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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-17 - Orange Coast Pilot. . ........... ~ ....... ~ SHIDBYHEAYYWINDS PLAMEllWIPTTOWARD ORANGE COUNTV'l'OUNDA VILLAGE IUNDAY ~FnRNOON PU --ed.,..; C.rbon c.-from S.n lem•rdlno County to thre•ten expenelwe tnict .,_... rl'IJW ilftOf .. ,~. ' ·~ • Pereida said, hOwever, qulcll control was expected because lbe fierce, dry Santa ~na wind• that powered the flames 1ub1lded durinc the .nl1bt . .. Everythln1 11 lOOklDt pretty Sood 11.Jb! DOW," Pereida •aid. At the ftre'1 pea~, unrelenting names poeed aerious threata to Olinda Vlllate, a tract of ex- pensive homes located on the Oran1e County side of Carbon Canyon, and ~ Sommerset ooo- domlnlum development near ltraemer Boulevard and Lam· bert Road. Flames leaped scores of feet into the night 1ky on the edees of both developments as strike forces backed by fire engines stood by with firehoses .on the ready. At the Sommerset develop, <See FIRE, Pa1e AZ) Sta~M• of three -eru1s 1tlesa.farnilg arfllltnent VOL. n , MO. m. a HCTIOllS. .. ltAOes • • ym~ s .. a1 ........... 1-...'iaC Roger Mudd, long a backup anchor man for CBS News, belins work toni&ht u chief Washington correspondent for NBC. Mudd left CBS after Dan Rather was chosen over him to succeed Walter Cronkite as the network's anchor man. Coast l(ostly' IUDQ)' but With . aome bl~ clouds at Umes t.brou1b Tueaday. Low• tohllbt 4e at the beaches tO 5' lnliDa. HlshJ Tuet· daf '10to1'. • New 1&25,. Another boost for Prime rate NEW YORK (AP) -Several major banks today raised their prime lending rates by three- quarters of a point to 16.25 per- cent, the highest that rate bas been since May. Chase Manhattan, the nation's third-largest commercial bank, initiated the increase from a 15.S percent rate. It had no comment on the move, but analysta pre- dicted a toUDd of prime rate in· creases following credit· tightening moves by the Federal Reserve Boar.cl on Friday. Citibank, the second-lareest bank, Manufacturers Hanover. No. 4, and Morgan Guaranty, No. s, quickly followed Chase's lead with announcements of a Mesa Man s~s two, then himself A eo.t.a Mesa family's home re- modellna erupted into an arp. ment that led to violence &mday u a ~stabbed bia wife 'With a 16.25 percent rate at each of those banks. Last week, Federal Reserve raised from 11 percent to 12 per- cent ill discount rate, or that rate it cbarees on its direct Joana to ban.b, and added a 2 percent surcharge for some large borrowers. Those moves by the Fed, the central monetary agency, are exped.ed to cenerally increase interest rates in money marketa, thus makin& banka' costs of acquir- . ine funds more expensive. The prime rate applies to Joana banb make to best cor- porate customers. Wbil~ it doesn't directly apply to con- sumer loana it ts widely followed as an indicator of general in· ter~st rate t repd.s. The prime climbed to a 'peak of 20 percent ln April, then slid to a low of 11 percent ln late July before be«iinnint to rise aeain. • It Jut was above ljJ percent lo mid-Ma)( when major banll1 were charetne either 16.25 or 16.5 percent. butclMr knife atuhect bl.I •titer· . Bodies found in-law ·and then pJun1ect the b&ade into hll own datfti &)ollce ,._., ported. k Barbara n.n.11repoited near wree lD aerku COaditlOG followinl •ur· 1ery late SUiMtay at rountain ;.,.. J~ .. e Valley CommUD.lty U.pitalan. DA •-• &&& the wa stabbed npeatedb' by bJr bmband, Eqene, 52, police HJd. Hersilter, Mary E. LlDytlle1~. Of El 1WC> wu reported by: pouce u lo loodcOndltJoo in a Santa Ana botpftal. • Connell, Who •tabbed bhmelf followtnf tbe Violence, la reported In fair condition at Fouatatn VatleyCOmmwuty. Inve1t111t0r1 •iiid the arau· ment beaaa betw..n Cdoeell lftd f!I' "IJ.)'eat-old ton. Aa It 1pr'Uid, COiuMll 'repoitedlJ wet to tbt kl{cbenof hil bome at29'78croftoD St.1 1rabbld a bUtcber mlfe aiad .be1an the attacb. Offleen~dtbeaon POUlldedoa bi.I lather'• back and 'tMD na ant door w~ Connell came towai'dblm. . Ntllltbon called poOce, in· .v•UlltonHld. firemen 48;ooo acres burned By tbe A.uoclated Presa The capricious Santa Ana ' Milda diminished today. helping firefighters in th ~ir battle against fires that have burned about 48,000 acres of parched Southern California brushland and damaged or destroyed almost 100 homes. The hurricane-strength winds Sunday fed fires that led to the death of one man and razed hlllside homes valued at up to $1 million. Damage m Los Angeles County alone was estimated at $25 million. But the winds abated during • early today,1ivin1 firefighters RELATED PHOTOS, STORIES -A3, A5 -............ ..,.....,......., F1Rl•NLOIEllATT\.ITOIAWSl'RUCTURllNOM_NQECOUNTY RCTIONOFCARIONCANYON D••trowN buftdfng n 11111 C.rbDri Canyon Drtve, canted llgn Of Mnta Fe Ene~ Company flRE THREAT •.. Law copter goes down WINDS.~. r )Dent, where names crept the closest, firemen •Hid damate was avoided because all roofs are made of asbestos·type shln1les. At Olinda Village, where wooden shake roofs prevail, firemen reported more than a l.alf·dozeo "spot" fires caused by the near continual rain of burniJli emt-.ers generated by fbe blazing brushland nearby. lluideota of the vlllage were l>ermitted to evacuate vohmtari· ly. At Sommerset, however, police officers were firm. order- ing residents to depart Im· mediately. 1 Still, a fow remained. man- ning garden hoses and packing what belongings they could. One Sommerset resident wail- ed to leave the walled communi- ty until the onslaught of names bad pused. Told by a fireman that the threat was over, the .woman, who was driving a Corvette jammed to the ceiling with belon1ings, joyfully screamed. "You're kidding." , After the siege at Sommerset, the fire continued to move west ioward the Orange Freeway, which the California Highway Patrol ordered closed due to the movement of fire equipment and "poor visibility. AbOUt 10 p.m. firemen Ut a ''back ftre" that stopped the ad· vancing names from burn.int to the freeway and jumplni over it. As the winds died down, the fire shifted course, burning to the north toward Los Angeles County. ' More than 500 firefighters from Orange, Los Angeles and San Bernardino cowities in-~ludlng crews from Lake Ar- rowhead and Big Bear - !manned the fire lines. A bue ·Dominican envoy slain BOGOTA .Co,ombia (AP)- • The Domlrucan ambassador to 'Colombia was shot to death to- day in the apartment of the Dominican consul here, police "Hid. Police said Ambaaaador Eduardo Antonio Garcia Vu. ques, 80, wu bit by seven bullet.a at the home of Comul Rafael Au1usto Sanchez. The coumul remained inside his apartment and bit telephone was disconnected. Colombian police said they could not enter the consul'• house because he baa cUplomatic immun1t)'. The couaul sent word that in the next few boun he would 1lve an ez. planat1oo. DAILY PILOT camp was establiehed at Carbon Canyon Relional Park. Officiale be1an releasing· firemen to their home Juriadic· tions late Sunday nlaht. Firemen were supported from the air with retardant·dropping aircraft and on the ground with bulldozers and other equipment. There were no injuries to humans. Fire spokesmen at the scene said an undetermined number of horses, cattle and chickens were trapped by the names. One of the houses burned was located in the Sleepy Hollow community in San Bernardino County just north of the Orange County line. The other was local ed directly across Carbon Can- yon Road to the entrance of the re· 1ional park. Identities of the occupants of the burned structures were not immediately available. Carbon Canyon Road was closed early Sunday afternoon and'remained shut down today to all but emergency traffic. The rire caused no serious damage at the county-owned re- gional park, although park at· tendant Teresa Baker said, "It burned out our nature trail. .. Ms . Baker said flames ap· pea red on the crest of hills north Qf the park about 11 :30 a .m. Fortunately, she said, there wen few ~le at the park ow· int te tb1 CIJ'J, cool, SUta Ana wlnd1 that started blowln1 Saturday. Alan Taylor. an 18-year-old Olinda Village resident said the fire was much worse than a blaze that broke out in Carbon Canyon Oct. 28. He also said it was the worst of seven fires he has witnessed in 10 years as a resident of Olinda. DARTEN, Ga. (AP> -A state helicopter crashed near the cen· tral Georgia coast while searching for a boat suspec~to be loaded with marijuana, an of- ficial said. No injuries were re· po rte. • The helicopter, a small Hughes 500D, cruhed Sunday in the Dough boy Sowid near this coutal town, according to Gib Johnston, a spokesman for the state Depart- ment of Natural Resources. The cause of the crash was not im· mediately known. Another DNR aircraft. several department boats and a plane belonging to federal Investigators were ln the area when the acci- dent occurred, Johnston said. Several arrests were made in the drug investigation, which was a federal-state effort, he added. Radiation leak 'safe' By Tbe Auoclated Presa Utility officials said there was no danger to public health after releases or radioactive gas at nuclear plants in Maryland and Pennsylvania. A small quantity of gas leaiced from the Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant at Lusby. Md., on Sunda1, the .fttth such leak this year, aaid offtclals of Baltimore Gas " Electric, owner and cperator of the plant. The leaic wu caused by a faul- ty valve mechanism which failed to close a valve in a water purification system, said Charles Franklm. a spokesman for the utility. Workers re- mained in the plant during the entire incident, he added us . This ls' a terrifying ex- !rlence,'' Burbank resident ck Elwood said before shin1 to hose down his roof. As he watched names move toward his Burbank con· dominium, Dr. Bernard Cook said: "It's just hell up here. There 'a fire allover the place." P•amedlcs re11cued a man trapped on a ledee in the fire's path. He was treated for foot burns. "Our biggest problem is get· ting through the streets," said Burbank police officer Doug Harris, taking note of what another observer called "a too of sightseers" in the area. The SunJand fire started when tension wires blown together by 80-mpb winds short-circuited. showering a nearby tree with sparks Other blazes Sunday included a 100-acre brushfire along the Malibu coast which destroyed two homes before being put out and a 300-acre brushfire in San Bernardino County which was contained early today. Three blazes were burning near Lake Elsinore. 70 miles southeast of Los Angeles. One a 400-acre frush fire, was sparked by hunters' ammunition, authorities said, while another, 12.500 acres. was deliberately set. A 40-acre blaze near the sub- urban Pacific Pali.sades home ol President-elect Ronald Reaaan was extin(Uished before doing any damaged houses Grenade kills 3 SALISBURY, Zimbabwe <AP > -Terrorists lobbed a grenade in· to a fish and chips shop, killing three people and mjuring 19 others, police said today. Commandlnents vetoed Court nixes Kentrreky school project WASHINGTON (AP) -Ken- tucky cannot post copies of the Ten Commandments in every public school classroom. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. By a 5-t vote, the nation's bi1best court said po.tine the commandments in public acboola violates the Conatitu· lion 'a freedom ·Of· rell1lon 1uarantees. The court'• decision, comln1 in an unsiped opinion, revened a Kentucky Supreme Court rul· ln1 that the state's action wu constitutional. ·'The pre-eminent purpoee for posting the Ten Commandmenta on school.room walla ta plainly. rellaloua in nature,'' the court aaid. "'lbe Ten Commandmenta Is undeniably a sacred text in the Jewtab and Cbrlatlan faith.a, and no lelillaUve recitation ol a 1uppoted secular p~e can blind "" to that:-r.." The eourt'1 rlty included JuaUeea wtWam . Brennan Jr., Tbu.reooct Manball, John Paul Btevem, Byron R. White and Lew F. !'Well Jr. Cbief Ju1Uee Warren E. City. huntjng ~rslayer Burger and Harry A. Blackmun dissented, voling to review the · case more fully before deciding iL Justices Potter Stewart and William ff Rehnquist said the Kentucky Supreme Court was rlaht. At luue wu a state law re- quirin1 the Ten Commandments to be posted ln all schooll"Ooms. The 1978 law wu challented by four Louisville residents - Anne Bowers, Patricia Bricking, Sydell Stone and Rabbi Martin Perley -represented by the Kentucky Civil Liberties Uni90. M1. Bowers wae described by , her lawyer as a non-believer in any form of orlanized-relillm. Mrs. Btlckln1 la a Roman Catholic, a school teacher and a mother with three children ln public 1choob. Ma. Stone is a Unitarian. Rulln1 on the 1978 lawault a1alnst the state'• superinten· dent of 1cbool1, a atate trial Judie lo Frankfort, Squire WUllam, upheld the law. Hia March 20, 1979, opinion aald, "Gov•rnment Involvement to thll matter la limited to eaaur· inl that a plaque la placed on 11cb c1umlom wall, lf OUlalde fu.n.dJ an avaU•ble." Tbe law doa not allow tax mon•J lo be 1pent for the •'dun· ble copy" to be post.cl ln each cluaroom, bOt instead ealll for priYI doriatioCil. Tb• law alao provldta that taoh copy~ contain ln 1m1ll print btlow.· the la1t commuadment U.11 neut.loo c:oncemlnf the dl•· play'• purpose: '1Th1 1eculat application of tbe Ten Com· maadmenta 11 clearlj teen ln Ill adOpt.lon. 11 the fu12da111ental l•l•l eOcle Of Western CJvtUaa· UOa ·and tbt Cornmoo w" Ol tbe UDlttdltatM. '' ·~~·eourt Wiil w Ajlri] • IA nallU. CID t.be la•'• ~ty, a,. law, u. ..... .__ .... ~ COtatl 1uto .. e-'17 u~ .a aow.,~·.,,..... The three iudliles who voled to strike the law noted that the first four commandments ·'are Wl· deniably reli&ious injunctions, proclaiming the supremacy ol the Lord God, commandlne tbat no other godl or graven images be had, forbiddin& the \lie of the name God in vain and enjoining the Sabbath to be kept boly." WASHINGTON <AP) -1M fubloaable LDn• bland, N.Y •• to\tt'n ot Southampton cannot ban door to·door .-oUcUatlon by Unlficatson Olurm memben, I.hi u .s. Sujimeeoun riiltd tod•,,. The ..Ucee, by u e.:1 Yot., up- held lom •trilllnq u un· e'Oaltltutloul a Southampton or· dtnaoee UW buMd •lrtually all door·tcMfoOr lolfottaUon by noo- retldenta. Only JUIUce WUllan'J. ff. RefiD. qulat votedtoalloWtbo ban. Ttie ord!nance prorided for a SIOO flDe ICA!mt anyooe wbo to· t.red private property wttbout th• owners• prjor · ~natulon to aolJelt ccntributiom or merily to hand out information. An eump- tion wu made for penom who bad been Southampton residenta at Jeut1lxmont.bs. Southamptcn, a town of about 45,000 on the east aide of Lons llland, bu lon1 been a gatherin1 place forthewealUly. The ordinance wu cballeneed by the Uniftcatioo Church, the controversial rellgiou1 aect founded by Sun Myung Moon. Church members,\ often called "Moonies," have a duty to solicit money for the church In public placesanddoortodoor. U.S. District Judge Jack Weins- tein in Brooklyn struck the or- dinance Dec. 28, 1979. Weinstein emphasized that Southampton residenta who do • not wllb to have their privacy dis· turbed can luard a1ainat such in· truslons merely by putting out a sl1n to that effect. New York lawt> prohibit solicitors to enter onto property or knock oo doors when signs specifically ask them not to. 1n a brief opinion April 24, a 2Dd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel unanimously upheld Weina- tein 's ruling. In seeking Supreme Court re· view, Southampton lawyers argued that the ordinance is a legitimate attempt to control lit· ter and provide privacy that did not infringe on any recognized free-s peech rights. Governor ailing HARTFORD. Conn. (AP) Gov. Ella Grasso is in good con· dtion after being admitted to Hartford Hospital for treatment of phlebitis in her left leg. • San Antonio Luhnt -• Bus Accident TEXAS 0 t •-1~d11 Map locates Luling. Texas, scene of an accident which killed two people and in· j ured 48 others when a church bus skidded on a patch of water and over- turned Sunday CHICAGO (AP} ~ ... ,. loc*lU • ~ ~·.IJ' th • tq They'r1 aeetln1 the penon who broke lnto a batt.rY and took up to •.ooo ortb ot epple, dlerry and ptneaPPle Pie fllllnp, PoUie ;Said 15 to 100 Rve ••llOn cu. ill nmn1 'ffl'e dtuovered mlutn.1 Sunday from the Mary Ann Baklnc Co. Plant1upe"110rDa•ld Ntmechetk aald tbt thief mu1t have b•en 1anaU beHUM ont1 two little win· dQwa ..,.. broken .to ••Jn entry. &rillio blast c811ed error BANGKOK, 1'halland CAP> - An acddent touched off the a, ploalom and ftra that tha~ a Tbal army munltiooa depot and lhe s urroundln1 nel1bborbood, killed al le-.t 38 and h\lured more than~. Prime Minister Prem Tinaulanonda said today Prem said inv~ligators ruled out sabotage in connection with the expklsion Sunday morning. It was reported the initial ex- p Io s I on occurred when a work man made a wrong connec- tion in the fuse or 8 73mm rocket he was assemblin". Sources said the deputy army command,r, Gen . Sant C~IUpatima, Visjted the plant a week before and ordered a speedup in production of 5,000 rocketa for the troops along the tense border with Cambodia. Drug-resistant VD spreading ATLANTA CAP) -A rel· auvely new type of penicillin· resistarit gonorrhea has spread rapidly bl Los Angeles this fall, causing the nation's largest single outbreak of the strain, the national Center for Disease Con· trot reported Friday. From Aug. 1 to Oct. 17, 1.9 ' cases of pe ncillin-resistant gonorrhea were reported In Los Angeles County, raising the total for the year to 175. From March _ 1976 through December 1979, by contrast. only ll cases were re- ported in the COUnly. Mao death plot PEKING <AP! Giving the first detailed account of Lm Piao 's 1971 plot to assassinate Mao Tse-tung, the Chinese gov- ernment said today that the former defense minister and bis confederates planned to use flame throwers. bazookas , dynamite and bombs to attack a train carrying the Communist Party chairman on an inspection trip in southern China. Haitians home PORT-AU -PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -Most of the 106 Haitians who tried to nee to Florida but got shipwrecked in the Bahamas for 40 days were back today in the s ame vilJages they never wanted to see ugam But at least 20 were hospitalised m Port.au-Prince, suffenni from malnutrition or beatings by the Bahamians. Eugene Singer. top left, and son-in-law H urb ' Brown sift through debns of S1 nger ·s ho m e destroyed when brush fire swept through Bradbury, northeast of LDS Angeles. Map, nght, d~p 1cts the numerou s week enu blazes that o fl1c1 ats estimate burned more than 100 homes. An un- identified Verdugo Hills re- sident in Sunland, below. tnes in vain to sa his hOme engulled in I lames early Sundav mornino .. .. ~· 0 , ........ • 10 MIUJ CALIFORNIA . &' II ~ ... , . ""' • -M'e lead ab11olufel11 llfl acar11h19. rl'l•~rf# wcu11 ·1 fJHe 11inglf-t'i rf# · nfl'it•ial 11p ltf#re. •• • 4N OLD llAN, Sl'mNG QD ~ curb across from bi blackeued hollH, wept quletlJ u hlJ prepant dauJtrter held him and rocked him like a baby. , '"lbere'a notblng left. Nothln1," sobbed the man, who would not give his name. "We had absolutely no warning. There waan't one single fire official up here," said Jim Coslin, aa he stood in front of the smoldering ruins of his four-beclroom, three-bath house. "I just made the last payment November 3." THE COSTIN HOUSE WAS torched by names whipped by J mph 5-nta Ana winds. The fire which destroyed their home wa_!f. declared 60 percent contained Saturday, but caught firefighters off guard when the wind picked up ln the early morning Sunday. "We were sleeping," ~n's wife, Theda, recalled with tea11 streamifta down her face. "There wasn't-time to 1et anythine." , C~ said be. his wife and 18-year-old dauehter Sharon were lucky to cet out of the inferno alive. "I woke up and .heart! the wind," Costin said. "I went outsidt and figured that everything must be under control or they woul4 notify us. I "I WENT RACK INSIDE and suddenly the evergreens just behind us were ~ught by sparks and exploded. I looked and It was just a wa&of flame." At another Bradbury home, 47-year-old John Hervey was help· ing bis wife load their car when he collapsed on their front lawn. He was prooomiced dead of a heart attack at Santa Teresita Hospital in nearby Monrovia. Los Angeles County firefighters bad no time to react, sai~ spokesman Dick Friend. "THOSE WINDS JUST ALL of a sudden kicked up. From the time those-winds started, within lS-20 minutes the houses were in· volved. It waa not anticipated. It just blew up," friend said. ; . "Once the fire enemes were there, they couldn't even see tW • flames Cor all the smoke," Friend said. Insufficient watet pressure, narrow roads blocked by fallen trees and locked gates a.196 hampered firefipters, besahl. . • • • I As ft.re trucks desperately tried to make their way up the nar• row hillside. roads, res'ldenta frantically moved down the roads to safety, some i.n baaWy packed station wa1ons jammed with beloa,inp, others leadin1 bucking bones. 1 SOME &ESIDENTS EXPRESSED anier toward local ffre ancl water officials because their homes burned to the ground witho'4 firefighters present to save them and without adequate water pressure. City officials say their services were simply stretched tf the liknlt. ' .. • I Famed race driver Mickey Thompson wu aU1bllY burned oq his hands as be fought a losing batUe to save St million worth o( exotic cars in the garage acljacent to bis home, Some cars were ii\ flames as he pushed them out of the garage. Thompson said he went throUJCh 37 racintt fire extinguishers fighting the blaze. which he said literally burned the coat off bis back.1 "I'VE RACED ALL my life and busted my ass," s aid Thompson. "I wasn't about to give it up." Most of the cars were a tofal loss, although the driver managed lo save his home and garage. He said the winds were so strong at the height of the firestorrli that he was blown off the roof of his home as he watered it down. Another victipi of the Bradbury blaze was a hunting lodge that once belonged to bandleader Glenn Miller. The three-story tower. recently restored by new owners, was destroyed AT THE BO'JTOM OF the locked gate entrance to Bradbury Estates, a black Cadillac was wedged into an embankment, its hood smashed into a garage. Firefighters said a terrified resident had been trying to flee and was lost in the thick smoke There were no reports of injuries from that accident. At the Cosin's house, only a ceramic pig cookie Jar atop the burnt refrigerator was left. ''That was the last wedding present we opened," Mrs. Costin said. One house up a steep, private drive was reduced to rubble, but a wooden swing set in the backyard was still intact -the swings dan1ling to and fro in the wind. our sh<Zarhng outdoor jockcz.t ... II' YOO'&S P&BPAIUNG to 10 mto tbe 'P1 bUliDeit. It mlibt be hudy to llave tbeM m.ape uaderneatb ,out trenc~t. Make sure, however. that 10W" clandeltlne mtatom are llmited to A11baniatan, Belllwn, Cuba, &tbloP•, SUt Germany or Yemen. That'• wbat tbe Its ma119 aboW, eaeb at the barlaln ba.Hment prtee tq ol St.ID. l:Jleept for Yemen and Ethiopia. These two Me CJDly tl.21. You can draw y°"r own conelualocut from t.bil CIA sale. Suspicioua types mllbt ftsure that tbe CIA mas- U.S. Boolc TeU.WMre MOfWVGoa.See~ IUlfl'tTaea were lousy in the first place, markin1 railroads that were actually rivers anid ~~ am.mo clumps wUh dty dumps. Either that, or the CIA im't interested la tbele ab countn es any more. Or maybe belDI a clandeati.ne operative is just gettinl less expensive tbeae days. BEYOND THE CIA, there are lots of other bartaina in the government catalo1. You can, for example, order up "Aunt Sammy's Radio Recipes." The catalo1 carefully explalm that in tbe 19201 and 30s, Aunt Sammy, who wu the wife of Uncle Sam, wu hostess of a popular .. Housekeeper'• Chat" radio abow, tbe high point of which waa when she trotted out her favort.te recipes for all thc»e Ustenen out on the airwavea. You can 1et your very own booklet of the menua and recipes by just 1endin1 in $1.50. 'lbat's tbe same price u a CIA map and it mi1ht be a bectuva lot more uaeful. In heavier tomes, you can learn about the U.S. Air Force for $6.50. The listinl la under the picture of an Army tank. You maybe didn't know that the Air Force bu tan.U. But then, the Army baa aircraft, so why not? BACK TO BA&GAIN P&lCES, the 1overnment wU1 sell you the •'Spotter's Gul~ for Identib'tnl and lleportin1 Severe Local Storms" for }mt a smale dollar blll. TblJ booklet explalns bow to recocime tornadoes. watenpouta or other severe storms if you 1et bit by one. If you care by then. The sovenunent even bu eomethblt for acbolan. You can order student manuals for self-teaebin1. one throup six. at prices ran&lna from three bucks down to $1.05. U you're an administrator , however, the C()jlt for your manual is just 35 centa. · You're left to wonder here if they're ll'Yinl to tell ua the relative delJ'ee of dUJlculty between belnl the macs.at or beinl the principal. Give thanks ~ President offers holiday mess~e r art works CHICAGO (AP) -ftellOk l'U nearalfbted. Rembrandt wa1 (araialited .. V•n Go1h bad 1taucoma. Monet bM eataraeta. ADd aeeordin1 to an op-thalmolop lnCblca10 recently .• Tb• lmpnulaallt Renoir, lot namp&e1 may even have reject- ed ey .. 11N11, 1Qlna be pre- ferred to ... the .Orlcl in a blu.r, Dr. Ja.me1 Ravtn said. ~" VINl or TOLSDO, Obio, adareuea the annual meetinl ol the American Academy of ~ tbalmolol)' in Chicqo lut week on bll theories about tbe vilual dlaorden of put painten. He aaid the artiltl • eye prob- lem• in many c ... apparently enhanced their worb and coo- tributed to the development ol their styles. _ He aaid Renoir, who died in 1111, bad tbe fuuy villoo cauled by myopia, or neanltbtedneu. VINCENT VAN GoGB. tbe troubled poet-Impressionist who eventually committed 1ulcide, may have suffered from 1laucoma, Ravin said. He aaid that In some of Van Go1h'1 lelf. portrait., one of the artist's pupil• appears lar1er than the other. The worb of llembrandt, who worked in the 17th century, pro-. vtde examples of presbyopia, a form ol fantabted:nen that 1ets worse Iller a1e 301~ sald. ...... in ldl ~ .... altd•• of Rembrandt"• HU· portralta to demoutrate bis theory. The earliest paintinp are rtcb in detail, sharp and col- orful. But in the later paintfnp, the focua la fuuier and abades of yellow and oran1e tend to dominate. Chil.ean iroman bean44kida in36yean Art e~lallHtlon readied Two of the masterpieces are shown that will be shipped to the U.S., along with some 150 other works of art, for an exhibit to be held in New York, Chicago and San Francisco in 1983. The Greek Apollo -------UOUf 1 s1 19 .. 11, I e DINNEi (') 0 GoPd lor lhrM p1ecea ol j111cy, gotdef'I bfqwn Kentuck.y C Fried Chicken. pl11a ••no•• 1erw1n11• or col• 11aw. ~ rnaah«I potatoH and gr9vy, and a roll Limit two oilers z per coupon per customer Customer pa ya all appllca • Belvedere, left, one of the most admired pieces, is in the papal collection. "The de- position of Christ.•' right, was painted by Michelangelo Merisi in the early 16008. . --------· AMUT S6 AAs~PE I •-.TDINNE I . z Good IOI tw11v1 plKH of fulcy, golden brown Kenludtj ·2 Fried Chicken, with 11• 10111. plua your choice ot •II"-' ~ ::::> large col• alaw Of a large maahed potatoes. and a amatt 0 ® gravy Lll1)1t two olle11 per coupon per cu1tome1 U Customer paya all appllcat>la aalts tax I:;, .. , .. I 01111 IXPllll P11ees in-... v~ II I November 30. 1980 p;1rlJ<;1patir•g •oc;• t1dna Good only Prleea may vary at par ..._....c--c::;~ lf'I SoutMrn I tlelpatlng toc111on1 Cahlc>1n1a wMr9 Good only •n Southern you ... the I Cahtomoa wl'lef1 you Colonels lace ... the Colonel's tac• window t>anner w1noow t>anoet --!: Some people will ' listen to Nathan Pritikin . as 'though their ~ves ' ~ • - NOHP aQd ICMa.h by ~ eaclav .. ol Martaa del ftey a d Suta llonlci: \>enfee Itself ta ~two ·-·--~ "1tP el .nt~ llDd • ·~...,, .... ~a few blOeka Ult. • tpeople eotlf•• wbat Ve.tc. la,'' ••Y• Poliee Capt. Jack 111\ltb. ·~•N'a Venlce l'>eacb, and about 10 Water war continues bitter lNJ>EPENDENCE <AP> -Amid the tcr aplres ol l;he Hltb Sierra, ruabl.q w•ter eomettmes la the only aqund. But below in the valley, the river's roar la drOwned out by a 75-year water war ~t raaea aa bitterly a1 the day it ~.an. . The st.Nagle of the farmer Davida to ••v• their water from tbe city Goliath u . a paper war, amona lawyera and bankers and polltlciau armed with warranta and taxes and ballot.a -and a r•al war, foutbt with bomba and b1alleta. And valley voters appear to have won a CD~ battle lut week wbeD tbe)'.ap- ptoved an ordinance ..Ubliahlq a .. parate Inyo County water depart· ment, a moYe which could parch the ci· t1 lD timel ol droulbt. OWENS VAU.EY WATD flows 2:iC> riiilea IOUtb to the •wimminl poola and bOt tuba and lawn SJ)rtnklen and toilets ol Loe Anaeles, the largest city ever built in a desert. People here aay the valley baa dried out and died out. ••People who come to the Owens Valley don't have any idea what's hap- pened to It '' aald Inyo County Ad· miDUtrator .iohn K. Smith, who's lived here 33 years. .. They come here and say, 'Gee, thia i. a beautllul high desert valley.' But they w--.;t bere when the trees were up and """° the valley, the rtver wu rtlDllina aDd the brush WU IJ'eell. It WU a thousand percent better tbaD it ll to- day.'' But Loi Angeles cl.Sm• .a ltRl rtpt to the valley'• water, which llUPPUes llO percent ol tta water needl. • "We Uve in an arid land and water LI otar life's blobd,•• said Kenneth Downey, counael to the city's Department of Water and Power. "If someone takes away our water rtehta, we se in peril. I 11.P ........ DEPENDENT bN VAu.aY WATER Mllpdepk:ta rout tnlveled to dly Nobody Ls living U1 new supplies to replace the okl sources." From U.. Art -~ when the d· ty ft.ht inveitlsated ta iDI the Sierra source -valley ii.ve batUed Anselmoe. ID i.m n bOmbed tbe DWP llCIQeduct 14 ti.mel.' tD ll:M, they shot at. oae DWP .o+er, ran down angj.her wtt.b * car Tbae clap, proteata are ._. ,.nooal but ahnollt u violent. In l9'1S • valley teen-aeer bombed a reservoir's flood1ates near Lone Pine. Last Febroary the DWP billing office here Oil lease sites par~d? SAN LUIS OBISPO CAP) -A aiM>kesman for Gov. Edmund G. Brown It. bu wd It LI a "safe estimate" that Brown will recommend the deletion of al least 101De of the central coast tracts lneluded in a fedetal offshore oil lease sate propoaal. .!trojedl coordinator Gary Midkiff aJto aald Brown ll ccnalderlna reeom· mendlq a lis·mll• Oft1boN limit for oil 1 ..... in area ol tbe 8uta Marta Milo DM e~ exeloded from tbitaale. Midkiff will ftM • report GD tbe ... '*" sale With the .tat. o.ter' Con· Wlental Shelf Polley Commfttee, wbicb lD turn will l\lbmlt recommendatlom to Bt'own. Brown baa unW Dec. 2' to respond to t~e Interior Department'• notice of Oil , Lease Sale sa. wblcb -wtth aome ez. ceptloaa -extends from Point Concep- tion to Eureka. The eueptlona ere the Humboldt basin, which extends from Santa Cruz to San Fnoclaco; Point Reyes, Just north of~ FrancLlco; the Santa Crua ba1in ~een Point Arena and Men· docino, and tbe E'utek• bum. IOUtb of Eureb aa.o.e eve llendodao, Bowe•• tbe a.ta Marta buiD Ls in· clacled In tta .urety because of Ill btdaer Dl'Clbabillty of .oil procb?Uon. lltdklft Hid Brown 'a recommend•· Uom would ~ illt<L account etuJen eoncem over the en1fioonmental impact of offshore oil exploration and develop- ment an marina wlldllfe, fiaherta and air quality. was firebombed. • Modem protests began in um with eompletion .al· a 1aecood aqueduct and a decision to pump more groundwater from the valley. Before 1970, annual pumpin1 to Loe Anae1ea bad avera1ed 7 ,000 acre feet (the amount ol water covertni 7 ,000 acres, one foot deep) .• I.pt year, the DWP pumped 112,000 acre feet of water and sent 18,000to Los Angelea. THE COUNTY WENT to court, claiming the additional pumpin& was turning the valley into a dustbowl. A state appeals court ls now reviewini • DWP environmental impact report on groundwater pumping. But the valley'• best shot at forctna a cbanie seems to be the new ordinance creating an Inyo County water com· mission. 1be deJ)art.nent will require permits and levy ~'fot au wells in the valley. Because Los Anteles is not pumpln1 at preamt, the ordinance isn't expeclt:d to have any •mmediate effect, alt.bough dry periods could mean water sbortaees. City officials s,ay they will challenge the new law in court. ~iflerkf;Ie'f · · 1 man sought By 11te Assocla&ed Presa Police in Potsdam, N. Y. said they have obtained warrants for the arrest of a .S.rtrel\b', Calft. bl8J1 wanted in con· n'ctioo *'h the slayine of his father, a Clarkson College chemistry professor and~ °'°1ber's kidn.app1"g. .. Tlie warrants ask for the arrest oft ~lenn ~rich , 24. on charges of •cond-diiree murder and kidnapping, police said. Frank Goodrich, 53, was found by a cleaning woman Saturday, stabbed to death in a bedroom of hU Potsdam home. Tbe words, "the horror" had been wrftt.eo in bitwd Qr red ink on a wall neat.the ~.'°lice reported Tbe Yidim's wife, Madeleine. was lddn.lpped at lmifepotnt by her son and released hours later in Albany. police a aid. - ' UNICE-BY·THE-llA A CITY OF TWO FACU Roller atcatera. pMdlet'e and fun.but-not-et-night Our exclusive sport shirts in authentic Tartans The 'Thrta.n pl•id Shirt of all-cotton j9 one of the classics of Brooks Brothers. We have these long-sleeve shirts made with button-down col- lar, so they arc correct worn with a tic or with- out. Sizes 141/i to 161/2. Tartans of R oyal Stewart, Dress G ordo n , Black Watch o r MacDonald. $3 1.SO Vu your Brooks B rochtrs chargt accounc or Amt rican Exprtss. ISTMUIHIO 1111 I ~ ~ ~ t I I tJ ~ t t ~ (_ ©jf@_~l.tl.@~~ ~ llm:s ~,. 'oy.s·Furntshtngs. Hllls ~,Shou J 530 WEST 7TH ~TREET. LOS A~OE l.ES. CAI.It-~)(11<4 • FASHIO'.\: ISLA "0. '."E\\PORT BEACH 9ZMO ~ I I -4 New Alaska landmark Unexpected passage of the Ala.ska lands bill after years of debtate shows how quickly Congress can act when the chips are down. - Arguments between environmentalists, who wanted more of the Alaskan wilderness preserved, and de- velopers, who wanted more OPPortunity to tap the state's vast natural resources, had resulted m a deadlock that seemed unlikely to be resolved by the 96tb congress. A bill protecting more tha1l 100 million acres of Alaska lands from commercial development was passed by the Senate in August. But environmentalists in the House who wanted even more protection said the measure was unacceptable without major changes. Results of the Nov. 4 election changed their minds in a hurry. Fearing the new Republican majority in the Senate would favor more commercial develop merit, the environmentalists hastily retreated and the House ap- proved the Senate bill after only the briefest debate. Since President Carter has endorsed the measure as "the greatest land conservation measure of the century," his signature is assured. While it will not satisfy everyone, the measure, which guarantees protection of 28 percent of the land area of Alaska but still opens key areas for oil and natural gas exploration and mining and timber operations, does seem to qualify for CartW'a d ptjon. SettJna aside 43 mllllon acres for new national parks and 53 million acres for wildlile refuges, it also opens 900,000 acres for oil and ea.s exploration, transfers 99 million acres from federal to state ownership and 44 million acres to native Alaskans. In the light of history. passage of the Alaskan lands bill may go down as the major accomplishment of the outgoing Congress. Proposalniakessense As suggestions go, Supervisor Thomas Riley's idea of having county workers wear name plates is a minor one, but nonetheless worthwhile. • Too often the person across the counter or desk at a county office is, if not faceless, usually nameless. Indenti- fication by name plate would make communication more personal by introducing people who aren't apt to in- troduce themselves and letting customers know whom to ask for in subsequent dealings. Riley suggests that wearing name plates would spur workers to be more accountable. That could be. Certainly a disgruntled citizen seeking help would know wttic:!h employee to complain about. And, by the same token, a satisfied customer could aim hia praise accurately. Employee groups representing county workers con- tend the badaes would constitute a change in working conditions and therefore should be subject to negotiation. While It might be advisable for the county ad· ministration to talk.. to worker representatives aboul tbe proposal, the matter hardly seems worth toomucbfusa. The name plate requirement wowd simply be ••mall step toward ensuring good i>ubllc· service -Biid that sho\4ld always be the goal of government, including gov· ernrhent employees. ' • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other Views expreaied on thla page are thoM of their authors and artists. Reader comment la lnvltfd. Address Th• Oally Pilot, P.O. ~x 15$0, Costa Mesa. CA 92828 Phone (714) 842~1. f a9cy penclkei tn u effort to dellaht the~ of Wal•. But lie IPille"d UM H\&Ce, the kluts, Udltcauchtftre. Never mlild, call the~ "i:teptf auzeue," Mid tell the Prlnce you clld It on ~· That'• how that "WO'rked-f, r, THE PROSPECT of Shnon's return to the Treasury, where he was secretary under PresideQts Nixon and Ford in 1974-77, builds passionate opposition. "It wo~d be a grotesque mistake,'' one Reaean adviser told us, "to have Simon nmning the most daring, most innovative and most im· portant economic program ever ..... proposed by the Republican Party." Yet. there are proponents of that program -radical tax and budget reform -who prefer Simon al Treasury to other names most prominently men- tioned : fellow Nixon-Ford retreads Alan Greenspan and Charles Walker an<l Citibank Chairman Walter Wriston. Simon would be far less prone to establishment pressures. Simon is indeed a retread of a different color. Within the dingy. gray Nixon-Ford regime, he was a scarlet stirrer-up of strife - terrorizing aides, feuding with other Cabinet members, defying the president. In 1976, his col- leauges felt Simon was playing He wu an early rt er on lhi 1980 Ree1an bandwaaon, reveal· ln1 hta desire to r hlf1' to WBBhln1t9n aecretaey at dft· fense. But eaaan'• aallooal eecurity advtaera lntlited that Simon'• abtaalvene11 rubblng against Pentaeon brass woUld yield. dl&a&~. By early October, the talk turned to Simon goin& back to the Tteaaury. AT ONE RECENT kitchen cabinet meeting. its unomcial cbalrm•n -California drue maanate Justin Dart -did not mince words. Dart made clear that Simon was his flret, second and third cholces for the Treasury portfolio and thal footsie with Reagan while sup-' d posedly supporting Ford for re· '(omrade, be prep6re to stomp the comrAde.11 nomination. Andy Rooney .,vii£ .... ADVOCATE& OF aupply· lde econoQllcl preesln• for • ReaeanJte economic revolution are not dlaturbed by Simon'• un- popuhtrlty amona tht bar· racudas or Wall Street, tbe &Domes ol Zurich or even the bureaucrats of Washin1ton. What )>others tbem ls bh Republican tendency toward ln- fll cti n1 maximum economic paan, throuch hllh interest rates, In hopes of achleYing minimum inflation. That politically suicidal course wu rejected by campaigner Reagan when he promised prosperity in- stead of pain. Actually, Simon's record on taxation is miaed. At the Treasury, he to7ed with a radical tax reduction but was staved off by the Ford White House He has tended to tie tax cuts to rigid dollar-for-dollar budget reduction. While "A Time for Truth" ignores tax re- duction, Simon's recent sequel -"A Time for Action" -trum· pets tax cuts in supply"'9ide language ("to restore incentives to work, invest and produce"). · So, some supply-siders, while preferring a sophisticated any such as New York City busi- nessman Lewis Lehrman, think Simon at the Treasury would stand up to orthodox opinion. He as the retread least congenial to the establishment and most ac· ceptable to Republican politi· cians who deplore a Nixon-Ford restoration. THOUGH A VETERAN political infighter. Simon today may be In the wrong place at the wrong time. As Simon travelled east for London. Reagan's economic advisers were going west to California to discuss economics with the presldent- elect. His legion or enemies will not easily concede the post that Simon has confidently told friends is most assuredly his. . Would you really prefer only good news? Last week I spoke to a group of people in San Diego and, by any standard, you'd have to say they were above average. They were asking me questions about things I didn't know a whole lot about, but they didn't seem to mind and we were all having fWl until one fellow got up and asked me the question that people in the news business are asked most often: ··How come you never report any or the good things that happen in this country?" I say it's a question, but at 's usually asked in such a manner as to suggest you are the agent or a foreien 1overnment trying to bring down the United States of America. There's 90metbin& that people who ask that question don't uodentand, and I don'l auppose anylhl.ng i say here it gouw (o help but I'm gofng to $aY lt anyway. . In the ftnt place, newa by its very nature is often negative News is change, a dev1at1on from what'.s normal or the way things have been Mount St Helens in repose 1s normal. and when it doesn't erupt you won't find pictures of it on Page One When it erupts al as a news story because it's an abrupt change that has a negative effect on the lives of a lot of people You could say lht' s ame of a shipwreck or Congress Congressmen are honest for the most part, and it 1s only news when one of them steals and is caught. MY QUESTIONER in this case went so far as to suggest that newspapers and television journalism ought to seek out stories that show America 10 a good light. Jn other words, be thinks we should put news to work creating an effect. We should choose our stories. not for their news value. but for the impression they will have on readers I'm sure trus man is 1ood to his wife and children and works hard al his job, but he doesn't know a damned thing about what makes this country ereat and free. Who would he suggest choose these "good .. stones about America? Could anything so important be left to editors'> Wouldn't it be better to have a government agency oversee the ch9ice? There's plenty of precedent for this around the world. Our government agency could tak'e a trip to the Soviet Union to see how they do it there. It isn't as oppressive as we think. They just don't let the jou·rnalists create a lot of negative ideas in people's heads by letting them report 'bad" stories. FOil INSTANCE, Russian readers never have to read about an airplane crash Aeroflot, the Soviet airline. as run by tbe government, and why undermine confidence an the gov~t. right, Ivan? Russians didn't have to worry about wheat production falling 20 percent below predictions an the Soviet Uruon this year, either. because that bad news wasn't reported in the papers. Tbey'U find out about it soon enough when there's not enough bread to go around this winter. It's difficult. fQr anyone in \he news buainess to understand how anyone can think news ought to be used for any purpose but to in-' form. As soon as 1t is used to pro- mote one good cause, such as patriotism, by having positive al· lusions to that cause inserted in its news columns, that's the end of a free press and first thing you know Spiro Agnew is running against George Wallaclfor presi- den.t. THERE'S NO doubt about it, news is tough to take here sometimes. In a single day's paper you can read of one politician calling another a liar. you can read of murder, drug busts . bribery of elected officials. dishonest police and 12 percent inflation, but if some Americans fmd it more difflcult to believe this is a great COWllry because of the negative stories they read about it, that's their problem. It's right for us all to love Amenca because you have to love your own in the world. But we ought to love it enough and beheve in at enough to know that 1t will stand up in open competition with any country in the world, even when all tbe unpleasant facts a~ut it !1re known . How to turn neutrality into a paying business for hl5 U.S. Phantom Jet.a. "But bl s usinl those jet.a tb blow uP .ll'aqi oll wella tbat have been •UWl1tnt us and our al- Ua." laald. ~ .. .. Esactly.'• be aatd. "And that'• why we hMt to aeod U.S. radar pl w Saudi Arable to de!eod their Oll wells from our own Jet bosnbera. We t.hlnll Of thll u neutrality at lt.a flDeat. •• • 11·17 •••lla'9-....-... ..,.,..._ "My w1re·1 cooklna c ellDf" ~UI .-~'di&h- heartburn that aUcka to the ribe." Proves hlnaself Blindness no bar to W'riter ' I PROVO, Utah CAP) -The only time Nolan Crabb remembers wiahing he could see was when he walked into a bank to interview an executive who gasped and stammered, "You're ... a re- porter?'' ''That's the only time in my life I wished-I had vision so I could have seen the look on bis face," says Crabb with a laugh. With a boost from modem technology and a Jood deal of persistence, he's proving himself as a blind news reporter. "I've never considered my blindness a han· dicap," says Crabb, 22, a journalism student at Brigham Young University. "But usually I have to convince other people not to treat me any different than anyone else." OFrEN THAT INCLVDF.S convincing tough· minded editors and journalism instructors. Last summer, Crabb worked as an intern for the Ogden Standard-Examiner in bis hometown. ''When I first interviewed for the job, they were worried I couldn't even use a telephone," be says. But Crabb says he surprised bis editors with a pro(iciency on computer terminals, which are rapidly replacing typewriters on most newspapers. "NOi.AN COULD SIT down at the VDT com· puter terminal and pound out a story while some of the other reporters were still mutering it," says F1ora Ogan, the Stand.ro-Examiner's city editor "You don't have to feel sorry for him." Crabb's blindness has forced him to adjust his work routme. He was turned away from an editinl class because his instructor thought-it would be impossible for him to edit stories for the BYU slu· dent newspaper. The Daily Universe. "He was right about that at the time," Crabb says But with the use of a relatively new instru- ment called an Opticon, he now can do the editing, and is working on the newspaper's copy desk. CRABB "READS" STOUES using the $3,000 scanning device, which is like a tiny camera at- tached to a vibrating box. He moves the scanner with one hand across the screen of the computer terminal. The scanner transforms the images from the screen into vibra- tions on a plate the size of a fiD1er tip. The plate vibrates in the pattern of the letter the scanner i.s ·'reading," enabling Crabb to "see" every word. "I can get up to about a hundred words a minute now," he says. "I'm still not as fast as I want to be." CRABB SA VS HIS BUNDNESS sometimes comes as a surprise to some of his sources, like the bank official "I don't always make a point of telling them that I'm blind," he says His equivalent to the notebooks and tape re· corders used by most ,reporters is a Braille typewriter which he totes to public meetings and interviews. "rF CAN GIVE ME A transcript of the con- versation," be says. "My notes are much more ac· curate than a reporter's who takes them by band." Like moet journalists. Crabb tries to keep up on local, national and international news. He reads a Braille edition of the New York Times and listens to recorded versions Qf Newsweek magaiine. He also listens to an all-news radio 1ta· lion and the nightly television network news re· ports. "I WANTED TO 00 aometbing new. There are so many blind lawyers, the prospects of that didn't excit~ me," says Crabb, who was editor o& his high school newspaper. He be1an writing poetry and abort 1tories at age 6, and at 14 settled on journalism u a career. Crabb, who recently married "a little •ilhted girl," says he believes both blind and siehted peo- ple should avoid cate1orizin1 the blind as ban· dicapped. 0 8CIBN'l1ST8 AT THE National Cancer lnatilute and the National lllltttute for Occupational Safety and Health have found an apparent as- 1ocladcln between lncreAM!d risk of brJln cancer and employment in the oil refinery industry," said an NCI f aet sheet obtained b)' the Post. NCI reaeard\w Terry Thomas cau· tloned, however, that mare studies ue needed before correlatiClllS can be conllrmed. Gulf Oil Corp. officials disputed the finctings, saying preliminary results of an in-house study indicate ·'no in· creased risk of employees developing or dying from braan tumors.·· The NCI study used records kept by the 011, Cbemlt I and Atomic Workea International Union. which represents more than 20,000 workers in Texas. Scientists reviewed 1,008 deaths at Texaco Inc., 129 at Gull and 398 at MobU Corp. over a SS-year period. computed the frequency of fatal dil· euea amon1 the workers and com· pared thole figures to the number of deaths from all types of cancer among males in the United Stat.a. Of the 2,133 deaths examined, re· searchers found 27 brain cancer cases, or about 12 m;.re than normal· ly expected, and ix deaths from brain tumors. THE 33 WORKERS were employed between 1943 and 1978 at Texaco and Gulf refineria at Port Arthur add the Mobil refinery at nearby Beau· mont. The tllr•e plants are the largest operated by each of the three companies. Of the 33 deaths, 16 occurred among Texaco workers, compared with an expected 7 5. Ten of the fatalities occurred among Gulf employees, 3.5 more than normal. And the seven d~aths amone Mobal DOtn" WAn -CALL MOW FOlt APPOMTMINT 892~354 ~~ workers was four more than an· ---------------------------~ ticipated, researchers found Stop by any of our convenient locations and meet our friendly staff. Now you have 60 offices throughout California to serve you and nearly $3 billion in assets to protect your saving&. FALLBROOK 1371 S. Mission Road (714) 723-1511 LAGUNA BEACH 664 North Coast Highway (714) 497-3363 LAGUNA HILLS/LEISURE WORLD 24132 Laguna 8i119'Mall (714) 581-5000 SEAL BEACH/LEISURE WORLD 13900-A Seal Beach Blvd. (213) 594-9541 MISSION VIEJO 2763% Crown Valley Parkway (714) 831·3451 NEWPORT BEACH 2620 Sen Miguel Drive --~-·tKOl'fDIDO (714) 759-0181 • "'HI atwaYt crlel When you o.t to the part tlhwe lhe ha no bone for. her dog." SHOE OOH MULLINS ISS PEACH MA"CIA I 'wt>WVE BEEN llEADING Al!JOLAT ... TTILA n .. e I-It.AN? HE FAMILY CIRCUS YE~1 Mt~S PE~CH1 ANO rT~A'r'~ HE WAS rHtlCTEEN WHEN HE ST A~TED TMS:ZEATENIN4 Tl-IE WOfZL.D by Bil Keane GORDO by Ferd & Tom Johnson P~f;TTY S'NE:.AK'/ WAY lo GET MOON TO l.OOSEN UP FOR IH'GAN~. r-~-~te:::::::=J by Mell uurius YOU'VE ~OT A NfCe JVfMP 0'-.1 HIM Wli){ '(O!Jfl. ~!> OF f'kO~IT'I ~ Ir-.! 'rnE ~. a~u~ '#JIU. NoT 5 f:AtlV{ by Kevin Fagan FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Jot.ttston ~·RE CRUJN' HIM you'RE RIGHT, MICHAe.L . FARLE-Y t kE's RERU.Y NERT~ YEAH~t-t>w \ CRN'TOECIOC ~ I LIKE 6E.~T-MYDCXl OR MY lJ1'1£ . SISit=R \ • TOIMY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 54 Dominate I La•94! 58 Sha1pen1ng amoun1 62 -McOueen 5 Cull 63 lnnocen1 9 Fa1111 64 P101s 14 Pe<suaoe 66 Mod1ly UNITEO feature Syndicate Salur oay' s Puute Solved 1::;;;;:::.:;;;;:;;;;;;;;J JH1~j" ._...,_.., .. ..._ ..... 15 Ethnic oance 67 Par1 ot OEO 16 V111le male 68 Nine Prtl1• 17 Says aoam 69 Equals "Barfy's taking P J for a walk ." JUDGE PARKER ANAR£. ntA1 THE OARTENOER'6 'T'Et!>TIMONY MIC:PHT LEAD TO TtM'b ARltE~, JEANNIE MAKffl A ev6(;U>TION! TUMBLEWEEDS eN1l:Rt.01SA i-lJCK: INUIANro'vfS MOS1 WHOl..E HOG-GOURMET. ·-·--- NANCY NANC.Y .. ·- WHERE IS MY NEW PlANTf I'M TAKING ITTO TOWN WITH ME by Harold Le Doux E~PECIALL Y IF l'OV 60 TO ~E HIM ANO EXPLAIN THE 'THOU t:J Hl5, PROVIOlllK' HE 1£u.b ™f. COPfJ 04E1' HtT ME Ft~! • Wt() 1:1...se 1-m~es A SAMURAI 10 171CE: HIS V~AEJt.ES? 19 Pointed arth 70 Mo1s1 20 LllUtg.cal 71 Remain~ vestment 2 1 Oevastale<i 23 Ooct11nes 25 Raze 26 -bene 28Hochynnh 32 P«sona1 ISMll 2 wOtOS 37 Take on 38 Can PfOY 39 Mellower 4 I Tct1rs gp 42 Perfume base •s AOOrtn bOoll <18 Oln1men1e<1 1n a way SO Pac1t.19e SI Haunl1 OOWN t C1ry ol tnd11 2 Liqueur 3 Ovef 4 Comeoown S Pronoun 6TrOe 7 Russian gu1IO hve 46 Furener 8 Ovtda1eo 30 M1m1c <17 Mort peevish 9 O.sease 31 So1oum 49 Immerse 10 Enle<tamed 32 A~ora 52 Sieved 11 Issue 33 Aware of 53 Sleep sounO 12 Mans name 3" German 1ule1 55 Coated rae1a1 13 Ootlar l)olls 35 Over Prel1x 56 Level~ 18 Allack 2 36 European 57 AOtusl anew words <10 Paper uni1 58 Brea-. 22 Egte 43 F1n1Shed 2 59 Anec001e 24 -ot Oav10 words 60 Ceremony 27 Amo~ 4<1 Farm 61 Clltw 29 DouOlt neQI· machines 65 Pigpen Canoe belie-re it? Steve Landrick of Lansing, Mich., paddles his canoe off the tip of Manhattan, with the Statue of Liberty in the background, to publicize his 28,000·mile canoe trip with his father-in-law Verlen Kruger. The trip will begin in May at the headquarters of the Missouri River in the Rocky Mountains and will end in 1982 after the men have traversed the continent's major river systems, the Pacific, Gulf and Atlantic coasts. State tells feds to 'start over' SACRAMENTO CAP> -Califomfa officials say lbe federal government should go back to the drawine board with itB latest report on fish and water quality. Guy Phillips. assistant secretary of the California Resources Agency. tolq a reporter that the U .S Department of Interior neglected the in· terests of the state in its draft environmental im- pact statement on the Central Valley Project. The statement was prepared to support the Department of Interior's request to Coneress to re- autborlu the "5-year-old Central Valley Project, the federal system that dellveni about 20 percent of all the water developed in the state. THE STATE BAD FOR years criticized the Central Valley Project, saylna that 1Fhile deliver· Ing water, controlling floods and generating elec· tricity, its operators all but ignored the considera- tions of fish. wildlife and water quality. But federal officials cont.ended they are not authorized to occupy themselves with such ques- tions, and to do so, they 'Would need a new authorization from Congress Hence the request. which would authorize the Central Valley Project to serve water quality needs -notably in the Sacramento·San Joaquin River Della and other Northern California areas - and also to serve certain fish and wildlife needs. THE DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL i~act statement outlines ways the federal Water and Power Resources Service would more closely tend to fish, wildlife and water quality considerations But stale officials complain in their response to the federal government that the statement deals with the mitieation of damages already created by the project or the probJems resulting from "lnap· propriate benefit calculations," and calls them "new benefits." McCOtlMtCll NOITUAllH Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495 1776 M4UOI LAW.._MT. oun Morluary •Cemetery Crerr9tory 1625 Gisler Ave . Costa Mesa 540-5554 ,..ct uorHtas ' UL.I. UOADWAY MOaTUAlT 110 Bro9dway Costa Mesa &42·9150 IALDIU•BOt4 SHfTH.,"""'" WISTCU.. CHAPll. •21 E l1th St Cotta Mesa 84&-9371 .. Fines levied SACRAMENTO (A P) -Republican Sen. Dan O'Keefe, bis campaign committee and Gun Owners of California were fined a total of $2,000 for late reporting of campaign contrtbu· lions. \ Firms offer helping hanJ, 8y IOYCE L. "ENNEDY &m~1~n~rllhl~~J~~~~~dl~e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====lll to worlt, may ml.ss Frfdaya or Monday1, b usually · 1 irritable and is becomln1 increuio1ly sloppy 1ll hla Job performance. His 1upervbor suspects Jeff bat a dri.nJdoc problem but isn't really sure. ·~1.1• W el't ..... Jot>ll L-1. tr•ln•, lltY -.Wa,1• lilllf ..... Mr°L .I-lllWt•I, SAn J-1\~..-.0irl Mr •"41 MrL Kennetll Al\110ver. o. ... ~llfi • ~1.1• Mr end _. Oe.. 9oetr'911t, S.. J1Hn Ctpidr-, boy ~·.1- Mr •llCI Mr'" Fr-tki. 8rownl1>11, ''"'""'#'''' e>c-...11,1• A decade ago, this scenario'• Jlnal act would Ukely lead to Jeff's loslo1 his job. Today. ln more thlb 6,000 companies throu&bout lbe U.S.. Jeff may be rescued from his disease by his elployer'a alcoholism program. YPICALLY OPERATED AS PART of wider· scope employee assistance proerams, ~e modern format for dealing with alcoholics is a series of atrateglc atep1 to identify and rehabilitate workers: • -A supervisor notices failing work performance, confront Jeff with docwnentatloo and secures a coml)litment to improve. -If no improvement occurs, Jeff ls aeain con- fronted. The aupervisor suggests he could benefit by the services of the company's employee a.a· sistance program. Mr •nd"""' Eewerd o...-y, se" -A phone call or J ... n c.cw.i~t 1• (----------... ) personal interview is im· Mr e"" Mrs. OWlltCllll*' Gatt0111. C4REEDS mediately arranged with Sen Cle-, tlrt ~ h Mr e...s-... ~ Me"t'>eY· s... t e program coordinator. J ... n~_..,., .• m Jeff is given the choice of ~~T accepting the company's M11D1CALC11MTU belp for his problem or losing his job. .......... 1 .. Mr end Mn. --... leelltt1, S... Ju.ti! Cecoidr-. wt ~-.1-Mr end Mrs. Ant11ony l'orlenH, C.plttr-8Mcll. glr1 Oc--.t,t• Mr al\d Mn. Marti L-lg, LeQUN llee<ll, 111'1 CldlMlw •• ,,. Mr e"4 Mn. J-• H•nder1<1n, L•OUM NIQull, olrt Mr end Mr1o Merll R'-llln<ltr. S... Cl•m•n ... 9tr1 ec.......1,1• Mr •nd M rs. Joe "'"· LeQUl'I• Nlou11, boy ~·.1• Mr -Mo-1 ,...,.,_ Atlllrf, ~N 8•e<h. 9lrt • ~ll,1- Mr encl Mrs. fl•ndolPll Gl•H. S.n Cle,,,.nt•. 11111 ~14,1- Mr •nd Mrs Don PlllU~r. Sen Ju.tn <A4>!U•-.11lrl Oc ..... 16,1- Mr encl Mn. AlcllarO LI-rt. s..n Clemente,t>oy ~tJ,1- Mr end Mn. O.vld Perllln, L-N Beech, boy MMG.aauuna .... llAL ....... TaL ~11 ,. ..... 110 ........ ~, efld J- Sml ... c:.i.v-...... boy Ocllilllr M Mr, eftd Mn. IUCtwlnl .,,..,,..,_ .... Clemente. llO\' Mr •nd Mn. Joll1flnllen, sen J ... n Ceplst•-. boy Oc-.rtJ Mr encl Mn. Alen Lowman, S... Cee-nte, llOy Mr. ond Ml"s. 0.Vld OWISlellff, S4Wt Clemonea. 9'f1 .~• Mr olld Mn. 0.Mla 8yrh, Un Cte.....,..,oltt Mr • encl M'I .. HICllOIH HIO<.lree•. 0-... ....... ~ ~11 \olr •n• Mrt. M11ue11 lee•, C..lltr---::-~ u Mr ...... ,.,..,._ -.. SM\ ~.~ ~,. '1Ar. eM "'1'L Leny S....,er, S..n c--·"" ~II Ml encl #ra. #lc-t Koch, S.n c:i.m-.bOy ~-Mr encl Mn Oen Yl•ldlnQ, San c1e .... nw,.., EMPLOYERS HAVE MORE THAN usual leverage to help these programs succeed Because Jeff does not want lo lose his job, the company. through confrontation, can create a crisis to help him abandon ~ alcoholic's prime symptom and inner enemy -denial. And by including akoholism among diseases covered by m-edical benefits, companies can give paid leave and sug- gest recovery routes the employee can afford Some firms r efer problem drinkers to counselors, others suggest out-patient detoxifica· lion programs. and still others insist on strict, four-week in-patient regimens. Nearly all pro- grams provide a tie in with Alcoholics Anonymous. A follow-up counseling program may be offered once the recovered alcoholic is back on the job. The Association of Labor-Management Ad· mrnistrators and Consultants on Alcoholism claims a high rate of recovery for alcohohcs diagnosed early in work settings, as high as 60 to 70 percent. But Dr. Le Claire Bissel, an expert on occupational alcoholism, says today's programs are rar more successful with men .Jhan women. The industries al the forefront-rn-combaling alcoholism are male-intensive; those dominated by women rarely provide comparable services If you work for a large company qd have prob- lems. with alcohol, your emplayer may offer - not the ax -but a helping hand. READER SERVICE For a pocket on ocC\ipational alcohol&&m assembled by ttu! National CINmaghoute for AlcoMI Informaton, send a postcard requelt to J071ce Laine KeMed11 at Boz 1560, Costa Meao m26. Alk for "Alcohol and Work " If It float•, chance• are you'll read about It In the DAILY PILOT I KNOW WE SHOULD GO TO THE FUNERAL HOME • Btrr, I NEVER KNOW WHAT TO SAY. The fact 11 that nothing can be aald to e•preH ad~uattly our lost or make the bereev«d family feel better. But that dottn't mean that a vt1U and an exprnslon of 1ympathy won't be helpful. Bereaved persons tell ua that It's not the words that are helpful but that t0meone cared enough to go to the funeral homt •nd expre11 their 1ympathy In ~rton. Som.Umet Just a hug or holding your frtencf'1 hand briefly le a good way to Seti "I c:.re." When a friend losn a lov«d r>ne go to the funeral home. Expreu your sympathy and offu your a11letance. You'll be appreciated for carlng. . ,,Harbor Lawn· Mount Olive Memorial Parlt · Mo1'tuary·· ·Mausoleums· Crematory When you rlt'ed a larger loan. your house may hold the answer. We can often help wtth a horn!Owner loan Count on us Other fam ilies and busm~~ have for over 6.5 years. On a Sl.5.<XX> loan. monthly payments are for 120 months at an annual per- centage rate of 18.00%. Total of payYnents: $32.432.40. We'll find a way to help. Call us today. NO POINTS. NO BROKER FEE.5. COMME"-CIAL C~EDIT C~RATION A loan of ~).OX) and over must be secured h\ 11 rnmhmat1on of real and persoruil propert'. COSTA \l~.::-,A •fliO E. 17th Strt'et • 6~5·8i00 " Gl --l[NDlA HLi\ IT\<.,TO\ HE.\UI • 1607.) Gulcle11 We,1 "t. • tu7-7i71 ~ll"'!:>IO:\ VIEJO • 2 U'J5 .\licia Parb'u). Suitt' 2E • i70-2651 Alicrn To\'" Plaza SAi\ 1 A A\.\• li!21 E..t,,1 lith ~treet • 5 ~i-58il PUBLIC ANNOUl'iCEMENT On Nov . 6th, 1980 Raciti Jewelry Company Announced Giving Away Sl00,000 In Discounts On All In Store Items. To Date, There Have Been $20,666 In Discounts Given. J f mJ ~iti cJewe1,-.y-company lriiiill Goldsmltnlng • Appraising • Repairing • Pl.lrchaslng -18)8 N~n Soolev;ard • Costa MnA CA 91617 Olaf 646-7741 • OM.YPILOT . .,,. l JAMES C. MORRISO lOl 1765 SHERIDAN YOUR CITY, PAY TO THf OIDEI OF-----~ HOME ~· of San Diego ~Main 701 B San D MEMd --------- Pays you 5 1/4o/o interest! Chextra. It's something extra, something special from Home Federal. 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And it'll pay you to do it right away. • 50 free checks and no service charges for 3montm! Sign up before January 1 for Olextra and we11 give you your first 50 personalized checks free! And, you won't pay any normal service charges for the three months beginning January l Olextra. Something special, something extra. Assets ov& $4 Billion Huntington Beach Offl~: 2111 Main Street • 53W511 f Solsa-Oot<Sen West Office: 15091 Golaen 'Nest Striit • 898-0934 Laguna Hills Office: 24300 Peseo de Valencia· no;.1111 Laguna Niguel Office. 30131 Town Cen,er Drive. Suite 145 • ~~54880 ... Irvine Office: 4543 Campus Drive • 752·6181 San Juan Capistrano Office: 31972 Camino Capistrano • •93·0601 • Santa Ana Office: 17th and Main StrHt • 83~4'336 Seal 88Gch Office: 1350 Pacific Coast Hwy.· (714) 898-3481 (213) 596-:5576 Home Federal SaVings and Loan Association of San Dltgc> - ' .......-.----. ,.... ~ ... - -....... ~ ...................... r--• -.. -•~_, .. ;.1'>:.. ~--• ·-·-----..-~ ....,._ ·. a ms not dead yet Defense puts on a show • ly VA 0 ... ~ ......... OXBO:fto. M 1&1 . - Bvu k~w •ituattan It was a MOST n: victory UM nam1 HAD to have, And, Uke they hive for 10 many Y••r• In the past, the Rama eame up on the wlnnll\t ftld, U\il time defeatine \he New En1tand Patriots, 17-14 here before a sellout crowd at &cbaeler StadJum. · Tl\e Rams' performance was in sharp contrut lo the debacle displayed last Sunday •laiMt Miami Tbls time the team played with heart, enthusiasm and spiril. It was the first time they had displayed all those qualities ttus year THE DEFENSE made 8elievers out of peoJSle again, and the offense played well enough lo win which Is the bottom line. "We wanted that win. We needed thal 'win,'' exclaimed Jim Youngblood "We felt we had a lot to prove out there. "After last week it was hard to say what happened. We knew we'd be facing a good team to· day on their home ground. We knew we had to stay after them Nol jusl at the beginning, either, but for the whole game If we can keep playing hke we did to- day I don 't think there'l> anybody who can beat us " Indeed, the Rams turned m a thorough performance. especial Jy defensively, against the No 2 orrense team pomt-wise m the NFL. The Patnots entered the game with a 28.8 sconng average and a total yardage figure of 343.2. SUoday'e score8 R•n'IS t?, New England U Atlanta 31, New Orleans 13 Miami 17, San Francisco 13 San Olf!VO 20, Kansas City 7 Baltlmore .10, O.trolt 9 Buffalo 14, Cincinnati O Pittsburgh 16, Cleveland 13 NY Giants 27, Green Bay 21 Pt11ladelphla 24, Wast\fngton o Mlnnewta 38, Tampa Bay 30 Oallas31, St. Louis 21 Houston 10, Chicago 6 Denver 31, NY Jets 24 Tonight's Game Oakland at Seattle (Channel 7 at 6 o'clock) • NFL summanes, page t3J • NFL roundup, page 84 however. those numbers had dwindled to a meager 14 points I with only one legitimate touchdown, as tne other was the result of a Vince Ferragam in- terception) and a stin~y 202 total yards. "We were due," is how Coach Ray Malavasi summarized his team's performance, which kept the 7-4 Rams one game behbld surging Atlanta in the NFC West ·'We finally did a good job Our de fense played well." ( Actually, it was the defense that seemed to inspire everyone After their embarrassing whip· ping at the hands or the Dolphins last Sunday. the Rams displayed a lot of hand slapping and back patting m an attempt to keep emotions high. "I TIDNK LAST WEEK woke us up a little bit," said safety Jeff Delaney. ··1 thmk 1t brought us back from the dead ple were sayu\& about us, that the Rams were all offense now and no defense. Nobody wants a label like that and l think that played on everyone's minds. ·'This was definitely the boost we needed," Delaney added. "We needed something to kick us in the butt and get us going '' That feeling was shared by a number of other Ram players, too "We knew where we were Im the standings> and what we had to do,' admitted Fred Dryer "It seems like we always play well "hen we have to I don't know \\hy I guess it's Just the chemistry and nature of this team "This was a big game for us. though. lt was not only a win. but It was a good wm that pulled everyone together We played great because everybody wanted to play great And it will con· tinue this way if we want it to." IN "PLAYING," the Rams finally seemed to gain some respect11b1llty that had been lacking this season The stigma, of course. was that the Rams hadn't beaten anybody with notoriety The critics can't boast that claim anymore "We knew we had to get it back and start playing to our capab1hties , · said Nolan Cromwell .. I guess 1f ..,e had anything to prove 1t was to ourselves." "We decided to play today and we played some excellent foot· ba II ,·· added Larry Brooks 'This team can play when it wants to, and we knew we couldn't lay down like we did last week." • • • APWI,..,.... BY THE TIME the Rams' mauling defense was throuch with Steve Gro5tan and Co .. ''It was like we were in college aJI over again out there today. Everybody was fired up and there was enthusiasm all around. We had heard what peo For the first time this year the Rams· offense almost went un· noticed The unit did put 17 points on the board. but seven of <See RAMS, Page BZ) RUSS FRANCIS IS IN FULL FLIGHT AS HE'S HIT BY THE RAMS' JOHNNIE JOHNSON. Mavericks Jo~ Sevano noIDatch for 1.akers They s~ill won't pay us--Reynolds d i INGLEWOOD CAP) Guards Jim Spanarkel and Geoff Huston provided Dallas with a potent one· two punch from the backcourt, but rirst-year expansion teams don't figure to beat the champs And the Mavericks didn't Despite 28 pomts apiece by Spanarkel and Huston, the Mavericks couldn't recover from a 22-5 first quarter deficit Sunday night in losing their 16th National Basketball Association game in 19 starts. a 110-102 deels1on to the Lakers FOXBO'RO, Mass -Despite the fun, despite the win, and despite the obvious rebirth or the Rams. things aren't all roses with the club. But, so what else is new? The latest bit of controvers,> occurred immediately after the Rams' win here Jack Re}'tlolds, who has been silent!} seething about his lack of programs with management during negot1at1ons. finally released all his pent up emo tions. "We win but they ( managemenll still won't pay us." he announced as he walked up the stadium ramp to the team's lockel'room FAlison at homt• It appears what the Rams have decided to do now is win despite management. That instead of keeping their anger bottled up mside, they're go· in~ to release it against the opposition. "We've got to forget about the damn pay problems and everything else and JUSt start playmg for ourselves," said Pat Thomas "We JUSt have to forget management and do what we have to do to wm They <management l certainly haven't given us any inspiration to play for them So. 1f that's the way they want to be we ·11 JUSt play it for us · · "We have a good nucleus of guys here if only they (management! would treat The final score was not a true indication of the game. as Dallas trailed by as many as 24 points and wasn't closer than the eight point margin of defeat in the final three quarters "We did a good job tonight," Sea K;ng.s, Laguna said Los Angeles Coach Paul II Weathead. whose team 1s now 14-5 ··we 1umped out and got a good lead and then held 1t We h d • la # havetoleamtogetaleadandthen mate e .. n p -v:o s notletitslip away butthat 's tough II J · todo I ,,,, "I thou&ht Dallas showed their By ROG ER CARLSON Ed 1son Edison teams lostthe Cl 1-·J h b b k 01111eoa11,,.1..,.su11 openerfour stra1"ht times during c aracter y coming ac , ,. Defending CJF Big Five Con the 1971 i7cra especial~y their euards, ~ho k.ept ference champion and two-time Fountain Valley <8·2 and the on shoot.in&. I wae especially im-Sunset Leagu~t1thst Edison High No 3 seed > travels to Rialto for pressed by Spanarl<el." Spanarkeldldn'tetart, but still e> has drawn the ~o 1 seed in. the the Barons' collision with played 37 minutes. In addition to 1980 pl~yoffs which begin Fnday Eisenhower < 5 3 l> of the Ci tr~ his 28 points, an NBA career high, and wtll m.eet Ang~lus League Belt League behadeightrebounds,rtveassists representative &;rv1te m ~ re Eisenhower. a 14 Otoserto Fon· and five steals Huston'• 28 points match of last years quarterfinals tana last week. was the first step equalledhlscareerbest. game. . on Fountain Valley's road to the , Earvin ''Magic" Johnson led The two wtll square of~ at 1978CIFBig Five crown. \be ~rs wlth 2( points and Or~nge Collst College F.rid~y Marina (6 41 must travel to ~ghl assists. Kareem AbdUl-am1dsta bevy of games, which m· Citrus Belt League champion ) ab bar had 17 polnta, a came-high eludes one malchup between two Fontana (8·2 >, where a hostile en 11 rebounds six asaisls and five OrangeCoastareateams-South vironmenl usually. awaits Fohi blockedsboU, and Jamaal WUkea Coast League. c~amplon Laguna opponents •lso had 17 points for Lo• Aoaeles. Bea<!b and v1s!ting Coron• del Although there is quite a rivalry Rookie guard Buteh Cart.er. Marofth~SeaV1ewLeague between Corona del Mar and playlnilnblsfirstgamesincebe-The Big P'ive Conference in· Laguna Beach. it hasn't been on ~DI sidelined because of a eludes two other S~seot Leaiue thefootballfieldforalongtime. Hlvular heart condltlon came entries -Fountain Valley •t Volleyball and basketball have off the bench to score 12 p0Cnta tor Eisenhower and Marina at Fon· ~kerrthe spotlight since the last b Lak b h d l ed et .... t tana fime these two met in 1966, which .t e etl. ~e a m 11 .., In· the Central Confer,nce, left a short series between the two '&&nJ.81. aside from the Laguna Beach· at3·1 infavorofLaguna Beach. t.01 An1ele1 played without Coronadel.Martiff. Estancia bat-Corona del Mar (6-4> is a tn- •tarUng auard Norm Nixon. ties Neff High at La Mirada champion from the Sea View ibr aldni bb personal streak of Stadium. . Leaeue The Artists, South Coast nocoMttUUveNBA1ames. Al so in action w i l J be League co-champs and the No. 4 Capistrano Valley at Mayfair, seed in the Central Conference, Ml11lon Viejo at Pius X and are in the playoffs for the first Valencia and El To'ro at Mission Umesince 1968. Viejo. Estancia's opponent, Neff has "This wun 't entirely unexpect-a 7 -2-1 record. Ndff has cornpeted ed," said Edison Coach BUl a1aln1t onf' Oran8t County team Workm•n, whose team I• worldna during non· league action an4 Oil on an 18-game wlnnin11treak. a 30·21 decision \0 Bu~n• Parat "~rvlte ii very tough de-Eatancta. 6·4, also own a share (en1ively aod we eipect a fUU of the Sea View crown wlth CdM house 'at <>ranee COut. Servile I• and El Toro 3·1 andthat male 1 tt\e aame took All1amei are billed for 1i·riday, E60d, on paper. 9ut ln rulily. bciainnln11t7!at:> rvlte lS w etwo loss came by Th CI pla.yoffa conallt Of tfelO,and1etUntbttter.'' nln• cont :rences wtth epcb com· 'Workman labeltcOlerv~te as hll pond of fiVft I fU • m!t~ obltae:Je In the Champ on•hlp J•nlH •re ~-~ -=.~.~~~ bme<t for nee. u ~llh the JUa ._:..-.~·_,,_,_..,.J"··•u•;tona b l'n ,~\:rh n ~:;: 1~0~ru-:i:.~e auqe •l us right... added Reynolds. who has been 1rowing more disturbed with each passing week "I'VE DECIDED l 'M not going to sit back and take 1t any more We're gomg to play better 1f we get more money I know how we can pla~ and we can do anything we want lo do "If the front office would just treat us right and pay us it's not too late to tum this thmg around I'm ttred of all the turmoil "Let's play football and get some~· pie signed It's hard to play for manage- ment with the way things are because you never know what the score 1s "All I want to do." }eynolds con- tinued. ·•1s get everyon back on the same track so we can really be the Rams again and quit all the Mickey \fousmg around .. HOW LONG TIDS display of anger will last remains to be seen The players ap- pear to be more frustrated now than at any time during the season The only change 1s that they're currently releasing their hostilities on the field. Butthat could change at any minute "This ia reality," explained Reynolds. (See SEVANO, Page 82) No frills best way for Kings VANCOUVER. British Colum· b1a <AP> There's nothing Like a no-frills hockey game to get the blood circulating again in the Kmgs After suHering setbacks at home to the Montreal Canadiens and the St Louis Blues, the Kings got their act back toaether Sunday night at the Pacific Coliseum with a strong defensive performance while edging the Vancouver Canucks 3-2 in a tight-checking National Hockey League game. "For us to be successful over the long run ... said KJng coach Bob Berry. "our defense has to play defensively, and leave the goal scoring to the guys who make the big money on this team. ''This was a !.obd defensive game for us, a no-frills hockey came Sometimes you have to play that way on the road to be succeuful .. The Kings only got 14 shots on Vancouver netmlnder Richartl Brodeur, with rookie Gree Ter· rlon and veteran Marcel Dionne 1corln1 power.play 1oals In ad· dlllon to one by defenseman Dou1Hatward. Loa Aneeles 1oalkeeper Mano Les11rd wu brilliant in victry, stoppln" 30 shots, includJng 15 in the final period. "We made excellent use of our opportunltlea nd checked well," said Berry "We aot tht bll saves In the thlrd ~nod and the defense cleared the robOunds well by playin1 rood. positional hockey." The c ftUCkt •PP.••red 'f\"Ullr at th tl t Checklna follow•n• a fr••· heelioa performance hen Friday durln• B·S Ue w'lh ontreal. • Al -----.,_,.of dw dafl ''I'm alarmed that an athlete can be cau&bt with do~ tOday and 1uspencled wttb pay. It makes me bellm Ulen.,.. not too many eommiaaloaera wbo have ~ iuta to make a touah deeisiul. 'Ibey are ao afraid of lawaulta that they don't know whet ltaDd to take. In our day, we'd have a couple marUDla, raise a little bell - and that was conaldered wroq. 'l1le only tb1q t.bat made me atop bettin& on football games wu my sua- pensloo." -Football great Pul BonlUf, lookin1 at the chaneinl face of professional sports. ··~1ao1111lt1tt11 fl#°I ,.ltiladftplaia Goalie Rogle VaclHNI fashioned bis first shutout (ii of the National Hockey League sea.son, and Boston , snapped Philadelphia's 13-tame unbeaten streak with a 1-0 victor Sunday n.ipt. The 3S·year-old Vachon, a former Kines goaltender, bad 19 saves as the Bruins extended their unbeaten streak to five games . . . First- period goals by Steve Sbatt and JtdUI A.doll were all Montreal needed as the Canadiens defeated Win· nipeg, 5-1 ... Aaden Bedber1 scored three goals and set up another to boost the New York Rangers to a 7 -3 victory over Hartford. The triumph snapped N-:w York's nme· game w:lnlesa streak, its lonaest since 1976 . . . Wayae GretaQ scored a goal and added two assists to lead Edmonton to a S-4 decision over Chicago. Cbica1oscored three times in the final period to get to within 4·3, but Edmonton's Gleu Alldenoa tallied at 9 : S7 to put the game out of reach . . . Craig ucHOM Ramsay and Tony McKegney each scored twice as Buffalo coasted to an 8-1 victory over Quebec Merlin Mallaowald scored two goals as Colorado defeated Calga.ry,4·3 .Wor<·h for Lee Tayff1r delflfll."d GLENBROOK, Nev. -Gusty winds and rough (ii water. forced a temporary ball Sunday in the search for the body of Lee Taylor. believed still strapped in tbe •battered cockpit of bis rocket boat. Search crews quit their efforta after they probed tbe inky depths of Late Tahoe with cameru and sonar equipment for several hours Sunday in hopes of locaUne Taylor's body. The 45-year-old racer's jet-propelled boat ripped apart Thursday during an attempt to brea.k a world water speed record. Crew member Dave Severson said winds and choppy water also cut short Saturday's search. Weather permitting, the search will be resumed Monday. Severson said He said crew members have focused on trylbg to find the cockpit and engine o( the 40-foot boat rather than "pick ing up every little piece of wreckage." Television cameras. which Severson said were effective in depths of up to 300 feet, were being used to explore Tahoe's waters. Searchen have expressed rears the cockpit section might have slipped even deeper along the lake's steep un· derwater ledges A memorial service was scheduled for Nov. 24 at Downey First Baptist Church in Downey, Severson said. M~anwhile, Taylor's wife and his dauehter Jen Lake Tahoe Saturday to return to their homes in Southern California. UCI serimmage Magee scores 51 Kevin Magee scored Sl points and Randy Whieldon added 29 to spark the UC Irvine Blue team to a 136-94 victory over the Gold in the annual Anteater basket- ball scrimmage Sunday niebt. A crowd of approximately 700 , watched Maeee, the 6-8 transfer from Saddleback College, hit 73 percent of bis shots. Maeee pumped In 22 of 30 attempts and was seven for seven at the free throw line. Whleldon, also from Sad- dleback. was 14 of 20 from the field. Ben McDonald, a freahman from Long Beach, scored 17 points for the Blue team while Kevin Fuller bit 21. The Gold team was led by Scott Hartman (22 points) and Robbie Beal (21). , Coach BIU MuW1an'1 Ant· eat~n open· the lll0-81 aeuon Saturday nllbt, Nov. 29, boltin1 Virginia MWtary lnatltute. Edmonton chosen EDMONTON Alberti <AP) - EdmCllton hat been selected tit• of the 19U World Unlvenity Gama. Tb• 11181 1amea will be held in l\Opiaola. The eames are held e-.erytwoy1an. • 0.~1-. lolt1t•a11 , "' I z 1uard Deal.I I · 1dct.d 11 ln bll ftm a•iu• ln Wal&erDa leCfalbcorenWlth~po ta,and m thrff ailhtl to lead Pboenht to• 11•101 NaUonal BatUtbeJl Alaoelatlou victory ovtr Portlao4 Sun. day. It wu the Hventh 1uai1bLl'lom• vlctory for Pb~nlx, the Dlntb 1tral1ht road lou for POrtland . . . Anti GU.o •cored 1t po ntl and Wfl7 ~ added 20 to pace Chica to a 11'·108 win over MUwaukee • • . Mlte Newlla •cored 28 points to lead New Jeraey to an 89·80 triumph over 0.troit . . . The ltfaJ lroubltt for former New York Knick• baaketba.11 player Ltit.laer ''Tklly" 8ardH •o on. Burden, 21 . waa arrdt41d Sunday mormnc and •lapped wltb a theft-of· JerYktl chafll fOt aJlt&edJy f alllftl to pay for lodltDI on Oct. 25 at a motor lnn. R• le currently free on $30,000 baal after befn8 chatted wltb ftnl-detree robbery ln connectlon with a Lone 11land bank hellt in June. .I,,.,.,..,, ol doMltlr drl,,,,.,c-? TUCSON -A paper trail of food bllll present· m ed by \JftiveraJty of Arizona buketbaU players · atter recelvtn1 catb. advances for food coat.a ac- tually put money ln thelr pocke\a, the Arizona Dai- ly Star tePOrted Sund~v . ' The ne'd)>aper said that lts Investigation showed the uni veralty paid a total ot S7,995 in cash for meals on eieht trips checked by tM publication. The Star reported the hotels in· volved later aubmtlted bills totaUne 16,250 for food charged to playen' rooms. One player who declJned to be Identified said he pocketed $80 In food money for one trip and then charged his m eals to hi• lllotel bill, the newspaper said. The Star Hid aeveral players said they billed the meals because they felt they were not glven the full amount or meal money drawn In advance from the university by basketball Coach Fred Snowden. Snowden refused to "dhmifv that Ques· lion with an a9swer'' when asked about player complaints of be· ing aborted on meal money. Last month, Snowden denied complaints by several playens that they did not receive their full meal allowance ror the 1979 Christmu holiday sea.son. ... tanford i11 lhaf" ff1r 1•ftlt.-h 114tcrl"! Peach Bowl organizers are toying with either [i] Stanford (S.4) or Indiana (6-4) as Virginia Tech's 4•• opponent after Arkansas accepted a bid to appear acainat Tulane in the Hall of Fame Bowl Former St. Louis Cardinals place-kicker Steve Little, paralyzed in an automobile accident last month, was trans(ered to LitUe Rock Sunday Little, 24 , was m "good spirits" . . Five athletes have been selected as finalists for the 1980 Brian Piccolo award. They are Rod Carew of the AnJtels. basketball stars Aust.ID Carr of the Washln~on Bullets and Harold "Happy" Halntoa or the Lakers and foot- ball stars Archie Manning of New Orleans and Jim Hart of ·,st. Louis. l.ftntard•s bro• her df!•in #pfling · The older brother of welterweight challenger • Sugar Ray Leoaard denies allegations of trying to spy on champion Roberto Duran's training camp. "I 'm not trying to agitate anybody and l 'm not spy- • SPORTS QREAK I l!OOTM.l. SEV ANO'S COLUMN. "W won the 1am , now where'• my money?·· •••• The Rams, betides dtabhlf lt out. iot pretty beat up themaelvea. too. Doua France lert the game late in the second quarter wtth a broken flnaer. He didn't return, either. although team doctora are optimistic about fhdna hJm with a plastic spUnt for next Monday 's game with New Orleans. The rest of the Injury report looked like this: Ed McGlasson -severe knee sprain; Pat Thomas lacerated nose; Rich Saul -severe shin bruise. For sheer guts, Thomas should 1et an award. The lacera lion w~ first (eared to be a break and his (ace eot 50 swoller by game's e nd it made Muhammed All's look like Bo Derek's in comparison followoing the Larry Holmes farce Thomas' right eye was swollen shut. there was a tremendoU! knot on his forehead the size of a golf b~l. and his face looked hkf 1t had been scrambled with an egg beater. Despite thls, he played "That's what I'm s upposed to do, isn't it ." he said with a faint smile. How bad Thomas' face swells during the week will determine whether he plays against the Saints or not. Thomas says he'll play re · gardless. ••• How banged up were the Rams? Things got so bad at one point that the offensive line featured such household names Ii ke Dennis Harrah at center, Bill Bain and Kent Hill at guards, and Jackie ~later and rookie Irv Pankey at tackles. What's funny is what would ha~appened 1r one or those i>ll'yers had gone down Believe 1t or not, tight end Victor Hicks would have moved to guard And who says the Rams lack depth. • * * If you're wonde ring about Wendell Tyler, the weather con· d1tions kept him from playing ••• Believe It or not. ooe writer asked Ray Malavasl by he thous ht the Patriots c ·4 > couldn't win games agai at tea01s of quality ca Uber. 1t appears New England, lke 1 the Rams, can't beat teams ~itJJ above .soo records aa \he Patriots loat to the RaQls, Hous~. Buffalo and Atlanta. ••• Prior to Sunday's game. ~e P_a,trlots hadn't had a fumble in s ix games. They had three against the Rams • * * Georgia not only showed up at. the game but accompanied ~e tea'!\ home on its ffight from Boston, where s he huddled with Malavasi for more than an hour. -* • * . The Rams. although they flew into Boston. bused au hour to stay in Providence, R.1. to escape what team officials called "distractions" in the ma· Jorcity. So. what is the first thing the players see as they arrive at the hotel -a pair or topless bars on the com er s., much for escaping distrac-tions • • * A line in one or the Providence newspapers. "The Rams ~'Ve played the easiest schedule this side of the Ivy League " Now JUSt wait a minute. I think Harvard or Yale could g1v(' New Orleans a pretty good game • • • Although set in a picturesque area, Schaefer Stadium, home of the Patriots. is the pits Other than a handful of seats, everything else 1s bench seating with the benches made of metal. What's wrong with that you say? Well. have you tried silting on a cold metal bench lately? ing on anybody." Roger ~ard said Sunday The rematch is scheduled for Nov. 25 at the Superdome in New Orleans ... .John HeQry won the $200.000 Oak Tree Invitational by 11-, lengths over Balzac: at Santa Anita Ridden by Lafnt Plncay, John Henry tied the stakes record in 2 23 2·5 over the l'r.i-m1le turf course . . Bntam 's GeoffLees led all the way in winning the 27th Macao Grand Prix, touring the 40·1ap race through the streets of this Portuguese enclave in a little over 11, hours . Alan .Jones easily won the Australian Grand Pnx m Formula One racing at Melbourne Norlo Suzu.kl of Japan won the Toshiba Pacific Masters golf title, takinga sudden· death playoff victory over countryman MasasbJ "Jumbo" Ozaki ... Greg Norman of Australia fired a two·under par 70 and posted a one·stroke victory over Brian Jones in the Dunhtll Australian Open golf tournament . Canada salvaged a l ·l be with Mexico in a World Cup soccer elimination game as Jerry Gray scored late in the game. , RAMS SHUT DOWN PATS. TeCftVion radio Following are the top SPorts events on TV tonight. Ratin9s are .t .t ' ( excellent; .t .t ' worth watching; .t .t fair . .t forget it. fl e p.m., Chennel 7 ./ ./ ./ ./ NFL FOOTBALL: Oakland at Seattle Announc•rs: Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell and Don Meredith. Jim Plunkett has directed the Raiders into first place in the American Conference West standings and last week ran four yards for the cllnchlng touchdc>wn. The Seahawks lost a heart· breaker at home to the Kansas City Chiefs, 31-30 on a touchdown with ~ seconds remaining. Seattle has had Its problems trying to get out of the cellar and has a 4~ record compared to Oaklanc:t·s 7-3 mark and a flve-(Jltme winning streak RADIO Football -C>aklandatSeattte,5·SOp.m ., KNX 11070) those came after a Ja c k Reynolds fumble recovery As a matter of fact, wit h t,he ·Rams offense unable to gel a first down during the en~re fourth quarter. it appeared the defense was puling one big stand after another In all. the defense forced rive turnovers. l\\-O of "'hich stopped touchdown drives "WE PL.A \'ED RAM football toda~." exda1med Pat Thomas 'We had to prove to ourselves "'e l'ould still play We had to show people we were stall the same ca libt-r team we were last year · "We played todav ltke we're capable of pl.aying, added Reynolds "and we're still capa- ble of playing better than that. We really nailed their butts to- day " Indeed. the Rams did stick 1t to t he Patnots But interesting- ly. maybe even more so than the clutch victory. \\as an ingre - dient that surlact'd m the lockt>r room afterwards a feeling of ramaraderie and togetherness, with a touch of fun "Th1<; ts the first time ttus season everybody was into the &ame," said Thomas. "The vibrations were flowing, and that's something that has been missing ttus season " "This is fun .. addt'd Dryer. "and we Cl•rtamly haven't had a lot of that lately · O'Brien paces UC Irvine, 6-2 Mark O'Brien tos~ed m three goals m leading UC Irvine to a 6 2 \\-ater polo victory over USC Sunday at Newport Harbor High. • The wm hikes the Anteaters' season record to 18·4·1 UCI re· turns to action Friday in the opening round of lhe Pacific Coast Athletic Association tournament at Relmont Plaza pool an Loni.? Beach Tenni8 playoffs start Thursday I ' NFL standings Seven Oranee eo .. t area eirls tennl1 teanu await the opening round ol CJ F playoff action Thurs- day, with Marina, Corona del Mar, Newport t1arbor, Laguna B .. ch 1nd Mater Dei drawing home uaianments. Eatancia 11 at Marina, Edison or Tulltin ia at Corona del Mar, El Modena ls at Newport Harbor and Unlvertlty l1 at FoothlU in the 4·A dlvlaion. Edi_,., ts at Tustin Tuesday to deeid• Corona del Mar's oppo. nent. tn S·A play It will be Los Amigos 1t Laruna Beach and eJther Mis· 1lon VlejoorTroy at Mater Del. NATIONAL CONFER ENCE East AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W LT Pc:t PF PA Philadelphia 10 l o 909 292 135 Dallas 8 3 o . 727 321 216 NY Giants 3 8 O 273 185 320 St Louis 3 8 o 273 229 251 Washington 3 8 O 273 158 232 Buffalo New England Baltimore Miami NY Jets W L T Pct PF PA 8 3 0 727 238 175 7 4 0 636 302 238 6 5 0 545 231 220 6 s 0 .545 175 204 2 9 0 .182 200 274 Central Central Detroit Minnesota Green Bay Tampa Bay Chicago 6 5 0 545 2li 198 6 5 0 S4S 216 210 4 6 1 409 176 231 4 6 1 .409 204 238 4 7 0 364 175 182 West Houston Cleveland Pittsburgh Cincinnati Atlanta'): 8 3 0 .727 295 202 Rams 7 4 0 .636 294 228 San Francisco 3 8 O .273 226 310 New Orleans 0 11 O .000 181 134 Oakland San Diego Denver Kansas City Seattle s-.tv tSc-lt•"'t 17, ,.,_ Envl•no 1• 9•111~ 10, Oelron t Bull•IO 14, ClevelMO o P111aou,,,.1•. cie._._ 11 8 3 0 . 727 205 UM 7 4 0 .636 242 223 7 4 0 .636 278 227 3 8 0 .273 142 201 West 7 3 0 .700 259 219 7 4 0 .636 305 211 6 s 0 .545 211 222 s 6 0 .455 207 240 4 6 0 .400 195 229 Zillgitt and Wright his Weeks special "4•• Yor• Gi.nu 21, Grffft Ber 11 Alla,.l.9JI, -0.i.*'ll ll 111111.o.1111'14.1-4, W-lnQlon 0 Ml-Mia a, T..,_ Bay JO O•ll•t 21, St. Louil )I Hew1I"" 10, Clliuvo• lntur.allCC agents and broktr1 ln1ur•nce premluma up thl• Y••r? • Call ua for a rom~tUlve quote for Auto, Homl!IOWMra, Fire nae Atta Lit~, Medical, R.V .. 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Piii s ... ,,., 3 POH from Br•Osh•W ( B•n ••Ckl A S4,S63 1...,•-ILe-n RUSHING Cl•Wl...0 M Pru111 IS H, G Pfu.11 ~ll PlthburQll, ... ,,., IS 40, 8ro0•"4tW120 PASSING C1e.e1...0 Sipe U·l< I 11' P1ll\burvn. er~w 19 JS• Z.J RECEIVING Clt.,..l•nd, M Pru111 S 4', G Prum ... :JO. ,..,....,,,... 3-41, Rud1er 7 o Pllls1>ur9,., Sw•nn 9· 13', Gro••m•n J ll, Smtih 2·1J .... ,,,, 2 II Ollert 10, Be•ra IS k-•YGoo9~ Hou1ton Cn1<e90 Cll1 FGTN>ml!HI Ch• FGTl'ome\71 0 ' 0 • ) 0 10 0 0 • Hou -Wlltion a pas' from Nt•f,•n IFrilJCh lllckl Hou FG f "t"n l' ... lt,J90 ...... _,~" RUSHING .. O\lston, C•m-11 JI io., Caroenier s-11 Cllte•Qo, P•v•on 18 .0, H••~•t-•.Ev.,,u-«> PASSING ---· Steblor 11·1).I 10.. Nllllet>l1.0-. Chi<-Ev•Mll·U·I l•S It ECEIVING Hou•IO" Berber ) S2 Renfro J.2l CMpent..,. 1 13, Johnson I 13. WllSon 1.f, Colemen 1 ·l Cn1t•QO Pavton •-4>l wens J.10 f1~r 1.11 B•sc:nMQOI I .. Biiie 14, Bengale 0 k«9•yGoo94'tof"a Bulf•lo o 7 o 1 " C1nc1nnall O O O O 0 eul -e .. 11er I• POU ltom Fer11uton (MIU Me-kklll a .. 1 110oil• J ""' IMl,...Meyer klU) A 40.tli IMll•-1 Le-" AUSHING Bull•lo, Br-n IJ_.., Hoolis tJ '' Cf"1btK • 11 C11"K-tnn.1tl Al•••notr 1l " A C,.1111" • IJ pes.,no Butt•lo, Ferouton. IS 2• 2 1n C.1n<tnn•11 A.ndenon 1 t '' 1 •s. fhomPtOn ••-O .... AE:CEIVINC. Bufleto Buller 4 ~ B••mmer 3-JI er.,_ J-11 Cmc1nNll R~• 'SI CurltH·S(t, ltreid« I 1'I NV J•h ~nv•r Den MYJ •• , .. J NV J NYJ k l(.ll J Bronco• 31 Jeta 24 kw• "' Qoo9rtan FG Sttol'!ort lO I 10 0 I l• J 1 1 14 JI W•"•' l6 twU trom Todd tlt_,.,, FG lt..,v ll J J-• JI ..... trom Todd ILeellY Otn Ooom< 11 pen lrom Monon «Sl••n fort ~1<• Oen P< .. 1.,,, l rvn tSle1ntott kt<l<I Oen Ke.,_..ih I run ISte1t1lort klCkl N v J Olerk 1no """ I Leohy 11tc k) °*" -UQC.hu<cn 1J PIH from MOrt°" '~"'"'°'' k!Ckl "" n iu ,,..._,Le_" AUS .. tNG N•W York J•I•. 1(1~rk1ng \I ~•. l.on9 • 11 H•ro•r l 11 Denver "~y .. ortll 11 SJ PrHton 10 .. Lyll• 2 11 PASSING Now Vorlt Jeh Tooo .. n 1 211 Don••• Monon l1 Jt.l ~ RECEIVING New York Joh, J J-. s 101 long l·ll Walllor 1·•1 Oenver Preston Ml Mewl .. '!!, Odom• 0-71 Colt• 10, Uona t ... .., ... ""' a. 11-. I J 0 0-IO 0.1(911 0 0 ) ~ • lel -Dlc••Y I r1111 (Miit•_,., •IOI .. I l'GMI.._.~,_, '' O.t l'OMwtey '1 Del -tlO ~., ,. Del -1'0 """'' ...... A -n'11 , ..... ~L.-n i.vSHING -S.lttrnor•. W .. hlnf\Of\ '·33, l'r•oat111 •n. McC...lo • 21. Olclto f.JO 0.lroll,. s1-••» •11-y , ... , l'AUINO a.llimore. J-.. 11.)-150 Oolroll, l>elliel~, ll·U I -1 i. i.ECEIVING -Ulimott, McC.11 HS C•rr 11'. WUlll11910fl 1 21. llullot 1·24 0.lrolt, Scotte-4$, II SlmtJ·ll CNrgera 20, Chl•f• 7 ~..,Qooel'Un K•Mea City 1 0 0 0 -I Sen Ote90 O • 1 1 -10 KC -Fwllor4 nM ILowoq•lllOI so -r-. • ""' 1•10 1•11.01 SO -f_..... 1'""18enlrsc:hk• 11101 SO-C. Wllfl•mdr1111 t8tn1rsc:nUk10I 1..-v.-.11,.e_,, i.USHll'IG !Unw.• City, S.llon '» McKnight ).11, Soilltr, ) S, Morg.00 l • Sill\ Oleo<>, T-..i l1 109, C Wtlllom• 10 ll, Mun<tef.JO ,).~t.:5,~~o~F'!.~:"~~l· rit1•' RECEIVll'jG -K•nst• cnv. Reed 14> McKnlglll l·ll. Smith l 19 San Diogo WIMIQ.-.~·.)I, JOI"''.~·. Thom-.. 1• Jef ltrlOll l·ll, Ml.Inc,. 111 COiie;. IATUi.DAY'S LATE scoi.•s Seti JowSI. 33, C•l Slele Fulltrlon 2 I Hewelll .. N•••Cle(LV) 19 UC o .. 1sll, .. oy .. •tOSI 16 C•IPolyC$1.012l.B°'IOSI 20 Cl•r•tnonl MuOo•1, Who1hu l1 IOeno "· N Arl10M I 1oanos1 ... ,W•"-•S1 s Rtdle"°'U. PomoneO ~crunentoS1 H .. umt>oldl 51 II S•nC• c .. reO. Nortnr1c19t SI 1J N re •• ,s1 1• HE L.ou111•n•" HOW THE TOI' M l'AREO I \;to(Ql• lll>-<HI) "-el Auburn, JI l I 1 USC (7 I 11 IOSI lo We\hlnglon 70 10 J FIO<lde Stet•<• 1.01 <110 not pl•y • N.CWHU 19 .01 b .. I IOW• Slolo H./I s Al•ba""' 11-2.0l IO\llONolr• O•l'M /.(I 10 t -.. • Notre D.trnt 18;, I) DUI Al•.,.in• 7-0 I Ohio Sle1e I' 1.01 Mel IOW• H I I P1lts11Uf91> It.HI• OUl Armv 0 I 9 Penn Stet• 19-1-01 OHi Tempi• )0 I 10 Okie-111.01 O.H Ml\so1m, II I 11 Mtcn19a1> 18·1-01 l>Oial Purdue 16 O t1 B•ylor 19 1.01 t>e.fo~ llitt. 1..-i. 1J e,,on.,., Y°""9 c• 1 01 ""•' co1or-s1e1e. •)-14 u SoY\h Carohna 41 l 01 t>••t wa-.e Forest, J9.l8 IS North CMoltn.e 19 1.0l OUI Voro1~1• Z• l 16 P<J•Out 11 l-01 IO•I lo M1cn•Q•" lo.{) II UCl.A 17 1.0) bHl A•11on•S1e10 IJ 14 18 SMU II }-411 IOSI lo Tues TMh, "-0 t9 M•H•HIOP• Sl•le Cl 2--0) De•I Lou1\1•n• Sl•te SS-JI 10 FfO<-111-01 OHf ICtnl11<•y II I~ Junior college •Chedute ., .... _ .. ,,._ ...... _, TMVllSOAY'SGAMH ,_...c.ic..,.,_. Go•oen Wffl •• Rlo HMOO •I Wh1t1oe• Coll~ SATUltDAY'SGAMl!S So...i.C:..stc ... 1ertfl<• O••noeCOll•l•ISDMew Cert1tose1 Fullorlon Gro .. monlelMl Sen Antonio c 1 JO --.,... (.ti c-...-tfl<O Los Angelfl CC •IS.nl• Mon•t a LAH•rbot•IE•llLA 1111..-c.. .... _. ~OO-i.•IP•-r ~nD109DCCetSoul-S!ern Sen BerMrOlooV•ll•vet A1ver .. oecc. Metrotle!IC.ft C ... lff9'1C o 8oke'111ol0 •I E•Com100 LO"Q Be•< n CC olP•..-.CC TeftllLAVelley Wtstenl SC.te C-lor9'1Ce Sa"<e 8¥-aCCat Anlelo~ Ve110 CanvonsalWHILosAngeles Comp1on•t Ventut• Glo...S.toat__.. _,~. Ml S ... JKlnlOel0-1'\ M1r•C01l••I lmpe•l•I Valley ,._..,..,....u LASoul~lets.nteAn•l1 JOI High Scftool Pl•yoffa C" llCH'tY• CONttl i.•PfCI (ltr6'ey, 7:>Dp"".) S.•••le v~ l!dl-•I o ... n99 Coe SI Coll• (OllO'I •• We1nut ~l'M<I ., FO'll•n•. SI frant1S•t8t\hop A~\ FOUl'\tatnF•U~-w•l El\tnho•f'r Crtspt at Lo~ Ailos Wl\I co ....... SI JMn Bosco P•t1l1c •• SI Paul Cl!NTi.ALCONltlaENCC SI Bern.erOol E~ranH Es\aftcla v\ '4ofl at L• M1ffKj• Sl•d•um Br•• Of•nOa •• Atomeny C.-*I_, II'-"•",.. .. ..,,., Mls,IOf\ \/\oe~O•t P1u\ x '-'•lttn<•• It\ El Toro ,, MISl•on V'1tjO C1p1t.tr•nO v ... ,., at Mayt11r L•M1red1•t El OOt'.ciO ~THEltNCOM,EltENCE 51ddlft»C• •I El Modena WlrfM ar u Quin la. EI Rencl!O•I K•~OV' LO\ AmllJOUI Sunny .. ,11, OowYw• al Loe•• Fooo"ll al Ulfdtl\ Ciro"9 S•nla Ana al Af\1n.-1m (ypr•u•tl.v"wooo COASTALCONl'EltEHCI San Marc.01. .u Muir Mt1l1k1n at Oanarc;• Compton •I Pe•oVera., Nowt>urv P•r• •I So'lle 8.,t>ere Cl'Wlnnel ISiand• •• S•nle Monie• Ar<.t .. at~Pu•C>IO) N torr•"'-~ •IWotl•U Cre'""UIV•llo•ll.B Po•• NO•THWESTE•NCDHFE•ENCE 81vrr1y HHtt 1t LOmPO< Ouaru ~rn '' Gttl\dlte. s .... M.tri• •• A ........ on Anttle>iPP VAllhel8'111Geroent. Burrougn• c 8ur-t1 ~;~~!~~,~·=~~~!!~mu.-nJJ~A•r ~~ l!AlTli.NCONl'•i.ENCC I..• S•err• el Soutn Hiii\ Cl•••mon1 al Cal.torn•• O.m.~n •• Aub•OOu• L• Puet'll# Isiah Robertson arrested BUFFALO, N Y . <AP> - Linebackers Isiah RoberUon and Jlm Hulett of the Buffalo BlU. were arrested on disorder· ly conduct charaes early today an.er 1ett.tna into a fight with each other at a suburban restaurant and night club, police said Ha1lett. 24, was treated at Our Lady of Victory Hospital io nearby Lackawanna for a minor rtnger injury, police said. They said Robertson, 31, a former Ram and Huntington Beach resident, bad some facial cuts and bruises, but didn't re- ceive any boepital treatment. Tbe two players were released on thelf own recopizance pend- ing arralpment in West Seneca Town Court Tuesday. Police said the pair and some other players had gone to the Pierce Arrow Agency restaurant after returning from Cincinnati, where they beat the Bengals 14·0 Sunday in a NationaJ Football Lea1ue game. Police said Haslett and Robertson were fi&bting in the restaurant parking lot when they arrived. Officers separated the two, then booked them on the disorderly conduct cb~1es. ec ArtlflQlon, Moll-114 et c;.,..Ule, Cevil'ot el No"•· ~ 5trne •t HQoeto•, H.,,,.1.er It IV1f't1die l"oty • 50UTMtASTallMCOMPaae•ca Cen1re1 •t kl>llrr; ~ Yellt'f Al Mer, Ster; Yert1umO.U1Yuce""9;l""°otG1 .. y, St. Antnony el Onttrlo; El Molllo et..Vl<lllr ll'•)Jtw, ~ .. ··-1.,,: Metk KtPlllll•I S.tr• lllJUlllOCOH,1l1ta111c• '-quln.eulT.t\acll•P'. Wlllltlor ChrlltlMl•I CalMdr.i, Slfreno •I TrCll\I, P•••clote el llreill••n ,.._., Hnler •I Vellev Cllr1ll•4'n 0.Mrl el Mammeell, al"'°I' V"IOfl et e.t Boar OMM.oOlrltllenAIMelodVl•nd OaHltf·MOUlllTAINCO#ltlltaNU St eonevontu,..•IAl•K-ro, R-ndo•I RIO MUe, St.,,.,...,...\ 91"-Olo90; i.1mol INOfld •1 ltoyel OP, "'"" el •'-"t"91on Sanl• Yntl •I Ml•elUI• L•w"4••• •I Ago .. , •. 8-lf••H18eldwln Pe<lt HIOHSCHOOLSTANDINOS (lt1M41 Sun .. tLvsaue ~AHO-W I. T . W L. T Pl' PA EO•san s O 0 10 O O 7Jl o. Fin VOiiey • 1 0 I 1 0 1.. \04 Muina l J o • O II• 10. Mwpl H•rbor 2 l 0 J 0 .. l•S WHtmtnster 1 J O 4 • o 14• 151 Hntglon 8ffctl 0 S 0 I t 0 91 ltl Angelua Leaaue ........ AiiO-W LT W LT Pl' l'A SI Peul 4 0 0 9 0 0 1 IJ 1• 81.nDpArnel 3 I 0 9 I 0 15' 11 S.rv11e· 1 1 0 l I 0 11 100 Meter Oe1 I J 0 S 4 I 10 I~ Mon1oomerv o • O s s o IOI •Cll •1nc1.-,11one11non l•a11"'1o> .. • S.•Vlewle•gue Le .... ANG- W L T W LT "" Elforo • I 0 6 • 0 11} E\lan<1• • 1 0 • 0 16S CoronaoelMer I 0 • 0 116 co .. •M• .. J 0 1 0 1., vn1ven1tv 1 0 ) I 0 116 Irvin' 0 0 0 10 0 St South COHI Le•gue IA-AllO..., .. W 1.. T W LT "" UQuneS..ocn • 0 ' l 0 101 M•H1on \/tejO • 0 ' 1 l ISO CapoVelley ) 0 • , 0 lU S•n Cl•rnM•• ] 0 • s 0 l•S L•gvn•H1U\ I • 0 • 0 "' 0.n•Hlll\ 0 s 0 • 0 120 Empire l••gue ..... _ AUG- Lo•r• • I 0 I 1 0 Ill Cyore" ) 1 0 1 J 0 1)1 l<.•nnedy l 1 0 1 J 0 ... OcunVlew 1 ] 0 6 • 0 IS. LO•Alam1los , ) 0 • ~ .. , f<•telt• I • 0 • " ... Gr8nd Prix Tournament i,.twe-y,11,,.i.""1 s1 ............ . PA 10 100 IJI 71• .... m "" " 91 109 111 JSI ... 101 111 ,., Ill 16! Ill Jon" Mc Enr°" ctol Geftt Meyer • •. t.• • l t McEnra. wu1\\ ~.000 May.-r w'"' '''·"" T•lpet Champlonahlp• letl •l4Ml. Telw..,I s ....... ,, ... 1 I v•n Lendt OPf 8r•M" Te»<.PH!t I> 1 •) "l I & I L•nGI win\ l lJ, IH, hoc,,er ,.int )0 11ll Dutch Women'• Toumey lat A--"'· H.-ria""'' s ....... ,, .... H•n• ManOlltr.ova Ofl Vtr9;n1e Ru11c1 ~·1 • J 1·S CM.andUkO¥• vuns l '•.000 Rutt<• win\ $1,0CIO) _,, ... , B•llV Sto••·Meno11•0 .. dtl lluntll M•m• J•UIOV'K 16,,. <Stove M•ndltkOV• Utli1 S.4 fJ(I) RU1.Wll J•uM>Yfl. ~pt.t $2 JOO) Flotlct. Women'• Tourney Ill Olit.,.,.r. "• I s-....l'IMI Anort• J-del Trecv Au>l1n ov o. '•"It c•utlln '°"'••tf'<I tle<•UM' ot • rwm ''''""' 1n1.,ry CJ~r ••nos W @> No\I' J•e~r <kt ~" White-1r1. • O in •n •• hiblliOf\ match ~School Pl•yotfa WOMl'H Cll' 4-A ll'lnt -· Tll11,....av1 S•ml V•ll•V •I Do\ P.-Olos, Wesll•-· •• Burrouo"• Mu" •I TnouwnO O•••. IEst.M <I• •I l'Ml1M , Cui .... C••• •• SoU111 Tor r•n<f' U•lv•ralty •l Footl'lill Mor•"o v.11,.,. •1 Aed1anct\ M1ra \e-s\t at Hoo••r C.tenoa.e •I 8ti,tirt., Hiii\ P•tot V'erditt •I Alnambre. Sen Gor90n.o el Pelm Sp"n9' E•I .. ,. or Tustin al car ...... , Mer, El MoO•"• et Newper1 HotlMr H•"itl •1 Cotton Arcad1• or Rotltng H1U\ a1 MarlbM~ Wf'\U••• •t 541,,t• Baro.r• Cll' >-A l.O\ Am·-•I u..,M .. ac.i. ArlonQ1on •I (l•rfltnont Trl"'\pf~ C•ty al K•ttlla AamoN •• Woo• Hills M101on \/teJO or froy •t MA'-Det, W•rrt-n .tt L• C•n.O• 801u1 Gr~ •• l 8 W11~on P•r•moune .ti W•lnut W•\I (0¥1n• •. ~n ,...r1no l.9 POI¥' •t Con"-llY Cyprtu "'' C1rr1eo\ 81\hOP A,,...1 "' Gltnoora . .,,.dell-• •I O•ft• Mills, L••••ood at LA Quint• LO\ Altos •t L°' Al•m1to~ CMffet •t A1v~r~tOe Po~t PKtfloM••tefe 4et .......... , .... ND<'iO !o<a...U, W,000 !H6-10 71-JG MeUIN Oi.eltl, SD.SCIO ,........,~ 212 T_)W....,,t l5.m 1>-11·11--m •• "'"''· au.w 1•-1<Mot-11-m 0 A.Wtlbrlr19-$1S,:W 1"7J.10.71-S15 loft Hln1119, te.OGO 7W7·10o1l-1" l.ff TrOYtno, tJ..... ~13-1211 l9S M"e RelcttJ.* ~n.12-71-31$ k11M11.....,,U .S.. 14-lt ..... 11 a5 LH IEIOlr, U,,.. 10.11·/J.11-115 D•MY EO.•rcll, \S,S6to 12·12·1171>-itS 011••• U S tcor" Boo Gtl-.... JOO IHI 10.70 a. C101Q S~ \l.tOe IS·I0.7110-1'1 O•kTr .. SUNDAY'S •••uus U4t~ et u.., ...... _.. H "'•1"'91 Fir•I rK• Owl-iP1noyt ''° • 60, l .0, Summer S.110r IOhvarest, • >IO, J 00, Toucn of A0<111v tOelellou• .. yol. 3.eo S.Cono reu fr191111u IHawleyl S 20. "'"° 3 .o. Silonl Tim l.Jonesl 11 .a 11 60. M•rrv Mac 1S-meur1 1 00 S2 01111v -1>1• I•· II 1M1d $26 00 ThtrO rec:• Hos e R1"11 IR•mlrell, H •O IS •O. 1 10 Norm N Relpti I D•••nousuytl ~ 20. loo Ne••d• Stoll (forol.1 IO FoiHln raco Laut•~ !iel Horo1 S 20 • 00 1 IO. Amllfl•meur 10.lelloun•v•I 'oo.~ 20;0pe~en .. 1s11oom .... n.) 10 Fllll\ rec:e o.. .. rl Hew• CF•lll J) 10. II 00 S .0 Jim Burke IP1ncay1, • 00. J 10 Fleel Au ... 10..let>ou>W•• • 2 '° u .. ec:~ 11·11 PO•<lkll !1(1 ...,.,,,rec:• "-•eQrH .. IOr IL1phem1 •IO. J 40, 1 .0, TlmCO (C•Ueneclel, • 10. 1 bO, Prem1•r Mil'*lf'* 'f0tot l ~ S..v•"'" ,.... F1n1 Tony 'Toro). l 00. 1 40. 2 20 JUSI A1Q"11 Moke I 0.1•'-l .. ~ol • 00. 1 to. Tu•erco·s PIN•ure IM.llg.r1n11. , .c> 's out<• tl 11 pa10 \OO !1(1 U Ptek S;~ ll·J I 1.J.JI 1M1d '18,9'• Wlo 11 w1nntno uctiteh fSiJt norw\I U Pick Sta con \Ot•t•on C>rlt4 ,., ., to , , • WHW'l1n9 h<UI\, Ill•• l!Ors-..1 Eighth rec• JOM Htnry IP .. ><•VI soo. J "°· 2.40. Belie< 10.1a11ou1..-.. 1. • 20 J llO. 8010 TrOP'< ISl!oem•••r) 1 60 M'"'" rMA: Pi~r• L• Mont •H•wltyL l 10.2 I0.120 N-Vt<IOtylMen.AI 1.0.•10 E• AOlsmo IMCGurn) 1 .o Uuect• II ti pelO \st so A llendence 4',l'M NHl WALIS COM,• 11t•HCE ,. .... ,.o,.,._ tu.,.. MOrttr••I ... rtlord PtllSburQtl Oetro11 'Ill I. T Git GA -12 S I 1' •1 JS t717'5.120 j •• )'I .... s 10 J ., 13 u JlllS.IS' ..... ~04--·~-MlnMsol• 10 l l /1 O ll 8ull•10 • l S I' O lJ Torof\IO 9 S I /I •l 10 Bosion S 9 J SS ~9 IJ O<Hl>e< I 10 ~ )I to 9 CAMP•~LL CONl'm•ENCf lt•tri<ll Dl•l&loa Ph<l_I_ NY ISi•-• CAIQAfY W•\n1nqton NY A•,.,. 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M<YrpnyJ I 49 i V•ntouftr. 80\0•'"tv t (8r•wr L.anr > 1J ll Pf'~lh•' w~o UC,,,,_. 6, 9:k J vsc UClr\111141 VC lrw1no tcorino i.11c1111 I, IMwleftd I • 1 0 0 ,_, • • 1 1 I 1__. 0'8t1en J, LHl>ltr t, High Settooe Pf•yoff• oua•n•"'"A~t•n• IWs• .... ,,atJ,,.._I C!flW. MlllllllM M ~He.-L9"Q 8ffell Wtlton •t Senl• 9•rb•re Downey •I Vnlvor.itv. Sulll\y'\l,UntWelnut. Cll'l·A • U1 P•nto •I -•1tt.n; t-tn ~.,lno vs ,..,,..., .i c.IN1IM, ~l.t ~-I •}C.O"llo; Crote>l•lle~ •' ' • ,, .... ..,.,,.,·· ......,,, .. t. t$A • WUT•t111 CQAPtlllN(l MWwostO...n .... Sen AnlO•UO Vloh w "Pa. 01 H S IJ7 ic ..... ,c11v Denver HOU\ton D•lla• 11 I ,,)1 1 ' 11 .,. • ' 10 '11 • ., .all• l 16 ISf 11 P.ocllk OlvtslM Plloen1 c 1 ~ l a33 Lelter1 I• S Ill I > Goldfn Sl•lf 11 • M1 l'n S.1111• ' 10 474 •• ' S•n OteQO • 11 llJ Po•tl•no s 13 ne 10 l!ASTEi.N CON,IR•NC& All.IMlc IH•ts• Plllleelelpl'll• New Yorll BoS\0'1 NorJerwy Woslll"910tl W I. Pet. G• u 3 Ill 11 • ISO 10 S 667 J'n • " •21 71,, 1 II ~ t Gttttral OlwlMofl Mllw•u"" l"41an• Cl\•c•oo Atlente ClevelenO 0.1roll 1S , .7SO 10 • 1 II S ll S IS • IS ~,-,k ..... Ne,. Jer .. v "· 0.1ro1t IO Cnic-11', N\llweukee 108 P.-nl• "'· Pofll...0 107 Los Angeles Ilg, !Mllft 101 T ....... ~ No !tetnft Klledulecl SS4 ' .. ' lit ' lSO IO 211 10"• L•k ...... 110. Maiweneke 10~ DALLAS e.,r,,.. 0, IA G .... oe n, Lloyd 11, Boyn .. '· Huston 21. Roblnilne •. Sl>eMrk .. ll. J.001 ... I 10, Allum\ 2 fotolS JI 1•·11101 LOS ANGEi.ES Wilke• 11 Cl!One\ 10 Abdul J•bblr II Cooper 10. Jonnoon H Br•••• 1. CMl•r 11, Hollend a, .. •rdv 1, P•tr1tll l rote1s,. ,.,21110 lofw..,,~ O.llu U t1 » l..o\ A1>991.. 2t 21 21 Fovlld out -Brt-r Fotel IOlll• 21, \.OS 1'nQel•• ]I Tech,,'lcel Co•cll O•<k Motte A 9 "l I Misc. Wffbncl T,.n .. c:ttona SAMttfaAl..1... NetieNl ........... AU«lellofl OALLAS MAVERICKS -$1Qned Ollwr Moct..~"""o R.e,.._JoeHuwn ciuerd ltOOTf AlL ,..._.,,....,.nu,.... OETAOIT LIONS -Acllveled Rot W1lllems .. ~ •«••ver Plec:~d JOt\n Arnotcl ontlletn1.,....,,_,,..111( SAM FAANCISCO 4'EltS Pieced """ Franc•t., h.H•De<k, on,,. 1n1ured r•wrvf; lht Actht•ted Jut\my "otMnlOl'I, wlO.. receiver HOC•IY ~H0<keyL.N911e '4EW YORK ISLANOEAS Relurr>N Aol•nd _,.,,....,, QOellender to 1nd••nap011s Ol 11\t Cenirol11"'k•Y L•811UO NEW YORIC RANGERS -Nem.d tN..,nt Tnom ... ~•te;~ •• ..,_ S«cir~ CHICAGO .. OltllONS -StQ'IOOc:tl ... Of1t Hff'lc. d.,..,.._,. of' .. Polo playoffs Wednesday I THE NEW------- 1 SPORTING HOUSE Newport Harbor High 's two-time defend ing CIF 4-A water polo champions have drawn a hom e contest with Millikan Wednesday in the quarterfinals of., the 4-A eliminations Also at home in the quarters ia Sea Vi ew League c hampion Univenlty, which duels Downey Ht AL I H LLUts MtMHLtf )t tll''; · 1 · ' · I r f ~ ~-l '") ( l · I I 1 ~ • , I DA y MlMBE l?SHir J L I ~ J I ~ t ! : I / 1 ) -------------------·~- We wont to bulld our reputation onyoul SEE ITS TODAY ••••• · t radio pager CR YST AL SALOON & CAFE ,. .. WIDE AREA COVERAGE ~ c...tJ, L.A. C... ., .............. c..&J. lth\f'IWt r .... e,. '17.75 ' "' ' .. ' I I ~ .. I • ' . . .. ... r"' I . ' ' .I'" I - 7 Nit•• Uve Countr.y . Music I 1 --·-_,. __ _ Mazatlan race A stormy . ~ crossmg By ALMON LOCK.ABEY O.llr l'llot aNti"I Wnte.-The best predictions of experts and computers were confounded Sunday when the weather gods stirred a few vagaries into the 999-mile Los Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race. The 13th race of the Los Angeles Yacht Club went into the re<'ord books Sunday as a cross between the slowest and the fastest of the biennial event By 8 a.m. Sunday all but four of the 29 starters were snugged down in Ma:iatlan Harbor and the tailenders finished by early afternoon It aJl happened when the normal calms at Cabo San Lucas and the expecled Light winds m BOATING the Gulf or California turned mto a stormy cross ing that brouaht the yachts boiling across the finish line at Creston light in droves. The surprisingly gusty winds created some close battles both for the elapsed time and correct ed time honers. Tightest race was for hne honors among the Class A contenders with Brad Herman's Santa Crui-50 Secret Love. Del Rey Yacht Club beating out the 65-foot scratch boat, Ragtime, by 64 seconds Two other Santa Cruz·SOs, Bill Walters' Night Train, Ventura Yacht Club. and Morrie Kirk's HaAB Ho, Balboa Yacht Club, fm1shed only minutes apart in the same hour Secret Love's elapsed time was 7 days, 5 hours and 5 minutes, about two days off the record of S days, 7 hours set by Ragtime m the 1976 race. Due to the slowness of the race, it was not sur prising that the Class D yachts picked up all the hardware tor overall corrected lime handicap hon on Dust Em. a Peterson-38 sloop co-skippered by Dennis Conner of America's Cup fame and Chuck Hope, San Diego Yacht Club, edged Dennis Choate's Sixpence for the top spot by 13 minutes Choate was the overall handicap winner in the 1978 race. This year's race. which loomed m lhe early stages as the slowest on record, turned out to be about two days quicker than the 1974 race in which it took the first boat 9Y.:i days to finish Ur>Olfl<t.i Nl'ICll<~ ruull> ovE.-ALL -I Ou•I Em. COf'l,,.r·.._ SOYC l S.a_.ce, O..W.11 ,,,.,.,,., 1..evc 3 ~r\1, G<Por9<1 R1<IW•-· C8VC • Red Shift. A••• GoeU-Anne KAhle, LA 'l'C. S M• Whl110 Kt1lh Mor9M\. Novy V .oc:hl Clul> I ~\Iver l'o•. 8ob Keller.er. LttVC, 7 Jel SltHm, Jerry S"""'"" L8YC, I ~co, A-0. Sec>lo, eve t Sd1temouttw, Rotl• Crocker, SF'l'e; 10 Warr tor. Al C-11 SC YC CLASS A I S.Cr•I Lo.. l l•ll!Jhl Treon J S"m•lra AIC.11 ~111n LA Ve CLAl'>S 8 I Jet Strum Jerry Somonl\ 1..8VC l Wotro0< Al C .. MI, &CYC l ~. Oovld Fenoa SI FYC CLASS c '-Sliver Fo•. &of> K•fl• ... •. Lave. &ot<CO A"09IO.,. S.p•O e't'C. J Scero,_,.11.,, llo1te Cro<k., srvc CLASS 0 • t Ou•t Em. Con,,., H-. SOYC. l !t11p..,c:1. Otnn1> 0.0.t•. L8Ve, J Sunovrtt ~9" lll(NrO-. cevc Bltdlaftan ..,,"• A ngf!llllGll ~n Dave Buchanan, skipper of the yacht Just Plain Crazy, was named the overall and Class C winner in Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's season- long Aneelmao Series for Performance Handicap Raclnt F1eet yachts. Buchanan sails under the burgee of Voyagers Yacht Club. Cltlfwl(lner1. cl.ASS A -1. Hoedlum. Miu ...ci Clnclt 5'~1•<. eve 2 ,,.,., JIM Emmt. ltC"te; J.1Ctlt11r, Jom O.Wolto. V'l'C CLASS 8 -I. -lln 0...1. Allen M-Art VYC, 2 TrM GorclO. Oe .. Price, 8CYC, l. PofPY. Roy Sln<lelr, eve CLASS C -I. J IAI Pleln CroN, 0.vld ~. V't'e. 1 OolHt ROOH 0-11'4. VYC; l. flh-rry Mv!t111. ICof'M\ MelOt\. YC lt'atllftl, Slbtger tri....,.,. Mike Wathen 's Stinger wu the overall and Class A wipner Sunday ln the third race of Capialrano Bay Yacht C)ub'a Mission Sertea. The race around the buoys was salted ln Santa Ana winds that ranged from light to heavy. There were no milbaps. Secood Ol'erall wu Skoehi Tlger, sailed by B4>b Strana. Capo BYC, and third WU Randy Tar, Greg Sands, Capo BYC. Cius results; Cl.ASS A -t ""*'· z. lt•,..r fer. l •--· lrwe Andllttfft. ~~;.I -I ~II N Roll, Jett .afld S.. lt•r1, OPY(; 2. MIW11,.... .. , O.,_. c;....,.,c;...,. IYC. I "aoJKk • .-10.0r~. OPYC. CL.AMC-I. Sj(Otlll Tl ... ; t. Oendell, Oo\IO~~t-J-, OPY<;, I. ll"vff, ,_,....,.,._,C.0 8YC. Maida rarr rr•rltedulftl Gusty northeast wlnda forced caoceUatloP of yacht.lftl acUvltlea aloni mOlt of the Oran1e Coaat Saturday and Sunday. lncludlna the icMctuled Newport Harbor match tacln1 cbamptonahlp co 1etect an en1tJ' In tons Beach Yacht Club'• Paclhc Coaat Match Racin1 charnplonshl~. t<Jewport Harbor Yacht Ctut; ri1d the ftent hu bee, rescheduled for next kend. 1 .. FOOTBALL t BOA-TING I BUSINESS CoWboya beal lbe St. Louis CardlbalJ 31·21, FA.leoo1 d f e.ated the New Orleans Salots l·ll, 8uff ato BUia tb O\ll the ClnciMaU atn11t. 14-0. th Mlnneosla Vlkinaa 'Outacored the Tampa Bay BuccaneeN 11·30, tbe San Die10 Cbar1en downed the Ka.auu ctty Chiefs 20-7, tbe Miami DolplJ.lDI rupped the San FranclJco Uers 17·1$, the DeDver Bu11eta beat the New York Jeta 31-24, the Baltimore Colts edeed tbe 0.trolt Lions 10-9 and the New York Giants defeated the Green Bay Paclten27-21 Oakland.playa at Sea\Uetonigbt Ollera 101 Beans Campbell, who carried 31 titnes, raised his season totals to a leacue-leadJn1 1,300 yards on 245 carries for the Olien, who tot the only touchdown of the game on an eight-yard pus from Gifford Neilsen NFL ROUNDUP to Tom Wilson on a fake field goal play just before halftime. To'nl Fritsch kicked a 29-yard field goal for Houston's other points. Eagles24, RedsldnsO Philadelphia won its seventh in a row and raised its record to 10-1, best in the NFL, by breezing past the struggling Redskins as Ron Jaworski threw a pairofscori.ngpasses. ·'I told this team before the season started that ir we beat Dallas in Philadelphia and the Redskins m Washington, we'd win the division, "said Coach Dick Vermeil. "Well, here we are. Cowboys 31, Cardinals 21 Danny White threw three scoring passes and Drew Pearson became the Cowboys' all-time receiv· mg leader with his 366th career catch as Dallas raised its record to8-3 by beating St. Louis Although Dallas trailed Philadelphia by two games in the NFC East, lhe Cowboys have the second-best record in the conference and are in prime position for a wild card playoff berth. "I'm not concerned where we are in the stand· in gs or how we got there.'' said Cowboys Coach Tom Landry • · l just want to get into the playoffs That's all l 'm worried about." Falcons 31, Saints 13 Atlanta won its fifth in a row to remain one game ahead of the Rams in the NFC West as Steve Bartkowski threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score. "We're tired of losing around here," said Bartkowskj_ "Now that we've had a taste of winning, we know what it's like." The Saints haven't had even a taste of winning this season. The loss dropped them to 0-l 1 "There's not much to say after 11 straight losses," Coach Dick Nolan of the Saints said. "We played hard. we kept fighting but we kept beating ourselves " Bills H, BengalsO Buffalo took over sole possession of rirst place m the AFC East by posting its first s hutout of the season The Bills limited Cincmnati to JUSt nine first downsand213netyards. · '"We didn't do anything offensively at all," ad milted Bengala Coach Forrest Gregg. "We were very, very poor. And that pretty well tells the story of thegame" Vikings 38, Buccaneers 30 Tommy Kramer completed 24 of 37 passes for 324 yards and two touchdowns and Ted Brown rushed fort wo scores as Minnesota beat Tampa Bay despite a brilliant performance by Bucs passer Doug Williams. who hit on 30 of SS for 486 yards and four TDs ''Now. is there any question about his bemg a top quarterback?" asked Minnesota Coach Bud Grant about the Buccaneers' oft·maligned Williams. ''He putonquiteashowoutthere " ··1 don't get off on individual thmgs, · responded Williams "'I'd rather win." Chargers 20, Chiefs 7 Mike Thomas, replacingtheinJuredCbuck Mun cie and John Cappelletti, ran for 109 yards and two touchdowns for San Diego It was Thomas' first 100-y ard game in nearly four years Dolphlns 17, 49ers 13 Roolue David Woodley tossed two touchdown passes to send San Francisco to its eighth straight loss. "We've been self -destructive," said 49ers quarterback Steve DeBerg, who completed 15 straight passes in one stretch of the first half and finished with 29 of 41 for 22S yards. "We moved the ball up and down the field on them all day long and came up with only 13 points That's been the story of our streak." Broncos 31. Jets 24 Denver rallied from a 17-3 deficit to wm behind Craig Morton, who passed for 306 yards and two touchdowns. It was the first time Morton bas sur paned 300 yards in his four seasons with the Bron cos. Morton completed nine passes in a row during the third half to help the Broncos score on three atratiht possessions. The winning mar1in was a 13-yard TD toss to Rick Upchurch with S.24 ten to play. Colts 10, L1oos 9 Rookie Lynn Dickey scored the only touchdown of the game on a one-yard nm capping the opening drive, and Steve Mike-Mayer added a 43-yard field goal. Detroit's Eddie Murray kicked three field aoals but rnissedona«·yard try wlth29seconds left. Giant.a 27, Packers 21 Phil Simms booted op witb Earnest Gray oo touchown passes of 50, 20 and 4 yards t.o carry the Glantl pa.at Green Bay. It wu New Yort•1 second win ln a row after losing eltibtattaiabt. Daily Pilot top IO • Dalb' PUot'aTapll ~C:O..tyPrepl' ua.uap Pot. Tea•,tteonl .ftbWen'•Oppe•eat 1. EdiJon < 10-0 > Servite 2. Eaperama (10.0> St. 8ern1rd 3 Founlain V&.lloy <8-2} Elsea.bower 4. El Modena (8-2) Slddleback 5.SunnyJIUIJCl-2> LolAmtfOI e. LO~ 8-2) Downey 7. El DOrado ('1 · J ,1) L• •llrada 8. An.ahelm (8-2} Santa.Ana 9. Foothill (7 ·3) • G atdea Gnwe 10. Manoa (8-t) Foataal Business -- -------- SEATTLE (AP) -Y~. FBI, there '3 a So-Cal. Undert0ver asents who posed u rtlpresen- tatives of an org..,lzed crime front company in the Ga.nucam cue caUed their dummy firm So·Cal Enterprlaes The case resulted 1n the racketeerin& convic· tiooa ot two top Wublngt.on leplators and a lob- byist accuaed of a1reeln1 t.o promote 1amblin1 legislation ln ~um for a share of the profita. THE CASE ALSO H.'S made the executives of a Los An&eles computer company angry. They work for a real So-Cal -So-Cal Buaaiess Systems Inc. And that company is no dummy. It has nothing to do with gamblin1. 'l1le Seattle Post-Intelligencer reported on the real So-Cal ln a copyri5ehled story last week "We've really been s -, " said Dan Hartley, a Seattle computer representative who has been trying to sell So·Cal 's systems in the Northwest "One way or another, the FBJ should've known," he said. Did he try to inform the FBI of the name similarity? "Heck no," he said "I'm a right wing ex- tremist I like the FBI " He did say he has talked Wlth a lawyer about the possibility of a defamation suit. Jerry Herbert, owner and president or the real So-Cal in Los Angeles, described the FBI's u.nin· l,643 bellg up t.eolicnal effect on~ bt&lileu as '"tarible." ''Why not call 1t lbe XY"Z company or something," he saJd So-Cal Busines1 Systecm wu lilcorpor.at.ecl bl California on May 1, 1m, aboiul 'U'c.>ths aftc the FBI version waa orcanlsed to contact Wastunet.on legialaton lo a •tlne operatklci. , "So how was I to know the FBI wu uam, our name," said Herbert. U.S. Attorney John Merkel. wbo proeee&ited the case, didn't know where the FBI name came from. "I think it's something they invented tn California, something used ln previous ca.sea," be said. When he was told there really ia a So-Cal, Merkel said, "Oh," paused and said, "I'll be. That's an unfortunate thing." THE EXISTENCE OF SO.CALL hu become an issue in a motion for a mistrial flied by the attorneys for former Senate Majority Leader Gordon Waliren, former House Democratic Speaker John Baenartol and lobbyist Patrick Gallagher, who were convicted onOct 3. A juror has admitted checttne business direc· tories in the Seattle library durirte the long trial last summer to find out for himself if So-Cal waa legitimate Merkel tiled a memo in U.S. District Court last week arguing against the mistrial motion. Car dealers' lament DETROIT <AP> -More dealers selling American-made automobiles closed their doors in the 1980 model year than ever before in the 18 years records have been kept, a trade publication says In its quarterly survey, Automotive News said 504 dealerships of the Big Four automakers went out of business between July 1 and Sept 30 to bring the net loss for the model year to 1.643 That left 21 ,945 dealers for General Motors Corp . Ford Motor Co .. Chrysler Corp. and American Motors Corp., 7 percent fewe r than the 23,588 in business a year earlier. '"This is the lowest total since the infant days of the auto industry when the manufac tllrers were beginning to bwld tlieir dealer organiiations ... Automotive News said Precise figure:; for the "infant years·· are not available In the 1980 model year. sales of domestic made cars declined 21 percent from the pre· vious year and interest rates at times hit peaks not seen since the Civil War. Import dealers, who have been doing bet- ter than their domes tic counterparts because of be tter demand, are reported on separately. Dealers are particularly hurt by high in· terest rates since they must ·pay for cars shortly after delivery They use bank loans to do so, repaying the loans when the cars are sold at retail The drop off was the largest since the publication began compiling figures by model year 18 years ago The second-quarter loss of 672 dealerships was the worst for any quarter In the 1979 model year, a net of '68 dealers closed their doors and in the 1978 model yearonly89did The worst previous model year was not given Is tlm year of yam? State growers pushing 'yummy' products LIVINGSTON <AP> California's sweet potato growers admit they used to be "pretty quiet" about their product But now. they're ac- tively promoting yams as a tasty, nutntional food worth eating all year instead of only on holidays. "Eat yummy yams and sweet potatoes - nature's energy food,'' proclaim bumper shckers produced by the Sweet Potato Council As Wlth promotions of other crops, the aim is to increase profits to growers and shippers by 1n creasing sales and thus decreasing carryovers rrom one harvest to the next "WHAT WE'RE REALLY pushing ts that sweet Potatoes are good for any time of the year." council member Gary Hamaguchi said in a telephone interview "With the health food kick go. mg on. we feel the sweet patato is the ideal item because of its nutritious content ·· A medium-sized sweet wtato has only about ISO calories but is "real high in vitamins A and C and has potassium, phosphorous and lots of minor elements in it," he said. A sweet spud also con· tains about 3"'2 grams of protein The Sweet Potato Council was formed five years ago so growers could compete with thousands or other commodities for market share "The poor little thing always got left out." said Hamaguchi, sweet potato division manager for Livingston Farmers Association THE COUNCIL FORCED normally com - petitive growers to cooperate for the common good, Hamaguchi said "Sweet potato growers and the shippers' in- dustry were pretty quiet. If they had a chance. they wouJd be cutthroat and secretive about what they were doing," he noted. "The councU brought &rowers together which improved marketing and relationships . I feel much more enthused working together for everyone." and newspapers on ways to prepare yams. The council hopes a new 9<>-second film explaining pro- duction and uses or sweet potatoes wiJJ be used on agribusiness segments of television newscasts. Eighty percent of the 9,000 acres devoted to sweet potatoes in the slate are io southern Stanislaus County and northern Merced County near here "We have Delhi sandy loam which Is what you need to grow good sweet potatoes," explained Bob Dallas. manager or California Sweet Potato Growers Heavier loam prevents yams from ex- panding into a smooth configuration with smooth skin as they grow Mini Office For '20 Mo. P 0 Box Msgs Pkgs & Sec 3857 Btrch 0 C Airport Newport leach Ca 92660 7141 54&-2287 The Post Sox i radio pager WIDE AREA COVERAGE Ora111t c.uty, L.A. C.U. ty. St• Berur61t C..ty. NnnWt r.-ey. '17.75 OR~'-' I I I >I '-" II ")fl) II If 1'111 ''I '111 \ 11 I I'( .,,.. ~ The council tries lo get articles in rn~a!&a~s~in~ea!__~~~~~~~~~~~-==~~~~~=~ COU. CTOAS CORNER R•re Colne a St•mpa GOLD a SfLVER Prtcn for 11-14-80 .............. --c:t.•1• ... ={:t = ~ ieoc:.r-... = JO ..._ .,.. ""' ~ $11-.... ~ """' ...-...lf.w,-•-· c:.lllr-..... (114)5A•SO South Coe9t....,. Ylll8f9 ....,._ ..... rst ~ ........ c..,., POSTAL BOXES NOW AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC!!! WHERE? AT MAILBOX WESTCLIFF In Newport Bffclt ... 00 ,. ... '' ... 1" OL. Use Answer Ad service when placing your ad ' . . . a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad . . . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you cal.I in at · your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $7.50 per week. For more information and to place your ad call 642-432l. 642-4321 . . ''''''"'''''''''''' ,,,,,,. . . . I ....._ .... .. --....... ,,. . ..,.,., ... ... tOIWI I ... , OfJJlf Aflf ":i' ,..,.,,.,.,. • ..,.OfSi.ra" l cm...,. .. =MCI<. '"'""' ................. ill WW.""'"" Jlllle att. .,,. conl>Oille '*" • eooDTIMU Rorlda end J.,.,_ .,. lorn Troultled tiaes ~ let1tno J J do a potillllt end llleif IN9Qlv· lngil llbe>ut Ille Pfcnp9Cll.,. modll • DIC*CAWTT OU.t· aultlor JMQIT>yn WMt (Pllft 1 ol 2) Maximilian Schell and Melissa Gilbert star as father and daugJtter in the new TV movie ''The Diary of Anne Frank," airing tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4 (see story below). • ~1CONTACT(A)n Cll w•1.•t•H ~ . NutM Coop« cen't COQll wltll Ille oe>erallng toom and RMiar a-t.a • tattoo ,.I OUNaWI NICHIWS HAPf'Y OAVS AGAIN Some snobbllh character• le•rn aomalhlng about Cllua w"-"t tl>ey 1nv1ta Fon zle to a high aociety party I J0t<ER'8 WILD w·.t.·a·H Maj. Houllhan·s l1ance ..,,,_ al the •0771h and lhodca Frank by aslung lllm lo be hla best man • MAETTA Batetla la llC*l wtth track Ing down the kH .. rs or a doM lrlend and protec1ing 1119 ptegn9111 Widow wno 11 on dope • OVEAEASY ~ta: ectOf Rudy Vallee llnanctal ••pert Jan• 8fyant Quinn, comedian StanKann O D MACN£1\. I LEHRER AEPORT . (I) TIC TAC DOUGH 7:IO fJ 2 ON THE TOWN Hos11 Steve EdWarda IN\<! MetOdy Rogers •n<I a 1urpr1.. guut undetgo • complet• beauty makeo- .,., Metedllh Wilson. CQfrl• poaer ot "The Muale Man. talks about the foy ol alng- •no D FlOHT el.CK W1Tl4 OAVtO HOMWtTZ ToptCB loolude how to col i..ct in amall claims court U 8HANANA o·ues1 P11y1111 Dtlte< 0 FACETHEMUSIC Q) AUIHTHEFAMILY G1or1a·a dlacovery about Ed1ll\ '41ada hef to convl\)Qe Mike 10 give Archie a lec- ture on tile tact• ol llfa m WACHEJL I La4REA REPORT eri) CONNECTIONS: AN Al T£RNATE VIEW OF CHANGE "The Long Chain" James Burke takes a IDOi< at some rneteroala •• d1acov- Channf-1 Lbf ing• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angele'> G KNBC (NBC) Los Angelec. e KTLA (Ind 1 Los Angele~ 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Otego • KHJ· TV (Ind) LOS Anqeles 9 KCST (ABCJ San Diego m l<T1V (Ind l Los Angele ., KCOP TV (lncJ J los Ang~les tit KCET TV I PBSl Los AnqPles Ci> KOCE TV PBS) Hunt1nq1on Beach er.O oy ec:cklent °' o.tiign •• which aller.0 the COUrM ol hlatory (R) 0 (I) P.M. MAGAZIHe A p.oltla or Dtana Rosa, a Mullang car auction l;(JO II <ll Fl.O An old proapector l1mou1 fOf hi• 1hort temper 1n11111 11\11 lie• going to marry Flo 0 UTT\..E HOUSE OH THE PRAIRIE Albert atretcheS 1"41 hulll about rumsell In 111s 1et111f• 10 • pen pal 111 a d1ttant city unaware that Iha girl 11 alao doing the .am• 0 U MOVIE * • • ·~ The Thoma• Crown Alfa1r I 1968) Stave McOUMn. F•y• Ovnaw•y An l<llUranc• Investigator ta/11 In love with a -althy crook (2 hr1 ) G MOVIE • • •,., ·stagecoach • (1966) Ann·M•fgret, Bing Croaby The trauma of Indian anac:k attecll the passenger~ of a at•· gec;oach In v•rled waya (2 hrs) Q) P.M. MAGAZINE A profl'41 of Diana Ron. a Mustang car auction, rapping w•tl> Curt IS Blow. CNll Tell makes m1neslro- ,,. Or Wesco has a quiz on croased eyfl aJ 80UOOOLO Guesta Johnny Lee Andy Gibb. Paul Simon 01re Stralls Jimmy Hell Grsce Jones fE 28 TOHIGHT uoe (I) LM*I MAH Allin"• CfatOllttir """' --.... IG KllOft wMfl ._ ~I IN 116110 .n.... t1er tlther Wttll ~ M>ln• "' -~llUNtlTT NiJO,,.,.,. Ouwt ~ McOoweM •GMAT •&eOMUJQEI ~o.-"' ~ flllc>- boloie Oenoe Theatte" In • perlorm-t~ et the Amer1cAn Dence l'Mttval "' °""*"· Nof"th CVOllna, IM P!lobollls Dance l'- al/'9 pet1orme four WOtll• ChorllOOl'aphecj by loun- ci.a MOMS Pendelton wid JonalMti Wo4ten Ii) MOVI€ • • • "trlah E~ Ala Smlllng ' (19"•1 Ole.II Haymat, June Haver An lrtSll cornp<)M( encount9fll IDYii while wtlltng numer- oua bll aong1 t2 hrs) 1.4&fJ9 TOK AM«>UNCE.O H08CIJ M•A•S•H (Sealon Premiere) Wh1'41 dflVtng 10 Seoul on a IWO- day pau. Hawkeye 11 ambus~ and captured by • North KOl'Hn soldtar 8 MOVIE "The Diary 01 Anne Frank' (Prerno«e) Meh ... Gllberl "4blm1llan Schell The 1rue story ol • Jew11h family's hie 1n hiding from the Nazis H -tnrough 1118 ~ ol a young girt Is drama. ltzad 0 fJ ~rs IHCREOl&t..E Featured doctors who .. .,. lnlenl's llv" by ren- derong them c\lntcally dead, a surfing ••bbtl, po11eemen who have hlKI an encounter wtlh • UFO Q) ~ERVORIFFIN Gue111 Oom OetulM. Paul Mtdlael GI-MICNMI Pritchard. Ron Howard, An111>nWUllam1 aJ HEEHAW Guesll L0tena Lynn Mii· llon Dollar Band. flodn•y Lay. ®) DON CORYELL 9:30 fJ (J) HOUSE CALL8 (S11ason Pram1ere) Or MtehMll W!ndl up in )ail when he reluM• 10 give medical records 10 • ...,. ale 1nve1ogat1ng convn11. '" ED NOGUCHI An 1n-dttpth IOOlc •I the hie of laamu Noguchi and hlS work In aoulpllng, !healer dealgn and environmental planning 11 prllH<lled @l MOVIE • * '> Shoal Out · (19711 C.regory Peck Pal Quinn An n ·gunmAn •S torn between hos obseuion with revenge and hos r11spone1b1111y tor a 6·ysor- otd 9111 and a lonely widow fl hr 30 min I 10:00 fJ Cl) LOU GRANT Cllarlte Hume gets ~u~P· c.>OU~ about •tie $lr~nge- -ino ~lie'*'*'"" heluMtewti.•~ "'• t..,otf ~ I& ••• "Ion\ In_, .. ( 1'1•1 Linda ... JoMlna MilelAtr~...._ e«1t I• Mn\ to a ju\lenUe detentlOtl ,_ ...._.. eti. mu1t .O~t to \lie bitter· nt1U end ttMnlrnent of the olher Olt1a 11 hf • 30 inlft.) • •NM-•l!NDl!J<ll--..nrr *TWOMNCM ---··--,_VoeclOf' ~TNEJIWl8H ~ The llltlOf}' QI an OY11< - IOOked f9dicel ~t cOfTll)ONd of .i-wi aml- gt-to Iha United SlalM and the newa.papet lh•I became 11\W YoiC4 fQ( 87 .,..,.. It •.q>!Ofed ID MAITIRPl@CE THEATA& 'Pride And Prejudice" Although Ellubelh lound the manner ol Mr Oercy'a propoul lnaulllng aha learn• the truth about Wickham •nd grows •lllamed Of her former ( bll~~lca (Pan 4)Q 11:00 1J U (J) ®) NEWS U HOU.YWOOO 80UAAU iJ HEWL YWED BA.ME Q) M 0 A08°H In or<M< 10 r.iM money to Mnd hll K0tean hOUMbO)I to medlCal schoo4. Hawk· eye ffll up a ratne wltll the prlie being • '°'""end In TOlcyo wllh Ofl4I of the nur- g) ONl STEP NYOND "The lnNM'llance A beau· tllul pearl MCkl-belong- Ing to the wealthy Counteue Feren11 II 1nvOIY9d In -Ill mv-1• rioua incident• 11:30 fJ (I) OUINCV, M.E. Quincy P«form1 • late night llU1opsy, but when he return• to the ottic. tho ne.trl day !he body al\d medlCal evidence nave di9- appearad D YMEKSTOF CAA80fe Guesl• David lt11t«men. 8uddy RICll tR) JOHN DARLING TONIGHT'S LATEST L•STINGS TUBE .TOPPERS ABC 8 8:00 -Monda,y Night Foot· ball. Tbe Oakl•nd Raldt ra and the Seattle Seaha•u provide the action in tonight'• contest. KTLA 8 8: 00 -''Tbe Thoa:na1 Crown Affair." Steve McQlleen ia a bank robber wbo becomes involved with in· aurance investigator Faye D\maway in this movie, which produced the hit sona "Windmills of Your Mind." NBC 8 9:00 -"The Diary of Anne Frank." Melissa Gilbert and Maximilian Schell star in this new dramatization of the true story of Jewish fugitives from the Nazis (photo at left, story below) . 8 PMOHIER: ~U aLOCKH Keren ffghta deac>er•tely '°' her '''• " • crltlcll Opetalton bec:Qn'lff ,_. IM"Y fJ NEW8 u GUN8MOKI A bleck man. to ...... 1111 own Illa, muat lalaety ac:cuM • bwid Of Indiana of 1•11i11ng out • ""900" train tD HOGAN'S HIAOU Hoglfl VMS p<op~a l><oadtuter A••• Ann .. 10 get Info 10 an Ulldetground r~TIJ<UA THIEF Al Mul\dy II purll\.lad by 911 ......in and his ,.,,,.,. accomplice &D G CAPTIONS) MC Hf!W8 9 Al/ICNEWa 11!!!0 0 IAOH8IOE A habllual gambtet 1urn1 paid lnlormet to pay off hie debts. 12:00 8 TW1lJQKT Z.ONE " """ ~ noolr.O on gambling alter WllnMa· Ing an<>I'* "NI Iha jack· pol on • ~.,.,,..s t>wi· di\ D A8CHEWS ID VOU KT Y°"" LR Buddy H.cken .._.. a lky-dtvtng nude champion, an apricot q..-i And a rnan who makn mullc trom him 1trlp1 12-.20 fJ MOVIE • *'It .. Journey To The Unknown" t 11168) Vara M1lel. P•tty Ouke Two Intertwined tales ol terrOf· • young woman ~ Ille Devil • quarry In an Old 1101ary, a m84'\talty unbal· anced landlady YiCtlmlz .. • villlOf 10 her hOlel (2 I ,,,. , 12-.30 D TOMORROW Guest• Or Cati Coppol .. no. Bill Margokl. reputed porno king ol Los Angetee • ISP'V "ll'a An Oona Wiii> Mlt- rOfa" 0 THE,. "The Oelec10<" (Part 1) • YOU llET YOtM UF£ Buddy Hadletl l"nNlt a cleelgner ol animal clolh· tng, 1 man wtll\ the WOfkl'• lotlgaat wallet and a lem•'41 ... ed\iClltO( Cl) ""T'IONAL Nl!W8 12:~ I) (I) 1lC NEW A~ A profe .. or with • luat '°' gold ~I a MCf8' fonnut. wt1lcti enatit. l\ltl\ to kHt people with a touctt or l>lshand 1.-a~u '""~~ ........ ~-. ~ f\oodlUIM.. iMe WOVll ..... "Tiie llildl ~ 11tUI Soplll• ~'•"· Anlllotly Ol.tlrln " ... ~._._,,..., tlle 10¥ely ~GI• ...... &1M fllt In lo\oe. (4 fW ~ "° rw. I 1•1 N1W1 THl&.GMI....,. ,., .. ~ n. uw· 2:00 .... a:te MIWI l=at llbvll * * 11t "Never LOW A Strangw" 111158) JoM or-Barrymore, Ln• Milan BeMd on a no¥91 by H11t060 Robbin• A men'• lut-pllpcl well on the wtkl aio. ot tit• vMI 111m • tap r1111Q on the crime ayn- dlcal• 18daer (1 ht .. 50 min) 2:a0• NeWS T.wsdat1'• Doflfba~ Mo.,I~• 11100 CD • "Tiie Dawn Rider'' ( 111351 John Wayne, Mat· Ion Bum• -AFTERHOON- 12:00 m • • • .. ,.,and Of The 8urntng Ooo4ned"' (111721 ChrlelOC>ll•r L... Pet., Cushing. A cumatleally temP41<ata ISiand auddef\ly bee~ ,,,. -o4 • lethal Mal wa ... and ~JC­ plalnable IOud nolaae. ( 1 l\f., 50 min) CD * * 1h "The Fighting l<.anlllCltlatl.. ( 1 IMt) John Wayne, lier• RIMaton. In ,,,. ~ llOOe, -,Kentuc:- ky man attempt• to pr.- -" • pelf of Ct'ooU from .1 .. 11ng end .... !Inda time tor-the~ d~ol·~~ .,., (2 "'9.1 1:00 9 • * ,_. "Pat11\an In Crline" ( 1113) Lee Ot'ant. Lou Antonio. a~ G * • "Chrlatma Coal Mine Miracle" (11177) Mltchell Ryan, Kun Ai»- setl by Armstrong a BeUuk Anne Frank's diary still riveting ·-Together again By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES IAP> -''The Diary of Anne Frank," despite the passage of time, remains in a new revivaJ one of the most moving and profound· ly human documents to come out of World War II Melissa Gilbert stars in the utle role as the teen age Jewish Dutch girl whose family hides out in the top floors of a warehouse in Amsterdam to escape the Nazis. THE FRANKS AND THEIR two daughters were joined by the Van Danns and their son. and eventually by Mr Dussel, a dentist Their only sources of food and lifehne to the world were Miep Gies and Mr Kraler • Anne's diary records not only the good times. but the years of hardship. tedium and stress that brings the occupants of the hideaway to the point of expl06ion. The last time Lew Ayres and Janet Gaynor appeared together was in the 1934 movie "Servant's Entrance." They're reunited for a future episode of ABC"s "The Love Boat" The two-hour film. to be broadcast by NBC tonight at 9 on Channel 4, also stars Maxim1han Schell as Otto Frank. Joan Plownght as Mrs Frank. James Coco as Mr Van Oaan. Doris Roberts as Mrs Van Daan, CIJ.ve Revill as Mr. Dussel. Scott Jacoby as Peter Van Daan. Melora Marshall as Margot Frank, AJtne Wyndham as M iep and Erik Holland as Mr Kraler FRANCES GOODRICH AND Albert Hackett adapted the script from their 1955 play, which won a Tony Award and th«> Pulitzer Prize Trivial 111ind collects Scribe's 'Tic Tac' talent reaps dough Edlton Note Mary Ellen Drilcoll, a Freano Bet 1port1 umtn, won a vorWty of priu1 dur· lnO Nwral ~·of the le~ game ahotD Tic Tac Dough. HeT IOl*f .tint on the •how began two .oseb CJQQ. and ahe wrote the foUour ,, mgartickabosd her e:iperience BJ llAllY £irEN DRISCOLL FRESNO (AP) -I'll be modest about this I have one of tbe areal trivia minds of all ··:-Ume. 1 am one of those peor.le ··bleHed wltb an elephant ne memory, the uncanny ability to remember and recall at wiJI everythtni that has no bearing whauoever OD real life . . The 't1~ of stuff that can make you tbe llle of the party but wtU ... never win you a Pulluer Prize. WHAT THIS aomewbat dubious talent did wtn me, bow ever. wu a trip to TahltJ, a couple of can, some luuace. 10me more tripef all aorta of ot!Mr prizes and ota of money, all of Which bat a areal deal of beartnc on ~al Ufe. I HW a cluslfied ad Ukint for cooteat.nt• for Tic Tac 'Qoulb. 8-1. J UJou1nt, ll \he)' wanL ~ti, I'll 1tve 'em a cont.,.• " I'll tell you right now -it 1sn 't as easy answering the ques lions in the parlor. Fun, yes. Easy, oo I know, because I was one of the lucky ones who made it through Tic Tac Doueh's rigorous screenlne process in Hollywood and actually got on the 1bow. For every 75 people who take t.be test, only one ac· tually makes it on the show. A TIC TAC Dough contestant aoes throuah four test.a : a 90- quesUoa multiple choice qub, a 1roup interview lmmddJately after the test, an interview wtth one of the show's executives and a run-through ot the game itself. When we bad the run-through, we also learned which colon are not compatible with televiaioo cameras. Black, navy. white, beiae. pink, yellow. lltUe 1trtpe• and UtU• check.a. I thanked God at that p0inl I have • lot of tur· quolse lo my wardrobe. Since flv• abowt ll"e taped at one time, we were told to brtn1 a few chanaea of c.lothJn,, Just In ca1e we made several •P· pea ranees. The fi~t tlme I 1tepped on ataae, I felt Uke an actress lo a play and that tt wa1n't really me doln1 all this but a chara&r. An)' nerve.a I bad felt d1HP. peared when I answered my first question The category was "Joes and Josephs" and tbe question concerned former New York Yankee great Joe DiMag· gio. Hey, they all won't be that easy. I reminded myself. And they weren't I MISSED A few easy ones. I looked at a picture of Honolulu and, given some pretty broad hintl, couldn't name it. I couldn't unscramble the word mustard and J couldn't tell any of the ele~ menu ot Eloateln'• theory of relatlvi~. lwaanever any good at phy1lca 1lnYW•Y. But, l an1wered more questions than r misted, ln- cludlna a couple of pure gueasa. But, Q'\Oltlmportant;I ~nt on the show to have a Uttle run. U I won monoy, flne. If not, that was flne, too. It really was fun, and I'm firmly convinced lt would have beeo If I hadn't won a dime Because. after the money's de- posited anil the trips taken, the 1ood Ume ts what I'll really re- member. Classified ads phoned in up to 5:30 p.m. Monday to Friday op~ in the next ®I iS10eS 642_5678ot the tQ;]ICQl!eil "I 'd read the book when I was a little girl." said Miss Gilbert. whose own company produced the film m association with 20th Century· Fox "l 'd dreamed of doing 1t When we finished 'Little House on the Prairie,' we had no project and we decided on 'Anne Frank ... Last year, Miss Gilbert starred in a remake or "The Miracle Worker " Patty Duke Astin. who won an Oscar playing Helen Keller in the 1962 movie, played Anne Sullivan. and Miss Gilbert was Miss Keller "l like the classics," Miss Gilbert said. ''I'd wanted to do something onginal, but' we had nothing strong I like domg strong things. J like an opt1misltc outlook "IN TIIE SCENE WHERE the Nazis come In -I got so emotional I couldn't stop crying. I was literally shaking and sobbinJ. I fell lilte Anne Frank. I knew I would be taken away. Then Alexander movie. set HOLLYWOOD (AP) Nicholas Clay plays lhrough the tears a smile came on my face. The hope and the optimism were shinning through." Susan Strasberg starred as Anne Frank on the stage, and Millie Perkins played the part in tbe 1959 movie Joseph Schildkraut <Mr. Frank), Gusti Huber <Mrs Frank). and Lou Jacobi (Mr. Van Daan) starred both on the stage and in the movie. Shelley Winters replaced Dennie Moore as Mrs. Van Daan in the movie. and Ed Wynn replaced Jack Gilford as Mr. Dussel "The Diary of Anne Frank" was revived by A BC 111 a David Suss kind production that was broadcast Nov 26. 1967. Diane Davilla had the ti- tle role In the cast were Max Von Sydow, Viveca Lindfors. Theodore B1kel and Lilli Palmer ! I ''THE ELEPHANT M.AN''~, ... ''THI! EMPIRE .. 811UKE8 IACK" __ ,___ Alexander the Great, who conquefed the known ,. _ _,., ...... world by the time he WU %7, in the PBS series. "TOUCHED BY LOW" Tbe four-pert drama was filmed on location in ,,,........,. Greece. Jane Lapotaire plays his mother, Queen -.....,...,...,.....,,,..l:IN:t~.,,..,,,... .. .,,. ... ...,.,,~-=,,,....1! Olympias, and Julian Glover is his father, Philip of Macadeonia. .,A POWERHOUSE OF A FILM ••• Aklra ~ b a !Mdfng atndldaw fol the g,..-.ct IMngftlmdlN<tOr:· --·-.-~ !JCCLU81Y£ ORANGE C 0 UN TY ENOAOE•NT MON.-AU. 7:00, 1:'8 MOVIE RATINGS FOR MRE1R'S AND YOUNG PEOPt.£ f'-.,,...Mol.._rt ...... IO ...... ,,.,_ ·-"" -·b<OfJ'"' ...,.., __ ..,.._..,,,,,,. .. _ fiil All AGEi AOMlm D ~ a..-.,-. U.'&UUPlAU .. u Slt S33I PAClflC I ...... ., .... " ... W"""""lfl I 1141 19! .1693 • H••• _,,,. •• •••-•u llAll'I MU PWA Br• !179·!>339 CNE:DOME f.DWAllDI' .. ,Diil Newpo11 Buen 644 0760 EDWAADI' lDWAflDS' MIUIOtl fltJO Mlll MISSIOI\ V1e10 49~ 6220 Otirlllf 634 1~~3 CINEMA WEU Wes1m1ns1er 891 3935 • PAUii ACCll'Tll IOll Tllll OICIA .. •t•T , ... ,.. . ....... ,". "42400 h •1ttO ., ........ . " ..... t l •tUC•t•f H4 2400 TMt Au AMDIC»I oalMI •AMllWI 1,1 l:L.tt..I M-1 .. 11t..T'M1'1M:• MAll(N) r.i l llM-• S..?H h•IA,..I_,. " uvu ,. un llNUTM n11 cm M 1tn L-. 2-LaJ AKIOATOllWI 121)6.tr-L>IM:ICM:»l•.W ecx ... MAWH IN PllVan llHJAMIN t•I h I W 1»S14Md S.19:JO flll ITM WAIS U.. C-1 TMl IMPlll 111HCIS UCK1,.1 '"SC*Y MO PUIU~ •7e-DOUY~ 111~~,.-.1s.10t•s OOUNI NA-IN PllVAR llHJAMIN111 12 )0.1: ...... s.1.-1s.1 I :IJ --eMMTTT\.9-"oaHHAaY HOPll'' 00 111~1--rlS.IOt)O "loT WT. -. WllOHO" IT'S MY TUIM \ti 12 ,..,,..,,,...,...,,...,.JO "PRIVATE BENJAMIN" -,01 oo.*"oo (R) ,,. ., -..00..11 1S !let 2CI0-4-IM)0.1030 Sun 2CI0-40CM IM30 'IT'S MY TURN -.,Y• 1 Q0.9 U-10 0 So\11u• 2 ,,,_. OCM 004 00.10 00 I 90&MMWM .. ,.avAn 11HJAMtNie1 " .. OCMMO , .. mu'"' • -..-tu••M•O•C.••· t(CU\(tft ... , " ..... c .,_ ......... ,u .t .. ,. CAUIOU9I e ~ IAOI 'ldolmaker' reali8tie ., ao p NNlNGTON .,,. ............ Movies about th movie in- dustry have not fared especially well at the box omce recenUy. but Uolted Artl•ll • •'The ldolmaker" stands a 1ood chance of reversin1 thla situa- ( MOJ'I~ REJ'IEW ) Sha~ey dominates tile fllm with a powerful performance and creates a character of con- a lde rable depth fnd sh•dlnc. Paul Land and Peter Gatlag)ter are perfect as the two teen idol& he creates. and Joe PaJ\toUaoo is very good as Vacarra s soft· ' tion. · Tbe production captures ttie excttement and the behind-the- scenes manipulations or rock 'n' roll during the early '80s and also otters a compelllne T"e IOOLMAKelt u ..... lortllll p,~ c;.ftel(tri.-. HowardW 1<0<n,Jr 01reclor Teylor H•Ckloro !><rHnlll•t Eowero 01 Lorenm TKN!l<O ... /o.llly Cul R•t ..,....,.., rov•n F••O•null. ,,._,., G •ll•Qf\cr, P•wl L•nO. Jo. P•nto1t.a110 M4urfff\ Mc(.otm1<.i., Jonn AP'•• R1<.M td 6nQt\t, O-vmpii• Ou"-•"•~ ~''""•n Aoo-.u..-Pec t. Leol\•rd C.:••nt \ O•n•~ TerflO Ctwr11, G4Mrdtr10 MICM tt Mt\ltJYt" t(,tn Mlh 0 8ntn Mttrw41 Ptrutt~ Ray Sharkey gjves a riveting performance or Vincent Vacarri,. a New York Italian sonewriter who realizes that the music scene ot 1960 is dependent on appeal- ing to teen-age girls. He reels he himself does not have the right looks w make it as a performer, so he pulls a sax player out of a New Jersey band and shapes hi01 into teen idol Tommy Dee by making a deal with the editor or a fan magazine and by personally contacting influential DJs. spoken partner Tovah Feldshuh is also outatandine as the editor of the teen fan magazine, who becomes romantically involved wil.h Vacarri <although this angle is not played up to a very lar1e extent) . Other effective performances are given by Maureen McCormick as a reporter who has an affair with Gallagher. Olympia Dukakas as Vacarri's sympathetic mother. Steven Aposllee Peck as has father. "ho abandoned his family and became a success ful bust- n ess man. John Aprea a s Vacarn's brother, and Richard Bright as his uncle A~1ng l1m. I XJ m1nut et MPAlo lb\I... PG character study or a man who is driven by a blinding ambition. THE IDEA FOR the film came from personal manager Robert Marcucci. who helped guide the early careers or Frankie Avalon and Fabian and who is credjted here as tectuµcal adviser. Screenwriter Edwar Di Lorenzo has shaped th"\! el · ments of this story into a fin drama.tic vehicle and director Taylor Hackford fleshes it out with excellent emotional nuance The script realistically deals with payola and the problems Vacarri bas in retaining the rights to his music. He does triumph over the existing establishment, but when Dee begins to question the tight con- trol Vacarri mantams over 'his career, the manager proves he can do it again by taking a bus THE f1LM HAS a mar\ielo~s look to 1t due to Adam Holen· der's atmospheric photograph} and lo David L Snyder's art direction and Rita Riggs' cos· tumes. both of which serve to ef- fectively convey the period. boy rom his brother 's res ant and molding him jnto uperstar through a clever media campaign. The songs are by Jeff Barry. whose music and lyrics nice!} convey the essence of early rock 'n' roll, and the exciting concert sequences benefit from Dene~ Terrio's choreography and Bob Dickinson's concert li~hting THE ENDJNG, in which Vacarri realizes the destructive force of his selfishly motivated ambition, is a bit melodramatic, but the Cilm goes for an errec lively upbeat ending @~b Tops in Pops@ By The Associated Press The following are Billboard's hot record hits for the week ending Saturday as they appear in this week 's1ssueof B4llboard magazine HOT SINGLES 1 "Lady .. Kenny Rogers (Liberty) 2. "Woman 10 Love" Barbra Streisand <Columbia) 3. "The Wanderer" Donna Summer (Geffen) 4. "Another One Bites the Dust" Queen <Elektra> 5. "I'm Coming Out "Diana Ross (Motown) 6. "Never Knew Love Like This Before" Stephanie Mills (20th Century) 7. "Master Blaster" Stevie Wonder (Tamla) 8. "More Than 1 Can Say" Leo Sayer (Warner Bros.) 9 "Starting Over" John Lennon (Geffen) 10. "Dreaming" Cliff Richard <EMl-America> TOP LPS 1 "The River" Bruce Spnngsteen !Columbia> 2 "Guilty" Barbra Streisand (Columbia) J "Greatest Hits" Kenny Rogers (Liberty) 4 "Hotter Than July" Stevie Wonder <Tamla> 5. "The Game" Queen <Elektra> 6 "Crimes Of Passion" Pat Benatar <Chrysalis> 7 "Diana" Diana Ross <Motown) 8 "Back In Black" AC DC !Allant1c l 9 "One Step Closer" Doobie Brothers I Warner Bros.> 10 "Tnumph" Jacksons <Epic> Film to be shot enlirely in Philly PHJLADELPllIA (AP> John Travolta 1s the star, some two dozen Philadelphlans have speaking parts and the entire film is being shot in the City of Brotherly Love The film 1s "Blowout." a mystery which features Travolta as a sound technician George Little, the producer, and Brian De Palma, the director. are both "Philadelphia boys · noted L1tto 49 PRO-FOOTBALL NIGHT Giant Screen TV, Free Munchies, SOd Hot Dogs, Giant Hamburgers. MARGARITA NIGHT Giant Margaritas, Chips, Salsa for $11 MS. NIGHT Free Carnation for Women with an order of their favorite beverage . PEOPLE'S NIGHT Happy Hour Cocktail prices, 4:30-91 WINE TASTER NIGHT Any wine on menu it $1 a gl8111 We'll open •Y bottle ol your choice. AND DON'T FORGET THE SUPER SOUNDS OF. BILL ERICKSON, APPEARING MONDAY -SATURDAY! ~dll'\ ~ COSTA MESA 3131 Brittol Ph. 667·3000 Bonzomania Reagan chimp popular HOLLYWOOD <AP > Ronald Reagan's elec lion to the presidency could mean big bucks for Bonzo al least, that's the hope of the two men who created the chimpanzee character that co starred with Reagan in the 1951 film "Bedtime for Bonzo .. The basis for a Bonzo craze already exists. as evidenced by a New York fan club, the long Imes of visitors to the original Bonzo's gravesite, Bonzl) film festivals and the Bonzobilia already available -not only a poster with Reagan from the film. but suspenders, belts, baseball caps and belt buckles. BUT THE AV ALAN CHE of merchandise may just be starting. In the works are plans for a Bom:o doll, pillow case. sheets, china, umbrellas and much more There's talk of a Bonzo comic stnp. a cartoon show and possible TV guest spots for one of Bonzo's descendants Although the chimp who played Bonzo in both "Bedtime" and a Reagan less sequel, "Bonzo Goes to College." died an untimely death by suf- focation m a fire shortly after making the two films . Bonzo III has been elevated to cull status on some college campuses PROBABLY THE MOST effective Bonzo booster has been Johnny Carson. whose Jokes arf' inspired not so much by any particular fondness for the chimp but by his assoc1at1on with "Tonight Show" director Freddie DeCordova. who directed the two Bonzo films Although Univers al Studios stall owns the films. writers E.O "Ted" Berkam and Rafe Blau retained all rights to the Bonzo character and have arranged for Gordon Howard. owner of lnterna· tlonal Licensing, to handle its marketing. "We're looking for another Snoopy and hopin~ for the same kmd of phenomenon that Snoop~ became," Howard said m a telephone interv1e"' from New York. "We 'd likl' to see Bonzo become the next Khban cat " • cesu JIUU • Cdw,1d1 C·"'"" ~·5 3101 •JS"'"' DOl l V Winner Beat Fllni Toronto Film Fesdv "****" -"ewsday i' I \1 , tow BADTIMING/ A SENSUA.L ~ ... "···-\\ '""'J "'°' llll' '" 1 HAI fll \t -£XCLLSIJ'E £Nt;ACEM£NT NOW SBOW/NG-- Mano'1 SOUTH COAST COSTA MESA 7141546-271 I Daily t·OO • 3.IS • S·JS • /J.00 & IO:IS PM Pl USllll AWAKENING" IT I IOV fUftN f'll) 1.0VING CO<.H'lfl "Cot o probUm' Then wnle lo Pat Dlmn Pat will -nt red tai-. gettmg the on.nuer• and action J10U need to 1olw SMQUUae1 111 governm.m and bwbau1. Mml llO"r Q'U"ltU>M to Pat Dunn • ..tt Your ~e. Orcmoe Cooat DoUti PUot, P 0 Boz 15ti0, COlto Me.a, C..t 1 '2626. Al mon11 letteT1 oa poutble will be ~ed. but phoMd itaquirle1 or letter• not includmg the reader'• full name. addreu ortd bu.UMH houri' plloM ""m~carmotbeconaidtred Thiscolumnoppeorad41· ly ere~ Sunda111. " flrst, toHoee ••l•lfl ci,. ' DEAR PAT: A friend is trying to talk me into taking a white-water canoe trip With him. 1f 1 gb, what precautions should I take? I've never even been in a canoe F.K., Corona del Mar 1'ldl sport can be fan, but i&'• abo edremely daa1erom. especially for a DOvke. • Tiie American Natloaal lled CroeB often lae. aafetydpe: Ne-.er caaoe alone. la fad, there slaoald aJwaya be at least tbree boata .UbJn alp& of oee aaedler. Be able to swim fa.Uy clo&W. • Wear a Ille jacket, llelmet aad, I• cold weau.er, a wet salt aod a paddlla& Jacket ror estra warmth. U you wear glasses, be 111re to use a safe- ty strap. Kaow tbe river, or go with someone wbo does. Cheek out dlffic\llt raplds from tile rlver bapk. U la doab&, carry tbe canoe aroaad lite ra,W.. PaddllDg a river la a team effort. Follow tbe leader's laatnactlou. Whea paddl- blg canoes outfitted with aeata, always baM. KQeellng concentrates tbe bulk of yoar welgbt toward tbe bottom of the canoe, thereby lncreulng Ute craft's atablllty. .. I' SHso11i•f1• grrrtrd •I DEAR PAT I want to pas6 along a good te· cipe for seasoning foods that people on salt-free diets are sure to like 1 use it all the ttme in lieu Of salt. Jt calls for 3 teupoom each of lbuai.d p0wder, iarllc powder, onloh po•det, aM paprika; l lh teaspoons white pepper or cayenne; and t teaspoon each or basil and thyme. Blend and put in a shaker C G., Costa Mesa This mixture also sou.ads like a 1ood subetttate tor thoee wbo want to reduce rather tbaa eUmlnaCe tbe me of salt. Tbanlls for sbar1D1 your recipe. Cal..,adar plrf urr fJrfghfn- DEAR PAT· Last April I sent for a linen photo calendar offered by Kellogg Co. for $3.95 and two proof of purchase seals. The picture I enclosed was supposed to be returned with the calendar in rour to slx weeks. I haven't received it, and the picture is ~rreplaceable. I have a real problem now beduse I don't have the offer address and can't recall which product was involved. Is there any way you can help me., D.H .. Costa Men n.e customer s~rvlce departmenl at ":.:r..\fi; aatloaal headquarters •lll CODtact yoa '1t aad try &o track down your pboto. It a~tt Qfat 1oar order llad been lost. However, KelJod IDU1' ae1attves of photos it requesu ln CClll8fftlcM •• stremlmn offers, so there's a 1• cWte yotli'I wlll~fomd. . Wbettever problem• occur wttll p~am •erf from uy eompaay, tlae apouortag comp1a1 ~ be ~cted ratber tbaa ..,..U.1 blill11idff &e .~ P.O. Bos .a.ere orders are prec111ed. Com,..._ aboat KelloH produeta or preml ... often dHld M aeat to &ellou Co., Conaumer Sentee, AtteaGlia! Adi .. Betabam, Battle Creek, MJcb. t•1•. Arlnstrong ~res gift to Sinai I -- ' ,, . • Wtrnn10: The Solgeon G;neral Hes Oetemnned That Cigarette ~mo\ing Is Dangerous to Your Health." . , . ' ' I\, . .. .. 1' ... " \ ' . " . , ·,,,,, t . -~-. He added; "1 thou1ht lhey CSov1•t•> were quite peasimlsUc ln their evalua~ of lbe period ahead ... Despite reported request.t for meetlpga will\ top Soviet leaders, tb• Americans dld not meet with 80¥ memben of tbe rulln& Sovlet PoUtburo. The Soviet deteaation to th~ three days' of talks wu led by Georiy Arbatov. head of the Institute on the U.S.A. and Canada, and Valentin Falin, deputy head of the international relations department of the Comtbunlst Party Central Committee . . .. By MICHAEL P ASKEVICH OftlleDally~ ... , .... The le st ext.enS1ve Chnstmas catalog features one 1tem- a mythical petrified elephant apple Catalog mad.riess . - much to spend (plus postage, of course). - Christmas C\lalogs are jamming the mail slots again, arrivmg from as far away as Hong Kong or Maine, or as close to home u the nearest shopping mall. Rotary nose hair clippers, mystery cue balls and Mardi Gras shower boods all are available for less than $S each from Miles Kim- ball Co. of Oshkosh, Wis., or you can send as much as $10,000 to American Express. At-home shoppers can order less genteel gifts from Harrods such as a Cartier cigar cut- ter ($2185) or a Cartier "C-shaped key chain that holds a lot of keys" for $240. On the chic scale, no catalog can match the Hong Kone Trader highlighting exotic jewelry and electronics war~ from Orient outlets .. This catalog is so cool it charges $10 per issue and there's not a pricellst anywhere. Indeed, some people might feel a renewed sense of popularity when the cheese catalog from The Swiss Colony in Monroe, Wis . arrives for the second year In a row -name and ad- dress correct again! ' The ten big ones is onjy a deposit on what American Express calls the "most luxurious car in the world.'' It's a 24-karat goldplated DeLorean, a gull wing sportscar that bu a lot of neat stuff in It. Should have for a sticker price of $85,000. Far more conservative is the L .L. Bean Christmas catalog. The Freeport Maine com-pany lists all it's pnces and sruppmg. costs. JUST DON'T mention the feeling to any bursitis-ridden postal workers. A Tower of Babel-sized stack of such material in your home poses at least two im- mediate problems: eye-fati1ue or insanity wrought by excessive laughter. Orders should be sent promptly -only 100 of these babies will be produced worldwide - but there's a catch of sorts. "There wilJ be no refunds," the ad states. On top of its lengthy line of boots, long un- derwear and parkas, L.L. Bean will ship a bar- rel stove kit ($46.50) or chairs fashioned out of snowshoes ($30). Tben comes the toup decision. Do you chuck it all into the fireplace (color material bums poorly) or Into the trash? THE AMERICAN Express catalog -alsq features million dollar traveler's checks made of chocolate for jwtt $20 for two and a Perrier bottle bar light at $85. ' THE AWARD for the least extensive catalog goes hands-down to Circus City Specialties out of Baraboo, Wis. It features just one item -"A Mythical Petrified Elephant Ap- ple" -available for $9.95 plus $1.25 shipping. Or, more dangerous still, do you make choices, send the check and face anxious weeks suffering from what psychologists call the "Will It Get Here In Time?" syndrome? A more ad- vanced psychosis, too complex to discuss here, involves the "How Will I Send It Back If It Doesn't Fit?" affilction. Harrods of London, considered by ltlany the world's greatest department store, is Certainly no bargain buement. Its t9ilo Christmas catalog features big na.me deslgn~rs with products at equally big pnces. Theres a woman's Piaget gold watch at about $24,000, but it's available only to "personal shoppers" in the ground floor David Morris Room. So tack on an extra $1 000 for ~ ASSVMJNG YOU'LL risk the hazards, it gets easier -at least in terms of decidinR bow • round-trip airfare. ' Walter Drake and Sona out of Colorado Springs, Colo, ls apparently out to make 1980 the year ol the personalised Jilt. 1bey'll put a name on anything -bowling towels, pot holden, golf tees, balloons, recipe books and ties to name a few. Only thing missing is mail-order tattoo service. He works to beat of rock fTIJSic Skates add dimension to art MINNEAPOLIS (AP> -Artist Steve McKenzie has tossed away his brushes and put on his roller skates to bring a new dimension to abstract painting. His method ls raisin& some eyebrows amon1 artists and non-artists alike, but McKenzie -with a twinkle in his eyes and a broad grin -maintains that his finished pie<:es are definitely serious art works. TO CREATE his paintings, McKenzie arranges s mall papers !Hied with brightly-colored paints around the edges of his larger canvas, then skates through the paints onto the canvas. He worts to the beat of rock music with an audience cheering him on, but says ooce be gets started he i.!n't aware of either the music or the crowd. "I'm pretty involved in trylnc to com- positionally oreanize the canvas," he says. The idea of roller skate art came to McKenzie while drlvln1 across the prairies of Saskatchewan to Banff, Alberta, where he was golnt to study art. 0 MY PAINTING with roller skates beaan u a fun idea, an idea that bad posslbllltles," McKen&le says. "Think ln terms of what is bein1 done. It fits in. Jackson Pollock spattered paint on can· vu. Tbb la Just my own lh1ni. '' McKende, 29, doesn't llke to talk about hi.a work ln art tenm. to talk aboul my work as a fun thing," says McKenzie. However. he says his works will stand up to professional scrutiny. "I happen to have the roller at the end of my foot rather than in my hand. That offends some sensibilities. Wheels have substituted for the brush for me. But the work has the same validity as any of the other types of conceptual work being done today." ARTIST BOB Lesch of the Lesch Gallery in Minneapolis. which carries McKenzie's work, aerees, noting that much thought goes into the roller skate paintings. "When you watch him you can see him thinking as he's working He has . just changed the craft. That's what• Pollock did," Lesch says. He says most people who view McKemie's works don't know bow they were done and accept them as aesthetic, attractive pieces. "That proves that the method is acceptable," be says. · However, some people watching McKenzie work say his art is so simple they could do it themselves. "Bul they haven't done it," McKenzie notes. "They have oo history of lt in their de- velopment." John's University in Collegeville , Minn., be was hooked. So be went on to graduate school in art at St. Cloud State University, and the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. McKenzie's main interest over the years has been in print making. His work bas been quite varied and has been accepted in several national print exhibitions. ' "I HAVEN'T limited myself to one series or groups of work." he says. "I have gone off in several different direc- tions." The roller skating art is just another of those directions. says McKentie "I've ~ly scratched the surface, the kind of abstract works that result from the skate marks," he says. "I think there will be an interesting change as the ~es develops." lfcKmde hopes eventually to com- bine teadalng in a university system with hll professional art. "BEING A GOOD teacher and being a good art.18t is a tough dual role," says McKenzie. "One side can suffer. There's a real balance you have to maintain between your artist ' responsibilities and your teaching responaibUiUea." But it's a challenae McKemie wants more than penonal fame u an arti5t. • Games are as big as ever this season, and some of the more unusual entries from different catalogs include a' Scrabble game in Hebrew eight-foot long crossword puzzles and a woocteii toilet seat that doubles as a crtbbage board. Mail-order food continues to abound and the November selection from Blue Anchor 'Fruit in Sacramento is a gift crate of kiwifruit at $14.50. CLOSER TO home, the catalog from Rooten's Luggage (with three Oranae County Stores) features an odd assortment of "collec- tibles" in addition to a wide array of leather goods. Standing or laughing enomes are priced at• $25, and an extra $S will mate you tbe tem- porary owner of a 17-inch tall replica ol Bob Hope. Bower's Museum in Santa Ana has a "boll day tssue'1 magazine that Usts gifts available at the museum gift sbop. There are the obvious things like art boob, jewelry and imported rues. However, the museum also offers home furnishinp to arace your coffee table or cabinet. A sure convena- tion starter, priced at $337.50, ts a bronae warthog from Upper Volta, Africa. ''There's ,.n awful lot ol baftletab in the art world. 1 just don't like that. I lib A&T BAS AI.WAYS been part of life for McKenzie, whose mother becan siping him up for adult art cluaea when be was ~ la lf'llde adool in Lake C\ty, Minn. By the lime be WU attepdlaS St. "I think I could enjoy fame, but I would like people to know that behind tbe a... aad bmeatb Gae aurfa~ ls sub- ltaaee," McKenzie iaya. Wleels substitute for paintbrushes for Stwe McKenzie Ann Mftnin punues an elDSive di-earn trlbuUoo to• make, the innate ability to make that cont.ributlon. and the rupcmlbWty to do9o." Had Ma. MudA not taken a Job a.a u - l11tant to a JJl'Oinlneint aoutbem educatol' • nmnber of yun aco, abe ml.Cht at.W be UWft I.ft llorida a1 • wife aDd radio diJc jockey. But tbal ~ toOlr ber to lndla1 where she met ow,. P:ruad Pan.deY, sounder or the lfanava·B.barad Jndla lntema· • &looal Scbool. .. "Dr. Paftdey aaw me at• part)' and he walked over tO me and aald, •you will han your 1ch0oJ,' " aald Ma. M•rtln. '""She explalned that Pandey was cnar1ed WtUl Htthil llP his icbool bJ .. the late Maliatnw Cllandl, wttb wbom he •• ~ ~ tM Brltllb col· Oftla) IO""tmeDL "Heaald, 'AA Obandi hu~ me, looweur..10U '''ue~. Thlt -• riaton • .,. ~tel nti. ~ undill' U'9 atan ... w > • . IOUthem niaht coa~ced Ms. Martin to punue ber Coal, but DOt in Florida. "I cOuldn't IMDl to dolt 1D florida," 1be explained. ·~btre'a money out here. There are no preJUcticea ai such and you've cot lbe belt weather tD tbe •orld."' Jn Dtcember, W78, Ma. Martin left her huabaDd and moved to Newport Buch, ~ a Job as ualstant editor of the Avco financial oUtflt s bouH ma1u:tne. Since tMn, ahe has moved •lowly toward her eoat 1nd1 lf not cntt~ly'luc· CHtul at fund·rataln•. Ka. Martin bu at leut asaembled an lm.,...lve cadre or aupPorten. A. sroup called Friends Of Manav•· h1r1ti hu been formed by Lal'r)' anCI DOnna 1 Hltthman. locaJ rilldentl Who 1pent • Manth vttiuna PindeY'• acboo1 tn \MHmalayUl Ma. Marila Ht Q an adtUOrJ· ll'OUI> t~a& JaclUdet Pandey add ·iUataka Olanltbl, a '•'••••• ~·• ••• Olrut••• •• ~••111111 Sprucina up doorway for Cbapt•r. III Chriatmu Luncheon Dec. a are (trcim left) Mrs. Frint MftcheU, Mn. DaVld Lester, Mrs. Norbert Tierney and Mn. Jobil len· berg. Fashions will be 1hown. durinC the luncheori to be held at the Bahia Cortiitbiu Yacht Club, Corona del Mar. Chapter lll ii a fund·raialnl affiliate for Catholic Coll\· mU:ntty Ageucles. For reservaUona, call r«araaretiaenbera at~. Certified virgin. sought His 'demands ... non-drin.ker, non-srroker ... no frozen foods .. DEAR ANN LAND.ERS: What ever happened to "the girl next door"? I am 30 years old and two years "behind schedule.•• I decided a lonl time ago that I would marry at 28. I bek>ag to two dating clubs and bave at· tended more than 200 church socials. I have proposed to at least 50 girla, but they all said no. I realize some of my views are old-fashioned, but there must be at least ONE girl around with old-fashioned views. My de· manda are as follows -I call them the Ten Commandments of Marriage: 1. Vir&in (certified by a pbysi· ciao). 2. Non-drinker. 3. Non-smoker. 4. No dancing where liquor is sold. s. All food prepared from ·"'"' Lo11ders scratch. (No frosen foods, either.) 6. No excessive allowance. 1. No second car. (Thia only tends to make a woman indepen- dent.) 8. Eat.put only once every two weeks. 9. I choose our friends. 10. "The man of the house" should be the final boss in all situations. I know the girl next door is out there somewhere. Will you help me find her. Ann? -B.W.J. IN EAST UVERPOOL, OIDO DEA.a B.W.J.: ftle llrl ,e. an 'olM•& for mo•e4 ud left • forwanlbas Mclreu. a. wu IHt leeD ta 1121, before .,.... 1ettbeft&e. You No. I ''Commaadmeld" la aa lmal&. No. • la laeem· pnllemll»le.N•.t udltan t•e demuda of • tyraaaleal J•d: .... I ptedid tbat c•e aen st wo•• will NJ • allo, ..._ JM •appea to ldJ Oii OM ... la fffble.mhM ... IO delperale 1lle'U &ab aaybcNIY. ( Boros(!ope ) Radiation aid can be effective ,.. IMll!I u. ...... C'IOW\,.Y T.l.llN.,,_.. ....... ... w. ................. _ ..... 8 al lotZ ....................... @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 11 .... 31-6990 -., associated P, '-• I ~ . . ,. • . "" Ii • • •• MSUMILOAM Buul:tf\al 3 bed.room I~ ~ Bl'OMvle• coado tba ~ llOO lq ft. It f4atures a laundry room. 1ara1• door opener, 3 patioe, com- munlQ' temda •pool. Aa· ,.. al.lt1af lou and owmr wUl carry a larc• 2llld. "'11 price SUZ,500. Call553180. C:SELECT . T"PROPERTIES ·SHORES $135,900! Cbarmla1. uptraded .._..bomelDNewJllOl't Sbonst I 88-1 BA. Deewai.d •anll'1 · N•• tarP«8 ,_. •all peptr. JUl1 1 ~'t ... ,1 call DOW, m.:mo Now You Can Sell More wltll Dally Pllet PENNY PINCHIBa ADS SUD oaly a. 3 lines ror 2 daya only SI a day. 34<! a line. Advertise one or more items valued • ! ! . . up to 1100. Ea~h additional line Is only 60c for the two days. Sorry. no commercial ads allowed Charae t Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your Bank America rd I VIH or Mutettanl. ' COU OF MIWPOIT RIALTOIS u111. c.-""'·· c--4111....,. f ' 67S-551 I MllA VERDE RAll8LU4'74,t00 Cape Cod Duplex, ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~~ • TaateruUy up1,114ed t ... ,IOO. Xia\ terma. : "* ltor)' 00 a qwetl 0Woer/A1t 144·4144, :-•-ll!l!ll!l---·----•1111m--!" , cuJ-de-aac. Pink o•k _-.azu ________ 1 j llOcrw 1D dbLlDa room 6 C.... .. M_. IOZZ SIPAIA11NONIA9"COMllZ71,000 Prime East Qosta M'9• location near 21st & Tustin Ave. You will love this charming separ~te 2 Bdrm home of redwood aiding on wide lot. plus two 2· Bdrm income units. A beautiful woodsy private patio w/BBQ and huge expansive spa. Quiet, peaceful & picturesque. Call for appointment. • kwel)' tree lined atnet. tiaD. •.ooo . ....-. kl\chea. Custom ab-at· j ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· Heavy abake rool fll~iVe l)OCll duplu + :z z petios. Lar1e 3 bdrm oa .-s Nllhll. PrilM loca· I Ntat 11 .. Verde Coull· ; try Chab. New on the ---!lllm----i 0-Pt. "-: marbL • POOLA)9YllW 4 bedroom z~ bath. ; i ll'9MITlllACI 1weepha1 ocea11 view ~ A CO&Y s Bdrm rormal rrom llvht1 room and I UMCOt ftOMISIM• d1nlnt rm home wltb bedroom. Wood-1ldi111 VllW i PoCJ1 aDd hlahly npanda· end abM.e root. Submit -----------1 j Beauttful 5 bdrm home ble view of harbor • '-'-· $191,000. 1 wtth aunkeo Uvlni rm ocean. A new Uatln1 at I 1 and many pt.her custom 1 only pao,ooo fee. ! • features. Uncomproml•·: CALL QUICK I : inl vlew of mtna, ca· i 644-7211 I l oyena & city Haht1., --------• RCl1ylorCo l I' I don o~;cn lJJJN. COAST HWY LAOVNA BEACH .., .... '511,000. call fm..5310 to-. 1--------1 i ck>'. ldlS I I A LL STA TE lArll wwnab.; loan + 1 M6i11Hc 5,_,,. ,1 I -own.-.W carry 2Dd TD. I ~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ REALTORS !Sp atua lmmac Nan I witll 121' down. New I Nldlev ' WISLIY M. !'Aft.Ga CO.. llALTOltS JUIS.h eh ... ._. MIWPOU CIMTll. M.1. 644-4910 ~ I .\f•.( ll ~ lf .. t IY \MiJ I): I 1 ,'000 = . I I Y · • cmt.om 4 Bdrm, 2~ ba ---==~=--------i a...ic Wed roof Spanbh I GO SOUTH I ! 0.-Ocl fl... tucket w/bonua rm. " bomawttbmotber~ln-law ... OIT HW 0 O home. O ce a u r · ""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! = I 31rplct on qt. canyon. --S151.IOO " Emerald Bay fea = South cl PCH tn Corona' INVESTMENT Deuplex IN PRlllE ~loanavail at ........ · PAU l h d •. I ~so·-· av I del llar t.bat la, thla 3+ l ' ! LOCATION, owner o:·. 11 v~.,;,,. ocean v ew, ar w°". -------: ~· VW'._ :duplesabobuqua.rten ' l ~tlllcenew•m•ln· "7.... ...r1111v sw&HOMI noon. open ceilinp, 3 • ...,. llPLEI I ny Cl.5,000 down! 3Br "J for a ba cbelor, z , BUJ£R1 tainedw/obvioua pride, 3l 6'4·1450. rmul 11 Fantastic a11umable Bdnm, 3 Batha, family :i W&W • 2Br unit.I. auper corner fireplacea for a cold 1• I Br upper inc. the lrg1 H._.......,. v• u-.. Woodly Z Br. 1 ba, home &oa. interat at 1.83 . room, formal dlaia1. ID...U.C«ooadelllar 'lot. Newly landacaped'wtnterand2pailosfor1 Deed • imtr1uite. New pluah --. • .._ ODap9Cioualot. Builtin Paymemaof'87Sprmo a.ally a nice home. .. '' 'i I r I location waltlal dl•· Md redeeorated. Ownu aummer entertalnin1.1 ::Jc: ~a &]OC: tax ~ tbruout. 3 Br Bt•~.~4 Bd .. t1ate boollc:aH1, panelin 1. on um 3 Bdrm beauty tlm.000. "4·7020 tmce to tbe be9Cb. Bay ' NYI ..0 now. Call llotivatecl 1eUer otferiDt • ary 1 lower' w/2 Ba brinp fan· wtmani""-..-~ ac. ,ot. bobbyabop. 111•,000. with detirable atriulO, 8DdOCeuVlewa.4and3 1 wry creative &erma. A t..ucnmt.'150,000. $350!000. Prln on y . e&epat Jtallu We -.nd l• ' I' =-~·lta. s.111.soo l @ ~.invHtment •t: JAalS IUln ~~f:e" Tenore. A1t. --;~;;:ru r:'~•:i;!:f. ... !flQO ·~ ! 17141 '13-4400 I ~ BAL B 0 A ISL AN I) I '7M670 Family want1 to buy ' I RBALTY 11M1M or duplex in CdM 'JD1ESHARE RESORT fltJJ •n.iut SEA COVE 873-ITOO · to live ln from owner or A&SUllABL& LOANS· Qdcetlmea available in '\ HARBOR PROPERTIES CAUfOaMIA I WATIRROMT rHlton. PleaH call 18r, 2'rilla + den, ebd ..,.._\ unit. Fee title. l j ' DllAMS SO. COAST COMDO PIER~P. ~uaTk ~ 8*8710 ;:. i::--an:c:°" ~ocA .. *12,00. I _. 1 714-631-6990 'Beauurol 1paclou1 a We bad 7, only 4 left. ~2 c!:"1~.,;. c.MMete IOl4 IPL 91J4,IOO. VIP, Inc. **fl.I.II LOVE a....:l.':';'r.LI. I bdrm bome, treat loc•· &aper abarpSo walk to I "25.0001 •••-•••• .. •••••••••••• ami with till• adorable S " Havuometh1olyouwant tlon. Fabu.loua famllr. everythln1. me·wlth ..... ..,Pr1,1rtlff llalk_•.._. I040 Mm, 2 Ba, one level............. 1012 to sell' Claaailled ads do I room, 2 fll»lcs, Jaeuu • low lnterett aaaumable I ..._.. I-SIDI DUPLll -.. •••••••••••••••• bm:ne wtUl •decorator'• --·•-•••••••••••••• ... _______ j ltweu.'&a.~. ~l ::.A••j:~~~;;ll ··-f§)*'=. I :j§~ ~i.::E.~; ~~1~:.~~ ~~ 1'MI UVINe IS IASY •••• A cozy 3 bedroom townhome in Deerfield. Enjoy community swimming & tennis. Close to school & shopping. Shown by appointment only. $139,500. macneb I trVlne realty A IUBllDIA"Y 0, THI l"VINI COM~ANY FUMCH MoaMAMDY ISTA111 P~me bayfront locatioo ! .Doeltage for 80' boat. Beautifully detailed cbateau. 2-story beamed livint rm w I baronJaJ fplc -paneled library - formal dining rm -5BRS incl. servants qtrs. -planked-floored playroom. Pool. apa, aaulla. Security system. QualiCled appointments. $5,000,000 -a leasehold eatate. Cathy Schweickert 6'2-~. (Q-60) _ ~1 with feneed dot rwa. bUl and aunaet view. REAL10R8 I ~&Beocn llWCllllS NUSTliUJ N.rlake,park poolaacl Co11 fireplace. Near ·------.,..---: Red Estate ••• ' br. 1.. tu , t d . .,.. ...;oo. A.Ji tll1I ud beaobea • aboppla1. $10,000 DOWN -nun~.-.-25~~~. Hilllborlaoed, home •..wmble&Oaul SlOl,000. __ IMYISTOIS ....,. 11.aimum levera1e with t5,000 down. 2 Bdrm COD· do. Owner will carry balance with aireeable \etma and payments Gnlu l.ocome $S400. Ask· inl '1t,IOO. Call 540-1151 for morecWalll. Is "51/nlO. for lb.la fine Z 2 Bil. 2~ ba, C:OO\emp. ftrftatY plu, $UO,OOO. IJ."'1o.a~rtdfe mftl' llJYI 11r111ome. •H010 DOYa SHOAIS c1a1tp. sua.00t. ar. m.oias. 161 '* ~I •-·It _.., • Rlt.yWorld,Cap. Adoc. The atatuary fountain 646-10" 64MOtJ fall..,.. ~ I ~priced (Eden) in and pted courtyard P~ Good Hllbborbood, ~1-3000 IAb Park. s Bdnrul, 2 vldlt AD immediate Im· cou •• ,... ._ TLC I -ba. earthlclne decor. As· -~euion of QUALi· D .. d. paint -. tall mitt• f'tlwy, n bl n i " _ __. . . Charminf lf>r, · Jba, + Home warraaty pro· 1uma e naoc DI • ~ -"!.: ~ HERITAGE . REALTORS WOODlaJDet Superb 2 Bdrm/ A'shCord with greenbelt location. Priced to s how t he --------1 owne r wa nts action 1--------1 Fas~ SISl.500. -111111 ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE . M1W IAffaOMT U~ Goraeoua Modern Home Wlth >. Deli&hlful Dlstinc:Uve Ofd World Interior With Imported Furoish.anp. Handsome Wooden Mantell. Huge "Carved Wood" Bar. So Many Special Amenltlea. Automatic Sprlnklera. Air Condltionln1 . S e c urity Sy atem . ProfeaslonaUy Decorated " Pn>teulonally Landscaped. Dock For Fifty-Foot Bo1t. Private Beach. By Appointment Only. Sl .600.000. / ........ it improves as dlD,IQOdCODd. Aauma· , bdrm 1"' ba aeller wlll carry. ~ you ccatinue through the bleiOila .. _ -111.w1 snm. ' · -001--•-1 $121,llOO. =~~:OC,~o_z:d CMY;;;,;OODa =· Bkr. 115-0185, -~T-n Wllo9&WefaaLI ·~: t h r e e • p a c I o u s ...,. auumable. owe IY OWMR ~~~tl1_1_ .. Bd• 1r1~ 4f3-Z752 bedrooms. The sparltlio1 -.. a s l b In .........,... .,... ...,. ..... q =and luxuriant plant· -no pay. r a, Bea.atul 3br, l"'ba, ll t a madtl home. Beautllul new cpta, copper plumb· .._, 2 bib to ocn, dbl decorator wallpapers, .....,.,_.... 1015 ··~ provide the regal 'A• RV., ..a.-atcbed 2 car ·-......... _•--, cpt/.1-, 7 -t.oueb. -ooo .. _ ~ -........ aua ..... .,.. window treatmenu and ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • -· · pr, fonnal dlnlq, re· yn. '130,000 ~ dwn or Ooorinp-all ln neutral Me $1i•fr .... 631·7300 M.I. mod kltcb, concrete caah9G-1'181 • tones. Available Im· HURRY! Low down pay· r ro~-;•ri4~·r:: 1 ~;IJ ts,000 Down-No Qual. nwtiatal,y. See It, then ment. OWC balance. ·,r. Owotlltr!l\at. '11,000 3bl', J~ba, new movert&btln. $151,000. Hqe eir.ecutlve home. 1' Bill wam Treel ++. Prine. only. l -------•I 211iy, fp, arr M0-1217 -... n t•ISTll Braker. -.mo or~AGT --• 1m PAii •-::=::~~,~~'4~J..a~z~oo~~·ts",... IHdl 106' ·~: ""'-""" ························~ Lipt, britbt> s Bdrm .. AMC4SCAM ~ ~ that •oo't lut. fllOUMTAlt4S Al"OIDAILllM "SPACIOUS .. lloYe ln CUMSltlon and Ir,,_ s.. 1UITLI aocx IS THI WOID the belt price for the b I i I e..w.u li"-"A• ln lrvlne'• Lov-'u s Bdrm a bath. 2 . .. -•. Anumable blab De1ira • ap ra ,._, ~.... _, .. • a&muM model 4 Bdrm moat~ vWa1ea Aor)' home, featurln1: ,, ~ loan. Dem 't mlas fam rm. J ba, noo aq tt'. f Or 0D1 Y U 74 , S 0 ~ · formal d1D1Dc room aad • ...... spa $191500 ew.itul S bdrm home family room, ll patloa •. 1,o CALL a.... '..... • rib coay family room in aeparate freenboU1e. • RED CARPET n••7 veryprivatelocaUoa. Of . ..., P&lDt ln and out. Of .• ., 754-1202 ·--'•'W-l_J __ -t ferin1 low down pay· reNCI at $121,000. Call 'ii , .. _______ , ________ 1 meat. uaumable loan 5t0-11Sl ~ , .... --and~ DO DC)Jn.ta, quick •f llAMD MIW ..... .. I 042 eacrow. call now to ... -~.s .. H£RITAGE . REALTOH~ • -. z•.&. ba, 2 level, ••••••••••••••••••••••• tbi1 very affordable ~ -..-.u .,.,, home. Price lncludea country kltch, micro CREATIVBTEBMS land.. ---------~ waw, 2 car pr ~/opnr. a.tom I Bel.rm. Pool• Low denalty. Prlm• apa. $190,000. Bltr ftMDdl\I avail. Builder _MH10t ________ 1 -~~-1.MbSt.Cc*ta ....... 1044 59-1111 ..... 11 ...................... . /\ / ' ---· LIASl/OPTIOM o..fleld 2 br. :z~ ba, .ONMDAILY . , • 1 1' :-.•: . ,, ... ! #-HERITAGE FH Al fOHS ~~~~~~~~~;R • • t a u r a a t f o r By .--.v..R H bo VI I Sale/Lease Sut1 130. v""'"'"" ar r ew I 84t0\0orM2·52e6 Homes.• Br. 2~ Ba . --'=---------1 Pam. Rm. Spa. Country 1 c rcW F re a c b , t o t a I I y .... ..., 1600 cu.tomlaed. '''·5ttS ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• &H-WI. . ftCAMYOM 2 om.a andina Properties in Excllllive Bil Canyon, Area Offers Beauty. Con· vealence, Prl v acy & Security. n ) llaanifi· caJt • br, 4 ba Custom Home on Golf Course. Spacious, Glamorous. Pool, Spa, Waterfall. Beaut wat.errrQnl condo, 2bdrm, l~ba , apec- tkular view from livln1 room Is master bdrm Hutto ......... S,350 Sq. Ft. Commercial Blda. 1 81.k to Pacific patiol, pool, MC bld&, UD• ________ , derlJ'OUDd prkln1. Slip, --------- pat fin&nclna. szas.ooo. For pvt abowln1 955-1961. JASMIMI ClllK sea.too .111&40 .f expando, Ur n.etwoo4. wlk CO •'holl· ,,-,; nuat. ~ tottd., .a•• tal'P•l.i••· <naaut.J-..._. ~7070 mecnab / lrvlna r&alty " -.......... shed • •••••••••••••••••••••• -------............ 3706 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAYFRONT. 1 br, frplc, prq, lldltl, DO peta, avaU DOW till Ian 1. Wkly '20C), Mamhly "50. lncl. utl. m.4840 . ar. 2ba, crpt, drapes, yr- lY. "550. Days 548-9341, e"WS 846-2148. OCEANFRONT 2 br, 2Br.Newpaint,drapea.2' 1---------"-winUr, ~ Incl ulila, Kids OK. Refrt1e. Noi 1242 ---------Versailles studio condo. Adults only . ssoo . TJ0.%913, or '168-$800. All. superb view. 873-9270 pets. $35S mo. Sierra c:.teMeM J724 Mcmt.Co.141·1.324. ' 1 Bill bath. uW pd. Quiet 2 Br 1~ Ba apt, 1ood &oca- ad\alta, no peta. $295/mo. Uon,Z.aty, SllJOdep. 541·'7889 M-i855 I Wt --••• 37 40 2br $470 uW pd Adults, UDO ISLI ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• 84S-llo:t1 no peu: m E.; 2Br, Zia, frplc, elec. aar. 3br. 2ba, Jovel)' 11e unit In 21.ltSt. MGR3D dOor, $ill50/mo. tr~. 6-pla. Clle toocn, tennis --------- -..azl.5. or79M955. <DW1a, Is JotliJlf trait. [4e2br, 1ar. w/d book up,t $850 18612AllOOq ul n new cpt. no peta, 2171 E . MS-SUI or 8'G·5S31 K Placentia $400 /m o ---------1 545-71183 ,. 3744 FOURSEMONSAPTS. l ~le. DQJ>eLa. J br~ lY. e be t~e. PaUo, pool, 1 MOO. '13SloADDM2-1602. 11 IWris. Small cbild OK. No pets 1960 Wallace ~Otrs.l·J&O&. l r ~eailelliu vtew. S.Curt· ty pte. Hubor Rld1e U45/mo + lHe ..... pin •• '11().930'1. WE STCUFF BLOG. Nl Wl'OnT Bl AC ti ........... " ............... ,,,., C.tll Mr tiow111d 645· 6l01 • camlTMO fllOILIM W&WTDto... t7a;61llJlll·tt41 Arnnt9dby SCUlM.m lllSWEIS i 3 line-s Jor 2 da' 1 only Sl a da}. 34c' a Une. Ad\•erllse one or more Items valued up to SlOO. Each additional lint la only 60c for the two daya Sorry, no com merclal ads aillo" ed Charae Your Penny Pincher Ad or use )'our Bank Amerlcard Vasa or Mastertard For more lntormauon and to place your ad call 642-5618 Pfychlc Conault.ation• ~':.~6a1ed electronic Jack SS&-l178 1 dlstributor needl full or I part time cable as· UT1U ANNIES sembJy people. Contact ESCORTS I ~-;Mc~.-Fri. All ll~orCredit j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;; cat=t~:fjled I ASSISTANT • i I ......... a •Lolt It F...cl 5300 Grand OpenJn1, Men' le Draper's La.tuna Rills ••••••••••••••••••••••••!Women, for relaxation le ' 1to~e. Must be eJt· ' stimulation try ''Touch 1 perienced In better ' , .. women's ready-to-wear .,. 1 al Class Musaae & Spa and aport.awear. Apply_ lo .. FOUN ADS 11£ FIEE lZ25 Beach Blvd, H.B. Oeraon to Maoa,.r 11•· , 536-9112· We accept all bie Austin, 23621 lloul&on 1 credit cards, open 11 Parkway Piasa ot call ! days. _ , 711MG22 for appointment. Cal~ ;SINGLE? Meet sir1cere, ------.---• 64z.5671 people·like You• Low ' r,:~~1-~;ELINE ' AfiOlllEY 1 , Corporeh back· 'loll or found a pet? Call DIAMOND WANTED ...., I 9r011Rd. work with ' Animal A11istance carat or larger, private flftaftcler ••• 9r•••d J Leque. 537-2273, No fee. 1 party.for cash 540·0208 floor op po rt•• lty. . INTROSPECIAL s...I ,..._ It salcwy AUlO mechanic, exper. on Locate -Minus Cleft-Foible Now enrol1101 Costa WATERFRONT HOMES REALEMATE 631-1400 BILLION Men Chrisllan Pre n. aovemment should school. $29 50 /wk l~No. MainSle. #200 try to collect all the Includes hot lunch & • Santa Ana, CA inoney owed to It. We TOUCHACl.~S snacks . 646 5423, can't 1et It all, but every ISCOITS 646-m>. CALIFOIHIA UWeBILLJONhelpe l ~. · 752-0817 JabsW..ted. 7075 RISTIAHIC •OYEMIER MID-WEEK SALE I For Private Parties Only - NOW through NOVfMBER 30th You Con Pica A Oas ... M To Starf On Tunday, W.._.., 0t lhunclaJ and Run ••••••••••••••••••••••• E.O.E. )i'l /F Practical Nunes, any --------• shift, xlnt ref's. 831 7200, 495-2211, flel-8177 lllllllC Free lance artist Graphic CARRY FOX specialise. de111gn, cartoons. illus In the placement of banlt- Part-lime 831-7270 IJ\g personnel We have ------lots of pos1uons ror ex· Help W..t.d 7100 1 perienced banJting, s.L, ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• mort111e leodioe &c escrow personnel. We also need several trainees for these types cl companies -CIMflOH RNAMC:tAI. CORP. 714 .. JJ;.Ot70 CGI CcrTY 972.9955 , OPERATOI list w /followine Salon aasrstaoce, mamcunsl, high pay, ~';.orlting condit1oos, ee-u..a STYLIST H1tif fashion . ex · pea.need in French tedmique desirable. Sa\sf.Y commensurate w/~. & professional ~ence. Send resume Ir ~Ual lo Richard Oue~lett_e Sa Ion . 200 ~nter ~N~ ~at needed for ~ F,vtce progressive tab\ In ooe or the top ma11' In O.C. Loads of ~TJ'!i.'' Please call MGMGl-81= asnUSTS Help In need or a work- ln1 anaaer. also s atyl ats for our pro-cre Ive full service . Guaranteed sal.. tA:lp m .• pd vac., ad- v trainin& by our tn~lin& style directors Grell opportuoJty for ad· ment Please call Cashier OfJll CASllEI COLLECTORS CoUecton, experienced lD CIOOltuner and /or re----------1 lllil credit. --------•I Xlnt worklo1 environ· meat. 1ood salary • all Owleal corporate employee bmefita. CHllSTMAS ssss SICll1'AlllS ~STS • CaJI Mr. Norwood TYPISTS 213-le0-4100 10011• as Houlehol': Fi!:~ce Corp. ~CAD ona·s Kentoae Savino TEMPORARY Ir Loan Buildinl COUPLE WANTED Man.le small bualnesa Part-tlme. Wlll lraia Call for aprpt 141-mt Scbedule )'OW' own Ume. llZltSouth Sl. Ceriitos !Wed 10'Jr own 1urrowi-E.O.E. II /F ~wanted to mana1e ~to 'i°~e cfr~r r~ COi.LiCH STUDIMTS •mall b111lnea1.:uu or Newport/Irvine area. Work full or part time psrtUme.MI ti · LODI t11 abort term H · ae I Jin 1 e 1 e ct r o a t c CUSTODIAN •••MOflllCI HoUlewiv• wanted lo wort foart time . lO:J0-2: , 5 day1/wt IWiable W /minimWD H· 1111'· WUl t.nlin. Ccm\act ~ Greater Irvin• Umon: 55&-3110. GENERALOFnCE re.. Cl.utllled M • , ACTION Calla DellTPllot AD-VISOR ta.5111 ll&llt eQjoy p1M>oe COD· EOE tact, worlrlnt with BEVERLYMANOR cwt...,.., detail work • Oaa~t Boepltal typlq, paid vacaUon, , 3MSZV)a PAtnda lie* P91 • bealtb tu. LapnaHilla F tr. Apply l.o person ..._/Cubler ea,p eve Mon-Fri at Barden'• .wtt. Apply ..; penoo. lwt Cclmr'ol. • flan. BID Brown Restaurant, dolpbA .... Cll.SM-5570. mos Coat Hwy, South Enjoy working as Office Cashier in Slavick's Jewelers. Duties include verifying sales balances, doing dally bankinc transactlom, disbursing funds and other related duties . Excellent Company Benefits Package. li1Dmenta· calculators micro· No~-eetoApplicaat =~r~a.t.J~!J~1 Knowled.le or computer scleocea helpful. Good General Help, Cateriat l..aluDa. •-----------Wareboue, atarUn1j;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Nov. 24, l :IOam-1 :10, mlllw.b da¥. •• am. . ~Ir benefita. Ja C.M. call Lev: 540-1530 . CONTACT ML McDaMOTT 17141 644-1 JIO .... ........ lnlle C-rchllL._ Offlan 8&Dldnf esp req. Xlnl salary • benefit.. Apply pm'liainDel director: 640.7093 I~~~~~~~' talTAM IAMIC SLAYICl'S .................... 7 Have aometblnc you want to Hll '? C1au1fted ads do lt well.1CN8'11. 721N. ~1~abeim CLlllCAL ftdWS We need several penon.s with nice appear~ to fill posltlona in beautiful Faabion laland omce. No typtnc or uperience necessary. ~ornln1 lntervie1r only MA•CAIDll Lovely offfce fn Newport Beach. Ac<'urat.e typlq more Important than speed. Compan1 baa excellent benem1 Ir 1tarlln1 •tlary Sl,000 IXICUml SICllrMY -MO SH FortUM 500 eoalPAJl1 bu need or corporate 1-crttarY. Th1I la an Important potltJon • requires persoo ol ltablllt)' &-latefrity. Salary Sl,600. $ICllTAIY -MO $H Plush offtce located near John Wayne Airport seeks secretary with 4 )'1"1. exper. Ir some lefal back1round. Thia co. ofrers creat opportunity ror advancement or pe1'oo with ad. or1anlzatlonal skills. Starting laia ry to SL,.lllO. E.O.E. SICalJAIY IQOC•Ma Large Canadian co. la <>Penint new branch near South Coast Plaza Able to run oHlce ln11_...:.:.---------1 bos1's absence. Good at follow-ups Co. would like trial balance Gre11t iround rJoor oppty Startint salary to Sl,:500. SICllJAAY -MO IN ~lush olnce In Newport Beac needs compettnl, aur,ctl\t person to Join tbe ln1uranc Ml------.,..---"1-'-""""-------:~~ dept. of tbelr corpoc'&le ofne.t. Co · ts in IJ'Owth state • escell. benefit. Ir 1tartln1 aa.la to Sl,100. ucdrAU -MO IN Nationally known propert mcmt. co. baa openlnl fo 1eneral secretary who u handle numbert. Beaul. otn racHIUes. Start.inc 1alar1 51,0SiO. I --,- \1 J • t r r 1 a j Liii SfaETllY/ PMUIEI ADEUTY FEDIUL =~.:-N~Beacb AA~=unl\y LUMCH.., RealEAmte SALARY •T0$14,000 PboDe Work· Noul•nq ._. Jl'Alate Uc req. Xbit oppty to worlt in a flllt~Nwpt Beach &e.r ~i.te FlJ'Ql. Air cmdltioaed otncea. For an appoiDtment to •ar our ofter on your ulary call Dau Now! ! 151-U. llC9'T JMC.'Y lleaV)' plM>On, typlo1, ~ bPdllo1 mall or-deri. Star\: $200/wlr. Call .Ju. L. *' 754-0.1. ~OMIST DllY PILOT llCUTAIY 1bil blllaly aucc .. afuJ Needed immed. With or local nnapaper bu an wltboul abortbaod. Tem· oDmbul I• a tram.. ift • t··" u ~-11 t&e •clicwatlo8 depart-~ ..... me ..... mma. Sulc Pillt will l-Tod~Se~Seni~ca~a~t~m-llOO~~;I ...U supeniaioD of 10 to 111 U yur Old boJ aod 1lrl lane dlltv.,. c:anten. L miracle n,azda 1, ,.... ' A Daily P.ilot ad number wiU appear in your ad ... ~e take your messages 24 hours a day .... you caH 1n at your convenience during office hours and ~I the resp0nses o you~ ad ... For more information and to place your ad can 642-5678 . . •642-5678 DAILY PILOT COHHEll CHEVROLET X> II,.,.,. J• • I I t... \ ,,, ; • 546-1200 * * ., ... Aaeetated ...... Tbe !8£rlcloua .Santa ~~.a wtndl dlmnllbed today, belplftl flrefl1btera In their battle ' a1ainlt ftnl &bat have buriied about 48.000 aena of parcbfel Southern California brusbland and dama1ed or destroyed almoet 100 bomea. The burrieane-atrenttb w1qda Sunday fed ft"8 that led to the death of one man and razed blllside homes valUed at up to Sl mlWoo. Damace tn Loa Antel• County alone wu estimated at $25 million. But the winds abated durin1 early today,livlnl firefllbten preclom time to clear ~· ment llDea. Tbe winds we es· (See WINJJ8. •••• A%) Huntington council sets .Iand-use talk Tbe Huntlnston iteacb City Council ii scheduled toniabt "° open the nnt of three public heariql on tuture ctly land UH9 to _ be _permitted under the local eoutal~. ToJlllbt '1 beariJ:ll will center ott a ~~!qn dll the Hunt· tncton KlrbOUf-area that ii un· c1er. ._.i euoe. It calb will focus on a .-equest KTJ:Propertta to N- aone five acres near SunMt Aquatic• Park and Peter's LandiJI& to resldentJal use. On Dec. 1, tbe City Coulldl will aero tn on the portJon of tbe city lyidl b'ttween . Beach Boulevard and the Santa Alla River. It wlt1 not be until Dec.,8 that the CoUndl will take up the moet controvental of the bearina• wh,en tt eomtdera what tmd of dnelopment It Will permit tn the do.wntown area. The PlaMl.nl Commlasloo bu endoned a plan calllnf for the denlopment of bltb·rile build- lna• in the Main Street-Paclftc Coaat m1hway area without beltbt limits. That plan ienerally ls aupport- ed by downtown property ownen but oppOMd by residents who previously have declared they want to retain the present vllla1e atmosphere of the dOwnto.m. Allo to be considered at tbe Dec. I beartnl will be two otber alternatives that would p:rohlblt bllh riles and Would r•ult in mu.ch lower density develop- ment. Toftlabt'a meetlq bet(lns at 1:30 at City Counc11 chamben. 2000 MabiSt. ~ Dlllr ..... ~ .. ....._....., PUSHEDBYH!AVYWINDS,FLAMUSW!PTTOWMD oRANaa COUNTY'9'0UNDAVIU.AGEIUNDAYAFTERNOON Fife mowct down C.rtMNt canyon from Ian ........... COuntr to tttreeteft ••~ tnlCt ..._. 'Canyon Patrol' aJJsists /ire fighl, . DeltfNll--- OMNGI COUNTY'I aLAZi ........... &Iota One could tell each patrolman wanted to 1et close to tbe names and 10 to work, but flrfmen held them back. fflflrsha.acl ltattle Bolsa Chica 11nit drops legal ~on RepreMDtaUves of the Amlloe •laiolt Si.pal, ~ de Boin Cblca aaid today that W.R. Grace comp.:!~ ••••• aetlon ·~u= the reported state. dumplq and acUvlUea at A representative of Slpal the 8oJla CbJca manblanda will Landmark Co the m~ owner be halted in Superior Court at the . tn the lkllla Cb.tea, said toct.y request ot the environmental tb• Amfp ha come out oa the •r:~ officials say that all = i:! of both suits in earlier partieebaYeapeedthataotJoaoa He clalaied that arlUJDenta by tbla part ol tiJe le1a1 batUe over tbe Amip queationlne the e0n· 1,fSOO acrea of manhland.I will be 1titutlonallty of the land H · post~ \UIUI final actlOlr ha cbuae bad been rejec:tecl twice been reaehW oo another lawsuit ln su,.nor Court before Colni to bf the Amlp tb!t la before the the apPeala court. appellate court. . Dr. P*r Green, prd\Cleirt of .1 the envtriJniDentallat or1uilu· UOn, a*! tbe latter 1Ult that cseatt With CODltltuUon&l llaues ta u -peetect to io before the stat. SU CoUrt.. lf.m lar the moet Important of the two 1ulta in tbe IObl run." Grea Aid. •-n.emore, Am!P <It ;80)l8 Qltea malt COMentrate ltt 1.,11 ~on the Coilltitu-tloaal lanutL •• Latk ol fUDdl pr.vents the Qi. C•D~ from 1upportlnc UM twoailtiilllD~. blaalcl ~ laWlfd\ befor• Utt ap. • pellateeowt~•tbe~ tltutlcullb' .. Of .... -t:t~ talJled a.y ·tbt .... co. from tM ml.. lft the BoWa ln • ..._ ..... &Utt.M ... .... ,.... ... ..,.,~ tM~=~ ..... '1111 tUt Ude an ... )ti *""'•JUWA•trmt miwot i.91: ~ ........ wW :......._ • ..., =----...=i11 .::: ... -== mllMaa cao be cut~ eat .-... ___ ,_ .__. , .. ,........ ........ ... ~ .. 1'M -..net uo eoetM+ it -IM•• 'J a tr, (lie PAY, Pa .. Al> The llpl Mtt1i11 II difwUit ' I -~ BJ REDEal<S SCBOB~ Ot•D91tY,... ...... Oranie County Fire Depart~ ment olftclail were cautiously optlmllUe today that the ~ blase that burned 8,500 acielt and poeed wh•t appeared to ~ an unatoppaJ>le threat to t'Wq Brea neighbC)rhoods Sundg would be brouaht under contr01 by Dilhtfall. Tbe fire, which ori1tnated in Carbon Can'yon ln San Bernardino County, burst into Oran1e QK.mty at lnld·afternoon Sunday anc:I consumed two houaea and an unknown number of livestock before it began 'burnfnl oo a less devastatine coune. At midday, the fire wu 35 per· cent contained and 10 percent controlled, said Capt. Art Pereida ol the county fire de- putlDeJ\t. Pereida aald, however, lb.at qulek conlrol waa espected because the fierce, dry Santa Ana wlnda that P6wered the flamea 1ub1lded durln1 the nl1bt. "Everytblq La looklnl pretty lood ri8bt DOW' •• Pemda aa1d. ~t the fire'• peak, unreleotlnc namea poeed serious threats to Olinda Vllla1e, a tract of ex· pensive homes located on tbe Oran,. County side of Carbon Canyon, Jnd the Sommenet con- clomlnium development near Kraemer Boulevard and Lam- bert ao.d. Flames leaped scores of feet into the nl~ ••Y on tbe ectaee of both developments as strike for• becbd by fire eql.Dea •toOd by wt.. t'lrebmes 00 tbe re.tdy. At the Sommeraet develop- ment, where names crept the clo1est, firemen said damaie was avoided because all roofs are made of aabeatos-i.,pe sbinctea. At Olinda Villa1e, where wooden abake roofs prevail, firemen nonM'tM more than a talf-doleii-~pc)t'• fires caused by the near conUnual rain CJf burnln1 embers 1enerated by the blulnabrusbland nearby. Residents of the villa1e were permitted to evacuate voluntart• ly. At Sommeraet, boweveri pollce (lftlcen were firm, ordel'- lnc residents to depart tm. mediately. ' Still, a few remained, maD- nint 1arden hcees and packin& what belonatnp they could. · (See n&E. Pace A!) •· Knifepoint rapist sought by police Hunttnitoo Beach police ate aeareblnl fOT' two men who al- le1ed1Yforced a 24-.Year-old Santa An• woman into a car at knife· point and raped her tn a field near the intersection of Beach Boulevard and Adam• Street. , Tbe Victim told police she was waW.nc alonl Beach near Slat"r A nnutat 11 p.m. Friday when Ute abduction occurred. The 1uspe«& were deaeribed u male LatinsJ_n thelr JOI, drlviq an ~arly-'108 model belse Ford ear. MottlY IUDAJ but with aome blah CJoudl at tlmea' tbrou1h Tuesday. Lows , tonllbt • at the beaches! . to 54 lnlalid. H1Ch• Tues· day 70 to ?d. INSIDE 'DNtA W · • B~~1eat0ttlf;· t.OfPt cu firt M.tto111d ft · hchne• ~meat c:fffa. Storv. ,~ ~°'~~ onaen in Pent BEIRUT, IAbUon (AP>-lra.Dlu Nlistoua lelldu Ayatollah Rubollab .Domelnl, apparentl.v_trYtuto~uellDOJlUeal dilHnt, to-day auured merchant.a from .~· bob' dtt or Qom that "I don't acrn with eveey d•roman. •• · 011 Sommenet resklent wait· e4 lO lNve tM Yf•lled tommUni· ty uoW the oul.u,ht of names hid puald. Told by a ftre111an that the t.Meat was over, the woman, who was drlvin8 a Corvette jammed to the ceillnl wltla belooetngs, )oytully scre1med. "You're kicldlng." o In an acldNa brOadcaat by Tehran Radio and momtoNd here, Khoalelnl 1pote out for theHOOad day about the divtaloaa between modentea andcleray~rteotecl mllltt.ntl. The merchants tD Qom and Tehr-.n 1taleddem0Mtratlona lut . week and aiped peUttons to win the releue of Jailed former Forelp Mlniater Sadeeh Gbotbudeh, a moderate accus~ of "tellina lies" about 1overnmeftt offtclal.a in a controvenlal 1 televi.sfon Interview. After the slege at Sommenet, the flte continued to move west toward the Orange Freeway, wblch the California Hiah•ay Patrol ordered closed due to the movement of fire equipment and poor visibility. Fre• Pep Al PAY ••• •'· .-.Ult tqueae $300,000 from t.bla year's $42 mlllioo general fund ;~let. but Ulla can be achieved Without cuttiDI educational p~ arams. «"Parents, teachers and stu· ntl must be made aware of e severity of the budeet cuts we 're facing," Abbott said of the qoeuon beblnd the public bear· , •... <>cl ''The community must 1et uaed to the idea that cbanges .~ave to be made." ~~ra. Allen aald that eletth·e 'dr.;:ar•ma, such u fine arts and ~r-scbool athletics, u well u support 1emca aucb as counsel· h.,,..' may have to be reduced next -jl1!!l'· ,.l Abbott said adadnlatratton ;)'ffc>mmendatlooa on wbat 1bould '1bt ~at Mel will a m.S. to tlle tnllCMI a Jan~. .,._ tlll .,,.,Uc bearlnO areeompiet.d. t•' r:r ,.Dominican b~nvoy slain , . .., BOGOTA, Co,ombla <AP> - hllfhe DomiDlcan ambuaador to Colombia was shot to death t.o- "'"Y ln the apartment of ·tbe 1)omlnlcan comul here, police ta~ld. .,.:;rouce aald Ambassador • "l!ICIUlrdo Antonio Gare•• Vas- High wind discovered on Saturn PASADENA (AP) -Measure· menta made by Voyager I have found a wind on Saturn that moves just one direction across moat d the planet, ls hundreds of miles wide and reaches speeds up to a startling 1,100 mph. Still, the ftnding was not total- About 10 p.m. firemen lit • "back fire" that stopped the ad· vanci.na flames from burning to the freeway and jumpl.ng over it. As the winds died down, the fire shitt.ed course, burning to the north toward Los Angeles County. More th.an 500 firefighters from Oranee. Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties -in· cludlng crews from Lake Ar· rowbead and Big Bear - manned the fire lines. A base camp wu established at Carbon Canyon Regional Park. · Olflcials began releasing firemen to their home jurisdk· tions late Sunday niaht. ly unexpected, according to Firemen were supported from Gray Huftt, a Univenity Colle1e the air with retardant-dropping of London atmosphere physicist aircraft and on the ground with and member of the Voyqer I bulldozers and other eouiome t photo interpretation team at the n · Jet Propa1sioD Laboratory here. 1 There were no in.juries to He •aid Sunda1 that some \ humans. Fire spokesmen at the .. aronomen, loollllll at 1* t teen• 1ald an undetermined aecood-bl•ae.t planet Jn tbe number of horse., cattle and solar •)'ttnl tbroUlb rround· chickens were tripped by the based teleseopea, bad predicted' f11mea. tbil felture. Voyager I, burtlinl at more than 31,800 mpb, wu more than 3.1 millloo miles beyond Saturn 00 Sunday. The wind it measured ls so broad that it would eJteod on earth from Philadelphia to Buenos Aires. The measure· meot.s indicated that the now is at its fut.est at Saturn's equator, bowllnc aloa1 at 1peeds 900 mph to 1,100 mpb, Hunt sald. One ol the houses burned was located ln the Sleepy Hollow community in San Bernardino County just north of the Orange County line. The other was locat- ed directly across Carbon Can· yon Road to the entrance<>fthe re- gional park. f'nHH Pagt1 . \ I He noted such a wind was roughly four times faster than WINDS Big .hand era It's Edison'• turn/or ro1es . By aoBDT BA&&za °'................. . The lJl& band •ra h.u co~e to H~Beach. The Huotl.niton Beach Hi-" Sebool band bu bland tbe trall, ha..-tne performed ln the Touma: ment OfRoees Puade and being the hOlt band for thb 1ear'1 ~th of July Puade In the city. It also ~11 participate in Macy's Tbank18lvlne Day Parade in New York. But Huntineton Beach Js bard· ly a one-band town. Edison High School's band alao hu been maklnl Iota of noise recenUy, climaxed by the invitation it received to appear in the Tournament of Roses Parade oo New Year'• Day. Tbe band, banner and drtl1 team wu selected over about 50 other bands in competllion Nov. 1 at Chino. The Charier band also baa re· ceived other honors. It YJOD sweepstake awards in recent parades in Tustin, Placentia and Rowland Heiehts. In addition, the band bu won tbree top music score awards,. tbe drill team has captured three ftrst.ptace trophies and the drum major, Tony Bolstad, also bas won laurels. The 175-piece unit is under the directkln ol Gary McJUton, who bas been the band dlNctor at Edison since the school was founded l\.years ago. He previously wu band direc· tor at Westminster High School. McJUton credits the blossom· ing of the band to experienced upper clasamen, a good spirit and support from the communi· ty and the booster club. The Edison band has an im· portant date before it goes to the Rose Bowl. It will appear al halftime as the Chargers enter the CIF football layoffs Friday. ~jor banks again hike lendiOg rate NEW YORK (AP> ~ Several major ban.U today raised their prime Mndlnl r•ta by ~ ttua.rt.en of • point to 16.25 per.; cent, the bipest that rate b.u been since May. Cbue Manhattan, the nation's third-largest commerdal bank, initiated the increase from a lS.5 percent rate. It bad ao comment on the move, but analysts pre- dicted a round of prime rate in· creases following credit- tigbtentng moves by the Federal Reserve Board on Friday. Citibank. tbe second-larrest bank, Manufacturers Hanover, No. 4, and Morean Guaranty, N~ $~~ckb-followed Chae'• lead wit.a annouocemeota ol a ll.2S pel"C4mt rate at each of those banks. Lut week, Federal Reserve railed from ll percent to 12 per· cent its discount rate, or tbal rate it charges on its direct loans to banks, and added a 2 percent surcharge for some large borrowers. Those moves by the Fed, the central monetar7 agency, a.re espected to 1e.nerally iDcreue interest rates ln JDOMY markets, thus maklnl banD' costs of aequir· Detaib revealed ing famda more expensive. The prime rate applies to ques, 80, wu blt by seven bullet.a :-tM ·the home of Comul Rafael ;..Ji'UfUSto Sandles. 11 • The eounaul remained lnalde -+~ apartment and bis telephone the 1tro111est winds Voya,er I • • • loans banb make to best cor· in Mao death plot porate customers. While it peeled to end altogether by late PEKING <AP> _ Glvtne the doesn't directly apply to con· saw on Jupiter. today. first detailed account of Lin sumer loans it la widely followed · * H d11connected. Colombian police said they ~d not enter uf\be coaaul 's boule because be a~u diplomatic immunity. The couaul seat word that ln the next Jlifew hours be would pve an ex· 11aP.tanatlon. · Hunt theorized that the mechanism drivin& the wind ts the cyclic rialnc and subsldeoce or massive, extremely cold cloud• of ammonia that are tbou&bt to be the major aub- stance al Saturn's atmotpbere. Cbokina smoke and ash blown l?iao'a mt plot to Haua1nate as an indicator or general in· by the northeast winds, which Mao Tse-tuna, the Chineae 1ov-terestntetrends. ran1ed up to 80 mph, blanketed ernment said toda)' that the The prime climbed to a peak areas several miles from the former defense minister and b1a of 20 percelll in April, then slid nine flra that raeed through the confederates planned to UH to a low of ll percent in late July weekend. flame throwers, buootas, before beainninl to rise •1ain. While the fires spread, dynamite and bombs to attack a It last was above ta percent in homeowners tried to salvaee train carrytna the CommUAllt mid-May when major banks b1ta of their charred homes. One P.attY chairman on an ln.lpectklo were ebargin& either 18.25 or by court ASHJNGTON <AP> -~ tuckJ c..-polt ... elf tbe Ten 0oauaud1Mlltl in ~ pubUt bobl elaanooin, tb u 8. ~ CcMirt ruled'*'· 18)' • vote, the na..-..·. ~ that tlOlll't aua P.Oat1ni lbe c:onamandm~nta 111 · jpillc schc>ola Viol1u1 the ConaUlU· tlon '1 ' freedom~of-re1J1Jon 1u1ranteet. The court'• dec:l1ion, comhlt In ab umlped oplrllon, revened a Kentucky Supreme Court rql. lnt Ui«t the at.ate'• action was C:Oftltltidlonal • .. The pre.eminent purpoee for Poll1nl the Ten Commaodmenta on schoolrooD) walls ls plalnly relig\Qus lo nature," the court .. ld. '"n>e Ten Commandment8 la undeniably a sacred text in the Jewish and Christian fatt.bs and no le,UlaUve recit.atlob bl .i supposed secular purpose can blind &M to that tact." The court's majority lnchaded Justices William J . Brennan Jr., Thur1ood Marshall, John Paul Stevens, Byron R. White and Lewis F. Powell Jr. Chief Justlce Warren E . Burger and Harry A.. Blaekmun dissented, voting to revtell' the ~as~ more fully before deciding at. Justices Potter Stewart and WUliam H. Rehnquist said the Kentucky Supreme Court waa right. At issue was a state law re- qulrln8 the Ten Commandments to be posted in all schoolrooms. The 19'78 law was cballftlled by four Louisville residents - Anne Bowers, Patricia Bricking, Sydell Stone and Rabbi Martin Perley -represented by the Kentucky Civil Liberties Unioo. Ms. Bowers was described by her lawyer u a non-believer in any form of organized religion. Mrs. Bricking is 1 Roman Catholic, a school teacher and a mother with three children in public schools. Ms. Stone is a Unitarian. Ruling on the 1978 lawstlt against the state's superinten- dent of schools, a state trial judge in Frankfort, Squire William upheld the law. His March 20, 1979, opinion said, "Govt:cnment involvement in this matter is limited to ensur· ing that a plaque is placed on each classroom wall, if out.side funds are available." The law does not •llow tu mone~ to be apent for the "char&· ble copy" to be poeted in each cluaroom, but instead calls for private donations Patrol saves fishing trio A fishing expedition by three daring sou.ls facing stiff wlnda Sunday at Sunset Beach nearly turned into a real sea adventure, the Orange County Harbor Patrol reported today~ The trio started out in a rub- ber raft about noon wt\ile winds were gusting between 3S and 40 mlles per hour. Then an oar broke and the three anglers were being pro- pelled quickly lnto the bounding main when finally rescued by a Harbor Patrol lifeboat. Rescued without iajury we::e Barbara Manuel, 24, Huntington Beach; Donald Turner, 24, Sunset BeacJl, and John Turner, 'Z1, of Norwalk. Crown accepted LONDON <AP) -Runner-up MlP Guam, the daut)lter of an American Army officer, will "deflnltely" accept tbe 1980 Miu World title that WU dis- carded after 18 boun 'by 1 We.t German woman, the orcanller of tbe wodd beauty paceant uld today. Kimberley Santoa, 1.t, wu due ln London Ulla week from Guam. Tb• clowSa are ao maaaive, they act lib an e:normoua Dlltoa and pump bqe quantities of e1'er11 lnto tbe atmo1pbere, Runt Hid. 1be up and down mo- tlom ol the cloudl are converted Into bi1ll •peed, borlsontal kbaedc eDll'O by Satu.nl's very old man we)>t tn the arms of his trlplnaoUtbemCbina. 16.S percent. prepant daUl)lter u a forlorn ·.----'--------...:.._----r----.Jll•.------;;....;:=-------------== dos Hl pear smolderin8 nllna in • raptd rotation, 11e actded. lD anoUMtr preUmlllary report, Jeffery CUui. a member of the Voyacer pboto1rapble team, told reporters that Saturn'• rt1111 pro•Jde a unique op· portunlty to IWdy the tie!favlor of broad; dlle·1haped structures ln,prblt around• W-1• body. • A dlac almilar to Saturn'• rtnp wu bellrled to clrele the prllpordlal •uo durtn1 tbe fonn1tklo of the Solar S11tem. Cuul '**9. He iddecl tut the way the mooaa ol 8atUm llfeet th• nni lt.namal'e mw: •• , •elentlltl to reflDe tbltt. UMSOriee abOut bow tbe dlle tUt 1urtound9d t.M sun mon th.ID 4.1 blllioo yean behaved. .. • \ th• posh Bradbury area. Tb• wind and ftru interrupted electricity to aomtf 50,000 homes, tbouth power was restored to more than 80 percent of them by Sunday Jliabt. A ~ failure to one pump- inl •tatloli cut water preuure, f~tretlna ftrettcbten al.ready , bavtna trouble puabln& aw1y the cuilous, oft'lclaluald. 1 Two people were arrested on char1es of 1ootlna nW:led homes. Fire •utborltles c:allid a "red na1" alert thiodpout &outhem Callfornla doe to htlb fire danaer, Mverely ratriCUne ac- Uvlly lD buih1 areu. There bu bHono1tsnt.ftcutralntMrestnee April.' •• Added tot.user, tbe nres h..i consumed about. 70 aquara 11111•. I ~ . .... - Eugene Smger, top left, and son-in-law Hurb' Brown sift through debns o f S i nger 's home destroyed when brush fire swept through Bradbury, nortfleast of Los Angeles. Map, nght, depicts the numerous weeken d blazes that off1c1als estimate burned more than 100 homes. An un- identified Verdugo Hills re- sident 'm Sunland. below. tnes m vam to sa " his hOme engulfed m flames early Sundav mommg ,,..,,"•'••"•' Au~o•I ' .. ' 0 , ........ • I 10 MILll O"'••I• • CALIFO·R NIA "( I ,. s ..... ...... • .. ' ... .. I --M'e had ab11olutely tan acart1h1g. 'l'ltere "'°"" ·1 011e 11i119le fire• offi~ial up laere. ·· .. There's nothing left. No&hiq," sobbed the man, who not Sive bis name . .. We bad absolutely no wamini. There lfun 't one sin1Je official up here," said Jim Costin, as he stood in front of smolderine ruins of his lour-bedroom, three-bath house. "I j made the lasi payment November 3.'' TUE COSTIN HOUSE WAS torched by flames whipped by mph Santa Ana winds. The fire which destroyed their home .., dee land 60 percent contained Saturday, but caught firefi1hten guard when the wind picked uptn theearl y morning Sunday. •twe were sleeping," Costin's wife, Theda, recalled with te streamina .down h~r face. ''There wasn't time to. •et anything." Coattn said he, hls wife and U.year-old daughter SJaaron we lucky to eet out~ the ln.fe.mo alive. : "I.woke up and he-rd the wind," Costin aaid. "I went outsi and figun:d that eyerything moat be under control or they wo notify us. - ."I WENT llACK •1NSJDE and s~denly the evergre~ns just behiod us were caupt bJ parks and exploded. I looked and it was just a wall of name." ; At another Bradbury home, 47-year-old John Hervey was be\. ing his wife load their car when be collapeed on thelr front lawn. He wu pronounced dead of a heart attack at Santa Teresitta Hospital in nearby Monrovia. AC Los Anaeles County firelighters bad no time to react, s.A.t spokesman Dick Friend. ~ ... ~ "THOSE WINDS ltJST ALL of a audden kicked up. From !e time thoee winds started, within 15-20 minutes the houses were - volved. It was not anticipated. It just blew up," Friend said. •w •'Once the fire engines were there, they couldn't even see t:be flamee for ill the lmoke," Friend said. Insufficient walllr pressure, narrow roacls blocked by fallen trees and locked gates also hampeNdftrdipten, hes aid. -"' As ftte trucks desperately tried to make their way up the dtilf.. row billiide roads, raidents frantically moved down the roay safety, 101De ln baatlly packed station wagons Jammed W\V' beloncinjl, others leadlng buckiftl bones. •Jt SOME aESIDENTS EIPBESSED anger toward local fire a1Jd wate~~ because their homes burned to the gf9und wi~ - firefi present to save them 1pid wittiout adequate waJer ~ press~. City offtc:ials say their M'fVices w~~.sh:nplx •ti:etc:b~ tbeUmtt. , " Famed race driver Mickey Thompson waa sliptly burned 4Jl bis hands u be fought a losing battle to save $1 million worth or exotic cars in the garage acijacent to his home. Some cars were in flames as be pushed them out o( the garage. • f 'Thompson said be went throuRb :rr raclnJt fire extinKUJshA-s fighting the blue, which he said Uterally bu med the coatoffhis back. "l'VE RACED ALL my life and busted my ass," sid Thompson. "I W-5D't about to give it up." Most of the can were a total loss, although the driver managed to sne bis home apd garage. ~ He said the winds were so strong at the height of the firesth that he was blown off the roof of Ills home as be watered it downll Another victim of the Bradbury blaze was a tluntine lodge ~at once belonged to bandleader GleM Miller. The three-story to"lr• recently restored by new owners, was destroyed. '!J AT THE BOTl'OM OF the locked gate entrance to Bradb~ Estates, a black Cadillac was wedged into an embankment, Its hood smashed into a garage. Firefighters said a terrified residfltJ had been trying to nee and was lost in the thick smoke. There Wfj,ri no reports of injuries from. that accident. , At the Cosin's house, only a ceramic pig cookie jar atop ie burnt refrigerator was left. ''That was the last wedding present.,e opened," Mrs. Coatin said. i~ · One home up a steep, private drive was reduced to rubble,;tut a wooden swing set in the backyard was still intact -the swffils dangling to and fro in the wind. · our sh<Z.aTling outdoor jockcz.t ... • u .s. Book TtU. WMf'e Moneweoea. SH'! It llft't Ta.u• were Jomy in the fint place. markinl railrod ada ~tht •t •actually rivers , and confmtni ammo umpe c Y dum:-t.her that, or the ctA isn't interested in these ab: countries any more. Or maybe being a clandeaUoe operative ls just getting leas expensive these days. BEYOND THE CIA, there are lots of other bar&alm ln the government cataloa. You can, for example, order up "Aunt Sammy's Radio Recipes." The catalog carefully explains that in the 19319 and 30s Aunt Sammy, who was the wife of Uncle Sam, was hos'tess or a popular "Housekeeper's Chat" radio abow, the high point of which was when she trotted out her favorite recipes for all those listeners out on the airwaves. __ .. You can aet your very own booklet of the menua - recipes by just aendiDI ln $1.50. That's the same prtce u a CIA map and it might be a bectuva lot mo~ useful. In heavier tomes, you cm learu about tbe U.S. Air Force for $6.50. The llstin& ii under the picture of an Army tank. You may)>e didn't know that the Air Force baa ta.ob. But then, the Army bas aircraft, so why not? BACK TO .BARGAIN Pmca, tbe 1overoment will sell you Uie "Spotter's Gulde for Identlfytng aad Bep0rUn1 Severe Local Storms" for juat a am,te dollar bW. Tbia booklet explailu bow to recopize tornadoes, waterspouts or other severe storm• if you &et bit by one. If you care by then. The aovemment even bu aomethin& for aebolan. You can ord~r student manuala for Hlf·teachlDC, one throuP six, at prtces ran&1n1 from three bucks down to $1.05. II you're an administrator, however, the CMt for JOU!' manual ii just 35 centa. You're left to wonder be~ lf they're trytnc to tell us the relative de,ree of ditficulty between belnl the student or belna the principal. MAINZ.a. ff• Germu1 <AP> -Pope raw II eondemned tbl ••pen~ CJMcitel'' ol·~m tOctar In a meettna wttb German Jew•. Iii ai.-·eaDed on 'Protel· tant1 to unit• witb Catbo1ict ••alblt atbfllm, ••Jin• ••we owe It to O(ld and to the world, ... to tHpupUM~alope. '' He told a M-intmber dele1at1on of Ult Ctlltt.al Counel1 of , .. In Germany aome of tbem 11D'· Yl•on 'Oi Naal' concentration camP1, that "the lnnoffnt .Sc~ Um1 In Germany or elMwbere, tb• dt1troyed or scattered f amlU. U.. Cultural val\lel and cultural trea1mt1 destroyed fonv• are tnclc proof ol wbeN dl1crtmtn1Um And" dlarecarcl few bumandltnlt.Ycan lead." Germany baa about 30,000 , •••• About • mllllon European Jewa wene ~eel by the Null in World Warn. TIR POPE underscored the them• cl equality and Chrlltlao unity at an outdoor meetlns with memben of dosena of ethnic 1roup1 and natlonaUtlea, ad· dreaatnc many of them in their paUve lancuqes. Werner Nachmenn, leader of a 24-member dele1ation of rabbll and committee members, told the pope that •'brutal vllolence, which rendered ua defemeleu, haadeclmiatedus." The pope said "concrete brotherly relationa between Jewa and Catholtc:c-in Germany re- cet..vea a very apecial value acainlt the dark backlJ'OUDd of persecution and attempted deatructioa of tbe Jews in this country." MSS'l'ING DaB with Protea· tant leaden, the pontiff repeated- ly refernd to Martin Luther, the rebel German theoloctaJ\ whose break wlth the Roman Catldic Church 500 yean aco launched tbe Proteetant ReformaUon. ''Today I come to you, the spiritual lnberttantl of Martin Luther; J &190 come u a plllJ'im. In a cba:f "'world, I come to Mt a alp unklo in the central aecretaof O\D'f aith." Altboulb hil primary purpoee la to lnllJllre a renewal of f alth amon1 Rom.an Cathollca, who make ~ nearly ball of West Germany'• population of U ml Woo, the pontiff'a llve-day vlalt also 11 aimed at developtns atronser ties betwea Catholics aad tbe Protettant followers odLutber. "We must keep up the dialope and the contacu. We must leave no atone unturMCS. We muat do what creat. unity. We owe lt to God and to the world " be told Leaden of the Council of Enn· 1ellca1 Lut!Mraa Churches in Germany. . . now blaitkef8 southwest Florid~, Cuba W.hBd f& 1tonn at •ea , Oacdneil to gate ·~..,...... .. Joan'Schrammeck, 2', Seattle, chained h~nelf .Sunday lo the gates of the new $12 million Mormon Temple ~ Bellevue, Wash., to protest the church's view of women 1 roles, i.. many as 5,000 Church of Jesus Christ of Lattel'· Day Saints membei:s, oppoeiog the F.qual Rl&bll Amen4- men..t, are expected to attend dedication ceremonies each day thill week. , Girl hides as two knifed to death . ' KEB.MJT, Texas CAP> -Just before she died of stab wounds, police aay, 15-year.old Lee Ann Wallace 1ta11ered to a bedroom door and warned the frightened teen·aeer lnalde, "Stay bidden." Authorities arrived to find the bodies of Mila Wallace and ber mother. Another woman wu found wounded, and police say tbey fear for the 16-year.old lirl who bid from the attacker. Authorities refused to identify the girl for her protection, and a Kermit police investigator would not say Sunday night if detec- tives bad a suspect in the stabbings. Tipped by an unidentlfled teen·a1er, police arrived at the home Saturday morning and found Miss Wallace slumped a1ainat a bedroom door, dead of multiple stab wounds. Miss Wallace had staeiered baclc to the bedroom door after she was stabbed and warned the cowering girl to "Be quiet; stay hidden." police said. ------11!1' -------AIOUT $& 49. SUPEill · Ue DINNEll z AIOUY I 1s1 n~.EA, I e DINNER n O Oood for tnr .. p1ec:.1 of Juicy, golden blown Ktnlucky C Frltd Chicken, plul slngle Mn11ng1 ol colt slaw. -0 maantd po11tot1 and gtl"Y· and a roll l.lm11 two offers 0 P9f CCKlpOn per customer Cualomef pa ya 111 1pphc1 • i : .. ~lfb Qood tor lw•I"• plecH ot 1u1cy. golden blown Kentucky Fried Chlellan. with al• rolls. plua your choice ot tlthtf I latge cote ataw or a luge m11htd po111oea, •nd 1 111'1111 I gr1vy L•~IMwo olltfl per coupon per cust~r Cull~' p1ys 111 1pphc1t>le U IH Ill! ----::::;::=""llll Offer expires NO'itmbtr 30. 1980 I Pt1ct1 m1y wary •t I parhc1pat1ng ~· tions Good only 1 Prices mfrt var, ti par 111 Soull'ltfn l1Clp1t1ng location• Cahfom11 _,..,.. Good only 1n Sour'*" you ,.. tnt I C1folom11 whtfe you. Colon.l's tac1 ... trie Colon.r s lace w•nclOW banner. window l>enMr __ .... _ Some people will l listen to ·Nathan Pr.itikin as tho~gh their lives 0 Cl. ::> 0 u ¥.osemite roCk slide Rilli three 1iiker:s ~ YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK <AP> -Boulden the abe of pickup trucks crubed dowri on weekend hlken on the hairpin t~ ol a trail near Yosemite Falll, killin1 ~ and laJurht~ Hven, park officials said. TWQ of the dead were believed to be Germans oo their tint day in California. ._The rock slide crashed onto the 4.8-mile trail about a ball-mile beww the top of the famed 2, 'ICJO.foot waterfall. About two dolen hikers were on the trail when tho ,ucJe n!Jnblecl down Sunday, said Unda Abbott, a National Para Service spokeswoman. Utddteed I09rlcer• .,.,,, ,._. &w · · · ·, · BURBANK (AP> -1'be 2,800 union workers who develop and dtllp a1rcraft for Lockheed California Co. were walldna pltltet "t~ today after rejeetiaa a last-minute coatract proposal, union n,.a11Ald. [ · Th'e aircraft builder, ) headquartered here, was ,SI' ATE struck at mldn1aht Suliday . by ltt enaineers and de- stanen. The company, which employs as,ooo people, wotdd conUnue to operateormally 1 Locltbeed1potesman Jim Rapdaleaald Qmday. s.lt.CI•• ..,orlcer• •lier_..,~· LOS ANGELES (AP> -With frOwinl piles of fUb linin1, r .. ldentia.I ttreeta for the ftftb ltrafpt day, city offtct'1s weft l~beduled to diacuss a new con.tract offer today from strtk1q union ntrotlaton, officials for both aides aaid. City manqen were expected to consider the new off" follow· inl two IDUd days of informal bartalninl at City Hall, 4l wu H· pOrted i.ie SundQ. • Mayer Tom Bradley and several~ council 111esnbe~_:1at~ th• weeUod ta1b in an atWDpt to halt the .utk• bi ·~•ti workeri, ensmeen. traffic controllera, airport cUStbdlus an recreation and parks employees amour others. PSA ..-..-n •er"tre as arflee ftlds SAN DIEGO (AP> -"Paclflc Southwest Airlines bas resumed atrvice with free drinu JOr pasaengers, OD 80 scheduled nJpts to aenn cities foUowing the end of a 50-day strike by pUota and ebpneers. t . There w~re few pusqers on Sunday's nJ&hts, said PSA st>okeaqian BIU Hastings, but PSA '1 reservation lines were ••amped with customers reserving rutbts for tbe Tbanb1ivtn1 abd Cbriltmas holidays. • 'l1>e airlines '1 242 daily ru1bts were halted when the stl!'llle be1an Sept. ZS. Werld Ah•t0•8• ~••rei. Lotedole lllfllti• OAKLAND (AP) -World Airways Ls cancellna ita ru1hts to I,.ondoo effective Friday because not eno\llh pa1aen1en took them, eays Edward Daly, president of the maverick airline. .,, The "no frills" airline said It would resume trans-Atlantic ru•bta by next April, but tbe service would be between Boston and 8alttmore. 'lbat will be replaced belinnlnl Nov. 29 by a dally fUpt between Boston and Loa Aqeles via Newark, With connect- ihl service at Newark to Oakland, tbe coml>anJ said Sunday. The London service bu been offered since June by the Oakland- baaed airline. The company said pa11en1er1 boldln1 teservatiomoncanceledfU&bttwouldbelivenrefunds. . CIVIi Grumbllng ... Gloomy Gue In the DAILY PILOT .: .. SECaET SEaVICE and Rea1an staff cars and rtewsmobllea llae one curb, leav· int Juat enouah room for one lane oftralfte. Tbe ptten are filled with telephone cables, and reponere can~ lffD booldne up portable phones and alWna on the curb callln1 lD their stories. There are allO the installed pbonea: the Associale4 t>reas phone lo a tree in Ule front yard of the transltloq .team~. the NBC=: under tbe mail box next and the CBS phone oo a fence down the street. When nothln1 ia bappeniq, re- J>QrWJll either mill around in the mlddleofthe.roadwayor 1iton lb.e sidewalk and eurbl like peopk waitingforamoviein We.atwood. San Francisco • man wms at' Scrabble SANTA MONICA CAP) -A nf pt watchman b'om. Sa.o Fr.an· claco who remembered bow to spell "xyatoi" and a myriad or other words ls the new Scrabble champion of North America ollowin1 a t ay tourna- ent. ~oe Ealey, 32, a w;~e Sta~ C! ~ si.auate grees m1Ui and pbilosopb1, l>eated 31 ot.htr U.S. and Canadf~ playe~ here Sunday to 1riD t)ie. tie and a fi·OOO prize or a trip for two to neland. The prize was courtesy of Scrabble manufacturer Selchow alld Rl1hter through ·its ..Wt Scrabble Crossword Gamesplayera Inc. of Holbrook, N. Y .• sponsor of the 3Qd annual North American Sorabble PlayenCbampion.sht#. Ed~y defeated nipl(ier·u~ Neubel"ler,a34-year-c>ld M · - tan, N.Y., attorney, by a 400-319 score wrule compilln1 a 14-3 record ln the tournament. Neubergerpickedup$2,500. "I feel very lucky." noted ~ soft-spoken Edley, who averaglld ·400 polnta a game and who ~ words written on ca~to pre~ for the braln-twiatill competf- tlon. He described htmaelf., "an eternal student.'' HYl9C .that Scrt1'ble was Ju.st on of his 1tudiea. Perhaps the moet unuaual~rd ~· ran acroes ln the town nt was "xyatoi," deriv«l tl'Ona ULe Greek word for covered porticoor premenade. The word scol'ed S7 i>«>lntt. I I .A'& t sun &et Wfdat ~ve~. s oke' fllled the air over the Los Angeles alr}Jline, making it possible for a ~rapber to capture this eerie sil~t~. Major brush f.lres raged out or control Sunday in and around the LoS AnJeles area, destroying • more than 100 homes and causing • thousanm of Southern California re5ldent.s to nee. • ~agan platfor~ studied L()S ANGELES <AP, -President-elect Ronald Bea1an has met wbb a bJue-ribbon panel of -Republican economists to receive a ~tailed plan intended to t~r.n bis campaign promises of tax. and spel)ding cuts into re- ality. The 14 economic ad· vlaera. led by former Treasury Secretary George Schultz, had bffn meeting here since Friday to hammer out wbat Schultz described Sunday as "a J:Om -prehenaive long-term strategy" to coordinate tax, enetcY, reeutatory and monetary policies for the nev.• adminiatra- tldn. SCHULTZ, and other members of tlte Rea1an economic team, which Includes tbre~ former direeton of the u~tetar ornc~ '6f f"~naseme.nt and ~~~(!cl tb cftj. &a 11 of the report ~tore t"'1 presented i1 to Reacan. But Schultz said it contains no aw-prises in policy. Rather than pro- posing new economic measures, be said, the plan ia intended as a strate1Y for fulfilline Reagan'• campaip pro- mises to cut federal spendin1 by 2 per~ent annually and to cu.t fe,deral income taJtes across the board by 10 percent for three cott- 5ecutive 1ears. SCHULTZ con - firmed that the report does not back away from Reacan 's endorse- ment. ol the Kemp-Roth tax bill , the con- troverstal series or 10 percent income tax cuts wblch criUcs say will wor1en lnflatlol) rather Utan beJp cure lt. r~ ' ~ Ii 11 ~ ' " • , Our exclusive sport shirts in authentic Tartans .. The Tanan plaid l$.hin of a11:Cotton is one of the classics of Brooks Brothers. We have these long-sleeve shins made with button-down col- lar, so they arc correct worn with a tic or with- out. Sizes 14 1/2 to 161/z. Tartans of Royal S_tcwart, Dress Gordon, Black Watc h or MacDonald. $31.50 Uu your Brooks BrothtrJ chargt account or Amtrican Express. Unexpected passage of the Alaska lands bill after years of debtate shows how quickly Con~ess can act when the chips are down. Arguments between environmentalists, who wanted more of the Alaskan wilderness preserved, and de- velopers, who wanted more opportunity to tap the state's vast natural resources, bad resulted lll a dead.lock that seemed unlikely to be resolved by the 96th Congress. A bill protecting more than 100 million acres of Alaska lands from commercial development was passed by tt1e Senate in August. But environmentalists in the House who wanted even more protection said the measure was unacceptable without major changes. Results of the Nov. 4 election changed their minds in a hurry. Fearing the new Republican majC>rity in the Senate would favor more commercial developmen~ the environmentalists hastily retreated and the House-ap· proved the Senate bill after only the briefest debate. Since President Carter has endorsed the measure as ''the greatest land conservation measure of the century,•' his signature is assured. While it will not satisfy everyone, the measure, which guarantees protection or 28 percent of the land area or Alaska but still opens key areas for oil and natural gas exploration and mining and timber operations, does seem to qualify for Carter's dacripti . • ~ aside 43 million acres for new naUOnal parks and s.1 IDlllion acres for wildlife refuges, it also opettS 900,000 acres for oil and gas exploration, transfers 99 million acres from federal to state ownership 1111d 44 million acres to native Alaskans. In the light of history, passage of the Alaskan lands bill may .go down as the major accomplishment or qte outgoing Congress. ProposalDJakessense As suggestions go, Supervisor Thomas Riley's idea of having county workers wear name plates is a minor one, but nonetheless worthwhile. Too often the person. across the counter or desk at a county office is, if not faceless, usually nameless. lndenti- fication by na~ plate would make communication more personal by introducing people who· aren't apt to in- troduce themselves and letting customers know whom to• ksk for in subsequent dealings. Riley suggests that wearing name plates would spur workers to be more accowitable. That could be. Certainly a disgnmtled citizen seeking help would know which employee to complain about. And, by the same token, a satisfied customer could aim his praise accurately. •Employee groups representing cowity workers con- tend the badges would constitute a change in working conditions and therefore should be subject to negotiation. While it mieht be advisable for the county •d- ministration to Ullk to worker representatives aboUt the proponl, the matter bardlY. seems worth too much fuss . The name plate requirement would Simply be a small • step toward ensuring good public service -and that should always be the goal of government, including gov- ernment employees. .. ' Opinions expressed In the tpace •bove are those of the Dally Piiot Other views expreased on this page are those of their authors •nd • artlata. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 15e0, Cost• Mesa, CA 92628 ~one (714)~2--4321 . • WASfllN~ -J_ult ..,_. leavlni Lbe counll)' N" l2 for don ldd • two-week •tu bro•, William Simon paaaed frienda a 1Dlece of Mn calc:uJat· ed to brtn1 Tre•aury buteaucrtlll leaptn1 rrom Win· ,... Md wau su.tt Doobihe walUulD~r . .He~ •ill lie Ronald .Rea an•,1 c:r.uty Of UM tnli\ar¥ (ID(llt h• -beell told that by the ~t .. i.et bl~. who !"has bitri Jn 11eU.,\on a1nce tlhe election But • be la tb~ choice for Treaaury of Re a 1•~~1 CalHornl"lf· dominated kitchen cabinet. Over the past year. East Coast mllllonalre Simon hat joined th•t select circle of West Coast mllllonaires. Among the final half-dozen men screening Reagan'• Cabinet choices Will be Btu srmon. • THE PROSPEcr of Simon's cetum to the Treasury. where he was secretary under Presidents Nixon and Ford Jn 1974·71, bullda pasaionate opposition. "It would be a p-otesque mistake,'' one Reaean adviser told us, "to have Simon running the most daring, most innovative and most im· portant economic program ever proposed by the Republican Party." Yet, there are proponents of th•t program -radical tax and budeet reform -who prefer Simon at Treasury to other names most prominently men· tioned: fellow Nixon-Ford retreads Alan Greenspan and Charles Walker and Citibank Chairman Walter Wriston. Simon would be far less prone to establishment pressures. Simon ls indeed a· retread of a different color. Within the dingy. gray Nixon-Ford regime, he was a scarlet stirrer-up of strife - terrorizing aides, fe~ng with other Cablnet members, defying the president. In 1976, bis col- leauges felt Simon was playing footsie with Reagan while sup· posedly supporting Ford for re- nomination. Last week I spoke to a group of people in San Diego and, by any standard. you'd have to say they were above average. They were asking me questions about things I didn't know a whole lot about, but they didn't seem to mind and we were all having fun until one fellow got up and asked me the question that pe0ple i.n the news business are asked most oft.en: "How come yaµ never report any of the go<Td things that happen ln this COWllry?" I say it's a question, but it's usually asked in such a manner as to suggest you are the agent of a for eig n government trying to bring down the United States or America. There's aomethin1 that people who ask that question don't understand, and I don't suppose anything I ~ay here ls golnl to 4 help but I'm going to say it -anyway. lo tbe first place, news by its . Ro~rt H Wetd Pubtlther Actually, Simon's record on taxation ls mixed. At the Treasury, he toyed with a radical tax reduction but was staved off by the ::Fotd White House. He has tended to tie tax cuts to rigid -dollar-for-~ollar .. budget reduction. While "A Time for Truth" 'ignores tax re· duction, Simon's recent sequel ~ "A Time for Action'.• -lrum· pets tax cuts in supply-side language ("to restore incentives to work, investand1>roduce"). · So, some supply-slders, while preferring a sophisticated ally such as New York City busi· nessman Lewis Lehrman, think Simon at the Treasury would stand up to orthodOx opinion. He is the retread least congenial to the establishment and most ac- ceptable to Republican politi- cians who deplore a Nixon-Ford restoration. ''(otnrade, be prepllred to stomp the (OmrtJe.11 TROUGll A VETERAN political infighter, Simon \oday may be in the wrong place at the wrong time. As Simon travelled east for London, Reagan's economic advisen were going west to California to discuss economics with the president- elect. His legion of enemies will not easily concede the post that Simon has confidently told friends is most assuredly his. very nature Is often negative News is change, a deviation from what's normal or the way things have been Mount St Helens in repose is normal. and when it doesn't erupt you won't find pictures of it on Page One. When it erupts it is a news story because it's an abrupt change that has a negative effect on the lives of ' lot of people. You could say the same ot a shipwreck or Congress .. Congtessmen are honest for the most part, apd it is only news when one of them steals and is caught. MY QUESTIONER 10 this case went so far as to suggest that newspapers and television journalism ought to seek out stories. that show America in a good light. ln other words, be thinks we should' put news to work creating an effect. We should choose our stories. not for their news value, but for the impression they will have on readers. I'm sure this man ls good to his wife and children and works bard at bis job, but he doesn't know a damned thing about what i:nakes this country p-eat for. hla U.S. Phantom jets. •'But be'• usina those jets to bto• up lreql oil wells tb•t have been auppl}'iM us and our al· lies,'' I laid . .... ______ _ and free. Who would he suggest anyone can think news ought to be choose these "good" stories used for any purpose but to in· a bout America? Could anything form As soon as it is used to pro- so important be left to editors? mote one good cause, such as Wouldn't it be better to have a patriotism, by having positive al· government agency oversee the I us ions to that cause inserted in its ~ choice" There's plenty of news columns, that's the end or a precedent for this around the free press and first thing you world. Our government agency know Spiro Agnew is running could take a trip to the tSovlet against George Wallace for presi· Union to see how they do it dent. there. n isn't as oppressive as • - we think. They just don't let the THERE'S NO doubt about it, journalists create a lot of news is tough to take here negative ideas in people's heads sometimes. In a single day's by letting them report ''bad " paper you can read of one stories. politician calling another a liar, FOR INSTANCE, Russian readers never have to read about an airplane crash. Aeroflot, the Soviet airline, is run by the government, and wby undermine confidence io the government, right, Ivan? Ruisians didn't have to worry about wheat production falling 20 percent below predictions in the Soviet Union this year, either, because that bad news wasn't reported in the papers. They'll find out about It soon enough when there's not enough bread to go around this winter. lt'9 difficult for anyone in \he news &siness to understand how you can read of murder, drug busts, bribery of elected officials, dishonest police and 12 percent inflation, but if some Americans find it more difficult to believe this is a great country because of the negative stories they read about it, that's their problem. It's right for us all to love America because you have to love your own in the world. But we ought to love it enough and believe in it enoueh to know that it will stand up in open competition with any coUlllry in the world, even when ill the unpleasant facts about it are known. a pa~g business ( "' ............. BOARD ROOM FORSAKEN FOR NEW ROLE Ken Nont• •cted after Mart •urgery Becomes aetor Top executive LOS ANGELES CAP> -Everybody's heard of starv· ing actors -Ken Norris is the exact opposite Until lruit April, Norris was chairman of Norris In- dustries Inc., a Fortune 500 company founded by has father in 1930 which now employs 12,000 people. Then, to use his phrase, he "stepped out." "I had had open heart surgery two years ago and a tri- ple bypass," he said in an interview. "I had made, fortunately, a considerable amount of money. I just didn't feel there was any need to continue dealing with 40-some union contracts and divisions in ts states." LEAVING THE BOARDROOM was a big change for the SO-year-old Norm. who was groomed almost from birth to succeed his father. "l was an only son and we grew up with the busmeas in the Depression. My fathft was a remarkable man, but he was very firm." he said. "I began training at 14 and went all the way through high school and coUege preparing myself to enter the buainess." Norris rose to the top of the company, but he doesn't recall the ascent as painless. "IF YOU'RE THE boss's son, you've got to be twice as good as anybody else just to stay even," he said. "Lots of people have the silver spoon syndrome and you have to work hard to overcome at.'· Norris' acting career. by contrast, came about almost accidentally. He was attendJna a cbarl(y auction Jast year where one of the l~ma bein1 soJd waa a part in "UttJe House on the Prairie." He claims he bought it ror his step-daughter but had to step in himself when no one in hts family would do it. "I Pl.A VED A HARO.NOSED business type," he said. "I was kind of the heavy." Norris recently had another role, a beauty contest judge in the television movie "Sophia," and is now loolcillg for more. "I think I can do supporting-type roles. which is really all l want to do," he said. "I think the kind of roles. I micht get are military or quasi-military. Maybe a t>uslness ex- ecutive. maybe even a western. But I don't see myself in any romantic situation o.r light comedy." ACTING, SA VS NORRIS, "is s<imething I can do en· tirely on my own without dependence on an organiutional structure. It's an individual and creative effort. It's fun." Looking back. says Norris. he might have done things differently. "It's unfortunate there's so much seriousness and so ~~ press~e and stress in the Amencan business way of lift?. My feelings are that a man reaches a point tn bis career where he should really look at what he's strugallng for compared to his family and his own personal in- terests," he said "I realize that not all are fortunate enough to be able to step out, but there are ways to relieve stress and get a better balance in life " Mine job awarded SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Bechtel, Inc , said It bas a contract with Carlin Gold Mining Co. to develop aold re- finery facilities at it.s Maggie Creek deposit near Elko in ea.stem Nevada. Bechtel said it would oversee endneering and constn.action by mid-1981 of racilities lncTuding a crushing plant, a leach pad, solution collection ponds, and carbon absorption columns. The plant is to handle up to S00,000 tons ot ore a year Gold, Medal Quotations Gold By Tbe Aaaocla&ed Presa Selected world gold prices today: ~: morning rixin1 S609.2S, oft •:us. 1..-..: afternoon fixina SISU. 75, off so. 75. Puts: afternoon flxin1 $620.33. of( $10.61. FnM.furt: flxln111 l609.98. tartdt: afternoop fix.Ua,,( 9810. off$1, BAac1Y:a 11annaa: Sellln1 price $611 75, ofl S0.7$. E-~lbard: 1eU1n11>rtce '811.50, ott $0.15. Eaplbard: fabricated price 16, off $0.78. Sll~r NEW YORK (AP> -fhDdy & Harman tllver tOday $11.320, Off f0.11 • Ena lb•rd 1Uver s1s.20, ott so.18, '•br1cattd su.-er Sl9.128, on I0.199. ~ MaXimillan Schell and Melissa Gilbert star as father and daughter ln the new TV movie "The Diary of Anne Frank," airing tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4 (see i>tory below>. CJ) TICTAO~ 7:30 8 t OH THI TOWN . Hoel• Stallf Edwwde and ' Melody Rog«, and a ~~1~00· complete beauty maltec>- -. M«edilh w1i.On. com· ~ Of "The Mu* MM." 111111 about the joy of alng· a· AGHT Mete Wl'TH ~YID HOAOWn'2 topics~ how I~ COi· IKt Wot ernall d.wns COUf1 D SWANANA G.-1· Phyllle Dlli.t. • 0 FAOl THE MU8tC Q) AUIHTfflFAMILY Glof'l1°1 dlacov.ry about Edith ~ her 10 convlnCe Mike to gi-.. Arc:hll I lac. lur. on Ille tact• of 11'9 • MACNEIL I LEHRE' AEPORT '11.> coNNEoTtc>Hs: AN Al T9IHA TE VIEW<:# atAHOE ··n.. long Ch•ln"" Je .... &Kite Ip.. a looll II aome meterlals •• dlllCOY· Claat1n.-I L.i•t ing• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 8 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles 8 KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles (J) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles Q !(CST (ABC) San Otego • KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles • KCOP·TV (Ind I Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 11.9 KOCE-TV (PBSI Hun11ngton Beach efed b~ llCCldenl or re.ion -wNdl en.red tile c:outN ol hl•tClfY. (RIO (J) P.M. MAGAZIHC A ptOllle Of Oi-Roel. • MU9fang Qr .uc:tlon 1:00 8 (J) l'L.O An Old proepector ,.,_ tor hie lh0'1 temper lnalttt lhel hi'• going to many FIO. II urn.! HOUSE OH THEPAAIM Albert 11retc;t>e1 the frvtll lbOUI lllfT1Mll In Illa lett.,.. lo • pen pal In I dlllanl city. un1ware tt.11 the girt II al.o domg the ume Q 8 MOVIE •••'It "'The Tllom11 Crown Attlllr"" ( 1968) Steve McO~. F•ra Oun•w•y An lnaurenc• lnve1t1g1lo< 111111 In love with • -alllly Ctook 12 Ml) G MOVIE • •.,. ··s11g1co1ch00 I 11166) Ann-M11tgr11. Bing Crolby The lt1um1 ol Indian 111ec11 1ttect1 the p1uengera of • Ill· g«:e>~h In vtrled w1ys (2 hrs.) Q) P.M. MAGAZIHE A prolll• of Dian• Roea, • Mua11r<g cu 1vcllon; rtppong wlll\ Curtis Bio.. Chef Tell mek .. m•neatro- ne. 0. Wasco nu • quiz on aOlled eyes Q) SOUOGOU> Questa Johnny Lee. Andy Gibb, Peul Simon. Dire S1r1111 Jimmy Helf. Grice J~ ft) 2a TONIGHT ,dfl' • CIMOL ltMHST1' NIO,.... ou.t "'°""" McOOWlll eGMAT ~ b~"' MW1Ca ..... .-. °"° -0-U.'" In a l*(ormanot U1C>ef 11 IM ""'9tlCall '*-Fildlltl In l:Jutfl9m. Hotfll CerOliPa. hit Pllobo!W DMo9 ft. • ,.. pertormt loUr WOftc• --=--~~.t>t ~-.. ..._ hniliJion and Jolla1111n w°"'"' .MOW • ** ''lrlah EY" Are lmlllng'" (111U) Olck H41Yf'*. Ju..e .._ Ari lrltn comQOHt enc:OU<lltf'I loOl9 Wiiie wrtttno num«· OUI bit IOftOI· (2 htt ) 1;41.QITO• ANMOUNCID e:oo•CI) w•A•a•H (~ Pt9milt•I Wlllle dtMng to Seoul on a two- d1y pPI, H1wtieye 11 IO'lbwhed a.nd captured ~a ;:;:,t·"'-llOldler. ''The Oitry Of Anne Fr.,,..·· (Ptemlwa) MellsM Ollbefl, MulmlU1n Sc;helt The true llor; ol • .i.wt9h l.mlly'1 111• In hiding lrom ,,,. Null 11 -UV~ the eyea of • ~ girl II dr- tlled. CJ "™""'~ Feah11ecl doctors wtlo aave Infant"• lives by r.,,. d1rlng them cllnlcally dead, • aurllng rabbit. policemen Who hive llld an tnCOUnter with~ UFO MERVOAIFRN G~a Dom o.lulM. Paul Mlchfft GlaMf, MIChMI Pritchard, Ron HO'iWard. Anson Wiiiiams. Q) HEEHAW G~la LoreU• Lynn. Mii· lion OollM Band. RodMy L1y. (JI DON CORYELL ~ 8 (J) HOUSE CAu.8 ISeaaon Praml•re) Or MlchMll winda up In jail -"41 fllV-IO 0-medle•I record• to a _,_ ate lnv .. tlgatlng commit· , .. fl!) NOOlfCHI An ln-de,Jth look •I the Ille of lsamu Noguchi and his WOfk In ICUlptlng, l~tet design and envlronmen111 planning 1& pr...,,ted (]]) MOVIE **'~ "'Shoot·Out" (1971) C.regory Peci<. Pit Quinn An ex-gunman 11 to<n between Illa obaea11on with revenge and Illa 1espona1blhty for • 6-ye ... old 01r1 and a lonely widow (1llr.30m1n l 11H>O 8 Cl) LOU GRANT Charlie Hume geta suspi· clovs abOUt Ille strange- *. * .. BQrfl innoc:.M- ( 1'14) I.Inda 91111, J~ ....... • ttOt.lblad .,.... Olftl .. Wit to • ~ OtMtttlon llOIN...,.,. .... ~ ad;u.t to CM bltlet• ..... and , .... tfl'Nrlt of tiw oer-""' 11 hr., ao· mlt\.) ..... ICllNT Nl"CWOfle( .... 10:IO ....... ,.... vaec.,~ .. • ... °'--·J-, CMOR: 'ntl ANMCHll'T8 TN llistOl'Y of .,. -· looliM r9d!P1 ~t tofl'lpOMd 9t Jewlth lflll. gr.-to t"41 United St'1• and In. MW..,..,. !Mt bec:etne thllt VolOa tor 87 ~··~­............. THeATM "Pride And Prejudloe'" Allhoogtl Pol»UI louncl lhe tNMet Qf Mr O.cy'a ptopoaal Intuiting, aife leerna tM tNtjl .OOUI Wickham .. nd grow• lllhamed 01 her fO<m« blind~ (Part 4)Q 11:00.U (J)Q HNI HOUYWOOO IQU•Jml I NIWl..VWED GAM£ M'A•e•H • In Ofdat to ralM money to Mnd Ills KoraM ~ IO medlc;al IChOOI, Hewie· eye Ml• up a retlle with the ptll• being a WMltend In TC>llyo with one of the nur-., ONI! STEP eEYOND ""The k"*ttenc." A beau· tiful ~neck'-belong· Ing to th• wealthy Countasaa Ferenzl la Involved In _., myst• rlout lncldenta 11:30 a Cl) QUINCY, M.E. Ouincy perform• • Ill• night autop9y, but ~he ratum• to the off-llW' next d•y thl body and medical evldenCe h•ve dla- ~ed U THEllUTO# C'AA80H Ouesia: 0.vld Letttrman. Buddy Rlctl. (R) JOHN DARLING TONIGHTS LA1EST LISTINGS UBE TOPPERS ABC • 6:00 -Monday Nlaht Foot· ball. The Oakland Halden arid the SHttJe Seahawka provide the actlon ln tOnipi,.s contest . l<TLA 8 8:00 -''The Thomas Crown Affair:• &Clve MC:Queen la a bank robber who becomes Involved With in· surance invesU11tor Faye Dunaway lh this movie, which produced the bit soa1 "Wiri.dmills of Your Mind." -~::. .... ~--_,.._.,,.,,,.. ... NBC II 9: 00 -"The Diary of ~e Frank.•• Melissa Gilbert and Maximillan Schell star in this new dramatisaUon of the true story of Jewish fugitives from the Nazis (photo at left, story below). • ,..OHD:OIU aoacH ~ llgtll• daaplnllly "' her Ille • • c;rttlcal op.ration --,_. aaty. I~ A blade """· 10 aave Ne own 1111. must l•IMIV llCCIMe • band o# 1nc1i.na of wiping out a wtgen \nlln. • HOGAH'I HEAOa Hog111 -propagand1 broadcutllr AJcla Arlrlie IO get Info 10 an uncHlrground ~I. • tf TAKO A TH&' IJ Mundy II pursued by 111 -.in and hi• lemlll• ac:compltca • &> CAPTIONED A8C NEW9 Q A8CNEWI '1:40 9 WIN8IOE A habltulll g1m1>1er luma 1>411d lntorm..-to pay ott 1111 a.till -Ml>NIGHT~ 12:.00 1J TWIUOHf ZONE A m111 bec:ornM nooltad on gambling af19f wllMSS- iig anothef "ht1 thl IKk· pol"' on a one-atmed ban· dtt fJ A8CNEW8 • YOU lllT YOUft UR Budd)' HttPt9'1 .,_.. • lky-dMng nude c:t\emplon, an apr~ qi_, and a men WflO m1111.. '""'* lrom tHrn atrlps. 12:20. MOVll •*'"' Journey To The Un~nown.. (1968) Vera MllM. Pally Ouk• Two 1111~ llMI of •error ' VoUl'O woman t>ecom. the De¥11's quarry In an old ~br ary, a ment.ny unbel- lllC*I l.,,dlldy vtc;tlmlze1 • vlallor to her holet (2 IVI) 12:30 D TOMOMOW O~ta· Of Can Coppo41· 4no. SIM Mergold, rec>vl.cl p«no king of Loe Angeles. • llPV 0'11°1 All Done Wllll Mir· ror•" 8THEF81 "The Defector" I P9r1 1) • YOU MT Y°"" UR 8ud«f Hack1tl meeta a ~Of~ cloth· lllQ. • man wl1h the wor1d's k>rlgwl ..... , and • female ... educ:atOI' ., NATIOHAL. NEWI 12:.0 f) Cl) ntl NEW AVINOERS A proi-with • lust for gold ~· • MCret lonnula which enablae him to klM peop11 wtth a touch of his h•nd Tiw•daB"• Da110•e Mo.,les ',. m * "The oawn '"'*" (111351 John Wayne, M11t- lon SIKns ~AFIUHOOH- 12:00 •••• "'ltland Of Tiw Bumlng Doomed" (1t72) CllrlatC>Pfla' L•. ...._, Cualllng. A cllm1Ucelty temper•l• laland IUddenl)I ~'"'-°'' lethal ,_, w-and --pl.in.ble loud no!Ma. ( 1 hr., !50 lllln) • * ...... '"The F1ghtlnQ Kentuctil111°' ( 1949) Jolin w~. va..a AllttOfl. In the~1800e.a~ ky man •ltempt1 to pt-. vent a pair of crook• from ateallng end .,. ftndl *'-to ,_ the be9Utlful dlUQl'lt• of a ~ gen. aral. (2 In.I a.• Q * ..... ··Pannwt 111 Cttme" I 19731 Laa 0'8nt, Lou Antonio a::ao G • • "ChriltmU Coal Min• Miracle"' (11177) Mllchell Ryan. Kutt Rua- Mii by Armstrong & Batluk Anne Frank's diary still riveting "'Together again By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP> -"The Diary of Anne Frank," despite the passage or time. remains in a new revival one of the most moving and profound· ly human documents to come out of World War 11. Melissa Gilbert stars in the title role as the teen-age Jewish Dutch girl whose family hides out in the top floors of a warehouse in Amsterdam to escape the Nazi!;. THE FRANKS AND mEIR two daughters were joined by the Van Danns and their son, and eventually by Mr. Dussel. a dentist. Their only sources of food and lifeline to the world were Miep Gies and Mr. Kraler. Anne's diary records not only the good times, but the years of hardship, tedium and stress that brings the occupants of the hideaway to the point of explosioo. The last time Lew Ayres and Janet Gaynor appeared together was in the 1934 movie "Servant's Entrance.·· They're reunited for a The two-hour film, to be broadcast by NBC tonieht at 9 on Channel 4, also slars Maximilian Schell as Otto Frank, Joan Plowright as Mrs Frank. James Coco as Mr. Van Daan, Doris Roberts as Mrs. Van Daan, Clive Revill as Mr. Dussel, Scott Jacoby 1s Peter Van Daan. Melora Marshall as Margot "Frank, Anne Wyndham as Miep and Erik Holland as Mr. Kraler FRANCES GOODRICH AND AJbert Hackett adapted the script from their 1955 play, which won a Tony Award and the-Pulitzer Prize. future episode of ABC's "The Love Boat." Trivial 111ind eoueets -Scribe's 'Tic Tac' talent reaps dough EdHora Note . Mar11 Ellen Dri1coll, a Fresno Bee 1port1 """•· '°°" o wmt11 01 pnzu dur· ate ..-rol lpitode• of the re~ OOrM lhow T1c Toe Dough. Her toped dint ~ the thou> begOn hDO •-UOQO, cuilrahe wrote the follow- ingo~abotdhn~e . --. 81 JIAllY ELLEN DRISCOLL FRESNO CAP> -I'll be ro.Oclest about this. I bave one of tbe ~•t trivia mind• of all time. ~ 1 am one Of tboae people bleHed wl\h an elephantine 111emory, the uncanny ability to remember and reeall at will evtrythlftl . that bu no bearing wb•tlOevtr on rul life . The type ol ituff that cao make you the Iii• ot the party but will never win ~ a PulJUer Prbe. I'll tell you right now -it isn't as easy anawerine the ques· lions in the parlor FWl, yes. Easy, no. I know, because I was one of the lucky ones who m1de lt throu1b Tic Tac Dou1h's rigorous 1creenln1 procesa in Hollywwd and actually 1at on lhe show. For every 75 people who take the test, only one ac· tuall:v makes lt on the show. A. TIC TAC Dough contestant 1oe1 throulb four tests: a 90· question multiple c:holce quia, a sroup interview Immediately alter the tat, an interview with one of the 1bow's eucutivet and a run·th.rouah or t.be same itMlf. When we bad the run·t.brou&h, we alJO lenned wtilch colon are not comp1ttble with television cameru. Black, navy, White, beige, pink yeU°"', Utile iUipei, and Utile. ehec?kl. I thanked God at that 1>91nt I have a lot al tlJr· quolae In my wardrobe. Since five aMwt JN ttPed al oae tlloe, we were told to brtni ~ few chas\PI or dOlhlftt, l•t lri ,..case we made sevtral •I» pe1rante1 Th nnt time l stepped (IQ 1t11e, 1 felt like an acv• lD 1 ~l•Y and aut It WNI''\ reall11n ~o1DJ all UU. bUl • ~baractu. Any a J bait fell dlaap• peared when I answered my fint question. The category was "Joes and Joseph5" and the question concerned former New York Yankee great Joe DiMaa· eto. Hey, they all won't be that easy, I reminded myself. And they weren't. I MISSED A few easy ones. I looked •t a picture of Honolulu and, given some pretty broad hint.I, couldn't name lt.. l couldn't unscramble the word mustard and I couldn't tell any of tbe ele- ment. of Elnsteln'a theory of relatlvlt1 I wu never any Sood at physics MP•1 · But, l answered more questions than I m,aaed, ln- cludlnt •couple of pure 1ueues. But, mott lm~rtarlt, I went on the shOW to have a Utt.le fun. If I won money, flne.11 not, th•t was fine, t.oo. It really wai:. fun, ana l'm firmly convinced it would bav.t been U S hadn't won • dime. Becau.e, ~ tt\e ltloney'1 df. po&ltecl arid \he trips taken, 0\8 lood ume 11 bat l'll r .. lly re· me'l?ber· I "I'd read the book when l was a llWe girl," said Miss Gilbert, whose own company produced the film in association with 20th Century-Fox. "I'd dreamed of doing it. When we finished 'Little House on the Prairie,' we had no project and we decided on ·Anne Frank.·'· Last year, Miss Gilbert starred in a remake or "The Miracle Worker." Patty Duke Astin, who won an Oscar playing Helen Keller in the 1962 movie, played Anne Sullivan, and Miss Gilbert was Miss Keller. · "l like the classics,'' Miss Gilbert said "l'd wanted to do somelhing original, but we had nothing strong. I like doing strong things. I like an optimistic outlook. "ALL THE CONTEMPORARY stones about teen-agers are about pregnancies, drugs, alcoholics or prostitution There are no scripts around portraying a nice, normal teen-ager So it's back to the classics." · She called Schell "the most phenomenal person in the world. Actor, person, father, friend The stories he told to me. through the tears a smUe came 011 my t•ce. Tbe hope and the optimism were shinning through." Susan Strasberg starred as Anne Frank on the stage, and Millie Perkins played the part in the 1959 movie. Joseph Schildkraut (Mr. Frank), Gusti Huber (Mrs. Frank). and Lou Jacobi CMr. Van Daan> starred both on the stage and in the movie. Shelley Winters replaced Dennie Moore as Mn. Van Daan in the movie, and Ed Wynn replaced Jack Gilford as Mr. Dussel. "The Diary of Anne Frank" was revived by ABC in a David Sussldnd production that was broadcast Nov. 26, 1967. Diane DaVUla had the ti· tle role. In the cast were Max Von Sydow, Viveca Lindfors, Theodore Bikel and Lllli Palmer. -THE EJLRJ.'S "-~<tCATIMO ...... -.... -S• \.•' 1116~·' ~*'"-c" '·"""" Stat"tt •' v~, Oo«u C •" ~" 'f' ""-~1 "'N' ., .. ,, COS'TA •ri641·1289 tut••--"Aside from railing in love with . . • · she said, her voice trailing orr. "He is very quiet, very low key, but when you work together he gets very L---~--'----'--.;..;...-­ funny. We were on the floor alrthe time lauehing." She said she also was attracted to the story 1111-..-.. because of her own Jewish heritage. "We had rel· a ti ves in the concentr a\lon camps." she said. "IN 11IE SCENE WHERE the Nazis come in -I got so emotlopal I couldn't stop crying. I was literally shaJtine and sobbing. I felt like Anne Frank. I knew I would be taken away. Then Alexander movie set HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Nicbolu Clay plays Alexander the Great, who conquered the known ,. _ _,.,....,.. world by the time be WU 27, iD the PBS series. "TOUCHED BY LOVE" The four-part drama wu filmed oo locatloo in 1'1~• Greece. Jane Lapotaire plays hll mother. Q~ ._......,....,.....,,,..,...,,=~· •:-::--==-==::11 Olympias, and Julian Glover is bis father, Pbllip of Macadeonla. MA POWERHOUSE OF A FllM .... Aktra KurowMt b • teadll'g c.andlCUte torn g~ IMngfUmdlNCllOt.u ---.~~ ,; Firemen repor;te'd • • gaining RILA1D PHOTOS, • 8TORIU -A3 AS ' ' Southern Califomia bruabland ._..and damaced or destroyed almost 100 homes. The bun1cane-ltrenltb wlnda Sunday fed ftres that led to the death of one mu and ra&ed billalde homes ~alued at up to $1 millim. Damate in 1-Aqela Countr ale:.-wu eatimatecl at $2SmUlion But the wtnda abated durina earl1 tGday ,llvbla flreflpten preeloul time to clear coatain· meDt im.. 'ftle wlnd.t were ex· peeted to end altoptber by late toct.y, CbotiDa smote and ub blown by tbe northeast winds, wblcb ruced up to IO mph, blanketed area1 aeveral mild" f10lb the dine Orea that raced thr6ulb the week.... / While tbe flrea spread, bomeownen tried to aalva1e blta of their charred homea. One old man wept in the anna ol Ms · preanant dauahter u a forb'D dol aat near 1molderin1 ndm in the pOlb Bl'adbur7 area. Tbe wlDd and fires interrupted eleCtii~ to some 50,000 hom.,a, -~ PoweT #U ....toNa to ~ mare tt.an 90 percent of them ~ SallMIPt A ~ fallure to oae P'ildP-U., futlaD cut wet.er p,_.UN, • ~ ftuatratidl ftnift~~ already (See WIND8. Pa1• Al) 3rd deadline • I delay sought on Sycamore LatuDa Beach CltJ Council •members will reeeive a recom· mendation to aaaln extend the deadline in neaotiation1 for tale of to acre1 cl Sycamore Hll1a property for a 295-townboUH de· velopment. City lbnqer Ken Frank will uk that the council, which bu already at.ended tbe deJd,U.ne twice, do ao aaat.n. t.bls time to Dec. 2. Ne10Uation1 wltb the Baywood Development Com· pany cl Newport Beach are pro. 1re11iftl, Frank 1aid. But be 1iid an aareement bu not been reaCbed. "' City offlclala have not aaid what fale price l1 belnl di•· cuued. . Proeeedl of the 1ale would be used to aervtce a portion Of a '8.1 million debt the city owes on the property. 'Canyon PatrtJl' ·tusists ·fire fight t Doekel loaded ORANGE COUNTY'S BLAZE P9ttedallea8tdota One could tell eacb patrolman wa~ted to get clOM to the names and 10 to work, but firemen held them back. \ SC city attorney plans to resign San Clemente City Attorney Michael Bartlett bu announced be will reaa,n b1a city poet elfec- tJve Dec. 1 to form a private 1,w firm in Santa Ana. Bartlett, 39, wa1 appointed deputy city attorney more tbaa . four yean aco. then became ac:t- inl city attorney unW hil appoint· ment u city attorMY tYt'Q yean •10. · H1a ~ Beach law office i. under eontrac:t with the city1 ucl tbe attorney apllta hla Ume between tbe' clty and private practice. • Bartlett wu palcl a yearly re- talaer -it waa more than ssa.ooo tbll year. -to repr.ent tbe cit)'. , ID adcUUon, be wu paid fbt wort oa dty le(al alf alrw that went be10Gd the limit.a •ot tbe ,. talner. He ·did be wiU Joln attorMy HowaH IIarHn la formlna a DeW law ptaetice ln Santa Ana where be .1a1t bJ WW c:onllnue to lpecldle lft tl*lal dlltridl. "I doa't lDtaDd to ha.Ddle dt6es anymore,,. he Hld, addl8', 1'1'bat'•••wtu1 *°' wn." aaru. leaYei tM eli, wttb at leaa& • .cUH law1aalta ua· rwolftd, a.1UCW.1 •ut" MMD den~. PtoJMttY ownen, Qd Jllel aid IOCS.081, O.daelaea•ouwftt A'!MNTA (AP) -A ~ »eeat _. a ltor'a T4dft 1111· eow•~·--,,,..,.... r,.:-==~·:1.: .. .......,.....,11 _...182• 81JDSet BJ REDEUCK SCBOE•EBL °'* ...... ,........, I Orance County Flre Deput; ment Offlclal1 were cauti~!Yl optis;nlatlc today that the bnaali bla&• that burl)ed 8,500 acra and Polfld wba( appeared to b8 an unstoppable <hreat to twq Brea nel1hborhood1 Sunday would be brouaht under control by nlgbUaU. The ftre, which ~rilinated in Carbon Canyon in San Bernardino Co'fmty, burst into Orange County at ml(j-afterooon • Sunday and con~med two houses and an unb•wn number of liveatock before it began burning on a les3 devutating course. At midday. the fire WU 35 per- cent contained and 10 percent controlled, said Capt. Art Pereida of the county fire de- partment. , Pereida aaid. however, that quick control was expected becauae the fierce( dry Santa Ana wlnda that powered the flames 1ub1lded during the nt1ht. "Everytlilnt la lookin1 pretty &ood ript now, .. Pereida said. At the fire'• peak, unrelentbla flames PCJHc1 serious threat.a ~ Olinda VUJaae. a tract of t~ pen1ive homes located on tAe • <See naE. Pase AZ> :· South Coa1t UJl'iter die• .in Niguel Jamea T. Van Rensselaer, writer ol a 1ourmet food and wlne column and communUx relaUons 1peclallat for two So\Oib Coa1t water a1encles, dted Saturday at bis home in Laguna Niiuel. He was 81. Mr. Van Rensaelaer was born in Los An.leles on Oct. 16, 1898. He attendM UC Berkeley ~d worked for ~ years as a com· munlty relation.a specialist for the Southern California Gas Company tn·Loe Angeles. · He and his wife, Myrtle, moved to Three Arch Bay in 196J. and to LaJuna Niauel in 1m. . At that time, Mr. V-.n Rensselaer began working fQI' the South Coast County Wat.I' District as a community rela· lions speelallt. He later did U. aame work for the Aliso WatA:r Mana1emeot Aiency. Mr. Van Rensselaer alao wrote a eourmet food and wine column for tbe News·Po~ new1papera in Lacuna HiJ.lt for many years. · Mr. Van RenaseJaer is a&n·· vived by hla wife ; a brot.ber1 Hendrick ol New Jersey; a a& ter, Nan Couts, of El Cajon: a aon, James T. W, of Botota, Columbia and a dau1btet, Ell,abeth K.rwnmell of Irvine. . Arraniementa are belnt made throuth the Neptune Society. 'No funeral la planned. The famllr baa 1ua1eated that memorial donaUona be oiade to a charity of tbe donor'• choJce. ' M.Uy sunny but with some h1&li c1ouda at times throu1b Tuesday. Lowa tonl•ht 41 at the beacbea to N lnJUd. Hlaha Tuea- day '70to1'. IN81DETOD~Y · ,8~ Nlidiflt• eal and wpl cu Jin •·r~~ n hOtMI. 0.W nKln dMd, Sto,,, P/IOtOl,.AI. .-.- omen in Pentagon ;·. BEIRlll'. Lebanoo (AP)-lraD.lan NliCk>UI leader Ayatollah 8 NE YORK (~P) -veral maJor bub tOday ral.Md their pnme lendln• ra by Uu'M quarters of• p01nt to 11.215 per. cent, the hl1heat that ute hu n tlQee May, CbaM Manhattan. the a1Uon'1 tblrd·l1t1est commercll.J bank, tntttated tht Iner• .. • from 1 15.0 ~rcent rat . It had no oomment oo the move, 'but an1ly1t1 pre· dieted a round of prim• rate In· creuH followtn1 credll· ll1hteo1D1·move. by th• Fed ral RtHrle1:8oerd on Frida1. CiUbelill, the 1tcond·lar111t bank, Manufaclurtrt Hpover, No. 4, and 1dor1an Guar~. No. 1. caulckl.Y followed Chi.ff'• lead wtUi announeem Dtl "' • 18 U ~rcent rate at each·~ Of lhotebl.nb: Last k. Federal ReMrve ~ Rubollab Khomellll. apparentlvtnlnl to Quell DOUtltal ~nt. to-· day auured mercbanta from the holy e.ity of QC>m that .. I don't . aaree with every clertyman ... . ln an addrea broadcast by ~an Red.lo and a6oaitond bete, ! Khomeini spoke out for the second day about the dlvtsioDI between • moderates and cleJ'IY-Oriented mllltan.ta. raised from 11 percent tb U per· c nt It.I dJ1count rate, or that rate It ~hartH on lU direct loans to blnkl, and 1dded a 2 · percent 1urchar1e for aome larie b0rtower1. Those movet by the l'ed , the central mooetuy 11ency, are expeeted • to 1enerally tncreaH lntereat rates 1D money markets, thus maklna bankl' cottl of acquJr. tn1 funds more expensive. The merchants ln Qom and Tehran stated demonstrations last · ~. week and signed petitions to win the release of Jailed former Forelp Mln.later Sadeth Gbotbndeb, a moderate accused of • "'telllq lies" about 1ovenunent officials in a controversial televillioa interview. Fro• PflflP Al ... WINDS SUBSIDE. • • °fl¥vtna trouble. pusb.1ng away ~ cunous. officials said. Two people were arrested on cbar1es al looting ruined homes. ti Fire authorities called a ".red nae'. alert throuehout Southern California due to high fire ftnger, severely restrictln& ac· tivity iQ bushy areas. There has been no significant rain here since AnrU. ftf"",\dded toeether, the fires bad ~«\f!~med about 70 square The 10,000.acre Sunland fi~ i.ced residents of suburban 4i)leodale and Burbank out or 'heir homes ; said Burbank Fire Departmetnt spokesman Rieb Kaufman. That blaze claimed 12 -tsomes. {""'The We ia almqa\ OD~ of •. rMa l• • terrf IJIDC .. qterlen.ce, ". Botbaok resident Jack Elwood ••id before ~asbtni to hose down bis rool. As be watched names move Coward bis Burbank co1a- aominium. Dr. Bernard Cook said: "lt's just bell up here. 'l'bere'afirealloverlheplace." 'Paramedics rescued a man trapped on a ledee in the fire's ~atb. He was treated for foot 'bama. p.···oUJ' bigeat problem is get- Une t.hroucb lhe streets," said ,.lklrbank police officer Dou& 'Harri•, taklne note of what ._4l1otber observer called "a ton ·D.r alptseers" lD the area. • The Sunland fire started when ~·· 'l>ominican ,, . ~oy slain · BOGOTA,Co,ombia <AP>- Tbe Dominlcan ambassador to ,~lombla wu abot to death to-.. y in the apartment of lhe · mlnlcan consul here, police Hid. Police utd Ambassador Eduardo Antonio Garcia Vas· que&, IO, wu bit by seven bullets at the home of Consul Rafael Au1u.ato Sanchez. The cocmsw remained Inside bit apartment ud h1I telephone was dl1conaected. Colombian poUce 1ald they could not enter .a the dOIW'a bou.ae because he bu dl&>k>matlc Immunity. DAllY PILOT ~.:-,_.,, ....... ·-tflt·--~11.'-~--.....··- L .. ut1• l••cf\ C>mo. *' "° C:.tl ......... , Llk tension wires blown together by 80-mpb winds short-circuit!d. showering a nearby tree with spark.a. · Other blazes Sunday included a 100-acre brushfire along the Malibu coast which destroyed two homes before being put out and a 300-acre brushfire ln San Bernardino County which was contained early today. Three blazes were burning near Lake Elsinore, 70 miles southeast of Los Angeles. One a 400-acre frush fire, was sparked by bunters' ammunition , authorities said, while another. 12,SOO acres. was deliberately set. A 40-acre blaze near the sub- urban Pacific Palisades home of President-elect Ronaid Rea1an wu ~heel ore dqina anydamagedbouaea. Burglars hit two houses in Clemente Two homes in north San Clemente were burglarized within blocks of one another over the weekend, police said to- day, with television sets and jewelry taken from bolh places. H.G. Boll, who lives in the 600 block of Calle De Soto, told police someone used bolt cutters on his front door knob to enter the home. Taken were items of jewelry. silver, a television set and ca.sh. No total lou wu reported. In a second break-in, burglars forced a garage and side door to gain entrance to Ron Owsen 's house ln lhe 400 block of Calle Empalme. They took a television set, microwave oven, jewelry, clothing, cash and two cameras with a total value of $1,863. I Woman hit by motorbike, hospitali~ed A •5-yeu-old Colorado woman remalnl 1D stable condition at San Clemente General ff01pltal today after belrla struck by a motorcycle Friday ln Dana Point. Verda Beatcb, of Colorado Sprtnca, waa atruck by a motoreycae whUe ahe wu crou· inc eout Hlgtnray Jurt · aouth Of Gnnada Drive at abo\rt 7 p.m .• a 1pokeilman for the CaUfoml• H11b•ay Patrol laid. Mra. BeJtch reportedly ti.al· fered • bl"Oken let and tntern.i Injuries. Th• driver of tbe moto"ycle, FAdy RObertl, 23, of Atta I.Oma, 1wferid mOderate lnJuriea. He la liated In 11tllfac· ') tory coodlUon at SC>utb Coat Medical Center In South Uaun.. The prime rate appltea to loans banks make to beat cor- po rue cuatomera. Whtie it doesn't directly apply to con- sumer loana lt ls widely followed aa H indicator of general tn- terestratetrenda. The prime climbed to a peak of 20 percent in April, then slid to a low of 11 percent in late July before be,Pnnlng to rise again. It last was above 16 percent in mid-May when major banks were charging either 16.25 or 16 S percent. f 'rnftt Page \ I F1RE ... Orange County side of Carbon Canyon, and the Sommerset con· dominium development near Kraemer Boulevard and Lam· bert Road. Flames leaped scores of feet into the night sky on the edges of both developments as strike forces backed by fire engines stood by with fire hoses on the ready. At the Sommerset develop- ment, where flames crept the closest, firemen said damace wu avoided because all roofs •re made of asbestos-type shingles. At Olinda Village, where wooden shake roofs prevail, firemen reported more than a t.alf-d<nen "spot" fires caused by the near continual rain of burning embers generated by the blazing brushland nearby. Residents of the village were permitted to evacuate voluntari- ly . At Sommers et. however, police officers were firm, order· ing residents to depart im· mediately. Still, a few remained, man· ning garden hoses and packing what belongings they could. One Sommerset resident wait· ed to leave the walled communi- ty until the onslaught of flames had passed. Told by a fireman that the threat was over, the woman, who was driving a Corvette jammed to the ceiling with belongings, joyfully screamed. "You're kidding." After the siege at Sommerset. the fire continued to move west toward the Orange Freeway, which the California Highway Patrol ordered closed due to the movement of fire equipment and poor visibility. About 10 p.m. firemen llt a "back fire" that stopped lhe ad- vancine names from burning to the freeway and jumping over it. A.a the winds died aown. the fire shifted course, burning to the north toward Los Angeles County. · • More than 500 firefighters from Orange, Loa Angeles and San Bernardino counties -ln- cludlnt crew• from Lake A,r· rowhead and Bil Be•r -manned the fire llnea. A bue :amp wu establlabed at Carbon Canyon Reaio"al Park. · Offlcla11 beaan releaain1 ttremen to their home Jurfsdic· Uona late Sunday night. Fire~ were supported from the atr with retardant-droppln& aircraft and on the m£th bulldozen'and ot.hl'r equt>Jl'ient. There •ere no injuries to humans. Fire 1poke1men at the 1une aald an und1ter11tined number or horaet, tattle and chickens were trapj)ed, by the flames. On Of th8 houses bumed wu located In th Sleepy HoJlow commUnlty In San Bernardino County Just north or the ora.n.ae Co~ty line. The other wa1 local· id dll'ffllY aero1s carbon caa- on RotrlcltotMentranceofther'I· ..-1,an. ldenUUes of the occupants of tM bUl"lled .UUeturtt wero not lmmtdlaMly available, , C•t:ll;n Canyo11 Road was cloiMI ur'b· 5Unh1 ilnemo6n and nmalnect ahUt dawn &oday lO all bUt emef1eney tratnc.-.11, pedestitia~ arrested 'l'be San Clemente police oUicer thoulht It looked auspicious when he spotted a man carryine a car battery, hydraulic jack. tape deck and a tool box in his arms early Sunday morning. But when he stopped to question the suspect. Joel P. Aguilar insist- ed the equipment was his. Theof· fleer let the heavily bunle&d man leave, after scribbling down his name and address Still unsatisfied, the ofiicer patrolled the parking lot of an ad- j a cent tavern on North El Camino Real where he spotted a pickup truck with the hood slightly ajar. Peeking inside, he noticed the bat- tery was gone. Entering the tavern, the officer found the owner of the truck, who later confirmed he was missing items matching the ones °P~ fessedtobeowned by Aguilar. The officer walked across the street to Aguilar's apartment, and, ~ a short foot chase. ar· rested the 22-year-old coo'k on charges of possession of stolen property and grand then • Aguilar was still in jail today. WASHINGTON (AP) -Kie· lucky ~ DOil ~ ol the Ten ~ lD ev..,. public 1cbool clu1room, tbe U.S. &apreme CoUrt ruled today. By a J.4 vote, the aat1oe·1 bl1hat cowt aalcl ~ tbe tommandmenu Jn , Jniblle 1chooll vtolatu tbe iContUtU· lion'• CrHdom-ol-rellalon 1uarantee1.-.. .... "~--Tbe eouit'a deeltlon. co~r in an umlped opinion, revened a Keatudy Sup,..me Cowt rul· q that UMi state'• aeuon wa eou~I. '1M ptel!emhieiit purpoH -P9ttlnt the Ten Commandmdl on lchoolroom ••111 lJ pla1~ reUgloul iQ nature," the eot.lt 1ald. ·~Ten Commandmenll la UDdeaiably • sacred text 1D tbe Jewish ;and C'brlltlan faith.a, and no leslil.Uve recitation Of a 11U.ppoted. secular purpose can bllDd tM to that fact." · The cowt'• majority included luStiCfll WUliam J . Brennan Jr., ThUflood Marshall, John Paul Stevena. Byran R. White and Lewis F. Powell Jr. Cblef Justice Warren E . Burier and Harry A. Blacknu.m dlllented. votinl' to review the case more fUllY before decldina it. Justices l>otter Stewart ana William K Rehnquist said the Kentucky SUpreme Court wu riabt. At issue was a state law re- quiring the Ten Commandments to be posted ln all schoolrooms. Burglar gets • • • pamtmgs 1n San Clemente A San Clemente art gallery owner who noticed some paint- ings missing from a window dis- play u be drove by his shop Satur- day, found, upoo closer examina- tion, the s hop bad been burglarized. Stewart Mortensen. co!Owner of the Dreams of Long Ago gaHery at 430 N. El Camino Real, told police he found an open window at the rear of his shop early Saturday. and an estimated $120,000 in palatines milling. The ampecq, wbo fled with an unknown number of paintings, cut tlectrical and phone wires while in the shop, police said. A more accurate assessment of the loss will be made follow- ing an inventory of the art gallery, police said. Wedding near? I Prince, girlfriend holiday LONDON <AP) -Prince Charles, heir to the BrltlJb throne, spent the weekend at Queen Elisabeth Il's country farmhouse with his girlfriend, 19-year-old Lady Diana Spencer, once again fueling speculation they plan to marry. But both are keepin& quiet if there are indeed plans afoot. "I've had a lovely weekend," said Lady Diana, daqbter of the eighth Earl of Spencer. when she returned to London on Sun- day Charles celebrated his 32nd birthday Friday, and rumors flew an engagement would be announced that day. · "We'd rather hoped Friday would be a rather special day for you, sir," one reporter said when Charles went out for a weekend walk. "So did everyone else," the priJlce replied. "You'll all know In due course." Th -una law wa1 challft)led by four .Louisvlll• realdinll - Anne ra, Patricia ~. Syd ll Bt.caae and Rabbi :Mutfn Perley -represented !bf ttie Kentucky Qftl Ubertlu UnioD. M1. ~ !fU de1crtbtd ~ btr lawYtr H a DOG bellev"° In an1 form OI or1a11laed reUSfon. Mrt. Brlcldn1 la a Roman Catholic, a sehOol teacber uid a mother wtlh l~ children 1n public achOc)Ja. Ma. Stone Is a UnlWian. Rullna on the 19'11 lawswt aaalmt the ttate'• 1upeiint8,n- dent of 1cbool1. a atate trial Judie la Frankfort, Squire Wllltam upheld the law. Illa March fO. \879, opln.ion 1ild. .. Gov nundl:. Involvement 1Jl thb matter ts llinlted to .-m· n1 that a plaque la plaCed on each classroom wall, if outside funds are avii!la6le ... The law also provides that each copy cOOtaln 1D small print below the lut• command.inent tbis notation concemlni the dis- play'• pUrpole: "The aeeutar application of the Ten Com- mandments u clearly seen in lb adoption as the fundamental legal code of Western Civilba- tlon and theP,mmon Law ol the United States." Grocery store hit; pair bound A lone masked gunman bound the store manager and • clerk etrly today and escaped with an estimated ~.ooo from a Voo's supermarket in Laguna Hilla. Sheriff's U . WyaU Hart said the st.ore employees were eon- fronted by the robber in the busi· ness office of the store about 6 a.m. Hart said investigation showed the man gained entry to the business office through the building's roof. The employees were tied up by the intruder after he forced the manager at gunpoint to open the safe, Hart said. Sheriff's deputies were sum- moned at 7:45 a.m. by lhe two ~mployees after they worked free of their bonds. The suspect was described as a male Caucasion in his mid 20s, s feet 7 inches tau, weighing 135 pounds. Hart said the man wore a ski mask. Hart said the crime may be related to similar robberies that have occurred in Los Angeles County. < Laguna thief grabs jewels· A bur1lar pried open a Wi8'1 wing of a car }larked in back ol a Laguna Beach liquor store and made off with $3,600 worth of jewelry. Police said the suspect took the items early Friday morning from a handbag owned by James Mur· relJ , 35431 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. A mah's ring, valued at $2,500, brdcelet worth $1,000, and charm valued at $100 were taken.from the car, parked in back of the Coast Inn Uquor St.ore, 1391 S. Coast Highway. * * * Ho11ae in Ctlll ) plle~ .. 1 ~ ~ • • • A faultJW"wliDt drop llDe from a 8oUtblr'8 calfonda ffi. el.mtcai win that be1an Pd~..,.,... tn "1114' 9'.mday li blamed tOday ~ a '250,000 fire tbat destro)'ed •· CoronacleUfarbome. , Tbe blaM at SM Seaward Road til the Corona Hlplanda ctevei. ment tctaled U.. reeldence oc· cupted bY Ruth Youn1 ind an adult ~ aceordlnl to Fire ~JimUptoa. tie ·u1d tbe ~-alarm tire broke Cd aboo• 11 a.m •• quckly enveloplaf tbe home and 1ar• u Santa Ana WiDda lubed tbe 1bake roofed-1trueture1 and threauiDidaellhbon' homes. · IDlpediDI' Upton Mid lnvestiea· tloa 1b0wed tbe nr, which llnaCllt aielebbon onto their OWD lOGfl tlO bole them :de>WD and prt· •eat the spread 'ot namee wu cWIDitelytbensultofbad .ntni. £"--. L: 1:,:-• 11 (lei GtJTl'BD, •••• Al) .., . '-A.r88ll •I 8 Major:' banks two woJDen .... in IrVine Nortla 1'1e••· Blaziit1 -pahri tree star,ts roof Bree taWeopter ----· ec sunset . 81 ftt:DE&J(S 8CROl!Mmn.: ... IMllr........ : Oranie COUntJ '1re ~ meat oftldala were c:auUoutb' ..Umilt:le today that the bnllii blaae ~t bunted 8,500 acte9 and ~ "9lat appeared to W aa unstoppable threat to tw,O Brea nel1bborhooda Sundt.y wOuld be brouaht \D\der control bynl~all. The ftN, whieb oriatnatecl in C•rbon Canyon in s,n Bernardino County. burst into Oram,. County at inld·allel"DOOD Sunday and eon1umed two boutet Ind an unknown number of P Hvntoek before lt be1an ·bUJ"llinl ua a less devutattna COUJ'M. .. At midday, the ftre wu 35 per· cent contained and 10 percent epatrolled, aald Capt. Art Pereida o1 tbe county ft.re de-partment. - Pereida 1ald, however, that qulek control waa expect~ bff a... tbe fierce, dry Sin.la Ana winds that powered Ute fiames tubslded duriDI tbe nt;.:~ lt looklnl preti1 1ooct rtcbt now," Perelda 1ald. r . At the flie't peq, unreleadal . , flamee pmed. HrioUI thre•tl .&Q Ollnda Vlllqe, a traet ol 81' pensive bomel loc:ated on ~ Oranp eo.ty aide of c~ Caaycm, and the Sommenet CClll· domlnlum development near Kraemer Boulevard and Lam- bert ROlld. -l'lames teqed •cor• of rwt ~.., .. .........,-~...,. Ui the nt,tit lb on the eqes ot D•Dt:r ~:m::= ponce, ln· Pa.la NeUJport •toOd bf Wltti CJO tW ready. At U.. Sommenet deveto~ meat. wt.re flames crept the elo1est, ftrem~ said dama~ wu a..olded because all root.e are made of albeatoa-t,.p. Wqlee. At Ollllda Vllla1e. where wooden 1bake roof• prevail. firemen ~ more than a t.au-doJeD-'ffiPl't'• fires caused by the nev conUnual rain ol buntlnc etitbera aenerated by ~ blulnc brulbland nearby. Retldeatl of tbe vtlla1e well& permitted to evacuate voll.Dltad01 ly. At Sommeraet, however,. r:Uee oftlcen were firm, ordel'll • resident• to depart Im• mediately. Still, a few remained, mu. nlnt = bosee and pactina wllat --"Cl' they could. (Bee naE. Pace AJ> . ·~ . Armed men rob ~: l takeout in. Mesa :• llome• looted Two men. one ol them ~ wttb a Nvolver. held up tli~ bY L l Jack·ln-'l'h•Boz restaurant at . oUr~ Or.• UH Harbor BlYd., in Coad "'. .. .. ... late Saturday. Burilan broke lnt.o at least Police aakl tbe•duo, descri~ two koml9 ._, G'1u1 Drive .. a JUD·tOtinl Latino and .• ln Newport Beaeb '• Donr black ~er with a mlaahil, Sbore' Dlltrlet o•er tbe front toodl. tOot about S85 ~­weeke~uclerlaf oae of a woman elen at 8:30 p.m. ·anir nea.rlY. ~ bl silver alid other fted. vaiu'blei. By far. tlae bulk~ tM tOta1 loll ••• tu«ered at the llOIDe Of Rolark> B . .A4tdn"e. wlllle Jtl OC• I eupaat1 were away for th• ••keiid In p~ ~. poUCe ..... lave1U1atora sald t" lD· tiwltn,,.UtWaQle~ _.lift I rrhllJ ...,... "7lai a rut ddlllll .._ to cala ...., naaam~ U. tiDUN ...... Ta... ,... a Ooltb' e ...... , ............ ~ ... ,. · .-.un.11111,... ..... two tWIOI ....... "~ -....... , ..... .., ......... , ...... ..... ... .. )lllOt allo lD· =-·-= ~-·" •-'Y· ...... c:waa, :WKb aan!iet:*' of pllHr, .. ..,, A •"" lillMIMI aw97 -~ ............ to tan1&11...,_ == Utat • ---., ... .... ..... . ......., rt wu windy ~ &mdalr In Newpi>rt >I~ Beach al 23rd Street and Ocean Front M•f Drive that Illes• traih c1111 dUI \hemselveo into lbe ...-.. th• wind hltilai1 th•· . other end di tbe ca111 dug the. saud from WI· der them. f'ro• 1'•9~ .\I ifJRE .... One Soaunenet resident wait· .td to leave the walled comrnuni· 1~ unUl the oulaulht of flam.ea !frl.d. paued: Told by a fireman iltlat tbe threat Wat over, the woman, who was drlvln_S_ a AlPrvette jammed to the ceiling wltb belon1in11 , joyfully °"4reamed. "You're ll:lddl.n«i." After the siege at Sommenet, fl fire-continued to move west Ward the Orange i Freeway, icb the California Highway Patrol ordered clo&ed due to Ute ovement of fire equtp_rnent and r visibility. ~bout' 10 p.m. firemen lit a "back fire" that stopped the ad-~an«ne names from burntna: to u;e freeway and jumping over It. 1;i1A1 the wind!i died down, the fire shifted course, burnl.nr: to l*Al,e north toward Los Angeles COunty. . More than !'iOO firefighters · _.trpm Orana:e, Loe Angeles and ~n Bernardino counties -in· eluding crews from Late At· rowbead and Big Bear - ••nned the fire lines. A ba."le ;'!Ptnf was established at Carboo e\lafoo Re«ional Park. Officials began releasin;: firemen to their home jurisdh.:· \(om lat.e SUnday niJ(ht. 0i\11Flremen were suPported from the air with retardant-dropping aircraft. and on the ground with ~ 1WiJ!ldozen and olher "!llipment. h ,.1There were no injuries to I ~!ipmans. Plre sPQkeamen at the 0ffe1rle 11'.t~ an Un4etermi11'ed number of horses, cattle and chickens were trapped by the. '1tames. l,. One of the houses burned was 'focated in the Sleepy Hollow community In San Bernardino ~County just qorth of the Orange 6ounty line. The other was l~at­ ed directly acf'O!s Carbon Can- r. 'yon Road tothe entrance of the re· ;" ;tonal park. q'·'"ldentllies of tbe occupanls of the burned structures were not .,.1Q:Jmedialely available. CaTbon Canyon Road was u:lf:tosed early Sunday afternoon 1ind remained shut down today to au but emergency traffic. ~ !•jTbe fire caused no serious }4amage at the county-owned re- "!onal park, although park at-., ndant Teresa Baker said, "It urned OU\ our nature trail." ~i1f Ma. Bat~-r said names ap- i. beared on the crest of hills north of· the park about 11:31.t a .m . J1.>rortunately, she said, there· ~•ere few people at the park ow-· ing to the dry, cool, Santa An.a wtnda that started blowing S.turday. ·Alan Taylor, aa 18-year-old Olinda Vllla1e resident said the fJre wa.a much worse than a bla1e tbat broke out in Carbon Caoyon Oct. 28. He also said it wa &be worst ol seven fires be bu ..ttoeued hJ to years as a "91dent of Olinda. --DAILY PILOT n::.·~~ W:::t:-"•'4\..t -· c.M .... ,._ .. _._ ~""C.a~,;t==~ • ' • 'Thou shalt not . . post . coWmandlne~ts WASJUNGTON (AP) -Ken. tucty cannot poat copies of the Ten Commandment.I in every public school cla11room, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. By a 5-4 vote, t~!h~~~on·a htcbest coUrt 1atd pu5Ull& the comm•ndmenis In public schools violates the Constitu- tion'• freedom·of ·reli1ton 1uaranteea. Tbe· court's decision, coming in an unsigned opirlion, reversed a l<entucty Supreme Court ruJ. ing that the state's action was constitutional. "The pre.eminent purpose for . poatinl the Ten Commandments on schoolroom · walls is plainly reliliOUl!I ln nature," the court said . '1'he Ten Commandments ia undeniably a sacred text in the Jewish and Christian (aitha, and no legislative recitation of a supposed secular purpose can blind wi to that fact." The court's majority included Justices William J . Brennan Jr., Thurgood Marshall, John Paul Stevens, Byron R. White and Lewis F. PoweU Jr. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Harry A. BlackmUll dissented, voting to review the ~ase more full.y before deciding 1t. Justices Potter Stewart and WtWam. H. ~RehnqWlt said th4 .Keatucty Supreme Court wa5 right. At issue was a state law re- quiring the Ten Commandments to be posted in all schoolrooD15. The 19'18 law wu challen1ed by four Louisville reaidenta - Anne Bowe.rs, Patricia Bricking, SydeU Stone and Rabbi Martin Perley -reyreaented by the KentU<?ky ctvi Llbert.les Union. Ma. Bowen was described by her lawyer as a non-believer in any form of organized reU1&on . Mra . Brlcting ls a Roman Catholic, a school teacher and a mother with three children in pubUc schools. Ms. Stone Is a Unitarian. Ruling on the 1978 lawsuit a1ainst the state's superinten- de~t of schools, a state trial judge 1n Frankfort, Squire WtlJlam upheld the law. His March 20, 1979, ·opinion said "Govt1rn1nent involvement 1ri thia matter it limited to emur· lne tJiat • plaque la placed on each clauroom wall, if outside fund• are available." The 1 aw also provlde; that each copy contain in small print below the last commandment this notation concerning the dis· play's purpose: "The secular application of the Ten Com- mandments is clearly seen in its adoption as the fundamental legal code of Westem Civiliza. tion and the Common Law of the United.Slates " Hearings set on offices in Costa Mesa A public hearing regarding Bristol Plaza's proposal to erect nine and seven -itory office toweu near the San Diego F.reeway on Bristol Street l• scheduled tonlebt before the Costa Meaa City Council. City officials noted that, although principal James Gianulias of Newport Beach has indicated he seeks a postpone· ment oo the issue until Dec. 1, ttle hearirur: could J(et under way when the council meets in ~gularsession at6: 30p.m . Bristol Park is appealing Planning Commiss.ion denial of the two high-rise structures last month . Glanulias told council mem· hers In a study session last Mon- day that he and homeowner groups 'protesting the proposed tall buildii;ip may be close to agreement on what area resi- dents will accept on the 4.9-aae parcel just north of Montgomery Ward. ---JUST BREAKING----.. Women demonstrate in Pentagon protest . . WASHINGTON CAP) -About 1.lOO women circled the Pen- ta•oo and blocked some entrances today in a protest •l•inst wbat tbey called Ule arms rac;e, m.Wtarilm and violence against WO ....... POUee 1aJd about 100 dem099traton were arrested ·~· one entrance for refullag to move from the door. In scenes rem.lnileent of YletnaJft War protee\a, crowds of women chanted ''tbe wtiole worJd 11 wateblat'' u proteston were aeir.ecl by police •llllOlll>dial tbo d!M>rwaya..,S earned lnln tbo bulldln(. Tb6 ldel for tbe dell;lloutl'atkln becan with women from the New l:n!lland Conference On Women and I.Jte On Earth accord· ta• to~ 1potffW'Ommt, Ynatrl Kiq. · _ ' .• ._,,. _,_.,.,. •f.lred WASfUl\fGTON (AP)-TbeU.S. SupttimeCourt, bY. aMvote, !Oda~ ... -tbo d .. lll --of --•lcted Goorll• murdmvl, order1Jlf that their caue be reaiudlecl. 'l'lleJ-dln<ted tboOeorJJa SUprem•Collrtlo rmow, In llsbt of their N•1 lldtcllton ln a Oeor.Sa cue, t.be punilbment tm· pooed m lames Rlchanl Patrick, Koanetb Hanly a.,.i Donald :'f•J'Dil'l'bMlal, . At tbe Nme limqe, the court left lDt.act the death penalties lmDOMd oo coarictad Georll1 murde,_... Henry ArtbUJ' Drake ...i lohnru' lf•ck WoatbrooL · · ....... , •••• c.,.u ... • LOS ANOSl.£8 CA.Pl -Proafdeat•le<I Roa1an be-le< Waabln&too todaY. """winl h1I promlaaln "m•h Ill Ille cuta I leell ca&'' bifWn!epeadlns, .. aoon uM.takelolnttOid rear. Bol-, 1111 llljl ln ll!o capllol, b1I ftni olnce -. Ille ~......,twoweb~,q111•WldreporWnbtbad'tilclof mts.i•1 4LrH" • .._ .. a--"~ udd ...... cfllloo ... _,,,... ·-·--··--... ___ tlllnwllllloalOlcf .... ,.. .... ,. ' ·" . , .. 9ylloe~ ......... Tbe _c:1priclou1 Saot1 Aaa wlndl ~!Oday, be'- flr-:tl1hter1 tn tb•lr b•UI• ... ,... a.. lllat hfl• -about e,ooo acra of -p.attblld Soutbent Ctilfomla bnashJIDd • and d1ra11ed or d••troyed •lloo,,.t 100 -· The hurrlcan.1trenlth wtbldl SU.<fay led nr.. lllat loci ln Ille death of one • man aod rued hillllde boDMI valued Ill J1P to '1 mUJlob. Damace In Loo :\iicel• Cowity a)oae WU eatimlted al '25 mlllk>o. But tile wlndl abated dllriu early tocb)'".llvin1 fl~ten preeioul Ume to c:)ear ~tafo· .. in~t µnet. The wtJicla,WieN "h~ pe~ to end llto1ether by late' t.oday. • Chokln, 1moke aod~uh blown by Ille OOrlbouf wlndl, wllicb ru1ed up ~ 80 mf.h• lilanketed •teat lfVeral mi ea from .. nioe firm that raged lbroup the 1 weekend. Whtie the· fires 1pread, homeowners tried to talvqe blb of tbeil\,cbarred homet. One old IQU wept ln the arms ot hiJ preanant dau1bter u a forlorn do1 tat neat 1molderin1 ruins in the poeb Bradbury area. The wind and Orea iQterrupted electricity to aqme 50,0CXfbomes, though power was rest,ored lo more tban SO-percent ot lhem by · SU.day night. • ' A power failure to one pump. Ing ataUon cut water pressure, RELATED PHO;TOB, STORIES -A3, A5 frustrating firefighters already havi'ng .trouble pushing Mway the curious, officials a aid. Two people were arrea'teri oo charges of looting ruined homes . Fire authorities called a "red flag" alert throughout Southern Ca lifornia due to high fire danger, severely restricting ac- tivity in bushy areas. There bas been no significant rain here since April. Added together, the fires bad consumed about 70 square miles. The 10,000-acre Sunland fire forced residents of suburban Glendale and Burbank out ot their homes; said Burbank Fire Departmetnt spokesmarr Rich 'Kaufman. That blaze claimed l2 homes. "The fire is almost on top of us . This is a terrifyin• eJ· perten<?e," 9uJ'bank reaidti.t Jack Elwood ••~d before! dashina: to hose down his root .. l As he watched names move oward his Burbank con· dominium, Dr. Bernard Cook said: "It's just hell up here. There's fire all over the place.'' Paramedics rescued a man trapped on a ledge in the fire's path. He was treated for foot burns. "Our biggest problem is get- ting through the streets," said Burbank police officer Doug Harris, taking note of what another observer ca11ed "a ton o'f slghtaeen•· In the area. The Sunland, fire started when tensibn wlrea blown together by 80-mph winds short-circuited, showering a nearby tree with sparks. Other blazes Sund• included a lQO.acre brushfire alone the M'a1tbu coast which destro~ two homes before being put out and a 300-acre brushfire in San Bernardino County which was contalned early today. Three blazes were burning near Lake Elsloore, 10 mile& southeast of Los An'!;eles. • • _,. \ a.ill, fl'IM .... lllr •lfMN ~ ~~ooq Cd ... BLAZI! •i:::t~· Nl!IGHBOll8 TO llOOF8 .,,~ -iind -· C.. uglllln ready to PIOllCl.home . Sailor jailed for refusing to move boat A sojoufning Sailor out of Coos Bay, Ore., became becalmed in the Newport Beach brig Satur- day aft.er be. tied up to ride out the Santa Ana winds and alleged- ly went below with a yo hobo and a bottleof'rum. Oran.gt? County Sheriff's Office Harbor Patrol deputies claimed Michael G. Hulse, 32, of Bandon, Ore., refused to move his com- mercial fishi11g boat about 2 a.m. when ordered to set sail. He had tied up at the~ Rhine Channel sea wall along Lido Park Drive in a :r:one reserved by law for four·hour parking by skippers loading supplies or un - loading their catches. Sheriff's deputies claimed Hulse. whom they alleged was doing neither, had simply moored to wait for the weather to clear and refused to move along. ··And, there are a few of the loc:~~ that area," said a Ha aookmmdiod1y, alle · aw HUlae clarmfl,1 be had been:~viaitinl; them and hia navigational faculties were im· paired. He ooukl not be charged with public intoxication because his boat is private property, nor could he be charged with opeT"al- ing a vessel while intoxicated because he refused to operate it and get moving as ordered. Deputy William Kauffman finally arrested ·Hulse on the cllarae of illegal mooring, a $10 bail violation and he was booked Into cit)' jail for sevtiral hours. Hulse wu later released on his written promise to appear in court and tell it all to the judge within 10 days. Militant8 evicted NEW YORK CAP) -,Police evicted LS members of the mili- tant Jewish Defense League from a hallway in the Israeli consulate Stmday after a four- day sit-in called to prot~t the lmprlS<llunent in Israel of league founder Meir Kahane. ' \ Fro• Page 1\ I One witness locaied after the late morning fire told of see- ing sparks spewing from the bare service wire carrying electricity. down to the Youngs' home. Inspector Upton said followup investigation showed the wire's insulation was broken at that point, apparently due to weather- ing and !X>SSible battering from Sunday·swinds. He added that the estimated $250,000 loss involves only the Corona Highlands structure and none of the home's various family belongings, which could make it rar higher. "There wasn't anything there that wasn't destroyed or al least damaged.·· he said today. The widely visible fire imposed a real load on fire department manpower because of its two- alarm status. si nce two fire engine companies had been dis- patched to the big Carbon Canyon brush fircearlierSunday. Cyclist dies in Stanton traffic crash A 32·year-old Stanton man was killed early Sunday when h.is motorcycle colJided with a car on Beach Boulevard, Stanton police said. Pronounced dead al Anaheim Memorial Hospital was Michael Thomas Thompson, who police said died about three hours after the 2 a.m. accident. A police spokesman 1ald Thompson was ridin1 hla motorcycle southbound on Beach Boulevard when it collided witb a vehicle driven by Richard Newt_>y of Fowitain Valley , who was pull· ing out of a restaurant parkii;i.gl~ Newby was not senousi.y m· jured. The spokesman said an in· vestigation is conUnuing into the causeofthecruh. AL GARAGE 5ll f HION ISi.ANO NEWPOR'l BEAC!i (714) 6'14 7030 •