HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-21 - Orange Coast Pilota1JEUY8UC& LOS ANGELES (AP>-Wu it
Sue ZJleD; tbreateDed with COO·
ftnemmt in a aanltarlam? Wu It Cliff Barnes. ~ oat. of • 1q oil
deal? Wu it ltrilUn Shepard,
faced wltb a pf'OltttuUon ~?
HaJiC OD = cowboy bat,• America -t'• tbe n.l&bt we flll~out ahotJ.R. justallouteve17bodyonthe
bit " " 1erles looU lib • · likely auspect. J .B. Ewtnl, of c0une, la that
acouadlel ol an oil tycoon wbo
• doubJe.dealt lda We>' 1ato an ln·
ternatiooal fnDIY of a.19c~ after IOIDI008' pUmped two al._
into blm at tbe eDd of tbe lut
MUGD. F..-baYebMD waltiDlto ftnd out wbodanall ever llDCe.
<Related story Paaeet>
Nude poses,
sex offers
A 21-·year-old Weatminater
woman bu been arreated in Ccata
lleta CID nspldm:l ol prmtitutioo
wlleoabe aJJeiicllj PoHd for nude
pbotoa and Offer'ecl Mll fortbe$115
tbai an andereover aaent bUded her. · •
· Held in Calta llesa Jail today
waa Nellie llarie Watermu.
employee ol a Santa Ana outcall
modeli.q atudlo.
ln•eall1atora claim lb.
Waterm:an wu IOlictted for ses
aeta 'l'bundaJ by ~· and met an vndercover officer at a
restauratooHarbor BouJeviid.
The two proceeC)ed to • CQita
lleaa motel where the woman.
wat arT .. ted after a photo
MNlCJD, pc>Jlceaald.
I t
l '?be denouncement wlll be
broadeut to East Coaat and
llldwestvleweraat 1v.m. PST. In
the Mountain Ume zone, tbe abow
will beeln aUp.m. PST and on the
West Q)e.st tbe abow will be on at
lOp.m.PST.
Viewehin the West can flncl out
tbe aecret early by liltenina to
broadcast outleta, some of wb.lch
plan uraent newa reports.
Puteqers OD Air Prance jets
bound for Europe will be told wbo sbot J .R. when tbe aecret
breaks.
Acton on the abow, inoludina
Larey 11.aaman, wbo playa .1.R.,
will be told the secret at a party tonlahl. They've alto been kept
ln the dark for security re....
and only about 20 people in
Lorimar Productions are said to
be prtvy to tbe secret.
Just about every character ln
the •haw loob aunty. Nearly all
had tbeopportunity, and tbere are
no lack ol motives for shootinl
.J.R.
J .R. baa mortaa1ed Southfort
Rancb riabt out from under bi.a
parent&, .Jock and Mlu l!We,
planned to sink oU wella on Illas
EWe'• land, driven bia brother
Bobby away, planned. to commit
bi.a wife to an lmtitutioo, batched
a plot to convict bia allter·in-law
of prostituticD and driven one
buainea auoclate to suicide and
left another bankrupt.
Here ii a rop's aallery ol tb4t
leadbla1mpeeta:
-s.e Ella Ewtaa, .Played by
Linda Gray. Sue Ellen bu a
pa11lOD for alcobol and other
men, no doubt driven to both by
J.R. Tbe niPt J.R. WU abot, be ~Id h• be wu committlna berto•
an inatitudoa for alcoboU.m. Sbe·
tucked a IUD Into her pune and,
left Soutbfoi'k Ranch.
-Krt.&111 IMP.,._ s~ 21·
len '• ~ Ind J .a.'• former· 'HC~ and Jnlatre8a, p_la1ed
b,v. Jllary; Ci-OebJ. ktliUn WU
ve17 cosy with J.R. UDtl1 bi tOld
ber to pt out Of ton. To man
tu. ;olat J:R. bad a pollteman
•1111..i be cOu1cl arrest ber for
pro.titudcin. .
-Cllff aaraea, .J.tt.•1
1rcbrlval, plaJtd bJ It••
KerebeYal. Clift W UM 1oe ol di&~
a•r B.,_., tbe partner Jotk Ewt.nc dou~ and Wt
(Seil DAQ.M; Pa .. Al)
• 1ven :v
. ~· -~
Hotel .on Ire ,G~ty
in NB
.-
..........
THl8VIEWOFLAIYEGASIHOW8MGllGRANDHOT!.LINUPPeJIRIGHTCORNIR
Flame• engulf huge Cntno, tnlpplng hundNcl9, •• i2 people die
Vegas fjre traps ~ests
12 killed in blaze at MGM high-riae
LAS VEGSAS, Nev. (AP) -A
m.tor ftN broke out in tbe bue·
ment fl the MGll Grand hotel·
cut.no OD Lu Ve1U' alltterina
atrlp today, aendln1 amolle
tbroqbout all 28 atorlea and
traDl>lna hundredl of auesta In
tbeli r0om1 and on ·the rool.
Clark OoantJ F1re Capt. Ralph Db)1man aatd 12 people wel'\
tilled aDd at least 40 were In-
jured.
11&111 IUISla fJed to tbe roof,
where belicOipten wen tl7iDa to
evacuate them. Dmamaf.J.aald the fire deputlnet•a la n-
• acbed emir to tbe nlDtb floOr OI
ttie '1GI mlllioe lwnary bOtel,
which with 2.0'N roome II oae f/I
the World'i ..... . SY.,. ........... ,._ town WU
oalled to &lie aeae. Ill.lured
........ .., ia :8111ltdatbet,
Weft .... tn .. -9 bJ JDedks OD
tM ......... tbe4kCN
~--.A a•w fl 1maa l'CIM bun· .,... .. Wt 1Dto tM air. aDd ......... ~ ... ..-. .........................
dow1 ... wen le~ut. -· .. ~ .. eueU.,Ndtodtmb ''It ............... ... w......, ..,. tbt"ftall ud
dido 't know what to do," aaid
Jerry Roeanblam, a New York
atockbroker wbo WU a sueat OD
tbe seventh noor. "You were
lulled into a fal.te aenae of
secw1ty. TbeN were no pbaoe
calla, no alarm, nothin1."
Conatructlon workers wbo
were comoletina an addltm to tbe botel When tlie ft.re bron out
rescued aome IUdta by ara•
blq tbelD from baleonlel and
leadina them awar OD acdfold·
ina. "We have at lfflt 40 to 50 in·
Juriu, ·iD(iilt.lj from fl.Ylila·llua
ed eonMI .trom 9anoiei lnhil•·
tion," DlniDiU aald.
He Nld OM fll tile dead Ud
ju~Ptcl frOm • wmdO'# uid two
otber bodM9 ...... ~ lD the
140>)'ard·lona cUIDO.
Dlumu "'4 tlil l\Mltl wee
in no immediat. daqer u ~
u they stayed by their wlDdows.
He aald the fire atarted In tbe
buemet aboat 1: 11 a.m. PST
and quicklY. spread to the north
aide ol the bOtil.
''At tld.I time the entire culDo
la iDYolv~" Dlnlman aald.
"E'Vel'J fm' 01 tbe bQte1 la ftlled
with bias amoke."
Th• portico ln front ot the
matn entrance waa -burned
away.
Trlicli.U ol llGll Grud Bate1a lilc. "ltoCi WU auapeDded OD the
New Yen St.oCk l:x~ tb1a
. morDIDI upon nen OI tbe &e. TracUas la iOudDe17 .. ,......
• OD a ltOc:k Wbm tbire la deftiop-
mat tbat CDOld an.~.
ro&bery·-~-----·
An <>ran,e County Juda•._.
tenced a former Santa Aaa
police captain to 1even yean ID 1tate prllOa TbundQ for .--.
part lD a $500,000 NriDort 8eMi
Jewelry atore robftery lut
March.
Superior Court Juqe lam
Pere& impoaed aentenee oa
Frederick Bopper. 51, -.n. ....
defendant decided to plelMI pa. .
t1 to the chart• aaatmt blm .. ~ mimal before bis armed rob-.
bel')' trial WU to bfliJL .
Hopper. accordiill to tile Jud••· simply aD"OUllCed to ... court be wilbed to plead pOl;y
and med for immediate ...
tenctnl.
Tbe defendant made bis~
prise aD11C1UMement darinl ,...
trial moHcm just prior to ...
besinntna ol bis Superior Oomt
trJal in Sala Ana.
A new trial for co-defendant
Bu1b Couabran, u, ••• acbedaled for Monday.
Co\llbnn bad been scbedaled
to IO OD trial wltb ~' bS
becauae a jury alread7 bad'-
selected and coWd hue be.a In-
fluenced by Bol:t!r'• pllt7
plea, tbeoewtrial wullL
Tbe caae bqan tut llardl
when two armed men walbd In-to tbe Brett-Walker jewelry
atore in Newport Beaela'1
Fubioa bland.
Weartnc wlp and·~~ tbe two men told clerb a radio-eontrolled bomb . ..,_,.
cleaned Out dl.aplay c.... ad
willdowl and fled with wbat ,...
later eaUmated to be aboat
$S00,000 ID jewelry.
(lee CAPTAIN, Pa .. Al)
·Weather.
Fm tbroulh saturday. tbouall wltb h1'b clcMadt·
DHI at Um••·. SU1bt.Ji cooler "Dear bMe'bea. LoW ton.llbt ..... tbe 41 1n1anc1. ,.,._ sat
near10._, ........
0
••
Supervisor
I\ •
iftves life »r of .worker
oiQulck action by a COIUltnaetk:ID
sctJ>ervisor may have saved tbe·
H6e of a Santa Ana man who wq
)llibed benMth the wheel of a
tdctor on an Irvine bulldlna
st&.
·t! . .:Felipe Saldivar, 38, of 1405
\V"est 2nd St., Santa Ana, bad
fallen off the tractor and become
trapped tmder one of its wheels
Thursday.
Warmington Co. conatructJon
supervisor Keith R. Fowler told
police Saldivar was turotoe blue
from lack o! oxygen. Fowler dug
the dirt away from Saldivar's mouth, allowing him to breathe.
~Oranae County paramedics
nsported Saldivar to Santa
a -Tustin Community
Hospital, where be waa reported iW' stable condition suffering
~sible chest and head injuries. ·(T
bt. ~alif ornian8 held
!:I.PUERTO VALLARTA, Mex·
ico (AP) Two Nevadans and a
Califorruan are in custody in this
Pacuic Coast resort accused of
_ p6ssesslng more than 2SO pododa
of marijuana valued at $100,000,
police said. Federal Judicial
Police identified them as An·
thony J . Catecci, 43, and bis wife
Q:ir~ara. 23, both of Las Vegu,
'nd' Edwin J ohnson, 48. of.
............. fllaNI d ..... ,i:.~--. ·~ ............... ~ . ... ., ........... ........... .., ........ ~='°21, .. .... =n,:.;=~ .:=?i'4
1taie .... aoc.r' ..... ....t
~ .... ~ ........... ..... Wt," ...... Allli ....
hi . a ~ lu• .. ,.,::., Data RMOUNlebic.,ille __, ""tee.;
TIM lat.it JWQP IA bor= eoeta.~ u ec.&JnecUll
N1tlciMI ·..u • Trwt CO. •· ~ la Qdc.,o lta pdlQllll
lendiq rm wu rlalaC ~
quarten o1 a pereentaae llOlnt to 17 percent toda1: ,follo1'ln•
"F9deral Bmerve attempea to
combat tnftatlon tbrouf,b a ntlrlettft IDGMtar)' pOUcy ••
Tbe lDereaH by the natloD'•
HHnth-lar•ut baD~ waa the Mtond~Uarter-potntrlM ln
-.; week Pd lifted the rate to lta
ht1bae.t ;.:DOIDt alnce May. Tbe primeenfe~Juimped to ao peremt
lit Aprtl u tbe Fed ~-credit, then dtopped u low u
10. '15 percent at 10me bub ln
late July u loan demand fell.
ConuDmtalJUmola' lead 1bun·.
day ••• not immedlatttlY followed by other major Jenden,
but analystt predicted a
widespread 17 percent&:!': rate wuliblybec&U1etbe 'own
borrowlng costa have been spiral-
ing.
'Use caution'
on hostages
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.
officials are caution•oa agaiost
renewed hopes for the imminent
release ol tbe American bo9t·
aeea in Iran, despite Secretary ot
State F..dmund S. Muskie's as-
surance that tbe United States
has agreed in principle to Ira·
nlan demands for the captives'
release.
"You can accept the principle
of something, but the details of
bow you carry it out can be very
sieSliftcantly ijifferent," Stat~
Department spokesman John H.
Trattner told report.en Tbun-
day.
Trattner aho cautioned
aeaimt "over•xclt.ement" and
expectations that the 52
Americana, now in their leeond year of captivity, are about to be
Creed.
1';T -
\lCeanside, Calif.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~
neaaan's top IJraa
President-el~ct Ronald Reqan't top appointees, Edwin
Meese Ill (left) and James A. Baker III chat with re-
porters in Washington outalde Reacan'1 Jacklon Place
residence. Meese1 ~ho la beac1ing the tr~Uon team, la
to become a Caomet-level counaetor to the president,
while Baker will be Reagan's chief of staff.
ORANG! COMT s ,
DAILY PILOT
,..,....,.~ .............
QltfWoH ~ Aw-......... 1•••
'Ripper' phones
with slay hint
LEEDS, En1Jand CAP)
Detedh'H buntlb• .. the
Yorktblre IUpJMr: • a Dlte-
w le l d la 1 klller wbo .b•• butchered 1J women. la. ftve 1ean, itudled a tape nCOrd1ni
today Ill ,.tdch a man cl•lm•na
to be the murdei'er wUDed be . wtu itrlke acatn 1n LMda nat
week .
The Delly MlriW aewiapaper
offlte in nearb)'. llancHIW.
wbO recorded tbe meuaa• ....
tbe mu tel~ 'l'iUnday
n\1bt, Hid be 1poke wltb a "•u.a DOi'theUt Enaland ac·
cent."
. -The 10 defendanta in the "GUI .t Four"
trial in Peldna are aeated in row faclnl tbe 38.~ge tribunal u their trlal be1an ID
, .
'8·count indictment tiicladlna. a charie
they ahd allies were reepoialltile for 35,000
deaths during the CUlt1lftl Revolutloil Of
1986tolin8. ·Pe today. The , which includel
Mao tung'a wlclo~ Qly, facet a
New sex trial · slated
.. Man, 75, accuaed of procuring teem
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -Millionaire Cbarle1
Rapar Swanson, 75, cbarsed
with IJIOCUrinl teen-a~:r for prostitution. la awal a new
court date after I mlstrial WU
declared when a fMlJ.lff jokiDS)y
told the Jury SWabloo had raped
a dozm women.
Juqe John Wessel had not yet
I retcbeduled the case, Palm I Beach County Circuit Court of.
ft cl ala said 'l'Uetday.
W e,sel declared a mistrial
Tuesday, saying he was una~
Jurors ·reallied bailiff Larry
Price was joking when he said
Swanson bad raped 12 women.
Charges against Swanson
stem from statements made by
two Palm 8'acb Co,unty· teen·
aaen and a woman who ci.tm&
abe procured females betWeen
the qe. ot 15 and z.t for the
Swedlab-bom lndustrtallst.
Swamon bu refmed comment
Distraught
·lover dies
WAUKEGAN, ID. (P)-
A 21·year-old man who told
bla ex-girlfriend be couldn't
ll ve without her ktlled
tilmaelf by smubiD1 b1a car into a tree in front of her
bome, poliee said.
Minutes before
Thursday's crub, Tobias
Waainaer of Zion. bad
telephoned tbe woqian and
told her to look out the win-
dow of her home and watch
blm die, pollce said.. Jan
Iona, 21, told police she
wu not Jookin1 from the window bulheardtbe crash.
MtuJone1, wbo broke up
wltb WHlnaer lD Sep-
tember, said she recei•ed
two t.elepbooe calla from
him in which be J)1leaded for
reconclllatioo. Sbe said she
buns up on him du.rl.na the
aecond call.
,.,.... Page A J
CAPTAIN • •
Only one piece of the stolen
Jewelry wu ever recovered.
At tbe time of h1I arrest, Hop-
per wu on parole from the
federal prlaon at Terminal
l1land, where be bad aened
time ftw a me coovtction ol ald-
inl in a jail break and po11e11· Ina atoleD bank moaey. ·
lD tbe UIOI. tbe delenclaDt bad
riMD to caPtilQ in the Santa Ana
police ctepartment. While on t.M
force, be wu accused bf tben ·
police ddef l'.dwml Allen ol 1»-
la.a part ot a ll'OUI> Of alltfed Jolan Blrcb &Oelety memben
t.tyln1 to have blm (Allen) ftrid.
Hopper eventually left tbe
police ~ to at&IDd law
1cbool." .rrom 18'10 &o 11"15 ~
pradlold law illlW Illa OOIAvk·
tlOD for ........ la • J&U bnU ln
NeYada, wbere one ot 1'11 cllaD
wu IDcattmat.d.
on the cue. Bia lawyer, Elliott
Broob, ••YI Swaoaoo "lecally did noUdq WJ"Oll8 •••
In a norn depoe1Uon, Deanni
DeHun said that In Auaust 1t'79
. when lbe WU 15, •be WU invited
to a party at Swanson'• mam1oo by Sue Quimu)'OI, 37, a dental
technician wbo deacrtbed herself
as a bosteaa for the man.
After her father contacted the
state attorney's office, an un-
dercover policewoman was as·
aiped to attend the party with
Miu DeHaan, acting as a friend.
The girl said Swanson "sug-
gested;' that if she moved in
with him, a blue Corvette, $200 a
week and trips around the world
would be hen.
''I asked blm •hat my duties
would be," Mias DeHaan said.
"He aald that I would have to
1leep in bi.I bed and only bis
bed."
p,...p-JIJ
DAELAS •••
pennilesa when J .R. WU only
knee-hilb to a sidewinder. He
bad claim to some Ewin1 Wells,
but J .R. decided to abut down be
field.
-Alu Ilea•, a devious lawyer
andpoliticalftxer,playedbyRan-.
dolpb Powell. Beam • ., the
Hboteur J .R . planted iD Barnes'
un1ucc11aful campal1n for
Conareu. J .R. felt Beam knew
too snucb and tried to get fid of
him.
-Vaqlla Lelucl, a blnker,
played 11)' Denn.la Patrick. I.ieland
. loet $20 mJlUcJl1 in an A.alb oil
swindle pulled off by J . R.
-MntleeSMM, the widow of a
buatn_, auoclate, played by
Fern F1taaerald. Her husband
commltted aul~~ after be lost ev~ lnJAfa oil deal. -11o11"1 Ewlq, played by
Patrick Duffy. Bobby eot fed up
with J .R. '•dirty deallnas. In ad·
dition, J .R. aaid aome nasty
thln1s to hia wife.
ADCJtber 15-Je&r.Old, CbriStlDe
Mone, 1ald that 1Ht fall,
Swauc:m left ber a $20 Up at the
dou1bnut sbop wher 1be
worked after aebool. Re m~ted
her to a Oiriatmu ball in Palm
Beach and told her be would boy
her a aown. Mila Mone told in·
vesUgaton.
Her father, John Mone, said
Swamon called bis daughter and
repeated the invitation. ,
"I told him, 'Don't you realize
that she's just a kid and she
doesn't know about people like
you?'" Mone safd. "He said,
'Well, how looa do you think vou cankeepberthatway'?"
Swanaon, wbo founded Edison
Tool • Manufacturing Co. in
Belle.We, N.J . OWDI • Palm
Beach mamlcm that fronts the
lntracmtal Waterway.
llr1. Qa.lmQOI told Pl'OI·
ecuton ahe iDtroducecl_.._~ women te' SWUIOD bee.-. I*
wu "~alee" to ber.
Sile Aid be her C)otbiq,
jewelry, and uab of between
$200 and $500 per introduction.
2,000 protest
GREENSEORO, N.C. <AP) -
Police reported no arrests .and
no ~ u more tbaa. 2.000
peop1-m.uebed Ill tblW dUeJ to p.-.. .._CQulttala ot sis K'f
ltlu SWmen and American
Nadli dw'&ed ln tbe==-deat.ba of ftve commmdlt
pathhen. The dem
took place Tb"'°y. ...
Odds off
Don't bet on 'Dal,laa'
LAS ~GAS (AP) -You can't place bet.I on J.R.'s U ·
aailant anymore. Not leeally, anyway.
THE NEV ADA GAMING Control Board bu ordei'ed a
Laa Veea.s bonkin1 •af!!Dt to atop takln8 beta on the out·
come of the sbootint mystery on the CBS-TV aeries "Dallp. •'
The Cutaways Hotel sports book DaCI eel OQGI Oil aJJ
the m~ smpectl in the ftctiooal a.boot1na -tnclucttns
J. R . EwiDe hlmaelf.
But Richard Bunker, chairman of the samtne board,
said the Cutaways wu ordered to "ceue and dealat."
Asked why, Bunker aaid, "Became it's not a 1portlna
event. Somebody knows the outcome ol tt -bow many
somebodies nobody knows."
'"l'BAT'S TllE LAW," be said. "Race and 1pc>rU
boob can only be inTolved ID aportiaa events." ~
WHY
ALDEN'S?
We show more than thirty manufacturer's
carpet Imes with approximately 3000
samples. We carry about 100 rolls of carpet
at special prices. In our remnant room are
hundreds of remnants from tiny to room size.
Every American manufacturer of vinyl is
represented in our vinyl display: Armstrong.
Congoleum, Gaf. Mannington •. Biscayne and
Amtico. Rolls and remnants in stock at
special prices.·
Our drapery department includes custom
fraperies. "Levelors." Woven Wood Blinds,
Custom Bedspreads and Spectal treatments
for unusual windows. We not only have a
speclalist in this department, but our own
excellent installer as well.
Juon Fine, 14, Lap.na Beach, and doa.
Breeda, (fore&rOund) line UP with other
Orange County 4-H dlub memben and
puppies they are training for eventual
· use as guide dogs for 4.>llnd. Younptera
and. their dogs were at John Wayne
Airport Wednesday night to familiarize
· • · pups ~ travel concUUooa ttieY will en-..
counter later in their llv4'11. M-an Scott, 14, Irvine (below, left) practices leaving
Republic airliner with . her dol, Fiona.
Amy Heathman, 10, La Habra, (below 1 ript) gets encouragement from Mn. Pat Hoyt, a proaram leader. Amy'1'do1,
Beaver, wasn't sure he lites sliding
glass dOor in terminal .
Health reView planned
OC to study quality of obstetrical services
A compreben.slve review of health services available lo
Orance County will 1et under way next month with a bard look
at perinatal 1ervices.
Tbe Oran1• County Health
Coach make!I
final, 'cUt'
FoOd stamps
require work
YUMA, Arl1. (AP) -This
southwest AriJona city bu de·
clded to jom 13 communitiee in
seven states lD a Deputment of
Agriculture prorram to make
some food-stamp reciplents
work for &bek stamps. S~ nut month, 25 people
here will be selected to
participate in the eitperimental
prosram, whlcb wu berun tut
year on 4,511 penona in San
Dte10, Mu1kln1um County,
Ohio; Rusk County, Wia.; Clay
County, S.D .; Morristown,
Tenn.; Suuu County, N .J.; and
Berkeley County, S.C., officlab
a aid. Participants won ao hours a
week on projects lncludinl city
maintenance and park cleaning.
..
Al'mbl'Ust add.I that Role'• baJfwayboaM-..Dotbave_a.~
penntt ter u.e aJJeaed'aam~
aetlvtd• aDd JIOMao.n'tbaw •
lice.Dae to SpaalOf lottefttil. Tbe
. dlltrlet attoney II U'1DI U@
court to ,tqp Rolle froar iuDldnl
the blnlO rames and to ftne biJD at
leutsuoo. • 0
RON lol'ifter))' ru bl9 btqo
••m• In Aoabelm, but tM dQls , coundlputeduordbwlcetbelW
that foreed blmout. lie movedtbill
detoxlflcatlaD center -and tblS
bln101ames -about two mcmtaiilt
aco to a loeatlon in the uabl·
corporated part of the county, ~
ataSmtaAnaaddress. • , • ...
.
DA's office rejects ...
Orozco pi-osecntiO:q
An Orange County judge ousted
lD a bltte.r Nov.., 4 election cam·
palp wlll not be proeeeuted by
the Dtstrlet.Attomey's Offic:e foi
aDe1ec1Jy perjurlnl himself four
yeara qo to fain appointment to
offtce.
Deput7 District Att4>rney Jean
Rbe~ aai4 a~----in-te1U1auon bf lier office baa
abowa there la "lnaufflclent flideaiei" to back up allelatiaqa ttia llUlctp I Court lodge
IUcbant Orozeo lied OD voter re-listfatkm forms tn um when be llateC:l an An.lbeim home u bis ad·
dreu. · ~ Orosco'• election oppo n\,
Bobby D. Younablood,
that the Judge's principal res-
idence was in Moaterey Park in
Loa Anldes CounQ-at tbe Umeof
hi.a appo&ntmmt to the Oranp
Count1benchbyGov. EdmundG. BrownJ'r.
Yom11blood claimed Orozco'•
appointrnent was Weeal since be
bad not met proper residency re-
quiremeots prior to appointment.
But Mn. Rbeinheimer u.ld
W edneaday her lnveatlgaUon
showed that Orozco had a private
toom at tbe Anaheim home of a
supporter and a1ao maintalnecl • private telephone line there,
which wu in service.
Orosco admitted t.o reporten
that becaly used the Anaheim ad· dreal·to meet ~y require-
ments even ~ be •cta111 still bed in Moatetey Part, froin
which be commuted for two yean
after bis appointment. Tbe jud:p.
wbo lea~es offtee In JuUUJ,
eventually moved bis family to
Brea.
Youngblood defeated ~.
for a central district court-.\,
Nov. 4 after a rancorous cam·
palgn. A 1uperior court Judie bad
voided the June election mate•
between the t,vo because of ballOt
lne1ularittes. YountbloOcl bad
woo tbatra-=e after a recount.
Chicago race
called off •f •;
CHICAGO (AP) -Mayor Jani!
Byrne bu called off plans for *
hi&h-powered Fourth of July
automobile race which had been
intended to attract touris1a to
Chic:aeo.
"Both the propo8ed date and
\ loc:atioooflheGrand Priz lmpose
an undue burden on an already
crowded holiday calendar," Mrs.
Byrne Aid.
The decision tocanc:el the50-lap
race alon& a course con•latina of
2. 7 miles of lakefront and
downtown streeta also was made
becaute of ''queatlona about
utlliaat:iou of Chica10 Park Db·
trict property.
AFS selliq nuts
The Ccrona del Mu chapter
the American neld Service
M1llni Cullen and almondl
moDth • part ol it.I I.II.Dual lDC eampalp to help Hild loc blah·. acboOl students abroad
bi'iqfoi'elp studeGl.I here.
For tcirtber inlotmaUon or
place orders. call 7ecM>159.
Public Announcement
..
-
displays u those for Little Boys over here, and Uttle Glrlt
over there. It seema this momentous declaioo hu been one year in
the mmac. That is, Ms. Allred cried foul OP the llaue.
alon1 about Chrt&t_tnu of 19'1'9.
Her point WU that the kids would set i-yched out if
they were leen shopplnJ in the wrona comer. "Hey, younc
lady,d.ropthefireeneineand1etovertherewiththedoU.and
to)' kitchens," S()methlng like Chat.
So according to the reports, M1. Allred ._ and toys
for th~ tot.a will no longer be displayed with aex designa-
tions upon them. .
AcnJALLY, TIDS OUGHT TO make it all euier for
the drugstore people in the fint place. Tbey can juat pile
all the toys in one unisex place and let the little darUnia
plow th.rouCh them any way they want to.
Parents who are battered veterans of the toy-selec:Uon
dodge already know that it isn't 1oin1 to make much dif.
ference. Whatever you get for Mary Jane, yo~ can ~ s~
Johnny will demand one too. Even if be doeln t want it.
When they get a little older, and more ~phUticated,
they don't care what the toy gift is. Instead they check tbe
price tags.
"DID YOU SPEND more on Billy than you spent Ol1
me?" ·
"U sbe &ot three how come I only Jot two?"
You are in a no-win situation when it come1 to lift·
givin1 to the youncer set. Wby, I'll bet 10\l'Ye known somlye
of those parent.a who apeqd 40-bour ween ~I
goinc over the selectioft of Jail the ri&ht toy lift for the kid.
In the end, it'• a marvel to behold. It whim, beeps,
twinkles with movin1 U1bt.a aod worb Just like the Real
Thine -whatever the real thlnt happens to be.
And when the bll day com• and the kid opens the
package for this wonder, what happena?
THE YOUNG8Tf;a RAULS it out of the box, fllp1 the
"On" 1witch, and watches the uaembled wom rotate for
about 18 secqnds. Then be 1brup expamlvely.
Then he t.oaes the box over bis head and plays with
that for the nut three hours. • ·
So much for kid stfts, by sex or otherwise.
NEW YORK <AP) .....:. A
pteaeber'a ion and fqrmer
transit policeman la jailed after
a ·macblne·IUD attack on two-
eay ban 1n Greenwich Village;
that left two m,a dead and •ix.
botpitaliled with bullet wounds.. •
"It wu a massacre, a blood-
bath," 1a1d Mike Greenberg, 52,
an adve~lnl executive who"
escaped lnJury in the abootinp.
Ronald Crwripley, 38, • father
of three described as bating .
homoaeXuala1 wu Arrested after
a cbue ~ Village tl.n!eQ.
lo b1s cu-, police said they found three plJtols and ao Janell-made
Uii macblne pn, all allegedly
stolen Tuesday from • Virginia
IUD shop. He WU cbuged with
murder, attA!mpted a:farder and
po11euionof W.eeal weapons.
Lt . John Yuknes· said
Crumpley wu moUvated by "a
dialtke for bomo1exual1 -a
rather Intense one I would say,
under the clrcwnatancea."
Gay rights groups demonstrat-
ed Thursday night at Sheridan
Square ln the Village and
marched to the two bars where
the shootings occurred.
Tom Burrowes, a spokesman
for the National Gay Task
Force, 1aid the shOotinfs came
at a Ume of lnereased incidences
of "faa-basblni'' -violence
aplnat tw>molftuala.
JOIG WENZ, 21, of New York
City, and an()ther man who was
not immediately identified were
shot to death, and another man,
Rene Matut~, 23, was in in-
tensive care at St. Vincent's
Hospital.
Five others suffered 1unshot
wounds and were admitted to St.
Vincent's, where they were list-
ed in stable condition. All are
from New York Ctiy.
Four policemen were~rea ed ~
fqr minor injuries suffered w en
their san crashed dur e
c'han that resulte.d in
Crumpley'a capture.
Greenwich Avenue wtiere 1HOrt· •
ly ~ore 11 p.m., be alte1eclly
shot three men and shattered a
plate-elaas window with a '
handgun.
From tbete, police _.!a_id,
Crumpley drove to Chril(Opher
Street In a Cadillac he stole from
bi• parents on Sunday. Dann
Hedges, 30, said he wu in ooe ol
two nearby cay bani, S'll-:.aten,
when the gunman apl>f'°a'Ched.
"The man in the Cadillat
waited about two or three
minutes, drove .around the
bloc:k, returned, stepped oaf of
the'car calmly, walked UP. to the
curb and 1hot a man staodinl on
the curb 1'8)tina lo• a ~ab,"
Hedges aald. ..The man fell to
the ground, then be abot another
guy who ran around tbe ~mfr.
Between 75 and lC)O patrons
were at the oibet bar, the
Ramrod, at th~ \ime. John
Ganzecki, 27, rec.ailed the scene ...
later, as he waited for. a~geon
to remove bull~t fra'gD\eQ~from ... ,
hisbaod: 'Cold tUrAey
"Police said Ctumpley's first 1
tar1et ,wu Sim's a ell! ' -.
predicte __
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Mon•mHo Motlterey
Ml.Wll-
HMCll• HewpOttBeedl
ONlenct
01mwlo
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IUwnlde
"" 81uff ltedwoedClty
"~ S.Cr•!Mf!IO .. UM& lenlHflWdfto left C)e!Wltl
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1NOW.124.80
•
.,
... . ""' ~ ~ctreM Anlie D!ekinson, t9, bas filed for divorce f • · '!' ..
ber estranged 'husband, sonawriter-compoaer Bur.t
Bac~cb, 52, for .. lrrecoocilable differences." The eou-
ple ~ married May 15, 1965, but have been separated
since sepi. 12, 1978. She seeks oil.b' custody and child sup·,
port for their daughter, Nikki, 14.
VACA VILL~ ( ~P) -• Psy~biatrist Thomas L. Cbmon
,., has been d_ismlssed as •uperio·
tendent the state prison at
, Vac e, tbe~te Correctiqpa
artmeht~. ,.
Department spbltesman Philip •
6 "!th9e said one reason for the
change, wa1 an incident in
August in which a prisone~and a cuarci weft stabbed to death. and increiMq. prisoner unrat· ~
decUldilaltaff morale 1incelhen.
Elmer Norman, 72,: speaks with
emotion as he talks to tb& press
about bis award of $4.5 million in a
. ~ivil fraud suit' against Colonial
P.enn Franktln Insurance Co.
Norman, nehly deaft and blind in
· ane eye, cri~ and said, ••at my
.. a~e, chances•are I'll never see one
cent." -·
B'ut Guthrie said the ~ ·
reaaoo t. that C.c>rrectidu Dlt1ie·
tor Buth•••'*' wuted '°put an
admlolltrator .. atber than It doc· . tor in. char .. 'of jhe 2.000.tnmate ' r.;;_._
.fnlllty, wtllch fiu always bed
SEMENZA SAID TH~T Jenson was also transferred a.s a re-
sult of the feud.
Incidents cited in the s uits date back lo December 1978, when
Jenson received a memo sa•nn~ that Strange had repeated rumors
that Jemon was "havinl[ a. .sifair with a secretary, taking long
lunches and return.i.Pg to .he office intoxicated."
The suits claim that in !February Jenson and Halpin put
Strange and Martin on a list of those to be transferred. Lat.er that •
month St.range and Elliot were denied awarda for investigations
that led to convictions of two doctors who had written ftlae pre-
1criptions for Howard Hughes. \.
~ .
'Charges dismissed
'in bathlwuse raid
LOS 'ANGELES (AP) -Sirleen men ai:rested for investi1a-
tion of tewd conduct in a 1ay HollywoOd bathhouse, followin1 a
police raid earlier this month, •will not be prosecuted, authorities
say. . .
City Attorney Burt Pine!'Sald this week tflere is itlsufflclent
eYidence to press any criminal charges, although civil llti1at100 Diay
be initiated against the ewners of the Hollywood Spa for ionin&' and
permit violation~ because of d · e and dancing without permits.
heaaed by a physician or ~~~~--''--'-';;...-~;..;_""'--".:.-~~~~~~.....-~---~~~~~.--~~~~~~~~-
P•Ychia1rist since it opened 25 years ago.
MKl>ICAL AND psycbiatrlc
services, the main fuiic\ioo at .
the prison, are to De upgraded
under a pew deputy supe~
dent who will be a doctor.
Guthrie 1ald. 4 ..
fu. lraid Uae deputy's Jpb WJliS
offered to moon, who tUrd&l it
down and will work instead with r
the department's 'parole outpa-
tient clinic dJt San Francisco,
where he wilrb.Veitmore direct
relMtonabip with patients.
Clanon. 51, has been superin-
tendent for eight years,... -
I
. HE IS THE third warden to be
removed or reassigned bY. Ms.
Rushen since sbe became
diretor in April. •
Otis Loggins, superbltendent
at Soledad, was reuiil!led al
bis o\m ~uest, Guthrie said.
Kathleen Anderson was re·
moved as superintendent of the
California Institution for Women
in Frontera.
... ' .
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...... ... quatit7. .
Decoder law µ,pheld
After ntensive Jegai wrangling, an Orange Count)'
uperior Court judge bas ruled that a recently enacted
,....;,sr-.:.te law to bar the manufacture and sale of 1ubscription
television decoders may be enforced. ·
In essence, Judge JObn Trotter held 'that the state
does retain some jlU'iadiction over the devices, despite
the assertkln by attorneys for a decoder manufacturer
that rigulatiqn of matters involving the airwaves is ex-
fusivel)' within the purview of the Federal Communlca-
n Conunisslon and Congress.
Decoder sales, prompted in part by all the recent
publicfty, -have been g~. It's easy to understand why
someone would rather pay a one-time price of $250 for a
decoder than pay close to $20 month after month to lease
a device from one of the suBscription television firms.
Predictably, attorneys for the decoder manuf ac-
f:ers intend to appeal Trotter's ruling and attempt to
a decision favorable to their position.
TnJtter himself admitted the law is "awkward" and
s "hastily .. passed by the state Legislature. It doubt--s will be the subject of further legal testing.
It's unlikely police will make enforcement of the
atute their number one priority -but would-be sellers
d buy~ of the dec~g d~ces sh<?Uld be aware that
now tsee law and will remain so until further notice.
--Soviet bluff called
The Soviets are good at bluster and bluff, but when
ey find they've been backed into the wrong comer
ey're still capable of yielding.
This was evident last week when the 35-natlon
Helsinki review conference in Madrid was saved from
oollapse by calling the Soviets' bluff.
t The session was scheduled to review compliance with
he 1975 Helsinki pact, signed by 33 European nations, the
nited States and Canada.
The asreement outlined 10 principles of conduct
between nations covering, among other things, human
ght.s, freedom of communication and nonintervention in
• the internal affairs of other states. rc:s: For nine weeks the Soviets tried to cut the proposed
12 weeks of discussion to four weeks and to keep dis-
cussioo of such issues as human rights in the Soviet
Union and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan off the
agenda.
Finally, a compromise agenda drafted by five neutral
tions was presented to the Soviets on a take-it-0r-leaNe-
basis. U the compromise were not accepted: the con-
ference wodld be called off, the delegates agreea.
U that happened, it would clearly point the finger at
the Soviet Union as the disruptive faction.
So the compromise1• which provides for the desired
· x week.a of general aiscussion and six weeks of pro-
sals for further lmpleinenting the Helsinki pact was
.\"" .... ~ccepted without a dissenting voice and the conference 1 ""'Proceeds.
The chief Soviet delegate had the tag line. •'The voice
of the people who wanted detente and peace has been
eard," said he blandly. However, he added. "It is time
recognize the fruitlessness of interfering in the internal
(elf airs of Afgbanietan."
~ That drew the first wave of laughter from the
I otherwise solemn delegates. ,
I •
nlons exprnsed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
...tilts. Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O.
x 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626, Phone(714) 642-4321 .
creator ol Nero Wolfe, wu
that old When he wrote hi•
first D111tery atory~ 8y the
llme he dJed J.D 1'75, he'd
sold rnore than 100 mllllon coplu OI his various novell.
No other American then bad
a1 m~ ~kl In p..U.t, I'm told.
Three thouaand tons of
paper money tbat'• how
much the Treuury Depart-
• ment •tr0n each week. Ali. 1ppropiate 1t1Ustlc. Hiab
time paper: money wu
meuurect In toima1e.
Not ev ryone knOwa bow to
piddle troee a nurdte wtnk. Or
brbtol With I aqwd1er.. Oi
squop, '.IMie ire apert ·~ only d thoH wbo pity Ud·
dlywlnb. •
a
QUJCKt tMKE A
OST Of ,AlL ™E
5PAPJ. PARTS
WENtED!
Oiarles McCabe
~ ._. .Pr-YloU ~;:. ~ .. .._ tM IO*M
aUmat. wp well •boH Ute
lJO.kllcitOa Bmlt peTmltted _,,
tbe thftihOldtrealy. So lM Unit·
ed 4tata oflici•llY Hpr..,ed • concun" to Soviet Am ·
.,. ...... ~ Dobrylll.o.
TM vio~on of tbe serm·
warfaN treaty could be even
more aeriou.. The Sverdlovlk
disaster, Which kllled tiundttd.i
of Soviet dUunt by the release
ol deadly anthrax badlll, wu
apparenUy the final evidence
needed to ~uade the CIA that
the RtlNlaN bave bffn de\'~
ln1 bio!ocical wea,PODI for ot-
fenalve use. probably 1ince
World Wa~ II.
•Jn late Aprtl 1t78, Sverdlovtk
residmtl were Jolted by a loud
ezpJ01lon, probably in a
laboratory at the biolo1tcaJ
warfare in1tallaUon in the
Cbakalov district of the city.
Clouds ol anthrax bacilli were
released.
Reservists at the mtlltary
base were the first to die. Nm
were workers at a ceramics fac-
tory downwind, where ven-
tilators sucked in concentrated
quantities of the anthrax germs. ...
THE OFFICIAL Soviet ex-
planation 4Vas that the victims,
who died within six or 1even
hours, bad contracted anthru
' from an illegally slauebtered
cow A~CIA~-· ed April 4, JM, Dot.a Uaat, bo•re•er, tile deatb1 ••wue
caUMd tor pll~ anUaraa ..
GPPoud to 1utrte or ttia •· tllru~ w1Uch would be 1110re
likely If anthru·contammated
beef were eaten °" handled.··
.. The ceramk1 l~ctory waa
1pra1ed ln1ide and out with
cbloraD>lnt, and Jars• areas
aroUnd the oillltaey lnata1J1Uon
were traded and co tted with
HJ>b•ll." the CIA reported.
"Wiid 8nlmal1 in a amalJ forelt
near the CfuilllJ) were alleCed·
Jy killed. Ind lnOlt dop bi t.bi
cJty dlatrtct were pleked up atid
destroyed."
.THE EXACT number of
cuaaJUN wu covered up, bUl
iuial)'tta have atimated tbe toll
at between 200 and 1,000.
.. UnCCJnftrmed reporta claimed
tbai tbe l1utallation
commaridel', a ceoel'al offtcet,
comlnJuect auicide followtn1 .the first cuuahles, '' the CIA report
1tates.
Notini that an effective lethal
dose for an individual is 10,000
anthrax spores, the CIA COD·
eludes tbat an extremely large
number ol the spores must have
been released -"effectively
negatine any· assessment of
peaceful or defenaive research
beine conducted there."
WATCH ON WASTE: Amtrak
~·7-~ .. •• -nlal,. -... b I I JllA•:t I • &0 •• tile
MvefilDHitQaeim ID_ ........ to a OMtt• Ylee ,....,_ wllD
wustvm*M ......... ~ Tb•~• 11 Carole P'otyat, W9'0 w .it·
mllleid ~~lhl~...,..._.,,il1 ."'railroed l"" IDUllllJ tor f•peiky
differtncea. •• At a eu1Jilon
a1atnat uneJnplofment, PCll'Yll
•11 sranted severance pay at.
her old salary -upwardl ol
$50,GOO • 1ea7. ne checu are to
keep comJ.na until next lanuaey.
Fotyst bad no trouble flnd.i.ni
something to do. She TOlun·
teered for the .. biith teaDl" aent
out tiy the ftepubHcans to pro-
mote Ronald ae.,.ll acro11 t.be
country. Tbis w11 no ll'Ht
wrench for the former raIJ.ro9d
veep. While she> was still at Am-
tralr , she bad worked en-
tbualastically for Reqan on her own time.
The Aintra1t officials wbo fired
Foryat may live to recret their
Judgment. She's contestinc the
dismissal and is contemplating
legal action.
As for the severance pay,
Foryst •a.id she hasn't cashed
any ol the checks she bu re-
ceived. She also points out that a
scant two weeks before she was
derailed, the rait..ystem's board
of directors voted unanimously
to reappoint her to her office.
WHAT'S RIGHT WITH
~•EaJCA: '1be campa.tin that
Just ended bad perba~ more
than the usual share of dirty
politics. Bot there were two
notable exceptions. >.. il hap-
pens, both involved Maryland
congressional races, but they ex-
emplified one of the things that
is ri&ht about America.
In the Ji'irst Congressional Dis-
trict, Democrat Roy Dyson was
running (ar behind the GOP in-
cumbent. Robert Bauman, unW
the conservative Republican
became enmeshed in an un-
savory homosexual scandal.
Dyson immediately declared be
would make no mention of his
opponent's personal tragedy -
and he didn't. Dyson won
without taking advantaee of
Bauman's troubles.
In the Fifth District, incum-
bent Dem~rat GladYs Spellman
suffered a rpassive heart attack
four days before the eJection.
Her Republican cballeneer, Kevin Igoe, c:alled off further
9}ecUooeering, and ~as so;ndly
defeated. ;;.
Winner and to.er ~ deierve
commendat19ft tor ~lq de-. cency over expediency. r
Tobacco lnerchants focus on Third World ..
Like a lot of other people I am
both saddened and angered by a
story that has been around a long
time but is just beginning to sur-
face. This is the deliberate dump-
ing by tobacco companies of
cigareu on the Third World,
creating addJction and certain
death from a cause lhat had not
existed before.
The thing that makes me sad
about the whole thing ls th'at I am
not certain
thallfl were a r tobacco ty-~
coon l mit)lt --
not do the ~ same thing, to • maintain the
profits to my
stockholders
and my own
family's style
of Ute. Fairly
decent people are doin& this sort
ofthlng all the time.
The fact is that the number of
tobacco users bas recently
dropped ln this country. While per
capita clgaret use in the last 10
years rose less than 4 percent in
the United St11tes, it increased an
alarming 33 percent in Africa and
24 percent in Latin-America.
THE MARKETING skills of the
tobacco people are considerable
and are being used ruthlessly
The governments of the Third
World countries are being told not
onl}t about the charms or the
weed, but are shown how painless
it is to raise taxes from an addict·
edpublic.
Tobacco growing as an industry
could hot exist without lhe help it
gets from taxpayer·s money. The
Department of Agriculture,
which administers such funds,
now finds Itself in a paradoxical
posiUon.
On the one hand, iL continues to
put out millions or dollars on sub·
sidles of one kind or another-for
research, price supports and ex-
port-promotion. At the same time
it is warning the growers about
the anti-smoking movement,
which ii sure to increase rather
than decline during comin1
decades. Our 1ovemment price support
programs assume. amonf other things, the production o more
tobacco than can be sold in this
country. In 1979 alone, $337
million of taxpayer's funds went
for that purpose.
IN ADDmON, large amounts
of taxpayer monies have been
used to help the World Bank and
the U .N. Development program
to encourage the production of
tobacco abroad. This is done on
the theory that foreign tobacco
growing is a good cash crop and
will encourage the flow of foreign
ex~hance. Says Margaret J . Sheridan, a
research associate of the
American Council on Science and
Health: "These trends in tobacco
exports, consumption and pro-
duction clearly indicate that the
stage is being set for a new
epidemic of smoking-related <fu.
eases in the less developed coun-
tries. •
"The epidemic may be prevent-
ed if we take action now to
eliminate the programs funded
by our tax dollars tlplt accelerate
the Introduction of cigarets
abroad.
''We cannot allow t.be health of
the Third World to be sacrificed
for the health of the tobacco in-
dustry. The price, in terms of life
and resources, is justtoo high."
BUT TAKING anythine from
the tobacco ilfdustry that it has
already eained is .eotn~ to be no
easy matter. The tobacco-
growing states constitute one of
the 01ost formidable lobbies in
this country. What Senator Jesse
Helms of North Carolina wants,
Senator Jesse Helms Is likely to
1et.
The evident inhumanity of the
policies that are, in a sense, being
forced on the tobacco industry.
should in the end persuade the
American people that a policy of
dumpine death on the Third
World is not for us. Better than
hooking the yet unborn of the
Third World on tobacco, we
should use our price support
monies to develop food and other
ptoducts that could do our less-f a vored neighbors eome good.
The telephone seems to encourage had 1nanners
••
J even by stran1en, let alooe by
1 triencls.
J wUl 1et calls at· the office
ln which tbe caller Just ~lnto bll pltcb, wbatever It may
be, wtth no re1ald for wbat I
ml1bt bappe1i to be dolDa at the
momtnt. A.Dd ti I interrupt after
a mtnut., 1Uueetlnc that I'm tn
tM middle ol COIUJ)OlhlC I col·
umn iQd don't want to pt de-
railed, IDOll ol ~ calleta wW
vUlf1 me for m1 "bad maq-nen."
Ute £naland, where even tbe
prealdmt ol a lar1• company
will ptck up hll own phone 1f be
ts ln the Olftce and does not have a Yl.al\OI'. But be bon that 1uch
callert wlll aot abuse tbe
prlvtl wW be polite aod to
lbe~ ••
..
•• • • ·-· ••• ;p T F •••
• • -~
Proof ol ••let11 requfretl ·
DEAR PAT: Your recent item about the
sweetener aspartame not yet being granted ap-
proval by the Food and Drug Administration re-
minded me oJ cycJamate. Is the ban on cyclamate
going to remain tn effect? , . E.B., Irvine
8lace eydama&e waa bu.aed la •t'7• b7 die FDA after a 1tady lmpllca&ed at u a possible
t urcblDCetat &M maallfaewrer laas bee9 •Ue•._
&o pl'Oft b PletJ ud relmtate tta me. After ,.
wlewla1 all &•• •au.. FDA c•acl• .. e• t•at
' cfil'llllte bs DOC 'beeii hOwJi tD ·~safe. a,eetnully, ••••lee fiUed. to PN•e Utat
cyelaaate -. _. e .. ,. ~ or tabel'ltai.i.
• le'Mdc ••a1e. TM law nqtilns PDA to *JaY ap.
r lll'"alef a f ... aM.tl•e lltlledata fallteeftabllllllU
AtetJ' ...... re ...... we eenuaty ... , ft a. M&
uue laarm. 'fte lnl:rden of pl'Ool is oat.be cempany
aeeldq&o market tile addJtfn.
TaWe sets aH01ea•t.-~•
DEAR PAT: I know that I wm have a large
tax refund next year . .May I change my W-4 to ex-
empt myself from withholding?
S.R .. Costa Mesa
No, but IRS says you may be ab~ to claim ad-
d<loaal wtt.bboldJnl allowances beeaue of la.r1e
.ltembed dedactaom. To qdallfy for &Ida yoa must
llan bad larae ltemtaed de4uctlom on die reta.rn
fol' tlae prevtou year, or you must expect &o ban
larser ltembed dedactJoa• 1D tile camms year beeaue of u ldeattftable event. The table oe tile
W .4 wtD help yoa In de&ermlnlD1 tile addltloaal al-
lowaDea to which you are elllltled,
Llfellne
Telephone Service .
What It Is and
iloWJOU can get It.
JOHANNESBURG,
Soutb Africa (AP) -
The South Afrlc an
NewapaJ>el' Press UillOI\
tau b~ a newspaper
advertisement ror Blue
Movies, a brand of hlpi
hu18iDI jeam.
The ad showed t.he
rear view of a young,
topless woman weartna
the jeans and r e ad:
"We'll touch you where
you've never b e -a
touched 1>efore.''
The jeans manufac-
turer said the ban in·
creased sales by 300 per-
cent.
TllE AGENCY roa the jeans ·~r bad not
bou1tit any network airtime for 1be aeries,
however, 'spokesman said. At botb NBC and CBS, the networks usually
make ceQIOnblp decialom and their stations and •
affiliates often 10 aloag with them.
.
SOUTH COASI' PLAZA
3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa
Phone 754-00f 7
Gounnet Shelves
Just in time for the holidays! This
decorative gounnet rack gives you ~~§~~~i extra storage and display space
beautifully It has three shelves plu~
a wine rack that holds six bottles.
Display plants on the IO\Ver metal
shelf or holiday decorations o n the
upper two dark wood-look shelves.
In almond o r chocolate baked
enamel finish with fanciful curlicue
~;;;::;;;=iiii:iiiii~;:;;~ accent5. Appro~ .. 6 ft tall, 2 ft. wide,
1 ft. deep. Reg~ 69.95
Aaron Brothen Special $18 . ..,
d
'~
b
B
I I
~··shortage ·of t11rkers
Holiday birds pkntiful, prices also .. up
MODESTO <AP) -Henl')'
T '• bualnal la turke,a. t'1 la·• cood modd u tbe
bfac) for 1heir tndi·
place on Tbanblivtni ~stmu dinner tablel.
t•a beeaUH there'• been no
for turkey srowen.
e•re enthualaatte, and
boomtnt." aald Turaer,
tbe Turkey ~d~
· "Allcosts are up fantasUcally,
.Primarily the cot.Lot feed,'' Turneraaid.
Dl'OUlht In the Southwest and
Midwest boosted the price of the
ataple foodatuffs turkeys ea\
such u aoybeans and yellow. corn, be explalned.
Conaequently, wboieaale
prices ID New York are sis to.
teven ceots a pound biCMr for
either toms or hem than a year
ago, wbieh worb out to about a
10 percent lDCftase, he said.
· Turner said he cannot predict
bow much ol that increase will
work its way into retail prices.
"WE NBVE• KNOW what
chain stores are coin• to do," be said, because stores often offer
turkeys at sale prices during the
holidays to attract customers.
The aupply of turkeys bu in-
creased consistently in recent
years, and ·SO bu the demand
Turner aaid. '
· "People. are diacoveriq that
turkeys are-a great buy com-
pared with other S11eata " be said. ''Tbe other thing ta '.,,e•re
providing tun'ey in forms people
want 10 that tbe mt of the year
they doll't bave to buy a whole turkey."
o~n vulnerable
o ·heart· iUs, too
Turkey parts are packaged
and proceued in such ways u wtns•. drumatfcb, thlibs, bone-
less routa and turkey ham.
"You can go buy enough for a
meal at a time," Tu.tner said.
THE MEAT ALSO ia Jow in fat
and high in protein, be added.
Increased eonsumer demand tbrouibout the year baa created
"a whole new ball game" for
growers wbo used to target pro-
ducUoo primarily to the need to
have birds ready for. slaughter
during the holidays.
They found it difficult to have
turkeys la1 eggs year aiound
and bad to build bousine to move
birds inside during winter
months, Turner said.
EXISTING PROCESSING
plants have expanded rather
than ones being built because it
would coat about $20 million to
construct a facility, Turner said.
"Growen used to produce
turkeys be1innln1 in March. and they would all be 1one by tbe
middle of December," be said.
"But Pl"OC'eUinl plants DOW need
turkey• year around or they
can 't have big plants.'·
SA TU RDA Y, NOV. 22nd
10:00 A.M.-9:qo P.M.
6862 EDINGER
Comer of Edinger & Golden West
Next to ZODYS ..
(714) 842~445 .,..
JOIN . THE FUN!·
* CLOWNS & SANTA
~ REFRESHMENTS
f.? FREE BALLOONS
f.? GIGANTIC SAVINGS
~CRAFT DEMONSTRATIONS f.? AND LOTS MORE
HUNTINGTON BEACH .STORE ONLY ... SAT. ONLY
~--25% OFF----... A~ SILK · FLOWERS, TAPER & . COLUMN CANDLES ,
YARN TYE, SATIN RIBBON & CUSTOM DESIGN-A-LINE
ARRANGEMENTS (CHRISTMAS INCLUOED). ALSO 25%
OFF ALL CHRISTMAS PRINTED ENSEMBLES (CUPS,
NAPKINS, PLATES, TABLECOVERS).
I ------· 303 OFF-. ------
ALL CHRISTMAS WREATHS, , GARl.l.ANDS, PICKS &
SPRAYS, BUD VASES & CUT PLASTIC SERVING TRAYS
& BOWLS. ALSO 30% OFF ALL GLASS BRANDY SNIFT-
ERS, CHIMNEYS, BUBBLE BOWl:S & HURRICANE LAMPS.
FELBRO PUNCH WOOD BURNING TOOL
reg. 1 .S9 ......... 5.88111. reg. 11 .95 ........ 8.88 .. .
STRAW BROOMS 5" ASKAR SCISSORS
reg. 1.88 ......... 1 .33 ... reg. 6 .99 ......... 4·.88 ...
PORCELAIN BIRDS
.18.99 ........ 9.88 .. .
... •• f" I ... ......
Lifeline
Telephone Service ·
What It Is and
how. you can get It.
H you're a residence customer of
Pacific'lelephonc and you make a
limited number of local calls a month,
y_ou might be interested in our Lifeline
lelephone Service.
Lifeline allows you up to 30 local
calls every month for S2.SO plua ~
l!ach call made over the 30-call allow-ance is ext.fa. (The 31st-40th calls
cost 10¢ each. Every call over 40 costs
15'.)
JdstaUatioo, telephone !ets, ~d other
ICf'Vices and equipment cost extra.
lif eiine is available to residential CUii.omen onJy in most area.~ of LOs ~Jes and San Diego;as well a,, Orange ~.Riverside, S8cramento, Santa
ROia, SAn Pl"anclieo, San ,ose, Stoekton,
ModeMO ind partal(>f the East Bay, Peniamla and.Marin. "
~toln~~?Callyour • Paciflc'le~on · ce repre1en~
live for detalll.
T i j I
i
"-
'• JOH'ANNESBURG,
South Africa (AP> -
The South African
Newtpaper PreSs Union .._, banned a newspaper
advertisement for Blue
Movlet, a brand of bis>·
huggtna jeans.
The ad abowed the
rear view of a youn1,
toplen woman wearln& the Jeana and ~ead:
"We'll touch you where
you've never been
touched before."
The jeans manufac-
turer said the ban ln·
creued sales by 300 per-
cent.
T8E AGENCY POa tbe Jeana maker bad oot
bout ht any network airtime for the aerl•a,
however,• 1POkesman aald. At ~ 'NBC dd CBS, the network.a usually
make eemonh.ip deelalom and tbeiT atatioal aDd
afflllat. often IO aloal with them.
rFra:in fare costly
TOKYO (AP) -1'oyolro '\vatanabe wu too absorbed in a Japanese 1uspense-tbriller to notice
th•t llOIDfJODe walked off a train with her small 1ultcue con~ SN,000 worth of Jewelry, of·
flclat. a.id.' •
Pollee aald Mrs. Watanabe, 31, who worked
pa.rt-time• a jewelry seller, had placed her suit·
cue oil a rack above her seat for a brief ride on
• Toty0-area train.
Gourmet Shelwlii
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3333 Bristol, Costa Mesa
Phone 75'-9CM7
Just In time for the holidays! This
decorative gourmet rack gives you ~§~~~~i extra storage and display space
beautiful!~ It has three shelves plus
a wine rack that holds six bottles
Display plants on the lOVJer metal
shelf or holiday decorations on the
upper two dark wood look shelves.
ln almond or chocolate baked
enamel finish with fanciful curlicue
rnffn~~'5F=iifiil accents Approx.,6 ft tall. 2 ft. wide,
1 ft deep Reg~ 69.95
Aaron Brothen Special $48.88
~
b ,,
0
[
Holiday birds pkmiful, prices also.up '.
MODESTO (AP) -Henry 't •1 ......._ a. turte,..
.. ID •, aood .mOOd • tbe bf8a for tbeir tndi·
lace OD Tbankalivtnc
;1bl'iltlDU clJnner tab•. t'a because there'• been no
for turkey srowen.
e•re entbu1la1Uc. and
boomlnf," said Turner, runs tbe Turby ~dvtlory
· "All costa are up fantutieally,
primarily tbe eoat of feed,"
Tunleruid. Drougtat In the Soatbwest and
Midwest booeted the price of tbe
staple foodttuffs turkeys eat
such u aoybeana and yellow
corn, be exp~.
Consequently, whoieaale
prices iii New York are siz to .
seven e'eDti a e;j hilbH for either toms or than • year aao. wt.deb wor out to about a
10 pereeQt Increase, tie said.
TUIDer' said be cannot predict
bow much of that Increase will
wort tta way into retail prices.
"WE NEVES KNOW what
chain storee are cotn1 to do, .. be said, because stores often offer
turkeya at sate prices during the
bolldaJB to attract customen.
The supply of turkeys bu in-
creased conaistenUy in recent
years, and ao baa the demand,
Turner said.
' .. People are discovering that
turke)'I are a great buy com-
pared with other meats," be
said. "The other thing ta we're
providing turkey in forms people
want IO tbat tbe rat of the year
they doQ"t bave ~buy a whole
turkey."
omen vulnerable
o heart ill:s, too
Turkey part.a are packa&ed
and proe•Hd lo auch wa)'S u wins•. drwnttfm. thllhl, bone-less rc)&IU and turkey ham.
"You can 11> buy enoqb few a
meal at a time," Turner 1ald
THE llEAT Al.SO a. low iD fat
and hip in protein, he added.
Increued eomumer demand
throuabout tbe year bu creat.s
"a whole new ball game" for
growers wbo used to tar1et pro;
ductloa primarily to Ute need to have birds ready tor. alaupter
durinf tbe holidays.
They found it difficult to have ....
turkeya lay esp year around
and bad to build bousina to move
blrda inside during winter
months, Tu.mer said. SATURDAY; NOV.·22nd
10:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M.
a; •
EXISTING PllOCESSING
plants have expanded rather
than ooes being built because lt
wouJd cellt about $20 million to
const.nJct a facility, Turner said.
"Growers used to produce
turteya beetnnln& in March, and
they would all bl9 gone by the
middle of December," h• Nld.
1'But proceuina plants DOW need
turkeya year around or they
can't have big plants."
6862 EDINGER
Comer of Edinger & Golden West
Next to ZODYS
-tr CLOWNS & SANTA -tr FREE BALLOONS
-tr REFRESHMENTS -tr GIGANTIC SAVINGS
* CRAFT DEMONSTRATIONS -tr AND LOTS MORE
HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE ONLY .... SAT. ONLY
~----2S%OFF----___..
' All. SILK' FLOWERS, TAPER & COLUMN CANDLES,
YARN TYE, SATIN RIBBON & CUSTOM DESIGN-A-LINE
ARRANGEMENlfS (CHRISTMAS INCLUDED). ALSO 25%
OFF ALL CHRISliMAS PAINTED ENSEMBLES (CUPS,
NAPKINS, PLATES, TABLECOVEAS) .
...,_ __ . 303 OFF--___..
. ALL CHRISTMAS WREATHS, GARLANDS, PICKS &
. SPRAYS, BUD VASES & CUT PLASTIC SERVING TRAYS
& BOWLS. ~LSO 30% OFF ALL GLASS BRANDY SNIFT-
ERS, GHIMNEYS, BUBBLE BOWLS & HURRICANE LAMP$.
EVERYDAY GIFTWRAP
IContlnuoue told) ~
reg .. 99 ...............• 77
WOOD BURNING TOOL
reg. 11.95 ........ 8.88 .. .
5" FISKAR SCISSORS COFFEE MUGS
reg. 6 .99 ......... 4.88 ... reg. 1.89 ......... 1.22-.
JOLITE PARROT KIT
reg. 8 .99 ......... 4.88-.
lllAC .. NI ~TD ~I. CUTS COITI TOO c ... ....,.... ....... In a.tnla, N.Y., wt
BATAVIA, N.Y. <AP> -Tbat ao-
wl 1btnmnaJ haul• -aweeplna up
fallen )laftll -no Jooger bothen tills
Weltem New York community tbanb
to HAnJ Simmom' creative tiakeriDI
and eomeDltbttime aaeaktb19"1.
Manned by city worken. an adapted
tract« and a connrted ba.J·balin&. aacblne bundle up tom ot leaves Jnd
apew out neat 35-pound bales at the eurb.
••wa-NRVD PICK up a one," ex·
Qlained stmmona, the public worts ... perintendent ... They're stolen over·
al~; once wq a municipalnuilance
.. now a valuable local commodity.
Oardenen love the free, cnmebed-leal bales u a aui.tltute for peat mou,
etcb they use for mulch. Peat mou
19Derally costJ about $'1 a bale. Cat·
U.m• aJlo uae tbe bales aa a sub-
.Ut•for'upenaive straw hecldtn1.
Tbe new 'ayatem aatlafled city
bud1et-watcben, too. It cut tbe city's
llb.naal leal-clearin.I bill from about ,.,ooo ta um to rouab1Y $13.200 last ~ar, SimlDClftl aald.
"LEAVES ...... worWea, oox-~ to all Citlea when they fall
-u.i ~·· ••""*'9 aald. ti.I envtroa.ment.i Jaws mums tt
Ule1a1 to bum them bl the street. theJ
plu, up draiDa and came added labor
-~·Sl**t· . . "But when Pllchpd Jn neat HtUe
IM1" tbat a penca can-put in the tnmk
of a car, now they can put them back tn
the IOil -where they need to co," be
Hid.
SJmmons said be developed the
.,atem 0 on city time with city money'•
·•nd welcomes other interested
muntdpalities to take a loot, copy it
andimproveooit.
BATAVIA VS&D TO rely on city
. work.en to vacuum curbside leaves in·
to open trucb -a llme-coosumtng
and expensive method. And then the ct-b' laad to ftnd a landfill willing to take .
tbeleaves, wbicboftenwun'teaay.
Simmma aald be bad been thlnlrinc
for years about trytna to bale leaves,
but never could come up with the
moneytoputbb plan Into effect.
Then three yean aao, a local farm
equipment dealer lent the public worb
department a baler aud Slmmona and
hb crews began to experiment.
THE BALER QSELF, however,
didn'tplckupleaves.
"So we built a . . . COOftY'Or to
lessen the angle of approach to the
road," Simmons explained.
Precedinl the baler on lta round.a Ls a
tractor equipped with an old landleap-
in1 rake with worn-out sweeper
brooms.
After residents have rated their
leaves to the curb, a worter rakes
them into the street, the sweeper
broo~m into a row for the bal-
ing m · and after some crunching
a bale emerges.
A woma ~ aeta the bales
back at tbe curb, and another lm·
proviaed rake and a 1weeper follow
bebindtoftnisb the cleanup.
The bales, lVblCb are bound with
cord, bold tOl«ber' beeaU1e the vea are 90 CIOlllg;-1.s: etpt tndtula ol leavesytel onetruckloadofbaJes.
Nebraska tax cut
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -The state
Board of Equalization and Assess·
ment has cut Nebraska's individual
income tax rate from 17 percent to 1S
percent of federal income tax
liability.
The 15 percent rate, along with the
unchanged 3 percent statewide sales
tax, were continued for 1981.
Rates had to be cut to avoid a SW'·
plus of illegal proportions in the state
treasury next June 30. Unreduced
rates would have left a balance of $84
mlllion, which would be higher than
that permitted by law.
de/ thomas
men~ si>ortswear
Capistrano Beach Plaza
34095 doheny parlc rd.
capistrano beach.cald. 92624
I
Pre-Holiday Sale
Nov. 21-Nov. 24
VALUES TO
Sports coats $120:00
D~ess Slacks $40.00
Dress Shirts ct19.00
SORRY, AL TE RATIO~ No4f'INCLUOEO
35%
OFF
Values To 2SOI L:ong Sleeve Sport Shirts $25.00 10
Asst. Flannels and Corduroy 0 F F
Reeeareh aid
WASHINGTON (AP>
-The ao... bu pused
a bill autbori.dn1 $8.8
billion tor the Ener11
Department'• develop-
ment and raearcb ·
(Watdl for them NOK 24-29.)
Wi·cker
Authentic materials,
craf tsinanship and de-
signs.
Rattan from Ban~ok,
Singapore, Hong tong.
Buri from. Cebu.
Choose from a big
collection!
• Chairs
.tables
• Etageres
• Chests
Princess chair:
Regal, delight-
ful , versatile.
45" tall.
Reg. $59. 99
39aa
Maharlika
c hair. ~or king
accent fot1
family, den,
porch at'ea.
Close weave
or lattice.
Reg. $34·. 99
2488
Singapore people's
cb4ir. Steamed
and handbent
Malq•ian rat-
tan creates
thie popular
ebape.
Our least expeQ!iye
buri kins. Get Pier l
qualicy at a die-
counter' a price!
Our 54" tall king
ia an iDcreclible
value. A. excit-
ing u the price
is it• crafts-
manship.
At some stores
inexpensive may
mean imperfect,
but Pier 1 alway•
guarantees your
satisfaction.
Reg. $49.99
•
..
"It's bUm.WatiD1 for the lddl to have
to 10 Um:luch thla kind of thlnl," said
Geraldine Neal, mother of one ol the
lirla aearcbed. "Ten dollan ls not
worth thedesradation."
Darla Neal, 14, said a math clua
with about JO student.a wu t.aterrupted an. one pup8 found that a $10 bill she
bad put under one of her boob wu
mlsaiq.
After a cursory 1eareh, the teacber
called in assistant princlp-1 Blll
llltcbell, who hrou1bt alona Mra.
Floreitee.
.. BE llADB VS look tbrou1b
evel")'tldne we bad," llW Neal said.
"Be said if we couldn't find the
money we would be searched."
Mrs. Florence took the 1lrls
separately into a room and asked them
to remove their clothes.
MitctJell said be checked the boys' bo9ka and peraooal bftlonlinll and frlakecl them but dld not have them un·
dress.
Scagga said diaclpllnary action
would be taken, but 4ld not specify
wbat thatentalled.
Tbe m1uinj inoney WtJ not found. r
,
Wild ues1 Stores is having a sale on some of
JKJUr fa1,,-0rile brand name beach pants and more!
Sale prices effective NOIA?l17ber 21 thru 23,
limited to supply on hand
•
$15.99 $15.99
MEN'S A. SMILE PANTS
Plenty to gm about cut prices on
A. Smile, CaHfomia's #1 beach pants. Your
choice ol assorted styles and colOrs in
comfortable brushed cotton or prewashed
C911on drill. Men's waist sizes; regularly
$21-$22:50 '
GEIATI JUNIOR PANTS
u.hat a great tine to stock up on your_
favorite~ of (;e/atl c!Jsual pants. S1w
$, too. 0100Se from many~ and C:OkiiS,
but the sale price is good for three~
on~ (That means ~~~1~
regularly $27-$30
$12.99
MEN'S & BOYS' OP PANTS
<Aeat low price! Popular sfj4es of OP beach
pants in cotton sheeti1g ck>th and
prewashed denm are special; reduced.
Boys 23·30 waists; regu/m+y $18.50-$21.
Men 28-38 waists; regularly $21.50-22.50
A
PURE SOURCE 6
.,..,.......
KEN MARGERUM l!ND8 tlS ~GIATE CAREER SATURDAY.
everythlq in sight but the glrla.
Talk about prollfic. Look at aome of
these statistics Mar1erum accumulated
in two years of high school ball: 8S re-
' ceptlona, 1,438 yaJ'ds, 17.1 yards per
catch. Honored as Oraiige County
Athlete ol the Year u a senior. Earned
All-Oran1e Coast -Area, All-Oran1e
County and All-CIF.-Oe.irt 10 puaea in
the Oran1e County All-star 1ame.
Played safety and tni.,rcepted aeven
puses in bia aenior 1ear.
"Well, yeah okay, I do tb1np a btt dif.
ferently from the avera1e football
player," M.,gerum Mid by pbaDe tbla
week as be prepared himM!f for Ida
• ~I
It's !)layoff time for coast area tean.is!
BJ &OGE& CAllLSON Of .. ....., ..........
The CJF football playoffs -sudden death
for the loeer, survival for the winner -bellnS
toni1bt for Oranee Cout area scboola with ei1ht
games on tap ln\'Olvtng teama from witlJ.ln the
Sunset, Sea View and South Coast leaiues.
Kickoff 11 at 7:30 for all but Miaaion Vlejo'a
Central Conference 1ame at Pius X Hilb ~ Dchmey, which belim at 8. TbNe key·~~ be contested wttbJD
Ui• ...... U..~;:'lllit • out. Of Qranc• County.
At Oran1e Coatt Ccillete it's a rematch of
the 19'19 SS. FlYei OGDt~ qWU1irflDU. u
Sieritte B18h'• rnM1~:,.fbMdme tM t.am to
snap Bdilon'• ia.1am• Wtlmiq ltr'eak, a Nip
JohnSevano
that bas carried the Cbar1en to the um Big
Five title and two 1980 Stmaet Leacue cham-
pionships. A capacity crowd of 7,800 la expected.
At Lagwua Beach, where the Artists are in
the CIF playoffs for the first time since 1968,
Corona clel Mar invades for a Central eon.
ference same. Lacuna Beach la t.be Sou&b Cout Leape's
No. 1 representative after lbarinl tbe leaaue crown wltb Mlulon Viejo. Corol1a clel Mar la tile
Sea View Le.aµe'a No. • ~tlft after allJinl to ahare the Sea View tlUe With El TOrO
aJ1d Eatancla.
And at Kiaaioo Viejo, El Toro wUl bQit: the
Central ec.ferenee'• wild caql _.
eta Hfitl'• 'ftcera.
Joumeyin• out of Or&n1e County are Foun-
A truce is called
into negotiations, and I think the people-are fed up
hearing about them.
"I try to look at thines prtematlcall)'. If it's
helpful to themselves or the team, that'a fine. But
I've never seen a po8itlve affect in talklne tltrou•h the media.
"Does it bother me when they do? I think it
would bother anybody. We want to run a happy
ship. It's Just become increuin1ly difficult to do that .
.. Somebody has to weat the black bat,"
Klosterman added, "and manaeement always
seems to be the one wearm, it. Bopeful1y, people
will have faith or understand what our motives
are.
"Cert.alnly, nobody likes unrest." * • •
FINAL ADD KLOSTEaJIAN:
"We abould have all these contractual things
resolved by next year . . . but there will always be
sometbini elae. ''
Yeah, like more contractual problems. I
mean, lf you think th1a year baa been fun just wait
until next aeuoa.
~ three playen were on their option years
in 1980. At least etabt, accordlq to Kloeterman.
come up for nefotiationa in '81. ·
And. it'• at the end of the '81 aeuon that the
playen' collective bar1aininl apeement la re-
neaoUated with the NFL. Which meam not too
many playen are 1oin• to be too quick to •ltn new
contracts. * * • IEPF&tm..EDGEUPDATE:
The quarterback from Alabmna la feelio'I bet·
ter. but be'• aim laekin1 ltrellath. And, believe it
or DOt, tbe kid HAS been aick. Aa a matter ol fact,
be'a 108t 14 pounds duiinc hla illneu, lirina b.ini a
(lee SEVANO, p_,. JM)
lain Valley (at Eisenhower in Rialto), Marina
(at Fontana), Estancia (at La Mirada Stadium
aea.inst Neff), Caplltraoo Valley (at Bellflower Hip against Mayfair) and Million Viejo (at
Pius X in Downey).
Setvtte'a tone 11 d~fense and a sound ruft·
niill eame, built around quarterback Gino
An1ellci. The Friars seldom 10 to the air, but
when forced, usually rely oo Todd Hart and
Paul Reilly to provide the W'let!J.
.Edllon. meanw~. ~ ~ 4"(~ boWn for ·et.cJIJdu thiit nm. ta adclltiOD to ~·a off..W.·,ttirust built around tallb&ct ·D.J~'Bell
and fullback Dave Geroux.
, At LNima Beach whldl Js ai,o eSpeded to be o•erflowJ.na, tbe ta bad OCl the1J' quts defenae for an ecge in a same ntted u a toeaup.
~ Laguna Beach's double winl offense ii builtb
around left-banded quarterback Lance Stewart~ and fullback Damon Berryhill. Mike McCaffrey 1 and Eric Clark are the wings and the deep 1 threat i.a Mike Davis. · ,
Corooa del Mar enters with an offense that
bas been generating some steam behind the·
brotben combo of Bill and Chris Bript, a palt1
of b~·nmning backs behind quarterback c~ 4
Tuck-er, another left·bander. { ' On. the toad, Fountain Valle)''• lhtt),,. -
Stevena take• bl• aerial abow agatna~
.l!lseJibower. whlle a crippled Marina deven ~,..
at Fontana'• pit. .; ...
!lstancia, which baa shown an im.PTQ.veclr
P .. ~:.ft .rame behind quarterbact J{m·._ Mee , ia up againlt Neff.
Parlcin--•...,.e• ••'WI!•• i,cau
PITl'SBURGH -Pittlburlh Pirate outfielder Ill
Dave Parter ii npeetecl to amderso knee •utaft'J
today lD a bOlpitaJ in Lanatn1, llleb., the team
announced.
Putter wu trOubled mOll ot lut aeuon by a cbrcille all·
ment in bit left knee.
Oudldder Omar Konno andenreat •~eJ"J to eorreet
U1ameat damaie in tbe Uttle ftnser ol lala left band Tuelday mornm, at JeWilb Hoepltal ID Loulnille, KJ.
Be Will remain bolpttaliled a few claJS before returmna
to PtttaburP, MonaO iDJurtid tbe fldaer •lktini Into aeeoea
bue ID a aame ID Pbiladelplda ID late May. ..
...... -r.:JJ ........... ,_
' .._ Ma'r•1 scored 11 poUita and Cahta m ·~ came off tbe bench to lldd · 28 to pace
Hou.aton to a 117-114 Nation.al Baautball Aaoda-
tiOD triumph over Cleveland . . . Kellll Ben. bit
for 21 polpta and teammatel Pldl ....._,. and TenJ TJler
Heh _.....,.11 to Ull -to a£ ..... !loll Dleso . . . Bob Luter made a field pl d two free
throws la the lut two minutes to lift MUwaut to a 17 -93 vic-
tory over Portland.
ae.ell'• •••••• Pf1C!e1 a• a.ell posted a ahW>iat in oo.ty la1I second Iii
same since retu.ralnt to tbe lalanden' 1,ineup from '
a knee injury and AIMlen a.a. aeored twtee u
New York whipped Hartford, 4-0, in NaUoeal
Hoekey Leque ad.Ion Tbunday . . . SbortbaDded 1"11 by
aejeaa Beale and Marl• Tre•ltlay and two-1oal perfo~ by !MeYe 8lullt and Houle powered Montreal to
• 7-3 victory OTer Detroit. It WU Montreal'• Hventh atralpt
:' without a losa, Detroit'• 12tb 1tralpt
.
I
••tat
without a win on the road . . . Gret
9•1• aeored OD a shot from the left paint
late in tbl ftnt period to liV9 MlftMICM I
1·1 Ue with Pblladelpbla . . .• W•JM cm ... '• aeeood·perlOd soe1brc*ea1·1
tle and sent 8oeton to a 4-2 vtetory over
Colorado. The win oteadllcl Bolton'• un-
·beaten. ltreak to 11.x ,.m• . . Dan.
Velkll, Wublqton'1 ~romad draft plck
thll year, acored hl9 ftnt NHL ioal and
Mike Gartlier bad a Pl'lr or taliet to pace
their llde to • 4-2 triumph over C ... ary.
Hate T•r•er repore • e11IVl9
( Tburtda.y thAt the Atlanta ColllUtutiaa bad tuoc..d • The A.uoclated Preli reported errooeoualJ on •
· Eclward &;ueu WIW•••· u aaytna, "I bate
TUrnelr," rctenii1 to AUanta Brav• owner,...
Tuau. A1lo tD error wu a statement that WlWaiu releaMd
to a ~r the detalla ol a ... 5 mlWoo comract ilMD bJ
.. Turner to .Brave• outfl•lclet a. ... n Wa.ua.-. Tbe ~ CODltttutiioa reported that ID am~ club owner bad re. I l•u.d the contract detalla Alltdr blm u 1aylu he dld IO
' becaUM •·1 .bate TW'Der" . . . . •aa. bu "been liven a f flv•1ear contract u maupr ol tbe Oakland A's, wldcb lD· I clU4e. dutle1 u tbe team'• di.NetOr ot pel"IOllDel. More tin·
l portalltly to llartlo, tben will be no sennaJ m~ lD·
volftd wt.th tbe A'• • . . A aalvap team Planned anOtber at.
tempt today to recover the bOclY of racer Lee,..,._ aDd ~ w-.t la left ot hll lbattered DilCOY9ry D rocket boat from tbe
( bOttOm Of Lake T-* . . . Nebruk1'1 4r.. Odl1r•, wbo : takH an •l1bt·1ear record of 1'-11-2 lnto Satvday'1
ibOwdowa wt.th OklahOma, bu been voted tbe AP Bll &lstrt
• Coatb Of the Year. Second ID • cloM vow WU KOi• Cc>Mh
:: Dell ~~ • • • Telerilloft perionallty Alt , .. ...._ ~ ll• bMr1 aamed tb• 1181 nelpiait ol the Tbeodon BoOMwelt,
' Award, the ~11\eat boaor pntented by th• National f Coo.ct.a. AUIJ.9tlc ~tation. UUJetter wu a thM.,..,
• ~ NM:~ at St.o Dt• Stat., Jadilli bit tWD l· • •coriaa ID tmoaa aDd ........ , ..... Fl •eN••an ol t.M Uaited Statea, alNady eo-cbanapkia ot tM women'• an:•
around ennt. won th• noor exerclle "int Tb~~ lD a U.S.-Oil.Da l)'mn .. uea match ID Pettiaa.
'
~•I'!~• ••acb Hl1la'1 ~ ......... ,,... ....
Cl r 4~ llrlt eumptOQldp ····~lllOlatlBedOit· 4o Hip "heri lllra eo.ta•a ....... .,flt f~ vie· --·~ Dlel&t. LI_. 8-ch rallied to de-
f.at Mater Del in Uane ...
•·11, J.J.-12. 11-e. wblle lllra
Calta dllDOHd ol El Toro in
1tral0t Mla;-15-f, 18-14. •
CoMfa lllte Dunean'• ArtllU wtu vJe for tbe •·A ebam-
pkwblp Slhl.rd&y ntpt at a.
Pucm'1 team wu powered
b1': tbe pl91 of aetter Deidra
Dvorak, mJlldle bJoCten Ula
lllli"DIW · aDd Sblrley SUtherland r4I .hlier Lynn Keuler q they
tbetr neord to 19-1.
Arlbta bave met lfira ~= tbe CIP •·A'1 No. 1· team, but were pvt down bf • i.14 dedalon in • cme-
•ame toanwneat 1ttuatioo. TbW'ldaY'• triumph, at Estm-da Hip, didn't eome easy for
Lallllla Beach.
llater Del bad an 11..a advan· t.aae ln the teeOOd set and vic-
tory WU wltbin tllbt, but tbe
Art.lits nsalned the aene and
Murphy then served four
1tralabt winners to set the ~on top for 1ood.
Lquna Beach aeemed to be in
control in the ftnt aet, but tome
poor ~ revened a M ad-
vantace ancf Mater Del too1t ad-
vanta,.topo1tlt1lone vietory.
Duncan ••YI be lln't 1urpr1Hd b1r team bu developed to tbll
point: "I Deft!" tboueht we'd IO
in there and clean 'em out. but I
certaln1y knew we bad a chance
to reach the fi.nall," HY• Dun-
can.
Cross country
finals slated
for Saturday
The Orange Coast area'•
superior power la eXJ)eCted to ~minate the 'CIF Soul.hem Sec-
tion• croea country finals like
never before Saturday mornlns
at Saddleback College where no
leas than five area teams are
elven a Sood shot at finishing
with the five best times of the
day.
And, Edi.Ion Hieb'• Ion Butler a. eX))eded to avense b1s tm
setback when lt eomea to the in-
dividual cbamplomhlp.
Sea View Lea1ue champion
ea.ta kesa 11 the team favorite,
with the Mustanp' major eom·
petSUoo cominl from UDiveni-
ty, Corona de) Mar and Fonntatn
Valley in the 4-A eompetiUon.
Mater Del leadl the pack for
3·A comicteration.
Coata Mesa and University
1lrll are also ezpected to
dominate tbe 4-A level
lkltler'1 1tronseat competition
for individual boaon ii ezpec:ted
to tome from Barua Thomas ol
Santa Barbara and Steve Valen
of Elllodma.
Tbe boyt' action beliP.a at 9:30
a.m . for 3-A and 4-A, followed by
the lirll at 9: 10 with S-A and 4-A
eomp«Won.
Sutton's pick
doe Monday?
MONTREAL CAP) -wm
pitcher Don Sutton bite at the
Montreal Exp' "substantial"
offer for the free asent?
Tbe Expos aay they should
find out by next Monday.
The Natiooal Leaiue team 'a
m•=• anent met with. Sutton and qent, Larue Harcourt,
Tb y .Ucht and off8"d the
H1bt-hlnder a three-year cOn·
tract with the club'• option for a
fourth Cll' ftftb year.
"W• feel tbat the offer we
made to blm w11 very com·
petitlve with other orilin'al de-
mand," u.ld .John llcJlal•, Ex·
poa • prnldent and 1eneral
man.,v.
• .,,,_Y told ue their ol'illnal or.
ter bid already ~ rejected by
Milwaukee. Brewera and the N•w York Yankeea," llcBale added.
He Mid llomreal'• otter wu
"a bull.neu·llte deal which we
canllvewttlt."
,,
Rustlers'
·Tess: she's
for Riel
By llOWAU L. BANDY
OI .. DIM'I Piiie .... Moat nm.nen UH Cl"Oel COUD"'.
try to 1et lD Shape for eventa
durlna ttie •Pl'lol aemetter tn:
track and fleta. -
Such iln't the cue for Golden
Weat'• Tereaa "Teas" Riel a
frelbman out of Mater Del m,b
School who a. the RuaUe.-.• top runner tbll aeuon.,
Riel ftnl.sbed aeventh to lead
Golden Weat to fourth plMe In
the Soutbern Calllornla meet
laat week after pacln1 tbe
Rustlers to the Sputbern
California Conference title WW.
an undefeated dual meet MMOD.
THE POUaTB PUCE fi.n1lh
quaWled Golden Welt for ~
state cbamplomhlp meet Satur-
day at Griffith Park In Loa
Anselea.
"Yet, I nm the mile and two.
mile ID track du.rtn1the1prtnc,'\
Riel 1aya. "But it'• mostly to 1et
in shape for crou country.
"I like to flnlah ftnt in any
race or I don't feel like I have
worked hard enou1b. I know the
Oran1e Cout &iris are pretty~
far ahead of me richt now but
I'll still be tryln1 for a top 10
finlah."
"TEs.9 18 A real bard worker,
doesn't complain and appears to
run with eue," says ber coach,
Sue Lehman. "Actually, it ap-
pears that she can't work bard·
enouab. She'• our best runner th1s year."
Riel plans to chaqe 1cboola at
end ol the current semester ... I
couldn't set boualnl at UC San-
ta Barbara or that'• probably
where I would 10." she nya.
"Right now I plan on tramfer·
rtn1 to Loni Beach State in the
sprin1 and keep runnin1 there."
But her concentration this
week la on flnisblns as hip as
possible in t.be lndlvidual com·
petition and belpin1 Golden
Weit to a top team flni..sbed u
well.
.
Irish break record
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC-TV
announced that lut Saturday's
nationally televised Notre·
Dame-Alabama came in Blrm-
insham, Ala., nHived bllber
ratinp than any re,ular-IUICID
collese football tame la bJ.atory.
The 1pokesman Hid the same
wu seen in 14,320,000 bom•.
19811 Olgtapi~•
Nagoya mak~ hid
TOKYO (AP> -l'be .Ja,...ese
1overnmeat Pft tlle ftnal ~
proval today for tbe city of
Na1oya 1P enter U>e blddina for the 19ft Summer Olympic
Games -on condition that city
leaders keep their proposal u
simple and inupensive u poul-
ble.
Nagoya Mayor Masao
Motoyama is to lead a dele1a-
Uon to International Olympic
Committee IOC headquarters in
Lausanne, Switaerland to file the
city's application on Nov. 218.
Nacoya 11 an industrial city In
central Japan 10me 220 miles
weat ol Tokyo. With a population
of about two million, it ls
Japan's fourth laqest city.
Melbourne, Australia, site ol
the 1958 Summer GJames, 11 tbe
only other city to formally sub-
mit lta tild for the 19 eTeut. All
entrle1 must be in by Nov. 30,
with the IOC makins I.ti ftnal de-
cision cm the site ID a meetJ.na at
Baden .eadeo. West Germany cm
Sept.; •next year.
In a document atcned by
Plime· Mtntater Zealto Susukt,
the 1overnment •creed to back Na1oya's bid for the Games but
stres~ that fmanclnc for the
Olympics should in no way in-
terfere with the current fiacal
austerity program set up to dig
the 1overnment out of a deep
financial bole.
It aaid the government'• out-
lay for the Games abould be kept
to leu than half of total expen-
ditures, and operatin1 expemea
should be covered· th.rouJh rev-
enues from adml11lon tickets and broadcuUna fees.
Nasoya bu eatlmated it would
coat MO billion yen ($4 blllioa) to
build a new main 1tadlum,
IWimmlDS pool, an athletes'
vlllase later to be used for
pubUc boullne and cover opent·
ins npenaea for the Games.
NFL Standings ·
NAftONAL CONFB&BNCE But
W LT P'd. PF PA
Pblla. 10 1 o .909 m us
Dallu a a o . m m ne
NY Giants 3 8 0 .271 115 DO
St.Louta 3 8 0 .271 229 251
Watb. 3 8 0 .271 UI 232
Ceatnl
Detroit e 5 o .5'5 211188
MiDIHllOta 8 5 0 .MS 218 210
• Green Bay 4 8 1 .408 178 zn
Tampa Bay4 8 1 .a JOt m
Chlcqo 4 7 O .IN 175 111 "-* Atlanta -o . m 215 a •••• 7 4 0 ..... s.F. a • o .m m 110
New Orlm o 11 O .000 111 ~~
AMEalCAN CONFl:aENCE
·Buffalo
New Ena.
Baltimore
Illa ml
NY Jets
Eu& -
W LT Pd. PF PA a s o .mm 175 1co .asam
8 5 O .5'5 231 DO
8 I 0 .500 1119 291
2 9 0 .112 200 274
Certn1 Hou.too 8 I 0 . 727 J05 1M
Cleveland 7 • O .m JG 221
Pittlburlb 1 4 o .m m m
CiDcbm.atl I 8 0 .m 1'2 201 ...
Oakland 8 J 0
San Dlelo • ' 0 Denver I 5 O
· Kau. City 6 e o
Seattle 4 7 o
t
.mm• ,.., 111 Zl5 .sdmm
.'551111 -.•m•
nJIT AIMK1T eYerJbocb in
Ute owe UDeuP. '°' mt.o u. ac-UoD ·n .. nay D.lpl, wltb lb dlf·
ferent plQen IOIDC iii for TDI ~d pf1ce' ticker Scott Gtem boOdq etpt ema pomta and a fteld~ wiua tht Yl~ry. owe 1w oow WOQ ftve strai1bt from Rio
Hondo and bolda a 7.f sertea
id1• onr lbe l\oaclrUmlen. But ~ );II tlilD• , oo tbe auauera• mliltb wu tbe momentum \bey now have after bact-to--bact
lau1hera (last week they
whipped Eut Loi An1eles CC,
48-7).
"ActuUly, the lut two weeb
1>ave aurprised me,•• admitted a
subdued Shackleford after the
muaaere. "It's been very pleas·
inl and lt certainly does pve ua
the kind of momentum we
need." .
Santtt Monica la at home
Saturday ni1ht against Loa
An1eles CC and ii •expected to
enter next Friday's 1boWdown
'1th the Rustlers with a t-0 over-
all mart and 5-0 conference
~bowing.
BUT THE COll&U&S will be
ap against ~ team which baa
DOW put 107 pointa OD the board
while allowing just 21 in two
games.
Thursday m,ht. quarterback
Sam Aiello put on an impressive
first-half display of aerial
power.~ l3 of lt palffS for
2CM y&rda.
Amooc them wu a 20-yard TD
pa111 to Jim Coppom, and two
TD atrlkes to Mart Gobel. i'be
Rutlen also 1ot a ._Yard Gltm
field 1oat and a two-yard bunt
by sam Centofante to open a 31~
balftJsnelnd. Tbe l\tiltlen eapttallnd oc
twoeub'~mt-....
to 1et on the scoreboard 4Uictb'. On Rio Hondo'• second plaJ
from 8Ctlmma1e, GWC1• Terry Bac:hDMler intereeptecl a Rieb
AriilMSa pus. Flv• pla7ers later,
Cent.Olan&eacoredhfa TD.
ON TllE EN8t11NG kickoff,
the Roadnmnen coughed up tbe
ball and Rick Lamphear
pounced on lt. Giem booted bis
field goal 11 plays later and it
was 10-0 GWC with 9:19 still re-
malnint in the first quarter.
Aiello picked up where be left
off in the third quarter, hlttlna
Coppom on a pretty 45-yard
touchdown pass, and the
Rustlers led, 38-6.
That brouaht backup QB Tony
LaPlante into the game and be
added a 89-yard TD bomb to,
Cbria Cates.
Fred Moore and Steve Kottke
alao found the end zone on abort
runs. ~e picked up 51 y&rda
on five plays in a reserve role to
lead all GWC f\llllllnl backs.
GWC's Hatton
'f{_elly, Steihlte,
Musso sparkle
BW Kelly. wbo prepped at Kater Del ll1&b and played
junior coUece football at Golden West. 11 contlnuln& to
ablne u a tlabt etld at Lona Beach Stale tb1a HUOD.
Kelly, a MDJor, bu caupt IO puaea for the Gers thia
year for 331 tarda and two toucbdowm. Defemively, Mike MUNO, a pl'Oducto( Fountain Valley
Blab and Orana• Coast Collele, bu been a standout for Lona
Beach tromhla linebacker polltioa. Abo a MD1or, the M , 225
lb. llUAOhu been ill OD 7Uactleltodatetbia year. .
EIMWbere, Oranae Cout area stars matinl a name
for themselves on the colle1e level include Utah State
place ldc~er Steve Steinke. A product of Fountain Valley
Hilb, Steinke bu kicked aeveo field goals and 21 extra
polnta for the A11tes.
Ol'FENSE
•Mldai Name, Sdlool tcb ycb avg tel Ii
Gordon Adams, Newport Harbor, USC 38 -t4 ·1.8 1 13
Kerwin Bell, Edison, Kamas 220 1,089 5.0 8 80
Doug Boswell, West., OCC, CS Full. 4 11S24.3 1 80
Mike Dotterer, Edison, Stanford 19 92 4. 7 O 30
DanDuddrlqe,OCC,LBSt. tse SIM 3.8 2 20
Wlllle Gittem, FV, Aris-. St. • 114 63& 5.5 5 ~
Ken Margerum, FV, Stanford 3 33 11 o 12
Gres Speicher, Ftbl., Sadd., CPSLO 51 MS S.l 4 49 .......
Name, Se.boel
Gordon Adams
F.rant Seurer, Edison, Kansas
I aeeetTiai
Name, 8cbool
KenriDBell Mite Cemp, Estancia, OCC, Colo. St.
Tony Cemp, Estancia, Paclftc
Wlllie Gittma
'Tim Holmes, FV, Arhona
Sobn 1-.; TultJ,n. 8add., SD St.
Bill It~, Mater Dei, GWC, LB St.
Ken Margerum
Dan llontM'e~ Irvine. Sadd., CSF
~le .RakNh•ni, ~. USC Orea Speicher DEFENSE
Name,SdMMtl
Rick Boyer, La Quinta, OCC, SD St.
Ron Dykes, University, GWC, LB St.
Bill Gompf, Lacuna Beach, Utah
Larry Hall, Estancia, UCLA
Mike Musso, FV, OCC, LB St.
Stan Shibata, FV, Pacific
SCORING
Name Scboal
SteveStlDie, FV, Utah St.
pa pc lat ydg tel
179 104 . 7 1,237 7
132 61 10 788 s
rec ycb HI tel II
I 6S 8.1 1 13
218 383 U .9 5 SB
11 .. 11.3 • 33
23 1*I 7.0 0 53
21 881 18.1 0 12 t 115 u.a 0 na
• Ill 18.8 2 • ,
41 • 16.2 li " ' ao 1.5 i ~1 1 55 '7.t 1 l'7
4 40 "10 0 1.5
•t at.._ .. ,
37 40 77 ·· 3
10 1 11 1
2062121
2728 551
30 4' 74 1
31 31 62 2
pat fl tp
21 7 42
Benirschke gives ,
Dolphins the hoot
MIAMI (AP) -San Diego Linebacker Woodrow Lowe's
kldter Bolf Benirachte, wboM lnterceptioo of a David Woodley
eonftdellce hlt rock bottom lut pass Ml up the winnlnl ldck.
weekend, said bis concentration Lowe plcted the aerial off at the
wu so mteme a1a1mt the Miami Ill am.I ~yard line and rambled
Dolpblnl that be couldn't aee down the rilht sideline to the
potential diluter starinl him ln Dolphins 12.
the face. Three nmniDg playa netted two
"Routine? No kick ii routine yarcb and Benlnchke, who had
aftertheweeklbad,'' Beninebke kicked a 37-yeard fteld 1oal ln the
said Tbunday nllht after boot'n1 second quarter, came on to end
a 21-yard field ioaJ with '7:48 re-the season'• sixth ohrtime
maininl in overtime to lift the iame.
cbarpntoa27-2'National Foot-Woodley said hU primary re-
balll.ea,uevictory. eelven -wide receivers Nat
Bemnchlte. who mla•ed on Moore and Jimmy Cefalo-were
three fteld aoat tri• and b.ad covered and that be spotted nm·
another blocked ln addition to dln1 back Tony Nathan open near
miuiq an atra poln.t in San the •ideline. "He wu open. I Just D1e10'1»7trlumphoverKansu threw the ball•bebjnd him," be
Clty tut Sunday. aald be wu to aatd. dete~ to mate IOOd cm tbe ... LOST SlGlft' of blm (Lowe)
1ame·w1Dnlni fteld aoal attempt wben I went outalde," aald that be didn't lee the snap from Nathan. "I saw Woodley tbrow
ceoter bounce before tt reached the ball, and didn't aee blm bOlderlllkaFuller. (Lowe) unW U.. tut moment
••J WASIOtuDedm apd '° conft. t'mn.ouure 111 wuopen. ·•
dent that lllke would tlve me a "Wewveinno1pedaldtfeme.
1ood biold that. I didn't know tbe But Lowe 1ure made lt look lite
ball boUDced u.nW we iot ID tbe we were roll1Da to ~t 1lde just locterroom," t.be fourtb-7ear Ute we baa drawn it QJ>. It wu a
giacetlcker from California· belhlva play," wd Cbar&en
aviiMicl • CoacbDonCoryell.
* • * Game time fqr Saturday'• OCC·San Die10
' Mesa football battle at Mesa bU been cbuied
from 7:IO to 1 p.m. Coach Dick Tucker'• Pirates
ban a chance to ftnl.lh conference play wtth a 1-3
record. But they'll have to beat Fullertbo in their
finale Nov. 29.
1978CADILLACSEVILLE
Leather covered seaUn1. 50/50 dual comfort seau.
and AM/FM stereo with tape. (515VP.IJ).
$8995
Ftl"ilEL WONtT TAKE too mucb credit for the
aucceu ol th.la year's men'• team. Tbe second· place Southern Cat ftnlsb was the belt for OCC
since 1J6S.
~.--~ ................ ._ AIOrl ~ ,._,.,_,. .U _,.._r.au...
~
,! ' L • • ·~ • '., • o ..
P!? THAT UDT CHI na.DfG wrnr eaniDl'I Gii •UTS.
Fitael, ln fact, bu been more lnvol.-ed wttb occ·, wom•'• lqUIMI. wtaidl jQlt bappeMd ...
tbe Soaitberi Cal tttW lQt Saturday UoaJd to'ltb
L&ITY Gn.r wbo 1lU .:..bMD pUotinc the mell'a
team.
•• I ltll.A,,_ ....._.._..
It le t•l'M1
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IC:aH State-I"°"' Ateal
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·THOROUIHIRED
RACING!·
$25,000 SADDLEIACI STAKES ,
F11llrl11 2·Y11r-pl~ Fllllea
latlrdq Aflll'lm
$21,000 •ISSIOI VIEJO
STAKES .
F11tlrl11 3-Yur-O" Rlll11
Sa1~1y Aft1i1111
• Pick Six W11erla1
!t Six Ex1et11
•Pest JI• 12. IMn
• l1cl11 WelllllSUI '""' ...... ,
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D~C•MSER 1
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lry•nt ... ,,
o.Mard -..cock ¥111er O.Hlll
Hlckl
MOofW o-n Aritol4 f:, Hiii
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lll<kl GWC~ 'f$ INl1 lram Alotlo CGlltlft
-~~~ .. jla9I from Lal1anro IGIOm kkkl
GWo-«o«U I"'" CGlom kick I GWC-Mocn 41'1111 COlem kl<kl
RH-COG(ier ' PllH lrom ACOIUI (PllU ~rf,....,,~I
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GWC-T~s. •». c;.nlof..,le, ~I. l!l
lldlt, 6-40, Boole«,~. Kottke, ).SI; Moon,
4 IS, W1981M. J.11, UIPIMUI, J. .. ; Alollo,
3" RH-ArancN, IH, Eddin91, 1 JI, ACOSUI,
'""''""'' '6; c;..e11or, l-40; Ololdcly, S.21, MMA, ,..,,._,, Aodrlqlln, 14. .......... ~
GWC-Alofle, 1$-.-0, 1'4; LeP1..n., t.
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GWC-COOPIH>"', S Ill, GOO•I. S·ll, JOllnllon, J It;-·,_.., <:.ntotanle, 1-11,
EIOHrd, t•eot.t, t ...
RH-Eddlngo,'41; c.,.er,Hl; Ka..,_.,
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wnc! MU, 1hell«M.•-**-7c..~1
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bonlt... '-· 22 tiKlrltlll, -"'9<~. US ro<ll Cod.
NI Wf'O•T I O•v•r's Locl1erl 1e •no•.,~: ltOrock cod, i ~cod (M1'• ..-, .. , _,..,..rt, 3-. IOmoo.arol, 22 rock
Cod, I l\llllb&A.
LONO llACH 10..-'1 w ... rfl -Jot
•nol•u: t """''-... ""'· 110 ,.,1co boM, '° ... .,. pwdl.. ,........., ... , _ 17 ~ .... us
roo~.
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JO
Women'• Volterben cou.eu use dllf UCLA, 1.S.fO, s.u. lj.10, 12-IS. IS.11,
JUNIOtt c:iou..oa
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Mira ~dllf. El TOf'O, IM, 16-14. Ul9Una 8eedl dltf. Mot.-Dal, t-IS, IS.12,
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La Mlr9do def. Alahettl, t•1', IW, I~. Cl,,, ...........
Santa Poul• d9(. Sent• Cl., a, IS.S, IS-13. l..eual"!llr Cllf. 819 BNr, 1).J, IS.12.
"""' $( ..... """''"'°'-Holy Family tlllf. Or ..... Lvlher .... IS.13,
!Sil.
Peroclolodlf. Brentwood, 1).13, 1.S.12.
N84 wan••• COii"•••"" ................
Slll\Ae ....
U1•11
Houston
KoMffOIY
Oonv•r
Dallas
W L PC\. •• IS 6 .71• 12 • .600 1\1)
• ' .471 s
' ll .409 .....
7 11 .Jlt• ....
l 11 150 It ....
l'OdfkOI,,.._
"-"'• 17 l ·"° -Lollon U 6 .714 2"'I Golde ft SUie I 2 7 .'32 •Vt
SHiii• t II A.50 I ~!land • 14 .JOO II
Saft 01... • 14 .JOO " aMTaaN COH"lltlNCa MNatkDlwtu.
PllllNlltlf!M f7 l
eotton 12 s
New voni 12 s
N-J•,..Y I 12
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Mll••1o1•
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. SKIING ii
so.u..ril t:.WonWi," bUt nowadaya, With tile oepdlllltiel '61 mbdert1 aao.mak:lQI macblMI, il ~"have to rain in LA tor lt; to IDOW ID tbe
moW14•W. . '
•OOODING TO COBBE, Jiftl are open up to
Mld1'a1 Sta~ A1 with Chalr 4 operattnl &Ad by
th1-.-eDct '-'IWI' 2 •bould be lD tentee matiD6 mott ol the *I vea ready to ao. Niabt ati.ini alto 1b0wd beatn thiJ wfftend.
It wa&n't ~ after bearlq tbe ltartll.nt news
•bout Snow Suuntt tliat tM Gtbei' .,_, jUmped to
ll Up the road, Goldmine wu bulJ ~ lb 1lopealn~=1nnofopentn,Sa~.
ADd re, So~. ,yalleY and most of the otbet1 J)lanned on ltatUn1 operaUoaa OD
Tbanbllvfnc Day. •
"One of the moat en~ atins at the vart~ Hi promotiou tbJj fall wu the ebaqln1
att!tude of 1tien towardt m•·made mow," •aid
Cohee. "stlers were no &oacer asking, 'Wbeo la tt
1oiD1 to anow?' but 'When ere 7ou ioinl to start matins mow?•"
WE BBA& ~ LOT of ditfertn, "opiniom about the q""11ty of 1klin1 ln Sout.bem Caltfomia but the
chronic complainers evtdently don't stop those
lbat appreciate tbe fact that JOU can leave your
home by the sea any mornina of the week and two
houn later, be 1kiln1 on a close raemblance ot
snow.
The numbers would seem to bur this out. Last
year, over one million Ulen took to the local
slopes, paying anywhere from '10-15 for a single
day of sbussloi. Of course tbat doesn't include
drivin1 costs, food and equipment costs.
Evidently, the high cost doan 't deter the
Southern California skier. If they've stied
elaewbere, tbey probably realise that lift tickets
avera1efrom $15-20 nationwide.
Whatever the economy, sll:ilng is too much to
glveupfortbolewbopartakey~lriandyearout.
Bur MORE TRAN THAT it's all the other re·
sources that the Soutbem c;lliomian ha.a avalla·
ble to him that makes JocaJ Sid.in& all the more re·
warding.
Like bus shuttle eervice from LA and Orange
counties to almost every area resort. Departure
points are located at Fashion I.aland in Newpon
Beach, Laguna Hills Mall and Seacliffe Village in Huntington Beach as well as 12 other Southern
California locations.
Lift tickets or Ult ticket/bus ride combinations
are again available through Ticketron outlets this
year.
Most of the aid areas have increued not only
•kilnl space but have. added aua.tantially the
service. ottered by their alD IC:boola, racin1 pro-er•ms and accomodat1oq hliillllU..
GOU>MINE -Mort' or the runs bavel>iill
replowed and widened. Lot.a of new safety
measures have been introduced like a chair lift
evacuation system in the event of breakdown. It al·
low• the sti patril to cut down the actual time of a
rescuemisaion by one half.
SNOW VALLEY -Not too many new projects
were undertaken • during the off·seasoo at this
popular resort although a ski shop wu installed.
SKI SUNRISE -Formerly Table Mountain.
this area in Wrightwood claima that, "We're Not
for Everyone." Mostly for the beeinner to in·
termediate sider, the stress iB on family 1kllng. One
of the nice aspects about it is that if by 10 a.m.
you' re not happy with your day ol siding, you can
return your lift ticked for a full refund.
Fro. Page aJ
SEV ANO'S COLUMN
current weight or 186 pounds (be came to camp at
200). .._
Rutledge is wailing for a call from team ~·
tor Toby Freedman so be can be ctven one lut
checkup. Hopefully, he'll return to camp some
time next week.
* * .. DAE UE SOME FIGURES that should in·
tereat you: After two weeu of research by fellow col·
lea1uea Ken Kumick of the Valley News ~d Jobn
Csarntcld of the Rtvenide-Pras Eot.erpnae, here
la •bat they've uncovered: The Rama' total re"Venue for tbe ueo aeuoo
wlll be approximately $2'1882,000--bithQt in the
N~ will Total expenses, accord.lnc to their survey,
be *20,91.t,OOO. . ' H That would net Georlia an almost coo~ ..,
mllllon at year'•end. Now remember, the above fl,urea are. only
t1timat10u . • . but tbey're clole ~elese.
Also the ttcures do not include Geortl• • 1alaey
dlvldenda and 1ucb item• u owne:r'a penooal
b\llln .. -related eq>enaea and no1M·eeutria1 U·
l)eftHI. -.._ n--a• . . . Ob, yea. Just IO you'll now. UR .IWll.WI
bl11eat ex.,._e th1I year 11 playen' salaries,
ytl\lch total apprOximateb' $.1,850.000. • * • W011LD YOV .8ELIEVI IT DBPT.: 1't tnaurance aaept ~reHntlna th Loi
Aat•* Rama wu OUt to take depoaitiou from tb• rnt41la Tburlday concenalna th• popular Mike
Trope;.f ack FaUlber club Of• mCGtb 110. Am.allftlly, Trope ls tulnl Faulkner and tM
l1Dl W ·;· mllllcm dOUN'l la~
Tba\'1 lncr.d.lbJe. -~·ln lfeu· ot the fact
be probebb' won't a« • slncle penny. . "' ,, aST'J'OIUI ~IO'V• w. atatlltlc: ·
TM A1'C 80W laaa a M-JO edc• over the NFC ln
acrtual wt~ )>lit &M NPC UI ~bed lu JUd
to 11·11 n. the joblU. • • • :;ge:. • ._ aa-:r.= U:J:: • .. .. ~ ~~~· .... ~~
•n.IW.. ol ..... carillla ...... te'! emte. n.at CMld v ................... 61
• J
Weekend
• r
TV, radio
~ ........
, TELEV1810N 1 9 a.m. (7) -COLLEGE FOOTBALL P&E· ~AME SHOW.
9:25 a.m. (7) -COLLEGE POOTBA.LL
Michigan at Ohio state,
10 a.m. (9) -COLLEGE FOOTBALL -
Defendinf NCAA champion LouisviJJe meets
DePaul n the Hall or Fame game from
SprinCfield, tf ass.
12:4.5 p.m. (7) -cOLLEGE-Footi.ALL -
USC meets UCLA at the Collsenm.
1:30 p.m. (2) -JI lllNUTES -A ptdile of
football coach Gerry Faust, who has led Cincin-
nati'• Hoeller Hilb School team to nine undefeat-
ed seasons in 18 yean.
3:30 p.m. <2) -SPORTS SPECl'ACUIA& -Undefeated Aaron Pryor (28-0) riab bis WBA
junior welterweight title •&al.nit Gaelan Hart
(45-18-3) in a scheduled 1.5-row>d boutrrom Cincin· nati.
4 p.m. (4) -SPORTSWORLD -1980 Indy 500
champion Johnny Rutherford, Mario Andretti and
Tom Sneva are among the competitors in taped
coverage of the Phoenix 150. Also: World invita-
tional paits bodybuilding, taped in Atlantic City.
5 p.m. (2) -NFL REVlEW AND PREVIEW.
C28> -SOCCER.
11 p.m. CS> -COLLEGE FOOTBALL -USC
and UCLA met earlier in the day at the Coliseum. Taped.
RADIO
Football Afr Force at Notre Dame, 10: 20·
a.m., KOGO (600); Oklahoma at Nebraska, 11 :30
a .m ., KIEV (870); USC vs. UCLA, 12:4.5 p.m.,
KMPC (710)i KNX (1070); KOGO (600); Cal State
Fullerton at Pacifie, l:IO p~'? JtWRl( CU'10);
'New Kexico at &an Die10 State, 7:30 JJ.m" KFMB
(760}; Drake vs. Lon1 Beach State at b~eim,
KNAC (105.S FM); Saddleback at Palomar, 7:30
p.m ., KSBR (88.S FM>.
Hockey -Kings at Toronto. 5 :05 p.m . KOGO
(600).
Sunday
TELEVISION
9:30 a.m. (2> NFL TODAY -Scheduled
segments include an interview with Charlie
Waters or the Dallas Cowboys. (4) -NFL 'M -
Three or thia season's top collegians. Mark Herr-
mann (Purdue), George Rogen (South Carolina)
and Hugh Green <Pitt), join host Bryant Gumbel
in the stoclio.
10 a.m. (2) -NFL FOOTBALL -The
Chicago Bears meet the Falcons in Atlanta. (4) -
NFL FOOTBALL -The Oak.land Raiden meet
tbe Eagles in Philadelphia.
1 p.m. (2) -NFL FOOTBALL -The
Washington Redskins meet the Cowboys in Irving,
Texas. (4) -WESTERN OUTDOO&SJllAN -
Highlights: Cross country sJUiq in Breckenrid&e.
Colo.; a.I.lo, a visit with a woodcarver In the Ozark
mountains.
3:50 p.m. (34) -SOCCER -U.S.A. vs. Mex·
ico, telecast from Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
4 p.m. (7) -COLLEGE F00TaALL '• -Highlights of games played this weekend. (9) -
COLLEGE FOOTBALL -The USC Trojans vs.
the UCLA Bruins, played Saturday in Los Angeles.
4:30 p.m. (7) -GREATEST SPORTS
LEGENDS -A tribute to Bobby 01'!', who is
generally considered to be the ereatest de·
renseman in the biatory of Ice hockey.
6 p.m. (2) -r•o FOOTBALL RAP.
10:30 p.m. (34) -SOCCEB -U.S.A. vs. Mex·
ico ln a match played earlier in the day in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.
11 p.m. (22) -NOTllE DAME FOOTBALL -
Air Force at Notre Dame. Taped Saturday.
11:30 p.m. (28) -TENNIS -The Al~aden
Grand Masten Vtntaae '80 ftnala, taped in White
Sulphur Sprlnas, W. Va.
RADIO
Football -Oakland at PhUadelphia, 9:35
a.m., KNX (1070).
Bultetball -Mllwautee at Labra, 1:50 p.m .•
KLAC (SIO) •
(Tile Dall)' PUot for late
ST. CROIX, Vlrflo
ltlaadt -AU.LraUan
1a.U0n wu. d0mlnat1n1
th• Hoilie Cat· 1' world cbam~..P• .ifter t.wo ne.a qnaay.
Tbe ...... WU With
11~ 'iJ)Olnh wa1 PbU
X•l1bt, ~ nmnana
•H Ju iD,ublord. 14
polau. ~ In thlrd lace ••• Snrlq•t l11aeroa.
P'*1o Rico. M; fourth wa•c :eratr J>r,lalld1 ccsrA~
A .... M;_,ftftti (7)4)540-9100
"• • J • n A lt • r ' (2 13) 587~~r-C&pllb w.JNa1. lt~. •VO ,
t
--.
by Blf Keane GORDO
"Watch it, Bily, or l'U give yov o black nose."
Ml f!QJfJp
TMI~
Te .. V
CAA~VM f'AW/ 1lff! liHTllN
~~ueeo
i:\JICl#Je "* u.JaL>~.!JION
a&>~l#o.le ~
11-ZI
//·l.I
................. -
11" WON '"f"
Pl"f" Met 'L PG>C. -ro Ft r -r'H19 PAPl!R .awN 19 "'fC::C &IQ ~t
by Tom K. Ryan
MISS c~eese, cu-r so.Ml!! L-l!!S HO&..l!S IN "T'Ml9 MANIL-A
e!NVl!L-OP1!!1 P\.. l!lA 9!!!
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS IO Routine
1 HMd cover'I 82 on.. Of
50ey O.C.*Y
10 Coot.cl 86 Pl¥ot
,. Skulk 87 Dnction
1& PlrlgOf'I • ap.lllh
18 1t111n IMF Ml'M
17 Aeg6on 70 .... Belt
11 Role: 2 71 H8rltl look
wordt 72 Clc:atrb
19 ....... 73 Profound
20 o..tJ 74 AuctloM
22 Enor 75 "--joly
UNITED Featu,. Syndicate
ThwldllY• Puzzle Sol'Md
:J.J.U:l :l.J!J.J Dr:Jt:lli
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~U)l\1~l0USQ~ FURNISHED
2 I 3 BEDROOM HOMEI
ENNIS• SWIMMING POOLS• JACUZZI
$2,600 ·3,000/MONTH
WIEt<L \'."llilTAL ALIC> AYAH.AILI
CALL lOU 71•t
Pacific Room
Saturday
Nov. 22nd
3 Mee&lap
10:00 A.M., 11:3' A.M. • n:oe P.M.
(II(~'' I I f It 'I'
11~11111 11111·1t1 ,,,
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SANTA AHA
835-3305
PUBUC NOTICE
~ICTlftCNS !MllnfaU
MAMa STATIIMSNT
Tiie fol!Owtn9 ..,_ II OOifl9 IMll·
MUM!
THe ~INOaltNAIL ,,Xllt, J91t 1. Plata Of,...,......, ca. ti*
...........................
~·· '11t'9 ..
SAU TOOK A BEATING tbla yeu, and ttieJ're idJ
used to it. For yean th91 bad made steady J)l'Clftti, b\liC
volaUle, unpredictable interest rates tb.1a year forced
man~~to JWel"ffl. It lbook them up. for a corrective, 10me SALi have rt
merainl otben, a step. that Barnard, be!r:t"=q ver'• VlcD•nd Fedet'al Savt.i& • ~ bellevea abould biP taken Clllly after much more deliberaticb. -
"rm •couraima tbem to ecimider c•refullJ befi they m.ab the move,'' be aald. "I beUev.,, ln ltler1en my own tiolQpany Jiu pown tbroucb two ol them -but
merae cut ot fear la d.angeroua."
IN IDS VIEW, the red ink that apilled over the boob
half tbe leacue'• ,,.., memben earlier tbla year la •
realOQ for ecimlderiDI 1uldde. •• Otbe.r buaineues, he
co tb.roQlb replar upe and downs over a epan ol y
"WhatanftlMlVelforf"heub.
But It ii indeed a new world for federally Cll&l~
S.La, and not just because ol tbelr new power to ofti
cbeclE:iq account.I (by Dec. St), consumer loans, c
cards -even data proeeu~ Jnfurance. Alona with these newly lfanted,powen Is a mort1a1e
rate atructure in which fiexibllity and lnterest r
vartabtllt,y replacet ricldity, whlcb. bad been the end
quality ot bome mortcaaes lince tbe 1130a.
I
EITBEa CllANGI! -TBB new powen or
mortcaie flnlbllity -la btQer than almo.t any~~
cban1e ln many years. Toaetber, they add up to an un·
precedented challeqe, and perbape an op rtunlty too.
BUT THE HUNTINGTON BEACH
student.a aren't just leamln1 the aecreta
of gambllne per ae. Tbey're tinkerin1
with the mathemaUcal theories behind
such games of chance.
"What we do ii we develop 10m•
m athematlcal and probablllty topics
and apply them to varioU. 1ambUn1
situations," say1 Horowlta, who 1t.arted
the eamlJllne U>eorles class lut year.
" "Gambling ii baaed on probability
theory, which datea back to the 17th
, century," be explains. "People used to
play eames with dJce and an analyals of
the 1ame s tarted the theories of probability!'
GAMESTERS, dilbeartened by dis· utrous losses at thtr dice tables, turned
to not.eel matbem•ticlam of tbe time.
Galileo helped develop syatem1 for
wacertna, later folloffed by the ~ babillty theory research of French
mathematician Blaise Pascal.
A 17th century .Dutchman by the
name of Christian Huygens made a ma-
jor breakthrough in probability theory
~ith his pioneering r esearch paper
titled "On Racioclnation ln Dice
Games."
After th• tlHI b11 tJaorou•bl7
dil•&ed • ~ 111 prob4ibill\1 ~.
lloro"1ta brtao out a dtck ol eardl
rouletle ~ .dlN, keao 1bllta ~
radq tonM.. Jt'a Um• to put tbeOry ln·
to practlee
Th• ftnt 1amln• 1 .. _, of tM day ta a lecture on 1an1e1 With tht wontoddi.
I ullBNO 18 TllE eul•t one IO 1pP1y
it (probab6Uty theory) to," ht 11y1.
"Tbat'• the 1ueur 1ame. It'• the wont 1ame ln the culno to play.
"The bett 1trat.n to play k...o ta to
play ooe llumber. But even theo you
have a low problblllty or wtonlot. It
In keno, 1 11mbler can cbooH from ao numben on a 1hMt of paper. Twenty.
numben then are randoral~ nlect.d.
So U you bet on one number, you~d H •
pect to hav a 25 perttnt chance ot win·
nJn1 , he aaya. The "fair odda" of th•
eame would txptct. 8·to-l payoff tor. one nwnber winner.
BUT ftlE GAMBSTla Only re1UH1
2·t0· 1 wlnninCt.
''That'• called the "c111no advan·
taee,'" ••YI Horow~t1. ''Tht falr odd.I are the actual probablUU11 of wtnntn1
or loalna a 1tame ... lf you bet on one number on 1 rOulettAt
• table, he add.I, the falr odd.I wowd be
n -to·1. But in fact the culno
paya off 35·to-1 on a one-number
roulette winner.
"So they keep $2, for Hample, that ln
a fair 1ame would belon1 to you," he
aay1. "Nowhere do caalnoe pay fair
odds. 'lbere's only one bet at CH.Pl that
pay1 the fair odds and it'• called the "odd• bet ....
IN ADDl'nON to casino 1amblln&,
Horowita'• students 1et a tun.&>wn on
bow to read raclne forms and learn the
odd.a of ~ options. But the math in·
structor adm.lta bls studentl are told to
leave probability theory aside when
they step up for a win, place or show
wager.
"IN ROVLlftS the cHlnO apecu
to male• ta.18 out ol tvery tlOO, re••rd·
leH of Wllo wtnJ and lot•," M Hyt. "It mall• no dJ.tternce wbJcb numbln JOU' betoa." For hard,ened ••mbltra, HotOwlta of·
ftr1 the followtn1 caalno ad\'anta•• or:
percenta•u of boUJ• wlnnt.ap from
11mbltr11 '*8. lt'a a lltt of pmblllll
opportWllU• Uated from wont to belt
odds:
Keno: 25-IO percent
· Horaeracinl: 20 percent Slotm~hlnet: 7-18percent.
Roulette: s.as percent
Cra111 and blacldact: 0-1 percent
Horowtts notes that leamln1 the
tbeorl• behind 1ambllne odds bM beetl
an unpleasant experience tor aome atu·
dent.I wbo frequent pmblln& meccu throulhout Nevada.
"Some of them eet UJ>Set because .It (theory) destroya a lot of th& Ideal and
systems ~·ve developed," be sayt.
"But I di>n't advise anybody. I just
tea~h them,'' be says. "I'd get in trou· ble otherwise."
Golden West College
mathematician Dr. David Horo'Wlt:Z has a
special class up his sleeve. It's a
semester-long c ourse on the theones and
practice of games of chance.
School'$ campus center has of a small Western town. Some buildings wete built by students. . !;jt
School on the Arizona range;,.
I ' Br IOHN aAaaoua
MAVER, Arts. CAP> -Some
80 r•an aeo Charlie Orm•'• dad
and mother broutbt tbelr three
cbUdrtn cMrt to thl• ht1h 4-ert countr1 to ranch. There wa1
ran•• land for the catUe,,but fto
acbooll for lbt chlldren.
Problem 10lveN, the Ormea
•imply hired a t.acber. Slnc:e tbtre were only tbret Orme
chtldrwa. lbty lnvtt.d tha ft~e
cblldren of ranch handl to •t· t.nd clUHI too. Tben cam• the ~
n•l1hboft• chlldr.n.
81 the end ot World War n.
thtrt •re JJ chUdren ln tbt lm·
promptu achool and the Onn•
bad .. llnee araduted. 'nllt
w11 "hln fatber Orme turned to bli 1'7·WW'.O&d son. CharU•, &Dd 1iJd~ r(J'Ye bad enoutb qt tldi.
Either >""' tall• lt over, or ~
It.'' •
munlty Uvlna, rHpon1lbU01.
the old valua, respect and aelf·
rapect.
The alumni include tb• children of Dlek Van DJke, Mary T)'ltr Moore, AUee and
ts,eoo a rear for tuition. You ~an
brin.i JOUI' own bone. You must
clean your own room. You are elt.ber ID. or you an out.
"In Cll'del' that t.bue will be no
miau.ndentandlnl," Uae aCbool
tr
D·
IU
II
in
d I
1e
IS
).
d
d
.-·~ SEAaCll SUpport" by tbe Trladcipl.w Ubhr')', • poup that. beip. adopted
cllildi'eD and birth paNnta March for eacb
other. '#friad,. II a term m~ UM adopted
cbild, tbe edopd.-e parent and tbe blrtia ~· -"WbO Ari tbe.DeBolta?''. film clepietiDJ
a famllJ tut baa adopted many cblldND with
apeelal needs.
From 2:30 to 3:30 p.m .• tbe WOl'bbope are:
-Adoption A.ASK style, •• a dllcuuklll by the
Hartmam, puenta of 19 cblld:ren. AASK ltanda
for Aid for Adoption of Speclal Kida, a support
rroupfor adoption a1enelea. ·
. -"CUB: c.cemed United Birtbparenta,'"
a d.lecuuioa aroup.
-"'illNO&ITY ADOPTIONS," a dia·
cuHion on the reportedly ur1nt need for
minority famllles to adopt wattinl eblldren.
-"Rapplq with Youala IDftlftd ill Ado~
tion,'' by tbe Open Door Soeiety ot Oraqe
County. -''Teen·.,• Father," a film preaentatioa of l11ues involved tn teen-a1e pre1nancy
• apOuond bY tbe CJdJdren'1 Home~· .Retr.bmeau and boutiquM will be located io troat ol tbe eollea• library, and child care,
••pervtsecl by tbe Oraace eo.mty CamPftn
Council, will be available in the Cblld Care Center.
Woodland Christmu ii the theme of the
second annual Candy Cane Ball Dec. e
apoDIOred by the AaalstaDCe Leape of
NeWDOlt Beach. Prep~ for the event Ja Teddy Bear aloo1 With J&idy Bauer (left),
ud KaUiY IWrilori. niie clwity beDeftt
will 1)8;be}d at the Ne'.WJ)Orter Inn. For In·
formatbi., can 8.11-.5025.
'lllriltt1 ••••
The Assistance League of Newport Beach
will bold a toy sale in ita thrift shop, 505
32nd St.. Newport Beach, on Dec. 8. Get-
ting ready for sale are (from left) Jane
Rotaton, Jessee Drucbl and Barbara
Dostra.
••• Sc ool OD
, ....... ,
of tM~.·· bt.W ~L~:::::e.:m:. .. ltW .. tldll..... ..... ................ ,. .........
talarlH • ._. .. , be '•tt•r
•IM9Mn. Ill .-.e Mlaooll, ~.·~ ............. ...
la *' plaee of nmarbble iJ8W.C.., 100 ..U. DO~ ol .,...,... Md ~ bal'"110 na-.n, tbeN ta • ......,
dlttance. Svea bHclmuter
Charlie Orme ....... a-...
tMN bliaC tbe tadt ..........
that llr. Ila lNDt ol a ue• ctOel
aot MellllrilJ ~ NIPICt.
'A bil. MUlJ bUd maii,'W :ll
plal•·•JC*eo, but tbere'• ~ queoce wtMa be writes about tbe
prtndplei beb1nd bl.I aebOol:
"WDiltaN JU.N1 'havinl de-
veloped owr many ceOtmfes • body ol Jllilldpl.. and val_.
whleh to find m....W., for bis
llfe and· baM d~taiont in the
COPduct ol h1s affaln bas almolt
dllcardeid it dlJ!Ui• the acltb eeD•
tury 9'iCbout ftDdinC •a~ foundadom. Tbll bu left blm
preea.rtoualy adrift bi • time
when eventa move to rapidly
u '° need wlle deciJICIU made r more l1'1IUY than ever before,
and when be desperateb' needl
pldelines ln tbe ordering of bis own life."
And one reuoa for what be
coulden the lou ot conftdence
in many 1cbool1 and un-
iventtte1, be 1ay1, la "the
destructive 1keptlcl1m of tbe
acbolara toward moral and'
ethical value."
The key to bapplneaa, be
beUevea, lies in motivatln1 stu-
d e o t 1 to reacb beyond
themselves to the service of
othen. Simply seekln1 penonat
happlneu in having fun ls a
dead end.
8011£ PEOPLE don't fit in.
A• Mark Lane, a 17-Yt:ar-old
senior from Casper, Wyo., by
way of Saudi Arabia and
Geor1la where bis father
worked, puts lt, •'Those who
have known all the freedom in
the world have some difficulty.''
(
Students draw regular
chores like feeding
horses, mllk1ng cows,
puttmg up hay, riding
the cattle roundups
and bOllding fences.
res~billty for myMlf. Tbey
have a Jot ol rules, but you de·
eide whether you make it or
break it."
At tbe con ot ranch llfe, Orme uplalnl, ta wort. So ln additioa
to cJeantnr their own rooru and
waltlnl oo tables. in the com-
mUDity dlnl.n1 room, 1tudent.1
also draw recuJar . chorea like
feedin1 horses, milkin1 the
dairy berd, puttln1 up bay In the
sprin1, ridlnJ in the cattle round-
ups, bui1d1nl fences and keep-
inl draina1e ditches clear.
Tlll!U IS A It p.m. cwfew
for eighth dµ'ough loth graders,
11 p.m. for Juniors, and midnight
for aenion. There la mandatory
eveninc study in study ball until
9 p.m . for tbe younger grades.
The campus center, including
some of the adobe buts the
orilinal cluaes used, ha.a the
look ol a small Western town.
Previous classes, as past proj-
ects, have built some of the
buildinp themselves.
Horos~ope
Wll.flf• 1. •vca Hart,
Got die oW ........ .ctor, came
MN • ~ • a.n4 bu IND
the ICbliOI .,.. • ffj .... ln·
ttrv .... •• 18 ... , .. ttu1 an olc1
bar Jak» a mill-&llUttl', a Hit eeller became U. ~room Uld the ~J~ll'1Wal ~ .. tuele4
by • habd·mtd& b•tierr heated
by • •mU4P. pat. • He be1Pt uacb bOrsem~p. t. dlreetar ot 1w:ilmer and Off.
campu1,:~r•ms and he teach• . Hla Witt, J~
11 the librarian. veryone
doubles 1n WUI around here,
•tudent and teacMr alike ..
A rather apectacular cliapel
1oob (Q Oil tile mountalnl to the
north ad attendaace ta man-
datory. But the nature of the
meettnc,I II "ucational ud in·
aplrational ntber than solel.y re-lilloua.
Allan Rlltcm la dlfect.or of ad· minions aa well aa other
duties. Even after testing and ln-
tervieW1, Jt it iuenworlt. "You
really clon't know wbat'a eoin& to happen unw you pat them In
the pot and •ti( them up a bit."
A WHILE AGO, they had
"some stroaa 1tudent.1 and some
who tboulht attending clus was
an intrusion on their freedom.
We decided to bite the bullet and
disqualified about 30. It cleared
the air.''
Reaction to a breach of
Orme's many,JJU.les isn't always
so drastic. A while ago two
teachers, strolling through a dry
creetbed, s potte d tw o
youngsters where they weren't
supposed to be. The students
fled into the brush and the
teachers gave futile chase, wor-
ried the youngsters might get
lost in the desert.
When one teacher returned to
the gate, he fotmd one of the
boys there, reeking or skWJk.
Further discipline seemed re-
dundant. 'Ibey simply buried his
clothes and took him back to hts room.
)
chan1e ~ heart. Be prepared. Have necessary
source material available. Coo.ault references.
So01e are better than others
SATUaDAY, NOV. Zl, llM
81 SYDNEY OllA&&
AUB8 <Mar. 21-Apr. It): You'll be called
upoa to JSPiai'I l'DMWI, moUns aDd ct..lrel.
Accent matlvit;y, unlqueneu and speela1 Writ· ten matei'tal.
CAnJCOSN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Logjam to
proareu ta removed. Be ready for a variety or
aenaUianl, travel opportunity and cbane(! to ex pre111ourselfincreaU\le manner.
'If you are carrying an t:TOre11a. keep
Dl'.AJl ~ LANDERS: Some baa rldel ,--~...-,~~-~~~ t'AtJllVS <ADrll •llay 20): Buie domestic adJu.tmmt domlnatea scenario. Utir•, Scorpio and another Taurus flcure pr0mlnently.
.,..._ Ula odaen, but ncne ol tb8m are
. Tbll ~ l lot oa • bul drtven -a ( • hmlhr.e pilot. The pweqen were · ~methlq out ol seioe. ft.c:tioo. l baYe tatea
llbert)' ot dJ'attlni some rules of ttiq\iette
Bt11 People. I hope you Jlf'int tbem. A lot of DeeCI eclucauq.
1. When the bus driver saya, "Move to the
cit of the bua," MOVE l
2. II JOU board the bua with a friend and
1 410n 't set aeata tosetber, dol1 't talk over people
:_.a eapedaUy in the mornift&. You can vlaft on the pbooe lat.er. a. II you do 1et to alt to1ether, apeak In a
low to&ee. one <>tMr puaearen are not in-
terated in your rent inct'UleS, your vacation
plana or the dress you 1ot on u.le.
4. Doo't crack your tum or clip you.r nails
on tbe bm. It's rude.
5. Doo't read your newspaper lD 10meooe's
f11ee -unlesa you know ~ to fold it onr.
&Ire, 10'l have a rtpt to ~ad your paper, but
tbe other penon bu • rtibt to breathe.
I . Uthe~ ii bot, open the window. I know
your hair m1ibt blow. but not many model
a1ency taJst acouta are ri~ the bus.
1. U YoU are cMT)'ln1 an umbrella, keep the
po!Jit down. It abould never be carried ill front
of you like a aword. , a. Doo 't pall tbe bu.Der and •et up •is stops
la advanee and block tbe alale. U you ml.as your
atop, wbat'•tbe bla deal? Get off and walk. t. If you aren't acquainted with the routa
and bus nwnbers1 call for lnformatioa. Doo't
atop a bul and u1: the drtver 20 ~.He
won't appreciate lt, and nettheT Will tbe
pauqen. -THANKS A MILLION FBOll ALL OF US
oua·s FLO
I 1e1 MBA._ MST . COSTA MBA
CACIOU NON IOMA ......
.• IRF~I
LET US IRIGHTEH YOUR
HOLIDAY 'AILE WITH A
IEAUTIFUL FRUIT OR WIME
I 'IASKET •.
Ann
Landers
DEA& T.A.11.: ftub for die .a..D01a&
plH -a 1o1c1 star for 1• ud a mo.e Co Ute
Madol&lleelau.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I WU taken aback by that letter from the reader wbo tboqht the
term "gay" should be banlahed from the
langua1e ~ause the bo1D01Uuala be knew
were neither 1ay, merry, cheerful nor happy.
Had you consult.eel an expert in tbe field of
word derivation, be would have told you that the
term "eay" oriainated from the word "1aiety."
It 1oes back to the Old Encllsh theater when
women were not permitted to act.
Speakinc for myself. I am -HAPPY AND
GAY IN SAN JOSE
DEAS HAPPY: Tlaanb for &lie ftll·ln. U ft pres.
GltlllNI (lla1 21.June 30): Obtain blnt
from Taurua meuace. Be realiltic about cur·
rent pl'Olpectl. '1nd out what Lt expected ol you.
Get rldol1uPerfluous material.
CANCD (June 21.July 22): Good moon
aspect coincides with trips, vi.lit.I, reunion wftb
relathe who bad bee" petulant. Accept
cball-ae ol added reaponaJl:Jility.
LB0 (JulJ' 23-Aq. 22): A projfft can be
completed. You're d• to receive plaudita of peen. Focm oa income, 1~ money's wOl1b
and deftninrfinancial terms.
V1aGO (Aq. zt.Sept. 22): You 1et chance
for fresh start. Take initiative, bigb-Ucht
originality and exude confidence. Stick to prin-
ciples, realize you are on brink ol m~r dta-covery.
LIBaA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Follow t.hrouah
00 hUDdl -you are IOinl In rtpt d.lrection.
Clandeltfne coatereoce could be oa qenda. Be
discreet.
BCOaPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. 2.1): You reeeive a
variety ol meaa~esz calla, suuesUona and re-
quests. Maintain Da.tanee and 1eme of humor.
Be aelecdve, avoid scattering eneralea.
8AGITl'A<.J8 (Nov. 22· Dec. 21) : Door of
opportunity opem wide -one "ln power" hu
AN EVENT OF MAJOR IMPORT
IS NOW OCCURING!
RUFFEll'S
UPHOLSTIRY w._y.w_, .... ....
lfJJtWtlwltN.
C ... eMIM-141-1116 1
Wm. Roberts, in conjunction
with our manufacturers, is
bringing to this area a unique
exhibit of Fine Diamond and
Gold Jewelry.
It will be available for
days only :
AeVAIU\18 (Jan. »Feb., ta): You lain ad-
ditional information concernin1 money, motives
and b1ddea values. Give full play to intuitive in·
telleet. You develop a viable concept .
Pl8CE8 (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Your natural
abWtl• aurge to forefront. Don't jump at first
offer. Gain indicated U williq to play waiting
came. Anotber Pisces and a Virgo figure prominently.
--
CASUAL
CLASSICS
&081:8, PBACB treea and
lllaD7 oUaer lhrubl Dted lpra)'·
1D1 with a dormant 1pray. Your
loeal wWl)'ma can •bow you
a baDdboolr on apraytq or live
you complete bow-to blmNlf.
Aak h1m abOut wiater p,r1IDiq at
Ute 1ame time. Tbla 11 the by to next year's ~wth and moat
1brubs in tb81Udeil wlll leneftt by It.
There you bave lU AcUon
taken DOW will knock out dor-
mant pesta and prevent their ln-
lutatloo next 1prl.Df. .
Weekend
gardemng
checldist
• Make sure tuberous begonia
tubers have been llfted and
stored. Wet soils will rot the
tubers left lD the 1arden.
• Feedin& the lawn llahtly ~ keep it ereener and hea!tblu
duriq the winter montha. i..•
mower blades tbt were mov~
hiper to help come"• 1tatet
during the bot summer months\
can now be lowered.
• Check out the 1001 canes oo
cltmbina roses to make sure they are aecured. Winter rains
and winds tb1a December might
loosen them if you don't.
• Fallen leaves and moet faded
summer annual.a should be re· moved from the 1aroen. Winter
annuals can be put lD to live you
1arden color tn these cooler
months.
• Let your fucb.slu take a rest,
but don't pnme them back imW February.
Pleul9'f platit
The beautiful cameWa, wtth lta prOfUH bloorna. come1 "1
eolon and ftower forma t9·pleue evtl')' 1antener•1 t .....
Careful aelectlon of variltlea make1 -It poulble to have
bloom from fall to early 1ummer. ·
I -S
Timely tips told
on care of. mums
For many people, a traditioaal
Tbanbpvinc mean• turke7.
trtmmtnp, and pumpkin pie on
tbe din1q table, and pats ol
ehryaantbemum.s tb.rQutbout tbe
house.
Afterwards, the turkey la
turned Into ~etrazzlni,
1andwlehet or soup, the mid·
n11bt macken ftn1ab the ~m·
minp and pie, but wbat happens
to the cbryaantbemuma? .
To help care for tbat favorite
Tba.nkapvtng (and any fall oc-
eaaion) houseplant, Raymond F.
Baaek, environmental
bortlculturtst, UC Davia, offen some advice.
temperature, around eo desrees F. .
CUT BACK THE plant to
about ahl inehea wben the
nowen fade and plant it lD the
1arden. Keep 1D mind the plant•
may not do well outdoors in col-.
der climates. Its ability to sur-
vive will depend on the enviroo·
ment, climate and your green
thumb.
PAMSIES ·
&
VIOL:AS
• Oll'IH MOH..flM 14. &lT. 1.-tMt,..
LLOYD'S NURSERY AMD
LANDSCAPE CO., INC.
JOU....,_. .... , .. e.y 1t.1 C-. W.... CA
C714t 646-7441
.......... ~ToS-0..-S•£xpree11 31 IO
GA&DEN 8TO&ES add
florilta offer dozens of ch.ryaan-
them_,.. ill a fine variety al * ora lDclUl!iDC brome, lavendet,
onirp, -ptnk;"ud yellow. ~
purchased, most of tbeae
bouaeplanta are loaded with
bloom, brlebten an7 scene, and
sometimes atea1 the abow.
Cbaoee a aunny location with
well-drained soil. Dig and loosen
the eround to a depth of six
inches, breakin1 up clods. Spade
organic matter lnto the ground.
Rou1h up the plant's roots ao
they no looaer form a aolld mass
and will srow into tbe new aoU.---------------~~~~~~-~---=-----::-------::-1-·'7 Dl1 a bole large enoush to ac-
commodate the ebryaantbemum
and prea aoD ftrDi1)' around the
root.a. Water thorouehlY.
On receiving your cbryaan-
tbemum, you might want to
place tt front stage center. But
avoid pt&tlng it in a bot sunny
place as the plant may die over·
nt1ht if you. do. A eood location
for your chrysanthemum la near
a window which offers lt1bt
(••at or north lllbt la beat) but
not direct IUD. Water to keep the
aoll mollt but be careful that you
do not overwater. Provide lood
air clrculat1on, It Wtea a cool
V our loYinl eare can help the
plant survive and maybe it will
bloom next fall.
\Vmter vegetable
seedling8 ready
Winter vegetable lardenlnl is
one of the 1peclal favon nature
bu bestowed on the California
1aroeoer. U you would harvest
delectable sreena for your din·
ins table durln1 the coolest
month•, drop by your local
nuraery tbla month and aee
what'• available in the way al •eedlinl ve1etablea lD fiats.
THE WONDER OFl ~
~FALL ENTERTAINING
Thanksgiving beckons with open arms. F'amlhes gather I
to welcome the holiday season's overture and the ad\'ent of fall.
Roger's Gardens celebutcs this changinJl oft~ seasons with
fresh ideas to enhance your holidays
Invisible
plant hot
sale item
BARE-ROOT ROSES ARRIVE SOON Roget's Decorates in Autumn
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
(AP) -Just can't aeem
to keep the house planta
"althy? A busineaaman here
tbtnb be bu j~t tbe
tbln1 -an "lDVlalble
Pet Plant" btlled u the
plant that "even you
can't ldlt"
For $2.99, customert
1•t the brl1ht17 packa1ed empt)' clay
pot, bue and eltbt..~te
booklet ol 11(!are lmituc·
tloot."
"It will be UM bottM\.
Mlllnl IMDl In tbe Unit·
ed Stat•• tbl1 Cflrlatmu, • • . predicted
Dand P. WoOdS, OWMI'
and prealdent of All
S.aaom Nurtel'J' and
Garden~.
Tbe 29-1•ar-old ea·
trepnneur l&ld that tn ta•• lut week bu7n1 supped ap 250 of the
p&uta. "It'• ral17 im ..... tl•n, • • 1ald Wood•,
'-.'OH plaDt butinHI
.. boMtl the world'• ......... ,,,. ........ ...
........ .... 14 , .. ,._ .• J.OfeetdMP. r~'lt'a ... ~ w.t;lt to ....
S•VE 1'5'\i ON PREPAID ORDERS PRIOR TO DEC 10
~)}~>~
FINBT N0.1 llADI IAIE-IOOT ROSES.
,.ICED PROM 4.11 over eo vortettea onMng before CMstmas.
YOUR UYINI CHRISTMAS
TUI llCOMll A NEW
LANDICAPI ADDmON.
-
PJ.ilCED FROM J .98 TO 65 00
WE CAN DECORATE YOUR Jlf.ANKllMNG
TAILE..:mankiQMng Is Thu~, Nov.11.
Select from blaUtttul
fal ftowlt":: ::.:::.=.. Wit .
UI IOOf'I fot your tablel' IGket
,
Roger'5 features '311 centerpieces. table and wall
arrangements of the most beautlful kind. Select directly from our
in·store displays or special ordtr )OOr favorite dried or fresh
flower arrangement. Treat yourself to our delillhtful holiday
tablesetlings. Ollna. crys~I. candles. accessorte$. and brasi that
could outfit a band! Come to Roaer's. See JUSt how wonderful
)'OW' holiday can be. The Holiday
Plants & Products On Sale. SALE Tradition.
6" Cyclamen Vivid colors, Reg. ~.95 $6.95
Chacon Bordoil, Reg. $2.98 $1.98
2 gallon Star Pine, Reg. $12.50 $10.50
J
... --
Roger's C4fldlelightlng Celebration. December 5 &
12: 6-9 pm. UaJ!t the nlaht gpectacular at our 7th annual
candlelighUng event. Candles. music. hollda>' refreshments
of Roaer's Garde!\$. buuUfully presented In a itarden of
Christ ntas)'.
A Garden of
OuistmasF~
WUlt to pt "back Bute'' In mme? ,,_. are thtee cba.Dcee
19 Ute ..a ftn daJ'I.
Sactale .. ack Coll•1• '• Fall
Ja.u ICIDlemble c.oneert •tuts at I tontabt ID th• Fine Art• Theater, ,.000 lhr1uerlt1
Parkway, Mtulon Viejo.
rt'BB VOCAL ensemble,·
dlrffted b1 Rieb Allan, Ud the
day .net evenlD• lmtrument.l
enaemblei, led by Bill Kirk, will perform ••GfJorai• on MY Mind.''
"Makin' Wboo~e." •lDay by
DQ" and other aeleetlons.
CurrenUY on the facultJ at
Saddlebaell:, Allan aani for 11.x •
yean With the Dapper Dans of
Dianeyland, a barbershop
quartet and vocal jan lfOUP,
and headed the mualc depart-
ment at Otan1e Hilb School for
11 years.
Kirk ia dlrect.or of comm'1'cial
music and jau studies at s.d-
dlebaell:. He bu maintained an
· active professional playina
acbedule, performln& with
Carmen lllacRae, Paul Horn and ·
Stan Getz.
Ticketa are M or $3.50 f« atu-
dents and Gold Card holden
<.senior
e1tbenl).
J a • I 1reat1 ,.
Bobby Shew
and Joe Far·
1ell will
perform wttb
flve Oran1e
Coast. CoUece
embleeat2 p.lll. Sunday la the occ ~udltorimn, 2'101 Fairiiew Road, ~·-· r-::~au. plieed at sz for adulti ~d '1 for dllldNn urider 12 and
pold Card laolders, ma1 be purchased in the admlillsttatlon
bu.ildlq on campua trom I a.m.
to ooon SibantaJ or at t.be ~. _,_...._...,. Shn, tbe molt aoucbt-atter
ad cnunpet ]>layer in t.M re;
eordln1 and film lnduatry,
performa regularly wltb tbc
Toahiko-Tabackio , Louie
84sllson, Neal Hefti. Don Mema,
Bob norence, Terry Glbbs, Bill
Bolman and Ed Sbaucbnessy
bands.
F A.a&ELL PIA YS tenor sax
·and is one of the leadin1 ~udio
musiclana in Hollywood.
Dr. Charles Rutherford, pro-
f esaor of lnstnamental mus le,
will direct mone than 100 atu·
dents IJ'OIU'pe4 u OCC'a Mon-
day. Tueeday, Friday, Saturday
and Event.na jau ensembles.
They will perform arranae-
ments by Tom Caldararo, Tom
Kubil. Alf Clausen, David
Leech. Doll Schamber, Gordy
Herman, Nell Slate r , Wayne
Harrilcm, Hank LevY and Clare
Fischer.
A" SEVEN-PIECE OCC fusion
ja11/rock band, called "Mer-
rldian.'' wtll offer a free p0b8c
performance at noon Tuesday in
-the campua auditorium.
Saiopbonist Brian ~u has
written the numbers to be
performed by Gordon
Rustovold, baas; Scott FulU,
IUitar; Bruce Simpson, drums; kevin Kearney, plano; Tom 1 Caldararo, trumpet and Mike
Fahn, tn>mbone.
BERLIN FESTIVAL IN COUNTY
German avant-garde, Renaissance and choral music
and German modern dance will be performed Sunday
lhrough Monday at UC Irvine u part of the universily's
Be rlin Festival.
Tbe four events are part of a series of performances
belna staged at UCI throulb early December in connection
with the Berlin-Los Angeles 200 Festival, a proaram under
which West Berlin is sending a variety of art IJ"OUPS to
Sou them California in honor of Los Antelea • 200tb birthday.
Upcoming festival presentations at UCI inch1et.:
-A concert by the avant-garde, electronic No-Set
Ensemble in the Fine Arts Concert Hall at 8 p.m. Satur-
day.
-A concert by the 47-tnember male chorus RIAS
Kammercbor in the Fine Arts Concert Hall at 4 p.m . Sun-
day. RIAS slanda for Radio in American Sector; the 1roup
formed in 1946 to perform a capeUa contemporary choral
works.
-A dans:e recital by the Triadla.cbea Ballet Company
of works by Bauhaus artist Oskar Sehleauner wltb
mus ical backina by the No Set Enaemble. Tbe
performance, directed by Gerhard Bohner, will bepn at
8:IO p.m. Sunday in the Fine Arts Villa&e TbeatAar.
-A proo-am of 16th century music played on authen·
tlc Renal11ance instruments by the nine-member
Mustcaliacbe Compagney 1n the aame theater at 8 p.m.
Monday. Tbe Berlin Fectival events are 1ponaored by the UCJ
Committee for Art.I. Tickett for any performance are SS
for aeneral admiaaloo, $3 for UCJ atudent.i and M for other
atudenta and UCI staff, faculty and Al\lmni AUodaUoo
mem~rs.
Oranp COuntJ'• Pall Fair otten esdtemart tbJ'oaO
Dec. 1.at Loi AlamJtoe Race Cou.ne where aome ol ~tlie
West Cout'• ftDest tboro\llbbred bone1 make poat timea
at noon.
Eleven races are acheduled dUly at dlatances of m
turtoiip to a mile and an etptb, wl~ e!Pt ~bred
races ~ day alone wttb tWQ quarwrhone evcts and an Appa)ooaa race. '
GRANDSTAND ADlll8810N la $2.2.5,, with aenior
cltbem admitted next Friday for a dollar.
There'll be no cbarae -escept the $1 partinc fee -
for fair events in tbe massive puklnc lot J>eCbmln• at noop and open until 9 p.m., a fair 1pokeswoman an-
nouneed.
The carnival -complete with rides and 1amea of
chance, and · • bevy of cbarlty~per•ted same and tun
bootha -baa a big white tent as lta center landmark.
Daily events this year include an Afncan S.lar\
Villaae when for $1 viaitcn can observe animals in a
. wildllfe-preeerve aettinc.
~
ALSO UNDEa WAY IS a talent aearcb that this year
bas garnered 138 acts and 8'10 contestants vyin& for $5,000
in prilel in daily cont.eats between 7 and 9 p.m. ~. ·
There ia a pettiQI fa.?JD and creative a:rta procram for
younpten and coulitry cont.eata includinl nail-driving,
rooster crowing and bog calltn1 several Umes a day.
8IO-JUMll ER FUPI DURING PAU. PAIR EOt9fT10N
Ac:rclMlk; ioullMa ................... , and.......,
A Freeatyle Ski Show, faturint demonstrations,
aerial ski jumps and ballet ati.lq in keepinc with tbl.s
year's winter theme, contlnuea throuCb Sunday.
Other special Fall Fair eventa include:
TODAY
· -Antique appraisals ($1 charlefor charity), 1-7 p.m.
SATVSDAY
-Cookout King competition for men, 10 a .m. to 4 p.m .
-Antique appraisala, DOOD to 7 p.m.
SUNDAY
-Chinese Association ol Orange County dancing ez-
hibit, 2:30 p.m .
-KW1Z radio's chili co$.off, noon to 4 p.m.
-Sonpriten Day muatC, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
-Sonpriters Evaluation ($3 per song for charity) 11
a .m. to3p.m .
NOV. ZS
-Pet Rabbit Show, 2 p.m.
-Indian Sand Paint.ina demonstration, noon to 2 p.m.
NOV. ZI
-Antique appraila.11, 3-7 p.m.
-Indian Sand Patntiftt demomtration, noon to2 p.m .
NOV.•
-Chinese A.aaoclatioo of Oranae County dancinJ
demomtration, 1:30p.m . -A.rt competition and sale, noon to 4 p.m.
-Water color demonstration by Costa Meaan Sooiy
West, 1-5 p.m .
For even more 1ood ol' faabloiied tun, allp lDto )'OW'
wool and denim and down-bmne ftdie of ml.D(t and bead
for the country fair in Sllvvado CaQOD ttm .-a.
Thia loth annual event featurea 100 booth• of
handmade aru and eraftl and tbie Wild West antlca ol tbe Silver.do charade.rt wbo ~ cowbioJ tnea, a.Jorm
brawll ud dance ball melOdramu.
. .
•
.
AMla .... JIOt.Jl ML:LST WW._...,.... .......... U. LA Mar .. CMc .,,...._, M
lie Am.nc.. Dence naeew ClltelW• ... tts
1Stl\ .WWt"MrY. u~ .. •rwctkW\ o1 eurctftMM the <OMPM~ wtttt11rterm at the thN .. r, ,.., Le MW• Blvd., et a. For
tlck•t lnformetlon call ~o.
I
ORt .. MA'-DAMC• CR•ATIOMI WUI b9 un-:
YeJltd tonight et C.t State Fulterton'1 little Theater as thf •nc• depertment continues its Fall Dance Thffter through SUnday. SW.
dents and faculty will 1>1rtlcl.,.. In the I
p.m. program with• 5 P·'r.· curteln SUnday.
More than 20 dancers wllt ~. kick end
Jump to the tunes of 8ertott ind Elton John. ~or ticket lnf«m.tlon cell 77).3371. ·
--"GODSNLL," a mtJSlcet Interpretation of
the Gospel of St. Matthew continues et the
Cabrfllo Playhouse 202 Ave. C.brllto, Sen Clemente, tonight end 5aturday at I p.m.
Featured In the muslcet production wlll be
Richard Yorba Prlscllle Regnier Sanford,
Dennis Bryan ~sand Harriet Whit-
meyer. For tlckeHniOrmetlon cell 492"°565.
I "SAVAGES," the story of e British dlpfomat
who ts kJdnepped and held hostaae by • · group of urban guerrntes f n BrezlT;con-
tlnues at Orange Coast Cotleoe's Drama Lab
Theater tonight end Saturday at I. Tkkets
are on sate at the Box Office from 8 a.m. to
noon Saturday.
"THE PAISLEY CONV8RTt8L:E/' a com·
edy about a .young couple Who SPlh on their
wedding anniversary opens tonight at Sad-
dteback Valley Communtty ThNter, 25741-C
Obrero, Mission Viejo. Fe...,red wltl be Lyn
Wagner and Stwe Cftakos under tbe dfrec·
tlon of Art Wtnstow. The ptay wUI continue Friday and Saturday nights throUgh Dec. 13
at 8 p. m, For reservations catt ~.
TO PORTRAY YOUNG IRL!NE MANoRELl
Heather HaaH of lrvtn. In TV MrtH
Early start
Irvine dancer on TV
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of .. o.My"9t ....
TV viewers wlJI have a chance to see
Irvine's Heather Haase on tbe "Barbara Man·
drell and the Mandrell Slaters"' special, on
Saturday. Nov. 29.
The 8-year·old plays the part of Irlene Man·
drell as a child in the first of a continulnl aeries
on NBC at 8 p.m.
IT TOOi{ SOME 2C) ·mtervlews before the
spunky bldnde landed her first actin& job two
years ago.-Since then •h• bu appeared ln Mac·
Donalds, Cheerios, Mattel Toy and Alpha Beta
com merclata. .
Acting Isn't aJI tun, thouab. After 1cbool
Heather attends dancln1 leasona at lrvlne
Dance Academy, 1ln1ln1 and •ctlna leaou in
Hollywood. followed by tap lesaom.
The cost for all theae cla.IMI comel to '300
a month, accord.in• to her mother, Caroll111 De Vore, who aald, "We 'don't 1poll her. WMn sbe
gell home ah•'• just a Nsular kid."
JIEATRER WILL appear reSUW"b' oo dl9
new televt1\on show. Soedll lutlta anearlnt 1turday Include: ··Dolly Parton, :Jttnny
Ro1era, John Schnelder from t.M "l>Uktl ot Hazzard .. anclthe Krofft PupPIU.
t•YUUl SUNDAY PLAYHOUSE presents
th9 Seddteblck COncert Chorale In a 2 p.m.
concert SUnday at the Turtle Rock eom. unity Cent.r, 1 Sunnyhllt Drive. Tickets
re $3 for adUlts end $2 for seniors and stu-
dents.
A FREE COMCl!RT ts being offered Tues-
day by baritone OU.ne Wlpperman et
Orang4t Coast College's Fine Arts Hatt 119 at noon. The OCC music major wfll perform
works by Gtuck, Mozart and Vaughan-
WUUams afong with accompanist Joane
Wllhlte.
A GIRMAN INSANa ASYLUM Is the set·
ting for "The Physicists,"• dirk Comedy
berng .,,....m9d tionJoht and s.tuidey at uc
trvt,...s Fine Arts VIiiage at a. Friedrich
Durrenmatt'• pl•Y focuses on three nuclMr physicists who are Inmates In the asylum.
Tickets are S2 for audults end $1 for stUdents
at the Fine Arts Box Office.
EAST MEETS WEST during the cultural
and trllde J1pan Expo '80 at the Los Angeles Convention Centar tonight thl'CMIOh SUnday
from noon to 10 p.m. More tttan 80 booths
dlsplaylng Japanese products, crafts, arts,
foods Md setvlces flll the arena. Admission
Is $2 for adults and $1 for chltdren.
s,• ANTIQUE TOYS will be on dlapfay
Sunday at U. Rochell• conventlon Center,
3333 l.Akewood Blvd., Long 8Nch, during
the 33rd West Coast Toy Collectors lhOW. Featured from 9,A.m. to 3 p.m. wm be cast
BAROQUE CHAMBER MUSIC wm be performed Sunday by the Cal Stat. Long
~ach Coflegfum Muslcum In the StUdto
Theater, 6101 E. Seventh St. Tickets for the I
p.m. concert are $2 for edults ahd $1 for Stu· dents one hour before curtain at the campus
bo>tOfflc-.
Iron soldiers froiri the 1920s, Charlle McC•rthY and Popeyewlnd-UpdoUs,
·and electrlcal mechanical tr•lns from Llollet
Amerlc:en Flyer. Admission 11$1.50.
NEW WAYB ROCK descendS on the C.I
State Fullerton Pub tonight as the Nu kats quartet performs their hltl "t Was•
THnege Stiapllfter" end "Lost My TV
Gulde." TN grOUt> will perlOrm •lectlons
from their recentt~:,ieased album during the 9 and 11 p.m. s s. Tickets are $2.50 for
COME 8UY A DOLL during Goodwill In· :...:. dUstrtes 14th annvat Doti Fair saturday•t ttt.lr Senta Ana store at Fifth and Fairview strffts. The public Is Invited to purchate an-..
tlque and cotlec:tor: dolls, along wfttt toys
from fore km countries. Olsneyland's Atlee In Wonderfand wlll be on hand et 11 a.m. to
present her tOOk .. llke doll. Proceeds from
the sate benefit the rehabllttatton eoency.
ORGANIST JUSTIN COLYAR and Costa
Mesa 90Pf•no Keren Avis wlll present re-cital Sunday et U'9 First Prftbyterlan
Church, at Euclid Street and Chapman
Hutts and $2 for students.
NEW YORK CITY OPERA continues Its
engagement at the Musrc Center's Pavlllon
'l:;iolJen ·" ,, ~ Oren~ Coat Col• Community S.rvlu Offlu
Civic Ballet of Southern Callfornla In
·~· Si/:;), agon ' ·_ -NUTCRACKER
BALLET'S GRACEFUL HOLIOA Y FANTASY
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN ~S ~
Specializing. In Chinese A la C.arte Dishes ~
.................. -.............. .......
......... Nov. 10 - 8 p.m.
Lunch. Dinner Dally • Food To Take Out
4711 C...,_ JOJJ ...._. ltYt&.
OCC AUDITORIUM
OIA ... I • 710.7171 COSTA MISA
Fairview & ArHngton, Cotta M9aa
CleM4......,. 642-7142 • 6)1.ftl I
Ge,,.ral Adm/11/on: $3 _. Chlldrtn Under 12: $2
Tlcketa at Door -Credit Carda/Info.: 55&-5527
Luk•'• lactu1lvely
l•lllSTOCI• fOOYWUI SllOP lal
Caltnse Fiii
••t here or
t•k• home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
BERLIN/LOS ANGELES
BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION 1980-81
at
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, mVINE
Nov. 22
UC trvlne
Concert Hall
8p.m.
Nov. 23
UC Irvine
Concert Hall
4p.m.
Nov. 23
UC frvlne
VIiiage
Theater
1:30p.m.
In Cooperation with
Der. Senator fur Kulturelle Angelegenheiten,
Welt Berlin, Germany
<TM Senate For Culture)
PREIENTI
No.. Set EnMmble. Electronic, com-puter, and percussion Instruments
featured In this unusual evening of
lmprovls.tional music by the flw-member No-Set En•mbte of Berlin.
Tickets $5, $4, $3 UCI studentS.
RIAS K1mmerchor In Concert. The •7-m•mber a capella choir, presents a program of atanderd and contem-
porary wonc1.
Tickets $5, $4, S3 UCI students.
Oskar Sctilemmer uhd Tanz with
c:tencera Gerhard 8.ohner(pJesslc• Ebert Terent• Ka Iba, Phil Kitner;
chorqraphy l'>Y Gerhard Bot......,..
Based on the work of artist/dancer
Olkar Schlemmer.
Tickets $5, $4, p UCI students..
"'Mu11can1c"e Compegnte. Nin•
young arttltl perfOrm musk of the 16th end 17tti '9flturles on "lstorlc
mualcal tnstrurnents.
Tickets $5, $4, $.1 UCI students.
Kreu11»eroer Strelc"quartett wlll
· give a ~ dernon.tretton tor 1tudem1 lftd community. Admission
''"·
0
FOR INPORMATION 714 • l:IHPI
"'f
SNOW Ml LOY••• •re ''"''lid to the Wlr.-terfeet'm oPenlno Nov. •at tM Aftillelm eonvenuoneentlr. Rettat .... ff'GM....,... the country wltl be dlSPl•yltM lkl _.pmtne
end dothel during the thNIHlay .wnt. A~·,
tire c:Mfn lnstalflno contest wm be flfmed
Nov. •~few an upcoming llltM"t Of "Games Pl•Y•" eontettants are lr.-vlttd to qual fy tor the mHt ~,at the
Ofd WOrJd Malt In HunttnGton BNch at 11 a.m.
•ILLY BISMOPGOaSTOWARCOntl..,..8'
the M8f1t Teper Forum thrOUCllh NoY. 30. Tr.
two-man music•• Is beseid an the Ut. of
CaMdfen wortd War • Ftytng .-Wltllem Avery BJshOp, whO shot doWn n .,.,.,.. In
ten .thM one year. For ticket lntorm.tlan c:att C213> 972-765-4.
• REX HARRISON ~reates his mest
memorable role as Professor Henry HIOglns during the opening of "My Fair Lady"
T"urtday at the Pantagu Theater. The music.al Is now on a Umfted cross-country
tour prior to Broactway. For tleket tnforma· tlon can (213) 460-2Q97.
•ERL:IN/LA -PeSTIYAL continues et
UCLA tonight as the university presents
famed chanteuse of cabaret Btendlne Eb-•nr.r during an 8:30 p.m. performance In the
In ernetlonat Student Center, 1023 Hltprd Ave. Tickets are $7.
SCOUT·A•lltAMA COMl!S TO the CON
Meu FalrOr'ounds Saturday es more ~n
50,000 visitors ere expected to SH the 1990
Boy SCout attraction. For more Information
about the outdoor sldlts al)d sports · demonstr.itonscelt 83C)..5876.
HEAR YE!!
HEAR YE!!
ThePllgrl•
Never Had
It So Good!
.. Your Choice: ..... ,_ .. ..,
•YlaJ} ....... ....
..... 51r1 ... ....
THAMKSGIVIMG
DINNER
Only
5691·
Dinner ~II Be~ 12 00 Noon til 9-00 p.m.
MAD YOUS llSBY,ATIOMS LULT
1127 MAIN A'I-'7MJOO
e = -· ,C-• -· -
, I
I
Tll& ArG&B•BNTJOND tetmeota la· volvtACltoal-"Sur1ery, .. ID wblcbhe!Sbaytq
a tooth utracted by a noviee deintla, ud ''The
Def esllel .. Creature,•• wbiliila JM laaa a J)alDful
eue of Pit -are the tarmSest of U.. a.Jlbt.
KokoJ'1 ttrua11e with a diW·Jmottn1 4tiDUlt (Cbuek ~o~Connor) wm tr111er empatbie
respouea tbfouabOut the audlenee.
OttieraeeneadonOtfareaoweU. ''Tbe.Goftl'-
The llttle 35111m
pocket c.mera with
big camera teeturea.
• Weighs iust 7 .'9 ounces in self-contained sliding
case. Measures about the
size of a cigarette package .
• Apertu~ority
automatic exposure -)00
jtJst select the aperture and
the camera sets the shutter
speed.
•Easy, rangefinder
tocusma.
.m.n:• --~
The White Oak
Thanksgiving
A beautiful, new restaurant
carries on the tradition of
holiday dining at the Newporter.
Roast Young Tom Turkey •..... 8.95
Pinmut-Apple dressmz , gibln gravy and cranberry lauce.
Prime Rib of Bee£ . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.50
Au jw with creamed Hcmcadilh sauce.
Minted Trout . . . • . . • . . . . . . • . . 10 . .25
Stuffed with mint, wrapJ>«l m bacon and gmcly saut«d.
New Yprk Sirloin Steak ....... 13.95
Choice cu~of fine bttf prepared to your order.
.Broiled Lamb Chops ......... 13.50
Broiled to ~/ecuon and ierwd with mint jelly.
Children unda 10
Turkey . • • . . • . • . • . . . . • • . . . . . . 6.25
Prime Rib . . . • . • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.50
En trees include choice of .soup or salad,
fresh vegetables, dessert and beverage.
Please make reservations early ... phone today
(714) 644-1700.
~ weekdays for luncheon,
dinner rµghtly and Sunday Brunch.
• t
A ronto Rlstorante melds
a new dimension to
lqlng out In Costa Mesa.
With unrtvalecl northern
Italian cuisine. Gradous
Continental aervtce. And a
decor that's elegant, yet
1ubcluecl. ~lgnecl for com-
fort.. wheQler you Join Ulfor
codctalls, our magnlftceqt
Sunday cham~gne buffet
bnanch or a full~·
LUNCH & DINNER
AT PRONTO
is a culinary event
Authentic northern Italian
cuisine begins with only
the freshest
ingredients -choice
veal, searood and
beef -masterfully
prepared and
presented. Even
the pasta is hand·spun each
day, right t>efore your eyes.
A cellar of fine wines and
• • •
homemade desserts
complements any meal.
Or ... try our magnificent 50 item
Sunday Brunch with
complimentary champagne.
HAPPY HOUR
AT.PRONTO
.. ._
••
SUNDAY
BUFFET BRUNCH
AT PRONTO
is the perfect way to
celebrate sunset with a
friend. Enjoy congenial
conversation over your
favorite cocktail.
is a veritable feast including 50
sumptuous dishes. From
specialties like Eggs Florentine
and Flounder Filet AJmandine -
to classic favorites like fresh
roosted turkey and ham.
Accompanied with fresh baked
breads and pastries. And cil~~ complimentary champagne.
And select from an entire
buffet of delicious hot and cold
hor d'oeuvres-compliments of
the house, of course. Happy Hour
is from 4 to 8 p.m.
Sunday Buffet Brunch is served
from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Banquet facilities available.
seven nights
a week. /It SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Fashion Wing Upper Level
Private Entr2mce
Blue Level Parking Garage
For reservations can:
54().8038
.,
·1
.{
.·1
. i •• , .
,.
,•
j
I j
J
I
Featuring Our Complete
Dinner Menu Plus
A Traditional
~a;.;r~;;
and All the Trimmings For Just
8.45 ·.
Children's Portions Available
Reservations Accepted • 642-2295
333"! West Pacil1c Coast Highway
(Ju~t South of Newport Blvd.)
Hours: U Noon to 8:00 PM
Children under 7, $2.95
Buffet served 11 AM -3 PM
Featuring:
ROAST TURKEY & BAKED HAM
Pllu Salad Bar. F~lh Ve1etab,., Potato,
Dre11lng & Gravy, Pumpkin Pit/
Special mtnu served 5·10 PM
A• I '?t• .utcl trldlUM•"U ..... \Ml P19:-v14u • l•tllltt adn1:1taa• bte••H 9ut Tb.na,·1 "98!! wlU ~ altl• _. Mlttt • ,......_ .._. • ...._ flalUr Uia jobl la ae·
~-s~·*··· ~ el .... !O"'W'lll ..... WeM IU?• v~r~ dall ... to ucertalD ddl ,.rtial ~·to..., hoUdt.1 an.rm,. ....... ..,.,... N=N naaaon w .ut teanu. the &t Old.fublOGed dlMtt' 'by aemnt the
wbole ~.Dad, Wlleii be prefen the waiter or
ea~ to tu• ov•s;, WW be wflcome to carve. Tbe JDeDU wOJ a1IO hiclude rell.lh \J'iy, 1allld,
••Ht p=~~aahed ~ioet. 1ravy, corn1 1uea btan1,
brHa 4rfflln10 crao·
Nn'Y aauce add cbolce
of mhlc• or pumpldn
pie. Prtoe for u.e dlb.ner 11 $12.95 tor ~ta. $5.50 for dalldrta ~ 12,
with • .mlidmum aar1e
Ol '31.'15 far each pan,:
tn ,114 Up Md.ldoaal.
Dinner alttinp m&y
be echeduled from noon·
enUl I p.m. Take-bome ba11 for leftoyer ,
turkey. Re1ervatlon1:
M0...000.
l!UZABETB BOW AaD'I CUrta1o Call Di.Dner
Theater will offer an ••otd Fuhloiried Oklahoma
TbanbelVinl" in keeplnl flttb itl current produc·
lion, Rodlen and H•mme~·· "Oklahoma!" The theater will be senint turkey with
Oklahoma dre11ln1, wblpped Potatoes, 1lblet
1ravy, ve1etables. aoup, salad and cranberry
=.:.p._...,., ...........
J\::r~2J=s.m:r=
aumn llllOWN'9---. Blvd., lbitlll,._ ....-, "9Jl,Mlt a
feut wttb .u.. rUlia& .tro. &Ill
roasted yoag tom tur,•1 to prim• rt aad AUltr~ 1ot*ter t.ll The Wrtey feut comPMl.9 wlt.b all &lit Ulm·
mln11, la tabbed at ii.ts 1or· adwta Ud N .• '°" chtldren, Service from noon. RtHrvatloaa:
·8'2·eeo2.
THE UGIST&Y HOTEL, lMOO MacArthur
1'1vd., Irvine, la 1ervln1 a 'lb•nlrqiriq bnmcb in
the GraDd Porta1e from 11to3. Selectlool include
roast turkey, baked ham, rout le1 ~ laJnb, lttlf.
fin1, salads and desserts; compUm~'·cbam·
pape, too, with a tab of $12.'5 for adulti!W $'1.95
for children under 12. •
From e to 10 diners can enjoy the same fare
with a la cane service and IOft piano muaJe. com·
plete at $13.50. plus the reiutar menu. The Gazebo
will feature tbe 1ame entreea tbroU1bout the day <Bf• 'l'llANK8GlVING, Pase en
A feast you'll·
give thanks for.
We're getting ready to truly feast you this ThanksgMn9.
There's a choke of dellclous entrtcs to delight everyone.
lnc.ludlng young Tom turkey, roasted to perfection wllh
all the trimmings. And you'll thank us ror the price. This
turkey feast Is only $8.95 for adults, and $4.95 for kids.
Or choose socculent Prime Rib. Or even Australian lobster
tail. certainly aR unusual treat for Thanksgiving,
Join us for a very special dinner on this very special occa·
~ion. You'll discover a feast that s worthy of Thanksgiving.
~~
Open at Noon
" • ......,Browns. '---:8 /Ai 3Ttte prime' steel< place·
Remember those great Thanksgiving dinners you enjoyed so much?
The Newport Beach Marriott' iflvltes you to have an Old Fashioned
Thanksgiving tuckey dinner with us. You'll be carving your own turkey
and the leftovers beJong to you.
Our holiday entertainment will t>e the
famous Marriott twin pianos. /
For Information and reservation•
Phone (714) a«MO()O Ext 6t00
Opens Sunday, November 23
Great
restaurants
are· dby
their sauces.
The White Oak will provide
you with 20 wonderful ways
to judge us. )
Sauce Marsala Sauce Bearnaise
Sauce Cashmere Vineyard Sauce
Sauce Viennoise Indian Curry Sauce
Hollandaiae Sauce Sauce Bigarrade
Sauce Au Poivte Dill Sauce
Sauce Jus Sauce Bordel.aisr
Mint Sauce Sauce Velote
... Red Manow Sauce Garlic Butter Sauce
Fisherman'• Sauce Cucumber Sauce
Sauce Maison Sauce Chasseur
,
Judge for yourself.
Serving luncheon weekdays,
dinner nightly and Sunday Brunch.
---·----
..
~-VERY
SPECIAL DINING
EXPERIENCE
AT
tltalt of tfJt l»balt
2 to 10 P.M.
<..._fl/'-'~ "'*"" c, ..... W.J _,,. ,_,. ,,.,,.,.. ., ,,,.,....,.,
ROAST TENDER YOUNG TOM TURKEY 7.9S
*<).A\1(C JC HWO:t• ~ '•11uu flt)til: M:••tO .....
0-U\.-.C ~Lll ••"•a .. t•.......t••• a I
NEW YORK STEAK ... """"'-· ...• 9.9S
ROAST LEG OF LAMB """ ~·· IHL> ••• 8. 95
FRESH STUFFED LOCAL LOBSTER . . . 8. 9S
HM w,,..... p., •jt~ H,-..J, \e.,•
lt• .. ,..41o11 Jo,.. • lu,,,-1 ( ,..,.... ,_,' ,. .. , .. , ' .. ,,__ ,,.. ., .,.,.
CHILDREN'S DINNER
~.,., ......
ri..-o1
•OAIT rua1uv •OAIT LAM•
Sl.95
Rtserv•t•on• For Per11n of 10 o. More
AT THE BALBOA PAVILION
400MAIN STREET
BALBOA PENINSULA 673-4633
8oallitiaMJ
and AD the litrrimtnQs For Just
'Paternity' Cast
HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Juanita lfoore,
nominated for an Academy Awanlfor "ImttaUon
of Life" in 1959, will co-star with Burt Reynolds in "Paternity."
The movie ia currently in production in New
York, with comedian David Steinbel'I making bis
direclorialdebut.
I•
I
I ,,
~~Nol!.
LOISTB SEASON IS Halt!!!
:cowt.nwl.UMCHIOM' !11 a.m.-4p.m.) (~ locat Lobltw • • • $6.IOI " cowun •••• Fri .. s.t. & Son.
(Whole local lobster .. SI I.tit·
G-lf,.. '" O>f.,>f1st6
'":'.'' rt,.s Restaurant •
Co..uftDll• Mon.thruThura. o,.lwlllr (08ily}(11 a.m.·1 :30p.m.)
(~Local Loblter ••• $7.tlt (~Local Lobeter ..... ,.,
• D .... HOUIS:W...n.-41e IO•Fft.W41o II• S..).IO
;: . O' 1 n r .,, dlr•S,._. ••. $3.71
...... S. .. aad..., COWU'l'ICAiMHea
SUNDAY BRUNCH (Compllmentsy Champegne)
RAVED 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. •OYSTER BAA ONN 11 A.M.·1:M A.M.
_ 34150 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
DANA POINT · · . CAlftPle P•l1dne> Rea. 493-26o3 ,
'?/fUl{/y;Pfg
~~ ~e -·~ue~are ~auee
Qtrofnn ~e
Serving Thankaglvlng Dinner Noon until 11 p.m.
ASSORTED CHILlED Rl!LISH TRAY
TURKEY MULLIOATAWN~Y SOUi'
HEAii TS OF LETTUCE, 1000 ISlAND DRUSI NG
OR JELLO FRUIT SALAD
~
ROAST TOM TURKEY
fRESH CRANBERRIES, SAVOflY DRESSING
GIBLET GRAVY
CANDIED SWEh POTATOES, CREAMl!:D ONIONS, TOASTED At.MONOS
HOT MINCE PIE OR "-'Mf'KIN l'IE WH""EO Cfll!:AM
OOF,EE TtA MILK
1.95
CHILDREN UNOf!ll 12
4.95 ......,.....
Otl>w~iota
OUCK A LA CROWN HOUll
CR .. llOASTIO HAl.F LONG IC'lANO DUCK
OLAZIO ,RUIT
11.95
and Cocktail Lo.unge
~·~SCAMPI
(shrimp in herb wine sauce)
Reci-'$12.95
Served with Soup du Jour or salad, rice pilaf
or baked Potato. Vegetable de Gardiner.
SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
I I :JO to 2:30 .
On-the-mall at South Coast Plaza nea he Carousel
ontheFirstlevel.Forreservationscall:540-8822
The White Oak
'Ibis Stmday, a beautiful new
restaurant opens to carry-on the
tradition of a sumptuous brunch at
1be Newporter.
The White Oak buffet brunch feature<;
over 20 different hot and cold items,
priced at $9.25 per person.
Assorted Salads
Scrambled E~
Quiche Lorraine
Sausage Patties
Grilled Ham
Saute61 Chicken LitJerS
Cheese Blint:tes with Blueberries
Chipped Beef with Rolls
Roast Chicken
Carwd Smoktd Turl<ey ar Ham
Assorted B,mds and ~
(714) 640-4182
Serving SUnday Bnmch
&om 10 a.m. until 2 ~
. •, • • • •
Our nwwgMng brunch ls strnpfy plumpc:uous:
r<XL'>t turlccy. baked h2m. mast leg d lamb. andllng. sa.bcb. dct&ctU-
a spl'c:'ad to put cvm grandma to~.
Add <;parldlng complimentary~ and thc Dick ~U lHo.
for a hoUday meal that will ICart a new CamlJy tradition.
Served 11 I() ;\ In the elegant Gnnd l\>nagc.
Adults. $12.95. children 12 and un<kr. 17.9'
EvcniflR dlnc:TS will !Ind the sanll' lilrc with a la carte 9Cl'Yk:c
and soft piano music. complete :u so.so. plus our regular menu
Serving !'rum 6 to 10
The: infunnal Gaz.cho will abt> fcatutt lhnc special mtrca
throughout the day. at '8.~0 for adults, l(,,se) for children.
Re1ttvat1ons rcqucstcd: 1~2-sm
~REGISTRY
t&tOO MacArthur Boulevard. Uvtnc. CA
,,... ..._,.., thd ,,.,,, .... ~ ... ·-..,.._
0/4 ~ . ' . ,.
A'J ,,._ i I ....,_...,_,. • . '
d
Tiii CANllR¥· .
L.u.,.,.CH~• FEATURE OF THE MONTH
" llii'VI""'• 11:30-3:00 MON..sAT.
'.EARLY DIMERS: SPE5~$M~~-~™
FRESH FISH OF THE DAY ., .. TERIYAl<S BAOCHETTI!
HAPPY HOUR: .C:OCM:OO MOH.· FRI.
DRAFT BEER .60 WELL DRINKS .80
FREE CANNERY Cl.AM CHOWDER
UYl•laTAll•fl'
··------~NOW •HOWING------
,. .. .. 1U1U ._ • wmmsm
Woodbnd(t ClMrN 'fltJO C1ntdomt Stadium Of1we In CiMlnl w.st
sst-0655 a30-6990 (7141634·2553 639· mo nt ·i93S
•35nwft ~8Y
I~ POWERHOUSE OF A FILM •••
Aklra Kurosawa Is a leadlng candidate tor the greatest
fMng .,,m director." -.JD Ktvl. NE\llWIEEK MAGAZJN£
"AWESOME ••. Cheold ...........
ha newr been more
~"
"A TRIUMPH •••
•wort< by a masaer.'
-ic.t'ln-.
lOSANQllS nMIS
"AN EXTRAORDINARY
FILM ••• ''
-Arwlfwl s.ttl.
SA'J'\MQAYlll\ll!W
"A VISUAL _ ..... ,,
r~•···
ENTaEES bead the holiday bW of fare
Tale of the Whale, in tbe Balboa Pavilion. a1n St., on the Penlnaula. Rout tender young
turkey ii tabbed at $'1.95; New York steak,
i rout le1 of lamb, $8.95; fresh stuffed local
lo ••. 95. • All dinners include choice of soup or salad, wJi ped potatoe1 and •ravy, candled 1weet
Po toes, fresh 1arden ve•etable, mince or ,.llfll:ID ple and beveraae. Children, under 12,
ve a choice of rout turkey or rout lamb for
'fil&9en'ationa -for parties of 10 or more OnJy
.,lean, taut and powerful. One of the finest
films of 1980.'
-Jim Brown, KNBC·TV
"GLORIA" (PG)
l'W9
''OtAP'mt TWO" (PG)
"OMNE MADNESS" (") ._...
"UP IN SMOU" (R)
\
-,an,.....wordlt.om were
..... ,.. .... Ml'YOUI '*8UH
II ,ei • IUtldaa wroq, J can't .... ~:,_ a-.-:-a of m1 unoon ce.ar ........ .
If ... DllieY Wit appre lY ,
wu ...-. Autb Warrick wu to ~la ftnt "" •••d.lnf l•dJ. "loAI ot tlW &outb," which la
baaed on tM Uncle Remua atorfff by
:Joel <>..,..r Harrta1 w11 Dtaney'1
t Uv.aeuan 1to1'1 aram1t111Uon.
TBS ANl•AnON ln th• fthn waa uatd u a l'°'1 within th• 1tory, to U·
~trate Uncle Remua' folk tllu. '"Solal of the South' will always bt
.. Yff1 1pectal movie to me," 11td
lllU ,Wlf'l'lc-. "It WH I wonderful
eapertence worklnt for Walt Dllney z
.tbo bad been bne of my h•roet ana
' ttr bttame • veey1 cloat pertonal .,~ 1
movit cloaelY paralleled my n.watm life at the time," 11ld Warlick. "I wu married to Erle Roll lD real
llf•, u well •• on th• 1c:reeQ. Wt
1 .bad a 10D named Jon, Uke in the ftlm,
,,9,\ad-we were alto havll\1 marital pro-blema.
"IN ftlB &ND of 'Soni ol the
South,' everythln1 worked out and
evel'J(IDe Und hap~lly ever after. t'a a lbame lt doesn t alwaya happen
that •11 bi real lit•, Eric: and I
Dt'Taep1rlted abortly thereafter."
'he Unlike the anobby patrician, Miu
Sally, wbo tent Uncle Remus away in
lilL"Soq of ~ South,•• Ruth Warrick
-aea. .. e,~· """• t90UM••• ,, baMCI., tM 1rt1.......,.ldwirJN ot..,. ...... NCk-.r~RObet1 M«cucd, fNY.tomeidjy bi,...
mtmNrtd et the fllm th.t launched Ktor Ray Sharkey. Y• .,.,t MW to bl 1 pop music !bUft to· en thll fllm or Sharkey'•
rtul P9rl0rmanc• .. • un-•w • ~turns ~Y McH fNm hit Uf'Wn IS.Uen
n.11hb0rflood Into natlonat Malrt·
thr°"-Alttf"nettty nurM"lfkl, bUlty 4190fT*\llC end promo-, tlon•f flnlua, Sharkey 11 cono
slta.hUy faaclnttlng -Ytl amai·
lngly sympattietlc even In his mo1t tyr-nnlcal momentt. In
IUPPor11"9 rote, Ptul Lind end
Ptttr 0.lfegf\tr: Ire tKCtllent 11 thinly CUIOUIMd tdltlonl of
f'r1nklt Av•lon and f'•blan •
Olrector Taylor Hackford hH done • terrific jOb capturing rock
music'• pre-conolomer•t• fnfan-cv, WMn Ill YOU nHcMd to get go. Ing WI-• dKtnt IOf'lg, •
mOdlcum of stage pre1tnce, 1 llt·
tie PIYOI• fnd 1 m•n•r with chutz~h. Rated PG, with some talk •bout Nx but Vtr'Y llttl• on-C•m•ra 11et1on.
"01itDINA9'Y ... O~L.•" ls en
emotionally lhatterlno ex·
perltnct, lar0tlY because of• r•· markable per'formanc• by Tim
Hutton. He 11 totally ablorbed In
the ponrav11 of •high sct\oOter "n1blt to cope with gullt over tht ... 1 •-...Aa•y ,.__1_ ... u •ccldtntal dfath of hi• older
.. 9"VW9 ,. •" -broth«. Donald Sutherland and In ortglMt 'loni of loulh' Mary Tyler Noor• art nls pyultd P1rtntJ, Judd Hirsch n11
b11 dedieated her Ult to helplnt the detp-problr'IQ psycn11trl1t. Olrec·
underprtvt.Je1ed. . tor Robert Redford's compassion
She II one o/ the foundera of Opera, tor tnt characters Is ••pressed In tJon Sootatrtp in Wattl, an act.1ve • every scene. An Impressive
member of the Mart.Jn Luther K1nl ecMevtment for •II, ess>«l•llY
Society and b11 tau1bt black itudJa vouno Hutton. Rated R because
ln Harlem. of l•riauaoe.
"ONl·TfllCK PONY" continues
"THE UNCLE Remu.a 1tortes are a tht pop.fame-ls rotten trend
very important part of black bla· already explored by "The Rose,"
tory," she said. "''Honeysuckle Rose," "CO.I
"Th 11 Af l f lk I Miner's Daughter" and ey are rea Y r can ° ta ea "Stardust Memories." This time brou1ht over by the blac:kl ln the the ego Journey Is taken by Paul
1800• and 1700s. They were my Simon, who wrote the script and
favorite stories as a child. I read the sonas end plavs a 1960s orotest
Uncle Remus atoriea to my children slngertrylngtomakeacom• and am now reading them to my back In 198C). While Simon's lald-
grandchUdren." back style fits his wryly In-
'ORlmt ITAR OI' 'TM ROCKY HOll..oR '9CTUM IHOW' ..._, . ..,nm C""1 le c1ec ~'".,..,,... ....,..
ttlllgent tongl, It'• too cotorlfts falls In tow with an actress who to carry a movie. like the 1tarred rn t ..... t LA
sl"9•t'1 "tr•nQtd wit• <Btafr befort his ti=.~! r::::,:..s Brown>, viewers can fMI no aym-hlmself by stlf..,ypnosls rom tht .,_thy for hi• dogged Mlf· present to 191~. and they become
lndufgenct. Rattd R. lovers until lime ovtrtakts them.
"MIDDLl!AGI! caAZY" It
baHd on the Sonny
Throckmotton IOnQ 1Dout a man "~ year1 old, OOl"e on 20." tff's Bruce Oern, a succftlfut
Houston contracior with a wife
who pumps up their MX fife to
kffP him Ntrsti.ct. But thet Isn't
enough. Hls'°"'ernover eglng prompts him to trede In his Olds
for • Portcht •nd to twlve • fll"9 with a 0.llH cheerleader. Dlrec·
tor John Trent .-ad writ., C.rt
Klelnschmltt have done a stick
Job of concoetlng • bitter comedy that ls In reality e modern
mor•llty plan. Dern gives the
best performanc:e of his c.ar"r.
Rated R.
"SOMEWHERE IN TIME" Is an appealing romantic fant.1y
abOUt a young pleywrlght who
Credit Is dw to Jeannot Siwarc's
attentive direction •nd tht a.st-ing of Otrlstoc>Nr Reeve as the voung romitntlc •ndthe ••qulslte
Jane Seymour as the Object of his ardor. Rated PG.
"TIMES SQUARE," producer
Robert st19Wood's latest fllm-
r.lus.record album venture, Is en
ncoherent -not to mention Im·
probabtt -tat• ~o teen·aoe<S runaways llvl"9 the punk dream
on the slNller side of New York
City. Robin Johnson Is fine as the deep-voiced str .. t urchin who
liberates the privileged daughte't
of a city officl8' also played ae>-
peallngly by Trfnl Alv•rado. The
duo's tsc:al*MS mildly amusing at best, qulckly be:Come boring
backgrounds for a sllck package
of punk and new wave rock hits. Rated R.
=-~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
o .... -1!!'..!!1.a..1 ISie ~-··-· ,...~~
....... •ttTlll ........ IMlllPtC' n._.,...
SMla Ml 540-7'44 El Toro 511·S8IO Or1ft99 U.177D ...... ·wr•r• ....... .--mu ~..,. l4l-03ll trWll ~''°'" Ot111911 537·0)40 ...... _.._-~-
'IJ ll:,
J-JHST
I >l·AJ >I .Y SJ N
IRJ l>KI \\t I>
"'"' '"' 10 l(IU.
.. FADE TO
Bt.ACK" , .. ,
ltl.UI c•• fl II /\\~\l>..l NIM,
t
(I) T1C TAC OOUGH 9.-v.,.,..
~ Ole*.......,, Eddie
Rabbitt, Petrlc:ll Ouf!Y,
7:30. •ON THa TOWN
Hoat9 Sleft Eftlltda and
MtlodY Rogerw vlelt Iha
Stuntmao'a Hlllt Of i;-.
• lootc •t the oondomlnl-
uma on WIWft ~
Yetd; a looll at Iha death of
Johll l<ann.dy 17 yM'8
i lnOallaa.
'AMll.Ynul> 8HANANA
.. GuMt: Chubby Chaclcer. •
• ~l EGI flOOTaAU. • 8NCIAL
PflUI ~ end Regla Ptlll-
bl,'I ho9t -· of the ~ and ac:dmmaoa
for the UCLA 118. USC
~nggarr&
I FACIE THE MUfMC
AU IN THE FAMILY
Arehla'a "tOkan" effort• to
M bar allza Illa IOdga back·
fir• 9 MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
al) VOTEN' PIPEUNE
Holt, Jim Cooper.
(J) P.M. MAGAZINE
~. Hollywood'• Mir·
<Ir-to the 1tar1: pno.
tographlng wildlife.
Oaa1111~I Ll•tl11gs
• KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 8 KNSC (NBC) Lot Angeles
I KTLA (Ind,) Los Angeles
KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
KFMB (CBS) San Dl~o
KHJ-TV(lf'ld.) Los Angeles
I KCST (ABC) $an OleQo
KTIV (Ind_) Los Angeles
, KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Ang.lea
KCET·TV (PBSJ Los Angeles
K?CE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
MO 8 (I) ™I INCMDl9t.I
HUUC ~. WQrtllno ... -.. 'of ..... Phlbltlori
~ ~ the llino.
cent ~Of en Old~
81*0MIDKVILI
Some of the 1WOl1d'• Ot•·
•• etuntmen lncludlng l(lt.
tJ O'Ntll, 8'-Bekw Wld
Rlokle WllMlnde perlonn , *" ot dwlng and llhOW ho># theV .,. done.
-~ * * * "TobNk" (11187)
Aoctt Hudton, Georg•
Papplird. Brltllh and Gal'·
min entl-Nazl9 blow up a.nnan fuel 1U9C>llea In
Tobruk: (2 "'9.I •o~ A Vltld coatuma pany at
Iha manalon le oomplloa•·
ad by the pr-of •
~ 1tatua and• plot
by foreign raYOlvtlonaflea
to~lt
GMOW! *** "A Clfcle Of Chll-
dran" c111n1 J-Alexan-
der, Rachal Roberti An
afltuant IUburbenlta lael-
lng boted by her Irle and ,_ mam.oe tiecornaa a
volunt-at a IChOOI for
amotlonally dltturbad c:hll·
dren. (2 llra.)
G)P.M.MA~
Joell, ~woocs·a halr-
drelMf to the 1tMJ: pno..
tographlng wlldllhl: '*"" Baker Cll'I making hollday
wr9atti.: capt. cerrot on
balnt too thin; Joan
Emtlery lntroducal • faml·
ly of gor1111L.
• lDAVUrt: l<JNCa OI'
CAlm>ONI
Holt Jim e.ckus look• '81
the wottc of Tax AvarJ, or.
ator of .. Bunny, Pottly
PIQ. CMly ~. Dll~
CBS-• 10:00 -Dallu. At lut, the
world Wilrftnd out wbO lbot J.R. la the cq_mu ol one ol the' bl&s-t TV pobUclty
1tunta ot all ttme <see pbQtO at left, ltorY belOw).
~MDIGHT-
1UO 8 TWIUQHTZOHE
A down-end-outer trlaa to
tum another rnan'1 IDIUty
to lal Iha Mure Into a
profit
12:.IO. ~ IP£CIA1.
Ho111· S111y Spacek,
~ Halm Gua111 BeY·
wt)' O'Angelo, Phytlls Boy-
-· Anna MUrTI)', ~. The lplnnare. Ruparl
JOHN DARLING
~tNC..,..,. rA ~ ·~ .. ~ CalllNn (1t70) ..0.¥14 ~.
JMI\ ~ A _,..,
oftli9 • hlJOI bou"Y tor
N eepture of tl'la INll'I
Who ,..,.., her and klled
liar tMbend. ( 1 "'" 65
IN\.) •
• THI ...
~Tcwmantor1"
• NJIJ lllDENT
NITWONC NIWI t2:40. HOl.LVWOOO
""""91AT
Hoat: 8ob Wllldl. GUMla:
Hell And 0..., 20 I 20.
POP, Y•811d M--. o CMOl.,,......, AND.....,.
G-19: St-Lewr-.
Tim Conway.
1:00• MOVll • • * ''Body And 8cul"
( 1947) Jotin Garfttld. Ut1t
Palm.. A bo•er follows a
croolcad llna from the
11um1 to the top of the
fighting racket only to
'~,.Old ways.
1: 10. VIDEOWE8'T
BACKSTAGE PASS
lnll<Vlaws with "Dead
HMda'', Yldao ~ by The
Rotting Stonee; an Inter·
view wltlt film dit'ac1or
.JIM-Luc Godard; a fM.
tura on Kally I ~Stu
dloe
1:30 D THE L~ AANQER
''Behind The Uw'' 1'4118 MOVIE
• • • "Monterey Pop"
(11188) Jania Joplin, The
INFLATION SEEMS TO 0E HITTING E.\IERYWHERE 'THESE PA."5 ... 'll-tE M05T ~ITT £XAMF\..E 9£1NG
TME. 7-El.£VEN 5~ •••
Look what they've done to my show .. ; .
BJ PETQ J. BOYBa A~T........_M*r
''To 'Dallu' With Malice"
To 'Dallu' with malice I offer these thoughts,
No loqer concerned with who fired the shots,
I'm wotried instead that his excess of hype
Will renCler sweet 'Dallas' a bundle of tripe.
.. 0, BOW I ONCE watched those dolnp 119 vile
And marveled that trash could~ done in such style.
Clan Ewing, that lusty and various crew
Kept me in Friday Di1ht.a, and away from the brew.
With Pina before me and wife at any side,
I miaaed not one 'Dallu,' indeed. never tried.
"111881.:LLIE, SO SWEET, loves Jock, a bit rude,
Whole hate of D. Barnes be passed on to bi.a brood.
The youn1est of these, a plump dumpling niece
Named Lucy could tensions most nimbly release.
In fact she flnt did so witb Southfork band Ray,
Who blmaelf bad once'rolled with Mlsa Pam in the hay
11188 PAM, BY BU blood. wu a atauncb"Ewtnc roe
The daua.bter of old Dicger Barnes -but. wait, no:
./It turned out that Bobby's awttet wile little Pammy
Was daddy'd by some man ,-bo'd got to her mammy.
And Bobby, her husband, • wbimpertni 1eek
Brought morals and ethics to 'Dallas' each week.
WONDERF'LY BLIND 'J'O all thia wu Sue Ellen
Whose booze babit led to much screamin' and yellin '.
Hers was the misfortune of bein& the spouse
Of Texas' most loathaoine, despicable louse.
She was well-oiled but her marria1e was rusty
Thus did she meet with a cowboy named Dusty.
"BUT MOSTLY I WA'l'CJIED for the commonest reason
To witness the depths reached by J.R. each season. J.ast year was bis beat one Ip guile and deceit.
I watched and I watched, ft.rat-nm and repeat.
I 1aW"his raw deals, his affairl and his schemes Till 'Dallas' did, wantonly enter my dreams.
I TWICB MW Bl8 sbootiq and wondered alone
With all ol the otbera, wbo done our boy WJ'OQI?
And now after months ol eodurinl thia 1tresa
So lbameleuly dealt to us by CBS, "
PerhaPI we from 'Dallas' abould unaiue our stares, After six months of wond'rlqwbodmnt. who cares!
Nab. Let's watch.
-
.., ..... '" ...
'"CD ttnd's1 .. P.tllll•UH..,
·~· !TM eitY• ....... federal ,.. • M9' .... .,. dlilt revitaHutloa
ua naa qto •• 1a11 elt•r .......... A miJOI' ffl>U\aMDt
....... '~OD llalD .._ ,_ man uaaa • , .. n. eloMCl
tu dOOlla IMt,..,. and there an
11 ~ t'OIWrdal 1pac. lo
OM two-block ana. Tb• City
CGandl Nc*lt.b' Voted to tear .at tbil bjlnclall bl 1 mW·~
wlllcb bf4 Mfo•H a focus f~ Hlldallam ~ 'WU popularlj
~-·-puk.u Ametbhi1 el•• 11 ml11ln1, cCotdlal to 10m• retldenta
• .. ~~c aplrtt tbat baa dMDte tM faee of otber
maU cdU. IUCb U Portland,
and ~lticMrth. N .ff.
'1 IUD ·~ old ueca.U..,
)'OU CID "t do aD1thlnl downtown Biddeford, 10
let's forset It." aaya Robert B.
lobmao, the city's economic de-.y;>mem dlredor.
~~BE ATTITt1DB locally
._.. to be a real can 't·wln at-
UWe, •• remarb Constantine
lta.rvonldea, who nms an ad-
iltlalna agenc. y and once ed as chairman of a
tOWD task force ... I've been
aecued ol bavtq a blind en-
tltaiaam," be acfds, "and my
i complabrt about that la I
mare people bad it."
deford la the epitome ol the
ew ~and mill town. And .. Rrt ol Problem la that the
dt;y th1nb of itaelf aa a mill town," says Karvooides.
the tum of the century, the
Us eqip.loyed 7,000. The local no-.., la fw more diveraified
• but the two survivtna mills
1 ill have more than 1,000
rken.
IJ'
Ntllb~ Saco, with lta ftne
colOtdaJ bome1, wu where the mill owners Uved. Biddeford,
with l\I tmementa, WN, and to a
lar1e decne atill la, the bome ol
the l'Nncb·Canadian workers.
At leut eo percent of the city'•
population ol 20,000 ii of French
berltace.
TBB aT\''8 PROBLBJllS -
tbe pbyalcal deterioration of
tta core, the arowtb of suburlMul
inalla wblcb bave drawn abqp-
pen a~ -are hardly unique .
But many say the city bu been
slow to addrea them.
The city bu permitted too
much ecattered development,
Karvonldes says. Instead of aJ.
lowint a MeDooald'a to be local·
ed at an outlying shopping
cenier; for example, c;ity of-
ficlala should have "stood on
their beads to locate McDonald's
in the downtown area.••
A deeply conservative com-
munity, Biddeford bas lone been
known for its tight-fisted ap-
proach to government spending.
The red-brick mills -31 build-
ings in all -still dominate
downtown physically. Johnsoo,
who is also a part-time historian
of bis hometown, once proposed
~ O'U*ftlU.
that the ~lty buy one of the
mllh, tear It dOwn and let a de-
veloper tum the apace lntb a
abopptna center. The idea went
nowhere.
IORNSON, WHO thin:P the
mill• are un.al1htly, aaya, "I
don't want to tear them all
down. I Jmt want to tear down a
few to create a better envlran·
ment for downtown BJddeford."
Andereon-Notter-Felngold
Inc., the Boston architects and
preaervatiop planMrs hlred by
the city aa consultants, released
their report in August 1978.
Among other thlnes, they pro-
posed creation of a clty square
"public green," a parldnc deck,
realienment of downtown streets
and street and sidewalk im·
provementa. The report even
called for more attractive
• storefront signs and facades and
other amenities to improve the
"pedestrian environment."
To rmance the plan, the city
last year won preliminary ap-
prov al for a $750,000 Urban
Development Action Grant,
after business interests pledged
$2.'2 million to the effort. But
problems ensued, and a major
blow came this April when the
~o P. OOMtS .... 11, ...... LAWltU•c• T. o·coH~ELLo'
,.., IHctl, ea. ... IMd _, ........ -an~ •• 1•... Ehewhe ,......,.. tt, !ta S-VIWd "r lllt ,,....... ..._....Ca. H9 wes llOr'll lft P6 "-·~-.--It. o-.. .. c•"'""· """"'''_.. • ,,_ 11. I • ~ KUTCIUNSON, Kan. lntMr.c.. . .01t011ertJ.o-na 1m,tt1t~•,........Of~-... (AP) A l"' year old vrence, c. .. slaler Mar .. ret C.. fOI' 8llWt \I .,..,. ~ wes • -.,. •
._.lf11111Pe*-'-lff1 of 1111no11, end 1 ~ltorflw!1,..ntart11t ,..t., MEL 8 0 URN E Hutchinson, Kan., youth
._ "9IMV wlH lie Mid oe f1H1tlfla l"'9r~). Ho WH a ' baa been Ordered to pay
• .....,.,._ 21, 1• •ct:1SAM "'"9falll11hv.s.AmrttMV11111rr-. Australia (AP) -Sir -.380 restitution to the
11¥ ... ol OWl.C'-1 Bunel .. "" '° '"'· 5-111'""' Illa wife JUlla lolul lleEwee 80 who .., •: • .. ...,., ,....,.,, Olufe11, .. o-c.w.u • ~ MeM, ea .. ..., • • Clti•e .. • Qt•te Bank m·
Sa • ca. 1nterme11t 81 G80CI 0en1e1 L "' AMMln!, c.. enc1 oev1c1 served for 22 days as .. .... ,_,.. s ~•rel cemetery. H1.1nt1ft9to11 J. ot ~"'· c:.. s.rvic.s w111 .,. Au 8 lra1 t 8 • 9 ~rime Arlington after a judge <ft,~. 01rectee1 a.., 011111 • ., lleldons.tunlrf.~22~1••• 1 '-t , U th found him delinquent in MlwWrf, 1Ne11 a. re111«1, 1o:eo AM• .. lleltr .... ..,....Sm1t11 m nu er ,o ow ng e connection with an "'fl!IHll9i111...,,, ca. ac:t-m1. • rut11m Wltlklltf CMpet wttt. Mir· 1967 drowning of Harold
' DOWD '"'°""" J. ~ oH1C111tlft9. auri.1 • H It died 1b armed robbery there.
·-NCIS J. oowo, r•lo.111 ot\tek•pl-8'tlwMl.04lftt~ry. 0 • ursday. Judie E . Victory Cefllir.:Me ... ca. PelMlll _, M "°"'. CerM91e, """"'ylv.,le. l'-CllllO ""~ *" ---'* -Na llllroc too ....... , .. ron·Smltll • CHICAGO (AP) -Dr. Wilson, Reno County as-
...... o.M1., c.. -... =':.,.::'.:'.iOwlfl ~ .. • sociate district judge, f.~is J . °""'·Jr... l'AYM• Dfto&bJ rriee, 81• a ruled the youth bad •n~ .f:i.!t~ :::,: IMMY PAYNE, retlcl9rOfEITo,.., biologiat wbo helped de-committed a delinquen-
., 0r9gon, c..u.rw Dewit, ca. encl .._. Mlilltflt • ,...._., velop the birth control ff d ~-E11e110..•i .. a.ec11,ea..._.._., .. .._._ pill and was a con-cy o ense, an was .._, CA.!~...._ a.1re .... 11, ,,.. 5WvtWd w tier llldlllMd. placed on probation lo
"' ••111 Jecllt• "~'"'• ••t11 •• ~ ........ .......-;,..,Jin\-::.:.--~= tributor to early re· the custody of bh ... _,~llJ. .., .. a .,__,......... ~.. search on sex hormones, .. -.y w111 11e l"llC11tc1 °" ..n1t1ell9ld,,......,,~1011t di_... -~..a-in ftarenta. He did oot re· l'r )' ~ti 1tlf •f7·00"'" ll:IO PM .. ~lfk VII'# ~ ~ .1.-y Leiden, ease th t b a ' ~ .. ., o.tttiM aunai ~111 ... c:t1a,e1. &IJtle•._... 1Jac111c v1e• Netherlands. e ee ·a.er s s.eur.r HO--. u . .-81 MenwrW ,..,.~.,...... name.
f:IMM ..... t.: Jolldiilll'a c:..i.llc ----.-.......,...,--:--~----------:--------..,.-=--~---
CNr ,.,.,,, ... llltfffMftt ....... c. ~ loill ,,...,,_, Mor-ry •
~tMIC::ll ).OITUAUS
Leouna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hilla
768-0933
Juan C.plstrano
"95-1778
LAWN-MT. OUYI
Mot1u11Y • <Ametery
Crematory UI~ Gisler Av.e.,
Costa Mesa
540-5554
Arraign•en• set Dee. J
Mesan facing assault charges
A Costa Mesa man is
scheduled for arraignment Dec.
1 lo Harbor Municipal Court on
charges of aaaault on a pollee of-
ficer with a deadly weapon after
allegedly bitting an investigator
with bis truck.
Sherman allegedly ignored de-
mands by . Costa Mesa in·
veatigator Dave Walker Sunday
when Walker reportedly held up
hia badge a.od. ordered the driver
of a truck to stop after cutting
"doughnuts" into the sod at
Davia Elementary School.
Walker, an American Youth
Soccer Organization coach, was
participating lo a parenta versus
children game at the school dur-
ing an A YSO picnic when be at·
tempted to bait the driver.
Police reported the driver ac-
celerated while leaving the
school yard and struck the ol·
ficer's right arm.
The off-duty investi1ator
c ailed his station on an
emergency fire phone and patrol
units Later arrested Sherman,
who i.s free on $10,000 bail.
Walker, who suffered only a
minor injury, aaid be m.iased
most ol the picnic while fiJing
reports oa the incident, but that
the parents 'didn"t miss his SOC·
cer-playing ability.
They beat the kids, S to 4.
Ghir:opraetors'
timing 'great'
~~~~~[ BOOK &4N
By .JOYCE L. ICENNEDY
Dear Joyce: I am a la1P ICMel aealor ud I
am bdere9&ed la bebt& a ddnprador. lafonna-
tloaf
CAREERS J
Ul1JID U~W~!!: SALISBURY. Zlm·
babwe (AP) -The IOY•
ernment's Board of
Cenaon has lifted a ban
on two publications
about American black
power leader Malcolm x.
Ruled no longer un-
desirable and prohibited
are '"Malcolm X -The
Man and His Ideas" by
George Brettman and
•'Two Speeches by
MalcolinX."
SUPER
SWEATER SALE
l'\JBUC NOTICE
Pt'i:T1nou1 au.1,....
"AMalTAT••NT Tl'9 fol-ifte P9f'IO"I ere OOlng
lluSlftff& ••
JltOM A$SOCIATlS. l Vlenne,
..... "" llMOI, CelltenWe fWO OIMW '· Mcl.9ulfllln, J v .. ,.,... ~ lillldl. Celltenlie "*" """"' J . KNcUt'lleCM<, 11 Po+nl l..ol'll• Drive, C•roft• del Mar,
Ce1"9nlla '26ZS ...... s. °"' C2S .......... Cet\.11, Val\IU, Gllltomla "1tl
Tllia ----It u11d1KtM by e .............
OW<1ft '· l#ILLINlll'lfl Jlla ~ -Ill• wllll \lie ~°""' .. ~~Of\ Oc· *"'"·19.
1'11ia ...,_.per will not
kDowlilalY •ccept any advertltlDI for real .... wbleb la lD vlola-
tkln d tbe law. SEA CO,VE PROPERTIES!:, di
71~-631-6990'
u Now You
Can
Sell
More l
wllb Dally Piie!
PENNY PINCHE
ADS Still CMdy sz.
3 lanes for 2 day(
only 51 a day. 34c
hne
Advertise one o more items valu
up to i lOO. Eaclt.;
additional line is• ,.
only 60c for the tw
days . Sorry . no ' com mer c i a I ads.,
allowed. Charge,,
Your Penny Pinche
Ad or use your
Bank Amerlcard 4
Visa or Mastercard ·~
t
I
~
t I ,
l
t
I
To all clients.
tnendt and U*>Ciates.
MAY JOU
lllLISS9
OLD FASHIOte. • ••••
An abundance of places to be
alone! A unique combination of
locatioo, design and value. This
elegant & spacious family .home
features a work of a craftsman
tbruout & is perlect for the large
family with a" active lifes\yle. II
you want maximum livability at
minimum coet call 759-1501 for
private showing. Compare value
at $249,500.
MEWPOllT HILLS OFACE
2670 SAM MMMlll. Dllft
l714J 71f·llOI
Linea Rul&t..n
II
associated
Bk ',c £ U'::. "f,. ··JPc,
Ji , t.. l:urt , ? ' ·•
CUSTOM LOTS
Two 1 acre + lots
w I aTCblleclural plans
for 3800 + sq. Cl. homa.
Rolline hills & horse
area. S173,000 each.
Advertlaen may plate their ads by leleplloae 1:00 a.m. ldS:llOp.m.
MoM.y lhnl Friday I to llOCfl Saturday
COSTA Ml!'&\ OP'FICJ! now. a..1 1142-Wl'I
HUNTINGTON BEACH tms Bnch Blvd
540-1.220
LAGUNA BEACH 103'7 N Coast Hw,.
Lacuna Bead!.._ ...
NORTH COUl'ITY
dhd lree 5*1.DO
CIAQ .. .........
l>«dllne '"' eopy . illb la $·SO p.m. lhe day lleton publltatlon,
except for Sunda y • Monday Edltloa• when
dudllne Is Saturday, u ooon
ca••.._ --..TIOMI
EllROU; Ad .. ctfHrt
ebou Id <:becll lll.tr ads
dally • report arron
launedlataly. THS DAILY l'1l.ol' uaum .. ll1blllty for th• tint lncornct lnHttlon only.
CANC!l.LATIONS: Wb.. klllinl an ad be
'"" to meka • r.cont or tlle KILL t:UJC llSll
itnn '°" W ;bur Id \UU M ~-pl of ,.._..
t111u11111en n•• am
II 1l 1D lier 1Dltll be •r••••t•d by the ""•rtlaW ln cue of • 4'1,ute,
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114-631-6,90 •
-----,-----1WamAd Results 6'2·5678
194 UNITS
In rapidly growing Den~er. Well
located 1 and 2 bdrm. a ents
with exc~llent low in erest
financing. Only $1,300,000 down.
Currently running 97% oc-cupied.
Annual income scheduled at
$542,220. Full price is $4,300,000.
(7141 673-4400
12 I JJ ,2 .. 2121
TIMt Hart.or Area'• aided
RHll1tot.Rrwt
HARBOR
macnab I Irvine
realty
A IUB81DtARY OF
~ IAVIN! COMPANY ---
ATnMr'IOM YACHT'SM911
Large custom·bull\ home w/sonken
living, dlnlna and brkfst rooms
looking over sunny dock to 147'
frontag~ bay view bas 2nd noor
master suite in separate' wing
w/altting rm and fireplace. 2 add'l
BRS • maids rm & convertible library/den each with private baths. Dock facility for Jarge boat.
$1 ,495,000. Larry Dyer "2·82S5.
(R-11) • _ •-
711-1414 111-1111
c~ v~c.,.., w..,..a,. c......
64J.llil 644-6111
~~Ii«>!!' Vi
CAllll OPPOITUMITY: Jel• •
fl'~lwlM _. •n 11 llAL llTATI
COMPANY -We HAft If , • ._. J
••• I 11• -..-Cl I It 2•111 a
9M WI -* cr::-11111• ASllSTAMCI AYAIA&I. ........ -. -COLI OF MIWPOIT UALtoas
21111. c.-...,,. c:.-......
67S.SSl I
Ci Coldwell Banker
MllM IUY
Big Cuyoo condo. 2 BR. 2 BA. +
formal Din'g. Fireplace. Gated
privacy. Like brand new. Splubing1
I ountain entry. Better by far at
$177,000.
IN NISWPORTCENmR ,
• 644-9060
ON WAID-OPEN SPACE VU
.... .., ···-··· 4.., .__ J..e.y ............. Mtl1•• ........ ,_.,... ...... ......... w ... ,..., ..........
Sl4t.MO. 6Jl·l400.
• WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
SW.. R•ntal" Prq>n111 ~1
2~ w C-1 Hwv 31S Mwvw Ave. Ntwpoft Buch Belboe bl.nd
611·1400 67Wtt0
OPEN HOUSE SUN. I ·5
WSK HAUOlt VIEW H&LS
3429 Quiet Cove Corona del Mar
fbr, 3ba, fam rm, new kit.
Owner will help rm. $410,000
OWNER-A.&EMT
AVE COMM 6~5159
* * OCIAM .. OMT * * 1 The go<xt things of lite at their
• best! This serenely beautiful 3
bdrm home ~trikes a balance
with nature. Imagine snuggling
by a crackling fire, while
listening to the roar of the waves
breaking, or long walks down
uninterrupted expanses of beaeh.
This prestige residence is offered
at $190,000. Call 159-1501 for a
private abowlns.
MIWPOU HILLS OMCI
2'70 SAM .... ~ Ollft
'7141719.1101
llE
llDlll ILllllS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
..... s IHT1
Fresh & Sparklln1. Newly Decoratm Three
Bedroom End Unit. Sunny• Spacloua Uviftl
Room With Wet Bar le Fireplace. Prtme
Location On Larte Greenbelt With Priv~
Wrap.Around PaUo Lease Optlcln Poulble.
$210.000.
OCIAM & IA Y V11W
Two lqe Bedroorm, Two Baths. Flreplac.
In Llvinl Room. Gated Community With
Mosl Beautiful Amenities ln Newport a...cll
Similar Two Bedroom Recently Sold F~
Much More. Make Otter. JUIUGO.
l•MCMO SAM JO.,_.
Lovely End UnJt. Two-Level TownbouM OD
Golf Course. Two Bedroom1, a~ Bathf .
ConvereaUon Area Wllb Wet Bar. New
Camel Color Carpet. Pa1'4uet K.ltcbeo F1ooc'
Ii Entry. Only SJJS.000.
® --.,...., ... ,, •
-..
-,,
27441. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEi. MAI
75~1616 , ...... ltld
CONGRATULATIONS!
8btugo MEWPOIT
IEACH
644-7020
c:-..con••• PWSJMCOMI
OIL. a ..._ 1 bl bcim•
wtUa laolated mHt•t
bdrm/pu9Dt ntru.t or
ID-law qrtrt +2 bdrm cot· ta1t. Aa1way y o&&
delcrlbe lt .. lt'a charm-
101. &&p to date and bea&&tlf ulb located. __ ...;.._ _ __;..=.;_--1
Priced aUZI0,000. Lr1 ._.Verde Home:
CAILPORDETAJLS owe. ·644-7211 (%13)'1tW'722e•ea.
/Jn '<•I,
t ,· l ~ ' l.
;, . il JI I 11 t
•
11.*MCISCAM
l'OUMTAIMS
' lyfteS.. Dulrabh aplral ~model. 4 Bd.tm,
fun rm. 3 ba, 2'10014 fl.
Jhlp ~· $111,500 • ... ........
963-1377
•
•
•
.
"
.
"
.
"
..
It
. ..
11.Uff I ......... ,..,,
ljOwllilt'
~· 2\o!I baths, condlt.lol\. ,Aa.
1111mble 1ou or owner
will carry AITD .
SJl,CIDD. OcleD Sat./SUD. ~ Vilt.a Bontta .
J
REALTORS
erock Viata Exec:.
4br, fam, llty twahme.
Qiaet., fut. view. rec: .
ltbh up1raded .
ea.rtbtones-wood, Zbr.
2ba condo, 1125. llMOlO
I
'-Dll ... ~. ~ lo ~ <ko[fla¥ new from 11&A4~t. $500 fW later PlO!Yrbf.171-5* 1.;...;..;;,;;;_ ___ .,....,_ ___ --1
a aria.. N1 vlew. d~u
• winter, •s yrlY . A1k for Coaal• A.
m«10
eo.t.W... J714
··········~············ ~unnln1 lar•e 1 Br .
• ~JI ~pt. pool, fet'!, aru. now.18th. si. ·
HAR•ROUMD FUN:
Social Acllvtt .. a O•·
rectllr •Free Sunday
Brunch • BBO's •Par·
t1ea •Plus much mote
GAEAT A!CREATION:
Tennis• Fret Lessons
(pro & pro shop)• 2
Health Clubs•Sauna •
Hydromasaage•Swlm-
ming• Drtving Range
IEAUTIFW. APAltT·
MENTS: Singles. 1 &
2 Bedrooms • Fur
n1shtd & Unfurnished
•Adult Liv1nQ.o No Pets
• Models Open daily
9 lo 6
Oakwood
O.rden Apertment.
Newport Buch/So.
1700 16th St
IOovtr 11 161111
(714) "2-1113
Newpott IMch/No.
880 Irvine
(II U!lhl
(714) '41-11CM
SHOlt1" TllM
11\un. s bdrm, Iba apt.
W..tly or mOnt.hlJ . A&ent, "75-1170
R.ril « lAue Venatllet
delu•• peDtbouae,
2bdi1:Ja. 2ba, ocean •lew,
fwS, furo, new furD,
pOOI, Jae, clubhoUI• A
om; auoormo. c.11 •~: eocmo. mi.a: M5-11CN.
Ill.SA VERDE bome at-
~· z•• Br cllx •. Nopetl. 5*10M
\5Pl~lll FamilJ I bdrm-
. ' . ·; (. ~~~ .
Special rot~ jf
1eosedly Dec. 15,
lqe()
20>1200 Sq. Ft.
Up to I mo. Free Rent
Wet Bar$
,.,
T~
:!' I,,,,
an foh
t I I Cl•ah/ '-ta."•! LMa,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• *•u•n-• 5100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SELL Idle Item• with a
Dally PU~Classlfled Ad.
NOW through NOVEMBER 30th
-
:n.AMnS MASSA~E
SPA
Be Pampered by le
Beaut. Glrh. ,Open
lOAM-CPM 7 days. Phone
~3'33
....
Requb·• minlm\lm of
Jyr. Q'Pel"\en~ ~ aood
typbil lkllll.
CHIT
VOIREI Experience preferred. Good typlnc stills req 'd.
{
Safe Deposit/
Clerical
~ Newport Center of· nee bU au hnaledl•l•
* BANKING
Our AUcia Parkway of-fice has 2 immediate
openings for: •• Teien ,., ... n... a
witb e mootha previous-bankina experience. -
,.
All Aboar·d For Our
"
Christmas Gift Train !
An •••Y wey tlD ... your Ctvt9tma• Gift tteme •
•
I Dr. OM Jcebos,
libnr7 &Ill, dWr.
55'7 ........
Aatique aofa, eanl•f· caola1, uplaol. too .. cualllooa, $1000/080.
~
..i.A2
l~
.. la .,;/.
~
'° ~R
.Ja
~.u
~
r,J. ...
I tit TOYOTA COllOUA
2 DOOll SIDAM DILUXI
Automatic trans • bucket aeata.
WSW tires, MPX radio. carpeted --· floor mats. deluxe pinstripes &
'wheel wen moldings ( 111~1).
ttll TOYOTA
PICllW ,.UCK
Eou1pped with 4 speed trans·--, .. _,
chrome rear step bumper and Del ··ssw.
19.0VOLVO
4 CYUNDEll
2DOORSEDAH
'BO Dodie van 8100, PIS.
P /B, auto, 2800 m 1, $6900.
~S29'l
P'.onl Van, runs good,
C\&ll int., 1ood cond.,
IDUlt.ee.~900. S48-e646
COHMHL
".:HEVROLfT . · .. '
... . \4
546-1 200
... HIUYEI
ToP dollars for Sports Cara, Bua-, Campers,
914'1, Audi's
AskforU/CMGR
JtMMAAINO
VOLISWAGEH
mu.Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEAOi 142-2000
TOP JOLI.AR
P.AIDFOR
GOOD&CLIAH
"USIDCARS!
19'18 GT (077UOQ) $4fft
"18 Span Seel. (01837)
S6ftt
Im Spider (9221'LT > S74tt
'78SprintGT (°'°81) Sl2tt
1 '74 TU, fuel lnJ, iiliiteond.
651Cml.
•2151
"12 BMW 30GZA, auto, Al:,
1umf1 new paint, &ood eood. .. uo. pp. 54Q.f445
'77 BMW ISOCSI,' xlnt
eood. warranty. SJ.9950.
644-4839.
,.11& ..... llpil, ... .
• ..._... ••lflli .. .. ,,,.,,. coa• I UHO .._ ...
CIVIC 4 DllR SEDA•
COMFORT --SMALL PRICE
OUR NEWEST CAR -COMBINES LUXURIOUS ·
AOOMINESS WITH Pl.:USH INTERIOR STYLING,
PLUS THE· FUEL ECONOMY OF OUR POPULAR
CIVJC.
IMMEDIAU DELIVERY
,
WITHYOUI
APPIOVID ·calDIT
77YWDASHR
Lovely delu:ae automatic , air,
batcbbaclt, 4 door,
o~al baby blue.
( ESlttl
.llMMAllMO
YOLUWA ...
lSJll BeKb Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH • 142-2000
71IAlllT
DtlS&
hrumculate. loaded with mraa.<•YCS> $6Jtt
@~·"'°"""" VOl.KSWAGlN. IHC
534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
74VWDASHR
Hatchback, 2 doot, IUD•
rfd with 4 Beed, radlo and~. Great B~I (74SYAJ)
$1495
JIMMAllMO
YOUlSWA•IM
11'111 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH 142-2000
71VWIU.S
7 puaeai•, (2527.SR)
s.!!9en.
~Garden Grove Blvd.
Wtlltmiuts' aMOlO
· 71YWDASHR
Deluxe lhtioG wa100. ' SDeed. i:J:a IJ'Ut condl-Uon! ( ) $4ttl
JIMMAatMO
VOUlSWAMM
11'111 Beacb Blvd. JIUNI'JNGTON BEACH 14Z.2000
76YWIU9
Dynamite aunrpof, 4 •Sfm 1reat..,1bape.
( ~ ...
JIMMAJUMO '
VOLISWA•IM
11111 Btaeb Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH 142-2000
YOUR CBOl€E ••• ·
JUST A FEW EXAMPLES:
IBBNUJ) '8999 W.4811115
NGWONLY
'T7 alJICK ELECTll.4 PAaK AVE. · 979 SIJBARIJ BRAT ~~~~-'3999 Ne1t'eNLY ~~~'1!!4.44 N01t'OM..Y ..
'89 0IEVaeLET.lleJUA 978 PORSCHE ft4 ~l~~ .. '5888 Ne1t' eNl.Y ,. ~~c:.> •• a '8888 NOWOM..Y •
'79 Gl..D8 £tJTIA88 DUSIBL
(215XOM) '7tt44' tt'ASIJW
N8W9Nl.Y
'79 mn••LET aNIVW:I •.• '79 'NY ... A £ELICA UFrBAC&
~~ ...... 991!!
N81t'OM..Y ' .. Cm.s '~999 New ONLY ...
'89 TaltJMPH TU
i:i~II,500
'79 'AGIJAR X•L
=~:·13,999
71 MUS'tAMG
'ASTIACll alDliet f'Gl'd;• low blue ~~.....:......;----.;.._...;........;..----bai*tpedal(lll'YZJ)
• "ZZ 11uat sen: '9000 evet • or very earl1 a .m .
Gl.-ilS
SHOWIOOM COMO.
'15T-TOP Power brakea, power
wlndowl power 1t.enn1 with uit1tele1coptn1 1teertn1 wheel, air, AM/Fii stereo, rear win-
dow defoe1er, automa Uc trans. SnOw white with BursundY Interior. lm-macul ate tbrqout !
$8,100. 154-1790 or
•~P.!'· MtOGarden Grove Blvd. W'ltm•n._ UMOto
'7tLTD4DI. va, automatic, p/1, air1 ~down 48 paJmenll or a.at APR 17 .IO~ A.C. Def Pmnt. $5942
(874WGQ)
s!!'L.
Answer Ad t208, ~ SMOGardenGrove Blvd. ·at bn. WMimtntts s:M-4010
, A*K. UHCI -..., Uted ......................... , ........•............
*FIESTAS *I-BIRDS
'flf FAllMOlllS W LIDS
*MISIAlllS ·* PllllOS .
*HAllADAS
'
ao
• impact
CARSON CITY (AP) -GQv.
Bob List 1aid tbe "Uvin1
ni&bt.mare" of the MGM hotel·
catlno ftre will )lJve "very far·
reacblni'' lmpactl on Nevada.
"It'• a Uvmg nifbtmare for
thole peop!e_ there, ' Ibt wd.
"I'm bopefUl that the damqe
and louea and deathl and in·
juriea will be aa minimal u
pc>41ible.''
LJ,.t alao said the Hl&bway Patrol had to arrest people who
Jammed into streeU around the
hu1e club to watch the fl.re -
and camed "an absolute total
mesa."
The 1overnor Hid firemen
couldn't cet equiplbent ln and
out because of the crowd.I of peo-
p I e who aeemed to "think
th91're watcb1nc 'The Towering
IDl•rno' live and ln color." "Tbe comequences of this tire
are ~Ina to be very far· reac , " the 1overnor aaid.
.. The M II ii one of the l&r1e9t
employer• in the 1tate. The
economic effectl ln Southern
N•vada are 1otii1 to be
enormou1,
• "J'bf ODIJ cutno diluter even
cJOH r&o tlda WU tbe Harvey's
bomblM" lalt Au1u1t at
State1ln9. • .i/, JJ• aatd. .. ADd the closure « the Aladdin In. Laa
Vecu earlier tbla year cal&led
major e~onomlc problem•.
When you throw um many peo-
ple * of won JOU , •• ripple effect tbroqbout the com-
mUnlty."
State Gamint Control Board
Chairman .Richard Bunker, who
viewed the fire tbrouab
binoculars from hi• office two
mllea eut of the MGM, said hia
aaentl wen preP.Jftd to move ln u aoon u poulble to preterve
the club's cub and financial
records.
Bunker aaid be wu able
to 1ee hotel pest.a crowded onto
balconiel -and ln some cues
abeetl hanainl from •battered
windows. "I doa't lr:now why the sheets are out unless people were try.
inl to mile a cblln to aet down.
But that'• not po11lble, most of
the rooms an too bitb," be 1aid.
Besides the helicopter evacua·
ttona ol 1ruesta from the hotel
roof, Baer said people were
beinJ lowered to the crow>d by
window wa1bin1 rt11tn1, be
added.
-siUpect held ..
in 1erie1 of
HB robberies
A •lllPffl ln a aertea ol rob-
beries ln wb.lcb a 1UDman ac· C09ted realdeatl ln front of tbelr
bom• OC' ln park!U tau bu
been arre1ted ·m Jluntlntton
Beach. Tak~! as.to cuatoe11 Wednel· .
day nJCbt atter offtcen obtahwd
a Hlrcb warrant wu AnthOny
Karl Mack, lt, of 18821 JlolktN St. I
Polloe set. Lull OCboa Wet
tbat II.ck wu UTest.ct and held
OD ·~000 ball aft•r bel•I atop by a patrol officer tieea• tae matdled UM deacrtp-
Uon "'&be .. pect. A .• call&er· revolver wu
fowld,.·m Utt 1uapect'1 bome,
OCboa ...... <>ea Nld that tbe flYe rob-
bert. oeow1ed between Oct. 10
aD4 'No9. 11 ID UM northern part "' ..... '1'IMt rd1ll 11i11 tOOk plaee JD :=:t .... wt uePllY ID· ........ 'fte _... flecl wlth cub = ... t.o tJa ln the -~~d.
Schools seek way
around cash pinch
8l &OBE&T BAUEa
Of .. Dllty ..... ....,
The Hunttnaton Beach City
(elementary) School Diltrtct ii
1en4ln1 a de1e1atton to Belmoat
Monday to ftDd out bow the Bay
Area lcbool cliltrtct ii coDIUwttb
deelinbla enrollment Uc1 tilbten·
inl 1ch0olfllwlce1. •
BehDant, aboUt 15 muea IOutb
of San Fnncileo, bu ploDetnd
the concept olrellttllj UDUNd pol'·
tloDIOf achool bUild.llt.I• toprtvate
flrma.
~ Belmm:at Plan bu been ad·
•ocated b)' a larp ll"OQ of Hunt·
inltOD Beach re.ldenta u a war
to raise addltlonal money,
ellmtaattna th• need to clole
tthOola. H~ Biacb 1uppcJtt.n
of tM plaai~·:M·--ti; ·~. Allen Pleldi RObMt Clultwrtoo
and Paul !iie,er, oppaee pro-
PG9•lltocloleaeboGll,
8eboal olftctill ta)' t.be local
dJatrlct .. nper1mcln(_ • . ....., decl1Dela~.'111t1...,.
dJ1cloMd plau to 11oie two tcboola •a..., of aaYlaf lbOUl ........... ,.
Hu•U•-:r; Beacll 1claool ......... ...., .. ,...... ....................... ...... 'ml ....... ... .. ~ .......... °' ............. Zf.Fl' ... . . .,,..,,. . ._. ... ......
dl1ttlctaebooll an located on ma·
jor tborouahf area, apparently
makinl them more feulble for a
wider ran,e of acttvitiet while
Buntlnaton Beach Schools
aeaerlilly ~ located ln the mid· die of boulln,tractS. ·
But Admlni1trator1 Bob Hawthorne, Roa Brown and
Duane Dllbno wW take the trip
for a clole baDdltucb.
Their ftridlnp Will be d.llcuaed
(SN PINCll. •••• AJ)
Lifeguards
LAS VEGAS (AP> -A fire
broke out ln the MGM Grand
hotel-eulno on Lu Vqu'
llltterlna strip today, send·
fn1 · amlote fhiouabout all 28
stories and trappina bun·
dred1 of 1ueat1 in tbelr
rooms and on the roof. Clark County Fire Capt. Ralph
Dluman aald 12 people were
killed and "the injUries are
going into the bundreda."
The fire, which broke out
in the baemeot at 7:15 a.m.
PST and sent smoke billow·
ing buDdreds of feet into the
air, was controlled two boun
later. D1mman termed t.be
blaze "the wont hotel fire we've ever bad in Laa
Vegas" and be estimated clamace in the millions.
Many guests Oed to the
roof, where helicopten were
evacuatine them, At 9:30
a.m. PST, the Red Croes said
~ people were stlll on the
fool. Dimman 11dd the Ore departpient•e ladders reached oDIY_.:.to the ninth
flOot ~ tbe ... m1DloD hD·
-.... wbiell Witli-'-~018 roo. II one al the world'• larit.C:: ... ",.Al leut anen bodies wre
found ln the 1•0-7ard-loa1
cuiao. wtilch WU cleltloJ9d hJ
fiamel and smoke, Dhllman wd. se Wei .... ellhth NUm
had j1Bi:lP9d from a wladow and
two Juul been foand in their
rooma.
Dia1m•n said most of tbose in· Jund bad cuta from llUa or
were treated for smoke lDbala-
tton.
Police belicoplera circled
overhead, aDd Gftlcen ~ over bullhorn., "Don't jWQp,
don't Jump," to panicked l..tl
who leaned out of Window•,
dan1Ua1 mall:e1bift bedabeet ladden or crammed onto
balcomee. An e1eWtm... said
about ID people were on one
balCOll)' .creamtnt for llilj).
Dlnlman aald tbe auetta ~
ln no immediate clancer .. Iona
u the7 ltayed by1heir wladowl.
Wltb the Oamet controlled, flreflebt,en belan evacuatiom floor by floor, both from lnalde
corrldon and from tbe ou:talde,
u11D1 wiDdow-w11ben' plat·
f011D1 to lower people to aafetJ.
Jlan1 of thoee brou1ht out were clued. barefoot, weart.q
ni1bt1owns blackened by
1moke. •
"BverybodJ WH pu1hla1
'evef1bodJ. We dic1D't know what
to do." said Walt.er Fellwood ol
Ellicott, Mel, who fled hil llDb-
\floor room With bla wlfe, leavtq
their beJoO&fnp beblnd. 11~. peats threw twmtwe ~u;~wtntrm'°~~
IODle peaple Cl'J the pouQd.
Enry ambulance lD town was
called ,so the 1cene. JDJ~ ~Htl, many in Diptclotbel, ••re beiq treated by medlca on ~ ltreel alonplde the 43-acre
hotel lite. "It wa1 terdble. People ,..,.. •
wanClerliia doW1l the bal1 and
dldn't knOW' wbat to do/' Wei
1erry Bouablam. a New Yon
1toc:k ....... wbo WU a pmt Oil
the MYeath flooi' ... You were
lulled lato a lalH HAM of
MCurltJ. fr'bilN "'9 DO pboDi
Callat DO aJarm. l!M!tbtn1."
CouvooUOll worken wbo
~r:o:::::iz.:,. = 0:
(9ee Y_SGAS, .... AJ)
SChool aides
giy'en raise
BJ PHIL 8NEIDDllAN Of .. o.lfr .........
,.
.... _.
...... "'!""
A multlmllllon-4ollar two-
platform dril11q complex aimed
at clrawlal 150 mtDton barnll al
oil outoltbeoceanQoorniDe miles
off the COMtol HUlltiqtoa Beach
WU uaveUed Tbunday by ~
Oil Company.
Sbell unveiled the complu,
billed u tbe lar1est in the world in
tenu ol ltl ao.well potential. by
ferrylna an army bf reporters,
pbotoarapben and televilion
crew1 to tbe platfOl1DI for an u -
baUltivetour.
Shell oftlclala also voiced ..
1urancea that the ocean complex
and ltl J&.mUe pipeline to Loq
Beach ii equipped with numerous
aafel\W'dl topteventoU 1pllll.
In addttloo, project comtrue·
tlon manacer R .C. Vt11er
claimed tbe drUUn1 COlllpln -
would be undamated by tbe type
of earthquake that rocked Laq
Beach ln UISS and would •Ultaln
only moderate c1ama1e from a
quake capable ol lenlinl that
city.
••Al far u I'm concerned," Vis-
ser aaid, "ID a earthquake, u.e
platfonm would be tbe Nfest
places tobeln Callfornta."
Dubbed Project .. Beta .. ..1be
operation la expected to beaiD
procludnl oil ln Janual'J, with a
peak pi'oduetioo of 25,000 barrela adayanUcl~IDftveyean.
Wbm the Pl'OJed ii COlllpllte,
Shell oftlda&,Uid, tbe total ti> vestment ln Beta will be about
$800ml1Uon.
Sbell OU bu a 50 percent ID·
terest ID the Beta project and la
operator for • ala-companT
aroup. '1be two Beta oll .....
were pUidiued from tbe federal
<See DIULLING. Pace Al) • •
•;I
I
J
l
\
Tiillikin' cnultr•, ••r ..
L06 ANGJCLES CAP> -Two major lnewa1 ~
re were cloeed for ,evwral boun tocla1 "*" , a •uobe tanbr-truck bit a car. overtW"Ded Ud ft~ iato ftama
under U. Pomoaa FNewaJ, 1~ ~.
Tbe ftri that raulted from the acctaeilt llboat l:IO p.ID.
Tbu.nday w" ao Intense that the Pomona Preewa, Oftl'HU
above Soto ~eet lD tbe downtown area w.. cracked And
• •.ebarred, aceordln1 to tb• CalUornta o.partment of Tramporta· tloa. _..
OlaMd wen the San BemardlDo ,....._., tran.altlon road to
-.the eattbound Pomona Freeway ·and tb• eutbOund San
I BemardlDo Freeway transitkJa to the socithbound saata :Ana
, Freeway. Traffic on tbe eastbound S.O Betoa.rdllM> Fneway
to bad to be dive~ to tbe eastbound lanes ol lmintate $, •• .,....,. tin• co•C rolled
LOS ANGELES (AP) -MoppinC up operationl were under
>!way tod.a1 in the lut of a fharl')' ol m.Jor bl'Ulhflrea that
•scorched thousands of acres of southern Califon:Ua and
tI de1troyed 1eores of homes.
:· The lar1est 11ue -tbe Turner Canyon fire that charred
ru ,000 acres ol brush south of La.Ile Elsinore in Rlvenide County
,-wu espec:ted to be contained today by a skeleton crew ot
about 200 tiretlpten.
To the west, the destructive 8,800-acre Stable Fire, wblcb
was blamed for one death and destroyed 55 homes in the U · elusive community of Bradburh, was expected to be eontrolled
by about the same time, aaid U.S. Forest Service spokesman
Robert Brady.
Newport robbery
~Ex-police captain
.tr. .
•i!1
Lit.
ch
Iv!
b'.
gets 7-year tenn
An Oran1e County jud1e HD·
tenced a former Santa Ana
police captain to seven years in
state priloo Tbunday for takini
part in a $500,000 Newport Beach Jewelry store robbery laat
March.
Superior Oourt Judie James
irez imposed sentence on
ederlcll Hopper, 51, after the
fendant decided to plead IUll·
10 the charges against him on-
minutes before bis armed rob-
ry trial WU to belia.
IHopper, accordin1 to the
ct1e. almply announced to the
urt he wished to plead IUllty
d asked for immediate sen-
nciq.
ITbe defendant made b1a sur-
se announcement durin1 pre-
al modons just prior to the
etnning or bla Superior Court
al in Santa Ana.
A new trial for co-defendant
Hugh Cou1bran, •s. waa
scheduled for Monday.
Coughran had been scheduled
to go on trial with Hopper. but
because a jury al.ready bad been
ftlected and could have been in·
flluenced by Hopper'• 1ullty
f.lea, the newtrlal date wu set.
·bTbe cue betao lut March
fftien two armed ~ wallled in· CD-the Brett-Walker jewelry
store in Newport Beach'•
hsbion Island.
Weartnc wiCI and •U.OSluMa
the two men told elerb tbe)' bMi
radio-controlled bomb. They
eaned out dlaplay cues and
lndows and fled wttb what wu
ater estimated to be about ,000 ln jewelry.
Only one plece of ta.. stolen
welry wu ever r~ovt1'ed.
At the time of b1I arr .. t, Hop.
er w•• on f>arole from tbe
ederal orison at •r.rmtnal
-
DAILY PILOT
..., .............
GETI lb!N Yl!ARI
Ex-cop Hopper
Island, where be bad ae"ed
time for a une conTiction of aid· lnC in a Jail break and polle81·
in1•~1DOMJ.
In the 1980ll, the defendant bad rilen to captala in the Santa Ana
police department. While on t.be
force, be wu accused by then
police chief Edward Allen ol be·
lnl part ol a ll"OUP Of allqed John Blrcb Sodety mem~n
trytn1 to have bJm (Allen) fired.
Hopper eHntual1y left the
police department to attend law
school. FrOm 19'70 to J.t'75 be
practiced law until hla eoovtc•
tlon tor &ldlni in a Jail brnt ID Nevada, where one of hla cllenta
WU lne8"erated.
County vote
certified;
it'• official
or...,. CoUntJ Re1lltrar o1:
Votel'I Al Ollan cerUftel tbe
•alt. Of tM ""· ......... to-da1. ~ m~ tba .ote
talU• ln tbi VaricMil raoe. of· ftclal.
Ollob Mid be Witt 1abailt a certlfted co.t>'. ·o( &be ,.. to
the County.~ of ..... ••· best"*-
~ .-. -'" ... ~~-·-~ -'
F..0..PageAJ
VEGAS •••
rescued eome iuests by grab-
blnt them from balconies and
leadin1 them away OQ scaffold-
in1.
"We ~ve at leaat 40 to 50 Jn.
Juries, moetly from Oy!Qg &lass
and eome from smoke inbala-
tlon," Dlnsman said.
He •aid one of the dead bad
Jumped from a window and two
other bodies were found in the
140-yard-loq caalno.
Dinaman sald the guesta were
in no immedlate daqer aa loC1I
u they stayed by their .mdowl.
He aald the fire started ln..tbe
baaement about 7:15 a.m. PST
and quickly spread to the north
side of tbe bot.e!.
''At tb1a tlme the eottre cumo
. 1• involnd, •• Dim~an 1ald.
''Zvery fioOI' Of the bcKel ls tlDed
with black smote."
The portico in f~t of the
main entrance was burned away.
Tradinl ot,.MGM Grand Hotels
Inc. stock wu 1uspended on the
New York Stoek Excban1e tbia
morniq upon news of tbe fire.
Tradinl ls routinely suspended
on • stock when there ll develop-
ment that eould affect earnlnp,
The MGM, which opened
seven years aao, wa1 in the pro-
ceu ol addin1 180 rooms and
33,000 square feet of banquet and
meet.lq room.1.
''Upon completion, the MGM
Grand Hotel Laa Ve1as will bave. a1IDOlt 2,900 euest room.a
and wtU be the lar1eat hotel in
the •«Id.'' accordiDI to the t..o annual report by MGM Gnnd
Hotels, Inc. Tbe expamloo wu
due for comp&etion next May.
~ro• Page Al
• I
PINCH •..
by trustees Dec. 2.
Belmont School Supt. Claude
Turner 1ald Thursday that tbe
· rentinc of w:moccupied apace bu
worked ft.De In a buainea• eeme.
He aald the dlatrict bas not bad to clo.e schools or layoff teachers.
He added tbat the dlatrtct la
ralatq about t280,000 by reatine
space today ca.re centers, private
industry and a labor unlon.
But 'turner said tben bu been
• 1re1t deal of bureaucracy in·
volved that hu beell "a drain OD
the dlltrtct and weai1q to the
community."
He Nld each potential UM baa
to unctereo three aeparate bear-
in11 and teadl to a "fuaa11 and
apeeulattoo and fean in the com· mwiity.
Unmasking of. J-.ll.
tU1sailant tonight
BJ IBaaY BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wu it
Sue Elim, threatened with con-
ftnement in a sanitarium? Wu it
Cliff Barna, cut. out of a bil oil
deal? Wu It Krlst.ln Shepard,
faced with a proetitution bust? Hane OD to your cowboy bat,
America-ton.lCht'• the nilbt we
finallyftnddut wbosbot J .R.
Andjuatabouteverybodyontbe
hit "Dallas" seriet looks like a
likely auspect.
J .R. Ewln&, of coune, is that
scoundrel or an oil tycoon who
double-dealt his way Into ID in·
tematiooal frenzy or speculation
after someone pumped two slup
Into him at the end of the last
season. Fansbavebeenwaitlncto
find out wbodunnit ever since.
(Related story Pa1e C9)
The denouncement will be
broadcast to East Coast and
Payments ordered
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Tbeci-
ty must pa)' $2 million to
tboulanda ol ,bltcb, Hllpaldcs
and W"Ome, .._. increue tbeir
representation on the ·police
force, a federaljudae bu ruled in
a seven-year Job cflacrimlnation
suit.
Midwest viewers at 1 p.m. PST. In
the Mouataln Ume IODe, tbe •bow
willbeginat8p.m. PSTandoatbe
Wett Cout the abow will be on at lOp.m.PST.
Viewen in the West can find out
the secret early by lilten.in1 to
broadcast outleta, some of wblcb
plan ur1ent news reports.
Paaaengen on Air France jets
bound for Europe will be told
wbo shot J .R. when the seeret
breab.
Acton on the show, includine
Larry Haeman, who plays J.R.,
will be told the secret at a party
tonlabt. They've also been kept
in the da.rk for security reuons
and only about 20 people in
Lorimar Productions are said to
be privy to the secret.
Just about every character in
the show looks guilty. Nearly au
had the opportunity. and there are
DO lack or motives for shooting
J .R.
J . R. bu mortaaged Soutbfork
Ranch riibt out from under his
puenta, Jock and Min Ellie,
planned to a.Ink oil wells on Miss
EWe'• I.pd. driven bis brother
BObby away, planned to commit
hia wile to an inltitution, batched
a plot to eonvtct hia aiater-in-law
bf prostitution and driven one
~iness associate to suicide and
left another bankrupt.
,
Odfts off
Don't bet on 'Dtdlas'
LAS VEGAS (AP) -You can't place bets on J .R. 's as
sailant anymore. Not legally,.anyway.
THE NEVADA GAMING Control Board baa ordered a
Laa Vqu bootina aeeot to atop tallin& beta OD the out·
comeoftbe1bootiqna)'1teeyontbeCBS-TVsertes "Dallas."
Tbe Cutaways tlotel sport.a book D&G Ml ooaa on au
the major ampec:ta In the fictional shootini -includina
J.R. Ewiat blm.self.
But Richard Bunker, chairman of the eam..inl board,
said tbe Cutaways wu ordered to "ceue and desist."
Asked wby, Bunker sald, "Because it's QOt a sportiJll
event. Somebody know. the outcome of it -bow many
somebodln nobody knows."
'"l'BAT'S TBE LAW," be Hid. "Ra" and aports
boob CID only be involved in aportina events."
I
r,,.._P~AJ
DWLLING ••
1overnment in 1175 for 71.3
million.
A dlacovery well iQ 19'78 loeated
oil in seven 1andltone sonea
between2,908 and'.250feet.
The cosnpany then spent two
year1 obtaioln1 nece11ary
permits from 11 federal, state and
localretUlatory ateocles.
Finally, two J.ara• platfon:na
were comtrueted on land and then I
anchored in about 280 feet ol
water.
Tbe drlqtn1 platform, named
•'Ellen," la equipped with two rip
to draw oil from wells in the oil
Ooor. The leeond platform, "El·
ly," boUlea production facWties
forseparatln&oU, water and1u.
A live-in crew of 50 will operate
the ocean complex in stlnta of
seven days on board, seven days
off.
According to Shell, the Beta
project is the only commercial
succeuful one resulting from the
1975 Outer Continental Shelf
Lease Sale at Los An&eles, in
which the industry spent *'17
millloofor 56 tracts.
1,000 march
• I • m mournin~ .
' NEW YORK (AP) -While a
drummer beat a slow roll. a
solemn candlelilbt processi<m ot
more than 1,000 people w°'8MS
throu&b the streets of Greenwich
vmaeetomourntbedeathsoftwo
men shot to death in a macbine-
gun attackontwoiayban.
Tean Wer.t visible on many
face1 Tbur~ay ni&bt as the
marcben astembled before the
two ban, Rasbrod and Sneakers,
where the kllUnp occurred.
On Ramrod'• Jront door wu a '
sl1n: "Blood Donon NeededJl'or
Sbootlni Victims." The alp pve
a telepboae Dumber for St. Vin·
ce,it 's Jbpl~. where four of the
etibt victim• of Wednesday
n11bt'1 attack were in sJtllfac-
tory condition today, according to
a hospltalspotnwoman.
Iran 'deal' told
EVERETT, Wash. (AP)
Boelnl Co. olficlall met cllrect1y
with Iran.Ian air force orncera
last January to ne&oUate the de-
livery ol a 747 cargo jet, the
Everett Herald reported.
WHY
'ALDEN'S?
We show more than thirty manufacturer's
carpet lines with approximately 3000
sampfes. We carry about 100 rolls of carpet
at special prices. In our remnant room are
hundreds of remnants from tiny to room size.
Every American manufacturer of vinyl is
represented in our vtnyt display: Armstrong,
Con~oleum. Gaf. Mannington, Biscayne and
Amt1co. Rolls and remnants in stock at
special prices.
· Jason Fine, 14, Laguna Beach, and dog,
Breeda, (foreground) line up with other
Orange County 4-H Club members and
puppies they are training for eventual
use u guide dogs for bllnd. Younpters
. and their dogs were at John Wayne
Airport Wednesday night to familiarize pups with travel conditions they will en-
counter later in their lives. Megan Scott, 14, Irvine (below, left) practicel leavin1
Republic airliner with her dog, Fiona.
Amy Heathman, to. La Habra, Cbek>w.
right) gets encouragement from Mrs.
Pat Hoyt, a program leader. Amy's doe,
Beaver, wasn't sure be likes sliding
glass door in terminal.
Bealih review plan,.,ed
OC to stutly quality of ob~tetrical services
PlaJlllina Colln.cil i. coordinating
the study, which ln planners'
Jareon ls known as an "ap-
proprlateneu review."
Perlqatal services involve
medical actlvitlea associated with cblldbirth. The review la
scheduled to take six mootbs,
and ofnclall for tbe councll aald
they hope to eet u many pec>ple-
lnvolved u poulble.
Tbe teView ii tecbilleal work,
but lta 1oal 19 simple: ~ inate
sure Oranae county bu tbeprop.; er equipment, f aclllt1u and
staff to band.le all kinds ~ ob-
atetrlca cues -but not an u-
ceaa of resourcee which fOl'CM
patients to pay more tbaa necessary.
To accomplish the obJed!ves,
lite Council recruited a volmteer
1roup called the Appf"OPrlat&i
oeaa Rmew Committee. Mein·
btrs prOpolcd a act ol ltadardl
fqr the medlc&l and bil<ll JWOo
ftHiooa. Their hope 11 that
futar. tiolpltal plau will be
tailored to ftt the StaM•i'dl.
Amon1 tbe 1taD4art9 are
ltlplllationl to emure U.1&:
-AnJ patleDt livet wt'* • IDiD ..... traYel Umt bf a ..........
or ellDle ~ fOr ~
Mn'lCll.
-c.eia ... Ctilldblrill "' -........... ~.,..,....
'I08a-doMto I~~ ......
IUiDaUl itatr orlt at mil ~llltld ==·
Food stamps
require work
YUMA, Ariz. (AP) -. Thia
aouU-west ArisoDa city baa de·
cided to join 13 communities in
seven states ln a Department of
Aartculture program to make
some food-stamp recipients
work for &beir stamps.
Startin& next month, 2S people
here will be selected to
participate in tbe experimental proeram, which wu beiun last
yen on 4,516 ~nona ln San
Dieeo. Muakha1um County,
Oblo; Rusk County, Wis.; Clay
County, S.p:_:1 Morrbtown,
Tenn.; Suls6x \;OQD\y, N.J.; and
Berkeley County, S.C., officials
said.
Partidpanta wort 20 houri a
week on pro)ects includlq city
maintenanee and park cleanln1.
Tbe <>ranee-County Diltrlct At-
torney's Off1ee bu filed suit to
stop the proprietor of an alcoholic
rebabilita&n center from bold-
inl dail,y bingo 1ames.
Franklla Delano Rose, owner of
the Colonial ~anor Half-Way
House ~. in Santa Ana, was
named aa defendant in the suit
filed in Oraqe County Superior
Cowt.
Deputy Dimict Attomey Carl
Armbrust aays in the suit that tbe
btnco sames are actually * lot-
tery and are prolul>ited by state
law. But be says Role tries to
avoid proeecutioo by calllni tl)e
games "donation binao" or "free
blngo."
ArmbJ'Uat adds that Role'
hallway bouaedoea not have•
permit for tbe alleeed 1am
activitie1.and Boeedoeln't haft
licenJe to apouor ~ries .
. district attorney LI alkinl
court to stop Bole from ruamna
the bingo games and to tine him
leut tz,:;00.
Roae formerly ran bia blna
game1 1n Anaheim, but the cit
counciJ paued an ordlnancetbe
that forced b1m out. He movedtb
detosificatlon center -and bingo games -about two moa
ago to a locaUon in tbe unin
corporated part of the county,
at a Santa Ana addreu.
Perjury allegation
}
DA's office rejects.··
Orozco prosecutioll
An Oruge County judge ousted
in a bitter Nov. 4 election cam-
paJp will not be prosecuted by
the District Attomey•a Office for
alle1edly perjuring hlmfflt four
years _.., to gain appointment to
office.
Depat.y Dbtrict Attorney Jean
Rbeinhehner said a six-week in·
veattgaUon by ber office bas
abown there ta "ioauffictent
evtdeoee" to back up alle1atkm
that Kuolcipal Court Judce
Richard Orotco lied on voter re-
iiltration forms in 1976 when lte
listed an Anaheim home as his ad·
dresa.
· Orozco 's election opponent,
Bobby D. Youngblood, alle&ed
that the judge's principal res·
idence was in Monterey Park in
Los Ancelee County at tbe time of
his appolntment to the Oranp
County beach by Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr.
Youniblood claimed Qrosco's
appointment waa illegal since be
bad not met proper residency re-
quirements prtor to appointmeut.
But Mrs. Rbeinbeimer aaJd
Wednesday her inveatigat,on
showed that Orozco bad a private
room at tbe Anaheim home of a
supporter and alao maintained a
private telephone line there,
-which wuinservice.
Orozco admitted to reporters
that be only used the Anaheim ad·
dress to ~ realden~y require-
menta even though he actually
still lived 1D Monterey Park, from
wblcb be commuted for two years
altedds appointment. The Judge,
who leave1 office in January,
eventually moved h14 family to
Brea.
Public Announcement
Youngblood defeated Orosco
for a central district court seat Nov. 4 after a rancoroua cam-
paign. A superior court Judie bad
voided the June election match
between the two becauae of ballot
irregularities. Youngblood bad
won that race after a recount.
Chicago race,.
called off )
.fl,
CHICAGO (AP) -Mayor J~
Byrne has called off plans tor I(
high-powered Fourth or Jui)'.,
automobile race which had ~
intended to attract tourists ~
Chicago. ·
.. Both the proposed date an~
location of the Grand Prix im~e
an undue burden on an alrea~
crowded holiday calendar," M11.
Byrne said. ·
Tbe decision to cancel the SO-~~
race aJong a course consisting
2. 7 miles or lakefront ao
downtown streets also was ma~
because or "questions abotit
utilization of Chicago Park rn...
trict property. '
AFS selling nots .~
The Corona del Mar chapter of
the American Field Service a
sellln& cashews and almonds th1t
month'aa part of ita annual fund·
ine campaign to help eeod local
high school students abroad and
brine foreip students here. • <!
For further information or tt placeorden, call 760-0159.
On No\'. 6th, 1980 Raciti
Jewelry company Announced
Giving Away $100,000 In
Discounts On All In Store
Items. To Date, There Have
Been $33,866 In Discounts
Given. ·
eo.111 1ni\
.q• ft Jud.
JJIW
owJ b
?dJ
'<'Uo ,bh
., ,
b
,.
PA.OT H / r
A8 fOa SD and the holiday, ..U, tb1t'1 ba~
too
Yoa DO doubt 8CMd la the ...,.. that femlDilt attorney
Gloria Allred claim• 1be bu ~ a snat victory o•er tbe
Santa Ana·bued dnal 1tore ebaln t.bat MINl•led itl toy
displays as thoee for Little Boys over here, and Little Girls
over there"' It seems this momentous decllioo bu been one year in
the making. That is, Ma. Allred cried foul on the iaaue
along about Cbrlatmu of 1B'l9.
Her point was that the kida would 1et psyched out if
they were seen aboppin1 in the wron1 corner. "Hey, YOU.U
lady, drop the fire enctne and 1etoverthere with the doU. Uc!
toy kitcbena," Somethin& like that.
So, accordin1 to the reporta, Ma. Allred wins and toys
for the tots will no longer be diaplayed with sex desipa-
tions upoo them.
ACTUALLY, TRIS OUGRI' TO make it all euier for
the drugstore people in the fint place. They can just pile
all the toys in one un.i.aex place and let the little darlinp
plow tbrou&b them any way tbe_y want to. _
Parent.a who are battered veterans of the toy-selection
dodge already know that it lan't 1oin1 to make much dlf. ference. Whatever you get for Mary Jane, you can be au.re
Johnny will demand one too. Even if be doesn't want it.
When they 1et a little older, and more soplmticated,
they don't ~are what the toy lift la. Jmtead they c:hec:lt the price tap.
"DID YOU SPEND more on Billy than you spent on
me?"
"U she got three bow come 1only1ot two?"
You are in a no-win situation when it comes to gift.
givin& to the younger aet. Why, I'll bet you've known aome
of tbose. parents who spend 40-boat weeks painataklnal)'
goinl over the selection of juit the r11bt toy lift for the kid.
In the endr it's a marvel to bebold. It whim, beeps,
twinkles with movinJ lights and worb just like the Real
Thins -whatever the real thine happens to be.
And when the bil day comea and the kid opens the
package for this wonder, what happens?
THE YOUNGS'l'Sa HAULS it out of the box, filps the
"On" switch, and watches the uaembled worn rotate for
about 18 aecoadl. Then he ahnlo expansively.
Theo be toaes the box over h1a bead and plays with
that for thenext three boun.
So much for ktd gifta, by an or otherwise.
' Aerial view depicts giant bole caused by the collapse of
an abandoned 1alt m1ne oo Jefferson hland, La. The col·
lapse forced the whirlpool draining of Lake Pelgneur.
The island, 10 miles sq~ wu evacuated after a 1,300-
foot-deep abandoned salt ~e shaft collapsed when it ap-
parently waa PJ111ctured by oil drilling, and seeptni lake
water caused the cave-in. Tbe $5 million oil rie, a tq boat.10
barges and a botanical garden were sucked into the gaping
maw. A fl.Sherman yelled "the end of the world ii coming"
as the whirlpool drained the lake water from under bis boat.
Iran, Ir8q b&ttle for mountains
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
Iranian paratroopers fou&bt
close-range combat with
helicopter-dropped Iraqi com-
mandoe today for a atrate&ic
chain of heights alon1 the
footbilla of western Iran's Za-
gro1 Mountain5.
Tehran radio reported Iranian
paratroopers were pushing the
Producer
guilty in
assault case
RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (AP)
Tbeatric:al producer Roy Radin
hu been ftDed $1,000 and e:tven
three years probatlOG in connec-
tion with an alle&ed assault on
actreaa Melonie Haller at
Radin's Lonf hland mansion.
Radin, 30, pleaded 1uilty
Thursday to a char1e of
poaseaim ol a weapon in return
for the dropping of drug
poaaession and menacing
cbar1e1 brought a1ainat him
following a weekend party Jut
April in Southampton. The
char1e said Radin pointed a gun
at Mlaa Haller on Aprll 11.
Mlaa Haller, 24, played a part
ln the "Welcome Bae.It, Kotter"
television aeries. She made her allegaUooa after she was found
April 13 slumped in a seat on a
New York-bound Long Island
Rail Road train, bruised and
dazed.
Iraqis back in the fi1htin1 near
Iran's border town.a of Mehran,
Gilan Gbarb and Sar-Pol-e-
Zahab. It aaid Iranian troops
bad inflicted heavy caaualUes
and deatroyed many enemy
fortifieatiom.
A communique from the Iraqi
defense command in Baghdad
said ita forces drove off the at-
tacken beJiind waves of bomb-
ing air force jets and rocltet-
firinl helicopter gunships.
The Iraqi communique said '5
Iranian troops were kllled in the
running baWe for the . beighta
thia momin&.
An Iranian communique made
no mentim of cuualUes there
but claimecl IO Iranian b'OOpe
were kllled ln mld-morlliDI
helicopter C\Qllblp U1aulta on
Iraqi pomtiom around the em·
battled Iranian town or
Suaan1erd, 100 miles lo the
southeast.
Tlle three towns, conquered by
invading Iraqi forces in the first
week ol the 11-d.ay-old war, COil·
trol the routes from Iran's
we1tern border to the Iraqi
capital of Baghdad, 90 miles
farther westward.
Military communiques from
the two aides suggest the battle
for the height. mi1bt become
crucial to Iran's wee.It-long coun-
ter-offensive at the northern and
southern sectors of Iraq's 300-
mile invuioo front.
Control of the height.a is essen·
tlal for bold.int the three towns
as well u the major border-
crouinl Iranian city of Qur~· Shlrta, which al.lo ls la Iraqi
banda.
Iran claimed 'Ibunday it re·
captured the atrate&ic height.a,
''Canoga Park''
killed 590 Iraqla and drove the
invaden back three miles from
their poeitloaa.
Iraq aald it lcllled 85 Iranians
in the same area Wednesday
and 90 Iranian troops in
helicopter gunsblp attacks
ThursdayinSu.sangerd.
None of the claima could be
confirmed because Western re-
porters have been barred from
traveling w the battle zones m a
regular basis since Iraq invaded
Sept. 22.
The Iraqis are shelling Ahwaz
from the south, bavin1 puabed ;
there after ta.king moat of the
port of Khorramshabr and sur-
rounding the nearby reft.Dery cl·
ty of Abadan, &5 mllet to the
south on the Shatt al-Arab
estuar>', Iraq's only waterway to
the Persian Gulf.
Nof1hern coast i-ainy
GRAND
OPENING
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Decoder law upheld
~ extensive legal wrangling, an Orange County
Superior Court judge bu ruled that a recently enacted
state law to bar the manufacture and sale of subscription
,,,_.,..,..levisi<Jn decoders may be enforced.
In essence, Judge John Trotter held that the Btate
does retain some jurisdiction over the devices, despite
the assertion by attorneys for a decOder manufacturer
that regulation of matters involving the airwaves is ex-
clusively within the purview of the Federal Communica-rn Commission and Congress.
• Decoder sales, prompted in part by all the recept
,Ubliotty, have been good. It's easy to understand why
someone would rather pay a one-time price of $250 for a
decoder than pay close to $20 month after month to lease
a device from one of the subscription television firms.
Predictably, attorneys for the decoder manufac-
turers intend to appeal Trotter's ruling and attempt to
f:. a decision favorable to their position. ·
Trotter himself admitted the law iB "awkward" and a "hastily" passed by the state Legislature. It doubt-
s will be the subject of further legal testing.
~ It's unlikely police will make enf o~ement of the ~atute their number one priority -but would-be sellers
pnd buyers of the decoding devices should be aware that \t now is the law and will remain so until further notice.
\'
-Soviet bluff called
The Soviets are good at bluster and bluff, but when
~ey find they've been backed mto the wrong corner
ey're still capable of yielding.
This was evident last week when the 35-nation
' elsinki review conference in Madrid was saved from
ollapse by calling the Soviets' bluff.
The session was scheduled to review compliance with
, the 1975 Helsinki pact, signed by 33 European nations, the
1tl IUnited States and Canada. ~ ;_ The agreement outlined 10 principles of conduct
, between nations covering, among other things, human
i' rights, freedom of communication and nonintervention in
e internal affairs of other states.
For nine weeks the Soviets tried to cut the proposed
nl2 weeks of discussion to four weeks and to keep dis-
cussion of such issues as human rights in the Soviet
Union and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan off the
agenda.
Finally, a compromise agenda drafted by five neutral
nations was presented to the Soviets on a take-it-or-leave-
·t basis. If the compromise were not accepted1 the con-
erence would be called off, the delegates agreea.
If that happened, it would clearly point the finger at
the Soviet Union as the disruptive faction.
So the compromise, which provides for the desired
six weeks of general discussion and six weeks of pro-
sals for further implementing the Helsinki pact was
ccepted without a dissenting voice and the conference
proceeds.
'•\'A','I\ The chief Soviet delegate had the tag line. "The voice
of the people who wanted detente and peace has been
heard,'' said he blandly. However, he added "It is time
to recognize the fruitlessness of interfering in the internal
lairs of Af ghanietan. ''
c That drew the first wave of laughter from the
otherwise solemn delegates.
t ' • '.""P-P,inions eicpressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot I Other views expr.essed on this page are those of their authors and I artists Re•der comment 1a invited Address The D•1ly Pilot, P 0 I Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 6-42-4321
Boyd/Late starter
• ByL.M. BOYD
Aae 41 i~ too late to tblnk ab ut awllcblng
ureets, tb t'a clear. The
writer of renown, Rex Stout,
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
w,u, November save
u1 qwt a choice. a
turkey or a ~· Let'• bo~• and pray the to '7 Will be better , tha tM eoo.e we've
~ba!lnl. J.c.v.
creator ot Nero Wolle, waa
that old when he wrote bJ.a
flnt mystery story. By the
time he died in 19'75, he'd
sold mon than 100 million
copfn ol h1a various novelt.
No other American then bad
aa many booltt ln print, I'm
told.
Thref thousand tons of
pa.,.r moqey -that's how
much the Tftuury Depart·
ment deltroya e•ch week. /ul
appropJate flatlatlc. Hl1h
ti me paper money wu
meuured ln tonna1e.
Not everyone knows how to
piddle free 1 nurdle wink. Or
bristol with a squJdger. Or squop. 11\ete are expert act.
only ol thole who play Ud·
~lywinb.
Underatana Tbe Oldeom aow band out another mllllon
8lb1 ry 18 d.aya .
WASHINGTON -For reuon.a
lllat are not clear, the Cart.et-ad·
mlniatraUoo bas proved reluc·
&ant to call the SOvi.t. Un1cn to ~ccount ror two clutnc oreichel Of aolemn t~aty prom·
ilH report d by 0 .s. ln-
telU1enice •8 nclea. ·
The two ep IOdea -a Sept. H
underaround nuclear teat and
'
ta1t year'I
serm-w&rf•re
accident In
Sverdlovsk -
provided COO·
vlnclna
evidence that
tbe Kremlin
haa been
systematical-
ly violatina
provisions of
two arm5·cont.rol treaties with
the United States. The all'ft·
men ts are the 'Ihreabold Teat Ban
Treaty of 1976 and the ba_c-
terlololical weapons ban slped
ln 19'72.
Intelligence sources told my
a55oclate Dale Van Atta the Sep·
tember nuclear explosion was
somewhere between 160 and 650
kilotons ln size. Many experts
conclude that t~e wide
divergence in measurement
data suggests that the actual in·
tensity of the blast was around
400 kilotons.
U.S. officials could not ig-
nore the incident, as they have
QUICKt MAKE A
llST Of All ™E mPARTS
W£NtED!
Oiarles McCabe
ott.Q dOiw in .,P,re•loUI ~1 btt•dlf ""' tM ett eJG eat1111•te wa1 well above ~
150·1dlot0cl limit ~rmltted ht'
th thte&b014 treaty. SO tbe Unit·
ed state. Officially expreaaed
"eonce.ro .. to Soviet Am-
baaHddr Aaatoly D0b"11lln
Tbe vtol1UorJ of tbe cerm-wa rf ate treaty could be even
more terlous. Tb Sverdlovsk
disuter, wbJch ldl1ed hundreds
of Soviet citizens by the release
of deadly anthrax bacilli, wu
apparently the final evidence
needed to persuade the CIA that
the Runlana have been develop·
in' biological weapona for of.
tensive use, probably since
World War IJ.
In late April 1979, Sverdlovsk
residents were jolted by • loud
explosion, probably in a
laboutory at the biological
warfare installation in the
Chakalov district of the city.
Clouds of anthrax bacilli were
released.
Reservists at the milltar~
base were the first lo die. Next
were workers at a ceramics fac-
tory downwind, where ven·
tilators sucked in concentrated
quantities of the anthrax germs.
THE OFFICIAL Soviet ex-
planation was that the victims,
who died within six or seven
hours, had contracted anthrax
from an illegally s laughtered
co • A daaatrt.d CIA report. dal·
ed Api1J •. }NO. 11otet lhat,
however, the aeatha "were c,ued by ~monary anthrax u
oppoMd t6'1utrlc or •kla IQ•
tbrn, which would be more
likely U a.rilhrax-contam•natfld
}>fff ~eaten or handled."
"Tbe ceramics factory wu
sprayed Inside and out with
cbloramlhe, and lar•e areaa
around the military ln5talletion
were graded and covered with
aapbalt," tbe CIA reported
"Wild animals in a pall foTat •
near the (facility) wire allesed·
ly tU.led, and most dogs in the
clty dlatrict were picked op and
destroyed."
THE EXACT 'number of
~aauallies was covered up, but analysts have eatimated the ton
at between 200 and 1,000.
"UnCOPfirmed reports claimed
that the installation
commander, a general officer,
com milted suicide following the
first casualties," the CIA report
states.
Noting that an effective lethal
dose for an individual is 10,000
anthrax spores, the CIA con·
eludes that an extremely large
number of the spores must have
been released "effectively
negating any assessment of
peaceful or defensive research
being conducted there."
WATCH ON WASTE: Amtrak
m!YDOtbavea~ ID• UM! tr&lm :run on time bu& M
b11 mana1ed to t•\ O• Hverante payCbetb bl Of um.
to a ~e rice pre.I~..., was oven the beave-bo.
The biireauerat n quet II
Carole P'oryat, who w db·
ml11fd by the ta.xpaytt"-timded
raUroad last month for ••pOUey
dU'f•renctt," As a cuabloll
aaa1n1t unempJoypient, Foryat
was 1Tanted severance pay at
her old salary -upwatda ol
$50,000 a year. The cheeks are tt>
keep comin1 \Dltll next JaauaTJ.
Foryat bad no trouble ftndln•
something to do. She volu.n·
teered for the .. truth team" sent
oul by the RepubUcana to pro-
mote Ronald Jlea1an acrou the
country. This was no 1reat •
wrench for the former rallroad
veep. WhUe she was sUU at Am·
trail, sbe had worked en·
thu,iasti,tally for Reagan on bet
own Um~.
The Al\ltrat officials who fired
Foryst n1fly live to regret their
judgment. She's contesting the
dismissal and is contemplating
legal action
As for the severance pay,
Foryst said she hasn 'l cashed
any of the checks she has re-
ceived. She also points out that a
scant two weeks before she was
derailed. the rail system's board
of directors voted unanimously
to reappoint her to her office.
WHAT'S RIGHT WITH
AMERICA: The campaign that
just ended had perhaps more
than the usual share of dirty
politics But there were two
notable exceptions. As it hap-
pens, both involved Maryland
congressional races, but they ex·
emplified one of the things that
is right about America.
In the First CongressionaJ Dis·
trict, Democrat Roy Dyson was
running far behind the GOP in·
cumbenl, Robert Bauman, until
the conservative Republican
became enmeshed in an un-
savory homosexual scandal.
Dyson immediately declared he
would make no mention of t\is
opponent's personal tragedy -
and he didn 't Dyson won
without taking advantage of
Bauman's troubles
In the Fifth District. mcum
bent Democrat Gladys Spellman
suffered a massive heart attack
four days before the election
Her Republican cba)lenaer, Kevin Igoe, called off furtber
electioneering, and was so\Dldly
defeated
Winner and loser both deserve
com mendalion for choosing de
cency over expediency
Tobacco merchants focus on Third World
Like a lot of other people l am
both saddened and angered by a
story that has been around a long
time but is just beginning lo sur-
face. This is the deliberate dump·
ing by tobacco companies of
cigarets on the Third World,
creating addiction and certain
death from a cause that had not
existed before.
The thing that makes me sad
about the whole thing is tb'at I am
not certain
that if I were a
' tobacco ty-
coon I might
not do the
same thing, to
maintain the
profits to my
stockholders
and my own
family's style
of life. Fairly
decent people are doing this sort
orthlng all the ti me
The fact is that the number of
tobacco users has recently
dropped in this country While per
capita cigaret use in the last 10
years rose less than 4 1>ercent in
Sydney Harris
the United States, it increased an
a la rming 33 percent in Africa and
24 percent in Lalin· A men ca
THE MARKETING skills of the
tobacco people are considerable
and are being used ruthlessly
The governments of the Third
World countries are being told not
only about the charms of the
weed, but are shown how painless
it is to raise taxes from an addict
edpubUc
Tobacco growing as an industry
could not exist without the help it
gets from taxpayer's money The
Department of Agriculture,
which administers such funds ,
now finds itself in a paradoxical
position
On the one hand. 1l continues to
put out millions of dollars on sub-
sidies of ooe kind or another for
research. pnce supports and ex·
port-promotion. Al the same time
it is warning the growers about
the anti-s moking movement,
which is sure to increase rather
than decline during coming
decades.
Our government price support
programs assume, among other
things. th<' production of more
tobacco than can be sold in this
country In 1979 alone. $337
mtlhon of taxpayer's funds went
for that purpose
IN ADDITION, larg<' amounts
o( taxpayer monies hav~ been
used to help the World Bank and
the U N. Development program
to encourage the production of
tobacco abroad This is done on
the theory that foreign tobacco
growing is a good cash crop and
will encourage the now of foreign
exchange
Says Margaret J. Sheridan, a
rese arch associate o f the
American Council on Science and
Health: "These trends an tobacco
exports, consumption and pro-
duction clearly 1nd1cate that the
stage is being set for a new
epidemic of smoking-related dis
eases in the less developed coun
tries
''Theepidemic may be prevent
ed if we take action now to
eliminate the programs funded
by our tax dollars that accelerate
the introduction or c1garets
abroad.
"We cannot allow the health of
the Third World to be sacrificed
for the health of the tobacco in-
dustry The price. in terms of life
and resources, is Just too high "
BUT TAKJNG anything from
the tobacco industry that it has
already gained is going to be no
easy matter. The tobacco-
growing states constitute one of
the most formidable lobbies in
this country What Senator Jesse
Helms of North Carolina wants,
Senator Jesse Helms is likely to
get
The evident inhumanity of the
policies that are. 1n a sense, being
forced on the tobacco industry.
should in the end persuade the
American people that a policy of
dumping death on the Third
World 1s not for us. Better than
hooking the yet unborn of the
Third World on tobacco, we
should use our price support
monies to develop food and other
products that could do our less·
favored neighbors some good.
The telephone seems to encourage bad Inanners
It'• just a mlnol' point Of civili-
ty. but enoup miDod add up to
a major after awbJle. And most
people'• telepbooe mannen are
a major &DDO)'ance to me.
However rude I mltht be on
other occulona, ,fben t
telephone ·
evea a tlale
friend, th• Ont .words I
utter are :
"Are rou
bu1yf' or
••Am I dl1-
t u r bl n S
you?" or "II
thh • b•d time to be
ca1Un1t" or aom.c.bJ.na to the Hme fllfreet .
Tb• &elepbOae eo domtutea
our won lit• aM bc.isn• llt• tWM
ctaya cut tbll.....,.. to me mt"Nl'/
• blJIO eon.lderalt11•11. But. .w. it not 11 pteCtS •
'
even by strangers, let alone by
friends.
I will get calls at the otfice
in which the caller just bar&H
Into hit pit.ch, wbetever it may
be, wtlh no reg.rd for what I
mlaht happen to be dolnl at the
moment. And if I interrupt after
• minute, suaeatlnJ that J'sn In
tbe middle ol compo1tn1 a ool·
umn and don't waat to flt de·
railed, snoet of tbele callen will
vilify me for my "bad man-
ners."
mE TELEPHONE, I.Ute the
automobile, ll .a prtvilece, not a
rlsht. U provide1 •Otree to
aosneone, bul It does not allow \II
to tranainsa hll pri .. cJ or bb
butJ1*1 lf lt la not COl'lV pf to
hhn, or her. Tbll la wby almOllall 'eucuU••s ba•• tbelr eallt
ftlteted by eecr«&rl•.
M J have mea*'*1 bitb't,
Ult• not the cue lfl count.rt -
like England, where even the
president of a Jar1e company
will pick up b.la own phone ii be
is in the office and does not have
a vhltor. But he knows that such
callers will not abuse the
prlvttece. will be polite and to
the Po(nt.
1 llAVE malntalned that aame
policy at work. but it la
1uduaUy wearin1 me down. In
fact, It hu ,iven me a bad name
with many readers, who would
not object ll they were fobbed off
by a secretary, but resent it
when J SPHk to them and
IUHelt lt would be better lo
Quo tee
"lt'a 8 1leW11>aptl''I duty to
"rlnt the new., and .retie hell.·•
WUlu Slorq, ''°'e1Mftl of fltit • a tr11 Of thf Chicago 'Tirne.t, JtlJ
)
write, slnce I lack the time to
bear their full ttory.
It ts just as bad at home,
where people call at dinnertime
without even lnqu.lriDI u to
whether we are at lM &able or ti
it Is convenient to fetcb someone
to tbe phone. Early Sunday
morn.lap or late on a 1ebool
nt1bt, it doesn't teem to matter
to 1ome people -to tbem the
phone ls a probe perpetuatl) at
their diapoaal, wbel"t 1.b_, feel
free to reach into ltl)'Oae '• boJbe whenever they happen to feel Utelt. ••
Robert Lyod, the Am.tc:ao
1oalol0fllt, once dacrlbid U..
tel pbane u ''tbe ,natat *"' nitnce amona nuiaaAca, dd tM
,1re•*l PulMnc:• amoot eoave
Dlenc " It ll bardly ·~ tb.t wlMfD AJaanCJer Omham
Bell retlfed to hl1 ho • la•
Canada, be would not a
pbo int.be
* *
• impact
CARSON CITY (AP) -(;(\v.
Bob List u td the "living
nightmare" ot the MGM botel-
caalno tire will have .. very far.
reaching" impact.a on Nevada.
"It's a living nightmare for
those people there," Liat said.
"I'm hopeful that the damage
and losses and deaths and in-
juries will be as minimal as
\
possible."
Lilt also said the Highway
Patrol had to arrest people who
jfmmed into streeta around the
hHe club· to watch the flre -
l)lld caused "an absolute total mesa.·•
The governor said firemen
couldn't 1et equipment in and
out because of the crowds of peo-
p I e who seemed to •'think
they're watching 'The Towering
Inferno' live and ill, color."
''The consequences of thia fire
are 1oin1 to be very far -
reaching," the 1overnor said.
"The MGM ia one of the largest
employers in the state. The
economic effect. in Southern
Nevada are 1oin1 to be
enormous.
''The only cuino diauter even
close to th1a ... tbe Harvey's
bombilll" laat Au1u1t at
Stateline, be Hid. "And tbe
closure of the Aladdin in Laa
Ve1u earlier tJlls year caueed
major eeoMmtc p'oblems.
When you throw this many peo-
~le out of work you aet a ripple
~fleet throughout the com-
munity."
State Gamlna Control Board
Chalrman Richard Bunker, who
vlewed the fire through
binoculara from bis office two
miles east of the MGM , said his
agents were prepared to move in
as soon as possible to preserve
the club's caab and financial
records.
Bunke r sa id be was able
to see bot.el guests crowded onto
balconies -and in some cases
sbeeta banging from s hattered
windows.
"I don't know why the sheets
are out \Dlless people were try-
ing to make a chain to get down.
But that's not posaible, m<l8t of
the rooms are too high,'' be said.
Besides the helicopter evacua-
tions of guests from the hotel
roof, Bunker said people were
beine lowered to the ground by
wi ndow was hing rig1ine, he
added.
Bunker also said be bad heard
many people were injured when
hit by Dying glass -caused by
hotel guests who were •'throwing
furniture through windows to
break the glass and &et some
fresh air."
Love case 'ends'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Superior Court judge ruled that
the Loa Angeles Police Com-
miuion can place its conclusions
on the coatrovenial Eulla Love
sbootlq in the personnel files of
tbetwopollcemenwhokWedber.
Coast
Weather
Fair th.roucb Saturday,
thoup with blgh cloudi·
DHI at times. Sll&btly cooler near bfacbes. Lowa
tonlaht a aloof the cout, "lnland. Hi&ba Saturday
nett 70 to near to.
INSIDE'IWDAY
Hot• rildlif, ~ cooklf w iJd dffnoMroffOM olOCril
oUtion 1o tJw ~ eountw Foll Fotr. S.. Pa,. CJ. ..... .. .,,_...,.. .. --~ .. UIL.... M..... CM ....... ..., ........... .. ~ ................ .. ~ C1I ,,_,..... =-en: .....,..:.,..:I r:::... C1I =:-....... ·~ ........ M~ ct ••• 1 7 q a.. ·-· a.t ---.... ....., "" ==:: ~: ::.:. ..... ~.
.
1 guest
leaps
·to death
LAS VEGAS Nev. (AP) -A fire spread thick black
smoke tbroughout all 28
stories al the MGM Grand
hotel-casino on Las Vegu' glltterina strip today, and Clark C"ounty Fire Capt.
Ralph Dinainan said .39 J>e9-ple were killed and hundieds were btjured.
Din1man said most of those killed were found in or near the ground-fioor culno.
There were conflicting re· po~ as to where the fire began, with some witnesses saying it started in the base-
ment, some in the main
e1ctalator, andfome in a ground floOr dell tessen.
The fire, whic broke out
in the basement at 7: 15 a.m.
PST and sent smoke billow·
ing hundreds of feet into the
air, was controlled two hours
later. Dlmman termed the
blaze "the wont hotel fire
we've ever had iii Las
Vegas" and be estimated
damap in the mlUiou.
Ka.a~ fled to the ..--.... --.... bellmf*-1 ...
evacua 1 them. At 9:30 a.m. PST, the Red Cross said
20 peopJe were ltHl on the
roc>f. Dins man aaid the fire ll!Jll!llil~~~~D-.a~1~f1-Jad<l1Hla
reached onl,y to the ninth
floor of the '108 miWon lux-
ury botel, which with 2078 roow la one of the world's largest.
SMOKE ENGULFS MOM GRAND ~8'NO ON LAI WGAS ITRIP AS DEATHS MOUNT
FINmen term the blu9 'Ute wont ftN wew ner ... n In La• Veg11e'
No~teachers
w get raise
mLaguna
Laeuna Beach Unified School
District trustees have reached a
tentative asreement with noo-teacblng employees on a con·
tract that includes a 12.5 percent
pay increase over a two-yeu
period.
The contract, which calla for
cost-of-Uvtnc increase• of 4.5 per-
cent for 1980-81 and 8 percent for
1981-82, no• 1oe1 to the 130
employees for rauncaUon.
The pact would COit the d.la· trict about •110,000 over the two-
year period.
School olftclala said the -.,ree.
meat la cont:lnleiit upon state m.. come to the district.
Aho included ln the •sreemmt la the ri•bt for the empk>yeea to coaduct an elec·
don reprdlna required mem-'
benhlp bl tbe CalUonlla Schooll
Employees Aaoctati.on.
Howard Lilwzence, CS!:A field
reprenntatlve, Hid tbat th•
•ai•l"7 lDcreue •sreed to wu "well below the rat. of lJd'latioa
ID tbe stat.,
W-dhdrawal nix.ea
Bait, tackle shop
wins SC reprieve
replace the pilings prior to this
winter'aatonns."
Caravalho 1ald U p0in11 wett
to be replaced. lnclud.in1 the con to demollah the tackle abop,
the bill cotnes to $'12,100 to com-
plete the work. About '75 percent
of tbe cost .W be paid for with
federal Flood Dbuter As -
elltance Funds.
However, the council aald de-
molltkm could wait unW U.W pll-lnl• arrive, whlth will tab ao days. The council members
directed \cit)! offtclala to wan
with Burlte to find a •Wtable
place to store hl• equipnient
wbl)e construction la tattn1
place.
Uniom in LA
eee a&reement
At leat s.eveJl bodies --.
fOUlld in the 140-yazd-JPDI culno, which was destroyed by
names and smote, Dlnlman
said. He said an elehth victim
bad jwnped from a window and
two bad been found in their
rooms.
Dinlman 1ald most of thole in-
jured had cuts from elua or
were treated for smoke l.nhala·
lion.
Police helicopters circled
overhead, and officers shouted
over bullhorns, "Don't jump, don't jump,•• to panicked guests
who leaned out of windows,
danflinf makeshift bed•heet
ladders or crammed onto
balconies. An eyewitness said
about 30 people were on one
balcony 1creamin1 for help.
Dinaman said the 1uesta were
in no immediate danger u long
u tbey at.eyed by their windows.
Witb the names controlled, fir-efllhten be1an evacuatJona
noor by floor, both from Inside
corridors and from the outside,
u1ln1 window-washers· plat-
forms to lower people to aafety.
Many of those brou&ht out
were clued, barefoot, wearing
nl1ht1owns blac kened b y
smote.
''Everybody t was puablne
everybody. We didn't know what
to do," Aid Walter Fellwood ol
BWCCJU, Md., wbo fled bha ahth-
tJoor room with bis wUe, leavtn1 their~ behind. Iii auesta tb.rew furniture tbro t&e1r wiedowt to set air.
• and fallin& debria iJUured
some people oo the s:rounct.
!:very ambulance ID town was
(See v:£GA8, .... ~)
Wont/ires
at hotels
9rftiA.•tdaWP"91
'I'll• Wont bOtel ft.re In
U,S. ~occurred Dee. !: 1•.M::J Ui• Wtnecoft Hott!, ta, and killed
Utpeos;M.
Refllll bicMel ftnl bi the
United 8'ates lDC:lude: Jul)'
11, 1m -Cambnd1e,
Oblo, Rolldat InD, t dead.
Nov. •.1178-RoCbtilt.er,' N. Y •• Ho1idA1Inn,10 dead .
Nov. S. tm -lloMldaJe,
Pa.. Allal Motor Ju, 11
dead. 11•1 H, 1111, Jelllco, Tean., lellkhll . Hot.I, 111WD deed. Jan. 29,
11'18 -Kama. Clty, No .•
Co•tea ilOUM, J.8 ct.ad.
•
SCENE OF DISASTER
Grand Hotel on Sbtp
Cats, dogs-.
research
protested
By GLENN SCO'IT
Of-o.H• ...........
Aboul8,IOO homeless cata and
do&s have been sold since 1976
by the Orange County Animal
Shelter to laboratories that use
the animaJa for research pro}
ecta.
· The county bu made about
S5.',000 through the •ales of the
animals that otherwlle would
have been killed at the 1belter.
But County Supervisor Philip
Anthony thinb it'• a business
the comity should stay out of.
Anthony bas asked other coun-ty supervisors to stop the prac-
tice At bis urJing, supervisors
will di.seuss the issue at their
9: 30 a. m. meeting Tuesday at
the CO\Dlty Hall of Administra-
tion in Santa Ana.
Twenty-three cities in Orange
County have contracts with the
county to use ita shelter. An·
thony said in a letter to the other
supervisors that nine of tbe
cities have imtructed the county
not to sell the animals they leave
for research activities.
(See ANIMALS, Pase AZ)
Laguna seeks
delay of road
mural work
Artist Robert Wyland bu been
told to bold off paintin1 a mural
on a block-Iona wall on Coast
Hiebway in La1UDa Beach unW
tbe city council diacu.aaes the
controvenW project Dec. 2.
Wyland, who had set a Dec. 1 .atart up a.ate for bis mural proj-
. ect, said be bad planned to
paint a primer coat SaturdQ' on
the wall between H1Cb Drive and
Myrtle Street on the i.n1aDd aide
of Cout fflCbway.
However, city offlciala said
th•)' bad called 1tate autboritiea
and uked that no work be al·
lowed oo the walls "unW further noUce."
W)'land, 24, ran Into op~
in hla propoaed mural tut sum-
mer from members of the NCll'Cb
Laauna A.elodation.
MOit CJWCJMDta ol the mural,
wblcb would feature wbaJet,
dolpblm, and seals, contend that
the acen• would dlatract
motort.ltl.
"Dul murals have never~
proven to cause acddeota. J>eo.
ple C&\M accidents. There are
all aort1 of diatract16n1 for
driven." WylDd countered.
W1JJDd bas ra1Md tl,D for
th• project ~ donattclai,
the aale ol post.en ud Ucteta
for a concert Nov. ID at inm.
Bowl.
Th• artlat llope• to ralH $10,000 to N!Dt tbi mural Dd
mamWn rt .for "" or men ~an.
,._,.f!r q•lt• a• t' •• ,,..,,...
... I :; lllElf YORK (AP) -Dick Howser ended weeb·of m7lterY
I ud 1peculation today by l'Mf~lne. .. mana1er ti tbe New York
.: \>.antees. He ... replaced u fte manaaer by Gene lliebael,
.: tbe team's general manater for lb• pat year.
t! Howser. 43. who piloted tbe YaDkees to 103 victories -only .:· one ipanager in baseball hiatory ever won mon 1am• ID hia
.:• rookie aeuoa -and the America.b League But Dlvtllon
tiUe, was criticized by owner George Steinbrenafr wbea the
team was swept in three games an the AL pla,.,,. by Ule
Kansas City Royals.
His relation.ship with the impulsive and ~HniaJ stein·
brenner steadily worsened.
Newport robbery
~! ~~ Ex-police caproin
}'4
·::gets 7-year tenn ... ... -An Qnnge County Judg~ sen-
tenced a former Santa Ana
police captain to seven years in
st•te prison Tbunday for takinl
part in a $500,000 Newport Beach
jewelry store robbery last
March
Superior Court Judge James
Perez imposed sentence on
Ptiederick Hopper, 61, after tile
defendant decided to plead tuil·
ty' to the charges a1ainat him on-
lt' minutes before bis armed l'Ob.
~r:y ~l was to beam.
. Hopper, according to lb•
j\tdge. simply announced to the
$rt be wished to plead l\llhY
and asked for immediate ten·
t~cing.
The defendant made his aur-
~lse announcement during pre-
trial motions just prior t.o the
l'>eginnina of his Superior Court
tfial in Santa Ana.
·'A new trial for co-defendant
ftugh Coughran, 45 , was
scheduled for Monday.
Coughran bad been scheduled
to go on trial with Hopper, but
because a jury already bad been
ilelected and could bave beell in·
tJuenced by Hopper's auilty
plea, the new trial date w•sset.
, Tbe. case began latt March
when two armed men walked in·
l!o tbe Brett· Walker jewelry
store 'n Newport Beacll '~ aamJbo Island.
Wearing wigs and sUh&lasses,
the two mep told clerb they bJld
~radio-controlled bomb. 1beY ~1eaned out display cases and
tindOW1l and fled with what wu
later estimated to be about
~.ooo in Jewelry. L Only one piece of tbe stolen
...,welry wu ever recovered.
• At the time of hia arrest, Hop-
4er was on parole from the
r.ederal orison al Terminal • • • • . • • •
ORANGI COAIT vsc
DAILY PILOT
; TM Of ..... Gett! Oellr ''*· •1111 -" It h--, .. _,,, ...... ,.,..,_ .., Ille
\
Ot-c..MI "'*'°"'"' ~y ---"41loflo .,.. -·--·· llw9'41\ '"*' ... c;..i. -· Ne-1 ~II. HWll ........ I!:.~~~"~ ~·:.::;. ~;;!::1 ~C": 1,...,1.--"-~" TM ...... .... =~-:..i=,:.: ~.=..-:,:: ...... 0
I ·-.. ,_. t .......... ,--·-' .,_ .. ....... . . .. ... • I ' I • • • • •
(I
Island, wbere be bad served
tim• for a 111& coavietiOD of aid·
tng in ~ JUI weak ud poaess-
in1 atole!t ...,_ mcDeY.
In the~ defendant bad risen to ca in the Santa Ana
police depuimellt. While on the
force, be wM aceuaecl by then
poUoe otdel Ed...,.. Allen ~ be· Ia• ~ al a pwp of alleaed Jolt.I llr$ Socleu members
trytq tf .. e IMl <A.Dea) fired.
Hop~ally left the poliee t to ettend law
school. ~ 1970 to 1975 he
practiced la-, t! bis convic·
lion for at a ' brok Jn Nevada, =. of.bis clients
was incarcerll&ed •
CoUnry 1'ote
certified;
it'• tif/kial
Unmasking of J.R
llJlsailant tonight
By JER&Y BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Was it
Sue Ellen, threatened with con-
finement in a sanitarium? Wu it
Cliff Barnes, cut out of a bil oil
deal! Wu it Kristin Shepard,
faced with a prostitution bust?
Hane on t.o your cowboy bat,
America-tonight's the night we
finally find out wbosbotJ .R.
Andjuetabouteverybodyonthe
hit "Da1Ias" series looks like a
likely suspect.
J .R. E~g. of course, is that
scoundrel of an oil tycoon who
double-dealt his way into an in·
temational frenzy of speculation
after someone pumped two slug.a
into him at the end of the last
season. Fans have been waiting lo
find out whodunnit ever since.
(Related story Page C9)
The denouncement will be
broadcas~ to East Coa•t and
Midwest viewers at 7 p.m. PST. In
the Mountain time ~one, tbe show
Iran "deal' told
EVERETT, Wash. (AP)
Boeing Co. officials met directly
with Iranian air force offtcen
last Jan'!81J to negoUatf the de·
Uvtty of • 747 c&l"JO Jet, the
Everett Herald reported.
will be'1Dat8p.m. PST and on the
West Coast the show will be on at
lOp.m.PST .
Viewers in the West can find out
the secret early by listening t.o
broadcast outlets, some of which
plan urgent news reports.
Passengers on Air France jets
bound for Europe will be told
who shot J .R. when the aecret
breaks.
Act.ors on the sbow. includina
Larry Haaman, who pl•ys J.R ..
will be told the secret at a party
tonight. 'lbey've alao *n kept
in the dadt for security 1'eUODI
and only about 20 people in
Lorimar Productions are said to
be privy t.o the secret.
Just about every character in
the show looka guilty. Nearly all
had the opportunity. and there are
no lack or motives for shooting J .R.
J. R . bu mor:t.aged Southfort Ranch rtgbt o from under bis
parenta, Joel d liLu Ellie,
planned t.o s!K oil well.a on Mill
Ellie's land, driven bis brother
Bobby away, planned to commit
bis wife t.o an institution, hatcbed
a plot t.o coovin hia =in·~· of 1nwtltulloa and dffP ~·
bUJlneu auocl te t.o ti.l~.e liDd
leftanotberbankrupt. i.
Ollds off
Don'·t bet on 'Dal/ml'
LAS VEGAS <AP> -You can't place beta on J.R.'t aa
aaUant anymore. Not legally, anyWay.
THE NEV ADA GAMING Control Board has ordered a
Las Vegas booklng agent t.o stop taking bets on the out· comeorth~st\OC>UnaioysteryontheCB,5-TVseriea ••oailu."
Tbt; Castawa)'11 Hotel sports bOc* bad set ooas od au
the major suspecta in the fictional shootinc -, includJ.nt
J .R. Ewing himself.
But Rich.ro Bunker, chairman of the a amine board.
said the Castaways was ordered to "cease and desist."
Aaked why, 'Bunter said, "Because it's not a sporting
event. Somebody knows the outcome of it -how many
somebodies nobody knows."
"111A1"S THE LAW," he said. "Race and sports
books can only be involved in sporting events."
f"ro• Page Al
ANIMALS • •
l
l'ro• Page A•
VEGAS •••
called to the scene. Injured
guest.a, many in nightclothes,
were being treated by medics on
the street alongside the '3-acre
hotel site.
"It wu terrible. People were
wandering down the ttall and
dido 't know what to do,'• said
Jerry Roeanblam, a New York
stockbroker who was a cuest cm
the seventh floor. "You were
lulled into a false sense or
security. There were no phone
calls, no alarm, notbinr."
Construction worllere who
were completinl an addittn to
the hotel when tfie fire broke out
rescued some guests by grab-
bing them from balcomes and
leading them away on scaffold·
ing.
"We have at least 40 lo 50 in·
juries, mostly from flyina glass
and some from smoke inhala·
tion," Dinsman said.
He said ooe of the dead had
jumped fJ'Om ' windop and two
other bodies •ere fo~d in the
140-yanf.toq casino.
Dinaman said tbe guats were
in no immediate danger as loo.g
as they stayed by their windows.
He aaid the fire •tarted in the ba1~ment alf.7:15 a.m. PST and quk*li ti! ad t.o lhe north
side al the~ .
''At tb1s time the entire casino
is involv~a. "1 Dlhsnian said
''Every floor or the hotel is filled
with black smoke."
The portico in front of the
main entranc~ was burned
away.
New police
cars for SC
The San Clemente City Council
bas agreed t.o spend ..,,836 t.o
purchase five new police patrol
cars from Hal Greene Chevrolet
of San Clemente.
Five auto dealers were invited
t.o submit bids. However. only Hal
Greene Chevrolet met the bid
specifications.
The new police vehicles will be
compact sedans equipped with
power steering, power brakes and
several high horsepower items.
Bailiff's
sex joke
backfires \
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla~ (AP) -Millionaire Cltarle
Ragnar Swanson, 75, dug
witll Jll'OC'U,ring teen-ate tirla
pro1tlt~ •. J.t awaitiq a ~
court date after a mlltrial wu
declared when a bailiff jokinfly
told the jury SWa.moa bad raped
a dozen womea.
Judie Jobn w ... 1 -DOt yet
I rescheduled the caae, Palm
Beach Couqty Circuit CouJ1. of.
ficiala said tuesday.
Weasel dedu~ a ml~aJ
Tuesday, sartaa be w• \1DSUft Jurors reallied bailiff Larry
Price was joking when be said
Swanson had raped 12 women.
Charges against Swanson
stem from stateme11t1 made by
two Palm Beach County teen-
agers and a woman who claims
she procured females betweea
the ages of CS and it tor the
Swedish-born lnduatriallilt.
Sw8DIOO baa refused comment
on the cue. Ilia lawyer, Elliott
Broob, •an Swamoo "letalllt
did DOthlng wrong."
la• notn depoeitiop, Deinni
Dellaq aald that in A\l,_ 1979
when ahewu 15, abe waainvtted
to a P¥tr ~ Swamon'a milllim by Sue Quimuyo1, 3'J, a dientaJ
technlciap who described heraelf
as a hostess for the man.
After her faUler contacted the
state attorney'• oftice, an UD-
dercover policeWPman wu as-
signed to attend Ute perty with
Miss o.Jt;an, actln1 aa a friend.
The ~ said Sw-...,.. "sug-
gested" ~at if site moved ia
with blm, a blue Corvette, -a
week and trips 81'011Dd the WQl'ld
would be ben.
''I ukel him what my 4'1des
would be," Miss De Haan Mid.
"He aaid that I would bav• t.o
sleep in hia bed and olilJ bis bed .••
Another 15-year-old, Cbrtltim
Morse, said that last fall,
Swanaon left ber a $20 tip at Ute
doughnut shop where oe
worked after school. Re invited
her to a Cbrlatmas ball in Palm
Beach and told her he would buy
her a gown, Miss Morse told la·
vestl"at.ors.
Those cities are Costa Mesa,
San Juan Capistrano, Seal
Beach, Westminster, Buena
Part, Loe Alamitos, Oran1e and
Santa Ana.
Anthony said that staff time
needed t.o sort out which animals
can be sold hu made the system
le11 p~table in recnt yean.
And staUIUcs he provided in bis
letter showed tllat the number of
anlmall sold for reaearcb baa
dwindled each year since 11T8.
About 2,8'5 were aold ln me
compared to 485 tbroulh Sep.
i.m ber of this year.
WHY
ALDEN'S?
We show more than thirty manufacturer's
carpet lines with approximately 3000
samples. We carry about 100 rolls of carpet
at special prices. In our remnant room are
hundreds of remnants from tiny to room size.
Every American manufacturer of vinyl it
represented in our vinyl display: Armstrong.
Congoleum. Gaf, Mannington. Btscayne and
Amtico. Rolls and remnants in stock at
special prices.
Tbe 1upervilor also arlUed that the county lOMS creditiltty
1D lta efforu to 9rovide a sbelter
for wayward animals by aemn.
them. •'I believe It la neither
necessary nor morally proper to
1ubJeet animals who have been
pet• to reaearch 1tre11e1
because ol the 1peelal lllilltivitJ
tbey have developed to
humana," be 1aid. "A.nhnals
that have been raiMd lD bfted.
inl l1boratorlt1 wttbout cbe
human UIOClltioD an nad1ly
avallabloforesMDUal worll."
The ebelter baa a ll1t Of 11 ap-
pTOvtd laboratoriea that bav• bHn aecndited by a prlvat. •s•ncy aad alto checked by count.Y vNrt.Daitana. Tbe boerd
of IUper'Yilofl pMled I riilolo-
Uon la J'ebr"Nl7 im calllnl for
tbe accredttatioo to m1ure tbat
t•• lab1 treat· tho anhn1l1
humanely.
Our drapery department includes custom
fraperies. "Levelors:· Woven Wood Blinds.
Custom Bedspreads and special treatments
for unusual windows. We not only ttave a
specialist ·in this department. but out own
excellent Installer as well.
Wood floors are represented by several
manufacturers such as Bruce. Harris and
Sykes. Patterns include Plank and ParQuet
designs.
WOMAN BADLY BURNED IN LAS VEGAS' MGM GRAND HOTEL HOLOCAUST
UNdenttfled mllft ...... over wife .. elte ta aided by firemen
• • in casino area
LAS VEGAS (AP) -Su!·
f ocating black smoke from a
f i r e s p r e a d 1 w i f t tY
throuldloUt the 26-floor MGM Grana hotel-casino toda~
and authorities said at least
75 people were killed, most of them trapped on upper ttoon
beyond the reach of fire de-partment ladders.
Hundreds of others were
injured in the fire that broke
out at 7:15 a.m. PST, ap-parently in a basement con-
struction area, and burned
out of control for two hours on the lower two noors.
SMOKE ENGULFS MGM GRAHD HOTEL~ASINO ON LAI VIGAS STRIP AS DEATHS MOUNT
Firemen term ttte blal9 'the wont tire ..... ..., MM In Lii• V-•·
Some guests on upper
·floors who couldn't escape
fled to the roof, where helicopters evacuated them. Others trapped in their
rooms by the dense smoke got fresh air by using
furniture to break sealed
windows or crammed onto balconies screaming for help. 'No warning'
No alarms, no cal& in MGM fire
LAS VEGAS (AP) -Some
aurvlvon of the MGM Grand
Hotel ft.re said today they bad
absolutely no warnln• of tbe
blase that caused numerous
deatbl and lnJurlea and millions
of dollars in dam.,•.
Several pe"'°°a laterviewed aald there were no fire a1anm
IOUDded and When they tried to
call the hotel a;rttchboard for ln-
formatlcla, the)' IOt no answer.
Fire oftldala wet tbey believed
the iwltchboard wH located
near where the .flN ii belleftd to
bave ltarted. ~ wu no lm-
m edt ate explanation wby
alarms didD 't Co off. One pelt, New York stock
broker JflfTJ Roaanblam, aald
tbere wu no warn1nt of. tbl fut
mo'flq blue. · "You .-en lulled liito a fa!M
aenH of aecurlty;~· b• aald.
''Tben wen ~ phone calla, no
alarm, aotblns-" Anotber 1ue1t, Walter
1"ellwo0d of Ellicott City, Md.,
aald be bad DO loklla& tbat t!w nr. blid .tarted.
"No a1Nma went off ••. and
amoke wu ~ tbrou&b the
b0Udtn1,' PeUwood eald.
"Everyone wu piahtnc evety-
body;.Wedida'tlmowwbaUode>."
do."
Petet' Mone UpUD• 41ndor
for 1lD1er Mao Da•l1, who
cipened • the 11011 'IbundQ
night, said no alarms sounded
and that be waa awaken.d in Illa
20th floor room by poundina and
sounds of shatterlnc class from
the room next to bis, accordlnl
to Davis spoteaman Jim Morey
ln Loi Angeles.
Mone, who clllled Morey from
Valley Jloepital in Lu Vecu
where be was being treated for a
cut band. said amote fUlecl the room 1fbeo be opened the door
and was foreed back . into bll
room.
"It wu just an unbelievable
event.'' Mone told Morey. "I
couldn't believe it wu bappen-
lnJ."
Mone Uid a helicopter
bullborD uqed people to stay ln
tbeli rooms and that he wu ftnally l9Cued by flreme at
7:45a.m.
2,000 protest
Gteen1boro, N.O. (AP) -
Police repoited no arresta and
no lDJmt• u more than 1,000 =marebed in tbne c1U.. to
pi tbe acqutttalt of ala IC\l
Klu Klammen ud American
Nam chartid in tbe 1Mntinc
deatbt :·ot·tfve commuiilit •11D· r:c:ia.n· The demonatr Uom
place Tbaarida)'.
j
Doieoa or fire engines rtnaed
the maastve hotel, at 26 stories
and 2,300 rooms one of the
larcest in the world. Dazed and
confused guests, many clad only
In nl,i.t clotbel, wandered aJooi
Flamtn10 Road wblcb runs
alona the north aide of the huge,
monolithic structure.
Fire department paramedics
and docton, aome al them wear-
tn1 their bolpital scrub clothes,
worked feverl1hl7· over a
number of. vlcUnu wbo were
aprawhld in the middle of the
four-lane atrM.
One doctor leaned over one
man on tbe atreet and was
pouadlnl oa hll cheat in an at-
tempt to let bla beart atarted. A r:. rtable cardiac unit ~ed •·
Y a lltead)t line on lb amall
screen.
A re~rter told a pa11ln1
print, 'FatMr, that 1UY Joob
bad."
• .. I've already ablolved btm .. '
the piielt .....,u9d.
At tbe betjht of. the fire, wblcb
wa• cSotit.tolled two boun after
tli• ftnt alarm at '1: 11 a.m .• bun-d red 1 of persona atood oo .
balconlee °' at windoft Oil tbe north llde Of tbe multve bcML
8Henl ropil CllaM of lbMta
tied ~ bunt tr0111 Win·
dowt, but It appeared that DO
Clde bad atunnpteO to UH &Mm.
Police heli copters circled
overhead, and officers shouted
bullhorns, "Don't jump! don't
jump!" to panicked cuesta wbo
leaned out of windows, danaHna
makeshift bed.sheet iadden.
Damage to the luxurious pale-pin k buildin& -one of· the
world's larcest hotell with 2,078
rooma -was in the millions.
Authorities called lt Las Ve•as' worst liotel fire, and aald it
mi•ht be a year before the facW·
ty alon• the •lltterln8 Strip
could reopen.
Clark County Coroner Otto
Ravenbolt aaid ynoat of the vlc·
Um• died of smoke inhalation,
and Fire Capt. Ralph Dtnaman
said <me jumped from the 17th
Worst/ires
at hOtels
BJ'fteAllMlaW Pnu Tile wont hotel flM in
• U .S. blatOry occurred Dee.
'1, tNI, in the Wlnecoff
Hotel, Atlanta, and killed
111 people. -""" Reeenl bcQl DNI in tbe
UnitedStateainclude: Jul)t
at, 19'19 -Cambrld1e,
Ohlo, Hollday hm, 9 dead.
Nov. 28, im -Rocb•ter,' , N. Y., Hobday Inn, 10 dead.
Nov. I, 19'18 -ffoneldale,
Pa.. AU«i Moto Inn, 11 'had. May U, uu, Jellleo, T•nn., JeDlrlna
Hot.I,..,_ deM. Jaa. lt,
JJTI -l'"HI City, No.,
Coatte HouH, 11.s.ad,
..
floor -el&ht Goon above the re·
ach of department ladders.
Many of the guests aaid oo fire
alarma IOUDded to wam them,
and others said they cot no
anawer when they tried to use
tbe telephones in their rooma for
information. Autboritlea said
they believe the fire knocked out
the switchboard.
Guests who were able fled out
the doors and wandered on the
43-acre grounds, many barefoot
and in smoke-blackened
nightclothes, weeping and
dazed, while medics treated
them.
"I just saw people running out
SCENE OF DISASTER
Grand Hotel on Strtp
from the front. They were com-p •
ing out like Dies," aaid Ray Mme rate
Hutcbiaon, a gardener who was
working outside. "The casino ..:geS to 17 010 cirls were coming out with cash • ao -;(
drawers in their bands and de· alers were running out stuffing NEW YORK CAP) -The prime
chips in their pocketa." lendinc rate rose to 11 percent at
With the names controlled, one m.;<>r bank today and inched
flrefiP.ten began evacuaUoos closer to its 20 percent record <1
floor by Door, both from in.side last sprinc as the Federal
corridon ·and from the outside, Reserve kept up its attempt to
usinc window-washers' plat-fight inflation by limiting the
forms to lower people to safety amount or money Americana can
·'Everybody was puabin& borrow.
everybody. We didn't know what The prime rate is a bank's
to do," said Walter Fellwood or charge on loans to top-ranked
Elllcott, Md., who fled his ainh· buaineaaea, but the general
noor room with bis wife, leaving U&btenln• of credit means bub
their belongings behind. will be "toughenin1 their terms"
"It was terrible. People were for con.sumer and mortca•e lend-
wandertni down the hall and in1 u well, said David JCIDel,
dido 't know what to do," said economist at the broker.,e bQuse
Jerry Roaanblam, a New York ofAubreyG.Lanaton&:Co.lne',..
atockbroter who was a 1\lflSl on '---------....... the aeventb floor. "You· we~ •
lulled into a false aenae of
•~urlty. 1bere were no phone
calll, no alarm, notbine."
Dlnlman aaid the a... eom-
plete)J -.ulfed the IJ'OUll(l·DcM>r
call.Ao wtthlo 10 JDlnutel. He
aaicl tbere ... po mdeDee that
the fin went *" the McGnd flOior, I* •mah niee tbroulbout
1be bulJdln• and bWowed hun-
dreds ol fett in tbe air.
M&QJ cu-ti fled to the root,
wbere be1lcopten w~ evacuat· tna them. Dtmman 1aid the ftre
department'• laddera reaebed
only to the DinUl floor °' ~ *1•
miWoa lmury hotel, whlCh with
2,071 rooms ii one Of the wodd'a
lar1eat.
There wen~ teporta
aa to WW. the flN be1an, with
aome WttnMMill l&yln.& it started
IA the bliemmt. aome m tbe
matn eaoa1ator, a.ad aom• tn a
C1"9UDd tloOi' dOlleatenea. Dlnimu .-Jct the t.ot.1 bad
1prtnklen ain1' lD the baHment,
Oil palt of ~ ftnt ftOOr' aDd OD the Jail Oooi'.
••we bave at leut 40 to a> tn
, .. VSG"8, .... A.I) . .
Coast
NEW YORK <AP) -Dick Howser ended weeks of mystery
and speculation today by restptna •• mana1er ot the New York
,. Yankees .. He waa replaced as fteJd manaaer b)' Gene Mlcbael,
j!'U1e team 111 general mana1er for the past year.
'. Howser. '-'· who olloted the Y ankeea to lOI victories -only ;i>De manager in baseball hiatory ever won more aamea ln h1a
r',ookle aeaaon -and the American Leacue Eut Dlvlsioo ~t.tue, was criticised by owner Georae Steinbnmner when the
:team was swept in three 1ames in the AL playoffs by the ";kanau City Royals.
· His relationahip with the impulsive and controvenial StelD·
brenner .steadily worsened.
Personnel offiL-e
NB's Cavanaugh
u gets Reagan post
4t'1
Jt, • _Newport Beach resident
James H. Cavanaugh has been ~.pointed associate director of
man resources in President-
ect Ronald Reagan's office of
presidential peraonnel.
Cavanaugh, a 43-year-old
senior vice president or science
aod planning at Allergan
Pharmaceutical Co. in Irvine,
said bis job will involve screen
ine and recrwtine peoplfJ for
presidential appolntments in the
area of human resources. "'·~e said his job, expected to be ~ompleted before Reagan's Jan ~ inauguntion. will be aimed at
l\Jiding people to fill 120 key
tk>sltions.
i.,.''Reagan as committed to find-
~ people from across the coun·
Cey," Cavanaugh explained to-
d.-y from his new Washington of·
nee. ''He not only wants people
rienced an government, but
competent people without
kgrounds in aovernment "
· :Cavanaufh 0 eid he was re·
.aliened a s t summer by
fteagan 's election team to help
cttafl guidelines for pulling
together a committee to assist in
a presidential transition
administrations of former
presidents Ford and Nixon. He
said he'll return to his post at Al·
Jergan .when. his task in
Washington is complete.
Scouts flock
to Mesa/or
annual event
More than 300 Boy Scout
troo~. Cub Scout packs and Ex
plorer posts will converge Satur·
day on the Orange County Fair-
grounds for the annual Scout-0 ·
Rama.
Flag-raising ceremonies at 10
a m will open the 1980 event and
its exhibits depicting Scouting
life.
As part of this year's theme,
"Scouting, the Better Life," ac-
tivities will include ma~ic, mus-
cle building, cooking, knots and
ropework, first aid and elec·
tronics.
Fair board
'*'rPM11 .... P.-~8EVEHYDR8
q &-cop HOpper
' .
Ex-SA Cop
guilty in
NB heist
An Oranse County judge sen-
tenced· a former Santa Ana
police captain to seven yean in
state prilon Thunday for taking
part in a $500,000 Newport Beach
jewelry store robbery last
March.
Superior Court Judae James
Perez imposed sentence on
Frederick Hopper, 51, after the
defendant decided to plead IUil·
ty j.o the cba.raes against him on·
ly minutes belore his armed rob-
bery trial was to begin.
Hopper, accordlna to the
judae, simply announced to the
court be wiabed to plead guilty
and uked for immediate sen·
tenciJlg.
The defendant made bis sur-
prise announcement during pre·
trial motions just prior to the
beginning of ~ Superior Court
trial in Santa Ana.
A new trial for co-defendant
Hugh Coughran , 45, was
scheduled for Monday.
Couehran bad been scheduled
to go on trial with Hopper, but
because a jury already had been
selected and could have been in·
fluenced by Hopper's guilty
plea, lhenewtrial date was set.
The case began last March
when two armed men walked in·
to the Brett.Walker jewelry
stor e in Newport Beach 's
Fashion Island.
Wearing wigs and sunglasses,
the two men told clerks they had
a radio-controlled bomb. They
cleaned out display cases and
windows aocJ fled wi,Lh what was
later estimated to be about
SS00.000 in jewelry.
Only one piece of the stolen
Jewelry was ever recovered.
At the time or his arrest, Hop-
per was on parole from the
federal prison at Terminal
Island, wher e he had served
tame for a 1976 conviction of aid·
ing an a Jail break and possess·
ing stolen bank money.
In the 1960s, the defendant had
• n sen to captain in the Santa Ana
police department. While on the
force, he was accused by then
police chief Edward Allen of be·
ing part of a group of alleged
John Birch Society me~bers
trying to have him (Allen) fared.
He said he completed that task
and, last week while on a busi· lt~u trip on the East Coast,
ltopped in at the nation's capital
bd was asked if he'd accept the
aaaoclate director post
I "I said s ure," rem arked
bravanaugh "I went home to
Newport, packed up and came
e..ck here''
He previously serv~ in the
New amphitheater
pact agreed on
mb threat ends
LONDON <AP) Police ar
rested a 35-year-old man on
Westminster Bridge ,today, end·
tng a four-hour standoff during
which be threatened to blow
bimaelf up, a Scotland Yard
spokHman said.
OAANOl COAST s .
DAILY PILOT
,,,._ ...............
iu,,.q1,..1:ca1 ..
~"~ AW-~ ... l"d•IW
TelepM1te (714)~
Cl•Hlned Ad••ltJlllnl .u.fll71
'••lfl&efttl•-4...-..00
I
0 "'*""9<11\0.1-C...Nt~lltf
IM0-1UO •
•
By JEJlllY CLAUSEN
OI-Delly l'illll Si.ti Orange County's fair board
has agreed to a new SO-year con-
tract for construction and opera
lion of an enlarged am
phitheater on the fairgrounda in
Costa Mesa, across from City
Hall.
In an 8 to 1 vote, with director
Clinton Hooae dl11enlin1, the
board agreed Thursday nl1ht to
back off orilinal rentala in a
contract blessed in Sacramento
last year with Performlo1 Arts
A11ociates of Loe Anaelea.
The new contract calla for a
lar1er outdoo1' theater, aeaUng
up to 7 ,000 tpectators ln aeata
and an addlttonal a,ooo on a
wl·llke grusy berm. Earlier
Ian• were for 5,000 flsed aeata
d room for 3,000 people oo the
berm. •
Structural ch111&a and rents
lower than ln.itlally •&reed to re·
sutt from complalnt.a by am·
pbitbeater principals that the $9
mlllloo theater cannot be built
and operated today wltb In·
comes antlclpated ln the
original asreement.
That .,reement wu put on lee
wbep a city of Coeta Meaa ault
wa1 filed againat the fair board
lutrear.
The dty aoqbt to force th
fair board to comply with city
planttlns rt8ulatlon1 even
t.bouah the f alqrouncb i• atate-
o"1led IJl'OPerty.
The City io.t the 1uit ln 0ranae Count.Y SuperiOr Court but ap-
pealed that deCtaton •.
A aetllemtnt finally wa• ... .
reached out of court in August
allowing construction of the am·
pltheater but giving the city
jurisdiction over future com·
mercial developments proposed
for fairground property.
Thurs day nigbt ·s contract
agreement is with Nederlander
West, operators of the Greek
Theater in Los Angeles and
other theaters across the nation.
Rick Witte, attorney for
Nederlander, sald his organiza.
lion plans to operate in conjunc·
tlon with Performing Arta As·
soclates, beaded by Harvey
Kresky who held the orilinal
theater comtruction contract.
Under the new.aareemeot, the
falr board must conttruct and
operate parldoa f-.cWtles oo the
falrsroundl for theater opera-
tions.
Nederlaoder wUI construct
and operaw the theater under
the SO-year-contract yet to be ap-
proved by 1tate officials In
Sacramento
Under the original contract,
the fair board wu to receiv~
about 4 percent OD ticket sales,
60 percent of partin1 income, s
percent on food coocenloo aaJes
and 7 .5 percent on beveraae
HIH.
Tb• new contract calla for a ~
percent reduction of those
figures over the flnt four yean,
a 45 percent redueUoo the next
two yoan tnd a ~ .,ercent "" 4uctton thj followm, two yean.
By'. abOut 1191, t.bo board will
1>11LD recetYlrll the run 1hara
1ttpulated lo the orllioal coo-
tract.
'('
A
Dloa'OlJln 1aJd the 1aata.,...
in no ~ate ~er u lcnl as the1 staJed by ~lr window.
The portico iD fro1>t ol the
maln enttance waa burn~d
awaj.
Tradlnl of MGM Grand Hotela lne. ltoci ~u 1uapeaded on th9
New Yoit~k !:-.cban•• tb1t mo~ °'WI of the tin. Tradlq ll routmely u.ilpended
on a st.ock trtieo the1'e r. develop-
ment that ~ affect earnlnp.'
When tradln1 reaumed, the
atock fell 2~ to IN.
The llGM, whleb opened.
.even 1UfW a10, wu iD tbe pro.
ces1 cit lddinf 780 roorm and
33,000 8QUll'e feet of banquet and
meetlnl rooms.
"Upcm completion, the MGM
Grand Hotel Laa Ve1a1 will
have allDOlt 2,IOO 1ueat rooms
and will be the lar1est hotel in
the world," accord!na to the 1980
annual report by MGM Grand
Hotels, Inc. The expansion was
due for completion next May,
'Use caution'
on hostages
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -U.S.
officials are cautioning aeainst
renewed hopes for the imminent
release of the American host-
ages in Iran, despite Secretary of
State FAmund S Muskie's as·
surance that the United States
has agreed in principle to Ira-
nian demands for the captives'
release
"You can accept the pnnciple
of something, but the details of
how you carry it out can be very
significantly different," State
Department spokesman John H
Trattner told reporters Thurs-
day.
Trattner also cautioned
against "over-excitement" and
expectations that the 52
Americans, now in their second
year of captivity, are about to be
freed.
Nude poses,
sex offers
bring
A 28-year-olil WHtmln1ter
woman bu been arrested in Costa
Mesa on suspicion of prostitution
when she allegedly posed for nude
photos and ortered sex for th~ $135
hth•t an tmdercover agent handed er.
Held in Costa Mesa Jail today
wall Nellie Marie Waterman,
employee of a Santa Ana outcall
modeling studio.
Investigators c laim Ms.
Waterman was solicited for tex
acts Thursday by phone and met
an undercover officer at a
restauraton Harbor Boulevard.
The two proceeded to a Costa
Mesa motel where the woman
was arrested after a photo
session, police said
Withdrawal nixed
UN ITED NATIONS IAP>
The Soviet Union today.re1ected a
new General Assembly demand
that at pull its troops out or
Afghanistan.
'Liri•g •illlt•are''
MGM disaster
·.impact heav~
CAJt80N CITY L4P) -Go..
Bob 1'1tl Hid tbe "ll.::.2. nl1bt11W1t" ot tbe MGM c11f.oo e,. "Will have ••very fu-reachlAc" Imp~ on Nevada. "lt'• • llvial Dl~tman for
thoat = ~re.• LI.al said. "I'm u1 t.bat the •mace·
aod toue. and ll11' at.bl and tn.-Jur1e1 will be u mlftimal u
poaaible.''
L .. t alto said the Hi1bway
Patrol b.acl to arrest people wbo
Jammed lJJto ~ uound the
bu1e club to wateb the fire -
and caUMd "an ab9olute total
mea1."
The IOYernor Hid firemen
couldn't set equipment 1n and
out beeauae of the crowda of~
pie wbo seemed to "think
they're watchioa 'The Towering
Inferno' live and in color."
"The coosequences of this fire
are going to be very far·
reacb.ioc," the governor aa.id.
"The MGM. iB one of the largest
employeni in the state. The
economic effects lo Southern
Nevada are going to be
enormous.
11 "The only casino disaster even
close to this was the Harvey's
bombing" last August at
Stateline, be said. ''And the
closure of the Aladdin in Las
Vegas earlier this year caused
major economic problems.
When you throw this many peo-
ple out of work you get a ripple
effect throughout the com-
munity."
State Gaming Control Board
Chairman Richard Bunker, who
viewed the fire through
binoculars from h.is office two
miles ea.st of the MGM , said his
agents were prepared to move in
as soon as possible to preserve
the club's cash and financial
records.
Bunker said he was able
to see hot.el guests crowded onto
balconies -and in some cases
lbfff.a ~I h'Om Wblind wlnclcrin.
·· r.1 ckln't bow=r:tbt ....
a11t out .... ..,.. b7· baa to IQU• • c am to eel downi. aut that'• not 119Nlble, molt ol Uit l'OOIU .... coo tllP ••• b• P.ld. BtllJdel~ ~r •neua·
tk>na ol ·l\*ts trom tbe hotel roof4 8urabr i&ld people were be~ lowered to the 1roWMI by
wlnclow w11blnf rl11tn1, be added.:
Bunker a1ao aaJd be bad beard many people were injured wbm
bit by ft.Ylna '1a.n -caused by
hotel suata who were ''thro1rtnt
furniture throup windows to
break the &Jua and 1et IOme fresh alr.h
Blood donor
day Tuesday
The American Red Croaa
bloodmobile will be lo Newport
Beach Tuesday afternoon at the
Newport Harbor·Coata Mesa
Board of Realtors office, 401 N.
Newport Blvd.
Donors must be between the
ages of 17 and 65, weiab at least
110 pounds and be in good health.
The bloodmobile will be parked
in the board's parking lot from
l:~ to6:30 p.m.
For further information or to
make an appointment, call
835-5381.
Payments ordered
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The ci·
ty must pay $2 million to
thousands or blacks, Hispanics
and women, and increase their
representation on the police
force, a federal judge bas ruled in
a seven-year job discrimination suit.
20-story buildillflll
Marines to oppose
Irvine Co. plans?
By &ICllA&D G&EEN OI-Deify_,_
Representatives of the El Toro
llarinij!I Corp Air Statiqn are ex-
peet.-d ~to oppdle Irvine
Company plau to coo.struct »
story building.a near the air ala·
lion.
The company wants to build
office buildings of that siz.e in its
Irvine Center project, a 480-acre
"super" commercial center to
be built on a triangle of land
bounded by the Santa Ana, San
Diego and Laguna freeways.
Marine spokesmen contend
that buildings more than 12
stories in height would hinder
flight operations at the air sta·
tion.
Irvine City Council members
will listen to both sides of the is·
sue Tuesday when they con.sider
land use approval for Irvine
Center. • Also to be considered by the
council is a Planning Com·
mission recommendation that a
15 -s tory height limitation be
placed oo Irvine Center.
That recommendation was
made several weeks ago despite
objections by representatives of
El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta·
tic.n.
After the city Planning Com·
minion action, Marine Brig.
Gen. .Jobn ~x. El Toro eom·
mander, formally asked the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors to restrict bullding
height on county land near the
air station
The board agreed to study the
request.
The Marines are also con-
cerned about plans to build a
10,000-person amphitheater at
Lion Cowitry Safari in Irvine.
The amphitheater would be in
the air station's flight path.
The Marines are expected to
oppose the amphitheater project
when lt comes before the city
Planning Commission next
monP, for a land use permit.
· Irvine Mayor Art Anthony and
Councilman David Sills met
with Cox earlier this week.
Silla said no agreements were
reached in the two-hour meeting
at the air station.
Sills said he told Cox Marine
objections to Irvine Center and
the amphitheater must be
backed up by hard evidence
WHY
ALDEN'S?
We show more than thirty manufacturer's
ca rpet lines with approximately 3000
samples. We carry about 100 rolls of carpet
at special prices. In our remnant room are
hundreds of remnants from tiny to room size.
Every American manufacturer of vinyl is
represented in our vinyl display: Armstrong,
Congoleum. Gaf. Mannington, Biscayne and
Amtico. Rolls and remnants in stock at
special prices.
Our drapery department includes cu~tom
fraperies. "Levelers.·· Woven Wood Blinds.
Custom Bedspreads and special treatments
for unusual windows. We not only have a
specialist in this department. but our own
excellent installer as well.
Wood floors are represented by several
manufacturers such as Bruce, Harris and
Sykes. Patterns include Plank and Parquet
designs.
DEN'S
••••••••••••••••• • ·installation. custom drapsr1es
linoleum • wood floor
1663 PlACENTIA AVINU~. • q>STA .MESA, CALIF. 92621 • PHONE 646· ... ll -646-235.S
•
11
Coneer11 aired
Savings &I
~TOOK A BEATING this year, and they're 11Gt
used to 1t. For years they had made steady proftt.I bl&
volatile, unpredictable interest rates this year ~""1i
many to dip into reserves. It shook them up. ,.
Looking for a corrective, some S&Ls have cons1d
me~g~ with others, a step that Barnard, bead ot ver s Midland Federal Savings & Loan, believea should
taken only after much more deliberation.
"I'm encouraging them to consider carerull1 befon
they make the move," he said. "I believe in meratn
my own company has grown through two or them -bat
merge out or rear is dangerous ...
IN IDS VIEW. the red mk that sp1Ued over the boob l
half the league's 4,460 members earlier Ulla year II • j!
reason for considering suicide " Other businea._ be aU4.. I .
go through regular ups and downs over a span ~f 1ean.l ·
"What are reserves for?•· he asks. i
But it is indeed a new world for federally chartered ~ 1
S&Ls •. and not just because of their new power to otter J l
checkwg accounts (by Dec. 31), consumer loans credit ' ;
cards -eve!' data processing and insurance. • ~ ·
Along with these newly granted powers is a mon,.,. l:' rate structure in which flexibility and interest rat. .
variability replaces rigidity, which bad been the enda.rtq 1 quality of home mortgages since the 1930s.
EITBEll CHANGE -THE new powers or tbe ~ mortga~e flexibility -is bigger than almost any otMr .i :
change m many years Together, they add up to an a-
precedented challenge, and perhaps an opportunity too. ~ .,.).
IN :i• • ........ -.,
~ -W I 7\olo + " .,. I ... _. ...
Pc1 Up II t
Up '1 Up t.J
Up II Up ..
Up 61 Up • .A Up .,
Up H
Up '' Up '· Up SS
Up '. Up u Up u UJI SJ Ull SI Up 51 Up 4 ••
Up • ' Up 4 t
Up •• \Ip 4A Up 0 Up 4 3
I. IU IU •.1 u u •• t:~ 1.• 7.J
H ., .. , '·' •t t.s .. , . '
11
= ;1···; "' + ... . !
Slh.·f'r
NEW YORK CAPI -H....,., & "-
1Clver today •tt.250, llP IO.n. ,
E"OtllluCI allver $1t,JOO, up .....
lebflcet.S lltwr UO.Jll. llP IO.lAa. "• •
Gold Quo1a1lo11• ..,,.. .. _ ..... ,,,_
S.i.ct• -"' 9D4ld ,nc .. t~: ".
I
-----,---------
' •
••• . -~ c
4W'?at we do Ts develop matfiemat1cal and probab1/lty
op1cs and apply tllefTI to vsnous gamblmg situations.
ayJO LC. 00 .... ..,.,.,.llMI
tu ti In Or. Uotd lloruwlt1'1
~ an am nt wh to doubt dOwft
• 1 bud ol bl ckj1ck, the er.ti of
keno, bat bet odd• ln crtpe and a
•• leMOeU on plrkln1 • wlnntir at th . ~Tee track. · But Horowlt& Ian 't runnln1 1 quickie
W"M for 11mblln1t novlc: hat on lhe
.. # • .._ _____ Wt of lmtant 1rH nery Jfe ha n't
.._ ~rlU~ a pulp pre11 book lot on the one
and only 1y1t.m for 1trlklnlf It rich at
~ulette ~ Rather, lhfl Uold•n Wtat Colltlt
'1atbematlc1an dol•• out • umnttr'1 ~· •ortb ot c:redlt. under tho form1al ~ cat.Jot U.t1n1 of Math 108
.. The clu1 m11y IH'CIO mu• the hrflcdtna
&rounds for hlf(h roll..r11
~. , BUT THE HUNTINGTON Bt;ACH
.. ~enu aren't ju11t lui.rnl11~ lht• •tcreta ... 91. pmbUn1 per '"" Tht•y ru llnktr1n1 ~ the mathe>mutkul lh1'4uic•11 behind
;: '1uch aamet of t h11n <'1·
~ "What we do 111 we 1~cvcJop 1wme
mathematical and probability lopl<:a
!· aitd apply tht•m to vurlou11 ii1i1mblln.c
-t .ttuat.ionit," 11uy11 llorow1tz. who 11tutcd
'• tbe iambllng tht·orh•11 <'1.u111 ln11t yur
., "Gambling '" hu'lcd on prohahlllly
'• illeory. wtuch dul''" huc:k u' the 17th
I ft'fttur)'." he uplmn11 'f't:fJJllC' U11od to
;;J'by sames with 1hce und "'" unuly1u1 of
be came startf'd the lhcor11>11 of
-i.-ptobability "
• GAllESTERS, d111heartened hy dlt·
utrom loue5 at the dlcf' tablf'I, turned
~ noted mathemat1rian1 ()f the time
GaliJeo helped develop 1y1tem11 tor
Yaien.ng. lat"r followed by the pro·
.. l>Jbibty theory re1Parch of French
DJatbematJcian Diam: P111cal
A 17th century Dutchman by th.,
name ol C'hn11tian Huygen11 made 11 ma
JOr breakthrough in probal111Jty theory
with h1~ p1onrrt1nf( rPl'lf!arc·h paper
titled 'On Hd r 1r>nnation In Diel'
Garn,.~ '
Afttr Ute cl•H h•• thorou1bb
dllHtfd a topic In probabtUty tlMlory.
Horowtta brf np out a deek of cardl1 rout WhHI, 41ce. keno 1Metl ana
raelnt fonnt. Jt'• Ume to put theory ln· to _pract.lc..
The nm ••mln• lUIOD of the day 11 a
lecture on ••m• with the worst odd.I
"KENO 18 TH£ eaal•l one to apply tt (probabtllty theory> to," he aays
"That's the 1ucker tame It's the worst
aame ln the culno to play.
·'The bat•straten to play keno 11 to
play one number But even then you
hne a low probability of winnlna "
In keno, a 1ambler can choose from
80 numben on a 1heet of paper Twenty
numben then are randomly N:lect.ed
So II you bet on one number, you'd ex
peel to have a 25 percent chance of win
nlng, he 11y11. The "(air odds" of the
1ame wouJd expect a 3 to I payoff for a
one number winner
BUT nu: GAMY.HTER only reallzc11
2 to-J winning•
"That'11 cullf'd th1• "r1111lno a<lvun
tage, "' 11ay1 Jlorow1l1. "Ttw fotr odd11
arc the actual vrohah11llie11 of wmntn~
or lo1inic a l(amf' "
If you bet on on1• numtw•r on a mule-tte
table, he add1t, thf' folr ''dd1 woul<J be
37·t0·1 Hut In ra <·t thr ra1lo"
pay1 ofr 35 to I on a ""f' numb1>r
roulette winn('r
"So they keep S2. for enmplf·, that 1n
a faJr 1amc would ~lonJ( to Y'JU, ' hf'
aay1. "Nowhere d'' c1111ln<1' pay fair
odcit 'Iber•'• only onf' bet ut c:raP" that
pa ya the fair odd11 1Jnl1 It '" c:allf'd th' "odd• bet ...
IN ADDmON to ca11ino g1i1mbl1n1.
Durtn1 the lint 1eme1ter Offertn• of
tbt clUI Jut year, Horow1tl took hJI
clH1 on .,,-ouUn• to Lu Veaa1. The
second CW. went on a field trip to the
race tr•ck.
Allbouch • few 1tudenta walked aw•y
from the culnoa and race track with a
few weeks worth of extra 1aaollne
money, mo1t were victim• of
"aambler'a ndn ..
"THAT'S THE IDEA that lo the lone
run the culno bu tbe advanta1e ... be
explains. "1be only way to win <l• to)
bet. win quick and leave "
Horowtti compare• cutno. to atock
brokers, who make a commlulon on
purchaus whether or not the cUent
loses or makes money The caaino
makes a profit by taking an adv~taee
position m the variou.. eames by setting
gaming odds.
"IN ROULE'ITE, lhe casino expects
to make $5.26 out of every $100, regard·
le11 of who wl1111 and loses," he says. "It
makea no difference which numbers you
beton"
For hardened gamblers. Horowitz of.
fcrs the following casino advantages or
percentages of house winnings from
gambler'• bets It's a list of gambling
r,pportwlities hsted from worst to best
odd•
Keno 25·30 percent
Horaerac1nc: 20 percent
Slot machines 7 18 percent
Roulet.t.e· 5 2l8 percent
Craps and blackjack 0 I percmt
Horowitz notes that lf!arnin1 thf'
theories behind gambhni odds has been
an unplea'lant experience tor aome atu
dents who frequent J(amblJni m"<'CH
throu~ Nevada Horowtti'11 1tudenu "f"t a run down <1n
how to read rarlna forms and learn thf'
odd• of 1tock optlnn11 Rut tht· m11th in
11tru<"lof' admit# hl11 11tudf'nU arc told to
leave probstbllity thf'ory &111de wh,.n
they 11tep ui1 for o win, placr 11T 1Jhow
wager.
"Srnnt> of them get upt1.t tieuo~ It
<theory J dntrfl)'# a I-Of of l~ i<S.as amf
11y.1t~m11 tht'Y 'vf' dn'f'Ji>Vf'd," he ~1~
I flut r <lon't flldvii;f' anvtlf'lffy ' jlf~I
f('lld• lM<Tn ,'' ™' i;~y<; 'f'tl f(llf In rttN
bl~ hthf.Twl&e · ·
Golden West College
mr1themat1c1an Dr David Horowrtz has a
<;PfJc,1al clt1ss up his 5/eeve Its a
t:ITm9.t:;/or-lonq lrJurse on the tfKYJf1as and
Pfill t1u> of qamec: of r.hanl o
School's campus center has the look of a small Western town. Some bwldings were built by students.
School on the Arizona range
By JOHN BARBOUR
MAYER, Ariz. CAP> -Some
50 years ago Charlie Orme 's dad
and mother broueht t.heir three
children out to this high ~sert
country to ranch. There was
ranee land for the cattle, but no
schools for the children.
Problem solvers, the Ormes
simply hired a teacher. Since
there were only three Orme
children, they invited the five
children of ranch bands to at·
tend clasaee too. Then came tbe
netabbors' children. By the end of World War II,
there were 15 children ln the Im·
promptu school and t.be Ormes
bad lone slnce sr•duated. That
WAI when father Orme turned to
bl• 27·year-old aon. Charlie, and
aald: "I've had enou1h of this.
Either you takt It over, or drop
ll."
I NOW YOU JV81' can't drop a ~ achool, and, kln or not, turn 15 t ldd1 out tnto the mtndl.., de-
aert. So Charlie Orme toot lt
over. What maku the acbool uo-
uauai 11 not lta curriculum nor
ltl ae01cated faculty' but the
le11on h teach•• outside tbe
cla11t00m: cltlaenablp, com·
•
munity living, responsibility,
the old values, respect and seU·
respect.
The alumni Include the
children of Dick Van Dyke,
Mary Tyler Moore, Allee and
$5,600 a year ror tuition. You can
bring your own horse. You must
clean your own room. You are
either in, or you are out.
"ln order that there will be no
misunderstanding," the school
The Orme School seems to be in a class by itself.
Its rules are stiffer than most of those in adoles-
cent academia -and you can bring your own horse.
Phil Harrls, Fred MacMurray,
Peter Sellen and Ronald and
Nancy Reae•n . Jimmy
Stew•rt'• stepson, Ron MclAan.
i1 remerpbered by the faculty u
one of th• best 10 who came
throu•h here, not for
1chol8l'lhlp, but for cltlzenablp.
A• a ~• aecond Ue\ltenant, be
died in,Vletnam.
IT MAY BB DIFnCULT to
lm11me a movie 1tar'a da!,&Chter
mllkinl.• cow, b\it that'• part ot
1tUdent llf• lD this ao-nonMnM
place. Jt teaches t1hth ~
l2tb tr•del, mamtaiial • •mn·
mer camp and COltl upward ol
bulletin reads, "the followins
statement is present.ed:
"It Is the policy of The Orme
School that the Involvement of
any Orme student or summer
camper at any time and at any
place with the poeaeHlon, uae,
atvln,, supplylne. purcbasln1.
or selUnc of narcotics or dru11,
l,icludlnl 1peclflcally rn1rl·
Juana, will be 8J'OWdt for SUI·
penalon or d18mlssal from tbe
ICbOOI qr c•mp ...
Ditto •lcohol wbllt undtr
acbool aupervlalon. "Odor of
alcohol on tbe brealb •lll con· ,
1t1tut1 vlolaUon Of thla re,Wa· ttod."
If the rulea are stiff by
standards elsewhere In adoles·
cent academia, a kind of bomi·
ness compensate•. Jack and
Kathy Rowe are part of the pie·
tu re.
He heada the EneJi•b Depart-,
ment, coaches basketball,
volleyball and tennl1. She 19 t.he
public relations department.
Both in their 309, they and their
three children live ln a com·
fortable cottaee on t.he school
arounda.
"No one calla me Jack or
Rowe," be explains, nor are
they called Mr. and Mn. ''Tbey
call me J .R. and ahe ta Kathy."
And Wedn11d•y nitbt1 -
Wednesday 11 1 day oft arowwl
here -the Rowe Uvlna room
and dlnlnt table l• bavtll for anyone who wantl to drop by.
BUT TllAT CAN happen In)'
nl1ht, or any day for tbat mat·
ttr. After cl..,.., lb• tdeal 11~
for EDlli•b ii 11. J.R. 1111 be
m11ht be fotmd ln the llbfarJ
tutortnt a ab111th·trad•r 1o the
nlcttlff of library r~•~b.
•'Look f« the date of putiUUUon
. (lee 8CHOOL, ••• .., '