HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-03 - Orange Coast Pilot•• * * * *
DRAllil COAST YOUR HOMITDll UAllY. PIPIR . ,.
• , ' • • • • t t& 'IHANG l <...OUN TV . C ALlf-ORNIA 25 CENTS
Troubled Onofr.e Duke unit fired up
By DAVID KUTZ MANN
OI ... o.ily ~ Stllfl
As their troubled Unit 1
reactor at San Onofre returned
to active duty today, officials at
Southern California Edison Co.
were quietly hoping for
so~ething they haven't had for
muc.h of the past two years:
A nuclear power plant that
runs , and runs smoothly ,
without any further shutdowns
for major repairs. At least for
I.he time being.
Based on recent performance,
that possibi lity remains
somewhat iffy.
Though once touted as one of
the most reliable commercial
nuclear installations in the
United St~tes, Unit 1 must now
overcome a series of crippling
and cosUy disabilities that have
kept it down and out for roughly
17 of the past 24 months.
The situation moved one
federal nuclear official familiar
with the plant to comment
recently, "San Onofre has not
been reliable in the past two
years."
Even so, utility officials
insisted Monday they still
consider their plant -at 14
years of age one of the oldest in
the country -to be trustworthy.
.. Unit I is a good, reliable
ope rating plant," said Jerry
Haynes. Edison's manager of
nuclear operations. ··or." he
corrected. "it's capable of being
a good. reliable operating
plant."
"Even with the problems
we've had the last year and a
half. if you look at the lifetime
utilization or the plant, it
compares very well and, In fact.
from an average utilization
standpoint, it's better than the
average plant in the country,"
Haynes maintained in a
telephone interview Monday
from his Rosemead office.
Still. various and lengthy
repair jobs have cost the utility
well over $85 million. not
co unting th e most recent
shutdown which ended early
today.
The seaside plant three miles
south of San Clemente had been
closed for two months -since
Sept. 3 to permit repairs to
two c ri t ical valves in the
emergency core cooling system.
Along with lhis problem, two
othe r lengthy shutdowns were
caused by repairs to corroded
piping in San Onofre's steam
generators (14 months) and to
an auxiliary diesel generator
damaged by fire last summer
<one month).
Appraising these and other
problems from the government
s id e of the fence, Nuclear
Regulatory Com mi ssion
inspections chief Dan Sternberg
said Monday:
.. I think you could imply from
the fact that they've been down
more than they're up that they
have got a problem in getting all
their systems operating at the
same time."
· .L~wyer says client shot NB man
Shuttle launch
'on schedule'
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
1 AP J -Joe Engle and Richard
Truly paid a pre·daw·n visit to
shuttle Columbia today and
thanked work crews for the
so-far perfect countdown. Their
launch supervisor said "we're
on schedule with zero problems"
for Wednesday's liftoff.
Ignition is scheduled ror 4:30
a . m . PST after overnight
loading of supercold fuels that
will power Columbia's effort to
become the firs t s paceship ever
to make a return trip to orbit.
Live television coverage of the
second flight of the space shuttle
Columbia will begin as early as
3 a .m . PST Wednesday, and
continue with ijye re1><>rts on
Sewage spill
closes LB's
Main Be ach
Orange County health officials
closed Main Beach Park to
swimmers and strollers this
morning after work cre)\'s
repairing a sewer line in Laguna
Beach began to divert treated
sew age onto the sand.
Thousands of gallons of foul
smelling but treated effluent
were diverted into the flood
control channel at Broadway
this morning. nowing under the
coast highway and onto the s and
at Main Beach Park.
Workmen are repairing a
I-by-8 foot hole in the 20-year-old
reinforced concrete pipe al the
corner of Broadway and South
Coast Highway.
Assistant city manager Terry
Brandt said work on the 27-inch
pipe forced crews to allow the
effluent to run into the flood
control channel. He estimated
up to a million gallons of treated
sewage could run out onto the
beach before repairs are
completed on the pipeline.
"We have contacted regional
and local health officials, and
the .county health department
has quarantined the beach."
Bl'andt said.
He said swimmers will not be
allowed In the ocean and
strollers will be kept ofr the
beach sand until tests indicate
the beach is safe.
Brandt said he hopes that
repairs can be completed on the
pipeline today. He said ere~•
will examine the pipeline to ...
lf there are additional r .....
necessary.
The antiquated pipeline, which
normally takes treated sewage
aevel'al thOUJand feet into the
ocean off Lasuna Beach, wUI be
abut down in March of 1983. At
tbat time, the city la to begin
u1in1 the Aliso Water
llana1ement Acency treatment
111tem, which will now off the
ocean at A\i'° Creek. .-
major developments through the
scheduled landing Nov. 9. ·
Launch coverage will begin at.
3 a .m . on ABC and NBC, and a
half-hour later on CBS, and will
continue to 6:30 a.m . on ABC
and 10 on CBS and NBC.
Cable News .Network also wiJI
cover the launching. scheduled
for 4:30 a .m .. live from the
Kennedy Space Center in
Florida.
The four networks will follow
the flight with live and special
reports through the scheduled
landing at 8:40 a .m. Monday,
Nov. 9.
··We have absolutely no
problems.·· NASA ·s Norm
Carlson said alter supervising
today's early morning activities.
Still. he indicated that weather
is a nagging concern. despite
optimistic forecasts.
. Air Force wea thermen
predicted adequate conditions.
and NASA Administrator James
Beggs said, "It should be clear
and beautiful tomorrow."
R a i n .w o u Id f orce a
postponement or the fueling, and
the liftoff. because officials fear
an ice build-up on the shuttle's
huge external fuel tank.
The astronauts stopped at the
launch pad just hours after a
large service structure was
rolled away, leaving Columbia
bathed in floodlillhts .
Man to die
in I rvine
murde r case
0
John Glen Davenport, a state •
prison parolee convicted in the
1980 rape-torture slaying of a
woman in an Irvine field. bas
been sentenced to die in the
state's gas chamber.
The sentence was imposed
Monday by Orange County .
Superior Court Judge Phillip
Cox, who said Gayle Ann Lingle
died a "horrible death."
The woman, according to
testimony during Davenport's
trial, was beaten and stabbed. A·
52-lnch long wooden stake was
driven into her body while she
was still alive, authorities
testified.
The March 1980 s laying
occurred in a field near Myford
Road and the Santa Ana
Freeway.
Davenport was convicted
Sept. 24. The Jury, followlnc a
penalty bearlna. recommended
Davenport be sentenced to
death.
Al the Ume of hl1 arrest ln
connection with the Llnale
slaying, Davenport waa on
parole after aerv1n1 four yean
or a 1$-Ye&n·to-Ufe lel'ID·for the
attempted murder Of a 1'Ulllll
woman.
f
.........
Photographers snap their cameras as the ser1'ice gantry for the 1poce shuttle Columbia 1s rolled bock at
Cape Canaveral, Fla.
Three county slayings probed
Three slayings -Including
one in which a· woman's body
was buried in the backyard of
her residence -are under
investlgallon today by Santa Ana j> o I ice De p a r,t men t
mvesthrators. .r
Accotdlng to a police
spokeswoman. the slain woman
was buried followina the slaying
that occurred two weeks ago.
The 1pokelwoman 111d • man
ldenUfied 11 the woman'•
hu1baad hat -"• a 1tatement
lo police tnv Y11tor1.
Further details were not
available.
Meanwhile, police also were
investtgatina shootings late
Monday night that left two men
dead.
rfhai tanker burn8
BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> -
A small Thai oU tanker burmid
-.... dwiDi. tha'Mnl •• on .-. .. t._Thauand .. ....,.
and lli; ..... ben or the crew an
blllevid dlldt~• uld.
According to the
spok eswoman, the two men
were shot at close ran1e tn the
driveway of an apartment
complex at 315 S. Laurel St.
InveaUgators, she said, believe
the shootings may have been
related to drug tranaacUons.
ldeatlUes of the t~ men. aied
41 Ud 47, were betnc withheld t>ft aotifieation or rel1tlve1. man wu dead at the tcent,
the T"otber died at Fountain
V1tley Community Hoapltal
earw today. t\
Killing
'-wasn't
-murder'
Telford Moore's defense
attorney admitted to an Orange
County Suptrior Court jury
Monday that the Newport Beach
psychologist shot and killed bis
roommate and business partner,
Stanley Espinda, but claimed it
wasn't murder.
Attorney Al Stokke argued
during his opening statement
that Moor e, 37, was under
·•almost demonic control" of
Espinda. 45, who be said was
hQmosexual and wanted Moore
to believe that he was as-Well.
The gun used in the Nov. 5,
1980, shooting at the pair's
Spyglass HIU home in Newport
Beach hadlbeen bought by
Moore for protection against
Espinda's threats against bim
and his girlfriend. Glory Lane,
said Stokke.
Stokke declined to s uggest
whether lesser charges would be
appropriate, saying only: "Our
contention is he isn 'l guilty of
murder.··
Deputy_ District Attorney
Bryan Brown had a different
explanation or the shooting,
however. Brown tol<! the jury
that Moore had purchased the
$150 gun through a newspaper
advertisement only a week
before the shooting with an
intention to kill Espinda, also a
psychologist. '
The two men had lived
together for much of 18 years.
Brown c laimed that Moore
finally chose to shoot Espinda to
end their emotional and
financial relationship.
Brown was scheduled today to
call bis first witnesses. The trial
(See MOORE, Page All
ORAllil COAST 1111111
Fair through
Wednesday with the
exception of some fog
along the coast late
tonight and early
Wednesday. Cooler days
ahead with highs
Wednesday from upper
60s at the beaches to
mid-70s inland. Overn1ght
lows 45 to 55.
llllllT•Y
A . gal lt¢jon OWMr 10llo houu a doctOMte u ru11ning
for hu HCOnd tnm °' mqor o/ Logan, Utah. Sn PtJge At.
11111
ff~ --.. !h:=. l
I
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I
•••••• Orange Coa•t DAILY PILOTffuttday, November 3, 1981
M to ask age;ncy to suspend emission con ..... ols
under 18 y_,an of •l• l•
"barbaric" aad •k>latH Ute
con1tltutlonal Mn oa nu.I ud
unu1ual punlahmeat.
WASHINGTON (A•>
eneral llotor1 Corp. •-.V• It
lanl to Mk the EDvlronmental
rotec:Uon A1ency to ••~nd
mlulon atandarda for
ieael·powered. 1986·mode1 cats
nd u.,.t trucks followlns the
upre11M1 Court'a refuul to Utt
he rel\llations. ..
The nl1h court oh Monday left
he rules lnt1ct and declined to
ree the auto industry trom its
urrent obHaaUon lo try to
comply with them. GM cla1m1
tbe rules. limillnl th amount
or exhaust particles that can be
dJ1cttarged into the atmosphere,
will cripple production or the
1985 vehleles.
"We'll have somethlnl in (to
the EPA> this week," GM
lawyer William L. Weber Jr.
said in a telephone Interview
from Detroit.
Weber said the company, ln lta
s upplementary request, will
ar1ue that the EPA has the
authority to put the rules on hold
whU they are beln1 reviewed
by the a1ency.
The company claim• the
neceuary anti-pollution device
-known as a "trap-oxidizer" -
will not be ready In time ror u.se
in 198$ vehicles.
GM fla;st uked the EPA for a
suspension of the anti·pollutlon
rulea on. Sept. 30, but agency
s pokeswoman Martha Casey
said Monday that thete bad been
no action on the reque1t.
Weber said the company la
now "spendln1 con1lderable
runda" to try to meet the rules.
ultbouah he did not have a
1peclric dollaf tl1ure.
The Rea1an admlnlatrallon already ls looking Into whether
the rules, adopted on March 5,
1980, during the Carter
admlnlstrallon . ahou ld bt
relaxed. They were upheld by.
the U.S. Court or Appeals ror t.h•
District or Columbia la1t April
22.
In other action. the Supreme
Court Oil Monday:
~ Airted to declde whether
many roreign companlu
operatlng 1n the United Statea
must comply wtth federal law1
barring employment
discrimination.
-Heard an Oklahoma lawyer
argue t)'iat executing killers
-Refused to 1peed Ul> It.I
con1lderatlon ol a New York
challen1e to t.he .... wu ol the
1980 natklnal cent•.
-A1rHd to deet~ whether a 1~5 federal law requires achool
districts to provide certain deal
children with si1n lan1ua1t
interpreters.
Leader declares war on Poland strikes
WARSAW, Poland (AP) -Solidurily's nation commission
opened a meeti g toda1 to
consider Lech Wal sa 's call ror
a war on wildcat strikers and
the creation of a commission
with power to expel members
who defy lhe union's no·strlke
orders.
M ean w.h il e , a bout 250
Communist Party officials were
charged today with corruption,
the official PAP news agency
reported.
Labor federation sources said
the commiss ion members.
m eeling in Gdansk, 9.'ould
debate internal restraints and
possible disciplinary measures
a~ainst unauthorized strikes.
The le.oder of the independent
unioo propo6ed the disciplinary
powers Monday after
lntervenlng personally to end a
two-week strike by 120,000
workers in Tarnobrzeg.
• Walesa also said It was "only
a matter of days" before strikes
by 12.000 women textile workers
In Zyrardow and 150,000 workers
in Zielona Gora would be settled.
Wa!J!sa said he would propose
creation of the commission to
enforce the national leaders' call
for an end to local strikes at the
m eetin g of the national
committee today in Gdansk.
The meeting was called after
the Sejm. the Polish parliament,
al a meeting last Saturday
called ror an end to strikes. ll
said if this was not heeded, It
would "consider a proposal Lo
equip the government with such
legal means as the situation
required."
Communist government
officials blamed the strikes for
aggravating falling industrial
and coal production and chronic
food sho rtages , Solida rit y's
leaders reply that the losses due
to strikes are negligible and that
the casue of Poland's grave
economic troubles is more than
30 years of mismanag_emenl apd inefficiency by the Com mumsl
Party.
Solidarity, the first legal union
Independent of Communis t
Party control in the Soviet bloc,
won the right to strike durin1
the wave o( labor unrest 141lhe
s ummer of 1980 that resul~in
its own legaliiaUon.
In Tarnobrzeg, a center 01
:.utrur mining and heavy
equipment production about 120
miles south of Warsaw, 100,000
workers went back, to their jobs
after Walesa urged them to give
the national commission time to
negotiate with the government.
However. lhe local union
chapter warned that if the
negotiations ··don 't bring
immediate and pos iti ve
results ... the strike would
rf'sume. .
PAP said 31 of the Communist
Party officials charged by
Po land's public prosecutor
today "held executive positions
in various ortices and a1enciea
of a central level." Among those
charged was Jan Kulpinski, a
former coal mining minister.
and Eugenlusi Pacla, deputy
minister ror the roect tndu.stry,
the report said. It said 98 of
those charged were in custody.
Mo st of the officials were
charged with counterfeiting
documents. accepting bribes.
falsifying work reports. using
s tale -owned mate rials for
private buildings ana
unauthorized use of official
vehicles, PAP said.
QUITTING St<.i l <.> Sl·n .John R r i g g " . H f'' u I I l' r t n n .
announc<•<l ~loncla' th~•l hl·
"ill resign h~ lhl• ~net 111 tht·
't•ar to ht•eornt• a l'l'<tl t"-t.111•
{'O n:-.ultanl ,111<1 lohb~ 1,t
Computer error nixed in bomber crash
.....
' Yacht s tolen
By The Ass~iated Prets
Speculation that an automatic
pilot co mputer may have
contributed to the crash of a
B-52 near La Junta, Colo ...
Friday has been dispelled by an
Air Force spokesman who said
the bombers can't be equippped
with such devices.
Meanwhile, a memorial
service was being held at March
Air Force Base for a Laguna
Beach man and seven crewmen
who were aboard the bomber
when it plowed into rangeland
during a simulated bombing run
Friday.
First Lt. Kendall E. Wallace.
25. whose father, Col. Eu~ene D.
Wallace, li ves in Emerald Bay in
Laguna Beach was the radar
navigator aboard the B-52.
An earlier statement by an Air
Force sergeant s tated the
born ber is piloted by on-board
computers during s imulated
bombing runs so the crew can
concentrate on lhe attack.
But the Air Force later
corrected the statement. saying
B-52s are s trictly fl own
manually by the pilot and the
co-pilot.
Specialists are continuing to
probe the scorched wreckage of
the giant bomber in an effort to
discover the cause of Friday's
crash.
Lt. Wallace is survived by his
wife. Helen. in Newport;
o~ner irate
Tlie weekend theft of a new
36-fool-long catamaran left boat
builder Roger MacGregor
scratching his head and an irate
New Orl ea ns yac htsman
hopping mad in Costa Mesa.
Jet f.ghters collide while refueling
Thieves cut the padlock on a
wheeled gate leading into the
fenced s torag e yard at
Ma c Gregor Ya c hts, 1631
Placentia Ave .. MacGregor
reported Monday.
"We last s~w lhe catamaran,
resting on its big trailer, last
Friday night," he observed. "ll
took a good-sized car or a truck
with towing equipment to get it
out."
EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE,
Fla. <AP) -Two F-15 fighter
jets collided during a refueling
mission 22.000 feet over the Gulf of Mexico. sending one plane
plummeting to a crash while the
second Umped back to base. an
Eglin Air Force base spokesman
said.
The pilot of the downed Eagle
aircraft. who may have ejected
from his aircraft. is missing.
The second pilot was not hurt
and his plane had only limited
dam age, acco rd i n g to
spokesman Lt. Crajg McDaniel.
Air Force and Coast Guard
planes, boats and helicopters
were scouring an area about 60
miles south of Panama City,
Fla., where the plane crashed
Monday night, McDaniel said.
An Air Force base systems
command s pokesman who
refused to be identified said the
pilot of the KC-130 refueling
tanker reportedly s aw what
appeared to be an ejection seat
pop out of the craft.
The KC-130 pilot also "saw
:;omethin g rtylng from th e
colliding aircraft, which may
have been an ejection seat:·
"Someone reported seeing a
flash," said Maj. Bill Campbell.
a base information officer. "But
the aircraft was not on fire when
it was last seen." he said.
The least damaged jet made it
ba c k lo Eglin with "some
Sl ruc tural damage " and
extensive fuel leaks. he added.
"We were lucky the second
one made it back." McDaniel
s::aid .
Both F-15s belong to Eglin's
3Jrd Tactical Fighter Wing.
Each carried a single pilot and
is capable of fl ying up to 2112
times the speed or sound.
The names of the pilots were
not released.
0 E A 0 ).J a x S c h l' r r .
founder of t ht• Re rkt•l<''
Aill'h. \\htch l'hrnn1cled t h~·
:\ l' \\ I, t.' r I I n I h l' s a 11
FraJH'IM'O <.ll't'a. hJl\ dil•d nr
n rntl'I' at ~.') MacGregor's firm . which
employs 150, constructs about
one of the big twin -hulled
fiberglass boats a week.
Crash kills
man; driver
faces charge
College race bias suit set From Page A1 ·'This one was white with a
blue stripe down each or the
flulls ," he reported. "Possibly.
someone might have seen the
thieves and will call me or the
police ......
Added to Ma cGregor 's
headache this morning was the
arrival of the New Orleans boat
'buyer.
A 22-year-old Carson man was
killed early Monday when the car
in which he was riding spun out
of control and crashed on the
northbound San Diego Freeway
at La Paz Road in Mission Vieio.
"He's here screaming for his boat," MacGregor noted. "l A s pokesman for the
may shoot myself. Obviously, California Highway Patrol said
he's first in line for the one we Roman Lomiga. was pronounced
build.this week... dead al the accident site at 12:30
The boat builder observed that · · a · m ·
• the stolen catamaran is valued
at about $22,000 and is complete 6 with galley. head, 44-foot mast
j "and the works." ! MacGregor said he had called
: every police force in the coastal
• area, the Newport Harbor
1 master, the Coast Guard, the
California Highway Patrol and
police in surrounding slates.
The s pokesman said the.
driver, Douglas Rank, 20, also of
Carson, is in stable condition at
Mission Community Hospital in
Mission Viejo with injuries.
R a nk is being held on
suspicion of felony drunken
dri v ing and vehicular
manslaughter, according to the
spokesman ..
Saddleback College officials
say a $1 million lawsµit riled six
months ago against the district
alleging race discrimination in
refusing to hire a black
applicant for an administrative
post could come to trial in
Fe bruary.
Adolph Johnson , 33, an
administritlor at Compton
Community College, has sued
Saddleback in federal court
demanding $1 million in punitive
damages a nd that the
$36,000-a-year job be given to
him.
Johnson, a Lake Forest
resident, was one Of -urree
finalists seeking a district post
as director of off-campus and
evening studies at Saddleback's
Irvine campus.
Court documents say Johnson
was treated "rudely" by District
Chancellor Robert Lombardi in
his interview for the oosition and ! ' Also notified to be on the
lookout for boat and trailer were
180 dealers across the country
who handle MacGregor boats.
~ • "If they see a new catamaran
~·going jnto the waler, we're going
, , to hear about it." he opined.
Retigan eyed
•
' • ~ Mt. St. Helens
r s till erupting
in governor races
I VANCOUVER. Wash. <AP> -
J
A "moderate" level of rock
falls , avalanches and steam
, emissions in Mount St. Helens'
crater jndicat~ the volcano is
Jco nlii\uin g its late s t
1 non-explostve eruption. officials I •say.
That eruption. which began
Friday, is producing a new lobe
• of lava on the northern portion
of the lava dome in the volcano's
amphitheater. "Seismic activity
at the mountain s going down,
but it's not down to low levels,"
Thom Corcoran, a U.S. Forest
Service spokesman. said
Monday.
By The Associated Press
Voters in Virginia and New
Jersey a r e e lecting new
governors today and a key issue
in both races is President
Reagan's effort to c ul the
federal budget down to size.
Mayoral races in Houston,
Detroit and New York, in
addition to large state bond
issues for prisons and highways,
are among other decisions
racing voters around the
country. ·
Reagan and members or his
ad mini s tration have
campaigned for the Republican
gubernatorial candidates in
Virginia and New Jersey.
The New Jersey race pits
O .. ANCl€00AST Diiiy Piiat
cea • ...., .............. n4otMNl7i ................ .....,
Democratic U.S. Rep. James
Florio , w h o talks of
"me an ·s pirited " Reagan
policies. against Republican
challenger Thomas Kean, who
advocates cutting state business
taxes.
In Virginia the contest is
between Democratic Lt. Gov.
Charles Robb, son-in-law or the
late President Lyndon Johnson,
and Repubican Attorney
General Marshall Coleman.
Robb, if he wins, would be the
first Democrat since 1965 to
capture Virginia's governorship.
Coleman has tried to portray
Robb a s the heir to his
rather-ln:law·s costly Great
Society programs. Robb, who
considers h'imsel f a
conservative, says the race ls
not between Reagan and
Jofinson.
"Don't let me down," Reagan
said to an audience ln Richmond
last week. "It la no 1ood
cleaninc up 'Washington il we
ton't elect the right kind of
olftclala at t.he state level."
Re.,an'a economie policies
1 ... • more direct challenge in ..... Voten are conaldertng a
......... refertndum uking
-.. Cou.u to call upon
~ appropriate more
lle8I DWdl tnatead ol •.. ,. ..
that Lombardi refused to shake
hands with Johnson.
Saddleback 's public
information officer , Bill
Schreiber, said Johnson wasn't
treated rudely in h.is interview.
and was passed over for the job
because there was a more
qualified appUcant:
Schreiber said the job was
given to Donald Rickner, who
had been doing a similar job for
the district for three years.
However, a court order has
prevented Saddleback from
naming Rickner to the position
permanently until the lawsuit
comes to trial and a settlement
is reached.
Saddleback has been criticized
for having no full·time black
Instructors or administrators.
District officials say they are
trying to recruit blacks, but
have had difficulty in attracting
qualified personnel to the
district. •
Harbour man arrested
A 46-year·old Huntington
Harbour resident was among 12
people arrested by Los Angeles
police narcotics officers in a
·series of raids that netted
$500,000 in cash and 9.9 lbs. of
cocaine with a street value of
$1.7 million.
Los Angeles police narcotics
officer Roger Langner said the
cash, two handguns and seven
other firearms were seized
Friday at the home of Oscar
Ordonez. 16861 Marina Bay
Drive
Langner said the cocaine was
confiscated at the Cerrilps
residence rented by OrdonM. Hf'
s aid the Huntington Harbour
man was jailed on suspicion or
conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
MOORE. • •
1s expected to last one to two
weeks .
Until Monday, Stokke had not
revealed the defense he planned
to use in the trial. although an
unusual "battered wife" defense
had been mentioned. Stokke
sought in pre-trial motions to
have Moore's confession on Nov.
6 t o police stricken from
evidence.
Judge Myron Brown denied
that motion. Stokke s-aid Monday
h e has doubts about the
confession because detectives
didn't use a tape recorder.
Investigators said Moore told
them: "I killed him; l shot the
doctor:· •
Stokke said Moore actually
said, "I must have killed him ; I
must have shot him."
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L eary, Liddy
find a bond
Self-proclaimed LSD guru
Timothy Leary and
Watergate figure G. Gordon
Liddy m et to d e bate
"freedom vs. authority:" but
they ended up rinding they
had something in common.
.. Gordon and l. we're both
real," Leary told about 800
people at the Boulder. Colo.
Theater. "Of all the people
who went to jail in the 1960s.
there are only two who
absolut e ly were n o t
rehabilit.ated.
"He'd do it again, but he'd
probably watch the tape
around the door." Leary
said . "I 'd do it again.
although I wouldn't let them
plant tbe dope in m y
ashtray." (Leary is a former
resident of Laguna Beach.
Calif.>
-Leary, who ser ved time for
possession of drugs. and
Liddy. who spent 41 :1 years in
prison for orchestrating the
1972 Wate rgat e break-in.
debated Sunday to a chorus
of cheers. whis tles and
applause from an audience
that paid $12, $15 and $18 a
ticket.
The first black mayor of
s tately Newport. R.I .. hall
been sworn in amid some
controversy
City Councilman Paul L.
Gaines took the oath of office
Sunday night but Councilman
Alfred L. Ange l. who has
protes ted Gaines· election.
"as not present
Angel, who received the
highest number of votes
a m ong at-large councilmen
in the September election,
threatened to resign because
Gaines was elected mayor by
the seven -m ember City
Council.
Gaines called on Angel to
decide by Nov 12 on whether
to quit or take the seat to
which he was elected.
In 1968. you could hardly
give away Ronald Reagan
m e morabilia, says Mark
Jacobs, a Chicago collector
o f polit rcal ca mpaign
material
Now the stuff rs so hot that
a n 8-ounce bag of Reagan
Jellybeans bearing a stick-on
presidential seal sells for $4.
Reagan wasn't the only
presidential ca ndidate
represented Saturday at a
s ho"' in Columbus. Ohio,
s ponsored by the Ohio
c hapter of the American
Political Ite ms Collectors.
More than 50 collectors from
acro:,s the country were on
hand Lo displa} and sell their
"ares
Ri c hard Burton will
portray composer Richard
Wagner in a n e ig ht-hour
lt>IC'-'ision biograph) to be
filmed ne.xl year, the British
ctovos nt•r nw co•it remoitr•turfs ne•r "«mel H'9f!S tn tr.. upper )Os
to m10 .OS ,.. ... N <°"st •nd 1n '""
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high WednHdlly 7S.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA Ory
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slightly --...a1 High• In the '°' near Ille CN SI ano Ille JOI Inland
v11i.u. Lows In llle olOs In IN IOw•r •ltvallon•
Elsewtwre, ll9hl v•rl•ble wlnOl
tl\r0U9ll tonight H<e¢ westerly I lo
14 knots •llernoonl Sovth to
sovtllwest •-II 1to•1"1 Sonw 111911
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Rain also fell 1r111e Aeclfl<
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Temper•hwft around the nation
r1~ from a low of 43 c1e9rett al
Mectford, Ore'., -Mlsto<il•. Mont.,
to a 111911 of 90 •I Palm Se>r'"9s
For t~. rain wn forec•st over
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producers hne announced.
"We approached Richard
Burton cauUoualy ana he la
very enthusluUc,'' said lo
Luat11. spokesman for the
producers, London Trust
Cultural Product10111 Ltd.
"lle 'a also In very good
health."
Vaneua aed1rave It
considering an orter to play
the composer's second wife,
Coalma Wa1aer. Dapbae
Wasne r, the composer·s
great·1randdau1hter. will
play Prlncesa Metterolcb.
The $7.5 million production
is to be released
lnternationally In 1983, the
centenary of the German
composer's death.
Actors a lready st1ned
i nclude Si r R a lph
Richard.son, who plays one of
King Ludwig 11111 ministers,
and Iris h actress Gemma
Craven as Wagner 's first
wife, Minna.
Orange County Superior
Court Judge Edward WaJUn
was abo~t halfway through
his morning "law and
mo~ions " calendar Friday
when an oddly familiar
attorney burs t Into the
courtroom.
.. Let me make one thing
pe rfectly clear." said the
man with the ski-slope nose
lo the obviously stunned
JUdge.
Then, tui:ning to a court
reporter, the attorney said,
.. My secretary. Rose Mary
Woods, has been unemployed
for a long time "
And. a s quickly as the
at t or n ey wearing the
Richard MUhous Nixon mask
e ntered, he left.
And the u sua lly
unflappabl.e Judge Wallin
s tammered som ething about
taking a recess.
\la ri1la11d state I rooper$
thrnk former governor
.\larnm ."vfandel. now serving
o prison term for mat/ fraud
011d rackeleer111g . would be ri
c11111d add1t"'n 111 the
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TOOAY
Hltfl tt:1011.m. ..__
What do you like about lhe Daily Piiot? What don't you like"
Gall lhe number ~low and your messa1e will be recorded.
tr11ns<'rabed and dcltvertd to the appropriate edit.or.
'the same 24 hour answering service may be used to record let·
len to the editor on any topic Mallbo• contributors must Include
their name amt telephone number for verirlcation. No clrculallon
rallt., please.
Tt'll u~ what's on your mind.
.. , ...
Cringe Cout DAILY PILOT/Tue1day, November 3, 1081
HOT WEATHER SUNSET Warm
temperatures has brQugbt Orange Co-ast
residents out to the :'-lewporl J{arbor .Jett~
a nd other coast al spots to 'i(1\\ c·nlorful
sunsc.•h
Ruling due
in Laguna
church case
The two factions fighting for
control of a Laguna Beach
church will hear the results or
an Orange Coun ty Superior·
Court j udg e 's decision
Wednesday at 11 a .m .
That's wheo Judge Edward
Wallin sa,jd he would announce
which of. two organizations
should be allowed to use the
Church of Religious Science
facility on Laguna Canyon Road.
The dispute involves on one
hand, founding m embers of the
five-acre church. On the other
side of the controversy are
fo llo w ers of Indian gur u
Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, who
now occupy the ch urch
premises.
Under a temporary court
order, both parties are allowed
to use the church facilities. But
P .J . Toelkes, an attorney for the
R ajneesh group, told Judge
Wallin Friday the arrangement
Is not world.rig out.
Uoder the· injuoction, the
original occupants of the church
can use the facility each Sunday,
alt e rnating services in the
afternoon one week and
mornings the next. They can
also use the premises Monday
and Wednesday nights.
Followers of the guru can use
the church other times.
He claimed in his court
presentation that the founding
members essentially abandoned
the ~hurch.
But Betty Mc Mullen said it
was "unfair" to say that the
founding members abandoned
the church.
County wins round
in hospital dispute
The Orange Co unt y
government has won an early
round of arbitration over
disputed payments for indigent
medical care at the UC Irvine
Medical Center
Lawyers for the county have
notified officials that arbitrator
Ro bert Leventhal decided in
favor of the county.on the issue
of reimbursement procedures
New drug
unit arrests
3 in Dana
The Orange County Sheriff's
ne w south county narcotics
squad has made its first major
bust , arresting three people in
Dana Point a nd confiscating
drugs worth an estimated
$53,000, authorities s aid.
The. si)(-member squad that
began on Oct. 24 to cover only
the south county arrested its
three suspects a fter us ing a
search warrant to enter a house
at 33971 Cape Cove, sa id
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart. ·
Arres ted on s us picion of
possession with intent to sell
cocaine and lesser c harges
Friday were Guy Zimbardi. 29.
and Donald Challenger, 30. both
residents of the house. and
Cathleen Bower . 23, of Orange,
said Hart.
They were booked into Orange
County Jail in lieu of $15.00Q
bail, he said.
The drug r a id was made
public on Monday afternoon.
based on community hos pital
rates
The decision m eans the county
p r evails in a dis pute over
roughly $500,000. said a county
s pokes man.
However , there is much more
to come. The county government
and the university are still at
odds over a r e maining S7 5
million in disputed billings.
Most of the disputes involve
bil ls county officials have
refused lo pay. claiming the)
are e'\cessive.
University o fficial s.
conversely, have argued that the
services were needed apd
payment shouldn 't be refused by
county administrators who
never saw the patients.
The issue is currently under
discussion during arbitration
meetings . University officials
have proposed that a sample of
112 of the more than 70,000 cases
should be used to decide the
r t!st, while county officials have
not yet made their presentation
the spokesman said
The issue decided last week
involves use of a figure kno~TI
as th e community rat e
adjustment factor. whicti was
implemented in July 1979.
The rate. calculated on the
basis of other local hospital
rates. was used to insure that
the county paid market-rate
prices for services for its poor
people. Arbitration focused on
whether the rate s hould be
applied before or after third
pa rly payements s uch as
medical were deducted. the
spokesman said.
" . ..
~~ Storekeeper Monte and Teri are wearing DISCUS Sweat-
shlrtS and-Pants. Available in both zip front and pullover
with hoods. Choose from seven colors.
A store that offers fine traditional sportswear •
for men. women. and boys.
BankAmericard!Master Charge W.•• cliff Plaza
---
Orenge Co11t DAILY PILOT/TUHday, November 3, 1981
U.S .• help to Libyans rapped
State Department says Yank.ai d in Chad venture ~against peace'
WASHINGTON (AP) -American ciUzena have helped
maintain Libyan Air Force
1nane1 and have accompanied
Llbfan troops on ct\.arter nl&hta
to Chad, where Libyan lorces
bave Intervened, tfle. State
Department has said.
"We do regard this as wrong
and a1a1nst peace and stability
1n tbla re1ion," Dean Fischer,
the State Department
•a>okeaman said Tuesday.
fucber said he didn't know
bow many Americans were
involved, or whether they were
Russian
01artyrs
canonized
NEW YORK <AP) -Czar
Nicholas II, his family and about
S0,000 other Christians slain
during or after the Russian
Revolution have been canonized
as saints during ceremonies at a
Manhatlltll cburch.
The two·part, six -h our
canonization rite was held last
weekend at the headquarters of
the Russian Orthodox Church
Outside Russia, located at 73 E.
93rd St. More than 1,000 people
attended the ceremony honoring
martyrs the church said were
slain by the communists.
Bishop Gregory. prelate of the
sect in North America, said they
canonized Russia's last supreme
autocrat because he was
''murdered" for being a strict
upholder "of the splendid .
concept or the Orthodox state:·
However, two other major
Russian Orthodox churches in
America, as well as other
Christian faiths. rejected the
proclamation of sainthood.
An assistant chancellor of the
church, Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky
said that many Russian emigres
believe the canonization or the
czar to be at least premature.
But he said that most of the
members of bis church seem to
regard the canonization as "a
matter of conscience," for their
group, and is a good reminder of
those who died for their faith.
Bishop Gregory said the
church had waited 64 years
before bes towing sainthood
because "suddenly and
unexpectedly we were able to
contact reliable persons in the
U.S .S.R. who provided us with
ample information and lists of
martyrs.''
The Church Abroad. as the
sect calls itself, was formed in
exile in 1920. It has about 140
parishes in the United States
and Canada and an estimated
worldwide me mbership of
150,000.
Nicholas, his wife. Alexandra,
crown prince Alexei and the
princess Tatiana, Olga and
Alexandra were shot to death in
July of 1918 in the city of
Ekaterinburg <now Sverdlovsk)
on the orders of the local
government which feared the
advanc e of counter ·
revolutionary forces.
The bodies of the imperial
family were reportedly burned
and their remains tossed down a
mine shaft.
continuing their activities ln
support of the Ubyan Air Force.
"Libya bu been 1uccea1ful ln
recruiting ex·patrlatea,
Including Americans, to service
various types of aircraft,
including Libyan Air Force
C·130s and Chinook helicopters,"
he said.
The New York Times -quoted
some or those involved Sunday
a s s a y t·n g t h e L i by a n
intervention in Chad, which the
Reagan administration baa
condemned, might not have
been possible without the
support of Americans.
"I don't know what would be
the truth or that allegation,"
Fischer said. "Our information
is that they have not been
pilots."
Libyan forces intervened in
Chad earlier this year and have
maintained lts forces ,there
slnce.
The Rea1an admlnlatratlon
baa condemned the intervention
as an lnvuion and has called for
the withdrawal of Libyan
troops.
Fischer said the United States
miaht be wllling to provide
financial s upport to a
peace·keeplna force in Chad
from the Organization of African
Unity. The administration hopes
such a force would supplant
Libyan forces in that country, he,
said.
The Americans helpln1 the
Libyan Air Force were recruited
by Libya, Fischer said. But be
declined to comment on the
specific involvement of a lormer
U.S. intelligent agent, Edwin P.
Wilson, who the Times said did
the actual recruiting.
Fischer said Wilson la
c:urrently under a federal
Indictment and he therefore
could not comment.
But he confirmed "that
American clth:ens have been
crew members on fll1ht1 from
Libya to Chad on United African
Airways." The airline ls a
civlllan Libyan aviation
company which does charter
work.
"We r e gard it as
reprehensible and against the
Interests of peace and security
in the region for anyone,
including AmeriClln citizens, to
contribute to Colonel Moammar
Khadaty's ability to carry out
his policies · of aggression,
s ubversion and terrorism,"
Fischer said . Khadafy is
president of Libya.
.. ,. ..........
ARMED LAUNDRESS A Chadian woman guerrilla tn
camouflage uniform keepl-1 her rifh.· read~ us ~he clot·~
laundr\' in eastern Chad She i~ a memht•r 11f ll a~~an
Habre:s guerrilla force.
Americans to . help pay for TMI cleanup
WASHINGTON CAP> -No
matter who you are and no
matter how far you Jive. from
Harris burg, Pa., you'll be
helping foot the bill for cleaning
up after the billion-dollar
nuclear accident at Three Mile
Island.
The accident happened March
28, 1979, and the plant still sits -
idle and dangerous -with eight
feet or radioactive water on the
floor .. • E v en after it's deco n ·
taminated, the damaged reactor
may never produce electricity
.again.
Whether the clean·up money
comes from utility bills, stock
dividends,.taxes·or -as is likely
-a combination of the three, all
Americans will be dunned for
decontamination costs.
Already , the f e d e ral
government h as spent $1 2
million on radiation research at
the disabled plant. Another $19
million is budgeted for this year.
Now Congress must decide
whether to endorse a Reagan
administration recommendation
to spend $100 million more for
cleanup. Congress is also
weighing legislation that would
for ce utility -companies
nationwide to contribute to the
project.
General Public Utilities Corp ..
owner of the crippled Three Mile
Island plant, is warning that
without government help It will
go bankrupt. Utility analysts
have told Congress that GPU's
bankruptcy would s hrive l
capital investment in_ electric
utilities and cripple the entire
industry.
Not everyone buys that
argument.
''It's a game or nuclear
chicken. Who's going to be the
first to blink, the Congress or
GPU?" said Rep. Edward
Martey, D·Mass., who opposes
federal cleanup aid for TMI. "ll
we blink because of their threat,
we end up picking up part of the
tab that belongs squarely on the
s h ou lders of th~ utility industry."
Market and other opponents or
federal aid Cor TMI believe
.,. .........
No matter~ far you live from Harrisburg. Pa .. you will be helping pay the bill for cleaning up after
the Three Mile Island nuclear accident of March 1979. This 1981 photo shows cylindrical building housing
reactors and four tall cooling towers.
utility companies would produce
ihe money to buoy GPU if there
were no possibility of federal
help.
And the plea for federal funds
is particularly galling to
lawmakers who were forced to
cut job training projects and the
school lunch program this y~ar
under the Reagan
administration 's austere
spending program.
"It's a budget·busting bailout
of a privately owned utility."
said Rep. Richard Ottinger,
D·N.Y., chairman of the House
energy conservation and power
subcommittee. "The Reagan
administration continues to
spout Its rhetoric about the
magic of the marketplace while
it quietly spends millions of
dollar& to save the nuclear
industry from the verdict of the
marketplace."
Utility executives claim that
some ledeu.l .l'.e&po.nsibillty for
nuclear acciden~ were implied
when the U.S. government
offered financial in~entives to
build nuclear power plants.
Opponents of federal aid note
that the utilities have never
s hared their profits with the
government.
In addition , the u,tility
executives say the Energy
Department and the Nuclear
Reg ulatory Commission will
be n e fit from research a nd
development conducted during
cleanup at the plant.
''The federal government
spent $12.8 billion In 1979 dollars
from 1950 to 1979 to encourage
the commercial use of nuclear
power," Louis T. Austin Jr.,
nuclear task force chairman of
the Edison Electric Institute,
told Ottinger 's subcommittee
this fall.
"The T MI accident
demonstrated that neither the
ef f orts of the f edera l
government nor the electric
utility industry were sufficient
to avoid the resultant Joss. We
both have an underlying
responsibility to learn from the
exp e r ien ce and assist in
decontaminating the facility,"
Austin said.
But in the R ep ub ·
li ca n ·contr ol led Senate
where approval of federal
c leanup money is expected,
Democratic opponents s a y
manufacture r s of nuc lear
hardware should help pay for
cleanup before the government
steps in.
"Compan.ies like
Westinghouse and Babcock &
Wilcox who make the reactors
and profit handily from the
nuclear program haven't been
asked J.O come up with any of the funding,.; Sen. Gary Hart,
D-Colo., said.
The EEI. which represents 200
uti l ities, has pledged to
contribute $192 million for the
cleanup. To make it easier for
EEi members to collect that
m oney from ratepayers, the
organization has asked for
l egi s l atio n making the
contribution mandatory.
So far, the cleanup of TMI is
es ti m ated to cost about S1
billion, but further delays could
e scalate the cos t. GPU has
e-ichausted ils $l00 million in
available nuclear insurance
money to vent gas from the
plant and prepare for chemical
decontamination.
To produce an additional $700
oillion, Pennsylvania Gov. Dick
Thornburgh has proposed a
funding plan endorsed by
President Reaian.
Under Thornburgh's plan, the
utility industry and the federal
government each would pay $190
million, the GPU would pay $2(5
million a nd th~ states of-
Pennsylvania and New Jersey
would contribute a total of $45
million.
Critics. pointing to the Reagan
administration's promise of only
$123 million, predict that the
governor 's plan will sputter for
lack of funds -a suggestion
that infuriates Thornburgh.
State spending tops $1,000 per capita
W ASJilNGTON (AP> -For
lh e fir s t time , state
fovemments spent more than
1,000 for each resident In l!B>,
the Census Bureau reported.
Nationwide, the bureau said,
state governments spent
$1,010.43 per resident, up from
$913. 79 the year before.
This general spending, for
such things as welfare, police
protection and edutatJon, varied
widely from state to state.
Alaska spent at the highest
rate, $4,827 per resident, easily
outdistancing the field. HawaU
was No. 2 at $1,595 per person
and Florida had the lowest
spending, $719 per resident.
The new report showed •totaJ
general expenditures by state
governments up 10.5 percent
from 1979. Total expenditures,
including pension payments and
utlllty and liquor store finances,
were up 14. 7 percent to $257 .8
billion.
Revenues, on the other hand,
were up 12.1 percent lo $277
billion.
Every state spent more on
education than any other
function, the bureau reported.
T he total education expense
born by state governments was
up 13.1 percent to S87 .9 billion.
The states spent $44.2 billion
on public welfare, up $5.3 billion
primarily because of an
increase ln Medicaid payments.
Turning to revenue, taxes
provided 58. 7 percent of state
income with sales taxes
accounting for the largest share
at $43.2 billion. State income
taxes raised $37.1 billion,
corporation taxes $13.3 billlon,
motor fuel taxes, $9.7 billion and
other taxes raised lesser
a~ounts.
State income from other
governments -mostly federal
aid -totaled $61.9 billion, up
from $.54.5 billion. The biggest
item was fe d eral welfare
payments, $24. 7 billion.
Thirteen states have lotteries
and these raised $2.1 blllion.
Michigan received the most
from lotteries. $487 .8 million.
Here is the state·by·state per
capita general spending:
Alabama, $920.16; Alaska,
$4 ,826.92 ; Arizona, $900.26 ;
Arkansas, $872.10; CaWornia,
$1 ,243.29; Colorado, $893.23;
Connecticut, $951.50; Delaware,
$1 ,378.28;
Florida, $719.21 ; Georgia,
$837 .05 ; Hawaii, $1 ,595.18;
Idaho, W71.44; llllnola, $967.36;
Indiana, $810.27; Iowa, $1,066.72;
Kansas, $890.27; Kentucky,
'$1,150.89; Louisiana, $1,061.64;
Maine, $1,016.06 ; Maryland,
$1,124.27 ; Massachu setts,
$1 ,170.46; Michigan, $1 ,135.53;
Minneso ta , $1 ,2 42 .68 ;
Mississippi, $975.83; Missouri,
$735.63: Montana, $1,097.22;
Nebraska, $853 .85 ; Nevada,
$1,022.87; New Hampshire,
'$798.38; New J ersey, $989.68 ;
New Mexico, $1 ,279.29; New
York, Sl,215.73 ; North Carolina,
$909.13; North Dakota, Sl,307.24; . .-,. ~Ohio, $815 .83 ; Oklahoma,
$948.04 ; Oregon, $1 , 134.57;
Pennsylvania, $869.28-; Rhode
I s land, $1 ,250 .43 ; South
Carolina, $897.51; South Dakota,
$1,032.35; "' Tennessee, $771 .81 ; Texas,·
$760.13 ; Utah.a $1,093.34 ;
Vermont, $1 ,189.59; Vir&inia,
$920.08; Washington, $1,175.77;
West Virginia, $1 ,160.59;
Wisconsin, $1,184.77 ; Wyoming, jl~S28.40. . .
Baby powder inhalation dangers cited
NEW YORK (AP> -Careleu
uae of baby powder poses a
danaer to lnf anta who inhale lt,
cau1in1 cou1blna spelll,
vomltlnc °" pneumonia, HYI a
pedlatnclan who speciallzea in
polaon control and accident
prneadon. Dr. Ho•ard llofenaon,
director ot the DOltoa control center at tbe r<aa11u County
Mldleal C.ter p New York,
said 92 cues of baby powder
inhalation were reported to the
center ln the flrst 1lx months of
this year.
Mofemon said in a telephone
interview that be doesn't think
the problem ii unJque to N uaau
County. "If we're aeelne it,
others are aeeine it too," be
said.
Moat of the lnbalaUoDI
occurred ln childrett 1 ... than 2
years old who were havinl tbelr
diapers changed and were able
to grab the bab1 powdn
container and Up it Into tbllr
mouths.
MoftnlClll, a former held al
the aecldenl pr••••Uoa
com mlttee of lb• A••rtea
Academ1 al ~ NM M
tells bia patilldl • to -powder.
''MOit panidi
~~ffiIT ~~· I
State high cotirt
to rule on· tax
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Loa
Angeles County has argued that
a half.percent sales tax to aid
transit projects was
constitutional. despite a
contention by the state attorney
general that lt violated tenets of
Proposition 13.
Powers argued that the words
special tax has been used ln
multiple ways and "ha& no clear
defined meaning.''
''It ls simply not clear what
Proposition lS means In this
capacity," Powers said. "We
have a tax that was approved by
the majority of voters in Loa
Angeles County, which ls not an
easy thing. The need for rapid
transit is enormous. II this tax ls
not used to fund rapid transit,
we wlll see rapid transit fares go
up rapidly.·:
The Callfomia Supreme Court
took the arguments under
submission.
Proposition A was passed by
54 percent of the county's voters
last year, but the attorf!ey
general's office declared· last
February that the tax was not
validly enacted and was
unconstitutional under
Proposition 13, the act authored
by Howard Jarvis that cut
property taxes in half and said
that any new special tax enacted
by special districts would have
to be approved by two-thirds of
the voters.
Powers emphasned that the
voters willingly agreed to be
taxed to fund ma ss
transportation.
Attorneys for the Los Angeles
County Transportation
Commission, which would
receive approximately $214
million a year from the sales
tax, Argue(i Monday that
Proposition 13 was aimed only at
property taxes. Attorney James
John· Knox, another attorney
for the Transportation
Commission, said that,
ironically. Proposition l3 was
passed with 64.8 percent of the
vote statewide and not
two-thirds or the vote.
Gas oline prices
take slig ht drop
John Finley, representing the
side that says the tax Is
unconstitutional under
Proposition 13. argued that
Proposition 13 stated that the
loss of property tax revenue
should either be replaced by
additional local taxes -to be
restricted by a two·thirds vote -
or replaced by the state through
its budget surplus, by personal
income taxes or corporate taxes.
SAN FRANCISCO <A P >
Gasoline prices dropped slightly
last month in Northern
California and Nevada, the
California State Automobile
Association reported Monday.
A survey of 6SO retail dealers
showed a decline of four·tenths
of a cent in the average price of
a gallon of regular grade gas,
two-tenths of a cent for premium
leaded and unleaded and
011e·tenth of a cent for regular
unleaded. The average prices
were Sl.41 for regular, Sl.52 for
premium and $1.49 for unleaded.
However, Chief Justice Roee
Byrd questioned the fact that,
historically, it h as been
impossible to get a two·thirds
vote on anything. She asked,
··Do you think voters knew that
when they voted this (the
two ·thirds majority
requirement > it would be
impossible to raise new taxes? ..
She said that the inability \<>
raise local taxes would send city
governments to Sacramento
"with hat in hand" to get a
majority vote from politicians
elected by the majority.
Stanford doctors
stress survival
STANFORD <AP} -The cost or Boyd
Paulsen's successful battle against Hodgkin's
disease, once almost always a terminal cancer,
was high: sterility, massive doses of radiation and
chemicals which made him unbearably sick, a
significant risk of leukemia.
Now doctors at Stanford University Medical
Center. where Paulsen was last treated 12 years
ago, are working to make the price of surviving
Hodgkin's disease much lower.
"We're now looking into quality of life." said
Henry S. Kaplan. a pioneering radiologist. "It's a
measure or our success that in a disease that once
was invariably fatal. we noW'have the luxury of
looking into that."
The cancer involves lymph nodes and usually
strikes more men than women. Most victims, like
.Paulsen. are in their 2Us or 305.
According to Stanford researchers. the
national rive.year survival rate for Hodgkin's is S5
percent. .
But some cancer centers, Like Stanford, which
are busy trying out new therapies, report a much
higher survival rate. At Stanford. in the latest
trials of radiation and drug therapy carerully
developed in light of each patient's degree of the
-disease, 86 percent of Hodgkin's victims have
survived seven years after diagnosis.
Relapses, if they occur, usually come in the
first five years. says Saul A. Rosenberg, a
Stanford oncologist. Thus, he predicts. the "cure"
rate -at least 10 years' survival -will probably
amount to between 80 and 85 percent.
Buoyed by the success. Kaplan and Rosenberg
feel it's time to experiment on the radlation·drug
regimen to reduce the potent side effects of the
"cure."
It was Kaplan. who. dissatisfied with the
palliative radiation which was the presumed
course 25 years aso. increased dosages.
Today. a survivor of Hodgkin 's has a S percent
chance of developing a fatal leukemia and could
develop inflamm~tion of the lungs and heart and
decreased lmmutrity to infections, the doctors say.
Rosenberg and Kaplan are now administering
less toxic drug combinations for P•lients who are
in tfle early stages of the disease and who have a
favorable prognosis.
These patients. after their first radiation
treatment, are receiving a combination of three
drugs, vinblastfne, bleomycin and methotrell8te,
or VBM. Formerly, they would have had a
four·drug combination that would almost always
make males sterile and triner the risk of
developlnl another cancer later.
Patients with more develope4 cases of the
disease will receive a lour-drug therapy that the
researchers hope will be less damaeln& than the
usual regimen, which would be only used ln event
of a relapse.
The experimental four·dru.J combination,
called ABVD, has been tested-by Dr. Gianni
Bonadonna or the Cancer Institute of Milan.
Bonadonna reports encoura1ln1 results in
advanced cases, with less sterility and far leas
likellbood of lri11erin1 another cancer.
Dr. Vincent OeVita, wbo leads the National
Cancer lnatltute, recently questioned Stanford's
cbolce ol the tbree-dru1 combination. >.. mucb at
it la dealrable to 1..,-e patlen.ta the unpleasant side
eff ecll ol the tradlUonal chemotherapy. doctors
should llV• paUenll the molt tffed.lve proven
treatll*lt, be aald.
K8Plaa and Rosenber1 counter D•Vlta'a
mllclam bJ ..,iDI firtt te•ta of VBll an tll8eoiarllillal. Belldel, &bey NJ', more poteill -_.... tn .. m•• e• be UMd for ,........ ...... t .. pcilll..Utotbe ......... l .
...,.d'I two~ el wort wttll ~··· ....... ilP!a ........ GD ''eliateal l\MIMI -
._. ...... •• Uft t81'11111 Olll to be n-.•• ·-~~t of i.m ,..ta treattd'"ll& --~ alDH 1111 ban Md a relapH, tb• ~ ......
.. -
{
Orange CoHt DAil. Y PtLOTfTunday, November 3, 1981 8
Farm· election
thrown out m· r for UFW • Will
..........
STAYING RT -Actress Kim Novak. 48. leads her aerobics
exercise class in Carmel. She started the class. featuring a
r egimen of bends. lifts and stretches to music. to stay in
shape and he lp others keep trim. She exercises 80 minutes
daily 'non·stop.
• Man survives 7 days
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A young
man lay seven days in the
wreckage of his car before being
found by a girl on horset.ack.
and authorites said today it was
"a miracle .. that Gary Corbett
survived.
But Corbett, 22, was In critical
condition Monday in University
Hospital.
"A massive infection .. spread
throughout his body as he lay
under the car in a concrete
culvert, a hospital spokeswoman
' said . At leas t twice. the
wreckage was flooded by water
from rain.
The California Highway
Patrol said Corbett. a single
man living in Descanso, lost
control or his car shortly after
leaving his sister's home in Pine
Valley about 40 miles east of San
Diego.
The two·door. Japanese·made
station wagon crashed 15 feet off
Star Valley Road at the east
edge of Alpine and 14 feet down
SACRAMENTO <AP> -ln a
vlclory for the United Farm
Workers, the state farm labor
board has thrown out a farm
election alter flndiog that U,.
grower unlawfully aided
employees in an anti·UFW
drive.
The decision announced
Monday by the Agricultural
Labor Relations Board in the
case of Abatti Farms, an
Imperial Valley vegetable
grower. ls the first to dismiss a
decertification election on the
grounds or improper
Involvement by the grower.
In a decertification election,
employees who earlier chose a
union as their bargaining
representative vote on whether
to remove the union.
Two other cases are pending
before the board in which the
UFW claimed employees who
circulated decertifica\ion
petitions were really acting on
behalf or the grower, said ALRB
spokesman Bill Camp.
The board found that Abatti
had given organiiers of the
antl-UFW petition drive leaves
of absence, an extra bonus and
other benefits, had brought them
together with a lawyer who
in wreck
into the culvert. A large tree
obscured the wreckage.
Sherry Musfelt was on her
horse when s he saw the
overturned car last Saturday
and rode home to tell her father.
Although Co rbett was
unconscious, he regained •ial
consciousness by the ti. he
was cut free of the wreckage
and put into a rescue helicopter
for a .flight to University
Hospital.
Compare our rate:
•
Annual rate of interest on Tei. n Investment Certificates•
Compare our term:
represented them without ~
· charee. and had held a
Christmas party ·where
decerlilication petitions were A
clreulated.
The Abatti case. decided by a n1
unanimous three·member ALRB 14
r.anel , included two other i,f
mportant rulings: ol
-A grower cannot refuse to rf
bargain with a union just U
because a decertification vote is
pending, ir the irower "'
improperly influenced the '''
election. I I •
-A grower cannot lay off fl
employees as protection against
a strike un~ess a strike la •11
actually imminent. 111
Abatti employees, who
number as many as 500 durin& ·
oeak harvests. chose the UFW [ as their bargaining repre· ·
sentative in January 1976
In December 1978, employees
collected signatures on a (
decertification petition and held
another election.
The preliminary results were )
l49·125 to remove the union, but
challenges were lodged against
another 114 ballots. most of v.
~~~':1 x~:t~t ;'a0Jk~~:c~~~:~~ ·~
that year'. JJ
While the e l ection was .,
pending, the board said, Abatti M
refused to bargain with the
U F W . Monday · s dee is Ion 1.,
th rowing out the election "'
ordered the grower lo resume 11 bargaining and pay union o
workers for anything they lost :11
because or the grower's refusal h
to bargain. 11 The board said there was not 11.
enough evidence to prove that
the decertification campaign •I:
was AbaUi's idea, but there was ,
ample evidence that the grower ,,
had given unlawful assistance to
the campaign. 11
The board also found that the ,.1 grower had discri minated
illegally in discontinuing the tt
ha r vest of rapini. 1.
·1
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Compare our minimum:
'1 n
n
All things considered, Avco Thrift's Term Investment Certificates offer you considerably moif
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We also offer 8Y2% Passbook Investment Accounts wilh a minimum investment of $25.
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11vall11bl~ to Californ111 reslden1s only
~L7AVCO THRIFT
25252 Cabot Road
~na Hills, California 92653
(714) 581-1700 ,
•
620N~rt Center Drive, Suite 101
N~rt Beach, California 92660
(714) 644-9490
,.
1.-00 ID .... CHMLil'I ANOB..I
TMASUMHUNT
THIMUPPETS
GUMI Oon Knolll
• HAWAII FlVE-0
A amall lown ule9man wH-
,_ the murder ol a
pro.tllUlt bu1 relu-to
t•llly
I 9UIM.88 AOOAT
OtCK CAVETT
"TV Journall1ta' Guests
David Brinkley. Ted Kop-
pel. Harry Rea-. Rob-
ert MKNeff (Part 2 ol 3)
(I) Cll8 NEWS rl.== rlJ MOVIE
• • •·~ "On The Town"
(19501 a-){euy. Frank
Slfla1ra A tno of salt0t1
teem up wltll a taxi driYer
and en antllroc)ologis1 to
find 1 beeuhtul girt whOM
picture is dl99layed In the
subway
(l)MOV1E
• • "Ta<ror Train" (19801
Ben Johnson, Jamie l H
Cur111 A college lrata<n1-
ty'1 New Year's masq~
ac:te party IUf'ns into a
'"911tmare ""*' a vtndlc·
llYt QU911 ltartl kitting Olf
the parly-gotfa. 'R'
1:30 CJ llULl.SEYE
• WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER
Eos1eln g1 .... all his pa11 to
Gabe wflerl a counselor
ltllt him he's not smart
enoug11 10 be a Y8t &I l<CET NEWS8EA T '19 9U81HE88 REPORT
(l)QIHEWS III BAANEY Mill.EA
FISll wants 10 Quit when
11e'1 put on restrlGted Outy
beea.IM of his health, l>ut
Oletrlcll 111111 111m out ol •I
Of) THI! SECAET OF
BOYNE CASTLE
GleM C«bell anct Kurt
RuSMll star N'I 1111s family
adventure set 1n Ireland
ot a young American J>oy
and h•s tnsll friend who
beeome 1nvol11ed In an
ese»onage plot surround·
1no a detec11ng scientist
(Pan t)
7:00 I) C8S NEWS
D MeC NEWS U HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Fon11e •I thrust into 1118
rote ol lather when he lies
to dltclpllne Spike tor lall·
1"11 pan 1n 1 burglaty
U ABCNEWS CJ LYNNSHAacn.FOAO
SHOW e w·A·s·H
B J bec;omes a surrogtte
father 10 a Korean family
when the young daughter
_.., medical assestance
tor ._ 1a1i-
(I) JOKER'S WILD
8) OVEREASY
Guett Larry Hagman O m MACNEIL /LEHRER
REPORT
TIC TAC DOUGH
®) ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
G!) THE MUPPETS
GUt!St Jean Stapleton
C'MOVIE
• • ·Tr.. Baltimore Bui·
lel' ( 1980) James Coburn
Ornar Sharif A small-time
pool hustle• must raise
S20, 000 and W>n 1 big
tautnament betore lie can
ha\18 a rematc;ll witll en Old
~t --whOh••
losl 11 any game 'PG'
(O)MOVIE
NO SAINT '.\1erlin Olson st urs us u
~old miner who occasionull.' pretend~ to
be a Catholic prie t to keep a uthoritie~
I mm dosing down his ot'pha nage in
Futhcr :\Jurphy .. premiering tonight at
~ on Channel t
* • • * "Animal Crack·
era" ( 1930) Mer• Brother•.
Marg1te1 Dumont Capt11n
Spaulding, Ille Al•k:an
eaplofw . returns lrom a
recent ••f>9d1tl00 to wrea.11
ha11oc 11 a 1oclal y
m11ron'1 -kana party
'G'
OM.CATAAZ
Thi1 dOCUfl*\l8ry IOokl al
Ille PtlSOt'I ol Alealtaz
7:20 CJ N8A IASKTUAU.
LOS Angelal Lakatl YI
Portland Ttall Blaz8f's
7:30 I) 2 ON THE TOWH
Feature<! • look It the
lauding MondaYI btotl\ert,
Iha mod ballla 'It Cll1S10-
ga. a nllUf'at geyset ttlal
may Ptedlct ewt~uakea.
e IOOll 11 h<>w c11ampaone
Is made. a !amity-run win-
ery o a FAMILY FEuo U LAVERNE& SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
A Gefmen cHll1ytty man
lainll In Ille glt1• apart•
ment D lYEONLA.
Fnture<t a vt11t to a gUl'I
club 1n Bevetty Hills wnere
alfluenl clllz-are learn-
ing to use lite 111ms. a too«
11 whO Wf1tN commere18ls.
a YISll ..,,lh tome lltgll
dlYerS
8) M•A•S•H
Tile per1onna1 of Iha
•071th respond In Iha Ult.I·
el mannet wtlen supply
llna 811 CUI "-1 and llley
lace cr11ical SllOr18Q8$
Cl) 'TIC TAC DOUGH m MACNEIL t LEHREA
REPORT
~NEWS
({) P.M. MAGAZINE
Visit Ille most sought alter
stunt driving team 1n HOiiy·
wooc:t
@) YOU ASKED FOR rT
H HBOSHEAK
PREVIEW: NOVEMBER
Husband -and·w1le comlCs
Jerry S11tler and Anne
Meara introduce the mov-
'"· spec1a1s and sports
8"ents com•no to Home
Boa ~ in NoYembe< 0 A BARE TOUCH Of'
MAGIC
W0<t<1-ctass megoc:lan Shi-
mada the smok_.tlng
Camz1n1 and an exciting
e•ecutlOn by gutllohne
are laatu•ed in this lun-
11118<1 8Yen1ng of ShOwgttlS
and dan••no mag1<:al feats
Z MOVIE
• *' • Vincent, Franco<s.
Paul And T lie Otlle•s'
( 197•1 Yves Montand
Michel Picc:011 Three men
form a deep bond of
tr>en<l$hop that sustains
them through a --of
pe<s.onal and proless1one1
crises.
8:00 I) Cl) THE DUKES OF
HAZZARD
Uncle J-gets arrested
when lie at1emp11 to llelP a
fuglll\19 Meape trom eo.s
Hm:.s clutcllM
D QI f'ATHEA MURPHY
(Premlef'et A miner end hll
partner teem up with a
tclloolteacller to protect •
group ol young•t-left
orf)llana by a gold claim
conlronlallon O
" MOVI£ ** "My N•ma ~
Bruce" Bruce Le, Ctv11tlna
Cheung. A martial ans
expert and 1 MCf_. aa-nt
team togethtf to bteak up
a band 01 11'1\UOOletS. II OJ HAWf DAYS
Lori Beth enlllll Fonzie u
llef Clellvery room coacll
when the glvea blnh.
8» P.M. MAGAZINE
M inttNlew wltll ectr-
Kristy f\kNICllOI. modern "°"* made from c:om-
preuec:t c:t111: Cllel Tell Pf•
PB'" mutllrooms a la et-. Paull Net.on tella
how 111 can hurt your
caree<
Cl) MOVIE ·
• * "Tiie Van" ( t979) Stu·
art Getz. Oebofall White
Eager to altract gttis W>lll
his ,_ ..,.,.., a Cetilornla
teen-ager equips Ille 119111·
cle Wllh various acc;outer •
ments lnclu<llng • wata<
bed and a buHt-ln bar
&I C08M08
"T,.......,,. TaleS" Or C8tl
Sagan r~eatas 11'141 HOi-
iand of Cht11tlaan
Huygen1's llma and lak"
vleWllf 1 inside Iha Jet Pro-
pulston LabOtalory. (R) 0 m NOVA
"01d Darwin Gel It
Wrong? CllallengaS to the
theory of IYOhlllon wNcfl
are coming !tom 8'fiden<:e
In tosstls and blOlogy tabo-
ratorles ere explO•ec:t O
[H1MOVIE • * "Biby Blue Marine"
( 1976) Jan-Michael \/1n-
C4!fll. Glynnis 0 Connor A
young man c:ttlllOn«ably
d ischarged tr om t lie
Marine Corps. auumes
lhe lc:tenllly, the role and
uniform of a war i-o 'PG'
(S)eaAAAE
.John eyner snows you
things strange< then truth.
larger th ...... and uriw
thin anything you've .,.,
seen.
1:30 8 OJ LAV£ANE ANO
SHIM..EY
A man ""'° pro(>099d to
LaYerNI year• ago rehJtM
u • dashing mlttoonwe o· ID All IN THE FAMll Y
A provocative kiss sparl<s
a feud bet_, Arcll18 and
1111 liberal daughter. Gl0t18
I _$1 L.AFF-A· THON
A comedian l\ost and faut
comic conteatanls who
compete against one
anothaf ere lnturec:t in 11111
u~sorec:t comedy game
show
UMOVIE
• • • ,.., "Tiie Parallax
V-" ( 19741 Warren Beal·
ty Paula Ptenllss An
1nYel11g1llYe repo•I••
a11empt1 to uncover a
natlon•lde network ol
pollOcal -Mine
CHANNEL LISTINGS
I:~ (O)MAKIHQ IT~
(TIME A"'"'°>OMATE)
1:80 (OJ AUTOMHH (TIME
APPAOXIMATI:)
HlO 8 (I) MOYIE -
0 KNXT ICBSI
(i) KNBC INBCI
0 KTLA fi nd I
CD KA8( (A8CI
0 KFMB l(f\SI
0 KHJ TV llnd
ail KCST IABC1
G)KTTV !lnd l
II) K COP TV< Ind I
ED K CET IPBS1
'1:) KOCE <PBS!
0 On lV z rv
H HBO
C (1nt:m.t• I
t 1WOR1 N Y NY
It WTBS1
f 1ESPN1
S 1snowt1m .. 1
" Spollrghl
& 1ca1>ll' New\ Network I
"The Princess And The
Cabble" (Premiere) Valetle
Bertlnelli, Robert OeSid••·
10 An lntecure youno gl•I
with 1 reading dtsorda< 11
IWllpeCI 1>y •sell-taught cab
drlYe< to oYe<c:ome !MW
problem D O THREE'CI
COMPANY
Jack accl81)1• • dare to
attend J1ne1·1 dance
c1asa o ID MSW ORlmN
.00\' ...
"uttl9 Ill,.,... t..IUt•
..... l.OOlll ~TN ~·
AllllHOjlt tOtltl Laura
~ .......... wey ..... ·~·Ill ..... 1oo.
Md '"' UllllM ......... . .. .....,... .,.. OONUIMf
~ ''Tr~a· Tllla" 0t C.,I
lfO*' ~-Iha Hol• 11nd of Chrlt tlaan
~·· llme end lllnle .._, in.ldt INI Jtt Pro-
pulliofl UltiotltOl"f. ( ~) Q (C)~
• • .. "NI ('*"Y Of The
People" ( 1177) Stave
~. Chlti.t OUM·
lllO· 8aMd on llMan'• pity l'tw cttllene of 1 wnall
'-' tlr•t ll)l)lli>d then I*~• • ~ pftyllelall '°' ~Ing the IOCal llOt ~lnllt unMle dw to OOl-
IUtlon 10 '
(O')MOVll * • "The ....,_ .. (11180)
Trilh Van Devete, JoMj)h
Cotten. A achOolteeehef
trtea to,_ lrom • nw-"°"' breelldown 11 !MW late
aunl't homt. Wfltctl II
beeleged by demons. 'PO'
Cl) n.E WNXY WOAl.D
OIF JONATHAN WINTPI
Gueet: Dick Clark.
t:30 8 111 TOO CLOIE ~
~
Sara'• t•ue 1dent11y it
quHlloned when It la
learned tl\at bablea -• twitched at the l>Oepllll
Where the WU bOtn
(8) PAUl SIMON eomoo-. poal and enter-
tllnw Paul Simon offer• •
nearly nonstop c:ollac;llon
ol hie g..atelt ""-and
c:unent leYO<ll• lrom the
T-Theatre lfl Uppet
Darby. Pa
CJ)MOVIE • * * ~ "Private Benja-
min" ( 19801 Goldie Hawn.
a-> 8'ennan A Wiil-lo-
do young women mist.ii·
enly joint the Army lollc>w·
Ing the death of !MW ,_
husband on thelt ...eddlng
~~ * * "WUlie & Pllil" (1980)
MlchMI OntkBWI. Margot
Kidder Th••• people
begin a triangular romance
In Gre«1wlch VIiiage that
continues througllOut the
mercurial aoclal milieu of
the '70s 'R'
10:00 o a nAMtNGO "°"° (Season Ptemlwe) Con-
stance Carlyle un4WOC-
~ 1tter IMlt 1811. and
Eudora overne.ts e long-
kepi Merel. uaeGNEWS
8 @) HAAT TO HART
Tl>e bodyguard for a QOY·
ernmenl wit,_. 11 killed
aboatd a IUaury ~
train 11111 Jonathan and
Jann1ter a.e alto l•avating
on O &I PAE8E.NTE
10:30. HEWS
8) MVEHOENT
NETWON< H£W8 SI 1NO£PEHOEHT tvE:
Tl4E YEAR OIF THE
Dl8A8l.ED P£MON G oovaMY
"Little lnjulllc:9e: Laura
Nader LOOkl At The Law"
Antllropologlat Laura
Nader c:ompete1 Ille wey
legal l)'S._ In MeXICO
and the Unit.d Stetea Mt·
lie dlSOUI• I nd conMHnet
complalnta. O
MOVIE
••• ,., "Rough Cvl" ( t980)
Burl AaynOlds. LH leY·
Anna Down. A Bri11lh
soclaUta kJ<n an 1nterna·
ttonal ,ewal thief oul ot
retirement lo llelp lier steal
SJ0.000,000 In diamonds
'PG'
@ MOVIE
**''\ "Amettcan GtgOIO'
(1980) AIChard Gere. Lau-
ren Hutton A 8elletly Hill•
gigolo becomes the prime
suapect In • mUtda< lnY8a-
t19Allon 'R' 11:001JDDCE98
HEWS G SAT\MDAY NIOKT
Host: Et1c Idle. G.-t Alen
Pnce. CJ PAUl. HOGAN
• TH« Jlff'EMONI
George's motllet anc:t Wife
flglll C111W him wllile at •
lunetll
ti) KHNY HIU.
Thwe must be money In
commercials, bul not wtlh
Benny In cha•oe.
fl) DC< CAV£TT
·rv Jou•ne111t1" Guests
Oavtd Btlnkley. Tad Kop..
pel. Harry ~.Rob
ert MKNeil (Part 2 ot 31 ~MOVIE * • "TerrO< Tr•ln" ( 1980)
Ben Johnaon. Jamie Lee
Cunis A college lratwnl-
ty's N-Yeet'I maSQUllt·
ade perty tuma Into a
noglllmare when a vtndlv
.·
TUBE TOPPERS
NBC e 8:00 .. F ather Murphy ."
Miners and o schoolteacher protect a
aroup of children left orphans In this
premiere progrnm . I See photo at ten •
KCET .9 8:00 a nd KOCE 9 9:00 ··cosmos: Travelers' Tales." Carl Sagan
re-create the Holland of Huygens 's era
and visits J PL.
CBS 9 9:00 .. T he f1rincess and the
Cabbie ... Valerie Bertjnelli stars as a
young woma n bidden away from the
world because of a 14!arnlng disability in
this premier~ movie.
ABC fl 10:00 -"Hart to Hart." A
bod yguard is killed aboard a ruxury
passenger train carrying Jonathan a nd
J ennifer.
llYe gwet 1tart1 lcllting off
the l*IY"908'8 'R'
(D)MOVll
• • ~ "Emm1n ue1te"
( 1974) 8ytvlt Ktl8tel, Al.tn
Cuny. The wile of a Franc:n
diplomat bec omH
In~ In a_.., of •ir·
Ult Mallon• alter joining
f'l8f ~and In Thailal>cl
'R'
11:aoe w AA.a
D QITOHIGHT
Hott: Johnny Ceraon
Ou.11: Shatley Winter•.
Pett Barbulll. e a AllCNIWI
NIGHT'1.M 1 .-T M GAOUCHO
TME 000 OOUPUi .SANFON>NfOIOH
• l(CET NIWMEAT QlD CAPTlOHEO MIC
N£W8
QAU.AGHER: MAO Al
HEU
The unptedletable Gal-
legher retu•nt with ,_
and 1ngenlou1 deYloel.
outrageous sight gags •nd
apeaka out agatnat a llOsl
ol tradltlona, trend• and
curtenl9'191'1lt
CZ)MOVE
* * 'Al •'TM Divine Nymph"
( 1979) Laura Antonelll.
Terence Stamp
~MDIGHT-
1~e MOVIE * * * "Thia Gun Few Hire"
( 11M2) Veronica Lake. Alan
l lcld A hired kNler Melle
revenge altar he 11 c:touble-
crouad. D OJ) FANTASY t8LAHO
D MOYIE •'A-.. 40 Guna To A4>8CM
Paaa" (1967) Audia Mut·
f)lly, Kennell\ Tobey
• COUNTRY TOP 10
Co-1\osll Mk:key Gilley,
Nanc y Sinatra Gueell
Mel Tllffa, T G Sl>eppafd.
David Frl:ael & Shelly
Wast
(I) AO()l(IE.8
Rylcat belrien<ll a young
gut whO rem1nd1 h•m of hi•
daughter.
&l EXPLONNO
l>NGUAOE: THlM<INO.
WNTING.
OOl•M NCATING
12:Cll 9 (I) lllCICtOUO
12:10G a ToM<>Mow
Gueits· All MacGr-. Mel
Totme. Yoodoo <loclor
Ernest 8111ton
• <X>N'T&tP<>AARY
HEAL TH l8SU£8
"Preact•ption And Ovar-
Tlle-Counter Otuos"
CH)MOVIE
• • "Baby Blue Marine"
( 1~76) Jan-Michael Vin-
cent. GlyMls O'Connor A
young men. dishonorably
d•t chargad lro m the
Mltlne C«ps, ~
the ldenlilV. the tOle and
uniform of a Wit' l'leto 'PO'
(SJMOVIE • * * "Fame" ( 1980) lr-
Cerl. 8«ry Millar Sever II
glhect atudan!a at • New
Y Ott< high ld'4)()I tor Ille
pwfoo ming er\I ~lence
Yat'°"9 ._ibec*• f"d IUC-
Qlla. of both personal
and ptolnalonll natures
'PO'
-~ * * 'h • ~lfalghl Time'
(1978) Oullln Hollman, ~
Qaty B\IMY An 8J1-cot1
dalperately lrlel to go
dlr1lghl alfa< leaving ptlS-
on. In aplte ol the many
rolclblockt wftlcll nM up
llefore l!lm 'R'
1••~ N5TWOM~
(C)MOVIE
• • • "Stranger In The
HouM" ( t975) Keir Dullea.
Otl\lla Husaey A pt~llOtic
murderer llld• In the allic
of I college IOf Otlly llOuM
on C11t111maa Eye •R'
(%)~
• "Schizo" ( 1977) Lynne
l'redlt'lck. John Leyton. A
tkallng 1t1r la ta<rortzecl
by a myallflout cl\Alfacter
whO. ft>f' reeaon• of hi9
O'*n, 11 11peet by the -
of 118' marrlegt to e
weetllly ~ 11Ch1<er 'A'
1:10 D MOVIE * * "Or Ook!IOOI And
Tiie Girt Born~" (1966)
Vincent Price, Fabian Tiie
nal1nou1 Of Goldloot
plans to e11mlna1a 111e
wor1<1'1 lop NATO leadera
by ~n• ol • number of
beautiful bUt deadly temlle
tOboll
@)NEWS
1:308 MOVIE
• * • "Hall'• Island"
( 1955) John Payne, Mary
Murphy A former PfONCU•
!Cit Is encouregec:t lo lrKk
down a m1111ng ptecious
ruby. apeclatty wtlen he
leem s thel hit ea-girlfriend
llo!Os some aey lnlonna-
uon
• MOVIE ••*'"'"The 8ells Of St
Mary's" (1945) Bing Cros-
by, tngrld Bergman A
l)fiffl and a mother 8"'1>9·
rlO< saYe an old parocl'lial
IChool by persuldlng •
P1lflnin1 to c:tonata land
and a bullding to tl>elr
cause.
~ D EHTEATAIHMEHT
TONIGHT
Richerd Ch•mbe•tatn
held• lor Au1trall1 lo star
In "TllOm blrde "
• IM<E DOUOlAS
QINEWS
2:20 9 NEWS t--8: • *'"' "Shoot The Sun
Down" I 1980) Christophe<
Walken. Margot Kidder In
11136. lout d•tPar•te m11-
lil1 use an Old map to
-ell for burled gold
'PG'
2:~D NEWS
2:50 fZ) INCU8U8
2:11 9 LAST Of' THt! WILD
S:OO U MOYIE * • * "The Indian Ftgllt·
er' ( 19551 K11k Douglas.
Elsa Martinelli An Army
ICOUI guides a wagon It ain
through SIOUa count')'.
11 l!JJ NEWS SPECIAL
U va coverage of the
launch of the lj)IC9 allultle
~
• MOVIE **'A> "Retreat. Hell!"
(195 I) Frank Lovejoy.
Rk:tlard CarlSOf'I Soldlets
JOHN DARLING
Bertinelli stars • Ill different love story
By JERRY BUCK
,, .. T.teYW. WrltH
LOS ANGELES "Finally," said Valerie
Bertinelli . "a movie without love in the Ulle."
Miss Bertinelli, whose first two TV movies
were called "Promise of Love" and "Young Love.
First Love," was relieved. This year. m her time
away from the CBS series "One Day al a Time."
she m ade "The Pr incess and the Cabbie ."
She stars with newcomer Robert Desiderio,
a nd a ver y pro m ising rind kt that . in the
bittersweet love story -there's that word again -
to be broadcast by CBS tonight.
"The Princess and the Cabble." written by
Edward Pomerantz a nd directed by Glenn J ordan,
is reminiscent of movies of the past.
Miss Bertinelli plays a rich but insecure young
'1om an who suffers Crom dyslexia, a disorder
which impairs ber a bility to read and write .
Desiderio Is feisty and self-taught, a sort of erudite
cab driver who takes on the job of educating the
young woman despite her father's opposition.
Her father want.s to hide her away, smother
he r with luxuries and marry her off to the son of a
rriend.
"I Uke it because it was such a nice throwback
Friendly leaves 'Entertain1nent'
LOS ANGELES <AP > -Andy Friendly,
produ cer of ··E nt ertainment Tonight," has
resi gn ed fro m the seven-week ·old industry
newscast in a dispute over ita ratio of hard news to
features.
The show hu betn crlUcbed u Uthtwtl•bt. by
some newapapeT television crttlc• who aay lt*a not
f\lllilllna ltl procniae to be the "watchdol" °'lite
entertainment induatry.
"We w1nted mo re news," Rie b Frank.
president of telmaton an4 vtdlo 4iltribudlD far
Paramount Pttturtt, H id. Paramout ..._
o::;::r' tbe lbow wtda Cox BroaitcMtlll. raft
Bl •• .-1re1ea., .
........ .. ~cm AWACler~ cues. bUt we alioilld be • tap ol U. ........ 1'NM ukl. "We llll •• CIOllld .._ I .._, llllf
1
In more depth. We d idn't think the show was
taking adva.nta1e of it.a satellite capabUlUes."
The s how's co-host, Marjorie Wallace, J1lso
wtll be leaving "soon," Frank said, because, "It
was felt that •he was, better at dolni piecn outside
tbe studio than reading Information u ~-boat."
l
to the '40s," said Miss Bertinelli. "It's really a
nice love story that deals with somet hing that
hasn't bei!n41:lealt with on television -dyslexia. It
has no bedroom scenes. It's a class y little film."
She talked about the movie during a rehearsal
break from ber role as Barbara Cooper in "One
Day at a time." Clad in jeans, blue sweater and
~ts, she s¥.nned herself on a loading platform
outside the Tandem Productions rehears al hall.
Around her neck she wore a gold logo or t he Van
Halen band, given her by her husband. rock singer
Edward Van Halen.
Her co-star , Desiderio, previously appeared on
the soap opera "One Life to Live." "Sometimes
you get lucky and get a real good actor," Miss
BertlnelU said. "Right now we're having a hard
time finding an actor to play Barbara's husband. I
keep suggesting Edward. He could cut his halr.
We 're getUng that desperate."
As Barbara on "One Day at a Time," she will
become engaged, althouah it hasn't been decided
yet whether she will be married. "They may want
to use the marriage as a seuon-opener next year
-If we have another ear " the actreu 1 .
'
In tile KortM W11 relUM
10 beck °" 11'1 1"8 tac. Of
the-y
<CIMCMI
* e "The Wo nderful •
CIOOk" OetMd 089ardlau
A ~oung, rnar'led l>lltl
~ turns c;rooti In
OtO•• to meet tll•
··~ Of 1111 butlnall and f Ille In IOve wllll Ofl8 04
1111 vletlma 'A'
(l}Titl WN:llCY ~
0# JOMTHAH W1HTlM
Oueat· Olcti Ctark
CZ>MOVll e e 1"1 "Vtneenl, l'raneolt.
Paul AM The Olhera"
( 11174) Yvtl MOlltand.
Mlc:llel Pie;COll Tht .. meri
torm 1 deep bond ot
frtendlll!lp that 1u1111na
them through I -le• of
petlOtlal and pt()feaalonal
ctllN a:ao 9 (I) NIWI 8PECIAl.
Live coverage ol the
•~of the 9')1Gt lhutlle
Columble
C.$JMOVlf
e • * ·~ "The H1untlng"
( 1963) Julie Ha.tit C1a1re
Bloom Four d11p a1ate
people lnYHhgllt I 9->M
Wtth an 1ntamoua reputa·
• tton lor a .. pernatural
~nga-on
S:46 U MOVll
• '"1 "Kill Or Be Kiiied"
( t1150) L1W<enc;e Tlefney,
George Couloum The
pOllCe stalk a ful)mve In Ille
jungle while Ille killer WllO
tramec:t 111m conducts a
tearch of h11 own
4:30 0 MOVll
* • • • "The Lion tn Win-
ier" ( 1987) Pete< 0 Toole.
Kathlt'tne Hepburn Eng-
land's King Henry II laces
1.n agonizing declSIO<I OYW
Ills aucceasor •• he con-
1emp111as 1111 stormy mar-
rtege 10 the t!rong·Wlllecl
Ele1nor ol Aquitaine 'PO'
M'edn~•day'•
Day I h11_. M o .,fes
-M()RHl«j -
7:00 0 • * :·~ G11mes ·
(1981) Stacy KtKh Jamtt
lee C"'1os An ac:centtoc:
t•ucker. e beautiful
hitchhiker. and e ptyCllO-
pet.hlC klHer 1r111lllnQ Ille
aame route are playing
g•~ '°' hie end death 'PG'
1:00 ((: • • "Home To Stay'
t 197 11) Henry Fono1
MIOllHI McGuire A ,_,_
agar takes he• sptrn11<1
g•andlatt>et on a trip so he
won't be sent away to a
home tor Ille aged
$ • * ·~ 'Tiie Last Chai·
Minge" ( 19671 Glenn Ford
AnQll Olcil1naon A retired
gunfighter's racor<I is
111rea1aned by • bold
young guns.hnga<
9:00 lj * • ; .. "Etc•pe Ftom
Alcatraz ( 1979) C1tn1
Eastwood. Pa1t1ck
McGoohan A hardened
convtel. returned alter hes
l1tst esc.ape from ·1~
Roell." plans 10 break out
~a1n 'PG'
11:30 q) * ''1 "Ct Ry Over HO<S·
... (195 If Bowery Boys
Tiie Boys lino adventure at
!Mr-track
<~)*•"Meteor" (1979)
Sean Connery, Natalie
Wood Amerloan and Rus·
aten sc~ eaperts '°'"
forces in an attempt tc
waro 011 a giant meteor
from oula< space wntCh •s
on a direct collision course
w1tn Ea•th. before mass
disaster stnk• PG'
10:00 (SJ •'I\ "Saturn 3" ( 1980)
Kirk Ooug1a1. Farrah
f'aWceTI A pair of ~ien
tlSl S w0<lung 1n a space
SlallOn are menace<! by a
mad genius and ll•S randy
robot ·R
10:30 Cl) * * New Fronher" i 1935) JOlln W•yne, Mu•iel
Evens Tt>e Three Meaqul-
'-• aid a gr0U9 ol rarich-
ers whose land 11aa ~
•truck by a flood
11:00 CJ * • • 'My Ftien<I Flic·
kl' ( 19•3) Roddy
McOowaJt, Prell on Foet8f.
An 1deaH1flc boy de11e1ops
• bOlld of "~ wttll a
.... tflOUgltl *' wltd 10
""" u:ao ( c.l •• "KlllO lolOmCM'I'•
MINI" ( tttol OtOorlll
l<tft, $1-.,.t Of~, A
...,ell IOI Kiflt Solomon'• dlamOt\d mlMI , .... Ill
-de9I) Info .... ~ Biid
cotofful A.Irle.Ill jungle • * • ,_. "Tiie WO<td 1
Or .. t#t Athlete" (11731
John AlnOt. .1e11-•11te1
Vlncienl A COKll wllO It
hiving 1 run ol l>H luC1I
1 """" to hle'nometown of
Alfie. and ~· a euoer•tnt.•• 12:00. e * V. 'Ard\ Of Tri•
umph" ( 1941) lngtld ller9•
man. Otlarlel &oyw All
Au.etrtan r•tuoee MltcNt
Parte !Of 1 0..184)0 llQW'lt m * fl * "Oelac:t1ve Sto-
ry" f IN 1 I Kl<k DoulJlal,
Eleenor Parker A New
Y Ot'k City Otl.cttve attack•
hll work wOh a "*'*81
lHI uni~ ltle etlac:t• begin
appearing In his peraonal,
olf-duty Illa and everyday
, ... tlonthlOt * * "FIOUf" In A ~acape" ( 1969) Robert
Shaw, Malcolm McDowell
'PG'
1:00 (SJ • • ·~ "Tiie Lall Chal-
lenge" ( 1967) Glenn F0<d,
Angie Olcltlrlaon A reti<ed
9unllgllter'1 rec ord 11
lhre•t-d by • bold
young gunt11nger
1:*>CC) •*"Home To Stay··
( 19781 Henty Fonoa.
MlcMel McGuire A teen·
ager talt9' lier ap1tlle<I
g•andllll>er on a trip to lie
won't be sent •way to •
hO<N lor the aged 0 * * "Mystery Island'
Fou• children sttandec:t on
an 1111nd are ctiaMc:t by a
hermit and d1aco11er a caae
of counterllilt money. ·G
2.-00 fZ1 * • "Terror Train·
11980) Ben JOhnaon Jam1e
LH Cut11s A college lra-
ternny s New Yeet'a mas-
querade party turns 1n10 a
n111hlma1e wrien a v1nd1C·
t111a guest 11arta killing off
Ille patly·g<>efl 'R
3!00 U: * • .. Su Gawain And
Tiie Gr_, Knight' MUf'ray
Head. Nigel GrH n A
handsome squi•• 11 Al<led
by • beaulllul m11<1an OUt· •no 111s bat11n w1t11 111a
treacl'lefous Green Kntglll
·PG'
0 • • • · Tiie ldotmal<·
., ( 1980) l\ay Shar~ey
T cwah FM<1511ull A man1-
puta11Y9 manager u-va.r-
IOUS ploys to catapult two
taen .. ge•s •nto pop s.ng-
lng staicJom 'PG'
3:30 CJ • • ·~ · L1v1ng Free
( t972) Susan HampSh1te
Nigel OavenPO<t Three
rntten-.>us loon cubs Qt'I
into all sorts ol trouble
wtllle being transpon ao 10
o game preserve
S • •" ·T11e NO<th Ave-
nue Irregulars ( t9791
Edward Herrmann Batba·
•a H1t11s The new m1n.sutr
1n a 5mafl town orQanozes ~
group of dolly women or
hos congregallOn to sto~
Ille flow or church funds le
criminals ·G
2 • • • • Oe<su Uzata
C 19751 Yun Sok>mln Max-
im Munzu~ 0.rectac:t by
Akttl Kurosawa In tutn·
ol-t~lury RvHI• an
Army enQ1neer and a
S11>enan hunter atrlke up a
lr1endsll1p du p1I• tl'H!lr
conthct1ng cullu• II back -
Qrounds G
5-00 C • • K•no Solomon s
MonM' ( 1950) Deborah
Klt<r Stewart Grange< A
search '°' Kong SOiomon s
diamond mines takes us
deep into the seen.<: ane
c010tl11I M rocan 1ungkl 0 * * ;, LOOl)holfl
( 195•> B;any S...t~van ()o<.
ollly Mator • A can~
employee accused of
p<lle"ng a large sum or
monev m onera1as h1maell
by 8'>1»'8hend1ng Ille real
culprn
5:50 l • * • 'Strange< In Tiie
House" (197SJ K.,r Dullea
0 1M a Hus.Mty A p1yetlol1C
murderl!f hid" 1n 1118 attic
cit a COiiege '°'°'''Y 11ouse on Chnstm11 Eva
\'Mommy's cleonln' the bathroom. Are you the
company we're 'specting?"
' f '9:\R'9ADl'KE by Brad Anderson
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"I know you didn't make any promises, but
the otf:ler kids get a dollar for each 'A'I"
Jl'DGE PARKER
COULD l'T 6E
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"Old you, by chance, see a fox go by this way?"
Hank Ketchum
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by Harold le Doux
WAIT A Ml MUTE' rT WOULD
LOOK Ab TH()U(;H MYLEAD·
IN6 LADY HA5 SUOOENl"I' RECOVERED!
DR.SMOCK
LATEP.
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by Ernie BushmJller
MRS.GABBLEY
LEFT YOU
TWENTY PAGES
OF GOSSIP
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
GCXX) EV~1NG1o..ASS
-~ldBG.ISH,
OtJ=\ CREAT\V'E ~AGE':
I
·~I
I
But we·re not convinced .
despite developers · claims. that
the time-share lodges meet the
quiet. subdued atmosphere that
makes South Laguna such a cozy
and rare be a ch communitv
Allowing one big de \'elopment
only makes the next ones tbat
much easier to approve.
Before lon g . the South
Laguna we know could become
the same kind of memory we
ha \·e of other parts of the coast.
Before it ·s too late. we must have
a better pl an.
,S~·~f/ort axed?·
After nnrly t'wo decades and
S12S billion~ the natioo 's apace
r;:r•m is slowly 1rinclin1 to a . ur.e for the S]*ce shuttle.
•"Id\ ~u 'Ille IM!Mbed for a ~ UmeWe .. 11~8)'.
I Vttya .. n l 9ft1I 2, wllich lt"*IM t. awe-iaSplrlbf pktures
df J ..... ud leblm, Will be the
last ctee; spa" probes for some
Ume to ftlfte. The budcetary ax
of Ute Rea1an atlmiai1tration
pr()ra,iael it) vtltually atr•l!e the
efforts of the National
Aerortautica and Sl)ace
Admlftittf'ltioR to continue our
c o,iitlllitment to space
riplorwon ..
Tile 6evle\ UniOlt, Europe
and ,.,.,. bave co11Unued to
de v~lc,, their own space ,..<>era-. realiaifts the vast. unta~ l'f9~ °""reel by thll DeVf J'milier. ~ far, the ·-•ee shuttle pro1ratn tau weathered the
federal a•vernment's era of
fiscal re,traint. Some critics
•u11e1t that tbe shuttle, a
reutllble 1~stltp. ·•ill survive
lar1e1' becMlet tt can serve
m iHtat't tat~re1h . At the su~n tun tbe arms race to 1;aee, we May lose &ight of the
shuttle'• value as a pmeering
tool for ~ ecteettnc raeatth
.and tlevel~melft ad a 90W'Ce of
new tndUltries .ct jobs.
In a spe~c h before in-.
vestment analysts. one space
shuttle •stronaut, Robert L. Crtppeta, boasted "There's a lot
of mobey t() be made in space."
To be 1ure, Ms werds have
beeome tile halhnark of NAsA·s
attempts w "'1 the spaee shuttle
'.prepam to prtv.ie industry.
a.irMIBlll8, however, have
taken a wait-and-see attitude.
They expect NASA to supply the
initial investment that will prove.
indeed, there are profits to be
made in space.
Previous space missions
already have shown that the·zero
gravity environment is an
excellent medium for producing
crystals of outstanding purity for
the semiconductor industry. In·
terferon. touted as a potential
cancer-fighting agent. can be
produced in vast quantities in
space. And metals of differing
densities can be forged in the
weightless environment to form
substances not found on Earth.
These pot e ntial d e -
velopments and more lie in
store for a nation willing to make
the financial commitment to the
space program. The results of
our investment may take years
to be realized in profits for
industry. solutions to our energy
crisis and a better understanding
of the universe. /
The romanti c s pa ce
enthusiast would liken our space
program to the voyages of
C hristopher Columbu s ,
Ferdinand Magellan and Prince
Henry the Navigator. One must
remember that these early
explorers sought we alth and
riches as well as the knowledge
of new lands.
We must realize that our
t e rrestrial demands will
someday outpace the finite
resources of Earth. Space offers
unlimited opportunities •to enrich
o ur lives as well as our
pocketbooks. This is no time to
adopt a policy of terrestrial
isolation.
trip around the wortd would cost 25
~ntl. To the moon, SZ.38. To the sun,
'830. But to the nearest other star,
S290 million.
Speed of the snail has much to do
with Its center of 1ravtty, evidently.
With a bi&h·splraled shell, It 1oe1
about two and a half feet an hour.
Wlth a low-spiraled abell, about 150
feet an hour.
' --tf
i J I
Spoiled food gifts exported
WASHINGTON (AP > -Ma n y
corporations are dumping their
leftovers, often unusable and indelible,
upon the deprived peoples of the world.
It may be a bad deal for the hungry and
homeless, but It's a good deal for the
corporations .
Here's the way It works:
Manufacturers of such products as
baby food, drugs a nd vitamins'
Invariably end up with stockpiles of
unsold materials. When the expiration
dak!s are about to render the goods
useless, \tie companles donate them to
registered, tax-exempt charities. These
organizations then distribute the
products to the needy around the world.
Il sounds like an ideal situation. The
corporations clear their warehouses of
overstocked items and get tax writeoffs
in the barg-ain: the d-eprl ved gel
much-needed food and drugs.
BUT4 THE RE IS A catch: By the Ume
the donated goods get into the hands or
the needy. the expiration dates have
long since passed and many of the
products are spoiled a nd rotting.
Las t August. for example , some
s upplies donated by U.S . corporations
arrived at a r efugee camp in El
Salvador. Among them were 607 cases
( 14,568 jars> of Beechnut pumpkin-pie
pudding baby food that was completely
spoiled , 148 cases <4,784 cans> or
Abbott's Ens ure Baby Food milk with
.. pull·dates" of November 1980; Unicap
v itami n s and i r o n t abl e t s.
manufactured by Upjohn Co .. mast of
wh ich had expira tion d ates in the
summer or 1979.
One volunteer in the El Salvador
ca m p told m v associ ates Dona ld
JACI AIDIRSll
Gold berg and Ron Mc Rae t hat the
Beechnut baby food was "rancid and
black." The fou l food was discarded
"9nd the Jar 'were used as toys by the
refugee childr en.
S u c h "dump i ng " of
a bo ut-to -b e -outd ated p r od ucts is
com pletely legal. If the contributions do
not r each the camps befo re their
e xpiration dates. the corporations
arg ue. it is not their problem; it's the
fault of the receiving organizations
Said a s pokesma n for UpJohn :
.. Because of the problem of shipping.
we do our ma1or giving throllgh just a
handful of charities We're 'cr y happy
in general ··
O ffic i a l s of the c haritable
organizations -such as Food For the
Hungry . World Vision and Catbohc
Relief Services -candidly admit they
often accept gifts with full knowledge
that they will s poil before delivery. The
charities can't afford to tum down any
gifts from corpora tions , they say,
because they cannot risk offending the
donors, who occasionally offer useful
ite ms.
OBVIOUSLY there is a crying need
for a regulation that would force
corporat1ons to ens ure that their
pe rishable. l ax-deductible donations
won 't s poil in trans it. This was
pa rtiaJly, though temporarily, achieved
in 1980 when President Carter issued an
executive order prohibiting the export
of goods which are banned in the United
St a tes. However. President Reagan
s ubsequently rescinded the order.
R e p. Mic hael Ba rnes . D·Md .,
chairman of the House Inter-American
Aff airs Subcommittee. has proposed a
bill that would forbid the export of
goods which cannot be sold legally in
the United States. o r course, this would
not prohibit, corporations from donating
products whose expiration dates are
approaching. Even so. the Barnes bill
stands slim chance of being enacted by
Cong ress
The real cost of controllers' strike
It's going to be interesting to see who
wins the hea\'.ywelgbt fight between the
President of the United States and the
ProfessionaJ Air Traffic Controllers
Organization.
It loots as though the President has
them licked, but he bas his own
airplane and his own helicopter so it's
easlel' for htm to think he's won than for
the rest or us.
When the President ·first told the
striking controllers that they weren't
s triking, that th ey we r e fir e d .
conservaUve businessmen yelled. "Hey,
yeah! Stick it to them. Mr. President!".
It was n 't only co n ser vati ve
businessmen who Cell that way. either.
When strikers ar~ inconveniencing
people and demanding more money. a
lot or Americans who aren't on strlke
themselves resent i t. Reagan's
ultimatum, "Go back to work by
day-after-tomorrow or you're all fired
for striking illegally, .. was undoubtedly
popular with most people.
THE QUESTION now is , who's
getting the worst of it, them or us?
Unemployed controlle rs mus t be
desperate for rent or mortgage money
by now. They've been out of work for 12
wee ks and who among us c an go
without a payc heck for that long
with out having it hurl? Som e
controllers have given up and taken
new jobs at the bottom of some other
ladder. In Los Angeles I talked to
pickets who said they walk the line for
four hours every day and then try to
pick up work as stevedores for food
m o ney. If you a r e an air t ra ffic
controller with a wife and children and
you've planned your life around the
income and security of your job. you
cert ainly don't feel like much of a
winner right now
But how are the businessmen and the
r est of ~ who cheered making out? It's
n~t an roses for us, either. AirtThes have
-AN-DY-R0-01-IY--~
cut the number of 01ghts by about 25
percent and the flights they have are
frequently delayed. With the possible
exception of waiting in . the dentist's
chair with your moµth open while the
dentist chooses a new burr with which
to re ach the nerve in your tooth. there is
no more excruciating way to spend time
waiting than waitng for takeoff on a
crowded airplane.
The re a re so m e cold numbe r s
tb al sugges t the rest of us aren •t
winning any huge victory over the
controllers either. If a businessman
planned to take the Eastern Airlines
shutlle to Washington from New York
or Boston a year ago. he could lea ve
midtown New York or Boston at 9 a.m .
and be in an office building in downtown
Washington before 11. Today be has to
plan on spending four hours on the same
tr ip because of delays in the air or
before takeoff.
I 've been pla y ing with some
statistics. The controllers were makine
more than $15 an hour. so you have to
assume that the flying businessman
was making a minimum or S20 an hour
f o r hi mse lf , a nd that 's an
ul tra -conservative figure.
Jf there are 100 business men or
wom en on board. each of whose time is
worth at least S20 an hour. the extra two
hours it can take them to get, from
Washington to New York is costing
someone 100 times two, which is $4,000
per flight. Eastern has 60 such shuttle
flights a day. That comes to a $240,000
loss on just one day's flights. That
would pay for a big raise to controllers.
If a Boeing 7'l7 has to wait an hour on
the ~round with its engines running
before takeoff, it burns <'30 gallons of
fuel going nowhere. If it has to stooge
around the airport waiting to land when
it gets there. it burns 670 gallons every
half hour.
NO ONE WHO flies a lot looks
forward to a trip. any longer. The spirit
of adventure has been replaced by a
feeling that flying ls drudgery and
something to be endured, not enjoyed.
It's a long, tedious experience and it
has become even more so now that the
waiting and the uncertainty have
increased since the controllers' strike.
President Reagan may bave beaten
the controllers to the ground but no one
knows how much it ls costinc all of us
because of business that isn't beinl
done because of nights that were never
taken.
We need pessimisin to balance optintlstn
While it is true that those who take a
hopeful view of matters oft.en '
accomplish more than those who take a
dismal view. it is equally true that
optimism can betray us into more
follies than pessimisi,n can.
What Is rare and valuable in any
person is a combination of these two
IYlllY 01111
attitudes, which might be summed up in
the old Wlld West maxim: "Trust
everybody and cut the cardl.''
II' YOU AaE 1oln1 to trust
everybody without cuttine the cards,
you are 1oln1 to be badly cheated
sooner or later; contrariwtae, tr you
tnllt DMody, you are 1oln1 to deprive
younell of more opportunlUet than 10'I
will avert io..ea. .
Ironleally, it was that 1re1t
1bowman, Barnum, who wu able to
llold bath U.,.. view• ln balance. He I•
J
m ost famous for saying there 1s a
sucker born eve ry minute . but he also
asserted. "More people are humbugged
by believing nothing than by beli eving
too much."
These thoughts were triggered by
reading a new biogr aphy of Ttlomas
Jerterson. and learning how crabbed
and disillusioned he became in bis later
years. when the repl\blic he helped to
found t urned a way from what he
tho ug ht we r e hig h democ ratic
principles.
JEFFERSON' FAITH in the people
began to corrode as he grew older, and
he died a bitterly disappointed man.
But \he secret wisdom of our founders
de p ended as much (perhaps more>
upon the skepticism of a Madison as It
did on the opUmlsm of a Jellerson.
M adtson did n ot wholly trust the
••native goodneH" of the Amer ican
people , their elected representatives,
the courts or the prl.!llidency.
And it was Madison wbo lnalated on a
system or chetke and balances, so that
no one element could iet too blt lw eta
own good, or tor the cowtt.rJ'• p_od.
Wblle Jefferson trusted everyane, Ind
Hamllton trusted no one (be W'IDld U. -
people a "gr e at beast"), Madison
called for the cards to be cut.
WHAT RAS BEEN little noted in our
hist ory courses is that.. our unique form
of g o vernment is built upon a
paradoxical principle : that the people
can be relied upon to rule themselves,
but at the same time no particular
group or class or branch of government
can be relied upon to do what is best for
the nation.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tut1d1y, November 3, 1981 ~·
Hizzoner pumps gas, a Ph.D.
LOGAN, Ut ah (AP ) As
voters went to t he polls hure
tod ay they wlll be c hoosln&
elthe r a po lltlcal scie nc e
profeaaor or a 111 atatlon owner
for mayor.
The eaa s tation o wne r ,
D eamond Anderson, has the
most experience for the job.
Running for bis second· term
as mayor of thls colleae town of
24 ,000, Ande r son, a Lo1an
n ative, holds a doctorate in
public administration. His vita
includes an associate deanship
•t a major university and a
special assignment for the U.S.
State Departme nt.
Today he pumps gas and sells
a s mall line or groceries.
Anderson is running against
Claude Burtenshaw, a political
1cle nce prorc11sor ut Utah Stute
University.
In an Interview ut his home,
Anderson, 58, said ho attended
c;ollege at Utuh State University
in Log a n be fore becoming
assoclat~ dean of the School of
Public Adminis tra tion at the
U {li ve r slty o f So u t h er n
Callfomu.1.
After 16 years a t USC an
t eac hing a nd administration .
Andel'son said he felt that "I'd
done jus t about everything at a
university you could do except
be president."
lie gave up academia 14 years
ago and has never returned full
tim e.
Bu t h e d i d n ot s w~
scholastics for gas pu~ at-.
once.
Andt~rtJon accepted a n offer
fr om th e John so n
udml n l trot lon 's Sla t e
Department In 1967 lo oraanlze
the NAl onitl Defense Coll ege of
Vietnam to truln Vietnamese
m ilitary officnR to b uild a
go v e rnm ent whe n t h e wa r
ended. ·
lie left the state Department
In 1971 and decided it was time
lo come home for good.
Anderson bought a boarded up
gas s tation and added a drive.an
dairy. "I saw it was for s ale and
thought, 'Why not give it a
s hot "· " he says.
Two years later . Anderson
was on the ballot for mayor
after helping wr ite legislation
vastly strengthening the offi ce's
powers
11 111 lour year t erm wu
marked by cont nllon with some
members of the newly formed
city council, who believed he
was exceed ini h is stat utory
powers
The dlsuAtreement ended In a
l a w s u i t that A nd e r 1on
e ventually won a fter he had
been defeated for re-election by
Mayor Walter Nickel. Nickel l1
not running tor re-election.
Anderson says that whatever
the outcome of today's electiOI\\
he proba bly wall sell the gas
station.
.. I've done it. 1 'm ready to do
something e lse. Who knows
what? Maybe I 'll become a
general contractor "
'Handicapped' siuffe d toy s aid for tots
MANOMET. Mass. (AP> -
\The elephant has a hearing aid.
the cuddly bear an artificial leg
a nd t he o rdi narily fris k y
monkey can't get out of his
wheelchair.
"It's a good way for gelling
a ble-bodied children acquainted
w ith h a nd icaps and t h e
paraphernalia that goes along
with them," she said.
Stone. a Malden toymaker They
are marketed under the name
"Special Friends ...
"If a child can lake Bear and
play with hii; false leg .. .I see
thl' poll'nlial of extending it to a
rea l ·l 1fe situa t ion more
poss ible." s he said in <1 n
inter view at lhe lndian Brook
Elementary School here.
and Monkey, there is Rabbit,
wh o h as a n a rtificia l a r m
holding a carrot ; Snake, who is
par alyzed a~d rides upon a
wheeled and wavy "snakeskate''
theoretically controlled with his
tongue in the way some real
electric w h eelc h a irs a r e ;
P e nguin. wh o Is blin d and
carries a walking stick ; and
Frog. who wears a cast for a
broken leg.
AP .........
.\tayor Desmond Anderson. yas statton owner and former CSC
instructor who holds a daelorate 111 public adm1mstrat1on. i., pitted
against a pol1t1cal .4lc1ence prnfes.<;or in toda.11· . ., electwn fr>r ma.11or
of Logan . l'tah. '
The animals are toys and their
c:reator, Mar garet Gibbons of
Lowell, has designed t hem as a
co mfo rt t o h and icapped
youngsters and a learning aid
for "able-bodied children."
M s . G i bb o n s is an
occupa tional t he r apibt who
works with st udent~ 1n the
Ply mouth-Ca rver school system
in M anomel c.tnd now also stuffs
and fi nis hes her eight animal
creations with colleague Bonnie . , n addition to Elephant. Bear
SAT scores show variations by states
WASHINGTON CAP > -The first
public ly reported s tat e -by-s tat e
breakdown of Scholastic Aptitude Tes t
results s hows a stron g correlation
between average test scores and the
percentage or students taking the tes t.
Figures compiled by t he weekly
publication Ed uca tion USA show
variations in average scores of as much
as 301 points for last year's graduating
high. school students.
Sul:h discre-pan cles, s ay College
Board officials. are attributable .. mainly
to the fact that relatively few students
took the college entrance examination
in the states with the highest scores.
The College Board has discouraged
s t ate-by-st ate com par isons of SAT
scores because of the wide variances in
how manv s tudents take the test. said
* * *
board official Robert Cameron.
A lthou g h the b oard ha s never
re leased such a breakdown, it did
provide the scores to stale education
com misslo,ners. and Education USA
canvassed those officials to compile the
results.
In the most extreme example. South
Carolina , lowest in the nation, had an
average total SAT score of 780, while
the highest, Iowa, averaged l.081. But
in 1979, the latest year for which figures
are available. only 3 percent or all Iowa
high school seniors took the test, while
48 percent did so in South Carolina.
Most students in Iowa and other
Midwest states take the rival exa m
offered by t he American Co llege
Testing program or Iowa City.
The College Board announced in
September that the national average
* * *
S AT scor es a m o ng last year 's
college·bound seniors was 424 in verbal
a nd 466 in math 890 com bined. Each
hair of the lest is scored on a scale of
200 to 800. •
While citing the var iations in the
percentages of sludeAlS taking the test
in diCfe renl s t ates, Cam e ron . the
College Board 's executive director of
research and development. noted at 1s
more difficult to explaih score gaps
between s t a t es whe r e simil ar
percentages of students took the SAT.
One million seniors take the SAT each
year. They represent one·third of their
high school classes and two·th1rds of
those who go on to college. The nat ional
average held steady this year for the
first time s ince 1968, ra ising hopes that
the decline in SAT scores that began 18
years ago has been arrested.
* * *
U.S. education cuts hit at parley
MIDDLETOWN , Conn . (AP> -While
President Reagan is spending billions of
dollars to beef up national defense, the
de ep budget cuts he is aim ing at
educational programs may actually end
up weakening t he nation's defense
capabilities.
Thal v i e w . fro m Conne cti cut
Republican Sen. Lowell Weicker. was
one of several gr im pronouncements
m a d e a t a sy mpos iu m on ··F ree
Com pulsory Pu blic Education " at
Wesleyan University.
Cuba, with a GNP a tiny fraction or
our own . has hundreds of teachers at
work in Nica ragua and e ducates
thousands of young Na m ibian refugees
on its Isle of Youth,·' Weicker told about
200 principals, school superintendants
and teachers who had gathered for t he
weekend meeting . "When will we learn
that there is no more powerful weapon
than the human mind?''
Weicker said in a recent visit to Cuba.
he found 600 Namibian st udents being
taught by Cuban and Soviet teachers .
·'T hey were gettlng an education
courtesy of the Soviet Union and Cuba."
he said. "They will go back to Namibia.
they wi ll be the leaders of that nation. I
asked U.N . A mba ssa d o r Jeane
Kir k patric k how m a ny ex cha n ge
students we've had from Namibia in the
past couple of years The ans we r : two.
Boy, ta lk a bout hav ing your best-
we apon in mothballs.··
Other speakers at the symposium.
one of sever al conferences being held
this year in honor of Wesleyan·s 150th
anniversary, focused on the public's
dissatisfaction with schools. especially
high schools.
Professor Ronald Edmonds. head of
Michigan State University's Insti tute
for Research in Teaching , said contrary
lo popular o pinion . educators know
what makes a high school effective but
lack a broad-based will to use that
knowledge
Court to rule on free deaf interpreters
WASHINGTON <AP > -The Supreme
Court, in a case t hat could strain public
school budgets nationwide, said it will
decide whether certain deaf children
are e ntitle d t o Cre e c lass roo m
inte rpreters.
Columbus. Miss .. after ruling that his
exclus ion from nursing school was
unconstitutional.
-Heard arguments over whether
con victed murderers who committed
the ir crimes while under age 18 can be
sentenced to death. A lawyer for Monty
Eddings, who was 16 when he killed an
Oklahoma state trooper in 1977, told the
j ustices: ··As we st rive to become
better. I urge that we not regress to the
point where we execute children."
Hudson Centra l Sch ool District 's
Furnace Woods School, was described
by a lower court as "a bright child"
with an "intense desire to learn" and
"an extraordinary degree or additiona l
help and support from he r parents · ·
Amy's pa rents also are deaf. The justices will review rulings that
federal law requires a Westchester. -
N .Y .. school dis trict to p ro vide
10 -year-o ld Am y Ro wley with a
sign-language interpreter.
She is an above-a verage student in a
class with non-handicapped youngsters.
but even with a hearing aid and her
lip-r eading abilities has trouble keeping
abreast of classroom discussions. Returning to the bench Monday from
a two-week recess. the court also took
'these actions:
-Agreed to decide whether labor
unions can prohibit candidates for
union ofCi ce from accepting campaign
contributions from non-m embers.
T he justices are expected to decide
the death-penalty case sometime before
July. As of last May, 17 of the more
than 800 death "OW inm at es nationwide
were under 18 at the time of their
crimes.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
emphasizing that it was ruling on the
fe deral law's requirem ent in Amy's
case only. said the school distncl had to
pa y for a fr ee sign -l a n guage
interpreter.
A lower court said no.
-Said it will consider kicking out the
onl y ma le stude nt at Mississippi
University for Women. one of but a
handful of stale·run schools for women
in the country. A lower court orde-red
the school to admit J oe Hogan or
Al issue in the dear schoolchHd case is
an interpretation of that portion or the
fede ral Education for All Handicapped"'
C hildre n Act r e quiring .. a f r ee
appropriate public educa tion'' for all
qualifying students.
Amy, a student at the Hendrick
New York education officials told the
high court s uch a requirement will
cause "chaos'' for those trying to
adminis ter the law. They said the
a p pea ls court's ruling is not a s
narrowly confined as that court m ade il
sound.
Scrapping
of pistol
opposed
Kickapoos want citizenship
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Texas band of
KlckapOO Indiana, a 600·member tribe wttbout a
country, is u kln& Con1reu to make ita people
c•Uzens of the nation they once lbunned.
For more than 200 yean, the tudltioul
Kickapoo, which split from the Oklahom a
Kicka~ tr ibe in hopes or preeervln1 their
aborillJlal berita1e, have wandered between the
Texaa border town~ &a ... PMI ud.Naclmiento,
Mexleo -• dlltaaee of.-. m mlel.
NtlllMr eoantrJ Ui ~ tMm wttll clear
cldl._.. 1tatu1, a laPM whlell ~pHcat.11 thelr
attell to Jolll,. ............ bealth and IOClal ............. iilemMn ... ban ln Mexico,
....... .. 1111 VldlM1 .... ._. pr•••tlJ dlll home • ehllter of
Hnl .... CW ...... I '9arroW9d OIM•ICN ~~ the lntnnldllMI lrtdll at Sa ... Pua. ~~~ ........ net ~-~:'ii:[~· tUI Nual --..a.aU..._1111~•-'of'*'Ufe ................... •'MMf ......... " ..................
.................... Celli ..... ..
.... .. • .... tlllll "g, ........ -
I
access to services that rederally recognized tribes
receive.
"I can't think of any insurmountable obstacle
to prevent them from taking their rightful place in
our society," sald Rep. Abraham Kazen J r ..
D·Texas, who introduced the bill to help the tribe.
"They just want a place they can call home."
T he Reagan adm inistration has taken no
omcial stand on the issue. •
Since leavina Wisconsin in 1795, the tribe has
si1ned seven treaties with the United States,
wlnnlna -and loslna -18 million acres of
federal ~and ln llllnoll, lndtana, ..14lssouri, Kansas
a nd Oklahoma . Mexico gave the group 17 .000 acres
near Naclm iento In t8S2 for defending that
eowtll'J'• borden a,-alnat other lndian raiders .
1'bllr cue for U.S. cit11enah1p hln1es partly on
an 1811 U.S. Army pass sayln1 they "are under the
protection of the United States.•· •
In ta, they were atven •·parolee" status by
tbt lmmicratlon and Naturall11Uon Service and
now CllTJ card• that say ''Kickapoo Indian -pendlal clarillcatlon of status by Coni ress."
The ltlckaPoO HY the maUer is more ur1ent
now beeaUH U.. ml1rant work that has sustained
the tribe for yean la dwlndlin1 and Eatle Pa11
aulhorttitl want the tiny tract for a park .
"
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask for Roy,
LEAS£ S'f CIALIST at
HOWARD Chevrolet
Co-,.. Ol ~and 0-1 St•
NEWPORT BEACH
-Paid Political Advertisem ent-
Vote on November 3
S teve Smith
Ocean Vie w S chool Board
0 00 SCHOOLS BU(LO GOOD COMMUNITIES ~~ ~~ ~~
Peld lor by ttw C°""""1M lo elect s1e ... Smit!\ 1.ot2 .Jenner, w..tmlfttter, CA . .,..,
~J
Daily Pilat
.Classifieds
Steps lo Bay 1 Br. great
Patio. frplc. gar. $435
wtnler . OPEN 32811
Sapphire 644-0000
' ' Fantas~resultsl We
had ovtfr 100 calla. ''
~~~r @s42-ss1s
charge it ~-by phone
From South Laguna & "'orth County
ca II 540-1 220 toll-free.
RESTAURANT
DIRECTORY
For The Orange Coast
ITALI AN
VILLA NOVA ALIS/O 'S
3131 W. Coast Hwy. 642-7880
All major crf'dlt cards.
l tuliun cuisine Qq•rlook1ng
Ne"port Aay DtnnC'r served night
I) until t a m Piano Bar Banquet
F'ac1hties ~-
1670 Newport 642-8293
1'1 aster Olarge, Bank or America
The best in Italian cuisine. Uve en· tertainment nightly Banquet
fuctlities
STUFT NOODLE
215 Riverside,
Ne wport Beach 548·7418
Restaurant Wri ters· Aw ard winning
Restaurant for th11 past 4 years.
.M EXICAN
TNT TACOS
N' T E QUILA
3300 W. Coast Hwy. 548-2224
~II major credit cards lla ppy hour 7 days 4.7 p m. Sunday
Brunch 10 3 with complimentary
chllmpagne
AMERICAN
•
.,
I
' I
.. Ale Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Tuetday, November 3, 1981
Only:
5 ingllµ-
Warning: The Surgeon tienaral Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking ts Dangeroua lb Your Health.
. · ~
l)\tr< ,.
0 Phllop MMa Inc. 19' I .
5 mg "11(' 0.5 mg nicotine
av. per cipr1ne by FTC method
one
\
..
'
. ~
Regulfil & Meridd
..
TOM ·
MclAURY '
'
BILL y Cl.ANTON
TONN1AURY
These wooden markers can be seen m the onginal Boot Hill
Cemetery m Tombstone They mark the er act spots where the OK
Corral vtcllms are buried
Daily Pilat
TUESDAY, NOV. 3, 1981
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
82-3
84-5
87-8
Two members of the .. Clanton Gang" wait backstage before their
performance during JOOth anniversary festivities at the OK Corral ·
in Tombstone. Ariz.
I
Tourist finds language
foreign. See Erma
Bambeck Page B2 .
l .
'
Gunfignt,at the OK Corral c
still drawing 'em to Tombstone
By ARnlUR ff. ROTSTEIN Mlec ..... ~ .....
TOMBSTONE , Artz.
Over the stone-covered graves
in the hard.scrabble Boothill
Cemetery, the epitaph reads,
··Billy Clanton -Frank
McLaury -Tom McLaury -
Murdered on the Streets of
Tombstone 1881."
The shots that put them there,
spanning about 30 seconds oo
Oct. 26, 1881, in the gunfight at
the O.K. Corral, variously start-
ed or climaxed a feud with the
Earp brothers and John H.
"Doc" Holliday.
They also hewed an Old West
legend and a chunk of im-
mortality for this tough frontier
town -a legend replayea in a
1957 movie starring Burt Lan-
caster and Kirk Douglas and
also recaptured in the 1950s
television series "Tombstone
Territory."
The world-famous myth of the
West's best-known gunfight has
kept this tiny tourist spot alive,
attracting an estimated 100,000
sightseers annually to the "town
too tough lo rue,.. as the com-
m unity of 1,700 bills itself.
In 1978, when Gene Harper
was elected mayor, he described
Tombstone as "a pretty dead
town."
Tombstone has girded for a
flood of visitors to mark the oc -
casion -replete with re-
enactments of the fight, an auc-
tion starting at $6,000 of a rebuilt
revolver identical to Frank
McLaury's and Billy Clanton's,
and even specially minted com·
memorative belt buckles.
Harold Love , c urr ent
publisher of the Tombstone
Epitaph which 100 years ago
was a daily newspaper and now
is a monthly historical journal,
offered two $2(),000 rewards fot
th.e .Mc.La.u..cy and Clanton
weapons -though neither was
expected to be found.
The word ·•murdered" atop
the whitewashed wooden
tombstone belies perhaps the
most controversial facet sur-
rounding the fable that has en-
veloped the 0 .K. Corral gunfight
-which, incidentally, dldn 't
take place on the premises.
That the McLaurys and Clan-
ton were killed is not disputed.
What is disputed is whether they
were murdered, what brought
about t heir deaths and the
reputations of all the
participants.
Many argue that the Clantons
and McLaurys were outlaws
who fired on town marshal
Virgil Earp, his brothers Wyatt
and Morgan, and Holliday when
Earp sooght to disarm and ar-
rest them for violating a town
gun ordinance.
Others contend the Earps, us-
ing Virgil's badge or authority,
provoked the fight after pre-
vious clashes with the Clanlons
and McLaurys . Some even
argue that the Earps were
lawbreakers, too.
Wyatt Earp had hopes of being
elected Cochise County sheriff
but was not a lawman at the
time of the fight, though some
accounts say brother Virgil bad
sworn him in beforehand. Yet he
became Identified as Maraha1
Earp in the ensulng years and
under the halo of Hollywood.
Wallace E. Clayton, editorial
director of the Epitaph and
Love's partner, believu
Tombstone's gunfight attracted
so much attention because there
was a "very active press in the
Epitaph and the Nugget," and
dispatches detatung the gwifi1hl
appreared in newspapers from
coast to coast. ·
. The papers also were
entwined in the feud.
The Nugget was the first
paper in Tombstone, a wild min··
ing town which sprang up in 1879
near the Huachuca MountaiM io
southeastern Arizona aft~
prospector Edward Schieffelin'a
discovery of the tombstone ~
silver mine.
It was aligned with the lown'p
first entrepreneurs, rancher~
miners and rural interests. anl
was sympathetic toward the
Clantons. ~ The politically Democrati
Nugget was generally at.
with the bankers, doctors. m·
officials and other late arriv~ from San Francisco and th
Eas t who sought a tranqu
economic base for inveslin
their money in Tombston .
Enter the Earps (also
Republicans). Wyatt had been a
deputy marshal in Dodge City',
Kan .. and a deputy Sherif( wheii
Pima County originally encom·
passed all of southeastern
Arizona. He "came lo town to
make money,.. says Clayton.
and "was a partner in several
fruitless mining claims." Virgil
became Tombston e's towja
mars hal, or police chief:,
Morgan was a deputy.
The shootout -about 2: JO on
cool, sunless Wednesda.Y aboUt
70 fe-et r-fi>m the rear of the O.K.
Corral -capped numerous
clashes between the men, in·
eluding at least three that day.
Wearing black, the Earps and
Holliday -the dentist turned
tubercular and alcoholic
gambler -came down Fremont
Street looking for the Clantons
and McLaurys, whom Virgil was
told were in town with weapons.
One eyewitness said Virgil
told the Clanlons and McLaurys,
"Give up your arms or throw Uf
your arms." He also supposedlf
said , "Hold we don't meaa
that -" in reference either tt
one of his foes drawing a gun ot
to his friends clicking their trig.
gers ready. I
Then s hots rang out, al
estimated 30 to 50 of them wit~
Morgan and Doc firing first. •
Ike Clanton, a braggart wh~
had threatened to get th~EarpJ
and Holliday, ran at Wyatt, who
pushed him down and said,
'·Fight or get out.'' He got out.
Frank McLaury was s hot in
the abdomen by Wyatt; Morgan
blas ted Billy Clanton in the
chest. Tom McLaury was cut
down by two shotgun blasts from
Holliday -using Virgll"s
weapon._ after McLaury shot at
him and Morgan, putting two
slugs through Doc's sleeve.
Morgan and Virgil were injured.
I (
l .
I I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTITuHday, November 3, 1981
• ANN LANDERS
• ERMA BOMBECK
;• HOROSCOPE
llAV AREA WE LCOME -The new
nuclear-power attack submarine USS San
Francisco gets a San Francisco Bay welcome
...........
from other boats as it arrives Sunday. The
sub visited its namesake for the first time to
help celebrate Fleet Week.
BEDWETTER
LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED ::: :-:"' ~':'.-== ;=-:--...:--.:: ::'.!.":!~ ....... _" ____ ,_,._......,... ---·-..... ·------__ .., ..... ____ ... __ .__
__ ..._.,,. __ ll'OM ___ Y•l ... ...... _.., ___ ............
-~::'::..'':.:~e::.~w_:a::..~~~.~-
... 'f; PACWlC INTUU•ATIONAL. L TO.
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I
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I $1u.i99 I~ ftft_~ 1$9~Aft1SPIKll ! • lr.11 I . ~77r. I 1 ... 7-m' ! ~ 6ood,.""" ... of )llcy ...... _,_ I 600d ,. ... pllCts of "*'· eoldln .,_ I ~Ilia CGUpOll -• Clll'f....... g ~ ICentucty fried Cllict111. plus lll19lt semngs I kentvctr fntd Cllden, with 10111 rolla. • I wrth llftttn petCll of julq, golden btOWll "O 8 or col• 111w, Nshtd po111ou end grevy. 1110• colt slaw, • targt 1111shtd pot1tot1 Ktetucky ftttd CNcltn Umit two olttn ~
end • roll Utnit two offers per pvichue tnd • med1t1m 911vy llllllt two offtts per p1ip111ehl11 Covpo11900d0fllyf0feffllll· I Coupon good only IOI cofnlllnllion •Mt/ I pwcllt:st Coupon good only lor cOllllinlClon I ntboll wtlltt/dtl\ otdtn Cvm.. P'YI I
dart orden Cllstorntr P•rs tll appltcMlt wllilt/dtltord111.Custo11111p1yaatl1ppli· 11t 1pptlctlllt atl11 tu
I attn tu. I· c~t 111" Iii I Offer 11p~tS NO•l!llber I) 1981 I Offei fJl)lllS Nov1mC1115 1981 0Nt1 tJP•ts NO¥ttllbtl I~. 1981 Priul 1111'( my .. ,.nlcifttint tocttioM I I Priett 1111y •llY 11 p~ting toutio111 I Coupon tood only Ill Soutltn c.llfonlll. I r~ Coupon good only '" SoutMrn Celrlomit
~ ---1 --COUPON -I _____ ...
!
I I • I
' ! I r I
~ntucky Fried Chicken.
TIRE
BARGAINS?
If you tdon 't see the prices in print
are you really saving money?
You hear a lot of radio and television talk about
ttre ''bargains .. these days.
Wlen you want prices you can count on. check
the tire ads in the Daily Pilot. · ·
Shop the Daily Pilot before you buy ... get the
facts . . . compare . . . then you know you are
getting the most for yocx-fTDley.
Along the Orange Coast the best values are most
often advertised In the
..
Case nOt fair exam.pie
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Not long after
you published those two columns on
abortion and took the pro-choice stand, I
read a story in the Dallas Morning News
that cast the pro-life movement in a
different light.
It seems a 12-year-old girl became
pregnant after she was gang-raped in
Oklahoma. The girl, three months
pregnant, had contracted venereal disease
as· a result of her terrible experience. She
wanted an .abortion, and physicians said
her life would be in danger if she was
allowed to have the baby.
The mother of this 12-year-old,
however, took the matter to co\lrt to
prevent an abortion on religious grounds.
She is a member of the Church of the
Holiness. Her contention was that the child
Was too young to make the decision on her
own and~ as the mother, it was up to her to
decide.
The Supreme Court of the state of
Oklahoma had the good sense to rule
against the mother, but there may be
further developments.
I thought this news story was a good
example of how far some people will go
when they become dedicated to .. a
cause." Sign me -REASON, RETURN
TO OUR LAND
DEAR REASON: Wblle many pro-We
. people have said NO pregnancy should be
Interrupted for any reason Oacest, rape, or
clinical evidence t h at t h e child ls
defective), I believe It would be unfair to
use this example as typical of the
pro-Wen' stand.
T h e Ok l a h o m a mo t her Is
unquestionably a religious fanatic -to put
It mildly. A mother who would go to court
to deny her lZ.-year-old, gang-raped and
venereal-diseased daughter an abortion
must be considered a most unusual cue.
DEAR A~ LANDERS: My husband
~~ IADIS
reads your column every day. Maybe if he
sees himself in print it will make a
difference.
People are always telling me how
lucky I am to have a mechanical genius for
a husband. The m an can fix anything -
radios. TVs, CBs, vacuum sweepers,
disposals, etc. The problem is that six
nights out of seven he is away from home
-fixing something for somebody.
I have complained about this dozens of
limes but he says, .. It's my hobby. I enjoy
the challenge and, besides, I am helping
people."
All this is true and I suppose it's a lot
more respectable than chasing skirts or
getting drunk with the boys, but it's more
than a hobby, Ann -it's a n obsession. I
can't say that I hate him, but I don't love
him the way I used to. Do you see any way
out? -WIFE OF A GENIUS IN SOUTH
CHICAGO
DEAR WIFE: An obsession is pretty )
stiff competition, but do, try. The m a n
needs praise, adoration and
ego-massaging. A loving, sexy wife bas got
to be more fascinating than a broken
toaster. Try it, Instead of complaining, and
see what happens.
Discover hew to be date bcut without /ailing
hook. Une and Slnker. Ann Landers' booklet.
.. Dating Do's and Don'ts:· wall help you be
more poi.$ed.a11d sure o/ yoursel/ on dates. Send
50 cents along with a long. stamped .
self-Oddressed en vewpe with youf' f'equest ro
Ann Landers. P.O Box 11995. Chicago. Ill
606ll.
Trend alien to her
Ma,·be the he artlands of . .\men ca still
s pe ak ·100 percent English. hut rn tht.·
larger cities. 1t 's getting toug her a nd
tougher to m o\'e about without un
Interpreter.
Don't get me wron g I wall bu ~
anything touted by a foreign accent from
~·ogurt to moisturizer that promises to
e rase mv face Somehow. I seem to rel•I
people from another country knn'' ''hat
they're talking about and would not lil' 111
me.
But rm talking' basic communa(·ation
I am here to tell ,·ou there is not om·
English·speaking cab dri\'er in the l'ntin ·
sta te of California Last week. I dimhed
into a cab driven by Boris Szorg~·lokhH
who was born in Odessa . Russia.
THE WORD .. HELW" WAS cook1t•
time for Boris. It made me wondl•r how h<.·
had come lo an American rreewa\' hehi nd
the wheel of a Japanese car ·
I could only sur mise he arri\'ed in this
country and went to a placement bureau
where a sociologist gave him a test. At th<.•
end. the sociologist s aid. ..You cannot
speak a word of English. You have never
driven a car in your e ntire life. You coml'
from a rural community. You are qualified
for only one job: dri\·ing a cab in Los
Angeles .··
The week before. I got an Arab cah
driver who could speak only four words : ·J
am not rich ,.. As he s napped a S20 bill out
flMA BOMBECK
AT WIT'S END
of m,· hand for a 10 minute rtdt•. I t<.1ug ht
h 1 m ·t hree mon• nl'\\ word... You rt•
getting there ...
Obnousl~·. I he rt• "' log1e J'-t11 \\hen·
non . Englis h-:-.pt•ak ing 1 mm tg rant.., an·
hire d. Pulling lhl·m tn chargt• of room
ser\'ice phones 1n largt• hoteb ... l'em-. tr, ht•
a g reat out let .\nothl'r la \011ll' 1-.
an!'.wering the bu7.7.N from .u1ur ho!->p1t al
room when ~·ou a re lliJnnJ.? cltlfintl t \ rn
sleeping -.itting up brt•a thini:t
A~O IS THERE .\~\· g1·<.·ate1 ll'ar
than to han• a hairdre ... sl'r \\1t h a p.ttr of
~t·1!'.sors o\·cr \OUr ht•ad \\ho dol'' not
understand one word of what \ llll an·
o.;ayi ng".' Or hO\\ ubout th(' -.u rgt•on who
a s k. in perfect Span1:-.h . b t ht-. tht·
patient"· 1Suppost.• ''e all look alikt• to
lhcm.1
I'll nc,·er f-0rget the wom•tn I ml'l onn•
in South .\merica who t11ld ml' ..,he ~l·nt ht•r
son to this countr~· to ll•a rn hm\ to '-J>l'a k
Englis h fluent!~·
.. Where is h<.• · · I ;,i..,kt•d
"'.\1i a m1. F'lond<.i . -.ht· ... mtllorl
It figures
Aries to get .. wishes
ARJES 1 March 21·April 191: Sudden
rus h of good fortune tops scenario. Wishes
come true. relationships jell. green light
received for funding . Lunar position
hi g h -lights fulfillme nt. reward and
romance.
TAURUS I April 20 -May 20 1: Wha l
a ppears to be an o bstacle could be
proverbial blessing in disgui se. Authority
figure backs you. aids in vindicating ~:ou
and opens door to necessary contacts .
GEMINI c May 21-J une 201 : Good moon
aspect coincides with trave l. s piritual
e nlightenment. adde d knowledge and
revelation concerning abstract principle!'!
of law and justice. You'll make new s.tart.
CANCER <June 21-July 22 1: Follow
through on hunch -family member will
change mind and s upport you. Focus on
money. credit and reconciliation with one
who means much to you.
LEO I July 23 -Aug. 22 1: Review
options: key is diversification. planning
a head and re -establishment of
communication with one who s hares
interests. Focus on distance. language and
lime.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 1: Accent on
practical matters. Including dependents.
pets. employment and diet. Check ror
medical-dental appointments. Vou·11
receive call or message neceasitatlng a
chan1e of Itinerary. ·
UBRA <Sept. '23·0ct. 221 : l:mphula
on experiments. satisfying curloelty.
• HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
m eetings with c halle nging . c r eat1 n.•
people. You are capable of expressin g
views in graphic manner ,..
SCORPIO 10 ct. 23·'.'Jo\'. 211: Focus on
home. property. rentals. leases and
long-term agreements . Major domes tic
adjustment could include plans for change
· of residence. ·
SAGITTARIUS 1 Nov. 22·Dec. 211. '.'Jew
approach provides stimulation. challenge
a nd reawake n ed interes t in vour
statements. ideas. Take a stand. express
self in direct. humorous manner.
CAPRI COR N I Dec. 22-Jan . 19 1:
Accent on res pons ibility. billing
procedures. intensified relationships and
opportunity for outstanding achievement.
Another Capricorn ts In picture
AQUARI US 1Jan. 20-Feb. 18 1· You
receive reco1nitton For efforts. limln1 is on
target and you mrt with f•me. YG'8 11t
what you w•nt throup. ·~I •PPtlll.
appearancea and apeclal' mataeta.
Pl8CD <Feb. lt-Mll'all •• shed on ar~a• P'"'.•kt eonfu1loa. rear1. d
.i.era~.W. Ja11•1a1.t•• prev9 to uve fMt
I
By f.HIL INTEALANOI of Laguna .Beach
. '
11-J -,
~1111he_l_IM_....,.._
"I type, take dictation; work all kinds or corree machines
and don't wash cups."
Pf ISOIAllTY Q.&A.
BY MARILYN ANO HY GARONER
Other woinan
causes split -
Q : As a longtime fan of Ann Lander s,
I've often wondered about her s plit with
her husband a bout five ~·ears a go after
having been married for so long. What
happened at the time? -)1rs. Hazel :WcC ..
St. Louis.
A : As Ann 1 Eppw Lederer• l'X plained
it. it was the old :-.ton of a new woman
While spendin~ some u'm e in London where
they owned a house . her then-hu-!'>band-
Jules went to a doctor for treatment of an
infected mosquito bite He met an English
nurse. She was 28 I It• was .')6 End of ston
End of marriage ·
Q : Whateve r happe ned to Connie
Francis, who was a big record star in the
'50s and '60s'! The last I read about he r was
whe n sht:' was brutalh· attacked and
rape d in a hotel room som e years ago and
d ropped-0ut.of fihow business as a result. -
Ginn~·(., Seattle
..\: We 'rE:• hc.ipp~ to report that Connie
is making a com etwck She ·~ hooked for
the Westbury. ~ Y ~1us1c Fair :'\o,· 12· I;).
and has other dat<'S pending \\'e hope that
all her fans from pc.isl ~ t•ar-. will gi,·e ht>r
lht.' support she nt•t•cb and help t·het•r her
on.
Casting ~ote~
Q: Who will pla~· the lrad in ··The Jor
Louis Stor~··· for the ~8(' mo\·ie'~
.-\ · Kt>n ~orton
Q : Who will pla~· Walter LipJ>mann in f he upcoming T\' ~lory of his life·~
..\. Pa u 1 ~ l' w man ·The \\'a It t' r
Lippmann Stor~... a I wo-hour mn\'ll' for
.\BC. chronil'les onl' of th<.· most famous
and scanda lous lo,·e s,tories llf this
t' l' n tu r y . l t i n,. o 1 ,. t' d L 1 µpm an n . a
dis tinguished public fig urt• \\'host• political
com mentaric:-. were read b' an entire
nation. and h1 ~ b<.•-.1 frit•nd ·-.· wift•. lklcn
Armstrong to be pla~ eel b~ .Joc.inne
Woodward
Tht.> film "ill focus on tht•ir affair <rn<I
the enormous ho~t1ht~ und cl 1-.grace the~
both faced '' hl•n t hl'' cl<.•c1 de<I to dl\'Ol'('l'
their re:-.pecti\ t' "POU~<.· of 211 ~·ear'> in order
to marr~
Send your que.'<t1ons to /ly Gardner. (;/ad
. !/OU Asked That . cpre nf the Daily P1l11t . P n
Bor 1962fl. lrt•me. Calif 9271.J Wanl1111 011d /14
Gardner Wlll answer as many q1lestions a.c: the4
can m t/1eir col11m11. fwt t11e volume ''' mail
makes personal replies 1mpos.<11ble
HERB MEN
OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO
Retorts make
clean sweep
HELLO: If ·you-.vo missed Former·
Mayor George Christopher. around the
local haunts. he is in '.'J . Y. as a member of
the U.S. Mission to the United :"llalions. a
post he will hold till December. "I didn·t
want to leave San Francisco ... he says .
.. but when the President calls. I go ... he
says
ANYWAY. First day at t he t;.'.'J .• he
was stopped on the street by a '.'Jew York
policeman who said. "Hey. I lived in San
Francisco when vou were Ma\'or . You
were terrific~·· ·George mum.bled his
thanks.
"Y'K.!liiilOW," the cop went on. "you
oughta move here and straighten out this
place. If you were mayor of '.'Jew York.
what's the first thing you'd do·!·· Snapped
George : ··Pro hi bit policemen from
s moking in public while in uniform. I
J-IATE that. .. Red.faced. the cop dropped
• his cigareltt• and ~round it out 'I'm not
too keen about littering. t•ither ... 'a1cl
Gor_geous GeorJ!t•. -.t ricline off
RETORT PROPER: During halftime
at the now immortal .t9ers-Dallas game. a
T\' camera crew roamed the s tands.
inter\'iewi_ng fans. a nd came upon :\I
:'<!e lder. :'<lot recognizing the former chief of
police. the interviewer inquired. "Sir. do
you come to football games in the hope ol
seeing people get hurt., .. "Look ... replied
~elder. ··if I ''anted to set• somebod~get
hurt I'd go to trre o pe ra they KILL
people in that'.··
CAE~FETI'I : Ex-Gov Pat Brown is
on a golfing tour of Greece. Turke~" Eg~ pt-. -
Is rael and Ken,·a . It 's one of th<>Sl'
.. People -to-People gimmicks. and the
.way Pat plays. he can onl~· makl• friends
.. Spinoff : If ~·ou ·d been standing near
the 18th hole at Pebble Beach recenth'.
,·ou 'd ha\'e seen Barn· Weston . treasure r
of a big Seattle firm.' hoist his bag of 11
matched Ha ig Cllras and fling it into the
P acific. ne\'er to be seen again. ·T,·e been
thinking abou't gi\'ing up golf. .. he explains.
.. and it seemed like the proper time and
place ... He's com·erting to St T ennis
Fl'RTHER~RE : Whil e the
. .\merican College of Surgeons was in town.
what were the ladies up to'.' I mean t he
ladies who a r e not sur,:?eons . ht• added
has tily. mindful of feminist outrage While
the s urgeons were cutting up. 600 wh·cs. in
daih· batches of 150 . \\en• at Kan·~ m
Chinatown. learning ho" to hont• t·h1ckl'n.
mince squab' and cho p ~ut•\
SCOOPLET: Chann<.•I -;-1s so worrit·cl'
about KRO:".:'s hot news s hO\\. "Ll\·e on
Four at Six" that it will counter "ith <i l'i
p. m . dail~· s eries about the Smotht•r-.
Brothers. King~ton Trio. Budapest Strin_g
Quartet. .Jackson Fin• and n int· clones of
Bo Derek trapped ·during a snow storm in
Donner Pass. tit led "llo" Two. Th rt'l'.
Four and Fi\'e. ut Six. on Se\'en .. \It' :'\ine
Tens" . . Don't blamt• mt• Bill Ci ml· i~
the guilt~· part~·
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
NOSODV
HAS EVER
EXPLAINED
THE
MYSTERY
OF HOW
I E XISTED
B£FQR£
I MET YOU.
Drugs affect he~g
DEAR DOCTOR: Uatll aboutT two
weeks ago my 76-year·old mother could
bear a pin drw ln the next room. Her
beartn1 was better than mine.
A month a10 our doctor prescribed a
very strong antibiotic for lter bladder
inf ecUoa. Her bladder la beUer bat wbat
worries •• 11 ber 1uddell decre89e In
heartn1. It came oa after • few day1 of
clicklnl 10t1Dd1 t. lter ean a•d some
YertllO.
I Udllll t.bat her lteart111 problem Is
likely dae te tlae medldlie •lie'• bee• taldq. la Illa& poulbleT TM--1ay1 lie
wUI Mil for eaaald&adoa If lier lleartq
..... '& .......... -•as. A.
rou1 HIAL 111
OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN
..
l.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, November 3, 1981
##..,....,..
BEATING THE MAIL It took an l's<·ort of two
polite offi n•rs on motorc~·tll's and t•noul..!h·
g rain to get ;.1 horse ll-1 miles. but ldc.iho St·n
Stt•\'l' S~·mms pro,·t•d his point thut t ht•rt' ... <•
quicker wa.' to -.<.•nd a letter than I>.' l' S
Po:;tal Sl'I'\ in· \'oluntl't•r ridt•r \':.ilt'l'IL'
Kanal~· mud<.• th<.• tnp tht• -.<Jffil' <l<t~ .\ Pos•<il
Sen·ict• s pokt•s man .;aid it \l'r>uld lakl' a
lettN. dropped in a mutlbox at lht• .;amt• llm(•
th<.· riders sturtt•d nff. tw11 miwt• d a~~ 111
;.1rrin· St·n s~·mrn!'> ·~ -.poll~lll' 111' t ht· J>l'i\'<t1l'
:\latl Carriagt• .\l'I 11f 1!}81 . "' h1('h all11w ... !
prl\·all• 1.·ompan1t• ... 111 t·111npl·t1· w1lh •h•· P11 ... 1;i:
St•r\ l('l' "
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0 r1".'09 Cout DAILY PILOT (Tuffday. Nov.mt>er 3, 191J
The
\\Orst
' \Veve
ever
done
is Teo
ayeat:
Each January, ~
Tulvinic selecta a list of
underrated 1ilver dollan.
In i°9HO. whill' the hull1on.
stc.ck and real estate mar-
kets went soft. our list still
managed to apprec1ate 72°' ....
We've done hcrter
1'178's lil>t appreciatcJ
11 }'~. 1<179's a remarkahle
2'1'',, 231" •• m one 'l'l·ar
Even more rcmarkahlc, is
thl· fact that 1'178"s last has
apprl'C1a1eJ. to date. 988't
Compare that m any
tlther Wi year investment.
Hannes Tulving is 1ine of
only 18 recognized experts
on Morgan and Peace
silver dollars And Hannes
Tulvm~ Rare C.Oin Invest·
ment~ is thl• only rare com
firm m che U.S that Jeals
exclusively with investors
Every rare com we rrc·-
ommend comes with a
grade guarantee and our
60-Jay money back policy
For more informanon
on our personal rare com
ponfolios and rare com
backed IRA. Keogh or pen·
sion plans and our 1981
list. give us a call
Or. return the coupon
below for a free copy of our
newsletter complete wnh
updaccs on our "Under-
rated Dollars" lists for the
past three years~
And do it soon. After
all. at 988°o over 3).i yt>ars,
imagine what you're losing
each day you delay
~
HANND 1UOONG I ~
4-4\\i MJCAnhur Bl•J
Suu., ll\' N~"r"rt Buch
CA ~lt<tt.' 17141/ISHllN
FREE NEWSlElTER
Pk'l<' lt'nJ Mf' I (rtt C•'f)T 11(
ywr rroro1hly nfwWllll
N•tv
AJ;J,,. •
c;..,
Stm-
z.,
H-"'°"'
Viejo savings expands
Newport firm. acquires business college
8enrly HUI• 8avl••• • Loa•
AuoclaUon, Mlulon Viejo, hu'
acquired an lnvatment lnterest In
Western PacUlc Comm ercial
Brokeraae Co. In addition to the
S&L'• acquisition or a minority
In terest ln Western Pacific
Commerclal's out1tandln1 common
stock. the aasoclatlon's presldent
and chi.ef exttutlve officer. Dennis
M. Fitzpatrick. wlll become a
lllllEll llllfl
member or the company's board of
dir ectors. Beverly Hills Savings has
assets of around ~ mlWon and 11
branches t hroughout Southern
California. • National Educa~rp., Newport
Beach, has acquired Skadron College
of BusineS.!I of San Bernardino. This
marks t he compan y 's four th
vocational school acquisition within
the past 90 days. Established in 1907.
Skadron is it fully accredited school
oHerlng degrees and dip~omas in
• AUTOMOTILE ACCIDENTS
1£ •111111
business admlntatralloo, account1n1,
eucullve and le1al secretarial and
t ashlo n merc hancTI'iln1. The
purchase was made for 10
undisclosed a mount or caah and
notes. NaUo.na l Education, with
a nnual revenues or more 'than SlOO
milllon. is a leading human resource
development co mpany with
worldwide operations ln vocational
and In d u s trial tral n tn1 and
educational publishing.
• A subsidiary of Fluor Corp. bas
been awarded basic process de1lgn
and front-end engineerlne ror a
liquefied petroleum gas plaot to be
built for Brunei Shell Petroleum Co.
at Seria. State of Brunel. on the
northwest coast of the island of
Borneo. Fluor· Nederland B. V"
Haralem. the Netherlands, has
responsibility for the contract. Value
of t he work to Fluor was not
disclosed.
N.OW!! • CONSTRUCTIOO ACCIDENTS thru Nov. 11th· • PERSONAL ACCIDENTS
The Law Offices of R. Steven Peters
emphasizes in the handling of Personal
Injury Oaims. R. Steven Peters will make
sure that you obtain all that you are legally
entitled. Call for a Free consultation and
determine you'r rights against all parties.
Hoosecalls or hospital visits can be
arranged.
12.9°/o
o p r f 1nof'lCl(1Q
on VOOt new
CIMARRON
at
~ 040133 LAW OFFICE
24 Hrs. of
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PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STOAES AND DEALERS
FICT1T10UI •UStMHI PICTITIOUI au11N•ll
NAM• STATIMtlNT IUM• ITATIMINT TM totlewl119 perlOns .,. 001119 Tll• totlewl .. ,., ........... ...
.nca wc••DtlOtll
CWllUUtT ...... 8•
Clea.6•••U.C.C.)
Irvine exec heads d~ui unit
Harrlelte F. Witmer has been
elected president or the Drug.
Chemical Jlnd Allled Trades
Aasoclallon at its 91st annual
m eetln& ln Palm Beach, Fla.
Mrs. Witme r . presid e nt or
Deepwater Chemical Co., Ltd. or
Irvine, s ucceeds Dr. James E.
Cochran or Stauffer Chemical
Co . S h e will h ea d an
or ganization or more than 500
companies in the drug, cosmetic
and essentia l oil, aromatic
chemical and flavor lndustries,
packaging and allied trades. • David R. Lovejoy has been
prom ot ed to sen ior vice
president of both Sec urity
Pacilic Corp. a nd Security
Pacific National Bank. He also
becomes treasurer of Security
Pacific Corp. Lovejoy lives in
Newport Beach. • Joseph V~sqaez has been
appointed senior vice president
and chief financial officer for
The Laguna Bank N.A. <In
organization ). P r evious ly,
Vas quez was chief financial
officer for the Bank of Yorba
Linda. He lives In Laguna . • Steve Moyer ha s been
promoted to director of
corporate development of the
Jolly Roger Inc., Irvine. His new
responsibilities include working
with internal systems and
procedures, corporate budgeting
and advertiJslng coordlnatlon. • Lyla PulUam, administrative
assistWlt of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce,
has been elected Southern first
vice president or Callrornia
Wom e n in C bumbers of
Commerce. • Les Spielman has been
appointed general sa les
ma n ager. Hote l Systems
Division of Santa Ana-based
EECO Inc. • Roger Balley h a s bee n
appointed director of video
sys t e ms marketing for
Tustin-based Oatatron Inc. • John P. Blnasld has joined
Marine National Bank a s
executive vice president. He
lives in Huntington Beach. • Lisa H. Maserl has been
prom oted t o sen ior vice
president for marketing for
Newport Diamond Ltd .. a
and planning, aod marketing P t•LMAM NOOYaa
OVER THE COUNTER NAS{) LISHNGS
M11n Id S.56
Flo.I tLC2 Gvt Sec 1..61 Hlln<e, 7.02 HI Yid t.tS
New p 0 rt B e a·cn I b. s e d
investment brokerage /lrm
s pecializing in real estate.
diamonds and securities. • M ar&ln Chevalier has been
named architectural deslsn
administrator ln the Irvine
Co mpany Co mmer ·
cial/lndustrlal Divisoo. He Uvea
in Lake Forest .
• Nancy Hoover has joined the
Cox & Burch Advertising Co.,
Newport Beach, as director of
public relations.
• P e ter Godinez has joined
Ir vine.based New , World
Computer Co. as product
manager.
• Richard D. (Scotty) Rowatt
h as been n a m ed quality
assurance manager. assembly
divjsions. for ITT Canno n.
Fountain Valley. He lives In
Santa Ana.
ltOWAn
Neme Al-M1991<.11 IR£ Fn
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H•Uowy APacl11 lllfSldRs Obj Raco PrelrPc
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ENGLANOElt APARTMENTS, un JANl!I l'OINT• ASSOCIATES,
E119l•nd st., Hl#lllfl9lon ... 11. CA ,,,_ Al,..., A-, Slolle Ot, C:.ta
Nelle• la ller••Y 11,,.11 t• tlle
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lroectvlewPl.,SeriteAM.CA'270S. Oe11e re 1 "••tMr,C• Calller11le Oo11elde H. M•<Leclllen, 10161 cor"rellOll), ,.,. Alrwey A-,
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lllMWeyDIM ...... CA-. ~··--.. -...---.cal ...... Ml.Cl I Mrt, .. trrlll, 11141 .... ,,It flf ""' ....... -........................ ...... ~ 0..-°'-0Mity•Oin. ~a. WA'**
.. ""· IKNtlrY..1. .,_ ____ T .....
,........ OPw9I a.....,,..., ........ er.. c-11 °""' ..... -. ........... ,,.. ...... ........ --."" ..., •
_..,_ II IJ I!-Wltll, City ..
Intl,., G9IHlty of Or81199, SI-fll
CallWMe tfwt elloA ~It .....
te ... lft ... te YOUNG IM KWAK ANO DONO SUN KWAK 'ft ........ .....
WI!-....,_ II te1 S. Llllle A ... .
.... '· City .. , ... lemfl. Cewlty .. OrMe9.•··~ TM ,,......, to ... tr....,.,... It
-.Cr-.. 1111 ... ,.. H : All t•ll !ft ., ... , ..................... ... wfll et tNt c.ttw a,... ._,., __
ll"9w11 •1 "ANOIEL.l'S CO,.Fll
SHO"" _,.. ._ .... at Ml 1 . tit St~ff\; City .. TWUll, CAMlftt' ef
Or~ ...... Cat .........
Tiie ••Ill Ha11Uer wltl •• _,,._..."'., ...... ""' -., Newsn-., "" at tt:• A.M . .t
WISTllUI MUTUAL. ••c .. ow co• ... ATTN : MA•tL.YN
WllTMOltlU..D, ..... ..,_ts ,.., s. .,... ........... '-"" Caf...,__,TMtttls._.._. '""", ....... "' .. --,....,,.. .. ~IS----.. ""· I• far •• 11 1l11ew11 t• tll• T"r_._,,.. ......_. -..., ...,..... _. w tt1s Tr--.rn,., .. _. .,_ ,._,._1 IAMI
~I Odlillta "" YOUNG IM ltWAIC ~._,..ltWAIC T,....,_
........... ow. Clllll °""' ...... -.... ..... ... ..
H YIO ..... .,.11 .. ,.fd s., '-Ill Safeco Secw: Trev Eq -·" lllllFd It.a 12.... lllCom s... ... l!Cllllt ..... NL T .... ,.. na NL Mun I 6.2' •-" Slacll •.1' t ,tl Grwlll IS 7'0 NL TwllC GI 12.'5 NL Optn IJ.11 14.JJ Ti ii lb t 1J 7.16 IMO 10,.. NL TwllC Set l 4,J7 NL SU"llft lt.1$ 1'.14 l'•1rlld 1.J1 7.9' SIP¥tl l11vett: USAA Gt 11:. NL Teel! 12.D IUt NEL fe Flllld: Ca;llt , .. ,II IS.Ot USAA lllC I." NL. Tot Rt -ell 1!41411t "·· 20."7 Grwtll I._.. 11.61 U11t Acc11 U1 NL Kt':•'-MaH: Grwtrl , .... II.JO 59ec:I n.u NL Unit MllC UI NL c~: u =~: l11<om U1 ta ScudOtr ........ : 111ted Fllndt:
C111 ... _veil
l
-~----------,------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTue1day, November 3, 1981 s ••
NYSE COMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS
QUOf 4TIO ... llt(L.UOI, IAOUON , ... .,. •• 'l'OI•. MIOWIU, ~A(ll'I(, ...... IOtlON 01 r•Olf ANO (IN(INNATI noc11 l,t.(MANOU AMO lll'OlllO I \' fNI lllA•D ANO ll'lllNIT ·•" ~,~ ... ,~ .
Commodities:
Beware of risks
If you go Into the commodities futures market
with a typical istuk" of 15,000 or under. the odCle are
overwhelmlne that you'll be wiped out -and fut.
One study showed that 60 percent or commodJty
traders with slakes of thi.a size lost out almost at once
to the professionals
If you go into trading commodities with al least
$50,000, you hllve about a S0.50 chance of lostna It all
or if you have a good trading plan and are among
the lucky few, you might be able to quadruple your
stake.
The lime·hon· ~ ored advice or stock·
brokers is that
··you ca n never ~,..
go broke taking a ..
profit. .. The truth is SYLVIA PORTE~-? you ALWAYS WILL ~ ~
GO BROKE taking
small profits As a
speculator in commodities, you can win only if.you
take very large profits to offset the many s mall
losses you invariably face. .
With the odds so heavily stacked ag_al nsl fOU, 1t
seems crazy to trade in commodities futures -and
yet, increasing millions of you are, particularly now
that the new lax law makes all realized gains in
commodities subject ot a flat tax rate of only 32
percent regardless of how long the position is held.
Are there signs that tell you when you're starting
on the wrong track? Yes, says Susan Cole, president
of NYZ Communications or New York Here are
Cole's tips and 1f they frighten you out of the
commodities market. 1·11 wager you're saving
money.
Don't use the stock market as a guide to the
com modi ties market. Use commodities instead as a
fo recaster of the stock and other markets. The
commodities market daily flu ctuations average 25
percent or the investor's equity (margin)' but the
stock market fluctuations rarely reach 2 percent
daily. Therefore, in the commodities market there
are billions of dollars involved in a quick search for
the "real price," which usually is reflected in the
stock market much later.
Don 't watch gold; watch silver and copper
The salver market as made up mostly of silver users
<such as Eastman Kodak and mining companies1.
and proress1onal floor traders Sal ver is a good
indicator or where other commodities are going.
Copper, too, is a leading indicator. because it is
primarily an industrial metal, sensitive to economic
changes. ·
-Organize a plan when to get in and out -
and stick with it. Too many speculators. when facing
a loss, want to give it a bat more time
Limit your bullish bias. In commodities. it's as
easy to sell short as it is to buy long. Many traders m
commodities &ot stuck in gold because they knew
only how to buy and bold.
-Don't newS·Jerk. The commodities market is
too s mart and varied for people to make money by
making decisions based on international rumors or
on closing prices in Hong Kong or London.
-Never buy a commodity because the price is
low. The longs those expecting the commodity to
rise -have lost all their capacity at these lows.
They'll need a lot of time to build up again.
Don't pyramid. This means adding to positions
an your favor You can be wiped out by a small move
against you.
-Don 't put too much of your capital on one side
of the market either too long or too short. and don't
trade in markets that are illiquid, relative to the size
of your position YQu 'll find yourself locked in
STOCKS IN THntW'IGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
MEW 'l'ORICCAP) F'l,..I Oow.J_, •"VI
NEW YORIC (AP) S.ln, Monda, Pf'IC•
and net <i..not Of the lll!Hn moll eC11w New 'l'orl SW.Cl Eacl\aft9e luun, tracllno ne11ona11, at ~• 11\an 11
IBM tll.100 SJ • '""' EnOfl • 110.100 JO"" • Cllkorp ISS,lOO UV. MaratOlt Mtt,SOO tO • 22\11 Tandy I Mtt,SOO ._ • 1-. ~ .. pt,, • 5'J,«IO u..... • , ..
(le1' ~ SSl.lOO ._ • :M
Cllle1S-.ce S»,SOO J014 •' :.-=[e<" :::: = : :: SIOOlllnd ..S,!00 SJ + M
ArcllOnM • o&ll,ICIO 1114 + '""' Scllll•mbrQ • U:S.IOO 51"" + 114 Va EIP-4'1,100 12.... • V.
"lrTMr Tio T 411,JCIO SltV. -'"°
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW YORK !AP) -Tiie totlowl"9 1111 1110W1 Ille N9w 'l'ork $100 Ea<~
1lOCU end war1enls that have -W the mos.I anCI CloWft Ille mos1 IMI-on f:'Cltf•t of c...,. r909nlloH ot volume
°'No =res trecllng below U are Incl· '.-cl. Net end pen..,t-<IWlnOH a,.. Illa 'lfference be-Ille p,.,,loul cto.lng
price and -..S.y'•J"~•·
N-I.all Chll P<t.
1 May1 JW S'-• 1"-UP a...< 1 MaratOll tO • 12'-" Up W J H"t Intl JO-. + J'h Up 20-J
• Len,,., s U~ • ''-Up 1a.1 S UnEt ... 1' • • Up tU 6 .,,,. ..... pf 111 •14 Up 141
1 Ryan Hom 11'11 • ,.,.. Up 1t1
I CLC Am U._ + '""' Up 1 2 t Lu~laol I 1A~ + 2¥ Up 12 J to Arvlnln 1Df D + 2\1\ up 12.
11 MatCrwStl 1'Yt + 1-. Up 11' n Mnot•ut .,..... + 114 UP II 1 1J Gen s-1 11 + 1"-Up 10..a 14 WacllOVle pf 11 + 1.... Up 10.t
IS 1• .... I -II + 1"-Up 1U "Alcos.-. ~ •• ' Up IOS
N-1..a• Chll P<t. 1 Cro<klft lpf 4' H~ Off f"U
2 PSIM 4,'-' 7 -"' Ott 11.I , SouAtlr\Fln Jiit -Ill Ott , .. • c-1n< 1.-. -n• Ott '·' s LwcaCllaN" tO-. -11111 §a U 6 SdUlb Int 11111 -"' 7.2 7 IUeGra11 Jlf 21"--1" 7.1
• Sel>\e ... I... • ,, ... -"' Off '' t Alretl F" I~ --Oft 6 • 10 Alll"-1 S.-. -._ Ott 6 1
11 Ketv "IN 11-. -"-Oft U
11 NSllw .... n~ -::: ~Oft U
;: ~:~.:: ..... -Ill u
1f MMW Ind .-. -JA It Rell-t\lt -.... U 11 JtftlftP'N ,... -,,,_ Off J,I
GOLD COINS
tor ~r. Nov 7 nocrcs a.... ...... Uw (-a. JO Ind .. 1 '1 S7f ~ 155 '1 IM.12 • 14.27 10 Trn m 17 ll:J 10 37U:S 319.7'• J,i. IS Ull 107 It IOI n 10. IS 1111."• 1.14 U Stk 34411 ,., tO ,., U ,.S IJ• 4.JD
ln<lu• s.u..-Tran 1,12'.G Ullll . 1,120.-
65 Stk . . . 1,90' • .llO
WHAT STOCKS DID N EW '!'ORK IAPI Nov 7
Ac!Varw:ed
0.CllMd Un<lla"9fCI Total h_.
Hew hl9M Htw loM
WHAT AMEX oro
HEW '!'ORK IAPI Nov J
AC1v11n<ed O.cllneel urw:11a,....i TOfal ,._.
Ntw 1119N
..... IOW'
p,...,_ •• tl1 , ..
IS> 1' 11
METALS (~~. ~,'~ .•• cent. •
pound, U.S. dHtlnel~ i...w-...c.n1 •• ~ l"llK 4'14-49Vo CM>b. ~ ..........
Ti. ll.OD1 ~I W-c-IM Ill-.
.,_,_, ... <*Ill• "°""'· .. y .
9eN ~.GO Pff trey -•. M ..... & "--yclellyquola. ~.,., 1412,00..., ,. ....
..........,.,11.00troyu.,H Y.
SILVER CMMMyl
St.UO -1,..., ..._ •. "....., a M-oNy clally.-O
GOLD QUOTATIONS ,.........,,
~: ""'"""'fhd119 ..,, ........ . ~:....._ ................ A.el .. ..... ,a.-.
.. , ..... , .......... 1 ... . a-tc•: ~ lbcl"I .............. a.•. Mai.00.-.ci.
M•••r • MerMe•: OfllY .... , -.-. 1411.oo ... ~oo.
.......... , .... ., Clelly ...-.........
IUI.
....... I Oflly deity wRe fallrlc ..
.., ......... tS
SYMBOLS
..
.. Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/TuHday, November 3.1981
NU ..
CONIOLtDATID
REPORT OP' CONDITION
ot "Sou1h Coast Bank" Of Costa MtM Coun ty of Or1noe, •M Domestic Subsidiaries 1t the ctos. of
hµflntu on $eptt mber 30, 1911.
Stitt hnk No. 1239
ASSETS
Thouwftds of
Ootlart
Cash end due from banks ••••..•••••••••••.••.• 3,251 u. S. TrHsury securltlH .. • .. .. • • .. .. .. .. • .. . 1, '"
Obllgatlons of other U .S. Govtrnment
NOTICe Of' OBATH 01'
SUSAN oe•TRUDe
ACKBlltMANKlkl SUSAN G. BAICOC , AND 01'
PITITION TO ADMINISTaR ISTATI!
NO. A·110911.
COHIOLIDAT•D ltlP'O•T Off CONDITION
C o n1olld1ttd Report of Cond i tion of "INTERNATIONAL CENTRAL BANI< & TRUST
CORPORATION" of El Toro, Or•noe County, •nd
Domestic Sublldlerles 1t the close of business on
September 30, 1911.
Suw hnll No. 1U7
ASSBTS
Ootlar Amouftt1
In ThouMndt
Cash and due from banks •••..••.•.•••. ,, . . . • . 3,368
.... lllOTICI 'fO CitlOf.,... ._ MIUC T•AltWla "*'CW IWT11WTI• TO T•Allll'IA Al.CONOLtC HWIAAOI LICINlllll Ca..t. ..., .... v.c.c ......... '" .. ~. lllOTICI ti HtallV OIVIH .. tM
Cr.01 .. n ef CHUl"HILL WINI A ~ ~;~~l4.lr. Cf ;.=~~mT ~:.
agenclu and corporations .•.••••••••. 1 ••••••• 3,638
ObllgtUOf\S of States and PQlltlcal •
subcllvlslons ..•••••••••••.••••••.....••.•••• 2,907
To all heirs ,
beneficiaries, creditors
a nd contingent c reditors of
Susan Ger trud e
Ackerman, aka Susan G.
Bebcock, and persons wno
may be other wi se
Interested In the wlll
and/or estate:
U.S. Treasury securities ...................... 57,694
Obllgatlons of other u .s. GovernrMnt
agencies 1nd corp0ratlons .................. 1,,,,.
LIU-• .._ MlnHI _..,_ It
14411 Culwr Ol'I.,., Ill tlle City flf" ,,..,,,.., C-ty .. Ot ..... .._ ..
Collft•ftf•, tllot t IMllll tre11Jf0r It 01M11I 1.0 .. me .. to •lc,..rlll C. llill eelllewa, I I . •IU•U •41U
AMO Ill A, atrtitll.,t I .I . • .... ,. ... ,., Tr•11•••re• -•nlll ,,.,.., .. , Tro11tf•rtt, •MM
llllllMtt ...... , It Jolif L Y l'offnO;
In Ille City of A-IM, ~' fll
0••"90· ...._ flf CellfWN.e ,_..
l'ICTITIOUI aUSIMtllS NAMtl STAHMtlNT TIM loll-\119 .,.,.,.,., ••• doln9
W.lllftSft' THE COPPER PL.AY,411 W 11111,
04, Cost• Muo, CA mv
The c-S.-"""" 111<. a Collfor!ll• corpof'•llon, 111 W Oltl, G4,
Federal fundS sold and tecurltles
purchased under 90rHme nt$ to resell In ,
domestic offices •••••••••.•....•••.••.....•• 16,000
a . l.oans, Total (excludlnc,a
unearned Income)····•·~··-···~ 37,128 b . Less: Reserve for possible
loan losses •••••••...•...•••••......••• 245
c . Loans, net ••••••••.......•••......•..•••.. 36,883
D irect lease flnanclnc,a ............................ 26
Bank premises, F .F. & e., etc .... , ••••...•..•. 3,005
Other assets •••••••••.••...•••....•...•••..... 1,630
TOT AL ASSETS •.•••••.......•••.......•.•••• 68,536
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of lndlvlduals,
partnerships, and corporations •.•.....•..... 10, 186
Time a nd Savings deposits of lndlvlduals,
partnerships, and corporations ....•......••• 43,032
Deposits of United States Government .......••••. 12
Deposits of States and
political subdivisions ........................ 8,450
Certified and officers' c hecks . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . 1,062
a . TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
OFFICES .......................... 62,742
Total demand deposits ..•........... 1 t,260
Total time and savings deposlts .... 51,482
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
A petition has been filed
by Mary Joanne McVlcker
Jn the superior Court of
O r anga County requ.stlng
that Mary Joenne
M cVlcker be appointed as
personal representative to
administer the estate of
Susan Gertrude Ackerman
<under the Independent
Administration of Estates
Ac t>. The petition Is set for
hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive,
West, In the City of Santa
Ana., Call fo rni• on
November 25, 1981 at 9:30
a .m .
Obllgatlons of Stat es 1nd
polltlcal subdivisions ..•••.•.•.••••.••••••... 13,"80
Federal funds sold and securities
purchased under agreements to
reMO lndomfftl,oftlc.U--··~··-·-··-·-8,UO
Bank premises, F.F . & E ., etc................. 20
Other assets •.•.. , . . . . . . . . • • • • . • . . . . . . . . • • • • • . 2,449
TOT AL ASSETS .............................. 87, 1 SS
LtABILITIES
Demand deposits of Individuals,
partnerships, and c orporat ions ......... • •. 10,586
Time and savings deposits of indlvld~als
partnershlrs, ~nd corporations. . . . . • .•..... 65,406
Oeposlts o united States Go rnment t,870
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN
DOMESTIC OFFICES •........... 77,862
Total demand deposits ••..•..... 12,456
Total time & savings deposits •... 65,406
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
ANO FOREIGN OFFICES .................. 77,862
Other liabilities ................ : . . .. .. . • .. .. 1,483
TOTAL LIABILITIES
Cexcludlng subordinated notes
and debentures) . . . .. . . . . . • .. . . . . .. .. .. .. 79,345
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Preferred stock
TllO lout..,. In c.flf9r11le " tM 0111 ut<11tl¥0 offfc• or 11tl11Ct•• bualno • 01t1u of Ill• l11te11lllolll tr•Mf-t..-........ All ether •t1ul11 .. 1 ll•M•t 01141 olll•rtstea Uttd •Y Ille lllloll•od ,,.,. ... ,., wl!fllll 1-.,..,.. lotl -4
.. lor ....... n " tll• 11110-d trentf•roe _, -
Tllo .,,. ... ,,1 IS OtKrl.., In ..... , ..
u : All tto<ll Ill tro4o, flxtwrot,
"ti'-INM .,_. .... wlll "' • c.neln L.l411or ilon ltu1111 .. , know" •• Cll11rt11111 Wine & $plrll, Ltd. 91\lll louted 04 1401 (ulver Orl¥O, 111 tM
City ol lrvllw, COllfltY Of Or-. $1eto of Colllornlo, end '""'fer tll• foll-•no .,,_.k ........... llC-
(Of' II~)· on 10tO 11t110r• H~
21·1US>, Mw luu.d to premh•• loceled el 14431 Clllver Orlw fw tllt premlwt toc.Wd .. 1.01 Cwlwr ~lw 111 tlM City of 1rv1N, '°""4Y of Or-. Si.to of Celltofnlo.
Cost• Mola, CA mv. ------------ANO FOREIGN OFFICES ................ 62,742
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you shoul~ either appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
written objections w ith the
court before the hearing .
Your appearance may be
in pers on or by your
attorney.
No. shares outstanding, None
Common stock
TllOt Ille-· 04 pool'<-... ke or <onsldw .. IOfl In <-llOfl .,, .. Hid tr•"'fer of sold llcenH (or llcenMSY end ulcl bull-. l11<1ud"'9 llM n tl..-.:l ln_,lor'f, 11 Ille tum Of
u so,000,00, Wlllcll conalsts of tlM lollowlno: Cati. uo.ooo.ao; Oefnofld Hote duo Ml dOYt, $100,000..00; S.Cwlty
Agroo..-. U00,000 . .00.
Tllot 111\0a -oor.o Mt-SOid ll<•"HO oftd 1.....-tr011"9rw H requlrod by Sec. 14014 of llW But!Mu
and Protoulollt Code, 111•1 Ill• con1ldorotlon lor llW tr-litr of wlcl
bwslneu and traMI• of a.ict llc:ollM Is
to .. paid only o"-f Hid lr011$lor llal -n •ppro¥0d bl' the ~I of AlcoflOlk'9ever~ Control.
Tiii• llwlnen la condu<led by a <orPff.elon. TIMC-5-nM
Preu, Inc.
PagsR-
Vl<o P'fftlo.nl Tllla se.t-"1 wti llled wit!I Ille
Cow11ty c...-. ol 0r....-C-tv on Oct.
...... 1. ,., ...
PwblllNd OrOllOt Coest Dally PllOI Oct. 10, v ....... l. 10, .... .,...1
l'ICTITIOUI aUSINHS MAM« STATl!MINT Tllo lollowl11o 'C>eroo11 Is dol11g
~ ..... ,. ... M & R MAlffTENANCE CO .. 17330 .... M .. eo ... ,,_,, ..... Volley, CA
mtL Roei.n L.. -yfleld, 17»0 SM! ~teo •4, l'ounteln Volley, CA '2109. Tllh _.,_, II colllNcled by 011 lndl<;I.,..,
Roaort L.. IMvfi.ld Tiiis s-1 WH flled wltll 1M C-ty CIHll ol Or0!9 eo..My 011 Oct.
...... I .
1'17ntt
PullllllNd Or-to.st o.nv Piiot,
Oct. 10, t1, -· l. 10, 1''1 OJU!
MUCllTIE
l'ICTlTIOUS aUSINIHS HAMii ITATWMtlNT Tiie lollowl119 porso111 ••• doln9
bw\lnu1u: . AH OOVEA ASSOC IA TES, Ill
Dover Drive. Sullo 14, H._t Beo<ll,
Colllor,.1e '*3 JoM FrMCls McKwrw, *'2 Sollte Ano Avonue, Apl. HO. 23, s.nto A110,
C•lllornle fl101 Horry L•• Owe111by, 110 Hotllft9Nm Rood, HowC>Or1 &oocll Collforl'llet2MO Tiiis 1>111IMH Is condw<led by
99 ... , •• ~slllp. JofWIF.MclCurw Tiii• 1U11-I· wos fllod wlttl t County Clerll of Or•noe County OcloberJD,1'11 fl l7 Published oronoe CoHt Dolly PllOI Nov. 3, 10. 17, 14, 1"1 •7204
PUlltC MOTICE
l'ICTlTIOUS aUSIMHI NMq ITA'TWMllNT
Tiie follow1110 per.on It dol119
bullftfflOI' PACIFIC COAST LEASING, 1711M
1 .. c11 a1¥C1.. HulttlftVIOll 8-11. CA .,...,,
WHllem Fre11cos Sallnerdl, tlS.SI
lto.ollllural Ave. ••> Huntlnoto 9MCll,CA,,_,
Other liabllltles ................................ 2,242
TOTAL LIABILIT IES ........................ 64,98.4
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,000,000
b. No. shares outs tanding "86,385 .... 1,216
Surplus •............................••.•• 1,617
TOTAL CONTRIBUTE D CAPITAL .....•...•.. 2,833
Retained earnl~s and other
capital reserves ••....•....................... 719
TOTAL SHAR E HOLDER S EQUITY .......... 3,552
TOTAL LIABI LITIES ANO
SHAR E HOLDERS EQUITY ........•....... 68,536
MEMORANDA
a . T ime certificates of deposit in
denominations of $100,000 or more . . . .. . . 42,820
b. Other time deposits In
amounts of S 100,000 or more ..•.•............. 147
Market value of Investment securijles .......... 7,260
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a
contingent creditor of the
deceased, you must file
your claim with the court
o'r present it t o the
personal representative
appointed by the court
within four months from
the~a of first Issuan ce o f le e s as provided in
Sect· 700 of the Probate
Co e f Callfornla. The
time or filing claims will
not expir e prior to four
months from the date of
the hearing noticed above.
a . No. shares autho r ized 10,000
b . No. shares outstanding 10,000 .... 1,200
Surplus ..........•....•.............. 6,060
TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL .......... 7,260
Retained earnings and other
capital reserves . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • . . . . . . • • . . . SSO
TOTAL SHARE HOLDERS EQUITY .........• 7,810
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO
SHAR EHOLDERS EQUITY ..•............. 87,155
MEMORANDA
(Amounts outstanding as of
report date)
TllOt • Mle, IT..,tler end ou..,......I
ol Ill• oloresold s<o<ll In trodo,
llxlures, eqwl-' -OOod will of Mid -lflou wlll .. ~"'9100, 011d 111• consldorollo11 tllerefor tov•tller wn11111e cOMl_.Ollon lor ttw
lr•nsler •nd assignment ol Ill• olorewlcl tkonM tor lkonws) It 10 be
Market Value of peld on or •II•• tllo JOtll d•Y 01
investnient securities ........•............. 68,~9 Noomber. 1t11, at 111e u crow
The nde I ed O I I J Fed · k E doflOrtment Of Croo..-Netloftel 90ftll, u rs gn , an e . ric , xecutive •• 1uo _," -1n strwt. ,,. .,,. c11y
Vice President and Joyce E. Young, cash ier of the 01 Sonia...,.., c.ountv of 0ronoo, stot•
above·named bank, each declares, for himself and of ce111or11••. provided thot 111.
herself alone and not for the other: I have personal Deportment 0' At<-11< a. ... , ... Control l\M --Mid tronsMr Of knowledge of the matters contained In this report, s.old 11,.,.,.,
and I believe that each sta tement In said report is OATE00c-,., 1t11
true. Each of the undersigned, for him self and CHURCHILL wiHe & SPIRIT, LTD herself alone and not for the other, cer tifies under By: Ed•· S1rut11e"·
penalty of perjury that the foregoing Is true and v1<.e P<OllOtnt
correct. ' ::~~~-s
Executed on October 27, 1981, at El Toro. TroMlerte Oftd lftlend•d
ls/Daniel J . Fedrick Transfer•
/S/J oyce E. Young ~~a••ATIONALUMK Tiiis -'MU Is c-..Cted bl' °" ------------111\dlvlcluol
The undersigned, Nick J . Rorlo, President and
Mary A. Ale, Vice Presid ent and Cashier of the
above·named bank, each declares, for himself and
herself alone and not for the other; I have person~!
knowledQe of the matters contained in this report.
and I believe that each s tatement In said report Is
true. Each of t he undersigned, for himself and
herself alone and not for the other, certifies und er
penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and
correct. Executed on October 26, 1981, at Costa Mesa,
California.
YOU MAY .EXAMJNE
the file kept by the court.
If you are Interested In the
estate, you may file a
request with the court to
receive special notice of
the Inventory of estate
assets a nd of the petitions,
accounts a nd reports
described In Section 1200.S
of the California Probate
Code.
Publl'11ed Or111191 Cotti Dolly Plloc_"_ ........ ___ ,._,_ .. _1 _____ .,_ .. _•~ ltcr9W 0••-
-1#>......: IDtM-MM!Mnet l'ICTITIOUS auSINt!SS NAMI! $TATl!MIMT Tll• following pnson Is doing
llllslneuos. WEST CONSTRUCTION, 700 W. Victoria, Unit C·I, Costa l!Ms.o, CA •i.21. .
WA AAEN E WEST, 700 W Vlctorlo, Unll C·I Cosi. #!MW, CA '2'21. Tllll bw~MU ll condU<lecl by on lndlVldlHI
• WMTefl E. '/Vest Tltl• se.1-1 woo llled with the County Clefll of Or-county 011 Oct. ......
. ""-Publlllled Oronve ('.OHi Dolly PllOI,
""'" 2, 10, 11, t•. ltll UIM1
rtllUC NOTICE
l'IC'TITIOUS aus1N•1S
MAMa STAHM•NT Tllo followl110 .,.,..,.. Ii doing
MIMU•: ED'S DISCOUNT JEWELEAS AHO
ACCESSORIES, '"" lrookllurll, "°"~"' v•t9Y. CA '279. A-M. E•-1. ts31 z.11onc1 0r., Hunllnoton a..c11, CA ,,...,.,
Tiils buelMU II COftduclOd ey 011 INlvldval.
..._E'-I flllt ........,. we lllOd wllll llw C-IT Oettl ol Or ..... ~ Oii Oct.
n ,1M1. • ,,,_
PwlMI.,_, Qr°""" Coost Dolly Piiot. Oct. 21. -l, 10, 11, 1"1 ......,
Wiiii... FronC*I Sellnordl
Tiiis st.It-I -• llled wlti. ttw :ounty Clerll ol or.,. COW1ty on Oct.
"'"'· fl1119tt P\lbllllNd Or-to.st Dolly PtlOI.
t s/Nick J . Florio,
President
/s /Mary A. Ale,
>ct: n. 10. v. NO¥ >. '"' ",...'
PUBLIC MOlXC
Vice President & Cashier
Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot,
3, 1981
November
4749-81
P'ICTITIOUI aus1 .. 1u NAMll STAT•MllMT rtllUC NO~E
Th• loll-1119 persons ore Clolno ------------1·------------bullftffJ os· fllCTITIOUS aUMNtlU
CUSTOM WAVE WATEilall! 0$, MAM9. STin'llMIE1fT UOS Hunt11191on • C. Huntington Tiie lollowl119 "''°n' ore dOl119 BHCll, CA..,... llllllllOH M :
JOWPfl Starr. 1405 11 ... ullQlon •C CAI CALIFORNIA DE NTAL H11ntlnotonJeoc11,CAn.-. COU H CI L, 121 CALI FOR HI A O•nlel VI~. llt01 Newlencl Sp. 14, 0"TOMETAIC COUNCIL, IJ) Huntlnot0118o«h,CA'2.... CALll'OANIA cw1•0P .. ACJIC Tiiis bllllftffl II ~00 eye CDU H"CIL, IMO Ouell St., •HO. .....,.., pw1nerolllp. H .. Por1 llMcll, Ca. t2MO
Jowpll Storr Pro~ Servkes Adveftlllnt, Tiiis 1~t -fltod wltfl I Inc. lo C.Ufornlo (Or1111f .. loftl, t•
C-ty Cl-of Or.,. C-V on 0 Ouoll St., •JtO, -.iort 8eocll, Co.
'· 1901. 92'60 fllfw. Tiiis -11\HI IS <Oftdu<lod by O
P\11111-or-C:0.'1 Dolly Ptlo C0'1>0l'Ollon.
0<1. U, 10, 17, NO¥. J, 1"1 _. PROFESSIONAL st!AVICES
rtllUC MOTICC
l'ICT1TIOUS aUMMtllS
HMM ITATa-.. T Tiie followl119 .,.,.on h doing
butl-•S: (IJ VIDEO MEMORIES; 121 W.
AOVEATISIHG IHC AIOI\ L llomlteln,
P<eidlonl Tiiis sto.-1 wH llled wlti. tlw County Cl-of Or.,,.. C-ty on October t , ltrl. 1'171914 Pull>ll.-or .... C-1 Otllly Piiot
Ocl IJ, tO. v . "°"· J, 1"1 ...,...,
IEST EHTERPAISES, JMl1 COr11M ------------
FICTITIOUS aUSINtlS$
NAMR STATtlllillEMT T II• lollowl119 .... IOI\ •• ,. CIOlllO
11<1.iMts u . AL LIED I NSULATIO N COMPANY. OBA PermeMnl Pl ... Prod1.1c1s Compeny I• Colllort1I•
Cor-atloRI, U171 ~lo Str•t. H1111U119'on llffdl, Colltornlo nM1 Jomes Woll•<• Wllllom1 , Pruldont J02t co-try Club Oi'lve,
COiie MGM, t..i-.ilo nt»
Jomes T"°"'o' Wllllem1, Vice Pruldenl, !1 Polnsellle, lrvl"•·
Collfornlo Ag11H Begley Wllllems, JD2' Counlry C111b Drive, Cosio Muo,
Collfornlo m»
Tiiis l>Uslftffs Is c-<led by • corp0rellon. Allied lnwlollon Co , OBA "-'ii..,_, Pipe
~11'-Y J.,._W,Wlllloms,
PNllditnt
Jon J. Visel, Attomey at
Law, 400 West 10th St.,
S&.ilte 203, Santa Ana, Ca.
9t701; tel: <714) llS.1636
~ ,_,~ ... te.Au,CAft1t1
-----------~Escrow No J~ Puoo.-Or-eo.11 Dolly Piiot, Nov >. 1t11 '111,.1 NOTlt• TO C•t:OITORI Ofl RKltOW NO. 1-Jlt IUl.I( TRAMll'tlR MOTi Ca TO CltROITO•S
11eca. •ttt-t• u .c.c.1 OI' auuc Tit.ANS••• Notice Is 11eret1y 9lon to 111e ISecL•1fl_.lll U.C.C.I Nil.IC ll11C(
credllort ol MYUNG K. LEE -NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N lllOl o ------------
MAAY M. UE, Tromfffon, w-!Milk tronslit+' Is obollt to be mede of NOTICE OF DEATH OF
Plll>llshed OrM9 Coelt Dolly PllOt llonlftfft oddrou Is l10S Hudton Al.,... :.:~•rsonol property ducrlbod F N S How 3, 4, ID, ltll 4~1 Clrclo, City of F-.lrt Volley, ~Y R A C I E D W A R D
rulUC lllTM:E
su,.•••oe c:ou•T l'Oit ,,.. ST.AT1l ~ CALI fl'CNUUA
l"CNt Tlta COUNTY CH' OtUUMJa 111 ttw Mattarof ... A,111llut1on af:
Of Or•noe. St ... Of Cellfornlo, ltlel . TIM -ts> -lluslrwu •ddrtH l<EL TER, a ka FRANCIS !Milk trOMler Is_,. to be modit lo ol Ille Intended trMsferorlsl ore: E K E LT E R .. AATIH KUYUMCU ~ _NIS A!I 9, CARFPHIL.l, INC., llDSl MallnollO. • ' a OLa HACATOAYAH , LUIZ KUYUMCU Fow11telnVotloy,CAmOI. FRANCIS KELTER, AND
and PAAAHSEM HACATORYAH, The nemetal -bwSlntu e-"s 0 F PET IT I 0 N T 0 TrantJo,._ ..._ bwslrwM eddr of tho lnlofldtd trorulereolsl ore: 11 tJOO Pot1 Corti.,. Ptoc.e, en,-: JAL.AL v. GORJI, we. ttll, Apt. ADMINISTER ESTATE
Newp0rt BHch, C-ty ol OrOllgo, •~. L-Boedl,CA'*5.a NO. A·110917.
SC.lo of ColltorrMo. Tllo ~ lo be 1'0fttf•rred Is T 0 a I I h e i r s •
TM PAPtrlY '° • 1r-1oN'od Is <toscr•-"' ...,.., .. H : AJI o1 1M beneficiar ies, creditors ~~r1-•--o1 0,. All ,~~ 1 1tocll rn tr ... , met<lla,,.,lso, S--41H, OONALDW'IU.IAMSCX>UttAs --~ .--· · -· n and cont i"rcnt creditors of F tr-. llJll\H'H, _..,_t -.-llxlures, eQulpmont, 9-wlll ond orc.11a,...C:.."::at*'6 wllloftiwtdr'Y<leonlngptont!MnlMts tr-of•-cortoln 11ut1neu •-Francis dward Kelter
o•ot1•T01MOWCAUH known., CLOWN CLEANERS...., ;~=B:.HIL .. CARM'S HOUSE OF and persons w ho may be
'"" 11761 locot.o •t to5t Bovsldo ortw. City of Sold ~ 1, ioc-•t: 1905J otherwise interested in the
WHEltEAS. ""'"'-· OOH ALO H•wPOrt Booct.. CowMy Of Orongo, Meonoll•. F-.iln Volloy, CA'""· w l II and/or estate : WILLIAM SCOllllAS, 11 -r ..... Se.• ol t.ilfomle. "'•• ~I., ..... • -11..,. , .. -Tiie b11lk tr•n•I•• •Ill De Sold bulk tten1fer Is to De A petition has been filed • . ._ -,.... w """ con111mmated on or ettor"" ttlll doy consum......., on or oflor HO¥. u . ttlt, b C k N t' I B Clerk of 11111 Cowrt le< 011 order of No~ 1'1! ol IO·OO em el el Ille offla of, end dolms moy be Y roe er a I Ona ank, cllonol ... ""''"°" ..... ,..,...from ProfHaloNI LC.-S«vk .... ..,,.._ llled wllll, UHITEO •USINESS William Francis Kelter,
OONAL.0 WI LLIA¥ SCOU RAI to ocldroH la 1911 """'T<lSllll A¥0flUO IHVESTMEHTS, INC .. I02t Alondr• a nd Shawn Joseph Kelter OOHALOWIUIAMSCHAIOT: 1....,1 Oflk• aoa 11,.,1 Soni• A,.. Blvd . P•••mourt•. CA t0m. 121JI In the Superior Cour·t of IT IS OfllOEREO tllllt ell --Celllornle'7101 1'21111. ' ' U4·1010, 1114) 6~2750. Tiils l>Ulk 1MorH1•1t1 .. ....,._..,__ T1101 ti.o1attCSete1or1111119 c101ms l11 tronsler 11 -l«l to Soc."°' of 11w Orange County requesting -•r....,..tlll1c-te110:•A.M., 111e escrow r•l•rr•d to herein Is Unllorm Comrnerclel Cod•·9Ylk that Crocker Nationa l 011 Oecamllor t , ltll, 111 lll• -m-lt "'1 T"fons~. ~.-a.°'.,.°'-CeufltY Sofor es 1~""'°""'10111e Tr-tor" TIM test c1o1e tor fm119 <l•IMs rs Bank, William Francis SYperlor °""'· toc.IM .e,. Civic 0111>11lillftS11MnOSond eddr-ulod ~ov,20,1t11. Kelter and Shawn Joseph
------------Or., MlulonV .. fo, CA tM1.
Tlllt Jtato..-1 We& rited wllll 11W County Clerk Of 0••"90 Cow111y on O<-tober Ml, 1W1
fl174'8 Pue1111Nd 0r.,... Coesl Dolly Pllol,
Center Orlw West, Senlo Ano, b'r llM Tr-.foror 1or IN .,. .. ._ So 1., t1 known to 11M ,,,,_ Kelter be appointed as
ce1uor111a. end.,_ c.o-. 11 MY, voorsoro:Same. lr•11ster••Ul 111e 1n1011d eo personal representatives
PVIUC MOTM:E
PICTITIOUS aUSIMISS MAMtl STATEMaMT T II• lollowlno person " doing ......... s •• CAL I FORNIA GOLD I NV ESTMEHTS, •000 Moc Art bur
alYO., Suite JGOO, H-llO'I 8eocll, C.. .,....
Pomelo Merle Teloll•, 2DOS
Cel-1 St •• COsto Meso, Ce tt•ll Tiii• ......... ,, ~-10d by •11 llWllvldlHI. P_ .. ,,. TMono
Woller Best Leo 111, ,.._, certlnO WflY t1101'11111'-1W ow,... ol "'°"'° Ootod: Morel\ 4, ltrl lro11sferorlSl used Ill• follow Ing "*'1T"'is,,..,.u~T.,H~o-oE••o -~ • A.tin 1Cuyumc11 •ddlllo,.01 bwslness nemu e11d to administer the estate of "1CT1nousau1t••• " .... " .... ..... ocldr•~ wttftln -,_ vo•n lost Franc is Edward Kelter Or , Ml•IOll Viejo, CA fttt1. ------------Tiiis _,...,. ll <-.CIOd by en
l,....vl-1. WeltH 9ol1 L .. Ill
Tiiis st.....--flied wltll llw Counh Cl-ol Ore11go Ceunty on :>ct. u. 1"1. ... ,..,
Pullll-ar.,.. Coafl Dolly Pttet,
O<I. 21, """·a, ID, 17, 1"1 *7-.et
rtllllC MOl'tl
Hov. J, 10, 11, 2A, 1•1 411M1
ru.M• ITAT ... NT <•Y of Ws °"*' .. Sfw. c.ow. .. L..ull ICuywn<>I past H-. ( d th d ~~~~:-~:p::-:· .. ~: .. -:: PIH ma =~:~·::;:, 1
:. '; ... ~:.11:.r~!·.~~io: :~..::==... OATEJ~~i.1~::,'RJI, A~°mr:istra~i~~~p:~ta;~!
N•w110rt ce111er or1n. s1111e no. PICTITIOUI auM••ss "''"'°" 111 0r.,.. c-itv. Cetlhnllo, T~ I,,_,, Tron...,.. Act). The pet ition Is set for Ol\U • -IOr """ 14) tllCC._.... PUOll...., °'°""' (.-1 Oelly Piiot, PublllMd Or ..... Coo.st D•lly PllOt, hea . . De t N 3 t Newpor1 9eocll, CA,,..., NAME tTATt:MaNT Oii~ ~-IM!, .. .,.._ Mt fOf' llHl'"'9 Hove m-a, 1'et 4,.,_,1 Nov. a, ltll 4711 .. 1 rtng tn p . 0. a w111re0 J . MeftO, ••1 OrOOf'ltroo Tllo follow1no "''°"' oro dolnt .... ,...... ,._. 700 C ivic Center Drive, .._, ,,..IM,CAft1U. IMlllnou•· DATED: Oct. n, ""· West, In the Cit y of Santa JKk E. Ulla,• Sftafldr....-Ori ... , EL DORADO PAATHERS, LTD., R_..H ..,_ PlaX ll1'IC( Nit.JC 19TIC( '"''"'·CA mu. U04t Coll• Av~. s..11o c. Son Juo11 J.,...,;... r An a , Ca 11 f or n i a on Tiii• llllSlneu •• ,....,<..,by. Ceplllrono,CAft611. ~Oewr1 NOTIUCH' ........ UTI-'u ..... 0 R c 0 u RT 0" November 25, 1981 at 9:30 tlrnlted ~P. H U H T I! R E H E • G Y ~ D.--.---l''-ITl ...... •Ulltt•H .... "' ... J ...._ co•PoA•TtOH c If I -0 .... ,. • .,,.. .... 1.. CALll'O•NIA, COU .. TY OP' a .m . i.AM. UATUMIWT G;..,., ;.;t,.: ,0,.;;.,.1-~ '*' ~ .. : A•~~~1.! :,:~,:=. Pwbllc t!Ollco ts ,,.,_, .. ...,. INC HA .. H . IF YOU OBJECT to the Thll U-WO$ llled with tlM tov11ty Cl-Of Oronge County on Octoei.r t, ltrl. Th• 1011ow1no POrMll I• dol11g Tiii• ....--fllod with u. c,SenJ1181\Cephl•-.CA nt7S. w.oo ~'*"°' M. eon-, Olld O..Wi J. :'c,c:!':-°""Wetl granting of the petition,
l'lnftS ............. : C-lyOerllolOrongoco-tyonOcl. RAL.PM E. PHELAN, JA .. *49 ..... ,...,c:.HIWIU..,.. ..!""f, . ....-.," .... _ fl ......... s1 ..... ..-, 5Mt.a!. CAtml you should either ap ..... ar P\oell.shed Or-to.st Dolly Piiot UHITl!O MACHINE SHOP, 1711 U 1M1 Collt AvledOf,. Sult• C, Son J1.1•11 ,.,. c ..,... rm n--stylO of ' .--Oct. 13, 20.11, Nov a. ltll 441t-t1 Pom.ono be.,Cost.INM,CA. ttU7 ~"'41 M_..,._. Coplslr-. CA'267S_ ''==Or .... eoe. 0.lly Ptlot, ConnHn Eoo11. Ill<., C&E Cerpot MA••t.AOtlOP...... at the hearing and State
PllUC MOTM:E
PUBLIC NOTM:E
R_lcl........,.--,,,.,._. .-.. u. Tiiis b<l\lllOH ,. c11nd11c1~ by. SolH, •t JIS1 Blr~ll Strwt. City ..... TITION•R : CA•OL s . your object'1ons or f1'le CA --• • ~ Oct. tJ, """·a, 10, lJ, "'1 .,._.. Mewp0r1 Booell, C-ty of OrOftllO, aeattY·••1,.,._ •":11~veb:.s'::s~~':6.: bl' ... :,...~~lforlllef*I UmlWCl~~~HEAGYCORP. Stolt of Celllornl•, did 011 Ill• RICMAltOlt.attlTl'Ott written objections w ith the lndlvl-1. 1'11-By AMpll E PMIOll, Jr. Piil.iC ll11C( lit doy ol ~, ltll, • ., ml/t\lol ~UMMOHS (FAMILY LAW) court before the hearing . R ·~~ consent, c11sto1ve ttw,..., pottrwnlllp C.Ata ftUMat:•: o"'w Yo appear c be PICT1T10US aUSIMUS Tiii• • ...=. L,;:'"' .. 11q.:d with ~ P\obll-Or .... Coolt Dolly PtlOt. Tiiis se.t-1 WM llled wllll tlw end lerml11e1e lllelr relollon1 H NOTICRI Ur an e m ay MAMISTATEMINT • """?ct.'1.-.),10,17,1''1 ......., CowntyCi.rtcofOrenge CounlyonOct. H...Ult partftOrstNroln. Yow ...... beon-.fllttcOIW1moy In person Or by your
The lollowl nt person ll doing f;,";"~~ Clof'll of Or-Cowflty on Oct. .. JD, IM I. fllCTITIOUI aUllMIUS Sold bush• 111 h Mvre wlll .. de<lcM eoe1111t yow w191out V-bolno attorney. bwllntts • nrU •T1C£ 1'17....., NAM• STATt:MaNT conducted by oonn11 J. EOOf\, wllo wlll 11oard untolt -.. r"'-9d wltlllfl • I F y 0 U A R E A A M E R I c A H M £ ll I T I M E l'l,.. Pu .. lshed OrOllOt to.st Dolly Piiot, Tll• toll-1119 ... rso111 .,. dolnt ... , .,.., Cllscllartt Iii llOOllltlos .,,., d•Y•. AMd , .. lftformotlon below.
COMPANY, ~, VI• OPOrtO, • tOA. Pui.11.-Orongo-COOlt 0.11•~1 H~ HOY.,, 10, 11, 2A, 1,., 4n 4"'1 bu\lnost•: debit ol tho llrm •ltd receive ... II'°" wlsll. -, .. .,,,k."' ... c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r a NewportBood'I CAtHU Ocl.11,Nov.3,ID,H,IWI P'ICTITt MISSIOHESTATES,1lODW.CotM monle1 ... yel>Mtol1Wllr"'. ottorflOylrtll\lsrn.llw,you.-lcldo contingent creditor of the ~,,~~ '°" 'ar·-•. 1-1 w coos1 ous aus1Nass ••ILJC llftnl'( Hl-wey ~ ..... 1-M-"' ·---11 F rt~ notk I ptl ··~ d -,_, -•• ••BLIC lift""( NAMa STAT•Mt!MT r• """'' ,,.. • -••• ·-...... .,.... • " ..... • • "'"°Y gl¥0111,,.t .. prom Y '° ..... VOii• r-so o• eceased, you m us t file Hwy. •110,N-por18eocn,CA'2"1 ru "'""" Tiit lollowl119 persons ere dolnQ Collfor"le'*3 llle 11nder1 l9ned Wiii 1101 be "90dlftLlf011r,moybefllOclontlmo. your Claim With the court Tiiis w•lnetS Is concluctocl by en bwslnttt M: G. PA•KEA OEVELO .. MEHT, ._.1 .... from 11\ls cloy on lot any AVltol 1"41vlclu01. P'IC1'IT10US aUSIMtlU SPECIALTY SPACE AEHTAL..S l'ICTITIOUSaUMNEU INC., •n Bol-. Minion VieJo, obltgotlons Incurred ~y Oonnlt J. Utled lie 1ldo demondedo. El 0 r pre Sent It t 0 the
Mlct.91 IWI Br~• NAM• STAT•Mt!HT ttan Construction circle E•ll. lrv1,..' •AM• STAT•MaHT Collforl'llo t2M7 Egan In Ills OW11 nome or In ttw nom. t•l-•1,.... dKICHr contr• Ud. "" per sonal repr esentative Tiiis ,,._, WH lllOd with the Tiie lollowlnft P•rton IS dOlftft Colllornl•'2114 • Tiit followlng Pt•ton .. dOlllt COATS ENTERPRISES. IMC., OftlMflnn.. oudlOnclo • ..--Ud. ·~ I t d b th t CIOrtlolOr "9tCoulltyon0c1 • • bvllnessos 4415 Vlo ~onuo. Sonia l•rtloro, OATIEO AT Hew,ort Buell, dolltrodeJlldles.Loole lflformoclon a ppO n e y e Court CMft.:; • -lrwu M. Oovld J. Huerte, •17 N. Pino OAAHGE COUNTY ACID WASH ColllomletJUO Colllorl'llo, 11111 111 ... y of Howmber, QUO t119U9. Within four months from
···' r11aas SOFTWAllE BY SASSO. ttl> Ploce.A.....im,C.lllorlllo..OS. co .. 211 19111 Sl•HI. H11nt111gto11 30 OEV£LOPMEHT, IHC .. 1700 '"'· SIUOtdcloMetcllklterel con• ..... the date of fir st Issuance
C '
0 II PllOt AleHndet Ad., l.eql.lnO &oocll, Ce. Cllorlos Mortiel, llSI Clubflowse aoe<" CA.,..., C I S ,.. PubllslltdOr--. oos • 1 • -•si Orlve,C•._..__,,. ... lf-••-·-· west •est H •11••Y. 1111• 170• n--M.r-"" • ..,._°"est• •-to. dotlorlo of letters as provided ·1n -011 .. 1 " .. ..,_.. --~ ..... K...-R.· 9en'V. 111 lfth Stroet, How-.. &Nell. C.lllomlo '*' Publl•hed Or-~eoo""'f•t~· .. ~-11• P11:; 11ecerlo 1---~1.1eme11te, de •••• Del 10.f1 ....... i.10, 1-· Leonerd P. Souo, Jr .. nu Aotlort o . .,._., u-. SI ao~on H ti-a...-11 ,. .. __ ........ ---'... • ""'.... Sectl 700 of th p b • -~ ..... ~ Ill\ • .,,.on -. --.. _ Thi• bUSlftffS Is COtleluCled by • Nov .•• '"' .,.... moMro ,., retpUesto 0 •looe<lon " on e ro aLe Aluellder Rd .. Lotuno Boocll, Co .•• .,.Newport BoKll, Collf°"11o •a.o Tiii• buelntU ,, condwdocl by ... ..,..,., ,__...... ..., •• v.-. ,...... -'991~•·• • Code of California. The '2U1 Tiii• bwslMU Is conducted by 0 1 ... 1vlduel. G. P-« 09,...,,,_., IM. Uomp0. t' f flll I I Ill This _,,,.H " c-..Cted by ... goner••_,,,.,..,,.., 1(-R. Bon"r ay: Oreg E. Pork«, PUIUC •TICl 1. TO THE RESP<>f'OEHT ime or ng c a ms w
l'ICTITIOUI ausiNUS 111C11v1dua1 OovldJ. H-19 Tiii• se..._,., wH t110c1 w1tt1 111e PntldlM Tiie pall'*-"°' lllOcl • petition not expire prior to four
NAMa ITATtlM•NT lAOllOrd Seuo I C Tiiis ....._.,, WM llled wllf\ .... Cownty CIOrtl of Or, .... C-r on Ckt, Tiiis slat-I -llleel wltll the l'ICTITIOUI avttMaU cOll(t m'"e yowr mon'lelil. If you loll months from the date Of
""• fellow1119 .,.,..., 11 dolnt ,.!,11~~Y "c~-~ ~~.,c:.:!'y ':, Oc-=r ~~;:.,~ 0r._ c.u..i., °" n, '"1· ,..,,.,., CIOril of 0r.,,.. Covroty on ttAMe 11'.ATaJllT 10 me • rtlflOM8 '""""'•<toy• of tflo the hearing noticed above •
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IAL•OA EDITIONS. UDO e ut fllntU P11b11.-Or .... eo.11 Doll.,"''°'· .... y • • ...,.,,.., .. , vou. y-dllfOllll l'Ny ........... oM th fll k t b ~ a1>M., P.O."°" m .... -.CA PubllllNd or.,... eo.tt Dolly Pll .. Nov i. 10, 11, u. 1'91 •n Mt Oct. •l. a. n. ""· S. ,.., ... ,..., • MU9MtlS sou T H M • 1. o s E 4 o the co11n may ontor • Ju•1me111 e e ~ Y the court.
,..,, .~....... _ E ...._._ Oct. u, 20, 11, Hov. l. "" 4431..,1 ,. _.,. -~~~-..... PAATNE,.Jtu "· 110D ,..,Ille aor cOt1te1n1,.. lnl\lllCtl ... or ..,., °""'" I• you are nteFested In the J, ,.a\'CO ""',,_ ... , 1_.. . ~-_.,. -.. _ ,.,IK ..... _. ___ y_ or1,,.,w.......,11oec11.c::..-.. co11ur111119 division of pro.,.rty, est a t e, you may f ile a
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J.!Wt<•Rlc:Ntrd "•CT•T1ou1aUS1N•ss MAMalTAT•MllHT Tllo followlno Porto" 1, ,011111------------PIMlk• "·"'"" 111e. """'"" ...... ce11r1. TIM ..,111111mont of ...... the Inventory of estate Tiiis , ... .,...... •• ,. ... wttfl .. ttAMt: tTATaMaNT r11e fo11-1no ,,.,_, ore Clolno 1111,,,. .... : .... JC telllCE 111tt MerlM ..., ~ ... kwtt......,, tokl119 of _.,or ,,_rty, .,. other assets and of the """tltlons, c-tyQw11o10r-c-<ftY ... 0ct. Tiit lollowlng person II dolnt, blltlnou•: l'INAL.L.Y A UNICO•N, lOHI ,_ 9oacll,Co . ...., I COllrt owthotlr911procoodl .... m•yollO aCC t d "" t n .1•1. • bu•IM1us: Lt o "N o , RAN c E ,_.. -· cwrtlt Pl .. 110 F.R.I'., t10C. 10 ro1111t. oun s an repor s .. ,,.... ""ST~ES THROW, UGO w. Cotti ENTt!RPltlHS, 951 •lr<ll sc .. Sllll• Wotl•Y Clt<IO, ............... 9oocll, .... l'ICT1T10UI •UMNlrM Collforlllo _.,.,.....,,, 11'22 MerlM OATEOs.,.t. n. ,..,, described In Section 1200.S
,,_.ltMdOr9119i C.• Oolly Pt1M. Hlollwoy, Ho I, Newport Btt<ll, UI, N--1 aoech. CAtwO, ~ Miii ... , lOHI Wetlty drcte, NAM9 ITAT11 ... NT :.:?., Orlw, Hlflltllll'°" tlhch, Ce. CL~ A. .,.ANCW, Of the California Probate
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•' • 1
, .
Disney Studios revamps
'Watcher in the Woods'
By 808 THOMAS AMeC ..... ..,_W"-
ffOLLYWQOD <API -Some movie fl11co1
have h•PPY endinas, •nd "Watcher In the Woods"
bas joined that minority.
When the Disney thriller opened in New York
·on April 17, 1980, to devaataUn1 reviews and 1Um
business, ll seemed another fallure In the
company's drive to attract a wide audience. Too
unconvinclna for adults and too car destined for a
fast tax wrlteoff and consignment to cable TV.
Disney bosses sought a reprieve after 10 d~a
in New York-, ~·watcher in the Woods" was
withdrawn from release and sent back to the Disney drawing bOards.
This fall, "Watcher in the Woods" was
released in the Northeast and a few selected areas
to generally good results. Other spot releases are
being made, spreading the mm natlohally by Thanksgiving.
Reports Chuck Good, president of t~e Disney
distributing arm, Buena Vista: "It's doing very
well in the marketplace now. Naturally we hope it
would do better, but it has placed one, two or three
among the product in release now. I doubt that I\
will show a profit in this country, but we have the
foreign release to look forward lo. It certainly isn't
a bomb."
Credit for defusin~ a potential bomb goes to
co-producer Tom Leetch, a 26-year Disney hand,
and Harrison Ellenshaw, one of the new breed of
movie wizards. One day at the Burbank studio, the
two discussed the rescue operation.
"ll was the usual cop-out or hurrying a movie
to meet a schedule," Leetch said. "We had to
make the New York premiere because it had been
scheduled as a benefit for one of Bette Davis'
charities. Our backs were to the wall, and we had
little time to test the picture. We damn near didn't
make the delivery date."
Leetch recalled that the film played well for
seven-eighths of its length at the premiere. then,
"in the last seven or eight minutes you could feel
Ulat the audience was dissatisfied ."
Critics expreased similar dismay. particularly
over the appearance at the climax of a weird,
outer-space visitor who was supposed to be the
cause of the tllm's strange happenings.
Adapted from a Florence Enael Randall novel,
the story concern.a a 1rlevlng mother, Bette Davis,
whose English manalon Is rented by an American
family, David McCallum, Carroll Baker,
Lynn·Holly Johnson and Kyle Richards. MiH
Johnson resembles a daughter Miss Davis had lost
30 years before in a mysterious disappearance.
Stranee things start happening, especially in a
seemingly haunted woods.
"We bad a lot of Input on how to solve the
ending: it's amazing how many people try lo be
helpful when they know you're in \rouble," Leetch
said. "Most of the suggestions were wild and
impractical. We decided to reach for Harrison."
The son of noted Disney special effects artist
Peter Ellenshaw, Harrison Ellenshaw had finished
creating the cloud city, snow plant and other
marvels for "The Empire Strikes Back" when the
call came Crom Disney.
"AU the other suggesUons would have made
the picture more of a science-fiction story with a
complex twist," Ellenshaw said. "I thought It
should be a simple ghost story."
The film was rl!·edited to remove some
"heavy-handed, clunky bits," and optical effects
were redone for greater subtlety. The ending was
rewritten, but retakes proved a problem.
Last year's actors strike delayed things, then
the actors had to be reassembled from other
assignments. Miss Davis could not join the
company in England, and her scenes were filmed
here.
Ellenshaw's major challenge was creating a
new apparition. He finally dropped buckets of
black sludge against a white background. then
used an upside-down negative to create a
convincing ectoplasmic vision.
Farce comes to Huntington
By TOM TITUS Of .... Dally,.. ... ._
The title alone is enough to suggest that you're
not in for an evening of Tennessee Williams or
Arthur Miller. "Love, Sex and the IRS" is
precisely what you might expect -a Cast-moving,
physical farce.
This lightweight laugher, now on stage
through Dec. 5 at the Huntington Beach
Playhouse, Is a frolicksome evening of tomfoolery.
-the sort of play that Jack Sharkey could dash
out over a weekend. And
though it may not win
an y awards. it . s INTERMISSION c<ertainly worth a trip to
the SeacliH Village
theater thanks to an
abundance of high-tempo humor.
Once you accept the rather unlikely premise
(a fellow declaring his male roommate, named
Leslie. as his wife on his income tax returns J,
.. Love. Sex and the IRS" turns out lo be a pretty
entertaining show. It's imaginatively mounted by
director ,Rex Day. who also stepped into a major
role late in rehearsals and acquits himself
splendidly as the quizzical' Internal Revenue
investigator.
The choice role of Leslie -who spends most of
the show in drag. throwing falsetto lines -goes to
Joe Ritkes. who's a bit of a Jerry Lewis type under
normal circumstances. Ritkes tum.s in a hilarious
performance as the focal point of an increasingly
complicated situation.
John Holtz enacts the straight role of the tax
finagler who's also sharing his fiancee <albeit
unknowingly > with his roomie with a fine sense of
comic frustration. Diane Burland is well cast as
the centerpiece in the triangle. brightly
interpreting a rather shallow role.
Most memorable. along with Ritkes. in the
Huntington cast is Martha Faulkner as Holtz's
mother. a sort or Margaret Dumont character
from the old Marx Brothers flicks. Miss Faulkner
is a superb physical comic whose vinegary facial
expressions draw howls.
"lOVE. l•ll AND TMlf 1aS"
A comecl'f b'f Will!..., VMI .t-aftCI J-Miiman, cllr.c,.., by A•• O.y, o..-.Ced Dy Erin -•-re. Rate....,....... E"91yn o.rt.
--tl9tltlflo Dy ~ Br•Y. Mt dte«atloft by Bram-II Vouno. -*' FrlcM.,, 8ftd s.turo..,s ••I:• ltWouol> o.c. s •t llM Hunt1119'on hach Pla'(llOvM, llMln Slr..t et V_t_.. A,,_,
Huntington llM<h. Aeserv•lloM'47......S.
TMlf CAST
Le1lle """"' . Joe lllftn K•l• O..Ws .. .. • • . . . 0...,. Burland
Jon Tree~ . .. .. . • .. • .. • .. • • . • Jolwl Hoitt
.. loyd ., ..... ".. ... ..... .... ... • • • • •... 11. Deen o.., Vivian Tr.ctltlMft . .. .. .. .. .. .. • . • .. • ......... Mal'INI Fauia,..r
Mr. J•nMn .. . • ...................... J•f C:-11" CCN1nle . . . . . . . . . Lau<• JaotObs Arnold Grunion • "'8111" EtltlnM>
Jay Conklin as the pushy landlord, who drops
in periodically to help himself to a beer or two. is
properly repulsive, while Laura Jacobs and
Martin Eckman function effectively in cameo
assignments.
Actor-director Day also des if ned the cramped
but stageworthy setting, inc uding an outer
window which plays an important part in the
show.
"Love. Sex and the IRS" will help you take
your mind off your own laxes. It's on stage for five
more weekends al the playhouse, Main Street al
Yorktown Avenue. Huntington Beach.
•
THE HARLEQUIN Dinner Playhouse is in
rehearsals for its next production. Orange
County's first look at the Lerner-Loewe musical
"Paint Your Wagon." which opens Nov. 18 and
runs through the holiday season.
Allan Hunt has been signed lo direct the
lyrical story of the California Gold Rush, which
includes such songs as "They Call the Wind
Maria." "I Talk to the Trees" and "Wand 'rin
Star.·· Brad Elsberry is designing the costumes
and sets, while Jay Smith will choreograph his
fifth Harlequin -production.
.. Paint Your Wagon" will play nightly except
Mondays lhrough Feb. 14 at the Harlequin, 3503 S.
Harbor Blvd. just north or Costa Me sa. Call
979-5511 for ticket infornbtion.
R e.
BREA FOUNTAIN YALLEY ORANGE'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT (Tuesday, November 3, 1981
Better Davia and Kyle Rlch.,d1 In "Watcher fn the Wooda··
~ ~ -.-£.l J. j Aita l
mi._ ~ Vo'''f"~'~ ~ NOW Pl.AVINO u.td Alteatl
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*BARGAIN MATINlll!S *
Mond•y thru Saturday
All Pt rfonm1nct 1 btfort 5:00 PM
{Except Spedll £1191 .. mentt Incl Molldlya)
lA MIUAl'A MAll Mtrodo ot lo1ec1on1
LA MIRADA WALl<·IN 99,·2400
..... --~--"ARTHUR "'"' ·------........... ,,_ .... ... _.,_ .... ,, .........
"CARBON COf'Y --. .. , .. ,... ... _ -..-.-. ..... .,.,
""l~D ""YOfl
IN COHCaRT" ,_.,,, ... _ " ........... .
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALl<·IN ____ _.,..._
"l'ftlNCE OF THe ~TY" .. 1 ••arM.r:a,•-
--·~"OHlY WHEN I LAUGH"' 1111 ••--... ••1 a;u .. 1e::a
LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAii( IH
~AIOelAmo 211/H .. 9211 --·-M&a• "RAJDaRI OF THE
LOST ARK"' ·---,,..-
LAGUNA
--·~-"RICH AND FAMOUS" ... ·----.-
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foculty ol Conolewood
213/531·9580
a::-..•-"BLUES BROTHERS" 11111
..... l<I&. ·-_..,..,.,. __
"Tita FAE.NCH UIUT~NAHT'S
WOMAN'' ... ·--·--·-
"IE.ICAH F"OM NEW YOflK" ~ •ua.--"'Hl!A VY flllET AL 1111 .........
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so. COAST WALK·IN
5ou111 Coo11 Hlwoy
01 t1000•oy
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·~--llU . "LOOKER" --.me.••• MT.-.tt&.trt&.a"a....._,_..
................ 515 \ .. \ .. e.oo '-'""°"e·•s
IMPORTANT NOTICE! CMll DflEN UNDU• 12 FIUE! M-.... WltM< .... Tlllo Fu 4 30• Sal S.t "4ls 5:30 ,.
~ SOlllCI • 'IOUll AM CAii MOO IS 'IOllll Sl'lMEll
llf NO AM CAii MOO WITl4 IGNll10ll ACUSPY l'OSll10ll
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ANA .. !<~
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN f_...., ti ot lemon SI
179-9150
··•ucKM'D l'ftY~ IN CONaltT'
"aLUES~l1111
Clllf ft SOUllO
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BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
UncOln "" Weat Of kno11 121·.010
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"LOOKER" fHI
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Mt$SIOl1 Vieio Mall
495 6220
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Newport Cinedome Cinema West
UA Movies Family Twin Stadium Orive·ln FOUNTAIN VALLEY
ORIVE·IN "ALnRED STATH" 1111 990·4022 962·f248 639·8770 Jon04e9Gfrwy 0,._,,_l(So)
COSTA MEil OUIGI WESTMINSTER 962·2411 c11•H• SOUllO • 644 0760 634 2553 891 3935 F·iiiiY--Ac_,_, ............ ,':.] Cinema 546·3102 CinedOfTie 634-2553 UA Mall 893·0546 II II 1eoch 11¥G So °' --~~~---•'.'°_•_-_"_'0_'"_'_...,_ ..... _ ..... __ -_-__ (ii"!ii!i_-._-__ .. _-_-__ 1 __ =-=-=-=-~===='•= ... == ...... ==·=-=-====I ======jl .,,,. ~ffl~U;l
Shulcx:k Holmes m<ets
Sigmund Fr~ud
THESEVEN-
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SOLUTION
Dudley Moore
Peter Cook
In
"THE
HOUND
OF THE
BASKERVILLES"
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Orange Coaat DAIL y PILOT /TUHday' November 3, 1911
flenry Segerstrom honored
by county Arts Alliance
•
IY MAaY J ANIE SCAR CELLO ....................
H~nry Se1eratrom, whose family contributed
both S acres of land and S6 million toward
colaltructlon of the new Orange County Music
C•nter, WIS honored with the first Meritorlo1,a1
Aehleve ment In the Arts Award at a meeting of the
Arta Alliance of Orange County.
The award, a limited edition lithograph by
UCI art Instructor Tony DeLap, was presented by
Dorothy Berry, president of the group, In a
eeremony at South Coast J>laza Hotel.
Supervisor Ralph Clark alao apoke at the
. proup's 'lccond annual conrerence, announcing the
ortn atrdll of a steering comm lttee for
eommunication between elected officials and the
art1.
Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson and Costa
Meta City Councilwoman Norma Hertzog will help
tetruit leaders for the committee, Clark said.
Community leaders and representatives from
theater, music, art, museums, education and
atchitecture in the county attended the day.long
meeting, titled "Putting the Pieces ln Place."
Keynote speaker was Ralph Burgard, a New
York consultant on cultural plans for cities and
eounties and the first pres ident or the American
Council for the Arts.
"We have to abOw bow the arts aftect us In
every facet of our lives ti they are to succeed In
the ·eo. and '90s, .. 'h• told the aroup.
"lnte1ratlon of the arts ls neceuary to
government declajon•m aldn1 ti our cltiea are to
become aynerptlc aad a celebtatlon rat.her than
Jusl endure endurll9ce. ln the tuture, mayors will
have t,o lnclUde arts in their pollUcal platforms to
be elected."
He continued, "No one should plead the arts aa
a specl-1 cause to school boards. Nlnety-el1ht
percent of what we learn ls throu1h perception,
language or numbers, and fenerally In that order.
Arts simply are a part of that trio, 10 bow can we
neglect one·Wrd of how we learn?"
Burgard noted that competition amon1 1roups
is good for fund-ralstn1. ''Tbe arts are the last
bastion where the private aectot can make a
difference," he said. "I don't know the details, but
I guarantee you h'aven't asked enough in Orange
County. More private money ls going Into the arts
simply because they"re beating down (private ·
industry's) doors."
He also s uggested that communities
consider ing cable TV contracts lobby for a
percentage of the gross revenues to be used for
local arts programming, rather than asking just
ror use of studio space and equipment.
A songwriter and his m risic
. '
By JOE EDWARDS ....... ,..... .....
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP ) -Bruce Channel
was thumbing through selections at a record store
recently when he came across his 1962 hit, "Hey
Baby."
"I was shocked," he recalled. "I didn't know
Smash Records was still printing it.
"I didn't l)uy it," he said, laughing.
He's one or the few who didn't. The record sold
a million copies, earned him two appearances on
"American Bandstand" and still garners him
toyalty checks. People now in their mid· to
J'._(e.30s, who wore out their tra~istor radios back
in the tranquil days of 1962. wili easily remember
the song, their steady date at the time and their
favorite high school hangout.
Today, Channel is 40 and a Nashville
aohgwriter. who has written or co-written such hits as T.G. Sheppard's "Party Time" and "You're the
Best," recorded by Kieran Kane. But "Hey Baby"
is what launched his long career in music.
"There was a sing-along quality to it that
people liked." said the husky Channel. who has red
hair and a matching mustache. "There was a
dance then call ed the Hully Gully, and people
dlnced to the song like they did to the Stroll. The
song had a simple message -a guy talking to a
girl and the harmonica part made it unusual.
"ll gave me the chance to see things I'd
always wanted to see and to travel around," he
said. "It opened many doors for me and kept me in
the business and kept me working."
He kept singing until the mid-1970s, when he
Jert the music business to take a job with the parks
department in Grape. Then he moved to Nashville
to make his living as a songwriter.
.. Everybody in this business is part gypsy." he
said. "You move where the action is."
Channel, a contemporary of Del Shannon,
Paul Anka and Jimmy Clanton, said rock ·n ' roll
music probably is better now than it was during
his heyday nearly 20 years ago.
"It's not changed too much. The musicians are
younger," he said.
"It's probably a lot cleaner now -more
musicianship is involved and people learn their
instrument and keep working at it.
"But there was a feeling of closeness with
~huck Berry when he played. His whole life was
infused with his music. and t here was an
informality about it.
"Today, it's too much show business. a-little
too much schtick. But jillions of people love it."
Rruce Channel
He said he doesn't keep up with rock 'n' roll ·
music too closely. "( just write all the time," he
said.
Everett paternity
• • case goes to 1ury
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A jury has begun
deliberations in the paternity suit lodged against
actor Chad Everett bv the 8·year-old son of a
oneti m e extra on Everett's since-c anceled
··Medical Center'' television series.
Jn his instructions, Superior Court J adge
ltaymond Cardenas advised jurors Monday not to
be it1fluenced by "sympathy" or "passion" and
said the key question to be resolved was whether
or not Everett had had sexual intercourse with
Sheila Scott on the day that she ~laims her son was
conceived.
··Sexual intercourse is not usually conducted
in the presence or witnesses,'' Cardenas pointed
out.
Everett claimed during the trial that he had
never had sexual lntercou~ with Ms. Scott, but
s he claimed they bad sex the night of Aug. 16, lf72.
Her son, who she named Dale Andre Lee Everett,
was born May 25, 1973.
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·:Ye age r 's
1blue blood
.is showing
' NEW YORK <AP> -Ir
·1they're going to break up the
Los Angeles Dodgers. then
catcher Steve Yeager hopes he's
.not included in the dispersal
'plan.
"I don't want to be traded,"
he said Monday after accepting
'his one-third of the World Series
i Mos t Valuable Player Award. "I
' 'just want more pl11ying time."
I Ron Cey and Pedro Guer -
ero, who shared the Series MVP
:n o r with Ye ager. were
.unable to attend the awards
ceremony sponsored by major
~ league baseball a nd Sport
Magazine. 1 The word at the Series was
that this would be the last time
around for these Dodgers.
Ironically, only days after
1s haring the MVP award,
:Guerrero was rumored heading
, 1ror San Diego in a trade for
·shor tstop Ozzie Smith. But the
Padres rejected that deal.
If management is determined
to clean house, then Yeager is
glad the Dodgers ended their
run with a world championship.
TUESOAY,NOV.~1M1
CLASSIFIED C4
Off shore Club canoe racers r from left J, Eddie Fraser. Andy Weigand. "This is our fourth time in the
Series," he said. "It was very
gratifying to finally win it.
especially if they are about to
break up the team ...
Yeager thought there were
som e lessons to be leaf-ned by
Series observers. The first · is
that he can produce more than
his 86 regular season at bats
Mainlanders upset Hawaiians
. al lowed and the other is that the
. Dodger veterans are still quality
players.
Area canoe racers prove that hard v;ork and dedicati on pays o.f.+
1 ·'This might have been our
last chance lo do it collectively
and we did," said Yeager.
"BasJcaJly, it was done by the
veterans. We showed we can
r still play."
And the veteran catcher hopedo
he can play more than he did
before the playoffs.
By EDZINTEL
Of tlM !Mii' ~lklt SUIH
Some s urfers know about it and talk
about it' and there have been infrequent
published accounts. but very few people
are concerned with or even aware or the
cultural warfare that's been going on
for years between natives or the
Hawaiian islands and "mainlanders,"
as they call us.
people. Their heri'tage, rich with
tradition and cttstoms unique unto
themselves , have been adamantly
perpetuated and protected.
Recently, the competition between
The!' didn·r lzke the .tac·
'heft 1ce heat them biit
tl?ere •1.:a.c; c '1ea/t hrer . -nn;mnc::•••1 ..4 I' I •I .'
~hn Van Cleave
' race, considered the World Series of similar to the traditional Hawaiian
outrigger racing. standard, but was sleeker, faster and
Appropriately n a m ed "Blazing more functional. The difference was in
Paddles," the Cali fornians shocked the the wood. or lack of.
rest of the paddling world by defeating them all, Hawaiians and Tahitians Whe reas the island -crafted boats · were continued to be made or the koa i n cluded. with a stunnin g a n d wood ta lightweight wood derived from 'I overwhelming victory. , the koa jungle tree). those born or the ·1
There were ramifications to all of it West Coast were made of fiberglass. 1
and it extended rar beyond the fact the The Hawaiian racers had trouble with
'"hoales" had beat the Hawaiians at this. There was an unparaJlel in the
their own ~ame. fine ly specified dimensions or boats but )
U nde r manager Tommy
Lasorda's platoon system-_
right-swinging Yeager was to
be used against left-handed
pitchers and Mike Sc1oscia. who
swings from the left side. was
the man against the
right-handers .
ll's a phenomena that stems from the
scarce ~vailability of space in ftawaii
a nd the continual surge . of
mainlanders to the islands toJive there
and-feed off its land
In the exampl·e-ur surfers. the
battleground has usually been the
wave-swept oceans surrounding the
isl ands and th e casualties a re
commonly in the form of fist fights,
damaged possessions like automobiles
or som<'limes. extreme bodily harm. ·
The Hawaiians felt threatened, of because of the scarcity or the koa wOod , 1
neighbors of the Pacific Ocean has course. but there was also a conflict in it was logical that Californians could
switched to another sport -outrigger thought over technicalities like boat not build koa boats. canoe racing. Specifically. in 1978, the rivalry was s pecifications. T he argument continued for three
rekindled when a small contingent After the sport had been introduced to years and Hawaii's most successful
based out or the Balboa Bay Club in Californians some 22 years ago by the club. the Outrigger Canoe Club of
Newport Beach traveled to Hawaii to legendary Hawaiian waterman Noah . Honolulu, claimed back the Molokai
Somehow it seemed that. until
the Series against the lefty-laden
·New York Yankees, the Dodgers
never faced many southpaws. II a wa11ans.are bv nature p roud
challenge some 35 other boats in the Kalama, advancements in material led title the last two years over w very '
41 -mile Molokai to Oahu Ion~ distance to an outrigger canoe design that was <See MAINLANDERS, Page C2>
·Jackson tries m arket again
··Burris, Monge join group of 29 baseball free agents
F rom AP dispatches
Major league baseball teams
' , in need of a seasoned s lugger
• now can contemplate Reggie
Jackson.
Those seeking a veteran
starting pitcher can include Ray
Burris in their considerations.
For those who covet a reliever.
• there's Sid Monge.
THOSE THREE, plus seven
others, declared their free
agency Monday, serving notice
they intend to go through the
re-entry draft on Nov. 13. Any
' player who has declared his free
· agency -there are 29 so far
can sign with his old team until
midnight Nov. 10 or after the
draft. In the meantime, he can
TAM EILEATS
Unlveratty High
talk to any other team, but not
about money.
Jackson , 35. is going the free
agent route for the second lime.
After playing out his contract
with Baltimore in 1976. J ackson
signed a rive-year, S2.9 million
contract with the Yankees. In
his stormv stint with New York
he has had run-ins with
former New York Manager Billy
Ma rt in. team owner George
Steinbrenner and Yankees third
baseman Graig Nettles, among
others Jackson helped the
team to three pennants and two
World Series titles .
H E HAD IDS worst season as
a Yankee this year. hitting .237
with 15 home runs and 54
runs-batted-in. Steinbrenner has
never indicated whether he is
veW.ty High's T.roja.DSJ.[tLln. the race..Jor ....CIF
Southern Conference berth today, thanks to a 15-14 victory
over SaddJeback in Sea View League football actio•
Friday.
And no one was m ore pro mJnent in t he
victory than quarterback Tam Eilerts. who did a Job In the
clutch when the Trojans needed it most, and for it. he ii
the Dally Pilot's Player of the Week
EUertl, a 6-1, 175-pound senior who
transferred to University after playing
in the No. 2 role at Costa Mesa as a
junior, scored University's tint
touchdown with a three-yard spl"inl
around hit left 1lde then tom hil team
on Uae wlanln1 drive ln the flnal
quartier.
1'rallla1, .H· 7, EUerta Mrambled ud .... BndO-opeatatbem
10D4 fDi' th toucbdrili, U... Jlld It
'1•Nlf for tlle ••••taa •mar&j~ ·~ ........ .... .,.., .... etaef ii u. -'-.r--".
•tt;~·=-.. ,.. ..
serious about re-signing Jackson
and has not talked contract with
his right fielder since spring
training.
Also opting for free agency
Monday were Montr e.al
rightander Bu.rris ; Cleveland
left-hander Monge; rigbties
Lar r y Ch r istenso n of
Philadelphia and Jesse Jefferson
of California; outfielders Jeff
Burroughs of SeatUe and Tom
Poquette o f Texas, and
Infielde r s Ron J ackson of
Detroit and Bert Campaneris or
California.
Jack.son and Campaneris do
n ot carry a pro fessional
compensatlon price tag because
they are second -lime free
agents . Infielder Bobby Grieb of
California, outfielder Joe Rudi
and pitcher Bill Campbell of
Boston also are going lo the
re·entry draft for the second
time so the team which signs
them will not be required to
compensate the club which loses
them .
Jackson is the !'lecond key
Yankee to signify his intention to
go for free agency. Left-banded
starter Ron Guidry filed lut
week.
GVI DaY WOULD require
compensaUoo under the terms
of the acreement which ended
the 50-day players' strike this
summer. Bnmlum players, u
defined by a compllcJted
mathematical formula worked
out ddrbl1 the strike, require
tbelr former clubl to be ,..., a
replacement player from a draft
pool stoclEed by major leque
clubt which participate lQ U..
draft. One paayer w1IO decklecl not to
beffme a 1.... eat II Pldl a .................. ,...
eo t t OD for
~....;..;..~~~~~~~~~-=::;__~~~~-=~~~~~~--~
)
Bruins face:
very big
challenge
LOS ANGELES <AP >
UCLA Coach Terry Donahue
acknowledges that his team
faces "a tremendous challenge"
during the remainder of the
regular season. That might be
understating the situation .
The Bruins fini s h the
·campaign with games against
Washington, Arizona State and
Southern Cal. All three are
ranked among the nation's top
20 and have lost only one game
each.
"Anybody want to take my
place the next three weeks?"
asked Donahue with a smile
Monday at hi s weekly meeting
with reporters. "We're going to
have to play really well, better
than we have all year , to have a
chance In all three games.
"As they say, the fans
remember the games inj
November." ·
One thing the Bruins, 3·1·1 mi
Pacific-10 Conference play and! •
5·2·1 overall, have going for1 them is that all three pmes_ arei
a t ho m e. the Los An1elel
Coliseum. where UCLA bas
played only twice thll season. ·
If the BruJns w4n all three
games. the worst they can do ls
tie Washington State for the-
Pac-10 title, and that's if the
Cougars finish 3-0.
Obviously, that's easier said
than done.
"E very game is a conference
elimination game, a conference
title game," said Donahue.
"We 're going to bave lo
generate more on offense, we
have to do better in the klcklnc
game and we have •to limit the
oppo1lllon 'a offense to fewer
yards and ftnt downa the re9t ol
the way."
UCLA bad a fm
at Or•••• l ····-. ..... __ _
--
Dodgers add four players to roster
The World Sertes·wlnntn1 Los Ill
Anietea ~Jera announced Monday they have ed four players to their
Padres rej ect trade :.
Smith for Guerrero
winter roeter and sold Infielder Gary Wtlll. The
DodHrt purchased the contraota of left handed
pitch r Steve Shirley and catcher Don Crow of
Albuquerque and first baseman Gres Brock and
lert·h1.nded pitcher Rieb Kod11 from San
Antonio ... Second baseman Phil Garaer,
named to the All-star Game three limes, ha11
1l1ned a three.year, St.85 million contract with
Houston ... New Atlanta Manager J oe Torre
hll• brou,hL several of hla rormer NY Melli
atalstantt with him. He will have Rube Walker1 Bob GINoe, Joe Pl11atano and Dal Muvlh
alon1 with firet base coach Tommie Anoe
. . . The Seattle Mariners released veteran
s hortflo_p Rick Auerbach and assigned rive
players to the minors .tQ reach tfielr final
40·man r<>1ter ... The Philadelphia Phillies will
hold the line on ticket prices for the 1982 season
acco(dlng lO 8111 Gllea, the new president of the
club.
From AP dlapa&.chel
SAN .J>IEGO -An offlclal ot the Ill
San Oieao Padres said the National
League club has rejected a trade that
would have sent shortstop Onie
Smith to the Los Angeles Dodgers for
lnfielder·outrielder Pedro Guerrero.
''The Dodgers came to us," said Padres'
General manager Jack McKeon. "Guerrero It
an outstanling player and has the kind of
right·hand powe r we 'Te
looking for, but we would
have to get much more ill
return for Onie."
Harrelson to coach for NY Mets
McKeon said he talked
about the possibility ·of
trades with Al Campanis, the
Dodgers' general manager.
before the National League
playof!s and after Los
Angeles won the World
8 11d Hurelson, shortstop for the II New York Mets for 13 years and a ,
leader of their 1969 and 1973
championship teams, was named first base
coach of the club . . . Rea.I Cloutier scored at
10: 02 o( the. third period Monday night to cap a
Quebec comeback from a 4·1 deficit and lift the
Nordiques to a 5-4 NHL win o¥er Montreal
... Defenseman Brad Maxwell of the
Minnesota North Stars pro hockey team
suffered a sUght concussion in practice Monday
... Emma Daniels McFarlln, a former
regional administrator of the Department or
Housing and Urban Development, has been
appointed to the Los Angeles Olympic
Organizing Committee ... Although Baltimore
now has the worst record in the NFL a t 1·8,
Colts owner Robert lrsay says Coach Mike
McCormack will not be replaced this season
. . . Princeton University track Coach Larry
Ellis has been recommended to coach the 1984
U.S. Olympic men's track team ... The
Milwaukee Bucks reached agreement to
acquire veteran forward Bob Dandrid1e from
the Washington Bullets.
GueN'ero Series last week. Guerrero,
along w\th teammates Ron Cey and Steve
Yeager, tied in the votin~ for the Series' most
valuable player.
Guerrero was involved in an automobile
accident early Monday in the Dominican
Republic, but he was not injured, police said.
Authorities said the car driven by Guerrero
and another vehicle collided and that damage to
both automobiles was slight.
Quote of the day
Vi nce Coby, University of Washington
· taiJback. asked to rate the top taHbacks or
the Pacific-10 Conference: "Darrin Nlson
at Stanford, Willie Gittens at Arizona State
and all five of ·em at use. whoever they
may be." Television, radio
SC's Allen Pac-10 player of week
USC tailback Marcus Allen was [I]
Following are the top sports events on TV
JOf'light. Ratings are: / 1 ' ' excellent; .t .t ' worth watching; ' / fair; .r forget It.
named Pacific 10 offensive player or 4 t
the week for h is 289-ya rd.
four·touchdown rushing performance against
Was hington State. Washington linebacker Mark
Jerue is the defensive player . Cal Slate
(Fullerton> quarterback Tom St. J acques,
linebacker Mike Merriweather of Pacific and
free safety Kevin Brady of Utah State have
been selected as the PCAA players or the week
~ 7:20 p.m .. Channel 9 v v
. Green Bay strong safety JohnnJe Gray
had his left knee placed in a cast Monday and
the Packers said he will be sidelined for the rest
of the season . . . Buffalo Bills linebacker
Shane Nelson will be sidelined for as much as
six weeks. He has a partial tear of a liRament in
the right knee. according to a team spokesman.
From Page Cl
NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Portland.
Announcers: Chic k Hearn and Keith
Erickson.
The Lakers are out for their first win of the
season tonight after losing to Moses Malone
and the Houston Rockets Friday night in
·Inglewood, 113-112 .Jo double overtime. Kareem
Abdul!Jabbar and Magic Johnson lead the Laker ·attack. -
Basket bait
KLAC (570).
RADIO
Lake rs at Porlland. 7 : 20 p.m ..
MAINLANDERS PADDLE AWAY. • •
frustrated but determined crew
fro m the Balboa Bay Club.
Finally. when the Hawaiian
Racing Association voted this
year to have a.11 the boals
entered in the 1981 Molokai race
be made of koa. there no lon,er
was an alibi -for either side.
Everyone was on par with the
other.
So it was that when the
Offs hore Club. a crew from
Newport Beach with some or the
same members from Blazing
Paddles and past Balboa Bay
Club teams. won the Molokai
Race recently. the mood had
been changed from contempt to
respect.
"'They didn't like the fact that
we beat them but there was a
healthier animosity." said John
Van Cleave, a Newport Beach
lawyer. who was a member of
the record·setting OHshore
crew. "It's their world. Their
entire cuJtural his tory is based
on outrigger racing. And I
guess. that in a sense, we were
tampering with that tradition
but reaJly all we were doing was
stepping into it. It ·s significant
in any event.··
Van Cleave. like five of the
other eight men, is a former
O ly mpic flatwater kayak
paddler. He competed in the
1972 and '76 Olympic trials but
failed to make the U.S. team
both times.
Al the age of 36. however, and
after 10 years of paddling, he
still has not lost that dream. He
continues to work out almost
daily in hopes of making the 1984
team. He did, in fact. make the
1980 team bu.t Cell victim to the
U.S. boycott of the games. In the
meantime, Van Cleave and the
others made a vow to
themselves that they would
return to Molokai each year to
prove that Blazing Paddles' win.
in 1978 was no Ouke. In 1979, the
Balboa Bay Club crew held the
race lead until rive miles from
the finish, when the Outrigger
Canoe Club strategically rode
the swift currents across
Diamond Head and breeied by
them for a narrow win. ln 1980,
Balboa Bay Club fell behind
early In the race when an
"ama" Ct.he extendln1 arm from
canoe to balancln1 hull> brokt.
The crew was able to make up
moat ol the around but not quite enoulh and narrowUy lost.
Tbls 1ummtr, tbe
malnlmderl toN nothin1 fM
ll'Uted. They worked lon1, hant
hou1 ln preparation for Ul9
Molokai race, dlrecU111 the
empb..a.• d61 •nlll • bHV.Y chop, 1imulattn1 lb•
• erlect ta Newport llarl9or IDll
elsewhere with power boats·
leading the canoe.
"We kept hear ing the
Hawaiians talk of Blazing
Paddtes-' win as a fluke, a
mutation or freak of nature."
said Van Cleave. "So we formed
a core or paddlers. Eddie
Fraser. Carl Toeppner, Billy
Whitford and mysell. to prove
that it was no fluke. We wanted
to sJtow them that those guys
(alumnus of Blazing Paddles)
were a viable force. We were
extremely frustrated."
But the frustration came to
end on Oct. 11 when Offshore
crossed the finish line at Fort
DeRussy Beach near Waikiki in
five hours, 25 minutes and seven
seconds. shaUering the previous·
record of 5:43.52 set by none
other than Blazing Paddles.
Another California c rew.
lmua. aJso based in Newport
Beach. placed second in 5 :29.53.
followed by Jhllani or Tahiti. The
defendi.n1 champion s,
Outrigger, was a distant fourth.
··It was a dog fight .··
Whitford, the steers man,
captain and driving force behind
the crew said at the time. "We
just got the breaks and barely
won."
But Whitford and everyone
else knew that there was much
more to it than breaks.
Offshore and Imua batJed for
the lead Crom the start and at
the halfway point, Imua held a
slight margin, although the
crews had taken different
courses.
Arter studying the channel
patterns. Whitford and the crew
aecfdea Uiey woufcl beadnorth
rather than charae south as
Imua elected to do from the
start. It worked rather weU for
Offshore as they were able to
keep Imua Within strikin g
Tan1e. '
It was lmua who bad
dominated the Calttornia
Outrigger Association (KOA >
race season durin1 the sumn>er
and though Whitford thou1ht
any one of five or six crews
could win Molokai, he knew
deep down that lmua would
present Ult 1Uffe1t eballen1e.
Finally, H ti•• two erew1
approached Oah•'• . Windward
tide, Imua'• c:UM *\"-an tiD
experleMe n1lff .. ,to-.I1m1,
rornq lmU'• paddllll ::: m .. uta wttbalul a .W . ~h• nonnal lntenlJ ~ l~IO m tn utH . Offlllore took
ad vaaatp 'Of lliH••'* h'9Alll · andat~MIWQIO&alllll.-. otU. Wl*•lilllll would Jllld. Aftertr.,._
lmua ,..... lw••
and Per Hurtig agreed that
though the chase boat trouble
hurt their chances. 1t wasn't
the deciding factor ...
"They were stronger than we
were ... Hurtig said.
For a change , the Kaiwi
Channel that shoots between
M o l okai a nd Oahu was
uncharacteristically calm and
free of winds that nornfally play
havoc with the seas. However,
as Whitford and Fraser pointed
out, that was not necessarily
good .
"It's a killer when you don't
have Mother Nature behind
you ,•· sa id Whitford . "It
becomes a grind."
Said Van Cleave: "It was one
of those things in sport where
eve r ythi n g goes right.
Regardless of the conditions. we
bad trained for all of it
"We had a good team and we
played our cards better. We
worked our crew changes better
than any other of the 40 teams
and we played the game right. ..
Van Cleave said that the nine
crew members <Whitford.
Fraser. Toeppner. Chuck Lyda,
Andy Weigand, Angus Morrison,
Dan Johnson, Jay Kearney and
himself) all got together during
the two weeks prior lo the race
and paddled from 12·20 miles·
per day.
According to Fraser, the crew
also varied the stroke pattern
slightly. reaching further out
like Olympic kayakers do. He
said they trained at an average
stroke per minute ratio of SS-430
and maintained an even 60 ratio
-during. the. ace.-fast by-aH
accounts.
''I bad no Idea what to expect
at the start of the race," said
Whitford, -former Newport
HarbOI' High football player and
Orange Coast College oarsman.'
"The boat we were given was a
70-year-old fishing boat with the
bow and stem chopped orr. It
bad never been raced ln a long
distance race before but for
once, no one could ar1ue with
the outcome. It waa apples
against apples.
''It wu the J>e9ple In the boats
that made the dCiference and by
uslna llotber Nature, that
hel~. too."
T1'e award tor whmlna UU1 year'• JOlb .....,al ol U.. rac!e
wa1. lronlcaJl7, a llber1lua canoe.
"I tlltnlr' we'll ~ ... to be
urerul from now oa,'' Hid Van Cle•"· "Wt cu to ahead m · =--=-~~ :'c~ "-!r .. *» ll"
... ,.,,,, .. " 111Wlj.
~
Excitement aplent!!=--~~
Big plays dominated last weekend 1s games
Bli play came ln bunche lust weekend for
Oranae Coo t area high school football players.
highlighted by Greg Locy's 76 yard touchdown
pasi. from his brother, Tony, for Maler Del, and a
pair of Iona touchdown runs by Marina High
quarterback Ken Laszlo.
Gil Ward's SS·yard' touchdown reception for
Newport Harbor woke Estancia up and Irvine's ·
Mark Bondi went 66 yards for a touchdown on a
pass from Mike Zorn, but In t1 13·8 loising effort to
Corona del Mur. tn all. there were 13 plays ot 50 yards or more
last week, the most ever in the last three years.
(Last week's big plays or 50 yards or more>
76 Greg Locy <Mater Dei>. TD pass from
Tony Locy
71 Rod Emery <Fountain Valle~. TD run
. 71 Rudy Figueroa (Woodbrldfe>. TD pass
from Kevin Burkt>
68 Ken Laszlo <Marina). TD run
68 Steve Svitenko <El Toro1, run with pass
interception
66 ·Mark Bondi <Irvine>. TD pass Crom Mike
Zorn
58 Herbie Campbell <Westmlnsterl, TD run
56 Ken Laszlo <Marina>. TD run
55 Gil Ward <Newport Harbor>. TD pass
from Greg Selby
55 Kevin Bradley < Saddleback l, TD run
54 Joel Seay <Fountain Valley l. pass from
Matt Stevens
54 -Kevin Beres <Mission Viejo>. TD pass
from Klaus Leltenbauer
52 Todd Williams CEI Toro), TD run
Season
96 Mike Fiscus I University 1. 90 -Onassis
Nixon <Costa Mesa>: 84 Dave Geroux <Edison>;
82 Todd Williams <El Toro>, 80 Lance Martin
<Corona del Mari; 79 -Kennedy Pola <Mater
Dei l; 77 Todd Williams <El Toro>. Kennedy
Pola. 2; 76 Mark Bondi (Irvine>. Greg Locy
<Mater Dei >; 75 -Charlie Brown <Mission Viejo>:
73 Scott Stier cHuntington Beach I: 72 -J err
Frandsen (Marina>: 71 Greg Locy <Maler Dei ),
Rod Emery C Fountain Valley l, Rudy Figueroa
<W oodbridge); 69 Herbie Ca mpbell
<Westminster 1, Rudy Figueroa <Woodbridge); 69
Al"W ........
GALLOPIN G GOMPF L.t ilh m1dcllt•
linebacker Bill Gompf. a former La~un i..I
Bc.•at·h I liJ!h s tanl:lout. tnc~ lo l'ludl' thl'
grasp nf San 01ci?o Stille qu<1rll'rh:.iC'k '.\1att
K n f I l' r a f I l' r in l l' rt' l' pl 111 ).! a p i..I..,... I a ~ t
Satunla~ Clo mpf latl'r pil'kt•d off <llllllhl•t
pa~~ tn ll·ad1ng l'lah 10 ;.i 17 11\\111
N FL standi ngs
.\IAHK HO\'IJJ
J rc111e !11gh
FOOT BA.LL
GHEC LOCY
.\later De1 l/1gll
-Ron Malerste rn <Marinal. Ken Lastlo cMarina>.
Steve Svitenko <El Toro ); 67 -Jeff Frandsen
<Marina); 66 Mark Bondi <lrvinel ; M -Bob
Critchfield CMarina>: 63 Greg Neff <Marina); 60
Kennedy Pola <Mater Dei ), Herbie Campbell
I WestminsterJ ; 59 -Mark Bondi <Irvine>; 58 -
Curt Wenzlaff (Estancia, Jeff Frandsen (Marina>.
Herbie Campbell <Westminster I; 56 -Dan Blanck
<Laguna HillsJ. Rod Emery <Fountain Valley > 2.
Ken Laszlo (Marina l; 55 -Damon Sweazy (El
Toro), Steve Patterson <Corona del Mar, Dan
Thompson (Huntington Beach >, G ii Ward
<Newport Harbor1, Kevin Bradley <Saddleback>:
54 J oel Seay <Fountain Valley), Kevin Beres
<Mission ViejoJ; 52 -Craig Rakhshani <Edison>.
Todd Williams (El Toro> 2; 51 -Eddie Nunes
<Wes tminster >. Beddie Arabe 1Laguna Beach>.
Rudy Figueroa <Woodbridge); 50 -Kevin Beres
<Mission Viejo>. Eddie Nunes <Westminster>. Bill
Bright <Corona del Marl, Eric Reinholtz <Ocean
Viewl, Joel Seay <Fountain Valley>. 2, J ohn
O'Callaghan <Edison I Jeff Holmes <Mission
Viejo I. Todd Cage < Saddleback >.
Last week's statistical leaders
Rushing
l. Herbie Campbell <Westminster), 32·209: 2.
Rod Emery <Fountain Valley ). 18·205 : 3. Curt
Wenzlaff <Estancia >. 28·177 ; 4. Ken Laszlo
<Marina). 12·173, 5. Kevin Bradley <Saddleback1.
27 · 165
Passing
1 Kevin Burke 1Woodbridge1. 19·40·1. 312. 3
TD; 2 Steve Anderson <Costa Mesa). 18·36-2, 194. 1
TD. 3 Ken MaJor 1 Edison>. 15·22·1. 188. 2 TD: 4
Evan Chalmers <Laguna Beach ), 11·28·3. 178, 2
TD. 5. Matt Stevens <Fountain Valley). 8·20·2, 178.
l TD; 6. Greg Selby INewport llarbor1. 11·21-1,
166. I TD . 7 Tony Locy cMater De1 1. 8-17·4. 166, 1
TO; 8 Eric Woods <Corona del Mari. 11·21·0. 149, O
TD: 9. Mike Zorn Clrvine 1. 8·14 ·1. 129. 1 TD.
Receiving
1 John Moreland I Woodbridge >. 10·151 ; 2.
Brett Blanchard <Edison > and Rob Berry
1Newport Harbor>. 6·82: 4. Greg Locy CMater
Dei1. 5·123: s. Brian Head cCosta Mesa >. 5-59; 6.
St eve Cook <Costa Mesa l. 5·36.
Scoring
l Rod Emery <Fountain Valley1. 24 : 2. Theo
Langford <Ed1son1. Ken Laszlo <Marina>. t8each:
4. Dave Geroux I Edison I. Bill Bright CCorona de!
Mar>. Kevin Bradley ISaddlebackl, Curt Wenzlaff
<Estancia >. Todd Williams< El Toro>. 12 each.
Fogel injured in crash
The college football career of Steve Fogel. a
former Los Alamitos High and Golden West
College standout, has been ended following an
automobile accident in Los Alamitos Sunday,
which hospitalized the 5·9. 210.pound senfor.
' Fogel is expected to be released from a
hos pital later this week after suffering a broken
foot and severe body bruises and a piece of metal
lodged in his leg, which was removed.
Primarily a blocking back and pass receiver.
Fogel had 6 career touchdowns with the Aztecs. He
red·shirted in 1980 after starting as a junior in
1979. but had been plagued by Achilles problems.
He was the Aztecs· third·leading rusher this
year. the No. 2 rusher in 1979.
*************
: JOHNSON & SON : • • .. ..
NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMERICAN CONFERENCE -ti Presents ... • .. Western Division Western Division •
W L T PF PA Pct. W L T PF PA Pct. •
San Francisco 7 2 0 208 154 .778 Kansas City 6 3 0 227 185 .667 •
Atlanta 5 4 O 263 172 .556 San Diego 6 3 O 275 207 .667 •
Rams 5 4 0 214 193 .556 Denver 6 3 0 173 129 .667 •
New Orleans 2 7 O 108 204 .222 Oakland 4 5 0 125 150 .444 •
Eastern Divis ion Seattle 2 7 0 128 205 .222 •
Dallas 7 2 0 214 181 778 Eastern Division •
Philadelphia 7 2 O 197 129 778 Miami 6 2 1 213 162 .722 :
NY Giants 5 4 O 171 147 .556 Buffalo 6 3 O 203 141 .667
St. Louis 3 6 o 179 251 .333 NY Jets 4 4 1, 191 209 .soo ·!
Washington 3 6 0 177 212 333 New England 2 7 0 207 210 .222 «
Central Division Baltimore I 8 O 158 298 .111 ii
Minnesota 5 4 0 205 218 .556 Central Division •
Tampa Bay 5 4 o 163 138 .556 Cincinnati 6 3 O 228 176 .667 •
Detroit 4 5 o 210 190 .444 Pittsburgh 5 4 0 188 175 .556 •
Green Bay 3 6 O 170 208 333 Cleveland 4 5 O 163 194 .444 «
Chicago 2 7 a 136 -2..18 .222. Houston. 4 ..S O 15.9 197 .444 •
~Y'tlC-it'
De"wr 19, MlnMtole 17 '41
New ~•I •=-'(•0-«
0.1"'41 et WWll"91on '41 :~•01.::tsN: ~::..-:.yet Mll•evll• ir
O•-lend et HouitOft ii Pllllecletlll!I• •ISi. L.oult • .., Tempe &.yet Ml-• ...
Cllk89Detl(-Clly ti Allen!• el S... ,r...c:IKo ..,
Clnc:lllMll et S... 0'-90 ,.
~·~.,;:::.~ .
Pllllbu,,,. et SHllM -ti MeloNy,Nov.t «
l11flel0 M Dellet !Clwl.,..17, & P"') '41
_. .
l***********************~*************•
: Pete'sPlcks at s1100 REBAIES or
.. • .. .. • • • • .. • , ................ .
SUMDAY
LAI-
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* S• Diep .....
Cwslm•
* MOMDAY D.._
..
It .. • Jt • Jt • • • • ..
up to s2100 DISCOUNTS It .. • • .. .. on ·Most Mew
• • • • • • • • • • ·a I Models In Stock • • • • .. '· ···········~···~·············-·····
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ll•Mv,.41. Dreem World No. 1. Scott'• ....... ...,,,....Scurry.
Time: :4'1/S.
U aXACTA 1141 Hid UOM.
OUAllTallMOllHI
saCOND llACll. 3'0 Y••ds.
Clem.-CT-II 17,40 '·'° SAO Added V•llle C~rl 1.20 UO
Mr !Hy llee CClerlue) 7AO
A Ito r~ed: Tiie B119ler, Joe Plccoll,
W•YIO" Awey, S11eppy P•""'· SllHOW
Llmlt1, lt«lft Fever.
Time: :1&.SO.
TMlllD RAa.»Oyarcb.
Mr Meny Olkk C~•l 7.20 UO lAO THtllN (Frydlly) 4.10 4.JI>
Tl"Y Hemplfl CH•rtl 7.00 AllO rllCllCI: Sltlp A~. A"9911 Polky,
lilly Jette Ol•I, Tiny, OwfdflVt, Stt J-Go,
Like A Tl"' Trlcl. DIKO Htnllt.
Time: : 11.01.
U a XACTA (to-3) pelcl HUO.
THOttOUOMSllaDs
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wr1u,.· -CMtMI 10... 7.00 >AO
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Alto ra..i: Snow Deft<••. Crlao waten,
OUf Bar~. Top uca.
Time: t :10 l/S. e,
"'™ ltACI!. 6 fur!Oftlll. Crystal SIM IRlwraJ 2.00 UO UO
Fleet Eric lsttlllftOS) S .0 ._.
Kl"9'S T...,..,. (NkOIOl UO
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Time: l ;IJ llS.
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BtntCtlf Blddltr c ~> ._. 2.IO 2.40
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Time: t:•Jls. U aXACTA CJ.JI peld .-.oo.
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CtllltflCI COllv-) J 00 UO LtMetVI,...(~) 7AO
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NllllTM llACl!.•furl-L
CM< Patrice (MeN) JJ.IO 10.IO uo
WlfWly Wll-CSUlllllOll S.IO 4..00
Its A 119 S.Cr .. CCnal IUO Alto raced: Miu Clttrmer. I Wtl'IM
Oeclor, Sltttlte GMI,. OUf Gastlt, SNlat
1111 .... 9oll e>wr, uveco.
Time· t:llA
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71 wl11fll"O lk kett 111 .. llorlffl. U Ptc• Six
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Wlto'ILMdff (~nll SOO JM p.,mettl (Sl«lille) uo Alto tta41: lndl.wl LoN, Gt11C11ct, H...,, ·-·"""'· Time: 1:142/S.
IU~atlTM •&el.
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ti a•ACTA 0-41~111 • Ane~-·-
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CAMNSLL c:ottPallateea ...,..Olwi.
W &. T PP PA ,._
''"'°"'°" • 4 0 71 • " lllllf• •• 0 .. ff ,,
VIM-• • J ... .. 11 Colortdo 2 1 J • " • C•loery 2 • 2 ,, • • IMntaDlw.._ · Ml,."9Mlt 7 2 ·1 • • " Cllk ... 4 J J " • 11
Wlllllt.'9 s J t .. 0 12 Detro t S S I 4S 0 If St. Louil 4 • J St Jt 10
Toro<l4o J 1 t " '° • WAU.I CCMn•aMca ........ DMllell
NV lalllldln • I I 41 M " Phll .... IClflU. . , 1 '° 0 17
p lttll>ll"" s 1 I ... " 12 NY ll•notrt 4 • 0 " " • Wa.ltllngton t " 0 » S1 ' ...... DI..._
Boston 1 J J S3 42 17 OuebK • • 0 6J eo ..
Molltttll • t • .. D .. luff a lo • J J ,, • " MartforCI I s s 17 ~·~ Ouebte s. MofllrHI 4
T__.•O-C•loery .. NY llltnden
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NV Rl"99" ti Pltb1111'9tl MlnllffOCI et W•Jllllllllon
V tl'ICOWW at Hartfwd
CtlOtfV al Bufltlo TorOflloelE~
Women•a vollevball COMMUNITY cOLlaoa
T ............ ~.
teta.tt ....... aCCI
Clltio I ....... ..
•
Goldeft W1Ht def. El Cimino, IS.7, IMS,
.. u, l ·IS. 1•14.
ni...PSece
El Ctmlno ... Or .... CoeA C•lleoe, IS.S. .. u. ,.14.
Mondey'e tranHctlona
llAMMU. ,._...L...-•
SEATT\.,! MAIUNUtS -........ Rldl
AuerMdl, tNrtAllP. ~ --~. pltclltr; v-M<HefWy. -.-. • ..,
Kim All9", c-..y Ptr-1 _,. R ... t WtllOll, oulfle4dw\, to Wt I.Ake City ef ..
Pt<ltl< Cout Leao11•. El•v•t•d Al Cll•mber1, outllelder; IC•rl B .. t, Aon
M11uel""" -E-" N-1. pltclltn, -Jim Pre•l•'I'. tlllrCI basemen, trom tllelr
mlllO< 1eaoua """"· .......... LM1199
ATLANTA BRAVES -'1tt41 Al
Gell~,,.,.......,, of ti.Ir Durllem -
of Ille Cll'OllN L .....
LOS ANGELES DODGERS -Pvrc.._,
the <OlllTKH Of Stew Slifriey. plkflef. -Oofl c,_, <Mt,.,, ,_ A1"'--., ..
Ptclllc Co••• L•••"'· P11r<llHtd , ...
cOlllra<b OI ONO Brock, II,.,. bawmtfl, -Rkll lloeltl. plteller, fromS...A,.._loof ..
TuH i.....-. Sold Gery WelH, l ... leleltt, to
AJ b11quetque. Relea Hd Jerry Gtol•,
uotclter. NEW VORK METS -Ntmtd Buel
HarrelJOfl, tlrst bew <OKll. SASICllTSALL .............. A_ .. .._
DETllOIT PISTONS -Sl9Mll Ol-
H ... 11..,.i. Wtl"911 Lerry WrlflM. .-.S.
MILWAUKEE BUCKS -ltH<lted
•t'"m.,.t to re.tc«111lre 8ob Otl>drl .... ,
•-ard. from Ille WMllJ"f(on a"'"'' tor a flltlMOUflCI dtelt Cllol<e Ill 1ttJ altd 9fl
ul>dlKloteel -t of cesh. Traded Left
Elmor•. center, to !fie New Jet1ey Nat• lot
uflCllKlotoed futllfe <Of1Sk1Uretlon1. MOCK IV ...............,LM9m
DETROIT RED WINGS -SeM c;_...
GaOftOft, oo•ll•. 10 KaltmaHO of ....
lnler11e11ont1 Hockey l -.
NEW VOflK ISUINDEAS -Ctlle41 up Nell Htwr'(llw, left wlfte. from lflClltNpa41s
of tlle '"''••I Hockey LffoW.
1
Area .. ,bigh school football log
U.-TL.EMIUS 17 ~(5-3) • EIT-27 '--r:"a Beach (3-3-1)
n .. ~(M) 1 0 SIMI , c• J 11 Irv II • • p u t4 CtltlMIM , 14 ,,.,..,.. ,.
N~ .... to 7 H...,.,. ........ 21 12 ,,,....... u .. .......... 11 ·~ 0 IC.... .. ,,_ IJ t L•: 7 • ........ 1 ·~---..... 7 ..... ....... _ .. I 2t D-Mll • .......... , 14 .... • H .... 1>-Ulll_...,y 14 $111 °""""9 0 ........ 14 t; ltl II ii o8Mdl • N:::r" Harbor 1-7) 1J Cepltt,_ VatHly 42 ==YIN l4 .... as Nov. ~lllM Viet: • ....... .._...V8119J I Mar as H..,, I~ HI ls (et llllV) ..... 1 ... 1 , ..... , .......... 1~ 21 laguM Hffll (Sol) ........... '--.:"C:::" ti ...... , 14 llA V11W U!AOUE J c.e.-.. 1 u '"' .. • .............. v .... ,
t4 llT-2.4 4 EAllKlt J7 C....dal-(1-2·1) M Ulllwttlly IS 1 u111--., • M H I e..cto • It lrtlM 1 ,, 0--. • ,......._V...,tM> . F . 1 • .._.. n I La CMolea '""eftl 0 "ii .. "--. , . ...., ~ ........ eat c• n Sall Oellwll• ti
a: ·= " "*"· t~41t1MM letOCCI 0 Mt .... Vle)o 41
It i1nc:· :: 9edclebectl(~) 17 0-Mltts • ~le---:; • Now. S-C.Valley (atMVJ_ = ' t1
, ............ ...... l~ llMcll (.. VI
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· . . .;I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tunday, No~embet' 3, 1M1
TM IOlfi•I tJO&lltlK will be foeund OD
Sou°"m Callloml1 In 11aeral and tbl la Coyotet
Countl-)' Club courM lD B\MIDI Park .. r.rtloular
thia week aa the SoC1l POA Open I 1ta•ed
Thursday throUlb Sunday.
The event wm be preeeded by a pro-am
featurtq 1ucb namea u Bob I.Amon, lbe New
York Yankee manaier, Del Rice, Jlm Frepl,
Bert 1'lyleven, Keltb Jackaon, Claude Aklnl, Joha
Larch, Den.nil H1me1, Harvey Korman~ McLean
Stevenaon and others amon1 tM celebritJea.
The four·day tournament la really a two-In-one
event. A aroup of aenlora beaded by Sam Snead
will play for a apeelal '30,000 pune oa Thursday
and Friday and then will be elitible for adclitlooal
wlnnlnp lf they make the cut.
Jolnina Snead ln the field are aucb toll 1tars as Gene UtUer, Art Wall, Bob lloltMtrt. Dick·
Mayer, Jack l'leckt Jerry Barber, Dow
Finsterwald, Uonel Heoert, Dout Ford and Ed
Furgol. All have won either the Maalera. the U.S .
Open or the PGA title.
Four members of the .Million Dollar Club (ln
career eaminas> wlll be in the field includln& Al
Geiberger, Georae Archer, Dave Hill and Frank
Beard.
Other pros inc111de Mark O'Meara 61 Lacuna
Niguel, Homero Blancaa, Leonard Thompson,
Victor Regalado, Tom Purtzer, Calvin Peete, Rod
Funsetb, :Jim Dent and Rod CUrl along with Dave
Barr, Peter Oosterhuls, Jack Renner and John
Cook.
The City of Hope will benefit from ticket sales
that are S8 per day. First tee-ort time Thursday
and Friday is 6:45 a .m . with a 7 a .m. start on
Saturday and Sunday. • • • COSTA MESA HAPPENINGS -The annual
Toys Fore Fairview tournament ls set for Dec. 18
and 19 at Costa Mesa Golf and CoWltry Club with
an entry fee of $5 pl11s a glfl or caab donation for
the hospital. Men's club members have untH Nov .
24 to si1n1 up for desired limes, then the event will
Reeves' call could
have cost Denver
DENVER <AP> -A 19·3 lead with 81-'J minutes
remaining ought .to be safe, and the Denver
Broncos apparently thought so, too .
But they hadn't taken into a ccount the
Minnesota Vikings' two-minute offense, which
produced two quick touchdowns in the closing
m inutes and nearly a winning field goal. But when
Rick Danmeier's long field-goal try fell short on
the final play, the Broncos escaped with a 19-17
National Football League victory Monday night.
"You have to wind up and hit it just right, and
1 just didn't kick it far enough," said Danmeier .
Danmeier's chance for a winning boot was
made possible by an Ill-advised decision by
Denver Coach Dan Reeves, who ordered his team
to go for a first down on fourth-and-one at the
Bronco 40 with three minutes remaining.
"I may have done some stupider things in my
be thrown <>Pen to the ieneral P"~:.
Play wm be on both days -au p&uenE pay in advance of the touraa...at ..-.
further Information, contact ebelr••• ••
Pappu at the Colta Meta eltmb. No~. 18 is the annual membenblp ......._ 8t
which time officers for the er:unalnf year~...,_
elected. The next blg men'• club ev• la ....
annual turkey shoot Nov. 20, 21or22. * * * .• FOUNTAIN V.tLLEY'S Brian lJ86r1,
low medallat with a 274 onr four romda 1111111 "''
bis f,lrat mat~b·play outlna to Randy H .. 1 11t' Mle
West Coast Amateur Golf Auociatlon tourutijll&.
Lindley was the runner-up ln the U .s;A!Jj.,.
cbampl<>Mllips to Nathaniel Crosby rte91 lD
San Francisco. ' • * *
LOOKING FOR A CHANCE to learn to fl# or
to imfrove your game? •
I so, better iet in touch with Ranebo .San
Joaquin GolC Course professional Matt
Smederovac.
Malt is staging lessons for betlllnen and
others interested in improvement Monday llllnlalh
Thursday evenings at 6 o'clock.
.. Each lesson lasts for an hour an4 thoM wtlo
sign up will have the same ni1ht eacll1 weet f9ll ID
· hour for six weeks," he says. "The only ctwvte ll
$17.50 which goes almost entirely to P•>iae• tfle
range balls each player uses during the lftl09. , .
For (11rther information, call Matt at.~ pro
shop, 551-5522.
*** -. CHIP SHOTS -Winners in the rMeat
Newport Center Association's golf ball chuln1 and
tippling tournament at Irvine Coast CC have been
determined.
Men's low gross: Michael Drucker, 71; Dick
Dillon, 73 ; and Jim Jones, 74. Low net: Deb E9*dl, ~
65: Joe Ordway, 66; Ralph Rollins, 68; John LIUie,
69. Calloway: Jay Swigart, 64 ; Bruce Stew...,_ 18;
Lee Powell, 70; Tom Wheeler and Ralph Rodfwim 72. •
In the women's competition. Millie D~rsoa
was low gross winner at 80 with Rose J(.-td
second. Lanelle Caren, 71, won low aet wtth
Georgine Laursen second at 73. Sharie XritzWI
won calloway . . . Although he didn't co....-
du ring most of the second half of the ...._
Laguna Niguers Alan Tapie captured top ~
honors for the TPA tour for 1981 with a •·'° average. He d id play enough rounds to qualtly for
the title and was officially declared the wiMer tbis
week. Mark O'Meara, also of Laguna Ni1uel.
finished SSth on the official money list for Hfl to
gain an exemption for all of 1982. He e....t
$76,063 for the year. his first on the tolll'. T..-•
was the orticial money wiMer with $375,_. i. official earnings.
life, but 1 must have bffn real little when I did J=;;;===:s::===========:o:::::;;;J~~ them," said Reeves. "Thank Goa it didn't cost us
the game."
Minutes earlier, the Vikings. using a hurry-up,
no-6uddle offense, had scored to draw within 19-10.
Reeves· decision backfired as fullback Larry
Canada was stopped for no gain b y defensive end
Randy Holloway. Two plays later, the Vikings
made it 19·17 on Tony Galbreath's second TD of
the quarter.
The Vikings got the ball one more time with
2:09 left. With Tommy Kramer finding the open
receiver repeatedly, they drove to the Bronco 26.
On third down. Ted Brown was dumped for a
2-yard loss by Denver comerback Perry Smith.
and Danmeier came on for the 46-yard field goal
effort. which fell about 5 yards s hort.
Smith. who started the game in place of Louis
Wright who had suffered a strained calf muscle in
pre-game warmups, s aid he was just trying to
m a ke a solid' tackle on Brown's run. "On
something like that. you either make It or miss it . l
made it.
··w e were s urprised they went into the
hurry-up offense so early. We couldn't get set on
defense, and they hurt us ."
The first half ended in a 3·3 tie as Danmeier
and Fred Steinfort traded field goals. Denver went
ahead 6·3 midway through the third period when
Steinfort, mired in a season-long slump, connected
Crom 49 yards out.
Coll~ge :football
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IUMoMIW IHI YW ..... IAlll'T
FACTORY STIO<ER SIOIO
DISCOUNT
Stll
SALE ~AltE
s7095
(2783) (!28P I $ ...._MIW
,,., tSUIU •••• FACTORY I ER . Sii
Ol!K:OUNT ' tit
SALEPAICE
(1~t~!L
ltlOYW•A .. 011saw.-oM
4 epeed tranemflelOn,
AM-FM atereo
& a aunroot .
(14"78)
. " .
(
Orange Cout QAIL Y PILOT /Tuelday, November 3. 1881
LUCKY GEORGE <;l'<ll'J.?l' Hurn:-1-; ult
-,milt'""=-' lw stand-, 111 front of Chri.,trna ... tn·t·
"1th four Pl.t\ hm Pia' malt.'" Thl· -,c•t•lll' \\.J'
part ol .t ll'h-\·1;1on l;qnni.: tor 1 ht.• Ct'Ol'1!l'
B u r n ~. E a r h . E :1 r I·'· . Ear I ' C.: h r is t m ;i ,
A~W ..........
Special." to i.i ir ·"''" Iii on ~BC-1'\'. C'h.111rwl
1 Till' t;.1pmg wa" h<.'ld c.1t Pia' hm \J;in ... 11111
\\'<.•...,t \lor\<l.a~ lliJ!hl 111 Bt.·q·r·h 11111... l'lw
Pia.' mall'" W('l't.• ttni<lt•ntifil'd
Chur~h buildings not • 1mniune
L OS ANGE LES CAP ) -
Church buUdings aren't immune
from the so-called "acts of God"
that plague Southern California
earthquakes. landslides and
brushfires.
memorial to 18th century mystic
E m anuel Swedenborg.
The visitors center . with its
m assive stone fireplace reading
room and big bay windows
overlooking the ocean, was a
travelers' retr eat along the
coast.
the cathedral corporation.
T he cathedral deteriorated
while voices w"re raised to save
it.
A cathedral. a historic m ission
church and a tourist attraction
are amon g t he r eligious
bui ldi n g s that have been
destroyed or heavily damaged
by naturaJ disasters in the last
few years.
The chapel is a popular spot
for weddings artd Martin says
that many couples who have
been mar ried ther e and had
their reception m the visitors
ce nte r h ave f o r med a n
association to restore it. A new
foundation and new floors will
have to be. laid and the heavy
stone pillars that held up the
"But there was no one coming
forward ·with the millions of
dollars necessary to do it," says
Brown.
The last service was held on
C h ristmas Day, 1979. The
cathedral was de-consecrated on
Dec . 26 . On F e b . 2, 1980,
demolition began and the site is
now a parking lot.
"The landslide area runs from
the beach up the hillside close to
the chape l," s ays the Rev.
E rnest Martin. "For two or
three winters we had very heavy
rain, and down under a certain . roof wiJl have to be reset, Martin
says.
•'The booth where they keep
the car keys used to be the
church sacristy." Brown says .
One of California's most
famous landmarks , the glass
and stone Wayfarer's Chapel,
overlooks the Pacific Ocean
from a perch atop an ancient
landslide area that reactivated
in the late 19705. ·
There isn't a happy ending for
St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral.
The downtown cathedral had
been declared a h isto r ic
landmark for its reCJection of
California architectural style -
red tile roof, sand-colored walls,
a huge redwood cross in the
sanctuary and gold-leaf covered
mosaic tiles on the walls.
The bishop's throne now sits in
the lobby of the diocese office.
And the cathedral congregation
meets in the chapel of Good
Samaritan Hospital.
Another victim of the 1971
earthquake was th e San
Fernando Mission Church built
in 1812 right on top of the San
Andreas fault line.
level there 1s mixed clay which
started cracking and sliding.
The cracks m the ground got
deeper and wider. and our big
stone visitors center gradually
moved
The cathedral was built in 1923
be fo re ear thquake standards
were the law and many repairs
had to be made to conform to the
code. But the 1971 San F.emando
Valley eart hquake was the
cathedraJ's death blow.
·'It was just an old adobe
mission building ; the master
beams were cracked, there were
cracks in the walls and it was
never used again'" s a y s
Monsignor F r a n c is We ber,
administrator of the m ission.
"The restrooms couldn't be
used and the plantings were
ruined. We had to close the
visitors center two years ago."
T he slide area missed the
chapel, designed by Frank Lloyd
Wright Jr .. by a few feet. The
chapel and visiting center were
built by t h e Swedenborgian
Chur ch of Ame ri c an a s a
·'T here were cr acks in the
walls and the ceiling and there
was a possibility of breaks in the
huge timbers at the top.'· says
Charles E Brown. secretary to
The s tanding walls were
knoc ked down , t h e rubble
cleared away and a new m ission
chur ch was rededicated in 1974.
DIATH NDTICf S
BECK
ELLE'\i RAY RECK .
re~tdcnt of Co~t;i ~l csa. C:a
PJ !>Sed a\O.a\" on (ktober JO.
1981 Sh(• was a mt•mht>r nf
lh<' Al i\non "''-Ol'lal1on :.is
"ell a~ lx•mg a membf.'r of
St J 0J ch1m .. Catholic
Church She •~ ""n'IH'd by
her husband . J ohn. sons
Wilham R of ~ipomo. Ca .
John P St.'ck of Costa Mesa.
Ca and David A Beck of
Utah . daughter1> Elizabeth
B Schleicher of San
Clemente. l'a and Barbara
.I Beck ()f Santa Ana. Ca .
also su r vi\ed b\ I I
grandchildren Recitation of
t h e Rn,:H} "'1 II be tln
~onday. No\'ember 2, 1981
11 l 7 :lo PM ;i t~a I l z
Rergeron'Smith & Tuthill
C h a p e I ~1 a ., ., o f t h <'
Resurrert1o n will be on
Tuesd;1y, Novembt•r 3. 1981
al 10.00AM at !'t Joarh1m s
Calholl<' Chur<'h lntcl\j1lent
servires "di be ht'ld at
I O O P ~f d l E v c r g r e e n
Cemeterv. R1vcrs1de. C'a
Servires Undt'r the direction
of Baltz Reri:eron-Sm1th &
Tuthill Wcs tC'11ff Chape l
~1ortuary of Costa Mc:>s a
646·9371
SAENZ
LAWRENCE RALPH
SA ENZ. resident of Santa
Ana. Ca. Passed away on
October 28. 1981. Survived
bv his wife Alice. 2 sons
A'es1r and Amraa of the
homt'. father Abr aham
Saenz of Stockton. Ca .
mother Ad1n<' Crui of
Czech officials
wary of unrest
OSTRAVA. Czechoslovakia <AP> -In this
s prawling mine and mill town just minutes from
the Pohsh border. Czech officials clearly are wary
about the potential spillover or unrest from their
Warsaw Pact neighbor.
Western diplomats report being una ble to
meec orficials in this northern border district.
where in some villages contact with Poland can be
as simple as passing something over the fence.
Visiting journalists are tailed by carloads of
police. apparently to {!iscourage contact with
residents.
PUil.iC NamE
Sunny\ ale. Ca 5 brothers FICTITIOUS IUSIHEU
Sch o lar hip
a wa rde d Is idore Saenz of Yorba HAMESTAHMll NT
Linda, Ca .. G~1ry Saenz of i.u!l:.~s:o~owlno 119rsoM •r• dotno
In·me. Ca . :'-lorman Saenz ,., HOUSEHOLD. GARAGE SALES
of SIOC'kton. C:i anct Wes DIRECTOR\', (bl HGSD, nu w Sh a n n a h a n a n d E r 1 t' FlloM A,,._, S.nt• An•, CA.,'°'·
d ( S I RICH ARD FREDERICK B1rkfor both o unnyva e, MARTIN, n1• w Fllvht Avenu•. Ca V1silal1on will be held Sent• Ana. CA 9210f from .i OOPM to 9 OOPM on R o e E R T J o s E P H
Wednesda\. and Thursdav at FRASCHETT1 , 1111 euroundy,
, ..----------... • · · , . Leuudle, CA '7024 1 P a c 1f1c View Memorial Tt.ts t>uslneu Is conducted by•
Whitney T. Slade of
'Oak Ridge, Tennessee,
gr andson of Costa Mesa
residents Mr. and Mrs.
L.B. Stafford. has been
awarded a scholarship
to st ud y al th e
University of Tennessee. UL n lflGERO ...
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCLIFf CHArEL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
64&9371
'9flCE l l OTHUS
SMITHS' MOlTUARY
627 Mam St
Hunt1111Qton &ach
536-6539
rACIAC YllW
MIMOllAl ,dlC
Cerreterv Mortuary
Chapel-Cfematorv
3500 Pacific lliew Or1"e
NewPort Beach
644-2700
McCO.MtCIC MOlTUAlllS
Leauna Beach
•94·9415
Laouna Hills
768--0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
HdlOll LAW~MT. OUYI
Mortuerv • Cemetery
Cte,,-.IOIV
1625 Gisler AV9 .
Costa Mesa
S40-55S'
I Park Mc:>morial services vener••~nNp.
II b h Id S· l d Rk N<clF ~r11n ~1 e e on a ur ay, TMs 1i.1-t wa$ ll•eo wilt. ,,,. l:"'ovember 7 . 1981 al countyc1er11o10r ... counwon0c1 ll OOA M al Kingdom !fall of ao. ,,.,,
Jehovah's Wilnesses. 19100 "" .. " I I Publf~ Orenoe CMst Delly Piiot, 1 D el11~are . llunl ngton No., l 10111• "" H1M1
Beach. Ca Pacific Viewi----·-· -·-·------
Mortuary directors rnuc •nlE
('()FF MAN
G E R T R C D t: K HM171'
CO r rM/\N resident of f'ICTITIOUSI USINllU ' HAMll STATllMllHT Cos ta Mesa. Ca Passed Tll• tollowlnv 1>9rJont er• dolnv away on November 1, 1981 al t>ualneues:
the age or~ Sl'le is survived TUSTIN FINANCI AL SERVICES, bv a daughter Virginia t ••U Red Hiii Annu•, Tustin.
\Vh isler of Costa Mesa. Ca .. Cell:~':.':-McG•-. Jr., t46H
1 sun Virgil Corrma"" of "" Hitt A-. "T1>1t1n, c111116fnt•
Costa Mes11. Ca . and 2 "~•nele Jovw McG•.W , .. 22 Rect grandchildren Rosary and Hiii A .. -.. Tt.itlln, c.11~1. talO
Mass.of Chnstran Burial will nit 11U1IMn 11 conc1uctu "' •
be celebrated on Tuesday. otMr•1 =r.',t0,_
November 3, 1981 et s ·OOPM Tiiis ... ~ WM flled with llM
at St J oachim's Catholic Covnty cttrk ot Or1noe t:;ounty on
I Church with interment a oct-• s. 1•1 ,11,_
I Holy Sepulcher Cemetery on Publ11Nd Orenoe c ... 11 Delly Piiot, Wednesday. November 4, ,.o ... J, 10.11,1•. , .. , •no.ti
1981 at 11 OOAM . T h e
deceased wished lhal thos
1wan t ing t o make
memorial contribution couJ ITAT::~:::;:,~~=;'u'
please contribute to th aus1Hns NAM• Santa Ana Chapler or th Tiie ltllowlno persona "•"e
Th ir d Orde r of Mou n ;::=.::::-9f IM l'1<11t1ew
Carmel, to be used by th A & T •,.T_,.,.,.,sn. 1.,.. ... ,.
Ca rmelile Father• a "'" .w~.CAtMa.
Ay1esrord. Illinois> "Th ,.:.t;:.::::!:'..!",~::;:: t=: Na tional Sc11pular Center· ~u1111, .. ,, tor l he "du cal lo n o ,.., ,.,,.,14"•. • ....,111«, 1rv1M,
IS I CA •Utl, e m I n a r a n s f o r l h t.en "*"<"'-14 ..._, 1rvin.. CA
'
prle1thood. lo'riends may cal nm.
PlmCl llOTHmS at Pierce 8rothera Bt l Tiii• ......_ ... c...-~ lllY • ~•OADW,AY 1Broadwo y MortUU¥ 0 .... ,;:.-;'.::.C.
MOlnlAl't' ,Monday, Novanber I. t• T11 ................... "'"""' uoato.dwev 1trom $·OOPM to t :OOPM. c:-c'°""0r.._~.,.°'" eo.taMesa P ierce Brothen Bel •••· ..,_
MH160 181 oacl way Mort uar ,_.._ ... ...,-,.. '--------~~ dJ1·1Ct11"1 ................ ......
Slade is the son or Mr.
an d Mrs. Edward C.
Slade. Mrs. Slade, the
f o rm e r B e v e rl y
St a fford , is a 1956
graduate of Newport
Ha rbor High School and a
gr aduate of Orange Coast
College.
"CTIT10US I USUHSS NAMI STAT&MI NT
T 11~ lollo'!!IJlA.. per19n 11 aoln o bu$fneues: THE STORK'S CLUB, 11 P•IOJ, 1'"'"'· CA mu. Merlyn Attef11ffry Oett&, 11 Pt lOS, .... 1 .... CA '271S. Tiiis lluilneu I& COllCIU<led by en 1nc11 .. 1c1ue1. Merll'ftA Ottu
Tiiis ,............,. wet filed wUll Ille COvnty Cleftl of OrllllOt County on Ocl. S, 1'11.
'"*' Publl1Mcl OrMOt Cotst Delly Piiot, Ho ... J, 10, 11, t4, "" on•t
..
CLASSIFIED ~ ·--11...L. -=-....... ,.;Wt ....... Wt
111111 ,..... ~ ••• ··············~···· ... •• ••••••••••••••••••••··~ ••••••••••••••••••• I ....:.1 tOOJ ....... ,................ Gwrttl I OOJ -•r.
INDEX ....... 1002 ............................................ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •A~-1-111·--c•,.• .. 111,.•--•I HUT AUllMAIUI Te Pllct Y• M. t11 -•• --oa 0111 btaULllull1 up-
642·5678 Only .1::·:0 ltt• ~:=~ ~~eg~ aae1co:e lltlUSFtl Ull you Into tbia totally re· plus. OWMrWlllpainUo ol sroubtk. Only ~o11"•• modeled 4 8dm hom'e. you t hoo.e colors. Ai• •,500 Call now m.srrt
.. _ ....... .i Larae t or'Mr lot, Koi will &Ive J yeu home A r~-:: ... ~::' pondtoo!Won'llHt,caU warranty. Call for .. LLSTATE
ti. .. .._. EQUAL HOUSING \l)' SfA COVE tallt. -
I. ~:.:~~~:.h OPPO ... TUNl!Y . , ... ' rROPHTifS . REALTORS ~:....... P.Wlltw'1Motkr. ~ 7'4·631-'990 Assumable loan. 2000 :\i t;:::::~·:-... 1 All rut estate ad -ft. suo,ooo. owe wi
........ \.... ., e rt 11 ed 1 n t h Is 9UICK SALE! ~000dowll.s.tz.4N5. ~:re:.!'..~· newspaptr 1B subject to I & II'-...... ,
""'"'""'"'' .. '" the Federal Fair Hous· ''""'.,""'"· ILU"5COMDO ~:-.!::. in1 Ari ol 1968 whith lO% down. SlS.OOO tolal •IA YFIONr • 3 bd , 2 ba, new cpts It ~:'...~~· makes 11 1lle(ll to ad· price. 4 Bdrm. 2 balh. IOATS&JP drps, 1p Hilin&! On!J .. ..,. .. ,....,..,~.w. verlise "any preferenc:e. family area. r1replace 134000 XJn n Al tULESTAH li m it a t ion or d is· CostaMesa's beatarea. $545,000! $ • • l nan. g •
.,,,.,., ..... " ,...., crim1nat1on ' based on Call for more details. WOW' Lowest priced 644·1133
•"""""04'..,"'" '"' race. color. rell1lon. '546·2313 b1yfront bomt ON ~-•1!!1!1••••!11 t~!.":~.;... :: ti I . BALBOA COVES Laree .,..,,.,,. ""'• lnl'I• '~" sex. or na OCUI origm, 4 Bdrm. 3 balh. double «,.. .... ,.,.,,,..,."' i..,, or an intention to make , ... ,,.., ..... ,\,,. ''' aoy such preference. flreplac:t. ro\ered paUo. ~·.~~.:~· .. ~: ::: l1m1tat1on, or dis· plus muc:h more' Will :::.=:.~'Pf..;!.'"· ~.::, mmtnallon .. AITD or sell ~o~.
........... " :iw n ''l-or lease option' ::!-::.'.'r..i:.:,·~.~. :::, Thix newspaper will not MIWPOIT Yo'urrho1re' :::.:'!1::;..'·~.. ~~. knowingly actepl any DWl.D lal»oa lay Prop. , ............ ~.... ,.... , ad\erltsing for real Stepa tobeach.4up&J It...., ~ ....... r.,,,,,,,... '•" eslale which IS in viola· down. 2 baths each 675-7060 • ::~ :~;~; ~ :·.~:;•• ,..., tlon of the law __ _ Furnish for winter /sum •
IENTAl.S mer rentals. Good his· ~--••••mi :::;: ~~:::!. ~ tory Fee. Priced at jllll--------1 OCEMllMT
-....... ·• '""' ~aoaS: ... ~.......&I. .. -S33S.ooo. ~ r"\ ..... r~ .. ·-,.,.. ... -..... 11tt, tw111• ,....., ~ ,............-n........ ~I
~:::':,.:'!~";~~:' :~ sh<*id dltc* .._. Cid• Boy ~ Beach ::..;..."":.·:~::· ~ doity • ,..,.... "'" Real Estate ~~.':;,:.. -... ro" h1w~. n.
PRIME PENINSULA
POINT 4 bdrm Beach
House with VIEWS.
PRIVACY FINAN·
CING ••
:=: ~:::1::. I •i ~~: I DAIL y PILOT...... VILLA IALIOA
:::: 0 ,,,,. "" labllty for 91w flnt Three lovely condos tn Open Wednesday l·S l~ East <Xeanfront
I rv1ne f'inancial Corp " '"" I 4 IDIMS bl rlus bwldmg with :!.!:';,!:';' !'~ h1corn ct IHtrtloa POOL-r.•Ji. rom plete seru rll Y· ~;;:~ t:.:.. : ~ I 011ty. ~"' rangmg in pnce from "'"'''"""'"•' ''" ·----•liii=:.1 Lovely 2 story home on Sl62 5()().f:m ooo !•11!!1•!!!!!!!~••!1!!!!"" ·;:~"'.;"""'"' ... I quiet r u l de s ac u 1'noo . M.I $89,900 4 Br Grul
67S«70, 67S· 7698
~:.:...:::.:.. ::: Easts1de Costa Mtsa • • b om e Name your ~"::'.~~ ...... , !'.: Houses fOf' S. Setluded master suite. l-1111111!1•!1!!11•11!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ lerm) ~:~·~!'.~.. ::;; •••• • •• •••••••••••••••• rove red patio. Custom I Bkr_848-0'109_ BUSINESS. INVEST Geiterol I 002 designed pool and spa DREAM HOUSE
••••••••••••••••••••••• Great assumable f1nanc: f'antasltt' 4 Bdrm. 2 ba. .. ~. ,.., M .. E ..... NT,._flNANCE • I • SI 51( 00......, * mg! Only $1G9,900' Call rul de ~ar home m Mesa -"" Verde. 3 fir~plarts. :!,':~:;-;,.:,:-:;,::., :;:: DESPBATI! to see. 646-?17l gorgeous ram1ly room.
, ............. ,.... "'' 48drm2 bapool home Qua l ity th r u o ut • ~.:;: ~~:;;:. ~ Asi.ume lu·balanct loan SI00,000 in as~uma ble
....... ANNO,UNCEMENTS. I o~s·cu<~lrc~~tRnotEAeLTY loa ns at 12'< Only
......,.,., -5179,900 <.:all oow OH>. PEISONALS l 549-7991 1-------979 mo RH LT ORS
. __ ... t .... os.r' rom .~ , 6 IAMT FAMIL y HAlllOl RtDGE A . -., I An exqu1s1te offering LLS""ATE s~ ::;!;~:,.... "~' HOME, $187,000 Elegant & spac:1oui. 3 1'1 Sp~V• 1-" ........ ·:::I EXt'ellenl Cosla Mesa bdrm + family room. I REA 0 Highly upgraded 4 ~:·:;~·:~;... .~;. nei1thborhood ' Living lev home w,panoram1c l T RS bedroom and fa mily
,...... ~ ·•· room reatures coiy v is ta or h-arbo r 0 .... EOF "'Kl .... D room home 1ora1ed on . SEaYIClS } flrri,>lace SWUly family roastbne, ocdn & night " '"' " the former model street ' ''" '• ~·., room ' 3 large .bdrms lights Prestige'. rom I.orated '" Co:.lll Mesa of Spyglass Hill This
CMPLOYMENI l I Setluded yard on rul de fort. luxury & 'ecurtl)' thu1 3 Rd rm home is home h ii s a 11 l he
PIEPHATION I ~ar flexible terms ' Redured. "°"' S739.000 h 1 Ith I) u I' graded Id ,,, ... '"'"'"'.. C 11673 ou" 0 fi Amemlles ind ude pool. amenities you wou
:..·;-..· •• ~:; "• 1 a """"" ( wntr inanang t Agt CUNlom i.pa. in l.i.w unit. wanl, large fam1I)' room
MERCHANDISE &40.S560 • ~auna . add on f1m1ly wil.b wet bar and c:ozy
ro om rt-modeled used bnrk f1replare
kitchen & more Assumt Large yard 11.1lh spa and
SI U.OOO tn loJns Asking I a ltrnftc front row v1e11.
THE REAL
ESTATERS , ... ,.,.,.,....
,,... #' ..
""'' .. ' ,. ~ .... .,.,., .... ,, .. , • •lt"'t•"' 4 t '1"4~" .. "I .... ,...,
t ~ ... I• \ ·~ .... ..., .. ,,,,,., ... '4. ....... " ..
ttu.."W"-~•·•••I' , ...... ,, Lo,,._•'-'I•""'"' ... ,. . "•"""-' ..... ~ ............. d
't .. ~ ··'"'"'''""...-ft\
OU1 ,,. ~"°'" 4 t ""''Ji ....... ..,,.,_.,. .. ., .. ,..
"-•" ..... ''""" 'Pl1·1ifC ., ... ,,,
.,...,.,. IN •Wf•"" tl•r
'••P. l \ M.d.u Hit I ..... , ....
BOATS l MARINE
EQUIPMENT ,..,._,.,
"'...., "•lftll ... ,,i.-..
lv#h .... Tl .. ••lfll.!111 ...... , , . ...,. .. ,
l'l..t• Hf'flll I"°'''"' ..... "'"' (lio.1,...., • .,. ... " ..
~ ................ ~
Mir .. h .... '6.,,
TRANSPORTATION "''f'•'t , ... ,,. .. ~, .,
• """IC ~ "'
... (.",~ 'WOOll!t"t-\. """'" ""' ... '-'• ........ frttt.n TrHrf Tr-. .. n' hh41 o\w&it""'••t ... ~ ..
AUlOMOllU
l.,.-1irr•J AllU(t"'°"' \ i•uu' M..-r.,1 .. .-\.,,.,,1 .. , ....,.,, 1e .... kwt ,.,..,.,U•on
. .• .. AXEi ~·:' $1 03,000
::; 3 Rdrm huge bar k
~a rd It real for fl rst
I l1mP buyer don't miss
~ th•~ onr Call now'
=~· I@ SEA COVE •• , PROPERTIES ... .... I 1~4-63 1-6990
IARGAJH! ....
:::1 I COLLEGE PK! .... Thi.' hi:st pnced home in I
Coi.ta Mrsa . only
RXEIW'f'Sl
A hllle redecorating to
make this large rumbl
1ng ranch homr a real I
dandy Big lot and lots of
trttS Asklllg $173.900
s1r. ,ooo J Bdrm. 2 bath. HEWPORT CREST . I bm·k r1rf'Place Owner VESTORS • • will nrry ftnanclll& w1lh 4 IH
:;:. 20', down Call right Ocean vu, 4 Bd & J Ba.
no"' ll won't las t famrm.wetbar.dtnrm. ~ 2313 pool, tennis. walk lo
... beach. $210,000 Submit : ~ 'l.~Z§ijjJ ~~p~f!~·~~f Oovlt'
::~ 1--------· ., ...
""
. .,
SIOOODOWH
LEASE OPTION
,, u ....
s178 000 of the ocean and c:1ly
· lights Pnced to sell fast
TRADITIO:\:\I.
RE.\LT\
bl1·7370
ASSUMAIU LOA'H Fanta,lll' h1t·at1on 3
Hrlrm ·::? l1Jl h Bear
l'rt-ek rondo 1 .. x·attod 1n
C:o,la Mt!'d 3 ~ears
11lil Xlnt f1nanr 1n.i
SIJ,t _9:,,1
at 1629.000
D.M. W. 1b • Ur
760-0tl_5_
PICTUIE PaRCT
Parklike g reens tn
I rvlne 3 Br 2 Ba end unit
on r ul-de-sar financing
ran be assum plus
O•"Oer Will 8$.SISl Ready
to mo\ e In al $156,000
RCTaylorCo
MO ()<)()()
HSTOFILUffS
3 B d rm 2 1, Ba .
rireplac:e , llallan
ceramic: Ole 1n ltv1ng
room. d1n1ng room.
k1lr hen and enlr)
Fabuloos moonlam and
park views. Excepuonal
ftnencang• Reduced to
1234.SOO
JACOBS IEAI. TY
675-6670~-
~=IA"••··-I ;:. , .... AUTOS. l~ITEO ~·
VrWUI
2NEWPORTHOM~ I
3 Br 2 Ba rottagr l.IKE I liiii=iiiliiii;;;-.::~ ... --
NEW' 1179,000
AND , ... ft ...... , ....
\~•UUI•\ ~ ....
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It·~'· J-.-.~1 , .. " ...... fr\.t""' ~ 1,lt .. u-.-'9 .. ,4.
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.. l;"
.
f.,'.l ... r. ... .. .. ,,,.
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~"" ft,}(•1> "'"~I # ""'t'' , .... ...... .... ..,.
r.,~. rr._.mfi"' ''""··· .... \ , .. \"
~ foUllll ,,.y
~ 1 \Ot
'f77fl
'''·' AUTOS. NEW
'-''"l'Mlf•I ,..,, AUTOS, USCD
•••• '-"''"' \.'•••'" t.,.,,.....
tll t~E ''"" ::z DAIL fl£1> AJS i ca,ASSI ~'tu,, ......
\'o-
lontUttnt•J
\.
0ut\•t1 .. \ ... ,, Dud .. ''"' '"',..,. .. ,
LIM M 'th~•m• ».-.~.,)
..... 11. , ...... ~ r-
""' !Nll
•11 ~J;j ,., .. ---... T --~ ... , -
II •nu nrrd qunllfled
<'rtl1'f1,. t'!''· llw1I~ Pilot
d."••ftl'<I ud' run put ~ou
1n 1111K'h 1111h thr n11h1
f'l''llllt• ,., • ....,.h ,.,.,1 .. r-rlllr<I .... ......... .w.
= ii-............ ~ Wll
Tiit llfatet Mir ...
Oii the ar...,. c..
DAILY PllDr
CLASSIFIED
ADS
You C.. W ff. Rnd II,
Trode It Wllfl o Wont Ad
i • • • • • • I 142-1178 ) •
If it's got
handles
you 'll '-'.ab a sale •i>
faster in
Daily Piiot
classified ads. Call
642·5671
deluxe ADULT CO!'<DO
WITH VIEW. Sl~.000
C A·L L N 0 W Hae
Rodgtrs. agt R<'max
631-1266
CHOICEIUY!
$104,900
Highly upgraded 2
Bdrm. lrvme Condo .
Beautiful wall rover-
1ngs, levtlors. drapts
plus pool. spa. re<' room
Take over u1s t1ng
financm1. Call for de-
tails! 646-1171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
CLIFfDRIVE
VIEW
SUPERB 4 Br 3 Ba home
with FAMlLY ROOM & POOL. Tradilionel Cape
Cod dealgn WITll A
VIEW from almost
every room. Low down
payme nt and AS·
SU MABLE FINAN
CING. Call for privale
showln• RAE RODGEES. agt
631-12118
IT'S MO JOICE
SI 0,000 DOWN
Unbelievable terms by
motivated owner !
Deffrtod 3 Bdrm st.uW
In lood ntilhborhood
Su n o1 kll c h t n .
Hardwood noon. Only
$10l,IOOI Call 113-U
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
--~-----
OCEANFRONT -3 UNITS
PrilM locatio11 °" .... ~ 0 Wlltr will
fllla1tu ot l l "o lllhnst. $640,000.
BA YFRONT -PBltmlt.A -YU
Lo~ & 1,aclotlt 5 .... 6 bo. .....
i.,. patio. A•..,... $900,000 to..
ltd. to $1 ,550,000 lo.t lip. Fil LAND
WATERFRONT HOMES,1:-.<
Rt"'I f '>IAll
'• H:. ' I
31!"> Marone Ave
Balboa Island 673·6900
RESIDENTIAL REAL E'.STAl[ SERVICES
PEHIMSULA OC~NNONT
"EARLY BALBOAN" 4 BR 2 Bath
shake 'Ai th on site parking for 3
cars. An ·'entertaining" f root porch
with rantasti c ocean & Catalina
view. Priced to sell at $575.000.
OPEM WDeDAY 1·4 ....... ..,
Pier -Slip -Beach + Extra Lot. 5
BR. Baytront. $2,100,000.
LINDA ISU HOMIS
c~lli!l' pool fam ily homt> 1 JD ~:::.--:;~~;:;=~n1u11 n n t'f v 1 e w from h tl a 11 t lr u I
ntd1twnal, 4 bdrm, 5 bath hon \:. Slil' fur 2 lnrtel' boats. $1,495,000.
Our associa t1•:t 1t•I u
increased their rll'l 111<,
Many have DOL' Bl.I ll .1
their previous i111·01111 •
Fl HS1 YI·\ t
THE .FINAL T \I I •· SALES VOLU \t J I
Sl0,7ti.'1 l1tJ!J'
22 TRANS \<"'I I
Applications no\\ 1 ... 111
qua lified ex IH'rll "l l'tl
CAL L BOB l~lt' \I \ I
75 9-122 1 ................... -..
2·STORY DUPLEX ,.
200' To Beach! '.\fos1 ,1
beaut maint hy 1111g iv. 1
& lge sundetk up :? I' I
lower. 2 F P 0\\1 , .•
dn .
WESLEY H. TA Yl 01 er.
2111 San JOO\f ,,, • 1
NEWPORT CENTER. ~.f!
Harf:lor View Hilb
L o v e I y 4 b 11 1 l'I
Sandpiper model Nn• I~ ,, 1 re d ecoraled~.,,41 •· 11 >I
Cinancing. S487.~l
U~l()Uf tit ~I \ --~~
Realtors, biHooo p
MEW ON-,
Four Bed r 11
SparkUng < It 1 I<•
In Westthfl 1.. ,, I
Ter ms 111 I()\\ rt
Possible ~~81 11 111
MEW W0008"1G1
Exception id 'I h •
On Cho1 t~· t •1 •
Location 111 l~t 1
Park & Coin , ' , .
Bedroom "'1111
Wa rdrobe:-"·,. Only SI 72.0w
'" .. ,_ ..
'" ., •• "' , .... ~ ........ ) ...... .,
POte1t' I ,,..,. ,,.
tllll•• I'
t0C"'•"'4J9t
HI• 11ktt 1)1riftO•
Hfttf\fll'! " ..
1llf ' 11f0jjt f .. ,, . " , .... .., ..
,,~ .... , ... ~
JOW1t " JI .,.Of'!' tt\ \ .. u .. )).
"'°" ..
~·~·) ....
JtfOlil~ ·~""' .. ..,.,.,,.. .,
111ow ao.-.
It ..
JO• ..
C P R R S 0 S V w :
S T P W 0 T H 0 H ~ •
R H I N S E T I E D ~ R
\
..
•t
' ,
i
I rgc lagoon vit>w fro111 &ve~·ti1t·ular
l h1h•ctural design 6 bdrm, :I bnth,
1yrnom , <lnrk room & d(•n. SIJp for 2
• rge bouts. $1,350.000.
LIDO ISLE HOMES
I .. at urt>d on Homes Tours this lovely
1 .1dit10nul spacious, custom 3 h1l rm. :~
••th home, newly redecorated. P1 ked
..,ell qui ckly a l $475.000 Mt•st "lt'1' .
wly 1 t'modeled 3 bdrm . 2 bath pl ui.
n 1 rl·at1on rnom & 2 patios Bf'am
c •lings Great for Camily 11 .. mg.
I ct• I en t val uc at $420,000
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROMT
1nor7im1c t>ay & ocean \ll'"' al
H'dge . fr om prime large lot, 4 lid rm
halh custom home. 3700 HI ft
c 1lu11ng marine room. Sl .385,000
I--_ I LL c R u N Dy' RE A LT 0 R
~41 Bay,1d" Or •v•· N B ,.1675· 6161
-------------
LEASEOPTI
4 8\12' l Ilia $t0.1t11J c' • 1
llSOO 11111 A11t. l3t I, 1L
Ol 648 Oftro
_ _ OCEANFRONT
RV ACCESS l BY OW)l~R
Grt•t romer location lu J-New l U:;l bit ' 1 ~ Me1.a drl Mar 4 Bdrm French 'l/onunm1y .1 ttk ..... ,,...,.~-w:.-~-,. · & den home l a 1 h• r a m II y r o,o m , n e v. split $89.' !nl UWC' .n klll·hen 11pphances-, l~w ' · l'I)' y11rd Full prier _&-ashore 6131~711
$142.500
EASTBLUFF
1 Dr Homt 2 ll ..
l •HIJl.'ll llll .~ l
C::SHtt l
....... PROPtHTll~
--· ---1 ~.000
DOH ,oW I 026 Roy McCarclt, Rttr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-7729
SHAH Ow.BSHlf'!
~DOWN
$.SJO/MONTH I 2 BR condo each have
pvt baths Patio, pool
J!ICUul O~er, 631-6666 1
HwitiftC)tolt leadt I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SUPER SHARP! I
LOW DOWN
StU.r 0nper•1
've n.a llu.. I b•'r•
lul Ill J>CnTIJ~t' ,
" large 11Sblltn11fil
loan. !\o q11allfy11.y • "'
ly $99.SOCI. Ask ( I
Owner Ai,'l «7!1
7J0..7~
..............
t.\UPER Be.iuurul 4 or 3 Br .• new
c.irpel. rtrapes & pa1111 ----------------1 1 ns1 de & out. We II
DOVER SHORES
Pool. Jat•uu1 OH•rlo1 " Ila} Gal~> Dr F m1111
' rl ~l 111
~
I
REALTORS
675·5Sll
I landscaped. $1000 do" n •
, to quahried VA Buyer or 1
' Seller "ill hd p finance rhn. rm. 2 frpll ~ :si lb,1
I $1l4,000. O Bourke 1 1~· I Re altor._546 ~ I . 642 2Sl0 1.1A; ~·11
I In I 044 Venal-.S Cord. !.~ .. :••••••••••••••••• t.v o"Ar1~r llior11 '1 I * *REDUCED! 11 OU§f 111J.._!~•1 ~.
I STWMf H111hl} motH·attd ~lie S 14•000 DOW•t LJrgt 3 Bdrm home in ' prc~t1g1ous Woodbrid~ Custom l Mm1 . I•
Pl.ice Very flex1 bl1· from bf't<11 r-11• ·• 11 term~ Mori ''lr.n h 11
<'Jn 1m11ic1111 11
• I
r .. cf!blt hr:i1i• '1. ,\
NH ~F'S PRIDE 'latu1 .ii det•1 ratot
.od 1 .ineling & manlt>b rnakt tlm 3
tJ n um & den WUl Olll' Of l hC tnosl
1q1 • 111 old l'd~t +a I Htlr m 11•11l<.1l
Jr. liO\\ \VJ ho \• I ·~ I 1
\OUI 04~ -"• t.
II " I -.J84,500
OLE OF NEWPORT REAL TO~S
25 15 E. Coast Hwy., Corofto del ~al"
675-5511
.,...,,_..,..._. .... _ _. ____ ._ ...... IC2 ....
?l'IO -if'! Mer I 022 Costa Me5a I 024 .......••.••••••. 1·············-•.....•
·13'1 AEGOHIA FREEDOM h~USE
' I I· ·1111 I nr \'11 I 3 llr I 11.1 la1 • ..
1,1 r l a r t 1 JI v 11. 1 ~~.ooo 1 t m6:J
I
r ·nn1rat·tor fman I 1'11hnH . tu It•' 11 1 3
I ~.15,lXWl Hit, 3 hi! pm II n11 1 o, I
upl(rJrh· OY,• Ill Jn ,
C. dM Charmer Dph.
With Fincadncj
$159 CIOI• ~I •r ••t
I' fl'-\I IJ I l' ' • If 11 ~ n I
12Y2%
l11 r ~2 .! ~I
d415~2 ·J.li7
W-iLKf:!U Lf'I H I
lov~~!'!~Jiul !
\ 1llage Owner will hPI~
hnan~c Submit! Uni\
$182.000 &15 9161
ASSUMAILE
29Y"ot 10.l'o 11.irbor JhJi.e. Uilr
huth townhurth \I • 1
E\\ In I>',.,
r. \di,. <' 11nrnu1o1l
. "' ... , .
OPEN HOUSE
~ REAlTY
·•H.11co ·•n1ns V' •'
~11•5 t "t 'lq 1 l 'I
inr, w Ii:•· 8~"~'. I , Jo • n of 1i:llll •ll•> I r , I lor imml'd '""' f $111(),0'lO do" n. I ROGERS REALTY
' . 675-2311
9ll)ll!llllllmllli!!!!llll!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!llllfll!!llll
WAL SQUARECONDO I t :.:1 or 2 + ~uesl 111
~1 ' c1n1t plu:. 2Br
\J I ·1111age All m
rl' • 1d ~ e'tcel
ut11Jr OY.n•·r will I 'Y I E '?nd TD Bei.I
12-14' r ml 11.llC, ;k1 'tr
IOJO!> f'r\>e 111fo
WaridR.E.
556-7777
N~ \R Bl \l'lt
2 Sdrm. I ~ ba., up I graded 'lint f in ,
SIOI 000 Try SI0,000 ~~~~~~~~~ down 5'.>2 1511, ah .,
~9 0147 - --
l"I loWn (Or Onh or
644-721 1
3BR.2~B\S111111t0 t'OLLEGErARK S &S
0, 531 -r-:n t BR 2l2 Bi\ Unltnisb1..-d
wnu'I room c:ommumt. CITY l.IGlfN \'IE" pt1ols & rlub hous
'l;r R1•J• h $2111-•· dn $165.950 By Owner.
r.31 5i f, I 1714 I 779-U.89 aft 2P \!
CRYSTALCOVE I SPACIOUSAND I
Beaut new 10nchJ~. 2 GRACIOUS
flN 11 Ol T \\II' > ou should .,.,., It; ...
~ho1ce c •l' l.
ourle>.m 1ld.C 110·11
~\ar "1111lo"A'1rteri .1
urnablf' fman 1111<
\25 000 DOWN mastPr '>Ullt·~. ltJh<1n I • tile t>nln 1~k\h~hl dbl I 2)rold rontemporary rn •rnd lolood nQQI'~ •,
.. ,., .. mable lllan~ g;ir "' o~nPr l.J:•' encl Turtle Rock V1sla .1 t ne 1l!hhorhood ~dl<>•
u• 111 nt I -;. ll'fl nt ~, •
bcarh. 2 t<· Im m U!:
doulilf' l(a1 ••~l' hr"r•1:1, •
•11,.frll!d 2 b1 . mre pal to .~ Yd t'ln~r lo I bdrm . 2 ba formal dtr I too: \II !ht· an,• 1 • o H I! .111 w plans ou·an rm ram rm. aJK! a ter 1 ~.!>VO
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1e: \~•·nl ~inq • private area. Mountain ,1;;~ 1'.n') fttfJ MJO 1932 M F.Yr-.n ~I \.1 E. an.ti canyon views. Fan I Llfi Q (
t ~. tx•1lrl)Om rot 0 !'EN fl!Ulb '5l N 12 ~ t:i~tle buy al $299.000. ~ I ·
• , .i••in view Onr &II 19911631 IJ( 1 .ii,t Ass ume the loans ver. 1 '111111191" 11" 1" '
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•!rm l Ba home local· lam rm .. tge ktlchen. -s~llt'r wil l J • !
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Mtsa Verde MocJic M IS.t;ION REAL TY
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ava ilabl!' ~n<l 11wnc r will I EMERALD IA y
help )OU \\1th tht• r1nanc , ...., 1 gamest s Br 4 Ing . \ l l r :1 cl I\ c J ewe e m 1•-1111!!11!111!1!!1••~·111 b d 0 m ., , b 111 h rer gar .\U extras In 1·
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cllct 4ayloleUmorc c~arkllng r1rl·pl:11l'S 5000 sq rt. house, 4 Br I for Sole I I
1ple about the serv1re Fmancmg IS Ot~1hle so 4 i., Ba $82S,OOO, good •• ••••••••••••••• ••.,
1 hJH' to offer Ask' submit yourofftrtod.ly' terms. Pnncipals only 0 C F: A N r H p ,
•Ul lur low rates to-$229.~ Call979 2390 641·1!7§3 L,\Gl ~A Bf'll ... ~.&tz ~--__ TorbelJlfOtton_ WOODS COVE rrom S29.900. nmt ;1.
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wooded lot. 2 blocks to
Victoria Beach
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U----u .a.-.i 11 d tto.MsFwahllidor •-lwllhFwwldlH Apell••flu..tw.. ApeilMtillhu.ftn. ApellMCllhu.fwa. Af»wlwww•hu.fwA. Apellwww•hu.fw-A. Yoc:.tto.._.. 4250 ~~.~ •• ~?~ =: .. ~=~::: .... ,. u ...... ; llOO ~ ..................................................................................................................................... OCEANF.RONT·;a;4·9;~ Malt nonsmlt.r. 2.br. Zba •
.._ ___..._. 326' ........... _. ........... CostoMftCI 3724 ..... , ...... 3I07 CottoM... 3124 ttwlla:gl•hedl ll40 .... ,.,..... ll6t M.wportlMdt 3Ht Avail. Wini.er. Weekly / ms +~ ul.1.11, In C.111.
w,,....., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••··~··•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moathl m.7873 Day 642·5441. eve ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE WUI-.. Ir. TIH PAii WtlmftlT B 1 b ~. to bch util ·. . . 3Br,2\Al.ba,poohndrec lhedls,.d•.ts $325/mo. ~lun Mobile 2bdrm,SS2Syrly 2 BR. 1 BA, nr S. Cst .,.~ IW'.ftrU I r a.s PS . CHRISTMASl NHAWAJl -=6'2=-'5620=-----
area. Newport Terrace. SUMMB· WIMIH Home. Matureadults, no Marshall Realty Plaza. & Santa An•: Luxury~~ units al ar. pd. $350, Property House 2 BR 2 BA Oceanfront Spectacular panoramic
$77S[mo .. Call645-S413 YIAILY·COMM'L pets. Quiet. secu~. 1991 67S·l070 675-4600 AdltsonlySS2S.54S-l24l, fordable living. 1.2 & 3 COUMJIYCWI M2·38SO,&f.2..lOIO a t at nie llikai In view. Quality F pref ..
Harbor View Homes. 4Br Newport.Blvd.646-8373. le ......... 3122 975-1107ext8. Br. Well decorated. UYIHG Eaalbluffs Tawnhouse H~~olulu DooPetUJQb(l neat & clean, N.B. f .. -... 1 orofto_..Mcr Unfurn 2 bdrm. No Olympic siz.e pool, light· Bachelors, 1&2 bedroom apt. 3 bdrm, 2ba, 2 car 21..3 81807 ...:67~3::...-009==-------2.,, ba, 2300 s/ • ~. g &...,.. ..-3741 ••B•••••b•••bea•• .. •··~··•of•• children or pets. 1st. ed tennis court, J1cuu1, apt.a & to~. gar. No pets No M/F nonsmoker to lhr 4 yard. Gardener, sec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 r, 2 a. ut . view 1 t ~13 park like landscaping. From 000 644·1900 children. S650/mo PalmSpringsArCelab(Mon· br
2
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MOO system. 2 fireplaces. Furn tux studio. spa. TV, bay, private Garage as . mo M l beawtul bldg 10 644 1010 terey Counll)' u I coo· • ..,,.. • · ·
lmmed. ott . 644-5966 maid service. phones. Re r r 1 g S9 o o m o E1sts1de 2 Br. 1 Ba. Near H '; 3 IEOIOOMS · ·
1116
do, 3bdrm. 2ba, atrium, mo. t ulill. 9157.3073
DUPLEX. 3BR.2BA. UP. 25 wk. 499-2227 1146·0096. schools, no pets. $ol2S . 846--0619 2 IATHS So.ttl L_,.. furn .. golf & tennis. Dai· G....,.
S900 mo. 2BR, IBA. lEMTTOOWN; Furn.studio.Laguna. Studio apt w/refrig. Mo.63l·6~. $67SMONTH •••••••••••s•••••••••••• ly , weekly & monthly for"I• 4350
Down. S650. mo. New SSJOSA3BR,famrm M Available Nov 20. $275. 2 bdrm. 2 bath w/pvt MAlltBSWAUC 129 35th Sl, lower unit. Oceanfront ml lBr. w/ rat ts av a i I . ••••••• .. •••••••••• .. ••
carpel & paint. Jackie, 8300 !:~ util Inc. 7~1813aft6 PM patio. Each bdrm w/pvt 2 & 3 Br. Townhouse xlnl cond. Avail. now. gara~e. S650/mo. lsl/lst. 17141558-S>Ol. 9-Spm, ask 2 +~car e, old
631·4°'6,851-2121 H B 3BR f d sink. La·...t-book-up. Apts. Patio&, single & (2lll966-17ll. S«unty.498-~l _ -for Mark. Cd ·S. H ·Alley ac· -==~-====----1 1$35 · · • nc ,,.,..,, Studio, fp .• deck,..,.Ul/mo. 2 Bd, steps t.o beach.~ --~ d bl• g ag•s · ......, _.., No pets. $475 . 769 ou "' car ar ... · Afioitl&:.lllhFwllidlH Mammoth Condo cu . 752·5001 ~ S600DanaPtHome ~!}30Sids . Charming! Ask for Darrell. agt Hamilton Rearunll2-B. Cboeailrd H~ ... ~a~ur. _.YenB .. ICo11......,.. I orUwfwiill*d 3'00 2BR,2BA. Jae. Sauna, ...:•~A::::m=-·~5P:..:m=-----
3 Br. 2~ Ba. Condo, 4930 ...,., 831-1266 rmmed . occupancy. ren--......._.. 2or.2 a. mmty poo ••••••••••••••••••••••• reasonable rates. Offk...... 4400
frplc , cedar paneling, l600 El Tom> Man-Or ~auliful 2 bdrm Ocean-u ...... lac:lt ADt 963-8182. a.-.... • ....,., lit! f7SO. 6JH7!17. S E A W I ~ D 775.3930, 8-S Moo·Fri. ••-••••••••••••••••--
patio, 2 car gar. pool. 8302 front Pentbou<;e Condo. S300 mo. includes u(iJ. Triplex 2 Br2ba. balcony, Adu"7v'er..O communi· IA YROHf VILLAG"E Lra Big ~ar cabin. P0ol !817 Westcliff. N.B. Want SSSOtmo _,,, 1 3 2 Comp. furn. Lease by .,.,.., n-1 d l I I I L " 758-0980 ,,.,.,., rvme + ul v•~..,_, aun aci . enc gar. ty. Immaculate 2 bdrm, Lwc 2BR. 2BA. Xtra rg table, color TV, 2 fplcs. financial inst. 70005.f. S410 mou~lilJ Y lllt Sl,OOO. I Walk to schl & goH. 1~ ba Huntington liv rm Overlooking New 1&2 bdrm luxury Sleepsl4.114/~16 1st floor AaatSCl..scm.. Spacious, newly decoral· Renllmes Owner. Costo Meso 1124 Avail Nov 10 ~Imo. L d k c d B Sec bldn& Under dull pts · 14 plans 1 -· · ed . 3 bdrm We st 631•cU (114)730-8444 ....................... , ... c.,•73 an mar on o. ay. d . I • • •, tn bd . a~eou.-4300 ... ~,,OllT ........, -.....,..... Washer & Dryer. 2 groun park:lng. Adu ts. Bdrm rom $490, 2 rm -.-~ "5" Newport coodo. AdJts. FEE Newport IMdt 376' HEWLY DECOI.. 3bdrm. 2ba, ram unit, up-patios, wetbar, bit 1.11 R & .$1000 mo.1!7~S I from S570, Townhouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• P8IMSULA
no pets. $1 ,000. Agt COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar stairs, $47S. Avail Nov. 0, 2 car gar. Z7S per Steps to the beach. 3 Br. 2 rr:om S640 + pools. ten; "Gav Roommate Spacious executive of.
646-0295 or675>9735 • 3 BR 2 BA d/washer. pool. Adults 20th. 642-1919. mo. Isl & last + $300 sec Ba. frplc, enclsd patio. ms. waterfalls, ponds. Con~ct Services". fices act'Oll from City
Btulrs. 3 bdrm, 2 ba con· A&t. ~i 6'2·2225 6'2-S073. d e p o s i t . C a I I Yearly $73S Mo. Call Gas for .cookin& & heal· L a r g e
5
t G a Y Hall. AU $t'n'iees avail•·
do, Obie gar. Pool S900 C d 11 l Ir. I loADt IAYTI...aS (714)759--081. Ask for 673-2S07 1 Ing paid. From San Male/Female Room· ble, 'opt.looal'. From 22S
"''mo . ..,.1$71 ll' • .:.: ;.,";J J425 N•wly "-· du pd He. 810 am. c.Jl W Oupl". "-"· 2 B<. d !'.:'C.';\."fu "::;~:::;::I m al< Smi« i o So. ::0~~1::" :f, 'j=~ Harbor Ridge 2 Homes, 3 ....................... encl aar.~ pool, dsbwr. SPACIOUS I BR. SPAC.-PINJHOUSI B~. f~lc, garage. Near lheD West oo Mcfadden Calil. G.R.C. for ~nlal quired, callm.30Q2
:;ea°: l ~it:O:~::: IEOMEOF Adulll. 642-5073. Large private patio, 3 br, 2 ba, skyliebts, Udo 5 opptng a~a. S600 to Sea wind Village. needs. ll·7PM
Avail. now. Could be THE LUCKY F1W 3 Ir To-..uM fireplace. walk in closet. cathedral ceilings, dbl ypeulsr. 1~:i· h~~~lts~ts~ (714)893-5198. (213>&»3040. UECUTIVI /M v. ""7 R t · Cost M a's pd dishwasher. garage. balconv, singles deli&hl SUrrES rum. o. 7...,..1.,, . en 10 a es Newly decor. gas ., 1 d 1 Avail llll5. Drive by Ill le 9at 1; Sb
1 1
h ~aeon Bay. 3Br 3ba, 18 NEW EST gated 20 YEAA·AOUNO FUN: encl gar .. pool, dswhr. po o I & au n r Y or family retreat. S650 614~ Clubhouse Ave S2004Plex, utll r r& uxury ome IN
ft dock t.ennl.s 2yr lse Townhome VILLAGE Social Act1~1tH!, o. Adults. 642~. faciUUes mo. Discount for It '94"303. • S403 w/prof person. 1sl last + Hmf AM 1600m~ M17 . ~~~~~ik&~ Bk ~~~~F:~:'onc:a? Spacious2 Br, I Ba.1395 l99W. BAY ST. =ng. Agt , Greg, v E R S AJLL E S 12'5 H.B. Bungalow I dep. ~3'2.11
1
~ Ne.po .. u.. 2br tba · 1 • G · · Part•es •Plus more 3 Br, I ~ Ba. $&25. Laun· ,,.L •113 D 1 · 1 Id l PENTiiOUSE 9633 0 F _,_ -~" h 2B New UXl.lf1 tee s~ace •• ...... • • ofpureuxury. arages, d r 548-9$56 .....-r euxe poo s e xra 2 Br 281 romerumt $330lblkto8ch r oxy emlUCwwsr r in Irvine's busiest view home .. atlO + dep. hydro-tubs in master Gf!EAT AECMATION: ac. · d large 2br. 2 ba, bltns. • 1 · ..,50 Mo' 5364 1 apt, H.B .. F.ST grad/ center! Easy Frwy ac· 642-5722. suite. formal dining Tennis•FreeLessoos L • r I e I b r m Nice Bach. Apt. for 1 dswbr. l~ miles beach ocean v ew. •• · metaphysical. $300 mo. A ail 1 c 11
Bay Shores guarded gate rooms, wood burning ~;:1~ fil~t!':~"n! w /dishwasher_. carpOrt, Adult. No Pt(. Utlls inc Id Adlta, no pets. $450 mo. 644·002. s:KO CM• ut.lls inc. S403 I 960-9890 ~=~ewls. · DOW· 1
community. 2 Br. till fireplaces, micro-wave • Hydromusaoe • ldry rm Westside. Sl90. &as & water. Frplc & S36-8362 2 bdrm, I ba ~75 yearly 1395 Tu.slin, pool M/F lo shr 2br Iba, non 551·I231 '4M2JO
H ·82.l850.2131972>5101, ovens, fenced patios & Sw1mm1ng •Goll 645-6625 patio. $380/mo. Call 2BR.TOWNHOME lease. O~tn beams. 8388 smkr, 2 blks from
697-CMal. _ yards. Privale .. eleganl Or•vll'lg Range 2 Br w/garage. Adults. bl w n 9 AM · 5 PM . Pool, part, near beach C8J1>0rt 111 W. Balboa RenUmes -Ocean. H.B. S220mo '•DB.UDOfftCIS•
2 tillsfrldt living only 15 mU1utes BEAUTlf\JlAPTS: crpts, drapes, patio, 645·6404. 963-Sl91 l213)1m-2542 631~ 960.7592 l,2&3room.Noleuere-
from Fuhioo Island. 7 Songlts. 1 & 2 Bed· :.!~e120r pd. Call 1·5 2 Br 2 Ba condo, nr So. NO FEE! Apl. & Condo FEE quired Adj Alrporter
30BRR.P2tBComA. Frp2 lc, DaWr, minutes to S.C. Plaza or room' •Furnished .....,... . Coast Plaza SA pool 16()(): Gortgeousn21tBr. 2beBsal. rentals. Villa Rentals. l . 4000 Mv/Fr, 30mtoat~.,r~~ BrerliW.aebslle Hotel. awm. f.12. • v • car g · O.C. Airport. Just east of &. Unfumts!H!d • Adufl 2619 "I" Santa Ana $465 ' ' ' aepe r a e u · • -67>4912 Broker. 00.S 0 e "'u " •
cptng, loft, renced yrd. Newport Blvd. & so. of L1v1ng •No Peta • 667 Victoria 70 ~~,!10002sauna, 1595. Deb area. walk J o beach. . •••••••••••••••••••••••! home. 963-0033. Ask for S250 Up. Hunt. Bch.
Leasedb r.546-6020 San Diego Frwy. Slarl· ~odels Open oa11y ,,_. child OK. no pets. Oceanfront ror. Wmler La&una Beach Motor Inn. Jenny.1192-7363afl 7. Carpet, drapes, air.
ing at 11000 a month 9106 ts20Mo.2Br.1BaciApL Spacious Bachelor. 1133-3307 Rentals Furnished le 985 No. Pacific Coast lSeeklng 2 professionals 17301Beacb.14Z-21134. Versailles, 2BrZba t675
On Waler2Br2ba 1695
Npl Shores, 3Br 2ba S8SO
Olo lo month I
Harbor Vu, 2stry. 4 Br
$14,95
VU home. 3 Br. $1400 mo
631-5439, 2473 Orange O k ood Gara4e. ·washer Ill ryhelrd. r a n g e • re r r i C · Nr. Hunli:Qgloo Harbour. unfum. Broker. &7>49l2 Hwy, Laguna Beach., over 30 for rny Ftn Vly I 7TH STmf
Ave .• CCJ6ta Mesa. Gar~ ... ~ .. rtmenta Oa.IKI butll·1115._SmOnJa 1 c 1 r Cpl/drapes. S32S/mo. 3 Br 3~ ba, den, rrplc, • 8 RE AT HT AK l NG Daily, Weekty, Kitchen home . n n. s m k rs . COST"' ~" --......,. • no pets. Y yea Call S46-7214 VIEWS• · 1 bl Lo · l A~ J asmlne Creek. CdM . Newport Beach N. old. Call for appt. E 'd . 2 B 1 8 '900/mo. 846-4360 Adults only. $750 Mo. ::~~-·494~ w wm er 962-6846. > 2 or 3 room atftce auttes.
$1500 mo, 3 BR. lease 880 ltvmfl '"' 161111 TSL MGMT 642-1603 .s1 e upstaira r a. 2 BR 1 BA 3 bl.lr.s to beach, H 2 8 pl hldl on Male roommate to share A/C, plenty at Pfk&. Util
opt. 2"'1 ba. faro rm, all (714)6-45-1104 Fireplace. pool, pvt $450/utll ~ict ~~ ~~ quiet. ailults only, no b~!: ba:-biuei With 2 Balboa Inn. '90 & up J bdrm Jlse with 2 pro-incl.Avail. now.Call
amenities. Woodbridge, Newport Beech S. patio dishwasher on 1ara1e. I c . pets. 1470. private balconies frplc weekly. Kitchennellt, ressionals in Irvine. RealooocnJcs ns..rroo
Irv. 2 BR den, 2 Ba. new 1100 1&1n St 10o ... a11a1111 E.aid~. all in x·lg 1' & 2 !~~~3666 dys. S36-&'S(} heated pool & ~ oi ocean (root. 675-8740 S.51·31Si or 5.51-8681 Costa Mesa. 250 aq. ft.
S7SO mo. freshly decorat· (714) &42·5l l3 Br garden apts. From Conv loc 2 bdrm apt. closets. 745 Domingo Dr. Newly decorated private 2 bd. 2 ba. jacuu.i, laun suite. $175/mo. Ulill in·
-
WATERFRONT ed. Aat. 759-9173 149. S.57·2841 $450. 2 BR. adlts. no pets. Child ok. No pets. 5420 979·8889or6'5-1260. room & bath, rrplc. ~· nn, HB, 1 mi bcb. I& cld. 779 w. 19th. St.
HOM ES Tow .. o•• OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br. 2 Br . 1 Ba. $4 so . Pool. 3Z5 J, 17th Place. as incl. 1142-1652 2 Bd, 1 CU.II bath, frplc, 1 inc Ids ulils. Easts1de patio. $260. 960-3060 ..!M=l·:::ll82S=·-----
REAL ESTATE U.fwlll•d 3525 Avail. Winter. Weekly/ Malramoniocon 2ninos. AflllAM,646-5137 3 bdrm, 2 ba, stove, dis· car gar. Steps to bch. C.M.&&S-Oli. Roommateshr2br.2ba. NEWPORT BEACH Nr 631~ ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• Monlhl . 673-7873. 2043 Wallace, Cost a 3bdrm. 2ba, Mesa Verde. hwasher, cpls, drps. $575/mo yrly 673-2830 aft L&. rm . in beaut NB hrn.. apt. w/vlew, Promon-O.C Airport. MO lo 1100
------l!!!!!!jCM,48R,twnhousequiet SHORTTERMS Mesa . S48-1546 & adults, DO pets. $625. Fpc. Enclosed patio. &pm. kit. priv .. pl:· prof. F. toryPl,NB.S360+dep. 1q Cl.M4-7'11.2
3 Br. boatsBp.ereatloca· neighborhood. S7SO per Buch rentals. 2&3 631·2150. 499-4721,83MS2l. Obie aar. washer, dryer 2 Br. Oen. 2"'1 Ba. Condo. ~/30 1225 /lnc utl 67$-3889. Share 2 etc IUtte in pre-
\ion. pvt uea. SUOO/mo, moolh. 631·9132 bdrms, ssso mo. up. Agt. STUNNING large 2 Br. & TO'hbouse Garden ~pl. 2 hook·up. No pets. Gorgeous whitewater 60-824.2 M /Christian nnmt. 2 br, sll&ious ai.rpoft area. 375
A&t.760-9333 "-'-nu.fin 3600 675-8170 Ba. Garden Apl. Pool. Br. l "'1 Ra. Patio & •2582 view . all deluxe Avall.Nov.l!t.Largeot· l ba. $213 E. CM. sq. n. For details call
......,....... • •· u , 710 W. 18th. St. I a r a I e · SS 2 SI mo· 3 Br. 1 "'1 Ba. Condo. KN\ Ceatur"'s. Ontiv s·~ Mo. tractive room. Steadily 631-4796 Dan. •"1 ......... NewPort Hgts, excep· ••••••••••••••••••••• • • ~ .. ,, ''""" ..= ... ::.:..;._=:.:.------
Uonal view 2Br. 2Ba, Costa Mesa .2Br dplx, WIMTllUMJALS NEW BREEDAPTS. 548·1377. Mo. Children OK. No F.dgewaterReal Estate, employed person 40 3BDRM Apt N.B. 2 pools, NEWPORT BEACH 5CM mo.~ tBa. 11rag~ 111 ~ley, orr 1 BR with LOFT & Nice2 Br. l Ba. ln4·Plex. ts. 213 -1524 Ge-~. y~ans +.with.or with out jac. etc. smmo i,i, util + No. Newport Blvd. l80to
slreel parking m front, 2 bdrm, 1
bath, rrptc, BACH. from $350. Frplc, $440. 1 bdrm, deck. stove, Versailles Comer Pen· kitchen prlv. 979-96S6. dep. 7~aft Spm. UGO sq ft. avail. at 90' a
J bdrms. 2 "" ba, 2 car recently de<!oraltd. S450 dshwhr, eo~ bl rec room. pool, Jacuui, 963-&SSl an 6. refri&. $350. thouse 2 Br. 2 Ba. Av•il. F. 1300 Mo. Beautiful 2 rooms m . Includes aq. ft. Sierra 11(11K. Co. tarafe. 2 Ureplaces. mo + gu&telec. Owner 3 bdrm, 2 bl • lns, 111 & water paid. USTSIOI S:i.5313 now! 8Ts.3787 38R. 2BA Ea.stside CM vtil. 960-281.5 before 9:30 Ml-1324.
den, new paint, drps. pays wtr & lawn up r*::d~z~lh. rrplc, Adults, no pets. 393 3 bdrm 2 ba enclosed Oceanfront vu, dlx, 2Br Wtstcliff. Lge dlx apt. 2 House.642-3Zil PM,or N0-7174.ff ...::..:.wi=-u"""n~IWft~-.. -.4-ll-111-11-·n
fardener Incl.
11200
1 keep. 1st & last + Sl50 .,50 mo. Hamilton, CM. 114H41l. patio. '2 ato~y. Avail lba, bltins. sund eck. Br 2ba, frntc, patio. QWet older man, Pvt en· Fem only •Ashr lae hoUH St. 3IO sf Sits. Sierra Yearly lie . .lll4 Estele dep. 548.6072 •• PTS ,,, t t $200 .., ..
Ln. 494-9907. 875:7720;-_.,.:_.., ~· +.._.. PALMMESAA ll/18.$800mo ~.adults,babyok,no mat.ire ptq>le. 9600. no r anee, t c. mo. w/same. wtrrplc, wet M1ml,Co.MH IM.
"5-tolM ~\IM&waiW•-l561MesaDr. &40..(ll97 ti. 2131 pets, no children . La u.na bar, W/D, micro, l&e WATmllllOM'f
d •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• l Br. Cum. 9400. 2 Br. un· lBR. Utl! paid. 1370. DILIW.alPt .. S ~0302 Sln&le room. share bath, yard, ~r s.c Pina. No Vi---~. etc.
511
.. 2bdrm con o, sp_e c· .... ._.. 3706 film "25. Adults only. Carport. QUletAdwt. No 3 Br. 2 Ba. Frptc. G~at no kitchen., close lo tda. 957.(91 r.O.M.O'.'~ r-~c:fb~~r.-Jo~:: ....................... Call 9-4.5*911D. Pets.313WBay.548-9516 SPACIOUSlBR klc:. near water. Adults bes ach,,utilsWmlcldld. SlC65o. Mtnlce m p. non·smkr. M-DICSTI
S4l-C8l 2bdnn,lbl,Patlo,parlr· 323 E. tah. 2 Br. 1 car 2 Br 1 81, encl. aar. Flreplau, walk ln only, no pets. S700. ava e. e . tux. home. Mesa Verde. "'"' · ln1.nopeU.Av1ilnowto Lovelydlxaptonlbe wtr, 11r11e. 2 kids OK. no clean quiet adultaonly closets, dlshwuhe r, 8155·CM24. 875"6608, .$57-3150. Lu•uriow aa If offlce :IC..,... Junt lStb $450 mo. 28r, den, frplc, 2 car ~u. $445. SierTa Mgmt. 279 w. Wiiton JD, fiarafe, pool & laundry CLOSITO-"CH w-. 4100 Prof. Lad'f wiOI poaitlve avail. for Mlf>.ttue Ill " llOI-175-o.Mt ar. wahr/'4-r, mo/mo Ml UM ........ ........... litJ -Id -..olN"''" --·"''••...1 "...... ..., . . ' rwu/mo . ....,.,_. aci •. 2 bdrm, a beth, lrplc, ....................... attitude wou like to ........ ..... -·-.... . 4Jll2'r\ba.familJrom, .... , ...... 1717 .1'7HDS lbr £/tick, n111l but l BR, uUI. ilOJoann St. Peta conaideted. adulit dJthwuher. 2 car SIALAllMOTIL share your bo1ne wkh lice compln•. AlrJQrt clla nn, 2lllO ICl.ll. Sl.500 ....................... l bl'. Condo, V\I ol fouo· cosy w /lots or neat No child-amt pet OK. ooly. Ml\ per mo. 1 ar1 I•· 1530 m 0 . Wkly mipts now avail. same f7S.Gli55 (Bus.}, cl o u . I at I u du : ~-..., ftnt 1'01 l bdrm .... '"11
• Beacll Pk ·-•-1 ,-...._ •t CICIO 000 _......... -......... A only ._., 1-1 ........ '-·-St. .~.. .. c 1 TV • • I et e pt / p II oat t:taM!;,,1.n.,.._ ia&. util~JUMSnS: cl:'•111~U:a, Pool; ui.iiet."' ,..._ . PIJ!O.CS1'JD8 ~ :;o;'rft'ekt> f7S.l.u. ilh~a;; b~\oo°m~r 2274 Newport Bayfront Apt, •Utllilita •.Janitorial .._C...... JJ7' SM·f140 tpa, nm, *· 1uard IASISIDE .......... Airy 90-.o? UpperDupltx,2 Bt.Den, Newport Bl vd CM Share furn z bdrm •100 frtt ~1 .. 11no. =••••_ .......... C .. W.. J7J4 M .'7&-.i Tom 8paeiolll I br, utural I O r 2 8 R I P l I · 'it Bill lO bHeh, 2 br, 2 B a . S 7 $ 0 6 1 1 744$ w /female. Fpc, car, dll· • A ID p I e _par~ I a I
.......... flllmt; ....................... wood ctlllDll • w/catbtdral celllnf , frplc, aar. Adulta. 9475. Cl .W.3800 Uve oo NewpOrt Beach ;,?;~;.:.llher&idryer. =~=:=.Mn·
.... J+I ........ e&Jle ~· eallllN, pn llalcmia,1 "91e .. I•. pool 6 tpa. 12Hd!St.sawt• 2 BR 2 Ba condo, rwwty UOO/wk Pine Knot f : lllart I blhl. I bl w
du. pd.p AMllll1 DlllJ11• ~ Mupuutlt.t, IO pell. •· • .... H .. • painted, cpll. fplc, pool, Motel. m W PCH, NB ... d -.. ·~ • • -•llat•....... -U l•o eue ea 1 --ed M.S-1$29 vraa It• New,ort DANA POINT 111· W 0 ... ' I . Htiff'7 ....................... ' . . .Ml.,.oMO !.!.':'-! t I Ce a. e . -II'~ .. AJN; ....,._._... .._ .. = · ._. ••-Off111Ytew.Dehale1112 Lra Zbdrm, a... frplt, Ytart1 ontMllNelafw9. mu.Mt .. .......,_....rilW "'--"'•--• ....___ .... I.a -=-. llw•ll• --Br.Apta.l'W#IJdeC!Ol'at· porcb. •· 81S AmllOI room1 . Kite•. • 81. htil&.IA.r,N .J-.-t-_.. .. --I --9 ...,.: _ .... : ..... , ..... , .. eel,~-. clllhwasbtr, Wa.w.N.8. T»ll 4. -· - -+ --• ...... _. . -•. ,, ....... ~ ... . .... ,~ "* 11.<a.a.•1•. db;;~r ..... ec1 pool, OCIANP'RONTVllW -.~r:-w.o.. ... ..,.__--.. .,.._ ..a. TV. h mAl)llllL _ _. ... --..PACIRC -a-;....__.._ ........ •:.t .......... -Mae• 11rwlc1 ••• • ...... -. ,....... • _.._, -· .,._. •· rooa... nu~• ,._.,, •i==~•;•llllllle. ·I.Int wHr•: •••·Ctll--· ,. eWr Ill. Pnf. .. ...... ....,... _ ___. ............... ~ .. , .,, ... ,..., .. ..U? ..... • ....
UlllllllL.W
.. •
Or1ng1 Coast DAILY PllOTITuetday. November 3, 1981
~.~ ..... ~~ ~.~.~ ..... ~~ ~~~ ...... ?!~ ~.?~-... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!!! ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~· ar.a Pvt om~. revnd Terrier. 1otd AUTOManve looMrirr Clerk T11t•t·Tt1lnt1. Driven no.tna nper'd f/ttme ... U1.. .,... .._-Afanal 0,... Spate. 1b1111 m11e · Lab PAIT'S M Coet1 Meu ublut ~P P..,,._ onty Bnn1 • '. • " ..-A.-." WIS ._ ~ .. t dlll, rrfdenra, mixed •bite ;; Rar: CAa-...u . .a TllUa, Ml 1 LA/R, ahop. Pltooe, flU01, OMV Rtldout. Call for :f:~.: 'r.i'si~a:, for Newpoh'a moat COMt•Cl.ALll Ser du\ pllont coon. All.lmal Sh Iler ~·-A/P, paY1'0ll,'lal11U1 or· lt•rn=l • ba1lc ..f.Hl.~ 11 ll • 1. 1. 8 &lamo"°"' and oewett ExttntlVfl on ttit Job Dawtttd <'Oft¥ Pt'iinr "4·• ' Dtaltnhtp or fortllll 111., ~. NIP .. ti· bookJ1 ~ aome t)'l)-DllYBS WAMTID ..t.rr3r w a·• · llealth cerit~r. Part 6 lralmnf· MUil be i1ililY
"50mo Ml Ull. Lott· Malt MANi"?OO auto partaA~Ptritau pe.r . ....,....,., Grow· Jy, _ It 1 ... _ t 11 -· t1tD tilne. (21J) ..-1 Prtntlns motlva fd lflf tJrter '°° q n ll V rd O id d · prtltnwl...,... O&ta for ln1 Mft. ud&lr. relai.ct "PGDJ ...,., ma ure. bhni U rtr prttlrOOltl htlptr, I f __.1 area en e e y 0
1 enr o • CD M • u1ppoWl'MIL b1.11lnw. Gooct ulaty. c•--ST >'111 or over ~nUv!' HOOSECLtAN!RS to NURSES ~AJ:::.D:..ES-7-• .J-·30-Mon 3 30 pm Fll\l•h. mnraonm1•,1!:, Pp'ru;·.
MS-4l23 e low, collar? IOY~ ·TaoG -"" fdnncell'Mftl.Mon.l'tl. ehr.Ptr,car."5<5121 Sm ll al~. Tues2.30pm-Finllh. draw wbl~ you itam
NRF.WI RO. 30 v · IOU.SIOYCI Ptr polil.IOD opa wit.b m m.~ co:t !°°~eia ... :r:1 Thutt·Pri. t5 Apply Attnctlve tommiHJon ...... ....W 44IO ew ywedl have loat Ill AtelMW Boc*ll-UpToHK 811tlu11 Parlu /So. Dry r leanert counter HOUS!Kll!PER/LIVE !Mllnda.•Dl. IMOPlal'ftlCJ1CN achtdule II benerlU •••••••................ baby, I moa. blk, tan & • -..... M1.11ttypest«lwpm, nl· woman 3 day• a week. IN Co"/.le _ .. , .. 1 slrl 2 Na:.= -P....,.u,.tlon JI llTAI. SPACI wht SilelUe in Dana Pt. c.lptrlenud book· Ins' .... ......_ pbonet Vr'illtraln.'46-7 l I U ....... , --•-ursa rvu " p1cak1e offered. Ca
Rtward. Hl·OUt. Baby1llterfor2l'bJJdren lleeper.'A /R I& A/P, tlao ,..... 30+ 11111 per Yr• 0, • t. :•lllW••· Unlqueemploycnenl op. P acll lnc" handhn1 Ken,175-41700
9001q.ft . .wlmo.Oreat &:IO· l afewdayuweek 4 to 5 payroll,tYDiu, lOlley, week s.nd,..wneto· m111 1p u 1ome pl'y for quaOfied RN bo1ery. Full·time po1l•l•••1111••--Upc»ure, Harbor Blvd. hrs forNBbome · calcul1tor .. ancl wwtr· KACOR Dtvelo mint 8tctnzlc DIN En1liah & Uke to travel. LYN or Uc. ~hysicai Uon. En&llah speaking. Sales Call found : small sray · 1111 pboou. Ca ll : c n..a1 ~JJ St p -..a-c-S$00.permo.C11J1tter th 'ti Cd 8 k Crystal Creations I r....,•-n•a...b Rtalon9 kt 17~00 female Poodle mix Gl.a&51 J lllA M).toe5 eo. al o., 1100 .,....I St. •· roe~......,·· Tuet <710 760·0152 trap13 n . ac:. . Hepus 11.,,t1u auvn y
•-------•I black nea tollar. Nr. Cit 8aby1ltter for 3 thlldren, P~ra:~oel A&r.. 2~90 200, NB. ,_, or call : Needed. OppOrtwilty to Cdtrf.. ground 1n nutrition req. ~l-~4. obllinln1 d.bCO\lnls for Hwv HB 910-00l6 myN COltalleaabome H bo 81 Jerry Roth 1714 ) create a new depart· --For further Info ca ll P/TIMllVMHGS cub .buy•t1. Llbtm1l llTAILSPACI ="-'-• · · Mon·F ri after Spm : ar r vd,.C.11.EOE 133·0880. mtnl for a arowlna. Houaekeeper, llve In. 2 Gary Russel l a t C .a... commanlonsformtn&
l210sq.t'LHatborBlvd. foundrlnalnNIJ. .,.2319 • · E.O.t . M/F/D medium tiled daily adults. 1 t hlld. Must (7!4)978-3734. y-.!.~SL womenola1lait1.Grtat + ator111.t1100mo. CallM.2·1113 · CASHIU.CLEllK newspaper. New main· speak En1ll1h, be Nurain& -~ for anyone rtquJrln«._ex
Realoftomlcs 175'-S'JOO --==•s::::::k.,,,,or Jan. Dependable, prefer frame computeraystem t n e r I ell c & love LVN'• & NUJ"Se$ Aldu Adult. with outstandtn1 tra Income Work part or ~-••••••I Found : youni M St. Ba.nklnt older pe11or1. (2) ahlf\I COCITAI. wlll be ordered In l'hlldren. M\< drive, needed In 74 bed skilled attrac~lvepe~aJJtln full time ~our ownooe
StorurOffice.IS.'IOsq ft. Bemard,vic.ol 1rvlne. Ta.a.. ~v:iL ~lift lihop, ltba~o~S::\. & January (moat Ukely ~~e~of:'~~~=~: nuralng facility. All r:~5e~'::r"':l~1;~7~~h nei~hborh or citl•A
Meu Verde Atta 416-evti1 To n8 ayAn:. Airport, ""'·II ... la.rie D~C hardware p .. •f•rr· ... Call Aft•wer shifts. Pre-certilicatioo E~enlna• g.g Pm uCall 'cal n& on merchan~ ·• 5'.5-41Zl SC Full timeopenin&. relal· Uet· at, •· Bettle: ru e.~on. nouper. nee. with spenallud produc· "''"' ~ '"' pro1ram avail. Salary -friends explaloin& the ,/ IAll-lETS edexperi~requlred. 5":907$. WetraJ.n.Fl.IJlorp/time. lion software). Or1anlz· Ad~487.?Ahn.00.4300. dependent on exper. 64 2·4321. ext 343 benifits ol lnternaUonal.1 C1 m1rcW I~ cattam Daya/nl&hla. Phone: Ing and supervisory HOUJekeeper/Live-ln Salary review aft.tr between 2 Pm and S Thrift Club, a dlvWon or ~
._.. 4475 IUW"""'1 IAMICMISS&•a IWl9'll 170.9212or75U85.5. ability euentl1l. Spanish speaking OK. 3/mo. Call Dirt!<!tor of m A1kfor,!odr~ Chrondelt. Int No 1n ;,;
COSTA·u~·;9•r:·;rt; Yearly -Bylaw -Full time apply Tbt C ... Mlllt.W. Previous hardware ex· Loni references. Ute Nunes; ~7764. --------•I vestment other thaq i>
lar&e yard ldeal for Rainy -Teapot -Safedrivinarerordnet. Earl's Plum.bin&. wt Hu.ntinrton Harbour 62 rn~!L:da~~m':n~ ~\;etc. Wknds off. Ort~onLic us·~ needed, l.L IMVISTMEMT ~~i~l~~a!~:r~,··
Contrutor. S600 Mo. TWENTY Newport Ave, Co1la coodo usodation 5eeU tary prouamming full ume pmltion, exp Eam white you learn gu.13341,851.911hves. Oneoldm.antoanot.her: UTIUTYCUlk Mesa ('114)14M.B person to perform wou.ld be "Alpful. This HOUSEWIVES, earn el(· necessary.llff.1405 ti E R I T A G E Fairmont Ave. Sao-:,•
"Mymemory isaaaood C •ua-s aeneral maintenance fc '"" tra money and added INVESTMENT will Die10. Toll free in Ca., Retailorolfice.Greatold today u it was lhirty We seek ptllQMtl who A-repair work for pool, department will be tu advantaaesworkin& PAIT·11MISIC'Y teach you creative l ·IOO·SS2 ·8845. Na·
Newport bldg in Can· years ago, or was It have energy, en · lcbabod's, Fullerton. docks&commonareas. cba r.ged with the out of your home-BalboalslandlawpfCice, finanrang, l031 Ex t~on_w_ad_el.:.U>-854~ ,=.~
oery area Al,,-int. TWENTY?" thusiasm&enjoyworlc· 8pm·lam,5UttlS/hr.ll 40/hr week, nex. hrs. responsibility to 960~ S H 0 RT HAND changes. in vestor de SALES/PR :l
space & lrg fncd yrd. Found. Big Red Dog ing wilhpeople. ok • full or Pill me . Salary $80().$1000. Call operale. maintatn. and Interior Design Asst. REQUIRED. Flex hrs. velopment& counseling. SPORTS fUM JOI
OwnerJAJrt: 673-5.1&9. Near Fair & Harbor: 8'70·92&2or~. . between 3 & 6, <714 l r~:irs ;~~:°~en~sl to~ Part· Time. Energetic. CaU6?5·5460• Ex per col.lnselors re ROYS &GIRLS EARN ,.:
................. 4100 S49·2$13 Newport Center loca· Clencal 8'4·2158. minimal assistance Flex, Exp. 642·2004. Part-time work. all type, ceivelllO''t comm Theis S80-Sl30WEEKFOH :
....................... Found: Wire haired fox lion; exceUent salary, YtwdC'-' COOK rrom the vendor Reply SU.1558. After2/PM. no fee. Laguna Beach an unusual oppty for p IT FUND RAISING
2300sq.ft.buprlvateol· terrier. Youna. Nr benefits & ~rof'lt shar-3· 11:30 PM Mon·Fri. llWfAST toJerrWeber, Janitorial Help Full· M/F 4!M·2697 right person Confiden· 5·9PMDAJLY ficewith spa,olfHarbor McDonald 's 00 Harbor in&. For interview Clerical dut.les on adult C,.._ O "--t T ' Pl h NB Part·time boat w tial interview. Call 10·2SATURDAY Blvd.&405Frwy.ONLY phone: unit of Psychiatric vv. ~-am e . us VlnceS46-581kl. CALLV1CKJS31·3230
$990 M J D nr 405 Frwy. Contact Faclllly. Handle phones, New European Cafe. D Piiot Ni blclub. 673-IG;M__ Maintenance, clea mg, --••!!!!lll!!!l!l!l!!!!!!!!l!!!•PI !TEAM MGR l8-"-~
.-
per o . · · S49·9799or548-6211 M t b · d some operating 30' "" -..-~ Property Mgmt . JackieEKVP miscpaperworkandpa· ~~ eNex":r~trnc~. 330W.BaySt. MAIDS dive/pleasure boat. IECB'TIOMST W/CARCAN 751-2787. Found . SI am es e • tlent request. No typmg ng ov . m· Costa Mesa, CA 92627 needed Immediately. Some boat handling ex-EARN WEEK I i)I
neutered Ma I e • Ati&ICAN nee. but prefer some eludes 1';1ch4 .PAMpply31tino (714)00.432l. Exper'd. Apply Angie, per. & mechanical ap-PAIT-TIME ----. •
Costa Mesa: Im ft. $300, declawed, vie. Fashion STATllA.I« cler ical or medical perosn · · The Daily Pilot is an San Clemente Inn, 125 titude. Some nex. in Jocoby&Mtytn SAUSPBSOH ·tJ. l200 ft.~5340 lsl.MS·ocrz7 SOONewportCenterDr. batkaround. Position Newport Blvd. Newport Equal Opportunity Avenlda Esplandian. hrs .. about20/hts week One of America 's for retail store 111 ---=-=-"""'"'"'-----•ptno11• SJH NBMG.SlOOEOE M/F also avail for Sat·Sun . Beach. (714)67J.3440 Emplyr. Women and San Clemente. al f§/hr. 76().2620. largest law rlrms is Laguna Beach. Apply at • SSO sq ft industrial 9:30-6 PM Capistra.ooBy CO-IC"-ILOI minorities encouraged M d f seekmgap/llme...cep. 1140So.Coast Hwy.Lag.~·· Stor ... ,,...., ... or ... spa"e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -,-to I ~ a nager wante or Part·limeSales, exper'd. , . .... . Bch -···· •11~ .. "' " lheSea Experienced for app y. R ·is . 1. · taonast lo wo11• in our West CM EXECUTIVE a 1al etaa tore Spttla azmg Motherhood Maternity Santa Ana olfice Apph· 64&-ti65 * SUITI * Banking S passage from Tahiti to In home atcessoraes. Boutique, .Fashion d b SALES
ForrentOt'lease-lO,SOO 2-4hourESCORTS TB.Lii Clerical Sin&aporeon44'sailing EXECUTIYE Full tame. New'/ort I sland , flex hrs ~:.~~'Teep':ng~enrr:, S10.000lyr . selling by,'"
t Local N"""""'rt Beach IEC.-rlOMST vessel. For appt. call SECIETAIY Beach area. Sen re· Eves/wltends Call & general office work phone Sellin&oneofthe,, sq rt storage yard. 53·1121 MC ISA --..-GENERAL OFFICE days 631-6017, eves A Newport Beach In· sume lo Ad 11937, Daily Mimi: 759-9951. Good customer relations last untoucbe.d tax
Fenced, IQcked, paved, COEDS· Would Love to Savinis & Loan bu im· Sffkin& 497·5922. ves tment IS to c k Pilot, P 0 Box IS60. a rmist The v.'Ork hours shelters. 011 & gas pro.
near conx~ of Red Hill Party with you. Call Sue !:~~~k~~a~fui! persooab~. enthusiastic • Counter Girl or Donut Brokerage firm bas im· Cost a Mes a . Ca PAITTIME are 4 30-7 JOpm. Mon· duct Proi training in·.C
& Paulanno, Costa orDebb1eanytime. exp. preferred. Ex· 1.nclividual foranewonel Malter, p/lime or mediateoperungforEx· 92626-0560 CrewSuperv1SOrS,work Fri. 10.Jpm onSat Call plus h Lado Marina
Mesa.s@.967l. 953-9363 cellent oppoctunilylll a person office. Varied • f/time. No exper. nee. ecutive Secretary with MAtlCUllST P /lame evenings & Sylvia between 9.11 & V11lage.NBofr ProveTt'"
fast growing usocia· duties makes job an· 1 Apply in person: Dippity word processing ex· Posh Salon m NB has weekends Superv1S1.ng 1.3pm. 12l3l688-0099 phone closers onl)" n<f 't:.~ttt/ '-~CDllJI==-, · s teresting , good Donuts, 1854 Newport perience to work ror the door to door sales apply Mr LaRue " .. ,.....___ taon. alary com· Bl d CMM P •·GM A Ii t openmg for manicurut crew or YOUl'l""ters. Ex· Receptaomst ~-.-....&'.. mensurate with ex· telephone voice essen· v ·• · res. "' · · PP can wa'th follo...,ftg. Salary -673·43Cl2_!0da •••••••••••••••••••••••' ~ l' I t ~ ood t · l I must have 2 Yrs ex· ~"' cellenl earnings for Private Athletic Club 14ttiMta • 24Hrs 641·0180 perieoce.Fullinsurance aa ,mus I .. YPIS . DAMCBS perience, portray ex ne otlable.67S.S700 person walh ability lo seeklllg attractive. SECltETA.RY benefits and p&id career Entry level posauon to f h 1 b I 0,p...Wtr SOOS C ... /Clltcb appareJ.Pleasecall: irow wit.bin companr • or s o~s . 18 ok. cellent communication Me chanic wanted, no motivate. Van or arge pers ona e . non or secrelary tnuoee..,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• h bpfMCJVita Ms. Demzy Parisia and reliability reliabili· I c b a bod s . H. B,. & skills. No shorthand rt· tools ntt. Apply S~ell car is needed. Call smoking person to han Nwpt Center Law olf1ce
LOSING LEASE, quit· 71~ ty essential. Company Fu.llerton. Day /night quired. 75Ul170 E.O.:..~ station. 17th & Irvine, Medfa Merchants ~l:ri~~1~n6~~:M ~~~l Ask for A...P[ll644~l6 ~:; .
tingbusiness,sellinaout AJ--a. MEWPOITIAUOA paid benefits include: shafts . Start S6 /br FOOD SERV I CE .lL!!:__ 213·42'7·27S6EOE Mon·fri Call Al . Secretary
ALL supplies and fax·• _... major med.ital, dental, 870.9282or7S2-695S. MANAGER WITH l•-------·i---------P1T Recptaonas·t ror .••
turesincluding: I of-1-. SAYfMC9S&LOAN plusprorltsharing. Deliver L.A. Times lo CERTIFICATE for M_.,.... PART TIME 752·7905 small Irvine Office. Fil:: Display cases walling -1100 Irvine Ave .. NB b · H B & c M _,_.. · Ph So t
h I . B t I Escorts/Modeling E 0 E CIMCO omes In . . . . small conval. bospt. To ASSIST AMT RECEl'T /SIC'Y mg . ones. me YP· room c a rs. eau Y • • • S46-44al 3·6AM. $400-$4.50/mo. + cook & manage kjtchen. Prefer limited X·ray EYDIMl'f Neat. front office ap. mg. Hrs Flexible Cen
Salon hairdryers and M /F & Couples 265 Bri Ave. C.M. bonus. Dependable car. s.g.3061. certification. Good pay na'1 pea ranee req for this tennaal Estates. 975·0412 hydraulic c:halrs, mir· ~·~MC/Visa BEAUTY 546-'"81 i 964-4982. -""-"-"~=-=----with chance for rapid We are presently seek· prestigiously located Ask for A. Ostemoui_
rors, shelves and plants. For Total body massage Delivery men over l8 for GAL AUDAY advancement. Call : ing adults with pleasant firm. Must have gd of. SECRETARY Also.make·up,shampoo by Steve. By appt. PNtffa5oms.ioll CLaJCAL L.A. Times to homes P/TorFtr9-2or3dally. 7S2-6300orl!M-Ol4l. personalities who would rice exper & be very
and hair products. lo.3PM. 548-0407 Looltin& l'o add to our p Alf TIMI c . M . 3 a m . 6 a m Prefer exper Secretary be interested in worki~ versatile. Will be work Data Wrv PtnOft
CaU631-9754or Ladies: Want lo host a staff several assistants. Looking for interesting Economy car required. to manage omce for l•••!llll!!!!!!!•!!!l!!l•!!!ll!• i )ales & Promotion ing wath top level ex· P1tame Must have good after 6,898-6809 Naughty Lady home Ric.bardOuell«leSaJon, work? Typing, no No co 11 e ct in g . local tax /fin firm . MEIMCAI. with Daily Pilot Carriers ecutaves for •multi typing skills. Will train
Want to buy Gardening party7 Call Abson 200 Newport Center Dr.. shorthand. Otrice loca· $40().MS()/mo. + bonus. Please Call Mr. Vance IAC• OfACE 10 to 15 years old. national organization ;a~ax,'!.r. 63col~77ml0ensurate ..
Route in Beach Cihes 968-1042 6.13-31.50 N.B. Uon Oil PCH. Ma.Ys per 646·0637; 64&:5844· 641·3161 Mon-Sat Baclt office bu..y family Unlimited earnings Xlnt oppt'y lo grow with ·-"':i:
Area.941-8072 Attn Joggers ! Don't Beauty week,SaUsSun.M&-7'31 DENTAL ASST . GARDllBS praclice,Fuhionlsle. available to right co. Med Iden. benefits SlCRETAIY
Art Gallery est. S/yrs. damage legs & lower ar.,tc,..ty'1 cbairside, exper necess, 26 acre resort hotel bas 644-1300 person. Hr. S.30PM to Contact Julie after Someone who doe5n'l w.~rfC'OOt MaJ~. Paint· back. call 968-8714 for FWttS.. CLlllCAL 4 day, 30 hr wk. Laguna immediate openings. Medical Receptionist. w }J~::·s!i~altu~~~ I 8 30am. (7141752-6003 mmd wor1ung for a liv·
in&s & jewelry. Low uifo. Need ha1rstylists, sham· Worlt Temporary Jobs Hills, 770-4275 Apply Monday to Thurs· Eneraetlc & reliable availa bilaty. For ap ACQUIS CORP. mg Raises ~ithout ask
price. l714) 494·417S ; r;-1 t:. poo peraon & assiswt.s. close to bocM. DEHT AL ASSIST. day Personnel 1107 Jam· person for busy front of· P 0 i n t men t . c a 11 . t89S MacArthur Blvd mfi lf your v."Orth 1t 3 garl 1g:~=·SHOP w/ ~=:::~ Top~!~'G1&uci.e.N.B. VlC&KJ=°N fi~~lr. EasyN_!!cedGoodof. ~:: Rd , Newport ~=~~=ed.AJltypes--~~fi4;~';. ask for Ben Ste1~~·DotJJ~Jaza ~.~7El(J>_r_or_ trainee .•
xtra 800sq. fl avail. for ;;.:;;;;;:••••••••••••• 540-8l77 n7:»5.30 540-0400 ~~ °& ~;;;'.'6.6.5411 Men. women&children 1--------HCEPTIOHIST added ideas & profits. ••utft'V ltd .,.,, u..... fl '-,,..__. No ex nec.548-7762__ Ty p 1 n g f 1t1 n g Xlot. loc. near Ne™rt t.1tr.._ 7005 ._..,,' w ys ; ...., . .......,. a er .. __,__ · p· s K r II -r;-••••••••••••••••••••••• Posh Salon ID NB seek· Clerical hrs. Gardener for our.com· I MODELS/ESCOITS r--------engineer's off1 r r . ier 15 u price Now Enrolllln&: Chris· ing E.slbelician's wath JICLlllP,IT I Dental AsslStant wanted. merce p~ facalily I Attn Fema'lesonly PARTTIME Newport Beach Ex
1·533-4242 tian Pre·Scbool. 320 E. follow1.ng.67S.S700 Loc~l Newport Be~cb f/time, c.ost.a Mesa of. year expenence m all ~I Mailiogoperations ..2!!:!.enced 975-0040
MEADOW FR~H 18th St., Costa Mesa. 8 11 p I Sav1n1s & Loan hH am· 1 fice. Position avail. im· phases of landsrape ------No exper. req 'd Must be 1~--....IST Opporlunity meeting * t I edl t -1 f maintenance. Good Mo.dels. professional, dependable and availa· in.....-'"'" , • Special Program . m a e ~ .. ng or a med. Call 646·2411 for lb rtf I ded Law office m So Coast Quality Inn . Harbor 646-5423 s11,• Jr. Clerk to worlt part app'l. commandoltheEngbsh WI po OIOS nee ble on call Npt Bcb
•SECHTAIJES•
T65 Sb70 lot ol phonn for bus) I penion Dev Co
Beaut Offices S16,800 '
Exp Consultant Ours
Liz Remders Agy, Inc
4020 Barc:bEst'64EOE
Newport 1833-81901 Free Blvd ., Anaheim. Wed lime durin,. week days. language required for public relallons & Fashion Island area. Plaza Area good ap·
7 30 PM Ex h lh Jobt W--"-...1 7075 G c-~ Good starting salarv, riotwork.8Sl·3139. 760.l>C1\1 pearance reqw~ Call : . c ange as -. Non-smoker good detail eneral ol 1ce and stock vv. J """ M Bl k •ell aaforfreesample. M;~~·;;·;~·;t;~ti;~d f'or busy ofjice. Irvine. room duties. Must haVl DtSHW -enn~al ~on~s. free MHOMONEY? !11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111' _r_ac64~.~ Sh1pp1ng clerk & hl••I._.. 5 in g 1 e 3 3 yr 0 1 d ~p /AR, pay~. collec· own transportation New European Cafe. medical/life msurance We have openings for 400 I PA YI OU CUllC warehouse person for
0,.,0.ll!Mtr SOIS gentleman looking for uons. lG-ltey, Jour. re-M/T /W/F 8:30AM · Must be exptrienced. :e~~fitsm~a':/toro!nh:P~ peo10 pdle to word k11 app~ox. j Experienced payroll active sportsware mfg
••••••••••••••••••••••• fun travel work. Full or con. Send resume & r~ 1 : 00 P M, a 11 day Starting Nov 9. Apply in pointme~t Monday lhru ays . e venn.g clerk including tax re Receptiorust Shipping exp. helpful
..,. _..a:.-_ _.__ part·time.a&-2S32 . feren.ces to Box 752 Dai· Thursdays. Please call person 9.4 PM. 3110 Frid 9AM· "PM telephone directories m turns & insurance re RK.,tion SI, 100+ 646·6688 __ _ "•iru .. ,c->~ · • • -. . ly Pilot. PO Box 1560, Ms. Denny Parisia Newport Blvd. Newport ay, ..., the Orange Co area H Bch Experienced for new of TRAVELAGENT to assume~ house pay· Companion llde. depen· Costa Mesa Ca926216 71~ Beach (714)673-3440 17 I 41t7t-9tt7 work your av a ti : ~~200Wl:~ploy~:: rice. PBX. typing. mail For north Huntington
ment. Receive existing 2 dable non.smoker. Booltlt ' NEWPOIT IA.UOA Domestic daylight hrs. Men or 842.6221. & other general office Beach agency Min ~
yrs equity. For info call 501963 Goodee~~rtunity for SAYIMC9S&LOAM Career Womans asst. 3 GENERAL HELPER· women over 18 w1lb -----duties. Call : Janine. yrs exp . Computer ex·,
Mark 842-7Sll tt.tp W..._. 7100 right person. •1 tOO lr'rileAn .. Ml afternoons a week. Light Must have drivers lie, cars, station wagons or . PBX S40·605S. Coastal Person perience preferred
• MOMytol.om 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Housekkeeping, er· neat bandwritlng, good lite trucks are needed '1:i~wennfia~·~e P'r nel Agy . 2790 Harbor 898-9939_._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCOUMTIMG rands. laundry. Some personality. 545·6728, Pleasant outdoor work, s ts ava e ays Blvd .. C.M. EOE Travel Agent needed for If you want a Real Estate Fast crowing insurance Have something you Trade your old stuir for mu I preparation. 12·4 Beverly valid drivers lie. & Calif. early eve. Min typing ••!!!!l•l!!lmll!!lll!!!!l!!!!!!!!!ll! Automatl'Cl Irvine Agen·
L 0 an at BEL ow aaency has -•ng in want to sell~ Classified new goodies with a 540-32:34. Eves644-4088 Gt...t ~ be. plates req. You can 1 required. Call: 631-0140 1.,.--.....ST cy Sabre exper pre ..
MARK.,..,. RAT"" II ......-·~· adsdoilwell.6'2·567&. Classi/iedad.642·5678 ..... .._., earn $3.50 to $51hr or EOE. 1 ~...,.,,_... "' ~ ca accounts receivable DRIVERS WANTED Exper necessary, salary Part time mommgs for rerred Exper. in com·
pr ime Fin an ci a I dept. Rapid advance·.' I a1·1y P1·1 .................. ' Early morning home de· commensurate with U · more depenclinj on your Pharmacy Clerk Exp local Real Estate off1re mercial lra\·el a must· Services ment for right penon " I L A Tl MES G I ff speed o( delivery For pref 9.5·30. Mon· Fri Hvy phones. lypan• a oualifaed_gnlv_95_7·_2'700
527 3477 · avery. · -· per enera 0 ice 1mmed. assignments _Cal_IPeter,64~ & 3 -L • salary commensurate • Irvine & Newport areas Please apply an person --must. PbylJ!s4~ 0788 , Travel
Venture Capital. pref. with experience. pajd S4S O + mo Jess · 1922 Placentia, Costa followin~ a short tram· Photo Lech. entry posi· REST••• .. ~ I Outside Sales Rep
hl.&h t··". •· -..nware. company benefits. Call · 546-0235. Mesa mg session. apply at the lion. Dart rm exp req. ~""""" • __ .. ed to sell """ "' .,....,1 Pauline"'""_,., loc. nearest you .. al Full·t1'me SC/hr. Apply El Ranchllonowhmng nn:u crwses also do equip oans _._. A R • riJle Cle k Driver for a4to parts Girl with car for 5 days 1 30p No lb & d 1 CM N o e x Pe ri e n c el occ9863 ADAGENCY ccounts eNWt r f 6 PM m. v 4 aa y Irvine Photo/Graphics _M2·1142J NB67S.6MS ne~essary.Trauungpr~ .....,. ~ store Must be 18 or rom I to to pre· there after at 8.JOam, t7&5l Sky Park. Ste G ' ~ W..., w..._. SOJO RECEPTIONIST The Daily Pilot bas an immediate opening over, have valid Calif pare evening meal $15 10 JOam or t.30pm. Irvine 752_6484 RESTAURANT v1ded Pal'\ lime OK::" ....................... Entertbeexcilingworld for a Classified Arcounls Receivable lie. & good driving re· day.Callafter6,&57·1057 810Lemm,Orange Catering firm has open Excellent romm 11141
M ....... -w ... ..-D of advertising . . Clerk Primary job function Is to process tord. Apply at. Hub RalrdruHr wanted wath I I 3 W Che s tnut. Plant Ma1.nta1nance i ing for respon adult to 607·3870
"'"'"' ~"' Beautiful Fashion expired advertising orders for computer Auto Supply 2l20 f LI . onJ V 1,_ Anaheim Experienced Interior! operate Hobart auto Trpist{R-:r $100000 °""''1-ed by tsl Island offa·ces. Must • 0 owing y. I .. ge I t . t . lj & I rt ~ • _.... input. This full time job requires a high Harbor Blvd., C M. Fa1r Mall. 494-l600 13650 Harbor Blvd, G.G P an main ao1nance s cer eam po ion Ar curacy a mus Con Trust Deed on House In have good telephone level of accuracy. Successful applicant 646-2464. See Claud. 3019 Enterprise, C.M person needed. Full· control Exp pref. but C.M. at 16~. PayoHin3 manner. and accurate should type 40 wpm and use a 10 key Hairstylist Assistants E ualOpptySmployer Time & or Part·Time. wall train. 9:JOAM to tractor,_~2010
to S yr's. Honest prin· typing . Plenty of room adding machine by touch. Excellent Driver /Trainee. oppt'y needed, Saks or Irvine N e w port B e a c h Ask for Steve. 631-6340 6PM . Mon· Thur. 6PM to W a at re ss • e" per d .
clpals only need call No for bright person to ad· company benefits including dental. ~or H1vrment. Must -=SS!lo=....-6353=""'·---brokerage firm needs Printers lPM Sun. 979-0747 for pltime. Apply an person LoanSb~3.81 vance. Call Sharon at Please apply in penon to the Human o:er t~IY!~~~l~.ra:d HOSTESS receptionist w/some Riverside Counties ~~r1· Kitchen onlyatTwoGuysfiont
644·71144 Resources Dept .. 330 W. Bay, Costa Mesa. driving record, neat ap-We have opening for knowledge of back ofnce futest growing Printing Retail sales, exper, for Italy· 22ti7 Fairvlo·(' ~ Trwt ABMIN COORDINATOR pearance. Come ln for Hostess. Apply between operations . 7:30·4:30 Plant. Has need for 4/C French country store C.M ----.!
Deidt 50l5 · New NB Office BUii· ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT : Interview: 3 ands Mon through Fri. daily. Salary negotiable. Strippers qualified in Call 714 /754-0442 Wolfnu/Waihn
•••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ness Univenlty. Degree : 330 W. BA'I' ST., • COSTA MESA, CA. 92'?6 : Fl11t11tW "Y STOIES Ancient Mariner 2607 w. Send inquiries to PO Box areas or compo6ite strip· Retail Sales Over 20 6 mos. ~11.-,.,
S-A.t.t-....,,Co pref. $16,950 lo $17,628 ••• ANEOUALOPP011TuN1rv1111PLovu \. _.-a; "' Pacific Co1st Hwy '1817 NB 92660 ping. Exponlyneedapp. per a en~e. Apply an ,• .
....,._-"'.' .. ? ' yr. EOE M/F. Reply ....................................... \. 2706H.arborBlvd. NewportBeach ' ' ' ly. Full benefit shop. SILYERWOODS " AU types ol real e1tate Golden Gate U. 818 W '1th Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 -W1nt Ads Call 642·5878 Call Man er. 656-3561 person El Matador;
lnvestmeotasince 1949. St. su lOOl. LA900l7 50083 1 •1y p•iat Nnrport .._. 1768 N!P!]lvd" ,./:;F.t:.. Mldru•"~ Fri/Sa• "::' ~~:." :-::.'.'lf. :.::~~~~:~~... , II I · · · · · · · · ...... · ·· · .. ·., :r.:1:~·~.t~:::~: ~:l:lr:~;~r~::~·
Widow bas money for 11 :30 pm to 7:~ am. 4000 simple with Daily Pilot service is our perience In rane special· p M. Mon· Fra E 1 rn
TD . SJO 000 N Hilaria, NB. Claaained Ads. And if We're se~klng to bwld a labor pool of ly store. Woman's wear. Sl50-Sl7S wkly. Must l>s c~i:c~. no r:·alty~ Newport Villa you have something to spttialty qualified graphic arts personnel for tv.o _Excell1ent commissio~ neat . persona bit &
Call Denison Assoc 842-Sl61 tell, call a friendly call 642-5678 Ht 322 departments an our pre-press area. If you an cent ve program "' energetic. 979.0747 al'L
17a,.7311 AJDF.S Claulflfd Ad·Yiser at _______ _. have experience an composing room of company benefits. App-lOAM f~~---;
Weekend araveyard 142-S678 ClauifiedAdl 142-5878 camera department "A'Of'k and are interested ly in person to Mr Worlt an Potpourri fat!
T.D.'1 FOI SAU ablft only. Attive retire-1 .11 Plat m newspaper production: ronsidef" t.J\e· 1Fa1tknedr. 4NS Fashion tory. Use electrit llue
Orin'• c-·olfd. Dis· t It Gd • II ...... '' .......... "··:. opportunities offered by the Daily Pa lot. We s an • e w p 0 rt D .., vv men tommun >'· kl rt t' I bo Ba·a~h. or ~all for i'n· g u n e co r a t •· ted ~vie CaU ...... ,.._ NB -·-3555 are see ng to an crease our pa · ame a r "" , ... ~ltell. Ru{Estate In· ~ne""• ' .9H • force, full·tlme openings may develop in lhe tervlew appointment. Chnstmas i~ms. Also~
9fi0..5402 ANSWER.INC near future. We are most interested in people (714) 644·2'24. need person for patkin~
vdlment. · SERVICE • NEWSPID(R lllUr'ITISfUf' • with skills an the following areas. E.O. E. & shippina. 540-~
I Ptr-Ftr days. Nonp. K NIHllll na Pute·up. Ad building or page makeup ~ ••••C b Hl'. Mlnlmllm typlnt s•••fflc nrt'lf'Ura experience desirable. Ability lo work Cast ...................... . =~r.•& 1 req. Call: 133·33U. W' -.anu1 · and accurately under pressure nttcssary. ......... IOOS
E.O.E. lmmedlat• op•nin• In th• ~reatlv• Flexible hours and d1y1. ••••••••• .. •••H••n••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .., ....,.,,._. •-C•....... • · " "' ' " Otraet camera production operation I· • R-..1 1•00 " ,..... ._... ui -.... -11rvlce1 department now titl1t1 for 1 h 11 '• a...t&..-• try, Carpet Inst., full ·tlme artist. R-ultet Cood 1ra""'lt atr\ppln1. Expertence n • ootlng ne and
e ...................... Ctramlc tlle1 pa.int.in.I, sr6W~TS detJsn and •P•llal~~tivlty. ability.to halftone work I must. Any strippin~ or
rooflna "belptra. •-c ty-, some 1u~-•-•l....-t-hnl"al Pl•temaklnJ uper1ence Pus . "" "" _... • ...,.. "' "" " Production-oriented peraon who can work '7$-llJO, drawln1 ability. knowled&dble In independettly hlchly dnirable. Nights.
A re b It ec l 11 ra I 11 • production, an uodent.udlna of retail Mark· up. Ability to SP« typr for u variety
lllltraton. Hlltl caliber ...aEEDED advertilin1 *-1•0• and ability to m'et of edvertlain& and rommcrcial mutrials.
profeulonaf qaallty n dttdlbltt. E1tperienre with electronlr markup • artllltedurll ~l Wt're fut·paced but fun to wcrk for. with dtalrtblt. but not MetSSal')' Ablllty to :
• Pfl'I,....,_ • laJ'Oll i=--. ~w w wllk. 111 ••~t btneflt ptdap lndlldln• typtHl would bt htlpl\11 :
ma ~ ... Cal ~" ~~,....... dfttal. Salary dePtnds on experil'nct 'Jbt Daily • TriPI I Prizes. C. Mr. If JOU llavt •l ltut an1 ,_, •• experitnN Pilot Ii an ~ual opportunity em'*'7ft' :
, •II II IJtjMll, bl prlnt·orinttcl wort ud a c1m1t Women •nd mlnoriU.S llft en(OUrall4t .te :
"" ,....,.. tall Clrt Tllblma at KMall, apptv :11~-----~l't'f'!'!' at. Ml IOkW.ae •..... t ; • CJMw COAIT DAIL~ "LOT :
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OcSANTIS
CHEVROLET
"" ........................
'61 PonU1c Fitt-blrd, 1216 v.1. yellow/blk. lnl .•
very clHn, lllnt. t\lnnin1 ~°"ct .• new 111perllte
wheels l TIA radials. $ltoo nnn. S6H150 or •1·1•
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Troubled OnOfre nuke unit fired up
By DA VlD ICUTZMANN °' .. IN!tw ""...,
As their trouble d Unit 1
reactor at San Onofre returned
to active duty today, officials at
Southern California Edison Co.
wer e quietly hoping for
something lhey haven't had for
much of lhe past two years :
A nuclear power plant lhat
r uns, a nd runs s moothl y,
without any further shutdowns
for major repairs. At least for
the time being.
Based on recent performance.
that possibility remains
somewhat iffy.
Though once touted as one of
the most reliable commercial
nuclear i n$tallations In the
United States, Unit 1 must now
overcome a series of crippling
and costly disabilities that have
kept it down and out for roughly
17 of lhe past 24 111onths.
T h e situation moved one
federal nuclear official fa miliar
with the plant to comment
recently. ''San Onofre has not
been reliable in the past two
years ." •
Even so, utility officials
Insisted Mo nday they still
consider their plant -at 14
years of age one of the oldest in
the country -to be trustworthy.
"Unit 1 is a good, reliable
operating plant,·' said Jerry
Haynes, Edison's manaeer of
nuclear operations. "Or," he
corrected, "It's capable of being
a good , reliable operating
plant."
.. Even with the prlblems
we've had the last year and a
half, lf you look at the lifetime
utilization of the plant, It
comparet very well and, in fact,.
rrom an a veraee utlllzation
standpoint, 1t's better than lhe
averaee plant in the country,"
Haynes m ai ntaine d In a
telephone interview Monday
from hlJ Rosemead office.
Still, var ious and lengthy
repair jobs have cost ttie. utility
well over $85 million, hot
co untinR the most recent
Astronauts Joe Engle, left. and Richard Truly await Wednesday 's scheduled Launch of the Space Shuttle.
...
Shuttle pilots pay visit to Columbia
Supervisors say launch plans right on schedule with zero problems
C A PE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP> Joe Engle and Richard
Truly paid a pre-dawn visit to
shuttle Columbia today and
thanked work c rews for the
so-far perfect countdown. Their
launch supervisor said "we're
on schedule with zero problems"
for Wednesday's liftoff.
Ignition is scheduled for 4:30
a .m . PST after overnight
loading of supercold fuels lhat
wµl power Columbia's effort to
become the first spaceship ever
to make a return trip to orbit.
Sewage spi ll
closes LB's
Main Beach
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. ...., ......
Orange County health officials
closed Main Beach Park to
s wimmer s and strollers this
morning after work c rews
repairing a sewer line in Laguna
Beach began lo divert treated
sewage onto the sand.
Thousands of gallons of foul
s melling but treated ernuent
were diverted into the flood
control channel at Broadway
this morning, flowing under the
coast highway and onto the sand
at Main Beach Pa rk.
Workmen are repai.rln& a
l -by-8 foot bole ln the 20-year-old
reinforced concrete pipe at lhe
corner or Broadway and South
Coast Highway.
Assistant cily mana1er Terry
Brandt said work on the 27-lncb
pipe forced crews to allow the
effluent to run Into tbe flood
control channel. He estimated
up to a million 1allom of treated
sewa1e could run out onto the
beach before repairs are
completed an the pipeline.
"We have con&Mted reatonai
and local bealU. otndala, and
tbe county bealda department
CIMll'IU.. .... AI)
Live telev1s1on coverage of the
second flight of the space shuttle
Columbia will begin as early as
3 a .m . PST Wednesday, and
ronlinue with live rept>rts on
major developments through the
scheduled landing Nov . 9.
Launch coverage will begin at
3 a .m. on ABC and NBC. and a
half-hour later on CBS, and will
continue to 6:30 a.m. on ABC
and 10 on CBS and NBC.
Cable News Network also will
cover lhe launching, scheduled
for 4:30 a .m., live from the
Kenn edy Space Center in
Florida.
The four networks will follow
the flight wilh live and special
reports through the scheduled
landing at 8:40 a .m . Monday,
Nov. 9. ··w e have a bsolutely no
problems." NASA's Norm
Carlson said after supervising
today's early morning activities.
Still, he indicated that weather
is a nagging concern, despite
optimistic forecasts.
Air Force weathermen
predicted adequate conditions.
and NASA Administrator James
Beggs said, "It should be clear
and beautiful tomorrow ...
R a in would f orce a
postponement of lhe fueling, and
the lifto(f, because officials fear
an ice build-up on the s butUe's
huge external fuel tank.
The astronauts stopped at lhe
launch pad just hours after a
large service structure was
l'Olled away, leaving Columbia
bathed i n fl ood lights .
Hoag to aid Music Center
Foundation pledges $1 million to M esa complex
By JODI CADENHEAD Of .. .,..., ........
The Hoag Foundation has
pledged $1 million toward the
construction of the future $58
million Orange County Music
Center in Costa Mesa.
It is the laraest gift ever
awarded by lhe foundation for
an organization other than Hoq
Memorial Hospital and lhe fiftli
sift of $1 million or more
received by the performln& arts
center. To date nearly $18
mlllJon has been raised.
The foundation was
established in UMO· by Mr. and
Mrs. George Grant Hoag Sr. and
their son Georee Hoag II to
support charitable causes. The
foundation was funded tareely
by the senior ffoag's lntereat in
the J .C. Penney chain.
Said Geor1e Hoa& II ,
prealdent ol Hoaf Hospital ad
former prealdent of the Hoq
Foundati0n, "The foundation
hH followed with Interest
community eftorta to build tbia
m•Jor S*'fonnlaa arta raellltJ. Bued on tbe leYel" of mtbualalm
for tbe project and tbe IDOl'llDOUI
pro1rea1 In tbe fuad-ralalii1 e•••••a•, o•r fouadatlon
wanted to show our strong
support."
Coat for the construction of the
3,000-aeat multi-purpose theater
for symphony, opera, ballet and
musical performances. along
with a second l ,OOO·aeat theater
ls estimated at MO mlllio.o.
Endowment costs for both
theaters will be Sl9 million,
'We couldn't be
more pleased.'
accordinl to Gary Phillipe, a
music center spokesman.
By September 11112 tbe Orance
County llualc Center bopes to
raiH SD mlWoD, said Pbtlli111.
·•we an n,ht on tar1et," said
PbiW ... "We couldn't be more
pleased. Major do nors are
reapondlna. We are 1etttna a
areal btt ol eatbualum. We leel
very .-about lt."
la addition . to the Ho a1
Foundation lift. the performtna .
art1 ent er has received M
mUUoo from the S.1eratrom
faml17 aloaa wttb ftve aerw for
UM u...ten, $1 milllon from ....
Jamee Jnlne Foundatioa, •
million from Jim BenUey and $1
million from the Harry G. Steele
Foundation.
Other major gifts have
included: '800,000 from Times
Mirror Co., $500,000 from Robert
P . Warmington, $500,000 from
The Re1tster, $300,000 from
James and Al Baldwin, and
$100,000 from Carl Karcher
Enterprises lnc.
On Nov. 9 Music Center
official s will present
prellminary drawln11 for the
. performing arts center to the
Costa llesa City Council durinl
a study seulon at 2 p.m. in the
fifth Door conference room at
City Hall.
Homes evacuated
in Texas OOods
DALLAS <AP) -Mon tban a
dosen bomu and bu1lnetse1
were evacuated alGnc tbe rllinl
Trinity River after mon than
· nine lnc:bll ol ralaf all ID some
aJ'UI of DOl'tb Texa1.
Tbt h•••r rains were
eiUm.._. &o laaft cauied more
tbaa SI mlWoD ln dam• to
lliP•1111.Maadar.
yo11r b8llet;
shutdown whi ch ended early
today.
The seaside plant three miles
south of San Clemente had been
closed for two months -since
Sept. 3 to permit repairs to
two critical valves in t he
emergency core cooli ng system.
Along with this problem. two r
other lengthy shutdowns were
caused by repairs to corroded
piping In San Onofre's steam
generators ( 14 months> and to
an auxiliary diesel generator
/
damaged by fire last summer
(one month l.
Appraising these and other
problems from the government
side of the fence. Nuclear
Regu latory Com mission
inspections chief Dan Sternber&.
said Monday:
··I think you could imply from
the fact lhat they've been down
more than they're up that they ,
have got a problem in getting all
their systems operatin& at lhe
same time."
<See ONOFRE, Page A%>
Coast voter
turnout light
to 'terrible'
Early voter turnouts along the
Orange Coast today ranged from
relatively light to downright
dismal, according to reports
from area polling places.
Voters have until 8 p.m. to
make their selections in various
school board and special district
board races and to signal ti1eir
view on ballot questions in
several cities.
In Huntington Beac h a nd
Fountain Valley, school board
and college board races are the
primary ballot concern.
"We 've had exactly three
voters ln the first 21f.i hours . This
is terrible," reported Isabelle
Fluhart, poll inspector at Murdy
Community Ce nter in
Huntington Beach . "It's the
worst I've seen since 1963."
At Crest View and Dwyer
s c h oots in north and south
Huntington Beach respectively,
10 and 15 voters had cast their
ballots in the first two hours of
voting.
In adjacent Fountain Valley,
where voten also are selecting
school board and college district
board members, turnout reports
were only a bit better.
Blanche Wea ver. poll
inspector at Harper School, said
24 out of .906 registered voters
bad come in by 9:30 a.m .
·'It's better than I expected for
a sctiool board election.'' she
observed.
Costa Mesa voters are electing
school board, college board and
sa nitary district b oa r d
members.
But a precinct worker at
Trailer Town Mobile Home Park
said she was embarrassed to
report that by 10 a.m. only one
of 917 registered voters had cast
a ballot.
At Page School in Costa Mesa,
Gladys Cristilli waited until
nearly 8 a .m. to move her
precinct materials ~n to the
building.
"They (school ofCiciaJs) forgot
we were going to vote, and lhey
didn't get here to let us in at 5:30
a.rn . It was very exasperating.
One man insisted on voting, so
Briggs post
eye d b y
Nestande
Bruce Nestande, who has been
an Orange County supervisor for
only 10 months, acknowledged
he will consider running in a
special election for the state
Senate seat held by Republican
John Briggs, who announced
Monday he is resigning.
But Nestande s aid In an
interview Monday lhat Briggs'
sudden decision to leave his
position ln mid-term has created
a ''situation I had, under no
conditions, expected to face."
Bricgs, the conservative
Republicans from Fullerton,
announced in Sacramento that
be wlll retire from bis 3Stb
District seat at the end of the
year. He has three years left of
his rour-year term.
Brl11s. who has served 15
years in the state 1A1islature,
told reporters Monday he's
quittiDI becauu of "Job
burnout," and lntendl let become
a lobbyist and real estate
investor.
Brl111 a1reed durln1 hla
announcement Uiat Nnt.ade,
A.uhllm llayor .lolm &IJW
.... IUGGI, ....
we let him vote out on the
sidewalk."
Mrs. Cristilli said eight out of
98~ registered voters had cast
<See TURNOtrr, Page AZ)
NB killing
'was n 't
01urder'
By GLENN SCOTT
Of tM Dally ~lee SMlfl
Telford Mo or e's defense
attorney admitted to an Ora.nge
County Superior · Court jury
Monday that the Newport Beach
psychologist shot and killed his
roommate and business partner,
Stanley Espinda, but claimed it
wasn't murder.
Attorney Al Stokke argued
during his opening statement
that Moore. 37, was under
··almost demonic control" ol
Espinda, 45, who he said was
homosexual and wanted Moore
to believe that he was as well .
The gun used in the Nov. 5,
1980, shoo1ing at the pair's
Spyglass Hill home in Newport
Beach had been bought by
Moore for protection against
Es pinda's threats against him
and his girlfriend. Glory Lane,
said Stokke.
Stokke declined to suggest
whether lesser charges would be
appropriate. saying only: ··0ur
contention is he isn't guilty of
murder."
Deputy District Attorney
Bryan Brown had a different
explanation of the shooting,
however. Brown told the jury
that Moore had purchased lhe·
$150 gun through a newspaper
advertisement only a week
before the shooting with an
intention to kill Espinda. also a
psychologist
The two men had lived
together for much of 18 years.
Brown claimed that Moore
finally chose to shoot Espinda to
e nd their emotional and
financial relationship.
8 rown was scheduled today tp
call his first witnesses. The trial
<See MOORE, Page AZ) ·
ORAIGI CUST 1111111
Fair through
Wednesday with the
exception of some fog
along the coast late
tonight a nd ea rl y
Wednesday. Cooler days
a h ead with highs
Wednesday from upper
60s at the beaches to
mid-70s inland. Overnight
lows 45 to 55. ·
111181 TDDAY
A (10$ atatfon owner who
holds o-dbctorate b nmnhag
for his second term°' ma.,or
of Logan, Utah. See Page Al.
11111 '
..
OranQ• Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuead1y, November 3. 1981
NOFRE REACTION. • •
•1 1ut frankl y," Sltrnber1
dded, ''that has never
artlcut-;~ both•red me u a eautalruo doA'l ff•ll~ ..,. ii.
uc1ear power ph1nt ever
perales . . . What I care Mbout
that they m et the mlntmum
equlrement1 •t all tlme11 for
hatever condition they're in.''
or the thrtt major shutdowns hlch have alfecttld San Onofre
Ince April. 1980, the most
lgnlflcant may have been the
ost recent.
Two valves which reeulate the
w·pressure now of emergency
ore cooling water into the
56·m egawatt reactor were
und to be inoperable.
Tbe coodition was diagnosed
ft er controi room
n strum entalion readings
o n r I i c t e d w i t h m a n u•a I
b servations by plant
echnicians following a Sept. 3
hutdown, which was triggered
y a re\ated and minor
lectrica m~nction.
Luckily, officials said, the
a ilure of the valves occurred at
time wheQ the backup water
ystem -designed to prevent a
adioaclive meltdown -was not
eally needed.
If the same malfunction had
1-:n :s .'W\':\TJ-: Sl-.'·\T
...; 'I p1• • nsor \ t''if •J 11ff1 •
• From Page A 1
·'BRIGGS. • •
"and Assemblyman Ross Johnson
or Fullerton probably will
f;cons ider seeking the seat. All
are Republicans
A former assembly man.
Nes tande s aid he certainly
"wou1d vie for the Senate seat if
he still were in Sacramento. But
with his new job. he said he'll
have to do some thinking before
he decides whether to run.
.. Now I'm in a position with
I the Board or Supervisors that I
thoroughly enjoy, and John has
.quit early in his term ... said
1.Nestande. ''I'm not prepared to
·make that monumental decision
•at this lime ··
If Nestande were to win the
Senate seat in the s pecial
,election. he would leave his
board of supervisors seat open
lo be filled by a ppointment from
the governor's office. ·
Nestande won his seat in June
1980 after mounting a strong
attack agains t incumbent
Edis o n Miller. who was
appointed by G.ov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr
Nestand e 's 3rd Distract
includes small part s of Orange
and Tustin plus Fullerton. Brea.
Pla centia . La Habra and
unincorporated anland portions
of the south county
Auto figures
d e cline 20%
DETROIT I AP l -U S .
automakers built 534 .121 cars
last month. a 20 percent drop
from the 667.616 produced in
October 1980. the companies
reported.
G en e ral Mo tors Corp 's
October production of 315.618
cars was down 20 percent from
394 013 in the comparable 1980
per.iod. the No . J carmaker said
Monday.
Ford Motor £0. said it built
123 620 cars in October, a 14
pe;cenl dip from 144 ,499 lo
October 1980. At Chrysler Corp ..
October output or 67 ,354 was 29
percent below the 1980 month's
94 ,378, the carmaker said.
occurred durlna a real eoollna
water crlsla, only qulck ana
1nnova\ln action by the San
On9ft'~ contJ'Ol room opera
could hav4' Mverted a potentially
disastrous nuclear accident.
Thl'Orf\lcally, one ot tbe
valves should have worked it the
other foiled.
The ttlmultaneous malruncUon
w611 considered one of the rarest
kinda of failures , federal
otflc inls said. For Edlson
omctals, It was simply the latest
In a string or mechanical !lls.
San Onorre' s slide into
mothballs began a year and a
half ago, when it was discovered
during routine fuel loading
activities that steam aeneralor
piping. and lots of it, was
corroding fast a nd required
immediate replacement.
That work alone consumed 14
months and $68 million in repair
work.
··Whene ver you have an
outage of any long duration like
that ... Haynes said, "you
anticipate problems when you
return to service."
"And the reason for that," the
utility official said. "is that the
plant is built to run, equi~m~nl
is built to run. And wherf 1t s1l8
for long periods or time not
running. and s ome of the
equipment couldn't be run when
t the plant 1 was shut down. you
experience problems with it."
However, Haynes said, that
explanation applied only to the
rash of small problems which
have forced short·term closures
of the facility.
The failure of the valves.
which took two months to test
and · repair. and the fire which
damaged an auxiliary diesel
generator in July, were not·
attributable to the 14 -month
shutdown. Haynes said.
Le w Mill er. the Nuclear
Regul atory Commission's s~ni?r
inspector at San Onofre, said an
a recent interview that he
believed "there was an element
of chance in some of the things
c that had gone wrong L"
Miller s aid that the problems
which have kept the plant on an
operational yo-yo resulted from
a combinalion or unforeseen
circumstances that could have
been better anticipated by plant
and inspection personnel.
.. I can 't s peak for Lady
Luck ,·· the federal inspector
said , ·· .but I haven't
ide ntifie d an y particular
co mm o n oa u s e for the
problems.··
He added, "I don 't know if the
last two years were an aberration or a trend ··
Miller's boss, Sternberg, said
tn a telephone interview from
his Walnut Creek. Calif .. office,
"It's hard lo gener alize it. I
think since no generalization
comes into my head, I suppose I
h ave n 't co n c luded any
1 particular fa ctor! is singularly
operative an the case or San
Onofre I th ink that it ·s probably
a s~nth esis o f !several
problems1 .··
Sternberg explained that San
Onorre·s age "is certainly going
to be a fct ctor :· but he added. .. Nobody really expects to build
a n ope rating nuclear power
plant \\1thout having equipment
br ea kdo wn ci nd req uire repairs ..
The lifetime o f a nuclear
fa cility like San Onofre is about
40 years, utiflly and federal
officials said.
"Jl's perfectly capable of
running re liably," claimed
Haynes. "That doesn't mean you
don 't ha v e to replace equipment ..
Re ferring to t he corroded
ste am generator lubes. the
Edison official said the problem
could not have been discovered
a n y e arlier ... They were
detected with a state of the art
d evi ce ... that was not
available previously and there
was no other way to detect
those.··
And the valve failure?
"Those valves were Installed
in 1976-77 . We did a very
extensive test program on those
valves at that time. The Nuclear
Regulatory Commission was
involved in that ...
.. All of that testing and all the
subsequent testing we've done
indicated that those valves were
reliable." he said.
To insure there are no rurther
failures of the highly important
valves. Haynes said testing and
surveillance programs will be
stepped up.
Added Sternberg : "The theory
is. a system or component ls
<considered> inoperable from
the moment you test it until the
next time you·ve tested il" and
· confirmed that it works.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat Cl•111fled edv•rtl•lng 114'M2·M7i
All ot,..r depertmenta M2-4U1
•
MAINOfflCI •w..e.r11 .. c....-..,CA. ._.. • ..._, ... tM,C-. ...... CA.-
From Page A1
TURNOUT ••
tbeJr balloboat Pat• by lU 1.m.
Preclncl work.en in Newport
Jle.acJi,.-wbere. voteu au
eltclln1 achool board and
collefe board memben and an vole n1 their oplaloD on a
propoeed hotel beef tu IDcreaM,
the early turnout •taln wH
U1ht.
At Andersen School ln eut
Newport Beach, 40 out ot 1.000
votera had turned up b)' t :JO
a.m.
"We usually have more than
that in the fint 15 ml.Dutel," a
precinct worker commented.
Acr0$S town at N9wport Beach
City Hall, only 17 of 1,200
registered voters bad cast
ballots by 9:30 a.m.
some prec.incu ln Irvine
rePorted slightly better mom.inC
turnouts. Irvine voter• are
selecting school board and
college board members ud are
vQUng on four ballot measures.
O.lly ........... .., Lee ...,..
Eastbound traffic jam in Newport Beach resulted today when wnes on Pa~1f 1c Coast Highway were
closed to the old Upper Bay Bridge. Photo taken from Sea Scout Base looking past Balboa Bay Club
toward the bridge.
At Rancho San Joaquin
Intermediate School, 50 out of
about 600 regitt.er.ed voteN had
cast their balJota by 9 a.m.,
precinct worker Jan lee Pierce
reported.
From Page A1
MOORE. • •
is expected to last one lo two
weeks.
Until Monday, Stokke had not
revealed the defense he planned
to use in the trial, although an
unusual "battered wife" defense
had been mentioned. Stok ke
sought in pre-trial motions to
have Moore's confession on Nov.
6 to police stricken from
evidence.
Judge Myron Brown denied
that motion. Stokke said Monday
he has doubts a bout the
confession because detectives
didn't use a tape recorder.
Investigators said Moore told
them: ··1 killed him; I shot the
doctor.·· Stokke said Moore actually
said, "I must have killed him: I
must have shot him.··
3 Santa Ana
slayings
inves..tigated
Three slayings -including
one in which a woman's body
was buried in the backyard or
her residence -a r e under
investigation today by Santa Ana
Police Departm e nt
lnvestl.cators.
According to a police
spokeswoman. the s lain woman
was buried following the slaying
that occurred two weeks ago.
The spokeswoman said a man
ide ntified as t he woman's
husband has given a statement
to police investigators.
Furl.her details were not
available.
Meanwhjle, police also were
in vestigat ing shootings late
Monday night that left two men
dead.
A c cording lo th e
spokes woman. the two men
were shot at close range in the
driveway of an apartment
complex at 315 S. Laurel St.
Investigators . she said, believe
,the shootings may have been
related to drug transactions.
Identities of the two men. aged
41 and 47, were being withheld
pending notification of relatives.
One man was dead at the scene.
the other died at Fountain
Valley Community Hospital
early today.
From Page A1
SPILL ...
has quarantined the beach ...
Brandl said.
He said swi mmers will not be
allowed· in the ocean and
strollers will be kept off the
beach sand until tests indicate
the beach is safe.
Brandt said he hopes that
repairs can be completed on the
pipellne today. He said crews
will examine the pipeline lo find
if there are additional repairs
necessary.
The antiquated pipeline, which
normally takes treated sewage
several thousand feet into the
ocean off Laguna Beach, will be
shut down in March or 1983. At
that time. the city is to begin
using the Aliso Wat e r
Management Agency treatment
system, which will flow orr the
.ocean at Allso Creek.
Proteste r s, OOP8
clas h o ver mnway
FRANKFURT. West Germany
CAP) -O!flclala have cleared a
"tent city " b1o c kin1
construction or a new runway at
Rblne·Main Airport near here,
prompUna claahes between
several thousand protesters and
police.
Scores of detnonatratora
marched throuch the city center
lload•J to protest the police
Traffic snarled
Lane closure jams Upper Bay bridge
A familiar scene was played
out today during the morning
rush hour on the old Upper Bay
bridge in Newport Beach -a
first·rale, born-honking traffic
jam.
The snarl. police said, was
created when o ne o.f the
eastbound lanes on Pacific Coast
Highway was closed to traffic on
either side ol the old bridge.
Wes tbound motorists,
traveling the new seven·lane
bridge , ex p e r ie n ced no
problems, police pointed out.
Police said they were alerted
lo the lane closure late Monday
when it became apparent that
eastbound traffic would not be
routed onto the new bridge as
predicted.
Bridge workers said they bad
to close the lane to properly
grade an approach to the new
structure.
Originally. eastbound drivers
were to be guided onto the new
bridge Monday morning but
construction delays s hot that
plan down
Al Saline, project manager for
the Kaster Corp.. the firm building tbe bridge, said further
delays were caused when the
firm pouring asphalt on the
approach to the new bridge
e x plic ably s topped work
mid-afterndon on Monday.
The firm was back on the job
today.
Eastbound motorists, barring
further problems. were to be
shHted to the new bridge later
today.
Reagan e y ed
• in governor races
By The Associated Press
Voters in Virginia and New
Jersey are elec ting new
go•ern(>rs today and a key issue
in both races is President
Reagan's effort lo cut the
federal budget down to size.
Mayoral races in Houston,
De troit and Ne w Yo rk. in
addition to large state bond
issues for prisons and highways.
are among other d ecisions
facing voters around the
country.
Reagan and members of his
admini s tration ha v e
campaigned for the Republican
gubernatorial candidates an
Virginia and New Jersey .
The New Jersey race pits
Democratic U.S. Rep. James
Florio . who talk s o f
.. mea n .spirite d " R e agan
policies. against Republican
challenger Thomas Kean. who
advocates cutting slate business
taxes .
In Virginia the contest is
bet ween Democratic Lt. Gov
Charles Robb. son·in-law of the
late President Lyndon Johnson.
a nd Republcan Attorne y
General Marshall Coleman.
Robb, if he wins. would be the
firs t De mocrat since 1965 to
capture Virginia's governorship.
Coleman has tried to portray
Robb a s the h e ir t o his
father-in-law's c ostly Gre at
Society progi;ams. Robb, who
c on s iders himself a
t'Onservative. says the race is
n o t b e tw een R eaga n and
Johnson.
.. Don't let me down ... Reagan
said to an audience an Richmond
la ~t week .. It 1s n o good
cleaning up Washington if we
don't elect the right kind of
officials at the state level."
Re a~an's economic policies
face a more direct challenge in
Roston. Voters are considering a
non·binding referendum asking
the City Council to call upon
Congress to a ppropriate more
money for local needs instead of
for defense spendini;l
In Ke ntu c k y and We st
Virginia. meanwhile. voters
decide ballot iss ues whose
outcome could help determine
the future of two ris ing
politicians .
A prop ose d s tate
constitutional amendment in
Kentucky would per mit state
officials. including the governor.
lo succeed themselves in office.
It has turned into a referendum
on Democratic Gov. John Y.
Brown Jr .. who under existing
1 a w cannot seek a second
successive term.
At Turtle Rock Community
Center, 34 of 700 reaiatered
voters bad visited by 9 a.m. But
at Deerfield SchoqJ, the early
turnout totaled only 12.
Jn Laguna Beach, voten are
choosin g school board and
college board members and are
slating their view on a ballot
question. •
At Top of the World School,
precinct inspector Darlene
Bergeron clajmed a relatively
good turnout.
"We've had about 50 out ol
1,461 r egistered voters," she
said at 9 a.m., adding that her
precinct "usually baa the best
turnout in the county."
At the Nolan Real Estate
office polling place in Laguna
Beach, 45 of 1,045 registered
·voters had cast their ballola by
mid-morning.
"This is a fairly old precinct,"
said inspector Ginny Josephson,
"so I don't expect there will be a
lot of interest in the school board
election."
Low morning turnouts ai.o
were reported at precincla in
Laguna Niguel and Dana Point.
Man to die
in Irvine
murder case
John Glen Davenport, a state
prison parolee convicted in the
1980 rape-torture slaying of a
woman in an Irvine field. has
been sentenced to die in the
state's gas chamber.
The sentence was imposed
Mo nday by Orange Co~n~y
Superior Court Judge P~1lhp
Cox. who said Gayle Ann Lingle
died a "horrible death ...
The woman . according lo
testimony during Davenport's
trial. was beaten and stabbed. A
52-mch long wooden stake was
driven into her body while she
was still alive. authorities
testified.
The March 1980 s l aying
occurred in a field near Myford
Road and t h e Santa Ana
freeway.
Davenport was convicted
Sept. 24. The jury, following a
penalty hearing. recommended
Davenport be sente nced to
death. At the time of his a rrest in
connection with the Lingle
sla ying, Davenport was on
parole after serving four years
of a 15-years-to·life term for the
attempted murder of a Tustin
woman.
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flne ......... !Ira 1117
WMrt ~ bar sanprisa bqil_L ==-J'l. ... :!lr=t~mi= 1:¥.~fl!'I. the main train flCbUDI wlUI police '° .......,. them. The fore.I t.raln traffic
.. eeveruhoun. l__-----~~--------~--~----~------------------.... ----------~"
' . • J
.................
Lee .'\.1a1ors. lookmg 11/.:e .\1arlon Brando m The 1r itd One. ·
grlles /leather Thomas a nde un h1~ m<>t()rcl.jcle dunng the
tapwg of a new n · .'ienes. Tile Fall Guy. wh1cli sta rs .~1.011Jr.~
Cl!i a l/ollywood stuntman 1
Leary, Liddy
find a .bond
SeJC-proclaimed LSD guru
Timothy Leary a nd
Watergate figure G. Gordon
Liddy met to d e bate
"freedom vs. authority," but
they ended up finding they
had something in common.
"Gordon and I, we're both
real, .. Leary told about 800
people at the Boulder. Colo.
Theater. "OC all the people
who went to jail in the 1960s,
there are only two who
ab s olutel y w e re not
rehabilitated.
"He'd do it again. but he'd
probably watch the tape
around the door, .. Leary
s aid. ''I 'd do it again.
although I wouldn't let them
plant th e dope in m y
ashtray." (Leary is a former
resident of Laguna Beach.
Calif. l
Leary, who served time for
possession or drugs, and
Liddy, who spent 4 1.:i years in
prison for orchestrating the
1972 Watergate break-in ,
debated Sunday to a chorus
or chee r s, wh istles and
applause from an audience
that paid $12, $15 and $18 a
ticket.
The first black mayor of
stately Newport. R.I.. has
been sworn in amid some
controversy.
City Councilman Paul L.
Gaines took the oath or office
Sunday night but Councilman
Alfred L. Angel, who has
protested Gaines· election,
was not present.
Angel. who received the
highes t number or votes
among at·large councilmen
in the September election,
threatened to resign because
Gaines was elected mayor by
th e seven .member City
Council.
Gaines called on Angel to
decide by Nov. 12 on whether
to quit or take the seat to
which he was elected.
In 1968, you could hardly
give away Ronald Reagan
m e morabilia, sa ys Mark
Jacobs, a Chicago collector
o r p o liti c al c ampaign
material.
Now the sturr is so hot that
an 8-ounce bag of Reagan
jellybeans bearing a stick-on
presidential seal sells for $4 .
Reagan wasn't the only
p r es ide ntial c andidate
represented Saturday at a
s how in Columbus, Ohio,
s pons ore d by tbe Ohi o
chapter of the Am erican
Political Items Collectors.
More than SO collectors from
across the country were on
hand to display and sell their
wares.
'
atcllard •• ,, •• wlll
portr1y co111poeer atell1,.
Wa1aer ln an •llbt·bour
i.Mvl1ion Wo1rapb1 to be tumoct next roar. UM artuu
producen h•Ye announced.
"We appl'9achod Rlch&rd
Burton eautlMlal.x and bt It very enthuduu~ ... Hlct 1-
L•1ll1. 1poh1man for tu
producers, London Tru1t
Cultural Produclloaa Ltd.
"He'1 1110 ln very Cood health." . v ...... aed•n•• ii
conalderint an offer t.o play
the compo1er'1 second wlfe,
Co1lma Wacaer. Dapllae
Wa1aer, lbe composer'•
1reat-1randdau1hler, will
play Prtllcele MeUenJeL
The $7.5 million production
Is to be released
internationally in 1983, t.he
centenary of the German
composer's death.
Orange County Superior
Court Judge Edward Wallill
was about hallway thJ'oup
his morning "law and
motions'' calendar Friday
when an oddly famlllar
·attorney burst into the
courtroom.
"Let me make one thine
perfectly clear." said the
man with the ski-slope nose
to the obviously stunned
judge.
Then, turning to a court
reporter. the attorney said,
"My secretary, Rose Mary
Woods, has been unemployed
for a long Ume."
And, as quickly as the
attorney wearing the
Richard Milhous Nixon mask
entered, he left.
And the usually
unflappable Judge Wallin
stammered something about
taking a recess.
\la ryla11d state t rooper!I
t /1 Ill k for mer go L' e r n" r
.'Wnrvm .Wandel. now !lervmg
o prison term for 111011 l raud
and racketec.>nng. would be ''
y •> u d ad ct 1 t 1 o n t o t h e
\1 a r y l a n d T r o n p e r ~
t\s!lociat1011 /ohb11ing team
Coole r d ays ahead
Coastal
tr. .OS -lows lram JO 10 ~s. H191>s
In IM 1-r dt--11 -tlle -r Color•do RI-v.i1.-ys 1'-td rMCll
,,.. ,_ -wltfl tows ,,..,, u ... u.
The upper deMrh .,.d Antelope
V•lley will,..,.. f'lllllt• trcm n to a
•ndlowsrrom•••·
~'IT"-~...-
Cooler O•ys ue lore<u l lor Hl911s in Los •-1es -..io be
so .. 111ern C•tllornla willl 1111111• ,..., II>
ren9l119 fr om upper •OS el Ille -----------
bH<lw• lo mkf.70s Int-Overnl!llll T •
low• from 0 to SS. Skin wlll be .I empera1£UTeS
moltly l•lr wltll -109 JIOllt tr.
c oesl late 1onl9lll •nd early Ml U ""'· Wednesday. Alti.ny 67 ~
EIMW!let'9, from fll)lnt Con<ef)llon Al.....,_ .. D
to tfle Muk •n b«dl!r -out 60 Andoor-ts 17 .17
mllH: LltfTI ••rt.Ille winds In the Atleftl• 7S J6
nlthl •nd l'l'IOfnlng holl~ becoml"t B.illmora 1l SI west to !Outhwest I to 16 knots Bllm•rcll U a
lll•Ollllll Weclnftdr( attemoon South a.ton .. 21
10 soutllwftl .-1 , lo • lefl 0.nM Bllff•lo .., M
109 developlnt loully late tonl9111 CN rll1n WV 71 a •nd early Wednesd•y mornln9, o.e.,.nne SI 22
l>Komlng more utenstve WldneMUiy Clll<•oo 60 .,.
nlgM. Claval-.. )9
U.S. summary
A storm system wlllcll brou9lll
heavy ••In• •nd some lloodlllt to
llCM'tll TtUJ -•enect over ll'te "°""' centr•I ~n n dr~ •Ir entered llw
retlon wltll -,_, tUIUrecl
from the Taus -IWlllclte to weslem
Nebr HI<•.
Scaflered lllOWers COllllllU«I over
centnl sections 01 Ille tower and mld·Mluisslpt)I V•llay,
Tllllftdentorml wllll kK•lly r.•vy
r•ln war. --1ed over southern
l"lorld• wt>lle Illies were ci..r over
the upper GrHI UllH -upper
Mlnlnlppl v.i1ay.
CIOuds -loll ...,.. r-r1ed owr tr. northern P«lfk COHI wlllle ii
w•s Clt•r and windy In New
En11l•n<I.
0.11Wr 62 V
OllMh n .,
El P•to 71 Jt
l"alrti.t*• ts °' H.,tford 70 Jt
Helen• Ml 21
HoM1ul11 a 11 M
......... is 10 S1 .01
J-11 • J2 .IS
K•ns City 60 a OS
L•sv..-11 50
Los ·-·· " " l.Alllla.11111 11 •
Mem!lfl!s 10 ff
Ml...,.I 1' 74 .JO
Mllw-SJ Jt
llo\t>l .. St.P .. • H-Orl-II ..
Oki• City S2 44
PllOenl• • U PKb*MH'tfl .. C2
ptl-.Me ...
,._ " • s... oi.o 15 • Sall f'rWI n n
SHttle " 50
SI Laula .. " Tiii .. " 47
CALI flOltlUA
a.lt•rsfleld a S2
Ellf'ell• .. ..
"""'° " (7
IAMHW n • l!Mryavllle 7S 0
OHiand 72 54 P-ltO«lle a ,.
Red Blllff ,. ..
R-.oc!Clty 11 ,.
R-67 u Seer•,_ 7t " SellnH It SI
SIOCll* 71 • TMrm•I to SI .. ,, ... " " ... ..., ... n
Rein was npectecl IOCS.y lrom Ille
centr•I lll•IM to tr. we1tern Oltto
V•llty. Sc•llt rtd showers were
lorac:HI -· Ille caftlrel Gull COHI
ll•tes -..:rou IOUUltrn "Ori•. Pllrtly cloudy lo cloudy llllft were
.. pecl9d owr much of tr. c-try
tHI of Ille ltoOIH.
·suRf RIPDRT
California
fl09 ltlOuld cover IM Southern CMlf9nU CNltllN t•e...,.,... •1111
............. Y ....... mi!IW .....
IMuld -'*· , .. fUt ..... W.llller ~"-...-a. Tem,.r91Wft INuld M tlitllltlY <•llr In _ .. , •-. wilt\ llltM
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.., ..... o.tl•"'Y ,,._ .... .
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Orange Co11t OAJL Y PILOT/Tuelday, November 3, 1981
HOT W.E A THER SU N SET Warm
temperatures has brought Orange Coast
residents out to the '.'lewport l-{arbor .Jett'
Delly"" ...... .., ...........
and other t oast a l spots to d ew ('olorful
SUll !-.Ct ~
Ruling due
in Laguna
c hurch case
The two factions fighting for
control or a Laguna Beach
church will hear the results of
an Orange County Superior
Court judge 's decision
Wednesday at 11 a.m.
That's wh"tn Judge Edward
Wallin said be would announce
which of two organizations
should be allowed to use the
Church or Religious Science
facility on Laguna Canyon Road.
The-dispute involves on one
band, founding members of the
Cive-acre church. l>n the other
side of the controversy are
followers o( Indian guru
Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, who
n ow occupy the c hurch
premises.
Under a t e mporary court
order, both parties are alJowed
to use the church facilities. But
P.J . Toelkes, an attorney for the
Rajneesh group , told Judge
Wallin Friday the arrangement
Is not working out.
Unde r the injunction, the
original occupants of the church
can use the facility each Sunday.
alternating ser vices in the
afternoon o n e week and
mornings the next. They can
also use the premises Monday
and Wednesday nights.
Followers of the guru can use
the church other times.
He claimed in his court
presentation that the founding
members essentially abandoned
the church.
But Betty McMullen said it
was "unfair'' to say that the
founding members abandoned
the church.
'County w ins roun
in hospital dispute
T h e Orang e Count y
government has won an early
round of -arbitration o ver
disputed payments for indigent
medicaJ care at the UC Irvine
Med icaJ Center.
Lawyers for the county have
notified officials that arbitrator
Robe rt Leventhal decided in
favor of the county on the issue
of reimbursement procedures
N e w drug
• unit a rrests
3 in D ana
The Orange County Sheriff's
new south county narcotics
squad has made its first major
bust. arresting three people in
Dana Point and confiscating
drugs worth an e s tim:ited
$53,000,. authorities said.
The six-member squad that
began on Oct. 24 to cover only
the south county arrested its
three suspects after using a
search warrant to enter a house
at 33971 Cape Co v e . sa id
Sheriffs Lt. Wyatt Hart.
Arres te d on s us picion or
possession with intent to sell
cocaine and le sser charges
Friday wer e Guy Zimbardi, 29.
and Donald Challenger. 30, both
r esidents or the house . and
Cathleen Bower, 23, of Orange.
said Hart.
They were bQoked into Orange
County Jail in lieu of $15,000
ba ii. he said.
The drug ra id was made
public on Monday afternoon.
based on community hospi
rates.
The decision means the cowly
prevails in a dispute ov,tr
roughly SS00.000. s aid a cow)ty
spokesman. I
However. there is much more
to come. The county governm~t
and the university are still pt •
odds over a remaining s1 5
million in disputed billings.
Most of the disputes invol\te
bills county offic ials ha•e
refused lo pay. claiming ~Y
are e xcessive
U niv e r s it y offi c ials.
con versely, have argued that the
se r vices we re needed and
payment shouldn"t be refused by
county adm inistrato r s who
never saw the patients.
The issue is currently under
discussion during arbitration
meetings . University officials
have proposed that a sample or
112 or the more than 70,000 cases
should be used to decide the
rest , while county officials have
nbt yet rnade their presentation.
the spokesman said.
The issue decided last week
involves use or a figure known
a s the commun i t y rate
adjustment factor. which was
implemented in July 1979.
The rate. calculated on tile
basis or other local hospital
rates. was used to insure that
the county pa id market-rate
prices for services for its poor
people. Arbitration focused on
whethe r the rate s hould be
applied before or after third
party payements -such as
medical -were deducted. the
spokesman said.
Storekeeper Monte and Teri are wearing DISCUS Sweat-
shirts and Pants. Available in both zip front and pullover
with hoods. Choose from seven colors.
A atore that offers fine traditionaJ sportswear
for men. women, and boys.
1028 Irvine, Newport Beach.
California, Phone 642-7061
---
Orange Cout DAtL Y PILOT ff_ ueld•y. November'. 3, 1811
~mu~rnrn
Jl:iJJi-nwiling r-ates
d~clared 'too low'
NEW YORK (AP> -A federal
appeala cowt ruled Monday that
JO•tal rates for bulk maUera
were set $1 bllUon too low
tarlltr thia year by lhe P01Stal
Rate Commlulon.
Tbt 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeala ordered the commission
to recoaaicler ha action, callin«
lt "an \lnlawfUI encroachment''
Upon the policy -making
authority o( the Postal Service's
8oard of Governors.
The two agencies were
created when the post office was
tslablhhed as a separate
corporation in 1970.
Murder evidence
•uppre11ioti Q&ked
ATLANTA (AP> -Attorneys
defending Wayne Wllliama
against two murder charges
h ave asked Superior Court
Judge Clarence Cooper's
permission to file new motions
to suppress evidence seized in
Williams' home and limit the
scope of the state's case.
Cooper bas said no further
tnotions can be filed in the case
without bis permission, and
attorney Alvin Binder met
privately with the judge Monday
~o ask him to a llow the motions.
Baby powder hit
by pediatrician
NEW YORK (AP> -Baby
powder can cause coughing
spells, vomiting or pneumonia in
children who inhale it. says a
pediatrician specializing in
p o'ison control, and he is
advising his pati~nts not to use
it.
Dr . Howard Mofenson.
director of 'the poison control
center at the Nassau County
Medical Center near New York
City, said 92 cases of baby
powder inhalation were reported
to the center in the first six
months of this year.
wrnmarn
Financial •uit
elUU in settlement
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Defendanta in a au.it filed by the
Securities and Excbanae
Comml.asion aaatnst a company
founded by the late William F.
Buckley Sr. and owned ID part
by his heirs have aianed a
$'175,000 settlement.
The defendants, lncludini
John W. Buckley, who man11es
the family's fl.Danca, did not
admit or deny any wron1doin1.
Red/oid bwiled
NEW YORK (AP> -The
Filth Avenue apartment of actor
Robert Redford was bur1larized
early today and two teen.agers
who live nearby were charged
with the crime, police reported.
WANTS LIFE CondE.'mnt'd
kill t>r Colin Clark ha ...
changt·d his mind and "i~
t'i~ht hb senll'OtC' of dl•uth Ill
a :\t.'\\ Orl(•ans pri ... nn aftt•1
his mother \\nil a
l'Oll rt ordt•rt'<I l'l'f>l'll'\'l'
Truce under way
in ravaged Beirut
BEIRUT. Lebanon (APl -
The private armies of Moslem
West Beirut have begun to lay
down their arms in the first step
of a plan to demilitarize the
embattled city and eventually
return security tasks to the
police and army.
The Palestine Liberation
Organization and its leftist
Lebanese allies decided
Saturday night that the political
parties must disarm if street
fighting among opposing
factions was to stop. (They
started putting their weapons
away on Monday.>
Disarmament schemes have
been tried in the years since the
Moslem·Chrlstlan 1975-76 civil
war, but they failed as one or
another political group held on to lts weapons, prompting the
others to re-arm and return
Wes t Beirut to its lawless status.
More than a score of leftist
militias and eight PLO factions
are based here, and vie for
dom lnance in the Moslem
sector.
Sweden continue•
Soviet sub probe
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
-Swed ish authorities,
apparently dissatisfied wi~b
explanations about a groundd!
Soviet submarine, said today
that questioning of the ship's
otflcers would continue and it
could be "a lengthy affair.•·
''The interrogation will be
resumed, but It is not yet
decide d when ," naval
l)>okesman Cmdr. Gunnar
Rasmusson said. "The whole
thins might tum out to be a
• lenitby affair."
Coverup charged
in apy acandal
LONDON CAP) -BrlUlll
l•1lalatort accuHd Prl••
IUnl1ter lhr1aret TbatcMr
Mond9' of tatta1 ,.rt • a
"maul•• M•erup • m Ille t~=-:• MCUt"1· T 11• l•r•r"' ral1et ' :::,~~:11• ·-::.t' ....
on how many exposed Soviet
agents have been given
immunity and how much
government ministens are told
a bout the operations of this
country's security services.
New I IU altacb
due in Bel/at?
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
CAP> -PoUce officials said
Monday they fear IRA guerrillas
are preparing a new bombing
blitz in Northern Ireland.
"The ProVi.siooal IRA ia intent
on a renewed bombing
campaign in various parts of the
province." said a spokesman for
the Royal Ulater Constabulary
who refused to be further
identified.
A.raenal f owul;
suspect dies
HANNOVER. West Germany
(AP> -Police unearthed 88
crates of explo1lve1,
ammunition and pbisons near
this northern city and arrested a
suspected right-wing extremiat
who committed suicide in bis
jail cell, officials said Monday.
Authorities said the areaenal
was found buried in foreata and
fielda 'during a search that
lasted several days.
Slaying suspect
woii't be 'detuf.'
LONDON (AP ) -A Hilb
Court official said Monday he
knew ol no plans to have Lord
Lucan, southt for the kllllnl of
hla children'• governeas seven
years aao. declared leaally
dead.
Under British law , •
cleclaraUoa of presumption of
death can be IOUlht from tbe
Hilb Court after a penoa bu
been m ..... wltbout trace for
HYtn,....
PriSon inmates s111Tender
GRATERFORD, Pa. <AP.L;_
The aH'"t bl11e1t prlaon
remalntd ln a llate o f
emer1ency today 11 1uarda
prtpared a cell·bY·ceU aearch to
ftnd out bow I •ant Of prlaonerl
1ot tbe four auna they uaed to
ttrrity holta1es for six day1.
The 1tandoff ended Monday
nl•ht wheo the aeven lnm.-e-
captora released the slx
remalnln1 hosta1es from the
kitchen of the state Correctional
Institution after flrlne their 1una
to empty them of ammt.tnitlon.
The holtaees were unharmed
and offlcials agreed to the
inmates demand that they be .
transferred from the
maximum·security state prison
to an undlaclosed federal priaoa.
Chuck Stone, a Philadelphia
newspaper columnist, called in
by the governor's office to
neg9tiate the release, said the
burst of gunfire "sounded like
cannons.''
•'Then they came out wi\h
their bands up. The hostaeea
came first carrying the 1uns, • ·
Stone said. ·
Gov . Dick Thornburg
announced later in Harrisburg
t hat he would form a
commission to study the
hostage-taking, which followed
an unsuccessful escape attempt
by a group of prisoners.
"' ....... ll11oded passenger q1n.>!; 01\ sign as he's dnven out of Pennsylvania pnson. The pair were believed to
be relatives of convict riot leader Joseph "Jo-Jo" Bowen. whose group surrendered shortly afterward.
Business failures • on increase
By Tbe Associated Press
Towering interest expenses
and sluggish sales are pushing
U.S. businesses Into collapse at
a faster pace than during the
r.ecesslon year ef 1980. according
to the latest federal government
and private economic figures.
Dun & Bradstreet, the
economic information service in
New York. reported Monday
that there were 459 commercial
and industrial failures In the \
final week of October . or 51 (
percent more than in the
comparable week last year.
For the year through Oct. 29.
business failures are up 41
percent from the corresponding
1980 period. Oun & Bradstreet
said.
The gove rnment's latest
economic reports indicated
more bad news ahead for
business despite a reduction
Monday in prime lending rates
at major U.S. banks.
The Co mmerce Department
s aid order s for n ew
manufactured goods fell sharply
in Sep t ember . while
manufacturers· inventories rose
In a separate r eport. the
department said the value of
new construction in September
declined 0.4 percent. hitting the
lowest rate since October. 1980.
The department said orders
for oew manufactured goods fell
0.9 percent in September. That
was better than the revised drop
of l.5 percent in August but it
would have been worse if not for
an 18. l percent rise in defense
orders
Mo r e significantl y. the
department said the value of
non·denfense capital goods in
Septem ber plunged 8 percent
rrom Augus t a fter bein g
unchanged between July and
Augus t That represents a steep
drop in corporations' spending
on plant and equipment, a key to
the nation 's manufa cturing
system
Meanwhile. the department
said the value of manufacturers'
inve ntories rose l . l percent in
September. the biggest jump
since last February and a sign
manufa ctur ers will cut
production to compensate for
lower demand.
Separately, the F.W. Dodge
01v is10Jl o f M c Graw -Hill
Information Systems Co ~aid in
a report today that contracts for
new construction rose at a n
annual rate of 2 perce nt in
September. But the rise was
given "little s ignificance "
because the new rate remains
coos iderably belo" the level at
the start of the year. the New
York·based concern said.
The r eports pointed to a
weakening economy that has
undermined corporate profits.
But businesses received some
relier from high borrowing costs
Mon day when major banks
lower ed their prime lending •
rates to 17 .5 percent.
David Jones. a n economist at
the Wall Street firm of Aubrey G. Lans ton & Co .. said he
ex peeled banks to furthe r
reduce their basic loan rates to
commercial borrowers. Jones
said the prime rate may dip to
16 pe rcent by the end of the
year.
Thoma s Thomson . senior
econo mis t with Ctocke r
National Bank in San Francisco.
predicted lhe prime rate would
fall below 17.5 percent "by the
end of next week" and to near 14
percent by the end of March
Hussein wants Soviet weapons
WASHINGTON <AP I -
President Reagan. apparently
concerned with Jordan's interest
in buying arms from the Soviet
Union. said today he and King
Hussein agree on the "primary
goal" of reinforcing Jordan·s
relations hip with the United
States. ·
"The security a nd well-being
of the Hashemite kingdom of
Jordan is a matter of historic
and enduring concern to the
United States," Reagan said as
the Jordanian monarch
concluded a round of meetings
at the White House. .
"We agree that reinforcing
thi.s friendship is a primary goal
and discussed how our relations
can be strengthened," Reagan
said . He offered no specifics.
For his part, the 45-year-old
king said he hS'd established a
personal friendship with Reagan
and said their meetings ended
on a note of optimism.
·'This particular meeting at
this particular tim e in
comparison with all my previous
visits to Washington has left me
more reassured than any in the
past and more confident of the
future," Hussein said.
Meanwhile, U.S. officials who
met with Hussein went out of
their way to douse speculation
that the United States is
interested in meshing the
eight-point Saudi peace plan
with the Camp David accords.
"I think it is very important
,.,. ..........
Pres1dt>11t Heaga11 1celc11m1"o; f\111<1 l/11.'·'''111 ''' ,,,,. l11•rJ1111 '"'''l'tr•;
heqw.<i 011 "'''<'JOI nsll ''' ,,,,. I ntlr'rf .'i/•111•\
that the Camp David peace
process not be put in jeopardy."
said Defense Secretary Caspar
W. Weinberge r , echoing all
senior U.S. officials who spoke
on the subject. However . the
o fficia ls a lso s aid Reagan
#
beli eves th e r e are both
encouraging aspects and serious
drawba c k s to th e plan
advocated by Sa udi Prince
Fahd. They cite what they say is
the plan's apparent willingness
to permit Is rael to exist in peace
wi th its Arab neighbors.
"We think there are hopefuJ
things about the Saudi peace
plan that indicate at the very
least that it is possible for
countries which have been
enemies to sit down and begin a
peace process." Weinberger
said after a visit with Hussein at
Blair House, the government
guest house
"We hope very much that that
is what will ultimately come out
of it all." Weinberger said. "I
think the president's statement
earlier about it is the adequate
expression of what we feel."
Another senior U.S. official.
briefing reporters on Hussein's
visit under the ground rule that
he not be identified, said Reagan
b e li eved th e Saudi plan
"indicated that there was an
initiative where none existed
before."
But he said Reagan "did not
deviate. nor did he intend to
deviate, Crom the adherence of
the U.S. government to the
Camp David process as the
fram ework for achieving peace
in the Middle East."
I s r aeli Prime Minister
Mena c h em B eg in has
condemned the Saudi plan in a
letter to Reagan. warning that·
U.S. encouragement of a Saudi
role couJd endanger chances for
achieving a compr~henslve
Middle East peace. ·
Americans' Support of Libya denounced
t '
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Re aga n administration.
acknowledging that Libya bas
recruited Americans for support
roles in connection with its
military intervention In
neighboring Chad, says such
activity by U.S. citizens la
"reprehensible" but apparently
not illegal.
"Libya has been successful in
recruiting expatriates, lncludina
Americans, to service various
•ypea of aircraft, lncludtn1
Libyan air force C·l30s and
Chinook helicopters," Slate
Department spokesman Dean
Fischer said Monday.
The disclosure was the first
oftlclal U.S. conflrmaUon that
Americana have been involved
with Ubya't military activlUn
la Chad, altbouah the State DeDartmeat prevtoully hu •aid
lt'"-llacl unconrlrmed reporta
about Americana tlyin1
"raupply ftilh\I tnto Chad" f'or
a Libyan civilian aviation
company.
"We are further authorized to
confirm that American citizens
have been crew members on
(lights from Libya to Chad on
United African Airways. Our
Information is that they have not
been pilots," Fischer said.
Fischer said he didn't know
how many Americans were
involved or whether they were
continuing their activities, but
he denounced their work for
Llbran lead~r Moammar
Khadafy.
'•We regard It -as rep·
re.henatble and ag!tlnst the
Interests of peace and security
In the region for anyone,
Including American cltliens, to
contribute to Col. Khadafy's
ability to carry out his policies
of a11ression. aubve ralon and
terrorilm," Fiacher aald.
The Libyan air rorco
reportedly has about 20 CH-47
Chinook he licopters, a cargo
chopper designed in the United
States and manufactured in
Italy.
Despite the State Department
co nd em n a tion , Ju s tice
Department s pokesman John
Russell s aid the Americans
apparently aren't violating the
law.
"On its face this activity is not
illegal. The Neutrality Act bas a
lot of loopholes and basically
requires that the individual take
an oath of allegiance to a foreign
government before a violation
occurs," sald Russell .
The Neutrallly Act prohiblta
U.S. citizens from servin1 ln the
arm cd rorcea of another
country.
• 'Tbe&e people were pa'4 •
of a Swtaa MM •H--* na..
than a Libyan one,.. llllMll
said. He addM. boWenr. tlaM
the Juatlce DepU't•••t l1
contlnuln1 an taViii.,.._U. ,
Justice Department sources
who declined to be identified
said the Swiss accounts were
controlled by former U.S .
intelligence agents Edwin P. ·
Wilson or Frank Terpil.
The two men are fugitives
from an indictment i n
Washington, O.C., c har1tn1
them with selling explosives to
Libya, setting up a terroriat
training school for Libya and
arranging for an unsuccnatu.I
assasslnatlon attempt on a
Libyan defector in E1ypt.
The U:nited Stalet has IOQCht
to brin1 IDlernationa.l p ..... ure
on Khadafy• to withdraw hi•
forces from Cllad. Some
esttmae.piMe ... •~!1!11!1!~
Lib1aa ~ tllln
Tbe1 -!.t~U tla ... j.;.
l
LOS ANG£LES lAP) -
Flrefiebtera conUnued to patrol
the perimeter of the deatructive
Oat Mountain Flre whlch was
extlnaulsbed at the end of a
rampa&e that destroyed nine
homes and charred 17,500 acres. a spokesman said.
Although the fl r~ was
pronounced under control late
Monday, County Fire
Department spokesman Dick
Friend saiCS 50 to 60 firefighters
would walk the 18-mile
perimeter for several days, to
watch tor stray embers that
could rekindle unburned areas.
Other weekend fires scorched
370 acres at the El Toro Marine
Base, 700 acres in Chino Hills
and 380 acres in Canyon
Country . All had been
extinguished by Sunday.
Power outage
closes runways
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
brief power outage as a result of
construction at Los Angeles
International Airport forced
tem porary shutdown of two
runways and delayed some
evening flii(hts. an airport ·
spokesman said.
The two runways were closed
from about S p.m. Monday as
darkness fell until about 6 : 15
p .m ., said John Smith. the
airport's s uperintendent or
operations.
Actor resting
after surgery
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Film
and television star Rock Hudson
is expected to spend the next two
weeks in a hospital following six
hours of bypass surgery.
·'The operation was an
unqualifted success, .. said Tom
Clark. personal manager for the
SS-year.old actor. "HlJ heart 11
runctloninl perfectly on tu own,
with no slans or any
complications ...
Usina small lenctl\4 or vein
taken from Hudson's legs,
doctors who performed
Monday 's operation at '
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
originally planned to bypass
three arteries feeding the heart
muscle but ended up bypassing
two more as well, the hospital
aaid.
.48ner elected
SAG president,
LOS ANGELES <AP! -Actor
Ed Asner has won election as
president of the Screen Actors
Guild, defeating the incumbent,
actor William Shallert, a union
spokeswoman said.
Though auditors were still
counting ballots late Monday.
Asner, the star of "Lou Grant"
on CBS, had enough votes to
win. said spokeswoman Kim
Fellner.
Bradley hints
about campaign -. SACRAMENTO CA P > -Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley,
the heavy favorite for the
Democratic nomination for
governor next Y.ear, says he
won't make his campaign
official for at least another
month.
Speaking at a Sacramento
Co m s tock Club luncheon
Monday, Bradley told his
audience of business and
government leaders that he is
seriously considering a race for
governor. but "the time just
isn't right" yet for a formal
announcement.
Maureen Reagan
hits the trail
LOS ANGELES <AP > -Maureen Reagan
prepared to face her first full day of campaigning
around the state today after ending long-running
speculation by entering the U.S. Senate race.
Ms . Reagan. 40. the president's e lder
daughter . planned press conferences in San
Francisco. Sacramento. Fresno and San Diego,
before attending a Cali fornia Republican
dinner-dance in Los Angeles. The hard day on the
campaign trail followed her announcement
Monday that she would seek the seat of Sen. S.I.
Hayakawa, R-Calif.
·'Today I announce my candidacy for that
office, and I feel confident in my ability to achieve
action beneficial to Americans who seek a more
rewarding way of life." she s aid al a press
conference at the Biltmore Hotel.
Ms. Reagan shrugged off the neutrality her
father has declared in the eisht-way Republican
primary race, saying he never takes position in
primaries.
Ms. Reagan also explained away her father·s
"I hope not" remark about a Senate race by his
daughter that generated a widespread impression
that President Reagan opposed her candidacy.
"He was saying that he wouldn·t wish the
hardships of a campaign on anyone." she said.
Ms. Reagan is somewhat more liberal than
her father, having campaigned actively In the past
for the proposed Equal Righ~ Amendment. and
supported gun control and abortion rights.
··1 am the only candidate who can publicly
disagree with the president and still be guaranteed
a dinner invitation at the White House:· she said
Monday. .
But on other issues she is far closer to the
moderate-liberal wing of the GOP, although she
characterized herself Monday as being "right
smack In the middle of the Republican Party."
Ms. Reagan joins seven other Republican
candidates for the 1982 Senate race, Hayakawa.
Mayor Pete Wilson of San Diego. Rep. Paul N.
McC loskey. Rep. Bob Doran, Rep. Barry
Goldwater Jr .• s tate Sen. John Schmitz. and
former Loyola Law School Dean Ted Bruins ma.
Trapped 7 days,
man succumbs
SAN DIEGO CAP) -A 22-year-old man,
trapped seven days in tbe wreckage of his car at
the'bottom of a brush-covered ravine, bas died at
University Hospital, a coroner's spokesman said.
Deputy Coroner Everett Mauger said Gary
Corbett dioo Monday night, two days after he was
found in his wrecked car by a 12-year-old girl on
hourseback. Mauger said cause of death would not
be known until an autopsy was performed.
Authorities described findin1 Corbett alive
from multiple injuries and a week's exposure as
"a miracle."
Corbett, who underwent surgery Monday, was
suffering from Internal injuries and "massive
infection,•· said a spokeswoman at University
Hospital.
Hls tiny foreign car went olf a 15-foot
embankment and landed at the mouth of a
concrete culvert. At least twice, the wreckage was
flooded by water from rain. Rescuers said t.be
doors ol the car appeared to be wedged abut,
preventing Corbett from crawlln1 out.
Corbett Iott control of hiJ car s hortly after
leavln1 bis sister's home ln Pine Valley about 40
miles eut of San Die10. accordln1 to California
Hl1hway Patrolman Terry McAfee.
A tarce tree and heavy brush obscured the
wreckac•. authorities aald. Marti Bennett, a nt1ht
....... OD tbe rescue bellcopter, Hid the bnaab Wll
so thick the crew couldn't see the car from the air . ..
STEER DESTROYED Tht• l>O<J,· o( a sH.'l:I'
lies alongside the Golden Stale F·n .•e'' a~ nt•ar
Sun \'allev. ufter it was shot I),· <rnim&JI
l'Ontrol offi cer s Al>oul four doz~n C'u ll lt·
t•sc·apt>d from a semHrailt•r aftl'r tht· t r ut·L.:
l>ecamt• im·oln !d in a colli sion with two ttll'"
...........
a nd O\erturnt>cJ in tht• southbound lunv
Offil'ers and cowho,·.., ,,·,irked latt· ~J11nrl a\ l'\'l'nin~ to r~tril'\'l'. tht• unim41b. man' ,;,.
'' h1 ch \\'(.•t'l' in llll'NI T\\ o J>l'opk \\l'l'l' h11r1 111
1 hl· ('l'ash wh1l'h 1 ll'd up traffi<' l1ir hour ...
Nuke plant license . challenged
SACRAMENTO {AP! -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. is asking the
U .S . Nuclear Regulatory
Com mission to review its
licensing of the Diablo Canyon
nuclear power plant.
Brown said his petition, filed
with the NRC on Monday in
Washington, D.C .. says "cesign
errors" could make it unsafe in
a severe earthquake.
But the Pacific Gas & El~ctric
Co. said it sees no need for
Brown's· move because the
co mp a n y ha s · already
volunteered to hold off fuel
loading "until the N RC is
satisfied that the plant can be
operated safely ...
Brown said last week he would
challenge the plant "all the way
to the Supreme Court.··
The petition s aid , "The
compound errors of PG&E in
fir st mis takenly siting the
Diablo Canyon plant within
· three miles of the Hosgrl fault
and then mistakenly analyzing
the seismic consequences of its
earlier error . . . surely must
cross the threshold of whatever
standard the commission uses"
for determining safety.
It questions the quality of the
seismic data used by the NRC in
licensing the plant It claims the
NRC 's decision to issue a
low-level testing licensl to the
plant was based on incorrect
plant diagra1T1 s . along with
outdated and incorrect seismic
information.
PG&E s pokesman Lyle
LaFaver said no one in the
company has seen Brown's
petition, but "we are working
closely with the NRC staff to
rurnish . the information
r e quireJ to assure that
necessary modifications will be
made."
. LaFaver said co mpany
e n gineers ar e making a
progress report to the NRC staff
today in Bethesda, Md.
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SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -,
Twenty -one-Democratic
California congressmen, tryina
to preserve proposed new
congreulonal districts, have 1~
turned to the state Supreme.>"
Court.
The congressmen want to-J't
thwart a Republican bid to H
overturn the district lines,
recently drafted by Democratic 1A
Re p . Ph i I Burton of Slin ol
Francisco and other party JI
colleagues. ' u
T h e p e t i t i o n b y the Jn
c o n g res s m en , p res en t e d ill
Monday, asks the court to stop a
voters' referendum petition 1~
. drive which the California • .,
Republican Party began six J,
weeks ago.
The referendum drive came
after Gov. Edmund .Brown Jr.
signed a reapportionment bill . .f\
meant to give the Democrats as
many as five nc:._w congressional k
seats at the expense of the '
Republicans.
The Republicans complained ·b
that the reapportionment plan Iii
was a gerrymander. .11
Burton and other Democratic t,
party leaders replied during •'l
Monday's court filing that the 011
GO P pettUons are "invalid" and "'
'that they \Could cost California ,,.
two representatives in Congress.
S''imilar suits attempting to f'1
halt GOP referendum petitions VI
against the state Senate and llJ
Assembly reapportionment bills ''t were filed l ast week by ,,,
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown.
The court has not indicated
whether it would take up any of \
the suits. \ The Burton and Brown suits
ask the court lo order e1ection
officials to reject the GOP
petitions and to hold the 1982 ''
congress ional . Senate a nd 111
Assembly elections in the '·t
c,lis tri cts drawn by the ll
De mocratic leadership of the Cl
state Legislature. ii
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TUESDAY, NOV . 3, 1981
CAVALCA DE 8~3
lllllllTll lllCl/fDllTlll VllllY BUSINESS 94 .. 5
ENTERTAINMENT 87-8
Tourist finds language
foreign. See Erma
Bambeck Page B2.
Solar· energy hacked Huntington, • ID
Mineral
rights
viewed
Private consultants have
recommended that Huntington
Bea ch officials lease city-owned
mineral rights in the downto wn
area to a Texas-based oil firm in
r e turn for future roy alty
pa y ments of up to $200,000
annually.
The city owns 130 or the 3,000
scattered mineral rights to an
unde rground oil fie ld in the
downtown area north of Main
Stre et.
Offi c ials o r Am e ri c an
Petrofina <FINA ) are
allemptinf to lease at least 75
percent o the minera l riihts so
they can get state permis!ion to
consolidate the field and begin
laree scale seconda r y water
flushing recovery to get oil left
dee p unde r g ro und by p ast
operations when t he crude was
less profita ble.
Oil officials say over a 20-year
pe riod the oil r eserve could
produce 25 million barrels of oil
worth $1 billion.
The staff r eport from the city
pl a nner s said the proposed
con solidation pla n "is a n
excellent one which provides an
opportunity lo r ealize many
im port ant be n e fits to th e
community."
A City Council study session
on the recomme ndati on is
scheduled Thursday, 7 p.m., al
City Hall.
The r eport als o said the
··successful unitization would
enhance revitalization plans ((or
t he d o wnto wn a r ea) b y
removing many of the existing,
scattered wells and ta11ks and
ge n erall y cl eaning u p o il
operations In the area.
· ·0 11 facilit ies wo uld be
concentrated into a few islands.
freeing valua ble sur face areas
now used for oil. for other
developments," the staff report
says.
The seconda r y recover y
"is la nds" would be fenced ,
soundproofed a nd landscaped.
the report states.
The owners of mineral rights
are bein~ offered a l /6th royalty
paym ent. But the report notes
that such unitizat1on projects
have historically taken several
years to begin operation because
of necessary "extens ive geologic
and engineering analyses," and
red tape at the state level.
City officials hired a legal
cons ultant and a petroleum
engineer to go over the proposed
lease agreement before making
their recommendation.
FINA officials say they now
have 60 percent of the mine ral
rights to the oil field .
.
J . Dick o.ty ,. ....... "--rm . left. president of tM Fountain Valley Hiatorical Society. and developer Jim Yates discuss
prospects of relocating 1920s real estate olfice behind tMm.
Landmark • ID jeopardy
Fountain Valley historical building facing bulldozer
By PIUL SNEIDERMAN $2,000 to $3,000 money the
04~:'; ~~~ yea rs ago, Sam Historical Society does not have.
Talbert ran a little real estat~ -The city· which is grappling
offi ce on Bushard Street in what with serious budget problems, will likely be r eluctant to is now Fountain Valley. ·, a s s u m e a n y f i n a n c i a I
According to the faded sign on responsibility in connection with
h is bu 1 I d i n g · Sa m s 0 Id the relocation or maintenance of
"b ea uti fu l lots" in nearby the historic buildings.
Huntington Beacb for just S250. But to Jim Dick. president of
He boasted that the community t h e H ist 0 r i ca 1 s 0 c i e t y .
had "paved streets " a n<S "some preservation of the old real
improvements ... All he asked estate office 15 impera tive. was 10 percent do wn. Jn just a rew months. Sam "It's the only piece or Talbert
Talbert's 19205-style real estate Vi llage that's left, .. he said. refe r ring to the early town oil and investm ents office is center a t the intersection of scheduled to meet a 1980s-slyle bulldozer. The long-a bandoned Bus hard Street and Talbert
office must be leveled to make Avenue.
f "When t hat goes. a ll of way, or a new t wo-story office T albert Vi llage will be gone to
building the bulldozers ...
But not if the Fountain Valley Dick is an 18-year resident of
Histor ical Society can help it. Fountain Valley and a founding
T he organization will ask the m e m ber of t h e His torical Ci t y Cou n cil toni g ht for pJ!rmission to relocate the old Society! real estate office, plus a nearby But ironically, he was not even aware of the real estate office's pump water towe r a nd Japanese existence until recently.
bath house, to an undeveloped The l2 by 1g .. (oot building is park behind City Hall. There a re several hitches in set well back from Busha rd
the plan . however : Street , and it is obscured by a
-The property picked out by mor e recently constructed barber shop. the Historical Society may be Prope rty own er Jim Yates.
needed for a new police station. who is developing the new office
-Relocation of the old real building, was unaware t hat a
est ate office by professional local historical society wi th an
movers will cost an estimated interest in the old buildings even
exis t ed . H e h a d t a ke n
photographs of the structure (or
his own historical interest, but
was proceeding with plans to
raze it.
Then Evelyn Wardlow, first
vice president of the Historical
Society, learned a bout Yates·
developmen t and s pread the
word among her organization's
mem bers.
Yates agreed to give the old
real estate building, water tower
and bath house to the Historical
Society if the group could
arr a n ge relocat ion . But he
warned that his construction
project must get under way in
ear ly 1982.
A cit y inspector con cluded
that the old real est ate office's
wir ing and roof ar e in poor
shape . but said it appears to be
st ructurally sound enough for
relocation.
Historical Society president
Dick envisions a sma ll fenced
historical pa rk behind City Hall,
where the renovated structures
and other memorabilia may be
placed on display.
He said another remnant of
T albert Village, a blacksmith
shop. could not be saved by the
Historical Society a fe w years
ago and was de molis hed .
"We had no pl ace to move it
to.·· Dick recalled .
-Use recommended for all ~
new homes and buildings
By PATRICK KENNED\' Of ..... ., ..........
Huntington Beach planners
have recommended that all new
homes and bulld!np be required
to have· solar water heating
syte ms instead of relying totally
on conventional energy.
"The price or electricity and
natural gas has now reached the
point where solar has become an
effective option in Southern
California ... " s tates an
89-page report, which is in draft
form.
The re port suggests that, if
city officials don 't want to
Shooting
• • v ictim
sent home
A S3-year-0ld man who was
shot twice during a quarrel at
the Huntington Beach home or
his estranged wife was released
tod ay from Fountain Valley
Community Hospita l.
Police said the wife, Tomooya
Saito Bowie. 50, was being held
t o day a t Orange County
Women's Jail on suspicion of
attempting to murder her
husband, Bernard C. Bowie, now
a resident of Downey .
According to officers, Bowie
was at his wife's home at 8682
Garfield Ave .. Saturday night to
dis cuss upcoming divorce
proceedings.
Mrs. Bowie became upset,
pulled out a handgun and shot
her husband in the right arm.
police uid. As he struggled with
her for the weapon , it
discharged aaain. grazing him
in the head, police reported.
Bowie fmally wresUed the iWl
from bis wire and sought help
from neighbors, police said.
<>
Harbour
man arrest e d
in drug raid
A 46-year -o ld Huntington
Harbour resident was among 12
people arrested by Los Angeles
police na rcotics officers in a
series o r r a ids that netted
$500,000 in cash and 9.9 pounrut
of cocaine with a street value or
$1. 7 million.
Los Angeles police na rcotics
officer Roger Langner said the
cash. two handguns and seven
o the r firearms wer e seized
Friday at the home of Oscar
Ordonez, 16861 Marina Bay
Drive.
Langne r said the cocaine was
confiscated a t the Ce rritos
residence rented by Ordonez. Hf
said the Huntington Harbour
man was jailed on suspicion or
conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
mandate solar heatin1 systemt
th e y could require ne\li
construction lo include hook-UPI
for easy conversion to solar
power. 1
The study also notes that n~ construction and landscapjn
should take into considera ·
"solar access'' and not block
the s un 's ra ys t o nearb
buildings.
"With the State Energ
Com mission predicting that o
in every five California hom
will be using some form or sola
by 1985, it is imperative tha
Huntington Beach examine no
the issue of providing aola
a ccess in existing and futur
development," the report says.
The study should be complet
and forwarded to City Cou.nc'
members late r this year
according to city officials.
J im Barnes, associate planne
for the city. says it has beco
commonplace for the city US
p rocess a pplicati on s Cori
r eside nt i al solar heatin~
equipme nt. According to th~
report, city officials received 52~
permit applications to insta4
r esid e nti al sol a r heatin.
syste ms during the first five
months of 1981. :
The report says a residentia~· solar heating system costs up t
$4 ,000. There are various stat
and federal tax cr edits an
low-interest loans available fo
the purchase and installation o~·
sola r , the report states.
·'The c ity can encourage
installation of solar heating in
new development, or. as some:
cities have done, solar can be\
required in new developments,"
Barnes s aid. l
Cerritos and Davis are twgl
cities that require solar water
heating in new developments.
the report notes.
·'The m os t co mp-e l ling
a r g um e nt i-av o r of
con servation is economic :
saving a barrel of oi l can be up
t o 10 t i m es c h e ape r than
producing a new one." the study
says, adding that conservation
reduces reliance on importe4
oil.
' The report also states that
··passive solar designs " cat
provide between 85 and 9
percent of heating and coolin
needs for a typic al Orangl County home without the use
conventional energy.
A p ass i ve sys tem i
"accomplished thorugh bot
careful lot siting and buUdin
design ..... the report states.
This in c ludes ··.winter
exposure and summer shading
of south·facing glass ...
increased thermal mass of the
str u c ture t o ev en out
temperature variations ...
appropriate exterior colors and
vegetation to reduce artificial
cooling requirements.··
~\ Post-Halloween pumpkins getting
TRASHY TUESDAY & OTHER TROUGlll'S -You
pull out of your hilltop driveway this mom and recogniu
that up there on the upper deck, the Halloween pumpkin
still reposes with the mouse witch in the pointy hat riding
• a repneve
on top.
~ ----------------~ TOM MURPHINI ,k"f~~
H a l lowee n
pu n ki n st ill
displayed and here
it i ? t·h c f i rs t
T ues d a,· i n ~ovembe r
Election Day. as it
turns out.
You s hould go
back a nd consign the pumpkin to the trc1s h can This b.
after all. tras h da~-. You forget 1t. Gin· punkin a nother
day. Halloween pumpkins have a ,·er~· short life span.
compa red to othe r holida~orn a ments like Christmas
trees. Only holida~· turkeys ~o faster.
YOU'RE GOING TO BE late to work because the
trash truck is trying the impossible. The dri\'er is
backing it up your hm. Sheer agony.
Two ne ig hborhoods down. p eople are p ilch in~
punkins into trash cans. Here's one now.
He is peering lopsided from the top of the heaped
trash can. He's still grinning his toothy pumpkin grin.
Very sad sight. Laguna Beach people toss interesting t rash. In this
ba rrel over here is one of those mode rnistic paintings ull
splashed purple and pif\k. Sombod~· nailed a shelr across
its front. Few people appreciate art.
Downtown Laguna ta covered with Jo11en and
runners. Joggers and runners always look pim. They're
Unul1Ull group -i>0ttN on Cocut Highwa11 -amlUng joggera
working bard to live to 100. Have you ever seen a smiling
jogger?
ONE J OGGING COUPLE g rimmed through the
intersection of Legion at Coast Hi ghwa\' She was alread,·
so thin when you got a side vie w she disappeared . s .. · n<'xl
Halloween. she'll be decoration. ·
The worst looking joggers are ex-Jocks. 40 pounds
over their former playing weight. He wears an old
football jersey with laded red number 18 on the front und
the 1 on the 18 is partiall y torn loose. He has new jogging
A
shorts. new jogging s hoes and old knl•e handage:-.
wra pped all a round.
Knee wrappers a re supposed to mukc him forget how
the right one hurt that a utumn aft ernoon long ago when
the score was tied and the slant of the sun made the goal
posts look funn~· a nd it was fourth and goal on the Tustin
one and the quarterback said. "Okay. this is it; dive
nght on t wo .....
Why the hell do we always di\'e right"' Wh y don·t we
ever dive left? It's a right handed world , that's why.
Here's a happy runner . s miling and s printing through
the Emerald Bay curve. against traffic He looks likl'
distance ace Ralph Serna. ~o wonder he's s miling.
TRAFFIC BACKED UP in Corona del Mar because the
signals were out again. This time they had two handsome
Newport cops with mustaches directing congestion. The,·
should have had white gloves and whistles . While the
world stood still. you get a good view of the sandhlaster
guy at work on the Linen Shop.
You guess that isn't as bad as a bull in a china shop.
Costa Mesa trash cans are filled with old soap boxes
Tide. Vanish. Banish and Fluff. Costa :\1esa wins for
cleanliness and no bad a rt with shel,•es tacked on.
COSTA MESA T RASH trucks carr~· big s igns that
warn. "Look Out for the Children" und "Do ~ot P11". on
the Right -Wide Turns.'· Dive right. dive richt: it's u
riaht-handed world.
Tomorrow is hump day U you can Jua\ kump ovw
Wednesday you can slide through Thursdu· and lftell ll TOI~ '
Have a nice ·wednead•)'.
..
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT{TUffdly, November 3, 1981 "'' ••
NY E COMPO ·1TE TRANSACTION
OllOUTION• INCi.VOi , •••• '0111 , ....... '1011, ¥10WIU. llACllll(. , •• •ono .... 01 no" ••O COiCl•NATI noc11
I llCMAMOU AlllO Hl'O•TIO tY TMI 1'16'0 AllO llltfllll f
Commodities:
Beware of risks
If you go into the commudltlff futurea market
with a typical stake of $5,000 or under, ~he odd• are
overwhelming that you'll be wiped out -and fut.
One study showed tha~ 60 percent of commodity
traders with 5taJ<es of this s1ie 10tt out almott at once
to the professionals.
If you go into trading commodities with at leut
SS0.000. you have about u 50.50 chance of losing it all
or if you have a good tradlng plan and are amona
the lucky few, you might be able lo quadruple your
stake.
The time·hon· • ~ ored advice or stock·
brokers is that
•·you can never •,c
go broke taking a · -
profit." The truth is SJlVIA PIRJI~-? you ALWAYS WILL ~~
GO BROKE taking
s mall profits. As a
speculator in commoditie.s, you can win only if you
take very large profits to otrsel the many small
losses you invariably face. . .
With the odds so heavily slacked against fOU. at
seems crazy to trade in commodities futures -and
yet, increasing millions of you are, particularly now
that the new tax law makes all realized gains in
commodities subject ot a nat tax rate of only 32
percent regardless of how long the position is held.
Are there signs that tell you when you're starting
on the wrong track? Yes, says Susan Cole. president
or NYZ Communications or New York. Here are
Cole's tips -and if they frighten you out of the
com modi ties market. I 'II wager you 're saving
money.
-Oon't use the stock market as a guide to the
commodities market. Use commodities instead as a
forecaster of the stock and other markets. The
commodities market ·daily fluctuations average 25
percent of the investor's equity (margin>. but the
stock market fluctuations rarely reach 2 percent
daily. Therefore. in the commodities market there
are billions of dollars involved in a quick search (or
the .. real price." which usually is reflected in lhe
stock market much later.
Don 't watch gold. watch silver and ~opper
The silver market is made up mostly of silver users
tsuch as Eastman Kodak and mining companies >.
and professional floor traders. Silver is a good
indicator of where other commodities are going
Copper. too. is a leading indicator. because it is
primarily an industrial metal. sensitive to economic
changes.
Organize a plan -when to get in and out
and stick with it. Too many speculators. when facing
a loss. want to give it a bit more Ume
-Limit your bullish bias. In commodities. it's as
easy to sell short as it is to buy long. Many traders in
commodities got stuck in gold because they knew
only how lo buy and hold.
-Oon't news·jerk. The commodities market is
too smart and varied for people to make money by
making decisions based on international rumors or
on closing prices in Hong Kong or London.
-Never buy a commodity because the price is
low. The longs those expecting the commodity to
rise have lost all their capacity at these lows.
They'll need a lot of time to build up agam
Don't pyramid. This means adding lo positions
in your favor. You can be wiped out by a small move
against you.
Don't put too much of your capital on one side
or the market either too long or too short. and don't
trade tn markets that are ilhqu1d. relative to the size
of your position. You'll find yo11rseU locked in.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YOAklAPI FINI Oow-J-• ..,.,..
IOf -··No• l noc11s 0..-Hltlll Law C-Clll >O Ind .. ,,., 171.SJ UUJ .... 12+ 14.t7 10 T rn m.12 Jl3 10 JU.» J71,7h l 1'
• 1\lt IS Utl 107.lt 1oe.n Ul•AS 1m.ot+ 1.14 + 141 6S St~ )U ... ,.7 .0 lRll JO.II+ 4.JO
AMERICAN LEADERS
·UPS AND DOWNS
+nY. . , .. . I" +2'-' .2 .... ... ...... . , ....
• 1'.M
"" ""
NEW VORK (API -TM to110wlr19 1111 ..,._, IN -Y-Stoclt El<Mfllll
UOClll -.. .,.,. .. ,, t"91 have 00M lo1f
'"' n'IOlt ...0 -ll'le -be.o °" per<efll of ,...,.. r909rdlest of vollHN
tor Mondey. I i. Ho MCurlti.a ltlldl"9 botlOW '2 .,. M
l.ICMd Net *'° perc..iteee <~ •re'"' 21ttei-.nte -I.,. previous clotlnQ
prlc• •ftd MlllHY''J'~•
H-I.HI C"8 Pct.
I Mo• JW s~ + ""' VP ..... t MaretOll '° +tt"" UP ».J a "°"' lnu 20\4 + 211o Up 10.a 4 LtnMt' t ll1't + 2'-' VI' 11.1
s unEI -1' + • VP 1U •A--Pf 111 +14 UI' U.1 1 Ar•'l "°"' 11-. + 1141 Utt u .1 e CLC """' t1l'I + '"" V• 11.1 t 1.•11111 1 24141 + ~ VI' 12.'
IO Artlflll• lll' n • '"' up IU 11 HatCIWSW ltYi • 1¥1 U• ! 1,9 It M~1' j2~ + l'i' Up 11.1 1a G.t1 SMI e + I~ \Jp IU
14 W•<llOVll pl n t 1~ Up lo.I U l tftffl _. 11 • '" Up 10.6 16 Akol\llftd t '1141 • t UP 10.S OOWWI
Uil CllO
GOLD COINS
.. -ltlli
1 -" '"" " ,.,,. -'" ""' -·~ ''"' -" ti ... -'" ,,._ -"' ,... -" ,_. __
IU•--. ''"' -,. tt1'>-'" •I' -"' ---114 -" IS't -1-.
P<t. °" U.t B 11.1 10.0 : .. •• §ft 7J 1.0 ... a u .. ,
I ti t: l.J .. ,
lftdul S,ut,Jlll ,,.,, 1,11t.-
UUl1 1,110 ... 6S Stk 7."lt.D
WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YORK (AP) Nov 1
Adver><ecl T~*
Oe<llMCI JU UM,.,e"91f(i 321 Total IH~S l .. S
New h'9M 6' Hew low• It
WHAi ""'U DIO
HEW YORk IAPI NO•
METALS
ToOey .. 7
113 ,,.
134 n
10
.,.,..,
':;T1 .. DD
ltlO ,. •
~ .... cs..
111 16' 75> u 11
C••••• 11 'lt·U cenl1 • pound, U.S
••llnetloM. UN~c.,.b •--
IJtoc 4'144'\lo ce<lb. --· "'" ... ,.., Tl• 11 «191 ~Is W-c-lt• lb
A'-'-7..ao <eftb a ...,._, H Y
Merc.-y ~ 00 per 11 .. k.
Pl•""-'J.112,00IP'OyO»., HY.
SILVER
1•010 -1,.,,., -··".....,a.._ 8flly delly QUOle
GOLD QUOTATIONS
L-: ,,_,,,.,. llwlnt ~7.7J, eff '2.IS
L.MM: ~Ila Int MJl.H, off ti 1$.
... ,..,,...._,lltlftt~ft. .,,_._., ... .,.llff ... 01
1.11t1t11: let• fl••no .. ,, oo .... "'1 u.oo.
$40.00otllecl.
H•••Y a Mern'l•111 only dally q.,..1. M2t.U, If! $1.7S. ............ c-
SYMBOLS
I.
Yeager's
lllue liloOd
is showing
NEW YORK (AP> -If
they're going to break up the
Los Angeles Dodgers, then
catcher Stev~ Yeager hopes he's
not included in the dispersal
plan.
"I don't want to be traded,"
he said Monday after accepting
his one-third of the World Series
Most V;tluable Player Award. "I
just want more playing time."
Ron Cey a nd Pedro Guer·
ero. who shared the Series MVP
nor with Yeag e r , were
unable to attend the awards
ceremony sponsored by major
league baseball a nd Sport
Magazine.
The word at the Series was
that this would be the last time
around for these Dodgers.
Ironically, onl y days after
s haring the MVP award.
Guerrero was rumored heading
for San Diego in a trade for
s hortstop Ozzie Smith. But the
Padres rejected that deal.
If management is determined
to clean house. then Yeager is
glad the Dodge rs ended their
run with a world championship.
"This is our fourth time in the
Series." he said. "It was very
gratifying to finally win it,
especially if they are about to
break up the team.'·
Yeager thought there were
some lessons to be learned by
Series observers. The first is
that he can produce more than
his 86 regular season at bats
allowed and the other is that the
Dodger veterans are still quality
players.
•
,
Dally Piiat
TUESDAY, NOV. 3, 1981 HJF
CLASS I Fl ED C4
......... ~~
Offshore Club canoe racers rfrom left J. Eddie Fraser. A11d.11 \Ve1yand . Anqus Morrison. Jay Kearney. Dan J ohnson and Billy Whitford.
Mainlanders upset Hawaiians
Area canoe racers prove that hard work and dedication pays off
By ED ZINTEL
Of Ute Olllly I'll« SlllH people. Their herit age. n c:h w1lh
tradition and customs unique unto
the m selves, have been adamanll~
perpetuated and protected.
Recently, lht> competition between
rac:l'. considered the World Series of similar to the tradilional Hawaiian
outrigger racing. ~tandard. but was sleeker, faster and
/\ ppropr1ately named ·· Blazins more functional. The difference was in
Paddles, .. lhe Californians shocked the the wood. or lack of.
res t of the paddling world by defeating Whe reas the island-crafted boats
"This might have been our
last chance to do it collectively
and we did," said Yeageri'.
.. Basically. it was done by the
veterans. We showed we can
s till play ...
And the veteran catcher hoped
he can play more than he did
before-the playoffs.
Some surfers know about it a nd talk
about it and there have been infrequent
published accounts. but very few people
are concerned with or even aware of the
cultural warfare that's been going on
for years between natives of the
Ha waiia n islands and "mainlanders,"
as thev call us
them all. llawai1ans a nd Tah itians They didn't [1ke the fact 1n c luded , wit h a s tunn in g and were continued to be made oC the koa " wood (a lightweight wood derived from th t b h overwhelming victory. a we eat t em but the koa jungle tree), those born or the
There were ramifications to all of it West Coast were made of fiberglass.
Under manager Tommy
Las orda's platoon syst e m".
rl~ht-swinging Yeager was to
be used against left-handed
pitchers andlMike Scioscia, who
swings from the left side. was
th e man against th e
right-handers.
It"s a phenomena that stems from the
scarce availa bility of space in Hawaii
and lhe conti nua l s urg e , of
mainlanders to the is lands to live there
and feed off 1ls land.
there WaS a healthier and tl extended far beyond the fact the The Hawaiian racers had trouble with · 't .. hoales" had beat the Hawaiians at II I · th antfflOS'l y . . . h this . There was an unpara e m e
-John Van CIHve 1 eir own ~ame. finely specified dimensions or boats but
Thl• Hawaiians felt threatened. of because of the scarcity of the koa wood.
Somehow it seemed that. until
the Series against the lefty-lade n
New York Yankees. the Dodgers
never faced many southpaws.
In the example of s urfe rs, the
battleground has usually been the
wave-swepl oceans surrounding the
island s a nd th e casua lti es are
commonly in the form of fist fights.
damaged possessions like automobiles
or sometimes. extr eme bodily harm. ·
neigh bors of the Pacific Ocean has (•oursc. but there was also a conflict an tt was logical that Californians could
switched to another sport outngl(er thought over lechn1caltt1es like boat not build koa boats. canoe racing. Specifically. in 1978, the rivalr~ was s pecifications. The argument continued for three
rekindled when a small contingent Artt>r the sport had been introduced to vears and Hawaii"s most successful
based out of the Balboa Ba) Club in Californians some 22 years ago by the club, the Outrigger Canoe Club of
Newport Beach traveled to Ha w.iii .to legendary Hawaiian waterman Noah . Honolulu, claimed back the Molokai
challenge some 35 other boats in the Kalama. advancements m material led title the last two years over a very ll awaiiani..are bv na ture proud 41 -mile Molokai to Oahu lonl? distance to an outrigger canoe design that was <See MAINLANDERS, Page C2l '--~~~~~~-'-~~-='--~~~~-=~~~~~~~~
Jackson tries market again
Burris, Monge join group of 29 baseball free agents
From AP dispatclies
Major league baseball teams
in need of a seasoned slugger
now can contemplate Reggie
Jackson.
talk to any other tea m. but not
about money.
Those seeking a veteran
starting pitcher can include Ray
Burris in their considerations.
For those who covet a reliever .
there's Sid Monge.
Jackson, 35. is going the free
agent route for the second time.
After playing out his contract
with Baltimore in 1976, J ackson
signed a fi ve-year. $2.9 million
contract with the Yankees. In
his s tormy stint with New York
THOSE THREE, plus seven
others, declared their free
agency Monday. serving notice
they intend to go through the
re-entry draft on ~ov. 13. Any
player who has declared his free
agency -there are 29 so far -
can sign with his old team until
midnight Nov. 10 or after the
draft. In the meantime, he can
h e has had run-ins with
former New York Manager Billy
Martin. team owner George
Steinbrenner and Yankees third
baseman Graig Nettles. among
ot hers J ackson helped the
team to three pennants and two
World Series titles
HE HAD HIS worst season as
a Yankee this year. hitting .237
with 15 home runs a nd 54
runs -batted-in. Steinbrenner has
never indicated whether he is
TAM EILERTS
University High
University High's Trojans are In the race for a CIF
Southern Conference berth today, thanks to a 15-14 victory
over-Saddleback in Sea View League football action
Friday.
And no one was more prominent In the
victory than quarterback Tam Ellerts, who did a job in the
clutch when the Trojans needed it most, and for It, he is
the Daily Pilot's Player of the Wetk.
Eilerts, a 6·1, 175-pound senior who
transferred to University after playing
in the No. 2 role at Costa Mesa as a
junior, scored University's first
touchdown with a three-yard sprint
around his left aide, then took hls team
on the winning drive in the final
quarter.
Trailing, 14·7, Eilerts scrambled
and found Brad Guess open in the end
zone for the touchdown, then did it
blm1elf for the wlnnina maraln, ~ll~rt1
outrunninl three defenders tq the comer of the end zone
for the two.point converalon. •
Wttb time nmnlnt out, he flnllhed the Job with a
11-yard nm to maintain poo;seuion of the ball and run out
the clock.
"Tam came throu11t in the tlu~h for u1," HYI
Unl•enUJ CO.tb Rlrk Curdl. "His 1tatl1tJ~ weren't
overpo;o&~ tMll when It IGt dDWll to tlM nlUY.·tntty, be
did the job."
)
serious about re-signing J ackson
and has not talked contract with
his right fielder since spring
training.
Also opting for free agency
M o nda y w ere Montre al
rightander Burris: Cleveland
left·h ander Monge: righties
Larr y C hri s t e n so n o f
Philadelphia and Jesse Jefferson
of California: outfielders Je ff
Burroughs of Seattle and Tom
Poquette of Texas, and
infie lde r s Ron J ackson o f
Detroit and Bert Campaneris of
California.
Jackson and Campaneris do
not carry a pro f essional
compensation price tag because
the y are second -lim e free
agents. Infielder Bobby Grich of
California, outfie lder Joe Rudi
and pitcher Bill Campbell of
Boston a lso a re going to the
re-~ntry draft for the second
time so the team which signs
them will not be required to
compensate the club which loses
them.
J ackson is the second key
Yankee to signify his intention to
go for free agency. Left-handed
s tarter Ron Guidry filed last
week.
GUIDRY WOULD require
compensation under the terms
of the agreement which ended
the 50-day players' s trike this
summer . Premium players, as
der1ned b y a c omplicated
mathematical formula worked
out durine the strike, require
their former clubs LO be &iven 8
replacement player from a draft
pool stocked by major league
clubs which participate in the
draft.
One player who decided not to
become a free. agent la Phil
Garner, who signed a three-year
contract OD Monday ror an
estimated $1.8 million with
Houston. Gamer. 32, wu traded
to the Aatrw by Pitt.sbur1h late
in the season.
"General Mana1er Al ROien
<and a member of the beard> did
a areal aalet J~~,_on me," Gamer tUd. "At um .... of
my H1"1', my malD lll'C was ftnandal rennmenlll& • bl1 emten ... ....,.. ....
team I tboulllt ~ Wtn 1t a
Bruins face
very big
challenge
LOS ANGELES CAP > -
UCLA Coach Terry Donahue
acknowledges that his team
faces "a tcemendous challenge•·
during the remainder of the
regular season. That might be
understating the situation.
Th e Bruins fini s h the
campaign with games against
Washington, Arizona State and
Southern Cal. All three are
ranked among the nation's top
20 and have lost only one game
each.
.. Anybody want to take my
place the next three weeks?"
asked Donahue with a smile
Monday at his weekly meeting
with re porters. "We're going to
have to play really well, better
than we have all year , to have a
chance in all three games.
"As they say, the fans
r e membe r t h e games in
November."
One thing the Bruins. 3-1·1 in
Pacific-10 Conference play and
5·2·1 overall, have going for
them is that all three games are
at home, the Los Angeles
Coliseum, where UCLA bas
played only twice this season.
If the Bruins win all three
games, the worst they can do is
tie Washington State for the
Pac-10 title. and that's if the
Cougars finish 3·0.
Obviously. that's easier said
than done.
"Every game is a conference
ellminalion game, a conference
title game," said Donahue.
"We're going to have to ··
generate more on offense, we
have to do better in the kicking
game and we have lo limit the
opposition's offense to rewer
yards and first downs the rest of
the way.''
UCLA bad a rai:rQ euy ume
at Ore1on la1t I rd 1. wbaalaa •u. =.::,~,,.·~
L09 Alamlto1
MON°" Y'S llllUL TS ..... , ............ _.. ... ,
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........ 1 ...... 1 l.M
AIM retelt: °'°'*9 ft PltMwe, Oft "'9
lt•bound, Oi'Hl'll World No. 1. Scott's
~.Hurry·~. Time; :•US.
P aXACTA ll·Jl polcl $50.00.
tlUAllTallNOltHS
S•CONO llACa. 350 yorm. c .. mHfl CT-*S) n.• 6.IO MO ........ v .... (AMlfl uo uo
Mt Eosy ... !Cloris.I • 1M
AIM rac-. TllO eueior, J" P iccoli.
W.ylon A•o.,, Snoppy Penny. Sii-•
Umlts, •oc111 Fowr.
Time: 111.90.
Tto•• llA«. utyorcts.
"",..,,.., CN<ll 1Car9u) 7.20 uo JM
Tullu" IF,..,..,) • • UI Tiiiy Hetnpeft IH«tl 7 J10
AIM r41C*l: SltlSI A 1que,.., A1190l1 Pelley,
My JotW oi.t, Tlfly 0.-clrhre. S.. J-Go,
Li.e A Tiiiy Trip, OllCO Hvslle.
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SIXT., llAC•. 11/16 mu ....
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t<lyl1>9s..r. Time: l:JU/5
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•1•MTM 1tACa.•111 lw~.
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...... 0 Fltdl. Ploow Be """''-· HOily Order.
Time. 1:10.0.
NINTH llACE.61ur9-.
Clllc Patria IMeftol 2UO 10 IO '-II WlM't Wiiiow 1seo111,..1 sa •.eo
Its A llt Secnt ICnal lUO
Alto rocod: Min Cllormer, I Wo1111a
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Tl-:l:IU.
$1•XM:TA 1 .. 71 paid SJAl.JO.
U PICll llX 1-l·i ·J•I paid 1621.2' •1111 7l •Inning tk uts lllw llor•s). U PIO Sia
COflM>lotlWI pakl 113.00 "'"" 1,133 •Cm l119 tlclltts lleur llorwsl'.
TSWTM llACa. 7 turlOftgs.
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~"---SEATTLE MAAINEltS -It ...... Aid<
A .. l'becll. Niorbtop. A~ ... G..._,
111tclltr; Yonce M<"-"· ...,......,, Ofllll
Kim Allens c ... ., P•r-Mlf A .... •
WollGll, ouu~t, to Soll L9'• City OI ...
Poclllc C•••I L••eu t . Elt•Ol•d Al
Cllemw1, oullloldtr; Kori BHI, Ae11
MvHolmen and £ ... II Nl#IU, "'~ ... Jim Prffloy, llllrd beMl'llOll, ,,_ Ulolr
lftlllOf 1eoewe 1Ylt0fll. ......... u..-
ATLANTA BAA.YES -Fired Al G•ll..,_,, ,.,..,....,, ol _, OurMM -.i
tf .... c ......... Loegue.
LOS ANGELES OOOGl!RS -~
lllO controctt ol stew S!Wley, pltcW, olld
Oofl c ...... <*-· ,,_, ,......,._ .....
Pacific CMll Lt .. ut. PurclloHf tllO
<Ofltreca.,, o..g 9rocJI., ''"' --· olld Ak ll R-.,plt<Mr,f,_,S..AlltiMlioolh Ttaot ......,_, Sold c;.,.., wtln, l11flel0ff, to
A9'uqutrqut. A•ltHtd Jorry Grote.
cotcllff.
NEW YORK METS -Nomtf lwd
Ho,,.._, fl"* bote co«I\. •
llAKaTaAU ................ "._ ..... OITROIT PISTONS -Sltntf OIHll
H090fl guwd. Wal-Larry WrlgM, __...
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lllUtrllOl'-1 .._ •• ,Lo .....
NEW YOAIC ISlANOl!ltS -Colled yp
Nell H-vfNI. left •Int, lrofft lncll ........ lt
of Ille C.,lr.I HoO.oy Lo .....
Area high school football log
IUHIETLU9W
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II ., •
7 • • ' • 7 • •
I .
. Or~nge Cout DMLY PtLOT/Tuelday, November 3, 1181
Top p~os invade Los Coyotes
Gelberger, Archer, Snead included in SoCal PGA field
he plfla1 •DOtlt111t w1U be foe••• .. _._ ___ lliliil _____ _
Southern Calltorilli 1D 1neral and tM Los Coyotet J..
Country Club eoutM In Buena. Pan ID partlc:War 9SM
thlt week u tbe loCal PGA ~ la 1ta11d 1111~-~~----Thul'lday tbrouCb llwldar.
The event will be pl'fflded by a pro.am
featurin1 tuch namet at M Letnoa, the New
York Yankee manater,· Del IUee, Jim PrelOfl,
Bert Blyleven, Keith Jatkloa, Ci.ude Aklu, John
Larch, Dennil Hames, Harvey Korman, MelAan
Stevenaon and othen 1mon1 tbe eelebrlt ....
The four-day toumament la rea)ty a two·tn-one
event. A IJ'OUP of Nftion headed by Sam Snead
wlll play for a 1peclal $30,000 pw"M on Tbunday
and Friday and then wUJ be elil1ble for addlUonal
wlnnlnp lf they make the cut.
Jolnina Snead ln the field aH 1udl 1olf 1t1n
a1 Gene lJtUer, Art WaJI, Bob blbura. Dlek·
Mayer, Jack Fleck , Jerry Barber, Dow
Finsterwald, Lionel Hebert, Doua P'ord and Ed
Furgol. All have won either the Mastera, tbe U.S.
Open or the PGA UUe. .
Four members of the Minion Dollar Ch1b (in
career eaminp) wlll be in the fteld tndudina Al
Gelberger , George Archer, Dave Hill and Frank
Beard.
Other pros include Mark O'Meara of Lacuna
Niguel, Homero Blancas, Leonard Thompson.
Victor Regalado, Tom Purtzer, Calvin.Peete, Rod
Funseth, Jim Dent and Rod Curl alone with Dave
Barr, Peter OOsterhuis, Jack Renner, and John
Cook.
The City of Hope will benefit from ticket sales
that are $8 per day. First tee-off time Thursday
and Friday is 6:4~ a.m. with a 7 a.m. start on
Saturday and Sunday. • • • COSTA MESA HAPPENlblGS -The annual
Toys Fore Fairview tournament is Ht for Dec. 18
and 19 at Costa Meu Golf 8lltd Country Club with
an entry fee of $5 plu a ail\ or calh douUoa for
the hCMapltal. Men'• clab •e•beN II• •II Nev.
24 to sign ui> for deslre4 thnes, ti.en t». neet' will
Reeves' call could
have cost Denver
DENVER !AP> -A 19·3 lead with 112 minutes
remaining ought to be safe, and the Denver
Broncos apparently thought so. too.
But they hadn't taken into account the
Minnesota Viklngs' two-minute offense, whic h
produced two quick touchdowns in the closing
minutes artd nearly a winnin& field 1oal. But when
Rick Danmeier's lont fleld·toal try fell 1-.ort on
the final play, the ·Broncos efcaped with a 19-17
National Football League victory Monday night.
.. You have to wind up and hit it just right. and
"I just d1dn't kick it far enough."' said Danmeier.
Danmeier's chance for a winning boot was
made possible by an ill-advised decision by
Denver Coach Dan Reeves, who ordered bis team
to go for a first down on fourth-and-one at the
Bronco 40 with three minutes remaining.
"I may have done some stupider thin1s ln my
be U.rowo oPell to the 1ener1I public.
Play will be on both days and all player.1 muat pay In adva"ce of the tournament date. ror
further Information, contact chairman Steve
Pappas at the CO.ta Mesa club. /
Nov. 18 1J the annual membership meetlfti at
which Lime officers for the enauin1 year wUI be
elected. The next big men's club event ls the
annual turkey shoot Nov. 20, Zl or 22. • • • FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S Brian Lindley •u
low medalllt with a 2'74 over four roundl but lolt
his first match-play outing to Randy Hua te tbe
Weit Cout Amateur Goll Association touru .... t.
LiDdley was the runner-up In the U.S. Amaa.tar
championships to Nathaniel Crosby receatly in
San Francisco. ••• LOOKING FOR A CHANCE to learn to play or
to improve your came?
If so, better get in touch with Rancho San
Joaquin Golf Cour se professional Matt
Smederovac.
Matt is staging lessons for beginners and
others interested in improvement Monday thrOP1h
Thursday evenin111 al 6 o'clock.•
··Each lesson lasts for an hour and those -.tM>
sign up will have the same night each week for an
bpur for six weeks ," he says. "The only charge is
$17 ,SO which goes almost entirely to paying for the
range balls each player uses during the lesSObS. ··
For further information, call Matt a\ tbe pro
shop, Ml·S522. · · . • • • ,
CHIP SHOTS -Winners in the rec~nt
Newport Center Association's golf ball chasing and
tippling tournament at Irvine Coast CC have been
determined.
Men's low gross: Michael Drucker . 71; Dick
Dillon. 73; and Jim Jones, 74. Low net: Bob Ev8"1,
65 ; Joe Ordway, 66; Ralph Rollins, 68: John LDlle.
69. Calloway: Jay Swigart. 64 ; Bruce Stewart, SS;
Lee Powell, 70; Tom Wh eeler and Ra lph Rodbeim.
72.
In the women's competition, Millie Dickerson
was low gross winner at 80 with Rose Harold
second. Lanelle Caren. 71 . won low net with
Georgine Laursen second at 73. Sharie KritzbePg
won calloway ... Although he didn't compete
during most of the second half of the season.
Laeuna Niguel's Alan Taple captured top puttinc
honors for the TPA tour for 1981 with a 28. 70
average. He did play enough rounds to qualify for
the title and was officially declared the winner tbls
week. Mark O'Meara, also or Laguna Niguel,
finished 5Sth on the oCCicial money list for 1981 to
gain an exemption for all of 1982. He earned
$76,063 for the year, his first on the tour. To• &l'e
was . the official money winner with S37S,69t in
official earnings.
life, but I must hav·e been real little when I did i::;;;===:s::=============;r;;s:" them." said Reeves. "Thank God it didn't cost us
the game.·· ·
Minutes earlier. the Vikings, using a hurry-up.
no-huddle offense. had scored to draw within 19-10.
Reeves' decision backfired as fullback Larry
Canada was stopped for no g•in by defensive end
Randy Holloway. Two plays later. the Vikings.
made it 19-17 on Tony Galbreath's second TD of
the quarter.
The Vikings got the ball one more time with
2:09 left. With Tommy Kramer finding the open
receiver repeatedly. they drove to the Bronco 26.
On Ui.ird down. Ted Brown was dumped for a
2·yard loss by Denver comerback Perry Smith.
and Danmeier came on for the 46,yard field gQal
effort, which fell about s yards short.
Smith. who started the game in place of Louis
Wright who had suffered a strained calf muscle in
pre-game warmups, said he was just trying to
make a solid.tackle .on Brown·s run ... On
something like that. you either make it or miss it. I
made it.
"We were s urprised they went into the
hurry-up offense so early. We couldn't gel set on
defense, and they hurt us."
The first hair ended in a 3·3 lie as Danmeier
and Fred Steinfort traded field goals. Denver went
ahead 5,3 midway through the third period when
Steinlort, mired in a season,long slump. connected
from 49 yards out.
College football
SolUfdeY'I col .... IOotDoll KllOdult:
WHT
WolNfllileft _,. UCLA .. Coll-CI:•> use .. CalHonN lff•-11.MV ... lott<,_St. .... ~ .. Cal St.-,114..,_ ,, p ..... )
w.,omlng ot SOii 0...,. St .. 11
Or990ft ot WOif!.....,.. St.
StOflfewf ot 0...,... St.
Utoll St. "'· L-.. ocll St. ol AllOMlm SIMIUl'll (7:•>
AlllM P9cNIC OI $IMn\o St.
St. Mo,., •• oc Cal l.lll?ltf911 C.....,_·""* OI Lo V«N 11.-1..-.. Wlllttler P~ s-.lotCol Ny C"""-l C.I St.Ille_ ...... OI Socr.,,..o 11.
Oc~ .. ,..,_."'-,
lento OM• .. Sen ,,MCCK• k. Humllolfl St. ot Col Swte HoyWonl
Chico St. ot UC O...lt
llOCllt••
Soft J-St. ot Ari-It., II
Ml-I el c.14"' ...
IYU .. ~lt.
Ut.eflot .... -.tco
MVTMWelT
l aylerOIA"'-.11
TtUIOl......,.,11 N..., ..... Olli.Mme It.
lllceatlMU
H-•11 at Tau.El P-
TCU ot T•-Ttcll H-Mealce St. ot TlllM, 11 IN'-St. ...... ToutlC. ~14""-St. MtDWUT
1 lllM68 ot llllkflllall Otllell.•~
Mkll ..... IC, It .... 11W11Mrll Pw .... I_
WC1<1MMot INMalla
Olllollomo ot IC-St.
OewtlO TOOi ot Notre Dome
Orelle ot ~ IMHIOI•
........ 0-.... llSt.
Ml-i,o. • CoM"" MkllleM ~St. ot ClllclllMtl
•01ttn1 MklllOllll ot Ktftt SI.
Olllo u ... ...,,_.,. llllftoll T ......... .,,. Mk"'90fl
IOUTM
Clem-ot "-ti! CorollN ,.._ st. .. ...,.. CorollllO 51
Poclfk et lowtll CMollM
Wl~lllta St. 01 T-...
lttntwclly OI V"'*'11111
NOf1fl Te-It. et.._,,.,,
Miami, ,. .. ot t<IOride St .. 11
Ml191 ... St. .......... Mlllht .....
Mltrytolld 14 TUIMW, II Oeorelt 14 t<twlft <0.-11ot12:0 p.m 1
llllcll ...... OIVMI ow. ...... ,_
NI La1111NN ot t.oullvllle
Het¥n at Wllllofll & Mary
Monllall ot .... loc:lll911 St. ,._ .. De....,.
C. T-... •tf01tCeroll110 t......_. Todlot *"'"'°St .. n Te ....... lk ... 1 ot SW.._..._, II TlleC~•TMuw-CNtkM-..,11
•AST
Pitt ¥L 111""9n01 f olt -~. N.J, Ttm"9 et WHt Vlt'9lfllo ,,,._ ..... .,.,
MelyC--ot~ ,,.. .. ,,~ .......... c.. ....
lhctllllll•C.-.... °',........ .. ~ Y ... OIClr'Nll
Oet--•~ ........ ~ .,_ ..... ll&Md
,
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
lllAMO HIW
"" vw DllSIL ltAllfT
FACTORY STICKER
$1050
DISCOUNT
$955
SALE PR1ee
'7095 (2793) (2oe881}
lltAMDHIW
1911 ISUZU
414 PICKUP
F.\CTORY s ilCKER
. $131
DIOOOUNT
ttH
SALE PRICE
'7395
-. ( 1273) (700ISM)
1910 YW DASHm
DllSll WAeOM
4 •Pffd trenemllllon .
AM.fM ater90
& • aunroot.
(149879)
... ...
,,
LUCKY GEORGE Gt•or ge Burns b all
:-,miles as he stand!, tn front of Chrt'.'>tmas t n•t.•
"tlh four Plad><n Pl<H·malcs. Tht• -.<·t.>nl' "u-.
part of a tcl~,·is1on ti1ping for tht.• ·Gcor;.!l'
Burns· ECJrh·. E<.1rl~·. Earl" Christm a-.
............
Spl'ciat.·· to air );o,· 16 on '.':BC·T\'. Channd
.i Tht: taping' was held al •Playbo.v '.\tanst~>n
Wt'sl :.\londay night in Bev('rly Hills Tht•
Pia~ matt•s wt•re unidentified.
~:Church buildings not
~· J
• 1mm.une
~ L 0 S ANGELES ( AP ) -memorial to 18th century mystic
->· Church buildings aren't immune Emanuel Swedenborg .
the cathedral corporaUon .
from the so-called "acts of God" The visitors center, wUh ita
t that plague Soulhern California massive stone fireplace reading
-earthquakes, landslides and room and big bay win dows
T he cathedral deterior a ted
while voices were raised to save
it.
brushfires. overlooking the ocean, was a
tf' A cathedral, a historic mission travelers' r etreat along the
''But there was no one cominl
forward with t he mllllona o f
dollars necessary to do it," say1
Brown .
' church and a tourist attraction coast.
"' are a m on'g the religious The chapel is a popular spot 1 •b u ildings that h ave been for weddings and Martin says Th e last service was held on
Christm as Day, 1979 . The
c athedral wu de -consecr ated on
Dec. 26. O n Feb. 2 , 1980,
demolition began and the site la
now a parking lot .
destroyed or heavily damaged that many couples who have
by natural disasters in the la.st been married there and bad
··~ few years. their reception in the visitors
"The landslide area runs from c enter Gt\ a v e f o r m e d a n
.. the beach up the hillside close to association lo restore it. A new
the chapel," says the Rev. foundation and new floors will
E r nest Martin. "For two or have to be laid and the heavy
• three winters we had very heavy stone pillars that held up the
'• rain, and down under a certain roof will have to be reset, Martin
·'The booth where they keep
the car k ey• used to be the
church sacristy." Brown sa ys.
One of California's most s ays.
famous landmarks, the glass T}lere isn't a happy ending for
, and stone Wayfarer's Chapel, St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral.
overlooks the Pacific Ocean The downtown cath ed ral bad
The bishop's throne n ow sit.a in
th e lobby of the diocese office.
An d the cathedral congregation
meets in th e ch apel of Good
Sam aritan Hospital. < from a perch atop an ancient been declare d a hist oric
-landslide area that reactivated landmark for its renection of
in the late 1970s. California architectural style -
..: level there 1s mixed c lay which red tile roof, sand-colored wails,
started cracking and sliding. a huge redwood cross in the
An other victim of t he 1971
earthquak e w a s the S an
Fernando Mission Chureb built
in 1812 right on top of t he San
Andreas fa ult line.
T he cracks in the ground got sanctuary and gold-leaf covered
deeper and wider, and our blg mosaic tUes on lhe walls .
stone visitors center gradually The cathedral was built in 1923
moved. be fore earthquake standards
"T he restrooms couh\n't be were the law and many repairs
used and the plantings wefe had to be made to conform tothe
ruined. We had to close the code. But lhe 1971 San Fernando
visitors center two years ago." Valley earthquake was the
The slide area missed the cathedral's death blow.
'·It was j ust a n old a dobe
mission building; the m aster
beams were cracked, t her e were
cracks in the walls and it was
never u sed again "' says
Monsignor Fran cis W eber,
administrator of the mission. chapel, designed by FrJlllk Lloyd ··There were cracks in lhe
·· Wright Jr., by a few feet. The walls and the celling and there
chapel and visiting center were was a possibility of breaks in th~
built by the Swedenborgian huge timbers at the top," says
, Church o f American as a Charles E . Brown, secretary to
T h e standing w alls were
knocked down, t h e r ubble
cleared away and a new mis.sion
church was rededicated in 1974.
DllTH NDTICIS
)1i\RTIN )Jemorlul Chupel. Pomonu
RllEA ~ M A H1'1'.':.,1•1'-1n t·har!!l' o r
rl'!-.1denl of "e11 port Bl·..ich. arra~emenl'.
C J Pal>" t' cl a \I .1 ~ 11 n La Pl. \~"TE
Saturday. Ot'tob<:r :H. l!J81 in )I A R y .\ L I (' E
Pomona \'ulll•\ Cnmm11n111 La PLANTE r"'s1den t l)r
lto!>pital. Pomona C' J Ill' ~l·1qx>rt Bt>ach Ca Pa:.-.t•d
11 a!> born on \pril 9. 111911 ID a\\ <I~ on :-.;01 l'ml>er I 1981
Earls. l\entu«k~ lie mo1 ed Shl' 1-, sun 11 l'd h~ he1 -.cm
to Pomonu in 1936 from John and 3 ~randchildrcn K e ntu ('k~· and li1 l'd 1n :\luss of the Hesurrection
Pomona until l941 al \lh1ch \\Ill be on Thur ~da1 .
time he moved to ~c11 µort :-O:tl\ ember 5. t981 at i 30P:\I
Beach. Ca Mr ~tartm ''as at Sl .lohn \'i.mne\' Catholic
a member or tht> )l..i,nnic Church. Scr\'kl•s 'under the
Scholars hip
awarded
~l ond:n. :-.:uH'mber 2. · 1981 Whitney T. Slade of
at ; 3<l.PM at B11ltz Bergeron· Oak Ridge, Tennessee,
Smith & Tuthill Chapel. gNAd.soo of Costa Mesa
)Jass or the Resurrection r esidents Mr. and Mn .
Tul'Mlay. ~Ovt.>mber 3. 1981 L .B . Stafford, hu ~n
at 10 OOAM at s1 Joachlm·s awarded a scholarship
Cutholu.' Church Interment to st u d y a t t b e
:.en ice:. wall he held at University of Tennessee.
I u u P :\l at F. ,. erg re en Sl d is th f M Cemt-tery. R1nrside. Ca a e e IOD o r .
Serv1cci. under the direction a nd Mrs . Edward C.
or Ball1 Bergeron.Smith &: Sla de . Mrs. S la de, the
Tut hall West('liff Chapel for m e r B e v e r 1 y
:\fortuar~ or Costa 646·9371 .• S t afford, ls a 1956
:: Lodge Ill Sacraml'OlO.direclion o r B ulll g raduate of Newp o rt
Harbor High School and a
graduat.eofOrangeCout
College.
Kentucky. Ill' 1~ sur1 11t•d b~ Bergeron-Smith & Tuthill
a daughter ~1rs Duns :\I Weslrltrr Chapc.'I :\lortuar~
Howerton o r Huntin1i1ton 646 93il Beach. Ca . 2 son!> George ARR O\'O "1cT1T1ous au11Mns NAMI ITATUlleNT ~ W. or Cucomonga. Ca and II ECTOR RI C A R 0 0 r ... touowlne 1H1nons are dolne
Rhea Jr or Indio Ca 9 \RROYO. agt• 17. a St'n1or at llUSIMUU grandch ildren and to t:d1;.on tl 1gh Sc·hool died lal HOVSEHOlO.GARAGESALH
I · . ' OIRECTORY; 1111 HGSO. SJI• W. great·grandch1 dren instantly ID JO automobile Flloh1Awnua,S.rtt•An•,CA'271M.
Private ser\'lces wt'r!' held arc1dt'nt earl\' Saturdav RICHARD FRl!Ot!RICIC
'' ond inlerm{•nt wai> at Fure"t morning October 31. t98i MARTIN, 5>14 w. F110111 Awen11e.
La"n Col'ina Hills Todd llertor wa:. an honor studl'nl Sant•:i~:'':'r J 0 s E,. H
al Echson llu?h School and FRASCHETT1. 1111 Burundf. an important member of the Levc•dla,CAft02A.
ff
' '
t r. . " !::
IALT%1UGYOM
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCLlff CHAl'IL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
rtHCtllOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAllY
627 Matn St
Hunt1nQton St!ach
536-6539
rAcwte ••w MIMOIUALl' .. I
Cemllert Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1f1c View Drive
NewPort Beach
644-2700
MICOIMlal MOHUARllS
Laquna Beach
4!M·9415
Laqun• Hills
768-0933
San Juan Clplstrano
495-1776
HADOm LAWM-MT. OU¥(
Mortuarv • Cenwttarv Cren-etory
1625 Gleler Ave-
Coata Mesa
540-5554
E(l I on I I' "h School l'ross Tiiis ·11vSlnen Is co!l<luct.o by • ' 1., general pe'1neNl!tp. Countr1 team !IC' \las ulso Rk lWdF.Martln
a t t 1 ' t' p h ' ., 1 r a 11 1 a n d Tiii• ''"""'"" was m.s w1t11 .,_.
limohed in ·h1:. chu;r h the c_i.,cie,... .. 0r.,.c-t'fonOc1 . d J0,19'1 llunt IDl(ton Beach Kini( om ,.11 ... ,
llull or Jehovah Witnesses. Publlsl!ad Or-Coell Oally fi11otj. Belo1 t•d son of Felipe and Nov. J. to. 17, 2A, 1111 • M
Yolanda Arro10. belo\ ed brother of f-~e lipl' J r .
:\11guel. Consuelo and Eltdu 1 •• ----------1Arro~o F'nends ma~ rull at ll'ICTln"~~llMllS an~ time at P1crl'e Brothers MAMlllTATUil .. IT
Smiths ~Iortuan Funeral Tl!• tottowlft9 PffW"' .,. f01ft9
II I d l d buMMHet: se-rvices \\'I >C con ur e TUSTIN FINANCIAL SERVICll, on Wednesday. ~ovem~er 4, uua Red Hiii Avenue , Tu111",
198 1 at 11 ·oOA M ut the ca111orlll•"'80
Huntington Beu ch Kingdom ltH w~:r 1:. ~!~:'.'·~ii.= H all . 19100 Delawure . ., ..
Huntington Beach. Ca with I wenc1e ~· M<Or-. t4'21 ,. ..
B r l h F' " k S h 1 t Hiii ·-·Tustin, Colllfomla ... .o e r r ,1 n . u z Tiii• '""'""' 1, condllcted lly • ofricraling. Interment will be .. ,..,., _,,,....,
m Good Shepherd Cemetcrl'. w ..... J.NlcGr-
Huntington Bench Ca lie Tiii• ...-... -m .. -"" IM · ' Ceufttf Ci.rtl of Or.... CollntY .,. will be lovingly remembered Octotlef s, "''·
by rumily and f riends .
Piert·c Brothers Smiths'
Mortuary directors. 536-~
· BECK ...C llllC(
ELLEN RAY BECK ,~~~~~~~~--..
resident or Costa Mesa. Ca .' •TATIMe .. TOf'AUNDOMMH1' since 1953. Passed away on Of'UMPf'"ICTIT1GVS
October 30. 1981. She WMS a Tll• ,.~:.:!':!'::111 lln• member of the Al·Anon .._...,.. .. -".,. ,.k,.._ Association as well as beln1 e...-.._:
A member of Sl. Joachim·" A t. T •11fTaitl"ttllU, ,.. ..... Cu~hollc Church Sht' Is •7;;.""r.'c',~1"r:tC:::t:! .. "•"'• survived b> her husband ,...,.,.. ...... _,.... ... °'.,. John, 9()n William R of c-ttt .. ,,...,
Nlpo1r10, C• • John P Bt'ck f;A "=1:.,..,..· 1 a.w...,, ,,...,.,,
of CO!llll ~eaa , Ca and ~ .-.., "..._, ll'YIM, CA
David A. bHk of Uteh. wu. ·
PmClllOntmS dauicbter11 Eltubeth 8 "* ..._ -~., • ~ lmOA8WAT Schltkher ol San CtemtntC', ---=r=-. NOllTUMT Ca, and Barbara J . Beck of Tlll!I ..._.. -,.... ......
U01t'oedw8¥ Santa Ana. Ca , aho CielllllY GMI•.._..~"'°"'
CGlll.... u r v I v 1 d "J 1 l .. "" MH1IO IJ'IDdthUdreft RedUUoft of "'--~-------•h• R()SIU'Y "H ........
\
Ruling OK'd
SACRAMENTO <AP>
-A defendant can be
convicted of soliciting
a n o ther to commit
m urder even if the judge
doesn't define "murder"
to the jury, a divided
state appeals court has
r uled. By a 2·1 vote, a
panel of the 31'd District
Court of Appeal upheld
the conviction of Rulon
Goldy.
i ....
_,.,_
_l .......... _,.,.•lol r-r••• r-•l•' t .. --...rwe , ............ lol =· .. "',. ._•lAI -~· l\ft>lol ... Afl>t'ltto., IOI --·-· .. ., ... .,. Cw.I-· SiiMlllllttlt••t. \ ............. ................ c .......... Of!Wl .... ..._ .... 1 ·-.......... =·-... ,. .........
.-SS. tmST·
llOIT, FIMMICl
=~.;or 1 ...... _°"9tt l ...... _ .......
-, .. i-_, .. _
...... an TD•
AlllllllCDIOJS,
POSIUlS&
Lm &FtM ...__
Cot ..... ..... .. Ml.,.. ... t..1 •1'-.... _....
IAST1el
Slll.000 Only Sl0,000 down 1tt1
yo. into-*" totatb' ff"· modeled 4 Bdrm bome. ;:J• comer lol, Kol too! Won't tut. caU
EQUAL HOUStHO ~ SEA COVE ! OPPORTUNITY ,.0,flTffS ,....,,.tWke: 71'-631-6990
All real u t i le ad· :.~~!:;~~:.,~It! ~. ~~!
lb' Federal Fair Hous· . ~".,IU"
l\t '(.1 ri ii I c-.i~ I\· ilt\
'I I I I' 1111
•IAYflOMh
IOATSUP
S54t000f
WOW ! Lowest priced
....
Auui.nable loln, 20001q.
ft, mo~ owe with
P.ooo~. 5JMM5.
IWflflSCCM>O
S ~. 2 ba, MW cpU 6 drp•i....~P ctUnc! Only '134.uuu. Xlat nnan. Alt.
144-lW 1• 1• I~ 1• 1• ,..
inl Act ot 1111 which lK dowA, $15,000 total
mall.es It IUepl to ad· price. 4 Bdnn, 2 bath,
vertlte "any pref'emice, family are~. fireplace
llmJtation or dll· Coau .... •best area.
erlmlnation 'baaed on Call for more details.
race, color, rellcloo, ~2313 bayfront home ON ••••••••
... -·--11•
1ex, or national oricln.
or an Intention to make
any such preference,
llmilation, or dla·
crlmination." nut nm -This newspaper will not
: 11.nowillfly accept any
-advert 1in1· for real
: ntate which ls In viola·
-Uoooftbelaw. , ... ---Je -W) --mt ----.. ..
Oll --.. .. -•• ·-•• ---,. ..
Ml) ----
,. ,,. ...
UlOJ ~
111015: ....,.,....,.. ........ ~ ...... ..., ... =.,.. ,..,.. f ~. n.
DAILY Pl.Of •1• 11 • ....., ...... flrtt
ll(Orrtd iwHrflo• ...,.
••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.., . 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * Sl51DOWM * DIWllATI! 4 Bdrm 2 bl pool home
Auume hl·balance loan. owe atraieht note. SUCC~REALTY
~7981
GIANT FAMILY
HOME. $117.000
THE REAL
ESTATERS
BALBOA COVF.S. L1r1e
4 Bdrm, 3 bath, double
fireplace. covered patio,
plus much men! WIU
AITD-or sell-SO<.f.,
.._OIT 75% or lease option! ,_,,....,. Your choice!
NI.IX ..... ..,,,..,.
Steps to beadl. ' up " 3 •••• 1 down. 2 baths each.
Furnish for winter /aum· ·-· •*•'•75--7060••*•• 1•-111!11!111!111111111!!~11111!!~ mer rentals. Good his· r-tory. Fee. Priced al ,_ ______ 111!11•1
ms,ooo. Ii)\~~ associated
HOo' "f :1 · ..i (A • ..i ';)
" • " " • 1 t. • • ~
4IDIMS
POOL-WA
~RedEstate
VILLA IALIOA Open Wednelday l·S
1554 Eaat Ocunlroot.
Irvine Financial Corp
f1S«10, ~.,.
Three lovely coodoll In
1st claaa building with
complete security·
r1111ln1 in price from
$162,500-$3115.000. 1-------61107300
Lovely 2 story home on
quiet cul de sac
Eastside Costa Men .
Secluded master suite, f'!!!!!!!ll••••••!! H.J. $89,900 · 4 Br. Great home. Na me your
terms . covered patio. Custom
designed pool and spa
Great usumablt f1111nc·
ln& ! Only Sl5~~~·'·'·! toaee.~1171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
DllAMHOUSI
Fantastic' Bdrm. 2 ba,
cul·de·aac home In Mesa Verde. 3 fireplaces.
1or1eoua family room. Quality thru ·out .
Sl00.000 in auumable
loans at 12'7c. Only
$179,900. Call now
m .5370
ALLSTATE
Bll.r.
RHLTORS
Sp1du•
5'•!1 'v. Hlahly up1r1ded 4
S..1.tl'lvllo· . ,... Excellent Costa Mesa
nei&hborhood1 Livlna room features cozy
fireplace. Sunny family
room! 3 large bdrms
Secluded yard on cul de
sac. Flexible terms !
Call 673-«560
HAUOlalKI
An exquisite offering
Eluant & spacious 3
bdrm + ramily room . l
lev. home w/panoram1r
vista or har bor ,
coastline. ocean & n11ht
lights. Prestige. co m·
fort. luxury & security.
Reduced, now $739,000
(Owner (Lr1ancmgl Agl
640-5560
REALTORS bedroom and family
room home located on the former model street
or Spyglass Jilli. This
h o'm e h 11 a 11 t h e
amenities you would
want. larce farruly room
with wet bar Incl cozy
used brick fireplace:
r, ...... -SOYICCS ....... _.. '*•t"1•> .....
EMIYMlllT &
l'lfPWTlltl -·--, .. , ...... """ .iir.~ M.9•-..... ,,.
MEICllMW AM_. -""*llWf"ll -... _
lljl) = ....... .i. -om r...,,.,.,,._.....,. -r ... -°""' -'"' .. '°. -f\o/Mw• -c.,.,.,M"' ----~ --. -.... --._, -·---... ""'~ ....... -.M111 ....... ,...,.. ..... ...,
OI''"'""'•~ -..... -=~= --........ ("--!llor1•ni1..,-H1 .. , -~T-,HtPl.SI'"° --MATS & lllAllllE
£ .. OT ~· ... _,._,....,... --·.11--•:--......... --. ... ,,....,... --·---. ...... o..u --~·"'· -... ,,. ..... -TIMSPtllATIOtl
lwtnll .... r .. .,....)Wo .... .... llfnn<lon •ut -()<too.,._.. 11• -" .. .-... ... Tr.-.nTt•ui .. ... !:~!'.'"i.,u .... -a-.. ~-·I( ....
--.11 ....... -lftr_\'_ ... ... :=11 ......... -Ntil>n•~ -,,,..,.. -v-lllilll ........ ...., -_ ........ -AITIS, IMNlllJ
C-ot .,.,
u ...... -A ... , -AIM•Kolt> -a11w 1711
i:., 171) ~ '"' flll -17 ...
r'tffM t t1ll ..... ·~ -· 'ftrl '-•wt :tl>i -fl» KM .. Mlillu flXi .._...... mt ..... <r.• :.. .... ~ ........ ., •i• llU "" •u• "1<1
""" mo P~f• tl(j ,_ ... fl• ..._ .. .,. --17» _.., .. f!IO ....... r.p
~ ri: -1.,... -~ -v .... ,. .... -v .... tm
AfTIS, ll(W
Gfft«•I -
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Rm-
SIOl.000
S Bdrm-huge back
)flrd-1reat for first
lime buyer don 't mus
th11 one. Call now' '@ SEACOVE PIOPERTIES
714-631-6990
IAIGAJM! COLLEGE PK! The best priced home in
Costa Mesa. only
S1Z7,000. 3 Bdnn, 2 bath,
bnd: finpla~. Owner
will carry financing with
20% down. Call rtght now , it won·t last
541-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
H )'OU need qualified
emplo~ ees. D11ly Pilot
classified ad~ can put you
In toucb v.1th Ille nght
people
If it's got
handles
you'll grab
a sale ·•
faster in
Dally Pilot
classfflld
Ids. Clll
... 5'11
FtXIAUPPEI
A little redetorating to
make thu large rambl·
lllg ranch home a rt'al
dandy. Big lot and lots or
trees. Askina Sl73.900
NEWPORT CREST
4 IMVESTORS
Ocean vu, 4 8d & 3 Ba.
fam rm. wet bar, din rm.
pool. tennis. walk to
beach. $210.000. Submit
any orfer. Bob or Dovie
Koop, act 7S9·1221
SIOOODOWM
LEA.SI OPTION
2NEWPORTHOME.5
3 Br 2 Ba cottage LIKE
NEW ! Sl79.<XX>.
AND
deluxe ADULT CONDO
WITH VIEW. $135.000
CALL NOW Rae
Rodgers. agt Remax 1
631· l.266 I
CHOICEIUY!
$104,900
Highly upgraded 2
Bdrm. Irvine Condo
Beautiful waJI cover·
ln1s. levelors. dnpes
plus pool. spa. rec room.
Take over existing
financin&. CalJ for de·
tails! 646-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
CLIFFDllVE
VIEW ·
SUPERB4 Br3 Ba home
with FAMILY ROOM &
POOL. Traditional Cape
Cod desl1n WITH A
VIEW rrom almost
every room. Low down
payment and AS·
SO MABLE FINAN·
CING. Call rot private
~ftoooEF.S. •st
61H316
OMEOFAKIMD
Located in Costa Mesa
this 3 Bdrm home Is
highl y upgraded .
Amenities include pool,
custom spa, to·law unit.
sauna. add-on family
room , remodeled
kitchen & more Assume
SllS.000 In loans Asking
$178.000
TR,\Dll 10\,\I.
RL\I T'
631-7370
ASSUMAIU LOAM
Fantullc locallon 3
Bdrm. 2 bath. Bear
Creek rondo Located in
Costa Me-sa 3 years old Xlnt rin anctng.
$134.950
Lar~ yard with spa and
a terrific front row view
of the ocean and city
U&hta. Priced to sell fut
at 11129,000
O.M. ... 1••Ur 760-MlS
PICTUlll PIRfllCT
Parklike greens In
lrvlne. 3 Br 2 Ba end unit
on cul-de-sac. F\nuci.og
can be auum., plus
owner will assist. Ready
lo move in at $156,000
RCTaylorCo
! .:·' ,, •'()J
llST Of IWffS
3 Bdrm 2 t,1J Ba ,
fi replace. Italian
ceramic tilt in UviJI&
room. dinina room.
kitchen and entry
Fabulous mountain and
part views. Exceptional
flnancing! Reduced to
$234,SOO
JACllSUTY
67 70
OCEANFRONT -3 UNITS
,..... toe ........ t.NcL °""' ...
flit.ct .t I 2Ctfo Wtntt. $640,000.
BAYFRONT -POIBLA -YU
lMp la tpoc .... 5 w. ' ..........
.... ,.... .......... $900,000 .....
aecl to S 1,550,0001Nt lip. FU L~MD
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC
RFAI ESTATE
JtS Manne lwe
81lboa Island 673-6900
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES
PIMIMSULA OCIAttflOMT
"EARLY BA LBOAN" 4 BR 2 Bath
shake with on site parking for 3
cars. An "entertaining" front porch
wiih f antastlc ocean & Catalina
view. Priced to sell at $575,000.
0.... W•mDAY t-4 ....... ..,
Pier -Slip -Beach + Extra Lot. S
BR. Bayf roat. 12,100,000.
• • • • •
YllR llllllll llllY PINI
J Lll '-.,[IAY Nt>VI Mlil 14 I I ... : <> H A N r; l co u N r 'f c A L 1 F o t' N 1 A / L, t "' r ..,
• I
,.
·Troubled Onofre nuke urtit fired up
B y DAVID KUTZMANN
Of .. D ... , ...... ltaft
As their troubled Unit 1
reactor al San Onofre returned
to active duty today, officials at
Southern California Edison Co.
were quietly hoping for
$omethlng they haven't had for
much or the past two years :
A nuclear power plant that
runs, and runs s moothly ,
without any (urther shutdowns
for major repairs . At least for
the time being.
Based on recent performance,
that posslblllty r e mains
som ewhat lrfy.
Though once louted as one of
the most reliable commercial
nuclear installations In the
Un ited States. Unit 1 must now
overcome a series of crippling
and costly disabilities that have
kept it down and out for roughly·
17 of the past 24 ll!Onlhs.
The s ituation moved o qe
federal nuclear official familiar
with the pla nt to comment
recently , "San Onof~e has not
been reliable in the past two
years.''
Even so, utility ofllclals
Insis ted Monday they still
consider their plant -at 14
years of age one of the oldest in
the country to be trustworthy.
"Unit 1 is a good, reliable
operating plant,'' said Jerry
Haynes, Edison's manager of
nuc lear operations. "Or," he
corrected, "it's capable of being
a good, reliable operating
plant."
··Eve n with the problems
we've had the last year and a
hair, If you look at the lifetime
utilization of the plant, it
compares very well and, in fact. ,
rrom an average ultllzalion
standpoint. it's better than the
average plant In the country,"
Haynes maintained in a
telephone Interview Monday
from his Rosemead office.
Still, various and lengthy
repair jobs have cost the utility
w e ll over $85 million, not
counting the most recent
Astronauts Joe Engle. and Richard Truly are ready but weather could bring disappointment. ,. ... ~
Overnight rain may cancel shuttle shot
Postponement feared due to 40 to 60 percent chance of showers
t r,
'i 1.
CARE CANAVERAL. Fla.
(AP > The pros pect of
overnight rain threatened to
po s tpone W e dn es da y 's
scheduled launch of the shuttle
Columbia despite a s o ·f ar
perfect countdown.
Air Force forecasters said this ii afternoon that there was a 40-60 l: percent c hance of s h owers
:( overnight -al the crucial time L\ Columbia would be loaded with j1 supercold fuel that powers its :c flight.
NASA officials have s aid rain lt
'··I; Sewage sp ill
c loses LB 's
Main B each
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of-a.tty""' ....
Orange County health offici als
c losed Main Beach P ark to
swimmers and strollers this
morning after work crews
repairing a sewe r line in Laguna
Beach began to divert treated
sewage onto the sand.
Thousands of gallons of fouJ
s melling but treated effluent
were diverted into the flood
control channel at Broadway
this morning. flowing under the
coast highway and onto the sand
at Main Beach Park.
Workmen are repairing a
l·by-8 foot hole in the 20-year-old
reinforced concrete pipe at the
corner o( Broadway and South
Coast Highway.
Assistant city manager Terry
I Brandt said work on the 27-inch
pipe forced crews to allow the
effluent to run into the flood
control channel. He estimated
t
t}1 up lo a million gallons of treated
1 sewage could run out onto the
b each before repairs are
completed on the pipeline.
··w e have contacted regional l and local health officials, and 1 the county health department
(See SPlU., Page Al)
would force a postponement or
the mission because or fears that
precipitation would freeze
around the fue l tank and
threaten the shuttle's tile during
the s hock of launch.
Capt. Don Greene, the Air
Force shuttle weather officer
who made the forecast, said,
"our job is to pinpoint" breaks
in the cloud cover and he
expressed confidence a launch
window would open for a
Wednesday liftoff.
Greene said the forecast calls
for isol ated s howers, and
"Thursday looks worse-than
Wednesday ~·
··Friday is marginal," he said,
"and the n we will run ioto
proble m s at Edwards.".
Edwards Air Force Base is the
prime landing site.
Live telev1s1on coverage or the
second night of the s pace shuttle
Columbia is scheduled as early
as 3 a.m. PST Wednesday, and
will continue with live reports on
major developments through the
scheduled landing Nov. 9.
Launch coverage will begin at
3 a .m . on ABC and NBC. and a
half·hour later on CBS. and will
continue to 6:30 a m . on ABC
and 10 on CBS and NBC.
Cable News Network also will
cover the launching, scheduled
for 4:30 a.m ., live from the
Kennedy Space Center.
The four networks will follow
the flight with li ve and special
reports through the scheduled
landing at 8:40 a .m . Monday.
Hoag to aid Music Center
Foundation pledges $1 million to Me sa complex
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of .. o.lty ..... Stllff
The Hoag Foundation has
pledged $1 million toward the
construction of the future S59
million Orange County Music
Center in Costa Mesa.
It is the largest girt ever
awarded by the foundation for
an organization other than Hoag
Memorial Hospital and the fifth
gift or $1 million or more
received by the performing arts
center. To date nearly $18
mill ion has been raised.
The foundation was
established in 1940 by Mr. and
Mrs . George Grant Hoag Sr. and
their son George Hoag II to
~upport charitable causes. The
foundation was funded largely
by the senior Hoag's interest in
the J .C. Penney chain.
Said George Hoag II,
presldent of Hoag Hospital anj
former president of the Hoag
Foundation, ''The foundation
has followed with interest
community efforts to build this
major performlnf arts facility.
Based on the leve of enthuaium
for the project and the enormous
proeress in the fund-raising
campaign, our foundation
wanted to s how our strong
support."
Cost for the construction of the
3,000-seat multi·purpose theater
for symphony. opera, ballet and
mus ical performances along
with a second l,OOO·seat theater
is estimated at S40 million.
Endowment costs for both
the aters will be $19 million,
'We couldn't be
more pleased.'
according lo Gary Phillips, a
music center spokesman.
By September 1982 the Orance
County Music Center hopes t.o
ralse $32 million, said Phillips.
"We are right on tar1et," said
Phillips. "We couldn't be more
pleased. Major donors ar~
responding. We are getting a
great bit o( enthusiasm. We feel
very good about it."
In addition . to the Hoag
Foundation gin, the p.!rformtng
arts center has received $6
million fro.m the Segerstrom
family along with (ive acres for
the theaters, $3 million from the
James Irvine F.oundatlon, S2
million from Jim Bentley and $1
million from the Harry G. Steele
Foundation.
Other major gifts have
included: $600,000 from Times
Mirror Co., $500,000 from Robert
P. Warmington. $500,000 from
The Register, $300,000 from
James and Al Baldwin, and
Sl00,000 from Carl Karcher
Enterprises Inc.
On Nov. 9 Music Center
ofrlcia l s wi l l present
preliminary drawings for the
performJng arts center to the
Costa Mesa City Council during
a study session al 2 p.m . in the
fifth floor conference room at
City Hall.
Homes evacuated
in T exas floods
DALLAS <APl -More than a
dozen homes and businesses
were evacuated along the rising
Trlnlty River after more than
nine inches or rainfall ln some
areas ol north Texas. The heavy rains were
estimated to have caused more
than $1 million in damage to
highways Monday.
shutdown which ende d early
today.
The seaside plant three miles
south of San Clemente had been
closed for two months since
Sept. 3 to permit repairs to
two critical va lves In the
emergency core cooling system
Along with this problem, two
other lengthy shutdowns were
caused by repairs to corroded
piping in San Onofre's steam
generators ( 14 moaths 1 and to
an auxiliary diesel generator
damaged by fire last summer
(one month>. I
Appraising these and other
problems from the government
side o f the fen ce, Nuclear
R eg ulator y Co mmission
inspections chief Dan Sternberg
said Monday :
"I think you could imply from
the fact that they 've been down
more than they're up that they
have got a problem in getting all
their syste ms operating at the
same lime ...
CSee ONOFRE, Pa1e AZ >
Coast voter
turnout light
to 'terrib·le'
Early voter turnouts along the
Orange Coast today ranged from
re lative ly light to downright
dis mal, according to r e ports
from area polling places.
Vote rs have until 8 p.m . to
make their selections in various
school board and special district
board races and to signal tbeir
view on ballot questions in
several cities.
In Huntington Beach and
Fountain Valley, school board
and college board races are the
primary ballot concern.
"We've bad exactly three
voters in the first 21h hours. This
is t e rrible," reported Isabelle
Fluhart, poll inspector at Murdy
Community Center in
Huntington Beach . "It's the
worst I've seen since 1963."
At Crest View and Dwyer
schools in north and south
Huntington Beach respecUvely,
10 and 15 voters had cast their
ballots in the first two hours of
voting.
In adjacent Fountain Valley,
where voters also are selecting
school board and college district
board members. turnout reports
were only a bit better.
Blanc he W ea ver , poll
inspector at Harpe r School, said
24 out of 906 registered voters
had come in by 9:30 a.m .
"It's better than I expected for
a sctiool board election," she
obsefved.
Costa Mesa voters are electing
school board, college board and
sa nitar y dist rict board
members .
But a prec inc t worker at
Trailer Town Mobile Home Park
said s he was embarrassed to
report that by 10 a.m . only one
of 917 registered voters had cast
a ballot.
Al Page School in Costa Mesa.
G ladys Crislilli waited until
nearly 8 a .m . to move her
precinct materials into the
building.
"They (school officials> forgot
we were going to vote, and they
didn't get he re to let us in at 5:30
a.m . It was very exas perating.
One man insisted on voting, so
Briggs post
eyed by
Nestande
Bruce Nestande. who has been
an Orange County supervisor for
only JO months. acknowledged
he will consider running in a
special election for the state
Senate seal held by Republican
John Briggs. who announced
Monday he is resigning.
But Nestande said in an
interview Monday that Briggs'
s udden dec ision to leave his
position in mid·term has creat~d
a "situation l h ad , under no
conditions. expected to face."
Briggs, the conservative
Republicans from Fullerton,
announced in Sacramento that
he will retire from his 35th
District seat at the end of the
year. He has three years left of
his rour-year term.
Briggs, who has served 15
years in the state Legislature,
told reporters Monday he's
quilting becaus e .of "job
burnout," and intends t.o become
a lobbyist and real estate
investor.
Brtu11 agreed during his
announcement that Nestande,
Anaheim Mayor John Seymour
(See BRIGGS, Pa1e Al
w e let him vote out on the
sidewalk."
Mrs. Cristilli said eight out of
982 registered voters had cast
<See TUR~OVT, Pa1e AZ)
NB killing
'was n't
01urder'
By GLENN SCOTT
Of tlle Dellr f't ... ltaft
Telford Moore 's defense
attorney admitted to an Orange
County Superior Court jury
Monday that the Newport Beach
psychologist shot and killed his
roommate and business partner.
Stanley Espinda, but claimed it
wasn't murder.
Attorney Al Stokke argued
during his opening statement
that Moore, 37, was under · I
"almost demonic control" of .
Espinda, 45, who be said was
homosexuaJ and wanted Moore
to believe that he was as well.
The gun used in the Nov. 5.
1980, shooting at the pair's
Spyglass Hill home in Newport
Beach had been bought by
Moore for protection against
Espinda's threats against him
and his girlfriend. Glory Lane.
s aid Stokke
St okke d eclined to suggest
whether lesser charges would be
appropriate, saying only: "Our
contention is he is n't guilty of
murder ...
D e puty Dis trict Attorney
Bryan Brown had a different
explanation of the s hooting,
however. Brown told the jury
that Moore had purchased the
$150 gun throw 1 a newspaper
advertisement only a week
before the shooting with an
intention to kill Espinda, also a
psychologist.
The two men had lived
together for much of 18 years.
Brown c laimed that Moore
finally chose to s hoot Esplnda to
e nd their e motional and
financial relationship.
Brown was scheduled today to
call his first witnesses. The trial
<See MOORE. Page AZl
ORANlif COAST WIATlllR
Fair throug h
Wednesday with the
exception of som e fog
a lo ng the coa s t l ate
tonig ht and ea rl y
We dnesd ay. Cooler days
ahead w it h highs.
We dnesday from upper
60s at the beac hes to
mid-70s inland. Overnight
lows 45 to 55.
INSIDI TODY
A gas 8totkm owner who
hold$ a doctorate is running
for hi1 ttCOnd term cu maMC>r
of L<>ga11, Utah. Set Page A9.
INDIX
.,..~ .. L.M..... .. ........ ~· ...,_C_ N
~ AJ C......... CH C-let /U ~"" I ...... .......... ., .. .. , ........ ..... __ . ,....,.. ..... .,
. .
Cast your ballot; polls oi)en until 8
L
} ..
llllJPlllt
TUISOAY,NOV.~1~1
1111111111:1 /lllTI 1:1111
CAVALCADE 82~
·auSINESS 84·5
ENTERTAINMENT 87-8
'---....::...;. __________ ...;....;. __ -.:, __________ .:;... ____ ~------..;.;...,_;. ...... --------------------------------~,
Tourist finds language
foreign . Set: Erma
Bombeck Page B2.
0
~ D
More land sale needed
Laguna's deal on Sycamore only partially liquidates debt .
.
~ ..............
Jim Dick. left. president of the Fountain Valley Historical Society, and developer Jim Yates discuss
prospects of relocating 1920s real estate office behind them.
Landmark facing bulldoz ers?
Historical society hopes to save Valley structure
By PIUL SNEIDERMAN
OftlleDMly ... letSIMf
Some SO or 60 years ago, Sam
Talbert ran a little real estate
office on Bushard Street in what
is now Fountain Valley.
According to the faded sign on
hi s buildin g. S am sold
··b eautiful lots ·· in nearby
Huntington Beach for just $250.
But to Jim Dick~ president of
th e His t o ri c al Socie t y,
pres ervation of the old real estate office is imperative.
"It's the only piece of Talbert
Village that's left." he said,
referring to the early town
center at the intersection of
Bushard Street and Talbert
Avenue.
··when that goes. all of
Talbert Village will be gone to
the bulldozers.·'
project must get under way in
earl y 1982.
A city inspector~ncluded
that the old real estate office's
wiring and roof are in poor
shape, but said it appears to be
structurally sound enough for
relocation.
Historical Society president
Dick envisions a small fenced
historical park behind City Hall.
By STBVE MITCHELL of ..............
Laauna Beach ortlclala are
now aaytna It will b9 neceuary
to tell more than Juat 82 acres ol
Sycamore Hilla to a developer in
order to retire nearly $7 million
owed former owners of the
522·acre parcel.
City Manager Ken Frank will
suggest to· City Council
members tonight that the city
be1in plannlnt for additional
facilities and uses in the
wedge.shaped parcel between
Laguna Canyon and El Toro
roads. .
Those uses include a county
regional park, and the possible
relocation .of the Festival of
Arts to a SO-acre portion of
Sycamore Canyon.
The city purchased Sycamore
Hills three years ago from the
Rancho Palos Verdes Corp., in
order to end years of lawsujts
and bitter land use battles.
Laguna is about to conclude a
$5.4 milllon deal in which the
Baywood Development Co. of
Newport Beach will purchase 62
acres adjacent to Leisure World
for development or about 300
townhouses.
Proceeds from that land sale
are to be used to partially offset
the debt still owed Rancho ,Palos
Verdes Corp.
But city officials say that even
with that $5.4 million from
Baywood, the city will still have
liabilities totaling $3.5 million -.
and perhaps as much as $4. 7
million -if water and sewer
costs to reach the new
development surpass Baywood 's
responsibility to pay for the
services.
Those liabilities include
$785,000 owed the city's general
fund for ptevious payments for
principal and interest to Rancho
a s well as costs for
environmental impact reports, ·He boasted that the community
had "paved streets" and "some
improvements ... All he asked
was 10 percent down .
In just a few months, Sam
Talbert's t920s-style real estate
oil a nd investments office is
scheduled to meet a t980s-style
bulldozer. The long-abandoned
offi ce must be leveled to make
,way for a new two·story offi ce
building.
Dick is an 18-year resident of
Fountain Valley and a founding
member of the His torical Society. ·
But ironically, he was not even
awa re of the real estate office's
existence until recently.
College race bias
s uit nearing trial
But not if the Fou ntain Valley
Historical Society can help 1t.
The organization will ask the
Ci ty Coun cil t on ig ht fo r
permission to relocate the old
real estate office. plus a nearby
pump water tower and Japanese
bath house, to an undeveloped
park behind City Hall
There are several hitches in
the plan. however:
The property picked out by
the Historical Society may be
needed for a new police station.
-Relocation of the old real
estate office by professional
movers will cost an estimated
$2.000 to $3,000 money the
Historical Society does not have.
The city. which is grappling
with serious budget problems.
wi ll likely be r eluctant to
ass um e an\ f i n a n c ial
responsi bility in· connectaorr with
the relocation or maintenance of
the historic buildin~s
The 12 by 18-foot building is
set well back from Bushard
Street. and it is obscured by a
mo r e r ecently constructed
barber shop.
Property owner Jim Yates.
wh o is developing the new office
building. was unaware that a
local historical society with an
interest in the old buildings even
ex i s t e d . He had taken
photogra phs of the structure for
his own historical interest, but
was proceeding with plans to
raze it.
Then Evelyn Wardlow, first
vice president of the Historical
Society, learned about Vales'
deve lopment and spread the
word among her organization's
members. •
Yates agreed lo give the old
real estate building, water tower
and bath house to the Historical
Societ y if the group could
a r r ange reloc ation. But he
warned t ha t his construction
Saddleback College officials
say a $1 milUoo lawsuit filed six
months ago against the district'
alleging race discrimination in
refus i n g to hire a black
applicant for an administrative
post could co me to trial in
February.
Adolph Johnson , 33, an
admin is trator at Co mpton
Com munity College, has sued
Saddleback in federal court
demanding $1 million in punitive
damage s a nd that the
$36,000-a-year job be given to
him.
Johnson , a Lake Forest
res ident , was one of three
finalists seeking a district post
as director or off-campus and
evening studies al Saddleback's
Irvine campus.
Court documents say Johnson
was treated "rudely" by District
Chancellor Robert Lombardi in
his interview for the p0sition and
that Lombardi refused to shake
hands with Johnson.
Saddleback 's public
information officer . Bill
Schreiber, said Johnson wasn't
treated rudely in his interview.
and was passed over for the job
because there was a more
qualified applicant.
Schreiber said the job was
given to Donald Rick.Der, who
had been doing a similar job for
the district for three years.
However , a court order has
prevented Saddleback from
naming Rickner to the position
permanently until the lawsuit
comes to trial and a settlement
is reached.
Saddleback has been criticized
for having no full-time black
instructors or administrators .
District officials say they are
trying lo recruit blacks, but
have had difficuJty in attracting
qualified personnel to the
district.
consullants, legal fees, title fees
and other services.
Other anUcipated city cosu
would include $150,000 ror the
city's share of a proposed 800,000
gallon reservoi{. annexation
fees, and additional costs for
water and sewer service to
Baywood over a $2.2 milljon
responsibility by the developer.
(;lty Manager Frank will ask
the cowicU tonight to allow h.im
to begin negotiations with
Orange County to sell 275 acres
of Sycamore Hills to the county
for right of way for a proposed
transportation corrldor. as well
a s a r egiona l park site in
Sycamore Canyon.
The county already has given
Laguna Beach $1 million for tbe
right or way and regional park,
and Frank estimates the 27S
acres to be worth $3.5 million to
the city.
He will also as k council
mem hers to begin planning for
concrete reservoirs in Sycamore
Hills to serve not onJy the
prop ose d Baywoo d
development. but a potential
nine -acre parcel adjacent to
Baywood should the city later
allow development of that land.
DallyPlletll&I" .... LAG UNA PRINCESSES -One of these Laguna Beach High
School princesses will be named Homecoming Queen at
Friday's game with Mission Viejo at Guyer Field.
Princesses include, first row from left. Kelly Rackemann
and Rennie Durand; second row. Kendy Wilkinson, Julie
Badraun and Portia Cochrane; third row. Liz Wilcoxen,
Lynn Kessler and Laurie Chris ty.
~\. Post-Ilalloween pumpkins getting
~ TRASHY TUESDAY & OTHER THOUGHl'S -You j~U I' . ~· -s horts. new jogging shoes un<I old k1H·1· hand:1gl'"
• a repneve
pull out of your hilltop driveway this mom and recognize 11 1~~. . wrapped all around.
that up there on the upper deck, the Halloween pumpkin ~} ru : __ Knee wrappers an' supposed lo rn;il-1· h11n fnr1.w1 ho"
still reposes with the mouse witch in the pointy hat riding· ,-\.l!.,..-'l L the right one hurt that autumn afll·rn1u111 long ~1go "ht•n
on lop. the scor e was \i ed a nd tlw slant of lhl' ... un mad1• lht• goal
~ Hallow ee n posts look fu nny and it \\a:-. fourth and j.!oal on t hl' Tustin
p u n k i n s l i I 1 one and the quarterback said. "Okay. this IS it. di ve displayed and he re n g ht on two . ..
i t is th e fir s t Why the he ll do we alwa~·s dl\'l' n ghl ·· \\'h~ don t \\l' /'o\
TOM MURPHINI -~~ T u e s d a ,. i n ever dive left? It's a right handed world, that's why. ~ o ,. e m b e r . Here's a happy runner. smiling and sprinting through
Election Da~'. as it the Emerald Bay cUl'\'l'. against trafril· flt• look:-. hkl·
turns out. dist a nce ace Ralph Serna . ~o wondt•r hl'-.. -.mllmg You shoutd -go
back and consign the pumpkin to the tr~ ca.n. This is.
after all. trash da~. You forget it Gl\·e punkin another
dav . Halfoween pumpkins h'1\'e a \'ery short life span.
compared to other holiday ornaments like Christmas
trees. Only holiday turkeys go raster
YOU'RE GOING TO BE late to work because the
tras h truck is trying the im possible. The driver is
backing it up your bill. Sheer agony. . .
Two neighborhoods down. people are pitching
pun kins into trash cans. Here 's one now.
He is peering lopsided from the top of the heaped
tras h can. He's stiU grinning his toothy pumpkin grin.
Very sad sight. .
Laguna Beach people toss interesting trash. In th1R
barrel O\'C'r here is one of those modernistic painting~ all
splashed purpll' and pink Sombod~· nailed a ~helf acros~
its rront Few people appreciate art..
Downtown La1uaa la coverecJ Willa ~ Ud nannen . .Jeilen and ........,. .aways llM* INL ftlJ're
Unauual group tpOttfd on CO<llt ff~ -maUlng jog~ri
working hard to live to 100. Have you ever seen a smiling
,Jogger? ·
ONE J OGGING COUP LE grimmed through the
intersection of Legion at Coast Hi1ehway. She was already
so thin when you got a side' view she disappeared. B~-next
Halloween. she'll be decoration.
The worst looldftl jo81ers are ex-Jocks. 40 pounds
over their former playing wei1ht. He wears an old
rootbalJ Jeney with faded red number 18 on the f rQnt and
the l on the 18 l9 partially tom loose. He bas new Jo11tn1
-.. --.....-~
' TRAFFIC BACKED UP in Corona del Mar because the
s ignals were out again This time lht·~ had l\\O hand~omc•
'.'Jewport cops with mustaches d1 rcct mg congestion Thl'~
s hould have had while glo,·es a nd whistles \\'hill• lht•
world stood still. you get a good vit'"' of t hl' sandblasll'r
. guy al work on th~ Linen Shop.
You guess that is n't as bad a:-a bull in a C'hina shop
Costa Mesa trash cans are filled with old soup boxes
Tide. Vanish. Banish and Fluff. Costa :\<tesa wins for
cleanliness and no bad art with s heln•s tuckNI on .
CO TA MESA TRA II trucks carry big si~ns that
warn. "Look Oul for the Children" and .. Do :'l:ot Puss on
the Right Wide Turns ... Dive right. dive ri~hl . it's a
rlj(ht-handed world.
aTomo~ ls hump da)'. If you can 1ust hum1> o\·~
W~ )'OU ran slide throu•h J'hur1d11~ and ~ I J'GlF. · i··
Wednesday
Dally Pllit
TUESDAY, NOV. 3, 1991
CAVALCADE 82-3
B USINESS 84-5
E N'l:E RTAINME NT 87-8
Tourist finds language
foreign . See Etma
Bambeck Page B2.
School site pftct eyed
I rvine.di strict, state. near accord on several areas
......, ..... ..., .....
Jim Dick. Left, president of the Fountain Valley Historical Society, and developer Jim Yates di$cu.ss
prospects of relocating 1920s real estate office behind them.
Landmar~ facing bulldozers?
Historical ·society hopes to save Valley structure
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of tM Olllty Pit« S!Mt
About 50 or 60 years ago, Sam
Talbert ran a little real estate
office on Bushard Street in what
is now Fountain Valley.
But to Jim Dick~ president of
th e Hi s torical Society,
preservation of the old real
estate office 1s imperative.
··It's the only piece of Talbert
Village that's left," he said,
referring to the early town
center at the intersection of
Bushard Street and Talbert
Avenue.
··when that goes. all of
Talbert Village will -be gone to
the bulldozers."
project must get under wa y in
early 1982.
A city inspector concluded
that the old real estate office's
wiring and roof are in poor
shape, but said it appears to be
structurally sound enough for
relocation.
Historical Society president
Dick envisions a small fenced
his torical park behind City Hall.
Orticiala from the Irvine
Unified School Dlstrlct and the
state may be nearing agreement
in a controversy over aeveral
propoeed school sites in •'-• "'~:t
which state officials rej~cted as
unsafe.
District Board of Education
member Gordon Getchel, in a
report to the board at its
meeting Monda_y, said officials
fou nd themselves closer to
agreement than he had
anticipated when they met last
week. Stale oCficials had rejected
five s ite s, l ocate d in
undeveloped areas of
Ex-Irvine
• inspector
files suit
A third for m er building
inspector has filed a lawsuit
against Irvine city officials,
claiming they slandered bim by
making allegations that he may
have pressured contractors to
supply gratuities for favorable
inspections.
Louis Perley is seeking at
least $1.50,000 in damages from
the city in his lawsuit filed
Monday in Orange County
Superior Court.
Perley, who says in his
lawsuit that be quit after
officials nrst suggested possible
wrongdoing by inspectors, is the
third inspector to sue officials
for slander and libel. Inspect.ors
Bruce Bullard and Arthur Peck
jointly filed a suit last month
seeking damages.
City officials were unavailable
this morning to comment on the
lawsuit.
According to the faded sign on
hi s building , Sam sold
.. beautiful lots " in nearby
Huntington Beach for just $250.
He boasted that the community
had "paved streets" and "some
improvements ... All he asked
was 10 percent down .
In just a few months, Sam
Talbert's 19205-style real estate
oil and investments orrice is
scheduled to meet a 1980s-style
bolldozer. The long-abandoned
office must be leveled to make
way for a new two-story office
building.
Dick is an 18-year resident of Fountain Valley and a founding
member of the Historical
Society.
But ironically, he was not even
aware of the real estate office's
existence until recently.
College race bias
suit nearing trial
But not if the Fountain Valley
Historical Society can help 1l.
The organization will ask the
Cit y Council t o ni ght for
pe rmission to rclocatt' the old
rea I estate office. plus a nearby
pump water tower and Japanese
bath house, to an undeveloped
park behind City Hall
There are several hitches in
the plan. howeve r .
The property picked out by
the Historical Society may be
needed for a new police station
Relocation of the old real
es tate office by professional
movers will cost an estimated
$2,000 to $3,000 money the
Historical Society does not have.
The city. which is grappling
with serious budget problems,
will like ly be reluctant to
a ss um e an y finan c ial
responsibility in connection with
the relocation or maintenance of
the historic buildinl?s.
The t2 by 18-foot building is
s et well back from Bushard
Street. and 1t is obscured by a
more rece ntl y cons tructed
barber shop.
Property owner Jim Yates.
who 1s developing the new office
building, was unaware that a
local historical society with an
interest in the old buildings even
exi s t e d He had taken
photographs of the structure ror
his own historical interest. but
was proceeding with plans to
raze 1t
Then Evelyn Wardlow, first
vice president of the Historical
Society, learned about Yates·
development and spread the
word among her organization's
members.
Yates agreed to give the old
real estate building. water tower
and bath house to the Historical
Society if the group could
arrange relocation. But he
warned that his construction
Saddleback College officials
say a $1 million lawsuit filed six
months ago against the district
alleging race discrimination in
refusing to hire a black
applicant for an administrative
post could come to trial in
February.
Adolph Johnson. 33, an
ad ministrator at Co mpton
Community College, has sued
Saddleback in federal court
demanding $1 million in punitive
damages and that the
$36,000-a-year job be given to
him.
Johnson, a Lake Forest
resident, was one of three
finalists seeking a district post
as direct.or of off-campus and
evening stuaies at Saddleback's
Irvine campus.
Court documents say Johnson
was treated "rudely" by District
Chancellor Robert Lombardi in
his interview for the position and
that Lombardi refused to shake
bands with Johnson.
Saddleback 's public
information officer, Bill
Schreiber, said Johnson wasn't
treated rudely in his interview,
and was passed over for the job
because there was a more
qualified applicant.
Schreiber said the job was
given lo Donald Rickner, who
had been doing a similar job ro~
the district for three years.
However, a court order has prevented Saddleback from
naming Rickner to the position
permanently until the lawsuit
comes to trial and a settlement
is reached.
Saddleback has been criticized
for having no full-lime black
instructors or administrators.
District officials say they are
trying to recruit blacks, but
have had difficulty In attracting
qualified personnel to the
district.
Woodbridge and VUlage 12, as
unsafe because of th eir
proximity to the El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station.
Getchel said district officials
have since agreed that two of
the sites are indeed unsafe, but
he added that Irvine has a
"unique problem" because there
are so many airfields nearby
that it is difficult to plan for the
growing district's future needs.
Getcbel said local officials and
the state agreed that a mutually
acceptable decision on new
school sites is necessary. The
state bolds veto power over the
sites because it participates in
the fundlne of new acbod)
construction peojects, he said.
The state had contended that
crash and noise hazardJ are too
great a risk for the children to
aJlow schools to be built on ~
proposed sites.
Irvine officials, lrylne to cope
with annual increaaea in s~
population averaging 10 percent.'
had proposed construction of •
high school, intermediate achool
and elementary school la tM-
now-undeveloped Woodbridge,
Village area, and construction of;
two elementary schools on thf;
east side of Jeffrey Road. i
Year's _delay seen
for center ballot
I
i I
I
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. DelfJ ...........
The Newport Beach City
Council has been advised that it
can take up to one year to bold a
citywide referendum vote on the
controv e r sia l $23 million
Newport Center expansion
project.
Former city attorney Dennis
O'Neil, hired by Newport Beach
to explore legal options on the
referendum issue, claims the
co un ci l could put the
development project on June's
primary ballot or wait until
November and place it on the
general election ballot.
As late as last Friday ,
New.port city officials were
working under the impression
that a special election would
have to be held by early
February .
O'Neil confirmed that an
alternative to calling for a
citywide vote would be for the
council to rescind its approval of
the Irvine Company project.
Such a move, he said, would
bla_s,k lbe development firm
from bringing its plan back to
the council for one year.
Jean Watt, a leader in the
referendum movement, said her
group inte.nds to seek its own
legal opinion on how long the
election could be put off.
"I can't see any reason right
now why we'd object," she said,
"but we were told an election
would have to be held within 89
days (after the referendum
signatures were verified)."
The city clerk 's office
announced late last week that
opponents of the Irvine
Company project had gathered
· sufficient signatures to qualify
for a referendum.
Martin Brower, an Irvine
Company spokesman, said bis
firm has no problems waiting up
to a year for a vote.
"We tiave always favored
more participation," he said,
··and if you combined thi.s with
the primary or general election
you'd have a larger turnout."
Newport Mayor Jackie
Heather said that putting off the
referendum vote might be a
good Idea. She said such a move
r\IOUld attract more voters and
• .
I give the city a chance to "setUec
down and attend to citY.
business." j
Councilman Paul Hummel
one of the two council members:
to vote against the expansio~
pla.n, said he hasn't made up hiSj
mind whether he'd support 8l
move to put off a referenduml
vote. I
j
I OC airport !
challenge
trial due
Newport Beach's legaL
challenge to the Orange Count~
Board of Supervisors' maste~r. plan for expansion of Joh
Wayne Airport is scheduled
go to trial on Nov. 30. · 1
The trial will be in tba courtroom of Orange Count
Superior Court Judge Brue
Sumner. •
Lawyers for the county had
asked to postpone the trial witil
they had more time to complete
discovery motions, a county
official said, but Newport Beach
lawyers said they'd agree to the
delay only if no changes were
made during that time at the
airport.
Lawyers for Newport Beach
are claiming that the mast~
plan should be made invalid
because of a lack o(
documentation or environment~
consequences or expanding th1
airport. •
The county's attorneys say the
planning is sufficient. :
The master plan calls fo~
graduel increases in averag-s
daily departures of commercial
aircraft from 41 to 55 flights, ~t
only as the total noise output i!
reduced. •
To accommodate the extra
flights, the passenger terminal
would be expanded, new-parking
lots built and adjacent
intersections improved.
County lawyers also are in the
midst of a separate legal issue
over access plans for
commerciaJ carriers hoping W
use the airport.
~\ Post-Halloween pumpkins getting a reprieve
~ TRASHY TUESDAY & OTHER THOUGtrl'S -You shorts. new jogging shoos and old knee banda•e<
• f
pull out of your hilltop driveway this mom and recogniu wrapped all around .
that up there on the upper deck, the Halloween pumpkin Knee wrappers are supposed to make him forgl•t how
still reposes with the mouse witch in the pointy hat riding· the right one hurl that autumn afternoon long ago when
on top. the score was tied and the slant of the s un made the goal
r;, H a 11 ow e e n pos ts look funny a nd it was fourth and ~oal on thl' Tustin
p u n k i n s t I I I one and the quarterback said. "Okay I this is it ; dive
displayed a nd here right on two .....
it i s th e fir s t Why the hell do we always di\'e right" Wh)· don't Wl'
T u e s ct a Y 1 n ever dive left? It's a right handed world, that's why.
:'I o ,. e m b e r . Here·s a happy runner. smiling and sprinting throuJ!h
r-'\
TOM MURPHINf ,~~ ElectiOI) Da~-. as it the Emerald Bay cur\'e. against traffic. He looks likt·
turns out. dis tance ace Ralph Serna. ~o wonder he's s milin g. You should go
bucka nd consign the pumpkin to the trash tan. This is .
afte r all. trash da~. You forget it Gi n · punk in another
day HaUowcen pumpkins ha\'l' a ver~ ~hort life span.
compared to other holida)· ornaments like Christmas
trees. Only holida~· turkeys go fa~ter
YOU'RE GOI NG TO BE late to work because the
l rus h truck is tryi n~ the impossible . The dri\'er is
backing it up your hill. Sheer a1ony .
Two neighborhoods down. people are pitching
punkins into trash cans. Here 's one now.
He is peering lopsided from the top or the heaped
trash can. He's still grinning his toothy pumpkin grin.
Very sad sight. ·
Laguna Beach people toss Interesting trash. In this
barrel over here Is one or those modernistic painting" all
splashed purpl~ and pink. Sombody nailed a shelf aero s
its front. Few people appreciatt' art.
Downtown La&una la covereCt with Joaen ud
'11nners. Joqen and runners always look srtm. Tbey'N
Uniuval group tpattm on Coalf Hfghtoo11 -rn1Wng jogger•
working ha.rd to live to 100. Have you ever seen i smiling
.Jo11er?
ONE JOGGI SG COUP LE grimmcd through the inters~tion ot Legion al Coast H.ighway. She was already
so Urin when you got a side view she disappeared. By next
Halloween, she'll be decoration.
The worst looking joggers are ex·Jocks. 40 pounds
over their former playing weight. He wear'! an old
football Jersey with faded red number 18 on the front and·
the l on the 18 is partially torn loose. He has new Jo111na
•
TRAFn C BACKED UP in Corona del Mar because the
signals were out again. This time they had two handsome
:-.lewport cops with mustaches directing congestion. They
s hould have had white gloves and whistles. While the
world s tood still. you get a good view of the sandblaster
guy at work on the Linen Shop.
You guess that isn't as bad as a bull in a china shop.
Costa Mesa trash cans are filled with old soap boxes
Tide. Vanish. Banish and Fluff. Costa Mesa wins for
cleanliness and no bad art with shelves tacked on.
COSTA MESA TRASH trucks carry big signs thut
warn. ··Look Out tor the Children" and ··Do ~ot Pass on
the Ri1ht -Wide Turns ... Divt rleht. clive ripl. it's a
r1Rht-handed world.
111111 ClllT
lllljl'lllt
MONDAY, NOV. 2, 1981
CAVALCADE
COMICS
MOVIES
82-3
B-4
86
Tourist finds Language
foreign . See Erma
Bambeck Page B2.
YeM's delay: possible in Ne~o:rt Center vote ••
' By STEVE MARBLE Ol .. Delf¥ .........
The Newport Beach City
Council bas been adviged that it
can take up to one year to hold a
citywide referendum vote on lhe
controvers ial $23 million
Newport Center e xpanolon
project.
Former city attorney Dennis
O'Neil, hired by Newport Beach
to explore legal options on the
referendum issue, claims the
council co uld put the
development project on June's
primary ballot or wait until
November and place it on the
gerterat elecUon ballot.
As late aa lut Friday,
Newport clty offlclals were
working under the imptesaion
that a special eleclion would
ha ve to be h e ld by earl y
February.
O 'Neil confirmed that an
a~ternatlve to calling for a
citywide vote would be for the
council to rescind its approval of
the Irvine Company project.
Such a move, · be said, would
block the develiutment firm
from bringing its plan back to
the council for one year.
J ean Watt, a leader in the
referendum movement, said her
group intends to seek its own
legal opinion on bow long the
election could be put off.
"I can't see any reason light
now why we'd object," she said,
"but we were told an election
would have to be held within 89
days (after the referendum
slenatures were verilled)."
The city c lerk 's office
announced late last week that
o pponents of the Irvine
Company project had gathered
sufficient signatures to qualify
for a referendum.
Martin Brower, an Irvine
Company spokesman, said his
firm has oo problems waiting up
to a year for a vote.
·'We have always favored
more participation," be said,
"and ll you combined this with
the pdmary or teneral election
you'd have a lareer turnout,''
Newport &t ayor Jackie
Heather said that putUne off the
referendum vote m ight be a
good idea. She said such a move
give the city a chance to "setUe
d own and attend t o city
business."
Councilman Paul Hummel,
one of the two council members
"to vote agalnst the expansion
plan, said he hasn't made uo his
mind whether he'd supp0rt a
move to put off a vote.
Al stake ls a 300-room hot~I
and more than 700,000 aquar't
feet of office and commercial
buildings the Irvine CompanJ
wants to construct at the
circ ular a bopplne and
professional center. 1
In reaching his decisiol\1
O'Neil pointed out that witil f ·
referendum vote is held, tbt
Irvine Company ls barred from '.
applyinf for buil<Jing permltl.
Council spares trees ~ . ' ~ i i .
I Me$a temporarily halts cutting in parkways
By JERRY CLAUSEN CM .. oeety .........
Costa Mesa's City Council ls
sparing the trees -for two
weeks, anyway.
Admitting that their public
re lations was in low gear,
council members voted 4-0
Monday night to temporarily
halt the Public Services
Department's program to
de molish 181 trees in College
Park and M esa Ve rde
nei ghborh ood parkways .
Co uncilman Eric Johnson did
not attend the meeting.
Council me(llbers called for a
detailed report in two weeks on
t he controversial program
des igned to eliminate trees with
roots that are damaging public
' sidewalks, curbs, gutters and
streets.
WANTING TO WIN After helium-rilled
balloons were sent c:iloft at California School.
Costa Mesa. students watch and hope that
theirs wtll wm the race ror space contest.
sponsored by the PT A. Attached to each
.....,,_ ..... ..,LM...,_
balloon is a post card requesting immediate
return. The one traveling the farthest will be
determined bY. the postmark. and the winning
class will be given a party.
Yacht s tolen
in Newport;
• owner irate
The weekend theft of a new
36-foot-long catamaran left boat
bu i Ider Roger MacGregor
scratching his head and an irate
New O rl ea n s yac htsman
hopping mad in Costa Mesa
Thieves cut the padlock on a
I wheeled gate leading into the
f e n ced stor age ya rd at
M acG r ego r Yachts , 1631
Placentia Av e ., MacGr egor reported Monday.
"We last saw the catamaran,
resting on its big trailer, last
Friday night," he observed. "It
took a good-sized car or a truck
with towing equipment to get it
out.''
MacGregor 's firm , which
employs 150, constructs about
one of t he big twin-hulled
fiberglass boats a week.
"This one was white with a
blue stripe down each of the
hulls." he reported. -
Airport expansion
challenge trial due
Newpor t Beach's legal
cha llenge tD the Orange County
Board of Supervisors' master
pla n for expansion of John
Wayne Airport is scheduled to
go to trial on Nov. Jo-.
T he trial will be in the
courtroom of Orange County
Superior Court Judge Bruce
Sumner.
Lawyers for the county had
asked to postpone the trial until
they had more time t.o complete
discovery motions, a county
offi cial said, but Newport Beach
lawyers said they'd agree to the
delay only if no changes were
made during that time at the
airport.
Lawyers for Newport Beach
are claiming that the master
plan should be made invalid
because of a lack of
documentation of environmental
consequences of expanding the
a irport.
The county's attorneys say the
planning is sufficient.
The master plan calls for
g radual increases in average
daily departures of commercial
aircraft from 41 to SS flights. but
only as the total noise output is
reduced.
Pair arres ted
i,i robbery
Two Long Beach teen-agers
were arreste d Monda y on
s uspicion of holding-up a
72-year-old Balboa Island man
at gunpoint and making off with
his wallet and car, Newport
Beach police report.
Patrolmen arrested l''ranky
Arti s Brea ux , 19, and an
unidentified 17-yellr-old at 3 a.m.
when they were spotted riding in
t he stolen car on Newport
Boulevard near 17th Street.
And Councilwom an Norma
Hertzog said late Monday night
s he wants Public Services
Di recto r Bruce Mattern
pe r s onally to be sure that
College Park resident Virginia
Ho lmes' parkway tree is
d a m aging public property
before it is cut down.
Mrs. Holmes was one of about
a half-dozen homeowners who
waited through a five-bour-loog
council meeetlng to protest the
tree program during the oral
communications segment of the
council's agenda
"My tree is destined to go
tomorrow," s he told Mayor
Arlene Schafer.
She said s he a nd other
resident.s bad been given the
run-around by City Hall officials
over saving the trees.
First, she said, she bad been
told if she purchased $300,000
worth of liabillty insurance to
hold the city blameless for
damages caused as the result of
sidewalk or street damage, her
tree would be spared.
She said she arranged for the
insurance. Then, she added, she
was told the amount would be
insufficient. that $500,000 worth
of insurance wouJd be required.
Finally, she claimed, a city
official admitted the expensive
insurance requirements were
quoted only becal)se "we
thought that would stop you
(from complaining)."
So far, city officials estimate,
a private contract.or has toppled
about 50 trees in the College
Park area under a city contract.
An additional 70 are scheduled
to be cut there.
A bout 60 trees are to be
dropped in the Mesa Verde
residential area.
John De Witt, a Mesa Verde
h om eowner, presented 375
si~natures of residents in his
ar ea who are · 'discontended
with the way College Park ls
being handled.··
parkway tree has been markedf
with a "T" and a red arrowJ
designating it as one to be~
removed.
"l've lived in that house l
years,'' she said. "I've seen ~ti
tree grow. It's like one of myj.
family." I
"This is a problem that's got
to b e d e alt with ," he
admonished. "We want the city
to work with us in developing a
new plan.''
He offered to stage public
meetings and workshops to find
alternatives to tree removal.
She claimed her sidewalk ian't;
being damaged and sought &Df
explanation. t
Mesa Verde area resldent4
Judy Gertner also sought an!f explanation.
"We'd like a say-so in the way
our n eighborhood looks. We
don 't want to see anything
happen like what happened at
Colleee Park."
She said she had been told by f
o n e city offi cia} that the
contractor had been removing'
trees that shouldn't have been
cut down.
College Park resident Hazel
lngmundson told the council her
Councilwoman Hertzog noted,'
"The communit y was not
informed, and they have every '
right to be upset." . .
Mesa passes curbs !
~!!~~.~~~~??.~~.~~~~ho~
m e rchant, a game machine well the individual buatne~
salesman, an electronic game performs in policing itself and
center owner and former Gov. youngsters.
Edmund .. Pat" Brown, the Business owner Lucien Bisson
Costa Mesa City Council passsed complained, "Don't you think
a new electroni~ game machine we are over-taxed, over-licensed
ordinance Monday night. a nd over-eve rythinged right Brown's comments were aired now?"
duri ng a pre-counc il study He called the games "good
session when Planning Direct.or baby sitters."
Doug Clark reported the former "These games take money
governor had sought an away from kids so they donl
ordinance delay by phone. spend it to s moke pot.•'
Clark said Brown had stated Lance Hailstone, spokesm&Jl
he is lobby ing f or game for a game distributor, said,
interests in the state. "We f ee I d iscriminated
Clark said be suggested that a g a i o st." He s aid be is
the former governor come to con cerned a bout the cost ol
Costa Mea for the ordinance's· permits and aduJt s upervision. J
second hearing, a requirement Geo r ge Kat s an p es or
beforeitbecomescitylaw. Huntington Beach i s an
The ordinance -redrafted electronics g am e c enter
after game promoters packed operator who took a different
the City Council chambers to view.
protest tough regulations "I'm for regulating them~
proposed by the P lanning They're a definite problem. But
Commission -allows the ifyouaregoingtoregulateit,do
controversial games. it for the single machine, too."
B u t i t c 1 a m p s s o m e He added, "The way it is now,
requirements, including adult they put in those machines, one,
s upervision and a ban on play by two or three of them, and forget
youths during school hours, on them."
those businesses installing four He said the regulations should
or more of the machines. appl y to all bus inesses
Such firms must acquire a regardless of the number qt
permit good for six months and gamerinstalled.
~\ Post-Halloween pumpkins getting a reprieve 'a,, TRASHY TUESDAY & OTHER THOUGlfl'S -You
pull out of your hilltop driveway this morn and recogni7.e
that up there on the upper deck, the Halloween pumpkin
still reposes with the mouse witch in the pointy hat riding·
on top.
~ b '\
TOM MURPHINI ,~Ir
H al l oween
punkin s t ill
displayed and here
it i s the fir s t
Tuesday in
'.'/ o \' e m b e r .
.Election Da~·. as it
turns oul.
You should go
back and consign the pumpkin to the tn.1sh can. This is.
a fter all. trash day You forget it. Gin· punkin another
dav. llalloween pumpkins ha\'e a ver~· s hort life span.
compared to other holiday ornaments like Christmas
trees. Only holida~· turkeys go faster.
YOU'RE GOING TO BE late to work because the
trash truck is trying the impossible. The dri\·e r is
backing it up your hill. Sheer agony.
Two neighborhoods down. people are pitching
punkins into trash cans. Her e's one now.
He is peering lopsided from the top of the heaped
trash can. He's s till grinning hls toothy pumpkin 1rin.
Very sad sight.
Laguna Beach people foss interesting trash. Jn this
bar·re l over here is o ne of those modernistic paintings all
splas hed purplt! and pink. Sombod~· nailed 4t s helf across
its front. Few people appreciate art.
l>owntown Laauna ii~ coveni"cl wttb Joaen and
runners. Je>gaen and run.Den alw111 loGk pim. ,,._,.re
Unauual group apotttd on Coo.rt H~fUoaJI -mtilhlg Joggn1
working hard to live to 100. Have you ever seen a smiling
.Joager?
ONE JOGGING COUPLE grlmmed through the
intersection of Legion at Coast Highway She was alread~·
·so thin when you got a side view she disappeared. By next
Halloween, she'll be cfecorallon.
T he worst looklnc Jo.a1ers are ex-Jocks. 40 pounds
over their former playing welaht. He wears an old
rootball Jersey with faded red number 18 on th~ front and
the l on lhe 18 la partially torn IOOH. He hu new Jo11tn1
-._,_,........_ .. ·-· --~
s horts. new jogging s hoes and old knl'e bandaJ!es
wrapped all around. .
Knee wrappers are supposed to make him forget hm'
the right one hurt that a utumn afternoon long ago wht•n
the score was tied and the slant of the sun madt• the gout
posts look funny a nd it was ro.urth and goal .on .tht• Tus~in
on e and the quarterback SaJd, "Okay, this IS it; dive
nghl on two .....
Why the hell do we alwa~·s di\·e right., Wh~· don't wt•
ever dive left? It's a right banded world, that's why.
Here·s a happy runner. s miling a nd sprinting thro~gh
the Emerald Bay curve. against tr affic. He looks hkl'
dis tance ace Ralph Serna . ~o wonder he's s mili ng
TRAFnC BACK.ED UP in Corona del MU' becal.W! the
signals were out again. This lime they had two ha ndsom e
~ewport cops with mustaches directing congest ion. The~·
should have .had white gloves and whistles. While the
world stood. still. you get a good view of the sandblas te r·
guy at work on the Linen Shop.
You guess that isn't as.bad as a bull in a china shop
Costa Mes a trash cans are filled with old soap boxes
-Tide. Vanish. lfanish and Flurr. Costa )tcsa wins for
c leanliness and no bad art with shelves tacked on.
COSTA MESA T RASH trucks carry big signs that
w;trn, "Look Out for the Children" and "0o Not Pass on
the Rl1ht -Wide Turns." Dive right. dive right : it ·!J a
ri11ehl-handed world. ·
Tomorrow is hump day. tr 1ou can ju•t ._p O\'er
Wednesday you can alide througn Thur~dlil '' 11nd then it ·s
TGIF. . Have a nice Wednetda.,·. ....
c a a 0
•
IC you go into the commodities futures market
with a typical stake or $5.000 or under, the odds are
overwhelming that you 'll be wiped out -and raat.
One study showed that 60 percent or commodity
traders with stakes or this size lost out almost al once
to the professionals.
I( you go into trading commodities with at least
$50,000, you have about a SO.SO chance of losing it all
or if you have a good trading plan and are among
the lucky few, you might be able to quadruple your
stake.
The time-hon·
ored advice or stock·
brokers is that
"you ca n never
go b roke taking a
profit." The truth Is
you ALWAYS WI LL
GO BROKE taking
small profits. As a
speculator in commodities. you can win only if you
take very large profits to offset the many small
losses you invariably face.
With the odds so heavily stacked ag_ainst ~ou, it
seems crazy to trade in commodities futures -and
yet. increasing millions of you are. particularly now
that the new tax law makes all reahted gains in
commodities subject ot a flat tax rate of only 32
percent regardless of how long the position is held.
Are there signs that tell you when you're starting
on the wrong track? Yes. says Susan Cole. president
of NYZ Communications of New York Here are
Cole's tips and if they frighten you out of the
commodities market, I'll wager you're saving
money.
Don't use the stock market as a guide to the
commodities market. Use commodities instead as a
forecaster of the stock and other markets. The
commodities market daily fluctuations average 25
percent or the investor's equity (margin). bat the
stock market fluctuations rarely reach 2 percent
daily. Therefore, in the commodities market there
are billions of dollars involved in a quick search for
the .. real price, .. which usually is reflected in the
~tock market much later.
-Don't watch gold; watch silver and copper .
The silver market is made up mostly of silver users
(such as Eastman Kodak and mining companies>.
and professional noor traders. Silver is a good
indicator of where other commodities are going.
Copper, too, is a leading indicator, because it is
primarily an industrial metal. sensitive to economic
changes.
-Organize a plan when to get in and out -
and stick with it Too many speculators. when facing
a loss, want lo Ive it a bit more time.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
"-I SIHlEI«
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1J Mo<MCmS~ 1J SIH\~ 1• TrallKll ll•c H UMET Tr
16 09ft ---17 StoUVC !If
1 Wor~rw J Al!Mfl Inc ~I ; Amw:f9.,.,.
6 TrllOll l11v 1 Concol11t I AM.llOYF t VaEIJJ tlilf
10 c:-..nOllU
11 ~'"'"''" 12 TEC:O
1J Atl~ : : :::: ..::.C11 16 UN• IN 11 ~
u" Ult °'I ~t. 11'11 t J Up ~ llt\ + I"°> Utt 10 I~+ I~ Up 11A
14* t I Utt M.7
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It\/\ • 2¥i Up U »"°' • J Up l.J IS t 1\o41 Up LI ._ + .. Up t.1 S\4 + .. Up 7J J\11 + .. Up 7.7
M • \lo Up 7J
5" + .. "' 1.S OOW:,.. + ._ Up 7.$
ust c:11e Prt ~ -" Off !0.A t~ = I~ g:: 1J1 == t gi: ~~ M' -14 °" " 1r-= :: fJ t; »"" -t u 1--.. .. ,,,.. -"' °" u It -1\t °" u 17\lo -I Ofl U .,._ .... °" u ~-•Off J.I ==:8:: tl
GOLD COINS
Due to late transml$slon
today's llstfng will not
appearlntheOally Piiot.
NEW YOfll ~ -'-'" -iw--,.. ........ "' ... -....... --_ _. ,..,.,,. ~ -''""'"" "•'--"' .. --tiu11Can t 17'.Jim 11-. • ._ '"''rST.. • "'• ,.. . . H...01 Tr 1•-11~ -~
'"" .,,.,,.,. ...... 1 • ... ·~II .,. ti/I • lo4t w.,,.. 7'.100 ~ ...
Helnr<:p n 7•.Jlll 11-. -._ AZL ltf$ .... Wti. -1 Hutll'tOG 54.71111 1°'4 • \4 tmoerou A t ••.• ~ • "
MflALS c.,,., 11 "·•• unu • pound, US tfoull 11allons.
LtN ,._..,<MIU e .,.,.-
:lll•c .. .,. ""' <.Mh • "°"""' O.tlwrM. 'lfl " II:* Metel I WMlr c°""'"ll• lb. Alli"''-7"4D<Mll e .,.,....,, H Y
Oet• ~ U per troy -•. Hencly ~
Herma11 onir dllllr QUO!•
Mere°" '421.00 oer 11•11< f'lal'-MllOOln>yor H Y
SILVER i•m.,... ,,...., ounu. M-r • M-
onty tfallv quote
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~: mornl"1 lhd119 ~.75, Off S2.U.
t.-: •tl-llxl1111 M•ts. oft JI 7S.
f'•rl•: ·~ ll•l"t $4&'3 , ... ~: 14•.n . ott"' 01
:l11riO: late fi•l"ll M17 00. blcl off U 00.
loCJ0.00 •IMd
M•••Y • ".,. ...... , o"IY d•llY Quot•
MD lS. Off $1 15 , ..... ._..CIOMO
SYMBOLS