HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-25 - Orange Coast Pilot7 struetures destroged
I
..
~ I-. ·:· . . ...
11 :-.. t~ . · ...
. ..
J•.;
: .. w ,._, ...
·~' .: . . , ..
•'•
. .
. ·
•
Vietim's kids Italian quake .·
tell how dad death toll set ...
stabbed IDOID at over,-3,000
DAILY PILOT 10,00() ee fire
, * * * 25c* * *
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 25, 1980
llOL 71, NO. la.• Sl~IOM,, n P'AGI ' f om:-counties •
7 ~truetures g o ae
8es idents _f/,ee
TrabiiC<i bktze
By GLENN SCOTT
Of -Dally P'lleC '\ell Fanned by strong winds, a fire
in upper Trabuco Canyon in
O[ange County burned 7 ,500 a res of land through the ni ght
and was still uncontrolled today
No injuries have been report·
ed but seven structures have
been destroyed a t a djoining
Holy Jim Canyon and another S3
have been damaged, according
to a spokeswoman for the Oranp.e
Co unty Fire Depa rtment
Most of the structures were
summer cabins. she said
Residents or Holy Jim Canyon
a nd tenants of the county's
J o plin Bo ys R a n l'h we r e
evacuated dur ing the night
Residents of the expensive Coto
de Caza area and Modjeska
C an yon w e r e a s k e d b y
firefighters lo evacua te volun·
tarily .
About 200 firefighter s were
battling the blaze today with 70
engines and four bulldozers. The
Co as a
Weathe r
Local gusty northeastel"·
ly winds 20 to 35 mph
mainly near passes in
Orange County, decreas-
ing tonight and Wednes-
day . Othe rwi se fair
through Wednesday. High
Wednesday 75 to lower
'80s. Lows tonight in the
40s.
INSIDE TOD.4'1
TM National Education Aa-
aociaUon 1<1111 tM overage
length of teacMr-service haa
dr~ /rom 2011ear1to 14 tM • rxut lwode~1. on indication
thal ~ teocMr-1 ore turning
tn their chalk. Bvl o former
J>h11tfcol education teacMr in
PennlJllmrda ja fighting the
trnid. Sn,,. A1.
l •lle-.
Cire was only 10 percent con·
tained. the spokeswoman said,
as winds from 30 to 45 mph blew
like bellows into the blaze. Gusts
were up to 60 mph.
A strike rorce of 15 firefighters
had set up a defense at the boys
ranch in anticipation of the fire.
which at last report was sweep-
ing north of Trabuco Creek and
Rose Canyon
The fire began at 6 :30 p.m.
Monday in Indian Canyon in
Riverside County about seven
m iles northw est or Latce Els inore. Winds pushed it into
Or ange County
The spokeswoman said the
fire ra g e d 'thro u g h the
brushland, sycan4ores and oaks
of Cleveland National Forest
and crossed into Orange County
about 2 a.m.
The cause of the fire has not
<See FIRES, Page AZ)
,.,..,,,...,.....
Raf' dead
George Raft, onetime movie
tough guy, dies of leukemia
in Los Angeles Monday. A
top-paid star of the 1930s and
40s, he was 85.
Kids tell how dad
sle w theii-mother
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Ol•Oelly ........
Without flinching, the two
young children of Or. Louis
Alaia told an Orange County
jury Monday or how their father
fatally stabbed their mother and
then attacked her boyfriend in
the woman's waterfront home in
Huntington Harbour last June
13.
The children -Mar c, 11, and
Maria, 9 -were tsoth higb\y
composed and at times ap-
peared bored Monday as they
described the violent seouence
Reagan delays
cabinet wo rk
LOS ANGEL!:S (AP )
Ronald Reagan. shelving the Job
of picking a Cabinet for a few
days, rues today to a ranch out·
aide Santa Barbara to apend the
Thanbpvt.ng holiday.
The presldent-eJecl met tor
two and a hall houn MOftday
with biJ cloeeat advisers tA' J.ia.
cu11 narnea on their lists of
pr01peef.ive Cablnet 1ecret.a.rlet1 but no ooe would HY lf any de·
claiona were reached.
of e vents that resulted in the
deathl or AJaia's ex-wife, Margy
Lou, 37, and Long Beach al·
tomey, Marvin Tincher, so.
Alala, an orthopedic surgeon
. who ls charged with two counts
of murder, listened intently to
his cbUdrens' testimony, fre-
quently cradlln& his head in hla
hands as the two recounted the
event.a of an evening that began
with their wanting to watch a
tele vis io n allow caned
"Boomer."
Though the two children told
~omewbat dlrterent versions,
they essentially teallfied that
thelr father came to pick. them
'up the nlCht or Friday the 13th
for a ~ viait but that their
mother told him be could have
them on Sunday and not sooner.
Marc sald hia father and
mother then began to' ariue as
be and Maria waited tor the TV
' show to be1ln. At one Ume, the
youngster said be saw l\la f alher
push hls mother wltb botli
hand1. She then told her former
husband "to 1et out of.., the
house."
When she a1ain told him to
leave and be didn't 10, Marc
1 a Id hl a m other went t o
telephone pollce, and H 1be did.
Alala went to a kitchen
(8" AJ.,AJA. P11e A.2)
' __ , --
* * * * * * Majc>r bl(J,zes
StJuthland • in
By The Associated Press
Here is a look at the major
fi r e s burning ir1 Southe rn
California today:
ORANGE COUNTY
Location: Holy Jim Canyon
Acreage: 7.500.
Damage : 7 s tru ct ures
destroyed, S3 dama ged.
Status: Uncont ained. Ortega
Highway closed Upper Trabuco
and Holy Jim canyons i'volved.
Fire has reportedly split into
two blazes. Joplin Boys Ranch
evacuated. EvacuHtion center :
El Toro High School.
SAN BERNJ\RDINO
Location: North and west or
the city. near Sta te Highway 18
about 60 miles eas t of Los
Angeles.
Acreage: 10,400.
Dama ge : 240 ho m es
destroyed or dam aged. lnjarles: S ix firefighters
suffered minor irljuries.
Stat.': Unc•lntained, bum·
ing south and west lo the San
Bernardino Mow1tains. All roads
leading into the San Bernardino
Mountains are closed to most
traffic.
MOUNT BALDY
Location: .\bout lS miles
northeast of Los Angeles In
Angeles National Forest.
Acrea1e: 10.000
Dama1e: Tiiree houses and
one structure.
(Qjwtea: No ne ri!ported.
Slatas: Un•!ontained, bUrTI·
rn g northwest into the Bear
C!'l nyon
MALIBU .
Location: Malibu Canyon
between the Ventura Freeway
and Pacific Coast Highway
Acreage: 2,000.
Damage: None.
Injuries: None reported.
Status: Uncontained. but ex-p ec t co nt a inm e nt .
Firefighters set back fires east of Las Virgines Road to stop the
fi r e . Stokes Cany on being
evacuated on a voluntary basis.
M alibu Cany on and Las
Virgenes Roads closed along
with portions or Mulholland
Qrive
RIVERSIDE
Location: Lakeland Village
area of Lake Elsinore in
southwest Riverside County.
Acreage: 6,000.
Damage: One guest house.
bjarles: Two firefighters
injured from smoke inhalation.
Stat.I: Uncontained.
NORCO
Locatloa: Prado Flood Con-
trol Basin or sometimes called
Nor co-Corona.
Ac:rea1e: 300.
Dama1e: County Museum
Stora1e Building. Dam11e
estimated at $200,000.
......-: None reported.
Stataa: 90 percent con·
tained. Containment expected,
by 3 p.m.
Italian quake toll
set at over 3,000
NAPLES, Italy (AP> -The
Jtallao Military Rescue Com·
mand estimated the death toU In
Sunday's earth·quake at more
than 3,000 today , making it
Italy'• worst quake in IS yea.rs.
(Related photo, A4.)
The director of relief oi>era-
tlons, Giuaepf)e Zamberlettl,
said 1,750 were known ~llled, S70
mi11ing with little hope or find.
Ing lbem alh-f:, and 1,879 in·
ju red.
But the rescue command'• of.
fice in Naples said lt estimated
at least 3,132 dead on the but. of
reports from prevloualy iaolated
vllla1n in the mountains behind
N aplet and Salerno.
The Interior Ministry aatd
there were 100,000 homeleu,· and sell~olo1ilt1 reported that
more than 40 a.ftenhocb tboolr
the r~gioo since tbe ln.lUal quake
Sunday nipt. They 1aid a new
tremor tn Avellino, east of
Naples. knocked do.m buJJdint•
dam aced in the flnt Jolt.
The Italian military an·
nounced that ~ aoldien and 150
: piece• of equipment tell tbe
northem city of Mllan to rein·
force the 10,000 soldiers and
l ,500 flremen already in the zone
dlHilll for aurvtvon. •
(See QUA.KE, Pase AU
30,500
... acres
charred "~
SAN BERNARDINO CAP) -Up to 10,000 people fled
their homes, s chools and
businesses as six fires·
pushed by winds up to 90
mph ravaged thousands of.
acres of timberland and left
more tha n 200 homes in
ruins, officials said.
Fires in four c ounties
charred more than 30,500
acres. Nearly 240 homes.
many of them in expensive
areas. were damaged or
destroyed, officials said.
One blaze was headed "oYet
the hill" north of this city into
the San Bernardino Mountains
toward several towns. and part
of southern Crestline was being
evacuated today, s aid J immy
Jews, spokesman for the Sen
Bernardino Fire Department.
Tbe two major roads into the
mountains, Highways 18 t.bd
330, we re closed as t he fire
jumped H ighway 18 and
threatened the exclusive com-
munity or Arrowhead Heights.
Another swiftly movlnt
brushfire that broke out today
in the Malibu Canyon area or
Los Angeles County was whip-
ping south toward the Pacific
Coast Highway after burning
more than 2,000 acres within
two boura.
. Some residents in Malibu
Canyoa, about JO miles west ot
.Los Angelea , were bein1
evacuted, and two major area
roada were immediately cloeed,
the Calilomia Hi1bway Patrol
reported ..
StlU another (ire t.bnateaed
an entire villa,e lo tbe Aqeles
N1tlonal Forest, and three
blues were out of coot.rot in
Riverside County.
More tbaa 1,300 flrefiabten
were batWnt tbe six fires, and
lilt fird\gbten were btjw'ed, ln·
chadlnJ two wbo aulfe r ed
broken 1eo ln , .... down ·~ terraJn.
No other ll)jurlu were re·
ported.
Thirty band crew• from
<See WINDS, .... AJ)
Royalty c heer e d
BRUSSELS. Bel&ium (AP> -Queen Elhabeth and Prlnce
PblUp arrived at lbe Bnmela
opera Mule Mooclay ru1ht to &be
cheen of 200 admlren and bool
of a doaen 1rl1b Republican
Army 1\IPl)Orten
f AN BERNARDINO RESIDENTS TIE DOWN 8£LONOIN08 ON TRUCK 81EFORE EVACUATING
Up to 10.000 flee their home•, echoola and bu91ne ... a before onruahlng flame• . --·-----
''D'allas'· rating highest
Friday's viewers largest in TV l'tistory
NEW YORK <AP> Last
w .. ck 's episode or .. Dallas" m
which viewers found out who
!>hnl J .R Ewing won the highest
I ·1 f in g 0 ( any pr 0 gr a m IO
t1•levis ion his tory, drawing
v1t'wers jn 53.3 percent of the na-
t i op ' s TV-e quipped homes.
f•~'tlrf'S from the A.C. Nielsen
t\>._showed today.
f 'ro• Page 11 l
~~lJAKE ... " . Ht•s1<1<-nts of Laviano, San-
t11111t•nna and other towns dug
tlt1 ou/,!h th£' ruins with their
h·1111fc; in seureh of hus bands,
w 1 v1•s , children or other loved
PllCS
Exhaust l'd rt'::.rue workers
v 1•1 c· c;hort of bulldozers and
1 llwr t•quipm<'nl tn clear the
1 ql 1hlt• It was dtffirult lo get th<.·
I'' c:1· n•h1l'lt·s ava1 lahle up lhl'
11 1rrov.. roa d ~ 1n the 1m
1·0~1·nshed region.
"1 couldn 't even get a chain
f:;;1 w to save my wife who was
lrnpped under ·a pile of logs,"
s;11d Alfonso Mignone, a lawyer
i11 S:tnt' /\ngelo de1 Lombardi "I
li :i cl l o w o r k w i t h m y
f111gc•1 m11b · r rai..:11H·ntary reports ind1cat
I'd hu111J1 t•cb more· dead wen•
'.till t•> Ix· ~·1111ntt•d in Tcorn. San
\I :1 111.:11 l.1on1 Lav1ano anct
I '·1l:i h11tto
In l.1on1 . IO Sl'<trch do~!> h<·lrx·d
find o;urv1vor., beneath the rub
hit•.
rem ;.i. a town of 3,000 was re·
purl NI levc.>lcct. but there was nu
··:•sualty report from it yet
H o rti11~ we r e collected in
sc hools o r on s ide w a lks .
BlankeLo; covt:red them until cof
fins could be brought in
Pope John Paul 11 flew to the
earthquake·stricken south today
and comforted survivors at a
hospital and in the village of
Ba lvano, where as many as 100
\ll'Oplc ~d in the collapse of a
no man 'tatholic Church.
In Balvano. the pope kissed a
htlle girl who had a bandage on
her head and a scratched face
and embraced a widow clad in
the traditional black dress of the
south.
"I have not come here for
<'uriosity. I have come as your
brother aod pastor You are sur-
rounded by the compassion of
ever ybody." the pope told sur-
vivors in the village. expressing
his solidarity with all victims of
the disaster.
T he pontiff arrived from
Rome on an Itali an air force
DC-9, then s witch ed to a
helicopter to visit some of the
hardest-hit towns and villages in
the hills east of Naples.
OAANOE COAST •
DAILY PILOT
t tw o,_,. tol\\ o.o, Pifo\. •••f'I wN,rt u
<Of'ftC:UNtel ,,.. PffWt. ftrM,, I\ tNt>lf .... D-. ff'W
OIAl\Qt to .. c NlllloN"I tom°""' $4M•.it
w11tk)n• M t pueti\t'ltd ~-. ""tvtf, ,,, .. Y
•or C.o•t• fMM. Ntwpiort •t~"· H\M\t>"4'0tt :::c' ... '\:,~~~:.'~ x·~~-.!.'."~' ~z;.n,~ p~OllSIMO s.i ... oo~ -$\lt'lOll~~ lM ....... _
ouoil•"l"<I p1on1 " " )10 W••i ••• 54~1. p o. &o• t \.tO, Gott• Mf••, C•ll~Of'ft • t1•'6
.... rl ... -........... ,,., l'Utlll-
,_, .. ~
........... (drtM
~" ...... AW<IJWll ,..._,._. hh•
Office•
t .. 11 .... ,. l• Wnt lty "'"' I -llHC~ IOI/ ,.. U.11 '41-ly
ti\O!l(l"ll"" &.•<• 171/S ....... -......
T1l-s>l'IC!n1 (t14)'42~
Cle .. lflld Adver1ltlftt 642·5811
That rating means that the
prime-time soap opera , broad-
cast Friday night, was watched
in about 41.4 million households,
Nielsen said. CBS researchers
translate lhat fig ure into a pro-
J<' C l<>d aver age audience of
about 83 million . In addition, Nielsen s aid
-"Dallas" drew 76 percent of the
audience that was watching
television at that hour.
The highest-r ated program
previously had been the final
episode of the ABC miniseries
.. Roots." which drew a 51 1 rat·
1ng when broadcast Jan 30,
1977 ABC said the fi nal "Roots"
episode had an ave ra ge au-
dience of about 87.7 million.
Nielsen computes figures only
for ratings shares and numbers
of TV households. Estimates of
the total number of individual
\ 1t•wers are left to the net works.
l'ach of whj<'h uses a diCferent
rormula
The program that held the rec·
ord for highest audience share
was the final episode of the ABt;
series "The Fugitive." broad-
cast Aug 29. 1967. That show, in
whi ch Dr. Ri c hard Kim ble,
J:laye d hy th e late David
Janssen, fi nally caught up with
the one.armed man who pad
killed his wi fe, drew 72 percent
of the a1U·dience in its time
period.
On tht! reco rd -bre a k ing
"Dallas," episode, it turned out
to be Krisl in Shepard, J R.'s sis-
ter-in-law and jilted m istress.
who had pJmped two slugs into
the conni\'ing 011 baron al the
r.nd of l21st season Krist in,
p l ayed by Mary C r os by ,
daughter •.•f Bing Crosby, also
revealed t hat J R . vlayed by
Larry HaE:man. was the father
of her unbo m child.
The broa.dcasting of the key
episode \11 as preceded by a
phenomenul publicity campaign
by CBS and Lorimar Produc-
tions that .:;t1 rred interest to a
fever pitch in the nited St ates
and abroad. The show has an in·
ternationaf following estimated
at 250 millii:n
India s tUdent:~ jeer
• • • • visiting pnnc«1~
NEW DELHI, lndia (AP)
.leering Indian students picketed
Prim·e Charles today as he visit·
('d Delhi University and accused
h Im of s a nctioning virginity
t(•sts for Indian women entering
Rnl ain. a charge the prince de-
nied Abo ut two dozen d e m -
onstrators carried signs s ay.
1ng "Down with Prin ce
Charles," "Down With British
Aparthei d " and "You a re
responsible for virginity tes~."
The demonstration orgaruzed
by the Delhi Students Union was
protesting a lleged racial dis·
cnmination in Britain and re·
ports of h<irassment of Indian
travelers ,Jt London a irport.
British airport authorities said
in 1978 the,, <'Onducted the tests
t o chec k. the practice-o f -
c on v e n i en ·~ e m a r r i a g es a r ·
ranged to gPt immigration visas
for Asian w1:•men. The tests were
discontinued arter protests by
India and other countries.
The only \•iolence was a brief
scuml when police tried to slop
a young m <m from handing a
petition lo the 32-year -old heir to
the British I hrone An aide in-
dicated he "'as willing to accept
the paper, ho wever. Its contents
were not imrY1ediately learned.
ALAIA TRIAL ...
knifeholder and seiied a knife.
"I'll kill you," the youngster
said he heard bis father say as
he approached his mother.
"Lou, don't." she responded.
Marc said be left the room
before actually seeing his father
attack his mother.
Marc said h e wenl i nto
another room where he saw his
mother come out of the kitchen
holding her stomach. "Your dad
stabbed me," he said 1be told
him.
The youngster testified that
his mother went bacjr. to the
kitchen toward the telephone.
However, before she could dial,
she slumped to her knees.
At the same time. Marc said
he saw bis father flghtinl with
Tin cher in the TV room as
Maria stood near a table.
· Though he didn't see a knlle in
hla father's band, the proeecu·
tloo wltneas said be heard
Tincher say. •'Lou, control
yourself." •
Marc said he ran outaide the
house and .n to a net1bbor's.
Find1o1 no oae home, he aald he
ran back to hi.I boule and stood
in1lde the doorway, callln1 for
hls doS. Then he acatn left tht:
house to a1aln find a oelthbor.
Whlle neetna, he Hid be told
Alala'1 thlnf wU~,._Su.ean, who
was w~ outa1ae U.. house,
what "-I bapPtned. ,
After f\ndin1 a ntl•hbot who called pe>Uce, Marc returned to
his house on GUbert. Street to
find his sister sUU atancllnc lft
the TV room. He aald be aaw
Tincher lying on the kltcMn noor and noticed b.ll father try-
-··--·-··· .
ing to give aid to his mother.
The woman, who had separat·
ed from Ala la in November.
1978 died or a ~ingle stab wound
to t he abdomen. Tincher suf-
feted multiple knife wounds.
Maria , who ,followed Marc to
the witness ~stand, said ~er
mother asked her to call police
after the arg1ument broke out
with her father. ·'This is my house and I don't
have to leav•r.," she said her
father told h1~r mother at one
point. When Mrs. Alaia went to the
kitchen wheN' the phone was
located, Mari1J1 said ber father
went to the knife rack and then
"be ran over and stabbed my
mom.'' But in a cha11ge fro.m her pre-
vious testimony during a P~·
Uminary hearh'lg in July, Mana
testified that h1?r father grabbed
8 second, Jarg1eor knife before at·.
tacklng Tinchf1 r, who bad come
over to visit e arlier that eve·
ning. I
Maria said lsbe turned away
when her fath1!r began n1htin1
with Tincher. 'l'be next time •be
looked, she sa•f Tincher sta11er·
inl toward the kitchen, where be
collalJSed. Alai• has p leaded innocer,t
and innocent by reason of insam-·
ty to lbe murdv1· charcea againSt
blm. • His attorneys aasert. be wu
temporarily lm•ane when the
staylnp occurred. If convtcted of tlrat decree•
murd e r w lt b a pec l al
clrcumata.nces, Aleta co~d be sentenced t.o lif•e tmprlaonment
without poulblliltY of-parole.
'
,.,.,,..,... ..
STAFFER FAILS TO SA V£ CRUSADE FOR CHRIST BUILDINO IN ARROWHEAD SPRINGS
Al l•ast 100 atructurea lo8t H flame•, puahed by wlnda, ••••P In from mountain•
Mysterious
mist puzzles
FL AGLER BEACH,
Fla. (AP ) -Environmen-
tal authorities are puzzled
by a mysterious mist that
h as plagued Florida's
eastern coast for two
weekends. irritating the
eyes, noses and throats of
bathers.
From Marineland south
to New Smyrna Beach,
people reported eye, nose
a nd t hroat discomfort
Saturday nig ht and Sun-
day. Similar compla ints
were heard last week.
Ed Barber o f the
De partment of Environ-
m en ta I Regulation in·
Jacksonville s aid Monday
th at the problem could
have been rain being con-
taminated as it dropped
through an acidic cloud
formed by industrial pollu-
tion .
Fro• Page Al
F1RES ...
been determined, s he said.
Another southland fire whkh
has scorched about 7 ,000 acres
in Rivers ide County n ear
Lakeland Village, bas forced
closure of the Ortega Highway
east of the Orange County line,
said a spokeswom an for the
Riverside County Fire Depart·
ment
She said the fire. started in the
s mall community west of Lake
Elsinore, has moved south. Res1·
den t s of the village were
evacuated Monday after the
bla2e began at 3:30 p.m.
Two of t he 550 firefighters
working on the fire were treated
for smoke inhalation. she said.
The Red Coss established a temporary evacuation center at
El Toro High Sctiool , Serrano
Road and Ridge Route, early to-
day. officials said~ Boys from the Joplin Ranch
are being temporarily housed at
Orange CoUJ)ty Juvenile Hall, a
county spokesman said. Firefi"hters battling today's
blaze were drawn trom Orange
County Fire Department, the
California Forestry Department
and the U.S. Forest Seryice.
f'rottl Page A I
WINDS CONTINUE • • •
Western states were expected to
be flown in to help exhausted
fire fighters battle the seemingly
•uncontrollable blazes.
M any residents st ayed at
th e ir homes until the last
m inute, hosing down houses in
attempts to save them from the
blaze. The larg est f i r e , th e
Panorama blaze that officials
said was set by arsonists, began
Monday morning in a canyon
north of San Bernardino. 60
miles east of Los Angeles.
It was fanned by hot, gusty
winds as it burned some 10,400
acres in San Bernardino and
the nearby Sycamore Canyon
•·Rocks the size of golf balls
were blown through the an at
the height of the windstorm."
said LoVae Martines , a
s pokeswoman for the California
Department 'Jf Forestry.
"It was black.er than hell out-
side ," said Stanley Hunter of
San Bernardino, who escaped to
an eva<'uation center with his
wife. Lucille. and their 9·year
old daughter.
"My wi fe was puttmg belong
mgs in boxes, but suddenly the
fire was ever ywhere . It was
like a rainstorm of fire . We
jumped into two cars and left."
he aald.
Hunter later returned to find every house on his block burned
and his $75,000 home destroyed.
Fire officials were unable lo
predict when the fire would be
contained.
"It 's going lo be troubl e
throughout the day." s aid San
Bernardino County F1 re Chief
Don Banghart. who added that
they are at the mercy of the
e lements -low humidity and
high winds.
Another fire was threatening
an entire mountain village near
the summit of Mount Baldy in
Angeles National Forest . 15
miles northeast of Los Angeles.
It had destroyed more than
9.000 acres and damaged four
buildings by this morning.
Firefighters were able to
establish a fire line south of
Mount BaJdy Village. Shifting
winds were "blowing the fi~ in·
to Bear Capyon, which runs
northwest up from the viUage,
where there are hundreds of
.
recreational cabins," said Gene
Kni ght of the U.S. Forest Service.
"I woke up at 3 a .m. I
smelled smoke, 1 just grabbed
my three kids and ran." said
one. resident of San Antonio
· Canyonnearthevillage."
Fire officials evacuated San
Antonio Heights today and were
expecting to make a stand in
nearby Upland to prevent the
fire from sweeping down into
the heavily populated area.
In Riverside County. south of
Sa'n Bernardino, fire fighle rs
and U.S. Forest Service units
were battling three £ire~. One.
wh1<'h had charred 4,000 acres,
t hreatened homes in Lakeland
Village. southwest of La ke
Elsinore An undete rmined
number of res iden ts we r e
evacuated as the fire advanced
toward the mountain t•ommuni·
ty of Rancho Capistrano and
populous Orange County
Seven miles north of Lake
Elsinore. anothl'r hlaw burned
5.000 a<'res of scrub hru .. h and
threatened 50 horn{'!-at one
point
Another fire• v. al. hurning out
of control in the Prado Flood Control Basin i n River side
County a fter consuming 100
acres. A dairy was destroyed,
a nd other s tructures were
threatened. fi r e off icials re-
ported.
M anv San Re rnardino resi-
dents ~ent to a central cvacua·
t1on shelter on th<' grounds ol
the :'\ation.tl OronJ!t' Shov.
v. h1ch ha.., .1 numhc·r of larf!E
exh1b1t1on bu1ldtn~., anct h.!llS
Casino fire
links probed
ATLANTIC CITY, tN.J. <AP>
-Fire officials today were in-
vestigating possible links among
four small but suspicious blues
in the Brighto n Hote l a nd
Casino.
Four members of Brighton's
security force were taken to the
A ti antic City Medical Center
after three small fires were dis-
co~ered Monday night. ----
-...--------~-----------
:/ s
'Indian givers': eontinui"9 tradit~
Co ast Sa01aritans brighten holiday
.,.. ~antua. VIN l.
OI 1"lw !Mtlt ~ .... , .. ,.
A Un) wa100 train WH <1'"9 w
urhe todu 1n tht· Nuvajo lwp1
lndaan roun\n of north~ut~rn
<\ numa
Tllf' lnp rast by tht• 1·1u •vllll uf
l Haw ~ntal truck viuu •nd
'anou.w otht"r , •• ,. and Vl"hu:I •
r rom lhC" Or•nair l'o1ut h••
bf>COmt' II llumk"ilVIOM ntr•van
11\ rahutl
\EA& IN AND ) t"or 01At, the
'fhanbac1vin~ t•ara.van 101\la\ed
10 19 .. 8 b) .. l n1t~d Put:t-1
Sf'rvtre trur k driver from
Lacuna Beiu:h h•:. brought food
and wtntt'r dothin~ to th~ nt-ed)
lnd1 .. ~
Set-urif.y urged
1-'r'mda of Danny Davey, wbo
Mm•ulf wu befrlendtd by
Naav•.)O lndJana a_nd 1lvtn food
and •hulter when be became
1tranded on a hunUn1 t.rlp S2
yHn aao bave jolned ln over
tht year. to continue the
~t'lfturt'
f>a Vt'Y, deapJle aae and ail· 111~nt11, hb remamed active in
the i?r<>gram now coououed un·
der au»pice.s of the Thunderbird
l''oundahon, a non-profit or
Klllltzahon he formed.
'fl RKE\'S, ABOUT 150 of
lt1t"m nour, nee. beans and
other stapl~ as well as CIWlled
l(oods . l'ake mixes and some
Typewriters
theft targets
By PIDL SNEIDERMAN
Ol IM 0.llf Pia.I S\All
A rash of IBM typewriter
thefts at s mall ofrtces has
prompted Huntington Beach
police to encourage local bus1 ·
nesses to increase their security
precautions.
Detective Marty O'Reilly, who
investigates commercial
burglanes, said typewriter ban·
dits have hit at least six Hunt
ington Beach companies this
month, resulting m the los~ of
about 18 machines.
HE NOTED that one escrow
company lost six typewriters in
a break·in, including two worth
$2,500 each. Another business
lost four IBM typewriters when
it was hit twice within two
Burglary
ring broken
by arre st?
Costa Mesa pohN• be hevt'
their arrest of a Los Angeles
man could lead t.o the breakup of
a burglary ring responsible for
more than $200,000 worth of
merchandise in Orange and Los
Angeles counties.
Maurice Brey, 18, was arrested
Friday as a suspect in the Nov. 19
burglary of the R.M. Abrams
jewelry store, 1819 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Four men broke glass in an
Abrams' door at about 3 a.m
that day. investigators said, en
tered lhe store and broke into
display cases.
Even before the store's alarm
systE:m sounded. an unidenl1fie<i
man called police' to report thal
the store was being burgla r1ze<I
The caller, investigators said,
supplied the license number of a
1974 Cadillac believed used in
the crime.
The burglars escaped with
about $20.000 worth of je welry,
officers reported
Police Sgt. Bill Bechtel said
two men also suspected of the
Abrams burglary and others in
Huntington Beach and Newport
Beach wiU be questioned today
in Ocean.side where they were
arrested last Thursday on suspi·
cion of burglary.
weeks, he said
O'Reilly said there 1s a strong
demand for the machines and a
severaJ-month delay in direct or
ders from the manufacturers.
As a result, the police detec·
t1ve said, there is a ready
market for IBM electric
typewriters that are grabbed by
burglars and sold to fences for
about $200 each The units are
then resold through o ffice
machine stores.
H E SAID local burglars
typically strike a s mall business
that 1s not equipped witb an
alarm system. He added that
thieves also have been known t.o
break into banks , take
typewriters that are in easy
view and leave behind the cash
that is secured within a vault.
O 'Reilly said the Huntington
Beach break-ins are not the
work of a single gang but are
believed to be the work of
burglars active throughout
Orange County or thieves from
Los Angeles.
He said one typewriter
burglar arrested recently in Los
Angeles was responsible for
break-ins at 48 businesses over a
11even·month period.
HE SAID A typewriter burglar
commonly smashes a window or
glass door t(> enter and makes
off with several typewriters ln
less than l!5 minutes.
O 'Reilly adviaed local bu.sl·
nesses to bolt or otherwise
secure their IBM typewriters to
a desk or typewriter stand. He
s aid burglars usually will not
bother with a machine that can·
not be rarried away im·
mediately
State's gas
usage down
SACRAMENTO (AP )
Cahfomta's gasoline consump·
tion in September hit the lowest
level for that month s ince 1976,
the state Board of Equalization
says
Drivers bought 948 million
gallons. which was 2.3 percent
below the figure for August, ff7
percent below the sales for Sep·
tember 1979. and 2 2 percent
below the total for September
1978, the board reported Thurs·
day.
Balced Alaska too tast91
1peclal 1oodlea were loaded
aboard the caravan that rolled
out of Oranee Coast Collete ln
Coat.a Mesa Monday.
"The faculty and staff looks
forward to donating every year.
'We always get a great re·
sponse," said OCC Instruction·
al M alerials Center Superviaor
Ray Hainline, the caravan
leader.
In addition to the food , heavy
coats and blankets are packed
aboard to help the Indians make
it through another Arizona
winter.
HAINUNE AND colleagues in
the Tbunderbird Foundation
figure it costs about $1,200 per
truck including rent and fuel to
get the materials delivered to
the 20,000-square-mile reserva·
lion.
Hainline has participated
since 1962 -18 years -and
wouldn't give up his annµal
week on the reservation fot a
week in the Bahamas or Tahiti if
somebody offered it because of
the Thanksgiving lesson each
annual trek teaches.
His feelings are pretty much
s hared by other s talwarts,
Davey, Bud lfohl, and Wilson
"Bill': Price, of Costa Mesa,
another OCC employee. Hohl re·
tired from the community col·
lege last year.
"THE THREE OF us collect
food from faculty and staff
members and we each drive a
20-foot U·Haul truck," says
Hainline, adding that the trek
requires about 17 hours.
"They are like a big party,
everyone has a good time,"
Hainline says of the four ban·
quets at different spots during
Five Xerox
machines
inte rcepted
Thieves have diverted five
copter machines valued at
$28,500 from a production li.Jle at Xerox Corporation in Irvine,
where they were being renovat·
ed before return lo their owners,
police said today.
Michael J . Kane, spokesman
for the Xerox reconditiootog
plant at 18891 Jamboree Blvd ..
to1d investigators Friday the cost·
ly copiers vanished sometime
since their receipt in August.
He said once they arrive from
the firm's Compton plant, the
mac hines are logged in and
move through the Irvine facility
in various stages of repair
before being checked and
shipped out
The five copiers apparently
disappeared at some stage in the
process. possibly while stored
awaiting new part s, 1n·
vest1gat.ors suggested.
Bridge title
LANCASTER. Pa. CAP) -
World champion Malcolm
Brachman of Dallas headed a
team of six players wbo took lhe
Open Team Reisinger Trophy
race here at the 1980 rail cham·
pionships of the American Con·
tract Bridge League
Sandry J,.as hbrook, the relgntn1 Ml•~
Alaska, bu been ordered by the Ml11
Al&1ka Scholar1hlp Paaeant Board to
forego all public appearances until she
loses •ix and a half pountt.. She now
wetghl 139'tit (rfgbt), compared with JMt,A,
when the won the title tut May (left). (See
story, Pa1,B3l
Delly .. , ... ltatf """9
KEEPING UP DANNY DAVEY'S TRADITION OF SHARING THANKSGIVING WITH INDIANS
Bud Hohl (left) end BUI Prtc. loect •uppl•• on truck bound for reMrvatton
Thanksgiving week celebrations
on the sprawling reservation.
Cooking begins Wednesday, with
2,000 Indians served Thanksglv·
ing dinner.
He says for the most part they
congregate at the banquet sites,
some driving in by car and
others arriving from remote
rarms by horse and buggy
"THESE ARE very proud peo·
pie," he says. They aren't look·
ing for a handout. We work with
local churches and mi s -
sionaries in order to distribute
food to those who don't wish to
take the food from us."
Hainline says one of their par·
ty is always instrumental in ex·
plaining the Thanksgiving gift is
not a handout.
Price, a retired Marine Corps
master sergeant and electronics
technician at OCC is a good man
to have along on the trip because
he is a full-blooded Navajo.
The Costa Mesan left his
native Window Rock, Ariz, 4-0
years ago to enlist and see the
world.
P RICE, WHO earned a
measure of fame in World War
Ceontyse e k s funding
II as one of the communications
specialists· who developed a code
out of the Navajo tongue that
baffled the Japanese, serves as
the official interpreter.
He is there to convince reluc·
tant Indians that the Than.ksiv·
ing caravan of supplies is not a
handout, but a gift from people
who care.
"Because those people are im·
portant. We must not forget
them," says Hainline, who fint
began making the trips as a
Marine Corps photographer
loaned lo record Danny Davey's
gesture on film.
Transit bill.s targeted
The Orange County
Transportation Commission has
adopted what members called a
"menu" of state and federal
le1i1lat100 they would like to see
passed.
Prominent on the list of objec·
lives is an effort to increase
state and federal fundin1 for
highway and masa tranait
systems.
T HE B IGR·KANIUNG for
funding issues comes in light of
a recently amended study in
which planners claim Orange
County needs $20.4 billion worth
of improvements lo its
transportation sy stems
necessary to keep people mov·
ing by l995.
However, county officials are
unable to raise the money
without help from the state or
federal governm ents. and they
have been studying possible
legislative means or getting the
funds.
According to the adopted
.. With the approechlng holiday
M1ton we would Ilk• to take
thl1 o~unlty to thank our
friend• and c~tomera for th•
goodWlll and loyalty th•t h ..
helped to build our bual""9
,bigger end better ..,...., year
plan, the county will su]>port
legislation either to increase the
seven-cent per gallon state
gaaoline ta it or, more likely.
It's 1W nwre
'Mr. Justice'
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
word "Mr." bas been baD.Ubed
from the U.S. Supreme Court's
voe a bulary, at leas't when used
in front of the word "Justice."
According to court employees,
the court's nine justices have or·
dered that the traditional ''Mr
Justice" designation be changed
in all court opinions, inter-office
memoranda and correspondence
to jus t plain "Justice." Thus, for
example, refere n ce to Mr
Justire Brennan has become
Justice Brennan.
The Justices did not explain
why they decided on the chan~e.
@
EiEM WISE
change the tax to an inflation·
ridin1 percenta1e of the cost o1 a
gallon, such as 7 percent of the
price.
Another aoal la to aupport • t
bl1her tnact welaht f ... OI' otMr
measures that will force truck
operator s to p ay a t reater
percenta1e of hi•b•a.Y ..-v, • enues. ,,!
Commi&slooers ablo •a.id they •'
will back attempts to ammd tbe ·=· state cooatitution so the Gum
lnJtiaUve (Proposition 4 ) ctoeai · .
apply lta appropriation limits on ·
new construction for transport.a·
lion projects.
THE COMMISSION approved
al least 30 separate items it
wants the state and federal
legislators to pass. However,
members also noted that the
ambitious program could not be
handled in a year.
So they told staff members to
return next month with what
Chairman Al Hollinden called a
high-priority list of "entrees"
from lheir menu.
-~--"
We "'811 ~ try to IMl'ft
your confidence. We are
grat9ful fOf yGUf CO(t'rib\lt1on1
to our IUCC9l9 wld wl8h to
1end you and your family
gr9ttlnga at tt\11 Thanbg~
MUOI\ . . from t~ ltlff at
Charlea H 8wY ~
. '· i!
•II ..
·•
•'
..
• r,
''GoodHeat>m1,Emil11! H~'sOMo/Tho~WdrdosNow!",, <
• about $1 ,000 from the Associated Students organization for
its educational fund. Now it looks like Rivenburg and his fellow (and girl)
bizarre heteroaexuals may be messing up the act.
Don't ask what act.
Anyway, at a recent Activities Faire (be sure you pro-
nounce that correctly, as in fair) on campus, Rivenburg
set up his Heterosexual Students Education Union booth
right there in the Fullerton quad, along with the other student
outfits.
YOU MIGHT BE SU&PIUSED to learn that be got 100
signups of boy-&lrl members rl&ht away. Another mem1 bershlp drive gathered another 200 members.
Now with membership 300 strong, Rivenburg is re· ~rtedly just w~~e for the Gay-Lesbian bunch fu go ~fore ttM 11 m6mber;:w tbe Anodated Students' Board of Direc-
ton in seeking fts l ,OOOhandoutnexttime.
Rlverburg, you see, also plans to seek $1,000from the stu-
dents leaders for a Hetero educational fund.
WHY, YOU PROBABLY thought you'd never live long
enough lo see heterosexuals have the brass to come right
out in the open and ask for money to support their incHna·
tions. But there they are.
Mr. Rivenburg even has a skeleton educational p,O..
gram proposed. He's planning to show film&. like, "Blue
Lagoon" that tout the practice of what is called "hatural
love." He wants to bring preachers ri1h\ on to the very cam·
pus grounds to speak to his membersbip of the benefits of
being a heterosexual.
THE SHOWDOWN ON all this will happen wh-en both
the Gay-Lesbians and the Heteroe show up seeking student
body cash. Will the Heteros set shunned? Will both croups
walk away $1,000 richer?
Riveoburi was quoted as sa)'lo1 .U be wants ia equal
treatment for his Heteros. Short of that, he plans to sue the
student bodysbip. Apprised of the Hetero plot, a leader of the Gay-
Lesblaos was quoted as saylne, "We'd rather not give
them any kind of credibility. . . "
Well, that figures, doesn't ll? /
Better to keep those biurre Heteros out of the cookie
jar. ·
-Otneald U'ido"' ,,..erled
Marina Oswald Porter. who sup~ those who want to ex-
hume the. body in Her 'former husband's grave to confirm
it is Lee Harvey Oswald, expressed those views to David
Hartman on Monday's ABC-TV "Good Morning
America'' in New York City. Oswald, who is believed
responsible for the sfaying of President John F. Kennedy,
was killed by Jack Ruby 17 years ago Monday in Dallas.
Domestic_ minera/,s
shortage aWrming.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Heavy
American dependence on im·
ports of critical raw materials.
many of them from Russia and
potentially unstable African
countries, has put the United
Stales in a 'dan ge r o us ly
vulnerable" situation, says the
head of weapons research for
the Air Force.
Gen. AltoQ Slay. in a recent
Faulty flue
fire kills 6
DUNLAP, Tenn. -A fire that
started in a heating s tove
engulfed a wooden frame house
in this southeast Tennessee
town , killing six people ,
authorities sajd.
Fire officials said a faulty flue
appeared to have contributed to
the fire. ·
The victims wete identified
Monday as David Bowman, 25;
h is wife, Nellie, '24 ; their
daughter, Jonelle, 3; and three
of Jonelle's cousins, Sherry
Brock, 11, Ernie Brock , 8, and
Tammy Allen , 6 .
Sanger man killed
SANGER (AP) -A Sanger
man was killed when his bead
was trapped between the arms
of a forklift and the ground.
Adam Macias, 37, was working
under the forklift's arms when
the lever lowerin~ them was hit accidentally, the Fresno County
coroner's office reported. ·
report to Congress, said that
America n depende nce o n
foreign oil is only part of the na-
tion 's resource problem
threatening security. Slay, as
head of the Air For ce Systems
Command, is in c harge of
weapons research, development
and procurement programs.
He also told Congress that the
United States' "alarming depen-
dence on imports of critical in·
dustrial raw materials from the Soviet llnloo or potentially un-
stable southern African sources
creates a potentially dangerous
naw in our nation's defense pre·
paredness posture.
"The pnce and availability of
vital materials such as cobalt,
chromium and mangenese are
almost completely dependent on
geopolitical events in southern
Africa.
"The adoption of Marxist re·
gimes by five African countries
south of the Sahara has con·
tributed to the political instabili·
t y in this r egion and the
likelihood of future supply dis-
ruptions.
NATION I WEATHER •
etches out
o~ 'Ripper'
LEEDS. En1land (AP) .-
Detectives circulated aket.cha
of three men they believe could
be tbe Yorbbire Ripper -the
tauntlDc psychopath who bas
claimed bis 13th victim.
The descriptions were put
to1ether aft.er scQres of people
contacted police With what they
hoped might be helpful inlorma·
tlon in the murder of 20-year-old
Sunday school teacher and
sociology student Jacqueline
Hall ;;om Leeds University.
Police ;;aid the three men
were seen at different times
near the area where Mrs. Hill
was seized and beaten to death
last Monday night while on her
way to her campus apartment
from an evening seminar.
POLICE SAID ONE of the
men resembles someone
described by one of four women
sucvivors of street 'attaclur,
possibly. by the Ripper, who
jumps bis victims from behind.
The latest murder, the Rip-
per's fifth in Leeds, spread fear
among the 4,000 women on cam·
pus1 and few now go out after
dark.
The Daily MirTOr newspaper
office in nearby Manchester re-
ceived a telephone call from a
man claiming to be the Ripper.
He said be would kill again this
week in Leeds.
The voice was similar to that
on a tape recordin1 sent to the
police last year mocking their
efforts to fmd the killer. Police
are convinced the tape was re-
corded by the mass murderer.
POUCE OFFICIALLY have
refused to give details of injuries
suffered by the Ripper 's vic-
tims, fearing it could encourage
similar attacks b y other as-
sailants.
But reporters close to the hunt
learned the murder weapon is a
l'h·pound hammer , and the vic-
tims are mutilated, said police
chief Gi!orge Oldfield, who leads
India greets
royal tourist
NEW DELHI, India CAP) -
Prince Charles, heir to the British
throne, has arrived for a three·
week visit to India and the
neighboring kingdom of Nepal.
He received a low-key but
formal airport reception Monday,
headed by Indian Vice President
Mohammad Hidayatullah.
As the 32-year-old prince left
t~e airport, a group of about 50 In·
d1an demonstrators displayed
signs and banners, one of which
read : "We welcome you to Delhj
Airport -but stop harassment of
Indians at British airports."
250 detectlvet ln tbe fruatratlnc
manhunt that bu lasted ftye
years.
Nlne of the Yorklblre Ripper'•
victims were prostitutes. Tbe
others, lncludlna the lut three, were ·respectable, police said.
They were a ahopgirl, a clerk
and two students and the police
say that no woman out alone at
night la safe.
All 13 slayings have occurred
in six cities in northern England.
u~ddad
wins tot's
cust'!~Y
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -A
Judie bas ruled in favor of an
unwed father in a child custody
case, settinJ a precedent that
may be cited by judges in
similar cases in Virginia.
John Younger, 29, acting as
hia own attorney, bad argued
that Betty Cbeeka, 23, had taken
"the only thing I bad left" when
ahe moved out of their home two
years ago with their infant girJ.
Younger won custody of the 2~-year-old girl, Tonya, in
August in General District
Court. He argued be took the girl
away from her mother in June
because Ma. Cheeks had been
preventing him from seeing bis
daughter for two years.
THAT RULING WAS ap-
pealed by Ms. Cheeks, but was
upheld Friday by Alexandria
Circuit Judge Donald H. Kent.
The ruling was the first in such
a case in a Virginia court of re·
cord and may be cited as prece·
dent ; the General District Court
ruling could not.
"I 'm glad it's over ," said
Younger, who runs a tow-truck
business And works in a fast·\
food rest aurant. "ll 's been
almost three years of a mental
beating."
Kent denied the appeal after
Ms. Cheek's mother, Lula _,ae
Farrell, contradicted statements
she had made at an earlier hear·
ing
MRS. FARRELL SAID there
had been a shooting incident at
t~e house in Halifax, where Tonya
It ved. :"t the earlier bearing, she
had s aid there was no shooting.
Kent angrily stopped the trial
after noting that Mrs. Farrell
"may very well subject herself
to perjury."
The judge said the contradic-
to r y testimon y negated
Virginia's "tender years" doc-
trine, which gives the mother
custody rights over the father if
all other things are equal.
Rockies snow · continues . .
C'oastalM'eatherl,-~r------------------..,... .... ~ Reno
S.11 L•lle I
S.nOl990
S.n l'r•n
'2 21
JI 32 ., S7
~ S2
•S J3 42 ,,
Winds lllloW c"enyon• tu1llne to to
40 mpl\, dKl'MtlnQ •-erd mHl-dty.
C:0.11•1 hlQll 72, IOW, In «II. lnl-
lllQll IO, IOw NW .-0. Wllter 60. EIHwhero, north to norHu•ost
wlncll 20 lo JO Molt, dOcrMllnQ IMI
•llo•noon. Wind w•wt l to• i..t.
~==="' """'da .... 1'1..U, II ,0.. C10 no1 ,,_ Y<lllr Pll!)OI lly't :IO 0 111 'c.11 "fO(o 1
D Ill and YOUr OOOY "'" 119 clal1"9fOCI
..... ,.fay end 8ullday '11 yow C10 no1 '"*'•• ~ eociy ..... • • "' '*' =~°.!!~ . "' -YoUI :!9" ..... .,.
·-•• .., . .... .. ,.
41 • "' .. .. J1 ., a
.. 71
II IS u ...
S1 • •• .. 41 10 ..,
• 41
s .. 11141
St LOllll
$1 P·TolTIH stStt~le Spollano
Wts!tl1191n
73 ..
lO 1J
31 20
S2 46
.... ~f:•Ulor•la Strl ... ,.., . .............. ·---· . ~ . ... ................ .....
"" ... ,... "" Mu Olr l I 11 t JWSW t I 1t t IWIW , • 11 1 t w
• • ,. 2 • ,.w
The 9th Annual World Masters Marathon, directed by
Bill Selvin. will be run Sunday, January 25 on a brand
new course in the Ci ty of Irvine.
Runners should pvt that dote on their calendars oow.
This AAU-sonctioned world-class event will be sponsored
by the Orange Coast Doily Pilot newspaper and the
Irvine Olomber of Commerce.
A fast, new 26-mile course is being laid out in Irvine for
the event with the active coopera1ion of the Irvine city
government and Moyer Pro-T em David Sills. The course
will be certified. Bill Selvin
Men ond women runners of all ages ore welcome to
enter. Awcrds will be given in each doss. /
Runners who entered the 1979 marathon sponsored by Walker & lee, or the 1980
10-kilometer race at Chapman College, and who haven't changed addresses since
that time, will receive full information and an entry blank by December 5, 1980 .
Other interested runners must send o setf-oddressed. stomped envetope to
Morothon, c/o Doily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA. 92~6. Include name,
address, city and zip code. Please, no telephone inquiries. All inquiries will be
handled by moil, so your self-addressed, stomped envelope is essential.
Sponsored
by the Wi~~ And
C:(ti••utt·
,._.o•t•e••ck
President-elect Ronald Reagan gives a pat on the back to the Rev.
Donn Moomaw aftec church services in a Bel Air Presbyterian church
Sunday. Past.or Moomaw, onetime UCLA football star, is formerly
from Santa Ana.
LA schools cut?
Panel urges 'no extra money'
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The
state's watchdog Little Hoover Com-
mission bas urged the governor and
Legislature to give no extra money to
the Los Angeles school district until
the board shows it can spend what it
has efficiently and economically.
In investigating the school board,
the commission "received apparent
evidence or ineffi cient management
systems, poor fiscal controls and a
lack or concern or economical ad-
ministration or operations." com-
mission Chairman Nathan Sbapell
said in a letter to Gov. Edmund
Reagan grandad
illegal alien, .
brother claims
RANCHO SANTA FE (AP>
Ronahj Reagan's older brother says
their paternal grandfather, believed
. to have ned Ireland's potato famine
for the United States, was a forerun-
ner of today's illegal aliens.
But tbe U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service, pointing out
tba( regulations were different in the
mid-llOOI, aays the presidential "1· eestor probably did not violate -by
-law. Neil Reagan , 71 , said the
grandfather, Michael Reagan, left
Ireland in the mld-1800s and went to
Canada, then slipped into the United
States, apparently without benefit of
immigration papers.
Reagan, in an interview Sunday.
described bis grandfather as "prob-
ably one of the early wetbacks -
except that he came in from Canada
instead of Mexico." But Jim O'Keefe, district director
or the immigration service, said such
methods or entry were legal then.
"There was no inspection at either
land border as we know it today,"
said O'Keefe. "The s ettlers just
came across from Canada or Mexico
and, if we ever came a cross them.
we assumed nobody had broken the
law."
Panama joins U.N.
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -
Panama has been elected to one or
the two Latin American seats on the
U .N. Security Council after telling
other countries from its region it
needed the position to defend itself
against President-elect Reagan's
hostility to the Panama Canal
treaties.
Brown Jr. and legislative leaders.
The commission urged that "no
additional funds be provided to the
Los Angeles Unified School District
until the district has demonstrated
satisfactorily to the governor and the
Legislature that its resources are be·
ing administered efficiently and that
taxpayers' funds are being expended
economically."
The main issue was whether the
Los Angeles school board should be
leasing or selling schools that don't
have enough students because enroll-
ment has declined. ..
The district has been pressuring
the Legislature for a special session
•on whether the di~trict should re-
ceive more money. The state sup-
plies 80 percent or all school district's
funds ; in Los Angeles' case that is
$1.3 billion.
SHAPELL SAID in bis letter that
members of the commission, the
formal name of which is the Com-
mission on Cab'Torhia State Govem-
ment Organization and ·Economy,
were not satisfied with board mem-
bers• answers at two bearings this
fall.
The commission le arned that
enrollment bu dropped by 125,000
students in Los An1eles since 1970
and nearly 100 of its 4Z7 elementary
schools are Underenroijed wltb fewer
than 300 students each. The commluAon 1aid the di.strj.cl
could save $126,000 by closing each
underenrolled school ~nd in addition
could make money by seWn1 or lea.s-
ing the surplus property.
AT AN OCT. t hearing the com-m issiQn asked Board President
IU>berta Weintraub why such un-
~rused schools weren't closed and
•'t he board president's responses
were inconsistent an~ failed to ad-
dress the question directly. The com-
mission found the points of rationale
prof erred by the president unfounded
in fact or unmeritorious on their
face."
Mrs. Weintraub, who broke down
an tears when being repeatedly ques-
tioned on the matter. tried to blame
low enrollments on the district's
court-ordered busing plan.
The commission said the other
board members were asked Oct. 28
why they were not closing schools
when faced with declining enroll-
ment.
"In responding to these questions."
Shapell said in his letter, "the board
displayed widely disparate policy
views for a governing body ultimate-
ly responsible for the administration
of $1.8 billion or taxpayer monies.
Each member res ponded individual-
ly and their responses weT'e in no
way coordinated with one another."
GOURMET
MJ\RKET
•
SAN YSIDRO (AP) -
Tb• lmmlaranll keep eomtnc in an unending
Ude and "they don't
~are whether Carter or
Reagan it president," a
1enior U.S. border
patrolman said.
"The average border
Jumper knows little or DOth1nc about America's
election results,'' said
BW Selzer in disputing
reports of a border
buildup in anticipation
of tougher U,$. immi-
gration laws under a
Republican administra-
tion.
Two under cover U.S.
immigration officers
over the Mexican border
in Tijuana said there's
no. buildup of people
aiming to cross.
IN ns busiest sector
along the 2,000-mile
Mexican line the U.S.
Border Patrol captured
7, 149 illegal aliens in the
12 days before the Nov. 4
election and6,0&t in the 12
days after.
In the first 16 days of
November, a total of
8,300 undocumented
aliens was taken into
custody, compared to
8, 700 in the same period
last year.
In the period of Oct.
31, 1979, to this Sept. 1
wer e 287,000 ap -
prehensions, compared
to 338,000 in the same
period the year before.
A MAJOR effect will
be felt, in Selzer's view,
when the President's
Select Committee on Im-
migration and Refugee
Guard ~laanges
State Senate President Pro Tem James
Mills Cleft), challenged for bis job by Sen.
David Roberti (right), has announced be will
step down from the Senate's top job at the
start of the new legislative session.
Inmate dies
in stabbing
LOMPOC (AP) -A unit of the Lompoc
Federal Prison was locked down Monday after one
man was stabned to death arid another man was
found knifed at the facility, prison officials report.
Those wanted for questioning about the stab·
biogs were not immediately identified.
Jerry Pena, 33, of Fremont, Calif. was found
stabbed to death in his cell and Martinez Valencia
Armundo, 38, from Tuscon, Ariz. was found knifed
in a separate cell Sunday morning, said prison of-
fi cial Clyster Lewis
ARMUNDO WAS TREATED and was listed in
good condition, Lewis sald. Lewis added that FBI
agents had been called in to investigate tlle case.
Prison officials said the entire H Unit, where
the stabbings took place, was locked down.
Sandra Rhodes or Santa Barbara, who was
waiting t.n visit her Ciance Sunday morning, said
she saw prison officials carry out a body covered
with a bloody sheet, and suspected that something
was wrong. She said her fiance, Paul Anderson, is
housed in H Unit.
Affairs issues its im-LATER SHE SAID SHE saw another inmate.
l)ending report. "They had a Spanish guy coming out or a car with
After several years ' a government guy and his (the inmate's) bands,
study, the report may be arms and everything were all cut up."
issued in December or Ms. Rhodes complained that she called the
.
SAN rRA.NCISOO (AP} -s.erameato County
Dt.triet AttorDe1 Herb Jaebcla ii fadq m...,.
meanor ebarla of public~. and battety
foUowtna.adlQuteowr a bar 1"1. police 1aid. Jaeboo wu booked at the Vallejo Street
police at..uon oo two count.I ol battery and one pl
.public dnnltennesa after be allepdly 1luaed .a
bartender and dnk clerk at the Huntlqton Hotel,
Barteader Charles Koenla said Jackaon ••• with a iroup ot people celebratinc a birthday •t
Ule hotel'• C'EtoUe restaurant Saturday. Othfr
members of the party left about 12:30 a.m., leav-
inl Jacklon and a female companion to pay a~
barbW. ·
·.~. vfrn •et. tor M•e Wesc
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Mae West, the UO·
a bashed seductress of 1ta1e and screen who
purred "Come up and see me sometime" aqd
became an American legend, will be buried •t
private services this week.
Miss Weat WU alt·
(
· ) ting ln a chair in ~er STATE . Hollywood . pentbous, ..,.. ______ __,_ ·when abe died Saturday
at the a1e of 87, ap-
parently ol old age and the aft'ennath of a stroke
that had hospitalized her for three months tb.ia faU .
The stroke bad impaired her speech, but not
the splrlt that carried her through an 80-year
career. From her hospital bed she sent word to a
reporter friend that she was suffering from a fall
out of bed while dreaming about Burt Reynolds.
• ~d aea••• ldftll.ifled
LOOMIS <AP) -A body found in a pas~ure by
two target shooters has been identified as that or
Mary Beth Sowers, a Sacramento coed who disap-
peared three weeks ago with tier fiance, sheriff's
officers say.
Placer County Sheriff's Lt. Eric. Engellenner
reported that dental charta were used to iden-
tify the badly decomposed body. which was dis-
covered Saturday about 20 miles northeast or
Sacramento.
The woman's hands were tied behind her baclc
and she had been shot at least twice in the head,
Engellenner said. Ms. Sowers, 21, disappeared
Nov. 2 with her fiance, 22-year-old Craig Miller ,
following a fraternity party at a Sacramento
restaurant. They were seen by friends being
driven away in a car.~Mmer's body, shot three
times, was found later that day near Bass Lake in
El Dorado County.
January. It was expect-pl'ison 12 times "but got the run around" and was
ed to recomme nd a told to go home. llamlclde rerard e•t.afJIUlled
limited amnesty and a Pena was committed to Lompoc prison last
guest-worker program. Oct. 10 and was serving a 33-year sentence for OAKLAND (AP> -The bus rider who becamt
The below-average armed bank robbery and escape, Lewis said. the victim in Oakland's record-setting homicide
rate of apprehensions is Armundo was committed to Lompoc July 20, baa been idenWied by authorities, who were
put partly on the time of 1978, and is serving a 30-year sentence for import-aearcbinafortbemurderer.
Y e a r . N o v e m b e r ing heroin, Lewis said. Armundo ls eligible for Police idel)tified Bradlord Phillips, 36, of
normally is tbe quietest parole De<!. 15, 1985, he added. Oaklandutbel2Mbvictimtblsyear. ' month for the U.S.,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....,....,.:""""":-:----:-.,...,..--:---:patrolman. But Sehrer,
deputy chief or the
Chula Viata sector, says
it is even quieter
because of 'ban on ran-
dom ranch arrests.
THE MORATORIUM
was ordered last April
on arrests in factories
and farms as well as I
ranches popular with
alien labor as a means I
or support for federal
ce n sus takers , who
wanted aliens to show 1 up normally for work.
Border patrolmen were
told to stay awa y in
April and Ma y except
when armed with war-
rants. '
But the ban continues.
and patrolmen think it
unnecessarily ham-
strings their efforts to
round up illegals.
"We're disappointed
a nytime our enforce-
1
ment effort is reduced,"
Selzer said in an in-
terview.
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
lo wor for ou.
TO MERIDA, COZUMEL, . CANCUN
On~ h.il( ol round lnp fare Good for mid~"Cek ckpanurc and requires purcha~ of lour
package f:ffecr"c 1/10/81 SubJCCI lo govemmcnr appro,al'>
I
We at Delaney's
Market
Our new low fares can take some of the chill
out of winter. There's no lower fare to any of
these destinations. No advance purchase, and no
leng~h of stay required~ Now doesn't that make
you feel nice and warm all over?
you to Honolulu you can save plenty. For an
additional $79 you can enjoy 8 days and 7 niahts
at the Ambauador Hotel in Waikiki. This price
ls per person double occupancy, for Thursday
departures and includes all transfers to and from
the airpon. But huny. some rcsttictions apply
and space is limited. Hotel package ef'ICcttve
January l·April 30, 1981. For just a little more,
you can leave any ct.Y and hive your choice of
accommodations at the Napulani, Con.I Reef,
Hilton Hawaiian Vlllaae or Staaton Waikiki.
..
wish you a ~ery Happy
~
Thanksgiving!
We wW honor tbe
holiday by being cloeed Tbaaksglvlng
so we can enjoy tbe time
with our famWes .
OU AYUCAIAN.Suuting Jan'uary 10. we·~
introducing direct fl ights to Mexico's Yucatan
Peninsula. Where the sun shines almost perpct·
ually. On the white beaches of Cancun. the cora.l
reefs of Cozu.mcl, the open market and ancient
Mayan pyramids of Merida.
With one of our bargain tours you can make
even more of your pesos. Catch Continent.II to
the Yucatan. h 's like no other suntan on earth.
HOHOWW Of A WI. If your plans ta.kc
For infonnation and ~(all )'>Ur
~.!T'.nt ot Condnenca.I Airtian. .._. • ......_ NU_~B USNOW. (11 ... '!'r''>C' ... _.......,._. __ , ..... u.•-"'"' .
•
•
I dietricts
llouble Hind
a "**'' acbool board meetint atteoded by about point.I out clualc dilemma confrontlna
0ne band there was almoet unanimous oppoeiUen
clos\119.
et at the ••me Ume, teachers were demanding a 16
pay increase.
t is obvious that.the district. which bu encountered
b times in the posl-Propo9itioo 13. pcM1t·5errano-Priest
eras simply cannot please everyone.
their credit, trustees bave aBffd -to stud~
sibility of renting out unused cfuaroom apace to
p v ate industry as ts the practice of the ~mont District n ar San Francisco. No teachers have been fired or schools
c sedtbere. But whether that system can be applied locally where
ools are located in the middle of residential areas may
another matter. ~eacben de.serve a living wage. And nobody wants to
c bools. are trying times for local districts. No one to
te has offered simt>le solutions.
We suspect that it is the time for harsh decisions. Tbe
mber one priority. of course, is continuing quality
ucation. ' Accommodations will have to made in other areas.
rt won't go away
The just-released master plan proposed for John.
ayne Airport bas drawn some predictable reactions
f m residents most impacted by airport noise and pollu-
t n in Newport Beach and Santa Ana Heights.
They were critical, suspicious of claims that noise
uld be reduced and leery of statements that airport
owth can be kept in check.
The master plan proposes, among other things, to re-
ce commercial jet noise in the takeoff pattern while at
same time gradually raising the lid on permitted dai-
departures.
It's not difficult to spot where the residents' concern
strings from. They've been burned before on promises to
lilnit jet takeoffs. Also, they must daily suffer under the
r-.,of the jets.
But the master plan, if implemented, appears to be
aimed in the very direction that residents are urging. By
forcing airlines to purchase quieter jets and setting up a
strict noise allocation system,, the master plan seems to
be offering some 1001-overdue hope for optimism.
Since there is no likelihood that the airport is going to
be closed to commercial airlines, residents seem ill-
ad vised to diamiu the proposed plan too quickly.
Some have gone so far aa tq complain that the
tieralded quiet jet1 the DC-9 Super 80, is no quieter than
other commeri~aJ jets now in use at the county airport.
This contention does not square with the noise tests which
showed that, especially in the heavily impacted Santa
Ana Heights area. the Super 80 was measurably quieter
than existing commercial jets.
The master plan appears to offer some movement in
the right direction on the troublesome airport issue. Non-
stop complaining at this point could be counter-
productive.
Beautification welcome
Dana Point's seaside character wW be enhanced if utility companies serving the unincorporated area follow
through with plans to install wires underground along
Pacific Coast Highway. .
'lbe companies will seek peimluioo Wednesday from
the Orange County Board ol Supervisors ~tear out 58
utility poles and bury 9,300 branch feet of cable along the
bighway from the Street of the Green t..antern to Crystal
Lantern.
'l1le estimated $810,000 will be paid by the Sfn Diego
Gas and Electric Co., Pacific Telephone and Storer Cable
TV Inc. Work is scehduled to begin in October 198i, and be finished by December 1982. ·
U the supervisors approve the request as they have
for similar proposals in the past, there Will be a 4.5-mile
stretch along the highway from Three Arch Bay to
Doheny State Park where no stark power poles or heavy
black cables disrupt the highway scene. In the end, of course, the cost of the work is absorbed
by consumers, but the project is worthwhile. The utility
companies and the supervisors should be encouraged to
continue to seek ways of enhancing the Orange Coast's pie·
turesque setting. "
• • Opinions eKpressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment la Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .. -. .
~oyd/Wedding rites
ByLM.BOYD
When you go to a weddina
in El)'Jlt now, you have to
check your IUD at tbe door.
Dear
G~my
Gus
Tbe "futurist.I" say we'll
emerge from the dark
days ahead and enjoy a
more alOuent aoclet.y by
the middle of the 21.lt
century. I can hardly
wait!
D.M. ......_, ... ,-.... .... ........ . , ...... ,. ....... . _ _.., .................. ..
:=11~~'&:L'=l" ,..,.. ..
Wltb aood reuon, too. Was
lone the cmtom for weddilll
pest.I to fire their weapoaa
to celebrate the auptlala. ID
dolnl ao duriJlC the last three
years, they killed 789 other
guest.a and wounded 3,087
more.
Anrage of five priaooen
escape from Sweden •a
prisons every day. Or such
wu the cue In 1971, at any
rate . No more recent
atatiatlcs are at. band: Think
of that! "" a day.
Arm IDd Hammer..._baldne
1oda bM adftl'Ulr.d m every
CODHCUtl•e lleue of '"Tbe Old P.-n' Almneek .. for
exactlJ .. ~.
Nwnerou1 fanm ....-Can· ton, Cblaa ralH cata aDCl
clop far tbetr meat and fu.r.
) ......,. Kretblct'llldhort.I Paot Eclltcw
)
I
.Narcotics security sliP.JhOd
W ASHINOTON -Govern-
ment 1toellplle1 of aartotlcs.
worth bWkml ot doUan on tbe
street, are h1ah1y vulnerable to
theft becaUle of lax security at
federal atoraae cent.en, federal
lD•.,U&aton concluded after a ..n.. ol 1urprt.e lnlpeetloos.
A sUU-MCret General Services
Aclabalatration repbrt details
tb• 1llp1hod
measures
uaed .to
•al•l\llU'd the lar1e quan-
tl t I e 1 of
morpblDe.eo-
delne and opium llGred
for emergen.
cy use at
Denver,
Colo., West Point, N.Y .• and
Fort Knox, Kf.
The report was provided to
Sen. Mu Baucua, D-Mont., as
part of a contlnuine lnvestiea·
lion of 1ovemment waste and
mllm~ement. Here are some
of the ftndln&I :
-Government employees are
allowed to wander without
supervlalon in drul( stora1e
Andy Rooney
areaa, wblch are under the
Jwu4ktloo ot the GSA and tbe
Treuury Department. At W•
Polnt, for example, the In·
vestltaton found that "pollce
guards do not enter tbe stol' .. e
vault.I with GSA eml@.l'ees, 1Vbo
are allowed In the vaults alone
and unobserved."
-WREN EllPLOYEE.8 leave
the storace vault.I, they are sub-
jected to a cunory search -by
macnetometers similar to thole
used at airports to detect metal
objects. The search "la not COD·
sidered adequate lO detftt the
presence of narcotic aubetances
or diamood.s, which are stored ln
the GSA vault and subject to
pilferace." •
-Regulations intended to as-
sure security of narcotics dUJ'inc
shipment have been tpored in
some cases. One shipment of
opium wu tram~ In un-sealed trucks, another was 'seol
without armed guards.
-Incredibly. narcotics shi~
menta are not weithed when
they arrive at the storage cen·
ten. to make sure that the cor-
rect amount wu received. In
fact, the lDvesU1atora fouacl
Mveral dlscrepwtea bettlem
t.be current inventory 'and tJ)e
amountl that wen 1uppoeedly
delivered for storage.
-A& one center. a shipment ot
201 case• of opium wei1bed
21,Ja.15 pounds when 1t wu re-
cetved tn 1151. But when it wu
sold m ..ms, then wu m.913
pounds leas of the drut. Tbe
shortqe wu "epeeulaUvel)' at·
tributed to moisture lou, de·
terioratlon of packagine. poui-
ble decomposition of the opium
and inaccurate receiving in·
formaUon," the report states
without convict.loo.
-INVENTOaY RECORD
cards at the Weat Point facility
were newly typed, with informa-
tion summarized from the
original cards. "Ediu.n, and typ..
ins nett inventory carda II a
aerloua deficiency, and raises a question u to why," the report
notes.
-Laree quantities of ln-
dividual-doaaee packets of dnata
were to have been destroyed at four federal 1tora1e centers
after attempts to sell them
RtRE lT IS. RO._, ~~R·~"· .. Cllf>..~£5~'
felled, bul t.be lnveaU&aton G•
pre11ed "tllllllleant doubU"
that the nareotlca were lD faet
des~. -• Accoulltln.I cootroll over atoc~ al nareotlc1 are ((JG•
aplcuoualy ne1U1ent," tbe re-
~rt ~nclude1. Furthermore, Inventory rec:orda are unrella·
tfte and lmufflclent. pbyalcal
count.I are not performed, test
welsbl.DI of receipts b not prae-
Uced and inventory reductions
for destruction or sale lacked
,adequate controls."
-AT DENVE&, the in·
veatigaton found morphine and
codeine stored with quinine sul·
phate, often uaed as a "cutting"
agent to dilute the aruga, inviting
substitution to cover theft.
•'Considering present inventory
and quality maintenance prac·
ticea.'' the invesUiators wrote,
•'it is unlikely that such a sub-
stitution would be found . . . for
many yean."
-"Inspection and quality
control procedures are inade·
quate." the investigaton found.
Many of the metal tins used to
hold the drugs were found to be
rusty. and had to be repackaged
at substantial cost.
CONGRESS, POLICE
thyself : If the Guinness
Book of Records bad a category
for the leaat·enforced federal
law. it would have to 10 to the
st,tute that requires memben
of Cone,reu to be docked a day's
pay, Stea.so, for every day they
are absent without a good ex·
cuae while Congress la in
seaaion. The only excuses al·
lowed are official business and
either personal or family illness.
But no attendance records are
kept, and the 1856 law hasn't
been enforced in the Senate
since 186S. In the House, it has
only been invoked once in the
last 10 years, and that was bard·
ly an official crackdown. Rep.
James Martin, R·N.C .. turned
himself in for taking off Oct. 9,
11 and 12, 1979 , to attend to
p.ersonal busines. He was docked
$505.52.
Martin's self.sacrificing ex·
a mple has not caught on, and his
colleagues go right on collecting
their full $60,662.50 a year, no
matter how many days they
play bookey.
Portrait of a proudly prejudiced writer
It is DOW a year s ince I started
writing this column. Three a
week for 52 week.a is 156. Each
column is 800 words. Six bun·
dred times 158 means I've writ·
ten 93,800 words. Because I
dtdn•t take any vacation this
year, I'm fOlDI to take a day off
on thia ~versary by repeatinc
my lint column:
What follows are some clues to my character. It seems only fair
that lf you're
1oln1 to read what I write,
I ought to tell
you bow I
1tand:
-I prefer
altUng, but
when l stand,
I stand ln size
8 ~ EE E
eboea. There
have been periods in my life
when Wide feet were my moet
distinguishing cbaracteriatic.
-Wben lt comes to politics, I
don 't know whether I'm a
Democrat or a Republican.
When I was young l wu under
the mistaken impression that all
Democrat... were Catholic and all
Republicans were Protestant.
. Charles McCabe.
This turns out to be untrue, of
course, and I've never decided
which I am.
--I like cold better than hot,
rice better than potatoes, foot·
ball better than baseball, Coke
better than Pepsi. I've been to
Moscow three times and doo't
like that at all.
-TBl8 MOllNING the scale balanced at 203 pounds. I'm 5
feet 9. lrty mother always calla
me "sturdy" and says I have hie bones. A UWe fat ls what I am.
-I have an American Ex·
press card but often leave home
withoutllandpaycuh. ·
-The following are among the famous people I have met:
Richard Nixon . Georee
McGovern, Arthur Godfrey, Frank Gifford , Barry
Goldwater, Art Bucbwald, .Jim-
my Stewart and Carol Burnett. I
have never met Teddy Kennedy,
although I've seen a lot of pic·
lures of him.
-I b.ave been arrested for
speeding.
-I speak French but
Frenchmen always pretend they
~on'l uwerstand what I'm say-
ing.
•
-It is my opinion that
prejudice saves us all a great deal
or time. I have a great many well·
founded prejudices and I have DO
intention of giving up any of them.
-I don't like anyt.bing loud.
-Fiction doesn't interest me
at all. I haven•t read a DOvel
since "Lorna Doooe." I meant k
read Hemingway's .. The Old
Man and the Sea•• when it came
out, but I didn •t. Fiction takee
too lOOI for the ideas coatalned
in it. I'm not interested iD beina
diverted fn>m life.
-Good idea are overrated. II makes more difference how
writer handle• an idea than
what the idea was in the flrat place. 1be world ia filled with
people with aood ideas and very
abort al people wbo can rake a
leaf. I'm tired al l'ood ldeu.
-WHEN I warl"B, I UM an
Underwood No. 5 made lo ll20.
Someone gave me an electric
typewriter but there •a no UM
pretending you can use
machinery that think• faster
than yo u do. An electric
typewriter is ready to go before
I l'lave anything to say.
-I know a lot about wood, lee
cream, the English language
and Harry Reasoner. In other
areas I have some serious gaps
in my knowledge of them.
-Writers don't often say
anything that readers don 't
already know, unless it's a news
story. A writer's greatest
pleasure is revea.lin& to people
tbinp they knew but did not
know they knew. Or did not re-
alue everyone else knew, too.
This produces a warm sense of
fellow-feellng and is the best a
writer can do.
-THERE'S NOTHING
mystical or magic about being a
writer . .A writer is Just a person
who writes sometbillg. There
are almo9t DO people who are
not dmtllts who can fill teeth
but then are a lot al people who
aren't profeulooal writers who
write very well. Thia is one al
the reucma why belne a writer
la toqber than bei.nl a dentllt.
-I admire people who don't
care what anyone else tbiDts
about what they do but I'm not
one of them. I care wbat people
think and would not want you to
know bow much I hope you like
what I write.
Next door to the richest girl in the wo~ld
Tbe talk got around lo
bypo11ycemia the other day. ~
it happens I knew what it was -
a deficiency of sugar In the
blood. I never bad it, but my
older daupt.er did In her in·
fancy.
This was when we were Uvtn&
in Cuemavaca, south of Mexico
City, In tbe
early '501 .
Our doctor
was a Vien·
ne1e named
Hans.
He pre -
scribed a diet
of bananas
and milk, on
1'hlcb the
)'OU1ll lifl
II.eel f« about two yean.
To tJU day, •he can detect the
sme~ ot a INlb banana at about
4iO pac. ad cu't bear tbe Idea
of Html cme; but the dlllt cured
Mr of the eondttlon .
TBll as•INDSD me of
Jlaa., with whom J became
quite friendly. He was an odd
bird. An excellent physician,
trained in the old school, he was
not exactly what you would call
respectable.
He was a communist who had
fought oo the Loyalist aide in the
Spanuh Civil War, and thua,
was persona noo grata in both
Austria and Spain.
He lived from sl• months to
the next six montha on t.ourilt
visas, which be found increu-
in1ly difficult to aet. He pretty
much was a man without a CO\Dl·
try; but damned cheerful about
it ,rithaL . -We uHd to meet nearly every
momlnl at the Bella Vista Hotel
wbere, over a bottle of Tebuacan
mineral water, I would leara tbe
condltion ol the ln.narda of Pf•~
Uoally every memt>.r of the
lotal ~.
BANI' •Oft lntereetlftl pa.-
Ueet, b1 far, waa a tadJ er-
roaeouat1 ldentlfted b7 tbe
taltlo6dl • ·-u.. rtcben lirl lD tbt ~,, Barbiara HuttcJll, .te.
etc. About three times a week.
this lady would call Hana in the
middle al the Dicht because •be
wu unable to sleep. .
Ham would scuttle over with
bis little black bag and give her
a bis fat abot of 1uia.red water.
Thu bad the invariable effect al
ghi.ns Mme. Reventlow. u abe
WU then known, a Sood Dilbt•a
sleep. Sbe thoulbl she wu set·
' tins beroln or something equally
fuclnatlD8. Hana alao was Incredibly
nal•e. I Mted him bow mucb be
char1ed for tbeM viafta. He laid
30 pelOI, whlcb wu about suo.
I WU abocked ~ told him ao.
"RUie lt to .. nut time," I
tolcl 'bbn. He did. Tben waa no
complaint. ad I ba'N ......., to
belie" that tbe taoo wu raiMd
· more than once tllereafter.
HUI WU OM oltlle few peop&e
.la ea.Mnca wbo ntt uw ibe
Wool1llllidlllllielreA. SIM~· l1 Deftl' ........ from IMr Wla,.· -~., .. ,....... ...
hadbonlD Sm ope.
. · Her ..n 1iir Hft~r. a ,
painter named nonbelm <as In
the shoes) uaed to 1peak lyrical-
ly of "the smell of opium comiDI
throueh tbe bouaalnYillaea" In
bl• 1arden, each day at the
coclrtall hour,
TBS ll08T fuciaatJ.n.s tidbit
that the doctor save me about
bl1 famou1 patient was what the
source al ber almost contlnuoua
W-bealth wu. When JOUDS, lbe
bad been lncliDed to exceulve
plumpneea and believed fully ln
the dictum that you c~ be
too tbln « too rich.
.. Bam,'' u tbe tablolcll a1lo
called her. went to a aeries ol
docton for a aeries of opera·
tlona. lo.. tboae days it was
beliend you could ccmtrol ap.
pettte by cutttna oft portkm ol
tbe ~ Ila a reault, Ham toN.
.me, lbe only bad a couple al r..
ol eokla. lmteld ol tbe ~ •u..J 8"i cw ao tbe _...., ,... ... ...
n.l' .... tie .., .......
mllela of our time a. 0-Unca
oUlailtdaJ.
··-----·
htiug the spark Loµnge
\
cashes in U.uqQe cou 11Ptidote f o~ teacher l>umout
on'soaps' 8U'l'LER 1 Pa. (AP> Teat'ben lo
DOrtlt........,. Peaaaylvaa&a uve a.. Jwnplq
off roofl, a.um.a. ~ a MariM-ltyte olletacl• co.ne w danallQC from parethu&e aaUI all wllh hope• of poh1hln• their PtrformHet In tbt
ctaanoom ,,_feet ud •trona ,npa won't n.ceuarUy
make Shat~are or locarlllunt more palatable
to 11-~.oldl; but audt 1•m• playlne caa,htlp
refrnb a teacher'• apPfUUI for lM .tob. HY• Ke.n
Mutko, orltlnator of th• Teacher Enthuataam
Reo•wal coune
•~hen are lo the same poeiUoo u a lot of
. tt\ldtntl, •• Muako aald over the clamor at the
Butler Rib School cafeteria, hit beefy bands
cradhna a cup of coffee.
uyoo OaTaOY THEla SPllUT by constant
ridicw• and penecutlon from t.he public , ad-
ministraton and parent.s. And when lbeir spirit is
broken. self-ima1e and morale aoes down."
He was talkin& about teacher burnout, a re-
cently recoenized but largely unmeasurable
phenomenon.
"I have no doubt it exists," said Virginia
Koehler. assistant director of the teaching and in-
struction division at the Nationat Institute of
Education in Washington. "But there are no na-
tional figures."
Tbe NptionaJ Education Association says the
ave raee length of teacher service bas dropped
from 20 years to 14 the past two decades, an in-
dication that more teachers are getting fed up.
LACK OF DISCIPLINE SEEMS to be the
main reason.
"One in 20 teachers has been attacked in the
United States," Musko said, referring to NEA
statistics from 1979.
Other factors in teacher stress include over-
crowded classrooms, reams of paperwork and ex-
pectations that teachers assume cultural training
abandoned by parents.
"The spark just goes out. Teaching becomes a
routine," Ms. Koehler said.
Enter Musko and his unconventional course.
IN THE THREE YEARS HE has been
teaching the program for the Midwestern In-
termediate Unit, which provides various services
for schools in Butler, Lawrence and Mercer coun-
ties, the course has gotten rave reviews from 150
participants.
"Sell-image is the key," he said. "This pro-
gram tries to help people find out that they're bet-
ter than they think they are."
To do that, Musko believes individuals must be
;:ballenged -maybe even a litUe bit frightened.
That's what Libby Zambelli was when she
climbed a ladder to the roof of Laurel High School
and came down on a rope by bouncing h~r feet off
the building's walls.
"I didn't know if I could do the rappelling. I'm
not too thrilled about height.s," the sixth grade teacher in the Mohawk diatrict later admitted.
WHEN rr WAS OVBa, SHE said abe "felt
good inside."
' That pro1ram also featured an obstacle
coune, crawlinC throu1h c:larlt uves, visits to a
mor1ue and occulonal paddlinc for disobedient
atuden&a. The Alternative Educatlon program won
Muako tJlil year's Freedom's Foundation Valley
Force Teachen Medal.
Bffldes aelf·confidence, lbe teachers' course
provides participants with specific motivational.
leaderahlp and communication skills they can use
at their Jobe, Muako saJd. ·
Tim Glunt, a practical arts teacher in tbe West
Middlesex district, said the coune helped rum
realize "the kids aren't just persons you can dump in-
formation Into. They have to have inputtoo."
RON ROHLAND, A MUSIC TEACHER in the
Greenville district, said he learned "how some stu-
dents must feel when frustrated by a situation they
cannot handle or control."
"I would make t.his course mandatory for au
teachers, instructors and coaches in our district if
I could," wrote one class member on the course
evaluation form. "It helps us rebuild our en-
thusiasm for teaching."
Enthused another : "You're like 100-year-old
gin."
QUINC\' • Jiau. (AP)
-Lotm1e mana1er Cart
Miranda bopea ·be can
continue to 1how five
houn of the television
soap opera .. General
Hospital" each Sunday,
dHpite threateninl
moves from ABC.
Miranda, owner of the
disco California, said he
offered to pay the
network that regularly
airs the show a fee to
tape the .five hour.Jong
segments during the
week and run them
back-to-back to an au·
dience of mosUy women
at the lounge.
"THEY WOULDN'T
have it," he said after
A special 7:()().8:00 a.m. drop off service Is offered Monday
ttirough Ff1day for spaying, neutering, dewormlng,
grooming, and boarding.
Boarding Grooming
Animal Adoption
Obedience Training
631 -1030
Doctors hours are:
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. M-F
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sat.
10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sun.
24 HR. IEMEltGBfCY SERVICE
about 600 c us tome rs ••iiimiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliil•••••••iiiiii watched the five hours I
of "General Hospital"
and spent about $4,000
on drinks. "They're try-
ing to sweep this thing
LEARN! ! HOW YOU CAN !VC ::
LEGALLY PAY NO TAXES ~·
IN 1980 AND RECOVER ~11 under the rug.•·
Miranda said he re-
ceived a mailgram from
ABC general counsel
Patricia Murphy, sug-
gesting the club "cease
and desist" from show-
ing the popular soap
opera because it is caus·
ing ABC "irreparable
1TAXESIPAID IN'77 '78 & '79~· ' .
dama~e."
· City laws prevent
Miranda from having
music and dancing in his
spacious club on Sun·
days, so he started the
soap opera marathon
about two months ago
after noticing how many
JUST THE WAY 14 PROFITA BLE AMERICAN COMPANIE S WITH
PR ETAX WORLDWIDE EARNli'GS OF OVER 3 5 BILLION DOLLARS
PAID NO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES AT ALL' Or" T HE LIST OF NO TAX
COMPANIES. ARE t: S. ST EEL. GE"\ERAL DYNAMICS. AMERICAN
AIRLINES. OCCIOE:'llTAL PETROL F:L'M BOEING AND J P MORGAN &
CO c RePort Changin~ Times. October l!l801
C ALL NOW AND LEARN HOW TO PUT YOUR TAX
DOLLARS TO WORK FOR MORE INCOME FOR YOU!
PHONE: 644-2507
people flocked to the dis· Complimentary Tax Seminars Are Available
co weekday afternoons Evenings & Saturdays. Refreshments Will Be
lo watch the show. For Served. Please Call For Seminar Dates. atmosphere, waitresses
dress in hospital garb. Seminar Speaker
"Tms 1s perfect," hel Mr. Gerald L. Kozak, Tax Planner·
said . ·•There · s no Newport Center
t.
•' . ' -
music. No dancing. it 'sl 359 San Miguel Or. Suite 110
.,..,,....... totally clean and it Newport Beach. California 92660 T • TEACHER TENSES FOR FALL shows what 30 million ~ii ~~-"T_nMt~~Acttv~·~lty-'_'_P_•~~-°'~,..--.,..-~•-•_co~u,..~~~-P_e_op_1_e_s_ee_e_v_e_ry~d~ay."~:~~~~~~~~~~~R~es~e~rv~at~i~ons~~li~mi~·.te•d·.~~~----~~-~-·~~it8
Reagan :.n ..
.·nol
I Not every instruction period Involves derring-
-do. Time is also spent in group dynamics, trust ac-
tivities and problem solving. Al the end of each
class the "point of the day" is discussed.
eyesighL -~· ;~~
ana/,yzed
CHfCAGO (AP)
President-elect Reatan
is farsighted, literally.
1.
Typically the first of four sessions begins with
teachers "ventilatln1."
"I &et them to talk about themselves, about education and what is really bothering them," said
Musko.
Then comes the icebreakers -activities to get
class members laughing and interacting with each
other.
"In one of them we get teachers to make a
real loud 'Oh' sound, like this," Musko warbled as he
mimicked an opera baritone, one arm out.stretched,
the other resting against his orang& and green
western shirt.
THERE ARE ALSO PROBLEM solvers like
"All Aboard," in which 10 teachers must all climb
on a round disk 2 feet in diameter.
"We do a lot of silly, childish activities. But I
believe in the healing power or hilarity'" said
Musko, a 36-year-old former physical education
teacher. During the final two sessions, teachers sail 100
feet and more into the air on the parachute sails
and n,11\ the obstacle confidence course which
Musko had built al Knoch High School.
"There's a lot of thought and courage in-
volved. The idea is to give them a risky situation
that they can succeed in," he said.
IT WAS THAT PHILOSOPHY that gained
Musko national attention two years ago when he
developed a "sctlool or hard knocks" for disruptive
students.
Omega nlghtsl
The Am erican
Academy of
Ophthalmology reported
that Reagan "wears
contact lenses to correct
hyperopia."
Hyperopia , or
farsightedness, is "a
common occurrence in
anyone past 40,'' the
academy said.
It also said Reagan
uses reading glasses.
But the academy said
Reagan's eyes are in
better shape than many
presidents, including
A be Lincoln whose
photos "indicate that his .
eyes did not work
together."
James Buchanan had
·'divergent strabismus,' ',
or eye mus c l e im-
balance, "which often
produced double vis-
ion ," it said . John
Adams' weak, watery
eyes were very red and
be h ad frequent
headaches, the academy
added.
0 OMEGA
.. I\ dab of perfume and the drama of
diamonds will make this nl9ht a celebration.
Omega presents our ladles quartz diamond
watches In t 4 karat yellow gold. A. S2, 900.
B. S3,300.
S LA VIC ".'S
PIM,_.... 9'ncw 1t11 , .. ""°" hlwl. Nttwport Ceftllr. Newport 8-d\, n'16"-1380 W~ I &.....-Hiia / ..._ VlltD f Nortll °""II I n-t (My 1.otc.rne..• ......
Alto C,... l.ot ~/IM '*i" lM Vtpt u.._., ....... _.... ... ,....Ml"-..... ~--a...
~ Fitw lllllffm C11U4
..
Up until N.OW.a
balance sitting in a
ch ecking account
has lx.ie n monev
doing nothing.
But if you open
an Allstate Savings
N.OW. Checking
Account, you can make your balance work for
a living to the tune of 5.4 7%. (Yield ba se<l on a
5.25% rate, compounded.)
~hich is a lot better than the zero percent
an ordinary checking account pays you.
GET A HEAD START AND SOME
FREEBIES TO BOOT.
The government has approved December 31.
1980• as the start date for the N.OW. Account .
But if you sign up for a N.OW. Account
now, you'll start earning instantly and be ready
to write checks starting December 31. Plus
'we'll print you 200 free N.OW. Account
checks from our wide selection.
Meanwhile, we can also include
use of our excl usive Bill Call System Account
that lets you pay hundreds of creditqrs
by ph~ne.Wrule you merely sit back and collect
5.47 %on the unused bal.mcc.· in \'Our acco unt.
Well give you the Bi ll Call System free
through the end of the yc:ar .ts incc:nt iYe rosign
up now. E\'en nex t year. then:'s no ad<l itional
charge for this sef\·ice.
If vou al read v ha\ e the Bi 11 Cal I S\'stem. \\'e 11
waiv~ the charges until the enc.I of tl~e year.
GET\VI-IAT'S COM ING TO YOU.
Stop by your nea rest Allstate Savings office and
we'll open your N.O\V Acco unt tcx.lay.
Its about time your checking account
became a paying proposition.
Allstate Savings ind l.otn A111oci1tion, 1 mrmbcr of tile Scars Fllm1lv 100 hnmcht'~ su.1c.,..1dl'. m•arh· ~ i hil1100 1n •~\t'ts •Sub)CCt tu final Sm r rtAulations.
I Fountain VaRey 18798 Brookhurst Ave. (Valley Center Pla?.a). Fullerton 1107 So. Harbor Blvd.
Mission Viejo 27521 Puerta Real. Newport Beach One Corporate Plaza.
San Clemente 911 So. El Camino Real. Santa Ana 1200 W. 17th St. Tustin 18232 lrvine Blvd.
Westminster/Huntington Beach 540 Westminster Mall. . ' , . f
-'"-
• "r.f •
,. •,
J.
,. I•
. "
..
'" , ..
'I
l"I
N
' '1 o')I(
m
11
·1')
·w
He BtUdies the 1TU1£allre ,
Writer turns from fiction.J.o real horror"
n;.ltt! Artistrw·
ltd
~u. Icicles on barbed wire and ice-glazed
Gi shrubbery frame th.is f armbouae silhouette
) ' near Mawranaville, Md., after an overnight
sleet storm sheathed the countryside with
wintry beauty.
·~r·
~; Alie~ problem knotty
101•
WASIUNGTON (P) -An in-
<:weati1ative a1ency of Coniress
·i1ays the proepecta for control·
1 lllng Wecal immi1ratlon into the
) United Slates are poor and the
costs of doing so would be
r.tormidable.
n;' A study by the General Ac-
~ I rounting Office says DO one real·
1y knows bow many illegal
''l'lieos are living in the United
l1Jtates. The Immigration and
Naturalization 'Service has
estimated 4 million, but some
Census Bureau staffers have put
the figure at about 5 million.
And though there is no way of
~nowing the number of aliens
ntering the United States ii·
legally annually. about a million
· e apprehended and deported,
~ imarily at the U.S.-Mexico
• rder. ~ ~· BORDER PATROL officials ~i~ timate that for every person : aught trying to enter the COWl·
• y me1ally. at least two others • -et through.
The GAO conclud,d: "An il-
legal alien . . . baa little chance
or being located and deported.
INS simply does not know the
number of illegal aliens or who
or where they are."
In a letter commenting on the
GAO repart, the Department of
Justice ae:reed that without im·
plementaUon of major measures
for controlling entry into the
country, "Utile progress in solv-
ing the immigration problem ls
likely."
U.S. immigration laws set a
yearly limitation of 290,000 im-
migrants under a preference
system with family reunification
and employable s kills given
foremost consideration. But cer-
tain immigrants are not counted
as part of the quota and actual
immigration exceed s that
number . .-In 1978 about 600,000
aliens entered legally as lmml·
grants.
Many so-called private
bills are passed by CongJ'esa al·
lowing legal immigrants who
are not counted as part of the
quota. And large groups of ref·
.ugees, such as those from Cam·
bodla and Cuba, sometimes are
admitted without being counted
in the quota.
BY FAil THE Bl(;GEST prob-
lem of illegal immigration con-
cerns Mexicans crossing the
border to work and live in the
United States.
The study says that about 92
percent of all deportable aliens
located in 1978 entered by avoid-
ing official ports-of-entry, and 98
percent of those were Mexicans.
... THE
EARL'S
~~ ... TiltG .... _ ... .....
II lit 217667
&.,-YW» l ,,,,. S•aru •t 'f °"' Ooor
f'C .. Stot• ....,_nl "°"' A'••t
COSTA _,.641·1289 , .. ,.._. ....
...... WU>415-CM01 --~ .. ....... ....., ... _,.......,,
. ..
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
JrbJ dom a pleasant J>roleuor of Zn1Ulb tW"D from Shakespeare
and Hemlqway tO intervlewlnl marderera? Wby would be write
a ~ about perbape the wont
mu1 killer ol all time?
Maybe lt bu aomethiDs to do
with Ida blrtbplace -notortous
Tranaylvania, le1endary home
of Count Dracula. Leonard Wolf
tlilnka that may have something
to do with b1' fascination with
the bizarre.
"It's called destiny," said
Wolf, 5'7, who becan by writin&
rather mysterious poems and
stories, then turned to a study of
the macabre.
BIS EA&LY SUBJECTS were
literary characters like
Frankenstein and Dracula, but
hla interes'-soon turned from fie·
lion to real horror, like the
weird, ritualiJUc murders of the
French nobleman Gilles de Raia.
HU newest book, "Bluebeard -
The Life and Crimes of Gilles de
Raia," ls the product of that in· terest. ·
Gilles wu a comrade·in·arms
of Joan of Arc and may have
been in love with her, and was
one of the wealthiest and most
influential men of hie time. He
al.so wu a brllllantly evil man
who tortured, raped and killed
young boys in the dark recesses
of bls cutles.
.-Gilles, whom Wolf says may
have been the wickedest man of
all time, has come to be called
Bluebeard after the myt.hical
knight who murdered a suc-
cession of wives.
WOLll' DESC&IBES THE vis·
its of Gilles' henchmen to
French . villages to abdu ct
children, telling their proud
parents that the children had
been chosen as pages.
In the castle, Gilles would
engage in violent sexual ran-
t as i es· ending with brutal
murders of the youngsters.
The horrors went on for years,
until Gilles began to challenge
the authority of the church and
the king. The murders were
used as an excuse to execute
him at the age or 36.
The question that disturbed
-~ ...... LOVER OF MACABRE '
Wrtter Leonard Wolf
Wolf was why Gilles, who had
every worldly advantage, would
commit such unspeakable acts.
"EVIL IS DEUCIOUS, excit-
ing, glittering-and attractive
beyond bellef,"' Wolf said, ad-
ding that there is a little or
'Gilles in all of us. "He is not an
'other.' He is a miserable in·
stance of what else we are.
"We play a great game when
we point to mass murderen and
say 'they,'" be.said, concludlnJ
that the "vaat energy in all of
us•' that some use to produce
monumental works or art }s Used
by others to commit terrible
crimes.
When Wolf began writing
about Bluebeard, he realized
that literary research would not
be enough to enable him to un-
derstand why mass murderers
commit their crimes.
He began sending letters to
convicted mass murderers in
California jails, and received an
jntriguing reply from one of
them.
"HE WROTE ME the most
stinging letter of rebuke," Woll
said, "asking. 'How do you get off
calllnc me a mus murderer?"
He didn't feel he wu any dlf.
ferent." Wolf bu met frequenUy with
the priloner, wboM identity be
has kept conftdentlal, and the
meetinp have confirmed the
conch•ioo WoU reached while
studying Bluebeard: mass
murderers are much like the
rest olua.
The study of Bluebeard led
Wolf to change his views on
capital punishment.
"I waa a Weloog opponent of
capital punishment, but I want·
ed Bluebeard executed," he
said.
WOLF DID NOT want
Bluebeard executed as a deter-
rent to others, he explaloed, but
rather l9 provide a final end to
the horror.
"A man who commits such
crimes ls writing a message to
the world. I think the message
ls, 'Stop me, and stop me all the
way.' The more he killed the
easier it became," Wolf said,
and the less pleasure it gave
him, Gilles was trapped.
At his trial, Gilles said he
committed his crimes "follow-
ing the dictates or my imagina·
lion . . . for my own pleasure
and physical delight, and for no
other Intention or end."
THE COURTS .sentenced him
to be hanged and burned .
"It was a fate he richly de·
served1" Wolf said.
Enrollnwm
changing
WASIUNGTON <AP> -More
than 300,000 foreign students are
studying in the United States
and that number may swell to
half a million by the end of this
decade, Sa)'S the. pre.sident of the
American Council on Education.
The council announced the
formation of a committee on
foreign students a nd !Jtstitu·
tional policy to study the impact
of foreign students on U.S. cam·
puses and to offer guidelines on
accepting and educating them.
/
Great
are dby
In many areas of Southern What's the advantage of this?
California, Blue Cross subscribers Frrst of all, since foun dation doctors
are finding special instructions on agree to accept the charges that
the flap of their Blue Cross cards. have been established, fees are fair
~'d like to explain what they and reasonable. Secondly, the peer
mean. review system gives the foundation
Blue Cross of Southern the right to reduce a physician's fee
California has oontracted with if they believe certain treatment
So those speciaJ instructions on
the flap of your Blue Cross card
mean that·member physicians of
foundations for medical care and
Blue Cross of Southern California
are worjci.ng together to keep all
your health care rosts down. With
this oooperation, we all benefit
--
their sauces.
The White Oak will provide
you with 20 wonderful ways
to judge us.
Sauce Marsala Sauce Bearnaise
Sauce Cashmere Vineyard Sauce
Sauc.e Viennoise Indian Curry Sauce
Hollandaise Sauce Sauce Bigarrade
Sauce Au Poivre Dill Sauce
Sauce J us Sauce Bordelaise
Mint Sauce Sauce Velote
Red Marrow Sauce G~lic Butter Sauce
Fishennan's Sauce Cucumber Sauce
Sauce Maison Sauce Chasseur
Judge for yourself. ·
Serving luncheon weekdays,
dinner nightly and Sunday Brunch .
.. New at The New-porter Inn
U07 Jamboree Road, Newpott Beach. Otlifornia
Phone (714) 644-1700
a
several foWldations for medical was wmecessary. Member doctors
care, organizations that proress have agreed to aa:.ept their de--
your claims locally. Fll"St, let's cision. F\nally, since your claims are
explain what a foundation is. It's a processed locally, they receive
large group of doctors in a oounty --prompt attention; and if you wish
who agree to aa:.ept prearranged to check on a~ it only takes
fees and abide by peer review. a short local call.
TESTING, TaSTING -Third sr• studenta at W<on.,,
School in Coeta Mesa teat ltrenlth. endarance and beilrt
rate. Tryt.q alt-ups (above) are Jeff Smith and Brittany
Baxter (rear) and Hoby Parks and Jennifer Bloomfield
(foreground). Testing her grip strength (above) is Suale
Sims, while (at right) YMCA staff member Keith Molle
checks heart rate of Keith Gilbert (left) and Jeff
Cathers.
13 tot adutta & teena. $1.IO for klda 12 to e. Tota uncter e
....-.. Admlulon ........
with wh 125 ule purch••·
r
~
MORE TESTING -·
Woodland School third
graders learn how to check
each other's blood pressure
(left) with Leah Rose doing
the honors on classmate
Kerrie Koehler as Justin
Bucci (striped shirt) and
Susie Sims await their turn.
At right, Christine Michelske
reacts to skin fold test for
body fat administered by
Dave Harding of the YMCA
staff.
of own
By SEllSY CLAUSEN
Of•Oalfy ...... SUfl
Staffing cuts and budget
declines have left many elemen-
tary schools along the Oranee
Coast without formal physical
educatioo programs this year.
To fill that gap, the Orange
County Heart Association and
the country's YMCA• have de-
veloped a pilot program or ex-
ercise and value training now
conducted in five school systems
in the county at a total cost of
about $24,000.
Twice and sometimes three
times a week YMCA fitness
specialists visit the schools to
lead exercise classes, test fit.
ness levels and talk about good
health habits.
On the Orange Coast, "Feelin'
Good'' program is being tried at
Woodland, Sonora, Bear Street,
Whittier and Newport elemen-
tary schools in the Newport-
Mesa school district and at
Smith, Hawes arid Perry schools
in H'untingtoo Beach.
The pilot program focuses on
third graders. It also is being
tried in Orange, Tustin and San-
ta Ana.
The Heart Association's f Wld·
ing pays for literature, training
care
},(,dies ::J
materials and the time a~· by YMCA staffs -lncludln1
of the Orange Cout and
Orange County Ya.
The catdiovaacular fit u
and health program cente .op
aerobic activltlea, enduran+
and claasroom lnatructlon.
The clusroom presentations
are by regular third grade
teachers who deal with health
and how youngsters can make
decisions about taking care ol
their bodies. •
The students learn about heart
rate, blood pressure, exercise,
diet, stress, weight and smok-
ing.
The youngsters learn lo take
their classmates· blood · pres-
sure, how to measure body fat
and the pros and cons of smok·
ing.
But the emphasis is on .e•·
ercise. a natural for thlr$f g raders, says Keith Moll•.
Orange Coast YMCA direc;; youth physical education. "
The 20-week-program bee
with written and physical t ·
at each school. ._
Tests will be repeated at'Uie
end of the term to see just tiow
effective the program has .n.
physically and educationally:
I t
·More cluck
. ~ '*' -------. AIOUT
1s1 GREAT
DINNER
() O Good lor three pieces or 1u1c:y. golden bfown Kenh;c:ky c F11eo Chtcken plus single servings ol cote st1w
~ m11~ polltoes 1nd gr1vy. 1no 1 roll L1mrt two olters 0 per coupon per customer Customer pays all app11c1• z t>le Hits II•
I C4C I Pritts may vary 11
pert1C.1Plhfl9 toe•·
uons Good on1y
In Soulhtrn
C1tllornl1 where
you ... tht
Coloners lace
window blnntt
GQOd tor twetve pieces ol Juicy. golden t>rown Ken!ucity
Fried Chicken. with sla rolls plus your tl'IOtce of .. ,hef •
111ge tole st1w or • large muhec:t potetoes. and a small
gr1vy Limit lwo oflefl per coupon per customer
Customer ~Y• '" •PPhClt>le 11111 ...
I Offer e.pires
Otc:emt>M 7. 1980
Prices m1y ••ry •t Pit· I llclp1tlng 1oc:1t1on1
GOod only tn Southtln
I CalifOfntl W""9 YoU
"' the Colonel • t1ee wincto. benntr
I
-
.
I I I .
I
' J_
• '
1
. (;
Delly PllOt reporter. type news and fe•ture atones
wtllch can be "read" by a typesetting oomputer.
Photographers examine hundreds of news and feature photos
every daV In the Costa Mesa dartt.room. photos which they've
shot all along the Orange Coast.
Then the stories are fed into a scanning com-
puter fOf photographic typesetting. After type
is processed in the black box, a "miniature dar~room ... it is ejected from a drying machine
in the desired style. size and column width
~ News end CJfdoe from tbe wottd. Mlk>n and lttl• come~
day to the Delly Plitt via Aleocleted Pr.. wire end
L.aserphcto .....ic...
Staff art1S1s prepare advertising layouts and provide graphic
services to news and advertising staff
In Of'dlr· to reproduce the art elements end photos on the
MW9Pll* pege, the pictures first mutt be ~tographed In a
Ptoceet C8m8f'a.
A compositor pastes up the photos. type and headlines In a page
layout designed by an editor.
The completed. pasted-up page Is then converted
into a printing plate which is placed on the Dally
Pilot's off9et printing press.
It
·-
As the presaea begin to roll. the staff conttantly adJuat
the controls to provide consistent Inking. The press can
print uP to 80,000 papers P4lf' hour. although It Is
stopped frequently to specially tailor editions for eadl
community served by the Dally Piiot. •
Flnally, the peper ls
deliveted by more thin
800 carrier• who ere
Independent cont'9Ct0rl
Hlllng and dellwrlng
the Delly PllOt to yout doorstep. •
.,.
.. .'
,
Reagan's church
relaxed scene
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The Rev. Donn D.
Moomaw, microphone ln band, descended upon the
sanctuary of the Bel Air Presbyterian Church as if
it were a stap.
"Are you happy this morning?" be shouted in
lbe style of an entertainer warmlne up his au·
dience, which included the presidenl·elect ol the
United States.
The members of the congregation, many lo
casual clothes, replied with a long chorus of
"Y.eah's."
ROM THAT MOME~, IT WAS clear: Going
to church with Ronald Reagan ls nothing like the
Sunday morning ritual of Jimmy Carter.
Carter's churches are filled with often·solemn
Baptists. The service Reagan attended Sunday
featured applause for the choir, giggles at the
minister's jokes and the general style of casual·
ness for which California is famous. Someone
likened it to a Broadway production.
From their seats near the rear, Reagan, his
wife, Nancy, and several Secret Service agents
watched as Moomaw, a husky ex·All America fool·
ball center for UCLA, paced in his gray robe.
·'We just had a marvelous weekend -some of
us -I know," he .said into his microphone, his
sardonic tone drawing laughs and giggles. Then he
promised: "We have a wonderful worship service.
We are so glad you came." •
THE AUDIENCE SUITABLY WARMED up,
Moomaw began with a prayer. A blue.robed choir
filed ln, singing hymns arranged with a pop flair.
Then, in unison, the congregation recited the
Lord's Prayer\ and went on to the "Prayer of
Thariiiliving,' the words to which were printed in
their programs:
"Thank you for the wet leaves," it began,
"which touch me with your constant care. Thank
you for wet cheeks . . . thank you for death, which
sets a limit to pride of nation, religion, position
. . . thank you for life, which offers me days never
lived before .... "
Jn the toarlnl modemiltlc church overlookinl
the San FemAnclo Valley, Moomaw beJ: hil
sermon wWa nat appeared to be aa ez ation
-of his informal style. Four yean ago, be aald, a
couple complained to him that the service was too
pessimistic, too downbeat. He became defensive,
thoulht of "popping them in the nose," but later
-decided they had a point.
AND IDS MESSAGE SUNDAY-FOua days
before Thanksfivlng -waa to live thank.a for
everything that happens, good and bad, and to
"develop a style of life that we live on the poeitive
side." He called it, "thanks·living."
"We have all heard of the moral majority,"
Moomaw said. "Well, there is a magnificent
minority who lead thankful lives." He asked the
audience to "be thankful in all circumstances -
and that's difficult, people."
Outside the church, as Reagan shook hand~
with the waiting crowd, his press spokesman, Lyn
Nofziger, explained that the president.elect isn't
actually a Presbyterian, but is a member of
another denomination, Disciples of Christ.
f\esa \7erde
Wine and ~q,uor
CHEMIN BLANC SALE!
BERINGER 1979 NAPA VALLEY
CHENIN BLANC
Gold Medal. L.A. County Fair
Reg. 4.oo'J.44
PEDRONCELLI 1979 SONOMA
CHENIN BLANC
Silver Medal. Orange County Fair
Reg. 3.so'2. 99
TAYLOR CALIF. CELLARS
CHENIN BLANC
Sliver Medal. L.A. County Fair
Reg. 3.1952.66
ALL 750M
Just 1n time for holiday enjoyment. we bring you this
fine selection of ule-prlced Chenln Blanc -
.~l~fomla's most popular varietal white wine.
·TAYLOR CAUF. CB.LAIS · c• .. i .. •-....... ••s . .,
. • ....... M.lf '2".. .
w.·ri a~ ttore and kM to ... , llM wtnea. ..,.aauy whet\ they're pttcad It H .00 and
under. we bet~ tNt fine c.Mtom&a wtnee ..
..... .. ,...,. ... pricee and"*~ donl :..~to lie ~ or a wtne enob to .. them. IQjiiji on rn and lefililk wm.r . .
NEWI 45 IMPORTED BEERS!
549~··
~-.1lt11amU
. .1
T..-.~a.i• OM.Y lllLDf -
N°"' Wy • in "THn 1sra .. Tentfto, lul I Need
.~. P.,.,.tl Ever1Where
''YOU C.OT IT! ..
ANCHO"t~.:, ,:J:•b (AP> -ludn .. ,. ....
............. at Mr abowt9I in tM 11111 AJMrlea ,.,. .. and
clMlded to "lilt mYMlf So a little
btt."
• , Now the Mils Ala1ka
leholanldp Paieant board bu
d.clded that the H ·year-old
brunette, wb9 ••lib• 131~ r:_., Ctlll't be ... ID public
ber role u lll1u Alafka untll allae IONS t~ PQUDCla.
Mlaa Lashbrook said she
wants to keep the crown she
worked so hard for.
"I WANT TO be known as
Miss Aluka. It means a lot to
me," she said. "I look fine. I
don't look so bad anyone needs
to be ashamed of me. I just think
they're fOina to extremes."
Miu Lashbrook said she
perfonnetl all summer weighing
about what she does now.
"I carry it very well. It's very
hard to detect. I get compli·
meats on my looks every day,"
she said. "I don't walk 'round in
a bathing suit."
Carol Beck, the board's ex·
ecutive director. said Miss '
Lashbrook's wardrobe was
selected for a 5·foot·7 woman
weighing between 125 and 130
pounds.
"THE MAXIMUM OF 133 was
agreed upon . . . for clothes to
fit properly," she said.
The board issued its directive
"'" ..... •to. Ma. Bffk said, aftAtr tbe ieioinl queen from
EaaJe ltiv• wu wamed to loae
···-..... Lubbrook •dabs about 5 pounds more lban when
abe woo tbe Miu Alaska' crown
May17.
A memo from Ma. Beck en·
UUld "Do You Really Want To
Be Miu Alaska?" laid down the
law on llllu Luhbrook's wel1ht.
After detallint the successes
of pre'riow Mias Aluku ln deal·
lns with weight problems, the
memo pointed out how other
Cash award
• • gaven patient
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -A pa·
tient bas won a $37 ,500 award
from a surgeon who mistakenly
operated on her right knee instead
of her leftlmee.
Circuit Judge Frederick Pfeif·
fer approved the awJnl to Joanne
Matthews,. 34, of Jacksonville,
who sued Dr. Armand Zilloli.
Mrs. Matthews went to Zilioli
when she twisted her left leg ln
1978. Zilioli testified that •'the cor·
rect k:Qee was not sufficiently
identified prior to commencing
the incision. The opposite knee
had been inadvertently draped
and prepped rather than the
state beauty queens were put out
to pasture over the i11ue of
poundl.
0 WB AaE DEADLY serious
about the wel1ht problem
~lonld. Fe,rvtew Community Chufch
J....._~OMTM?MN&rt.e..
WIDffllDAYa, 7:JO ~M.
(Comer Felrvlew Ad. a. F•lr Or., Cost. ~se>
lullfeot: ••ADOUmNCI • ..._ ........,,_,
.. ......, ... _Doulll''
Nursery C.re because it reflects a deeper Dollu OoMtlon
problem-a problem of attitude. ~E;;=:=:=:::;:;;~~~~~~~~~~~ A problem of cooperation," the""
memotald. •
For the Miss America
pageant, Mill Lastil>roolr said
she dieted, exercised and Uled
water pllla to drop to 120 pound.a.
"I could gain or lose five
pounda in one day. I was tald.ng
water Pilla down there . . . I
would have taken cyanide if
someone would tell me I would
lose wei(ht," she said.
Her failure to finish in the top
10 left her depressed, and trig·
gered a weight gain, she said.
AFTEA HE8 BOUT before
the spotlights in Atlantic City,
she returned to Alaska feeling
out of sorta. Her hair was falling
out. she said.
"I was very, very depressed."
Sh.: said she decided, "I'm not
going to deprive myself any
longer . . . I let anysell go a lit·
Ue bit."
Keep up,-with news of your
community. All the newspaper
you need comes to you f!Very
day, the DAllY PllOT
CALL TOM MARSTON
ABOUT A SECOND
TRUST DEm LOAN
UP TO •500,000
Newpo~,f;}.~~fJ!0!,~?!}:,}:1c •
propertnee." 642-4321 (714) 760-6060 ~~~~__!~==============~======,,,.,.....--==~==--========l
ltS so nice to have a gas man
around the house.
He Ugbts your fire.
If the pilot light in your gas range goos out,
a Gas Company Service Representative will be
happy to come out and light it for you. He'll
He'llgh.18
yoaabOokof
•
It's called the Answer Book and it
answers just about any question
you might have about
using natural gas.
It also gives plenty
of easy ways to
reduce the amount
of gas you use and
thus keep your gas
bills as low as
possible. This book
is free, too.
also check your range to be
sure it's working properly and
he'll do his best to solve any
problems and answer any ques-
tions you may have about your
gas range. All free of charge.
,_ ' .
He takes the
~ heat on your
~11~~ • hot water
costs.
He'll relight your water
heater pilot if it goes
out and he'll show you
how to turn the thermostat
down so you save energy
by not overheating
your water. At no
charge, of course.
He may even
be a She.
Although you may be used to referring
to a Gas Company Service Representative
as the "gas man;• they all aren't
There are Gas Company servicewomen, tQ<>.
But whether they're men or women.
they're courteous, competent and highly
trained to help Southern c.alifomia
Gas Company customers.
ProVing~nce again-the best things
in life are free.
~---·tDllldi• •.•. ..,._,; ·---· J..
•
ed aints how to Ram~, 27-~7
•r.10mN1avA.NO ...............
SW ORLZAN -AU w.-loAI &M
Salau toa'-ded la lb• At"papen ~N U.y weren l u INMI • tM&t O.ll
tecord lndluted. Aad J.O)t ~Dow
Vince t'•rra1amo aad bl•
olf tnalv• 11 raa up aDd down tbe
ft•kl like tt wu a track meet. Tbe
lalnta, cW .. lvely. \ried everytblai
from a M ·=•t (wblcb bad been
to flll a .._. booth. TbeJ were that
diaappotated.
''Tbia ii oar blalest dllappointment,••
said a downeut place kicker Benny
-Ricardo. "It'• totten to the point now
where we almoat expect aomethlna bad
impression of the magtctan Houdini.
Everything they tried seemed to
dlaappear in a sea of blue and gold
Jerseys.
won one same •lnce Dec. 3 ot lut year
(that victory comin1 against the
Rams). And, not only are I.bey 0.12 tb.ls
year. but they've now run their r«0rd
to 0·5 <>Cl Monday nights.
" .......... , ~·nt ..... ,.., .... DOt t.Abad •. u.,n .... .
• TM cwren' •II lala&a &.Mre&allal1
fmbai'rMNd u. .. 11lfft Wore at-..t pool., fw _, • _... .. W.VWO. au·
(lieMe lD Dlq IO tM Rama, rl•7. 1"e •••I. Hmlnlaeeat of their record
· aucc...rul q the Rama lately) to a
4.J, ud evaa td •a.a ta trylal to contain
~eolflDllW .. alllt.
8 VT NOTBING ISS•SDto work.
And, UUDp tot ev~ more dialat.r'o\M
wben the Salata Sot the ball u Areble Mannina waa sacked nlM U... ud
could only ienerate 92 yardll la total
offense by iame's end (a hWDiUatlni
14 yards in the ftrat half).
ls 1oin8 to happen to ua. .
"WHAT WE BA VE TO TllY to do
now la mentally not pack our baas.
Each player la folng to have to k>ok ln a
mirror and ask himself if he's a
profealonal.
"We were so geared up for t.hls and it
was a good opportunity for us,"
~xplalned Manning who still showed
some of the scars be received from the
Ram&' front four. ''I certainly didn't
think it would tum out like this.
"It's a heavy atmosphere around
here, but I th.ink we're boldinl up pretty
good," added Manning. "It's Just ao
touah. I look at Dick Nolan and actually
feel sorry for the man. Plus, I'm 1oln1
through a tough time, too."
a,._ leatUtAwO yean
&My MW 1M Seahawlal to a ... -.i .......... ~
~ ........... -botb off-1YelJ
land ..,._.v.i, -ln Jllat abou& U..
N'eedleaa to say, by tbe time the
contest reached the fourth quarter Ulere
weren't enough fans in the SUperdom.e
"Thil game ii IO tough for us because
we mew· Steve (ftoeenbloom> wanted
this. He's been so good to us and we;
went out and laid down again." ·
Indeed. after bold.ing the Rams early
lo the contest, the Saints gave g great
"PLAYING MONDAY night
football is something special for
everybody. It was a chance for people
to see we weren't an '0·11 team. I'm not
going to hang my bead for anyone,
though. I'm just going to loolr at this as
another loss."
The Rams, on the other hand, appear
to be swinging In the other direction
after their embarrassing defeat two
weeks aeo agaioat Miami .
Not only have they beaten two (eams
on the road in New England and New
Orleans, but they 've done it
(See RAMS, Page 85) • By losing, the Saints have now only
Duran
vows KO
tonight
NEW ORLEANS CAP) -
Roberto Duran, a brawler who
learned bis craft in the streets of
Panama City. de fends his
World Boxing Counctl
welterweight championship
tonight agains t Sugar Ray
Leonard, the gym-trained boxing
tactician he beat to claim the
crown five months ago.
The bout in the Louisiana
Superdome h e adlines a
worldwide closed-circuit telecast
which includes two other cham·
pionship fights. After Leonard-
Duran, the Superdome crowd will
watch Marvin Camel defend his
WBC cruiseweight crown against
Carlos "Sugar" DeLeon . The
closed-circuit opener, beamed
from London, will show Mauncc
Hope defending the WB C super
welte rweight tille against Carlos
Herrera.
BUT THE MATCH which holds
center stage is Duran.Leonard, a
fight of contras ting s t yles
matching the champion, a crowd-
pleasing. swarming , slugger
against the challenger, a classic
fighter who depends on speed and
~guile.
.,. .,,..,..._ · J "slfour points separated these
THE RAMS' WENDELL TYLER TRIES TO AVOID RICKY RAY'S TACKLE. two boxers on the three official
cards in their first match June 20
in Montreal when Duran wrested
the title from Leonard by a Wl· animous declslon in a close,
fiercely fought battle.
For a while, it seemed there
might be no rematch. Leonard,
John Sevano
•
Rams-Sairits third
active in commercials, television
and other areas, talked of retire-
ment. He was discouraged after
the loss and considered going in
other directions. But the lure of
regaining the title was too much
tooverc0me. NEW ORLEANS -How far have the Saints
declined in this city?
Well, let's just say their contest with the Rams
Monday night was the third best show in town
after the Duran-Leonard fight (No. 1) and the
LSU-Tulane battle <t:"lo. 2) played Saturday.
As a matter of fa·ct, the local newspapers were
still doing stor ies on the LSU-Tulane outcome
TWO DAYS later.
Amazingly. even after the game started Mon·
day night, the play on the Cield took a back seat to
what was going on in the stands. The battle
between th~ "Aints Bag" contingent and the "ban-
ner hangers" was entertainment at its best. And
the animosity between the two factions caused
in ore than one scuffle in the stands.
The Aints Bag wearers, who are anti-fans dis-
gruntled with their team, came up with the bag
gimmick last Sunday in Atlanta to demonstrate
their disgust.
The banner hangers, who are the counter·
group, came up with their novelty this past week
In an attempt to lift the Saints' spirits. The
hangers represent those fans who love their team under any circumstances -even if they are0.12.
There is an actual bitterness between the two
sides. The Aints Bag people contend the whole af.
fair is nothing more than a little fun being' poked at
a horrible season . The banner hangers,
meanwhile, don't find a shred of humor in the
lituation.
* • • As you might figure, former USC alum Pat
Haden lost a couple of bets on last Saturday's out·
come between the two rival schools won by UCLA.
Haden dropped a case of beer to former UCLA
srad Wendell Tyler and be owes Frank Lauterbur,
the Rams' linebacker coach, all the drinks he
wants until he falls off his stool, "which will be In
about two days," Haden says with a smile.
Haden contended that UCLA's victory was
sheer luck, while all of USC's wins came on skill.
He was still smiling when be made that state-ment, though. . •.•
The main topic by the players on the team bus
going to practice Sunday was Atlanta's win over
Chicago and the Falcons• subsequent six-aame.
winning streak.
Almost to a man, the Ram players are taking
credit for Atlanta's recent surge.
"H we had beaten them lUte we should have,
they would have been buried the rest of the
season," said one player. "We let them off the
hook and now they think they are winners. • • • The team was somewhat detained in departure
from the Superdome Sunday after practice. Build-
ing oflicial.s locked the team in, and needless to
say that didn't set well with the players.
Impatiently, Dennis Harrah began to rip a
pair of doors off their hinges, but be thought better
of the Idea a moment later.
Incidentally, the Rams were finally released
on their own recognizance. ••• The bhtl(est atltacUon of the year for the Ram players turned out to 1be Bourbon Street here in
town. With a midnight curfew due to the Monday
night eame, the playen were out in fqrce enjoying
themselves Sunday night.
Super Bowl XV ought to be ltbme function here ·
in January. Both participants are scheduled to ar·
rive a week before the game. Hopefully, both sides
will remember they have a con~t to play Sunday,
Jan. 25. • • •
The Superdome Is a 1t1antic building. To iJ.
(See SEVANO, Page 85)
"I enjoy boxing," said Leonard,
who had won his first 27 fights
before losing to Duran. "Most of
all, I enjoyed being champion. Be·
ing the challenger this time has
given me an extra boost. rve
worked harder. I would like to
wear the championship belt home
again."
Jluran, of course, has other
ide.._
"I don't like Leonard," Duran
said. "I don't like any of my oppo.
oents."
IT'S OFFICIAL:
NOUN FIRED
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The
New Orleans Saints today fired
Dick Nolan who, after the two
most successful seasons in the
franchise's history, failed to win
even once against 12 National
Football League opponents this
year.
The announcement by General
Manager Steve Rosenbloom
came just hours after the Saints '
were humiliated by the Rams
27-7 before a national television
audience.
"No, I will not resign," Nolan
told reporters after Monday
night's game.
The firing came as no sur·
prise.
Nordiques left Simmer.(ing).
QUEBEC (AP) -Charlie Simmer con-
tinued to wreak havoc on NaUonal Hockey
J,.eatue aoaltenders as the Loi An1elea,
JCln11 came from behind to down the
Quebec Nordique1 4-3 Monday nieht.
"I guess I was just in the right place at
the right times on my goals," said SJm·
mer, who scored twice and notched the
1ame-wi.Dner to brint bi• season total to
23.
"When we get ahead like we did tooiaht,
our priority 11 to keep lhe other team
hemmed tn Its sone," Simmer added. "But
even more Importantly, we want to con\!'01
the puck and 1et lt out of our .one."
Simmer lifted tbt .Klap to victory wtth
a power.play etfort at. '1!43 ol the third
period while Quebec'1·Jobn Wenalnk •u ""inc an interference penalty.
Lo• AngelH bead coach Bob Berry
• I
praised the work of Simmer and his
llnematea, Marcel Dionne and Dave
Taylor, who Sot the other K.iJ)p• fOals.
"We'bow we wtll 1et •corina from that
llne and they were Just 1pectacular
tonitbt," said Berry, who a1IO lauded the
defeoa1ve work el b11 teem. ·
"I think our penalty·kilUna Hved tbe
1ame for UI. Our def enH played a IOlld
game.••
Simmer'• 1am•winnlng pal wu one of
Just two lhota on ioal the Klnp mana1ed
ln the third period, but Berry wu oot
overly eonees Dold.
"We did not have that many 1hoU .on
eoal, but we've had a few 1amea lib that
lattly " BerrJ laid. "I suesa U.. lmpor·
tant tblDI t1 &Ut we make our 1boU
count."
And.re Dupont, Robbie FtorO and Jamie
Hislop scored for the Nordlques, who twice
rallied from deficits to take a one-1oat
lead in the second period.
The Nordiquea enjoyed two power plays
late in the final perJod, but were unable to
beat Loi Angeles eoalle Mario Lessard,
who faced 28 shots.
¥icbel Pluae wu teat.eel 1' times by the Kine• before 10,890 fans at the Coliseum. LOii ~eles improved Its woa-lolt-tted
record to t.s..5-1for31 points and first place
ln tbe Norrl1 Division, while Quebec:
dropped to 4·11-6 and remain ln lut place
ID the Adami Dtvlaiott.
stmmer opened the 1corins for the Kint•
wttla.adl ad coal of the 1e1110D at 12:55 of
the ~ period after be took a pu1
from defeaaeman Larry Murphy at
Q\aeMe'a blue line and mewed lD aklne to
beat PJ .... on the n1bt1lde . . I
----·----........
~ly "llllt l'MtO lty lltl<lwlnl K-lar
JOHN GIFFORD (LEFT), DIGGY RILEY PACE TARS.
Sa.ilors' dynasty
tested W ednesdajr
By ROGER CARLSON
01 Iha o.ily l"llllt Sia"
If there 1s a coach more straight-forward than
Newport Harbor High water polo coach Bill Barnett, he
hasn·t shown his face around here
And if there is a more successful coach, we haven't
been able to locate him, either.
Barnett pulls no punches and never
has. His team, meanwhile, punches out
victory after victory in what has
become the CIF Southern Section's No.
1 dynasty. .
Wednesday night the Sailors travel
to Long Beach's Belmont Plua to duel
Sunny Hills for the CIF •·A ch,am-
pionship and the Tars are eying a fourth
straight crown.
BARNE'IT, IN HIS 14111 YEAR as
the Sailors' boss, has guided Newport
• a.H ... TT Harbor to an astoundin" record.
Sunset League champioos every year, the Sailors have
won seven CIF 4-A championships and finished second on
four other occasions, making this the 12tb appearance in
the finals for Barnett.
This year's juggernaut include!l seniors Diggy Riley,
John Gifford, Eric Doering, Brett De Valle, Mark Han.sen
and goalie Ian Marksbury, along with junior Mike Howell
and senior Jeff Wilson.
Riley and Gifford were returning starters with first
team All-CIF credentials and Barnett says he's not sur-
prised and fully expected to be where he's at now -await-
ing the finals against Sunny Hills.
Barnett says this year's group ls more talented than
the 1979 team which went the distance. But. he has re-
servations.
"LAST YEAR'S TEAM had a better perspective, says
Barnett. "This team Is a much tougher team to work with,
it tends to be going in a thousand different directions. It's
hard to get them to concentrate." Well, they've concentrated enough to establish a 23·1
record, the only loss coming to Sunny Hills, a team they
have beaten three times.
..We lost once to Sunny Hills, 16-7," says Barnett. "It
sflould have been 24-7. We were dog meat, just terrible.'
Wednesday's action begins at 9 p.m. and Barnett aays
his team's objective will be to stop Sunny Hills' one-man
offense -Michael Spicer. a drive-and-shoot so~.
'THE SAILORS RELY on a ~Una system with Riley
and Ho•ll lending additional advan~e from the left
side. \
Three of Barnett's stars are transfers -Gifford from Hun~ Beach. Riley from Edilon and De Valley from
Corona del Mar.
..They transferred ror the water polo," says Barnett
. matter-of-factly. "It was the pa.rents' choice, they've tot
the ript " be adds.
The Sai1on run a single poet atlac:k with Gifford pav-
ing the way; with his passes to Rlley, Howell and De Valle,
usually.
Barnett says hls tea in 's belt useu are speed and
qulcknesa.
And u for Spicer, Bamett'1 knowledae ol tbe SUnny
HUii' star runs deep, •ince Spicer ii a member ot tbe u.l·
ed States Junior natlonal water polo team, coached b1
Banett. · "That doean't really ctve me much o1 aft Ml•," M1I
Barnett. "I'm not In tbe pool."
btSak
hold a bag party
rdome auite 432 ., .... " ..........
N OJU, AN wt 431 In tbe Leulliana 'EIJ' upudom •u I.be ae n. ol a bal party Monday
n11tll a \N wtnl New Or&eana Saintl lost to the
Ram1 ln a National Football Le cue 1ame.
Jll)' L.auntiUa, lh boat, welcomed vlaiton with a beer
and a ba1. tho lalHl form o( trlticiaQl for a team which c:ar·
rled lmprt slvt ll·l•m• k>llinti 1treak into the 1ame.
••P'ow1 It you count lhe lut three preseuon 1ames,"
s •d LaUrlc Ila "But we don't."
Obviously, there 11 charity m lhe hearts of the bag peo-
ple.
For Monday night's network television show, they
broueht banners, too One said, "Trade The Saints to Utah
and Bnng Back the Jan." bemoaning the log of the city's
National Basketball Association team. Another said, "Dick
Nolan Another One Bites The Dust."
And Ulen there waa the posillve one.
'Go For O, '' it read. And the 0 even blinked on and off. a
tribute to the electronic ingenuity of lbe bag folks.
Some people m New Orleans oppose the bag people and
have launched a counter crusade labeled "Saints Optimism."
"They don't understand," said Lauricella, who is in the
real estate business. "They're lairing it as malicious and a
personal lnsuJt. All it is is an excuse for a party and a good
one.''
The leader of the bag crusade is Bob Lecompte, a barten-
der-entrepreneur who had 4,000 of the bags printed. They are
sold for $1 apiece outside the Superdome. Updating decals to
keep pace with the Saints' record cost 25 cents each.
------Quote of the day -----....,
University of Iowa basketball coach Lute Olson talk-
ing about the upooming Big lOseason: "The Big Ten is the
best conference in the country. An excellent team can finish eighth, ninth and even loth."
Willianu. Bell o n injured reserve IUt
The St Louis Cardinals placed two more ·[i]
players, linebacker Eric Williams and wide re-4 .l
ceiver Mark BeU, on the NFL injured reserve List
following their loss to Kansas City ... Starting
linebackers Harry Carson and John Skorupan of the New
York Giants were put on injured reserve ... All-pro center
Tom Banks, who was cut by St. Louis last week after
criticizing team officials, was clatmed on waivers by
Washington ... Houston Coach Bum
Phillips cleared up any rumors that be
might be planning to leave the Oilers in
favor of the New Orleans Saints: ''The on-
ly move I'm planning to make is next F~bruary 11 my new house is ready by
then . . . Running back Earl Cooper of
San Francisco bas set an NFL record for
pasw receptions by a rookie, the team dis-
covered one week late. He now bas 63 re-
ceptions for the year to break the old
mark of 56 set by Sid Blallb of Houston and
w.u.AMS tied by Mau Snell of the Jets, both In 1964
Fraalr Malone1 resigned aB coach of the Syracuae
Univel'Jllty football team . . . Freemaa •c:NeU, the UCLA
tailback who caught a deflected pasa fort.be touchdown which
beat USC, was named Pacif'ic·lOoffemtve,player of the week.
Arizona State's Mike Richard.son, who made bis seventh in-
terception o( the year to clinch a win over Oregon, was
named defensive s tandout ... Lehigh of Pell.D}lylvania
(9-0-2) ilnd Boise State of Idaho (8-3) have been named to compete in the NCAA Division 1-AA football championship
playoffs.
Bos1rt1"• goal gi.,e• l •la ndPrs de
Mike Bossy•s 25-foot slapshot from the right ~ faceoff circle his second goal of the night, gave '
the New Yo~k Islanders a 4-4 National Hockey
League lie with Winnipeg Monday night. The two
goals boosted Hossy·s teague-leadmg total to 25. Defenseman
Scott Campbell, the captain of the \_Vinnipeg Jets, suffered a
badly separated right shoulder dunng the game ... Herb
Brooks, who coached the U.S. Olympic hockey
team to a gold medal, said he ~ad hoped to.become coach ~f
the New York Rangers immediately but might have to watt
until March ... Walt Michaels will be back next year as
coach of the New York Jets according to a New York
newspaper ... Right winger Rejean Houle of Montreal has
been named the NHL player of the week.
ttillio,..,,· laf e 11urge p~ ll.rdda
Sly Willlams scored New York's last five •.
points in regulation and nine more in .overtime to
give the Knicks a 113-110 NBA victory over
Houston Monday night . The injury-riddled
Seattle Supersonics acquired 6-9 forward-center John
Shumate from San Antonio ... Earvin "Magic" Job.uon un-
derwent successful surgery on his knee ... The North
American Soccer Lea~ue aMounced it has realigned its Indoor
League because of 1mmigrallon problems bemg faced by
Canadian and foreign players ... Outlielder Garry Maddoz
and third baseman Mike Schmidt of the Philadelphia Phillies
head major league Gold Glove teams announced this week
. . . John McMullen, under fire in recent weeks from
Houston Astros limited partners, stepped aside as general
partner but will continue to help operate the franchise aa part
of a three-member executive committee ... Matt.laew Saad
Muhammad the WBC light heavyweight champion, says
Lotte Mwale', his opponent in a Nov. 28 title bout, is not going
to give him much opposition ... Salelman Nyambul and
Mathews Motshwarteu of the University of Texas at El Paso,
finished first and second to lead UTEP to its third con-
secutive NCAA cross country tltle.1
Na.,raaHova fle•et ..,Ith ~
MELBOURNE -Tennis star Martina al
Navratilova says personal problems and frustra-"
tion with her family caused her to lose her top
playing from earlier this year.
Navratilova said Tuesday that she had hoped her mother,
father and sister would have settled with her in Virginia, but
her father, who could not speak English and wasn't anxious
to learn, found he could not adjust to the American way of
life.
Tefevi•ion, rad io
Followlno are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratlnos
are: ' ' " ' excellent; " " ' worth watching; / 1 fair; I fort get It.
A I p.m .• Ch•nnel 9 ./ .( ./
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Pan American at Nevada-Las
Vegas. A'nnouncer ~Chick Hearn:
Jerry Tarkanlan's Runnln' Rebels of the University of
Nevada-us Vegas,open the season against the Pan Am.rtcan
Broncs. The Rebels aren't listed In the top 20 this seaSOI) but wlll
be playlno In the Times Classic In Anaheim In December.
' OTH•lt TELeYISION 8:30 p.m. (11) -ltAMI w a•K.
RADIO
No events scheduled.
•
AP' WI'""'"°
DAVE WAYMER PATS RAM MIKE GUMAN ON HELMET.
FrorN Page B-1
SEVANO'S'COLUMN. • •
lustrate, Housto~ 's Astrodome
can sit inside this massive com-
ple~. • • • Can you imagine the New
Orleans Pride, the c ity's
women's basketball francbiae,
will play their home sames in the 70,000.aeat Superdome.
Fortunately, maintenance
won't have to do any cleaning of
the stands. All the participants
and fans will be on the court. .. * .. Surprisingly, the Saint.s·Ram
game drew almost 60,000. An
early head count on the Duran·
Leonard crowd has the atten-
dance al 30,000 -very low and
disappointing to local promoters
here.
ll 's Lhe promoters• own fault
for the sparse turnout. To put it
simply, they h ave priced
themselves out. Despite the
Fro• Page B .J
RAMS •••
convincingly. And , they've done
it by finding their old trademark
-defense.
local blackout. nobody is going
to pay $50 to sit in the back row
and watch a fight 200 yards
away. .. . .
Vine~ Ferragamo update :
It appears the Rams· policy
toward a new contract is to let
Ferraaamo test the free aaent
market and then match the
highest bidder.
What the team is gambling on
is that the bida won't reach
astronomical proportions. What
the Rams would like to pay a
year is between $200,000.300,000.
Ferragamo is looking for
something in the $400,000 range.
If the Rams win this intriguing
battle, look for Ferragamo to
use his trump card and opt (or
at least threaten to opt> for the
Canadian Football Lea~ue.
• * •
For lhose fans who watched
the game on Channel 7 Monday
night. here's a clarification or
what happened to Frank Corral
when he was asked to leave the
field in the first quarter:
The head referee asked Corral
to depart because he had tape on
his kicking shoe which is il-
legal. And, the rules state when
a player is a s ked to leave
because of equipment problems
by an official. he must sit out at
least one play.
,
T~.~btr21, 1Cill0 twl. y PW.D'f -
CHRIS CRANDALL
Golden 50
Prep foo tball's top plays
Goldeest
/. (Last week's play1 ol 51 yards or more) ~Abel Cachola, Chris Crandall (Estancia), intercep-
tion and return for TD (Cachola 54 yards, Crandall 45
yards)
87-Rod Emery <Fountain Valley), kickoff return for TD
67-Bill Bright (Corona del Mar), run
64-Damon Sweazy <El Toro), run
61-Ray Chretin (Estancia), pass from Jim McCahill
Season
99-Cachola-Crandall (Estancia); 90-C. Bright (Corona
del Mar), Cech (University); 87-B. Bright (Corona del
Mar), Emery (Fountain Valley); 83-Irvine (Ocean
View); 82-Stanley (Ocean View); 7&--Moor.e (Irvine);
73-Moser (Ocean View>. Slouka (Mater Dei), Ventura
(Marina); 72-Grandstaff (Marina), Placka <Dana Hills);
70-Harry (Fountain Valley); 69-Harry (Fountain
Valley); 68-Reinhollz (Ocean View>; 67 -Thompson
<Huntington Beach); B. Bright (Corona del Mar>; ~
Bush <Marina), Nixon <Costa Mesa); 64-Sweazy (El
Toro); 62-Gleed !Dana Hills); 61-Chretin (Estancia);
60-Brantley (Huntington Beach), Harry (Fountain
Valley); 5&--Urmson <Estancia), Ventura (Marina);
58-Davis (Laguna Beach), Giddings (Newport Harbor),
Moore CHuntington Beach ); 57-Harry (Fountain Valley)
2 ; Frandsen <Marina), Welton <Edison); 5&-Grandstaff
<Marina). Mounce <San Clemente). Jeisy (San ClementeJ;
55-Sweazy ( EJ Toro). Tuttle (Ocean View); 53-Sweazy
(El Toro>. D.·Jackson <Edison); 52-Williams <El Toro),
Irvine <Ocean View); 51-Davis <Estancia), SO-Giddings
<Ne wport Harbor), M. Jackson (~ison L
Last week's statistical leaders
Rushing
1. Damon Sweazy (El Toro), 29-247 ; 2. D.J . Bell
<Edison), 13-163; 3. B. Bright <Corona dd Mnr), 9·103.
Passtqi
1. Jim McCabill (Estancia), 14-28-1, 216 ; 2. Bryan
Douglass <El Toro), 10-14-1, 140; 3. Clay. Tucker <Corona
del Mar), 10-14·0. 132; 4. Bob Grandstaff (Marina), 9·23·3,
129; 5. Ken Major, 9-12-0, 114 .
Recelvta1
1. Jamie Aiken (Estancia), 5-G; 2. Abel Cachola (Estan-
cia), !>-51; 3. Melvin Jacll:soo (Edison, 4-83; 4. Chris Hecker
(Corona del Mar), 4-70; 5. John Glina (El Toro), 4-63.
Seorlq
l . O.J . Bell CEdi11on ), 18; 2. 1lm Mccahill <Estancia).
16 ; 3. Damon Sweazy (El Toro), Todd Williams CEl Toro),
H each; 5. Rod Emery CFounUllin Valley). 12. •
N e b r a s ka c oach dies·
. • .. .. .
. . . .
LlNCOLN, Neb. CAP) -Joe
Cipriano. the winningest bead
coach in the 81 -year history or
University or Nebraska basket-
ball, died at Bryan Memonal
Hospital today following an 18·
month battle with cancer. He was
49.
share coaching duties last season
with assistant head coach Moe
Iba.
Cipriano had a 254· 196 record in
17 years. His teams recorded 168
more wins than any other coach ·s
squads. In 20 years of major col-
lege coaching, his teams won 297
games, losing231.
A spokesman for the Nebraska
sports information orfice said
Cipriano underwent initial sur·
gery for cancer Nov. 12, 1979. The
recuperation forced Cipriano to
Their combined efforts led the
Cornhuskers to an 18-13 overall
record, a tie for second in the Big
Eight Conference and a spot in the
National Invitational Tourna-
ment ··r have lost an awful good
friend, .. said Iba .. All the things
that he did for my family are im-
possible to put into words. My
whole family is very. very sad."
"The university has lost a great
person and I have lost a wonderful
friend,·· said Athletic Director
Bob Devaney "WE'RE NOT QUITE there
yet but we're getting close," ad-
mitted Jack Reynolds, as the
team Improved it's record to 8-4
and stayed a game behind Atlan-
ta in the NFC West.
"There's a certain mystique
about coming to New Orleans
and playing well here. We want-
ed •to shut them out badly. We
didn 'l, but it was a team game
all the way.
Pro football probe
~·W e want to be in the
playoffs," said Jim Youngblood
in explaining the team's play.
"We know our backs are against
the wall and we have to come
out s mokin' every game."
The R~ms not only came out
smokin' against the Saints, but
in the process served a warning
to other NFL clubs that they are
back.
"Intensity and concentration.
That's what It takes to win in
this league," explained Fred
Dryer. "I don't think we're quite
there yet ... but we're close.
The good teams will do this
week in and week out. We still
have four tiames left. Let's see
what happens now."
ACfUA.U.Y, WHAT happens
now is simple: lhe Saints will
·try and pick up the pieces again
and attempt to decide who their
No. 1 choice ln tbe colli'Se draft
will be . Tbe Rama,
meanwhile, will malre tbeir
perennial drive for the playoffs.
Only UU. ttme lbe playen will
be wlnntnl for only one cause,
and that ii . . .
"Ourselves./' aald Re)'nolds.
''Ourselves,'' added Jfm
Youngblood. .
"Ourselves ,•• chimed ln
Dryer.
"Ounelves," exclaimed Rlcb
Saul, makln1 the vote un·
anlmoua.
WeU, at leut tbe Ram• have
SOME111ING to play for. Tbe
same can't be Hid of the Saint.I
anymore . .
Q. Wbat wu Kauaa ctty laead
coach Man LeYJ'I record la Ute
Canadlaa Football Leape! ·
A. Tbe Montreal Alouelles
won Canada's Grey Cup twice in
five years under Levy and had
an overall 50-34 -4 record.
Montreal made the playoffs all
five years and appeared in the
three Grey Cups. In '77, they bad
the be8t record ln the franchise's
history, 11-5. Levy began pro
coaching in '69 as the Eagles
kicking team coach. He served
under George Allen at Los
Angeles and Washington before
taking the Montreal post ln '73.
As a college bead coach, be
served at Coe College ('53-55),
New Mexico ('58-59), CallfomJa
< '60-63 ) and Wllliam & Mary
. ('64-68).
Q. Mere cllcl TOllJ DoneU
raak • Dallu' all-&Jme 1111& el
raaltera at tile ltart •f tlala
aeu.!
A. Wlth 3,'39 yardJ in his lint
three aeUOD.11 Dorsett ranked
fifth. 1be Cowooy career leader
la Don PertEins, wbo ialned 1,217
yards in 1,500 carries over eight
seasons. No. 2 is Calvin Hill
(5,009 yards>, followed by
Robert Newhouse (4,187), Walt
Garrison (3,886) and Dorsett,
who bas the best per-carry
average (4.6 yards) among the
leaden. Dallas' No. 6 all-time
rusher is Roger Staubach with •
2,264 yeards.
Q. Bu New Eqland'• Harold
Jack._ ner led·u.e NFL la re-
cel•lalf
A. Once. In 1972, in hia lut
season with Philadelphia,
J actson caught 62 passes for
1,048 yards. Jacluon, who start-
ed 1980 with 497 career re-
ceptions for 8,840 yards and 70
touch~, bas twice led the
NFL in yards Sained by a re-
ceiver (1,116 in •• and l,OM in
'72) and averaged a career-hip
21.t yards per catcb in '73.
JacboD, who opened bil career
wU.b Loi Aqelea and bu played
with the Rams (twice), Eacl•
and Pat.riett l tor the Ii.at two
yean), aftl'a&ed 22.5 yardl on
'5 eatct. lut aeuoa.
AUTO I FOOTBALL / BASEBAI L
PllOSNIX (AP) -If .,. ....... , ~ u. ,... "° ........... a.. .....
fraea•a aay, tlU llOHlOI
Aatne' All·IUr rlP&· .. ....
mlllltMMella .. ...... .,., ... ,....,. ........ ....
,i.u.. •
··a ·m~f .... anato-... ~•• bl lfrial tralil .. ;' -ii14
Aatro ceat.,fltlcltr C11ar C.._. • tM .... ~maelf
rrotaa~uakle. "lwu
OM ol tM r.w ...... Wllio law llimtt after hla lwo-•raUona.
Afttr tM MCOBd OM, I knew
be'41 come back. Aad I bow be'• determined to, I I
atCBAaB SUPP&&ED a
stroke July 30 durin1 a workout
witb ex·teammate Wilbur
Howard at the Houston
Astrodome. Sur1eona nbse-
quently removed a blood clot
from the juncture of two arteries
in bis neck which was lmpedln1
the pow of blood to hia braln.
LNI than four montha later,
the 6-8 pitcher la In Phoenix to
conttnue rebabllltation.
Several of bis teammates and
National Lea1ue rivals ·•howed
up tbla weekend to play in the
"J .R . Invitational" 1011 touma-
meul with proceeds 1otn1 to
Richard's non-profit or1ant1a-tioa that aulats ex-players in
findint new careen.
Many fttured Richard wu go-
itig to be included.
"He waa almost dead a while
back and now be'a almost
healthy," said Houston U1lrd
baseman Enos Cabell. "After
seeing the determination J .R.'s
shown, I don't doubt that he'll be
back."
LOOKING A LITl'LI: under
his listed playing weight of Z30
pounds, Richard met with
selected newsmen Saturday for
the first time since his injury
struck.
"I've been working out two
weeks now -running three
miles a day, lifting weights and
doing certain exercises with my
arm. I feel great," he said. "The
doctors don't know when I'll be
able to pitch again. Maybe in
January. To me, it's just a mat-
ter of time."
"I'm not worried about a re·
lapse," added Richard. "All I'm
trying to do now ia set myMlf in'
the best posalble allape I can and
prepare myself mentally. I got
more motion in my arm now
than I've had ln a lon1 Ume.
Tomorrow, ll mipt be different.
But right now, things are
alright."
tlae Ratru
~ , ta.AH: 11. (.oler ... .......
•
flilln'Y.
.,... lnJwy tn 1m
9lllrrY ........ ._,.. ""'" 41Utlftl ... -....... end tuMeo _...uw ':tied In foW more .... • ,.w.=,...,,,. lltt. TMI '-* y •--'•In Ml ••ttk .._In IMlrceDtlonl es M ~u.I off eWd In ft71 com-
perM to MM letl '"'9ft. cou.••: ,.,ry played two y .. ,. .. Celotedo after .,.ndlng
1it11 ''"""'•" and sopttomore INION .a ,,esno City COfltll
wlMr• r. •s • JC All·Amerlcen. At one time a track star, Pwry
hH recorded • Jump of 2.W. ~•lllONAL : Born In Fresno~ ,,.,r., att.ttded Hoov1tr HIQh In
'"•t city. He and wife Pat llve there during the off-seaso",
where Rod Is working on • bachelor'$ degree In P . E. at
Fresno State.
lrlsla prof lie
Turkey night grand •et e pris
ByBOWA&DL. llAHDY ..............
One of tbe olden aad ClCllllinuout automobile
rac• la loulhern Calllonala ii tbe annual Turkey
Nlabt Grand Prbt for USAC lllldceta •t Ascot Park
undertbe banner of J .C. AaaJuia.
Tbla year the USAC UU. wW be at atake •lain but Ca.ta ll•a '1 Roa "Sl"PJ" Tripp w1l1 not be in
the bunt. Tripp wu amooc the top contenden unW ···;;;~:~beGu,m,to
1poll Mel Kenyon's attempt to win a third Turkey
Night victory.
Tripp, incidentally, has never won at Ascot but
will be in the field Thursday nipt for the 100-lap
main event.
· . The two driven in tbe battle for Ule USAC
midget crown are Kenyon (a five-time previous
winner) and Rieb Vo1ler who woo the tiUe in 1m
Tripp is a two-Ume former winner but bas bad tib
problems in the last three yean.
Ontario) Benny Parsons, Cale Yuboroulb, 86bby
Alllaoa, David Pearson, Budd)' Baker, Darrell
Waltrip and Kyle Petty. • • • IN CABE YOU BA VEN'T marked the dates on
your calendar, the 1911 Grand PrhiofLoq Beaebl.a
aet for tbe weekend of March U-15. Tb1t OM featurel
aucb driven as Mario Andrettl, Alan Jone1, NelM>o
Piquet, GWes Vlllenueve, Emenoa FlWpaldi, Jae~
quea Lattlte and many otben on the international
circuiUnqUMtotthe world drlvlnl cbamplombip.
ndlo
Jlller
WIDE AREA
COVERAGE On• c..My. L.A.'Cea-ty, Ila.,_,.._ C...cy.
IUwnWr c-..-,. Moeller's Faust A fourth former champion, Steve Lotabaw
(1979) is also in the field for the Thanbgivt.nc
night eyeot that gets under way at 8 o'clock. -===~~==-=-.....;;....-""•
Othen an the field will include former short-track motorcycle rider Sonny Nutter; Doug Wolfgang a
two-time sprint car title holder; Jon Rabe of Mla-
sion Viejo; defending champion Ron Shuman·
Danny McKnight; Gary Patterson and Tony Simo~
'17.75 in ND trOJition
CINCINNATI (AP) -
Gravelly coived Gerry Faust,
who created the Moeller High
School football program 18 years
a10 and since then has averaeed
nearly 10 victories a season,
always said there were only two
places he would coach -
Moeller and Notre Dame.
the top of every note he wrote,
even a thank you to a sports
writer for a complimentary
story about the Moeller
Crusaders.
He police d 1the Moeller
grounda, picking up scraps of
paper. He once directed Stpiday
morning t.raffic when a traffic
light failed at the intersection
outside a Roman Catholic
among others.
Incidentally, Vogler is aiming al winning both '
the midget and sprint car titles under the USAC ban-11'10•,~ha::::ve~our competent
ner In the same season. No other driver in USAC hls-• plumbers do the work!
tory bas ever won two separate open-cockpit na-· -BLO~K ~ ...
tional titles in the same season. Vogler has already " -
•on the sprint crown and leads Kenyon by nine H!IAT'"fJ
points going into Thursday's battle. iuu~, aa 3836
* * * ......... ,.~
&e&al ••· cos&
no deposit on
aedit IPPf'Oval
I >W \'-I I I I •l '''
ll 4. qi 1 1 I, fl'HI 1'-.f
'' W \ II I 1 "-1 . ,n-.;
SANTA ANA
835-3305
Calt'S41-678.
Put 111 t.W word•
to work for ou. "I've bad other offers, but I
wouldn't leave Moeller except
for one job," Faust said. "I like
the atmosphere at Moeller, and I
guHa it's pretty much the same
al Notre Dame."
church near Moeller.
His players were big and
tough, the equal or many small
college alhJetes. But they were
expected to be gentlemen and
THAT WAS A YEAlt ago at scholars.
WHEN THE NASCAR Grand Prix circuit opens
the 1981 season at Riverside International Raceway
Jan. U., it wiUmark the swansong of the larger cars
and the debut of the down-sized racing machines that
will be used next year.
NA.SCAR will introduce the 110-inch wheelbase
cars at Riverside but will allow the 115-inch
wheelbase machines to compete for the final time as
JC~~=* 40th l11nnlnt AUTO
VALVOLINE CLUI .
this time, just before his team "I don't care if he 's the
won the Ohio big-school cham-greatest player there is, he bet-
pionsbip. Everybody suspected ter never cuss, he better never
Coach Dan Devine wouldrft stay play dirty football , and if he
at Notre Dame much longer, burps he better say 'excuse
and some alumni already were me,' "Faust once said.
touting Faust for the job. He knew he could never run
Monday, the day after Moeller such a tight ship at most col-
had won its riftb state cham-leges. Until Notre Dame called,
pionship in six years, Faust told he contented himself at Moeller.
well.
A number of driver changes are scheduled for
next season including those of Times 500 winner (at
Allen hospitalized
hisassistantshewas leaving. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Southern California
Faust probably could have FAUST WAS the second Ohio tailback Marcus Allen, the country's second-
had several college coaching high school coaching legend in leading collegiate rusher with a 156.3-yard per
jobs. He just wasn't interested. his family . He pt aye d game average, is in a Hollywood hospital because
"I like the discipline and re-quarterback for the Dayton high of problems with his right eye.
li1ious orientation of Moeller," school coached by his father, Allen bas been Usted as doubtful for Southern
he said. "I like working with Gerard "Fuzzy" Faust Sr. Cal's final game of the season, against secood-
klds.", "My dad was the best football ranked Notre Dame on Dec. 6, it was announced
Jlleli1ion is a big part of coach I've ever seen," Faust Monday.
everything Faust does. said. "Kids loved him. He's sort The junior from San Diego said he couldn't see
He always led bis Moeller of my idol." out of bis right eye after last Saturday's game
players lo prayer. He once With a career record of against UCLA and wu adm1tted to Hollywood
turned away from a walking in-174-17-2, Faust could have been Preabyteljan Hoepltal that night after be bad
terview on the Moeller campus an imperial coach with wood-been bleeclinlwitbiiltheeye.
to genuflect and say a short paneled office, carpeting and "I'll check him Thursday morning and, if
prayer in front of a statue of the wet bar. Instead, the office he there has been no re-bleeding by then, I may let
Virgin Mary. shared with his assistants was him go home," said Dr. Victor Wechter, an op-
loud, cramped and messy. thalmologist. "I want to keep him in a quiet en-
USAC MIDGDS
Turkey Night
Grand Prix
MIL KINYON
STIVI LOTSHAW
ION SHUMAN
SLllPYTRIPP
RICH VOGLIR
DOUG WOLFGANG
TIAllSCIVllG llGllT
lUOO Vermenl
•I";: ,1 .... r'
' I l. -'
11) l1l \ :41
Before the s troke ,
Richard complained of fatigue
and a "deadness" in bis throw·
ing arm.
HE SCRAWLED "JMJ'' -for "I never hide anything from vironment to allow the damaged blood vessel to
Jesus, Mary and~J:o:se~p~h.:_____::o:n:___m~y~c~o~a~c~hes~._"~F~a~us~l~sa~i~d~.~~~__:.:he=a~l~.'-'~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~!!l!!l!!m!!l ........ lm!!!ll ...................... _.
Alcohol bout ~
over ·for Ellis .
~HOENIX (AP) -Doek Ellis hua't pitched
in a ~ajor leaaue same ln more than a year.
Yet it wasn't uoW recently that be was able to
shake one of the ''social dbeaaes" he acquired
ft'om playing baseball -alcoboliam.
THE H· Y EA&·OLD BLLll, here to
participate in a fund·raialna golf toumament in
behalf of allln1 Houtten Astro pitcher J .B.
Richard, baa just returned from a tO-day stay at
The Meadows rebabllitatlon ce'lter in Wlckenburs.
It la the same place Kansas City Royals'
catcher Darrell Porter tunMld for help with his
drinkinl and dnll ptoMe1n1 last •Pline.
"My drintlnl bad ,.U. out ol haad," Ellis
said. "It waa due a lot to t.elnl out of the 1ame.
But it'• in cq,ntrol now an• arrested.
"l got With the Fellowship ol People there and
the>.: worked wonders," be added. "It was one of
the bluest declslom of m)' life. I'm &lad I made it
at that particular time."
&Uis, a right-hander w1M> won It games for the
197ll>ittaburab Pirates, taid he denleped a drink-
ing bablt once be reaclled the m.Jon in 1988.
,fflt's a 'shame that t1'e d.iaease Itself is social-
ly acceptedi" he said. "That's what'• so bad about
it. It's near ya thing where It's almost mandatory
in sporta that you have a few spirita here and
there.
"PEOPLE ARE NOT lmowled1eable to the
,,. fact that lt la a dUtease," Ellla added. "ll's one of
the ~ three klllen today. People don't ..realize
that." But I bad nache4 the polnt where I did. And
ex·Btooklyn Dod1er pitcher Don Newcombe 1ot
me some help."
Newcombe bad referred both Porter and
Dodier pitcher Rick Welch to The Meadows to ~the bottle. Each came under 1crutlay and
controversy whea their stories became public.
''I don't think that wlMnev• you need help
an4 tecetve it that lt la embarraaalQi," EWa said. ...
;Race scheduled ..
~· Vlll• Park Tw11ey Trtt ftye.mlle nm ud two-iDUe nm for ncmee .._.. wW be held,
at......._ at Vllla Pan R-..a • Nn. at at l :JO a,m,
Pre-,....,..._ at• rill• Wldft·-<11 wttbcM)
can be PIC!bd •at IM.t 9't4111C 'aeo. aacl rw-niDC .--ID tbe Ona.-Coml1 ... a.......-wm u.o &m ,.._....,...,at
7;IO a.m. 8l tM rue atM • *-tliJ' ti tM nee.
'J'lae rMll WUI ""* •••• .. ill.,......, .. ,
SPA
DSOF SPAS
t POITA8LES t IN-GROUNDS
t ABOVE GROUNDS
No apes held back. All col·
on end 1tylet. All 1pe1 pr•
tegoed with specie! llq-
uldetlon prlCH. S.ve up to
1976.00. Full warranty on
first fine spe1. Bring cash.
caahler's checks or money
orderi. Haul It yourMlf or
we'll lhlp freight collect.
Meny factory seconds In·
eluded.
ITAlllNG AT
SALE
3 DAYS ONLY
e No Mlesmtn -only fedoty ptfton~I
• lnst1ll1tl0n advice MIS rec:ommtnd1tlon
e All units 1.A.P.M.O. tPSWOYld ISP
1021
$279°0 BE EARLY
IOOllOf81AT
NtM10tM
MIT CIOMI -
mtlMID
Ml MaalY ,. IAll wu••--•
3321 W. Castor St.
Santa Ana
957-14'4
orange Gify Bank.
I
We
the c;taylght into
full-~·~
banking.
Extended hours with extended se1vices. And free registered
key tags At Orange City Bank. Huntington Harbour, we're
open Monday-Friday from 9 AM to 6 PM and from 10 AM
to 1 PM each Saturday. With a friendly, ·competent staff to
assist you in all aspects of personal, as well as commercial
banking. Dedicated to service, we 're on the move. Con·
struction 1s now underway on our Huntington Harbour
~iiiiiiiiiib..
branch. In the meantime, a temporary location at 4972 ,~.liiiiUiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
Warner Avenue is open for your convenience. And of ·
course, our beautiful main office at 2730 E. Chapman
Avenue in Orange remains at your service. Stop by ttither
location and pick up a sturtiy Orange City Bank registeted key tag with your
personalized code number. In the event of lost keys, the tag Instructs the
finder to deposit the keys In any mail box. Orange.City Bank guarantees the re-
turn postage. We'll keep your keys, and your money, out ot the wrong.hands. ·
Visit us S<?On. Interest bearing checking accounts beginning December 31, 1980.
l
-
• ~
! • .
l
! • ' 1 {
I ..... ..,. ..... Md•••• ............ ,.. .. ....-.w ........ ... ' : ' ' croM a ltt • --J:A• lldD'le'a Iii. Ftr _.. ....... , clll lU Holt at aT·lm
orTf._..,
____ ....... __ ......_ ____________ ....... j
.. --------
NPL .. ,....,.,.; ~·Mal ... . ~ "\ "'' ,, .. " ' . '" = ,. ' .. ,. .. ...... ,. -••• .. ,.,ua
• ' • u• •• "' ~
I ' • • ' . . , • • ... : = I ~
I 17'
• m
,.._ t a • '" m 21•
--• • 0 .. , *'' 1» .... f'f.CltCt 6 I I I» l• Jlt .... on.-t 12 0 -1• M
AM&••CMe co.•••••c• .... ........ -If~
a.Ill-• ..,., ... ,
NY ~II
• l 0 liel i.. 1•
..... , Wt U'
• • o liGO 2U >ti t t 0 )00 19' Z>I ) • o no n1 im
~
Clt~HWI.,.,.,
PlllM<K911
Clnclnnttl
• • • 4
o .. , mm 0 ..,,,3' I S
> ' 0 SD '" lit o .1110 ,., m -· 0..1-S...D._
Deaver
IC•ntt• City
S.•111•
I • 0 .. 7 21S U• • 4 0 ... , 3J2 w
I S 0 .MJ 2•7 201 • o "°° ,,. m 103JJ 2)2JIM
MMUy'1k.,.•
...... 11. -OtleMlt 1
TllW'tlllay' 1 0-..
Chlc•go •I Oatr<MI ICll•n""I 1 •• 9 lO
em.I
S.•lllt Al Ollll• leti.NWl 4 •I Ip m I
A1m1 27, 81lnt1 7
Sc-tty OIM11tl"l
LOI A1>99lt1 0 U l IO 27
NtwOrle-0 0 0 7 I
LA -O.nnero JI p•u fro m Gum.n
I Corral klckl
LA Oennero 16 N U from Ferr•~mo
ICoH•I kkkl
LA -FG Corr•l U
LA -Petcock I rvn ICorr.i klCI"
LA -FG Corrtl 19
NO -c:Nldt IS NU from Stoll IR•c••OO
klckl
A -Sl ....
LA
Fir.too-t i
Ru•hH·Y¥ds 0 21S
P•nlng y¥0S 111
Ret11rnyantl 14
PHW• 1S 7M
Pvnt1 4~l
F11mbl-ICKI 11
Pen•IUH-ytrds •·lit
.........,u.Nn
"° • II JO .,
1 IS »-2
8-41
1 I
}-«>
RUSHING -Los AllQel ... Tyler I••.
Pe.cocll 11.zt, ,._,... 1-41, llry•nl 1·41,
G11m•n s-t. New Orie..,•, -nnlnQ 2 If,
Rogers M, WlllOn 4-C.
PASSINO -LOS .A~IH, Ferre~mo 1•1•+1~ ()llrnlln M.o..31, Crom .. ell 0-1~
New Orleen1, MtllfllllO 12·2'·1 n , Scoll J.t+». RECelYING -Los AngelH, Brnnl S-20
Oennud >JS, Hkll• 2-42. N•,. Ori••nJ1 WlllOll s-t1, Herrl1 ,.SJ, R-ra M9, Clllldl ,.., ..
~toptwenty
Tiie Top 1-ly c..ms In TIM Auocletea
Pr•SI <Olle9f ....... POii. with llrtl·plK•
¥0ttf lft ,. ....... -·• r~rd• encl ~ ·-1.111 4" I . ....,.. DMN W f.+.I 1,222 ~ ~ S&ef• (0 .. ,.. • ....
"·~I~ ,,., .. ,..,.
i.~--.. , .. "°
6.. Oklatlome M.O M ~1'E ·H! :! ...,... t-t.o m
,ONt.-.. ,. -II, ltltlMfl\ Y-'9 10.t.O SM IL ...... cw.llfte 10.l.O S21
14. UCLA •2.0 J0J IS,;.........., .. 1.0 4'0 '"' MMl••w• ..... ..,.o m 11. So. c.lltonlla M · I 112
1t. FICM'lde 7·1.0 JIJY>
,., So.IUI <Moline ~ IS
Jt. So. Me1"0dlsl 1-U • 7S
Coffege football schedule
Hert ls tN major col~ footbell .c-•~ '°'"'''-*: ,.__,
Alloclt Isl-•I 8r0Wft
"'*' Pitt at Pem Slelt
~' Al•btma .,._A'*'"' al BlrmlnQl>•m
ArltOftt ~It al Ari-..
Teu1 Ttcll YS . .ArllMIM1 et Little Roe~
Holy Crosa et Boslon Coll-
Mleml, ...... et Flof'IO.
Georgl• Ttcll •I O.Or11I•
Air Forct•IH•w•ll.n
A l<t at -'°"· n Army vs. ,....,., at Pflll.cielPhla
llrlo,,..,, Y-.g at Nev•CS.i..• Ve9••. n
Oki_,. State al Olllallomt
Ul•h •I 5an Olf9o St•lt , n T .. HUMelTtHI
Te~e\V~ll
~.,
UCLA ~QreoonStett .tlOllYO
.... .. nau CIOllN••..C•
b\::"'°'" ...... _
0.1111tr ...... ,,11,
0.11••
~"'· ~
Gol*nS~"' ... rn • ,.,,,_
kl\01~
.............. . ~ n I 1t •
t II • u
' 14 ~ "
~""°'"'' ... " . I. 1
IJ I 0 12
14
0
EASTEaN COM,11.llNCI
AUMtkOI....,_
f'n .. ..a . '11 ti/I
~. ••• ,., .'<\
.IM 12
'" ... ,~ ::i: :~
.m 10Yt 311 11
P111"4tl~ It J ...
8osl0ft 11 • 6M 4111
HewVOl1' 12 1 ~ s
W•Y.lft91on I 13 .»1 IOYI
Hew JtrWy • I• lW II
Mll,.evlt.•
1nc11-
c 111c..oo
Allen~
Clevtl...O
Otltoll
C-t.M Dl•!Me9
1• S ISi
11 10 W.I Slit
' U 42' I
7 ll .150 '"' 1 It .l04 II
• .. .111 11\lt ,,__,.,Sc ....
New York 1 ll, Hqyston 110 loll
TMIM'• o.m..
Porllancl at All.,I•
Pntl•a.tPN• •t O.llas
Denver •• St!I D'-
Argentln• Open
l•t 9-Alt'tl, ........ "''""
CNo,,.i...sNp ~· Jose I.uh Clerc def. ROii Gellrtr•Q, 6-7, 1•.
I S, 6 0, .. 1.
CM~p~ff
Han• GllderntlSler·AnOres Gomer dll'I
J•oro ve1a.co-An1191G1mener.••.1 ).
Austf'llll•n Open ···--) WOMEN
Flr1t•-S11118lel
Mime J-Ye< def. Bettin• B111>Qt, •~.
6-3, Belly Stow Clef Roselyn F•orlMlnlr., 6-1,
I•· t·2, a.fly N.19el"°" dll. Ro•le c ... 11.
4>4,4·•. M .
--·-~· Pam Shrlwrdel. SU.Sellbe,4>·1, 7·S, CllMtY
RernolOI def. Renttt Tom•nove, ••. •1.
Beuy NAQlll""" dlf. Diane Morrison.•·'· "'3.
B.,ber• Helkllll•t def. Kerryn Pr•tt, 6·1, •3.
Llnd .. Y Morw a.I. 8•-· Cetton, 6·1. 7·S,
Wendy T11tnbUll oef. Lele Forrod,6·2,t ·3, S...
Barker Ott. 0 1-De$lor, •·2, t>-3, H""'"
Mendllkove d9f. Ellubetll Little. 1 •. 6-1.
GrHr Slt¥ensdel. sue Leo, 6·2. •~. Vlrolnia
Ruilcldtf .UncMICtiMll,l>-2, 7-S.
LoaMH*>1
MONOAY'S1U!IULTS
... 114tyfalf•lr-1119) ...,. __
First raca -A-to Win lllMdl, ......
UO, I.JO; lndleft;s Meld IZ\1111 .. e l, S.00,
4M; .. .,_ t~>. 6.60. U e....a. , .. ,,, Ptlcl$Z7...0.
~
Second rM• -L.•nt• D•Mn H••• IHtrtl, 11.40, 4.tO, ).IO; Fl•mlno C.t
ICl't_,, UO, l.20; -Easy JotWI I~ 1.....,),7.JO. T-••"1•-Thlrd r.c:e -MonlSllAI• IOllvetffl, u.oo. S.40, J,60; "-Y Brome (C.. .. ntdel,t .tO,
•.60; llOld Sw ... IAllarOycel, •.20. '2 Uklt
(M l ptldSl4UO.
Fo11r1h ract -Pr°"d -lch (Jones I, 6 tO,
l tO, 2.40; Baron Prince ISt•llln(lsl, IS 20,
• 00; 8obKo!flrt0ompU),2 40 Flllh r.a -H~y Nnr Veer (Mtnt),
• llO, •.00, 2.90. Indian H•wll (Selldov•I),
10 ... 6.IO. Vino Fino IAllarOyc.). 3.40. s.s
eucte IJ.lOl pelOS119.oo
Si•U1 rtct -End to End !MtlQarlnll, •.oo,
J 10, 2 . .O; Sntp B11tton (V•fenzutl•I. 4.20,
3.10, "41~ Buo (C.Sltnedal, 6.70.
S.venltl race -Sholoun Annie (Mtntl,
S.00, l .40, 2.60, Bronz• Htmlress IVel•S·
quez l, s 60, J •O; Theresa 's Siar
IC41tene<1a1, 2.80. SS e .. <la <l·IJ paid
'101.SO.
EIOhlh r<Ke Pa .. the Ball lllplltm).
1J 00, S.20, l.80, Mtlorl•llsloc tH• .. rrol,
• 70, 3 10, Mt'"'s PtPPa Baro !Ohv•t'91I,
4 20.
Nonlll ••c~ Coroero Gr•nG• IMu11>flYJ,
II '°-' 10. •.60. f .. 1 Ctmo IMaloerlnll. •.60,
.. 00, Flyln(I Truck IValder),,. 60. u ··-
( •0-1 l oatO SI 20 SO.
ta flitdl ... l..U-1 ~.., ........ .... .... .,_,._ .... &k-.a ,., • .....,, u
..... 1111 (Ill ..................... ,,,
•llllUN~("•--1. ,.,_ ,_ ..... , .... (C. ....... l .
,. .... t ... a•.~t11tO•IT.,t),t•,
.... ; Tvlf ...... "" f.Alial'.,C.),a.st. -----.......... reo -Mr 1111,,,, c:111u l'9f ..... ), .... ,.., uo. Dt4-lf...., •
..-..1M¥tl,UO.a.»• OH-5ewftt.,..l•Ollc:k tCltaHI), .... a i6. OH-0.N!Met ,., wcent. P tli«ta lt~I pa ..... U euaa
IUlpaMIUUO •1~-1.u1.
. NHL
W.AL81COMP8RINC8 -·°'""'-• L T 0" OA Pb .....
MonlrMI
Her11«d
Plll.'6111'911
Oelroll
U S I
12 I 2
t II • 6 II l
J 14 J
tS 71 " " w ,. .. 1113 1•
13 • u
•2 tO ' ...,._Dim•
MINWI01e II • • " S3 .llllff~lo 10 s S 13 51
'To<ofllo • 1 3 12 71
llotton • ' s .. ..
Quebec • 11 6 72 tO
CAMPlll..LCON"lalNCI
Pllll-lp/>141
NVl11_.s
C•loerr
W•1lllf>ll'011
"4V R•"99rt
SI. Louil
PlllrldlOlrisleot u s J u s s
• 1 s • • • 4 14 4
Smytltt DIYlsltll
'1 w
" 71 ,. 1S
.. tJ
72 102
n•l 12,.
II 1 • 17 ll
,.
" 11
11 ..
l3
ll
21
20
12
27
26
c 111ceoo s 96 95 23
Coloredo 4 10 11 20
Edmonton s •.1 17 IS
Wlnnlpeo I U • 68 106 I
-•y·sscor ..
ICl.,.1 4, QuebK J
Wlnnll»Q•. He,.Vork lsl•nders•
Kings 4, NordlquH 3
~ellly....Wt
f'lrttPtriM
l I~
7 D-l
' LO• A,.1 ... Stmmer 21 (L Murpl\y,
T•ylorl. 12 SS 2 Outbe<. D11poftl I IA
Slestney, P Slldlnyll, IS Ot Pe"4111 .. -
Wells, Lt, S S3 Hunter, Qlle, I .i. Hunter.
Out. u S3 Ste_,.._
l Lo> AnQel .. , Teylor II, O 4. Ouelll<.
Florek • Goult', RlclltrOI, J .., .I OuebK,
HISIOP ,, (I.Krol•, p Ste1tnyl 10 Jl • Lo\
AnQele>. 04onM 11 IL. Mu'l)hy, Korebl,
It 77 Pentltlti L•trOI•. Out. • IS, L
Murphy, LA, 4 o . HtrOy, LA, • Sl,
L•r1v1ere, Que, 11.20, Lnfis. LA, ";SJ.
Tltlrd Pffled
I Lo• Anolu , Simmer 23 I Dionne, T•ylorJ, 1.0 Pena111 .. Wtnslnk, Oua.
• 2•. Goldup, LA. double minor, 9 S4,
Weni.lnk,Que,' S4, Lewi•. LA, U OS.
Siio .. on goal lo• AnQtlH S·•·1·1•
Quebec •12 .. 11 G ... 11.. Lo\ AnQelH, Leu.rd Ouat.c.
Ple1W A·IO.t'IO
College
UC '"""" 11, C.1 T.cl'I O UC Irvine ICOrlnQ HalwrHl•cl1 S, Delzer
1, Slruck 2, 811lloe 1.
Misc.
~al•ne
......... &....-
SAN FRANCISCO GIAHTS-NamtO 5t>e<
Richer~. Yi<• -'*"' ot -r.U-. N•l"td P.t o.11 ...... , YIU _,_ OI 1111;11 ..... _..._.
UM8TllAU. ......... ......._...__
SEATTLE SU~ll'SONICS -A<cqulrwd
John 5ftumlitt. c-, '"°"' tlW Safi A-*» SOii" 1or • lillr........., cl<att choice Md .,.
11tldl1<--ot -y.
l<OOTDALL ................ ..._.
NEW YORK GIANTS -PIA<ed Herry
C.rson -Johft S.or-. llnebecker., on
Injured-lb!
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Pltctd Eric
Wllll•ms, 11-ktr, end M•rk Bell, wlcM
receiver, on tr.e lnjurta reMrve 11•1
WASHtNGTOH REDSKINS -S'9neel Tom
Benu, c .. 1er Pieced Freel De•n. oflen•lve
IKkle, on Ille lnj11red reMrve llsl.
HOCKEY Ne,_.. Hecuy i...,w
DETROIT RED WINGS -Flr•O Teel
Lindley, l'tMO co.ell, end Mercel PronoYott,
aul1>1en1 cot<n Nemed W•yne Muner,
t-ead cotch, •ncl Biiiy Dee, aul1tenl coe<tt.
SOCCEI'
Hor11t ..._.le.ell Stc:cer LH••
NASL Announced 111•1 1r.e WuhlnQton
Dlpfomtu, Hou>lo11 Hurrlcene end
RocllHter I.oncer> lr•nclllw• 1141v• foloeo.
COLLEGE
NOTRE DAME -Nemtd Gerry Few:!,
helld loolbtll Coe<ll.
SYRACUSE Frenlr. IMloney, he.0 loot·
bell CNCll, re$l9"fd,
TEXAS LUTHERAN COLLEGE -0..
KniQlll, NM loolbell c ... c!'. rei.19....S.
Mea prep football log
SUNRT LEAOUE
Ecleon (11-0)
fo..wtt•n V1lley (t-2)
10 EIOoreclD It l!I Toro
II LM10 llMOl lfWllllOfl ............
7 Letl.-cl It Metlna
17 """"'" Kartlor 4'~ ...
1' 1!411-11 "_.....,. DN<h CJP"""'" • El....,_. ...... a-&.a.U• t•I Hiil
HU"11r18'Dn .. ech (1-t)
.. C....d91Mer .. ••O..-u ..... °'_ ,. c.,_,_
•• Lee.-..... 1 ...... _, 1....,...
'~-• ~y .. ..., ...... , ... ,
Westminster (~)
t Lt Olllnlt
1 I~ ~:'~ ~ 14 Oct11n v1e ..
14 11 LOl'Q 8N<h w11-.
7 21 Hllfttlntton a.Kii
• 3~ ~=In Velley : 14 Merine
14 14 Hewpor1 Hart>or
1 SEA VIEW LEAGUE
COfOftl del Mir (7~)
u eo.e. ..... (2~)
14 $41114.AN
14 '-"lt-Velley 14 oc-vi.w ,, ....... 111.
14 U MINMrl Vl91o
ti ti Unl...nlt'r t 0 llToro to 1S Ett-i. 21 H lrvlne ti 21 cor-tlltl""9r ~: IJ Ton> (7~)
27 11
..
21 • 1 ,, .. .,
1
10 • 1S 21 1
10
' ti 14
lrvlne (0..10)
7 Veltft<lt
0 D•MHllll I S..,.,_k
0 L•ount Be.ell 1~ ~~Hiiis
• E•1en<le 11 c.,,_c1e,_r
0 Coslt-, u111-~ty
Unfv....ity (3-7)
1 Horwalk.
IJ Tustin
1 U..-Hlll1
IJ D•MHllll
14 1...-BNc11
0 CotltMese
• cor-del Mar
• EIToro 1 EttAnclt
• lrvlne
11 ,.
lS
J2 ,,
20
0 21
21
JI
0
Legun1 Hlll1 (4-t)
0 T111lln U Eslencte
JO Unl->lly 19 Co11tMtw
21 Irvine
14 L'9UN8e«h
1 S.n a.,,_te
10 MIH!Gfl VltjO
II D•NHllll
24 C41C11Slr-V•llty
Ml1skln VleJo (7-3-1)
14 0 >• ,. 2! 1
21 14 0 11
PIKtr
s.dcl-k T11stln
" " 14 ~ 1 ,.
El Toro
Co1leMev
" • 80unt COAST LUOUI!'.
10
Dent Hllli.
C111>l1tr-V•ll•Y L...,.Hllls S.nCle-L•OUN 8McJ'I
Clf'~ P1111 lC C•.,._.no v111e~ (t-2)
ti
0 " " " 0
17 u 0
t4
• ,. ,
14
to " 0 It
: 14
" ti ti :
14 ,
12
0
I
21 ......... (74)
,. .. MaW'felr
1 •...... t9 II ll"lrlM
1 • ""'"""" 1 ~ ~ ......
If • ::-a:.. t7 , (¢11 _ ... .....,
11 Ml-Vatte a,...,... • c:.-....
• 14
II • • ~ 14
17 .. , to
, 1
24 u
I t1
"" Cte!Mnte (4-1)
c.r-... "'"'' Vlll•P-£1~ &I Toro
c:.pjttr-Valley '"---"'"-' L...-IMCll MIMMllVlt,lt
OaMHlllt
OTHIRI
Oc9en View (M) ,
0
0 II to
14 WW""'
" t1 41 ta 11
"
17 l.tQilollM
It C-.--
11 -~ , il'.tt-'4t
IS ICetella 14 ,.,.,,...
I) IC_...,.,
7 '--" • Lei .Al.llmHw
~ tl
"' 11 ,. '~ •• • " , . ~ .... • ti I•
., ..
1
21
21
JS 21
10
12 so
• • 1 12 u 0 u
10
I
11
17
1 to • 21 JO 1
t ,. •
.. 14
14 ·I~ • It u to .,
u
J , • .. ti ,
It
:I
----------------
(, ..
PUBLIC NOTICE
Jletlftoul lull Niss
NAMS ITATllMllfT
I
The foltowtno ptfton Is dOinQ bu•I· neu as:
CRYSTAL VIEW WINDOW
WASHING, 11• AuQuste, C.0.te Mew.
C.lltornt•'21Ut
P•trlcll E...,. S.umoto, "" A~te. Colu Mesa, c.111ornl• t»26
Thh Nlneu 11 c-ttd by en ln-
dlvld ... 1.
Patrick E. S.umoto
Thl1 "*'*'-' wn llltd .. 1111 tne County Clerk ol OrllnQOO Co11nty on
Ho11<tmber 14, 19'0.
..1 .. SIS
Publl1htd 0r-. eo.11 D•llY Piiot.
~v. II, ts, Dec. 1, '· 19'0 --~
PUBLIC NOTICE
..
.,,.-.
P11t111-Or-. C.0.11 Delly PllOt, "4ov 11,1e.u.o.c.2,two ~
PUBLIC NOTICE I I '" f'lc:TITIOUI IUltN•h
NAMa ST•T•MllNT , ,
1 ne 10110 .. 11111 peri.on1 .,. oolno ~MMU•. I
PACIFIC AUDIT SERVICES,
16041 ~-s1, H11ntlft(lton Betel\,
. •:...•
...
... .. :~
C:.l lfor~• 92t47 • . ; •
corr!:: .. ~. ~~I 8~~:w~1~'.11~~~1~ '
lnoton Buch, C.llfornla t2M7
Tllll butlneH I• COnclllCICKI by 4 (l>t'o
porellon.
Pacific City B.nl<
J. s . .JoflMOn,
l!xec..tiff Vo(• P"t1idenl
Thi> •telenwnl ,.., 111eo .. 1111 ,.,.
County Clerk ot OranQe Co11n1v 4n
Nowmr 14, 19'0
F14Ul7
Publlihtd Or..-oe Cout Oally Pilot.
No•: 11.U. Dec: 2. 9, J9'0 '601-IO
I PUBLIC NOTICE •.
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINllU
NAM« 5TATIMENT
The IOllOWlnQ --I• OOlnQ bllU· .......
SOLDER WO RKS, 11101 M\ W11,.tngton, Fovnt•rn Valte¥,
C•lllorllle '110I
Cherlu F McGerry, U 10 l a
Colonla, Founte•n V•110 , C.lllornl• .,,.
Tiil\ IKnlnn> Is conduclecl Oy •n ,,._
dlvkluet
0--...F
Th11 s141-t
County Clerk ot
Howmoer7,1"°
M<Gtrry ,.a• flleel '"''" Int Orenoe County Qll
F14tDU
PvOlll-Or-. C:O.i.t C•ily PllOI,
fOIOV.11,ll,JS,l>K.2,.... 01~
PUBLIC NOTICE
·.
. ..
•
,.itors 11ot ..,elC!...e
DEAR PAT: Is there anything I can do to stop
members of a church from contacting me? They
Lome to my house every month. t have qked them
not to do this, but they refuse to listen to my re-
quest.
J .E., Costa Mesa ~ AYS HHme1 yoa llave teld tlteee elaird1
~emben &bat yoa laave a rtpt lo la1l1& H
Yi'eedom ol dlolee wbell It cemes lo uJtltlal H
penGUJ u rell,.._ belief.
• • However, If Ulla tactic lau failed, yoa may
waa& ao coukler ,.._.., &M clero la elaar1e.
TJU• prolllem wa1 preaea1ed lo A YS by uodter ~ader aeveraJ yean aco, and It was aolved wltla the
hopen&ioa ol Ule clern.
tte;,i tft"9U al•o•t olnolete
; DEAR PAT: Can you be put in jail for not pay-
ing your debts? A friend claims this is true, but
only if you go into deep debt.
R.J ., Costa Mesa
Yoar friend 11 wrong. Debtor's prison ao
loa1erexl.IU. Tltere la•• e:a~ laowever. Y011
caa be ae9& lo JaU aHer ertmlaal laws fer Mt P•J·
•1cldld..,..n11 Y" lane u.e •MlltJ .... , . A JaU ... '-.-eaa re9!llt rr.. ...._ f_. .. eea·
tempt ol cout for falllac &o pay spoual npport
~ll•emy) llyoa e~doao.
Eva II yoe are la deep ~ most of yos pro-
perty -eome or all of die eq111&1..:,z.7 ...._ (If lao•et&eadecl) or moblle lto•e, e , fU'ldare,
ap &o $1,• Im a 1a.la11 aad .... auoelatlee .... aa
~espeml·.e aecl car-are ese•p& ..-r.Callf•nla
w &Del ea11't be taken from ,_to pay Miter ddta.
coane,noesemp&Joalawprotedayoafn•leGlll
.. Item wt.ere yoa llave falled to make paymsta oa
tte Item IUeU, and It ha1beftlpalllP,or1ttarlty.
fHet end e!lai_. ..,elgihed
DEAR PAT: I'd like to lose some weight and
remember that you had an item about a couple of
ingredient.a in over-the-counter diet pills that were
.t.>und lo be effective by some government agency .
• Would you repeat that informJition?
S. T., Huntington Beach
A panel of e:apena appola&ed by die Food alld
•ra1 Admlalltratlon reported there la aome
~lde•ee tlaa& two aon·prescrtpllo• dn11 are
elpfal a1 ald1 to dieters. Tlaey are
eaypropa.olamlae, wlaJcla ablo la ued a1 a aaaal
c..-u&, alld beuocame, wlllcllt la a mild
•aeatlaellc Mmetlmea ..ea la tltroat ·1ose11aa.
Tile puel, IMnre.er, wu ert~ ol M•• el Ute e•odoaal clal•• macle for ffer·&M 'CMUer diet ,endleeuddaewillllUl&b&~&M9e
. I edlaU. Be aw.re &o claeck wt&la ,.._clHterlaefere etas aayprod11d~atelabu ,_ wlllleee wetp&. ,.
r
•z pref era ed te ~
DEAR PAT: I have hi&b blood pressure. My ~tor prescribed a medicine that controls it, but !}>m~one told me surgery can 1et rid of
vpertenaloo once and for all. la this true? u so,
what type of surgery la involved?
n B.T.,/Corona del Mar r a .
la tM pan. pa&letlts wtda •Here eue.tlal .,,,......,_ cwp WoM pnuue> ••.U.et laad
eti1efJ, wMcll ewalned ol ~ 11• .. dletle
•ne ~ wa.a.e ftben &rus•I& ha,..... to &lie
"nllnalftlar 111tem. /l'lle pl'MMue, called ••,...1dHly, waa draatk Illa&..._ It na&nlW ..,..,...... .._ au elae falW. ,....,. ••ten ................... ..,. r;
1 ••••.r• dr•1• p~r•I& elaemleal •'l•..,.1de.._ &U& eu .. .._.. eem,..._ .._
llr ,...,. •• wMla a aealtleL Mereew•, ~ au.._ ea. ............ lty ... um1kd I ... ..... , ........ .,~_, .............. .
fees tf.) increm1e
at Hearst Castle
b!
, ~ SACRA.MENTO CAP) -Tour fMI for adulta
• Heant Cutle in San Simeon wlll 1Dcreue from
!_to '7 on Jan. 1, th• stat. Pub .-S Reereauon
;;apartment bb &DDOUDced.
,.. ChUdnn a1ed e to 11 will pay ta lnatead ot the
.-irrent '8.50. Children below e wlll 1Wl 1et bl ~·
However, people who i-eaene 1181 toWa WI i•r can pay the current rat., the deputmnt
.. ld.
~ Dtnctor Pete Dancer:IDOM laid Wti~UGD WM NIPGllllble for the lncnue, tbe ftnt b~ult r.. ainee 11'1'7 and tn youth fees •inc•
Ri
f: I
f
Woman left at institution stays 60 years
W 4L 111AM. ...... CAP> -WbeD
Mary ~ ra8dM w 7llb bbth·
dar I &MN .... HlebrMtca Ill tbe
..... ~ Uaat'• ---..... ,. Mal'l,J • 1M'9· ........
..... , .. aot ,etanl .. : • • ..
"duiDptd" at tb• rernald State Scboof aDd llmoly srew accustomed
to m.t11..-..• llfe. . "It'• ..,....... bow many people
we fomd wt.o 1pent tbelr livet here
beeame 10meooe left them," ••YI ,_... A. Wert, 1upertnteadeot at
f'erDald. . "It'• aometblnt tbey did back tltea," added Pernald 1poke1man
Paul Jooea. "They just dumged \bem. 11ta, UvlDI ln tbil environ·
meat, tbay toot on lnatitutlonal
bebaYIOr. TMy ... med retarded."
Called ''Fernald'• 1wMtbeart.''
Ill• Meany bu been here llnee 1920.
8be •• found to be mentally co~petent lJ J9A11 aao, and t.l1ed WO~
u a nanay ln tbe outalde world. But
after a few moat.hi, yean ot Uvtq In
an lnltituUon took their toll aod she
uked the ec:hool to take her back.
"Tbe problems Mary encountered
when lbe tried to work outside were
from be1q lnltitutlollaU&ed," Wert
said "There'• notb1ni wron1 with her bead."
, Mbs Meany was abandoned u an
infant on the steps of a Lawrence
church.
•'The nuns who found me never
knew who my parents were," she.re-
Warningc The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
called at tbe perty. ''Tbey Cared tor · me In tbe ecJDVeGt •W I wu I . Tbe9
a lady came h'oQI the Sta~ •bo
put me with a family in Lynn.
·•0ne day, the state lady eame ln a
car and said she found a beeter-place
for me wltb a trade 1ebool and
brought me to Femald.
"Except for a few moa\bl workint out, I've been here ever 1lnff," Min
Meany said.
About 15 years ago, Dr. Huao
Moser, tben superintendent at
Femald, learned of Mary's hlatory
and encouraaed her to leave the
home. She was given a job as a nanny.
''One night the boys started Jump-ing on the beds bard enough to break
the ,,,...,,, Mm Meuy ree.u.t
"Wb• I told tbem to atop, they ....
their mother Hid they didn't have"
take my orden because J came frcM9
a feeble-ml..., aebool .
"l save one boy a little ~ and wrciU a note tUt I cl.ld.
day, they aa1d tbeJ were tUinl mt
to a school for tbe nally bad-..
"I WU tenUled aod called r...w
to take me baek," 1be Hid.
"Sbe found the world )WU IO ma
different out there, people called w
an idiot and 10 on, ao 1be Oed back
here." Jones said.
"ThlJ la her home and we are her
family."
• ULTRAi 5 mg. "tlf,0.4 mg. nicotine. ULTRA lOO's: 6 mg. "ttr,0.4 mQ. nico1int. tv. per ciprltte b¥ FTC mt1hod.
__ J
. ,
__ ,...:;_,_._ ______________ ,., ___ a _____ •
I ltD•: •H•,.11111111 •antlrtalwent
·•UllMU •Ann Landers •••
Training for . pr~ection
., ....... DOUGAN ... ...., .... ...
la Im, Barbara lAYy and ber lf.year-old eta.._ ,rere almOlt aaaulted by
three mea -dreued u women -in New
Yorll'18tatueofLiberty restroom. . ·
One blocked the door to prevent their
escape. Another stood by a aecond door
and tbe third moved toward tbem, spout.
Ln1 t.b.reata. -
''Tben wu no doubt in my mind that we
were acu. to be tilled," aaJd Mn. Levy,
now olNeW.,ort Beach.
BUT stJDDENL Y an employee barged
tbroulb the aide door which struck the
second aasailant in the face, causing • 'ae\'ere nosebleed.'·
Mrs. Levy and ber dau,bter bolted
tbroqb the door and escaped.
Her fear sublided. However, another
e moUoo quickly took root -IUiJt.
"I realised that I wu not capable of de-
fendlnl myself nor was I capable of belp-
inl my chUd," she explained.
A few qys later, Mn. Levy returned to
her home, then in Pasadena, and ap-
proached the local police department for
euidance on leamin1 self-defaise.
.. THEY KEPT GIVING me a run-
around routine.·~ sbe said. "But I persist-ed. I had to find a better way of coping
with the fear."
Finally, a friendly officer got her into a
police academy course on weaponless self.
defense.
"That first night I WU flipped; tripped
and practically stripped," said Mrs·. Levy.
But she learned that women do not have to
be vulnerable to the human beasts of the streeta.
"Your body is a good deal stronger·
tha.-you give it credit for being," she said.
"A woman is not weak and helpless; she's
simply tmtrained."
/
bandt out literatun wbleb clalma that ooe
out of tbree women ID the Loe Aqelel re.
1100 will be aexually uaaulted ODff in
tbelr llw.. In i.m, 1ald lln. Levy, It la
eaUmated that only 100 out of every 1000
rapea were reported to autboritlea. Of
thoee, aa went to trial, three nplata were
convteted and "maybe, maybe one wu
1enteneed."
'There was no doubt
in my mind that
we were going to be
killed,' said Mrs. Levy
Many former assault victims take
Mrs . Levy's course, she said. Her current
class ol 2S students includes two rape vic-
tims, two incest vicUms and a woman
whose soo was murdered by the Freeway
Killer.
••A lot of women come because their
husbands batter them," she added.
Although 11ie teaches her students six
speclftc self-defense moves, much of the
claaa la aimed at educatlq women on
a voiding assault situations, Mrs. Levy
said.
"I want to eliminate the possibility of
them ever being victims by making them
aware of the circumstances in which they
place themselves," she explained. "The
key to personal safety -perhaps the key
to your survival -is your st.ate of mind.
"WOMEN ARE VEaY naive wben it
comes to awareness because they believe
it can never happen to them.
·•A lot of women don't want to come to
my class because it makes them so un-
comfortable. They don't want to bear what
I have to tell them."
:A woman is not weak and helpless,· says
self-defense teacher Barbara Levy.
'She ·s simply untramed. ·
Training women to avoid assa~t. or pro-
tect themselves il it can't be avoided, is
Mrs. Levy's passion. Sbe now conducts
classes in Women's personal self-defense
for the Garden Grove Unified School Dis-
trict's Adult Education Administration.
How great is the threat to women?
"THERE A&E QUITE a few rapes hap-
pening in this area," sa.id Mrs. Levy. She
Avoi~ attack, Mrs. Levy said, is a
matter of coosidering the possibilities and
being prepared.
For example, she encourages senior
citizens to carry their cash in a glove or
pocket, rather than purse.
Life is out here
f Or Reag&n daughter
'( think I can deliver,' says Patti Davis . .
LOS Ar(GBLES CAP) -Patt1 •ere questions even tbe self·uaured
Davia, a ~-actress, sJnle-r • Miss Davia hacl a bard Ume answer-
and aon1wrlfer. admits that the inliie admits b.avinc a famoua family •P9tll~ ii abinl_QJl a little mor:e has its "pluses and minuses" but an-
bri&btly on ber now tbat ber father ll grily rejects succestioa.s she is trylnc
prnldent-elect of the United States. to cap'tali• .. oo her father's -'Uoo. In one recent week Mils DaVls ap-~ -~
peared oo a naUooaily syndicated d
talk abow, received offers from three BECAUSE more her parents an
movie studios, a television network her maternal grandmother were ac-
and five independent producers, and tors, her taJent and desire for an en-
was told by her managers that a re-tertainment ca.reer came naturally,
cordin.gtontract would follow soon. shs\s~:drruts that "the spotlinl.t is on Miss Davis, 28, r~jected sugges-.-•
lions that she is trying to capitallae me and it wouldn't be so mucb if my
on the fame of her father, Ronald father wasn't dected president," but
Reagan. insists she will succeed on the
"l'VE BEEN WORKING a long
time at my art and my craft." Miss
Davis said recently after taping a
guest appearance on the "Toni Ten-
nille Show."
"I wouldn't be honest if I didn't ad-
mit that the extra expos ure will help
my career," said Miss Davis, 28, who
uses her mother's maiden name pro-
fessionally. "But I think I can de-
liver."
She's already had some success:
The Eagles recorded one of her
aongs "I Wish You Peace," and she
bas a'ppeured on e pisodes of "Love
Boat," "CHIPS" and "Vegas."
AFl'Ell TRYING for seven years
to get Hollywood's attention, it was
all good new.. But because the offers
came only after her father, Ronald
Rea1an, wu elected president, there
strength of her· talent, not because of
her family.
"I wouldn't be honest il I didn't ad-
mit that the e>ctra exposure will help
my career," Miss Davis, 28, said.
"But I think I can deliver."
SHE ALREADY has had some suc-
cess on her own. The rock group
Eagles recorded one of her sooga, "I
Wish You Peace,'' and she bas ap-
peared on episodes of "Love Boat,"
"CHIPS" and "Vegas."
Miss Davis said she wilJ not move
to the White }louse next January, but
will stay in Los Angeles, where she
hopes to find her own fame soon.
'TU go back to Washington and
visit," she told Toni Tennille during
the interview that will be a.ired the
first week of December.
"But I won't live there. ~Y life is
out here."
T11e apotllght •hmes on Ptltti RNgan DIMa, daughter of
President .. lect Ronald Reagan and hff wrfe ~. .
-
Bdltqr#• Hou: m the first of a tltrn-
parl .nta, AP torit4'r JOM See WM&. U ·
om'"•• t11e trend t oward later
motltnllood and tM(preanre of Ute bobw clock.
By JANE SEE WHITE
._ ............ rftw
It was an easy question once. But
for a growing number of women, It is
now the deadline decision of a
lifetime, a source of troublc!d soul-
searcbing: Shall I have <'hildren
before it's too late?
"It's a really bard decision, and
when you reach 30 you realize' that if
you don't decide, the decision will be
made for you biologically," said 32-
year-old Linda Heary. who recenUy
took a break from her Wa:shington
law career lo bear a son.
The problem is that "you don't
really know what JOU're deciding,"
she explained. "You don't know bow
it'll change your life and whether
you'll be happy about. it."
SHE AND BEil husband debated
whether to have children "for a loog,
drawn-out period and ultimately we
decided to take the plunge. It really
was a leap of faith."
Such soul-searching is not unusual.
The baby debate raises questions
that can alter a couple's relationship
and lifestyle for a lifetime. Saying
yes means more responsibility, less
freedom. Sll'Ytng no m ay mean
second thoughts when it's lob late:.
Have I r:niased an incomparable ex-
perience? Will I be alone when I'm
old?
"I see women in their late 30e Just
going bananas trying to decide if
they can afford a baby -chance
their lives, their careers, their mar-
ri a 1es," said Sharon Bermon of
Counseling Women in New Yorlr:.
IJl'.i Ol'llEa '11MES -before the
pill, before feminism arid the two-
career family -havina babies wu
almost automatic, the normal thing
to do.
Jn tbe early 19509, the a veraee cou·
pie produced their first baby within
11 moatba after marri:11e. Today,
couplee wall an average ol snen
moatba lonier. And they are bavina
fewer cblldren; the birth rate bu
reaebed a historic low of 1.1 blrtha
for eacb woman.
"One ol the happiest th1np ln my
Uf e lt tbat we were ao lt:DOl'ant when
I wu ~ that I never even uked
whether I would have babiel," nid
ludltb BardwlckL~'-a tJnlventty ol • · lllcbican peycbo .... t •Ad mother of
th.~.
t .
Slnee 18, the number ot women
bav .... ftnt babl• betw._ ..-JO
ancl II bat dropped II peremt, ac. cordilll to the -Nationul ~ for
Heal&ll •tJtUee. Bat tbe Dumber
laaYiaS tbeJr ftnt bet ... • aM •la
._, Jl pelftDt; betWMD JO ... M11t'1
up II per a wt
I
Women who live alone should list
Baby clock keeps ticking
IT'S COMMON today for a woman
lo have kept the question of
childbearing oo the back burner dur-
ing her 208,'' said Pamela Daniels of
the Wellesley College Center for
Resear ch on Women. "It's also
natural for the issue to arise al about
age 30."
The surge of interest is tinted to
woman's reproductive clock, which
s lows in .the 30s and stops at
menopause. Though m edical ad-
vances have pusMd back the a1e
frontiers of chHdbearing, risks rise in
the 308.
Partly because of biological dif.
ferences, men and women view the
declsloo to have children differently,
Millions of women post-
poned childbearing to
devote their 20s to
education, career and
marriage. As they
enter their 30s, many
hear the insistent
ticking of a baby clock.
experti say, addin.a to the complexity
and temion of mak.iq the choice.
"WBEN 888 &EACBES menopame, be ea.D IWJ cbanp bil
mind. Sbe can't," aald Howard
Oaofaky, a s-ycblatrlat at tbe Men·
nlqer ~doe ID Topeka, Kan.
'She'• more aware of the time
cloell."
Thlrty-o1i•·Y••r·old Barbara
Wbltebouae •ne up ber Job u an of· flee mau,. ID Waalliqton wheD
her infant dauebter W'U born.
''I WM a little IMl'VOUI aboat qult-
tint, ..... Nici. "My job .... "'7 de-ftlandina ... J io.ed my wan. I wu
concerned that my batbud would.
rtad me "--'•• U I •ll.1.ed bome wttb
-.... ' I' · a bab)'. ·
.... taaed aDd talbd aad ........
.My b..._. I-a to waat Udl bebtu m~b •I did t![ I coalda, baW. doM
It. I'm too lmn ... I'",.. w wbo,_....,.~atboale_.I
,
tbetr .ftnt lDIUal or -.,._. )et -• ~t:..':8 .. ftnt .... ).a tbe pbcme boa On m•Hbos, tbey lboald add tfe
name ol a fteUtloul roommat.. .•
Womm wbo drt" alone lbould t..,.
man'• tiez pipe or 10me otber male ttem ~
Pie dnhonud, .. well u • a~
"Pleue Call Police" aillf Ill the trunk bl
caae of a breakdown.
•as. LEVY ,ALSO demomtrat" a
number ol penoaal weapom and pl"CMe·
tion devices, aucb u mace and CS 1u dil-
penaen, 1>0llce wb.laUes and freon 1briek
alarnu.
Of these, 1he recommenda •l•in•t plastic, as opposed to metal, police
whistles ("You can·t liear them m a auJ>.
tertanean 1ara1e.") ana mace, which abe
clalma ta ineffective a1ainlt black U •
sallants and those on alcohol or drup.
If usault ls unavoidable, Mn. Le!)'
stresses the use of wbat abe callt
"penonal weaponf' and "body weapons.•>
Peraooal weapon1 are common1,.
carried items such u boob, shoes, t•
or a purse.
Body weapons include fingertips,
thumbs and the palm of their bands.
"Your whole body is an arsenal of
weapons," said Mrs . Levy. "It can save
your life."
Her students learn •'six (fightinc>
techniques along with the psychological
aspects -how to run, how to scream, bo•
to talk," said Mrs. Levy.
A WOMAN'S response to threat of as-
sault must vary according to bee
personality, she explained. "There are
women who are fighters and women wbo
are screamers and women who are not,"
said Mn. Levy.
Of'FICIALS AT the Garden Grovf'
school di.strict have expressed doubt about
funding for the course. The $U per student
fee does not cover course expenses, Mn.
Levy explained. .
If tbe class is canceled, she said she
would look for another place to hold it.
But that hasn't happened yet and pros-
pective students can still obtain informa-
tion oo tbe course by calling tbe district's
adult education center at 638-6291.
know what tbeir buabanda are clmq at tbe cllftce ...
While the decision to have children
welabs leu bearib' on mea, u:perta
say mm worry more about bow their
offspriq will fare when they are old,
or U they die. ·
FO& SO•E couples, the question ot parenthood b so troublln1 ''the
easiest way to cope is not to mate a
decision," said Mn. Bardwiclt.
"When you weigh it, it comes out
SO-SO. So you think about it tomorrow.
hoping it will come out •3-57.
"I think many people are hoping
an external event will make the de-
cision for them -a promotion or dis-
covering they hate being with a
friend's new baby."
Though some couples still face
pressure from friends and in-laws,
today the real pressure to have
babies may be internal, experts say. · /
"TBE&E IS FOil a woman always
a feeling that she's working with that
fertility cycle, a finite one," said
Ma1eie Scarf, author of "Unfmisbed
Business," a study of depression in
woman. "She keeps thinking, 'Gee,
am I not going to have this ex-perience? lf I 'm tbe corporation
president al SO, will it be enough?
Will I feel barren?' "
The human.body is desiped, after
all, to carry on -to continue the CY· ~·
cle by producin1 children. Many feel ~
the same as the man who told Mn. ~ •
Daniela be thought it would be "pre-:· sumptuous to resist." ·
Some researchers have found that
manr women don't feel they're adult
unti they've stepped into their
motber'1 1boea. One who felt that
way wu Sbaroa Bermon, the New
York counselor, who was 30 when her
only child wu born 10 yean •to.
\
'.•· ' .. ONCE I HAD a baby, I could atop-~ putting evM'YthlH off and cet down ...,.
to buaineu;r ibeiaJd. "I didn't feel I~.,..
wa1 aown up . . . until I bad a child." -· --
Mn. Berman decided to have her
babJ after mucb poetponemeat, u
1be waited for an "eu1 time" to in-
terrupt ber career. Sbe 1"Dt abud
after dee'diq there wo.ld be no COD· , •
veAient time.
''Tbe qUlltioD DOW La wbJ I haven't
bad a MCCIDd baby," IM aaid. "I'm waiting qala." ·.
AT .. ft 18 NOT too la• far Mn. .,
Berman to ba" uotlMlr dll.N. Bu& •
maQ coupa. are lonD_... bJ a
deaclliM Mt muda eartMr. •
''The metal ll6olollcal dodt ... ::·
for..._ M •• 11 been•t • •·~ th• ....... dedal" ,.... ....... : Mn.~ ............ , ....... ~·
tbat the •.Pparatua wm ,_., or •
IO ........ Jflt'a.ot..t• ...... •• ~,..U taJ ta..t'a Mt tM UM.
TOMOnW: Mt IC f 11 ..... •*Mlf
'\
,
I
NANCY BALDWIN (RIGHT), GUESTS
Clalre Roblneon and Stan Taylor
Horoscope
WEDNESOJ\ \',NOV. 26
Ry SYONF:Y OMARR
i ARIES (Mar. 21 Apr. 19): Emotiona l
r e ponses tend lo do minate logic. Young
pc sons make demands, not all of which are pr ctlcal.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Expand
pe sonaJ horizons. look beyond the immediate.
PotentiaJ 1s gre ater than originally anticipate<f.
Gd nini, Sagitta rius natives figure prominently. I G F.MINI <May 21 J une 20)" Highlight
\·c·tsntilitv. <evo1c1 Sl·allen n~ forces. check rnqssages w h1<'h relate to possible s ho rt
J'11trncy
• ('l\NCf:R <J unt• 21 July 22J Money comes
lrnm "urprist' :-.ourc•t• Ti ming, judgment and m ·
1111tion provP accurate You make new contact
which could lead to "something big."
LEO (July 23-Au~. 22): Obt.1~· hint from
Caucer message. Gel off sidelines d into "the
ga rp e... Emphasis on per&0nallt special ap-
pe~rances and recognition of unique talents.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22): Period of
seclusion proves beneficial. Don't permit
"psychic vampires" to clutter plans, thoughts.
You have rare opportunity to glimpse behind
scenes.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0 ct. 22): Friendship is
transformed into important relationship. Focus
on production, added responsibility, money and
love. A wish is fulfilled. SCOJlPI() <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Study Libra
message for valuable hint. Finish rather than
initiate project. Look beyond the immediate -
focus on major toals . One who "pulls strings"
will de<:ide ln your favor.
SAGITfABRJS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You gain
enlightenment which enhances potential. Ac·
cent on possible journey, publishing project and
wider areas of influence.
1ldt over the fntlvitlee Feb. 38, following in the
lootetept ol o&ber llardl Gru lum.lnaries such as Hueea ..... , m, Leoa Lr• and lln. Walter
D.&.GIMla.
Tbe news waa proclaimed during the Sales
and R..tal Council's spedal gallery opening and
booklta"eaaleatthemuaeum.
.... &.ban 150 guests were there to enjoy the
evenl"I, which included wine and a buffet of hon
d 'oeune. -""'•• well as baraalns from the booklb'e.
Read.IDI tlM prOC!lamatlon were "«:ourt
jesters" ._.,. .. Zaepfel and Darey SIMce,
both10.
The two hoGoreet are indeed d~ervlng o( the
tribute. Mrs. Turnbull, laq uaociated with the
museum, baa been curator ol ex.bibitiona slnce
1977 and Hester, who baa a gallery named after
him, hu been a member of the board of trustees
for six years and treasurer for rive.
If you want to a~tend the Mardi Gras Ball
you 'd better eet your tickets now. Last year they
were sold out in December. Reservations are be-
ing accepted at $4S per person, according to
chairman AM Satla. Call 673-3204 or the museum
at 759-1122. Suaa Jarvie is chairman of the Sales
and Rental Council.
.lames and Nucy Baldwbl have a new home
in Emerald Bay and they bad a Greek-themed
housewarming to s how it off.
Guests were greeted with a glass of Ouzo the
traditional Greek apertif, and then led doWn a
spiral leakstalrway to restive Greek music by Bill
Soteropou.loe and his Bouzoukia Orchestra.
It
Bappentng•
By Judith Ol~t>n
As the guests munched on Greek hors
d 'peuvres, ranging from feta cheeses to stl\lffed
grape leaves. the lntttlor designers, c•atre
Roblucm and S&a• Taylor, described the features
of the home.
Then there was more. Adtu Karraaoftbe In·
tersection presented a performance of Greek
dancing and there was a full Greek dinner pre-pared by IDU lt.oberCa.
And the evening still wasn't through yet. Mrs.
Baldwin rustled up a birthday cake for her
husband's 42nd birthday, and then everyone ad-
journed to the moonlit deck for traditional Greek
folk dancing.
Enjoying the jam-packed evening were Mr.
and Mn. Aadloay llobo, llr. and Mn. ROii J'oeU,
Dr. and Mn. Robert Moatcomery, Mr. ud Hn.
Doag Slmpeoa, Mr. aad Mn. Vlace McGaiJIJleu,
Mr. and Mn. John Elliot, Dr. ud Mn. Walter
Alston, MJ'. ud Mn. Bry CaDDOD and Mr. •ad
Mrs. Dave Kelly.
Reed ud Rita Sprinkel or Newport Beach are
celebrating the Thanksgiving holidays with
FEATURING -
1..-.---
frtendainColoradoandUtab.
They now are vlaltlng Haupe&er aad Blrl)Ua
Baas (he's Conner execuU ve chef of the Jonathan
Club in Los Angeles) In Woodland Park, Colorado,
then they'll go to Park City, Utah to ski with Edu i
and KftlDetll 11ptoa from San Diego and enjoy the
Tiptons'newcondominium. ,
When the Sprinkel& return home they will
plan the.ir wardrobes for the inauguration of
Pre1Jdeat•lect Ronald Rea1an ln Washington,
D.C. ~
Henry Segentrom has received a Golden City
Award for his efforts in "helping enhance the
quality of life" In Santa Ana.
The awards are presented every two years by
the Santa Ana Kiwanis, Rotary and Lions clubs .
RoulUle Pemberton, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Alvta Ole of l,,.J&suna Hills, has been elected to
Deltas at Mount S'L Mary's College for 1980-81.
Deltas is the officiaf service sorority for the col·
lege's Doheny campus. Miss Pemberton will help
host events in the historic Chester Place.
Acacia Rebekah Lodge celebrated its 40th an-
niversary recently. According to Oma La11lter, a
charter member of the Huntington Beach lodge,
20women were on the original roster .
Since the ball has been sold, the reunion was
the last in the original facility.
Theater audience dances Celebrate the
llollclaJs with a Old-fashioned, arms-around-partner dancing inspired third act
By MARY JANE SCARCELLO
Of the DAiiy Pll .. Sutt
First Nighters at the Laguna Moulton
Playh~use gathered Friday evening for a pre·
play dinner at the Cordon Bleu restaurant in
Laguna Beach.
Greeting diners were Lloyd and Celine
Milne (she's president of the First Nighters' As·
sociation) and Laguna Beach Mayor and Mrs.
Wayne Baglin.
AFTER DINN ER , everyone adJourned to
.. Ballroom." the theater's second production of
the season.
Orange Coast College's John Ferzacca
directed the musical, which is based oo the
drama "Queen of the Stardust Ballroom."
Production numbers flowed with old·
fashioned, arms-around-your-partner dancing
and inspired a special "third act."
ACTORS AND dancers encouraged au .
dience members to come onstage for dancin1g
after the performance.
Lights twinkling off a mirrored ball abov•?
the stage gave the set an a uthentic ballroom
feeling.
Among those enjoying the big band sounru;
were Mrs. Adrien Pelletier, Mrs. Georg•~
Thomas, Mildred Cornelius, Mr. and Mrs . Rudy
Burton and Esta Bruggiere.
•ewlmap!
Results are always the sanie
Everyone tries to be serious about 1t and sympathetic
For celebrities whose
ever y malady must be
shared with the free
world, there should be a
code name for hemor·
rboids.
Although it's a condi·
lion that seem s too
''comm(>n" to be as-
sociated with presidents
and third basemen in
the World Series, it does
occasionally happen and
the results are always
the same.
Everyone tries to be
serious about it and
sympathetic, but there's
an unmistakable twinkle
in Cronkite's eye, a
headline that is catchier
than most, and you just
know that somewhere
the sufferee wilJ receive
two or three anonymous
Titanic Lifesavers to sit
on.
M' a y b e l ' m to o
sensitive at)oul this, but
1 never permitted m y
children the heartbreak
or diarrhea. \Vhenever
they returned to school
after an absence and
needed a note of e x-
Erne a
Bontbeck
plana t ion I prudently
opte d f o r "ups e t
stomach." One teacher
circulated a rumor that
it was because I did not
know how to spell diar•
rhea, but she was quite
vici9us and thank good-
n ess did not have
tenure.
To be honest , hemb
. . . that word . . . gives
the celebrity a human-
ness I am not ready to
admit to. In my heart, I
have never be)iev~d that
Miss America sweats.
Robert Redford bleeds
when he shaves, tbe
Pope steps in chewing
gum , or Sophi a Lore n
gets an anchovy stuck in
her front teeth
Why, you ask, does the
preH have to print l( at
all? Became. )'OU ellly duck, accord.ina to the
First Amendment, it ls
your God-given right to
know if your hero is sit·
ting on a w h oopi e
cushion from the waist
down and acting like all
1s well with the world
from the wa ist up.
Also. there is an un -
celebrity will not appe~1r
a t an event because of a
case of . I don't know
... Creative Sitting, the
Tblrd Bat:eman's Dis-ease, or MNnetbiq.
Maybe 9(aahington
could come up with a
l\&me for it. After all.
people who call a defeat
a "winning streak in r€'-·
mission" or refer to a
seam a s a "shift in
power and resources··
c an come up with
something.
written law that hemor· p.---------.
STDTmwAT SPICW l&TIS!
Why ~ brighten up your lifestyle?
Of ama&Eany tmprowe the way you lex*, leel and
appeal to~. tt's entatat>'e and easier than
ever thn>lq, Powers wortd famous expertise.
Ca11 today for the special Holiday course scttedule.
That's the spirit'
r hoids sell pape rs I RUffELl'S
have personally ad -PDmll lntlNIT & mllll~S
mired the people who UPHOLSTERY
have visited Mexico and we-'f• w_. ORUGE COUNTY
come home with con -"-•If 3 lio & C t O stipation. It does'n 't sell ' 1 tu.._..,.••'-wn oun ry, range
as many papers as dlar-C..,•MeM -541-1116 (714) 547-8228
rhea, but it~ class ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ real class.
I'm not kidding about
the code word. One of
these days celebrities
will be s pared the
humlliatlon of headlinea,
news bulletins, and elgbt
seconds of a Carson
monologue. The word
will go o ut that the
Women to be polled CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19): Obtain ac·
counting; check stock on hand. be aware or in·
ventory. Be skeptical or one who promises
"something for nothing." AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 18): Emphasis on
legal matters, public rel ~tion~. ability_ ~o
diversity and chance to wm allies. Gerr.m1,
Sagittarius persons play important roles.
SACRAMENTO (Capitol) -In an
effort to determine the problems and
concerns facing today's women, the
California Commission on the Status
of Women bas begun the first phase
in a comprehensive s urvey of the
state's female population.
learn women's needs and to find
ways to meet those neech.
Commission Cbalrman Irene
Hirarao said the survey ia vital to the
comnliasion in order for it to better
servel women. She noted that the in-
formation the survey generates will
be used to lay the groundwork for
legish~tion and other action to ad-
dress the problems It reveals.
.......
5 uh 7 oz. Safari .. Summer
S ausage. 4 oz. Robusto
Triangle, 4 oZ. Taco Triangle.
two 2 oz. CheeN ~eds. lo\
oz. Crac::Md Wheat Thins and
StraWbeny Bon Bons
PICES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20 ): Check basic
needs, be aware or required material and ac-
quiesce to review and revision. Aquarius,
Scorpio, Leo natives play key roles.
Adopted aa a 1980-81 priority by the
commlaaion at a recent San Fran-
cisco meeting, the survey will seek to
Nerves calmer at her niother's hoU8e
'I hate to see my mother come to dinner. I alwa-ys have splitting headaches ..
QEAR ANN LANDERS: You've
printed a few letters lately from
mothers complaining that they never
getl invited to dinner at their married
chl\dren's houses. How about printing
the~lher side or the problem?
I \Ill not the housekeeper my mother
is . !Her home is always immaculate.
M ifJe looks "lived in." Despite the clut-
te r ; my husband and I and our two sons
ha"e a wonderful, warm, happy home
life• and nobody complains.
every time my mother visits, '•he ma~es comments Uke, "Your draperies
nre. filthy. When did you last send them
outl tor cleaning?" or, "I see you
ha\(en't washed your wlndowt 'ltely."
Worse yet, she sometime• set.1 out the ,
sco)lrtnlf powder and atartl acnabbtng
the1 kitchen noor or clunb\I th• oven "b~cause f know you clDD't have tlme, <Sur. and it really nffdil to be doM."
Ann
Landers
but she doesn't hesitate lo make me feel
uncomfortable and inferior about mine.
Please tell all those mothers out there
to atop belng so critical. Maybe they'd
flnd themaelves more welcome. -NOT SO NEAT BUT CONTENT IN N.Y.
'DEAR CONTENT: Yoa &eld t.bem -
aad HI')' eff~yely, 1'1111JW a '-ch.
Aad.., I eu J•• .. ear die 1e1Uon
al'Otlild tlte --*" •• dley ..... tb1I di--,. .;~ A.a ... , I.~!
.... 8olM ..... ~ ..... It 1peueG 0................ .
when I get with a boy I freeze. It's like
my shoes are nailed lo the Ooor. Can it
be because I have always been the one
to lead?
I keep worrying that I will step on a
guy 's foot and c rus h his toe or
something. I weith about 180 pounds,
but I'm tall and I don't look fat. That's
another problem. Most guys are shorter
than I am.
When I get uptight. JllY bands get
clammy and I sweat a lot under my
arms. I just pour off.
Can you b'ive me some advice on bow
to be well-poised? -LINDA IN l
SHREWSBURY, N.J.
I
DEAR ~A: Yoe •ave Mftl'al pro-
•11•1, den. Fin&, JOtl .,.pt te...,, •aa~1u w1a ..,.., .. 1oe cu.-•.,
&19• •alllt VI leadl•I· s.c.i, '" a ,.,.._ .._. a ..... A J.1.19u..W "'---!..:::· ..... -~. Nes&,•a .............. . ti•• •re•••· Yea •H• aa aa•I·
•••• ..........-~ °'*9911 ......,
............. pt .....
MJ.Ot7Z .._.., 111 ,._..a fllot,,. t ... ...... ,.,
...... au ..
Two 1 lb BEEF
S TI CK• S ummer
Sausage•. 8 oz.
Edam Slick. 8 oz.·
• Sharp Cheddar Stick.
7 oz. Plain Gouda
and Strawberry Bon
Bona.
ZJ.tl ...,.,._..._...._..,
~ ..........
t lbate to have my mother come to dln·
ne~I aJways have • epUtttng headache
by be time the leaves. It'• much eJ.SI«
on y nerva when our family loet to
he bowte. The woman wouldn't dream
or 6rtttclztnc her frl nds. housekeeplq,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a '1.rl .
who 'WW be 14 yean old in three months
and one week. I want to be a pod
dancer. I ~ 1weU wtta ctrta, but
"' ........ A •11•1ru& ........ fte I
,.... wll .,..e W. ... ,._. aM '=========::;::::;:::::::=:I ~ ................. le .. ftnl. . • JI
.1 :, h ' t ' •
SHOE
"What you need Is your own
urban renewal program!"
MOON MULLINS
MISS PEACH
'IANUn
'UNKY WINKERIEAN
I REAU..<J ~'i IOX)(>.) IF
I SHOOU>'VE eoo;Hi AU.
OF ~ "UtKE<.>.5 !
~T ME I IT'5 ~GOIN&
R)R A GOOD C.AU5E f
I
l
I
9
ll·H
by Jeff MacNelly DRABBLE
,~,N~ II 'fM£ ~O
IS MUEP £U'tr Mt.
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
by Miii uurlus
0
~ """"'"'"',.,.,.. ,, "
DR . SMOCK
HMM··· ARE. '/OJ
SURE 1Hl5 I$
ACOUR.SE IN ~
ENGLISH? 11,. • , ........ ~,.... f~ f ~~
THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane GORDO by Gus Al'licA
DENNIS THE MENACE
t
--------~--------· rJIU(f'/ AH
~TOPUT A~A IN~W ~IMr.DOMf
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
WAl~!.e-ooiTA HAVE: W·WA1l:R! ..
Slf\IKIN' FASi. .• ~E:R'(1HI~ OOIN'
~-1Jl.ACK .. :T}415 IS •• 1r. ..
NANCY
SLUGGO, YOU PROMISED
TO CLEAN
YOUR
HOUSE
by Harold Le Doux
NE~ l>IU.!:I HAVE A l ENO NCY
ro er1cx. MATT! YOVU FINO
THERE. ARE TEN OF THEM !
by Tom K. Ryan
At..MOS1, PARP ! rrs 1Ht: ONE ,A/1Jt7
WHA'S'Ai! A PAUL.Ir./ L.IGH'f ONl-Y Ml! uUSi HAP MY RHINE-
IN 1}if PARKNESS! H:Ctt)Nltl. s-nmes ANC71l:E'TH SIM:>NIZE:V i
M-MAVlJi: rrs .• HeAv'aJ!
BUT
YOU'vc
ALREADY
LOAFED
HALFA
DAY
11-~
"Isn't that new ironing board hard on your legs?"
by Kevin F ----.. ... .it'l-1'
1'0 "°'~ Wf 11)1'1''4
~O'I.
by Lynn Johnston
1fiE~e ISN'T f\
SMlJTT'{
800KIN I
!HELDT.
)°ODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 58 Yearn
1 POie 59 Of an age
6 Weapon part 61 Glnh
UNITED Feature Syndtcate
Monday's Puule Solved
10 Holle< 62 Thought Fr
14 Vestment 63 Salvage
15 Laod unit 64 Love
16 Hint 65 Eum
11 Sign up 86 Barracuda
18 8'itish gun 67 - -to
19 Weelt Prefaced
20 Nevada pass DOWN
22 Concealed 1 College gal
24 Hlghtandef 2 Famed car-
2e lntensdles toonlst
27 Catastrophe 3 Farm build--P."'I'!"
31 Catch •tng
32 Egg-Shaped 4 Stretch
33 Main points 5 Liberate
35 Existed 6 Owns
38 Half grOW1h 7 Deeds 29 Netve
39 Bargain 8 Emancipated 30 trrhates
t't'ents 9 " - - a ~ Auto
40 Ptllet o.nc." 35 Monsoon
41Flnish U) Named 36 Monl 's
42 Reigned t 1 Gi.dden nelghbOr
43 Card game 12 Light unit 37 Loom part
44 SllOOn 13 Engtllll city 39 Confidence
45 Calendar 21 Soak 40 Lift
word 23 ~ 42 Newfound.
47 Leeds astray 25 Authorized tand ~
51 Nldut 27 C~a 43 RCMP't -
52 Caution 28 Ruulan Ride
54 Glt1s name 44 AlloWenc:.
46 Pro -
47 Bowling
problem
48Waar.,.ay
49 Sand
mounds
50 Fig.ht
S3 Roof edge
55 Trimmed·
Scot.
5e COior
57 -Fielda.
b8ndlMdef
60 Rent
~. f't ·-
' Udneas
OPEC oil output bits 5-year low
, l'elalcle •ade 111 1rn.ee
NEW YORK (AP) -OU out-
pu& by OPr.c members Hnk to a
ftH·)'NJ' low of 15.'4 mllllon barrelt a day lo September
amid tbe war between Iran and
lr14 ud tallln1 world oll de-
mand, Petroleum lntelllcence
WMkly bu reported. The trade publication said a
drop ln oll consumption follow-ta& a 150 percent rise ln world
Dltl"oMwn prices since the end GI 11'11 r.ult.ed in f allinl output
~ Orpnilatlon of Petroleum
l:aportlq Countries members ·~-before the full effect of U.. Jniit.lraq war was fell."
Tm •ALY said lflls week tbat .,._ber'a OPEC produc-
UoD WM down Crom an averqe of•·• mlW~ '2-1allon barrels a day 1n JulY and Auauat and
w.aa otf 20.7 _percent from the
32.08 miWon barrels-a-day rate
ol September 19'1'9,
Tb• cartel's otl output was
eatlmated at 21.7 mllllon barrels
a day in the ftrat nine months of
1980. Tbe newsletter aaid the
averace was "1i.arply belo'ft' the
UUlUal 30 million barrels a day
averaae maintained over the
pa&1t seven yean except 1975.
when a worldwide recession
pulled it down to 27 .1 million
barrels a day.•'
::·~Three-wheeled prototype vehicle, made in Irvine by .~·A• Aerovtsions, was pictured recently ln Santa Barbara
while being driven from U>e Anleles to San Francisco
OPEN PRODUCTION com-
prised 58 percent of the non-
commwlist world's oil output ln
September. While the cartel's
production dropped, oll output in
other Western countries gained
5.7 percent from last year's level
to 18.19 million barrels a day,
• ·~L · where it was on display at the Northern Calilomia Im-
•tt!• ported Car Show. The vehicle, on tbe.fiflt leg of its test
, . •'•'•run, achie'ved 149.7 mile1 per gallon at a speed of 55 mph. . ~---~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~
r-" ..
-~ I';.
i'
'·'
'$50,000 to $sqo,Qoo.
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• lnt•r••• only P91yment.
'' lnc:o•• ·c.--cw . • R..Wentlal
Contact our
·-· laf-tlo• -me. fur vour financing noreds j
(714) 751M515 f
AMHqH HOllK ~·
230 Newport Centtt Onve
Deaten Plea N-pott 8HCh, I
c.J1fomta I
92680
[(llf=~QJ
Five promotions bave been announced by
Archive Corp., a manufacturer of tape products
for small business computers and word-processing
systems. They are Jfm Ryan, production
manager; Eric Barr, mechanical engineer ;
Sbeldoa CmualDgbam, supervisor of purchasing;
Nancy Jones, supervisor of material control and
Candy Weidner, supervisor of sales administra-
tion. The firm is located in Costa Mesa.
Development Strategies, Inc., a firm specializ·
ing in computer systems for fund-raising firms,
has recently opened in Laguna Hills.
Beverly Tllomp-., Ille., Newport Beach, bas
recenUy comrleted the prototype the .. elegant ..
nraioa of E Torito Mexican restaurants. The
Bosa COrona. wlt.b tbe finl lnltallationa scheduled
for Louisville, Ky. and Indianapolis.
Tllomu Gray has been appointed president
and chief operating officer of Zee Medical
Products Co .. Inc., Irvine .
Richard Kalferd has been
named executive vice president
for corporation development.
Charles Eaclaley, Adlns Zapara
and Cecil Proalx have been
named vice presidents of sales.
operations and administration
respectively . The firm
specializes in emergency
medical products.
Rldaanl C. Flemlag has joined the staff of
Peterson, Diehl, Quirk and Co., investment bankers
headquartered in Newport Beacb.
Carol Jorda•, Huntington Beach, Gwen St.
Clair, Santa Ana, and Coaale Ema, Lincoln, Neb.,
have been promoted by Laguna Furniture. Jordan
la customer service supervlaor in Lacuna. St. Clair
la customer services manager, Laguna, and Ellis
central marketing manager at the Lincoln
warehouse.
· Mhil Office
' For 120 Mo. P.O. Box. M191. Acgs. & Sec
3857 Birch, O.C. Aifpor1
MeW91art lemc•.
ca. 92MO (714') ~2287
• Ttle Post Box
Petroleum 1ni.w1enc. Weekly
Hid. The newsletter said American
oil output tn September wu up
2.9 percent from 1979 to 8.6
mlllloa barnla • day, whUe oU
output ln Mexico aur1ed 43.2
percent to 2. ~ million barrela
daily.
The Iranian-Iraqi war cut off
daily oil export.I of 3.2 million
"2·11Uon barrela from Iraq and
about 500,000 barrel• a day
from IJ'&D. la -late September.
Iran'• prewar production
averaaed 1.3 million barrell a'
day, whlle that of Iraq came to
3.4 mll\loo barrels dally. .
Last week, Industry sources ln
Beirut, Lebanon, said Iraq
be1an pumping oil to Turkey
tbrouah a pipeline that can
carry 700,000 barrela of oU a
day, wblle Iran be,u ablppinc
200,000 barrel• 0 on • d•J
throuiti a port at Lavu laland
tn tbe Persian Gull.
Saudi Arabia ~nd several
Penian Gulf alliee Jut month
raised their production about l
million barrela a day to help
replace the Iott suppllea.
Tarkey tales tiring
Rancher bothered by·same old questiom
LANCASTER (AP) -Thanksgiving
means different things to different people.
One of the things lt means to turkey rancher
Victor Ryckebosch la that the re~ers come
around.
"They usually ask ~bout the aame aa
you." he said. "They want to get the whole history and all. Actually, some of thia stuff
could beplcked up from another article."
"I don't know why they don't think of it
ahead of time," Ryckebosch said ln a recent interview. •"f1lla lan't an euy b\.'9lneas ln the
beat of yeara and it's to~gh lbi&'year and on
top or that J. Kave t.6 put up with all the re-
porters. It 1et1 kind of.diaeustlq."
Ryckebosch said his Thanksgiving vis-
itors normally want to know bow many
turkeys hla Lancaster Farms produce• an-
nually (2.5 million), how big the averace bird
is < 16-24 pounds), and what baby turkeys are
called (poults).
Ryckebosch is a genial man who bas
giv~n hla age as B2 in some lntervlewa but
declined to pick a number this year. He
acknowledaed. however, that he's seen hla share of turkeys.
"These questions are asked quite often,"
be said. ''It's kind of like the game shows on TV."
llYCKE808CB SAYS reporters often ask
a bout turkeys being stupid.
"They're not really that dumb," he said.
"l'VE BEEN IN THE business since the
1930s," he said. "I moved up here in the
Depression with Ma and Pa and bought the
ranch."
"But turkeys -they're still inclined to look at something bigger than them as their
parents. We're bigger than they are ao they
look to us as being their parent and we have
to be careful or they'll look ror us instead of
lopking for their feed and water. Maybe
that's one reason people think they're
For the last 25 years or so. says
Ryckebosch, reporters have appeared around
mid-November expressing interest i~
turkeys. stupid." ·
!MnoHE ~l<RI 11 Bent Fr BeyllMll lllM!lne ..,,,,pt,
&entlyL
=L.et> •. ~
Over The Counter
MASO UtllRgs
U \ltU\4 t S S~ HefvdF I ·~ 11'1 Holotlm UV. 3614 ~r 21v. n v. Horl1R1
JIYi n Hyettltll .... 1V. IMS lnl I 21v. 21~ lnfre lnO I 1 M• Intel t JO ·JOI/• lnlrCfN 11 llY> 1ntm1Gt 11 1911> l11MIW'11
JI"' n•• lnwrtll JI ll~• lweSoV1
JS"'-36 Jemsor l l~• Jerico •
'
.lt I .01 J. l ... IJ. o.oe"
MUTUAL FUNDS
l:c~nc ft:~ ~t '"~~.:r :g:E irn "'V'W:,""*~.4 ~I I0.54 NL lllel Jt... NL =Bel 2U~ =uv ~ 1Hf ,:~Ji Gitt Sec 9. u NL JP lnco 1.61 1.14 HI Yid 11.21 NL Jenus 11.1.S NL Lt ""'" 1.• NL Joly\ Hencock; . fllwltn II.OS NL Bond lUS 103 S8i.m I 06 NL ~ 12." U.01 Tllrlft 9.U NL ~ U7 t ... Tr9fllCI J:J.90 NL Te11 I• t.M 10 ...
lr=lltnClel p·~; NL ~ F.,u:, NL
ridut1 .S.01 NL lrcom 1.IJ I JJ
ncom ''°' NL Gtow 14.M ... oo 11 ln'l'tltort: HI Yid t.02 t.61 ~Af) IS.o3 IUO Mllf'I 9 7.61 1.06
o U7 9 .• 9 t:" 1UJ 1S.1t II 11.u IUS mm 22.41 2U9 "'°"' 1.01 7.r: tell 14,S1 IS.'2 t.SO 7. I Tot fltt 1U3 U S7 ,51 UI ICeYlt-Funcr.: ex Ill l.U 1.9' CUI 91 14.22 lU.S W~ll lUI NL Qll 82 1'.1' 11.7'
i'ld Gth SM UI ~ 114 1.11 t .OJ Grouti: K1 7.70 ,.42 U2 NL Kl 7.IS .II
14.SS NL ti :i~ l2.4J Mulel 10.19 11.14 ·. 1 ... IU7 lpeel 2U7 NL 1 ,ts ll.t 7
r8"1!11n 1!: 1.......-nc 4.St s.02 AGE • I.ft MMMcl'luMtt C.: .,_ • .. ,,.. 12 •• 1 .....
OHTC I r, 't· MMt 1.Ul h .M 8fir." ::~ 4:fi L.e&"f': ~~ IU.1 ~~ ;:.s J:11 ~ 'i::t =t = '.:tt 1f::i Ufit 1111 lo:ff 11~1\ Wllllt lllCI t='a 10.to NL f=rr 1t.U 1a~ ~t Se~~~ =L l2iAo at~~~·" L
.tS t Mfl"• 1·!t J:H
-=---.L:'Y _ _:_:I: L It'!! I I :a; t!.14 ell IMft .JS 2 ... 1 II "L U..en tre:
.I
v,. .....•• .,..
ii.,;;.
MolClub Loc:llE•P CSM Snl Mol'IAvln St .. rMf 111101. wt K1ne1n1 Ruco ~
W•rrfltet o "'9ecor MlcrwRK APt<lndun llrwTom I Ok..0 I OeutRtt lntmtU. llKal'INJ
0.TOtftH EledSy ~$Cf> rioo.'kwt PtMPec
·~ ·o;g Pei.
>'ft • I Up .0.0 J .... "' Up .. , 2 15-1• .. 1).lt Up .. , Ml'I • t Up at.j ~ + 1 ... Up JU 1m : ~ ~ :-1 D'• • 1"" Up 11.I 31, + VI Up 18,J
'' • • .. Up t1 9 ,.. • 1" Up ll.1
.,._ • '• Up at •~ • '• Up u' 12 • l'n Up U 3 711,. • ''• Up 13.7 l't • ,,,, Up 1l 6 1"" • t't Up 12.' l5 + 4 Up 12 t
5' I • .. UP 12.1
•' i • 11 Up 12.S
41 1 • '" Up 12.S • • .. Up 11 6 2<1 • .... Up 11.1 ,~ • ,,,,, Up 11.
11 • 1 Up 10 f
DOWNS ... ~·h -°'t
2 5-t• -• 1• ,,., 1
• 1 •') "-'~ -~ l'i· -'h l \f· -.,.,
J"1 -"' 1•• -, 1\'t -,
J -v.
J -"' 2 .... -"' 44 -Sh ... _,
2\o\ -v. 2'i'I -v. 1J -..... , .... -'" 22"' -1\IJ
JV. -"' ~ -\Ii ... -s 3 .. ,. -~
Pel.'
Off 20.1 Off .... Off ,,,,
Off u l Off u l
Off ll.• Off 13.J Oii 13.3 Off 12 s Off 11 . OH ti.I OH 11.1 Off ,,,,
OH 10.1 Ott 10 1 OH 10.7 Off 10.5
Ott 10.S OH 10.3 Ott 10.0 OH 10.0 Off 10.0
Off 10.0 Off ... Off u
,.
NYSE COMPOSfl'E TRANSACTIONS .
I
81 lllL'l'ON llOl&OWI it .
• Wida everyoae aDd b1I bratber ruDAllll these day1, you
ml1bt apeet. certain people to be cubblt ln on the craze.
Por f'llmple: lllUen ol l'UDDIQI •boet. For another ex·
ampl•: pubU1ber1 of runnln1 ma1ailnea. And •till another: podiatrists.
I'm not sure about the pocU1trl1ta, but the 1hoe
manufacturers and pubUabers are certainly doln1 well.
'!be bipest name lo ruqn1na ahoea Is Nike, marketed
by a company hued ln Beaverton, Ore. They botd an
eatlmated ISO percent of the U.S. market for rwuting alloea.
In 1974, t.beir 1alee were $5 mlllion, In 1m, tbey were $29 mllllon. Now they are
approachio1 UOO
million.
The No. 2 brand in
the nmnlnf·thoe market
is Addidaa. This ia a
German company with a
market share of about 20
Money
Tree
percent. Their sales have also skyrocketed, butexactflcurea
are not available. · ·
The No. 3 brand is Brooks, made by Brooke Mf.c. of
Hanover, Pa. They bold about 15 percent of the market. lo
1977, their sales were $1 million. Now they are $30 mlWOD.
Runners, like other addicts, need their own ma1•~es
to support their habit. And these publications •Jtave
mushroomed. During the past tour yean, Runner's lt'rld
bas expanded from a circulation of 70,000 to 400,000. ,.. ,
The Runner, which is owned by Hollywood's MCA,
boasts a circulation of 165,000. Running Times bu a
circulation of 400,000. And then there's Running, a seven·
year-old magazine that limped along with a circulation of
6,000 but is now aiming for 100.000.
IT'S NOT ALL sweetness and light, however, in the
running business. While joggers may smile and greet other
joggers when their paths cross, the people who are trying
to make money out of this obsession are at each other's
throats.
Much of the controversy swirls around the magazine
Runner's World, published by Bob Anderson from Moun-
tain View. They do an annual survey that rates running
shoes. In recent years, the top-rated brand baa been
Brooks. This top rating was clearly one of the factors in
the explosive sales growth of Brooks.
Nike naturally disputes this finding. They have ac·
cused publisher Anderson of tampering with the survey
data. And they have said publicly that there's something
s us picious about the relationship between Brooks and Run-
ner's World.
LAST YEAR, NIKE yanked all of its advertising from
Runner's World as a protest. And now they have bought
their own magazine, Running, to compete with Runner's
World. Running is published from Eugene, Ore.
Anderson responded to Nike's charges by filing a $6
million libel suit. He called it "sour grapes," pointing out:
"Nike never complained about the rating system when
they were on top."
A Nike spokesman told a reporter from Advertising
Age : ~·we can't wait to get those guys in court."
r
Sii-
HEW YORK IAP) -H-y £ Hum1n iOver lodey 519.UO, uo to.U.
E r>9etllard •llver 51t.300, up 50.0U.
leb<tuled tit-U0.311, uo to 20.
\
•
'TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS.
Loelc .....
Tb~t·s not Jeonlfer Hart, though it IS
Stefanie Powers, who plays the role. giv-inc Robert Wagner the eye on "Hart to
Hart .. toni&ht at lOon ABC. Channel 7.
I ,Na.Y F'EUO
IHANANA
au.t: 8tephenja Miiia.
• HOLLYWOOO
IOllAMI
I 'N::tf THI MUie
AU. .. THI 'Miil Y Edith addl a Mnlor<ltlnn
wedding and a pair ol
hc>Mymoo11er1 10 Ardlle'a
pracloul flettlng trtt> l)lalla.
• MACNU. / LIHMft
MPORT
• NEW'8CMlCK
Cl) P.M. MAGAZJHI
An 11-~-old actr .. ·1
controveralal ad cam-
paign; e hang glider WflO
hU lNmad up with I
hlWk.
1;00. Cl) A CIWWE
MOWN THAMC80MHO
Animated. Chat11e Brown
II one. 8JOa1r1 put on the
apol when Peppermint
Patty lnvll• heraalf and
her friend• to hit h0u11 tor
Thanl!IQl\llng dinner. (R)
• IO YEAM CWTV
COMEDY'S GMATEIT
HITS
•• MNlf"t ~ft ...................
~on the TV 9llfne .,_ "au-t F« AO.,." . ..,. ....... ~~·
C1t151 GeotOt ...... Oen-
,_,. Blott. A ~ een.-
dlM Mowldl .,.. 10 "'*'
off an ....ina1'on plot
llOlllnat Aumlal'I Pramler
l<OIYll" wn-. ht II villtlnQ
~(211ttl • ,.M.MAGAZINI
An 11.......,~ actr .. ·1
conlroverllal ¥ c:em·
pelgn; • hang gllder whO
"" tMINd up with •
f'lawk; Ooro1hy K1t1n1
malt• a quite wllhoul -
Ing; eecic. Cen01 on ¥909-
tarlan dlatl, Linda Harn.
~Lalla TahOe.
• MOVE
• • • • "Rad Sun" (19711
ChatlM Bronaon. Allin
Oalon. A lrlln, robber i.
doubl..croued by hi•
partner, WflO ateal• a
......., eword from a Jap-
-am~ n well u all tha gold from the
robbery. (2 hre.) ·~ "Tha lives Of Tha Stara"
With Iha help of computer
ant!Nltlon and llunnlng
aalronomlc* ert, Of Clt1
Sagan anows hOw atara
are bo<n, live and die. O
1:30 . Cl) THAHKIOMNO
IH THE I.AHO Of OZ
Animated. Whlle Chuing
al1er 1 mlalng Thankeglv·
Ing pla. Dorothy once
again runt Into the Wizard
of ~ and and• up on •
air~ lldvan1ura. •o LAVEAHf& IHIALEY
Tha glr'la' 11r11 day In Loa
Angetee la marred by an
.-tllquake and ahodtlng
,_. from Lenny and
SQ\Jlggy.
• M0A•&•H
Hawkeye and Hot Lipa go
lo the 8063rd 10 demon-
atrela Illa erterial ,,.,,..
~I operation. (Pert 1)
• NOVA
"Thi Weter Crllla" An
examination ol ac;ld rain in
Iha Adlrondecl!I. water
racycJlng In Calllornle and
contaminated well1 In
MAIMChusetta Is pr1Mnl· -...ad.o •
TUBE TOPPERS
NBC 8 8:00 -30 Yean of TV
'Comedy's Greatest Hlta. A aalute to
comedy on television with bosta Dick
Van Dyke. Carl Re~er and Bea A.rt.bur.
KHJ e 8:00 -"Russian Roulette."
George Segal stars in th1I movie drama
about a Royal Canadian mountie who
tries to prevent the assauinatioo of
Soviet Prem.le~ Kosygin.
CBS • 9 : 00 -''Little Lord
Fauntleroy. Ricky Schroder (of "The
Champ") plays the title role in this TV
remake of the classic movie (see story.
photo below).
-under hMYy er1lllety
llfa tn enemy tenl1ory. with
HIWkeye recaMng e leg
wound. (Per1 21 CD NOVA
"Thi Waler Crlalt" An
examination of acid rain In
the Adltondaek•. waler
racycllng In CalllOfnla and
contaminated wet11 In
MlllUICOOsetts II pr_,1.
;~VIE * • * "Liiiia Lord
Feunllilfoy" ( 1936) Freddie
Bartholo<Mw, Mickey Roo-
ney A little Brooklyn llld
beComM. proper Brlllah
lord wtlh Impeccable tlUla
and mannws. (2 11ra.>
9:30 8 9 TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT
A cluamate ol Sarah • lol·
lows her home and trill to
latch ortto the lamlly
• M"A"S"H
NeMcater Qete Roberta
ratum1 10 the 40771h to
updlle Kore•n Wer condl·
Ilona. (Part 1)
• TI4E800YIN
QU£ST10N
"Netlva Medicine.. Dr.
Jon•lNn Miiiet conlrUIS
the Pf'ACllce of modern
medicine In an Englilh
town with the tradllionlll
meglcat ayalem ol the
Aland• tribe In Alrlea. O
JOHN DARLING
10:00 8 THE ALAN KING '
THAHK8GMNG anew.
Alan King •• a utlflc
look 11 wtla1 Americana
l\ava 10 be tNnlltul for on
the -ol Than~Mng. 11:::-TOHAAT
Jenn!Mr .. kidnapped by
lllllalnl ""'° mlalak• her '°' another-. • M•A•t•H
NawlCUI« Cleta Robaft•
return• to the 4077th to
update Korean War condl·
llonl. (Part 2)
• IHOEPEHDEHT
NETWORK NEWS G NEWSCHEa<
10:30·~
"Dal Mero Coruon" The
ballad• and lyrlcal love
eong1 In the Taau·Me•l-
can Nor1ena muliC tredl·
uonara~ CD THE800YIN
OUUTION
"Nellve Medicine·· Dr .
Jonathan Miiier contrHll
the practice or mo<Sern
medicine 1n an Engllsn
town witl1 the traditional
magical syetem of lhl
Aunde tribe In Alrtca. 0
11:001••Clla NEW9 HOl.LYWOOO
SOUAAE.8 8 NEWLYWED GAME
• M"A"S"H
• ONI.,... llVOND
"Dool'Mdey" TIM flt•t
N'll eon Of eedl r.rt of
DonMloof • --'°die ..............
• MllCIOl.M ....,
"PMllW &yet.,.." An
~ of the llM of •o••r energy without.
~ Ot i-Ind ._.ur.
'"' eatl.llll ...,,..,... of AMllw IOlar hMtlng .. ·-11:80. Cl) LOU GMNT
Lou Mllrdlel for • mytta-
rtoue hlto WflO lolled an
......in.11on attempt. (Al
• TONGHT
Hoit: Johnny Cart0n.
Ou1111: Eydie Oorma,
M--MurilftY. ., ... ~~
lloa<H
The raid on Wentwof1h to
free Janet II In lull lwlng
when Er1Ca llMrfuptl It,
with dllMtrout raeulta.
·~ An aging matltlal .... out
to treip • band ol outl.lwl.
• HOGAN'S HEAOES
Hogan hu to dellYllf an
Important radio pan to the
underground.
• ITT AKEi A TitlEf'
• G CAPTIONB> ABC
NEWS
11:80. 9 MOVE * * '" .. A Fllltul 01 Oyne-m Ile" (1972) Jamee
Coburn, Rod Staiger.
-....oHT-
12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE
• YOU BET YOUR LIFE
Buddy Hadlett ll'IMtl a
pholo-joumallat, a man
whO wuti. alrplanae and
I a woman whO cool!• with
lnMCtl.
12:30 D TOMORROW
Guesll: vlollnl1t llzhak
P.,lmen; Chicken cur
Franil Pl'due; euthOr Dor·
othyG~
• MOVIE . *. "Genwatlon .. ( 1969) Oevld J__... Kim Darby.
• THEFBI
"Colllllon CourM"
• MISSK>N:
IMP08818LE
••• •mlNT NITWONCMIWI
tU>• (I) MOV9 •• ._. "All The Kind
• .,.,.,. .. (1t141 ~
9eneon, John Savaee .
1m• MCMI ··~ .. Shoct~" (1*1 8t'*1 .Whitman,
cetol L~.
t:IO. THI LONI MHCllll'
"Frtend In Need" .MCMI ** ''Trog" (1t701 Jo.I
CfMord, MICtiMI Gough. 2:001• NIWI MCWW ,
• .... "Tha UNnNblted"
(19t1) Mellna Mefc:ourl.
.i-Muon. "°I NIWI 2::26 NIWI
HO M0\11!
• * • "Tha Trulh About
Spring"' ( 1965) Hayley
Miiia, John Miiii.
2:861 = ••'A .. Look Who'•
Laughing" (1941) Edgar
Bergen, Lucille a.ti.
a:111 • MOVIE **'A "Band Of Angell"
(19571 Clark Gable. Sidney
Poitier.
4:00Cll MOVIE • • • "The Odden Sal•
mander" ( 19501 TrevOf
Howard, Herbert Lorn. 4:281 NlW8 4:30 MOVIE
• • "Kid Mltllona" ( 19351
Eddie CantOf. Ethel Mer·
Wedne•da11'•
Dayfhrte Mo11le•
11:00. *'"'"'The Trail
Beyond"' ( 1g341 John
Weyna, Verna Hlllle. A
-AflfRHOON-
12:00. * * * "Once MOfa,
With FeeUngl" ( 1960) Yul
Brynner, Kay 'l<endall.
• * * * "Gypay" ( 1963)
RONllnd Ruuell, Nllalle
Wood
a:00 a • • * "Eal'111quak•"
(Part 2) ( 1974) Char11on
Heaton. Ava Gardnw.
8:30 II * •.,., "Smolty .. I 1966)
FIM Parker, Olan• Hyland.
by Armatrong a Batluk
Claa1111el Ll•fl119•
8 KlllXT (CBS) Los Angeles .
DI<* Ven Oytta, Cerl FWn«
end BM Arthur are )olned
by an all·•lar c .. 1 lor a
.. 1u11 10 comedy ort televi·
alon.
9:00 8 CfTT\.E LORO
FAUNT\.EAOY
Rlctcy Schrod« and Alec
Guinness atar In the Ulle of
an Impoverished youngtter
whO Is swept lrom the
tenements of 19th-century
New York to the 11tate ot
hit Engtlsn grandlathlf
D O THREE'S
COMPAHY
NOC HA5 ASKED JOHN
TO WORK ON THIS ~
M.ACY'5 THANK~6NIMG DAY
THEY' M~T HA'IE aee:N SHOITT A IURKEY!
8 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles
• KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ·TV(lnd) Los Angeles
9 KCST (ABC) San Diego e KTI\I (Ind) Los Angeles
• KCOP-TV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCET·TV(PBS)LosAngeles Ill!> KCX::E· TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
8 MOVIE * * y, "The Outer Spece
Connec11on·· (1975) N8'·
rated by ROd SerNng New
evidence appeara 10 IUQ·
gest that human Ille on 1111s
planet begen with. the
arrtvlll ol "aoclent aatro-
nauts .. whO Miiied In the
Peruvian Andel and the
Bermuda Triangle (2 hrs )
Jeck cons a beaulllul
female skie< Into believing
that he Is a cl1amp1on
downhill skier Q
G) M0 A•S•H
Hawlceye Ind HOI Lips
PARAOE..!
~'Fauntleroy' one for Guinness book
j By TOM JOR Y was never a handsome juvenile, tenements of New York who Fame" production of "Caesar admitllng his weaknesses."
E W YORK (A P ) -which accounts for that. But I've goes to live in his grandfather's and Cleopatra ... Guirmess says he re·read the
" mlet" in 1938, "Oliver always been determined that my castle in England was adapted "There's no real reason book, but did not look at the
T st" a decade later, "The work should be different each for film twice before, with Mary for that." he says of his ap· most recent film version of
Lav1mder Hill Mob" in 1951, time I perform. Pickford in the lead in 1921 and parent preference for the "Fauntleroy." "I had seen it
"Bridge on the River Kwai" in Freddie Bartholomew as Ceddie theatrical motion picture . about40yearsago,"hesays.
'57 ~"Star Wars" in 1977 -a "IN TIUS CASE," Guinness 15 years later. "though both · fauntleroy' and
ve partial list, and awesome says, "I rather growled at the "I don't think I've ever played "Tinker. TaHor' were done on
at al. And for Sir Alec Guin-idea of another 'Fauntleroy.' But a grandfather before," says 'the film , rather than on tape, and I
"LITl'LE LORD Fauntleroy"
was filmed principalJy on loca-
tion al Belvoir, the Duke of
Rutland's castle in Nottingham.
England.
ne , a distinct role in each film. when I read tbe script, I found, 86-year-old Guinness, a veteran felt a bit more comfortable for
ve always tried to do dif-against my better Judrment, I or more than 100 different movie that."
fer•rit things," says the dis-was moved. I guess the story roles. "Unless, of course, Obi-
Un shed British actor whose touches some fundamental ·Wan Ben Kenobi of 'Star wars·
pr ce has been. and will be, springs." was a grandfather."
a iliar one on Amerlcan Guinness plays lhe austere Guinness, awarded a spedal
tel vision this fall -in the re-Earl of Dorincowt, with IO-year-Oscar last year for advancing
ce tly completed "Tinker.' old Ricky Schroder, star of the art of screen acting, bas
Ta r, Soldier, Spy" on public Franco Zeffirelli'a 1979 film, been aelect.ive in his choice of
d In "LiWe Lord Fauntler-"The Champ," as Ceddie, Uttle TV rolea. He was in "The
' to be broadcast by CBS Lord Fauntleroy. Wicked Scheme of Jebal
tat9onchannel2. Deeks," a "Ford Startime" pre-
• 1 ' v e al w a Y s been a Frances Hodgson Burnett's sentatloo for NBC in 1959, and in
ct.er actor," be says. "I ta le or a child from the the 1976 ••Hallmark Hall of
doption: a new game
Myths dispelled on new PBS special
y MICHAEL DOUGAN
• • Of ... Delly ...... Stlfl
ption is an expansive
a phenomenon that has
ed numerous related Is·
when WQED, Pittsburgh's
c television affiliate, and
sweek magazine set out to
uce "Adoption in America"
reateat challenge must
been defining pointa or
After all, they only had an ·
to explore this complex
ct.
Ela SOLUTION was to
t the program into four
pendently·created "mini·
" and lntenperae several
1"41JP11ruon statements. The re· a coberent, in~lllgent and
y unemotional program
veals a quartet .of adop-
...
(TV REVIEW J
lion's many new aspects.
For adoption ls changing.
''Adoption in America," to air
on KOCE, Channel 50, at 7:30
p. m . Wednesday, effectively
blows away many public mia·
conceptions that should have
died a decade ago.
Legalized abort.ion and a trend
toward keeping babies born out
or wed.Jock have drastically re-
duced the number of white in·
fanta available for adoption. Of
the 200,000 children le1ally free
for adoption in this counlr)', 40
percent are over 11 years old. 25
nola' applauded
\
percent are black and many are
physically or mentally han-
dicapped. It's a whole new ball
game.
T HE PROGRAM, part of a
new series called ''Cover
Story,'' opens with an explora-
tion of this change titled
"Special Children, Special
Parents." "We believe now that
no child is unadoptable, •' says
an agency worker on the show.
Indeed, she claims that 50 to 85
percent of all so-called "special
needs" chiJdren wilJ be placed in
permanent homes.
"Refugee Orphans" bighliehts
a Vietnamese boy who Is becom-
ing a happy Ameri(an and a
Vietnamese mother desperately
trying to find the children she
sent lo America as the war
ended.
''The Black Experience"
features a ploneer black adop-
tion aiency aa it tries to recruit
parent.a and ~Ila of one success
atory .
.. WHO I S MY Mother?"
f ocu.se1 on the open recorda con-
ttoversy and aomt adopteet' at· tempts to find heir natural
parenta. One woman la shown u
t he II reunited with the mother
t he newr knew. "A~ ln America" ll by
no meam • complete overview
ot tbe subject, but tt la an •m·
bltioul IDd lDformaUon·packed UDdettUlas tbat will enlilbten
vtewen ' wfille dllpelllnt a few
m)'t.bi,
IN THE SIX·P ART British
Broadcasting Corp. produc-
tion of "Tinker, Tailor." John
LeCarre's spy thriller, Guinness
played George Smiley, the re-
tired agent called back to
service to ferret out a Russian
mole.
"Smiley," he says, "I could
take seriously. I tried to get into
his shoes, and enjoyed the role very much.
"IN TIOS ONE," Guinness
says, referring to "Little Lord
Fauntleroy," "my character
was so two-dimensional, the dif·
fi culty was trying not to make it
too joking.
"He's a very crusty ,
blinkered, upper-class man,
who's weakened by this small
boy's love and care.
"I saw a lonely, embittered,
cynical aristocrat for whom l
had no sympathy," the actor
says, "until I looked at him
more closely and watched him
grow and prove his strength by
ANA.NOIALI
--· -WIST
Emmy-winner Norman Rose·
moot, whose credits include a
number of TV adaptations from
the classics. including "The Man
in the Iron Maat,'• "Les Mis·
erables" and the upcomin1
"Tale of Two Cit.ies," produced
the two-hour I'M' special.
There ls a rather nice f()OtnOt.e
to the "LiWe Lord Fauntleroy''
story: Guinness and his young
co-star found one another's com-
pany rather pleasing.
"I ettjoyed him enormously,"
Guinness says. "He was great
run to be with. He's ex-
traordinarily mature as an ac-
tor. somewhat like a wise old man.';
Loco I news, sports or1d
advertising come to you . fNe<Y
day in the bright, lively,
interesting DAILY PILOT
642--4321
.......... ••·ms ,....., ..._. ----c.. ..... f1'-4141
-.... , ....... °'""' &)fl~ ----17141 ••·., ...... ___ __
• •
1·--tMtds~ 5'6-31112
'FAUNTLEROY' STARS
Gulmeaa, Schroder
I
•rlr81 tMM• Ml de"'nJld from m-..y ...., -.-,. • .._., aaovt., .._ u occu6oaal
........ lmf&. ''lalJno.m•• .... a DIW ......... : tlMl~JpiKlal
TM TV ~ .. Qyeee ol U.. SlanlYll Ball· room•• lull ..._. w ......... iato u _,a1lna
...................... U..staa•.lt'IDOW
OD YMw Ill tM OG1y k>cal
oommunlty tbeattr lara• ~ to accom· modat. lt. tbt Lacuna
lloula.c.PlQ~.
And what a warm
aod wonderl\IJ 1how lt
11 , a tender and
touc~ production aet
to the melodloua stralna
of bll band dance
muaic . Jt'a a holiday
aeaaoo treat from tbe
combined talents of
director John Fenacca
" ~ and m\dlcal difector
David Anthony, mount-
ed on an impressive
series of settings by the
fatber-aoo team of Don and Doug Williamson,
which b)eod utility and elegance.
BENEATH THE IMPOSING, ttthnical trap·
pings is a very lilesize, human story of a middle-aged
woman, coaxed out or ber shell after a year or
widowhood, who finds excitement and romance in
balJroom dancing. There are, as there must be,
complications (which it would be imprudent to re·
veal}, but these are not magnified to the point that
they impede the upbeat theme ,r the show.
Despite a large company of 36 performers,
"'Ballroom " is essentiall y-'a tour d e
-·
~31;tm "·~~~.1 NIV:;'°~cal ~., ____ 194-2400 1111. a.• ........... , .. .
'
I ;._.__
~ ...........
494 15)4
' t .... .. "'" .... ..
494 1514
(
...... _ .. ..... ,. .......... .................
"GLORIA" (PG) -"CHAPTER TWO" (PO)
"DIVINE MADNESS" (R) -"UP IN SMOKE" (R)
..
Intermission ~
Tom Titus
rorce for Its leadio1 actrelS, and Rottyn Nehls de~
lifer1 a superior perform~. Outata.ndinl both
d ramatically and vocally (hen are the only
mu.lcal numbers aside from ballroom vocalist ..
"ULL.•OOM''
A m1nlul .., ~-l<H•, &Illy ~ -AIM ""° Merllyfl ........... 111..o Oii Ille TV Oley "OuMn IJf the SIMdWI .... _ ••
dlre<WCI 11¥ "1M '41rlKu, mutk.l efr«tor o...,ld Afltllenot. cllOr.;..
9'epjl"f llY ,,.., •• Ptfldl-. M( ......... Oofl -'*" Wll1ie-ll1J11tlfle 11¥ llon ColflNln •l'ld Jim Rli'M. _._ T~ 1..,....;
S.lurdeys.ttp.m. until Ce<. U etthe ~-.ilOll "'eyhouM.60t
Leg.-c.n,,_A-,L.89Une8Mc1t.R.-t1Gr11*'4741
THa CAST
8N Aillff . AotlYll -· Al AOUI • . • ,. • . • • . • • . • ..... , • . •.. Joe Guu.ti. Mart-..... . • . .. . . . .. . • . . • • . .. . . ... . . . .... Tolll 111-1 Alltle O' ~r. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . Lee Clll lctr-
.Hf\My LIQllllOOt . • • • • • • . . .. • , • • • • • • . 0-les ,._y
...... • •• • • .. • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • ,.. .... IC.ey ...... .,
Je<ll • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • . • . ....... 8111 o-.. .,
Die"" • • . • • • . . . . . • • • • . • • . . . • • • • • • . • Mery Jo Aecllfneie< Devl<I . . • . . . • .• Mett Miiler
Pt111Une IC.rim.. Ell.-Scllmldt
Scoei.r . . . Ewl Mcc.nN Fey H•lpem. SMiie NICC..N P ... I S.Mn.. • .IOM OlltOreu
Mertll• ~Y . • .. . • . • • • • • • • • • . . • .Justine Gwtfn
Toni Silveri), Miss Nehls possesses a marvelously
expressive face which allows her to perform
subtly yet effectively.
Joe Guzzetta is first rate as her love interest,
Reagan good for films?
Movie industry get,s 'one of its own'
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD <Al?> -What will the Reagan
administration mean to the motion picture in·
dustry?
Good news, according to the post-election feel-
ing in Hollywood. This despite the fact that the
film world has been predominantly pro-De mocrat
since the era of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
As a letter writer stated in a trade paper: "No
matter what our political beliefs are, shouldn't we
be overwhelmingly proud and joyous that a
member of our industr y has the ability, dignity
and talent lo become the 40th president of the Unit·
ed States?"
THE IMM EDIATE RESULT of Ronald
Reagan's election was a rise in entertainment
stocks. along with tbe rest of the market. The long.
range effects are difficult to predict, since show
business is not always tie<1 to the general economy
(some argue that citizens seek inore entertain·
ment in bad times>.
Jack Valenti, Motion Picture Association presi·
dent and one-time aide to President J ohnson,
sounded a hopeful note:
"We will have for the first time an administra-
tion that will look with more Wldentandin1. more
sympathy and probably more acUve a pproval or
our aims. I don't expect admirers to be waving
banners for the film industry in tbe balls of
Congress or in the East Room of the White House.
I do feel that our problems will be viewed in a
more hospitable way. Not that we have encoun·
tered opposition, from the Kennedy and· Johnson
years on. It's just that this president (Reagan} has
an instinctive understanding of motion picture
problems."
THE REFERENCE, OF course. is to
Reagan's 27-year career as a movie actor and his
'activity in industry affairs, including presidency or
the Screen Actors Guild.
Valenti declared the industry has four goals in
the new Congress: 1 revision or the copyright
laws. which he said were hurtin g Hollywood as
principal supplier of TV programming; 2. tough
anti·piracy legislation to hinder not only duplica ·
lion of films and tapes but stealing sign als from
s atellite and cable TV transmission; 3. a trade bill
to expand the Webb· Pomerene Act permitting in·
Pickens pickin'
country career
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Actor Slim Pickens
says a film role as a backup man to singer Willie
Nelson in the recent "Honeysuckle Rose" im·
proved his voice "100 percent."
"Understand, I can't carry a tune in a bucket.
But everybody else thinks I've got perfed pitch,"
says Pickens, who played a
gritty guitarist in Nelson's
band.
Pickens, veteran or nearly
100 other films, headed to
Nashville to cut his first album,
for distribution next year by
CBS' Records. J ose Feliciano ls
doing some of the arranging
and Pickens may get a little
backup from Nelson himself.
"Il I can get enough real "'cu•s
talented people," he says, "maybe they won't
have to list.en to me."
ZIP·A·DEE-OOO·OAHI
•
ler-industry associations to compete with private
and government cartels abroad; 4. revision of the
Communications Act of 1934 "broadcasters and ca·
ble systems have a larger interest, but we'll be
monitoring it."
Despite record receipts in 1979, the film in·
dustry faces financial problems . In two years the
average cost per feature has jumped 65 percent to
$10 million; marketing costs have soared 20 per-
cent annually to an average of $6 million. Valenti
said this year 's gross is running .44 percent behind
1979 "which means we aren't keeping pace with in·
nation."
VALENTI ADDED: "THE new administra·
tion subscribes to the theory that stimulatine busi·
ness will stimulate the economy, to the long-range in-
terest of everyone. That philosophy is held by many
Democrats as well as Republicans."
A.D. Murphy, longtime financial expert for
Daily Variety and now a teacher of future film ex-
ecutives at the University of Southern California.
observed this reaction to the Reagan landslide:
"While he doesn't enjoy popularity in the
liberal community, there is a feeling that 'he's
not against us.' ''
Murphy commented that bOrrowing is no longer e problem for the major film companies,
but independent companies always need help.
Limited partnerships and cllpital gains may
become easier .. since Republicans favor anything
entrepreneurial."
MURPHV PREDICTED THAT the Reagan
Justice Department might be less enthusiastic
than previous administrations about prosecutin1
anti-trust suits "by small mom-and·pop theaters
against the major companies." He also suggested
that lhe administration might not pursue such a
case as the attempt to shut down Premiere Pay·
TV. the amalgam of Paramount, Universal. 20th
Century-Fox, Columbia Pictures and Getty Oil.
"After all," Murphy observed, "when Reagan
was campaigning for governor, be remarked that
the film industry had changed so much that the
government might well look into res trictions pre·
venting the producing companies from owning
theaters."
Excluetve Showing!
BAD TIMING ·--,-~, .. ,,
_'"IDOLMAKER"
(R)
"IT'S MY TURN"
"B.£cTRIC (R) Walt Disney·s Song a1 South ,_,HORSEMAN"--, ~-,~~t ~ I "PRIVATE . 11-::i=:-:~,..,...,IOOK~~n=ll!!ll=--1 • IBUAMIM"
RBAN COWBO ,,....,, ...
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
,...~-... ,. ...... ,0-... --... ~-,,... .. -,,,,.....,0., ... ,_
fi=il l\l.L AGH AOMTTE D ~ 0...-AI --·
M.L a ID N«l 11J rt1..MS MC«Nt
twa UM. CW™« MOTION l'ICT\1111
OODE CW M'll MOULAt1DM
~ti 142-5171.
Put • f•w word• loworlt for
I 1''TlE ELEPHANT
MAN.::_'"' ~
"M EMPIRE CNI ' snuKE9 BACK" _.,,___
'
--UCLll$JV£ 6N'-AUJUNT NOW UOWING--
Mann'a SOI/TB COASI'
COSTA MESA 714/546·Z.111
Mon·Wttl 1:00 • 3:/S • S:JS •I.# I 11:/S I'll
Tltun&n S:JS • 8:-f)() & IO:IS nt
. • : •
~ .
~ .
\
PtJaUC NOTICE
--~~~~~~~----.. ICTITIOUI •Uat•HS ...... ITAT•MS•l' •
T,,. .......... --11 cWnQ l>VM ..... T•OJAllTACO •tt, 10tC.lh e In
_,,,.._s.t\~.c.i1torn1emn
Je,_ 0. Hewitt, JCW21 Mir-C:O..rt, L.....-Hlfue4, CMllOfnll fi.11
Tllll -.i..u 11 cOIOKlad Dy an 1n
di•'-'· J-O.Hewll1 T11ls ..---• flleO wllfl ,,,.
c-ty Offlt of Orange Counly on
Hove-14,t..,.
PVBLIC NOTICJ:
l'1CT1nous euatM•U
MAM9 ITATelldMT
T"' IOlloW\fte .--II doln9 lluM
Mi.I Al :
THE GREASE MONKEY. 7Ull
Bow sprll, Hunlln9ton Bea ch,
Calllortua~
James E 51,_, 21.it a-~11.
Huntlnoton llN<I\, C•ltlOfftla ,_ Thia _,,... 11 condu<tecl by an In·
dlv1oua1. JamasE.SI,_ Thil , .. ...._, wti meo with llM
County Clara of Orange county on
Novemt>ar 71, 19'0 1'14tl1J
Pue.II-Or-Coesl O.lty PllOt, l'l,_
Now. 11, "· ~· J. '· ,.., •5s.-tO Pul>ll-0r.-.. CN SI Delly Pll<>',
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS •UllNISS
NAMa ITATIM .. IT T ... lotlow4nt __, II OOlllQ t>u•i· ....... ,
MACKAY MULTl·P URPOSE
COMMUNITY CENTER, 1'jC) Airway
Ave .• Unit o.J, Cotta Mew, Calllornl•
'26.lt
Paul T. Salate, .. Lino• Isla,
NewllJCWI a..ui. Calltornla t26'0
Tiii• buMMU Is Condu<lecl by an Ill
dlvkhull.
PMllT S.lat•
Tflll stat-I wa• llle<I wltfl Ille
County Clerk of Orange County on
Nov 2S, Dec. 2. 9, 1'. 19'0 .,,....,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS •USINEU
NAME STATaMINT
Tiie follOWlnQ pe,._, I• dolnQ bu•l-
neu •s:
R C REAL TY SERVICES, OtO
MecArtl>ur BlvO , Suite lSO, Newpor1
BH Cll, C.lllwnla t26'0
00<I• oau;,., 1111 ... A co .. 1 s.,...
lnQl, Court, Hunllnoton 8aa cfl,
C.lllornla .,....
Tiiis buSlnns Is <-..Cle(! t>v an 111-
d1v10ua1.
OO<lsO..wn
Tiiis si.t-• was lllecl with Ille
County Clerk al Orange County on Howmtier 1, 1•. l'l4ttt1 Hoveml>er 71, 19'0 l't,_S
Put>lltftecl 0r.-.. Coest Dally Piiot, Put>ll~ Or-Coast Dally Pit<>'.
Hov.11. 11.u,0e<.2, 1t10 •s1o.ao Nov u , De< 2, '· '•· 19'0 ... ,..,
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTlTICIUS •USIHIS5 l'ICTITIOUS •U51NES5
JUI.Ma STATEMENT NAME STATEMIHT
Tiie followlllQ peraon• are doing Tfla 1o11owtno __, Is OolllQ t>usl-
lluSI-•: ........ NG A INSURANCE AGENCY, R C AOCO,OtOMacArtflurBlvO.,
10101 ,..._ •21•. Fountain Valley. •n o, H--1 8Hdl, c.11tornla tl'60
c.lllOrNe,,,. LHAMe HeMon .,., Via Angallne
H.G.A., INC, a Celltomla corpora. Drive, -lngton Beech, C.lllornla tlon, 10101 Slater •21', Fountain t2647
Valley, Gallfomle '2708 This bulslneu Is conductecl t>y an ln-
Tllll --Is C~lecl DY a «W· dlvld.lal.
poratlofl. L•Nvle Ha,_. , ff.a.A. Inc. Tiiis stat_. was lllad wltfl tl\e
lly: Gene A. C..,.lllllQham , C-ty Cieri! of Orange County on
Tiiis == was llled wllll tlla Hove-21, 1•. , .. , ....
County Clerk ot Oranga c-ty on Pu1>1lslled Orenee Coast Delly Piiot. NOWlllbar 1•, 1tl0. ,.,...,._ Nov. U, O.C.. 2, t, 1~ 1• _ ~
"!:,~~ ~~.c;;:• o.uy.:;::. ,' PUBLIC, NOTICE
PUllUC NOTICE
PlJBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI 8USINHS NAMaSTATEMINT
The fotl-lllQ "''°"' •re dOlllQ ,., ..........
GOOD I.EASING CO , tll Glen-
wyre, Sta. c. L..-llN<ll, CA "'51
Don ~. llS I.a lfl1ta, laOUN
Beec:ll, CA "'51 o ... , OouiMrw. 2770 H19111ano
#ey, i.....-8McJI, CA ..SI
Tlllt llllSIMU 11 'onducted Cly a
~e·~ ._MarleH..Ual
Tiii• -~ -llled wllfl ,,,. Gaul\ly d9rtl fll Orange ~nly on Oc. tolltf •• ,. .. ,_
,....,..,_, OrM!ll Coat! o.lly Pho!
He¥. 4, 11, "'25, 1• "' ..
I Pl'BUC NOTICE
"11UCNOTICB.
l'ICTITIOUS •UllNaSS
NMY ITATIMllNT
-·
Tl\e 104'°"""'9 ""'°" 11 doing t>vsl· ,,... .. ,
BALCAN IC EUROPEA N
&AKERY, 22Sl He.-Blvd .. Cost. Mesa. Calllomla "'11 OonW<e llletcv, J09 21'1 Str .. t,
Golla~ Celllomla ~I This llUll.-s Is conclu<lecl by an In•
Olvlduel. Oomt\kAI lll~KU
Tflit •ta-I was fllao wllfl '""
County Clerk of Or•nge County on
Howmt>a0.1'llO. l'Httlt
Put>ll-Or-C.0.1t Oelly Piiot,
Nov. 11. 11. n. o.c. 2, 19llO. _,...,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5 •USINEU
NAME STATEMENT
Tne loll-lt>Q person 11 OOlnQ Du•I
MSS •t.'. PHOTOGRAPHIC ART WORKS,
US7 Comsloc:k Drive, Hunllngton
8ea<ll, C.lllwn1 ~ Oevoo J. a . .,.r, tJS2 Comstoc:k Drive, Huntll'91on Beec:fl, C.lllorni•
92M6 Thi> buslNss I• <onelu<lecl Dy an in
01v1oue1
Davlo J, Brower
Tiiis s .. --.t was lllao wltll Ille
County Clerk ol Orange County on
Nowmbe< 1•, 19'0. l't4tS11
Put>ll,_ Or-Coesl Oally PllOI,
Nov. II, 25, Dec. 2, 9, 19'0 -
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTlnOUs •USINESS
NAME IT.ATIMl!NT
The loltowfnt --Is Oolno l>vtl· neu •s: A I. K PACKAGING SUPPLIES
CO., 11112 Boin Clltce •H.
Hu..Clllflon 8-dl, Celltornla "'41
Mk -R. L.eonaro. 111n 801Y Chtca ••7. Huntington B•uh,
C.llfomlat»D Tlll1 ~ I• cOfldueted t>y an In·
dM dual.
MlchMI R. ~ro •
Tllh __,.. w• flted wlltl Illa c _t., Oef1l of 0r.,,.. C...y on
... ~W.lta ,.~·· PUl>llslled Or-C.0.11 O.lly Piiot,
Nov. 11, 2S, O.C. 2, '· 19'0 _,...,
'
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS NAMa STATIMl!NT
Tiie fotl-lnt pertons are doing
t>u1inessas:
A. L WILLIAMS. t•211 Yort>e
StrHI, ""'• IOS, T.nlln, C.lllornla
'2680 HUI L. Crou, IUl Independence
Awnue, Redl-. c.tllornla tun
V. Gene Crou, 211131 5'11ndrlft
Lene, Huntington a.acn. C.ilfomla .,....
Tiii• --· I• Conductecl Cly • general ~lf'-V.O....Crou Tiii• -.-was flied wlltl ,._
C<>unt1 Clark of Or-CcH1nt1 on
Now m-JI, 1•.
f
6
4 .
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY , -..
,... .. ., •• Mella:
All real_.. -4vertiMd tn um aewapaper ia sul>-
Jed lo tbe Federal Falr
lloiaaiDI Acl of ltU wblcb 111111kea It We1aJ t.o
~dverUae "any pre-
ference, Umitatioo, or
dilcriminatioa bued on
race, colcri rellcioo, sex, or old.ioaa. oriliD, or an
intention to make any
such preference, Umlta-
ticn, or diacriminalion. '•
'Ibis oewapaper will not
lmowiDllY accept any
adverli1lng for r eal
estate which is in viola-
tion al the law.
CLAS""8
HOUaS
Adverhsers may placl' lhflr ad• b)' lelephone
8 OOa m toS·JOp m
Monday thru Fnday 8 lo noon S.turday
COSTA MESA OPFICE
3JO W. 811y
642-5678
llUNTINGTON BEACH
1787!> Beach Blvd
S.0-1220
LAGUNA MEACH
1027 N Coast tlwy
1Agun1Beach494 9466
NORTH COUNTY
do al frtt !>40 1220
CU.SSWtlD MADUMIS
Deadline for copy & kills
Is $ 30 p m lhe day
beforf publ1ca11on.
except for Sunday •
M ond1y F.ditions when deadllM I~ Saturday. 12
noon.
b..sw. ~"°"' ERRORS . AdverUsen
1hould checll I.heir ad• dally • reporl errora l mmed lllely. T H E
QAIL Y Pll,.Or' uaum•
U1blllt.r Cor Ult tin ' lncorrttt lnsertlon only
CANCELLATIONS:
When klllina a n 1d N 1ur~ to make • record or lht! K I LL NUM BER 1lven you by your ad
teller u rece1pt ol your
c1ncellation Thia lr1ll
numbe r must be
presenled by llle
advl!rtuer m CHf of a
dis pull'
CANCELLATION OR
CORRECTION OF NEW
AD BEFORE
RUNNING
Enry t>ffOrl Ill made to
k 111 or rnrreel a new ad
lhal has been ordered.
but v.f c1nnot guaranlee lo do so un11l the ad has
appeared m lhe paper
OIME A 1.INEAl>S
Then ads art strictly
cuh m advance by matl
o r al any one or our
omces NO phon~ orders
Oradlmt 3 p m Fnday
Costa Mesa office • 12 noon ul all branch
offices
Tll E DAILY PILOT
resf'rv•• the right to
classof)' edit. censor nr r e f u ~ ~ a n >'
1dverll$rmenl. and lo
c h ang~ 115 ra1es &
regulation' wolhout prior
notice
CU.SS#'llll
MAJUM6 A.OOUSS r o Box 1S60. Costa Meu
92162111
v \ /·) t~~
Starting
a New
Bualn•••
A cccord l ng 10
C1llfornle &velne•• end
ProfH.._ Code (Sac.
17100 to 1700 ) 111
pereon1 dolnt bu81neH
under • ~ n1me
lllUll flle a 1t1let11enl
wllll 111• COi.iniy Clerk
end lie" It P'Jtllletled •
four l l lft•t In 1
n1w1p1per Mf"'"t Ille
1 r e1 In wlllcll Ill•
IMlelneMll ........
Th• •••temenl I•
required ~ lew •I'd le _ .. .,,'"~ ...
rour llu1lne1• n1tt1e.
Moet ttanlt1 re4111lr1 ""' ....... ~ -lll•fd• MCOltttt .. Tiit DAILY "LOT
pro.tcle•Mttlfllnt•llCI
!H1"'41elloll IOf*"· We
haft .. "'° --" .. ,. ... llM .........
d•ll• HrVMI• •• tll• Or••t• Oovntr c.u,....._. ..., ....
'' 0111 or '"' CIOllVtfllOfll offlc•• or
,1110110 1"1e L•OAL OUAtmmn MM»1,
lat. Ill t•r more ....., ........ ~--.
Uae the DliJy Pilot
"Fut Result" service
directory. Your.
terVlce la our
1pec:l a.II.)'.
Call MZ-M79 ext. m
•
Miff AT WOODlalDel CIOS_..
.... in the Village of Woodbridge in
Irvine where all the trails, footpaths
and parks interchange. Note the 3
bedroom, 2 story, 2 bath, 2 fireplace
townhome on Pinewood. The Easton
model with the large back yard and
plantation s hutters. It's only $225.000.
U~l()lJI: llf)Ml:i
REALTORS, 675-6000 2443 u.t c;~'FS?tfsr~~1 Mar ~ HA VE"39-0 S IN TOWN· ···-.. -,. -. """
MESA VERDE INVESTORS
BARGAIN 7010 DOWN
Tri -level S Bdrm, 3 baths, family room. din· CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX, owner want.a ing room, 2 fireplaces, income. Will finance lbe
wetbar, brealdasl room, balance. Each unil 2 3 car 1 a r a I e , Pro· Bdrm --ooo B .. fessionally landscaped. s , --· · ..r. Try lo match this one for _m.8550 _________ 1
only $174,900. Cal JBDRM +pooUB3,800
Z313 Bea~ul garden home,
THE REAL
ESTATERS
UHITS, UHITS
Eight four-plexes. Buy
one or btzy them all. All
28drm unit.a with only
IS% down . Ofrered at
$127,500. 540-3666.
~CAMYOM
L o v el y M c L a in
tawnhome. Golf coune location. 2 Bdrms +den
and It 's a wonderful end
lmit. Excel. financing &
priced lo a.ell. $300,000
*cote Realty
& Investment
-·-640=5777
MIWUmHa .......
Cl.OSI TO MACH
s Beel, 2 baU. each waJt.
Jl\lra.bbed. Stone F /P lower. Good sum-mer~ rental. AB·
tnc~eve.
ftftU
Laree S Bdrm. 2 bath,
fireplace plus two-2
Bdrm, 1 bath in excellent
condltion. Pric ed a t
~J II
associated
8 Q 1 )loo f h_ I..' f fl. l T 0 C.,
J 11," 't/tt fl" t l " ' "·
mast desirable location.
c.c.y fireplace, sun.shine
breakfast patio . Un·
believable value. FHA
financing for low, low
down. 963-6767
OCIAM Fl 0 MT MEWPOITHll6HTS
llAUTYI MOT MUCH AXIH
Take a dip right inlo the
ocean from this ocean·
froot home. It bas 3Br,
28a, with bac he lor
quarters. AND lhe pric
haa been rabed fro
M85,000 to ~.ooo. Hurry while it is
slill •bargain!
L: _ '_I" . . -1
$11 ... .... ,
JIHMOM
LAR&ELOT ........ ~ .......
llUl1a UALn
146-0814.
$l.11,. .,
That's AIL you pay
fora 30~..S
•Yfl.IT
Biil
mKlllY
DO rl'MOWI
MJ.1671
3 Bdrm 2'111 bath ex-
ecutive home. Newly landscaped with brick
Elltty. tluie corner lot
with spa too! Bring paint
brusb. 'cause it needs
some belp inside. Call
DOW lo cash In OD $$$.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
114·631-6990
VACANT
$88,500
FaulalUc s Bdrm 2 bath talrnbome, shaded patio
area. Also, 2 c ar al·
tacbed 1ara1e. Good
nnandn1 at •.soo. Call on Ulil one. 541-DU
.UC• SIJ,000
Beautlftd eaeciattve 4
bed.room 3 ball• w Ith
family room, spa and
CUllGm dllc:cwator Items.
Rlp aaaamabl• loan. Ow..-wW belp llaance
dowa pa1atat1. l'ull =.r-..... Call
ill!SELECT ~PROf>ERTIES
_. .. 191ACI ·j .. OMT IOW -1191. ... New exclusive listing. Mos{ fantastic
location for viewing the boatln1
activity, jetty, ocean & bright lipu.1\
Just in time to have a close-up .view'~
the Christmas boat parade. New luab f.
landscaped terrace. 4 Bdrooms, f am. '
r m. form a l d i ning, dual .stone
firepl aces, 3-car gar. -Call for appt.
WISLlt M. TAYLOI CO.. IM&.TOD .. ~·~u;u.~--:= • ., .. l
CE
810111 ILlllS aa.
OVER 5o VEAftS OF SERVICE
.... ,
PRIME IA YROMT
Forty -Foot Frontage. Pier & Dock In
Exclusive Security Guarded Bayshores
Commuruty Lovely Two-room Master Suite
With Fireplace Plus Four Bedrooms &
Bonus Room & Den. Step-Down Living Room
With T.en-Foot Ceilings. Spacious Dining
Area With Wet Bar. Truly .Goregous View Of
Islands & Channels. And An Extra Large
Front Pauo & Deck. SI .550.000.
LIDO ISLI
Easy f'lnanctng. Near Community Beaches.
Cl ubhouse & Tennis. Quiet Comer Lot With
Traditional Three Bedrooms. Plus Great
Guest Quarters With Bath & Bar, Or Billiard
Size Rec reat ion Room . Beautifully
Landscaped Lanai & Pauo Expandable Lot. ~35.000. '
Double Knit Set!
Don t be ltlt out in the cold
knit th1t cuddly wt 1n a huffy
llffY.Jf.Nll po111pon tall and
ton& tatl a1t 1n an t.4111 wa1m
double kntl S!llCh Wllh dff9
cablt J)lltttn Use synthtltC
WOfSted Pallttn 7418 ""'
CIP (ldJUSIS to ht alD
SUS IOI uc;h pattttn Add ~c
eech 111t1ttn loi It~ elm 111
m11I 1nd handhn1. S... • Mel ....
......... Dept.10I .,.., .....
.. lU, ON C..... S&, ._
'"' "' ltll1 ,.. ..... ...... -., .............
Clldl Oii IO iht tr1ft boom! s..d tor our N£W 1911 N((OUWO
CATAlOC. 0. 172 deMlllS. 3
lrte pelttrM 1flStde. $1.00 ML CMfT mm. .SUS _. UM..._..._ ....
mi:.~ ....
tal Mh Fi 'I ::&:"' l:t:Y""l ·~,..... ...... in.-.·~ .... ...... emir ...... aa.....· .... tMbt•'ro....... aw:-~ llJailt~ .. m..-
11N11t ... fl ..... c,.w 11----= llH.llt ... " c..-ll
UH s;s•
n•ll =-..._ ........
•1 1 2 m;...zn ... ,
" ..... , ........
Beat• &a•dieap
Jus~ because Jo Beth Ravellette of Spokane, Wuh., was bom without arms
*•n't mean she can't hold a telephone -or do most other things. She says she has "*ured out a way to do everything she
,Wer wanted to do.
.. esticide planned
f9r Oregon weeds ..
-------
Ways to s~ve on · food
Careful ahopping, coupom can cut co1t8
By TM Aueda.ted rreu
Don't let aoarinf food priCft eat up your famJ.'
ly bu.dpt. Flaht back to beat lntlation.
You can cut 1rocery bllll b=ln& coupons, paylna att.Uoa to pricet ands g smart.
B&tt·bonel bllYl"I alto can trim coet.s to help
offlet lhe expected 10 percent to 15 perceo.t ln-
c rease in rood price next year. Generic or "no-
ffllla" products, for example, cost anywhere from
10 percent lQ 4() ~rcent less than brand names.
Warehouae-1tyle atores, with low overhead and lit·
ti~ service, offer brand names for an average of 20
percent less than conventional supermarkets.
The pennies add up. Here are some things you
can do:
-LOOK AT WHERE YOUR MONEY goes.
AmerJcans spent $162.6 billion in grocery stores in
1978. Mo~ than one dollar in five -$36.5 billion -
was spent on non-food items, including everything
from soap to stocklngs. More money went for
paper products than for fresh poultry. Figure out
how much of your "food" bill goes for food and
how much goes for the other things. Some of the
non-food items are essential ; you may be willing
to pass up others to save money for food.
-Collect coupons. but use them wisely. Do
not buy items you don't need or want just because
you can get 10 cents off. Compare prices. A store
brand may be cheaper than a national brand -
even if you have a
coupon for the national ( J brand. Watch for stores CONSVMER offering double value on
coupons. Look ror refund
forms; if you see an ad·
verlisement for a refund and your supermarket
doesn't have the form, ask for it.
-Keep a record of what you pay so you can
figure out whether an advertised "special" really
representS a saving. Double check prices on end·
of-aisle promotions in the supermarket to make
sure they really are lower than on regular shelves.
fine for a stew, but less dealra~e when served as a
separate course. Test products to see ,which ones
you Wte.
-Shop in competing supermarket.a, but don't
make ao many trips that you waste guollne. It ls
unlikely that a single store will be cheaper on all
Items. Learn to recognize loss leaders -producu
that stores sell at below·wholesale prtcea to attract
customers. C()ffee is one of the most popular loss
leaders.
-CONSIDER A WAREHOUSE OR LIMITED
a!sortment store instead of or in addition to your
regular grocery. There are nearly 2,000 of these
stores across the country. Warehouse stores carry
a full line or groceries. but eliminate many of the
services found in traditional supermarkets.
Products are displayed in packing cartons instead
of on shelves. Items may not be individually
marked with prices Customers often pack their
own groceries in their own bags. Limited-
assortment stores have a similar lack of frills, but
they carry fewer items and usually do not stock
perishables Your biggest sav\ngs probably will
come on staples that you can stock up on in large
quantities.
-Shop ror meat by the serving instead of the
pound. A low-priced cut that yields only a serving
per pound may be more expensive than a hiqher-
priced meat that has less bone and fat. As a
general rule. you'll get the most meat per pound
from flank steak, ground beef, lean stew meat,
boned roast, liver, center cut ham and fish steaks.
-Get the most egg for your money. Grade 8
eggs are just as good as Grade A for cakes and
casseroles . Save the Grade A for frying, poaching
or boiling.
DON'T FALL INTO THE TRAP or think-
ing that convenience roods are alw~ys more ex-
pensive. Orange juice made from fro%en concen-
trate, for example, is usually cheaper than fresh .
Frozen and canned vegetables also frequently cost
less than the fresh ones. Prepared main courses for
dinner, however, generally are much more ex·
pensive than the same meal made from scratch.
-Don't shop when you're hungry. And don't
take the children. If you can't leave them at home,
give them specific tasks to do so they won't pester
you to buy thmgs not on your list.
1 Secondo/ two arltcl~s J
ITA=llfl Oii' AIANGD1"0I' VYOP
l'ICTITIOUS aUll .... teMIWI
T1't ~ --....... -IM Ult llM II tM Pletlti.vt awilMU ........
CO-.TININ'TAL ~OUl1'1U, •.MO
MICArtllur llMI, .._,.., -..Cll, Ga,
""° Tiie l'IC1ltlOll& ._... N•me ,.
ltrrOO ....... -filed lfl Ofentt C-tyon~U. lt1t Doth 0--, 11n-4A (Mii Sew• ,,... en.,"""'°"'*'" e.ac11, ca . .,._..
Tiiis ...,,_ ... ~MO fly 4MI
lnc:Jlv~. OWl10.tin
..
OBITUARIES .
MmaTOCltl ........
cw.._.T~•ll
C ..... e....-V.C.C.I NeUc• 11 ller••1 fl"'Oll Ce Cito c.... ...... ......., .... ~ ....... .. .,.,.....,. 111....,.Tr...-rar.
....... -.., ..... •••rau '' ua. .. _..,., ............... ~ ...
ttt¥a,...,...., ........... c...yef
0r ........ c.i.,...... ..... .. ttentfor la ....-ta .,. _.... ta
Htwittrt lvrf t. litart, lee., Tr_..,...,.._.._ .. _ It
119¥1 Mot!M, ................ ZDt
~ ............... IMdl. c-
ty .. 0r ............ c.i ....... Tiie .,....,,, .... .,....,.,... It Tlll.s ..,._, wn Iliad wltll IN
Covnly C,.rl of Or•noe '*""'Y on lac.et•• at 21•~ ~''"°• aalllM t11t f>4, .,.. Ht• New"rt ltlHI.,
P1IUIJ Newjlet1 liNCtt, c..l;My 04 Of .... , Novomoar21, ••·
Publl-Or-C:0.1t Deity Pltot SUte ef ClltforNa,
No•. U, O.C. 2, t. 1', ,_, .....,.., Seid..........,. It -.Crte.t WI lllMt•
-----------H t Alt llle<.ll 11\ If .. , flld--, ......
PUBLIC NOTICE ment.,..llllOll.wlJIClf"-'-.~
t1rlotttt11lp b1ulnH1 1111awn ••
-------·----""'"" lw1 ............ ~ .. NOTICaO,AP~LICATtOM 210111 ~lne ....... l•t .... Ml tt2A
TO l•LL N-ltlf' lllWI., .......,.. a..dl, Covfl..
ALCOHOUC 1eva•AOll ly ol Or11111. 114t•of Clllfor"'9.
t1/2tt• T"9 Mii, tr.,..r wltt M C~·
To w11om 11 May Concarn: rnetoo on w efwr tlle 12tll ,.., of
NAN L.. BERRI LL I• ol>CllYl"I lo 1118 OK•mllw, t•, et tO A.M, et 2~
Oeperlment of Alcol\ollc e ... , ... Morin•, 8t1M• htond, end 212•
Control ror • "41" ON SALE Nowpon 81....S., ~ lleedl, Goun• GENERAL CPU&. EAT. PL.I ll<Of'IM ty of Or .... , St ... ef Cll ....... o.
10 sell olc-tc tiover•OH •I 1052 $o le< u ..._ i. IN Tr-'-·
Ne•llOr1 llotMYOl'd, • 15. Cost• MeN, •II bull-M ..... "'" by Tr9!tfler•
CA nu•. tortl\ettvwrNNt•.i-t,eroSAME
Pllbll.IMCI Or-co.ut Delly PllOI LHt -to Ill• ct•lmt; OeceinMr
Nov. is, IMI '711-tO It, 1'111
PUBLIC NOTICE
r1CTtTtOU5 •UStNEU
NAMa STATaMaNT
Tne IOllowlncl __, I• dOl"9 bYsl·
MSSeS..
WINDMILLS. 1179 M19uol Ln ..
Coste Mew. CL nu.
Adolph Zoboflo TOtlkOS, ,.,,
MiQ<IOI Ln., Colle-... Co. 92'1•
Tiiis 11<.tMnet& 11 condY<lecl by •n In·
dlvldY•t
,._p!ll. ToelkOI
Ooi.d. JMly 21, 1-PM __ ....,,m,
Tr .......
NtcM,~& ....... 19N
1Nttl-'.......,..
Ptcltk ........... CA tn7I Pl#tlllllwd 0rW9 ()DHI Delly PllOI,
No•.2S,IOID ..-Z-tO
PUBUC NOTICE
'1CTITIOUS aUltNllU
NAM9 STATHUNT
Tiie fot1-ne•..--Is doint llvsl· neu.u: This lie-WOI tllod Wllll 11\t Coullly ,Citrtt of Or~ Counly on Nove-11, tteO.
XAT INCOME TA.IC SERVICES,
HU VolH<O L•ne, Cotto Meso,
l'I-C•lllornte'l'J6J6
Publll/WCI Or-C:O.tl Dally Piiot M•r1• It. Urbln•. ,.. V•l•Ko
Nov. u. De<. 2, t, 16, 1te0 411-LoM, Coate Mele, C.llfornlo 9262' Tiii• -inet6 It conducted by on In·
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATIM•NTOP
AIAJtOONMaNT 0, us• 01'
FICTITIOUS 8UStNeU NAMe
The tol~ ptrton hes --11\e UH Of Ille Ffcllllous 8u1lne1S ....... ,
(Al PACIFICA "'°RTGAGE, lb)
PACIFICA E~ltflES, llMI BYSln•• Center Or., Ste. 101. 1,..,1,... Ce, 927U
Tno Fktl"°'6 Bvsil'IOH Nome ,...
torrecl to -WOI llltd In Or-Coun1y on Jutyl7, lt71
Oorb ~. em_.... eo..i St><· invs Crt .• Hunt1n9ton BMc.n. C• 92M6
This bllSlnfts •et c-..c-fly on
U'Mfl'tltc:kMM.
OO<lsGouln Tiu• ste-t wes fllecl with U..
CoYnlt Cl~"' ot <><•nve Cou"IY on
Hov 11. I.., ,_
dtvtduel.
MOf'to t<. Urbine
Tiits tt.lltf'l'l9ft4 w•• ffltd wllll Ille
County ci.r11 ol Oronoe C:O..nly on'
Novembof' 21, tteO. ~1-12
Publll/WCI 0r.,. co. .. Oolly PllOt.
Nov. U , De<. 2, t , 1', ,., 472-
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICll 0, IALa O,AYaUSL
VALUllOAT MORIE THAN UGO
NOTICE IS HaAE8Y GIVEN
....,,,.. ...... ..alona •• 501, 501.J, 502
& *· H-&. Ne•lfMlon C-of IN Slot• of C:.llfornle, thot Ult .. n.
oorttorwo w111 ae11 •• PYlbll< ...ctlon, •• 2431 W Cotit Hwy., "-1 8NcJ\,
Ce ot IO:GO .. m. on 11'9 tOUI .S.., o4
Dtcomber of 1910, 1no t•ll•wln9 ~rlbocl ...-r11'. to wll:
··SALEM, Ore. GP) -Weeds which threaten
Oregon peppermint fields will be sprayed with
paraquat, a pesticide used to kill marijuana plants
jsi •Mexico, state officials say.
-MAKE A LIST BEFORE YOU go to the
store. Be flexible enough to take advantage of good
buys. but don't let yourself be tempted by poor
value. Stores often put non-essentials like candy
and snacks near entrances or check-out lines.
where they are sure to catch your eye. Marketing
tie-ins -putting the potato ch.ips next to the soda
-are designed lo boost sales or both products.
Don't buy both if you need only one. High-priced,
high-profit items also are likely to be displayed at
eye-level on shelves. You may have to bend or
stretch to find the bargain.
-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiii9 Pt11>H"'90 Or-Coo'1 Delly Piiot Nov H . DK 1. t . 1•. ltlO ... 1-«>
Yuro48oM: lttS
Meke of 8oM: l.MUOn, Pocotmollar
Ltconse No.:'' 9307 CM
··Federal authorities authorized the state to
su:tlervise the paraquat spraying or Italian rye-
graJS, common groundsel and othe·r weeds on
15,000 acres in central and eastern Oregon, state
Department of Agriculture officials said.
Leonard Kunzman, state agriculture director, s~ that under the emergency approval the state
m t inform the federa l Environmental Protection
A ncy of any adverse effects in use of the
pesticide.
DeU• Netlees 1 .. aAKaa on No...-12, 1te0 In Costa Me .. ,
VtllOtL "" 8AttaR, ruldonl of co. Ho -• rnl~nl of Costa Mo ...
-CMon• Cit!-· C.. ,....., •••Yon C•. tor oboYt l yoou. Born In ,.......,... n, "9 . ._., Morch 10, F&aneOllft, llllnol• on Oci-r I. 1901,
llfl Jn L'9eil, lelllfl ~. $uni-N WOI o bellor tor 4S yeorS, Ond Wot 0
by . I'!' ,,,... Z»tle, deulfllerl Money "91eron,.. _ u.$. Army dYrlno Worl<l
8011'4" Volkl\ of Atherton. C.. end wer ti H• I• 1urvtved by • son
"""'....., WMlllM .... of AINr1on, CMrlH 0 Smlln of Cos•• -wi. •
C•I .eftd • 9rencklllldron. FuMrol ~lltor l!Mrjori. HOllond of 1111no•s.
w"'ke1 .wftl bo -on ~Y. 1 brot,.., K....,,.111 Sml1no11111no1S ano
No,,1mt1or 2'. HIO •I 12.>0PM •I mony 1renocn1tdren. •IM> l sleP·
Pe<ltk View -...y Chopel lnler· o ... Qlllor~ Allu ~le~ ot C•m•r.llo.
ment el El Toro c..met•rv. El T0<0. C• •ncl J-Noll! o1 Tusun. C•
Co-f.Kllk vi.wMortuorvdtrKIOr\ S.rvl<H .... MIO"" TUO..S.y, NOY
t PAYN• tmbor U , 1_, •I II ISJAM at Int Batll ~MMY PAYNE, roslditntof El Toro. Berooron Smith & Tu111111 westctttt
C-.Former rnldonl ol Howport CllOP<ll wllh Rev o.n. Swenson ot·
Bo8'11, c:.. PHMCI •••Yon No .. mber tl~l•llno 8"rl•I will la-e pie<• In 11·
17, ~-~1...0 by "9r hvW..nd 11noll on ~uron Bolll Beroero~
JOHPll Poyno, ton Lorry MoUICk, Smllll & Tulhlll Wetlcllll ChOIM
mother Mn. 0-lol EtllOtt ond fotller Morluuy torwardlno 01reclors.
JI•• l(nowlln end 1 9 rend1on1 ....... l71. ouatAN s. ... ~ _,. -Ofl NO .. mbor JO. YOMT 1..0 et h Poclllc View Monvery. HAii JOSEPH YOMTOUBIAN, rHI· P~lfk View_._,..,. cllr.ctcw•. -• of Hunllnvton &HCll, Ce. Passed !;• ~•Y •••Yon No°"""ller 22, 1te0. Survived
OM$Y a . POOLllY, ro1ldonl of by• son Hetl• Yomtoul>lon of HYnl·
MeM, c:.. Pened •••!' on ln9ton B••cn, C•., end meny •· 1•. S4.wvlwel by a o..r o r • n d < I\ 11 d r • n a n d o r • • I· ~ niom. ,.._ Lllllon 9ran«lllldf'On. S..v1Cfl wore ntld on
-· of LOI .,,.. •••• Ce. SunO•y. NOWf'l'ltllr U, ,.., •• l:ISJPM ,....,, ... ~ et Ill• Harbor Lown-Mount Olive IMAPlllO Momo<lal ..-. Sorvlcos under llle ·~ll ZIC>aL SHAPlllO, r"ldefll of OlrKllon al H.,._ i..a-Mounl Olive St• • c:. .............. ., on No.... _,, ... ,y"" 0-IO ,.. ... SAO-Us.4 "· ,... .. It _,,._ by •
Buy in quantity when you spot a sale. Try to
set aside a few dollars or your grocery budget each
week. Look for specials on items you use regularly
and spend your extra dollars to stock up. Several
weeks before you run out, start looking for another
s pt-cial. Never pay full price for anything if you
can avoid it.
Pay attention to unit-price labels. These
labels required in many cities tell you how
much a product costs per ounce. pound, quart. etc.
Suppose. for example, you're faced with two sizes
of a product -14 ":.i ounces for 89 cents or 38
ounces for $1.79. The unit price label will tell you
the per-pound price of each; 99 cents ror the
smaller size versus 76 cents for the larger one.
Larger sizes usually are a better buy than smaller
ones. but it doesn't a lways work . As a general
rule. if the description on the label implies a
monetary saving "Economy size," for example
-federal regulations require the per-unit cost Lo
be lower. A description like "giant" or "family
s ize" doesn't guara ntee anything.
-LOOK FOR "USE BY" OR "sell bv" dales
on perishables. particularly things like frozen
foods that you might want to keep for some time.
Buy the product wjth the latest date to avoid
spoilage and waste. Check canned goods for dates
indicating when an item was packed. Most
manufacturers use a complex code, but some use a
fairly simple combination of numbers. You can get
a clue by looking at the last two digits; you may be
able to recognize the year.
-Check out "generic ~· or "no-n·ame" prod·
ucts. Generics were introduced in this country
less than five years ago and account for about 10
percent to 15 percent of supermarket sales today.
They have no brand name. There is no fancy
packaging; labels are usually white with black let-
..... ""'· Ke1>M11-......... JM HOll:ltMft of H""'·
an •••<II. C e ., e nd • llll~on. Gf•1rn100 Nr.,,l<H .Deathtt·
.• ters. The choice of sizes is limited. Canned fruits
. and vegetables feature lower grades than the
brand names. The nutritional value is the same; ,,... on -..., "-"'lier U ,
tWat tl:eaAM M lM ~Le_. -Oii,.. ,.._._. ,. __ Servlul
llftder tN .irectlon of ~ Le_....
Mount 011• ,,,_.._.,of C.0.te MtM.
S.SIM· IMITM cGlrFOtto P. SMITH,,._ ••• ,
HAltlo. L.AW~MT. OUYI
'Mortuarv • C.me1erv
ti'., Cre'1'8 tory
• 1625 Gisler Ave
i: Costa Mesa
540-5554 , .
'(
t PtllCI .. OTHHS
llLL UOADW.U
MOnUA.IY -110 Broadway'
Costa Mesa
642·91~0
,,~ IAl Tl & IH<H•OH
'I' Slllln4 & TUTHILL
,,. WISTCUFf CHA,U
•27 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
P9CIUOTHHS
.,.IWITHS' MOITUAIY
627 Main SI
Hunt1nQ1on Beach
536-6539
......... u
COU*IAL ~l
**' 7801 Boise Ave
Wettm1nS1er
893-3525
Elsewhere ,__
, the main difference is in the appearance. Be selec·
tive to save the most. The U.S. Department or Agriculture found savings on generics ranged
from just under 10 percent to over 40 percent, de-
pending on the item. Some products may not
match up to store or national brands in quality or
flavor. Generic vegetables, for example, may be
LAS VEGAS, Nev.
(AP ) -France s
Liberace, 89, mother of
t he piano entertainer.
died in her sleep at her
home here Monday night.
She had been ill for some
time.
LONDON (AP )
Herbert Agar, 83, former
editor of the Louisville,
Ky., Courier-Journal and
winner of the 1933
Pulitzer Prize for His-
tory, died Monday at his
home in Sussex, SS miles
southwest of London. --------------
PUBUC NOTICE
~tCTITIOUS 8USINEH
NAM• STATeMENT Tll• lollowtne penont ere Oolno
""~ ..... .,, OENERAl CONSTRUCTION CO .
HS> S, Rltthrf, $en1o A,,_, Ce. 9270S
JOSOf/lt tltey Ovnc.on, ~ Rlvor.
NtwPGrt IMUI, C&. 92'63
Joe l'loMlng, 610S Se•-• Or., ""'"°" llMCll, c:. . .,.., Tiii• IM!llrleu h condvct"' by • ..-.. ,...,....,.. .. ........ ~
Tlltt _ _. -liltd with IN
c-ty a.ttl 1111 Of-C:O-IY on Oc· •-21,1•. ,l.71ft
P11btl-Or .... COHI Oell't Pltal Nt¥. u, DK. t.. t, 1', ttld muo
( PllBLIC NOTICE
I.;
Coke Dead rat in
UXJrth $125,000
TM/ t brings death
PllZING CAP> -The man.acer of a Cbinele
flour mill wareboule baa been aentenced to ct.ath
for tt•h• 1• tom of wheat over two years, the hopln DILllJ newspaper reported. ll ...._ ... ..,.ho be)ped U. man.,er 1teal U bo8ua.da of ..-..t wu .-enetd to life In prilon
ud a mW Oftld.al C!CIDYM:W ol Lu apent&ioD
dnw • t~year term, tM Communllt Party .....,.,..npoNd. -
It Mkt tbeJ mllde UM '1Q11l•allot Of '17 ,154 bJ HIJlnl tbe ltolat Wheat.
••
(
WEIGHT LOSS
and
NO SMOKING
MO MUS!
... 0 DlnlYATIOt41
LOW
FEES
MANGNALL'S
INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR
Brush
Roller
Spray
421 Peart St.
Laguna Beach
Commercial
Residential
wallpapering
I nsured
22 yrs.
Experience
:Free Estimates
497-1280
'
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS a UStHESS
NAME STATEMENT
ft\t> fouowu'tQ oert.on1 •r~ dotnQ
C>U~lnt'\\~
!Mild ...... to< .,,. ~ "' .. 11~lytne 1w e1 the ~ ror ro-
~•·~ '--meterl•I -In lhe •mount al $3,°".Sl ~-r wllll costt
of eovertit1"9 end eapen1n of ••· penusof wi.
D•t•G 11\ls 7•111 d•• of No.,.mbor. ,..,
THE BALBOA TRADING COM &o.tsweonsLoOerlnc
PAN y JOI ' P•tm Ball>o• By H..-.ryH Hiii ,
Cot.torn•• 9'1M>l Vice Pr~l~n1
Beac h Entrrpr t~fL tnc •• Publi\twd OranQR COl't 0 •1ly P llOt
C•t1torn1a c.orport9\•0"• •OO ~ov 1S.1'80 •11Prt0
E09•w•1tr N•wpor t Be•t M.
Ca11forn"' 9l:Ot>t
TrH\ 00\inpu ., cOf"'dvctt"CI bv a cor PUBLIC NOTICE
P<>'•Uon&e-.ch fnl•rprtws In<: ,ICTITIOUS •USIHESS
J....,.. F Ro«»rh, NAME STATEMENT
PrMAdt"t r h~ t0Uow1ng per!..on5 •rt dolnQ
Thi' mMnvnt w•' f1ltct w1tn tne bu"~:~~~l MANAGEMENT ANO ~:::.::~•;;k1~ Oranoe County on MARKETING SERVICES, 1'600
' ,,_,7 :,~1:1chll<l, w .. UO. lrv•no, C..llfwl'll•
:'c9~C::,. llOc-1 Cunnlr>QNm. 0 .0 S. 1M7
L,owret"&
... Ne....,, c-tor Drift
r .o.eoaMW "•'IJPtrt a..dl, ca. '*1 P"l>h.i.d Or-Coo~I O•oly Piiot
No• H DK 1. '· 1•. ,_, 411~ -----
PUBLIC NOTICE
Port M•r9•f«, N•wporl B••<h ..
C•lllornlon.M) I Jomes Hodo•. o .o .s .. en
Emerald Boy. Le9une Bt•<h, c.i".,..,...~,
JOl\ft Enk.,._.,, o .o s .. 1'01 Blue
IC o . Ccwon. oe1 Mer, c.11tornl• ~u
Thi\ bU\•IWS' •S COf'\Oucted by •
-r•I _.1ner\1'11p
~-n Cunn1"91\0m
ODS In<
Thi' \t•t.nwn1 -~ hl.O ""'" ttw Co .. nly Cl<tr~ of Or•nve Coun1y on
Now•mDei' 11, ,..,
FIMllJ P"blt""'° Or-Coost D•tly Pilot.
Nov 25, Dec 1. t, 1•. ~-~
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTiCE OF DEATH OF
AVRUN EBB COOPER
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-106723. To a ll heir s , beneficiaries, creditors
and contingent creditors of
Avrun Ebb Cooper of Laguna Niguel, Callfornla, and persons who may be
othentise Interested In the will and/or estate: A petition has been filed by Lucille Cooper In the Superior Court of Orange
County requesting that
Lucille Cooper be appoint-ed as personal represen-
ta tlve to administer th~
estate of Avrun Ebb
Cooper (under the In-dependent Administration of Estates Act>. The peti-tion is set for hearing In
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, West, In the City of Santa Ana, California on December
16, 1980 at 10:00 a.m.
IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and state your objections or file
written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be
In pe,. or by YoUr at-torney. IF YOU AREA
CREDITOR or a cont-ingent creditor of the de-ceased, YoU must flle your claim with the court or
pntsent It to the personal
representative appointed by the court within four
months from the ct.te of first Issuance of letters H provided In Section fOO of the Probate Code of
California. Tht tlme'for
flllng cialms wlll not n-plre prior to four months
from the date of the he•r·
Ing noticed .c>ove. YOU MAY EXAMINE
1he file IC;ept by the court.
f you are Interested tn tM estate, you mey flte a ,...
q'lest with the court to re-ceive speclal notl~ Of tM
Inventory of estate autts.
end of the petitions. e<·
counts end reportl
described In Stc:tlon 1100
of the C&llfornla Probete
CocM.
M .. ~r.r~~-t Uw.L!' • ~ ........ -., ca~
;tll:,,...,
llAUl"Y PLUS
a WI')' a&traetlve floor
pla.ia llUa auper abarp 4 ~ bome. Larae faml· b' rm. CklH to beach, llhlW'll It achoola. Only
$1'7,500. Call now
9'11:5170. -
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
COMK>S I« DOWM
Newport Beach Ir Jrvlne.
Great ftoancina. Steve.
117 • l.llOO, 14(). IS4,5
HAUOll llD&E
Le11e oplion ,
Renaluance model.
Steve. 117-1900, ~~
lk< on your kit, Cualom Homes Palala, l ,662 aq ft,
$11,912. • llodela. Build
now 19'0 prices. Call
Now! Call Anawer Ad
Hl3,.,. bn, 842-4300.
11/2 US TO OCIAM
3 er. 2 ea, lK emtina
lou or OWC lK down. • J1c¥. 111.«flll, t5T ·ett5
THlllST
3 Bdrm + ? room, 2 Bath
Pealmula bome on a bl~ Jt..a llulldable lo& Juat 100
to bMdl.. All new carpet-101. drapea tbruout.
llea1J,y different! Only •.aowtt1a terms.
~"
·-~~=· ___ ........ -....
.,,.~
Prhate lroa 1ated
courtyard with lm-
praalve statuary aad
founlala. 27 foot uaed
brick lotla. Tbree 1paclou1 bedroom•,
family room, formal dln-
lnt room and lovely Uv· Int room. Tbe one third acre yard with luxurioua
pl.,.inp and pool la an Hr.N .. am .... '-1:
..wPORT
TOWNHOME
73 DOWN, 2 Bdrm end
i.mi1. Owner will carry
the ftnanclnt . call for de-talla. Prine. only. Bkr. ·
m-8550
Beautiful P'ounlalo
Valley 2 atory wit ~ pool and palm tree.. Ta"ke advantafe
low Int. floaoc n1. DON'T WAIT I Call •au
ALLSTATE
--.. ~bl.TOM
4-. a l/a .. 2 Sty
home, alaake root. free .-.. sm.500. Eaaulde Oalta 11 ... Owner may
tndt Cw 11mller bome
~..Z...11tr. ... nn
OCMM'IJ -.OCI
~ 161 INnD alta.
'1repl.ce ••~la aaJt. leller will llHace I ~~ llM I .,,..,....
•IALTOll ~ . ""'"' ..
COU °' NIWPOIT IMLTOIS 11111.c...e..W,..ca-111119llllr
671-1111
------------------
Sl'ACIOUS YllW
On the golf course. Two bedrooms
plus den. One level Condo. In
Rane-ho San Joaquin. Some
financing available $175,000.
macneb I lrvlne
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IAVINE COMPANY
ucm ... OCIAM '1IWt
Sm ashing townhome overlookin1
beautiful greenbelt enhanced by
ocean view. Large assumable
loans. Truly a buy at $179,900.
SuzaMe Shuler 642-8235. CR-G>
712-1414
Comp;$ VoJl,ey Cent•
64UIJI
THE
NUMBER
AS.,._lt."9
$607/MOMTM Fabulous opportunity to take
advantage of. Low, low payments
& interest rate. 2 bdrm, warm fl
cozy. X1nt for your investment
portfolio. Call now for additional
exciting details. ONLY •.soo' !
.#294
L.olSU
$491 ....
0 u t sta ndi ng newer home,
completely remodeled. Extensive
use of rich oak, beautiful Italian
ceramic tile thruout. Leaded
windows in large country
kitchen. 2 story . tile roof.
ASSUME lST T.D. ! ! #295
nm IAST ._.
OMLY $112.IOO
Spectacular view home .
Dramatic main entrance thru
courtyard with' spa & peol.
Raised s undeck. Assume lit TD
at 9.25%, $807 /mo. Seller will
carry $110,000 with assumption.
BEST BUY IN NEWPORT!!!
#296
Walker Blea
R11I Estate
C S M E I H V T S T T D 0 L C S E E E
S R E P I l A C T L I P T L M l A A I 0 l I H R R £ I E H I A E I A S l R S
YOWQtELYGJPVCUILklA
T E A C U E D S E E £ R Q l U C £ A H
R A T k C A L S M L 0 S E A l T D L T
S S S H l I D E U M T S I T I A 0 k C
TTAADQAAEITISMUIO S
R I Y [ U S E T A I R D A Q L L I S A
M A A E U D £ S C " l 0 U I I A P E I
VVMllRPkSATAMDPAO N
L 0 £ L P l l Q Y I D E L M I S A H
MASMkTURETIMODAll I
LJOIEAAM(l~CAIAI f
"CAMRLCMRYLMTATDI L : ..... =~---..... ........... 71•·1-----.. ...,
~ U.U. flfl .... -' .,. .... .,.... ..
t.,.. --~ I I ~ ..... , ....... • 11
lMI T ...... ..._
T-~
..........
PUfBi f ... Y llM-11.B. ............. L-..~•J .-z-. .............. ,.. ••r•t• wer••lt••· Ow•er ........ t11!Sll7,MO.
A WATElflOllT llM I/SUP
Mew • "• .. ,..., I• • prl•.t• · ......................... ... ,....... ........... , ...
...., ..... L-.. ....... .... ......... ....., ............ ....., ...
yew ... ..._. & IOAT ... 0....-
wtl ........ ft I ... Sll0.000, fM.
ON THE IATEl--¥1EW
.... .., ....... a.I. 2 .... c ....
....... M.t .... .. • 1111 ...
fl 12.7S•/e. FrMt rew te ALL l9y
ectf.tly. SHO,tot. 67Mtto.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE s.., ll<rntals. PrQ1Wrty M.i~nwnt
2436 W C:0.11 Hwy 315 Manne Aw ~ &.ch Balboa 1'1.>nd
Hl·I... 67Mt00
IALIOA •IMIMSULA POINT -
DREAMS COME Tl\UE 2 Bdrm 2
blltb, den. double •araae stresaed
for 2nd story. Beamed ceilingsL~ brick, paneling -a real w-eam hoax. ...
LAZY .....-SWAM -Put away the
mower at the Balboa Peninsula
home. Roomy -4 Bdrm, -4 baths and
family room home. With den/study
too. Close to beaches, bay & ocean
-who needs more? ·
642-5200
1601 WISTCUff D11Y1
MIWPOIT llACH
.._.. .......... ~-·------__......_ ... _.._.. -·--.................. .: .................... ~--.. .... ......_.. .. ·~ ------
tmuclD
-··· $40,000 3 BR Pla.,.in J1:1s mine
Creek with mini ocean
v iew . plant a tion
s hutte rs . air. Owner
w ill ca rr y large
contract. S310.000 .
r--.. NoweMDet •. 1•
iiiiiiii ... l""--1
1044
<ti THE 8&ACll·ll
Home 2Br, redwoo4
deck, c•d•r allallea,
hardwood lJlt, frplc.
Dla8 Point duple•, 2 1 be upper, I br low ••••1n1nL :;r:t· ,,..b pa
.... ". ceiUAp, frp New 3 bdrm 2 bath Wood· diaiQI ane • acl. p
bridle bome with front <Xfend fol' cml1 $144, covered patios. f765 / .FtJLL\pJUCEI monthly on one year ~ONREALTY
lease . Includes 4M-0'131
prdeoer. H other• to -,_--sa..r..---.-"-..,.--
clX>Ole from, '600-1100. We're the ones lo call. Chice times avall•ble in lar&esl un.lt. Fee title..'.. $12,000. ~";"·
L.,...Y .... l.E..
497·11'1 " CllEl(Plft {~r•]"llodbrldge
Uaht, britht 3 Bdrm • Realty
bea~ Uuit won't lut. 551·3000 •,
Move In condition and mtBarranu Pllwy.lrvtnr AAU94DLYHOMl;.
the best price for the '-=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil area. Aaaumable high 1• Cbanning 2 Bdrm boa_\•
balance toep. Don't misa ./ llST IUY with lovely mounta\ri ~. CALL WALMIT 59'JAll ~ewbOn~~r:~eo~:!t:~
•
RED CARPET Nice 2atory 2 Bdrm "C" suo.ooo.
75 .. 1202 plan. Freably painted,
or central air. Priced below
oompar'•ble sales for im· don os en
mec1.m4lJ'fri
.. Fii TIE 1213 N. COAST HWY ~
LAGUNA BEACH ~ •
_ r1-.,!t11r'
.. ··n "97""848 . r l on this super duplex llWUWll ~...... I 052
localedlnoldCdM.The in thia l•ree 4 · •••••••••••••••••••••••
property bu a 3 Bdrm I bdrm+booua rm home. TLC ... Hoao oattaae with new paint Brllbt llllcben with all Woodbrtdte. 38r, 2~Ba " 5 .....
and c•rpeta and a Dll!Wappli~. $US 000 tariest William Lyon. On Tender loving car~ modern 2 Bdrm apt c;.U,: • · park . By owner : needed to make thi0'3t
w /bll·lna. The owner _ &.50l50 Bdrm 2 bath Pacesetter
saya aell and he'll lialen .a 1ttCARPET · bouM a superior bo~~ to all offers. A1kln1 1202 OltAM41rltaH Pool ailed yard. Cloee 11 $219,000. · CONDO park, acboola and sbo . .,, ...... I.a.ditty Priced for faat sa •'"' '73-1700 U,lhNVerdeBome. ~~·Sharp end 1121.750. IO~''
l•+POOL
Delilbtful family home ca cul-de·HC lot. Formal dlnln1. Larae family room, J•cuu.l, beautllul
laod1capla1. AD e•·
ceUeml .... •l $111,toO.
owe. 3&91'aqeJoTerr.
(213)'11N--3'7Z2 evea. C /21 Mewpwf C ...... d on osen. IUYlaSll'VARE1----6-40----1-31-7~~1 . ' ' . . • Thia beautiful tour ••SPAAMD l%13N. COAST ewv'•'-<t bedroom bome oa •quiet •WOOD DICICIM6 tne lined ltreet baa to be aold. New roof, aew
LAGUNA BEACH
r...""'.iiZ!•* backyrd, ..a porch to re-lu .. dar' • ltard day'•
wart. Great uaumable loaaa. Call ua at
7W!S45-Nfl
H e r i t a t e P a r ll «..... -
&owllboUle a 8flrm 2~ • I ... I Yleie I olL Ba, 2 car,.,..,., bot tub, ••••••••••••••••••• •••• cauaJ alr, uaumable loan wltb 1st T .D. ·or DllAMATIC
117,000, •~" lDtereat. YllW NOMI w -..-:
~ ... .. -. --____ ...
0 . 1"t .... llW" AlT!i'-BF+atudy wiLb 1 ',, r..u, rm. a yn old. J ,
-----
.... ..._. 1006 FAMI). Y HOMI
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~llT'l~E •ll•A .. llulll&ilW 4 Bdrm bome
mac. aec. bome .... t,. ..
••mo.ooo.Mut .... b7 12/30. CalJ TS2·Zlt'r;. ,,.,.. ,_
............... 106~ ..
STYLI
('Qlll94 DAILY Beautiful Republic home
216...,.Mfl,OOO lo Meaa Verde, with I C.-..1"-d loads of ll•llao and Tec•le tile , two $1,100,000 flrepl•cea, gourmet
.......................
wltll ••leaalve tile, --------• akyllahta, and even an in· MIWPOllT .....,q'
door aardeo aU in one CHAlbim , ,..,
·'-• ...• ..,..
-I .\"~I It A I f.-t IV W• fl_, ~-.Y kitchen and a backyard ~~~~==:1~:=:~:15~i-673-6900 you won't believe. Take 1---------1 over approximately -
LOU IUCHTEL ~C.~l ~~:rs4s~9cled * •fAIJASTIC
~ 11111 ?000
'IbJa remodeled home
futuna: •dded m•ater
bdrm and family room, ~·
flrepl•cea, hardwood
floora. new cor.p4!f. plumbtna. new roo • RV~
accea and much, muC1l,
more. Owner wlll belP
with the financing. Of··
fered at $189,900. Ca4~ 540-1151 ••
I
I ,,
LINDA ISLI
5 Br. 5 Ba, huge master suite,
maid's qtrs. ·beautiful light
decor, entertaining home.
Room for 65' yacht. Consider
option. Priced at $1,100,000.
Bob or Dovie Koop. 631·1266.
Res. 7~1*.
RI/MAI
H l S F Y
I''" I' I I
BE D,R Y I' I I' I
M l g R U S I I' I I I
... AMOC..... -Uptnlded 1 Bdrm sur-.... ..... rounded by trees and ponds. Decorated in S.. & l..tal1 , eerthtooes and wood
22' ...._A•. I .I paoellloa. Assumable --s -HERITAGE
. . REALTORS '71-lll 1 ~· 2ba, fam rm. liv rm, ~~~~d~o:n2n~~~~:i:~
•-..._-----... --1-00-7-1 din rm. frplc, assum. 112 SOU --------• Plllill 8~% loan, nicely de· • · ...................... '°"led. $1U,SOO. 3183 { ,, .. J""'-•b Id OPIM DAILY For Sale By Owner, Canadi&oDr.979-1793 Y9\1\JU r ge 2'MllDU5'C
<hlples,each3bdrm,2b•. Re4llty 2S91 Bayahores Df.' fll>k • 1ar. (213)922-1 yr old bouae. reduced Baysbores. 3 Bdrm. dlo·
daya, eves Ir wltenda $1.S,000. 4 br. 2~ ba, 551·30CMJ ina rm. den. Across from
m.«564. ID8DY uparades. Assume 4t2tBarrHu Pll•).lr.,lnf' :a'J:·OOO· See Helnft'
C.-.. M• 1022 o10!c0.·eauNo ~~2881119.f.ying . For Sale By Owner. . 1"' •••••••••••••••••••••• "' ~· Waterfroat Homes. Inc. ...,..,ST SIW "-I I 75,.. &.o.. Owner financed. 3 Br. 2 Rulton 631-1400 ,... • • Ba. Roule. 125,000 down. ---------Below market financ· balance at 13~. 1124.llOO. By OWNER Harbor View
lna-tt'a letal! Put your 1•1m. Homes. 4 Br. 2~ Ba
equity to worlt with tbia•---------1 Fam. Rm. Sp•. Country
Owner left state , 1paclou1 duplex.
ftreplacea, 1au1e. 17
1q. ft. each un.lt. Gross
$1650 /mo. 29% down. owe belance. $215,000. ar. 675-0W, 646-5264.
SPACIOUS coodo. Local· LOCA Tl ON F re a c h , t o t a I l y
ed In P~P.>ul aru. customized. 644·5965. u..1 all ameastia. Owner LOC •TIO.._. &44--1W7. w II help finance . A " 1184, 900, TAR B ELL 3 bdrm, 2~ ba Edinburg
2Br, 2Ba condo. Stepe t RE A LT o Rs. ca I I lD VW.,e I. lJvlnt room
b h ... 28 500 By '""""1""" loob onto major freen-HCAMYOH
eac . -• . ii_.iiiiiiii·iiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil belt. lluy e:irtru. nalde owner. 21J.144-tr181 days, l•\mdry room, protected
2 13 · 6 9 1 • ' 7 6 9 ° patio. Nlce ailed lot.
B .. ut. lbr, 3ba. lua.
t.ownbouae. Lee room•, blah ceHiDP. cua&om cpt
Ir window coverlo11.
brUbt • cheerful eat-ln tttC:'bm. a paUo areu are CD17 a few ol tbe ID&DY dellthtlul attractions . Full ••curlty •rea . -.ooo
714-m-7410evea. OwnerwtU helpflnance.
CDMConA•I
PWSIMCOMI
.-tesz7J.IOO
at I Bdrm 2 bath home
wltb llolated mHl•
bdrm (can be parent
retreet or ln·l•w qrtn
AND a 2 bdrm cotta1e.
Als.yway you describe It
It'•~ ~~.date -&Tli.-~t.d.
644-7211
.... TlllACI
POOLaYllW
A. fflJ I bclrm wltb ~=·•wltb ...... ·~-.... • .. d
-. A ..., liadal at ..,...._
~n11
A •''I•'' , -\_ .. ·, :.·
/
...................... .........
Good ~bborbood, ._. 6TLC.
.... ,1.. be. Sl0'1.:..0. OWC·81Hl Ind. 1111lr • ....
STAY*IMAPI
AD,_,. ..... awimjo':f la ,.... INlkliu .
lmlmc.a.le4Bll, .. ......, .,.... ..,, cptq,
bit• alero••••• 1•1 , .... A-....a 9ie4
llrlc*.WalklO ..... -,1::r. .. ti& .... ...
ift;llll
La Jolla Broken Ltd
1•Wallll. +eypft•p·
macnab I Irvine
realty
A IUeSIDtAAY M
THE 19'VINI COWANY \
HERITAGE
HI Al I<)~~
. -...----------~-----... --_ .. ____ .... ....,. ......... -.... --.-·-~--------=----------------· .......... -......._-... .. ,; .. ..._. .............. ..-.... ... . .. ...... .... ~ ...................... . .................•...
lilleliP1 ' 1<1 J717 c:.e.MIM .................. ....................... ...................... .... .................. .
• 1'1.U.11'111111 A&t.rM't.iv• lbr, .comp1. redec . •ttr•t BEACHP90NT INN. Low ,_ ra, frpk, feDHd tivelbrhae,oewpajatln 1"m.-,..._,"° .. •le. ar ~tot. \l&U pd,
1U'd. C1M1t17 lrttcba, nr &'.out, crpti, drapes, tile, '7UJ... = Z:::J: ~·
....... , pool, DO pet.I, etc. N'trpt Sbor'tf -~.!!!~=:!!!!!2,.;__1 ___ ...._ ____ -i .. au lmmed. ~7S/mo Y1V Older pr« 4"1Ml4S 2 t.', 1 b8, wloler rental. WT ...
-:;; ........ SP.. ~ . 'I ••re••· avall. DOW c I .w ... $UO/mo, •d11lt1 only. -• <TM)-.-S ....., a. 2 •tor>' bome Harbor View Homes m-.a 8Jllr,....,6deal2bltb, A..._• ..... ,_ M. • .&._, t MUI S ta.r 1ar. pooll • ~. :ba, lam nn, a 3 tn·lnal. l'rpk MJJl.lbt, • ft. \l•I· AtH\, ~..._-_..,~t.!!•.· 1a911•.a .. a.. Bra ...U,ID-1171.alleJ'I. csu • palnl. -/mo. CelhMIM 724 dedt• .. Oo.~dillcfr-.n ~ -_._... . .,,_ -,,_ --t .....,.~,,'""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• -· -...a mo A••il 114·Ht• ••••. ~ -.... ·-. WOODBJUDGE Area. a _.._.,,, St I I 1 B Oil -· -• .. • ________ .....,_ ..... aw--.. 1--.s at '700 w. BR2~ a. dln.IAt room NEWPORT TOWER WID ••• ,.. r . Dec. ULb. * E. !Jal St.
IUPDDilfanlPT _,.. · ~.c:.uno.aia. w , ~ • .,.,family CONDO, bayfront with =.*fio~~Jl rec. Dal: Hl·UU ~ nu
YA IDC'IPelMAMotl ~ Pn SBr 2B• rm. fpk, cpta. clrJl9, AC. ou11tandtn1• view of · · · ~ee~15~~tl~-----
Oalllr'8ill9 .....,. area. dla. rm, 11~. ept, 0 • eamm pool II teuls, z Catalina, Udo vma1e. i •a bdrm. n-aUen. $lU ctmlTMAS CASH
UD yr oW .. ...-. re· aloslH pleHe saso cal' 1ar .• nail Dec:. 10. 2bdrm, 2b1, sec blda, • up + Hcurily. No nl6udcubeworthll00
e111&11_Nlt11ed. °"1 J\11 en.mi · · sns + dep. 152·1212; dock avall. ~ monlh· childrenordop.M2·9193 to YoU· a Br. Ht B•. ac... ol l"MIDdl, m0t• · i•OMS month or Jae. Dys : 1 Townboulel, pool, la'"'· thM .. 14. ft.• Uvlo( Ill 8.C. Condo, I leveJa, _ ..l.... 791).1t&'l.ev~:S48~90H. 1325 Mo. DtJuxe mobl e dry, IU ar w•ter paJd. 1.-eie +a car •ar· &'.car· Jbdrm. Zba, dlo rm, tam WOODB.RJOOE, tie um home. Mature adult.a. No Infant to 6 mot. 9400 to •not ii WI d ... bouN. COcnm. IOD· rm pool •P• tennis +den, 2~ b8, 2 car car, NEW BLUFFS CONDO peta. Quiet. aecµre. 1991 IUS . • • .... Pri .. fl'opef• lDf poeflble, preMotly SJZ/mo. a1.m4 . l•aa rm. diDID& .,... L8rge 3 br. 2 ba, bright Newp>rt BMl 6Ml-U'l3 .
. NNN nJl&I~ ...... ,..., -1000. DI.au fplc, epta, drp9, comm ~yard patios. Dream t'6dbl• ••It l 40
CraJa • Assoc. ll.E. 3br, 2ba, cpts/d r•pea, pool. Avall lmmed. '800 kitchen. No pets. $980. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• C...., m.1• feoced yard, llOO/mo. -+ dep. C•ll 152·1282: Coleawortby le Co . Wlote-Rent8l '850f 3 111 .._...... 2900 ~· i..-.olM6 ~-Bdrm. 2\1i 8a. c~~o. ----------1 Wets~ MaaticeUo condo, 3bdrm. Unlvenity Park 2bdrm, 3 Br. 2 Ba. House 6 mos. Ocean• Bay view, 20' Hl\WOft/6 u.ats •••••••••••••••••••••• G d d boat slln. Comm teno•-w' ·••~ 2bat..,..,Zcar1ar,11 2ba. community pool & lease. oo con . ,, .. HMrtofNewportBeacb, .U.I.., 'Fair tr Fairview. New jac, washer /dryer , Neighborhood pool. courts, pool. Washer/
OUVETREE
J1llO ~~.e. 548·1367
IASTSIOI ,,,,.r'Wooda
localed tn tbe com· U c-.. aaffa, Lacuna ... .-... -A.I cloo 11 700-1298 Dryer, 2 frplcs, 2 car merclal area It can be Beach. Have qual. crpta • -.-. '525/mo . ._ .. ,.pr r ope er, garaae w/elec. 1ara1e
OOOD Au••· to a a UNd for b1&1i.oea1, re· buyer, SlJO,O(>O uah. ~ lu:n, '15'-:MN of ~!~~w1.;...~1525 · C•ll Newport Heights lovely 4 door opener. Private
• •-.. ....__, uo &'+n«••lor ?! Submlt of. Olclt Joh.neon, Nolan lice. .....,..,..._ ...,_ · Bdrm, 3 Ba. bo~e. cpu, patio, new carpet.
IMll .... l~llliome C:..-INI..... rer., •• QPO. -..._, Re&IF..Rate.'9'7~. .,_,.... 3226 WOODlllDCH 2 FP, 2 car 1ar., end . ...:69-...i;._:;1..:...800~;__· __ --=-=--=--=-'
2 BR w/lte patio, avalla·
ble. Cotner ol llonte Vb·
ta • Santa Ana A vea.
M25 mo. 548·9190
3Br U(lltairs, 2 full baths. lr&, balcony. No pet.a. .
030 /mo. aoo w
HamiltDD. 838·2917. • ••,.~. OC'eae Ir-·••••••••••••••••• W..__..., ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• 15 d /fruit trees No 1--t.....-•744 • .._ new Teaolt. =..:..._• -. 3 Bd2 a. coodo 951 /mo. yar w · __..._ •
-a Me. ••t. A •teal 1100 111111. ..... 1 fOO •••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLEX: Xtra lge 3BR Callcrai,. '31·\2186. pets, 1.St. Ir last + dep. + ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ -n.;.__ '31·1400 61).6 ...___ '•s's'nad 2Ba lower unit. Pllllb util. $900 mo. 410 E ....... lBa, adJ•-. pooJ, ten· ,& -. •. ~-•tor' ••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ,,__"' •-• D F ~ .. •••••••••••••••••••••• cpu Ir drpa . Fence Modeoo. Avall 1 ec. o ma, l5CiO mo. l yr lse. ~I · c....,. Sin JYaO Capo. $S5,000.. ..... ....... 3106 yard, tome ocn vu, cl09 apSJt. call eves. ~ollect 59-0&J.2 ... ,7 Br.2Ba.wtOaq.l\.tyra.DiiilkteJ 1100 ..................... tobchfi~.1515.P REALTORS 916/583--8Ml. Ml..-rta.ec• 3769
• old. A&\$41•$032. ...... ,.... .. -i .... Sbt> 1 be. New· ~HI0,_.2Z31 •----L ,.241 •br 3ba ( d all .r-"' •••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~:._ _,,....-• .. , • pro . ecor, ••••••• •••••• •••••••• OWNY ...... -.. H SPAC0 v•--vw-. ~CONDO ••••••••••••••••••••••• W ll·lnl. mk ro, frplc. 2 THvvEn P•A· RJI. .,_, Coviqton, H.B. 4·plex, ~11. ,......., 11'1\ •-bl lnt l 1 Bdrm den d .t COZY OCEANFRONT car gar. 1 blk oco, \4iP AGENT m•> "2·817'7 .... 111\UDa e, ll oc. c--.. M• l 122 Ckeu vt... De/°w UDpoo\ • lBr, Mobile Home, knol· 115(}/mo. 548-4169 ' CIR liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Prioc. ()Qly. MZ-291. •••••••••••••••••••••• and jacuzai $450/mo ty oine Int. frptc, pvt bch. ILUFfS ............ ONTKEBEACH 1524129 . . dlaoaly. tllOOmo. !714) "' "'"" ~lll!~ Mo¥9d 1900 1 Br duplex w /fr plc, 4filNB:ta E Piao, 3 bdr, 2.~ blhs. Ir. • g • •••••••••••••••••••••• 9580/Mo. M0-9900. Ask Eucut.lve a Br 2~ Ba SllOO/mo. Possible lease· NIWPOllT Houle to be moved to your fot ... ,... l'antutic ocean view: Ocean view 2 Br+ den' 4 0 pt I 0 n . 0 w D r I A gt .
W4THNOHT Beauttru! c uatomiaed lot.3 br,lb8,atuccoex·t .. wpMta.ah 3169 Con do . End U n i t. dedla,lae.$'700.Nopets. 644-4144833-3212.
I,.ar1eat floor plan of· U 'dO' Viking Home teri~prox. ~ yn ••••••••••••••••••••••• -...m. Dave,ait.&44·?2\l. 3br + den Newport Hts. YEAf'·ROUND FUN:
fered. Open, fresh & 2Br, 2Ba le enclos.ed ~-~:pl~r;~~l1:i UDO ISLE Oceanview 2 Br. 1 ~ Ba. lttBALDIA'f Nr Schools $'145 /mo. ~eoc~~:.~~!':'~~~d~~
beautJlll.I view. Custom Pl?ttb. ln La1un• Hilla! COila 846-28 Completely furnished Frplc, partly furn. l ca <»eamide · front row. _m._7_s_15_______ Brunch . BBQ s. Par
decor, IQkl fixtures and nicest S star part . ..____:__ · JOOO with everytbinl you prqe.38stepstodoor. g:r~~s~fl~v~~~ Highl y upgr,ded , toes •Plusmuchmore
many up1rades. Boat (J=. a. It _,...,.,., need. Remodeled Is de· Adultsonly.Nopeta,Cal -.,,,,,,,_ earlhtones-wood, 2br, ~EATRECAEATIOH:
alip rt'\Yf~.\1iC; ec •••••••••••••••••••••• coratal. 3 Br, den 2 b•th. for appl. aft 6: 30 on rm.._............. -2ba condo, S62S. 964-6010 Te rims . Free Lessons
J MISLCM>ULD '"' i.ToWll $1650. Monthly. BilJ wkdya-.5$43. 3Br.3Ba.Nice w1thview. 1pro & pro shop)•2 ~ 12Jt$S 2Br . l Ba. front 16 UNnS Grundy, Rltr,815-4161 BT_.. 1232 asomo. 2·4 br c:oooos. some w t Health Clubs •Sauna• •--•6•7•3--1•5•3•2--~1 kitchen. Home lo have -.a. IJA MIW 3 Bdrm 2 .. _th Pe-'-Pt •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. 2th Ba. Nice. small ocean view, $700.$950 mo Hyoromassage •Sw.m· neW exterior supplied by ~ • .,.. • wu. · "'-.... Cl\ mo. BwriU. 751· 7961. ---------II All t s:zo ooo Take tbe ut user of com home. Mo to mo. or HOMES FOR RENT ., ... _ -m0ng • Drov1nQ Range
MEWPOIT HEIGHTS I ~~}. . or ' pcneot depreciaUoo for winter lease. $675. 3 Bdrma. "50·$595. 661·2551, 838·8900 Ron. NWPT HGHTS. l Br. cute. BUUTIFUL APART·
Larter lot with fixer up. clAsSIC that tu abe!ter. Struc· 673-2113. Fenced yards Ir ca rages. Eves 499-2715. cozy w /nice patio. ~5 MENTS· Singles 1 &
per. Nice 3 Be home w1lh MOllUHOME ture2Dd T.D. to your llk· ...____ !Lfl wlaltecl !i_.da._.! orpe!! .. :!11c.oAm.!·. 3 tr. 3 ba, ivg rm. frplc, mo. 64.5-9628 2 Beorooms • Fur 2 det ... _.. e & ing. 29% down. A Quall r-. _,. _...,_ ··~~· •• ~ Sl"eO s. un!urn.!>heO c~ ac.'""' garag SALES ... a .... ""-cl .. •ive.1"'"·1 ;:-••••. •_,•••••••••••.:2••0•2 no'-dnl rm, den. or town. 2bdrm 3ba lux unit inl s w I m m l n g p 0 0 I . ..-. '""LA -..... ·-· -• ·-· ocean VI.I, children " pell 0.. ea' • . h • A<lu•l l v•ng. No Pets Beautiful location Call 2706 Har~r9~206-A ...................... tWlwl•a.oclt 1240 OK. SlOOOmo 494.2469 mg nyoo wit tennis.I • Mooe•s Open oa.1y
Chuck Spiller with Re-54 5 l I ' ~u ... ,L ...............•...... • -LlltJlll... 1250 jac & pool 833·3349 I 9 !O 6 M t 631 12166 T A Several houses avallable -,.... ~
ax a · .p• .._CE inOnuiceCounty: s bl.ks to ocean. Ele&ant 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jbr. 2ba Newport Shores I Oakwood
MEWPOIT CREST I.A C.M. 3 Br 2 Ba 91185. bdrm. fam rm & den, NlCE 3 br, newly painted newly ~orated 7$4-6282 Garden Apartments Assume $100K Joan at ON THE BEACH-Mobile PltorHTllS'" S.A. 3 Br2 Ba ptS. (S725 mo). Plush crpls, ~pered home lo quiet or963-8818 1 So Home 2Br rodwood SA 3B 2Ba-..."' 2~ ba, cedar & glass. --I Newport Beach/ . 8~~ho~!h~1!~~mpo.o~ deck, ced~r s ha t es,1 10,...Till:JOP.M.I nnvty3~r2B:iii'So. Dbl car pvt gar fully gbborhood, fncd yrd,THEBLUFFS.2 Br 2Ba I 1700161'1$1
a;d' tennis. HUR RY ~ hardwood int, Crplc .1 Whelan Property maint. yd. Adults, no = C:it·~·~1 am· sunrm. greenbelt. w d. s ·~· 1 • -61" $59, 900. RM p ( 114 )I Management. 953-1667 pets. Inquire at 521 18th. · · · -ref. t950 mo. 640·8146 & , 7'4, 642·5113 Asking. Sl79,500. 4.9&-1 St. 114/960-6331 or ~t>Ug11191 1252 675-5930 '
Smith-Meyer. 640·5357 lc6oCI llmMI 3206 960-6331. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------Newport Bea ch/No. C/21 M.wport Center 7 UNITS •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba Vi r I ZBR 2ba, 1mmac Tht' &80 ly ne
110"-OCEAN OCEAMFIOMTrARK BRAND new 3 b~. 2 ba. ns'o. New e1V:.·s .~ec. Condo Bluffs Gar.age. I ~· 't'' &C~illa View 2Br, cabana & trlr, sub-PRIME YIAIL'Y llMTAL.S romm. rac. (tennis, pool, Kids/Pet.sOK. 495-6089 po I. $700 m o F. \es t 714, 64S.1l04
letting allowed. 3 pvt COSTA MESA Uttle Is land : Large l clubse). No pets. $695 -640-4Ul0 ._· --------==-·
NO
I LEASE
REQUIRED
T'M> Bdrm 1 Ba cott•ae, fenced )'I'd $418 +sec .•
l.d1 pd. Adult, DO pell
64.S-5'33
1 Br, patio, 731 W. 18th St. s:no. &C6-S72S, 640·9900.
A&k for Faye.
Avail. now freshly paint-
ed 1 Br. $325 mo. J.D
Property M gmt .
751-2787.
New E. sl4e upstairs
duplex, 2bdrm, 2ba.
crpta, d.rpe, refrig, stove. dishwasher , laundry
room, encl gar & opener.
frplc, patio, no waterbed.
DO peta. MiddJe age COU·
pie, "50/mo. $200 dep.
64.5-8939.
E.side. 1 Bdrm, alJ ulil ex
cept elect. $285 /mo
641-8544
2 Br. Duplex, gar, w Id
book up, new crpt. no
pets. 2118 Placentia I! E.
M2S.~7983
Bachelor. Newly decorat-
ed. Great E'side loc. No
peta. S32S, 548-0908
Mt:sa Verde 4-plex. 2 br, 1
ba. gar, adults, refs.
54&-5833 aft. 5.
2 Br 2 Ba. Townhouse.
patio, garage. $500 mo.
838·8081.
1 Br. Clearbrook Lane,
garage, no pets. adults
$350. Sierra M gmt. Co
641 1324 ------Newport Cr est Con
domin11.1m 3 Br. 212
bat.M, 2 story. Pool & t . ~-"-wport CHter
640.5357
bchs.pool&fishfogpier. AREA Bdrm Apt. Un/um. Gar mo.968-5'30&963-0867 4br,famrmhome Many PICTURESQL"E LIDO ~nh
$19.900. RM p . ( 714 ) &zy at l0.9XGross. Nice for small car. $500 lbr Condo, semi-retired u~r~~d extras LN ISLE! Lovely 4Br. 4Ba UlrfwNIMd l~ + loft. 2 full baths
49&-3816 2 Bdrm house plus IAYROHTIENT4LS 962·4281 evenings. fl • :ir,oo. -with manr amenities ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-290l
dUP.lexand fourplex. Al SeveralAvallableNow ~39> ...WTOWMHOUSE Lease : Sl6UO mo lcAoal"-d 3106 - --------
THIS IS MO TUllEY buiktinp with new roofs. 2 • 3 •' Bdrma. Jbr, 2'r'lba, frplc, drn rm, Broker 848-0800 ' •••••••••• •• •••• • • • •• •• 1 FOUR SEASONS APTS. C-Osta Mesa single wide Low,lowvacancy.OWC . WUJt•LuaesfromS795 Brand new 3 Br. Condo. braeak(ast nook,wetbar --------Yearly , fanta1l 1c Ir& Couple,oopels._2br 1 •~ HAllOIVllW Detroiter. cute le clean. Owner must aeU now l y ... ..a~Leueafrom~ Includes 1ara1e door w /icemaker solar Exclusive ly new . lux· lbdrm l pr apace w/d ba twnbse. Pauo pool. 0 1 S 9 0 0 comp)ete trade. Make of· _.., ~~·.!!Uo. u1aeof te'!: waur, micro, tennis, etc. ~?,'112 Br .. 2 Ba1. co1nddo. book up avail. i 5oo. S370. '73.SJoAno&ci.1002. 4 Bdrm, bonus family n Y l 5 • · rer. ~1920. , -• _..1 I & .-. •• _ ..,. ':>""""'• poo,. spa • S8SO/mo. 6(0.2571 or ...... secunty. nc u es (2l3)~19'11 r0omf&bonus rm. Lovely (OG6'763-64). Call Pat ._ SW 5 -rec. rm. Secunty gate. ~1830 popt. spa. BBQ. Rec rm.. · E'alde Townhouse type
home in superb condi Elfi'ty5MoltNe5_.107H0o.-• ' ~U ..6,.IL 675-JJJL Minimum l yt. lease. 1IOOl rm, library & gym ..... Pot r'll• 3107 2Br. l~ ba apt with encl
tion. Asking $299,()()C} for ..-T A 1850 per mo. Seaside Nicuel Shores lwnhse. 2 Call days al 213 1542-1680 ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar. tU0.646-2280 ~i;rls~WportCeftt•r ---------llf PLACE Charmin lB /d Village. 213 /833-1369 br, den , 2 ba, lge as k for Tony Eves 1 br, uWs pd, $495 /mo. lBr.,Balcony,Newpainl
6_.ft 5357 WuJtur! f67;-::r+:s.i: days, 2.131831·5734 eves. landscaped y ard. pvt 2 1 3 s 1 6 . o 4 9 4 o r ~to beach Built-ins Adults. nope~ """" Plt<>PHTllS... beach, tennis, pool. att 213 325-9522. 673-7964 art 3pm TM L,AT£7 640-8146, 67S·5930. Agt Lee 1 br Condo balcony. gar .. washer /drye r. ne w --------SJlS 97~1~
IUU • IO,.WTill:JO,.~.I Brand 3 bd 2 b pool. spa. $395/mo. paint & CJ'l>t& No pets Nwpt Crst Lux Tv.nhse CI06e to beach & bay. SOUTH COAST PLAZA
D R A M A T I C Priced Out or The Hous· new rm. M 342.7042 ~/mo. Lease. sec dep Jbr 3ba lg msl ste Elec I bdrm. stove & refng. AREA. 2 Br 1 Ba Lrg GLAMOROUS 4br. 4ba 1ng Market ? Smart Frplc, dln rm. 1ar. $1000 ._54930r 1.152.2780 1 dbl gar Ftplc . wet bar. newly painted . very custom built hom e buyers choose mobile permo.yearly.675--8921. HseotgJass,peekvu city UL.-r-yr-a... 1267 pool. tennis .~kfst rm clean . 2 c ar ga r . patio. pool, rec facal
Nearly ~.000 sq ft homes!! IUNITS ..... , ...... 3207 tites,oceanbree1es.3br. --.. .-S850.67S·l44ll. washer1dryer. no pets . security gates. no pets
Den /Lib Luxurtous \\'.,e CfP~1'.o-Westside Coata Mesa.••••••••••••••••••••••• 3ba.tll95.962·6197 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----"50. ~l & last + SlOO S480.968·3652.
Master Suite. 3 Frplcs, •ty55_.7070
1 good cooditioo, Income Charmlnr 4 BR 3 Ba, 4Br l~Ba Fenced yard HOME FOR RENT Charming Cottage 2br . dep.673-2810. l'erfKtllr21a
Ptd/Spalocated on Golf l ..-sec>.800yr.Price$44.5,000. W/D,refri&incld.,$1lOO Ne.ar Br'ookhu rst & 3 Bdrm. S»O. Fenced lba . gar , nr Lido eor-.. Mw 1122 lliOOsqft,paUo.rplc
Course. $1,200,000. Do payment S130,000. mo 6Ts..837S Garf" Id _ A ii yard and farage. Kids & shops/Bch $500 call art er ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl encl oar, dshwshr LAJOLLABKRS. OWCbalance.at11%. · . ae · -mo. va peta we come . Call 5PM673-0343 3 Br 2 Ba N 1 t 1...t-hcdup.l675 1032WalJSl. I ~ Slepa to Bch cute lbr ammed. 833·1381 days. 91J4..2586 or 973-2971 Agt · · ew P• n • u~~ 00 LaJollaCa9203'7 I OMTMEIA'Y fR€HIG€ lnM w/yard um Incl. '191MllB'7eves•wknds nofee ·· WAUCTOIEACH carpel. fireplace. STSO 3J06Glnger 54-0-44 2Br .. o . Ui r HOM€r . ,.....,,__ 3 Bdr·m 2 ba mo. Days 675--0185, Eves F . I •g • .-..-, + o ace, supe n > $tll&no./yearly. 210 44lh Beau&. New 2br, 2ba, 2 m l N1c:e 4 br home on quiet -.....;1u r I ti i &t6-S'J64 Spacious a 1111 Y 2
baytlde paUo, Ju.xwioua . St. calll11-1'M from ocn. -.SO/mo. days street near schools ~ f:":':-;;n~ c, t8'a ~-~ . Br·S3SO. Pool & play.
1MI PIHIHSULA Interior. Frplc, pool. RealEst.atelnveatmNenBts C.-.. M.. 3222 (211) 549""040 ext 591 .r.....-1 ..... A.lr/cond. STOO ...,./mo 631:1NU . SPACJOUS.l br, fantastJc around. 548·9556 from clubhouse. $135.000. 3333W. Coalt Hwy, _..,....._ .. ..,., . "'"" ...... *" • Clly ll1bt.s view JZ.7PM 645-,646 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (71')53f.f'108evea mo. Wa lte r & Le .......... '---·------3Br·2B b y owner.
llodern house + 2 car
tar on R·2 lot. Great Joc:ation. \1i bllt to Bay
Be.ach. Launc h your small boal in Newport
Harbor. 1 blk to the
ocean. Only $120,000.1•--------... Must have 30M down.
OWC90M at 12% to offset CtlllStwy Loh/
cost of land lease. c,,,.. 1500
6'75·1769 days 544·4206 ••••••••••••••••••••••
S52-4471. Newport Terrace condo, from every room. $SSO. Br ,__.,. d N CONDO 2 br, 2\1i ba,. hut· 3tll' a. nrbch l bd 2 .... b ( 1 2 . .., • .,-. rapes. o MUSTSELL! ur. mHtr awle/frplc, • ' rm. T., a . rp c . 1 Bl.IC FROM OCEAN pets. Chilc1ttn OK. W/D 2 homes on 2 duplex loll. .ec. • full rec. rac'a, tlOO/mo. 3 Br, 2 88· Condo. Com wash/dry• ref rig, gar· large 3 br, 3 ba. frpk'., hook up. $&25. 644-5789
C.M. Beat offer. takea. a.'50, 152-0880. #7-822l ~Ol+'':'?.~;~2!~.!..Ylllaa . •1mo. 731-5537. 1 b 11 1 l~flDUlcina. Own/Agt. '"'-3244 -~ _.._, _.,,. ILUFFS enc . car. eaut u 2br, ne w cpl/drapes ,
M2-lllll6 l Br. boule, 1ar. newly de· .... , .................. tel a,... leeclt 3269 •-0 _ t 3 bd neighborhood. 900 mo. bUlt·ins dean, no pell
• CIOt. Adults oaJ,y. No pell, DE'" •nrE b b ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ase. uo:au . rm, --' '4S·H22 See 752 • B , ~ ULEX "5(1/mo. + $450 dep. ~"A 2 r . 2 •· 2\1i ba condo . Trina Call Anthony. w /daya,I Shalimar Dr.
•-....... 11.,,_ loan. Ex· 64M738,wkdya. ~~a~~"o/lo.8!; Model. End uoil o1 n ~·57Sl. niles • w/enda, . ._._ ,. _ ._,. ..,... -3 Bdrm a + den , gor geous green be t. --<P-,.... 3126 celleot Anaheim loca· 2or 3 Br bee. Fum. avall. paymeata. 2nd avail. be.autlfully appoloted Fresh paint. new oalt · •••••••••
don. Z.3'1 • 2·2's. 11 X 505C.l'D8Uoo.So.aideof Slll,000. By owner. home w /3000 aq. ft. floorioc Ir lo veJ/. OocylBr Apt.frplc,pool. ;;;•-;·;:··~ U •
IJ'OU. $230,000. Sell or Hwy 673-0T2"1 i • ... Avail. 11/15/80 \IP lo l eartbtGoe carpeting. · l employed penoo, ool ti 1 • a~ 'i52:' ••-------.....-or aale 2 Cemetery trade for house. A1en · year lease. Agent. fered at $1,100 per mo. smoker or pet. $450 mo. w rp c, • • • ·
Plot&. Good She~herd 714 /'51 ·4025. Eve 2 Bdrm durilex. patio, Uparaded new Wood· 613-7300. Sl616Age. lal, last, dep., 1ef'1 llarttla41'7~.4M·3'72
SAVE $11,000, Newport Ce m etery . a I J ~3110t. 1tove /refr I· ta race. brtdfe cottap home, 2 Harb r View Homes S. ...._ &4(M888. 2 br. l ba. lie k1t. • liv
Crest, Plan 4, realtor _213__;1_4»-_134.2 __ . ___ --I APPLIY4UIY li50.+depo11t.180-l.3t3. =·A/C,pool/jac. ~. 2b• .• tam rm: Cl9lttr..o 3271 c.te...... 3124 rt.o , UIS. Martha
saidae1Jfor$19e,OOO. Buy 4 cemetery lots, Harbor Nearnew4-Plex,2bdrm. Lovely tc 3Br. ZB• dplll, new crpt, paint, drapes, ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• «·5454,ec-3112
fromowner for$18S.OOO. Lawn Mt Olive 2 b•th each unit with w/lrplc, blto k il W ...... Vll.•re. $900, Jae, 644 ·5965.a;o. 2 br, jac, 10 blks HIWLYDECOR. Ocean vlew2 Br. 2 Ba.
93 aaaumable loan, Mem~rlal · Park , fire\)lace,encloeedp•tlol w /m lc r owave. 520 2 Bd condo. $525/mo. 644-'IWJ. from bch, affluent• 1Br.1u pd, encl car, "Frpic, huie deck, 9500
ocean view. Open House Mapolla Mdion, $3200 gara1e. $165,000. Bil Be1onia. USO mo. Avail. now. Call Cral1. clean area. 213-990·93'16 d/Wuber, pool. Adults. mo. Boat Canyon Really Sun. 5 Summerwind value, aell all for $2500. Gnmdy,Rltr,815-tUll 159-1616, 551·5784 or 811·19 THllLUFISS, ;;.:s:,zJo w 11:· n d s . 642.5073 -..OS.
::..:· l076 C&llcoUect (114)92'7·4132. o...r .... se11 48U713 I~~~,~-Spacloua • spotless .3t Wwt aater lZ91 21r. I laA.pt ..:. ..... ~::..; ... ~-_.,...--~-=,.,..,.....,,4-=-o
••••••••••••••••••••••. ~cMr!_hll 1600 6 Bdrm, 3 bath giant Coeta Meta 3224 h' • bdrm, 2\1i bath end una ..... !......... ........ Newly decor . Gaa pd. • ........... ••••••••••• -u SHOii!!. n•ury home. Ass ume l al ....................... REALTORS.. with pvt patio on ''The . eocl&&r,pool,d/Waaher. Brand new 1 • 2 Bdrm. Cwn' S s: •••••••••••••••••••••• $125,000 at 113 andBrandNew!OceanVlewl Greenbelt " i n o urAtlractlve4br 2ba,loc:.m Adulta."2·5073 PierpoUileCoados.Pool.
4000' Euc. Hme ln LACMIMA llACH $25,000 2bd at 14%. Due 3 Br 2\1i ba condo. Turlleroelt Vlata Enc. ad ..,. ... Avail. now IOOd oei&hborbood. l&e ap•, teanta. 1ara1ea. Guuded Commty. 180' lllll5. Projected income tl25/mo. 988·4456 or 41lr, fam, 31ty t"nbme. lam bome. nke yard. l .. ToWllh•M • (2U) S..120Z drs; (714 ) Ocul\View,tennls,pool, 960059.FT. f<lC'lye.ar$19,200.bfully 982-0MukforGIDA)' Quiet, faot. view, rec. '850/mo.Call!Ul>-9523 New'f decor. 1as pd .• 8Gmlevea .
.. '-'-ml prlv beach. 14 Leased commercial· occupied. R.H .R. A.... J t t lo a b·•tte ra c • •1 enc i•r gool • ...., ._.. •• p •n • o .. • s ... •vtE..., ~ B • .8 I~ r • 1 . , . ua .... _ ,.._taJ -.... ~ 3 $'150 ,000 by appl . lnduatrial unit.a locau:u ukforBeeu,6lJ.7300. E.Skle ~le:a.2Br,yard, t J to a or r.n ""' • 1·., a ........ -.a..1-d 3425 d twa1 er Aull• ... .....,....,.. ·-•o.
(114)541-6M2or 723-8828 onooeolLa1u.na'1main aar .. quiet street. :::o!l~/ ab'!,~p'tng . Port R~y~l. ... 1f11e1whto •• :::=.~.: ......... 642-S073 · · Bdrm. 2\1i Ba. Coodo. hictiways. Bwldloa re· 1q, notch triplex w flood OlUdlwa ok. Avail. now. ocean • '"'-1 1. Ocean Ir S.y view, 20· OllA.M ceot1y remodeled. Higb income, 4 yrs old, Npt llOO/IDO. lll&s lut +sec. -.an $1800 mo. 4 Br. 2~ Ba. DeD8 Pi coodo, 2bdrm, 2 Br. l Ba. '400 lo M~. boet allp. Comm lellDia
'YOUI DREAMS deamod atta. Partnen ~ area, 3 Br 2 Ba Joan41'7-5t02 Woodllftdp 2 atory, 2 Br, New Bedford:'Ni1bt ll&h 2b9, partially furnci aar, D/Wlllber. cara1e. courts, pool. Washer /
iJl om Cape Cod style want oul, olferinc very ~ +2 Br 2 Ba wilt. 4 · 1\11 a. pool ape lean.la view. $1400. Both avail. catport, waaber I ry~r • S4f..33IM Dryer. 2 c:ar &•race ~~:':me'lu!olrer!t~~ :r.T~riec~:f~~5~ a f;p':!::~.°;:,~ d~~ 3=m=00~~=! · ~~~.4u .' Lae . =-.~~,.:;:u, ;t?.Ws.jac, tennia. ~118drm.~. ~~ =.· ::.~:f.e .;!tO:,
Cu1tom feature• wt\h"118,750down. 59-3385 mHter auJte, family Tow••• pets. c . .... . I DeW c•.rpel. wm COD·
throqbout. Ellleoelve RMaonocntcs 175-87 --u room, (lreplece. Pool, llMJALS LIDO·LIDO 3 t1drm , \kfwfllr•sd 3525 +de\).ISl-9847 Aderf\al'D.64Hto3.
• UM of l>rtck. muble Is ' ---, uuna, Jacua.I, .tc, etc, 2 br 2 M E COUl'\)'U'd, aludJo, park· ••••••••••••••••••.e•••• PINE BLUFF A.PTS _,....., ... ""'ONlt "8rdwocJd. Onlyt mo old. MIWPOllTllACM A.beolutely· prlm• loc•· ac, lu .. prtvate 1ardeo 2brMbll +dee U., • .-Omo. R.H.R. Act, 2Br l\4Ba. 2 car iar Spec: 2 8 2 Ba Ad It u•m·u_.,_..,. ='a;n':~ht>,t=: Prime c uou1xuow1tb :: ':afi:°;e:~.:1!~ J*Jo.WSOmo.~n ==~~~ SJJO.$HOO m.mo. ;~r: '-:1!1 /1•':: ~f.1•:0:r•:•:~· .. vi:':~ ~2!°:.2~~~C.O:~:
Call&n-lmorMl·Dlt. older t•o '-edroom I.Ard uiumable loan1. IOOS,...rS Oil Ot2~be .... .-ON WATER: 2 Bdrm. 2 wHb•i;~&er , pool. stove, dt1hwar. apa, lrMh coml)t .. eJec:. 1•r. ~~=1;,~= Aak0la or~·llv•r B·Slde, feeced yard, 4bl'W.bll+bollUI = ba.Seeuri\.Y."50/mo. uma, . tllOOttno. lndryrm.From$:500. opmer.Tsmm,J\aequel·
Blvd. *'50.000. A1ent, 6"°"1317 r:···· 2 Br. •50· lwlba H.llla ON WATER: 2 Bdrm, Al\.C:f72.l.S37. SPMC '31-4101 =.i:::J~~-:~sri:
IMl'UXM.I. zno........ 3brr'fu1Ua"50 YSJC!IMDST75/moyrl,y. D.h ........ HOO a. mo. Call K4·25H or
---------• Neu' beach, 2·1 bdf'lll., 2 Sh a '(t 4 Br . N •a r ..... ok-., SECU1UTY CONDO: 2 ....................... ~~ 2 ::~:.. ·~1· t7J.lt11 A;. .• nor .. .
...;;...__,..------1 ....... Miller.... .at' ........ near P•tk, M.V •• C. Slmll c~lldr-.n ::'Bdr/mom, 2 b•, vlew 9!'" ... ~!!!~DOutJrJ ':'!·. lndry rm. Imm~.:. oc'. Lbftly 1. 2 • S 84rm. I 071 il: a.. rt Commeft tnDC. Clldy. OK. J11cld1 tarvenlna ,...... .. -.-... -.. ey Adult.I oa., c•t T -l.Btk '° Pa-'•c TR.lawtmt642·1903 1trvtce. $125. Dold WA',l'Ell.2Bdrm,2 11u:.:11atSt.ll1rs ,..._... · · owollouHa, ur•t•. • ,._ I ••so "'ooou' lbde Realtor 541-ao. b8, u ceptlonally furn. OK. TSl9ll1mt. &U-ll03. pMlo. .. .....,., lac. "806 IYOWMll Oeeaa. -1 ~ • . CM .. ~ SIAOO/mo, 2br,lb8,No.La.1unacJ011e "51).-2 Sr. 1\1i Ba. "11.CallN,....Tmor
...,,,....., paneramlc IM-l.•·\ff=co. ~lfl" 2110 a.~bay Ar .. HH for __ to .tlla,.lbcb '950/mo ~bae. All bulll-lna. nt•'IMT.
eaa •l•• •f D•e• 1wr' 644-4910 ....................... lwe:4br,Aa,lcar••r, Wth:ifvM ..... •lllc eau..,..-or4'7"4IMI P.U0.1ant. LDdJy rm. 111iM1ii;wiiir1iiMi1juii1T111ii...-
rltor. Spectacular • •• • .,. . .,_ ar SH Lule lelllllt eta, Ju, avail Ul·l400 Sm cbUcl, am pet OK. i...., WliilMa hf
IOOO aq. ft. 5 Jlalt start1n& up ln a buai· otdabo,. re•ote HH 12/U80 ..... a.4-t0'11 , Pl l litl J707 lmmed. oc:-c-.ene1. TSL Ax*tll 1'11!11. u• 6 j
+n&n•t. "9,000 neNolyourown? Al . w/lllllliMt.roedl,1u, a ~m. Cotta1e wlth ...a.ilhe:. .......................... ea.&• Br. WeU •eeerat,•: .., #N. MIU1•ble way to tell ~le aboUt •· a• ....u. ltoJDe, ..,....,.,. lf•Ml. to r""u"""""JJa:~"" 'Br. 2 Ba. Nr bcb, PoGl. '-Dal.,. apt,-... to ~ 1 .. _ u-"' ctr-. 1111 ..... 1_.
I Ml 1' 11 • • • c 1 • t · It 11 with • lo•...co1J ...-.. a• ._. -M.da. t..aa. mo/mo fr'N + bda. Ocrl/a.1 TI9w <ro• .._.. 1 ...... .... · .. ian. ..-_..... ...n. Jactilll, ilc~~~:. Clau lrled ad. P hone 11a .. 1 •• ..._ to Mllf ,.u. na w. wn~o:,I flDd wbM you ,.an_t ln :C:·.!!.~11r· t11ndec\'.. ssoo1wl1ter .a C&lJm•i ,... ..... •=.._ l·l'-"7. 642-5im.. awU'leihdldOltwell. m.-. . °'71'UotC\PtlftedS· v ..,_ • SllO/yr'\1.CT$..5* rr--. -
' .. -
20 yrs. Remod., repair
Home. office, boat &
dock. Al 675-6294, 548·6888
Cu.lom brJd1, •toae, ...._., ~. ttuteo. IWI. ,..._ ._ Ut-..., ........ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Pa.int1n.1 • Papertn1 Prof. wodi:. Free eat.
Raobl. Steve. S.7~1
,......... ,.0. .. 11 ... £ ,.,_..,... ,, • ..................... ....................... ····················~
aa7oa Pal•ll•I Co. PwtPmtBl>zlenlc. n.. Setv.·•~lalw •
111&./Jt:d. deu, depeod•· 1llE MAIL 8 0011. at hr removloi Yuceu A
ble, pertoa allaed -EQIUlw7Cdtl-Nll at•mp1 . J'ree etti
.-vice. Complete pre· ..... .,.MM411 ~ •
pera&Joo. ~lal care. liiieiiii'-:--;-;-:--~....,..,.. 'Nwtllt .. . ............................................ .
Metboda , from U ,
~Jt7f 548·1570
1---------New 6 recovera, llepalr ~ s.r.lc•
"American Palotinc It a peclaU•t /atay ·bu1y •••••••••••••••••••••••
Decor " Reaid /Com m. prica. Aellable. 5M·0612 FM& accurate typinf on
Freeest, iuar. 646-1460 HOIUZOM IBM Correct /5electrfc, other aecMarial work, REASONABLE PRICE IOORMG CO. buslneu letters, t•:•
lat.text. Free est. AlltypesolroolinC a umes, e t c . K aren.
c..i. work. 636-94$3 Jack i 381M.25548·3609 8'7$-1230 I'.!"'!":::--::---,=-=-~-:-~~~ a aiaoOuatom Painting Tit W •1wClt .. 9
Int/ext. Materials·labor ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••
guar, free est. 963-9810 llMllMI• •och "Let TheSwaahine lo"
Tie. Co. Call Sumbine Window
New' ceramic tile Im·
proves a ppear ance &
value at reu. cost. Free
est . • su11eation1 .
8'2·3020 17592 Gothard.
H.B.
Ceramic tile installed,
small )ob& welcome. free
est. 96().9289
TreeW.lce
••••••••••••••••••••••• ' TREE DESIGN .
Or namental pruning,
Sculpturing, topping,
thinning. rem oval, gen
clean.up. 646·18'5
Yoo don't need a g'un to
"draw fast" when you
place an ad in the Dail)
Pilot Want Ads! Call now
642-5618
Cleao.tq, Ltd. 548.US3
PROWJNDOWWASH ·,
Home & Comm ercl,al
Free FAt. Steve 646-1957
~
NEW
BUSINESSMEN
Contact the DAILY
PILOT for Information
regarding the county
requ irements for '
u s ing a Fic titious
Business Name.
642-4321
EXT.332
Aportm•t'lb Unfum. uh Unfum. artments Unfum. Retltds to Share 000 OHke R...td 4400 Office R...tal 4400 MoMy to Lo. 5025 Mor+CJl!IJH, Trust
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deidi 5035 Ccr,ool 5150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hadin9o.. hoch 3840 leoch 3169 S.C......te 3176 16~7 We:itcli~f. N.B. Want We have office s pace lowest r ates a".ailable· •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fem. non smkr to shr 2Br f1nanc1al anst. 7000s.f available an prestigious Free coos1:1lta~100 . No IMMEDIATE Need riders. Lv. D.P ·
lbdrm apt. cottage i.lyle NO FE£! Apt. & Cood Studio a pt with ocean 2be condo ~r OCC. A l<;:. lsl.floor.Agent541-~3~ N~wport Center. 675sq ft oost-no obhgahon . loao FAST FUNDING on ~~~~st ~~n F~~;~i:.;.
lJ mG-$325 rental.s Villa Rentals view Elec. furn. $275 pool, tennis, S2SO+ ulll. ~ ft p · t with a huge ocean view ~uotes. Isl. 2nd, Jr~ s. re· 1lld's & Jrd's Cambna S.A. at 7:15AM. Lv. S.A• VUig, 8473020 67~912 Broller . mo.See Mgr,332Encino Avail L2 /5, Shery l ba~· Frapprox r1.vate for only SIJO ft Lease ru~ance & AITDs .. No Mortgage.9S5·3454 agam4.30PM 661·8437. -----·-· -Ln.AptC,S.C. 752-1330 ext 66. dys, wy convemen has 2 year option from mln /!Dax. Creative Wooclak•A,......nb Near Hoag Hosp 2 Story S48-5019eve. Near Nwp Frw y & October 1981 Call for fmancmg exper. Please Pnvate party has well Lod&Foulld 5300
6100 F.din A H H 2 8 l'h Ba o·.. R '1 2Br, S425 mo .. enclosed --. -Bristol. $225 mo. Avail moreutformal1on call631-2246, ~·2089 secured 2nd TD for sale •••••••••••••••••••••••
... ult I ger .ve2 bd · · Lar.dry ,_..:_._mrng m. gar , oce a n v aew, Oceanfront, N.B. Yearly. 12-1-80. 765St. Cla1rswte OM MARSHALL RLTR ""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim! atdl.scount 975·1176 ---------•
beauWul lake & st.reams 642-""""' .,.... MONEY AVAILABLE nu uxury. l cx rm, ~ ,....,..up. $485. 58&-07.Sl, 768-4541 12165/mo. Female to shr l!D. Costa Mesa. 645·7800 ' •u•.999() • I
Com let \ N · ... _._ ........ ir.....-1-L-d Jbdr m . 2ba. Aft 5pm --'1111 WH9.ts/ pet./Froema~1 1es o WESTMEWPOltT ~~~HOO 675-6783. START '81 ~!.~~~ ... ~!~.o ~~~~~~~! I r:fr~
846-6591 L&e 3 br, 2 ba upper apt. •••••••••••••••••••••• Apl . to shr . Dana Pl. "-··--"' by Combination -----No pets _..5 o Agt Forstore&offkespaceat """' ... "" ••••••••••••••••••••••
675-8170. wht male $230 mo. ~oe.. es,,,.qft. lnt.ertelFinanc1alCorp. =::=-:.-... ":! ...... 2Bdrm,l 'hba,newpaant, ...... m . . Large2Br.2Ba.Stra1ghl u!J .. GHT bl w o{ Real/~ersoi;ial Prop. L -?9 ... ~ 5 100
stove & dshwshr, encl 1 9 9 •-500to Z 0 ;-t IZ11>MJ.?Z¥ gar. 3 bib from beach, Lar ge 3 Br . Uppe r lst / ast 4 J ·O 87 "' ............. Offi M" .. 'AVERDE DR ··-·-· -adult apts in 14 plans 768-4234 "'""' ces ~ PLAZA • CA:ld OK, no pets. S425, Duplex. I house from from $415, 2 bdrm from --at u• Marilla le""' M y, d E c M Wmhd 5030 No y
53&-0828 ocean. With beautiful ~05 + pools. te nnis, M/F sllr furn. ~br, 2ba VIII• ,,,.,., Yas.11J3 · . ~••••••••••••••••• W OU NIAi THE IEACH view. S750 mo. 675·8018 waterfalls. ponds! Gas ~.B apt. Pool, Ja c, ten.
New .2br, 2ba, bit-Ins, 1 house from beach. Lrg for cooking & beating incl uUl. Sheri 645•81•5 or Special rotes ,f Newport Modem Store or SI 00,000 2IMI T.D. I Can
patioMnar. Adults. $475. 2Br, freshly painted. Will ~~y FJ"~~ S~~r&ie~~ 63l·SM4 Eves. leased by Dec. 15. office. Nr post office 548 ~h~e:~ erei:e ~~~ an aer. 84().3808 fum.1625/mo. 968·8263. Beach to McFadden then Share lrg lux home, $265 1qso S/f. J erry 213t•77·7001 Qmdo. PP only-no Bkrs Sell
BraodoewCondo 1 bdrm. Villa Balboa Condo, new West on McFadden to + utll. Microwave, 2 5(X}.1200Sq. Ft Near Airport& Freeways. please. Pays 153 per yr.
1 bath, close to beach. )a 2Br, pool & rec rm, Se aw ind V i 11 a I e . f11>lcs. 544-3428. Up ro I mo. Free Renr Total 1640 sq ft. 2 air All due 5 Yl'S or sooner.
encl. aaraje, frplc. No nice view. 260 Cagney (714)893-5198. Mature aentleman will Wet Bors cond. office un.lts W/2 ba. MiuWalker87G-8600 . peta.$&25.974·37~. Lo.S'TOOmo.675-3007 4 0 ahrbeaut.3br,2 baN.B. WoterfrontSertings La h i a h cel l i n g Moat) s.T ... t
2 Br Ba I r --8 ult bd home w /discriminating warehouse/storaae area Deidii' 5035 .1 • in 4·Plex. N ce ._.t I oice 2 .r m , Noo·smoker' fem ale, lady. 121115. 71().0802 lo rear w/t.rUck slze a c-•u•••••••••••••••••••• oeiibborhood. Clo.e to 2ba in a~rdeo settmc. qwel, no peta/klcla, pvt ceaa d.r. SQttable for Uaht all. Garaie. No p et1. Po:oJ, paUo, new c rpt, rm. kitchen prlv .. tndry, Roommates 18-25 to ehr manufac turln 1 . as· Wtlet-Mh).Co.
SUS. 76().1713. 833·3307 qLDetsec area. Adults. no pool &bot tub, N.B./~.M. JBt, 2Ba apt, CdM . $185 sembly or ? Completely
pets . $565/m o . Also area. S22S + v. utll. mo.,immed.759·1222 carpeted. Will consider
AU types of real estate
iov~1:49. 1465. l&e cheery 2br. 2ba.
blt·lns, or ocean, areal area . N o p et1 .
'5M5e(Dean>.
New lbdrm, 4 block• from
ocean. Adult.I ooly, no
pd.a. 536-2877.
Deluxe poolside xtra lge
lbr, 2ba. Bllns. dswhr.
1~ miles beach. Adlts,
no pe t s . $395 mo .
536-8382.
spacious l bdrm apt for 645-0128. all or part. 641-1388 Bus. slnale a<lult. S46S/mo. ----------tFe m rm m t e 2 2 + hrs. 548-9991 eve & 6'4-4787 Room w /lull house responsible. clean, neat ~ends. i...TDt
642-2 171 545.061 I · privile ces. Ne w port 1165/m o C M a rea Ca rdtll
2 Br. 1 Ba. Av ail. now. Beach.642-all ~ • __ _.1 ..,.475 C-.forT.D.'• ~of Balboa & Coast ----------• -,. .. ___. ... Hw y. $575 m o . J .D. LaguoaBeachM_otorlon, Workios-nother nds ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMQD"ican-tc9SS-4141
pr 0 p e r t y M 11 m t . 985 No. Paclhc Cout roommale-fumlshed a pt
7Sl-2'787 Hwy, La1una Be a ch. Sl75 mo851-0l89aft Spm
· Daily, Weekly. Kitchen G4a 1 2Br. 2Ba, studio on Bay available. Low wlr.ter torT.... 4350
front 11()()/yrly rates. 494·5294. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-8990
Widow has money lo buy ar make 2ND T.D. any
size above $10.000. No
credit ./, no polty. For
a lion call AGT 67J.7311
sq. ft. & 1260 sq. ft. in _anyt.L.....;.._._m_e _______ 1
More
~It h Dally Piiot
P E S N\' PlNCH ER
ADS Stlll onl) 82.
3 line' ror 2 d;n l> onl~ SJ u d11.) J.lc· a line
Ad,·ert as e one or
more items \'alued up lo SIOO Each
add111onal line 1s
onl.) 60l' for the f\40
da ~·s Sorr.). n o
comml'rC'i al ads
allo"ed Cha r~e
Your Penn' Pincher
Ad nr u~e \llUr
BJ nk America rd
\·1~a 11r \lao.,tercurd
fOUll ADS
AIEREE
64\f,78
r .. ···············································; l .--: . I I -~~,1.·. i
\•, j I ~ • ! • Businessmen f lit you are do1ngi
\business under a '
1F1 c 1111ou:r Business ~
l \ ame you are required ; i by faw 1 Busmess and i
! ProfesS1on.s Code. Sec r
! 17900 10 179301 to file a 1 i F'1ct1t1ous Bus1neu f ! Vame Stateroent and J
I hove 11 pubbD!ed for 1
four con.tef:Wrvt' Wt'eks. i
j WE at lhe DAILY j
; PILOT can help with r-
j both Call the LEGAL !
i DEPART.~E .VT at ~
! fi42 -1321 F:zt 332 f or i· i furt>in 1nformat1on ~
i ..... . ...................... !
llMIW• tlwlaw 3842
----------Low rent to mature F in Single garage. Dbl lock.
Homelike Lower 2br. 2ba, exchange for child care. StOrage/park. Mesa del
~; w/frplc, $600. dis-li42-n 63eves Mar.11(}/mo. 851·2175 Huntington Beach. Flex•· bleterms.213/596-7202. Losesomething valuable? These little ads really ..... trf-' R-.dal 4500 Place an ad in our Lost for mort' iulormJlwn work • Joan the thousands •••••••••••••••••••••••
CONDO. 30' boat slip. Bay
view. 2+den, prestigious
Huntington Ha r bour.
$1060 mo. R.H.R. Agt,
873-7300
~:i~~no pet 644·0685 .Hotels. Moffit 4100 Costa Mesa, 731 W. 18th
-----•••••••••••••••••••••• St, "5. single garage. •••••••==••~••••••••• and Found columns. andtoplaceyouradt•all of other people in this
That's where people look area wbo are regular Lovely, large 1 Br. Apt in DO YOU LIKE 64&-6725, 640-9900. Ask for
lhe Bluffs. $495. MOTELS? _Fa_..y_e_. ------•
CXc & whse with o/b door, when they've found an 642-5678 users of Classified Call
750 sq Ct, sz4o. Util pd. item of value. our ad taker at 642·5678
851·0494 Weekly rentals Crom $84 Garage & storage in Hunt.
Yearly28r.1Ba.Stepsto & up. 646-7445 . 2274 8ch.213 /433·2435orP.O.
C.M. Fwy close. 615·625 l. ;;.:;;;;,;;:;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;::;:;;;:;;;;..L;;;;::======:::...!..----_;:...:;~,;;-_ Stol-Uiji 4550 '"'-• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
I Br 1 Ba condo, adults.
pool, tennis, no pets, The
Lakes. $&25. 548.6357
beach. Very clean. ~25 Newport Blvd. C.M. Box 449. Seal Beach.
rm.21.3/947·514• LJVE AT NEWPO RT 90'140 Approx.6,000sq.fl.avail 111 Fountain Valley near
Vtlla Balboa Condo. Lux 1 BEACH ~~~~;, On Balboa Peninsula next S.D Frwy. $1320 mo.
Bdrm, Pool1 Jae. $525. ....,........, to fUn Zone. (l0"'2x20'h) ---------1 John S56-9360.~-7S33
....... leach 3148 Secur. Bldg. 64~8039 Vocatfolt R...tals 4250 673-2!H3. 673-3930 NEW EXEC. SUITES ._.ab W..t.d 4600
••••••••••••••••••••••• Npt Shra. across rrom
beach. Bach & 2 Brs
from $345, pool, enc gar
~5078
•••••••••••••••••••••• • Office ll...tal 4400 BEST 0 .C. LOCATION ••••••••••• ••• • ••• • •• •
MOUNTAIMYIEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• 200N.TustinAve.lman HOUSE wanted by Bachelor apt, beaut ocean view, pvt garden
aettlng, wom an pref.
$t00 . .s9-53(M 9·5.
VILLAS S.A. & Nwpt Fwys. Lge mature. qwel cpl Npt
TEHMIS CLUI KOU.CENTER prof. decorated of cs Bch or C.M. To $850 mo
Near Palm SP.rings. 1-2 & 3 bedroom villas availa·
ble. Weekly, monthly
and annually. 7 light~
tennis courts. Close to
HEWPOllT !Wceptionist, telephone Lease. Sec dep for sm
WOODS COYE
Ji2S mo. 1 Bdrm. open beam celliog1, frplcl
cedar lined bath. 370 Flora . Eves 494·3449.
da)'1I m.~ Phil.
\ br, frplc. downtown, $410
incl. uti l s . Martha
4'7-5454, 494-3672.
Apt for rent. 1 or 2 br.
vtew, frplc, no children ·orpeta. 497·1306.
l BT. 1 Ba. Steps to beach.
S350 Property House
642-3850, 642-1010.
3 Bdrm. 2ba . 933 W. Ran c h o Mirage 's
Balboa Blvd. Dishwshr. Restaurant Row. Agent. frplc, · 1aund hookups, (714)328-4097.
garage, t,; blk to bch. S750/mo. Isl/last. securi-4bdrm, 2ba condo on
ty. Avail now. 673-2282. 9 North Shore of Tahoe.
t.o s pm. Fully fWTI. 5 /min from North Star. $400/wkly .
C.anal Front corner lot. 967-3226, W-3946 Bert.
3Br. 2ba, frplc, lg sun· SKI RENTAL deck, refrig, auto gar dr,
Oceu front apt, 2 br. 2 ba, greenhouee wlqdows 11ip So. Lake Ta.hoe, Nev· 2
SlJOO mo, For sale or availa ble . $875 /m o. BR, almoet new, steps to
67c o120 67 .. 2375 He.veoly NorUi ski lifts,
Elegant executive suites
in prestige location. With
complete support servi~.
7141851·0681
J.2S.500 sq. ft grod fir,
utils pd. From $85 up. 779
W. 19th. Sl. C M . Tom
967.UIOQ.
"'THE"
EXECUTIVE SUITE
fUlJ service offices in
Newport Center 6'().5470
,LAZA
IXICU11YE SUITES ae...d7·1305. " or ~ panoramic lake view.
....... 1152 •OCEAMfaOMT• Only 165 per nlte. The ''Therelaadifference."
••••••••••• •••• •• •• • •• • 1br i>-nelln&. great vw, E q u l t y S h o p p e ~...l..ltNlpool, nr 1bopplo1l f11>ic, 9550/yr. 2br, den, 916-542·1400, ask for 714 /752-0 234
fllti>/mo. LalWla Nl1ue IP'Ut vw, paneled. frplc, Unda. 2082 Micbellon Dr. #212
Condo. M&-9618, 661·0416 =/yr 642·00·'5 eves Maui Condo: 2 bdrm on 2ml Business Cntr 1213
.............. 386' Beach. View! Sleeps 6. Doctor, &..wyw, •••••u••••••00••n° Lux..1t::~,:0~~1:;~B· $10 night Brochure . ~Cr.Mt!
serv .. xerox, conf. r m trained do&. 644·6503
Sec. serv. avail. From Nd lbdr St d" ff S275 mo. Last month free u JO e 1c1ency H.B area Jan Feb· w/6 mos. agreement. Mar c h A m en It i es
953-0937 840-4912
.-wrc>RTCENTH ..._.t/ht•.st/
1 man exeeutive ore. pvt •• ~!•••••••••••• entrance, prestigious ad-......_
dress. $310 mo. 6«·7712. Opportwtlty 5005 ••lilllM611181-----i .•••••••••.........•••
----------1FAtab. Newport Beach HWPT FltOMT AGE tu & accounting prac·
REMTALS live. For sale to in-
2 Rental Spaces Approl(. dlvidual only . Te rms .
S50 sq. ft. & up. Inc J udiog 1 "iiiMZ-iiiii5212iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
ullls. $350 " $450. 24501• Newport Blvd. Costa
Mesa. See Manager.
Single to tri ple office
1ultes avail. in Newport
Beach. Ca II for Info:
75U188.
HIALTHFOOD
USTAUUMT
A 1uccesaful bualness in a larse newer shopping center locaUoo. Price in ·
cludea excellent lease ----------•plus a turn.key opera·
Office, E .slde Costa Uoo. Seats 140 persons.
Mesa , 13 2 Cabri llo Aaaumable loan and
Sl79/m0. 641-8544 owner will help finance.
-
8514l09 Eletant bldf ., In heart of
Secbkts.tMSW-1622 .... toSMN 4300 Huntlntton Bcb ,
' HIWPOltTHGTS. •0 •••••••••••••••••••• Y/1paclou1 office s -UY.... Lov~ 2 8d 1 Ba quiet Movin&? Avo\d dcpoal\.a la llcyUthll, wetbar, con· &... Offke fOf' Leese
S ollea, 11t2 bedroom aru, mature adUita 00. c ut Dv101 upenae1 I rerence nn, 15' &;f aq . ft. ' Newport Bea.ch, Orange
~:. ............ ..........
'31·1400 671-6900 ua, latownbouaet. ly ....... 5. J eanne, a .... ProfeHionally 1lnce !"~, auper 21 •~.ft. Cowaty Air{)(> rt area. ft'Olll .,.,. •• mewcal bld1 .• well •P· Lu:nrioua office avaU
... ~·1900 631·18. 197\touSIMATIS pointed at 7~ per t q.n . Dec. J.5tb. tn cuatom de·••••••••• ~•aofroot tor Winter Lldo Ille Bay fro nl. m-41.M FordetaUuall 1lped Lawyera aulte. tel.em 102
..... 1\arnUshed la "'1· Gor1eoU1 ~Jew. a Br, RED CARPET New aln1le It~ offi ce ••••• ••••••••••••••••
ftn.Brokw.f1Mt12. 2ba, rrplc. $900/m o . LOOKJNGTOSJIARE? 183-Wl ~:e':ft"°Secret1:~1Zi ./NEED • 4M--0029 WE MATCH AOOM · • 1q. ft. well located area fllll1 rum. Recep·
i.,.. I 'br, 2 tNI, fiatlo, MATES I North Coeta MeH office . Uooist, copy service, 'frfilc:, cWiwhr, new 1 de· Veraa1Ue1, 1 Br. PoOI, ?U.9475 Part nut to yo\lr door. llbrary
1
coril erence
eor ... H mo. A1t., club. S.Curity. "25/mo. M/F sbt 6 bt· 2 ba ba• Fully equipped with room.\A.11714/833-1~0 m.-. -..i•. No pet.a. c ... N ' So c : carpet, a/c, cabtneu • ·•· Spa. r · o••• • R bl Qllll& I Ir. Apt. Oara1•. Lee 2 Bdrm motel uolt. f1ua • twy. ra:zs + 1/5 1.or a1e. euon a >'
_.... ..._, Adulta no l\ana IAU -JO"'· OK ~ ............. • ..... t ~C::· Call Tom, Harbor -· _.., ' ' .,.. ... ' -.v.&.__ Prdeatloo J Bldl "*'; UOl U. 15'b. Sl. blkloocean. $150/wll. No , .... Be b lb b to b .., 1IOO • · ~ s.f•bta, tue. d!p.MHMO .._ M r OJ• s r __ . __ . -----•
.,. i Bdrm OJac1o w 1tecurity =~~!i~ ~::.~ wxuaY sum
AD AM. ao ,.... 2 Br. 2 1uard. Refrl1. D /W, e:ao-$SIO day1, 494·5'11 ~ l:"ftncy. JOOO Ill....._ .... Pool, •Pll· Jac1111l. S$25. 752-2.310 ..-acaeon; : omeea
........ d1W..a.r meld ... -.1111.v... P9opie•boJMeclpeople (ion. ·~:rr c.~·,c:r: Br·1 • Golf Coune. Iii lbdnii apt, aduttl, abould alwa19 tMck UM Newport Bell. CoPtad
pooA, ..... 1y ~r. No Senkie Dtnd0f'1 ID tlM AD' R. rY ey ( 11 s )
Wll&Adllalp? ttl-111t ..-w.-aur.MMua. DAILYPILOT --·
·-' '
Prime Newport /Men
Bulloaa Parlr. Qualllly
oUlce 6 warenouae ..-ce. 1,tl80 •q. ft. unit
avaU. fOI' Immediate OC· ~· For-lea11n1 In·
ro, call 142·..U Mon. ·Fri.
7:»4 .
IOO aq ft • a offlcet In = c.ot.r. MT San
Dr. Suite 109.
l700permo.M4-4U4 .
•
./MONEY
•
NOVEMBER
MID-WEEK
SALE
For Private Parties Only
NOW through NOVEMBER 30th
Your.an Place A Omallild Ad
Tos..tOn
Tunday, W....., • Thunday ' and tun
J1&YS
FOR
THE
PRICE
OF 4
(NO REBATE FOR EARLY CANCELLA TIONSJ
Oean out the closets, kids' rooms, I
ga·~ -take . advantage of this _.
sale by fuming your unwanted Items lntO
cq1h.
COFFER LIMITED TO NON COMMERCIAL ADVERTISERS)
CALL lHI DAILY NbT 4DllSOa TODAY
642-5678
(
J j
..
-NATI
We Offer:
Specialized Programs
Designed to Help
Stud•nts Who:
• Dislike School or Learning
• Become Confused Easily~
• Daydream In School CY
~Feel Lost •
• Feel like a Follure
• Have Poor Grades
• Learn Slowly
•Don't Know
How to Learn
Tutoring or
Remeclatlon In
lan9UC199 Skills,
Comprwhenalon,
Phonics, Math, Spec101 Study
Algebra Programs ond
• Counseling Avolloble
THI
STUDEHTIMPROVIMEMT
CENTER
Call Today--642-9088
• 8AU.ET •TAP • JAZZ • MOOIAN DANCE
• CHLDAIN • TEENS * ADULTS ..... ,, ..............
'"I ,_.....A.,... I' :::::t: .... _..'#,OI........,.,._..~....... .
-··~1440-
fMl'UIOi DISlet•s..,..
SIMCI lt6Z
COllfGt Of INTU~ Of$1GH l
Jt'TfRIOt OfCa.Alll'IG
lAu.tT IY OlllONlll
HACTICAl ' NOftfltONAl coueut a aa-AH ... INTl8tOe et"9lt & MCOll.i.TIMO H~ ....... & CAIU8 llM41H PtOMAMS
ONl Y 6 OAY8 lE.fT TO ENROU.FORAn~
C:0.....1110..-1
STARl tNO oet. 2
Tuition PH
IN OES'GN ,., A.LA
NlW#'OR' l'lNIFk ,.r;,...tON IS. 4NO
a•-C-.M..~IMCMliUn'IJ .. .....,,..._ __ , ..
s.i.-1e Al•• Lecet•ll
.. ,,.rty Nlll1 • Le ...... • Le J ... • ...... s,...i.._. a-,,,_lee•· S.."le. a...-Oelu
fffL.,_...,.,._. .... ., .... ...
........... .,,,., ... , ............................ j
.. ....-. u ...... .__.. .............. .............. ...... Oddd =--==-=.::=.. ..... 0 a. tad
.a.ccaaAd9 ... ~:c·ut:t=----
· -·'-·~._ .. ,
New Clttu•• St•r1 h•ry 4 Weetle
C• flli A ..... ..._.. MMll c ... ••Wet.,.
• Jn a few· short months. you'll have the skills and confidence to enter
the job market in an exciting.
well-paid, rewarding career as an:
• AOMINlSTRATlVE SF.CRF.TARY
•LEGAL SECRETARY
• BOOKJ<EEPER
•JU NIOR ACCOUNTANT
•GENERAL OFFICE ASSISTANT
• RF.CEPTIONIST
HRP .YOURSELF!
Hundreds of Orange County
companies have hired Irvine
graduates. Call now for more
information and brochures.
The Orange County employers
need you now! Inquire about
financial aid assistance! (You
may be eligible for Federal
grants and loans.)
GET STARTED
N'OW!
CALL 556-1190
• "'IVATf SfSSl()IU AVAILA9U
•DAY• 1\1£...0 cu.aM•
• f"H ~aMUfT ASSISTANCE • ftHTAIMANT ~I Of TODAY -°' ft&OI ec-..,. -~ • I &3ac:sas2 I z
1t:M& ~II.VD. (IUn"l Kt OAM>IN OltOYf
Daa.M•te
Neid .............
........ ubn.hll
or parttlme. Ooo4
~ hacb area.
W01Ma01mu't4
1t1y W /hOUH~ll OC· ......,.,. top ,,.,. uq.
............ ,. •• ,.,.to
PO llN IM, Cd.II. mZ5
DIC SlellnAaY
ADMIKAll'T
TOSll.otO
To bway prHldent of
1rowln1 mr1. aa.d
ler'lice related butlAea
\n Tmtill, non-•m•er. ~ or1aalla\iooal
ahll.IUes, be lnltlaUve,
ud trilr8 \o talle reapoml ua. Send te· ._.. to Boa 811, Dally
PUot. PO Bo:a lSeO, Coeta
Meaa,Cal112121.
ve.U.lstaat
Author !Publlaber seeks
' Elec\IUve Aal"tant. ezp
ln editinl • research
belplul, mutt be fast, ac·
curate typist, prefer·
rably ezperience on
word procaainc equip.
Cal.IM2-0.T1 for app't.
...... 'NSecrefwy
Top rlllbt attractive lady
w /sbortbaod, bkkpg,
lYJ>iD& ai mana1ement aidlla: ~.eoo pr yr +
llOOO bonm/profit abare.
p telephone solicitor
noted for P tr work in
aUraetlve Fashion Jal.
olfce. Call Ms. Elliott
MMal2.
FASIUON .. FUN .. $$$
F\lll or parttime help
needed. Wear Is display
faabkm. Call 8'1·0786.
FASJllON
Top saleslady. ex·
perienced, F tr or P tr.
Top pey ai commission.
E:aclusive shop. 1803
Weatclilf Dr, N .B .
548-1001
FtELDl.EP.
Telepromp~r Cable TV
~ Newport Beach is ac-
cepting applications for
temporary help to ex·
chanae cable TV equip·
ment in Newport Beach
lfti Hllp H1f1p W..ted 7100 tWp W..e.d 7100 twp W..tecl 71 00 tWp W_.... 71 01 area. Must have depen· LOllt&,..._. 5JOOw ••• SJIO W..tH 7100 HllpW..tecl 7t00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• dable tr.ansport.ataon. •••••••••••••• •••• •••• • •••••••••••••• •• • • •• • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• • •• . Will tram. Starting at
Last or found a pet? Call TOMMY'S Accountant (staff) Babysitter for 4 mos. old CADllR CLHICAL Companion w~nted for cusroDIAN . $UO/br with incentive
Animal Assistance OFNEWPORT -T~Salary-&. 3 yr old, Mon-Fri. ForearlyAMnewspaper c...-tMFIMAMCE elderly lady. Lite bskpg. htnmectiate openlog for alter. Apply at 901 West
Leaiue. 53'1·22'73, No fee. ESCORT CPA candidate or CPA. MIHOlO delivery tn Costa Mesa, Front office clerical & personal care. Mon· Nwpt Beacb i:etaJI store iatbSt. l'l.B.
152·9311 3)T. minimum Tax ex· ---------Newport .tr Irvine areu. 0 nine. for sharp in· Fri. 1:30 to 3:30PM. ft olfl~e matnten~nce.1---FOO--D-P_R_E_P __ _ •Found°' Joe\ a pet! Call usl We' re the Pet Pala.
('lM)'lJt.219
TOUCH A CLASS per. Procreulve H .B. S.bysltter, 2 days/wk, s call between 2AM -10AM . df:ldual who enjoys 5fi6.QS12 wkdys, 955-2440 Expenence.d. rehable llCOltTS ftnn.Ml-5.581. hrs/day, my bome. ~-meetiq .tr aervtnc ,the Wk:adlseves. penao with eye for de· Experieoeed penon. Ap.
Newport Beach. 759-0457 public. Exp pref. But tail: Permanent fullUme ply ln pel"IOG to Sebu·
Lo1t. Grandmother'•
bracelet. Sept. lS Nov.
1Sth. H.B. 114·9M-5447.
REWARD.
:MIDIS. 752-0817 ~ ia oo restriction to C A S H I E R I trainee Position avail. •C~* po11it~ with ex~ellent tian'a West, 140 Avenida
PlychicCooaultations earn extra Christmas Banking HOCJSEWAR.ES SALES. Must be gd with figures, ~ benefits. Call Jim or._Pi_c:o._San __ c _ie_m_en_te_. __
Jack mooey, demonstratln1 LO•M Apply In person: Rion xlnlbenefita. Breakfast Cook. F rr. ~.&U-5070. •••AL OfFICI 556-u78 lD)W in fiM Department 11ft Hardware, 1024 Irvine n. Monts Pl• Co. Exp. Pref. if not-will CUSTOMB llP
St«es. 1(.00/hr. +com· _..._.r• (WestcliffPlau)N.B. CaJI Lauraat6Jl-007l. train. Apply in person: Ufice Mana1er for solo
Last: Pit BuJI, black fr Grand Openlnc. Men fr mission. Call (213 > 1111.-vRAll Dic.kChurch'sRest.2698 Service desk. Heavy NewportM.D.Preferre·
white female. Reward. Women, for rela.xation ai 3'16-461l. SAY ·lOPM . Requires minimum of C~JllER Oerical Blvd. CM phones. scheduling & fit cent college graduate.
S200.536-4782.H.B. lllimulaUon try "Touch \yr. experience & good Mature woman l~ wo~lt DIPARTMEHT \DI. Teleprompter Cable EJtperience & skills dClau lbaaaae ai Spa" A• .. •c• Orinn typl.ngakills. days /eves. Inquire in ClEIK iv. 901w.16th. NB . helpful but not essential. l..OSI'. Gold bracelet, re· 11125 •acb Blvd. H.B. Ca. EMT .1 Com PI. persoo Ice C.pades 2101 , full & part, apply in $950/mo. 40hrs. M. F .
venible w /blue &. red SJl.9112. We accept all mu.ranee requirement .-.c•y ·c· Harbor CM Entry-level clerical posi· person at Mull Lynches. De Ii very I Warehouse Please send resume to ad
enamel . Reward . credit cards. open 1 over22yra.gooddrlvlng """"' tionopeninoursbipping 311 Palm , Balboa Pencoforparty&rental nolll7,DailyPilot.P.O.
_675-__ M23 _______ 11_;;ct.ya...;:...;...· ______ __, remrd. Top pay, fringe wmfll C.ASNB MEIOED & receiving department. 67~1556. store. P tr apply' 2025 Box fts60 Costa Mesa,
Loet: 2 Cockateila. No. SINQL•'. M--' s'ncere, benefits. Seals Am· 11111 P /time on weekends. Some lite packing in· 1----c-------Newport Blvd. C.M. CA9a6216. M "' ''''" • bulance:wl-3'56 Experience preferred. Ca.11 for appt. 646·7«1 volved. Mu.st work with --------..,----1-----------
Costa Mesa, 1 · 1'j. ,eeple-Uke You! Low'miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Goodlypin11klllsreq'd. Lloyd's Nursery . 2038 deadlines. Candidate Part time. Immediate Delivery Man for early a.10fc/llecepf w /or. cbeeka, 1 Fee Call DATELINE·t• Newport Blvd. Coata abould type 4Swpm & o-nlDcs. South Coast AML.A.TlmesDelivery Small co. near ocean ary /wbt . Reward. ,..-.ui.a.s ... -............... -Both • f .. ri ..-N IL ~ 11tr• ~ -po11itiona are uH Mesa have U>-..ey expe ence. Plua.C..UDon,641-0118. Route. Adults only! o oeeds stable ... mature iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilf l&llture couple for 80 unit time 41 available In our liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ·Please apply in person: coUectin&! Economical penon with Syn. 1en'l ~;. Blk • Wb\ Fem. *'OrtLA8T• apt b1&ildln1 in Calta Mesa ofllc.e. Call PLf:SSEY SEMICON-COSMITICIAH carrequired.2~hrs.per ore. uper. Accurate
:)IDenan Hutky in Capo OlncALLOMLY We at min st e r . Duaoe8ie1el atMe-8510. c•llOS DUCTORS, l&U Kaiser, lmmed. open Inc for day. $4.ZS/mo. net take typist. SOwpm. Front
Be a c b a r •a 11 / S · VISA MC References required. ft11 ra M Irvine. female cosmetician. tlKne + booua" caa al· desk telephone recep·
REWARD-..a3M ·-•*iilit1iiiiJ.iilliili1Jiiliiliii•--t•Stll•lt•i1•••'----I I~ M lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9l Mmtbavelice°:e. be alt lowance. Westminster' lion. Xlnt. co. benefits.
T ...... t ·. 11/2'"/•", oran1• ""1ltimepo&itlonlnour UTVTE ,...._. ·• tractive. nea u.-.lA ... oo Beach area . ._Ca1 __ 11>onn __ a_:_64.S-_36S2 __ . __ ~ ~ uv '"'-"· .. _ .. office E1t ....-..c... ,,_.....,.,,.iitv. Call Toni: · ==-1-b's wa.llet near S.v-A1'.AMnl MASSA•I A .. fB-ct """' .. •-· . ,......~ " _.._ GENERAL OFFICE · On al Weateliff Piasa. . ..... imJS:~~:;: opentnc•. per. preferred. Call Jaclt ~llES CLERI( _&»_9121l13 ________ ,---------part or full ume. Must ~talns hard earned .,....,. Worll near beach . Clarllat~2300. MARKETS ~ CmmolOlotiat DIMTALASSIST. ueelOkey "byt.oucb,"or
ClJrlatmas money · Be Pamgered by 11 MeclaaQlcal auembl>:, l'Allfll•A For2nd&3rdSh1fts Interview in i Elq>rd. Laiuna Hills. 4~ milht consider a bri&ht
P1'8Mreturo. 141-2111. ~".!i-11 :~~~. ~fc:: wtriD'o aolderin1. Will .,.., Leadina Oranae County ColmolOlOliata. male or daya, X·Ray lie. 830-65lO trainee. Better Way
Loll: Adult male 1rey • ~ tnizl. rowin& cocmpany, frM:llAL We promote to manfage. di~f..~; laforaeekSalnl_! anCleinrk. female, JCUlptured nails. ENTAL •"'ST Rovar Fooda, Inc .• Newport
.,,bl male Ca•. H . K ---------i ec>Od beoeflll. all for I.KA.. roent &. au,pervision rom •IU.... ~· facials, pedicures, for ,..., · ... • IHI'llOSPECIAL ·-165-Xli Sa '--& I --within. position. Must type -·-N 8 prt. front/back ore. X · ,_Be_ach.._;_._64.S-_2"4_. __ _ Weatherby Bay, Hunt. llYSTlCMASSAOE .._.: ·f!"!'1'9.' .v... WANTACAREER? 4Swpm + 10-key by new shop, opeuu•I .. ray lie req'd. Salary,
Hrbr. Reward . MASSAGESIOW/AD ,.."3_.00aH.arM ... boaCrAB~;... CostaMesa touch. Responsibility rExcl~ve 7cli4·e)!.~!~ .. ~all F/f.N.B.MMBIO ..!:!°~::Xa!~~n!~ _n_•_J840.. __ _. ______ , s.ntaAaa ~ .....,. ..... ,,_ lllDelMar wUI include procesaln1 orappt.( l .....,._,. •-.. -.,--, ... -.... -.Sl-S_.T .... A-MT:-::::::-:iaoir•P'ontca';;.Good
Loll: Bia.ck Pelle, 1old 41 F.qualOpportunJly 631·9421 debits fr credits, Ir aow.ur Help wanted in --whHe marklncs. on •• e>nnce County mf1r. of ___ E_m_p_l_oy_e_r___ catal~I requests. Also Dell . Full time/ Part E:lp'd' day wMk CDM t..::..PlY..;...·_ea._1S11 __ . ___ _
ll'YineAv,N.B.S41·6105 ~~~~~1:C'?d~ electJ'o.mechanlcal pro· BARTENDERS La1wiaBeacb handling disputed In· time Ezper. preferred . .,._..._na ~&II I~ «-?m or (f2.9034. lll5 d\ICta la aeelllnt trainees Nowhlrlnc. fulJtime. Aph· '9t·9233 :':U; App\y in person _675-_m_· a:J __ • ------i DIM'f'ALASSISTAMT ~· S. Camino Real. San ~~~c~:e:~~ r::u;: 1S:O~s:~~ ~!~Y Huntln1ton Beach ......_. Specl.etlff COUM'f'IA Hl&.P .,_sat
,...WW. Clem. Jlla1a.App~rnon: Jlollow Ln, Laguna ---•'iill!ilHlit•--•I 1640Mon.rovla,C.M. For Pasta Pub lOAM· DIMTAL/
Sak>on -Fiahy -(%) Prol. Women seek to MmMr ltiM4ts &each. ------:-----1.i'tiiiiiM•---•'iii'Oii.iiEii. 4 P II star l i mm ed. ~OMIST
Derby -Scaulrm --..Jt. Xlnl ref's pro-JM> lloorovta. C.11. IOOICKEIPH Cllrfs'-• s.t.. fMl.8433 , day f /t hours nu.
BUSINESS Wied. 9151·3'19 f9.M 1 .0 .E . tlli•d lloU'llW!! d d 16-19 Beculat.ioa la when so-I •:i::-~ ---·-Immediate position r ,._ Counter Help nee e . ---------~pub Ill 0011e into It •• _..... anllable In Fashion Wet.rain • provide cos· ClericalCCOUMTS Some retail uper. pref. DINNER COOK ai Sous
your BUSINESS. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ASSIST AMT laland men's retail store twnea, we aul1n you to A Fri. or Sat. sunrise & sw-Owl Tale of the Wbale . ._ .. a .._. .... .,. ..... for a qualified person in lt'"8, tn1lla, etc. So be a PAY AILI Ina ahifta. Ml.lit be 18 or 400 Mam St. Balboa. AP· FOUND F /dot. blk w /brn •&11 --area o( office manaie· "miracle-maker" • join We have an immed. need S49 0641 E 0 E marb, med. size about lilllt•ll• 7001 Draper's La1una Hills menl, incl. A /P & theWest.eniSant.ateam! ror an Accts. Payable over. · ' · · · ply\n~ ~ adorable &31-1358 ••••••••••••••••••••••• store. M1&1t be ex· ~.Ml.lit be able to We1tern Temporary cleric w/min. or 1 yr. re· _M_;_./F_. ______ --t Donut shop. Af\emnoon
· •1 nc drivers needed perleneed ln better deal wtth people al all Serv. cent Payables exper. COUMTB Hl:LP shift. Apply D .K. ·1 Found : Ynl Fem. Cat, Get• C1ul 1 Uc now. women'• ready-to-wear levela of mana1ement. 13132NewportAve,U13 SUcceafwcandldatewlll Sandwich sbop. Mon.· Daow, 2l8QJ Fairview,
f:I. stripe, bn face. col· ~) ~1107 ext '1 for andaportaw.ar. Apply ln Salary commennrate Tultin 730-6282 have e:aper. in a mf1r. Fri. Roura open. An· C 111 .......... lVi ..v ~&oMauaer Ila· withe:x--rlence. Frln1e envlronmeot Is have a thooy's Dell, 11181 -·-·-------,,......._ nee. _.,_.1 .. -111 .... _ ..-CLEANING PERSON· ..,. f--.a •1-in EDP i I f ---.-A o ... ..,u benefits available. .. ... ._...a....... Slrypartt, Sule A, rv. Doyouhaveaflalr orlD· Found: SHELTtE mlx. Now enro1Uo1. Costa P1au or caU &M-<DIM. Once a wk. Nr. Cliff Ir appllcaUooa. Please con· ~o. terlor Deeoratint?
0mera1omce M~ Newport Beach
t\oaDc:iaJ flrDl bu i m
~r,1:::
IJldlvidual to lraln In
print abop. He.vy Wllnt reqw'1'. Cllrtls r...ie, vie HuaUncton ..... CbrlsUaa Pre·~===~=~=~~I ~ Dover. Npt. Bch . lad: Pltlme belp wanted for Center parlliDI lot. school. Ut.H /wll. Cafeteria Aaalataot1 541-9215. Mmlw<-a.tet OOUPLEWANTED ...___ ........ intbe ... _. lllchadea hot luacb ft needed ....... Ume help a1 ,_,,.u .,..-la cu Mana-1mall b111ineas our~"':~~ "'"'N'· lDluraDOI deft. H1° b••· -·-_.. ""ERIC..., Ptr Fine re --onrov • ·•· •· C 11 city .. 1.nw••" o ezp. per. ,.ql&ired. A p a / ·-••••• IJIO 1naeka. 141·S423, DualnllaHJ1hSchool • ...., ~ · · .._ ... .., EOE Part·t.lme.WUltratn • '"'·" 1 .... -... ft~ ........... _. \al ttore in N B Deeds ZMI . . ·-·-,._ -~ .. ~ .,_...... ... a c. T.-&.A. ............... •••••••• .. _ Apply at Caplstranc · · ,._ .._.-•• .. -•r-·
PRE LAW 1badent needt ~Wah~ 7071 We have lmmecl open· Unlfted SCboolp Drflatrlct. ~~:t!d°: c~ ua~ Cl.-nPIST n.....i... wuted to mana1e -.............. ..... +. Accuracy im· f!.000. WW do anythln~ ....................... l~s f 0 r a s . mn Calle • ecto. ~ ~ ' ---· •"9 --
fl d t' __ ,... I h &JC. a.1%15. ~ macbloe by touch. Need tpeedy typi.lt for small bmlneH \Ill or Arebitectural dealtn --,, Wl. Con an a Cook, mature, ell~r 1-ren wt iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii WUltralnt.o ....... tsalesln· .... ~ In •t-ent firm -""time Ml-tn5 <-. opmlaal .or tll ex· D P 0 Bo• "142 -.....'--a -•-•-wn of • m-· r--.._y •• -· -· · · ...__.._,I · S.,.. e:aper. pe .. •D·-.a dl•tan .. one N 8. ....._. . .. .. ' -· ICllDe ...... • UlllU.IU .. v-· ~ .... --oa• fo OD computer1/otber awpm, fl must uae die· LEI ;:.-port Be~~b ofe.. n .. -.. ...a
· -· ur .-.11t. Wrlte ~~1'L::.~=-_., ., 1eneral office taah. ~-Call Denile •t CREDIT C l'fMUO aa:;,..01..,,ilir -11
a..llledAd ,_,Daily WmlMlt .U.Mlde 11 MAMA•• Won eebedule nex. At Ul·HTS. Start Im · Tbe Dally Pilot baa an T.-... Ptloti..:; Bo:a Uto, ~ PCB. Mut r be PoeltloD open for ai-EaN, Fubloo Jal and. medJaUly. Immediate opeoin1 for a Driver to pl ell up de
Coll.a Ca.... aper•a. at aoldenn1 1rutl ve m Ir . In N+5070Mr. Cl.lne. Credit Clerk. Mut be c:.aMd ,.u ud tom Bllltry a.vel wllliDI to M.a.W.-. 71H ~· •t: 1t1Mwlde, mult1·1lore __ , OOACH-PTTIME •bl• to baodle many Jard wort. Sta B tnilD. ~-............ ~ Orao1e CollD· aetloce1 0 Fl Id 8 .. t......,. contacta lD a Pet Cemeter1, 1914 Ea c e 11 • co ID Pa a Y
ty. Carpet uper. nee. Productloo Secre&ary, ~cn.O.S .,:;.:: pleuaat, lnatlne11llU BuebBlYCl.11.B. .,....._"9uet09lad:
·--.-.-....----....
-llODrot1•,C.M. &.eell. l*1 booua pJ'O-r. 50-5.Swpm, 10-key, • · ._-, Type ..WPM, ~._.,.... '
1ram, proih tbuln&, ~ • beoellta, Sant• COLl.lellTU08CTS 10 tt.y lllltdtnt "'9Cblne ('fM)M4 llll
a.dkal,....t.al ~. IU e Spria••· Wbllller Wen full • ,.n Um• by W.b.. EacelleDt COID· Ed. '7Ml•TIA
•·rut lleault" •trvlce
....,,.Your
MrVlce lt our
lil*faltJ.
Call .. .,. ext. m
allowlaee.Calleou.ct: area. Call Sharon. Hlltnl tlectroDte ~._.... laeludlnl orlJ/l. ... tdD .A/7J!!9...:.: ~ (JJ.8)91-0TOt. ululatou, micro. '1Ulaudl>nc:1ti a.-n.1..rver1.l.a1Qlla ~U~
11 ....... 7171 Ujou'n no& readial the 5.:..r= ...._ •U to i.11 more 1
llUe edl iD Clwtntd, ol ~ml*ttt pqile ..... LIM Mhiff -==::--Dr. •
Ya.. ~\o ..n+ you're mllau., a IGt ol ~helpful. Good ,_. ei..v. to off•. Allr ft--···· ......, lllformatloe aa 1191 • ....rl&a. 1D C,11, lllloll OS ... nlei to--------~T"--a..lfted adl ttweU. ftl•101Deinat1Moa. calllA•:SflO.lllO. ar....... Ma
.
,...._ -·-· . ............. ____ --._ ........ _ ___.,.. __ --
• --------
... ____ ... .._. _______ ~--·-
.. * ....... ~.......... .!~ ..... ~!~ ~?~!.! ..... ~!~ ~'!.~ ..... !!~ ~"1!~ ...... ~!!!
... , ~--.w~ PAITIW....., IOm•I •1: -.cno.n ..... .
_..... ~ ..... HMltent :"~,._II•. ~If~ NI~. bNlleat-.c 1• !cMd'crwut KFJC"•'1r: •llllWl.NttUa. .. • 'NM.J~.Ai.-l\'Wl~l:IU~C& :,:&;:·Call l•ff, ... Ptr.Wmttat...., ,_.....;.;;;;;;,;....;....;.;....;;__ __ _ -... .... =·~· 'h~1.::_1111_r.1.:_,._"'_ ... .....:.rl:.!l!!;!!!!P!!•.~!.1~1!!1•~"~L!!!r ~IHG::_I &a ut .,,u uu... ....... ,....._ -,;;; "' . -""""'. =-· .... =· lecwtt)' 1...:..::::..:::;.;...;;;~---..llh MOUi • Marl•• Hardware,_.~ "uted. A ~ llU .... r _..MaiftJ,haD•Ptr
,_ Uw ........... 000 , .......... pan U••· .. ...0 ....... eoal• Y., . • .... ac.. Hall ....... "'9IJU••· lo•t .. -*'· ..... , .. pad. .. .• -. ........ ..., ..... M ....... w.a -•wlu • cnveyard ......... .... WI ............. M-. ....... oaU ........ NI ... Tilt SberinH ""n•a.ry. 111e...-..oml'Y.Perfed u,_.,...._.lveaDd thlfUd&Jltla~e:!tt, trahrfibt pertoa .
......... ll•tel u • . , 11 Call lalboa Marloe for ......... Ncm-smobr looldDcfGrafutunlDr• :':* w . p · "i ••l'IOH•tcirGa,,). a... famlb •lM r,..._r
'I' :u1•n1 .. ~' 1.;.1!,':...~'::::'. .. tm.IO.l!.M/f'/ll calY.MO-ms. tlil mpal w /fnood co. Oepl~ •~•Tow Truck Driver =t·.:.:.:..:e~:......;;:~-------w..., -.. CM Clli* ,_ _. ..._. 6 J &onl.J Martel R•Hrd•·•orll fhmbiqSupplles = :lf.r 110:-= Ntwporter Ju, 1101 -'ed. ~OD· 5PM
'-""-a: ... Metld ........ ••afl away U.11l .-ol ~. &o GrowlDCCo:hualotop. Frla.dardSboe9 .,,7 l amhorteRd.N.B. b' ..... UveC.M. area. --·------1 ., .... & •11111 IJtt LT.;,•· I a b 11 l a 0 Hro atra moaey.for portMDKy IOI' Refflvl.11, So B.t.to1 C II ' Seeuri Otn full
6
.... HARBOR AREA ~ ~ 'a.tt req'd CbrltllQH maybe? ?er~~·· Gea,ra ' ' ' . Pff &.'Yp.=:'bl car TIAV&A•Bn' APPUANCESERVICE •--~----~,... ...._ea» r. u UIM Wrt.,. 1111 111 0 lb ftMlanl•euy&olearn llDOWledC• ol plwnblo1 s.a.m... :.l~r • e, lko'•eell.Ouar. IU·TIH. Mo.,.rr1 Piiot P 0 Box 1:.0 Job. no 1alt1 or product• helpful. GcJ INSULATION 6 paam almutt Poel· lmmed. Openla1 for reccnd u..,
1:»1 ,......,~· .. ....:. C"-.. ' Ht'retarlal Involved. worldnl COQCI, •alary Eun 9IOO + •week no tNaoa.a
1
o1~n 8n1 • •l!'H qualified .,.noo. Good ~~ Cff . ...;.._..~...;;..;-...;.;....-..•_"-· ~7. open, fnn1e oeneflb. credit turn downs, ••P cue • ••~• "aa Salary. alnl o p9ty. , , GUI&.~~ ... INTIHUOk t>BSION uu.a...... c.&J The Balb Mart, Mr. pl'eferred, will trala ........ Pro Sent Seeurl· PrtmeLocaUoaNl-3445 C. 1011 e• Couch w/love '9al OlllriilUM a,_,. C•, rl.... d t ~--• Peters (714)f7S-4830. 531~ ty ...... ,hm·Spm. T l f b 1 I •••••••••••••••••••••• Gold/Brown Brand~ ' .. <'-... l)pot n• oo • crea tn Apply to perJon 2112 CdM u or or •• c • ec-a......Of' ·~~ ~""~ ~ ' • • · drin ' penuo for acceuorhlna 11a·rbor Blvd, Coat• · HIUtLl'llA_.r b'anica, start lmmed, 2·4 Himalayan, 3 mos old, M, --.~ 1er~-._... • • ::-~~ rnoditlhom•.Muatbave Mesa . 11 F , bet POSITIOHS ~ffiE$$SS .-..1 I~ hn/Wk.59-980 ~~aper:;.:::_lawed ,ShellUnltSoUdWooctA&i
___.... pol'Uoli.oorplcture1.0t•· lOAJIUPM. AVAILAIU ~..a-Leonlte Coacrete Inc. TYPIST ...._,t50.,._ -prox.
7
XIWhlle
4
sheig' Gii 1 1 r, .U 'blrMdl a play 1JiKll1l"OW\d Mlp!ul. Day lbt.esaea looldna for britbt Hlf o.,. 1040 81iOIG-S034 .., ,..,...,,Cal& R.Jotat._, t rvinei uea, Medical Assist, front of· F/l'"Booklee.J>er + + ± ~lndlvtdul. M1uit1 Parttlme. Word pro· •••••••••••••••••••••• •
•IHI *1 ..,._ flee, fM G.P .. up pre-r-~reWPM ll'oo-Fri .,,.,_ .. ,_.1 __ • c ... -'eniinl have I d 1ecretar a ce11o r experience ,,.,,."""°OND p AKC Sofa $200 c hair ..A. terred, mail resume of· ...... ~..... n&1 lldlll, DO lbotthand. Hrs be!pluJ. Fountain Valley. ~ up1. · . • hair M••S INTi:RIOR DESIGN fice mana1er : 3Sl 17J.1505 "veryrewardin1career M :30.m.f717. ~1800. Cwnpsire. M/F. Pet& Matching sofa & c_!.!.!;.,.
.,.ou ,,... m.....,-1 homes KospitaJ Rd, Ste 118, oppty. wltb New~ort1• 1 b 0 w . p v t p t y . Gd cond. 645-UJJl . ! F\aU • p&l1 time All r •nm "" ......., Beacb clc. ol a rapidly Service Station Allen-TyJUt 213/8t7·1.345 aft 6 pm , ........_ Ualfann1 f!U'JS'd needs uaitlant for ac N.8.8all63. 1rowin1 computer• dant, fwl time. Apply • · MUST SELL. Couch & :
-D .. ove" .......... <••torlet dulaner " Mo1t1t 11r-Ofc AH i . ,,,._ 6 .......... co. .......... 12>1 No. Coul "1 lllll:tu Lhut·""90 pu... M /F. IOve ..... frn/wht •t•· • -.kw No uper oec Jnlphlca dept Includes Npt. Bcb. law firm $4.00 ~ are an orsanued Hwy, Las. Bcb. AKC, red/sold, Champ Jt1nt cond. 646-1932
1
• ' ~ ~!ic!.r~~ !~~vetr;ean::~:ei~;:: ~!"'o:O m:~~!~~· ~.~r~ tnidt~w~~~~~: SERVICE SfATION AT-TJlist/ blood Ii 0 ea · P · P Barker Bros. King Size
W. 3U!St., Sant.a Ana In ~ ~for a9pt. pniapectinl " deve)op-TEND ENT-Day sbifl, JJwttw <n4)834-0ll29. Electric Posture 'Bed
la'view bra 9 12 & 1 4, IDI iq acds. " able to 6AM·3PM. Apply S~ell r~ WI POODLE Puppies for w/Vibrator. SIOO. 548-4a73 -.Fn JAMITO llAL 11u1&1r5-.....ft.ER wOrk ID fut paced en· StatJoo, 17th & Irvine, Cbri t L ~ • Full time Work in ........ ~bave~ood.,driv•ftg vironment, this i1 the N.8. Even1NrShiA.Atleaet70 . s mu. a yaway, Want to bey: An Arm~re IWR SfYLIST ....... ,J: ··\1 poaitioo for you. Excell. . wpm. 'l'op pay for good gift wrapped. 54&·2848 & two drawer 'fi I e
lmmed. openina ror ~:~'~.~:~ tJ:a~! ~O..~~t~~e!s:!::. base saJary plus com-Shoe aales, full time with wlMcl\Mll. Our benefits Golden Retri . ed cabinet Must be iit~d
a--....•e•-c"••·atvle "h1s 721 North u c l1'd , rniuioo&prolitabari.ns. or w/out exp., or wlll includemedical&dentaJ I S Cevers,Mra,1s cond ~nd reasona61e ._, ... '"• ., benefit.a. Apply Tues thru major medical" dental. train. Good co. benefits. insw-ance "credit union. n a.nta ruz ns . . . 6 ba "•" hair. Must be Fri. Dana Point Marina Ana be i m . 991·38 60. For interview appt. Call: Apply in person 9am to Apply in penon between beautiful coals, A KC, 962-3928 •
attractiv4t"penooable Co, 24701 Dana Drive, E.0.E.. 1 ... coco llamMoolhruFri.Stan-9am -s1,m Monday champion line, papers, GcralpSale 8055
Ucenae A exper. req'd. Dana Point. MISS&tC;HJP.T. ProducUoo 714-955-2772 I dard Shoee, 3077 So. ~idaComt avail Tues· Fri, $250, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Toal......... JIWILB Delivery between Costa Kel:K wanted part time. Ee"'Rwt Emelxr Brist.ol,C.M. D r11ot 6'4-1373. MOVING : Auto Hand Mesa •·Lawndale Mon M room. Mon. 5PM 'tll . Tools Rosewd Wall '·'n1·t Ftr professional, Bench Sat. M on . mo.r n ins finish. Tues. 5PM 'til I SR SECRETARY 330W.BayStreet Shi-Tzu Pupa, 2 males , I Redw'd Patio Furn.uTa: ~i exp'~in setting, llH2:30, Mon.-Sat. aft fi nish Apply 1660 ~wg:~. a':f:r~ Xlnt. opportunity for CoataMesa,CA92626 female, champ l~nes , ble & 3 Bar Stools . HIPPY
TIIAECMltC .
FROM EVERYONE AT
Cf\-Lff\:
l(MPQllA!rf PUISONNH Sl lMC1$
557.-S 3723 llrcfa Stre.t
Mewp:rtleeclt
HARDWARE SALES
Apply In penon: Rion
Hardware, 1024 lrvme
<Westcllff Plua> N.B
.._,WANTED
We are now accepting
applicalions for a full UJDe ')ioliUoo in our re-
..,. ad dept. Telephone
• counte r urea. R, .
qUlrea 1ooc1 1pellln1 .
1ramme r , Is p eo -
m.tO.llip . Muat e njoy
melllfQ the pub).lc. App·
J7 ttennysa ver. 1860 PIKeatia Ave. C.M.
H8STESS
M~~ ha~!'xtnt r~f~~~~~i 5PM. Apply 1660 Placen· Placeuu·a. C.M. !:• 1:,p. Ste~°Jy P rr. aeU-moUvaled person. 642·'321 shots & w o rm 1 n g . ~7_2298 s.5&4047 tiaAve.,C.M. SocSecOK 0 Micky : 71'·833-8680, EquaJ()pporEmployer blk/Wht, 10 wks. Dari· -----
--------. 991-767 E.O.E. Wa.itr'""'•, days, 4-6/hrs. ing! 644-9571 MISCELLANEOUS .,...., .... EL Modeling. commercials, ae..&.1 EST ... TE er-y l rl_.,. ....... d I o NB "El"" films, extras. Need new ~ "' -.,,," : .,... SfATIONERY STORE in possibly eves & wkends Shih Tzu Pups AKC Reg. ~Vista e ro, ·
races. 71'·957-0207. SECRET ARY Part time. Varied duties. CdM needs saleslady at El Rancbito, C.M. Call Perfect for Chris tmas _Sa_t_9-4_. ___ _
Custodial Work morn-
IJ\IS S.1, train minimum
wage, merit Increases,
must have auto 557-6020 LoveJy New Offices In LatunaBcb.497-3600 F/time, S days. Xlnt. Undaat642·1142eves. taking res ervations HDl•1hold Goods8065 •
MCYnfERS Newport Center . Good ... _ 1 1 h h woritins conds. F.special· . 61~3530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Bring your child to work. St art in g S a I a r y + ~retary • on c !MC • ly rme clientele. Phone. Waitresaes needed. M u~t .
Ptr babysitting Tues, Benefits. Ask for Paula. mature person, typing & 6'15-lOlOforappt. be over 21. Apply 10 DOG KENNEL. Chain K1ng ·s iz~ beds pread , LEGAL SECRETARY Wed. Thurs, AM , call ZitllOO transcribing skills im-person, 1768 Ne wpo rt link 6.xl2'
2
gates gd velvet, hke new, {ost • nee~:S i.::r F~;;,~~~~~°_~ athletic club 551-4421 Callportan631t.2880Exp necessary· SWEEP ERR TOR Blvd. C.M. cond S200 Mz·S034 ' S'200,: sell $7~ 646·438
7
_
. · . MOBILE OPE A ' a-.-1... 89 0 atmosphere. legal ex·~ ... Photo Fashions Receiving Clerk for At n....-,f&bl w/ref's Call W'•--ESSES E...........toY• 1045 _ .. ,....,
'"""-...,.' in F h. I I d SECllT AIY ................. e · ""'•" n-.. •••••••••••••. ••. ••• ••• perience necess a r y . seeks new modelin g Ease as ion s an • forappt.714~1·01RT Apply btwn 9AM & ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Salary comensurate with faces. Call 673-3375. N.8. has an opening Professional with top l2PM Charlie's Chili T G d H Man's 14Kt yellow .«Old
experience. Ask for Sue..,__ Del1 LA Mon-Fri. 8.30·5:30pm, S/H & typin~ skills. RE SWITCH B 0 AR 0 3001 Red.hlu Bldg u ' 0 A 00. 0 me bracelet, in nugget tex· 847~1 ·~paper very, some exp preferre d. developer. Airport area. OPERATOR, W /train, Ste.1'226,C.M. · · ~ker/~paniel & Ter· lured curb link, measur·
--· Times to homes in Nwptl Please call 644-5070 Small office, good P/time swing shifts & rier mix 6 wk s o ld ing lJmm in widtl\,-8"
1..EGALSECRETARY Bch, 3 :30AM·6 :00AM . wkda.ys. Katie. benefils.549-8565 wkdys . wlmda. 642·3013 Woma 01 A 55 is ta n·t ~2886 length Secured wil\i a
with escrow background 5450 to $.'500 mo 548·8«1, . . R Athletl~ Direct~r for Adorable Holiday Pups concealed box clasp. preferable, small com· 64&-1413 RECEPI'IONIST position SECRET A Teacher/Playground 1areepn.vateclub1nF.V. -. Purebred Collies with a figure 8 sal\ty pany Top• 833·7642 ava.IJ. Mon-Fri. 6:30AM· Su per v I sor . EI em . Ed t .........,
1
T t
1
· ht ·s · .. NW"SeS Aides, Orderlies 2PM, Call Jon. Voaet, TO $ 12,000 _ _._ . C uca ton or exp pre-~2176 c asp. o a we1g 1 1 " 1 gr....,,.. Full time. osta !erred. Call 962-1374 ask 30.92 pennyweights. Ap-Uquor store clerk, some' ~for conva es~ent 752-~ Accw-ate typist for In· 1 Mesa area . S700/m o . for the woman's health Please take Doxie m ix J!ai.sed over $3.000._Sell wknilhts, weekend days hospital. ~knd. shirts. --10 .... 15y votcbur, must know 10-642-0tll. club. .. .. en "'A"
6446
., delivering, maintenance, Xbil. benef1la. Apply in -ii:r• "......, key 6y touc h. Non -• blk/floppy ears small or...,..., . .._. · ,
ewraJ duties, gd pay. penon. Beverly Manor Immediate openmc. in smoker. in Tustin . TIACHEI ~ with bil bark, l lvla yrs Mhcel•ious ~80
• Will train. Apply in Convalescent Hospital, rapld ly ·e8xpahnd1ing 1132-Ul&l ForPrivaleScboolinCM ••••••••••••••••••••••• old,bowsebroken&faml· ••••••••••••••••••••••• pel'IOO Hollday House 340VictoriaAve.C.M. Newport .eac oan · 548-3803 Allll•u 1005 ly,loveskida.968-~10
Liquor' 2937 E Coast brokerase fll'm. Answbleir Secretary for Or. 's office ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• LUGGAGE TAGS . Hwy cdM · Nt.nto. ttfl•_. teephooea, greet pu · c In lrviDte .. ,....,days week. Black Labrador, 8/wks from your business c:.iJ:5!. J ' · ttc.c" -&lijbttyptnl. 64M3SO. .._ _ ....... .,_,. Teclmlcian.~--· · old. MaJe Send one card for each
LYM/DAY SHIFT ........... --·--· .... ~ WESTMINSTER m9410. tag plua one spare~w.~:
Every other wtnd off. $l.75Jlw. llC .... IOMIST TIST ABBEY 1050 return p ermannHy •·
Xlnl. free medical Is den-We wlll traln. 8 paid ~,a~J!~00 ~~ ~y & UP77 We have an Im med : ANnQUE MALL !::!'!'.'!'.:.............. sealed attractive tac 6r. ·J tal. Apply 1445 Superior, hoUday1, be1innln1 al e='~ t)'piDi ·cr.rtcal ~ fOI' a techalclan J>eib' 1.M, PrllO.t strap, meeting air.Jin•~
N.B. soon u blred, benefits. Mdllalsknowledte ofdlc· ~ S.:Jc::t:i"!!~~ orm a varlety of aa...tTuesday **I IUY * * l.D. requirements. »'e.·: •MAMnNANCI Bayview Convale1cent laDbone tran1cr19tlon. m·r. R cl l ..... ~~~ umWfllhnlneterAn. Good med P\lnUture & Vml Lou & theft ! For a
.. .....,. fllllDA Y.. JbJit~, 2055
r Tbu~f' xint. worlrlnl cood. It fr. Super S:raone~~ °!::k __ .,,A• liabt readln1s on Gatdep Groys 5:S1;f!03 Appliancee-OR l will personalized tag entlose
C. · rs . arre : lnae.benefita. For ·appt: ror!Sl.9,.200 ~products, in· ---·· ---~ .... ,,~~ wallpaper. fabrie• or Full-time permanent 642.3:505. E.O.E. 714-Ssr..f3le. Li.IBeindenAaenc.Y .,._. •ru1 ...,.,... •' "Day Glo" paper ~.we
poalfion in pleasant sur-N in& 4ClllO Blttb, Eat'M EOE chadiq uU analyail 6 in· Antique 1ofa car vine A OH wUJ back & trim your
tor hi&hlY aophl1tlcated ~rr!e'~ ff:%~ W'S c .. t11Wc1 UCB'TIONIST = 'f:1{01f:':!'::1~i canln1. upbol. 1001~ H• 1616 & IJJ.f625 t-es. 0r try two c~& :' balllwatranaactiona ln· j aJ. Excellent !or ........... with profeie l onal materials lncludln1 c111blon1, $1000/0BO. . badttoback.
volYiaa rnUllonalre clan telephone •kills, for a SIC&n'ARtlS acryUc/pluUca for color 87S"1N Kini Sz Xlra rtrm rnner PRICES: indl""'-18. Pwlt.ion r•· retlree-t~ wbo would $4.00Jlw. Newportd.lapoatlc firm. · " performance It make • 1 pr In I matt re •• 12eaor3/S:S qllirel a very penooa-11.kefl.sin thlnas around 8 paid bolidaya. begin· ~2lll (Zalt}. With/Without Sb. Mac refat.ed meuuremenll. _,,.men 1010 W/D3iatc~collbox 1pr· 4/Stap Sl.60ea.
ble, ele1ant 1lrl who the clflce. See Service nhii as IOOD u hired, RECEPTIONIST Card exp• plus, not nee. Awlicants 1bouJd have 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ; .. -. never uaed, still 6/9tags SJ.SO ea. ~I[._ . · benef"rts. '9ayview Con· To• ~ -"-l J n.-1ri • : -apeabelequently.aodl1 HOWAUCltH rolet v-•-.-t H-~taJ, """'c au1ft-•••m-.. 'calrecep · ·4A·0400 yn. "'""'le-eve course na eera&or.wkeoew.17 pkaed, worth~ Incl 10ormore$1.40 ea. If ll
d ~..,.. .... """" ............. ""'" · -worflortheequlvalentor ft K · SaJesTaxlncluded beaut u Y groome Dove&QuailSts. 'lbllriD, c .M. s. Far· Uonill needed for busy cldH llAs cu. · enmoor. w/1ce· delivery 1231. Caeh only Benefits include ex· NEWPORT BEACH -" ....,.., """"' E o E lndu1trial dept. Call Vi estoo soc. 2·3 yrs. related exper. maker. $4SO. 673-2789. 640.so97 NO CARO? · ·' cellent pay, attractive n:.u: ,._......,.., • · · e&rlfTAIY Must also be af>le to -Or or send •urroundi.DJ• and flex1· MANAGER, CM \"a size Laura, SS'1.QOO. -,.-sdup & use opUcal /Ught· Three piece sect ion a I, oa~aw, ~~'!f r:s:~ phone & • · --SIH4 llC-.-....IST Needed immed. With or Ina teat equipment , k d blehourl. leaee 1ubm1t shop. Mature woman. ..-• a-11"" wlthoulsbort.hand. Tem· <Protomeler) & other Toplaceyourmessage with ottoman, needs re· we ma e one car per detailed hand written let-lor'I time appear al exp, Wortt in a friendly at-Mt.b or without typina porary " run time. Call standard measuring de· before the upholstering $25. tag. Add 25• each ter immedJately , oper well estab store. mospbereat CostaMesa needed. Top pay. Tem-Tod8ervicesat979--8900 vices. Qualified can· d' bl' 548·9860 Sendcheckormoncyor _._ ribe If f 11 M ~ 'l I JL full u e Call rea 10° pu 1c. de ._c yourse u Y 991·7670 e _~1 a · panary • m · didates are invited to • rto
inc1udina education, ex· ----• ~t'CJ Tods.rvkeaat979-8900 erru-•ET•iy ~ phone Antique oak Hoosier. SSOO. PILOT PRINTING
perience and your Manager RH's&LVM's -"" C-.laftl Daily Pilot Gramma's port. sew. P.O Box le"" personal expectations casual wear store needs Receptjoniat, order clerk, with property manage· 1 ..... "Monro..,....vi·a , C.M••. Classified, 642-5678 mach, 165. 675·2331 "-·ta Mesa. Ca~92626 and salary require· agressive store Evening & night shifts. with good t elephon ment background. Must '""' ........,
merrta. Send response to manager. exp only. For fuJJYc!\J;~!'U~'A~s voice, aome typing, con type S0-60wpm . Prefer 6SM Ei9.E1 WantAdHelp? 6425678 ~itledAd-;-642·5678 Ad t806, Daily Pilot, Box info (714)770-1677 ask tor genial work ln1 cond exper. with coded accts. ----'---
1560, Cost a Mesa , CA MUtiorBob. l2Hr.'shifta,work 7 days 7itll.SO. Call Sandy Burns , · --.
921;26 ~-~-v_y_w_~_;r_n~-:1-c-~-~-~-!-a5-~n-; =~~: "' ~--:n:-~-.7~-:~-:;.ns:-~~_;~;..;.rv-~::::--b7us-f1iWNEV~lili· .. ~.e.enlM";iiliyil;. ... ; .. ~: ... p.;.~.rbo ... ~; .. :, All Abo a rd For Our
HOUSECLEANERS qualifications, must operation of our 8 bed ltefttClllCOMlllt..t lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim ;.:.;:::..::; ~~:·:;'. l:;J:~·mr-:.'f:~r.!:.: ....... ~~~1.... ~~~f;ill;;:,.m '·....._ Christmas Gift Train! 'I\es.Frl. 675-2514. Mgmt. 848-6995. Dir. of Personnel SB:IEJAIJ
M•11J11Mftf 542·2734 R.f.S..Oppt'y ~ HOUSECLEAN ERS
Io '!hr: sy. 'ftil23
t11 ...... ,., w..ted
Refioed lady to live-in,
private roo m , balh.
Salary. 644·8819.
HOUSEKEEP E R &
DJNING ROOM ATTEN
DANT for s mall retire·
menl residence. Full
time, days. Exp. pref.
4M-M58.
Housekeeper wanled.
Mon.·P'rt. 9AM·$:30PM.
'I'o care for lovely Ba I boa
Peninsula Home' " 3
acbool·age c hildren.
llust speak English &
have xlot. references.
Call 673-76'3 aft. 6PM &
oowkndl.
HOUSEKEEPERS
PmME
Jmmed.. openlnp In your
area, $e &o • per br. No
f ... no taxes withheld.
Call Dana'• loday .
'15CMD
IL llEeeper 6 personal ~ ol ut.hrlUc woman
Ga Balboa llJud. Moo.·
"'1. 1Jllooa•'7 or tPM.
... /hr. + meall 6 ta.x·
• paid. Also need 1ame
balp 1or wbda only. Reft
Nll'd. Call 1'71-01111 for In· .......
llOU81:kEIPE.R, live ID. W...., bf Ir. cltl1ea.
.... dri ve. Opportualty to...,. your SOC. ltcUrt•
t7. ,·L• llebra HH.
......... T1U'75-8780, ........
--~M .. Wili.W.._~ Exp. investmen Are you a hard working 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil salesperson. Comm' I and ambitious person 11 apts, " illdus. Earn t __. ~
kxmn1 tor a career m N • 803, major med. pla KW~ I
fast foods management. 'W\urav1so1 avail. Many li1ting1, Report direetly to a Pro· Do you enjoy working r"' -TIME princlpaJ beyera. Bus jed Ma.oa1er
with Pe or. I e . t h e -• office. Confidential appt. 1lM! aucces.sfUJ candidate
lc1hallengetheof eMadersEhi~? Thef hnation'shu plrhovider Mr. PuueUUl-52S2. l1lUlt be accustomed to
you do n e"' d's o ome eall care -~~iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiill heavy uae of dictaphone would like to talk with services is looking for a (l•·-dail ) St · mat"-, r"""po"•ible RN \l'lfllf~ .._ Y avera~e · you. art1ng wage ... .., ..... .... 1 ~70 c I of $1.SOO/up plus health plan w /a flex. schedule to wpm. apa e
for you and your family supervise our pvt. du~ A...,.S wrlying telephone In·
&bonpd vaFcations anl d e nursesall fo. rRefap,spt.reqwP·Jroehn Weo(ferthefolowlng: 1nde4:endent decision uses. or more n· U IH.llhCommlaslon mailer a must ! Ex-formation, contact Lee Healthcare Services, _,.Bestlocallon perience with project
for Interview anytime l .. Wi!ililllllitiilm---~ _,.Private secretary mcmt. lo the building in-al\er S:30. Call Me & _,.Protee.elonalas~1. chatey pref'd.
F.d's Piu. Parlors. ll80 Office Affaa da t. Call now for ap lntmenl l'\al.I raJlle Of benefits: So. Brls&ol, Santa Ana. Educational reimburse·
5*-3B63. Board 11 Care facility. mmt saving• incentive,
Part time. Sat. 6 Sun. ---------i ~ · "holid MANICURIST assume "~·ao. -.25/br. Bavvlew vacation ay1, ...... -., Restauranl-1aodwlch exhtlna clientele. Manor, 350 W. Bal. St. maker, food prep. Prll}Je ~· Ii ti Juliette & Poree nails. C.M. 642-3505. E .O. . area supplier of IOOd ete •PP ca 00:
Pd. vacation. 494·9729 --0-"1-C_E_PO_S_IT_l_O_N--1 food &o Irvine corpor ate
ult for Bennie Williams ClericaJ skills necessary. communJty, near O.C.
Vandruff Iosurance, HD Airport, needl people to
........ 13. simple food prep , 500NewDort Ct.r. Dr.
sandwich malling " 5'1.ftef350 Order Desk Girl, anawer OCMlter help. No ex per. Newport Beach, Ca '21663
taephooei, eome Illini. nee. Mon.-Frl. 1-4. Call 1U.&M-321J
0 u r DI rector of Kwit have gd bandwrlt· Hal or Susie , M · F ·l • .l•lliili••llMlfiK...jj
Manulacturinl hae an lns. C.11 1·5, Plcwlck ;~::-c:D==·=------·limiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij lmmed. need for a Paper549-W7. secnury with 3-5 yra. of _;:_:;;;::..;:;;...,:;....;._;;~-----l Reataura.nt
recent exper .• preferably rA.IMT SAUS Del Taco In Newport lea Ila 1 Jlsec.
w1thla rnanllfacturiu Part tJme T "' to.. ---h •-DOW blrtn1 run c.,.... GpptJ •. la IHt· !!~~·toct~~C!!~ wee1. • to i'r.i ... So.;e ~ ume IMtp. Jl1w· Jl9eed l'(JL _llc.b. Jnv .. 1-:= ~.-b .......... ::-a-dlT"c· exp. K •rm ll 1 m a hie houri, days Ir nl1hts, = ":::.,'lt'"t ~P
i.a;,:.,J;rthuchldllt Katctwan, 2IM Harbor 1tart1a1 P•Y up to ~ "'°'' Cf ...-...w ..._ e ..a..11-Jte pl"'". Blvd. C.M. M.50/hr, Pie ... applY in 1S). • ......... -:_ -... "'"UI -pi111GD, Z..SPll. 2112 S.E. aper., ... .._. • .., ~ ... ~-. Muet h ave above PAITTIMI BrllMol ---averaca numerical sllllla World Book la now hlr1nl ...;;.....;..;..;.;..;;:;•-.N-.B_. ____ 1 illii•illii.---.i It ht able to•• a 10 ltey. ti 1 •-IB1' AUUNT • SboUld be able to efftc· f« put IM Vot t"'ne. U• CXlllU!lunloat. with ~Earn ex+lreaa;.h,r1r1~m1~~ NB rt1tauraat Hekl
alli.witclPtnonn.l. Of o'tld Boo . Call ....,Uc ~I• to fill Jn Ndltloe &o a very =•, 1 .. 1 • C • l" In • . full Ir P. . po1ltlons, ~plllt.ive Hla.ry, w• .. .. . coolrl, co ... '!.aut" Jt•lp, ~fer a tu.H ran1• of s..aueit, -wor..el'I, -.naa •a bJlh~ com , , dall..-y PtOPle. Call for petablt pork en lron: Uttle ta BllJ! ClaHlfted 9fl.Jll-U. . mtat PIHH eoatact ada are rHlly •mall......... \ __... ... _ ............. c.. "l*Pk to people" .. ,.. ......... .,.....Ml~
· ,_........... calla~ btf ruderahlp U:. Oood ~ ~:: -~C.11. and bl• rwu.ltal To plac ...,.._, Call Nt•nl'7, •• l,O I fO'lr cl ... llled ad, call ...._,_. a.taurut Riweiiiiiil:liliiltOiNljiifl
--- -t*1 M%-5C'71. lo. Qil P\ua, I
r . t
An •••Y ••Y to NII your ChrtatrMa Gtft ltem8.
ToplM_!~...._, ... .._ .....
CllfT TRAIN 'AGI CalaDimr .... Clw"•n II¥ ....
CA.LL TODAY -IOoll7I
DAILY PILOT
. r
.,,, ...
-------
)
A Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad
we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call
in at your convenience during office hours and 9et
the responses to your ~d ... For more information
and to plaGe your ad call 642-5678.
642-5678 DAILY PILOT
,_ 9170 ....._, l•port.d Mtot, "'9porttd ..,..., l•port.d ......... , .......
tl 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••~ ... tafLOeOWle ........................ 10Dadae van 8100, PIS, Mw"-e 9701 Alt 97H P.tcM t710 ~' ••• 9770 nn
• • " u~-I WlU p IB. a••~ 2800 mt 98800 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••-••••••••••••• ••• • .. ..... -· .,. ..... ablteoncl, -• . . .. •• ..,,.... P..U.l Ut~••I• irap .. lc 'Tll'mtloodcoed. m.-"18 Sport &dan, lmmac. 71,.AT 121 "19Poncbe~. like new, "13 vw But. •lilt cond. •ill IT!
.._,...on\&* ...m. far ,.modeliDI .__aft s·ao very lo mllea, •m/fm •cylinder 4apeed 33000 m than 4000 ml. auto, 93000 Webiavw•llOOCIMlectloa l.r ...._,t ai.o,. .wvteN or materia!JI. • · '79 DODO E Van lo cau. wheell, pin.al.riped, miles. ' ' ' air, $11,500. 851-0333, ' · Ml"'"' of NJ: 'fl 6 U 8 t: D .,. .... ~ 10 IAH Daya 14S 'flU, uu ..._..._._I*/ mQealec.U atler9AM car cover $8200/0BO SJ49t (213)~ a.roieUI
artlatle ebUltlH ..._._ .. /lh1 .. , fl60 111-1133 564.1407 '78 Rabblt. Am / Fm
--~ ....................... ..._ W..-.4 9590 '73 AJla apyder. bought ~-... ,,,,."-'•• ~ ~~ T::~ ':~~-atereo, and, new lll'ff, I ,~ O Nl'4H l
· ,.--..... 1091 Reot : U' L\I&. llotor .. ••••••••• .. •••••••••• new'7•,m.intcond,S5000 ~ T~ lmmac. Gemini 'blue'. 32,000mionrblten1,x.lnt .. -•••n••••n•n•••• Him, alpe I, HJl·coat. W'EPAYTOPOOLLAR orbatolr 548-l388 • HONDA Sl2.llOOotr.M6--0822 cond. 0100 /0BO.
97$/Wk. +•lmf. fortopUMdcan·forel1n · · 18AUTOCENTER DR. 980-se:Mevea. TV M0-8515 dommtlQI or claulcs. If 'Tl¥& Alfa Romeo Spyder, IRVINE 830-7600 '72 914. White, blk intr. '74 Super Beetle, anrf, DICODERS •17 Tlo1a II 1a· all )'OUI' car ia -fra clean, sbarp,coovt.Blaupunckt '75 ~Spider Sspd, mag Maas. AM /FM radio. am/fm, 57,000ml., s:woo. a.o.-.. flber&lua mloi, alpa 4, leeiartBST. lts'eo, .Uver, gd cond. wheela. am /fm casa SMQO,call496-460'7 ~150aft.3PM .
•i' vii' t
I
, l '> I .( J' ....__
Beautlful RCA ZS" color w/cruiae control, like Amlilt 9709 64C).9321after5 $7000. Call Ad Answer "19 Convert, River Blue Mante Carlo Landau,
Dodie H'O, Ump1. ~· • ~.499-3205. great cond ! $3300 Brown 71 911T, 5 spd,
'IV, 2 yr wrnty, free de· new: ate, stereo, 2 way .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ......__.._ 97•7 1316 at 642-.:iOO, 24 hrs a met, cua, 4 aptra, aerv. fully loaded, -200. relri f rd din U ,,_ 4 recorda, lmmac, muat -aide c ab 3 UverySJ.)t.146-1716 1. orwa e e, • 'MSprite,goodcond,new ••••••••••••••••••••••• day. sell 9111115 l3l:U.t3 ~~-
1 shelf. loch· CoJor Con.ao.le ZENITH ::,~.~t~:~·u~i:: #t .. o.-pc...ey m~:~.6eng. $lSOO. VISITYOUI 64356C,rebltena.newin· '68 ~Uf ~ec.h 'a car l._7_6_Cbe __ v_et-te-:-.. -pd-.-F-m-
768-5837 GoodCood. Worllln& '75 shower, 38K ml, very 2125HarbOrBlvd. IMW 9712 C>llAMCilCOAST ter .. orange over bill. owner. nu ena, clutch. stereo cau, 27mp1.
• MB-50M cUllly appearance, cost COSTAllESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• HONDA 642-91197 amoa cert. B/O P .P . ltOOO.S'D-21827,MS-4726.
l'JlS-80 comp. level 11 • T.V li" co&oa'yra old like $12,IOO new-aell •00 979·2500 .,_.l.ft.ftll •IT-S '75 91~ 1.8 dark red, runs. 417.2230 d t'fK . all a cc ea1 . firm.After7PM731·20IO For the beat deal in ·-T-..-SR • 72 Chevy Kln11woo tOBO.~aft.4 . :::::::::.l·m:t For Rent: 22• Deluu WllUl ~eT~!tr·· Come TODAY!!! :;;n_:~~:/OBO ·~~:nthl:sfrn: :!c•~:.0d~~~::
lllJmberabip of Newport Id! .. llotorhome al pa IS CLIAMCAIS s· UMIYllSITY '71 9US Targa equipped $l.ll00.873-9387 aeala • lail1ale. Air r8e•cb TenQll Club ...................... $200/week 10• /mile ......... UCIS cond.,Wt1teerin1wheel,
llM IMh. Peww 9040 «Ml88 ~ '.. • • ~A25ar&iE w /everything. 7oK mi, ••BUG, new paint, reblt he rack, am a trk stereo
Jltoewood WiU Deliver &
Back.
•• {J)678-1134/836-7482
....................... T ........ Tnnel 9170 -SADOLii.icic HOHDA ~model s11.soo ~7t~. $1700 Firm . &manymorenru.Brn
'73 35' Flber1la11 Luhrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• -S _. ._.. &: white exterior w /tan with., brid t dal VM.UYIMPORTS GMC iaUC:I lolaltope 9756 , 197 ~ bl&aior. Xlnt cond. ln· y ae. wn • '73 IQ;yadu' wlk to bch, 28t02MrritePkwy. 2850HarborBlvd. .. ..................... Partlna Out . • aida It out C U Rhoad aenerator. I bower. fenced yard, pela OK. bot II Viejo OQS'l'A MESA . Ml llC•l(R IN us'...... Voluwa1en Bua parta, . • a 8TAMPCOLLECT10NS loeded. N.900. 551·0833 tub41'1·5MI .Hl-204 495-4949 140.9640 ·7 uu. · ·"· . forule.641·9157 at•D55
PURCHASED by Dave or640-5279 , ......... utllty 9 I IO ROY leeiiiiiieiiii1--9ji9j'jJiiO
J, Cooper. Call 846·2387 55' MQOalMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• tHH IU'Yla CJolled Sundaya HONDA ACCOID ~ CARVER vw ~· '67 left & rl1ht ... ••••••••••••••••••••
iiCHJUSTMASTREES +boat unuTYTRAILll Top dollars for Sporta U tlOUS·ROYCl =.:s:.sJ: door. $50 1972UMCOLH
i Wholesale Only Offer 631-4286 Wanted. Uaed and Must Cara, Bup, Campers. s apeed, air, at.ereo, p/a, ,,..,,......,_ Goodcoocl. $750.
I 972-4710,831-1257 Claaaic 18• Lyman beincooc!ConcllUon 914'1,Audi'a allvertredlikenew!Tbia l . · ::::' .. •"' '67VWBEETLE 67$-2013
9arlboard, Hot Stuuy I Launch. Great Bay boat. .,.7. JIM ""' ! 1 ST • UOAOWAY YMU) , __ ClostDSUHOAYS SJ.OOO. <7l•)S41·'7907 78 Uncoln Town Car. "" 3182 AMf°Mu,ff1!9,.R $ • · weekend only ! (020 aowJdeqtne•bod,y.
hrin nn. 5'8", with New Fine cond. 92500. AMto$wYlce,P.... VOUCSWA•a. SAHfA AHA s.A111b•ck 1·67 ~ M.PW "Comicbe", '•VWSqu.areback. Good maei.u...:=·
Wave desiao. Xlnt. cond. , 641-5750, 142-5561. & Accftaori•• 9400 19'711 Buch Blvd. 835·3 I 7' v.-.y 2dr cou.pe. RHO. xlot _ .... IL •-•--'-r. SlroDI ~;;--.-----.iilii Ea -lite Pro series. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~TONBEACH TMtumMAttDfl1V1NoMAcM1Hl I ..£... --•-.... Ill: 9911 .. am cood. otfen over $19,000. .-.n ..... Only ... eoo. Call . Call eves an. 3: SA.I.YAM SAU SSAVISAYI S 4 200 •USED IMWi• 714131-%040 4M-2023. ~. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••
1830. I ~ IW wmt USID PARTS '7320m (0558) SMOWaOOM COHD.
SlnitbCorona, all electric, As Is wt.re Is Imported car parts TOP DOI.LAI '7420mtiis/r (0332) Wanted Honda c ar s.lt 9760 iO VW Squareback, new "15T·TOP •v d t s c eluial I IMPORT p• •D FOi '7S2002a (003$) mo.12, N-600 with blown ••••••••••••••••••••••• pot. Urea, catm 1trlpin1. Power brall:ea, power Y u y. e r · l 9 7 8 3 6 ' Tr 0 j • 0 AUTO SUPPLY .,.. '7620021/rep. (1578) engine. 531-8801 MEW & USED good cood, auto, needs wtndon, power ateerin1 Mdl typewriter. Jus t : CF8918GK Twin Cum-lOlN. Manchester GOOD & c• ....... , _ _, a1 320 ' Sl200 wltb 'llt /tele1copa"n1 Hr'vlced. $150, Black & • mina V504M. Onan ·--i......•m 77"'9900 ....... " "Tl32lhwu1. r ( 1) .._ 9730 s· .... CEMTR.a reverie ear • """""" .,.. USED C •151 '776.30caiauto (0040) --r-AA9 SR 631~evea 1teerin1 wheel, alr. Beeker Workmate Hvy generator, may be in· ..a • ,,_.__ d• .a ·~··••••••••••••••••••• .. un:ou1•-eo,rearwln· ri... bl d d L B t ~auaamys n.-1.--~ ""'Y Ta e. never use · specle arson oa 4-.-•ed z 68 XKE convert. wires, I 19'78-99GL. GLE. EllS" '73 Super BeeUe am/fm dow defoner, enta.ruatic ~o. SLIM-GY M Ex-yard, Berth 214 , -r newtop/lires,abeauty , TURBOlowas (653WCL> caaa, S2200 645-4199 or trans. Snow white wUh
erciser good cond. $&5. Terminal Island 8·4. tr.....a11ioll bs t o rrr . 531 ·0855 , I $5299 : 64.S-4203 Burgwldy interior. Im· Fishi~g equipment. Sealed Bid must.include Alsomiscellaneous240Z. & ~31183. . i maculate thruout !
some brand new. Camp· 10% or total bid in cash. 200Zparts I --·73 Orange & White VW $8 100 754 6790 or
ing equipment, slightly cashier 's check or 768-5837 K.,.....Ghla 9714 BEACH IMPORTS Van. gd cood, runs well. AMwer Ad lfm, 642-4300
or never used. 960-5844 ~Y order payable t.o • & fl"O z I .._.... llYd. , ............... • .. • • .. • 848 Dove Street Air. Am /Fm stereo, new _a. tin.
evesorwknds. William Knight. Subr;n•l 67 Bug doors L SS · ,,__..._ ...... __ 64ir.5700 Slldcl.back 1'58Classk Ghia, top body, I NEWPORT BEACH br.akes. $3500. C a II ,._ 9933 Surveyors 5732 E. 2nd .,.,,6783 1 x n me c · • Miene e at 645· rm ••••••••••••••••• • ••••• bid to So. Coast Manne ea. '73 Ldoor $50. ,----r V•y I t h S 3 3 9 5 I 75% 0900 "'-11 5000 .__,.. Juteboxes classic 50's .....,. 1-.... I ""'"ll'MID 548 0285 613 ~,.-6 style, newer also. all re· St .. Long Beach, Ca . --WANTED! I ...,..... •• a•r....,-. . Toyota 9765 ... LCr pm. 69 Cougar . Good
cond. for rec rm 536.3224 90803 before 2 ·OOPM on 1.9IB Lincoln Continental '71 2002 4 speed. Maida 97 38 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VGIYo ~772 transportation car. $600. Dec 10 Balance due parts for sale. Hood, LatemodelToyotasand sWlrl .. stereo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Toyota C el1'c a ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67s.-0652. . · O · u d b Vol v o s . C a l I u s (74.2 PCW) 1---------within lOdays. wner re· gn • oors. umpers. AY ' 11 .762002 73 Mazda RX-3 Wacon. Llftback. Xlnt. cond. VOLVO '7SCOUGAR serves the right to refuse wheels w /new t 1 rea. · · 5spd, lo mi. gd cood am/fm radio: Heater.
Riviera Sofa-bed. S25.
window air conditioner.
$75. ~9'l23. anxor all blda. radiator. power seat. Auto, sunrf, air, $1200/080. 497-5126. aJr, aut4 trans. Shade Rum aoc>d. 1ood Int. lli-iiillliii-iiiiiiiiill---•I new brakes, radio, air Am /Fm (269 ZIT) Mt.cteln lea 9740 louvers . low mileage SALIS. SBYICI $1500 548-9023
Oval braided rut 9&12, gd coocHUooer, rear deck ~~~;,1; •••••••••••••••• •• ••• •• 644.Qr76. AHO LIASIHG f.ord 9940 ~ J15, Teac R to R 9050 lid.allin1oodcondltion. lfU....._11•& lowmiles,(S23RZl l ,7SMERCEDES280C OVERSEASDELIVERY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Clpedeck. mdl 4010, gd ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1().$50. 545-1914. c .... ,....., . rf 71 c.orooa Mk JI. auto. 68K EXPERTS LI" l.Uld SJ.00. Solid dbl oak • f'-'4 .. tlOwUO-t4'7 '7732Uau.to.,sun .. Excellentcond1t1on11 mi. gd cond . Sl695. 72 Ford. A/C. auto. ae -.,ere with drop leaf lid CHARTER. 48' Luxurious Partin& Out •52 Chev. \"i 320iair, (aHedTIA ) rf (8S2 NVJ) 546-6640 EAIU llCE new. Good ti r
1
e s
200
&
desk. x.lnt cond S375. '74 Sai!in( Yacht. Fully Ton. All or Part 536-7674 '77 4spe .sun · S8295 . brakes, clean. l . equapped. Slee""' 10. 2 ~ft"';me PORSCHES air, stereo, low miles '75 MERCEDES450SE 71 CELICA GT Ltftback VOt..VO S.Sl·l~ amaha Enduro 360. ,... ......,.. TWA H bo Bl d 1---------day minlmum. S500 per (837 > Excellentcond1lton1 ' 5spd. loaded. 1mmac 1966 ar r v ~~ond. $400 call day . 213 1687-7327 or ..,_far Sale st;,.~a!:,~~ ~·~·R ) 100NPF~0.595 962·<XX31 646-'ff°d'tf.f~467 low·~.°:1~.~~· ~~
!Jewport Beach Tennis
Club Membership for
!ale S750 644-S942
awfool Bath Tub-Old.
Iron & White
. Good Cond. $100.
Decorator Item:
3854 daya, 951·2551 .
1013
Di.rector trombone
lb cue. Excellent con·
SJ.00. 675-8052 after
hall 100 watt super le.ad brain, um model. 'Looka lllle new. Hardly
~ eso. lbane1 electric
Et r . Profeulonal
with Tree of Llfe
up to the neck.
ood&raln body with
bard ahell case. $500.
~ ,.,.... ...
........ 1015 :·······················
2131627·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED ....... ed rf 000 . 41119CJ\ w·u t d -........ SaH 9060 IMPORT•NT '78.-,4 spe . s un · Saddleback Valley '77 SR.5 Sports Cpe. 36. MTY pnce: _,, 1 ra e
-"' Al.low ua the opportunity air. stereo cass.. Imports nu, orig ownr. immac ~I COU for ?1. 9157-0282. 673-5953. ••••••••••••••••••••••• NOTICETO toCOOlldertbepurcbase <873WDI > 714831-2040 $3al0.646-4067 VOi.YO
16' HOBIE CAT READERS AND or trade-in of your clean '7932U 4speed. sunrf . '71 Colmt.ry Squire, ps. pb,
with trailer. $1600 ADVERTISERS foncbe. Check with Us air.atereocass., etc '78 240 D standard, str. I IUYrllOll.EMS EXO.~~LY~O~VO air, .&lot cond. S900.
661-9279 The price of Items ~I (358MRE> a te. am /fm 33K m1 Sick or dead Foreign Laraat ovo aer .._'96-_2023 __ . ___ -==-::
advertised by vehicle S ddltll•ck $14,960640-5280 can wanted. Pintos too. inB~eL~_::~! Mwcw, 9950
'udo 145~8i'7d. $900 ~r~:f:1e~ ~~~e~~1~11~: v.-.y 79· Mercedes 300CD Free tow. 631-•n. DIRECT •••••••••••••••••••••••
11..._.14 w..._.ler columnadoe•n.otlnclude 71411
1ii1
1.rt2•040 lvory~~~d_.,e.!.,12Kmi ~ 9760 ~,~--~,~·~ ORANGFIE..£&UTNTY'S .,_ , .. _ any applicable laltea. """"~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~
., 9Sl-l1SO }i=·c:!::::~re!e1:; ~======='.....1----------'78 MB 450S EL' i m . NEW & USED!] ! ~~:=~RY ~lpa/ 9070 air pollutioo control de· ma c u 1 ate . met . SAAi CEMTlll 2025 S Manchester
••••••••••••••••••••••• vice certification.a or de· brown/tan leather. lo mi. A-..h...:m 750-201l ~-lf/l/_J6tt/J.• aler documentary pre· bizy or a11ume lease. J.978.9901.. GLE, EllS & ""'--~ T~ AVAIL: Side Ties, 14' to pe.r&Uon char&ea unleaa & ~1.58 TURBOlowu (653WCL> •---------LINCOLN-llE0RCURY
2 S '. L l do Y a c bl otberwiae apecllied by SSZ99 '71 lC.E: New Urea. Runs i&-llAutoCeoter Dr.
Ancbol'•ae. 673-9330 Ron the lldvertiaer. '79 300SD. slvr on blk, bad. Need a lntetior. so Ftry-Lake Forest exit
Snyder. lwlllA•11/ , .... Mere-Salee-Service-Leasing turbo dleaeJ , sunroof. 40 •~•CH IMPORTS Some new parta. MOO. IRVINE • li H l ~ I 95JO -, ~ I pl. tank, all xtras, UK .,_ IJ0.7000 For rent 35 5 p, \ID -a ca JDllRarborBlvd. _....,.,AC. ml. $29,500/080. P.P . ..DoveStreet ~7· Har. Maureen, 84&-M33 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..__II-• ••" ...,..,. .. _..._ BMW .. _ ""~" CH -•-ood ( ._ ......_. -.,.,.,..--.......... f79.43111. nc:a. 675-....., NEWP0Rl'_8EA ...._ oo....-.. '79 lfaoarcb, ........ t c -• (rea).....oa wora). 1970CADIUAC 1540Jambotte 71Z.OtOO ---4-c1r air auto. P/S, P /B ..,._SI•-9090 Cow-IDIVILU WeP_, NewportBeacb 64().6444 '86 Mercedes 230$, good --------=-=,...,..,,,,-1••••••••••••••••••9••••0• -~
-Y-OVER cond. eng overhauled. •--a.. 9765 ..._._ 91 1.....:;;;.;.;..;_· -----==== •••••••••••••••••• ••••• -.--. or{arinal mUes " I~---• ....... 995 ..
--· •-$3.000/ofr.846-6079 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••--. • Dry aloraae available. io.ded! Must be the best -.... IOI 1 •1..... •••••••••••••• Newport Dunes. 1131 ex.ample of this model In Mc...,. 5" I '73 MB 28fSE 4.5. blk on ·77 Toyota C elle• RIVIERA. im. Co. exec. ••••••••• Back Bay Dr. NB. Oranae Co. l prevloua ForYou.rGood Llftback. Xlnl. cood. car. Takeover leaae '•llmlanlll•cbl.Good
644-05l0 owner & perfect ! VW,_PoncbeorAudi. -1 $ bUt. full pwr. air, $8250. am/fm radio. Heater. ·1282.26 mo. <OAC> or mod. paint ready. $2100
(770AVA). · · 646-8654 alr, auto trans. Shade buy for~. CaU Pal at ar best ofter. Call Dave.
Tia .. arttltloll $3411 ~ .. 64 220 SE, convt. 2 dr louvers, low mileage. n4.s57·11810daya. _54S-OJl3 ________ _
••••••••••••••••••••••• VW·PORSCHE·AUDI 850N. Beach Blvd. sedan chocolate brown _644-«7 __ 1S_. ______ '69 Riviera. 13()(). firm. 'GS 289 VI, upd, twin
•WANTED; Good used AlrcNft 91 IO ...SE.CoaatHlway LAHABRA 1_c_l_ua_ic_548_·_9882 _____ nCoronaMltlJ,auto.68K C.allevea: pipes, needs en1 work !£';Furn for our new ......... -............ atBayaldeDrive <5/fi·no.olSAFwy) mi. gd cood. $1695 , 644-0309 $800/0BO 673·2484 or cea incl. wood deaka, ..,__,_ .. Be h 673 0900 '79 MB 300CE cpe, met. e::..ur -~" _ I chain, conference l969 Beach Musketeer, ,..., .. ....,.. ac · 714 52Z..53J3 black, cinnamon int. -----·------C =1c 9915 ....:557..:-·-,;,,,;,.:.,.:__ _____ _
ti It chn. mes. etc. Call mldlime 150 Lycoming Premium prices Sunday by Appl. Finest example of im· 71 CELICA GT Llf\back ....................... ·~CONVERTIBLE 11\W.l.C.752-~l ~~Pc!d~~:S:~v~ft paldforanyuaedcar • • •• maculately-maintained Sspd, loaded, immac. YOUll#I Au.t.oV-8,PS,restored
....... 1017 6PM oocli d (forelpordomeatic) r " driven auto. All ac-962-C>ml CADILLAC Makeolfer,535-5865 . ... .,... . '48 Ford W e, realore ln lood condiUon. . '76 BMW 2002, au.nroo , oesa. atandard. Incl spl ---------• .._ !~•••• ................. C ••rs,Sale/ $1.3.000.ALS0 '29Model SeeUaFlratl macwhls. am/rm casa, whls, sunroof, R. hand "TlSR.SSportsCpe,36,000 DIA&•1"'11PIH ••Ford llustaof, new C#zon Crested Cockatoo, ...., 91%0 A Town Sedan, 4 dr, other xtru. xlnt cond, mirror. Aaking pric e mi. orif ownr. immac. OIA)•ICOUMTYI lma&clr, mlnt cood. $l350.
, fery tame and affec· ••••••••••••••••••••••• restored. Ideal for 1tu· '80()(). Call 640-5593 or Sl9,SOO <blue book $3800.64&-4067 -...o. 1 \klnate.On.lyl~yraold. 8'camperaleeper.$37"/or dent.SJ.0,000.675-6161. 'lSZ·a.3. wholesale price ). Call tlUYPllOILIMS SALES.SERVICE Cli* 1'1• 9tH
.49t-S844. bestolfer. 111155 MGTF. uoo clasaic. c.,rt 9715 781 -5190 wkdya 8·5. Sick or dead Forelao A.NDLEASJNG ••-••••••••••••••••••
hrt tame Parrot + 545-4884. Reatorallon project. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 793-8878 6-1 lp m or can wanted. Pintos too. ·~· 'Tl~ Delta a. catm
'•ro111ht Iron play-Open Road Cabover liOQO. (714)S211-1811S. '76CAPRI 11 wkebda. Freetow.131-87. c r11lter 4·dr ••~•··
WOUnd,$100.MS-8465. Camper, 10¥&', aeU·cont, '$2 MG-TD Repllcar. 1 yr v.e 4-apd. 26mp1 , Mal 9744 ValllW99111 9770 ~~4lo. :!!; a Or.-. 1090 nr ...,, • llOO/OBO. old. 3K ml, VW cbaatia • AM/FM cua.hlooka xlnt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lodm. bur&Jar ·~. v .. ... •••••••••••••••••••• •1• enc. vallllld su,aoo muati--=---------~~~~3104 uoo&. '79Mal 71WUTPAUA c:~~~oo 5.7 _,. 121( mi, f7150. •SM.£• Jotm Brhnball'a annual
hoUday piano • or·
a&le. New Grand
• '2,"a.oo. New
• CCIGIC>le planot: .,r. alf. New or1ana: up
I05".olf.
JNl Sout.b Brtltol
•i 151-Wl
fl'n:INwAY 1'4" Ebony
81'and, bit 1809, lllre new
eond, one of a kind
... 000.
1'A8C)N Is HAMLIN 8'2"
E Grand, bit 19'26,
new cond .
!bmltolter.
M•mmond Or1an • ..,._ c .. ter 215' E . ~llwJ.C411Mtl9IO
tWort~lllet . 9140 aeesn&O-.ztn .,.._ 97%0 Am-Fm atereo. 23,doo camper 4 speed, air. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!. Olllf15.Sm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4---. ._._" 9150 rmi.. muat see to ap· atereo, pop top, new ..= -.... ;;.;;..;.....:,_ ____ ....,9'"'t,...,R,...,7~ .,......,........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• -" t ' <2V&j I -•-• Moped ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1--=--------~• , -... -.. a eS, .a. ~~ala, imwrlc)ulate ! ! "19 Seville DleaeJ, or 1 .... ""•••••••••••••••••••• .,. """"' or MIUIDe i.e. Sale price 76POl.D~210 I '1rtH CUYIBIMW sa.uoo. Lae aaumptloa 'Tl Run.about, 50111, Pl. ---------t Xlat. CGDd.. PIS. P /8, 2 ....................... 1.at•Broadway Cll'•IMW .,../IDO. <n4)55l-ta5'7. amlfm "-'·· mo.dtd, "°'
aua. tanks, CB, AM /FM a-e 9701 s.ntaAna W-3171 J.aUsBroadway C ttl7 ....... MW1Z7 t 110 ,.._-.• dock, much more. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., _ _._ •--.... •111 • ............,_ tt61 ...... ~nu. .....,.. .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~ tl.'50/0809C·8'00 AUA "13 MGB GT cluslc, xlnl -·-•••••••••••••••• i. Hwalry 250cc O.R. 1 cand. pew palnl &: lnt. "19VWVan-7pua. Dark ''71 Cam, auto. am/fm 77~._
Uke NEW condiUonl "70 aco..l _Y! 800-C 1A1 .Gx nl HUJMIMIAITHS lfl9Ml~ll:.lilfit\t e.aoo.-.SZ05. bnrn/t.aD, J.t,000 ml. Gd ...-, a /c, a.w map • ., ......
11u1t aell tbla wettl ClODd. _...,. • re1 p ot 9741 cond. ..-oo. 494--NM or peiat,J&mN. IMl·llll ·~ ..... ..:Sl!::t00=.:.54f.=..:•=1::•:.:.·---~ii-....:::::::L:'-----.n'il l978Gl.tcm9U0Q> ll:ii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii:I' ¥ .............. ewa4'7·1511 C11et1•t ttZI ...... _tiW 9160 ~" ________ _,········· ·----------....................... ~ ........ brak•.
Ulll HD &poruter cuat .... •••••••• .. ••••••••••• ''18~Wi.,.(0).837) '12 3tQZ, rblt motor, new PIUGIOT !t17 IAY -CHI¥ MU "It wlndows. Power door :::ra1~n~ =~ "11 Pord Cou..rler w /ahell . 16''" clu&.ch, m.,1. Am /Fm CLIAIAMCI ., ~pay for MAI ieu ¥6 :..':'11~ ~
n1a .'91111 • ...,.,.,.,..,ua.fltJd umSMdl4rjaaTLT> cau. 0800 /080. a-.. -~'lldtnth• IPOltTCCMftt VI. AllJFlll I track • ' t-*, auto, '2100/080 · 17, •9 ..:•;.:;:..ID~:.;.· _____ -t (2) '71 sot Dl•ela low aa -~
DESP&R.AT& llual --=-=~•;...;..;.....,,______ '7t8Dn.NG.'J'9(0'Gl1) (501RSC) DA&YPILOT Autoc111\lc t.raaa., ah ~ ~411
llOllll '1t9uaukl. Aak'-. •n~ ":.:. a;::t ~~ o~iJ~ Sift' SlaYICI ~~~ • • o r e I
SUIOO/ofr. ITWl11 541.au DtllCTOllY 0...Y •"•'
11'11 lMI' HoM•. llACHIMPOITI ..., M1tblal wltb a llACHIMPOITI DOITNOW! MOWA19Cbu;•t
i cand.... ...,.._.,. ~-~ .......... , .. _..Ad .. Dcrl'e~ 641-1671 ~'!'ca· .mi NSW!O.U~ISACH ._ ,.._ '---NJ:WJIQIR ft'l'_I rcH
. 7'1Joe990 t. ....... -ta.tr . 71z.etl ---6 ..... a.ult.a IG-5C11 )ullallta.51'1'1. ,.,. __
-,
ach
VO CTIONS, 32 PAGES
Three
~••rBo•etewa: ..
Dally New ••tte•·:
"' . ,.
TWENTY-FIVE CENT$~
A BERNARDINO <AP>
p lo 10, pe."<Jpl fled
their homes. schools and
bus1nesse as su fires
pushed by winds up to 90
mph ravaged thousands of
acre of timberland and left
many homes in ruins, of·
ficials said There were at
least three confirmed deaths
10,000 escape; 325 homes
'
•• • in ruins Thirty hand crews f:so
·Western states were expected·,
be flown in to help exha
firefighters battle the aeeminily
Fires in four counties
charred more than 40,000
acres. Nearly 325 homes.
many of them in expensive
HB chief
asks 72
ne-w cops
By ROBERT BARKE R
Of 1119 D-'lr Piiot Staff
Huntington Beach Police Chief
Earle Robitaille says lhl' city
needs 72 additional µolacc vf·
· ficers "in order lo meN minimal
staffing requirements" fot the
war on crime.
In a report the City Council
declined to act on Monday night.
Robitaille asked for 18 new of-
ficers thi!' year and 18 each year
for the next three years
Costs of the expansion are
estimated at $2.8 million.
Robitaille aaid an an interview
that additional officer s are
needed to insure a minimum of
1.5 officers per 1,000 population.
He estimates that the city will
hilve a population of 178,000 by
1984.
PreeentJy, 193 sworn officen
•erve a popalaUon of about
172~008. o ... taJlle contends the cur-ren l'8t.lo al about one olficer
per 1,000' ts extremely lo"W for a ·
beach cit y.
Masked man
sought in
I
118 rape try
Police are se;trching for a
masked gunman who broke into a
north Huntington Beach apart·
ment early Monday and at·
tempted to rape a 22-year-0ld
woman.
According to police, the
woman awoke at about 12 . lOa.m
when an intruder wearing a cloth
mask jumped on her hed and
pointed a revolver at her.
The woman screamed and
began struggling with the man.
grabbing the barrel of the re
volver at one point, police said.
The intruder struck her about the
face, but the woman continued to
scream and struggle and knocked
him off the bed, police said.
The intruder. who was
described as a white man in his
mid-20s with a slight build. then'
fled out a window. A neighbor who
heard the woman's screams sum-
moned police.
Coast
Weather
Local gusty northeaster-
ly winds 20 to 35 rnph
mainly near passes in
Orange County, decreas-
ing tonight and Wednes-
d ay . Otherwise fair
through 't'ednesday. High
Wednesday 75 to lower
SOS. Lows tonight ln the
40s.
INSIDE TODAY
The National EducaUon A1-
10cfation soya the averoge
Wrlgth of tftJClwr ""1ict h4a
droppajfrom20yara to 14 the
pcut ttoo decacka, 011 mdiccstton
that rraor. UOcMra Ott tunriftg m IMtr chalk. But a former
plaflbll «fucolfon ttocMr m
P""""llONo i.a fighting CM
trnd.Sftl'oOeA1.
l•tles . .,.,_...,. . ,,_e..-ca a '-.M..... ... ........ c... g:: o~
c-tca Q =-~ ......... ......... IC..' .......... (14 '""''*" CJ • ...,.,... 0
areas, were damaged o r
destroyed, officials said.
One blaze was beaded ''over
the hill" north of this city into
the San Bernardino Mountains
toward several towns, and part
of southern Crestline was being
evacuated today, said Jirnrny
Jews, spokesman for the San
Bernardino Fire Department.
The two maJor roads into the
mountains, Highways lit and
330, were closed as the fire
jumped Highway 18 and
threatened the exclusive com-
munity of Arrowhead Heights.
Another s wiftly moving
brushfire that broke out today
ln 1lre Malibu Canyon area of
Cos Angeles County was whip-
ping south toward the Pacific
Coast Highway a fter burning
~ ~~~~~~~~~-
LISTENS TO TESTIMONY
Murder Defend•nt A181•
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of ... Oeil'I Pli.t Stafl
. Without flinching, the two
toung children of Dr. Louis
Alaia told an Orange County
jury Monday of how their father
fatally stabbed their mother and
then attacked her boyfriend in
the woman's waterfront home in
Huntington Harbour last JWle
13.
The children Marc. 11. and
Maria, 9 -were both highly
composed and at times ap·
peared bored Monday as they
descnbed the violent seQuence
of events that resulted in the
deaths of Alaia's ex-wife, Margy
Lou. 37, and Long Beach at-
torney, Marvin Tincher, 50.
Alaia. an orthopedic s urgeon
who 1s charged with two counts
of murder. listened intently to
his childrens · testimony, fre-
quently cradling his head in his
hands as the two recounted the
events of an evening that began
with their wanting to watch a
tel evisio n s h ow called
"Boomer."
Though the two children told
':somewhat different versions,
they essentially testified that
their father came lo pick them
up the night of Friday the 13th
for a weekend visit but that their
mother told him he could have
hem on Sunday and not sooner.
Marc said his rather and
mother then began to argue as
he a nd Maria waited for the TV
show to begin. At one time, the
youngster said he saw his father
push bis mother with both
bands. She then told her former
husband "to get out of the
house.''
When she again told him to
leave and he didn't go, Marc
said his mother w e nt to
telephone police, and as she did,
A la la went to a k itcben
knifeholder and seized a knife. "I 'll kill you," the-youngster
said be heard his father say as
be approached his mother.
"Lou, don't," s he responded. '
Marc said he left the room
before actually seeln1 hls lather
attack b1unother.
M·arc said h e went lnto
another room where he saw bis
mother come out oC t~ kitchen
holdln1 her stomach. ''Your dad
atabbed me," be said abe told
blm.
T he youn11ter testified that
hla mother went bac:lt to the
kitchen toward t.be telepboae.
However, before 1be ~ •.a .
she alwrq>ed to her kneel.
At the aaiue tlme, Marc laid
he 11w hil rather filJltlftl wtt.b
Tincher la the TV room 11
Maria stood Illar a table .
Thouah he dlcln •t see a klilfe ln
b1a father'• band. the Pt'OMCU·
Deity ...... "'""'-·..., GerY • .,,.,_
TELLS OF ARGUMENT
M8rcAJ•l8, 11
DESCRIBES KILLINGS
Marte Al•le, 9
tion witness sald h e heard
Tincher say, "Lou, control
yourself."
Marc said he ran outside the
house and went to a neighbor's.
Finding no one home, be said be
ran back to his house and stood
lnside the doorway, calling .for
his dog. Then he again left tht
house to again find a neighbor.
While fleeing, he said he told
Alai a 's third wile, Susan, who
was waiting outside the house,
what had happened.
After finding a neighbor who
called police, Marc returned to
his house on Gilbert Street to
find his sister still s tanding in
the TV room. He said he saw
Tincher lying on the kitchen
floor and noticed his father try.
ing t.o give aid to his mother.
The woman, who had separat·
ed from Alaia In November,
1978, died of a single stab wound
to 1the 'abdomen. Tincher suf·
fered multiple knife wounds.
Marta, who followed Marc to
the witness stand, aaid her
mother asked her to call police
after the arpment broke out
with her lather.
"This ia my house and I don't
have t.o leave," abe aaid bu
father told her mother at one
point.
• When Mrs. Alala went \o the kltcJlen where the phone w ..
located, Maria said her father
went to the 'knlfe rack and t.bea
"be ran over and stabbed my
mom."
But ln a chan1e from het pre-
Yioua leltimc.y durift8 a pre-
liminar'1 heartn1 1D .July, Marta
tetW\ed that her father 1rabbed
a Mcond.larser tnlfe befon at· tac~lftl ·1111Clier, wbo bad come
o.er to Yillt earlier Ulal ~ m.n,. (8ee~Pa1eA1>'
•
more than 2,000 acres within
two hours.
Some residents in Malibu
Canyon, about 30 miles west of
Los Angeles, were being
evacuated, and two major area
roads were immediately closed,
the California Highway Patrol
reported.
Still another fire threatened
an entire village in the Angeles
National Forest, and three
blazes were out of control in
Riverside County.
More than 1,200 firefighters
were battling the six fires, and
six firefighters were injured, in-
c luding two who s uffered
broken legs in falls down steep
terrain.
No other injuries were re-
ported.
'uncontrollable blazes. '
Many residents stayed Jt
their homes until the last
minute, hoeing down houses in
attempts to save them from the
blaze.
·T h e l argest fire , the
Panor ama blaze that official+
said was set by arsonists, beg~
Monday morning in a cany~
north of San Bernardino, 4P
(See WINDS, Page A!)
7,500 acres burned ... ' ·.
Trahuco Canyon
fire uncontrolled
By GLENN SCOTT
Ol U. Dall' Ptltlt St.llH Fanned by strong winds, a fire
in upper Tr abuco Canyon in
Orange County burned 7,500
acres or land through the night
and was still uncontrolled today.
No injuries have been report·
ed but seven structures have
been destroyed at adjoining
Holy Jim Canyon and another 53
have been damaged, according
to a spokeswoman for the Orange
County Fire Department.
Most of the structures were
summer cabins, she said. •
Residents of Holy J im Canyon
and tenants of the county's
Joplin Boys Ranch were
evacuated during tbe night. Residenll of the expensive Coto
de Caza ar ea aod Modjeska
Canyon were asked b y
firefighters to evacuate volun-
tarily.
About 200 firefighters were
battling the blaze today with 70
engines and four bulldozers. The
fire was only 10 percent oon· •
tained, the spokeswoman said.
as winds from 30 t-0 45 mph blew
like bellows into the blaze. Gusts
were up to 60 mph.
A strike force of 15 firefighters
had set up a defense al the boys
ranch in anticipation of the fire. 'which at last report was sweep-
ing north of Trabuco Creek and
Rose Canyon.
The fire began at 6:30 p.m .
Monday in Indian Canyon in
Riverside County about seven
miles northwest of Lake
Elsinore. Winds pushed It into
Orange County
The spokeswoman said the
fire raged through th e
brushland, sycamores and oaks
of Cleveland Na lion a l Forest
and crossed into Orange County
about 2 a.m.
The cause of the fire has not
been determined, she said.
Another southland fire which
has scorched about 7,000 acres
in Riverside County near
Lakeland Village bas forced
closure of the Ortega Highway
east of the Orange County line,
said a spokeswoman for the
Riverside County Fire Depart-
ment.
She said the fire, started in the
small community west of Lake
Elsinore, has moved south. Resi-
dents or the village were
evacuated Monday after the
blaze began al 3':30 p.m .
Two of the 550 firefighters
working on the fire were treated
for s moke inhalation, she said. Th~ Red Coss established a temporary evacuation center at
El Toro High Sctiool, Serrano
Road and Ridge Route, early to-
day, officials said.
Boys from the Joplin Ranch
are being temporarily housed at
Orange County Juvenile Hall, a·
county spokesman said.
Firefighters baitllna today's blaze were drawn from Orange
Coqnty Fil'e Department, the
CaWomla Forestry De})artment
and the U.S. Forest Service.
Search canceled
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The
Coast Guard baa called off tta
search for three memben ol a
workboat crew mluint after a 488-f~t tanker crashed Into
their ?S2•foot craft at the mouth
or the Misaisalppl River. The
fourth member of the workboat
crew wu rescued nine houri
after the Monday mornln1 col-
lision.
o.ltJ Niil ....... '9 •lcMN .........
THEY FLED BLAZE AT COUNTY'S TRABUCO CANYON
Jo•nn Nert, d•ughter Mofty, reat at El Toro High SchOol
e JOPLIN
BOYS RANCH
COTO DE CAZA
<&>-
OeltJl"Mlllt"-
ORANGE COUNTY BLAZE
Jopln(dot)Evmcu•ted
Doris Allen,
slwrt by 497,
to get recount
Doris Allen, whose Nov. 4
challenge to incumbent Chet
Wray in the 71at Assembly Dis-
trict fell '117 votes short, bu
asked for a recount.
Mn. Allen, president ol the
Huntlntton Beach Union Hlgb
School DI.strict board, laid the
county Re,Utrar'• of(lc:e will
betln the recount next llonday.
' She said lf tbe retama ol about
65 key preclncta do not lndicate
an upeet, abe will atop the re-
count. There were M,• ~
cut 1D tbe Ttat Allembly Dla-
tri.c1 ballotlnc.
Mra . Allen. 44 , of
W estmlmter, •aid t.be recowat
will cost about "°° dally. Sbe uld tbe State Republlcan
Caucua wW pq part ol the eon.
Sbe allo said tbe bu hlred a
bandwritlnl expert to verity
1l&nalm'ee on ablentee balloU
caat for Wray, 51.
Man awarded
$13,000 in
• • arrest IDJury
A 25-year -old Huntington
Beach man ·has been awarded
$13,000 in civil damages for in·
juries he s uffered when he was
a rrested by city police in July Of
1979.
Chris Turner, 25, was awarded
the money for medical expenses
and lost wages Monday by a siZ-
member Federal District Court
Jury in Los Angeles.
Turner bad sued for $1 .S
million after suffering a broken
a rm when police were called to
break up a party at Dublin Lan«
in the southern part of the city.
Deputy City Attorney Robert
Sangster said no damaaes for
pain and sufferin& or punitive
damages were awarded.
Sanpter aaid police testified
that Tu.mer resisted anest and
that be was injured Lo a scuffle
while officers were tryinc to
handcuff him.
Sanpter said that Turner's at-
torney previously bad offered to
setUe the cue out of court for
$75,000 but that the city refused.
Reagan delay&
cabinet work
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Ronald Reaaan, sbelvinl tbt Jolt
or plckint a CalllMt for • '-*
daya. fti• today to • rucb out-
alde Santa Barbara to spend the
TbanbciYlDI boUday.
Tile prealdent-el~t met for
two ud a half boun Monda.v
wlth b1a cloeeet adviaen to .di·
cuaa names on thelr 111\1 of
protpeetlve Cabinet aeenta)Me,
but DO one 'fOUld aay If &llY ..
clllom were reached.
8&1RUT. IAbarwn CAP• t. Jr14 Utd Suaa1a1•rd durtaa
U. ftkShl and b bl llP rt\ilotctmMll appare•\lY lD P"PI· uo. t.w a drlv to occupy \he l ri.Dlu bol'Mr city Mton tM
11ftnlQ1 al tbe wtnlu ral • Tear .. lectio aald tollir.
1t allo refO"\H av)' Ir~:"' ol GUu •·Gbarb, • mu-aortb ol ~ rd, • 'I ~t ~ &nlller)' u -
than.-bltweea lraalu Md Inca• bat\eriM lil the Abadu
area. m1'eal0Yl9' of s~....,.t . rad.iu aald Jru'a 8"pnrm DefeAM CowtcU met aod re·
rt"1 lhat '"' rot "•tand idttab&e 1uccUM1 oa u,. ~ aqtnl and Abad o CtOCIU .. and an the rectoo around Ahwaa,
th u~tal of an n<'h Ktiuabtan P?ovloct . .,. .. ,. , . .,,. 11re.,••• ..,..,.., •IM
ABIDJAN. hory CoiliJt (AP} -Tbe pmaldent of Upper
Votta,&*....,. Laauaua • ..wu overthrown today in a coup led ~ Col &a.J• 7.erbo, th armed fortes eommudel' tn the capital
ol 0~, CllplomaUt tOW' ... lD Abi"'ao reported. wu no hnmediai.e word of the fate of Lamizana, M,
"ho wu bt-U,ved to be ln Ou1adougou.
Upper Volta is one of the poorest couoll'ies in Africa with its
f m1U.1on people mainly eoiaaed tn subslstence fuming and
a.ver ly affectf'd by the lon1 Sahel area drouabt.
~PolUll ""orlier• bt1er ..,1 ~••m..,en
t WARSAW, Poland (AP) -Poli.sh workers today interrupt·
1ed commuter service in Warsaw and the Baltic port of Gdansk,
•shut six ractor1es around the capital and staged a slowdown at
nine coal mines in the southern province Q{ Katowice.
Leaders of the Warsaw local of Solidarity, Poland's biggest
independent trade union, threatened meanwhile to call
widespread strikes unless a government commission agrees to
negotiate new demands. including release of prisoners charged
with anti-socialist crimes.
Gun•a n kill• f r a "el Ofll!""Ctl oenwr
PARIS (APl -An unidentified gunman fired into a J ew1sh-
owned travel agency here today, killing the owner's wife and
wounding the owner and another employee, police said. It was
the second fatal incident in Parls within two months involving
an attack on a Jewish facility.
4 1 milli on laonaes
'Who shot JR' show
has record viewers
NEW YORK (A P l Last
week's episode of "Dallas" in
which viewers found out who
shot J . R. Ewing won the highest
rating of any program in
television history, drawing
viewers in 53.3 percent of the na-
tl on 's TV -equipped homes,
fig\lres from the A.C, Nielsen eo. showed today.
That rating means that the
prime-time soap opera, broad-
cast Friday night, was watched
in about 41.4 million households,
Nielsen said. CBS researchers
translate that figure into a pro-
j c ct e d average audience of
a bout 83 rrullion.
In a ddition, Nielsen said
·Dallas" drew 76 percent of the
audience that was watching
television al that hour.
The highest-rated program
previously had been the final
episode of the ABC miniseries
"Roots," which drew a 51.1 rat-
ing when broadcast Jan. 30,
1977. ABC said the final "Roots"
episode had an average au-
dience of about 87. 7 million.
Nielsen computes figures only
for ratings shares and numbers
of TV households. Estimates of
the total number of individual
viewers are left to the networks,
each of which uses a different
formula.
The program that held the rec-
ord for highest audience share
was the final episode of the ABC
series "The Fugitive," broad-
cast Aug. 29, 1967. That show, in
which Or. Richard Kimble.
pla yed by t he l a t e David
Janssen, CinalJy caught up with
the one-armed man who bad
killed his wife, drew 72 percent
of the audience in its tlme
period.
On the · r ecord-breaking
"Dallas," episode, it turned out:
lo be Kristin Shepard, J . R . 's sis-
ter-in-law and jilted mistress,
who had pumped two slugs int-0
the corutiving oil baron at the
end of last season. Kristin,
ORANGE COAST H ,
DAILY PILOT
TM Or.ncJll COHI 0.Ur PHot, •Ht'I -'"'" It
comb1n.o ,,..,. H••' Pun. u oubU\Nd Dit 1~ Or•~ , .. ,, ""°'''hlf'lllJ (O'n,..ftt ~r•t• f'CtftlM\ .,. • ....,,tlwd MoM4,, ""out" ,..,.,Of.
••• Cott• Mina, Ntwl)Of't a.ecn ttlHIUfttfo" &each J'.ovnt••" V•fl•• trwine, L•O'-"• 8 .. <,. Sotltft C:0.1t A i l"Olt "etton•t .ou .. o P'UtJH\M,d s..,,Y( .. 0 ~ $.vn06f\ fftt ~in<.•.-t pul>fl\h"'O fH""I .. I I lJO WHI ll1y SlrMI, P 0 80~ 1 s.o. CMf4 Ml'\• C•mornfa f1i,.
"-" .. _ Prt'\lch"t Incl PvtliiflWrf'
11\eml\ICH¥11 ldltO' , ......... ,.....,...... ........ ..._1 .......
CJMJ'liH " '--..... , ... , -.... ... £011• ·-· ... ·· l'WtdOr-C-tldtl ..
H111•tfnaton .. Kfl Offtoe 1111Tltttfl-••>O
Miiii .. "de"" " 0 90o"' -otfk•• 1 ~ h,lcfl um No eo..i HIOtt•n GAY Mow ue Wot'"' Sl,...1
T'tfette.Gn• (1t•)l4Mm
C1 .. effled Anertltiftt IGMn
l'-..-i110t•• Coll!ll¥~Utt MO-f 2IO
..
pla yed b y Mar y C ros by ,
daughter of Bing Crosby. also
revealed that J . R., played by
Larry Hagman, was the father
of her Wlbom child.
The broadcasting of the key
episode was preceded by a
phenomenal publicity campaign
by CBS, and Lorimar Produc-tions that stirred Interest to a
fever pitch in the United Stales
and abroad. The show has an in-
lernational following estimated
at 250 million.
Italy quake
death toll
tops 3 ,000
NAPLES, Italy CAP> -The
Italian Military Rescue Com-
mand estimated the death toll in
Sunday's earthquake at more
than 3,000 today, makin~ it
Italy's WOflt quake in 65 years.
<Related photo, A4.)
The director of relief opera-
tions. Giuseppe Zamberletli,
said 1,750 were known killed, 570
missing with little hope of find -
ing them alive, and 1,879 in·
jured.
But the rescue command·s of-
fice in Naples said it estimated
at least 3,132 dead on the basis of
reports from previously isolated
villages in the mountains behind
Naples and Salerno.
The Interior Ministry said
there were 100,000 homeless, and
seismologists r eported that
more than 40 aftershocks shook
the region since the initial quake
Sunday night. They said a new
tremor in Avellino, east of
Na pies, knocked down buildings
damaged in the first jolt.
The Italian milita r y an-
nounced that 500 soldiers and 150
pieces of equipment left the
northern city of Milan to rein-
force the 10,000 soldiers and
1,500 firemen already in the zone
digging for survivors. r-
Residents of Laviano, San·
tomenna and other towns dug
through the ruins with ...their
hands in sear ch of husbands,
wiv,es, children or other loved
ones.
Exhausted rescue workers
were short of bulldozers and
other equipment to clear the
rubble. It was difficult t.o get the
large vehicles avaUable up the
narrow roads ln the t m -
poveriabed re1ion.
"I couldn't even get a chain
aaw to save my wife wbo was
trapped under a pile of lop,''
said AJIOMO Mlgnone, a lawyer
In Sant' An•elo dei Lombardi. "1
had to work with my
flngemalll."
Fra1mentary reports ind.teat-
ed hundred.a more dead were
still to be counted in Teora, San
Man10, Lion!, Lavtano and
Calabritto.
In Lion!, 10 search docs helped
find •urvivota beneath the rub-
ble.
Teora, a town ot a,ooo wu're·
Ported leveled, but there wu no
caaualty report from it yet.
a1 l'lllL SNEIDEa MAN °' ...... ,..... ....
P'OUl!Uia Valley police, whote o.r ... year com.rad with the city
a~ today, have unanimous-
ly r4.Jedect the city'• "float .. of.
fer for a new pact, a police
baraalnine 1potesman eaid. Sst. Ron Manda, oe1otiat.lq
~hairoian for t he Fountain
V aUe'J Poliff Offlc.n Auoda·
tlon, aaid bia team wlU ~ake a
cou.nter-propoeal ln a bar1ainln1
aesslon tomorrow afternoon, u
poUce betin working without a
contract.
Personnel directo\' Bill
Ackerman, who is negotiatin1 on
behalf of the city, said that. if an
agreement with police is net
reached tomorrow, an impasse
may be declared. A state
mediator may then be called in
to help break the deadlock, he
said .
Meanwhile, the remaining
three employee bargaining
groups, whose contracts also ex-
pire today, have reached ten-
tative agreement for new con-
tracts, Ackerman said.
These groups include the
Fountain Valley Firefighters As·
sociallon; the Fountain Valley
chapter of the Orange County
Employees Association,
representing general employees
such as field service workers
and clerical staff; and the Foun-
tain Valley Professional and
~echnical Employees Associa-
li on. representing middle
management city staff.
Ackerman said the details of
these settle ments will not be
made public until they are pre·
sented for formal approval by
the City Council at its 8 p.m.
meeting Wednesday.
The police negotiations will
continue.
Sgt. Manda s aid Fountain
Valley officers need a hefty in·
crease to bring them into line
with their l'Ou nte rpa rts in
neighboring citi~s.
Manda claimed tha t when
salary and benefits are com·
bined. Fountain Valley officers'
ea rn in gs placed them 24th
among Orange County's 24
police agencies.
He said h.is team has averaged
the salaries and benefits of the
city's immediate neighbor
forces and has found that Foun-tain Valley officers are 30 per-
cent behind.
He said police negotiators
want to erase 'that 30 percent
gap but claimed the city has of-
fered only a 17 percent increase
in pay and benefits.
The po lice a ssociation
represents 58 s worn employees
According to Manda, the depart-
ment had a 24 percent tumover
rate in 1979, in part because of
low pay.
"We're hoping to get a decent
raise to help us keep the quality
of the officers we have now ··
Manda said. ·
Front P age A I
ALAIA .•.
Maria said she turned away
when her father began fighting
with Tincher. The next time she
looked, she saw Tincher stagger-
ing toward the kitchen, where he
collapsed.
Alaia has pleaded innocent
and innocent by reason of insani-
ty to the murder charges •against
him.
His attorneys assert he was
temporarily insane when the
slaymgs occurred.
If convicted of first degree
murder with specia l
circumstances, Alaia could be
sentenced to life imprisonment
without possibility of parole.
Cit y m a n a ger
being s oug ht
The Seal Beach City Council
has agreed to pay a consultant
$6,000 to recruit a new city
manager to replace Dennis
Courtemarcbe.
Courtemarche, 37. is resigning
Dec. 12 after 10 years in the posi-
tion to take a job in private in-
dustry.
The City Council has appoint.
ed Finance Director Deni•
Thomas to be interim city
manager until a permanent
manager can be hired.
Fence for vandal8
vandalize d in FV
A fencing project almed at
keepln1 vandai. out of a wine of
Harper School In Fountain
Valley that was dama1ed tn a
fire almolt four yeara ago hu
been de•ayed becauae someone
ripped nine fence polu out of
wet cement durln1 &be weenend,
police aald today.
The fire that gutted several
claasrooma at the acbool on San·
ta Ynei S&reet tn January 1m,
was set by vandals, accor~1 to
clt.y fire official1.
lfefps pollee ?
ActQ.r Robert Conrad, known
for his good guy roles on
television, gave police some
real help when he alerted
them to a suspected rapist in
Malibu. Police arrested
David Wayne Cordell, 20,
who was found struggling
with two nude, teen-age
girls.
Residents
irked at
FV lllayor
Fountain Valley homeowners
concerned about bus vibrations
along Ellis Avenue expressed an-
noyance Monday at an abrupt de-
cision to cancel a meeting tonight
. between the residents and Mayor
Al Hollinden.
Hollinden, who also is an
Orange County Transit District
director , was absent when
homeowners complained to the
City Council last week that buses
traveling a new route along Ellis
are <.'ausing distressing move-
ment and damage to nearby
homes
A tentative meeting with the
mayor was scheduled for tonight.
but a s pokesman for the residents
said city officials canceled the
meeting Monday without ex-
planation.
··w e reel the mayor's giving us
the runaround," said Harriet
Cadilli, an orJanizer of the bus protest. "They (council mem-
bers) are nol taking this very
seriously."
"I'm wen aware of tbe prob-
le m," Hollinden replied today.
"You can certainly feel the buses
along there. The basic problem is
that the road is inadequate."
The mayor said he has visited
the affected area a nd has listened
to tapes of last week's council
meeting. He said tonight's ten·
tative meeting was canceled
because he cannot yet offer resi-
dents an immediate solution.
Holliden said, however. that he
is initiating talks between
representatives of the city and the
transit district and hopes to re-
.port back to the concerned resi·
dents next week.
The council last week un-
animously agreed to ask the
transit district to move the cur-
rent bus route from Ellis.
The mayor said today ,
however, that public hearings are
required before any bus route can
be changed.
He also said passengers using
the Ellis Avenue buses have or-
ganized their own petition drive to
save the route.
Ma.ior blazes
I . • in Sourhkind
• 87 'Fite Aeeoctaced Presa
Here ls a look at &be ruljor fires burnin1 ln Southenl
Calllomla today: ·
OaANGE OOUNTY Leealioll: Holy Jlm TrabucoCanyon
Aerea1e: 7 .~.
Dalliaae: 7 structures destroyed, S3 damaged. ,
.~: Uncontained. Ortega Highway closed. Upper
Trabuco and Holy Jim canyons Involved. Fire ha$ re-
p<_>rtedly split into two blazes. Joplin Boys Ranch evacuat-
ed. Evacuation center at El Toro High School.
SAN BERNARDINO
Loca&ioll: North and west of the city. near State
Highway 18 about 60 miles east of Los Angeles.
Aerea1e: 10,400.
Dama1e: 240 homes destroyed or damaged.
IQjurlft: Six firefighters suffered minor injuries .
Status: Uncontained, burning south and west in the
Sao Bernardino Mountains . All roads leading into the San
Bernardino Mountains are closed to most traffic. .
MOUNT BALDY
Location: About 15 miles northeast of Los Angeles in
Angeles National Forest.
A.crease: 10,000
Dama1e: Three houses and one structure
htjutes: None reported.
Stahla: Uncontained, burning northwest into the Bear
Canyon area.
MALIBU
Location : Malibu Canyon between the Ventura
Freeway and P.acific Coast Highway.
Acreage: 2,000.
Dama1e: None.
llljades: None reported.
Statas: Uncontained, but expect containment by.
Firefighters set back fires east of Las Virgenes Road lo slop
the fire. Stokes Canyon being evacuated on a voluntary basis
MaHbu Canyon and Las Virgenes Roads closed along with
portions of Mulholland Drive.
RIVERSIDE
Location: Lakeland Village area of Lake ElsinorP in
southwest Riverside County.
Acreage: 6,000 .
Damage: One guest house
Injuries: Two firefi ghters injured from smoke inhala-
tion.
Status: Uncontained.
NORCO
Location: Prado Flood Control Basin or sometimes
<.'ailed Norco-Corona
Acreage: 300.
Damage: County Museum Storage Building Damage
estimated at $200.000
lnjuries: None reported. L Status: 90 percent contained Containment cxpectl·d by
3 pm
* * * * * *
WINDS WHIP FIRES • • •
miles east of Los Angeles.
· ft was Canned by hot, gusty
winds as it burned some 10,400
acres in San Bernardino and
the nearby Sycamore Canyon
"Rocks the size of golf balls
were blown through the air at
the height of the windstorm.··
s aid LoVae Martine s , a
spokeswoman for the California
Department of Forestry.
"It was blacker than hell out-
side," said Stanley Hunter of
San Bernardino, who escaped to
an evacuatio,n center with his
wife, Lucille, and their 9-year-
old daughter.
"My wife was putting belong-
ings in boxes, but suddenly the
fire was everywhere. It was
like a rainstorm of fire. We
jumped into two cars and left."
he said.
Hunter later returned to find
every house on his block burned
and his $75,000 home destroyed.
Fire officials were unable to
predict when the fire would be
contained.
"It's going to be trouble
throughout the day." said San
Bernardino County Fire Chief
Don Banghart. who added that
they are at the mercy or the
elements low humid1tv and
high ~and~ ·
Band i t robs
• gas st ation
A FoWltain Valley gas station
was robbed of $300 Monday night
by a mas ked gunman who
escaped on foot. police reported.
The suspe<.'t, wearing a ski
mas k. pulled what appeared to
be a .38-caliber revolver on the
lone attendant at the Go·Lo gas
station at Magnolia Street and
Talbert Avenue at 7·50 p.m ,
police said.
The s us pect g r abbed the
money and ran in :i westerly
dire<.'tion. police said
------------· ..... ~_,... ______ -~·----------
...... ·-~--
s DAILY PILOT AS
• eers' eoratlttulttfl tradlt..,_
Coaat Sa01aritan• bri,Piten holiday
., .urmu& a. VINISL .,,....., .......
A tbo' ..,_ train •u due to unve ladar la UM Na¥~Hof' I._ ~ ot oor\b utca
~ . n. trip eut by th• nra¥u ol
U·HHl reatal truck VI.DI and nl'iom either car• and vtbldM
from the Orao1• CoHt hat
bttomt' • 1"a.nk11 v1n1 caravan
la ritual.
Y Aa IN AND year out, the
TbubCivin& cerann inlUated
1n lNI b y a United Parcel
Serwiee truck driver from
La1uaa Beacb bu brouaht food
and wiater ck>thlf\1 to the needy
lndlan1
.. e~urltt1. u r ged
,.,.._. ot Oaaay Davey, .tao
blmHlf w11 befriended b y
Nav.SO IDdlam and 1iveo food
aad Allter when be became
ttranded CIG I hlanUq trip SI yHra .,o have jolned lD over
lbt yean to conUnue tbe
ll••tu.re
Davey. d•plte •1• ud ail-
menta, "u remained active 1n \be procram oow cootlnued UD·
du aU1pl«*I ot the Tbunderblrd
Poundatlon, a non.profit or·
aaniiaUon be rormed.
TVaKEYS, ABOUT 150 of
them. flour, rice, beans and
other staples u well as canned
goods, cake mixes and some
Typewriters
theft targets
By PIOL SNEIDERMAN
OfllleO.fly Pilot Si.ff
A rash of IBM typewriter
thefts at small offices has
prompted Huntington Beach
police to encourage local busi·
nesses to increase their security
precautions.
Detective Marty O'Reilly, who
investigates commercial
burglaries, said typewriter ban-
dits have hit at least six Hunt·
ington Beach companies this
month, resulting in the loss of
about 18 machines .
HE NOTED that one escrow
company lost six typewriters in
a break-in, including two worth
$2,500 each. Another business
lost four IBM typewriters when
it was bit twice within two
·Burglary
ring broken
b y arre st?
· Co~t• Me•• police .. u...
their arrest of a Los Angeles
man could lead to the breakup of
a burglary nng responsible for
more than $200,000 worth of
merchandise in Orang<' and Los
Angeles counties.
Maurice Brey, 18, was a rrested
Friday as a suspect in the Nov 19
burglary of the R.M. Abrams
jewelry store, 1819 Newport
Blvd .• Costa Mesa.
Four men broke glass in an
Abrams' door at about 3 a.m.
that day. investigators said, en·
tered the store and broke into
display cases. Even before the stor e's alarm
syst~m sounded, an unidentified
man called police to report that
the store was being burglarized.
The caller, investigators said,
supplied the license number of a
1974 Cadillac believed used in
the crime.
The burglars escaped with
about $20,000 worth of jewelry.
officers reported.
Police Sgt. Bill Bechtel said
two men also suspected of the
Abrams burglary and others in
Huntington Beach and Newport
Beach will be questioned today
in Oceanside where they were
arrested last Thursday on suspi-
cion or burglary.
weeks, be said .
O'Reilly said there is a strong
demand for the machines and a
several· month delay in direct or-
ders from the manufacturers.
As a result, the police detee-
ti v e said, there is a ready
market for IBM electric
typewriters that are grabbed by
burglars and sold to fences for
about $200 each. The units are
then resold through office
machine stores.
ff E SAID local burglars
typically strike a small business
that is not equipped with an
alarm system. He added that
thieves also have been known to
break into banks, take
typewriters that are in easy
view and leave behind the cash
that is secured within a vault.
0 ' Reilly said the Huntington
Beach break-ins are not the
work of a single gang but are
believed to be the work of
burglars active thr oughout
Orange County or thieves from
Los Angeles.
He said one typewriter
burglar arrested recently in Los
Angeles was r~sponsible for
break-ins at 48 businesses over a .... u ......
ff E SAID A typewriter burglar
commonly smashes a window or
glass door to enter and makes
off with several typewriters in
less t han 15 minutes.
0 ·Reilly advised local busi·
nesses to bolt or otherwise
secure their IBM typewriters to
a desk or typewriter stand. He
said burglars usually will not
bother with a machine that can·
not b e carried away im-
mediately.
S tate's gas
u s age down
SACRAMENTO (AP >
California's gasoline consump-
tion in September hit the lowest
level for that month since 1976,
the state Board of Equalization
says.
Drivers bought 948 million
gallons, which was 2.3 percent
below the figure for August, .07
percent below the sales for Sep·
tember 1979, and 2.2 percent
below the total for September
1978, the board reported Thurs-
day.
•P•tl•l 1oodlea were loaded
aboUd tbe caravan that rolled
out ot Oraqe Cout Collete 1n
Cotta M•a Monday.
• 'Tbe faculty and ataft lookl
forward to donat:Lnc every year.
Vie a lway• get a 1reat re-
1pome," Hid 0CC lnJtructiOO·
al Materials Center Supervilor
1'•Y Hainline, the caravan
leader.
In addition to the food, heavy
coata and blankets are packed
aboard to help the Indians mate
it t hrouali another Ariiona
winter.
HAINUNE AND colleagues in
the Thunderbird Foundation
figure it coets about $1,200 per
truck including rent and fuel to
get the materials delivered to
the 20,()()()..square-mile reserva-
tion.
Hainline has participated
since 1962 -18 years -and
wouldn't give up his annual
week on the reservation for a
week in the Bahamas or Tahiti if
somebody offered it because of
the Thanksgiving lesson each
annual trek teaches.
His feelings are pretty much
s hared by other stalwarts,
Davey, Bud lfohl, and Wilson
"Bill" Price, of Costa Mesa,
another OCC employee. Hohl re·
tired from the community col·
lege last year.
.. THE THR EE OF us collect
rood from faculty and staff
members and we each drive a
20-foot U-Haul truck," says
Hainline, adding that the trek
requires about 17 hours.
·'They are like a big party.
everyone has a good time,"
Hainline says of the four ban-
quets at different spots durin~
Five X ero x
machines
interce pte d
Thieves have diverted fi ve
c opier m achines valued at
$28,500 from a production line at
Xero~ Corporation in lrvioe,
• ...... ~ ......... NDO¥at.-ed'before return to tbelr ownen,
police said today.
Michael J . Kane, spokesman
for the Xerox reconditioning
plant at 18691 J a mboree Blvd ..
told investigators Friday the cost
ly copiers vanished sometime
sincetheirreceiptinAugust.
He said once they arrive from
the firm's Compton plant, the
machines are logged in and
move through the Irvine facility
in various stages of repair
before b ei ng checked and
shipped out.
The five copiers apparently
disappeared at some stage in the
process, possibly while stored
awaiting n e w p a rts, in ·
vesUgators suggested.
Bridge title
LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) -
World champion Mal colm
Brachman of Dallas headed a
team of six players who took the
Open Team Reisinger trophy
race here at the 1980 fall cham-
pionships of the American Con·
tract Bridge League.
l •lldrJ Lubbrook, the re1Jllln1 Ml11 Alub, ......... ordend b)' tbe ....
Ala1ka Sebolan lalp Pa1eant Boar d to
forelO all public appearancee anW ehe
loaea •Ix and • hall J>C)Ulld8. She now
welpa ~ (~t) ~lit~ when 1he won ti.e tltfe lut ll•Y ( ). (See
1tory, Pqe Bl)
Oelly Pllee Staff -
KEEPING UP DANNY DAVEY'S TRADmON OF SHARING THANKSGIVINO WITH INDIANS
Bud Hohl (left) end Biii Price load 1uppll•• on truck bound for reaerva tlon
Thanksgiving week celebrations
on the sprawling reservation.
Cooking begins Wednesday, with
2,000 Indians served Thanksgiv-
ing dinner.
He says for the most part they
congregate at the banquet sites,
some drivinJ in by car and
others arriving from remote
farms by horse and buggy.
"THESE ARE very proud peo·
pie," he says. They aren't look-
ing for a handout. We work with
local c hurc hes a nd mi s ·
sionaries in order to distribute
food to those who do~'t wish to
take the food from us."
Hainline says one of their par·
ty is always instrumental in ex·
plaining the Thanksgiving gift is
not a handout.
Price. a retired Marine Corps
master sergeant and electronics
technician at OCC is a good man
to have along on the trip because
he is a full·blooded Navajo.
The Costa Mesan left h15
native Window Rock. Ariz . 40
years ago to enlist and seP thP
world.
PR ICE, WHO earned a
measure of fame in World War
County seek s f unding
II as one of the communications
specialists who developed a code
out of the Navajo tongue that
baffled the Japanese. serves as
the official interpreter.
Ile is there to convinc1• reluc-
tant rndlans that the ThJnksiv-I
ing caravan of supplies b not a
handout. but a gift frorri pt'ople
who care .
.. Rec a use those peopl<' n n· im·
portant Wl' must not (orgct
thl·m." s:iys H:u nhne. wh11 first
began making the trips as a
M a r tnP Cori's µhotogr,1pher
loaned tc1 record Uan11y l1w1•y's
µ1 -.tun• on fi lm
Transit bill.s targeted
Th e Or a n g e Coun t y
Transportation Commission has
adopted what members called a
"menu" of state and federal
legislation they would Uke to see .......
P rominent on tbe llat of objec·
lives is an effort to increase
state and federal funding for
highway a nd mass trans it
systems
THE HIGH-RANKING for
funding issues comes in light of
a recently amended study in
which planners claim Orange
County needs $20.4 billion worth
of improvement s to its
trans portation systems
necessary to keep people mov-
ing by 1995.
However. county officials are
unable to raise the money
without help from the state or
federal governments. and they
have been studying possible
legislative means or getting the
funds.
According to the adopted
plan, the county will support
legislation either to increase th~
seven-cent per gallon statt:
gasoline tax or. mor e likely
Ifs TW more
'Mr. J ustice'
WASHINGTON (AP) The
word .. Mr." has been banished
from the U.S. Supreme Court·s
vocabulary, at least when used
in front of the word .. Justice "
According to court employees
the court's nine justices hhe or
dered that the traditional "Mr Justice .. designation be changed
in a ll court opinions, inter-Offi ce
memoranda and correspondence
to just plain .. Justice.·· Thus. for
e x a mple, reference to Mr.
Justice Brennan has become
J us tice Brennan.
The justices did not explain
why they decided on the chan~e.
changt' thC' t.ix to an 111l lal1011·
ruhn~ p..•r<'c•nt..igC' of the 1·1·-sl of a
~allon , -,11d1 ''" i 111•fl'('lll of the
~f (I'
Anolh1.:r goal is lo support
hl&ber uuck wei&bt fees or other l\ me .. u.r. th•t wUl loJ'ce tnlek .,.,..,.
oper ators f () pa) a f!reate r
JH'r tcnta ~1· of h1g hwa> n·v-
1·n UC'S
C'•1mm1'"'' 11wr. also said th.;-y
..... di UJl'I-. at11·mpb to amrnd the
state cunst11u11on so the G.mn
ln1t1allvc c Propos1t1on 4> doesn't
apply its appropriation lirnrts on
new construction for trnn<;lJ()rta-
t ion prOJPc-ts
THE C'OM ~ISSION approved
at le:J-;t 30 ~c>parate items it
..... Jnt!-t the state and ft>dcn.tl
le~1-.IatMs to pass. However,
m t:'mb<>rs abo noted that the
ambitious pro~ram could n·1t be
handled in a )ear
So the' tl•ld staff memcll·•-S to
return next month with "4hat
Chairman Al Holhnden c.1lled a
high-pnor1ty list of .. entrets"
from their menu ----------------
With the approaching hOllday ... eon ,,.. would llke to take
thll opportunity to thank our
friend• end cuetomen for the
goodwlll end toyatty that ha•
helped to build our bu.In ...
,bigger end bettef ~ year •
®
liEM WISE
We &hall always try to mtlf1t
your cont1dence. We are
grateful tor your con1ribut1ont
to our 8'JCCelS and wltl'I to
Hnd you end your tamlly
grHtlngs at thi• Thtr\"8g1ving
MUOn . , ff'OM t"'9 ltaff at
• Charin H. e.r .19Wel4tfS. •
'·'
•• . ~ . ,
t f:
'·· 1! ·.
H ' •
TVaMNCJ TllS TAaL •en. -You UHca ot be..,
treat.cl bk• 1 weardo~ Do .,..W alum >'OW company bff• you don't have • foot let.lib? AN you Oltraclled
a yuu're not a charter member of lb• Gay Com·
munltv Cfllttr1'
Vt° n brolMr or • "" ther m y be hope for you yet. 1 ll ~ou doo '\ h ve a QOv l auual orieotation -
1f ~ou·re a i mal and ltk• men, or you're a male wbo 1oes
for the oppo11te .-x Ju t h u the &oocl word out of the
t.:ffttral c:ounty.
e d11p.atcb~ from that realon sua1e1t that a 22·
)~ar-oJd Cal State Fl.lllerton, student named Roy Riven·
burt ~trying to gel oraanh:ed on your behall.
tUvenbu.rg has formed an on-campus fr'OUP known as
th" H erosexual Students Educatlon Union.
BY WAY OF BACKGaOUND, it should .,. noted that .
another orgarur.ation, known as the Gay and Lesbian St\J·
dents Educational Union, bas existed on the Cal State cam·
pus for several years. . And each year, the Gay·Lesbian group 1ets allocated
"GoodHeo~. Emily! H'ere'.JOrl.eo/Those Weirdo.! Now!"
about $1,000 from the Associated Students organization for
its educational fund.
Now it looks like Rivenburg and his fellow (and girl)
bizarre heterosexuals m ay be messing up the act.
Don't ask what act.
Anyway, at a recent Activities Faire (be sure you pro·
nounce that correctly, as in fair) on campus, Rivenburg
set up bis Heterosexual Students Education Union booth
right there in the Fullerton quad, along with the other student
outfits.
YOU MIGHT BE SURPRISED to learn that be aot 100
algnu119 ot boy·Sll'l members ri&bt away. ADo&her ....... berab\p drive aatbered a..-•r * DMeben.
Now with membership 300 strong, Rivenburg Is re-
portedly just waiting for the Gay· Lesbian bunch fo go before
the 21 members of the Associated Students' Board of Oirec·
tors in seeking tts $1,000 handout next time.
Riverburg, you see, a lso plans to seek Sl,000 from the stu-
dents leaders for a Heteroeducational fund.
WHY. YOU PROBABLY thought you'd never Uve long
enough to see heterosexuals have the brass lo come right
out in the open and ask for money to support their inclina-
tions But there they are.
Mr. Rivenburg even has a skeleton educational pro-
gram proposed. He's planning to show films like, "Blue
Lagoon" that tout the practice of what is called ·'natural love "
He wants to bring preachers right on to the very cam-
pus growids to speak to his membership of the benefits of
being a heterosexual.
THE SHOWDOWN ON all thjs will happen wben both
the Gay-Lesbians and the Heteros show up seeking student
body cash. Will the Heteros get shunned? Will both groups
walk away $1 ,000 richer?
Rivenburg was quoted as saying all he wants is equal
treatment for his Heteros. Short of that, he pla\ls lo sue the
student bodyship.
Apprised of the Hetero plot, a leader of the Gay.
Lesbians was quoted as saying, "We'd rather not give
them any ki nd of credibility. "
Well. that figures. doesn't it?
Better to keep those bizarre Heteros C)Ut of the cookie jar
WORLD /NATION
• • continues pay eros on
~ \
WASHINGTON CAP> -Lillll by •UJ'linl mortp1• rata, coo· ,_.,,._le 01 .. ll If clmbld eaodaer ~ ~ point for
a U.l .. lln' CUJL4 T•d .....a rate, U. ........ Im.I today. Oftv~ r'• U _.., IR••• bl tbe Comumer Price Jodex ........ : ti•• ......... wbor J)epartmat • .w. l'or tbe ftll(•» ~.i'll-. lnftedmt at the eou...,. leYel accelerated
at. a« 11••· 11•••111ad.tUlted12.2 l*"ffllt umuaJ rate. LMt ,..,. ........ rate wu 13.3 per"8t
TM .......... doubliMffllt .inflaUoo ride Mlped to further
erode a WCll'Ur'• PA1 cbect la Odober. Tbe Labar Department re·
ellt real •Dmdallle ~ -..., ~ Social md federal lDc:ome taet -•rilliMd 0.1 perffat.
.... year, ........ ~ ~. eftel' ....... ad}uat· m ..... ia down I percent, .............. MW.
Tbe lnllatlon rep0rt •aid aliou& tbne.ftflht ol October's price
jqmp ... due to splralln1 boullDa COIU, wbleb htcreued 1.3 per·
cent after three mootb8 ol vlrtua11)' no --...
Food prices, the bll vU1aln in NeeDt mombl, rote by far lesa
In October -0,7 percent, compared witb l.& perCqt ln September.
The Agrl~ult'ure Department predicted last week that
Americans will pay 10 .percent to 1S percent more for food in 1981,
particularly for beef, pork and poultry producta.
The Labor Department reported that: .
MGM Grand
Serio us fire cOde
violations revealed
LAS VEGAS (AP) -Evidence
of serious fire code violations,
'including holes cut in fire walls,
was discovered in the charred
MGM Grand hotel as crews
searched for more victims of the
blaze that claimed 84 lives, of·
ficials said.
No additional bodies were
round Monday after firefighters
broke into sealed elevators and
pumped six feet of water out ?f
the rubble-stewn basement, said
Deputy Fire Chief John Pap-
pageorge.
"I WOULD say we are pretty
positive now that we 've got
everybody. Nobody is reporting
anybody missing, and we feel
confident we got them all," Pap·
pageorge added .
But the search uncovered such
fire code violations as holes cut
into fire walls on the casino's
catwalk. or "Eye in the Sky," an
a rea from which observers can
peer down al the casino floor
below, said Fire Chief Roy Par·
rish.
MGM officials were not im-
mediately available for com-
ment.
• • • CrISIS ID
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -Ira .
nian parliamentary s peaker
Hashemi Rafsanjani said today
Iran had done its part in solving
the h05tage crisis by offering
terms for their release and it was
now up to the United States to de-
cide whether the 52 U.S. captives
would be freed.
Rafsanjani spoke at a news con-
ference here as U.S. officials in
Washington awaited delivery of
an Iranian note said to request
clarification or the U.S. reply to
Parliament's terms for releasing
the hostages, held captive 388
days.
"The Majlis (Jran 's Parlia·
ment) has made the decision on
the hostages." Rafsanjani said.
"The rest is up to the United
States."
He did not elaborate and made
no reference to the Iranian note,
to be delivered by Algerian in·
termediaries who represent Ira·
nian interests in Washington. But
R afsanjani continued:•
•'The hostages have been held
.. J don't know what the
people's intent was," he said.
"They wouJd probably cut the
holes for easy access to air·
handling rooms (where air con-
ditioning is controlled) and elec-trical parts and so on.
"These kinds of violations are
always serious," said Parrish.
"People should not cut holes in
fire walls for any purpose whatsoever."
A fire wall is a fireproof wall
to prevent the spread of fire
from one room or compartment to the next.
The holes. near a lobby next to
elevators, might have contribut·
ed to the rapid spread or smoke
in the quick-moving fire, of.
fici als said.
"l 'M SURE the smoke got in
through the areas that were cut
into the drywalls," he said.
Among other factors that
helped make the s moky fire a
killer were open elevator doors
in the lobby . The open
doors caused elevator shafts to
act as c himneys funneling
smoke up through the hotel's 2l6
stories, Parrish said.
by I raruan militant students in re-
taliation for the American op-
pression and imperialism under
the shah's regime. The whole Ira-
nian nation was held hostage by
America during the shah's re-gi me."
There are said to be legal
problems in meeting all but the
last demand which were ex·
plained in the U.S. rcpl~ to l~an
d e li ver ed t o Algerian 1n ·
termediaries on Nov. 10.
-The price of a bouae roee 1.5 percent, wblle mort1age rates
jumped 1.9 percent, the blqeat mootbly lne,reaaes amce June. llenu tOM 1 percent, the same u ln September.
-Prices for food bou1ht at the 1rocery atore advanced 0.8
percent, following much lar1er Jumps lo the prevloua three.
months.
-SMALLER INCREASF.S tor port and poultry, pl\11 price
declines for freah frulU, veeetables and beef caused the modWa·
tlon. Cereal and bakery products rose by a sharp 1.4 percent and
sugar coet 4.6 percent moreJhan in September.
-New·car prices declined l .S percaUn October alter ri•lnl 1
percent the month before; used-ear prices were up 5.5 percent
after surging 5.6 percent in September. Airfares rose 1.5 percent.
. -Gasoline prices, which had dec~ned ror five consecU1o1ve months, rose 0.3 percent.
-Heating oil prices dedined 0.7 percent and charges ror gas
and electricity were down OA percent. • -11IE COST OF entertainment rose O.S percent. half the in· crease in September.
-Medical care Increased 0.8 percent, the same as in Sep·
tember.
-Ti1e cost or apparel and its ulfkeep rose 0.5 percent, follow·
Ing a 1.3 percent jump the previous month .
The Consumer Price Index in October stood at 253.9 before
seasonal adjustment. This means that a marketbasket of goods
and services that cost $100 in the 1967 base period sold for $253.90 last month.
Homeless i~ despair .
An elderly woman sits in a wheelchair in front of her
destroyed house in southern Italian town of Saint Angelo
De' Lombadi. The de ath toll from Sunday's quake is now
estimated at more than 3,000, making it Italy's worst
quake in 6:5 years.
Snow covers southwest
Kansas, Texas Panhandle rewrt six inches
('41a.41fal Weafher
F•lr 111""'911W.CS-y1..0Ctl OUI IY winds lo JS mp11 ClecrM1lnQ loniolll
And WednHcl<ly.
(;OOl•I lltljtl IS, lo• In Ille 401
lnltlld "lqll IOW9r eo., low In !he 40s
INttu, •I
E he whore, 110111 •.,••Ill• wincb
l>f'<om1no -.t"-tl 10 ... ,1 .s 10 ts
-no11 will\ one 100! win<! weves w.o-
Mld•Y ., .. .._. From Point Con·
<t1>llon lo the Muicen borCMr, smell
crefl ectvlsory lor Q<nty wl11C11 •ncl
lo11r lo 1la root -•. winds de<rNt-
11111 lo IS to U llroou tllf'W911 Wedntt-
d•y F•lr
lJ.S.. §1 I 15
Snow 111-...i pens of _,.,,.
•nd fOUt'-t.tem ICenMs Md tlle ~
11er P•nNndl• of Tun.
Roeds -• tsPKlally llaardous In Ille IOIJt'-9t comer of 1Cenv1,
Wll«e e treWltrJ ectvhory w• In et· ft<L
Snow wu reported t lorit Ille
IC•m•t-,Col0t9de line trorn Goodlelld
lo l.lllcl(tl, wttfl II rTM«h et 6 ff!cMt
el Elltlltrt In U. s*ll9's '°"'llwefl corner
Tiie ,;-~ofT .. estlt0
001 •now. -• "°'"' Wtltll .... Ill
.,.., ........ ....,
h ........ .
i'll•"'<IAY l'tldoy II \IOW clo no1 1111 .. .,,.,, --.al0ot11et1111t111te1 ""' ~""'/llOJI'-.... ~ ..... ._.
G.11~•011¥ .... s.....,.,.. ,, ....., Clo ll01
1Ke•1Ml \'IU CDC>y 0~ 9 I Ill Ctij Will'" I 1 t m oncl YOllt COQY Wtl11141 . ,,.,._,,.,.,
•lf«t fw WU o( _,,. Ta11ts.
A stodlmen•s -....,., wes 1...,..
lor 1"9 11111 COWlll'\' ., toutll TlltH H
ltmperetur" dr"*91f llllo Ille JDe..
.,, .. ..,.,. .. ,. .. ... " .. ... ,.
41 JS ••
H-111111
HoUUotl
lnctnapll1
Jt<kll'l¥11•
Ktnl City
1..tt V99111
Llllle Roell
LotAneelft
Lo.il1ot111e
Memphis
Ml em I
Ml lWtullM Mpls-St.P
He.,.vllle
Hew or..-
Hew York
0«1' City
~
Ot1Md0 .......... ...... nl~
'"'"°"""' '"llMd,Onl "-s.nuu s...oievo ..,,,llft
~
.. 11 .. 52 '3 11 .02 n .. 1.07
40 11 ., 41
4' JO ,. )1 .. 32 .OJ
51 ,.
12 10 » • JI IA
SI 41 .02
'1 " 57 .. 1,00
47 JI • 11
IO •2 .IS ,. ., uo
70 ·"' 4' S4 .11
"' .. ., .. • II •• .. SI ... JO
4$ • • 10
.S11ow t llO ''" from tolllM .. t Wvomlnt llftf W. NoWetM ,.........,
dlt •<rot• • .,..,11 Color ... 4tM _..,.,, .... MftlCe lllte lltf"""'1lt
" ft
S1 .It • ...., .......... • ·" ,..... .
511ow .. , •••t911 to '4f!llllw OVtr -....nt Mii ~tel Tea·
"• (1W11111n9 te re111 -tM ,..., of llM llt tt erld IOlltllef'n l.AlltltlMo,
lt1111 .... -jlll'tdktM,.,.""'
!\Ol'lh Atl4Nlt1C Cotti llatti Mii llw
nortll ,.fKltlc eo.11. <1!11119Me t• __ ,._..,.,.WMH,,._..
, • ..._""'" ....... ,., .... ti
u 14 .. tJ
4$ • .u
0 al .a • 42 • 14 .. ,. 12
42 " .os u u • IS
TOCNIV tlircoNlow s:n P."I> '°·' Sec:Oftd l"tf! ...• ftOftUOAY
"''" "'"' lt:Mt flll, ... ,.,,..,_ 6:Ull.'". u SKOnd 111111 11:14•.'"· u Se<01141 IOW •:IUflll, .0.2
hnrl-•:Ne.m,. Nta.f:U•·"" Moefl r1eet:•p.mu MU ':U ._19l,
;:1~~:',.~.~~=!.~4; S..laent Calflorttla S..,., llepon
Well. l'lt. HeltM141t .... "-rtelll11-....s,
------~-"
..,.
""' 1
2
t
'
.....
Mu
' 2
J
4
... ~
11
" It
14
......... "1 Miia
' .l I ' t t _ J
......
Dir WSW
WSW w w
I '
The 9th Annual World Masters Marathon, directed . by
Bill Selvin, will be run Sunday. January 25 on a brand
new course in the City of Irvine.
Runners should put that dole on their calendars r1ow .
This AAU-sonctioned world-class event will be sponsored
by the Orange Coast Doily Pilot newspaper and the
Irvine Chamber of Commerce .
A fast, nfNtl 26-mile course is being laid out in Irvine !or
the event with the active cooperation of the Irvine city
government and Mayor Pro-T em David Sills. The course
will be certified.
Men and women runners of all ages ore welcome to
enter. Awards will be given in eoch class.
Bill Selvin
Runners who entered the ~979 marathon sponsored by Wofker & lee, or t~e 1?80
10-kilometer race at Chapmon College, and who haven't changed addresses since
that time, will receive full information and on entry blank by December 5, 1980 .
Other interested runners must send a self-oddr~. stomped envelope to
Marathon, c/o Doily Pilot, P.O. Bo)( 1560, Costa ~so, .f.!4.. 9262~. l~~ude ~ome,
address, _city and zip code. Please, no telephotle inqu1n~ All 1~qumes will be
handled by moil. so your self-addressed, stomped envelope 1s essential.
Spon~
. bJ the
r (7£ (jHil(. And 'U ,(flani(O'C(
C: (<·m mcm:
IA Dl~P >-Shon:M .... of a ,..q'61N
ncteet'J tNta tor h ah •t i0l
........ OIJll)OMCl\I of ta. rW
..... teld • Auembly h arig
lNt •i•MU1 l&udeala who lD ••"1 e .. Miu PoOrly on u..t.-.-wtu ••lhutat
··To deny d1ptomH to hl1h
atbool Maion wbo wtr• th vie·
Umt ol dilcrimination based on
.. alth &a to deny lhtm t!q\tal pro·
t~Uon ol lbe law.'· oppon n told
the h•anni Monday.
Tbe Cius of 1981 l5 ftnl to race
the test. But the le111laton were
told "ptttimiaary test resulla in·
cllcate lhal ounoraty students are
railing the teats en masse "
Tri-...,, ....... .
LOS ANGE}-ES <AP> The
Board of Education has chosen
Anthony Trias, a businessman
and opponent of court·ordered
( __ ST._;f_TE_J
busing, to s ucceed Kathleen
Brown Sauter on the board.
Trias, 48, was elected over eight
other finalists by a 4·0 vote Mon·
day, with the seven-seat board's
two other members itbstaining.
He was immediately sworn in to
fill the remainder of Ms. Sauter's
term, which expires June30. 1983
PffUtie approt,~d
SACRAMENTO CAP> The
building and plastics mdustries
have won a round in the long dis-
pute over use of plastic pipes in re-
sidences, but the issue is far from
resolved ..
The state Housing and Com
mun1ty Uevetopment t:om ·
mission voted 4·3 Monday to al-
low one type of plastic pipe to be
used for home drinking water.
But the oommission's approval
of polybutylene, over objections
from plumbers and the s late con-
sumer affairs director, must be
ratified by another panel, the
Building Standards Commission,
before the plastic can be used in
water and drain pipes .
Slawer •enteneed
SAN JOSE (AP) -A 20-year-
old man bas been sentenced to two
consecutive Ufe terms without
possibility of parole in the 1979
killinp of a frjend's mother and
atepfather.
Clarence Johnny Garcia was
also sentenced Monday by Santa
Clara .County Superior Court
Judge John Schat~ to another.
consecutive lire term for con-
spiracy.
Garcia was found guilty of first·
degree murder ! in the Dec. 26.
1979 rifle s layings of Ernest Blair
Gjevre, 43, and his wife. Sandra,
39, at their South San Jose home
6 olti~er11 jailed
TIJUANA, Mexico CAP > Six
federal highway police officers
including the Tijuana-area com
mander have been jailed for in-
vestigation of assaulting an at-
torney.
After attorney Carlos Saenz
Camacho was beaten, lawyers in
several cities announced they
would boycott the court system
until the officers were pros·
ecuted.
The incident took place when
Saenz Camacho reportedly tried
to take possession of a house
whose owner had lost it in a legal
dispute. The officers included one
who had been renting the house
Al"WI ..........
ROMANTIC SCENE FROM MOVIE 'IT HAO TO HAPPEN'
George Aeft hold• RouNnd RuaMll In 1938 fllm
Emphysema claims
George Raft, 85
HOLLYWOOD <AP> -George Raft, the dapper veteran of 105
films whose underlying air of menace made him a natural for such
roles as the coin-flipping gangster in "Scarface," has died at 85
after a lengthy bout with emphysem a.
The aging actor, who afso was linked with underworld figures
in real We, was admitted to New Hospital one week ago and d1ed
Monday afternoon. said hospital spokeswoman Susan Lindquist.
She said he had been in and out of a coma.
R~FI' RECENTLY HAD DEVELOPED an "unusual blood
condition" which might have been considered "pre-leukemia,"
said Dr. Rexford Kennamer, who had treated the actor for 20
vears
· He said Raft had no living relatives, but hospital officials' said
a friend was nearby when the 50-year movie veteran died.
"I was sorry to hear the news. I've known this good man for 40
years and I loved every minute of our friendship,'· said Frank
Sinatra.
RAfT HAD BEEN INACTIVE professionally in recent years,
although he made a cameo appearance as a gangster in the spoof
"The Man With Bogart's Face" this year.
It was bis performance u the cool killer in "Scarface" in 1933
that bl"O\l&ht the dark-haired actor stardom and set off his career
as a movie gangster . In hla rnc»t famous 1cene, he Olpped a half·
dollar as he was gunned down by P.ul Munl.
In the 1930s and 1940s he was one or Hollywood's highest -paid
stars. He was in "Souls at Sea'' with Gary Cooper~ "Each Dawn I
Die" and "Invisible Stripes."
ln the mid-J.9:50s, Raft left the silver screen for the gaming
tables of Las Vegas and purchased a 2 percent interest in the
lavish Flamingo Hotel. RecenUy be had appeared in a few TV
commercials, often m pnsoo garb, and apent his afternoons as a
greeter in ~e Beverly Hillil office or the Las Vegas Riviera
Reserve fund set
for movie 'bomb'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -
Although 1t says it is sure the
c riticall y panned m ovie
"lkaven's Gate" eventually will
be a commercial success, United
Artists has established a reserve fund agains t its investment in
the film.
The movie opened Nov. 18 in
New York to disastrous reviews
and was quickly pulled for re-
editing. "Heaven's Gate" was
said to cost S36 million. a figure
l 'nited Artists and its parent cor·
poration. Transamerica Corp.,
refused to confirm
The San Francisco-based
parent corp0ration said Monday
the reserve would.reduce United
Artists' fourth-quarter earnings
but would have "only a minimal
effect" on the parent company's
1980nelincome.
Transamerica called the re-
serve, or write-down, a "con-
servative accounting" move.
United Artists' net earnings for
the first nine months of 1980 were
$21.l million, up from $20.5
milhon forthe first nine months of
1979
Transamerica's net income for
the period was $182.8 million,
compared to $182.6 million in the
previous yea~s first nine months.:_
GOU RM ET
r.!AR KET
We at Delaney's
Market
'
wish you a very Happy
Than~giving! ,
We will honor the
holiday by being closed Thanksgiving
so we can enjoy t,be time
with our fa milies.
re Roan t·I, Cloled Sanday
2111 NeWport Blvd., Newpllt Beach
673-5520
j
TUllldllr, Howtmbef 25. 1 MO H IF
.
Mills out; Roberti, Broun aeelc ~·t
SACRAMENTO·(AP) -
Senate President Pro Tem
James Milla bu alven up bis
fight to keep hls job as lbe uwer
hous-e's leeder, but a year·Joal
speakership batUe 1n the M ·
aernbly ii sWJ raging .
Mills announced Monday that
he would not seek another term
as pro tern. apparently clearing
the way for the election or
Democratic floor leader David
Robertt;-an outspoken liberal, to
the Senate's top job.
Meanwhile, Asse mblyman
Willie Brown, D-San Francisco, I
claimed that he had more than
enough votes to be elected
speaker when the LeJlislature
starts its l981-82session Monday.
BUT BROWN'S opponent
Assemblyman Howard Berman,
D-Los Angeles, said much of
Brown's support hinged on him
winning a majority of the
Democratic ca ucus . And
Berman said he still had an edge
there.
"I still havt• a majority of the
Democratic caucus and my
guess is that a Jot of Willie's sup-
porters who will support him in
the caucus will not support him
on the noor unless he has a ma·
jority of the caucus," Berman
told re(J()rtcrs.
Brown called a press con-
ference to claim that 23 of the
Assembly's 47 Democrats and 28
Republicans would vote for him
for speaker next week.
B UT BERMAN SAID af·
terward that he had 2 4
Democrats and contended that
one of the Democrats Brown list·
ed m h1s camp actually support·
ed Berman
The speaker, the second most
powerful official m the state, is
elected by a ma1ority of the
80-member Assembly. But tradi·
tionally Lhe majority party
unites behind the candidate sup-
ported by most of its members
and elects him speaker.
The s peakers hip fight has
been raging since Berman tried
unsuccessfully lo oust the cur-
rent speaker. Democrat Leo
McCarthy of San Francisco, late
last year .
McCARTHY DROPPED out
of the fight after pro-Berman
candidates won more seats in
the Nov. 4 election, 'but Brown,
the Democratic floor leader, re-
p0rtedly put to1etber a coalltloo
of McCarthy supporters and
RepubJi caos last week to
GIVES UP FIGHT
Jemea Miii•
challenge Berman.
Roberti mounted a challenge
to Mills following the Nov. 4
elections, arguing that Senate
Democrats neede.d stronger
leadership.
Mills vowed to fight for his
post even after it became ap-
parent that he had lost the back·
ing of most of the Senate's
Democratic majority.
Then in a surprise move Mon-
day, he released copies of a let-
ter he sent to Roberti and other
senators saying that to fight on
with the backing of his caucus
would not be "statesmanlike."
·'I believe that you cannot
replace me as pro tern without
my acquiescence. but I cannot
believe it would be
statesmanlike of me to hang on
and bring upon the Senate the
kind of turmoil we have seen
during the last year in the
Senate," Mills wrote.
SEN. ROBERT PRESLEY, a
Riverside Democrat regarded
as a possible compromise can-
didate if Mills and Roberti
d ea dlocked , predi c ted
Democrats would now unite
behind Roberti.
That would deny Republicans
the leverage of casting the swing
votes to decide a leadership bat-
tle. Presley aaid be bad no "lm· • mediate plans" to nm for pro
tem but might be interested
later, "depeadin& on tbe
Al"WI..,...
CLAIMS VICTORY
Wllll• Brown
circumstances down the line."
"As or the moment, I feel very
supportive," of Roberti, said
Presley, who backed Mills.
Presley faces a leadership
challenge himse lf from Sen.
Barry Keene, D-Elk, who. said he is running for Presley's seat
on the powerrul Senate Rules
Committee with Roberti 's back·
ing.
The Rules Committee, which
is headed by the pro tern, ap-
points committees and commit·
tee chairmen and can decide the
fate of a bill by determining
which committee will act on it.
IN T HE ASSEMBLY, that
power is held by the speaker,
but Brown said he had promised
Republicans he would support a
weakening or t he speaker's
powers . letting the seven-
member Assembly Rules Com-
mittee , whi ch ha s three
Republican members, make bill
assi~nments. . · Brown said that five
lawmakers who had been un-
decided or on both sides at dif-
ferent times in the last few
weeks Assemblyman Bruce
Young of Cerritos, John
Thurman or Modes to, Curtis
Tucker of Inglewood, Wadie
Deddeb of Chula Vista and
Norman Walen of Plymouth -
were on bis aide. But Berman claimed t.bat
Tucker was pledged to support
him.
TO MERIDA, COZUMEL, OR CANCUN
< >n1• hJll of munJ mp fare Good for m1dweel dep;inu~ aod rcquuT' purcha't' of tuur
p.1<.~Jj!c F.fle<.IM~ 1/10/111 SubJ«I lo 1?-0vcrnmcnl appn"•'-
95
TO WW On<·"~> Coach fatt on selected daily nigh1s. Effccll'O 1/1/111
SIO ,urcharic on Friday-Sunday Oighls. Seal\ arc hmued
TO HOUSTON
One v. U) every Coach seal on night #608. Deplll'ts 8:25 1m SI09 on 111 Other
• nomiop 01ghl!>. dfee1i~ 1211/80. Se11s arc limned 12/19/80-1/4/111
Our new low fares can lnlce some of the chill
out of winier. Thcre·s no lower fare 10 any bf
these dc.\linat1ons. No advance purchase, and no
length of stay required~ Now doesn't that make
you feel nice and warm all over7
GET AYUCAIAM.Starting January 10, we're
introducing direct flights to Mexico's Yucatan
Peninsula. Where the un shines almost perpct·
uaJly. On the white beaches of Cancun, the coral
reefs of Cozumel, the open market and ancient
Mayan pyramids of Merida.
With one or our bargain tours.y6u can lfiale
even more of your pesos. Catch Continental to
the Yucatan. It's like no other suntan on earth.
HONOWW Of A SALL If your plans take
you lo Honolulu you can save plenty. For an
additionaJ $79 you can en)oy 8 days and 1 nights
at the Ambassador Hotel in Waikiki. This price
is per person double occupancy, for Thursday
departures and includes all transfers to and from
the airport. But hurry, some restrictions apply
and space is limited. Hotel package effective
January I-April 30, 1981. For just a little more.
you can leave any day and have your choice of
accommodations at the Napuala.ni. C0r1l Reef.
Hibon Hawaiian Vill .. e or Shenton Waikiki.
--rorinfonnation add rcservalioM call your ~!'lent°' Continc.ncal Airlines. -c~•"'Mf•""
NU SHOULD SEE US NOW ., .... ·-r-r..-................ -.. -"" ... , ... ,_,._ ...
hool distriet8
double hind
__, 0r...,. Oau1111ehool dlltric:U t.beH day1,
~-~ BHeh Ctt1 (elementary) ~hool Dlltrlet la :----·•l blnd. diat.ric1. wblth D'8'ben 11 feboo&I aAd b&i about
ltUdentl. bu eape......._ a 1teady decline ln 9al'oll·
•---tyMn. a-. ol the enrOU..,... drop ud • deyiAI up ol
ma, lhe diltrld faem a defldt of about '750,000 nat
. 1'bis akml wlt.h a tutbeea ln pro1ram1.
D etrOIU to mak e.dl meet, offlclalt fl'OpoMd to
two ... mn&al'Y &ctaoola to uve ahou $300.000 a
a ~t cbool board m Una attended by about
.....,. ~LI out clauic dilemma confrontmi
cine baDd there wu almost unanimoua opposition
tk>eunMI.
et at the ume Ume, teachers were demanding a 16
pay mcreue.
t is obvious that the dis\rlct, which baa encowitered
h Umes in the poet-Propoeition 13, post-Serrano-Priest
eras simply cannot please every90e. ·
To their credit, trustees Xave agreed to study the
~ ibillty of renting out <.mused classroom space to
pfivate industry as is the pra~tice of the Ftemont District
n a r San Francisco. No teachers have been fired or schools
c sedthere. But whether that system can be applied locally where
1hools are located in the middle of residential areas may
another matter. Teachers deserve a living wage. And nobody wants to
These are trying times for local districts. No one to
;
se schools.
te has offered simple solutions. . .
We suspect that it is the time lo~ harsh .de~lSlons . ~he
mber one priority. of course, 1s conbnumg quality
ucation.
Accommodations will have to made in other areas.
Airport won't go away
~ • The just-released master plan proposed for John,
~ayne Airport has drawn some predictable reactions
ffum residents most impacted by airport noise and pollu-
tion in Newport Beach and Santa Ana Heights.
•. They were critical, suspicious of claims that noise
c.i>uld be reduced and leery of statements that airport
g.rowth can be kept in check.
:. The master plan proposes, among oth~r things, to re-
d.Vee commercial jet noise in the takeoff pattern while at
tt)e same time gradually raising the lid on permitted dai-1; departures.
' It's not difficult to spot where the residents' concern
sl)rings from . They've been burned before on promises to
limit jet ta keoffs. Also. they must daily suffer under the
rqar of the jets .
"But the master plan, if implemented, appears to be
aimed in the very direction that residents are urging. By
forcing airlines to purchase quieter jets and setting up a
strict noise allocation system, the master plan seems to
be offering some long-overdue hope for optimtam. '
Since there is rio likelihood that the airport is gojng to
be closed to commercial airlines, residents seem ill· ad vised to d.fsm!ss the proposed plan too quickly.
Some have gone so far u to com9lain that the
heralded quiet jet, the DC·9 Super 80. ia no quJeter than
other comrnericlal jets now in use at the county airport.
This contention does not square with the noise tests which
showed that, especially in the heavily impacted Santa
Ana Heights area , the Super 80 was measurably quieter
than existing commercial jets.
The master plan appears to off er some movement in
the right direction on the troublesome airport issue. Non·
stop complaining at this point could be counter-
productive.
Beautification welco01e
Dana Point's seaside character will be enhanced if
utility companies serving the unincorporated area follow
through with plans to install wires underground along
Pacific Coast Highway.
The companies will seek permission Wednesday from
the Orange County Board of Supervisors to tear out 58
utility poles and bury 9,300 branch feet of cable along the
highway from the Street of the Green Lantern to Crystal
Lantern.
The estimated $810,000 will be paid by the San Diego
Gas and Electric Co., Pacific Telephone and Storer Cable
1'V Inc. Work is scehduled to begin in October 198i, and be
finished by December 1982.
If the supervisors approve the requestii as they have
for similar proposals in the past, there wi be a 4.S·mile
stretch along the highway from Three Arch Bay to
Doheny State Park where no stark power poles or heavy
black cables disrupt the highway scene.
In the end, of course, the cost of the work is absorbed
by consumers, but the project is worthwhile. The utility
companies and the supervisors should be encouraged·to
continue to seek ways of enhancing the Orange Coast's pie·
turesque setting. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
01her views expressed on this page are those of lhetr authors and
artists Reader comment Is invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd/Wedding rites
ByLM.BOYD
When you go to a wedding
In Egypt now, you have t.o
check your glm at the door.
•
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
The "futurists" aay we'll
emerce from the dark
days ahead and enjoy a
more affluent society by
lbe middle of the 21st
century. f c•o hardly
w•ltl o:M.
With good reuon, too. Was
long the custom for wedding,
guest.a t.o ftre their weapons
to celebrate the nuptials. In
doing so durin1 the last three
years, tMy killed 789 other
1ueata and wounded 3,08'7
more.
A. veraae Of five prisoners
eacape from Sweden 'a
prisons every day. Or 1ucb
WH the CNe In 197f, at .ny
rate . No more recent
statlatlct are at hand. Thlnk
of tbatt F\ve a da¥. ·
' Atm and ffaSD1'* "lrtna soda Ml advertllied lo every
conaecuUve l11ue of .. Tbe
Old Fannera' Al.manack'' tor
euct.b oae century,
Numerom farma near Cu·
ton, ChlJla raise cat1 aod
c1o11 f c>r theJr meat 1nd fur.
' 'r --....... o;-
•
I ~~.lfllll ......................................... ~.obe .. rt .. H •.• Wffd ... /.Pu•b•l•l~ .. ' ... T~homffl!lll!!ll•K•M•v~l·I/·~-~.~~~ .-::...~ r~. NcMI'** 2l, ,. S.rbM• Kt-lblChJEdltcwl .. ,,._Editor
\ J
Narcotics _security slipshqd
WASHING TON -Govern·
ment •tockplJea of narcotics,
wortb bOUons of dollars oo the
1treet, are hlahly vulnerable to
theft because of lax security •t
federal stora1e centers, federal
•nve1Uiaton concluded al\er a
aeriea ol surprise in.specUons.
A 1Wl·aecret Geperal Services
Administration rePort details
the 1Jlp1bod
me11ures
u •• d t 0
Hltl\W'd tbe
lar1e quan-
l l t le a of morpbine, co-
de l n e and
opium stored
for emer1en·
cy use at
De over,
Colo., West Point, N. Y., and
Fort Knox, Ky.
The report was provided to
Sen. Max Baucus, D·Mont., u
part ol a continuing investiga·
lion of government waste and
mismanagement. Here are some
of the findings :
-Go\l'ernment employees are
allowed to wander without
supervlalon in drug storage
Andy Rooney
areaa, which are under the
. JurlJdict.lon of the GSA and tbe Treuwy Department. At West
Point, for example, tbe In·
veati1atora found that "police
1uudl do not enter tbe 1tora1e
vault.I with GSA eme!oyees, wbo
are alJowed 1n the vawts alooe
and unobHrved."
-WREN EMPLOYEES leave
the storage vaultl, they are sub-·
jected to a cursory search -by
magnetometers similar to ioo.e
uJed at airports to detect metal
objects. The search "is not con·
aidered adequate to detect the
presence of narcotic substances
or diamonds, which are stored in
the GSA vault and subject t.o
'pilferage."
-Regulat.aons intended to as·
sure security of narcotics during
shipment have been ignored in
some cases. One shipment or
op\urn was transported in \Dl·
sealed trucks, another was -sent
without armed guard&.
-Incredibly, narcotics sh.ip-
m ents are not weighed when
they arrive at the storage cen-
ters, to make sure that the cor·
reel amount was rec~ived. In
fact, the lnve1tl1ator1 found
several d1aerepancle1 betw.n
the cwnsrt l.nventory and the
amount.a that were supposedly
delivered for ltOl'•I•·
-At one center, a shipment ol
201 case• or opium w•l•hed
zt,312.U pounds when it WU ,..
celvecl 1n 11151. But when it wu
sold in me. tbere was 167.93
pound.a less of the druc. The
shortage was "apecuJativety at-
tributed to molJture losa, de·
terioration of packa1inl, poul·
ble decompoe(tion of the opium
and inaccurate receiving in·
formation," the rePort 1tate1
without conviction.
-INVENTORY RECORD
cards at the West Point facility
were newly typed, with lnforma·
lion summarized from the
original cards. "Editing and typ-
ing new inventory cards ia a
serious deficiency, and raises a
question as to why," the report
notes.
-Large quantities of in·
dividual-dosage packets of drugs
were t.o have been destroyed at
four federal storage centers
after attempts to sell them
H~E \TIS, RQM UN~R' PROBL™:
(~t'A.BKjG£5T.' I
raJJ~d. but the inve1..tJ1aton , •.
pressed .. 1i1ntlicant doubtl"
tbat the narcotics were l.n fact
destroyed.
-• 'Accountinc controll over
stockpiles of nareotlca are COO·
aplcuously negllaent,'' the re·
~rt concludes. Furth•rmore,
'inventory record.a are umelia·
ble and losullicient, pllyalcal
count.a are not performed, tell
welgbinc of receipts 1J not pr11c·
ticed and inventory reductiaas
for destruction or sale Jacked
adequate controls."
-AT DENVER, the lo·
veatigaton found morphine and
codeine stored with quinine aul·
1>hate. often used aa a "cuttint" agent t.o dilute the drugs, inviting
substitution to cover theft.
''Considering present inventory
and quality maintenance prac-
tices," the investigators wrote,
"it is unlikely that such a sub-
stitution would be found . . . for
many years."
-"Inspection and quality
control procedures are inade-
quate," the investigators found.
Many of the metal tins used to
bold the drugs were found t.o be
rusty, and had to be repackaged
at substantial cost.
CONGRESS. POLICE
thyself: If the Guinness
Book ol Records had a category
for the least-enforced federal
law, it would have to go t.o the
statute that requires members
or Congress to be docked a day's
pay, $168.50, for every day they
are absent without a good ex-
cuse. while Congress is in
session. The onJy excuses al-
lowed are official business and
either personal or family illness.
But no attendance records are
kept, and the 1856 law hasn't
been enforced in the Senate
since 1865. ln the House, it has
only been invoked once in the
last 10 years, and that was hard-
ly an official crackdown. Rep.
James Martin, R-N.C .. turned
himself in for taking off Oct 9,
11 and 12. 1979, to attend to
personal busines He was docked
SSOS.52.
Martin's self.sa crificing ex-
ample has not ca ught on, and his
colleagues go right on coUecling
their fuU S60,662.SO a year, no
matter how many days they
play bookey.
Portrait of a proudly
t't
prejudiced • wnter
It is now a year since I started
writing this column. Three a
week for 52 weeks is 156. Ea<'h
column is 600 words . Six bun·
dred times 156 means I've writ-
ten 93,600 words. Because I
didn't lake any vacation this
year, I'm going t.o take a day off
on thl1 anniversary by repeating
my first column:
What follows are some clues t.o
my character. It seems only fair
that if you're·
goln1 to read
what I write,
I ought to tell
you bow l
stand:
-I prefer
sitting, but
when J stand,
I stand in size
8 ~ EE E
shoes. There
have been periods m my life
when wide feet were my most
distinguishing characteristic.
-When it comes t.o politics, I
don't know whether I'm a
Democrat or a Republican.
When I wu young I was under
the mistaken impression that all
Democrat.a were Catholic and all
Republicans were Protestant.
.Charles McCabe --------
T his turns out lo ~ untrue, or
course, and I've never decided
which I am
I like cold better than hot,
rice better than pota toes, foot-
ba ll better than baseball, Coke
better than Peps i. I've been to
Moscow three times and don't
like that at all.
-nus MORNING the scale
balanced at 203 pounds. I'm S
feet 9. My mother always calls
me "sturdy" and says I have big
bones. A tittle fat Is what I am.
-I have an American Ex· press card but onen leave home
without it and pay cash. ·
-The following are among
the famous people I have met:
Richard Nixon , George
McGovern, Arthur Godfrey,
Frank Gifford , Barry
Goldwater, Art Buchwald, Jim-
my Stewart and Carol Burnett. I
have never met Teddy Kennedy,
although I've seen a lot or pie·
tur~s of him.
-1 have been arrested for
speeding.
-I speak French but
Frenchmen always pretend they
don't understand what I'm say·
ing.
It 1s my op1n1on that
prejudice saves us all a great deal
of time. I have a great many well·
founded prejudices and I have no
intention of giving up any of them.
I don't like anything loud.
-Fiction doesn't interest me
at all. I haven't read a novel
since "Lorna Doone." I meant t.c
read Hemingway's "The Old
Man and the Sea'' when it came
out, but I didn't. Fiction lakes
too Jong for the ideas contained
in it. I'm not interested in bei.Da
diverted from life.
-Good ideas are overrated. It makes more difference how
writer bandies an idea than
what the idea wu in the ftrst
place. Tbe world is filled with
people with good ideas and very
short of people wbo can rake a
leaf. I'm tired of good ideas.
-WREN J WJtlTE, J use an
Underwood No. 5 made in 1920.
Someone gave me an electric
typewriter but there's no use
pretending you can use
machinery that thinks faster
than yn ~ do. An e lectric
typewriter is ready t.o go before
J have anything to say.
-1 know a lot about wood, lee
cream, the English language
and Harry Reasoner. Jn other
areas I have some serious gaps
in my knowledge of them.
-Writers don't often say
anything that readers don't
already know. unless it's a news
story. A writer's greatest
pleasure is revealing lo people
things they knew but did not
know they knew. Or did not re-
alize everyone else knew. too.
This produces a warm sense of
fellow-feeling and is the best a
writer can do.
-THERE'S NOTHING
mystical or magic about being a
writer. A writer is just a peraoo
who writes something. There
are almost no people who are
not dentists who can fix teeth
but there are a lot of people who
aren't profeuiooal writers who
write very well. This is one of
the reaaoos wby being a writer
is tougher than being a dentist.
-I admire people wbo don't
care what anyone else thinb
about what they do but J'm not
one of them. I care wbat people
think and would not want you to
lrnow bow much I hope you Uke
wbat I write.
Next door to the richest girl in the wo~ld
The talk got around to
hyPoglycemia the other day. As
it happens I knew what it was -
a deficiency of sugar in the
. blood. I never had it, but my
older daughter did in her in·
fancy.
This was~b we were living
In Cuemav , south of Mexico
City, in he
early ·sos . ,~~ Our doctor 7 7
was a Vien·
nese named • ;lJ!
Hana. •
He pre .
acrtbed a dJet
of -bananas
and milk, oo
wblch the
yo unc 11 rl
lived for aboOt two years.
To Ulla day, 1be can detect the
1meU ol a freah banana al about
40 p1ces and can't bear the Idea
Of ••tlnf one; but ~diet cured her Of the c:oodttJon.
T818 aSMINO&D me of Hint, with whom I became
quite friendly. He was an Odd
bird. An excellent physician.
trained in the old school, he was
not exactly what you would call
respectable .
He was a .commuobt who had
fought on the Loyalist side in the
Spanish CivU War, and thus,
was persona noo grata in both
Austria and Spain.
He lived from six months to
the next six months on tourist
visas, which be foun'1 increas·
ingly difficult to get. He pretty
much was a man without a C()Unr
try ; but damned cheerful about
It withal. We used to meet nearly every
morning at the Bella Vial.a Hotel
where, over a bottle ol Tebuacan
mineral water, J would leam the
conditJon of the innards of rrac-
tlc ally every member o the
\ocal ~ue.
' RANS' 11081' intereatlos pa·
tlent, by far was a lady er·
roneou1ly ldentlfled by th•
llbloida u ''the richest rtrl tn
tbe wortd," Barbara Hutton, etc.
etc. About three times a week,
this lady would call Hans ln the
middle of the night becauae she wu unabletosleep.
Hans would scutUe over with
hia little black bag and give her
a bil fat •bot of suiared water.
Tbil had the tnvariable effect ol
givina Mme. Reventlow, u she
was then known, a lood n1Cht's
sleep. She thought she was get.
' tine heroin or sometbinl equally
fuclnatlnl.
Hans also was lncredlbly
naive. I asked htm ~be
charced for these visits. He said
30 pesoe, wbkb wu about $2.50.
I WU aboeked and told blm so.
"Raise it to $300 next time," 1
told him. He d,td. There wu oo
complaint, and t have reuon to
beUe\'e that the $300 was raised
more than once the ... atter. Hans was Obe of the few people
,In Cuemavaca wbo enr taw the
Wool.....,, belnel. She pradlcal·
ly nn ... emer,..S from Iler Yilla,.· and~•'"'trMedl* had known ln Burope. •
• Ber nut iloor n•l1fiboi, a
painter named Florsbelm (as In
the shoes) used to speak lyrical-
ly of "the smell of opium comtnc
through the bou1ainviUaea" in
his garden, each day at tbe
cocktail hour.
THE MOST faaclnatin1 tidbit
tbal the doctor ,ave me about
bis famom patient wu what the
aoutte ol her aJmost continuous
W·bealth was. When young, abe
had ~ inclined to excesalve
plumpoesa and believed fully in
the. .dictum th.al you cannot be
too thin or too rich.
"Baba," as the tablold.s also called ber, went to a aeries ol
doct.on fOf' a aeries of opera.
tlons. ln tboae day1 it was
belle~ you could control ap.
peUt. by cutUq off portlcm ol
I.be ~. Aa a result, HUI toW
me, Ue OGly bad a coupl• ol ttit
of cokm, \mtetld ol tbe ~·-·Uoul aw or.'° tM or., ''7 ............. TIMll·w.·u.. we..-mac1te1oaru-~
oftlMatclQ.
VOL. n, NO. m,. SECTIONS,. PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY. CAL:IFORNIA ' TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
A Bca.FiAIU>lNO (Ai'I -
A\ leaat four were coafi.raMMI
cl .. d IOda,)' Md m iaoaaN wen
91\Mr Cla-..,.d or •tro.ved u
wi•d• relenue .. lY faued ab
bnalb ud timber fires acrou
40,000 acres of Sou\hern
CaWoroia.
Tea Ulouland people Oed the
Oa-ies. 'n.e moat devaatat.ani ol
tbe blues, which burned in four
COWllJee, wu the Panorama fire
• • m ragmg itifer.nos ... ... . ,·
10,000 escape; 325 homes • • in ruins
Lesa than 24 houn after it
began, the arson-caused fire had
burned some· 12,000 •crea of
brush and was still rapn1 on the
western part of the city and, to
the northwest, towards the Ca-
jon Pass and Highway 15.
in the north end of San
Bernardino.
An elderly couple were found
burned to death at tbelr San
Bernardino home and another
San Bernardino man suffered a
fatal heart attack while water-
inl b1a property to ward off the
fire, police and fjre officJals
sald.
City fin spokesmen said at
least 257 homes were damaged
or destroyed in San Bernardino,
and U .S . Forest Service
spokeswoman Joanna Guttman
said the estimated property Joss
was at least $15 mlllion. Slxty-
three homes were damaged or
destroyed in a fire south of Lake
Elsinore that jumped from
Riverside County to Orange
* * *
County, and two homes burned
in a fire on )fount BaJdy.
''This ia the largest fire, in
terma of homes being destroyed,
in the history of the San
Bernardino National Forest,"'
Ms. Guttman said.
* * * Residents evacuated
The identities of the three who
died were withheld pending
notification of relatives. Tb-·
couole were found in their y~
(See WINDS, Page AZ)
* * *
..
Trahuco holocaust~·
' •-.!
·bUJ-ns uncontrolled
By DAVID KUT'ZMANN
Of ... O.lly ...... St.it
An 8,000-acre bla:ie raged out
of control in Southern Orange
County's Trabuco Canyon area
today, forcing evacuation of resi-
dentB in the upper Trabuco and
Holy Jim canyons region and
threatening homes in the
fashionable Coto de Caza and
Modjeska canyon areas.
LAGUNA BEACH TEACHERS REJECT DISTRICT'S 'LAST, aEST' OFFER
.,..,,..-s ..........
The fire, fanned by wind gusts
up to 60 mph, sent huge clouds Qf
smoke and ash over the southern
county, turning the noon day sun
into nothing brighter than an
orange ember in the sky.
· Dave Hagen, pre•ldent of faculty group, dlecu•M• poHfbfe toD •ctiona Fire officials told reporters at
their Trabue<> Fire Station com.
Wltbout ftinc:hln1, the two
youa1 e9lildreb of Dr. Louis
Alala told an Oran1e County
jury Monday of how their father
fatally stabbed their mother and
>then attacked her boyfriend in
the woman's waterfront home in
Hvntington Harbour last June
13.
The children -Marc, 11. and
Maria, 9 -were both highly
composed and at times ap·
peared bored Monday as they
described the violent seouence
of events that resulted in the
deaths of Alaia's ex·wife, Margy
Lou, 37, and Long Beach at·
torney, Marvin Tincher , 50.
Alaia, an orthopedic surgeon
who is charged with two counts
of murder, listened intenUy to
his childrens' testimony, fre-
quently cradling his head in his
hands as the two recounted the
events of an evening that began
with their wanting lo watch a
television s how called "Boomer."
Though the two children told
.somewhat different versions,
they essentially testified that
their father came to pick them
up the nJght of Friday the 13th
for a weekend visit but that their
Coast
Weather ·
Local gusty no~beaster
ly winds 20 to 35 mph
mainly near passes in
Orange County, decreas-
h\g tonight and Wednes·
day . Otherwise fair
through Wednesday. High
Wednesday 75 to lower
808. Lows tonight in the
40s.
mother told bim be ebuld have
them on Sunday ud not ,IOODlll'.
Marc said his father and
mother then began to a.rcue as
he and Maria waited for the TV
(See ALAJA, Paie AZ)
Victim's body
identified
asLagunan
The body of a woman found
floating in the shoreline in San
Clemente Monday has been
identified by police as that of
Mary Ellen McElwee, 25, of 546
Catalina Ave., Laguna Beach.
Police said the body was dis-
covered about 50 feet north of
the municipal pier by two
women who were walking on the
beach Monday morning.
Officers said there were no
signs of foul play.
The Orange County Coroner's
office said a preliminary in·
vestigation indkates the cause
of death was drowning.
The woman was found at
about 5:45 a.m . Monday clothed
only in jeans, with no identilica·
lion.
Teachers
Te.-.. ia t.be IJQWia ~ .
Uai.... leboel Dlatriet 'Yoted
tht• mornlq to reJeet the dia· trlct's "wt, best" pay hike offer
of 4.S pucent !or 1980-81.
The offer, which came after a
single day of talks Friday with a
state appointed mediator, in·
eludes an 8 percent salary in·
crease for 1981-82 if there is no
change in the state's financing
picture.
The teachers are seeking 8
percent for 1980-81, and an in-
crease next year tied to the
Consumer Price Index.
Of 66 teachers voting in the
Laguna Beach Unified Faculty
Association ballot, S8 voted for
rejection.
The faculty group now iB con·
sidering a possible walkout or
work slowdown.
Teachel"S' at each of the dis·
trlct's five schools were
scheduled today to meet to dis·
cuss possible job actions.
Those could include a one·day
walkout, extended strike, or re·
fuaal to perform extra work as·
signments such as involuntary
supervision, conferences, or
open house activities.
The teachers already have
stated that they will comple\P
current accreditation work. but
not turn it in to the district ad·
minlatrators.
ADDITIONAL FIRE
COYERAGE-ft•ge 82
mand past that the 75 young
resident of the county's Joplin
Boys Ranch were evacuated
..,ly t.o4ay wben It ap.,_.,-.d
flllaaea lllOUld •weep 4owa upon the facility. ~~a?~~ Norm ~ .iaia names
b)'pUllfld the ranch t.hia mQ1111aa
dd It appeared the fa~Utir waa
no 1oQiet in dana•r of buralnc.
Flre department spokesman
Chuck Murphy saJd up to 300 fire
fighters from varius agencies
were battling to contain the
blaze with 70 engines and four
bulldozers.
Murphy said that as of about
11 a.m. there was "zero contain-
m ent" on the fast moving
flames which began Monday
night in Riverside County.
Murphy said seven structures
'had been destroyed, but that
there had been no serious in·
juries reported.
Hampering firefighters have
been off and on surges or wind
blowing in a westerly direction
which have sent flames
hopscotching over hills in the
southern Orange County area.
The fire began at 6:30 p.m.
Monday in Indian Truck Canyon
in Riverside County, west of In·
terstate 15 and about seven
miles northwest of Lake
Elsinore.
Murphy said northerly and
westerly winds pushed the blaze
into Orange County just past
midnight, leading to the evacua·
tion of the boys ranch and the
Trabuco Canyon area.
Murphy said fire officials did
not know the cause of the blaze.
(See J1llES, Page AZ)
' o.ily N9' _.,•ICM,,. lt-
TH£Y FLED BLAZE AT COUNTY'S TRABUCO CANYON
Joann Nerf, d•ughter Molly, reet •t El Toro High School
COTO DE CAZA
Qb.
o.llyf'llMN-
ORANQE COUNTY BLAZE
Jopln(dot)Ev•cuated
2 arrested
for stolen
goods use
Two Laguna Hills lawyers
have bt!en arrested by Orange
County Sheriff's deputies on
suspicion of using stolen elec-
tric tvvewriters in their office:
-------------~--------------------------------~• * Major fl1-e sites listed
The· lawyers, David Michael
Fishman, 38, and Joslyn Aitken,
31, work for the Mission Legal
Group, 25231 Paseo de Alicia.
They were arrested last week at
their ofrices, booked into
Orange County Jail, then later
released on bail, said Sheriff's
Lt. Wyatt Hart.
The information on the ar-
rests was made public Moo4ay.
Hart said deputies found ~x
new electric typewpten ln the
law office. Four were beln&'
used arid two were in storage. By 'ne ANoda_. Prea
Here is a look at the major fires bu.ming ln Southern
California today:
ORANGE COUNTY LoHU.: Holy Jim-TrabucO Canyon
Acreage: 8,000
Dama1e: 7 structures destroyed, 53 damaaed. .aw-: Uneontained. Ortet• Highway cloled. Upper
Trabuco and Holy Jim canyom lavolvecl. Flre bu re-~ Portedly split into two blues. Joplin Bo,. Ranch evacuat·
ed. Evacuation center at El Toro Hilb School.
8.tN BEaNASDINO
Loeatlaa: North and we1t ol tbe eity, near State·
HigbWllJ !I about eo miles eaat ol LOI Aftlelea.
Aeft8p: 10.•. J .,.._..: MO bosne1 deltroyed OI' am-.ed,
..._...: Six ftreflpt.en suftered minor injuries;
four penom dead.
._: uooontalD"ed. bUndal I08tll Md •eat tn t.be
Ban BenarcMno MountalDI. AU rMdl ...... lDto U.. San
BeJ'drdino Mountalu are cloled to moet tntne.
•OVNTMLDY
1•11111 About II mu. llOl'theaat Of Loi ADfelel ID
#\D .... lflidaaal ran.t.
'l•1111: IO,IOO D s p:,,..boal.-IDdoae~: , J IN: JfoDe "'°"'4· • •illilH v.oa.tamMI_ ....... aciirtlnNlt IDto the Bear c..,...... . .
MALIBtJ
LocaUoa: Malibu Canyon between the Ventura
Freeway and Pacific Coast Highway.
Acreage: 2,000.
Damage: None.
lajvla: None reported.
Statu: Uncontained, but .expect containment by.
Firefighters set back fires eut of Lu Virgenes Road to atop
the fire. Stokes Canyon being evacuated on a voluntary basis.
Malibu Canyon and Las Virgenes Roads closed aloof with
portions of Mulholland Drive.
&IVEllSlDE
Loeatlaa: Lakeland Village area of Lake Elsinore in
aouthwmt Rivenlde County.
Aereaae: 1,000.
Daaace: One aueat house . iaJmtee: Two firefighters ~ured from smoke lnhala·
Uon.
8&at.a: Uncontalned.
NORCO
LoeatlM: Prado Flood Control Buln or aometJmea
called Noreo-eorona.
Acreqe: 300.
.,...._: CcMmty Museum Stor•1• Bulklln1. Dam•••
eatlmat.ct at •.ooo. ~: None reported. ..._: to pertent contained. Coatalnmmt exptded bJ ap.m.
He sald the macbines are
believed to have been stolen in
burglaries of retail shops in
Corona and Carlsbad earner
this month.
A spokeswoman at the law ol-
fice refuaed on Monday to com·
ment oo the arrests.
Mao plot talk
at P"8 trial
PEKING (AP) -The Gaq ol
Four trial ablfted today from •
plot by Ibo TM-t-c'• .....
Jian1 C¥q to block ne.. ~
tn1'• return to power .o·l>ehDM
Minister Un Piao'1 Plot to "' llao.
The Ferel1a lllatllry ••·
QOWlced tU& &1111 tit.al ns\llD..t
at 3 p,a llliiid "ecmtallld to ta:
•eatlple feda GI GftaMa of tile
couptney Of the Lba Piao~
ter·renhaUoaary ellcaH •~ •;r.•,•_: Cbalrmaa llao ••4 .. • .. ...... '"pd'ltlll. •
... ~ 1Abuon (AP) -Iraq •tillu.d ......... dw'laa
.._ .... ~ht up ,..,orcemtA&a appereoUJ bl prepa· ·
U. .., a drf" to OC't"UPY .,._ lru.laa borchr :!fl beferi t.he
.,.,. rt .. ol U. wla~r ra&M, TMru Radio Mid l ·
It aa.o ~ hMV1 Jr~~~Hn. of QU... e·OWb, aG0 ...... -* al ........... • '1 ..,.., -aruu.ry ... C'b ........... lraiaiu .. lr9fal ba\&ariH lD lbe Abacla.o
a •mi._ toU&ll ol luat1111rrj. :T.; rlKUO H~ lru ·a -.,.me o.1 .... CcMaacU met a.ad re· pone4 \hat ltl fOtt.. .. ...... eoulderable IUCC'ffMI OG the
S-..,...S ud ~ f,._." ud \D U-. resion •round Aln~u.
\he clilt.al 'ol ciU rich Kh.w.tao Provloce.
•:is•• .,,. 11••••••• ..,.,,, • .., ....
ABIDJ~. Ivory Co•t tAP) -The pre1ldeot of Upper v-.a, ~ Lamliana, wu ovtrt.browa today in a coup led
by Col. &a1• Zet'bo, the armed forces conunander in the capital
ol OQl..toulOQ. diplomatic IOUJ'tea lo Abidjan reported.
'l1Mft wu no tmmedlate word of the fate of Lambana, 64,
wbo w11 believed to be in Ouaado\alou.
Upper Volta ii one of tbe poore1t countriea in Africa with its
6 million people maiftly e._,qed i.n subsistence farming and
sevuelY afft-cted by the loog Sahel area drought.
f
.......... werur• ... , ..... ed1111 ....
WARSAW, Poland CAP> -Polish worken today interrupt·
ed commuter service In Wal'Saw and the BalUc port of Gdansk.
shut si.x factories around the capital and staged a slowdown at
nine coaJ mines in the southern province of Katowice.
Leaders of the Warsaw local of Solidarity, Poland's blggest
independent trade union, threatened mea)lwhile to call
widespread strikes unless a government commission agrees to
neeoUate new demands. including release of prisoners charged
with anti-socialist crimes.
·Gw ... 11 kill• f ra.,~1 Ogntcfl oenwr
PARIS (AP> -An unidentified gunman fired into a Jewish·
owned travel agency here today, killing the owner's wire and
wounding the owner and another employee, police said. It was
the second fatal incident in Paris within two months involving
an attack on a Jewish facility.
41 Million lao•es
'Who shot JR' show
has record vie-wers
NEW YORK (AP> -Last
week's episode of "Dallas" in
which viewers found out who
shot J .R. Ewing won the highest
rating of any program in
tel.evision history. drawing
viewers in 53.3 percent of the na-
ti on's TV-equipped homes,
fig ures from the A.C. Nielsen
Co. "Showed today.
-'that rating means that the
prime-time soap opera, broad·
cast Friday night. was watched
in about 41.4 million households,
Niel.ten ~aid. CBS researchers
tran&Jate that figure lnto a pro-
j e c ted average audience of
about 83 million.
In addition. Nielsen s aid
"Dallas" drew 76 percent of the
audience that was watching
television at that hour.
The highest-rated program
previously had been the final
episode of the ABC miniseries
''Roots." which drew a 51.1 rat-
ing when broadcast Jan. 30,
1977. ABC said the final "Roots"
episode had an average au-
dience or about 87.7 million.
Nielsen computes figures only
for ratings shares and numbers
of TV households. Estimates of
the total number of individual
viewers are left lo the networks,
each of which uses a different
formula. The program that held the ree·
ord for highest audience share
was the final e pisode of the AB<.;
series "The Fugitive." broad·
cast Aug. 29, 1967. That show, in
which Dr. Richa rd Kimble,
played by the late David
Janssen. finally caught up with
the one-armed man who had
killed his wife. drew 72 percent
of the audience in its time
period.
On the record· breaking
''Dallas," episode, it turned out
to be Kristin Shepard, J .R.'s sis·
ter·in-law and jilted mistress, who had pumped two slugs into
the conniving oil baron at the
end of last season. Kristin.
played by M.ary Crosby ,
daughter of Bin& Crosby, also
Of'ANOE COAIT 1./$C
DAILY PILOT
revealed that J .R., played by
Larry Hagman. was the father
of her unborn child.
The broadcasting of the key
episode was preceded by a
phenomenal publicity campaign
by CBS and Lorimar Produc·
lions that stirred interest to a
fever pitch in the United States
and abroad.
SC council
' sets study
on growth
The San Clemente City Coun·
cil will discuss bow to handle the
20,000 new residents expected to
move to the city in the next 10
years when it meets tonight in
City Hall.
C ity Manage r George
Carvalho will ask council mem·
bers for $120.000 to begin plan·
ning the city's ruture. The
money would be used to hire six
new planners and ad ·
ministrators and would be cov·
ered by increased fees for de-
velopers.
Council members and city of·
ficials have expressed fear that
development of more than 8,000
new dwellings in the city's back
country will drain the city's re·
sources and spell disaster to the
already deteriorating downtown.
Caravalho advocates using re-
development funds and bond
sales to beautify the downtown
area, whJcb, he says would en·
courage the private sector ·to
make improvements.
Central to Caravalbo's growth
plan 1s the revitalizing of the
city's redevelopment agency,
formed five years ago to im·
prove the pier bowl area.
The agency still receives
about $220,000 a year in property
taxes, which Caravalho says
should be used to beautify the
older parts of San Clemente.
Caravalho says he would like
to see the six new planning
employees working by Feb. 1.
3,000
dead i1.1
~e
NAPLES, Italy (AP) -The
ltallan Mllltary Reacue Com· mud ettimated the dead) toll in
Sunday's •a.rthqualte at more
than 3,000 today, maltlni lt
Italy'• wont quake in 65 yean.
(Related pboto, A4.)
The dlrect4r of relief opera·
tlona, Gluaeooe Zamberletti,
sa.id 1,750 were known killed, 570
missing with little hope of find.
ing them alive, and 1,879 ln·
jured.
But the rescue command's of.
fice in Naples said it estimated
at least 3,132 dead on the basu of
reports from previously 'isolated
vitlaees ift the mountains behind
Na pies and Salemo.
The Interior Ministry said
there were 100,000 homelesa-, and
seismologists reported that
more lhan 40 aftershocks shook
the region since the initial quake
Sunday night. They said a new
tremor in Avellino, east or
Naples, knocked down buildings
damaged.in the fint jolt.
The Italian military an-
nounced that 500 soldiers and lSO
pieces of equipment left the
northern city or Milan to rein·
force the 10,000 soldiers and
l ,SOO firemen already in the 1.one
digging for survivors.
Residents of Laviano, San-
tomenna and other towns dug
through the rufos with their
hands in search of husbands,
wives, children or other loved
ones.
Exhausted rescue workers
were short or bulldozers and
other equipment to clear the
rubble. It was difficult to get the
large vehicles available up the
narrow roads in the im·
poverished region.
"I couldn't even get a chain
saw to save my wife who was
trapped under a pile or logs, ..
said Alfonso Mignone. a lawyer
in Sant' Angelo dei Lombardi. "J
had to work with mt'
fingernails."
Fragmentary reports indicat·
ed hundreds more dead were
still to be counted in Teora, San
Mango, Lioni. Laviano a nd
Ca la britto.
* * * Fro• Page A I
WINDS. • •
by ·county she riff's d eputies
after their children reported
they ha~ .oot turped up at any evacuation•~-
Police said they also arrested
four looters in the fire-stricken
North Park area of the citv.
Except for Highways 15 and
138, all roads into the fire area
were closed. On top of the
several hundred homes evacuat-
ed Monday in North Park, resi-
dents of about a dozen more
homes along Myers Road on
the fire's western flank were also
asked to leave today.
A fire that started Monday on
Mount Baldy s wept through
10,000 acres of timber in the
Angeles National Fores t and
was heading southwest towards
the more populated San Antonio
Heights and Cucamonga Canyon
areas.
*· * *
Fro. Page A I
F1RES ...
Weary fire crews whi ch had
been on the Unes since 1 a.m.
a nd 2 a.m. today essentially
were di gging in various
perimeters of the fire to try and
curtail its spread.
Some residents of the El Toro
area could be seen wetting down
their roofs as ash particles
rained down on the area .
Residents of the Trabue<> and
Coto de Caza areas watched
anxiously from several vantage
· points as the thick column of
s moke turned the sky a dark
brownish gray.
Firefighters we re using O,Neill Regional Park aa a st .. g.
ing ground for manp0wer and
equipment and firefighters from
as far away as La Mesa and
Poway in San Diego County
were moving onto the fire line.
,_. .... "" '-''" .,__,A.,....,_
Nixon estate walk
protest set in SC
Ma ............ -.
~" .... -~-...
°""". CMIAMoM UOW.11 .... "'-
H""l"'tllM .. ~II 11'1'....,. ...... enl
T•t•,UM (7'1•)MM»1
CtH-"'MMYettl .. -.N71 Lllf'I"• ...... Al o-.a ... .-.: T•l•P'tO"• ....... ,,_,....,_ ......
'-"T. ::!.'=.~~~~':\.~ er,., -~.,u.......... :.i7lil ,,, ....
,.,, .... , .. •lll!OVI ........ "'"'"""" .. . .,.,,..,_
IN__, ., .. , ,..c_ ~ft •• , .. ,. Mt .. ,
Collllfetl!la iv•"' '" .. , -..,,,..,.., ""' U.· twf ..... _..,, lly ""'" UM _,,..,, ........ ,-~ ......... "'.,
The new owners of the former
NlxQn estate in San CJemenl!
are expected to 1how up at tlM9
City CouncU meeUn1 toni1bt
wltb m•pe dd cbarta to •bow
why a propoeed pedestrian path
leading into the estate ta lmprac·
ti cal.
Cott.on Point Aaaoclates, which
is seeklne city approval to t\lb-
dlvide tbe 20.t-acre property in·
to 16 lou, ran into an unexpected
l\&Hestion by one councilman
three week.I aao.
Coundlman Patrick Lane •aid
the publle 1hould bu• acffll to
the prvperty. But tb• request for
a path lead101 to th• Nlson
house, w.blcb la to be occupied
by partner Gavin Herbert and
_hla family, was opposed by the
developen.
They said access would crellte
a safety and securit.y problem,
and aaid they feared souvenir
hunten would cart off port.ions
of the 12-room bulldin•·
Representatives of Cotton
Polnt Aaaoclates met with City
Manaaer Oeorae Caravalho two
week• ago to di1cun Lane'• COD·
d1tlon few 1ubdlvillon approval.
However, they were unable to
retoln the matter.
CoU8dl memben •W !Mar the
matter at 7 p .m. In Couaell
Chamben at City Hall. 100 Ave.
Preatdlo .
Ll8TENS TO nmMONY
MfM"der Defendant Aleta
Fro• Page A I
ALAIA •••
show to begin. At one time, the
youngster said be saw bia father
push his mother with both
hands. She then told her former
husband "to get out of the
house.''
When she again told him to
leave and he didn't go, Marc
s aid his mother went to
telephone police, and as she did,
Alaia went to a kitchen
knifeholder and seized a knife.
"I'll kill you," the youngster
said be beard his father say as
he approached his mother.
"Lou, don't," she responded.
Marc said he left the room before actually seeing his father
attack his mother.
Marc said he went into
another room where be saw his
mother come out of the kitchen
holding her stomach. "Your dad
s tabbed me." he said she told
him.
The youngster testified that
his mother went back to the
kitchen toward the telephone.
However, before she could dial,
s he slumped to her knees.
At the same time, Marc said
he saw his father fightmg with
Tincher in the TV room as
Maria stood near a table.
Though he didn't see a knife in
his father's hand. the nrosecu·
tion witness s aid he· heard
Tincher s ay, "Lou, control
yourself."
Marc said he ran outside the
house and went to a neighbor's.
Finding no one home, he saJd he
ran back to his house and stood
inside the doorway. ~Ung for
h~ dog. Then be agaitt left tht
house to again find a neighbor.
While fleeing, he said he told
Alai a ·s third wife, Susan, who
was waiting outside the house,
what had happened.
After finding a neighbor who
called police. Marc returned lo
his house on Gilbert Street to
find his sister stiU standing in
the TV room. He said he saw
Tincher lying on the kitchen
floor and noticed his father try.
ing to give aid to his mother.
· The woman, who had separal·
ed from Alaia in November,
1978, died or a single stab wound
Planners to meet
Laguna Beach Planning Com·
m issioners will study height
restrictions for radio, television,
and broadcasting antennas at
their meeting Wednesday at 7
p.m . al City Hall.
~ ............... ..,., ..,,,.,_
TB.1.8 OF ARGUMENT
Mllrc Alal•, 11
DESCRIBES KILLINGS
Mllrta Alala, I
to the abdomen. Tincher suf·
fered multiple knife wounds.
Maria, wbo followed Marc to
the witness stand. said her
mother asked her to call police
after the argument broke out
with her father.
"This is my house and I don't
have to leave." s he said her
father told her mother at one
point
When Mrs. Alaia went to the
kitchen where the phone was
located, Maria said her father
went to the knife rack and then
"he ran over and stabbed my
mom."
But in a change from ~ pre·
viou1 testimony during a pre·
liminary hearing in July. Maria
testified that her lather grabbed
a second larger knife before at· tacking Tincher, who had come
over to visit earlier that eve·
nmg
Maria said she turned away
when her father began fighting
with Tincher. The next time she
looked, she saw Tincher stagger·
ing toward the kitchen, where he
collapsed.
AJa1a bas pleaded innocent
and innocent by reason or insani·
ty to the murder charges against
him.
His attorneys assert he was
temporarily insane when the
slayings occurred.
If convicted of first degree
murder with s pecial
circumstances, Alaia could be
sentenced to life imprisonment
without poe.sibillty of parole.
expected
San Clemente Olty Council
members will conaider for the
third time tonlgbl an en-km
of a subdivision •1~ment • a
188-acre tract behind San
Clemente Genera1 Ha.pit.al.
The council bu delayed rullnC
on the matter because of quet·
lions of the geolotJcaJ 1tabWty
of the area for development. lo aaaiuon, the councU bu
been under pressure to extend
the tract map from 50 investon
in the project who could lose
their money if the council mem·
bers decide to revert the area to
open space.
Investors in San Clemente
Estates already have city ap-
proval for the subdivision. But
they did not begin work oo the
project before that agreement -
approved by a previous council
lapsed in August.
This means that if the in·
vestors don't get an extension by
the new council, they will have
to s tart over in obtaining
permits, grading approvals and
another subdivision agreement.
The council is leary of grant·
ing approval after more than $10
miJJion in claims have been filed
against the city from property
owners whose homes were
damaged by a landslide in June.
Council members say they
want assurances from the de·
velopers that the hilly property
won't go sliding away, carryin1
homes with it.
Council members will con·
sider one of three alternatives
when they meet:
Extend the subdivision agree·
ment with San Clemente Estates
subject to minor changes in the
design.
Require the investors to re·
design the tract to take into con·
sideration grading problem.a on
the land as a condition of sub-
di vision extension.
Revert the 188-acre parcel
back to acreage, meaning the
developers will have to start
over again.
That alternative would not be
popular with the investors Their
original partnership has filed for
bankruptcy a nd a new
partnership says it will bail out
the investors only 1f they can get
t he property with the s ub·
division agreement intact.
The council will discuss lbe
s ubdivision at 7 o'cJock in COWl· '
cil Chambers at City Hall, 100
Ave Presidio
18 Mexicans
sue MGM
LOS ANGELES IAP> -One
of the first suits against Metro-
Goldwyn -Mayer Inc regarding
the Las \'egai. MGM Grand
Hote l fire has been fi led in
Superior Co urt here by 18 Mex·
icans
The Mexican natives. who
claimed to be guests at the hotel
Friday when 84 died in the
second worst hotel fire in U.S.
history, claimed in their suit
that MGM "in a wanton and
malicious manner placed the
economic security of the gaming
tables before human safety and
the property rights of others.''
Attorney Fred Kumetz, who
flied the action, said the suit
seeks S175 million in punitive
and compensatory damages and
could go u high as $2SO million.
ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
Four infenios ..
SAN 9 llNAAOlNO (AP) -
At lt t fou r wctt coaftrmed
d .. d UMtay and m bom • .,..
elt"•t dam.,ed OI' dutroyed u
w1ad1 releutleHly ranned aht
~uah and timber fltet acrou
40,000 acres or Southern
Callfornia.
10,000 escape; 325 homes .in • ruins
Ten t.bouaand people fled the
names.. The most devuta\Uw of
lhe blau.s, which burned in four
counties, was lhe Panorama fire
i n the north e nd of San
Bernardino.
An elderly couple were found
burned to death at their San
Bernardino bome and another
San Bernardino man suffered a
fatal heart attack while water-
Tra
slew-their 010ther
Without flinching, the two
young children of Dr. Louis
Alaia told an Orange County
jury Monday or how their father
fatally stabbed their mother and
then attacked her boyfriend in
the woman's waterfront home in
Huntington Harbour last June
13.
The children Marc, 11 , and
Maria, 9 -wer e both highly
composed and at times ap·
peared bored Monday as they
described the violent sequence
of events that resulted in the
deaths of Alaia's ex-wife, Margy
Lou, 37, and Long Beach at·
torney, Marvin Tinther, 50.
Alaia, an orthopedic surgeon
who'is charged with two counts
of murder, listened intently to
his childrens' testimony, fre-
quently cradling his bead in his
hands as the two recounted the
events of an evening that began
with their wanting to watch a
television s how ca ll ed
"Boomer."
Coast
Weather
Local gusty northeaster-
ly winds 20 to 35 mph
mainly near passes in
Orange County, decreas-
ing tonight and Wednes·
day . Otherwise fair
through Wednesday. Hlth
Wednesday 75 to lower
80s~ Lows tonight in the
40s.
INSIDE TeD.4"
Though the two children told
:somewhat different versions.
they essentially testified that
their father came to pick them
up the night of Friday the 13th
for a weekend visit but that their
mother told him he could have
them on Sunday and not sooner.
Marc said his father a nd
mother then began to argue as
he and Maria waited for the TV
show to begin. At one time, the
youngster said he saw his father
pus h his mothe r with both
hands. She then told her former
husband "to get out of the
house."
When she again told him to
leave and he didn't go, Marc
said his m o ther went to
telephone police, and as she did,
Alaia we nt t o a kitc hen
knifeholder and seized a knife.
"I'll kill you," the youngster
said be heard his father say as
he approached his mother.
"Lou, don't," she responded.
Marc said he left the room
before actually seeing his father
attack his mother.
M arc said he went into
another room where he saw his
mother come out of the kitchen
(See ALA.IA, Page AZ)
Mesa police
nab second
• VIce suspect
Costa Mesa vice squad effort.a
to curtail prostituOoo in the city
by moving on women ~
out of escort services be.a in
Santa Ana resulted in ~r
arrest tbia mornina.
Undercover inveaUcaton ar·
rested Karen Ann Dlanetti, rr, ot
Costa lleaa on suspicion of
protUtulloD after arraQl.lna co
meet wltb her ln a Santa Ana mot.I.
WU Mat to the motel by Cover
Oh'l l!:leort Service lD Ttllpoaq
I to a pboae Call, t
'J'btY claim that ln excb.IDfe
for aboat ·-tbe woman ol· fend '°C for •Ude pbotOI ud~ ..........
.. -..,..... lDto Onall ~CDUM .. wamu .............. • ~:':*we AU toauTr .. • • • °"'8 .... .
ing his property to ward off the
fire. Another woman died of a
heart attack .
City fire spokesmen ""Said at
least 2S1 homes were damaged
or destroyed in San Bernardino,
and U .S . Forest Service
School
adapting
weighed
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of -o.ll'f 9'1 ... SUlf A proposal for converting
Corona del Mar High School to
house seventh through 12th
graders in 1982 will be placed
before Newport-Mesa school
trustees tonight.
The proposal by Superinten·
dent John Nicoll is part of his
long-ranae plan for converting
all four district high schools to
seventh through 12th grade
faciUties over the next five
years.
The prc:_>Cess, suggested as one
way to deal with the need lor
cloliaf .c:~aa cllstrict enroll· ~.~-== by .. _,. .... •&&, eapeci~ in
tbe Corona del Mar area.
Tbe Coron.a del llar propoeal
calll for ~·---UI• ...... 1cbelDI to• ..... ....,.... .....
bl ........ ~.-... Llneoln Midd.le Sebool to house
fourth tbroutb slstb ,erades.
spokeswoman Joanna Guttman
said the estimated property loss
was at least $1!5 million. Sl.xty-
three homes were damaeed or
destroyed in a fire south of Lake
Elsinore t hat ju mped from
Riverside County to Orange
County, and two homes burned
in a flre on Mount Baldy.
·'This is the largest fire, in
terms of homes being destroyed,
in the his tory of the San
Bernardino National Forest ,"
Ms. Guttman said.
Dltly ptMl ~-.............
Andersen and Harbdr View
elementary schools would house
kindergartenen through third
graders and Corona del Mar and
Eastbluff elementaries would be
closed.
THEY FLED BLAZE AT COUNTY'S TAAllUCO CANYON
Joann Neri, daughter Molty, reat at El Toro Hlth School
Similar plans a re envisioned
for areas surrounding the dis-
trict's three other high schools
Newport Harbor, Costa Mesa
and Estancia.
Board members have been
pondering various plans for clos·
ing schools as enrollment con·
tinues to drop in Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach schools.
Some theorize that high
schools J hould close in the
future, but others contend that
the more expensive and
sophllllicated high school plants
should be kept open and lower
gra11e students fed into them
while elementary facilities are
shut down.
Petitions bearing more than
300 signatures of parents op·
posed t o comb in ing "im ·
preasionable" seventh and
eighth graders with older high
school students were presented
to board members Nov. 12.
Mobile homes <
County man
struck by
truck, killed
A 34-year-old man was fatally
injured Monday in Irvine when a
light pickup truck slammed into
him.
Charles H. Terrell JJJ of
Orange was struck at \ p.m.
when he attempted to cross an
unlit section of MacArthur
Boulevard north of Sky Park
East . POlice said .
Irvine traffic Sgt. Robert
Kredel said Terrell, who was
dressed in dark clothing, had a
"noticeable odor of alcohol on
his person."
Irvine park teUs
rollback in rent
President Roger Alexander and
t enant representative Maury
Geller ia to remaln in effect until
Dec. 3, 1981.
A survey of the September
rents at the Meadows Mobile
'Rome Park concluded that t.eft.
ants paid from $151 to $210
monthly for their moblle home
spaces.
More than 100 Meadows
Mobile Home Park tenants,
primarily senior clUaena,
showed up at the Nov. 11 Irvine
Clly Coundl meetJn• to eom·
plain about the October nnt ln-
crea1e1.
Th• council memben decided
at that Ume to poetPoDe ftnal
t*llideratlon of the matter until
5~30 p.m. toalaht.
The lle8dowa ta ode ol two
moMle home ~ la lrvlne.
The other ~· tbe 019"1 la Nortbwood, bu 9eet tlMall r....-from .... to-. llObOe bome ...... tnkalb
malre mortc•,. ••~•at on their -*le bomel In edlllUOD
to spaat niinla.l paym .....
v
e JOPLIN
BOYS RANCH
COTO DE CAZA
®
DMl'fPl ... N-
OAANGE COUNTY BLAZE
Joplin (dot) Evacuated
Four-story
parking site
wins backing
Pacific Federal Savings' plans
for construction of a four-level
p arking structure at its
downtown Costa Mesa corporate
headquarters site were ap·
proved Monday by lhe city Plan·
ning Commission.
Oriemally, the parking facility
was proposed for the plan's
second phase, ii and •hen the
savinp firm acquires property
alona Harbor Boulevard west of
lta old McNally School property.
The facility will banCUe 440
cars and ia ei:pected to have a
helicopter landinc pad.
The addition of the $1.S mllllon
parkln1 structure ls the fint
phue of the plan for a square
block pareel bordend by Harbor and Newport Bowevarda and
ltth and Benard Steeta.
Paciflc Federal ia ln the •ro-
cesa of moving ita corporate
headquarters to a temporary
location in Costa MeH from
Hollywood.
Wben the mulil·mlllioo-dollar
faclUty l1 completed on the
former llcNally Rich Scbool
site, tM bN4quarUn will bt
mo•M tblre, a .,M••• Mid. Tbe ..... term MCcmd ..... ot
tbe plm callli f« more oftke
1tructun1 and a reiltauraat.
Less than 24 hours after tt
began, the anon-caused fire bad
burned some 12,000 acrel of
brush and was sWl ra(lng on ttie
western part of the city and, to
the northwest, towards the Cit·
jon Pus and Hh~hway 15.
The identities of the four ..tho
died were withheld pending
notification of relatives. Tbe
couple was found in their yard
<See WINDS, Page AZ)
on
Scores
flee 2
canyons
By DA VlD KVTZMANN
Of .. o.lly P1191 -
..
' ...
An 8,000.acre blaze raged out
of control in Southern Orange
County's Trabuco Canyon area
today, forcing evacuation or resi·
dents in the upper Tr abuco and
Holy Jim canyons region and
threat ening homes in the
fashionable Coto de Caza and
Modjeska canyon areas.
The fire, fanned by wind gusts
up to 60 mph, sent huge clouds ol
smoke and ash over the southern
county, turning the noonday sun
into nothing brighter than an
orange ember in the sky. • •
Fire olfici-1a t.old report.en-at
their Tral>uco Fire 8tatioe c0m:.
maad .PMt Uult ~ 75 YOUN
ft9idenq of the colmty'• Joplib
Boys RbC!b were ewacuated early toCtay when it appeatecl
names WOUid sweep down ~
the facility. ~
But Orange County Fire Capt:
Norm Schlothauer said namea
bypassed the ranch thjs morning
and it appeared the facility W8$
no longer in danger of burning.
Fire department spokesman
Chuck Murphy said up to 300 ftre
fig hters from varius agencies
we re battling to contain the
blaze with 70 engines and four
bulldozers.
Murphy said that as of about
11 a .m. there was "zero contain·
ment" on the Cast moving
flam es which began Monday
night in Riverside County.
Murphy said seven structures
had been destroyed , but that
there had been no serious in·
juries reported.
Ha mpering firefighters have
been orr and on surges or wind
blowing in a westerly direction
which have sent flames
hopscotching over llills in the
southern Orange County area.
The fire began at 6:30 p.m.
Monday in Indian Truck Canyoo
in Riverside County, west of In·
terstate 15 and about seven
miles northwest o f Lake
Elsinore.
Murphy said northerly and
westerly winds pushed the blaze
into Orange County just past
midnight, leading to the evacua:
lion of the boys ranch and lhe
Trabuco Canyon area.
Murphy said fire officials did
not know the cause of the blue.
Weary fire crews which bad
been on the lines since 1 a.m .
and 2 a.m. today essentially
were diggin.1 in various
perimeters ol the fire to try and
curtail its spread.
Some residents of the El Toro
area could be seen wetUne down
their roofs aa ash particles
rained down oa the area. ,
Retidents of tbe Trabuco and
Coto de Caaa areas watched
amdoualy from several vantace
points u lhe thick column of
smoke turned the alt)' a dan
brown.iab p-ay.
Firefl&btera were ualnl
O,NeW Resiooal Park u a ~I·
Ing around for manpower and
equipment and ftreftcbters from
u far aw., u La 11... and
Poway ln ·Saa Dle10 County
were movtq onto tbe ftrt line.
1615,000 blaae ·.
BURBA.NX (AP) -Fln of.
ftclala lltlmate dam ... to a dl1
cleutnc ltol'e at .. 15.• .,._
tbe ......... dlitaQJM b1 ...... . some u ............ ...-t...,...
'1 ........ eot1talaia1 -blUe M t7 u SUdl Ci11•1' oa Wiit Ila~• Boule..,.
Mn .
'\
Iraqi• read' force.
/or attack on bordsl't
9Sl8UT, Le~ «AP) i-. lreq abelled 'Al&nlerd dwiQI
tM ftlllll Md bn>qi.t up ttWCN"HllMftta apparentty lD pnpa·
Uoa IDt a drlv to ~c upy UM lrulu a.or,MT cit.)' beton Ole
bel\='91 ol lhe •lnter ralal, ?Miu Radio tald todq
ft .a.o "'fOl'Md hHYJ JrW 1WUna ol Ollu e·Gbarb, 200 lllU. ~ ol S.IDI rd, ... ll..-..y ai&ht ud artillery ex·
ch..,_ ..... lraa.lan IU\ld lr14t balleritt l.n the Abadan .,..., • IDlla 10Uth of uancerd
TM radio aald Iran'• Supnme Delenae Council met and re-
PGIW .aat "' fotC'• "•cored tooalderable aucceasea on the S...._.. aod Abad~'· aAd la lbe re11on &round Abwu,
tM '" ....... ol t r•~h Khu1i.llan Province
lJ 1 &r t 'elt• ,.·r••iflftll .r.ie1a.,...,,.
A8Jl>JAN, Ivory Coast (AP) The president of Upper
Vaka, ~ Lambana, wu OHrthrown today in a coup led
b7 Col. ~e Zerbo, tb armed forces commander in the c apltaJ
of ~. dlplomauc aourcet ln Abidjan reported. tt..r.rwu oo lmmedlate wocd ot the tale of Lamisana s.
wbo wa believed to be LO Ou1ado~u. ' '
Upper Volta la one of the poorest countries i:rr Africa with Its
8 million people mainJy enga14kl in subsiatence farming and .aevue&r affected by the lone Sahel area drought.
; ........ .,,orlt~r• lnter..,t ewmu slfers
: WARSAW, Pol.an~ CAP) -Polish wort~rs today interrupt-
ed cor?muter ~erv1ce m Warsaw and the Baltic port of Gdansk, s~ut sUt factonc:s around the capital and staeed a slowdown at nme coal mines m the southern province o! Katowice.
. Leaders of the Warsaw local of Solidarity, Poland's biggest
independent trade union, threate ned meanwhile to call
wides.pread strikes unles~ a government commission agrees to negotiate new demands, including release of prisoners charged
with anti-socialist crimes.
v.. ... n ldl,. t ra11el agerec11 oenwr
PARIS CAP) -An unidentilied gunman fired into· a .Jewi.sh·
owned. travel agency here today, killing the owner's wife and
wounding the owner and another employee, police said. It was
the second fatal incident in Paris within two months involving
an attack on a J ewish facility.
Italy quake
death toll
tops 3,000
NAPLES, Italy (AP) The
Italian Military Rescue Com-
mand estimated the death toll in
Sunday's earthquake at more
than 3,000 today, makink it
Italy's worst quake in 65 years.
(Related photo, A4. l
The director of relief opera·
lions, Giuseppe Zamberletti,
said 1,750 were known killed, 570
missing with little hope of find·
lng them alive, a nd 1,879 ln-
Jured.
But the rescue command's of-
fice in Naples said it estimated
at least 3,132 dead on the basis of
reports from previous ly isolated
villages in the mountains behind
Naples and Salemo.
The Inte rior Ministry said
lhere were 100,000 homeless, and
seismologists reported that
more than 40 aftershocks shook
the region since the initial quake
Sunday night. They said a new
tremor in Avellino, east of
Naples. knocked down buildings
damaged in the first jolt.
The Italia n military an-
nounced that 500 soldiers and 150
pieces of equipment le ft the
northern city of Milan to rein-
force the 10,000 soldiers and
1,500 firemen already in the zone
digging for survivors.
Residents of Laviano, San-
tomenna and other towns dug
through the ruins with their
bands in search of husbands.
wives, children or other loved
ones.
Seniors, singles
treated on holiday
Seniors, singles and "all those
away from home" will be served
a Thanksgiving dinner in Costa
Mesa Thursday.
The meaJ, sponsored by the
Harbor Christian Fellowship,
will be served at 1 p.m. at 740 W.
Wilson St., Costa Mesa, a
spokeswoman said. Reserva-
tions may be made by calling '
548-ll61, she added.
OAANOI! COAST
DAILY PILOT
TllMl••ll-ldil ....
Fro• Page A I
WINDS. • •
by ·county sheriff's deputies
after their children reported
they had not turned up at any
evacuation centers.
Police said they a lso arrested
four looters in the fire-stricken
North Park area of the citv.
Except for Highways 15 and
138. alJ roads into the fire area
were closed. On top of the
several hundred homes evacuat-
ed Monday in North Park, resi-
' dents of about a dozen more
homes along Myers Road on
the fire's western flank were aJso
asked to leave today.
A rare that Started Monday on Mount Baldy s wept through
10,000 acres of timber in the
Angeles Natjooal Forest and
was beading southwest towards
the more populated San Antonio
HeighLs and Cucamonga Canyon areas.
U .S . Forest Service
spokesman Dick Modee said two
cabins in the mountain resort
a reas were destroyed.
"Mount Baldy Village is still
hanging in . . there," he said.
In Riverside and Orange coun-
ties, three more brushfires were
also raging.
The Indian fire, which started
seven miles north of Lake
Elsinore and jumped a ridge in-
to Orange County, had claimed
10,000 acres, burning 56 struc-
tures including seven homes
destroyed.
The Grand Fire three miles
southwest of the lake had
charred 5,000 acres and prompt-
ed evacuation of residents of
Lakeland Village and a fire in
the Prado Flood Control Basin
about 15 miles northwest of the
lake near Corona destroyed a
dairy and 300 acres of brush.
Gas station
worker found
dead in wuck
A 24-year-old Marine private
was found dead Monday morn-
ing inside a low truck parked at
an Irvine service ·station where
be was employed, police sald to-
day.
Police LL Bob Lennert sald
the cause o f Rand a ll
Thornburg's death hasn't been
determined but the death ap-
pears to be "natural or acciden-
tal in nature."
He said evidence at the scene
indicat.ed the man may have
choked to death.
By STEVE MARBLE
CW-.IMllY ...... tlilft Newport Beach City Councll
memben, who've supported the
Idea of residential conatructlon io
the Irvine Coast area, are calling
Orange County's envlromental
documents for the coast plan in·
adequate. .
Council members ordered let-
ters sent to county s upervisors and planners detalllng their con-
cern• about the plan to allow
construction of up to 2,000 new
homes south of Corona del Mar.
Draft environmental docu-
menta, prepared by county plan-
ners and Irvine Company of-
ficials, are expected to go to
county supervisors for a vote Dec. 10.
"No development should occur
in this area until it can be dem-
onstrated that necessary sup-
port systems will be available "
supervisors are being told in the
Newport letters.
Specifically, Newport orticials
want the plan to guarantee that
police. fire and other gov-
ernmental services be tied in
with the development or the
coastal area.
Further, Newport officials are
suggesting atht before any res-
idential or commercial de-
velopment , the San Joaquin
Hills transportation corrjdor
should be connected to the
·Corona del M"ar t 'ree.way.
Also, Newport officials say,
two roads -Pelican Hills Drive
and Sand Canyon A venue -
s hould be linked from the
transportation corridor to Coast
Highway.
City officials also are stress-
ing that they'd oppose extending
San Joaquin mils Road into the
proposed Irvine Company de·
velopment until Pelican Hills
Drive is constructed and con-
nected lo the transportation cor·
ridor.
the city is taking exception to
tentative development standards
for a medium-density residential
tract adjacent and south of
Cam eo Shores.
County plans indicate that
homes in this area could be built
to h eights of 35 to 50 feet.
Newport offi cials contend a 24-
foot height limit would be more
desirable.
Mesa panel
delays hearing
over housing
The public hearing on plans
for a project includjng "afforda-
ble housing" in north Costa
Mesa was continued for two
weeks by the Planning Com-mission Monday night.
Spokesmen for McClain
Development Co. sought the de·
lay lo review plans for the 250-
unil project lying southeast of
the corner of Fairview Road and
South Coast Drive.
Planning depa r tment
spokesmen said the company
plans to re-evaluate parking pro-
posals.
The company seeks a variance
from city ordinances requiring
2.5 parking spaces for each con-
do unjt. McClain's proposal is
fo r an average 1.8 spaces per
unit
The project is planned for
about 11 acres owned by Nellie
Ruth Segerstrom and is expect·
ed to provide bachelor and one.
bedroom uruts selling for about
$65,000, planners said.
18 Mexicans
sue MGM
LOS ANGELES (AP) -One 1
of the first suits against Metro-
Goldwyn-Ma yer Inc. regarding
the Las Vegas MGM Grand
Hotel fire has been filed in
Superior Court here by 18 Mex·
leans.
The Mexican natives, who
claimed lo be guests at the hotel
Friday when 84 died in the
second worst hotel fire In U.S.
history, claimed In their suit
that MGM "in a wanton and
malicious manner placed the
economic security of the gaming
tables before human safety and
the property rights of others."
Attorney Fred Kumeu, who
filed the action, said the suit
seeks $175 million in puniUve
and compensatory damages and
could eo as high ea $250 mUllon. An autopsy performed on the
body by the Orange Cowity
Coroner's olflce proved In·
concluaf've and further te.ta will R...-1 k hne to be conducted to de·, ~ea•n ran&ac
T...,...M(714)~
ct••~ Advettlelnl~R'7t
l'rw11*C1•...... ' ......
termine the cauae of death, ac· 1 r .._ __
cordlnt to a coroner's represen-'-"UBUl Mesa home tatlve. , ·
A spokeswoman for El Toro
Marine. Corpe Air Station aald
the marine, whoee name lt beina
wtlhheld pendln1 notification ol
relatives; •u an apparent vic-
tim of carbon moDO:idde poUon·
lnt.
Tbt tow truck In •b.tcb the body wu found .,., parked lo-
1lcle tbe Mnlc. .,., of Ule En-
OB 8tatlan at Sand Can1on and
U..sat.Ana Freeway •.
BurlJan ransacked the Jamet
Willems home in north Cotta
Kesa over the weekend •hlle tbe family wu attending a 1"CI·
dtn1 ln Fresno, poUce said.
Ta-n were an eatlmated
'130.000 worth of belontlnp lnw
dudlAI clo1td·clrcu.It video
equipment, Jewelry, cl0Wn1
and •U~are. Ottlcen Hld tile tblev• -.red p unlofted wilt·
dow and l'llllHChct every room
In the &mnow.r A••ue home.
DE8CRIBU KILLINGS
Maria Atala, 9
,.,..,. Page A J
ALAIA ••.
holding her stomach "Your dad
slabbed me," he said she told
him.
The youngster testified that
bis mother went back to tbe
kitchen toward the telephone.
However, before she could dial,
she slumped to her knees.
At the same time, Marc said
he saw his father fighting with
Tincher in the TV r oom as
Maria stood near a table.
Though he didn't see a knife in
his father's hand. the prosecu-
tion witness said he heard
Tincher say, "Lou, control
yourself."
Marc said he ran outside the
house and went to a neighbor's.
Finding no one home, he said he
ran back to his house and stood i~side the doorway, calling for
has dog. Then he again left tht
house to again find a neighbor.
While fleeing, he said he told
Alaia's third wife, Susan, wtftr
was wailing outside the house, what had happened.
After finding a neighbor who
called police, Marc returned to
hi s house on Gilbert Street to
find his sister still standing in
the TV room. He said he saw
Tincher lying on the kitchen
floor and noticed his father try-
ing to give aid to his mot.her.
The woman, who had separat·
ed from Alaia in Nove mber.
1978, died of a single stab wound
to the abdomen . Tincher suf-
fered multiple knife wounds.
Maria. who followed Marc to
the witness stand , said her
mother asked her to call police
after the argument broke out
with her fat.her.
"This is my houae and J don't
have to leave," she said her
father told her mother at one poinL
When Mn. AJala went to the
kitchen where the phone was
located, Maria said her father
went to the knife rack and then
"he ran over and stabbed my mom."
But an a change from her pre-
vious testimony during a pre·
liminary hearing in July, Maria
testified that her father grabbed
a secon~. larger knife before at-tacking Tincher, who had come
over to visit earlier that eve-
ning.
Maria said ·she turned away
when her father 'began fighting
with Tincher. The next time she
looked. she saw Tincher s tagger-
ing toward t.he kitchen, where he
collapsed.
Al~ia has pleaded inpocent
and innocent by reason of 1nsani·
ty to the murder charges against
him.
His attorneys assert he was
temporarily insane when the
slayings occurred.
• in
' I By Tiie Auoclated Press
Here ta a look at the major f~• bJafnin& io Southern California:
· . ORANGE COUN'P'f 'Locatloa: Holy Jlm-Trabuco C&nYon
Acreage: 8,000
Damaie: 7 structures destroyed, S3 damaged.
S&atm: Uncontained. Ortega Highway closed. Upper
Trabuco and Holy Jim canyons involved. Fire has re-'!
portedly split into two blazes. Joptlo Boys Ranch evacuat·
ed. Evacuation center at El Toro High School.
SAN BERNARDINO
Locattoa: North and west of the city, near State
Highway lB about 60 miles east of Los Angeles.
Acreage: 12,000.
Damage: 257 homes destroyed or damaged.
la,jlarte9: Four residents dead, several firefighters in-jured.
S&atus: Uncontained, burning south and west in the
San Be~ardino Mo~tains. All roads leading into the San
Bei:nard.ino Mountains are closed to all traffic, including residents.
MOUNT BALDY
LocatJoa: About 15 miles northeast of Los Angeles in Angeles National Forest.
Acreaie: 9,000.
Damage: Two houses.
la,Jaries: None reported.
Status: Uncontained, burning northwest into the Bear ·Canyon area.
MALIBU
Location: Malibu Canyon between the Ventura f reeway and Pacific Coast Highway.
Acreage: 2,600.
Damaie: None.
laJwies: None reported.
Status: ':J ncontained. advancing east toward
Mulholland which could be a threat to homes. Firefighters
set back fires east of Las Virgenes Road to stop the fire.
Water-dropping helicopters planned. Stokes Canyon being
e".'acuated on a voluntary basis. Malibu Canyon and Las V1~genes Roads closed a long with portions or Mulholland Drive.
NORCO
Locat.ioa: Prado Flood Control Basm or sometimes called Norco-Corona.
Acreage: JOO.
. Damage: County Museum Storage Building. Damage estimated at $200,000.
l.aja.ries: None reported
Status: Uncontained.
Issue laot again
Bay sewer plan
arguments slated
Approval of a controversial
sewer line project that would
skirt t he banks of the Upper
Newport Bay has been appealed
to the State Coastal Com-mission.
Jim McGrath, a Coastal Com-
mission staff planner, said com-
missioners will decide during a
Dec. 16 session in Los Angeles
whether lo accept the appeal.
The appeal of the South Coast
Regional Coastal Commission's
approval of the Sl million prOJ·
ect early this month was lodged
this week by the Friends of the
Newport Bay.
Listed as grounds for the ap·
peal include the claim that state
commissioners already had de·
nled the project.
McGrath, noting he'd not seen
a list of conditions set by the re-
gional commission prior to Its
approval, said be is surprised
the regional commission even
considered the sewer project.
The baek bay sewer line has
been a thorny issue that dates
back to the mid-19705.
State commissioners, in 1977,
s truck down approval of a
similar bay sewer line project
claiming its construction would
disrupt habitat a reas of en-dangered species.
Environmentalists in Newport. argue t hat tbe recently ap~
proved sewer line is virtually
the same plan that. state com-
missione~ denied in 197'1.
The sewer line would' extend
from the basin of Big Canyon
south along Back Bay· Drive to
Newport Dunes, where it would
hook into an existing sewer line.
Orange County Sanitation Dis-
tract offi cials contend new sewer
rapacity is needed because the
exis t1n~ pump station
and sewer line 1t ties in with
ar e operating at seven times
their designed capacity.
They say periodic overflows at
the pump station spill raw
sewage into Big Canyon from
where it eventually is washed in·
to the bay.
The bay line would accom·
modate an additional population
of about 3,000 persons or 1,000
new homes.
Other alternative sewer line
routes. sanitation officials say,
ar e far more expens ive and
would consume a greater
amount of energy.
~~~~~~~~
c
I
TRANSAC'ltONS
• -
OM.YPLOr a
•11111.TON•caowru
WIUI .. .,._ and b.1a brother nmntnl tbMe da111 YoU
mJlht eQtd certaln people to be cuhlne In oe tM era..
For Hamo&e: maken of nmn1nl aboes. l"Dr Mott.er U·
ample: publlabers of runnln1 ma1ulite1. Atad 1Ull ano~:podiatriata. r·-. tw>t sure about t.be podJ1tri1t1, bat the 1boe
manufac:turen and publlahera att certainly doat well.
The bt11eat nasne to runo~ 1hoel h Nike, malttt.d
by a company bued In Be•verton, Ote. They bold an
estlmatA!d 50 percent of the U.S. market tor rutlnlDI ahoieia.
In 1974, \Mlr eal .. were $S mllllon, In 19"77. lheJ were m
mmton. Now they are
·~~roachin1 $300 million.
'lbe No. 2 brand in
the running·sboe market
is Addidas. TbLs is a
German company with a
market share of about 20
Money
Tree
percent. Their sales have also skyrocketed, but exact fil\llU
are not available.
The No. 3 brand Is Brooks, made by Broob 1411. of
Hanover, Pa. They hold about 15 percent of the market. In
1977, their sales were Sl million. Now they areSIOmlllion.
Runners, like other addicts, need their own ma1ames
to support their habit. And these publicatlona 1%,ive
mushroomed. During the pa.st fo ur years. Runner's W .. ld
has expanded from a circulallon of 70,000 to 400,000. •
The Runner, which is owned by Hollywood's MCA,
boasts a circulation of 165,000. Runnmi Ttmes h.. a
circulation of 400,000 And then there's Runnlne. a seven-
year -old magazine that limped along with a clrculatiob of
6,000 but is now aiming for 100.000.
IT'S NOT ALL s weetness and lighl, however , in the
running t>usiness While joggers may smile and greet other
joggers when their paths cross. the people who are·trylna
to m ake money out or this obsession are at each other's
throats
Much of the controversy swirls around the maganne
Runner 's World, published by Bob Anderson from Moun-
tain View. They do an annual »urvey that rates r unnlng
!ihoes. ln recent years, lhe top-rated brand has been
Brooks nus top rating was <'!early one of the factors in
the expl06ive sales growth of Brooks
Nike natural!} dispute~ ttus fmdulg They have al'·
cused publisher Anderson of ta mpering w1th the survey
data And they have said public!} lhat there':. something
suspicious about the relationship •~tween Brooks and Run·
ner 's World
LMl"T VEAR, ~IKE yanked all of its advertising from
Runner's World as a prokst Aud now Lhev havf' bought
the ir own magazine Running, to compete with Runner's
World. RU11ru11g 1s published from Eu~lne, On.
Anderson responded to "'ike'3 charges by fillng a S6
million b bel suit He called it ··sour grapes, · pointinJ ~t:
"Nike never complaineo al.Jo1.1t the raung system when
they were on top "
A Nike spokesman l'Jld a reportt>r from Advertising
Age . ·we Nn 't "'Jtl to get lh~e guyo;; m court.'
TIOS YEAR, NIK ... aho filed a suit against the Rub-
oer Manufacturl!rs Association, charging their members
w1lh conspiring to have duties imposed on Nike's shoe im-
ports. Brooks responded to that suit by filing a $3·milllon
counterclaim against Nike, alleging that the Oregon com-
pany has tried w monopolize the runntne-sboe busl.ne11,
bas enaaged in industrial espionage and bas wroagf\llly
disparaged the Brooks runrli.ng shoe.
One of the aped.fie cba.rees ln \be Brooks suit ia that
Nike lured professional baseball and football players to
"wear Nike logos on athletic shoes made by Bl"OOU and
other competing companies."
Brooks hM also asked the court to order Nixe to itve
up its control of Running Magazine.
Runners. think of all that as you lace up .
. 4tt1.wk• 111 TIU'
Sp•tlf9ll1
• J, • 1 1"' 1
• '6. -------------
-.av,,,,.a Tod:J, OIDc: ,,.., 1110
U"'"~" * Tcu1 '""'t 1"4 ..._., ~·gM • ~ ·-l ,.
WHU AMCll 010
NEW VO'-K ;API -H
"'9v.
tWJ. 1101 ld ·~ It' ,.
ta.Id,, .......... .
.......,., mornl"9 ll•I"' •ti.ff. Ht air.Mo LeaeM: etttr-fl•lno 5'1t.fl, eft
JIUS . ....... __.. .... , •• ,,.. .. ,,.42, tiff ., .....
......... , lll!lllO .. ., 111, ... f.Ji.tl 1 .. tct1: iat• _.._ n.1,,. .. ,,.. -.
o1t t 1 ~.co. "11.00 ....
.._., • --· M111111 ,.ru .. ......_., ,,,u
........... , ..i11,,. pro ...... u. elf.,..,,. ......... ,_I( ..... ~ ... ""
llS.U
I .... ..... -...... ..... .,. .......... ~ ..... ............... ...
1 1CTAO-... ......... •r--... a.1 w .,_ ............. .._._
~ ........ ,....
-~-Ult .. • TMl--HIU. a.ow ~~-, ..... "'*' • CMlt 1llM ~ twn
iw-. .. """'°" of .....
~~~".? --........, c..er.. "'°' ..,...~, .....
'°' ~·,.
<mMlwe l.AN)lc ..... AK .... .............
... COMf' MCI(, .ona
~oeca ,..._
Mcflelof pees
• GOOOTIMQ
That's not Jennifer Hart, though it IS
Stelanle Powers, who plays the role, aiv·
1n.i Robert Wagner the eye on ••Hart to
Hart" tooight at 10 on ABC , Channel 7.
flOl1de •• p6erle lot " J .•
bltll'IOay ara -9\al
aubduad whan J•mea *'"' ,,.., • comput9r .....
g1...,, him • l>lld Q.011 r .,
~!Patt 21
• DO<CAVETT
G~t lntetVieWef Oflan•
• .,lltlcl
: • W-1CONTACT(R)Q '.:.g) M•A•t•H :':+.---· '"d Hot Lipa go 1=· jo tr-. 8063r<I to 09m00·
•• -.trata hit 1ttarlal trens-
.~t OC*etloo (Part II
! o,0 MAHEY MllLEA •:TIMI detectlYN gain evt·
~ dance egalnat an undef •
1 •• ground .oopUon ring end ·~ ll'rMI a prolMaOf tor hit
• .. jewd con<luct In , ... .,.ch·
1~ C8SHEW8 j an x~•te<I dlctl<>n8fY
•, NeCHEWS
:-• HAPPY OAVS AGAIN
I AIC..wl
JOKP'IWIU> M•A•t•H
TIMI 1U1* mAn mall.. •
much·nHd•d 1urglca1
Clemp fO( the 4077th and
KlinQer fhra-t out Hot l:!PI' wedding ring
• MMTTA Batalla <l*>overa a polio.
man tleln In tilt Ana ol
outy wq actually mur-
dered, MCI hie wife, a ,..,_
low officer. may have
mu1tt111lneleCI tt
• OV!ftEAIY
"After Work What ?
(Rallram•nt)" GuHIS:
actr•sa Fran All1aon, Or.
Jamo1 PetMson, M•ry and
o.atga Oudlnalc o ID MACNEIL / lEkRER
RE POAT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUOH 9 MERVO~
l Otl Beth ChOOMS Iha
CuMlnghlms .. the rnoo ~ el for II« paper on the typ-
7:30 f) 2 OH THIE TOWN
~ .. , ..
. ,. ,.
ical mlddi.-dus Ametic.n
family
The 1 llh Annual Female
IMC>f!f50llators· Ball 11 hlS-
lorleal look 11 lhll golden
•oe 01 rao'°
Cltannt"f l.l•flngs
8 KNXT !CBS) Los Angeles
Q KNBC (NBCI Los Angeles
• KTLA (Ind) LOS Angeles
• KA8C-1V (ABC) Los Angeles Cll t<FMB (CBS! San 01eqo D Kt-IJ-1V(lnd ) Los Ancitllt-">
®l KCST (ABCI San 0 1Pg'J
G) KTTV (Ind I Los Angele'
Cl) KCOP TV (Ind\ Loe, Angt>les
OD KCET-1V (PBS\ Los Ang!'1~s
8.l'l KOCE TV !PBS) Huntinqton Beach
I FAMtl Y "IUO
IHANANA
~:S~MUl9.
• HOU.YWOOO
IQUAM8
I l"ACI! THE MUSIC
AU. IH THe: ffAMll Y
Ecllth addl • .-ilor-cltll'an
wec:l<ltng end a pair of
~,..•toAreNa'a
~ llahlng trip plans
• MACHllL I l!HN!"
RePOA'T ID HEWaCHeCt< (I) P.M. MAGAZIHI!
An 11-year-okt actr ... ·1
controvaralal ad cam·
palgn; a hq gtlder wno
hu taaln4td up with a
h1wk
8:00 8 Cl) A CHAAUf
BROWN THAHK80MNG
Ammatecl. Charlie Brown
is once aglln put on tha
spot when Peppermint
Pally lnvllllS he(tell atlO
her lriands to hl1 llouM for
Thanksgiving dinner. (RI
8 30 YEARS CW TV
COMEDY'S GREATEST
HITTI
Oiclc van Oylt•. Carl Ram.,
and Bea Ar1hur ato IQlneO
by an all-star cast tor o
salute to comeoy on telftVI·
StOn l!I MOVIE
• • •;, "The Outer Spece
Connection" ( 197~\ Nar·
rated by Ao<l Sertlng New
ev1oence appears to IU9"
Qt'SI that human Ille on thll
plane! began with 11\e
arrival ol "1nclen1 aetto·
nauts" who sellled In the
Peruvian Andes end the
Bermuda T riangte. (2 hr1 )
•
•• """""0-\1'1 ~---·-· oon•••• on lt\e fV oer-lflow "~For A o.y ... .MCMI *•it ~l'ulllert ~ ..
( 1tTt) GeOf .. a.g.i, Defl..
hOMI lllcltt, A ~ C...
~ Mouflliol t• IO he9d °" -....... Ion l*Jt ....... """"" ,.,.,,., I(°"""" Wtllll "' .. ~ c.n.da. (t ..,. ) ., ...... ~
An H~-old ~·· con1ro11er•l•I ad ell!\·
PllOt'· a heng glider wtlO
llM teMWld up wl111 •
hawll: Dorothy Ktlln•
mlMll • quilt wlthOut --Ing. <iepl. CMfot on ~
tarlMt dlilt•; Und• Harm
vlllt.t Lalla T ehoe.
• MOVll
••• "Red SUn" (1871)
CMllM Bronaon. Alaifl
De1o11 A train, robber la
double-c:roeMd t>y hi•
JNlrtMr. wllo etHle a
ltweMd 9WOt<I from • Jaf>-
-emb.-.dor .. well .. all the gold from Ula
robOeitY. (2 In )
·~ "T1" U-Of The Sten"
With Iha hal9 ol computer
animation and ttunnlng
utronomlc:el att, Or. Cart
Siigan .nowt llOw star•
•• t>orn, W. and <lie. O
t:ao e Cll THAHK80IVINO
IH THI LANO Of' OZ
Animated. While ef\lllllnO
after • mtMlng Thank90lv·
Ing pie, Dorothy o~
again runa Into the Wizaro
ol Oz and ends up on •
atra~ adventure. • QJI LAVERNE &
SHIRLEY
Tiie gtr1a· lir&t day In lo•
AngelH Is marred by an
ear1hquake and ahoclung
n-• from Lenny end
~ulggy. .. M•A•s•H
Hawlleye and Hot Lips go
to the 8063rd 10 demon·
etrete his ar1erlel trans-
plant ope<atlon (Pm 1)
• NOVA
"The Water Cr1SJS An
examination of aclo rain In
the Adl•ondacl\s. water
recycling In Calrtornie and
contaminated welts in
Manachtlsell9 11 presenl·
e:ooe~LORO
FAUNTLEROY
Ricky Schro<ler and Alee
Guinness stir In the tale ot
an 1mpav11r19hed youngster
who 1s •-Pl lrom the
tenemenlS of 19th-cen1ury
New York to 111e estate of
his Engtlsh grandtathe• 8 9 THREE'S
COMPANY
Jack cons R beaulllul
female sk1e< Into believing
that he 19 a champion
downhill skier Q G» M•A'S"H
Hawlteye and Hol Lips
~UBE TOPPERS
NBC B 8:00 -30 Yean of TV
t!omedy'a Greatest HJta. A 1alute to
comedy on televialoo with bolta Dick
Van Dyke, Carl Reiner and Bea Art.bur.
KJU e 8:00 -"R ... lan Roulette . .,
George Segal atara in t1U1 movie drama
about a Royal Canadian mountle who
tries to prevent the aasu1lnaUon of
Soviet Premier Kosygin.
CBS • 9 :00 -"Little Lord
Fauntleroy. Ricky Schroder (of "The
Champ") plays tbe tiUe role in th1a TV
remake of the claBSic movie (see atol")',
photo below) .
f;Ofll9 under .._vy enlllery
"'• In 9MmY terntory, With
Hawkeye rec.lvlng a leg
wound. (Pert 2)
• NOVA
"TM Water CrilM" An
axarnlnatlon of acid rain In
Iha Adlr0ftdadl1. 1 .. 1ur
recyc:llng In Callfomla and
COf'ltamln•t•d walls In
M.-.cnuMllt II pr-1·
;~
• • • "Llltl• Lord
F 11Unlleroy" ( 183e) Freddie
Ber1~. Mlekey Roo-
ney_ A llllle S..OOktyn lad
~ • praper Brltlah
lord with tml*le*l>le tute
an<I mann«a. 12 htt.J
t:30 • lll TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT
A cluemata ol Sar•h'a fol·
lows her home ano Illas 10
latch onto tr.. family. tD M•A•S•H
N-ecute< Ciel• RotMtrll
r•tum1 to the 4077th 10
update Kor9&' Wiii condl·
tions {Par1 I)
8!) THEBOOYIN
OUESTIOH
' Native Medicine' Or
Jon1lhan Miiier comrasis
the precllc:e of rnodflrn
meclcine In 11n Engltsn
town W11h the tra01tion11l
m1g1cat system of the
Azande tnbe In Afrln O
JOHN DARLING
IO:OO. 'TMt AL.AH KIMG •
THANKIGMNG ·~ ...,.,, King tall• • uttnc:
10011 Ill what Amerlcenl
haW lo lie tllaNt1ul tor on
,,. _of Thri~
ll:::'toHART
JennllW II klelnaC>Ped by
~ wtlO mliltlk• her for
anotl\erwoman.
• w•A•a•H ~er Clet• Aot>9rt1
,__ to tM '<17Tth 10
update Kor9W\ War c:ondl-
tlOna. (P_, I)
• IND9IHOINT
NElWON( NlWS
• HEWSCHECK
10:'°•· NEWS PM.BENTE
"Del MllfO Corazon" The
ballads and lyrleal lave
ton0• 1n tha Tex. .... Maxl-
cao Nortena mualt' tradl·
lion •r• .. mple<I. ID THEBODVtH
OOESTION
• Native Medicine" Or
Jonathan Miller corllrute
the practlee of modern
'"4tdlelne In an Engllsl\
town with the 1radll1c>n11I
mag1ea1 system of the
l A.lande tribe In Africa O
11:00ea•Cl)<11 .. ~ 8 HOLLYWOOO
SQUARES fJ NEWLYWEOOAME
• t.e•A•S•H
2 TONiGHT'S LATEST LfSTINGS.
..,..,.. ... e(J) WCMI
DoilwMor 1uurMd '° dill • • i.. "All Tfl• l(lnd ............... Strangen" (tt1A) ~ e MllOec.M <iOl'v " .. "'°"· JoM aevaoe. _., ., 'ldl .MCWll.
.. ,......,,. ~.. N\. mNl~t'llt!oc* rr..em.nt"
eMPOll4!0n of .. i.-of (11ffJ, 81Ult1 WhltlMll,
aoler •"•'0>' without ~ I.~ ::-.:...--:.:::-~11 Ji/9&~~ ~ '*" Mdno .-Ollle'1li0Wf e.me. 1• mi•• t'ftoll' Ot70) Jc#I 11:aoe<1> L.OUGMNT __. Goucl'I·
Lou -en. tor • "1)'91.. ...
tbJI WO wtlO tolled M
......inatton ~.(A)
• TONIGHT
Hott: Johnny Carlon.
GIJHll; Eydie Oorme.
M__., Murptiy.
-~ceu. kOQCH
TM relcl on W.ntwotth to
tree Jwwt 19 In NII l'#lrlO
wfl«I E1'ca lntemipt• It.
with~~--•~=' An llflll'O merwllal •• out
to trmc> • bend of outi-
• HOGAH'8 HMOO
Hogan llU to dalnler M
lmpor!MI rldlo pert 10 the
underg.round.
• rT TAJCEI A THll!F
•• CAl'TICINE> A8C
NEWS
1 uo e o MOVll! * *'At "A Flst1ul Of OyN-
m It•" (1972) JamH
Col>um, ROd Steigal'
12:00. TWIUOHT ZC>He
• YOU 8ET Y°"" LIFE
Buddy Heclcall mM11 a
photo-journallll, a man
wtlO wuhel alrplenes and
a woman who c<>oks with
l11MC11.
t~• TOMORROW Guatlt: vlollnlSI ltzhek
Perlm1n; chicken cur
Frenk Pardue. author Dor-
othy Gr"'1PllPQ«
• MOVIE • • * "0-atlon" ( 19e9J
Oa'4id Ja~. Kim Darby
• THEAM
·colhllOn eourw··
• Mt88K)H:
IMPOSMlE
' . **'+ ...,. Ulllnhlblted" =~Mer~. a-.201-ne NIM
2:30 MOW! * • * "TM Truth Al*d Spring" (1H&I Heyi.y
Miiia. John Miii•.
2:M1= ••'At "look Who'a
IAughlng" ( 1941) Edget
8«get1, Lucille Ball.
a:11e MOVIE **'"" "Band 01 Angetl" (1857) Clarie Gable, SidMY
Poitier
•:000 MOVIE
e * * ''The GOlcMn Sala-
mender" (19~) Trevor
Howatd, Harbert lorn.
·~1 HEW8 . 4-30 MOVIE .. e "Kid MUNont .. ( 1935)
Eddi• Cantor. Elhel Mar·
men
Wt"daesda11'•
Da11t l•e .tfo.,ie•
11:00 • •'Ii "The Trell
Beyond" ( 1934) John
Wayne, Verne Hiiiie A
-AFTERNOON-' ------
I 12:00 ID * * • ''Once Mora.
'1 With Feeling'" t 1960) Yul
Brynn•r. Kay K•ndell
ti) 1t * * 'Gypsy" ( 1963)
Rosalind Ruseell, Netalle
Wood
3:00 Ql& fl * • "EarthQu•l<e'"
tPit1 2) ( 1974) Charlton
Hes1on, Ava Gardner
3:30 0 * •. ,, 'Smalty" (1966)
Fess P•rker 01er>• Hytend
by Armatrong & Betluk
NBC HAS ASKED .JOHN
'TO ~RK ON IHl5 ~ MACY'5 "T'MANK!>Gl'llHG DAY
THEY MLJ5T HA\JE
0€EN SHORT A "TU~i-<EY.'
PARAOE.!
-~ t? 'Fauntleroy' one for Guinness book
By TOM .JORY EW YORK CAP )
"Jt.$mlet" in J938. "Oli ver
Twist" a decade later, "The
La.vender Hill Mob" 10 1951,
"Btidge on the River Kwa1" in
'57, "Star Wars" in 1977 a
very partial list. and a wesome
at that. And for Sir Alec Guin·
ne~f, a di stinct role m each film
':f've always tried to do dlf-
fer~t !lungs,·· says the dis-
tlngOished British actor whose
presence has been, and will be,
a £4miliar one on American
tel6lsion this fall in the re-
ceif{Jy completed "Tinke r ,·
Td)or, Soldier, Spy" on public
Tv::and in "Little Lord Faunller·
ro'/ " to be broadcast by CBS
lo~htat9onchannel 2
\!'I 've always bee n a
chahcter actor," be says. "l
was never a handsome juvenile.
which accoW\ts for that. But I've
always been determined that my
work should be different each
time I perform.
"IN TIDS CASE," Guinness
says, "I rather growled at the
idea of another 'Fauntleroy.' But
when I read the script, I found.
against my better judgment, I
was moved. I guess the story
touches some fundamental
springs."
Guinness plays the austere
Earl of Dorincourt, with lO·year·
old Ricky Schroder, star of
Franco Zeffirelli's 1979 film,
"The Champ," as Ceddie, Little
Lord Fauntleroy.
Frances Hodgson Burnett's
ta le or a child from the
tenements or New York who
goes to Live in his grandfather's
castle in England was adapted
for film twice before, with Mary
Pickford in the lead in 1921 and
Freddie Bartholomew as Cedd1e
15 years later.
"I don't think I've ever played
a grandfather before." says the
66-year-old Guinness, a veteran
of more than 100 different movie
roles . "Unless, or course, Obi·
. Wan Ben Kenobi or 'Star Wars'
was a grandfather.•·
Guinness, awarded a special
Oscar last year for advancing
the art or screen acting, has
been selective ln his choice of
TV roles . He was in "The
Wicked Scheme or Jebal
Deeks," a "Ford Startime'' pre-
sentation for NBC in 1959, and in
the 1976 "Hallmark Hall or
Adoption:
..
a new game
Myths dispelled on new PBS special
:~y MICHAEL DOUGAN
.• 04 IM O•ll'J P!Mt ''-" ~ptloo is an expansive
topj~ a phenomenon that has
sp~ed numerous J'elated is·
SU~ ~when WQED, Pittsburgh's
pu c television amliate, and
Ne week magazine set out to
pr uce "Adoption in America"
th greatest challenge must
ha-A been defining points or
foc\11. After all. they only bad an ·
ho\k to explore this complex
SU
IR SOLUTION was to
ent the program into four
pendently-created "mini·
• and intersperse aeveral
opinion statements The re·
a a coherent, intelUgent and
y unemotlonal program
~eall a quartet of adop-
(TV REVIEW)
1 lion's many new aspects.
For adoption is changing.
"Adoption in America," to air
on KOCE. Channel 50, at 7:30
p.m . Wednesday, effectively
blows away many public mil·
conceptions that should have
died a decade ago.
Legalized abortion and a trend
toward keeplng babies bom out
of wedlock have drastically re:
duced the number of white in·
rants available for adoption. Of
the 200,000 children legally free
for adoption in this country, 40
percent are over 11 years old, 25
percent are black and many are
physically or mentally han-
dicapped. It's a whole. new baU
game.
THE PROGRAM, part of a
n e w series called "Cove r
Story," opens with an explora-
tion of this change titled
"Special Children, Special
ParenU.." "We believe now that
no child is unadoptable, '' says
an agency worker on the show.
Indj:ed. she claims that SO to 85
percent of all so-called "special
needs" children will be plac~ in
permanent homes.
"Refugee Orphans" highliglits
a Vietnamese boy who is becom·
ing a happy American and a
Vietnamese mother desperately
trying to find the children she
sent to America as the war
ended.
"The Black Experience"
features a pioneer black adop-
tion •teDCY as It tries to recruit
parents and tells or one success
story.
'•WHO 18 MY Mother?"
focuses on the open records con-
troveny and some adopt.ea' at·
tempts to find thelr natural
parent.a. One woman is shown as
ahe ii reunited with the mother
ahe never knew .
.. Adol>tlon 1n America" l5 by
no meam • complete overview
of the subject, but lt la an am-
bltJOUI and tnlormaUon·packed
ondertaldnl that will enll&bten vl•wtra .tiile diapelllns • ,.,,,,
cnytbl.
..
Fame" production of "Caesar
and Cleopatra."
"There's no real r e a son
for that." he s ays of his ap
parent preference for the
th eatrical m otion pic ture,
"though both ·Fauntleroy' and
''Tinker, Tailor' were done on
film. rather than on tape. and 1
fell a bit more comfortable for
that ·-
IN THE SIX-PART British
Broadcasting Corp. produc-
tion of "Tinker. Tailor." John
LeCarre's spy thriller. Guinness
played George Smiley. the re-
tired agent called back to
service to ferret out a Russian
mole.
"Smiley," he says, "l could
take seriously. I tried to get into
his shoes. and enjoyed the role
ver y much.
"IN THIS ONE," Guinness
says, refernng to "Little Lord
Fauntleroy," "my character
was so two-dimens ional. the dif·
fi culty was trying not to make it
too joking.
t l
"He's a very crusty ,
blinkered. upper-cla ss man,
who's weakened by this small
boy's love and care.
"I saw a lonely, embittered,
cynical aristocrat for whom I
had no sympathy," the actor
says, "until l looked al him
more closely and watched him
grow and prove his strength by
-.. ANANIMALI
l AM A HUMAN Bl!'.INOI
1.-AM~.A MANr
...... _
ftM911Ml "'*""~·~•uo ........
c.lllcanll C-Mlllt79-4141
admitting his weaknesses."
Guinness says be re-read the
book, but did not look at the
most recent film ver sion of
·'Fauntleroy " "I bad s~n it
about 40 years ago," he says.
"Lf'ITLE LORD Fauntleroy"
was filmed principally on loca-
tion at Belvoi r, the Duke of
Rutland's castle in Nottingham,
England.
Emmy-winner Norman Rose-
mont, whose credits include a
number of TV adaptations from
the classics, including "The Man
in the Iron Mask," "Les Mis·
erables" and the upcoming
"Tale or Two Cities," produced
the two-hour rrr special.
There is a rather nice footnote
to the "Little Lord Fauntleroy"
story: Guinness and his young
co-star found one another's com-
pany rather pleasing.
"I enjoyed him enormously,"
Guinness says. "He was great
fun to be with. He 's ex-
traordinarily mature as an ac-
tor, somewhat like a wise old
man."
local news, sports and
advertising come to you . fNefY
day in the bright, lively,
i nteresting liJ;jl.eD
M2-
..
\IA
' • 990 .022
•mttllSI
("'"9 C4llttN
546-3102
'FAUNT\..EROY' STARS
Gulnneu, Schroder
-c~ (714) 134 2'Sl -5'M111110n .... 1n
13978'0
•WW.111
C111t• W•I
'" .3935
TRANSACTIONS
..
• I
T~. Nc'Mmber 25, 1llO N
Dow Jones Fi
UP 3.93
CLOSING 982.68
Ctd·tlaroat 11 .. 1ness
Running sprouts
unhealthy angles
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
With everyone and his brotht:r r unning these days, you
might expect certain people to be Cushing fo on the craze
For exampl~: makers of running s hoes For another ex
.lmple: publishers o f running maga zine'> And still
another . podiatr1c;ts.
I'm not sure about the podiatrists. but the shoe
manufacturers and publis hers et re certainly dom g well
The biggest name in running sh<>el> is Nike, marketed
by a company based in Beaverton. Ore. They hold ~
estimated 50 percent of the U.S. m.irkel for r unning sh()(S.
In 1974. their sales were S5 m1lhon In 1977, they were 129
mi llion. Now lhey are
approar hi ng $300
million
Tht: No 2 brand in
the running shoe market
is Addida:!>. This 1s a
German comvany with a
market sha re or about 20
Money
Tree
percent. Tb~ Sdles have also skyrn<'kcted, but exal'l f1gurns
are not available.
The No 3 brand is Brooks, made by Brooks Mfg of
Hanover. Pa They hold about I!'> percent of the market In
1977. their c;alcs were SI million. No"' they arl' $30 m1 ll1on
Runners. like other a ddicts. nt't.•d their own magazine ..
tn support lht>1r habit . And th<'..,C' publi<'al 1ons ha"e
mushroomt'd During the past four }e:irs Hunner's Worhl
ha" expundcd from a c1rculat1on of 70.000 h 400,000
The Runn<'r. which t!> owned by Hollywovd'!\ MCA.
boa!>tS a c1rc:ul<sl1on of 165.000 Hun nirif! Time~ hult a
c:1rculatton of 100,()()() And thc-n lht•r(''S Running, a 'iC\'t'I\
vear-0ld maga11n<• that llrn('lt'd alo11g with a r1n·ulation of
6 000 but 1s no"' 'tirmng for 100 11()(1
IT'~ NOT ALL sweelnt's'> anti h~ht, 1 .. 'H'Vl'r 1r1 the
running b1h1m·-.-. Whtie JOg~l·r,.. m ... , srnilc .111J ~rec•t other
Joggers w l11•11 th1·11· p<ilhs trns:. lht• 1wopl.: '"'hu <1rc try mg
lo mak" mono•\' t)Ut of this oh<,1•,-.;i11n • rt· ;11 l'arh l)fhpr's
thr oatc;
Mud1 uf llll' t'orllruversy 'l\lt'ls <iround tlw ma~al.tne
Runner 's World. published b~ H•ib \nderson from Moun·
tain Vie"' The} do an annu:il • u1 ve} that rates running
shoes In recent years. lht' top ratt·d brand has been
Brooks 11us top rating was <'lec1rb one of the factor!'. m
the t•xplos1ve salf:'' growth 11( Rrnnks
Nike naturcd l;. dtSIJUlf·-, th1:. finding Tht'.\ ll<IH' ac·
l!U:.t?d publii.hcr Ander:.un uf lc1mp.-ring with the i.urve)'
Jata And tht.>y hJ\'l' c;aid publtcl) that lht•re''> something
suspic:iow. about the relationc;h1p betwet>n Brooks and Run-
ner s World
LAST \"~AR. NCKE yanked all of 1ls advert1smg from
Runner s World as a proteM And now they have bought
their own maga:line, Running . to compete with Runner's World. Runointt 1s publis hed from Eu~ene. Ore
Anderson r esponded to Nike !'. charges by filing a S6
million libel s uit. He called it "sour grapes," pointmg out:
"Nike never complained :.ibout thP rating systf'm when
the~ were on lop •
A Ntk't> c;pokesman told a reporter from Ad\-ert1smg
Af!e "We <'~11 l wait to get thoc;t' ,Ruys m C'OUrt ·
1 IDS VEAR, NIK E also ftlt•d i.1 s111t cig.uno;t the RulJ
ht.>I Mauufal'lun·rs As:.<.1e1atwn. chargin,_:-thdr nwmt>crs
"llh ronc;pirin~ lo h.ivr dul1f's llllf.)()"f'd on Nikr>',_ o;hcw 101
ports Brook!'. respondt.>d to lhul suit h) fll1n1; .~ $:! mlll!url
c11ulllf'rrla11n ,1E?a1nst Nik ... allt•ginl! that the Or•·~on C1J01
µany has trit'd to monoprihw lht runn1n,: shr1f· h11'1nt''I'
has t"1tgc1i:ttS 1n 1111.luc;tnal 1·..,p1on;1i.:1 .rnc1 h ,.., ·' 1 <111J!h1ll\
d1<,par agP1l the Hr<>ok " running '" ''
On"' of rhe c;pN 1fu: t 1Htr~'•'" ,,.. 1tw Hr•"•J.:• '"'' 1:-tit 1t
"like hirt.'d µrofC<,S IOnal b&s<•h.111 and r .... ,1. di pl·~ Lr' '"
'W('ar :\1k1• )OJtOS on ilthlt'IH ... t11w•-. rt1.11lc• h\ Bronb lltrl
ollter com1wt111~ cumpanJl•!-
Bruok:-. has also ask!·cl the ' 111 1 '" 111dt'r '<1k1 lo 11n·1·
uµ its c-011tr.1l of R unnmi.: \! a).!annc
Run1wrs thml. or all ti.JI ;j<, \Pll lac•1• •Ill
( ,,,. oud Dfllt'H•
NEW YOR9' ,,., ftw to11u-.1r'9 h'll "10ws Ille Nt"' v.,rk '>lo•k C AC"""9f 'toc.ki •nd ...,.,,.11\' 1f'\41t h•v• f)(Hlf' UP ""' ~t Md down ttw •no•t ba..-o on j!r\:enl OI C"""911 ·~•di••\ 01 votunv ()<No=~\ 1•"°4"11 i-tow S1 art '"''
-IWt -~rce"leQO <h•"9"• .,p '"" difference a.1 ... n \ht o••••°"~ <to-s•no
D<lce a!WS todlly "°°"Of I<•
.. 11
·J
l
4 .. ,
H
L •M 6J .. I..,_,.,, ... l.111Jt.jl\11
l ute l 1'•. '""''' • P"w"' -WuwtM Tu' )I llll Mf.t.,-. '""', °'"'"°'ilf' ~O Atwmt"""" ·•Ct>"''" a Pl'.h.INJ N v
MttCW"Y $iAOO 00 ~,. ""'' "1•11"""',._1>4.llrvvoz k •
Silt·.,r
NEW fORK IAPI Hall(ly .. H•ono•· .,,.,., ,,_, s•• ..o °''so on
E110~111ttd •lln• S•I 00 oll U 011 l•l><l<•llO .~ ... , '" .0., Oii so '°'
tauld fla.uuotiflt111 •• no.,._ ...... -· .... ~,«1-d QOld P.lt .. 100.y
~ r.ur.. ~~,_,., ..
~For P\ltlill "°"'" WIO'P"
O.NIM LDolc ,,,, •••
MIC ...
IUU.llYl
W'l1.0mlll. IACI(.
•OTTEll
8erlllrino oet• hoe own
becflelor" ped
• GOOOTlMES
Tbat'a not Jennifer Hart, though it IS
Stefanie Powers, who plays the role, giv-
ing Robert Wagner the eye on "Hart to
Hart" tonight at 10 on ABC. Channel 1.
Flof!Oa e OIMt to. J J'a
'btrt11d1y .,. 10m.-hat
auoaued when Jim ..
~nt lh•I • ~pulet II•»
given Nm• OMS .;redlt ral·
~ (PW1 2)
• OQCCAV!TT ,·:<iutet lllf~ Oflllll l~lllld. 1:•. S.2·t OCMTACT (Al Q t.•ll) M'A•t •H !~:)tawk~ and HOI Llpt go
I•*' ~o the ~r<I to demon-Atr••• his wteifal trant·
.•.~t op«ation. (Pert I) ;;o BAAN£Y .... ~~
The de\ectkles Ollln evt
• der>e:e lgl!Mt lln Under·
•' oroolld e00ptjon rtng •nd
• "'"' • jl(Ot9ffof tor hl.J Mr.a c.ooduct In .-.-rcn
TllO CBS NEWS
· 1 •n X·reted e11c110011rv
l" N9CNEWS
I AICNe:we
JOl<EA'8 WILD M'A0 8•H
The )linll 1'111111 mlkM a
muc;h-n••d•d IU<QICl l
clemp tor the 40771h llnd
KllllQtlf throw• out Hot
Lipe' wedding ring ., BAAETTA
Barett• dllCO*• • poll(».
mlfl alaln lrl tha tine Of
duty w11 1C111111y mur-
defed. and hi• wilt. a i.t-
low otftcer, m•y have
mNltrl'llln<led It
• OVEAEASY
"Aller Work Whal?
(Rotlrament)" GuHIS
ac:lren Fran Amt0n Or
Jeme. Pef•80fl, Mery llnd oeoroe Oudtnall. a Ci> ~CHEil I l.EJiAER
REPORT
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH ®J MERV GRIFFIN I• HAPflY DAYS AGAIN
• Lor1 Seth cnooses trie
, Cunn!nQhams a, the mod
Ill l()f ,. ... P8'>4!1 on thtl tYP·
1'.30 IJ 2 ON THE TOWN
lcal m1ddle-CllS$ Ama .. c1n
t1m11y
The 11th Annual Female
lmperson11ou 8111, a h•»-
tor!Cftl loot< II th4t go4dM
a~ofr&doo
ClaannPI Lbf ing• ·
fJ KNXT ICBSJ l 1~ Angf'IC':.
0 KNBC (NBC) LOS Anoele:o e ICTLA (Ind I Lo~ 4ng"lti'> fl KABC·1'1 (ABCI Los Argele:.
(I) KFMB (CBSI S~r• Cl•e1.10 C> KHJ rv (Ind 1 Los An~rti:!>
(It II.CST (ABC1 S.ln 01 .. qr
G) KTTV t•na I LV'• A•1q1•h?'•
Cl) KCOP TV pnr! l Lv~ Angt•le5
fl) KCET· TV t PB~I Lll" Angr•'es
~ KOCE·TV 1PB,,, ~unl1n9IOI" BPilLh
I FAMILY FEUD
SHA HANA
Gueat Stephanl9 Mlllt
• HOU.VWOOO
80UAl\ES I FACE TH! MUSIC
AU. IN nt! FAMILY
EdlUI edds • _,IOl'-ClllZMI
-'ding Ind a pmlf 01
honeymooner. lo ArchHI •
e!.ICloul flehlng tnp plltle
., MACHEIL I L~!A
REPORT
Ci) N~ECK
()) P.M. MAGAZINE
l\n 11-yeer-ol<I ec1reu'1
con1rovera111 ad c:•m·
,,.ign, a hang glider whO
llal fMtnjt(J up Wftfl 8
hawll
8:00 8 (I) A CHARLIE
BROWN THANKSGIVING
Animated. Charlie Bro,,,..n
IS once agal11 put on the
1pol when Peppermint
Patty 1n\lftes herself and
nef lrtend$ to his house tor
Th1111kag1vlng d111net (fl) fl 30 YEARS OF TV
COMEO'f'S GREATEST
HITS
Olc:k Van Oyl<e Carl Reonet
and Bea Arthur are 1ci1ned
bV an all-star cast tor o
s alute to c.omedy on leltwo-
slon 8 MOVIE
• •'II "l he Outer S1>11<:e
CO'lntctlon · (1975) Na•
rat.HI bv RO<I Setllng New
e•Nlt1nco1 epoean to !loJO
gest that hum3n ltfe on tfl1s
pl8nef oegan with the
a111v111 Of "snc1enf astro-
nauts' Who seltllld '" the
Pt11uvlan Andes and tri4'
Bermuda Trla1191e (2 n11 )
• 9 tw'f"f Dl\VI
M#tofl If I**• IO bi I ~ontNTVCIMW .... '"°'*" fOf A o;y~· .
• tilCMI **"' .. ~ Aou!MW' ,.,., Geotot--. DM-
'lldltll~ A~O... _, ........ "* lO l*ld °" .,. ..... netlOfl plO\ ...,.. ~ Pftmlef
KOt}IOlft ..._ he II vlllt'"cl
Cfllllldt. (2 lltt.I • , .... MAGAZIHI
An t ,_,..,4c1 ectr ....
controv .. 1111 10 tan'I•
pelgrl; a l\IWIO Qlld« MIO
1161 tawnld up "'4th •
1l1wk; Oorotlly 1(1lln1
mekt1 • qulll wtlhOlll -.
Ing. Otop\. Cttrot on 'l904t-
IM11111 Clltt1; Utldl Hlfrll
lllrltl Llkt T~
• UOYfe
••• ''1'19d &in'' (1971)
~ Bronaon Al1Jn o.on. A tr91n, robbaf It
double-crosM<I by hla
p-1net, WhO '1 .. lt I
j--.c:t twOfd from • J~
-1tnbundor aa Wfll
u 1111 the gold from the
robbary.12 tire ) -~HT "TIMI LNtl 01 Tiie SIMI"
With the help ol computer
11\lm&llon 111d stuMlng
1stronomiCll art, Or Cert s.oan lhowt now &tlfa
ere born. 11ve and dte O
8:30 8 ([) THANK801\ltNO
IN TME LANO OF OZ
Animated Whlle c;ha.lt>0
llhf'f a mlHlng Th4/lk..glv•
Ing pie Oo1othy once
-iiain runs 1n10 file Wl.r:11d
ot Ot ano 4'flll• up on 1
slra~ 11<1ven1ura 8 llQ) LAVERNE&
SHIRLEY
The g11ls' f11st Olly 111 Los
Ange•~ I~ mtll•'l<I by an
earthquei.e tAnd ~'1.x:11tr.9
n-• from L .. nny oJnd
Squ'Ogy GI t.e •A'S'H
HaWl<;;ye and Ho1 LIP• go
to 111e 8063rd to den0fl-
1trate his er ten11 tr ans-
pl311t operation f P11r1 11
&l) NOVA
'"The Wote1 Crltls" An
ell8mtn1111on c.it acid raor. r,
Ille Adlrc;ndncks. water
r~ycllnq 1n Callforn111 11nd
contam•n•llld welt11 11'1
t.loh.SaehU!.8115 IS pr-..MI
9-00 U ?iTTL£ LORD
FAUNTLEROY
Ricky ~crircoc« s ,,1 Ate<.
Uuonfit'llS sf&r "' the tale ol
rm lmpov8rlsriod yo1.tngstn
whq, •s ~wl'PI !ram H1e
tenernef'll~ of 19tfl tun1ury
New 'for• to th" AAt.Ue ul
no~ €ngl1th orandt•lh"r o a THREE'S
COMPAfllV
Jack cnl'I' " IJ<l,,,,,.tul
temate st.. fl' 1ru > •,pf Avlf~;
that he '' 11 do11mr·10•1
clOWOf\111 I~ I\'• [)
G) M"A"S'H
H8wkeye 8!lcl H()I ' •P~ '
TUBE TOPPERS
NBC II 8:00 -30 Yun ol TV
'Comedy's Greatest Hitt. A 11lute to
comedy oo televiaion wttb hmb Dick
Van Dyke, Carl Reiner al\(I Bea Arthur.
KHJ 8 8:00 -"RUs8lan Roulette."
George Segal stars in this movie drama
about a Royal Canadian mounUe who
tries to prevent the assassination of
Soviet Premier Kosygin.
CBS tf 9 : 00 -"Little Lord
Fa untleroy. Ricky Schroder (of "The
Cha mp") plays the title role in tbia TV
remake of the classic movie (see story,
photo below). ,
(;Ol'M unClet llMYy lrttllery
llre In enemy lllfritoey, wl1h
H•wlle)'9 1aceMng • leg
wound (P•rt 2)
6Ii) NOVA
"Th6 Wetat Cl'lals" ""
t .. mtnallon ol acid rain In
1ne Adlrond.ctls. weter
recyc4<ng 1n Callfonlla 11\d
co11tarn1na1ad well• In
MHMChusetta IS 1)(-1·
fl, caovie * • * U ltlo Lord
fpunllQ(oy" (1cntl) Freddie
Bartholo11-. MIGkey Roo.
riey A ltttlo BrOOklyn 1110
oecomes a prop8( Brillsh
lord wl\11 1mpeccable tule
1no mannetio 12 IVs.I
t:30 0 (JJ) TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT
A Cf1U$tn8lt1 ol S1ra11'5 tol-
towe her honwi and tries lo
19tctt onto thfr flln'ily.
G) M'A'S"H
Newscaster Glete flODeflS
r111urns to the 4071tt> to
uPd•le Kore8/l Wer condl
Ilona (Pan ll E0 THE BODY IN
Ol.IESTtON
Nellve MPCI r.ir1"" Or
J 'nalhan Mil.er c.untrasts
111.i p1ac:11ce of modern
m~lc111e ·n &n En9hlh
town with fl\tl tradltlooal
rn1p1Gal &ystem ot the
Atende •11oe in Alroca O
JOHN DARLING
10:00 D THE AlAH l(JHQ •
TMAN1<8GMNO 6P£CW.
Allll l(lrtg l&kea I llll<IC:
tOOk 11 wf>ll Amerlclnt
l\eve to be thankful I« on
the eve of Th1nkaglv\ng
9CI NEWS G QI HART TO HART
Jennifer 11 ltldneppe<I by
v11111n1 who mllllk• l'llf tor
enotn.woman tD M'A'S'H
New9C1Slat Clfl• Robert•
retuma to Iii. 40771h to
update KOl'een W1r con<ll·
Ilona. (P8'1 2) ., IHDEPEHOEHT
HETWOMN&WI
• MEW8CHE<* 1 10-.30 ·~
I
''Del Mero Corazon· The
ballad• llld lyTlcal love
songs In Iha Tex .. Meld-
cen Nortena muale 11adl·
tlon are sampled.
Ii) lltE BODY IN
OVES~
"Mauve Mldfc;lne" Or
Jonathan Miiiet con1ru11
the pr tlCltce Of modem
medoc1nt1 in an Erigllah
town Wllh the tr~ltlonal
I
magical 1y1tem of the
Azande trlbe In Africa .. O 11:00 811GCJJ 9 NEW& 8 HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES I C> HEWl YWED GAME
G) M"A'S•H I
.ONI..,....,..,
"Doom•de¥" T"9 llrlt
bom -°' .... ""' °' OonlMoot .. CU'leid '° .. .............
.M.cecx.M ...w .. ,.....,. ~ .. An
aplonltlon of IN u.e of
101ar energy wllf\out
pumpe Of ·-tlnd fMIUf-
lnO "°""" ...,.,.. Of QIMM tc>lll hMtlng .. ..,,..
tt~. Cl) LOU QMHt
Lou ~ tor • lnY"•
rloul i.o who follld 1111 ----Ion ltten'IPt. (R) , D TOMGHT
Holl: Jollrtny C1r1on.
Gut1t1: !ydlt Oorme,
M.uretn Mutphy.
• PfllllOHP: C8.l
ll.OCKH
The reld on Wentwonh to
lrM JIMI It In NII 9Wlng
whefl Enca '"*"'PIS It,
wltl'I me.trout~ I!-~
An aging manl'lal Illa out
to tr~ • bertd of outlawl.
• HOGAN'8 HEROU
Hogen hll to delver 111
lrnp«lanl rtldlo part to the
und«ground.
• IT TAt<U A THIU'
•• CAPT10tcED A8C
HEW8 t1:eoe 9 wov11
• •~ "A Flltlul Of Dyne·
mite" ( 197~) Jemn
Coburn, AOd Steiger.
-~-
12:00. TWJUGH'T ZONE
• YOU IET YOUR UR:
Buddy Hldc1tt .,_,, I
pno10-Journall1t, a m111
wtlo wuhel llrpl11181 end
1 women wno QOOk1 with
\nMctl,
12:30 8 TOMORROW.
G1.1at1: vlollnlat llrhak
PMlm•n, Chicken czar
Frink Petelue; 1111\hof Dot·
othy GrMl IC>eC>C)llf.
• MOVIE
••• "Genatlllon (1969)
David Jmn-. Kim Oatby,
fl) THEFBI
"ColUtlion COUrN"
., MIS8K>H:
IMP0881BL.E
.Nil . .,, ...,.._
~-(I) MOVll
• • 141 "All TIM l(IMf ..,...,.. .. ,,.,.,~
....... JoNI .. .,....
1.oeMCM&
••i."~T~"
(1M4) 8tuett Whttl!Wlll.
Carol L)'nl9y
1:aoe THll.ONI~ "fn.nd In ...., ..
• MOYll ** "Trog" (tt10) Joell
Crewtord ....... Oougti.
l:OOI~ ••Y. ''The Uninhibited"
(1Mn 'Mtlln• ~.
Jemea MUOrt. !:IO I NIEW8 1-.21 NEN8
2:30 MOW! * • • "The Truth About
Spring.. 11"5) Hayley
Milla, Jdvt Miiie.
2:aal=
• • y, "Look Who' a
lJluOhlng" ( 19-4 t) Edgllf
B«~. Luc;llte Ball.
3:15 . MOVIE
• 1t lit "Bind Of Angell"
( 1957) C'-'11 Geble. Sldoey
Pottier.
•:00 8 MOW * • * "The Golden Sela· mi nder" (1950) Trevor
HOWllfd, Herben Lom
4:251 HEWS 4:30 MOVIE
• • "Kid Mllllon1" ( t035)
Eddie Centor. Ethel Mer·
man.
Wed1H••da11'•
Daflfbae Mo.,les
1 t:OO. *·~''The T1att
B1yond " ( 1934) John
Wayne. V8"18 Hiiiie. A
-AFTERNOON-
12:00. ** • "Once M0te,
With Feetlngl" I t9001 Yul
Brynner. K1y l<ertdatl
., • • • "Gypsy''(1ee3)
RoNhn<I RuSMll, N•lllle
Wood
3:00 9 * * * "Earthquake" (Pen 21 ( 19741 Charlton
Heston. Ave Gt1rdn&r
3:30 C> •*'"''Smoky" (1966)
Feas Park er, Otane Hyland
by Armltrong & Batluk
THE.Y MUf>T HA'IE
0£EN SHORT A IU~i-<EY.'
'Fauntleroy' one /or Guinriess book
By TOM JORY '/IE W Y 0 R K I A P l -"Ef~ml et'' in 1938. "Oli ver
Twist" a decade taler , ·The
La (e nder Hill Moh' 1n 1951,
"Bridge on the Rivt>r Kwn1" in
'57, ••star Wars" in 1977 a
very partial list. and ~1wcsome
at (hat. And for Sir Alc·c Guin-
nea•. a distinct role in cu ch film
''l've always tried to do d1f·
ferepl things, ~ays the dts-
lmgtflshed Brill~h actor whose
prince has been, and w1U be. a sniliar one on American
tel ision this fall 1n the re
ce t\y completed "Tink er,
Ta or, Soldier, Spy" on publJc
TV!frid in "Little Lord Fauntler·
ro~-· to be broadcast by CBS
to.?tht at9on channel 2.
J 've alwa ys been a
character actor." he says "I ..
was never a handsome juvenile.
which acrounts for that. But J've
always been determined that my
work should be different eoac h
time I perform.
"IN THIS CASE," G uinness
says, "1 r ather growled at the
irle a of another 'Fauntleroy.' Bul
when I read the scr ipt, l found,
against my better Judgment, I
was moved I guess the story
touches som e fu n d ament al
springs."
Guinness plays the austere
Earl or Donncourt. Wlt h 10-year-
old Ricky Schrode r , star of
Franco Zeffirelli ·~ 1979 film,
''The Champ, ' as Geddie, Little
Lord Fauntleroy.
Frances Hodgson Burnett's
t a l e of a c hild fro m t h e
tenements of New York who
goes to live in his grandfather's
cas tle in England was adapted
for film twice befor<' with Mary
Pickford in tht' lead in 1921 and
f r<'dd1e Bartholom1 w a~ Ct.cfd1c
15 ye:irs later .
"l don't think I've ever played
a grandfather befor€:." -;a~~ thl'
66-year.old Guinness .• 1 "et<'ran
of more tban tOO different movie
roles "Unless. or rourc:t• Obi
Wan Ben Keoobi of St.Jr Wlir.,
was a ~randfather
Guinness, awardert J ~1A'c1al
Oscar last yeJr for ~Hlvancing
the art of screen ;,ictrn~. ha!>
been '!electi ve 1n his chof<'e of
TV roles. H e w~~ in "The
W ic ked Sch eme of Jebal
Deeks," a "Ford Start1me" pre
senlation for NBC in 1959. and m
the 1976 "Hallmark Hall of
!doption: a new game
.. ::. ;;: Myths dispelled on new PBS special
~:By MICHAEL DOUGAN ( J •· • Ol llM Dall• ~li.t SUH A(\optlon is an ex p an slve TV REVJ E W
to* a phenomenon that bas
sp*1ed numerous related is·
SU •• ! when WQED, Pittsburgh's
pu c television affiliate, and
Ne kweek magazine set out to
pr(iuce "Adoption In America" tll~ ere atest cha lle nge mus t
ha~. bee n defining points of roe~ After all, they only had an ·
bof:to explore this complex
Sll t. r-,
EIR SOLUTION was to
11e ent the program Into rour
In · pendently·cr eated "mini·
d " and intersperse several
bri opinion statements, Tb.e re-
aul a coherent, intelligent\ and
lar ely unemotional program
\ba · veals a quartet or adop-
tlon 's many new aspects
For adoption is c hanging.
"Adoption in America," to air
on KOCE, Channel 50, al 7:30
p.m . Wednesday, e rfectively
blows away many public mis·
con ceptions that should have
died a decade ago.
Legalized abortion and a trend
toward keeping babies born oaj.
or wedlock have drastically re-
duced the number of white ln·
Canta available ror adoption. Of
the 200,000 chlldren teially tree
for adoption in this country, 40
percent are over 11 years old, 25
percent are black and many are
physically or mentally han-
dicapped. It's a whole new ball
game.
THE PROGRAM. part of a
n e w ser ie s called '·cover
Story,'' opens with an explora·
lion of this ch a nge 11lled
''Sp ecial C hildre n , S p ecial
Parenta." "We believe now that
no child Is unadoptable, .. says
an agency worker on the show.
Indeed, she claims that 50 lo 85
percent or all so-called "<;peciaJ
needs'' chDdren will be pla<!ed in
permanent homes.
"Refugee Orphans'' highlights
a Vietnamese boy who is becom·
ing a happy American and a
Vietnamese mother desperately
trylne to find the children she
sent to America as the war
ended . "The Black Ex pe rie n ce"
features a pioneer black adop-
tion agency as lt tries to recruit
parentl and tells of one s uccess
atory.
"WHO IS MY Mother?"
rocuses on the open recordJI con· ttoveny and some adoptees' at-
tempt.a to f\nd their natural
parema. One woman ls ahown as
ahe la reunited with the mother '"
•be ne ... mew.
"Adoption in Amerlu'' ii by
no me...-a complete overview
of the •aJect, but it 18 an •m-
bUiom ... lnlonn•Uoa·pjCked
underta.klnl that will eftlllht.en
vlowen .tille dl•pelU01 a few
myth.I.
Fame" production of "Caesar
and Cleopatra."
·'There's no rea 1 reason
for 1 hJt, · he says of his np· I-'·' rt•nt pref<'rt>nce for the
tht>dlr1«al 'm ot\on pi. tut e
"thougt, both · Fauntlt•roy' and
"T1nhl·r, T.11lor ' v.ere done on
fd rn rather than on tap('. dnd I
f<'ll H bit morr c>•Jmfortuhle for
th.it .
IN Tiit; SJX·VART British
Br o11 rt c:-:isttn ~ Cor p prod uc-
tion 1•f 'Tinker. T.silor." John
LtCarre's spy thriller Guinness
pla .vc•d Gt•flrl!t' Smile>. the rt!·
t1 rctl agen t l'allcd back to
st•rv1ce to ferrt't out a Russian
mok
"Sm1lev." he sa"·'· "I could
Lake -;<'now.Iv I tried to get into
his shOt"!>, and enjoyed the role
vcr) much
"IN THIS ONl!:,'' Guinness
says, referring to "Little Lord
Fauntleroy ... "mv character
wa!) so two·dimensional. the dtf·
h cultv was trying not lo make tl
too Joking "He 's a ve ry crust.>.
bhnkered, upper-class man,
who's weakened by this s ma ll
boy's love and <'are .
"I s aw a lonely, embittered,
cvnical aristocrat for whom I
h·ad no sympathy." the actor
says, "until I looked al him
more closely and v. etched tum
grow and prove his strength by
1 AM A HUMAN BE.ING!
1...A..."11-A MANI"
admitting his weaknesses."
Guirmess savs he re·read the
book . but did. not look at the
most recent film version of
"Fauntleroy." ··1 had seen it
about 40 years ago," he says.
"LITTLE LORD Fa untleroy"
was filmed pnncipally on loca ·
Lion al Belvoir. t he Duke of
Rutlnnd's castle m Nottingham.
England
Emmy-winner Norman Rose·
mont, whose cre<tits include a
number of TV adaptations from
the classics, including "The Man
in the Iron Mask," "Les Mis·
e rables" and the upcoming
··T ale of Two Cities," produced
the two-hour JIT special.
There Is a rather nice footnote
to the ''Little Lord Fauntleroy "
stor y: Guinness and his young
co-star found one another's com-
pany rather pleasing.
"I enjoyed him enormously,"
Guinness says. "He was great
run t o b e with . H e's ex·
traordinarily mature as an ac·
tor somewhat like a wise old
m an.''
Local news, sports ar'ld
advertising come to you . f!NefY
day in the bright, lively,
i nterest ing DAILY PILOT
642-4321
'l'JIB Y~·.............., .. .............
fK.'9 lllll w~•v• •9W220 ... _.
CllllMCDrB Call .... ·~4141
...,.....
t:..aWllT _._ .. ,.~
edwatds NEWPORT
MUICOAIT MWf.IMACAITHIUI
• ..._eaaaw '44-076
t I
'FAUNTLEROY' STARS
Oulnneu, Schroder