up throuah th• Napa Valley win• oountry
and came up wtth the atory ot 1 man who movta to
HA POWERHOUSI OP A PILM ...
Mira t<urouw9 b a INdlne CMdldatll fat the 0
tMng ftlm dfNCtOr.'' _..,.. .,.. '*"""'""' ~
the city He's a man who rejects everything his
father stands for His father raises grapes, he
writes TV commercials."
HE SAID HE HAD DAVID Janssen in mind
for the lead, until Janssen's death
''He had that burned-out quality, that aura of
living close to the edge," he sa.id
Prelutsky also clashed with CBS over having a
minor character commit suicide. The network
didn't want the suicide. but Prelutslt,y felt it was
necessary to show the direction t.he father was
heading. The suicide was left. in.
"I wanted to show a character so emotionally
detached that If he didn't make a connection he'd --------------------
kill himself," t.he writer said. "By the end of the
movie, he can tell his father he loves him, and tell
hls atrlfrlend he loves her ...
I
HOLLYWOOD (AP> -When l~~!ii!!ll!~i;;i;;~~=~;.~;;:11~ a tamou1 •l•1•r-1on1wrlter 1i 1penda alsnoit four yean writ·
Ina and •lAirrlnl In a movie
about a •ln&er-.onpriter, the
questloo ii JaevJtable: 11 the
character atnc>bioragb1ca11
But 1dmlta undtdl1
that ln both the ftlm and bla ma.steel caretr, be II much baP:-
pl•r. H • writer than aa a
eer1on:ner
· ··-Jn tbe cut o ' One 'J'riek
Pony," Paul Slcnon'1 rum, tbe
an.1wer ltart.d out aa • qualified yn and encled u a qua)1fled no.
"Not to aay t.bat I don't enjoy
•inlln& ~ tbat I don't enjoy ad-
inl, but IDY intenae interest and
enjoyment comes from wrll1Jll,
not from performm1. .:::~=::::::::::=:;:::::=:::::::===;=::;;=::=~ "I th1.ok tbat I'm an adequate
performer cl my own material,
and I tblnk that'• about all. I
think I Just about do Juatlee to mJ own material, Ud 1 don't
think I'm estraordlnary u a
performer, either u a 11.n&er or
M au ,,_.,. ...,,,.
IMl111 •.I , ... ......_, ..... ,., >o1M, ..
MAlaCNI ... ,,, ...... ,., ............. ,.
" UWJ .. "" ""'"''" n11 cm a. nn l-. ioee u11
ALltGATC>a Cll ,,,,.~.-.-·»• .. ,.
--MA-IM NIVATI llNJAMIH (I I 111w:i..1,u .. ,1,..10.ao
"AlWl.M..,._•
IT'S MY 1UIH Ill ,,,,.,,...,__,.,.,. ------------
"PAJVATE BENJAMIN" ! _,.,_ (R) ,,._,..,_,,II ... ~ .... ,.,. -.-.-.:1w:Jt
"ITS MY TURN" ...,.,_, ... _J:t._. .. ,..._ .. 00
"lt'a not ll!SHS>Ually 1U1obio-
l1'apbical," Slmoo 'aid, obvioul
ly weary but 1amely fleldiDC
question& in a small hotel room
after a concert.
"IT'S Nor .U.OVT my llle or
my career or even my mar-
riage, aJtbouib when 1 set out to
write about U, I tboqbt perhaps
by writina about tt I would dia·
cover aometbinl about my mar·
riage and why it dtdn'l work.
"But that turned out not to be
the case. I didn't discover
anytbin&.
"lo fact, the more I got in·
volved in \frltine about myself,
the less it seemed to work, and
so J let ll drift away, and it'•
drifted away to such a dep-ee
that it's really not autoblo·
graphical at all -with the
possible exceptions of the scenes
between the character that I
play, Jonah, and his son."
THERE ARE, IN fact, obvious
differences between Simon and
the Cilm 's protagonist, Jonah
Levin. But regardl"ss of Simon's
disclaimers there are some
similarities too.
At 39, Simon is one of pop
music's most successful and
respected figures, considered by
some to be the best songwriter
in the business.
Simon not only survived his
breakup with 1960s partner Art
Garfunkel, but also produced
some of his most admired and
so phisticated music. Tbe
critically acclaimed "One Trick
Pony" soundtrack, his first
original collection of songs in
five years, had little trouble
climbing to the top of the album
charts.
Like Simon, the character of
Levin made it big in the late
'60s Levin's marriage is in trou-
ble ; Simon's ended in divor.ce.
NoW!
............
'NOT AUTOlllOGRAPHtCAL'
Slngef Paul •mon
Both Simon pd bia character
dre11 ln wlndbreakers and
baseball cape, both live in New
York. Both are soft-spoken men,
and in person Simon somehow has
the aame air of vulnerability that
makes Levin appealing in the
film.
But while Simon's efforts to
mature musically have been
successful, Levin is a bas-been
who struggles to make enda
meet by playing one-night
st.ands in a succesaion of towns
where it always seems to be
raini.ni.
He and his band while away
long hours on the road by seeing
who can name the most dead
r.ock stars; be bas to fight to &et
into a record company ex-
ecutive's office. If nothing else,
the mm should be required
viewing for anyone contemplat-
ing a career in pop music.
"ONE TRICK PONY"
represents Simon's first full-
fledged acting effort, following a
small role in Woody Allen's "An·
nie Hall" and some guest-host
work for NBC's "Saturday Night
Live."
u a performer.
"WHEN I THINK of what I'm
10101 to do in the future, I don't
think of myself u a performer, I
think of IQYaelf aa a writer. . . .
I would like to someday work oo
a Broadway musical as a
writer."
Any more films in silht?
"I'll have to wait and see what
happens wit.b t.hls movie and see
whether the exp~rlence ii pleu~ or very unpleasant. If
it'a neut(al. J would like to write
another -screenplay because of
what I learned a lot from the first
one. I think I'd be much better the
second time."
SIMON ALSO WANTS to
make an album independent of
any other project, but bis fans
might have to wait a while
"I've been working on this
movie for almost four years, from
the beginning of writing to the
completion of the editing, and l
really think that I'm depleted. I
don't think that it's a good time
to begin work on any new pro-
ject. I think it's time to stop and
rest and read and travel and just
live. You just have to replenish
yourself."
Pilot Power classified ads in
Wednesday's Coast life and
Doily P.ilot reach 340,000
Orange Coost readers for only
$2 for fot1r lines. DAILY PILOT
642-5678
MANN THEATRES SlllSTOl ~ Of 40~ AHO 68~ SUNFLOWER 541-27'1 ', , . r • t ,·, • I ; ;.
Two Great Tastes
in One Great Meal.
Exdusfve l...hited Engagement
Art Garfunbl BAD TIMING
As.n.u.t0111111ran , ....... WJll ... _
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1980 Long JOhn 811 • ., a Inc All 11ghtt ,,..,,.,..,
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3095 tt..bor It.cl. In Costa' Mesa
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A true "1e.'t!'~ trfumplt ,., . ·-
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
no. --o1-··-. 10...,..... -,,,,,..,, ,,.. ...... ,,..,, "' M>.,,. ~ b" "•*no by,...,, c~
~~~~ .. ~~o i; .~::::::._,·
l'U. AGES AOMITT£ 0 •-
Petemel 0.-denc. s.._.,.., ''ELECTRIC
· HORSEMAN" .-='
Al.l 1:1 ~ .AHO [Ill Fll."'S A'CEIVE
rHE SEA<.°' THf 1.tOllOh PICTURE
COO£ Of-SEl r AfOUlA Tl()>j
Local news.
Every d.i\Y·
In the H·Uij@m)i
I "PRIVATE et11
IBUAMIH"
I "THE E&.EPHANT
MAN"'IN1
''THE EMPIRE CNI
STIUKES BACK"
-llO~-
"ORDINARY
PEOPLE"
t I
"lr8 llY ,._.... 1111
''11.EC'nUC HOR•MAtf" 4"'
"MOT'IL HELL" et11 .. ...,.,..
ZIP·A·DEE·OOO-DAH ICMAMING STON"
..
Winner Best f1lm
Toronto f1lm Feallval .. ****., -Newsday
A &n"...-W P11111•1'" C fl'~,.._....,_ PY~:'-'~l~~~·~o~tt"~LM
--aa.va1n llNQAUMl/ff' NOW IBOWINfJ--
Mau'• SOtJTB COAST
COSTA MF.sA 714/546-2711
Doiq /:00 • J:IS • S:JS • 8:()() ~ 10:15 PM
Solid Oak
ANTIQUES
All the items in our
store are handmade
by true craftsmen of
the past --and have
traveled over 7,000
miles from England
and Scotland to be
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Free Delivery -Good Service & Low Prices
• is
American
. . . Best buys . . . usually are
the larger tom turkeys . . .
The turkey bu earned Its place at the bead
of the buquet table. So venaWe ln lt.s uses, it's
aho one ol the beat buys int.be meat cue.
In theae ener11-conaclous times, it la also
intereatina to note that turkeys are one of the
moat efficient converters of plant protein to
animal protein.
THE BEST buys, with the bigbeat meat to
bone ratio, usually are the larger tom turkeys ..
Yet smaller families Jre often puzzled over
what to do 'Witb ao much meat.
The tried and true solution is to roast the
blg bird, then carve leftovers into slices and
chopped turkey to free1e for later meals.
Another way to take advantage of the sav·
inga in a large turkey is to cut up before cook·
ing. This way family sized portions can be ob-
tained for a wide variety of m~ala.
REMOVE THE LEGS and Wghs of the
turkey, then cut away the wings. Next, carve
the breast away from the back part of the
carcass. Each of these piec~ will make a
separate meal and can be fl'02en tmtil needed.
The whole turkey breast makes a
marvelous roast. Keep the skin on the
breast, carefully remove the bones and handle
like any boneless roast. Brown it in a bit of oil
in a heavy kettle and cook slowly with carrots,
onions and perhaps white wine.
It also can be stuffed with a favorite turkey
dressing and roasted. with frequent basting, untiJ
golden.
8&111 LEGS AND thighs can be cooked in
broth for about an hour, or until tender, and
meat can be removed easily from the bone.
If a microwave oven is used, the pieces
should be put into a covered casserole dish with a bit of broth and seasonings, following
microwave directions. Meat from these pieces
mlates marvelous cas.seroles like tamale pie or
• lasagna, but it is equally delicious in stews,
cbow mein, meat loaves, salads and
sandwiches.
Turkey wings should be cut into three
pifces, separating at the joints. Simmer the
pieces in broth or bouillon, or microwave until
tqder. 'lben, cover with barbeque sauce and
,.bae in a moderate oven until tbe pieces are
w•ll 1Jased for ao excellent ebup-of-pace
mtal 9r holiday buffet treat.
TUll&.EY BACKS and necks are 1reat for
soup and broth. Simply simmer these leu de·
sirable pieces with onion, celery and seasonings
until the meat starts to slip from the bone. It's
amazing how much s ucculent meat and broth
can be obtained from pieces which are often dis-
carded.
Turkey also 1s a nutritional best buy. It is
low in cholesterol and fat. There are approx·
imately 2SO calories in a whole cup of li&ht meat
and 280 calories in the same amount of dark
meat.
The protein values are a bit higher and the
calories a bit lower for light meat because of
the lower fat content.
ONE CUP OF chopped light meat contains
100% of the recommended daily allowance of
protein, 80% niacin, 10% iron, and 10%
riboflavin. One cup of the dark meat has 90% of
the RDA for protein. 30% niacin, 20% iron. and
20% riboflavin.
With such good values around the fall holi-
day season, plan to buy a turkey large enough
for holiday needs and perhaps another one
which can be cut up for use in a variety of
nutritious meals during the months ahead.
'
Share the work
with your
holiday host
and bring
part of the
menu. Cranberry
Mincemeat Pie,
Turkey Stuffed
Pie and Molded
Frwt Salad
are good choices.
Share-the-work holiday dinner
It's time to apply the idea of the covered dish supper to big holidays
~ .
Since few of us have the time to spend
several days in the kitchen preparing an old
fashioned, many-course 'lbaobgiving din·
ner. lt's time to apply tbe Idea of the covered
dnb SUJll)er to big holidays.
Get several frifbdB or family members to
bring part of the menu. YOU\C'Jtll etu.er •Lii·
gest a diJb and supply tbe recipe or let every·
one bring his specialty. It will µndoubted.ly
be a dish they mate very well.
As the host or hostess, you probably want
to make the turkey. If there are just a few of
you, forget a large turkey. Serve economical
and easy-to-prepare Turkey Stuffed Pie
made with just one pound of s~ed turkey. a
can of whole berry cranberry sauce and stuf-
fing mix. II you're having a large turkey,
tuck this recipe away for leftove~.
Be sure someone Ls going to bring a
refreshing molded fruit salad, a perennial
holiday favonte. Ours has delicious mandann
oranges. cranberries and ground ginger.
For dessert. it's traditional to have more
than one kind of pie. Along with a pumpkin or
apple pie, serve Cranberry Mincemeat Pie, a
tasty blend of cranberry-orange relish and
mincemeat that takes minutes to prepare.
Use .l prepared pie crust mix or a prepared
cru5t if you want to make preparation even
easier.
CRANBERRY MINCEMEAT PIE
2 packages of 2·cru.st pie mix, or your
own favorite pie crust recipe
2 jars (14 ounces each) cranberry
oran1e relish
1 jar (28 ounces) mincemeat with bran·
dy ao4 rum, lf desired)
2 eupe chopped, ~led and cored tart
cooklnl apples like Granny Sm1tb
2 tableapoona eomat.ardl
Prepare pastry Jad chill 20 minutes.
Preheat oven to 425 de«rees. In a lar1e bowl;
mix together cranberry orange relish,
mincemeat,,11>ples and cornstar~b. On a light·
ly floured s\ftace roll out Y.s of the pie crust
pastry; line a 9-incb pie plate. Repeat with
another Y.s of the dou1b to line a serond pie
plate. Spoon filling evenly into pie crust. Roll
out r emaining pastry to a circle ,,.·Ulch thick.
Cut into Y.s-inch·wide strips and arran1e on
pies to make lattice tops. Turn edges of
pastry under and press with the tines of a
fork to seal. Bake 35 to 40 minutes or until
crust is lightly browned and filling Ls bubbly.
Transfer to wire racks and cool completely.
Makes 2 9-inch pies, 16 servings.
TURKEY-8T1JFFED PIE
1 box (6 ounces) chicken·flavor, top·
of-range stuffing mix
1 can (16 ounces) whole berry cran-
berry sauce
1 potmd sliced turkey, cut into lh-inch·
wide strips
3 cups milk
4 large eggs
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a
shallow 2-Quart casserole. Sprinkle all stuf-
fing crumb& from package over bottom.
Spread whole berry cranberry sauce over
crumbs. Top with sliced turkey. In • SQllall
bowl, beat milk with eggs and ve~
seasoning packet from packaged atuffina
mix. Pour over turkey mlxture in d.lsa Bate
at 350 degrees for 1 ~ hoU1'8 or until a knife
werted in center of casserole comes out
clean. Remove from oven and serve hot.
Mates 8 servings.
MOLDED FRUITED CRANBER&Y
RELISH
2 cups fresh or fresh frozen cranberries
1 Y.s cups red wine
1 package (6 ounces) lemon-flavored
gelatin
1 can (16 ounces) Jellied cranberry
sauce.
'4 teaspoon ground ginger
1 can (11 ounces) mandarin oranges.
drained
lapples, peeled, cored and finely diced
In a saucepan, combine cranber.ries and
wine Bring mixture to a boil ; lower heat and
simmer S minutes. Stir in gelatin until dis-
solved. Press cranberry sauce through a
sieve and add to hot mixture. Stir in ginger.
Cool until mixture mounds slightly when
drof>ped from a spoon. Fold in apples and
oranges. Pour into a lightly oiled 2-quart
mold Chill until firm. To W'lmold, dip mold
into lukewarm water for a few seconds, tap
to loosen and invert onto serving platter.
Makes 12-quart mold
-Cranberry preserves versati"te
. . . Enjoy cranbernes as an hors d 'oeuvre. as a sauce or as a dessert ...
Take some fresh cranberries,
preserve them in an imapnative
way and you'll be able to enjoy
cranberries as an hon d'oeuvre,
as a sauce or as a deaaert.
In the background, the two
larger jara hold cranberries
mixed with peaches and
Armagnac.
To make this fabulous fruit
dessert economically you
1bouJd, ol COW'Se, uae whatever
frulta are in season. You can
•lao substitute ord.laary brandy
for the Armapac.
TBE a.Ma Jl:U..Y on the
trtndowsill ii Bot Pepper Cran· ,
berry Jelly, ID Q.DUIUal COin·
bthatlon of cranJ»erry Jul~•
«>Cktall, viO,IU •nd bot pep.
l>C1'. Tbla la tally alOD• or spread
over ere.am clleeie o.1 crack ...
AI•El.J•A L'A•llAGNAC
l PouDa um.eetened troaen dry padt rupbemes•
. 1 ~ unaweetened rrozen
dry pack blnc cbetr1es• a CUJ>I (12 ounca> frwb or
fresh frOle:D cra~rrl
S~•lllaf~-:::; l~ tb 2 eup1·,Anrapae
Place a 1nlsture Of frulta lDto
at.rtltled 1.qu&rt Jan, to wltblD
1 ln~b Of the top. iAdd ~ cup •UC·
days before serVin1. Makes 8
ball pint.a.
TOMATO CRANBERRY
BEUSR
I can (16 ounces) peeled
tomatoes
3 cups (12 ounces> fresh or
fresh frozen cranberries
1 ~cups granulated sugar
1 cup 1olden ratalns
1 teupooo aalt
1 teaspoon fl'OUDd 1in1er Into a lar1• Hucepan cut
tomaio. coarael)' and add julc.
· from cu, cranbenles, ausar,
rwtu, ult &Del ~er. Brm, to a boll. Lower &e.t. cover and
simmer I to 10 minutea. O>ol.
s.rie cold. Rellab Will keep for
week• In the re.trt•erator. Can
be mMle and 1tof6d ln ~Jatls: taliitirii m ttee..-. e\l: •
c~.
...,
.,
~
...
"""'\..~
J
)-
\..
IOC
IOC Off Squeeze
Parkaymargarine.
MA GAOC(A ~'"''' 1 H1·1, .. I uofl (,,.,.,.1 "11 ,, ·t1t ,, 1
1 "',,. 1111· IM.t 11~1,,r ol '~"' l"''PIJll ullh IC ll.lnrfhrQ '""" t' 1· ~'"'"'"*11 You H'df't!"'"" '' on 'tf'U' ''-1111 ·u•u "' lht , tr• r'' ,,, w1ot I " "'Id I"~' 1()01"1 'tlJ"'.\f rt>u ttqff'B 10 , ..
1,t "''~ ,, D•1lc./IJ'ol' ~ ,till• ien1 lllndurl IU '°"" a" •tdrlT'tM"'\ Couc•"' '" •"'4 *f'let• li•eO D•nM•led ,. r, '"otrPn 1.~ 1~ .. drlO ,,..t«Nw tie u~tQM.<1 uc 114•)feuro bf
,.,. Cnn '''"" I 20C (,u)lulf.i ""''' ~' 4"' •uotic.i le
" '"' ·~0111)11 ,,.~~ ·~
21000 105342
<-_,
Oller e~p11es
Novemoer 30. 1980 l'r•te~ may vary ii I
p;1r11c•Ddl•no 1oc._
11on~ Gooo only I Prices may vary at pat
1n Soutnern 11c1pa11no loc1t11ons
~--c.,i.torn1a where GOOCI only 1n Soutnetn
you see the I Caltfot.nia whe1e you
Colonel s face see tne Co1one1 s face
w1noow oanne• window Danner .··-----=----------~
Because milk gives you all kinds of good
things. Like protein, vitamins and lots
of calcium.
Fo~bout 12~ an 8-ounce glass.
And tnlns a beautiful bargain.
Now, more than ever, is the time for milk.
Pu1onaU)', I mu1t
bave flll•d Hveral
butbell wttb the panJey I've pu1bed off my
plate. I bad no Idea
anyone ever ate tt." -
Howard Mau.on, Direc· tor of Public lnforma-
Uoa, m.titute of Food
Tecbnolollltl.
". . . I've snatched
parsley off platet In
rHtaurantl tor yeara.
I'm endol!q a rectf: that u1ea a who e
bunch." -Kn. Paul
Nelaoa, L)'Ddbunt, N.J.
llra. Nelson will re-
ceive a copy ol my "In·
ternatlonal Slim
p. Mince parsley fine ;
omit atema. Stir panley
and remaining ingre-
dients lnto onion mix-
ture. Cover tlCJitly arid
simmer over very low
heat 3 boun. (Or com -
bine ingredients in a
alow-cooker; cook ac-cordln& .to manufac-
turer'• directions.>
Remove bay leave:s
before 1ervin1. Serve over puta or broiled
chicken. Makes six aerv·
lnca. 90 calories each,
sauce only (1u1ar adds
under 10 calories per
aervmc).
For ea111 low-col bor~cw ~and othn
trhn toppera, und a
•tamped, 1elf -addreued
enve~ and 35 cents to
Slim Gourmet Clip-N-Cook
Sauce Recipta, P.O. Box
624, Sparta, NJ. 07871
~upple Juice
~~Coconut
~hMlncemeet
HX.l'ICI! c..M. Pr<:OG S1fM Vons l'l\ushroom1
It;;h~creme
11 Oll'ltt l'ilCIWlf >I!. Betty Crocker.,. Cnitt
~~&ftet l'l\ot'ldl
~«fNuta
~Own~
:N()llNIX-He~z Sweet Pickles
t-Ol.CAH~-
8en ferNndo <>Ma
' ~1ifEg9Nog
vons~Ol
s;~r l'ilpldn1
109
.65
}48
.58
.69
FROZEN FOODS
~':iePeu ,79
~~i:'~~ 199
~~Sh. .63
~~hNStlcka .65
·~ CH118US. llHl'i£ 011 ROSE
MEATS
Lii 198
UI }69
U1 258
UI }78
UI }39
UI 139
lll 129
UI 269
IA }09
lJI 429
249
~~R~
1.'JOIOU.&JIU llOTTLI ~Nun Uthhuinlch
~DeBIS\c
1)1.lt.= ... ~-Seba Mt. es
~
~~-
~odka
~!olfee Liqueur
J~
.49
'HOT' BAKERY
M~Rl.OOIAV~Ol'C.Y,.TSTOM'llllTl4
HOT -CAM: r'Dlt rcAll!Ut STOM.. CM.I ~~IA'l'!.O .. T..,..._OI ,._~
tHNOllSC""'°'A~ 119 Cinnamon cmnk,y Loaf , ,.
B:"~~ ~.99
~~~~ 249
~""tr:::Roas .69
P.":,~ 219
j:~~C:.h! 348
HEALTH £.:. BEAU TY
-
~·· "!'•Pl
'Foolproof'
drink tips
Playln& bartender
doetn 't bave to be an
"all thumb•'' ex-
pertenc..
I uat foflow the ten "foolproof.. steps Ulted
below and in no time at
all you'll be dauliDI =·with )'OW' perfect
Wbo knowl, you may
even invent a few Mftla·
tlonal coclrtalll of your
own.
1. Follow d.lNctlona
and alwap meuure, UI·
ln1 aJiaer. 2. Stir drinks that
1bould be clear, 1ucb u
a ManbaUan. a. &bake drlnU for.
frotby top, 1ueb u
whllky IOUl'S.
'· Use a blender for drink• that should be
Hrved completel1
foamy; auch u a Pina Colada or many fruit drt.Du.
5. Serve cold 4rlnlu
lee cold and cblll tb•
11 ...... e. Place lee ln tbe
'1utftnt.
7. Pour liquor over
le• for dear cocktalb.
I . Pour •u«•r and fruit julc.w lDto .......
befON addlDc UQ\IOI',
t . Serve bot dtlnlla ln
mup wttb b1Did&el. To
Hold etaeldfta, Pia~ a .u .. .,. in tM ..... before ,_..., u.. bot
~-~WD .,.. .. " ...... -'"' dl1Ma .. .., .. "°" ............ ,.. ... _.,•61le•IPlrtt wUl nn.t .. $ib opt.
lildli llMa& '°' ...... « ~ .......
.. c;J~ lu&-!lint: cll_p
tbtll Up•, ..... kHp
tMm • roor_ bai' wMn UatJ'U be ""11 a ~ •••1· .
I lr· '
............ .., .. ,.
1ttu.eiRll'il ..
'
US NO I •D YAMS ~ll:.29
• ~ Reel Grapes
~ Ripe Avocados ....... ~ Vorinoff Vodka
•• 39
•. 33
1n 6SI ... ~
-~·...._..., ' Bt Paul Masson Wine :,/ 3 ·~
'Bj hctRo;.'wC.*'wi:°' ~' 21'
.... 3''
Utt 67 '"' .
•.:· .59
..
,.
way
........... o.aa .................... °" ............. ==r-:i:-............. ........ ; .......
1Ur .w •tll am.a
Md ... .-..c... aad eook ~a~oat 10 mlautel or paUI flab nu•...., wMa '-&-fld wtdl • ton. .. ...
•Mut ...... "to. Mn'•
m11.
.......
jltBisquick
B! L;'y';°; .. M. Mix
~ ......... c-....
m" Nestle'• Morsels ... ~ Red label Syrup
..... 112 ,.,
"'• .. 76 ....
':.:· 1 ••
·~· .69
SAYE'S.32
Hard facts on the 2-for-1 game
a£FVND OF TBE DAY
Write to the followiq addreu to receive
the torm required by t&ll c~·a birthday book offer from Wet Ones Memorable
Birthdays, P.O. Box 1500. White Plaint, N. Y.
10602. 1bia offer expires Jan. 1, 11181,
·------------~--~~---~~~--~~----------Cl.JP 'N' FILE RE"1NDS
Microwaving better beef
More brownmq occurs when beef patties are seasoned
em.
1--------~--~-----------------1 SAVI C,!"•'l,rm' 25~ .- -1250 .......... "' --~~--
1 WHEN YOU BUY ANY SIZE CRAV£111
PROTEJN-RJCB FOODS CATS CRAVEl1"' ,.ai~ljiiiilii!r~ z 0 Q. ::> 0 (.)
w ct: ~ en
I
t>aA1.D: Our ~nlOllw 'WIU l'tldeefn lhls ooupon IOr lhe
lace value pl\15 7c tor handling criacves ror each coupon nt-deert.*f in ocxon::lance with the c:ondlltol1$ OI 11\is oiler lnvoic:as
pl'OVlhg pulChase OI sulboent Sloclt 10 OOYM coupoN prerented
lor redempl1on mUS1 be made ava.Jlable upon t8Q'1J65t 10 Kol
Kan or us ogen11 The customer musl poy onv sole!> lax nus
coupon VOid an lkJles where laxed , '' !'Minded by kr-1 Cas.l'I
volue I 20th OI 0 otnl Restnc19d I• one coupon per IClm.lly
Kai Kan Foods Inc PO lk>x 1836 a1~on towa 52734
7111
It is auo helpful to minute standing time. I SAW 23100 102c!iC\c! SAW
rotate individual patties (Invert afte~t45 seconds, ~ ~tu. Coob concerned with
aavtnt tilile and ener11 will be pleaied to know
that UiDbUrJel'I can be
aucc~ prepared in
the microwave oven..
However, a bit of
knowhow 11 required.
combining 2 tablespoons
111lt, 2 teaspoons ftour,
1 teupoon paprika and
Vt teaspoon pepper lD a
.salt abater. A small
amow:at of this mix (3/16
to ~ teaspoon) should
be sprinkled on toe of
Wh ~ a.nd liibtly
rubbed over the surface
to dtatribute evenly
before cooking.
in the dlab, turning the invert to onginal poai· L ~ ·t. · · Aiil'r
outer portion of each to tlon before standin1 1-----------------. .... --------------------------------------------------------------
t1il!Ube. test. titcbens of
e Natloeal Live Stoell ud JCjat Board, tecbnl-
que1 have been de·
veloped for cooking by
microwaves, beef patties
that are juicy, tender,
browned, uniformly
done and navorful.
It was found that mdre
browning occurs and
more even coo"ing pro-
moted when the beer
patties are seasoned
before cooking, rather
than atter cooking as is
directed for conven-
tional b~llng.
A cook can make her
own easy and
economical aeaaoning
mix for browning by
To avoid widercooking
centers and overcooked
edges. make a small in·
dentation or hollow in
t.be center of the patty
after shaping.
Or the patties can be
made doughnut-shaped,
leaving a hole about the
size or a nickel in the
center.
A piece of waxed
paper should be placed
over the patties before
cooking and during the
standing time. Standing
time is important for the
patUes continue lo cook.
tbe center, at midpolat time.)
of the cooltlnC t1111e aa 4 • o u n c e 'P a tt 1 e a well u to roteta the dJab-(cooked in pairs): 2
itaell ~tum. minutes 30 MCODda plus
When ttvO or more pat-'l minute standlng time.
ties are cooked at once, <Rotate patties after
lt la not peeeuary to cootine 1 minute.)
turn them over during· 4 -ounce patties
cookinf; however, pat· (cooked in &rOUPI of 4):
ties coioked individually 3 minutes 30 seconds
should be turned. plua 1 minute standing
time. (Rotate patties
MICRO GUIDELINES a f t e r c o o k i n g 2
The following recom-minutes.}
mendations are made For 5~-ounce patties,
ror cookin& 4-ounce increase above cookine
ground beef patties, limes by 30 seconds and
shaped approximately standing time by 1
'-2 inch thick and 4~ minute. Invert or rotate
inches in diameter, on as directed approx-
h i gb power. Ti mes imately halfway through
should be used only as cooking time.
guidelines. ~--=-------
4 -ounc e pattie s
(cooked individually): 1
minute 1S seconds plus l '
Call 642· 5178. Put a rew words ___ to--.w.-ork ror ou.
Save25'on
"'
.2 lbs .. of lmp~rial®
.
...
.. .
' ING
BlEND
'
• ~ e
I
l
t
' .
r. ..
'
..
I
I
' '
II r
f I
t I~
1· ~
1 Reappralte every-
Jna that 11 on your
le and remove the
d that you decide
D 't in your best health
weilbt interest.
1 These are some of the
retrainJna techniques
ied by Ma . W,ayler,
o is co-author of the
xtbook, -Applied
trition, .. published by
acm1llan Co.. at the
~ldent facility she
nded io Vermont.
e community is a
ce where women can
rn bow to achieve
ll ·lasUn1 weight con· 1l through applied
ucation in nutrition,
havior, and exercise.
e main concept that is
ed ls based on the
dapitallzed word IDEA
~ a combination of
sight, Diet, Education
and Activity.
When you can un · derstand the values o(
the food you eat in rela-
tion to the phys ical
needs of your body, and
combine that knowledae
with increased physical
activity to burn off ex·•
cess calories, you are
able to control your
weight and inc reas e good health.
High on your list of
foods to omit should be
excess fats and sugars
that aive you empty
calories that your boidY
does not need for qp.
timum nutrition.
Here are 1ome low
calorie main courses
that are prepared
without acfded fat or
suaar, uaina poaching and baking met.hodf that
are healthier for you
and your loved onea.
Seasonal
dessert
Here's a U1ht and
Oavorful dessert for the
fall season:
GaAPE-aOSE WINE
DESSERT .
,,_CUP SUGAR
,,_teaspoon salt
1 envelope un·
Oavored 1elatlne
'rit cup lemon 1u1ce
1 cup bolling water
~ cup rue wine
1~ cup• halved
Thomp1on ileedleu
,....ngrapes
Sourcre•m
Blend •ua•r, Hit and
lelatlne ln mlxtn1 bowl.
tlr lemon Julee lnto mixture; let 1tand 5
minutel to IOften. Add
bolllna ~at.er: •Ur mix·
tun until 1elatlne and
1u1ar dl11olve. Add
wine. CbllJ until mixture bePll to thicken: add
1rape1 and mix well.
Portlop lato 8-ounce
wiae ,a .... Chill UQtll nrm. Serve with dollop
ot 1our euam lluea
about I HrviftCI.
FOOO
iques for eating less
.....:. ..... ~ ••P lla•l1 , .... , ..... ,.., " •tt• 1r1ted .. , ...........
.,_ • ._ 1pl11acb well: mla
l .. ..., IWOlla , ........ the beef Add <c•• _. ••~ fro• Nit,,..._. and 1arlic llOWUaanM) powder and mlx well.
l ••t Cl ou•ee > 'hrm Into l·lneh balll. IC>_._ Place bto a he•vy
V. = ... NII wlM HIHl'Ole with t11ht lid. l ~11.-oa eont· C o m b In e b rot b • atareb toaaato NUC"e, red wine, a c-.. :llot cooked and cornstarch: mix
rice well. .Pour over meat·
COmbme beet, onion, ball•. Cover casserole
e 1 1 .. , d Parm ea• n and bake in a 3SO-'.de1ree
Ji t•MHOP 1arlk daeeae. Draln thawed oven for 40 minutes. "W"'G..,.........,..c;;;;a"fl\illfiiW;:I; I I
.-59 LADY LEE 78 TURKEYS •
~en or Tom. Young Basted
Graae A Frozen 11·25 Los
LO
~ teMpoon talt
Wi Leu ... pepper
l\i ~ flounder fillet.a s cu111 bot cooked
rlce
Comblne onion, creen
pepper. tomatoe1 ,
tomato aauce, bay leaf,
thyme, ealt and pepper lq a saucepan. Cook
ovel" low heat 15
minuta. Remove bay
leaf. Arran1e flounder
fllleta in a ll1htJy
areaaed baktn1 pan.
S~n Hutt over fl1b.
Bake at 375 de1rees fo~
...... ·~ -.
I t
F'ullv CookeCI Whole 5·7 LOS ltl
CUDAHY
BAR·S HAM 799 CROSS RIB 198 ROAST
water AddeCI. cHam Halve!$ 1 98 LO 1 Canned ·
1"'·"" ~Irr N'rfri,.;,n. ritn,.(A~ ~'(1(1~·, ,.,,,
Only I Grade "A" •
oualltv!
We offer only the f1nJ t •
quality. Grade A turkeys al
lower overall prices. From
Lancaster Grade A hens and
toms to pre·basted birds from
Butterball and Lady Lee We
offer a complete selection ot
"fresh" Zacky Farms Grade A
turkeys, too.
Poultry & Meat
GRADE A DUCKS
•~ n91u1 , • .to H.S
STUFFED TURKEY
lt 1.58
11.97
ti .89
..p5CAR MAVER BACON 1 98
r .. SUCfO \ lJ OZ "" •
ROASTING CHICKEN
"""' ZA(IY 'dfolS
GRADE A GAME HENS
n l()N Fi90Zflll 10 01
... 88
(ACM 1.39
FRESH OYSTERS 100l ;M1.49 . Wlflllltl
Liquor
b
SEAGRAM'S 1129 7 CROWN • ~ecs wru~ev , 1s ur Btl eo Proof
L PAUL MASSON WINES 2 79 (NAelJ\ .... _
Oi i~ I Slit Ill •
ALMADEN WINES f lffOCr< COlOllllAllO C'*-llAllC 2 89 0 OI G«OW:4' llOSl I S l" 111 •
COLONY WINES
l' '""~ -lllilftAU) 2 39 0 llUI• Cll'tSTM. Oii CAO I S Ht Ill •
SESASTIANI WINES o1
A ~=ns~~ ,,,"' ••12.69
l' WEISEL WINE 2 79 o CMllli ~ , no--. t '1. •
Fres t1 Meat
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
IOO<ILUS IOllD(O lfr< LONI
ROUND STEAK
IOrW LOI IOIC>I' 0 IHI
PORK LOIN ROAST
s-IOI'< Clll AWtAGI Wf"-'l J LIS
CURE 81 HAM HALVES
112.68
111.98
lt 1.39
lt 2.98
~ANK PORTION OF HAM 119
IOf'tl W IUH Y COOCID ll •
BUTT POllTION Of HAM 1 28 -.; "I •11u' COOICIO ll •
FARMER JOHN SAUSAGE 98
-· MOT Oii MILO I 11 i!Oll •
ITAUAN srvte SAV,SAGE 1 98
fllHH ~K HOT Oii MIU> L8 •
SMOl(ED SAUSAGE
~'Tl.~~,,clr>llfO
SNOW CRAB ClUSTERS
u1 2.28
11 2.28
OSCAR MAVER BACON 1 98 Ill~ '4ICI I lt OICC •
LADY LEE BACON ~ 38
'4.l(IO I LAI ,_c; 'I •
Ho 1.Jset1old
l' KLEENEX NAPKINS 59
O -· 60Ct OICC •
L ~'fr~ WRAP 1005• llOU .49
l' SPILLMATE TOWELS 61 0 ,~t l 15 SI llOlL •
b ~oo'f.E FOIL Jr s s• •ou . 79
l' SCOTTIES FACIAL TISSUE 67 0 -1r DI AJSl -IS 100 C1 90X •
tCT ,_c; • 78
, MARSHMALLOW CREME 49 l, ~MT 101 -'Mo
''CHOCOLATE CHIPS 1 99 b .,.111u ""91 11 oz ""c; •
5 lt> can Bonetess Bonded Beet Chuck LO
CRANBERRY !SAUCE OCeanSprav
Jethed or Whole
.45
160z on
!STUFFING 69 MIX \ '• Brownoerry 12 oz Box Hero OI' saQe & onion
LADY LEE
PUMPKIN
\
}'LADY LEE
6YAMS ·
.48
2901 can
.49
290z can
LADY LEE PINEAPPLE
, '"'""'"0 45 0 CJIUIHIO OV. Ot raoT\ 11 J\ Ol (Atj •
IAOY LEE SUGAR 63 --.o IO<t Ot DM• ._.,,,, Ol IO>•
L MRS. CUBBISON S
Oft~ .... WASOOtlO °' '°"' -Stllf• ...
f FRUIT COCKTAIL 0 Cl.l-'t
P LE SUEUR PEAS o w.oil
f VLASIC PICKLES 0 -(T WMOlf
1101 IO•• 79
llOZ 0 ... 55
1.CJl , ..... 49
11011 ... 1.09
pEXTRA LARGE OLIVES 73 o~•C~A •mo \101 c"'"•
r SHREDDED COCONUT 1 66 O •AAIU 1601 l'ICC. •
p BUNOT CAKE MIXES 1 49 0 Pllllll/llY I VAlttlTIU 11· •OZ IOX • •
pCORN MUFFIN MIX 25 01'"'1 l 10ll0Ko
f ROYAL GELATIN 45 o aoz IOlr.
r PIE CRUST MIX 59 0 • ,,, ctocu• lfC OU II(• II Ol IOI •
p GINGERBREAD MIX 69 0 .-Irv (llO(l(ff ,. IOI IC)I! o
,P DATE BAR MIX 0 -~aot«• ••or , 1.19
p B & M BROWN BREAD 79 o "°' c~.
'°' ,,..67
canned & Packaged
P CHICKEN BROTH 31 0 twAlf\Oit M ' > Ol (M •
P COFFEE-MATE CREAMER 1 49 0-owotftD 1601 ... ,
\WHOLE PEACHES
<loO•lH ~fO 1"01 c,. ... 67
f NIBLETS CORN
O wt<Otl -L 1101 CM.35
Delicatessen It ems
bCRESCENT ROLLS .69
POlst>urv e o z can
~
CHEESE bLADY LEE 119
Mild Cheddar 9 oz Pico OI' Monrerev Jack
f CREAM CHEESE 6 lAD'f ld aoz """ .69
f CHEESE SPREADS 1 39 h -•V-TU 1 01 Cutt •
l' CHEESE BAU 1 59 6 tllil.Jl.""4/lfAnUI W.fHHlJT\70Z CIW:G •
r CHEESE LOG 1 99 h ·~ IUll W '-"f\ '001 PC(. •
f ITALIAN DIN SALAME 2 19 0 MAtCOPOlO MIO tOJ ""c; •
r SMOKIE LINKS 1 49 0 lAO'Y l(( 11 Ol .. c; •
r VLASIC PICKLES 99 O llfli DllL -E l<W•lt l1 Ol 1At,
f VLASIC PICKLES 99 0 Df'UDIU~t-\'li U OI IMo
Dairy & Frozen
XWHIPPINO 99 CREAM •
ll<IV lte 16 Ot Ctn
!JOHNSTON'S
PIES
Punip111n or Mince
r LADY LEE SHERBET 119 6 S •i..tVOl!t 1IOll'IOS I 1 (,AL CIW •
P CRANCE JUICE 0 (A' llUlif Q)lirC""'ATI 1JQI (,A,lj.69 ...
All stores
Wiii be Closed
Thanksgiving Day
-WltlW••---
\
"'".
Produce
JUMBO
WALNUTS .69
Hartl~ New Croo LO
Swttt & JUICY LO
BLACK
GRAPES .59
1111>1er u s No 1 LO
FRESH
MUSHROOMS .69
8 oz PlcCJ
FRESH
CUCUMBERS .24
E;'l(t,
Dairy & Frozen
!REAL 85 SOUR CREAM •
i.ao-nee 16 oz Ctn
GREEN BEANS f' lAOY Uf fff.U\A.t CUI 88 0 .i-'""'" \ rY\I 10 01 BAG•
l' BIROS EVE VEGETABLES 39 t, PIA~Ollwt<Otl•l-lC°"" 1~01 ..CCC •
LADY LEE EGG NOC 89 UOl cur .
l' PET RITZ 9 PIE SHELLS 65 i; JCT PICC.•
r COOL WHIP TOPPING 77
0 lltOS hi II 01 Cl" •
l' LADY LEE MARGARINE 57 0 (-()I\ 1601 "".
Olir,=::-::C~~~~~~.Cf'\
ltlf\ISu~v -1VO lllO
~ ' HOLIDAY • ·, ~v GIFT
·~. :-' , . ~· BASKETS . .. . '·~·-,;.., ''" '"'·.· .. ~-......,, 0. I ••\. .J"
• .JA. ~· .,).,, ·-•
ShOw s~ you care w1tn a
Olfl OI OOod t.-Stt from LUCkV our
HOll<SaV Fruit M\ktlS .,. fllltO to
vCNJr oroer w1tn rrt'Stl {~
ano t •ollc fruits nurs Mid chffSes rrom our ~1 aw. all at a
price you can aUotd ASIC your
stote n\l~tr fOI' CS.tails .. . .,..., ,.. .
u
•
FOOD
ALTHOUGH TRI!
French court may have
marveled at this bovel
dowry, the ioCHdleat.
bad lon1 been Italian favorites.
So prized wa1
Parmesan in Italy that
when the 14th-century
writer Boccacclo want·
ed to retale his COUD·
trymen with a
moutbwatertn1 tale, be
invented the idyllic land
of Beaaodl, where
macaroni makers dwelt
high ~ a mountain of
grated Parme.ean and
rolled savory buttered
noodles down the naky
slope1 to hungry
townspeople below.
Boccaccio's rantasy
was far rrom incon-
gruous, ror
cheesemakers bad been
producin1 Parmesan.
type cheese in Italy for
thousands ot years.
ALL SUCH CHEESES
were called "grana"
because of their hard,
grainy texture. The
grana made from the
sweet rich milk of the
cows that pastured
around Parma was ac·
corded the reatonal
name, Parmesan.
From Etruscan times, grana was valued not
only for ita diatlncttye
nutty flavor bpt also
because It aced well and
could be transported
· Ion(. di1tancea without lpoillq.
Over the mJllenla, the
cheese aained even
wldet PoPu.larity, uatll
in uu; tlle Italian ob-
server could declare
that "in our day, Italy's greatest glory comes
from Parmesan
cheese."
FIFTY YEARS
later, the Dominican
cookbook-writer who
managed the household
of Pope Pius V did not
hesitate to claim that
Parmesan was the best
cheese 00 earth.
As trade among Euro-
pean nations grew, so
did parmesan's interna-
tional renown.
In 1686, diarist Samuel
Pepy1 recounted~ow
London connolaaeurs
dug pits during the
city's great fire to pre-
vent their precious
cargo of Italian cheese
from melting.
In France, a century
later, Diderot included
Parmesan among the en-
tries In hla famous en-
cyclopedia, describing it
aa "a stronc cheese hichly appreciated by
Italians, produced in the
recion of Parma, and.
from there exported to
all European nations."
BUT WHILE all of
Europe was iraUna the
treat atop noodles,
vegetablea and 1oups,
PAAMESAN 'OPS NOODLE PIZZA
I t s t i l l t a k e s mioeatrone soup, even usage of parmesan on
almost two gallons of Caesar salad, all rely on the family dinner table
milk to produce one parmesan as a main in· and the continuing
poundofcheese. gredient. availability or recipe
The milk ia heated to ideas, more Americans
conform to modem safe· AND IT SEEMS that are makillg parmesan a
ty itandarda; then it is the role Parmesan plays regular part of their
skimmed, as it always in cooking ta continuing cooking routine.
has been on Italian to OourlBh'. Consider the Italian-
farms, so that the firm-With the increased American spirit of
grained cheese will con·
SAVOaY ITALIAN 1au111e <or •roua•
bee/, II 10'I prefer) ..
browned in lb• Hm• utnet that wW MrV• .. tb4 oven ca1Hrole for
baktnf. On on, tomatoes, oreaano and IOOUU'ella
and' Parmeean cbeeae
are added.
Noodlea are cooked
separately, tbett to.aed
with freab·; e111, a
•Prinkle ol paraley anCI
1arllc powder and more
fragrant Parmesan.
THE NOODLE mixture topa the
meat and the layered
casserole ls put Into the
oven to bake.
It emeries -after it ls tumed out onto a serv-
ing plate -l~g like
pizza! And that's just
how it's cut: in pluallke wedges.
Add a green aalad for
a luncheon or Informal
dinner menu.
And, for a crowntnc
touch, top th,e Just-baked
casserole with addi· tional Parmeaan.
This novel dish com-
bines the thriftiness and
through-and-through
Parmesan navor of an
Italian-style dish with
the ease and speed of
preparation and the
vivid color and flavor of
20th century American
cookery. It's a taste of
the best of both worlds.
~:~.~~.fr~··::: Try artichoke delights
As i• old-fashioned cheeaemaking, a natural ~ A r ti c b o k e . . . oz. frozen package)
rennet and a bit of bac· Artichaut . . : The very 2 large c a o n e d
terial culture called a name evokes visions of artichoke hearts
"starter" are added to s i d e w a l k c a I ea in ch()pped
make the fresh mhk Montmartre, clay-red 2 hard cooked eggs,
coagulate into curds and fields of Provence and chopped
whey. the blue Mediterraneah. ~ cup thinly sliced
Listed below are small mushrooms
ONCE UPON A ti.me, several suaaqUona for v. cup black sliced
farmers used fermented artichoke reclpea to mushrooms
milt from a previous. brine a continental touch v. cup mayonnaise
batcb of cheese as a toyourtable. 2 tbs. Drambuie
"starter," but now the C R A B II E A T Snipped chives
f r i e p d J y ARTICllOKE SALAD Salt aod pepper
microorcanisma are 1 cup naked crab-Combine all ingre-
salt and pepper to taste.
Refrigerate until serv·
ing time. Serve on let·
tuce leaf with lemon
wedges. Two servincs.
ARTICHOKE
SANDWICH FILLING
Puree 6 cooked
artichoke hearts, and
Oavor with 1 teaspoon
lemon Juice, ~ teaspoon ofgrated1arllc,andsalt :l~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~:5:~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~ and pepper. Add some
butter (aoftened) to bind
P r e p a red 1 n a meat (l~ oz. can or 16 dienta, addlng chives, h11tealcally clean ~------~_::......_..,...;,;..~~:...-....,,...---=----~.:..-...~---__;.~------------....,,...~---....,,...._._...;.._~...;,_~_,....~~------.;o;...;;;-;;.....,,...,..-------"""----------------~~~---~---~
•tarter room.
and chill.
Alter the cheese curd bas formed, it is
"cooked" with steam
beat, salted, band·
packed into 22-pound
molds and pressed to ex-
tract more ot the whey.
The wheels of cheese
are soaked in brine for
about a week and then
dried under carefully
controlled temperature
and humidity conditions.
Cempen should store a
batketful of coottn1
tgulpmeat aloa& With the
tent ~ 6811 and other outdoor parapbematla.
A y ~
Cubbison' s
Dressing
s.::::.. Russet
Potatoes
Safeway Speciall! .. -~ .. 1111 1-iPartyDlps r:=• t: 49' •KraftCremnCheese :: 79' FreshYams ~s,
15' Rolls :.!i ~ 2 ~. '1°0 .. Whlppilg tr.am"-:: 59' Table Grapes Wit..., .. "* 1131 1-i English Muffins '=' :12 79' • Cool Whip ':: ~ 69' Crisp Celery Ff•, r1111
• PumJ*ln Pie ..;... '::" 1179 Yellow Onions ~51
• 3().Sllct lhad ..;... 2 = '1 00 Mixed Floral Bouquets
.. Deluxe let Cream~ .=-'241 Orange Juice
·-
c
I
&LaultY~SD •••l• ·~·1t••••1 ~ ........
11 mlsecl wlill': otlaer .......... ~ .... Bot_peppel' .. .._for
............. 11 •• •
:a:v.=n.~-t al moat aay aayory
tauee.
Dllhel prepared with
leftoven are not oDlJ
•atilf)'lnl to bUllll'1 •P. petlte1, tbe1 're eeonomlcal u well, coa· ltltutiDI a mo.t deUcto.
mean• of atretcblDC
eoit:IJll)Mt.
Autuma Cblek• Ple, mattna melot leftover cootea chicken, ta a
atreamlined version of • traditional bud1•t
fHOftte.
CAaaoTB SQVASll, celery aad c:urranta
(or ralatnP U tbey*re
baodJer) all 10 lnto a
creamy-filllDI that'•
I AUTUMN .. I MAKU UR Of QtlCUN
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Making break in proce'80r
'It takes less than five minutes 'to get the dough ready to rise ... '
l1t1lflQICt)f
642-..321
Alone the Oran,,e
Coast, bruneb often ls
"the" meal for enter·
tainln&. It fU•tl mwit come a long distance, or
lr the weather la lncle·
ment, comina and 1oln1 durin1 daylicht hours is preferred.
Quiche is an l m ·
preulve meal to serve
on these occasions. And
It 11 well s uited tp
today's livin1·style
because it is easy to pre-
pare, needs only a salad
as an accompeniment
and requires little clean· up once the guests have
left.
This recipe for
Spinach Quiche bas a
German flavor, due lo
the German Rhine wine
that is added. Because
of the character of the
wines of Germany. they
add a great deal to foods
with which they are
cooked. A bit of tang
from the fruity acidity,
a touch or the delicious
flavor of the grape, and
a fullness in the body
that is not overpowered
by other foods during
the cooking process
USOA Cllo1c• Ch1Kk Cut lB.1.69 Fre<1h El Ron<ho
O·BONE BEEF ROAST PORK SAUSAGE ..... ... .
USDA Choice llocl. Cut
.LB .97 t..on Doe. Not h c-.d 22'141 fat
BEEF CHUCK ROAST El RANCHO GROUND BEEF •. La 2.19
USDA Choice Cut :.l8 1.59 USDA Ch-• 8onele'I' Shldr 8"4
7-BONE BEEF ROAST CLOD CHUCK ROAST l8 2.49
El Ron<ho Reody to Eol LB 1.59 El Ronc:ho 008\ Not E•cHd 15% Fat
SMOKED HEN TURKEY LEANEST GROUND BEEF l8 2.49
USDA Choice frtt"1 Lorge LB 3.79 El Roncho Style
LAMB LOIN CHOPS THICK SLICED BACON .l8 1.29
FRESH CENTER CUT ROASTING CHICKINS . SWORDFISH STEAK
USOA Grode A Lorge Coloforn10
Grown
LB.
fml1901 19 IAllUN OYSllRS ...... JAR 2.
Fron~ O.ftooed lo·I 0., Coo~.ct & Pw l•IJ 99 SHRIMP ........................... LB 4.
WHOLE OR JElllEO SAUCE· 16 OZ
,.,~ 1 0• Jot WllH• oYsnas 1 .49 .,.,,h,,u,,,
•AaRCRIDSMAPM8 .. 1e 1.69
OCEAN SPRAY 3• CRANBERR~ •' ·I .::
C""'vCf .. ~ ft""'I (•f"tO" ..... 89 u ... _.as HAMPSHIR9SOUR CREAM PERRIER WATER
~' !io•/111101ulo .:...L--1'1u
PITTED RIPE O LIVE6 .69 PRINCEll A YAMS .69
24"0J H.•N~• 1.09 I lb (vb. Mo'90".._ .75 SWEET PICKLES FLEISCHMANN'S
Sib·"""'-.87 /> Ol ~.'°91 •Id .49 Pll lSBURY H OUR FRUIT COCKT All
~"' S"'oO P\9 Nob•wo .89 18 .17) ft ltoH H•orr o_,~ .95 SNACK CRACKERS REYNOLDS ALUMINUM FOIL
BESTFOODS
MAYONNAISE
MRS. SMITH'S •6·0Z. I 99
PUMPKIN PIE ........... L.1~.'~-~---·· ••• •
•1>.
C&W PETITE Pt:AS
3~~z 1·.3~
LIMIT2 7
11>01 lov •·•dwr•
SMALL WHOLE ONIONS
lO •I O"'••Qoo••
BROCCOU SPEARS
RIC t F~OUR .I•
1111111 ... '~.,.. •• i.
GOURMf T VINEGAR .81
f11Y"1·················~ 11 LB. CILLO CARROii I •'~:·BUY ONE GET ONE I
W•t• ·~·· ••• ,... ••• u ,.~... I . EE I . ~~ • .wi.. •• ..,..,. ~ • I
lle((a ·i.::: ~ lioM ... •••• • ...... .., """ -. ..._.."' .... -v.rw 1'19¥: ~o """ Ho• 11 ••to I ' •••••tMUCiMIS MAUIT COUPOlt••••••
.79
.83
.79
1'1'\ 9 "DMP O•~
JOHNSTON PIE SHELLS , ..... ~\...,
APPlf PIE
.89
1.75
RED EMPEROR
GRAPES
39~!
1.79
.39
.49
TURKEY BREAST
El Rancho Fresh
worh Rob Cog<'
& G1bl~• L~.209
1-LB. CAN
YUBAN COFFEE
All 2 69 GlllNOS
LIMIT 2 •
J
W• ,...,... the right to llmJt or ref\IM..,.. to~....,_ ot wh .... llil1ra. A.dwerti.ect ltema In thl9 lld .,.. U.. Nme price ot lower In
.n.1toru 1111hefe n1llab.._ Prlc" other thP ~
,..1c .. m8Y wary dependlnQ upon ~I eo~ coet faC:tort or geographic loC•tlon.
Ralphs Premium-F.rozen
With Pop Up Cooking Gauge
Any
Roasting , ..
·1;;:..:,:{ll>«l\I or
1Tom A ~·-__ }!£-/,Turkey
"'
Green Barid
Fresh
JiJ ~alery
7
Ralph9
Brown •n
Serve
Rolls
A .... Party Flake or
Natural Qreln pkg.
-· Limit 3 of 12 •
Armour Star-Freeh Boneless
Turkey ·
ButtwBaated
'
per
lb.
Ralphs-Butter BaeteCl-Frozen
HanorTom 00 turkey --~per
With Pop-Up Cooking G•~· lb.
(T('
\eJ
RalDhs has a full seiectton
of fresh and frozen poultry
Limit 1 Per Family
Ralphs will not be und•sold on
frozen Grade A Tom Turkeys•
,..,.,. htft ............. ,...... ..... .,_ ...... wlCle
....... of .......... ...__.. ................ ....,..., ... ...,..;
"VIie .. ., -. ... teel • ...,., m..tcate cit.., .W., "°""
,_.,_ .. prlta, ..,ettlMcl In the LA Tlmff e1C1udlng
~·t-Ohr efleclft "'""'Mr-• ....,.., ..,. .. ....... ......,.. ...... ....,.. ........ ,, ...... ... ...
59
Limit 2
1 lb.
pkg.
Ocean Spray "
Whole or Jellied Cranberry
1 'Sauce
16oz ••
can
Assorted Varieties
Mrs. Cub bison's
Stuffing Limit 2
Frozen-Whl~ped Topping
Bini' Eye
Cool Whip Limit 2
..
10 oz.
pkg ••
(.f
1
I '
11
,
)
·-
• I
l11 J I,. DIVIDES ,~,.,seafood into wblte-
flubed ocean fish ,
shellfish and other popular species and
Market
Report
.. ::update
WASHINGTON CAP )
,, -Pork chops and ap-
plesauce are a tradi·
tional food combination
and one that will be
especially attractive
now •• both foods will be plentiful
The Aerlculture
Department's monthly
food marketing alert re-
ports that this year's ap-
ple crop ii expected to
set a record and a large
volume cl the fruit will
be beading to market next month.
And of course ap-
plesauce l.ID 't the only
, -·~ay to go. You can en-
"'-J O Y apple piea ,
turnovers, baited apples,
cider, Waldorf salad or
just chomp them down.
THE ALERT AL80 reports that pork
prod~ction will lncreue
seasonally 1n October to
close to the hleh rates of
a yearqo.
r O.n the other band, aupplh• of beef,
chicken, turkey, e1&1,
milk and d.a1ry producta
are only expected to be
adequate durlna the
month.
Beef production will
' be about the 11me as
lut year, which ii 8 per-
cent to 10 percent leaa than the 1977 .79
aveur· II P&ODUCl'ION
wlll be in a aeaaonal
decline and e,. 1uppllea
JlU expected to be
Jlllbt.11 below tut year.
There lhould be plen-
tiful 1upplle1 of fresh
rapes and adequate
amount& of Bartlett ud
winter :~, cranber-
ea and ·fresh oru1es and lemcm. Grapefruit
will be ln upi 1upply, bo\iib.
Dried pnma will be
lentlful ..a there Will a~ IUPPPllet of ' major clllDeil fruit Ud ca~ and frOsea citrus ulcea.
"Jtorl•I Dreued
....._ • Refriaerated ......... C1Ufornia, Davia,
CallforDia 95811 •
ISND A C88Cll or
IDQDe7 ........ out
to s.,.nateadeat of DoeMww!ll.
To_. AY of U.e 1ee-..Jnu.~loa 11 arlae Reaourcea
S1>9dallatt. See Grant ~ uDJvenlty of
For St.a JOU cu Ol>-
taln a :r&l1;:.a. on ''nah over
tbe Coale" from
Conaumer Information Qenter, l>epf.rtJQent Y,
.. Se.val 1peel" of
ftab haft tbelr OWll pro-
m oUoa a I offlcet to
Whtcb ~cu "rlte foc-aa1wer1 :to 1peelfle
quaUOal and for free
reelpea,'' IA Mol COD•
PRICES EFfEC.
7 FULL DAYS,
NOY. 20 •
NOY.26, 1980
Service Deli ' t'IATUl!e INITOllll WffNmmca Dar90M. Y) ........... ~i•·
ALIX•-llM6C--,... 49• ... Alt ................. IHA _
~ .... '°... 'I" ............... IH&
-••a.ICeTO-.. ., •• TmlCn .....,,, ......
LOlelMOM • nll8lf WT • , " cw-....... .....
eluded.
I .a.-.nt···~AllD s 1 •1 ID ........ e.,-. • PIE ................ . .... .. ................ *<>L Sllm llOIH :: ... , tUOL 2f a QOU) lllB)AL 16.F-«ISIHO H.L 14•. °"MO.°" Uf9UACHl:D 82c CUii PEACllS =~-.9 --67' ~ FLOUR ................................. .u PllRI ~· ................ , ....... -. 61' I D ... RQ..ac>NEs··s· CORNlll~ STIWFINOOfllEAIOHC 79c Pllftl 'a YAMS ........... t .. --19' ..,..,_~.-.::.:.~~;;,~·::.~-· If =Pl• ... : ... _ 75cJ
I NIAii CHIPS '.'.".'.".~':'.'-99c Siii CREAi-..;. ...... f -92'
• YUUN•M;.DRN",PM0.-11.SC.~ s2t3 llEflll IEAllS D~ .. , ........ IM)Z. nc C•rEE .................................. ...... CAT• i:<.::...... . .•.. f . -21"
I iiSTAlli c•FEE ..... M)L s3 92 U5A1!1~.::~·· .......... ,41 mR I FIOST .~ ............ ~.. 1.113 I iiUS~LLOWS ....... 6Jc r.m;:s ~~ ..... t .. -.;:
I ii.iiiAll•E ........ ·····-·17c •Fii~............ ~
COCM:OU. TM °"8"llTl•MO. OflSUOAIM'Ma ~ -"°~ A 119 I *""TINOTAYMA&l .. ..,.,, s I'' rlHNI .... ~ ..................... tUOI. .. s•t ••••s ........ 0<)1.... Ii~~:=~···:· :i1!s.
I LONGGrAiM & HOTIOLL Pl CRUST STICIS ~ .n« Sl.19
WILD RICI I MIX SALT 'Mc ::r:z:::l. 99c , "'Ml"97c .,.ROr:S.::-YOllRU-=P .. . .. . .......... -" ~
M ~~ ... f ... ,.oz. W i-r.~u.ow I MA£8r11N1 SAlllA COFFEE ~.... .• -'6.59
.. C ..... A.T
l&.AOE.Cllf
· 97c La. •••••lllAM ai·~L.IO
, •• L8,
I ='lrdlr..~~~ $479j
Low Frozen Food Prices ..., .. ,....
YEGDAILIS =::=:~:..nu ........... ~ II'
PECAN PIE ...................................... »« •3 19
EGGO WAFFLES ................................... H«. • 1 ••
ORANGE JUla ...ns ............ : ............... ~ 49'
TOPPING ., ....... , .................................... IM)Z. 79'
COOL WHIP TOPPING .......................... ~ 69'
• eaa•elAllT •
"~ ~ lllliiiGr.~.~-----42'
,,_ 51c lllitfftlcm ... .•Mil. 41'
11111·--'."'a.-•6«. lllftii. ""'""" ... , .......... ..
mtlm . ~. ·-'1.15 al&u• .... . .. .. ·"'°' 41-
,« 49• = 74 • INS.l~ITCOFCOFFEFEEE _,.,f .... M)l :42.~33 SAIW\A "'"n Dlllll> f . ~z .-I ' '------=--------------_.;;,;-----..--WOOD PLUS ~MPoMGUAIG. tM>L $1.47
) SllEllY =:-&.-: .............. ~ .............. »«-•7••
SCHWEPPES ~o:ca::=-, ., .. °"33c 111£1$ a.ue "°°"' OlllCllll AU. l.DIOtl ..-Oii YOOllA •llUI. • , .. • "'4&.
LAllCll'S WI• ........................... n•• t3a•
COLOllY WI• :::r.:t.":'Mr.' .•. '~ ............. •.M. •219
~••••,._.. ..... ~. •2n ~ ..... .--co.a~ ........... , ....... , ••
mlla -.......................... tn..OZ.IO'tn. t 1 ••
Mlllia~ ••••••••••••••·•~•••••••••t9't»Gl:.IOT'ftat '3"
,,,
.4 p-
f'WlllltMd Or-.. C'Mtt o.I~ Pllet !fO"· s. ll, "· •• ,.. .....
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
ITAT8MaNTOPA9NfDOMjljl•NT
OftUHOI'
Plc;TIT1a.IS luttN•ll NAM•
Tiie follOWtn9 ,.,_ llew -
JUST HEAT THEN EAT BREAKFAST ftlE
BREAK.PAST PIE
Crumble bacon. Set
a•lde. Mix com flake
crumbs with the 1 tablespoon drippings.
Setuide.
In medium-size bowl,
beat ea-unW foamy.
Stir in remaining ingre-
d hnta. p·our into
greased 9-incb pie pan.
Sprinkle with crumbs
mixture and bacon. Cov-er. Refrigerate over-
night.
, Remove pan from
refri1eratOJ'. Uncover
and bake ln oven at 325
de11:ee1 about 50
minutes or unW knife ln· aeYted near center
comeswtclean. Ylelcl: I
servinp.
SAVE·A·DAY
COl'l'ESCAKE
1ti cup hl&b·protein
rice and wheat cereal
y, cup chopped nuts
y, cup firmly
8 slices bacon.
cooked untll crbp, re-
ser vlng 1 tablespooa
drlppinp
Beefy • • lll81D course
~ cup corn flake
crumbs sew z~ cups frozen bash
brown potatoes
l""' cups (4 ounces)
shredded Swlsa cheese
\1t cup cottaee
cheese
""'cupmllk
1 sreen onion, thlnly
aliced
1 teupoon aalt
~~pepper
4 drope llq,uid pep.
per•auce
Meat in the recipe
makeiJ this salad a satis·
fying main dish, con·
tributing to the diet high
quality protein plus im·
portant vitamins and
minerals.
RUSSIAN
BEEF SALAD
3 cupa julienne
atrlpa cQoked beef (about iv, pounds)
3 medium pc>U\toea
(1 pOUDd) 1 cab (lS ouncea)
wholebeeta
Feel clean and
· fresh for extra
confidence.
• Deodorant pro-
tection for eKtra
freshness.
• Staytree maxi·
pad protection
for confidence.
• Wide adhesive
strip for comfort
and convehlence.
New Stayfree
Deodorant Maxi·
Pad• help you feel
ff88h, c•n and
confident.
1 small onion. sliced
cros•wi.se ~ cup mayonnaise
""' cup dairy aour
cream
pepper in laree bowl.
Stlr in beeta. Liebtly
fold in beer atrip1,
potatoe• and onion
rtn11. aun s aervinp.
1 't'.t teaspoon a.it
11, teupooo pepper Microwave ovens cook
Cook, chill and pare with beat produced by
potatoea and cut ln ·radio wave penetration.
pieces. Drain beets Thia means the "micro thorou&blY. pal dry wltb waves" can work woa·
absorbent paper and cut den oa non-food items. In quarten. Separate For enmple, the fut
onion allces into rtnp. ovent tum oUt beautlful· Combine mayonnaise, ly drlecl flowen and
1our cream, 1alt and aromatic berbl.
Hoi.D SNOOl<UMS
,A MINLJT~) kAYo ·• l'Ve
GPTTO FIX I~~~ FORMULA .
by Ftrd & Tom Johnson_
~
by 811 KNnt GORDO
"Get your milk off the,.-, P J. Don't you know
this is a COFFEE table?"
----------------------'a) CCLJl,..I:>
cu.fp IN A
WIJ.IDOtN ""1!X' D4W. Wl1H IJ5,
a.Jt!I -~..-~-~
-u~ f8tl0, how would you Ilk•.~ red noeer
by 'Kevin Fapn
MA~~ t«ftll ~ 0 ---·-~-
Lt"E ~~SO
I uusr 1.4JISH l'Di'AKEN Mi
f:.Ol)Cfftl()H ~OOSL '{-' / W~eN I HAO 1fiE O\PliC.E.
ITTS GO,LAWREt« ·-·
6KE. ~ow~ WE'RE
L\61\!~I~.
I
a..,""...., ... MA. AND MRS. PAUL BENDEii (J.EFT) WITH MR. AND MRI. Q.T. SM""
Chapman· Founder's Day
More than 500 frie nds of the college gathered for a reception, dinner
and dancmg ...
Chapman College in Orange now is 52 years
old and the birthday was marked by the annual
Founders' Day celebration in the Harold Hutton
Sports Center.
More than 500 friends of the college
gathered for a reception, dinner and dancing to
the music of Les Brown Saturday evening.
The semi-formal affair, themed "Salute to
the Trustees," was chaired by Rohen Gug-
genheim or Newport Beach, and included pre-
sentations to the board of trustees and the read-
ing of resolutions from the City of Orange, the
county board or supervisors and the office of
Mike Curb, lieutenant ~overnor
Guests were greeted by Pttsident and Mrs.
G.T. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. George L.
Argyros (he's c hairman of the board of
trustees).
Guests included Mr. and Mn. Clement L.
Hirsch, Mr. and Mrs. James Hines, Mr. and
ff UJJJJeiaings
By Judith Olson
Mrs. Paul Bender, Mr. and llln. Alu Rypbukl,
Gaylord Wagner, Sapenlaor ud Mn. Tom
Riley, Auemblymu Brace Nes&aade and Mr.
and Mn. Roa A. McCU.atoek.
Also Herbert W. S•t&oD, Mr. and Mn.
Harry Aseae, Mr. 1ad lln. Lawrence C.
Moldey, Mr. aad Mn. BarrUoa Sltarp, Mr. aad
Mn. Nick Doolla, Mr. aad Jin. Jer17 Pa&rtek,
Mr. and Mn. Robert Hitt, Mn. Pat Keadrtck
and Mn. Joy Anett.
MoJD beats her in her dreams
' ... What can I do to prevent these nightmares in the future. . ?'
DEAR ANN LANDERS: It is very late at
night -or I s hould say, very early in the morn-
ing, I haven't had a bit of rest because I am
a'rald lo go to sle.ett
Tb l>efore last I bad a terrible
ni dreamed my mother was hitting
rp e egs and wouldn't stop. I woke up in
tears. When I went back to sleep the same
Msbt repea\ed itself l could R\\lally feel th• pai.D, and lt was awful
I am a IT-year-old girl who has had lots of
dlaaareemtmts with my mother, btrt she bas
never beat me up like in that dream. Whal can I
do to prevent these nightmares in the future?
Please don't say "Be nice to her" or "Tell
her about It" because we are not close -in
fact, we get on each other's nerves.
( Singles J --------~-o_Wia __ d_o_r ____ __.
SINGLE JEWISH FRIENDS will have a house
party Saturday, in Fountain Valley For in·
formation, call 557-3862
OUTDOOR SINGLES will have a discussion and
social at 7'.30 pm Friday in Huntington Beach.
A potluck dinner will be held at 6 30 p.m. Satur-
day, Nov 22 For 1nformat1on, call 556-7026.
AL ALBERTS and has orchestra will provide
big band entertainment at 8 30 p.m Friday at
the Center Club in Newport Beach For informa-
tion. call 975 0700
PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS will have an
inter-chapter dance at 9 p m Saturday in
Garden Grove For mformat1on. call Bev at
847-7406
WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP will have a brunch
at 11 :~ am. Sunday in La Habra. For informs· lion, call Glenn at 871-9765.
SOUTH COAST JEWISH YOUTH will sponsor a
miniat.ure golf \rtp al 8 p. m Saturday in Foun-
tain Valley. For information, call Fred at
751-1378.
ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a dinner.
dance to be held with the Wheel of Friendship
singles at 7 p.m. Saturday in Fullerton. For in·
formation, call Ann at 751·0291
SELF CENTER wm have a Sinale Experience
dlscussion on ''Getting on With Your Lile" at
1 :30 p.m. Friday ln the City of Oranie. For in-
formation, call Jan or Michael at 99'7-Sl600.
BfG BAND SINGLES will have a deoce at 8: U
p.m. ~Yin Anaheim For information, call
W.76$7.
Ann
Landers
NIGHTMARE CHILD IN WICHITA
., DEA& CHILD: AU •reaaa me a a some~ bat I am Dot quJllled to la&erpret
yoara or &a}'Oae ehe'a. It Is obTila from you
letter &llat 1GaJ' metlter ls &he llOUce of a lot of
anxiety.
Yoa Deed to wor• out yov problesm wltb a
profealonal. Talk to you plduce coauelor at
scbool, 01' au )'OIO' family doctor wlilere to 10
for help. Tbere are some escellent mental
bealtb facWdes ln yoar city, ud I ar1e yoa to
utlUie them.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife passed
away five years a10. Last May I married her
best friend, who bad been a widow for approx·
imately the same length of time. We are bOth in
our 60s and always got along so well it never oc-
curred to me that we would have any problems.
I was wrone. It seems we can't agree on money.
We are both fairly well off. I own a good
deal of income property, and she baa Inherited
some excellent investments from her husband.
We both have children and they are all in good
financial shape.
I'd like you to tell me, in the paper it possi·
ble, who pays for what. Should a husband be ex·
peeled to foot all the bills, so the wife can piJe
up more money for her children -who have
plenty as it is?
Since I married this woq:aan I don't have the
av ail able funds when investment opportunities
come along. Thia bothen me, because I don't
think she is being fair. Her net worth ii actually
larger than mlne. Tbanb for an unprejudiced
opinion. -RANKLED JN RICHMOND
DEAit RANK: Too bad Joe 4ldn't wrtte to
me · before yn sot married. M~J matters
bave a way of seemlat almport.ut hrtal
coartalllp. La'r tS'• a clltterma ball ••me. I hope yoa ud your wife will make aa ap-
pointment .tUa it neatr .. tldnl party, prefenbly
someone wWt ft.a••clal kDo•·lloJr· Be <or llae>
ahoald eaauel yoa bo~ on you respou.lblUUee
and obU&atloDa. Yoa .altOald epee la adnace tlaat Ulle arbitrator's wo.i'd fl ft.UJ.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been eoing
with a lovely man for 1everal montba. It •tarted
out to be a platonic relatlooabip, but lD the last
three weeks lt bu heated up constdetably.
The problem la t.bat he came back from a
monttre vacaUon with • milltacbe and a beard.
1 almOll dropped to the noor When I HW blm.
He looks 1oofy. Wf>at•a more, I tan!\ ltaid to
have him kin me. t eet hair ln my mouth a.ad lt ••• real turn-off.
II it fair for a alrl to aay, "Sha e or no
kiuee"? Are you With me, Annie? -EAN IT
IN LAWRENCE, KAN.
DUil •.EAN IT: U,.. feiel 10 ..,....,
abOtlt M. ,. uead. v .. doll'& liMd me l't&ll ,_.
!fttre'.1 eoboiy wtlll • Maid or m-.c11ie 1 an "'
to•IU.
Deatlu Ellewhere
MOSCOW (AP) -
Nikolai Alne,n,-86, a
So-.let deputy defeae
nilnlater, bu di~ 0 unez ..
pect.ed.ly,'' official Soviet
news acmcy Ta11 said.
Uaually the urm "unex-
pectedly'' Implies a heart
attack, observers said
Thursday.
MOBILE, Ala. (AP)
-Blues singer 0. V .
Wrlllrt.,41, whose hit re·
cordines included the
album "How Strong My
Love la" and the aingles
''Eight Men, Four
Women" and "Nickle
for a Nall," died Sunday
on his birthday of ap·
parent heart failure.
lie accident u he drove
from aouthei'D Fr111ce to
Madrid._
NEW YORK (AP) -
Berl.a Ar••-. 81, who eamed six Tony award.a
for set design and de·
signed more than 100 pro-
ductions for the
Broadway staee during a
career that spanned five
dee ad~. died Sunday.
ioNDON (AP) -
Former movie sex sym-
bol lmopll lluNU, 38,
wbp appeared in ''When
Dinosaurs Ruled the
Earth," was found dead
Sunday with a bottle ol
pills in herhand, poll~
said. The actress re-
portedly attempted
suicide a week bef.>re. LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Nick Demda, 76, a
character actor who ap-HARR I SON, ~ r k .
peared ln such films as <AP) -WDBam JCNlePlt
"Spartacus" and in sup· Moore, 1081 the n~tion's
porting roles in the TV'"' oldest living war veteran
series "Kojak" and "Ben and Mason,diedSunday.
Casey," died of cancer
and heart disease Fri-
day.
Holiday
donatiom
accepted
Oranee County resi-
dents can donate blood
during the four·day
Thanksgiving holiday
weekend when the
Orange County R ed
Crosa Blood Center
sta)'s open.
Hou.rs will be 9 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. on Thanksgiv·
iag Day, 8 :30 a .m . to
3:30 p.m. on Friday and
9 a .m. lo 1:30 p .m .
Saturday and Sunday.
Questions may b e
answered or appoint·
ment.s made by calling
835-5381. SAN DIEGO (AP) -
World War II m edal
winner Wiiliam A .
Hacbon, 73, who refused
a Purple Heart after
leading a Battle of the
Bulge rescue, died
Saturday at a hospital.
He led a detachment of
125 Army infantry men
that rescued trapped
U .S . force• ln
December, 19'4.
BATH, England (AP)
-Anold Raakell, 77,
authority on ballet and
author of several best-
selling boob on tbe sub-ject died Friday. ,-PUBLIC NOTICE
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(AP) -aobert Lee
Wolff, 8', Coolid&e
Profeuor of Hlltory at
Harvard and an· autbori·
ty on 8y1anUue and
modern Balkan history,
bas died of a Jong·urm
heart ailment.
MADRID, Spain <AP)
-ADC!rel Amalrlk, 42,
playwrt1ht, historian
and a leadlne exiled
Soviet dlaaldent, was
killed Tuesday in a lraf.
LOS ANGELES <AP)
-Newicm P. Jat!OM, 80,
founder of Crown In-
ternational Ptcturest
died after a fight agains
cancer.
Polish
fete set
A dlDDer and dance i.s
1cbedtaled Nov. 3CJ by tbe
Oranae County-chapter
of the ~h Natiooal
Alliance.
Chairman Reatna
Kobai ot Anabelm Mid
the 1emilormal alfair
will be at the Gardea
Gro•e Community
Center, 11300 Stanford
Ave., beginning at S:30
p.m. Reservations can
be made by calling
974-1184.
..
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'1ennous •UstHd' 112 ...,.~TATCMaNT ~
Tl\e following,..,_, 11 do4~~ ..... t:Sl'I' ........ .
IMTl;RHATIOHAL lr1tAOE ,.
1,uu Del PfMIO A .... SUit. 11,
POlnt, C.. 92'1' "
E rllen Gedilt, 10I Vie Alegre c1em ... 1e, ~ ,,.n ,
Trilt Dull-lt ~ t>p411 ,f\,.
dlvidual.
El"lllin~ik
Tl\it sl•'-1 WM fifed wlth "'-'
County Clerk ol Or811Q9 County~ OcJ
100.r 21, 19111, ' ,..,, ..
P11blll/Wd 0r811Q9 Co .. t 0.Uy Piiot'
Ocl 29, Nov 5. 12, It, 1'111 052-ef
PUBLIC NOTICE ••
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINES$
..AME ITATU•'ElfT
He 1011-1n9 person• •r• doine t>ulln•u•.
ELEGANT INTERIORS <f110
~.:-Qr• .... ~ llHl;t c;.
V•l.,•e J u,,._r, l Wl\i-
W•Y trv•ne, C. n115.
D•vld G. Ur.lier l w1111ewoo4 W•r. trv1ne, c. nns
Tl\11 busjl'fts 11 conouctac1 Dy •n '"' dtvlOUel
0.vtdG u~er
nus 11 .. _1 ..,., llled w11h tnc
Co.Inly Clerk ol Or-County on 0c,.
•-••. n•o .., ....
PIOOtl-Oranoe CoilS1 0.Uy Piiot
Nov s. 12, rt. :It, ,.., f42._.
PUBLIC N.OTJCE ,
. livw set• •ileni m.CtlOn
Barbara Kirby (left) Lil 1>un1an and~ane Chase.examine ltema to
be aucticned silenUy on Saturday to raiH tunda for the American
Association or Unlvenlty Women'a educational foundation pro-
gram. ?be auction, •Pon.sored by the MUW'a lrvlile branch: ii tet
for 1:30 p.m. at the Senior Citizen'• C~ter, 380'1 Sandbui'I Way.
For information, call 559-5215.
David Melill (left) and Guy DePaul chat with Boise Taylor, a
model from Bullock's Fashion Square in Santa Ana, about the for·
men-0nly Santa's Satchel shopping party. The party -featuring
modeling of women's wear, jewelry and gifts -will be hosted Dec.
9 by the Satchel Club, support group of Santa Ana-Tustin Com-
munity Hospital. Call 953-3450 for reservations.
( Boros cope )
TRURSDA Y, NOV. 20 Specifically, emphasis is happiness no longer will
on public relations. be a stran1er.
BySYDNEYOMABR SAGl1TAJUUS (Nov. AQUARIUS <Jan.
22-Dec.21):0igbeneath 20-Feb. 18): You'll be
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. surface indications -doin1 more for yourself
19): Financial gain in-you could be on brink of -you receive Ions·
dlcated with aid of writ-m a king ma j 0 r d ls. overdue credit. Property
ten material. Member of covery. Prot.ed asaets. or business purchase
opposite sex figures CAPRICORN <Dec. could be on agenda.
prominently. Emphasis 22-Jao. 19): You ex-PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar
on special collections, tricate yourself from 20): Forces tend t.o be
hobbies, payments · "intolerable" situation. scattered. Know it and
TAU&U8 (Apr. 20-May V ill l i to _.... bt•· fin • 20): Lunar cycle blab _ ou w ex per ence p ece ,..,w.er ... o .
e greater freedom of formation. You are scat· tim~ng ta on taJ'Set and thought, action. There tered. Know it and plece
you ll be at rilht place will be out 1 et tor toaether bits of lnforma-
a t crucial moment. creative endeavors and lion.
GElllNI (May 21-June __ --------------20): Obtain answen by
cbecldog behind the
scenes . Focus on
hospital visit, participa-
tion in charity drive and rSPECIA
club activity. > c
Q
CANCEa (June 21 -
July 22): Hi1hll1ht pro-
d u c tl on, bu1lnes1
acumen and wllllnsne11
to invest in Ideas and -
creative projects . ..I
C•prlcom abd another O
C•ncer fi1ure pro·
piinenUy. %
LEO <July 23-Aua.
ta>: You complete lone-W ~andlnt a11l1nmtnt, toj~l. More r:nona ~
--.re interested a your A
•cUvlUea, 1tatement1, ...
:\IJewa.
.: VIRGO tAu1. 23-Sept.
: Be ready for new
art in new ~on.
1hUpt lndependtnce,
qijllDality add ·WllUDI•
, .. to plone,t.t • C!QQC.pt.
phuif Oft t.rneJ, tOD·
tutlon of le1a1 pro-·
edure and Wtct.r area of
c9mmumcatloo.
LIBRA: (Sept, 23· o.t. 22): lritultive nub -•en-pav So 1 'tnne.r feellnp. ,,
ltnanclal tranaaclloP
n1 111« ... ful and
Jd-... pettner or
• DiftlM ..........
=tcOaPIO Od a.Nov.
t: l'ocUI on mQtna Uaen ander1l,a 1na
mMlw. -arid 16u.
ROSANNA CLASSICS
REGULARLYS18
NOW 2for$22
NU~ Y.U.LS~ avttaa of till Coata Bolr t W•b '• • ..._cW'omeD't Club, Ht CO'lla'tlf. Will laold • tor :u:m a.m, at tlO w, ~ llNVgM ddl' lllbJJt., cc.ta Meta.
............. ~ I C~e Cburd. mo THE 'nlaD..\Y Club of
Ward St .• rouatatn Newpot:t Harbor will
V•ll•1. laformatlon: meet at die Balboa Bay •-un. Club oa 1'ae9day. Nov.
• 25, at n a.m, 1'be N&lfl'O•T •1LL8 lhdrl&al Slncera ot Oar• :a.ti Will dla-Corona del Mar Hltb n.~ dec!otattnc .:...11 -....-.1 ...... , at al1albdleciD '*'blurs-w• cn-..u•. &WOrma·
.. _ ..11..L t\Qll: ., •• -1 at wt ilwwMe. In· formation: a....a.
11MA&lfAL PAOB· leiua Md Boole" b t.be
toplc tJI a "'Mdl at 7:30
,.m. :r11ur9 a1 at 'Pret~ Cburcb of tbe 1 Mjj)tr, aeoa1 lhr1u~lt4 Parkway,
Ml11ton Viejo. 'lbe pro·
tram ii·~ 'g,~ Caret.nUt of Sc>uth · t
Medical Center. In~
formatiOll: 491-UU.
10 t.m. to • pm. at
Cbrlat Qaurcll b1 U..
S.a, HOO W. .9•lboa Blvd., NewpOrt :Beaeb,
tpOllJOred by Ualted
lltthodUt Women.
.CATHOLIC Dfi•u1btert ofo America rtri bott ita annual Quilc.pu aale
tbl1 weeltead· 'It St. Joachim Catholic
Cburch. 1N4 Oraaae
Ave., Colta lleaa. 1
SILVB& Anchor Aux•
1li•ry ol ffuntinaton In·
tercommunlty ·:Roapltill wUl bold its Cbrbtmu
BouUque and lbiJte 'sale
tbJa Friday from 7 a.m.
to 4 p.m. ln the bolpltal
Job by. Information:
168-4484.
LAGUNA Beaeb Hilb
School'• Cius of 19"
will gather for a Silver
:labllel ...... Uau aatmu •. .., aad
Saad K~I Lku•• Beaela. ilntormafto11:
161...._ T
J',U,L 81.00D OalVE, co-1pontored by the
Coata Me11 Women'•
Clu.b la Ht tor Tuesday, Nov . 25, at Jhrbor Center, 2300 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Meaa.
Bloodmobile donation•
wlU be ~en from 10: 15 a.m. to 1:80 p.m. ln-
formatioo: 815-~1.
ME MOSABLE eo-
menll ln piano blltory
wllJ be IUfed by Geor1e
Gouldlnf at tlle Friday Smoked Turkey
Dolphins slate
' . lunch, contest
The Dolphins, women's division of the
Newport Harbor Area Chamber ol Commerce, will
hbld their annual Chriatmu luncheon and cen·
terplece contest on Dec. 2, accordlnc to Mary
Muncy, cJlairwoman of tbe event.
Muncy announced ~t this year's luncheon
will be beld at the Balboa Bay Club, with a country
and western theme for both the luncheon and tbe
contett u well. Western dress for attendees ls en-
coura1ed, but optional. Luncheon will be served at
noon, with a no-host bar at 11.
Ideal Business
or
Family Gift
_ Perfect for Holidcly . -j) Entertcining
Hickey amok•d and ., 'I} oven routed. thla
or •'/ pfump, Juicy tu!'i(9y II
" • -delicious eerved hot or ~ cold. Avallable tor a
15111illiili.....--limlted time only. Order
fti~k~W V:~itm~. ~ OF OHIO
# 17 FASHION ISLAMD WISTCLR\ PLAZA
~IEACH 17•A•YM
640-6030 MEWPOaT llACM 64Ml7Z Competition ln the centerpiece contest ta open
to the public. Clubs, organliationa, business firms,
schools and individuals are welcome to ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ participate. Cast\ prizes will be gjven and a grand
sweepstakes trophy awarded.
· For more information. call Mary Muncy or
Jane Cavenaugh by Nov. 25, or call the Chamber
of Commerce, 644·8211.
No reservations accepted after Nov. 26.
Donna Mosher sets
school cello concert
Cellist Donna Jill Mosher wfU perform in
concert Friday evening al Fountain Valley
Elementary School.
The free concert begins at 8.15 p.m. at the
school, 1'1911 Bushard St., Fountain Valley.
Miss Mosher is currently a member of the
Fullerton-based Pacific Symphony Orchestra.
¢ • Demonstration set
Jane Freiman, author of "The Art of Food
Processor Cooking," will offer a free cooking
demonstration al 1 p.m. Dec. 9 at Willlams-
Sonoma st.ore at South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa.
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Marc S. Friedberg, a Newport Beach market-
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• 8UIJW
~sh.Ow
ALLAS <AP> -UU Ulan a
llefoi'9 the nalloa ftnally
~lbl~illrl'Who J. R., the real ~by -.. of tb rqJ h'·
Int 00 Co. -ls 1uln1 t.M pro. dueera of tbe hit TV aer:l
fl'Dallu'' for$C miWon.
'h_; .. "l'm not IQJna to be walked oo," aald Ewtna, who wUI be
r.,res.ented by Houston lawyer
o•J'Uchard "Ra~ho.rae" Hayn •
l fter the clvU awt ~ae filed lut
· eeklnU.S.Distri~Court.
• THE St!IT, which names
.Lorimar Productions Inc of Los
. Angeles, is partially in response
• tt> an Oct. 9 copyright auJt nled
in Loa Angeles aaainst Ewing by
r ,µ,e production company.
~ . "They made me madder than
.bell," Ewll\1 aald. "We'll IO all
the way to the Supreme Court lf
we have to. Tbey'll think a
second Ume before they start
wallthrg on anybody else in
d>allas."
There was no immediate com-~ent from Lorimar.
The hugely popular "'Dallas" ~eriea is based on the wheelings •llbd dealings of tbe family ot
hck and Ellie Ewing. The
vJllian of the prime·time soap, ~dest son J.R., was shot as the
series ended last year, and CBS
is expected to draw record au-
"dtences next week when the
identity of the would-be killer is
"f~vealed
·THE FJCl'ITIOUS Bobby Ew·
ing, J .R. 'a brother, is among
tbe auspects. In an interview
last summer, Haynes offered to
defend J .R. 's assailant.
Lorimar alleges that the real
_twing infringed on their show's
:>Copyright by marketing a line of
·'l'-shirts, blue jeans, caps and
.paperweights that refer to "Ew-
ing Oil" and "Bobby Ewing."
.. A California court issued a
restraining order prohibit'lng
Ewing from selling the items un.
til the case, scheduled ror a Dec
1 hearing, 1s resolved
BUT EWING'S s uit s ays
Lorimar 1s us ing similar
strategy in a game it is current
ly marketing.
The game, the suit contends,
refers lo comp.antes and in-
~viduals in the city and county
Dallas and uses trademarks
"'which are confusing similar"
to real Dallas companies
RANDOLPHPOWl!LL
(Alan Be•m)
, AP .. ,.,, ...
THEY (AND MANY OTHMS) ALL HAD GOOD RIAION TO PLUG THAT NASTY J.R. EWftfG
But TV• hOtiat a••••nt pme wtU go on -an tM culpltt la NYealed Frtesay
Mi11lons don't ·care
But it's rwt easy to escape 'J.R. fever'
By LOUISE COOK
~ ...........
Who cares "Who Shot J.R. ?"
Not me:
There have been 54 episodes of "Dallas" -not counting renms
-since the CBS-TV aeries made
its debut in the fall of 1978. I
haven 'tseen a single one.
What I know about the show.
I've learned from newspaper
and magazine articles, and from
friends who give me strange
looks when I respond blankly to
questions about J .R. Ewing and
clan.
l'M OBVIOUSLY not alone.
The Friday night show draws an
estimated 44 million viewers in
the United States. That's one
American in fi.ve.
Subtract the babies who are
too young lo watch television,
the poor who can't afford a set
and the curmudgeons wbo are
too ornery to tum one on, and
you 're left with millions ot people
who don't follow the Ewtn1
fortunes.
It's not easy to escape. The
pubftcily cloak spreads over not
only the fictiottal characters, but
also over the live actors wbp
portray them.
J.a. EVEN manated to get in·
volved in -the presldelltial cam-
paign. Durin& a fund-ral.ain& vii·
it to Texaa In July, President
Carter said: "I came here to
help the DemOCl'atic Committee
and all the members of It. BU\
primarily .. I c•me hen to find
out who shot J . R.'' He didn't.
Independent John Andenoo,
meanwhile, wu ln Encland. He
called at 10 Downin1 St. for a
meeting with Prime Jflniater
Margaret Tba~cber. OnlookeQ
cried out: "J.R. for President."
They didn't get him.
I dido 't start out to be a
"Dallas" no-show. I didn't even
notice it at first. Friday night ls
the end of the work week, time
for a leisurely dinner. an even·
ing's conversation, a eood boot.
No need to set the alarm cloct.
Friends explained ~ made a pointofwateblna .. Dallaa." Ult
1hattend tbelr Wustona about
Texu u a land peopled entlrelf
by cowboys and Indiana, at least
it bad plenty of oil and money.
We didn't watch it? Unbetieva-
ble. Incredulous. Why not?
The fever mounted as the
weeka wore on. Last aeaaon
ended -as even J a m aware -
with the 11hootin1 of J.R. Ewtng.
The publicity blitz began "Who
Shot J.R." T-shirts. Records.
Parties.
SECaECY AND security
shrouded t.l1e set where ftlmlni
for the 1980-81 season of
"Dallas" was takin1 place.
Rumors leaked out, alone with
carefully timed announcementa
from tbe s)iow's producers.
There were several endings be-
ing filmed.
I'd say the buUer did it. But I
don't know whether there is a
butler.
The actors' strike delayed the
start~ the new season. NBC-TV
stole the headlines and the rat-
in111 with "Shogun.'' Would the
nation ever find out who •bot
J. R.? Would it still want to
know?
•
'Dftllas' hype
traps millions
BJ800TrKMn
Ct ..............
Tbe lbontiDI ot vUlalnoul J.R. £wt,., baa created a ~ that doea ol' J.R.
pri>ud -amllahly i>Jayhl• With
the mlDdl ot m.lllioa.a wbUe at
tbe um• tJme pte•ln1 their poet.a.
Some 250 mUllon people
•roUncl the world are watc.binl
the wildly poplilar "Dallu, ..
where the oll·ricb Ewtna clan
ban11 out tta dlrt~ linen bl
televtaao'• prime um.. .
'Real' J.R . ..
wislws it
were over
DALLAS (AP> -J.R. Ewtns doesn't really care who abot
J.R .. what the nest twi1t will be
in the tanaled lives of Sue Ellen.
Bobby and Pam, or whether
Cliff Barnes will be ab~ to ex-tract his pound of neab from ~
collec:tive bides of the evil Ew·
inl clan.
All J .R. Ewin& wants is for people to quit ringin1 hla ter-J.a. ls not the popular
blackauar<t of the prime-time
soap opera "Dallas." Tb1a man ta the poor unfortunate 1"bo bap.
pens to be listed in the Dal1u
telepbooe book under "J. R. Ew·
ing.''
THAT IS. BE was listed that
way until well-meaning and
malicious "Dallas" fans jangled
bis telephone and bis nerves,
shattered bis peace, interrupted
his sleep and generally made
him wish bis villainous
television counterpart would
quietly expire from bis wounds.
Like millions of others, Ewing
and bis wife turned on the tube
to watch the antics of tbe
turbulent Ewing family in that
familiar cb.rome-and-llus city.
But every time the fictional J.R.
broke a heart, bankrupted a
buddy or taUfed uotller e1M1DY.
the pboae ttarted rtnalAI·
T"ey're •ondertn1 -.. en
bettlni -w111o abot :J.a. Met tbef'ir:e.~ up tbe WINI ol
an l.ddUIUy that IDaJ IOOD mue
HeG Ewin& Oll'a flctlUou1
fortune look like a cowpiofle'a
aavinp. ·
8ALES OF J . I\. buttona,
bumper 1ticket1, SteUOD bats,
!ame• and
eans are
oomfn1. T·
1bJrt1. read:
"WlJl Rolen
Never Met
J.R ... Macy's
ta-o"nine
J .R . bouti-
que• in New
Yort and
London. Ban· 11
t•m Boob recently publllbed
"The Dallas Family Album."
The ahow'a massive audience
spans geography, social status
and income. Even President
Carter, during a Texas ap-
pearance, wondered aloud il
anyone could tell him who lbot
J.R.
THE question of the televiaion
seaaon wlll be amwered before
the week ls out. CBS has
promlaecL
Bot another question rem~.
Wbat ta UUa show doina tom?
1.a. BWDlfG, the "DaUu••
centerpiece played by Lal'I')'
Ha1man, hasn't one redeeriiinc
quality. He's sr~edy. he's
deaplcable, be'• unfaithful, be'•
Immoral. And be'• proud of it.
On the abow, he'• desptaed by
virtually all wbo tow him.
Hence, virtually .everyon~ la a
suspect. But they're oUtD\llD·
bered -millions of viewers love
him, or at least love to hate him.
Dozens of reasons for the
show 's popularity have been ad·
vanced, to wit:
-Ordinary Rich Folk. We
love to be told the problems of
the wealthy aren't so different
from our own problems.
-REVENGE. WE 1et a·
vicarious thrill from J .R. Ew-
ing's ven1eance and bis
penchant for ruthless revenae.
We harbor revenge lots of our owa, U.. 1 to carry
tbemGUL
TV sleuths off er clues
1NESPLICABL~. TBB
aoawer apparently ls "yea." CBS In stretching out the tolu·
lion to the crime and reaping a
ratings success. The first epi&od-
of the "whodunit" series was
broadcast on Friday. Nov. 7. A
special added segment was
broadcast on Sunday. And the
end. we're told, won't come until
this Friday at 10 on Channel 2.
I've got other plans.
"We doo't watcb the abow
anymore, it Sot so diaCUStinl,"
Ewing said with the sip ~ a
man weary of conversations
about his small -screen
namesake.
"I HAVE HAD as many as 61
phone calls in one day from 10 in
the morning to three the next
morning," sald Ewm1. who re-
luctantly acreed to answer a few
queatlma about bis sudden and
unwanted "popularity.·•
-Poft.r. We fantaatae atiOUt
bavinl the power of I .R. Ewin&.
uain1 lt as they please and never
having to s uffer the conse-
quences. J .R. never gets his
comeuppence. -Hate. We need to bate
someone. And J.R. is eminently
hate able.
John Homlish, who teaches
psychiatric ethics at the Men·
ninger Foundation in Topeka,
Kan., thinks "Dallas" bas re-
deeming social value in much
the way "'All in the Family" did
10 years ago.
LOS ANGELES (AP > -Hav-
lhg had more than a little ex·
perience with video sleuthing,
those hardy perennials of the
airwaves the television detec-tives -al.So have their opinions
about who shot villainous oil man ·
J .R. Ewing of the "Dallas" TV
series.
Audiences won 't get the
answer until the "Who Shot
J .R. ?" episode is telecast fn. Clay. Meanwhile, a fewoftboseTV
detectives have done their own
$looping. A sample or their fmd·
ipgs:
_i -James Gamer, star of "The
Q,Ocldord Files,'' who bungled ills private eye cases about as
qrten as he solved them,
'\nswered in typical Rockfqrd
fflsbioo: "Any good detective
"ould know it 's obviously iriatln (Mary Crosby) who
ays the sexy and ambitious
ster ol J.R.'a wife Sue Ellen,
~well as beina J .R.'s mistreaa.
l were Rockford, I would
a eke Angel's Stuart Margolin
e on it, not my own."
-"ISanaby Joees" star Bud-
~ Ebsen, wbo ALWAYS goth.ls
T.lprlt: "1 shot him." Why?
.. ~ ....... DID BARNABY 00 m
Buddy EbMn •nd J.R.
"He's a no &ood son of a -.
I've known a lot of 'em. Barnaby
·Jones did it first. Check it out.••
-A•ale Dlcklll•••· wbose now-cancelled aeries "Police
Woman" wu a victim of TV'•
philosophy of .. big raunp or
elle," said witbout hesitation:
•'The producer.••
-Jfebert 1Jrtcla, who plays the
two-fisted Dao Tanna on
"Ve1u.'' aald the foul deed.., ..
perpetrated by a Southerner all
ri•ht, but from some rucab
you'd never expect to see Ht
foot in the Ewing Oil Co.'• board
room : "A hit and run by one ol
'The Dukes of HaDard,'" sald
Urich.
-Mike Camon, who starred
for el&bt years u "Mannix,"
aaid "I'd arrest the whole famJJy
and take away their charge ac-
counts unlll aomebody talb."
-Demla Wea.er -notinC
that Unda Gray had one of her
flnt major roles on "McCloud''
ln wbicb Weaver played the lead
-aaJd, "U Sam McCloud dla·
covered Sue Ellen really dJd
shoot J.R .• he'd let her to and
pin the blame on 1omebody
else."
-Hal u.detl, the New Yort
City detective In .. Barney
Miller" said, "Sorry, it'• Dot
my j(,b. I could band.le-lt lf lt
happened in the 1Zth PteciMt,
but It'• out of my Juritdlctlm."
.
Who abot J .R.?
Not me.
Tourist trap
Hordes visit 'Southfork'
PARKER, Texas (AP) -The "Soutbfotk Rech," home
of televlaioo's wealthiest and tackiest family, tbe Ewinp,
bas become the area's most popular touriat attraction. It'• also 1ettln• to be a eiant pain for the folks who llve
near the spread, located just north of Dallas -the real
one. lin Taxi cabe, tour buses and tourists ftle past the apraw i
180-acre ranch every clay mMt tbe parade of rubber-necltln1
"Dallas" fans sent irritated neighbors to the courthouse
se,kin& a little peace and quiet .
Laat May, John ~ Susan Barber, wbo live acrocsa the
road from Southfork, filed suit to atop any more fllmina
there. .. Tbe Barberi claimed that "hundreds of apectaton
have made thelr "premiaa unhealthy, dangerous and un-
fit for the mainteDance of a home."
goPHIOT!e47:£~ f?RfJBRAMM!/fJG ...
I
TRI: STaUCTU&E of the
ramUy in aoclety ll changlna,
aaya Homli.sb, who .UO studies
children and family life.
What aociolotWa call the e:x·
tended f amUy, 1eneratlom of
rrandparenta, aunts and tmdes
llrin1 nnr each other, bu all
but vanilbed. And famllles to-
day are retreatlni into privacy,
handling their own problems
within a smaller family unit. •
•'The Ewinl family ls a kind
of mlrTor of that retreat into
privacy,'' Homllab aays. "'l'be
Ewinp have all the problems ol
aocle'y -alcohol, lnfertt:!t, etc. And they handle all r
problems wttbin the fami11.••
Every daytime aoap opera
family reflects the problem ot
aociety, but the Ewinl• ln
"Dallas" take a more actlve
role ln deallnl wttb thole prob-.
lem1 -and vtewen ean learn
from that, Homllab aald.
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and Ocean Views. 4 and a bdrm. units. $389,500
with ta'm.a.
f7 I 4J 67l-4400 1.zut u .. .zan
HARBOR
$11 ... ....,
JIDIMOM
LARGE LOT
Hadwud Roon
fUUBUALn
54'-0814
ON THE WATER-VIEW
Mlcely -oret.4 Jbcl. 2b& c ... p. A•..._.._, sip. Ilg•-'It.._
.. I 2.75o/o. Freet row to ALL hy
tietMtJ. $300,000.
WA TERFRONt HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATE
S.s. R.nr.ls. l'r-11< ,,..,_,,_.,
2'36 W Coosa Hwy 315 M.IM Aw N~ Beach Balboil lslend
'31·1400 '7Mt00
GiJ Coldwell Banker
llTT8 IUY
Big Canyon condo. ~ BR. 2 BA. +
formal Din'g. Fireplace. Ga~ed
privacy. Like brand new. Splashing
fountain entry. Better by far at
$177,000.
IN NIEWPORTCEllTE6'
• 644;{J060
•
9441
SIZES 8-18 •
-"" 1ff Mi-1ff 41\T.-
".J_J • I I
associated
n 1. ,. 1 .., , "'~ r,, •.,"' •_.
•'. h ... • • ,,
•••••••••••••••••••••••
4 .. 2112 ... 2 St, I OPIM DAILY
home, lhake roof, fresh •1,=••ts 000 paint. SlST ,500. Eaataide "' -, ec.ta llaa. Owner may I lslmd
trade fot smaller home SI 100,000 m.:;eMc~:r... lltr. Wtl• ft
1
-/UllWy
541-772t '7Ut00
llAUrt nus LOU lllECHTEL
a vt!rJ attractive floor -.d Auocl.tes
plan in um 1uper abarp 4 htll lstah
bdrm home. Large faml-S.S & R..tals ...
Close to beach. ·-u--i-... ..._ I I llacboola. Only .,..,...,. --"'•• •
$ , o. Call no w~ __ 6_7_S-_3_l_l_I __ _
~S370.
A C.... .. M• IOU LLS ... " TE ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ I"" Attncllve pool duple& + 2
REALTORS aood rentm. Prime loca-
~. El~~i. Starting
a New
BuaineH
Acccordlng 10
Cellfornle 91191,,. .. •nd
l'fofe19'ofte Code (he.
t1t00 to t1UO) ell
pen!Onl dllllrlg buelneH
"""'' • flc:lllllous "-11\U.I ,, .. e Mft-nl
"""' Hie c-ty Clefll and lleve It publl..._cl
four llm•• Ill• newapeper Mf""'9 Ille er•• I n which the
buallleH la tocet.d.
Tiie atatelftent I• required by 1-•lld 11
nace....-, In ~ec:tlng
your bualn•u nem•
Moal benlla require
pR>of of nlng IO open
comm•rdal accoun1a.
Th• DAll.Y Pll.OT
provldH both ftllng enil
publlcallon Mt"4cff. We
h•v• ell the neceaHry
forma and melnlllln •
d•lly Hrw)o• to Ille
Orente County
Cou<thoUM. Elthet atop
by one ol our
conyenl•nl ofllc•• or
pllon• Ill• LEGAL
OEPA .. TMEHT '41-4321,
Eal . 332 lor more
lnfor111alkln •ncl fo""•·
tion.. sas.ooo. M0-4999.
POOi. AMO YIEW
llVIMI TRUCE A cosy 3 Bdrm, formal
dlnln1 rm home witb
oool aDd hlcbly expanda-ble view of harbor & ocean. A De'f' U.Uq at only ~,~fee. Ciu.a. QUICK 644-7211
/Jn "llG[l
ill\IU Y &
l\SSUCll\TES
..... Y .. Hlls Beautllul Jg 4 Bd estate w/manicured ~ ac. lot.
$3501000. Prin only. Palnclt Tenore. Agt .
631 U66
Family wants to buy
house or duplex in CdM to Jive in from owner or
realtors. Please call
646-6710
MUST SEU!
Owner le1t s tate,
spaciou s duple x .
fireplaces, earage. 1700
sq. ft. each unit. Gross
$16SO/mo. 29% down. owe balance. $295,000. Bkr. 67S-0185, 646-5264.
G.....-al 1002 • •••••••••••••••••••••• -= 111111 ILlllfS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
UDO ISLE
Exceptionally Good Location Near Tmnis
Courts & Beaches Really Neat Two
Bedroom Home Wlth Oen. Plus Formal
Dining Room Assumable Loan. Price Only
$375,00().
IMVISTOIS A nBtTIOM
Nice Uvable Home On A Larae R·2 Lot In
Better Area-Of Costa Metia. Build An Extra
Unit For lncome. PMced.Al $95.500.
..
/JD.NIGEL
fiAIL(Y &
ASSUCIATES
/Jn 11m.rL
~)>ill [ ' &
AS~Ul1All5 Fo~rsrr.::
OLSON ·•-El! 2300:J& otlmnarioua liv· ~.\1 1bia~ ~fke~•--•-•.-i _,,_·---~---· ----• OM GOLF COUISE
Frontln1 S.A.C.C.
Beautiful 2·slory, 38r, 3Ba, 2 frplc. Solar water beatlni. Im mac. BKR.
attached home Is •~VETER" ,_._.._ pou.ibly the only exam. IO.A
1210.000 540-5010 ~e in the prest11ious IN PARK I
oodbriqe F..tates with Thia 3 bdrm, eDlaried a private pool. Call now family room ii California AurUpper toaeefsesijoy! livin1 at Its beat-~. 21>:.n i~':De~n~~ (g]$UM,llOO lasterully decorated,
area, drive by, 1621 San-~I ~bridge clole to community u -dal-ood M sa v d IOdaUcm pool, spa ten-
$ l 2 5, o' o o ~ O we: eer Ruhg nia and acboob, Ubrary
('107)9'2·6.'WSS. 551-3000 and aboDPina. Very lar1e
--------·-412181rruu Pkwy,lrYlnt> lol.All(ororily$184,500.
llmEFOITHE .... ,s
In tbls lara e 4 bdrm+booua rm home. BriCht kitchen wJth all new appliances. $113,000.
CALL
•
RED CARPET
. 75.i.1202
~·~~~ ba, lf5Z3 C'MePUS~htvlffE
P8ilo. frpl, new paint. 5~ ~~;_'139,800. Bkr. CULVaDAU tJQ-V:&mflNe-5264 New u.un,. 3 Bdrm, 2
519IOOMS lfnlverailJ Park Cam-bath, country kticben, Lar I h larp ccraer lot Lar•• I• spac ous • omt; bftdle End Unit Green assumable loan. ~x· w It b bu I e ll :s 3 5 Bek, Pool, Jbr, 2ba up· _,,_. dtti Tb'· enclosed Patio/Game 1raded tbruout l1e c~ COft on. .. =~~oJ.a~ atrium w /atryllgbt, i1~D.~&Sc>N
North C.M . area . ceramic tile noor, re· llAl.Totll3Ji.t2tJ SlM,IOO. mod • led k it c b e n , •
Broker 549-2844 ml crow ave . pro I ........ IHdl t 041 ---------1 laodacaped, new roof,•• .. •••-•••••••••••••• SAFETY AND ate.~~
COMJOIT •&111M0c ..
at • iilliC prj ce I •• OF..... Wtawllar va.w
Beautlfull1 don• four .Bea..Ul.ll ' Mnn hom• a adnn a BaU., JP!lclou.t bedroom'*" home with with t:stenslve use of atud1, w/ vaulted ull-burllar alarm 1y1tem, c.ramtc tile, akyliabta, •·wood Ooor, buUt--ln one_year old carpet, new and even an Indoor ~M..-, tU• otrJ,
roof, new dishwasher, p.rdeo, .UlDOMstory, brtl!a C\11\0m kltc.,.n 6 and new 1ara1e door 4inlqCQOm
0
, 76a-ll20. ~. Fantutfc family hOme at only $118,IOO.
Act !'.~w . call n,,._,,_ --• 11 11 ~ 'llt1;1
• HERITAGE
. REALTORS
·. HERITAGE
REALTORS ,.,..._.
don osen
I ' I , I ' r ~.
'.
2 Br. 2 a.. lower unit OD
the 1olf courae, weat ---------•
nine. $550 per mo. '800+ utU. 2 Br. 2 ba,
811·2551, 138-8900 Ron, patio. Nr. ahopa /bcb.
Ev9a.27l5 Adulta, DO peta. Yrly reo----------1 tal. ··-4 br, fam rm home. Many ---------•
uplJ'aded extras. LN. Ccmpl. ndec., attractive $'JUO. m.-oo. a br bee, new paint in ac
tt1tl1•Yltfo J267 ::: ~~· =· ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrly. Older pref. m-8145
llOlfE l'Oft ftENT 3 Bdrm. '550. Fenced Harbor View Home1,
ylll'd ud 1arase. ~4-fa 4bdnn. Zba, ram rm, ou
... " .......... J26t ....................... ---'------·
CCII• CHAIMB
I Bdrm• + den beauUfa&ll7 appointed
boma w /HOO aq. ft.
Av.U. U/J.S/IO up to 1
year I••••· A1eat, --·
LA QUINTA HERMOSA
umJ. P..uide Lo, 1 blk w. al Beacb. a bibs. or
F.dln&er. 147.5441
~----------!
Sharp!Sharp!Sharp'
F.astside urut. 2080 Santa
Ana St. lmmed avail
AduJts, no pets. 2 Br. l
---------• Ba. upgraded, new paint, StZ mo. +security Agt
UTIUTIES,AID
•CONVENIENT
-QUIET
•HEATED POOL
I CUte 2 Bd 1 Ba in nice
area $.495 1m o C all
Jeanne 631·1266. Agt I
BAYFRONT, 2br & 3br.
Luxury Condominiums,
Completely Furnished,
c.oumi,-Club Setting.
Golf, Tennis Avail
able at Special Rates
for our CUenta only
Weekly, Moothly and
Weekend Rentals
Call: <71•)328-8911
CA'I1lEDRAJ. CANYON
COUNTRY CLUB
34-587 Cathedral
CanyooOnve
PaJmSprln&s,
California 92262
Deler1 Reaort Realty
leae. Dontown Lacuna
Beacb. &U aq. rt
'623/mo. Ample pvt.
parlrloi. Owner .
714/752-0234
~ Mlchelson Or. #212
2021 Business Cntr #213
For lease. Koll Irvine In·
dustnal 2400 sq. fl. total,
lSOO sq. ft. delux omce
s pace, 900 sq . ft
warehouse. Courtesy lo
Brkrs. 751-4760.
DodOf', Lawyer,
Mwchant Chi_.!
Elegant bldg., in heart of
Huntin1ton Bch .
w /spacious offices
skylights, wetbar, con-
ference rm, SS< per sq. fl
Plus, super 2,000 sq.rt
medical bld&., well ap-
pointed at 75< per sq.ft. For adult. over 25, no
pet.a. l Br. from S:US. 2
Br. 2 Ba. $625. Ul072 Spr
inadale, 840-1065 before
6PM.
view pauos, $800 & $950.
Call Bob 752-2266. Hawaii Waterfront Hou.ae
2 br, 1 ba, l\ls Mies beach, at Kauai Surf Hotel.
frplc, beamed ceiling, ~E'M'788-0548
For details call
RED CARPET
893·1351
"50. 673-6422 Oceran Bluff Kauai Condo, 688 sq. fl. well loca.ted
lwk/2 '250, 1 wk/4 $350, 1 North Costa Mesa office.
wk/6 $UO. Golf tenni• Park next to your d~L
etc 67J.'IS5 ' ' Fully equipped with
· · carpet. a/c, cabinets &
--=---------i4bdrm, 2ba condo OD storage. Rea11onably
Bachelor apt, beaut
ocean view, pvt garden
settln1. woman pref,
$G.4S18-530C8-5
Attractive 1 bedrm apt,
freshly painted, new
crpt, patJo, $375/mo 364
Holly St. 497 415 7 ,
~UFF 2 Br Condo.
New mter Adults, no
pets $.')25. 673·6640
(213)31115-3637 2 Bdrm. l bath. with patio.
WOODS COVE Xlnt Joe. Call 645·9314,
$525 mo. 1 Bdrm, open 646-8603
beam ceilings, frplcl cedar lined bath .. 370 Lovely, large l Br
Flora. Evea 494 3449; the Bluffs $495
851·0494 --..);_ -----
Apl·in
North Sb«e of Tahoe. priced. Call Tom, Harbor
Fully furn. 5/min from Baker Professional Bldg.
North Star. "00/wkly. 95'7·1900. E-ZZJI, 53C>-3llNI Bert ---------
Palm ~ lWt. tennis
Condo, pooJ. spa, 2J) r.
2Ba . Wknd /wlrly
Oldest• largest a&ency
Servint So. California
~and References
Credits. ABC·NBC·CBS
Colmo-LA Tlmea-Etc
Since 19'11
lrvtne,'6'1·1899
Garden Grove, 891 1773
LOOKING TO SHARE?
WE MATCH ROOM
MATES1
7S2-t47S
M/F ahr 5 br, 2 ba hae,
C.M Spa Nr So Coast
P\ua • fwy t22S + l /5 ~.&U-4913 ----Promontory Point, ocean
view Peolbou•e. 28 r
w /1rs. loft f urni.lhed as
atrice M. den. $550. 11 /F
pnileqlonaJ. 873-9054.
wxuay SUITE
1mmal OCCupaJlCY. 3000
sq ft. Ste of 8 offices
+conference " recep tlon Koll Center .
Newport Bch. Contact
Ann Harvey (213 )
5:16-2000.
Pnme corner loc. Up to
4,500 sq Ct. Full service.
modern, glass bldg
646-6303. ------
NEW EXEC. SUITES
BESTO.C LOCATION
200 N. Tustin Ave, l min
SA & Nwpt Fwys Lge
prof decorated ofcs.
Receptionist, telephone
serv . xerox. conf rm
Sec serv avail From
$275 mo Last month free
w 6 l1l<Jl!I. agreement
953-0937
GROUND FLOOR
CAMPUS" QU AlL
1200sq n at 90<
F1JLL SERVICE
Mullan Really 540-2960
2300 Sft>FT.
Beautiful refurbished
low cost office space .
Private " &roup areas .
Ideal for computer, re·
search, design, etc.
RIGHT REALTY
979-8533
t ' -~ 4410 ~ .. ..._ 1021 u.ta..._. 1300 Loil&,._.. HOO ._.,_. IJM a.ta..... HM Pw •1 1311 -·w.... 71M .... W.... 1100 ~. ................... ..... ··········~······· ....................... .........•......•...... ....................... ...................... ....................... . .................................. .
JiB/CM, .., to C700 fCl. ft. NEE l.c*: llaloale diamond "-1: Wldte female dos. LOIT: ~ ZOdlae Rub-A'ILAMl'IS MASSA•I ,. ii DO rmrtctloD to
.Jf;: .•\J:!':!nCO:::~: { fllll llS ~::aS:!-:-;~~~t'. :....~· Costa ~~r~a~11~~a:1~:~ P IPA d b 11 :::..;,st;:m=~ft!: == m.o a.ward. .....allO. lewlildl'1S-OTIO Be ampere 1 t.clfl ID tm. Departiia•t , ./MONEY J'ouad: Bltttu German Bent. Gtri.. 0 en -.. t&.OO/ltt +com-DI'.,..• Lacuna lla ,..,._t llOderD Store or ·-Lall Old Eaalltb Sheep &bepMrd, 11., 1 mos. Lmt: •a!IMM mill male, JMJl-4PJl'1d.a,.. ....._ Call ·,, .... 11 atore. llHt be h · ,11fttee. Mr polt olftce $41 I nae. hm. lS,.,,n.1 Upt ~.NptBdl. .... Ylc llcmte Vllta ls .... IAll·uPM . ""•~ced iD better
.Allf.JS172IJ/•7'1·'100l Cal: . bluuye-,ldartblDeeye. ~C.11.ta••· ,..... 1410 . ::-· .. tud7·to-WMI' ~ ·• rcW . e '4J.N7I Lott vtc. Newland /~: ~~!:l:U.'7:;5 Loat. Greadmotlter'a _ ................ A ts L rtrewood, men ,.:to';*'...:=~ :.1 .... 4471 Adami, RB. Nov. I.Ith. ~ ~ Sept. 1S Nov Nmd ddlr to Wuh. J.J.•, berd work, tall bleAllati.lml·•o _ ............... ~···· Clt91TMO REWARD. HI-HSI, an..e:••I.D. Jab. B.8. 71'·1M-~'7: ...... .tqBBll/21-11 Ml-m79fttr5pm. PmtrW., Piasa ar all
STORZ. Soutb Coeat '90..... sa.alM.JobnCarney. Found: Mt ol keys wltb U:WARD. mam..m-1512 All·parpoH, clerical •t~-~--~~far~appol~~D~bn~ltl~t~. Hwy. La1une Beacb. W&JnlTDao-t.c.tarfOUDdapet?CallLalt.Younalmo.o&dlra1 pridlocl.11 .. Woodanr , 1 =• . ....,..,..,. lynolc. ea-D+ .. ft.~/mo.1.1t• Animal Aulatancc malecatw/WllltubeaUt S.UW.557-NZI L08'f:eaw.,wearin1red &:;: ,.. dlslnable Goodpro-lait.--Mllt/111-t 145 t.eque.537.z:m,Nofff. ........_ l H--"--collar. Ana "Taff1", "'•-·-I 't f • l • An'aqed by Wlllw pen. V c. ...-uvr Faanll: llaftdeome white -. cW llar, if found, ·-.................. apec • or aa ary Store, 100 1q ft, 50•2 C:O...HwLw .P'oundcrloatapet?Call Vlewarea.N0-0320. ut lonslsalr lr&Y dllt7N70I t .. ullA napamibWty lncreuea 1Warner Av., H.B. Avail. A llorttqe Broker mt We' re tbe Pet Pala. . madttn,.. Nr Buer 6 • ltM~KIH 7001 for mature, qualified
"'-.OwDBW,881·1257. •-----=-=----• (71A)7»2918 Lo.t. Brown • Wblte Bear Cll ..,.._,. ro..d.Grey..utped •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• penon.-..ie. ~ t ratea available· -'--------male Spriqer Spaniel, ' · · · 10'IDI female cat. _ __.
I a "......... 4500 Free COlllultatlon. No uw AID 'Vlc Harbor • Wilson, Fowad: Female Collle CAUi. 75Ml72. ~ ~· J!!:e~ u:-:v~ A p A R T II E N T ... •••••••••••••••••••• ce»t·no obli1atlon loan I.oat fem Sblb T C.ll. 548--t020. wltb red collar vie (71A) m.110'1 ut "1 for MANAGER
•••FOR LEASE••• quota. bl.2nd, Srd'a, re-lQba' salt•.pepper/i:~Y . llabr •Fairview.' C.11 . Youns mele German lafo Caner opportunity for =~ti=-~·~ finance It AITD'a. No Ir~ coJoriD1. Halr Found: Doberman mixed, '151·.r3. Sbepberd l'ound · ~-~:.:--:,:. ,. ... '-.. h aq. · t c min /max. Creative cllPPed. •yn. old. 011 male with DO balr on Beach/A&lanta. Now enrollln1. Costa --~otc +5000 aq. tl. ""andnl aper. Please Friday, Nov. 14th at bead. Weatltltblaod l'oud, fem. German ...n.2. lleaa CbriatiaD Pre-pla.llllltbavepleuant
aapbalt.covered callGl·D&e,,._.,. Fublca Island around female. Old poodle, blk 'SllrJhlfd. l'fo tall. Kr. , 1110 HltooJ, $21.60/wt . =~~ back-~ to Broten 1----~----1 t :IOAll. Pleaae ~all : female. Wlllpp9t. brtndle Bllaae H.S. ta-*2 • --........... IDeJud• bot luell 6 lltuUO.. Bx=:, I~.,,~~~~~~~~
71'Ml-4780 WAHfs••MST7 m.-. mUe.Allocata.Newport talJ01. PBS LAW lbldeatMeda H•eka. IH·UU, ~llUtDOtaiec:•H•'Y'~
.,. Beach Alllmal Shelter, -.... WW do uytldu •-lf Ol.berwtae qualified. A11tanatt-.. ---------1 All1 aml·bt. Ziad. ll"da· ........ FOUND: Lab/Sbepberd lAlal. Confidential ..... WlltM. 7071 Good aalar1, lovely SALESPERSONS
15D01qftlndustrlalapace, fla.~nowl . Illa llale, Graham/ DVll. P.O. Bos 32'1, -•••••••••••••••••• apert.meot + beneflta. lln or women earn
•12 offices, 2 bath, tse~~E.~~~~~-~·~·~~I fS ld A.-.;... t.c.t: Balboe Ialani Sat. Warner HB Pupp1. N.B.-. Practical N'11'1ea, any Pleue Ulllrer ln own wbl.le you learn. Up to
r..,-door, ~II Lotan~ -.uw11 Nov. 15Ua Sblb·Tn male ~ ill6ft. xlnt rel'a. 131-1200, baDdwritlnl, Bo1 ett, SIOOO mootbly aa a Av,Clll.~9352,Ml-Olll Muul 1111, ,,;... Call white, IOIM lan, black, flllST LADY alZl.1.111-117'1. Dally Pilot, P.O. Box qualified aalHperaoo. Deifli 5031 I a baved rear 1e1 . FOUND : Fem C at -..--... lllltl 15e0 C.ta Meaa Ca. ~ friqe beDeflta lo US35Sq ft at» aq ft, com-f'i Reward! •7•.01"'1 or T l I e r I W b t ' _.. •• Quiet Relined Practical , • "">' pleasant amTOdzid-___._, ,_..area in C.11 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• lbily lat v " • .....,.__ -~toll ._ iu~ ...,_ -· •-Call Al II ~..... m.3ll:M Wll.aon /Placentla Cll • -·r -.--Y•111 _.._ .._. u apon Vaelul for 1tora1e or w.rM19-Co. · $pafed/Deo.lawed •f7J.IJ41 * mil Pmtlac~Mt'800 ::;>~::~~ Call ~:::.::~=u Al-11$01 t.c.tBlble. Bet. Feru.leaf/ ...,.. llCfirVllAAceepUcl .... W .... • 7100 for• moe. old
c-~.. 54• 5&71 Balboa hi Brd1e. .._,_ b _,..., -•••-•••••••••••• ./ it 3 1r old, llon·l'ri. Okltwllaewttbo/bdoor, +W;;;;' 1.· _m_m_,_$'11-_S. __ . --·~:t~~':'p..,ra:r:. cova C911L CL.. MM010 'nOCll.~ ~· 2!11~1 · 6Gl171 141-1611 Lost, pr .. crlptlon Wlncbell'a DoNot, •OU'ICAU.• llature ladJ for B.£CJIONIC •---...._-, .. ---.or--2-y-r-... -, ... • rw1C-.v1....-.. • ----------f ,.........,_ E Blvlf bl/__.. --~Bl Cll n-w--a _._ JICIUTCI& ltadltleal wart t-••• -1-I' UIU
-· • • ._. ._..... ·""" .. u . -11• ,,,_,. :-.& i..-.. your bouae or mHle, S••• 4550 c.e.fwT.D.'• --------i cae,rwU'd.711).0IJO. eo.1121 • billlD1. <;.•. area. BB
-·••••••• .. •••••••••• Alnslculltt-..1•1 ;;;::;::;::~~~~3.:=~======:l.;:=;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1 SPIU'nJ~~&AJ>INGS •ma. ANnlllL£1$ c-IOt&ll ____ . ----
Allllroill. 1,0001q. ft. avail. WILi. IUY 1 JOllD.IOIQ. P\&111 Uc'd. JUKlllD ~~· 2 da,ya~w!; 5
m-FouatalnVal.leyneer -..~-L4tltTD'S • I ¥11111 _,_ar•llN.1115 ./ ./ PreYlou1 esperleace ra/ •1. my o e , 8.D. P'rwy. $11%0 mo. -MV" 8. CamlDo Beal, San. wllb~,barwalq, NftpoltBeaeb. Tit-GMT Jatm-...O,Ml-'1513. Or bid oew TD'I . For aem. ICllderiq and worklDI .... w_.._... ..600 lmmed. quote, call ACCOUNTS wltb 1 mall 1 u b . BABYSITl'B& wan~d. -~ W.l.C.MJ'l'(TU)75Z-1211 TOMMY"S •mNlea. you ltome or mlae.
OFM:CWPORT llCllYAILI aarJCBENCES re-
.......................
LaddJlr far small bouae Prtvu part1 bu well
'lfttll ama1l yard It/or aec:ared Ziad TD for aate
~ wttb a.mall yard adllcoaat. 171-1171. l a Bunt. Bcb area. "',,..,, .. IUttlCllATI
FAIT PUNDJNG on D ' 1 •/tfrr"1t/ 21Dd'a ls lrd'•· Cambria
... • ~· Martaap. 116-MN
-················· -.£-.. ~ to b •• I • • ..,_ -IDODe)' U)' ft.•• O:I IOOI • Diab DfD T.D. any ...,. • -t a11e aboH sio.ooo. No
-················· credit ~. no pnlty. ror ~=-~on. edlaD call >.GT 111-7311
•1.000 complete< ----·~---------1
--e I am•/
DlllO: Cleanln1 Solvent. =~tf;;.'6. ND> Late rood lupple
--. Bttt.1 elt•r 4 : :.• .. •••••••••••• .. • • •• • Jlian.J'rilat61UDt-• ~ I tum• 1100 (TJA)tll-tlOI • • ..................... .
Now You "
Can
Sell
More
wUla Dall}' Pile&
P.&NNV PINCHEa AO tkWtelyU.
MID-WEIK
SALE
For Private Parties Only
YeuC.. .... AGilr ... M
Jese.tOn
T.-.r, W'*'11..,•n..1•1J .......
l•aYlr.i.
DOORT PaalUaa reqllina btsb we olf• a at.able wort QUINll·lntDe 1-a daya tebDal dlploaia and .ome ___.___. _.... ----~iaamaoufae· •nu-.... _ aD e•·1....;._;..;....;_..;..._ ____ _ --celleat 1aler1 and __ .,. ... -••s turial acCOUJttiq en· ...___ _ _.. .. -, illdlad---------,_.. _. _ ~-Type •s.-so --..--.. --w... llCOITS _ ----··-u .cl-las comp••>' paid --..---r--Mlillcal. ""'-and Dental adlR8. 711-0IJ,7 dlr/cakalalarbytoueb. lu.araaeea, Penalon
--..we ~ ...... -... -tlau Pima. leriap Plu wtt.b .. ..,._ ..--f!.:te•••tlon and blab lateral rate, 11 J'aek peek.,. la at· J*d lddQS ,... rear
•1111 traelhe end com· .. u..-palcheeaUoD
1 -• ... ..-U _..._PINN apply at: an.imoailll. Tl1ia poa1. ... ·--m~ tlcm muat be ftUed lm· ESCORTS ..,_, ..,.,, ..... Pie ... apply
Allll-er.dlt !~•-.9f...--1&:.PJ:UONNEL ~r lllDWbillA••· mm Coatall•a,Ca. =· B:rlrr 11 /f'
* BANKING ' a.-Alida Parkway ol· f\C. lla1 I Immediate atea1np ror: , ..... '~~~~~ ,....,._ 1=
.... moatM PrmoutC AS BJ E ~apertence. JIXJSEWARES SALES. J72J ..........
Wt1J1 ~ Bau orren Hardware, 103f lrvln · Apply ID penoa: Rio,~~~;;;·~•;dl~~~ -..'"'"DI benenta and CW..a.cutr Plua) N .B. COll'ID!al worlrlD1 at-1.....:..~---....;_---i ca.ma TYPtlT
.......... For mwe ln· CAI... Will tra1.n coucMnUou,
6'maticmse:;ecaJJ: P\all ttm.. Over 21. Com· dependable worlru to
•11••111-1000 ~~a":V:S-W: =:-.t~~11::;
21150llarta', C.11. adder, II mowled1e ol """*'''.! CAS ... S otc. Jll'Wedurt. !!.eel. eo. IMpeftta. Call lln. Now biriq f« holl Weect aft 1A11. M5 IMi 1ea1oa (p·time, H ·24
b r 1 I w k ) 1 o m CL•/l'YPllT
"'9/wbda. We otrer lmmedlate opellins lo Job w/JIQ ol variety ln ~Valley aircraft
f\mudcreatlveeDriroo compaa1 for B.S. meatiu~£~~ at: 111 sraduate with 1 Y••r ~ Broa Art Ilana
I· .. r • t
0 ,,
Receptiorust
Telephone Reteptionisl,
101De lite typin&, some
fllinj, happy cheerful of.
Cice Heirwood, 1977 SaJes Jam Rohn Produc
Placenlla Ave C M t1ons. a personal de-
Recept10011t ror
tometrist's omce
lime, H 8 . 963 3030
velopment company has ~:II operungs for s sta!f m em -
bers to set up & service
the "Achievers Club ·
High commissions Call
AJ at 714 975 0686
SECRETARY
Mewporf leodl
Fro1tt office •p·
peara1tce. Gro••d
floor oppty. worilltNJ
for Vice"~ of•
Mort9•9• be1tkl•9
corp. Good """" ,... al ...... to. ... , ...
...,.. piehtrecl W
Nlt...c.Sdcwyope1t.
C&n'ROH UCErTIOMIST
Newport Harbor Animal
Jbpital. 631-1030. • SALES LADY* RMAHCIAI. coar. 714-8JJ.Ot70
REX:EPTIONISI' needed Part or full lime The i-.--------i for pleasant bus. ofc. Gd Show off 22 Fashion1---------
frt ate peraonallty. Lt Island, Ne_w_po_rt __ Be_a_c~:_ i-.--------1 lYIJinl, telephone expr Salesmen
-pref. XJnl worklna cond. IHSULATIOM
0 S31·0700. F.am $600 + a week. no
• .io UCrTfrYPllT '°t~pt. Bcb, advertl1lo1 •11. needs aharp, ., enet1euc peraon for -.l'rQnl dealr. Requires ex· cell. typtn•r.. pftooe
1ki111 . A1•nc1 exp 'helpful but no1. req 'ct.
Slllt '800/tno. t:; 11fESANBORN ~O ,. '114.-MU
credit turn downs, exp preferred, will train.
531 '""501.
WUl troubleshoot PC as-
semblies and controllers
ualn1 eo1loeerin1-type ~clq>lace teat station.
Requires at least 4 years
experience, or AA with
years experience,
perlormint the abov
functions with a
mlnlmum ol 2 years ex-
perience, worklni with
Z80 and /ot Z800 m.lcroproceaaor1 lluat
be able to real software.
WEOffO: •Cos,_, peldLlt., ...... .,... ..
.... mc.H ., ...... ,._
•541Ylnga Pl• wffh hlcJll lnlerelf r ...
., _....,AID
•ac.alloll after 6 "'°
Evenint Shift. At least 70
wpm. Top pay for iood
individual. Our benel'ils
include medJcal At dental
lmuranc. •credit wdoo
Apply in person between 9am-5pm llon•y ~Friday
Coost
PQot
330 yStnet
Colt& llesa, CA 92626 &a.ml
Equal Oppor Employer
Valet Pantna Attend.
Women/Men, P If, Full
time help wanted for u
clualve restaurant• In
O.C. Muat be depend.,
able lo work daya, td
with people. Xlnt pay.
Women .. ncouraaed to
apply. c,.11 An1eJ'1
VaJeb lac. for app'l.
CT14)5511SZI
All Aboard For Our
Christmas Gift Train !
An •••Y way to NII your Chrtetmaa Offt ttema.
, .
5 ••
r. )r
·8
0
r
..
••• &Ml ........
A Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad ...
we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call
f n at your convenience during offke hours and get
the resPonses to your ad ... For more Information
and to place your ad cal I 642-5678.
642-5678
I DA:1LY PILOT
IRVINE
130-7000
!. n::-n~t!:~·t~~: ~ .. !:'! .......... ~!!.~ '76 MONARCH V8, 4 dr.
good body, no rust. call YOU.# t air. auto, P /S, P I B.
5l5llMl8t3 CADIL&.AC $?,3SO. 496-MM
Di.+' •SHIP IM ....... 9'52 ~ICOUMTY! .. •••••••••••••••••••••
'65 Mustang 289. Ori& owner. Automatic. $1995.
Ph9lil6-1493 SALES, SERVICE
ANDL~JNG
NABERS CADILLAC
l (J()() H. trtlOf 61\.c1
C~1o1 Mt-<.1 540 <llOO
':~"ifl l . . '
' .
'6.5 MUST CONVERT
IBLE 289 VS, auto. p/a,
xlnl rebuilt and restored,
$5llOC) pp 5.1$.5865
·~ Mmtaoe. auto. new
brakes/trana, $1800 or
best. «·2740 em
•••••••••••••••••••••••
ESTATE SALE· 11'17
Plymouth Volare, tan,
auto trana, air, food
CXIDd. 'ISM111 wkdyt for
lofo.
\ I
veblclea are causin1 cUit.renm,
movement IJl nearby homes, u
Well u damqe to foundatiom
and patiol..
"We CUlftOt live With an earth· quake every 20 IDinutes, •• u -
plai.Ded ~ CadiW of Rhea
A venue. ''We can't take it
anymore. We ~n·t live tbi1
way!" .
Ron Laur of Watt River
Avenue declued, "I have an in·
vestment here a.nd lt abakea.
llB ele~entary district
Every day that tbe bu&ee IO by
our home la weakelllni."
After llatenin1 to -tbe resi-
denta' complaint.a, the council
instructed police cblef Marvin
Fortin to erack down on apeed-
inl buaee and llle1a1 trucks tbat
appaten&ly are~ to the vibi'atklG problem.
The council also unanimoully
•&reed to request that Oranae
County Transft Diatrid officials
Actiq Mayor Ben Nielsen
Hid IJollindm was aware ol tbe
bomeonera' complaint. and
WU waridq toward a IOlution.
300 pl!otest school ---
. . .
closings proposal
By ROBERT BARKER
Of• Deltr ""' .....
Propoaals by the Huntington
Beach City (elementary) School
Dlatrict to close two elementary
1cbool1 because of declining
enrollment and U1btening
* * * l1npasse
irks HB
teachers
Teacher represeiatativea in the
Huntington Beach City ( elemen-
tary) School Dlatrict claimed
Tuesday night that they are auf.
ferii1a low a.orate ~d mountina
atreaa beeaUH ol .ulled •alUJ ne1oti8tiom.
Karen Giaer, bead of the
teacb•ra' neJ:it.rl!ion team, blamed the a tration for
problema that ahe aays concern
school transfers of teachers,
cla11 sizes, problems with
parents and lack of teacher
preparation time.
She alao indicated a major
cause ol stress la lack of action
on the teachers' request for a 16
percent pay increase that she
said la needed to keep pace with
inflation.
Earlier this month, an im·
paase was declared In contract
neaotatloos that saw the district
mattna a final ofter of 4 percent
pa7 lne!reue.
School board President Roy
How aald today that because of
the Serrano-Priest decision and
1brinkln1 revenues after
Proposition 11, the dlstrict bas
1one from an affluent diatrict to
an impoverished one.
''Our bands are being tied by
state mandates and we are in a
toutb financial situation," be
declared.
He said the impaue was
declared aft.er both aides refused
to b~ ·from positions "and
1how their bole carda."
Teachers and trustees •P·
proved the three··Year contract
In Oetober ol 1979 but left the
way open for a future bargain. mi period. .
Under lmpuae procedune, a
mediator la summoned to belp
ruolve differeoce1.
Fair aDd 1wny throuah
Tllurlda1. LOWt t.6a.llbt 38
a10D1 tbe c:out, • lnlud. ~ 'nlurliday. to 75.
INa1•STe8.4Y
finances have come under fire.
Spokesmen ln a crowd of
about 300 residents, one of the
largest turnouts ever at a city
school board meetine. ureed
trustees Tuesday night to scrap
closure plans.
o.llr "'"' Slefl ....._ \lallq ro11ali11
Selected as Fountain Valley
High ,School's homecoming
king and queen are Emile
Harry and Irene Mendozao,
both 17, seniors and Foun·
tain Valley residents. Emile
plays varsity football and
basketball; Irene is a varsi-
ty song leader.
Cellmate says
doctor·told
of poisoning
With Orange County deputy
diatrict attorneys Robert Chat-
terton and Paul Meyer -both of
whom have children in the dis-
trict -lending support, attorney
Allen Fields urged trustees to
set up altemative ways to raise revenues.
Field• urged the board to
study plans to charge rent to
private firms for the unused por·
lions of school buildinp in order
to keep •cboolJ operating.
He told trustees that the
system baa worked in a school
district in Northem California ..
Flelda declared that rentina the spaces to such activities u
Montea•ort Schools, day care
centers, and small busmesaes
bu been compatible.
"Not one child bas been
moved and not one teacher baa
been fired," be said, adcllba, "We flat o\rt don't want our
achooli cio.ect."
Fleldl aho called for the de-
aolutioo of a committee to make
recommendationt for school
closures. He said it spreads dis-
sension and hostility among
neighborhoods.
School officials say that the
district is facing tbe "strona
probability" of $750,000 deficit
next year and tbe closure of two
schools would save about
$300,000.
Officials alao claim that their
bands have been tied because of
state mandates and that the only
recourse they have is cutting
coats.
Enrollment haa dipped in the
district's 13 schools, eenerally
located south of Adams Avenue,
from a peak of 8,500 students in
1976-77 to 6,800 last September.
Officials estimate that the
downward trend will continue
and that another 1,193 pupila will
be lost to declining enrollment
by 198.1 when the total student
enrollment ta estimated at 5,650.
Truatees indicated that the
proposal about alternative ways
to ralse funds will be placed~
the board a1end8 in two weeb.
Bandit gets 8110
at liquor store
Police are searcbin1 for a
youn1 man who ran into a Run·
titon Beach liquor store Mond*Y
nl1ht, threatened two clerks
with a round object wrapped in a
T-1b1rt and ran out with tUO.
The holdup occurred at t: 1l
p.m . at Joe'a Liq_uor, 15437
Edwards St. Police 1ald the 1\11·
pect WU a 'CAUCUian, abom 2Zt
with sandy blond, 1boulder-
lenllh hair.
That's the purpose ol this mannequin
outside a iecood-hand clothina store in
downtown Portland, Ore., and 1t seems
to be accomplfahlng it.a mission. Perhaps
she's related to the headless horseman?
3,000 £ubans Huntin~on
woman dies
in accident
The traffic accident that
claimed the lives of a Huntiqton
Beach woman and an Irvine
woman on a curve of Univenlty
Drive near UC Irvine la almost
identical to a fatal era.ab there
last year.
HB seeks funJing
to teach ~fugees
BJ PATIUCK KENNEDY Of .. Deltr ........
H\IDtiqton Beach Union lliah
School District officials are
seekiq federal mODey to teach
In the Sunday nt1bt tra1ed)'. ' hundreds of adult Cuban ref.
Ellia Mari Earlev Smith 20 o1 u1eea to •peak En1U1b next ' ' ' year 18181 Liu St., Huntln1ton Sb. 11 11 s dire tor of Beach, and Karen Ann Ziealer e a arcu , c
25, of !MUS Cberbouri Ave.: adult 1cbool'1 ~nall1b u a
Irvine, were killed when their second lqu.qe pfOIJ"am, aaya
Jeep ran oll Unlvenity Drive the U.S. Department of Educa-
d ---_,. -......a Uon u.pects at. leut 3,000 CUban an au....-. """" over cuu. refu1eea to 1etUe In Oran1e
Police found their bodies and Counry In 1881..
the amuhed Jeep on bruab· Of that number, about 800
cove.red land near the lnte,Mc-adult Cubans are expected to
tlon of Univenlty Drive\ and 1ettle In the dlatrlct, which in-
MacArthur Boulevard, the same cludee Pountain Valley, Hunt-
place where a demolished infton Beaeh, Weatminater and
Mercedett Bella and a cruabed Seal Beaeb, Mn. llareua •~d.
Newport Beach man were found Most ol tbe reft&IMI -about
June %7, im. IO percent-are expected adult
males over 18 who are poUUcil Barry David Curtla, ~1 Ol 1.Nl refu1eea from the dictatorial Port Cardiff Place, !'4ew~rt Cuba, abl explained.
Beach, wu efeeted from b11 car Tberelore, dJ.itrict offtclall and crushed by lt one aDd one-. 1a1 tbeY dO not upeet llUlQ1
ball · years a10 wben bll biCh ac:bool aae Cubana amons llercede8 Beu went out ol COD· the llDJDllril:iU
trol and ftlpped over near the The district ~ tbe Catholic curve.
I
Communlty Aeency'a Immigra·
tion and Resettlement Center for
Cubans, in Santa Ana, toeetber
are seekl.q an $800,000 IJ'Ult
made naflable by the U.S.
Department of Education to
teach the refu1eea the new
culture ind laqua1e.
Tbe federal 1overnment is
finandq muatve resettlement
Of tbouaands of Cuban refupea
who DOW temporarily reside in
Florida. ,
"The Wbole IOa1 of the pro.
cram la to provide flnanctaJ in-
dependence for these people, ..
lln. Mareus aald. "We Deed to
set them oil welfare and Into jobs."
' The rdwrees lo lb• diltrict'a
pro1ram will eo to acbool three
houn a day, tlve days • 1'eek for 18 months, Mra. Matcua
laid.
CoUtline Communlt)' ~
alao ii to pUtlclpate in the ll'llllt
pro1ram, lbe NW, by providinl
audiO•Yltaal egutpment and
lbaterlals UMd fo teacti the ~ <See CUBANS, Pa1• A.2)
IU1NJCH, West Germany (AP) -'°" JC>U Paw D celebrated a Mau cllreeted at youn, people todat -the lut day
of b.ll West Gerlllan trip -at the scene of US. ottoberfest te~
roritt bom~ and wu told the church'• teacblap oa au and
penonat relitlOaa!ili> were too ttrtct for youq PM.pie;
Jtarbana &s11. cbaJrwoman of tbe Leasue ol Germao
Catholic Youth hen departed from tbe telt ot ~eleom.ln1 re-maru deliver.ct after the llau and told the thete wen
"too many Pn>blbltloDJ" on YOUOI people the cburcb'• ieachlnp.
.-The "°"' lowered hll bead and cl.all>ed tu. handl durlnl ber brief nmarb, then looked~ after tbe 9u ftDlahed. H• made
oo comment and left the MUI u ICbeduled-
(J.ft. 'laird quarl~r •C!o.ta111w 1or•e• •
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Tbe U.S. economy from July
through SeJUmt.u proved aUpUy weaker than ftnt estlmaa.d;-
althouab corporate proflta rebounded from their dilmaJ 1b0wtn1
earlier th1' year, the 1ove.rnment Hld today.
1be Commerce Department Jllo repore.I &ha lnflaston, u
meaaured by the overall econqmy -not just conawner prices -
accelerated futer tban orlflinilly believed.
The department aald the economy pew at a 0.9 percent an-
nual rate durin& the third quarter, a downward revtalon from lts
earlier, estimated 1 percent rile.
llB youths suspeets
Hearing Friday
in punk rock case
By ARmuR &. VINSEL
OttlleDelly ............
A preliminary hearing, de·
layed by a key wttnea1' demand•
for lmmwlity rrom prosecution,
resumes Friday ln the cue of
two punk rock ent.busiuta ac-
cuaed of tbe near-fatal tradua·
tion night knifing or. limousine
chauffeur on a Newport Beach
streetlutJlUle.
Oranae County Superior Court
Judie Richard Beacom 11an·
ted the request by Bridset.
Sheinleio, 20, of Orange, the
girlfriend of defendant Ron
Glenn Sherrard, 19, of 20861
Horizon Lane, Huntington
Beach.
He and David Paul Owen, 19,
of 8121 Mun.ster Drive, also in
Huntington Beach, are accused
or involvement in the stabbing of
Daniel Hann.s, 25, of Cyprus.
The s~pecta, who remain free
on bail, were arrested ln mid·
September on char1es of assault
wlth intent to commit murder
istemming from the mid-June al·
tack.
Preliminary hearinl for Sher·
rard and Owen la acbeduled to
resume at 9 a.Ql. in Divilion 7 of
Harbor Municipal Court, with Ma . Sbeinlein scheduled to
Le1Ufy.
The two defendants have
pleaded tnnocent to the charies
,t.bat could send them to state
l>riloD for alle1ed roles in the
'tabbing that boapitallzed
J':larm1 ln critical condition.
He told police the 1roup of
e11ht punk rocken kicked and
beat him, laughed, jeered and
poured beer over hil bead in ad·
dltion to pl\Jllling a blade lnto tu.a chest ln the confrontation on
Walnut Street.
Newport Beach Police Delee·
tlve Bob Hardy lai.r called ln an
Oran1e policeman *ho
1peclaliza in deep bypnocil to
put Harms tmder a trance and
help him recall detalla. •
Tb9fMl were crucial ln provid·
OAANO& COMT "'~
DAILY PI LOT
ing information leadln1 to the
arrests, lnveatlgatora say.
Detective Hardy aald at' one
point after Sherrard and Owen
were charted that Ms. Sbelnlein
faced the prospect of prosecu·
lion aa an acceaory for aJle&ed·
ly witbboldinl information about
the crime.
She had beiun to teatlfy last
Friday but the proceeding was
stopped at the advice of her al·
totney. wbo ft.Md a IJloUOD ln Oran,e County Superior Court
1ranliJll her immunity in the
case.
Harma told police a hurled
beer bottle atruek hia rental
limousine u be and the Ediaon
High School graduates from
Huntington Beach cruised
through the Newport Shor.es
neigbborhood on the ni1ht in
question.
He parked and 1ot out to in·
vesti1ate whereupon he was as·
saulted by tbe crowd of crewcut,
leather·Jacketed punk rockers
and knlfed with a blade that
nearly nicked h1s heart.
Hanna .tumbled back to the
limo and collapted into it, ask·
inc bia pauen1ers to get him
medical help, whereupon one
youth drove to a hospital.
Fro.. P•g~ Al
CUBANS ••.
fusees what the dlatrict terms
"survival akilll."
The resettlement center ln
Santa Ana .Ul work with the re-
fu1eea in Spaniah for two weeb
before they come to the dis·
trtct'• phase of the pro1ram, she
said.
The Ont thinp the Cubans
wtll learn at tbe adult 1cbool ls
to communicate their names
and addreMel, to use the public
tranaportatlcm l)'ttem, to un-
dentand tbe monetary ay.i.m
and bow to IMly lf'Oeerla and
pay btlll, the 1ald.
"We alto wtll 1treu the
American work ethic," Mrs.
Marcm Hid, addinl .that aome
of the Cubbl wbo already have
arrived an world.De ln the in·
dutrtal ledor. )
She Hid UM cultural ·~k tor tbt Cuban ref\&IH• probably
~l not be u put u tt ta for
many lndocblnHe refu1eea
from nam cuhura.
About I0,000 lndocbtneae ref·
u1ee1 bave Hltled In Oranp
county'bfreeeot'f9an, 11M Nld. Tbe..cMi ·tchoOl·~ll'am cur·
reotly ~ 1,000 llOn-ltn.UU
apukhi* .:1tudntt, of wilob
mort tban 8')0 an IDdocbtaeie,
•he 1Ul 'IM •a.torkr ol th6 rettare~.Shes-..there an abaut boellD qeUlq aaau oa wattlq-'0.ta for UM el•,_
Bt RDAIClllCllOlllEllL ... ..., ........
After II minute• of acrhnoa.OU. debate, tbe ~
County Board of Supervlaon •IH d Tue1day to walt two
WMU blfore ~ •betMr
Ruman Sentca ap!JICJ Dtrac·
tor Marcant Grier allO 1hould
be the count)''• m~tal boalth
director.
Tbe cWa1 .... IOCi&ht by lit Dt.triet Supervt.Or' ~Up Au· ~ •. wbo d'*9 Mveral uncer-tu._D~ ·~the d\111 ap-potntmeat by Stb Dia·
trict ~ TbOmu !Wty. Antbatll1 complal.Md Ulat "a
lot Col tntorm..Uon) bU been
thrown at 111 lD the Jut few
day1" that required more
anal71l1 bJ tbe county Ad·
mlnlltntive Office and county
Coumel'• Offlee.
The board .,reed tUJanlmoua-
ly to delay final action on
Riley'• pl'Opoaal until Dee. 2
after turnlnl down ln a a-2 vot., a motion by 2nd Dlttrlct
Sapervllor Harrlett Wieder to
abandon CODJlderatton of tbe
dual appotatm,at OI Mill Grier.
Only ant Dlstrlct Supenilor
Edilon Miller JOtnea »r.. Wlecler tn IUpportll)I CM mouuu.
MlH Grier, director of the
Human Services Acency alnce
lta inception fOW' years •IO. bu
served u aetinl mental health
director alnce-tbe resipatioa of
Dr. E"*t Kla«e from the poll
one year ago.
Riley pJ'OPC)led one month ago
that the contloverslal ad-
mlniltrator receive the mental
health position on a permanent.
bails -a recommendation that
baa drawn oppoaltion from
several mental health organisa-
tions and the county Grand
Jury.
Riley charged during the
meetinc that theJrand jury, in
of posing the du appointment
o Mias Grier, took a one-sided
approach.
Newport man
admits guilt
• • m sex crimes
A Newport Beach man baa
pleaded guilty to sex
perversion char1ea involving
three youn1 11.sten be met at a
Rtvenlde c.mty nadtat camp
earlier th1I year.
Senne~ B~kabire, 53, en-
tered the pleas to three of 13
charges against him in Oran1e
County Superior Court.
Brookshire previously bad
been convicted in San Dlego
County on sex perversion
charaea three yean ago.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge James Turner declared
Brook.shire to be a mentally dla·
ordered sex offender, meanint
the defendant will be aent to a
state mental holpltal for treat·
ment and ·evaluation. Be could
be sent to a state prison lat.er if
doctors determine be isn't
reaponding to treatment.
'Accordln& to court recorda,
the cue involved three allten
a1ed 12, 15 and lf5. He pleaded 1uUty to two
counts of unlawful aexual ln·
tercoune with a minor and one
couat of child molestation.
Broobhlre had been on proba·
lion from the San Dte10 cue
and JudJe Turner revoked his
bail Monday, orderin1 him
taken into custody.
The aexual activities with the
children occurred durin1 a
several-week period last aprfnJl ln Orange County. Be wu ar-
rested wbe11 the children'•
mother learned of the actlviUes.
Police seek
s~op owner
death clues
Santa Ana police lnveaU1aton
.. ld today they 1Ull have no
leacll or auapecta ln the 1la7tna
of all elderly woman who oWnea
a 1mall srocery •tore. 'fbi bod)' ot AIDel Serna Cor-
rea, a, wu found by ber IGD
late Tuelday momlna lmlde the
einall 1tore 1b1 owned aud ,
operateO al am w. lit St.
Tb• woman bad b••a
blUOliCIOed u well M stabbed.
Lnvutlptorl uld. . A police· ipokecmaa 1aid today
Uaat tbllN have bNti fd ch111 to
belp olllaatl :ftlUr. iOUt "bo wu r•pqmtble ror thl .,.,... .._,.
LD• ol a .,,_ owner •bo Ud ~ la the .... aetabort.ood
for Dffl'l1 •,..,. --w..O ... well tlUd Ud po,.W: 1D tblt
comm\mlt.7. PoUcil~!Tc(. Jam .. 8&Cfey UJd
tt la ~ mon Utan tJ.006
Wd Wire from tM It.on.
1an11 aald hl9Htlfatora
toUd a dadlr ti\Oel oa Ult ,...a· .... .,....,...., ............
.. 9tdlli ..... Mn. con.a wM _.,.. llllJIP' q U ''Neclaa''IOM!lidl. J
Willie ''the Actor" Suttoo. a bank robber who became
one of the moat ht1bly
publl~ criminal.a of the
century, is dead at 79. Cause
of bis death, in Sprint Hill,
Fla., was not disclosed.
FVapproves
funding for
fl_,god :1tudy
Fountain Valley City Council
members a1reed Tuetday to
hire a ccm1ult.ant to ttudy tbe
diaapeement between <>race
County and federal offtclall cp
how bad1Y tbe Santa A!)a River would overflow la event of a
major flood.
Reaulta ot that atudy could
form the buia for an appeal of
the new federal flood lnlurance
map, which claims portlon1 of
the city would rest beneath two
to three feet of water in a major
flood.
CoUQty officials have indicat·
ed the flood waters would only
be 1.3 to two feet ln depth.
The depth of potential flood
waters will determine bow high
developers must conatruct a
base for future buildings and
thus will significantly affect con·
struction costs, city officials
say.
The council autboriied the
public worka director to pay up
to Sl5,000 for the con~ultanta
study.
Ao lnveatlaator of tbe
Callfarida Dtvtalaa 'ot tonltry
Hid lt IDQ be a rid before a
dttilJoD II re&Cbld OD •Mt.bet
to pro1ecate a borae rider
believed 1~ble for ttaJtlq the C#bon ,_ ftre that eon·
IUIDN l,JIO acf9 ud deltroyed two.::;...._.. wtures and • . ...... Ca~~.JrtnWl Hid be bu tb.ree of four ~ .. Wbo ..... rfdl.D1 ......
Sunday momlq lo the area ol
the c~ Wbere the ftre broke out, ACldlDI &Mt the WUmat. di-
clltoa OD proMCutioa wW Nit
with the s. Benardlno County
Dbtriet .Attoi'Dey'• Offlce.
At Uds polnt, .GrUfttb 1ald, lt ta
conticleted unlikely that
crimlnal cb&rc• will be IOUCht acalnlt a U.year-old Brea mu
who ftJDe (OI ward Moad&)' fo
clllclole th.at be may bave IW't·
ed the fl.re while 1mokln1 a
ct1areth while rldln1
bonet>ack.
GrUfttb old Tuesday that be
comldered the came of tbe ftre
"•tridly accidental"
The rider ln question, GrUlltb
aa(d, "doesn't~know in b1a own
mind tf be wu retponslble." In·
ve1U1aton are wlthholdlnl the
man'aname.
Fro• Pagt? A f
POISON ...
death as congtalive heart
failure.
But authorities alleee she died
from an lnaulln overdose ad·
miniatered by tbe 65-year-old
La Scola.
Another prosecution witness
at the beari.D1. a onetime heroin
addict who worted for LaScola
u a "go.fer," 1ald an intoxicat·
ed LaScola once discuaaed Mn.
Tbera's deat.b with him.
·'It is all kind of va1ue ln my
mind, but the SIA of the COD·
venation wu that be bad killed
Georgia 11\era for her estate.:'
William Schenley said Oct. rr.
He added that LaScola ad·
mltted to wine i.naulin, saying
that if an autopsy were
performed it would look like she
bad died of conieattve heart
failure.
Oi1ftlth bad 1a1d Tulilda1 Wiit
I.he acticm ol tbil riden and tbe
outbreak al t.be fire ''flt tO ' te.."
ff• actmoWJidaled, however,
that tM anra ta Wbleh t.be ltden
were located waa not poated
a1alnat •moklne·
Control
near ·on
au fires
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rellef
l• ln •labt for fire-be1l•1•d
Soutbem Callfomla.u, accord·
lnS to state oft'lclall wbo aay
they 'n nearly atJncuilhed the fire• that· rava1ed more th.an
50,000 acrea.
A 23-vear-old A1u1a rnan, Jobn M. BUdiab, WU to be at·
ral •ned in Weit Covin~
Munldpal Court today for ~
verUntly aettin1 tbe moat
dettructlve of tbe fires, t~
Bradbury-Duarte blaze tbas; deatroyed more than e,ooo ~
burned 55 bomea and damqed· n others for an fatim•ted. mWJon loa. ~;:
One man died of • heart a ;
tack u a res~ tba blaze \Mt:
waa atill burnbII northward lntp!
the An&eles National Forest ·
Tuesday ni&bt.
Dhnlni1bln1 wlnd1 allow~
fireftPten to contain most oC
the blue Tuesday, but full con·
talnment wu not anticipated un ..
tJ1 tonlaht at 8 because of UD· ·
predictable weather conditi<ma,
said U.S. foreat Service
spokeswoman Jean Schwabe.
Only one other major blue ret
mained, the Turner fire south cJf
Lake Elsinore, where 1us~
winds still caused problem•:
That fire, however, was 55 per.
cent contained and SO percent
controlled in steep terrain.
The Riverside County Board
of Supervisors posted a $5,000 re-
ward for information leading to
the arrest of the penoo who set..
that 28,000-acre blaze, and tb€
WETIP citizens group chipped
in PQOmore.
DESKS GALORE
Largest
selection of
fine desks in the
area.
Desbfrom
Drexel, Heritage,
Henredon
•
t · • -'
Chy council members In lt\'lbe llave •creed to plU'tietpate
With tM COUDlt, NeW:P;Ort Beach and Colt.a Mua ln ctn~ a en·
vtronmentaJ impact report fortM men.aiod.
Irvine Maj,or Art Ant.hOnY, cal.itJoninc that bll !d&t W tdea no stand on t.be extension, aaid ~ly aad C.U ...-; eMClala
h&n aari'ed to plun1e into tbe controversial tOpiC ••lln ~rt.
thOUJh, has rem•ined silent.
Btrr NEWPORT MAYOR IACQE Heather predJctl tUt the
Uitlverslty question will 1oon come under 1crutjny bl NeW'POfl Qty
Cb'tmcil chambers.
And opponents a1ain are startipg to line up.
Newport Plaonin1 Commiiaioner Allan Beek calla the ~
posed Univenity exten.aion "a WJeless street."
Beek contends that, wllh the promlaed utenalon of the Corona
del Mar Freeway, University is no IOnaer needed as an east-weal
transportaUon corridor.
But county officials, citing transportatioQ studiet, say Ute ul·
timate traffic volumk on tbe propoied University exte:?lon ould reach 30,000 vehicles a day -the capacity of a primary rial
hiehway.
The first,sk:irmlsh on the University question is ex la~r
this mQnth when Newport council members consider putUQg
UniversitJ back on their road crtaps.
-· .... .r~
UNIVERSITY OAJVE-IAVINE-COSTA MESA CORRIDOR
Dead-end mean• you can't get there from here
THIS IS OTHER END OF ARTERIAL ROAD WITHOUT TARGET
Ecologtcal reMrve continue• •t tt.art of controveray
Cities can join
Housing lean
,. plan spreads ..
! Managers of Orance County's
llond program creating below-
cnarket·rate housing loans will
tend let.ten this week inviting
f4>eal cities to become involved.
Currently, only housing de-
'felopment.s in unincorporated
,,a rt1 of the county can
participate in the program de-
a}ped to offer $2 billion worth of
k>ana. 1be nine developments
already selected to offer the
loan• are all in the rapidly·
developing south county.
By lettint cities join the pro·
gram, though, the loans could be
•PPlied to developments
abywbere in the county.
Mrs. Watkins
final rites
slated Friday
The County Board of
Supervisors agreed Tuesday to in·
volve interested cities
John Gibson, administrator of
tbe revenue bond program. said
a few cities, such as Anaheim,
La Palma and San Clemente,
h•d shown a "tentative" interest
in joining the program
An organizational meeting for
city representatives will be held
s~o to explaih how cittes can
get involved. he said.
The COWllY has sold one rev·
enue bond series for $150
million and is preparing a
second series, which officials
bope to market early next year
Gibson said cities could join in
that sale or in later bond sales
propOsed by the county.
THE SECOND BOND sale
was set for $50 million, but
,upervisors agreed Tuesday to
modify the sum to range from
$40 to $75 million, depending on
market conditions and bow
many cities seek to join the pro-
gram.
Gibson said eacb city would be I responsible tor administering it.I
portion or the bond money, but
said one sale will be more effi-
cient than expectina each clty to
conduct its own. _. The home loam ue 1enerated
by selling tax·fr.e government
bonds to lnvealon, wbo are re·
paid through monthly morllaie
payments by home buyers. No
tax money I.a used to ftnan~e the loans.
The flrsl bond sale raised
money for 1,800 eo~ntY·
sponsored loans for f amtllea
with annual 1Qcomes leaa than
$2'1,600. ¥ort1a1e rates for those
loans ranee from S.75 to 11.5 per·
cent.
----------
Papermaker
meet set
The N i guel Art
Assoc1aUon and invited
guests will be shown how to
make their own paper atthe
association's meeting
Thursday.
Slump in eco1Wmy blamed for OC slide
Tht> demonstration will
be held at Republic Federal
Savings and Loan
Asso<'1ation, 30212 Crown
-Valley Parkway in Laguna
Niguel, at 7 30p m .
For information, call
495-5005or 493-0799
Drill team
• • auction aims
at uniforms
The cost of air travel and the
slump in the nation 'seconomy are
continuing to affect air passenger
traffic at John Wayne Airport
A total of 1,996,926 passengers
passed through the airport
terminal through Oct 31. wtuch
was 8.7 percent fewer than dur
ing the period ln 1979.
The number or passengers
that went through the airport in
October was higher than 0 <'
tober 1979 But airport. officials
noted that the increase is mis·
leading because Hughes Airwest
(now Republic Airlirtes> was on
strike one year ago a nd the
a irline's operations were
curtailed
ACCORDING TO THE
statistics r eleased Tuesday
176,416 persons passed through
the airport in October compared
to 162,411 during October 19'79.
The amount of air freight that
The Los Amigos High School moved through the airport
drill team booster c lub will terminal during October was 211
but officials once again attn buted
the increase to the Hughes
strike
For the year through Oct 31,
however. the passage of air
freight was down 24 percent
Private aircraft opt>rallons,
which account for 91 percent of
the activity at the airport, con
tanued to show declines The
number of takeoffs and landings
or private pla nes were down 14 5
Laguna slates . . semors movie
"The Grass is Greener:·
starring Cary Grant, Deborah
Kerr and Robert Mitchum. will
be s hown free to senior citizens at
2 p.m Fnday at the South Coast
Theater an Laguna Beach.
Tickets are available at the
Senior Center, 515 Forest Ave
The program as presented by
Laguna Federal Savings and
Loan Association
percent through Oct. 31 com·
pared to the period in 1979.
FOR OCTOBER ALONE,
private plane operations were
down 30pt>r<'ent
Total airport operations, in·
cl udmg both commercial and
private aircraft operations.
were down 28 percent from year·
ago levels
··This appears to be a continu·
mg reflection of the high costs oC
fuel and air travel m general,'.
according to airport oCficials
Volcano show due
Photos, slides and video tapes
of the Mount St Helens eruptions
will be presented Wednesday at
Orange Coast College by
gP.Ologist Wallace D Kleck. His
le<'ture, from 7 to 10 p.m. is
scheduled m Room 207 of the col·
lege 's Chemistry Building. s ponsor a fund raising silent percent more than October 1979,
auction. beginning at 7 p.m ---------..::.-jmiiiiiii.iiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiii) Saturday, at Columbia Savings riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Ii
aod Loan, 2273 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa.
Organizers of the event are
hoping to raise $1,200 for uniforms
and training camp expenses The
drill team is made up of 36 girls
attending the high school In
Fountain Valley
HORS D 'OEUVRES and non-alcoholic beverages will 6e
served et tbe auction, and
par\lcipan~ may bring their
own wine. ~ ,
Local merchant.6 have donated
various auction Items including
food items and cerillicatd lot sports equipment,' hair c.re,
1boes1 clothin1 and flower
arrangements.
~ PARTIQPANTS CAN stroll
tbroueh the display of aucti~
items and bid by regittertng theli'
name and an amount next to an
item.
Those wl1hi.n6C to donate
addiUonal Items to the auction
1bould contac;l Suo Decker.
7'15-2143: Joe Davies. il1·8U8, or
Dot Gagne, 839,.7159.
,Gem
Talk
By J .C. HUMPHRIES
Ctru/ied GcJ11oloaiat. AGS
. LARGEST PEARL
chan~• handt
The 'Pearl of Allah,' wh1cb bas
been billed as the world's
l•reest pearl, weiehs over 14
p0unds. It was bought recently
by a Beverly Hllls jeweler. He
paid $200,000 to the estate of
archaeolojist Dewe11 Cobb, who
recently paased away. The
pearl waa auctioned by the
heirs lo bia e.iate. Cobb
claimed that the eiant pear),
which measured almost 10 by 5
inches, had been taken from a
huf e Tricadna clam wbJtb b1d
ldUed the Philippine fliherman·
who had taken ll. C.Obb slld)>e
f lrst tried to buy the pe•rJ in
1934 from a tribal diitf ln the
ialand•t but th• chit! rcfuied
because be be!le\'e<l th pearl to
be Hcr6d. Later, NY1 Cobb, the
chief ~hanaed Illa mind .it.er:
Cobb cured the chief'• "tell\ or
maltrla. The history and
lntrliue aurroundln1 the btg
purl bN madil It a le,1end amo111,...,., eolieeton. Al With
lll ·-. Q( a tdAd" s wtlat Jt bffgt a ~ ftature to the ~ *1to ~ It C1n )'OU l•aCIDI Ule .._ el th cltm
ttiat •P.l/OiUH" tbt Pearl of Allallt-I ,_
~ ~ never loo ear/'!
lo ~lm-1 l~inking aloul
C/,,,.i6fma6
I
At QM.V ""'°' H I ,
.... T ..
M .... •lae
N8g1Pit1 «Plestions
on• MJNNIMG D•n. -111 iOGCID .... tMn wu • aot of adl••-' ,...-aUid today wlteD Or...,• Couilt1'1
Fall Pw ID&_,.••>' lrp tbere at Loi ~mltol. JUlt lmlPM": 'l'be ebMr\Da tbroftp, \be u.blbita on muvell of our aae. \M de~. tbe eUdlnl. the
mlclwQ and tM boatbl. All ol ddl •• IJ'aild u tbe falr ~ ltl nm tbroiaP Dee. 1,•but )'OU mutt bave Jttoftt auaPleU. tber. wu OM
ov•rrtdlnl attraCUon. Tbat i., tbe tborouCbbred nap are
NADbll •the fair upoill t!ie Loi AlaJllitOI tta~. lDdMd tbest an ..no baybumen tbat bav•.Juat been
dl•coanect'ed from • ~· out 1il TU.stlsi. Tfl•se Loi Alamitol bol'MI are tbt real thlDC -blQe<bloodect bone
flab of tbe Sport of Klnl•· •
OF COUUE, WBBN YOV vlalt the f-1r ~~track,
you will only eo'to watch the speecbt nap rortbe sport of It
all. . Waierlnl upon one of the 11 dally races (except on
· TueadQI) would never enter your snint\. of purity and
virtue. ~ Of coune, lut year, aosnebocly did place a buca or two
Looks liker·~ ·~~cted anothenobmerat LolAlamito.
here and there. Several somebodies, as a matter of fact.
Despite fairly lousy weather on some of the raclng
days, lut year's average daily attendance totaled nearly
11,000 boneflesh lovers. And they poured a net of $290,000
across the betting counters. Nobody reported bow much they took home.
THE llECOllD DOES SHOW, however, that Oranee
County has been a Ion& time getting a thoroughbred racing
meet, despite the fact that Los Alamitos is one of the finest
tracks for runn.ini nags you'll fmd anywhere in the uni-
verse. Somehow, Orange County mo,WS could never coo-
vinee the racina aulboritles tbal our nO\"·befty population
deserved a chance to see the premier na11 10 to it ou the
local track. 'lbus, somehow, the big races always seemed
to remain ln Los Anaelea County or Mexico, or anywhere
buthere. ·
CEllTAIN SUSPICIOUS TYPES got the idea that
maybe it all bolled down to one thin1: 'lbe Money. Los
An1elea liked the betting bucks. 'Ibey like Orance Countiana
traveling up there to now their cash tbrouah the
parimutuel windows. Clearly, LA people like to keep their attractions at
home. Like the Rama. Every now and then they lose one.
You're left to wonder if the Los Alamitos track bad
been located lo Anaheim would we have gained thoroughbred
horse racina a lot sooner? Anyway like the Rams, the blue·blooded na11 are
here now~ you're free to 10 lay your hard-earned bucks on\
the line if you so desire. As for me, I'll stick with the fat
man ln the carnival tent. I never was much for sbeddini
dollars Juat beca~e my horse had a headache and couldn't
tell me about it.
I'll PAROCBIAL ENOUGH to figure, however, that tf
LA Cotmty doesn't want us to have thoroughbred horse
raclna ln Orange County, then by blazes, it's a good thing
wewentoutandgotaome.
So let'• iet 'em off and running. Which way do you point one of these beasts, anyway?
Where'• the ateerina wheel?
·Reagan 't~lists
cabinet candidates·
WASHINGTON (AP> -Presldent-ele~t Ronald Rea1an'1
peraonal lawyer, Wllllam French Smith, la the clear cbolce to
become attorney 1eneral in the new admlntatration and cbolca for
other Cabinet poata are narrowtn1, SOW'Cff on Ru1an'a tramlUon
team report. Several IOUJ'~ea dld Smith, 63, a lonctime Rea1ap eonfldante,
seems au~ of beinl selected for the top JuaU~ Department
spot, while former Treasury Secretary WUllam E . Simon ii ll.ltely
to return to the job be held under Pretident Gerald R. Ford.
Sources on the transition team 1ald Rea1an bad made no
formal decisions as of Tuesday, but ii expected to make h1a
choiceit-aPd extend formal Cabinet offers beliJml.DI next week.
Two<sources involved in the shapin1 of the new Republican ad-
minl1tration said Simon, another of the 19 members of the
"kitchen cabinet" that prepared the list of candidates, was the on-
only penon being seriously considered for the Treuury Department
post. However, other sources said that while Simon wu the front-
runner, be was not the only candidate for the job. Also mentloned
were two other former treuury ueretaries -Georce P. Shult.I,
QOW vice chairman of the Bechtel Corp .. a worldwide enitneerln&
and construction fmn based in San Francisco, and John B. Connal-
ly, former Texas governor -and Walter Wriston, chairman of
Citicorp. A congressional source said Sen. John Tower, R-Texu, ll "all
but certain" to be selected as Reagan's defense secretary.
Iran again rejects
Iraq's peace terms
BAGHDAD, Iraq <~P) -Iran
rejected Iraq's peace terms
again today, sayin& they came
"too late,'' even aa a special
U. N. envoy ,repared to open
talks with each of the warring
Penlan Gulf nations. Iraq said
it killed 50 Iranians in new at-
tacks in Suungerd, but Iran
said it was pushing the enemy
back there and in Abadan.
"Our nation is prepared for
the hardships and saeriflces of
war, b\<lainnowaypreparedto
accept the conditions of Iraqi
President Saddam Huaaeln's
government," Iranian President
Abolhaaun Bani-Sadr told a
maaa rally in Tehran as the war
raged lnto lta *h day. ·
•'Alter the failure of his dream
hU eovemment decided t.o whip
up public opinion against us in
the world. allettng thatt he w~ts
peace but we don't ... He said
he wanted peace and would
withdraw bi.a forces from Inn
wbe'n we agreed to accept Iraq'•
leaal borders," Bani-Sadr con-
tinued in the speech broadcast
by Tehran radio.
"But It wa1 too late, for
neither our public nor the world
public will be deceived any
longer. The Saddam Hussein
governmen dJd not attack our
country to secure border adjust·
menta . . . He attacked to over·
throw our republic.
Sn~ws bw-y New ~d
l'llr lllrllllllft Tllundey WfJll •-Y
Clay•.
CM1t81 llllh ... IOW •· 1111.,d 111911 7S,lew&WIW,ff.
•IMwtltre, lllflt Wltlllllt WlllCll
11ltfl\ ..i "*1llf'I '*"'-.mine ........ , ... "kllob wltll -..... ....... .._~·--· W••l.,ly .... 1 .,. .. tll•ff , .... . "'"·
Llt111 R«k
L.oaA ... • &.wltwllll MtmPlll•
Mllftll
Mltweu• Miiie-St.,
H111twlll1
.... ()Nmll .... v..-
41 SS .II ,, " •a M ... 47 .... 44
., 75 .u
• 2' u 16 ... ... 1.26
1s '" .10 41 21 .'2
...................... ....... ~ .. --.. • " ,, • 1 .. , t n \' ' • , ., ' . . I \t I a W
'1faite power hailed
A White Power Party promoting racism has been an-
nounced by Harold Covlftston, naUonal Nul Party
leader. Covington made tbe revelation Tuesday in
Raleigh, N.C. and said Monday's verdict in the
Greensboro, N.C. Klan-Nazi trial is a "triumph for
freedom." Six Ku Klux Klansmen and Nazis were ac-
quitted in the slaying of five persons during a 1979 com-
mwllst rally against the KKK.
..
·.
t'I
I
fAlj/ Co Hll ga# •Caclou
LOS ANGELES
(AP) -Gull Oil Corp .•
J which at one time. operat·
ed more than l, 100
service stations lo __ .;_ ____ __., California and six other
western states, said it is
aell:lng tbe rest of its stations in the region.
Gull, which 20 years ago launched an ag· 1reulve campaiCJl to crack the gasoline market lo
the West, Hid Tuesday it has sold its /l.oai 240 out·
leta to Thrifty Oil Co., an independent gasoline
marketer based in Downey.
a.....,.. •~lb tranJdf plan#
SACRAMENTO (AP) ..:... Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. ~ plans Tuesday for a high.speed
paa~e ger train, lo run on a currently un· dete route with funding from a yet unknown
IOU e.
Democratic governor said his administra-
UOll wtU becin a nine-month, $300,000 feasibility
study to cboose a route and the best technology for
tbe tt"aim, modeled after rail systems in Europe and Japan.
But the statement was silent on how the state
wbJcb the Brown administration bas said will nm
out of moaey in a year at current spendine levels
would pay for such a project, estimated to cost at
leaat $100 million.
De_,,crat• OM#I K "K k-ader
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Ku Klux Klan leader
Tom Metz1er was removed by police order from a
county Democratic meeting Tuesday night after
attemptin1 to claim hls seat as a member of the party panel.
Metzger, who was defeated by a record
laod1llde in Calltornia 's 43rd Congressional Dis·
triet race two weeks ago, was asked to vacate his
Hat on the San Diego County Dlllb:ratic Central
Committee, but refused and was escorted out of
the downtown State Building by several
J?OliCemen.
\letD eafery •t-011ur_.,. pa#1Wd
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Reactine to the above·
normal number of cases or hepatitis in the county
since summer, the San Diego County Board or
Supervilors bu passed two new la,.-s aimed at
at.emm:ing a •pread of the disease.
Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously passed
measures affect.in& area restaurants where coooty
health officials say the disease originated.
One measure will raise restaurant permit fees
to pay for additional inspections by county health
officlab. 'nle other requires restaurant owners to
send employees through programs to learn
sanitary handllns of food.
For Men
s4211
Reg. $49.99
For Women
s3911
Reg. $46.99
.,. ..........
Alive without kidneys
Jeremy Adams, 7, of Los Angeles, sbOws
plastic bag which ts responsible for saving
his life by replacing his kidneys. The Viet-
namese orphan is U\'e youngest child in
Southern California to be kept alive by
Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal
Dialysis. The bag is COllJlected by tubes to
the abdomen and must be changed every
four hours.
Drug· f irrn ends
toys by sex ads
LOS ANGELES (AP> -'Ibis Cbrutmas, little
girls may feel more comfortable shopping for tool
kits and ftre engines and UtUe boys may be less
hesitant to choose nursing kits or toy kitchens.
Under a stipulated judgment to end a sex-
discrimination suit, Santa Ana-based Sav·On Drug
Stores bas agreed to stop displaying signs for
"Boys Toys" and '41G.irls To1s."
INSTEAD, THE SIGNS will. be replaced with ones saytngsimply "Toys ...
·'On behalf of all children, we congratulate Sav-
On for helping to move hi,story forward," feminist
attorney Gloria Allred said Tuesday in announcing
the settlement. "Sav·On has afforded children
equal opportunity to express themselves regard-
less of sex so that they will grow and aspire to oc·
cupations which match their interests and
abilities."
Ma. Allred filed the suit laat Dec. 6 on behalf of
seven children aod the Women's Equal Riebta and
Legal Defense Fund.
THE SUIT CLAIMED the old di'fi.sion of toys by
sex "continued the usual 1tereotypln& or males
and females which we in the women's movement
have long tried to eradicate," Ms. Allred said.
Specifically, the suit charged Sav·Oo with mis-
leading and deceptive advertising aod with viola-
tion of the Unruh Civll Rights Act, which prohibits
sexual discrimination in commercial establish·
men ts.
es
Man awarded MS milliDn in fniiul tuft .
.P.OllONA 1AP{ -In a dVil fraud lull Uaat eould inftuence bealth wurance ulea to esaer1" ~ple tbtoUchOUt t.be COUDtey, a 72·)'ur..old·1Dan
hu been awarded $4.5. mUlloo puQiUw damgea
acatnst Colonial enn Fraulin JNurance co. ·
1ile insurance tt>mpa~. -blch otters 0 out-of-
b09pltal" health in•urance 1policie1 to ibe 11
mlWOb memben of the American AaaoclaUC)ll of
ReUMd Persona, ha• been critlciud by several
cooauaner O'OUPI tor alle•edly taldq advantage of
the elderly.
Tbe company alJo bu been investigated by
ttie U.S. Postal Seriice, the Federal Trade Com-
inlSslon and atate insurance a1encles in N'w
York, Wisconsin and Illinois.
THE POMONA SUPERIOR COU8T jury
verdict Tuesday was believed to be the fl.rat as·
1essln1 punitive damaaes aaato.t the company.
Tbe company said it plans to appeal.
"We are •bocked aod dbappointed by the
verdict," said Daniel Crough, senior vice presi·
dent and corporate counsel for the Colonial Penn
Grou_p, the_parent company of the insurance busi·
neaa.
' In bis lawsuit, Elmer Norman or Azusa, Calif.,
claimed Colonial t'enn fraudulenUy switched his
main policy in 1974 to one providine 40 percent leas
benefits than his original coveraee. while stating
in a letter that the new policy offered •'substantial
improvements."
IDS LAWYER, WILLIAM SHERNOFF, pre·
sented evidence during the ·trial showing Colonial
planned to reduce its claims payment by $4 . .S
million a year by curbing the coverage 40 percent.
Norman "broke down and cried" when he
heard the verdict at the end of a three-week trial
bis lawyer said. '
He told jurors he did not file the lawsuit for
himsell, but to help other AARP members who
have similar policies and "don't even know it's
fraudulent."
c.onaumer advocates have alleged that
Colo.rual Penn preys on the elderly through its ex-
clusive contract to provide insurance for AARP
members, and of offering the least protection for
anr. non-hospital "gap'' type insurance policies.
Cntics.also have claimed that the company's mail·
order insurance service, circulated through the
AA.RP membership list. offers slow service and claims processing.
MUCH OF COLONIAL'S COVERAGE
duplicates Medicare, the consumer advocates
claim, and is therefore an unnecessary purchase
for the elderly on limited budgets.
Cyclist nabbed
as pot suspect
FRESNO (AP) -A policeman who only want·
ed to warn two bicyclists not lo ride at night
without lilhta wound up arrestina one of them for
investigation of posseaalna five pounds of mari-
juana OMcer Joseph Kubo became suapiciou.s when
the cycu.ta turned onto a narrow canal bank to
evade him. He drove to the next street that met
the canal bank and saw one man jump a fence into
a back yard. The other cyclist escaped as officers
~hued the tint man throueh several back yards.
Tbe suspect fell into a swimming pool, got out
and kept runninl -but dropped a bag containing
marijuana. Officers followed his wet footprints to
an apartment house and arrested a suspect.
No injuries
Quake shakes
SF Bay area
LIVERMORE CAP) A smaH. sharp earth·
quake jarred residents in suburban communities
about 40 miles southeast or San Francisco early to·
dar .. Th~re were no immediate reports of damage
or lllJunes.
. "!fe d~n 't have a good Richter Scale reading
on al, said Russell Heedham, a geophysicist at
the United States Geological Survey's National
Earthquake Information Service in Golden Colo.
"But it's somewhere in the low three's, m~ybe a
3.0.''
Needham ~stimated the epicenter as slightly
northeast of Livermore, about 40 miles southeast
or San Francisco.
. A ~UAKE WITH A 3.0 reading, measuring the
mtensaty of ground motion, can cause slight
damage.
A security officer at the University of
California Seismographic Station at Berkeley said
an earthquake alarm did not sound when the
quake struck at 1:34 a.rn. lt takes a temblor of
about at least 3.5 measurement on the Richter
Scale to trip the device.
Jim Reid, a s upervisor for the Contra Costa
County Sheriff's Department. said one telephone
caller reported feeling "a strong thump." About a
half dozen persons called to say they were shaken
up for two or three seconds, Reid said .
THE ALAMEDA COUNTY Sherirr's Depart·
ment also received calls with similar descriptions
Most of the calls came from San Ramon Dublin
Danville and Uvermore, dispatchers said.' ·
Reid. a few miles away in Martinez, •aid be
did not reel the shake
Live•more 1s home to the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, one of two
nuclear weapons laboratories in the United States.
Last January, two quakes. measuring 5.5 and 5.8,
rattled the Livermore area. Damage to equipment
at the lab was estimated at $15 million to S20
million and a small amount of tritium. a low-level
radioactiYe liquid leaked from a storage tank dur-
ing the quake.
~I Sears I-. I HUNTINGTONBEACH ...,..,,_ ............. -..... .....,,,..
. .
Qua ntities a n d a ssortme nts ~re li mited, so hurry in! • I
SURPLUS STORE
\V<> o,ell fir.I qunhl\ .111cl cli-.•·1111110111·11 ·\\,, ... •• pr1t1· .. f(U•111·tl .ire th1 n•J:ular prin· .. ut \\hirh
m<'rr handi-..• from ~·.1r .. H1•1.11I .trHI 1h1· 111•111 ... l\t·rt· f11rnwrh 11Hn1·cf h' ( ·.11.1l11i: or in man\
C:-1talo~ l)j,1rill1111un '• .ir .. lt.1.111 ,,.,,. .... 1r1111ncl lh• • uuntn
~.;;.t1,;~t80---. -~
ROLLER DERBY
STREET SKATES
NOW
D•t• A8C9 SOUnd Tower 19"7
--~~.._...,.....,...,...__ .... ..__.. __ ._., · R•ce HOG Racew•r ..,..
Ch•~ Race••r a...
TYCO
8lg Oetoili'. 8aou.N
ROliid Rectno ht 5e"
• Cal'NltO Race Car 497
SNOOPY SKI BOOTS
'fa~,RE NOW 1 Q. 99
~ load off balance ·
Middle lncome..Americans probably don't bave to be
minded that their income tax load seems to get heavier
d heavier. In case there's any doubt, an ana.Jyall of tax returm
ad'e by the Internal Revenue Service this year reveals
t per&ODS in the $15,000 to $50,000. income ranee paid
.1 percent of all federal income taxes for tm. That's
e biggest proportion yet paid by middle income wage arnen.
Taxpayers with incomes under $10,000 paid 4.4 per-
nt of all W19 taxes, leavtna 35 percent to be paid by those
th incomes in excess of $50,000.
According to a study by the Tax Foundation, the out·
k for the middle income citizen is bOt improvin1.
In 19'79, a worker with a median income of $20,000,
llll1DPortt.ng a spouse and two children, paid $4,814 or 26.7
rcent bis income in federal taxes. His tax tab for
will be $5,441, or 27 .3 percent of his earnings, accord-
g to the study. .
The experts blame lnfiation and the prevalence of
o-eamer families, both of which push taxpayers Into
her tax brackets, for the increasing burden on the
ddle income class.
' These are the unhappy f acta that will force the new
ministration to give top priority to tax cuts that will
nable workers to retain a decent share of their rightful
rninga. ' pening the doors
Beginning in January, a new state law passed by the
11.slature and 1igned by Gov. Brown, will open the
oors to a range of governmental activity heretofore
argely closed .to the public.
The law requires all state boards and commiallons,
ong with their subcommittees and advisory bodies, to
nduct their meetings in public, with advance announce·
ent of the agenda where feasible.
The new law not only requires open meetings, but
ts forth s~cific rules to provide full public access to
e agencies' activities.
These Include providlng the pubic wiUl backO"OUDd
ormation on agenda items; euaranteeine the public
e right to tape record open meetlnas; probibltinc
barging any fees for meetmc notices; requirlna that the
eneral reasons for a closed seaalon be announced; and
uiring that confidential minutes or reeordinp be
en during closed sessions to insure against illeaal d.la-uuians in such sessions.
Existing laws have been successful in opening meet·
a of elected bodies and of some state boards and com-~· 1be new law is significant in that it opens the ·
rs to all aeencles wboee members are appointed,
er than elected, and wbo wield enormous power in tate 1overnment.
As a welcome aftertbouPt, the law wipes out tbe
rm 0 exeeutive se11lon." From now on a meetinc closed the public for legal reuons wtll be called, in plain
elish, a "closed se11lon."
' • Ion.• expreased in the 1paoe above are thoM of the Dally Piiot.
views expreu.d on thla page are thoM of their authora and •sta. Reader comment 11 Invited. A~dreu The Dally Pilot, P.O.
154!0, Coata Meta. CA 92926. Phone (714) ~2-4321 .
BoyiUCenturieB
Complhated, that cbe~ pme. Sodium II a
metal &bat explodee •ha It
COIDM lato tbe ccmUlct wtda
water. Calcium h a poi1onou1 111. Put tbem
totetber u.ouo. and J'OU ••
th-. ordlnar1 table ult
aecHtary to baman ••· tneee.
Earl Waters
-T&UCIU LEASED to S.maon were involved in a ma-
jor envtronmental hazard on
Staten Jaland last year. The
trucu hauled pobon-aaturatecl
h\(lustrial fllten to a dump site
operated by the Chelsea
Trmtnal Co. 1be wute was then
depo11ted In bins owned by
Jersey Sanitation Inc., wblch, tn
•
·Californians in line for national offices
While the election of Rooald
Rea1an ls Important to thole
acrou tbe nation who see better day1 ahead by reuon of leu
1ovemment re1ulatton, lower
taxes, a balanced bud1et, and
1tron1er foman policies, It prom·
lse1 to be eveo
more lmpor·
tant to
Califorlana.
For there 11
1mall doubt
• that for tbe
flrtt time In
the nation'•
blltory • bifb
percentap of
top federal of.
fleet will be ftlled with Callfor·
Diam.
Thia .m,bt have been e~ to happen when tbe ooly other
CalJ.fomlan ever eleded Preli· «eat Rle.tuird Nt&OG, tOOk omee.
Bat NbUJD had ·~tb.ll entln ltt• after coll•I• away from Callfomta,· ftnt tn the Na\17, then
u a eon,....man, U.S. Senator
and Mee Pnlldnt. Re dJdni
bow any~inCaltfomla.Allof
Ill.I clciM UIOdatet were ol the WullmitciDeatablltbment.
Reapn, oa the other band, u
Uke Jlmin1 Canel'. He doem't
know the people lD D.C. and
furthermore doesn't trust them.
H dil layed this same dl.ltrust e fn goYemment when be
o:fllee u covemor. In mak·
inl h1I appointmenta then, be
dre• beavlb' upon people from
private enterprbe and can be
expeeted to do the same now.
I
BOWEVE&, be baa 1tron1 loyalties for those who have
helped blm lD the put. Also be
ll more comfortable around peo-
ple be lmoWI best. For that rea·
son It can be predicted be will
be fllllq many po1ta with tboH
who .ervecl blm well wblle be
wa1 iovernor.
Th11 1eem1 H1ured ·by the
very fact that be bu alnlldy
named FA MeeH, Cuper Wein·
1Mr1er and Verne On u three ol
bll top edviaon to aid ln the ulec~ ol tbole who are to ftll
tbe cabinet and otbel' top federal
offlcet. All three are Calltor.,
nlam wbO beld bilh poaltlont in
state penul!eat du.Hnl h1I ad-. mbill&radoa. )( ... , .ID fact. WU
th• cltef exeeutl•• whll• both Welilbillrler and Orr did sttnta u
bll dJ.nctot of fblanee amoq
otber~.
N1met ol otbenl who MrVed blm la callfonda to dllod. Ray
Arnett who was Director of nab
and Game will certainly be of.
fered a top po1t ln the federal
wild.life manqement a1ency. He
not only proved to be the best flab
and tame director tbe state bu
ever had, but continues to stand
hllb wttb 1portamen '• or1anba· tiom u well u coaservat.lves.
ADoUm' ll ISW GldneW wbo '
waa Director of Water
Resourcee and could be picked
for the bead of the federal water
manr,f:,:nt aiency. And tbere ll W Pean Kott, Jr., wbo
althou1b a conHrvatlonilt.
pleued Reaaan u hia dJNCtor
of p.,.a and Recreation and can
be expected to be choeell to bead
the NaUoinal Paro, 11 DOt an
even bllber polt. Almoe.t certain
to tM picked for an lmPortant
po1ltlon tn connection wltb
federal welfare pro1ram1 ls
Robert CarllOo, wbo wu the,
architect of :aeaian'• welfare
refonm In Calll9nila.
OP OOVUE, be won't be able
to transplant h1I eatlre former
team. He bu OutUYed ac>me wbo
performed stellar Hrvle-for
blin wtdM otberi dldn 't prove all
that aatidadOl'Y, and attll otben
may not be interested in maklq
moves. And, despite bla feellno
about the Wublnitoo ettabllsh· ment, be will have to have IOUle
who are experienced ln the way&
of Con1reas and tbe
bureaucracy.
Still, bavlna been sorely ltUnl
a few times while 1ovel"DOI' bJ
1ppolnttn1 peo.,le be didn't
penonally lmow, cboostna them
atrtcUy on their "record.I," be
will be doubly cautious now.
BE llAY EVEN reach out tO
the Califonlia Lepalature to ftDd
some ol bis appointees. One wbO
mi1ht be picked ii Senate
Republican leader BW Campbell1 who u an Aalemblyman eDjc)yea
1ood rapport wtt.bReapn.
lrontcall)', deJplte ha. eon~
1ervat1ve Jean•ns•. Reaaan Pl'Ob:
ably won't make any offen to
the t1'0 lDllet~ ~ "rfllat;
winters" ba the .Ute SeDate, llm Rl~bUdlOD and iot.m Scb.ailtL
Altboutb th•)' undoubtedly
would be IOOd cbolc:• and dO a· celleDt Jobi, both have Jrtecl
B.ea1an .ln:·&M put, reNIUllJitO
lupport him on vartoua ......
Still, ftea&an'a electSoo pro~
to •pan tbe '1'.'tl•*t t.rUICIOft! ttnentat mltratlon 1ince tbe'
Uert C8IM Wett MHiDIPid-
OOse en~ounter
1Debded areu from )h• aeolOO ~rt reg~ •
. 'Bal)lD mond to n,qulre the 1eok>o rePol'ta bl 0 moelent8.
bllh and estremt •. 1eolo1lc:
baurd area.." He UA deleted
otber "«>mP91lte Ulant•• and
"envlronmentalb HntlUY " areaa that bad bffn recom·
mended by city olftelali. XU vote was 1-J. With ~ ciloiea How8id DaWIOD and Kel·
ly Boyd S\IPPOrUY the motion
Crew of a USAF Phantom II jet eives a close check to a
Soviet Tu·95 "Bear" aircraft recetlUy over North Atlan·
tic. U.S. fighters scramble from Kenavlk, Iceland, to
track Russian aJrcraft that venture near Iceland. M the
Air Force crew Iookt, a Soviet airman· on the '&ear
(below). looks back. Both photos were t~eb by a USAF
master tergeant.
Newpor,t man ~liy
of sexual crimes ,
'burden' .
. sO Viejo plan~
. I -
Mar. Traffic in 1ome aecUons of the
roadway 18 requited to travel in just one
time. Project Will . conthiue for • while.
Conalcler an 81temate route.
Residents hit plan Dow Jones
at 1,000
then dips
' . . for Sooth 'Laguna
Approval of a controvental
locat coastal plan tor South
La1una wu po1tpooecl TUelday
by the Oran1e County Plannina
Comml11ion-but not before
Joc:al resident. took some •Wipes
at \be plan.
Ron Tippetts, project
manager for the County En·
vironmental Mana1ement Asen-
cy, told the commlalioo the plan
ian 't qulte ftntabed. More than
130 people were oa band to bear
the plan dlleusaecl.
The commlaalon acbeduled
another bearlna to consider tbe
plan at 2:ao p.m .. NoY: 25 at the county Hall ol Admlnijtration tn
Santa Ana.
The eoaatal plan la dealiDed to enaure that development
pidellnes for SOuth La1UD• an
in acc:Ord wlth requlrem~ of
the atate Coutal Act.
The ~ lllo la prOdaolna a
more in·deptb veralon of the
NEW YORK CAP) -The Dow
Jones industrial average
crossed the 1,000 level for tbe
fint time in almost four years
today aa the stock market con-
tinued it.a post-election raUy.
The widely recogohed
averaee of 30 bl1-name stocb
which climbed U .89 poluts Tues-
day, roee another 2.31 points to
1,000.216 by 8 :30 a.m . today. But
then it fell back to 995.56 by 10
o'clock althoufh It rebounded to
999.32 at 11.
It last closed above 1,000 at
1,004.65 Dec. 31, 1978.
Galnen held a 111,ht edle on
losers in the early tally of New
York Stock Escbange-llsted is-
auea. •
TracUna wu heavy, with the
conaolldated ticker tape report-
lnl trades in NYSE ia1ue1 run-
ntn1 more than 10 minutes late
in the early 1otn1.
The Dow·l,000 level baa 81· ·
aumed conaiderable
paycboloatcal 1i1nilicance for
the martet ove~ the put de· cade, ln tbe eyes of many
analy1t1.
Falr aad IUQl\1 throuch
Tbu...U,. LoWI tollljht a
alODI the ~ • Inland.
Hlibt ~•to '15.
INll•8--~W
An lnvestieator of tbe
Callfonua Divtalo1i of Forestry
1ald it may be a week before a
decisioo ta reached on whether
to prosecute a borae rider
believed responsible for 1tartin&
_ the Carbon Canyon fire that con·
· aumed 8,280 acres and destroyed
two permanent structures and a
mobile home.
Capt. Evan Griffith said he
has interviewed three of four
people who were riding horses
Sunda.y morning in the area of
the canyon where the fire bmke
out, addin& that the ultlm~de·
cisiCJb Gil froseca .. will
with the Sin Bernardino ty
District Attomey's Office. • At tbla point, Griffith said, it ls
-considered unlikely that criminal charges will be sought
against a U.year-old Brea man
who came forward Monday to
disclose that he may ~ave ~
ed the fire while smoldn1 a
cigarette while riding
.fabrseback.
·.~Griffith said Tuesday that be
considered the cause of the fire
·:pirtctly accidental."
,', The rider in question, Griffith ~ald, "doesn't know in his own
,Pind ii he was responsible." ln·
vestigators are withholdine the
man's name.
!;•Griffith bad said Tuesday that
)be actions of the riders and the
'outbreak of the fire "fit to a
tee."
He acknowledged, however,
that the area ln which the riders
were located was not posted
'*eal.nlt smo~g.
• The fire orietnaled near horse
:.iables ln San Bernardino Coun-
territory north of the Sleepy
low community. The stables
located near a skl slope that
e l"U operated in the rustle
yob.
The fire, fanned by stron1
Santa Ana winds quickly moved
Into Oran1e County and for
afveral houri poaed a serio1.11
threat to Olinda Villaae and a
cqndominium complex ln the
north teetor of Brea.
Tbe two home• that were loct
were located in Slff PY Hollow
and ad)acent to Carbon Canyon
Relional Park.
llore than 500 flremt'n were
• •ummoned to the blaze. ll wu
contatoed Monday eveninl and
, ~ntrolr.d Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Oran1e County la
DAILY PILOT
Tbe $38 million· bill. which
cleared tbe House Jut t\UIUDer,
calla for creation of a natloaal
urban park ttretcbint from
CoronadelMattoSoatbLaguna. • ~r1yle ehon, an ad -
mlniltrative aide to Rep. Robert
• aadham, R·Newport Beach,
aald it wodld take a "mli'acleH tor the part bill to be pauecl by
a~ou1 three Southenl Callfomla
counUea in whicla a atate of
emergency was de•lared late
Tueaday by Gov. Bdmubd G
Browu lr.
Tb~ designation will allow
people wbo suffered damage in
recent ftres to qualify fpr ce~n
property tax breaks and low .Jn·
terest, government-backed
loans.
Only two Orange County Fire
Department units remained
near the fire area today, accord·
lng to spokesman Mike McKee.
Relief *,.lar
in brush · •
fire battle
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Relief
is in sight for fire-besieeed
Southern Californians, accord·
ing lo state officials who say
they've nearly ertinguiahed the
fires that ravaged more than
50,000 acres.
A 23-vear-old Azusa man,
John M. BUdlsb, wu to be ar·
raiened in West Covina
Municipal Court today for ina<J·
vertently setting the most
destructive of the fir~s. the
Bradbury~uarte blue that
destroyed more than 6,000 acres,
burned 55 homes and damaeed
'n others for an estimated $25
million Joss.
One man died of a heart al·
tack as a result of the blaze that
was still bumln1 nortbwud into
thee An&elea National Forest on
Tuesday nilht.
Dlminishin& wind• allowed
firefilhieo to contain most of
lbe blaze Tuesday, but full coo-
tal.Dmmt' was D9t anticipated un-
til tooipt al 8 because of UD·
predlctabJe weather conditions,
s a Id U .S . forest Service
spokeswoman Jean Schwabe.
Only one other major blue re-
mained, the TUrner fire aoutb of
Lake Elllnore, where 1usttn1
winds atlll caused problems.
That fire, bowever, wu 55 per·
cent contained and SO percent
controlled in steep terrain.
The Riverside County Board
of Superviaon potted • $5,000 re-
ward for information leadin& to
the a.-rest of the penon who aet
that 21,000.aore blue, and the
WETIP citkena IJ'OUP cbJpped
in S500 more.
the Senate. .
''Con1reuman Badbam
believe. in miracles.," Hid
Nellon early today, ''but he also
believes that miracles come few and far between."
Badbam and Rep. Jerry· Pat·
terson, D·Santa Ana, authored
the House version of the bill.
Congress is expected to ~
this Friday and then return for
only flv.JL wortinl days before
callln1 it·e year Dec, 1 •
.l lson, acknowledging tb(lre
ts a very outside chance" the
bill could be bfou1bt to the
Senate floor without clt1aring
the enero committee, said it
will be necessary to reintroduce
the bill next year. He said
Badham is commi.tted to doing
that.
But what left a number of
Wasblneton officials confused-
waa the sudden md atro~ op-
position to the bJll, that, only
last· week, was being viewed by
its authors as non-controversial.
Nelson said he's been unable
to figure out where the opposi:
lion is coming from but
speculates its aimed at the bill's
pricetag and a general feeling -.e land is 'fOrthy of national •#~·seems io be an
Eastern bias among those that
came out to Orange County look·
ing for lush j!eeo parkland and
saw brown lsldes instead,"
explained Ne
.. ;erhaps tftey just1 don't un-
derstand that you just don't find
lush green forests in Southern
California, ,,.be added.
Several Washington officials
noted that while committee
chairman Henry Jackson, D·
Washington, generally favors
passage of the bill, his suc-
ceuor, chairman-elect Jame~
McClure, R-Idahq, is more skep-
tical.
Nelson said McClure is one of
the senators that Badham wooed
in tbe past weeks to 'win support
for the bill.
"Unfortunately, there's a lot of O,.PJ>08itlon that he (Badham)
just wasn't able to overcome,"
expJained Nelson. "Things are
not very optimistic."
AUSO ...
re1pon1es, favorable to
themaelves, and bave made no
effort whatsoever to aummarhe .
or describe portions of tbe
record \hat are not favorable to
their poeition.
•'Their method ha.a placed an
intolerable butden upon the
court u well u upon respondent
(the coWlty)and .-.I pany ln ln·
tereat(Altao Vlejd Corp.) who
have been forced to search
tbroueh the it1anUc record for
evt&Dnce aupportina or reJedln•
the board'• dectatona."
Lee noted that written
documentaUon in the case filed
by attom•Y• total more than
!.i,100 pages, excl\ldiDI uhlblta.
He Hid that be bad devoted
more tban 37 court d•YI In
handUnt the cue.
I
That's Ule puri)ose of this mannequin
outside a second·haDd clotblng store in
downtown .Portland, Ore., and it teems
Federalfr.atudy cites savings ini,uel
W ASlUNGTON (AJ») -A '5
mph speed limit durin& severe energy shortages and aaan·
datory tire tnflation inapediona
could become the law of the land
under proposals in a 1ovem-
ment ~ud.y aimed at reducln.g
oil imports. •
· The study, released Tuesday
and designed by the out1oin_g
Carter administration as an
energy policy blueprint for the
next decade, finds the country
could reduce oll imports by two
million tQ three million barrels a
day ov~r the next 10 ye11rs.
Conducted by the t Enere.y
Department, the study calla
Largest
selection of
•
auch a reduetion critical to pre-
venting upheavals that mlaht
"teu out OUJ" very aoclal fabrk"
from the JOes of mljor fcirellJl
oil aupplle:a. 1be United States
• importa S.8 millim barrels ol oU
d.ally -40 perc:ent o( what the
country uses.
The report says the govern-
ment should be prepared to im·
pose a 45 mph speed limit during
severe energy shortages and
should require U.S. automakers
to m~ Oeel mileage averages
of 38 miles per gallon in 1990.
The law requires autom,.ers to
meet an average of 'n .5 mpg b,Y
fine desks in the
Deskstfrom
Drexel, ~eritage,
Henredon
and more.
1985, but dOes not 10
that.
The 1tUdy abs the ~ountry.
could also save 15,000 barrels of
oil a day in 1'90 by requlri.Dg ••
state auto inspection programs
to check tire pressures. It says
the average motorist's tires are
underlnflated by four pounds per
square inch, resulting in a 3 per-
cent drop In fuel economy.
But the biggest drop, m tmJ~
ports would come from a speed~
up l~ the 1985 deadline for re-
moving price controls on natural
gas, the report says.
Irvine
chief
chided
BJ aJalAllD GaEEN °' .............
Ift.tne Polle. Cblef Leo Peart
"Uled C, J~eat" In the way be led a petty theft .....
port 1nvolvt.a1 Cou.ncllwoman
Maey Ann Galdo, accordlD.I to
A11lltant City Mana1er Paul Brady Jr.
''The appropriate dl.l~Ullims
flue taken place with the chief
and suaestiou were made u to
a.reu 'al improvement,'• Brady
said today,
· In a report Brady complied
after a.JO.day lnvest.l1atioft into
alle1ed wron1dotn1 by Peart,
the Hllltant aty mana1er CCCl·
eluded tbat tile chief didn't
Violate tbe ew or depar1ment
policy In thd way be handled a
police report favolv1n1 Mrs.
Gaido. /
Peart med bal Judcment by
t.eWD1 other ~ offtcera that
tbe report mlaht be 1lven apeeW tnatment, accor:dbil to
Br~ I ID tie ftDal analyaw Peart'• tb0u1lata on the matter were
JleTer put ipto actloo and,
therefore, be l1n't tullty of breakiae tblt law or department PGleJ,.-..; Nia. r -8ra~ COD~DCted tbe ID·
....... it tbe 1'4quett al tbe
Irvine Polle• Ahoclatloo, bar18inlnt a1ent repreaentlq . an 1.rrine police ontcers.
Mn. Galdo -said 1be ll em· barraued about the Incident
tllat beian Sept. 29 when •be left
the Enviroamentat Self·Service
StaUon, '801 Campu• Drive, lrviDe, wttbout paytn1 a $1.17
1uoUne blll.
A 1tatlob attendant 1ot ber
license number a1td ulled
police. 111'1.· Gaiclo went back
and paid the bill after abe was
, (See CHIEF, Pa1e AJ>
Mesa police
arrest two ..
in drug bust
COita Meaa police na.rcotlcl
deteettvea said today they have
culmina~ a aertea of three dnas purehalee from a Newport
Beach maclWlllt by anwtill,I
llkn and a companton and iel. lu cOcalDe and buhlab.
llUuell T. GUbert, 21, of 2211
lllld St., Newport Beach, wu
nl•Ued on tu.ooo ball followlial
bla anwt at bll b6me MODday
wbere a 1mill amouat Of co-
caine wu contlleated.
Gilbert, owner of T ts T
MacldDlry in Westmtnater,'wu
...... Oft IUIPldOD of 1ale al
Dai'tOU0t1 while Jam• lllehatd
!"BrMB, •· al • Suta lubel An., Colla ...... wu al'l'elted
-~ wtth pot .. Slon ot MftCltiel.
A Har!JI warrant allowed ..Uc• ·io eater 8rie-n'• r ... ..._,., .._.. a ,amall amount
., .. .--.ct b111m1a ... mo
II t'HIMd M .,~ iecard· a-.etiwltfte DlluD. ................
~an••m.t II tor Mell man .... ...,..
WI ,....; W dliea Ntun for
OD)J ,ftft ~ da7• ..... eaJUN tt a ,..,Dte.-1. Ne11cma.~tben Ii ... 'ffll1 O'UW. ~ .. tbe
bill cOald .,. broght to tb• senate floor wtu.out cl•arlnl th• ...., commttttl, Nici It
Will be ·aec.aary to telntrodace
tbe btll nest year. He 11td
Baclham la colnmlu.d to dotn1
that.
Tbe Oran&• County Board ol
Supervbora ha• approved a
SlW.000 ecliltl'aet for clnds1nl ol tbe boat launcbln1 area at
Newport Dunelln Upper Newport
BaJ clespitetbefactthe bid fort.be
park wu SSt,000 more than an
enlineer'1etti.Dlate.
Sbellmiaker lae. of Newport
BeaCh, aubinltt.ed th. on1J bkl for • '
D_ow Jorfes
·touches
1,000
Me1an held
in robbery,
kni/e threat
I tb• projee\ to remove 11 000 eublc
yardl ol material from ihe launcb .,.a.
The build up of material, ac·
cordlq to county Clftldall, poaes
a na9lptioaal baurd and bu
prohibited boat launcblnt durlnc
low tide periods.
County oftldall 1ald they met
with SbeJlmaker representatives
TrUck kills
motorcyclist
in Costa Mesa
A motorcyclllt WU fatal17 in·
Jured at about l :Of p.Ql. 'l\ae9·
da1 WMa be wu hll at. the cor·
ner of Plaeentla A venue and
17th ~ ea.ta ..... by •
plctap track.
PoUe. aald Franm J. Dowd,
51, 21'1 Republic St.. Cotta
lleaa, died ID Boq Memorlal
Hol~ ol muaive internal in·
Jurtea at 3:M p.m.
in an effort to ba'fe work
performed at a price closer to an
en1lneer'1eatimateofS95,000, but
weren'tauceeuful.
The ollldall concluded that tbe
en1lneer'1 estimate did not ade-
quately "reflect the lnflaUon.ary
trendl fOI' thll type of work," ac·
cordlnl to • report stven to
(See D&EDGE, Pa1e AZ>
. i!
Newport
man guilty
• in sex case
A Newport Beach man bu
pleaded 'ulUy to ae~
perveratoa char1" lnvolvtn1 three JOuQ' ataten be met u • Rlverlkle OOUnty nudist pmp
earlier tb1a 7ear. •
Senne 1'ay •rook•bh ... sa. .. tered• the plea. to three -of '11
cbara-...... b1m in ~ County Superior Court.
Broobhlre prevtou1J1 W
been convlcted in San Dl•-Co unty oa ••• ger•er1io1a cbar1• ~yea.ts qo. ·
Oranp c.owrtJ Superior Oodrt"
Judie Jamea Turmr declared
Bl'OC>bblte to be a matallJ dD-
ordered tn offender, meaial"
th• defendant will be sent to a
•late mental b09pltal for Jtreat-
ment and ,valualion. He eouJd
be tent to • It.ate prhoa later If
docton determine be l1n't
reapondi.as to treatment.
Accordlnf to court records,
the cue involved three 1liten
•led 12, l51and 16.
He pleaded 1ullty to two
counts of unlawful sexual ln·
tercoune with a minor and OQe
count ol cblld molntation.'"
The aaua1 actlvltiea wttb ibe
children occurred d'Jrln1· a
aeveral·week period Jut •Drilul In Orqe County. He wu ar·
reated when the cblldren'1
mother learned of the actl'titlel.
Meetings planned
on sdiool clo&hrg ..
Traffic lnveat11atora Hld· Public meetlDI• to dlacua
Dowd WH rldln1 bl• •mall acbool cbww lD the Newpart· moto_reyde eut m lfth Street .u ... -.a be""'• ._,-.. ... when lt wu struck by a amall Mesa U&Mo&ict .-""""..... -truck driven bv Albert w. 1:IO In Calta Meaa'a WoodJarid " School. Seid•, M. al Stanum, :proprietor Dlltrlct tn11tee1 ~ scbectialed·
of 8'14-1a.nutacturini, as to au.ad three 1ucb 1euloal
.NewportBlvd.,eo.tallna. • acbeduled tbrou•b De~. I .
Offlcett aald Dowd waa Seaafom are Mt for Andeneil
lmoc!k.ct off bla motorcycle, flew School In Newport Beach or#
atop tbe bood ol a pickup ~ven Thursday at T:IO p.m .• ind at
w•t c. lTtb l>Y Rene Golidara, Llndberab School jn Cotta Meaa, ao of La Habra. Dec. 2 at 7:15 p.m. No dtatioa wu 1ailtMd. peod-
IQ1 hU1bif Mddent biv..U .. -
tioa, pQljce Nid.
ProsecutWn eyet/,
·in ~canYon blaze
A• tnvestieator of tbe Callfornla Divtalon ol Forestry
laid tt may be a week before a
declflon la reached on whether to prosecute a horse rider
laeHfted responsible for starttn1
tlae Carlal Canyon fiH that con·
~~~
CUL Evan Grtffltb Wd be ... lDt8rnewed three of four =no were rldlna bones IDOl'Dbll tn the area of a. c~ wbere tbe fJte broke ...,_ . ...., tb8t tbe altlm• de-..... ~ ~ ~· ....... ~=will ,.
... ~=-~~tb ~it la
eea1tdered unlUrelJ' tbat trbDiDal cbarlea wW be aaucht • ,,_... a 31-year-old Brea man
;,,.,.._ eame forward Moaday to
. • .. clme tbat be may hne start-., .. ~ fire wbUe 1molrill1 a
et1arette wtrtle rldin1 :~11•1ct.
I • OllfllUl uJd Tuesday that be
·JPAltdredtbec~uaeofthefll'e ~ acddental.''
"-dder tn qwtion, Gritftth ~ .. dlramn't know tn h1I own
.... ., .. WU respouible." ID· IM~ are wtthboldlng the ,...ume.
c·'n Orllllla bad Mid Tuesday that
6 ...... ol tbe ridel"I and tbe
11 n o• o1 tbe nn "flt to a '{.lllL" 7.J~· 8dmowleqe4, however,
..... _. tn wbicb tbe liden
.~ ... Jocated WU Dot posted
.. : laznokiDI.
· •, t'llil are ort8'0 ated DNI' bone
ii In San Benwd1Do Coun·
tliiiltw4Y mrth of tM SleePY
commmatty. The atablel llc8ted near a Al slope that
::.:_-opera&ed 1D tbe rustic
'~an. tuned ~>' •trona
.. --Alaa winda qwcklY moved Ot.Ur1e CouatJ and for .,.. .. boun ~ a· aertous
Co OUDda Vlllqe aDd a
..... mlJDium eomplu tn the
-.tor' ol Brea.
s
DAILY PILOT
The two homes that were lost
were located in Sleepy Hollow
and actjacent to Carbon Canyon R~lioaal Park. Jilore than 500 firemen were
summooed to the blaze. It was
contained Monday evening and
coD\rolled ~>'· Meawblle, Oranp County ls
among three Southern California
counties in which a state of
emer1ency waa declared late
Tuucla1 by Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr.
Tbe dealpatlon wtll allofl
~ .. "° IQfhr8d c1 ...... In we.•llM w q~ for certain property tu breab and low ln-
te reat, 1overnment-backed
loam.
Only two Orange County Fl.re Departm~nt unita remained near the fire area today, accord·
ing to spokesman Mite McKee .
* * *
Man pleads
• uuwcent to
Bradbury fire
WES!' COVINA (AP) -M
two major bNlb ftftl Temalned
out of coatrol for tbe fourth da7 I
a 23-year-old Azusa man pleaded lnaocent today to char1es be
atarted tbe 8,800-acre Bradfliury·
D'1al1e ftre that destroyed 55
bom11, ctamaied 27 otben and
left one man dead.
One count ID the cllatrict at·
torney'1 two-cou.at comp~aint
a1ainlt John M. Budlah alleles
crtmtnal ne8lllence tn settlnl a
ft.re th& cauaecl damae~ to prop.
trty, Tbe other count 11
allllilal\ tJIU\ a.Ue1e1 dama1e to
forestland.
Citrw Munidpal Judi• John
L . Nicbola Mt ball at $20,000 ~
day. and at the request of
Budlab•i attorney ICbeduled a
bail tei'tt':f.o hearinl for Nov. 21. Nicboll tdaeduJjd a pn-
Umtiwy beartDa for Dee. a.
Nlcboll allo lebeduled a pre-
limiDUJ buriDI for Dee. a.
U canvtcted.~ 8udlab facet up to aevm yean lD prtaon and
$100,000 ID ftnel.
FininaD ban DOW rln&ed tbe
22·1Dlle perimeter of the n.r.,
whlcb wa1 belc) rtllponalbS. for
tbe cSeatll ol a BradbUi'Y man
' wbo autf ered • Jleal't attack
-whUe loadln1 ht• car wttb
•alublli&
DREDGE ...
aupervilors TueedaJ. Ne"J)Olt DuMa la leued by tbe
county to a private con·
ca1lona.lN, Newport Dunes Inc.
Dred1tn1 la the county's
respoaalbillty under terms of tbe
leue.
The dredcecl,materlal will be placetl in an _.. in the west por·
tJon oftbe Dunes park to dry, ac-
cordtnl to· the report. Poulble
later use et the material la tmcer-tain.
Acconline to county officials,
the material could be uaed in coo-
structiod scheduled to oecur dur·
ine' 'J>lumed redevelopment of
Newport Duna. OthenriM, the
matertal would have to be re-
moved to a permanent alte at a
cost estimated to run as high as
$50,000.
The transportation cost eould
be reduced lf the county finds a
bt.lyer for the material, accordina
to the report.
Sbellmaker will have up to 75
days to complete the wort called
for in the contract with the county.
Accorctinl to tbe report, dredg-
ing of the boat launchln1 area will
not be required for another 10 ye an. I
F,.._PageAJ
CIUEF •••
contaeted .,, police. '
Tbe owner at tbe ~ ata·
Uoo Hid lilt Jqs_tw the sa.'7
ahld dldn't want to pre11
cbaries. ·
On Sept. 30 Chief Peart saw
the petty theft report Ustin1
Mn. Galdo as tbe suspect .
According to the fllldinp of
Brady's invntigation, Peart
"thought about baviq tbe re-
port chan1~" from ab incident
report to a petty theft report. He
also thouabt about bavtn1 a new
report writt~n in which Mn. ·
Gaido'• name wouldn't appear.
He a1ao tboulht about bavtq the
petty theft report not listed on
the press lot at the station.
,.,...PageAJ
PARK .••
Several Wublneton officials
noted that while committee
chairman Henry Jacuoo, D·
W aablnateD, 1enerally favora
pa1111• Of tbe blll, Jail IUC·
ceaaor. ehalrman•l•ct James
McClure, R-ldabo, ii more ake~
Ucal. Nellon aald llcClure la one of the Hll8ton that Badbam wooed .
in tbe put weeks to win support '
for tMbW. "Vnlortuna~ there's a lot of o~ tMl be (Badham)
Just wun't able to over<!Ome,"
explained Nelloo. ''ThiDP are
not very opUmlatie.''
Teens seized
in 828,000 ,
silv.er. theft
..
Tbat'• the purpose Of Wa manneqUin
out.side a second-hand dothina store in
downtoWQ Portland, Ore., ancf ft teelDI
to be accomplishing it.I mission. Perhaps
she's mated to the headless horseman?
SANTA MONICA (AP) -A
jaU ~llmate of Dr. Raymcmd
LaScola baa tesUfted that: tbe
Malibu fhyaician admitted
polaon ng the elderl1
millionairaa wbo adopted him
and made.him her helr.
"He (Lascola) •aid he
poisoned her," convicted
murderer William Conrad Acll:er
told a clOled-door preliminary
hearin1 wbicb ended with
LaScola's indictment last week
on cbar1es incJuding murder,
solicltatiap ol murder and grand
theft.
Transcrlpta of the preliminary
bearin& were released after the
pe4latijclto-by6notist pleaded
lnnocebt to all the cbartu;
which allege be killed 87 -year-
Largest
selection of
~ .
old Gecq1a Theta to taln COO·
trol of bef '3 millioo estate and
also tried to UTan1e for the
murder of two Jawyers
repraentlQI UJe woman ftptlq
Lascola for \control of the money.
· In bis Oct. 28 teatimony,
Conrad -a self-described
jaUbouse "rat" -alao said the
doctor told him the poilOD be
used to till lb. Tbera could not
be detected because. be had her
body cremated. /.
Mn. 'lbera died July 18, 1JJ'79,
five months after sbe and ber
husband Artya adopted LaScola.
LaScola, wbo signed her death
certificate, listed the cause of
death as con1estlve heart failure.
fine de8ks in the
area.
..
Desks from . . "
Drexel; Heritage, .
Henredon
But autboribes allege •be die4
from an Lnsulln overdo4e ad·
ministered bY the 65-year-oJcl
LaScola.
Another prosecution Mitnest
at ~e bearing, a onetime bero1o
addict who worked for LaSco1'
u a "ec>-fer," sald an lntoxicat.
ed LaScola once discuaaed llra.
Tbera's death with him.
"It la all kind of vague ID mt
mind, but the rtst of the con-
versation was that be had tilled
Georgia Thera ror her estate,"
William Schenley said Oct. ZI.
He •added that LaScola ad-
mitted to uslng insulin, sayiq
that if an autopsy were
performed it would look like she
bad died of congestiTe heart
failure.
TD OWNBU OP A 1mall business on the Ohio-Wea
Vlr&inl• liM write: .. U cood and faithful employees
weren't 4epmdent an Ol1t busineas, we'd aet out."
A eertatn amount of IJ'iping ls common to amaJI busi-
ness rank.I, since the game played ls a lerious one of lSlf
bopes and ~ 101all res\llta. Tbet.\" comment.I were· culled from a random aam
of the 8»,000.member NaUooal FederatJon of lndepen
BualDetl. Results of the sample, tbe federation aaJd,
tent • sray Jl6cture for small business.
•-nn; SO.CALLED 'reeoveey' from the Ul80 r·~Wli~
wbicb bes8n In the third quarter wu only a terni us
eome, but certaiDJy not by the small business owner,"
Profeuor Wllllam C. Donkelber1 of Purdue.
Dunkelber1, an economist, w.bo with Profea
Jonathan A. Seott of Southern JlethodlJt UnJversity,
terpreb federation data, comments that "at the botto
tbe receulon, when small business should have
bo\&Ddina back, no\bln1 much happened." •
The lmplicatiool extend beyOnd the small-buaineu
muntty. CGDllder employment, for example, and the
menta made about it two years aeo by the House Commi
OD Small Buainesl.
J • •OU TRAN 88 percent of the commercial eatab • menta bl tbia country are small businesses," the commit
reported, "but 1mall bualneues employ leas than two-·
of all priv~aec:tor worken.
'"lberefore, it ii surprising to some observers
between 1188 and 1978, small businesses accounted
•bat can be conaldered virtually all the new private sec
employment in this country.''
S1~lul11Tlw
.U..fal• ~
C••"4H' 9S~97~ cent• • pound, U,!-
u-------------; c11tstlnec1ont. ...... ~-u •llO'ind DN ~-IS • pound, delivered.
Tie P.ts"Mt\ll&Weell c~lte lb. "'-'-7' ce<Tlle --'• N, y Metcmy .-..,.r llMll • ....._.1'..u lrV\' GL H Y
SHr•r
NEW YORK (I.Pl -H-y & H._, 111¥er l__,'1, .... ~IO ...
Eno•lllerd ,,.,..., sn.ooo, up $41.0S •
f-lcaledal -$111 om ... to.SU
..
Claa1111n Ll•tlng•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los AngelH
• KNBC (NBC) I.OS Angeles
I KTLA (Ind ) Loa Angeles
KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(() KFMB (CBS) San Diego e KHJ..TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego
I KTTV (Ind.) Loa Angeles
KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles D KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
netUJOrk race
On Tl' tonight
• .a 11111111 (1 hr., IO .... )
-~-..UOA
''Nont ..... °'*' ~ Toutne!MnC ,.,_.. .. 10:00• QWQ' ,. ................ ........... ,"'°"' tt\111 • .....,.,_ _,,, ~cw
II~ upamur.-.
11= OM'1 ..........,. 10 ...,.,.....
~ .. PMllcf•Cltllw-P. .,. llllld .. tMwted
~ fie dlltrtct 8"0r!MIY• --. ..... w
NITWONCNIWI -1· .... co..eoe
"T,_. In lpeot And
Tllfte'' Dr. C4li1 ~
....... Into .......
Md .... fUhn for • looll .. .... ottgln cf an. ..,.., ..
teni, ... pen.ne Ind ttle
pllMtlcf oetier...., a 11•11:: ....
IQUl'MI 1 MIWLYWID~ ti1•A•l•H
HIWtc*Y• end Tt&Pl)ef'
1t""'9l IO retrtwl I eup.
ply of hydrooonl•-
•toten by btec*·marll· .......
. JOHN D~RUNG
• CM..,. llVOND
"The Herld'' A ~
~.,..,...·~~
............ P"*IOIMllOl'll ... ...... pt.
-~ ..,,....THI
MJDC9t lf11UIM ...,,..., .Mell ~ ..._ T.,.._ lyn-
*Oflll.•~~
tlofl ,......,,. "-• dllof·
cltrOllN------
~.-.-~ iatlOn oC Ille *time oC IN
..._.from~to
Null.
U:IO. Cl) MOVll * • • ...... In The Peclftc" (1tee) lM M&Mft, Toet*o ..,..,.. A .i..,.,_ ,_.,
ofiow and 1111 Amertcln
matlne .. ltrlnded on I ·
Pdlo IMIM and diloover
..,., need eecfl octw to
~.
• TONIQHT
Hoel: Johnny CJ''°"·
o..t; Nc:llly Sdwodw. • • •ar-. CILl. a.oac ..
Jlfn'I ..,. trill lo wwn
Meo ..,. Geoff Buller.
141MCNIW8 ..... ca
A 'l'lldd'I aged-Cl!Pteln
Gl'IM ,. tlle -lllld
dacldel to ...ua -Oodgeetty
I
'Homeward · Bound' poignant
~
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Burt Prelutaky
moved to Carmel, Calli., last year to write the
1cript for a movie and found tbt be and the town
were meant for ooe another.
"Carmel seemed 1mall, quiet and borinc,"
said Prelut.ak)'. "Well, I'm 1mall, quiet and borin&.
so we were 1uited for eacb other.••
The m0vie be wrote in that California coutal
community wu "Homeward Bound," and borinl
it ii not. It ii the story of a man wbo reacbel mld·
dle aae alienated from u.o.e around blm, and ii
unable to eQreu ht• love for them. Hil aon ii cty.
int and bil fatber doesn "t want blm around.
the city. He's a man who rejects everytbine bis
father stands for. HU father raises irapes, be
writes-TV commerclab.''
BE SAID BE BAD DAVID Januen in mind
for the \ead, unW J anasen '1 death.
"Be had that burned-out quality, that aura of
living cloH to tbe edce." bf 1akl. ·
Prelutaky al.lo cluhed with CBS over bavtos a
minor character commit 1uicide. The network
didn't want the 1ulclde, but Prelutlky felt It waa
neceuary to 1bow the d.lreet1oa the father wu
beadlq. 1be 1uldde waa left in.
Tla•ntl•lf'
D•1dme/lle .
1 U10 e •~ ''UMllle "8nolr"
(1916) Jofln w.-. ....
~
-AFIBlll>CJN-
1l:OO. •*IA ''TM Muml\'ly''
(1151) Peter Cu1htno.
CMatopMr L.le.
• **IA ''W• OI .,.,_
Wlldcall" (1Ma::r Wayne, Mar1tle
ISI041•••"Haetw-(1t74)1en~.~ ......
... ••i.."ThlPrtm•
Nrty OI S.gMnt O'f•·
,.... (1Ma) Bob •· ~Ok .
by Armstrong a Battuk
SUT THEN 'rt:)t.J KNCN>/ HOW "TH06E CLOWNS STICK IOGE'TH~!
Serl ...
Danny Kaye
will make bis
TV dramatic de·
but in the CBS
special
"Skokie" which
tells how
citizens of
Skokie, Ill..
faced con-
troversy involv-
ing a neo-Nazi
group.
DAVID IOVL 8TAU AB a 4C).year-old man
tryin1 to make connecUona with bla IOD and father
before lt'a too late. And lf you tblnk ol Soul u tbe
1ec:ond half of ''Stanky and.Hutch," take a look at
.. Homeward Bound."
"I wanted to 1bow a character 10 emotionally
detached that if be didn't make a connection he'd kill blmaelf," the writer ~aJd. "By tbe end of the --:~__..;;..-------------:~~
movie, be can tell blJ father be loves blm, and tell r
Soial offen a moat credible and movin1
portrait, u do Barnard ff~ u the crandlatber
and llomle Drter u UM son.
"Homeward Bound," directed by Richard
Michaela, will be broadcut toailbt at 9 oo Channel
2.
"I went to Carmel mottly to 1et away from
L .A.," tald. Preluuty, wbo II di\'Ol'eM. "I lived
here for 8' yean, but I neffr liked the diltance1." •
TUB BEA&DED wann BEGAN bla career
doin1 iDOvl• reviewa tor Loe Ansel• ma1ulne.
He allo wrote a weekly eolwnn. for· the LOI
AD1e1e1nm ...
CBS a~ebed Prel\dlky wltb only &be idea
for "Homeward Bound." lt want.ct a story ·~ a • ~n• bOY Wbo belpa reeonclle tbe father IJld 1randlatber.
0 1 ~t aboUt dolnl it ethnic," he 1~. "I
tboulbt UM father would be a man wb"o bad
ebapaed hU name. Tbe1~ d.ldn't want it etbnlc. SO I
dl'on up tbi'oUlb the Napa V.U.1 wt.De count.I')'.
aD4 came µp 1'1tlt tbe 1tory ol a man wbO mo-. .. to
blJ alrlfrlend be lovea her."