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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-05 - Orange Coast PilotF~al ()r8n1e Election ·RetlJrns <See Page A 3) / • ·GOP's FrlzzeJJe Du1nps Maagers ~· Wray·Alle~ Raee Still Close ... . . '• .. • Staatoa Unseats Antho•Y . ~. .. '· • R~agaa to Tap Amerieaa Spirit -.. Vol•me Record Hard-hitting Stanton Wins By GLENN SCOTT Of u. o.61, ~ ,..,. Roger Stanton's campaign to ex}>loit the legal problems of Orange County 1st District Superviaor Philip Anthony paid off Tuesday in a surprisingly atrong upset win. Stanton, a Fountain Valley ci· ty co\Rlcilman, received 57,349 votes, or 56 percent. compared to Anthony's 4.5,708 votes, 4-4 per- cent, in final, unofficial results. Stanton, 43. had neither the campaign funds nor the political Frizzelle Solid Winner Over Mangers By ROBERT BARKER Oflllto.lt.,~llMt Republican challenger Nolan Friaaelle scored a solid victory over Democratic incumbent Den· ala Mancera Tuesday in the hard· fou1hC 73rd Assembly District race. Final, but unofficial results: NelM Frt.ueUe, 71,Ul Dennla Mangers, (inc.), 67,816. Tbe campaign between the II-year-old con ae rvative l"ri11elle and tbe~O-year-old Maa1en became extremely boltile and bard-bitting In Its ftrntl dqs~ • ,.Friaelle apparently was suc· cetshal in portrayln1 Man1en, a wo-term incumbent, aa a big uendbtl liberal who operated UD· chr tile thumb of Auembly .,.aker Leo McCarthy. "'Jlanpn bit at Frinelle's COO· l:tt"atiam and tried to Uak hJm to • at&emptl""by rilht win1 ex· (r.emilta to . take control of a ........ dl8trlct. ·11....,., wbo bad indicated tbt till eampalp would be bll 1Mt fOI' tbe Awmc:!le made dla· dllatarJ1'811Ullb )'. ''I'm_, to call Kr. FriueUe 811019 •I HD I« b6m and'CCJa• ll'•&ailteldm..twtab blm well. I .... a. tD work with blm to ~=dll trmaltlon u smootb u ~ ...... . 11811111'1~ bit., •• tot.bl ·-. n*•"• .... u, clout of incumbent Anthony go- ing for him during his cam- paign. But he hammered away unceasingly at the three felony indictments issued against An· thony on charges of laundering campaign funds in the 1976 elec· tion. 0 Anthony has d e n ied any wrongdoing. and an indictment does not imply guilt. But Stanton nevertheless criticized Anthony for his "audacity" to seek re- election until charges stemming from his last campaign are cleared up. Voters in the predominantly middle-class district, which takes In Fountain Valley, Westminster, Garden Grove and parts of Santa Ana, gave Stanton the lead from the beginning. when absejllee ballots we re counted. He'1u!ver lost it. Stanton stayed at home with b'is family and about 50 sup- porters to await the result~7 Their celebration began In earnest after about half the votes had been counted. "I said during my campaign that the voten want to start a new chapter," he said. ··1 mean It very sincerely and l think the people mean it very sincerely." A full-time mana1ement in· 1tructor at Cal State, Long Beach, Stanton said he will seek a leave of absence from the col· lege so be can take over his new of. fice at the county Hall of Ad- minlstrationon Jan. 5. No immediate changes are on his mind. "l just want to roll up 'my sleeves and get· to work," be said. Two weeks before the election, Stanton had raiaed only about $17 ,000 in campaip tuncb while Anthony bad 1atbered almoet $100,000 since June. The incum- bent al.lo WU ridlDI on •troac endorsement• from the four (See 9TA.NTON~ Pap AJ) Flier Phony SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A pbony e leellon-daf. mer an· nounelal U. cancel lion ot tbe elecUon due to the· "allMBee ot popular ...... '"'WU delivered door·...._. lD at leut OM 8llll rraaelaco aei1bborhood, ac. cor._ to U. ett1•1 ......., ol ....... ~. ~ . . Mitu1it19 . Al" WI ..... Barry Goldwater. running for senate re-e lection in Arizona, holds an 8,000-vote lead over opponent Bill Schultz, a millionaire Phoenix' apartments owner. Goldwater is a frequent vis- itor t.Q Newport Beach. - Wray Leading· Doris Allen By Slim Edge By PATlllCll kENNEDY Of .. ......,""' ..... About 10,000 uncounted ballots may make the dtrference for Chet Wray, Democratic lnc:um· bent in the 71.st Auembly Di.I· trict. Wray, $7 , led Republican challenger Doria Allen by a slim 568 ballota this D}!>mina after 96,214 votes from a ll precl.Mtl had been counted, accordlnc to Oran1e County Retlstrar Al Olaon. It wu not known bow many of the 10.000 uncowited bat.Iota are from the 71.at Aalembly Diltrtct, but Ollon •aid they would be counted promptly today because of tbe elalen111 of tbe race. NormallJ, be satd, the aa. ...... and ballota ,.~ f« aoftle reason by eounUn1 machinery doa't cban1• the nnal,.aha. Tbil IDOl"DAq, Wray led wtt.b ... 4U votn to II rs. Allen's ,tl&. Ubenarlaa e ... Wat• o. .. ....., ...... 1.711. * * * * * * American Spirit Reagan Tells Plans as President LOS ANGELES <AP) - President-elect Ronald Reagan, triumphant al age 69 after a 12· year quest for the While House. began talks-with. top advisers to- day to shift Republican efforts from trying lo win an election to trying to set up a new govern· menl. R eagan. who campaigned against President Carter's * * * hanaiing of the economy and against the notion that the na· lion's economic problems were loo complex to be solved, ac· cepled his victory Tuesday night by saying: "I aim to try and tap that great American s pirit that opened up this completely un- developed continent from coast * * * GOP Surge Sends Stocks Soaring NEW XORK <AP) -The stock market soared in record· breakine actmty today, responlling to the election vie· tory of Ronald Rea1an and the RepubUcana' gains in Congress-. The Dow Jones avera1e of 30 industrials jumped 18.18 points to 955.38 in the first hour of trad· ing and wu up 29 points after two hours of trading. Gainers outnumbered losers by a J..S.1 margin in the over-all tally of New York Stock Ex· change-lilted issues. Big Board volume in th' open· in1 hour totafed 22.Sl million shares, surpuaine the record of 20.73 million set Oct. 10. 1m. ·'The stoJ:k market is his· torically a Republican animal, and Re&1an represents a true conservative Republican," the brokera1e firm of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields aald In a wire tranamltted to all Its branch of. fices thla week. • The fact that the Republicans took control of the Senate and re1lstered lar1e 1ain1 ln the Houae wu alto lreeted with de· lllht on Wall Street. "It may welt lead to tfte pa11a1e of major flacal F..mbauy Takeover KHARTOUM Sudu <AP>- A handful ol Ubyu ,.....-of · tbla eut Afrtcu aaUoe tooll over tM UbJaa Emklty on TueadQ aad proelalmed l& a "People'a Bureau.'.' in &M laa.t in a HUI of DOD •Vloleat tQeoven ot UbJ• ... ...._ 6a chan1es," observed RQbert Stovall, an analyst a\.R'aD Wit· ter Reynolds Inc. But Stovall and other bro°kers were cautious about bow long the eupborfc mood might lut. Further increases in Interest rates such as the bank prime lending rate are expected any day. In addition, inflation is expect- ed to pick up momentum In the next few months, re1ardleas of what actions the government takes. Bond prices also rose In early activity, but then gave up some of their 1aJns. <See S'IOCKS. Pa1e. AZ) -PSA Planning New Airline SAN DllGO (AP> -Strike- bo u nd Pacific Southwest AlrllDel ls fonntna a 1ublkUary called Pacific Northwest Airlinel with expectaUou it will fiy by im. a compaQy ottlcial said. Tb• •PC>kftlmaa, wbo uked Tuelday that hla name not be dlaclOHd, aald a recau•t to create PNA servlnt S.a tt1•1 Portland ud Sq_., Ort., aa BolH, ldabo, WU·. 11194' wtth CaUlonla '1 MOretarJ of 1tate. Althoulla M40tiaUona aimed at Ht''=-PiA,I P&1ot 1tr1b ,.. tumid WMk, tbln •• no =::-°'·--toU. •W ft.aeb be ... Sept .•. ti> coast and made it a great na· tion." · Reagan's press secretary, Lyn Nofziger, who told reporters be himself does not expect to go to W asbington, said the former governor of California plans to remain in his home in Pacific Palisades all day. But Reagan will begin work "right away" on the transition to a GOP administration follow- ing his landslide victory , Nofziger said. Among the first visitors to the Reagan home will be Vice President-elect George Bu~h. who was flying here from Houston this morning. Edwin Meese. the campaign chief of staff who served Reagan in a similar capacity during bis governorship, said he does not expect the president-elect to an· nounce his Cabinet until late November or early December. "Our personnel a>eopte will collect a lot of names•' between , (See aEAGAN, Pate A.2> Coast Weather Low clouds and fol ni1ht and mornint with h11y sunahine Thunday afternoon. Lowa tonl1ht 58 along tbe cout, 12 Inland. H11hs Thursday • to 72 at beaches, 77 to II inland. IN81DETODAY A P""'*lplda Cop '"7frtg ~ ,.... Cl lcMt clkatlc• cat laappf,.•u Ito• Hiii hit ,,., ..... -ttom -.ipcMded .... to a 10.to0rk•r JtOJl·profft /Oddotbl. SH ~ Al. ..... world e,.talt. . I ' s . 1 8JWALTDa.•&A ........ ~ WA.SHINO'i'oN <AP> -hf yean,..,.lllilllcwlaa"~ that a.,.._ .u.&. eoulft'.UW m~ywuouttMN. waldqto arlM Roeald fleaaan 10t b111tart ln naUanal poUUce tryiD1 to tap that veln ln the uuH or aarry Goldwater'• .,.._ldeftUal ticket. That put hJmon the loaln11ldeol a landslkle five electlona aao. But the silent majority apok~ Tuesday. Led by President-elect Rea1an. the conservatives are coming to Waahlnaton next year. Republicans are takln1 control ot the Senate, a prize they haven't held In 25 years. They have reinforcements in the House, and a chance at control * * * Voters Frustrated . With Carter Years two years hence, if all goes well for their new adm inistration and they are able to reverse the his- toric trend of off-year election setbacks to ·the party in White Ho\lle power. There wu more than con· tervatism -'to the astounding landslide Reaaan eained Tuel· day. ~re was deep dlssatisfac· tio• with the leadership of Jim· my Carter, the Southerner who could not capture the South, the Democrat who could not win in the sll'Ongbolds of his party. * * * An Asaociated Press-NBC News poll of voters In 10 states across the nation showed that they J•t didn't conaider Cuter a 1ood enough leader to merit re·eledlon. Six of every seven who said flrmneu and decisiveness were ~eir criteria for chOOlin1 a can· dldate cut ballots for Reagan. Two voters in five said they thought Carter had done a bad job. Even the signs of an imminent break ln the year-long Iranian * * * , . Debate Signaled Def eat Carter Effort to Mar Reagan Image Failed WASHINGTON (AP) -Jn the winger who repeatedly had ad-perception that the president wac end, the campaign boiled down to vocated military intervention in a decent man. two main issues: the economy world crises and was likely to As the campaig.n reached its and war a.nd peace. Both worked blunderintowa.r. f1nal month, Carter was forced to againstJimmyCarttir. Blaming inflation a nd un· concede his error pubµcly. He Carter couldn't overcome his employment on increases in oil pledged to abandon personal at· record and failed to convince prices, Carter played up his tacks. voters that Ronald Reagan was achievements on energy and the Thereafter. the president con- too reckless and right-wing tooc· Middle East and stressed the tented himself with quoting cupylheOvalOffice. necessit y for calmness a nd Reagan's words. Sometimes they His last chance may have been stabiUtyintheOvalOffice. were more than a decade old. the televised debate a week As the campaign progressed, such as the former California gov- before theelection -a one-on-one Carter went so far as to declare ernor'ssuggestion that those who confrontation that Carter insisted bluntly that the election was a can provide for their own retire· on. choice between war and peace. As ment should be exempted from The reassuring image of the evidence, be seized on Reagan's Social Security . Repeatedly. Republican nominee projected rejection 9f the pendjng SALT II Carter insisted the former actor before an audience of more than treatywiththeSovietUnion. ·wanted to make the pension 100 million belied Carter'• efforu Race beeame an issue, too. system voluntary. to portray Reagan u trigger-Carter lashed out al use of "code And he hammered away cease- happy. words" su.ch as states' rights and lessly at war and peace, in the As hewasrestoringlustertohis intimated t hat Reagan was final days singling out nuclear image, Reagan attacked the pres· peddling racism. Later, he siad proliferation as the most impor. • bo1ta14 cri1l1 worked to the presldeat's dl1advanta1e . J.mtead of providlq him the lift the Rea1aa camp feared, lt 1erved-ID tbe ""of campalp maaqer Robert S. Strauss -to remind people oCthe whole year's fru.stration. Rea1an alwaya said that the real issue of 1980 wu the rtte>rd of the preai•ent and bis Democratic admlnlatralion. The voters obviously a1reed , although the AP poll 1howed nearly half of those who sided with the preaident were swayed by Carter's contention that the Republican nominee mieht risk war. But disenchantment with Carter isn't enough to explain Reagan's crushing margin, and the starllin1 GOP gains In Congress. The last time a oresl- ( NEWSANAl,YSIS J dent won that big it was Richard M. Nixon over Geor ge McGovern eight years ago. The margin was even more lopsided \han Reagan's over Carter. but it did not tran s l ate into Republican congressional gains. The 1980 returns are evidence of a conservative revival, or· gan ized, mobilized and bankrolled to remodel American government. It was not born Tuesday. The current Senate is more con· servalive than the one before. Republicans gained three Senate seats in 1976 even as they were los ing the White Ho use to Carter. And the new Senate will be far more conservative than the one t hat eonvenes in lame-duck session Nov. 12. Chances are that session will be brief and perfunctory , w i th a new Republican adm inist ration about to come to power. ident on the economy where he ~eagan's election. could ~v.ide t~nt issue facing the nation. was most vulnerable aski~ black . from white, Cbnst1an Carter conte nded Reagan Reagan, it seemed. was exe mpt Signal of l'i~torg Eleven-year-old Andy Budds of Fountain Valley displays wide grin under his "Reagan Country" cap Tuesday night during victory celebration for the GOP at South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. Andy's "V" just about sa ys it all __ _,,,_,rollt.f!qgp . l I FRIZZELLE WINS • • • voters whether they we~e t>etttt-from Jew." believed it was none of America's from the age i ss ue . A off or worse than they were four But when asked directly business whether other nations hearty, healthy 69, he will be the nationwide surge for president· Frizzelle, an optometrist who years ago. . whether he believed Reagan was developed a nuclear capability; oldest man ever inaugurated pre· elect Ronald Reagan and the lives in Costa Mesa and has his Inflation stood at 12.7 percent aracistorawarmonger,thepres· Reagandeniedit. sident. turning 70 soon after he earlyconcessionspeechbyPresi· bus iness in Garden Grove, said and unemployment at 7.5 percent. !dent alwa~s backed down. deny· Carter ad milted be bad. made takes office. . . dent Carter. previously he would encourage ·..::."?fft~..;.mericans had bee9_ 10ghebadinten~~.toleavesuch.,. m_istakes .. and dec!ared ~·~self . . Mangers said Carter's re· localpoliticianstosolvetheirown hetdtiaetagetft1ren·fbr4')'UI\ i tril~;r+ ·~-·---·Jer~orhison-the·Jobtrainmg. Carter won ha~ $1ngle term ~Y marks, which came an hour problems instead of running to Within 48 hours, Carter knew Nevertheless, the insinuations ButU'Uw!eJMl~tbe,mqw~Jt't!:..::.-:~.~«e·point~~..,;..r.>,;,,..,·,t-·~otf ~~e1fj».· ~~!"@.rnen~Qf9_r_~m- the situation was desperate. Dur· took their toll. Carter became his job in W76 as an outsider lostit in the. closest electo,... ~liege " c -~i\.i~;"J~~ ... -5.dWC .... .-e~w~~~~~~'ffi"i:--t · ing a week-long campaign blitz, known as a mean fighter, and a four years later bec.au~e he had , count m 60 years. He said that Democrats from voting. focus on repealing the state in· he tried frantically to refocus the backlash threatened the general becometheullimate1ns1der. was ample mandate to govern. "I was surprised that the presi· heritance tax which be bas spotlighton Reagan. * * * * -* * -" dent cared so little for the lower labeled" an abomination." At first, it worked. Carter cam· Keagan beat Carter by 10 offices on the Democratic ticket The district extends into Costa paign polls had shown him trail· Fro• r,.,,. .. , I points : won 42 of the 50 states in to make his statements while the Mesa. Huntington Beach. FOUD· ing Reagan by 3·4 points after a landslide that ranks with Nix· raceswerewideopen. lain Valley, Seal Beach, Sun*t the debate. But _,Y Saturday, the REAGAN LANDSUDE. on's ·over Mc Govern. Lyndon Mangersalsosaidearly projec-Beach and Rossmoor Leisure president held a slight 0.3 per· • • Johnson's over Goldwater. and tions by television networks may World. cent lead. Franklin 0 . Roosevelt's over Alf havehadatemngeffect. Overnight, it fizzled : Sunday's now and then and submit three "I think I know what he Landon. Democrats held a registration llandit Slain polls revealed that the president to five top choices for each job to meant," Reagan s aid. "But"J lead of just 3,000 in the 73rd Dis· was down by 2·5 points. By Mon· Re a g an . Meese said. He don't think he was afraid. tte Carter came to power to work trict. M JLAN. Italy CAP> -One of day -theday afterCartertem-declined to dis cuss names, was ready toconfronttheprob· w i th a C on g re ss wh ose Fri zzell e's ca mp a i g n three bank bandits holding porariJy suspended campaigning although he did appear to rule out lems . the troubles of the still· Democratic members owed him chairman. Wes Bannister . cited hostages in a downtown building, lo assess the conditions set by an administrat ion post for youthful country, determined to no political debts, for he had no thesuccessofaneffortto increase killed himlf with a pistol shot to Iran for release of the hostages -former President Ford, saying seize the historic opportunity to coattails. Reagan takes over to Frizzell e's name identification in the head and his two partners the outcome was inevitable: he Ford "has a statesmanship posi· changethings. deal with a friendly Republican the district. released their captives and sur· trailed by7-10points. lion far beyond that of a Cabinet "I am not frightened" by what Senate fashioned on his coat· He said the improved position re ndered. officials s aid . .'Ille In the pre-dawn ho1,1rs of Elec· officer." lies ahead." tails. and with a GOP House coupled with Reagan's coattail er-three, all from Milan, stormed lion Day, as Air Force One flew to Reagan has said he would minority strengthened the same feels were more than enough to into a bank Tuesday after shoot. Plains, Ga., for Cart.er to cast his value the advice and counsel of way. put his candidate over the top. ing and seriously wounding a ballot, press secretary Jody the former president. who cam· f'rona Page .I I They do owe him. Frizzelle was unavailable for guard, took two men and a . Powell ordered a drink and paigned for Reagan this year He is a man with a mandate. commment today. His election woman hostage, and barricaded braced himself to deliver the despitetheirbitterbattle forthe STANTON for c ons ervatis m and for apparentlywillsignalachange in themselves into a nearby build- omen to h.is boss. GOP nomination four years ago. • • change. relatiohships with local officials. ing. B~~~~~~t~ed.~ The tr~inthep~~~al -===~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~-~=~~~~~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ knew. race already was clear when other county supervisors who ,;;. The post-mortem offered by Reagan prepared to leave home willstlllbethere inJanuary. , Carter's aides blame the defeat for dinner Tuesday evening with Stanton. however , used his on the hostagestalemateanddual the group of wealthy Califor· limited resources and clever problems of inflation and re· nians who convinced him to go speech-making abilities to pick cession. into politics nearly two decades at perhaps Anthony's only Since his nomination at the ago. serious political liability, his De mocratic convention in His departure was interrupt· legal problems. In an llth·hour August, thepresidentsetouttode· ed. however, by a phone call mailer. Stanton wryly stabbed pict Reagan as a dangerous right· from President Carter , who con· at Anthony's background by as· * * * gratulated him on hi s ex -sociating the incumbent with" traordinary victory and pledged former s upervisors Ralph f'ro,,. Pag~ A I to help smooth the transfer of Diedrich and Bob Battin. who STOCKS ••• In foreign-exc hange markets. the dollar moved up strongly against most other leading cur· • rencies. • · 'the price of gold in London rose about $6 an ounce to $652 u of the afternoon "fixing ." power. were convicted earlier of illegal Al about 7:30 p.m., Reagan political practices in separate drove by motorcade from the incidents. palatial home of his host. in· Stanton's mailer used the dustrialist Earle Jorgensen, to same format Anthony bad used the Century Plaza H~.,..Cem· in a 1976 mailer atacklng a paign workers ~d supporters former foe, Harry Yamamoto. lucky enough to get tickets Yamamoto later sued Anthony packed the h9tel ballropm around In a still-pending libel case and the dozens ol television cameras threw his weight In this election and news reporters to wait for the to Stanton. ~ctor'sappearance. , Anthony said today he agrees financial centers ~s Tokyo and . • While the ·crowd listened to th~ the Legal issue was the 'roront.o ~led gaans attribut~ music and cheered the an· "overwhelming" reason for Stock markets in such foreign to enthusiasm over Reagans· nouncement oftbe latest returns, Stanton's success. election. ,Reagan remained in a 19th-Ooor He said the four years of "con· OftANGa COAIT DAILY PILOT TM o....,. CM•I Dolly l'il<tl w11n w"''" " • (.,,.OH'••d H• ...... Prtt•. h ..... j\Mf OY dw 0 ••"941 ""''' _,.,,..,. , .... ,.., '-<••• f'Cl1hoftt .,. ""*"'""° ~ •. uw~ ,, ... " IO< CO.lo Mt\4 H-1 l••I\, Hl#llf ....... • •••t" trouftl••" V•ll•r. It••"•· L•f""' I ...... Soull\ , .... ,, " ..... ···-·' .. , .... " ...... ....., $oeyrN U --00 ,.,. jltU\C ... I ! ......... ~ ............. , "° ... , ... 14, .. , ,, 0 I 80• IS.0 Golla,_ ... 0 hl°'nl•t 1tllo l I I I I 11_'1 ...... Pfn t .. "i •Ml ~1~ ,_,AM ........ Monoqlft11 l•llO< Clle'1n ". L.-. "'''"•"' .... .._.i,,.10110< T~ne(7141MMll'I a ...... Adv.,......toltfl hotel room, tapping his fingers as fusing, adverse publicity" about he wa~bedtbeelection returns on the charges plus the recent state threetelevisionsets. Supreme <;ourt decision not to He ••t apart. somber, smiling bear his appeal created "a.very only when· visiti>rs offered con-bad impression at an un- gratulations and shook his hand. fortunate time." 'Then congratulations came by Despite the loss. Anthony said telephone, one from Democratic he will remain in office until Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. January. "I will try to do the best Reagan was surprised by the job thatl can." he said . sweeptn1 victory. The supervisor is on a leave ol "You know me," he said. absence as an en1ineer from "You heard me say ·cautiously Rockwell lnternatlonal in optimistic' so many limes." Anaheim, but he said he hasn't At 8:45 p.m., Reaiian, his wife, decided yet what he will do after Nancy, and their c~ildren leavln1 office. stepped onto the ,1tage one by one to a deafening roar from the crowd. "Here we are," the president· elect be1an. • 'Thjre's never been a mofe humblinl 111omo11t in .my life. Even if it had been the cliff· hanger tha~ all of ua I thlnk had been expectin1, we would feel the same way .•. I &Ive you my sacred oatb th•t 1 wlll do my ut· moet to J•tlfylou~ trust." Reatan Hi Abraham Lin· coin, UNI hll eleetloa in lllO, 1ummonid the rePorttn who bad ceftend bit campetp to tell tbem, "~aur trwblw are over now: mllie lane J',llt behn." U.S. Jet Fighter Falls off Ship • ExpanSion -Sale LAST THREE DA VS! THRU NOVEMBER-.8th Greatest Reductions Ever! ! 15°/o 1~'50°/o OFF $1 .fDJ.000 INVENTORY ORASTICA~L Y REDUCEDI featuring: Drexel -Heritage -Henredon -Baker -Kargas ·Sligh Desks -Schafer Brother~ Leather -Classic Leather - Woodmark -Stanton Cooper -Marge Carson -Cal Mode -Freemarc -Aireloom -Marbro -Stiffel -and much. much morel With the Holidays near -take advantage of this rare opportunity! SPECIAL ORDERS HONORED AT REDUCED PRICES. • t - .. OC ~ote 'Co11nt Beats Deadline FINAL TQJ'ALS . Orange Co11nty '(' Vote' Results 08A.NGB COUNTY 8ESULTS ... pnet.e&s ... et Z.• pnelae&s lJ.8. P8£81DENT 8MeW aeacu (Republ.Jun) 520,549 Jimmy Carter <Democrat) 1'73,932 Ed a.rt (Llbertarian) 14,250· Barry Commoner CJndepen- dent) 2,521 John Anderson (Independent) M,3" II aureen Smith (Peace & Freedom> 1,051 John Rarick <American In· dependent) 334 U.S. S~NATOR David Bergland (Libertarian) 22,744 . Alaa Cranaton (Democrat ) 330,683 David Wald ( Peac-e & Freedom> 16,253 Paul Gann (Republican> 373,859 James Griffin <American In- dependent 9,692 ORANGE COUNTY SUPERVISOR nnt DI.strict Philip Anthony 45, 708 &oger Stutoel 57 ,349 U.S. &EPRESENTATlVE UUa District Simone <Democrat) 11,884 John Donohue <Peace & Freedom) 2,215 Daa Lu1rea (Republican ) 40,952 38tb District Charles Heiser (Libertarian) 7,201 Art Jacobson <Republican > SS,340 74t.ll District Sue Waltman (Libertarian> 15,560 Jack Baldwin (Democrat> 27,860 STATE P&OPOSnIONS <Onnge Couty 0.ly) Yea 1. Parklands 341,871 2. Tahoe Bonds 294,718 3. Insurance Guarantee No 373,759 417,714 148.720 527,358 4. Property Tax W1Jiver 122,445 554,149 5. Property Reassessmem. 243,300 432,663 "6. Jury Size 420,663 278,156 7. Solar Energy 425,102 243,873 8. Water Development 328,669 ~.075 9. Drinkin~ Water . 417,466 280._740 10. Non-Smoking 346,408 410,950 11. Judges Salar\es 513,444 185,142 Marian Bergeso• (Republican) 126,187 IUDIClAL Superior c.oart Office No. 8 Ragnar Engebretsen 208,616 James SmJt.ll 360,936 Sapertor c.oart Office No. 1 Robert Chatterton 275,968 Robert F1U1erald 323,147 Superior c.oart Office No. 14 James Cook 332,937 Sueanne Lewis 268,167 Ceatral MaaJclpal Coan Offtee No. f Cliff Harris 41,363 John Ryan 55,787 Cea&ral ManJclpal Jen:>', r.itenoa·~l..1.._. Court Office No. 5 Bobby Yoan1blood 52, 721 Richard Orozco 49,269 Ceatnl Manlclpal Del•• ............. •k-1t.-i. OVERVIEW OF ELECTION CENTRAL IN ORANGE COUNTY WHERE THINGS WENT SMOOTHL y 'It Looka • Lot Better Than June, Don't You Think?,' County Regletrer Commenta 6Return To State, U.S. Seats Six incumbents holding state and federal office in -districts in north and central Orange Coun- ty handily defeated challengers in Tuesday's general election. In the 38th Congrasiooal Dis- trict, Rep. J erry Patterson, D- Santa Ana, soundly turned aside two opponents, Republican Par- ty nominee Art Jacobson and Libertarian Party nominee Charles E. "Chuck" Heiser. It was Patterson's fourth suc- cessful bid for' a two-year term in Congress. Final, unofncial results with all precincts in the District re- porting were : Heiser, 7,201 Jacobson, 65,340 Pattenoa, I0,147 Despite Machine ·Failure b!;-r-( ., ., ' • 1·~ 1f l' I l.il •)( Despite the failure of fourr • vote-counlina machln•, tabula-" .: lion of baUotl cut bl Tuelday'1<'-' general election in Orance eo.m-,;_. t y went accordin& to plan. '! Final resulta, in fact, were re-' l ! leased 45 minutes ahead of schedule. "ll loou a lot better t.bu[ June, don't you thlnt!" com- mented Re8istrar of Voten Al Olson . He obviously was pleased that the new vote count· ing system didn't falter as it did in the primary election five months ago. Olson, speaking at 6:30 a.m. after being at work for more than 24 hours, said a "'logic test'" " conducted after the returns were·' processed showed that result.I' were accurate. •' The only incident that marred the tabulation, the registrar ~, said, was the breakdown of four 1 of the 90 n e w counters purchased from Martel Systema Inc., of Costa Mesa, for $1.5 million. O lson said four of the machines which ...,.ead" marks made on ballots became "un· operational." He said ballots were transferred without di.f. ficulty to other machines for processing. The machines that broke down are now being re- paired, Olson said. The registrar attributed much or the success of the vote count to the installation following the June snafus of special computer equipment at the tallying center that monitors performance or the system. · 90 647 • •r -...-, . .;.-, .. • . ... District Wiiliam Daaaemeyer (Republican) 172,029 $-;r·'":<T~~-.... lto~~~ John Teal 47,311 STATE P&OPOSmONS (0nnJ[e Comaty Oaly) In the 39th Congressional Dis- trict in the north county. incwn- ~-·~4VJW#..{" I)annemel'.er, -· 't~rt<Jrr-/:rnla}' -iieleucu -• Democratic Party nominee Leonard L. Lahtinen. · The final unofficial resulta ol voting in the county's 2,062 pre- cincts spewed out of a computer in the Santa Ana Civic Center at 3: 17 a .m. Olson had predicted fina l results would be out by 4 a .m. In June -during the ftrat test Leonard Lahtinen <Democrat) •. 53,738 4ttlaDlatrict aoltert Badia•• (Republican) ll8,31S Dan Mahaffey <Libertarian) 22,776 Michael Dow (Democrat) 60,0ll STATE SENATOR 35th District James Grover <Libertarian> 10,821 Jolla 8rl11a (Republican ) 150,497 Frank Boeheim (Peace & Freedom) 3,943 Louis Velasquez (Democrat) 75,S49 37tb District Dewey . Wiles <Republican > 67,326 Paal Carpenter <Democrat) 102,990 STATE ASSEMBLY lltb District ·c h·r is ti an Th i e r b a ch (Democrat) 31,797 ao .. JobHOD (Republican ) 88,075 70U. Dlltrlct Jolla Lewis (Republican > ~ Rob erta Rin e hart (Ljbertarian) 21,892 Kevin O'Rourke <Democrat) 29,857 7lat Platrlct Doris Allen < Republrca n) 45,915 Cltet Wray (Democrat) 46,483 ! Devon Showley (Libertarian) J,726 ~ < 7Zncl Dlllrlct ~ Raoul Silva <Republican) 26,098 : &lclaard RoblmOtl <Democrat) f9,6&1 . ~ 73rd Dtstrlct : Nolu .Frluelle <Republican) 11,531 i Dennis Mangers (Democrat) f?,616 : * * * LOCAL MEASURES Lagana Beach 26 precincts out of 26 precincts Yea No Meua:re E: Bluffs 3,896 Meuure F : Nuclear 4,316 Measure G : Housing 4,023 Newport Beach 5,170 4,749 4,685 90 precincts o\Jt of 90 precincts Yes No Measure L: Freeway 26,587 4,095 Seal Beach 47 precincts out of 47 precincts it' -Yea No Measure 0 : Tal · • • ._ S.036 8,970 SAN CLEMENTE CITY COUNCIL 31 precincts out or 31 precincts Alan Koneb 4,315 Slll Wagner 2,213 A.L. Wulfeck 670 Edward Beyer 784 Bob Brennan 499 Patrick Lue 4,170 Gary Fuller 689 Ray Maddocks 746 Melanie Vansell 1,206 Stephen Rackleff 401 Robert Rusin 350 Jay Durkin 1,892 Thomas O'Keefe 3, m ~JON VIEJO MUNICIPAL ADVISORY COUNCIL ~precincts out of 51 precincts Llilda Westfall 6,539 Georja Baldwin 2,756 George Simons 4,919 Aaae Foky 6,"5 Leaford Elam 4,148 Maril)'ll MacDoa1.U 6,977 Howard Meissner 4,965 Norman Murray 5,755 * * * oungblood Vmeats ld Foe Orozco Tuesday's balloting after one of u\e rD09t prolonged and harshly fou1ht judicial contesta in recent Oran1eCounty htst.ory. Final but unofficiaJ retuma to- day ahowed Youn&blood beatina Orosco, an appointee of Gov, l'.cf. mund G. B~ Jr., by more than a,ooo votes -52,'721 to ..... ''I'm Jmt &lad it'll oHr," a disheartened Orosco •aid tOday. Th• Judie, clalmln1 b1I oppo- , neat •PP981ed to ti.. "baler ln- 1Unct1" of •oter• wUb a "partisan, rac11t campalp," said be would Uktli return to private law praetic., eitlaer lD hllert.an or Santa Au. ..................................... •• (partleulafb> for tbe people rD • ., cllltrld.. ~ Final, unofficial results were: Lahtinen. 53, 738 Dannemeyer, 17%,0%9 Successful in the 3Sth state Senate District in the north county was incumbent Sen. John OANH•MEYl:a V. Briggs, R-FuJlerton, weJI known for his conservative and often controversial views. Briggs receivea twice as many votes as his closest rival, Democrat Louis Velasquez, a Fullerton city councilman. Also trailing behind Briggs were Libertarian James N. Grover and Peace and Freedom Party nominee Frank Boeheim. Final, unofficial results in the race showed : Grover, 10,821 Brigp, 15t,4t7 Boeheim, 3,943 Velasquez, 75,549 Incumbent Sen . Paul Carpenter, first elected in the 37th state Senate District in 1976, defeated the Republican nominee, De"wey Wil~; a CaHfomia Highway Patrolman. Final, unofficial results were: Wiles, 67,326 Carpenter, 102,tto In the 89th Assembly District, incumbent Ross Johnson. R- Fullerton, maintained a better aalCMH ltoel...,_ than 2 to 1 margin over bJs oppo- n e n t , Democr~tlc nominee Christian CRJck> Thierbach. Final. unofficial resulta in the race were: · Tb=h,31,797 lo •,t15 In the 72nd Allembly District, incumbent Richard Robin.son, D· Garden Grove, wu returned for a fourth term by a comfortable marstn. His Republican oppo- nent WN RllOUI Sliva. Final, \llOfflcial result.a were: Sllva.•.oee •••-•a.•~m In the '10tb Auembly Diltrict lo wblcb tbe baewnbent, Bruce Nt1tHdt, R·Oran1e, dld not aeek re·electlon, Republican aoaliDM .Jobll t.wlt defeated two .,.._, Hetftt•nta, Kevin o :Ronke, the OemocraUc DOID~ Roberta RllMbart, U.. U candldat.. COUNTY ELECTION WORKERS PROCESS THE BALLOTS ----~-nty_Fow .,.•kdown• In Str••mNn~ ~ye1em of the new vote counting syatem , -Olson had predicted final re-. suits would be released -at 2:30 a. m However, problems with both the counters and data proc- essing equipment arose and - final unofficial results were not . released for several days. Four Men Arrested In Armed Robbery Orange County was the last county in the state to report its June e lection results to Secretary of Stat~ March Fong Eu. Four men suspected in the rooftop break-in and a rmed rob· ber y of a Westminster drug store were arrested by police Monday morning after a vehicle and foot chase. Westminster officer Earle Graham said the four suspects. all jailed on suspicion of armed robbery and burglary, are John Woods. 47, of Los Angeles: Der- rick Hall Simms. 22, of Long Beach: Everett Allen Pratt, 25, of Los Angeles: and Derrly Ray, a 22·year-old transient. Graham said the men are sus- pected of cutting through the roof of Cla rk Drugs, 15421 Brookhurst St .. at 8 : 15 a.m Monday. before the store had opened. Two of the men. armed and Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Certified Gemologi1t, AGS NATURE'S BRUSH painl• gemslo"e.s Mother Nature's paint brush touches many things, Including the leaves or autumn. the animals or the field and the colored gemstones of the earth. Colored stones have gained great popularity In recent years, as fuhioos have moved more and more toward colorful accessories. Mos t ol us are familiar With such stones as the areen emerald, the red ruby, the blue sapphire. But there is an enllre ranae of colors available In expensive and less expensive atones. Besides the ruby, there are such red beauties as the red splnel or the red zircon. Tanunite and tourmaline are amona the prettle&t ol blue atonn. Some l\Oft~L _auch N the tourma1ine ud me saoohlre, come la a variety of.different hues. If you prefer a wbtte JeweJ to contraat with your penonal fubion style Of U.. inoment, U... are the pearl and the op1I, or lvoey. Let Mother Nature betp YoU find a atone to plean you . She '• paln~I one for JOU rilht now . I wearing s ki masks, dropped through the ceiling and sur- prised a bookkeeper in the .store's office. police said. The pair took about $2,000 from a safe and fled back out lo the roof, police said. Shortly afterward. police patrol officers spotted a van sus- pected in the robber~ and pursued it until the.. van crashed near Westminster Avenue and Yockey Street, police said. Two suspects were arrested·at the scene of the accident. while the remaining two were cap- tured nearby with the aid of canine patrols, police said. According to Graham. the cash taken from the drug store was recovered by police. along with other evidence linking the four to the robbery. The slate Commission on Vot- ing Machines and Vote Tabulat- ing Devices threatened to force the county to scrap the Martel' system if it did not perform up . lo standard in Tuesday's elec- tion . Olson said he is confident that the system will now be endorsed by the state commission when it meets in Sacramento Nov . 25. According to the registrar, the task now at band is a "mop up': operation involving an estimat- ed 10,000 ballots. These include absentee ballots returned to the registrar's office late Tuesday by the counting de-vices. Olson stressed that "mop up" operations are common in all elections and that the likelihood of a ny result changing is re- mote. AffordabL? Elegance • I Jewelry can offer the ~r o( rwo worlds: The el~nce o( 1 bygont' t'ra and pricH affordable by tod1v'1 1tand1rd•. Hert' arc four u cellent uamplH: A. L.ditt l-4 karat gold n ng with 1pproxim1rely 2.25 · carau In emt'ralds ind approxlmlft'ly 2.05 carars In squart'-cut diamonds. 8. Ladies antique rln& wnh t .05 car•t diamond, and held- "' round diamonds rotaling one end• h1Jf cartts In 1 platinum seutna. C. Eighteen round diamonds tot1llng 1pproxlmately one carat surround thN!e 1ound1 tot1lin.a 1pproxlmarely 1.20 c1rats in a ladiH platinum mountlna. 0 . Very unique ladies 11htique pletlnum rlna whh four •mall round dlamon~• and thrtt round Mpphlra. · I J. C..Jlw).,,Jw~ J.-1.rd MEMBER ALRICAN OEM SOCIETY @ 1823 NEWf1,>AT 8LVO COSTM\tESA ~ IN THE SAME LOCATION SINC~ ,,_ 8arfJAmerlc1rd-Ma1t•r Ctltiaro-""°""' ~1 A Jump o~ Sn1~t Tlll8BEAT18 BLUE: Ri&ht now lf you feel saturated ritht up to here in election news, you can think of aomethbl1 else. How about sexy stulf? Or the baMin1 of lt, maybe. That seems to be a favorite preoccupation aJona our coastline these days. Conalder the good city of Huntiniton Beach, for eum· pie. Jwt the other ni1ht, the Huntintton City Council cte- . cided to come down with a four.month ban oa the "adult" entertainment•bualnesses. No such n:ew businesses wUI be allowed. Among those banned are rap studios~ encounter cen· ters, musage parlQrS and clubs with naked or semi-naked entertainers. Also out are-adult movie houses and adult motels or hotels. ADULT MoTELS! Maybe you thought all motels were mainly for adults. Not in Huntington Beach now. Kiddie motels only, folks. Any new dance studios arei also on the banned list. Dancing is apparently among the forbidden sins ln the -1 Oil City. The Arthur· Murray people might be a bit miffed ' ' ( ' 1, ~· •'• . ·' 'I ' .. ,,, I n DANCE BATILE OF THE CENTURY! r.:;: 9'--';td ., KELLY vs ASTAIRE 2GREAT RITA HAYWORTH HITS! ' • _ -ADOlrtlE ~ • ;~ ME. NJOU ,/ uviii ~· :J .;;E .( CUGAT ~ I I • ... 1111 KERN orc~estra 'r ".i"'l!!~~~..;'~ i Shockmg Behavior Worthy of Banning in Huntington Beach over this prohibition. If they've ever heard or Huntington Beach, that is. You'd think the least the Huntington city dads would do is to allow No-Touch dancing studios. Well, maybe they'd want to add No Wiggle, too. · WREN IT COMES TO SIN, lust and dancing, you've got to be awfully careful in Huntington Beach. You go dancing and it might be best to just stand still and tap your foot. The municipal savants of Huntington Beach an- nounced that the reason they got all exercised about sexy stuff is because an adult book store named Talk of the Town opened in nearby Newport Beach recently. featuring a bunch of lusUul volumes. Huntington Beach doesn't have a dirty book store yet So they banned it in advance. Just like dancing, you can't • be loo careful in shielding community vi rtue. IT WAS HEAVILY SUGGESTED t hat the horny magazines being offered by the Newport store would sure- ly attract criminal elements to the harbor community. They sure did. First the store was hit by burglars, followed shortly thereafter by arsoni sts. The place was in· temally incinerated. That is what you call really hot st~k. Despite all this travail, the Talk or the Town people are vowing to get back into business in Newport, the best efforts of the criminal elements aside. Where the firebugs and burglars leave off, however, Newp6tt City Hall shall take up the battle cry for virtue through legal action and roning la~. Thus they would pitch the smut operators out · of town to seek more lax locations. ' Apparently that won't be Huntington Beach. HOW ABOUT COSTA MESA? Costa Mes:tfri~ials have been GD a long 11tt.J»paign to maintain community purit$;1rTheY must be miffed in recent times because Newport Beach and Huntington Beach have beeA getting all the attention. It seerm like a long time since Costa Mesa busted a call girl operation or clapped a topless dancer in chains. So just the other night, the Costa Mesa City Council. in it.a infinite wisdom, ~hrew a massage parlor out of town. That was just for warm-ups. You know, to keep in practice. Tour of Duty Travelers Boost Marines PORTI.AND, Ore. (AP) -An- ;~ na Cuper disproves the adage ,.. .. tbat all the Marines need are a :: few 1ood men. •• 1 Mn. CUper, M , has had ei1ht ': f amlly members in the Marines. : : and bu ·come as close ae pool· :---ble to becoming one herself. the United States to boost J.he Marines. The two were ln"'lhe Portland area thJs week. THEY LIVE ON Social Securi· ty payments, mailed from home by her son, a 16-year Marine. .. ,'.: B ti nd and con fl n ed to al.!> wbeetchalr. she an her husband,·· Frank. have lolled 43,000 miles 11 ln a Volbwaten bus on a tour of . Victim Chosen .,. "f • 1 n, 'LAUREL, Md. <AP> -Rep. , •• Gladya N. s,.llman, 62, semi· I c:oD8doul .,..... 1ufter1Da a heart h ·~~k1 wu ov•rwhttml"'1J re· ,,, •Jee1eC1 to eoncn-Oil ,.....y from Maryl&DCt'1 5th Diltrtct. Her a.publican opponent wu &evfll a. 110•, a form11 f Tnuurr Department tMld1et ualpt wbb bu uver held -*· u..omce. Cu per, 86, describes hla wife as a "gung·bo Marine." Her first husband was a Marine, and she served tn the M arlne Corps Auxiliary. Mrs. Cuper said she didn't tell the Marines she was bU.nd and ln a wheelchair when the wrote to propose a tour of the United States ln their behalf. --- • NATION Humor Not His ·Only Weapon MIAlll CAP> -When John Sptakellftlr of Buena Park died ln r1orlda '1 •l~rlc chalr lut year. Don Wrlabt pennM a Hr· toon that deKrlbed, •t-s> by hot· rifyln1 atep, what happena to a human body when 2,250 volll al el.ctrictty 1ur1e throu1h lt. The drawlna. entitled "The Electric Chair <A detailed di•· 1ram for the dt•th pen•lty ad· voe ate)." s howed how the "reaplratory center of the brain burn• up," and how "Electricity bunea, 1kln smokee, 1lvln1 off aound 1lmUar to fryln1 bacon." THAT DRAWING A~D. others won Wrllbt, political cartoonltt of The Miami News, his second PuUtzer Prize. He said the elec- tric chair sketch was a poignant example of some of the thlnja he tries to say in his cartoons, which are syndicated to about 150 newspapers nationwide. . "I think it is possible to get in· to other elements such as pathos and a level that transcends humor and le.aves you with a feeling of being utterly and total· ly washed out and disgusted," Wright said. "The capi~l punishment car· toon -it was not funny. And if you read it you would have to come away with a feeling of, 'My God, that's awful. Who in their right mind would draw such a thing.' And I think that's what is missing in a lot of the younger editorial cartoonists," he said. WRIGHT SAID HE worries about what he sees as a tenden- cy by young cartoonists "to use too much humor, to the extent that it's getting sort of sllly, almost i nnocuous , in what they '.re t.rying to say. "I think there may De too much emphasis placed on the value of humor in editorial car· loons and has led a lot of young cartoonists to feel it's the only weapon you have," Wright said. The 46-year-old Wright. who joined The News in 1952 as a copy boy and took his present position in 1963, said cartoonists shouldn't be afraid to adv6cate positions or support political candidates with their drawings. Bank Robbery Charges Faced CARTOONIST DON WRIGHT SOMETIMES USES PATHOS De•th Pen•lty Work Helped Sn•re Pulitzer Prtze Wright. for example, was an una bashed supporte r of John Anderson. the independent can· didate for president -who was endorsed' by The Ne ws -and used his cartoons to bols ter the Illino is congr essman 's can· didacy. "I would s uppo rt An · derson by lashing out at his op· poneAts, and Lord, I have plenty of material with Reagan and Carter," he said. "Ahd I have to . emphasize that really, I have reasons for liking John Anderson, not the least of which is he can · con1tr.,ct a sentence." Hla suppor t or Anderson represented a sharp departure from 1976, when he was aa earl,y anil enthuslaalic aupporter ol. President Carter. ! • ·1 took-my posltion on carter. early, and I thought of all the candidates, he was the one we should have. That ought to pw you some idea of my qualiftea. lions to judge candidates " he said, laughing. "Nevertheless, I drew him as I saw tum at the time -he was carefully drawn lo exhibit aqme stature." "And as he got on ln tbe pres· idency, he s hrunk . just I thinf his performance baa shrunk," Wrigb~ said . · WRIGtrr SAID HE hopes hi.a cartoons stimulate the tbinkini or those who read thtm, but acknowledged that probably doesn't happen to any great ex- tent. "I've been doing this a long time now and I would like to believe that I have some sort of influence on people. that I can affect the way people feel about capital punishment, the energy problem. conservation, and that I 'm somehow m a naging to change their minds or stimulate them lo lake concrete steps. .. But I'm not Stlfe whether I can say that and l 'm not s ure it really happens." Cartoonists ran 't separate themselves from newspapers. Wright said, expressing fear that some of his young col- leagues mi gh t not consider .... themselves journalists. ''EVEN WHEN I WAS much yo unger , I s till f e lt the responsibi lity that 's connected with being a newspaperman. But I don't see that or feetthat reflected in the work of some of the younger cartoonists l'm not sure they regard themselves as being part of the newspaper. "It 1s simply not enough to say witty things about political characters and government in· discretions or even sociological aberrations." he sa id. "In all of those things. if a cartoonist is a newspaperman. he ought to be co nduct ing hims elf li k e a newspaperman." By Suspect .t .... · • NASHVILLE, Tenn. !APJ - Joseph Paul Franklin, c~ged with violating the civil rights of two black joggers shot to death I in Utah in August, has also been accused or hol ding up t wo Nashville banks last Y.ear . ......... ,._ i-• ..r· --.. .• ."~-~f:r.e~~, ~ ... -~.~-~~~~-­ when you shop South Coast Plaza ~--·· this time of year! FBI agent P~il Thune s aid Tuesday that Franklin, 30, is ac· cused in federa l warrants of armed robberies at two Nashville branch banks April 3, 1979, within a half hour of each other. Thune said he obtained the warrants last week and that Franklin has not been asked to e nter a plea in the robbery cases. A federal grand jury in Salt LR.lee City indicted Franklin on Friday on charges that he violat-I ed the civil rigf\ts of two black m en shot by a sniper as they jogged through a park with two white women Aug. 20. Franklin was arrested Oct. 28 in Lak~land . Fla . .' on a fugitive warrant and is being held ln lieu of $1 million bond at t h e Hills borough County J ail ·in Tampa. He faces a hearinJ to- day in Tampa, at which federal authorities mu.st prove he ls the. same man iltlicted by Ure grand jury in Salt Lake City. Thune said Franklin must enter pleas in the Nashville ham robbery cases before authoriti~ can determine whether he will be brought to the city to face tht charges. Tiny Infant Loses Fight AMARILLO, Texas CAP> -A 13-ounce baby girl born at Northwest Texas ffoapjtal died in the fourth day of her Ure, a hospital spokesman said. The condition or the lO~·i nch girl - Guadalupe Florea . dauchter of Mr. and Mrs. Je1u1 fiorea of Amarillo, had declined ateadlly after her bl.Jth Friday. hotpltal officials said . Sbe was born 28 weeks after ·conception. docton aald, and at birth her chances al aurvt\lal were rated aa 1ero. She was able to breathe on h•r own at llr1t, but later needed · the' help of a "'8plrator, aald Gwen Hailta, the h o 1 p l ~ a 1 'f a u t'I t n a 1upervllclr. • Because our restaurants will treat you with complimentary "Refreshments" Every Weekday Afternoon From 3 to 5 p.m. NOVEMBER 5-14 Stop by the following participating mall restaurants and "Refresh· yourself-the choice is yours with our compliments Amat o's (U pper level I Carousel Court) Complimentary European cappucino with purchase of dessert. Back Bay Rowing & Running Club (lower level I Bullock's wing) Complimentary scoop of Haagen·D~s ice cream with purchase of a meal. Caffe Pasquini (Upper Jevel t Saks wing) Complimentary dessert with purchase of lunch. Carl's Jr . (Lower level I Sears wing) Complimentary soft drink with purchase of hamborger. Forty Carrots (Lower level I Saks wing) Complimentary fresh fruit shake with purchase of eotree. Kaplan's (lowef' level 7 May Co. wing) Complimentary danish will) purchase of beve<age. Lindberg's (Lower level I carousel Court) Compllmenta.ry cake and , coffee with purchase of lunch. Magic Pan (l ower level t Nordstrom wing) Complimentary mousse with purchase of lunch Pronto (Upper level I Bullock'! wing) Complimentary pastry and coffee with purchase of lunch. Rendezvous Cafe (Lowe< level I Carousel Court) Complimentary pbpcorn. Riviera (Lower level I May Co. wing) Salmagundi (Lower level I Bullock's wing) Complimentary beverage wit h purchase of soup or salad. '20th Century (lower level I Carousel court) Complimentary European cappuclno with purchase of dessert Vie De France (Lower level I NOtdstrQ!TI wing) Complimentary roll/crOlssant With purchase of coffee or Complimentary dessert with purchase of lunch. ,.. . • CALIFORNIA ~ •••• ~5.1.., ·Voters Reject ·.s~r)kmg .. ·Meas11r,~ Ag&in . .... . WINS THIRD TERM Alan Crenaton BEATS JIM CORMAN Bobble Fiedler .. 0£FEATEO PECK Robert Doman Legislat1ire Race Tight Libera l B e rma"' Conservatives Big Winners LOS ANGELES <AP> -The big winn e r s in the s t a t e Legislature races this year were two Los Angeles County men with oppo s ite p o l i ti ca l philosophies but a similar ambi- tion : liberal · Democrafic As - semblyman Howard Be11man and conser vat ive Re publican Sen. H.L. Richardson. Ber m a n . fro m We.st Los Ange les. be s t ed As sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy of San Francisco 26·22 in their battle to gain Democratic supporters to vote for them for speaker in December. BUT RICHARDSON and his money-funneling Gun Owners of California and Law and Order committees knocked off 22.year Senate veteran Albert Rodda of California and helped elect one other senator and about nine As · . sembly candidates. Rodda's loss to 30-year·old John Doolittle of Citrus Heights, fOJIJ!ler attorney for the Law and Order Campaign Committee, was the surprise of Tuesday's election. Doolittle won 52 per- cent to 48 percent. But four Assembly members also went down: two Democrats loyal to McCarthy and two Republicans who were beaten by Berinao candidates. . The election ch'anged the makeup of the Assembly from 50-30 Democrat to 48-32. The Senate stays the same with Democrats ahead 23-17. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Here are the winners of Tuesday's election for 80 state Assembly dis tricts CD -Democrat, R · Republican, x-incumbent): 111 Dl&trlct: St•n Slatham, Ra. 1no Dlltrict: Oouo••• Bc>Ko, D•. ·GOP Near Majority In House Delegates Jrd District· W•Uy H•rgtr, A. 4th Dl1trlct: ThomH H•Mi~n. D•. "" Ol11r1c1: Ju n _,,...,, A a. 4th District: L.eroy Grttne, D•. 7th Dlitrk:1 . Norman W•ters, D•. Ith Dl\trkt: Don Se!Mlslianl, A. tlh District: Wllh.m F1l•nte, R•. l~n DillrlC1: 8111 e..er. A. ltlh DIWIC1. A-'1 C.mpt,.11, D. 1111\ District. Tom a.ru. D•. Ulll D1stri<1: Ell"" H•nls, D•. Utll DIWtC\ Biii \.ockYtr, D•. Ull\ Dlstrk1. Glllltrt Mar9utll, R. '"" D11trl<t• Art A-s. D•. t1tll 0111t.cr Will,. 8r.,_, Da. lltll District 1..eO Mc:C.ortlly, Di. '"II Dist,.ct loull P~n. D• 10th Dlst,.ct Rober1 N•ylor, A•. 11'1 Dlst,.u · 8Yro<1 Slier, D. Uno Dl51 .. ct ErM\I ICOMYll, R. llrd District JoM VHconctllos. D• 141h DISlll<t Dominic CorltM', D. 2Slh Dlst,.ct: AJistar Mc:Ahster, D•. Hth District. Adrian FonaMt. R. 271h Dlstrk1. JOM Ttwrtn41n, D•. 11th District. Sam Farr, D. 19111 Dhlrlct: C.to/ H•llelt, Ra. lOlh District: Jim Cost•. D•. l 1't Dhttlct: Richard IAflm•n, D•. l2nd DIArlct: Go<don Olllly, R&. llrd District. Oon Rooers, A•. .Mii• Dhtrlct. Phillip Wyman, A•. JSth District: Gary Hart, D•. 361h District: O..rles 1m1>recnt, A•. 37th District. C.thlt Wrl9'1t, A. 31th Dlstrlcl. Marl•nL..8Follttte, A l'ltn District: Rl<h•rd IC•U. D. .0th Olsttlct: Tom a-, D•. Ost District: P•trlc« Holan, R•. 42nd Dlltrlct: William tvt <l, R•. 4lrd Dlllrict. -.rd a.r man, D•. 4'1h District: Mel u v1,,., D•. 0 th DISltl<t: ~rtcllet "OMnlhal, Dl<. 46tll Dlltrlct: Mlll.t Root, O•. •Ith O•strk1. Terna H119"", D•. 41th Dit1r1ct: Mll••ne 'N•ters. D1. •tlh Dlstrltt. C.--·· D•. SOlh Dls:trl<t Curtis Tu<ker, 0 1. Shi DIJltt<I: -llyn Ryan, R•. n no OIWkl: Gtr4MG FtlMClo, Ra. Slrd Dlstrk1. Dick Flol'CI, D. ~tl\.PhCrt<t Frank VlctftCI•, Oa. U th District Al<llerd Aletorrt, O• LOS ANGELES <AP I -Democrats clung to a slender one·vote Mth D•st,.<t Art Torrn. Da. edge today in California's House delegation after Republicans used Sith District D .. • EkM•, Di. Slln D1strKI OH>nls Brown, Ra a stream of television commercials and heavy spending to help de-st111D11tnct: ManlwwMllrt•ner.D feat four incumwt~mocrats. \;1 ~ 7 · .., .. , ,.. ~~$i;Uw ,,,.,,.,, Da Veteran Rel'! Ha rold • .. Blzz" Johnson, D-Roseville, Lionel '."\;-~. ~~ts"fh -~ ...... ,:~:.~~;~ Van Deertin D·Chula Vista and James Corman D-Van Nuys •lre1 D'""'' Bruce Youno. D•. • • . • • • , .. , .. 01\trtct O.ve S'1r1tng. R 1. went to defeat Tuesda y along W1th th•ee-term Rep. Jim Lloyd, D· ue11 D1w 1c1 Jim cr•mer. D West Covina. as the GOP made its strongest bid in years to win a ... h D•~trl<t Terry Goo111n. Da. . . . '7th Dl\lrlct. 9111 Laona rd, R • maionty of the 43·member del~g3llon. "'" D1llr1c1 ""••t 1n~11l, Cl.a. But Democrat Tom Lantos a Hillsborough eeonomist knocked n111 D•ilnct Aou JoMM>n. R• fr f h R B"ll R ' R R d ood · ' 10111 DlllrlCt .>onn U w•s, R o res man ep. 1 oyer , -e w City, to ensure that 11u D•u nct. o.et ""'•• D• De mocrats would retain control of the delegation. 12"" O•i.tr•ct Aich•rd Roo•nlon. Da. Jl rd DlltrlCI; NOian Frlu tlllt, R ALL OTHER INCUMBENTS seeking new terms won most of 741h Dtw oct. Ma•••n S.roeM>n, A•. . ' 1Jtll O•llflCt. D•vid K•llev. ~-. them easily. 7tth Dlsl,,Ct AOl>erl FratH, R&. Democrats have a 25·18 maJ'ority in the delegation now The l7th D•11•1ct: ._.,,., !>1oriit19, 11• Go . . 1e1h Dlltr•<t t..arrv K•PllOO, Da. P needed a net gain of four seats to take control for the first 1t1n D1m 1c1 Pe•• c,..con. Da time since 1958. The line up in 1981 will be 22·21 . eot" Dmric1 w..i •• Oeodtn. Di The GOP's California victories were part of a national trend * * that gave Republicans at least 26 more House seats. * One of the eas iest GOP victories came along the Mexican LOS ANGELES CAP) -Here border. where Rep. Clair Burgener, R-La Jolla, easily defeated a re those elected Tu~day to the Tom Metzger , leader of a Ku Klux Klan faction. Burgener won state Senate <D·Democr at. R· about 85 percent of the vote . Republican, X·incumbent >: Ut Dl\trlCI fll•y .>onnion, Ra TUESDAY ALSO MARKED the political comeback of former Lt.· Jro D1w 1<1 Jonn 0ooi.111•. "'· Gov. Mervyn Dyma lly, who defeated Republican Don Grimshaw to l•" D•\troct M111on Mllru . Ra. 1111 D1w1c1 O.n•tl &ottwroont. D. take the seat of outgoing Rep. Charles Wilson, D-Hawthorne. "" D1m1ct N1cno1H Pet•••. D1. ln one of the most emotional races. Rep. Robert Dornan. R· '•t11 o.si .. e1 Alfred A•qu•"· D•. lllll 01Jlt1cl Jonn G.,_n01, Da Santa Moni~a. defeated Democrat Carey Peck. son of actor 1s1" D111 .. ct Row Ann ""''"· D•. Gregory Peck, for the second time. 11th D .. ••1u H..-rv AM110. D. lttn Dillrlct EO O.vls, R Democrats also lost a San Diego a rea.seat they hoped to win 1ut D1m 1c1. N•.wton 111un•11. 11. when San Diego Deputy Mayor Bill Lowery bested state Sen. Bob 13'" Di.irie1 o..1c1 Room •• D•. Wi.lso•. n-~esa. • ,... u 111 Dl11t1e1 H.L. RlcN rQIOn, Ra. "~ •271h Olllrlct. R-'1 &ewr1y. Rr. James t man, a 20-year veteran ~t known as the co-author nth D11tr1u &111 Gr-. D•. ltst Olstrl<t Diiie 5'19•-. Ra. of U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy's national health insurance plan, lost JJre1 D1w 1c1. ""'"••m C•mp0e11, A• by only 864 votes to anti-busing activist Bobbi Fiedler in a race u ih 01s1r1c1 Jo"" B•tlla\, Ar. where Los Angeles' school integration plan was the key issue. ~~:~g:::~:~:. ii~'e~~···· 0• Clear Skies for Many Atlantic Coast Dotted With Showers R•ln w•s 1u1tere<1 trom Horth C:.roliN to 1\11,tl,,., wlln • few lhllf' d•rsnowers owr tht mid All•nhc Cotit states. Tiie '"t OI Int M iion llad c 1 .. r ....... A•ln w•• t llPOCttd •1-IN north Pac1lk C:O.st, with •uttered __ ,, •<rou the reu ol tilt P.cll lc Hortll-•I inlO ....... " Mont•n•. A t l\ance of '"""' Jhowers ..,., !If edl'1 ed lor llCW1"''n New li."91•nO •nO .,., .. ol New Yor• , Temoeracwe• •r•-tho nttlon Hrly today r~ from 20 oegrH\ In W•rr-. Minn .. to 11 ~, .. , 1n ICt YWttl.f'I•. ...-, .... hl•wy ............ -Mondev-'••Of\f II WW 00 "Ot ........ Y<I"' r-D!I a lO p"' '"11 o.•or• 7 o M •M "°"' CC6v w111 be d•h.-ttteo =~:!:v:.;:: ::"t."t"°."..:'o ~ btl<l''I I I A"' 11\d \'Ou< Ci»1 *'" 09 ,,.,. .. ,.., Te t••rm..w HI u ~~ CAUl'OtUUA BO •rsllelcl 17 ~ 81'(1ht •• St Fr•IM ll '9 MOnltrty 11 "' ,.. • .,, lei '° "' O•lltMd 71 SS Sa<••rnenlo JI so Sant• Bart»rt 11 SS $to<k10l'I t2 "' Tlltrm•I to 51 ..... 0.. • u Bit BH r )2 lS C.tallM n sa l!t Centro '1 51 L0119 eea<ll '1 JI Newport IHC.fl n 5l Conclnnatl Clov .. •no Dal·Ft Wiii Otnvtr Ott roll Ou I 11th Ht ltfl• H-111111 HOIKtOft 1nc1nap1ls Jacksnvllt IC•,,. Clly LOtlltOM Little Aoo LOIA"llttt L.ovlsvlll• s• a. se u ,. so •• 40 u 1' •S 11 tO JO IS 70 71 ,. M JI .. n ~ .0 IJ S4 ,. '° 17 .0 ... 4' Coall•I 1\19" .. lo 11, tow 56. lllltftd M911 71 '°a. -42. w .. .,. •l. u .. wl>H't, 11911' ••rte4>1e •Inell nltftl 4ll>CI rNrnlftQ nows 0.COffll"O "" 10 --• 1o u •-•lln -It two ---°0Nn48'( 81ttt" -· ~ty t'"41 two to """ 1 .. t. NltM -ltW""'9 ...... IOI •ltn "''"_,le!,..._ c1Mtlft9. TOO.Y Se<Oflfl '°"' u:oa '·"'· o.~ Second h"" t;OS ,,m, U T'MUlllOA't f'1m i., We_,.,r Firs•..., ,,., •• ..,, 1.1 l'lrtt 1119" 7:U Aj!ft. U Oft!arlO t s tO fllllm~lr9 .. •t HieM -motlllftt ltW C'-lne» Se<Oll4 low t :JI •""· U ' Mid tot Wiii N1Y IUMlllN T!WrNt~ StcOlld llith 81'9 p,m, '·• afltrflOOft. °"'' "'1181 cl•l"f t i hn rl,..•117..,.,., ..... ,,. p.m. • S.n lkfNlrdlllD tS m t Stfl JIM 112 SI SIM'tl• AM IO S2 S.ntt Crut 10 » S.11lt Mllrl• 14 SS i11t•ec""-MOM ,, ... ,u •. m., .-tu:11 p.m. .,, ...... 8uf lvf...., 8..U 8..U 8weU A•I· Mu Pnl. A•I Mn Dir Zuma 2 4 12 "2 3 W Santa Monica 2 4 1J 2 a W Hew.,ort 2 4 12 I a SW San ~County I S 12 2 4 W Outlook for Tlnand~: 8Upt bacl'UM ln ... t fuU.,beacbM. · 't , At ...... 70 Att•nt• 7J '""""°'' S1 .u ., .,,,,.,...,,, ,. 111m.,o ,. Bol• .. .... .. .h ''""""'le It ........ • ... CAttlfl11K 1' .a Clltrl1l11 WV o..,.,.,. Clllc- ' ~I• .:!::"-~. -::-'.'!:!~:!~~~~~~ BEATS METZGER Clalr Burgener .,..I.._.. LIBERAL WINNER' Howard Berman Mass Kille r Manson De nied Pa role Ag ain VACA VILLE (AP) -A defiant Charles Manson, who ad. milted he was still dangerous, was denied parole by the stale Board of prison terms . whjch cited the mass killer's "long historyofinstability and criminality." To board suggestions on how Manson, convicted of the 1969 Tate-La Bianca murders. m ight improve himself before his next parole hearing in 1981, Manson s aid, "I'm not going to do that. . . I '11 stay here forever. . . I've got that long.·' He made the statement to reporters Tuesday outside the hearing room after the board came to a decision at the close of a 21/2-hour session at Vacaville Medical Facility. a state prison 4S miles east of San Francisco. Oaotct\hUfn ('0 11 ric•f t fUIS l fJ#wfd SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The state Court of Appeal Tuesday unanimously upheld the convicHon and life terms of three young men in the ransom-kidnapping of a busload of Chowchilla school children four years ago. But the court voted 2-1 to throw out findings ( J of harm which required l ire terms without ST ATE possibility of parole for _ James Schoenfeld. 28, ------------o f Athe rton , a nd Fr e d eri~k Ne whall Woods, 28. of Woodside . Schoenfeld's younger brother, Richard. 25. also is se~ving a life t~rm ~or his part in the kidnapping of 26 ch1ldten and their driver from the Central California town of Chowchilla on July 15, 1976. MotNfl"H c·,,,., rof ('o uuc·il .. "4H1rfl SAN JOSE (AP) -Women will control the city council and the county board of s upervisors if early results stand in Sa n Jose and Santa Clara County The city already has a woman mayor. Janet Gr ay Hayes who wasoneofthe first women to become mayor of a laru ci: ly when she was elected in 1974. • 'V Other Results . Mixed J,.OS ANGELES CAP> -Jn virtual rerun of 1978, Californi voters have rejected a ball measure to separate smokers norr;-smok~~·~~~::-::::-;;:::::-d.~~.c._.U The defeat of Proposition ~ Tuesday was a victory for t.b tobacco industry. which may en up spending $3 million on a cant paign that labeled the initiative• bureaucratic power gra b and &ti intrusion Into business an41 personal privacy. : It appeared that the final vott would be close to the 46 to 54 pe~­ cent margin by which a broadet initiative was defeated two yea~ ago. . l THE TEN OTHER statewi~ ballot measures showed mix~ res ults. Environmental groups scored~ major victory with the passage qr Proposition 8, a state constit~­ tional amendment aimed at prf- venting the proposed Peripher._i Canal from damaging North Coast "wild rivers" or wat~r quality in the Sacramento-Seib Joaquin Delta. ' But a conservationist-backed plan to buy up land around Lake Tahoe whe r e development threatened to pollute the lake suf. fered a setback with the defeat of Proposition 2, an $85 million bond me asure to finance the land purchases. VOTERS APPROVEb a $2S5 million park bond, a proposal to allow juries of eight instead of 12 mem bers to try civil suits of less than $15.000. and a property tax break for homes and businesses that install solar heating or cool- ing syste m. Proposition 10 would have re· ' quired posted no-smoking areas i n publ ic buildings , in r est a ura nts, and in indoor workplaces if workers requested them. It would have banned smoking in public areas of retail stores, elevators and buses, with violators fined $15. Supporters of the measure . who . backed the 1978 initiative, cited studies calling "second·hand" smoke harmful to people with heart or lung problems and tothe lungs of healthy non-s mokers. Opponents disputed the s tudies . and claimed Proposition 10 would hurt business and industry ; dis- rupt factory work: divert police from catching criminals : and let government regulate privatec()ti • duct. · · • !'W AS IN 1978, the measure led by more than 2-1 in early opinion With about 40 percent of the vote counted in Tuesday's election, attorney Zoe Lofgren and former banker Rebe~ca Morg~ held comf~rt.a~I«: leads in their ra ces for county supervlsor. They will JOIO incumbent Suz anne ~n in giv· i11g the board a 3·2 majority of women. f HYf' ,.,,_.,,lo f'o uf rol Mnft.,. . ~ '~7"'·~w~~ four major tobacco co~an\es­ R . J . R ey no lds, Bro wn & Williamson. Philip Morris and INDEPENDENC E (AP> -In a bid to regain control of a shrinking water supply. Inyo County residents vot ed by a 3-1 margin to force Los Angeles to seek county approval before pumping more groundwater. The vote Tuesday was the latest salvo in a water war dat· ing back to the tum of the century. when the powerful Los ~ngeles Department of Water and Power began quietly buy· mg up Inyo County land lo gain control of its precious water. Los Angeles depends on Inyo County for a bout 80 percent of its drinking water. Cranston Elected TpThirdTe~ LOS ANGELES <AP> -U.S. Sen. AJan Cranston survived an election blitz that won control of the Senate for the GOP. soundly defeating Republican challenger Paul Gann and becomiM the first California senato't"'ln so years to win a third term. "I'm going to miss Jimmy Carter and I'm going to miss many of my old friends in the Senate," Cranston told sup- porters Tuesday. "I will be car· rying the bariner of the cause that brings us together in the pemocratic Party." WITH 1ee PE RCENT of the precincts counted, Californians were favoring the 66-year-old Senate majority whip with 57 percent of the vote to 37 percent for Gann, Cranston had 4,636,714 votes t.o 3,036,488 for Gann. Cranston had directed his aides Monday to research the state record for the widest . mar1in and the most votes scored in a U.S. Senate election. "I• expect to be able to work injunction G ranted SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A I.Ural Judi• bu ftaatAKt a pre-llm lnary lnJ1U>cUon tn an ur- 111at•' laWIUI• prohlblttn1 ~ atate pritons from 111tptn1 more than one person to a cell in maximum Mcurlty demtlon areu. - much more effect ively with Rona ld R eagan '"tha n wi t h Richard Nixon," Cranston said after the former California gov- ernor's victory was assured. . -~"All I wanted was a victory," Cranston admitted after his own win showed less than the 2·1 edge late polls. ha~ forecast. Cranston had expected a healthy share of crossover votes in the bitter contest with Gann, the 68-year-old c o-auUaor of Proposition 13, the California property tax ceiling initiative • running for his first political of·· fice. R eag a n Win Draws J eers BERKELEY <AP> -About 3.500 University of California students tool( to the streets of Berkeley protesting the election of Reput>Ucan Ronald Rea1an as praident. The atud&nts marched up Telegraph Avenue T uH d ay ntcht chanUnt ·'Down With Reagan" and "ftea1an Hu To Go." Ot.hera swarmed. UC resi- dence ha.lb encouracint more student.a to joln the demonatra· tlon. ·Berkeley ,police otflcer l:mest Mooltl aa.id the rally WU ''loud and rowdy.•• but that QO d1ma1e or. Injuries w•r• reported. I l ... r ... ,,Lorillant -opponents outspen.l. supporters about 8-1 after JuJy 1 and mounted an effective radio and television advertising cam· paign in the final six weeks. .v Another apparently effective campaign was wctged by farmers against Proposition 8. which led by more than S-1 in a September poll and wound up with a relative- ly close victory. With 1()() percent of the vote counted. th~ ·measu~ led tty S4 to 46 percent. It piled up huge ma rgins in the San Francisco Bay a rea and San Diego County. enough to offset opposition in the San Joaquin Valley and on the North Coast. An in s urance compa ny - sponsored measure, Proposition. 3, lost by a lmost 3·1. It would have given a tax break to in· surance companies for contribut- ing to a guarantee fund fo~ in· surers who go broke. APPROVAL,OF Propos ition 6 a llows the Legis lature t o authorizejurieS of eight members for civil suits in Municipal Court, where the maximum amount is· $15,000. Voters also approved; -Proposition 9, which shifts $15 million In left-over bond fUnds from a drinking waler cleanup program to a new effort to decon- taminate groundwater. -Proposition 11, which rolls back $2.7 million over fi ve years In pay raises for 27 state Supreme Court a.id appellate justices, end- ing .>alary inequities created by a -"urt decision that partly in· hhuated a judicial pay U mil. Propo11l&lon1 Prop l·P•r118on0 l"rOPl·T-lton(t ,.,...,..n ___ "'•P•·Bonovotn Prot1$-DINU0< Prot1t •.J"'i.t ,.,... 7 ·Sol• Propl·,..,ipller•I ,.,.,, .. w•1tr ._ Proti IO>Srnot\lflO ,., .. 11.J11C19H "" ... >,m ,Ju u'°. no J,6Gl,•ll l,"1._ t, .. ,11 ....... , 1,ne,'4s s.w.s1• , • ·~. "' 4,0ll,21• 4,157.Stt UI0,1'4 4,Hf,•$4 t,Al2,aa i.-.u1 >,l11,111 ..... .u ,,.,...., U U,ltt 4,.S.Q$7 •.m .ai1 2,1».5Gl VotQlg T ime Firm SAN FRANCISOO (AP> -A federal Judi• ref"'td Tuetday to extend vot.lnl ln San Fran· ciaco by two boun, dapite fean by De~rata that the city's lenttby ballot would preveot 11 many as .0,000 voten from cut- ln1 balloU. ............. ,. .E,.;a~tO~ ... , ... ane Ro1>e11 N weect1Publl1her ... ·~ ~ 1 r.. w......,, Nooe11~ 5. ,., Barbara Kre1blch/Edit0tltl P~ Editor Fire-f.ighting Plan Successful· Was it fato that caUHd the 15,000..acre Owl Fire - one-ol lhe lar1eat v r ln Ora.n1 Couptr -to break out lh n..,t. hot, dry winds ol tJ\lJ year's Santa Ana seuon began to blow el1ht days •10? Fire invesli&alora say it defin1tely wu not. They say the fare that bore down oJJ Yorba Llnda housing tracts with the rury of heU wu the work of an arsonist. Nor was It coincidence that the flre, for all its s ize and rury, conaumed only one house -a ranch structure located near a citrus grove. That the fire did not roar through scores of expensive. new homes on the e.ast side of the city is due to the ex- e mplary efforts of the Orange County Fire Department and firemen from more than a score of other agencies both in Orange a nd Los Angeles counties. More than 750 firef tgbtus ult.imat.e!Y te~ded . The response once agamaemol\strated how-s uccessful· ly well coordinated mutual aid plans can work. And the response also is a credit to the use of special five-engine strike forces that can quickly be dispatched to potential trouble spots. · It was, quite simply, a job well done . Controlling the News The United Nations Education al, Scientific and Cultural Organization <UNESCO) doesn't give up easily. The 21st gen eral conference of the 152-nation body in Belgrade once more turned its attention to establis hing som e sort of control over the dissemination of interna- tional news. Third World me mbers, a majority in the organiza- tion, feel 'they have been neglected a nd misrepresented on the world scene, notably by the Western·press. They demand a "new information order ." In effect, this would limit information out of Third World countries to reports a~proved by their governments and -they hope -reqwre the world press to publish this informa- tion. This would involve; establishing codes of press ethics · and taking steps to ·'protect" journalists -meaning to license them . It's unhappily true that news coming out of Third World countries tends to emphasize famines, floods, droughts and civic upheaval, rather than whatever pro- g r ess is being made in education, agriculture and similar areas. But that happens to be the way of the world. It would be helpful if UNESCO could assist t hese countries in d e- veloping technical systems that would enable them to communicate better with other nations and within t heir own boundaries. Trying to control t he free flow of information is a nother matter. That doesn't seem to bother the UNESCO majority. It's given the green light for a 1983 conferen ce on international press standards and authorized funding for a panel of experts to determine how those standards can be improved a nd enforced. This, we are told, will be a first step in creation of the "new info rmation order." Not on this s ide of the 'Atlantic it won't. Union vs. Jobs ... A frequent complatnt of U.S. auto workers has had to do with the way Japan is robbing them of their jobs by selling too many Japanese-made cars and motorcycles here . Washington has bent over backwards trying to get some of the J apanese firms to build pl all ts in the United States and employ American workers. One of the first to r espond was Honda, which for the past year has been operating a motorcycle plant with 200 employees in Marysville, Ohio. and plans to open a 2,000-worker plant turning out 10,000 Honda Accords a month by 1983. T his would seem to be good news, but the United Auto Workers union still finds something to grumble about. Seems the Honda folk, following the Japanese custom of corporate loyalty and harmony, issue the employees white overalls and caps bearing the company name. When one e mployee turned up wearing a cap with the UAW insignia he was asked to get back into uniform. The company also bans the wearing of UAW buttons because they migbt scratch paint. This has infuriated UAW officials who have com- plained to the National Labor Relations Board contending ·Honda's d,re~ code is designed to interfere with their ef- forts to unioruze tbe plant. - Honda management points out their plants in Japan and other countries are unioruud and the dress rules.are s imply int e nded to e ncourage pride in quality l' workmanship. .,. · ~ • Assuming the UAW Is genuinely interested in promot- ing more jobs for auto workers, the union would appear to be once ag~ biting a hand that could fued them. -• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views expre~sed on this page are those of their authors and art ists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Oaijy Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd I Pursesnatchers_ ByL.M.BOYD When a woman holds her un- clasped handbag upside down with nothing more than fingertip pressure to kfep the conte11ts from falling out, you may think she's a bit odd. In fact. though, she's execul. '.! one of the best defenses against pursesnatchers. The Dear Gloomy Gu~ t W e used to say "nothin1 la sure but dU th and taxes" but 1J n I 1 a Li o n a tt o u l d probabty be added to the Utt O.M. GI .. _.,, ht C"911fte ... I •tt ~·· ...... .. ....... ... .. ... . -~.:r. """'' ............ ... =-..... ,... .......... .. ,~-....-~- sorry soul who grabs that thing will scatter what's in· side all over the street. It's more likely that the woman than the thief will take lhe limetopickitall up. No, the federal census doesn't count everybody. cer- tainly not. In fact, the first such census even with far fewer to count missed some. OQe notable in particular, who failed an a'ppropriate listing wu the man retpon1ible ror that census, Thomes J ef- rerson. The Welab dictionary µtat lexlcoeraphen in wales start· ed about60 years ago l• well on Jts way. Tbey'\le completed the N 's. tt wat bad manners ln the M lddle Aiet to put a bone back on thei'late after you ftnlabed chewlq the meatfrom ll. You were •llPPOHd to drop tald bone on U.Ooor. r ~--------~~------------------.-.----Rowland Evam I Robert Novak .. . Behind the. Hostage MQneuven. W ASIUNGTON· -On the eve- ning of Oct. 10, a long-distance tel~phone call to Ronald Reagal) by a senior adviser warned ex- pllcllly that President Carter was plotting an election·eve release of the American hostages and pro- posed immediate contingency plans to minimize political fallout. Behind the warning were two sets or facts: first, campaign rhet oric by the president and his sur- rogates, an o"'bjectlve rea4lng of which hinted at a pre - e I e ct ion break - t h roug h ; seco nd . substantiated reports from European capitals of agreement between Washington and Tehran on removing economic obstacles to the release of the hostages. A Treasury team under Deputy Secretary Robert Ca rswell was putting final touches on the com- Andy Rooney plex lssue ot m'lfreezlng blocked luolan auet.5. Simultaneously, agreement was being worked out for releasing military apare parts paid for by Iran before the shah'•· fall. "IT WAS ALL there for anyone · to see,'' the Reagan adviser told us. If the president bad not been assured one month before the election that his hostage ploy would work, there would have been no U.S. tilt toward Iran in the Iran-Iraq war. , The till was only one Carter signal that he was ready lo deal on the hostage queslton. The ad- ministration's movement toward converting the hostages intb a pre-election asset really began with Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie's letter to Iranian P.time Minister Rajai in late August. Rajai quickly interpreted that letter s an "apology." which Muskie i mmediately4Jenied. Reagan's advisers began to ask themselves this question: Was that letter a first step in the buildup to a pre-election political coup or simply a welcoming gesture to the recently-formed I LEE I f\CQCCA )fNf us ! I Iranian "aovemment?" They de- cld.ed the tor1Mr. In the oplnioo ol the Reagan camp, the big C&Nr push lbr the dreaded "October surprise" had begun. THE MEMORY was strong how Carter had manipulated na- tional opinion when the hostages were seiied one year ago, using it to revive his poJ>ularity. Carter's celebrated television Interview from the While House early on the morning of the crucial Wisconsin primary ·had left Its imprint: When it comes to politics, this pre- sident means business. Carter's maneuver was made possible by the outbreak of war tiefween Iraq-and-Iran Sept. 22. No longer were the hostages in· dispensable as a "unifying force" to keep together feuding factions of what passed for an Iranian gov- ernment. The Iraqi war now sub· stiluted for the hostages. The hostages became a bargaining chip in Iran's wartime need for guns and gold. Reagan's European agents began to pick up the scent of So- viet_ pressure on Ayatqllah Kho· meini through his closest political agent. Sadegb Ghotbzadeh, for spee.dy release ..ol the ho.s.Lalel. Ghotbiadeh long bas been known ~s one of the Kremlin's key allies m the maelstrom of Iranian politics. THE REASON for Soviet pres- sure was Moscow's h<ipe that re-- lease of the Americans ~uld guarantee Carter's re·eleetiQn and defeat Reagan, feared aa a bi~·stick warmonger. The im· portan~ ot this Soviet factor in the poisoned politics of Iran became known wf\en Gholbzadeb himself made clear that' the hostages sJiould be released before ~ov. 4 to help Carter. The lingering problem facing Carter now became ii show of good faith to persuade Khomeini thayhe U.S. would carry out it.a t pre.election commitments: un· leashing the spa re parts and un- freezing Iranian assets. In the leading role as Carter's agent for arranging to free Ira- nian assets was Deputy Treasury Secretary Carswell. one of the ad· ' m ini stration 's s hrewdeSl • operatives (who lea m ed the ropes as an aide lo former Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon 20 years ago ). "Carswell runs a very cozy operation," one top administra- tion official told us. Cars well 's Treasury team dropped hints 1n the hi ghest bank- ing ai\d financial levels: Carter would give Iran what it wanted on asset freeing , with the U.S. gov - ernment underwriting private ... claims against the Iranian gov· ernmcnt ELABORATE CLUES were srattered to convince Iran that the U.S really did intend to carry out its commitments. Is rael's clandestine shipments to Iran from its own F-4 stockpiles were not hindered by Washington , in the .S .. warehoused and newly· produced spare parts were moved to embarkation points ready for a1 r frc1ghtto Tehran. Littl e wond~r . then . that Reagan got that phone call from c top adviser Oct 10 But with thE fix clearl} in. Reagan decided hE was powerless to intervene om . way or the other. Saying nothing he c:ould only wait and sec when Carlt>r's hostage coup would takE American \'OIPrson ;\;O\' -t l It's Remarkable How Long the ~ody Lasts ' I am 60 now. I hat~ it and I constantly inspect my brain and my body for signs of declines. I don't see it yet. but I suppose others do. There must be some. I played three sets of tennis today and I never played better. As a matter of fact, I never played that well. Oh, I notice a little falling apart in the face when I look in the mirror to shave but it's no worse a look t han I had when I looked too young at 2S. The only reaJ- ly disturbing thing about that is that to detect the de- terioration in the face. I need my glasses now. f am most surprised at my physicil stamina. I played' a 'lot of football in high school and col- lege and. wat~bin.g games on tel~vision, I dream of what it would be ijke to get in for ~ few plays. I thirik I cow. but I guess Oiarles McCabe I'd be in for an a wful surprise - still, I tend to run up a night of stairs two al a time I don't walk. J feel in shape. People haven't started saying how good I look for my age yet That's a good sign. IT SURPRISES ME to con- sider how long the body lasts. I've been doing all these things J do with it for a long time now. And without much servicing. either. I suppose I 'II be the last one to know but I haven't detected any deterioration' in my ability to do what I do for a living, either. I write. of course. It still bothers me to look at something I wrote, five years ago. I don 't usually like it. I have a feeling I've learned a lot since then and wouldn't say it that way now. Is the time ever going to come when I read somelhtng I wrote a few years ago and say to myself, ··r couldn't do it that well any longer?'' This is a recurring thought I've had for as long as I've writ· ten for a livinl{. The things I wrote last year never seem verv good, but that thought doesn't usuall)" occur to me as I'm writ· ing them. Some kind of protec· tive thing that goes . .,on ln the brain. no doubt. What w<ir r1 es me 1s that physical deterioration is a lot more apparent than mental de- terioration. There's no mirror I'm going to be able to 1ook .in~ even with glasses, and be able to determine that m·y· brain• has· ~ MY~ look o_lder. There brown spots are. some veins showing through I still expect Ben l;logan or now, and a few brown spots. I Sam Snead or at least Arnold hadn "t noticed them until I Palmer to win the U.S. Open · hear_d_ the ~ommercial s ~n ctgam ev$.xsar but, of course. · telev1sl0n tellin~ about SOtrter11·1~t:~Q;: tn~•"'~ .. ~~­ salve that gets nd of them. I tot1 solid evidence that the body · can 'l believe _th!! salve is very can't do at 40 what it did al 30. good for you if it makes brown Let alone 70. The evidence· of spots in your skin go away. The what the brain can and cannot salve certainly doesn't make do with added age 1s not so you any younger and youth is clear. · the only thing that would ~eally My hero as a writer is E. B. help. I,f they ever make a Jar of White. He's 81 now and living in that. I LI have some. . Maine. I know him some, not ' Eve? lhoug~ my feehng that I well. and I'd like to ask him why haven l deter:iorat~ much men-he isn't writing much any more. tally or physically 111 the last 40 Has he said what he .wants to year~ may_ be an illus.ion, I am say ~r does he feel he can't say convmc~ that fhere is en~u~h it as well a ny q_iore ? Or is it just ~rulh to it to be cause for re101c-that be wrote to make a living mg. Forty adult years of full and doesn't have to do that now? 1 strength and mental capacity When I'm 81 I hope I can read isn't bad. Even if it's part ii· what I wrote when I was 60 and lusion. r think it wa sn 'l very good. ( . ... Cronkite Wins Trust By Making Us Feel Good More people irr this coWJtry trust Walter Cronkite than trust God. according to a recent survev of the Ladies Home Journal. More people t.tUst 'Cronkite than the popeoreven Billy Graham. Some 40 percent of those polled by the JournaJ said that they hav e fait h in Cronkite but only 3 percent put their faith in God. These r e- markablerev· e latlon i; mus t tell us so m e th ing about the peo. pie w~ wefe questtoned by the macwn~. The tdltors <or the promotion de· partment) sent quest lollJlaires to 1,000 randomly selected J ournal aub•cribers, held 1roup dl•· cussiont with homemakers and workinC motben In California, M IHach.Uletta and Missouri and lnterv1ewed college women et four major universities. They 1 110 visited rive elementary •cbools. It la conceivable. of courae. that .. J the whole thing is a scam, a mere clever publicity stunt to increase the circulation of a magazine by a "finding" so outrageous that it is stunning. But more likely the thing is true though it may have been ever so slightly manipulated . T he general respect in which Cronkite is held is a highly·exploitable as- set. And this in itself raises in· terestingquestlons. THE IOURNAL pollees are a cynical lot, with the exception or Cronkite . ''Nooe" was the most popular choice. It was the most popular among political leaden, wlth <nratd Ford, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan following. In the cate1ory of· ·reUtioua leader'' good,c>ld None came out n n t over the pl)pe, who on1Y.JOt 3t percent ofth~"·ote. . . • I certainly have nothtn1 agalnat Cronkite as a petsoQ or 111 a news reader; but I would ralff a '1n1le and not unimportant cauestlon : Whal la the~ lO m l.atnaat. about Cronkite? It ls easy to truat a person who ls bland as a mou.1H. IU1 Cronkite'• job, as he sees ll and obviously u CBS sees It , to be conalstenUy ln· orrenalve on Juat abou.t every 1\lb- . ject he tackles. This. quality 11 doubtless a part of the man's nature, which is a doubly blessed thing for him and for his network. I SUGGEST THAT "trust" and "respect" are not the proper words to be used in describing our premier newscaster. He makes us feel comfortable. He belongs in that c\tegory where also dwell Norman Vincent Peale and the Reader·s Digest: He glves us the assurance that au fond people are okay. He's a nice guy who is a ble to create the impression to his listeners that they are mce guys too. This is really a kind of magic, Quotes •'The destruction or our nation'• groundwater will contlftue unless we move immediately to locate a ll pote ntial sources of groundwater contamination and take action to btodt the further n ow of toxic •ubltances into the 1rouncl. ''-A report by the llMee 0.H,..._ Opera&aoaa subcom- mltlee wamlq of the threat to drtnkln& water from chemical wastes. and should be valued as such. Certainly neither God nor the pope are comfy these days. God exists. all right, but he is so frac- tionalized as to be almost con- troversial. He exists as interpret- ed by-the late Jim Jones. by the Moonles, and by a hundred other prospering sects, some goofy and some not. NOBODY j\MONG Catholics in this country can feel comfy with our current J>Ope, a hard-lining Polish gentleman who continues to tear our Catholics apart with his intransigence On the subjeelof birth control. And he didn't make too many people happy when be plucked Father Drinan out of the U.S. Con.gre~s because he WU, of all things, "engaging in politics.'' With Uncle Waller we have no such problems.' He is there to make us feel gQQd, artd be d()(\t it. He milst be embarrassed belQ\d • belief to be placed above Goct,and the ~pc In a lightweight "sut· vey, ' but If he I~ he doesn 't dhow ' lt. I Whnt will ha1>pen to "Tnist ln • America, '1 as the magaiine'sSW'" vey wa~ entitled, when Wal\crre· Urea ln 1981, as he ha& promlffd? One wee.,. for the country. CONSUMER C>••· .. -·-ln<·- "You're.waatinc your time. He gets his inspiration from the profit sheet." "Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities in government and business. Mail your q~stions to Pat Dunn, At Your Service. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As many letter• as possible will be answered. but phorw!d inquiries or letters not including the reader's full name. address a.nd business hours' phone numbeTcannot be considered. Thiscolumnappearsdai· ly except Sundays." 'l'•% E%~tf .. Trf~lqf DEAR ·PAT: I am a college student working part time. Can I claim that I am exempt from federal withholding on my W·4 form? J .E .. Irvine IRS aays tbat ln order to claim you are exempt from Wttlabold.lng you must have had no tax Uablli· &y la tbe previous year and expect no tax Uability ln tile curreat year. The fact tllat you are a atudeat llaa DO beariag OD the determlaatioa. Aayo.e who claims e11empt atatas and usually earaa more tllaa S2tl per week has a different •lt•atioa. New re(ulatloas require that penoa'a employer to send a copy of bis or her Form W·4 to tile IRS. The e mployer allO mast send a copy lf more than nine withholding allowances are claimed. If tbe IRS determlDes tbe W·4 form ls ln· correct, the employer is noCified hi writlng to db· regard that form. UatU a correct W·4 form is ••P· pUe4, tlte eJDployer la reqlllnd by law &o compate tile wtaw..Nial fer Jacome w u ii tile employee were a alQgle penoa clalmlng no exemptlou. A peraoa wlilo coatillaea to sa.bmit a false W·4 cOllld be subject to criminal or civil prosttutioa. Tiie penalty for willfully submitting a false or fraud.ae.t Form W-4 to u employer I• a max- im•• 11.e ol S5ll for each coaat or lmprt.aoemat for ••to o.e year, or both. 'l'lrftl 'l'lrn?' Ch~~k '~ We'll • • gweusa There's only one thing that sets us apart from DEAR PAT: 1 bought my firsf car about six every other savings & loan Institution: service. months ago. It's a used car and I really don't know Since 1934, we've been giving our customers how to tell if the tires are getting worn out. l can see that some of the tread on them is worn away. personal, caring servica. The kind of service you How do you tell when tires are worn out enough to won't find anywhere else in town. be dangerous? P.L .. Costa Mesa When you open an account with Perpetual, we Tbe Tire Industry Safety Council aaya tbat • b 1· th t t • t · d d th Ure ta considered worn out aad could allow e 1eve e rus you ve PU in us eman S e dangerous skids If lt bas leu tban i 11.u. lnclt tread very best we can do for you . So we always provide deptll.M,.aay two or more tread grooves. ~-, h Tread~ lndl cato'~bars: ·~oa>ftri(•\t ~.taD.rr~ ...... 7...::_ .. ,-,.. J .,JM JdtlA P.xtras t at mean so much to you "wear ban," built lato tbe tire tread grooves and your savings. become visible when tbe tre•d ls wol'D to l/ lltb laclt. W'bell this happens tires shollkl be replaced. Perp•tual pays the highest interest rates Yoa may be interested in requesting a free allowed by law. No bank pays higher. "Coanmer Tire Galde" by seadlng • stamped, self-addressed, bualness·slzed envelope to: Tire la· duatry Safety Council, P.O. Box IBtl, WHhlngton, D.C.zttt3. Teoi" {!If rtf R~•llfl U11~ DEAR PAT: When I wrote to my mother and told her that my daughter had lost one of her baby teeth fi!.d expected a reward from the ·'tooth fairy,' my mother wrote back that she had read "somewhere" that there is a woman who actually plays the role of tooth fairy and talks to youngsters on the phone, encouraging them to take good care of their t~. I think tbts would be fun for my daughter to do, but my mother can't recall where she read about this so I can'{ fol1'1w up ori it. Is there any chance you can locate the "tooth fairy" and let me know how to ciontact her? · J.J., Huntington Beach Yov mcMlter probably wu refenta1 to a re· ce•t article Ill F amlly Circle ma1u1.M. It teld abo•t Mn. Slaaroa Ratowakl, a delltal ... ...._, Im Ad41a.., DI •• wlto la M c~ a.._. 1 ... de9· &al care daat die acta Ht lter __. fairy role la coet•me accompaaled by two maaiolteUea, "Mr. Bnaalla" .......... Cavity," u IM deUven lectarea le acllaool dalktrea. Clllldrell cu c•tact tills real too&la fairy (with tllelr pare•&•' permlaaloe) by plloal•I (31Z> IZl·•IS Tlle9daya alld Tl111nday1 fr:e• I p.m. to 8 P·•· (Callfenla time), er &lley cu write• lier at P.O. lies-. AcldJMll, Ill. •ttl. "-1, Ha a,eclal aenl«=!z ~ a ... wald alM wuta pareata to now mat If tlley mall &Wr clalld'a a.Mii to Iler, Ille wlll lane It &oldpla&M for SI (pl• II ceata pee&a1e ud llUNlbl > Hd reaara It a9'acllaed to an .. .,flclal" toetll fairy certmca&e. .. Birthday Gift Set for Launch • There are several attractive savings plans to choose from. And you'll like the variety of free services* we have on hand whenever you should need them. So when you add it all up, the answer for real service is easy: Perpetual Savings. It's a place where there's no limit on the interest taken in serv- ing you. At Perpetual, ... we'll ~erve Yf•U>gt~r.;, ~~~ give us a chan~~ ............ - ·' • .. • s ,, • I I ~ I I . I TOKYO <AP) -A Greek abipplnl mapate ordered a SH.3 mllUon yacht for tab dauthter 'a bl~. and Mitaubiabi Heavy Industries. the builder, will launch it next week, a company apok•man Hid. ____ , Tbe apokeaman aald Tuelday tbe ao2·foot·lonl, D·roo:.r.::t wu ordered lut year by Evan1eto. P. N , '15, owner Of )lareredo Companla Navlera, an International 1blppla1 company ope,-aU., taken, for hia da~ l:lfle. • J I ... . · ...... Otloe: 81IO WU1hlre IMS., lewerty Htl ... CA 80212 27~ or 2n-aeie • Jf•l•IDd Oflot: 1CW Wllehlre BMS., Loe Ange .... CA 90024 474-3803 ... • LMdtlwonl Otlloe: 250 No. Larchmont llvd., Lot Angelet, ~A 8000lll 492.W • .......... Oftln: 18540 oevonettlre St., North,_., CA 81324 380-2329 • C-.. l'9fll Oftloe; MOO Platt Ave., C.noga Park, CA 81304 34M141 • l'ullertOll Ofloe: 3334 Yorba Linda 8~ •• Fullerton, CA 82831 (714) 81CS-1200 • Nca~rt ._. OftlM: 1114 Ian Miguel Dr~e, Newpo'rt BMch, CA l:zectO (714) '40-1834 • ......... Mu *'II fllm 11 .... ti 2 , .. 1. V\Jdt 'g,Mm k~--.a Bleak Future Told THE TIME IS NO 'f Report Hm Glaomy Scenario for 1985 .. ,,....,.... Game lbow ·bolt Al- len Ludden ia makin1 good prorreu in re- covery from a strok4}, accordin& to his wife Betty W6ite. He bas been moved from a Monterey hospit al to a Loe AnJeles hospital and the care of bis own doctor. HolM locm rates w11 rb•'y never be lower for 191 . . L.06 ANOELU CAP) -Tbe UDited ..._ lt likely to pau thrcM&lh a b&eM •a for tM Dest H nral yean, but a .. ore atnu.t IOC!iet)' lt.oWcl em•rl• by th• m iddle of tb• 21st c:ent.ary. futwiltlaay. The acenart.o. ol tba futun wre clrawa from ftPOl"t.t to be delivered to tome M •tw• and civic i.aden Nov. U-1.S at SIU ..._..Uanal, a private oomultina flrm ln Memo ltan. • The bleakest outlook com• la a ': ..altled •"Hard Time9" by researcben lluie ~-and Peter Tel1e . JU 1loomy aceurto for tM 1ear Im lnc:ludes: ' -UNEMPLOYMENT AVEaAGING 11 percent with pocketa as hiah aall pelftDt. -Inflation risin1 so fut tbat COD1umen apend money as soon as they aet It before It IOHI lta value. , -Governments at all levels teeteriDI on bankruptcy under the burden ol payina for ener1Y. -Frustration givin1 way to extremism, ~rime and violence. -The very fabric of democ:raUc aovernment •being threatened by autboritariana promialna euy answers to society's Ills. · '" rr1SN'"T-bl1'E 'RIE GaEAT ~reasion of •t he 19308 when everything juat collaps, says Ms . Spengler. "Instead , it 's spiralina inflationary paralysis . . . a period of relatively severe and 'chronic economic hardship." Nonetheless, she says, competition will be fierce for a piece of an increasingly shrinking economic pie. "Basic needs -food, s~lter, lranapo~alion, and so on -would assume a greater prominence in consumer cholce.s," she says. A more prosperous future by the middle of the ~21st century is ouUined in two "Better Times" cenarios prepared by Peter Schwartz tor the • allfomia Energy Commission. } SCHWARTZ FORESEES A FUTURE when ,life is easy, home and community thrive in a n ~nergy-efficient society with no nuclear power ~plants, the air hasn't been cleaner since 1850, and people work less as traditional boundarie.s between '.job, learning and leisure become blurred. • Jn both of Sch wartz' scenarios, affluence · Ancreases substantially -with coming generations eciding whether they are more desirous of great .. abundance or a better environment: , ' Under the richest scenario, Califor nia's population will double to •2 million and the economy will flourish, with industrial output increasing by 10 times and the number of jobs doubling. Desires of consumers will be satisfied or saturated. "But the social costs a r e sign ificant, producing attendant levels of disaffection and ·tension," Schwartz adds. I Stroke Impairs Actre ss ' Speech · LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aging sex queen Mae West apparently bas recovered from a stroke and has left Good Samaritan Hospital followlnJ a three-month stay there that hospital officials, ap- parently unde r strict orders, tried to keep secret. Hospital spokeswoman Betty Sheller said ~Tllesday that the 87-year-old movie star was re- ',leased Monday night. Sources told the Associated ~ 1Press the stroke left Miss West's speech impaired, ;•ut the hospital would not elaborate on her condi- tion. MISS WEST HAD BEEN in failing health Au ust when she was hospitalized amid secrecy following a mild stroke. Sh e r e portedl y bad been secluded in a tightly guarded celebrity suite on an upper floor of the downtown hos pital. Hospital officials ste adfastly re- fused to confirm that the ac· tress was at the facility. Miss West's aaent, Jerry Martin, • said last week that a liv~in WES1 ·~,~~{ira~ ~~sf~~~~ 'iupervise her continuing care. He refuaed to con- firm reports that the blonde bombabell, reportedly 'bored and restless, had taken trips away from lhe ospital for drives along the Sanu Monica beach. MISS WEST LIVES IN PALATIAL splendor n ear Beverly Hills -almost as a recluse -OD • ..,enormous wealth resultina from. shrewd real state investments an4 top' salaries m her years as 11 top star. ' Miss West . who launched her career in the .~920s made her millions muttering aplcy com- m entS. She is widely remembered ror the throaty \invitation -"Come up and see me, sometime" - he issued to Cary Grant ln "I'm No Ansel" in ~ 933. The busty actress is one of Hollywood's last . lving legends but has sharply limited appearances . 'fo recent years. ~ •' In 1978 she starred in the film comedy "Sex· ·~tette" as a movie SU! on her 1lsth honeymoon. Z T his year she d id a aeries of r8dio eommereiala for , , Poland Spring Mineral Water. •I Palim.ony~ Grm:ited TEL A VlV, Iarael CAP> -An laraeU court bu ruled that a woman wbo hu aeparated from the man abe lived with may be entitled to 1upport pay· ~nta even thoueh ahe wu not leaally married. The rullne touched on one ol the mOlt aenaitive subject.a of Israeli law aM politics -the total COD· trol of Jewilh marna1e and divorce by tb• rab· ~1 blnate, wblch applies 1trlct Jewish n ll,iout law to all family affaln. Halla dlstrict. cou rt Judp Ell--.r Neumu held tblll an .,reemn t by • uam..-. eouple to live toeether lt aot Immoral IDd em. be enforced by, ~a couri ol law. The nallq ••similar to puta ol • "pallmoay" to 1111man1ed wamea ba 'tbe UBIMd States. Demand for ener1y to keep the economy i otna wlU bave tripled, witb ezteDllve use of coal and nuclear power u well u oU. Calllom.la '•air don not meet federal alr..quallty atandardl. • • • Swing loons 2nd & 3rd trust deed loons Discount notes '· Sdlwarta• sec:ond scenario preaenta a aoclety i n wblcb value• have become more ec~loaf·mlnded and Ufeatylea more modest. AltbOUlll population bu increased by 60 percent and per-capita a bundance hu doubled, demands for 81M1"1)' have 1rown only by 25 percent and a" supplied by conventional fuell. Nuclear energy - aloo1 wttb Its disputes -are a thine of the pu t. Call 17141851·9135 ,, tl DANAE CORP .. · I 9600 Fairchild, Ste. 250, IMn., 0. 92715 License & R.E. Btolter IMocAt1nll ot Jon0oree) Fashion Island Store Only Pre-Holiday ·Sale Fashion Island · Store Only NOW Infants• Orig. NOW • Ditto • 25 ooy Sportswear Orig. Jeans and Stocks-Jr .. Misses .................. I 8.1»24.00 9. 99 Se~ St. Underwear Sets ..............•........... 3.79 I ~9 -Junior-• I 0 only Tropical Shirts-Sm,..Med. Lrg. ................ -:.:-.. :-:-.~. :-1. 'll:.m---i1Ji'-'1-----S~'i,.W8stemJM!..Jsizes 2T --4T ........................ b.50 3.9t • Misses • I 5 only ---~-.__. Vel<>11 Jockeis .. · ................................. 30.00 21.00 De~ Pait Sets, sizes 2T-4T .......................... 8.50 4~99 • bO on1y • 15 ooy Misses S '$Shirts .................................. 8.00 3. 99 Olyrrpc T-Shirts. sizes 2--4 ................ : ........... 3.29 I. 99 • bO ooy • 10 on1y Ditto Tops. Jr. or Misses ........................ 8.1»12.00 3.99 T-...1...11 · "-· 2.. 13 00 6.50 ouuier S UfeSseS, SIZeS .., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • • · · · • · r •12on1y •30ooy Misses Blazer and Slcirt Sets .......................... 75.00 50.00 Todder's Tllfiened or T-Shirts ........................ 4.50 2':99 • 1e ooy Misses Plaid Wool Slcirts ............................ 25.00 12.50 • 12 only Jr. Prioire Slcirts .................................. 18.00 12.60 • Denim • bO OOly or Polyester Pants ............................ 8.S0.11.00 Girts• Orig. 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'h Slips, white and beige ........................ 5.00 • I 5 only Pont Llners, w+iite . . . . . . . . . . . ...................... 0.00 • 24 only Full Slips, white, beige-30. 32. 3b .................... b.50 • 12 only Camisoles. white-32. 34 ............................ 5.00 •!Sonly . Floral Print F,1.. Gown _ ............................. 13.00 • 12 only Brushed Nylon F 1.. Gown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12-00 • 24 only Jr. T-Shrt Knit Gowns .............................. 11 .00 • 24 ooy Cosmetics Orig. Revlon Etemo 27-12 oz. body moistllizer .............. 15.00 NOW 2.99 1.99 2.99 1.99 7.99 7.99 7.70 Skirts. sizes 7 -14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... _ . . . . . . ... 8.50 • 12only Jr. Kcjl Tropical Print Tops .......................... 12.00 • 12only Jr. Kcjl ~esses ................................ 15.00 Bedding· Housewares Orig . • 19 ooy Pansy Stripe Priscilla. %x84 .......................... 18.74 • 12only Sheer Priscilla. 144x8 I .............................. 23.99 • 5 only Bedspreads. "-'in. . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '40.00 • b only Bedspreads. full . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46.00 • 2 pc. T onlt Set ........................................ 8.50 • Body Towel. 3'4•72 ............................ _ ....... 20.00 NOW 6.99 8.99 3.99 3.99 U--9 2.99 4.99 6.99 ].99 NOW' 6.88 6 88 20.00 27.00 2.88 9.99 •!Sonly Revlon &emo 27-2 oL moistllizinq aeom ............ 14.00 NOW 7.50 7.00 7.00 • Wooden Cutting Boards ll"xl6".. .. .. . . . . . .. ...................... 18.99 7.99 • 24 only • Revlon Etel'no 27-4 oz. moisttiizinq lotion .............. 14.00 Fine Jewelry Orig. • 5 only Timell Stioopy Watches ............................ 21.qs • ~(.lied Serpentine Chains ........................ 11 .qs • 6 only °"*' ' "::..d Llqhtning Bolt Pendonn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 2b. 99 • 14 ooy .. Gold filled Stic~ ?ins ................................ 4.88 • 5 only Men's Timex 8ectric Watches ........................ 27.qs Orig. • 92 only Assoned Sport Shirts .............. _ ........... 8.ro 15.00 I e 30 only Bust. Shcrts. siz.e 28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11.00 • 16 only . Flannel Shirts. Med. and Med. Tai •................... 13.00 • 83 only ~ Assorted Sport Shrts . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 12.00. I 1'Jt) • ·a only . Fashion Jeon.s. Site 30, 3 ~ ......................... .'24.00 • so only Poly 'wool ald Wod Suits .................... :-..... 200.00 • 140 only . r ~ stripes ald solids . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . _ . . • . . . . . . ... 6.50 • 1f.'0nty D;ess Slacks. rtr:Hy or brawn, JS..40.42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • 28.00 • 24 only . I 001. Polyester Plaid Suits . . . • . . • . • . • • .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 115.00 • bO only Boys' Orig. Star Trell T-Shim, sizes 8-lb .......................... 3.50 • 100 only I Stor Trek Socks .................•.•............•... 1.69 •q()only ' I Terry Shirts. chest sizes 29-3'4 ........................ 13\,a_ • 72 only S/S ~ t'L:-.. ,.:-a 12 • U'I .... .,.,.. ..... ~ -0-•••••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,.,, • 26 only P~ Di-.s Sleds . . . . . . . . .............•....•.• 10.00 • 12-only \ Snoopy Uidetwear Sets, sizes 2·12' .................... 5.<f9 I Now · 12.99 8.95 19.99 '· 99c 19.95 NOW 4.99 5.50 6.99 6.99 J 1.J9 99.00 3.34 IZ.99 75.M MOW 1.99 I 1.22 6.99 4.99 1.99 2.99 • Yardage-Assorted Fobncs ....................... 3.99-0.99 I. 99 yd • • I only Cameras Orig. PentOll ME w/1.4 ................. • .............. 279.99 • I only PentOll ME w '1.7 ................................ 239.99 • 2 only Minolta XG! w '1.7 .............................. XR.99 NOW 199.00 177.00 199.00 ~---~~~Y!~!£,;~~9-di1!9_ ~o~~~ · ... ..-...... · ·-r.vW • Scenic . Ong . Woll Msals ..................... .' .......... 34.~~,i~~TO~ •Sonly ' Genie Gaoge 0oor Openers ....... _ .............. 159.99 I 19.88 • Wa~Suits, men's or women 's ................................ 25.99 • 3 only Kentudy Rifle Kits ............................ ". ... 74.99 Fumiture Auto Center orig. • 4 only Speobr ~em w 1pow8' boost ...................... 79.99 • 13only Stoiness Steel CB Antenna .................. , ......• 19.99 • b only In ~ 1'M ofM 8-Trod Stereo ...................... 69.99 • 18only '4 ply ~olyester rires. B71b l3 ........................ 25.00 • 6 orly Sport .Redal rwes, I bSRx 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . • . . . . .. &4.00 ... orly Spat Rada! r--. 166Ra1l ....................... , .. •1.00 19.99 54.99 NOW ' ~9~00 189.00 I 181!00 126.00 I 799.00 21 .18 NOW Of courH you can charge It ~83 ?dCPenney NATION Cop a -.Ray of Sunshine For Dyi.ng Kid&, Final Smile Provided . PHU.AD&LPHIA (AP) -ror nlne years, NIM Gftleei' •u a.m.,le l&Ood MCwity watch at a loeal ...-na lllolpatal. lnllde, children died, .,._ tifrolkl. thMr ctreama d)'ial with them~ He uw them come aad to. aome bald .from ~ ... ........,,. aome r•le, drooped on crutches. He'd ...U. aDcl tMy' Lalk. Thea after a whlle, 10•• of daem WQ\&ldn't come anymore. And he'd eMek _. find out they were dead. ,._,. YEA&s AGO, 1'1118 BEEFY cop, with a morqaae and tbree kids ol hi• own, reached deep into bi.a pocket for help. There wasn't much, J•t enouah to buy a dream -~ sent a girl dying • of caneer to a roe~ concert. · Charmed by her 1mile, he boutht another. And another. For there wu fieetinl happiness in his wort -a moonlllhtlnl aenie putting a final dash of Joy into tbe UvH of dytn1 children. Today, Sample ii preaideot ol the Sunshine Foundation, a non-profit organisation that he put to1etber in his spare Ume. Seventy volunteer worken now assemble the dreams. . Irv Homer, a locaJ talk .show host., helpe raise moDeY for the (ound.atJon on the air. ln 1111, bia 500'1 caneer was diagnosed. Tbe bo~died within lO days. "We've approached many companies for help; some don't even bother answerln& our letters," he aaya. "1bey don't want to be associated with terminally ill kids." Sample had just gotten off the oveml&ht shift. He's 1oi.na through the manila folders on bi.a des k. filled with children's names, and their dreams. "Here's a girl rrom Sa;inaw, Mich. All she walfts to do is go out and see Olivia Newton-John. She's 16. LitUe Stevie from Mass•Cbusetts, he wants to go to Disney. He's 11. There are really some tough ones in here, I'll tell you. "Every time there's a publicity," Sample says, "we get more children than we know wbat'to do with. When the money is gone, it will be over with. Thank God we've made it four years." Art Accunuilated - Finished ll DWIGtrr, Ill. (AP)e- Tbe final link or tihe 987 ·mile lnterataie Hl1hway 55 from Chicago to New Orlems h•• been opened. :> Of(iciala rrom tbe qll· linola Department of Transportation were· 'on band,u the lut 5.8-alile stretch of the hith'11iay was formally opened. The section cost '13.2 million to constftlct ~d runs around Dwight. There are 294 mllee of l·SS in Illinois. The open· lng means that Illinois ' l, 734 -mile interstate highway system is 99 percent complete, JOf· ficials added. IT llA Y BE A TalP TO Disney World, a ride down the Mississippi on a houseboat, a week at the· SEATTLE CAP> -The Seattle Art Museum '!·"!lllllll1o.. ... ~~~ shore, a trip to the Grand Canyon, or a visit with a has acquired $4 million worth of African art col. Completion of the roadway also marked the end or the remaining portion of the old U.S. Route 66, which is bdng removed fr9m servi~. far away friend: lected by a lruck heiress. For one 11-year-old with leukemia, it was Katherine White, whose father founded White · · he Pittsburgh Pir•tes. Motor Corp. in East Lake, Ohio, collected the 1,800 "Out on the street as a cop, ev i·.-:-~o~b~e~ctits~s~tartin:ifi';;igr1in;;fl94~9h;.;:.S~h;Je.;di;ed~ln~Ahug:.'.u~s~t ~and~l~e;&ft_ to bums who have thrown their health and their t e muse · lives away," says Sample. "These little children, $2 million worth was bought with ~ anony01ou.s they never bad a chance." donation, museum officials said. Since its incepliO(l in the fall or 1976, the The White Collection represents at least 66 Suuhine Foundation has sent more than 50 dying or African cultures from Ashanti lo Zulu, and virtual- cbronically-ill children and their families, many ly every m aterial and skill open to the African drained financially by the illnesses, on expense-paid artist. trips. "WE'VE NEVER HAD TO TURN down a family or a child," Sample says while working in the foundation's office, two' rented rooms above a hard ware store. • "We always send the whole family. Isolating the child would be an additional burden. This is a time when they need to be together." . .. ...... ,..... CHM>NICALLY ILL CHl 4) MAY HAVE DREAM COME TRUE Policemen BUI S.mple Vl•tt• Krtatln Wlleon, 3 The last stoptight1 on l·SS also was eliminated with the opening. 'Cell 642-5678. Put • few word' lo work for ou. • BICYCLE OUR SELECTION IS ENDLESS Sample is 44. He's been a Philadelphia pqliceman 18 years. When he's not a cop, he's either asleep or working on dreams, always in a tt-t--+--httny..for fear-death-will' cancel a trip._ _ _ I i r . I I I I I I ; I I I I I I 11. .. · "Yeah, that really hurts," he says. "Because you become attached to them. You try not to, but iou do. I've been a pallbearer at their funerals; I've been ulced to say prayers." ' THE OFFICE WALLS ARE covered with postcards and letters. "As you know," begins one, "we lost Suc;an right after our trip. I still can't believe that she is gone. "The reason I haven't sent you the papers Cthe receipts from the trip) is that it seemed like one of the last connections I have with her, and when I send them to you I really have to accept the fact that atie is gone. I am shaking while I am writing this so please excuse my writing. "She really enjoyed Florida. It was as if God gave her the extra strength and health. We love you for helping us. I have no doubt that you have a selected place in heaven." Some Exits Sh y PONTIAC, Mich. <AP > -The Pontiac SUverdome. site or the 1982 Super Bowl, is 442 ellits short· of meetina safety standarda and has two hu1e-propane storage tanks dangerously close lo ltl entrances, four fire and safety specialists con· elude. The arena has 25 exit doors, which would limit its capacity to l4,3SO people m1eler the code used as tbe stadium's fire safety guideline, the specialists say. . To meet the capacity crowds of 80,000 for such events as home games for the Detroit Lions of the National Football League would require 442 more nits, the specialists reported. Now! • ·~4~;;0 ~Gre~ .:~~~-­ in One Great Meal. Fish & Chicken \ $249 •A crispy fish flllet •Two han~·cut boneless whltemeat Chicken Planks~ •Fresh cole slaw •Golden f ryea DAILY 10-9 SUNDAY 10-7 SALE STARTS ·THURSDAY 10:00 lM. OUR LOSS - YOUR GAIN! BE HEIE lllEI THE DOORS W! • ARST COME-ARST SEd r=~..i.. BICYCLES BIES BIX ROSS! SR! CHAMPION! SEITllEl! S&S! GT! RED UIE! COOURION! COOK BROS.! lMD TORIER! JIC! ISER! DllmlD BACK' ATTENTION!! IE Mil IHI CLDSED Fii 3 llft Tl .. •PllD••• OOIE ST1ICl. .. , Ill IUUllEI Tl EllBllTITRIS., 11:11 A.II. ENTIRE INVENTORY BICYCLES ANO ACCESSORIES 0·1SPOSAL SALE STARTS THURS. NOV. 61 " lO·oo A.M. SHA ~ -..._ • l I I ••••n'fl Soprano Leontyne Price will be given the first co m · m e mora ti ve gold medallion of the San Diego Symphony Orchestra Associa- l ion during her performance tonight. The medal bears a likeness of Mi ss Price. -------- 'Canals'· CLAIROL CONDITION SHAMPOO OR CONDITION II TREATMENT llG. 2.14 TOP Of TIH UNI PERFORMANCE SOCK MADI TOSEll fOl J.50-S4 N . MIN'S BmER VINYL SIU GLOVES !':t 2'' ...... , • Lellle1' Viooyl S.I CUP O' NOOPLES BEEF I CHICKEN OR SHRIMP FLAVORS SUPER PRICE NATION -1s• n-:-1~-----~~e~d......-• .---1 .... lf.(111.AUI • ~S c;1e ........ , ............. 2.Jt IUIOHIG -~ ~ -KNIT WAK~ll:At"'--__...__ !:~..... PAii c On M·ars . BATON ROUGE, La. (AP> -Mars contains thousands or s mall c hann e l s possibly formed up to :4 billion years ago, according to a geologist who ·has studied photographs of the planet. , Dr. Dag Nummedal. a L o ui si ana Stat e Univers ity geologist . says-he believes that during the planet's early h istor y the channels contained w a t e r released by volcanoes. NUMMEDAL WAS com missioned by the National Aeronautics and Space Administra-· ti on to study the planet's paleohydrology: or an- c i e nt water ch a ra c - teristics. "The water w a s some how stor ed like permafrost for billions of years," Nummedal said . "the n re leased here and there because of volcanic episodes and the resulting melting of · ground ice P<>ckets. ·' N umme dal and a gro up .of graduate s tudents have been examining photographs taken s ince 1976 on the su rface o f Mars by Viking Orbiters I and II. SCIENTISTS IN tbe 19th and early 20th century sketched maps of what some of them believed were "canals" on the Martian surface that might be an irrigation system. But spacecraft exploration found no evidence of such canals. Nummedal said the photographs did show tho u s ands of s mall channels and "a dozen or so.. extremely large ones . He sa id th e presence of the channels reflects some ty pe of activity in the period 100 million to 3 billion years ago. ~ .,A, Atthougn s 1 ,il._r·h,loking channels ca n be rorme-d by a variety of phenomena such as wind, lava nows or ice in the form of glaciers -Nummedal con c lude d that the channels were formed by free-flowing water. He said the waters could have been In the for111 of a thick mud ·flow or catastrophic flood - waters. DETERMINING exactly when s uch a catastrophe occurred on Mitrs is partic ularly difficult since scientists have nb rocks Crom the pUnel to submit to rabioisotopac e x a m- ination. ·•we simply inferred the age at which these events happened.·' • Pleosont to1tong. 76•oz JOHNSON'S DOUBLE TIP conoNSWABS IEG. 1.47 Choice of for.mulo1 20·01 AQUA-FRESH TOOTHPASTE WITH FLUORIDE SAU NICE 99c 89c 100 s Price Includes 10« off lobel ~RRID SPRAY DEODORANT OR ANTl-PERSPIRANT llG. 1.49 P11ce incl. I Sc off lobel 4·6 10 oz BAYER ASPIRIN TABLETS FOR FAST PAIN IELIEF It~. 1.79 Ill"'°''"' Fo• •EG. 99c Cr-O< ovet·COlf >!yle, De>1gned 1 19 10 ollow e•tro onkle ond orch • .upport Whtie, >lr1ped top •. BALLOON TIRE 26-INCH BOY'S BICYCLE rm MUIRAY· EIMONTEIET I SAVI '2.50 •••!] 26"126" vnvn FLOOR PlllOW 5!.!.. Floor pillow with 10.seh Chooce of cofo" pollern• TDK PREMIUM 60 MINUTE 7 , Ot Whole •lock• lost EXPORSEVILLA STUFFED GREEN SPANISH OLIVES SUPER PRICE 6 pock o l 17 oz con> UNDERWOOD SEASONED MEAT SANDWICH SPREADS SUPER PRICE 79c 6Jc 7 oz bottle While stocks :011 4 ' 1 01 hom or 4 '• oz chicken While ••ocks lost• GORTON'S FFV CRACKERS CHOPPED OR MINCED WHEAT, ROMAN MEAL CANNED CLAMS OR STONED WHEAT l!QIDJ EMPIRE AUTOMATIC COFFEEMAKER cAssEnE 1 APE suPER PRICE • suP1• ,.,cE "'f"(';_"": ··~·-I,. 3~~~ ::1~ •• , .__..._ SPECIAL PllCI ">"'l'~A ;~: ,.\ ~5~9c:-241 IEG. FOR 2.39 3· I• 2·01. co ns, new dry lormulo. VICKS FOIMUU44 COUGH MIXTUll llG. 1.lt 12• 5oolhet irritorlon. 3·01. Top selling brond. Bottle o l 100. YARDLEY THE HAND LOTION SCINTID SOAP TMllITTPllCI ~-1 · 4-1 /4-oa. !lo~ tlae "'•· Brews 6 to 10 cupi With thermo· slot Almond,,color f1n11h only . TROUBl·SAVlR LIGHT BULBS JSOO AVIHGt MOUU :c: 99c '°· 60, 7S or IOO'woll . ... Sf I MATCHIOX DIE an ACTION VlllCUS .,.99c 1.4t IAQt Molly tlyfet, reolhtlc detolllnt. ltt. 3.2' tO·MMte C..Mtte T.,. ...... 2.ft ~ ~ lf'J.y Q)cQt)~ SHEii COMFORT. TOP ANILE OR INEl-Hl'S ~ llG.SH 39c TO Ht ILUI llUN IMPOITID WHITE WINI .o. 329 4.ff . • 23-01, lJeblroumllch ~-.... 6', 01 While ttoc:ks losr QUAKER STATE FINE QUALITY 30-WT. MOTOR Oil WICIAL IUY 79c Top quol11., motor 011 I qt While ltcxk' lost PRESTONE II All SEASON ANTl·FlllZI & COOUNT llG. 4.59 3'' "OdlOIOI oddlhv• 1 golfon CALIFORNIA Teen-agers-\()wn Town I Kidco Group Bought It· a s Investme nt .. GORDA, Calll <AP> /. rumb1Jn1 "kathunk" lhu• U. reetaunnt. CW1tomers look up from U*r pancak• witb aharm Mike, the cook, and Dee O... tM ualataat man11er, step outside to 1nvestt1ate. A minute late r , Joa nne, the waitress, meanders out the door marked "1At-way out." Little Sequoia, Dee Dee's dauahter, also wanders away. rwo customers ut up to leave. T hey wait by the counter. And wait. And wait. No one comes fonrtard to take their money becawse lhe entire staff ia outside. ''ONE nME A WAITat:$ t ot so loaded that she just talked to the coffee machine. Sbe wouldn't wait on any customers," says Town Manager Ro1er "King Schmuck" May with a sigh any long-s uffe rin g c ity a dminis trator c ould understand. · Welcome to Gorda , where "laid back" is a way or life. One other thing -it just happens to be owned by a company whose president is 16 years old and whose other execuUves all are in their teens. Gorda, from the road. looks like a typical picturesque Big Sur community, nestled into the cliffs above the roiling aquamarine waters and undulating kelp beds of the Pacific. It has a era ore, i!S station, a few small ho uses - an e res auraril\ • BUT ITS 43 RESIDENTS -"I DON'T count the dogs in there." says May -are a little fiaky, to·put it charita bly. "Is that fog?" ask the toutists as they watch the floating mists. "No, the ocean's on fire,'' Gordites reply. In the 1970s, Gorda became a haven for remnants of t he flower-child generation. It was. · an town the store. restaurant, gas station and houses a are 1 owner, Kidco Ltd. Ventures. In 1978, the four Cessna kids from Ramona , a s uburb of San Diego, were looking for a way to invest half a million dollars or so. They had made a bunch of m oney· selling horse m a nure fo r fertilizer, ktmng gophers and cleaning streets ·- your typical entrepreneurs. except that they range in age from 12 to 16. THEN WARNER BROTHERS BOUGHT their story for a reported $500,000. A. newspaper ad led them to Gorda. and, presto, Kidco became an absentee landlord. Trash Pickups Set for Laguna Unwanted bulky items, such as refrigerators. couches, carpets and chairs, may be placed at curbside for regular trash pickup next week in l.teguna Beach. The city wilt hold its annuaJ fall cleanup Nov. 10-14. , Clippings should be bundled and tied and be no more than four feet long and 18 inches ai:ound. There is also a 50-pound maximum per bundle, of· ficials said. Trash cans s hould be no larger than 42-gallon size·and weigh no more than 50 pounds when filled. College Offers Frisbee \"Goodies ~ .. " Recipes, new ideas, menus and local food ads Wednesdays STANFORD CAP ) l In the Give t hose . F ri s bee- Reaction among Gordites was immediate an<I · anary. But in the mellow ways of Gorda , the anger doesn't seem to have lingered. •·u·~ a community that's kind or a throwback to the '60& and early '70s," says May, himself long-haired and bearded. "They just came to live in the country and be left alone." May bemoans the lack of ambition of most residen~. He 's paid by Kidco lo keep th.e locals in line and takes his responsibilities seriously. "SOMETIMES I F EEL LIKE I HAVE 40 children," he confides. "Everybody here wanted to be far out and groovy. I worked on that. made them not offend the public." Kidco, and their father, Richard Cessna. want to make money on Gorda. They want it to be a tourist attraction, although Gorda reaJly is just a wide space in the road. "He's aot visions of grandeur." says May of Cessna. "You need i;omething to attra ct them other than a Mexican restaurant." n ;ckie Cessna , 16. and Kidco's president . says Kidco bought Gorda as a tax shelter and tourist attraction. He and his sibl ings Ne Ne. 12 ; June. 17. a nd Bette. 14, all come to Gorda occasionally to work, planting flowers. painting and generally being industrious. • "IT'S KIND OF A STRANGE deal," says Ri chard Cessna of t he conlr <is l between his budding capitalist brood and the residents. KIDS WANT TO ruRN THEIR TOWN INTO BIG SUR TOURIST ATIRACTION aPw~J'! Kidco Officers: Bette, 14 (left); June, 17 (center); President Dickie, 16 (rtght);•ndNeNe,12 "The people who li ve here and work for us are. well . not hippies or anything, but they enjoy the leis urely lifestyle. They are not highly motivated." he says. All the adult residents work for Kidco, but it's hardly a sweats hop Mike. the cook, tries to recruit a long-haired · · • to "oin the community by telling him about his work hours. "Couple of long days, couple short days. couple no davs." he says. "That's my schedule." ~THE EARL'S l Utot91NG.,•f A TING Sot•• Wale• k••llnt ,, .1 te• .,,, ..... ' ..... '"" "'. . I( .1! ~t •U ,~,. 1•t.> I f "' t.., j 1 •••• 81wd .. 1$SIOW Ylf'104 " 7ftn C•m.no Ce04•tt•no (Sa" 0..91) f,.., el A•••t f'••t I O n No vember 8 & 9 our cobb lestone streets w il! be transfo rmed into the "Streets ol Lored o·· where the good guys alw ays wore w hi te hots and the bod guys olwa·1s got 1hc1rr We'll hove stunt shooters. squa re dancers and lhc lamou~ "'C logger" d ance troupe w1:h all kmds of W tld West fun and surprises1 Not to menlton the great sh0pping dm:nq and oro ·.vs:11 always going on at Lido Marina V illage The wild west 1s com1na to Lido y all come tonl SATURDAY: NOVEMBER 8. from lOam to 6pm. SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 9. from noon to 6pm. LIDO MARINA VILLAGE Ii ' If i' J I r • 1: I t~ j ''•'"l o tJ" • ' f' S 11 • ': I ! ) f i J, •'-~ '• f4 • J ------ you'll like the Interest Best at FAR WEST .935°0 ANNUAL YIELD 12.000% ANNUAL RATE Effecllve Oct 30 through Nov 12 ' It's i n ~u r best interest to lock in this high interest rate to day. with a 30-month T reasury Certificate. • Yo u r savi n ~s earn .25% more at FAR WEST SAVINGS than in a comparable account at bank' Interest is compounded daily . It only takes S 100 to op en this account! (F .oer-., ••9u••,1ont u~Q1.1•n a t ubt tanhal 1ntf'fet t penen1 to, ••rly wlthdr•*•l lrom C•rttl1ca11 at countt l SAVINGS INSURED TO $100,000 FS LI C =======~=~ FAR WEST SAVINGS 27 OFFICES STATEWIDE NEWPORT BEACH 4001 MacA rthur Blvd. Near..J am boree Road Serving Californians Since 1889 ~~;~~~~~e~~~i~~e~.tan-I I t]J I r181 {I} I Sixt y stude nts a re _I. • e n r o lled i n t he uni -;......:::::::::::::::::::_ ___ ...:.,...,...:_ __ ~,----._---------------------------------------------r..:.--...;;;;_...=;;..;...;====~--.....;:=:;;;::;::::;;;;;;~~:;;;;;;:;- versity 's first Frisbee save 7 0. 0 0 I I -· -----. save 5 0 O/o ~l:s~o::i~~r:eee~f 0:~~ . Sea rs Ch1di!ill I I.I 'Ji b' 4"'"8'1 @91 l ,\l!,;;oe weekly. It carries one 10 .. RADIAL ARM SAW B HUNTINGTON BEACH LADIES' SWEATERS p h ysi cal e d uca t io n • Sl RPI l s credit. ~. , ' V-NECK OR s l·~~:~be~aiisn~n ~p~r~ Stand included ~ .. ~~ ..J ~ TURTLENECK STYLES popularity and will prob· Was 33944 . ~ ~ \~ ~ ~ · . a bly s urpass t e nnis '-..,..f 'V%"'------Were 899 Ettec11ve 11 5 80 someday soon," says in- st.ructor Tom Mc Rann. "It's au sports rolled into one. It's great ex- er cise that combines running and leaping and stretching with the ex· NOW 269.00 NOW 4.44 (4 only) SELECTED BAR STOOLS , '"'""""~ ·-r.-·.-"-,"In . '\&~~ .. -~ ,,...J -~ '9l"t;~t:J.!lr;...!.I..:...·~#,.~ .... ~~, .. · something fly.·' said e professional Fris bee player , who hold s a Frisbee·throwing record ·~~~EK:~S 9 ~<t. NO ~· :(~f'~..:J:.: .. . ~i••lE_'°Wn"::'.:'-----~°t l..l-• .,..,, I. Efecfro ~coer'Gitm.r:-:-: .... r: •. ~-: . .: .. :.' •....... :"29C'7 20.9 \/\J er e 2999 to 9499 of a86 yard!!. Foe their midterm ex· a m, the students played Fris bee golf, in which e ac h t h row o r the Frisbee toward ma rker in a nine-hole course counts as a stroke . , Enrollment U p BERKELEY CAP) - Earollment at the nhte Unlven lty of CaUComJa c a mpuses r ose 2. 9 percent this ran to a rec· ord 135,786, the uni· venlty reports. Out or t.be increase of 3,888 atu· dents , 3,329 entered as UDde,rgrad uatea, brini · inl the total to 96,538. Plant Sale Hunt+ntton Center fNCWOlde ttwu sat tge I " 11.86 & S2 2'7 ? 10 CUP DRIP COFFEEMAKE·R Was 2999 NOW 14.88 Save 100 .. 00 POWERMATE VACUUM Was 32995 . NOW1 22g..88 12onty Save 35.90 ·., 7 '' SANpER1GRINDER 1 H.P. / Single ~peed ~-.~ W,as 9999 NOW 64.88 Electtontc Baseball Game ........................... 28 .47 19. 9 Baby Grows Up Doll ........... : ..................... 15.27 7.4 N QW B aby Be Good Doll ................................. 9 .77 D 4·:4 Computer Perfection Game ....... 1 •••.• «=' ......... 31.99 21 .9 5 0 OJco t Q 6 Q 0 1 0 Buck Rogers St., Fighter ................. ·r....... 3.4 /( Fllntstone Ga"!e Alley ......................... · · · · · · 4.89 2.9 Q FF ,, Zodiac Asttotogy G•me ............................. 44.99 32.8 super Jock Football ................................. 8 .49 5 .99 Former Catalog Prices .. Star Wars AdventureT Set ............ ·.:· ............ 7.88 5.49~-------------------1·. · Hutk-Rece and Chase Set ................. • .......... 29.49 21.9 MEN S-WOMEN S-C HILOR EN S CLOIHING 60°10 OFF WERE Ladles' Knit Vesta .................................. 17.00 L•diea' Card&gan Sweaters ........................ 23.00 NOW 6.49 8.99 8.49 5.99 Save 200.00 2 H.P. SPRAYER1COMPRESSOR Was 55995 NOW 359.88 L•dlea' FH hlon Terry Bluer• ...•.................. 21.00 Boys' W•rm Up Sult• ........•...................... 14.H &or•· Vinyl RatncCM1t• . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . 3.H 1 .591-----------------------------------~· Save 32.00 V2 H.P. Little Girt•' Long Dresses ...........•......... : .... 12.H Girl•' Denim Stdrt• ................................ 12.99 Men'• v .. ta , ........................ t ............ 1tr.tt Men's Sport Coats ............... : .........•...... 29.99 Men's Turtleneck Sportshlrt9 ................... '. .. 15.11 4.99 5.19 2.88 9.88 8.39 Dual Motion Sander Was 6999 NOW 37.88 & Was 59" NOW34.88 .1 Episcopali~ Gain NEW YORK CAP> -For the first time since the mid·1960s, tbe- Et>iscopal Church bas registered an increase in tnembership. The Rev. John A. Shultz, statistical officer, says dJocesan reports tor lM9 show that baptized membership rose one- ball percent to 2,841,350 and that bap· tis ms increased 3 percept to60,276. -. U.-S. lncre tJSes Cognac Imports PARIS (AP) -The United States has replaced Bl'italn as the world's largest lmr>orter of cogbac,' the Fr~nch National Cognac tlureau said. ,. FOCUS ON COMMUNITY H E A L TH SPONSORED BY PAC IFICA COMMUNITY HOSPITAL CANCER'' LECTURE -FILMS -DISCUSSION THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 13;1980 7:00·9:00 p .M . MOD£RATQR Samuel M. Cohen. M.D. CARMEN YUPPA CONFERENCE CENTER 18819 Delawan Sttetl (Y. Block South of Main) Huntiniton Beach, California For Information PtloM 842-0611 Ext. JSO The United States imported 25 million bottles or the f'rench brandy in the marketing year that ended ~::;:;:====::::::::::::::======='...._ Aug. 31. a 58 percent Increase from i . the previous year_, the bureau said. Clvll Crumbllng.... . · · French cognac accounted for 1.2 ~t· GI~ ... -" Gus JIAFl&il 5 t centof all U.S.liquorsales, lt ackfed. • . -.~!"" In thel!l!119' llJ(tJI : Prince L e isure ly Shopper LONDON l AP> I Ourmweit BrentwoOd .. c.t .. .c ...... ha ~. . ~~ Prince Ct.arles took away two turkeys", a brace or pheasant and a loin or beef after an early-morning visit to London's Smithfield meat market. 1 ~ • ...,.Dsagreat .;~M·~== ---inveslmenttoi )f~;~:l~· ..... I all investors. l I Lo 3Q.degree weather. the heir to the British throne c h atted and quipped Tuesday with cockney porters at the l 12·year·old wholesale market. He hi d been in- vited by the tenants as· sociation. I - I I!~!!> 12.940% The prince wa s serenaded by retired porter Jock Cameron. who plays his trumpet each morning at the ·market. Charles was given a "wazzer," a mixture of tea and whiskey to warm him up, and later ate breakfast at the butchers' canteen. Affidavit 0 K' d SAN FRANCISCO I (AP > -The s t ate Supreme Court ha s l"Uled legal a police af. l fidav1' supporting a re- ~est rot a search war· rant although it omitted j -adverse material about an infocmant. The court said the docum~nt was legal lf there Is no at· t~mpt to mislead the j udge a pproving the search warrant. Annual Yield* . . ' 286 7 E. Coast Hwy • MILTON lllDl.h Mil TON BRADLEY Super Simon Slmon·a big brot11er1 Try to lollaw 11 111 spewa out his colon and 1111nda. Or even ltl him pick Ille player hi wanta ID repeal a 11q111nce1 IDEAL Rubik's Cube Yahtz~e GAME 'J$ • --=:.--MAftEL !~~l ~~!.~S ~~ BEAUTY SECRETS Barbie doll and comes with bottle ~ Mlntl ~~~12.95 \ Pren her back and make her comb her hair. B1ush her teeth powder her lace & put on lipstick Kiddie Links by PL:AYSKOOL t & ptaalic links In live bright colon. .S.t1 lor 111th1no. w2.29 i11W· 8.95 RONALD/ESSKAY Dolls Cuddly b1by dotls lllfl just low to bl 11111pered. • '501 Ul ..... sanu . r Slit "'*' & •ltl ·~ ll. 011111 sontc. 11· -~''"-• ll503 1&1• S10t . ur Slit 1111 ..--"" • ~ KAii£• ur .... """"' "" TONKA Clutch ·· ~opJers·w wftll "TUltlO SOUND" Autlltfttic 0.11111111 Strolling Bowling bJTOMY CAllFOANtA -~-....... Ne--•fftf Dr. Frank Press. science adviser to President Carter. has been nominated to. become next presi- dent of National Academ y or Sciences. Teen .Sex Charges Denied SACRAMENTO CAP) -State Sen. Alan Rob· bins has pleaded inno· cent to felony charges of u nlawful sexual in · e and oral copulation wi wo 0. year-old girls and at- t empted sexual in- tercourse with a 17-year· old girl. Superior Court Judge Benjamin Diaz on Tues· day set a preliminary bearing for Dec. 5, and said the trial will start Dec. 29. ROBBINS, 37, a Van Nuys Demo cra t , responded ·'not guilty" to each of the 10 counts in the indictment read by Deputy District At· torney Albert Locher. The judge granted a request by Robbins ' lawyer, Neil McAllister Jr., that the grand jury transcript and other papers in the case be sealed from public view pending a hearing on r that question Nov. 12. \ Diaz said he will de· cide before the pre· liminary hearing I whether to grant McAllister's request that . itbeclosedtothe public. McALLISTER SAI D he was asking for seal· ing of the docume nts and a gag order on lawyers i n the case because of pre -trial publicity. He noted that he and Robbins had difficulty getting through a crowd of about 50 reporters and televi s ion ca merame n in the hallway outside the court. "For the first time in 31 year s . I almost couldn 't get in the courtroom," McAllister told the judge. Robbins declined com- ment, except that when • OM. YP!l.O'T A. Pacific Rate Bike P.lea Brings Order for Alldit SAN P'aA.NClSCO (AP) -In IM>pu ol boldin1 down future rate lllcruau. tbe -P"bllc.. UWUiea Commiu6on ha oN4tred Pacific Telephone to undertake a m.ana,e- ment audit by an independent audltlna firm. The l>UC 'a executive dJrector and stair would establish areas of study and develop plans for select· Ina lhe consultants. .. With Fluorld• loz.TUK SPECIAL! SPECIAL! Bl c IMSPOSAIU SHAVERS PAil Of 10 1.88 BUY 5aSAVE 3oc PETUNA CAT FOOD I oz. SIZE SAVE •1.11 Pacific Telephone has on file a request for a rate Increase or f7t4 miW. aMUaUy. PUC President John Bryson said lhe coat of a~h an audit bas been estimated at $3.:S mHlion. such an audit mlaht provide in· formation leadlne t~ cost reduc- tJon' and would be worth its cost. The audit would be In two phases. Finl, the consulting firm would !ltudy top m a nagement practices of the utility, including the role of the parent company, American Telephone and Tele- graph. "hopefully recommend changes to improve the quality or manage. ment, which in tum could lead to better performance and reduced costs." a udit but be allowed lo llst It u an expense lo future rate proceed· in1s. Pacific Telephone is the state-ls Jargesl utility with about 9,5 million subscriber lines and more than 15 million ins talled t elephon~s . It has more than 100,000 employees and derives rev· enues from subscribers and other In the second phase, specific operations would be reviewed to identify additional cost reduction apd performance improvement But he said in view of $3.5 billion In annuaJ operating and main· tenance costs and planned con- struction expenditures of about $14 billion over the next five . years, The PUC said this study would opportunlties. · The company would pay for the services. · · AD PRICES PREVAIL: f Hl llNdl For11111l1 WED. NOVEMBER 5th. THRU SAT. NOVEMBER 8th. H•r•'• how our L8y·A-Way Plan Worka: 1 • sei.ct rour pattem. Aegl1ter br flHlng out ltle llmpl• form awelleble et ttie dl1pler. Give It to !tie 1tore meneger pr c .. hler. a. Coli.ct 30 certlflcetet to tlll rour Se~r Card. 1t'1 fMI end '° ... r. C.rtHlc•tee .,.. !U1t tH .. ch, ph• te•. wtth • S3.00 purcl\eM. 3. Pruent th• tlu.d Sever Card to 1tore end pick up rour 20 p(ect •t Totel price 111u1t 1211.70. Complete " menr cerd1 e1 you went. SAVE 18.00 •OOM Colorburst ..,. 250 ........ c.... 8AVIE4.00 .f) At(DC Cassette 1£~D£1t Count Vasya VODKA IO PWOOf 1.75 LITER 6.99 Canadian Reserve WHISKY IO PIOOf 1.75 LITER 9.29 I YEAI OLD Foster Creek BOUR.ON 1'H18KEV IO PWOOf 1.75 LITER 8.99 Mackinnon's 8COTCH WHISKY IO PWOOf 1.76 UTER SAVE 2oe 1.51 SAVE 14.00 FESCO 32 GALLON TRASH CAN l'IHtlC Ctnlll-Wltll , ..... ., .. SAVE 34c ROBITUSSIN COUGH FORMULA fof Cfllldnn SPECIAL! "WEAlt • EVH" W'Nt .,,,,._. Silver Stone I " CHEF FRY PAN 5.99 lOW' SQUARE& 99 GIUDOf.E • SPECIAL! UUEY GLASS "ATlMTIS UNDH SEA" a%" CANDLE . Ti.y cr11t1 11111 lllullon ti II~ ulldlr ••ler On111.111c O.lloMlul .3.49 7.00 REBATE . . . ,J a reporter asked if he would resign from the Legislature, he replied ''Absolute!)', une - q uivot:ally not." t'he Legislature reconvenes Nov. 30 to organfze for its 1981 season, stai;tlng .-.~~-. ·----.,.. •£~!".:;~~ Garap flMr ' Me88D Gets Law Honor Marine Lt. James B. Vile, aon of Nancy B. Vile of 2533 Fordham Drive, Costa Mesa, has completed the Lawyer's lliUtary J•tJce Course at the Naval Justice School, .Newport, R.I. for newly commluiooed Navy, Marine CoTpS and Cout Gu.ant lawyers. A 1"8 1raduate of Costa Mesa Hip Scbool, and a lt'10 araduate ot Oran1e Coast Colle1e, be Joined the II a rine Corps in January 1971. • .,. • •111111" ,...,..Illy •• ,. 171"1 •1111 • ,_. ~--1 Ml II H tftlflY ...,....,.. fWll sm <W '•IO'') ::;7.88a 3.88 8AV•3.00 ltlVAl • 4-4UMT CRO~K ·POT Ori""'' CLEANER ,. •·> .. Oil Absorbent (1-6. ... , YOUR CHOICE ORANGE COUNTY B8lloon Race Backed · Coun1y to Co-aponaor Gordon Bennett Evem ,. ... Oran,e Coun&y Boant °' Supervllon rallfied ao .,,... mtn& to a&a1• the Oordon Betantu 8alloon Race at Mile Squre p.,., ln Foun&aln Vala.y neat Aprll 25 and as. .\c~ to the •treement. th• cou.n\y wUI put up about SaQ.000 ln labor and other cost.a subject to ~lmbursemenl. 'urt Brittain, a supervisor for tbe county Environmental Menacement Aeency, said the coQnty paid 118,346 up front lut year and received "every dime" back. The balloon race, named after an East Coast newspaperman who .origjnated it in 1906, will be co-sponsored by the county and Gordon BeMett Inc .• a non-profit group. Three A w a rds 811ttalft laid the eYMt la bein& upandld to two d.aya thla year, with hellwn baUOOOJ takln1 off from the park on April 25, a Satur· day, and a local hot alr balloon race the followinl day. So far, ai.x foreign ballooniat.s and six from the U.S. have en- tered the helium balloon race. The winner ls the entry that noat.s the farthest distance from the Fountain Valley atartine point. The race wu held annually Crom 1908 to 18, Brittain said. It was re-established In 1979, with the startinl point al the Long Beach Harbor. It was moved to Mile Square PHk last year. Under terms oft.be aereement, the race sponsors agree lo buy a $1 m illlon insurance policy and to re- imburse the county Cor its costs. County Commiitee I . To Honor Heroes Heroes of Orange County henceforth will be deeorated by a county committee for their deeds. The county Board of Supervisors decided Tuesday to go ahead with a program to award its bravest citizens. Members ap· proved a plan to pr~~ e or three awards to a dents judged to have performed acts. UCI Frie nds Award Life M e mbe r ships Six Orange Coast residents have been awarded life mem· berships from Friends of UC l rvine for their efforts on behalf or UCL One of the recipients is Walter Burroughs. founder of the un· iversity support group and former publisher of tfle Daily Pilot who, in the late 1950s. helped convince state officials that a UC campus s hould be located in Orange County. L. E. Cox was honored as the university's senior employee. having begun working there in 1961. The former UCI vice chan· cellor for business retired in 1979. Tom Casey. former president of the Friends of UCI, also was honored, alobg with UCI sup- porters Joan Irvine Smith, Peg· gie Shedd and Norman Walker. Alien Sentenced TUCSON, Ariz. CAP ) -Santos Flores Elias. 22. of El Salvador, has been sentenced to seven years in federal prison for his part in an alien-smuggling venture that left 13 people dead on the southwest Arizona desert. However, a proposal first pre· sented a week ago was modified slightly by sponsoring Supervisor Edison Miller. Appointees of the s upervisors rather than the supervisors themselves will com- prise a selection committee. Also on the committee will be appointees of the sheriff's and fire departments. Miller had expressed concern -about-allowing supe.r.._yj,SQ.[.L!o belong to the committee. both for procedural and political reasons. Under the program, the county can award a Medal of Valor to persons who risk their lives in an act of bravery._ A Courageous Achievement Award would be the next best honor. and the Certificate of Merit, the last. Recipients of any award also would receive a lapel pin from the county. Miller foresees that only two or three persons would be chosen each year for the Medal of Valor. They will receive their awards - along with Courageous Achieve· ment Award winners -at an as· yet unscheduled annual awards banquet. .County officials plan a contest to design the Medal of Va tor. Diabetics' Classes Set Self-care classes for diabetics will be held at UC Irvine Medical Center on four consecutive Tues- day evenings beginning Nov . 11 . Tbe classes, which start at 7 p.m. in the Surgery Clinic, Build- ing 9, are free and open to the pu!>lic. Yor more information call the medical center in Orange at 634-5476. The race can be postponed tbroulh May 1 ln case of bad weather, accord.lne to the agree. ment. Board Hikes C ounty Court Filing F ees Higher civil and probate filing fees for Orange ·County courts were ·approved by the county Boud of Supervisors. State legislation recentl)' authorized counties to increase the fees, and Orange County of· ficials predict the new rates will .t.~ke the county an extra $1.7 million a year more than money raised through the former rates. The new rates will go into effect J an.l. In Superior ~ourt, the charge to file civil or probate complaints will go from S52 to $75. Filing a response on ~half or a defendant or third party will increase frorri $37to$55. In Municipal Court. a civil com- plaint will increase from $16 to$25 and a response from Sll toSlS. Orange County is expected 'to raise about $3.7 million this year from the former rates but could raise SS.5 million with the new prices, according to a county study. About 39 percent of the court costs now are recovered from fees. -noman from Car Crash Burns A 53-year-old M1ss1on VteJO woman has died at UCI Medical Center from bums she received in a fiery car crash on Oct. 16 in Laguna Niguel. A s poke sman for the California Highway Patrol said Mary Kenny of 22986 Via San Juan, died at about 1 p.m. Sunday. She reportedly received major bums over a large portion of her body in the accident. The CHP spokesman said that on the day of the accident Mrs. Kenny waa eastbound on Crown Valley Park way and was making a left. tum on La Paz "Road. Mrs. Kenny 's car crashed head-on with a vehicle driven by Scott Hardigan, 18 of San Juan Capistrano, who was traveling west oo Crown Valley Parkway. Mrs. Ke nn y 's car was reportedly hurled over an embanJCment from the force or the collision where it caught fire. Hardigan and his passenger, Karen Crail, 17 , of Laguna Niguel. received minor injuries in the crash and were treated and releas ed at Mi ssion Community Hospital in Mission Viejo. MONEY SAVING VALUES "'6.-.i &.., 8lH +I?~ £9 GREAT AD PRICES PREVAIL: PLACE TO SHOP ~ WE 0 . N OVEMBER 5th. THHU SAT. NOVEMBER 8th. 10 u. SID "-Wd Cle1•rs DisidlCtJlt Amil .... 2.49 . 24u.99C 11-.1.19 21-.1.59 12 .. 1.49u. Nestle~ Egyptian Henna R • CanfiNUl1 Shampoo (I ez.) ADOS MO COLOI • Pre·Mi1ed ff* Conditioner <•oz.> • Intensive Hai Confiefter <2 •z.> • Hot Oil Treabnent <""oz.> 189 • Hai Colar ca oz.) ram 1 CHOICE • El. or OIUREX·2= Water Piiis Hll,e hlMI heat Wy W• laUTMlm 2.93 3.43 Accunee. ••Y·tHu In tM priytcy " Ytw .... -·- 12.95 HUNT. BEACH -Adame & Btoolltlurwt -Sprift9dale & Edlnter -Beactl & Garfield FOUNTAIN YAUEY-M..,,ola A Warner NEWP<w.T-1020 lrvlne. We1tcllff Pina IAYINE -Culver Or. & Welnut MISSION VIEJO-25272 Mergvertta Ptrwy. El TORO-24372 tioclcfleld Aoed SANTA AN~ -3911 Souttl Brfltol Str .. t ~"·"£'" PATfO & f I RESIDE HUNTINGTON BEACH Quality q: DIRECTOR'S CHAIR ·-ef ~ I The special Wicker Desk set for your student. f BA TTAI I WICIEB SAL WICKER PLANT STANDS Large ~tlonof manystytes ., 'J! ,, .. s 14•s .1/ ?J~,~J 1111 IACI WICIEI IDCIER by 1'el8SCGPE MADE IN U.S.A. Reg. •ao.oo '"' -....:.. . ',,. !.' ;-- ,, s29ss ~ IALI r-1 c"""H.,..,s=c=K"""'"""i"""H=Es=E=FE.=A..,,.,T=u....,..,R~E=s,....,, • Walnut Stained • Precision Milled WOOd • Non·Sag Back • Corrosion Resistant • Plaattc: swtval Glide Hardware AIR TIGHT ENERGY FIREPLACES THE ARROW WOcld~I bu.rnlng. Unique blower Wfttl Vlrla.bte speed control. n kttp up to 3000 tq. tt. of space warm and cozy. lti COMPl.CU ~ INSTAl.LATKlN H KITS IY atlable for l ~ny lypeof ~ ............ . ENERGY SAVING WOOD STOVE FAIR Manufacture representattves from various fireplaces and wood stove companies will demonstrate their new energy saving products. We will show you how to save money on your energy bills. Jofn us in Anaheim Wed., Nov. 12th at 7:30 p.m. and in Huntington Beach Thurs .• Nov. 13th at 7:30. p.m. Wine and cheese will be served at the shows. · CUSTOM MADE PIR•SC9'••NS FLUSH MOUNT ) l ' Relieved By Texan ~ aaUve Texan la the new •~r1•ant major at the Tuatln MarlSte Corps Ai r Station belieopter baae. assumlna the po1t from tM ftnt American Sa· · IDoaD ever to attain thal rank ln tM Marines. The colorful ceremony in wlaich s,t. Maj. Fetu L. Falo turned over h.i5 sword of office to Sst. Maj. Salvador I. Navarro inehlded a staff NCO parade and music by the Third Marlne Aircraft Wina Band. • ' A seraeant major since 1978, F•lo ii beiQI trmuferred to act u hipest-ranking enlisted man In the First Marine Aircraft Wini. Okinawa, Japan. A 17-year USMC veteran, he lives in earson with his wife, two soos also both serving in the Marine Corps, and a daughter. A 25-year veteran, Sgt. Maj. Navarro comes to the Tustin beUcopter base after ser ving as sergeant major of Marine Wing Support Group 17 of the First Marine Aircraft Win g. He also has held that rank with Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 23S of the First Marine Brigade and the First Tracked Vehicle Battalion of the Third Marine Division. Navarro r~eived a temporary commission and served as fire STANDING TALL -Sword-exchanging ceremonies marked ta1eover of duty at Tustin Marine Corps Air Station as Sgt. Maj. Salvador Navarro. center. assumed Post from Sgt. Maj. Fetu Falo (foreground> recently. dir ections offi cer for the 11th Marines from 1968 to 1969 in Vietnam. He left that post and reverted to enlisted rank as chief artillery assistant to the artillery officers at Headquarters. Fleet Marine Force Atlantic. He is a recipient of the Navy Co mmendation Medal with Com- bat V and lives in Pasadena.with his wife and four children. OCC Schedules 'Mother' ~lure "Your Relationship With Your Mother" will be the topic of a two -hour lecture Friday a t Orange Coast College. The lecture begins ,at 7: 30 p. m. in the college chemistry build· ing. room 207. Admi5ston is free. I I. 1.'/ Co1U1ty · M•1lls ~h~ging ·Rent ByGLENN8C01T 0t111to.1trl'l ... llaff Orange County govel'nfl)ent may start charging its depart- ments rent as a way to prevent them frQm wasting expensive of- fice space. The plan may sound fa r- fetched, but-a county efficiency expert says it. is worth examin· i.ng as a possible money-saver. That recom mendation was · good enough Tuesday for mem- be r s of the county Board of Supervisors. They told offi cials of the county Gener al Services Agency to look into the idea. T hey also ordered a took at seven other effi ciency proposals from the County Administration Office. ED MOUNTFORD, analyst for the administrative offi ce, stressed that the self-rent plan is still in its early stages. He said specifics -such as how much the rent "might be and where the money would come from -·will be examined in the GSA study. The proposals wer e made after a r outine management audit of the GSA 's facilities, he said. ANALYSTS CAME up with the self-rent pl an, Mountford said, bec.ause they sus pect that the county is paying to lease extra office space when room ls available in its own buildings. But officials find it rough go- ing to force departments t.o give up their extra space, he said. By charging rent, the county could provide a budgetary iricentlve to frug al de partments, he ex- plained . A similar method is used in San Diego County. .lt'here the government charges its offices 25 cents a square-foot rent. MOUNTFORD SAID San Diego's system is a means to in· ventory space. but Orange Coun· ty analysts think the plan can be expanded to encourage depart· ments to give up unneeded room . However. any final decisions will be based on whether GSA officials think the system can save the county money, he said. Seminar Slated Coping with depression wilt be the topic ol a seminar N.ov. 20 at Santa Ana College, beginning at l p.m. . The class will meet in room t>-201. For more information call 835-3000. . DM.V ""°" A .. Marinea Set 'Toys' Run A Toya for Tota run is scheduled Dec. 14 at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Proceedl from the flve.- k l lo meter and 10 - kllometer races will 10 to help buy toys for .needy children. Pre·reaJstrallon is $7 with a tee shirt and $4 without. . ' 1T ,, " Awards will be given following the 8 a.m . race, with 10 kilometer partici- pants starting at 8: 30. For more information, call M9-3Sl3. ,, ' Bur1;1 lnj~ S.eminar Set A panel discussion on burn in- juries will be held at 7 p.m. Nov .• 10 at the UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange. The discussion is s ponsored by the UCJMC Bum Center Alumni Group. More information about the m-ee ting in building 53 , classroom B can be o~tained· by c a lling Shirley Simonton, 634-5568. C•ll 642-5171. Pul • rew word• to work tor ou. I I Sleui,hs To Join Forces Two investigative un- its of Orange County that have delved into welfare fraud separately ·H 0 t ·1 D A Y s ~ ~ S A L E ,. . ' in the past will join bands beginni ng in March. When the sleuths from the county District At- torney's Office join those from the Human Services Ageqcy. they should turn op about $50,000 mere a year in restitution, officials sa y. THE TWO UNITS in the past each have · in- vesliaated a spect s or wellari 'fraud, but they ~have bem supervised by boa~ iD separate de· partments. The situation was criticize d for duplicated service in a 1979 county Grand Jury report. and officials have been preparing the merger since then. said David Cortez. analyst for the county Ad · mlnistrative Office. The county Board of Supervisors, which first c ommitte d to th e merger a year ago, act· ed Tuesday to complete the consolidation. CORTEZ SAID the new unit will have a bout 2S investigators working under a supervisor in the district attorney's office. He said preliminary reports from that office claim the streamlined investigative ieam will un cover about eight more cases of fraud a month. Although the crews from the two agencies will be under single supervision, some dU- ferences still will exist. Tbe district attorney's lnve~tigators. for exam· pie, carry guns and han- dle more dangero us cases, Cortez said. BECAUSE OF THAT, county supervisors postponed the mer1er last year unW Orange Count1 puabed through 1tate leglllaUon exempt- int the Human Services Aaency investl1ators (rom ~lvlng higher retirement pay as public safety work~n. . Tbe letislatlon goes ' · into effect in January. . . BroncRides 11.00on bucking n'llChtne with Wntern fun dlYI thru Sun. • Huntington Center / \ • B. R o· A D W A Y DUPONT DACRON®SONATA CARPET~ ORIG. 21.00, l4.99 SQ~ YD. ~ .. Carpet one room or the whole house. Sonata is a dense, tightly packed saxony carpeting that resists crushing uryderfoot or the weight of furniture. lt'1 autoclaye heat-se~ ·to j ! stabilize yarn and insure no change in size or shape. And there's a great choice of solid colors, all with th.e extra-bright, rich lustre of Dupont Dacron" polyester. Carpets, 32. Oacro')• is a registered trademark of Dupont, Inc. No p•yment 'tll February. Ch(\rge your purchases now through January and pay -:-:-.:..,;.__-~--nothing u.ntll February 1981 . Sign up for our Deferred Charge Plan in your nearest lroaaway Credit Offite prcatt-1011-free,, 1-800·422 .... 732-3.-.. . . . . . . ·' • J t '#• CJ,Ho * f.ttm THIS CHRISTMAS TAKE ROGER'S HOME . NOVEMBER'S Gardening. Tips FOR THE HOLIDAYS Thl· 11th of :\nH·mhcr is the fl·ast Ja) of St. '.\lartin - the patron r-:11 1 nt of l<iwrn·kecJX!rs. \'rne·l!mwd ' anJ ~ I l\lnl"~,1.~~.'::i~r 1.; JO 1Jeal month lo t1Jy ur )~1ur 11arden. PREVIEW NOV. 7th anJ amcnJ the""' \11th Roiter'i Soil Activator. ;.-~~;;··············••r• C1Mlll llml' tu tran,pl;int e'1crl!rwn ~ ) tree" JnJ shruth. Don't fon ... >cl tu thin Jl'O"t: tree' ;inJ ,1;1ke"\11unuer uncl>. Roger's has always made Christmas 1 ... ·1·c1 the ,1 .. 1cr h.'''"' yiou mJJc ;:,round a memorable holiday. A time of joy. Of pl:int,. th1l> la,.t .;umml·r ~· \\'atcr d11c:1n't festive. good fee lings and cheri shed colll-d durinu l'om1nl! rJ1ns. reunion. We a't Roger's are happy to have been il part ef-Ch1-ishnas-pasl-a..u-------=--&4< Roger's Reminders Still .1 l!••.J muhth tu plant Jnnual.;, rcrennials. tree.( JnJ ,Jirut" F1111,h pl.1ntinu l•~•I 'l·a..iin \ej.!l'lahles such as k·llule. «1hhJf.!l. li1uhll1111l·r. Bru,(CI "rrout~. and hmccoli. l'l;int fr11m J 1Jr1d\ 11f hulh' •till il\JllJhlc fur J:iizlinl! >'p11nu JnJ 'Utntnl·r u1lor L'ut h;1d, Chry:-.anthemum' to h " W "lh.'n they arl' f1nt•hl·J hlrn1m1nu Control ,n;ut... ;inJ .;luJ.!' \\'1th That's It ""·'" h;11t The Plant Doctor Q My lil\\'n i:> lookin~ brown and ~l!mcwhal tirl·d. \\'hat can I do to rc\'i\'c ® 11: sincerely wish to complement your Christmas present. Roger's · Unwraps tlie World ,. . . ~ ... It is Chri~lm;i:: a:: celehrutcJ in humli:< \"hc'Wi1rlcI uwr.-l 'niqm" :'\o::l11lt.11l'. l'nhurril·J. <>IJ \\'orlJ ;snd the fom11i;1r. Sr".-c1;il. \\'arm.,\ lfoiter'i; CarJcn ChrMma.~. 1lll' 1mrld of Christ ma.< ha:-Ix-en 4u1l'lly unwrarix·d 1n our 1otardcn 11f holid;iy fanlal>)'. Look fur C'111:dul cheruhs from lt;ily, and Italian miniature lil!hli;. \\'him.~1cal wood can-inJ.!l> from &andina\'ia. Eh:i.tanlly l.'.fl'alcd ornaments. and IA.-c11rnt11e lrl-c lo~ hanJmilJe h} EuruJ)l•an families. . \nd st11l thcrc 1s more. ··- The Christmas Tree Our lo(illll'r}' fe;iturl'S tn.'C!I ll'1lh tx-autifull)' dcrnrall'<I thclTll.'!I. Each lrl'C ha!I Ileen indl\idually ..:rcaled as an .illl!•lt ad\'l'nturc 1n holida)' 1mait1natiun . \\·,. 1n1·1tl• y11u to \'ic11 what" Ch11stmas Trw l'an he. The Florist Christmas Originals Our florist is thl' J l'!lll!nt·r \\'ho \\'ould makl' Santa's cl\'l's l!rl'cn with CO\')'. Create il Joyful holiday fcclinl! in your home. Choo~ from dclil!htful I~ Jesll{nt·J dried l\'rl'aths. ccnll'T' pil-ccs. door swill!,'\, anJ 11•;ill arranuemcnls. SJ)l-ci;il orJlT or scll·l'I Jtrl,·llr lwm our display uf frl'sh faltorwintcr aminl{l'mcnts. Fresh i.tm:nsa1·ail;ihle l.ll~cmhcr I. The Holiday Nursery School . . .. Al·knowlcJJ.!eJ ;iulh11rit)'. CorJ11n lkikl'r l.lo)'J. pn.'1\cnl:> -ltlc;I,'$ for ;1h e:1.dli nl! tr:1JH111n11lholiJ11)'. Lcaroi11 rrcp;il).' anJ packal!e pl;ints ;L( 1tHt11: "ChrlStrnas Gifts That Grow." Tuesday, November 11, 11 am. ·"A Spectacular Thanksgiving Table From Your Garden". · Tuesday, November 25, 11 am. The Beauty of Roger's Candle lighting Celebration The l<o1otef':. Christ ma.' Spirit ,hincs thr1>uJ.!h hnuht and dear. Our cl'll'hr;ition 11( this 1-cry sJ)l·~:ial holida)' ~a~m lx'l!ins with the dcliJ.!hlful l'>.Jleril'nll' of lil!hlinu up 11f lfoi.tl·r·s Car1.k..n.< with l'ilndlcs. E\'cn St. ~irk ll'ill he here'. II is a warm fa mil)' affair nf ..:andlclil!hlinl! dcliuhls. musk ;inJ rcfrl·shmcnts. :"\11\\' 1' Jn ideal lime to thatch lawns. Thl·n l ul dose Jnd on:rsced with annual ryl· "~IRiti~~~~,~~~~ \\'l' wdcume ~·ou. ~11~ds CanJld11othtmu Cclehration. .\rtl'r i..icrmmalton. hclo!in rntlinl! and fl·rltl11.1ni.? on a rcJ,!ular hasis for a health)'. hcaut1ful \\'tnh:r la\\'n. Escape To CC®Il®~~ ! I - Get your home and gardcn·reaay fo r the holida>' season: Call our Colorscape peop le and fi nd ou t what their landscape and gardening expertise can do for you~ 640-5806 Trees arrive Dec.1 Trees and Roger's go hand in hand. And this year. for the very first •time, we're offering cut' Christmas Trees ' of Noble Fir. &otch Pine. and Plantation Fir. 4 VISA/AMERICAN EXPRESS/MASTERCARD MAS'J:ERCHARGE \\'rappmu rarer anJ rl·am.< uf l'olorful rihhun fmm Europe Candle~ ;:mJ holt.krs tfand·patnkd l'cramk and l.'.f}l'tal Jl'l.'.oralt11M \\'e tnl'ilc \llUr \hit and \\'lsh the happiest of holidil\'S. Roller'< un11rap,. our Can.kn of lnn!'tma...; Fanta.<y for ~11U. }1Ktr tncnJ,, and famtl}. Christmas Preview. Friday. No\'ember 7. 9 am to 9 pm. Special evening events 6 to 9 pm. PlanS .. & Products OnSALE The Christmas Gallery N uuks and nannies of atm11splll:rc from most l'IW}'\l'IWTC. The l!allcr~ is a pm•cnl tn it!ll·lf. ,\ plil..:l' whcrl' }UU l'an Ix-eSJ)l~iall~ trl·akJ tu 11Ur holtda} home Jl'l.'.mattnl! !lul!J.,.>cstions. Tahll· sl'lhnJ,!:1, china. c~lci;. plal'l' >l'llinl!s. cl')'!'tal. ;ind of .:11t1TSl', llll.'rcdihlc ;11.'.l'l'!l:•mici; 111 l'onlplelTll.·nt ~'lllr holiJ;iy cntcrtaininl!. \\'c mii.iht al~• add. our l{alkrr 1~ a ple;isant departure Imm the u.<ual and l':l.pcdl•d hu.<lle ;inJ hu.<tk· of holiday shoppi~I-!· NURSERY • INDOOR/OUTDOOR PLANTS & FLORIST • LANDSCAPING ANTIQUES • PATIO FURNITURE & ACCESSORIES San Joaquin Hills Rd. at MacArthur Blvd. ~,~ .. -111111.. Across from Fashion Island • Newport Beach Open 9 to 5 Daily Magic Gro® Bulb Food Reg. SJ.99 Sale $3.39 640-5800 Bandini #6 Fert.ilizer (1 4 lb. bag) Reg. S 11 .95 Sale $10.95 Blue Angel Holly (2 gal.) Reg. Sl 1.50 Sale $9.50 Special Holiday Event Roger's Candlelighting Celebration Dec. 5 & 12 6-9 P.M. ) Mic llmlkd tu ltclll!I on hand. Sall· enJ.< ;\O\'. 20. America's Most Beautiful Garden Center \ ., 'J tJ :, ) ) .. ..... INStD•: •Sports •Comic• ReputilicaDs Capt11re Senftte Control . . WA.SHINOTON (AP' -Republicans captured control of the Senate foT the finl time. In 28 )'ell'I on Election Day and ousted such leadina Democratic Uber.W u Geor1e McGovern, Frank Cburc'h, Warren Ma1nuson and 81rcb Bayb along the way. clal mlsconduct th.ls year, trailed Mattingly, 753,739 votes to 769,362, with only 46 of 2,471 precincts yet to report. Bolstered by Ronald R•aaan's presidential landallde. Republican1 netted at leaat 1q &l'Ml poulbly 12 aeats to asaure a GO~ majority ran1ln1 from Sl,'49 to 53-47, dependin& upon the late re\urna .-hich trlclded In today. Talmadge enjoyed a substantial lead in earlier counting, and several news organizations, Including Tbe Associated Press, declared him a winner. Two other races, in Vermont and Arizona, were still too close to call. A late sur1e by Republican Mack Mattingly gave him a nearly 16,000..vote edie over Dem~ltic Herm~ Talmadge in Georgia after the lncumbent had looked like a winDer on election night. Democrats held 58-41 control in the outgoing Senate with In-dependent Harry F. Byrd of Virginia voting with the Democrat to oreanize the Senate. Byrd, wbo supported Reagan. said today he would remain in the Democratic caucus. Talmadge, 67, who was "denounced" by the Senate for tinan-The other uncertainties were in Arizona where Sen. Barry Andt!rson Dream Fades, I . But ·Backers Yell '1984' WASHINGTON <AP) -John B. An· , derson's quest for an independent coalition to propel him to the White House is a failed dream for now, but. he still thinks there's enough potential support that he may try again in 1984. No decisions have been made and first. Anderson faces t he task of paying off SS million in campaign debts. But that task may be made easier by the fact that Anderson ap- parently will qualify for federal funds . ANDE.RSON POLLED just 6 percent of the vote Tuesday but 5 percent would qualify him for money from the Federal Election Commission. Aides to Anderson say the same discon- tent that once gave Anderson a 24 percent rating in public opinion polls is still there. despite the landslide victory of Republican Ronald Reagan. At his final appearance of the 1980 cam- paign -a rally in a Washington hotel Tues- day night -Anderson said. he calJed Reagan to offer congratulations earlier in the eve- ning. "TIIE RETURNS HAD clearly shown l was not destined lo become the' next presi- dent of the United States," he said. He paused and then added, "That is a de- cision deferred." About 800 supporters in the ballroom im- mediately began to chant, "Eighty-four. eighty-four, eighty-four.·· Of Reagan a nd Vice President-elect George Bush, Anderson said he wishes therri s uccess in trying to solve the problems of lhe country. "They will have my support." An- derson said. Anderson appeared to have little impact in any state. and Democratic accusations that he was a s poiler who would throw the election to Reagan were groundless. Reagan polled about 50 percent of thevote, dem- onstrating that he would have won with or without Anderson in the race. * * * Ho.use Strength Increases Bv The Associated Press Republicans won at least 29 additional House seats. surpris- ing even themselves. and were leading in all four remaining races. A 34-seat gain would restore the party lo the strength it held before the Watergate scandal ousted Richard Nixon from office and decimated the GOP's ranks. Democrat s hold a 276-159 margin in the outgoing House. With five races still· too close to call, the lineup was 243 to 192. Goldwater held an 8.000-vote lead over his Democratic opponent Bill Schulz and in Vermont where liberal Democrat Sen. Patrick· Leahy was the apparent. although undeclared, winner. The new Senate will be the most conservative slnce the off. year election in 1954, when the GOP lost control or the chamber it had won two years earlier. Beyond the mere numbers. the election will mean a major shift to conservative committee chairmen. The most notable may be in the Judiciary Committee where Sen. Strom Thunnond, R- S.C .• will replace Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. The Republican triumph was clinched with the victory in Alaska of Fairbanks banker Frank Murkowski .,,. Wirel*e'IO BIG LOSER -Herman Talmadge lost by more than 16.000 votes to Mack Mat- ting J y after earl i er projections had Talmadge the winner. Governor. Chairs GoGOP WA S H INU T ON (AP > Republicans. riding the long coattails or Ronald Reagan's march to the presidency, snatched al least three gov- er norshi ps from the Democrats and appeared on the verge of • capturing a fourth as final re- turns were counted early today. The GO P was assured of at least 22 and possibly 23 gov- ernors. its best number in a dec- ade. One of the more striking Republican triumphs was con- firmed today as Little Rock businessman Frank White oust- ed incumbent Bill Clinton in Arkansas. THE ADDITIONS, coupl ed with the scope of Reagan's lands lide. are s ure to put the House on a more conservative course than has been the case. Republican challengers knocked t-~_..,oi;;;.. __________________ .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;,;;. ______________________________________ ~~,ott-~everal-pT01TTTnen~ rrberai Poll Blames Indecisive Carter lmaf{e AT 33, CLINTON is the na- tion 's youngest governor and was l'egarded one of-t-he-risiAg- stars among Democrats. But his e mbrace of President Carter may have cost him dearly in a state swept by Reagan, as White wound up with 52 percent of the vote. • I Tax Revolt Loses Steam Prop. 13 ls~ues Fail in 6 of ~ States By The Auoclated Press Massachusetts voters defied warnings or fiscal doom and gave themselves ·a whopping property tax cut. but in six other states the nation's tax revolt ran but or steam as voters rejected Proposition 1.3-style measures. Taxes headed a Ust of hun- dreds of ballot measures de- cided by voters in 42 states Tues- day. In California and in Dade County, Fla., they refused to limit smoking in public: in IJ. linois, they slashed the size of the state House, and in South Dakota, they lifted an eight-year ban on the s hooting of mourning doves. ATTEMPTS TO LIMIT nuclear plants or waste sites met mixed receptions in a half. dozen states. Missouri voters de- cisively turned back a move to ban such plants in the absence of licensed radioactive waste dumps, while Montanans reject- ed a proposal that would have essentially halted uranium min- ing. Oregonians narrowly ap- Droved a measure blocking con- struction of nuclear plants in the state until federally licensed waste dumps are built. But Washington voteTS approved a ban on storing most out-of-state radioactive wastes at their Han- ford dump. With 91 percent or the vote in, the tally was too close to call on a nuclear issue in South Dako(a, and a non-binding referendum in Massachusetts was yielding. in· conclusive retµriis. q, ' IN ONE OF the most emo- tionally charged issues -seen aa a backlash against Miami's 600,000 Cuban Immigrants - Dacie County voters by a 60 per- cent margin told officials to stop conducting huslness and print- UN. MoGOYeRN -South Dakota aenator 17 yean; once ps91dentlal candidate defeated by Rep. Jamei Abdnor. tp ing county publications in Spanish as well as English. "This shows people want to speak English in their own com- munity," said Emmy Shafer, a Russian immigrant who led the drive ror the measure. "They want this to be an American community again." The Massachusetts tax measure, which won 3-2, was dubbed Proposition 2'h because it will gradually cut property taxes by an average 40 percent until they are limited to 2'h per- cent of assessed values. STATE OFFICIALS warned that approval would force public employee layoffs and service cutbacks. But proponents who call their state "Taxachusetts" said they need relief from some of the nation's highest tax rates. In Arkansas, voters a1mroved 4-1 an amendment bloc'Mng a court-ordered reassessment that would have raised property tax- es considerably. In other states, however, at- tempts to copy Proposition 13, California's 1978 property tax· cutting landmark. fared poorly. Three separate proposals lost in Michigan. and tax cuts lost also in South Dakota, Arizona , Oregon and Utah. Iowans turned back a move to call a constitu- tional convention that would draft a tax·-relief amendment. HERE ARE HIGHLIGHTS or other measures voted on Tues- day : -State lotteries were ap- proved in Colorado and • Washington, 0 .C. A similar measure in Arizona was narrow- ly leading with nearly all pre- cincts COWlted. Legalized bingo won in West Virginia, Texas and Missouri .. -Washington, D.C. voters ap- proved a measure that would .... llAYH -Seeldna fourth term from Indiana voten, loser to three -time Republlean Rep. Dan Q\!ayle. ~ start the process for the nation's capital to become the 51st state. In stx southern New Jersey counties, non-binding referen- dums endorsed the notion of seceding from the state. -Iowa voters rejected a state Equal Rights Amendment after a campaign in which opponents showed films ol homosexuals dancing together and said the state's popular six-girl basket- b a I l team s w ould b e jeopardized. -VOTERS IN NEARLY half of Nevada's 17 counties declared opposition lo federal moves to locate part of the MX mobile missile system in their state. Kansas City, Mo., voters approved a m eas ure to fluoridate their water after a 25-year-old battle by opponents who said the chemical might cause cancer. -North Carolina approved a measure requiring new judges to be lawyers. -Florida voters approved a "right to prjvacy" amendment inspired by fe ars or electronic ~nooping but subsequently em- braced by homosexuals. -MICHIGAN VOTERS Te· fused to lower the drinking age from 21 to 19. -Nye County, Nev .. voters said by a 2-1 margin that legal prostitution should continue in their boundarit~· -Rent control proposals were trounced in Seattle and San Diego. -Alaskans r~ectesl a share- lhe-we&Wa, initiative that would have made all Alaskans equal partners in a state corporation empowered to invest in projects such as the Alaska oil pipeline. llN. CHURCH -Chairman of Senate Foreign Relations Committee slim loser to Idaho conservative Rep. Steven Symma. Democrats who have helped shape the nation's course for years. House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D-Mass .. called the election results a ""disaste r for the Democrats.·· Among the most notable Democratic losers were John Brademas of Indiana, who held the third ranking leadership post among Democrats ; Frank Thompson of New Jersey, a top spokesman for labor causes ; Thomas Ashley of Ohio. influen· tial in housing legislation: John Murphy of New York. a leader of American shipping interests: and Harold T . Johnson of California. head of the House Public Works Committee. ANOTHER PROM INENT Democrat -Al U llm an of Oregon, who chairs the powerful tax-writing Ways a nd Means Committee -was in a neck·and- n e c k r ac e. trailing his Republican opponent by more than 2,000 votes with 95 pe rcent of the precincts reporting. He bla m ed Carter's concession two hours before 0 re gon 's polls closed. And se ver al vetera n Democr at s , inclu din g Ric hardson Preyer of South Caroljna, Lester Wolff of New York, Bob Eckhart of Texas. Jerome Ambro of New York and Andrew Maguire of New Jersey. lost their seats. In contrast, Republicans lost fewer than six incumbents But one loss was that or Rep Robert Bauma n of Ma r y land, the parliamentary wizard who has long made life difCicult for the Democratic majority. LABOR SUFFER ED major setbacks as the conservative tide swept through the House. Not only were Thompson and Murphy lost -both had been In- dicted in the FBI 's Abscam bribery investigation -but as many of the candidates who had labor's endors·ement appeared to have lost as won. Only one of the five con- gressmen indicted in the FBI ·s Abscam probe won re-election - Rep. Raymond Lederer . D-Pa. • REP. ~·---Calllomla con1res1snan; bead o( the House Public Work.I Com· mlttee, beaten by A.a· semblyman Cbappte. NEW YORK (AP) To the last, Jimmy Carter retained his reputation among the American • electorate as a man or honesty. integrity and strong religious beliefs. But he also retamed a reputation for indecisiveness and that, in the end. helped do him in. The Associated Press-NBC News polls of voters in 10 key states and across the nation said Ronald Reagan defeated Carter at least in part because or that intangible .. leadership" question that has plagued Ca rt e r throughout his presidency VOTERS WERE ASKED to li st one or two personal charac- teristics that were most impor- tant to them in their choice of a candidate. Among voters who cited deep moral and religious beliefs, Carter had a margin of almost 2-to-l over Reagan. The incumbent also had a majority among those who cited honesty and integrity. But six of ~ven voters who cited firmness and decisiveness as important cast ballots for Reagan. The former California governor also had an edge of almost 2·to-l among those who made intelligence a criterion. And more than two voters m five said their vote was based in part on their feeling that Carter had done a bad job in office. REAGAN EVEN DID we ll among groups that were thought to be heavily Democratic. Carter won the Jewish vote, but not bS: the margins he had - hoped for. lie got about half the vote, with Reagan taking better than a third and Anderson cap- turing neady one Jewish voter in five. Carter also took the black vote by an overwhelming 90 per<l&dt to 7 *"8cent for Reagan in 'The poll. Anderson received 3 per- cent. Another De mocratic incum- bent , Arthur Link of North Dakota, was tfailing Republican Allen Olson by a narrow but persistent edge a s the count wore on today. Reagan took North Dakota by a 63·to·27 per- rent margin over Carter. There were 13 governorships at s take. Republicans held on to all three statehouses with a GOP incu m bent while only six Democratic · incumbents. bar-# ring a turnaround for Link, won. IN MISSOU RI , the most populous s tate captured by Republicans. Christopher Bood beat De mocratic Gov. Joseph Teasdale. Four years ago, it was the other way around, Teasdale upsetting the Republican Bond. Two Republicans easily won re-election. And in Indiana. a highly popular Republican, Otis R. Bowen. was barred by the state constitution from a tbird term, but he was succeeded by h is Re publica n s econd-in· command, Lt Gov. Robert Orr. The Democrats, meanwhile, threw out two incumbent gov- ernors in their primaries and wound up losing one of the seats. Was hington. while holding onto Montana with a new candidate, Lt. Gov Ted Srhwinden. IN WASHIN GTON, King Cou n ty Re publi ca n J ohn Spellman defeated state Sen. James McDermott, who had eliminated Gov Dixy Lee Ray in the Democratic primary. She was one of only two women governors ln Vermont, Cov. lticharA ..Sne lling beat Democratresta1e Attorney General M. Jerome, Diamond. Gov . Ja y R ocke f e ller personally spent $9.4 milliod in defeating former Re publican <Jov . Arch Moore to "'win a second term in West Virginia. Moore had beaten Rockefell er in 1972, but he was outspent 12-1 by Rockefeller in this election. I~ -DM.VN.OT Coata Cited in Laguna Niguel Issue ' •T naoaa1CK 1CHOE•EHL ................. The board abandoned the proposed action Tuesday after receiving a report in which attorneys in the county Counsel's Office concluded that a lawsuit likely would cost the county more than It could expect to receive if the Jawsu.it proved sue· cessful . Tbl Oran1e County Board of Supervisors has decided not to pu1'11ue le1al acllon over construe· Uon of a La1una Nl1uel pool U\at is one inch short ol \he leqth reqwred for Amateur Athletic Union certification. IT HAS BEEN ESTIMATED THAT it would cost about $30,000 to lengthen the 25-meter swim· ming Janes which range from beJOi' one-eighth inch to one inch short. ~--------- R.nch , . • 1911 . .._._ ...... llf. Without AAU certification, the pool may not be u.sed for sanctioned swimming meets nor would any records set there be considered official. The pool. located in Crown Valley Community Park. cost $195,000 to construct. It was opened In September 1978. The county Counsel's Office staff concluded that the contra~tor, Vi~tor Construction Co .. could not be held liable for the incprrect dimensions. Its contract : according to the report. included specifications which permitted-deviations of up to one inch in the length of the pool. PETER HERMAN. AN AIDE TO 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley, said it will be up to the Laguna Niguel Community Association and an ad- visory group on the park's development to de· termine if they want the pool broughrto AAU stan· da rds. Ii they do. Herman said. money for the project would have to co me from county service area funds designated for Laguna Nig uel projects. He noted that a ny repair project would have to compete with other projects contained on funding prior ity lists already approved by the asst>cialion and forwarded to the county . "All I'm asking for. Scott. Is some assurance that this will be a lasting temporary Infatuation." According to the Co\lJlsel's Office report, there is no indication that AAlJ certification was desired until after the pool was built. Bus Passes Bein~ Sold Monthly bus passes fo r the Orange County Transit District are on sale at 11 branches of the Automobile Club of Southern California and nine JC Penney department stores in Orange County. -~1resma11tor the district said the locations have been added to make it more conve· p_ient for bus riders to buy · passes. The passes already are so ld at a ll Gemco a nd Albert!Son's stores, all Laguna Federal Savings and Loan of· fices, the Mercado/Salas Cur- rency Exchange in Santa Ana and Bullock's Fashion Square in Santa Ana. Ther e are three kinds of monthly passes. They cost $17.SO for local buses. $13 for students and $43. 75 for both express and loul buses. Tbe passes also are on sale at the Orange County Transit Dis· trlct office at 11222 Acacia Parkway, Garden Grove. -' Panel Takes Step To Re-open Nuke WASHINGTON <AP> -A gov· ACRS, it could be some time ernment advisory subcommitt~ before the case is settled. took a step toward the possible restarting of a General Electric R~p. Ronald V. D_ellums. D· nuc lear t est r eactor near Cahf., a!'d the env1ron~ental Pleasanton which has been sh~ group Fr~ends-of ~e&art'flffiiVe down ror three years for an aske~ ~o intervene 111 the case - earthquake safety review. ~equi~g the NRC to hold hear· A three-member subcommit· ings on it -and are expected to tee of the Advisory Committee opposeanyrestart. on Reactor Safeguards heard de- tailed technical reviews by GE aad 'Its ~ultants and by the st arr of the Nuclear Regulatory , Commission. • T hen. the s ubcommittee agreed to present the case to the full ACRS when it meets here later this week. THAT COULD lead to a n ACRS recommendation to the Nuclear Regulator y com - mission . The commission's permission ls required to re· sume operation of the reactor. Even with approval from the DWIGHT GILLILAND, General Electric's manager of reactor irradiations, said it .-ouktt.akesomertinomonthsto12 mo~ to restart the reactor if approval were given. GillHand told a reporter the .reactor began operation in 1958 and h~ been used not only to test nuclear fuel designs and materials, but also to produce radioactive materials used in medical diagnosis and treat- meotanclin induatrial testing. The reactor has been shut down since December 1977. • . . In Orang1 County. OUR FABU OOS· FolDING STACK CHA RS, IN TIME FOR THE H LIOAVS . .. Here are your perfect e•tra cMlrs with a fine design and finish, solid ~ood frame, vinyl seat, and a clever fold aW stMd-swk steel locking system that's a ~ 1~ce saver. Our great little 2-f\f-1 prke includes delivery and our famow warranty of quality. EL TORO• 236'1 El Toro Blvd.• (71'1951·3303 SANTA ANA/TUSTIN• 1703 E. 171hlt.• 543·8201 COSTA MESA• 3115 N. Harbor Blvd.• 549·8761 WESTMINSTER• 15011 S.ach 81vd. (714) 898·9673 HUNTINGTON BEACH• 1901 8Hc:h Blvd.• 536~501 ARTESIA• 1'727 South St.• 924-6682 SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK • WEEKDAYS 10 UNTIL 9 • SATURDAY 10 UNTIL 6 • SUNOA't' 12:30 UNTIL 6 < Co11y,,9N 1980 RB tnGustfies tne • ,,_ Yot11 Sloe• t •C""'9f Company BOORO'S JIM BEAM VODKA BOURBON 6! g: UIW . • ~ 'Goi.iRMET FOODS ANO SPIRITS Prices erfec11ve through Sunday, Nov. 16 Hurry' SJ:>me limited quantiltesl In lhe even1 of an e"or the ltlgal minimum price wlll prevail. DEWAR'S WHITE LABEL SCOTCH 15: ..,..., TAYLOR MAGNUMS Q Tile wine taster'')~hoice: ' Chablts, Burgunoy. /. Alline. and Fr~. • Regul1rly M .ct 289 ~~ RED TAO I 5 Lote< ~ tr~.:. . BLUE NUN Everyone's , / •"!;'l lavonte Ueblraumilch. ·~. ~ A S6.25 Velu. 319 ·~-_:·_ "ED TAO 7r>OML F'i--~ MARTINI & ROSSI ASTI SPUMANTE Oellclously ltghl and festlve~69 A ,.,. doller VII RED TAG 750ML n~u~~=·: 01 ........................................... 7 " ~~~:ti~~~ ....................................... 6" • SAN MIGUEL 7-UP 1" Regular e "" Light 2" & Dark &PK. .i\'i~~,-~ &Sugar . HEILEMAN'& EXPORT , .. • Pl! Free ' ; ~· . . ... 12 pi.. c.r. SMOKE SHACK• KE IEER •CATERINO• DIUCATllllN DELIVERY OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. TO :11 P.M. . 496E.17th ST.• COSTA MESA PHONE [7141 648-9314. 11 j: I ,· p I I . I J i : I ' •I 0 I _/"' J I/ I ... . -.. .. I . Wldr~. Nov.mber 5. 1980 ' 're going your way with more. buses • I .. • ·/to more places than · ever .before. ---.-~ ~---· 1 I I . I ~, More people are riding the bus to work, $Choo/ and shopping because we've .. ' . , . ' ' mad~ it so easy witfi new buses, new routes and improved service. New Express Route New Local Route Cypre6s to Anaheim Via Kate/la Riverside Frwy. Cypress K11011 v,111ov View I ~ ~ 81oo~t111•SI I>. Garden .! Grove __.~E.;;..;;.11c1_.,,_J H111oor -- Srare College Orange 402 Anaheim Tustin to Seal Bch. Via 17th & Westminster G1d1tt1 ~!c~.-_.---~-- Hosp/1•1-~-----~ -1 ~.;.;.,;;--- Garden Grove -l -~ e-.,,..-"""'"--A 62 se,1Beach Improved Local Route El Modena to· Hunt'g Bch. Via Chapman Ave. 54 rw"""c' . Tustin Newp()(/ Frwy (55 ~\ Orange _G_1J_ss•_·"----,.j,3 ff.,N • i'\I UC/ Medlcal Cent0t -----tin 9~ Santa Ana Tl'lflC1ty • HJstN ~ Garden Haroor ~ Grove __ _._....,(:u ..... cl•;;_rl -/ ~// B1CJ0•.rwr~1 .,.• $' ~--~a-'---,o \: • M.lqnul•il (j /' ----"1----'"'-/ "-~ wesrmlnstar J I Mall .f..~ /Huntington ~ Beach Snt•nqri.te • soc; is all it costs one way on regular routes, and never 1 more than 51.25 to go 1 express. Exact change, please. For information on routes nearest you CALL: '636•RIDE. Se habla Espanol. - CWLY PflOT Doetor's Wife Noise Experts Hired for Airport Suit Drugs, Sex Guilt Venkd Two firm. that will provtde t'XPf'rt witness testimony in 1n upcomlna John Wayne AlrPort noiise dama~e lawlluit have been employed by tbe Orangt: County Board of Sup<lrvisors al a cost of SSS,800. • The money, whic h will come fro1n a S400,000 account set aside for legal expenses related to airport operations, will pay for the testimony of acoustical engineers from Bolt, Beranek and 'Newman Inc of Canoga Park, and real estate appraisers from Landauer Associates Inc .. of Sanu Ana. BO TH FI RM S W EJtE employed by the county to pro- vide expert witness testimony in a similar noise damage lawsuit that went to trial In Orange County Superior Court in 1978. spring or 1981. Sevier said the $39,800 that will go to Bolt 6eranek and Newman and the $46,00CUo Landauer l..S more than what the firms were Individually paid as a result o( their services 1n 1978. .. lt reflects lnrtatlon." he Cit· plained. The Bolt firm, In Its proposal to assist in the. county's c11e. has proposed to perform four tasks: -Undertake noise mea11ure ments at selec ted locutions around the airport. . -Prepare noise charts for the periods in which the plainlltrs claim they were damuged by noise. -Confer with airport otficinls and other expert witnesses on the trial preparations. ../' Provide testimony durinl( the trial. Landau er represen - tatives have proposed to ap-. praiH the properties listed in the lawsuit to determine their market values in tight of their location near the airport. In u related action Tuesday, supervlaons also approved in· creases In what they. will pay in le(lal fees to the firm of Luce. forward, Hamilton and Scripps, a Carllbad law firm hired as special counsel for airport legal matters. Rates for principal attorneys will rise to $ll5 and SllO per hour rrom former rates of $105 a nd SIOCY. Rates for associate at· torneyK will rise from S40 to $75 per hour to $55 to 185. while that 1111ld ror paralegal services will Increase from $35 to $40 per hour fo'ccs were last increased in February 1979 \/bit OK•d Britain's Princess Michael of K'ent~ ex pec ting her second child in April, has de· cided to go ahead with plans to visit Canada Nov. 13-17. He r husband is a cous in to Queen Elizabeth 11 T he 21 -year·o ld wife of Newport Beach chiropractor Dr. Gordon E. Braham, accused \Oith him of supplying a 14-year· old girl with drugs for sex until she fi nally took the lurid tale to her minister, has pleaded lnno· cent. Nancy Braham and her at· .lorney, William Allen, appeared in Orange County H a rbor Municipal Court to formally de· ny the charges filed by the Orange County Dis trict At· torney's Office. HER HUSBAND. 36, a lso ar· r ested Oct. 8 at their con· do minium home, had already pleaded innocent to the several felony charges. whose practice Is a t 3~ MacArthur Blvd., Newpo Beach, went to court earlier plead innocent to a lle1at1 m ade by the H ·vP11r-"1tt His lawyer. William Sheffield. sousht a delay In setting of * preUminary hearing date un~ Thursday, apparently to allof' him to obtain more i>olic.e ~ ports in the preparation of t"8 case. • Both defendants are free oo bail , S40,000 posted by· Dr. Braham and Sl0,000 in the cue of his wife. - In that case. 98 Orange Coast residents claimed damages due to noise from jets f~ to and from the airpO'fT A jury , however. refu sed to a ward any monetary damages. The case is under appeal. Fire1nen Exposed Group Given Bathing Test He is scheduled for a court ap· pearance Friday, when a date is expected to be set for his pre· h mi nary hearing. according to Deputy Di s t r i c t Attorney Suzanne Shaw. POLICE OBTAINED assorted a pparatus for sexual use. In· vestigators allege they seized various items of evide nce used in activities involving the Brahams, who are charged with child molestation. unlawful sex- ual intercourse with a minor . sex perversion and other counts. The alleged orgy activity as· s e<rtedly took place at the Newport Beach residence during t he pas t year before t he youngster in the case confided in her pastor. police said. • In the upcoming case. Harold W. Anderson et al v. County of Orange, 2 52 individual s representing 44 properties are seeking damages for alleged property damage and personal injury. A TRIAL DATE has not been set. Deputy County Counsel Charles Sevier said Tuesday the case will not go to trial until the SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Fi re fighters who battled a four alarm waterfront fire where s mall amounts of a cancer· linked chemical we re released have been advised to take pre· cautions for their personal health. fire officials say. While i t was not known whether any o f the 125 Entptio11s Lit'e11 Volca110 Parties PORTLAND. Ore <AP> For $50. Julie Lewis will bring a papier-mache volcano to your house and liven up your party with a mock erup· lion complete with plenty or green smoke, flash powder, and strobe lights. The 25-year-old graduate student at the University or Oregon Health Sciences Center said she got the idea for her business. known as Erup- tions Ltd .. after Mount St. Helens dusted Portland with ash May 25, forcing residents to stay indoors . "I THOUGHT, 'Wll\' NOT HAV E a volcano party?"' recalled Ms. Lewis, who likes to be known professionally as "Magma Woman." Her 21h ·foot-tall si mutated volcano. with a metal stovepipe inside. is delive red to engage· ments by two friends, Wes Lewis and Rob Connell. whom s he calls .. my molten men " They dress in black coveralls, while Ms. Lewis wears a black cape and makes herself_u p with blue cheeks. silver nose shadow, scarlet eyebrows and black-rimmed lips to further her image. For sound effects. she plays recordings of an atomic bomb explosion and an amplified recording of" A Night On Bald Mountain.'· IN BUSINESS FOR ONLY a few weeks . Ms . Lewis s aid her main purpose is to win $25,000 in a contest for the most original party. · Ms. Lewis said she has taken her volcano to a housewarming, a couple of gatherings for children and Halloween parties In addition. she is scheduled for a couple of parties in December. "But we're not exactly overbooked," she said. So far. the Magma Woman has eRcountered only one small problem -termites found her papier-mache creation delectable. Artist Haines' Showca e Sunday firefighters who fought the Mon· day fire on Pier 70 were con- taminated. they were advised to hose down their clothing and to shower as a precaution. officials said. Fire Lt. Al Chuesen said they were also advised to be alert to any symptoms from con- t am inalion by the chemical. PCB. which has been linked to cancer and li ver disease. LONDON CAP> ..-A dozen members or an expedition pre· paring to go to Antarctica will bathe every day for five weeks ha If of them in cold water, the others in hot. During the expedition. the health and pe rfo rmance of members or each group will be compared to see If one group is better acclimatized to the south po lar cold. She said Tuesday that pro· cee dings invo l ving the chiropractor and his wife, whose preliminary hearing date is scheduled Dec. 8. will be pros · ecuted separately. A Ht.S BAN O AND wife cha rged with the same crimes in a related case a re often tried to~ether. Authorities said Dr. Braham. They have expended coo· siderable time attempting to nm down leads on other possible Juvenile victims of the all eged crimes in which narcotics were s upposedly traded for sexual acts A reception honoring artist Richard Haines will be held at the Laguna Beach School of Art on Sun· day. when has c,ne m an s how opens in the school gallery. The reception will be held from 2 to 5 p.m .. Paintings and drawings or the artist will be shown at the school. 2222 Laguna Canyon Road. through Dec. 6. °'./.' s99 on otlr first morning flight. $99 on our 7:30p.m.widebod~ The Designing Women. support' group for the school. will be hostesses for Sunday's reception. Historians Cha(lengeq _ PHlLADELPlllA <AP> Supporters or Vik ing explorer Leaf Ericson. who insist he sailed • across the Atlantic to the new world 489 years ahead of Christopher Columbus. have hurled a new challenge al historians. . , "'America· comes from the Scandinavian om· merike' which dates back 1,800 years and means 'distant land."' said Ivar Christensen. president of the Leif Ericson Society. "Ericson was the one who named the new con· tlnent America. and not Italian mapmaker • Amerigo Vespucci ," Christensen said at the an· nu al celebration of Leif Ericson Day. ·PROTECT YOUR V ALUAILES! We Will Photograph Your Possessions For A~curate Insurance Rec6rds C .. Mew 6'45-542_. Photo Proclllctlons 2~ 14 I. C.... t:fwr. C.IM ....... . . s99 on selected return flights, too. S99with no restrictions~· .. s74 2s for kids under twelve you bring along. U11i 1t•cl sav(•s you $82 o ff Lh c regular Coac.:h r~u·r to Seatilc. Just fl y one of our sclC'ctC'd nighls any day of the week and you'll fly for just $99 one way. Scats arc limited on these flights. but t: 1crc ru·e no advance-purchase or length-of-stay '· requirements at all. For information and reservations. call your Travel Agent. Or call United at 973-2121. Partners in lravcl with \Vestern International Hotels . ./ Most nonstops to Seattle l.A'llvf' Arrive 7:45 a.m~ 10:15 a.m. I I :m a m 1 55 p m I .~O p 111 :i·55 p m :t30 p m. 5:56 p.m 5 :~o p m 7 56 p. m 7:30 p.m~ 9:56 p.m. ~~~~.:......~~~~~~~~~~~ •s99 nigh ts · ~the frie~skies of.United.· -·~ -~;I -can UnkedJ>l'1Qlf.:ipM ~ ' I ti t1 0 • ' Place an "Early Bird" order totaling $20.00 or more for Hickory Farms of Ohio fresh cheese and meat gifts and re- ceive a delicious Cheese 'Ball or Cheese Log FOR 1 c. The ·gifts you order can be sent or picked up now or later. Offer E~pires November 15, 1980 Shop for Christmas · Gifts Right at Home! It's so · e~sy! Send for our full-color Catalog . · . . yours FREE! r ,-------------------~ Please send me your FREE Hickory Farms of I I Ohio' Christmas Gift Catalog with Order Form. I I I Name: I I I Address: -------I I City State Ip : I I I ft ~~/i~f1"9/ ff ~m".ffi~ ~o62°1rvine Ave. I I , m-mun <t Newport Beach I ~------------------~ We have a beautiful selection of tempting selections, mail in the order and relax. We'll food gifts ... perfect for everyone on your send your gifts directly to friends and lisf. Just mail the coupon below for you r family. FREE catalog . When . it arrives, make your # 17 Fashion I stand Newport Beach 640-6030 ... l by Ired A"""°" FUNKY WINKERBEAN I TMINK ME'S Lasf IN THE W0005 by' Curtis M. kllutl I KNOW WMAT 't'Ot.I MEM 8VT LET ME. TALK 10 MIM, WILL 'la.I ? DEFINE ii-IE FOUOWltJ&: (I.) WR.SOR~ __ ._1·-~--------------------.. ~~ "That's Marmaduke's diploma fi>m obedl- ehce schdol ... it's signed under protest!" ,...----------~ • I i J 9 fl• SHOE by Jeff MacNelly MOON MULLINS EVERYBoC>'/'S OUT·· I l>ON1T IHINK WE SHOULD LEAVE kAYo ALO}J(. ORABBLE FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE I'M 'JUST ONe. OF !HOSE MOMS Wl-\0 l..D/ES BEING wrn-1 CHILDREN~ - \ ITWASf\ PLE.ASURE MISS PE~CH by Mell Lazarius DR . SMOCK ~------- A'2T~tJ~ €~Pt.Al IJ<; A8our A~ll-H.A~, HOW COME WE. Ht.AMAN~ HAVE' HAI~ ON Of.A l< HE.A~? BECAL 1 SE' WHEN THE HUMAN ~ACE 5rA ~TeD, Wlq' Be A UT'/ ~ '> THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "A lot of the guys' mothers type their book reports for them. u DENNIS THE MENACE HADN1r YE T ~EN INVENTE D . GORDO JUDGE PARKER I HAO MY 6ACK WHEN YOU oAY TH lb , TURNED AT THE OTHER FEL.l..OW WALKED TIME: IN AND WAb 100 FAE7T FOR CHET, WHAT 00 YOU MEAN? r-=:::--- • YOU CAN WAt...K I MR. CON ~OY.' S O 'T"H ~OW AWAY 'T"HO Se C R O"f'CHeS AND WA~t<! by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux ~T THE NEXT THIN6 I HEAR lo A 'T'HUO ... AND CHET'S ON THE Fl.OOR,OUTCOLD.' THEN THE CiUY C:1RA66 THI!:> DAME 6Y lHE WRIST... AND OUT THEYCx)' NOW WE CAN KEEP IN TOUCH by Ernie Bushmilltf' ---ER , I DIDN'T HAVE 'veRY MUCH STRING- COMICS 1 CROSSWORD "A bulldog yau uy?'' by Kevin Fagan llllta i.aoo 1.0 ..,..,.,. tN1"~ ~ A 'MO~A1't ~OU? TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 51 Bird sound UNITED Feature Syndicate 1 - -now 53 P0<Ch item Tuesday's Pume Solved Current 57 -pad 5 Punch 61 Formerly 10 Lima. e g 62 Menu Item· 14 Sh&r11 2 WOfCll 15 The Hunter 64 Kind of room ~'IC"lr...-r.--~~~ 16 Exhof't 65 Land: Fr. 17 Rated too 66 Church aru high 6 7 Nourish 19 Assassinated 68 Courser 20 Warms anew 69 Fret 21 Protac1111e DOWN items 1 Love goel 23 Bogs 2,Economlie 25 -de 3 Approve: Janeiro V1t. 26 Catxlt's llnd 4 Gaffer 29 Servioeably 5 Painting 34 Woltl'lound 6 Spring · 27 Cr~ as -49 Sovnd out 35 US dramatist 7 Thus 52 Whither 37 Company 8 Ktcked 28 Nu~aods 53 Unhaanng 38 Against 9 Sland up 30 Appear 541 French 39 Olctpros 10 Trtp: 2 words 31 Oefuted one department 4 1 Knight 11 A Gaioner 32 Ft9nch rrver SS Bone. Comb 42 Drink to 12 Oye4ng gear 33 WWI site lorm 44 Strewn: Her 13 Thllngt 36 US cartoonist 56 Waste allOlll· 45 Present 18 Receipt word 39 Power source ance '6 EJamlnes 22 Filters 40 Fixed a lawn 58 Russ11n tsar 48 Towers 24 Recommend 43 Romped 59 uS'SR rtver 26 Oeter1 45 Striking 60 Expanded plants 47 Trades 63 Anger WAIHJNOTON CAP> · "ral coU•t• flnan· dal ... ..,..,.. .,. worried that a new feet.rat law C'CMIN .._ ltudeet 1ublllcl1 .. for the wt&ltby at the ••,._. ol U., poor and the middle claH. TM nperta al.o fear tM law wUl MHravate a tead-.cy la the federal aid procrams to penaUae ,.,,, •• ,.,_,who eave for thelr cbUdren'• educa· · Uo. ....._ rewardln11pendUuifll. TM ltduuUon Amendment of 1980, which P""1dlal Cart•• 1t1ned Into law Oct. 3, extended fechral arant, loan. work-sh.tdy and other pro- arama IW nve yeara and made changes in the aJd fonnwaa. Ont or the most slenutcant changes ... elUnln.atioo of the need for larnilies to report 8razzl Gets Reprieve equity ln their home a.s part of their asset.a. Tbe new Jawdisregardl home equity. A COMPUTE& analysis by the College Board's CoUeae Scholarship Service indicates that families with Incomes 0015,000 to $18,000 could be expected to pay $414 more of their children's college bills. They now ue expected td"pay $182 a year. But those making $33.000 to $36,000 mJebt save $304. Their contribution woµld be$21394. In the $42,000·to-$45,000 range, a family might save Sl,376 and see their expected share drop to $3,158. Lawrence E . Gladieux, director of the College Board's Wa.shlogton office, maintained that the law also created some quirks in the aid formulas Default Deci.sion ReverSed SAt!i FRANCISCO (AP> -A default judgment "in excess of $1 million" agajnst film star Rossano Brazzi ln a film.contract dispute was revenied by the 9th U.S. Court of Appeals. The court sent t~e case back to U.S. District Court Judge Robert Takasu{l In Los Angeles with instructions to set asJde the judgment and "impose a lesser sanction." Braui had appealed the default judgment --e judgment entered when the defendant fails to appear to answer a suit -contending his failure to appear in the lower~ourt was excusable and that he had a "meritorious defense." The Court o( Appeal noted the record "reflects some sanction is warranted." But it said the plaintiffs failed to me any briefs .. Tbe action was brought by Rtc~d Grossman and Malcolm Levinthal against lltaul, Osear Brazzi, Mirage Cinematograpbica and Chiari Films Jnternational. It alleged the defendants entered into a production and distribution agreement with Arisia Films for a movie and to Share with Arisia certain rights to the film. The defendants al$0 purportedly executed a promissory note to Arisja. that Concreu will bave to correet with tecbnical amendments. THE TOP STUDENT-AID OFnCIAL in the Department ot Education acknowled1ed the need for some technical alterations, but said tbe depart- ment will make sure the wealthy are not aided at the expense of the poor. Thomas Butts, the deputy assistant secretary tor student fmanciaJ assistance, said the College Scholarship Service's figures assume that all ,tu- dents will be faced with the same contribution rate, but that is not necessarily so. "The law says the tax rate may be up to 14 percent for families with income of $25,000. It is silent above that," he said. "There's nothing to say we couldn't have a tax rate lower than 14 per· cent for low-income people and higher than 14 per- cent for people with higher income." The department will not use the new aid formulas until the 1982-83 school year. It plans to Punch issue rules next spring on how it will determine • lll'l '-,....,....., students' needs. i..;...::::::.::....:.==.:.=::.=;,..._ ____________ .- "My pipe! My allppersl" THE MAJOR FEDERAL AID pc:ogram, Basic ---- Educational Opportunity Grants. provides SlSO to $1,750 to students based on need and college costs. Families with income roughly above $25,000 do not qualify. But there is no income limit on getting the heavily subsidized, federally guaranteed loans for college. The new law raised the interest rate on Guaranteed Student Loans from 7 to 9 percent startingJan.1, 1981. The'govemmentpays allthein· terest while the student attends college. Time Switch OK'd MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet Union will shift its clocks to daylight saving time next year for the first time since 1930, putting itself in closer time with Western Europe and some East European al- lies. Soviet specialists s ay the switch will help save more than 2 billion kjlowatt hours of electricity a year and improve working and vacation condi· lions. ·I FV Homeowners : Slate Gift Sale The compl a int sought $7 million in damages. alleging the defendants failed "to perform their obligations and acted ~udulently." thus entitling plaintiffs to punitive damages. Gladieux said, "The question is whether the subsidies are going to drift increasingly to high. income families because of the Joan subsidies." The old law dis regarded a family's first $25,000 in assets, including home equity. The new law disregards the first $10,000. The Soviets have ignored the time change for 40 years. Daylight saving time is used by most European nations, including the Eastern bloc states of Poland, Bulgaria and Czechoslovakia. ---------------------- Fwids Arrive SACRAMENTO CAP> -The state has r e· ceived a $2.6 million federal grant to improve transportation for the e ld e rl y and han - diupped. The"' Depart- ment of Transportation 4 s aid the money will be used to help buy about ',;<~ Jewelry, crocheted items and other gifts will be available at the Greenbrook Fountain Valley Homeowners Association's third annual Christmas boutique to be held at the Greenbrook Clubhouse, l8222SantaJoananaSt .. Fountain VaUey. The sale will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. on Fri· day and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. Admission and parking are Cree. Series Slated On Life in India A free slide and lecture series examining the art, culture and architecture of India will begin 100 vehicles. wheelchair lifts, ramps and other equipment for distribu· lion to 29 non·profit or· ganizations. Crime Soars • 1 Friday at Golden West College in Huntington l Beacb. The programs wiJ) be conducted from 7 to 9 LOS ANGELES (AP > -Statistics show that crime rose 21 percent at Los Angeles Inte rna· tional Airport during the first nine months of this year. despite increased security measures. • p.m . in Fine Arts Room 222. Geography instructor • Sheila Brazier and art instructor Harvey Clemans will serve as; instructors. Both have traveled ex- tensively .in India. I J ., ~ • u tJ 0 ~ Grand Open_ing Designers of Residential and Commercial Interiors at affordable prices. Unique Accessories This i<; one of the many room 'iClling<., we fcaturn. Profcs~ional, pcrsonali1cd l'Olhultation at no ~o~t with rnm:h a~c. I or yo111 co11v~:11km·c o ur holid:1v ho11r,;11 ~·M .W I·. Ill f,p m. I 11c,,· I hur,, IO·X p.111.; S1111 . I~~ p.111 . 16562-A I Got h,rrd St reel (714) 847-7414 Huntington Bcae~, CA 92647 Come /)id; 1111 yo11r.fi·,1e 1981 ct1l<11tdar! i..• z Mothers \__ and fathers, b0yS and The World's Biggest Birthday Party balloons • clowns • birthday cupcakes • cold drinks • hot dogs ice cream •jugglers • mimes • pony rides • puppet shows • girls!· Huntington lntercommunity . --Hospital Saturday, November a 11 a.m. Universal Studio's Cylon (Have your picture taken with this character from "Battle of Gallactica11 ). • i' IN ~ily extends an invitation to every child born at our hospital to attend till ;3 p.m . at the hospital featuring Ronald Mc Donald and a special 2-hour Magic Show at 1 p.m.! •. Prizes (including Grand Prize of a color television. More prizes of free passes to Disneyland) rf~__;,, Clll'~ll TO H\JNTl"GTON IN"T(ACOMM\JNITV HOSPITAL ATTN AOMtNISTAATOA ,£.., ,------------------~---=--~ I Im a Huntington baby' Count me in on the fun and register me for the I pnze drawings at The World's Biggest Birthday Party on November B. I from 11 a m to 3 p.m . at Huntington lntercommunity Hosp11JJI I I My name is ., I was born a1 Hun11ng1on on __ mcJ'\lti My moms and oa1fs names are ____________ _ Weltveat _ , City __ State Zip_ _ I I Our telephone number is I I O Sorry. can't make the party. but register me f()( the prize drawings I anyway (you don't have to be present to win) I OP '-------------------------~ Join us for The World's Biggest Birthday Party and the most fun yoo've ever had! It's a party in yoor honor. And it's all.free fCX' any child born at Huntington lntercommunity Hospital (Moms and Dads are invited, too, of course). If you have a Huntipgton "baby," fill oot and mail the coupon abdle·. We'll register you for our great prize drawings (you don't have to be present to win). Or bring your coupon to the party to register for the drawing. Don't miss The World's Biggest Birthday Party -for the world's greatest babies. , .. .llll~m!CtiiiiV-~iii.Tilll ........ ~ ... ---...... Nl1i.•.•.•Glf .. ~.1.91) ........................................ ili ....................... .. R~lfer Carlso11 Jusi Another Ganie? It aeems a little far-fetched, but should the day ever come that Edison High's Chargers and the rival Barons of Fountain Valley 'rield mediocre football teams, It aeems certain. they'd still draw a huge following for their annua r conflict. The game annually draws 12·15,000, and when it's a Sunset League decider such as Friday's game at Anaheim Stadium, the fllure will s urely rival 20,000. It's become more of a happening -the place to be than JUSl another football tame. Edison Coach Ball Workman agrees, the game would still be an attraction even if both teams were winless. But he doesn't like the sound of such thoughts "U we were (winless), Coach Milner and myself would be retiring very quickly." says Workm an . Mike Milner is Fountain · Valley's coach. . · . The thought of mediocrity for these two seems even further out in space when you conslder their past records. EdiSQn has never had a losing season in ils 12·year history a nd has posted a com· bined record of 90-27·4, twice reigning as CJ F champions . His sister, Michele, plays on the team. whlch a lso includes teammate Jana Workman. And the head coach ? You guessed it. Edison Coach Bill Workman. Fountain Valley has had one losing season (3·4·2 in 1974) in the same sp~n . posting a combined record of 83·33·5, cap· turing the CJF crown once. · Probably the most mystifying item of all -and it goes for t he entire Sunset League is the mutual respect and cordiality bet ween coaching s ta ff a, combined with such an intense.desire to beat the other . * * • Making this game tt)e attraction it is • * • also Includes the fact each enjoys a huge ·enrollment. Fountain Valley is the CIF Southern Section's largest school and Edison isn't tar behind. Fountain Valley has picked up-a transfer in sophomore tailbark·fullback Jim Woods, a 5·8, 180·pound speedster by way of Sunny Hills and Servile High. And when you're only four miles apart. li ves become intertwined. For instance. Edison High Athletic Director Lyman Clower's son, Steve. is a junior tackre for Fountain Valley. although an injury cost him panicipation in this game. Milner rates him as a potential starter for the vars ity in 1981 * •. * Fountain Valley receiver Emile Harry is an assistant coach for the Fountain Va lley Grammar School's girls basketball team. E staneia Hig h~a c kers have been breathing a lot easier these days with foot - ball star Steve Kraiss, lost for tbe season with a neck injury, busy with the basket· <See CARLSor;-i, Page 810) D•oly Ptlol St.ff Photo l>y l..e• Pl yM HB to Edison Prep Transfers, Coach Is Irate By RQG E R CA RLSON Of UM D•lly Ptlol St•ff When you·re on top there are a lot of folks who would like to join. And if you 're struggling. it can become a pretty bitter pill lo swallow when one or vour own leave for greener pastur.es . Such is the s ituation at Hunt· ington Beach High where an irate Bob Isherwood. along with his en· tire football coaching staff. is ap- parently on the verge or quitting ISllE RWOOD SAYS the reason is because of one or his top pros p ects . sophomore Jerr Washington. <.1 5-10,.168-pound de fensive starter in the secondary. a lternate wide receiver and punt return specialist. checked out or sc hoo l Tuesday. o pting for another residence and a contmu· ang education at Edison High. home of the defending CIF Bag F'1 ve champions "What am I supposed to tell m' kids today?" asked Isherwood "J efr's dad, Don. just flat out told me he was taking his son to Edison for athletics "We're t rying to develop a pro· gram here and I reel like I'm hit ting my head against the waif. Al1 of my coaches are upset and none may be back nl'xt year unless our district does something about this . ·' ll 's just not right. llrnt a youngster can change schools and b(' imm1:di<.1 tl'IY e li gible. lie should be 1nclig1hlc for one year ... CIF Rl'LES. however. don 't back up Isherwood 1·m not very happy about 1t," he continues. "I know the Edison coaches were tellin•m they did not want to talk to hilr' I don't reel they had anything to do with this. but 1t 1s a combination or dad \.\-anting the boy in the limelight. anrl it's the boosters, Junior All · Americans and the community They'v(· been proselyting him ever since he was m Junior high · school " THIS IS Isherwood '!. first vear iS varsity coach at Hunlin~on Rc:ich. where the Oilers. a I though g1\'l.'n accolades by teams who have met them, are still struggl- ing in the win-loss column. This year's team 1s I .7 and has been un . able to shake a Sunset losmg s treak dating back to 1973, which has now reached 26 Informed of the s ituation. Edison Coach 8111 Workman sa1d. "Oh. no. Workman gets roasted again I'll admit on the surface 1t looks bad. but what can I s a'., ··If the father wants·to move. he has the ri ght to move It becomes a big d<'al because 1t involves Edison ... This isn't the first time such a situation has ri sen 1n prep athletics. to the contrary 1\ good case in point was the transfer of Tim Wi gmore from M atrr Dei Hig h to Westminster lligh a few years ago In the span of three weeks f.:d1son faced Wigmore at quarterback ·ror the opposition twice WORKJ\1AN SA VS Edison's winning reputation isn't t he only drawing fa ctor "We take very TELLING IT LIKE IT IS -Mary Malavasi. mother of Edison High's Bryce and wife of Ram coach Ray. dis· plays scores of all past Edison-Fountain Valley football games for all to see. She is a s taunch Charger booster and proud of the 11-year record of her favorite high school team. Isherwood's contempt for the situation does not lie with the Edison coaching staff. to the con trary. but he cites boosters. mem bers of the Junior All·American program and the community as a whole. as the instigators. "I think there are some under· h a nded thini;(s ~oing on and <li'ee 118 COACH. Page 8 10) S11iFrise! lt'-s Carlton NL Cy Young Atoord to Phillie NEW YORK (APJ Steve Carlton, to the surprise of no one, is the National League Cy Young award winner for a re· cord·tying third time. And, just about here. there lhould be comments from the Philade lphia Phillies l elt- bander about how It feels to be honored again es the league's . beat pitcher. Mike Schmidt and Pete Rose, but the trip was cancelled and the pitcher went hunting in stead. Carlton's wife said she did not know where he was when the award was announ ced and added he was expected to be away for about a week. BUT OTHER PEOPLE. as usual. spoke in his stead. "It (the Cy Young Award) was a very c l ear cut choice." s aid Bob Boone, his · catcher . "Ile was just outstand· ing. esJ>(!cially considering the number or innings he worked and his strikeout total. His slider is an awesome pitch with great control. BOB !SHERWOOD • 0.•IY Pilot ....... by PaY10 0'-11 BIRTH DEFECT IS NO HINDRANCE TO TOM KNAPP. Ont.1'-arm Skifl'r You Can't .Prove It's a Hindrance 8 yCURTSEEDEN OfllM~lff'i ... St.aff Tom Knapp recalls the fi rst time he e ntered a water s ki race At only nine years old, the Newport Beach resident said to himself. 'Tmgoingto win this race." He repeated the prophecy to his mother who was a little hesitant to burst a newcomer 's bubble. "Don't expect to win e\·ery race," s he told him. Knapp promptly won, and he has now ski ed his way to the national championship in his age division . NOW 16, KNAPP REIGNS as the national water s kiing champion in the 13-15-year·old age division thanks to his performance in this year 's nationals at Clear Lake . Sept. 19-21. To many people, particularly first·time observers of Knapp in action. this seems like a giant accomplishment. A birth defect lefl Knapp with only part of hi s left arm, which to him is nodHferent than you or I losing a fingernail. "I simply can't consider it a hindrance when l 'mas good or better than anyone else." he says in a more confident than cocky reply. KNAPP SAVS H E SNAPS on the skis and hits the water nearly every day of the summer when the water skiing season is at its height. buring the winter. he m ay get in some work during the weekends. He stays in s hape by running the 880 for the Newport Harbor High track team and playing a little soccer now and then . But his first love is skiing, and Knapp's self · expectations seem endless. "I'd like to win the national championship in the men's open' competition and go to Italy for next year's world cham· pionships," he says. Only two men and two women are eligi· ble to represent orfe country. making the odds slim for the out· going \eenager . ... Knapp will ski in the 16·19 age bracket next year, and he will need to finish among the top three finalists in order to qualify for the men rs open division. SUCH AN ACCOMPLISHMENT is a far cry from Knapp's first experience with skiine. Competing in "fun races" at Lake Arrowhead when he was nine, Knapp had to learn the ropes in some very non-competitl ve races. Today, he reacheS' apeeds of 75-85 miles per hour. and he CSee NO, Page BIO BUT, CARLTON, who played • key role in leading the. Phillies . to their first World Cha m- pionship, was,. as' he has been to the media, unavallable. Sluggish Blazers Threaten Lakers . He was voted lt\e honor Tues· ·day by a Baseball Writers As- IOCiatlon of America panel, and ·joined Tom Seaver and Sandy • Koufax as the only ·three-time .• winners of the coveted award. , Ttte rtercely private Carlton ._. refused to talk to the media · for' the past sever al aeasons. ftat poU~y conUnued throuah. ti• playoffs and the World ... lea and he was not even labae lo be nqUfied that be won the award. .Md been expected lo 10 to dlia week to cond'1rt aome eu.Ja with teammates INGLEWOOD CAP) -It was a game that the National Basketball Associa· lion could be proud of -big leads jusl don't mean much In the NBA. The Los Angeles Lakers played like the defending NBA champions that they are Tuesday night in bullding up a 91·66 advantage over Portland alter some elght minutes of the third quarter. Qut the Trail Bluers s.t.ormed b9ck, only to ran one point short. "In the firat patt of t he 1am e, we 'played ao well that it created prob· lems ," sald Los An1.;les Coach Paul Westhead after hit team'• Ut-118 vie· tory. "Our CUY• a11umed It wu easy and with any club in the league, you can't assume that. "We kind of thought we had it won before the clock s howed It. Portland made a whale of a game out of it." The Trail Blazers, who trailed 97-84 entering the final period, came to within one point twice in the late going , the final time as Mychal Thompson made two free throws with « seconds remaining for the last points or the gam e. Portland had a chance to win it ln the closing seconda but J im Paxson missed a s hort baseline jump shot and subsequent lips by the Trail Blazers failed as time ex· pl red . Kareem Abdul·Jabbar led the Lakers, who are now 10-3, with 28 points, nine rebounds a nd eight assists. Jamaal ,Wilkes added 27 points ·and eight as· sists; Earvin "Magic" Johnson had 20 points, 10 rebounds and 12 assis ts and Norm Nixon contributed 18 points and eight assists for Los Angeles . Thompson paced Portland with 26 points, 20 or lhem in the second half, and 10 rebounds. Calvin Natt added 19 polntl for the Trail Slaters w.hile Pax· son had 18 points and nine uslsts and Kermlt Washlngton had 18 points and 11 rebounds. "Our comeback was due to aood buk play 1" Hld l>ortland Coads Jada Rams ay. "We were sluggish early and then our defen~ got ti~hter. But we're 4.9 right now and I can t be real happy with that. "I'm encouraged by the way we played In the last period and a half. I want the Blazers to feel tood. If we play like we dJd late In th~ game we can win." · The Lakers, who led all the way. made 57.4 percent of their field goal •t· •tempts to an even 50 percent for the Trail Blazers. Portland has now lost el1ht 1trai1ht road 1111De1, six of tbem th1a aeMOn. TM Ti'&ll Blann had woa five of tbelr &alt Hvell meetln&I with tM Lak... J . f I J l I I r f 'l_ <l 'p ,- y ~ u ti 0 • I ' • : A Capeu .. Report From the World of Sport• J Girl Deni <I (Jpportunit~· i To Play on Boys' Te8J!l Prom AP Dtlpak-.et w ASHJNOTON A Supreme Court justice· m Tuesday refuaed to order a Chica10 area junior hilh acbool to let ll·year-oJd Karen O'Connontry out for the boys' basketball team. 1 Justice John Paul Stevens reJected an emergency re- quest by Karen's lawyers aimed at forcing MacArthur Junior Hilb School In Prospect heights. Ill., to give her a chance to make the team. · The schOol says Karen is free to play on the girls' team. but not on the boys' team. .explainina bis action in a 10-page opinion, Stevens said, "Without a gender·based classification in competitive con- . ~ tact sports, there would be a substantial risk that boys would dominate the girls' programs and deny them an equal op- portunity to compete in interscholastic events." Lawyers for the seventh-grader sought emergency help from St.evens last week, after the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals postponed the effect of a federal judge's order in Karen's favor. Karen. described as an "unus ually gifted athlete," wishes to play on the boys' team because it will offer a higher degree of competition. , A professional basketball coach who saw the 4-11. 103 pound girl play with both bOys and girls last s4mmer rated her ability as equal to or better than a 10th-grade girl or an eighth-grade boy. ------Qatote of tlw Day ----- OhioState'football coach Earle Bruce, reacting angri- ly when told that a Buckeye supporter had called the 21·0 victory over Wisconsin .. our dog game of the year": "That's a fan. F-A-N. They're fickle as hell. We won 21·0 didn't we? We shut them out.'' ,., Guard Dennis Johnson scored Phoenix's five m final points, including a clutch free throw with eight seconds on the clock, to lead the Suns to a 109-108 victory over the Indiana Pacers in National Basketball Association play Tuesday night. Johnson led all scorers with 25 points ... Adrian Dantley scored 33 points and Darrell Griffith added 20 to spark the Utah Jazz to a 107-104 win over Kansas City. The Kings were led by Scott . -. Wedman with 28 points ... Rookie Wayne Robinson sank a jump shot from the lane with 34 seconds left and Ron Lee added a clinching free throw 1A seconds later, lead· ing Detroit lo a 98·96 victory over Milwaukee and snapping the Bucks' win· ning streak at 10 games . . . Guard Brian Taylor and rookie forward Michael Brooks combined for 55 points and San Diego broke the game open in the third quarter to p0st a 116-102 win over Dallas. T!lylor " scored 31 points and Brooks chipped in with 24 ... Kevin Grevey led the way • with 28 points as Washington exploded ror its best performance of the season and crushed Atlanta, 122·98 . Grevey scored 10 points ;n the third quarter when the Bullets outscored the Hawks 34-23 . . . Rookie Butch Carter of the Lakers will be examined by D. Albert Kattld, a cardiologist, today because of abnormality in a heart valve. .~nfN Sign Bat1k# 10 8""fM.<'e ffaMti The New Orleans Saints signed free agent [i] wide receiver Gordon Banks to replace Rieb Mautl 4. t who broke an arm m the Saints' loss to the Rams Sunday ... The Detroit Lions have signed de-' fensive tackle Alva Liles to fill the spot on their NFL roster left vacant when John Woodcock walked out in a contract hassle last week . . . Dean L. Meek, 22, of Bellipgham. Wash., was arrested on a misdemeanor reckless endange• ment charge at the Seattle·Philadelphia game Sunday. He was acc~ed or throwing a toy football on the field at the Kingdome during the game . . . There is absolutely no chance of Coach Dan Devine remaining at Notre Dame even if the No. 1 ranked Irish should win the national football championship ... Quarterback Mike Kelley, who has mis- sed Georgia Tech 's last three games due to a shoulder injury. is listed as doubtful for Saturday's game against Notre Dame . . A Fiesta Bowl-Cotton Bowl deal involving Penn State and Pittsburgh was denied by Bruce Skinner, executiv~ director of the F'iesta Bowl. Lamber• Goal Propt>br Canadiens fo tt'b1 final period propelled the Montreal Canadiens to a ' Yvon Lambert's goal midway through the ri1 5.4 victory over Quebec in a National Hockey League game Tuesday night. Quebec derenseman Normand Rochefort was penalized for freezing the puck with his hand and the Canadiens scored at 1 :29 or his penalty time . . . Bobby Nystrom and Butch Goring scored goals 17 seconds apart in the first period to break a 1-1 tie and de- fenseman Deals Potvin registered five assists as the New York Islanders defeated Detroit, 6 -4. 1. <O • Mission Viejo Nadadores diving coach Dr. lloD • O'Brien was named Coach of the Year for 1980 by United States DIV'ing, Inc. This was his second straight year to win the award . . . Sophomores Lamar Hewd and Derrick Floyd, part-time starters fo~ the University or Georgia basketball team, bave been arres\ed and charged with taking $17 from an Athens convenience store ... Tampa FBI chief Philip McNlff says he'll leave the bureau after nearly 30 years to become a lroublesbooter for New York Yankees owne r George Stelabrea•er . .. . Pitcher Do)'le Alexander, who won 14 games for the Atlanta Braves this year, says he is dissatisfied wlth his pay and wants to be traded after one season with the team ... Fred S&aaley, startin~ shortstop on the New York Yankees' 1976 team, has been traded to the Oakland A's . ..- Ora1p C...,. L.A. C.... .,. , ........... c.-,. IU•en* r...ey. '17.75 ... ' • ' t ! ~. ' \ . ' . ' ..... 't.. " \ - · ~1 cl\ay An1uses "riters PITTSBURGH CAP> -Th~ coaches in this city aren ·t known for colorful remarks, so re- porters had a (ield day here Tuesday in a telephone hookup with Coach John McKay of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. "I'm amused al some of the things I've supposedly saic! I give an ans wer that is the pest one I can give," said McKay, whose National Football League team hosts the Pitts burgh Steelers Sunday. HERE'S A SAMPLE of other • remarks by McKay. a native of Eversettsville, W. Va ., who went from the coal m ines , to the Air Force, to Purdue and Oregon as a player.and from Southern Cal to Tampa Bay as a coach : On balance in the NFL: "On any given Sunday, Monday or Thurs- day, anybody can beat anvbody." On the possibility he might one day get fired: "I'll quietly go in· to the sunset with my back- swing and a fat wallet. I can a lways go back to t he coal miners' union. I kept my card up. l worked in Mine No. 32 in Owens. W. Va. That's why I gave 0 .J. SimpSon No. 32, to re- mind me of where I was from." On criticism from fans: "They named a bay after me here. then they wanted to throw me in it. I could care less. At Southern Cal, my name was idiot." On rumors he wants to get quarterback Pat Haden from the Rams: "I think the Rams' front offi ce likes to get its name in the paper. They say they're talking intimately to John McKay. I on· ly talk initimately to my wife." ON IDS BLUNT appraisals of his team: "If I don't think the players played well, I'll say we stunk .... If the player doesn'f "ke that. he can always be shi to Buffalo." On s game plan for Pttts· burgh: "Tell Swann I'm gonna cover him myself." On the progress of the Bucs since they lost here in 1976 "We· re still General Custer." Dodgers' Baker Latest Free Agent LOS ANGELES CAP > -"I'm disappointed and I think they're disappointed," Los Angeles oul· fielder Dusty Baker said of the Dodgers after he entered his name in baseball's re-entry draft. "Thfa is my home a nd thi~ is where I wanted to play," Baker said Tues'day a fter notifying the Major League Players Al\§oeia- tion to include his name on the list for the Nov. 13 draft. ··Everything has been good here. It's not HlO percent dead; the lines are still open. legally and emotionally." Baker and his agent. Jerry Kapstein, had met with Dodger owner Peter O'Ma lley and club Vice President Al Campanis earli er Tuesday, trying to reach contractual accord with the team. "His asking price was too high," a Dodger spokesman sajd. Ba ker's s alary demands weren't revealed. but it had been reported previously that he was seeking a five -year contract worthS4 million. He hit .294 with 29 home runs and 97 runs batted in last season fJ>r Los Angeles and had 17 game· wmninghits. "We have the highest respect .ft>r lhe Los Angeles organization tnd it is our hope that the Dodgers ' '1-~xercise their option to Dusty ~after the draft," Kapstein said. . ·'On Wednesday, we will begin discussidns with other teams un- der the rules of the basit agree-' ment." Baker, 31, grew up in Riverside and came to the Dodgers from Atlanta in the winter of 1975. Los Angeles swapped the Braves Jim· my Wynn, Tom Paciorek, Lee Lacy and Jerry Royster for Baker and infielder Ed Goodson. A spokesman for the Dodgers said no meeting was planned in the future with Baker and Kaps- tein. APWl ...... to · Flyi11g High Detroit"s Gregory Kelser sails through the air after try- ing to block a shot against Milwaukee. In the back- ground is the Bucks' Brian Winters. Detroit won. 98·96. Collle Nove:rnher, Trojans Get Hot LOS ANGELES <AP> -It's November. so Southe rn Cal Coach John Robinson riltu~es it's ti me for his Trojans to · really come to life. "Even in spring practice. we ta lk about N<tvember being our month." Robinson said Tuesday · "We say, 'Hey, we're going to run this play now and we'll run it again and again, but it's not going to work until November · ·'I think it takes a physical team lik.e we are a long lime to get ever/thing going." Robinson ·s :-.lovem ber record smc«j he came to Southern Cal m 19761s an impressive 14·1. and in a II Cf.ntests after Oct. 31. he's 19·1. The 11980 Trojans have one outing under their belt this month, open- ing November with a 60-7 blasting of Cal last Saturday -by far Southern Cal's most explosive outing of the campaign. The Trojans. 6-0· 1 and ranked fourth nationally, next face the unpredictable Stanford Cardinals Saturday in Palo Alto. Robinson s aid he's exc i ted -a nd frightened. "Stanford has the finest collec- tion of offensive talent that I've seen since I 've been here.·· Robinson said. "They've got a lot of offensive weapons and they use them . ''They have a big offensive line. a pair of fine receivers in <Andre i Tyler and <Ken> Margerum. a ~reat back in < Darrin> Nelson and 1John > Elway 1s a Roger Staubach-type quarterback." Robinson joked tbat he'd come up with a defense thal would stop l,he Cardinals. • • Ill ' "We'll double-cover both wide receivers. put three guys on Nelson. rush five and have two sa feties deep," he said, keeping secret his scheme for playing 14 defenders at once. Last year, the Cardinals prob- ably knocked Southern Cal out or the national champ1ons h1p, rally· ing from a 21·0 halftime deficit to tie the Trojans. 21·21. Southern Cal can rewrite a page of its football hi story Saturday The Trojans are riding a 27-game unbeaten string and can top the Howard Jones-coached Trojans of the early 1930s if they beat or t ie the Cardinals. Interestingly, the earlier Southern Cal undefeated streak was ended by Stanford in 1933 F'1otball Signa/,s "" II PENALTY REFUSED, INCOMPLETE PASS, Pl.AV OVER, or MISSEOQOAL Hands shifted In hol1zontal plane. •• II PASS JUGGLED INBOUNDS ANO CAUGHT OUT Off BOUNDS Hands up and down In front of chest (following Incomplete pus signal). Milav&si: Tyler . ,, . To Start' \ From "p Dllpatclaff Wendell .~yler led the Los Angeles. Rams in rushin& ,Ptb 1,109 yards last season, so=:;t ~ a major w when he lnj a hip In automobile ace~ t last sum . .. Now Ty · coming back.1lle started agains w Orleans Saints last Sunday t g~ only fi ve yards on tw camea before Coach .,Ray Malavasl t.Ocik him out of the game. ••· "We were ahead and we di(t,Q't want to risk an injury," ·the coach said. HE LISTED TYLER as 'ius ~tarter this Sunday when the Rams 1play Miami at Anaheim but told his Tuesday media c~­ ference: "He will play a little more than in the last game. He'll start and pl ay a quarter or more." Malavasi sent E lvis P~acock into the running back spot and the former Oklah oma sta~., gained 92 yards on 14 carri~ ii! the 45-31 victory. -~ Cullen Bryant, the build~, fullback, holds down the other s pot in · the backfield and be • gained 88 yards against ttie-• Saint,s. At quarterback, the R4'tni have a somewhat disconsolat(, Vince Ferragamo as the No. • with Pat Haden as the backup Haden was the sta rter until ill· jured in the opening game. Bee also had been hurt late ~ season with Ferragamo t.ataaf, over for the final regular-seUOll games and the playoffs thatW to the Super Bowl where t~. Rams tostto Pitts burgh, 31·19. · :. FERRAGAMO WAS unbaifo,, that Haden was used againSf New Orleans even though Old~ ror three plays. He also ~ he's worth more money than the reported $52,000 he's gettinc ii:I his rourth year with the club. _;; So the Rams have the s~ problems of erstwhile yean when there was competitioa between Bob Waterfield ~ Norm Van Brocklin. Billy WiiW and Van Brocklin, John M and James Harris, Harris iiiiJ.. Haden, Joe Namath and Hal Coach Malavasi and ragamo talked foll owing New Orleans game, whkh the Rams al 6-3 and tied Atlanta for the NFC lead in West. .... ''Vince came-in and tal~ the coach said and, in answ..-tO a questioh, he added, "I <Qdn~ pay any attention to how h.-~ ac ~ed . He is o ur ~q,,.. f· · quarterback, but I ma~ U\.tl~ cisions for the overall team .... overall sea.son... : a . .. ....... Olympic Team S • ~ At Laguna Beach · The United States Women's Olympic volleyball team will take on a specially selected men's team tonight in an elthibi· tion match at Laguna Beach High at 8 o'clock. Admission is $5. The U.S. team qualified for the Moscow Olympics this year. the first U.S. team to do so since 1968 NEW MARK HOWARD VOLKSWAGEN EXCLUSIVE I . ' . 'Crucial4''rfinte for PPe-p Key (;arnes Dot Footb~ll Agenda a,wa•CA"MN ............... ...... •tw•. u..n .,.·.-.toa..otberr.K· bell .... &..olvtq o.....,. Cout .,.. ..... MIA•• tM Uloe·f'CMmtala Valley 'IUU rrtdJy ........ Thia Week'1 Pltep Football (II a-It J:JI ......... ........................ , Somethlnl will have to atve ln th.la.one where two exr,l01ive runnin1 attacks colllde. We,tmlnater re· vo vea anMmd tailback Erle Wlllln&ham, who hu ndhed for 962 yards on 184 carrtea, collecUn1 10 touchdowns. A....,u..m an AllC•lua LeaaueUtaalc bet~ loqUme powen and rival• Mater Del &Del a . Paul, Oc9aa View'• lut abot at a Cll' plaJOCll Mith aaam. ltmpln i.e.,ue leader Loua. Newport Hanor'a contlnulne quest for the pAa;yolfl at lfunt-laltoa Beach and Eltancia '1 b4d f« a fourtb 1trai1ht Sea View Leque victory. .... St. Paul vs. Mater Oei LOlfa vs. lkun View ....., 1'1• ·SA Bowl <8 o.m.) Hoot.qtan Buch .... Marina, out of the veer, bu a tou&h option aeries "9 U. behind qUarterback Bob Grand.staff and halfback St Paul by 8 'Chris Ventura. A1oodportionolMarlna'uttackdla· Loara b 7 appeared, boweve(, with the lOll of halfback Pat Y Luat11 to an injury a~orbed a1ainlt Huntlnaton &1hncta '1 rile, after1 a 2·3 start 1D DGD·leque competltkln, bu come laraely on the rtpt arm ot jualor qawterback Jim llcCahlU, wbDM pualnl llu turned a IOOd offeue lnto'an outstanctta1 one. lllcCablll'a tut three start.a bave ... IUm com- p~ •ot 55 pule9 (13.lpercenl), aood for 5'5 yards ud rtvetoucbdowu. On the other end of b1a well-placed pAIMI have .,,_J..aon Abel Cachola andJalme Alken. "We kept blm out of the aecobcl. ball atamJl Coeta Mesa and Irvine," aays Estancia Coach Ed Blanton. "So be has really accomplhbed those atatbtica in a total of two 1amea. "McCablll la startlnf to mature, be la readin& the defenaea, checklnl of the MCOOd receiver and la sbowi.na a 1ood knowledge of defenses. . "Before he'd Just pick aomeooe out and throw it." "Cachola is hls favorite receiver and we use the poet pattern a lot. Jim reads it with the ti&ht end and outaide recelver and the play 1oes depending on bow tbeaafetyreacta. '' At 1-2, 190 pounds and still only 1S years old, lleCabill appean to be a malnltay for the Ea1les for aometimetocome. . "I parantee you he's a m~r colle&e prospect. He'• loin& to throw for over 3,000 yards for us before ' ,.,...r.p•• f Ollltain Valley vs. Edison Newport Har~ vs. Htngtn. Beach Marina vs. Westminster EstJncia vs. tmersity Irvine vs. r.osta Mesa £1 Toro vs. r.aana del tU capo V*f vs. lJgtN Beach San Clemente vs. t.5ssion Vie}o Laguna Hills vs. Dana Hills Anaheim ~ Edison by 7 Hootinctan Beach Newport by 3 ' Westnlnstef' W$tmstr. by 2 Irvine Estalcia by 8 IXqe 1'.oast Costa Mesa by 7 Newport Hnr · El Toro by 7 lJgi.na Bueti capo Vlly. b'j 12 Mission Yiejo Mission 'fiejo b'i 6 ~ Dana Hills n p.m.l Dana Hilts by 3 he's lhroulh. ''says Blanton. Here la a look ateacb ofthla week's 1amea, aside from the Edlaon-Fountain Valley game: Newporttt.rborva • ......_.. .. ecll The Sailors (2-8 overall, 1·2 in league) invade Huntington Beach with the prospect of staying in contention for the CIF playoffs. Sailors' tailback Pat Evans la out\ however, with deep tbip bruises and will be rep1aced by John Gaasi and/or Rudy Jlmene1. The Oilers, tryln1 to snap a Sunset League losing streak of 218, enter with a backfield consisting of quarterback Gre1 Knapp, tailback Bob Thompson and fullback Jamie Pa(DaneW. CARLSON'S COLUMN • • • Tars, Uni, Mesa.Roll ball team, apparently fully re· covered from any form of paral,.U initJally endured from the injury suffered against La1una Hilla earlier this year. Kralaa' future in football won't be decided until the sprln1 when Dr. Robert Kerlan offers hil ad· vice on continuing in football. ••• Water polo enthusiasts may baveJo wait until Wednesday to see a published account of the upcomhlg CIF playoffs, which begin oo Wednesday. the upper echelon of the CIF polls since the start of the season. ,. ••• Woodbridge High's Warriors, at last check, were 5·1 on the sophomore level and 2·0 on the freshman level under Coach Gene Noji. Noji says his team will play a varsity football (with no seniors) schedule in 1981, but almost exclusively against l·A level teams. 0ver Foes Newport Harbor, University and Costa Mesa, three of the Orange Coast area's top high school water polo teams, posted comparatively easy victories Tuesday to keep their records intact. The pairings are scheduled to I be made Sunday, but CIF Com· miuic:ner Ray Plutko's staff is It's anticipated the Warriors will enter the Sea View League in 1982, which would logically move El Toro to the South Coast Leaaue. where it belon1s. Logic, however, sometimes suffers in these matters. Cypress High, set for the Sml.set League in 1981. would agree to that, eh? Newport, with eight players sharing in the scoring, toppled El Dorado in a non·leque out- ing, 1~3. The Tars are tbe No. l rated team in CIF this season. University's Trojans, third in the rankings, won ove.,r host Ealaocla, 14-6, and Costa Mesa stopped Corona del Mar. l<Mi, both in Sea View Lea1ue action. The Muatansa are rated fourth in the CIF. I ~ unable to promi.se anything • more than to mall out the in· -formation sometime Monday. I Efforts to get the information on 1 Swaday by telephone for Mon· day's publication gets only a may wer from his unen· ~i laff. Too ater polo takes such a backsea ut, the CIF isn't makin1 an o e on water pe>fo, so the appear to • c6incide: Two-time def champion •Newport Harbor rea to be · Meded No.' 1 in t he ~A elimlna· Uqna. Other area powers expect· eci to do well include Costa Mesa 1 and University, each ranked in ..... Cross Country blot.es : League finals are on tap Satifrday with a double-header at Saddleback College,-feat11Nng the S.u\h· C4ast League at 8;30 ,a .m ., followed by the Sea View League finals at 10:30. • • ·The s'un se.t .League 's showdown will be at Huntington Beach Central Park. beginning at 9 a,m. Coach Bill Barnett's Newport Tars improved their season rec- ord lo 1'-l wiCb Jeff Wilson scoring five goals, Diggy Riley four and Mikf1, Howell two. Goalie Ian Marbtiury had 16 saves in gold tor the"winiters. I . 1-Hs coA~;.~~;~. University's Trojans im- p(Oved lheit league-record U> 9-0 and overall mark to 16·4 with Steve Hanley hitting five goals and Jeff Campbell' six for the victors. Doug Hartung had four goals in a lqe\Jlg CJUle for the Ea1les. I I • P.cS care ol kids in terms of mak· ill them go to school and to use c91cipllne when they need it, re- t rdleaa whether it involves foot· U. People lmow that." Huntington Beach Principal Aisin Chlebicld verifies there is ll)thing llle1al with what is being 6>ne and nothing the Hunlinlton .. ach School Dlatrict can do lbout it -the transfer is com· pletely leaal. ''117heart1oea out to lab on this ·~alter," aayaCblebicld. "He baa tiarned tbt football proaram 180 •areea and lhll is really a dlf. ftcult situation for the studenta, tMm and coaches on all levels. "I don't believe there b anyone l)!lllty ol wron1 doin1 at Edison. ~Y (the faculty) are on the up· •·up. ' 0 1°81JTI FELT like I was putt.int l 'knife in lab's back when I told •maboutthla. •l"We're worldn1 on U&btenln& l'Jlture lntra-dl1tnct tranafen, ht when a family mov~a. it b Im· Ible for the dlatrtct to do Jtblnl about It, other than to l~f the residency," said le~_cki. • • the world,'' says Isherwood. '•But I am trying to do something positive and it's for fun, not for an ego trip.'' The only thing for sure is the Oilers will be hos\ing Newport Harbor Friday nigh(-and they'll be doing it with one les~uad membel'. At Costa Mesa, the Mus tangs continued their hold on second place in the lea1ue standings with a 7·2 record and 17·6 over· all. Art Chasen bad three goals while Phil Castillo, Tony Barrett and Greg Brown each conlribut· ed a pair. Duncan Millar, t he Costa Mesa goalkeeper, had 13 blocked shots a1ainst the third place Sea Kinas. ....... r-.•• .. N 0 IHNDRANCE . • . admita the sensation is nothing be-doneproperlytoavoidinjury. sbc>rtof ~pboria. ''But, then, there's really ''It's ldnclofneat. Everything Is coming rtabt at yqu and you have ·to be able to react 'L~kly, '' be ex- plalnl. "SUre, lt'a ofacary at first. But I don't get scared any more." "If you become afraid, you start doini dumb tJUnp," Knapp coatin\a. "U a swell com• at you, you have to be able to react fut ,"headds. notblnc you can do about it if y~ do fall. It'• belt to avoiddlvinl UD· der the water when you fall. YQu want to jun roll with the water," besaya. ' "NAPP DOESN'T fall ewty . He'• collected race tltlea for the put several yean. and he doesn't plan oa *'PPinl. Knapp's brother Grea and sis· ter Anal al.loakl, and Greg is a ski· inl Instructor at Lake Ar· row head. lf you don't, you blt the water, aomet.bin& that Knapp aaya must __:;..;.___;; ______________________________ _ Beach. Marina will be trylnl to make it two straithl Sunset League victortea over Weatmlnater, a school which was not beaten by a Vlkinp' vanity in 16 straight years prior to the lt7tdecisioo ( 17 · 7). EITorova. CoroMdelM8r If Corona del Mar la to challen&e for the Sea View LeaguetiUe, thil la the 1ame the Sea Kin&• must win. El Toro (3-0) boaata tailback Damon Sweaay, a junior who is a do.everythin& sort, as shown by statiatica which reveal 989 yards on 192 carries, 13 toucbdownl. two field goals and auorted PATs. By comparison the Sea Kin&a (2·1 in the league), have scored 10 touchdowns by all bands. The Sea Kings operate behind left-banded quarterback Clay Tuck.er and brothers Bill and Chris Bright. . IEM•ncl• va. Unlverelty McCahlU and bis receivers are complemented by a fine Estancia running game as tailback Bob • Urmson and fullback John Lamberton give the Eagles excellent balance. University, under the coaching of Ted Mullen and assistant Bob Salerno, played Corona del Mar and El Toro tough, but are still on the wrong end of a 2·6 overall and 0-3 league record. Estancia, No. 6 in the CI F Central Conference poll, is 5·3, 3-0 in league. Pacing University's running game is Villa Park High transfer Randy Scott, a 5·10, 160-pound senior who has rushed for 489 yards on 99 carries -nearly 5.0 yards a cra~outof theTroj~' multiple offense. lrvln• va. Com Me•• On the surface it would appear both are just play· ing it out. but Costa Mesa still has something going for it. Victories tonight and a week later against Corona del Mar would propel the Mustangs C1·2 in league Sea View League action and 1·7 overall) into theplayoffs. lrvineis0-8. St. Pautva. Matero.I Mater Dei (5·2· l and 1·1 in Angelus League play> meets the No. 2 leam in the CIF Big Five Conference. St. Paul's Swordsmen are 7·0 and have allowed only 26 points in those seven victories, while relying on a sturdy ground game to average 25 points a game. The anticipated relufn of Kennedy Pola to the Mater Dei lineup has been dashed -Mater Dei Coach Wayne Cochrun says there is no way his star linebacker and tailback will be in condition to play this season. Pola suffered a knee Injury during pre~eason workoUts. Loera va. Ocean View After two tough Empire League losses the Ocean View Seahawks have their backs to the wall -it's either a victory over leacue-Jeader and defending CIF Southern Conference champion Loara or forget the playoffs. Ocean View, with a dart-like running game behind halfbacks Doug Irvine and Rick Moser, must win Thursday and a week later against Los Alamitos to ensure a CI F playoff berth. Sen Clemente va. Ml .. lon Viejo Reminiscent of 1979 when the Tri tons went from 3.3 at one stage to wind up in the CI F Central Con· ference finals, the Tritorui are making another championship bid after a 1-4 overall and O·l South Coast start. Coach Allie Schaff's wishbone offense and Arkansas slant defense should test Mission Viejo, the Central Conference's No. 4 team and the only team to defeat Capistrano Valley. c.pietrano Valley va. Lquna Beach Buoyed by its 41·7 rout of Dana Hills, Capo Valley invades Laguna Beach with the knowledge it must win to stay in contention for a portion of the South Coast UUe. Capo is 7·1 overall. 2·1 in league. Laguna is 5·2, 2· 1. The Artists are led by quarterback Lance Stewart, but his passing ability is up in the air becauseofashoulderinjury. Lqun• Hiii• va. Dan• Hiiia The last time these two met the Dolphins' Jim Gleed re-wrote the record book as Dana Hills thrashed the Hawks, 54·13 . Gleed ran for 428 yards on 24 carries and scored ontouchdownrunsof93, 84,2.S, l9,3and lyards. NOW AVAJLABLE .. nl Office Rental .......Include 0..1, ...... SWtt........ : HUNTINGTON BEACH QB GREG KNAPP. : OCC Women Win In Cross ColUltry SAN DIEGO -Lisa Gonzales and Barbie Ludovise ran one-two and the Orange Coast College women's cross country team captured the South Coast Conference cross country cham- pionship Tuesday at San Diego Mesa College. J. • l The OCC men's team had its highest-ever finis h, second place . in the finals with John Gerhardt placing second in the individual race in • . : 20:14.2. ~ # t Grossmont captured the men's team title with 24 points to60 for runner-up Orange Coast. In the women's competition, OCC had 31 points to 43 for runner-up Grossmont. The victory was the fourth straight for the Pirates in the conference finals .and OCC has captured three strai&bt dual meet crowns as well. Helping the OCC women to the title we~ Diane Jones in sixth place , Dale Sprink in lOU\ position and Mari Gibbs in l2lh spot. Ludovise and Gibbs were both inj ured most of the week. Diablos Capture South Coast Title i ,~. 1 . . . Mission Viejo wrapped up the dual meet cross country championship of the South Coast League • with a 20-39 victory over San Clemente Tuesday ! - but sophomore Brett Clifford was the individual t victor for the Tritons. ~ In a battle for second place, Dana Hills ~ stopped Laguna Hills , 15-~ to finisb with a 4·1 ,; record compared to 3·2 for San Clemente in third f place. ~ Clifford's only Joss in league competitio 1 n ~athme i at the hands of Dana Hills' Rod Mayer ear y an e 1 season. He finished a full second in front of the top Mission Viejo runner on Tuesday. Joining Mayer in sweeping the first five places for Dana Hills were Jay Fletcher, David Howard. David Sims and Mark Kohr. The South Coast Leacue meet will be held Saturday at Saddleback College with Mission Vie- jo's Diablos the team favorites. Mayer and Clifford C are expected to battle it out for the top individual vie· t ·~--------~T ......... ........ •Cell ................ ,. •U-....... ....... ._ ............... . . ...._... ....... ...... _..,_ • -w;:I NOW OPEN in I FASHION ISLAND ~~-. I .......... 'ACT NOW, SPACE LIMITED .,. __ ......... POSTAL BOX Ml I . 11th It. Suite 11, Coeta Me•• 1 Orange County's Mosr Complete Ski Shop ! SKI PACKAGE SPECIAL •ROSSIGNOL ELITE Ski ....... 165.00 • Bindings w/Brake (Choice of Al for Isherwood'• future at t1qton Beach, it appears up the air. "I'm not tryln& to kill LEASE· DIRECT AND $AVE!!! 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IM; Tllelttl < .. yleul, u o. U tuc· It( ... ) .... MIUO. l"O\ll1ll r-.:... $Mt .. Joe IMIC~ll l, ft.JO, li.20., tl,OI; Ttft Pertenter CSt-•nlW111• o . .o, 6.lli llllln1lmtn N CM-,-),JM, Flftll ,_-y_,. MIU!eft 1'4Mdlel, 1.60, •.~. •.•; Cro»tttt tTOddl. J.to, 1.00; Roy .. A«ord 18k:Jtfwdl. 10.10. SS euc .. CS.I peld MUO. Sllltll ,_. -Gem Guest ,..,..,...,,,'''°• S.00, •.lO; Sporty Old Al IWllhtrdl, U O, •.•; MorMrey OntmlSN<reft), 10 . .0. Sevtntll r •<• -Rome n Cll•P•I 10.-rl, ...0, 3...20, 2.111; -y Blue N CL.on901. <l.60, UO; Repus Red ISotwMv1llel, uo. '5 ...c: .. 11-31 ptld $1....00. S2PICllSI•1 .. 1.s..11 ~S60).t0wll11U wlftlllllll tJ<Mts llollr 110r1u>. S2 Pica $la COf'IMltllofl peld $17.60 Wllll .... wlnnlnt UClth <tllree lloneS I. Eltllltl r.e -Full ~UI IAck.ermanl, l .20, 2.'11, 2.10; Sl•vonlc Duke CWHll•msl, 3.20, 2.10; C'Moft Hillbilly CS.ylHSI, 2. 10. Nlntll ,_. -o.1e•1 o.nctv IAndtttonl, U . .O, 10..IO, S.'11; Fr• Eapreulon (Olfr- col, 1.60, •.OO;_Monlerey .,... .. IPeterwnl, l.00.'5 t.etc:YI IHI ptld $1,l:M.JO. Ttftll\ r«e .. °'9rlf91\t <Ptrller>, >.•. 'MO,.,....--~ llONllllllle)1 IUO, ' Miah lch0ol fl•ttl&Ml9' IUI; 0.Wal $11~ (LAftool, dO. ti tUC· a .... , ... ~ 1e u .• ,_...,~,. ..... T-.,.-.1 . ..... ~~l.,.~ _ -'· ·----...... .:. ... 1a -: •, ' , .... ;.~ •. ..., ··.:· ~-' ~ 2:1t:'flilljf ,,..., ·I, : l· ; ·: •: 1•: ,. • • ~".,• .~. ~· .~·~r lo it ,Jo 1¥ :, , ,, ~.....--""""" fMt _,, .. , ~ * . .'.. -. .. :· .. ··,:: . ._ll~AMltcNl · ' •. ,::~ •w" · . :· "·-~~' .. " . ... _.. .,., .. .,. ·. . .. , •·=•c .. 11 • • ..... • _ 1• · · · .r, u.11 •:. . · ... -. ,tie .. ,.t •• • c. Oii CN-11 · • • -;;.(.ti ·,:;. !.-._.~u . HllfllcMol .......... ClP6oA ( .... t. ~ -..; 1. u.1--.; a. c.r-... MM'I 4. ...... Y...,I t. TMYMM Oelu; "~· '· ~-vw•; '· ,,...,.11; '· VINe Pwa; II. 0..,....... (IPNCMllll t , Meter Otl; I . Mir e Colla~ l . N-llt; 4, l!I Dor ... ; S. 8-Peril; t. Lt CtNlll; 1.-...-110; I. Pi-; t . Sen Merl11e; 10. llltl IUtMtu end Norco. cu•_,.._, . '· u ......... l. c.e.te Meu; J. s. ....... . P:oo111111 ; s. N1w11ury Perk ; •· S11111 ••rwre; 1. ,.._... Y .. ley; •· e_..; t. • Pelo.I VetOK, 10. Ctr-.. Mer. (IPJ.A l--..1 t . te• MerlHI I. •l•llell An1et; J. c..ltlr-V.....,; 4. U9olM ... , .. i s. we1n11t; •· Al.,..111; I. Mire Coue; •· Sonore; t . AnO.,o Grenoe: 10. •r••..011114&. NBA WISTl•N CIONPlltlltCI ........ Ol\'1"91 WL I'd. oa Stn Antonio 10 J .IM Ulall • s .61S 2 Hou1ton ' s ...... • Denver • I ,,.. ~ IC•MH C•IY s ' .JS/ SY> Oellet 2 II .15' • Pecltlc DhiM9 ,._n .. II I ·'" '--•" 10 J .1•9 '"' Golden Sl•ll 1 s .SU • SH ti It • • . l29 • SenOI-I .:i.. .. ,.., Porllana . • .Jll I IUTlltN COHl'lltlNCI AllMlkOhiM• Ptulaclllpl\11 ' .... Ntw VOf'k 1 .178 I BoslOfl • • ·'°° 2•,1 NewJersev s I .llS s Wnlllntlon 3 C..."'•' Dlvllll• ' .HO •. ,, Mtlw•u-.. 11 l I .. lndl•ne • s 61S 2'h Alltlllt s 1 .U1 , C"lc.QO • I .:164 S111 CltvtllflO • 10 .2 .. I Oetroll 2 10 .10 • T-Y'lk- Ullen 119, Portltnd 111 WHlll"91on IU, All.,.11 ti 01tro1t ti, Molwauk" .. Sen 0'-111, 0.llH 102 Utef\ 107, I(-Col'( ICM Pnoenla 109, lndO..,. IOI , .......... ~ A1len11 .. Botton c1uca90 491 ~w Jeri.ev O.lroot 11 Pn11-1pn11 Plloer11x •t San Antonoo New York al Kins., C•IY Sen 01-11 H~IOll Cllvel-at Goldon Stile Oenver II S.1111• ni.w.y•• o.m.. Oelll\ •I Wtilli"91on c11 .. 1-1tUl•n Lake,. 119, Trait Blezera 111 PORTLAND -Nall "· WHhi1>9ton II, TllOmpson 2', PuM>n II, Ran .. , 6, Oweni •. R. Brewer O, Grou II, Kunnert •. Harper 6. Tollll Sl IMS Ill . LOS ANOILIS -cnone• 11. W1I••• 21. Abdul·J at>l>er 21, John10n 20. Noxon II, CootMr I, L.end111tr1,1er 2, J . Brewer •. To111t S.· ll·U "'· S<.,.ll>yO...run Portland 2l 29 32 ~Ill LOt A,...tft Jl tt lS 22·119 Fouled OWi --· Total IOUIS -Pol'll-, •. LOS AllQllH II. A -10. 100. :' ..... ~ .... (~ I ~ ., -~•.,.J.:.'..l"(· .. , ... .,..,.M, rl. ' .... "sr: i• ~'~ r..•11 't ~ ... 0 '·: -'-• °"~~-." 'J -,I lii(•, .._ ..... ;e,. 1'1 .... ,.... •• ~ • .t, ...... ~, . '/"-Ml . ·'1-t .. .,t\l ·-........:::i.::;.~ ' '.. t: ~I Der .. 1Ht+11 • •• ·-. Ht •. -._. .: -··1.~Vtlllry (MJ '' lW . ·-:· NINOttc:ou.aN '-M1...,.v1tioc ... 1.11 1oa ~~11.•uc1 S. ar...ollNM 1 ... 1.11 • Or-.. C-* . • 2 S .,._17 6. 1....at <WI 62 ""· SM AllWllO 0 2 J 2-I 1, N•ff c•l·ll u Or-.. C.-. IC.Orllll, 'l"OUnt '· AllllOll •, a. Plus x IS-21 O 90rSUll J, A. ~t 2, JoM'ton 1. CM1ol1 I, •. u .. _. 14-31 • 5efi0 I. 10.Y~(~I 1' (IP~~· 1.~t (J.11 • ; • 2. f:ioo!Nlj IMI . ,., 110 • 110 90 ............ ~. Go*ft--. .,. 2 • I 3-10 CrtrfP ' l 2 I >-l Goldlft w.st tcotl ... : Helh.if. S', WllSOft J, HOlfmtll 2. • • Ctlt l l!I Atnel'D C/.11 •.El Modtfta ,...,, S. Ly-IS-21 • 6. $Wl!'Y,Hlll1 IHI 1. Gtl\t 1 ... 21 " .1• W8ttr ""'° . • a. cy.,,_ 1 ... 21 t. An.,,.lm 1 ... 21 11). Oo-y ts.JI 10 Joi 22 .. . "'°" SCMOOL. •• .............. , .... .,. .. , El ~edo 0 0 I 2-l NewtlOft HtftlDr J ' l .,._,. NtwfOtt Htreor IC.OrlnQ: Alley 4, .._., 2, HtllMft I, 0owl"9 t, Gifford I, WllSOft S, woo11o111 1, s.t11ewe 1. . . Utll_....., M, • .._ .. • Unl11tnlty ' l l 4-14 E1tt11Clt 2 1 I 2-t UnlvtnllY IC.OrlflO: HMlley s. C.mptlell •. McCoy 2, Willls I. EsteftCJt scor1n1,1: Ursini I, Ore lle 1, Hertunt •. NHL WAUS COtll'lltlltCI It""" ocwi.i- ICI ... Hartford Melllrtll • Pll~ Detroit w LT 01' GA - t11$tni. S •l4JSOIJ S61S04111 ••• , " u 10 2tl .OS6S .,..._DI...._. Mlnne10te 1 1 2 ,.. ,, 16 8uflt lO I 2 2 .0 21 16 TorOllto • • I SJ .. , ll Quebec · I I • -45 62 6 Boston 2 I 1 tt JI 5 CAMPalU. CON Pl It INCi Pelrkll D111i1Mot Pllll-llltlia I 3 2 c.ioerv • s 2 NY ,.,.,_,, S S J , Wallll119'on J • S H'I" Rangen J ' I ....,_OM .1 ... SI U II .. so ,, ., Sl IJ .a. ll " "' t3 I SI. LOUIS Yencou.,.. Color- Clllt'90 Edmonton WIMll*,l 7ll ... 411 11 6•2S01'U • , ..... u 6 2 SI SI U 2 •S l6.0' I • l .cl SI S , ..... .,..k«ft New 'l"ork ISl-n •. Oel•Oll • MonltWI S, °""9< • , ........ ci.-es ....... w.,,.. .... Tor onto II P1 nsourQI\ Colorttlo•l Bulfalo New 'I"-Alft!IW~ 11 C/11<-Ctlet'Y ti WiM>1199 Htrtlonl1Cki.-ll ,...._.,.v_, ,,..,..,., ci.-es New Y_ l.,...n ll Boston ............. o.trolt ....... ""',_.., .. MIW1fwd II Color- Misc. TUHCley'a Tren .. ettona aAleaALL ~i..eee- SEATTLI MAIUMlllS -$1onect Herald RtyftOldS, IMle~; M1~ Huchon, PilCller, end ... Nl..,,,OlllflelOtr . ........ ~ ~M OIClGO PAORU -~ 0-11 l!ltrMt,Clle(lt.. aAMCITllALL ...... ,.,, ................. u._ Nla•ASICA W•ANOLIEltS -Tr- Rtftl• 1(1-tD IN New Orle.,s Pride tort 1lat1t-r-1'11 •ett cllOlce. HIW °"LIAN$ P•IOE -w .. _ S-•e s.-11..-. MINNl $0TA l'ILLIES -TrNM J- fft!IUIM .. Ille Nellr..U wr....,.,, tow a tlatll-rolllld 1911 drell CllOlct. •••••* OtLAIM Wlltlerns, Pel ~ ..... OeftlM Grllfltll ' ST. LOUIS IT"IEAK -ltt ... M MM t4·.::· Jell --· end MtrtN He1ti,._ .....,,..,.. . l'OOTMLL ................. ~ Nl'.W OlltLIANS SAINTS -SIOll .. OortlOft ....._., .. rKel.,.f. Plec'4 RICll Mtwtl, , .. ..,,. .,_1e11 .. , ell lnfur.o re· ltrft. NIW VO•K JlfS -Pl«Mi Miiot Mc:K .. Mii, 11-lltf, ~ •tndY RelnwtMfl, "'9f'f1 ell 1'11 lll!Vi'W ,_.,. llat. $ltf1M 1(-y Lewlf.nillll ....... MOCl&lY. _ ........... ....... ....,_ NlW YOltt( lk.AHOllU -lltecellecl "•i.tM ...._, ... lie, lrenl ,,.........,, el tM ~ ... .._..., .......... "ti""*'"'"' """· ......... 1111...,..11. ... ,.... ""'"' He1111l11t 1t1e.,er-cN ,ll. Nemeo Gerry IMMI! flr'tc1• 94 •Y""--'· ST. L.OUIS aL~ll -hctlllf 1111 a-..n, ··--· 11'91!1 S.ll L.ekt 01 Ille ""I'•' ..... ~. Women Eager to Open Baaketball Semon 81 JOHN SEVANO o1-.-.............. Contrary to popular belief, there JS more than o ne basketball team resldlnt on the UC Irvine campua. Coach Bill Mulligan's crew may be 1rabbin1 all the headlines, but the women's squad is doing its best to keep pace. Actually, the UC I women's basketball team starts its 1980-81 campaign 11 days prior to Its male cowiterparts. And. as if starting the season with only one senior on the team wasn't bad UCIREPOKr enough, the Anteaters must open against always powerful UCLA at Pauley Pavillion. Surprisingly, the women's team is accepting the challenge with great optimis m. The squad may be young, but it's also eager. "I'm as enthusiastic as ever about the season." exclaims sophomore forward · Diana Meier, who will be oounted up0n heavily this season towards the team's success." "I think the new recruits we've gotten will help us a lot." New recruits are o~e thin,. h owever . and experience as another. Coach Dean Andrea, startin« his third year. Is faced DIANA MEIER with the task of working with one senior, two freshmen and the rest sophomores. "I think we've gained a lot of experience from I-est year." explains Meier who, at 6·0. averaged 9.6 points and 5.1 rebounds in UCl's 10-19 season l ast year . "We're definitely more confident. '·As a team I still think we have to learn more, but we're very positive." Meier came to UCI out of Mira Costa High in Redondo Beach. where s he was an ALL-CIF performer as a senior. Andrea, who recruited her and her twin 1i1ter Dawn. says Diana II extremely coachable. ''She's briaht and ahe Ualeoa," praises Andrea. ''At the time l WH recrultin1 her I WU a1ao recruitlni three other girll, aocf• she'• aurpuaed lhem with her,. hard work. She's one of the moe rt coachable girls I've ever h11ct " "The only 1oal I had wheo : came here waa I really wanted'°' to start," said Meier. "And U..~ only way I figured I could do1• that was to do the right things lit' practice. "' "There are some peoP-le who com e out of high school and " think they 're right orh everything, That's not true," she adds. "The only way I figured rd·• become a real good player wu' if I listened to my coach and worked hard in prac tice orf' hustling. and playing defense." • • • There are new bumpe; s ti c ke r s th at will soon b~ circulating throughout the UCJ c' a m p us s a y i n g , " W e ' re, Hungry." •· Ob viously, that s logan is · referring to the lack of success,, and subsequent change being hope d fo r in •the m e n 's. bas ketball program. Rumors have it that Kevin Magee s aw the s logan and immediately left Mulligan 's office a nd he aded for the cafeteria. ArJ American Revolution Fi11t' Shot'• Smrt' I 903 fOlt .. Olt WClmJI Anti-Slip Safety irnf! •l!l l 1"1..fEr®1JJ Cadillac. 1981 . at ~ COSTA MESA (714) 5 4 0 ·9 100 (2 13) 587·8266 l!A M R li«>C Cool, bre.,,..oble. hond-croh•d elk 1a-.d <o..+iode, dr111 "°"· Easy °"· ee»y olll MoccoMn comfort. bo.eloot flexibility $., ... women $.51o 10 M·5 IO 10 I ~ • • Tum your unusables into usable cash. can Daily Pilot classified 642-.5678. ~\ ~.~ :L 11 ,_, ..... '* ~ .1A --b .. ,..,........ ;,...- $.-..- $-911> lo 12· ll W·7 IO 17.13 • • • ' . . .Jl.m~ SHOES 99 F••hto~. Newport Beach ... 759-9951 tarestoneg ALlll THE TIREMAll COSTA MESA CorMrof H..t»or ltwd. & Wiison Across~ P.-.y's Stto,plncJ C...ter PHONE 631-0712 HOUIS: MOM. TH•U f•I. 7:10 AM TO S rM SAT. 7:10 AM TO 3 rM ..,,_ ,, ....... lies Pfy Tire fer .......,, & (....,.Usf FOR IMPORTS AND COMPACTS Y•re•ton·e 'F•r••tone XE CHAMPION· -'°"" c,_•Clf'T 6 00-12 I 115·12 6 00· 13 I 111·1J --: 111-11 6 00· 1!> -I !> 60· I!> 155· 11 1H•1J IMPORT CARS FRONT DISC BRAKE SERVICE • AepleC9 Front DllC Pedt e JMc:nlne Both Ftont Rotort .. s49E?-_ ' ST£El-lllTID RADW CIVALLllO : •41 c-•IWl·t2 • IWl·ll ~~T ...... ~ ....... • Mlll-15 •lulnNI A11'1 ~ tO r!)1 r:.w. W1llWl11I .... llf)lill. 19111111111 >1111'\# A1r (.0M 1lr<111••11 r,\I , '1hQ'"'~ ll1qlll'1 -~· • PEP BOYS STlll GIVES A LIMITED ROAD HA'ZARD WARRANTY* AT NO EXTRA COST THE PEP BOYS GIVES A LIMITED WARRANTY ON CORNEll TIRES FOR A SPECI FIED NUMSER OF MONTHS AGAINST All ROAD HAZARDS IN NORMAl PASSENGER CAR USE. DAMAGED TIRES Will BE REPLACED WITH PRO RATED MONTHl Y ADJUSTMENT CH ARGE BASED O N REGULAR SElllNG PRICE AT TIME OF PURCHASE.• ~~~~~~ 78 ·SERIES $ 99 REPLAC ES MOST FUEL PUMPS MECHANICAL OR ELECTRICAL Speedt atorl1ng, el1monote• •opor toe~. otopo moot 1tolling A•ooloble f01' ~ds2T :~E~~~~N 1888 ANO fORflGN CAllS. TllUCKS & CAMPUS IA<tl PEP BOYS SPECIALS 011 SHOCK ABSO ...-..~'RADIAL 88'' MacPllERSON STRUT SUSPENSION EPLACEMEIT CAITlllGE 1 Sfa" PERF OllllAICE SHOCKS MAH ISPICIALL Y FOi CAMP11S. PICI.• ... VMS, IV1I 4 WI'• . SIOCI AISOllllS THE ''llTIMATE" SllOCK FOi UDIAl llASID, All»BTEDTllES Mew IMre'• o ll e<llol Vol•e<I Sl>ec~ Ab-ber "'°' ,_ rlcle cOftttol 16 -ffh the ..,_.. of ,..,, cor. COSTA MESA FULllRTON GARDEN GROVE 29•6 IRISTOl $T. l.S30 S HAHOR 8ll/O, 10912 !CATELLA AllE. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE, 870-0700 KATEllA & EUCLID PHONE S•9.1533 PHO NE: 638-0863 YOUR CHOKl Purolator ~ IMPOH CM o r "TMI HOT ONI" OIL FILTERS .-----' ::-:: Ott IN-LINE ~·GAS. RllERS 200/o OFF CADll BAnlRllS SACRAMENTO (Capitol) - • 1be next time you sit down to your breakfast oranae juice, ask )'OW'.Mlf for a moment what you might possibly have in common with monkeys, guinea pigs and bats. r. 1beanswer ? IF YOU ADD a rew exotic birds; you will have the entire list o creatures that need vitamin C and can't make it inside their own bodies. Fortunately oranges are a particularly deliahtful way to lfet vitamin C. A single navel orange will meet all our Recommended Daily Dietary Allowance for vitamin C. "A good, s weet, ripe onnce ia one or the most sensual expenences that can happen to the human palate,'' says Mary {.o{.Ue Lau, a food specialist. IF EVER there was a time lo put her opinion on the delicious· oess of orantes to a test, it 's right now. Perfect growing conditions forcaJifornia navel orantces have resulted in a 40 percent increase over last year. "'lbere's never been a year like this for qualitv and yield," s ays Green SACRAllENTO (Capitol> - W6en im't an.or&Qle -orance? Aak lack Ree1er of &mid.It Growen and be U happily ex· f plain that Valencia orances. the variety ol oran1e you can buy from late February through November, still may be green althoUlb they're at the peak of their flavor. To confuse matters, they can be a perfect orange col- or altbougb they're quite acid and have very little sugar. "With Valencia oranges, col· - ... 0..YPILDT ----.~1.1_, vegetable crisper (which it should be for humidity) l it will lastuptoamonthandaha f. PMl uaoraqe the "round 'n' round" method (perfect for aec- tJoollll ... cuWnl lnto cart...._): Cut a thin slice frombotbeadaoloraqe. Wltba . 1U1btly 1awtna motion, cut anly the outer colored peel ln 1 con- tinuoua 1plral, leavtn1 th• wb6te membrane. Cuttin1 lenltbwile with curve of fruit, remove . white membrane. grower I>On Schonauer. Navel oranges usually are used for eating, in contrast to Valen- cias which are primarily a juice orange. Curious, he ate one of the fruits and discovered an orange·colored goldmine. Navel oranges 11)ake not only a handy and nutritious snack. they also have a detergent action for cleaning teeth and they stimulate 1---------------------------, the gums. They also make a splen· did dessert just as they·are . or you Navels are easy to peel, fall naturally into sections, and as an added gift, are totally seedless. YOU CAN EASILY recognize them in your s upermarket because they alone have the characteristic navel at one end. Next time you 're in your favorite market, take a look at the small mountain of navel oranges. Every navel orange you'll ye there, and every navel orange in every store or stand in the entire world traces its ancestry to one branch of one tree in r emote Bahia, Brazil. Just over a hundred years ago a Brazilian citrus farmer noticed a branch of one of his trees was heavy with fruit much larger than those on ne~ghboring branches. THAT CHANCE mutation in the branch of his tree had yielded an entirely seedless orange blessed with an exquisite tangy flavor. Twelve cuttings from that Brazilian tree were sent to this country where they were grafted onto our rootstocks. From those cuttings bas sprung the entire $150 million California·Arizona navel orange industry. When you're selecting navel oranges, what should you look for? ntE FRUIT should feel firm and heavy. never spongy, and it should be free or bl em 1shes or son spots. It will keep at room tem-perature for about two weeks, and refriger.ated in the covered means Valencia can make one of the favorite of orange growers Darlene and Don Scbonauer. SCllONAUER SHER RIED ORANGE DE~ERT Navel oranges l'h cups grated sweetened coconut '4cupssherry Peel and slice the oranges in quarter-inch wagon wheel slices. In a glass bowl arrange sli ces in alternating layers with the coconut. Finish with a layer of coconut. Pour sherry over all, and cbill for at least an hour. Serves six. For free recipes using navel oranges, send a stamped, self· addressed envelope lo "Navel Oranges," California Women for Agriculture, California State Fair, 16000 Exposition Blvd., Sacramento. 95813. • is wrap for later me with only minimal lou of vitamin C. IN CIT&US, vitamin C is uniquely stable because of a sub- stance which inhibits the usual • Bite· size pieces: Cut peeled orange lengthwise. With shallow V ·shaped cut, remove white center core. Place halves cut· slde·down; cut lengthwise and crosswise. Peel an orange with a Snacker (easy for kids ... no knife needed): To score : insert cut· Ung point of Snacker at stem end of orange. Pull Snacker downward through peel, scoring a complete circle around orange. Repeat step again to score peel into quarters. To loosen peel: use opposite end of Snacker. Insert (curved end down to conform to curve of fruit) between peel and "meat" of orange. Using a puJUna ~ tion, move Snacker along all sides ol each quarter. loosening peel from fruit; remove peel. To segment: gently separate along natural divisions. . or doesn't mean anythia&," he says. "A Valencia might turn just lbe right golden orange col· or in winter before it is fully mature, but ·as the weather turns warmer, it will . start to tum green again, starting at the stem end." "ONE OF the things wbich Sunkist would most like the public to hear about is that the greenish color on the Valencia in the supermarket is an indication that the fruit is ripe." oxidatioo of vitamin C. It's the.,_ ________________________ __, same substance. that does the The orange is going through a process referred to in the in· dustry as regreening . The clorophyll inside the fruit mi· grates out to the surface of the fruit, tinging it with green. AcnJALL Y, YOU need never worry about buying an unripe Valencia. State law forbids the shipment of unripe Valencias, and this is VigorQusly enforced. Thia year may be one of the best years ever lo buy Valen· cias. "The mild winter and abundant rains have produced the most bountiful crop in his· tory, '• says Carolyn Leavens, wife of a Ventura citrus grower. If you stock up on Valencias now, how should they be stored? Most citrus fruits will keep at room temperature .for about a week to 10 days. For longer than that, the Sunkist's Consumer Service Division recommends keeping them in the covered vegetable crisper of your refrigerator. TO GET THE most juice from a Valencia. bring it up to room temperature, then roll it on lbe counter a few tiqies to break down the juice tacks. U you have a hall-0ran1e left after fill· ing your Jb,ice gluaes, you cd: refri1erate it ln a plutic baa or job when you squeeze lemon juice on avocados, a pples or bananas to keep them from dis· coloring. Very little vitamin C is lost during shipping, marketing, home storage or during common preparation for eating. How do the growers like to pre pare their Valencias? Mrs. Leavens says her refrigerator always has 50 or so fresh oranges ready to be squeezed for · the family's morning juice. But she al.so makes hundreds of dif· ferent recipes using Valencias. THREE·GENERATION SALAD "My favorite -way to serve them ," she says, "is peeled and sliced in half wagon wheels , alte rnating with a vocado slices.·• The dressing is made ol 1 cup ketchup, 1 cup oilL ~ cup cider vinegar, 1 teaspoon salt, "' teaspoon garlic salt, a pinch of pepper,~ cup sugar, all whirled in the blender. Mrs. Leavens got this recipe 30 years ago from her mother·in· law and is delighted to aee her own cbildren'are using lt. Taking a · fresh approach %·cup1qar 2egs 2 cupe wlllte bread cubes l tablespoon 1rated orange rind tan1ertnee, t.an1eloa are segmented for euy eatlnc. They are also lhin·lkinned and euy to peel. ~ &eupoon Mlt ! l ~ freM oraqe juice Cream butter or mar1artne; sradually beat ID -.ar. Beat ID .. r• one at a time beatlq well after HC addiUoa. Add bread c:ube9, oraq• rind, 1alt and oraaa• Julc.. IAt 1tand I mlnutea at room t.em· peratun to mollMD bread cubit. Pour IDtd bUttend l-41uart baklDI dlab: let In pan of bat ....... Bake la llO -..... ov• 41 ml.Dutel or unW puddin1 ia ftrm. Serve w.arm or cold. Ma• 'to I MrVlDp. Al tblir UllMI lmpl7, the taseftDI ud tbe ta..,.... an nlated. The &aqelo ll .e· tull1 • bbrtd of the t.aqertae ... the sraPlfnlll. Tee .... an about the 1b1of1 mm~ aftet ...... Tbey an brtllld7 eoaor.d _. u.. a delleloul aroma. n. tuselo eom..._. die flavon ol tlle ..._ ud 1rapefruU for a l••IY t11te. Llh • Often called nature'• "sipper" fruit, .taa1.nn. an popular for Utielr eatiq coavmitnce and juley' .... nator. u YoU aren't well acquainted wltb t.aqeloe, try UMm and YoU 'll dlaeover their ... ty eoavea- ~ee, too. Both taqertnea and tan1ekle in MUOU durlnl JQUU')'. . . TANGBatNS BLCJllOD .I medium-llMd WlpfbMI .. eup beaYJ cream 1 tlMIP a ae ....... \4 tHIJDOa dmamon Dub-.... Peel tan1erta... CaretullJ Hparate t::.s:,'nH lato ' Hetlou, 1aalnant f ComllMleenam,....,. e' e • wl •n11 ID wall Mwl. it'MP ..- minlN umllJ .eMI. Pile llllo I 0 10 al ......... ,....... .... ...., ........ ......... Peel an orange the "basketball" method (theold·fashioned way for eating out of band) : Gut a thin slice from stem end or orange. With knife, score peel lengthwise into quarters or sixths. Pull the peel away with fingers. Segment orange for eat- ing. Smiles for easy-eating orange wedges: cut oranee in half crouwi.ae; place cut.side up. Cut 3 to 4 wedges from each half. Cartwheel slices: (Peeled or Wl· peeled) cut a thin •lice from both ends of orance. Slice fruit crotswtae. Cut slices In half for half·cartwbeela. Grated peel! Wub and dry oranae. Wltbqulek dOwaward 1troll•, 19IDO¥e outer colored • layer of peel Clll11. Grate°"" wazed ,....... To me•ure. tlPt· IJftllme•.walpoGll(donot pack)."':~.... le• be ltond ID 1 e bal and froaenWltil . OI Eider, Dou1h nut1 · Co01patible OM Of .a..-com· \.\ .,._.poaa around beat 2 mlnutu on ,.uble foM OO•llia•· clua.. mediwn 1pMd of elec· U..:. la .tM A.erieH ~ tMapooa lnund trlc mlnr, acraplDI ..., ... •Ult Hl'tala11 •u&m.. bowl oeca.-ally. Stir • ,,_ .... ddlr ud-.tu' <a ._.lilt l lD tDOUO of U....nmam-traaranl, homemade . mar1uiM. _... ln1 flour lo make a son .......... · l IMl11pa. around doutb. Cover; let riae in Tltete ue autum• elua.. warm place. tree from i.O'cit, alln•ta., tM Md Seal• milk ; 1Ur In dHft. untll doubled in "barvnt la Mar al \.\npMllU',laltand~ bulk-, about 50 -60 Mad. e-. ......,.... Cool to mlnut.. But ._,. .... , eooli:t lukewarm. Meaaure Punch dou1b down; e U•• lo produce warm ..., lnlo lar1e turn out onto liahtly b ........ at the warm bowl. Sprinkle ln rioured board. Roll out of a dcfll-Jua? dry y .. t : 1tlr untll 411· to ~-inch thickness; cut rite in warm place. free trom draft, until doubled In b ulk, about 30 minutes. Brus b dou.,,hn uts wltb melted margarine. Bake at US-P. for 8-10 minutes or until golden brown. Remove from 1heets and cool sU1hUy on wire rack. Dip In re- m al n i n g m e lted margarine. Combine re· maining 1 cup sugar and l tablespoon cinnamon; coat douehnut with SUI· ar mixture and serve warm. Makff about. 2 dozen. Doughnuts, baked In the oven, make a delicious accompaniment lot Apple Cider. : On tile OCIMr hand, II solved. Acid lukewarm Into douthnut shapes tou take tbe tlme to millf milltur~. e1p, 2 wltlt floured douallnut fheck prlcH on the cups flour, VJ teupoon cutter. Place on 1reued feady-made variety, cinnamon and nutme1; bakin1 sheet. Cover; let r: ou'll ctiacover makin1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~~~~__;;~.;:._~~~~--':.._~~~....;____,.~~_;,,;_-=-,;,..,..::__~~~~~~~- ou11anut1, roll• and ead homacrakb b a RAtlTEED LOW f:f.~d;~;;:.~;~;~ VOlll GOA ._ . . P~ICES that the dou1hnuta are tt5%?{1~~~,11: ~ -TAKE YOUR PICK ArtD SAVE tookies. I I To achieve a rich taste tnd crunchiness, the aked doughn-ut is ipped in melted argarine, cinnamon nd sucar upon remov-ing from the oven. ~ Douehnut.s, either the fi ried or baked variety, re best when eaten resh and warm. ' However, they can be febe~ted successfully in r microwave oven or l°aster oven. '-Leftovers may be f ~ozen to use another 1me. , SPICY BAKED ~"RAISED DOUGHNUTS S 1 cup milk ~ l 'h cups sugar ~ 1 teaspoon salt ~ lf.s cup margarine ~ 'h cup warm water ~ 2 packages dry teast ~ 2 eggs, beaten (at room temperature) ~ 4'h to S cups unsifl-td flour i pyst e rs tfreasure d I Many seafood fanciers !rate oysters as the :(lumber one ocean ~reasure. And well they ~hould . .i Oyste r s oCfer de · ;iicious, delicate flavor. ~hey are an excellent rt;ource or high quality fl>rotein, minerals and vitamins. They are also easi l y dige s tible whethe r eaten ra w , steamed. fried, baked, frittered or in stew. OYSTERS, are availa· ble year-round. Using the time-tested harvest- ; n g methods of their for efathe r s , Virginia water-men tong for o ysters season after season to produce the largest supply or fresh shucked oysters in the nation. However. oysters are highly perishable. Bu~ because of modem pro- cessing. transportation and storage practices, you can enjoy oysters whatever the time of the year . Oysters are sold live in t h e s hell , fresh s h e lled, forzen a nd canned. When sold in the shell, they must be alive wh en purchased · with shells tightly closed. Fresh shelled oysters should be refrigerated or surrounded by ice. I F PROPERLY handled, they will re- main fresh for a week to 10 days. · Frozen oyste.r:s should not be thawed until ready to use and they s hould n eve r be refrozen. Abo, be sure to use the liquid content along with the oyster meat for maximum flavor. For a unique seafood e xperience s ure to brighten breakfa!U, lunch or dinner, try this outstahding recipe from the collection of Virginia Chet Johnny Lockhart of Lockhart's Gourmet Seafood in Norfolk . SUNNY SI D E UP OYSTERS 8 large oysten l larae egg 2 ounces cream 1 pat butter \ii teaspoon ginger Melt butter ln a small casserole dish. Adel cream. Lay oysters aide by side at one end of dlsb . Open e11 and place sunny aide up °" other end. Sprinkle °" &Inger. Bake at tao degr•es for a bout & minute• or untll ••1 firms \IP· Gamilb with pualey, • watercret• and lemon wed1e or 1Uced lemon and llme. -J -\ -.. MEJ'I T 16 00-.CE PACKAGE. LIMIT 2 1Pu<r hd-. °'''""'~"'<I P<-<" I .J'), SLIC~"IG SIZE • UJ•llT ~LB ll'uict\a'4: °"'"' lw'nrt ll!g ptlCe 39 LB I L8 · A Gift In Good Taste VONS GIFT CERTIACATES '. IO<lt For your shOpplng convenience al Vons markets wfll be OPEN VEI ERAN& DAY 9AM·7PM, TUESDAY, NOY.11th l o\flll K•'G BfEf-l["' lf'Ofk l l\\lf 2 4Pltlc hd~4'0\t"'f ltt• ... .-..... } l"", J '"'• I h t ·EX 14LSAM &PRO'l'BN · "pH~ l .. C!H~fM fff1199, THltCJ 141'., l'IOV.6 TOl'IOV. f, IMO. CM.1.(.21 J)lf•l"4IOl'Oll lOCA"°" Of" STOM "'NIDT 'IOCl 111N MO PNCU fl TI9 llO i.()1 UncTM AT \laM, )J)4 w. Int IT. I.Ge MQUD, UOO W "9CO a"-. LCle NIOO.U. U71 W. IOlff IT. LOI MCft.d, IM *GO NfO t.M "90Aa. IAl.O Ill llfTAll GUNmTa Ofll.Y. Ofltll I N'i DAU . t.00""' "'"°"'y Utoo\ FOOO STAI¥ COC#Ol'll ~y ACaPT'U> Bob .• nio.-nd ..... s.d ~.totJAll .6, Nlb\'..y &tcullf, s-.n,a OI ~ •~ 17 Plhbury IMQ Co;.-y 81tcu11.a, eat 33 Borden~« Anwrtc9n, OllCHlt ~00011.. JL8 6.611 DIAL BAR :SOAP 'ALMOND DYNAMO LIQUD LAUNDRY DETERGENT 35 64-02. (l'tO.UOES .JO OFF) J .26 HY•llR ... fl ...... ~u.u 2.07 0t ~8-f~ 160l 2tt120lllU Oll 19 Ot ~ MMI 8oiogna,ltOl 1Qe,UOll 6"1 •otl,ll Otc•• ""'re< links..,..... , a at,, 1.99 o.c.,~,betO!\,lll~COfl«ll IL•.. 1.te , FOOD Organize your reb&tes a1 llA&TIN SLOANE "Tbe wonl 'rebate' ll not new to the bulldlal ol I boule of wonbip," say• Betty Bourquelo, clerk of the Sunman Bible Cllu.rdl. ''Kina So&omoo uaed re~tes to build b1I temp&e. 1be word appun in the new t:n1liab version of the Bible, l Klno t :I . Over tbe put two years, the Miuionettes ol lbe &-man, Ind., con1re11Uon have con- tributed many tbouaanda of refund dollars to help build their new church. But don't aome refund forms state that · "no 1roup or or1antzalional requests will be bonofed"? True, but that does DOl prevent in· dlviduala from aeod.in1 for refunds and then contributl.U the money they receive to a church or charitable or1aniulion. This is ex- actly bow the Misslonettes do it. TllEllE A&E A FEW differences between refundiq for yourself and refunding for an orcanbation. For a group to be successful at aucb a project, many people must be educat- ed, motivated and or1aniaed. But the basic · objectlve la the same: to turn every box top and label into cash. Finl, every member of the 1roup must be shown bow organized refWKling works. Chances ate that many a~ µnaware of the many hundreds of refund offers. that manufacturers make annually. Moet get excited about refunding once they realize that the box tops and labels they have been throwing away can be worth dollars to their organization. This enthosiasm must be organized and ch&Meled produc- tively. Flndlnl refund forms is the 1roup's bi&· gest challenge . Members are askeCl to look for forms in all the wsual places, such as aupermarket displays, newipapen and macazlnes. llloet sroupa find that tradl.na refund forms by mail produces the be9t n11ulll. llemben of the 1roup are asked to save all their box tope and labels from national· brand producll. And as soon as the inventory of refund forms bepna to build up, a apedal list of needed proof• of purchase is prepared and diatributed \0 each member. Once the forms are matched with the cor· respoodi.n& proofs, each merpber receives a portion ol them to be filled out and malled. SOME OaGANIZATIONS ask their memben to concentrate oo cash refunds. They trade lift and free-product forms to ob- tain additional forms for cub refW\da. ()tber organizations sell the lifts and produCta at bazaars and namma1e sales. This type of fund raising is by no means easy. It requires a 1reat deal of cooperation from each member of the organiutioa. Your group may find it a lot easier to sell dec- orative candles, candy or 1reeting cards. REFUND OF THE DAY . Write to the following address to receive the form required by this $1 refund offer: Libby's-Cool Whip Refund. General Foods Corp.. P.O. Box 4052, East Court Street, Kankakee, Ill., 60901. This offer expires March 30, 1981. -------------ci.P~N-mEiEFVMi------------, CEltEAU, •1t•A1t,.An "ltOOUCTS, •A•Y "ltOOUCTS Clip -lllls Ill• -....., It will\ "m"•' c..n-ott '°"PGI" --1199 ,.._ off..-s ••th oewr-cou~. for ............. SIMI COll«fl"ll , ... -P<OOh Of pure,,_ .. wflll• -1"11 for ltMI ,_ired r•· 1.-formt •• the s-mwrut. 1n ne~s ...., m-.•1lnH, -....., trecll"ll will\ lrl....is. Oft•~ m.y not lie w•il.oi• In •II .,...,Of lN ~ry. Al· -10 ~IO nK••ve NCI\ r.tund. AUNT JEMIMA GrHI ~Hllfftl Otfff. RKetw • t i ret.-. Seftd Ille reqwirecl r9fund fonn. i"91'edient fists lrorn M'f -Jemlm11 Penulle ""• ...., .,.., Au11t Jeml""' hrup plus 11\e n•me from •ny ~~T : .. ~~"~..'::::k 21cu11'::: Rmlv• • c--· Send IN ~.,.., r9f11nd form plus lhrM P<OOl·Of·-c,,.w •His from R••ston fnsi.nt or R•ISton ReguiM llOt cerHt. E1tptres Dec JI.'"" WET OH'ES Me,,_eote BtrlllCNys. RKelw • .... paoe l>lr1hdAy·-1Y -· Send IM requ1r..i r9fund form. r_,., platlc •-from tM -· of "'9 ,., str•PS of ,_. -y·•IH Wei 0n .. peck-pltn 75 cents tor IJO'IA9t ...., hendllnQ. E•plres Jen. JI, 1 .. 1. Bonus I TMM ollers don't req<ilre form" OIAPARENE Doller Ref11nCI, P.O. Bo• 1'9•, W•terl.,_, MeU. 02171. RK elve • II rel...cl. Send tM $Inell pink c~ -11<0Cluct cooe ~n from IM lo-r l>e<k I-ls OI •-OtetNtr-~ Wesl\ CJoth& pec"-', eltNr 111e. E•pires J-lO. 1 .. 1. HEINZ B•DY Food R•lunCI, p 0 Bo• 142. W•tortown. Meu. 02111 Rec.elve • l l retuncl. Send H l•C." from HeiN Junior F-E•pir9t Dec J I, ltt2. OAfltY "ltOOYCTS, OIU, lllVlltOAltlNIS, DIET l'OOOS CRISCO OIL S.l.CS Lonr's Cook-k Oller RKe•V• • ~ ~-. Send 11\e ,_,,.., t• fund lwm plus IN flu-• si.'*Ment from 11\e •-• of .,., O IKO Oil Dollie or tr. loll cap 11,..r from I !19iton0f O!Ko Oil. E•pires July t, '"'· MIRACLE BRANO Merverlne Ofter. AK•lw. peU•91 ol Mlrecle Brend AMroerlne. Send 11\e re-qulr~ rel-form pltn '"'" Unlverwi P~t C-s from .,., comllln.Uon of tN fol-1"11 t· ~ -of wi.1_.i Mlracle Br-Mero-rlne, l·POUllcl P•Ck•oe ol Whipped Mlr•cl• Br•ncl M•row1,.., t.pouncl peck•91 of Whl..-0 Miracle BrenCI Com Oil Meroer1,.., E•plrH June JO, '"" LANO 'O' LAKES lttO ~n Offer. AKelw r.s cents In c_,s. Send IN requlr9d refund form pius one end penei lrom LAnd ·o• Lekes Golden Velvet or 2-pound Anwrlc., Pa<k*911. E1tpir11s /oMrcl\ JI, ,,.I, MAZOLA CMll A-1-.'RKelve • 7S-C.,I rel...CS SenCI the r-lrecl r9fund form, the net·-IOM , .. ,. ment from ti\:' front pen•I of eny I·~ -· ~·o•rlne p1115 IN cer1mcel• trom o,.. -ci.11., ""'rkecl P*Ck*Oll. E•plre1 Merell l l, t .. t ---, . I ----------------------------------· Pork, chicken, too !\'lea~ prices are rising again - WASHING TON CAP ) -Meat prices are on the rUe and are likely to' keep on climbing at least through the first half of next year, tbe Agriculture Department says. department said r ed seven cents over the meat and poultry pro-third quart.er. duction during the July In the first three through September months of 1981, meat quarter was about the products will probably same as 1979, after hav-continue to increase ing risen sharply during moderately in price, the from 10 to 15 cents over first-half prices this year. Pork products are leading the way as hog producers cut back on their slaughter to make up for losses suffered since mict-1979. Decllnes in both pork and poultry production during the remainder of this year will more than offset an Increase in beef production, the de- partm"1t added. the first half~ 1980. department added. Total beef production Pork prices will con· rose 3 percent in the tinue to lead the way. it third quarter , pork pro-said. duction was about the The average price of same as last year and broiler chickens Is ex- poultry output declined. peeled to reach SJ cents Pork prices are ex-to 54 cents per pound in peeled to average near the first half of 1981, an $1.SS per pound in the increase of about a dime fourth quarter, up a over the first-half prices dime per pound over the this year. third quarter. Turkey prices are ex· It pn!dicted price in- creases for all meat in the flrst half of 1981. The Retail beef prices are peeled to be from 68 expected to average cents to 72 cents a pound around $2.50 per pound in the flrsl half or next in the final quarter. up year, an incr ease of _________________ .:.:::..:__ -------- ••• Try this diet-light French Vinaigrette dressing on a favorite salad. Combine I/• cup red wine vinegar, 1 tablespoon each water and lemon juice. 1 teas- poon sugar substitute, 'h teaspoon basil, 1"2 tea- poon seasoned pepper. IA teaspoon each paprika, dry mustard, tarragon, celery seed, seasoned salt. Add ¥.. cup salad oil. blend thoroughly and refri1erate several hours before serving for the best flavor. •The thinnest, most comfortable feminine napkin ever made. •A unique absorbent system distributes fluid, locks it in. Pad stays thin, dry and really comfortable. .... , .. ....,. •it.•\C 1)1 ~lfi 10 'tOrftf"'\ "'"' '~"" Oftl't ........ ,,.t Ow"<"4-" o' ,..,_ .,~ " "" •"titG All; ~ wV t. "1\I Mf1 ••hCJ W \~0 tOWOO"\ CM' Dil ff\CI •IC t ~ ~ fh ,.. •• M'.clUilf ~ "Y• c;IWW: emNfft\..,.._.,. t"'O ._.. ilfl(o.f O~\ IO tevf Outif1 ,..., .. ~ &\f~'"-"'0."'~~IN:Otl't'IOJ \.tt \ rOIC.Jl\tG '°" Jtt iWN' IH to'~ ~·1 <°"00" n.JVl lQll'll Wf •'OIY '°"''Ofrnttau~t ,.!"IC .,.'lupO' ~t '( ~H'll) c.Nfte ~,CK/" <CKIOOl'I '~ Ql'lt, ' '°"' ,,.c COl'l'IUl"ltf P\.l'lf <omotid •ll"I ~ .. ,~, ~' !"'IC. ft""'tf 1""""1-(;t\ \l'IO~ pijltf\of\C OI W"otf'I$ t.a0t• tO :oitt" <OUOO"'I O'ttr"'lltC f"loM Olf tflOwPI ~ '""'1f ~ ;::-:;,'~.:::::,:!':'c'~~Or.;fl ~ ~ = ~o:' :4~· :~':Z: 'Zo!;~ r, u.~,=~ ~.Jr '~~~s~~~:v1 ~ t;.~·~.Z, • ~,,.. (IOOI Ol'Wt O"I ""'. "'' " Cl'OOwd °""'°'° -.it~'"""'°"'..,"' .... "' ~-... - 08004 100908 Introducing a new way toke~ your teeth in mint conClition. DENTAL FLOSS MINT FLAVOR .~ UNWAXED Like Johnson's Dental Floss Waxed Mint, it does more than give your mouth a dean, minty-fresh feeling. Your dentist will tell you. Flossing gets where a toothbrush can't, to remove bacterial plaque and de~ng food partick?s that get trapped between teeth and under the gumline. Those; are the things that can lead to gum disease. And that can lead to tooth loss. So see your dentist regularl9, brush, and floss daily. With new Johnson's Dental Floss Unwaxed Mint. You'll love the good taste that says you're helping to keep your mouth in good health. · ., Fighting gum disease will leave ~ good taste In your mouth. ' . Wee ta .......... ·- Bestof.~ worlds ---L()W~orie P•~mpltjn cheeSec&ke "I taaH•'t He• a .... ,.. ...... 't lk• .....Ua pi•,,_ or ............... , .... l•d1 Dukl• ol Bel· aont, Ute wl•Der of Uall moaUa'1 Slim ........... lledpr C-t.a. ........ bolt· ay -I Melded to eomb6M tlle two. ln a low~eUirie ftraloD : .. aow I can enJoJ IOm ...... apedal, too.'' Judy'• lndhld ual p umpkin ch eHecate •puddla11 rea ~ly are aomedllq •pedal. Not wltla leftov•r _pumpkin ·-tile 8IDCMmt needed .., ............. than dM em ol pumpkin pro· vlct.! A. llak• a low-calorie Pum&*ia Souftle . . . a luac{ou aide di1b to 1erve wttb rout chicken or turby. Here's how: PUllPKIN 80UPFLB \.'I cup fresh non-rat milk. I t.abie9poom flour zeu1Qlb _J ~ cup caaaed •· ••ee~pumpkba . . I tablespoons ralaln1 J tablespoona brown 1u1ar (or equivalent subaitute) pl.Deb of: cinnamon, 1tn1er,clove, nutme1 zeaw}Utea pinch of salt Combine milk a nd nour in a heavy non-stick aaucepan and mix until smooth. Cook ai'ld stir o\ter low beat mtil m ix· ture s immers a nd tbickem. Remove from beat and beat in 1 en yolk at a time, until tboroUlhJy mbed. Stir in remalnlnt lngre· dlenta, except e11 wbl&es and aalt. Place over low heat. Cook and the. beaten egg whites. 11 ti r until ml xtu r e Spoon Into a non-stick thickens 1U1ht1y, but baking dish which has ·don't boil Remove from been sprayed with cook· beat and -11ow to cool. lng spray. Me8{lwhile, combine Place the db h in a e1g wbltea and salt in an lar1er pan, containin1 1 electric mixer bowl anil Inch boiling water. beat untU stiff'. When • Place in, a preheated pumpkin mixture is 350-degree oven; bake coo 1, gen ti y but uncovered for 1 hour. thoroul,bly fold the Makes six servings, 75 pumpkin mixture into ca lories each ( 65 calories e•ch with sugar mfgllt print '°'" recfJN substitute). tome otlwrmontll ~·• more 111Uabl• lo tlae Win "The ltdemational ,,eoaon. All recipu Slim Gourmet Cookbook"' pubu.lted toiU ~ moa'*d by entering your de-o book. Print clftrlal. giH coloriud rediJN in our JIOUr name, ~ad lip f Nndlil and in/'""4l con-code, and Mid .,.,..,. mtrie1 teat wUh no rui.a. If JIOU're to SUm Gourmet' RHder not o .......,.. nut month, Recipe Contea,. P.O. B~ don't oiw up lookbsg! We 624, Spor14, N.J. <m7J. HOLllDA y · BAKING TIME ·1s. HERi!: • anly tMt, thef're rich in . ' dairy aubitioa. "I like 1 · my deuerta to provide protein, be low in fat and 1u1ar and low· calorie,'' Judy adda . Thia recipe 11\ffts all thole requirements. .. G . I I r She polnu out that this deaHrt can be baked in a piepan and cut into pie-abaped weclces, "but I like bakiaa it in in· dividual cuatard cups, ao tbeJ're all ready to serve. I lMJPe you enjoy tbJa u mudl u I have." JUDY IKJND.£'8 LOW CAL PVllPIDN CBEIC8ECAKE BAKE 2eap 1 cup canned un- . sweetened p l ain pumpkin 1 cup low-rat cottage cheese 1 cup plain (or vanllla> low-rat yogurt 3 tablespoons fruc- tose (or 5 tablespoons 1u1ar) optional: pinch or -••It 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon pinch of ground clove \. Combine ingredien~ in blender or food pro- cessor, in the order list- ed; blend smooth. Pour ~into 6 custard cups. Set the cups in ·a shallow pan cootaining an inch of boiling water. Place the pan in a preheated 350-degree oven. Bake uncovered, until set : (when a knife inserted in the center or the I pumpkin mixture comes out clean), about 3S to 4S I minutes . Makes six servings, 115 calories each (alternative ingre- dients add 2S calories per serving). SUGAR FREE: Use plain low-fat yo1urt and 1 to 2 teupoona vanilla"' extract; omit fructose or su1ar and replace with su1ar substitute (an amount equivalent to 12 teaspoons sugar>. 95 calories per serving. LOW C HOLE S · TEROL: Omit eggs ; replace with half. cup liquid no-cholesterol substitute. 100 calories per serving. LEFTOVER PUMPKIN . Q. What do you do Iialian D e light UPSIDE DOWN FETnJCCINE BAKE \.'I lb . Italian sauaaae. casing re· mored ,, 14 cup chopped onion 1 16 -oz . ca n tom at.. 1 teaspoon oregano leaves \.'I cup (2 ounces> shredded natural low moisture part-akim D)O&aarella cheese ,,.,, cup (1 ounce> arated parmeaan ch~ I ounces bot cooked fettucdne noodles · v. cup (1 ounce) · 1ra"ted pir'tfesan cheese · 3 e11t• slightly beaten · 2 tablespoons mar1artne - 2 tablespoon• chopped panley J4 teaspoon vruc· powder . .. Brown meat in l~incb oven-proof 1killet: drain. Add oai9n ; cook until tender. Stir in tomato. and ore1ano; brba1 to boll. Simmer 30 minute•, 1tlrrlq oc; ea1loaally. Stir in mo11arella cbeeae. Sprinkle parmuan e...._ onr tomato mill· tun. Toa• DoodlH . wUb eomll6md nma' '1 ID· IJ'd 'a,lpnad .... mist .. oww ,.,. ... ellleHe. Bake ll llO .. .,...•••au . · .... _..... ....... ...... swldastatalGul ~ .... ,., .. . Cllll ........... . s 6 1'l 0 1 Ant Vor~tte\ KAL KAN CAT FOOD 1 lb. Con Grovnd MJB COFFEE 13 .Sor a.tty C•O<~er BLUEBERRY MUFFIN MIX Fre\h Armour'\ Venbesl Center Cul PORK LOIN CHOPS Does Not E.c~ 22P10 Fo• GROUND BEEF or PATTIES .• 29 2.94 1.09 LB 1 .89 LB 2 .19 NESTLES ·5 MORSELS .:~~l.r .... 19 01 Nabisco CHIPS AHOY COOKIES 12 01 F 1ne Med Wide GLOBE A-1 NOODLES 1.69 2·loter COKE-TAB-SPRITE ...................... 33 B oz Creomy Cucumber KRAFT DRESSING I 89 llMIT 2 Pl£ASE .69 .75 •/ '-; 7.SO-ml. Still Whole MATEUS ROSI' 7SO·ml. Goet~;;~-· · PEPPERMINT SCHNAPPS 7.SO ml Fon~! lrtsh Cream CAROLANI UClUIUR F1e1h Armov,., Veribe•I Center Cu! PORK LOIN ROAST Fresh Armou•\ Verobe\I Boneleu PORK LOIN ROAST Fresh loin Cul Armour's Veribes! 3 .99 ·11.98 lB.1.79 lB 3 .49 BONELESS PORK CHOPS lB 3 .49 ~::::;;:;;o~ Off 112 40 01 K ON MOUTHWAI H 2 01 Reg ·Unscented Incl JO 011 n can 1ouo I .S o z Normol Ory Oily ... TIHAMltOO F1esh Thock Cut 101 Bo"e o• 880 PORK LOIN CHOPS fresh Par~ lo• I( Sob, loin Cui LEAN BONELESS CUBES 2 .99 1.59 1.99 39 LB. lB 1 .89 lB 2 .89 Swet'I & Sour Chow Mein. Chop Svey lB 2 .89 LEAN CUBES OF PORK FRESH ~~i:.~~~·: S SPARERIBS. ~~~~r 29 El Rancho Style 'THICK SLICED BACON U SO A Choice Boneltu Chuck Rolled 2 49 t B 1 .29 CLOD SHLDR. ROAST tB • U S D A Chooct Beef Chuck Cul 7-BONE ROAST LB. lB 1 .49 ITUfflD ntUH PORK LOIN CllOPS IDAHOMOUNTAIN s 198 FRESH TROUT ........... /.;;_1?~~................ LB . DRESSING BUTIER 1 69 FRESH EGGS LB. • c·HaR~0STO• CLAMS tB 1.29 PACiFIC n D I MAPPU ti 1.69 F101 0.tto\ted F•llf" ATLAMTIC C~ f101 o.trO,ted N0t•~•'" C••"'' C-..1 HAUBUT I TI Alll l& 3.29 ll 1.89 6 0 1 Aul Vone•te\ MRS. CU BBISON'S CROUTONS .69 .89 .69 Pre-p,.ced 1 19 Lou10 Scudder'\ POT AlO CHIPS Twon Pl. .S 01 Swon1o0n CHUNK CHICKEN Fre1h El Rancho PORK SAUSAGE El Rancho Sweet or Hot ITALIAN STYLE SAUSAGE l B 1.29 LB 1.49 El Roncho Oven Ready Fresh eog1 MEAT BALLS & 8u1ter LB. 1.89 FnlH POall CROWN ROAST ARMOURS VUllBEST LOIN CUT LB.2. 79 fOO~ fif' TH£ fJR£lfr' IN OUI NllH NOOUCI Ot't ~ -( ... , 101 ~•o Toho•o !<o•er & s. ... .,.. 3 , 'Or Morv<ho" KfnVf\t y,_dof'lt CUP NOODLES .9S NAPPA COOKIES .71 ./' I 01 ltt Mt1ollo All.0~1vl• I) 201 ~·~IV.~'•• PICKLED PLUMS .99 7)0"'' ltl M•yolo COOKING SAKE 2 .19 .... lirdt 'Y• 12 oa. Con -~ ......... 79C .......... , .... ..._ .......... _ ""'_ ... , ..... ........ ~ t ..... v ... c-... , 25c CU RRY II .91 • 01 "'o Sh•t0lolov c~;o Sabo ••• NOODLES .. . .. ~ .. -. .. 1601.C~~-• • mccv1a CllllR ............... I.I S 12 ••• Slicild -'-' W •l•CHWlt•• .......... l .•9 uir.MA• ................... 1.89 .... ~·-. .... lllmU61111111119UMI .. 9 • DM.Y"-Or QI Local Grapes Make Good [ C hamp a 11.1e Flows_ in N .C. 1 ROIE HJLL, N.C. (AP) More t.baD a c•· spunky, medlum-dry rose called Noble are t•in· · lwY aeo ln 1 Uny vla.yard ln AOl"tbeutern IDC popularity ellewbere ID tbe country. I Norltl Carollna winemak•n Sidney Weller .. NOltTll CA&OUNA mak• a mucb more ••Mbd hia u .. la app..-ialion ol • atua of fruity wtae that la very ~olatUe u far u ill bou· i Amft"tea'• ftnt commercially produced cbam· quet la CGDCel"IMCI," Hid P'uuell. ''Traditional· ...... ly, Nortb Carollu winn are •weeter t.baD the SolOe 1'5 years later, the bubbly la Oowln1 Euroeean wtnet. But, 1enerally, we've found, -------AIOUT -------~ oett .. aln from thla atate known more for Its once folb try oun, they quickly develop a Uk· tobaeeo than for its 1rape1. lnl for them." . North Carolina Champasne. product of the The winery also produces po.rta, brandies, native muacadine 1rape, la belllullnl to fand lta and, of course, cbam pa1ne. Much of the · way slowly lo vintners' shelves and wlne wtnemaklnc la done by band. Except for the ad· ' cellars. ditlon of a few modern, tlme·aavinl con- ., ceasloas, Duplin 1Wl makes the wine exacUy 1$1.89GREAT I 'DINNER (") S6 AAsu,1d e-.:7DINNERI no: CHAMPAGNE and other wines are be· Uke it was made-200 yean 110. in& squeezed into existence at a, small farmer-"The quality and natural srape navor of O Gooo for 1111ee pieces of 1u1cy. golcten brown Kentucky C Fried Chicken. plus single servings of cole s•aw 0-,, masned potatoes and gravy. and a roll L>m1t'two plters z per coupon per customer Customer ~ys all apphca· z 0 Gooo for twelve pieces ol 1u1cy. golden tirown Kentucky Cl. Ft1ed Chicken with si. rolls. plua your cno1ce of 11ther a 0=> large co1e sl•w or a large maslled potatoes. and a small U gravy L•m•t two offers per coupon per customer owned cooperative winery in Duplin County, our wines conftrm the wisdom of our old·timey about 175 miles south of where Weller's Medoe ways," said Fussell. . Vineyard once stood. Ironically, the winery aita in the middle of a Duplin Wtne Cellars wu establ.iJbed slx dry county. Wineries are federally controlled, Years llO to breathe new life into the state's dy-but it took a special state lelialalive act for ing arape industry. Perched a~ the ed&e o! this Duplin to open tasting rooms and sell lls prod· .amall agricultural community, the wanery uctattbewinery. seems u out of place as the satin-bedsheet out· Acconlinl to town legend, it also took a let located next door. kindly act by a Baptist preacher to halt a move· "'lbe Lord blessed this slate with Vitis ment to close the business. · rotondifolia muscadines, a Southern grape that "Yep, he stood up there one SUnday mom- once gave North Carolina the distinction of be· ing and reminded the consregation that a lot ing the leading wine-producing slate in the was invested in the winery and that if it were country," said David Fussell, a 37-year-old closed, it would mean an unfair economic loss I Die sales tu C1C I Customer pays all 1pp1tc1Dle aalea t.. C1C Ofter expues November 30. 1980 P11ces may vary. al par 11c1pa1tng iocat•ons GOO<l only 1n Sou1nern , Ca111orn1a wnere you see 1ne Colonel s face window Danner former school principal who is president of the lo the grape growers and the only thing lo do co-op ¥Mi operates the winery with his wife, would be for the church to buy the winery and Ann. close it. Then nobody would be hurt but the con-C H AS. McCABE. I :.urs. tongue . in th• '--------' firmly 1n cheek ... THERE IS 75 million dollars invested in North Carolina grapes, not counting the land costs. We had to do something to protect that in· vestment," he said. To be considered authentic North Carolina wine, the grapes must be traced to what is believed to be the original muscadine vine - which is still growing at Fort Raleigh on Roanoke Island where il was discovered hun· dreds of years ago. Captains Phillip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe, exploring for Sir Walter Ral.eigb in 1584 wrote that the coast of North Carolina was "so full of grapes as the very beating and surge of the sea overflowed them ... in all the world, the like abundance is notto be found." Indeed. the slate's muscadine grapes were ' so __l!JentituJ that in the 17th century they were often -u.w;a-as a medium of exctiang~. GEORGE WASWNGTON'S favorite table wine was made from Scuppernong grapes - one of the most popular offspring of the muscadlne -and Scarlett O'Hara used Scup- pernong wine to make her syllabub. Before Prohibition, the stale was the largest wine maker in America, producing at least 12 million gallons a year. In f~ct. Weller's Medoc Vineyard was the country's first commercial winery. Al one time there were 33 in the state. Today, there are only three. Operating under the slogan "PUT CAROLINA ON YOUR WINE LIST," Duplin Cellars is trying to stem the now of Tar Heel grape juice to New York wineries. Until rece~l· ly. about 95 percent of the grapes arown lD North Carolina were shipped to New York. With 2,494 acres of grapes in the state, North Carolina produces about 5,600 tons of grapes -of a national total of about 4.6 million toM. THE STATE'S WINES have a way to go before reaching their potential, according to Dr. Dan E . Carroll Jr. an enologist at North Carolina St.ale University, but be adds, "I think within the next 10 years you'll find North Carolina wines listed on fine restaurant wine lists." "It's really good," declared Florence and Alvin Pietro Paolo, a Middlesex, N.J ., co\!,Ple who stopped at the Duplin winery for a tour and tasting while en route to F1orida. "Who would have ever thought North Carolina had anyt.hing like this." The seven wines produced at Duplin range from the sweet Scuppernong and Carolina Red to the crisp. dry Carolina Preeminence White. Scuppemong remains a favorite among North Carolina buyers, but Preeminence While and a Is It a Y am Or A S °"·eet Potato? Ca ndi e d , ba k e d . The name nyami was mas hed . or s t uffe d . shortened to yam. This sweet potatoes can pro· s weet potato bec ame voke an identity crisis at known as a yam in the dinner table: Is it 'all' ipany parts of the coun- sweel potato or a yam ~ try and the stal e of Robert W. Scheuerman, Louisiana used the term University of California y am in advertis ing Cooperative Extension sweet potatoes to dis· farm adviser, helps put Unguish it from those a8"end to the confusion: grown in northern stales. A sweet potato is· an · elongated storage root Many people came to which comes in various beMeve sweet ~tatoes sizes, shapes, and col-and yams were different ors. Its varieties are vegetables. class ified, in marke t California growers le rminolORY as dry· produce both the dry- "fleshed or moist-fles hed, fles hed and moist· according to the feel fleshed types. The main sensation produced when dry-fleshed variety bas eatingacookedone. a creamy colored outer The moist-fleshed one skin with yellow interior ls sometimes referred to flesh. The two main a s a yam . the dry: moist-fleshed or yam fleshed one as a sweet types have a dark red potato. But b9th are s mooth skin or a copper sweet potatoes. They colored skin with deep are native to the tropical orange flesh. Americas and s ome South Pacific Islands. The true yam <rarely grown in this country) is an underground tuber, native to Africa, and de· rived its name from "nJamJ." It may vary in No matter what you call it, the sweet potato Is an excellent source of vitamin A and a -good source of vitamJn C. •lie from that of an or· CAMPING dlnary whJte potato to ~ a n e o or mo u s Y a m Ll&hten the food load welgbin 1 30 to 40 onthatnextcamplnetrtp pouncb. with dritld •and fr .. ae-How did tbe mix-up dried fGOdl 1ueb u di)' start? In early days the milk, ....,,,,.nf mlxn. 7am wu min.ken by dry toap, _.. ftakn, .ome people for a sweet powdered Jule. and ,.... gregation.'· , And that, Fussell said, was the end of that. DAILY PILOT ... . .-, . . ~- ..;-.-' ... --.. ......,.. ........ 'Mluswltat two slices of -. . . .,,._, ·. .. ·- .· ' -' You may win one of 101 priza to be awarded in this area. Enter your Boman Meal •aker's HapP)\ Healthy Sandwich Recipe Contest. C reate your own ver ion of a uper andwich that's good for your body and tastebuds. Just put two sli ce of Roman Meal· Bread together with a little imagination-then send the recipe to The Roman Meal Sandwich Recipe Contest. If we think you're the area's best sandwich maker, you'll win a C uisinart Food Processor. GRAND· PRIZE A Cldatnon. Fbod Proussor Cuisinart ii DLC. 7 Delu xe ~ Processor. 1bp prize for the talented sa ndw ich- maker that wins Roman Meal's Ha ppy, Health y Sandw ich Recipe Cnnte.,r. plus u Third Place Prizes. ~ · 25 Fourth Place. And SS Fifth Place. S RUNNERS .. UP •,: I G.E. CJJMll9n llPoU CJlMft'·R·OVEN._ ' I ,... • •\, ' J ,_ ••• . " ........ . .. ,, ., ... .. .,. . • One of che handiest appli· ances a cook could ask fo r- th e GE To a st 'n Bro i l TOASTER-OVEN. And 5 runners-up will win one-just for sharing the ir fa "orite •sandwich rec ipe wit h Roman Meal ~ad. Plu · some winning recipes will be published in a coo kbook by The Roman Meal Company. Look far entry /arms and derails at your par ... ticipating grocer's Roman Meal DispJay. Void i~ the Scace of Vermont and wherever prohibited lry law. Concest ends November 24, 1980. potato ID the aouthem packed meals, Not only ·United States because are u.. ..........,..t, t be two crops W'tre but U.,'D 'Wp blp tbe 1rown and J1Md in.. a ~1111.froml •vma ~ 1lmllar~, ·, • ;1 .... _ • \._~ f • ,..'"tl_..._L~tM~~~~l; -. . ·' .. -~,...-.........;.;;.---'- .- r Top Glief Keeps it Simple A diMr of the near Klilll' An JUM ol llTt to f.atve wUl • w able lo nu 1 Uae ., .. un1r1 w•r allli•p cocklaU tn patron• walttor to a rHtaura•t U food .... •lcoaM.~ U-&o t.he eo1u cceunue &o rile. fi1orlda neliJaborbood. • foll IDd .upe it lo t.he '°"" ol • IWUL I am •~b a ltlelllar for detail tllat we evea postponed n e ope ntnr of the rt1taur1nt for • few day• until tbe snenua aod muclle• we re ready!" POb TENDE&lklN FLOaENTINE 1 pork tenderloin, l ~ to 2 poQnd.t 2'ounces ham. sliced degree oven unUI rare. Cool. Roll out pu.ff pastry and lay the ham in the ce11 t e-r , Sp¥&aci Lh.e sp inach o n the ham. Ta ke the tenderloin and place lt in the middle. Brush lhe edges with lhe be a t e n egg a nd r oll everything a round the tenderloin. Close the edges. Place on baking sheet and bake in 375- de gree oven for 20 to 30 minutes. Serves 6. So a t a t u Kl a u s Priede n nicb , cb•f· owMr ol Klaus' CWIU.. ln Oa)'lona Beaclt. Fla .• and caplain ol the team of dleft wldda ,..,,.....,. td ~ U.S. In the recent Internationa l Culinary C o mp e t i t io n i n l"ru~.~uy. . ·one ,._. .. bull- ne.• .... 9e way of pric e a," t'9Y• F r letle•reieh. "Eve n now I ha~e no ashrimp coc ~tail on my menu because it's too e x · penalve." THE CHEF PRJ:· fe r s t o 'e xper i ~ n)ent with less costly food's 'such as short ribs a nd ma ke t he m jnto something special that a_ould be served anytime r a ther tha n work up e laborate dishes that are affordable and ap- propriate only on festive occasions. ·'The en trees I serve have a gourmet flavor, but they are not so com- plicated and laden with ·French words as to be oon-understanda ble . I felt tbot individuals in the a r e a wo uld not a p· pr e ciate s uch heavy gourmand fare so I made it light and simple,'' he continues. Putting a new twist on the preparation of basic or classical dishes is his forte. "THERE'S NOTIDNG new; you have to use basic ingredients in dif- ferent combinations." Friedenreich explains , and bis menu exemplifies tMs philosophy. One side of the two- f old listing has tradi- tiona l "uncomplicated continental" foods like Veal Oscar . The other side has the house specialties such a s P ork T e nderloin Flor entine. a pork. ham and spinach combina- tion in puff pastry. Both owning Klaus ' I Cuisine and playing a major role in the com· p e tition a r e l o n g · cherished dreams .:ome 1 true for the Ger ma n- born chef. ORIGINALLY FROM the northe rn city or Kassel, Friedenr eic h c am e to America in search of better ca reer opportunities. He landed in Boston whe re he s e r ved a s r ou nds c h ef a t t he Valley Steak House and lat e r wor ked at t h e Sheraton Hotel and An· thony's Pier 4. The 37-y e af-o ld F ried e nreich the n hea ded sout h a nd ope ned t he door s of Fish Dish Many unusual and de· licious recipe are in - cluded in the book let .. Fish and Shellfish Over the Coals.'' including cla mbakes. swor dfis h steaks, grilled king cr ab and others, as well as h ints on selecting and buying the best fish. The booklet sells 'for $1.25 a nd can be purchased from the Superintendent of Documents. U.S. Gov· ernment Printing Office, Wa shington. D.C., 20402 . . *** MINCEMEAT D~ERT Place sliced fr esh Bartlett pears in dessert dis h. Spoon hot min- cemeat over pears and garnish with dairy sour cream, whipped cream or soft ice cream. Or alternate ingredients in t h e p arf ait d esse rt fashion. *** HOW TO CORE BARTLETT8 If you don't have a pear slicer, scoop the seed core from . fresh Bartlett pe ar h alves with a melon ball cutter o r a ~·t eas p o o n meuute : then wit h sharp knife take s malJ slice 'from core to atem end. ***· mcaOW.\VE YC>Va PLOWBIU thln . 818 K•PMAlll OD U..Utd9t.IMDllu.tcu m a ke •tnlol ou\ a memor.W. esperleate l\av e m a de th e re.ta urant a aucc ... for tbe chef and bla wife, Barbara , who budla the "froot ol lite boue." 4 ounces spinach, cooked and drained, salt and peppered Frledenreich con · siden hllOMlf a &eneral pra etltianer and will be contributin& h1s culinary talents in both bot food preparation and cold platter arrancements. Followtna I.I one of bl.I favorite .-eeipes for home pntP.araUoo. 8 ounc es puff "We don't have do11ie b a lf t," says Friedenrelch. •·we plll ..meat.en food pastry• Salt and pepper l ounce oU 1 beaten eeg Trim the port ten - derloin of an· fat. Heat the oil in . frypan and brown tenderloin on au s ides. Balte i n 350· •Regular pie crust dough may be substitut· ed for puff pastry. lilwer BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST Bondeo Beef T·BONE STEAK Bonoeo Beef l 01n .98 LO 2ss LO TOP SIRLOIN 2ss STEAK eone1ess Bonoeo Beef Loon LO CROSS RIB ROAST 198 Bone1e~s eonnr·o Bl'ff cnuc~ LO BONELESS TIP ROAST PORTERHOUSE STEAK COMBO PACK FRYER /AC•• I APM\ C~\•rOq"• A "'P"I,,\~ •• (1(\ \II'" ... .-.\ ' .. "' V~T.,-•'• I IJ'fA'" ... Ahl~ LEAN GROUND BEEF (<f "•..i' (I !_fr }0 1,U HALIBUT STEAK BEEF BRISKET BEEF LIVER PORK LOIN SPARERIBS PORK LOIN ROAST \+9l0t°" ry• A\'(V&rA 1111"-... ' 'Ht\ PORK LOIN CHOPS O!fl ,9 1.98 11<2.68 .1.19 p 1.78 ,, 2.98 .o 2.19 ,.1.19 l~ 1.39 ,9 1.39 ,.1.88 Health & Beauty Aids I ~~•Es~~.~PSULES l SINE·AID TABLETS • TYLENOL LIQUID b f ~ '0A \TO(...C, '" AOv~ J "'1.97 '"1. 77 801 2.19 b ri~~.~~~~.~~~PSULES •co,2.19 MISS BRECK HAIR SPRAY b ~.~f:;oo\u<>t•~~'o<("'f090t 1.49 DENT AL FLOSS t waatO UtfWA•l O t ct•• • .._, b .-itWl WA1.l0 Olt '91 __ , UM'IA\(0 L AIM TOOTHPASTE 060l .97 .. , 11 011.29 L SIGNAL MOUTHWASH • 01 1.17 • PERT SHAMPOO · b •tGut•• ~ Ofl• t ARRID EXTRA ORY .:> PfCUIAO !' ARRIO XX b •!lt090l r BRECK SHAMPOO e "tO'~•t ~l. ()I [)•" noi 1.19 l\01 1.19 ··01 2.29 r BRECK CREME RINSE 1 89 6 t t 1S•Y •lC. or f \"'" IO(t\ '&01 • b LUBRIDERM LOTION • m 1. 99 SPEED STICK 1 l Yf .. ~I .. !lfOOOH'' 115 .. Cul•• Sl"("f Mf9'ft , ~'YI 1' "II • VASELINE LOTION r "'''""""'CARI ilf"llA• 1 33 *' .. , ... l Of •• t4 "•NC;•~ ;(I 01 • VASELINe BATH BEADS [ '"l~I CA.tt 117 •tc:v,•• a-Hflfl•l •\ 01 , b LADIES SHAVER 1 37 •11(•i. • _! ~O BISMOL 1~01 1. 77 CLEARASIL [ t tG\HAI f1Nt Of VA't.f1Mt"t( J()t'y ~ t b FIXODENT 1·~01 1.49 I 01 1.71 7-BONE CHUCK ROAST Bonded Beef FRYING CHICKEN 129 LO .59 wnote eoov Grade A southern LO BONELESS ROUND ST.EAK 198· f ull C1ll Bonoeo aeoe1 LO BONELESS RUMP ROAST 198 S1rto1n cur Bonoeo Brei Rouno LO OSCAR MAYER BACON ftGU\AO SI.I(( 1 98 tfHt(ll( Sl<f ) ll P'"c;, S t9f , l8 "'" • OSCAR MA YER BACON 1 98 fHl"' ~ll(( 12 02 PICG • LITTLE FRIERS OSL•D~A"'(" PC'tt" 1•0• \A •U(f TOP ROUND STEAK A~hf',\ OC"l'\iOtO eui TURKEY PASTRAMI TURKEY HAM 80"'4HBC. 1l)u14i P1f' ,. TURKEY· BREAST lO\.flSO('.,. 00•10 101 ;, 1.88 ,9 2.19 .2.18 .a 1.89 \¥0•10 180 OQCi.1P•"'*• "fO .. 3.28 , •. 87 ROASTING CHICKEN LADY LEE BACON Dairy & Frozen J:BANOUET 129 DINNERS Man Ple,1ser 17 Ol Pk<J cr11cken Sclh~Olirv or rurkev • ORANGE PLUS 6 81Qtx(•I (ON((NT .. !I ·101 , ... ~. 79 ~ MRS. SMITH S PIE 1 99 ~ PUY .. ~ •O 4• OJ PoC • r IMPERIAL MARGARINE 67 0 1ft01 ,,,.. • !' CHICKEN BREASTS "l 69 0 &A'IOvf 1 11 01 Plo.G~ • NO CAMES, LIMITS OR GIMMICKS canned & Packaged f STACG CHILI Aw''""'•'' l\Ol tAN,91 [,Jf.f? SHELLS rocr ~.62 we Wiii ee open veterans oav Tuesdav,Nov.11th 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. J:CRANBERRY SAUCE ocean sorav Jell1eo or wnore }'LADY LEE b YAMS .45- 16 oz can .49 19 Oz c;in J:STRAWBERRY 159 PRESERVES Kern'\ 31 oz Jar }JHARVEST ODAY CATSUP DELUXE BREAD .59 H OZ Btl .59 H,1r\ll'~I 0,ly 11\llo'I ' ~-l Ol LC.it W11E'.11 Q, llllO I I) I ~.l1 1.1. 11 ~MAHATMA RICE 1 58 ..:,. ~o~G GO• -. J: 1 fl• • l, ~~~~ 1~EE COOKIES . J: ,, • 59 J, ~A~~~BERRY cocK;,~~L ... 1. 3 9 b~~~OCORN SYRUP ""' .69 b ~~.~~~TE RELISH,, ..... 1. '15 b ~~.~~or~EE PRETZELS •oz e• .49 b ~_!~~~"BRAND MILK·: _1 •·· .89 r NONE·SUCH MINCEMEAT 1 89 0 80ClOfN \ 1~ 01 11.t • b ~,!~~SCHINO CHER~l•Ee>~ ... 99 n,~~!f..;R~.uvEs , ., .. 2 .57 r~~"~'~COA MIX ·101 ... 1.43 r oREAM WHIP ~ TO"PING ~1,; soz eo• 1.25 r JELL·O PUDDINGS 49 0 l"i\IA~T )l<A\1()1115 \\ Ol l9J • • b~~~~~~~~~sBREAD•··oz '"" 1.09 b~,?Jl.~OLL Ml~ 'P'ot •o•.83 !' BROWNIE MIX 0 8£ ""' CtOCllfl 1• 01 so.1.19 !'PILLSBURY FLOUR b ... .,, • ..,... !' POUND CAKE MIX 87 I; tw<>YfOAI• t101 IO•• r ~!~~~•llC"fN 1C Ol 9H 1. 28 l'CUP·A·NOODLE 56 t, 11)<> O YI" \ <1A~ ) 01 oC(; • O\~, p,,(,. PtOftct,onoot•Cv Q\1,tt.t•ir'" 1n11w O't<f'\ tt'tn,.fltff'Ctt'W.,~4'('tf'f'\Ot1v ~C\IC'_,,f)~• 1r,, '"'v '''f"\(1~1"\I """'''"""' '"" ·~ DtSCClJ\JT SlPERMARKETS MWet• ,.W,Ulllll&.M.._ ·~ 81t 80. lfllt'I co.ilM 90ULAVMIO Delicatessen Items !~DY LEE F.RANKS Mea[ .89 12 OZ P~g l' LADY ·LEE 149 6 ~.~~~!:tt~ Of fl,1Ck 16 01 Pkg L ~fY LEE FRANKS : :: o. • 99 : ~~~~,c~N <~~EEs~. 'l. ~· 1. S9 ! ~~~~.~.~~~ CHEES~~: .. , 2.39 • LIGHT·N·LIVELY l ..... ~1.C( ~·1o;i: .... ' 1 69 .::;. ·.c,1 ,..... . ..... c. • b ~~~~~~~RY BISCUITS,1c2 ..... 45 b ~f.~L PARK FRAN~~ ~1 ••c 1. 69 b ~~,LL PARK FRAN~~ / "' 1. 79 b ~~~~NSCHWEIGER • 79 b ~l~~~WURST : " • 7 9 Liquor b HARVEST 199 DAY WINES P1r'~ ( 111011~ VII' 111'> ( ! l '1 Bii Burquno, r c11.1m • •LORD CALVERT ; .t.'\41.CA\ h ... •• 10 69 ~ ·c~• •• •· . CHAMPAGNE tit j&(Qyf\ 1e'( T 2 19 !, .. ~'I<''<• ro•~.~ • , v. •• • I ~2~SCHMIDT V,0..~?n 8.39 )\ -LADY LEE MILK LOW ~a[ r -174 \. I / c;,11 Bii Klaus Friedenreich captains U.S. culinary team Produce ROME BEAUTY 3 3 APPLES • Idaho Extr.1 Filncv t...uqc LO BOSC PEARS .39 us NO 1 Wt 11nrr'11I ri.1v , ll1 GREEN 10 CABBAGE • FRESH ·BROCCOLI 100 G"OCI £.11u1q .39 LO RUSSET · 109 POTATOES u s NO 1 10 lO Cello e.1q Household & Pet b ~R~: .. ~EE ~z~ !' 7o~ONE! TISSUE " .83 b L!?~l~.~~TERGEN: 1. 0 9 b ~EF_T.Y}~ASH BAGS ~ TWICE AS FRESH b "'lifrot ""'lf• t .... ·'• b !,~N~E~ CH~Nl<S b ~U.RORA Tl~~~E • BLU·BOY CLEANER 0 ' ........ SNOWY BLEACH .2.19 .... 80 .31 .... 95 • l •• 64 , .1.97 b H~~~; ~~ASH BAGS . • • 2. 59 CIFT CERTIFICATES MAKE THE PERFECT CIFT Stt the store manaoer for deta11s Everyday low priced items. GOLDEltCROWN ~E~~rc ... ~ 1.29 ~~~~.~~?PINEAPPLE • .. .. 49 LADY LEE CORN FLAKES 01 •••• 88 .. ~ ~.~~~.Eo~U1:f ER iQ I ••• 1 :09 SHREDDED WHEAT 1 19 \jAlrSCO '\"CO~ ~11( 1P' :J7 IO• • LADY LEE COFFEE 2 28 '· f'j9()V-.O'\ If Ol CA~ • ~NIMAL CRACKERS 59 t•O• Ul t4 Cl f1Wr • POTATO CHIPS 01 ,.,,.69 HARVEST DAY PUNCH 79 r1,001 '"oz ar, • HI CLA,SS CAT FOOD 1 44 o•\ • • 01 ••c. • HARVEST DAY APRICOTS 7 3 ~.,.Ol l 1' Ol (Aft; • VEGETABLE OIL ···~'-" 1.76 J1A~f-·!('t&'t SANDWICH BAGS ·~. ,, 1.09 MACARONI & CHEESE 2 5 4AO• Hf Oi"t"-(~ ' 1 ~ •. LADY LEE ASPARAGUS 97 G•H--. (yfS & 'P\ •~ 01 (A~• PORK & BEANS no1 t • .,.57 ~•o• tu HARVEST DAY PEAS •101 c•.,.31 LADY LEE COCKTAIL 1&01 (A.,,67 v1C.1 ••eu ~ ~ DEVELOPED AND PRINTED 12 UCPOSUttE 20 UPOSU.I 2.89 4.09 •""'•~o· " • ~ .. r"""\Ufl'V!• -C t f' , .. M"'lt•;lot • '.;" t ••..ti"o• tl'*ttf ~IUINOTON MACM .h ~ ' q ?. ., I I ~ . ' Microwave ovens cook with he• pn>ducted by radlo wave penetration. Thi• mnna the "micro waves" can 'work won· ders on non·lood Items . For example, the fut ovens turn out beauUful· IY dried flowerl a n)! aromatic herbs. ~HTC* a.u "°· ~ ""- U!Ol*A.~ ...... ..._. t la?t ..-.ouA Aft!WC M\ltll'ttlCITOll -.AOM ... , ATUlllJA ..... I-!IOI.SI\ CHICA AWMJI Hin CAeOT M>,\O Af I.A '4'1 .~~--~..,.. --STOMI OPIN DM.Y t A.M. ITMfTOM ,....A19UAA'ft. NIM ,.,. ...., .t'ftlllUI \ ... .....,. 1•n .,,.,.,u lflltrl FOOD San Francisco crab cook-off - cooked ln 1arllc will ficial vtllt to Ftance. The City of San Fran· render a new scent to F r o m c a n a d a cisco will be represented the Olympicar .. • Where be [s executive by C hef Salvatore . 15°/o OFF any bottle of wine with oufCh&M or~ 1unc.ey 20°/o OFF on ell Henckel KnHea .... ftOW ......... 11111111111 .. lmpot1ed Mer Md ........ Crabby claw1 are •••Int au over tht coualr7 witlll lhe an· no--•ee••nt tlut San P'raadlco·1 f am..t Crab Cooklq Olymplu haa bin ,.v1ved by Pier 39 developer, Warren Slm· mona. Othera whose entry >chef for Viva, The Can· Cbiavano of Swiss Louis forms have been re· nery and Mulvaney's Restaurant and Chef celved Include Yves Restaurants in van· Claus Iversen of Van- M e n ore t. c h e f at couver British. Colum· n e l I i "a S e a f o o d Ba1well's 24/24 at the bia B~ Wehren has Restaurant, own cooklnt school befUD orlllnally u an out1rowth of hia studlea with the famed James Beard (Beard developed the competition guidelines for the first Olympics in 1969). Supervislns the rules and regulations of this year's competition will be Dennie Berkowitz. nationaJly.Jlnown res· taurant coo.sultant and owner of Dante's Sea -------------------~ b • Catch Restaurant J.n San -------------------- The crustacean claulc will take place November 21, 1980, at the 45-acre Pier 39 com· plex ol restaurants and abo.,. acljacent to Fish· erman'aWharf. . Hyatt Regency Waikiki entered. The pleasure ot as- in Honolulu; Ton)I ¥ing Pennsylvania has seesing the wor~s of Chan._.exec'utlve-cher of been heard from in the these distinguished Cecelia Cbiana'a Bever-person ot chef Josef o. chef~ will 10 to a panel lY 'Hllls' Mandarin Goebel, executive chef o,f sax well-known na- Restaurant; Executive of The Original Seafood t1onal ~d re~onal f~ C hff }laymond G . Shanty Resaturants • experts mcluding Lows Mar a b a 11 of t b e which are located in Szatbmary, a former Acapulco Restaurant in p Iv · d N c o ftl P e t I t o r a n d Nelson, bimaelf, was the subject or a lO·page story in the June iuue of Bon Appetit Magazine. Francisco and Maurice ( } St. Ives, chef of San Fran-. L. M. BOYD _ cieco'e Neptune's Palace ----1-N-F_O_R_M_S In lh• Restaurant. DAILY PILOT r-------------, Since official word of the competition went out a few, weeks ago, more than a dozen chefs from coast to coast and Hawaii have already sent in their applications. Beverly Hills Ca n en· ennay arua an. ew chef/owner of Chicago's trant in previous Crab Jersey. The Bakery Restaurant IOCOFF MAYPO FlllST AMONG THE chefs to acept ,.the in· vitation to compete was Robert Charles, well known to many San Franciscans for his Fleur de Lys Restaurant on Sutter Street ; Charles on Battery' Street <which he later moved to O'Farrell Str.eet); Maurice and Charles in San Rafael and now La Vieille Maison in Truckee. Olympics> a nd Ron Continuing with the as well as a syndicated Ousey of the Encina truly international food writer for the Restaurant in Santa flavor of this Olympics C h i c a g o S u n Barbara, also a com· will be ~talian:born Times/Field Newspaper petitor in previous chef, Mano Ratti, who Syndicate and author Olympics will be whisked to San whose ftf'th book "The Francisco literally Bakery Resta'urant hours before the event Cookbook" was due out Save on your next purchase of Maypo maple-flavored oatmeal. Upon learning of the rebirth of this event, ..,Robert, who makes a strong point in favor of garlic, declared: "Crab AN0111ER FRENCH· man with San Fran- cisco connections enter- ing ts Yves Pimpare! who, for the past 6 years, has owned La Table Francaise in Reno. Prior to Reno, he was executive chef and co- o w~er of San Fran- cis co 's Le T rianon Restaurant. A standout in Pi m· parel 's distinctive career was his appoint· ment as chef to Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain during an of· Recipe Book for 'Guy Next ·Door' "A Man's Tas te" the first collection of men's recipes, will be published April 30 by the Memphis Junior League ($7.95). "A Man's Taste" is a unique, new cookbook . . . unique because it was written exclusively by men who are not the professional t'he f /· cookbook authors, but doctors, lawyers and businessmen, the guys next door who love to cook. "A Man's Taste." a colorful spiral bound volume. includes 250 tested and indexed re- cipes for dishes such as "Salmon Bouilli," '•French Fried Dill Pickle," and "More Than You Really Want to Know About Cooking and Curing Country Ham ," plus s ome fabulous Italian recipes by a well known Mem· phis restaurateur, writ· ten in a concise. easy to follow style. · The witt y an~ philosophical collection includes remembrances of kitchens p ast and treasured family re· cipes. adventures ome cooking and eating in· doors and out, with a man's creative flair for turning the dullest of meal s into a gastronomical feast. "A Man's Taste" is published by the Mem· phis Junior League, publishers of two other Pour sugar into a quart Mason jar. Then tightly pack with tiny sprigs or fresh crushed mint until full. Add 2 jig- gers of brandy. then fill to the top with rye or bourbon. Shake this a few limes and then refrigerate for 10 days <a must), inverting jar each day. To serve, strain and discard mint sprigs. pour 2 ounces of mint concentrate over crushed ice. Garnish with a fresh mint sprig. Make several jars. because even conf"ll'med Mint Julep haters love this -RayGlotzbach. , BERTHA BALL 'S ONION RINGS Combine: 1 cup flour 1 tsp. baking powder 1 'h tsp. salt add: 1 cup milk, mixed with 1 egg Let batter sit for 30 minutes. Then stir in 4 . or S onions that have been cut into rings. Deep fry in hot oil until they turn brown. Drain. These onion rings never make it to the la· ble, so plan to ser ve while standing up in the kitchen. Onion rings are a great compliment to beer and hamburgers, as "real" ones have become a lost art. - Mike Driscoll. favorite cookbooks, the T ll A S H B V R G E R "Memphis Coolt Book " COOKER (over a quarter of a 1 galvanized bucket million copies sold) and 1 church ltey . the "Party Potpourri" "' 1 double grill (kind <<over 200,000 copies with long· handles that sold). ' look like 2 square tennis Proceeds from the rackets hinged together) sale or these cookbooks 8 or 9 double pages go into the com,nunity of newspaper wadded up tru s t fund which finances community With c hur ch key, educational, cultural punch 4 or S'holes in the bottom of the side of the and welfare projects of bucket. Discard church the Memphis Junior key and reserve the · League. bucket. Sandwich 4 or S To order a copy wl'lte hamburger patties in to Memphis Junior League Publications, the grill. Put 6 of the pape r wads into the Memphis, TN 38112. bucket and light them. Here are a few recipes Hold the burgers over from the book: h fl THE NO·C&ABKEAT . t. e re. MEXICAN DIP Soon you will have a 1 can (16 01.) chili grease fire going that without beans would be the envy of the \4 cup chopped · Dobb'a House grill. The onion bi11er the bettpr. If it \'11 cup 1rated Ched· d lea down before 5 dar cheete minutes on eaCiih s ide, 1 cup Alultan King add more wads, one at a crabmeat • time. Combine chili, onion Thia method offends and cheese in saucepan. mos t purists of the Heat until hot, stirrtn1 "llowtna coals" school, all &be tinM, Serve wtth but It la a fast, cheap rrttol or cracken. Put method, and most peo· er ab m • • t t n the pie can't tell the dtf· nfrtieretor and save it terence for lometblnl else. -· Joa8'11der'. oa. aAY'I MINT .WUP ( ...... rt) Yteup1111ar 2 JlQen brandy l quart rye or ....... l'l'tlll antat 1prt11, cna$ed 8E&VllO&BETS The French aerve sorbet.a bttwffD meal COW'MI. Slmllar to lcea, tbe •well nifrelben an d11l1Hd to clear the palat. al the flavor from lbe,..... COUl'M. begins. this Call. Ratti is executive chef fo r Princess Cruis e Lines. ADDING A J apanese t o u c h to the competition will be Chef Kayo Ogino from the Hungry Tiger Restaurant in the Los Angeles M~icCenter. From the East, An · thony Leounes, Jr .• of Leounes at the Mansion Restaurant in Wil · mington, Delaware, will be coming to San Fran- cisco to defend not only the honor of his state but his family name, as well. Leounes' father was a competitor in previous Olympics. Chef Marcel Godbout of the Signature Restaurant in Hartford, Connecticut and Chef Patrick Augustyn of The 95th Restaurant, local· ed, appropriately. on the 9Sth floor of Chicago's fa med John Ha ncock Center have also en· tered. · Other judges include Bert Greene, (ood edito.· for Gentlemen 's Quarterly and contribut· ing food writer for Cuisine Magazine, Vogue and Esquire who is also well-known as an author having published "Bert Greene's Kitchen Bouquets." "The judging panel is rounded out by Ruth R eic hl , restaurant writer and food critic for New West Magazine ; Ingrid Wilmot , restaurant writer for the East/West Network , publishers of airline in· flight magazines for such carriers as PSA, Kughes Airwest, Pan American and Delta Airlines as well as fqr Performing Art s Magazine of Los Angeles; Kit Snedaker. food editor for the Los Angeles Herald Ex · a miner and 'Richard Nelson of Portland, Oregon, who runs his Here's how to whip inflation and conserve energy with Wheatena and Maypo. Just bank the clime. ser ve a delicious hot cereal on a cold morning, and you're in business. Choose one coupon. r---------------------------------, TO ntE GROCI-~: Y••• • .,.. Al~hnmt'd lo .. ., "-' , • .,. I I I I I I I I I IOCOFF ~· f11r lht rtdtmpl""' •A '""' roupon pnMdrd >'"' WI 1htc.......,.... ha'• comfl!trod "''th lht '"""'"'this c.tfr< Wo ,.111 r .. rnbllr.t' >'"' f<or lht C< .. pOrl fatt \'All.If pfU< ;c I•• ""rwih"l! provwicO 1h~ roupon has bttfi r...t.-.n"11 I" a«'""""""' Al lht llme-•' 1iur~of tht lir;wf 1nrl1"alt'd ln\C4C.-. rwu\IMll purrha...-,, ...itlc1rftt ''"' J.i. hf 1h .... Pf'Cthr'1 1nrwJuct to Cn\.f'r coupon~ n-dr.-mtd m<N 1,.. "" .. n "'""' r"IU"I Tlus CCJUl>Oll IS ,.., a~. non lr<lrW<rallk ~may not bt rq>r<> '"""" c""""""' m""' P") ""' .... i.-s tall. "'*' •ht<• pmhcbol...t 1'•~ or rn1nc1..d I)) bw Gocld only 1n I..,\ ldH•J .... 11.!0c CouponH•tllnocti.hontnd1I pro""'1rt•I thmullh un•uthnnud lhmf l"'rt•n Fw ......,.ioft. -..1 IA>~ Miiiin« C.,.....,. P.O. Bi" IQO, nintCMI, 1-a U'734. . U~OT IJ!\'E llll'l'ON PER PURCHASE 1.ot 'PON (j()()I) l)'l y ON l'NOl>UCT INUICATEO-I t\NY OTH~.R l~E CO~llTUTES t"'RAUO CCll'PON F.XPIJU:.'i DEC ~l 1'1141 I 40300 100290 STORE COUPON I L---------~----------~------------~ r .. and to Whethe r you choose Raleln Bran, Carrot Raisin or Fruit 'n Nut, Sun-Maid Muffins are the bakery-fresh way to start the day. They're all made with plump Sun· Maid Raisins, unbleached ... wheat flour and other Sun-Maid Cinnamon Swirl Raisin Bread has 50% more of what you buy a raisin bread for-plump, delicious Sun-Maid Raisins. And like our Sun· Maid Muffins, it's made with a ll natural, wholesome ingredients. You'll find them both in the bakery naturally delicious ingredients. -- --sToRe-cOOPON -- - -1 Saves L------------~----J ' .. "· section, of course. r----sr<5REcourotr ___ _ and saw~ SUN·MAlD RAJSIN BREAD. L--~--------------01980. Son Diamond CroY.'t1'5 of Cahfomlll ' .. . ' C9 DM.V~OT kin ProbleD18? Check Your Diet · CH17._. __... Un 4 IW&Me diet plaa to aa. .. a pHet. ud woua• laelM• aa I•· enam nvplntm, fNll ,,.... ol ..... aralu ., Man, HM ... .,.. • • • e •• p I • Jl doel.TIMM.,.Mtoely ·earllollrdratH, a a nalty pl"OWem but Me'naM in 1t11ar I.ad alllO • eowu °' ""ueat IMAua <Clftm lalddaD in fala and dlaeo•lort. Pl'9C••ld feodl), ud a Dtet la many UIDel ti.. 1wltda to -.n.tuc.d ....... tolfM Md Dcm·aleolaolic Accordlq to Dr. S. ... • ., .... 1'MM allould CMrukin ot Alabama, laclud• frHb Juices, "Sida la not Jutt an en· rather tUa eanouted .eao,. for the body. but drlnllt tbat have hi1h a barame&er ot bealtb." IUIJr cioaa.t. Tb• akin often l1 the Here are aome neipes ftnt place for alps of f o r u n r e f i n e d symptoms ot a 1y1temlc earbobydrafe foodl to Pl'Oble~. bel~ you to ebuie your Cbera&kln explained dlet patterns, and .to a recent medical po11ibly to clear akin .. minar that people who eruptlcm. By Jun• Roth Jwce, oraqe juice, tar- r a 10 n and pepper to1etber ln a cruet; pour over salad. Toaa and serve. Makes 8 aervin11. BaOWN atCE P.SPANOL l cup abort grain brown rice 2eupe water 1 cup chopped tomatoet l chopped green pepper l cbopped onion l quart tom spinach i,; teupooa salt leav.. ~ teupoon pepper '4 pound fr es b · Place rice and water mushrooms, allced in a saucepan; bring to l cup halved cherry a boil. Stir. Cover and tomatoes cook for 15 minutes, fluf. '-'Da~e akin complaints ,. .Jenerally ccimume more · calori .. , more refined carbobydralel, have low intake of vitamin C, COD· sume more sodium. have more coffee and tea, and may conaume aever-1 alcoholic drinkt a day. '4 cup wine vine1ar finl once, witil rice is aA&&P CAaaOT· l tablespoon lflmon tender and water ·is STVPl'SD POT4T011:8 Juice evaporated. lleanwhile, t 11 r I e b a kl n I 1,1, eup oraqe juice hea.t totetber tomatoes. potato. i,; teupoon dried green pepper, onion, salt l cup m a abed tarraaon . a n d p e pp e r i n a cooked carrott l/1 teupooo pepper saucepan. Tou tomato 1 tabl•poon srated Combine ve1etables in mixture throu1h rice onion a lar1e salad bowl. and serve. Makes 4 serv- Wont to buy time shore interval ownership of a con- dominium, own-your- ow n apartment or recreational property? Find it fast in the new clo.ssificotion 2450 of the DAILY PILOT BU-5171 h Order Your •Baked30hou111 •Honey'ntplceGtaz•:> Thanksgiving •SplralallcedforeaayNrvlng --. • Whole or hilf h.ma t1 and • Nationwide ahlpplng Mf'Ylce l. Holiday •Full ••rvlce Dencateasen1, Ham Now! "ilL. :~~:'~~.~~;:s'¥1P Get Your Shipping m. ~artytraya 1 1 I Orders in Early! ... llglll§; J7M I. COAST HWY .. C...... .. W.. P'HONI 67J.tfto --~ • 14601 IAYMOMD WAY .... Toao u .... Toao. P'HONI 117.JIZJ , J I t06t Ill.CH 11&.YD ... 6AUllLD, HUHT1M6TOM Ill.CH. PHOH1141 .. 171 Also Anaheim, Orange, Rancho Mirage, La Habra, S.n Diego 1 Westlake VIII~. North Hollywood, nd Hiiis ' 1 ~ OOc:x::JOccx:>c:>ocoo lCJc::lC Cl~ ( ART HOPPE ] SATIRIZES In addition, scaley skin can reflect a need for a belt.er variety of fresh fruits and vegetables in the diet to provide a wider variety of essential vitamins and minerals, lnclud1n1 the trace minerala that are otlen lost durln1 food procesain1 of manufactured products. 1 eu Shake vlne1ar •. lemon tngs. 444444444444 ~ teaspoon dried ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- dill weed It would be wise to consult a medical dermatologist for any skin problem that seems to he chronic or spread- ing. Be sure to diacusa your present diet pat- terns ~ t}\e po8Sibifity of making changes that could improve your skin condition. U your skin is scaley or patchy, dis- c u as the value of vitamin supplement•· lion. ~ teupoonAlt 14 cup plain low fat yo1urt Scrub potatoes. Bake in a 425-detree oven un- til soft. Cut slice from top of each potato. Scoop out potato without breakin1 skin. Set potato shells aside. Place PGtato in a laue bowl. Add remainln1 ln1redients and beat well. Pile potato mix- ture into shells. Bake in a 350·deJree oven 20 minutes. Males 4 aerv- in1s. FaESB VEGETABLE SALAD ~ small head cauliflower, broken into nowerettes 2 cups sliced celery It's a Long Road From Apple Hill SACRAMENTO <Capitol ) -Next time you 're biting into a fresh, crisp apple, think for a momel)t about where it came from. In fact, don't just think about where it came from, imagine it's sprin1. the bees bave finiabed pollinating the apple blossoms, and you're standing in front of a typical apple tree - it's about 12 feet tall - and you have a task ahead of you. That apple tree has about l,600 baby apples on it. and if you don't thin three-quarters of them, not only are you 1oing to get small, un- marketable fruits, you are going to exhaust the tree so thoroughly that it will hardly bear fruit at all the following year. YOU LOOK UP at the tree. The apples are so thick on the branches they almost look like 1rapes. And you've got to knock off 1,200 of them! Farm adviser Dick Bethel is looklng over your shoulder. "Try to thin them so there's only one every six or eight inches," be •U11ets. and then addl sympathetically, .. It 'a a Ume·CUll'UID.lnl job,' but when you 're an apple grower, and you know you 're only 1oin1 to get ft one paycheck a year, , you '11 have a tendenc~ to develop a lot of pa- tience." YOU BEGIN picking off the surplua apples and soon tbe 1round is covered with them. In three to ftve. boun you're done. If you were an ex- perienced thinner, one who bu developed 1peed and skill like a fast typist, yqu could 1et tbe job done in an bour. But remember, lD all tbia time of workln1, you've only thinned one tree. N 0 W P U T yourself in Cal Able'• 1boe1. He's 'an apple 1rower from Apply Hill, near Placerville. A mod.era orchard may have 300 treee to tbe acre, and he baa ao acres to look after. If ;U..retaf:9.,.!i* apples to be t from aaeb tree tbea Cal Able ii · f acld wltb thlaalaa nearly ball a btWoa ap- pl" ncb IPl'bal. Old« orCbarde U9ed to ;,,.a.ave far fewer trell -to ~~1 u.. ~· Sev..ty ...ct ~ •• pntty ltwlard namber a co.apte ~ de· cades ago, but today's orchards are planted close tocether to trap as much of the sun 's ener1y aa possible. THE APPLE TaEE is actually a Uvin1 solu collector, and if the trees are planted cto.e to1etber, less of tbe sun's rays reach the ground. There's an ecological advantage to this new way of doing thin1s: weed control is simplifted if the tree is catcbin1 most or the sunlight. AFTEa ALL TRIS work in making good. sized, healthy apples, how do we select good ones in the su~rmanet? Many olthe Apple Hill growen would counter this question with an In· vltat:iaa to WI to come 1et the apples directly from them, and have a picnic in apple country at the same time. For thole of us who can't make the trip to Apple Hill, here are some ttps. "BUY BAGGED ones," su11eats Norma Brubaker. ''Thete are usually antaller than the ones out on diaplay , but they're Just u tHty, they're perfect for small kids• lunches, and they're a lot le11 ex· penalve. And beat ol all, they baven't been handled." "Look for brilht color and unblemlslied al:ln. Toucblq it la soUal to leave bruiae marks, tboae Utt.le flaferpriDt marka . . . kaow )'OU 'Te Mlil tbem. 'fbe arocer la aolnl to have to throw out bruised fruit and every Ume this bappem, lt brinl• tbe prtca up." WBAT'I TBS aweeteM apple? Farm advlNr Belbel potata out that lD 1U1ar com.et, •P· plea aN all pretty 1lmtlar If they're at tbe aame ata1eotr1peneu. "But,"beempbaabee, • 'thl1 does not mean they're all ..... to tui. equall1 lweet. Tiie aeldlt,y ol all ADDie COD• troll how .... -lt'• .. lnl to talte!' . AcC*'dlQ to BetMl, tbe W DIBdoUI .... low ID addt, ;tii tuae tbe 1...e.t, followed by Ooldla o.lieioul. ltmDmaWIDllapud loe.O.wt11u.e.Q1dle tert ............... ............... Minute Maid Star-Kist Tuna Turkeys Avocados ~I c.nter Cut. Safewoy$ Leon .... leund 78 • t.lmot • St fll Dungeness Crab WltcM Fiozen 0t D«tostea s1 s9 lb • Cube Steak s2ss Saltw1YlU018"I IO Sole Fillets s2s9 f111'1Do.fr lb SmokeCI 'orii. Whole A"" Shoulder c --'"' lb. A-·, .................. o. .. UMlt •• SI 1•) Pork Sausage ~~' s1s9 F•""' JOlln llnll lb Premium Franks 110 s1s9 P\g Filet Mianon S.1""1Y lun a.;l lo..,_ T tndtrtoln c Onions US llo Ht!- Green Cabbage Crnpandflesn Romaine Burritos s.1..,,, 3 s Ol s100 Ground Beef P~os py.,._ Don Not b cetcl 22' f11 111 s4s9 111 s19s Braunschweiger S.ltwly ~ Wttgltt 111 s1 29 ~~oes •.Er.~lt Drinks 0111on 89' ~unt's l2 snc K*""" lot~ "1 ' •Van Camp >,:~ 5nt ~,...... C.ft ';]' • £_<J!tage Chees~_. 79c • ~~onnalse 2~ s119 • g~~,.'!e Juice ~~ 7ry. ,. 9-Llves Cat-·Fottl~~ ~-2 ·-I··-· ' ... c- Liquor And Wine · ""'" ........... u.. ...... ~-.............. _"' JO.o.M-. '" .............. , • JJ ~75-Llter Sale! -Kavlana Vodka eoPtGGI Die Blue Nun Liebfraumilch Z-7 Champagne or Cold Duck = • Christian Bros. Brandy "-:, 'u! '6" 2::. 1700 3 = s500 ti: '10" Vitamin C Slletar 1000 "" Aspirin Slllw9r Stlmu-Legs StleiNr ,..,., Holt • _..._._,.,,t , ............... c:...r.c.._...,....., ........ a./..-........,. lb 15¢ ue11 49' .. 35' loft s319 " 100 Prunes Tomatoes Pathos Plants 4 oncnS.1r ~ggc 2~99c ~69' Qdl ggc •SAJIWAY onuu , .. NICIS UIAUITll ttl Wf.llOf PAf-tll f-~mM-IMIMLL Af SAflWH f1IAll Ul'f 11111 LOCAL""""' • MP11111Bn01 ... PAY JOI A •. . ~ DOUBlE . . CASH REBA ft ' ....,,_., __ "...._ ...... ............. _ .. .....__ _ _..,... ... ._.n......w. .. ..... _.... .... ,... .. ,.......w=: .... _._....,. .. _ .. _ ...... ....,_ ....... ... ..... " .......... -·· ..... 9tt.-· ........... ., ..... -............. , ..... _"40t. ................ """ ........ ._ ...... """-' -...._ -__ ,..._ ........... ~ ..... ......... oouat ne IUl'-lm! fW't _.....,..-c-..-~­......... -r~·.., .... • -... -....... ~ ..... :;•: :..· ... 't'.:".::::".!-.~ - ~ ·Chili is Cheap, Satisfying 4 nat la.,.. ..,. •• ue ( CllllO..C...1 .............. Jfft ...... .., to M far .. .,. 'ft9r u...ur a dUU la tM mak1q from OOD· .W.ralile clWMee ud an ...-Mlkaat to ad· .W.wltiM'a ..... ualaad nat'•-*· Au&Mnde or Dot, chill 1 wttla ...._or nee la one • l 4ll11t every buy coot • must have ln t.be l'ftipe ftle. [ It '• economical, vth.W., aatill.YiluE and dloat people like -it in va'rytas detreee of bot· ~ neu. It can be made in ad· vaace and the (lavor im· provea, and it pack.I a · 1'allopolnutrltive values to boot. . But II cblli cooaidered · "party fool?" Why not? l pie lbell made of )19Ut doulb provides a firm lounclatioo for the robuatltew. Offer a aelectlon of top· I pln1s such aa 1liced sealliona , crated ~,ID e r i c a n c h e es e , c•opped green pepper and olives to make the plllin chili fqcy. And you have the mak· tnss of a party you can af. ford. Serve with green salad and iced tea or be'er. CIDLIPIES 'h cup warm water (105°F. · l!SF.) lpacka1e Dry Yeast 1 cup unsifted whole at flour 1 eca (at room tem· ature) 2tablespoonsoil · 'ril cup non-fat dry milt f . 2tablespoonuuiar l 'hteupoonasalt 2'h to 3 cups unsifted w eflour ~:.'6espooo water euure warm water l8J'le warm bowl. SOHnlrJe in yeast, stir un· .....,,....,"". WJd. Stir in 'ril cup w e wheat nour ,· eJ1. oil non-fat dry milk, IUI· ar and salt; beat unW 1 Stir la remai.nln1 ' •:• wbeat flour and e up white flour to m e a stiff clouih. Tum out onto lipUy noured -board ; knead until 1mootb ud elutic, about I to 10 minutes. Place in a sreued bowl, turnin• to areue top. Cover; let Ii* ln a warm place, free from draft, until doubled in bulk, about 1 bollr. Meanwhile, prepare CJalli filline (recipe below). Punch dough down; torn out onto lightly floured board. Divide dough in half. Roll each into a ll·inch circle. Pf ace each over an in· verted, greased 9-incb ple plate. Cover and let 1tand 10 minutes. Bake at 375 degrees for 5 minutes. Mix en and 1 tablespoon water and Yanks Like It Sweet 'NEW YORK <AP) Adlerlca's sweet tooth is 1ettinl sweet« . ..._("be nation's away. uvm-...._ favorites are c-ndY, cookies, sweet' 16ack1 and sugar· sweetened soft drinks, ¥cor~in1 to a trade ~bllcation. •In its 34th annu-1 !ua ol t.be automatic dln1·machine in· ry. Vendlnl Tl mes ma1utne reported that bf lt'11 Americana de· posited a record SU,IOJ,000 in tbe na· U.'1 five milllGn vend· IQ maehlnel in loca- U on 1 ran1ln1 from mPGCta to I009 all over MllemL Saft driDkl - up ~pl• petteat over lf7I -proricll -:z.: percmt ol all v Mlea. ~candy ban IDd mack.I make • ...,.., 13 per· c"at, for • total ... 1 • llMliOD la...... . brusb over surface of dou1h. Mum to oven Pd Nke 4 mlnutel, or u.aUl cl"Ult la Juat 1tarUna to brown. Remove from oven; cunf\Ll1y .remove 1hell1 '::'J: platea and brUlh witb e11 mixture. llelurn ahella to oven llDd bake I to 8 minutea, or unUI done. Spoon prepared chili mixt""' into warm shell. Cut into wedaea to serve. Unfilled sbella may be re- heated at m". for 25 to 30 mlnutel. Makea2pies. CllDJ nu.ING: Heat PUINWIAP. Sausage \4 eup oil ID lar1e akillet over medium beat; 11ute l~ c• cMpped·onlon, ~ cup chopped 1reen pepper and l tablespoon minced 1arlic until tender. Add l 'h pound.a finely diced lean beef round and cook until Uabtly browned. SUr in 1 can (18-ounce > 1omatoes, 4 teaspoons c hill powder, 2 teaspoons salt, 1 teaspoon dried oregano leaves, ~ teas· poon cwn1n and a dash cayenne pepper; simmer 50 minutes or until meat 1 lb. pkg. .· I.a tender. Stir in 2 cant (20-ounce each) can· nelllni beans; continue cooklnlS minutes. Note: Whole Wheat Dinner Rolls may be pre· pared from dough in· 1tead of Chill p1es. After lint risinl, punch dough down. Shape into 6 equal balls. Place on un1reased baking sheets. Cover; let rise until doubled in bulk, aboutlhour. Bake at 375 degrees for 20 minutes , or until done. Cool rolls on wire racks. ~fijjiliiiiitiii·4'1'@1> Save .2t with Coupon #457 1 lb. Cello Bag Clip Top ;~~ f 'f'll Carrots .... ,....;... ., _,... ... , ...... ,, .. Umff One 1'9m end One Coupon P~ Customef siiPiiNcOUNil PLAJNWRAP.: -Point Cut orned Beef Brisket t Chlll pies are perfect for parties. All Ralphs 11Dre1 wll • open Vetenn's Day, Tuad~, Nov. 11 cll:tJour local Ralplil for sp Holiday Hours. ~iUJumiiii~·'f~ Save .33 with Coupon Sliced Leo's 2\'t OL ·f . II Chipped Mti"it i ~L!!~ - ... ,. Turti., or Chtdlen -..-.. .. ........, ,.._ Um ff One 1'9m and One Co~ P~ Cuetomer Siilii COUNovPOi per lb. 49 Aeeorted Flevort HiC Drinks Uptan Sotf>MIX Nooc:tt .. w/Chicken Broth-2 Pack Lipton .... • 48oz. can 1\'.r lb. loaf Pl.Ill WRAP.. -Water Added Boneless am ,. ~ ) ,. . pkg .• ' "( ' ./. 11 Welle Baltam ~~ well a 9~1~am Hair 47 Conditioner Regular or Extl'll Body • 16 oz. btl. PLAIN WRAP.. Scotch or 19. Bourbon • 750 ml. btl.. SCOTCH j 1 ~ ·l .. - Learn to Love the ~mon ll '1 amuiAI Whl Clll M aetompll1bed with j~t • twtlt ol lemon. The fOMJIMIG trick• ~rlllnc up UM navor of •H fOC>CM, IMldlnt tan1 to ~ ·a cool drtnk, M•aonlnl 1 l emo n pie ar e famlUar. but tbert are , counu ... other tub the _ lcmoa ran make almost ., effor1lea1. Many fo11u try to cut down their salt intake but find food blaod without it -a twist of lemon will br i1hten the flavor remarkably. VEGETA B LES, salad s . m eats , a nd potatoes can go virtually saltless when a little lemon Juice is added. Lemon Julee in the cookio1 water helps keep white vegetables whit e a nd green vegetables green. A little le mon juice sprinkled on cul edges keeps fruit s like peaches and nectarines from turning brown. FOR 11IE CALORIE conscious, a twist of lemon subsUtued for oils or butters on salads, vegetables. and baked potatoes can sa ve dozens or calories and give satisfying results. Lemon juice can also come to the rescue in household tas ks. No need to s uffer from "dishpan" hands when a little lemon juice will help restore the natural body acids and prevent this common malady. Lemon peel in t he bath adds a lo vely natural oil and scent to the skin. Tired feet can be re- vived with a soak in hot water and lemon juice. AN D D 0 N " T forget that l e m on juice removes s tains a nd odors f ro m the homemaker's or han- dyman's hands, while a lemon juice hair rinse has bee n a favo rite beauty trick for ages. The lemon offers many garnish options too. Wedges and slices are always nice. but curls, narrow strips and "boats" also add in· terest to plates. Lemon wedges can be dipped into paprika, cin- namon, or nutmeg, de- pending on the dish, for added glamour. LEMON RIND ··boats" can be filled with sauces or sherbets for an extra nourish. Brown Bag Chic Bringing your lunch an a paper bag was once considered very unchic. Certainly no executive would be caught brown- bagging it to the office. But. that was before inflation, and before the public became aware of the perils of eating foods t ha t add pounds and raise blood pr essure, blood cholesterol and triglycerides. For people who need to cut down on salt in their diets, ·'eating in" also eases the problem of select.ing foods at a restaurant that are "on the diet." Lunch in the con- ference room or at your desk can be a social oc· casion when other staff memben join you, or a good opport unity 'to catch up on your read· ing, shopping, or ex- ercise. For the person on a salt restricted diet, a brochure Crom The American Heart As - sociation suggests that lunch need not be a sandwich. Consider packing a l~g or chicken. a s mall to m ato , cucumber strips, low-aod.lum bread or cookies, and fresh fruit. Coffee, tea or milk complete the menu. Ealing in provides an opportunity to have a better control of your salt intake. Anyone on a sodium restricted diet who ls subject. to occasl,onal bouts ol acid lndi1e1Uon should alto keep an an- tacid bandy In J)Oeket, purse or desk drawer. Rlopan Ls the name of one that la reported to be effective and low ln aodium content. C.11 142-1171. ftut a tewwordl 10 .. rll tor A twist of lemo• m•k•• even un · •••morou1 club soda Ht m like t he most eh1ant i mported mineral w•ter. CH008£ lemons that are firm and heavy for their size for the maa- lmum amount of j uice. They will keep for up to 1i>t WMka ir refri•erated. A lemon will be juicier if it's at room tem- perature and rolled on a counter aeveral llmet decorative arrancement beforesqueealn1. in the kitchen, dlnlng FO& A 811AU amount of Julee, Polle a holelnone end or the lemon with a toothpick. squeeze, and out comes the juice. Replace the toothpick and the uomed portion can be stored in the refri1erJtor until the next squeeae la needed. A sm all b9wlful o f lemons with a rew· polished leaves makes a. room , or even t h e bathroom. Their scent is fresh and they're available when aeeded. One lemon will pro- vi de two to three tables· poon1 of juice and about o n e ta blespoon of 1raded lemon pe_el. Atter the juice and peel are us~. the rind can be used to freshen the garbaee disposal. Lemons can also pro- vi de part of the necessary daUy dOla1e ot Vitamin C. THE JUICE of a whole lemon has o nly 20 calories. but contains 70 percent of the recom- mended dally allowance of Vitamin C. With this food nutri· ' lion p lus ts many household uses, the beautiful lemon should be a weekly entry on the shopping list. YOU A1WAYS SA.VI! DU•DESS COOKED CRAB ~ WHOLE • I ~·1 '4 LI~ KERN'S CATSUP 32-0Z. =79c EA. - --_L Service Deli PRICES EFF.C. 7 FULL DAYS, NOY. 6 · NOY. 12, 1980 -~--------------....... ~ ITATllllel. "Ill Me•IY IAt• eUAIANHI HeUALlnMIATI U~~f.Pt:~rD fO 0tl0utM n .. 1Nl4 f •UHO ..,. • ;'IH¥ • YIOAa • Hl• ···-~:g1 SllH'l'I • 11.0l 'KO SIZZUAN . ......... 11111()1((0 La •1 1• l8 •1• FRYING CHlaEN PARn l8 ••• .• • 11• l8 • 11• .. •in IHATUll(O Ill ITOtlU WITH K •VlCl Ofll ~O~L•I ALU• 'C>TATO .... .. ,.. . ..• AU I • C&INIOTlllAI .... ••••• &All• • IUClD T 0 OMU HAeT .... JllUI< •NOT TO flC:UO IO''"' ··--·IU • .. • CMUCll llOAl l ........ -·CMUCa 7 .. 0l•HAaT ....... .u •21• •U ••• .. 'I" l l •1 2• .. •12• " •1 •• •u • CMUC:ll • -~u• • 1 •• ... ...-.... , .. 'MIH•l.l.Uf•NOTTOUCH D2J .. "' •1" ••M-•IU ,, I CHEF I OY·AR-OH • 1££f 0 11 CHEESE RAVIOLI .. 6Jc DETERGENT :~s~~ I .. oz 51.19 IS·OZ s214 BAR SOAP -OENSLOTK>N • &1$.()Z 25c i Liii'11 ALL liliiiiiilT u -oz SOFT SCRUB LK>ino c•rmo I u o1 79c 5165 LIME AWAY L•IJ1CALUlMOY•• 1 .. .()Z 51.18 OYEN CLEANER ..... " ....... I .. .(), 51.43 32·0 Z 32·0l. 5 144 I ~~~~E~~~rU~~~ ()ti ,..()Z $1 28 1 s290 WIZARD MIST t'RA~A~U ' a.oz 7gc .. A twist of lemon can replace salt. Olis and butter. remove stains and add fla ir to any meal. TA•U•ma. SLICID BACON 11-0Z. Pl<O. 99c EA -KU• II.Mii-CUT • 11 • c..cKenAK .• -·~lM) 'I" ••••nAK .. WU• CltUCll • eotllnlU ' .. ........ •1Wl ~· 1. aWiiuT .. 'I" KU • --·n&K .. 2•• I · iiliiiliii I iiiill-SHIELDS tiiiiiiits lO-CT s243 BATHROOM Tl§..tU!.~=•'o°''~51.09 10-CT TRASH BAGS ~~.u•c~N • '""-<>•• sac s i a2 SARAN WRAP I .. '° ., 76° VARIEGATED $329 SPIDER PLANT ~:zT~~~%~ACH 12.CT PAPER NAPKINS t~:u I •DKT 5r •· ,.-at•·UTIIAAUOfllEHT ·OAYTIM( 5290 I cuusSE• $111 ., P~llS • TOOOLEllll DIAPERS .. • DIAPERS ... . 2'.CT. , PICKLES ~:.C'RHAlYllJt.()Z ~~~ ti,. IWPl•L • OtET ~ 59c MARSllULLOWS ii"0 I •..oz &7c 11; MARIARl•E . . . . . .,... TURIMRS ~=-;· 1 ~· 23, L191t 'I •Titn oDY ~RACKEis TOMATO IUICI l ·..oz ·59• ··e 6S~~z JIM.I. , .,, I ITATlll-.0 .. ·. IUACH .~69· •• ~MOToa&L"T , U~I 92• I YMoTI>A&t" H .01 97• Beer & Wine Speciah IAVAIUIU IN ALL IT~H UCl'1 LOMA LINOA) . lnif BE£R .......... f ............ 111u.ez. 1mus $309 ltms BEER .............. t ........ .,,~llTlUs s1s• ·. mrn1~~.~ ........ 1 ..... ~ ......... 1jl s2" -i r--.. , .. ,,..., Hal ...... ~a , -MVll .. ~ ... ....... s~cials T"'°"91 ~ t R.C:-COLA =a:r::lL I .. H s119 ORAllE SODA =~UllNAILI .... , ,~. Sl.19 COFFEE i:C'!Fa . . . e •Mil. s2.49 APPLESAUCE llAflA ~o• . .• 1.01. 37c C & C CIJ -.oHn ... f .. ·" 95c OYEl IAKED BEANS .... t tM>L 77c SNACK l.IYES =y t . .,« 71f 1 SPAlllTIIOS ~o...-c•N I ,.,~ 35c lfr'M. ,_53c ! CHIP·A• .,.._ ' "M)L '1.35 POTATO -CHIPS :::li.-t .a.QI. Ir BAKlll SllA -·NA-... ' 1.0~ 4r BIOWll 111 ::=-I 11wi1 s1.23 HOl COCOA MIX .., ..... I . ,.,H)I. s1.3& 11115 s121 ] MO °" lllOAA-111111 I NOT IYAt1.•• ... tllOIO • " - . MAISlllAWIW CIOI m" r«. 5r CGFFEE 5E.:c .. 1... ·.o•. 52.74 •E~: •..... 9 ..... ~. J7• ~I ........ ,... '1.11 Sr. .............. '1. Low F rozen Food Prices ONION RINGS MOO'll'I .•. I 2~Z $1 4' MORtON'S DINNERS IYMUIH I 1H)L 63 4 DONUTS :sEL~· . I llEO ~Q. 694 EGGo WAFFLES 11/Tl(MMltC •.. 1 ...... 11~Z. 73c BAKERY SPECIALS AYAtl Ak IC( AllllOWMIAD (ON\. y CINNAMON NATURAL GRAIN COOKIES ' ROLLS BREAD ~Ao~~~nu 4 •Ga •1 oo .~, 79c DOI 99c . . I tTAftmtA.-SAY8'YMMe•Yt .............................. " .... ..,. .... ,. ......................... ~ ............ ..... ,_...,..,.,,......._ ..... ......,._..,.,._.,.....,c.n~....,,........,_ ... ._,...,,_.,. UVWI I ._ ....ullftl .. _______ ..... __ .. _ .. _ = :' :t::..:e:.-:.a:.:..: -..,.. ... , ... -""'"--·-··--.. • 1 Wl lllllllYI THI lllOHl TO UMIT 0.- lllfUM UlH TO , C~IM. L DIALllll Ofl t ~~· I FOOD Ytlet:tM9day, November 5, 1t80 The challenge of child ;appeal Pl•••ln1 nutrltloua IBHYI hanq that Im portaal ln•re dle nt tal.IM d\lld appeal 11 a tbl,Jenp If nutratloua food doeu 't look •ood or lU~ IOOd. It la probably net 1oln1 lo be eaten For ~ be1t chance aucceu when plan· nin1 menua, encoura1e a child's lma1lnatlon a nd build on exlsUna lo9d a nd flavor pre · rerences. • Breakfast, for exam· pie , can feature pan· cakes made in animal sha,.. What youngster could resist Pancake Bears? l\alsins and coconut give these bears a frien~y look. And wheat or bran Oakes cereal adda some food fiber to this enUcing break:fut treat. The creative arrange- ment of foods as they are served is another tip that will add interest to a meal. Or give a familiar food a silly new napie. Pigs On a Stick are s ausage meatballs, made with corn Oakes ceri!al. They are baked on skewers with blunt ends: B.efore ser ving , the Pigs are lightly brushed with a mixture of lemon juice and honey and chunks of fresh fruit are added to the Sticks . Another child-pleasing recipe idea combines two favorite flavors into Peanut Butter a nd Jelly Muffins , u~ing toasted rice cereal. Just let your imagina· lion go for even more fun ideas for nutritious foods to plea se y our youngsters. Your reward will be their enthusiasm. PANCAKE BEARS 1 ¥.! cups all·purpose flour 3 teaspoons baking powder ~ teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 egg l~ cups milk 2 tabl es poon s veaetable ofl l 'cup wheat bran flakes cereal Maple sy rup o r honey Shredded coconut Raisins Stir together , llou r , baiting powder, salt and sugar. Set aside. In medium.size bowl, beat egg until foamy. Stir in milk. oil and cereal. Le t stand s minutes. Stir again. Add nour mixture, stirring only until combined. To make Bears, pour about 2 tablespoons bat· ter onto greased a nd preheated griddle for body and about 1 table · spoon next lo body to make head. Add 1 2 to 1 teaspoon batter for each ear and paw. Cook, turn· ing ·once. until gold en brown on both sides. Pla ce on servin g plate. Brush with maple s yrup. Spr inkle with coconut for fur and top with raisins for eyes, mouth and belly button. Serve wa rm . Yi el d about 16 Bears. PIGS ON A STICK 2 tablespoons honey 1 teaspoon lemon juice 1 cup corn flakes cereal ~ pound bulk pork sausage 1 t~aspoon pn;pared mustvd 1t 4 wooden s kewers with blunt ends Fresh strawberries, pineapple or other fruit Stlr together honey and le mon juice. Set aside. Crush cereal into fine crumbs . Mi x with saus•ge and mustard until well combined . Form Into 12 meatballs. Place 3 meatba lls on each wooden skewe r . Place in lightly greased hallow bak\n1 pao or on rack in pan. Bake in onn at 375 de1reu a b out 12 m i nut es or unt i l browned and thorou&hly cooked. Remove Crom ov•n. Bruah wllh honey mixture. Add chunks of fresh fruit to skewers and aerve. Yield: 4 serv· Ines. PEANUT BUTTER· AND JELL V MUFFINS 1 cup all·purpose 1/4 teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon ground cinnamon \'II cup sugar 2 cups toasted rice cereal l egg l "4 cups milk ~ cup crea m y peanut butter "4 cup jelly Stir together fl our. baking powder . s11lt, cin· na mon and sugar. Set aside. mixlng bowl. Let stand about 2 minutes or until crumbs are softened. Add peanut butter. Mix well. Add flour mixture, stirring only until com· bined. Portion batter e"1enly into 12 greased 2~·lnch muffin·pan c:_ups. Press 1 measuring·teaspoon jel· ly into top of each muf· fin. Pancake Bear can make breakfast fun flour 3 teaspoons baking Crush cereal into fine crumbs. Combine with egg and milk in large Bake in oven at 400 d eg r ees abo ut 25 minutes or until golden bro wn . Cool slightly before serving. Yield: 12 ti., powder muffins. · nY .<-~~~~~~~~~~~~-.,..~--;~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,.,_.~~~~~~--''~' ~-c-~~~~~~~~~~ ~ Fresh Broccoli ....... ~ ... tff Grapefruit w..,.,..._ ~Apples ~ Banana Squash s.Met tff Orange Juice •.. 39 .... 39 •.. 39 •.• 15 ~·179 ~· H! TolllClto Soup ··;;···. 22 ............ c.-$tyio !*! Green Giant Com ·::· .39 ........ !*!Yams 1!:'·.49 -M•Sic.4 B! Del Monte Pears ·:.:· .59 ..... Dr~,··-~Refried Beans JO·••· 77 .... B! Mahatma Brand Rice 3~:· • 7 7 R+ ;;rc'h;;; ~.I ........ , :· 20• SCOTTIES B! Hunt's Ketchup J4 .... 69 ~II. • ...., .. u~ ~ Pillsbury flour •••• .89 .... e.ttyc-& .. ~ Potato Buds lJ •• .89 ,., ...... .39 tij Mixed Vegetables .... -..,... ...... ~ Esprit Yogurt 3 ~ $1 ........... ~ Cream Cheese ····· 59 ..... _NEWl_r CROWN POINT I I · GLASSWARE ms-.SRA1111 ~ ~ ~ llYllAll llASS ~ ~ .:J9¢Ht FACIAL TISSUE WlllflOINtlfT 9¢ "'reef '1! Vorinoff Vodka ......... ~ ffi Steinbrau Beer • AU IUANTITY RIGHTS ltlSllVID. MO SAU TO DIAUIS OI fOll RISAU OI COMMllCIAl USI. I 11 "' 6 11 .... - 65 8 119 .. ..,., .. ,,. ... 3 ::·$1 ~ Orange Juice u.ow ~ Clorox Bleach ..... 59 ~ .... 1-'f kottA"""94 Dr -~ Bathroom Tissue ..... 85 .. ... .... ........ ~ Assorted Napkins 60·n 32 ,., . v ... c..., '1~ Pork & Beans ·::· . 30 k•• s •••• m Nestle's Morsels 12 ... 1 '' ,., DIET RITE OR R.C. COLA !*139 a..liokt • ...,..._,. -hn ff llMoe B! Almaden Mtn. Wine . I .J 21• "' "'rwf~wwo, • ffi Seagram's 7 Crown 110 4'' "" . ').. "' IJllKES unmv1 WID., NOV. S T1llU TUIS., NOV. 11 , 1'IO. ~ c_...,,....,"""Cllldi.. C rn" Thighs ........ , ... le9 Slk-4 I .... ~Pork Chops 'H ?o;R;und Steak U.S.D.A. 1--"4 ~ '~ Shoulder Roast '~ L~i~ 'L;.;bChops ~1~ l~~·~c:,1;;b m 1e;.~~;i~i'"· ~ a.;;· Steak •.. 95 •. 1 •• •. 2•• •. 1 •• •. 2'' •. 1 '' •. ls' •. 20• m ii;cbA •.• 99 ~ sirl:in Chops •. 1 5 9 1 1a.w. ""°'"' ._ 0r m Smoked Polish Sausage •. 119 ..... ~, .... m Smoked Ham •. 129 Holiday Gil~ Certlfleates , "" llOl.IOAY GIFl GIVING 1$ , EASY WITH MAllKll ;::' ~ IASIET GIFl • -CUflFICAtES. GIVE \. .,.._ • THAT HOLIDAY TUllKU ~C' ... .,::;:,;b , OllHAMWIT_.A -· ~ -COTIFICAtE. TO "-ACE YOUll 0110£11 011 fOll 'EllSOllllL ASSISTAllCE, CALLJEAll TAU: (213)725·3451 I }f)i '• •• ,, . j • • J I I - .. i ' Mini Office For s20 Mo. P.O. Box. Msgs. Pkgs. & Sec 3857 Birch. 0 C. Airport Newport leach Ca. 92660 1714) 549-2287 The Post Box I radio pager WIDE AREA COVERAGE otaece C.Oty, LA. c.u.. ty. SH llkrurlillo Cobty, RlnnlM c ... ey. '17.75 to&ail mo. cost no deposit on eredit approval OA4'11Cf ( Ol ''ll n II 41>10 I fl f Pt IO'llf 'lfll\.I( f I'll( COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Coln• & Stemp• GOLD & Sil.VER Market CloHd for Election Day See Tomorrow'• · Ad For Price• Drive ~ 0 . Legend EldorodO. by Codilloc, at ~~ S 11rveg Slaows Rehoamd Bank 0 K? d .. . . , Consumers Optimistic -For. Irvine ' · . · . Preliminary approval At the heels or the November etec· ~s· between' October iJn9· and April has been gtanted for tion, Californians are more op-1980. In this latest survey, however, orgahization, or Pacific timistic about their economic well· it recovered 14_points to a reading of National !tank to be being and the fight.agai.rlst illflation" 112. . headquartel'Cd.i!i'lrviue;.. . thab they were six-months ago, ~ · "This recovery is doe mainly to a Jaai~s Lytsch who ' according to the lat~t Bank of drop in the percentage or people! who was founding. prJs1 dent America survey. . said they were worse of( compared to · ot Irvbie National Bank .. Alter dipping to Cl re~ord low. th a year earlier., and tbls dropJ)ed to~ .. l>rior to & merger With the Sprin~ of tbls y~f' 'co~umet ~-' ~rcent i1f thf'lalest' stfr\rey... ..'... Heritage BlltUc. wrn··~ . pectatio~ for the fut~e are at th4! Consumers 'aiSo' al>~ir optimisti~ Pd~l&C Natfonat's presi-' sa~e level ~ a year ?go,'' ~aJcl Fred' . .about the future. Comparing dent and chief executive Tba~mann? vice pres1denl m ~hart~ ~ay·to next year',' the outlook in· officer. ?.r marketing r~rch for the bank. dex in the tat.est survey registered .consumer o_pl(!m1sm ~as r~b<>onded 131 points, the same reading as Oc- smce the Apnl s~ey · tober 1979. · Appro-Val for forma- tion o( the . bank, to be situ4le'd near John Thiemann s aid consunters also seem a little more optimistic about inflation, although overall the ratings are still low. .~ . Confidence that Inflation can be Wayne Airport, was controlled scored lhe b\ghest reading g ranted by the U.S. since the spring of 1978. It rated 68 Com plt'Oller of the Cur· Business Money $5,000-$250,000 Loans & Lease Transactions Preliminary Commitments Within 48 Hours Funding Within 5 Days Information Taken Over ·T he Phone CALL (714) 752-1411 ISliiUslNFS5~iY I I.SW MAC••"T"'AfllVO \ulf( ... , tAV .... C-AWPI'\ 111•1N ... ' ~l()tA.P•~Cil'i''•..,• t .t' .,_.,~,,.~ "• • I' >1(A\o H 11 l"i ......... llj.• ..--v-.... ............ , .. ~ ,,., ... -·" ' -... ,, ••.•. .._ ........ " .............. _.,..to Some 2,278 Californians were queried in lhe latest surtey the rl.I'St points which was' a-six-point increase rency. over· Ai>l"il's Teading of 62. However f --------------------66 percent o~ose surveyed said they are. "not too':. or "not at all con- fident" that infi i.Uon can be con· --- week of October .. ,. ·· · The consumer well-being mdex, which compares today to a.yelir ago. had drol>ped 21 points to a reading of troUed. COSTA MESA Call 642-5678. " n ri ~ n ~ n 11 r-, ~-~ 40~!J:~~/E (7 14) 5 40-9 I 00 Put a few words l 0 0 B~N1G E ~ _:_:===:::::=::~;~(2 13) 587_;8_2_fin ___ •o_w_ork-=lo-r _ou_. _ lL~f@JJ™1!~1 · ._ If Your~ Aatuma A. Rebibart Is media dlreclOr of B. J. SteWlr'l Advertising and Public Relations, Inc .. JJ1J•a cl'1ents ~ New:~::::::;:~no~:~~::eers and Ill Constructors, Inc., a subsidiary of Fluor Corp., .~ <C : • > Irvine, has been awarded engineering a~ construe-~ ~ ·werien 't .· .... . tion services for a multimlllion·dotlal' refinei:;y ~ I I _, modernization program bySbellOilCo. a~Martinez. .. .,1 • rn!;plred by a '36 Mercedes Senr. this tl~newbeautv l\as a GM3..8 lrter v-6 OOwer'train <Ind GM chassi!. 1l1e Centaur 1$ ainiost entirely hahdma<l&. Sculpting of the body, inter1oc.198thft. detalling and shaPing of lhe lncl1-thi<* solid mah()gal'ly dash ar& hahd done ds are most of the luxtJ!Y appointments. THE ROADSTER Standard equ1pmen1 includes; automatic transm1ssK>n, power steenog. disc brakes air condit1on1ng. chrome wire wheels. AM/FM stereo cassette. Delivered. 1n California. for $29.600. Tax. license and documentary fees are not 1nduded "' :;;;._e;;..;,;;,--1-t---hus ;a·s t· ;c ! ~i:~:::,~!n~~~t:'~~ ~a:~m:~e~::~~;. 0 '~ I' AMF lncorp .. according to an annoonci!men\from Bob Lo~pre, 1.,c. ,g about las+ yea· r's gift c= the la;.:;n:~;:ali:iv~:::::rs:~::tlons tor' . 13600 Beach Blvd ., Westminster, Ca. ~I . 1 , , 1 l _-· . , . . .. : 0 • • .\ 8 ~GI~:::.·::.:~ ~=:uon's lrlme brab<h ·,.. __ -.... ____ o(leaaJ_~_._· _ng_-_M_._'·_""_L_•_!_ry_-_M_'_· K_._"_v_'"'_"_uq_• _t,,_•>_636-_2soo_c1_14>_e9_2-66s1 I It· s time to gtve :0 :eeg:~~n1!8:nJ 0~~~ o~e:S . -. .... and de\'elopers or South Coast l 1' ~ • • • e r-· Mesa, as manageroffinanceand H 1lle 1 o,t· l 0,lt0.11 B • d -._ Plaza Shopping Center, Costa c Q ey g en businessptanning. ~lft H .. 0C Callie Crosby, Corona det ~ JTOOE.COASTHWY. ~nus Mar. has been named art direc· Niia.SO" "C GOAONA 0E1.. MAA PHOME ,n-...., ~ · . U ~ tor of Lenac, Warford, Stone, Inc., Ne'WJ)ort Beach. 1-1 AAYMONO WAY .-t EL TOAO AO. . -· • , 61.. roAo PHONE•n ·Jl22 . II J ue lteed ftlomu 1.s asst.stance art ~tot 190"' eEAO. 81..vo. 11 GAAF1E1..o -· f ' ----W ~ rd "''"'---T... """" ....... ..i c.... "' ~ ~cOAii:Ti'CoAST DllJiMY . ~ ~ubllc:ta~0'1rin irt'N~'1 ~~~rn·~~~:. · · ·· -· '/'... ; ~I:. C)ptae-r,,l rLll maiaa,tnf enalfteet of the~le !'.nalneertng Corp., NeWp()rtBeacb. ·, · .James L. Le Pere is manager, Treasury, of the Fluor Corp .• Irvin~. , . .. ·~ 8 ldlanl B. Cole••• has been named ·vtce president of admln1.straUon of ,..,..west Savillcs and ~Loan Aaaoetation, Newport Beacb. . ·A.~aycenUbar, 111f~bJ O•Jedl•et,'' . is 1cbedUled from t~~·lll• to 4:30 p.m. Saturday at i UC Irvine. Gunther aiaut, ·inwatQa director of ~e ~i{x.tltute, for ·Advanced Plll\Dlal. trill conduct the , ~lhfftar. Pre~Ument t~ ii $15 with S80 for the cbarce iUbe doOr. ln.formatlODG.'»Ul. AMAZING NEW ·-,_.~··\&A8:LBllllG DEllCEI . . . -. .. ·'· . . . - "OUAING THE GASOLINE CllUNCH. WHAT MORE CAili SAY?" "When t get paged !>O miles 11om Ille ot11ce and can t>e routed to ano1her customer near tna1 loca 11on Answer Page pays 011 10 its htghesl deQree Ancl w1111 mv bus11iess 1t riaooens a1 mos! C!ail'/ I Cl be IOSI W1lllOUI 11' .. JOM S 01mm1tk Mooe Eng1netrs Inc Downey "WE HAvt 6AIHED ACCOUNTS ... " Answer Page nu pto111oecl us 1ns1an1 con1act w•tn our men 111 the held we have ga1nt0 accounts by being at>le to get 10 emergency calls and give our cus1omers quoek seNU When they have a problem · · • J1mCt0n1t Hydm Pest Col'llrOI Co . Los Angeles "THE ONE THING THAT S£TS ME Af'AlllT." • In real es1a11. your cans lrom clients are your llleblOOd. One tnano that sets me apan trom O!t'lers rs tnat ""f calls gel IO ma NON•·· ··Ed Jones Cefltury 21 !Wal EIUll, UttWOOlll "l'M NOT GOING TO MISS DEUVElllNG A WY ... •· "I can 1e1u outsioe ol nome and oltice knowing • tll.lt I'm 001going10 miss delivering a baby wnen I'm 'between 1oca11ons· · ··Euoene R Sollmln. M O c.naoePa111 I ~ ' . , ... • • How's this tor a good answer: money. Read our newspaper , and cash in on advertised values. discount coupons. food news and consumer reports that can save you money every single week.· We also save you time: Which is important tor busy women managing a home. children and many other responsibilities. ,. In the market tor tun? We cover w0ekend enter- tainment and special events around town. Tv and movies. Recreation. sports. hobbies, a whole package of interesting news and features to give you a lift! Whenever . -you have the time. So if you've been feeling 11 little shopworn lately . get some help. Get the paper. I What'• In It tor you? The answer appears on every page of · vouR DAllY Pll01 642-4321 c , \ . l 1~.; 6,' k-:~ ' .. _, ' ... ,tar .... ~ ............. ..... .. .. . ......... WllO ... I • • ._. IO ...... -.,... -vi.fl r-.a •ftDTM .... ... ,. ...... ••• • 1 J ~ Aoben• ,.._ to 1M 4077111 IO llC)dllte KCH.wl WW condl• llOne (Pen 11 • TNl...VNU IHOW 8enoy Pf-"-1111 lflOW Wlttl en Aultrellan c.t ·~~ --l"MM581110f\t" WILCOMI 8ACK. KOTTa "Bet~ In LOYe" IPtn 1) • 9000 ftotl8 The flfTllly trlee to con. vi-J-lhll he lhoUkl -1 doctor tor hla head- ac:hea and emotional out· burata. Tanna Targeted • DICK,CA~ Guest: Ray 8'adbu<y !Part 2of 21 Lorne Greene guests as a gambling king who has Dan Tanna (series star Robert Urich ) shanghaied on the two-hou r pre- miere of "Vega$" tonight at 9 on ABC. Channel 7. Gi) S-~1 CONTACT (A)Q ()) M"A"S"H Frank is 1nt1gon11tic toward a wounaed North Korean ollocer who descrlbe5 hi• own Injury and correctly dlagnoMI th• wounda ot ·other ~toents. 9 BAANEY .. LI..EA u» 8 ·cea NEWS ..CNIWS • OYPEASY Guests actreu Gloria Swanson, Newaweek ·a llnanclal columnist Jane Byrant Quinn. Chef Nersal. i MACNEIL/ LEHRER A90ftT ()) TIC TAC DOUGH tll tlfE1lN OM'f1N Gueits Cheryl Tieg1. Brooke Shields. Shelley Smith. Mochel• Mazzola. Monnie Moore, Shaun CaM)I, Christina Ferr11e. • HA..v DAYS AGAIN Fonzie falls tor • woman wnose Ille cente<s around the city's country club .,.t. I AllCNIW8 7:30 8 2 ON THI TOWN JOK£R'8 WILD • M"A"l"H Hot lips" myaterioua dla- appear.-to dlllurba Frank that l'9 $h0011 B.J. wfllte preparing to -ell the jungle fCH the tnlaalng nutM.. • MMTTA Barett•'• girlfriend la kllled on order• from an underworld bou. and Barella la det•mined to nail h'lm. ··A Country Mutk: Specl.," The reunion Of Hometown Jamboree: Melody and St-revW ~from the 195 I lhow II Et Monte Stadium I ,MIM..YNU> fHANANA au.t. Jamee oen-. 8 HOU.YWOOD ~ ... I ffAat THI MUllC AU. .. THI ffMIM..Y Archie and Edith are • C'Jla•llft ......... . 9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA 11nd l Los Angeles 8 KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles ()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego II KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTIV (Ind I Los Angeles KCOP·TV(lnd) Los Angeles e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles Ci) KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach lhOClted wflen they leetn tti.t Mike and Gtorla ,,_,.. decided to lee\19 Joey with friend• In the ewnt ol their dMlh•. • MACHlll I LEHMA IWPORT 1111> LNI FROM THE ~~ "Menon Leacaut'" Renato Scotto, Placido Domingo, Pabk> El111r• and Renato C.pecc;lll ere INtured In Puccini's vibrant 09«1 t~ at the Metropollten Opera House In March , 1980. J-~lne GOn· duct• fhe Metropolitan Opet• Or~ra. ()) ~.M. MMAZINI ''Reel ~·· atw swan '"""'811; how *-vletlma -coping. --·~"" HAZZAN)" Enoe .. ottered • job with the Loe Angelee Police Department afler he makee heedllnee by eccl- dentally Mbblng • pelr of crimlnala. 8 MAL PEOfl\i Feetured: tile woman wt>O WU voted "Beet Waltr- ln A!Mflca'" by 7,000 tluckera; • midget Michel· angelo; a chimp that drlwla •tractor and feed• oowa eSTAMKYAND HUTat . St81aky and Hu1ch go undefcowr In LU Vegat IO find e killer wt>0 sing ... out ~tolul Chorus girt• H hla vie1im1. {Part 11 Televbion .. eOMHT• ...... AMI'(• troubled 1e.-,,..,... old MPNw -In wtf, the 8'edtotdl, arid Joen- nle ~ SactM*i· IO'I ftfat femele ..,0,U. •& • * * "Dark Vlct0<y" f1'3t) Batt• Oevta. ~ 8'ent. Wtlen • _. IMml that '* ~ .. ,ftUmbef'ed ~ °' .., lnop«able brlln cxindttlOft. lfl8 gain•..,.._ .. ~ Ille doctor aha IMITlee. ~ In.). • ~.M. llllMAZINI A Wit lo 1M eeC of "Prl· .,... e;.a··: how .. , __ vie).. time .,. ~; Ct* T• bonee ftlh; Or. WlllCO Of' mlcto IUfgety (or ~ problefn•: Joyce ~ Of' the moon and IMlmatl bet\hlor. •wcww • • • ··Fire!'" (19771 Erneal Borgnlne •. Vera MMM. To "'-1 attentlot) from hie eecepe ~ •• convlc:t'lgnltee a blan ttial beC:on'9I • reglng f-' tire tlveelenlng • ame11 town In Oregon. {2 hn.) .HTONIOHT '"Public ~hbol1'" Host Cljl Ware ditcu-the apectal need• of the handicapped end '"Englilh·As-A·Sec· ond Language" ltudents (part 2 ot 41 • l:.IO. CAAOl. IUANETT ANDf'MND8 • WON..D 8"EC&AL "The lllamlc Bomb" The story of how the Pattlatenla -•able to obtain nuci. w technology from the West and hnlllClng lrom lib)'• to buttd the twst lllarnlc bomb •• docun'l«lt· ed t:OO 8 ()) MOVIE • • * "Love At Fltlt Bite'" I 19781 George Hamilton, Suun Saint J-. Tilt world"• moat famoua vam- pire glvea up hie one-bite elands when he fall• In IOve with • wacay New YOf'k tUhion model. D ..CMOVIE "Afcatru : The Whole Sllodclng Story"' {Prem- iere) Art Cerney, Telly Savala. Clar-Carnes, a man wno was aentenced to Ille lrnpriaonment et 11111 age of 18, II aent to Alea· tru eft• -at failed eecepe allampts (Part 11 • STANICY AND HUTCH SlerMy and Hutch dbcov- ., tti.t the key ~1pec1 In their CIH la • tor,,_ ctuarnat• of Hutch' a Wart 21 ·•O VEGM {Seuon Premier•) Dlltl •• kidnapped by an 1nterna- tlQQll eambltng rong and t>teonwashed to kill his numbet one client. Ph"•P ...,.,. TUBE TOPPERS C~ 9 9:00 -"Love at First Bite." George Hamilton goes on the town in Manhattan as a transplanted Dracula in this movie comedy with Susan Saint James. CSee photobelow). NBC 8 9 : 00 -·•Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking-Story.•• Art Camey and Telly Savalas star in this new TV movie about a youth sent to ''the Rock " at the age of 16 . .. C~ 911:30 -Campaign '80: Post-. Election Report. Walter Cronkite and the C~ news staff analyze the results of Tuesday's election. • a.mw GNF'AH • Oue111: Cheryl Tlega. B<OOke ~•. Shelley Smith. Mlchele Mazzola. Monnie Moore, Shaun CeMy. Christina Ferr111. t:aO. IOHO OF THE CAHN« An exemlnatoon of the dan· gerou• working conditions that Americans 11e sub- jected to every day Is pre- aented on thos special ~I· Ing with the controversial subject ol ocx:upatlonal hHllh. 10:001 ~~NEWS 10-.ao • NEWS coeM08 "Travelers" Tales" Or. Carl Sagan re-crutes the Hol· land of Chr lallaan Hu)'9en•"• tome and takes VieWllJ• inllde the Jet Pro- pu1aidn Laboratory O 11:ao e D 8 ()) o:1 HfWI 8 HOU.YWOOO IOUAAD I NEWLYWED GAME M0A0 &•H Col. Pot1er teams that neg· etlve report• reo-rdlng hom end tttr 4077th have reached Seoul. • ONE STEP eEYONO ..o;-deal On locust Street" Anna lnvll.IS fWI f1811Ce. Danny. ICH dinner He"s the first oul9ldef to visit the llouM In a year. JOHN DARLING 11::IO 8 (I) CAMPAIGN 'IO: POIT..aa::TlON MPQRT An In-depth enalysls ol elec1oon rnYlll end a IOolt •I the Mure lmplicatlons for the Pfeaklene°f and the Congr ... wlU be pr_,1. ed. D TONIGHT Holl: Johnny Carson. Guata Angle CM:kinson, Calvin Trlllin, M•chael Pritchwd • PMOHfJt CEµ. et..Oa<H Pat Is rel9Mad from Went· worth Ind r_,.ted With her children ·~~~ The son of a wnlthy rancher~ lrom ptls- on and 11 captured• by • bounty hunter who anem.pts to blackmail the youth"• f11T1lly • HOGAH'I HEAOU A RulSIAn 111rtu811)' uaures Hogan"• cie.th by one ol his own sabotage bombs • ITT N<U A TtilE1' Al Mundy competes with en 1nternatlonal fence to obtain a llolan treaty •• CAPTlONEO A8C NEWS -..an----~ -- 12:00 G lW1UGHT ZONE Oki 84ln h., the atranQe ANO L£T'6 5f.~ WHAi UJt~Jr'IC~ ilP MINNIE CAMERON WO FOR U5 IOOAY! • poww to "*"8 ........ "''° ~. "' ~. ltewenlL • YOU _...YOUllLft ~ ~... meet• • prot.alklnal drunlt and pot emo61er. a temlle body- bUllder and • ....,...,. -- 1a:ao r:"~ •TOMOMOW O.-t1: Rob Keell, - time WOtld ChamplOn lut· key ~. c:ooldng eolum· nlal Plerf9 Fr"'9Y. eucww * * * "Marrieoe On The Aoc:lta" I INS) Frank SIM· tra. Oeborefl K•r. While on \18Catl0n. a lo\IW'I quarrel wlndl up In df\lorce with the .... metrylng her '»l.tband'a bMt friend. j 1 flf .. 55 min.) 8 0 LOW80AT ·•u..ege For MIUfeen" Brenda Benet, 8111 Bl•by; "'The AcapWc:o Connec- tion" Charo: "Gotcha" Mii- ton Berle. IR) an. .. "How To M iwder An Iron Horse" • .....aN: ~ The IMF tries to keep a man In Pflton tong enough to make it look as !hough lie'• breaking oot. e NATlONAl. NEW9 1:00• MOVE * * '"The Creature·• Revenge"" { 1971) Kent Tay· ICH, Grant W~hams. An American doctor plots 10 transplant· the br.,n ot a Mlddle Eaatern dictator ( t hr .. 30mln.I 1:098 MOVIE * * * "Ruthless" ( t9•81 Zachary Scoll, Diii\• Lynn An ernbllious businessman lorlalles h<• tamoty and happiness ICH success 12 hrs . 10mon I 1=*> 0 THE LONE RANGER GJ MOYIE ***'it "'Pal Joey" ( 1957) Franl< Sinatra. Rita Hay. worth Based on a Broad· Wlf't play by Rodger• ' Hen and l •novel by John O"Hwa A ...nhy aodellte finances a nightclub tor an entett-wno falls for a lollilly chorus gorl { t hr , •S min) 1:.eoD NEWS --1= .... Tiie....., ...... ( 1"44) "lllCIOIM .__. TomW• .. , .... t:aO MCMI • •"' ··T11e Weddtno Hight" ( t9351 Gary eoo. '*·~seen . 1:11eucww **It "TM ... Sllr" 11162) Klrll OOliOIH , o-.y Martirl. ... MOVll ,, •'h "Tiie ln\llalOle Teorror' :1..tt-8'fody. Ellen .. ·4;··--..s· MCMI • • • '°WO/lftM\ Ch.a, Men" 11937) Joel MeCrM, Mwlenl Hoptilne. Tlaur•d••'• ·····-~ .. ., ... 11:00. **"TN Star Pecllet'' (1~) John Wayne, Vema , Hillie. A IOUOf'I cowboy depullHI e group of renc:hera to round up a gang of out1-.' ' h<.) -AFTERHOON- 12.-00. * * • "The Str-betry Blonde" {t9411 Ja"'*' Cagney. Rita Hay#or1h. After marrying hla MCOnd Choice lor • bride. • man discovers that he la bett• ott (1 hr .. 50 min I • * * "'Dragoon Wells Maseacre'" {19571 B81ry Sullivan, Dennis O'Keele. An ill-assorted group ol me<1 IS hipped In • atocic· ade whole an Apac,he allaclc is gllherong on the hOrizon l2 hrs ) :L-00 l!J) • • '> ··unwed Fat,_ .. (1974) Joseph Bottoms, Kay Lenz A voong men llghls to gain cuatOdy of 1\11 Illegitimate child. 1 1 tw., 30mln.) a:ao Q •••,."Kin Them For Me" 119571 Caty Grant. Suzy Parker A trio or Navy ottlc:ers on shore lee\19 In Sen Franciac:o find 11\11 ll"a a pteny friendly town alter rnM1ong up wllh a COUPie ot raally beautiful girll. 12 hra.1 by Armstrong & Batluk CBS Delivers Its Sunday Punch, Regains Lead. highest-rated shows: million. NBC, and "Dallas." CBS. and "Three 's Company," ABC. both 23.1 or17.9 million. The rest "Of the Top 20 : Priest and "A Lucille Ball Special." both NBC. and "That's Inc redible," ABC. three-way tie. .._1 .I I 11 11 fl oJ I• ~1 NEW YORK (AP) -Led by last season's top,-rated program, "60 Minutes," C BS re · established Sunday night dominance during it s self· proclaimed Premiere Week and won the ratings race by a com· fortable m argin o ver ABC, figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. showed. C BS spotted a half-dozen shows among top 10 in the week ending Nov. 2, including (Pur rrom the network's Sunday rugbt lineµp -"60 Minutes" in first place, "Alice" fourth, "The Jef· re r sons" fifth and "Archie Bunker's Place" tied for sixth. ABC, OFFEalNG Premiere Week programming or its own, bad two shows in the Top 10, in- cluding "Love Boat" in third place, while NBC, which began its 1980-81 season Sept. 15, also listed two. was 26.6. Nielsen sa ys that m eans or all th~ homes in the country with television, 26.6 per· cent saw at least part of the newsmagazine. An NBC movie, "The Gauntlet," with Clint Eastwood, finished second for the week. CBS did particularly well with two movies and a special. "The Jayne Mansfield Story·· tied for sixth place. with another made· for-TV docudrama, "Rape and Marriage: The Rideout Case," 11th, and the latest production in "The Body Human" series, on sexuality, 17th. · '60 Minutes." with a rating or 26.6 representing 20. 7 million homes, CBS; Movie -"The Gauntlet." 25.l or 19.S million. NBC: "Love Boat," 24.S or 19.l million, ABC ; "Alice." 24.3 or 18.9 million. and "The J er . rersons," 24 or 18. 7 million. both C BS : Movie -"The Jayne Mansfi eld Story," and "Archie Bunker's Place." both 23.7 or 18.4 million, both CBS ; "Little House on the Prairie." 23.2 or 18 Movie -"Rape a nd Mar- riage : The Rideout Case.•· CBS; "Eight is Enough," ABC; "Fan- tasy Island." ABC. and "M·A· S·H," CBS. tie: "'Real People," NBC. and ''The WorJd 's Most Spectacular Stuntmen." ABC, tie: "The Body Human : The Sexes II." CBS, and Movie - "Father Damien: The Leper From babysitting to window washing the dossif ied SeNice t Directory helps you find hefp. ; Consult the Service Directory in l the classifieds of the f 'GUNGA. DIN' REMAKE SUTED HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Stuart Whitman, now filminC "Butter· fiy, '• will produce a remake of "GuneaDin." The Rudyard Kipling classic was rllmed in lJ38 with Cary Grant,. Douglu Falrbanb Jr. an,d Victor McLa1Jeo. WhJtman, w}\o plays one of the major role9, acquired the ript from the Na- Ueoal Historical Trust of Eal!and. CBS' rating for the week was 19.8, to 18.3 for ABC and 16.5 for NBC. The networks say that means in an average prtlne-time minute during the week, 1.9.8 percent of the nation's TV- equlpped homes were tuned to CBS. OF THE NEW series in· troduced in the ABC -CBS Premiere Week, CBS' "Ladies Man" was the highest-rated. tied for 28th, with "It's a Liv· inc" on ABC tied for 38th. and ABC's "I'm a Big Girl Now" 42nd. GINA AOW\.ANOS "GLORIA" '"°, NBC kicked off the season in mid-September with a five-part miniseries, "Shogun," despite the actors' strike that began in July. The network won the rat· ings r1._ce four times in s ix weeks, 8nd maintains a au•tan· UaJ lead-over ABC and CBS for the period from mid-September to the present. The presidential debate broad· "IT'S MY TUAN" cast by all three networks was not s'ponlored and thus not in· . c111 Three of £be five lowest-rated ?\ "NIVAft rt> cfli ·· eluded in the ratings . I proerams for the week were pres· IBUAMIM .. identlal spots, the exceptions r--:=:=========::i CBS' NO. J fmtah in the latest survey was the network's first since the week endln1 Oct. 5. be l n g NBC ' s " Sm o the!~ 1 · Bfothen Special" and an N~ 'THE ELEPHANT News s pecial report, "The MAN" ''°' Hostages," No. 61 for the week.' c:========> TM. ratinc for "60 Minutes" H e re are the week 's ~o "THEEMPIRE "' ~oildes Re•nlte Komum ]oim Cammy's Show HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Harvey Korman bu been 1lgned ~ star weekly with Tim Conway on the CBS "Tim Conway Show." B. Donald Grant, prosrammlnt vice president, 1ald, "We're deltthted to have tbeM two· top comedy atan worklnt to1etbe~. 1belr comedy talent.a prorided many of the hithllthta of 'The Carol Burnett Sbow.~· r-.... ~. wbo won four Emmy Awards on the Burnett¥<>•· will .,_.... oa tbe Coaway abow iD November. Conway said, "Harvey ati.11 owet me money, and he promlHd It out of bl.a flnt pay~bffk.'1 • I tlronkite Tunu ,64 STRIKES BACK" -llO,,....- ''JUSTICe POii ALL'' Cir) "llOTU HRLL .. 1111 ''WHINT'ttm ICMM9MQ ST'CWI'' c:::. ;::..·-.:..-.::.. ··IMCMCrf • nm IMNDIT. PMT II" DAILY PILOT ., • (NffRTAINMENT i F4Y GARDNER ............... .,, t11taM.:t:N• :i ., ... ~..:~~~-~~~ ---~ ..... .._ ••nw~ ""' .... ., •• , zCllllllU·~~~, : ................ ~, ___ ...... 11 l :=-.UtJOU•••llwbalyouaot-AQISe. a."t ..._.hit &Ml U..'1 '*hln1 ~_with • ..., la ..... "u aa.. u it'• DOt uplOiUve." 'l'Mn'• w qwtioll ..._.",· about tbe openlna ..... la &M .-..r la .. Dr11Md to Kill.'' IMiden tell · u 1be wu very uDU1ht 9out tbat aceDe. ft WU definitely A.Date from tlae walat up -and t11ou1b ahe denies she ever uaed a double for ber nudeaeenes, it ml1bt DOt have been An1ie you 1aw from the wais t down. Thia lln't the first m ovie in which TV's "Policewoman" bares all. Some ol the other fllma in which the I beautiful star showed w what she had were "Big ~Bad Mama," "Sam ANGIE DICKINSON Whis key" (with Burt Reynokla) and "Youns Billy Youns" with.Robert Mitchum. · . On the one hand, the 48-year-old actress thinks there's no particular age when an actress should stop undreaaiq ln public. But on the other band, she ad· milted to writer Robin Leach, "Perhaps I am all,nost too old for cheesecake pictures and should start be· ing careful wttb what I do. I don't want to embarrass my dauehter, Nikki.'' ••• Q: Wiie wu 1&. after a llG&ed writ.er submitted a movie l!r...,. &o llalm. lat.er said: "I read part of It all &Ile way ~ -bat I stW doa't like It.•• -Bea Janael. 8eaUle. • A: 'l'bat's a quote credited to pioneer movie pro· ducer Sam Goldwyn -a "Goldwynism" be actually created himself. A lengthy collection of such "Goldwynisms" enliven Arthur Marx's Ballantine biography including: "Every Tom, Dick, and Harry is named Sam." "I can tell you in two w~rds : im· FOUR DAY FILM FESTIVAL WOMAN f111Jtt1ADH O. lmLIM MOM.. nm.. wa.. nus. ADMISSIOM ... ........... .., UC1 & NIWt'OaT MACH Mn COMMISSIOM 1WO N.MS IACH inw•• --· -llUT -~ ... 191 393~ NCIAC'I Ml'TI c:eAIT Ugulll lllK~ ·~·1S1' am.-Ot•• 63A 2~~ 7:00P.M. Ml6HTLY _.1.-APUU Itel Slt-$339 'KlflC'I .... , . ..,... WHl...,.Sltl 17141 891·3693 •-•oca:•na _,,_( __ , 'Glad YOU Asked That'/ poeaible." "Include me out." "Keep a IWf upper chin." When ooe of Mr. OoldWJ8'9 bootkeepel'8 u kedif hecould deatroy all of tMftrm .. reeordl dat· int back to 1M5, the bou nodded, ''Certainly. Juat be sure to make a copy of everythlq!.. · Wbea lnvlted to pen bla autoblosraphy t Goldwyn remarked: 111 don't think anybOdy' should write his autobk>traphy until after be 11 dead." The producer also referred to a certain film u ''Valley of the Hello Dollies." Goldwyn, bloarapber Marx insists, once embarruaed a woman writer by sayin1 "cohabit" wbenhemeant "cooperate with me." ••• Q: Wllat•1 u.e realOll Gretory Peek la rehac· tant to play Abe Lincoln In a poulble movie role! -DouJd Wallace New Orteau. A. Superstar Peck, at 63, feels he may be too old to play Lincoln -who died at 56. But he's not Unhappy with being in his 80s. "The best is yet to come," grins Greg. "I can give much more now than ever before . . . Not as a young lover or adventurer. but in more mature roles. I'm no longer trying to be younaer than I am, no longer playing the intrepid young hero." Peek, looking younger than his years, admits there aren't as many exciting roles written for him now that he's past 60. "But I'm hoping there will be a few more," he says; "because I'm full of energy and imagination and getting more mastery of the job all the time." ••• Send your qu.e1tioftl to HJI GGrdnn, "Glad You Al~ That," care of thi.s new~r. P.O. Boz 19620, Irvine 92714. Marilyn and Hy Gardner wiU CDUWtr °" many que1tion.s °" they can in their column, but the volume of mail make1 per!Onal repl~" impoui~. l ....... ,, .. .._, ... "4·2400 ...... "'- IJ/)J1 '* \ ~ .... .. ~., .... .. 494·1514 \ c. ...... ·1•·-··· 494. 1!>14 ···~ ... r., HA ' .. -----NIYAft llNllM• 111 11'»1' ................ ,, ... ·----9"~ "",_.,.... ua..,.. ~·__.. _ _,_ , ............... .... ........ _ .. NIYAftlNNMIMNlll 11'»1'»4'4W ......... ,,,,, •&JWT,-.-rn MY TUIN111 111»1'»41_1_1»1 .. M "PRIVATE BENJAMIN" (R) -,..1'-0.tl:11 ..___., ....... ,..t.;JO "THE ELEPHANT MAN" :==:.7_. (PG) -L 111r•i. Nll'\fMlllll --=iF: -.. Burt Who? Actor Burt Reynolds gives a perplexed glance to an unidentifi~ ~?ma.n in . a sce~e PUBLIC NOTICE from the movie .. Patenuty be mg f i i med m New York. The encounter. though not beyond NOTICEOfr DEATH OF ·--,.CTITIOUS•USIM•U ed f th MA U R I CE SP I E G E L NAMa ITAT9MHT possibility in New York, was stag or e AND o~. PETITION TO !.":.:~"' pet"sons.,.. 001nt ...,si. ~~miioiviiiei.iiiiiitiiiiiiiiiliiliiil ADMINISTER ESTATE SAN CLEMENTE OIL COMPANY, NO A· 106007 1•111 o ..... vi.w u.... Hl#ltl"910ft • • hacll c.111om1a ~ T 0 a I I h e I .r s ' Gr•~t G. ArQaWl91't1, ,.,II Grfffl· benefiCi3ffeS, CredltOrS view Le ne, Huntln9ton 8HCll. antt dM\tfftte"nt creditors of c.111orn1e .-·M·~riCe Spl~· of Irvine c .. i F. are-. 601 e.yslde 0tive. v ' Ne•POrt 8eac/I, C.llt0<11la t2MO C,I fot'nla, l'\d persons Kennell\ K. S.r11101omew, •07 who may be otherwise In· 8eys1Cle Ori••. Hewporl a .. cll. terested fn the Wiii and/Or C•~1,::o;:•!~-. lotU llWM•911 estate: Orlvt. Hacienda Ht19Ms, C.lllomt• A petition has been filed mo by Sarah Splenal in the T11ls·bus1n1u Is col\duU•d 1>y • • -~ eentral pertnenhlp. Superior Coort of Orange c;,.,,, o. Ar.-i>rf911• County requesting that r111s u a11nwne ... 111~ "'''" '"' Sarah Spiegel be appoint· eo-1v Clerk a1 0r.,,.. Goumy °" Oc· ed as personal represen· 1-10• 1"°-,.,.,.,. tative to administer the estate of Maurice Spiegel Puc.fl"*! °'.,,.. C.O.st o.11v P1101, <under the Independent 0ci. u , n . No• s. 12' ,_ o2W0 Administration of Estates PUBLIC NOTICE Act>. The petition Is set for ------------hearing in Dept. No. 3 at N-72626 700 Civic Center Drive, NOTICE OF DEATH OF West, In the City of Santa LUBA GORBUNOFF AND Ana, California on NOV· 0 F PE T I T I 0 N T 0 ember 1-4, 1980 at 10:00 ADMINISTER ESTATE a.m. 1NO. A·106417. IF YOU OBJECT to the1 To all heirs, ben· granting of the petition, eficiaries, creditors and you should either appear contingent creditors of at the hearing and state Luba Gorbunoff and yo,ur. objection s or file persons who may be _, written objections with the otherwise interested in the court before the hearing. will and/or estate: Your appearance m aybe in A petition has been filed person or by your at· by Tanya Towle in the totn~. Super i<>f" Court of Orange .. I 4:--~y 0 U A A E A county requesting that' CR e O'I J OR or a cont· Tanya Towle be appointed :1rjge!°'t .credl~or of _the de· as personal repres.ntatlve t:e~sed, you l'J'1USt ftle your to administer the estate of claim *Ith the court or Lu~ Gort>unoff of Costa pl'esent -it to' the personal Mesa, California (under representative appointed the 1 n d e p e ndent by the~court within four Administration of Estates 1 monthS from the date of Act>. The petition is set for fir st luuance of letters as hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 700 · provided In Section 700 of Civic Center Drive West, the Probate Code of Santa Ana CA 92701 on California. The time for November 25 1980 at 10:00 filing claims will not eJC· a.m . ' pjre f!rior to four months IF YOU OBJECT to the from tllp.date of the hear· granting of the petition, ing noticed above. you should either appear . YOU MAY EXAMINE at the hearing and state the. file. ~ept b'y the court. your objections or file rt you:are interested in the written objections w ith the e~tate, you may file a re· court before the hearing. quest with, the court to re· Your appearaAce may be cei¥e,~Pecial notice of the In person or by your · in9eAtory of estate assets attorney. and-of the petitions, ac· I F Y O u A R E A co·u.n t s and r,epo rt s c RE o I TO R or a tdescri~ ·in Section 1200 contingent creditor of the of th·e California Probate deceased, you must f ile Code. your claim with the court Aarons & Aarons, Inc., or prese nt i t to th e Attorneys at Law, 2790 ·pers~nal representative Har'bor Blvd., Suite 209; P. appointed by the court O. Box 1469, Costa Mesa, within four r;nont~s from Ca . 92626; tel : (710 the date of first 1~suan~e 546·6604 of letters as provided 1n Section 700 of the Probate Pub11.-0r-. eo.11 o.11y P1101 Code of Ca lifornia. The 0c1 ~.JO. Nov. s. 1• '>1M0 ti me for filing claims wi It PVBt.IC NOTICE not expire prior to four · months from the date of LEGM...OT1u the hearingnotlceabOve. THE COSTA MESA PLANNING YOU MA y EXAMINE COMMISSION WILL HOL O A k t b the rt PUBLICHEAltlNGOHTHECITYOF the file ep y cou . COST A ME.SA GENERAL PLAN AHO If you are Interested in the LOCAL COASTAL PROGRAM LANO estate, you may file a USE PLAN ANO DEVELOPMENT request with the court to PCH.ICIES ON SATUAO.AY, ,.o""EMBEA 1s, ... THt: PUBLIC receive special notice of Hl:AAIHG WILL e£ HELO FAOM t he Inventory of estate 1:00 TO S;OO P.M. IN THE COUNCIL assets and of the petitions, ~:i:-~e~·~~~v•:L;1~~A~~ account s a nd reports CALIFORNIA.. described in Section 1200 For t.urtMdl\torrnat1on °" tll .. bO•• of the California Probate tlurtr19, tel..,.. 7W.S241 or uoll •t Cod IM olloce ol Ille P1...,.1"9 O.partment. e • S.cono Fl«lr, II F•lr Ot'lve. COSta iMsa, c:.11tOl'Na. PeterC. Tornay, COSTAMESA Att t"'a PL.ANNINGCOMNUSSION .. orneya -·· Rl<NrctC."-· 1'33E.4tltSt.,Sulte1M, a..1rman S.nta Ana, CA 92701 11 CNrlftW. Roaert•. (71•)97).1464 *'9ltry*'4 Oir«tor o1 Oewlopnwnt Services I Publl~ Or-Co.151 O.i1y Pile4 Publl$11ed ~artee Co.ltl o.lly Pll .. Nov. s. '* 44tz.eo No•. S, •. 12. 1• ~: I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE LaULMOTIU Al'PUCATIOMTOOAUIOU A NATIC*ALMNll ..._.. .. 19 Al'l'UCATIOllAccali'T•DPOAfllUMCMI OCTOHA0."9 TM•COMl'T~••Oflnt•cuaa•secY W&ltll ... TOM,OllT&ICTOflaM.UMelA Al'""I CA TIC* W&, THEUNOEASIGHEO.l~ .. .,._,w--_,.,•te•Nata.MI._. ln.cconMllC:ewltlltN pr,.,i.-9f IN ....... hMAct.M._...., m•WMl.aj;;_• ,,... • .-1Ut1t1110 -c.m,e.-1er 9f UW Cur,_y IW _ .... _ .. ..WNat1-tMl.eN,,....•• ... ,._. • \, TfllltMlftetl\OfllU9fulellM419Mt._ .................. ...... •'<ltCllW., .. t'f l!MnK1iOftM~51N..,_y ... ~--.ifl-dlY .. ....-.INdl,GraletCIWMY.CM~a. •. TMt. ........ ,, .... -........................ _ ... _.,..~ Uftft; • 1.AOUNANATIOHA1.9"flt( LAGUMA....._N,A. N" TIQNlll. ea..1t()ll LAGUNA a. Tllll IM ..... C#C._IMl*l t• .. _ti_.., .............. ._ Nf U!Mell ... ..," .................... . c.tll' ......................... ,.,., ••.. ············:.········· ·~ _....._.. .................................... , ........ ,, ......... ....... , ..... c:.e ........ ·············-~····~······················ ...... . .. .......................... , ......... ,.1, •••••••••• 4;-...... ...... .................... .-. ............................... ....... ,.,.......,.,. ···························~···············. .. .......... ...,. ················t.ii;r...-0\............... .. •. ""' °'* c. M9r\I, ''· • __,... =LM. ..,_A_, ...... MNk.,cai...,,......._ea•-• .. ,....... .. ....,_, ............. =.:.°"'"" .... .. ,,,.,.. ........... _,.... .. _c.... .. ...... - '":':; WtTiln&M•llOt' ....... I ..................... _ ......... ...... ,..,,....... . I • •eca~••••O" .. ....- 1. I -- ·ting Actress~ Future Rosy? -~ ........ CAAl!l!RS LINKED Ball and McBroom Heston's By RON PENNINGTON TlleH.ilJw_R_tff Combining the current success or horror films and the continuing in- terest in tgyptology, the old mummy is being unwrapped again in the Rober:t Solo production of "The Awakening." The Orion Pictures Co. release offers passable genre enter- tainment, but it is poorly structured and inconsistent in terms or style. Based on Bram Stoker 's "The Jewel of Seven Stars,'' which has been updat· ed to the present, the film stars Charlton Heston as a Britis h archaeologist who discovers the tomb of a previously unheard-of Egyptian queen. It seems she was not an especially well-liked lady -she killed her rather and everyone who had ever spoken to him after he forced her into a n incestuous relationship -and when she died at the age of 18 her body was sealed away anCi her name was erased from all historical records . SHE HAD MADE provisions for her reincarnation. however, and had even prophesied when and by whom it would .be accomplished. a,IACUSBY•AN LOS ANOSLES <AP> -One day in U?T, actre11-1ln1er Amanda MeBroom lat dowa at the piano, ln- teacUaatowrit.a~~ 'n'rolllOll&. "flaD a hour later I had 'The Rose,"' 11M says, "It waa aa if 101Debody 1ave it to me." · In a eoincldence that mlaht have eome from a old Hollywood movie, it jUll 10 Happened that a friend Wal about to aubmit a son1 to the producers of a ftlm baled on the life of J anls Joplin. She su11eated that Miss McBroom's ballad be submitted as well. producer, aaid it wu 1olna to be a aaya, "I'm JUlt bopln1 that people 1fill claule." . play it and a1nl it for yean. The aon1 At one Ume, producen conaidered seematpmeanalottoalotofpeople." bavinl the compoeer, who also pro-The aueceu of "Tbe Rose" lln 't the videdb.clnap weals for tbe ftlm, •inl only aspect of Miss McBroom's life the title IOftl over tbe closinl credits, that could have come from a movie. because tbe atar had already "died" ADOtber ii ber meetina with the man and beutq ber wlce lmmedlft.ely al-wbo la nowber husband of slx years. terwarclmilbtatartleaucli..-. The romance ~Ian in San Fran- BVT, IA Y8 •188 Mc Broom, ''They cl•co, where lliu McBroom,).here for to a weekend break from perfOnning in ~~~~~ IO with her and they were the Ore1on Sbakeapeare Festival, She didn't actually meet the "Divine ~~nJe l?. ~cqa•~B~lu ... on of the musical Miss M" until the ni1bt "'l'be Ro9e" -·~ won a Golden Globe Award, and so TRUE SRE~ELLinlovenotonly Tiiie ..... _ ... "HALLOWEEN" 1 :15-3:0CM:45 . 1:30-8:15-10:00 never aot a chance to know her. with the show, but with the atai: - OBIGINALLY ENTITLED "The Because the sons wun't wrlttea for Geor1e Ball, a talented actor with a Pearl," the movie had been renamed the score, it was rulecJ lnelillble for friendly, com(ortable presence and a -wbatelse?-"TheRose." AcademyAwardcompeUtion. rich baritone voice. And, in the best Not only did the pf.Oducers buy the Miss McBroom's version of "The wouldn't-you-know tradition, the very JOIN I I ,_ .... ~ aonethatcoincldentafty'borethename Rose" ii contained ln ao album on UM next day there was a notice in the ._le..,..... Y of their film, they released it as a newspaper that auditions were bein1 sln1le. The recording by Bette MJdler int Up ln Hollywood," on which she beldtofillafemaleroleinthesbow. , w aaa smash hit. sings as auest vocalist with pi8nist Lin· She tot the part. And that was · · "Nobody anticipated itto be qwte as coln Mayorga. the beginning of a warm relationship I .. ~·Ml, ........ ~ nan big as it became," says the delicately Unfortunately, a complicat-that, after a few separations while he ~ ......,.. •• 1 beautiful blonde songwriter, ed lawsuitoverrightstotheaooghas performed in Bolton and she in New ~•• O ~~ ''although Paul Rothchild, the music tied up profits, but Mias McBroom York,resultedinm'arriage. I PRO-FOOTBALL NIGHT 'Awakeninu' Better Asleep f .~'"=~~~~:'t!!.~~. e = MARGARITA NIGHT ( . J amplified animal howling on the of the script. Heston comes ofJ best as ! Giant Mar-itas, Chips, MOJllE DE"TnEtr/ soundtrack. The middle portion tends th e young and a m bit i o us Salsa for $11 ~" • "' to bog down in plot and scientific ex-archaeologist, but seems rather un- planation, and, when the shocks finally comfortable as the obsessed British t-----------------~::......--1 start coming by the way of several professor he eventually becomes. Jill Enter Heston and company, with his wife giving premature birth to a daughter at the exact same time he opens Queen Kara's sarcophagus. Flash forward 18 years and Heston becomes more and more obsess¢ with the ancient curse and prophecy while his daughter starts undergoing strange transformations. The script is credited to Allan Scott & Chris Bryant and Clive Exton and it's ob'lious that several eeople had a 1 hand in its .construction. It starts off strongly, quickly grinds to a halt and then lurches forward to a muddled climax. And director Mike Newell hasn't been able to bring it all together with any kind of cohesiveness or con- sistency. THE FIRST PART of the film, deal- ing ]Vith the discovery of the tomb, is rattier good. Here Newell manages to create a shivery ominous mood. although much of this is due to a lot of violent deaths, it all seems overly Townsend, as his wife who leaves him MS. NIGHT Free Carnation for Women with an order of abrupt and a desperate attempt to get after the birth ortheir baby, and Susan- to the final action. nah York, as the assistant he later Several of these later scenes also marries, both add inte resting seem overly abbreviate<s in Terry personality to their characters. · their favorite beverage. Rawlings' jerky editing, and Newell is TN a AWA1t•MtlfO OfiM~C.. Prod11<er ...... ., , .................. R_, Solo Direct« ............................ MllleNe-41 S<rHnl)ley Allen S<ott, Civil Bry.nt, cu ... Etnon T~/~-..W./~ CHI: CNlrllon Heston, SulMIMI\ Yot~. J iii TownMftd. Stephenie ZlrnlNllst, Petrlcll o,...,,, Br..ce Myers. Nedlm S.well\a, len Mc:Ol.,rnkl. Allmed <>smen. Mlriem Mer90lyes, MicNMI Mell· , .. ,.~~'·· Runnl119 lime-IOO minutes M~MRltti .. :R never able to regain the feeling of sus- pense he established in the earlier scenes. The final portion of the film, dealing with the reincarnation, is rushed and weakly developed. The performances meet the demands -or the lack of demands - PEOPLE'S NIC1HT Happy Hour Cocktail prices, 4:30. 91 STEPHANIE ZHIBALIST is ap-s pealln• as the daughter and she makes a nice transition from girlish innocence to the cruel and snarling incarnation of Queen Kara. Patrick Drury is wasted as one of Zimballat's r-----------------~-==~ suitors, and his character is only one WINE TASTER NIGHT aspect of many undeveloped ideas ! A · · $1 I I (including a brief hint at incest>. ny wine on menu 1s a g au We'll open any bottle Jack Cardiff's photography is im· of your choice. pressive in the manner in which it cap-t------------------4!!'!l•~ lures the mystery and majesty of the AND DON'T FORGET THE SUPER SOUNDS Egyptian locations, but is otherwise ratberroutine. Michael Stringer's pro-OF BILL ERICKSON, duction design is generally attractive. APPEAR ING MONDAY -SATUFJDA Y ! and Claude Bolllng's musical score, l.L.-.DT. 1' ~ ....• conducted by Marcus Dods, does what \\V"UllDCal\ ~ COSTA MESA it can to build a sense of suspense and 31 31 Bristol Ph. 557.3000 imminent danger. SEA MONSTER CA~A• IAGC-A mod. irresponsible Seo Coptoin.. rffponslble for the tronscri destiny of mony prominent Notional and lnternotionor penonogff In o lorge sector o Southern Colifornio. Abbo H«b Alpert BMG"s George Benson Glen Campbell Corpenters Christopher Cross Nell Diamond Dooble Broth.rs Fl .. twood Moc MRRirfunkel George Horrlson Billy Joel Elton John Olivio Newton-John Mich~I Jackson Eorl I( I ugh Gordon Ughtfoot Kenny Loggin• Sorry Monllow Chuck Mangione Manhattan Transfer Moodyllues Kenny Rankin Lou Rawls Helen Reddy Lindo Ronstadt Olano 11011 loz Scaggs • Poul Simon Spyro Gyro llafbro Streleond Donna S.,mmer Dionne Warwick 0~ A MIGHTY WAVE Cdptain Jock Elliott (2 L'1 and 2 T'a).plunget wildly Into the mighty Wove of the formld· oble electronic woten on the few horhion of your FM rodlo K Onner. where Ed the Red Viking ond Pete the Pirate hove left pilroge ond plunder • FM !attitude 108. 'Just North of the Border' ... beyond the Spanish Main. Captain Elliott carouN• ond covorta with his prominent po1Mnger. In a degenerate manner which will oroUM your lndlgnonce ond morbid foaclnotlon. Eovatdrop Jn. FM 108. k-WAVE ..• K.W.V.E. Out of Mght (olmoat). The end. (of the dlol). ever. I 0 l'Mll, Merril Inc. 19'0 ' Box: Less than o.1 mstar. Warning~ The Surgeon Gene.rel Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. lm M 0.1111"w;·0.01 mt --------~---------.J nicotinl 1¥.Plf cittmt• by FTC Method. r •Cl•ulfled •Horoscape • I I I Pi~P Title Goal i , For '80s • I . By MARY JANE SCARCELLO Of 1"9 o.llJ ...... S- Q)d stereotypes should be put lo rest. Everyone knows lllal a man who will take off his clothes lo pose for Playgirl ~agazine is a mindless, macho egomaniac with the sensitivity of a cement slab. And if he's from the Orange Coast, he's probably a blond surfer. MEET DWIGHT Blackshear of Newport Beach, one of 10 finalists for Playgirl Maguine's current "Man of the '80s" contest. Now 31, Blackshear entered college at 16, has one degree in business and another in economics, flew F4 phantom jets as a captain in the Marine Corps and heads his own video taping company. . The middle child in a family of seven, Blackshear remembers a strict home environment where study was important and parent.a set high goals. 1 His father completed college in night I .school, and his mother recently returned to .. j classes. • . r --So how did such parents react lo his posing for the revealing photos in a national magazine? I-• "MY FATHER simply never discusses it, but my mother went through a whole range of emotions," he said. "First was astonishment, of course, because she remembered me as the ultra-conservative kid who attended high school carrying an attache case and wearing a necktie. "And then s he was horrified. But I persuaded her it was an honor. After all, the e:diton went through about 10,000 initial entries before narrowing down the field." Blackshear, who was penuaded by a friend to enter, was amazed to find himself among the semifinalists. ''They ran 92 photos of that group from March through July of this year asking readers to select 10 finalists," he said. MAG~INE READERS are again being asked to choose one man to represent the ideal . "Man of the '80s" based on stories and photos taken this summer at a mansion in Beverly Hills. The winner will receive a long list of prizes, according to Blackshear, but no cash awards. "It would be interesting if a black man were elected 'Man of the '80s'," he says thoughtfully. "I believe in the concept of equality for everyone and think I could be a good representative. "I like treatina a woman as a woman, but females are the largest minority in America and deserve a better deal. That includes equal pay for equal work and elimination of a double ~ standard." FOB EU•Pl.i:, Blackshear remembers a bar near bis m,ht school in Florida where the owver had topless waitresses b"' wu forbidden · by local authorities to employ male dancers. ''I'm a conservative ~rson. but I believe i.rl the concept of offering a magazine oriented pward entertainment for women," he says. · In spite of the contest's emphula on good looks, Blackshear doesn't consider beauty an important factor in selectln1 ~own frienda. "ALL &IGtrr, It's • cUdle,'' be says, "but beauty does come from lnllde a penon. '" At 5 feet 11 inches and 170 pounds, he describes himself as in "bad shape" but admits to havtn1 been a racquetball and fencing instructor ph• boldiq a black belt in Karate. But he's never walked down the alale. "I've never married, probably because I'm a worbboUc," he admitted with a trin. "My .astrolollcal sip b Pisces, and I'm in love with the idea of love, but work acta aa a cbeckvalve for •ettlnl too inYOIYed ... BIACUllEA& Lan the Mumea with u.. tel .. al beeomlq a commercial alrlibe pllot but CCNldn't find work because of a slowdown in U. iDclUltrJ. "l'botolraphy WU my HCODd love, IO I ........... videotape buainea,'' be said. Bil compa111 bu expanded to a stair ol 10. Be ._ Cllldauecl to lb, u.oup, •"•'"'"' a belieopUr lifmH in a 10-4aJ period and a ... ,..... Uewe over a ........ ,,.._ tM alrliD .. hlre 11A11U ... I'll be lmoc-cm tbe door,'' be N(d. I S.• wtmiDI the Pta111rt COlltM wouldn't dlall ........ . ~:·,~ ...... -........ .,.," ... ..,. ...... 1 •"--.-. am&at u a._.... Wti ..... ............ . 'Tm .. ..,.. ....... M I wu blfon - jtll& 11• • ... wata ID wwwMCIU ad ia••lll'••1SsartwttltaeMrplOp1e." • ..... , ... ~5.1llD Peter Odegard, professor of music, also directs the Irvine Symphony. He'd like more people to sample this cultural asset, which may be Orange County 's least known. By JUDITH 01..SON Of ... OeitY l"I ... St.eff Cqlture is hidiDe in Orange County. Peter Odegard would like it' to comeoutofthecloset. Odegard is director of the Irvine Symphony Orchestra, the cultural group that could be one of the least· known in the area. It has played at t he Newport Harbor Art Muse um nearly two dozen times in the past two years and repeated the concerts at the Irvine Community Center in Turtle Rock. Still, the audience is small. The best-kept secret of all is that the concert.a are free. Perhaps things that are free are a little suspect. Aft.er all, what could be so good about the music if it's being given away? Odegard, a bearded redhead with glasses and a charming sense of humor, flnds the concept of trying to lure people.to concerts a bit funny. BE REALIZES be 's competing with surfing, sunbathing, skiing, television and the myriad of other ac- ti vi tiea engaged in by Southern Californians, but he thinks skeptics should take an hour and check out a concert sometime. "Try lt. . .you '11 like it," he jests. "You'll have a good tim~. You'll get your mooey:s worth," he chortltm. Performance and Trust Fund of the Recording Industries goes. Matching g rants a re given to groups such as the Irvine Symphony and are administered through the locals of the musicians ' union. Since the grants are m atching, the concerts must also be underwritten by sponsors , whe ther it be in· dividuals or industry. THE SYMPHONY grew out of the Irvine Chamber Players . which Odegard, professor of music at UCl. also founded . He is a violist who earned an B.A. from Harvard and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from UC Berkeley. Odegard's o r c hestra is not a permanent grouping of musicians, as is the Lo6 Angeles Philharmonic, for example, but he calls on the same musicians all of the time. He says that the group "is a full· blown symphony. Our orchestra is almost the size our repertoire is writ- ten for. "There are a few compositions that need 110 players (the Irvine Symphony ranges from 20 to 40). You're uking, 'Do I intend to do those pieces? ''' He indicated that havi6g a big or· chestra is not one of his priorities. Instead, among Odegard's priorities is to present "a wide variety of pro- The concerts are free because grams," something that major sym- that 's the way the funding agreement phonies oft.en don't get around to do- between the orchestra and the Music in1. The Irvine Symphony usually attracts about 200 to fts free concerts. There's another next Sunday at the Newport Harbor Art Museum. "Next year ," he added, "if we r aise the money -and we have to r aise the money because these people ha ve to be paid-we'll have a number of distinguished solois ts including every member of the New York String Quartet." THE GUEST artists also will in· elude Sidney Weiss, the new con- ce rtmaster of the Los Angeles Philhanrum_ic, pianist Nina Scolnik and guest conductors J eff Evans and William Fitzpatrick. Odegard also plans to perform two one-act operas , "Trial by Jury" by Gilbert and Sullivan and "The Im· pressario" by Mozart, and col· la borate on "The Messiah" with the Irviqe Master Chorale at E aster . Currently, the concerts are draw· in g betwee n 200 and 400 at the Newport Harbor Art Museum, which is a small crowd when compared with the population of the coastal cities. ODEGARD, bein):t interviewed in the museum's Sculpture Garden Cafe. said the facility is "not an ideal place to play," but indicated that the perf'Ormances are "more than just a concert." He pointed to the sweeping view of the mountains from the back door of the museum and beckoned toward the art on the walls as an explana- tion. • ' Odegard admits that he's bucking a lot of odds when he hopes lo attract a goo<! audience to the Sundsy after· noon performances, but thinks more people would come if they just knew that it's not a stuffy. boring, poorly played concert. He talks about the music informal- ly during the hour and likes to stick around for a while after the concerts to interact witr the audience. AND TIIE perfor mances are just an hour long so there's no need to squirm. One problem with Americans , he said, is that they hear so much back· ground music in t he supe rmarket, of· fice and elevator that they have just tuned out to it. And with commercials interrupting every television program , attention spans have shortened. "There also is a gener al decline in the unders tanding of music, .. he added. Statistics show that the audience Odegard is trying to reach includes only four percent of all Americans, but he's not daunted. If only 200 persons show up for each con cert at the mus eum, Ode0gard and"his orchestra are doing just what they love to do best, and they're getting paid for it. • The next concert will be at 4 p.m. Sunday at the Newport Harbor Art Museum. There Will be a little Ravel, some Rossini and s ome Hayden, Odegard revealed. • A ura.-n• TlllN81.. '*'-'•*' aale, ··-=· ........ Clult~ ........ wW be MN ·• •·•· IO I p.a . ....,.Y Ill tbe ...... ,....,,, HOl lall ll.., .......... Beath. n•=llll Oii ~IO UM ecMlllW wl re-,.. • ...,.. feoi( Cll9ta an wader way ~roUta U. affMd . ·---of Noveaber at UIWarill la II...._ Viejo. lniM ud C.ta ................ :111-119. \ 1aV1Nl'I 9L\NCll of the Am•riean Auoela· Uoa ol Unlvenity Wom•n wlU meet at t :30 p.m. WedaMday, Nov. 12, at the Irvine Sen1or CeDter, mr Saadbur1 Way, Irvine. Procram lD· formation: 551-MlO. A oavaT' BALL, sponaored by the Maxine Cuertey Memorial Chapter ol lhe City ol Hope, will be held Saturday evenina at the El Adobe Re1taurant in San Juan CaP'atrano. lolorma. Uon : -.9122 NEWPO&T BEACH Chri1Uan Women will hold a Harvest Fair BouUQue from 10 a.m. to noon Wednesday, Nov. 12 at the Alrporter Inn, Irvine. Information: 544·2921. FalENDS of the San Juan Capistrano Public Library will meet at 1 :30 p.m. Thurlday at Home Federal Savings Community Room, IJel Obispo at Camino Capistrano. t\ HOUDAY BOtJTIQUE will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Shadow Run, 16400 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley. [ Slagle• C'aleledar ) SELF CENTEa wlll have a Single Experience dl1cu11ion on "Holidays -Sin.Cle But Not Alone" at 7 :30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 7, in the City of Oranae. For information , call J an or Michael at 997·9600. • OUTDOOR SINGLES will go roller s!sating at 8 p.m. Th~ay, Nov. 6, in Mission Viejo. For in- formation, call Robert at 544-8276. BALBOA SKI CLlJB will meet at 7 p.m. Wed- nesday, Nov. 12, in Newport Beach. For in- formation, call Barbara at 640-8648. ORANGE COAST SINGLES wiU h~ve a cocktail party at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 8, m Huntington Beach. The group will have a bridge party.at 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 10, in Huntington Beach. For information, call Ann at 751-0291. BIG BAND SINGLES will sponsor a d ance at 8 :15 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9, in Newport Beach. For information, call 525· 7657. SOUTH COAST JEWISH YOtJTH will have a 'SOs·style dance at 8 p.m . Saturday, Nov. 8, in Westminster. For information, call Randi at 551 ~. WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP will sponsor a lunch party at 1 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9, in Cerritos. The group will have a fireside dinner at 6:45 p.m. Monday, Nov. 10, in Westminster . For informa· lion, callj?se at 635·4~61. PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS Orange Coast Chapter will meet at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov 7, in Costa Mesa. Broker Patricia Thomasson will speak on "Singles Guide to Financial In· dependence." Following the meeting, the groui:1 will have a dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m . For in · formation, call Barbara at 551-0161. Warts Causing Problems DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 24-year-old female with a baffling intimate problem. I began having sex when I was 18. ·Two years ago I managed to get a severe case of venereal warts. I had never heard of them before. Apparently they are highly contagious and difficult to get rid of. I have been applying chem icals and have had electro-cauteriiation, but the warts keep coming back. Please perform a valuable service to your readers and write something in the column about venereal wartS. I need to know how to get rid of mine -permanently. -TOO GREEN IN GREENVILLE DEAll GREEN: Tbe two procedares you llave described, applying cbemlc•l• and elec· &ro-camertutloa, are tbe best tttluUqoes for get- ttag rid ol venereal _w•rta. Obvtoasly yoe bad ( Borose.oPe THURSDAY, NOV. 6 By SYDNEY OMARR ) AIU.ES (Mar. 21 ·Apr. 19): Light is shed on area previously shrouded in mystery. You make discovery which eventually leads to greater financial security. TAURUS (Apr. 20·May 20 ): New approach to legal affairs proves beneficial. Emphasis on partnerships, public relations. cooperative ef· forts and marital status . GEMINI <May 21-June 20 ): Maintain low profile. Don't attempt to force issues. Sense of direction is subject to change. Pay attention to bunch. Colleague inadvertently provides clue to resolving dilemma. CANCER <June 21-July 22): Good lunar aspect coincides now with increased social ac· tivitv. intensified relationship and successful s peculative venture. The number 3 figures prom· inently. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Dig beneath surface indications; you could strike gold mine of in- formation. You'll learn more about basic issues. property values and small print connected with recent transaction. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Be ready for change, travel, variety and special communica· lion from member of opposite so. Give full play to ability enabling yoq to analyze and piece toget.he&bits of iilformatiod. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Adjustment of family budget is on agenda. Emphasis on lu.x· ury item, plans to j,plprove home and beautify s urroundings. ~ SCORPIO <Oct. a3·Nov. 21): Circumstances favor your efforts. Judgment, intuition are on target. You need not back down to on~· who makes grandiose claims. · SAGITl'OltJS (Nov. 22·1>\!c. 21): You'll have more authority In connection with or- 1anlzation, promotion and special activity con· nected with club, group or charitable drive. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Potential for aucceu ls greater than originally anticipated. ·Popularity increases and you can strike cbord of ·UDiveraal appeal. AQtJilltJS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): What seemed a "foal cause" is revived. Accent on new start ln connedlon with business venture -you *9o can re.-..bliah an importantrelationablp. i PISCES (Feb. lt·Mar. 20): Travel, publishing, education and awareness of' future trends -tbeee do m i nate your personal scenario. Ann Landers the good sense to see a doctor. I consulte d with a knowledgeable dermatologls&, and b e said e lectr o · cauterization, U properly done, should solve tbe problem permanently. He pointed out tbat warta are caased by viruses, and a woman whose venereal warts keep coming back Is pro- bably getting tbem from the same partner who bas not gotten rid of his. · DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm 4-0. divorced. better;than·average looking and I still. get whistles. I have a very good job and am able to support myself. My ex-husband also insists on paying alimony <guilt) because he left me to marry another woman. I tell you this so you will know I do not need a meal ticket. I have been dating an interesting widower for nearly a year. l don't see anyone else, and we have talked seriously about getting married. Several months ago it became apparent that he was never available on.Friday evenings. Final· ly. I asked why. He said. "Fridays are reserved for my secretary. We always have dinner and finish up the week's work." He asked me to be patient because "next year" her husband re· tires and they wi ll be moving to Nevada . Shall I go along with this, or tell him to take his choice? ( P .S. The secretary is SO-plus, nothing to look at. but -as you know -that doesn't mean anything.> -ANONYMOUS IN CHARLO'ITESVlLLE DE.All CHAR: If you really care for the man, relu. Tell blm those Friday night dl.nDers are okay wttb you and now that you know wby be'a not avallable, you will accept lnvltatloas from other men on Friday. Then do It. 11 be is sincere about wanting to marry you, he'll knock off &bose Friday dinners and quit fooling around. 'Ordinary People' Screening a Benefit ~ The film "Ordinary People" will be shown twice Nov. 19 for the benefit of the Orange County Red Cross Blood Center buil<ling campaign. It will be screened at 1:15 8Jld 9:40.p.m. at ~ward's Newport Cinema Theater, Newport Center, andtfoketsare$4.SO. The new 32,381·sq~are·foot blood center. un· der construction at 600 Park Center Drive in Santa Ana, will allow for expansion of donor recruit· ment, blood distribution and blood processing. Al.so, there will be four times the current space for storing blood and blood products. Donald Karcher ls chairman of the fund cam· paign. . • For more information call the Blood Center campaign office, 835·5381, ext. 262. 5 MINUTE DRESS • No Stitching • Only One Hoak & Eye Send 14.00 For......,,.. llUA1 _,,., P .l 111 51Z. St. ... CA 11111 Don Nolan & Dorothy Emerson pr8$ent TIQVIS ma 11111· .. , INTHE~"11lDINO"'. ORANGI COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS 11 'AIR OAIV& • COSTA MESA. CA . NOV. 6 THAU 9, 1980 ~YTHAulATUN>AY, MOPM IUNOAY.NOON•V .M . A giMt ~of theoali.ctlont of IMdfng deelerl '"..,...,...All ...._prleldtnd avat...,..fot purcttlM., OM1t11 A•1•u1 •• CMdrlfl ~ ti hi. DIBNTl8Ta~ Fea c•t Al~DTEE.~8 l.M.6 ....... D.D.S. ~· H7C 2 , .... ..... S.CI , 18CfOll from San Clemente HoePttel) SALE OF FURS "E.XPERIENCED" QI\ I J f Some or tne IDO$t 'fQbuloos furs as I\~ I J -W • seen on TV and 1n the mo111es ore · w now here IOI VOVI! seleCliOrt WI DlfY YOU TO DlfflltlMTIATI THI .. W OMIS JM>M THI llSALIS. ··~y -ly Fill•~Y Ne~.7 •• ••• ... ,.... ..... , .... "-' ...... wy ... .. MM...,.,._.., ' inc:tUdlng ........ , \lur99MOMIMA KIND epectele. Imagine buying a line fur stole fOf under S200 .. a fine mink iacket tha.t was onty worn once Of twice or a mink coat that was a pnze on a TV giveaway stlOw They're all here lor your setecttOn now II you know lurs. you can buy a lam1ty heirloom fOf a fraction of its value. Nevet before. never again will so many valuable lurs l>e offeted at such nd1cutous pnces II makes sense to buy a tine rental or 1..nc1a1med tur Some furs labeled '"used" have only been rried on worn less than mosr rumers· new stock Firsr come l1rs1 serveo 1:>a~1s A '>ITiall AK liljlOf Gt14>1 Ca•O' Wt •«•Pl ··~a~ Ill\ oepos11 Wiii hold your layaway 'E"·poftTER ''' Paelfle •••• 1197 .Ja•••ree .... Ne.,..... lleaelt. NOW f\ T DAVIS BROWN I NFLATION FIGHT E~ SPECIAL •H ... Sasor ... .... u .... ..,... wffllwlofcooldllg ...... •Y ...... Po~ c ..... • 25 ::J ,, ..... ff..wdodl <Im> Whirlpool ..,.,,,.,,,, --Model RFM7300 's299•s PUBUC NOTICE ~nm SU ..... Oil COU•T Of' TM• STAT• OP CAUPOlt .. IA, P01t TM• COUNTY Of' Olt ... O. PlJBLIC NOTICE ,.. o• CeMlr °""".... f'ICTITIOUI eusutHI S...AM.Cell..,..mtl NAM91TAHMIJltT PLAINTIFI'; ANN '9\ARGA••f Tiie fotl-lnt Pl'IOlll ere doi"9 ALeEln -PAUL AL•E•T l>llslriesus: OEFENOAHT: ARLINE MA•tE A. NEWPORT HOME LOAH SEMANIE, GEORGE SEMANt~. end TRUST •l7'; 8. NEWPO•r HOME OOES I ""°""' Jll, inct..sl.. L.OAN n un • 177: c. Nt!WPOIU CASll s..u=.: matt HOME LOAN • 171, 0. N•WPOltT .. OTIC•I Y• llewe --. Tiie HOME LOAN •17'; E. NIWPOltT HOME l.OAH •llO; F. HEWftO•T CMn -y _... ... i.tt ,_ wl-.. HOME LOAN •Ill G N"'WPO•T _ ................... ,...... . ... wtttllA ... .,._It ... IM....__._ HOME LOA N • 112, e11d H. ....... NEWPORT HOME LOAN • IU. 17 11 you wl•h lo-• 1,_ .Ovlce Of .,. Corpor•le Piere, Newl)tlrl Buell, •llornay In '"" A'Wller '°" SllOuld dO C•l llornl• '1'2MO Newt>Orl Horn. 10 promptly •o 111e1' your wrilltn ~°.:· Inc,. H<t-1 Beecll, C.llfa<nl• •••l)Oftw,ol•nv.maybe loledon ume. Thi•, .. ,_,, w•s 111..i wltft IN AYllOI U~ .,. tla -•·fMe. Couflly Clerll or Or•n99 County on II tri.-r _. deci.lr <....,• Ud. NO .. mller • 1'80 • ....._ ... __ IN......... • . • f'I ..... u ,_.,.. ... *-. U. .. ...__ PuDllSlled Or..,g« COHI O•fly ~· cl• .... .ie-. Po lot Nov. S. 12. "· 2•. IMO ~ SI u11eo -"'4kiler el con .. 10 oe ----------un •l>ooltdo tn Hit nunto, dellerl• ll•cerlo lnmedl•l•mente. de ul• PUBLIC NOTICE mantr•. •u ,_.,..,,. ncrolAI. •I 110 ----------atoun• . .,._.,. wr •e91•tr..U • 11ernpo. f'tCTI nous eUStNEH TO THE OEFENOANT: A civil NAME STATEMINT compteonr n.• l>Mn t1i.1 "' ,,. 1>t•ln· Tiie to11ow1no 1Mr10n1 ••• doing ltll a940ln\l you, II YOU wlSll IO delelld l>Usoneu ••: 1111\ ........ ,,'°"must, Wtlllln lO O.ys INSTA TUNE ... , s. BeKll, u .. t•r tn11. s.ummoM '' urv•d on you, H•bf•. CA lole wtth Ill•• coun • •rtl ten r.sl)Onw • No<OlllS G. Burger. , .. , Pt.cenU• to IM comc>1•1nt. Unl.s• you oo '°· A•e . Co\ .. ~. CA '1'2617 Your clel•ult will lie entered on •Pf>llc•· Rot.-P. ()pill, 2'10 E. ~Pl•, Hon of Ille .,..,,..,11. whoeh coula rewll ~c. Or-. CA '12 .. , tn 11•rn0Shmlllll ol ·-•· 14*1"0 ot Tl1ls 1M111nen is conaucteo Dy • money or Pf_I, or 01,.r reh•r re· QeMr•I .,.,,,,.,51111>. QIHSled on,,. Coml)l•tnL NICOlllS 8Uf9e' OATEO. Fel><uery 11, 1990 Tllll s1.11eme<11 wes 111.S wltll ,,. ue A. er.,.cn. County Clerk or Or•nDt C-ly on Ct•rll Novem~ •. 1990. By Amy Sllv•. Deputy EL01t•o a O'llOU•KE AnerM,_ .. y., QINerUI ............ '-lte• ow-. ... ~t1m {llJI 147 .... 1 ""_"..,: l!Utt ..... AlllHI Hid PHIA- Pul>llshed 0r"'911 Coast 0.11, P1to1, Nov, S, ll, "· 260 t• «31-IO PUBLIC NOTICE 1-----------"CTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATIMENT Tiie lollow11>9 IMfiO<\S ••• 001"9 bu.SIMS$.,. KLI NE OAIVE •• Gener al Parlne"lllPI, llJI L.•oun• Onyon Road, '--"' B .. cll. CA 9l4Sl M•rk C Brower, 3lll L•QuM C•nyonRO.O,'"-nea .. c11.cA9lUl SlePMn G Wolll. llJI l.•oun• C.n't<)n Ao.o. LequN S...:n, CA9l•S1 MiChHI Oenn os ICe•nY, Ull ~ .... ""'°" A-. 1.-N Buell. I CA '1'52 Trus bui1ne\\ •S conchA<lff by • 9t~r•I CNrtM'f'tn•O St""'9n G. WOiff This \l•temenl w•s tiled wllh Ille County Cterk OI Ora1191 <:o..nly on Oc· l(llle• 1. '"°· Fl4'77' PUCMISht<I Or .... C...sl Delly Pilot Nov. s. n. 19 i.. '"° ~1740 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS euStNESS NAMl!STATU"INT Tiie IOllOWtftQ .,..._ •• Oot"9 l>u•I· MSSH PROFESSIONAL AE PROOUC· TION SEAlllCE. 111 W. 51h Street, S.nlaAN,C..'1'270S Peter~. 2'31 S. O.lmler, S.nl• An•.CA '110S Tn1s °"''~' •-s conOu<ted oy •" tn· d1v1d11•f. Pettrsr... This ,.,1.,._1 wn 1o1eo ,,.,,,. tlle County Clerk ot O.an99 County on No .. moer4,t• Pl_.. Pul>hslltd Orallgt C:O.SI o.lly Pilot "°v s. 11. 19, 2'. "'° Q 72.., PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICll TO c••orron Of' euut Tlt ... SPa• I Sect. .... , -61t7 11.C.C..I NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN 10 tfte Credllors ol RALPH WILLIAMS •1141 JUDI W.flt((HT, rr.,sHron, WftDM l>uSlnus addres• j1 331• Meryl•1141 Clrtle, Cily ol Cos .. MtM, Count, ol Or•noe, s .. 1. of C.lllomle, Ille\• llulk l••Ml•r IS -lo tie ,.... to T llACI JO FANNIN -AANOALL LESTE• FANNIN. Tr .. sler-,.-llu\IMSS .odreu IS 2•711 C¥lol• Ori.,., City ol Mlnoon V,.IO, County of 0.91199. State ot C•t 1torn.e. Tiie Pf-rty 10 be lr•n>lerreo Ii ducrl!Md In 91Mret es. All 1lock In lr•de, 11"1\lf*'• equipment •nd 9000 will of lhill Auto Oet•ll l>uMnHs llrlOWn o '"COSTAL CAA CARE"' •nd IOC•led •t 1141 '"O"' N~ Blvd .. Coly of Coll• IOMw. C'.ounly of Or91199, Slete ol Ci1htorn••~ ... Tne l>lollk tr•nller woll l>e co•,.umnwteo on or •lltr I,. 2111 C141Y or No.,....-r. t• •I 10 00 A.M •t WESTERN MUTUAL ESCROW CO RP . ATTN . MAR IL YN WESTMOAEL4NO. WllOM eddreu Ii 14081 So Yortw St .. Sutl• IOI. Tuslon, CA 92..0. Tll•t llW l•ll O.le ror hl•ng cta11n1 in trw eKr-reter....s IO,,.,_ " Hoveml>er 20, 1•. So ter •• Is llnown 10 the Tr•nolerws, •II 11u$1....U N~ •nd •ddreues uwd Dy,,. Tr.,Slercws tor ,,.. p.t\l lftrtt -,..rs ere S.rn. 0•1.0. Oct-• JO, '"° Trao Jo F....,ln A-II Lester F•nnln Tret>SlerHS Pul>h•lled Or-eoa .. Delly PllOI HOV. s. '"° ~I- PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF GEORGE C. KEISER ANO OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE '1...., NO. A·106471. Pu1>11sr.t<1 Or-eo.11 o.11, P11e11 T o a I I h e I r s ' Nov. $, 12, 1', 24. '"° "*""° d It beneficiaries, ere ors P UBLIC NOTICE and contingent creditors of ------..,....-George C. Keiser of "CT1T1ouseuS1Nas 1 rvine California and NAMli STAT•MINT • ' Tne 1000••"9 ,,.rson• ••• 00•"9 persons who ma Y be 11U$1neu H otherwise interested In the STRATA EXPl.OA•TION, INC -will and/or estate: 1ttO·U PROGRAM ; STRATA • · bee f"led EXPLORArtON INC -"IO·U A petition has n I !'AOGAAM. 1t01 E.si umoer1 A<*!. by Tanis B. Keiser In the ~==~~================,-1su11e101,LAH•1><•.CA -.i1 Superior Court of Orange cor!!':~:10~':"1°.'~:one~~-~:" ... ~:;~ County requesting that • autumn shoe sale ... PRICES IN EFFECT THRU NOV. 22 regular 12.99to15.99 9.98 regular 16.99 to 21a99 12.98 regular 22.99 .t up 14.98 .............. frofll,......., llOOkl • Big ohOloMI BUI atnl .. lnoamtlfMel Ao.o,s..11e1oi.LA H•1><•.CA-.i1 Tanis B. Kei ser be ap-Tn .. Du>H•U •I conOucted l>V •po i nted a S ·personal tom•'*" i>M•ner..,.,., rep resent at i ve to ad· ~~P~~°itATtOH, tNC minister the estate of z.,_, r T•1um, George C. Keiser (under Tr111 : .. ~:! ••• ,,190 .. ,111111e the _ ln d~pe ndent Ad· county C1tr11 ot Or•nve coun1, on mln1strat1on of Estates Novemoer 4, 1• Act). The petition Is set for ,., .... 1 hearing in Dept. No. 3 at Pu1>11•'*' or-~·· 0••1• PllOI 700 Civic Center Drive, _tlov. s. 121 "• 2•. 1• ...u.eo West, in the City of Santa PUBLIC NOTICE Ana, California on Nov· f'ICTITIOUS•USINHS ember 2S, 1980 at 10:00 NAMCSTATliM•NT a.m. T,,. 1011-1119 tM•sons ••• dolftt IF YOU OBJECT to the M •i:si::AN c&o ~ AS· granting of !he petition, SOCIATES, 101• Pomon• Ave.·A, YOU Should either appear Cost•~. c.. t2627 et the hear I no and state Ao1>e rt o. Pelerson, uu your o~ectlons ·or file· Crestmore, Riverside, C.. ltt · ti Ith t .. -ten Slroul), 102' Pomont Ave.-A, Wr en JeC OOS W ,...,. "'s•• "" ... c.. ttu1 court ~ore the hearing. Tllh l>Uslnn• la conouct.0 l>Y • Your appearance may be 99,,...91 =-=~~tenon In person or by your at· Tiiis SIM-' wes 111.0 wltft Ille torney. Co1U1ly Cieri! or Or•nve County on I F Y 0 U A R E A Novem11tr~.1•· CREDITOR or a cont· Pw1>11Sfled 0renee eo.st o.;~1= lngent creditor of the de· "°'· s. 11. "· i... •• 4llWll ceased, you must fll• vour claim with the court or PUBUC NOTICE present It to the personal f'tCTtnous eu11NHS representative appointed NAMCITATUMNT by the court within four ,.,. fa11ooo1ne '*''°" 1• dOlft9 eus•· months from the date of ,.."t!'v TECH, uot1 c.,1s1r•110 first Issuance of letters as L•ne, HWIC•fll'°ll e.ec11. c..,.. provided In Section 700 of M•rlly n J .. 11 c ••• ,,.,. no.• the Probate Code of ~,.~=--~. H11Mr11et.,. ... ,,, California. The time for Till• ...... 11 c-..Ctect llY an In· fll lng clai ms will not e•t)lre flvldwel. prior to four months from '"" ~-~:'~1ee1 wjtll tM the date of th• hearing CollfllY Clerk of O.•ltilt CO\lftlY Oft noticed abc>Ye. Howm-4, 1-. YOU MAY EXAMINE ,.,.. .. _ o..-. eo.,t o.i~'= the file kept by the court. ~ .... s. 11. "·a.. 1teo -•• If you are Interested In the -----------estate, you mev fll• • re-, PVluc NOTICE quest with the court It re· --------celve special nottce of the ••cnt\OUt eu11 .. au Inventory of est• .... ts , ... =i:T!.r~".~, "'"'and of the detltlOftl, •c· ..,..,...,.: counts and rt1torts 1 •oac1n "'"D AND U · detcrlt.d In SecUGft t200 ' IOCIAfH, ... _.. C-.. .......... of tht QUtornle Probe~ ._. ..... ,c:.w-••Mtr,CA ..... ~--• ...., _ _, L,IM. 141 ....... '-MVW· "'rt.::~u:.-=l~ um •· ~a.... ''=•=--~.==-:-=-:.Witter a M• ·At•• J_L_ilillllll!ll!~~~S!l.!!l!!g~~~Jd"--· .... ~~ , •• ,. ., '"''. ttl .... ".&JM ~ Clllllr Dr ..... c:::., ?:\: =-~-'911My ell ... .,.,. .._ Cl • .....,.,.. !.~ ' ~1-:.a.. "'"Sa ~ ... ~~1 ·~,.....,...~~·~S!tt!!til••~t:l. . I' I I I I \ I i OBITUARIES PVaucNOl'ICS 'tenn.. IUMllUI ....... ITAT&fll9•T T•e lell-l!lt N r Mfl II t eltlf lllllUleU•. ~O IV COCH, ..uJ S.11 CJtCle, """" ..... llNdl.C... .... •11o11i. H ...... ~ ... I Clrtle, Mllllt ..... IMctl, CA. ftWt TIMI ....._. ll ~ D • .,_ !Mitt ....... 1"81111NH,5COWI flllt ......,_, w" lllM wllfl Ille C-tv Cielll Of o .. "91 e...,,,, Oft °'"'"' ...... • f'l47UI P'*llMd or-. OMlll O.tlY Pllol Ocl. U, 1', Ho•. S, u. 1• 42U·• PVBUC NOTICE PVllUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOW 9Ulflllall MAMa ~TAT .... lllT 111• 1•11..ifl!I ..,_, .,. "'"' IUilfltH Ml HARIC>ft•f'AC.,IC MOltTGAOl IHVl$Toi.s ..... ltol Oo"' Slr .. I, lolll• 14', .......,... .. ec.,, Gellf#ftle ~ He lllol•Pecllte Morlgege In ¥ff IOU. lflC,,. c.lllornl• c.._•lleti. ••Ot Oove Slt .. I 210 , Newporl ••e<!I, ~11411'11'• t..O lliociotn ,, SD«1, 111111 Oo# Stt•I 210, N.....,,-t 9Hc111C.lllorn1e •M60 Tllll DllStMH 11 COlll4uCttHI by it PU•UC NOTICE PtJauc NOTICE PUBLIC NOTJCE Pt1BLIC NOTIC& 'ICTITIOUI eu•n•a.& l'IC'TITIOUS IUIU•EU "CTlf lOUI IUMNIU ~IUC NOTIC. ....... ITATIMINT IUM91TATaMeMT MAMelTAYe ... MT TMfe w111 •e,_..1C ...,"'9lfl 11169 Tiie 1o1,.,.;119 _...,. It doing D.,.I· TM '9llOWll\9 "'"°" II delng ~~ Tiie IOllOW!ft9 .. ltOfl Ii dOo/I@ Dtnl INrO Ill-el Ille ee-11-~ neu M I neu ••: neu H . 01\lrl<I. ltttO "I' S4net. H-1"tf*I YACMTIHO CONSULTANTS, J.I" OAICGLEH l"llOPl"Tll.S, LTD., OIAMOHO WMOLISALE l'l!H le.ell, Ca., t»U, ... ,,..,..y, ....,.,. VI• ~ Ho 1, ..._. .. e<ll, 141~ ~llld, El T .. o, CA th» CO,. 11)1 W..lrnlMlel', GMl.I "'-M. emller 1i, 1 .... e l f•M II 11t f8<(I GelllOrlW•t'M1 "-'d L. R1111tltft, t.762 S..,.,.. c e111o;n1• ti.V o..r_. .. , of _._.119 lllferlNllltft ,. .. ltOOHl o. He911\, 1n Vlrt lnl•1 1Mrw1M,l!lf-.CA'1QO JOELLA J EAN SELIOA, 1>s1 O•IClll\f Ille *•lrltl'• .... _. 011.,t Pie<' c..t. Me ... Gelllorllie lliU Tlllt 011>1nen Is COftducted lly • 1 w .. 11n1n'9er, Goti. N•M, C.elll41rnle '""ffl Ho--11 tfMll •1111<•11-Nt\ Tiiis MlneU 15 c-...CIMI OJ ti' In· llmllff 119'1Mr1111C>. 92U / Ille Melrlh M"Cle Eesy ellO CllHtf dt¥1o...tl. Rontld L. Ru>l>lon lfttl D<W""''" COl\OllCltO Ot an 111 Oe•tl-C.111 ... Pf'OQf•mi.. R-" o . 11"0•11 Thi. .i. .. .._1 We\ filed Wtlll .... a1 .. d11•I PuDlt"'9d Ortllle C:O.M 0 .. 1, PllO(; ' Tiiis ~ wel fllff w•tll Ille! C:O<Hlly Cter• of Or-GollnlY on Ck· Joell• J .. n Sehl• Nov s, •,I, 1t9) 4Al1-90 C-ty cl.flt OI OrM191 Gqvl\ly on Oc· IObel 21, '*· Tn" •t.•-· We\ 11190 wlln .... .-r11, 1•. 1 ,.,.,,,, Co11n1y Clel'k Of 0<•1199 County on Oc· PUBLIC NOTICE jlf '1 .. IM PuOll"*I Oret\99 Goe\I Dilll'f Piiot IODel 21, 1'90 P11011"'90 OrenQe Goetl Delly Pllol, Oct 2,, Nov. J, 11, It, 19'0 4U3·IO ..... tit Oc1. 29. Hov,), 11, 1t, 1• ~17-IO --P11DlllN4 0r•"9f Goett Delly Piiot, NOTICE OF D•ATH OP,f PUBLIC NOTICE 0<1. H. No•. s, n, "· '"° .,, • ..., KATHRYN 0 . NELSON, 1' TAD -Rqlh Anne Greenwood lan't com· plaiDlal. 8ut four buly children meana a lot al drivial and be.r 1tatlon wa1on otl~n aeema Uk• a t.Ul. PICT TICMn IUStNeH ITATllMllNT Tiie loll wing P••Hn 11 doing but-HM; OCeAH r.•Y CLUNl ltS. fttJ E. ~11r~.a:::--•· L..-a.ec11. 11m11ed _.,,..,,,,p, H-·Pe<lfk ~1n11e•IO<'• Geftor .i ,..,1ner lliOlleft J. 5"tr PretOltnl C01JMI••• pertner , Tnlt sw-1 Wff lllecl w1tn tile Coli!llY Cletk of Of-County on O< • .... n .1-. • I ,..,m PUBLIC NOTICE --;;oTiCETOCOtlTIACTOAS PUBLIC NOTICE aka KATHRYN DUNaAll.r "cr1n ou11u,1N11s---.. CALL1No,.0••1os ~:~ff1':,•NAT~D AOD~:I .. NAMISJATIMINT Sc11001 o'""''· NEWPOIH ·M ES" F1CT1T1ous 1us1Hus MINISTER EST•T• Ho.!I Th• lollowtno perM>nl .,. 001n9 UNIFIEO SCHOOL OtSTAICT NAME STATEMENT " .. °"''""' n : 810 o..dllne l 00 o'ctoo p.m. 01 Tiie 1011ow1no perM>nl e1e 001n1 A·106401. , J NAllRAHG HOME MOVIES, l:IOO v..,,,•.l~ll.~YB:~:cv:'.':'~~~iectni1. °"''~'J;~ COAST PARTY SALES, T 0 a I I h e i r s.' lflillo It. -II••· •11 S.1-A,..-. LMA119ete6, C.llfonlle-.. Tllb llull-I• Uf'IOllCl.td 11y M lrldlvldloel. ...,,lo "· Alneflll• Tlllt s.-i -• llled wllh IN Collftty Clorll of Or•noe c:.o..n1v on Oc-•.1• 'S>il!lllSltedj)r-Coe•I 0.llY PolOl, ()(1. tt. No¥. s, tJ, "· '* •is.ea PUBLIC NOTICE AO.ms., • 27H, Colle Mew , Ce. n•» "' b f i · i d · Kutdlp S1ngr.~.1JOO Ad•m•. s1.coue-.cA•w1 Jt?t W.-•.S.nuAne,Ge.91/<M ene c1ares, e re 1tors •JIH,ColleMeW,Ge m» PrOlt<I ldenltllullon N•me. Connie C. -Rooerl (; S,new, a n d COOtinge f\t CreditOrSoff B 1"'" MA I NTENANCE CARPENTRY 3'21W Moore,Sent•Ane,Ge 91104 K h D N I k N••inder K•Y• ll•mOr•. IVV w 0 A I( TH R 0 u G H 0 u T THE I Tn11 DulHwl\ tl conauclto DY •n at ryn . e son , a a -----------·~m•. •llH.OKi.Meu.ee nut 01sTRICT ,~,,,,o ... 11n..WM111C1end..,,1.1 Kathryn Dunba r Ne lson of ,.CTITIOUS •UllNIH Tiit< Oo.IMnft< •I Condll<lf'd Dy .,. ·~ NAMlllTATIMaNT ino•••OY•llnu~endwll•t P1euP1enureon111e:2'ti·BBeer R-t c~w Seal Beach , Callfornla , "",..._"' ....._.. -dolno ._,. N K en-• S•Ng~~~e~~Hi~~ G•llEN ,,..,j co' .. "~:. •r.:~: ~~n~'°co'::~., •;: atnhd pe_rsoni st whot~~V tbeh Mte •s.. T"" .... ,.,.,.... ••l 111ec1 •11n ,.,. • -o erw 1se n eres ""' n e Health Classes f'H1~ Pubtl-OrM9 CNll Delly Pilot. Ckl. Jl, lt, Ho¥. J, 12, '"° •191.tO ~I.AMA"' ENTERPRISES. 11 .. l Co11n1y Ct••• ot Or•nve C011ftlY Oft Ille •DO .. ·ne~ 5'11ool 01str1<1 ol I Novt mOe< •. l'illO I f'Klllc Goes.I Hlghwey, H11nl1nglon NovwmOtr•, l'llO. O•enoe eo..nty, Geltlornt•, •Clt"ll by !01-l Wiii and/Or estate: .-... c.lltorni.tlMI ...... ,. •no ""°"'" Ill Go•ern1n9 Boerd. Puott•i.G D<.,oe Goe•• Oe11y P•to1 A petition has been fi led ~•r•ldlne ~oen Begtedl, 11••1 P1101tll>ed Or-Goest D•oly Pilot n •' • 'n •It•, re I• r' •a lo • • Nov S, 1119, i., t'illO O/J·IO b R Do Id T k . i ~tcitl< Goett HIQl'lwey, H11nllnglon s 11 "l• 1~ O)O-IO Ot~TRtCI Wiii re«•••"° 10. 11111 y • na omp in s n PUBLIC NOTICE Planned at OCC _,.cll.c..tlforlll•tlMI No•. • • • • 1 no1 ••t•• ,,.._, 111e •bo,,.·•i.ted .,.,.., PUBLIC NOTICE the Superior Court of J•mu Or••lcr c1111e r. ''" 4 s PUBLIC NOTICE M•ltO btO' tor 111e •w••O ot • contraci 1 Orange Coun ty reques t ing "~C:,:.~C::!:~!':::s =:-'A-. OowNy, c.o1110tnl• fo~::=:0::~.,,ec1•n 1,,. ptac• l'ICT1T1ouu us1Nns that R. Donald Tompkins .T.~101~~;·~~'~'';:';' !!'i:: •• ~=;~~_cond11ctt4 by • "CT1 T1ous~u11N1EU 1oe .. 111oed •DOw, -sun r.e -neo '"' t:i~~!T:,.1',~~~ ... ~ .. dotnQ be appointed as personal Health awareness prosrams are scheduled dur· iina November by Oran1e Coast College's Student •Health Service to focus on specific problems. SOCIA TES, 11!01 '"""" 81\fd .. T11111n Gereldl .. BeQledl Th• IO~.:!:T::l~~N.~. 001n9 ::::::.~~~::~:"" ., Ille _,,,. .,.. .. ~~·~EASING, lJJ1 l.•9un• ,. rep ~etse n ttaht iv e tt ot a df· ,.._ ,..._ 011•lntu•s . Thert wtll -• N•A ~~11 r-q"lrt o m In IS er e es a e 0 ...... -Tiii• 1telemenl we1 filed will! l/M --~· ~ ~ nvon Ro.od, L"llU<W Bt•ch CA 91oS2 K h D N I k P•ul Warner l rumfle tO,t la..,ntyClerk OI0<11n9t GollnlyonOc· GNU THINGS MANU F AC to•e•cn >elolD•ddocumentslo M•rk C.Btowe•.llllLd(luMC•· at ryn . eson , a 8 Mo1W11<!1 8eY.So.L""1W1.Ce.t101 1-r:IO.IW . TURING, us E. 111n SI••••· Co\I• ou•••n1 .. 1nert111rn1ngoodcond111on nvonRo.O,L"OVn•Bucn,C.A<nul Ka thryn D u n b ar N e ls on Tiii• ll<nlMU ,, condll<led by en tn 1'147UI Mo •. Celllorno•9'2•U w1tnln N, A cr..o •lttr tne Otd ooen1n9 MtCll•PI o ...... , Ke•ny, HJ/ (und e r the Inde p e ndent', Information tables wlll be set up in the college quad on the proaram dates between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m . and experts are scheduled to answer ques· tlona and distribute materials to the P'fblic. Proarams at the Costa Mesa school include: dtvld11al. 1"11ofltned Or-Goest 0.1ty P1to1, Do119tes F. Jtn•11. •/1S2 H•••n °••• La9un• Ca11von Rooo L•9une Be.cl\ IAd · t t • f E t t Pa11I W.Brumfleld 0<1.l1,2t.Hov.S.ll,l.. tllt..O Ron Ort .. , Hunl1n91on 8eull, E•th b10 m11•I tonlo;m •no be CA9l•Sl ' ' miOIS ra IOn 0 S a e s I Tlllt Itel•"*'' WM fifed wllh llte ·---------C•lllorn••~ '•"'°"''w10111e contut1do<u .... nh Tnos bUS•t\hS " conducted by~ A c t ). The petition is set fo r . COlllllY Clelll OI Orlln(lt Gollnty Oii Oc· K•ren z. Jenen, /HJ H•••n Ro<k Ettn l>t<l "'"" "" accom1>4n1PO ov oeneral .,..,.,,.,,,,,,p hearing ~n Dept . N o . 3 at 1-1 10 ,.., l PU'BLIC NOTICE Onve, HunllnQton Stach, C•1ttorn1• tne securtly re•trrea 10 1n I~ contract Mict>atl o.tnn" Kedny 7 OO C • C t D i • . 1'147taa -----------nw documtnn •nd 0¥ Ille ttSI ol PIOC>Ostd Tn•• •WtetnHll """ lol~ Wtlll '""I IVIC en er r v e, I PuDll"*I Or•noo Goe1t Oalty Piiot l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS T1111 b11s1neu •• <onOutted by • suocontrectors, Counly C.lerk ot o'""ll" County on Ot Wes t ,' tn the C1t v OI S~nta -Nov. 6 , "Planned Parenthood by the Planned Parenthood organization; -Nov. 13, "Communicable Diseases" by the Oranae County Health Department; 0c1.u .21,1t,Ho•.S,t• ••••• HAMEITATIMENT t;ien•r•t P..-tner~tp. rneo1srR1CT •-rve111>e••11n110 10.-,1.1• IAna, California o n N o v · ltU:Sln•H•'· TPus s:tAte-ment was. flled wUh tM 1rreg ul•rH1e\ or 1ntorn"•hl1es 1n any PuOlisneo Orange C.Od\' Odd'f Pilot ' • Tiie lollowtno "''°"' ••• doing 0 . F. Jenen ••l•<I eny or all D•O~ or 10 ....... •ny I FIO,., ember 25 1980 a t 10. 00 PUBLIC NOTICE (I> WEST COAST INDUSTRIES. County Clerk Of Or..-oe Goun1y on Oc Ot05 ortn tr. DtOO•nlJ NO• s 11, 19 l•. l'illO H1¥ 80 I a. m --------------1 m BANOINI MOUNTAIN, m SKI tol>er 27, 1911>. The 01srR1c1 ,,., 001a1ne<1 ••om : -· IF YOU OBJECT to the • -Nov. 20, "Your Heart -Know It" by the American Heart Association. f'ICTITIOUI IUllNIH NAME ITATIMaNT The following per1on 11 doing Dlls lMUH: '&ANOI NI MOUNTAI N, •nd t•I 1'1.,111 1"41 Otrtt<lor ot tr. Oe1M1rtmen1 ol In· PUBLIC NOTICE I f .• FLATLANDER FLASKS, UU Oakoi. PUbltS/WO 0r•"9P C0.'1 Oe•t• Ptlot, clultrt•I Rttatoon< the QOnt••• P'"•all gr an ting 0 the pet 1 t10n, A••. cos•• w.w . CA ,,.i. 0<:1. 1•. Ho• s, 11. "· t'llO o,..eo 1no ••t• ot per ootm ••oo• 1n 1ne you s hould either a ppear t Oevlcl Allan 0.1to, l11S Oakote IOC•1•h '" "'f"tn ln•S .. or• '' to °" FICflftOUJ BUSI NESS lat the hearing and State A•t .CosleW.w ,CA'26i. PUBLIC NOTICE Ptrtorm.o for ucn cr•ll or 1y~ ol NAMESUTIEMIENT b . t • f .I BLUE CLOVER MUSIC, JI .. Co11 nlry Cl11ll Or•••. Coua Meu, Gel ifa1111e t1'1' Roelle Louise Edw.,ds, 1i.1 Min· "°'llmen -to •ttcut• th• ton I Tn• tot1ow1no IM!•10ft "do,,19 bu" your 0 1eC 1~nS O r I e netol• Aw .. CosleMtw .CA'2•:i. FICTITIOUSIUSINIH lrl<I r~ ,., ..... on Iii• •• tn•' """"' writte n ob1ect 1ons With t h e Tllh 1M11tneu ,, conducted by . NAME STATIEMIENT DISTRICT OlloU •o<••ea •• 11)1 THE REI C:OMPAN'r )QJI A :.0 court before the hear ing. ·British Barn Backed Jeffrey Scott St-en, ll• Coun1y Ctuo Ort ... Coste Meu. C.llfor111e 92'2' Thll -.ll\eS It ConGllcled o, en lllOl•I-. venere l perlnerslllp The 1011ow1n1 perso111 .,. clo1n9 Pl•<enlt• ~ CO\ll ~Cl> •1•11 BrddlordPf .Sant•An•.CA'l1/0I Yo r appearance m ay be i Tiits ::!i"!:~1°=:!~vltltd wt111 ,,,,. °"'"~~,!-~'ERLAKE. 010 ce mp11• ~=~·:,~ot,!'::·:= .. °"or':~:~.~ !>o B~~~~~~~~a~·.~~~~~t',"' tn ~rson or by your a t- Co..nty Ct•1tk of OrMQB County on<><· o .. ,, •• S1111e 110, Newpar1 Buen. the 1ot1•H• Thi\ O..Str"'" '' <onaucl"<I Dy•"'" torney. LONDON CAP) -The Society for the Protec· lion of Ancient Buildings says the old British barn Jeff Stewer1 T~I 1.-...nt wff flled •1111 IM c ..... 1., Cle<lt of Orenoe County on tober 11, ,..,, lol>er 10, ,... 1'14m• Cel1~c:;-,n~:i Sel\<ntl, 1•10 G"nCluD .,;:;:, t,'!":": .,:,,,""'!":..o~,:'o:~·:;; a •••Ou••Rttr,.,d Edward I"'""'• I F Y 0 U A R E A P110llllled Orenoe Coeu 0.11, PllOI Ro.a. Sou-I. Alb<•q11uq .... Nt• toQhl Ill-· Tne ··~ lor ,..,,,.,.. rn .................... ltlecl Wtln '"" c RE DI TOR or a cont - Ocl is. 11• n. No•. s. ,.., , .. 1.., Me••<ouio; •nd o••rt•me -· v-.11 o. •• 1ust I ~':"'ro':; ot Oo-•n~ Goun•• on<>< ingent c reditor of the d e · is aufferine frorn neglect and has launched-. serious campaign to recycle many dilapidated structures all over England. "'•nu P..Ollt.lleO Or-Goel! 0.1ly P1lol, 0c1. 11, ,., Ho•. s, n. '"° ••2..0 PUBLIC NOTICE Gton• J s.n<Mi. 1•20 Gvnt1110 •·m• ano one n.11 0 ' cea sed v ou must file you r II •hell~ nWl\CMll0tv upon,,.. CON Ft001' • Ro.a, SOUl,,_SI, AlbllqverQ..e, New TRACTOR IO .,nom lllt conlr.ttt is PubltSnrd °'""Of Co>a\t Oa11y PolOI Claim With the COUr l Or Me•~~~:!ass•ncntt. ,.,0 G11nct11b •*••a..i. -_, •"Y woc:on1rac1or No~i •~ 2!! t"9t.I u >J 1111 present tl to the personal "Their traditional materials make them e-..-pensive to maintain," a society statement said. PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI •USINISS NAMS ITATIEMaNT The loll-Ing penon ll do•no 0..11· n1\1 •s : Ro•d. Sou•11-u. A1o..q ... ,q ... N•* ""°"' n1m, 10 p.oy not •en ,,..,. '"" C NOTICE r e presentative appointe d Mn .Jco lll.\)S •••O •1>t<1f1eo rat•• to an w0t•menl P UBLI by the court w ithin fo ur TileOdOf• M Brode,.n, 0 20 C•rn •1:::.,Pc'o0n""•,-"1' '""m '" ~ •'ec"1'°" ot I months from the date of "Unless they can be made viable for apiculture or freed for altemaUve uses, few will remain." "CTIT10US IUSINeSS NAMI ITATIM•NT Tn• loll-Ing 119llOM ere 0011\Q ousine-s1as.: INTERNATIONAL TRADE CO., 1..,11 Ott P<edO A¥e , S..1lt It, O•n• Potnl, Ce. '161'1 ""' Ort¥e, Sulla 110, Newpon Beech, ·--STATIEMENTOF WITHDRAWAL I cetllorn•• '2MO No D•oou mav .... 1nar•w "" 0<d •or I FROM PARTNERSHIP f 1 rs I Issuance of letters aS' Roscoe M c Ke .. 11en, •OOO d pt'rtOO Ol tOtly h•• (Oi 0•r• .... , OPERATINGUNDEA provided In Section 700 o f The barns provide opportunities to study lar1ely miknown forms of medieval architecture, the society saya. FEATHER N LEAF, ltSJ3 Be.Ch Bl•d., Hunllnoton le.ell. Getllor111e 91641 Erf\M Giecl1k, Jc. Vi• A199r•, S..n Clemente, Ge. 9Z.71 This 1>1111.-• •• conovcted by an 1n· dl•I011e1. M•<Althur BoYl••era, Suitt •~. IM O•lt Ml Jor lhe openon9ot boa• I FICTITIOUS 9USINIESS NAME I p b • t C d f NewPorl8Hcll,Celllorn1•.,W.O Ap.oyrnenlbon04nd .. pertorm•nctJ Tn• toliow•nQ pu,ons he•e lthe ro a e 0 e 0 Tllos oustnen " cond11cted bv • bOnd "''"be rt<1<11r..i P••O• 10 t<tLu w•tndrawn., ~,,.,., '""'""" ''°"' California. The time fo r QeMr•lpertne~ll1p, loonOllM<onlr«LTntp•v-mtntbond l tl\t P•rlntrsnop opetaltnQ 1<ndt• '"" flftng claims Wtll not e X· n -e M. Broderock ...... 0. tn the lorm stl lorlh '" Ille lltttll""\ """""'' n•m• 01 BYRON s Ip re p r ' or to four m o nths CA•UON CHARLENE C. CAAL.SON. let!Oent of Colt. Mew, C.. Pe1Md ew•y on Novem-i, 1•. 5119 I• 1111¥1...i e., 11•1 ll11il>en4 WeymeM Ce11to11 ol Go.le -· Ge., 1 llOfl w..,,.. CMlllOfl of Colt. ..... Ge., • .....,....,.. Gen· dee·• -•• of ,,,,,.,., c:. .. 0 1on• Ce1l10ft, IEtln C81l1on end M.,c1 GMI_. ell of O.t. Mew, Ge., 1 ... len C,,.n_ Eslrettlfll of Co•tne, C.. ~ MMllYft a.ticoo of C¥r1-. c.. •-e11d l 1re11dclllldren. Memort•I _,,ICH wOI be .... 0 Oft n ......... .,. Novem-•• 1 .. 91 •:OOPM 91 -Newport Meu Cfl1hll•" Center. Pllvete IMer,.....I •I l'ore1t Lewn Memorlel Peril, Go¥1M, c.. Pitre• l rotll8'1 a.II l roedwev Morl11•r'f' dlte<IAIU . MU Ila LL EONA P. HUllELL. pes..., •••Y on No-*9r •. 1• In Go.le Mew . C•. lom In Me~I•, Kenw1 on 0.C.mber t , .... $ur¥1WO "Y e 10¥11\9 llllw..nd, E4wln M. H-11 of Coste Mew, C.. 2 de..,,.9" Merle. Kell Of Newporl heel!, Ce . e nd Vlr9lnla Mefteol of SMt F1encl1<0, Ge., -.._, I urenddlOdr..,, 1 0!"9•111enoct1lldr., •NI 1 .,._..,,.Ht11ren«lllld. 1'11-1 "'41Y <•II •I -mot1uerv on T""rlldey, November J, ,.., f1om 11 :OOAM lo J:OOPM. Mna of ltle Rewrrectlon wlll be held on Frldev. November 7, ••al t :MIAM •• SI. Joeclllm'• CelllOllt Cll11rc11 "'"" MOMIOl\Or Tllomu Nevin, pntor, olliclet1119. Prl••I• c.omm1t1e1 • Pec:lflc View Memor111 Perl!. Se"'l<ei -Ille direction Of Herbor ..._,.,_ 011•• Mor1.,.ry, Gost•-.~71 'UllCINI J EAN CREA JENKINS, •Ott U . e 1W1ti¥e of Monttceoo, 1111no11. PesMO ewer on "'1ottdr/, How<nber i , ,.., el Peclflu .._i1e1, HllMll\Glon leecl" Ge. Mn.. .-IM llad -Ille -lety ed11or end lier nu1bend Jolln L, Jenkins lleO -the ..,1orno11vw editOt IOt IM GN<-Trlti.aw, bolll retiring Seecllff Flnencte1 C0tpore11on, • Oe tewe1e '°'Pof'etion, 11'12 BHCll Bl¥d ., S11lle '• H1111llngl011 8eecll, Gel lfornl• 92647 Tiiis 1>1111nen h <0t •d11clecl lty • c0tparatton. SNcllff l'lnenclet Gor'p. J-a.verll<ll, Pretillllnt In lUO. 5119 "--' lo the Tucson erff Tllil ~......,_1 wn fifed wllfl IN afwr Mr. JenlolM' de9111 In 19S1. SM co .. n ly Cle<k of Or•noe ~tv on u me to Hllntlnoton 8NCll. C.. In 1971. Ocrt-a, ••· Sl>e w .. • memtltr of Ille Firsl United 1'1•7'• Melllodht Cllurch of Hunt111eton P..i.ll-Or-CM•I Detlir Ptlol, h•C" S...V•••no •rt • 11-on Jey Oct l1 1' Ho¥ j u t• •U.-.0 C N0trl1 -l"-votll•r c-.e _ · ' ' ' • ' J Nor"' b0411 ol Hunt1"91or> 1eec11, Ce • I •11i.r Et0tM O<r of Molw..,kee. PUBLIC NOTICE Wtt<onton She _, prec-.i 1n ot•I" ----------llY • ~r Jeen H«Yit 1n 1t77. Memor,.t Mnrkes will De c-ted on Suftde,. No¥embar •. HM el l :OOPM el Ute FINI United Met-1•1 c1111rcn of H""'lnvton Beac:ll. Int.,.. .,..,., will I ... p1.ce., Memorlel Petit CemettrY In S.Oille, 1111no11. TM fem•· ly ~ contrlbUllon• De mede to Ille Finl Unlled Melhoclill Ch11rcfl B111ldlno F11no. Pierce Bra111ers Sm11111· MOrtu.ery director• )J6..t"' II.AN f'UTTl[N ,.CTI TIOUI •Ul lNIU MAME ITATIMINT TM foll_,ng per-. II dOong l>llSI• neu •1. RODGERS OISTAIBUTING, IOS.1 8e<t\le r A111er Aven"•• Fountatn Velley, Gelllornl• '270f Mertl Aten Rodgert, :IClll I -· ltd• Circle, H11nlln91on Beacn. Celllomi•.,._ Tllil ~·ti cono..cled Dy .,. on· dl¥i0~. Mor• Roe1Q11r1 Tntl tie-wff ltlecl wllll Ille County Clelll of Or-County on Oc ·-· 17, 19'0 ,1 .. 111 P110llllled Orenoe Goel4 0.lly PtlOI, Ocl. 7'1, N ..... S, 12, It, 1.. OIJ.tO PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI •ultNalS NAMa STATIMaNT OIRIC ARIE VAN PUTTEN, I t'll· dent ol H•••linoton Beech. Ge s.lnce 1tS1. PetMO ewev on Novwmber J. '"°· He --• N llV• Of Holl end. He II ..,1.,,,.d oy lllJ wife Cornell• Ven P11I· ten ol H11ntlft9ton B••cll, Ca,. J deuglllert Heflny Deering ol H11nl· ln9lon Beech, C• .. Rlene V•n· derLl.-n Of Gdlden Gro11e, Ge. enO Anni• Go•erclt 01 Holl•nd , • 11••1>d<lllldr.,. end 1 oru1-orenc1e11110 Services will De lleld on Wednetdav. No¥ember S, lteo •I 1.00PM tn Herbo< Lewn Memorlel CfWlpel Wttll Rev. Th• followlno perlOnl .,. ao1n9 KurMy Fr--. of Ille Prinn ol IM"lness n : PH C• L-1 .. O>llrcll offlclell"9. TEO l'ISM MARINE SERVICE, 59,,,1cn-llleOlrectlollof H«Dor HOI 0 11k• P ie ce , E~•I• Meu. LeWll·~ Oil .. "'°'1...,Y of Cotle CAllfomle nwt; P. 0 . -· 147•. Coote Me ... ,,.SSJ,l. ....... Getlf«ftle .,.. WIST Edw.,.d I . Plill, Jr., HOI O.ike ALBERT L. WEST. peued ewev tn Piece. Coile Mew, Cellfornle t2'2• 01•noe. c. on Ho....,ber 1, '*· He,, Jen1<e w. Fltlll, ttOI Ollll• Piece, tllr¥1¥ed Dy 1111 wlte \All Wtll ol Costa Me ... Gelltomle fli2' Emer-Gedlk Thi• slel-1 ,. .. tlled wllll lllt County C,.,., OI Or-Coun1v 011 Oc· tol>erll,IW . Tlllt $191-1 .... "'"" wllll tne Conlr•ttoocument> ,APPl,.1.1\NCE •• 8~•· ~"'"" ..... I I Col.Inly Clerk ot Ofenoe County on Oc· GovernoftQ 6oerd I St•n1on, c. ~ from the date of th e h ear · .. , .. 11. •-r 10, l'llO, Oo<othy H.,,,., F•>M•. I !he l1Cl1t1~ ous1neu "~"'· ·••t~ 1ng noticed above. ,.1o.w P11rtl\ai1nQ01rtc1or menl 1or t~ p.o(1,,..•"1•1> wo tttea '" YOU M AY EXAMINE ' Puo11..-Ot-C.O.st O••lv Pilot A"'Ju\I 191e '" tht (.ountv ol Or en90 Pul>lliJlecl Or-Goel! Oelly Pilot ()(t 1•, No¥ S. 12, ••. t'llO OU.IQ PUBLIC NOTICE f'tCTITIOUS •USINESS MAMa ITATllMENT TM IOllOwlnQ 119'-' ,, OOlno !><al· M UU'. ORANGE COAST MOBILE MUMTE•&YOU Alt_. .. .,. el La• , ... f'elrclolltl Drt¥e Soolt• "' ""' offk:.e ... 11111 1,,,1 ... c.e. mu P110llllled Or-Goe•I Deily PtlOI ()(! ,, ...... s, ll. I!. ,.. 0)0.IQ PUBLIC NOTICE I AAKE, tttl Settle AIWI Ave .• Cosl• "CTITIOUS IUSINIEU MtM, Ce '2617 NAME STATEMENT Jofln °'' Melmo<olsl 11. 190 S.ftta Tnt IOflO••"ll Pt•'><>fl• ••• OO•n(I AIWI A¥e., Coste -. C.. t1-27 o..s.ntu •s. Tiiis -!Nu •• c-.Cted Dy ... In· OINl,.G WI TH DUKE, J4S. Vo• dl¥IO..el C)j)orto, He-1 Beecn, Ge ., .. , JOhn Melrnqvht Lo111• Oen1t1 Fell•<•••. 0 01 This lie-I wn llltcl wolll lllt P•t•lte Ro.a. Nt..,POrl Buell. Ge Gollnty Cieri! of Or-Countv on Oc· 02otl ·-· 10, ,.., M•rt•n EtllOU, •JO? P•trl(• Roao. "1Qf1t Newport 8tech C. .,..,l P11llllllleel O<-Goest 0..1, Piiot This 011s1ntl> '' conOu<ltO bv • Ocl 1S1 21,2t, No•. S, I.. 0 14«1 limllt<I P¥1"""'"P PUBLIC NOTICE STATaMaHTOft LoutS 0 Fellec•r• TPU\ r..Laletnenl wa~ l1ltcJ w1tn l'W Counlv Cltr• ol Orenve Countv on Nove m'"r c, •990 AIANOONMINT 0 .. USE Oto 1'1~ "CTITIOUI IUSINIESS NAME PuDlts.-Orenoe Go41I D•lty PtlOI Tiie IOllootlnQ 1>«-. ,..,, --a No• s. 11, 19, 26, l'llO UJl.80 Ille UH ol Ille Ftctt11011\ Buslnt u He me C R E A T 01 V E H 0 M E IMPROVEMENT CONCEPTS. 11171 N•wlend, Spece 112, H11n11nglon 8H Cll,Ge.t2- Tlle F1c1111011• Bu\lneu H•m• rtftrr9d IO •bow WU llled In Ou090 Co11nty on No....,be, tl, 1919, Fiie No. Fl2'31t. Ttmo1ny L. O•••v. Gen•••• Building Gontrec:tor. lilt E. Tul•rt Ave., T11lert, Ge. 9327' Thi• IMalneu •M conoutted by an 1no1,,1a ... 1. Tln'fOtlly L. Oetey PUBLIC NOTICE fl'ICTITIOUS IU$1NEU NAME STATEMENT Tht following perM>ns e re ao1n9 ous1ness •-' A. NEWPOR T HOME LOtN TllUST 111 ... 8 NEWPORI HOME LOAN TRUST • llS. C NEWPORT HOME LOAN ",.. D NEWPORT HOME 1.0AN 11 Ill E NEWPOR I HOME LOAN "111 F NEWPOR I HOME L01"N ;; 119 G NEWPOR I HOM E LOAN "UO. •nd H NEWPORT '40ME LOAN "191, 17 Corporelt Plall Ntwport Buen. Getllorn1e .,MO Oct 1'1, No• s, 1'llO •J.11.ao r11• iu•i ..;.,.,.,•no •t1arou 01 1r.e the tile kep\ by the cour t. Pt''°"' W•INl«tw•nv••e Jonn R .... a l If you are inter est e d in the e,,.,.,,a.n• M e1oooe11, 1191 M••t estate, you may f ile a re · PUBLIC NOTICE o .... H11nt•"ll•on Boch,~ .. tio.a I quest with the court to re-" l'ICTITIOUS IU51NESS °'«••001"" M OIOOQett ,.,.,,. ce1ve special not ice o f the I NIIMI' ST ATIEMENT , Tflt to1•-tno __ _, I• OOfne ou••· Pub,,.._ Oren~ c.o." O•••• Pllo• inventor y of esta te a sset s .1 l\Hl.•s I No. s. 12• "· ,.. 1"'° .. , .. '° and of the petitions, a c · SANOWICH EXPRESS 1700 E c 0 u n t s and rep 0 r t s Gury, s-•Ane, c. "11os PUBLIC NOTICE de•c r ·....,. •1n "-ct·ion 1200 Jud• Jvnt SU..• lt7 Brent..-"' •~ ;>e 1 Coll• Mew, Ca mm NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION o t the California P robate Tllh OuSine .. "c:-..cieo b• an •n· 01' f'ARTNIERSHIP Code. OtwlOu•1 PuOl1C not1<f' t\ M<fOY 9'""~" ln4'1 -- J....., Jvnt S..W-ERNIE P O<.ltC.l.EY, WILLIAM P T11h ... ....._, wu 111..i "''" 1ne i eR1Nocs •no STEVEN M eROwN H . Jac k Hall, Attorney Gollnty Clert of Or•ngr Counh on Oc· Mr~ll>lort -"II ou»nHS ........ r th« a t Law, 881 Dover Dr., 100.r 10. ,.., i •·c""°"' 1irm rwme .... o "Y'• o• o e Su ite 33 Newport Beach !0147• 11. et 1110 GitMev•• C•t• 01 LdQun.t • .' ' P110Jlllled D<ell9t Cont D•••• P 1101 eucft. Count• o• O•..,.Of' ~t•I• ot C a ., te l. (714) 642-1441 OU U. lJ, 2t, Nov S, "IO 0 II.ell C•ltlorn1a Ola on lllt Und day OI July 1'90. by mvfUitll C.Of\Wnl, O•\.WIV• IM P"Oll\neG Or~ C.OISl D•1ty P1to1 I s,.•O iwn~rtin1p MKt 1erm1n•I• 1rwu Oc1 19 Al. Nov ). '* •l'Q..lil r•l•l•Ons •.s part~rs ,,,.,,.,,n -----~ ------------Any, unl•nosn.c> bu••ntU will bt ton PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSI NIEU ouct•a DY Stn..,, Brown. 1004! ~Ulll NAMESTATEMIEHT Coul Htl"•••· Le11una 8e•tn -N-·1llU ____ _ Tiie loll-t"ll per-. •S 00on9 buS1 C•ti•orn•• '176S1, wno wolf PolV ana di\ NOTICE TO CREDITORS MU •l cna•v• •• , """'"''" •nd oeots 01 ,,... OF BULK TRANSFE R SPU. r. 11041 HtWH ,. ••• S.nt• r '"'" •nO "'""••• .. 11 mon.~' p.ov•DI• lo IS.Cs. •IOI -•107 U.C.C.I "n•, C•,91105 tne torm NOTtCE oS HEREBY GIVEN lo Ille Frtatrock J OB,.en, 11041 Htw°' OATEO •T L.lQ11I'& 8~oln C.r•OllOr\ ol GEORGE ROTOLO. Ave • s.nt• •n•, C•. 9110.$ C•llforn1a "''' ISlh day Of October Tr•n,ttiror. wnoW tMJ)1neu •ddresi I!> Th" l>utir>H5 •l condocte<I ov •n tn· l'ltlO 1/W HMOOr 81\'d . Cosla Mtw , Gounly Cll\11dual Fr9ditr1ch J 0 8rien Sttven M 8r(Jlrilllfn o• Oran0t .. Stat~ ot C.llforn1a. tnat • Jn" '1•tl'ftW't wes tlleCI w1tn lht CA PAETZ & KASOAH ~~~~~·e~tr~ ~I~~'~: !:e1 ~!':c'-: County Clerk ot Or•noo Cou<llY on Oc Altouwy~ E WILLIAMS. Tran••trees_ *no•• lo!Mr 71. IW lO't l uolneu CenlH Of'tw, ousinth aadre\s ,, USO Harbor BIWI "'.,114 lr¥1ne, Geltlotnl• Co"• Mew, C.OC.nly ot Oran~. St•1t ol P11bltllled Or-C.out D•••v Ptlot P11tllt•l'ltd Ot•not Guol Oa•lv PdOI, C•lttO•"•• Ocl Jt, NOv s. 12, "· l'llO 05-4-IO Novtll'IDN S, 1'80 u JJ IO ' l>••O pr~rly ,, aucroOltd '"9.,,., .. -1 d\ 411 \tock 1n t,tldf, ft•lures, eQule>-PUBLIC NOTICE ment •n<I IJOOO woll ot 1ne1 FAST ~ 000 ""'"'~' •nown •l H SALT ... CTITIOUS •USINESS NOTICE 01' 'Tii'U'STEE-s StLIE I E!>QUIRE Ft SH & CHIPS eno IO<llecl NAME STATEMENT TS No 4'JIJ77 J al 1/SO t<erDO• 8tva , Colt• Me•• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE F-••111 Vell..,,. ton Heuy Well Of Tllil 1111\IMU " conducl•O OY --------------ftalllltoo41, l ...... 9". Vtrl tnt• Hod-11"10.nd -wite, -------------dtCll ol Founl .. 11 V•llry. C•. end Ellen JentG• w F11n Tllol lie-I wn llled Wtlll the Coun1, Clerk of Or•noe County on Oc1-r 17, 1•. Pllbll"*I Or-Goel! Oeoly Potot Newport Homt La•n. tnc I• C..htornt• C«OOf•lionJ 11 C.Ol'Porat• Ot•I•. NtwpOrl 8e•cn C•I 1torn•• w.o T ne lollowln9 person " Oo1no I O SERVICE COMPAN Y •> dutv Counh ot Of•noe. St•I• ol Ce1ttorn1• ttuilnlSiM •ooo•nttd TrU\tM VNJ.tf" '"* 1011ow1ng tn• ouu, lrMu.Jer w•lf ~ conwm BELLA s WRAP HSW•v« Street OtscroOltd -OI lru•t WILL SELL I m•lfd on or ... ~,'"" llln O•Y of NOif• N.-..e Society CMMA~ WA.ATMA .. 7431 ., .. , _. _ _, .... -···· ... ,··--···~· __ ................ c..--....-.. _ c-..e.. s1ret1on of M«Ngen, u gtendC:lllldren Tn11 Jt.ien-1 ... , 11190 w11n Ille end 11 -'11'~1dren. 2 '""'' Covnly Clelll of Or-Covftty on Oc· Ed llll Keir.r -.Agne1 So-fiend of 1-1 Z7, IW . ...... " PUOlttlleCI Or-Goel! 0.llV Pttol, WHt 111~. W ¥1cn llelO on Wed· -•Y. -J, 1 .. at 11.00AM el Ille Hertlor LeMI Memorlel P••ll w1tn R.. Bruce Kvrrle off1c,.11ng. 59,,,101 ..... , tne d1re<l1on Of Heroor Ocl. lt, Hov.), 11, 19, 1• O lt-tO PUBLIC NOTICE Oct. 11, 1', HO¥. J, U, 1.. 01.._, PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUI •UllNISS NAM€ STATEMaNT T II• toll-Ing persons e re do1n9 Tn11 ~11neu. ,,, <onoucu·o bf • corpor•11on CORI KLOKE Pr...,atnl NEWPORT >iOME LOAN. INC Le911ne leech, Gelilornoe•l.SI AT PUBLIC AUCTION f 0 THE t mot r I •IO, •I IO 00 " M •I B•tt• L•no lH Wevr S1rut HIGHEST BtOOER FOR CASH IEKEC.Ufi\fE PARK ESCROW INC L•9t.m• Be«:h, C.hf0f'n•••1•il lP~••O•f' •• 11m. of w le in l•wful &fin £\i.row Otl1Cff B~llY 1(~11~r Tn" OUSlnt'\S .. <°"""'It<! Oy .,, mon•y OI t~ Untl9d Sl•lhl •II roQM.: ····~ BH<ll 61.U ~u·•· 201. Hunl •nd•v•OW t till• •nd intt'r~SI (Of\wf'yMf to •no now inqton S.tten Counh ot Or.n91, S••t• &ett• ~nrg NtO O'f '' unoer WK1 ~ ot rru\t •n ot C•11torn1• Tni\ 1ii.temtnl ••i t1ltfld w1lf\ ,,. j ltwPr00rtrtv'W'tt1n4tfte<CM\CriOtd So 1ar M known to lM Tr•nsfHMI, Lawn.-.,c Oll¥t M«t""'Y of C.t• ------------= ~:;;:;::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::;::;;;;;~ Me __ .. _. ,,_ __ i_SJ.I_. --------"CTITIOUS •USIMllS 11.AMa STAT•MeNT PUBUC NOTICE TM fol-Int perto0n1 ••• 001n1 °"'1~9:~!'0ENA HARVE-ST 'OAYS. INC , l(IS) __ .,Cl Wy., Colle Mew, CA t2'27 Ben C. Leng, IOJl Wtslw.,o Wv .• Coile Mele. CA '2627 KATHLEEN HEAP, Ant Vice Prtt • N-1 Home LO..-, Inc Tiii\ llllem"11 WI' toled w11n ..... Co11n1v Cle•• 01 D<•noe County on I TR US TOA WfLl.IAM F MORI Tl an DU\•nP\\ Nmo eno •OO•el .. s uwd Oct-• zo, 1•. •no S•RLENE VICTORIA MORITZ. oy 1••.,>tt<or •or W '"'" vurs i .. t ,,.,..,, nu\O.llO •na w•lt •l 10 en ""°'v'-P•\I, are NONE P1i10U~ OUH''tQlf (0.'1 0•1ly Pilot, on• tniro 1nt•t"tU .,, fOtnt t•n•nb rri1 ··~· °"'" IO ..... Cla,m\ ., No" Ocl n. n , HO•.), u . ,.., .,.,.., RONALD BEVERLY,. 11ng1t men ••• ,..~, 1•. ·~:L-.... , ..... y COLOMIAl NaAL ttOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 ,AC..CY•W MIMOllM. PMIC c.mt1ery Mo rtuary Chapel 3500 Pac ific View Drive NewPOrt Beac h 644-2700 "CTIT10UI IUMHSS ........ STaTllM«NT The follOWlntJ per10n1 ere do1n9 Ollttnen es: O&C I ERRY MFG., tllt l Allee Lallt, H<Hltlnvton Beecll. C.llfornle t2M7 Oe nlel Ror h tr-. 11161 Allee L.ene, Hvnllnglon Bte<ll, C.llf0tnl• t1M7 O rie Aay ..,,.,, ltltl AIKe LAne, H<Hlllfl9ltll INcJI. c..llfornl• '2647 Tllli -nett II COndllCled by • 19Mre1.....-1Np. Otnlel R. h rry Tllll Ide-I -flleo wllll Ille COllftlV et.rtl of 01.,.._ Gollnly on Octoett JO, .... '14168 llllilnKlft! T$L, INC., .. TSL FINANCIAL SE•VtCH, 111 .. , J7'ft 4f,, S11,ll• 812. Cotta MeM, (A, ti.2' TSL, INC. t• Gellf0tnla Corpot'e· Uanl, 6* W, pc_,fronl, NewPon 8tecll, c.. f*l Tl\lt> IMnl-''~led by • .COi' porellan. TSL, INC. Tllornal s. L". Prwldtm Tiiis ltel-"1 wet flleel with tlte C:-ly Cle111 llf Or411191 Oovftly on OC· Gl0tle Fl-r, IQS) WHIW•rO Wy., Gotl• Mele. CA.ata/ Tiiis 1>111lneu It conducled Dy • vene••• "'""9t'llllp. Ben c. L.11"9 Tllll , .. ...._. w .. lilf<I •1111 tne C.O-ly Glet'll of Or11n91 Gollnty on Oc· ,_,,,,, .. ...... u P110llllled Or-Goftt Oally Piiot O<;t. 2', Ho¥. S, U, 19, INO USl.IQ PUBUC NOTICE l-r tO, l... p 14799 ----ott=M0..,--:-::1:-COU=:-N=T:::T--- Pulllflllld Of-C.0.11 Oell, PllOI w ... ••oet eou•T !><'· 1s, tt. "·Ho•. s11• •ttMO "'Cl* CilllW on ... -......... c..tm• PLAINT IF F : CU M IS INSUltANCE SOCIETY, INC. PUBLIC NOTICE County Clerk ol O,.noe County on No¥emlttr•, 1911. *' ,. ..... P11bllSIWO 0<-CNll O•llY Pilot Nov. J. 12, 1', 1', l'llO «J'•IO PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINll$-- lll~I STATIMllNT T.,. IOllOWlne perwn II dolno Dull· nn ••1: AUTOMOTIVE AFTERCAi.e OF CALIFORNIA, !l E11111e Point, Irvine. Ce. t27t• J•,,,_ E Knlfftn. Sl E•91t Polnl, lnlM, Ge. 9271 4 Tllli l>llllMU II ConGllCled by en In· dl¥1due.I. J-.E Kniffen IO en undoytGeO one llltrd ln1ertsl ..,.4 O&Jt<I. ou._r ll, 19'0 8AAOLEV G OVE1', l'Slnl)e m•n u ; U..rlft L. Witll-s lo •n undivided CIW thuO '"'''''' Nttnc.v E WUllMTU PUBLIC NOTICE ------------BENEFICIARY GAIL BEVERLY lren~lerffl l'ICTITIOUS IUSl~SS and OIANNE BEVERLY, llusb•n,d Publ"twd O.•ntt C.0.11 Oe11..:1101 T ht 1:.~~:T::,'!:~ •~• doing eno wife es 101n11onent•. NO• S. l'lllO 31).IO l>ll•lnen as· ' Recorded Aprll 17, 197• "' 1nS1r no PUBLIC NOTICE M1"RS SECAET1"RtAL SERVICE. ~I 1n OOOI< U.S1. -19S of 0111<1•1 t12 Un J\len Lent. Pta<enua, c" •2'70 Records In the omce Ot IM Recorder Mery Ann Rldcltll, 911 Sen J"'" 01 Orenoe COunlv N·7)11' L•ne. Pla<Mlte,CAtMIO S.tO ..... effect& tn uncll¥1ded one OltAN°'E COUNTY SUf'E•10• Jolln N. lt-11. 911 S.n Ju•n third lnltrffl of Wllllem F. Morol1 •ncl COUltT Lene, Plac:f!flll•, CA m10 Slrlene Victoria MO<'lll 01 lne lollawtnq lot Glv>< Cetow Orhe lllfHl Tiiis llllslness 11 con0uc1ec1 Dv tn dekrioeo-nv s...teAM,C.11....Wtt»tt "vld\le9'tH-~Wll•I. LOl!IJOflre<l11/l ,tnlnt CtlYOI l'LAINTIFF MR. ANO MR~. .... ,.., AM AIOdell C.o••• Me ... H ~· mep rroc;oroeo In MARSHALL HOAfHCUTT (parent•' JoM N .• ._II Boo-... Peoe1 27 ... d Jl of M il • n d M A R I( l. A R A s H A w H Tiiis Jlel-nl waf lllto wltfl the ctlltneous Map1, recorO\ of u•O NOA fHCUTI. e ml.-, l!Y Ill• Gll•r1 COlf"lh Clttll of Oo--Gountvon Oc· OrengeCounly,Gelllornte Ol t" e no Llltm Ml.RSHA.LL t-r 10, .... ti4 WlllOn Streel, Coste M•H . NORTHCUTT Gellf0t1Wa OE FENOANT MARK ALLEH/ "'*'"'" Or .... GM-' Delly Pll91, ----,-,CT-1-T-IOU_l_l _U_llN•U ~ WOST\IAl•S 1-0c--t.-1_2_, Jt_, ..... __ • s_,_u_.•-___ •_27M9~ flAM9 STATaMaNT LeQuna Beech PUBLIC NOTICE ~'::~~1111 per1on• .,. ••'"' O El'EHOANT : WESTEltN MOltTOAOE COltl"OltATION a nd OOES 1 TM•OIJOt4 llO. IMlllll,.. Tllll stelerntnt •• , llled '""" Ille Counly Clerlo OI Or411191 CO\tntY "" 0c l-rl0,1t9). '147tl1 ,.,.,.,, P110ll-.I 0ret>9t Goest 0.ily P llOI ~l.U.12,2',Ho¥.s,1• ~"'"° l"lf ...... -ftl or common .... SULLIVAN. -OOl!S I tlVOllQf\ 10. II\ llgnellon •• ---··· no ..,.,,.,,,, c•u~1ve ,, ,,,, ... es to tb C-lttentU °' cor SUMMONS I' f ,.. CAM.._.. aMt41 MOTIC91 Y• .... .._ .... n. 494-9415 AAltOH It. HE CO., Jl'n '#aHWI, Pvbllillad o.-... CoeM Delly Pllol Oct. IS, 22.1t, Nov. S, I.. •11...0 PVBUC NOTICE LeQuna Hill• l'ICTl'nOUI au•••n Tm ln, CA -76&-0933 ....... UATIMllfT Rlcll ltHllll Inc, Ce Gellforftle cor· -~ ............ .,.. .. .... PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS •us1Nass NAMS STATEMaMT San Juan Capistrano TM i.t'-lfl9 __, 11 ...ine ._,. pare 11 .... 1. 2m W•I""'· T11t11n, CA 495-177& ""c:' ~~ R l IS R, TA TUM, 0 II n;-:.. llollifleU IHOl~1" OV H O• .. f'lllOOUCl•. ltol EHi Lem lNrl lfMlf•lltft. ,_ ..... ...._ .... .,..,...... ....-.~ ............ -.... f'ICTITIOUS IUllMIM 11.AMe ST ATIMIMT Tiie f.i-lllf pellOll\ ere dOtftO llllUllO t et: I "*'IOIUW.... ....... OU .. Mortuerv • C.meterv C~nw fOf'Y tl2SO~A119, Cost• Mfta 640-55~ ltM41, ...... -~~a.CAQJI RICH HEALTH, INC. (llUIH R. T .. 11m, •11 Tll11n• ,,_I. "ICll. _,..rtlc-t,1'111 ......... CA~ ~ Tlllt...,......, It,_,.. ey ~ lft• Tfll\ --fh .. #llll lftt ........ 1. C-.r CWll tf 0r-. c-rty on Oc- Clwrtet •· T-1....-11, ,., Tille ---t -fll• wltll tM '111tlJ c-1, Clerll tf Ot-C-y tft Oc• ...... _ Or._ C..• o.lty Pitel teller 10, ••· OcUt, ....,, S.11, 19, t• 4$HO .. , .... "'*''"'" °' ... c:o. 0.lly .. 1 ... PUBUCNOTICE ...-. AYltolWlllMllNt ..... rt'ft. el .,.._.. .......... _.,.. IHI. • _.__ ... __ UC.,..... ....................... ....._. < .... ..... If .,.. w(tfl ....... -... k ... eft ettente\I lft W. INIW, yew lillOlllCI .. .. .,r•mcitly .. ,,,., '(GUI •t1tte11 ,._,K.,,.,,,,_.,11e111Htfl llme. 11 u.-.... •i<IW ti c.n•IO Of "" ...... "' .... --*· .... , .. Oct. IS, tt, "· '""· S, 19 ~iaJ- lle<.,lt l,,_.letemeMe. do •••• tnefMrl, w ,....,.. .. et<tlla, ..... y --------------· ei.-•• ,.... _1ttl•t••• t llef'lljle. PICTITtout IUl4N•N TO TH• O•FENOANTI A ctvll ...... ITATUI•'" _ ....... - -fl!M .. tllt Ctlaift· '"• , .. , •• , ..... ,.~ .... lf'll ''" ..... ytll. I' .,... .............. flCTITIOUI eut111811 MIMtl •: 1111• le....it, 'l'Oll '"""· wlllllll a •vt PVBUC NOTICB fM IOll-'"9 ..,_.It °""'9 1111111 -·': CANOY CLIANEltS, IO~ So Coftl H ..... Y .......... .._.,, C... .. ,, NerlkO IC•UllN, t1fJ1 Ne¥-. Ml•lof'I VltlO. C.. t1"1 Tiii' .....i-' It. <tlltllCIH llY en In• 41¥Mhlel. NtrlM ICot)Ulle Tiii• t&e*-1 -flltd •ltt> ... C-tJ CMftl .. Or .... °"""" tft oc. M11ert0.•• '14'97 "'*'--Or .. Coe\t Delly fllllet ()c1, 1$, tt. ........... ,. ., ..... WINI COUNTRY. tt•t S.n Mltw•I Ollve. N•wporl 8 eecfl, c.11101111• '2MO LI-NlhllU KnlQllltfl, 17lt7 Qell, F-elll llelley, Gelltorllie'2/0I 1.1no. Qule K111t111e11. 11~1 o.a. "-••In vAy, Gefflorl>I• n10t Tiii• lllltlneu " (01\0llCl•O Dy 1111....-........ ._,_ M. ICl\ltllttn fflll M-1 we\ 11190 wllll IN C-ly Clerk OI OrllflOe GOllllty t11 O<• to0er 11,1MG. "141119 l'Wll.,.,. Or .... Cotil O.lly Piiot Oc:I. ,.._.I, It, 1'. t• q 1;.;& PVBUC NOTICE ....... TAH .. •T LIDO HCH,..ICAI. 11•111CIS, ~ ""',..,._ I•~ °" ""· PUBUC NOTICE Tiie tl94Mwtnt .......... , ... Int INC .. 1.IDO ,UILllHINO, LIOO fllt wllll -~ e ~ ,.._ ,ICTtftOUtaUSlleHI' llUll11ett•• OALL8•tQ. LIDO l"•Ol"lltTIU, It tM ~. UllllM ,eu .... , LO•M,..,,,.,,,..... "'" ... "LIDO IM,OltT11• LtOO A•T '°"" ...... wttl M .....,.._ ._. f'ICTITtOU1au11"aM ...,...ITAHMIMT 110 ......,,llNCll,µ..... I M f' 0 It I U M 1 I. I 0 0 lllkMMAtftM .. .i.tclfl,_,W.c-1 llAMll•TilltlMINT T ... IOI....,.. _.nona •re Ofl,,. 'IMefl.<*W-la~ Ma•CHANDlllNO, LIOO NY"""~:!. ..... ::.= .... ~:... ..... ~ ... _.,_, trt •1nt -f~~iALCA•CAH,"t\•"O" ~=·= "'" ... , ~.:.tt::=u~=~-rr: ::.!c':':..-;;;;;t.; 99'fli.....,_. et aLIOANT IHTa•10ltl, 4"t .....,..,.-....... Cllll.IMeM.c.tlltorllla J.,._ "· "-C• ....,.....,, ,,.,_ .. Ava..ua un1•1~1 11a1 ......... ._ .. _.,.,11r--1Y« ~Ort ... .......,, 9tfKA. ea •~,., Je ,_.,.. ,.711 ~ .... ....,..,.. ... , .... 111, ........... ltecll ..... , ":i.J'• H•lll 1!9tM ....,, t.lltf, .......... Ill Ille <9"1• VMetle J, ~. J IMlhllw• Dfl .. , MIM14111V .. IO. CMlferllle .a.ti INdl,CA... .....~.,.,. ~,·.o #w. .. -wet lrw111t.C..•tt lt8"4ftll U llff l'•Mlll1 .. ,,t ~=--.: <_...._ l'f • .. ,,:;:,AM. "::i.::1 ::::, .... ~u.tiANCH . ,,..,.. o. "--"tr,' .ite ••• C•f l•I• Drt~•. ll'l lute11 Vl•I• • """'"· ic-c:.t...,._. 0-. ' #ey, IMM, Ct. mtt Cetltwlll•'*' ~~lflOttATt(IM Tfll• ........ ~,,,.. ...car ...... ........, TI* ...... llaMY<tet'YM lllo TM• .... -It~-.. al\ l.M. f'llMr. ............ ,_.., el"'9MI. • ~ ... ..,. ... ,,....:.., ........ ....., .. .,._ WltAY,..._.&..... o..wo._. ta -c::y=:-Or:~~= ~~~-=-c:-= :....:...ma..= ~=::==::= c:::. Cler\M =-~~~-= • ' .,... flltt • I ' "... I ·- re<IMHI -• GAH NUMla• .. ,._. TM -foclefy .,,..., <etO Deed ol NOTICE! 'l'W .......... .-. TM 1r-u11. ov ...._.,of • oreec11 or otfe1111 ,..," nwy tied•_-..,_,.. .... In 1 ... OOltGellont WC11r9d l ... reby, y..,r ...... _.. ..... Yell res ..... Mrelolote elte<llled -dell¥eAO lo wlttol" • -~ fllfff h ,..,_._ lM """'"""° • wrlltef'I Oeu.,•1i.n .. 1.,. of Delellll -oe...-lor Sele. •llO A\11$01 Ull• ... .._ ... 1 ... wrt11•11 ftotl~ of llnecll end Of ele<tlon e 1 Tri-,.... -.c~ ~· i.H: 10 CellM Ille llnderSitnH IO ...... 10 M .... i.Mle e - -1H. r..-' p,._r1y 10 \eltsly WI• OOlloetton•, ._ ,.,.,,. • ae ..._ LH I• ~ •nd tflerMI., -~nlgned <•uMO ._ ... ..io notk• oc llrHCll -ot e1ec11on 10 c t. TO THE· OEFENOANT. A clttl lie ..c0f'd9d .Jiiiy U, ,..,, •• ln1w. No. comptelnt .,.. tlHf'I lllH lly Ille ,. .. .., ?9201 '" lleOll ,,.,., -s.7, OI ...io 1111 eo•IMI VOii • Offkl•I ~ • If VOii wl•ll lo ctefef'IG , .... $eld _.. will llt mede. Diii w1lllOlll l•W\1111, Vol> rnutl, Wllllill 10 N YI e!W CO'ftftelll er _r_,,1.,, ••cir•u °' '"" 11\l1 t11mmDM It _,,.... on ,...,_ Ill• plied, .....,ilno 1111e, PMtHtlon, or w1111 tlllt -1 • wnltel\ _........ ' tllCll4ftO<-. te "Y Ille rem••nlnt rupo111e 10 111• co~l•llll Ill prlnclpet wm el tlle -•U> •ecvr.o J11\ll<t Colin. -rnvfl ,.,. wllll~ oy .... 0.... ef frull, wftn lnterol •• court • -m,.. 11teM111t tw , ..... • lft ~ ... ,_. pt0¥icted. MVMUl, lf eny, oral pltedlfl9 •• lie ef'll.,.. II\ . Yf'!Cltr ..,. ter~ of ..i. °"" l>f Tr11tl, oouetl. vn1 .. ~ • •· _ ... '"'· c-tet Wlf U,...Mt 01 Ille Wiii lie ef'ltertcl ~ ... IC.ell• .. rn.4tH .,... •• Ille ,,.,..., c.rMlied llY 01elfftlll, -1111• c-1 -Y •Iller .. ., 0... tlf T"""; Jueltment eMlntt """i. IM tollef • a.i. .-wlll M lltN en l't14NY. monffelln ~~Wlllcll­ No••ll!Mr .. I• at tl,00 • m. •1 IM N lllll Ill ...W.,""""4 tf ...... - tffl<e ef l D, 'terork.t ~Y. IM>ll ot _,or pr-rty er..,_, reti.f,.. .. A-~ ,_, hlW 111•. 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"·a. 1'11 ...,. ..... 1,1t,t1,-...-• '""· s. ti, "· -• .., .. .. twl'f lllLOT · The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange eoaat DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED You Can Sell It, Find It, ·Trad• It With a Want Ad . ( 642-5678) ~.~ ............ ~.':!.s:!: ........ 1~:.~~ ........ i~:.~.5:'!! ....... ~.~~ ........ ~!~!!!.~.~'!:. ....... J~!!.~~.~ ... : .... ~.~~ ....... . .... ........ l 002 .G....... I 002 G1Mr.. I 002 G....... I 002 Wf'.e I 002 iG•Mr.. I 002 I 002 ••-.a I 002 ......... ··············I-·······............... . ....... •• .. • ............ .............. ......... . ..................... ··~····················~ ....................... ···········••'••········ . .. ..................................... .. I ,~ ~-1 ~~ ~·~.::~..:~~~~~~tr~~g: i M1~?:~~:e0 ~r:~oe I \\ I '-., ! I '1 • ' _ -recreation room ~ 2 patios. L_1ving DAME - EQUAL HOUSING room has attractive beam ceiling. 3 Bdrm seas,ho re home or TAYLOR CO. f{ I.,\ I. l I ) I; ~ " I jl ' I ' I ll 1 OPPORTU NITY fireplace & French doors leading onto yest eryear. Stai ned glass SB'ARATI HOMI & INCOMI bric k patio. Ne w kitch e n bit-in windows. beam,ed ceilings in OWNIA WILL CAIRY I st TD FOlll ,_...,.., .. otlce: All real estate advertised m lhis newspaper 1s sub jed to the Federal Fair I Housin g Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise ··any pr e·, rerence. limitation. or I discrimination based on race, color, religion. sex., or national origin, or an I intention to make an) ; such preference. lim11a lion, or discriminatton · · ' Prime East Cos ta Mesa location near a ppliaaces. Close to tennis courts. master suite. Cheery fireplace, 21st & Tustin Ave. You will love this sandy beaches & clubhouse. Now minutes from yacht club. tennis $412.SOO .t 121/JO/o Ho a...,_ Beautifully designed home by Ivan Wells. Newly painted interior. Panorama or water. lights & mountains . 4 Bdrms. family room. lanai w/rnarble floor for dancing. Pool & ~pa. Ideal for family & en- tertainment. Dover Shores o'look- cha rming separate 2 Bdrm 'home or available. Call for appt. $420.000. a nd go I f . $ 2 2 9 . O O O. For redwood siding on wide tot. plus two appointment 2· Bdrm income units. A beautiful IAYROMT woodsy private patio w/ BBQ and huge We have several fine hom es expens ive s pa. Quiet. peaceful & with pier & slip. picturesque. Call for a ppointment tod ay. WESUY ... TAYLOlll co .. llllALTOllS 2111 S-Jam .. la Hlth llloed HEWP<>Wr CIKTIA. ...I. '44-4t I 0 ' This. newspaper will not ! knowingly accept any , ad ver tising for real estate which is in viola tion of the law. .. '----------------------1 n ! .. EW LISTING BtRORS: Advertisers should check their ads ~ and report er• ron inwnediatety. The o ewporl 1~ DaleboutBay ... Beach DU,LEX OJ a.ost: TO BEACH Real Estate . 3 Bed. 2 baths ear h unn REALTORS 11(utsrA1u11crLLfHCESIHCf1""' I F\.t rnishecJ. Ston<' F' P lower. Go o d i.um • DAILY ,ILOT assumes klMltty for the first in- cornct insertion only. 675-551 I DOVER SHORES . mer/winter rental Ask ! Open Thursday 1-5 ing 5275,000 1000 Mariners Drh~ EASTSIDE C.M. 1 A beautiful ··PA RTY . TRIPLEX HOUSE '" with a s pec Large 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. ~sforSate ••••••••••••••••••••••• lienerat I 0 0 2 I \\'11od S.\ ~L·t t1n g shows off this cl up l ex i n · · 0 L D <.: 0 :\I . . 2 Bl'rlrnom ~ l'ath. Front unit up- gr<11 led Hear only ti .\ea r~-; old and opt.•n beam ceilings Ofll'recl al :-e1s.ooo . tacular view of the UP 'fireplace plus two 2 PER BAY from the en· Bdrm. l bath m excellent tire living area, plus · condition Pri«ed at master bedroom Im· S197.SOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CDMDU,LEX 1 pressiye walk-in bar j Five huge bedrooms · Four baths. Two double garages. Pool. S72S.OOO associated 2YEARSNEW ... 4 B drm and 2 611-7300 N.I . BROKERS-RE Al TORS lOH W Bolboo 6 I l )66 l lo Bdrm ... So u t h o f PCH .. Private bric k courtvard .. 4 c ar garage· .Oak planked fl oors . Ital ian COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2 5 15 E., Coast Hwy., CoroM ct.I M• 675-5511 tile .. Super terms Call 1 ,...11111111_._._._ .................... ... now. SEA COVE PROPERTIES ln•Htor's Special 3 Br home. fr pk. lge yard. great area for kids Excellent rental proper · ty. Priced for quick s ale' Owner transferred & will help finance Calli 96.1'8182 714-631-6990 ~ I ---WATERF«ONTHOME EashideTriplu 5 BR. 4 Ba . c us tom, ::iM"'JI: lOo/t down Will gel.)'OU tn I Water fr Ont h 0 m e, Q~, to ttus desirable Lnplcx w 17x38' pvt dock Price CJ, I Therearetwo2bedroom Sl .395,000 Rurlder. ___ _ units and one 3 bedroom 1 w1trade for Palm Spr·' .............. .. unit . G reat 1n com,e ' mg.:, F..state For details WANT A GOOD potential Call befor<' 1t i. on this home and appt to INVESTMENT' gone. 556-2660 I see. call Carol llorr, agt , · I f;JJ.()004 We have an excellent 6· «;::SELECT , ---unit r en tal building, I PROPERTIES . BIG CANYON I which ha~ great potentiali L ov e I y M r I. a 1 n· for increasing in value • townhome Golf course : Great year ·round ren·1 t-IEWPORT HEIGHTS ' location 2 Bdrms +den. tals ! FIXER I and it's a wonderlul end. ONLY Bring your shovels and I wiit. Excel fin anc:111g &• lllliiiijiiio~riliiiiim• paint brushes to rnsh m pnced lo sell S:W0.000 I on th.is sensational\ a lue , Huge corner lo~. hosts *Cote Realty this 3 Bdrm 2 b~th ex & lnveMment I ~ullve hom~ Country 640_5777 kitchen, living room. , family room. den and ' spa too' Cash m and call ' ASSUME LO.AH -------- IO'I " Ill \I I' "l ' ... now! . l AT LOW INTEllEST THAT'S Attractive 4 bd rm home INCREDllLE I ~ Ill a good location Seller , ASSUMABLE LOA!'iS j I may carr) 2nd Only• AND OWN ER WI L L I $109.000 Call 979-53701 HELP F INANCE this , now ' . gorgeous 4 Bdrm home.' SEA COVE PROPERTIES 1 A ' F'anuly rm & for mal din· 1 1 LL STA TE I mg rm Only $167,SOO. _ .............. ___ I Call 979·S370 I 714-631-6990 As..._ Contract Large 4 bedroom 3 bath back bay home. Loeated near million dollar estates and ecological preserve. Assume low in lerest $124,500 c()ntract. Call before It's gone 556-2660. C SELECT TPROPERTIES TOI.ACCO ROAD Sl39.950 Thal's exactly what this Eastslde triplex looks like, but, oh w'hat a deal! Three l Bdrm units. New I roof. Super, super terms. 1 Call now @ SEA COVE · PROPERTIES REALTORS IA I ll.1v~~thm}: ~ou "'ant i LLSTA.TE 1 to sell:' Clas!-1fwd ads do REALTORS I 1t v.ell &12·5678 ----'#...._ ___ _ ------ THE • <Ws- NUMBER.ATO Site NEWPORT IEACH OfffCE 2043 Wntclff Dr. C7141 646-7711 ASSUMI I O.J'Y. <*LYSIH/MO Phenominal opportunity to live right on the Bluffs at a drastically reduced payment. Secluded patio & hundreds of other a menities such as : swimming pools, nearby tennis courts & • major s hopping centers. . BUY NOW · SAVE MORE! I! #259 . WOULD YOU -..vt7 SI• AT 1607/MO I I l j 714-631-6990 "--------That's right! But you better get a sneak preview now -it won't lut! Enjoy the coziness & warmth of the fireplace. But if you 're up to it. just step out into your own private spa, so. CO~ST CO .. DO I Sit.too I Better hurry on this one. , ll won't laat! Sharp 2 Bdrm, with new paint fJ c&fl)Ctt + an auumable io.n. Call now . 540·3'6e 1 I POI $607 / M0.7 UNBEUEVA8LE! I! #2161 THE l<Ws-NUMBl;R TO SEE NEWPORT HILLS OFFICE 2670 SAM MIGUEL DRIVE <7141 759-150 I BIG CANYON VIEW From this fahulou ~ SO:\l F:RSET model 1n Jl.\H TlPR \"I E\\' 110:\JES This eomplelel~ rcfurb1shl'cl homl' ll'<Jtures 5 hrs. fa m r I> room . t q1k lt.t rgt' yard. new. O l'\\ e \ er> thmg & cul cle·sac location fu r $289.000 WATERFRONT PARADISE Ch arming 3 br home located smack on the ocean w pr1 \'ale stairwav to the sandv beach tor your en]o~·menl I T his exquisite re· s 1dence is offered a l only $790.000 CREATIVE FINANCING!! The sophis ti cat ed owner of this property is fie xi ble on terms~ This outstanding home fe atures 4 br!-.. parq uet entry. 2 custom patios. l'r plc. family room . greenhouse wi ndow. French doors & mort.'' Sl36.950. OWC 2nd or AITD. Walker Blee Rnl Estate macnlib I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF TH.: IRVINE COMPANY ~~--~~-~ ~-1 - llG CAMYOM-UASI! S pac ious a n d sec luded 38..R Monaco on cul -de -sac in park-like setting. $2000/ mo. Belle Chase Lee 644-6200. <0-63) 711-1414 tomP-VOiley Cert!• 642-IHI 673-8550 Coroftadel M• ing back bay. $550.000. .. WISLEY .... TAYLOR co .. UALToas 2111 S-Ju• ln ... ao.I HIWPOIT cena. M.I. 644-4tl0 EXECUTIVE VIEW TOWMHOME OCEANFRONT . Rare end unit. Step down . 2 BR l 'h .~ condo Cpts. ASSUMABLE llvmg room. leads to sun ·drp;. bwltms .. <Over 40 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home. Ap· , filled kitchen. overlook ; adult community. I Pool. prox 9 years young ing spaci<lus terrace. Jacuzzi. c lu~hou.se. F'r plc. P.arquet entry. Master suite + 2 queen · S65.000. 119< <,inanc1.ng. huge patio, greenhouse. I sized bdrms upstairs. I Near large s hopping water softener. elec gar . Pool and spa too! ow11er I center . and bus stop. Large oceanfront lot m exclusive 3 A ri·h Ray Crashing !>Urf aocJ 180 degree view $2.000.00IJ (7 141 613.4400 dr !12.900 'says be flexible on I Oceanside. 714.433.4422 So Calif. Rlty : rtnancing. Dial now. _ __,_. ------ 54605605 I i--------12111621·2121 I h1 h.11 '"•I .II I ·' '11lrlt•,t I<• .ol ~.,1.1 11 F11111 . I @' I OCEAN 1/J ILOCK INVESTORS I Deluxe duplex, 3 Bdrm. 2 We have assum . in · 1 balh and 2· bdrm units. vestmt. homes in O.C. , 1 fi replace each unit. SlOK to S2SK Prin only , SEA COVE . Oc~an view from1 upper 6.'ll-4960 Agt · I wut. Only ~.000 . ----PROPERTIES lalboalay,..op. -:Xcllange so· Power Boal 714 631 6990 lllftllars Xlnt Cond. for ranch. in • • •675-7060• \ lh\ I lqfl qi I l.11 l1n1 111\l·•l Ill• 111 t 11 come prop . etc 644·1405 PRIME NEWPORT OCEANFRONT S.autifully maintained l bdrm home with beam ceilin9s and c harmin9 decor. Quid location on the IEACH. In a fit. residential area. Large patio on the sect for entet"tainineJ. Possibilities for H• panslon. Reduced.to S649,500. HARBOR VU CORNER Wonderful eucllti•e home for ~ tainin9. ,rivacy, prestl«je 4lftd iflt- presM•e 5 !Mel home wittl fonMI dift rm. L~ patio surroun*d by mature 9reeMrf. S359,000. 673-6900. EXTRAVAGANT QUALITY & CHARM Perfedion in every cMtail GotcpCMa Country Frettch 4 bed, 31/.z bath. 3 fireplacH, plmtation shuttet 1. bnlls fidlln!S. HW floors, be..tfM Hin. ; goldetl oak staircase, ....edailsig wal covl'fiftgl. Mashf' wih wttt. .,. & fireplace. Landscop•d by Ro9er1 Gardens. VU fro"' Most•r 111it•. S695,000. 611-1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REALi'STATE ')d1ff'!t R1ofah. p,n,,..,.~ M•fldgernirr'U l H1> W C°"" 11 ... .., Newport 8ei'Ch '31-1400 llllC & ,,N l IS Mdnrw Aw &lboa Island '7Uf00 THE SEAS ct.i. ... .,1111!<1 .\els. \nur one 1--------'>l•~P ... hop1>mu c·enter :~1~ i~ll~ ~·~·m ... _ _6-12~56~11 CE 110111 ILllllS CD . OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE HARBOR RIDGE CLASSIC Superb Kensington Model With Outstanding Styling. Four Bedrooms & 31 2 Baths. Master Bedroom With, Fireplace. Excellent Uvin& Area. Separate Formal Dining Room. Jenair Built· In Kit chen With Roomy Breakfast Area s.5 l!i. {XX). LIDO ISLE Exceptional1' Good Location Near Tenn,is Courts & Beaches. Really Neat Two Bedroom Home With Den, Plus F'ormal Dining Room. Assumable Loan. Price Only .,S37S,OOO. INVESTORS A TIEMTION Nice Livable Home On A Large R·2 Lot In Better Area Of Costa Mesa. Build An Extra Unit F'or Income. Pnced Al $95.500. ® ·--... ,. ......... . f1J Coldwell Banker WATCH THE SUM SIT over the dramatic pavilion. chan· nel & ocean in this quality c ustom home in charming Irvine Terrace area or Newport. 3 BR. 3 BA . S615.000 FEE. IN NEWPORTCIENnR • 64~-9960 Barrett ~alW ~glster IN Sl50,000 RANGE? HIWPOIT HtteHTS -New listmg -Cape Cod w ith brick trim . ·shingled roof, big trees. 3 Bdrm with Teak floors a nd carpets. New kitc he n and ba throoms. brick • patio. Another great listing. HAllOI YllW HOte -Gleaming Oak parquet floors. Venedan Ule In new kitchen and new baths . Sumptuous Montego model on a reenbelt, near pool. See this beautifully customlted home. WISTCLl'P -Skyligbta enhance thls charmln1 3 Bdrm home. En· Joy winter sun and cheery at· mosphere, bit trees and walled 1ardens. c $2 PENNY PINCHER AD 3 Ii ne!. ror 2 da \''i onl~ SI a dll~. :l<lc· a hnl' Ad' C'rll~C' nnc or m ore items \'alued up to SIOO Ea c h add II ion al lane is only 60<• fo r t hl" I\\ o da ys Sn rr~ n o ro mmrrl·1:il urh allo\\ed C harl(l' Your PcnO\ P inc·hcr Ad or u ~l· \Our Bank ,\meric1ird Visa or :\lal>lc•rc•ard c .. today ....... your ad I• pri•t tOMCMrow! c.. ...,,..., "'"' fri4ey l :OOAM to S:)Of"M fw .... .., •• ,.... •. c .. ~, -.. s.hr*Y tor s-.y·.,..... DAILY PILOT C~SIFIED INDEX Tt .... Y•M.Clll 642·5678 E .. OllS ,., ......... ····" clieck lllW .. ....... ... ,.,., .. ,,.,, lw•....,. n. OAIU rt4.0T-lltlll6llty ,., .......... _. ........... ..,. ~HERITAGE REALTORS . $139 500 l 3 Bdrm 2 batt rireplace. 1 --------- large lot. roor 2 years E-SIDE DUPLEX Two 3 Ir. Ulffh $142,500 FUU.Ell IEAL TY 546-0114 1 new.Cal164~·9161 · I .. OPEN HOUSE REALTY ~· Exce11ent rental area two minutes from freeway. 20"'c down will handle. Seller will rinance wit h 12 1 2~ Four·plex traders, don·l miss this one! 752-1920 1 Mu1"Ullfw•h•11d jth11"U•fwwllil1d , .. lwillh'= llti1d j fl ; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ....................... ,, , l .,.. JJ44 ... rt ..... J26f ..... J741r~UILJJ1l1......a Afal I........ M&IJ!Willa~ , . ................................................. ., ...... ••····················· MIST ~~ ....... ~~ c.MMeli 1114 N t I __ .._. 11M -.....u.tn11 · .................................. -...... . ~·llke '""' 2 a:!EAN :SAVE loc llr.1ep. .at. flJlle ....... ......,...., IMalliid I Ir ~ p . Terraced ~~ca:· u,.,.t., draft•. HH ms. ia. -· O• 19: ..... CH bbq, ty .... ll50 !ldila D .... Ml:tlll. dd. Nope&a.'41-.. tountaiaa. w:=:....ca1i.::.n. ...,.., --· __....._ ____ _ 1 room • . 8Kbelor E'llde loc: Nft' I Br. 2~ la. CoaclO. ... YA ....., ..., ..aa. 1,,.1c , dlnln1 area. • 2 Br. Condo near IDO No · Dia. rm., Mlcro·wave ., .... --.. parilall)' furn liltc h I oeet•. home·. Plau SA. Tennis pool . pet.. tr..b aompt. •••. car. ...,...,,, • I I O 1 •e •o a 6 cabinets. · ' ' 541..(8)1 T'---1-R ._0 11 W't....... ..""•,,_ •c • " Huoun aton ape . .-.t.100. No peb. ~ apmw. -· uquet· P.P.-• MlW "• _ s.t-SZl2or'41·1A60. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, ball,pool,~.uwaa.Ho 1--... ..._.. JIM 1• ... to btacb. I Br. 2 Ba ·uofum. $400 1 WXUIY UYI... :!°:....~ ~ : .!o «cJ. ~ ~ --Ip pra1• paUo No m furn from -_._.u.,... · · •111 ..... -............ 1 ' • • h ...,. Jn quiet Adwt Complex. m.an Alt .• no fee. •SAC ... c.. I pe&a.lllllD0.9'2·5ZIO -Spacious l BDRM. APT. YIU.A A t 2 Hdrm. 1 ba, frplc . 1;i~~~ '1~m Dbhwasher, hreplace, 2 Br, 2 Ba, • 1tove • Lrs2 ~ 2 Ba. avail. 11/ Qr81ie1 CO.ty Dana Oorntrol Be1onia 6 Lil. 1510 pyt. patioa. pool " spa. d t hwh r locl. Encl SUO/JD O. ~ Oeea. view lot .so,call1'15·N31 't NOPETS.1395mo.&up. 1ara1e•. Couple pref. -~-------- OM, aooe for lot with e!'c:.ree~· MEsA PINES Children OK. No pela. Db Zbr 2ba $450fmo Ill ~ p1ua Ow Irvine Terrac4f·OCe&n 2850HARLAAVE. $&50. UW pd. ucelketec. ~ ' pei.. l i .,c; m..il'.Jli. . ner . vift, 3bdrm. 2ba, walk A HERMOSA SPMC 549.2447 mt Elden. 642·1213 beach.·e:.w.. m to Balboa & fash ion arlullde Ln, 1 blk bd h $4 bd 'r.o fa~ view lob IJlaoCS. Avail Nov. 15· h,3blksS.of 2 ouse, 5012 Nicec&ean2Br, lBa, fncd l4e2Bdrm oucpU/df1>• cw.rtoolllAI E l Ni1uel' Dec. of '81 at S1200/mo. duplex l'70/ 645'8103• .Y d • C • r a 1 e • 2 O 2 9 P9do pr ioc1.t OK' $1t5° Cowatry Club. Bui Id er 17~ or875-2500. .5441 E. 21 St. C.M. Wallace-B. "°° qio. lit " 79U Hott N7-4803 · · ---Pri d taat +Sl50aec. 549.ma · ~. ce from ,.-....1.-~-lZ24 --------tnS.•· Call 714-13H2lt 1---ely lge unit in -......~-.... _,,. 1 BR t 1 ~ 3bdrm, l~ba, 2 INm 10-4 daily. ••••••••••••••••••• • •• • to ocn. tennis -.;;;;;.-.._,.. · _,.,. ups a rs. iar • story com munity pool -----------, .......... V"' ... DE· 5 Bdrm Jo1gln1 t k • -00 pets. lll2 E. Bay St. spa 't ,. t ' ....._..._ 1'3";;t.b.. POoL.' Reduced 2 Atgonqr:I~ .APAITMIMTS 541-5331; ev1~232S • eno '· no pe s, P,n 2100 I to *°Imo. Waterfront 846.5531 K. Beautiful garden apls. SIS15/mo. 9S2·886S. ••-•••••••••-•••••••• Homes, Inc. 631·1400 Pool & spa. AcJult.s, o Larg~ 3 Br. 2 Ba. 4·Plex, 3 br, l~ ba, piool, waler lb*ua,nearbeach.new· . pas. patio, garage, new paid, $550, 892·Wl or lJdec, Open bae Sun 11·2, 12 BR DUPLEX. Easts1de. 3744 2Br.J8a. $44 carpet. HMO B Valencia. 98G-9007Evea •Did St. 53f.fll'22 2 ba. dishwasher. patio. •••••••••••• 131 E. 18th, 646-6816 1485. No pet$. 545-7983. · I pr. MIO. 675-0562. lts. pool, len· 2 Br l 'L Ba T h 3 br, 2 ba, dbl gar. MIS, t' , .. DeMt't Bach. . ..., . own ouse. lst, laal + dep. .._.. ' 1400 Luxurious condo. 2 Br, 2""1 mo. 1 yr lae. 1 Br. Adults, oo pets. $395 mo. 646-45oS9 -••••• .. ••••••••••••• • ba, 2 car gar. auto dr op· 161 E. 18th. 642·0856 646-9501 · Bt1 Bear . 75xtOO n ice • ar, frplc. pool, jac.. Sl675,I och 3769! SPACIOUS 2B d I 1HIWHIFR.ETaEE . level lot in Sugarloaf. Ph: 645-8986or641·1545. lral Park. Des1rablej I ••••··~·••n~ 2 Br. 2 Ba. Sundeck. 1425. r.~ u t apt. Luxury ~dull units at af· Well treed w/gd a ccess. ' neighborhood. $'750 mo., I Wdetrfr-t H-a ' Avail approx Nov. 1st. ()per n beadm ceilings, lots i>rdable Uving 1 2 " 3 SZ2.5CIOPP714·496·3793 13brcondo.2 ba.SSSO /mo. 847-1622848·7945 l.eoMP•lrv• us ..... ......... S48·8675days, 760-141 o woo . No p e t s . Br. Well de~o;ated . · • · ! pool refs · Ille. 63 5-1400 eves & wknd.s. ~/mo. 673-8803. Olympic slz\ pool, light· PALM SPRINGS . . Ms-2258. 28r. l Ba . Double garage., Several homes r.urnished 2 br, 2 ba c h·1tdre·n OK EASTS ID E. lge re·1' ed l~ court. J~cu:u.i. 2 cmdoa for aale or rent $475 mo. Near beach. le unfurnished· priced · · park lik I ds g tW"ll ke furn tennis' College Park 3 br. 2 ba. Clean. 847 ·4900 or from 1600 /m o lo HAUORIPDGE new carpets & drapes, model.ed 2 BR 2 Ba. nr Fro~S:0.~19 y, ' . · lovely home Columbia I 998-3861 112SO/mo. New listings Magnificent new 3 br, Ulle new thruout, com· shoppmg, $450 per mo. pools, golf, car avail. The St Isl last d~posil $595 1 coming daily· Call for UP· view. condo. Sec. S1 .500. munity pool & amenities. 642-Q68 I 2 br, 1 ba studio condo. fairways on golf c lub ~.....;., · · ·jtW'AOll I to-dateinform ation. Steveoro.1900 1500/m o 892 9713 j •--to ho in f dri 1117 700 ...,.,.."""" ~ ..,, · · · l Br. Stove. Private patio, c..,.,., 9 PP g, wys, ve. • • • • • • 1 ttc.tMMr· 1242 551-1700 842-7781. Ask for Larry ga8 paid. Adults. Rer·s.I new paint, drapes & crpt. Smoke Tree R acqu e t Brand New ! Ocean View!,•••••••••••••••••••••••I Versailles lBr condo. YEAA·AOUNO FUN: Metzger.. .....,,,..'"""""'". 1 1475/mo.963-'7866 Q ub on E. Palm Canyon 3 Br 2~ ba condo . Charming Huntingtoni SSSO /mo. includes all Social Act1vlt1'1S 01· ......, ~ a l S~n ri~e . 189.900, $875/mo. 968·4456 ori Har!;Jour 3 bdrm. 2 bath.: amenities. 640·2081 . rect'lr• Free Sunday 1lfE VICTORIAN . 2 Br. PINE BLUFF APTS ; Bachelor's apt. 2 blks creative fi nancing ok. 962-0t96 ask for Ginny I Just steps from sandy' ~5 Brunch • BBa·s •Par· -w/gar. Adlts, cpts, drps, Spac. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Aduttl from oc~an .. downtown Owner ~2163 or P.S. · beach " bay. Move·in ttes •Ptusmuchmore bltns, fncd yd. water pd. Complex. Patio, view. 1 K.B.~ S28S utils pd. Call JZ5.732lukforArt. 3 br. 2 ba, newly redec.; cond. Avail Nov. 30th.1 LEASE: ADULT ST UDIO GAEATRECAEATION: 636-412.0 frplc, encl gar., gas t.une.848-4343. CM of C1•tr ~c·=~~d~~.ld~~~~ r.s~1~· J~~~ _ga;9~~~f{61' EXECUTIVE HOME ~~~~~ ~o;ag c ~~s~ i~~0"1r ~~~es~~,~~."~ 667 Victoria St. $370. stove. dishws r . s pa. Spacious 1 & 2 Bdrm Apt.s. ,_ .,...., 2550 04.7373 1 eves. · Turtle Rock Ridge 3 br. 1 clubhouse · 10 min walk Health aubs•Sauna • Luxurious condo: 2 Br, lndry rm. From l500. Tranquil setting among ••••••••••••••••••••••• I' 1 2~ ba. 3 car gar. avail. I toocn. Guarded gate. un· Hydromassage •Swim· 21'1 ba, 2 car gar. autol SPMC 631-6107 streams & pine trees. 2 K rea of gracious coun-4br: 2ba. Mesa del Mar.; lnfM 12441 i mm e d . 9 7 9 · 2 5 6 0 , derground security park ming . Driving Range door opnr, frplc, pool, Immediate 2Br E. side. Adults only, no pets. tly living. This beautiful Will cons ide r optio n.,•••••••••••••••••••••••! 851-0610,851·3965. I ing. Pool. sauna. ex-BEAUTIFUL APART· JaC Ph : 645·8986 or No pets . 1375 . See Froml385.846-6591 bone ranch is only 20 SliSO/mo. 640-0008 •c ANY 0 N V I E W .. . ercise rm. no pets. $450 AU NTS s 641·1545 min. from Or. Cly. 3 TURTI.EROCK RIDGE.1 3 Br Woodbndge 3 BR l "• mo Call Realtor Bob : tngles. I & ------------1 manager, 162D Tulip &.p.a•ac?i 3141 Bdrm,28a"familyrm. NEW 3 ~R 3 Ba condo. 3bdrm, 2~ba, 3 car gar. ba ... Sunny. pool, drps., Hindman (714 1 645.3474. 2 Bedrooms • Fur· Light. airy 2 Br. frplc, LaneC.M. !••••••••••••••••••••••• cUltilm built home. over· tplc, patio, dbl gar. Nr . avail immed. 979-2560 or tenms. •11.s. 995·1226 eve If M H CC nished & Unlwmislled dtwasher. lSt/last mo. + !Small bachetor apt. C1ose sized detached garage shops. 16&5 mo. No pets ., 851-0610 551·1494 I no ans. r. 0 man •Adoltllving •NoPets security. Adults. no pets., Costa Me'ICI 1124 to bea c h . 1300/mo, •/carport, lrg 4 s tall Agt . 760 ·1211 o r • • . 1 ~•och 3241 59S-1657 •ModelsOpendaoly S450.537-857lor63J..4681. ••••••••••••••••••t•••• 1St/lasl,sec.536-14S3 bern, 2 tack rooms, & 213-SQ6.8209afl5PM ,WOO DBRIDG E UP ·••••••••••••••••••••••• 4bdrm Spanish Villa 9106 Nice n ew adult lBr . ...... -I ,. I' . ,_ ..................................................................... It " f ' iHM JZ41 . AYAU O.C.J, ltldrm. Iba _ ..... ... -• .. •••••••••• •• ••• Inlet Northw90d •"The a-.. Newport Shora M.1'• Illa 1e oc.aa. 1C&t1anl 2 1 ........... Deluu 1 Br Iott. flSD. _.uo ' .:'.,d!a ...... t .. na • du, DMP uaU wk~ frplc •• (-IDO). PlllP cJ"pU, ~. t...U., pool, NPT. -dupleL I lw. rcNlHla 2~ ti., eedar • aw•. ttc. Call wtulys 144-1414. 2 ti., w. bt'h, "°° ao. ....... Diii car pvt 1ar. fuUy Wlrndl•l•H. Yrl)'. •1.-. 1parldla1 mabat. yd. Adult•. GO Spaclou ~· m .. ,. al 527 18th ~: 2br • denf 11r. pat.to .... beach, n••· S.,.rate 11 /HO 8311 or .,. ldtcheft w /all amen. lY det, oo pets, 9'00 yrly. Walk·ln cl -.cDl . deck, 2 car 1ar. or a .UM , lib lldtc:he lakt/ park. 1750. mo. BAYCRIST B ba Wal k to Nr bucll. saa, 28a, trptc. 5111Mlll 3 r . 2 , Om&Ar. trml dloin1. encl yard, ·~ aarace. patio, '750 mo. 'nJR1'LEB OCK p-eenble. Gardener incl. 1 ·e.dJ'OO ao-Ol74 Llc2·aty,' Bdrm, a Ba, a -/molae. ~ 1&'15. 3 Br. 2"11 Ba . Family cu 1ara1e. xlnt loeaUon. 28edroo aso.m.1100 Exec. Backbay view con· Twnhae·u Rm. Laundry tt m. 2 do. 2 Br. 231)!) sq. ft. Ten· F\teplaces, dishwasher, Beaut. lJnlv. Pk 3br, 2ba, nia, pool, spa. 11200 mo. Adlllla refrtle. lra$2 COfllpac· lst. last + securl ty . UUliU t0t. lrnmac Beaulitul ram rm. ff1>1C, lndry, no NS-5791. m>1q. ft. Ownera unit. pell '150552.11317 l.AQUINT Geminl Realty 531-2200 Woodbrid1e condo, 2br, Harbor View Carmel , Ul211 P fbr lease 3 BR 2 Ba, 2 ur 2ba, ,den, a /c, frplc. 3bdrm, tam rm, nice yrd. W.olBeac quiet, tlSO, lae, 844·5965, Edin1er. gaarage w /opener. A peUo, pool, -.so. 551·'184 MC-'JS7. 847 truly lovely home. 1 mile Wdbridge cottage new IAYFltOMTCOMDO 3br, 2ba, lov to beacb. $590 Incl• Zbr. 2ba, fam rm dbl gar, water. Call Monika al 2+den. excellent loca· 4-siiex. Cite ~or 963-1139 nr lake, lee, '~/mo t.lon. $1700 pr mo. Boat courts. " 548·81184,Dlc k . teve slip available. Agt . 1650 1667 L&e 2 br, fenced. dbl gar, T»-0875 eves '. 780-9333 846-5111 or chiJdreo wclconte .$550. Tovan Aft. 4, 960-Q83. WOODlltlDGI ON WATER: 2 Bdrm. 2 ,,...,.. 5 br, 2~ ba, Cam. rm, 2 Bdrm and den aina.fe bath. Security S950/mo. ••••••••••• ftplc, avail. immed, SBOO, family Broad moor ON WATER! 2 Bdrm, 2Br, lBa. ad lease.968-0S47 home. vaulted ceillnp, very clean. S775/mo yrly . nis, 9550 fireplace. al rt um-1675 POOIJck SPA: 4 Br. 2 Ba. 1 mo. Agt. 675-6000, ask for SECURITY CONDO: 2 548-0'12 Home. across from Cen· Natalie Bdrm, 2 ba . view Hewport• tfl50/mo ••••••••••• greenhouse. Lots of . graded 3 Bdrm. 2 ba.,COZY OCEANFRONT count kitchen wood Oakwood Clean &neat 2 Bdrm.nice garden apt. for rent. l Br. Xlnt. ocean v1ew. treea. See to appreciate .Lge New 3br, 2~ba CON·I frplc. all. dbl gar . pvti lBr. Mobile Home. knot· 'J fl ·1 d d G•rden Apartments area. uliJ rm. Older cou· Garage. 642·5569. Balcony. new carpets, .i lhia unique property All i 00, 2car gar w /elec, patios. $650. 644-1480.' ty plneint,frplc,pvtbch. Pfgge . ~ors. ,ea\ • pie pref. Lots or nice laundry . $500 mo. t.hitforonly$149,900. By open, micro. gas bar-b-1 830-SOSOX81. I adltsonly 1750mo. (7 14 ) g ass w.in ow. renc ·NtwportBeach/No. neighbors . $395 /mo. S375 mo. 2Br, l ~Ba 549-11.86,499-3922 Own e r . 646-627 5 , que, small patio; w /d~ --l 499-:1116 1 doors. Linda 631·6990 or 880lrvine W-ate rfront Ho mes studio, drps, cpts. Mr. 1...,-0985. I hook·up, w/w cpt & drps ,·I BEAtrrlFUL 4 Bdrm. 3j I 645--mTagt. (at t6thl 6.1l·l400. Clar k (213 ) 596·1631 Lge apt, 2 . br. 1"2 _ba, CM .. Stah 1 d /w . ava ii l 1 /8 /80 bath. $900 /moyrly. FANTASTIC VIEW . (7l4) 645-1104 R oo m # l 0 2 , or modem , quiet. very nice. rr.,....,, 2600 , 1700 /m o . 631 ·7100. Waterfront Homes I 3Bdrmon 609.Buen~Vis·1 sc~~ 1278 . 13 Bdrm.2"'2 ba condo.Dis· 714-642·1135 N. t.guna, adults! 1.$45. I 642-2001 I 631-1400 ta. Xlnt location. Highly ..---Newport Beach/So. 1 hwshr. frplc, 2 car gar. 1-623-3827 •••••••·~·••••••••••••• ' upgraded . $850/m o . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1700 16th St I Pvt s t. Avail n o w . Deluxe2bdrm. 2Y:iba con·--------- 40A sceruc Oregon Coast. , MESA VERDE ,~lerock condo. beaut; 64().S536 12 Br. 1 Ba. with view .of 1Dover at 16th1 I 5625/mo. !st/last. securi·, do, gar, pool, children Bachelo.r apt. bea~t. Elect~city,. fenced, ou~-, 4 Br. 3 Ba. Family r m. vtew, 3bdrm, no pets.I I FOOt.hllls. Garage with (714) 642·5113 t A ·1 673·2282 91 OK. 1675/mo. Call morn$ oce8:" view, pvt gar en st..:ling view. access1· , wet bar. prof decor & , $895. 851·0263or975·0477. 1 3br. 2ba, Cam ~m . f~lc, auto. door opener. Quiet ; Y'sp vai now. · 1 oreves548·3561. selling, woman pref. ble,owoer492-2499 I lnd.scpd. 3 car garage.' . ---stove, r efr1g . dis · family neighborhood . 1 to m. St00.499·S3049·5. AS r EM A I E-A Gardener incld S990 WOodbndge. 5br. 3b a . hwasher, covered patio., Fenced yard with cov·l~1 fib . Stunning. large I Br. MEWPORT 1$450, 1 br apt. frplc, close $?1 OOO l 714/770-l804.644·7~_7._ ry-escouModel.Camrm.1 S800 t m o . 8 4 2·4946 . 1 eredpat.io.Convenientto l uwt::isMct 1 Garden Apt. Pool. Rec1 APAITM~TS tobeach,view.494.1322. 5, din rm. A/C. 2 frplcs. 3 855-UllM. 8311·9900 Frwy & complete shop· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 area $355. 710 W. 18th .. 1 Br. S2SO + ut1l. 2 Br. ---------New 4br, 2.8ac. 29min to j Mesa Verde. 4 br. 3 ba.1 car garage. Assn dues.I ping. $495 mo . 30771 1lalaoa?sa.d 11061 St I s:IXlmo ln!antsonly.NoiL.al)lllaMHJ-t 1152 ~ wor ld bes t skiing ! fam. rm. pool. pool Gardener No pets Mo. ••lower 3 Arch Bay. 21' Pasco E l Arco. Work 1 , nah nowaterbeds . ••••••••••••••••••••••• "-U s· k. · M """" 5032 b d 11000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PALM MESA APTS ~~· ....., ect eves imp ins 1 rruunt. & gardener. S900. ID O-_,5. Agt 541· e room mo. 972-9196, Home768-4608. I 24SONewport Blvd. 1 Br 1 Ba Condo Pool (I03)923-4417,AGTSok. avail. now. 979-5814. . 499-2986,495-4486. r__._ .... _ 1210 Deluxe Bayfront Jbdrm.I L561MesaDr. CostaMesa · ·$475 · · 67J.229ll Luxunous condo. 2B r. -.. -2ba. refrig. frplc. adults. 1 & 2 Bdrm Furn & un· 492 00 56 3526. .......... 2"'-'Ba. air, call aft 6PM . Ocean view 2 Br+den. 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. $800/mo yr ly ' furn From ms. 9.4. Ca11'0-Poillt 11261 -67 or l· Wmhd 2900 NICE hse. 3 br. Jge J1v 559-5584. decks, lse. 1700. No pets ,Sperlt.Ung clean. cozy 2Br 644>-7213,644·5138 I !J46.91160 ....................... Newport •och 1169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. din rm. den w wet 3bdrm l'~b d t Dave, agt 644·7211. o Ide r h ome . B i 1d .,._ ,... 1 b l 1-· 1 & 2 Bdrm. Garage. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt party w<!uld like to bar. encl gar. (n rt yrd. · T< a .. en ur_u · nr O I backyai:d. Near Edinger ' ~ .. a ... ive r, gar, pa 10· AVAJL. now. 2 BR, pvt D/washer. clean. Close lease w /opt1.on t!> .buy I nochildren.nopets.$500 pool & tenrus. Children ~~:'!! •••••• !~~••' & Main $450 /m o ' wash/dry. avail now 1 deck overlooking ~olfl be ach. Fro m $34. 5 PAii NEWPORT home in Mission V1eJO or Call eves. 642·7803 OK. $625. 640-0547 eves j 63'7-7918. $500 mo. 673·0188 aft 6 course. new cpts & paint. 493-5853 Aft. 5PM. Mr. COUMTIY CLUI Costa Mesa. 548·9464 , ---------• iCondo , 3bdrm. 2ba . $425 mo Call 546·5880 I Blain 646-0034 ,3 Br. 2 ba. cpts/drps, nr' Wdbn)-Y1D.G reflt I washer/dryer, gar. nolHomesFmllislNdor . IAYNOMT askfor BiUorPam · · · UYPMG Wilson/Placentia. F ed! 2 B~ corido, $550 /mo. pets. SS75/mo. 581-1799. , u.tw.1•d llOO N1ce2Br 1 ba w /sbp i . lbdrmaptl360.2bdrm Singles, 1&2 bedroo m ..... ydS550.963-1777aft S Avail.now.CallRogeror :u.,.aMI~ 1252 1 ••••••••••••··~··•••••• SlOOO/mo. 673·5~1 L.ower 2 Br. 1 Ba. m 4.1 apt$4:i0.586-0741, apts.&townhouses. ••.-•••••••••••••••••••• ----1 FredSSS.9400. I'••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br 2~ Ba. view from , Little Island yearly Lrg Plex. 271E.16th. Pl. S350 768--4541. Froml449 644-1900 ....___ IL-1.a..-~ 2 Br. Single Ba Fenced1 II ;'1V f. I\";. . I every room, c lose to . · ! mo. Call644-0452. . ,.._. .._..__ yrd. attached gar Pet&: ·~fn ~ L~ Niguel Shores 3 Br. +den town, SBSO. 497.5922 & a~ry I bdrm. $500/mo 1 2 or 3 br, back yard, big Oceanfront f?r Winter ....................... I child OK $490 mo Callr-b--·---gardenhome.S725. I _ Avadtmmed.675·3412. i R.oomy 3 Br. Townhouse! sundeck, garage, w /d , Rentals.Furntshed&un· ...... .._.. 1106 642·0857 I REALTORS 494.9453 1Cc:' ... f "!!:'i~d• 3425 1-Bdrm unfurn. charmer Apt. in quiet Adult vie.w. new carpels & fum.Broker.675-4912. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----; _. ••-;.,.n Complex. Newly re· pa.1Dt. S550 mo. 494·2798. WINTER RENTAL 3 br I ba f.larage lrg TURTLE ROCK E X E C U T I V E 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••: on canal. ~. Rum bold d l d r· I . 9AM 94 755 VILLA IALIOA 28drmhome.~uiet st.nr yard' ...,.,,..· 960 Oak' St 2br. conv den, 2ba. lg TWNHOME 3Br. 2Ba. Luxurious condo: 2 Br.I Really.675·4822. eclsdora eti, :_rep ace , 7.JO. .4 ·1 . · ..,.,.,,. l · d f ~ C I d ' · A /C ------eric pa 0 .. garage. CONDOS So. Bay. Love y private 968-8388,960·l503 brit.e l/r + /r, p. Cathi orma 1n1ng. .1 2Ya ba, 2 car gar, auto Little 1, Lge 1 Br Year Sorey no pets. $495 mo. Large private s tudio, pvt Adult only patio.dbl1ar. S&OO. -Clngs. o/s. dbl gar . rrptc. pool, jacuzzi. 1795. door opnr. frplc. pool, Ii . . 645-338 675-5949 I yard $325/mo Lou BrechteU1Assoc. E.Sidedupl~x .2Br.yard.1 pool /rec.1745.851·2206....:._ mo.760-1666 jac. 1675. Ph: 645-8986or ~~t~al::-f1 2p~~lt;4 2n5o tor I · 495-oi2'7 :~1.:de~'~:abnav!:;:,. 675-llll gar,. qui et s t reet.Iv . Pk 1 C k. h 2 Mi.U.Vieio 1267 641-1545 673-9473 28drm.2 8a.Townhouse. llwll1R9 • e.1140 ceuview ..... , ... ,.;. 1107 ~dre/ n ok.&Alva1l. now.;I :.;·2 Bageal~~h~ d'bl ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.... .... hn 1650 ............. _ •. 1 ••• ...1 1807 All Adu~ts. IAttacheld •••••=~•••~••••••• 2Br.2Ba.w/oceanview _,., mo. 1st ast + sec V • & 3er ......,__ ya rd garage i ••••••••••••••••••••••• -'"'""'-a garage, 11rep ace. poo • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Joan497·5402 I gar. ery pvt .. ~oz.Y pe~&kld. ok '.uoo/mo. Cl 2b ' blk f •••••••••••t,••••••••··~ spa l450 mo. Call aft 3. Winter. oceanfro nt. woodsy W/D refngincl · ~ · ean. r 'l rom 'b al 631~ 2bdrm, 3 car prking. College Park 3 Br. I'• ba. Lse, s7oo ~o. Aft 5: Can be seen anytime., bch covered deck· I n·'~~~.: ~ts.r.~l~n:L ----·------ between B & C st. 1625. dbl gar. SS75 incl grdnr. 642·2917 ;955·~ utils 67~l60agt. 2 Br 1 Ba S400 to $425. ~. 645·2062 days ; 838-4075 ---- -D1washer. garage 24172 Delphi St . Mission Cant OK. Yrly. $575/mo. Viejo. Se habla Espanol. I l.s~. l300sec. 548·509~ 4719 ''THE I •l(ES .. C.-.. M 1 122 eves. -3br. 2ba, yrly $650/mo 5411.3394 I •••••••••••••!'!'••••••.•• N C 561.ake Pines: 2Br l ~ ba frplc. 406 E. Balboa HOME FOR RENT River St. NB <upst airs) 3 Bdrm. $55-0. Fenced ..., ; wh ,_,,.l.,..d ONTHEBEACH 2 Bdrm duplex, view. avail. 'tll 12/15. All Faye. &l().lllOO Lovely 2bdrm home. com· pietely rum , secluded patio, 2 car Jar. Couples prelert"eCtl-~9228 after lpm. tta.,.... •ace. 316' ••••••••••••••••••••••• UDOll&.I Completely furnished wllb everythin g you .-ed. Remodeled & de· conhd. 3 Br, den 2 bath. llatbly. Bill Grundy. JDtr.~111 I Bdrm, 2 bal.h, Penln. Pt. bome. llo to mo. o r •Inter lease. $675. ·•zua. ew2sty 2br. l'!lba. rplc. on water. no pets or kids. Blvd. 675-7367.675-4912 S350 mo. 2 Br 1 Ba, 2860 d and F ii j.nf-w yar ga~a1e. am y ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /d. dishwasher. self· 2..+rv If I --1 Hickor y Pl .. M esa clng oven. balcony gar. -.i w rp c. ~ mo ~ .. M• 1122 Verde No kids /pets. please. Kids & p ets ..... P.a.d 3706 welcome Call 964·2566 or ••••••••••••••• •••••••• Mature adults. no pets. U8La.kePines.1Br. Iba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refsreq'd.Agt.559-6221 97J..29'7l Agt., no fH . Small 1 br apt. Yrly. incl. RiOO/rno &U-7725 no pets or kids. SSOO /mo. 21,'a Bdnm. 2 ba, frplc, dis· 252 Pine View 2Br 1 ~ ba, 2 stry w/frplc. Kids OK. no pets. $575/mo. 2Br+den,2Ba c ondo. Comm. pool /apa ·Alito Villas. $550 In cl uUI E.Side Broadway 3br. lba. frplc. no children /· pets $575/mo. 645·4461 leave message Brand new 2 BR 2 Ba con· do, lge rms. dbl gar. lge 4111.:1)34 . All rentals requ i r e 1st/last + 1200 security 1 Hewpart •ach l 26t '?· side yd, 1650. Nancy. Each unit has access to _63_:i_-e990 _____ ~ _ __,._1 tenn is, poo I. j a c u :ti. lZ26 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bdrm 1 ba, ff1>lc, dining rm, brdwd fin, W /D hk· ~. '550. 415-0227 sauna W\d has r11undry hookup. Ask !or Gil regarding theeerentals. l,...C ....... rr.,.,.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• BLUFFS. 3bdrm. 21At ba, ram rm, frplc. patio. nr pool, school. 1795/mo.• 640-8141. Newport Shores 2 br, 2 ba, den. newly p.!nted " crptd. Nr clubhse. 1675 mo. 831·2981. utilities. $375 mo. Agent, 6'T.M062 .._.,.,.lllila 1707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAY FRONTAGE . Beach, Pier, 2 Br. $600, 1 Br. $450. Adlts, Wnlr. 303 E . E d gewater . ~ 1-8'11 ·2866. Balboa lnn, Oceanfront. Winter rates. ISO up wk . For info call 675·8740 Walk lo ocean & bay. Larae 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. l600 COiia CHAIMEI I yrly. 675-4630 Agt. • B drm • + d en ,2Br 1 Ba, view, ,51-021 9 P1 t•Va19J Jll4 .....•.•..........•.... -----------t hwah r. No. of P CH . Lge 2br. 2ba. new decor, U>/mo, lSt/lasl. securi· pool. adults,~ 646-7319 ty. Avail now. 673·2282, '9 _or_673--0884 ______ _.___. to5pm. 205 E.1.9thSt. 2Br. au new New 2 bdrm. 1 ~, ba, ~ cptS/drps/painl & vinyl. w/view & 2 car pkng. garage. vacant. $475 mo. $750/mo 1st •& last plus 54&-2042 SZSO dep. 9$-0142 week ---------i dayJ 675·8592 ev.es & Eas\alde 3 Bdrm, 2 '-a . No .. ~:._,,,_ ' pets. S575; Ul + dep. """""......... 833-93811 ' 2 Br, 1 ba. frplc, new --------~• ~. etc. So. ot hwy ; I &2bdrm, 2ba apts. Pool. 1525mo. All 675-2373. : Cfl'tS, drps, laadscaped,, ------':;.__' --,,...--aec:luded. No pets. sns1 Stud1o Apt. No cookln up.831-058Sor 731~. fadl. Kltch area w /frig E s;.a-C M 2b . f nu cpta. $285, 67~·1M31 . """ . . . r , 10 our- plex, tie patiO, dbl gar, adults/no pets 645·5512. MS-2331 bay beautiful! a ointed HOME FOR RENT 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. TurlUerock. 4 Bdrm Condo $575. New paint. & carpet. No Y PP I ckdul, Slli5 wntr, 85 yr-1 2Br, LBa. ocn view. frplc Gara1e. Families pets. S750. Sierra M1mt, ~o:.e ;;f:So: sq.to'\; ly. Ask for Connie A., t550 mo. lo qu.lel non· ....... U.fawliMd ~~~:. Calkld11...,~~0ts Co.&U·i.a:M 1!ar leue. ~Pgent ,i 675-8870 amoker.M0-8945 •l Br. Duplex S320. .... ••••••••••••••••••• WaM..~ ..,. 6'flllllllVV u -. .,,,..,_, ,.-....a.-~-•724 ,.__.,_ .....___ 3124 A all N •· ...,..., · .~ 0 mar1.Ast.noree. ._,...eiJlnow!Woodbridl • -...--., .---v .now. ope .... ~ Deluxe poolside xtra lge From l600 Mo. 2br. 2ba. Bltns. dshwhr. JRL Properties 11,'a miles beach. Adlt.s. 645-4586 645-6459 no pets . $395 m o . MEAllEACH 53M362. Lee 3 br, 2 ba upper apt. Very large 2 Bdrm. new No pets. 1700 mo. Agt. cpts/drps. Patio. Gar , 67S-8170 kids OK. $395. 847 ·4803 SUOO 4 Br. 2 Ba. Duplex. Brand new 1 & 2 Bdrm. Oceanfront. Wood beam Plerpointe Condos. Pool, ceilinp, carpets. drapes. spa, tennis, garages. all built·lns. Enclosed (213) 51J&.7202 dys; (714 ) gara1e w i l h IMi-4121 eves. wubet/dr)'cr. Fum. or unruro. Jmme d . OC· Spacious 2 Br. Avail now. cupancy. TSL Mgmt. $365. Private patio. 2 642-1803. Kids OK. 17401 B Keel.ton Lane. lit. last + securi· NEW cpts/d.rpe. 3Br, 2Ba. ly . (213 )598 ·5328 . frplc, gar 2 bllts bch. No 831--mo.1 pets. $675 mo. yrly. Winter Rental. $800 Mo. 3 66-18112 • Bdrm. 2~ Ba. Condo. Venail.lea lwuary 2 Br. 2 Ocean " Bay view, 20' Ba. Condo. Only S590 mo. boel slip. Comm t•nnu 213/912·9352. Eve.s " co(lrta, pool. Washer/ Wknds. 714/ 547-7451 Dryer. 2 car 1arage Mn. Luc.laaowtdaya. w/elec. gara1e door IAYROMT opener. Private patio, new carpet. Wlll con· Sciacloul 2 Br., den, 2 Ba . sider furn. 642-1803. ~with apectacular . Lwnartoua appoint· lrl· 18r condo; immac: Gients . Bea u liflll aec . btd1 ; cpl/d r pa : = ai sand)' beach . patJo; dl.abwuher; cov· looU Balboa Island. L j, I •' rd prtina: lwuary 1mda; Slip avail. Adulta·no pool: aauaa; rec. rm. pet.a. 11•n~19. .... _ 32 ' 3 br l ~ ba view o ~,,on H•eHTS •••••••••••••••••••••••! •••••••••••••••••••••• B. Placenlla. 645-9494 _ .................... ....._ ...... 1240 .,...;,.aiJ . k 1575 ~ SUSCASITAS I ..w&.YDICOI. .. -. 4 IW, I be, deD , dlni.nl 1••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ..._ dY, nr par • . 3bdnn~~lra Jrd with hm 1 br. a pt. Sl50 •up . 1 Br. 1u pd, encl gar. 2 Br. Garden AJ>!. Small ~ IG5. n••-4172 ult for NO FEE! Apt. 6 Condo Nyle or Lenny, or rtlUll. Villa Rentala. zis..m.1Sia5, Mr. Shane. m412 Broker z~ar. pn1e apt, Quiet, a Bdrm, a ba, 2 atory dplx r •. I 21 Co r •I · . HOMES FOR RENT _ • :=·kitchen '-:i::,',:~1 Incl. 1ar. Adulta, no dtwuber. pool. Adults. cHldOK. SITS mo. •••u. a Bdrma . $550:1550., ~·ALS LeaM Incl lardener • Pltl· 2110 Newport Bl. MZ-5073 541-tl50. 1 Fenced ya rd s an d i 3br2ti. $'175 pool ;,,alnlenance. Not 541-4MI betwn 8:30 " • • 1 .. ._. 2bdrm, t\\ba, bll-1.na, pvt 11A&YllMTALS t .. ra1u. Fam i lies' 3br2Y•ba 925 pet.a MZ·a.81or957·11M" SPll. • • Ga deck, 1ar. M50 lse only. UUle lallud: Larie 1 I please. Kida Ir pets !~~~baba 2"!!•250001 ref: Avail approxj2 br 2 ba II•• Verde ~?. .. d•poolcor.d /.::.tfe~· 781>-0990C'780-0409. Ad 11 lt1 prthr red . apt . Di1hw1hr , frplc. ... t r I w9come Call 984•2566 0 wvv-... ll·15-IO • • . . --" -· ' . I Hardwood floon. Nr l...t boollupe, 1ar. "' O:::..a~:r; .:O: urn · mart Ast .• no ree. 4 br2~ ba +bon1» ~, · ! Ad lta. oo ptta. $450. Adub. MJ.$073 ! NICE 2 BR, redecorated. be9cb. DIO. 535-'lD. blli to bcb. S750/mo. , -1fWJator)'iBdrm 3br~6 ~:SUn"50Qceanriew,SBrcondoe.: -..U. >•T•wU••• 'I pvt yard, encl lllrage, llB.Lux d 16 lit/Jail, ..ewity. Ava.II lllme, md\u'D, dbl 1ar. 4br2~ba sns1cd 11: N_pt.~.751-7911 I St14u lnc l ar1• 1 Br . Newlf decor. 1a1 pd ., ~~:Orriod~aul Zbdrm. =-= A°:~1u., now.11J.2m,t1o&pm. dolt to So. Bay· (7 17 •r DAY tum. winter rental · tardta apt. pe>ol, rec. • n c 1 a r . , P o o I • ' '! no-· pool Jae teonla rooma. t nOOin· n;;·. tfvo !NCW PO R T c a EST ..... •· 710 w. 11th. d /wuher. Ad ulh . ~ l BR, $116 utU pc1., ..:.:1a1.' ' 'OCEANFRONT al a a you pay ror ... : lbdrm, 2~be. coodo, dbll SL ea.aon Carport •dlt1, no peta. 1 3 Br, 2 ba, duplex colft• -aaoday ad lnttie • I ~ · • 11ec pr ld1 wtt bar . • m w & Mt-11518 1 Lovely a • a Bdrm 'I plt ttl1 reh arb l•h•. IA'"°'"llMTALI•, DAILY PILOT ~ amall ~ ... 'vw. pe>ol: Lalp 1 Br. Furn. Nr;auo-• 2 Br. L Ba. Apt.j · y. Towahou Ha, 1ara1~. Ytarly l eaae HU. •J ..._..AvallableJ'lfow SllYICI I I a...-*· '715. .... pool, all utill pd., Pool. lalDlry rm, Cf1>lt, 2 Br. 2 Ba CQQdo, ttonJt pMlo, laUDdry fac. 5'5061 m.tl1J 1-U148d,.... I • ~ .D Ludlall Court •llonn>Vla.>41~ j ~· Adultt only. Cal, crta pool SIH •o.t p. cau iu1-.noa or ------.....--~.!::',.::S:f Dl~lffJ~Y m.iL~ ap.;How8at/8un. ·Studio apt . ~tcoratorj TILlli int.N-llOl.l "•si-.~tt_.,. TM,,_1M7. v~:-.~,!~.~ '' -'4~1671 • ~ I Wlllrf.-C I Br, lunf1' ''"'· Private patio. 38r.2Ba.NearOCC. fUO Avail. now. fraltb palat· U10U'NkJakUllfOl'abet· quMt,MCW"e,addarta. • ..... allld&AMec. I . wtt.b fabuloulwater6cl ·~ pald. INO, mo.tJ"::,:S1 1 ed 2 6 J br apta, .J.D. wJob,youwoa't wanttc> la &eat Bluff. Slqle 671-1111 I Clutlned ;\di , your one.' fffJ<.'AMMDa~l~ I \)" ll&llla view. aoeo mo.1:.. ~ I ~rty lhaa1•meatJ =-~· the tmployment ..... DO .... M4·4'T1T. ·--------~ stop1hoppln1center. I . _ lllldiiu&U•.•1·2111. l Se.llldJelttms GG58'78 j ~~~Adftesun.. 642-5871 '111· · ~-laaa.llltcl •tmo. -1 r I 1'.'CWf'OllNlA'' ............. • ClmtTMO Found: blk A11bu, P': alao tan Sbep. P\APPlet, F. N.8 . Animal SMlter, 8"--. Found: youn1 female1 Siamese cat, vie Fairway " Del M' ar. C.M.642·3889. •FllYUIY * ~ONLY . * 972·1131 * FIRST LADY ADt•l.SIC.., ...... ........ P..tyO.C.,... * 972-1345 * MC• VISA Accep\ed PllOIUM W&lntTD.._• '7MIJl/115-l 145 AITaniedby eo.t ..... u.. MAICE SC*IOHI HAPPY MAICE SOMEONE IMIU! Found : keya, vi e University & Redlands, C.M. 556-9840. For a public water a1n· cy located 't LaPa1 ao.d • 1·5 Fwy. Xlat t~ 11dlla• euentlal: GIRL dictaPbone experience. COVER filln1. Sm'all o'ffiu. Yrtr._..• P•iaaula. Hr, 1 '9, ... I br. a ba. Place a HAPPY AD in thla column foronl,y $3.25. C.llM2-~8 * OUTCALL • Startlnl aalary s10a. CA'ftlE.DRAL CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Found~: Bird. area of 953>-0778 MC /VISA _eau __ 77_CM2118 __ • ---- • -L.-\Ot aam•, phon• I ••...._to call •t ..... Mapolia & Adams. RB. ** Call ll describe 962-7185 SPRJ'nJAL READINGS aft6PM. lOam-lOpm. Fully Lic'd . 3'-517 CaUMdral HAPPY UYl'H lo Beck~ 482-7298 or 482·9034. 1815 All~ DO peta. 2 Br. 2 CaayonDrive Lookinl rorw1rd to Found: Abandoned puppy S. Camino Real, San. . Ba.~•· Pool, spa, Palm Sprtn••, many more. Love, G'reg. nds lovin1 home. Blond Clem. _..._ d tw..a.r lDeld -tr 'a111,n....t/ w/big ean. 4 m0& old. ---------1 C ·-.... · CaUfornla 9Z262 ftq e SI SO Housetrained. 497 ·3712 TOMMY'S ~ N.8 . Golf Coune. n.....-Relort Realty 714/75• 0234 56-.._~ -....................... evesor49'7·5494dys. OFNEWPORT .Advertilinl Salm Representative tlO call oo reader ad bual· oea1 accounts for ad· vertiaint. Moo.-Frl, t-5. Bue + commwloo. Co. benel\ta. wm train. App. ly Pennyaa ver. 1110 Placentia Ave .. C.M. ---------· ...... Sllse 4310 21112Micbelson Dr. 1'212 I r' •• Need $30,000 loap for 3yn. Ride wanted SJC lo Birch ESCORT 8&MX)lif8AY,2br,2 ba ....................... 211118usinessCntrlJ213 'Jllflllmity SOOS WUlingtopay 15.5% for &Von~en.N.B .. ar· Found : Ma le Cocker TS.2·93&8 AOVBTISllMC. apt of BAY FRONT oid de 'ts" SUbl t b . N t •••-•••••••••••••••••• 3yrs. No broters please. rive 8:30 leave 5.5:30. Spaniel. Golden cir. AP· DISIGIMH bome t-11 avail utlla Mov\D&T Av pos1 e c o1ce ewpor WANTED· Carpenter Securedw/adequate2nd. -..ntO • prox 9 mos. Ftea collar.I TOUCH A CLASS Busy ad agency wants • ' cut flvln1 expense•! Beach location · Design · Call Diane· 213-928-6126 Vic: Paularino • Babb, ISCOltTS ti & ·bl Incl, '780/'mo. yrly . Profeulonally since Plua. S51S/mo. 644•2260. with 'B' License. 7c39all · · Lolt&,_.. S300 crea ve respon11 e ~ um · eves&t.S-'1876or!M0-4 NeedS!O.OOOfo_rayrs. Will•••-••••••••••••••••• CM.~82 3UIRS. 75.2·0817 person for Artist's pas, "''-: S <Xfice Fast pace, lots of pre-Pre1U1lou1 Verullles HOUSIMATI Sl7I PH MO Doc)GfoaDR Ing Sllop pay16%. Dons: 955·0809. Found beautiful bl.It & wbt ss~. wilimlted oppty'a. c coado,lmbllbr.intertor 832·41M Includes an 8 ~10 • Located in Cor'!na del MDilyigi .. Trwt n..tryfemaleldtten. Vic. GntitCa .. •y 714·556·0460 ask for J decor. 6 harni-.hed. .__,_ .. ~ o'fc. cubicle+ Mar. Eatab .. clientele. Deicli 5035 FOUND ADS Myrtle St. l:aguna ESCOITS Penny · ~ c-· ....... -IUl"UllN..... I __. Aalttng S2000 Beach. 494-7346 ; 494·4080., I AWi.-u·-·· ··~· · 'I. . .. 1 elec. recepl. telephone ""' ·~~. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 2AHrs. 641-0180 ALTERATIONS & expert I l Br . pent h 0 u s e Mtftt• auc . answering. Conrerence fl92.l9l6or640-0064 Sattler MhJ. Co. I AIE FIEE LOST: Kitten 2'h·3mos. C .... /Clwck1 custom dressmaker for 1 Versailles. Nr ocean. lf1 irulc..S ... t r~oms. co~inJ racil, Broker owned prop. All types of real estate male. Siamese ~ /whl! A.Exp/MC/Visa Gimone's Lido Viii Dress .• =?'. $550 . Agent ·-~----~·-~~~·tij::1~a~d~v::: rr'!:·w~:ro::s!~f!..~~: in~=:.949. Call: ~:C~u~r.:e!~r~laf~ra~~. I Shop.6'{5-3261M-S I ~ SST·ll.Sl for purposes of growth, WTD• 642-5671 fo . l e ad l n g to h i s1j Oct. Special $15 per \.'.i hr.I ANIMAL 1 ICNptllla.3Br,2Ba.fp,gar. 1 Oldest&largestagency ZlOOsn.FT syndications. e~c. Write 64z.2171 545-0611 I whereabouts. We miss STEVE'S HAIR HAP· HOSPIT.A.L l ldry rm, rear yard, ServingSo.California Engineer a~hitect re · ad no. 803, Daily Pilot, him.Cal16"2·1946 j PENING . Wom e nj A t.rees . .as.67 5- 1225 =:-:~~~~~~J~ ~arch, advertisin,: de· ~.O. ~~O. Costa C~forT.D.'s il.AJst $100 reward Femi Lall: Black long hair cat.1 Welcome! 646'9636 I ~~}~~~8Je~::idh~1p· Valla Balboa lux 2bdrm,I Cosmo-LATimes·Elc. s1gn.<Xfice&drart g.rm.I esa, . AmericanMtg9S3·4141 Germ Shep. blk with' Fem w/wht nea collar.I PsychicConsultations ' 1;2ba, fam rm. frplc .I Sincel971 Dlxspc.HoagHospv1c. iltluttwa.. '. CASHFORTD's w/silver tan marks. 71 brokenlongtooth.Oct31" Jack ll ~,~t :Ot~.i~scl~:~ r s1r;y1tte,micro-wave,up-lcvine.641·1899 979 .. 533 I Opp•twlty 5015 1 •FASTACTION• mo.E.Cosla Mesaarea: 4PM . 500 Larkspur.' 556-1178 Saturda y . Ir v ine / • grades, view from bal.: GardenGrove.891-1773 RIGIITREALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ca b . Mt 955.3454 ~.Info? I CdM. Reward! 640-1993.! unLEAIMIMIES NewportBeacharea.Ap .. 'pool, Jae, sec bldg &! I I CNVESTOftSWANTED m na ge . 1 wk644·1570Shelly ' ply Mon.-Fri. llAM· 1 pa. rlti.ng. 1 block to' LOOKING TO SHARE? I Join small group in buy·i Widow has money for 2ND Lart: Beautifu~ Fem. ~at,, ! ESCORTS 3PM. 1333 Avocado N.B. beech. lllOO. 675-8865 or WE MATCH ROOM ·1 ./ ./ ./ ing control of uod~r , T.D. No credit check. no part <,:&.lico/T1ger stnpe'. l.llST: 4 Mo. old Germani All Major Credit <Newport Center behind e1.-i. MATES! CfACES FOR LEASE valued public co. • UI· pnlty. Fbr action call lg hair. wht nea collar" Shepherd. So. Cst Plaza. Cards Accepted theater). 1~ ~. ac.....,s frol1\ I 75.2-9475 Fr Cl itiatin.g acquisition pro-AGT67J-731l anytime 1 last seen near Heliotropej $100 Reward 673·5349, 895-1676 ,---. ---. ---~ ... ~ --•""' ----------1 eewoy ose gram.Steve714/646-7374., &2nd.CdM.759-1146 SO-OllZ7,"2-6585 l .AnswenngServ1ceneeds ' bch.. Bach & 2 Bdrms I Female will shr 3+ br bse . SFR's to SOOK. Purchase I . . W Ii bl 1 . telephone secretary roe 1 fromD&S.640-5078 on Newport I sland, BRANDNEW! I &refi.2nds (Equity)2SK Lost: Brwn/white S~r· L<lst: Parrot, gree~ w1th j .anttor;_:J~~o~~:ug:r. Upmto7am,Sun&Mon ~ .. •-Private lbr. s.350/mo. Call Susi, c.osta Mesa. Bee and llMYISTMIMT tA>-15yrs Owner/Non ingerSpanrem pup. V1c:I yellow top , v 1c of 1111 to ha 1 washer &I only. Permanent PIT. ...-.-apt in-t•he Bluffs . No 64G-0791,673-3184 Baker Streets. < oro~:i OPPOUUMITlES no ·'pre :p~y Condos: Placentia & 18th. CM.1 Bluebird Canyon, Lag·I' dryvan. ~ 1 $.7S57. del Mar Freeway o . Commercial Fee/Lsbld Nd s m e d I cat' on . Beach. 497·1612. er. t --------- cbildreo or pets. $550 Femal~ roommate, ramp). I PALMSPRlNGS PETER.DOBBS .Reward.S48-6Ul I . . . IEMPTY U·HAULTRUC K!Apartment Manaier: · 851-0tM needed to h 48 hs L<lst -M Siamese Cat with . M al u r e coup I e to 1 s r r eon, LOTSOFGREEN! 4 un!ts w/pool. 1~r~ari1 REALTOR/BROKER !LOST.: Lthr Address Book Jewel collar, Lag. Beach .t Leaving for Michigan. manage 21 units. Free Bayfrontlbr,$375/mo. ::~~O Avail Dec Lil AcrossfromMil.eSquarel :!!'Yu:~lst ~ith 640-6016 /673-9043 alongP.C.HwybyAlpha Buen a Vista a rea ._ Want.~rsona~ 0~.co~-, apartmenl.Allutils.paid Call I Park , Eu c li d and financing.$215,000 ti W1LLIUY I Bela m So. Lag $200 re·I 499-. 505S. '1 ~1 ~er~ a~ is~blo, + s mall income. 2450 673-3554 FEMALE to share nice1 Warner. 500 sq. fl. <San nJS11N ·T 'S ward, no ques asked1 • e ver as · osst . el Newport Blvd. Costa :"'-Versat'lles 2 Br.2 8a. hsew/samenrSo.Coast1 Diego Freeway orr. 4 Plex w /pool Welt. Or2111d-lf'6.4thTD'DS F j 493-SlSlJD Burns L<lst:Golde5nh Rehtriedver~I room on return trap.1 MesaSeeManager . • ,,..,..... ramp) • Com.munit : Cund new . or · · German ep er . v1c 1 4!n·5610 . ___ . ------- $ISO. By Hoag Hos p. nw.ntaineg. 1 bh Yj immed . quote, calllREWARD· Lost femdog· Brookhurst & Yorktown. 'Apprentice to learn roof· Adulta. 988-2297 : ~~l~n c u ou ~e W.1.C. AGT (714 )752-8261 in vie. ~f Bear /.Baker' REWARD. Please con-I Airline Tickets <2> Toi ing trade. Im med. open· ;Specioul 1 Br. in quiet NEWPORT 1 • •c••llh/ Sts.Smallw/short brownl tactScott963·07l2. ! ?Aa 11 ~ s . ~ ~5~iea8 ingavail.Musthaveown "area. Walll: to shopping. 6 units in the heart. of Pwn•~s/ hair. Tail curls up. 13 yrs! Found · g shorthair blkl ~ can ., 1 lrans. Call aft 6PM. Pool, Adults, no pets. Newport Beach com · Lolt&~ old. "Sugar" 979·0965; cat ~IcoUar . Santa! .. _5S2_·_9232 ______ _ • _,mo. 646-437B mercial area: Can be •••••-·•-•••• •••• • • •• after 3PM I Ana/ 15th. 642.1938 1 we alt by H .. e . bu s 1 · A.rt paste-up u:ied for b?usaness, re· Aa a• n•nh 5 100 . Ir neutered male 1· nessman seeking allrac-1 Working with transfer ...a llACH .s1dential~SO,OOO. •••••••••••••••••••••••' ~rthi!\red cal. white Found : YC?Ung friendly live young lady for arter· t lellersheels & photo· ~ ~ ~~cyri~~li COSTA MESA I chest. belly & leghs. Lrgl ~~~ck~~~~~b ~~~e c~:::1 noon dales. 536-9898 gvraphny .. bFlulbl o~-dp /T . .._ r l 1 ROAD RALLYE Now v ·ou gray/black pate es on ..... ..,...., Yowig man needs ssooo. ery eJU e rs ... aya. Br. l ... , rp c, enc · gar. . sides & back. Yellow _............,. Payback +15% within 90 548-1914 ~·:r~. Br furn. I ~~~11J>:=na;!0~n~,l~: Can . eyes. losBt I vdic 23~~:1 Found. Samoyed female. days. Secured form of --------- Nwpt Bcb Rlty 675-1642 900 sq t . p , showroom. Has existing, , Newport v on ·1 Abo. Siamese Bluepoint oollateralM&.9858 A.SSIUILB/ ~ S..Cll•• 3176 ~.10t!~ ~~:~~r:ik:~ ground floor locat10!'-; business. Owner will! ~~call 6"2·8890 arterl ~u!:i~i"::~~h' s~a -!•-•••••••••••••••••• ,312.6"2-43002.tbrs. oear beac~es . all util. careylstTD.S575,000. I Sell I · INTROS.PtCIAL I We have an i mmed. 1 'h Ye a r s new . I taxes. etc ancl. $575/mo.! WaterlronlHomes I DOING FOUND: 1 Silver grey MASSAGESlOW /AD I openiog for an .... BEAUTU'UL! ! s plit ROOIOIATE waoled to ~1964 I Inc. ReaJtori. l ~-cat. Mesa Verde CC vie.. MYSTIC MASSAGE ~r/solderer w1tb a I level, ocean view, 3 sbr. 2 br CdM house! Anan'IOIM' 631·1400 i More · .. ::. BUSINESS 7Sl-&9l 556-4658SantaAna ~muumum ~ 1 yr. exper. bedroom , 2 bath , w/frplc, wash & dry, • 1 .:.: UNDERA d WillbereqwredtoS;C*fer carpeta, drapes, built· .garage. G&2 mo. 673·59801 Doctcr, a..wy.r, 5025 I I .. · · FICTITIOUS ,_,_, USO Grand Opening. Men & ~· turret term111als, -2---'--~c1trports -~Chief! ~tol.o. "ith Daily Pilot I .. N&ME? ••••••••••••••••••••••• W01Den forrela.xalion& wtre, solder .tr touch-up -_ _. ' ... ~ 1••••••••••••••••••••••• PE~1'\' Pl:-.ICHER I "' ' PCBM t...._ 'd t t..dry facilities, public Elegant bldg., in heart of · ' 1 PRE LAW student needs stimulation try "Touch · . us """~per • ai IOlf co.lne,and tennis Prcl. M/F to shr lo~ely ' Hunt in Ito n B c h . YOU CAM II ADS Still onf~· S?. If you hewe full ftl•d S25,000. Will do anything ol Class Massage & Spa" aolderin~ circwt boarck. cc.ta ri&hl behind pro-: Condo N.B. Spac1~us w/sp. acious ofrices -SUUWITH A 3 ltnl'S for 2 da\·s I ~ou~ n .. ,:ictlllou: 1 Legal. Confidential l9l52S Beach Blvd. H.B. Apply at. <-..•-1&1-- perty. Close to ever -3bdrmpool ·lenn1s · skylights, wetbar. con· · onl~ st a day J.IC'·a 1 11:11~"n~•yete_:i:,,;.:d DVM. P.O. Box 3242, 536-9172. We accept all M.lfw~_... ything!! $500. month/ jacuzii $37 5 + Lynn ferencerm,85'per sq .ft . BANK line I ltforpubl!Qtlon,ple•H N.B.92ili63. credit cards. open 7 1640Moorov1a,C.M. leue. Available Nov· 4!J7,5388 Plus, super 2,000 sq.fl. Acf\ l'rtiSl' one or don 't for9•1 fhet the days. 642-2427 E.O.E. embel' 17th Call owner1 medical bldg., well ap. rnorl.' itemi. \•alued 11m11e11on 1• 30 dey• M•~SA"E n4642-0138 Fem. roommate. Wood· pointed at 75< per sq.fl 2 d TD' lift In Sll)ll Eaeh from del• of llNr19. Tiie ""' a ••:,_...& St...... t 'th I bridge Townhome. No~,·, Fordetails call n s :Hldt11onal llO(' IS I ~u';,!l~hy ;~rL~~.~~: Be pampered wit~ a ll ~,...ii.. Assemblers ..... 10 ap w1 ocean: smkr. 208 or 30s. Ava1 I RED CARPET RIDUC.ID RATES nnh r.11e for Lhe t\\O I Io, I 3 e . so . o u, person al relax' n g ••••••••••••••••••••••• view. Elec. furn. $275 Decl.$59-0652/951·0820 1 893-1351 d.t ·\ !'I Sorry. no I clrculetlon 1~11.111 .. lh• I massa&ebyl2 ofthepr~ ~Diii& I ./ mo. See Mgr, 3.12 Encino S..ttego.... ",1 mm l. r c· ta I a cl s l entire Orang• Cout Ulest girls In Southern .....-..CtlOll 7005 Ln,AptC,S.C. Fem. to shr 3 Br condo, Prestigious Newport 714-132-5200 .il lo\\'ed l'har~c I •r•• end 19991 notice• California. Ja c uzzi,'•••••••••••••••••••••••i NB. non-smkr, rec facil.. Beach office to share I Ask for Unda f1ynn \our Pc•nn.' Pin<"h•·t eppHr In 8'1 edit.Iona. In saWl.8 etc. Open lOam· 1 . . ELECTRONIC tf IAi\lllh r.rwttMct m>.S48·7267 SlOOpermo. 673-7595 or Karen Linn .\ d "r U"l' \nu I order to aubmlt your 4am. 7 days a week. Vis· Big rig dnvers .needed wWfwlll•d JtOO . EqtsalHou.aingLender B ank .\mc•r1c·~1rd I 11 :1\8 m1ent 10 ~ atM.C. Atlantis Health • Get a Cius 1 he now., •••••••••.•••••••••••••• SHR. extra lg. 6 br. 3 ba f'1U Service ~riv .. Ofr1ces 1 Vic;a or '.\lastcrcar<I :~rop~:; ;,;Y ~~; e Spa, 2ll2 Harbor Blvd, I .<n4) 975-1107 ext 41 for ASSEMBLERS Sa i&...I Vila home. Nr. OCC. Male or w/receplion1st m New check to THE DAILY Qista Mesa. 645·3433 Br·j Info 1 -fl Female. Beau67J-.4697 Irvine loc. ~rom $175/mo For more informa11on I ~~.~:·~·,!!'. ~· ti.5:: ing _this ad for your I Now enrolling. Costa I Previous experience New 1112 bdrm 1:xury Roommatewanted clean or. O:C. Airport, Frwy, WAMTSSSFAm andCoplaceyourad<'all w.·11 c1o fhe , .. ,. "°' special gill. Mesa Christian Pre· w!thcabllng.bamessing. adult apt.a in 14 plans quiet, nonsmoker.' 'h blk Call for info 833-3103 Any amt.-1.st. 2nd. 3'rds· 1n1ormet1on •bout lagel ProlessionaJ Therapeutic school. $29 . 5 O I wk . soldering and working from MlS. 2 bdrm f~m from beach. $275. Steve,1688 sq. rt. well located nex.. terms-call now! E. 642-5678 ::;~~~~':...pl~;~· cell massage. Llc'd. NB Appl · Includes hot lunch & w 1t h s ma 11 s u b ' l ' L :St.erf~~~<t!~nG1:~ ~5396. North Costa Mesa omce. Slarr·S&H833. only. Steve S48·2117 ~ s . 6 4 6 . s 4 2 3 . assemblies. for cooking & heating F t d ' Parlt ne.xt to your door. · We olfer a stable work s;iald From San Diego e m rmmte wan «; I Fully equipped with Jalll W91hd. 7075 mVlJ"O(lmeol with an H · a; Frwy drive North on si92.50tmo + ~ uhl. carpet. a/c. cabinets & NOVEMBER. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cellent salary and Beach to McFadden then H.B. Atter6PM 960-l059 storage. Reasona bly English~. highly qual. benefits package. includ· West on McFadden to M/Ptoahr2brN.8.apt,l priced.CallTom,Harbor seeks valet/ houseman/ ang company pai"d Se a" ind Vi 11 a g e · bl.It beach, w /'J(J yr old ex· Baker Professional Bldg. housecleaner position· 1 Medical. Life and Dental (714~5198. ec. Answer-Ad J3•5. 957-1900. La&ima area. Xint refs. lnsurances. Pension l =: .... :.:: .. ~.~ .. M24J0.24hrs. ~OC:orea~ v:;~v:~ •• I-WEEK .SAlE .::;:.:c. 7100 :i~ ~tilt p::e~i~ OD Newport Beach. Beacb tar"f:.t 4350 N.B.. Low rate. Approx. ....................... :!t1 ~ ::id~!c:::! \ Hotel room · 1 ma11 ••••••••••••••••••••-• 1.500 sq ft. Xlnt for law, alter6 months. Thia posi· ~ kttdlm. 2308 W. Ocean· OnBalboaPeolnaulanext CPA or design firm . ACCTG BKPNG tion must be fUled im· front. -It up + S260 20' .... ) 7~ .. , TEMPORARY mediately. Please appl,y wls-.-it.673-•154. toF\an~~'h~. n · · Regist« today to •rk A:~ f. . . 671-2M3, . .. New oce*1l view office, ~For Pn•vate Part1·es Only Oil various accounllni" mEi>RSO:~ ' ,.,. __ Beach Moc.or Inn. t50. s.oraae only. See at 500aqft,xlntparking,on . bookkeepin1 assi&n·. .,. • No. Pacific Coast 325 J nth Pl. 646-5137, Coast ~wy in Laguna ments. Work close to TAivEx. iNC. J ff1'Y· Laauna B'ach. aft ........ ) Beach $550./mo. Call Ill your home . Figure ·--o ..... _..-n..a~, Weekly. K1tcben · UAllll· ' h S t. 2.-~w •.. ,., ~~ .. -~ ;,;;.;;.~ .. ~~!~ NOW. through NOVEMBER 30t :=:...:a~.!:~~i J..f-Zi~;:,.:,~ a-with llltcben priv. Near bu.a ts 1boppln1 C!illlllla'. Adult.a only. Evea H :•orwkads.112-7520 La1aaa Lie furn rm tr/llaebl ba, SltS/mo -.-0, 156-21112 eves Cl* _,, room ai ba .. pvt 8llll'Mce, SIOO/mo. MIMUO ~ ctoe. tO OCC. Non -*"· • mo. 5'5-2510 .... wrc, TCLIFF BLDG IH WP< 1fl T fl( I\( H ,, 1 •• t .)!~ Mr Huw.11d '145 f,tQI Foratore•oCfice apace al reatOD&ble rates. 500 to 2700 5111 Ft. llESA VERDE DR PLAZA 1525MesaVerde E, C.M. 545-4123 liia bJn Place A CJassified Ad .. ... _ .. , ..... ~~ To Start On Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday and Run -DAYS FOR THE PRICE OF tNOREBATE FOR EARLYCANCElLATIONSl Cl9Gn out the cloMts, kids' rooms, & garage ~~·:.ftab advantage of this .,_ .. by tUnil• your unwanted Items Into cash. . ((.)f!F~· L1¥1TED TO NON CC*MEACIA&. AOYEATl8EASJ • DAILY PILOT ADVISOR TODAY 642-5678 • ..... RTHRUI .. accounle11'5 . ZIDNo. Broad~ay noo. Coldwell Buker 91d1.,SutaAaa l714tNMIOJ FllU PAIUONG To place your message before the reuding public. phone Daily Pilot Class1f1ed. 642-5678 ACCOUNTANT-SECRETARY: . OSTA MES A ORDERS 6 46-180 0 Turkey & Avocado Sandwich with Sprout• or Lettuce a. Tomato Lunch Salad Choice of Beurege: Coffee, Ice Tea, Hot Tea or Miik Value $4.25 With Thia Coupon $3.15 Call Art's Carpet Setvice Installation. Repairs. Restretches. Fast & Dependable 631-0447 Free Es1tma1e with this couoo" or>lv' Exp11 l.'s .'"o' :lO. 19Rl1 : t I Aotot1U 1,nv.a•~ Gre<11~ Planllng Sod Paoo Coven Wooo 0..C... For Tne F•netJ Oua11ry Worti. C.11 "'''<" 11• 960-~88 I ' _yhrtipui &:Jt1n1'1h1~' 1?eft ,,is(;;,~ WliO'e<wle Pt,c.f't. l'.Jnt;"' A~c.omo•n1&0 di'"'~ C.uv0>"" On Ant1Qu~-Oru.,. 10% OFF . · YOUR FIR..:T izn-io \\.,, .. .,n A•~ ..;, 0M<fl"n Gm•" CA 926-11 PURC HASE Ii Ml f\'l<l·l!'>H RO-SAN'S GIFTS & COLLECT ABLES We · ~eature The Finest in Gifts. Col lecto r Plat es. Figori nes. Stamps. Supplies & Greeting Cards. I 00/o Off OR Atty P..-dMIM of ss.oo fW Mon Ill ,.... Mtlst p,._1 CotipOft Wlttl PwdlctM l:xp1res Nov 15. 1980 l"IM VllOCJe C ....... Comer Jeffrey Rd & Irvine Cnrr Or ) 857-0846 COA'll CL.ASS 130•"'·" oo .... THUISDAY ~ ... , MO.MttfGS ~, • 'f. ADULTS OHLY Fr .. Co~I HARBOR BLUEPRINT"'~ 209/o off Oft alt 1,.pffes "' 5tock or · °" ~ lexcept ••ftlftCJ ...._ -I 0%1 If Or"dtncl. allow 2-5 day del•ery. Offer expires Nov. 14th. 1980 125 23rd St. Newport hoch 673-7960 CLAYTOR'S CARPET SERVICE Commerc111 Rest0ent.,,1 C1~aruno Attoa•ttf'IO 20% DISCOUNT WITH COUPON 645-0617 Jl Expire~ :'l:m :io. 1!!811 Custom Work Is Our Specialty! I 00/o Off Job Witt. This ~ PENELOPE'S FASHION FAIRE 1125 Vlc:torio St .. St•. J Cotto M••o, Calif. 92626 GRAND OPENING SALE -ik• I ' } .. ' ' 1 ~ j ) 10% ~ OFF &WITH THIS COUPOH OH AMY PUICHASf ' ~ ~ -646-0734 ~Hi . French Doors ~ Remodel• _... Skyllghta _ · Wood Flooring ~ Deck•, P;;1~··ovemead•~ CARPEITIY 10% OFF LABOR ~ 645-3720 J.C.'S TREE SERVICE STEVE'S HAIR HAPPENING & SPA SPECIAL $20 for Y2 hour Massage Free the of HOT TUI iftc:luded Men & Women W~lcpme 1751 Newport ll•d. 6·U-9634 Open 1 Oam-1 Opm I BRING MY SERVICES & TOOLS TO YOU SpecialmftCJ in American & ForeiCJI" Some Motorhome and lnbocrd Boat Won 15% O FF o n all work except oil change & lube Call for estim ate anytime 554-5715 'DISTFNCTIVE CA<:J?PEC'f & CUPHOL TER'Y Cf{f=STOR A rqoN KMART PLAZA BARBERS Grand Openinq S• HAIRCUTS 3.75 And Up 2200 Harbor llwd., e .M. K Mort PIGla urros.50 ai!~!E CASH FOUNTAIN YALUY • IODYWOllS Y sci Cl•• U,.. ReMYaffw&lleM••··· SAVE $50 WITH THIS COUPON ........... c~w. I .. 1trW Quality Work. 'Affordable Rates MoJobTooS..- MARKO ORIGINALS Offers A New Look For The H o l i da ys . A r.t ist ically Arranged Pictu re Wa l ls & Furniture Arrangements THE TICKET SHACK -........ RANSFER OF YOUR CHOICE Wmt EACH IHIU YOU IUY '1 OF HEAT TRANSFERS TO CHOOSE FROM T·SH•n. lllHALl SH•TI, fOOftAU SHlllTS FROM ,'3'~ to s7t1 CONCERT TOUR SHIRTS '4" .;~~ 645-8990 ~ ..... -'9'1 ... ~rr.~~'IT".'9"!"1"f liii Ha uling? Tree Service? Cl • i Lawn Maintenance? Moving? WE DO ANYTHING ! ...$" HAULHS Free Est. With Coupon Call 548-6920 For Further Infor mation Regarding Placement Of Advertising In OuF Coupon Cape rs Section Please Call Debbie Koamln 642·5678, ext 330 I ,. • · c .. .we..--_.._ ... • • ,...........,. jllaundl J I 1P...a...a.....tp-ri... 1....._.ta.Jlt -·-,_......... I • I , . ._., I __, --....................... ·-·-·············--·· ... . .................................................................................................................................. ,.. -~. ••• • •••••• •• d i I • St " Pl p h 1 8 l I Clll'TOM INTERIOR Dale w Phillill9 con· Oa.rdetunl/Lan seep 1)1 I HallliAi 6 Dump Jobi . Praise tbe Lord aome one Dave's Palntloa servlna ucco aater ate • • ~ "1 DHlj CAAPENTRY crete. ~aonry No job T ue Trimm i n I & , Ask for Ra.ody. la here to do houaework,l area 9 yrs, mD.t reu. no Job l.oO 1m. quick at C.. · -1111 .. ~ ~~ ty J~ MJ·UCW t.ootmall. $42-21U Removal, Ml!Jor Clean·• ~ hie ail, dot sit, personal lnlured, Uc'd. Sl6-M25 clqnMS-420S, 145_.lt9 ~· ceramk lll• m · I.al PIH111lnl "1 REllODEL/R EPAlR t'QIWC_.. , ~l\~r7~.1~~t. l nex·1 ffau1.move·clean·up. Con· ~reR:,c:i:;~.!~~~::~e. Painting& Papering i.H. & Plethr e!f.:.•:t :::.~f.t 6 a. •iteh Bl vd •10 ADD. quality work, 2nd•••••••••••••••••••••••, ; crete removal. Dump op Poof.work. Freeesl. A1Hypes,Ult /ext. eat. • •u 11e1t( •· ..... -....----_ aen bldr. 17 yn in ar"a. Child car e, my C.M Reas rates, lawn service.: tr uck. q ul c k se r v . Superb Housecleaning Ranbl. Steve. 547-4281 I &U·:seecl 8'2-3020 17592 GottaFd • ..._.eeper avail lo Llc. Mr · P • 1° m bo home, former preschooq land•j~fc101:r!P::~~=~1 642'7638 Spectacular res ults , Fine ext/Int painting by I I'll_. .. , H.B. .; oa accounts in "U' anyilmeS62·83W • teacher.631-52.28 · • =~a~vi:1979.J14 · 'No Job Too Small Ori 673-0509,642·4439 Richard Sinor. St. lie, ....................... T .... S..lce 1! 142-9154 Nancy CUSTOM CABlN ET &jC tu edcw Lar1t ! Free Estimates 1~.-. lns. Try me 836-5555, 24 Plumbing refaira made •••••••••••••••••••;r.•• 11"9... HOME REPAIR lnt/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gardenina Cleanup:s.j CallDaveat'54S·8046 •••••••••••••••••••••"'• hn s imple, cal Raymond Tree•ShrubTrimm~lc -•••••••••••••••••• e x t . C II A R Room add .. remodel, Tr·ee trim min&. main-12 .bl Reas rates lawn service G PE FORCE WorthMS-5113 removal. Yard . clrn· wwa)'t. Parkinl lol RF.l'iOVATING 845·3749 custom houses. Lie. con·! tenance. Free est. Arnie h!:~ ~;~~~st'ru:k. ~;~j landscapi°ng, sprinkle; P~in~ ·Company . P.O. lox lt..t.h UIJI, hau~ng. 64S.01 or maira ealcoatlna I FATHER" SON tractor. 548-0786 I 548-8414 I tree main. equip. Can do· installali~ "repair. Ask 3 Gen:ratlons Of 1 ................ ~...... Mf.l4UJ1m. t" ~cl. Aaphall. 646·4871 Carpentry' new & re· t ..... , Cwtn1dlot1 . lbpHt c1e.. ... any0Un1! 968-86SO for Marvin 979·S814 Painting Excellence I Pvt Poet Box Service T......... J model Plans 847-7868 Geocontr foundations to j Trees topped/removed · 535-6701 . TIIE MAIL ROOM , 24 hl" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .. lat . . (mi.ah. Uc'& Ins. 496-6811 Lawn renovated. 7Sl·3476 Haul ing,. clean. '!P s ' ~uJ!ng, amro~1:,'~ rc~ea~ . . . :aJO ECstHwy CdM·NB n11'0R·Math, Sci, ~e. -••••••••••••••••••Gene r al Carpe ntry. 1 garages, yards. Junk p , Y . Exten orPaantan1 640-0340or644·"81 Spanish, Study Ha.lilts . ............ -.myhome full Ooora, Skylights.8ec:tric91 IJAPANESEGARDENER I trash.dirt.shrubs.trees landscapang.63l·4264 Specialis ls ·stucco re· ..... -•1&1t-1r 645-Sl76,S48·9570Fr• .-~-IUJD . I R "' d I Fl ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~ ,i I l I d d • I l f . ---r-tune days or eves. Nice .,mo es . oo r s, • . aeanup,aar"'en care, rmm.e r emove t~HDR'/ par,wa .erproo 1ng · .... ·••••••••••••••.••••1 T>-'--~~i a..-w /yard Dwntwn Oecka,645-3720 ~ECl'RlCIA':J·Pnced lrim, 213-532-7295. 96l-6546 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sandblfstmg, custom ,.._, _ _. ,,.,t h Exot'ift Jf"""'ll _.... .. ce •• · nght-free estimate on' · work com etitive uuuc~ru c _ens. ." •••••••••••••••••••,,......•• llB.lll0-22'16 c.,.tSenlu 1 largeorsmall jobs. G1•rdSer•lces 1 HAULING/CLEANING Valley Masonry Cunom . 'uc bon':sed ins. Baths. Sp.ac1ous Addi· Fast accurate typinl on arp mother to t ake care •••••••••••••••••••••••! Uc. •337254 673·03S9 •••••••••••••••••••••••! Tree trim" Painting ft.replaces,. Bnck, block, pnces. 642.6005 ' lions •. Cabtnet.s. Int/Ext! IBM Correcl/Sel~c . tfyourchild In my home. Shampoo & ste»m clean.1 . Elrperienced ad/ mark':l· or ?? Ray, 964-4276 st~. Quality work.. I Painting SS6·706s Call othe~ secretarial 111f1fk. Balboa Island area, Mon· Color b"?&hteners : wht1 Elertric1an. Qual. Work ing e~ecutive ':"I media M---a....-&... Lie u 9oea2 963 2925 RALPH'S PAINTING 1 6-lOPM I business letter s, r e · -...,.,...,...,. cpt.slOnunbleach.Clean1 Reas. Rates. No Job Tool exoenence w ill create ·~ Now l and Mason r y Prompt 2Ahn Uc neat RoofiNJ sumes. et c. Kar.en . ~· •· v•.,. """· · II A I Small 1 Fr E iHa 7918 ' r-. d k · I ••••••••••••••••• • ••• • • ' ' ' ·' ' 67"'1230 . liv, din rm, ha SIS. vg l . ee st.....,. • pnot. a s, mar. eting . 1 custom blk work & re·°'; refs. 962-4701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.. lab)(lltting, my home., nn S7.50, couch SlO. chr . I sales letters. rad1o spots .. Housecleanlng . + + ·. ll.s Fr · . 1 'llUI' Vi¢toria, l yr le up. z. Guar eUm pet odor.!Top 9uaUty, dependable 1 newsletters. brochures1 what? Call Suds n Stuff ~ wa · ee esl.,CoUegeStudentexper'd in,Repa1r &. Reroor. All WlndowC&eaniftcJ ~ 1 _C.ll.6'2·8482. . Cpt repair. lS yrs expr .j servt~ Reas. rates. 161 andP.R.Call675-1230-! fordetails.842-0884. I int/ext, any job for less ! types-shinglea·r ock · ••••••••••••••••••••••• i UCENSEDDAY CARE I Do work myself. Refs: yrsexper.531-SOSS i11anct,,,..n ,.Wanta REALLY CLEAN Frplcs, brick paving.I Alex559-5198 s~:i.~mr·t;.r·~{ee "l..et.The~nshi~eUI': • : )I y· h o m e C D Ml s:n.0101 jGwdellincJ • ..... !=.............. HOUSE? Call Gingham veneer, stone work. 30 "American Painting &I es . in. va!.__ Cal~nsh1n~ ~-®w .C •tull/partime openingslWhy Pay store prices .:• .. ••••••• .. ••• .. 0 ••0 0 Home improvement: 25 Girl.Freeest.645-5123 .yrsexp.893·3743 __ ,Decor" Resid /Comm .,New~recovers. Repa1rl Cle g,Ll · 38;63 • ~873-2945 Buy through Carvel in·j Cle~s/HaullnCJ I yrs exper. Fe nc in g.I HOUSECLEANING I Brickwork/Small Jobs ' Free Est . all . work ~1allsts ~t stay busy! STOP!! ---1 st a 1 1 e r . I s e l I Lawn s e r v I c e , Dependable. 631·4264 I Newport Costa Mesa & . guaranteed. 646-1460 p.nces. Reh able. B&C k · f S20/ k 557 2233 • 5480512 Tu l' t1 ml' to rela)(\ and WH OLESALE (cos ll .1Landscape Free Esl.IHel r h' ·bl nis, w up ·--i lrvine 675·317Seves·._..._/R i ' . ! ~hn11 athomt·.1t·s ~1·n111Ju .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Will bring samples Free· 642-9907 P or are. no JO 00• • · .-.... .....-lpa r I !: ~ ·~aliveEnvlronments · Wk ·1 d ' smaJl Chris Very thorough&rehable.1Mo.,Mw. ••••••••••••••••••,••••1Shlcco 11 1th Ua 1l 1· P1l ot est. or guara n ee . VERY LOW PRICES I . . o-' ·1 L. 548 8067 -, ''l:t"1t1"d .\ct".., An!I ,·f • natruction. Stained. Also carpet layed & re-* .* 494·7154. ncasavaa · asa. · '••••••••••••••••••••••• Neatpalches &textures 1•••••••••••••••••••••••1 '" ' 0 Glass Remodels. Spas ; paired.Jay.754 .6550 !On landscape .main 1 bef.8am. Movi ng? The Star ving FreeEst. 893-1439•Expert Stucco Ser v1ce1 i ou hai l· 5"111l'thini to a.372.8 I tenance. Free estimates. Sl.'111\llh E.\S I-.' 1Exp lady t<>' clean yourt College Students have Restucco. patch. & re :-l'll c;il l .. lrie'ri'dl~ W.\~T .\l'Tlll~' IJ-'111d l\hat iuu \\'Jill in : 21yrexperience. George : lbu BHEl-:Zr: 'home. Reasonable rates. grown, same gd service , *'atchP'lcn~ri'")* pair, room additions ' ~·}1;'~~~cd .\tl \'1s1\J' <it · Clas,tll-d \iJ, lit::! .iti:>' . Ua1h Pilo1 l'lu:.s~f 1ed' I 549-2015. · <'la.,~tl tt•d \d, f\.1::! :-;7!i 646-9001or54S·9292. 1 lfT12A·436 Ins. 641-8427 A1J Types 538·7113 Call Dana 636·2016 ,..~ .,., -------, -,,...-- I ...... W..ted 7 I 00 Http Wanted 7 I 00 'Http W..ted 7 I 00 Hejp Want.cl 7 I 00 Http Want.cl 7 I 00 Hetp Wcinffd 7 I 00 Help W..t.ct 7100 tWp WClllhct 7 I 00 'Hllp Wanted 7100 ••••••••......•••.•••.• ····················•••t••····················· .••.......••.•.••......•...•..•..•.........•..........••.•..•.........•....••..........•..... ·······················.······,················ Aesembly Banlung Carrier's Needed early Cl.ERK/TYPIST Electro-Me1:hamcal GeieraJ CXfice 1 Homtmak..-Heeded Install.er <Ca bl~ TV) Jrvine-based electrontc TELLER a . m . de Ii very Los with other gen'l office DATA ENTRY Des1gn/Apphcations Growing Co. has xlnt op-For elderly couple in Start Immediately · -distributor needs ex Permanent. full lime 5''2 Angeles Times 5400 /m o ' duties. Im med. opening. CLHK Enginttr portunilles for General Laguna Hills, prepare Teleprompter Cable TV, perienced ca ble as ·• day w~k. & part lime. ~~. Benefits. Call 8 to 5. Mon Leading Orange County : So California manu!ac· CXfi.ce person. Must have j meals. lite hskpg, & run 901 W.16thSt, N.B. · aembly people. Contact Expe!1ence. prererr~d. thru Fri. 646-2435 electronics mftir· has an turer of J.C probe testi general k!1owledge oflite err~. 3PM·7PM Mon· lnhrior DHiC)Mf ..lob Tracy, Mon.·Fri 1 ~willrons1der cash1er·CASHIER-hou se wa r e 1mmed. opening for a equipment has opening• bookkeeping, 10-key by • Fri . Wk ly pa y + Model ho JI: t MM·SPM . 549-09!>4. mg background. !YPe saj_es. Apply i~ person.1 Clerical data entry per~n. wilb I for· qualified engine.er; touch. lite Ly.ping. Ex~ l ia ns po r la l io n a I . have rlr~li~xpColj:se 40wpm. Xlnt benefits & Crown Hardware. 1614 • use of Oec w rt le r & capable of designing nee. Gd working cond. lowance. Call now for d pol . · g ASSIST.AMT CHEF advancement. Call San Miguel \Ha .bor Vu ./ ./ ./ Beehive Terminal. Some customized precision . Fringe benefits CallThe t appt. Upjohn H ealth ~ rv1ne area . For lsl class d inner 9'79-JOOO. EOE Ctr>NB. TEMPORARY 1 limited. use in keypunch' motorized m otion ~ Bal h Marl : ( 714 ) Care Services. 752·0993 ---------- house. Previous exp a · BARMAID & venfy. on TAB 510 w/comput er controls. 675-4830 Mrs. Burkhart 1 EOE M·F Janitor · . . CASHIER ./Fle~·b1li1y punch venfier. Excellent I . ' a o R fusst. mApp~ e ~~\7e~~. Enthus1ashc. Xlnt P /T1 Two openings, hrs. lo be ileorn riew sk.11~ co. benefits. 1 yr . ex· Exper. ln design or step· General Hostess, experienced, full ~ ~t~ ! :.A~ o ~/club lles~au'ra at , I S~H I oppty.646-9935 arranged. Experienced.I .-·Eorrigoodpo' perience desirable .! and-rep~at 1.c:;. probe ThelaltoalayClubis ' lime. Apply in person. Anply in person : Kerm · ' • Please contact: l~l stations. highly d~· • • I Beach House Inn. 619 storage, pvt. coUJltry •llroothurst.F.V. !BEAUTIC IAN-run s ml Rlma Hardware. 2666 Yield Heston Mastet-Specialties I s1rable·parhcularly 10 nowhtriftC): Sleepy Hollow Ln. Lag dub.644·5404.exl.:!d' ~~·s~ay~ ~rn&a:~:S·· Harbor Bl., CM ; & Associates l640Monrovia, C.M. area<?' ~omputert·co~trodl: F Foro..tll t' Desi& Clerkt b ll Bch. Janitor• ni g hts , for ASSIST.AMT ·· · · • 540..0400 642.2427 E o E 1 pr ec1s1on mo orue 1, u ame , mus e . . l t 1 b MAHACiH 646-1145. CASHIER : · · · 1 linear motions. Ability to available eves & wknds. I Host /Hoetess, prest1g11ous. ~n~ap~ ~~~~1[~~·~.2: Draper's Laguna Hills ' BEAUTY OPERATOR & Nw-sery experience pre· : s.u~~rt marketing ac-: Experienc.ed referred. N.B. ~estaurant, •PP Y 59 Mon· Fri for, inter-flew . .atore. Must be ex·; Manicurists with some fer re~. Ca pislrano :cook . ex perien c ed DllnrLATlmes t1v1ta~s with customer. NCR4200m·house com·I Fashionlsland,N.B. 644--S404 :. .Per ienced in better filing. Good Commission. Gardens Nursery, San breaklast cook, full lime. To homes in C.M. & H.B. tectm.1cal requirements a : puter~ ;---------• ---------..---~en's ready·lO·wear 557.2234 Jua n Capislrano .1 Apply In person art• J.6am. $350-$450/mo. + defuute plus. We offer:, Mlll~Spo.Att~t Hotel Jewelry , ...Ssportswear . Apply 'fl 661-6666. ! 4P M .. Beach House Inn, bonus. Dependable car.I small. growing. closely F\&1l time " pa~ time. C .._SHIER Fine Jewelry Stone in penoo to Manager Ma· . '-Sal . 619 SJeepy Hollow Ln,. 546-4481,964-4982. I knit company : e.xcell. Must be a v a1labl e 1 A Newport Harbor lrea ble Austin, 23621 Moulton IKPR/JR. ACCT. Cashier es 1 La& Bch. · . . group lnsurance ; mcen-wtcnds. lmmediate opening ex-needs FIT take-in s>Ason ~ay Plaza or call I for rapidly expanding HICKORY FARMS : . ·Delivery ~v~r. female. tive and stock option I GrOCJ Shop Clerk I ists for reliable person 1 for repair dept, days, 'J68.8822forappoinlment ftnancialfirminFashion ~extra money s~ll-, COOK I Fff. gd drivmg rec~rd.I plans Excell. potential Full lime. Must be with pleasant pbone l Mon-Frl.Write P .Ofllox I _ bland. Exper. a must. ang gourynet foods & ~1rts j Ex per. full time day Costa Mes~ Bluepn nt.i for right person. Please 1 available wkods . Cash • manner & aplilude for 1566, Newport ~ch, Daily input & genera 1 for holiday~. Flex 1ble1 cook. Apply: I 111~0 Placentia, 548·5571. call 714 1979-8912 or sub· register experience pre· figures. Enjoy excellent 92863 . .uTfO General Mechanic led&erdestred. hour~. W 111 l r a 1 n . • J.I. M.c's RHtClllr'..t mil resume lO Alessi ID·. ferred. company benefits indud· )\;day work week · I 758-1515 Westdiff Plau.: &U-0972. 101.42 Adams. Huntington ! DB.IYBY dustrtes Inc. 3195-C ' Please caJI for ~n a ppt:' ing a free meal per shift. Salary $350/wk guaran·· Fash.loo Island. 640-6030. Beach , 3.5 Mon· Fri., -so..a Airport Loop Dr . CM. 64S-73S8Mon.-Fr1,8:J0..5.: Apply in per~on 9AM · -teed. +lnsurance paid & 1 Equal Oppty Emplyr r~ " 9121626. '. , Noon. Mon·Frl, Person ~ dothes furnished. •~at Tooling. All phases . CASHIER 1 M/F. M M E D I A T E · I pel. 1 NB area. 644-7151. i Plug work. jigs, pat· for gas station. Apply t OPENING B.ICTaOHIC TECH I T ~lC' J MARRIOTT HOTEL, I , terns. Experience re-lUO. Newpor t Bl vd. 1 1lte Daily Pilot needs a Testing at Trouble Shoot· I - -900Newport Ctr. Dr. ~mechanic, exper. on I quired. Apply 3401 W Costa Mesa. COOK , delivery person for a ing. Digital le An alog .J:: -' , Newport Beach , Datsun or Toyota. Good I Fordham. Santa Ana. I Opportun.ityexiatsforre-large motor route ir1 Systems for a small co ~ EquaJOppEmplyrM /F f )ay & benefits. 642·2434 qr9.9361 , Uable person to work as a Laguna, South Laguna Previous exp. Conta ct I . I -.k c•rHIERS I breakfast Cook for one of I Be a c h . R e I i a b I e Data.Itron Inc. 7J0..1S7S. GENERAL OFFICE . Automotive IOOICKEEftn IW I our hotel resta urants ., automobile is a must. <RECEPTIONIST> Hotel Desk Clerk, exp pre 1 P.Aa'TSDEPT. Responsible & ex -1 Short order cooking ex.1 HoursM-F3:00-S:OOP M; Electronic Tech. Ex· Type6S. spell well, love ferred. apply in person .l TR.AIMEE I perienc~. Must. type + u M' perience preferred. En· 1 Sat&Sun6:J0to8:30AM . perienced in print & the phones, dress )ike a I Holiday Inn, 3131 Bris tol 1 A growing Orange Co. 1 ~ptiorust duues. Full1 TOTE '.JOY e.xcellent company i NO COLLE~ING .. Ex· schem atics r eading. pro, enjoy figures. good St.C.M.S57·3000. dealer seeks ambitious ti me · Con la c t J ud Y1 ' benefits. Apply in person : ceUent earnmgs for Just Diagnosis & repair of al detail; common sense., JOUDI man to learn the I 675-9490 , 9AM·Noon, Mon -Fr i.' a couple of hours. of your: electronic systems. SUN smile, .up attitude. love Housekeeper wa~ted, lov- '}Nlrts business from the t ' MARKETS Personnel ' day. For Details call, E L E c T R 1 c people, for m y office , ely Balboa Pemn. home . '. KJtchen help wantffl, to learn food prepar~on. Sl.75/br to start. Male - preferred. Work·~ng hours : SAM to f PM. M .. F. Lori 's Kitcthen. ';1J7'1 So. fbrbor Blvt. SA Call 979-0747 lor appt. LANDSCAPE'" MAJMT. FOREMAN Exper. in all pha~ of landscape maint. inelud· lng gd. knowledge iii ir· rigatlon. Excell. ditpty for advancement. SOE 714·546-7843 benefits,musthavegood S ma ll but g r o wing ! 900 NewportCtr.Dr. 1 642·4321. 1 c c 1 o heaven!S900. j Must be exp household -------• ... • sround up . Good jBookkeeper . : For2nd&3rdShifls MAJlltlOTTHOTEL I Foster Ouell et at1 CORPO RAT ION. 23522 Drop rl&hl in from ! 3 school aae children.I driving record and be I L a ~ u .n a B e a c h We promote ti:! ~anage· Newport Beach , Orancp Coast I om'!lerce en er r. Call Liz for appt. I manager & possess xlnt overl8yearsold. publishing Co. see~sl ~~&supervision from . EquaJOpp Emplyr•M/F I DailyPllot Lagu na H i ll s . CA LizReindersAgency ref. Call 673·7643 after. . JIMM'"'lt ..... O bookkeeper w/exp an!withi.n. '1 i •511>-8611.E.0 .E 4020Bireh.Est'64 EOE 6pm&wkends. ""'" R II WANTA CAREER" n>W.BaySt.<;.M. ' YOLKSWAGEH j A/P, A/ • pay ro · l yp-1 · j Equal Opp Employer Engineenng Newport/833-8190/Free ing & 10.key by touch. Call 714-962·9116 or Codi. Pre·school. approx M/F ,1950/m o Must have HOUSEKEEPER-Live- 18711.Beach Blvd. I Manual converting to S37-4840 1 S hrs a day, serving 1n. wonderful couple, <no HuntingtonBeach I EDP System. Gd or · s nac ks & lunc hes .1, BS Engineenngdeg.reeGlRLFriday.exp'd Typ· hiJdr > eed d rl I 142-2000 I gani~lional skills. Some! Newpor t Beach area. I Demonstrators te;.yrs ~per.l~~~rvisei ing, phones, filing, etc.' ~ouse':eenper w~e ea :e coUece acct. courses pre·I Oerical I Ask for Joni 64-4-0232. ! Attractive female de 1~ 'ti 105 &a ion ° H B · Io c · Ma r k 1 looking ro~ an 1 m . ~UI'OMOTIVE ferred.49'1·1727. I , monstrators wanted to new aci lie~ eq~p-714 -893·5847 days , maculate exper lady of LOTMAM HN •DAY $$$ COUNT E R He 1 P r o r introduce new snack food ment on oil field proJect 213·912-5607 eve & wknd hi h I . k ~Jl\Jll time. Responsible. Bookkeeper • UU sandwich shop. Center in local supermarkets. mcluding separation un· g ~tegnty to eep mature person needed Exp all around utihty l Don t .'e.t tbhe holld~ys Poi.nle Plaza. Salrichieos f1ex~ly work. part or its, pipelines. stora~ Gtrl Friday, Ptr. flexible1 beautiful Nwpt Bc h •for s pe cial duties girl. Must have exp. ac-~~{:~po;'a~u~~::~: Deli, 19732 MacArthur, Frr. Call 1714 ,848.1900 tanb. degassing ~ts, hours.N~~~Beach. I ~~~·r ~nud1habv~ ~~f~· ..References requir ed. counts payable & a<:· ·ts . th l al 0 C Irv. 965-1247. Apply btwn I for interview. test separators . o1 . gas . I Call 1714) 851·0627 9.5 L•lhc•• S.per; Sl.500 to n800 00 E . lllust be bilingual. knowledge cl sprinkler & irription system + knowleclse of plants. Will supe~ise crews of 20 to 100 IJlen. Poe. will cover 3 ec>un· ties. Riverside lo MIMion Viejo. Call G~y . 54(Mi05S, Coastal Peftc>n· nel Agency, 2790 Hitbor Bl .. CM. E.O.E. 'NEVER A FEE E.O. E . CalJSteve Harveyforan counts receivable, xlnt :~ m eWock ,· 9AM&l2Noon I & water separators. GU'"'RDS l witdys. . appointment . k · d d AirpOrt area. or a ew Dental Hygenist 2 days pump stations. power "" IOY C '"'RVIA wor in g con · g days a week or a few c t H 1 t d I · ""·II •-rt t. All • ___. "'--......_;. "" benefits. Medical & Oen· a month. Weeki oun er .e p wane . per week. xlnt ~ay , ge~er~tors, & camp ru "' P~ am e. , HOUSEWIFE -..-~ ..... -. llOU.SltOYCI tallns.H.B.nearWarne r weeksh k Quarterlyy! Part t~me : 10AM -2PM .· private N.8 . office I fac11it1e s. Take ad to areas. Uniforms fum d. Uyouarefriendly ,cons · HELP! -... W payc ec s. F\ill Time . llAM·8PM. 646-818 1 nearest Employm ent Ages 21 or over. retired _ & IM & ~ach Blvd. Hrs 8-5. 5 bonus trips., W~ are ac Gary's Dell. 752_5401. · Development Dept DOT wel~me. No exper . nee. cientious & dependable 640.6444 dayweek.847-8511. ceptinlapplicauonsfor:,J.J;, DIAMOND SETTER <m.061·014. Ad paid for Ap ply : Universal weneedyouforourde· wt .. ~ha~mcao!e~o~: ' BOOKK EE p ER /I /f1l( Cl(lllS I COUPLEWANTE.D Wanted. Pronj, pave.1 byemployer. Protection Service, 1226 lightful restaurant. 8·4 .:C"":c;;peclalizes lathe ~ SECRETARY· l d ~I y n I Manage small b11uness c hanne l set. Wire1 .I:)! W.sthSt.,SautaAna. l.n-\Vkd.ys. We traln. Alf"ly ol f ~· I ~ty Rent·•·Car ia working conds Nwpt /l(C(PTIONIST ' Part-Ume. WllltralnCall fabrication also. Full! ESCllOWMAMACill :"'~· hn: 9·12" 1-4, ~~~·~TW,'~M"'c;v. ~~~!~~':11: ore::~ l •IOW takiq applications &ch. With R.E. Develop· Y for appt~3279 time. Npt.. area. 540-7SSS Bay Escrow, est. 1947, is on· '· .._... COunt :1or lot man & re ntal mept<Firm. 759·0W4 /TYPISTS 45Wpm ,.. .a.m..a'--1~1 for a qual. mg.r . HAIRSTYLIST Am . Housewives P /T, earn No~eetoAppUcUt • ...... male le female. y ~ "., to head up new office 1n b. 1 h If xtra money doing what PleasecaU: :;.1.xperience preferred , Bo<*keeper (Full chg). Immediate opening for oc Airport area. Must it ous. s arp se · y 0 u kn 0 w be s 1 , •"M not necessary. Good Pufcbuina Dept. exper. t/llCTA TYPISTS Data qualified structural have strong following, s tar\b~ whd°-rtan\s housework. Call Suds'n M~~~ ·tltenetita. Able to work l lnimum t yping 1 drallsman. T1lt·UP ex-ha ndle exchan ges . some ng 1 eren · Stuff 842-08M "" ~ ··~enln111 • weekends. ~m:°4 day w~lt. $700 C¥1todaY or appt. Entry perlence prefer red. AITD 's , e/ c . XI n l Dependable car a must. · · 170Newport ~. ... ;AM for Patsy or Dirk, mo. Call 714 / 752·8746. 557an~5 Floyd E . W ea v e r bene fits. saary com-MOO +perwk.~tential. Indoor plant main -Sleau _'IJJl20 .. ,..11.Sl. -UV. O..rft._!! ~I. 3839 Birch mensurate w /ablllty. Guaranteed min. for tenance.Fulltlme lcP/T lrvinearea. en Lin-~_..... Sl.,N.B.551-85SO. Call F . R. Becker, rilfitperaon. H.8 .-C.M. available.770.9565. -------... -.... by1llter. lt ve ·l n IOOICK~ • _ Drycleaning .Counter 5f7·5625. area. Alk for Warren,1 Lf'llllS.1£1'1 ... llllt ""1iotben Helper for 10 Architectural Fil'm has -Person. Responsible 957-0534 ! Must be pleuant ~.old slrl.No smoker, lmmed openlns for full nMPOtARVl'f~HSllMClS ~m=!:~ ':!~~ penon to mark, assem· UPll.llHCIDP{T HAllSTYUST I .....,,._...,. gam.t, 3-4 yn .0~ • .)mary + private room chareebooUeeperup'd l ..__..... bk, cashier. CdM loca-GroceryStoreClerk k>n J .It I ,....._,.don patent law 80-1 • own bath. 752·2197 · in accounts receivable J12J ..-t~;::n°':cf~~e :n~7!~ lion. f'Ullthne, partUme. Phone 644·0510 !:,. ~ete a mt:0~age~ 1 2-3 yn. ex 1 ~r1, in ,electro· typiba, ., shrthnd. .~ 4.n n"""'G collection. Pleasant ot-j , .. .,.,..._. MDSSertea2l . Preferre-f1mble houri. 873-4 M.IClBIC I ment o( 3 beautiful new ~ecban ca ~ I · en· & "" oo. E . Cal=:no, ·.""'•"' ..... ! _ 1 -s flee wlth 1ood co. d 11 'M ) ! I v1ronment req d. Mus t 1 SIO-eo55 eoatlal . ,_ benellta.7l4.54f.7124 late 1ch oo n 1 or ' · R.L. Kautz b accepting storel.&44-1118 be fam ilia r w i th _.At'eDc 2790 rbo :-e&.• nPIST minimum experience . .-Electronics aPllllcatlonl for a begin· HAllSTYUST I Mil.SPEC IOldertn1 in· I Bl Cll Y. r immedtate open1np for Bowtinf Alley, desk. lead Oerical We offer a stable wort tHSTaUCTIOMAL' :!.~ !::mres1 ~r:!; Raln& liat • Assistant spect.ion •capable of re·I· NivDA FEE ~ .-canta. Ex· coordinator, portel', etc. ./ ./ ./ environment with an H · ASSOCIATI/ In IUlq dept..-Good ::::!fat lllcbael Gu• adin1 blueprlnta uain1 miiiiiiliiiiilllllliiiiilllllit•• ;~· requlNd. Excellent o.y.,u.s.826-l300. I Ever Stop To u llent ulary and TIClltOl.06Y ~ c:oo41tio.a'a with rpn'i.CallM2·M'tO-l ~~y~·caaU·peoodn.jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!l!~!i_, ~-.:!!!~~:J~ Syl ~ia lca.nvueen lnllll•tionCo. ! Think At.lout The I beneftU pac1ta1e. includ· TICI .. Ol.06Y QPllOl'tualll• for train· -HANDYMAN :b..Y'";;ceii frfna• :· IAMC O.IAVIMI needl eaersy .ta.rveyors; Convenvlences Of ~c~Ufa•a~ &:::a CITAILICTIOMtcS 1n1 • dvaac:1•m::t5 CUBl'OIU!RSERVICE benefli• • ea'Joyable !Squel()ppt'y E mployer tor canvualq, exp pre ·t WOtklngTemporary j lHuraDcH Ptnelonl"O . C . C . X I ntt . ~~ ~ ..-r1,,. ··-General carpentry pamt work eovlrolJm e nt. fel'ftd, will train, topi ;Fle"'lbl lltk • l 1 ' -.. Jblneflta, IShr/w . to ...., -· w-. .~ .., •---• i ---a-i"'at· ., " P'be. Sevlnp Pan w th l ~* uas.t atudents • 4:30. Salary "50. Coa· tcJuch.UIJ', m-repa rt .. ~.__.._....._ l /Savln.o •Loan Pa Y • JO · 21 bra I w It · I L•rn new s Ills = later"t rate, 11 18 11_, method 1 tad ,.111 ..._.700 ext. on n • w ho m u I n I -="-~--C 111 1 I E.O.E. 531-4801. I ./Earn good pay I hDUdaya per 'Y••r i tA lDlitrucUoa. Contact I z.n, Soulhln Oraot• Co. Ph. lltO _v .... , i o' E TB 1 B All office ~ills "9eded · _. l wwk paid vHat.lon, Co u t · C om mu a it y .,_, 80Ml7 · · ·' APPLYTODAY tll I :":=nt·Jr~':!:I Coll•I"· 1110 Adamal ~~~W=• Ha4w••W.. 1----------. -....... H• I• --........ ------applv• Aw .. C.ll.-.516-se47 ----~ ..... 1 1 1 --Toa •-.--.. _ _..,~ ~ 1 ..,_.. SPll Nov 211t halldym.aa on L11una App17 1n per1on i 8 "", ....... -1 . t AA.11111•11 at:PERIONNl:L 1 'E.0&.1111'' . . .,., •. Koo•!-=s• of caOWN BUDWAllE, •e•YiDI n1pec or, ....... m~ I • . ""*""9'"' . Ba· -s. a.et Rwy, CdJl.1 dDlmum tyr ... .,.,, In• U~ l ceptl•al opportu .. lty. ma.o, J tupeetloa or relatt4 TftlVlll INC • USI THI UM our toola. lluat have IWIJ. lluat be able to uae, ·-"'""-"-l DAILY PILOT A-1..._1..,,.. wrt .. ad ..,,.ND bMtc laspecUon llaDd. •Maar9'1.a; -.....UA••· 1 no 1111. ..Dal~ PUot .._... WCMUJI wtUI Ute tooll • baft • ,...,ai --' Olllla..._CA-! ~AIT '1'.0 .... 111G, Coital UPI ..... t,plal a mmo.t1111t ot 'l"'PftD&a.1111iiliiiiim .. riiiiill , ... ,.... . =~~1 QflPOl1UMITY ,.._.orrs.er111r lllULr. , ...... CA-•u1t. •P'IOftaJ back· ~.=:..'=8tr!!':. Whill'•YoarT o.s. 11 /F . lmOd&t often when ··ou mflCI• Ir 0 a • d • a p • I • ca Rd. lrvlM .....,. ' • 11,. 0a, --~ D•ll)' i . When )08 nil Cla 1tf1ed ... JDI, woc'kial wlUi !OE • ·, Thut'ahtU \O 'Piiat Adt l°' lt'Hlnw lo plan f« UM& llllCTOIY top1Meafte4. \OU'rtH•1 .ITM'IS1 ·. · · liar aa Ml 10 Ow ;~~~~~~~~~ .. raecli tM Oh• Cout vacaUoft lriD P'vr ut,a I For lte1Ull aurt'd of a fr1 end b If \OU'rt> not readln8 tht 'Wbllbe.r l OU're b'l.)'lnll or i Piiot !k>r\ iCI 0t Ot1 -~Plic.MUITI ~~ .... ~~ti d:,m.e Service Call welcome 1rnd hel~ In little ~In c..'tanifled. semna. Cla111tlcd 1d \hit can etl1bU1h ~our ...... wldt ~ an~ I 641 1671 ....... )OUf '1 '°N be•tr )'llU'nt nu111ln1 8 tot or ~ertiliftl wUI 1et )OUr I prolu•lonal identlt · ..r1G1nta • ..: 111 , rtapoeH Ca I ow1' ntow•> lnform atloft a&I ~\othertslitpeo-r F'br mote tnfOfnllfm• -: &D-WJI well•.omt et •1 . pie CallToday!ld-MTL celtMHf11. ' 1 I i i ftd• ... ftll IJ'O'Wlal computer HICSOllY PAIMI .. ..,.. firm. The ldM.I W?s •11Alll. •••n.••• J rk s a Mwn. L.A. -.. .. !!"-· ala· TlaH le •••H ·~---------=\l ...... llNda. I : ... CALL Opportuait1 to Hll ............ lood .... ... ._al uwu .. I r::: .......... ,. be rtaourc•fYl , 6 .,... ~I'· f'lu ltu. --c •• -y WOl'k· Plua. IO#r2. let Aa a ..... relaa.d •t· I I J' ' ' f ............... 11. ~ ••· r •I• Hflh. Ll•wlleo LIM .... , .. Pff ea.a. Girl, C.11~ rllllioslalaad,ltMOllO. a..,.. HUia. p tr Ptt• S A L ! S I A R T · vtronmeat. Mu.at have' Jyrs. ap. It type IO+. I a.mp sire. II F. Pet • r show . Pvt pty . ........... -0.., Nilllll ftomYGW"Mlw1 •-UllOMAL s..s .. carc1 '• lier 8ar Latwta Hllla . yrs ap ....sect. Appl)' ACCESSORIES. P'l are Ncm.smour IS1·2Ul I r m t•M.MS alU pm . tO 3 'u ......... hll U••· Company -.nu. Appl,y Pen· ....... .-PlaceaUa A•C.M. MANAOIR Cpl. •(&etlred) for relief ..,... ol mini-.toraae aitH In Sant• Ana. (pJtJme work). Call: .... 751-1.IM. t to 4, -.'ftwn. MAlUll WOMAH u..nmbered, DO exp me. fta bn, Npt Bcb lat, dat pay aft. train· .... 161 .. , 173-5* All cml1. Civtt CeeMr far decor. nee. '1e:s. hra. •POODLE PUPS• llf plt.11 OM •'*'· W• • •ITAL TEACHERS return permuiDtl ...W 8dracllvt 1 llALTH SUISTITUTI strap, mfflln• • MUIS. $10 Na DAY I.D. requimnema. Wanted ! Quall f ie va loM • tbeftl F • Poc .. latrle auru Subltltute Teachers t penonallaed tq eee • (JUfl) _.I years ea;t~~~~~~~~~ teach hl1h school atu wallpaper. fabric o9' SIC"t jalCeT Q-n, m PJulariDo Hilb earntn1a. Will Ave,C.M. 711·111.J. tn1D.-.l4ll. For fnlnt olflce. Needed for Newport Beach CPA ~--SU. Couple Wanted to firm. Salary co m · ~-'-• for a Jr ·buJ•r maDall 11111111 bualneu men1urate w /e:sper. fullar part time ... .-71 ..... 912 ' w Ut 2·S yn up. la auiatmaa dtpc»it.a. T. Cups also. SM. .. I Shi-Tau Puppies I wka di AKC Blk /Whl. IUS 0 &M-11571 ......_ ...... to • denla 1n tM event of "Day Glo" paper 6 ·.-i P.11. lldft at ba·Plltlea PllllC9'T. work 1t o ppa.1e o wW ta.ck ~ trim >'~f.,. ,....+ .. ,., Able lo won SICUTAIY ..... ..,...._.,... JAVtD· Sea. Receptlooiat near O.C. lAlrY CIGlllrOI esp 6 '"'1inJ · 4 Female AKC picture a perfect Cocker Spaniel'•, lacWt1. laata Aaa o LAswaa Blada manufac· emer .. ncy .. Dady pa taia. Or lt)' two cd'W"' Ao.Ulm. ll'ull time; turiat co DMC1a sbarpl *· Six bilh achools ti.cktob9PRcllcC. ....... ...: 11111. llR SHIP Airport. Real Estate of com,....., olftce, llnowle.'!.J• helpful. malatemuce aup.tll••· : 1 wb old, 541-00lO dys. -.1111eves MlO par hour lo t tart, ,..._ for ou.r froot of· 1radu I · 12. Va Ii ""° 112.•ma&lmu.m. Ii ct to opt rate California credential re !215~~eoea. ~ P9oplt on.tecl, rdable Salary usted to ex· Ableto~ or· penca Meded to work perience. Call Paul den. Fq I company d 8r'OWD Lab. female: 5mo. COUNTY OF OltAMGE 17141114-7121 swltcbboard, open •1 cpred. Apply and sub S/9t•-Sl.50ea. ..,, • .,._.. 11111U, 6 aulat with J mit credential ln person -P • r • o a n e l D e p t . 1 fftnl"llOO Beach Unio lOor more Sl.40 ea. ,o!a woftJoed. Type SOWpm .f HJ&bSCbool District Sa.leeTHlncluded,,,. • Previous clerical exper. 10251 Yorktown Ave NO CAJlD! 'rut dt1ired. 4·day work RB. or call to be re :!::. =:..!boa.~ ........... Sbould.,. •·Ziil ............ 1. ..._on.a.I pd able to z:cate cub realtter . Secretary /Recept loniat . ... ...... oy ncelJent com· Good 1pe1Un1. 'typin1. NIWUC .. 111 i*1Y ....nta. Apply in clerical akllls. For a ~ IAM-Noon, Mon· . r9pomlble· position In 1. ........ 1 Deetronlc sales. 157·&H6 Papen. ll!O or near offer . 8]3-3114. n Shettle puppies, sable • , white, M'tF, $150. .. 6*7803 I week. We offer 1ood pay Pt«ed 114·964·3338 an .., ~ AftlrmatJve Actioa • beneftta. Call fOI' appt. day lncludlnl Sat." Sun. we'U make one card·...,ff.1 Employer 11/F I Tpelon i c Ber lee I e y , DeacUlne Nov. lS. 1980. 'i11homeoy poodlp e, l~ to .. 1ood ~ ~~ ~:~ey.;;~ ::f Diil try commerc1~ --.T We provi MAlllOTTftOT& !.0 .E. all ol Utt uteuive train· .. r.:11 need lo be a •Newport Ctr. Dr. Secretary I j h h ;,.... .. y_ 1045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• e rs on n e I D e p t . T . apen. derto: . ~~ ........ NH' n....._NOl. E.O.E. , eacher'a Aide, P /T , 631·3647. --Gerber Cbll-dren 's '9LOTPllMT1M6!->·1•• Predlcal Dunes, aidel,• n x SIC'Y I ~. Newport Beach. Ree. Toy Fox Terrier.I P.O. Box ueo .:..; pro eaaional. Income, NftPort Beacb • oca c ~re . draw • beDellta. Call for Equal Opp Empl)'r M /F • mature penon, typing " an appomtment for ln· I traucriblnl skills im- tervlew. Reelononilcs I portmt. Exp ne.:essary. Corp, t7U700. SALES Call 831-2880. c o m P a n I o n a 6 we 0 ff er x l n t c 0 . 1 Aak for Joni 644-0232. female. all shota except Coeta Meaa, Ca.~.:; 11 g c HAN 1 c A L ~cs. Live in/ou~. benefits. Sal. com-1 ror booster. To fd home. ' ENGINEER IUU/part time pc»ltiona mensurate w/exp. •; Tow Truck Driversi 4118-5874. CERAMIC .nr'• u you an aac.reulve and. . 1ooll:inc for a Mure in re-• SECRETARY· A 1 r po r tj tell m1mt w/1ood co. i Law firm. lood akills.1 Ha.ii. now. ahility Typinl S5WPM • needed. Experienced on·i . TILi 1159"1 ~ • .: '\ • 1Jrowtbldl opportunidtY1 AIDIS IN ACTION : (ll'ft ·aptitude pleasant i ly. Must Uve C.M. area.1 Fr~ nutfy kitten to good1 6x6 ... 25t per pie.:e. Paint ~ fap Y expan DI PenaanelServicea otnce N.Y.S.E. Member 1 646-9&311. : hOme. 12 wks old, shots . &•glaze your own ~ •teal component I ofOraqeCounty, lnc. Firm. Call for appt . l ~7491 I Good ror cer amic shQM. =ac:turer ~ulrea a : Sl5Town Center l>r. 1J730 833-17CM Joan Baird Sutro 'RAINIE or private parties to ... ,,. •t lndlv.tdual. to : Coltalleaa 5'5-0500 6Co.1401 Dove. St. Suite 1 I Show horse stable. Li ve· I FREE FIREWOOD L~R your artistic abilltt«• ltftaltben en1aneenn1 ! 400N.B. EOE I Estate II cease n ot1 Zel'oa 800 or 850. artec in. 331-lOll. or 244.2218. .· ...,.. ~1of it. but hurry . ' 5.'M-7533 : • '-tklnl. Includes de· :N'8"MI Aide needed for. . I neceuary.Xlntsalary +1 SLOAN $ exp!d. Full or· P 1'· .. ~ ..._ clra1Un1. materials private duty care for PHOl'O PRINTER. im-. bomla. Seed detailed re· IRIS8t1'ATIYI 1· Ne-:port Secretarial I Valet Parking Attend. · 2 Caddy s poke wh~d-. l9tiq, and R " D pro· • man in Newport Beach. med opening, exper on swne to Vilta1e Property• to call on banks and Services. 752.2377 Women/Meo, PIT Holi· AFGHAN. male Cream. rims. SlOO for bo\~·; ... A decree is pre· j Work ~2. Moo-Fri. ref1 packap printer. <Nord 1 ll1mt . Inc . 100821 olher related b~inesaes i s.cr.t.iea-&.-.-a ' day Season help wanted Ap_Prox 3 yrs. Gentle. 839-:!00'l/839-9320 ,.; ftnedwithl-3yeanex· 1 req. Call now for app't. 1 lldl Ill). Ftr. 1·9PM .~ GarfieJdAve.Hunt.B.ch.1 forpubllc2ndrelaTtlonDs with .. Immediate op7ri"ing . for pvt parties. special friendl y . 631·1030 ·i • periw.; however, re· Upjohn Health Care Ncn a~er. Apply at . Ca. 92HI. Attention ~ i com Heavy litig~tion ex·i events. Must be ~epend .. : 557·3145 Send ~!=~:·1o~°)~ ~araduateswith1ood ~Services, 7S2·0H4.' OnSlte Pboto1raphics" llartrDonan. =..,,. ~.~: ::::.1 perience. G~ s~ills, a~ to work n1tes, gd· Male Black Lab. 8 mos. bouquet of'. 30 m. ulti ~~ 1.tt.w• wlll .•lao re· I E.O.E.11 /F. I Dl'IHarbor Blvd., Unit : llC9'T~CASHIH Wllltraln.Xlntopport•i' str:onJ organ1zataonal• with people. Xlnt pay .. Hasallshot.s 1 1 oredheliumballoona~' Clltfteamideration. 'I I &.I, C.M. C ll E ult I ab11it1ea. Initiative & Women encouraged tol 89'1·4647 with ribbon " your GrWA qr.-opportUnitytojoin ~ . . : PARTTI E.m.allO ~ 1 q Y ., willin1ne11 to take apply. Ca ll Angel 's! . personal mesaa~ aa e:scitin1 team . I ~ 1Pr9c:hoola1de.llom1n1s,I llaturepenonpref. . raponalbllity essential. Valets Inc. ror app't.·Lo~ang Lab-Shepherd Perfect ror every ·Qc;~ Qtfallfled applicants I ....... ._... j older women preferred. lctCapadesChalet SALES: Looltlnl for that Excellent ben efits .. <714 1558-41122. l max, 1 mo spayed· casion. We delivM":· . ...Sr9wneto: , $l.75Jlw. ~bet 3 •spm. 1 2'101.Harbol'Bl,Cll very special s ales Salary open. Call Linda . . fermle,lovessmallldda.i 673-4419 '>':~·;I l\.l...-..CbWEn1i.Deer We will train. 8 paid! 1 uc.TIONIST person. Port O' Call Ru • s e 11 col 1 e c-t , W~r;.!_Sses wanted Im· 552-Sllt. ~ .._.Via Fabricante 1 boliday1,~lnnin1 as Pl£SSMAN . 1 87$-1110 213/558-2000. Interviews' ~lily. Part or Cull t A wit I OSO STAMP COLLECTI~. I MIM&cmvt•'-,CA-l · ..,.._ u , be .. efi•·.• LootiaC for a mature, lnN-beach , ume.Call751-0341 . ,na m PURCHASED Da,y -~ --... .. experienced • reaponal· ,._.....,. • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coope 846-Dl'J ~ .~, eayv.le• Convaleac~nt' CJ••·y.m•• ! ble peno~.-Must be' SALESMAN I I WIUtresaes. Apply btwn, I BUY I r. • y. I lllDCAL Reept. Auut. ~~t~r~F:~rue~f; For double width Harris . fMbionable u well. For. Territory, Oran1e C-oun-••SICalTA.alls.*-• · 9 A M & 1 2 P M .: ** * * Snap·on side c •~·· •f -Npt Ctr ct. j JMO offset press Apply busy, ele1ant, bllh· ty. Salary open. Call Al· r-al/........,/NoSh.-.6 800 CHAJU.JE'S-CHlLr 3001' Good uaed Fumiture " drawers 1 shelf _~ ~da r~ap :, P!~.':; • 6'2-3505. E.O.E. , In person be.tween · fa.hiclnsalon. RJCHARD1 1 I.en Brown for eppt. Will ~cl~Pt/Bn.·t:S14 400 ' RedhUJ Bide. u.' Ste.; ~llences-OR I will, ble. ' · ..... 11 J19ftOD. Esper. pref'd. jNunlq 9am-4pm OUELLETTE SALON, train right person. Sec/Shl0/En&Sl4 400 '238.C.M. • orSELLforYou Sl40 768-9 ----. p 1 ...... 11 · '" llfl..__. ~ Coest aoo Newport Center Dr. -.-1. . G otc/l'90/0ursSl0.800 . ·• MASTB S AUCTIO N 1J•, ..._ art ru tlme. =-w:-.. I Plot N.B. I TomquaatMach.Co wReinclenAgency I WB.011 64'-1616 &1lJ-t62S New Ta~pan Touch/~~tr- ._...."' 1 . Bru, Ca. GO Birch Eat '64 EOE MacGre1or Yachts. 1631 trol Microwave Ov~d llmllca1 A.uut front of· , $4.00jlw. ~t · i:Y St ! ~t. lood typlngj iu• _ MANA&H Newport/133-11.90 /Free I Placentia. CM : King size 1ttra firm inner1 List Price $d9 Sell for •...J. i Gp ' . 8 paid holidays be1in· a eaa skills. For ortho office, 1 -. 1 ' sprin1 mattress with $375· Queen Size Custom ~or :1 ··exp pre,· ,.; ... u soon u hired Equal()pporEmployer Mature, lCM()yrs. 5 dayl Oi:llJty for embitioua in· Women nee ded ror matching coil· box spr-: Bed01pread • Pillftw 11an,.., mat resume o · -• : ~ d i I h I · k . ~ ... flee manager : 351 , beneftta. Bayvi.ew Con· . .._..642-5897. v .~ necessary 1 ousec ea nin~ wor . angs, never used, allllt Shamte0.64().2746 ., lb ital Rd Ste 118 vai.cent H09pttal, 20SS Production Worker. lst uc---...1st I quahfic ationa, ~ust I Seer••• r/bec. I Good .~Y· rull time. Call, pac+tged, worth SS20. in-N BP_, • · 'Iburin, C.11. Mn. Far· abift full time. loadinal _. .. "'" .. I hav~ abUit.Y to tram &i Career oppty. in fast· Robb1es Rag & Mop:, cl deUvery$220 Cash on· Japanese swords (9)·~"~ · · · rell:642-350l5. E.O.E. ~te t A 1 . Neededforescr:owomce.I motivatesaleateams. paced Npt. Bcb. invest· I 548-0'157. ly.~. armor w/box to be s6~ apes: PP Y '0 I t.empoc'ary poeitlon. Lite Penonal bualneas mgmt I meat (U'1D. Requires top! , a 11 together o n r y, lldcal OPnCE POSITION P e r I o o · T ff E typinJ needed. Hours: I -..-skills (ahtlmd 90 typing' WORD PROCESSING CUstom made queen size 497-2S17. Y~-TecWca.. a.1calakillanecea11ry. CREATIVE WORD, W, lloa.·Fri. Call Toni: I ~) Sound professional I Day or Evening shift water bed with solid1--------- N'Md---_rlr 1 I' 'd Vaadnlfflmurance, RB, 17~ Skypark Circle.I 55MOllOforappt.Salesmen j e::sPer .. maturity & cor·• avail. 6 hrs. a day. Magi wood bookshelf head· Sony Reel t o R~.l.. in1u• I C • Ml-40.S. Ste. •B-2. Irvine., I INSULATION •. porate bkcmd. helpful a. Savin 900 or Artec. board. Mattress. heater . RecorderS300. Bookc ~, teell. for busy ofc. 2 541-0UB. I llC9'TIOMIST Earn 900 + a week. no Call· s.-Ol23 I CalJ 752-0234 I liner dded ·1 . S2IO. 37gaJ fish aquari ....avacaUonflexcell. O,.nlh•1 Peruaa1I Omeea'•lmedsls.edNB credit turn downs. up! · · p&ete°=..mat~~~ c:r;: comp. $120, Su~ bneflta. 1750 to $900 Ba c k . u p W i r e P R 0 D U C T I 0 N' Law l"lrm seeb sharp preferred. will train. 1 ·Mii it •llM I cbelt of 5 d 1 both\ am/fm c .. a SlOO. t~ DOE.CallAnn,540·6055, Operator /Back-up j TRAINEE Rubber hosel indiv with e:sper. Li1htl' 531-4501. l SICllTAIY •-••••••••••••••••••••,like De'W ;:;e~. misc. $10, 979.5300 d~l(i' Oollt.lil Penonnel A1en· Cubier Deeded for wide. 1 producla. Must pass co.1 typin1. Non-smoker. 1 3Pll-IPM ......... 1005 ; an' b._ hque! Dale Mech ' ey,2'JIOHarborBl.,CM ly known brokera1e physical Incl. back X·I Salary commensuratejSelee 7SWPM no shorthand ....................... : ~ Y ca me~ with • ·~ NEVER A FEE E.O.E. ftrm. Jmmed openln1. '-Y· Taking applications·, w/nps. Good beneflls. 1 Need P I T a u per I applicants need abov~ ongtnal 1RCA r~dao and Buglarproof your bolllfie'. Call Helen llcGinley 1 btwn 1 ·10 only . n4-'JS2.8Ml aalespersoo for F11bion 1 avera1e spellinl &j WESTMINSTER recordpayersullworkd The inexpensive wey, Medical Sec retary &M-2812. Stratofle:s , 17671 UC91'10NIST Island, Wed, Sun 6 gnmmar skills. word ABBEY I inl.!!$300.0neof akin . Mac.548-1444 ,., ... ..; w /1tron1 medi c al ~n-.... .. Gil Armstron1Ave .• lrvine., . . wkendl preferred. Call processing back1round ANTIQUEMALL qu1lhled bedspr eado'.l very Reasonable! A.::..a terminolo1y back ·""-'"~ r , answer EOE. A Kendavis Ind .• With or without typih1 ln4)'158-9151,l0.Spm. helptul.752·0234 Dailyl~.Fril0.9 eart tone colors, $35 ""' telephones, some filing. Co needed. Top pay. Tem-· ClosedT d 1 Cal.171~·0138 Rug 9 x 12, Lamp&, t')b"l powad/knowled1e for Mmt have gd bandwrit· . I porary 6 f..il time. Call SeJee SICIO AIY ues ay -Sola Bed. End 6 Coctt*'f bmyplMticsurseoo'sof· in1. Call l ·S, Picwick TodServicesaU79-8800 PAITTIMI . ~ i.mmed. With or l G1::,!,'!'!'1-l~;~ro1 ~!!!Ri~g~~d I This, Queen Hdbrd, etc. nee in Newport Beach. PaperMl-llSi. PllODUCTION : GltlAT HOUIS! I without shorthand. Tem· . . . 556-Q90 l. Some preparation of COMnlOL PL.ANNY RECEPT /PT I porary " full time. Call Gl11s Front " Sades ~ ._.ocal le1al reports; PAINT. SALIS Front office appearance. Tod Services at 979-8900 DOROTHY EMERSON & 1 Closed cupboard Below· Aquarium. pump, mt~- w.-cribln1 " varied Put time, Tues. s to 9, :Sinl.:;:. c:{e!~i~il:t~ DetaU oriented. Stron1 tAM TO J PM DON NOLAN PRESENT I Xlnt Cond k50 546-6398 stand, SllO. Gas drY.~ ... typiq required. Salary . Wed. t to tPM. Some ofimurtDI scheduled de· clerical skllls. Some bk· Oil ~ EXPO & S •LE •, eves. S20. Kit. table, U O commensurate w /ex· exp . Ker m RI ma liveries al customers' or· k p I k now I e d g e 4PM TO t PM SIC&ITAllllS A I Refri1. S20. I love P"jJ,. Plftmc'e. Xlnt. benefita. Hudwan, 211111 Harbor den. Able to review " beneflci•I. Small con-I Lod'-J for A 8iant panormama of!' ~g Sale. Fr Prov. 548-0107 • • ~ appt .. call 844·1240.: Blvd.C.11. implement engineering ...-.. office. Corona del Join the Loa An1eles ACll•ii n antiques in the collec · 4!'· rm set w/6 tuf\e~! Rancho San Joaqoh' lln. Ip ,.~·-E ............. Maintain lnte· 11.ar location. For in· nmes Circulation team ...._ •-EOE tioaa of "ver 100 selected• c .rs. stereo conso e Family Membersh.i...,, ---------I arts .......... terman xp .. ..._.. tsviewcallt7S.t1Sl. aod adapt your 1ll(Ork nee -. . . dealen... I misc. rum. S49-oewi6 .. _..., ........... -1, comm I I Pref but will train FIT IJ'ity of inventory re· secbedule to your IrvinePeraoonelAgency At h I et I c c I u.b.., -_9!.,.c nae'w· '. Boatawains Locker. 2ui cords. Req ula lt Ion R8llal ••ent very busy llf-~ie. w-.. s hn per j •. E.17th, Costa Mesa~ Mo¥. 6, 7, I, & 9. ..__..l""-'IES f f .._, ntru. N....... matsiala to support de· ~ • ~ _.. SUiteZM 6421470 Thurs Fri Sat llV"'• .,.~ Sl2S +trans er e~,. laees. AU a1es/type1.1 W.CoutHwy,N.B. llverf schedule " oftlce,licenHreq. day in a Times Clrcula· ---_ ...:..._ l·lOPll,Sun.'u .6PM Whole houseful. Must 6441579 ·.:.: '11M1'1.a>'1. AllChedule orders req'd. ~. tion Sales Office neari &..<4.M4M4M4M.U> lNTBE tell. Call496-S203. Jotm Wayne Tennis CJ06 .llodlll, Female, fl1ure, PAIT n MI by the markellnl dept. your home and have! COMMERCE BLDG. Kinl·slze hdbrd, dresser Family Members.\')§> .. uter Specialties Co. RESALES morethne for your faml·1 Secfttary _..._~I CO. 2 side tables. dk wood $1000644·1405 · tll1. abarp, only. 142.1292 EVBllMGS otren you a 1ood salary.. ul>:· .. ~w· or leuuhre '1c·1 Caut1cHM·DI•. F~1a.•ou~Ds best offer takes. 851-0263 M. I Adults over 21 lrith out· ac.el. frln1e benefita • A CAIE£1 ....... e pay ~ur Y, ~ary. Beaut. cor · "" ~ " Ladies dresses S3 • '4ii standln1 at&actlve aneQjoyableworkin1en~ ..,_udcomml.ssaom. porate of'c. nr. airport. Admiaa.D.50,orwlth !nS-0477. prladiesbootsSSpr-nH . .-~IY1 -·"Uea who e"''oy vironment. Pleue senu 11 IUL ttfAf£7 Fee naid by employer. ad. SZ.25ea. '·-Mahogany dining n......t. house needs A....,, We~~pfor-400 1 ~wtthklda.14Per resume alon1 with W • LaAa91laaTI.e1 ReallY top benerits ~ AMPLE t=tre'. 4 chairs. roundj ~prladiespu~ ....,.. to work approx· hour. Call &42-4321 Ext salaryhl.storyto: FlndOutlllt'aforyou ll75s..flowerA••· SlUOO. Rush! Call Eme FREE PARKING R*>ckwoodkitchentable ss. Fire extinguisher~ lliDlll41 10 days deliver· 250 between 2 and IPm. .......,. s,.cMiltM• flEE •nllflAI Costtl MeM . O'Brien. 540·5001 . Also SLOT MACHINES w/chrome. 4 chairs. call I need.a refill. Rolla~•.r Illa~ dlreetortea Alie for Lori. IMO Monrovia, _..! 540.030 I fee ;ot.. Snelling Ii Snell-llilla 6 Jenninp, xlnt 831·W . cart fell' TV SS. Butcher la tbe Oru1e County O.,...c..t c.o.tall .. ,Ca.92127 T-.Ne •• 4ttL int ol Newport Beach cond , Pvt . pa rty . block cuttinl board •ll:· .... Wort your avalla· ..., ... E.O.E. CHAllPHOn"'d~OGEUVNE ANRESD An F.qual Oppty Emplyr ~encyE. 4340 Campus ~lll07. 2comtwinpletbedea. G, l30ood/eraor' Colemen camp stove lilO. blf clQlipt boun. Men F.aua1 ODllGr Employer ._ · Ull"., F.O GWtar l20. Car radio•· OI' womea. Over 11 Sale9penon wanted for AMl'l'i)UISALE rentala.S3l-G7S. Bird ce1e 110. 541.7q~ :~~tSt::!.C:-k':':a! PAYIOUCLRI •~=toSU~tlea ,... aportia1 •C:S~ 6 Senlce S...._ I 0.U, bullet, hall tree. For sale: Capt. bed, 2 Dl'l Wallace St. eo,g 'llBftDUCJION *Tr I ....,. wear store a1. Alla Ila I Ude Arco roll top. bookcase, piano, drawers, 4 shelves, S7S. Mesa. . Pl ... ~Dt OQt• 11at JollJ ftoter Inc., an rllU Jlllll. P/t.ime ~ f/Ume . .._ ... _ . .._1 .. ,. hr .. pictures. clocks ac· PbonetM-5305 r.r~"· Va&rd drben ~::.:lfsbed rtatallrailt I ill·Trll <" • -Lllnl rt I -w •. w1ea arU ued • Two an loot tbeat • Calif. u~ bu an open.la• for CONTROL Spomored By ' Hrs na. . SC per hr. LidCI ..mq.-'541-iliz ..... s. 1055 UlfU, cab&es, control --nQUlnd. You can ape.yrollclerktowonln C J -tJlj-.w. ... SALESWOMAN, C.11 . Arm.JmONewportBlvd, . • ................ ~ .... M7S. aft. 6 HS·I ~•.JS..•Jhtormore a3pencmdept.Abltityto RSVP .._7414 half lbe sbop. Warm, NBm.um •rP'•c~ 1010 Me.-rtH.,._ awue. ~~I" ~C!!! on your speed ~~~~e pboaet CLERK ~· w/tJ/apparessl u~. ·;-.::;• ~·;;ry·-;;,·~;~; Blal~Pror ... ioneJ 2-Ton P100l'•Jack, La;...c.:...· • ._,. com.._ea ....... a mus . ~ P me. o.. SecreUry _...... tood cond. Sl2S W-."I cw. ~!!/If ::.!•=~ :'::!':i ~=[paa!ur:":1~i =-::.~!'~~-....'!!~ult 6 9IMl70 c-t.S.C'y. ;;.;.. · aDDCWeltbetrannual Frame. 751...., >,!\'• ............ Ion.apply at tnln an ladlvichaal who :__. · ~-• · puUtme Du 6 Dlpt Sa,...~ rr.toeppticaa.L Detail· •AIA .. S AU .~.~ 1 tlll llcMloe nnrett you ba9 llmlt.ed aperinee • ~ i:i:a~~I 0~•j:t~~ ildft Hallable. PleaM P\alllime .. Private club. minded person w /1ood Ma)'la1 wHber • 1as .. • 1 •llarel Plrw•aa• " •· Jl:IMll or l :IOPll, a dalin to learn. Salary Ability to u p date alllllJ ID ,..._, llOD.· Nw,tBtd.ID-1511. lYllballsabo(tllandwant· dryer, avocado. 1ood Sat{.,; New I flt Orenp,SplltSJ.50/~1 =.,....•naNov.106 commeoHrat• w /e:s· llllUrtalmovementwitb J'rl.; 1£m·•c:..Craa1 eidto-wiat V.P. at cor cand.SllOpr.MllOll tAll~4p11 -.SS.aftMIPll •(id ••.1.tlle10r•30•fAt11•r at ptrlea~. Ap'!~111 1: Wlllt'-P"M*t· llanellr ,. .. .a~•--•:. .. 1!"' p•~ .. Drt""!,,. ...... ~~~·~·~~GE Frost free refri1· 401£.BaySt,C.ll. I c r i b w /mattrer"f. I : A I : • or ...-_ .... ~ -1um-.---nua. IUU n1111:. QqaunW\I f•jolle.CallCUoaJhack entardatnuaniq cond We welcome your COD· b l ~ l:~. ~~i~V-l'gO~~ ~-=-.:c:. ~PPl:ROHJ'S :,:~c=t~c·:~:! I~~ ~a:;1:=~·~!~ SUI0/080..,_ ~=:d:e-~'!e. :~ =~:r~'.t!u!:.P .. Af/9. INC. ~~t s a lary aad PIDASTORE med. employment. Cell A;eacy 4340 Campua SEARS Keamore Di~· addanbiprUDd. all.MM208aft.S. • .~. 110GOW.U.Ave. .--a.JNldQe, includ· .._.,._._•forf•·"fs-rt Capl1truo Un Hied Dr m• b....._. 115Good Coadt· SCUM-1.ETS s f lrvlM.CAlll'714 illl _.. Lile, Mtcll al ----1111 -lcbool D191.. Trauporta· ·• • tiaa.....,_ ,Lam ... Col Table·Area . 0 • 0 nu• Olll _.. DIDt.a 1 c time a, 1 • ., at loc•· uoa. •·11~2 for lo· R qi ·T Y pew r It• r · It. ~.. ----·---.. ,__ PIM 8:~8:.~i tlou ar OC Airport. lonu&.km. SblppiDI 6 recelvlnalM ll 1M•art•IOJI 1 BoolraJewelry·World ir: . .... ,.... ..... , V.tedda.ra 6 Ian. lcleal dirt. n puU m ••••••••••••••••••••••• , Boot Eney-lla1n•VOJl .. · .. i~~ ftaldoli..;.. 1 .-tbs MWll ....... iMomefor leentm7.IOOdEn1Uaba tnla. ~ 541.-io ~.4 Aoll• troo, lO'd \4 x• ~II* 211 Cedar, r .. 11 .... ......,. ,.,, bu ..... studema. typla1 ....... ,.t 6 pmcmlJ l\4d/lt, "e•._new. pvt' N.BKHHl. I ~ ... , ,! . , ,.... .. 1'1111 POllTJONI o. ,.,_. ...... .,.,... 1 di•eralfled work In · party. Mt.ant A. ,.. ....... .., ..... 1 All ~ I ... ..... r@J.SD ••• c ., llJ' on .. °"'" PMlaioa lalaad area. SHOllALllMAM 1'°""u ~ ·--· nlew • .. '=.·,• t4 lll:DIA . Please' ._ ...-._.._. beMd ..., .... -.ma W.Mft u openlDi for Chrome towel bars • 115.louDSt,AptjO,CM, '· ·:·_ • _,.:..... ' o • 1 6 • r J o b' • ~ hall or ,.._......__.. &mderl lll.-S. ---'--------:::=-.' " Busineasmen m:w ·i pedwmaaee ........ :1 SBIET•AL putU•• ••lHperlOD. ·•:.-.!t~.:.a::i....... 1060 I If 11ou ore doi ng . ~ _....~.Mutt~ Pro l optlc I Alllltr '-,..._, uk rw ~ ,..-••••••••••••••••••••••• tJ Pair· buiuu uder 0 nwax •. i 11 or onr. Appb la' ...JI.:~ CIOIDPll:, *-C.saw, lletaplalU'• • •Sale/IAaH, Jqmpu· ..... °"i F'fcfUiOMt a ... ,,.,.. ...$... I .-: • .,... ........ ol a l ~--........ ~ __ , f sbow. uooo tac II . I W., I SonN p ON ,_,.aN'd ......... ..,. ~~Sul~~ C-'::f wtUt ao•• · • • 1010 •.., ....,., In• -bit low ,,,...,,. and !!pl!Cft...,.,1 M/P . -AM·-/MokkMPl•I ......... hall time wltb •-.... ••;·~~~~1Ja• .. f 1070 ~11111• j Prof•'*"' Cods Sc '~-~~-!!~-~~~~~· <NattollcO..alda) 8,,...d. Dia I•· • •'• eap w wlU Dwta ... eel ••ID•-•••••• .. • .. •••••••• -· · 1;; a.o.s. .-. .............. '°! ,. ·• ~·~n 1.._'""·1 it•1 at lnot lo l'lflll io Iii o ""6 • •t• • telle' lr9 !,* eo. -..nta ... .._.. Porblack.aad Gea"I •• 811r • ue Dr. to• "ctttfoH 8H(Hu I llYoarPnfiMe...,, :. 1 .._.rt C-of. ~ • .......... Lo ......_ clenaopa..1 ''°'' avma. Yw daolce, rllway i i No'"' "°'"'"' ad HOii& a&PAIUT 1 ..... t ......:=ary 11--*'tf'rt. ltaa· ...._wit A• ll coa·I GllllJ•w:ta.••H• l! ",!°: ~ ~ 1 IJld ,_ ._. ,.. •• ,....._~~·-• 6 ........ rtOl la·I daH hoea, H17 So. .ara&e. a pllou fix "I WE: ol Hae DAILY I plw a dwtned .. la .._.._ •'*2J..Alllfla,._ lltailll.C.M. 't•n•tratt. ,4 r.••t•.UtU. la 8111! Cla.Nlflt4 ~~~~~~~~ PILOT COl9 1w1p ...,,. I=.= t:".'::1 ,....,..ac, or ae841 'C;~f• a,o : lrAftOlllUY noas m =..,._,~:af• rate, ada ar• reall>· 1m a11 r-a .. -t· botll. CCIII U.. UOAL -•,_• ..... ._•I .... P,11mlPlll C-.17'-aJ cal_... Ht.lffJI •--. ·•.-...aoD90PM" aalea -... II' p A It r" e Nr --Dslr... ••ta • 11 • ,... F/Ulllle I .. ,. &tat '1 calll _.. blt ........ hlp 't1'&nttol Da Sf '1 &17-... •-f Ptw-.. a•-=.....a1•--...... lntlle ant -... • ' • -•..o UJdW•multaf1oplace Plo)'mtnt U2-4J21 ..ezc. JIJ /or --.!::a:'--n I --·· , ....... , . m _%£...._ ~·l'l'r8de >'OW ._. ptulf for~'d-.1 .. .......1 -~ • U 'I ........_r~_,,.._ ----·.. ~-=· .· ~·· _ .......... :m•t a your ·--· .. a ..!!!!!:!!!.!~~f~.led.==-=lJ·~---·;." . ...-~-.~-""--==--:;· ..... ==::!i:',~~:::;~~ .. ~~~·~·~=::.I-~~~!!!! .. ~~ -------YY» ........ u ... -- • -· _ ~ t Cvntfted Adi,... "'2·5171 ~ -~ ed.141 . ~ __ , .. ___ _ --1,,•1 _.. ·~ ~ --~ _. -:-= .. ! c -...-.-i::::a.-------= ~;:::::::-::=====:=:;- I\ EAL ESTATE ACQUISITIONS blaellts apply in person . brilht. orgaolze<j. non-1 Company aearchln1 for a 9am to llam Mon thru I smoker. Joele8Sl·9025 I coUece IJ'aduate lo help Frl. Standard Shoes, 3077 Sec'y/Word Processor I reeearch " purcbase ln-So. Briatol, C.M. come property. Real SALES TOP PAY ! It. .. .. A Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad ... we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses 'to your ad For more information and to place your ad cal I 642-5678 . 642-5678 DAILY PILOT .. I cA ...... fl61.............. IT,... 9160 .... rtM . ......1.,orW ....... a.,orW · Alltot,e.,_,w · ...... UHd ,rM 1 IMI -................. &A111111r1ee 9400 I~ ......... •••••••••••••·-•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••··~ ..... -.... ,.,. .., ..... Ttlr .............................. ·n Dltllln Kini Cab,... 9707 w-9720....... t7ll .,... 9765 c .,. ttlt •• ...... .... .... Card I ... a--tll00/080 ror Salt: Dodie Ven D.OOOmL sa.ooo. '72 Ford .................................................................................................................. ,. I:\ ,•~1::J~~or ! ,,,_._IPll 11111 Md,..., Pop.Out P.U .• Ullt co.cl. IZ,000. 1971 AUDI I OOLS tr1 ao.dat«, no en1ine, '74 Mud.a. Good cond. 1 '80Cellca, Sspd, lop cond, '788cylw/tl0p newllrfi , · · :1i1·,....catW/\laUer a' tl!M'l•lUT Call 141-SSH. l ·lpm, SIDAN x.lntbodylrbardtop,besl owner;.SllOO. ~milea1e.aeveralxlra1 S4700 • .. ; ~ &newriter T1·C f\alb..ap.Woa u prt.. ......... _,.,..,lplb·lOplb. Sunroof with air Ir off•. 7eo.a375. CallS48·35S5 incl.Call~. '31-4181 ~ mo•el. Sony vldeol W/1tll uader retau ....................... AmlileW-.4 tHO automatic. Ori1inal '78Dat.aun8210. Mlfce .. lea t740 ¥......... 9770 O.w•t 99z,e., =VP·-· Radio (Mw)aftl:OOS339'3 DlfOJrl'ANT _ ..... ••••••••••••• finilh, lovely condition. SWuocil,All/FM radio. .. ............................................ j. •••••••••••••••••••••• .. • •') ~U..,~: Udo H, trailer, UUman NOl'ICETO wEPAYTOPDOLLAR UJtPEN> S1l50 875-8240Kevin '88 MB 28CISE A·l. 16395 '73 VW Bu1. rblt eng in -ct.n,CITATIOM .. ,, ... a-•u,-~~ -.a~--..ua vatd llttl t P R&ADWAND fortopUledcan·foreip, U4tl ·ao•oosx 819·3'00 days 497 ·1566 Kim cond .. Super clean. 'IO,. ...... ~ - -11, ew, . • •· o ADVDTISERS daamtls or clauics If .-..MAl..c> • evea/wlo)dl 12295/080.497·3034 -• 1 ..... ,. eab. e1-1tack ciaad.-.tTs.!710 1'111 prtce of llema 1fNI ear ia extra clean YOUCSWA•.. Fuel injected 4 cyl .. I Hatc .. ad. 1 l•r•cluira-miae. :.;.::,,,./ . . •• ~· vellkl• ... uanRST! • 11'11lBeacbBlvd a~tic, dual electric :• MB 2IOOD. Good cond. "18CONVERTIBLE Auto. trans .. air cono-.1• furalture. 4H·ltl1, . _ 1 yelaict HUNTINGTONBEACH inirronipower1teerin1.I Air . Auto t r an s . Like new, 24 .000 ml . 1 econ.4 cyls. & LOW"' -> • , _ ••dol9 not lacludel silver/black howldllooth eves. trade.1·779..SSZO. <6118XRK>. aMm. lv. meuqe. •••••• .. M• a v#tl1lb1 ~ 14z.2000 s l e e r a d i a I s , 714/731M728 dys, 5«·91291 $1500. will lake VW in m I I e.1 ! Cute ca r 1 1 OhiH fYn, IDcl aofa, SUn1!'fEEDBD .., appUcable taxes, interior, wheel covers, . , ONLY $65t5 ..... ~ chUr, ottoman, teble, as •UP UcmM, ttaufer fees, k "18miFO, 1Xr'eeJdrn/'b4aea·pdge', '°1Kd ruc1a1e ·rack, factory '79~. a .black beau·1·VW ~8. c.onvert1ble ,I· HOWAIDCL..... ~•-t ....a tu.. Beat offer. ftS.1100 ftn.eeebarpt, f9" for .. sty root, 1 owner, "A ty, wtlh polis~ed alloy clus1c white /black. ex·, -•~" na.ma M·F. TSZ.IOl1 lloortq 11 21, * poUutioD eoatrol de· #I la°"9tf c..fy· clean cond . Am /Fm Dlamoad"#043300 whla, bamboo mt. Powt:rl tras, lo mi, mint cond.1 DovelrQuallSts. .. I "'9+-... to 31'. -=~o~;t~/mo . YieeeertiftcaUoaaOl'de· 2115HarbOrBlvd. stereo tape, •nrf. A/C. 7,516.... everythln1. 23,000 ma., 548-54218 I NE~~ROT5B5E5ACH ". .... 1017 &:1.a .. u ....... -.. .... aoewatary pr• COSTA M"'CU $6500.673-5008,875-7805. l SANTA ANA Am/Fm cass stereo. elec1., Sal ff '63 ....... ~ "" ... " ,......_...,,_, =--• unles1 ~ IMW snrf, $33,950. 833·22 11 ,1 .. or e ot v " new! --..-... • .. ••••••••• · ~-•• 979 2100 9712 ! DATSUN I pit, reb eng, gd trans.' 11r-USFllSTI Canart• f 1 1 ad Slip, 2Sft. Waw, tiff, :::r-;:cmed by • ....................... • 551-7111 ! 557·3542. Many x.tras Must Seel 't:5 ·. Ffdot•Y~: e, r . b:br.800/mo. •• · WI IUY I For the beat deal in I ''79 300CD lo miles, Mintj $2000953-5079 I :r Nv~ ~g~ sl,i~ctE~ , ;, 551-1141. -.5335 JVM1111/ I CL•• ... C ... 15 I 0ranp County... come 7151 o HA TCHIACK 1 Olndilion . . 1 0ievro1ets, : '. lolh.Stlf totO Cliltlb 9520 :.-" ,.. SeeUaToday!! (cyl .. automatic, am·rm' 642·5392 179 White. Convt. vw , · .... &Ort lotO •-•• .. ••••~••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••! AteftUCIS & stereo,newradiab,clolh' Beauty Rt~s. Am /Fm1 .-.... .. •••••••••••••• .._ to ll bl lt70 CADILLAC I interior luggage body '88280SL, 2 tops, cass 7000mt, S9000/0 BO• COHHEll CHEVROLET r.'!i.:..• Spinet Waln t -~ s ra1e ava a e. ' _,..._ mo1' din . , . ' 4-spd, rbll ena. 640-0297 • 'x;'4 H.trl•,r IL. 1 ,,~l\\Ho..,\ "~>.· · u Newport Dunes 1131 COUPI DI YIW • ....., ga, pan slnp· "' I ::..;eel cond. 1850. Back Bay Dr.' NB. 31,m oriliiW miles •I SADDLllACI :=iJliver, low mile1.1 $14.000.493-8294 '75 Rabbit, air , new! .. • I M4-0510 loeded! Mut be tbe best . y ALLIY IMPORTS 1 54170 I '00: Good cond. Must sell ! i brakes, 4SM. x.lnl cond. ______ __::= """'811Gruel.5'9" blac111.1 ·a--ol UlJ.a model in . i . . . $1600. I S23ll6 rll'tn . 536-«>92 '75 M le c I La d 546'-1200 •f.100. 640·0505 or ,Ttu IJI t811ow Onnle Co. 1 prevloua t I 2M02M.arJuentePlllwy. · SANTAANA 499-~13.494·8248 350 ~8 a~~o Amn/~ .,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• owner Ir perfect ! l 1•1 2~~0aon4V91ejo4t4t : DATSUN : 17good4 Super Bedetle. drun s , stereo ~lee ~indows 'Ir --------Maefl fl 10 <nMVA>. HIGHIUYB JI· -'-' ' 551-7111 .MG '742 . ,needs rivers oor,1 • • l~mrlll•.... 1094 13411 cio.edSundaya I •••••••••••••••••••••••I S2400 548-2917 seat.s, crwse control. rllt' •••••••••••••••••• 1•-••••••••••••••••••••1 ' Top dollan for Sports '76 rtCI UP '76 ~ MID,.,_n . . ly loaded. S2600. 848-4105 . • ~, ~ 199 Beech Musketeer . 1 Cars, Bu11. Campers, I -• 168 Bu1 high mileage --:•::ion 3~08 a:t~ miclllme 150 Lycomlni. , 914's,Audl'a , Perris Valley Camper Must Sell ! Future 'j good ~ondition 51050·~ '76 MONTE Carlo, air: ~ DI. use,,~ I ea1, Z Com .nav'a1 1 AlkforU/CllGR 1, shell,4cyl.,41peed,am· Claaaic.Need.ll Clean·Up, l-678-l49S ' ·1 AM/FM stereo. $2 ,850: ..... • eowea:,co:;s.s;t ln&J lftder. Ml·Z5Cll aft' I JIM MAalNO fm stereo tape, tach and " Meclwlica TLC. suoo . 96J.S75 . ..-. pr\ce 8 . 1 ..... VOLISWA•at o· ST. llOADWAY compass, sport rims. 75-0080 1'66 vw BUG. Restored... . t\!a. ·cm ......... , ' I ·-1eeacbBlvd. . SAHTA AHA KD.atepbun1per,brighl ~-9744 i Mint cond. $2100. Call· 70 MONTE CA RLO •t......1 ,-''--.... 3 3171 yellow only 25070 miles ,_. I M2-3818aft6 350-V8 Am /fm 8 track ~DI~ Equipment· fllOI, . I HVHl'INGTONBEACH 8 5· #3117RSI ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 $1600 A·l Conditidl\ r.., ~ ~=:.:• •M•U ...... •••"!. ..... W 'fl!tt1~ 142-2000 TM£ uuw•n otwVIHG MACHtHl $4160 , •• MGB Classic Good j '&t VW CONVERTIBL E., 642·2514 . · o ...... 1> ... 'a•s ........... Cams-itill., ~"';clan,. dr, TOPDOLLAI •USIDIMWt• 5,AMTAAMA 'Cond.ee:;~~ 'xl~t cond, S2600· PP.icl ........ 9UO SailaProTaak 1s1...., ••ort•ed Dod It• ot1 ...,.._ Ideal IOI' atu·j : '72 3002 W w f s/r <208U DATSUN : • 631 9580 •• .. •••••••••••••••••o "'in n. ~ lllape S350.l cllllA...._11Hlll. · PAID FOi I '73Uca4spd. (0558) 551-7111 ·77 MGB, xlnl cond. 26 I' '68Squareback, clean. 1972 UNCOLN _. . i-• . . . ~ . 9000 & CUAM '743002tih/r (0332) ! mpc. new top, lug. rack, 1.sla:iOsleals il! MAKE OFFER ..... .,.. ftt..W. llft. blifta~· , SUti USID C IS • '752111C12a (0035) • '7t 2IO Z:X CPE. GL custom rims 6 tires.' 645-952!1. after 5pm. 675.2013 ~=· .. ·-···~~ .. ··· caaper. Stfttt.. . • . . • A ! I '77&1Dcai 41pd. s/r (0366)' Factory GL pk1 .• 6 cyl., 5 ~ally beautiful. Low ! . • .=ua &CA Z5 eolor ...a. ...... . y. I '11~1/~411p.(1S78) I speed, air powe.r .steer· ma. S*IO. 496-1858 '71 VW ,Ccln.th 9'32 ~.a yr wraty, free cfe.. 4. auat aee to •P ·l ..... 541-8183 aft IPllj I "18SIOiaau, (5~) • inl. power windows. am· ! 4 cyl., am·fm stereo .. ••••••••••••••••••••-• -~.SIJt ..... 1711 prectate.549-2018. 1 , or&t4-C33days,aslt forj ·' '793211Uapd .. slinrf(8917li rm stereo, steel ra~iaLs,:'73MGBGT. Good cond. bod.y side moldings."62 Corvette origin,al -;1. Jim : "18alla, air (8085) I niaan map, cruise con·: Snrf, cassette, $3200 .1 vinyl interior, t an and : 59,000 mi, runs xlo~ TV t tolwtlld.... ti 40 , I '79saa hpd (1944) trol, blaclt/gold, cabridet1 642-1016. clean!! Test drive this I Sl,000:842·1784 Eves . . DECODERS .. _ .................. , 53 Cadillac, m111t sell,1 , '79satas/r (J81S) sit£. Great Car. Great'p ot 9741 I one! N-'M.CEL I ... Ad Maxi 2 HP Xlnt· •orbestoffer. j 1 ao.MS.adns Prfce' #434XWD •bfl SZl64 ·Fwd 9t~o ecDI. . . I ..... ...,. , J ' . ~ ••••••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • . I •••• ••••••••••••••••• , •• l40-W mGl ~... c.e.W...645-5700 1 01At•ICOUMTY'S ' · SI0,9tt ORANGECOUNTY 'S r SANTAANA IF\este '78 silver sunroof ~Blle•lSptn. Akai ' , ' SANTAANA PEUGEOTDIESEL I DATSUN 1 xtras ~ · · c;,aette. Int. Amp. "1tllclpt4, Jlbltcond. Mary WANTED! : OLDHT DATSUM HEADQUARTERS 551-7111 . . 548~ • Tue er, turntable . -or otter. I Late model Toyotu and ! 551-7111 \ ! · MMll.S. 142-ttaJ. v 01 v 0 I . c a 11 u s . ~ '11121 o~Dr 1910 5051 '73Super Bug-new paint, I 62 Ford l\'=n wago~ Beth I TODAY!!! : ~ I · "' · 1 lGea&DleMlt •new upholstery . Call -"" " . .. ........ ,.. t'f::='/ ti 10 ! ; Sales-Service·Leasing ' 4 ~yl., 4 s peed. new' tBE MOW"' i 98M8S6 642·1016 • , j ' . I whitewalls, wheel cov·I __ ··• l·eoDi-·l Rabbit. dlx mdl,'jMlfrwv 9950 •••••••••••••••• ·-•,•••••••••••••••! M 1 • Rav CW"Yer l11e. in 1 1 t · 1 ~..... - , • . orton I iliSAo I en, v y n enor, ug., IEACH IMPORTS I loaded w/xtras. Only ····················~··· 4#C!.~ ... :: ..... ~~! ~~-::.~ -:n.. "" ....._ ... 1 RoUa ~:mbofteBMW I =~~~'!:>~~.:~~~ .. Dove Street : 4100 mi. S7SOO. 63'7·6863 j ORANGE COUNTY~ ~ l:t" Ja11mon elec. OB, 12' fairial 6 tourtn1 seat Is 53 c .... ....._ , I Newport Beach 640-64-44 l Sm a I P • y men t s ! NEWPORT BEACH ' FINEST ---boat SlOOO .•• $1150 080 642·8770 or " .... .,., ........ ,. . #839RXC. 752-otOO '73VWBuc.snrf,Am/Fm ' LINCOLN·MERCU RY. ;;;.-beat Oifer over 5114114. AAOld"AdTaker" $3276 stereo, new eng, $2000 DEALERSHJP • ._....... All Motorcycle Swap bSbe!ll! PORSCHES I IOIMcLAllM't I SANTAANA r.ict. t750 rarm.675-1240. u.-. .............. I DATSUN 1~··•••••••••·· .......... '79VW Van · 7 pass. Dark ~ "?f.~·-91::.' h •c4'zo UA~~~~o~i~:.o:~ YoilrftallWltbCtua & 551-7111 60 Porsche 356, good brwn/lan, 13,000 ml. Gd LINCOLN·MERCURY ~· .. ••••••••••••• a•ailable. Orange Co. s..ts. •~ WANTED , cond. 675·69i 0 .:kdlis; cond. 800. 494·9456 or 1 16-18 Auto Center Dr. ~ELECTRICIAN FalrOrounda,C.M .24~ ~ ... -· 9140 7712102DR. 67W:alllevea w en · eves497·3498 I SDf'wy·LakeForesl eJJl •· Qualit)'Wotk. Call illlo.111..SUI. . •h• IU•• .... M••H•••• Allow ua t.be opportunity l:ION. Beach Blvd. 4 cyl., 4 speed, am·fm '71914, 34,000 orig mi. im· 1 Volvo 9772 R -..afterlPll . •-~-.-. toconaldertbepurchase LAHABRA steno tape, ne~ tires, mac, best orfer. After !••••••••••••••••••••••• I VINE . 13 ..... 500, 4 cyl, illat .,, UJlln4l!I" r~1 beadu. or tnde-ln ol your clean <5 Ill. No. olSA Fwy> wheel covers, vanyl In· SpmMS-7435. VOLVO U0.7000 ......_ cond . '700/beat. Call Weller carb, •!14 ~am, f'oncbe. Check with Us . C7 ~i tertor, lu11a1e rack, I ·~•al 9030 after5-l80HID offer M1·12t5 shell Today! ' 14 52J.Hll body aide moldings.1'19~hes:M <new J/80), --'75 Mercury Monarch, ,................ DWNM'll chro'me •bis new Sunday by Appt~ brilht yellow, low miles.I still under wmly, sunrf. j SALES. 'HVICE new tires, new brakes. 8olTaEPnnsBIHG 7~~,,,.w.~ brakes, reblt en1 • aavea1aa. t578SPK AM/FM caas, 6,000 mi. 5 1 AND LEASING very lo mileage. Git l6at mt,.., top sidft, vuuuguuq, _,. tlwa, (Mt, SIMO / offer. $3063 spd, met. gm & special I OVERSE.A.5 DELIVERY cond. $2500. 963·6188. -....S, 1uper I at.rue· 551·295 ea.-'74 Bavaria. Air, allto, SANTA AHA paint. F1awless. 673·1093, EXPERTS .._ rtl' MZ-1413 M500 642-GM '76 Marquis sta . wag. FVI~ 1 "ISllONDAJIOec lomltes, 4-Wlllllletftt tllO m-42Cia DATSUN I ly equipped. Mint cond . .... ,._. 9040 nteeded rorh._ :At: 11111•01••••••••• .... •• 551-7111 Porsche '88·912 one owner EAILI llCE Priced righl al S2.SOO. ....................... Giii. aooo111-uu .,, .,.,... •• lllMwtbed. ,_ Lftar :ra. 78, fully equipped, 5speedAll/F!lll ~ VOLVO 751-4344. ll'.,flbei:,lau Tua, IPll' oat 1baf:j PS, PB, wp U9 muat1ell.$7900. '77 280Z, gold/whl int, 714-640-2608 I 1986HarborBlvd.~ -------9-9-5-2 w ntu eekencler or......,...._ .. We/ ..,..,, -OZ3ft ' LLI 494·311182. loeded,xlnt;dilion. Rolaltorce 9756 .. ~mJ':.~:467 ..................... .. ~ ~ 'i:U:tb. ../SI•• ft60 '14 GllC Jimmy Sierra! .,.__ f"Y .. ourCar' ~ 2IOOZ., xlnl cond, 4 spd. 661 · •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• '75 Mustang 11. Only t'taef~irull aa1a.~~ ~t·•::~··L••••••M••••• ~1048051~ ,!!dlala., .IOMMSOM & SON 631air,..!..unrf. $5600. PP. "'"-i 9723 •t DEALER IN U.S.A. OIAHGI COUNTY 133.000mi. 4s pd. Xlnt. ...,.. ~::erator, dbl. ncD ; ... Ull. otor --._, ............ ••••••••••• cond . $29 50 . C all 1 t Hme, alps a. aelf·cont. LllllCllll Mercmy ,.._. 9715 '67Ferrari330GTC. ~ ROY 1 VOLVO Richard: 640·2092 dys or .... ~compee. HSO/wll . +l«/m l. 'G.leepPicltUp; zaHarborBlvd. _,,,..., 29000mi minlcond CARVER I EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO I ~eves ·-•-•· _.. XllltCoocl. O.Ullesa 540-5630 ~··•••••••••••••••••••• 631.oeoo;,..~: ROUS·ROYCC ~est Volvo Dealer I · · ltf!r H' Tollycraft • 8'11-4181 74 Capri 411pd. am/fm.l n~ f U4'Jam11one ' mOrange Counly! j·66 Must, 289, ps, pb,. ~fmoorlDI Price 11 Pace Anow 11, 14,000 ml. We P.y snrf. xlnt cond. ,.._ 72~ Ne-..r1 a .. <,. 1 BUY or LEASE 1 needs paint. snoo o e o . ft~ Call mu.sa in 1en .• roof/alr, bitch. '79Fordcamper1peclal,4 OVER 963-8712 •••••••••••••••••••••• ....... ' DIRECT 548-5186,675'°439 ..... r.~nd., .11,200. =--~.=~Ues ......... Dt11ma 9720 71flAT 121 CLOUDSUNDAYS l ~t•~7M~=*'~lil~I~ .75 M l II r ,~··-. ll7V, mu ir • h9o. air.~ '"o ~.~~udl ·······················, ~~nr.44s,peed9 ·~·~~ ............. ~?~.~!! eT e :11t!~,:~~~c1;~i1~~ ..,_...,..,.,..,w/tr ,.....tof, self cont'd.-•••••••••••••••••• -• ltlOSAAI -20-25--S.-M--nch·--6,551M22.1,ext25,days, .... Sl,000 mi, awnlo1, nf"' ,. Lt1V llllrado, C1ean ... TUU--a ~ -~Craftll' w/trlr. Uni. Mat Nll. a.ooO .... -.moorta·SM1 · "~ ~ "?.t.llJ.• .,,. Anaheim 750-2011 '67 Mu.st,xlnleng.&bod)I. Mldlil-ta..•t 080.-.nza ....... VW·PORSCHE·AUDI . HON ... tBIMOW! imatsell.S125o.642·1191, Dn ' DC• l IHT 7M-2lllS.1 ' DIP lTW Sid Boat T&1llF1tTNffl 9170 'H IL CAMINO No 4:Leo:::.way 18Atn'OCENTERDR. S&ICTIOM• 1963 4·dr sedan. Good ~. •II 99.rr •~: 1/0 .'Tralltl' ................... , .. " ae11on1bl• Offer N-i:ac:h .;:.Ol/IOO IRVINE 830-7 . enclne. Needs body re· USUMI I •• -. fu_._.._, oldff. =-Lean mesaace ...... ,,._. Nllir. t850. 548·72A9. • ..................... ,. l.!!!!!!::.------1-,._ .. Fiat 124 TC Wago llACH IMPORTS .,...... '80 Regency cpe, loaded; ,..1 4 ~ ··-t•I W.c.brtNewJJo.'b ~ated. Pnmiumprlces needs a little work . ..~eStreet '79 242 DL. air, auto,[ (ow mi, nice, S7HO. !'I -d· ..._ .. ,le . MO . '11 Pord f'llO a XLT paldfclreay llMdcar SLI00/080640-2181 .,.,.,. 968-0290 lrJtC .. PfJy wtt.h tral r. <fonlanordomeatlc) 1971 o.t..240% NEWPORT BEACH steno cua, ll,000 mi.--------==n.:~•:11~ =· 1~;r~e· f.4· l!ari = ~~ IBIDOdcoadWon. . Brudneweqlne '5C)OO ~~!'>1~r. red conv. 71J.ot00 .','.~.'~~· 1 .77 Cutlass Supreme, <Tlltm·••torllr. Altfor :" Aa°s•l•no. a /e , ... U.n..tl 11Pr583'1 """'"n..I rmCUs,mags, SAAITUDO --39,000 mi, all powu .. -------;.;o;..;.~~·;;:..;;-w. ad.. .. n'\IUe aoo. 2131914-IZSl • ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean. 963-3IM6 aner 6Pllb ....,, W W1'Ul"*' • Mlt-eoet. --IDOW .. conven: ·•n.t.aun Roadaler, runs .....___ 9727 Tl " z dr, sunroof, •-•ti 990 I .. PAmOaY DBllO-.a • aalll=b.1C111DP1ct ttoui Urea. •T4t5. well. 900 or best offer. :::::"••••••••••••••••• AM /FM stereo, alloy ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• '78 Delta 88 Coup'i •• ....,. ''°" ttataer, car, .... 141.oaao • .,., m.aa. Jlmm-418. X:: :!t ;,f:CSn::: MOTM• ova ~s~.fe!ri!:.r'::.~ _. camoie, marua m.-1•ano --i be VISITYOUI ..sm $4995 1 h •-c C)lllr, CMllltana. bait lllAJU'-• 1 ton flatbed • , _..., mmac. st 9765 eat er .. moonro9 • ...... •u '" Dare .... Cemtort .. lpeetlt a .. ,. tM'fS firm. ·-a 'lnr ..... ·( Rlvd. ;:~ori1. owner. ~COAST!!'.::!>~................ _96:M55 __ 1_. -----' ·..-...-m:.-. M, On8 Vacl&Jta • .. ...,...... ~ • • .,., ,1'7W13S. HAar.JD ,._ '79 CUtlass Calals diJef. ~--•,Hll • ·~PU UUI. i,:011\ldlt'!1a ~.0330 'IO )to•X "" 19' '19= :-r,• slat cond, 27mP1. white, sand viryl · ~OM ,_Al .. _,. fl .. W, A./C, auto, 1oocljCen, trucb. vu. run· Front wbeel drive, 4 ~AITllS I k> ~.rm I t op, s~nr oo f , a r , ~-I' , ....................... Ura.--••.at. WWpeycHb c111odtr, 4 a~. GX TOD,,.,Ylll ian•u•ST. Pano.oruc stereo. 18700; l'HAl'I UUU&r traller. trailer .. llAZDAPU aJat 1 ........ ..,. I pk1 .. Mc11 aide and "' ... "18 Toyota Corolla, 2dr, c:osuMHA 1*••1 983·-5515 " ~Good Una. '1•·1 . ..Le, .._....Umoldinp, pin · INYIRllTY I auto tram. 1d mp1. 1d ..._ -,,.0 1,... 9957 .-.. .._ 1 .......... lbdlall, .. .._ . ...._, ••rtltl l&ripea, heavr duty un· SALD61BRVICE ;::-i:--180. -.e•.1-..................... , ........................ . ._., lea,_.. ...-m..-! ....................... deneal, DatauD resin OUtlMOllLI · ,.,, Buick Skylark, runs:'12 Pinto. Good en1iRf!'. ;·;;. 'AA11i111 ........ "MIM11UNPICSUP I•• I., t7ot ., ~~·.r:=us GAS HONDA ioc...eoreat&conomy xlnt, tood comt. SIOO.I Needs bocly work ...... .................... , •• ,._. "'-· flnt eooo:-•••••••••••~··••• ~VI •• eMCftUCIS Olr-/080 11•·1161 I oner.$40-150'1 . .. llAfllA':lrs ........ .._ 1'18 Bulelll lkyhwk, ...... ~..... -Harbor' Blvd. ..,._ .,..._ tt~ 1-----------1 AmtrlDcw,urf,auto. _..,,..___ ~AllDA 'C •11 ttfl1 -Mlll-P. 14 a C ' r, -'°•P .. I ..._,.,... lo mUe.=·· IATIUM a.t640 ... 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It was written by WaJker Jnd Commissioner Suzanne Reed . THE REPORT SAVS 14,000 megawatts of power plant capacity will have lo be added to California 's present 40,000 megawatts by 1992 to Meet demund 1i1rowth , rt!place old facilities which mus t be retired. and maintain reliable reserve margins . But Walker and Ms ·Reed also recommend that lhe ut1h1Jes reduce their use of oil and natural cas by 50 per<·ent during the same period, and there lies the question mark. Walker said in an interview that the utilities hafe been letting their plans for generation plants sUp backward Ile also said the utilities •·are not giving the s ame emphasis to wind. cogeneration. sma ll hydroelectric, geothermal a nd renewable re- sources that the commission prefers over coal." But he said these "preferable " sources may not producc.> l'nough electricity to fill the gap, so some coal or synthetic rucl plants may be justified in. the next 12 years • The Cl)m m 1ssion 1s read y to approve facilities us mg "prcferal>le" sources without addi· Plate of the Day r~ ==•CALIFORNIA~ ... ~· ... M.R FOCU~ I MR FOCUS Darry l Schiff. a fashion photog· rapher. thou~ht at would be filling to have Foc us on the front or his car. lnlofm•t-tor llW Plilt of 11\e O•Y" 1s ~i«.d by Mlkt FJrltl'. •u,hor of thf' 1'7• Mn1on ot lht Who., Who of PenoNflz~d Cahtorn1• l •<M\ift Piii,.\ PUC Approves Sen-ice Costs SAN FHAN('!Sl'O I A P > Users of private· line ser\'t<'C wall bt' rrqu11Pd to pay their fair share of local Pac1f1 r Telephone service costs -some $21 million C1nnually under a pi<tn approved by the s tatC' Public l 't1ht1cs Comm1ss1on. Privatt• lim· users generally make a large number of 1nt t•r e1ty calls and lease lines for their o" n excl~l\'t' usl' They e ither pay nothing or very low rates for loc~tl telephone ser vice. BV <.:ONTRA.l-.T. thc l't:C said, regular long d1~tancl' users 11ay for t•at•h call and have about 35 percent of lhf' toll charl;!e allocated to the cost of local telephone :i"n 11·t- As a result. the Pl 'C said . private line users get a ·•fret• rt<k on the local network at the ex- pense of other s uh:-trilwrs ~ The propoM•rl c·h;ir~c by Petcific Telephone would avt'ragc ahout S:l:l per line per mont h for ac· cess to its lot:il te lephone network. It would be phased in over ;1 2·1·monlh period SUC'H J\ Clli\R(; E hus been proposed for na- lionwide use by the Federal Communications C'ol'J')m1ssion. The Pl'i<' s aid if an FCC plan 1s or· dered, 11 would probably be s ubstituted for Pacifi c Telephone's plan. L. Reed Waters. a Par1Cic Telephone vice pres- ide nt, said the plan would be used lo reduce local basic residential a nd business rates But he pointed QU\ the $21 m1l111m s prl'ad out over a year would probably amount to only a few cent~per month. HE SA ID SO~U~ firms may want to re- evaluate their use of pnvate lines Waters stressed Pat'ihc Telephone's revenues 'Would remain unchanged and the sole result will be t hat charges for service are more fairly dis- tributed 1 Protests oppo!ttng PT&T's plan were received from 18 orS?anizations. either competing toll lelepbone sompanies. including MCI and Southern -l>acitic Cdtnmunlcations or large users who will baye to bear the burden of increased charges. I ~ . . l!!xico Traini11g ·owjs11i Experts T IJUANA, Mexico <AP> -Out of the sight of tourists, Mexico is preparing young men and '"1tflen for careers in luri~ foreign money. The School or Touris m , newest and smallest lollege at the Universidad Autonoma de Baja California here. has graduated 254 students lefiicated to drawing travelers to Mexico in t1rpwing numbers . • TOURISM ALSO CREA'fES JOBS and ;ectistributes income within Mexico, says Rene astegui Leon, the school's director. It Is the first such school In northwest Mexico. 250 students hope lo work after gradualioo as tel and restaura nt managers, travel agents. tour Ides, public relations people .or offklala In ernn1entaeencles which oversee tourism. Tts budget Is $440,000 this year wlth a faculty of THE 8T1JDENTS STUDY THE history, graphy and na~ural attractions of MeXico and rn business skills . Mexico conaldera Baja Hfomla "a priority zone -and the ~eraJ emment is goin.i to lnvest a lot of money," said atecw Leon. "Mulco hu two altern11tlves to develop It.sell, IY Ind tourlam. Ener1Y la non-renewable and run out someday but towilm Is a thlnl that un keep developlni." he aald. tlonal analfses of need. But propoeals for coal and synfuel p ants would require the additional analyaes of need, he said. Walbr and Ms. Reed project a statewide growth in peak eleclriclty demand of 1.5 percent annually through 1992 -last year the commission estimated 1.8 percent through 1981. IN 111E EARL)' 117 .. w}len formation of the Energy Commission was being.debated, the utilities were forecasting annual demand increases of about 6percent. Walker and Ms. Reed attributed the dramatic drop in demand forecasts to the high price of fuel -especially petroleum; greater awareness of the need to conserve, and lmprovernenL<J In fuel effi· ciency. Aa for the needed 14,000 me1awatta capacity, Walker said about ball la already under constructloa. Some of the rest depend• on transfers from projects from out.aide the 1tate. These Include hydroelectric power from the Pacific Northwest. a nd coal and nuclear power Crom Utah, Nevada. Arizona and Mexico. The report listed applications already s ub' milted for about 16,500 megawatts statewide, In· eluding about 4,500 megawatts of nuclear power from units No. 2 and 3 of the Diablo Canyon nuclear powel"' plant, under construction. It said the utilities are revising' downward their estimates or nuclear need: In 1976, they in· tended t-0 build enough nuclear plants by 1992 to pro.vide 31 percent or the state's total capacity I but have since dropped that to 11 percent. Lou Ferrl1no, TV"a ''Incredi- ble Hulk," baa been awarded $75,000 in settle· ment of claim • bis photo was used in bodybuilder ada without his permission. 1 I ... VOL. 73, NO. 310, .. SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBERS, 1980 Record Volume Reported Reagan Vict~ry Boosts Market: Delly ...... Maff ,_ VICTORIOUS ASSEMBLY CANDIDATE NOLAN FRIZZELLE Ranked by Children Olene end David et GOP Party 1 Frizzelle Cains ·Mangers' Post By ROBERT BARKER OllM Delly "IJ-4 IMff Republican challenger Nolan Friuelle scored a solid victory. over Democratic incumbent Den· nia Manters Tuesday In the hard· fou1bt 7lrd ~mbly Diltrict racet. Fblal, but unofficial results: Nola FrtneUe, 71,531 Dennis Mangers, Cine.>, 67,616. The campaien between the S8·year -old conaervatlve Frluelle and the 40·year-old Man1ers became extreme ly hostile and han!·hitµng in its final days. Friuelle apparently was suc- cessful in Portraying Mangers. a Wray-Allen Race Still I . Undecided By PATRICK KENNEDY Of 1M O.Hy ..... SMff About 10,000 uncounted ballots may make the difference for Chet Wray, Democratic incum· bent in the 71.st Assembly Dis- trict. Wray, 57, led Republican challenger Doris Allen by a slim 568 ballots this mornin~ after two-term ·incumbent, as a big spending liberal who operated un- der the thumb of Assembly Speaker 1.eo McCarthy. Mangers hit at Frizzelle's con· servatism and tried to link him to an attempt by right wing ex- trem1-ta to take control of a moderate district. Mangers. who had indicated that the campaign would be his last for the Assembly, made con- ciliatory remarks today. "I'm going to call Mr. Friuelle as soon as I can get him and con· gratulate him and wish him well. I would lite to work with him to make the transition as smooth as possible." Mangers linked his defeat to the nationwide surge for president· elect Ronald Reagan and the early concession speech by Presi- dent Carter. · Mangers said Carter's re- marks, which came an hour before the polls c losed In CalHornia, discouraged Democrats from voting. "I was surprised that the presi· dent cared so little for the lower offices on the Democratic ticket to make his statements while the races were wide open. Mangers also said early projec· lions by television networks may have had a telling effect. Democrats held a registration lead of just 3,000 in the 73rd Dis· trict. Frizzelle 's campaign chairman, Wes Bannister, cited the success of an effort to increase Frizzelle's name identification in the district. He said the improved position coupled with Reagan's coattail ef· feels were more than enough to (See FRIZZELLE, Pa1e AZ> Sweep By GOP Hailed NEW YORK '<AP> -The stock market soared in record· breakin1 activity today ,. responding to the election vie· tory of Ronald Reagan and the Republicins' 1ains in Congress. The dollar also posted gains in Europe. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials jumped 18.18 points to 955.38 in the first hour of trad· ing and waa up 29 points after two hours of trading. It still was ahead21 points at 11 a.m. Gainers outnumbered losers by a lS·l margin in the over·all tally of New York Stock Ex· cbange·listed issues. . Big Board volume in the open· ing hour totaled 22.51 million shares, surpassing the record of 20 73 million set Oct. 10, 1979. ''The stock ma rket is his- torically a Republican animal, and Reagan represents a true conservative Republican," the brokerage firm of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields said in a wire transmitted to all its branch of· fices this week. •The fact that the Republicans took control of the Senate and registered large gains in the House was also greeted with de· light on Wall Street. "It may well lead to the paua119 of major filcal c han1ea, •• observed Robert Stovall, an analyst at Dean Wit· ter Reynolds Inc. But Stovall and other broken we re cautious about how long the euphotlc mood mis.ht lut. Further Increases In interest rates such as the bank prime lending rate are expected any day. In addition, inflation is expect· ed lo pick up momentum in the next few months, regardless of what actions the government takes. Bond pMces also rose in early activity, but then gave up some or their gains. Two Satellites . Leave Light Trail PRINCE ALBERT , Saskatchewan lAP) -Two American satellites re-entered the atmosphere and burned up overnight. leaving a trail of light seen over a wide area of Saskatchewan and Alberta, the North American Air Defense Command said today. Spokesmen at the Canadian forces base in Saskatchewan said the satellites came down when their orbits diminished. "What people saw were bits and pieces of the thing burning as it re·entered," said one of the spokesmen. <eh Reagan landslide } . '• ' . ,,. ............ JUBILANT PRESIDENT ·ELECT RONALD REAGAN, WIFE NANCY CELEBRATE VICTORY After• 12-ye•r Queet, Republlcan Former Governor On HI• Way to WhH• Hou•• A1nerican 'Spirit'. Tapped LOS ANGELES <AP) - President-elect Ronald Rea1an, triumphant at age • after a 12· year quest for the White House, began talk.a with top advisers to- day to shill Republican efforts from trying to win an election to trying to set up a new govern- ment. Reagan. who campaigned against President Carter's handling of the economy and against the notion that the na- tion's economic problems were too complex to be solved, ac· cepted his victory Tuesday night by saying: ·.:1 aim to try and tap that great American spir it that opened up this completely un· developed continent from coast to coast and made it a great na- tion." Carter carried only the states of Rhode Is land , Maryland, Hawaii, West Virginia, Georgia and Minnesota, and the District of Columbia . The race in Arkansas is undecided. Reagan's press secretary, Lyn Nofziger. who told reporters he himself does not expect to 10 to Washington. said the former governor of California plans to remain in his home in Pacific Palisades all day. But Reagan will begin work <See REAGAN, Page AZ> t", ' . By GLENN SCOT!' Of -Deily "IM IWI Roger Stanton's campaign to exploit the legal problems of Oran1e County lat District Supervisor Philip Anthony paid off Tuesday in a surprisingly strong upset win. Stanton, a Fountain Valley ci· ty COWlcilman, received 57,349 votes, or 56 percent. compared to Anthony's 45,708 votes, 44 per- cent, in fmal, unofficial results. Stanton. 43, had neither the campaign funds nor the political clout of incumbent Anthony go- in g for him during his cam· paign. But he ha mmered away unceasingly at the three felony Indictments issued against An· thony on charges of laundering campaign funds in the 1976 elec· tion. Anthony has denied any wrongdoing, and an indictment does not imply guilt. But Stanton nevertheless criticized Anthony for his "audacity" to seek re· 0.ily Pli.t St.ff,.._, election until charges stemming NEW SUPERVISOR from his last campaign are Foum.ln Valley's Stanton cleared up. . Voters in the predominantly political practices in separate incidents. middle·class district, which Stanton's mailer used the takes in Fountain Valley , same format Anthony had used Westminster. Garden Grove and in a 1976 mailer atacking a parts of Santa Ana, gave Stanton the lead from the beginning, former foe, Harry Yamamoto. Yamamoto later sued Anthony when absentee ball~ts were in a still·pending libel case and counted. He never lost at. th hi · ht · th' I t. Stanton stayed at home with . rew s weag m is e ec 10~ his family and about SOJ-su~ to Stanton. . t rs ' to await the results. Anthony said l~ay he agrees. por e . b an in that the legal issue was the Their celebration eg "overwhelming" reason for earnest after about half the Stanton's success. votes hltd been counted. • ss 214 votes from all precincts bad been counted. according to Or.ante County Registrar Al D Carter •Reagan ~In Doubt "I said during my campalgn that the vo~rs want to start a new chapter, ·~.he said. "I mean it very sincerely and I think the people mean it very sincerely.•' Coast Obon. It wu not known how many of tbe 10,000 uncounted ballots are from the 7lst Assembly Dt.lrict. but OllOll aai<! they would be count.eel promptly today because of the cloeeness of the race. MormaHy , he said , the abHnt.ee and baUota rejected for aome reason by counlin1 machJnery don't chance tbe ftaal reaulll. Thia momin1. Wray led with ff 413 votes to Mra. Allen's u:eu. Libertarian candldate Oivoa Sbowley bad a, 72J8. . TIM Tllt AHembly Dlatrict ·elD perts °' WntmlD9t.er. . V.U.y, Garden Grove, ltanton, Buena Pm, • a Palma, CypreH and Loa )UaadtOI. Democrata ln the umber RepubUcau ... -•n. AlllD. ICboal board= ~~~~~ ... ~'.if. De utt-ibualq or-.. Comt1 ••·lloc. ' II llr-; .. __. U• to . . ... A Cull-time· management in- structor at Cal State, Long Beach, stanton said be will seek a leave of absence from the col- lege so be can ~akeover bis new of. fice at the county Hall of Ad· ministration on Jan. 5. No immediate dlanges are on his mind. "I just Mi\lt to roll up my sleeves and lot to work,'' be laid . Two weeb before the election, Stanton had raiaed only about SU ,000 in campaip tunda while Anthony bad 1athered almoet Sl00,000 since June. The incum· bent allo wu rtdin1 on atron1 endorsement• rrom the rour otber county auperviaon who wm •WI be there lD January. Stanton, however. ued hla limited reaourcea •nd clever 1peecb-maldD1 abWtiea to pick at p erhapa Anthony'• only Hrlouapolitical liability, hi• .... , ............ -lltll-hour mailer, · Stantaa wryly 1tabb9d at Antbany'1 back1round by •· eoelat.lq UM lDeumbent wttb former ~:gerviaora Jtalpb Dtedrlcb Bob Battla, wbo were canVictM earlier of lU.111 Weather Low clouds and fog night and morning with hazy sunshine Thursday artemoon. Lows tonlgbt 56 along the coast, 62 inland. Hl1ha Thunday 68 to 72 at beaches, 77 to 82 inland. IN81 DE TODAY A PhUadelpltfa cop gfvtag dJ(ing lddl a kut chance at hoppineu ha• utn hit perlOltOl elforl• ·~in· to a 70-worker rwn·profU foundation. Sff Page At. •••• 1 Reagan in County By FREDEalCK 8CllOEMEHL Despite the former Callfomla 0.U.Dejl,,......... aovernor'• landslide showln1. Orange County voters like Orani• CountJ, eJeqtion ob· Ronald R~a1an -a lot. servers said TUeaday ni1ht they The Republican President· were 1urpriled to see Real• elect garnered 88 percent .t the take &ht lead across the country votes cast in the county in the at the rate be did. presidential race. Jimmy Carter And several said they were gcH 23 percent. Independent equally surp)"ised -and presidential aspirant John An· somewhat anaered -that Presi· d~rson gained only 1 percent of dent Carter ,conceded defeat ~countyvot_e_. _____ ~ __ 1_o_n_1 __ b_e_fo_re __ th_e __ P_o_1_11_1_n ~gnal of \'ietorg .. , Eleven-year-old Andy Budds of Fountain Valley displays · wide grin under his "Reagan Country" cap Tuesday night during victory celebration for the GOP at South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa. Andy's "V" just about says it all. ------------------------ REAGAN LANDSUDE. • • .. ~ight away" on the transition t~ a GOP administration follow- ing bis landslide victory., Nofziger said. Among the first visitors to the Reagan home will be Vice President-elect George Bush, who was flying here from Houston this morning. Edwin Meese, the campaign chief or staff who served Reagan ii} a similar capacity during his governorship, said he does not expect the president-elect to an- nounce his Cabinet until late November or early December. i'.' 'Our personnel people will cbllect a lot of names" between nbw and then and submit three t~ five top choices for each job to ~eagan , Meese said. He ~clined to discuss names, aJ~hough he did appear to rule out ~ administration post for fetmer President Ford, saying N(>rd "bas ~tatesman Ail> posl-t~n far beyond that of a Cabinet ofJicer." HReagan has said be would v lue the advice and counsel of t former president, who cam- I DAILY PILOT ! I h• P•-Goe•I O.ily 1'1101, ••t• -h " oml>lnff tlW '"-l'rttt, It tMIOfl-h tM , ..... (.OHi P\IOlllll"'I C-fty • 5-•.W I 1l10ft.t •• M11t1WO ~f. tilrovtf' ,,..,., or CO\le Mo ... __ , h •<"· """'..,...., I ••<•11trowntelt1 Yallt¥ lr'f1"'I L•twf'I• Kft -h C..&t A tl"llt rttlon• Hltlon ii """" kt..,.,_ -S..fttl•t• TM ll'Wl,.1 t ................ , ...... Ull ..... ••1 Jlrwll .. 0 ... 1"60. CAMU Mn6~ C•l•fVnl• '7.it ll.-.,N ...... PrttlM nt •"d PvtM19'ef ~·11-'""°' ,...,_, .. ,,. ......... "' .... ,, ... --c:-tN. L-. A&tnl .. , -..i... ECIJI .. ~--W.M Ot-C-t ldttor ............. d Ofllle . .,,.,r9.M ....... ... INlll"',._'"' • 0 ... ,...- T1l1pl•HI (7t•)......an Cl...iftM AdW ........ MM171 ,,__, .. ~(-·~'" .... , ... paagned for Reagan this year despite their bitter battle for the GOP nomination four years ago. The trend in the presidential. race already was clear when Reagan prepared to leave home for dinner Tuesday evening with the group· of wealthy Califor- nians whit convinced him to go into polims nearly two decades ago. Fro• Pug~ . \ I FRIZZELLE put hil candidate over the top. Friuelle was unavailable for commment today. His election apparently will signal a change in relation.ships with local officials. Frizi:elle, an optometrist who lives in Costa Mesa and has his business in Garden Grove, said previously he would encourage local politicians to solve their own problems instead of running to Sacramento for help. He allO previously said he will focus on repealing the state in· berltance tax which he has la be led'· an abomination.'' Huntington Reporting Heavy Surf Thdtock market wain 't the on· lythin1thatwentuptoday. Surfol six to ei&ht feet was reported in Huntinston Beach and heavy breaken elsewhere along the Oran1eCoaat. . Huntluton cit)' lifeguard Capt. Douc D'Arnall said wave 1i1e1 more than doubled today with OC· cuional eight-foot breaken near the pier. Slaw ute1uard SteY• Rolen reported ellbt·foot breaken were lnereulDI ln frequmey at the Santa~ AM River Jetty at the aoutbenl bomdary ol H..unstm StateluclL N..,port Beaeb llfe1Uari11 Mid the lurf wa puaaDlal up CID I • IOUtll IWlll to ftft'feet .,.. the -t etty ......... California had closed. Many vented their anaer ..._ the television networks' decj.sTon to declare Rea1an a winner 'prior to the polb cloein1. · ·'Sure makes you think like your vote isn't worth 'much,'' complained c;>ne person awaWna the 1tart of vote tabulatloe at the county repatrar or voters office. In otlter major contests, Oranse C.-ty voters were de- cidedly ln faYOr of Paw Gann, the ·llepublican contender for one of the state's U.S. Senate aeata. Voters save GaQD a 43,000. vote edge over incumbent Sen. Alan Cranston, t.he Democrat, in that race. However, Cranston w9n elsewhere in the state. Oran1e County voters also didn't go along with many or the statewide propoaitions on the ballot. They went against Proposition 10, the initiative to create •molt· lng and non-smoking sectlom in most public places; Proposition 8 on environmental safeguards relating to construction of the Peripheral Canal to transport water to Southern California from the Sacramento delta re- gion, and Proposition 1 to pro- vide bond rinancing for purchase or parklands. 1. Orange County voter also re· jected Proposition 2, a nd is· . sue to stem pollution Lake Tahoe; Proposiij.on 3 create an insurance guarantee fund ; Proposition 4 to permit, subject to a two·third vote, use of prop· erty taxes for capital outlays, and Proposition 5 to prevent re· evaluation of property when an owner is forced to rebuild because of a natural disaster. However. county voters favored Proposition 6, to reduce the size of juries in municipal court civil trials: Proposition 7. . to exempt properties rrom re· assessment when solar heatin~ systems are installed; Propos1· lion 9, to permit use or bond funds to rehabilitate domestic water systems. and Proposition 11 . to equalize s alaries paid judges. * * * County Vote Fnlls Short;- TV Blamed Ttae Orange County voter turnout in Tuesday's general election was slightly more than 17 percent, several percentage points below the 82 percent that had been predicted. , One factor blamed by election officials for the lower turnout was the announcement by television networks that Ronald Reagan was the winner prior to the polls closing in California. They said this announcement, plus President Carter's con- cession, could have caused potential voters to lose interest in voting. In the 1976 general election voter turnout was 83 percent; in 1972 it was 85 percent. 11 Rescued KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia CAP) -has plucked 11 omce wori<ers trom tne root of a burning high-rise building in a rescue minutes before names spread to the 'upper floors. Four people were injured seriously enough in the Tuesday blaze at the b~ Bumiputra building to require hospitalization, but there were no fataUties. 'Half Voters Stay Home NEW YORK (AP) - Nearly half the nation's elialble voten did not cast ballota Tuesday, marking the routth stra11bt decline in turnout for a preaiden· tial election and the lowest tumoutln~years: . An Associated Press projection, baaed on the turnout with 95 percent of all precincts reporting, put the estimated total vote Tuesday at approx- imately IM.9 million of the ll0.5 million persona of vottn1 II'! in the country. That. nsurea out to a 53.t percent t~t of thole or votina age, the lowest ln a national election since the 51.1 percent turnout for the Truman-Dewey race in 1948. Tbls year '• estimated turnout com· pares wttb M.4 percent in 11'71, 55.4 ]Jll'Hllt 1B 1'71.z IO.t ~ In U. ana '1.lperMttinlllC. ............. 'I CAN'T SAY IT DOESN'T HURT' Preeldent carter eonc.de1 Defeat Debate Signaled Def eat for Carter WASmNGTON (AP) -Jn the end, the campaign boiled down to two main issues: the economy and war and peaee. Both worked against Jimmy Carter. Carter couldn't overcome his record and failed to convince voters that Ronald Reagan was too reckless and right-wing to OC· cupytheOvalOffice. His last chance may have been the televised debate a week before the election -a one-0n-0ne confrontation that Carter insisted on. The reassuring image or the Republican nominee projected before an audience of more than 100 million belied Carter's efforu to portray Reagan as trigger happy. As he was restoring luster to his image, Reagan attacked the pres- ident on the economy where he was most vulnerable. asking voters whether they were better off or worse than they were four yearsal!o. Inflation stood at 12. 7 percent and unemployment at 7 .5 percent. Firty-two Americans bad been held hostage In Iran for a year. Within 48 hours, Carter knew the situation was desperate. Dur· ing a week-long campaign bUtz. he tried frantically to refocus the spotlight on Reagan. ~ At first, it worked. Carter cam- paign polls had shown him trail· ing Reagan by ~ points after the debate. But by Saturday. the president held a slight 0.3 per· cent lead. Overnight, it fizzled: Sunday's polls revealed that the president was down by 2·5 points. By Mon- day -the day after Carter tem- por arily suspended campaigning to assess the conditions set by Iran for release orthe hostages - the outcome was inevitable: he trailed by 7-lOpoints. In the pre-dawn hours of tJec- tion Day. as Air Force One flew to Plains. Ga .. for Carter to cast his ballot. press secretary Jody Powell ordered a drink and braced himself to deliver the omen to his boss. Before the president voted, he knew. The post-mortem offered by Carter's aides blame the defeat on the hostage stalemate and dual problems of inflation and re- cession. Since his nomination at the Democratic convention in August, the president set out to de· pict Reagan as a dangerous rieht· winger who repeatedly bad ad· vocated military intervention in world crises and was likely to blunder into war. By PIDL8NaDBaMAN ................. U.S. Rep. Du Luqna. no WAI re-eleded to Caqnu 'J\a. day with a reeouadlq 71 perc• of the vote, said today be i• e.,_ to retum to a new Wublqtan governed by a Republican Pr9f. dent, a Republican majority in the Senate and a more evenly balanced House. "It's goint to be like returnlq to some place with a new clJmate." the Long Beach Republican said. "It wUl be like mov· in1 from a winter state to California." L un1ren easily dereat· ed sln1le· named senior Lu ....... citizens attorney Simone, a Democrat, to win bis second term in the 34th District, which in- cludes western Huntin1ton Beach, Stmaet Beach, Seal Beach, Loni Beach. Lakewood, Bellflower and portions of adja-cent cjties. With all precincts ( 156 in Orange County, 407 in Los Angeles County> reporting ln, the final, unofficial results were: Daa1Aa1ret1-W,%53 Simone-45,386 John Donohue (Peace and Freedom)-7,635. ' The incumbent said Ronald Reagan's coattails may have nudged him up a few points, but attributed bis victory to bis rcord and his work in the preclncta. "ltfeela good to win by t.hia big a . margin after being in several squeakers," the 34-year-old con· gresaman said. Lungren said he spent about $150,000 on this year's campaign, including the primary race. Special Tax Rejected in ~~i:!..~!.!.~v~ ~je<I· ed a measure calling for a special tax to finance police, fire and paramedic services at present levels. Voters rejected the measure ll,970to5,036. Ballot mreasure "O" called the "Special Safety Services Tax," was expected to generate about $750.000 in tax revenue next year tom aintain the various services. City officials, blaming Proposi· ti on 13 cutbacks, predicted that, if the measure failed, the nine- person paramedic unit and 10 police officers, or25percentofthe force, would be laid off next year. The measure needed a two-thirds majority vote to pass. Expansion .Sale LAST THREE DA YS1 THRU NOV~MBER 8th Greatest Reductions Ever ! I 15°/o to 51f/o · OFF ,. $1 .000.000 INVENTORY DRASTICALLY REDUCEDI featuring: Drexel -Heritage -Henredon -Baker -Kargas -Sligh Desks -Schafer Brothers Leather -Classic Leather - Woodmark -Stanton Cooper -Marge Carson -Cal Mode -Freemarc -Aireloom -Marbro -Stiffel·-and much. much more! ' With the Holidays near -take advant~ge of this rare opportunity! I SPECIAL ORDERS HONORED AT REDUCED PRICES. ,. "·~ I Uatc11na/South Coast \'o•r e ••••• .,. .. Dally ~ewN~a~r VOL. 73. NO. 310. •SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WE DN ESDAY, NOVE MBER 5.1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Oean Sweep D1101ps 3 Lagun1;1 Is~ues 81 DON CHAPMAN Of -Dlillf ....... , .... 1 Laauna Beach voters de· livered a triple whammy to : ballot propositions Tuesday. 1 sayln1 they don't want a blufftop • preservation. initiative and re· jecUn1 anti-nuclear and afforda· ble housln1 measures. Final but still unofficial re· suits ror all 26 precincts were : Measure E Cbluffs) yes, 3,896; no, 5,170 Measure F (anti-nuclear) Yes, 4,136; Do, 4,741 MeHureG Cbousing) yes, 4,023; DO. 4,185 The blufftop measure would have added 25 feet to the city's exi1t1n1.10-foot setback for con· struction on the bluffs. It also included language de- signed to protect the bluffs, and called for a specific plan and walkway easement for the city's central bluffs . &ut local residents fou1ht the initiative. They claimed It was "un- necessary and r-edundanl." and characterized it as ambiguous and impractical to enforce. Late in October, the City Council majority rejected a separate blufflop preservation ordinance that they bad request- ed when the initiative qualified for the ballot. The majority said that any _Record Volume Reported suc6' ordinance should be lbe product or a cooperative effort with tboM living on the bluffs, and criticized the initiative as well. Linda Farnell of the anti· iniUalive Laguna First Blufftop Committee. said oeoole tn the community "recognized the problems in the initiative." "We are just ecstatic," she said. Meuure F was an advisory vote on the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. A yes vole expressed opposition to nuclear power at the station. Members of the Committee for the Rllhl to Vote on San Onofre had urged that the plant be con- verted to non-nuclear fuel, or be closed. They had said that there was "no safe level of radiation," and that nuclear coslt are rislni. Measure G proposed that housing for low and moderate in- come persons be developed in Laguna Beach, if no city 1eneral fund money is used a nd the public Is elven notice. It also "stated that such hous- ing wouldn't exceeds percent or the city's total dwelling units. Reagan VictOry Boosts Market RETURNED TO COUNCIL PMrtck Lane O.llyl"l ... --LEADS THE PACK New Councilman KorHn 1 Lane, Konen Win Clemente Election By STEVE MITCHELL CM U. o.tly l"IMI SIAlft Jn a campaign characterized by a minimum or hoopla, San Clemente voters elected civic activist Alan Korsen and interim councilman Patrick Lane to the City Council Tuesday. Unofficial final results or all 31 precincts in San Clemente show : Alan Korsen, 4,315 Patrtck Lane, 4,170 Tom O'Keere, 3,797 Bill Wagner,2 ,213 Jay Durkin, 1,892 Melanie Vansell, 1,206 Ed Beyer, 784 Ray Maddocks, 746 • Gary Fuller, 689 Al Wulfeck, 670 Bob Brennan, 499 Stephen Rackleff, 401 Robert Rusin, 350 Korsen. a 38-year-old manage· 1ment consultant, rar outspent 1aod outcampaignecl.,Jlls oppo- 1nents, stressing the ~eed for a lgrowth management plan for 1 San Clemente. He said he will "work to dispel reports of a pressure group or power blO<'k tied to me by my op· ponents." And he said he would "work very strongly to insure a master growth plan, improve geologic s tandards and help strengthen the economy of San Clemente.·· Lane, when reached at his law offices this morning, was less en- thusiastic about the election re- s ults. He said O'Keere . with whom he served on the council from 1974 to 1978 "would have brought in- dependence and stability to the council'' had he been e lected. "What we have now is a 'wait and see council'." Lane said. He said the same political or- g an i za tioo "comprised or homeowners and other in· dividuals affiliated with that group ran <Mayor Karoline) Koester, (councilman Bill) (See SC VOTE, Page ,\2) Sweep By GOP Hailed NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market soared In record- b re a kin g activity "today , responding to the election vic- tory of Ronald Reasan and the Republicans' gains m Congress. The dollar also posted gains in Europe. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials jumped 18.18 points to 955.38 in the finl hour of\rad- ing and was up 29 points alter two boUra of tradin&. It at.i ll was ahead 19 points at noon. Gainers out.numbered losers by a 5-1 marlin in the over-all tally of New York Stock Ex- .change-listed issues. Big Board volume in the open- ing bour totaled 22.51 million shares, surpassing the record of 20. 78 million set Oct. 10, 1979. Volume at noon was 71 million. ·'The stock market is his· torically a Republican animal, and Reagan represents a true conservative Republican," the brokerage firm or Bache Halsey Stuart Shields said In a wire transmitted to all Its branch of· fi ces this week. The fact that the Republicans took control of the Senate and registered large gains in the House was also greeted with de· light on Wall Street. · ·'It may well le ad to the pa ss age or maj or fiscal c ha nges." Ob\erve d Robert Stovall, an analyst at Dean Wit· ter Reynolds Inc. But Stovall and other brokers were cautious about how long the euphoric mood might last. Further increases in interest rates such as the bank prime lending rate are expected any day. In addition, inflation is expect· ed to pick up momentum in the next rew months, regardless or what actions the government takes. Bond prices also rose In early activity, but then gave up some or their gains. -· ._<t __ a---· Reagan Landslide . ,.,..,~ JUBILANT PRESIDENT-ELECT RONALD REAGAN, WIFE NANCY CELEBRATE VICTORY After• 12-yeer Queat, AepubNclln Former Governor On Hie W•y to Whit• HouH Reagan to Tap American Spirit , LOS ANGELES CAP > President-eleet Ronald Reagan, triumphant at age 69 after a 12· year quest for the White House, began talks with top advisers to- day to shift Republican efforts from trying to win an election to trying lo set up a new govern- ment. Reagan, who campaigned against President Carter's handling of the economy and against the notion that the na- tion's economic problems were too complex to be solved, ac- cepted his victory Tuesday night by saying: "I aim to try and tap that great Amer~:n s pirit that opened up this completely un· developed continent from. coast to coast and made it a great na- tion." Carter carried only the states or Rhode Island, Maryland, Hawaii, West Virginia, Georgia and MiMesota, and the District of Columbia. The ra <!e in Arkansas is undecided Reagan's press secretary, Lyn Nofziger, who told reporters he himself does not expect to go to Washington, said the former governor of California plans to remain in his home in Pacific Palisades all day. Inte r change Cras h Kills Laguna Man A Laguna Bea ch ma n died Tuesday after his car skidded off a road leading from the Laguna Freeway to the San Diego Freeway. Toma Tomic, 52. of 516 Park Ave .. died of head injuries when hi s car tumbled over an em- bankment about 6:20 a.m., said California Highway Patrolman Walt Lamb. In a separate accident Tues· day, Charles Davenport. 19, of Lincoln. Calif .. suffered critical injuries after nis car veered off the San Diego Freeway just south or the Santa Ana Freeway interchange, said Lamb Davenport was in the in - tensive care unit al:!ss1on Community Hospital sday with multiple iltjuries, a ospital spokeswoman said. Lane, an attorney and former city councilman, based his cam- : paign on retainUtig stability in San Clemente, a towl\ that has seen three council memben re· 1 called from office, resignations 'of other councilmen, and city 1 employees fleeing the city. DCarter 91eagan ~In Doubt But Reagan will. begin work ··right away" on the transition to ~ GOP administration rollow- i n g his landslide victory, Nofziger -said. Among the first visitors to the Reagan home will be Vice President-elect George Bush, who was flying here from Houston this morning. Edwin Meese, the campaign chief of staff who served Reagan in a s imUar capacity durin& his governorship, said he does not expect the president-elect to an- nounce his Cabinet until late November or early December. Coast The two winners edged out ap-J pol n ted councilman T homas tO'Keefe, a 12-year coun cil l veteran who was appointed last t•ummer to fill the unexpired term of Mayor Roy Hamm who resigned in April. ! Lane, who served on the coun· ell until tm, was appointed to 'the seat of Councilman Roy c H~rlbut, who quit a month after a Hamm left office. 1 Korsen, who 1arnered the mott votes, said he believes be J can work well with the other four council members. 1 "I'm lookint forward to ex· erclslnl tbe independent thinkinl .\bat I said I would brin1 to the ·'°uncU,"Konenaaid. .Slayer Guilty l'RSSNO <AP> -A l'rean<> mu hM been convicted of flnt- •1H• murder l.D \he Illy 8 ebocittna cleatb of a Fn1no etty Coll••• administrator. Jobn Goin-. a, wu ordtred ~ · to feta to eourt Off. 2 for ... ..,_ la eaanectlOa w1t.b UM GI AlfNd Hernra1 41, _, ,.... ao11e,.·1 a180date ~. ,, MASS 14 -fU 4 c:::l CONN 8 - N.J.17 -DEL. 3 -M0.10c:::::J o.c. 3c:::J ALASKA 3 - HAWAll 4 ~ ''Our personnel people will collect a lot of names" between now and then and submit three lo rive top choices for each job to Reaean . Meese said. He declined to discuss names, although be did appear to rule out an adminislrat19n post for former President Ford saying Ford "has a atatetmanshlp Poll· tlon far beYond that of a Cabinet ofncer." Rea1an has said he would value the advice and counsel of the former president, •ho cam· e•laned for Rea1an tbb year d"plte t.belr bitter tMttta. for the GOP nomJnatioa four yean qo. Tbe trend ln the prealdmtlal race already .,.. clear .- Rea1an prepared to leave home for dinner 'fuesday evenln1 with tbe fraup ot wealtbp Caltfor· nlana wbo conrineff Mm to IO lato polidea nearly two dftMtet 110 . Hla departure w., interrupt• ed, howver, by a phone c1U ta. UO~N ....... All -.r We ather Low clouds and fog .night and morning with hazy sunshine T hursday afternoon. Lows tonight S6 along the coast, 62 Inland. Highs Thursday 68 to 72 at beaches, 77 to 82 inland. . INSIDE TeDA't' A PhDoMlplria cop' giofftg d11h1" lddl a laat chance at hopphlUt ha• IHft hb pertOfllll ~~ ~ hi· co a 70-worlccr non·pro/U /01'ft.dotion. ~e ~ .o. 68 Percent Favor Reagiµi .in .. County By FREDEalCll SCHOEMEID.. Ot•OMty~ ... ,Uff Orange County voleTS llke Ronald Reagan -a lot. T he Republican President· elect garnered 88 percent of the votes cast in the county in the presideotlal race. Jimmy Carter got 23 percent. Independent presid~ntial aspirant John An· derson gained only . '1 percent ol the countyv~te. • Despite the former California 1overnor's landslide s howing, Orange County election ob- servers Hid Tuesday ru,ht they were surprised to see Reagan take the lead across the country al the rale he did. And several said they were e qually s urprised -and somewhat angered -that Presi· dent Carter conceded defeat long before the polls in r o.lty ...... "'"9 _., •kM,,. lt-lff FOR THESE INCUMBENTS, ELECTION WAS EASY Congresaman B•dh•m, Aanmbfywom•n Bergeeon Badham, Bergeson I Coast to Victory As predicted, Congressma n Ro b ert Bad h a m a nd As · semblywoman Marian Bergeson. bot h Newport B eac h Republicans. coasted to easy vie· tori es Tuesday. Badham, who represents the !>prawling 40th Congressional Dist rict that takes in coastal Orange County, and a portion of San Diego County, came away "'ith 209.775 votes, according to fina l but unofficial tabulations in both counties. D e moc r a t ic c hallenge r Michael Dow, an Orange County deputy district attorney, came in a distant second with 65,388 votes. Liberta rian hopeful Dan Mahaffey, a Huntington Beach business owner. finished with 211, 133 votes. In the Orange Coast's 74th As-s~m bly District. which also in· eludes northern San Diego Coun- ~. Mrs. Bergeson had an e!lSY t me winning a second term in acramento. According to the un- oJCicial results f&;0m both coun- ties, lhe'Newpdrt. resident earned Wl ,105otes. Jac k Baldwin. the as- ORANGE COAST L SC DAILY PILOT Tt1• Orenp eo.s, 0.lly PHO' ... ,, wftt<" ,, (Ot'f'Ot""'49 IM ....... Pf'Ht •• , ov• .. .,.. 0) ... o ...... c.u .._ ........ """-· -... tClttMM\ •re PVO'i""*O MotlcUy. 1Ptf'°"9f' fl'rtU f for Cott• Mew ~•oort &t-•<f't. """'"""'°"' :::cc,_" ,:.:;h,:~ ~1!1:e~; :;.i!::l ~~~::.",~ Cklttl1the'O S.twNn •"'9 WM4~• tftt ortft<lp.el puOlllllt"9 P14'11t '' 11 »O ..,.,t B•• $tr"l. P 0 Ioli 1k0, Cotti Mu•, C•tiforr11e .,.,. n..w•tkn••• '"""' , ... ,..., ... M_ M•"•Q'"4 EINtor U..m1H. L- AH&.C#\• ~f'4MJN\Q E•ltor Legun• l••cfl ~ 1011 H• Coen H ....... OfflcH eo.teMtw JJ0Wol .. •St'"1 H""t11"19i0f' 8••< .. ''11S ... " 9cNlt.ara r.-.,tton• (714)M>4121 Cl...iftM Act¥ertleifttlOM11 LA19Yn• leech All D•fl•,..,,.••: T~e ....... ,,...,,,.,,c .. -....... ~"'C =. o::. ~::.:."::::''31::.: i f'll•Tt•f or ••••rll\e,...llU ne•e•n m .. ., ... , •• ,.d .....• ,,.,...,,. '"'··· •• ,,,,, ... .,_. • ,...,,...,,_ • ,.,...-,_ ....... •• 1"1:9'1• --• tel-"'• tu ... 194 •• _,,.,,... .., u. , .. , ,. • IMllllllw. •• "'"' u If -~• "''"''" ... , ..... _,. ....... ,~ .. sem blywoman ·s De mocr atic ch allenger, ended up with only 32 ,969 votes. Libertarian can· didate Sue Wallman received 17, 153 votes. Badham. who'd predicted his congr~sional race would con- clude with lopsided results in his favor. was not available for com- ment, having left early today for Washington, D.C. Candidate Dow said he was dis- appointed with his loss. but vowed to s tart campaigning early forthe 1982race. · ''q'he vote was far below what we'd expected," commented the young Balboa Island resident. "We started getting high hopes near the end but this took us by s urprise. The conservative vote across the nation was swift and overwhelming.•' The contest between As · semblywoman Bergeson, who couldn't be reached for comment earfy toQ_ay. and Mission Viejo re- sidenftatdwin was a low-key af. fair and her easy win was ex· peeled. Fro• Page A I REAGAN .•. from President Carter, who con- g rat u 1 ated him on his ~x · traordinary victory and pledged to help smooth the transfer of power. At a6out 7:30 p.m .. Reagan drove by motorcade from the palatial home or his host. in· dustrialist Earle Jorgensen, to the Century Plaza Hotel. Cam· palgn workers and supporters lucky enough to get tk:kets packed the hotel ballroom around the dozens of television cameras and news reporters to wait for the victor'• appearance. Whll• the crowd Uatened lo music aDd cheered the an· nouncement of the latest retuma, Rea1an remained lp a 19th·fioor hotel room, tapping hl1 fin1en as he watched the election retumaon three telemion aets. . He 1at apart, t0mber, •mllioc only when villton offered con· 1ratulatlona end •book b1a band. Tbtn con1ratulationa came by telepbolle. one from Democratic Sen. MWU'd II. 1tellaedY . Reapn wu 1urpriMd by the aweeplnt victory. Calif omJa had cl01ed. Many vented their an1er at the television network•• dee I to declare Rea1an a winner prior to the polls cloaln1. ·'Sure makes you think Uke your vote Isn't worth muc , ' complained one person awaiting the start of vote tabulation at the 'county re1lslrar or voters office. In other major contests, Orange County voters wert de· cidedly in favor or Paul Gann, the Republican contender for one of the state's U.S. Senate seats. Voters gave Gann a 43,000- vote edge over incumbent Sen. Alan Cranston, the Democrat, in that" race. However, Cranston won elsewhere in the state. Orange County voters also didn't go along with many of the s tatewide propositions on the ballot. They went against Proposition 10, the initfative to create smok- ing and non-smoking sections in most public places: Proposition 8 on environmental safeguards relating to construction or the Peripheral Canal to transport water to Southern California from the Sacramento delta re- gion, and Proposition 1 to pro- vide bond financing for purchase of..pa rklands. Orange County voters also re- jected Proposition 2, a bond is- sue to stem pollution of Lake Tahoe: Proposition 3 to create an insurance guarantee fund ; Proposition 4 to permit, s ubject to a two-third vote, use or prop- ~rty taxes for capital outlays, and Proposition S to prevent re- evaluation of property when an owner is forced to rebuild because or a natural disaster. However . county voters favored Proposition 6, to reduce the size or juries in municipal court civil trials: Proposition 7. to exempt properties from re- assessment when solar heating systems are installed; Proposi· tion 9, to permit use or bond funds lo rehabilitate domestic water systems, and Proposition 11. to equalize salaries paid judge,s. * * * County Vote Falls Short; TV Blamed The Orange County voter turnout in Tuesday's general election was slightly more than 77 percent , several percentage points below the 82 percent that had been predicted. One factor blamed by election officials for the lower turnout wa s the announce m e nt b y television networks that Ronald Reagan was the winner prior to the polls closing in California. They said this announcement, plus President Carter's con- c ession. could have caused potential voters to lose interest in voting. In the 1976 general election vote r turnout was 83 percent; in 1972 it was ss·percent. Pair Seized In Drug Raid Two Laguna Beach residents have been arrested and charged wit~ possession or cocaine, am- phetamines and hashish for sale following a late-morning search of their house by police Tuesday. Police. armed with a sea.rch warrant, reportedly entered the home or Richard Athey, 43, and Penne Conley, 27 , a t 138 McAuley St. at 11:45 a.m. Police said they seized an estimated $3,000 worth or illegal drugs in the raid. Both 'Athey and Miss Conley were taken to Orange County Jail where bail was set al $10,000 each. Fro•Pa~AI SC VOTE .• Mecham and Korsen. "I hope that doesn't add up to a votln1bloc,andanopen mlndthat it won't." The aeats won by Konen and Lane expire in April, 1982. Althoulh only a doaen can· did.a. campaiped for &he two council Mata, 13 namt1 appeared on voter ballots ln San Clemente • The name of Al Wulf eek, who dropped out ol the runnJAf Oct. a, 1till appeare.& OD &he ballot, Ind du pU• bl-a DDOU.ac•d wlU,drawal, he'°' rro votet Tuel· . di)'. Stanton llil_aeta ' Anthony By GLENN 8COrl' ... ....,NII ..... ' Ro1er Stanton'• camNllD to exploit the le1al problema of Oran1e County lat Dlatrlet SUpervteor Philip Ant.bony .~ off Tuesday ln a aurprtiinlJy stron1 upset win. Stanton, a Fountain Valley 'ct· ty CO\mCllman, received 51,Mt votes, or SI percent, compared to Antbooy'a 45,708 votes, 44 per·· cent, in final, unofficial resulta. Stanton, 43, bad neither tbe campaip funds nor the politlcal clout ol incumbent Anthony ID" ing for him during hia cam· paign. But be hammered away unceasingly at the three fekla)' • indictments lasued a1almt An- thony on charges of launderinl campaign funds in the una elec· :· lion. Anthony has denied any wrongdoing, and an tndlctmmt does not Imply guilt. But Stanton nevertheless criticized Anthony for his "audacity" to seek re· :- election until charges stemming rrom bis last campaign are cleared up. Voters in the predominantly middle·class district, which : takes in Fountain Valley, Westminster. Garden Grove and &~-·........ parts or Santa Ana, gave Stant.on 'I CAN'T SNI IT DOESN'T HURT President Carter Concede• Defeat Debate Signaled Def eat for Carter WASHINGTON (AP> -In the end, the campaign boiled down to two main issues: the economy and war and peace. Both worked againstJimmyCarter. Carter couldn't overcome his record and failed to convince voters that Ronald Reagan was too reckless and right-wing to oc- cupy the Oval Office. His last chance may have been the televised debate a week before the election -a one-0n-0ne confrontation that Carter insisted on. The reassuring image of the Republican nominee projected before an audience or more than 100 million belied Carter's efroru to portray Reagan as trigger· happy. As he wu restoring llisterto his image, Reagan att.acked the pres- ident on the economy where he •was most vulnerable. asking voters whether they were better orr or worse than they were four years a1Zo. Inflation stood at 12. 7 percent and unemployment at 7 .S percent. Fifty-two Americans had been held hostage in Iran for a year. Within 48 hours, Carter knew the situation was desperate. Dur· ing a week-long campaign blitz. he tried frantically to refocus lhe spotlight on Reagan. • At first, it worked. Carter cam- paign polls had shown him trail· Ing Reagan by 3-4 points after the debate. But by Saturday, the president held a s light 0.3 per- cent lead. Overnight, it fizzled : Sunday's polls revealed that the president was down by 2-5 points. By Mon- day -lhe day after Carter tem- porarily suspended campaigning to assess the conditions set by Iran for release or the hostages- the outcome was inevitable: he tra iled by7-10points. In the pre-dawn hours of Elec· tion Day, as Air Force One new to Plains, Ga .. for Carter to cast his ballot. press secretary Jody Powell ordered a drink and braced himself to .deliver the ome n to his boss. Before the president voted. he knew. The pbst-mortem offered by Carter's aides blame the defeat on the hostage stalemate and dual problems of inflation and re- cession. Since his nomination at the De m ocratic convention in August. the president set out tode- pi ct Reagan as a dangerous right· winger who repeatedly had ad- vocated military intervention in world crises and was likely to blunderintowar. the lead from the beginning. Huntington Reportin@ . Heavy Surf The stock market wasn't the on· ly thins that went up today. Sulf.Gf six lo eight feet was reported in Huntington Beach and heavy breaken elsewhere along the Orange Coast. Huntiniton city lifeguard Capt. Doug D'Amall said wave sizes more than doubled today with OC· casional eight-foot breaken near the pier. State Lifeguard Steve Rogers reported eight-foot breakers were increasing in frequency at the Santa Ana River jetty at the southern boundary of Huntington Stale Beach. Newport Beach lifeguards said the surf was pumping up on a south swell to five feet along the city shoreline. Surfers in south Orange Coun· ty were greeted by waves or three to six feet today. Laguna Beach had waves up lo six feet orf Bird Rock and other areas along the five-mile city strand. Surf was glassy. In San Clemente, lifeguards said surf was three to five feet. Doheny State Beach Park guards said surf began to pick up this morning, with smooth three and four foot sets. The ocean temperature was about 61 degrees. Expansion Sale LAST THREE DA VS! THRU NOVEMBER 8th Greatest Reductions Ever ! ! 15°/o to 50°/o OFF Sl .(D).000 INVENTORY DRASTICALLY REDUCEDI featuring: Drexel -Heritage -Henredon -Baker -Kargas -Sligh Desks -Schafer Brothers Leather -Classic·Leather - Woodmark -Stanton Cooper -Marge Carson -Cal Mode -Freemarc -Aireloom -Marbro -Stiffel -and much. much more! With the Holidays near -take advantage of this rare 9pportunityl SPECIAL ORDERS HONORED AT REDUCED PRICES. .. · .. r Instructor Charlie Ford Encircled By Wheelchair Students Never Too Md For Exercise Ford Assists Rachael Roe, 93. to Stand Up Out of Wheelchair Bob Standage looks forward to his daily exercise class. He knows the sequence of each exercise by heart. That's not unusual but Bob is. He is blind. nearly deaf and 93 years old. Obviously Bob doesn't do push ups and the rope climb. In his group it's a major ev~nt when everyone is able to open and'close their hands 12times in a row. But it's still exercise and still. experts agree. a vital part or well-being and health, even at 93. Standage lives in a Newport Beach convalescent home. He is one of those least able to participate in a regular exercise program yet may benefit the most from it. That is why such programs were among the first started by Coastline Community College at its beginning fi ve years ago, ac· cording to Debbie Secord, a Coas tline coordinator or Emeritus Programs, classes tailored particularly to the needs of older peo- ple. EXERCISE FOR ELDERLY s hut·ins is relatively new," Secord said. "We are just beginning to recognize the nlue and need for these programs and we in Orange County have a more ex· tensive program than most other parts of the country. "ln Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach, Coastline conducts classes in two senior centers and five con vales· cent facilities. They are a ll taught by part-time instructors who are usually recreation~! otdlhysical therapists or have worked In physi<."llledue""atioot"' sbeleid. ....., .. • One instructor is Charlie Ford of Costa Mesa . a student at Cal State Long Beach working toward a master's degree in Recrea· tional Therapy. He teaches two one-hour sessions per week at one area convalescent home and four times a week at Park Superior Convalescent Hospital. Newport Beach. "This is essentially therapy in a group session," Ford said. "I had previously taught exercise for adults but never with senior citizens. This aspect of it is fairly new. "THERE'S NOT a lot of instructional material developed yet for people in wheel chairs, elderly people who have suffered st rokes and people in their 80s and 90s. A lot of the success depends on the instructor. That makes it quite a challenge. "You have to remember that most of these people have had to leave their homes and families, their familiar neighborhoods and friends," he said. ·'They have been brought to a convalescent home where they don't know anyone and don't know what to expect. It can be a very traumatic experience. "MANY BECOME very withdrawn and apprehensive. Some just turn inward and wait to die. I believe that one of the most im· portant parts of my job here is to try to bring them out of this sell· absorption. Many have no families, only about 20 percent get week· ly visits from .anyone.,J10 there is a real problem in getting them to Evelyn Halswanter, 82, Does Hands on Head Exercise ./ I• ,. Bob Standage, 93, and Mae Ghodes, 79, Confer TEXT and PHOTOS by LEE PAYNE begin to interact with others and take an interest in the1 r surrolind- ings. "When we do make a breakthrough and turn someone's atten- tion back into the world, it is a very satisfying experience. Fortunately, I have a lot of help. especially from the other mem· t,ers of the class. When a person gets up into their 70s and 80s. they may feel it's all over for them. But here they see May Kipp who is a hundred years old and she comes to every class session and does all the exercises. They see Standage who is 93 and blind but remembers every exercise and its place in the sequence. Then they realize that th.ey have no excuse not to try it themselves. "WE AREN'T TALKING about push ups and sit ups.'' he said. "We do things like pushing down against the arm of your wheelchair. counting to twelve while opening and closing your hand ang passing a foam ball from one person to another. Standing up out of your wheelchair is one of our harder exercises and doing it isn't nt!arly as important as trying to do it." . It's easy to see how deeply Charlie Ford has become involved with his exercise class. How do his students feel about him? One. Dr. Mary Dye, 73, worked 43 years as a physician m Tex· as. "When Charlie took a couple of weeks off in the summer, some thought it was the end of the classes. They really missed him. It's a good class. It is physical exercise and social exercise as well , and we f1 1 love Chaclie, ·'she said. ' - Ro~ r Carlson • I Just .Another Gaile? ~ JtJ It seems a little far-retched, but should day ever come that Edlson Rllb's r1e~ and the rival Barons of Fountain ley field mediocre rootball teams, lt · ma ce~in, they'd st'U draw a hu1e llowtnl for their annual coofllct. Tbe 1ame annually draws 12·15,000, and *'4tn. it's .a Sunset League decider such as t. "triday's 1ame at Anaheim Stadium, the n1ure will surely rival 20,000. . Jt's become more or a happening -the Jilbce to be -than just another football :Jft!Oe. 'Edhon Coach Bill Workman agrees, the l me would still be an attraction even if "' h teams were winless. But he doesn't , ke the sound of such thoughts. 1'lf we were (winless). Coach Milner and ,q>yself would be retiring very quickly," .~YS Workman. Mike Milner is Fountain Valley's coach. . , The thought of mediocrity for these two 'seems even further out in space when you );9DSider their past records. Edison has never had a losing season in Its 12-year history· and has posted a com. bined record of 90-27·4, twice reigning as CIF champions. His sister, Michele, pJays on the team, which also includes teammate Jana Workman. And the head coach? You guessed It, Edison Coach Bill Workman. Fountain Valley has had one losing season (3-4-2 in 1974) In the same span, .. posting a combined record of 83·33·5, cap· luring the CIF crown once. Probably the most mystifyin1 item of all -and it goes for the entire Sunset Lea1ue -:-is the mutual respect and cordiality between coaching staffs, combined with such an intense desire to beat the other. * * * Making this game the attraction it is . • * * also includes the ract each enjoys a huge enrollment. Fountain Valley is the ClF Southern Section's largest school and Edison isn't far behind. And when you're only four miles apart, lives become intertwined. For instance, Edison High Athletic Director Lyman Clower's son, Steve, is a junior tackle for Fountain Valley.· although an injury cost him participation· in this game. Fountain Valley has picked up a transfer in sophomore tailback-fullback Jim Woods. a 5-8, l80·pound speedster by way of Sunny Hills and Servile High. Milner rates him as a potential starter for the varsity in 1981. * • * Fountain Valley receiver Emile Harry is an assistant coach for the Fountain Valley Grammar School's girls basketball team. Estancia High backers have been breathing a lot easier these days with foot- ball star Steve Kraiss. lost for the season with a neck injury, busy with the basket- (See CARLSON, Page 810) HB to Edison Prep Transfers, Coach Is Irate By ROG ER CARLSON Ol-0.lly Pil«St.tt When you're on top there are a lot of folks who would like to joiii. And if you're struggling, it can become a pretty bitter pill to swallow when ~ne of your own leave for greener pastures. Such is the situation at Hunt· ington Beach High where an irate Bob Isherwood, along with his en- tire roo1ball coaching staff, is ap· parently on the verge of quitting. ISHERWOOD SA VS the reason is because of one of his top pr ospects. sophomore Jeff Washington, a 5-10, 168·pound de- fensive starter in the secondary, alternate wide receiver and punt return specialist, checked out of school Tuesday, o pting fo r another residence and a continu· ang education at Edison High, home of the defending CIF Big Five champions. ·'What am I supposed to tell my kids today?" asked Isherwood. ··Jeff's dad, Don, just nat out told me he was taking his son to Edison for athletics "We're trying to develop a pro· gram here and I feel like I'm hit- ting my head against the wall. All of my coaches are upset and none may be back next year unless our district does something about this . "It's just not right, that a youngster can change schools and be immediately eligible . He should be ineligible for one year.·· CIF RULES, however . don't back up Isherwood. I'm not very happy about it," he continues. "I know the Edison coaches were telling him they did not want to talk to him. I don't feel they had anything to do with this, but it is a combination of .dad wanting the boy in the limelight. and it's the boosters, Junior All· Americans and the community. They've been proselyting him ever since he was in junior high school." THIS IS Isherwood's fi.rst year as varsity coaoh at Huntington Beach, where the Oilers, although given· accolades by teams who have met lhem. a re still struggl. ing in the win·loss column. This year 's team is 1·7 and has been un able to shake a Sunset losing streak dating back to 1973, which has now reached 26. Informed of the situation. Edison Coach Bill Workman said, "Oh, no. Workman gets roasted again. I'll admit on the surface it looks bad, but what can I say? ''If the father wants to move. he has the right to move. It becomes a big deal because it involves Edison." This isn't the rirst llme s uch a situation h as risen 1n prep athletics, to the contrary. A good case in point was lhe transfer of Tim Wigmore from Mater Del High to Westminster High a few years ago. In the span of three weeks Edison faced Wlgmore at quarterback. for the opposition twice. WORKMAN SAVS Edison's winning reputation isn't the only drawing factor. "We take very 0.1ly Pilot SI.Ill P-• lty Lee "o• Isherwood's contempt for the situation does not lie with the Edison coaching staff. to the con· trary. but he cites boosters. mem· bers of the Junior All-American program and the community as a whole, as the instigators. <See HB COACH, Pa1e BIO> .tfELLING IT LIKE IT IS -Mary Malavasi. mother of Edison High's Bryce and wife of Ram coach Ray, d is· 3 plays scores of all past Edison-Fountain Valley football .. games for all to see. She is a staunch Charger booster ~ and proud of the 11-year record of her favorite high school team. "I think there are some under· handed thin~s ~oing on and S11rprise·! .lt's' .. Carlton.:,. NL Cy Young AUXJrd to Phillie NEW YORK (AP) -Steve rlton, to the surprise of no , la. the National League Cy award winner for a re- ·tying third lime. nd, just about here. there uld be comments from the bila\ielpbia Phillies lett- er about bow it feels to be red a1ai.D as the league's t pitcher. Mike Schmidt and Pete Rose, but the trip was cancelled and the pitcher went hunting in· stead. Carlton's wile said she did not know where he was when the award was announced and added he was expected· to be away for about a week. BUT O'l'~ER PEOPLE. as usual. spoke in his stead. "It (the Cy Young Award) was a v e r y · c 1 e a r c u t choice," said Bob Boone, his catcher. "He was Juat out.stand· Ln1. especially considering the number of innings he worked and his strikeout total. His slider is an awesome pitch with great .control. 808 llHERWOOO D.lllY ,., ... ,,_ 11\1,. ... IU0'-11 BIRTH DEFECT IS NO HINDRANCE TO TOM KNAPP. .. One-arm Skier You Can't Prove It's a Hindrance ByCURTSEEDEN Of .. D.llty ~ ... SUH Tom Knapp recalls the first time he entered a water ski race. At only nine years old. the Newport Beach resident said to himself. "I'm going to win this race." He repeated the prophecy to his mother who was a little hesitant to burst a newcomer's bubble. "Don't expect to win every race." she told him . Knapp promptly won, and he has now skied his way to the national championship in his age division. NOW 11, KNAPP REIGNS as the national water skiing champion in the 13-15-year-old age division thanks to his performance in this year's nationals at Clear Lake, Sept. 19·21. To many people. particularly first·tirne observers of Knapp in action, this seems like a giant accomplishment. A birth defect left Knapp with only part of his ten a rm. which to him is no different than you or l losing a fingernail. "I simply can't consider it a hindrance when l 'mas good or better than anyone else." he says in a more confident than coc.k:y reply. · KNAPP SA VS HE SNAPS on the skis and hits the water nearly every day of the summer when the water skiing season is at its height. During the winter, he may get in some work during the weekends. He stays in shape by running the 880 for the Newport Harboll High track~eam and.playing a little soccer now'and then. But· his first love is skiing, and Knapp's §elf- expectations seem endless. "I'd like to win the national championship in the men's open competition and go to Italy for next y1ar's world cham- pionships," he says. On ly two men and two women are eligi· ble to represent one country. making the odds slim for the out· going teenager. Knapp will ski in the 16-19 age bracket next year. and be will need to finish among tbe top three finalists in order to qualify for the men'sopendivislon. SUCH AN ACCOMPLISHMENT Is a far cry from Knapf,'s first experience with skiing. Com~ting in "fun races • at Laite Arrowhead when he was nine, Knapp had to learll lhe ropes in some ver)' non-competitive races. \ Today, be reaches speeds of 75-85 miles per hour, and he <See NO, Pase Bit) BUT, CA&LTON, who played key role ln leading the Phillies their first World Cham- bip, was, u be has been to media, unavailable. Sluggish-Blazer8 Threaten Lakers ' Kt wu voted the honor Tues· bY a Baseball Writers As· adaD ~ Ameriu panel, and Tt>m Seaver and Sandy a1 the onl)' three-time of the coveted award.· fiercely private Carlton nf\Md to talk to the medJa t.bee,a•t several Muons. be notified tMt .. INGLEWOOD (AP) -It wu a 1ame that the National Basketball Auocla· Uon could be proud of -bll leads Just don't mean much in tbe NBA. Tbe Loe An1eles Lakera pla~ like the dettndin1 NBA champiom they are Tuelday night in bulldlq up a 11 .. advantace over Portland .,_. IOIM •llbt m"l:.ol the third quarter. But the TraO rt ltormed back, onl1 to fall one point lbort. and with any club in the leque, you can't uaume that. "We kind of tbou1ht we bad it won before the clock abowed it. Portland made a whale ol a 1ame out ol it." The Trail Blasen, who trailed 97-84 ent•riDI the rtnal .period, cam• to within _. POhtt twtee la the 1Me ao1aa. the ftul tlme a Mychal ftomplaa m• two ffte tb"°"8 with" HeOacla rema..... ,_ die IMt polnta of tbt 1ame. Kareem AbduJ-Jabbar led tbe Lakers, who are now 10.3, with 28 pohata, nine rebounds and el1bt as1l1ta. Jamaal Wilkes added 'n point.a and el.Ot U · 1l1ta; Earvin "llaalc" Jobmoa bad ao point., 10 rebounds and 1J Ulbta and Norm Nlxon contributed 11 potn&a • et1bt aulatl for Loi An1•l•. 'tbampeaa, pand Ponlaad wltb • po6nu, ao ~ them in UM HCOlld ball, and 10 Nboundl. Calvin Nau addict 11 potata tar tbll Trell Bluen wtdle Pu· Ramsay. "We were 1lu11ish early and then our defense 1ot tl~hter. But we're 4·1 rilht now and I can t be real happy with that. "I'm encourased by the w•Y •e played in tbe tut period and a half, I want the Blasen to 1 .. 11ooc1. 11 .. play like w did late in the 1am• we can wlD." • Tbe Lakera, who led all the w y, made 5'7.4 percent of thtlr fteld ..i ;t· tempg to an n• IO percent ler ,._ Trail ..... I I I ey CDrttnued ~" p a~ and t ho World n be WH not even ... • ... rd. luld u_peeted to '° to "In tbe "'(ir.u part of tU ••••· . we played ao well that lt crealll4. ,,_. Jama." Mid ..Loa .An&elea e-1 Paul W..U.11d after Id• team'• 111-1• .-C· totJ. "Our IUYI a•umed lt wa1 .. , Portlmd ~ a chanee to wiD It ID UM .-1n1 MC!Olldt but Jim PHIOD mllMd a 1bort .,. ....... jump abot mcLtubleqmat tlpt by the Trail Blasen failed u time••· pl red. -Ud i:.=.. and ......... ad . ~Wbad18llllbawlll -n~ ~. - Portlaad bal DDW IOlt eldl araiht ftad ~· ... .,_..__..._ ..... ,...,,,_-+"-ti ne TnU Blain Md ... aw ot t lut """ IDMllaP wltla tlM ....._._ lMI .. to conauct Milne clinics .tth teammat. \ . ... • I' ''Oar wbeet was d• to .-S bulc play," Hid Portland Coach Jack J VOL. 73, NO. 310, ~SECTIONS, S6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNeSDAY, NOVEM BER 5, 1tl0 TW&NTY·FIVE CENTS .. Jtone lnctimbent ·Judge Loses Bis Seat ' . ...._ By DAVID IWTZMANN • Of•IMl1¥1"11et1Uff l Preaidinl Central Municipal t Court Judte John C. Teal. an ap· I l*ntee ol Gov. Ronald Rea1an I ei1ht years a10, became \he on· I ly incumbent Judie to lose in 1 Oran1e Couo\y this year when voters picked challen1er Robert E. Thomaa in Tuesday's elec· t.lon. Final but unofficial returns showed Thomas, a deputy dis· Anthoay Upset trlct attorney, beatjng Teal by •bout 3,000 votes -50,619 to 47.311 . Teal's loss and Santa Ana la~yer Bobby D. Youn1blood's victory over appointed Central Municipal Court Judge Richard E. Oroaco were the biggest sur· prises In the county's judicial elections. Youngblood also shaded Orozco by about 3,000 votes, 52,721 to 49,269. Jn three countywlde SUR8rior Hard-hitting -" Stanton Wins o.lly l"llet Staff ,_ NEW SUPERVISOR Fountailn Y•H6y'a Stenton Affordable Housing S tudy Set The Irvine Planning Com· mission wiU look at a builder's proposal Thursday to construct a 248-unlt "affordable housing" apartment complex just west or Irvine's Deerfield area. Called the Windwood Apart· menll, the project to be built on 13.5 acra of land formerly used for agriculture is to include 60 1 •overnment-subsidized rental l units. : . The Irvine Company has re- ceived prelimJnary indication 1 that the U.S. Department of Hous- inl and Urban Development will help low-income people pay rent on these Wllts. ·Irvine Pacific, the homebuild· inl division of the Irvine Com· pany. baa designed the project to include 80 one-bedroom units, 1.38 1 1 two-bedroom units, 24 three· I bedroom units and six four· · bedroom Wllts. Iftbe Planning Commission ap· prov• the plans, construction would belin in March or 1981 and unit.a would be ready for occupan- ey tn Jmeol1982. 1..Tbe aD&rtmenll are to be buUt a«leffnf to the intersection of ~::.leld Avenue and Culv.er By GLENN SCOTT OI U. o.11, l"llet Staff Roger Stanton's campaign to exploit the legal problems of Orange County 1st District Supervisor Philip Anthony paid off Tuesday in a surprisingly strong upset win. Stanton. a Fountain Valley ci- ty councilman, received 57,349 votes, or 56 percent, compared to Anthony's 45,708 votes. 44 per· cent, in final, unofficial results. Stanton. 43, had neither the campaign funds nor the political clout of incumbent Anthony go- ing for hlm during his cam- paign. But he hammered away unceasingly at the three felony indictments issued against An· thony on charges of laundering campaign funds in the 1976 elec· tion. Anthony has denied any wrongdoing, and an indictment does not imply guilt. But Stanton nevertheless criticized Anthony for his "audacity" to seek re- election until charges stemming from bis last campaign are cleared up. Voters in the predominantly middle-class district. which tak es in Fountain Valley, Westminster, Garden Grove and parts of Santa Ana, gave Stanton the lead from the beginning. when absentee ballots were counted. He never lost it. Stanton stayed at home with his family and about 50 sup· porters to await the results . Their cele bra tion began in earnest after about half the votes had been counted. "I said during my campaign that the · voters want to start a new chapter." he said. "I mean it very sincerelv and I think the people mean it very sincerely.·· A full-time managemellt in· ·<See utNTON, Pa1e ~) • DC art er court races, three municipal court judges won election to the higher bench, edging two deputy dlatrlct attorneys and another jud1e. Teal surpri.sinaly bad att,act· ed more votes than Thomas in · the June primary. A runoff · became necessary when neither man could muster a majority of the vote in the primary. Thomas had said durine his campaign for Tuesday's election Sweep By GOP Hailed NEW YORK IAP) -The stock market soared in record- b re akin g activity today, responding to the election vic- tory of Ronald Reagan and the Republicans· gains in Congress. The dollar also posted gains in Europe. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials jumped 18.18 points to 955.38 in the first hour of trad· in& and was up 29 points after two hoUrs of trading. It still was llhead 19 points at noon. Gainers outnumbered losers by a 5-1 margin in the over-all tally of New York Stock Ex- change.listed issues. Big Board volume in the open· in& hour totaled 22.51 · million shares, surpassing the record of 20.78 mHllorf set Oct. 10, 1979. Volume at noon was 71 million." ' t hat be picked Teal to run a1ainst because he did not respect him "as I do other Orange Oounty judges." He also claimed Teal bad been in· decisive on the bench. Teal had won the endonement of Orange County Shertrr Brad Gates and Manhal Don Rhea. Teal appeared a man defeated Tuesday night at a post-elect.Ion party hosted at the South Coast Plaza Hotel by Robert Nelson and Associates, a political COO· suiting firm. The prwiding judge sat sullen· ly at a circular table and con· fided to at leut one .attorney that he was concerned about tu. future. . In the ra~e for superior court se.at No. 11, North Orange CoWl· ty Municipal Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald, ~ Corona del Mar resident, defeated Deputy District Attorqev Robert Chat· terton, 323,147 to ·275,968. The Fitzgerald·Chatterton race attracted attention when it was reveale<J that Westminster obstetrician William Waddill was contributing heavily to Fltzterald. The physician said he W&J do· 101 it to beat Chatterton, the man who twice unsuccessfully proaecut.ed him for the death of a tetm that survived a saline <See JUDGE, Pa1e A%) "The stock market is his· torically a Republican animal, and Reagan represents a true conservative Republican," the brokerage firm of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields said in a wire transmitted to all its branch of· fices this week. .... ~ JUBILANT PAESIDENT·Et:ECT RONALD REAGAN, WIFE NANCY CELEBRATE VICTORY After• 12-y••r Queat, Republfctln Former Governor On HI• W•y to White Hou•• The fact that the Republicans took control or the Senate and registered large gains in the House was also greeted with de· light on Wall Street. "It may well lead to the passage of major fiscal ch anges." observed Robert Stovall. an analyst at Dean Wit· ter Reynolds Inc. Reagan Promises Cabinet 'Siooep' But Stovall and other brokers were cautious about how long the euphoric mQOd might last. Further increales in interest rates such as the bank prime lending rate are expected any day. Jn addition. inflation is expect· ed to pick up momentum in the next few months, regardless of what actions the government takes. Bond prices also rose in early activity, but then gave up some pC the~r gains. LOS ANGELES (AP > - President -elect Ronald Reagan's chief of start said to· day the new Republican ad· ministration will make a clean s weep of President Carter's Cabinet and all appointed agen· cy heads in Washington. Edwin Meese, who served as Reagan's staff chief through the 1980 presidential campaign and also when Reagan was governor of California, was asked at a news briefing whether there would be any holdovers from the Carter administration. •'Out of hllmanitarian concern for all the time and effort . ' Reagan Landslide '------------ ~In Doubt .. they've put in recently, we think the only decent thing to do is to allow them a well·deserved rest," Meese quipped. Although it is to be expected that most of the old order"'\vould be replaced in the transfer of powe r, past presidents 'have made it a practice to keep a few holdovers for unity's sake . particularly those who may have their own powerful con· stituencies or whose jobs are re· garded as non-partisan. Meese said Reag an would name rus transition team at a news conference Thursday but that some talks, such as those with congressional allies and enemies, already have begun In an ~ffort to map a strat• for a smooth changeover. He also said there has been no agreement that Reagan reprefentatives would be added to the administration team task .. force dealing with the hostage crisis, but that he hopes some such arrangemen t ca.n be (See REAGAN, Pa1e Ai> · County. Vote Fa lls Short; TV Blamed The Oran1e CouP-lY voter turnout in Tuesday s general election was sU1ht1y more than 71 percent, several percentage polnta below the 82 percent that bad been predicted. One factor blamed by eledion otflclala for the lower tunout waa t he a nao uneemeat by televtsioD aetworb tbat Ranald Rea1aa wu the winner prtor to the poUI clolbal ln Calllora1a. Tb., laAcl tbll announcement, plus Pr•ldept Carter's COD· c'uslon, could have c:auHd potential vo&en to lo.e ~ 1a.--.. In tbe 1'fl ....,..1 ellctioD voter turnout wu 11 per~; ln lf'2 It Wf1 11 l*'ffDL Vo t e C ount P e rformance W ins Praise The Orange County Board of Supervisors congratualed its staff today for the successful vote count achieved in Tuesday's elec- tion. Board Chairman Ralph Clark. noting the criticism leveled at the vote counting system after it failed to perform up lo par in the June primary election. said, "I appreciate the work you have done as professionals." (Related Story. PageA-3> Clark said the "comeback'' from the June problems was a crdit lo the staff of the county General Services Agency wruch operates the Registrar of Voters ortice. "(} . The vote, coµm in Tuesday's election Clark s aid. was ·'superbly outst1¥lding. · • Co ast Weather Low clouds and fog night and morning with hazy s.,nshine Thursday afternoon. Lows tonight 56 along the coast, 62 inland. H1ghs 'Ibunday 68 to 72 at beachei, 77 to 82 Inland. INS IDE TODAY A PltUt*lplria cop giving dl/frtg Jcida Cl iGlt CMncf cat happfHIJ ha• HU ,. .. p.rlOftlJI ~fort• •spanc:IH fn. to a 70~worlcer non·profH fOtindotiofl. SH Po4ll A9. I . . 68 t Eavor Reagan in County . By Fal!DSUCK IQIOEMIE& ot•Deltf,.... ..... Oranae County voters like Ronald Reaaan -a lot. Tbe Republlcan President· elect 1arnerft(l 68 percent ol the votes cul ln tbe county in the presidenUal race. Jimmy Carter aot 23·percent. In4epend•nt presidential aspirant Jobn An· deraon &ained only 7 percent of the county vote. Deapi'te the former CaliromJa 1overnor's landslide sbowtne. Oran1e County election ob· serven said Tuesday nlabt they were surpriHd to see Reqan take the I~ acroea the counEry at the rate did. . And se rat 1aJd they were equally aurprhed -and somewhat angered -that Preli· dent Carter conceded defeat long before the polls in California had closed. Many vented their an1er at the television networks' decision to declare Reagan a winner prior to the polls closing. "Sure makes you think like your vote isn't worth niuch,'' complained one person awaiting the start of vote tabulation at the county registrar of voters office. In other major contests, Orange County voters were de· cidedly in favor of Paul Gann, the Republican contender for one or the state's U.~. Senat~ seats. Voters gave Gann a 43,000~ vote edge over incumbent Sen. Alan Cranston, the Democrat, in that race. However, Cranston won elsewhere in the state. Orange County voters ,also dldn 't go along with many of the statewide propositions on the ballot. . They went against Proposition 10, the initiative to create smok- ing and non-smoking sections in t most public places; Proposition 8 on environmental safeguards relating to construction of the Peripheral Canal to transport water to Southern California from the Sacramento delta re- gion, and Proposition 1 to pro- vide bond financing for purchase of parklands. r. o.IW ........... ., ........ "-FOR THEii INCUM81!NTS, ELECTlON WAS IAIY Orange County voters also re- jected Proposition 2, a bond is· aue to stem pollution of Lake Tahoe; Proposition 3 to create an insurance guarantee fund; Proposition 4 to permit, subject to a two-third vote, use of prop- ~rty taxes for capital outlays. and Proposition 5 to prevent re- evaluation of property when an own er ls forced to rebuild because of a natural disaster. CongreNman BadtMlm, A•MmbtfwOmari Be11eeon However. county voters favored Proposition 6, to reduce the size of juries in municipal court civil trials; Proposition 7, .. .. As predicted, Congressman R o b e rt Badham and As · sem blywoman Marian Bergeson. t1 o lh N e wp o rt Beach ~epublicans, coasted to easy vic- tories Tuesday. Badham. who represents the spra wling 40th Congl'"essional District that takes in coastal ()range County, and a portion or San Diego County, came away with 209.775 votes, according to final but unofficial labuJations in both counties. Democ rati c c hallenger Michael Dow, an Orange County deputy district attorney. came in a distant second wlth65,388vot.es. Libertarian hopeful Dan Mahaffey. a Huntington Beach business owner. finished with ~4.133votes. ~ In the Orange CoJst's 74th As· sembly District, which also in- cludes northern San Diego Coun· t..v. Mrs. Bergeson had an easy time winning a second term in acramento. According lo the un- fficial results from both coun· ·es. the Newport resident earned 31,105-0tes. Jack Baldwin , lhe as - mblywoman's Democratic allenger. ended up with only 12,969 vot~s. Libertarian can· · ldale Sue Wal.tman received 7 ,153 votes. j -Badham. ,whQ'd predicted his l ?ngressional race would co~- o"ANGI ~ DAILY PILOT ""-··-· It: dot .. ''::.t.-:t ~".LAM """'Ml!-....... e:•llor • T_..,ttone (714)MMalf ' elude with lop.sided results in his favor. was not available for com· m ent. having left early today for Washington, D.C. Candidate Dow said he was dis· appointed with his loss. but vowed to start campaigning early for the 1982race. "The vote was far below what we'd expected,'' commented the young Balboa Island resident. "We st~ed getting high hopes near the end but this took us by surprise. The conservative vote across the nation was swift and overwhelming." The contest between As· semblywoman Bergeson, who couldn't be reached for comment early today. and Mission Viejo re- sident Baldwin was a low-key af. fair and her easy win was ex· peeled. f',....PageAJ STANTON .• stl"uctor ~l Cal Slate, Long Beach, St!nton said be will seek 'a leave of absence from the col· lege so he can Ulke over his new of· fice al the county Hall of Ad· mlnistrationonJan. s. No immediate changes are on his JDind. '!I just want ~11 up 'my sleeves and get~ work, •• he • to exempt properties from re· 8fseuamnt when solar beatlQs statelll.$ are installed; Proposi- tion 9, to permit use of hood funds to rehabilitate domestic -..ater systems, and Proposition 11 . to equalize salaries paid judges. Fro• Pagt-. l I JUDG.E ... abortion three years ago. In the race for superior court office No. 8, West Orange Coun· ty Municipal Court Judge Jame~ Smith defeated a colleague, West Court Judge Ragnar Engebretsen, by a substantial margin -360,936 votes to 208,616. Both men, who received high maru from the Orange County Bar Association in a judicial evaluation, waged low-key cam- paigns. In the race for superior court office No. 14, North Orange County Municipal Court Judge James Wright Cook easily de· feated Los Angeles Deputy Dis- trict Attorney Sueanne Currie Lewis,• 332.937 votes to 268,167 votes. And, in a final ~enlral municipal court district race, Orange County ~puty District Attorney John Ryan bested col· league Cliff Harris. ps,787 '/ 41,363. f) said. • Two weeks before the election, StantM had r~ only about $17 ,000 ln campaign funds while Anthony had gathered almost $100,000 since June. The incum- bent also wu riding on strong endorsements from the four other county supervilon who wUlstillbethereinJanuary. Man Slain; Wife Hurt Stanton, however, used his limited resources and clever speech-making ab~Ues £o pick at perhaps Anthony's only serious political Uability, hla le1al problems. In an llth·bour D)ailer, Stanton wryly stabbed at AnlhoQy'a background by U · aoclatlnc the incumbent with ' former supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Bob Battin Wbo were convicted earlier of We1al political practices in separate incidents. Stanton'• mailer used the 11me format Anthony bad UHd 'ln a 1971 maller atacklnt a former• foe, Harry Yamamoto. Yamamoto later sued Ant.bony ln a ltlll·pmdiftl Jlbel cue ud threw b1I wellbt in th1a •led.Ion to Stalllon. Aatbofty Aki toclq_ be a ...... tbat ~..... lllUl ••• die "o•erwbel•l•I" reason for ltutOll'llllillllll •.• LAKESIDE <AP) -Ernie Henderson opened his door to a kUler who shot him to death and left hi• 23-year-old wife wounded seriously, sheriff's deputies aald. Henderson, 39, was shot several times, deputies saJd, ~ his body wu found in tbe hallway. His wife Cecelia collapsed outside while lryin& to reach help. An all·polnta bulletin wu put out for an armed man wearin& a cowboy bat and drtvlna a plctup truck. deputies said. Slayer' Guilty PRESNO (AP) -A f'relno man ha been convicted of ftnt. de1ree murder in tbe May I 1tloMlnl clutb of a l'reano City Colle.. admtnl1trator. John 0om-. 41, ••.ordered Tuelday to NlWD to court Dee. 2 for .... = .. __.... wtda tbe • AINd Herrera. .. tbe Jmlor eon.,.., v~tate dean of........ t A I 1' /" 'I CAN"t. SAY IT DOESN'T HURT' Prealdenl Carter Cone.de• Defeat . Debate Signaled Def eat for Caner WASlilNGTON <AP > -In the end, the campaign boiled down to two 'lllain issues: the economy and war and peace. Both worked against Jimmy Carter. Carter couldn't overcome his record and failed to convinc~ voters that Ronald Reagan was too reckless and right-wing to oc- cupy the Oval Office. His last chance may have been the televised debate a week before the election -a one-on-one confrontation that Carter insi8ted on. The reassuring image of the Republican nominee projected before an audlence of more than 100 million belied Carter's efforu to portray Reagan as trigger· happy . A• be wu restoring luster to his imaae. Reapn attacked the pres. ident on the ec:odomy where be was most vulnerable, asking voters whether they were better off or worse than they were four yearsa.zo. Inflation stood at 12. 7 percent and unemployment at 7 .s percent. Filly-two Americans had been held hostage in Iran for a year. Within 48 hours, Carter knew the situation was desperate. Dur· ing a week-long campaign blitz, he tri~ frantically to refocus the spotlightonReapn. At first, it worked. Carter cam· paign polls had shown him trail- ing Reagan by 3-4 points after the debate. But by Saturday, the preside.nt held a slight 0.3 per-· cent lead. Overnight, ·it fiuled: Sunday's polls revealed that the president was down by 2·5 points. By Mon· day -ttie day after Carter tem- porarily suspended campaigning to assess the conditions set by I ran for release oftbe hostages - the outcome was inevitable: he trailed by7-10points. In the pre-dawn hours of Elec· ti on Day, as Air Force One flew to Plains. Ga .. for Carter to cast his ballot, press secretary Jody Powell ordered a drink and braced himself to deliver the omen to his boss. • Before the president voted, he knew. Tile post-mortem offel"ed by Carter's aides blame the defeat on the hostage stalemate and dual problems of inflation and re· cession. Since his nomination at the Democratic convention in August, the president set out to de- pict Reagan as a dangerous right· winger who repeatedly had ad· vocated military intervention ln world crises and was likely to blunder into war. won.lout. &lcMrd v. Miia. ta.. ..... =...., .......... ............ campaip followtaj ,. ....... nporta ... be ............ bl• · Job at tlae WMt• llouae durlq tM Nlua ~ for pencma1 pin, N&uned to the Aeapn camp Tmlclay lllllat as the eleetioa returu .... '°urincin. =i He WU wearta1 a ••• staff -. but ...._ rel say whither he hd formally been returned to the penaanel roster. That "will be cl~" at tbe' news conference, 11_,.. said. Richard Wirtblln, Rea1an'1 chief pollster and campaian 1tratestst, a.aid the landslide r. Rea1an wu "a referendum Clll Jimmy Carter's leadenhlp" and did not ailftily a reaUpmeat of traditional Republican and Democratic loyalties. ''I don't believe we es.: perlenced a party reaUpment last n11ht," Wlrthlln told re..: porten. "However, we bndaed and cracked the Democratic coalition" that traditionally bU Included organized labor, the South, liberals, blacks' antt: ethnic minorities. Wlrthlln said that bued on his: polling, the electorate's primary expectation "ls that the economy will improve and we will get inflation under control." Reagan, who campaiened against Carter's handllna or the economy and against the notion the nation's economic problems were too complex to be solved, accepted his victory Tuesday night by saying: "I aim to try and tap that greal American spirit that opened up this completely UD· developed continent from coast• to coast and made it a great na- tion." Ml1111h1g . Barry Goldwater, running for senate re-election in Arizona, holds an 8,000-vote lead over opponent Bill Sc-hultz, a millionaire Phoenix apartments owner. Goldwater is a frequent vis- itor to Newport Beach. Expansion Sale LAST THREE DA VS! THRU NOVEMBER 8th Greatest Reductions Ever ! ! 15°/o to 50°/o OFF ' ... . . Sl ,lm.fDJ lNVENTORY DRASTICALLY REDUCEQI featuring: Drexel -Heritage -Henredon -Baker -Kargas -Sligh Desks -Schafer Brothers Leather -Classic Leather - Woodmark -Stanton Cooper -Marge Carson -Cal " Mode -Freemarc -Airetoom -Marbro -Stiffel -and m_uch, much more! With the Holidays near -take adVantage of this . rare opportuntty1 SPECIAL ORDERS HONORED AT REDUCED PRICES. oraue <Atast • EDITION VOL. 73, NO. 310, ~SECTIONS, 5' PAGES ., ,,.. Auoela&e4 Preu T~ apiritual advlaer to the milhanh boldin& lbe 52 Ameriean bolta1ea in Iran said toda~ the crisis may be pro- lon1M as a J'esult of Ronald Reac~·s victory in the U.S. prea~ntlal elections, Tehran radio reported. •·Because ·President Carter was already in office, we would have reached a solution faster if he were re-elected," the radio quoted deputy Parliament speaker Hojatoleslam Mooeavi Khoeniba u sayin1 in an in· tervlew with Greek television. "With Rea1an's victory this "'.ill .needalon1lime. "I think Carter 's policy has failed ln. the Uni~ed States ·and thfs has no effect on the hostage issue," he was quoted as saying. Khoeniha said the hostages would be put on trial U America did not act on Iran's conditions for the captives' releue, said the radio announcer, readin1 what he said was a transcript of the interview. Kboeblba wu the cKalrman of the committee which drafted the conditions, ap· proved Sunday by Parliament. Parlllll'Dent said the hoeta1e1 will be released if the United States: (1) uoftee.ze~ Iranian Record Volume Reported usets held in American banks, (2) returns the wealth of the late s hah, (3) drops lawsuita against Iran and (4) ple dies non· interferenceinlran'saffaira. The hoetaaes today be1an the second day of their second year in captivity, the368thday. However, both Khoeniha and Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai said in interviews con· ducted by the Iranian news agency Pars the U.S. election would have no efCect on Iran or on ita coadlt.ionl for release of the hoeta1es, Tehran radio re· port.ed. . "The conditions for release of the ·hoetages is a law paaled by the Majlis (Parliament) which bas to do with our country," Ra· jai was q~ as sayina. "We don't care who is ruling in the U.S . government. These cond.l· lions were passed ~Y the Majlb and approved by the Imam <Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini> and we will carry them out." Tuesday the United States re- j ected Iran's demand for a speedy response via the media to its terms for release of the hostages and sought clarifica- tion of the conditions. ~"Reagan Victory Boosts Market I -- Mangers Defeated In. 73rd By ROBERT BARKER Ofllle O.Uy ~Si.ff Republican challenger Nolan Frizzelle scored a solid victory over Democratic incumbent Den- nis Mangers Tuesday in the hard- -fou1ht 73rd Assembly District Tace. Final, but unofficial results: Nolaa Frtuelle, 71,53 l Dennis Mangers, (inc.),67,616. The campaign between the 58 -year -old conse r vative Frinelle and the 40-year-old Manaers became extremely hosUle and hard-hitting in its rmal days. Frizzelle apparently was suc- cessful in portraying Mangers, a two-term incumbent, as a big &pending liberal who operated UD· der the thumb of Assemhly- Speaker Leo McCarthy. Mangers hit at Frizzelle's con- servatism and tried to link him to an attempt by right wing ex- tre mists to take control or a moderate district. Mangers, who had indicated \h~t the campaign would be his la~ for the Assembly, made con- ciliatory remarks today. "I'm going to call Mr. Frizzelle as soon as I can get him and con- gratulate him and wish him well. I would like to work with him to make the transition as smooth as possible." Mangers linked his defeat tothe nationwide surge for president· elect Ronald Reagan and the <See FRl.ZZELLE , Page A2) Badham, Bergeson Victorious · As predicted, Congressman R obe r t Badham and As· aem,blywoman Marian Bergeson, both Newport Beach R~ublicans, coasted to easy vic- torfea Tuesday. Badham!O"wbo represents the sprawling 40tb Congressional District that takes in coastal Oranae County. and a portion of San Dte10 County, came away with 208,775 votes. according to final but WIOfficial tabulations in both counties. ' De mocratic c hallenger Jlfohael Dow, an Orange County uty district attorney, came in atantaecond with 85,388 votes. lbertarian hopeful Dan ~Jbaffey, a Huntington Beach IMl~in~ owner, finished with JC,lllVOC.. lat.bl <>ruse Coast's 74th As· •mbly Dlatrict, which aLao ln· C!IUdM nortlem-s&n Dle10 Coun· tJ, 11.,.. Ber1eaoa had an euy '"""'"". Barry Goldwater, running for senate re-election ii) Arizona, hol<ls an 8,000-vote lead over opponent Bill Schultz. a millionaire. Phoenix apartments owner. Goldwatft{ is a frequent vis· itor to Newport Beach. CdM Freeway Action OK'd By Newport Newport Beach voters over· whelmingly s upported a city ballot measure Tuesday that will give city administrators power to renegotiate an agreement for the extension of the Corona del Mar Freeway. ' According to the final but unof· ficial tabulation from the Newport.precincts. 216,587 persons cast ballots favoring Measure L and 4.095votersopposed it. Voter approval of the measure was required by the Newport City Charter, which says city officials can't enter into a freeway agree- m ent without first going to the electorate. oc'arter • time wtnntng a second term ln Sacramento. Accord1n1 to the un- afftclal re.ultl from both COUD• ..... tbe Newport resident eamed 111,lOlotel. laek Baldwin , the ... ••ltlrwoman'• De mocratic . te.alllaler, ended up with only ~1-votea. Ubertarlan can· maate lue• Waltman recet99d IT lllwt19. ' ...... wbo'd pr..tlNd 1111 ........... Nee ....... e.t• ............ rtlultl la .... .......... ,.. .... -·-•-lift~~ ... Mrb today for f Sweep By GOP Hailed NEW YO RK (A P > -The stock market soared in record- bre a k In g acti v ity t oday, responding to the election vie· tory of Ronald Reagan and the Republicans' gains in Congress. The dollar also posted gains in Europe. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials jumped 18.18 points to 955.38 in the first hour o( trad- ing and was up 29 points after two hoUrs of trading. It still was ahead U.98 points to 953. U at cloe· ing. 'Gainers outnumbered lo.era by a ~1 mar&in in the over-all tally of New York Stock Ex· change-listed issues. Big Board volume in the open- ing hour totaled 22.51 million shares, surpassing the record of 20. 78 million sf! Oct. 10, um. Volume foe the Clay waa a near· record 79 million. "The stock m arket is his· torically a Republican animal, and Reagan represents a true conservative Republican," the brokerage firm of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields said in a wire transmitted to all its branch of- fices this week. The fact that the Republicans took control or the Senate 8!\d registered large gains in ttie House was also greeted with de· light on Wall Street. "lt may well lead to t he passage of major fiscal cha nges." observed Robe rt Stovall, an analyst at Dean Wit· ter Reynolds Inc. But Stovall and other brokers were cautious about how long the euphoric mood might last. Further incr~ases in interest rates such as the bank prime lending rate are expected any day. Jn addition, inflation is expect- ed to pick up momentum in the next few months. regardless of what actions the government takes. B9pd prices also rose in early activity, but tben gave up some of their gains. Reagan Landslide I . -~-...... JUBILANT PReSIDENT-ELECT RONALD REAGAN, WIFE NANCY CELEBRATE VICTORY After • 12-ye•r Queat, Aepublc8n Fonner Governor On HI• W•y to WhH• HoUM Reagan Promises Cabinet 'Su:eep' LOS ANGELES (AP) - Pres ident-elect Ronald Reagan's chief of staff said to· day the ne)V Republican ad- ministration will make a clean sweep of President Carter's Cabinet and all appointed agen- cy heads in Washington. Edwin Meese, who served as Reagan's staff chief through the 1980 presidential campaign and also when Reagan was governor of California, was asked at a news briefing whether there would be any holdovers from the Carter administration. "Out of humanitarian concern for a ll the time and effort .they've put in recently, W6 think the only decent thing to do is to allow them a well-deserved rest." Meese quipped. Although it is to be expected that most of the old order would be replaced in the transfer of power. past presidents have made it a practice to keep a few holdovers for unity 's sake, particularly those who may have their own powerful con- stituencies or whose jobs ate re- garded as non-partisan. With 99 percent of the pre- cincts counted, Reagan had 43 million votes, or 51 percent; Carter 34.7 million or 41 per- cent; independent John B. An- derson 5.5 million or 7 percent, 1tnd Ubertarian Ed Clark 1 lf)r· cent. That tr.anslated to 483 elec- toral vetes for Reagan, who led for 6 in Arkansas. the only slate still too cl0se to call. Carter had only 49. Reagan needed only 270 elec:· toral votes l9 win. (See aEAGAN, Page A.2) 1st District To Stanton In Big Upset By GLENN SCOTI' Of I ... O.ltJ ~ilel St.ff Rog ~r Stanton's campaign to exploit the legal problems or Orange County 1st District Supervisor Philip Anthony paid off Tuesday in a surprisingly strong' upset win. Stanton, a Fountain Valley ci- ty cowicilman. received 57,349 votes. or 56 percent. compared to Anthony's 4!>,708 votes, 44 per- cent, in final, unofficial results. Stant.on, 43, had neither the ~ampaign funds nor the political clout of incumbent An thony go- ing for him duriqs his cam- paign. But>·!le h•mmered away unceasingl7 at the three felony indict'tnents issued against An- thony on charges of launderinl' campaien funds in the 1976 elec· lion. ,_. <See STANTON, Page AZ) .c:; •Reagan ~I n Doubt Coast I ~ASS 14- fU. 4 c::::l CONN 8 - N.J.17- DEL. 3-M0.10c::J O.C.30 ALASKA 3- HAWAll 4~ Half Voters Stay Home NEW YORK (AP ) - Nearly half the nation's ell1ible voters did not cast ballots Tuesday, marking the fouith atrail)ll decline in turnout for a prealden· tlal e&ect.icm and tbe lowest tumoutln~fean. · An A11oclated Preu projection, bued oa the turDout with 95 percent of •11 preclncl• r.eportln1. put the estimated total Tote 1'mda)' •t approa· lmately M.t mlllloD of tile 1eo.1 lll1Wae penau of ........... &lie coatQ. Tbat ...... out to ..... perelllt tunlDul of.._. of ...,.,.,u.aow.tlaa n.UO.al.._..llMetlw Sl.1 5 t"'9CHlt for tit• -Dewey race la lHI. laia year'• •tlmated ttanOUt eom· ,. ............ Pel'C•t• ""· .. , ;.re..t ... ltTI. ....... , ...... wt 11.lpern•a.UM. " Weather Low clouds and fo1 nlabt and morning with hazy aunahlae Thursday afternoon. Lows t.onJ1bt 56 alon1 the cout, 12 inland. Hi&h• 'lbunday 88 to 72 at beaches, 11 to tl2 inland. IN81DETODA~ A PltUadllplda cop gf vfng dwf"f ~ a lalt c1'ac• at hopp•"•" llcu • .,.,. hit per__, -t/on• e%pllftd;ld fft. to a 70-IOOrker ftOfl·profU ~.S..,.AJ. I .~ I 68 Reagan in GouBty ·ay FaEDDICK 8C80S•llllL . ., ................. Oran1e County votera Uke Ronald Reaau -• lot. The R•pubUcan President· eaect 1arnered • percent of the votes cut in tbe county in the * * * ,.,..,. P•,,e ii I REAGAN ••• I Carter carried only the states of Rhode llland, Maryland, f1awail, West Virtinla, Georli• and Minnesota, and the District ol Columbia. Tbe race in Arkansas is undecided. Meese s aid Reagan would nlme his tr-.nsltion team at a news conference Thursday but tf'tat some talka, such as those ~th congressional allles and enemies, already have begun in ae effort to map a streteay for a smooth changeover. .,ffe also said there has been no a e re e men t th a t R e a g an representatives would be added t<t the administration team task force dealing with the hostage cgsis, but that he hopes some s ~ch arrangement can be worked out. ~Richard V. Allen, the senior fqreign policy adviser wbo re- siJned in the la.st week of the CJmpaign following published reporu that be had sought to use his job at the White House dyring the Nixon administration fcSr personal gain, returned to Ufe Reagan camp Tuesday night ai the election returns were pauring in. ~f!e was wearint a. Reagan sta1f pin, but Meese fefused to say whether he bad formally *n returned to the penonnel rotter. That "will be ·clarified" . at.· the news conference, Meese !;4Jd. tRichard Wirthlin, Reagan's c'-ief pollster a nd campaign strate&i't, llald the landslide for R.eaian was "a referendum ,on Jimmy Carte'r's leadership" and did not signify a realignment of preeldlltlll nee. Jimmy Carter 1ot U pere•t. Independent p,_ldlntlal upirut JC»U AD· denon 1alned only 7 pereeat ol I.be eoun&yvote. D...,tte the former California governor's landslide sbowinc. Hayd e n Urges ~ud~n~s·to Get Political tt•ditional Republican and By .JURY CLAUSEN [}jm()(ratic loyalties. 0t•D11MY"-'klff ·"I don 't believe we ex-Political activist Tom Hayden ·-ptf.rienced a party realignment told about 300 Orange Coast last nitht," Wirtblln told re· Colle1t stude9'ts ~day that • ..... porters. 1'However. we bruised their citbeosbip bu been re· aid cracked the Democrallc duced to voting every two or ccralition" that traditionally has four years for "prepackaged" inl:luded organized labor, the candidates controlled by the South , liberals. blacks and world's big corporations. ethnic minorities. He· urged them to change the Wirthlin said that based on his world through political activities · polling. the electorate's primary during the 1980s or. he warned, e • pectation "is th at the It will be too late. donom.y will improve and we Tlle co-founder of the wtll get inflation under control." s tatewide Camp a i g n for Reagan, who campaigned Economic Democracy, ap- againsl Carter's handling of the peared with fellow CED activist edonomy and against the notion Larry· Agran, lrvine City Coun- ttte nation's economic problems cilman, at a noon session were too COJ11plex to be solved, sponsored by the college's Aa- accepted bis victory 'Tuesday sociated Students. night by saying : Agran urged students to run 0 "1 aim to try and tap that for local political offices in an great American spirit that effort to take government con· opened up this completely un-trol from the "old men" of the developed continent from coast cold war era, including Gerald to coast and made It a great na-Ford, Henry Kissinger and tion." Ronald Reagan. -Reagan's press secretary, Lyn But Hayden, who unsuc - Nofz 'ge ho told _._ h cessfully ran for the U.S. Senate ~ 1 r, w · repo. u::rs e in 1976, indicated after bis talk msel! does not expect to go to .ashington, said the former that he may ne.v~r again run for governor of California plans to public office. remain in his home in Pacific "I still haven't decided," he ~lisades all dav. said. "I am politically in-,, volved," be added, gesturing ~ toward students who openly de· Wast Kills 7 bated with him following his ~ o speech oo the grusy quad. WINDHOEK, Soutb·West Hayden warned his audience rica CAP) ~ A landmine ex-that elaborate military weapons sion killed seven blacks, in· systems, such u the MX mls- uding three· children, near sile, should be abandoned and uth-West Africa's border with the flmda allocated to fe,eding ' gola, the South African Presa tJ!e bun,ry world. 1<~ciation reported. TW~ex· · Weapons, be said, will not in· ·~ wu ~unday, the press fiuence U)e ·world's hungry or oc1ationsa1d. the maaies seelling change Jor DAILY PILOT T1l191heftl (71•).,.._. ce111l*I M11111111111.....,. H rell1ioul or national reuoas. Food, a1rtcultural supplies and macbillery for awakemng nations are required, he said. County Vo te Falla Short; .. TV Bla m ed· Ttae Oran1e County voter turoout la Tund•y's 1eaeral election wu llilbtlY more than 11 per_., _...,al perceatqe poiD&I below the a percent that bad ..... ....-eted. "Orte factor blallMld by elecition odlciall for the lower turDoUt was the announ.cement by televlaton -Mtworb that Ronald Rea1an wu the W'bmer pnar to t.b~dolinl la Callfomia. , laid tbia __...celDIDt, plu1 ldeDt Carter'• eon· r::::;:, eo91d bav• eaued ..... to ... ~ --..................... !m"M ......... ,.~. IJl ~··" ... ,... ... . • f Orange County election ob· 1erven aald Tuesday nicht tbe)' were 1~ to see l\eqaa • take the lead aero.a the country at the rate be did. And' 1everal said they wen 6qually surprised -aad somewhat aniered -that Preli- den t Carter conceded defeat long before the polls in California had closed. Many vented their an1er at the television networks• decision to declare Reagan a winner prior to the polls closing. "Sure makes you think like your vote lsn 't worth muclt, ". complained one pe"°'1 awaiting the start of vote tabulation at'the county registrar of voters office. In other major contests. Orange County votera were de· cidedly 41 favor of Paul Gann, the Republican contender for one of the state's U.S. Senate seats. Voters gave Gann a 43,000- vote edge over incumbent Sen. Alan Cranston. the Democrat, in that race. However. Cranston won elsewhere in the state. ' Orange County "!Olers also didn't go along with many of the statewide propositions on the ballot. They went against Pro~ltion 10, the initiative to create smok· ing and ooo-smoktng sectiom in most public places; Proposition 8 on environmental safeguards relating to construction of the Peripheral Canal to tran.spo.rt wat.er to Southern.pamomia from the Sacramen..,, delta re· gion, and Proposition 1 to pro- vide bond financing for purchase of parklands. Orange County voters also re- jected Proposition 2, a bond is- sue to stem pollution of Lake Tahoe; Proposition 3 to create an insurance guarantee fund ; Proposition 4 to permit, subject to a two-lhlrd vote, use of prop- !'rlY taxes for capital outlays, and Proposition 5 to prevent re- evaluation of property when an owner Is fotced to rebuild because of a natural disaster. However, county v.oters favored Proposition 6, to reduce the size of juries in municipal court civil trials ; Proposition 7, to exempt properties froJJl re- usnament when sol..-beaUn• systems are installed l Proposi. lion 9, to permit use of bond funds to rehabilitate domestic water systems, and Proposition 11, to equalize salaries paid judges. STANTON • • Anthony has denie d any wrongdoing, and an indictment does not imply guilt. 84t Stanton nevertheless criticized Anthony for hi& "audacity" to seek re- election until charges stemming from his last campaign are cleared up. Voters in 'the predominantly middle.class district, which takes in Fountain Valley, Westminster, Garden Grove and parts of Santa Ana, gave Stanton the lead from the beginnin2, when absentee ballots were counted. He never lost it. Stanton stayed at home with his family and about 50 sup- porters to await the results. Their celebration began in earnest after about half· the votes ha8 been coud'ted. "I said during m~campaign that \he voters wanf' to start a new cbapttt," he said. "I mean it very sincerely and I think the ~l)lemean it very sincerely." A full-time management in· structo~ at Cal State, Long Buch, Stanton said be will seek a leave of absence from the col- le1e so be can take over his new of. nee at the county Hall of Ad· ministratiooonJan. 5. F ..... P -.Al FRIZZELLE early conceuion speech by Pmi· dent Cart.er. M •n1ers said Carter's re- marks, which came an boar before the polls closed in California , diacoura1eo Democrats from votma. "I was surpriaed tbtt the preti· -dent cared ao little fol' &be lower offices on the Democratic Ucket to make bis atatemeatl wbUe the raca were wide open. )(..,... J,llosa.id .... ., projec· tlODI by televlaioll networb may have Md• teWna effect. Democra...,beld a re1tstraUon ,, lead of Jmt a,ooo in the 18rd Dls- trlet. , rrtuelle • camp•ilD chalrnum, W• BaDDllter, cited tbe 1ucceuof'u effort to lnerMM rril..0.'1 name ldenuneaUon m tbeduartet. . _ He Mid tbe lmprcwed ...... eoupa.dwtua .. ., .. ·aeoetuMlf· , ......... u.. ........ .-1aa. .. dldeteovertliletc9\ . ' 'I CAN'T SAY IT OOE•'T HURT' Prealdent Cart9f Concede• Defeat Carter 'At Ease,' To Wr.ite~ MemOirs WASlllNGTON <AP l -Presi- dent Carter, the outsider who came to power four years ago only to be cast aside by a landslide, said today he feels "at ease," plans to write his memoirs and is determined to help President-elect Reagan in every way possible. In an interview with reporters in the Oval Office. the president also said losing was "not a pleasant experience." but he will be relieved to hand over the daily routine to someone else. Asked whether he intended to seek the presidency again , Carter replied : "That's a ques- tion I have not even dreamed about." Alter the SS.minute interview, the president and his wife Rosalynn Oew to their Camp David, Md. retreat to rest and ponder their future. Hundreds of aides, as well as Cabinet mem- bers. gathered on the Sout~ Lawn to see bim off. Carter said be will remain at the }lideaway for a week. except for brief trips back to the White House. "l really need to go off by myseU and think for awhile," Carter said. The president confirmed that he knew Monday night that he would lose the election by a wide margin. He mentioned several factors be believed coot.ributed to his downfall, among them the captivity of the 52 Americans in Iran, the economy, and allega- tions of impropr iety against some of his top sWf. ·'Obviously, the hostage issue was a factor, .but I can't say it was more important than the high interest rates," be said. He said he believed the dou- bling or imported-Oil prices last year was "one of the major ele· ments in the outcome of the elec- tion." Carter also said that with the e lection or a Republican-run Senate, he will not push for ratification of the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty. The president ~tinued today the conciliatory tone be set in his concession speech Tuesday night, saying he was sure Reagan "will do the best he can to carry out bis campaign pro- mises and to restore our nation's pre -eminence" in international affairs. Carter pledged to keep Reagan as informed as possible, giving him access to national security briefings. But be said: "I will be the president for the next 21h months." BJ DAYIDarnllANN .............. p .......... c.&ra1 ·g Coult Judie,,.. c. Teal.• . ,.,..... "'ao. ....... el•llt ,..... •• ......... .... - ly lnewnbent J~• to loae an Oranp County tbll year .._ voterJ pielled cb=r Babert E. Thomas in y•a 'elle- tlon. Final but unofficial returm showed 'lbomu, a deputy dil- trict attorney, beaun, Teal by about 3,000 votes ~ 50,Stt to 47 311. Teal's 1011 and· Santa Ana ..aawyer Bobby D. Youn1blood'1 victory over appointed Ceatn1 Municipal Court Jud1e Richard : E. Orozeo were the bluest 1ar-prtaes in the county's judicial elections. Youn1blood al10 shaded Orosco by about J,000 votes, 52,721 to•.•. In three countywide superior court races, three municipal · court Judges won election to the higher bench, edgin1 two deputy district attorneys and another judge. tt Teal surprisingly bad attract- ed more votes than Thomas in the June primary. A runoff bec!ame necessary when neither man could muster a majority ol the vote in the primary. Thomas had said durtn1 bis campaign for Tuesday's election that he picked Teal to run against because he did not respect him "as I do other Orange County judges." He also claimed Teal bad been in- decisive oo the bench. Teal bad won the endorsement of ·-Orange County Sheriff Brad Gates and Marsltal Don Rhea. Teal appeared a man defeated Tuesday night at a post-election party bolted at the South Coast Plaza Hotel by Robert Nelson and Associates, a political COO· suiting firm. The presiding judge sat sullen- ly at a circular table and con- fided to. at least one attorney that he was concerned about his future. In the race for superior court seat No. 11, North Orange Coun- ty Municipal Court Judge Robert Fitzgerald, a Corona del Mar resident, defeated Deputy District Attorney Robert Chat· terton, 323,147 to 275,968. The Fitzgerald·Chattert.on race attracted attention when it _ was revealed that Westminster obstetrlclan William Waddill was contributin1 heavily to Fitzgerald. The physician said he was do- ing it to beat Chatterton, the man who twice unsuccessfully prosecuted him for the death of a fetus that survived a saline abortion three years ago. ln the race for superior court office No. 8, West Orange Coun- ty Municipal Court Judge James Smith defeated a colleague, West Court Judge Ragnar Engebretsen, by a substantial margin -360,936 votes to 208,616. E xpan si-Off -· .. S ale LAST THREE DA Ysr· THRU NOVEMBE~ 8tt1 Greate•t Reductions Ever ! ! -·150'/o ;;509/o OFF $1 .cilJ,000 INVENTORY DRASTICALLY REDUCEDI I featuring: Drexel -Heritage -Henredon -Baker -Kargas -Sligh Desks -Schafer Brothers Leather -Classic Leather - Woodmark -Stanton Cooper -Ma(ge Carson -Cal Mode -Freemarc -Aireloom -Marbro -Stiffel -and much, much more! With the Holidays near -take advantage of this rare opportunityf • SPECIAL ORDERS· HONORED AT REDUCED PRICES. - BUSINESS / STOCKS NYSE COMPOSITE , CLOSING 113.15 •. Serious BoOks • Lost ID Shuffle By •ILTON MOSKO~ When everyone \>ellns to write about same thin1 a the aame time and everyone seema to rea h the same coa· clusion, you begin to wonder. One possibility: they're all wrong. This year bu seen a spate of articles on the bodit' publi5bing industry. They're all gloomy. They keep pop. ping up. Here's a recount (maybe you have seen others). : • -Lut June 17, the Wall Street Journal's Steve Wei~ reported on what he called "a small war brewlnl!~: between the in~pendent boobtores and the two f .. ~:­ growing national book chains: 8 . Dalton and Walden-· books. He quoted Joan Ripley, president of the American Booksellers Association and spokesperson for the indepen· dent stores, as saying: "The chains have an enormous amount of power. A very few people can determine w~ the American people will be reading, and I think that's scary." -Ed Cray, author of six books and a teacher at USC, picked up this theme in the Sept. 21 Los Angeles Times. He Money Tree cited critics who describe the new chain bookstores as "so many supermarkets. uninterested in anything but the.. quick sale." -James Wood, a writer and attorney, took up the cudgels next. In an essay in the September-October issue of The Center magazine, Wood bemoaned the con- glom erate takeover of publishing houses. Wood said that. the commercialization of the industry has brought boo. publishing to a twilight zone "where reflexive action give~ the illusion of life.·· -N.B. KLEIN FIELD, A New York . Times reporter. then came up to bat with a two-part senes on Oct. 9 .and 10. explaining that the publishing. indus~ry "~~s acquired the flavor of the high-slakes mov\e business. . He quoted George Borchardt, a literary agent. as saying: "When you're an author, people ask rou, 'Well, h~ve you made your first million yet?· That d1dn 't happen m the days o1 Hawthorne." -Finally, to WTaP it all up, Thomas Whiteside. a veteran writer about the business world, did a three -part series in the Sept. 19, Oct. 6 and 13 issues of The New Yorker. Subtitled "The Blockbuster Complex," Whiteside'l; articles ranged through all the trends in the book business -the coogJ.omerate takeovers, the rise of the bookstore chains, the hyping of best·sellers. · Some common threads run through these lament1. Publishin& companies are being taken over by co•- glomerates. The 10 largest publishers now account for $l percent of all hardcover sales. • .ftitorl.:. I• Tit#' .fiipo111,,111 NEW YORK IAPI· SMel. J p.m. Pf'fce •nd ne1 cf\tn91 OI tl'e 111 .. n mo\\ •ctl .. ,,,... 'l'o<k St«ll E•<M1>99 •UUH , lr•Olng Mtlonelly •I more 1i..n SI. 18 /'A 1,01•.JOO .. ..,. Untt Tedi 1•t. 100 SS"° Te-•co inc rll,900 .a RoCkwelllnt l nl,400 Jl Amer f4T 119,JOO •~ Mobil t.H.100 1He Gull Ott 614,100 42 AllRICll!I I 542.300 U 1,e Ret1tnPur S4t,700 tO•n Pll1il1K~I StT,.00 S4V, LTV Corp Sll.300 I•• ... c;.n Moton su.-SI~ Am•rHns 1 i11,G •11" M10So...U1 "2,900 ll~t Merrt11 Lvn m ,.oo u•.- Pct. Up lU Up IJ f Up 11.1 Up 11.J Up 10.• Up IO~• Up HU VP 10.1 Up 10.1 Up 10.0 UP •• Up '·' Up 9.• Up 9.• Up 9.• Up 9.< Up t ,J Up 91 Up e.• . l.wrfran L#'ad#'r,t; .tl••lnb '-... ,, Olt• CMh .t llOU"O. 6\ O.ttiM Oont... •• LH414SCMIHpovncl r Zhtc.J711J..Ji'1Junn• pc>unO, O.flvttf<I. •. Thi JI, 1'3, Mel•IS Wtek <GmPOSolo lb .,...,.,_.,,,.ctntupound, N v Met'Clfrt'°'lO.OOper lle1k. l"l•tl-$651·-llroYor N Y SUr.-r Due to late transmisslft\- today's listing will nbl· appear in the Daily Pil ~· Gold QuofationJI ' L ....... : "'°'"'"II ll11no $6SS,OO. up '6 •• .....-: .tlle,,_., lt"'r>Q '651 00, up~ l" .. rll: ~ ll•lllQ '6S..l f. UP '4 JI \ l'r...-twt:lmnQ\4SS .... uPM<fi I b rlcll: '6.S4.0011<<1, uP l9 00, 56S1 00 •Jllla. H•• Y•rll: H•nOy 4 ... ,,,,.n ...... morn1no 56.Sa.OO. up '6 00 H•• Y-: EnQ9111<trO 1e111119 P"U "''°" morn1no 16.S2.00, uP 56 00 New 'I'-: Env-l~uo l•b,.coled ..... mo0·~"'"9 561•.12 ~= t;1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ UP ... S11•bol• VP l.S Up l.S VP U Pct. Off IS.l Off 9.1 Off 1.0 Otf .., OU t.2 °" s.1 Off u Off u ()ti s.o Off ... Off •• , i()ti tl I •.> I U ~ !j Off u Ott u Ott u g:: t1 s:: t.~ d ,..,.., vut•y IOw v ~_.,.. •••••..., r1tor1 Unit\\ ot,,.rw1w notf'Cf r•tt\ ot 01~ •rt .,.nu•I d•\bv•~mf'~' ~ .... °" f -v•fft"• ttr ,,.,, •f\'hl•J df'Cf•r ScMt••l or t1ttr• O•••llP"<h Of' 0t,m., Of'\•9f"•ftO ~ rf'C)vlM ''" 10Pn1tf1•d tollow1no tool"<>1•' • Aif\.O t1U(tt 0' ''''•\ o An"u•• "' 'lot Ill O•-•Of"CJ ( flO"•d•t•nq 01w1 8:!::;:: ':, o:~d'"J.~';~:\ ·~.~ 'Oh' VO • P•'d tflM\ f't•r O•w•Ofif\CI Otlf>Hff Ot ftO Mt•on .... .., •t 1(1'\I d ::,:~:~t:. ~~,~.: ~::.:~~ .,.~·~ n Nt'ft 1\\W-t 0.t1••'1S Ot O.•O•n O't 1J ntOf"lf'-\ Ohi\ "0<k d1w1~nd I P \tot,. '" or•t,.dtf'WI tJ montP'I\ ,,,. <•\I\ ,...,..,.Of\•• C11w10t-~ Of •• O•\lr Clelt • 1 d•v•clirftO Of t • ,.9"'' ' E • dt ~o \41t\ '" tvU 1 ~''' '" tt.;t1 t fd C•lttd we~ 01,1r1~1 .. o •• t\\wtO •• \llltll\ *'''•"h '"" ••"•"" •0•\ l • ct•\trt0wt10f\ P l t •tt0 Tnt-0'''~ Of t11 \IO< m_,u.pt• ot f:' \h.er• • .,"."'' Ot'• ~~w;'r.~' ~~t-:•~~ 1J mo-"tn _.,,n,no\ +Iii! ., ... . .... . :: ... _ ·,.,.., ..... ......... ~ .... -a.. 9'GW1t .. ut~ 10 N 40TP"' IO ... ~-~ IOf\t (P_,. 1) THI..,......._ . "8-tierlnO 1n Lo.,.·· (Pen eooonia ~It'-10 con· J.,.... Iha! he ltloUid Tanna Targeted • Ooc;tOf fOf l\le llMd· achM and emollonat oul· but It&. • c.c:e<OAVETT . GuMI: Rey 8t!Mlt>ury. IP11tl 2ol 2) Lome Greene guests as a gambling king who has Dan Tanna <series star Robert Urich} shanghaied on the two-hour pre- miere of "VegaS" tonight at 9 on ABC , Cha nnel 7. ' ·• ~1 cbHrACT (") C;J ()) t.e•A•a•H ,.Frank Is a ntagonlallc towar<I a wounded Norll'I '1<oraan olllcer who cSMerlt>u hla own Injury .and correctly dlagnoaea · the woun<la ol •other 'pallenll. .g ~MILLEA 1~9 cea..ws • HeC..WS 9 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN \ " Fonzie latla tor a woman whoae fife canter• around • OYP EA8Y GuHls: ac1reu Glorla Swanaon, Newaweek's lk\anclal columnlal Jane Byrant Quinn. CMf N11taal. i MACNEIL I LB4MR ~ Cl) TIC TAC DOUCIH QJ) MPVGNFf* GuHla:' Cheryl Tiegs, Btooke Shlelda, Shelley Smith. M~ MazzOla, Nonnle Moore. Shaun CaMy. Chrlsllna Ferrar•. lhe city's country clubs.el ~. MCNEWI 7:IO 8 I OH THI TOWN JOKEA'8WIU> • M0 A•&•H Hol Lops• mysl8flOUI dla. ;!.app9&r&nee 10 dlaturbs Frank lhal he all<>Ols B J whole preparing IO -Ch the Jungle lor the mlaalng nurM :;e IAMTTA c Bllfella'• glrtlrlend •• killed con order• from an ;,underworld bon. and Bareua Is determined 10 naot him "A Country MuSIC Special" The 1'9Union of Hometown Jambotff: Melody and St-reYlew clipe from the 11151 show at El Monte Stadium. I FA*.YFEUO IHANANA G~: J-Oetren 8 HOUYWOOO ~ I FACE THI MUM: ALL IN THE FAllML Y Archie and Ed•lh are ~ Claa1u1rl Llstl•fl• " 8 KNXT (CB S) Los Angelt1s J D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles g ICTLA (Ind) Los Angeles t> • KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles '°' Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego -,1 flJ KHJ·lV (Ind) Los Angeles Ji al KCST (ABC) San Diego l> • KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeles ?' • KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles I, • KCET· TV I PBS) LOS Angeles f. I.!) KOCE·TV(PB S) Huntington Beach i!" ll>ocked when they learn lhal Mtke an<! Glori• have deelded to leave ~ wtlh frlen4a In the -1 ol their de•lhL 1 .MM:Na.I~ MPOM Ii> UW FROM THI ~AH "Manon L&ICllUI" 1 Rfwl•lo Sootto. Placido Domingo. PablO Elvira and ' ~ato Capecchi are leatured In Puoclnl's vibrant o'pera taped at the Me1rop0lltan Opera Holda In Mllfeh, 1080. J-Levine\ con- duc:ll the Metropolitan Opera OrchMtra Cl) P.M. MAGAZME "Aul People" star Sarah Purcell: hOw atr-v1e11m1 are coping a.«18 Cl) THI OUK.II ~ HAZZAM> I Enoe II ottered a tob *Ith Ille Los Angelee Police Oepat1men1 aller he makes MadllnM by acci· dentally nabbing • pair of crimlnall D MAL.~ Featured: 1119 woman wflo ...... YOled ''Bell W•·"- ln America" by 7,000 truckers: a midget Michel- angeto; • chimp lhll drtve1 a tractor and leed1 cows. D 8TARIKY AHO HUTCH • Slartky and H\llch go vnOerCOVtw In LU Vegas 10 find a killer who 11"91" out beautiful Chorus glrla u hts vic;llm1 (Pan 1) u:-· Mlllll• .,........ ,...,..,. ......... ..-In .. ................... ................ to'• .,.. ,_. _,.. ' •·:..& • • -"Oetll Vlctcwy" ,,.., ..... oa•. a-,. 9tttM. ...... • WOIMll ..... .... ~-.~---°'"' Ir ...... btllln condition. ... ..,_ "**'-trom IN dCICtor the mMrlM. (2 "'8.) . , ....... ..,.... A .,..... to tN Mt of "Pfl. vele a.":-'-str-lllc- lllM -coplno; a.I Tall -.. lilt!: Or. w~ on ll'llerO -gery tor bKlt ~ ~ Jillaoll °" ..__and,__ ....... . ,.,. • • * "Flral'' ( 1977) e,.,.., l orgnlne. Ver• MMe9. To <ll¥ert .nemlon from hla eac-c>e ~ • convM:l•lgnllea • blu. IMI ~ • raging lcweat fire ltw..unlng a an\911 town In Oregon. (2 h<L) • •TONIGHT "Public: Sc:tloota" Hoel ClJI w-~the apeclal nMCI• of the Mndlcaopped and "Engllah·At·A·Sec· ond Language" atudenta. (parl 2 01 •1 e:ao. CWQ. IUflHETT AHO .,.,.,. • WON..D IPECW. "The lslamlc Bomb" The tlory of hO* the Paklttanla -• able 10 obtain nuele- ar tect>nolo{iy trom IN! West and tonanclng from . Libya to t>utld the firtt lllamlc t>omb '' documanl· ed t:OO 8 Cl) MOVIE * * • "Love Al Flr51 Bile" ( 1978) George Hamilton. Sust11 S..,,I J-. The world'• most lamous vam- pire gives up hd -oil• tlands when he tall• In loYe with a *ackY New Y0tk IUhlon model. 8 NeCMOVIE "Alcatraz: The Whole Shoclung Story" (Prem- iere) A.rt Camey. Telly Sava.las Clarence C.rnes. a man wtlO was Mntenced to ttte lmprlM>nm41r11 al the age of 16. Is _,, to Ale•· ttu after _., flliled eacape eti.rnpta. (Perl 1 I • 8TARIKY AHO HUT'CM Staraky and Hutch discov- er that the ~ey 4uspecl In !heir cue la • former ciaaam11e 'l' Hutcn·s (Part ;.111 V£OAI (Seuorl Premoerel 011n le kidnapped by an intern•· uonal gambllng r"'G and brainwashed 10 k1N h1s number one client. Philip Roth TUBE TOPPERS ' # C~ a 9:00 -"Love at First Bite." Georae JlamJlton goes on the town in Manhattan u a transplanted Dracula in this movie comedy . witt\ Susan Saint. James. <Seephotobelow). NBC e 9:00 -· "Alcatrai: The Whole Shocking Story.'' Art Camey and Telly Savalu star in thla new TV movie about a youth sent to "the Rock" at the age of 16. 1 I C~911:30 -Campaign '80: Post-. Election Report. Walter Cronkite and the CBS news staff analyie the results of Tuesday's election. • tllPN °"""" Guaata· Cherv• roeg•. 8'oolle Shteld1, Shelley Smith Michele Mauola Nonnie Moore. 8ha1.1n Caaey. CllrllllM Ferrllf• HO. IOHQ ~THE CIMNf'( An e,Um1na11on of rne dan- ~ous WO<lllnQ oondltlons lflal Americ:.na ... aub· jecl.o 10 e.....y day .. pre- aerlled 111 th11 apeclal 0..1- lng wtlh lhe controver11a1 eubiacl of occupallonal hNllh. tO:OOla ..ws NATIONAL ..WS 1c>.t0·~ "Travelers' Tales" Of. Cart Sagan re-c1eatea the HOI· land of Chris11aan Huygens'• llme and takes viewers lnaode the Jet Pro- pulllcin L•l>Ot atory O 11:00 ••• Cl) (1JJ Ntw8 e ..auvwooo ~ ... I NEWLYWED GAME t.e•A•s•H Col Poller learna that neo- •ltV4 reports regarding l'llm I and the 40771h have reached Seo<.il • ONE 8TE1' BE'(ONO "Ordeal On lOCU91 Slreel' Anna 1nvt1ea n.. foance Danny. tor dinner He's lhe ltrtl outl>Oer lo v1Sil 11\e house111ayeM JOHN DARLING ~o LE'T'6 se.e.. WHAi 11:IO. CAMPAJON 'IO: H>eT.aacTION "90RT An ln-dec>lh ana~oa ol alec:Uon rnutu an<I a look at the llllUf'• tmp11Catoon1 '°' lhe ll'eaodency an<I lhe Congtna Wiii be pt-I· ad D TONICMfT Host Johnny Carson. G~t A,,... Dldoonson. Calv on T rollon M•cnael Prttchar<I " PNSOHE.A= CEU. I IU)Cf( H Pat IS releaaed from Went· • worth •n<I reun11ec:1 w.lh I he< ~noldr.,, 8 (I)) A8C NEWS a olJN8M()t(E I Thi! son or a wealthy I rancher escapes trom prl.. j' on and tS captured by a bounty hunter who a11emp11 lo btackma1l the youth's family ti) HOGAN'S HEAOU A Rua..an v1r1ually US41res Hogan's oeath by one 01 nra own sa1>o1aoe bombs • IT TAKES A 1"IEF At Mun<!y eompelea wtlh , an tnterMtional lenc;e 10 olMIHn a stolen l/Nly fl) '1i) CAPTIONED A8C HEWS -MINGHT ~ 12.-00 D rMUOHT ZONE Ol<I 8en hat the Slranae l'IP M INNIE: CAMf;RON HAS ~ U5100AY! powr to olwlf9 ....... Imo ~,,..,..._, he--.YOUlmT~UN ~ ....... ,..... . prot1111ao111 *'-* Ind pot amok•' • fatn.ie body· builder 8"CI t Mtttne -· ~r.~ GuMla; Rob Keck, ,_ lltN world champion tut· key cMIM: ~Ing ~­ nial Pierre Franey • • "°"" • * * "Marn.ge Ot1 The Roc:b".(19651 Fr•nk Sina. tra. 0.l>orlh ~r. While on vacation. a lover'• qu.,rel wfn<11 up In dlvoroe with the wffe merryjng her 11umano·1 W.1 f(lefld t 1 ht.,55m1t1.) e a LOYE80AT ''Meuage For M _ _, .. Bteflda Bene!, 8t11 Bl•by: "The Acapulco Connec- lton" Cf!Mo. "GolCl'la" Mil· ton !*le (RI a ntt,... . "How To Murder An Iron Horse" • Mtlll()N: ~ T.... IMF triee 10 llMO a man 1r1 prison toog enough lo mllke 11 loOtl as tll<>ugn he· s breaking out • NATIONAL N1W8 1:00m MOVIE • • "The Creature's Revenoe" (1971> Kent Tay· lo( Grant W111oams An American <IOCIOt ploll lo transplant the bfaln of • M1<1d1e Eastern dlelalor f 1 hr. 30 mm) 1:06 1) MOW * * * "Rutttle&S . ( 19•81 Zachery Scoll. Diana Lynn An ambotoous businessman !ors.lees his lam1ly and happiness lor wccess (2 nrs . 10 mtn) UO flJ THE LONE RANGER • t.tOVIE I * * * ·~ "Pat Joey ( 1957) Frank Sinatra. Rota Hay. · I worth Bas.ed on • Broad- way play by Rodgers & Hart ana a novel by JOhn O'Hau A wealthy 10C1a1t1e finances a nigntclut> tor an entename1 wno falls for a lovely cnorus girt f 1 hr •5 m1n 1 1:40U NEWS T••rsda8'• Da1111-. Mo.,ln '':00. * ~ "lhe Stw Pacllet .. (It,.) John W.,.ne. Verne Hiiie A tough cowboy · depulliH a group of rancher• lo round up • gang of outlawl ( tlw.) -AFTERNOON------ 1~ • • * •1 "The Strawt>erry Blonde" (19• 11 Jamea Cagney, Alla Haywotth Aller marrying hit -wi ChOIOe lor a bride, a man <l1SCOver1 lhol he Is beller oil (1 hr . 50 mtn I II) • • "Dragoon Wells M11ucre" (19571 Barry Sulllvan. Dennis o ·Keefe An 1ll·assone<1 group ol men 11 lr&ppe<l In a SIOCk· •de wn11e an Apache anack 11 gathering on the h0<1zon f2 hrs ) 3.00 (])) • •'•"Unwed F11her" I 1974) Jowpn Bo11om1, Kay Lenz A youn9 man lights to gain CUSIO<ly OI h11 11190111ma1e chtld ( 1 hr • JOmtnl S:30 0 **'••"Koss Tne<n F0t Me" ( 19571 Cary Grant. Suzy Parker A lrto of Navy olltGers on sno.e teave in San.Francisco t.nd that 11·s a prelly friendly town alter meehng up ""''" • couple OI realty t>eau11lul girls (2 hrs I #;BS Delivers ItS Sunday Punch, Regains Lead NtW YORK CAPl -Led by las~eason's top-rated program, "6i 1 Mi nutes ,·· C B S r e · e s t •b Ii s h e d S u n d a y n i g h t donfinance durin g its s elf- prottaimed Premiere Week and won, t he ratings race by a com- f o r\,.a ble margin over ABC. fig~es from the A.C Nielsen Co.~owed. 'GJJNGA DIN' l 'l Q}IAKE SUTED ~LLYWOOD (AP) -Stuart WhUian, now filming "Butter· fly ,rr, will produce a remake of "G•gaDin." ~ Rudyard Kipling classic wa~ilmed in 1938 with Cary Gr , . Douglas Fairbanks Jr. an~ ictor McLaglen. Whitman. wbq. plays one of the major roles, acquired the ri&ht from the Na- tiou l Historical Trust of Entland. l ( C BS s potted a h a lf-dozen s hows among top 10 in the week ending Nov. 2. including four from the network's Sunday night lineup -"60 Minutes" in first place, "Alice" fourth, "The Jef- fersons" fifth and "Archie Bunker's Place" tied for sixth. ABC, OFFERING Premiere Week programming of its own, had two shows in the Top 10, in- cluding "Love Boal" in third place, while NBC. which began its 1~81 season Sept. 15, also listed two. CBS' rating for the week was 19.8, to 18.3 for ABC and 16.5 for NBC. The networks say that means in an average prime-time minute during the week, 19.8 percent of the nation's TV· equipped homes were tuned to CBS. was 26.6. Nielsen s ays that .means of all the homes in the country with television, 26.6 per· cent saw at least part of the newsmagazine. An NBC movie, ''The Gauntlet ," with Clint Eastwood, finished second for the week. CBS did particularly well with two movies and a s pecial. "The Jayne Mansfield Story" tied for sixth place, with another made· for-TV docudrama, "Rape and Marriage: The Rideout Case," 11th. and the latest production in ."The Body Human" series, on sexuality, 17th. OF THE NEW series in- troduced ln the A BC -CBS Premiere Week. CBS' "Ladies Man " was the highest-rated. tied for 26th, with "It's a Liv- ing" on ABC tied for 38th. and ABC's "I 'm a Bje Girl Now" '42nd. highest·raled shows· "60 Minutes." with a rating of 26.6 representing 20. 7 m illion homes, CBS: Movie "The Gauntlet," 25.1 or 19.5 m111ion. NBC: "Love Boat," 24.5 or 19.l million, ABC: "Ali ce," 24.3 or 18.9 m illion. and "T he J ef · fersons," 24 or 18. 7 million. both CBS; Movie -"The Jayne Mansfield Story." and "Archie Bunker's Place," both 23.7 or 18.4 million. both CBS : "Little House on the Prairie." 23.2 or 18 NBC kicked off the season in mid-September with a five-part miniseries, "Shogun," despite the actors' strike that began in July. The network won the rat· ings race four times in six weeks, and maintains a substan- tial lead over ABC and CM for the period from mid-September to t~e present. 'l'he presidential debate broad· "IT'S MY TURN" dst by all three networks was not sponsored and th.l's not in-Clll eluded in the ratings . I' _=-::i Three of the five lowest-rated 11PllVA TE 1111 9rograma lor thew~ were pres-IBUAMIM"' .l~ential spots, the exceptions clsi NO. 1 rtnish in ttre-tatest survey was the network's first since the week ending Oct s. beln1 .NB~'s "Smothers ·1 · NT Brothers Special" ~na an NBC 'THE ll!llHA News-special report, "The ... MAN 1N1 Hostages," No. 61 for the week. The rating for "60 Minutes" , H e re::r a re t he week's 10 ''THE EMPtRI!' ll'OI 1 8TRIK!8 BACK' ~ -lllO ...... - Korman]oim Conway's Show · I HOLLYWOOD (AP> -1taneJ Korman bu been 1iped to 1tar weekly with Tim Conway oa 0... CBS "Tim Conway Show." B. Donald Grant. pr'OIJ'aaun&n; vice pntldlAt. 1ald, "We're dell1btec1 to have t.heH \wo top ~ u n workln1 toptber. Tbeir comecfy talenta provldM U, of tM hicllli1bta of 'TIM Carol Burnett Show.'" 1 • Korman, •ho won four Eamy!A•arda on the Burnett 1how, will belin Oil~ Conway ahow ln Nctvember. Conway aaid, "Han•y ltill wa me money, aJld be proatlMd it OU~ of b1i flnt payclMek.'• ; l , • ~l'Dnkite Tunu 64 million, NBC. and "Dallas," CBS. and "Three·s Company," ABC. both 23 1or17.9 million. The rest of the Top 20: Movie -"Rape and Mar· riage: The Rideout Case," CBS: "Eight is Enough," ABC: "Fan- tasy Island," ABC. a nd "M-A- S-H," CBS. tie : "Real People ... NBC. and "The World 's Most Spectacular Stuntmen.·· ABC. tie ; "The Body Human · The Sexes IL'' CBS. and Movie - "Father Damien: The Leper Priest Jnd .. A Lucille Ball Special, .. both NBC. and "That's lncredJble," ABC. three-way lie from bobys11ting to window washing the classified Service Oirec1ory helps you find help. Consult the Service Oirec1ory in rhe classifieds of the DAILY PILOT