HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-11 - Orange Coast Pilotea aces et cut ---·····-·,.·· __ ,, .... .. ....
Proseeution mon't ask
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 11, 1980
Akaia death penaltu
VOL 7J, NO. lt6, t MCTloetl, a l'A•al
' \
• • • •
•
1 Coast boating indus • SID • g?
Murder trial
Alaia spared
death: penalty
BJ DAVID KUTZllANN
Ot ti• o.lty f'IMe IU!f The Orange County Superior
Court murder trial of Dr. Louis
Alaia or Huntington Beach
opened Monday with a surprise
announcement by the prosecu-
tion that it would not seek the
death penalty against the promi-
nent orthopedic surgeon.
Deputy District Attorney
Richard Farnell told reporters
outside Superior Court Judee
Reagan faces
• campaign vow
to cut budget
WASHINGTON (AP > -
Democrats on the House Budget
Committee moved today to give
President-elect Reaaan the op-
portunity -and the obli&ation
-to live up. to bis campaign
pledge or cutting federal spend-
ing.
Rep. Robert N. Giaimo, D-
Conn .. the committee cbaimian,
formally proposed an acroas-
the-board 2 percent spending
cut as part of the bindina federal
budaet ceiling for fiscal 1981. He
denied a Republican leader's u -
sertioo that the move amounted
to political trickery.
It would be up to Reagan to
decide bow to mate the cuts
after be takes office in January..
"Adoption of my amendment
would &Dow the new president
tbe opportunity to present bis
proposed cuts to the new
Conareu ID January.·' Giaimo
said Monday. "U be were unable
to acbleve these cuts, pre-
sumably be would ut for an hr·
create in the apendln1 celUn1."
But Giaimo aaJd tbe ac:doo
waa not intended to emba.rrau
Rea~, who pledCW durtnc bis cam~ to cut speodinc.
•'I m not interested in callinc
the pswident's bluff," Giaimo
1ald. "I'm lntereated in 1etttns
eontrol of spend.ins ... I'm not
trrlnl to be ¥indictlve." llep. Jamea R. Jones, D-Okla.,
a eontmder to replace the retir·
h•I Giaimo as committee
clWrman in the next Con1n11,
called tbe I percent cut hqv.tte a
( ... Til ClJ'I', Pa1e Al)
FAlaeatlon firet
IOHANNESBURG , Bou~
Africa (AP> ...-South Africa'•
wbJ .. a.rttf llOrirmnftl u-llOUDeed t.adaJ that lt .. ......
lllnl • ......-• ol eom&:-" ..S.e .... IOr ....... Int Um• tD tbJ1 ra4lt·••1repW
C!OUDb'7 Ill J~
'
Byron McMillan's Santa Aiia
courtroom that aft.er reviewing
the case, he haa decided not to
ask for the maximum penalty •
should a jury convict Alaia for
the slayings of his ex-wife and her
presumed lover.
Farnell said his decision was
based on a "combination of
various considerations," includ·
ing the circumstances of the
case and the physician's
personal background.
"We ~gbt that (not seeking
the death penalty) was the ap-
propriate action to take," the
prosecutor said.
However. Farnell said special
circumstance allegations that
could have led to imposition of
the death penalty wiH remain in
force. This means should Alaia
be convicted of first-degree
murder for either or both of the
deaths, he could face life im-
prisonment without possibili\Y of
parole.
Alaia, 5-0, is cbar1ed with
fatally stabbine bis former wife,
Margy Lou Alala, and Long
Beach attorney Marvin Tincher
last June 13 in the woman's ex-
pensive . Huntington Harbour
home.
The physician bad gone to the
home that evenin1 to pick up bi1s
two pre-teen children for a
weekend visit, but. an ar1ument
ensued during which Alaia al-
legedly seized a ldtcben lmi.fe
and attacked bis ex-wife and
Tincher.
Witnessing parts of the at-
tacks were the two children, wbo
will be the prosecution'• key wit-
nesses.
The defenae, however, con·
tends the pby•iclan wu tem-
porarily inune at the Ume, due
in part to their client's use of the
medication Ritalin.
Alala purportedly suffers from
a dlleue known u nar~le.,.y, <See AIAIA, Pale AJ)
Baby killed
in' car crash
EL VERT A CAP) -A mother
Iott control of her car wblle try.
in• to swat a wup that wu bov-
erln1 near Mr baby. crublne
the car Into a pole and kill1nc
the baby.
Tbe Cal~fornla Hl1b~ P~roJ Ntd It happened on
Street la J:lverta, Sacramento
County.
Pl••·moatb-old Leab Rodrl·
q\a.1 WU prooouaeed Med on
arrl•al at ll::L laa luao HeePltal. n. r, Deborab ROlrique1, 1'1, of &lverta ln . 1aen..-eo.1, wu UuWd ---:-~· .
"' -
Mesa of the fut1•re?
This is an artist• s conception of the proposed
rapid transit line on Bristol Street going
through the South Coast Plaza area. The
rapid transit line would tk elevated in some
areas to allow street traffic to flow smoothly
<see story. Page A3).
\
Teen blocks heavy tire
Heroics save troman's life at race car event
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(~P) -Eighteen-year-old Erik
Raymond dld1ft know Donna
Altiere when be threw himself in
the path ol a ~pound Ure hurtl-
ing up at her. Now the mother of
four filbta back tean as sbe sJta
at tu. bedside.
Raymond has beep un-
conscious since the Ure, knocked
free in a race car collision and
speedinc at an estimated 10
mph, bit him ln the bead Satur-
day.
"He wu willin1 to live bi.I Ute for mine. I can't pick words out
of my heart to detcribe' what
tbU boy bu done," said tbe aWJ
shaken SS.year-old Mn. Altlere
after visiting him at tbe ba.pital
Monday.
'Ebe t.een·a1er'1 mother, Mn.
Earl Raymond, aaid 1be wun't
surpriled by her only cblld'1 act.
"We've tried fo,ralle blm that
way -to think nm of otber peo-
ple, not of himself," •be said u
sbe waited for word from doc·
ton on test.a done on ber aon.
"I'm very proud and very
heartbroken, too," 1al4 lln.
Raymond, her voke craettns.
"l(y God ii ta.ldq care of thit. I
Cocaine aeised
8DIJCIA (AP) -Pov ..... uve MID arreated and fciw
pouadl ol ..... 9llMd Wlow·
lq. n. ...... llnlllia•
don, pollee .ut lloelar.
have the utmost faith in him."
Mrs. Altiere, whose own 18-
year-old son drives at the track,
was sittina beside Raymond on
the top row of bleachers at the
Sunshine Speedway when two
cars collided, Jarrin1 loose a
wheel.
The tire wu burled 30 feet into
the air and spun over a 15-foot
protective fence toward the
spectators. Wltne:aaes estimated
·it was travelln1 at 70 mpb.
·'I froze. I aa" the tire co~ at me," Mn. Altlere said. "I
said to myself, 'This is it. Thia is
Gang attacks
bus driver
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A
youth aanc beat a city bu•
drlver and ticked him ln the
eyes with steel-Upped boots, police aald, when be refuted to
accept a week-old traufer.
The driver, WtWam H.. Pond,
and a ~er quietly hopped
into a DOltci car alter U,. attack
ln the Sumet dlltrtct and 1potted
twp ot tbe yOU$hJ, hlcludtnt a
15-year-old boy who offt~n ta)'
••• tbe tmttaator. Tb• boy wu arrest.cl al'tM a foot chaM that
led to 0ce-. ~aeb; tbe otber
oat eeea,..S. A IMODd tMn·qw ... .,,...... ...... ln .... SunMt
dl1tiict boml.
'\
your ticket out:..it•s the end.'
Then, Erik was there. He cov-
ered me lite a blanket.''
The wheel smashed· into
Raymond's bead and slammed
him face -down into the
bleachers . He stopped
breathing, Mn. Altlere said, but
two men from the crowd revived
him with heart maasa1e and
artificial resuscitation.
No ooe wu injured in the car
colllsion.
Raymond sustained a con-
cussion and severe bead injuries
and was in serious condiUoo.
There were no early •llDI of
brain dam11e, but doctors
weren't sure lf be would be
permanently lmpaiJ'ed.
''Today, everytblns you bear
la blood and tutl, rapea and
murders, what people -teen·
a1en -do Wl"OQI, not wbat they
do rl1ht," lln. Altlere said.
''Tb•n you see aomethina lite
tbl1 -what thll boy bu Sinn
up. It doeln't aeem fair.
"lly heart ta broken for WI
boy. I owe him my Ute and l
know there'• no way to pay him t>.ck~"
Skdie in typhoon
MANILA,Pbl.UPOlJMl(AP)-
Typhoon Betty left M people
dead and N othert ml11la1
and ama,. •Umated at _..
U.u Mpa.UUon, aut.hor1U• aald.
Gloomy
• picture
painted
By ALMON LOCKABEY Deity""'---.."'"-Oranp County's marine iD·
duatry, once the larsest in the
UnJted Statea, la like a founderint
abJp and ft will take all bands oo deck to11velt.
That wu the gloomy ptdutt
sketched Mondax_by Fifth Dis·
trict Supervisor Tom Riley in a
talk before t.be Orange County
Coast Association in a luncheon
meeting at the Newport Inn in
Newport Beach.
But Riley wasn't teUlng the in·
dustry people anything they
dido 't already know. primarily
that Florida is rapidly keel-
hauling Orange County a nd
Southern Calllomia communities
as the boating capitol oftbe U.S.
The only salvation -and quite
possibly a slow one -Riley said,
would be the development of new
marinas and marine facilities
along the Orange Coast.
He specifically mentioned the
proposed Bolsa Chica Marina at
Huntingtoo Beach which would
provide an estimated 1,800 slips
for boats, and the proposed
marina at the mouth of the Santa
Ana River capable of handling
2,000 more.
Riley said there are also
possibilities of additional sites in
Upper Newport Bay, barring
technical problems posed by en-
vironmentamts and others.
Directing his remarks to
several governmental leaders in
the audience, Riley said:
<See BOATING, Pa1e AZ>
Coast
Weather
Fifty percenl chance of
rain tooi1ht, 30 percent
Wednesday morning,
clearing Wednesday after-
noon. Lows toni&bt in the
50s. IDgbs Wednesday in
the 60I. ...
INSIDE TODA"
Tlwfl orw tlw ka.tt o/ t"-
do1'Qhbolll, the v~~ of
World War I , .and toda~ bc'°"f' to tlwm. Tlw agmg
HUroftl celebraff A"""'ict
Oaf. S.. F«Jl:wtltg, Page CJ.
l•tlex
Out of the past
to its original state after it was recovered
from an Icelandic river where it made an
emergency landing 40 years ago.
• Technicians work on the last rema~g
N-3PD at the Northrop air craft factory in
Hawthorne A task force of 300 volunteers
spent 150,oOO hours refurbishing the plane -~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Second v.ictim
identified in
l<>r so niurders
LONDON <AP> -Police have
1dentifiC'd the s<•cond or two male
b<>dies found dismembered in
'>\•pa rate London murder cases.
Th e\' said he was Donald
.lust'ph Ryan, 49, an unemployed
n•sident or south London's Cam-
nn~ ell district
Rvan·s torso was round in a
plasti<' bag in a rubbish bin at a
dump His head and limbs had
Ileen <'rudely hacked orr. police
,aid A lip led poli ce to the
,1par1 ment block where parts of
I hP body were found
Thrtt men and a woman were
ck tained for questioning' police
> .. 11d
The the second case, a man
\\ ;,1s being questioned in connec·
tion with the dealh of 77-year;ald
wirlowcr Sam Dens low, whose
head was found buried in the
r.arden o f hi s home in
Wimbledon. His body was dis·
c•o vi>red tn his bedroom
S trike delays
,,,SA flights
SAN DIEGO (AP) Pacific
Southwest Airlines, shut down
hy labor problems for six weeks.
:-..Jys nights might not resume
f<Jr another two weeks after only
five C>f about 500 striking pilots
<:rossed picket lines.
l'SJ\ chief operating orncer
I' 1ul Barkle) would not predict
how soon its jetliners would be
put back. into the air, but said it
could tx· as late as "next w~k
or the wet!k after."
Meanwhile, Bryan Conn,
Southwest Flight Crew Associa·
lion president. said lhe move by
a h andful or the union's workers
to return to work Monday
... howerl that PSA had "absolute-
ly m1sJudged the soUdarity and
strength" of the union. PSA , in
fin attempt to end the 47-day
strike. last week orrered retroac-
t 1 ve pa} to any pilots and fight
~nginecrs who returned before 5
µ m l''riday
(}uake hits islands
GOLDEN. Colo. (AP> -Of.
f1cials at the U.S. Geological
'iurvey Center said a strong
earthquake shook the Priroce
Edward Islands region south or
Africa today. The earthquake
registered a 6.9 on the Richter
o;cale at about 3:37 a .m. today,
~aid Don FinJey, info rmation of·
, fl eer a t t he U.S. Geological
·:Survey office.
.
" ,. . ~ . . • • f • • • • • • .
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O~ANGE COAST
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Telephone (71•)-.U-4321
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( tft~ Nffth()f Af\0' (•"'"'fl (Ofn4TMftlt1_,
5o40-1220
f . r••• p_,,.. :l I
BOATING INDUST'{Y • • •
"If the boating industry is to
continue to play a vital part in the
future of our economy and recrea·
tional needs, there is nodoubtthat
we as government leaders and
me mbers of the industry must
work to seek this balance. I, fur
one, a m willing lo work for this
goal."
Riley's reference to the pro·
posed Bolsa Chlca marina elicit·
ed a hearty "amen" from Har·
riett Wieder, Second District
Supervisor and member of lhe
Regional Coastal Commission.
Hammering on the theme lhat
"boating isn't just fun for a
wealthy few, but vital to the
economy of the county," the
supervisor cited statistics pro-
vi ded by the Southern California
Marine Association:
-THERE ARE M9RE than
46,000 boats registe red in this
county with an assessed value of
over $75 million -total value,
$JOO million.
-TIDS f1GURE DOES not in-
clude thousands of sma ller boats
which are not assessed, plus
documented vessels valued at
over$5million.
"We must also recognize that
our marinas and harbors are not
for the exclusive use of boaters,"
Riley said. "Last year, according
to government estimates, the
total visit.or days attributed to
just one or our harbors -Dana
Point -exceeded two million -
more lhan 50 times our boal-
owning population.
''Although many or these boats
are simply brought in for a day's
pleasure in lhe bays and ocean,
many olhers are seeking docking
f aci Ii ties in the county. Un-
fortunately, lhe p resent capacity
or our developed harbors leaves space for only 14,000 boats.
''There are 2,000 boats berthed
at HWltington Harbour-Sunset,
9,000 at Newport Beach, and 3,000
at Dana Point Harbor."
There is a waiting period of one
to seven years for boat slips in the
county, Riley said.
And that is only one reason for
the down-slide of the marine in·
dustry. Brokers and dealers can-
not sell boats because buyers
would have no place to berth
them. This results in a layoff of
many' sales people. Riley pointed
out.
Further, said Riley, if lhere are
no slips to dock newly-built boats
for new owners, boat manufac·
turers will build fewer boats for
loca l use, SCMA currently
estimates a shortage of 25,000
s lips in Southern California -
10,000 in Orange County alone.
·'The elf eel is not just recrea·
tion al, but more economical,
Riley emphasized.
•'Our latest figure.s Ust 3,300
b oat building and repair
employes in the county earning
wages in excess of $45 million per
year.
"You must add to that amount
the 5,500 employes in related in·
dustries who earn over $82.5
million annually as well as the $43
million-plus which is spent at the
retail level by boating en·
' thusiasts. As you can see, boating
has a real effect on the economic
growth of this county."
In adWlion to the boating relat-
ed businesses, Riley also cited lhe
impact of the boating industry
contributions to other markets
and revenue sources , such ~:
-Marl'be concessions ,
restaurants and hotels.
-Constractlon and main·
tenance.
-Sales and property taxes.
-OMV fees and trailer boats.
Loa.u ud leases.
-Commercial parcbases,
manufacturin" and office snsii-"
The bo ating indus try is
beneficial to local government
agencies as well, the supervisor
said.
Boat companies pay property
taxes and income taxes, and their
employes pay property, income
and sales taxes.
The boat owner pays sales taxes
on his purchases and unsecured
property taxes on lhe boat -and
probably leases hls s lip from a
local agency. <Unsecured taxes
are paid on such items as boats,
airplanes and business inventory.
Secured taxes a re paid on real
property, such as homes or busi-
nesses.
Riley said marine industry peo-
ple are becoming alarmed at the
exodus of local manufacturers to
Florida but said the answer is
simple.
"Comparing the attitude and
pro-boating policies or Florida
coastal areas to those or Southern
California are like comparing
night and day. Governmental of-
ficials in F1orida welcome the
large revenue base and economic
growth that the boatin1 industry
offers.
••Many Orange County boat
buyers give up in frustration
bec ause they can'tobtain a sllp-
or if lhey do buy, find it cheaper
when purchasing a large craft to
buy in F1orida and pay a $1.S,000
deliveryfeetoCaUfomia.
·'The total effect of lhis situa·
lio!l means fewer boats being
built in Orange County, and the
less our manufacturers build, the
less competitive we become.
"Florida is willing to increase
facilities and actively seek the
benefits of a strong boating in·
duatry.
Fog toll hits
seven killed
SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
As the minutes ticked by, vehi·
cle after vehicle entered the fog
and slanimed into a growing heap
of twisted, smoking metal.
When the fiery chain reaction
slopped, seven people lay dead
and 17 injured in a halr:mlTe o(
wrec kage that included two
dozen vehicles, police s aid.
The ch ain-reaction pileup,
which involved ei1ht tractor·
trailers, began about 7: 10 a .m.
Monday u neat-zero-visiblUlf
fog bung over Interstate l.S, the
California Highway Patrol re-
ported.
I . ~
Toast stymlM
WWI vet breaks tradition
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) -Clifford Wetaler wu sup-
posed to take a bottle ol lt38 bourbon from ita band-earved.
cedar container toclay ud drln.k a toaat to cS.ad Wurl.cl War I comradel. .
But be won't carry out the Veterana Day ritua.l aireed oo 31
years ago by 12 World War I v~rana. He DO loaatr d.rlnb .
Wetaler Ja .tl>e lA1t aurvivtna member of a World War I Last
Man Club tor~ed ln 11'2. lta tradition called for blm to uncork a
sealed bottle ol Cream ol Kentucky, a ~proof bourbon, and
tout b1a buddlM .
But WetaJer, .ao. stopped d.rtnkina a~ean a19. So be plans to auction the bOftle a.ad llvl to. t.be Caneer'
Fund. The veteran aviator aald bil eoa and several men lD tM Lut Man Club died Of c~.
-ALGIERS, Alt•ria (AP> -
Deputy S.Cretary of State War·
r•n Cbl'latopMr met •lain today
with A.blerla'• fo...tsn mlnlater
to furtlaer uplain tbe U.S.
re1pome to Iran'• terma for re·
l•aatn1 tt1• 52 Amtrlcan boltat•. AJ.aerian sources re-
ported.
They said the American poai-
tion wu diacuued at a luncheon
tiven by Forei1n Minister
Mohamed S.nrabia and that
Alaerla would forward the
l'ftpoGM to Iran followinl the
explanation.
Christopher dellvered the
American reply in ~ meeting
with Benyahla on Monday for
transmllalon to the Tehran gov-
ernment. Christopher flew to
Alaien with Deputy Treasury
Secretary Robert Carswell and
three other U.S. officials from
Washington. They planned to re-
main in the Algerian capital to
await Iran's response.
It wu assumed that the text of
the U.S. reply wa.s forwarded to
Tehran within hours of the one·
bour meeting. tiut toaay Radio
Tehran said: "U.S. and Algerian
officiala have remained silent or1
the U.S. reply to Iran's cond1-
tions, which is expected to be
conveyed to the Iranian govern-
ment in the next few hours."
Meanwhile , the Algerian
Foreign Ministry denied rumors
that a high-level Iranian delega·
lion was en route from Tehran
for indirect negotiations with
C hris t o ph e r thro u g h t he
Alierians.
Although the contents of the
U.S. message were kept secret.
officials in Washington summed
them up in general terms.
They s a id along with the
pledge to stay out of Iran's af.
fairs, given repeatedly in recent
months by President Carter and
other U.S. spokesmen, the note
explained the legal obstacles to
meeting the Iranian de mands
for cancellation of all American
claims against Iran and the re·
turn to Iran of all UMtl the late
Sbah Mohammad Besa Pab&avl
and cbe r.Jatives tramlerred
abroad.
Tbe fourth COIMlltJon cau.d for
th• freetn1 of more than '8
blWon tn Iranian uHta frosen
by Presldeat Carter. U.S. ol-
flclala have •aid there will be DO
dllficulty in cancelin1 the freeae
order, but aeveral billions of the
a11eta are alao blocked by Je1al
claims by American firms and
individuals against Iran.
"We would like to be as
positive u po11ible, bdt they
have to understand the le1al and
other compllcatlona," one of-
ficial who uked not to be idea·
lified told 'lbe Associated Presa.
"Generally, it's a positive
response," he added. "It's bard
to say what flexibility, if any,
there Is in the Iranian position.
Also, how much will there is to
end the thing."
Qualified sources said the U.S.
reply wu "long, detailed and
complex." .
A U.S. Embassy spokesman
said Christopher delivered it in
person "to explain to the govern·
ment of Alteria several complex
legal and financial aspects."
Officials in Washington said
one of the American mission's
principal tasks was to try to find
out if the Iranians planned to re-
lease the hostages if the terms
were accepted or planned to
hold them until the conditions
were actually met, as the Ma·
jli s , Iran 's parliament ,
s pecified.
Algerian officials said their
government's only interest was
to facilitate a solution to lhe
hostage crisis. Algeria is Iran's
intermediary with the United
States, which broke diplomatic
relations with Iran after Islamic
militants seized the U.S. Em·
bassy in Tehran and its staff on
Nov. 4, 1979. The Algerian am·
oa ssador in Was hington de-
livered lhe Iranian terms ·last
week after the Majlis approved
them Nov. 2.
Reeount plaaaed
Voter si
checked l>y Allen
Republican Assembly can·
didate Doris Allen said Monday
that s h e has e mployed a
handwriting expert in her bid to
win election in the 71st As·
sem bly District.
Final results, except possibly
for a handful of absentee votes,
s how Mrs . Alle n trailing
De mocralic inc um bent . Chet
Wray by 518 votes -47 ,04.5 to
46,527.
Registrar of Voters Al Olson
declared earlier in the day that
the coW'lting of ballots in lhe dis-
trict wu all but complete. About
1,350 ballots were not counted ln
initial returns, he said.
Mrs . Allen said slle would file
for a recount as soon as the elec·
tion res ults are certified by
Olson, possibly next week.
She said lhe estimated cost of
ab<>ut $10,000 would be sha red by
h e r c ampaign and b y the
Republican Central Committee.
Mrs. Allen. president of the
Huntington Beach Union High
School Board of Trustees, said
she ret~ handwriting expert
Howard C. Doulder to check lhe
validity of voter signatures.
She described him as a
s pecialist on ques tioned docu-
ments.
She said she doesn 'l s uspect
any foul play in the bard-fought
campaign but wants lo make
s ure that the people who voted
are the s ame· ones wb·o reg-
istered to vote.
She said she felt compelled to
test the accuracy or the Martel
voting system since sbe came
wilh less than a half percentage
point of winning the election.
"I don't feel comfortable
enough that the new system
pe rformed adequately not to
question the result.I," she said.
She admitted, though, that
the re is less tha.n a 50 "rcent
chance that possible counting er·
rors will be sufficient to reverse
the results.
She also claimed that election
officials, particularly Registrar
Olson, are "very, very honora·
ble people.'•
f"ro• Pa_. A I
TAX CUT •.••
e"unk 1w the new 9dmildltn·
Uoa to eoq1e tn ud meet." But, I Ones added, • .._.,.
(tbe RepubUeana) IO&nl to Mft
to 1ovem tome now . . . tlllitf
doa' t It-••• • fr•• rid• an1....-.."
JODMwaa8*..SlftheeulWM
aimed at ''t'alll•I Reacan'1
bluff'' oa ~ euta or if • wu Jmt a respome to UM ~
Uoa l'elUlta. "I 'll take tM lat. t• ... be Mid, lauebiDI.
ID an opent•1 ata.._eat eo bll
panel, Giaimo eow1tered, "I am
noti-£ to a&Ddt.c tM new •
•• r . ...,_ Ulaaid that be
can make 1ucb a (2 pereent> cut
without barmina the American
people,•' the Connecticut
Democrat added. "That will not
be simple to do, but it ta a
cballen1e that the preaident-
elect bu ~ for him.self. We
should clve him the opportunity
to meet that cballenae. ''
Althou•b fiscal 1981 be1an
Oct. l, Coqreu bu yet to ap-
prove a bindin1 bud1et resolu-
tion, u required by ita rules.
A draft ol the budget reaiolu-
tlon drawn by the committee
staff calls for a $648. 7 bllliOD
budget with a deficit of $31.4
billion.
But Giaimo called the projeet-ed deficit, baaed primarily on
spend.in& bills already paued by
the Ho\R, clearly "unaccepta-
,ble to many, If not to moct,
memben of Congress."
He said bis amendment would reduce~ deficit $13 billion by
cutting all federal spending -
except defense -by 2 percent.
That staff projection ls baaed
on a tax cut or $30 billion to $32
billion, compared with the pend-
ing $39.8 billion reduction pro-
posed by the Senate Finance
Committee and endorsed by
Reagan.
ALAIA ...
or an uncontrollable urge to
sleep, and the Ritalin 11as ~
scribed to counter those effects.
But the medication, defense
attorneys Ed George Jr. and
Albert C.S. Ramsey claim, also
produces side effects such as
anxiety, tension and aggresaive-
!fless.
Because of Famell 's decision
not to pursue the death penahy,
the procedures for selecting
jurors Monday were simplified
, considerably.
It meant new and more com-
plicated se~on p~ures re-
qui red by the Califor·nta
Supreme Court in death penalty
c ases did not have to be used.
The new procedures included in·
dividual questioning of poteotlaJ
jurors outside the presence ol
their peers when asked their
views on capital punishment.
Jury selection in the trial will
continue Wednesday, because of
today's Veterans' Day holiday,
the courts were closed.
Boy, 15, convicted
of felony mischief
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
15-year-old boy, charted in lbe
desecration or a Jewish
cemetery , toppling 389
headstones, was convicted on
charges of felony malicio~ mis-
chief.
Juvenile Court Judge Diane
Wayne found the boy, whose
name cannot be released
because of bi.s age, guilty Mon-
day following a two-day trial. He
set Dec. 3 for sentenctn1.
1 '
;
Oleander peace offering
Oleanders stand ready for planting along
fe_n ce t hat sepa~~tes De Anza Bayside
Village from Pac1f1 c Coast Highway . Resi-
dents of the Newport Bea ch mobile home
par k co~pla ined when st ate highway
workers npped out old, 18-foot oleanders in
connection with work on nearby Coast
Highway Bridge over Upper Newport Bay.
R esidents said big, tbushy plants are
needed to block out dust and noise from the
highway. State repla ced old oleanders with
four-rooters, but park residents demanded
bigger ones.
-~-----
Golf ~yillage plan eied
Project zvozild 'minimize' flooding in canyon
By DON CHAPMAN
Ol IM 0.11~ l'llot Sl~fl
-An Irvine Company official
says development of a 36-hole
golf course and 1,465 homes in
Laguna Canyon would minimize
flooding problems that a nnually
plague Laguna Beach.
Warr e n Roche. associate
director of planning for the ·
Irvine Company. says the firm
h as conside r ed t he canyon
floodingin its plans
"We realize the problem
downstream." said Roche. "We
are confident we can ease it with
re tention basins on the golf
course.''
THE IRVINE Com pany IS
seeking county approva1 11f •·
gen eral plan amendnent to
allow the "golf village · proJi:ct
on 1.300 acres on the west side
of Laguna Canyon Road n¥tt.
of El Toro Road
The co unt y Pla:-n1ng
Com mission and county Board
of Supervisors are expected lo
consider the amendment next
year.
T h e property is now
designated ag ri c ultu r a l
preserve in
the county's
general plan.
The Laguna
Beach City
Council voted
in Apri l to
reject a joint
Sycamo r e
Hill s plan
with l h P
I r v i n e ROCHE
Company that would include
1,831 homes on 1.400 acres in the
canyon.
That plan included 100 acres of
the 522-acre Sycamore Hi lls
parcel, located between Laguna
Canyon and El Toro Roads. The
!r vine Company's c urrent plan
..
i ncludes t wo 18 -ho l e
cha mpions hip golf courses on
360 acres.
THE COMPLEX would serve
as headquarters for the Southern
CaliforniaGolf Association.
T he two courses would be
wit hin the floor of the canyon
with rural estates in hills above.
a nd mixed density homes
around the northernmost gotr
course.
T he plan also includes a
four-acre public park adjacent
to an existing natural lake on the
west side of Laguna Canyon
Road about a mile north of El
Toro Road.
Also planned is a 25 -acre
recreational-commercial area
on the western edge of the golf
cour se . T ha t site would
accommodate a 300-room inn,
and clubhouse. restaurant and
golf-oriented retail shops.
ROCHE SAID in a talk to
the Laguna Beach Rotary Club,
there would be "no m a jor
hillside m o d ifi cation " in
development of the rural estate
homes.
He also said the pla n does not
include realighment of Laguna
Can yon Road . as h ad the
previous joint plan with the City
of Laguna Beach.
But the road would be widened
by two or more lanes where it
passes the golf courses.
The golf courses are expected
to be available to the public
about 90 percent of the lime,
Roche said. They would be used
for tournament play. the rest of
the time.
Providing the general plan
amendment is approved. the
company expects to open the
golf courses and complete the
first homes in the development
sometime in 1983.
Brown tells realtors
-GOlF COURSE CJ RESIOENTIAl
~ t~~i1c1AL ~RURAL ESTATES
Dall,l'llllt,._
GOLF VILLAGE PLANNED
Map shows propoeed ere•
Newport set s
running clinic
A series of free runnin_g clinics
for all age groups and all levels
of ability starts Wednesday at
Balboa Park in Newport Beach.
The clinics. sponsored by Ex-
tension 9, an Orange County
fund-raising group, are to be
held Mondays, Wednesdays and
F ridays at 6:30 a .m . and again
at 7:30 a .m .
For the early-to-work crowd,
ins t ruction will be r epeated
Saturdays at 7 and 8 a .m . For in·
formation, call 675-874-0.
·Housing picture 'dim·'
(
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL °' .. o.Hy """ ..... In an address to realtors, Gov.
could bring inflation rates as
high as 2S percent.
On other matters, Brown said:
-The $30 billion tax cut pro-
posed by President-elect Reagan
will necessarily mean an in-
Edmamd Brown Jr. predicts the
housing industry will be "rathe r
sluggish" for at least six moolbs
and quite possibly longer. If ef-
forts. aimed at reducing inflation
are s uccessful , the outlook Laguna panel would brighten. Brown said.
Tbe governor spoke Monday in
ADJhetm at the 73rd annual con-
• ve.nUon of the National Assocla-
:-tlon of Realtors. • ~ Brown said the most im·
t mediate problem lacing the real ~ nt.t.e lnduatry is a shorta1e of capital. He Sal~ persona and in· f ·•Ututions seeking mortgage
' m9ley must compete aaalnst : bO&h corporate borrowers and
~ l"•~ment borrowers who hold
"' priority over available money.
a&OWN MID HE fHrt tb.t
U. f~ral '°vt mment will at·
tempt to correct t he money
••orta1• by Urlnl ,UP tb• Wu~ prinUnl p....,.. and
••stvlnc tbem ever)'tbln• they •ant." Such u action, be Hid.
• l
I
seats vacant
Applicants for two seata on the
Laguna Beach Board of Adjust-
ment should submit resumes t.o
the City Clerk prior t.o Dec. 2.
City council memben will! in·
te.rvlew applicants at the ~. 2
meeting.
' The Board of Adjustment
meeta nnandaya at e:30 p.m. t.o
conalder variancea from the IOl'I·
ln• code. The flve-mtmbtr
panel aho 1lt1 as tb• city'•
Det!ID Review Board.
Tbe po11Uoo ~Y• $40 a month.
For more IDlormatloa, call Cl·
ty Clerk Veraa .Ro1Un1er at 497-3311.
t .
crease in borrowing by the
federal government.
-Two presidents, Jimmy
Carter and Gerald Fo.t;d, loet in
their rf~lect.ion effotta because
their p(>licles aimed at controll-
ing increued spending rubbed
too many persons tbe wroog
way.
"We have seen the last two
presldenta falllne because of
their attempta to control Infla-
tion," Brown said.
-Realton and bultdera must
find ways to make higher densi-
ty housing projects more attrac.
live t.o the buyin• public u land
becomes scarcer In Calllomla.
THE GOVEaNO& SAID tbe
amwers to tuture probleau will
be found tbroqb the efforts of
"coalltlon1" -envlronmen-
tallsta and de"lopen, labor and
buatn.... and sav•rnment, and
the private Md.or."
He laid the coalltloa approach
to problem eoa.m, bu been tbe
factor that bu bltnefttteel aucb
nations u Japan.
T~. November 11. 1980 OM.Y PILOT
:p1an far~~ea~~g
County seeks support I or transit
ByGL~8COJT °' .. ...., .......... ,,_A $2 btlllon. pro1ram to Im-
prove tranaportatlon tn Oran1e
County by widentn1 the Santa
Ana Freeway and addlnl a
24-mile rapid transit Une from
Anaheim to Irvine will be taken
before civic, business and com-
munity groups over the next
three months.
Direct.ors of the Orance Coun-
ty Transit District and tbe coun-
ty Transportation Commlastoo
will be aeettna support for the
program before they sit down
together again to work out a
final plan.
Qnce that final plan is ap-
proved, wheels will begin mov·
ing to start work on the ex-
tensive improvements.
THE PLAN IS based on a
study of improvements for the
Santa Ana traffic corridor.
Tom Jen.kins, executive· direc-
tor. for the transportation com-
mission, noted Monday as a pre-
face to unveiling the plan that
the Santa Ana Freeway lies
within three miles of half the
county's population and 65 per-
cent of its work base.
Thus, he said, the improve-
ments are necessary to keep the
increasing congestion on the
w e ll-worn freeway to a
minimum. Officials sa y a rapid
transit system could remove
about ZS percent of the freeway
traffic.
IN EFFECT, OFFICIALS are
trying to steer the rapid transit
system through the most
populated parts of the county,
making as one official noted, a
"downtown Orange County."
The preliminary plan includes
four major parts:
-A $394 million prope>sal to
widen the Santa Ana Freeway
from a six to an eight-lane
freeway throughou t Orange
County. A staff report for the
meeting included projections
that the freeway really needs 12
lanes, but officials say such a
project isn't feasible.
-A $485 million rapid tranait
system, a "starter line," to nm
from the Disneyland area put
Anaheim Stadium and ,tben
south through downtown Santa
Ana to Coeta Mesa and fin.ally to
the Irvine office and industrial
area -near the John Wayne
Airport.
A second branch of the system
ia scbedWed to extend tbroup
Ga rdeb Grove -to Beach
Boulevard.
EVENTUALLY, THE rapid
transit system is intended to link
witb systems running north to
Los Angeles, said OCTD General
Manager James Reichert. He
said the system also could be ex-
tended into Newport Beach and
into the south county.
Officials are considering
several kinds of vehicles on the
rapid traruftt line, he said. One
possibility is to create a special
busway. But be said officials
also are looking into quiet, elec-
trically-powered vehicles that
could nm on tires along a track
or even on a Disneyland-type
monorail.
The track probably would run
on the ground part of the time
and also on an elevated track, be
said.
-A $672 million package of
improvements t o Amtrak
service. including cons truction
of a second set of traclr..s t.o s;e-
duce conflicts with freight
service . The schedules would be
Wlttl the "opening" of the
doors by Red China and the
courting of trade and travel
busi ness there. we are
beginning to see 10me nice
uamples of oriental art in
. jewelry Most of the superior
examples are old pieces from
the twelfth or seventeenth
cent uries. Those were the periods that the Chinese
revived the tine art of clolsonne
(Kloy·zc.NAY) and while 11 was primarily used 1n vaNI and
figurines. it was also found
suitable lor beads and r1g1d
bangle tMaoelets. Not 1urprl1lngly, the Red
ChlneM would r•thef M ii the newer clolaonne that part with anc ient treasures. However,
there Is some of both !ypes finding its way Into the wotld
markets.
••
In cloiaonne' work the
enamel la confined to cells
made by eolderlng thin atrip1
of metal or wire to a metal
bate. Thele strips have been
carefully 1ha.,.ct to produce
th• desired design. (The enamel I refef to hef9 It
powd9l'9d gl ... not the IOOMf'
term 1omet1me1 applled to
many fln l1hu. lncludlng
certain peintt), The enamel, after being
Pf•pared with Its olorino agent. 11 then pleoed In IN oetlt of
the del6gll ~ ftted In I tmell
electrlo or gaa kll n. The
templfeture '""''H verle1
rt
o.11,r1 ... ,...
RAPID TRANSIT SHOWN
WouldeaMcongeetlon
increased so commuter trains
run every 15 minutes during
peak hours.
-A $417 MILLION plan to
add about 400 more buses to the
OCTD fleet and to coordinate
traffic signals and build arterial
streets -all to relieve freeway
con gestion, especially in the
south county.
Al Hollinden, who sits on both
the trans it dis trict a nd
trans portation commission
boards, stressed the need for the
improvements. He noted that
county population is expected to
increase 51 percent from 1976 to
1995.
Holllnden also said that the
lmprovementa are not meant 10
bpost population g r owth. ·
althou1h they might cause a
shift In densities closer to the
rapid tranatt Unes.
Because of bb double mem·
bership, Hollinden got t.o vote
twice on the propo1als, as did
county Supervisor Ralph Clark,
who also sill on both boards.
AND a.AU IS obviously in
favor of the plan, too. He said
th e improvements will be
especially important for busi-
ness~.
"The employees mu.st get to
work, the products must get to
ma rket, or our entire business
community will deteriorate," be
suggested.
Although Hollinden and Clark
control almost half the votes, it
dido 't matter Monday because
preliminary approval of the plan
was unanimous.
Reichert noted that 30 presen-
tations of the plan for communi-
ty groups already have been
booked. And six public meetings
are scheduled, including one at
the Costa Mesa city council
chambers at 7 p.m. Jan. 8 and
one at the San Juan Capistrano
council chambers at 7 p.m ., J an.
22.
Reichert said if all goes well,
the 11\8SS transit line could be in
ope ration as early as 1987,
although the report names 1988
as a more probable time.
Inflation battle
Tax.able sales up
in o ·range County
Orange County fared slightly
better than the rest of the state
in its batUe against inflation as
the State Board of Equalization
reported second quarter sales
totaling $3.1 billion.
The 9.2 percent increase in
sales over last quarter was
sligbUy better than the state's
average of 7.9 percent, but was
Police, fire
to get keys
Closed-gate communities in
San Clemente will have to pro-
vide police and fire officials with
a key to the gates, the City Coun-
cil has decided.
Emergency crews said they
have been delayed at some con-
dominium deve lopments
because of locked gates. The
council agreed lock boxes, con-
taining gate keys, s hould be
placed near the enttances of
such developments.
The loclr. boxes, which are
much stronger than the ones
used by realtors to s how homes,
would be accessible only to
police and frre officials.
Car Kills Wife
BAKERSFIELD <AP) -A
64-year.()}d Bakersfield man was
boolr.ed for i nvestigat ion of
murder for allegedly running
over bis wife early today with
their car.
@
liiEM WISE
not enough to keep up with -the
rate of inflation.
ORANGE COUNTY ranked
s econd behind Los Angeles
County in reporting taxable
sales. Statewide s ales totaling
$34.5 billion ending June 30 were
the weakest in 22 years, accord-
ing to Ernest J. Drooenburg, Jr ..
member of the State Board or
Equalization.
Although the county posted an
overall increase of 9.2 percent,
the Consumer Price Index.
which meuures the actual cost
of cooda. ro9e 17.7 percent. The
CPI is 249.5, meaning -that
Californians are payjng $2-49.50
for goods and services that cost
$100 in 1967.
Sales from restaurants in
Orange County totaled $277
million, up 8.6 percent from last
quarter and 10.3 percent over
last year .
NEW CAR SALES in Orange
County totaled $245 million
down 16 pe r cent fro m las t
quarter and 13. 7 percent from
last year.
Retail sales in the county
totaled $2 billion, up 3.5 percent
over last quarter and 6 percent
from last year.
Service station sales which
are only figured on a statewide
basis. rose 47.8 percent to $4.l
billion, although gasoline con·
sumption was down 2.9 percent
from last year.
While sales for Orange County
increased 9.1 percent during the
second qua rter, sales rose 12.4
percent the quarter before and
14.9 percent last year .
somewhat according to the
composition ol the enamel. but 1t 1s usually a fairly t'tigh red
heat; about 17"°" Tt'te result 1s
glass firmly fixed to the metal.
Because the enamel contracts
wt'ten !used. the process must
be repeated until the enamel
!Ills the cells; usually four or
ftve appltcat1ons are required.
After the cells are tilled or
overfilled. they are "stoned"
with a small square ol emery or
s1hcon carbide. The 01bect 1s to
reduce the enamel to the level
of the part1ons and produce en even. pahahed surface. That accomplished, ii is rellred to
_get a sa111lactory glaze. Ftnally
lt is poll1hed on a hard felt
wtieet.
I've done a bit of firing enamel on copper myself end
know how Intricate and
painstaking the process oan
be. While my handlwortt would
ne ver be mis t a ken for
clolaonne '. It has given me a
healthy mpect tor the art form.
CHARLES H. BA RR ----~--1----
Some ol lhe nice pieces of
ctoiaonne· that I bought during
my recent trip to China are
beginning to come In now.
We'd like to Invite you to come into the sto,. and ... them.
There lf9 plates, vue•. ginger tara. u h trays. bow•• and
t1 mp le pot• . . all very
beautllull But then I Mlected
them. to naturlllly I would think
they ..,. • . . come In 1nd Me
what you thin.._
awJ e.-tA ,,.. . .,..... ............ ..............
tj I
r----. Nan•• tt, t•
Ja t
oe ting
Paradise alley?
THIC Rl!EWAY FOi.LiU, PAaT d : OalJ )'elter·
day. tbt tranaportatJon aa~anta ot our Oraqe OMmly re·
1ton announced grand MW plam on bow t.My're IOlaa to
fia up the way we 1et around. lt'a awe10me. It'• to..., to
cost two billion smackera.
First, there's &oln& to be a totally new t.ranalt 1y1tem
that will wend its way from aomewbere near Anaheim
Stadium on down into our coutal re1kMa at t.he Irvine In·
dustrial complex
Nobody has decided what It 'a 1oln1 to be yet. Maybe
lanes ror silent electrical buses. Maybe trolleJ can.
' · Maybe a Oisneyland·llke monorail train. But that's all m
r:• the future .
• n PfOW AS TO THE OLQ Route I Suta Ana Freeway.
1.1 The savants said the •&Inc wuhboard would won ftM f04'
!I· future traffic needs by wtdenlnt It to 1J lanes. But then
:.-
.l
•" ...
~
:'f•
...
.. ,..
..
•1
.,.
•:
•:
'•'
Iii • ..:...-i._-l
Are you ready for IM all-rww count11 trmuit syat~?
isn't enough room to do that. So maybe they'll widen it a
couple of lanes and opt for one of lbe added systems noted
above.
All or this is very sophisticated and futuristic. Aa for
the Santa Ana Freeway. most of the commuter worklnc
s tiffs of our region would be elated just to bear that the
transportation moguls planned to put a couple of new
lightbulb6 in the unlighted freeway directional sipaa.
EVEN MORE SHOUTS of huzzah would be beard from
commuters with aching kidneys and brolten car sprin1s if
they announced plans to fill the Santa Ana Freeway
potholes and iron out the washboard asphalt.
Of course. these kinds of creature comforts don't
sound half . so grand as talking about a "multi-modal
transportation corridor." · ·
Besides that, doing over the Santa Ana Freeway slsn
lights and diverse deviations in pavement might destroy the
character of the road. It's become so famous it mieht
become immortalized in song, like Route 66. AU kinda of
song titles are possible. like:
"Dolng the Buen• Part Boaace."
Or, "I Lost My Groove ID Ganin Grne!•
Or, "Slipping Along the Santa Alla Baaua."
Or another, "Augerla1 Into Oraage."
OR FINALLY, "The Anaheim Annihilation,"
sometimes known as "Busted at Ball" or even, "Lambaat·
ed at La Palma."
Besides becoming famous in aon1. tbe SMta ~
Freeway might open up a whole new mm.t for bamper
stickers. The hapless commuter could use bumperaJocaato
explain to other passing motorists what happened to bi.
frayed rear fender or pretzeled bumpe.r.
Instead of getting curious glances from other drivers.
the stricken family heap could carry bumper measa1es
like:
"Mashed at Myford.''
"TaUgated at Tustin."
"Creamed Near Calver."
Or, "Junked at Jeffrey."
Instead of the old 1849 slogan of the sold ruab,
"California or Bust," we could change it for reaular users
of the Santa Ana Freeway. Maybe somethin« like, "Mi.a·
sion Viejo? Mission Impossible."
Ah well. next time try the train. If you can find oee.
THE AUTO EXCISE tax -tee per $1,000 value -is the
other major target. The proposi-
tion cuts the tax to S25 per
fl,000.
These taxes are the main
sources of revenue for the
state's 351 communities and the
only taxes they may impose.
And Massach~etts doesn't have
a budget surplus to keep
Criticism
~
threatens
papal, visit
VATICAN CITY (AP) -The
Vatican diaavowed a German
Cftholic criticism of Martin
Luther after it threatened to put
a chill on Pope John Paul ll'a
meettni with Lutheran leaders
duri n1 bis visit to West
Germany next week.
A Vatican specialist on rela·
tions with the Lutherans ,
Monsignor Aloys Klein, said the
crttlcisms of the leader of the
16th-century P"rotes tant
Reformation in a booklet dis-
tributed by the German Bishop's
Conference did not reflect the
poelllon of the Roman Catholic
Church. He said church officials
lo Wes t Germany were
publJshing an epilogue to correct
the statements.
About half the 63 million West
Germans are Protestants, and
moat of them are Lutherans,
wlalle about ball are Roman
Catlllolica. Tbe booklet that
an1ered the Lutherana, "Short
m.tory al the German Church,"
was b y Catholic historian
Remigtu,, Baeumer and was js,
sued to give background in·
formation on the pope's visit.
In it Baeumer said Luther's
"Reformation brought no re-
form, but the splitting of the
Cburcb," and the "boundless-
neu of his anger and his
polemic ... made him blind to
Catholic truth." It also said
Luther's writings were not
or1ginal but were just a rehash
of the arguments of most
Catholic interpreters of the Bi-
ble in the Middle Ages.
Showers pelt East Coast
Light snow/ all continuea in mid-west
CIOudy lOf\fOnl w•t" • )() oerconl
tNn<.1 of rein 0Krt•s1no lo lO Qiltr
cent WedneSd•Y morn•no Cle•r•no
We-WS.y afternoon
CN Slal ano inl•nCI "'O"' In tl\t .0•. tow• In lhe ~ W•ltr. U Ehewt.t•. sou1h•9\l•rly w1nO\ \0
to 11 knou ton1Qht bt<om1no
nortll•••lerly 10 to ,, "'°" w.cin .. day. Wnt.,.ly swell two 10 1nre1 ffft
Cllanct ot 119ht sl\O•Wlf\ ton1oht Pertly clOUdy WedtW\day
Caalunala
A JO percent cl\ance of r•ln o .. r
mucl\ o! Soulllern C•lllornl• wu
forace1t l0< tonl9nt, but It'• npected
lo deer•-to lO percent by Wednft· day.
Stoc•ton .,
fMrmel IJ
Bantow '4
ai.a .. r '1
81"'°" Tl
Cata Un• .0
El Centro •• I._ .... ., ..
H .. pol'1 !leach ~
Ontario ,,
Paim Se>ri"V!i u
$a11JOM u
$a11t• .... ..
$ante Crut .,
S.nte M., .. TO
Tetloe Valley )l
PAN AM••lc.AN
A~l<.cl ., ......... ..
.. rmUCM " ...... 0
SI
SJ
JI 1• SI
" SI
SI
SJ w ..
SS ..
'3
lJ
IS 7) .oe .. -~ J7
C11rKao '° ,, .n
,.~ .. ,, VI• Hallonal Weatr..r Service'• _____________ _. .... ..., .... ,.. ........... ....,_
forKast Included • Cl\Ml<• of 1191\t
sllOwers over tile <N •l•I and .......,..
teln eritn 111rouon Weclneld.ty morn·
lno. Tiie •~lo o .. r Soutllern
California were ooe<tecl to be9ln
c1e ... 1no w_., all•,,,_
• T•m-et""H ..,. hlre<asl lo 119
lft 1M tell In ~ A"9tle• ...ct In ,,,.
valley~ Tiw .-.ntelns "-id cOOI
-n inlO IN'°' as Qu~ly wind• were
e..-<ted to -at U IO JO mOfl
T ... delef11 alto were e1pected to
Mv• "'~ Q111ll11Q uo to lO mOll un· Cler cl_., sJ<le• T,,. tow•r -IS
atlould have ttme11ratur .. •n Ille TO.
wfllte IOUthom oe .. r1 tem.peratur•• _,_ Hpected to be In Ille~
l.i.S. s ..... w,.,,
Sc altered 11\o wen e nd tllun·
dersllo-rs tell over Ill• \OUIMrft
''°'kl• ~ ... 1 •• Wflllt 1'9114 -dvsled pem of Ille m.-Allanllc
Stet .. encl 1M Hor111ff\I '
A few -" dolted tM centret Ro<llles
More 1'9111 .,_ or rain wes ,,_.
dieted trom Hew Ef191•ncl to ~
York, wlm K etle,..d -_...,,
from Ml-tota to 'entrel MonteN
...., ...... Oel•trt .......... ~
Mol>f-.·l'•OO•v 11 vou CIO ~ot 1111119 yOUl !It-l>'I & 30 P '" <Ill 1)41()1"9 1
0 rft end 'l"(JUt COfJY ww-10 (lit O•l1Vttt9d
letutllty f"CI Sv""•v 11 you C10 "°' teee1vt '/OJI <t)Oy 0Y t I m Coll
.. fOfe I t • m .-.0 yO\.-tOOY woll .,.
0.l•W-•ttd
'
end tl9flt rain 0t -. "°"' -tanatoH-
Temperalurel M'OWld tlle ...u ...
u rty tCICNy r.,..o from 11 ...,_
In lnlerNt...,... Felts, l!iliM., .. •
C1419rfft In "Ott lAudltnlele, l'te.
Al~
Atlanta
Beltlmo..
llrmi"91Wn
11\maro klM
BotlOn
ar-nnile
BUffete
Cllarisln SC
CMrlslnWY c11.,.,.,,.
Clll< ...
Cincinnati
Cleve I.,..
Columti..t
Del·l'I Wtll
Otnver
0t1rolt
°"'""' Htle,..
H~tll
Htut ....
t ........ • Jee_..,. ...
ICeMCM, 1. •• .., .... t.:i.t=. ~ ..... _..,..... ..,.I
Mliw--. ......... ........ .... o...._ .... v-.-~ .. Qfy
OMIM
"'Le .... 7J .,
16 .. .. .
" Jt u n •
... Jt .IO
S1 JI .... .. . ,. 11 .... ., .
41 •
47 41 •• A IA .... .. Jt
41 • . ,, .. . . ., 11 .., . .. st ,. •• .... "· .. : :: • • " . . " ... •• 11 " ,, . " .. .. 14 " . ••
~, ..... .. " GuMel•I•• " .. .. ,. 011 ... ~ .. .. """ ..... Hav-" n 2.0J ~· • .. '""'''"' .. 11 "':::.rt. • )1 Mo-., .. ., .. 7) ......... .. ,.
" .n ,..., ...... .. 1J ·-,.
Merkl• .. .. llllC.IWMM Tl 1' Me1lco City ,, " ,. 41 Seit LMle _ .. r,..., '2 .,
S..0-.. .. u
SM llr• .. " Ne-11 .. TS
$af\J..aft .. ,. ,..., .. " • .. ,. StKllU .. ,,
SI LaW11 T-..<i.-ICWI " u .04 MP·T ..... 11 .. Trlf114111d u Tl .40 ..... ....,. 26 tt v ... ec:rw " .. s.--" IS
TllfN • • 8-1, ..... .,,.. . .....,. .. ..
TOOA'f
CM.I ....... ~-s:»p.m. 0.1 ••• ...... " ,. tee .......... r.: .. " WS.l*llOA'f' ,. .. ·" "'"'Ill"' 12:14 a.m. J.4 ........... .. .. lllnll-4:1t a.m. u ....... • IKMd llltfl 10:4'p.m. u
o.11 ...... " ,, Sf<OIMI leW •:1'.,.m. 0.4 =.-ct;. " • 5"" r1-•:n a.m ., MtH:SI 11.m. .. ,. lllleon rl-•:»e.m., wt•l:Ool p.m •
s.e.Jwrtt Culll1•rnla SNrl ..,.,.,., ............. ,...,,.__., ...................... .......
I !
~°"' I : : ~I la ... r1 l.lfttUflMet.
............ ow :r : : I
IA f t I W'
IJ 2 ~ • w
(call M~··: l'olUI ~ -.d1 lo--
,..1n th• DAILY PILOT
•
Condolenf.!es
KING WANTS to fee wlat
happens before alternative tUe.
are considered, alUMNc.111 IOIDe
legislators Ud dvit bf...._.
Uona, including ~ Leape cA
Women Votert, bave already
made SUlletlodl, •
Their pl'ODoeaJl lbcllldelt •· panslon of U.· S ..,._, .._
sales tax _.._ clodlbls and food
are now exetnpt --6d _..tu
powers for colhaumlttft. hes
for such services as l•rbale col-
lection and school iporti were
also suggeeted.
President Saddam Hussein of Iraq receives kiss from
mother of Iraq soldier killed at front. He visited woman
in Baghdad to express sympathy.
State Ref. Gerald Cohen,
chairman o the Lelialature'a
Ta11ation Committee, sald
alternative lases wen't be COil·
sldered o.ntll June wbeti ne•
state and local budpta are in
preparation and U.e hllpaet of
2~ on local eerritfl8 h eleuer.
Wilderness leasing ok'd
CHEYENNE. Wyo. (AP) -A federal judge baa
overthrown an Interior Department opinion clos·
ing nearly 21 million acres of western road.less
areas lo oil and gas exploration.
In an order filed Monday, U.S. District J udge
Ewing Kerr said Interior Department and Bureau
of Land Management restrictions on leasing and
exploration or wilderness study areas are much
stricter than the Wilderness Act itself.
TO ALLOW THE Interior Departmeat restric·
lions would be "ludicrous" and would be counter
to the·intent of Congress, the judge said.
Kerr's ruling came an a lawsuit filed two years
ago by the Rocky Mountain Oil and Gas Associa-
tion, a trade uaociation of ISO oil and 1aa com·
panies bued ln Denver.
The asaocialion contended an opinion by Interior
Come. Feast your eyes on the exquisitely
warm and whimsical world of Boulanger .
To celebrate her Orsi personal appearance In
two years. you're Invited to our special exhlbl·
lion nnd sale of Boulanger·s latest cxtraordl·
nary creations. Olis. tapestries. watercolors.
lltho~raphs and more. Whe n you mcca Boulanger. you'll
have the opportunity to acqutre
her masterfUI commemorative
edition po1ter ... a rare find
Indeed. Even 1;>e1tcr. with
Department solicitor Leo Knalit& lft elftet locked
up wilderness leasing and exploraUeli Gii laada
being studied for possible lnclmloa ta Ule .U.S.·
ness system.
"In essence, defendants would have thil court
agree with a statutory interpretation that Imposes
a stricter standard and duty on lessees than the
Wilderness Act (which is the pal) ltaelf lm·
poses," Kerr said.
"THE LEGISLATIVE biatoty fll tM WlldenleM
Act clearly demonstrates COftll'IUtonal talent that
the public lands should be uttlilled tor m.WPle
uses," M added. "Mineral ... tf•"4INIM iii ,Ob-
viously a primary concern ·~ ~~ ,
"The non-impairment :RmlQanl~ so
strictly applMd-tut ail • -' denlopment ban com~ -I . t.aa la
,.;ildemea study area," Kert'IAM. · ·
l·
I
o.,,..gone ··~
Fido seems to enjoy some of the sun's rays as he bangs
his head outside his owner's convertible recently in Santa
. Barbara. The dog seemed content to let his owner take as lor\i as he wanted running errands.
Majority of delta
levees rated poor
, SACRAMENTO (AP) -More than half the Sacramento-San
Joaquin Delta levees are in poor or very poor condition and levee
owners should increase surveillance and maintenance efforts, the
state Water Resources Department bas said.
"We're generally worried because of the enormous cost in
people's property and the enormous government effort to provide
remedial action," DWR Director Ronald Robie said at a Monday
news conference.
He released a study his department did of lhe levees that keep
water from the 52 islands ~d tracts of the delta, which are
1enerally below the water level.
THE OCl'OBE& STUDY wu prompted by levee breaks on six
islands: Webb, Holland and Prospect tracts and Deadbone bland
Jut winter and Lower Jones and Upper Jones tracts th.ii fall.
Those breaks caused an estimated $25 million .in crop losses and
repair costs. · · • ·
All of those breaks were in private levees maintained by
reclamation districts consisting of the owners of the rich farmland
in the delta. • · ·
Therefore, Robie said, the slate or federal government, which
maintain some of the levees, cannot force the landowners to fill
their levees.
"WE WOULD BE HAPPY to help tbem undertake the
remedial work," he said. "But it's basically their responsibility.
We don't bave a laree budget for this.''
The islands · and tracts that were rated very' poor in
construction and maintenance were Medford, Mildred, Quimby
and Webb (which Robie said bas oot been properly repaired slnce
lta bruk um year).
RotJle atreued that breaks in 'tbe put have utually not
oecurred at obvious problem areu, because poor ~ materials are often below water and 'not visible.
London Fog
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SAN P'flANCISCO (AP) -W~mm bave ,woe control ov•
three~ Cdlorala loeal ftl'f·
ernmenu aad a letMler et a
1tatewtde county aontament
or1anludoa U11 the victoilee
&N tbe ftnt ol maDJ.
''I would predi(l t.bd wttMa
five yean there will be at lemt
Tax clerk
charged in
swindle
MERCED (AP) -A forni.r
Merced County taa c!lert baa
been cbaraed with MiiMn""* hundreds ol thousands of dollu'I.
A proeecutor said the t.tal may
reacb$1 million.
An amended complaint bu
been filed accusin1 Eunice
Howerton, 41, of embelallnf
more than S180,000 ln eacb Of
three periods between lllid'-tm
and earlier this year when she ·
reaiped.
Three other couats accaaed
her of embe11Un1 more t.ban
$200 in three period.I from ~
tember 1987andJ1111e1m.
M.8. BOWZaTON, wtRr Uv~
in nearby Atwater, pnvtoualf
was chaqed with embenllna
$19,000. Tie new counts were
added. Monday after ,a pre·
liminary audit.
"The PC"eCUe computation bu
not hem determined . . . but "
know from documenu for the
last t.br,ee years that it ,, .. over
Sl00,000 each year that •!Mt stole
from the treuuey," Dlltrid At-
tomey Patriot Hallford aahl.
"We believe It <the ll'Ud
total) ia up in u.e vidnltJ of ..
miWOft."
·THE OIUGINAL ch~r1e wu
IUed after discrepancies were
diaeloeed ln a spot audit ordered
by Treasurer-Tax Collector
Norman P'ullei'ton . Last
January,.Fullertoe sucee.ded
Lynn Gr.bam wbo ntlNd.
Co.Ullty Auditor LeRoy
Gilsdorf said prniou~ apet
audiu bad failed to tunt Up 1181
cliKrepaciee. ·
Halllord said a•oanta in ea-cns ol $100,d were li8ted fbt
the most reeent yean became
U.e It.Me'• ..... detenablaW .-. tenclq law aDowa fttl'a pttidD
time fw tbefta ewer t.bat ...,...
10 otMr CO.U.. wttll the ma-
Jorily of tuperytioh WOIDID,"
San ruatheo S.apervlaor
QQtntin &ow Mid. lie la .._...
••• p .... ldeat of ti•• c~ Supetvlaora AuodaUon of
Callfernta.
TH Nqy. 4 eleetioa left tile
clty-cduly. of Saa rrandleo
·•ltb ala •omen en it• 11·
member Boa.f'd of Supervllon. A
few mu. to die llOUdl, Sall Jme'• cil.f eocmdl 1-a M female ma-
jorltJ ud ba Santa Clara eo.ty,
wber. sea Joeela louted, women
aalllumber me8 3-1 OB tbe 8oatd or s-.perYllon.
ao111·MN~aM
San Joee also MY• wqfnea ..
ma1on. ......, are the ftnt ma·
Jor metropollta anu la Uie na·
Uoa where women domlaate city
and couiy 1evernments. ac-
eordinC to the Natlo8al Women's
Polltkal Cauc\11.
"My •timaUoe la ~at ttlil
11m,1y mea111. that tile cw.ma
of San Jose require quality,
* * •
I T...ct.y,N0\'9mber11 ,1llO
wt.ether it'• baa skirt or panta,"
aakt Iola WoWam.. a San Joee
Cit)'. c:o.dl member, who wu not ... be.Dot. "l. tJ1iU lt'1 terrific," said
Kopp, .._., mt a mayoral race
la.at rear to San P'ranclaco
Jlar,ot Dianne Feinstein. "I
tlon t • any dllference occ:ur-
riat Meeme of 1eeder. · •
He Mid the trend la happenln1
• 'tbrou1 .. out tbe 1tate of
Callfonua," and be noted tbat
women bold two of five seats oa
~everal eounty boarcb in the
It.ate. •"t'lller. are more WOQMD
who are tunnln1. Tbat'a tbe
polat, .. be laid. '
Sall Jme Mayor J.anet Gray
HaJn, lD offtce since 1174. laid
wofnen already have done a
credible job in politics, en-
courastn1 others to try tbelr
luck.
San Francisco and San Jose
are tbe tllird and fourth lar1est tities in California, with 870,000
and 815,000 people respectively.
In San Joae, seven women ran
* * •
a1alnlt an equal number of
for MffD ... a. cm the city
cu. n .. ol the women woo i
•
year tenm. In Santa Clara County, Becky
llorru and 7.oe Loffren defeat·
ed two men. Tb•Y will Joln
Supervbor Sueanne Wilson• and
two men in repre1enttn1 the
county'• 1.2 mi1lloD raidents.
One newly elected woman
jolned ftve incumbents in San
P'rancileo.
I Gl!NDU WAS not an iuue in,
any of tbe three races and the
women, with varyin1 political
pbllo1opbies, dld not run H
teams. ·
"We are three women who are
as different u the three men
wbo have been there," said Mn.
Mor1an in Santa Clara.
"Why ia it when you have -..
all.male council," asked L'-
Ryden of the San Jose Council,
"nobody thinb to ae_k the men
bow they feel about being part of
an all· male council?"
• • *
22 incumbents defeated
R~·election bids fail in supervisorial contests .
SA4tRAMENTO (AP ) -
Twenty-two county 11upervilon
1in C•lifornia lost re-eledion
bids. aftVldbic to the County
Sup.-ntsora A11octatton of
Callfornla.
Abotber 14 incumbent
auperviaon were defeated ln tM
June prtttiary, the allOCladoa
taid. Ninety-one lneumltenta
•on new tetma, ettber in Ult
prtmuy or lD tbe Jlfov. ' eiec.
tioa, and 53 otllWI dff141ed not to
aeek~.
TM IW\8••1 lll aupet'YIMn
$,
ln tbe state were not up for elec-
tion thia year.
The results are iubject to
e'aa1e by at least two pouible
rffOUDta, in San Joaquin County.
1'bete ls a1ao a lawsuit that bu
dela~ the vote count for two
seats in Madera County. alle1-
tn1 tbt the clrawin1 of district
linea dl1crimtnated a1atn1t mlnortU..
Tbe i'eport also Hid Santa
Clara aad San Francisco ~ame the seeond and third
eomtim in Califomla to elect a
majority of women to the board~
Butte County became the fll'lt iJJ
1978, the association said. :
However. the overall numbei;
of female supervisors rem~
at 51, or 17 percent of th4t
statewide tot.al. Fifteen women
won elec:tions and another 15 lost ~r retired. '
Seven supervisors who did ~
seek re-election were candidale4
for the Legislature. •
Knox eyes Medi-Cal
Tbree won -Democrats Sain
Farr ol Monterey County an4
Dominic Cortese of Santa Clare
County and Republican Adriq
Fondae of San Joaquin Countr. whose Democratic opponent;
Patrick Jobnaton, says be ex•
pects to uk for a recount of mi
16-vote defeat. ~
Four lost -Democrats Eri~
Huaeltine of Contra Costa ~
ty, Larry Aaera of Solano Coult
ty and Geor1e Garcia of ~
County, and Republican Willi-..
Jobucln ol El Dorado County.
FINl DRESSES, COATS AND SUITS
I
1 MISS MAGNIN DRESSES, COATS ANO.SUITS
DESlGNER, 8~TTER AND MISS MAGNIN SPORTSWEAR
..
ii • ' .•
CONTEMPORARY AND JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR AND DRESSES
LtNGEAIE AND FOUNDATIONS· ACCESSORIES
INfANTS' AND CHILDREN'S WEAR
/. I
SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE
1/3 OFF~ PRtCES
SA~E FOR MEN
1 /3 OFF OR~Al. PRtCES
END·OF-SEASON
SWIMWEAR CLEARANCE
2/3 OFF ~AL PRtCES
Sorry, no mail or phone orders. All 111 .. f lnal.
lt""9 In •oc:k on •I•.,. mertted In .ch dtpertment:
lntM'nl«tllte rMl'tcdownl hwt been tlken on tome Items.
t •
irport lawsuits
ostly for county
The Ornngt• Count)' Board o( Supervilon bu com·
ltled the t"OWll}' to lipendlnJC more than a,5,000 to hire
o firms that will provide ··t>xpen" testimooy in an up-
mlna trial over alleged noise damage resultinC from jet
ratloM at John Wayne Airport. ~ county now is being sued by 252 individuals
presentinJ '14 properties in claims both they and their
Nn1dinp have been damitged by noise. T This ls the third time the county has been s ued by
nroperty owners and householders for damages allegedly
resulting from airport opera.lions.
: In the fir.;t case a homeowner who charged jet noise
Had devalued hJs property was awarded ~.000. J ln 1978, 98 persons filed suit claiminJ? noise damage
Qut a jury rejected their claims. In that case a judge had
riuled that claim~ or personal injury due to noise were inad-
issable.
Both the 1978 case , which is still on appeal, and the
ew suit doubtless will be atrected by a recent U.S.
upreme Court decision that let stand an appeals court
uling in an unrelated case. It held that airport o~rators
such as the County of Orange -may be held liable for
onetary damages tn lawsuits riled by persons who sue
r alleged noise· related injuries.
So the county has decided to rehire the firms that
rovided the expert witnesses -acoustical engineers and
ppraisers who successfully argued the 1978 case.
Although the $85,000 cost may seem high, supervisors
It it would be less costly. comparatively, to present wi t-
esses already familiar with the airport issue.
Since the county did. come out the winner in the last
ase in which the two firms provided expert testimony, it
a logical expenditure.
· vers belong to state
Shortly after signing the Peripheral Canal bill in
August. Gov. Brown made the unprecedented move of
asking Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus to place five
Northern California rivers under federal control in the
National Wild and Scenic Rivers System.
The move shocked officials of the Metropolitan Water
District and other water agencies since the rivers account
for more than 30 percent of California's runoff.
The streams already are protected under the slate
Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, and that protection was even
more firmly established with the passage of Proposition
8 this month.
That measure makes it impossible lo tap water from
the five protected rivers without a vofe orthe electorate
or a two-thirds vote in the state Legislature.
However, there is always the possibility that t he
water will be needed by future generations of Califor-
nians, and for that reason the rivers clearly should re-
main under state control
Once placed under federal jurisdiction. they could be
released only by an act of Congress. As things stand ,
Secretary Andrus could comply with Brown's request as
a n administrative act without further action in the slate.
ln an effort to block such a move. MWD and nine
other State Water Project contractors. along with other
~gencies and counties in both Southern and Northern
· alifomia are seeking a court injunction to block further
ction on the federal takeover without public hearings
and approval oflhe state Legislature.
Apparently Brown 's ill-considered request was based
pn his distrust of Southern California water authorities
lcind fear that somewhere down the line an aUempt might
be made to tap the rivers, despite the recent ballot action.
Secretary Andrus, who will not be in office after
January, would be well advised to resist the pressure of
the Brown administration and leave any decision in the
matter to tus successor. Locking the valuable state rivers
into the federal system at this time is unthinkable.
Peacetime protection
Today is Veterans Day, once more restored to its
original place on the calendar to mark the signing of the
Armistice that ended World War l at the nth hour of the
11th day in the 11th month in 1918.
An attempt to move the holiday around to make yet
another of those three-day weekends resulted in con-
Jusion. There were too many who refused to ignore the
·~ignificance of that long-ago date. ~ The name or the holiday, however, had to be changed
from Armistice Day. ln the decades that followed that
,.first Nov. 11 . there were to be many more conflicts and
M\any more men and women to be honored for their
service, many of them not even born when World War l
ended.
The veterans of recent wars have not enjoyed the
heroes' welcome home that greeted their fathers and
grandfathers. Many who served in Vietnam received,
sadly, no welcome at all. though they had suffered just as
Cllravely and served their country as truly as did those ~artier veterans.
-. Our hope today must be that there will be no more
-·veterans of armed conflict. But we still need to honor
those who give up part or their lives to join the services in
peacetime.
For the very fact that those services exist can be the
key to our securit y and lo the maintenance or peace. , .
Opinions expressed 1n lhe space above are those of the Daily Piiot
01her views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
,.wt1sts. Reader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. P 0
\Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321
-
Boyd/Wheaties
ByL.M.BOYD
T his big interest In bran
ll moog dieters Is not new. The
eating of same was highly
Dear
· Gloo1ny
., Gus
Re the Nov. S editorial
Onions vs. Jobs: "P11de
In quatlt y work
muuhlp." UAW -
Wake up! 8 .£.8.
recommended to people who
wanted to lose welgl\l back In
1821. A health clinic operator
in Minneapolis fed his pa-
tients bran gruel for thut
purpose. in fact. In stirring It
on the stove one morning, It
s plaltered. The small drops
quickly frjed into wafers. He
tasted them. Not bad. not
bad. He discussed it with one
James Bell of the Washburn
Crosby Co. Let's experiment, •
said Bell. They tried bran re-
peatedly. But ln pac11taie1 U
powdered. Then they trled
three doleo kinda of wheat.
And ftna1b' -lt rt1bt. The flnt "Wheaties."
Am advised lbe averaae
American wtfe will speAd 11
year~ ot her Ufe u 1 widow
..
T~.~t l Ila>
Rowland Evans I Robe rt Novak
THE CHOICES are important
both in themselves and for sym·
bolic content. Purging Allen and
van Cleave, advocates of true
defense preparedness and
toughened foreign policy. could
be a move back toward the very
detentlst polic ies that ha ve
weakened the nation. Avoiding
the establishment's displeasure
In filling the Treas·ury post
would signal the embrace of
economic orthodoxy.
Taken together, those two
steps would signify Reagan's in-
tention lo replicate the Nixon-
Fo rd adminis tration : eight
years of dedining world prestige
and a deteriorating economy.
accompanied by the Republican
Party's stagnation. They have
acquired a sheen only in con-
trast to the four Carter years
that followed.
Indeed, widely ·s pec ulated
choices for senior Cabinet posts
are all Nixon-Ford retreads. So
are many of the advisers in
;>lace for the transition Jn addi-
tion to their advantages of num-
bers and proximity, these Nixon-
Ford veterans wear the cloak of
r espectability Their appoint ·
ment wi ll eam instant approval
from commentators who never
wanted Reagan for president
anyway.
The transmutation of Ronald
R e agan a s Gera ld Ford's
political executor might have
been unavoidable had he won
Richard R eeves
oarrowly, u expected Some
farslsht.OO supp0rters now Lell
him that tUs landslide carrie• a
mandate that not only permit.
but requires hiJll to build an act
mlnlstraUon with now and dlA
linc t polic ies. however un·
·fami l iar and rudl c al l o
estabhshmcnt eyes
THE FATI': OF lJi<'k Alltin,
Reagan's Waahinalon l'On"ullimt
on forci.in policy tht• 11u"t fuur
years, Is a teat c1t11e Som•·
Reagan advl18r1 ho ve t•ovlr<.I
the Queen of ffeort.s. who In or
dering ofr Alice'• head ln11h1t1-d
"Sentence rlr•t v.,rdlct ef
terwards " Retore connlct-of
Interest churicea a&Mln 11l him
could even be 1tludied, the11e ad
vlsera were sr,readJna word that
he was gone rom the future ad
ministration <even If retained
\\~ . ~orry, sir.
'
Ro~r1 N. Wffdl PuDll1her
to help plan the transtUonJ.
There is no evidence or com-
plicity by Henry A. KJ11ln1er
Cwbo telephoned Allen con·
dolences obout his troubles). But
Allen IJ viewed by conservative
RcpubHcan polltlclan& as a
u rercuard aaairurt the return of
Kluln-cer or Kissinger-style de-
t nth1m In urging Allen to fight
hhl <letructor11, one such polili·
c·1111l wrote him: "You cannot
lo11t' thia battle, for it is at the
hr.rt of the fight for the mind
a nd IOUI Of lhe Reagan ad-
mlnl1tratlon's fo reign and de-
ftnH policies.''
VANCLEAVE, Reagan's prin·
clpal adviser on arms control
has no ~cal charges against
him But when lhe Reagan cam·
paign Oct. 29 repudiated his
public stat e m e nt that the
..... _.
Rea,an a dministration mlpt
have to lncreue defeme ·~
lnc more than 7 percent a,..,.,
there were echoes ol Pteeldeat
Ford'• 1ackln1 of J ame1 Scblel-
lnger u defen1e secretary fot
refualng to cut defenae spendlq.
Like Allen, van Cleave ttu been
prlv ately read out orthe new .ad-
ministration by some Reagan in-
siders.
As for the key Treasury post,
publicly-mentioned possibilities
are, to the man. Nixon-Ford
a luputi : William Simon, Alan
Greenspan, Charles Walker. All
are publicly committed, as is
Reagan, to sustained tax reduc-
tion. But since none of them sup·
ported that policy in their Nixon·
Ford incarnations. the question
arises: Would they opt for cau·
lion and respectability in a
Reagan administration?
That question cannot be asked
about Lew Lehrman, a 42-year-
o Id Vale-and H arvard-
educaled self·made millionaire
from New York City and an in-
novative economic theorist. At
the Treasury. Lehrman would
ins ist on supply-side theories
with radical tax reduction. He
would start reviving the dollar
by moving toward a return to
gold backing. He is no favorite
of Wall Street but has fervent
support from the supply-side
economic clique and a wide
R e publi can spectr um in
Congress rangi ng from
moderate Rep. David Stockman
of Michigan to conservative Sen.
Jesse Helms of North Carolina.
THEY AN D OT HE8
Republican politicians want to
see senior Cabinet members
whose names are not household
words. That would take political
courage for Reagan. So would
appointment a s secretary of
state of a name that is familiar:
De mocratic Sen. Henry M.
Jackson Some of Reagan's Nix-
on-Ford adviser s (especially
Bill Simon ) bitte rly oppose
.I ackson. Lut he would be a de-
p arture from the unhappy
Republican past a nd an opening
to coalition politics .
The last three presidents to
begin new adminis trations
J ohn F. Kennedy, Richard M.
"lixon and J immy Carter -
were s harkled by hairline vic-
tories Not so Reagan . who faces
unlimited possibilities with no
need to e mbrace names and
policies of a past more ~sociat
ed with.failure than s uccess.
How television could help next election
WASJflNGTON The ··Great
Debate."' the climax of the 1980
presidential campaign, did not
get very good reviews. Henry
St eele Commager, the historian.
writing in the Los Angeles
Times , c omm e nt e d that
television debates '"corrupt the
publi c judgment and, e ventual
ly. the political proce5s ··
With great respect to Com
mager and others who believe
that, l would
s ubmit that
the political
pr o~e s s i s
al ready cor ·
rupted and
th ey don 't
kn o w what
they are talk-
ing about
The y h ave
not been out
there. liVlng with the alternatives
lo debate The Cleveland en-
counter between Jimmy Carter
and Ronald Reagan may not have
threatened the reputations of Dis-
raeli or Lincoln, but it was one of
the few moments in the whole
campaign that djdn't make you
want to throw up.
PRESIDENTIAL campaign-
ing h as drastically c hanged
since I began the rat-race for
the New York Times in 1968.
Then, despite books about
Sydney Harris
televis ion and selling of presi-
dents, the campaign was essen·
tially print-oriented The domi-
nant non-candidates on the trail
in those days were the most
s en ior a nd mos t respecte d
newspaper and ma gazine re-
porters -people like .rames
Reston or the New York Times
and, later. David Broder of the
Washington Post
There were daily press con·
ferences on the road Yes, they
were trivial most of the time,
but th<'rl' were follow-up ques-
t ions by J>('rs1!>.tent and informed
reporters A Broder or a Tom
Wicker or someone less well-
known. would lead the interroga-
tion or c:.mdidales about ideas like
$1.000-a head poverty grants
THAT REALLY changed in
1976. Telev1s1on correspondents
particularly aggressive ones
like Sam Donaldson of ABC
News took over with their
armies of equipment bearers.
· There we re fewer and fewer
formal and informal question-
and·answer sess ions . They were
replaced by shouted -and
filmed cries of "Mr. Presi·
dent. you've been charged with
. .. " followed by a smile, a
wave and a slamming car door.
That wnR about all there was
this year: Ralli es. town meet·
ings with awed citizens and
chati. with nl't~ork and local
an<'h orme n w ith o ut th e
knowledge or the rt><tuisite ir-
reverence to pus h a president or
a possible pres ident The can-
didates only talk to cam eras and
crowds now. Time Magazine has
not had an interview wit h Presi-
dent Carter 1n o ver a year.
News week has been shut out for
2' 2 years.
··we couJd just hold the whole
e lection in Washington then
we wouldn't have to go through
this charade of r unning around
the country at great expensP,"
said Greg Schneiders , an un
u s ua lly c andid assis tant to
Carter ... We do rnedia events
we do television events We
stage these things because we
know that the reality is that
there's going lo be an everung
news tonight a nd they ·are
budgeted for a Carter spot and a
Reagan spot.··
"l 'M NOT BLAMING
television. The thing has been in·
vented it has inherent in·
formalional limitations -and
now we have to live wit~ it. The
best thing television does
maybe the best it can do -is de·
bates or pseudo-debates. In the
real world of 1984 and beyond,
then. anyoae who cares about
politics and presidents should be
begging or working for debates,
not complaining that they are
not good enough.
Now that the election is over.
universities and foundations and
othe r nice organizations will
be~i n sponsoring conferences
about what happened and how
we could do all this better. I
would suggest that they -and
networks and newspapers, the
League of Women Voters, Com-
mon Cause and all the good peo-
ple. try to figure out a struc·
ture lo force the next round of
pres idential hopefuls into more
debates, more rigorous debates.
Forms and s tructures should
be set up beginning now. before
the next campaign begins . Which
will be in about two months .. Face
to face e ncounters with can-
didates questioned by experts in
s 1gnficiant fields . Debates
scheduled before the candidates
announce. Demands of and
pressure on candidates and
parties lo make debates part of
their campaigns and platforms.
Obviously, candidates could
refuse to play by the good
people's rules. But that should
be a campaign issue in itself. We
can, you know. push these peo·
pie around -we pay them . If
the rest of us -reporters and
citizens alike -don't make our
rules now. we will play again by
their rules and get a lot of doors
slammed in eur dumb faces.
Weight: There's always too muCh or too little
my mind I am stm skinny. I'm like the fellow who sat
through the prelude, the In·
terlude a.nd the postlude, walling
tor the "lude" that never came.
I've been walling for "weight"
all m y Ufe.
What I mean by thta curious
expres11lon is that I s pent the
first half of
my life belnlC
unde rweight,
and Che latter
half being
overweight. It
lo o k s as
though I am
never going
t o "'b e
''welthL''
T h l s
m el anc hof y reflection was
prompted by one of my children
rt1mn1 throuah my old flies at
home and comlns up with a pie-
.-t
lure or me ln fjme maeuine
whtn I Wa!'I 20 years old. The ac·
companying 8tory (written in
"TlmHt'" or that period) re-
ttrred lo me. among other
thlnaa. as • ·wup.walsted. •·
AND WASP·WAISTED J was lndee~. weighing about 12$
pound• wringing wet. All during
my youth and young manhood I
kept quaffing malted milks and
t•oplouft calories of whipped
cream to get a Uttle fl esh on my
bones.
Then, sometime In my 308, a
c u rious metaboli c chanae
seem ed to take place almost
<1\'ernight, and month by month,
·year by year, 'l expanded -but
1 atm retained the sell-lmace of
being lean. until one day my
doctor casually suuesttd lhat lt
--____ _..__...... --------· ·~·---
wouldn't hurt to take off 10
pounds or so.
Since then, as many of you
m ay sympathiie wlth. it has
been a grim , relentless, and
nearly losing battle to attain my
optimum weight. The trouble 1s
that during my campaign to get
heavier I became irremediably
addicted to sweets of a ll sorts.
and l begin to twitch like a
junki& If denied a snort of peanut
brittle or a square or fudge for 24
hOurs at a run.
G ROWING OLDE R always
comes as a great surprise to us,
for we find lt Impossible to ·
believe we will chan1e aa much
as we do, at leq t phyaiol~cal·
Jy. and I am stlU ~hock@d when 1
newspaper lnterviewer reftrs to
me 1n print u "portly," alnce lo
~
As another example, I never
thought I ·could gel enough sleep
when young, and could happily
s tay in the kip until noon on any
given day. I looked upon my
father as eccentric, if not ~ad,
tor rising early in the morning.
even on Sundays and holidays,
as 1 turned over for another two
hours of blissful slum~r.
NOW. ON SUMMER vaca·
llon11. I find m yself padding
down to the kitchen at 6 a.m .•
makintt coffee, and wandering
oul to lhe village post ortlce two
boura before It opens, alooa with
a few other old codgers who
don't know what to do with
themselves t hat early . T he
worst trick llf e plays on us ts not
tellln1 ua what to expect of
ouraelves.
-·--------
~
I >
NATION
Widow ties 'strings'
to $500,000 donation • •1 "11..a LOii vlalllna l.oatructor. Nol an academl· .,__..ca, clan," she aald, ber voice Orm, "but SUll'l'f& ,,., -Well·do-do widow aomebody wbo will lake time off
daaaM1-.0IOto1maU\mlvenlt.y. from Wall Street for a semester. A
lo? NatMaa too UDUIUal about that. practicing investor." ....... tti.e ...,:ltil•* la a.uoe UD.lverelty,
la ......., Delud. Stetsoo la not a ·::r .....-. lMlt lta atandarda are Md it. II well recanled for Its ,.._ram ln bmlnesa admlnlatration.
TBS DONOa 18 Sarah Georce.
lln. Georte la IO. She Uves modestly
la a amall brick house 'OD an un·
pntentiom street.Her yean have not aulled ber sense of perspective. Nor
ber aeme al humor. Nor, clearly, her
Mme al adventure.
Tbat becomes apparent when you
take a look al the strings that
aprlabtlY lady attached to her half.
mUJicm-doUar gift.
Ber husband, Roland George, died
last year. He was in good health until
a month before his death, at 93, and
never retired from his lifetime
paulon, which was playing ~tock
market.
"n WAS BOTH his business and
his bobby," Mrs. George recalled.
"He was an investor. He never tired
of it. In bis last days, he read the
market quotations with a magnifying
glus."
· I.n all bis years as a Wall Street in·
vestor, Roland George had occasion
to train many young people entering
the investments field . He detected in
them a pervasive flaw.
"Roland was a down-to-earth
man," Mrs. Geofge said. "It an-
noyed him that colleges could teach
only theory. The students used play
money. They took no real risks. He
felt the only way lo learn investing
was actually to do it."
SO, IN MEMORY of her husband,
Mrs. George approached Stetson
University with this proposition:
She would give Stetson University
$500,000 provided the students in an
advanced course in investments con·
trol tbe whole bundle, and speculate
wltb it themselves , win or lose.
Dicey.
"If they lose it," Mrs. George said,
ever so softly, •"Well, they will have
learned something by the experience.
"If they make money, they are to
uae the earnings to pay a salary for a
THE GEO&GES. Roland and
Sarah, tnew what lt was like lo be
botb up and down financially.
During the Depression, Roland
Georee walked the streets of New
York for two years and was on the
verge of going back to the Pen·
nsylvania dairy farm where he grew
up before he fmally landed a job at a
bank.
Sarah, meanwhile, worked as a
librarian and kept house in their
apartment in Greenwich Village.
They had no children.
"We lived on Roland's salary and
invested mine," she said. "That's
how it began, very small. He made
much more than he lost. I was sur·
prised at the size of the estate."
NE ED LESS TO SAY, Stetson
University was surprised, too. Mrs.
George's offer, of course, was
s napped up.
"I know of no other school with a
program like this," said David
Nylen, dean of the business school.
'"We intend to f()(us on this program,
really do it right.
''This investment fund should
generate enough money, enough pro·
fits. to attract recognized experts, to
provide scholarships, to build a
fine reference collection. That is, of
course, if all goes well."
If. Isn't that the little word Roland
George had in mind?
,.,. ..........
WOMAN DONATES HALF MILLIOtt DOLLARS
Mra. Ao19nd George memortdlle• ru•9bend
Vanda/,s' parems hit
TOWSON, Md. (AP> -The parents of two
Baltimore County teen·agers have been ordered
to pay more than $20,000 as partial restitution for
their sons' vandalism of two schools last year.
Circuit Judge Edward A. DeWaters Jr. issued
the orders against Dr. David and Lila Jenkins , ?nd
J erry and Shirley Haller, both of Lutherville.
Authorities said David Jenkins J r .. 15, and
J ohn Hatter, 16, were responsible for more than
$200,000 in damages to a local elementary school
and a local junior high school a year ago.
Save
Vol!I' energy
In the laundry room.
Always wash full loads or adjust the water
level in your washing machine to fit the size
of the load. Use wann or cold water whenever
possible. Always dry full loads and don't over·
dry your clothes. Be sure the lint filter on the
dryer is clean.
,
CWL. y PILOT A 7
Join us for a Pre-Christmas exhibit
of Byzantine kons recreated in bronze.
On November 11 and 12. in our
Fashion Island store. we will pre·
sent a large and varied collection
of 18th Century Byzantine Icons.
in bronze recreation During the
exhibit. James P O'Donnell, an
internationally known collector.
connoisseur. and authority, will be
on hand to 5hare his expertise
with you .
Choose from a number of
unusual pieces in solid bronze.
with the champ/eve (raised field)
enamelling done by the nuns of
the Priory of St Paul.
lJ)fer Fleur De Lis
(rcJ)). Enamelled
J" lC 5'.' $71.
!>I C.t-<1r~e and the
Dr Jgon. Eoa1111•llf'd
J" x l YI '.' $68.
Serving Southern C1/dorn1a since 1894
11 Fashwn /\land. t'"'fX>rt /Jc•arh b44-57h4
MasterCard. V1~a. and Anwt1c,m Exprf'~S
....
•~
Don't take a bath on your hot water costs.
Water heating is the second Jargest user of natural gfl$.
So set your water heater thermostat below the
middle of the dial and instaJI a water heater
insulation blanket. Get a water-saving
showerhead and take short showers(Wash
onJy full loads in the dishwasher and fix
leaky hot water faucets.
Don't bum~
when you~
Don't preheat the gas oven ... it's unnecessary.
Avoid opening the oven while food is cooking;
it's bad for the food and your gas bill. Adjust top ..-
burner flames to fit pans; then reduce to simmer
after cooking starts.
If you put these energy-saving hints into action,
they won't make a difference in your life, but
they will make a difference in your gas bills.
For more ways to save gas, call the Gas Company
at 1-800·35~·4124. ·
~work together
fOSM18enmgJ.
.. ~·
99!
r I
I
NATION
FreighteF legend retold ,
~
Cadeta honer Z9 u:lw m?rd ffOim with ship
4 u .......
IL.L.trATID fREIGHTER EDMUND FnZOeRALD
Sank In Lake Superior norm Nov. 10, 1171
Gist wit•ess
Man denies
murdering six
WEST CHESTER, Pa. <AP) -Coolly and
_calmly, Bruce Johnston Sr. denied under oath that
he tilled a stepson or five other people whom
authorities say he murdered to keep from squeal-
ing about bis criminal activities.
Johnston was the Slst defense witness as bis
trial before a jury of seven women and five men
entered ita sixth week in Chester County Court.
BE IS CHARGED WITH THE deaths of James
Johmtoo, Duane Lincoln, Wayne Sampson, James
$ampeon and Robin Miller, all in AufU.'t 1978, and
Gary Crouch in 1977.
Momenta after Johnston toot the witness
stand, bis lawyer, Anthony Li.st, asked him:
"Did you ever participate in the shootings of
James Johnston, Duane Lincoln and Wayne
Sampson?''
-"No, I did not," Johnston responded.
Q : "Richie Mitchell testified you were there
and shot one of the three in the head. Were you
there?"
A: "No, I was not."
THE THREE TEEN-AGERS allegedly were
s lain the night of August 16, 1978, and MitcheJI led
police to their common grave in a wooded, rural
area Dec. 30. Mitchell has pleaded guilty to the
murders in a plea bargain for a reduced sentence.
Another prosecution witness was Leslie Dale,
who testified J ohnston hired him to kill Crouch and
-told him about the other murders.
Johmtoa denied any part of the kiJ.1iD1 of. Crouch, wboee body wu found wben Dale led
police to the burial site.
JOHNSTON SAID THAT ON the night Crouch
was killed he bad met the victim and Dale in a
restaurant.
"Crouch had called me in my home and said it
was important to see me, and I remember it
because my wife was expecting any minute. She
was pregnant and I didn't really want to see him
because I dido 't want to leave my wife very long,"
Johnston testified.
civll Grumbling ...
Gloomy Gus
~ lnth• DAILY PILOT
LEARN!!
DETROIT CAP) -Juat ~
dawn'• chilly fl rat ll1hl, IO
cadeu from the Great Lat"
Maritime Academy stood at
1Uent attent.ioo u U••o wreetha
were dropped into Grand
Travene Bay.
They boaored the crewmen of
the hei1bter Edmund
Ftt11erald. which sank with all
zt handl durtn1 a vlclOUI 1torm
on Lake Superior fl ve years
a10, OD Nov. 10, 19'75.
Tbe lnvetU1auon into the ftnal
voya1e of the enormoua o,. ~ar·
rier wu olftciaUy closed wtth a
Coast Guard NpOrt In July 1.tT7.
But-ibe lepnd of the Edmund
Flta1erald 1urvives, in a haunt·
iDI ballad by aln1er Gordon
LJ1bttoot and u a teaUmooial to
the .treacherous 1ald of Nov·
ember and the Great Lake•
sailon wbo defy them.
AT MAIUNl!RS' CHVaCR ID
downtown Detroit, the Rev.
Richard Ingalls tolled the
sanctuary bell 29 times when
special services marked the
Fitagerald anniversary.
"We keep It alive every year.
It's one significant tragedy that
will keep alive our recognition of
what the Great Lakes are and
the personnel who work them,"
Ingalls said In an interview.
He said he remembers the
sinking "as t hough It were
yesterday."
The 729-foot freighter was
bound for Detroit from Superior,
Wis., loaded with 26,126 tons of
taconite ore pellets. The cap-tain, Ernest M. McSorley of
Toledo, Ohio, had 40 years' ex·
perience traversing the lakes.
aECOaDS FROM THAT
fateful Monday show the
Fitzgerald was nearing Wbiteftsb
Point In southeast Lake Superior
about 3:30 p.m .. when McSorley
radioed a nearby U.S. Steel Corp.
freighter, the Arthur M. An·
derson.
Pounding waves had ripped a
deck rail from the Fitzgerald
and the ship was tUting severe-
ly, McSorley told the Anderson's
skipper, Capt. Jesse Cooper.
But McSorley also said pumps
':'THE
EARL'S
11'\.UMelfOG•MfATllOO ..., ..... " ....... Sl \.it 21 ,,,,_'
5., ........ ,,,..,.. g,.,,, .... """', {lnctf
1Ca11 St,_• N••'"'"' v""'' A1•••
cona •ra641-1 289
ISltl--
...... ~1 iN!::.c::::"!~~-=...'
TU ... 'S • ..-..oalAL ACUPUNCTURE
DI. AMllOSI, S.C.
UM
Hf W. 1 ftli Str..t c..e.......,c•
541-7270 or 642-2513 .., ... __ °""'
were ......., the hatchet, 11Mt
Andenoa crew later te1Uft9d
before a Cout Ouard Manne
Bqard ol lnvntl1atlon that the
Fltllfrald dJd DOt seem HMOUI·
ly Imperiled.
The Sl·de1ree water• 1rew
wilder u nt1ht fell. By 7: 10
p .. m .. with tbt rtt11erald 13
mllea off Whlteflah Polnt1 wavet •
had built to U fMt ana wtnd1
were tmtinl to 75 mph' ln what
obaerver1 termed the worst
autumn 1ale {n as years.
"WI! UI! HOLDING ova
own;" wu the last mesaa1e the
17-year-old· Flt11erald sent.
Within minutes. Cooper re·
called, t.be frei1hter disappeared
from the Anderson's radar
screen.
When the storm's fury had
spent itself 12 hours later, all
that remained for rescue crews
were two lifeboats, one raft and
an oil slick.
Nine miles east of Canada's
Copper Mine Point, where the
Fitzgerald was las t plotted,
Late Superior washed ashore
ring buoys, oars and Hfe jackets,
but surrendered no trace of the
men who'd had no time to use
them.
The official Coast Guard in·
vestigation blamed leaking
hatchcovers for the tragedy,
says Capt. Charles Millradt, who
led the Coast Guard's futile
rescue effort. The ship had been
taking on water for 18 hours
before nosediving to its 530-foot
grave, wrenching into three
pieces on impact.
"I WOULD SAY NEVER find ·
ing bodies is complete ly
normal," Millradt says. "Most
people probably washed over
deck or were trapped un -
derneath. The mor e typical
Hollywood approach of bodies
and skeletons laying a round is
not realistic, especially with the
extreme storm raging at the
time."
E .J . "Shine" Sundstrom. a
Great Lakes historian in Sault
Ste. Marie, said local seamen
s till debat e wheth er the
Fitzgerald might actually have
sunk because its keel ripped on
1boala, a theory the Coast Guard
d11mlued.
And Jean-Michel Cousteau,
aon of renowned oceanographer
Jacques Cousteau, suggested
after , an exploratory dive lhiJ
paat September that the
frelshter broke up on the sur-
face rather than aft.er sinking. I
''A lot of experienced skippers ,
I talk to ttlU don't agree with the '
Coaat Guard, but nobody will
ever really find out," Sundstrom said.
"It wasn't the worst Great
Lakes pccident <that was the
1915 capsizing of the Eastland,
which took 812 passengers to the
bottom of Lake Mi chigan ofr
Chicago) but it's certainly the
most famous."
Simi man dies
Newport Equity ~unds ·Inc
l lCENSEO BROKER SINCE 1969
in boat crash ~~~~i~e~~~s~O~n~~~g
BAKERSFIELD <AP > -A ~
Simi Valley man was killed .1.Jental "LI~~1t~I. when his outboard motorboat .L-:JL,a ~l
crashed during a race at Buena
Vi sta Aquatic Recreation By GERALD WINKLER, D.D.S. Reservoir, officials said.
Wayne D. Cook . 26, was CHILD'S FIRST DENTAL VISIT
traveling about 100 miles per
hour when his boat became
airborne, authorities reported.
His back was broken, and he
was dead on arrival at a hospital
here.
Cook was participating in a
California Outboard Racing
Associjltion Event.
Pa yrnents restored
LOS ANGELES (AP> -State
Finance Director Mary Ann
Graves has announced that
welfare payments docked from
recipients who receive income
tax refunds will be restored,.in
full. Ms. Graves' announcement
comes more than six months
after a judge ordered a halt to
the practice of reducing a
welfare recipient's payments by
the amount of his fede ral income
tax refund.
A child i.:oini.; to lhl·
drnt1l>t for the hrl>t t1m,, •~ 11ftl'11 a handful o l
anx1etres An' drnt1'1
us mg the n ght ti't·hn 1
qu1ts c;in tram.form thl•
most ternf1cd child into
a cooµl•ratl\·c· patient
\\ho 1!-nr1 lonf,!er ufrarrl
a 1·h1ld \\h11 will
ll'J\l' the offttl' \\Ith u
<om1le on tu!. fa1·e
The f1rl>t th1ni.: a den
ll<;l mui.t do I' convince
the rhrld of hi' honestv
<"hllllrc·n are 'mar·l
The~ an· not t.>asll\
fooled If a ~ounl('>ter ,·.,
µrom1sed t hat a
µa1 t1cular th1nJ! \1111 l)e
rlone thl' dl•nt1c;t had
bel tPr ht-!>Ure he doc"
ti
l"~u;1lh . tht• rlt•nt1st
begmi, with i.oml'th1n1ot
ras~ lie :.;ns. · Toda' I
a m i:omi? t11 count \'our
tcrth · And. ufter that.
tome •1h;it ma~. he
mu~a count the teeth,
using whatever means
necessary Remember
this The child often cries before anything is
rione to him Ceven a
f1r~t haircut i He is not
hurl and the dentist
has to prove that he can
he trusted to do exactly
what 11<' says he is go·
ini.: to do no more. no
lci.s The noise and
h) ~lerics generally dis·
apµear after the first
'1s1l If the denllsl
establishes his rehabili·
t~ and that he is
trust worthy. there will
rarely be any m ore
trouble
Ge rald Winkler. O.D.S.
and h sociates
11111 \\O<:ado, Suite sos.
'•·~1 port Beach Phont•: 640·<1100
Up until N.OW.. a
balance sit ting in a
check ing account
has been money
doing nothing.
5.4 7{fi, on the unused ha lann.· jn vour accou nt.
We'll gin: you the Bill Call System free
through theenJ of the year a:-, inccnti\'C: to sig n
up now. En.·n next yea r. tlwrl'~ no .HJ<liti onal
charge fo r this serYice.
~HOW YOU CAN
LEGALLY PAY NO
TAXES IN 1980
AND RECOVER TAXES
PAID IN ·
1977' 1978, 1979
But if you open
an Allstate Savings
N.OW. Checking
Account, you can make your balance work for
a living to the tune of 5.4 7%. (Yield based on a
5.25% rate, com~u nded.)
If vou alreac.h-ha\'C: thc Bill Call Svstcrn. \\'c'll waiv~ the charg"c:s until thc:c.:nJ nf tl{e year.
GET\VJ IAT"SCOMINGTOYOU.
Stop by your nearest Allstate Savings office and
we'll open your N.O.\\( Account tc.xlay.
Its about time vo ur checking account
J UST THE WAY 14 PROFITABLE AMERICAN COMPANI ES WITH
PRETAX WORLDWIDE EARNINGS Of' OVER 3.S BILLION DOLLARS
PAID NO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES AT ALL! ON THE LIST OF· NO TAX
COMPANIES. ARE U.S. STEEL. GENERAL DYNAMICS. AMERICAN
AIRLINES. OCCIDENTAL PETROLEUM". BOEING AND J P. :\IORC:A:-0: &
CO. <Report Changing Times. October 19801
DON'T WAIT UNTIL mE END OF THE YEAR.
.CALL NOW AND LEARN HOW TO PUT YOUR
TAX DOLLARS TO WORK FOR MORE INCOME
FOR YOU!
PHONE: 644-2507
( A s k lo r Se min a r D l rector > AND ATTEND A
COMPUMENTARY TAX SEMINAR. Call today and aak for
seminar dates. Refreshments will be served.
~ Seminar Speaker
Mr. Gerald L. Kozak, Tax Planner
Newport Center
359 San Miguel Dr., Suite 110
Newport Beach, CA. 92660
ReservaUona limited .
. ..
'
Which is a lot better than the zero percent
an ordjnary checking_ account pays you.
GET A HEAD START AND SOME
FREEBIES TO BOOT.
The government has approved December .)1,
1980* as the start date for the N.OW. Account.
But if you sign up for a N.OW. Account
now, you1J start earning instantly and be ready
to write checks starting December 31. Plus
we11 print you 200 free N.OW. Account
checks from our wide selection. (i
Meanwhile, we can al<iO include
use of our exclusive Bill Cal l System Account
that lets you pay hundreds of creditors
by phone.While you merely sit back and collect
. ' lx.---carne a paying proposition.
-ALLRATI SAYINGS
• tthr
Allsralt' Savings and L°'n Assocralron. a ml'mbt·r C1f 1ht Sl·11r~ hrmih 1(\0 hranrhc' ~w1•1\ iUl'. n1•11rh S \ t"ll111n 1n ·"''''' ''111lt1ll t 1<1 lrn.11 \1.ut· ''')(1tlniioos. I~
Fountain Valley 18798 Brookhurst Ave. (Valley Center Plaza). Fullerton 1107 So. Harbor Blvd.
· ,Mission Viejo 27521 Puerta Real. Newport Beacl~ One Corporate Plaza.
s8n Clemente 911 So. El Camino Real . Santa Ana 1200 W.17th St. Tustin 18232 frvine Blvd.
Wes.tminster/Huntington Beach 540 Westminster Mall.
"
j l
'
Marshlands'
revival seen
Tate Seal Beach National .,,.....,. ...... w.tlaacb will be
......... ~&he reatoratJoa of
lf.5 aeree of clried·UP coastal martll.
0811, ......... DARK AREA NOTES REFUGE
185 acrea lnvotved
Route 55
study sl a t e d
W e dne sday
The first in a second series or
Costa Mesa workshop sessions
on Route SS's transportation
study will be held by Caltrans and
city officials Wednesday.
Thomas Cbarmley, refu1e mu.,er, aald the project abo
will develop a nestin1 area for
the e~ered least tem and
will create two tidal ponds to
provide a food chain for coastal
blrda.
THE PROJECT, scheduled to
be1ln next year, will brine the
total marsh area inside the ref·
u1e to about 865 acre s,
Charmley said, making it one of
the largest salt marshes left in
the state.
The refuge takes in about 900
acres in the Anaheim Bay, in·
s ide the U.S. Naval Weapons
Station in Seal Beach. It is north
of Huntington Harbour along
Pacific Coast Highway.
THEDRIEDmarsh is be ing
restored by the removal of Case
Road, whic'-has blocked tidal
flow to the area for more than 20
years, Charmley said. He said
Nasa Island, in the center of the
present marsh , will be de·
veloped into a least tern breed·
ing area.
Charmley, who is employed by
the U.S. Department of the In·
terior, said the project would
cost up to $185,000 and would be
done by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.
"This is a significant develop·
ment because salt marshes are
rare ly reclaimed," Charmley
s aid. "Usually they are dredged
and filled or made into boat
slips. Besides the Bolsa Chica
ecological reserve this will be
the only salt marsh restoration
project in the state."
... .--.,.~~-w_.i
Balboa IJridge sift!dng
Workmen put finishing touches to work platform they'll
use during next five months while completing overhaul or
Sl·year·old bridge. The 40().foot·long concrete structure
has slowly been sinking for three years. When the job is
done. prior to Easter Week crush, the bridge will have 96
,,,
T~.Nov•m~ 11, IMO DM.,Y Pl.OT' • ,._
new pilings, a new see-through railing, new lights and a
wider pedestrian and bike sidewalk. During construction,
traffic over bridge will periodically be limited to one lane
between 9 a.m . and 4 p.m. weekdays. City-funded project
will cost $1.3 million. The session, expected to last
about two hours, is scheduled for
Southern California College's
Administration Building, room
111, 55 Fair Drive, at 7:30 p.m.
A Caltrans spokes man said
the public is urged to offer views
regarding nine alternatives for
handling traffic along bus y
Newport Boulevard between the
Costa Mesa Freeway and Pacific
Coast Highwa)'..
CHARMLEYSAID portions of
C ase Road wi ll remain, to
become is.lands. He said more
than 100 species of birds utilize
the area during the year, includ·
ing the endangered light·footed
clapper rail, the Californra
brown pelican and the Belding
Savannah sparrow.
Badham pushes for slide repairs
A similar city-sponsored
workshop session was held la.st
month for Newport Beach resi·
dents.
Man fo und s la in
,HOLLYWOOD CAP > -A
Hbllywood man was found
gagged and stabbed to death in
hi• rans~cked bogie, and
authorities say he was killed
during an apparent robbery,
He said the tidal ponds will en-
compass about three acres each,
will be about four feet deep and
will provide fish for the coastal
birds.
Charmley said restoration of
the dried·up marsh will see the
growth of marsh vegetation
within one to two years, includ·
ing cord grass and pickleweed,
important plants in the salt
marsh tood chain.
The refuge was established in
1972, he said.
Rep. Robert Badham, R·Newport Beach, has urged a federal
disaster official lo give "prompt consideration" to a Laguna Beach
appeal for funds to repair landslide damage in Arch Beach
Heights.
Badham sent a letter to William Wilcox, deputy director of the
Federal Emergency Management Agency, following similar com·
munications sent in October from Sens. Alan Cranston and S.I.
Hayakawa.
Badham previously toured the site, where 30,000 cubic yards of
dirt as well as about40feetof Del Mar Avenue, slid down thebillaide.
The February landslide caused heavy damage to two homes.
One owned by Dr. C.L. McArthur al IN8 Del Mu wu rued in Sep·
tember. .
In his letter to Wilcox , Badbam noted that more damage could
potentially occur at the site.
Health Net:
"Alter reviewipg the geological and engineering reports, it ap-
pears evident that the application for assistance meets <the agen· ~
cy's) guidelines for emergency work," be wrote. ·.
Badham said he wanted to be kept informed by the agency of
the status of the city's appeal.
Tbe City Council has authorUed the expenditure ~ $845,000 , ,
rrom city funds to complete the restoration of the billalde.
The slide mass threatens homes on Baja Street and Del Mar ; .· '
above the slide , and about 10 homes below on Crestview and ·
G ainsbo.rouch drives. ·
City Manager Keo Frank noted that Cranston, Hayakawa, and
Badham had looked at geological information related to the slide. ~. _
"When people look at the information, they all come to the
same CODClmion -• 1ood portkJn of tbe repair Work t. ellCibJe for, , federal funds." he said. "ll'a the only coocluslon you can eorne •1-to." ~ .
. '
Insurance for your b ·11 • A staff of do tors fOryour health.
There 's an alternative health plan for group
members in Southern California. It's called
Health Net and its purpose is to take care
of people.
Behind every member
is a team of dectors.
There are 41 Health Net medical centers in
Southern California, each with a staff of doctors
ready to meet all of your health needs. You make
your own appointments with a doctor of your choice.
Waiting is kept to a minimum and you can see the '
same doctor every time you visit. If necessary, your
doctor can arrange appointments with a staff spe-
cialist. Since Health Net is sponsored by Blue Cross of
Southern C.alifomia, you know that each medical
center meets exacting federal standards.
We pay Health Net doctors to
help keep you healthy.
That's their only concern because we've taken care
of everything else. Health Net pays your participating
· medical group a fixed amount each month to provide care to you. One fee. Unlimited visits, usually at no extra cost.
·'That's why your Health Net doctor's only interest is giving
J\J,(11Um Xlt'<lk-111 Group
Artt"'i<1. Xlullikin Medicnl Center•
Bellllowrr :\ IK!ic."1 Group. Inc:
Burbmk :\l{-dical Oinic. Inc '
CAOOICll Park:Commuml)'
Medical Group of m ... , \';ilk:y
Cmtll Ml.'SA: Bn~tol Park
Mc"<lkal Group. Inc.•
~Medical Clio ... ·•
El Turoll..Ak.r F~: \'1'la
Mooical Croup
..
Garden Grm·e:J~ph\\'. '.':<Ible.
M.D., Medk"lll Grp .. Inc.
Granada Hills A!ooc11ttd
Physicians Mediclll Group. Inc.•
Gnimda Hill~: Facer Ml'dical
Group. Inc.•
Huntington P11rk: Southcal\t
Medical Center'
ln~·OOd: Pl'llirie A\t!nl.I('
Mtdkal Group '
• Mt'mlxor of th<' llnirwd Medi<-<11 C~ /
I.a l li1brn: Friend I) Hill•
Medkal Group•
Lom:i Lmcla \ IK!ical (imur. Inc
I.MK B('a<"h; Tht• I lamn'l.in
Jtltlt'll Med1c11l Chnk •
Lfl!I An>eelt-s:
The Xln111\' · \\'hitt•
Ml'<lirnl Climt·•
Multi·SJi«i;lll\ \lt<l11.:il
( in111p. l111.· ' ..
. . l .
you the highest quality care no matter how
many appointments it takes. And your
premiums ate usually lower than those
of regular health plans.
Your family doctor can still
be right around the comer.
With 41 Health Net centers located
throughout Southern C.alifomia, you
-· • " . . . .
~ • • . .
. . . . . . . .
•, • • . . . .
~ . ·-no longer need to drive for miles in ~
order to see a different doctor for every ~
member of your family. A whole staff of ~
doctors work right in your community. f I
Medical care is available t6 you 24 hours ~
a day. Woiildn't you feel better just know-~
ing that? It's another way that Blue Cr~ of t
Southern California is ready to help. So watch
for the announcement of Health Net where you
work. Available from Blue Cross of Southern
California. Health Net: the health care concept of the
future -with some of the nice things from the past.•
Xonh Hollywood:\' 1.:1
~ledical Croup•
Ontario: Vineyard
:\ledical Group
Or.Inge: \'<ll'l>a Pllrk
Xledical Group•
Panonima Cit ':\':1n ~U)~
:\lt'<liClll <imup•
Pllsa<kna: s.,n G41bricl Medical
r."'uJ> lft<1lth Pli\n. Inc
. .
HEAL1ll NET •. Blue Cross.
A~~ HMO dSo.#wnc.aMorna
9
~n Bernardino: Family Practice
:\ledical Group of San Bernardino
Siin Diejro: Rtts·Stealy Mfdkal
Group(Mira Mrsa.Tiem~nta
and La Mesa·
Seril>Pl' Oinic I La Jolla and
Rancho Hemamo)
Smith Hanna Medlen! Clinic•
San Gabriel: Jo.eph W.1'1;hle.
Xl.D .. Me<lical Grp .. I~
•
Santa Baroora Medical F~llll111111n
Clinic (Santti Rarbara and
CArpinttri.'I
Till· Rl'Vl'l"'ick.· Xkdical Oink:
T<#Tllnce Family :\ll'(hal (imup
Ventura: Butniwentura Medk:81
Oink.Inc.
West ~'inti :\ll'<lkal Qinic•
Westmimittt' Mt'dical 6'wJ) •
Yorba 1.indA Medk91 Qinic, lnc. •
VucaiP' Mt'\liall c1'1lter
•
l
'
-OM.YN.OT T..._ ......... , .......
Kid killer undetecle
inLapna Jf'inter renews fear of 'The Babysitter'
Aa ........... u4t ..,_ .. ,.w M
Ml at Uae La•••• ..... l"tld•al ., Alta r;••• Mn. II from : ........... .
T~e •Hat wlll be
&::~~=-: ....
......... IPACM wmMaftOUlebtlia-. "?!;.... wilbla1 to
~ ........
CM eaMad tM s.Jor
Clttaea1 Club at 515 ~Ave.,•·MU.
Anon blamed
SAN. DIEGO CAP) -
Anon ii beinl blamed by autboritles for a
doaen ID.-. fires within
a lS·bloclt area of
soutbeat San Dieeo in
six weeks.
D&TaOIT (AP) -It u. --more lbu s~ yean .UC. ta.. cbUd kWer kDoWD only u ''tbe •~" 1tn1ek la tbe 1ullurbs aortll of Detroit, but (all la 1till a UJMof fear la Oakland County.
Wiiie ta.. ftnt snowfall comes, pannta worry
ta.. Wier may tty to add to bll U. ol vldima -
two llrtl and two bo)'I, _a .. 10 to 12.
'he tmOlved ·~ Ulo were brwaht to mlad bJ UMt k'IHnp ol 'li blaell clliJdnD and tbe
.......... ._.. ol fOUr ~n la AU~ta sine. July am .
,,_ OADAND OOUNTY CBILD&B'.N, all of
t.Mm -.. disappeared and ' were found slain bl&=hbnw'y lt1t ud Mardi tm. ''Tbe 9ab ter' • 1ot bt1 aa .. because h• took
m can ol b1a vletimt before be killed tlMm. ,..., were well-fed, clean Ud 'warmly
ckMW dlllrtDl IMlr captivity, whleb luted up to
11 da11. police aald.
,,.,_ ol tbe YicUma wen 1motbend and oae
wu lbot ID tbe 1,ee; AU tour alQtDp took plaee in
winter and a the vteUma were abancloaed alona
U1btly traveled roads, t1'elr bodies neatly
atntcbed out ln tbe aow. Tbe bo11 were sexually
mol•ted: tM 1id1 were not.
Police have linked tbe slaytno because of the
careful treatment ol the victims and the way the
bodJes were found.
•'The first snowfall always brines back
thou1hts," said Herbert Balter. director of
culduce and pupil penoanel Mnlc. f« ti..
BlrmlnCbam ~hoi>la. .
THE LA8T OF TRI! l10l1& victima, Timothy
KJn1. U. attended elementary aebool in that dia·
trlct. ' "People are still very much concerned about
lt," said Sberlff'e Sit. Richard Blrminaham.
"Calla (ol 1u.p6doua acUvltlea) are turned in
much more re.dlly now."
Police tbeorbe tbat tbe killer approached bll
victims, somehow aalned their trust and
penuaded them to 10 someWbere with blm.
Mn Stebb6DI, 12, of Ferndale, wu lut seen
alive Feb. u , 11'18. Hi• body wu found alx days
later in a parkint lot ln Soutbfteld.
IDL &OIUNSON, lJ, OJ' &OYAL Oak, ran
away from home Dec. 22, lJ'78, after an arsumeat
with her mother. Her body, with a •botlun wound
ln the face, wu found four days later in Tro{.
Krlst1De Mibellch, 10. weat to bu.ya maauine
at a party atore tbree bloeb from her home on
·Jan. 2, lt1'7. Her body wu blDd 11 days lat.er in
Franklin. Kini•• lut seen taltinl to a man in a park· ln1 lot next to a blue Gremlin oo II arch us. um.
HU body wu found seven da,ya lat.er. ·
Some lnveati1ators say lbe killer may no
lon«er be in the area, but for the put two winten
there baa been a commuruty-wlde effort to educate -----.=========================;----'-children oo safety.
. ' yes.
,_~no.
VWve taken the a~ and listings that busi-
nesses use to call each other and put them in a
separate book-The Los Angeles Business To
Business Yellow Pages. You'll find materials,
equipment and services from firms all over the
greater Los Angeles market. And you'll find
them faster and easier than ever.
Pizza 7 It's listed in Pacific Telephone's Los
Angel.es Consumer Yellow Pages.
,Ito,,, ·"~18 ·
Restaurant . ~}"//
and Cocktail Lounge •.
BROIL!D
HALIBUT
Maitre' d Hotel
Served with Soup du Jour or salad, rice pilaf or
baked potato. Vegetable de Gardiner.
SUMDA Y CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
I I :30 to 2:30
On-the-mall at South Coast Plaza near the Carousel
on the First Level. For reseNations <:411: 540-8822.
1 11 v'AW.'Av Shop now while sel~ons are plentiful.
Lr'\J • , J Use our Layaway Plan.
Show Orlental hospltallty.
Our dellca~ly tland-painted guest set is a
beautiful welcoming gift, or a gracious way
to say thank you. Both are hand-decorated
porcelain by Fukagawa. Ashtray. s112H
diameter, s 18. Vase, 611 high, S34.
I SLAVICK~S
..... ,_... .. ltl7
PesNon Wwt, Newpon C.nter, ~rt lffch, 714/CIH-UIO -w.-.. .-ta.....-tll. I M-..on Vi.to {Notm 0...,..1 Tht C11y &Ale c..tria ... ....
A.a.a c...-a.. A ..... I SM DMfo /Lat v., u.. _ _..._....,_..........,,.__ .-.......... ..... tlfA. .....,,~
~ Filtt ~ C1dW ,.
A FAST·POOD CRAIN PRINTED alp.a on
placemat1 warnlna children not to talk to
stran1en. SUnllar wamlnp were found on milk
catt'ona eold at local 1upermarltetl. Tbouaanda of
r -ahlrta with 1peclai tno1ana were sold, and social
workers and peycbolo_ajata villted cluarooma to
Instruct children on what to do lf they were •P·
proacbed by 1traneera.
But detectives are no cloeer to solvtne the kill·
lnga than they were in 1'78, Blnnln&bam said,
when 158 lnvesti1aton from a dosen commuruties
collected more than 16,000 tips and spent more
than $2 mlWon in the process. Five are still work·
ing today. ·
Police have pieced to1etber a composite draw·
ing of the killer -a white male, ace 25-30. A
psychok>gical profile described him u intellleent,
middle-dus and probably a wbite·collar worker.
4
"111E&E aEALL Y AaE NO NEW tbeories to
the end result of tbe killer or bis whereabout.a.
We're operating on the assumption that he's still
available, somewhere," Birminebam said.
Michigan State Police U . Robert Robertson,
who beaded the lint task force, believes the killer
no loneer lives in tbe Detroit area.
"I still support the theory that the killer was
taken away from society in one form or another,
either by death or institutionalization," said
Robertaon. "I'm convinced that be ia not among us
today.''
Strange critters
go with fritters
MONROE, La. CAP) -Joe llcQuiltoa'a wife
went on strike the first time a dead armadillo wu hauled into her kitchen, so he bad to do tbe cookin&.
But ahe cbanled her mind after abe tasted it, said
McQui.aton, who acquired a taste for the Southwest
delicacy from hl5 Texas son·in·law.
The armadillo -its name means •'little
armored thing" in Spanish -ia an odd-looting
critter with a rounded shell, pointy snout, long
tongue for catching insects, hairy ean and a very
hairy belly. Its teeth are so far back it cannot bite
in self-defense, so it dies long tunnels and rushes
into one -or tries to dig itself a new one -at tbe
first sign of danger.
IF rr CANNOT GET AWAY, it tucks its nose
and feet into its soft belly and curls into a virtually
impenetrable ball.
There's a song about an armadillo that fell in
love with an Ahny surplus tank. And Rudyard
Kipling, in h1I "Just So Stories," auuesta that one
of the first armadillos was a w,rtle which loosened
its shell plates so it could curl up and avoid beinl
scooped out and eaten by the big cats llvinl aJoo1
the banka of the Amazon River.
Tll08E WHO &NOW 8A Y armadillo meat.
which lutes somethinc like a cross between pork
and chicken, is lood for you, and Soutbwesteroers
ate a good number ol "Hoover bop" durinc the
Depression.
As for the McQuiatona, they've eaten quite a
few since that first one, uainl a number of ftCipes including that first variation on fried chicken.
Cancer center
offers support
The Saddleback Community Hospital Cancer
Center la elltabliabina fUpport IJ'OUpl for cancer
patients and their famillea.
Tbe iroupe will be destped to help patientl
deal with options available to penoaa with cancer.
Information may be obtained by callln1
770.3808.
$1,000
REWARD! .
For Information INdlng to the arrest
and conviction of persons Involved In
the burglary of the home of Charles
Bredy In Arch Be.-ch HefQhts, Laguna
Beach on the weekend of October 23,
1980.
GEN•llOUI R•WA•D NII TH• RllTU•N OP , ... utY AND PANMITOUN
NO QUUTIONI AIK•D.
P-..... :4tt-2756
~I
NATION
Pranks IJegln at 40
Jerry Wtlkinson displays about a $900 birthday greeting in color ad
in Salinas newspaper, a message from his brother, Jack. Jerry can
grin, because be promises bigger praw as his brother gets older. ----
HEED
HELP! •hff-
.
Dttt-YIWSllf
Stn ...
SOLID OAK
ROLLTOP DESK & CHAIR • Advertised in the .. Arts & Antiques" section of
Coast Life 11/S and the Dally Pilot 11/6 should have read:
or have our competent
plumbers do the work'
54" solid oak rolltop desk with rue drawers & in·
set panels and solid oak swivel peacock office
chair fits under the desk.
BLOCK "-':ING
HU TING 16NIM"4419, -~o: llACM 848-3636
for 1 7394lPT
STEWART ROTH ANTIQUES
750 E. Dyer a. Santa Alla 751.-Z
.. ..
. . .
COSTA MESA
COMMUNITY MEETING
Residents of Costa Me!>a are invited to
part1.:1pate in a Communit y Mt>etinj!
to decide what programs will be pro·
posed for funding u!.111g S 1.000.000
the Cit} will re..:c'l\'t: unJ~r a Fedcrjl
Housin~ and Community lJevelorment
Gr,1111 for F1~..:jl Yejr I 9~ I ·82.
Ttw. will bl· tht' l::i~t orrortun1t~ for
\.'.1t1zt:11 l.Ommt:nt bdort: tht: propO!.t'J
progr.Jlll'.:o are submitted to the Cit y
Counl:il for approval in De..:embt:r.
Plan to attend this important meeting!
WHEN:
TIME:
WHERE:
Thursday, November 13. 1980
7:30 p.m.
Coucil Chambers
Civic Center
77 Fair Drive
Costa Mesa
Sponsored Bv: ~owsi ng and Community
Development Committee
·. cyg
. . . .
.IJIT
~ . . .
~~cl;~£~-· .--...-
ComeheJpUs
celeb1-ate UCB's
·new look!
•
Thanks a million, Corona del Mar! We've enjoyed your
patronage. To show our appreciation, we've freshened up
our offi ces with new furniture, carpets, and a lovely new
paint job. We hope you like our new look.
We're having a remodeling celebration from Monday,
November 10 through Friday. November 14. Come see how
we've changed, and enjoy some refreshments.
Our hours remain the same: 9am-4pm, Monday-
Thursday, 10am-6pm Friday. Drive-up windows: also 9-4,
Monday-Thursday, but 9-6 on Friday.
Drop in anytime during our celebration. Bring your
fam ily, bring your friends. It's our way of saying, "Thanks a
million, Corona del Mar!"
Corona del Mar Office
3141 East Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar. CA 92625
(714) 673·9240
.. , ..... ··"·-· .. ··--·--·-· ---............................. ..._., ... -......... ···--····----· ......... ~,,,,.._ ...,.._........,..._......_..._.._ ._..... -----··· •
\
' .I
.-~
,, ~
•
CONSUMER
QUEENIE
~ .. ~,,_,,
"I think I mlu the strike."
Jailed judge
pleads illness
CIULLICOTHE. Ohio
0
(AP) -Attorneys for a
former judge imprisoned for a sex offense say lh4lY
will try to obtain his re lease so he can be treated
for an illness that makes him diuy.
The plea will be made to the judge who pre-
sided at the trial of former Summit County
Probate Judge James V. Barbuto, according to at-
torney James Burdon.
Burdon said Barbuto has Meniere's Diseue, a
puullng disorder of the inner ear characterized by
diuy spells and deafness. The Akron attorney said
medical facilities at Chillicothe Correctional
Institute are not suitable for dealing with the ill-
ness.
''I DON'T THINK HE CAN get adequate
medical attention in there ,and that's why he
should get shock probate," Burdon said. "The a p-
pllcat.ioo for shock probation will be made this
week."
In shock probation, release is granted soon
after imprisonment on the theory that even a brief
confinement may have had a deterrent effect.
Barbuto, 80, was sentenced in August to one to
five years for gross sexual imposition stemming
from a 1974 incident in his chambers involving a
court clerk. ife also received a concurrent, one-
to-10 year sentence for intimidation of deputies in-
vestigating his sexual conduct.
The former judge was found guiJly of tbe
felony charges June 13 after a week-long trial,
malting him the first Ohio judge to be convicted of
a felony. He bas been confined here since Sept. 30.
SUPEalNTENDENT TED ENGLE of the
Chillicothe facility said Barbuto has suffered "a
couple ot episodes of dizziness," the first Oct. 14
during a visit with his wife. and the second three-
days later in the dinini hall Marbuto then was ad-
~itted tot.be prison infirmary.
-Retired Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
lud1e George J . McMonagle, who presided at
Barbuto's trial, would rule oo the shock probation
request.
The Ohio Parole Board could grant a shock
parole, but for Barbuto, that opportunity won't
arise before March 1981.
Engle said the former jurist has adjusted well
to the medium security prison. He said Barbuto is
housed with 180 other older inmates in a dormitory
considered calmer than facilities housing young
prisoners.
"THEaE IS AN ABSENCE of the day-to-day
violence, drug use and occasional rape found in
other dormitories," said one inmate, who asked
not to be identified.
Barbuto drew a choice job assignment as
master clerk in the office of the volunteer
coordinator.
''He runs errands and works with inmate
groups within the institution," Engle said.
' Trike-athon race
to battle cancer
The tint semi-annual Tricycle Race, a three-
wbeeled fund-raiser for the American Cancer
Society, ha.a been set for Saturd•y at 3 p.m .
The race, calling for four-person tricycle
teams, will start at Houlihan's Old Place
Restaurant, 4880 Campus Drive in Newport Beach.
An entry fee of $35 per team will be charged.
Each team ls expected to provide its tricycle,
not to exceed 20 inches from handlebar to pave·
ment. Pedaling with hands is permitted, but not
recommended.
For information, contact Steve Ha ll al
752-60Z3.
IY
DOMOVAH CIA WPOID
HAlTO;...-•
IETTING THIE STAGE
When pr..,_rlng you'r
home to ~ shown to prospective buyers, use
subtle showmanship to
tt•IP set the right
atmosphere. Give your
home a restful, happy,
·inviting lac*. Don't Just
Mii a house -sell a
hom•I For evening
l"spectlon, brighten your tlOmt fro(n the
front porcn llght on
tbrouah all the rooms In
the lloutt . L ittle
cM<or.ttor touches -a
va1• ot flaMrs, a plant,
smeH pt11ows -can add much to the
comtorteble feellng of•
hom•. If youarehevlngyour
home show" In tht
winter, • cr.ctcllng fir•
In ttte fir-'•• adds lrretf....,.. ettrectlOn. ~t1...,aeceu•
ma)or attraction to
home buyers.
A large mirror can
make a room look
larger . Properly
placed, It can reflect
and l'Nt9f'llfy many of
your beSt selling points. 0.flnltely turn off tbe TV and turn on soft
background music on
the hl·fl to create that
s ubtl e -llved -ln
atmosphere. Your
prospect s are buying
more than a house -
ttMy a rt buying a new
way of life. So make your hOmt L.IVE. . . .. -
T.-c·hHlqtt .. lnr r .. f axnr im1
DEAR PAT: A friend claims that a stress re·
ductioo method called "r~laxalion respanse" real-ly works. Can you tell me what's involved in this,
and if there is a book about it?
M.D., Costa Mesa naa &ec:llUUqae " deacrtbed la tlae book, '"rite
Relnadoa Respoue," by Dr. Herbert ae.o..
Five reqlllsl&es for ladacl•c It are: a qalet e11vtroe·
•e11t; a meetal device lo clear tlae mlDd of dla·
traet•c tllloapu; a paulve attltade; a ~mforta
ble ,.adoll; altd at 1e .. t a two-Mar' time lapse
ai.ce Uae last meal.
._by littlltl ID a comfortable positJoll wltll
eyes doeed. Deeply rein ·au yoar muscles, be&la-
alag at yow reet atHl-progresatag., lo you face,
and keep tbem rela1ed. A.a ,.. breatlle ""°9p
your aoee, become aware of you.r breeddllg, aad
HY 0 one" aUeetly lo yourself _... eacll ltreaUI -
in and out -ror up &o ze mlnu&es. SI& qaletly for a
few mlnates before reaumlag activity.
Cat ..,..~I• dOfl ~
DEAR PAT: I'm in the dog house with my cat
because I haven't let him in the house for two
days. He's covered with dirt and grfase spots, and
he just won't let me give him a .bath. I don't know
how to get him clean. Can you help? .
· R.P., San Clemente
A cornstarch bath ls tbe easiest and most
econom.lcal solution. Part your cat's hair and
sprinkle comarch into the coat, or rub It ln&o short·
haired cats' coats. Leave It on lonl eaoup &o
absorb all dirt, oil and grease. Tlaen brush
vigorously. This treatment cleans the coat and lP
recommended for removing s mall grease spots.
Pnmpltlf-1" .,,. I lu• 11·0~1
DEAR PAT: You told your readers that a new
pa mphlet about divorce in California was availa·
ble free from the State Bar of California. I request·
ed it and a pamphlet about wills. I sent a self-
Tundey, November 11, 1980
"Got o pr~m~ T~n wnt1 to P04 °"""' Poi wW cut rnl tape. ~t1111g tilt orlf\&le't1 and CRffofl Woll lfttd
to .rolUt' iMql.IUU!a In oovemmm· CJftd ~u Moll
11011r qw.tionl to Pot Dunn, At Your~' Or~
Coo1t Dmll/ PUol , P 0 Boz i5li0, Cotto Mt'10, CA
tu26. Al man~ lttttrl 01 pouibl1 tutU be ~
bilt phoMd inqllints or lttte-ri not mcluding I~
rtodtr'1/WI11amt. oddreu o*1 t>wmtn ~r1' phorte
numbtrcomiot btccmlidtred. T1'Ucolumnoppeoradoi·
111 t:rcep4 SimdaJfl ...
addressed. stamped ~ovelope to ~ proper ad·
dress. My request was mailed back wiUl a note,
"Sorry l can't ht!lp you." ll was alped by '2talne
Reed. I hope your other readera who requested
this pamphlet were not as disappointed as I wu,
K.J ., Anaheim
A YS coatacted tlae State Bar'• dlvlaloll of com-
maalcatlou Ud wu &old tllat there wH llO penoa
oe staff with tlae aame tllat wu alped oa you re·
q.eat. 'fte pamphlets are bea.1 malled &o Y• hn-
m edlately wltla apolo1lea of tbe State Bar.
Al~ tile alpatare remaJu a mystery, It loob
Uke tlals was a case of mlsdireded mall.
,._.Ui11u rPf1u1d 'ffXiHU
DEAR PAT: t have lived in Laguna Beach
since October 1979, but I filed my federal and state
tax retu.rM in Chicago before I moved. I received
m y s tate refund, but am getting the runaround on
m y federal tax refund. I've called the Chicago tax
office several times. but they keep making excuses
for this unreasonable delay. Help!
S.W .. Laguna Beach
A VS contacted the action llae apedaUat at the
lateraal Revenue Service's pubUc affairs division
ln Los Aa«eles. He worked with Cblca«o IRS
peraoanel &oeq>edlte yoar refmd.
DEAR PAT: How much advance notice of a
cuurt date must be given to a Small Claims Court
PtJBUC NOTICE _ PtJBUC NOTICS ~
111mnoweu1u•.. O••••• CM~'n MU•ICl .. AL ...._n•H••Y ..,..,
Tiie ,........,. _._ It ...... !WM ........ NIMCW INl'T~ -;a
N U ff. ....,__.... •?
MAHLeY'$ OECOlllA TI NO ~ ..... CA .... HllVl('elN(.,J)O~el ... L~ 11'1.A INflllll ; JOYCe lllUTH Hlflt. C:.. tMa VAU0HH • ~ ~ lfedoicla, l"l, SM\. o•ir•NDAHT! TH•OOOllA •u1'1 11.ooo Or.,""-"t~.C. 91... l(CMJltY, .... OOIHI ........ n•• ~-•• c_ ... •Y.... .... 10, lt1C1..U.. dlv1ou.i, 1UMMOM1
Mtfliey J, l'Hwci., NOftUI Y ....... -..._ T-. ........... , ................... ....... MAHI.EV'S OCC:ORATIHG -...... ~ __ • .,._ ..._...o SERV1Ce 1NC. ...... • ~ .......... ~ Tlli. tt.-1 we• 111-.! Wltl'I ll'f MMw , 1JI Colillty Clerk of Or ..... C-ty .., Oc· TIM• c-.t IMY dee141t ........ WiAr tooer 11. UIO. wl._ -w ine....,_ ....... vt.CIJ
,..,." ,.~ .. .,. • -~ "•..,. ttw 111-e PUllllll'leel 0<M91 to.II 0.lly Piiot lor .... llOtl lletOW,
Oct. JI, 21, Nov,•. II. t.. •IOI• II.,... ....... M9ll U. advk• ol ....
OllOffley ill Olia IMtlM, you lloevllr~ PUBLIC NOTICE •o promt1llY M llMlt vovr wrltt t~,lf My, !My llelilMM tll'M<
N·71'41
NOTICE O" DEATH OF
LEOTA M. YAGIR AND
OF PETITION TO AD·
MINISTER ESTA.TE NO.
A·106521.
To all h eirs , beneficiaries, cre ditors
and contingent creditors of
Leota M. Yager and
persons who may be
otherwi~ interested In the
will and/or estate:
A petition has been filed
by Marie Walker In the
Superior Court of Orange
County requesting that
Marie Walker be appoint-
ed as personal represen-
tatl ve to administer the
estate of Lepta M. Yager
of Costa Mesa, Callfornia (under the Indepe ndent
Administration of Estates
Act>. The petition is set for hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Cente r Drive
West, Santa Ana, CA 92701 on December 2, 1980 at
IO:OOA.M. I
IF YOU OBJECT to the
AVllOI U-.. 119 .... ._...,,.,fl
II •.._,.__.._ .... ~o IH. .._....._ ... _.-u._,...... .............. w. .. ....,_, ,........... '" SI "llN .... IOlk llor el <OftM)o 1111
lltl .......... .,.._ ........... . llecerlo lftl'11odfo1omo11te, de ••~
m-re, SU -to nc:rlte, M ~r.: •19..,,., ...--reef•t•..,. •no,.,...?
I TO THE ot!FENOANT A <flfifl compte1111 lie• -.. 111..i by '"" ptef~~
1111 ~INI you, II .,_ Wttll to •i.M
11•1• .... ..,, •. -"""'· '"''"'" lO ,,.,,, otter ltlls ~ Is sorwd 011 "°"· Ille w lll'I this <OUf1 e wrltllen r-» to I... cornp1•t UlllHS J'OV Oo "' your defeutt •Ill be entered on ~ pllcet lo11 ol Ille otolnOllll, onct 1111• court may ent ... o ivelltNnt 0~1..st
"fOll ror the -.1o.f <19-In Ille complol,.t. w111c11 could rt111lt ,,., oornhl'l,,..nt of woe-•, I0 1no o,i moMy OI .,,_,, O< ollwr r•li.t re~ Quett.O In Ille complolnt. '1 OATEO: O<-r U , 19'0
J Pelerson. Cler .. By 8ert>oro M<. l,.tM,
OeOUIY OCOltOI L. ltOOIRI
AUw~--11111 ..... a1.c., s-.1..,
H .. tl ...... 9ekll, CA t2M7 C110M7_.1
·'
Publl•-Or-Coetl O••IY Pilot.
Hov.11, 11.is.o.c.1.1990 O lf·80
PUBLIC NOTICE
defendant?
P R C t M g ranting of the petition, · · · os a esa you should l!ither appear
Sl"SU17' NOTICEOI' TltUSTEE'SULE Ne.1"9 You must receive a copy of the "Claim of at the hearing and state
Plalatlff" paper at least five days before the bear· your objections or file
lnl If you Uve In the county wbere It will be laeld. U written objections with the
yoa Uve outlsde the couaty, 15 days notice or tile court before the hearing.
U . Your appearance may be Sma Claims Court bearing la reqalred. U yoa do in person or by your at-
ao1 receive a notice. &De JUdge mast delay tae torney.
heariag for at least 10 days, and tbe court tben 1 F y o u A R E A
must send a notice of the new time and date to CREDI TOR or a cont-
yoa. 1 ingent creditor of the de-
On No-.mboot ZS. 19'0. at It 00 A.M ..
GOURMET
MARKET
ceased, you must file your claim with the court or
present it to the personal
representat ive appointed
by the court within four months from the date of
first Issuance of letters as provided In Section 700 of
the Pro b ate Code of
California. The time for filing claims will not ex-pire prior to four months
from the date of the hear-
ing noticed above.
PEOPLES INVESTMENT AHO t..OAN ASSOC IA flOH es duly oppo111too TnnlM under encl ounuont to OH<I of Tru•I •t<.Of"dtd ""'"h I, 1979. ••Inst•
H9 IJ•,-ll05t,~ 1611,olOlllCl•I Records, eae<utld t>y Mar•o c. P.c1n• ond LucltleM. Pec1n1. hustwl'ld •nd wife
O• J ohll T._.,t.s OS tru•tO<>, Ill ti. of·
h<• of Ille County Atcorder ot Or~ Counly, Stele of Ce1ttorn1•, WI LL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION lO HIGHEST BIOOER FOR CASH (1>001110 •I time of W I• •n lawful money of Ille U1111.o Stotnl •I tri. South 1ronl entr;once to
,,... Or•ll9t County Old CourihovSe. City ot SO"I• Ano, Slate of Celrlornl•, •II t10111, 1111•-il'lle<HI Con••Y•d to Olld
llOW Mid t>y 11 under w oo DH<! of Trust
'" Ille pr-'1y SI 1 .... 1.a Ill Yid County •nd Stele O.s<t1-•• per Exhtbll I
•U•cf\ed twtre10 and m•oe a p.art
nertof. EXHlllTI l"ARCILI :
·DELANEY BROS.
SEAFOOD
Fresh Paclftc lied Snapper ........ 1.4t lb.
Alaskan King Crab Legs ............ 4.a lb.
Fresh Uve Local Loblter .......... 4.a lb.
(We will glady clean & split them for no extra charge)
MEAT DEPf.
For you beef lovers we'll •&•In
have those delicious prime
ribs , aged at least 30 days to ~
the peak of perf«tion aad p~parff
ror your easy tableskle carving. Fresh Lean Gl'Oalld Beef . . . . . . . . . . I.ft lb.
(ground hourly)
Box of 48 Lean Groand Beef
Patties, ten .,.,.ads to a bos ...... 14.tl box
Cut A Wrapped Sides of Beef . . . . . . l .4t lb.
(Sold by hanging weight)
Please order your Thanksgiving lurkey early.
Cooked and stuffed with your choice or
Delaney's dressings or Just stuffed and ready
for the oven. Again this holiday season,
Delaney's wtll feature fresh dressed local Zacky
Farms turkeys, roasting chickens, fresh frozen
Long Island ducklings and geese.
This ad effective Wed .. 11/12 thru Tues., 11118
DELANEY'S
LIMITED TIME ONLY!
Take advantage of our free home delivery
service, completely refrigerated from oar
door to yoan.
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE .
Local Frail Broc:coll .. : ............. 4k lb.
So. Amertcaa Baaaaas ....... 4 lb. for l .te
L1. Sweet lbaby lted Grapefndt .. 4 for 1.M
Selloolboy She lted Delldoal Apples 3k lb.
UQUOR DEPARTMENT
Delaaey'1 Private Label
CJaablla or Via 8-e mo mil> .... 1.a
Berta&er 1ftDea <750 m )
Chealll Blaac reg. s.95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -.3.5'
Scoresby Scotch (750 m11)5 .55 •..... liter 6.85
Bolla Wines <750 mil.>
Soave or Tnbblano .................... 4.%5
The Blsbop of Riesling
(750 mil.) reg. 1.15 ...................... 4.SG
(All IJquor prices do DOt Laclude tu)
Planning a hoUday party or just a get.together
-call our complete gourmet caterinit service,
673·5520, and ask for Tom Martin. , .
Store Hours 9·6, Closed Sunday
ZD Newport Blvd., Newport Beach
673-5520
MOSELEYS WEST
ONllCI SUPftJIS ONllCI ..,.,.,., ...
2205 MAIN ST., #23
SIACl.llP SHOnl la CIMl'll
HUNTINGTON BEACH ..
(7141 960-2438
ArtStea1·1i
Century 6204 Flies
LOCI-
' 16.00 IXTRA
GUIDEIODS-
'5.00 llTIA
D
. , ...
I I
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are interested In the
estate, you may file a re-
quest with the court to re-
ceive special notice of the inventory of estate assets and of the petitions, ac-
cou n ts and reports described In Section 1200 . of the California Probate
Code.
J . L•rry Batlard, At-torttey •t Law, 1400 N. Harbor 81Vd., Suite 400,
Fullet"ton, CA 926"; tef:
(714) 171-1132
t..Oh 7 -Sfn Bloc .. SJ1ol "'C..n•IS.<· 110... H4t-1 ll<tecfl." In the City ot Newport ll<ta<h, County ot Oren~. Stele ol Ce4llornl11, °' "10wn one map recotcled In -•. pege ,. ot Ml•· celloneous ~. In the Qlfk• 01 ,,.,. COUt1tyReawd9rofwldc011t1ty, l"ARC•U: T .... I -UOl'I GI Ille Nol'lheosl q...,,,_, ol Ille Soutll-M Quorle< ot Fract lonol Sa<llon 1'.. T-p • Sovlh, A ... Wot, 5"" ..,...,dtno 8ese & Merldl lt1 ll'le Cltyol '"-1 lleKh, County Or-. sut• Of Celllwnia . ...:conll to°" offke Plot llled lt1 Ille dhlrtcl I
olflc•, ....,.. •. t•. -·•-Iott~. "
-...-.. el e POlnC In Ille-· ll,...Of\llelOOIOOOtri9iltl~dtkn
.............. fl'om A. J , o--. otl'len, u ,,...., ... "' Soul"'"' Pec1f ltellr-~. rt<.,_ OcJ t•. 1'21 IA --...... 111 i1t -..-........ .,--. ... ,.,_~~-., 1•"4 •.cnM4! I.A ,,.., ce
l-tw9 -Alw'fl f7, INI In
IOft. ,,... -et Olfidel It -· ~., ....... r ... IM , .... wld curve, ..... to o ,..WM lt1 PuOlttlled Or-to.st Delly Piiot westerly line of P.,cef No. I oescri
Ho!• 10, II, 17. 19'0 ~ 111 tl\ol Ce<10<1'1 l-1Uted9ted May
ltU, recOf"dtd -mller 20, 191.S
PUBLIC NOTICE -1'1, -U 01 Oflk•tl ~ecor -----------I l,_tlCe Norl .... rly el-ttw WHI NOTICE OF DEATH OF llne ol WiO Porcel No I, on •"" <on<•ve WHl.,.ly, 110vl119 • rodlu~ GEORGE C. KEISER W5.0S 1-, tdh1onceot 50.00IMt I AND OF PETITION TO P01n1, tnence w.s1er1ye1-•1t11e1 ADMINISTER EST ATE I• redlel lotllt Wfflerlyltne ol s.10 loot strlpOl 1-. 67. u l"t to., P01nl NO. A-106471. Wld WeJIMly line, dl•t•nt Hort'"' T o a I I h e i r s , ,,.,.,..,.., s1." ffft '"'"' 111e ooint
b f · · · d It beQlnnlno. tll<ln<• Souttwrly •long, ene 1c1aries, e re ors wu1er1v11ne.s1 "t"t1ottwoo1n1 and contingent creditors of beOl,.,.1no.
Ge orge C. Ke ise r o f Seld oerce11unownonam•o t11e<11 Irvi ne, California, and recordtn -9l.-11o1rt<01<1
pe rs ons WhO may be ~11:c":,~:;,:.i~co!~t~ of 1"" Coull
othe rwise Interested in the P•11cn>: Will and/Or estate: Thetport10l'l ol lheHortheutQu•r1
A t"t' h bee f "I d Of Ille Solltl'lwffl _rt..,. ot trecttO pe ~ ion as ~ 1 e s.c11on n. T""""~P • 5oo.it11, R•l'l9t by Tanis B. Keiser tn the wu1,s...e.rnerd1no e...1.Me,,d1 Superior Court of Orange •n ,.,. c11, o1 N....,._,11eec11, County
County request ing that Or•"99. Sl•t•OI ~111orn1a. accord•
T · B K i b to•11olltclotpl•ll1ltld lnlhe d,.lrlctf an 1s . e ser e ap-ottk•. "'"""' •. '"°· .,.,.,,,_ po i n t e d a s p e r son a I 1ot1ow•
r ep~ e sent a Ii v e to a d· 11:.~~7":': •:c:, ~.,:~ •:,~':':. V:~·::
m iniste r the estate of du crit>eo '" 111• ouo trom " George C. Keiser (under Cr-.-. -Oltwrs .. 1"'''*" t he I n depend en t Ad . s-1,,.rn Pecllk Aallr'Otd Compo
m inistration of E stales =°::~~~· ;::;~ °:" ...
Act ). The petition is set for or • .,.. c-11. '°"' po1n1 o1 be!l•nn• hearing in Dept. No. 3 at 11e1t10 111e ,,_, Sout-•er•y c
700 Ci_vi c Ce~ter Drive, ~::':1:°i':!;11~"".,.":!'~~",t . West, 1n the City of Santa tto record9d Februery 17, lt'1 lft Ana California on Nov--11n. -~°' 0tt1e1a1 Records,
b• 25 1980 10 . 00 IMM• Emerly •loftO • redlOI ..... 10 em er , at · w1o c""-. . ., •• 1.-. to • ooi11t 111 111e a . m. Westerlyllne of Porcel No. I, 0.Ktll>ed IF YOU OBJECT to the • ., ,,.,., cer\lln •-"" a..111c:1 May Jt ,
grantlnn of the petition t93s, R--.i Ho~r ao. 193s '" •• ,. ' bDoll 7'2, -U of OllKiol Recofds, you should either appear t11tnc• Northerly •kln9 111e w .. t•rf'r at the hear I flO and State lltlO OI Mid percal Ho. I on o<ww con your objections or file uv• westerly 11ov1no • ,.,.lut 01 . t obj ti Ith 2,•u.os , .... • dist.Inc• Of «1.00 t•I writ en ec ons w the 111e11u w.sier1, •IOl'IO • 11 ... rac1101 10 court before the hearing. 1111wn1 ... 1v11,,.ofsa1c11001001 str1oo1 Your adPearance may be IWICI Oii . curw COf'IU .. Eon ... ly h•V· . lne e reClklt oU,tl4.83-o cM•leM• 01 tn person or by your at -«i.7U•tto1"epotntot11191nt11no.
torney. S.ld -·IS INwl'I one m..., llltld I F y 0 U AR E A tor ...c•dlt1-t7.-11o1rec0t"o
CREDITOR or a c o nt-~.::.,7.!,1:,::•ol llle c011t1hr~·
lngent creditor of the de-T11e 11..--u ..... ,.,.H.,.,,....,. ceased, you must file your e1e.i.,......,,11..,.,,01uw, .. 1pr-rty
claim with the court or ~.ct~"::~:::'...=~~~~
present It to the personal c.o1 ._ representative appointed T ....... _ ... .,..._.o ... Trva .. d1oc101m• by the court within four flty 1tranylMorrect ... uo11,.,. JWwl -otlle< com,,_, dO · months from the date of 1..,., ,ueriy,_,....,,,_
first Issuance of letters as s.1c1 • w111 • ,,...._ ...,. "'"'-' provided In Section 700 of er~.,...,., ••P<"• or 1m-dlftl title, ,.._Jlon. ., -the Probate Code of <-.1e.-yt11e-Wt10or1n Callfornla. The ti~ or c1N1 _...,_ byMkl fill~clalmswlll noteicp r DHctot..MH1.w1111 111t
prior to four ~ths 1rom ~'::: :..=~· w1•
the date of the hearing Truat, 1-.<JWtM-'• not·ICed above. I\ Trwtl•-oltNlrvlbetwteo YOU MAY EXAMINE ou .i •• ,, .. u , 10' 1~• •"'0 "1 ...--y ... ,_. ........ lo)J4..... . the file kept by the court. .,,. Mlltf1<1etv..., Mid o.ect
If you are Interested In tM ''"'' ,... .. ~. •u<vt"' 0110 •·
estate, you may fll• a re-~=.i:.:: :,i:,.~•O:..,:::!: quest with the court to re· s.1e, ....... ,, ... ,...k •efDtf•u1t-
celve special notice of ttM a1e<tr011 •• 1eu. rr.. 1.tt1der11on"
I t of St teal t c ... 9"M14'N91l<•et0tl0Ult-Elec· nven Olf'Y e a st s t1on1os.111e11e~1nt11e <01111tY and of the petitions, ac· _,..,,.,.....,.....rj,1,1ow1.o.
c ounts and r e ports 0e1e1 oootiero.~""· described In Section 1200 ,110P1.u tNVUTMENT
of the C.llfornl• Probate .:=~~.ut0e••T19N
Code. 111Gw11',E"9t1Nrctt,
I A ....... YIAfe<I
l R •--• 8 ""s.uMINceetwo. erry • _...., "'' SwlteC Witter a Har,. •r At· -.-.,H111t.ee.t0m
tor11eys at Law, 611 T .. :ma1UMM0011C1
Ne.,.,t CeMlf Dr., Suite ~:=-c.e.tt o.11y ,.,tot
isat1 Nca,er1 -..Cllr ca. --•· 11, ~,... .,... .
....... Or .. C.tt Dell• ~ ... .......... 11... .. ...
Cell 142-H71.
Put • I•• words
lo wor• tor you._ •
....
(
a.I DNl.Y P'tLOT
Pounds
of coins
pay bill
CINCINNATI CAP>
A~ter years of litigation.
William Sakkas decided
to give in and pay $1, 700
for unfinished chili
parlor renovation~.
The 46-year-old
delivered 400 pounds of
change in a garbage can
t9 the law firm of
McCaalin, lmbus &
Mccaslin, announcing:
••Trick or treat."
IN lt77, Sakkas -
owner of Empress Chili
Parlor and the Pickle
Barrel Bar neat the
University of Cincinnati
-hired Ed Benton to
renovate bis bar and
cocktail lounge. The
work wa s ne ver
finished, and Sakkas
fought a losing co'urt
battle which he says
cost him $20,000 in legal
fees.
Benton said he dido 't
finish the job because
Sakkas kept changing
bis mind about the work.
Sakkas bad someone
else finis h the work. and
refused to pay Benton.
SAKKA S SUED
B enton. wh o
counter-sued and won.
Sakkas went to the Ohio
Court or Appeals. which
sided with Benton. and
the Ohio Supreme Court
refused to bear the case.
Sakkas went to three
banu to get tbe change
for tbe payment. "I wait
for th1t day like you wait
for your birthday," he
said. "At last I'm free,
no more courts."
His happiness showed.
He let the law firm keep
the can.
UFW ch08en
DELANO (AP ) -
Workers for a Tulare
County olive company
bave decided to let the
t:Jnited Farm Workers
union continue to
repre sent them .
Regional farm labor
board chief Ed Perez
8
S•tllftllctf tt .. i .,ote
Goldwater 'rode in;
on Reagan's coattails
PHOENIX. Arb. <AP> -It'a been nearly 30 year• 1lnce Republican
Sen. Barry Goldwater, who woo a
flftb term by a aqueaky tllbt vote,
needed uYboci1 '• coattalll to 1ive
him an election edte in ArilOlla.
But tbe 11.year·old Goldwater
acllnowleqed in a poet-election in·
tervlew that Ronald Rea1an 's
landslide victory in lbe prelJdenUal
election probably nud1ed him across
the line Just a.bead of hard·charline
Democrat Bill Schulz, a 49-year-old
multimillionaire Phoenix apartment
developer.
''I DON"rTIDNK there's any ques-
Uon that lt helped me, just like it was
wilb Ille the first time," said
Goldwater in an interview.
Back in 1962, Goldwater parl.-yed
bis p ioneer family name
(Goldwater's department store) and
a term on t.be Phoenix City Council
as part ol the charter reform ticket
into an upset victory, by fewer than
7 ,000 vote., over Democrat Ernest
McFarland, the Senate majority
leader. 1be symbol-to-be of national
conservatism never clenled his debt
to tbe late President Ei.aenho~r for
b1a ride into tbe U.S. Senate.
Except for bis disastrous presiden·
tial campaign in 1964, it had been
easy riding In Arllona until last
week's face-off with Schulz, who
fearlessly challenged the legend or
Goldwater's invincibility and bis
usefulness to tbe state as a mostly
absentee senator.
IT WAS IATE into the day follow-
ing the ele.ction, after absentee
ballots were counted, before
Goldwater came up 'a Winner by
about 9,600 votes.
.••1t was a tough race and be
(Schulz) ran a good campaign, con-
sistently beating me on the question of
IQY health and age," said Goldwater.
•'He put a question in the minds of peo-
ple whodidn 't know me."
Of major importance, s aid
Goldwater, was Arizona's rapid
growth -"with 800,000 new people
since my last run. I'm an unknown
quantity to them."
·'I sort of expected it would be
close." he said. "My pollste r showed
me four or five points ahead, but
there was the Wllmown."
AS FOK IDS health, Goldwater
concedes all his aches and pains, but
counters with bis passing his Slat
physical to Oy the nation's top jets as
a major general in the Air Force
Reserve. ··sure. I bad a new bip put in six
years aao, and I've 1ot an infected
bone in my lea that baa to be treated
every two days," he said. "I did that on the campaign, but I'll bet tbere
are few of those who wonder about
my health who could pus my flight
physical."
AP ..........
'REAGAN HELPED ME'
Sen. Barry Ooldweter
"'The one area that ha s con -
cerned me for years is how to handle
the welfare state," he said. "I know
that sounds strange coming from a
conserva tive , but it can 't be
abolished. What we've got to do is fix
it to where those who need help get it
and get rid of those who live off the
government.''
The mellowed Goldwater, however,
is no less vulnerable to gaffes ,
especially when be tries to appease
his hard-line conservatives and still
appear reasonable.
He got caught during the campaign
on the issue of abortion. a subject he
wishes "would Just go away." He as·
sured his anti-abortion constituency
be would now support a "human life
amendment," but later hedged to al-
low for rape or incest.
BE FINAU. Y CAME back with a
policy statement that he opposed use
of taxpayer fWlds for abortions.
A question that touches a sensitive
spot in Goldwater is whether he real-
ly intends to go the full six years of
his term, which will make him 77.
Ariwna's Republican leaders put
extreme heat on Goldwater to run
again to avoid the intra-party fight
with ultraconservatives that cost the
GOP a U.S. Senate seat in 1976.
Goldwater had strongly hinted that
be was ready to come home t.o
Arisona to stay, or as be put it -to
"chase raWesnakes and rabbits in
the desert."
REPORTS PERSIST that the deal
was cut for rum to stay on for three
years, and then step down and •'let it
(the intra-party fight between the uJ.
traconservative wing and the
Goldwater faction) happen" after the
GOP tries to regain the seat Jost to
Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D·Ariz .. in
1982.
He's no longer the physic._lly
powerful Goldwater of the free-
s winging stride and his hearing is
less acute. He's still feisty about too
much government, unswerving in his
devotion to the military but rarely
terrorizes conservative audiences
with gloom-and-doom socialiam. In ~fact, be thinta wellarism is probably
here to stay but needs some cleaning up.
''That's a da mn lie," Goldwater
responded. "I never started anything
in my life I didn't intend-to finish and
t hat goe s for this term in the
Senate."
Coastline PUBLIC NOTICE
-
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS autt••u NAMe 5TATIM8NT Tiie lollowlng perM>ns ere dO•"g o...11 nenu. TAllGET HOl.DINGS. UU E.
Co.SI H.__Y. So.;ttt C. Corona 1191
Mer, C41ilon11a t l6ll
fhomu C•" 811tUeln. 11•1
S11t•rn1ee Avenue. Loftg B••<h,
C•lllorn,. 90IU
. Cra19 S LOe, StM Naples Plaae.
API I,~ Baecn. Celllornl• '°9Gl
00~1·• B. 8ynon, 12 HIO••to.
lrvoM, C.lltom•• 92114
fllll OllSIMU IS t OllOllCl•O Oy •
119nera l "*'"''""'P· n.om.. CMI 8 111>1•1n
PtJBUC NOTIC&
1'141 ..
"-*llNO Or-C:...M Oa11y Pllee
OCI. JI, le, Nov. 4, 11, '"° 42M-t0
PUBLIC NOTICE
PIC'ttTIOUS alltlMIUI ltAMe ITATeM8MT
Tiie IOllOWif'IO --ll-,. !Mltl· Mii ••
MENTAL O'l'NAMICS, h01
Clt••br-Of., Hvnllne-a..c11. CA. 92-
Cll••••• Lee La <'•Y. hOJ Cle••llr-Or.,_,.....,. a.-ft, Ce. •2-Tllls ~ Is "'"'9ue-lly on ln-
Tn11 tt•ttl'l'l4tl1 wes llllld wUn l,,. Ol•IClval, Co..nly Cler-ol 0rtn9f CoUnly on Oc-0.1 L.acuy
,_, IS. '"°· This 11.._I was flied with Ille
'141111 • Counly o.rt< ol 0r....,. C-11 on Oc·
PUOll"*I Orange C:O.JI Delly Piiot, ,.,.., 11, ... Ptt7•t Ocl ll, 2t, Nov •, 11, IMO •2'1-tO ......... ~··""'··~--·;-""
PICTITIOUS 8USINHS
NAM8STATEMa NT
Tnt 10110...lnv P41"""'' e re dolnv bv>lnns~
HIDDEN TREASURES, 211 ~In.
Svlle 1. Huncln;ton a..cn. C4lllor·n1e
91'41
Relph S tepllen Sllve, t 071
Rhodt•I•, Huntington Beac n,
Celllornl•"""'
J im S/ljlw, 141U P•>eo Verde.
Tu•ltn,Calllcwnlaft..o
Tn" Ollslneu Is condV<tttd Oy • oane••• corporation. Relph S. Sll\I•
Tnis '1•1ement was Ille<! will! Ille
County Cieri. of Oun~ C-ty on Oc
I·-· .•. '"° . P147ta.
Pvbll•htO Or-Coest Dally Piiot,
No• 11,11.n .De<.2.19'0 _..,
PICTITIOUI •UMME.SS
HAMii STAT•MEMT Tht 1011owt1>g ,..,..,.., ere OOln9
OU>Jnt U H .
UNIVERSAi. GEMCORP CO . 1t6
I Tustin Avenue. ~•woort 8••<h.
Calllornl•'l?'6l
Gaylord -Mlml Waonar, a 1 E ven1n9 Sier. Ntwoort Bttac n,
C•hlornl•tttto
I
Geyltne Arl.,emllr. IS. Tustin
Awtnll4, N1tWPOrl Beach, C.lllornl•
'1MJ
This l>usl-s I• cono.,c led 0y an ...,_ oncoroor.i.o _ ... lton 041W• ,.,.,, •
ou1ners1Mp,
Mll'l'll E WA9fttr
Tiiis slel-t wes Ulect will! the
Covnly Cler' ol 0••"90 County on
No•emllet' 7. IMO.
P1...,I
PvbUSned Or-Coast O•ily Piiot. Nov 11,11.U,De<.2,I.. .-..
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS 8USINESS
NAMelTAT8MaNT T ... ,.,,_I,. perwros a r• •olnt
o..slneuas.
P~osNd ()( ..... c-t Dally Pllltl
Oct. 21, ll. Nov.,•. 11, 1• OJt.eO
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS
NAMEUATEMINT O~ferm• g '"• 10110 ... 1no pe,.on• ••• oo•no
announced t b a t 8 7 NUMTLH GARCIA COMPUTING SERVICE, 161111 s.ndre L.arw, Hllftll,.._ lkecJI, workers at Padulla ELLSllW\RTH ELMER HUNTLEY.
Farms voted for con-~--:° -=.' /:_ ~ ~ ~~.:
tinued UFW representa--•· ... -1111m '" 1111no1a an 0c.
IJ . b'-lilntH,•-' C•ll,.mle.,...,
GOOD LEASING CO, 911 Glen-
M Yrt. St•. c. U9une e •• , ... CA •101
Ulrry G«cla, 161111 S..-• une.
. and 31 led f t-"· ....... __ .,... __ lion vo or no JO Y"" far uw 0,,.1 s.rvice ....... • dynallll• CS D<>n c..c>uto, llS UI "'•t•. L•ovna Bt•'"· CA 9?1>11
HvnUneton aa.cn, C•lltornla 92Mf
This °"5lnff• I• <onclo.clltd Oy ... ln-dl~lduet.
union representation. rnem .. r 01 uw MAMll'llc LCHtee In Eleven votes we re o-_._ * .. _,,._..., "'• ••te Slllt.., ...... ..., "' c.ta Mne, ca .. •
G••• ao..Qrwrty. 2110 H1on10..a
W•y, 1.-ne ee.cn. CA •i.s1 The dynamics of as-Tnh o ......... " t onovcleO l>y •
l.Mry c;.rc ...
Tnls s:to""'"'1 w•• Hied wnn ""' Covl\ty Clerk ol Or•n .. County on
challenged. c111.._, oi-_..., ., "'-· -:-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=====;;;;;;::--c;e., Jee .... lnl ~ ol F,_, C. .• .:.. UMe ....,_ OI C-ta Mne, Ge • ...,
1ert.ive behavior will be oenoral ::-::..·:-.. ... u ..
offered by Coa stline Tn•• St•l-1 wa• lllf(I ••lh ,,,. Comm\Ulity College as a co..n1y C'*<•"' o .. ngo County on Oc-
No.,.mber 1.1•.
Pl*'1
PuOll.fhecl Or-Coes1 Dolly Piiot •
'ACIAC YllW MIMOllAL,Alll
Cerretery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Fac1l1c View Drive
Newport Beach
644·2700.
*C:oaMICIC MOaTUA•UH
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hills
768·0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
MAalOll UWH-MT. OUYI
Mortuary• Cemetel'(
Crematory
1625 Gis ler Ave ..
Costa Mesa
5-40-5554
,_ClllOTI-ml
l&l.llOADWAY
MOttTUAllY
110 Broadway
Costa Meaa
642-9150
1Al1'%Al• .. OH IM1M. TUTHtU
MSTCUflll CHAN&.
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
84&-9371
,_ClllOntal
IMmfl' MOITUAAY
627 Main St.
~nt~ h
o..r.. Hwll..., fll c.-ta 1111ne. ca .• •
si tter Stella ol Color•••· 6
er•ndc llllelren enG J t••••· vreflel<"'-· Siet'vkes -. IMld °" S11nct•y, Ne.,.rnber t , 1ta0 at the ... ,., ~ MerNrlel °'"91 .....
ltew. aruce Kiin' .. pffl,i.ti.,._ Crwtna·
tlon wltft I_....,. ol H-u-..,_1411 P-. Siet'vl<:H Yl'lcttr UM Clff'oKt-"' .... ~ -011 ... .,,_., ol c.w Mna. s.sss.
'°"'"'°" El.Ll!N "·JOH~. -.cl -•v on Now-• t , ltaO. lttttllHnt of "--'....,.,ea. s..v1ww ., 1-1.....,. .._.., OI II•-•, ca., al'ld
Ira L. """'-ol I~ W.Ua, C.., 4
9rel'lctclll-. 1 .....,.., ,..._ a.con
ot St.cktlft. Ca. -O.y 9acon of Sall .. ,.,..,,....,Ca. ._lal tenr1Gesw111
lie llel411.,. T......,, NoWfflCler 11, t•
el l :OOl"M .. Paille View Me.,_lor
c 11a,.1. I-~ OI Pecllk ....... ,.._fal ........ Peclfl(VleWMH-...,y
dlrwctwa. Pueu•
JE"N WA•NElt SPltAOUI, '"'" dent .. u.""""" C&. .......... YOll
...... "' .... ·-· .. .._ ..... ot lttMrt R .......... rt..eMr o1 11-.n
Raymo.~ Spra111e, Jr., Wllllorn
flrect•rtc11 Stlreevt end Loi• Mn
Spree"•· er•nctmotller of Eric Raylft0ft4il .,.. Jo9t ,._,..,., Serwkti
wlll .. ,...att:aAMon-....,,,Nev·
--.rt•, t•lllTNLl-OMH'cflOllN "I-rs,,._,~,.._. t..ewn~. In lleuoff....,.ctone· "°"' rnor M ....-to c .. 111ernl• IMeltute tw c.-r ,_.-.rtft of UCLA
MHlcal c.Nr. DlrKllMf 1rY f'-t LA--o .........
PlJBLIC NOTICE
tooer lO, 1'90. psychology class begin-rnuu ningSaturdayat9a.m. Pvo11"*1 Or-eo.>1 O.••Y P1101 Taught by Susan AJ . Now •. 11. 11, u, t'llO wwo
Uson in the Mesa Verde PUBLIC NOTICE
Le amine Center, Costa ---,.,-CT-iT-,-ou-5-.-u-51-.. -Eu
Mesa, the-class will deal NAME STATEMENT
with improving rela-~!::>•.011ow1"9 -'°" "00<no 11vs•·
tlonsblps by handling WULFF a. ASSOCIATES. 100• anger and irritation. C•••lln• sc . ~ e.~11. ca nui
Registration for the s1., ~~~:::; ~~~·· ..;;: '4••11n• tuition-free class is dur-rn.s o.a1,_s Is conouc1ec1 ov an in·
I b fl :llVld.J•I. ng t e rat session, w1111arnH.w11111 with additional informa-T1111 •••1emen1 wu meo ,.,,,, ,,,. tiOn avaiJabJe by calling County Clttr• o< Orange County on Oc-l-r l0, 1'90
PUBLIC NOTICE
~OW.11, 11,U ,Oec;.2,, 1.. 4Sl2«1I------------
PUBLIC NOTICE PtCT1TIOU. 9UllNH•
MAMelTATeMaMT
,,,. tollewll'lt ,.,_, .... ""'"'
SUPlnUOft COUltT IMIJIMUM: 0 .. CALl~NIA D.T.M. ENTERP1t1ses, •••••
C:OUNTYOPll81tN RttG•-Cir .. S..lte T, HIHIU,.._
1411 Tnmt• A-8"<11, C... ,,._
.....,., .... , C... n»t 0...... ............. UM_._, N-
c:Ase NUMeElt A P-4M llfltlM INcll. Ca. '1M1
In tne ""4111•• of JOE MANUEL ...... v-·· Ult PlotiM, HIM1-
LARA, a Minor person wt.o S1-ld ... '"''°" ...... c.. '*' dK lerltd ,,... lrom llW Cu,t10CIY end Terri ~ -1'1ft St .. H-· control or l\4S .,.,..,, or ~nb. l"I..,. a..ai. C. • ..,,...
To JOE CA TAR10 LARA ano Tiii• -IN .. ,, c ... c1vc1" ., •
JUANITAMAIUA..,ILLARREAL.ono ..... rel~
10 alt personscl•lml119 to llllt Illa let,,.r or O.W. MMquif
mot,,., of Mid minor oerton ebO.. Tiil• .....,,_, -tiled •ltft Ille n.m.o C-ly Oer1i., Or ... C:-y °" Oc· e., or ... , ol lniS Co"" Y"" are ._, 11, t•.
llereOy ct1" end rttq11t,..d 10 •-•i ' PIQMI
O.lore ..... Judge Pr1tSld lt19 In Dff.efl· PYIMltlled Or ... C:O.SI Oall• P1"'4
ment One of the •bO.,. tnUUed court Oct. 21, ........ •. 11, •• 42..tta Juanita Buchanan at ,..._on O.o~ 1t.1•a11·)0 P.M. 01 ----------PulllllhtO Orenge COH I Dally Piiot lh•I dey, 11-.,.., tlWr• IO ·-COllM, 963-0811.
Irvine man
Nov •. II, 11, JS. 1'80 '311-to u a ny ~ou nave, wlly u lo oenon
PUBLIC NOTICE ll'lould not 0. Clecl•recl ''" lrorn Ille
COlll(OI of hlJ perenh k CO<Olno to I/le
pellllon on hi. llefeln.
P!llUC NOTICE
f'ICTf '1°"9 aut1•e11 .-n., .... ,
PICTITIOUS 8USINESS For ,.,,_ 10 .Ct-, yo.. will :l ·• 1 TIM lell0wt"9 pertoftf ere dol"I
• NAMIE STAT•M•NT tl'l'lecl 9ulllyof. contttml'I of cou.'1. ....,_, •: new e118tgll The 1011owln9 perM>ns are doing Vo11 ••• htrelly notllltO OI 1ht ..,.... • 0 0 L 0 a N 0 9' A 0 0 N
bvtlntu as vision\ ol ClYll C-tU7 i Wlll<h pt<> 9'1!STAUIUNT, JOU H~ ....... RJcbard K . Packer, AS TOH GARAGE. CAL1FORN1A, •liH• "1he 1.,.,... .,..11 ""'" tN c-ta -...c:... *21 son of Mr. and Mrs. 110 N. Crttetnl W•y, Un11 "0 , minor ...... IN -eftll, II .,, ...... ol WHJS GelWl'I or ..... Inc. I• An•ll•lm c. 91IOI .... rlQ111 to ..... COllnMI .... ....,, f 'I• Celt...,... -.. ..... , • ., "-Robert M. Packer of Jonn Leudt • EnltrOrtHI la court,.,..y-11'11,_llo•--nt ...... o..-...ea.,,.v Irvine, bas g raduated c.111ornl• corpore11on1, , ... Gu11 c1r ,,,. rnlno< ..,.,,.. °' no1 ,,,. minor 11 Tiii•--.. tt ,_..,. .. , • ~·
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JOHN LAUDER P11TllO\OOflhi•~llon l1101r .. t ... w1>-~----~· N·a v 8'1 Air Station. ENTERPRl!.SS i.ct minor tor .... Ion Ol.,,,.•"9 •nG ..... ,.,....,.
Pensacola, Fla., and bu ev.Jollnl..olldt•. 01.cem..,1 '"''......,... -111• .. "'.,. been commialloned as a P..-1e1en1 GALE s. ENS TAO, C-tr °"" fll °' .... Olullty -Ck· PICTITIOUS •llMN•u. l nls si.t-1 wa• filed wtln ,,,. C:-y Clt•k '*' ,,., ..
NAMelTAHMCMT Navyensicn. COlll'lly °"'""'Or-County on~-8y IW P.M. CMMI.,, ..._
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c:.11tet"'°'*' PUBLIC NOTICE Je1W1,,... v.,. 0r.,., m s.i.to PUBLIC NOTICE
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Oct.11.,,_., ••• 11.1-.1• 4i
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
, ., ..
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•t
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• J
I' I ••
DNLYPILDT
• I
Rtinning isn't always .sweet . .
But for Kuehne, it's a way of life
. ~!!IJ!!S *°' ltuellll• bu lib~ eue tclns. He eravn It. He tbtlves 68 It. SOmetima l»e bu to
ha•eltOl'M "'11 dte. ht lob&_._ ta aot • frostllll •ddlet-not
by eWa. b.~ llmpty u. to1'He the aqar Mce•ltuMIMts~ .. abtUe.
~ ,..,..~ ICING over •nYthint else
.,.caw It'•·--. CwlU. •..->." ICuetme aaya. ''Fo~ ~":;r.t~J'fte ...... tomeUlln1
dtffeNnl tMli ~,ff most ...-&beUea. ftat 's beaa.+1-;::,:,_r;-~ nlDftlt. "I Utt · teU betdn • taee if I'm 1oinl
to b•ve a (mabl!tl> reaetibll~l'D &oad up on a little ldNI an4 thete'a.'6· · . "
But KUM&De, • selllot 0.ta Meaa tnp,
hasn't alwaY. been able to predict the reac·
tloM. Oii more than a ~ oc~ufoos, he's
had t.o pull cMll of ' ~c1t ~ ;et • few squeezes from • imall tube ol l&il ~ eatrtea .ttb him. . .,,· ..
'NDB llAY:. BSl:N ~ times, like at
th• reMnt Ccleta Meaa Javttatloul. when the re·
action wit• so severe that ku.llne came
dahgerousty ctote to pe?bape loda1 bis life.
He WI' fe.liill tOod ad rUMtnc well -near ttM head of t6e -peck ._ wM!ft, trith about
one lftlle tlr:J lO, K~e felt diny. He tne• ex-
acUy wbSt tfi"e 1ymptbm1 meant but WI time,
tbe litM·headedne.. iseelnitd a Little mare in·
tenH ihan ua\laJ.
''It wa. tr.e Qelcll .. t nd banHst naction
to ever b.tt me,!' Koeblle r«oa.led. "I alowed
down, 1.beh atartecl waltin1 1'hll~ eat.int some
icing. But I Just 4ldn't have ti.e eneTIY to start tunftlbl aaatn." \ · · K~e walked. wl\lle.t'UnfteN puaed him ,
for about a half hllle. Finally, be was able to 1et
up eil°"lh 1trtQUI to "kidl it la." At the finilh
line, "p8leed oat.
"Aftta THAT, I ho ablolvtely no idea
what ha,.._... duttn1 that a..t ..U.. Our team
won tbemeet.~"i.Uu..l•attenid." K*We ii ·~ d., 1•dtirt, meantna be
has ta ,S-ft Mmd!f t1re .fl1f88erink aboU &I In·
1ulla wery G)', Ok4t lD die moi'ldJll ·and •lain
Deity.Hiits ... ,... iD the nenlftl.
coetA ..U HIGH'S ROB KUEHNE. &at because he's an adllele, and especially
belnl a nmner, he requires more sugar in his
system than the average person.
lrol'tically, it wasn't until last year in bis
third season of running, that Kuehne discovered
he was a diabetic.
.. .,. WAS THE be•innln• of cross country
season (Kuehne also runs track in the spring)
when coach (Joe) Fisher sent me to the doctor
because I was having these dizzy spells,"
Kuebnesaid last week after a workout.
"A normal person'ssugarlevel count is about
h1wlt11f' i• Httl a fn•11fi119 ad·
dirt -Httl hfl t•hoit•t•. 11111 INNlfl
11hHplfl l1a11 Io ha 1·•• llw ~•~,ar
hec•atl#f' h 11t•f111f' i• n diahf•1;, .•
155 and when you get to 500, supposedly you're in a
comatose stage. So you can imagine bow shocked
we all were when the doctor told me my sugar
count was riding around 700that day.'•
Sue Hendershott. diabetes clinician at Hoag
Memorial Hospital, says that although there are
several schools of thoughts on what causes
diabetes, no one is sure what the exact cause is.
However. she says, there are a few known facts
about the disease .
For example, we know t.hat there are nearly
five million Americans who have diabetes and a
vast majority of those a re elderly -over 40.
Also. as Kuehne has shown, diabetics can
lead active. normal lives, if they're willing to
work at it.
KUEHNE SAID THAT he first noticed pro-
blems when he began urinating 3().40 limes a day.
A frieodofhis, Stuart Lloyd, a runner al Universi-
ty High School, had been told he had diabetes a·
year earlier and after the two compared notes,
Kuehne realized whalil all meant.
Lloyd's blood sugar count during his initial
check-up was even higher than Kuehne's al 960.
"Stuart and I are pretty close now," says
Kuehne. "We get together and compare diets
and t rainin" methods."
Last Saturday. the two ran against one
another in the Sea View League championships at
Saddleback College.
Kuehne is an integral part of Costa
Mesa's team. The Mustanss are currently
ranked No. 1 in the 4-A division and in Orange
County, and Kuehne is the fifth man. a vital
position in a depth sport such as cross country.
Lloyd alternates between second and fou~
man on University's team, ranked second tn
CIF. In previous meetings between the two
schools, University narrowly defeated Costa
Mes a in a dual meet and Costa Mesa later beat the
Trojans in two invitationals. Kuehne says that he hopes to someday go
into the medical field as a doctor, specializing
in adaptive physical education. This rau. he's
worked as an aide to athletic trainer Leon Skeie al
Orange Coast College. After attending
OCC. Kuehne is planning on majoring in sports
medicine al UCLA. And he wants to continue
running.
•'I think some of the guys on our team may
go to OCC and if they do, I'll run with them,"
says Kuehne.
HA VJNG TO contend with a disease such as
diabetes is agonizing enough but Kuehne ran in·
to another problem last January prior to track
season-
"I ran my first -marathon and bruised the
bottom of both of my feet in the process," said
Kuehne. ''What developed was a painful form
of plantar warts on my feet."
Kuehne rested for two weeks and started
running again but the problem recurred. He
needed more time off to let his feet heal.
Nevertheless. Kuehne came back for track
season and managed to run his best times in the
mile (4:42) and the two-mile (10:10).
Kuehne says that his biggest support has
come from his coaches -Fisher last year and
now John Camey -Sue Hendershott at Hoag
Hospital and his teammates. "If it wasn't for aU
of them, 1 couldn't be running right now.
They've given me the ability to do the very best
I can each time 1 run."
Next on tap for Kuehne and his Mustang
teammates, Sea View League champions and
the No. 1 team in the Cl F Southern Section: The
CIF prelims at Saddleback College on Saturday.
They're expected to breeze to the finals a week
later al the same site.
'···~~...-..-----~----------......----------------------
·A·· notch above the rest
,. ·' ' OCC's Bergdahl mu o late bloomer
year the final match at ~.
State could be belweeft these two
schools once again.
' BUT THIS 'ftltE, one· of t.M
star s will be Oran•• Cout'a Julie Bergdahl, who attended
Edison ffigh School whtr~
volleyball, until recently, was
not a tqp sport.
"In high school, l ran Oft tile
track and cross country teaDl.I
until my senior year," hUe
says. "Then 1 got intetetted i!t<.i~
throulh a friend who wak on we
team."
With such a beginniial,· Julie
was last weekend nimed IDOlll
valuable player in the prft·
tigious Santa Barbara Jialot
colle1e women'• tourna•ftt
that Includes only confertnC'9
champions of the year bef~.
"That's the best tht*'C thlt
ever happened to me," sbe aa~
with modesty. "There •u a lol
of talent oo those teams, lachld·
in• ours. and I wu fortunate."
Bergdahl credits the OCC
coaching staff with her rapid de-
• velopment as a blocker and hitter.
"l'VE LEARNED aa awflal W
here. Lut year, wllle1a Et injured. Ray Price dW
help me and tblf yea e
George and Scott Petef'IOft hHe
.·.1Jaker, LA agree
:·.~ $-year conlract
.· ..
becauae the talb weN ~·
ed cordially, witbout Pg· :
He =ed by bl ... and a 11 1am•·
bits, aec:ond mc»t ill tM N~
League. Jn 151 ••mes, be made
Jwit three errors, and be b9d et·
rorleH streaka of 11 aad 8'
11me1.
Kapateln Hid aro,ad-the·
clock ne&Otlationl lrGDed at& di.
• 'sl1ntflcant dtff•t=Q fl "
between tbe=en alet • after It appe the
would 10 Utt ........., draft.
"W• feel Dusty la.In ttie ptt•
ot bta cu.er and we ,..aril !
U OM of tbe pla ID
•••• 1 ... ,~ 'i:~.:s Praew.t....,o· It;:~ tr ......... ~-...
Dod1era fot t•• aat'll.e ............. ..............
to•trtlttltlou to di•
put la • l4l Of ettra Ume ln tnehiltt all of us a1oa1 wttb
Jane.'' Hil1eqdorf assesses her ne•nt .eat In tbla manner: '!SM hu tbme netural abllity
Mlt wu tMWer really coached
btf9-re ... 091M here,'~ fflliea·
d6if iQI. ~'8be bU • kind of fu.lUIY tedmique and she didn't
play •et'J much IUt year, but tbia
year sbeU.eomeon nry strong.
"5'ae11 a particularly good
ra.-e ptaytil' and she'• in-iew.-. w1dch helps her even
moN. Sbe hu UM ability to read
onoslftl bltten ud I think
1be's ~tne the best in the
It.ate.
"91D'5 VUY effective and
domlnatet the net more than
lbJbodJ J1ve ateJ'l. We use
videotape and Ju!M ls very COM·
dfftUoul· abbut studying these
tape• and"hiil tAe ability to pick
~·up tor lenelf ...
Lite MVtral OCC athletes,
Julie ts wortdna under Leon Skele
aa a st1.ldmt trainer, one of 13
1tr11 in tbe program .
"Mt 011ly tell 1oal in wolle~l ll to ttJ and 1et a
lellllan&lp to a•JP ,.., far my ~°'·'-:~~ eaya. "I am ver1 ln la workln1 with U.. btbdlOUl*I eaft'Clally the
elllldtaa.· .... \ ft.lllab ICbool
and Hal tM tNnu I am leam-
lal ~ • traiber Will help me. • • ill\ no* J apead a 1°' of trm 111 a VlkNtf for the football , ,, .... wate4•l antlea and • CJtlriit.,. tMn'9 &at AN Dftal&J')'
t.e .... bmb "'94J to plaJ.
• • 8.a& I really Ute the re-
1-abWtaUOa .-ti.of tM Procram e_e..:,-...1 k8w llo'! tt feell t.o be ··Lllllt,.., .............. &Dkle
early t6 tM ....., b .. • lot of nee pMMe• ied' lllJ 1beWder
.wa1 butt, ..,, _Tl)e'6 beld me lof·==~·tt:J1:e for •mm IDIGMI aad 1•m very u.~·· .
'
o.lty ,.... MMt ,,__
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE STAR JULIE BERQDAHL.
Keough honored
ST. WUIS (AP> -Matt Keouah of lbe Oakland A's
and Jerry Reuu of the Loa An1eles Dodcen were named
tbe Sportinl News "comeback players of the year" on
Monday. Keouah potted a 2·17 record lut year, but improved it
to 18-U in 1llO wtth 20 complete 1ames, third hlsbest in the
lea1ue. and an eamed·run averqe of l .'2, fourth lowest ln
the American Leape. a... brouaht b1a 7.14 record tut year to lM, leadlnt
the Natlonal Leasue wtth 1lx •hut-outl and compllln1 an
eamed nm aver.,e ol 2.U, third lowelt tn hll leap.
Tbe SporUns Newe awarded tbe bonon after poWD("
244 pl.,_. ln tbe American Le.,_ and t• in the NaUonll
Leafreciup ta a product of Corona clel Mat HA1b School.
Kings get
new streak
• in 4-l WID ::
INGLEWOOD CAP) -Even a
hockey team that is red-hot may,
entertain a doubt or two when it
ldses a few games . But Charli~
Simmer and Garry Unger of the
Los Angeles Kings say all il
takes is a victory to start things
rolling again.
Both players emphasized the
importance of the Kings' 4-1 vic-
tory at home over the slumpinB
New York Rangers in the only
National Hockey League game
that was played Monday night
T h e Los Angeles triumph
followed s uccessive losses tb
Philadelphia and Montreal on
the road.
"It was a good win because we
had to tum it around." said Sim-
mer. the NHL's leading scorer
who rammed in his 16th goal of
the season in the second period.
"THE CONFIDENCE helps us
at home, where we are un -
beaten," he said. "We started to
regroup in our building. On the
road, they were checking us, but:
tonight we got back to our:
game." ,
"No team can go 80 games~
without losing," said Unger. who·
scored bis 400th career goal in~
the third period. "But this was a:
big game for us, because when!
you lose, you s tart second~
guessing yourself." :
The victory was the seven~
straight of the season on home"
lee for the Kings, 11·3·1, an~
matched a club record. •
The Rangers, now winless in'
their last seven games, grabbed
a l·O lead 1:36 into the openin~
period when Doug Su1llmar(
scored on a rebound against
Kings goalie Mario Lessard. :
' ROOKIE nM rox tied it for·
Los Angeles with a 20-fool re-
bound 1oal six minutes later,
and Simmer put his team ahea
to stay with bis break-away IO&li
6:05 lnto the second period. ~· Simmer was aJone at cente
ice when he took a pass ~
linemate Marcel Dionne an
skated in to beat Ran1era coaU
Doug Soetaert from in close.
"I couldn't decide whether tcf
10 off the lee or 10 ln for th4t
puck because it waa the-end of
our sbilt," Simmer explaine4
about hia being al center ice.
Tbe Kinls wrapped it up l.n ~
third period on 1oal1 by Stev•
Jensen, who took a perfect pasl
from Gree Terrlon to score fro!Q
five feet in front, and Un1er'1
sixth pl of tbe aeuon .
"Wlnnln1 tonl1bt 1ave
us more conftdence1" Un1e,
11ld. "So often after 1oelnt ~
1tart wonclerint about younell.
We bounced bact and It wu •
•ood ••.-i·" .,
I I
. " . .
. '
-DAILV Pll Of T~ Huww•** II I_,
Playoff berths np~in • air Brea
Only Edi.on, FV, E1tancia certain
Mod rn-day ballplayers
don't impre8s Feller
FreaAPclllfakMs
CINClNl'fATl Bob Feller, the all-time 1reat
Cleveland lndians' pltcber, ls disenchanted with
modem baseball and baUplayers. He blames bla
money and bi1 heads for a decline in the quality
of play he aees , even in the World Series.
"There was a careless reaard to execute the fundamen·
tals ," Feller said at a sports collectors convention this
weekend. "There were too many faillncs -runners roundln1
bases on the wrong foot, costinc precious steps; outtlelders
not onJy not in the right po.ition for the catch, but then
catching one-handed , then having-to brinl the ball back: to
throw, again losing time; the shortstop crabbinc the ball with
one hand when common sense tells you the fastest release is
using two hands ...
Feller blames both mana1ement and players for the
lower quality or play.
"Something's gone . . . execution, pride," be said.
He accused management of giving in to "show busin~s.
brought on by the whims of television."
Feller said the expanded league allows players to make it
to the big leagues before they're ready, and that big contracts
intimidate coaches who make only a fraction as much as the
stars. ·'The trend is to sign the college player when two, three
or four years' experience in the minors would prepare him
for the competition and the lack of instruction from the
m anager and the coaches," Feller said.
· ''I think, because of the big money difference, coaches
are embarrassed to approach a· player with a suggestion. I
know this, r 've talked to them.
'·Billy Martin 's teams execute fundamentals. They listen to
him because I think they're afraid of him."
QMote of the dafl
USC basketball coach Stan Morn.., talking about
6-9Y.i, 240-pound freshman center Claytoe Olivier from
Los Amigos High : "He's so strong that he could be the
first guy in college basketball to pop a ball."
.4titallecorth r1uu ,.,,,of 1..-k-again
Wide receiver Job.D StalhrorOi, who just came •.
off the disabled list a fter recovering from a 4. •
hairline leg fracture, broke a bone in his left foot
in the Steelers' gam e with Tampa Bay Sunday.
Pittsburgh won the game , 24-21, but Stallworth is scheduled
to be sidelined four to six weeks . . . Joe Morrta, the speedy
tailback who became Syracuse Universiy's all-time leading
rusher this year . has had his junior season cut s hort by a
broken collar~ne ... Jolla Meeom Jr., owner of the winless
New Orleans Saints, met for one-haU hour with Coach Dick
Nolan Monday, but would not say what went on behind closed
doors al the team 's practice facility ... reserve linebacker
J oe Norman or Seattle, carried off the field on a stretcher "'
Sunday in the Seahawks' loss to Kansas City, will undergo
s urgery today for tom ligaments in his left knee.
1·rf!t· throu·" c·linc·h I. 1a11·,. einof11
AJJ an Bristow and Billy Mc.K.laaeJ bit two free •
throws apiece in the final 30 seconds to put the
game out of Indiana's reach and Utah held OD for ~ I
108-106 victory ln the only NBA CODtest slated tor-.:.
Monday . . . In other news, ~ ._. defeated ,...
McEnroe, 6-3, 6--4, at the Stoclt.bolm Open in the rubbeT match
o f t heir persona l dual after splittinc confrontations at
Wimbledon and the U.S. Open ... The Chicago White Sox
have signed manager Tony LaKasa to a new one-year pact
. . . George McGinnis has been placed on the Indiana
Pacers' injured list with a knee injury and will be lost to the
club for a minimum of fi ve games ... Madison Square
Garden wants to stage a late January fight between Kea
Norton and Gerry Cooney, the No. 1 ranked heavyweight con-
tender by both t he WBC and WBA. Officials from both sides
a re meeting to discuss the possibility ... The New York
Yankees announced the signing of relief pitcher Dotaa Bird to
a multi-year contract, thus removing his name from the
baseball free agent list ... Weadell Balley, a sparring
partner to WBC heavyweight champion Larry Bol•ea, was
stabbed to death by his wife during an argument . . . Alvba
M. Ulbrtck.soa, who coached the U.S. Olympic rowing teams
to two gold medals and was a coach at the University of
Washington for 32 years, bas died at the age of 71 ... Sad-
dleback College has named Keltlt Calklu, a former head
football and track coach at Chabot College, as its athletic
director. replacing the retired l>oel Frlta.
Teferisio-. radio
a1 aoosa cut.SON °' .. ....., ...... "-" Or an1e Coast area football
teams Ed1aoo Fountain Valley
and Estanda have loco oo CIF
playoff be1tbs -but for nine
other area blib school teams -
their f~~ hinces on this flnal
week cA the recular seuon.
Each s ix-team or lar1er
league is guaranteed three
berths with one wild-cant team
• taken from five leaiues in each
conference. The CIF playoffs
belin Nov. 21. Here ia the situa-
tion in each of the five leaiues
represented by Orange Coast
area teams:
S.uet Lea1ae -Edison (4-0)
and Fountain Valley (3-1) are
the leaeue's No. 1 and 2 entries,
r espectively regardless what
transpires Friday.
NeWJ>Qrt Harbor (2-2) is No. 3 if it defeats Westminster C1·3).
But a loss, combined with an
Edison victory over Marina
(2-2) would make il a three-way
tie, requiring a coinrup.
Marina could make it as No. 3
with an upset over Edison, com-
bined with a Westminster vic-
tory o ver Newpor,t .
Wes tminster 's only hope is a
three-way tie, forcing the flip.
ltillloo VlejO (4-0) Friday.
A 1011, however, combined
with victories for Capistrano
Valley (2-2) .ud San Clemente
(2.-2) over Lquna Hilla 0-1) aod
Dana Hilla (CM), respectively,
would throw It into a three-way
tie, forcing another cotnrup.
Should it come down to a de·
c lslon between Capistrano
Valley and San Clemente for No.
3, Capo wins out by virtue of its
victory over San Clemente.
Empire Leasae -Loara ia the
leasue champion with a 4-0 rec-
ord, but the rest of the leaeue is
a nightmare to fiiure out.
For instance , s hould Loara
(4-0) defeat Kennedy (2·2) on
Friday and Katella (1-3 ) defeat
Cypress (2·2) and Ocean View
(1-3) top Los Alamitos (2-2)
Saturday, five teams would wind
up 2-3.
Or , if the results were re-
versed, there would be a three-
w a y tie for second between
Cypress, Los Alamitos and Ken·
nedy. Or, forget it. Loara is in.
The rest have a s hot.
Aa1elas Lea1ae -St. Paul
(3·0) and Bishop Amat (3-0)
fight it out for the top two bertha,
while Mater Del (1-2) and Servile
0 ·2) clash for third place in the Sea View Leape -With a finalstandings.
victory Estancia (4·0) is un· There is , however no
disputed champion Thursday, guaran~ that the CIF ~ ac·
but 3-1 El Toro cans.hare the ti· cept three teams from a five-
tle and gain top billlna with a team league -it really boils
win, combined with a Costa down to two wild card teams in
Mesa (2·2) victory over Corona the Big Five Conference.
del Mar (3-1). · Mater Del, however, would
Corona del Mar's s ituation is boast a 6-3-1 record with a vie·
the most ticklish. It's possible tory, with the losses cominc to
for the Sea Kings to share the ti· Edison, St. Paul and Bishop
tle with a win and miss the Amat.
playoffs entirely with a loss. Here's this week's final salvo:
Costa Mesa will be the No. 3 Samet Leape
team with a win over Corona del Friday -Newport Harbor
, Mar, providing El Toro defeats (2·2) at Westminster (2·2);
Estancia, or can throw it into a Marina (2·2) vs. Edison (4-0) al
three-way tie with El Toro and Orange Coast College; Fountain
Corona del Mar if Estancia de· Valley (3·1) at Huntington
feats El Toro. Confusing? The Beach (0-4).
picture will be clearer after --Sea View Leagae
Thursday's game involving El Thursday -Estancia (4-0) vs.
Toro and Estancia at Mission El Toro (3-1) at Mission Viejo.
Viejo. Friday -Costa Mesa (2·2) Mesa
Soadl Cout Lea1ae -Laguna
Beach (3-1) can win it all -the
league title and No. 1 berth in
the playoffs with a victory at
38-34 vietory
vs . Corona del Mar (3-1) at
Newport Harbor; University
(0-4) at Irvine (0-4)
Soadl Coast Leagae
Friday -Laguna Beach (3-1)
Oilers stay tme,
it's a cliff-hanger
HOUSTON (AP ) -The
.Hous ton Oilers almost forgot
who they were Monday night
when they jumped to a 2'·6
halftime lead against the New
England Patriots. .
But the Oilers, who prefer a
good cliffhanger to a blowout,
quickly got back in character in
the second half when they
almost blew the lead and treated
fans to their weekly chamber cA
horrors before pulling out a 38-34
thriller.
"We've got an outstanding of-
fens ive te am with a lot of
talent.''
Campbell, who had only 46
yards rushing in the first half.
said be was trying too bard.
"A lot of the problem in the
first half was my fault,"
Campbell said. "I was tryinl to
push tbinp too much. In the
second ball I just slowed and let
the offensive line do their wort.
Their defense came at us very
hard. They've 1ot a great club.
There's nothing you can say bad
about them."
at llluioo Viejo (4-0); Dana
Hills (O·•> at S~ Clemente
(2·2); La1una 8Jll1 O·I > at
Capistrano Valley (2·2).
1: .............
Friday -Loar• (4-0) VI. Ken-
nedy (2-2) at Watern. Saturday
-Ocean View 0 ·2) va. Loi
CHRllBRIGHT BILL BRIGHT
Golden. 50
Prep football's top plays
~ ..
(Laa week'• plaJ& el SI Juda or mere>
9C)-Cbri.s Bright <Corona del Mar), kickoff return for
TD
87-Bill Bright (Corona del llar), TD nm
65--0naaai.a Nixoo <Costa Mesa), TD pus from Gre1
Tereg:is
61-Keith Richard.a (Fountain Valley), pass from Matt
Stevens
58--Mike Giddings (Newport Harbor), TD pass from
Robert Anthony
50-M.elvin Jactson (Ediaoo), pass from Ken Major
Se ...
90-C. Bright (Corona del Mar); 87-B. Bri1ht
(Corona del Mar); 79-Moore (Irvine); 73-Moser {Ocean
View), Slouka <Mater Dei), Ventura-.(Martna); 72-
Grandstaff (Marina), Placlta (Dana Hilla)°; 70-Harry
(Fountain Valley) ; 69-Harry Fountain Valley); 68-
Reinholtz (Ocean View); 65-Bush (Marina), Nixon
<Costa !4esa); 62-Gleed (Dana Hills): 60-Brantley
<Huntington Beach); 59-Urmson <Estancia), Ventura
(Marina); 58--Davis (Laguna Beach), Giddings (Newport
Harbor); 57-Harry (Fountain Valley), 2; Frandsen
(Marina), Welton (Edison); 56-Grandstaff (Marina),
Mounce (San Clemente>; 53-Sweuy (El Toro>, D.
Jacksoo (Edison); 52-WiWams (El Toro), Irvine <Ocean
View); 51-Davia (Estancia); ~lddinp (Newport
Harbor), M. Jacbon (EdlMn).
Last week'• Aaawkal leaden ......
1. Jim Gleed (Dana fn.lls), 22·1S7; 2. Max Marold
(Costa Mesa ), 29-151 ; 3. Bill Bright (Corona del Mar ),
15-146 ; 4: Erle Willingham (Westminster). 24-133; S. Rand>
Scott (University), 23-121.
p ......
1. Matt Stevens <Fountain Valley), 14-29-1, 213; 2. Greg
Tereg:is (Costa Mesa ), 10-17-0, 195; 3. Robert Anthony
(Newport Harbor), 10-18-1, 180; 4. John Heinle (Ocean
View), 6-1.>2, 132; s. Bob Grandstaff <Marina), 10-21-0,
123; 6. Jim Mccahill <Estancia ), 11-20-2, 1.20; 7. Bryan
Douglass (El Toro), 11·16-0, 117.
&ea1Yla1
1. Steve Cook (Costa Mesa, 6-108; 2. Abel Cachola ( Eatan·
cia), 6-«2; 3. Chris Nussbaumer (Marina), S-72; 4. Mike Gid·
din1a (Newport Harbor), 4-109; S. Onusia Nixon <Costa
Mesa), 4-89; 6. Emile Harry (Fountain Valley), 4..-; 7. Eric
Bryant (El Toro), 4....0.
Scortq
1. Mike Glddincs (Newport Harbor) and Max Marold
(Costa Mesa), 12 each.
Following are the top SPorts events on TV tonight. Ratings a re : .-.. " .t excellent • .t .t .t . worth watching; ./ ./ fair ; .t forget
it.
6 p.m., Channel 9 ./ ./ ./
It wasn't decided until cor-
ne r back Greg Stremick In·
tercepted a Steve Gro1an pus
in the end zone with 20 seconds
left to play.
And it took a couple of Monday
ni1ht specialists, quarterback
Ken Stabler and runninC back
Earl Campbell, to lead the
Oilers through. •
College football TIE
1981
NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Atlanta.
Announcers: Chick Hearn and Keith ErlcksOn. Stabler, wbo bas posted a 10-1
record in Monday night games,
completed 1S of 17 puses for 258
yards and three touchdowns.
The Lakers hope to r~roup and not lose any more ground to
Phoenix In the Pacific Division standings with a victory tonight over Atlanta. George Gervin and the Spurs put the Laken two games behind with a 112·109 win Saturday. Mark Landsberoer was sidel ined with an ankle Injury Friday night and wlll be out
for two weeks. He will not play tonight and wlll be replaced by
Jim Brewer in the Laker lineup.
Campbell, in hia fifth COD·
secutive 100-yard performance
in Monday night games, gained
130 yards on 30 carries and
scored on runs of three and
seven yards. RADIO
Basketball -Lakers at Atlanta, 6 p.m., KLAC (570). "It's not a matter of 'I' but
'We'," said Stabler when asked
about bis Monday night aucceu.
AVAi A&I MOW!
Prestige location
Early Mail D•fiY8fY.
Holding and forwarding u.s., ..... s....-.,,.......
TheMllllW.
17777 .... lt.T
lr ...... ,CAfJ714
7141 54t-47JJ
........ ....__ .............. . , .......... _..,. ·c•i.. ............. _, • \IOlllef,.,... ........ ..... ...._... ........ . ...._ ....... ....... -....... -4-
•• CT NOW, SPAC! LIMIT!D
(1 ........ --.., POSTAL Jl()X •
•1.1nttac. 21,CoMaMeH
~ve taken the ads and lisnng., that busi-
nesses use to call each other and put them in a
separate book-The Los Angeles Business To
Business Yellow Pages. You11 fi nd materials,
equipment and services from firms all over the
greater Los Angeles market. And yo u11 find
them faster and easier than ever.
Bagels? They're U.ed in Pacific Telephones
Los Angeles Consumer Yellow Pages. ·
........ ·--···· ... ····-_,. -·· --· ·-········ .... ......... • -9"111 . ... • • • • • .. •••• . .. , ... Ii... -· -..... "" . ... . -. ... -t .... -..
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Utall s.-n. L.one 8McJI Stllte ...........
SIMIWft,ftr'"
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Weall ........ SYteetCol On.-. Ore9'ft SC. Cal"* ...... _ et s... ,,_ SUt•."
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llOCllial UCLA M Al,_ s..te, 11 eo1or-su.e1 avu
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OM.V PILOT
/fl111111111m -111111•m, good
Earl Campbell of Houston finds an opening
and busts through for yardage against New
England Monday night at Houston 's
Astrodome. Campbell helped the Oilers to a
38·34 victory over the P ats, which kept
Houston tied with Cleve land for first place in
the AFC Central.
I
CIF b11rns Costa es J
R 1.,'}. b l . o.o n 'ie S lm s uxiter po 01sts
By 'IEe.,~N
The ~~~r~r aolo
playoffs get mideriraf Wednes·
day -and iJi case you over-
looked It -Costa Mesa Hllb's
)lustangs, assuming they breese
as exmia_ed in the h.rSt round
a1ain1( 'Saddleback, meet No.
2·seeded Surmy Hills in the
second round Ftiday.
If X9U 're into water polo it
't a lot of imaetnatioo
out s ometblns is
Mesa against 5'.m·.
· PY Hilla in the se~nl(I?
ON A .llQPl'llALL acale that
would mean St. Patil woul~
Fontana or E.dison wo.uld meet
Bishop Amat in the first round.
It j ust ~·t happen.
But in water polo , where
. ~~~~~ pa;t;
charge of the pairings, such is
the c_ase.
Coacb Bob Shupp's Costa .
Mesa Mustangs, UL.4i for the
year, 1WPJeiDUP in the rugged
Sea \Uw ~e. ~ No. 4
in the CIF ~Ill SeetioiD for
the past fuc.e bas been in·
se-.ed into the o. ls slot , where
idle "Sunny Hills awaits as the
No. 2seed.
• "It's a ~" sayti Shupp.
''The CIF is making a sbaJllbles
of this and is really shafting my
kids .
"The lack of exgoeure for my
players in the q uarters and
semifinals alfeds the lives of thr~ or_lour of my RJA)'ers ,"
adds Shupp.
What Shupp is domg, in es-
sence, is predicline his team
will lose to powellful Sunny Hills.
It's not the most optimistic ap-
COSTA MESA'S 808 SHUPP
ttopptng nwd with CIF
proacb to the gJ.ayoffs, but it is
realistic. SuQny Rills will be a
solid favorite·, as much as Costa
Mesa is over Saddleback Wed-
nesday.
COSTA MESA'S odds of ad-
vaoci.QB to the quuterfinals are
s lim . desp ite th e fact the
Mustangs have held the No. 4
slot in the poll .
What baa Shupp so up in arms
is the fact his team has ·been
r anked No. 4, yet has seen No. s
Lo n g Beach Wils on , Moor e
League champion , moved into
the fourth seed.
"The CI F keeps te lling us you
have to play by the rules, but all
of a sudden a rookie is telling
Mazatlan race stalled
you rantings don't mean a
thing," says Shupp, who has
built a nd maint a in ed Costa
Mes a's water program.
"He has advisers on this,"
continues Shupp. "Newport
Harbor's Bill Barnett, J im
Sprague of Sunny Hills and Rick
Jones of Long Beach Wilson ad-
vised him, but he flip.flopped it
anyway despite the ract he has
never seen either of us play. He
(Clark) just doesn't know what
he's talking about and won't
take &QY advice."
Clark's answer to the situation{
coincides wttb what Shupp s~ays : He bu an advisory commJ ,
then be makes the final decls
as to which teams are seeded.
"IT'S A MA1TER or sitting
down and making the most ob-
jective judgment you can," says
Clark. "I feel comfortable about
that. After the top four have been
seeded, we make s ure eac,b first
place team meets a third place
team in the fi rst round, the rest
becomes a geographical formal.••
Among Costa Mesa's list of
victims this year is Long Beach
Wilson, which was dea lt a 5.3
loss in tournament action. At
one point it was 5· 1 before Shupp
emptied the bench so the re·
ser ves could see some action .
Efforts were made, according
to Shupp, by Barnett, J ones and
S prague t o g e t C la rk to
change tbe playoff str ucture, but
Clark disagrees with that state·
ment. And, he says, it doesn't
mean anything anyway.
"That's not the issue," says
Clark. "We have an advisory
committee, but this office mahs
the fmaldedsion."
N o wind has them drifting
''·
By ALMON LOCKA.BEY
o.lty Pt ........... W"'9r
The old sailing cllcbe, "the wind ia slral&bt up
the mast," still plagued the 29 boats ln the Los
Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race Monday aa they
drifted into Mexican waters.
The race continued to be a drifting match after
44 hours of sailin1 with the lead yacbta barely lo1·
ging lSOmilesu:ndermurkyskies. ' •
breeze of about eight knots was s hoWing on the
wind indicators, but the weather report from San
Francisco indicated tbe fleet might expect a
northerly breeze by today.
The light winds at the start were particularly
discouragin1 Inasmuch as veterans of Mexico
races are aware they could be trapped in a marine
"parking lot" again in the lee of Caho Falso al l\e
tip of Baja California .
Still clinging to the boat-for-boat lead was -------:::----:iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
Brad Herman's Santa Cruz.50f Secret Love, Del
Rey Yacht Club, with 153 mi es under her keel
since the Saturday noon start of( Los Aneles
Harbor.
ONE MILE ASTERN was a.notber Santa
Cru.z-50, Ni1ht Train, co-skippered by Bill Walten
and John Thor, Ventura Yacht Club, and third was
s till another Santa Cr ua-50, Morrie Kin'• Hana
Ho, Balboa Yacht Club, six miles behind Nitbl
Train.
The scrat<:h boat, Ra,Ume was four miles
behind Hana Ho.
The three leaders were olf Cape Colnet, a few
mlles aoutb of Ensenada. Several boata bad barely
pa11ed the 100.mile mark and were approacblnl
Todos Santoe Island off Enaenada.
Overall handJcap leader was Dual Em, co-
1kippered by Denni.I Conner and du.ack Hope, San
Dleco Yacht Club; second was Silver Fox, Bob
Kelleher, t..on1 Beach Yacht ClOb, and t.b1rd 1'81
Secret !Ave .
' L • .. • ..
ORANGE COUNTY
radio pager
WIDE AREA
COVERAGE
Or.• c.ut7. L.A. Ceu-
lJ, SH.,...~ .. c-c,.
RlnnWt r .. ty.
'17.75
Wal mo. cost
no deposit on
ad IPP"oval
1111\ '' I • "I 'I\
W \I >lo 1 11111 I II l'loof
''~I IC I 1'-(
' ; .n ...
ti
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-OAI!,. V PILOT
here a man belongs.
-··
Low tar. Camel taste.
tar. Smg
8 mg. ''tat. 0.7 mg. nicotine av. per cigarane by FTC method.
•
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Oangeroul to Your Heahh.
. ..
I
•
,,
INSID•: •H._.1 .... •Comk1
•1•11--•Movies
•
Tu.oey, Nowmt>er 11 , 1MO Eeaturig_ •. _ •• ___ c.
{ the doug~Ys
:Last o . ( .. ...
~ By MICHAEL DOtJGAN OIUleDelly..._ ....
Tbe commander of Veterans ot Wor&d War I
New Mesa Barracks Ud pcxmded the podium
and bis voice rose to a f alr about.
"We are so proud to get Armlsttce Day
back on it.a ori&inal day. the 11th, and we're go-
int to stick with that," Frank Kripner bellowed.
"We don't want it on the 25th, 27th, 28th or 29th."'
Pound. Pound.
"We want it on the 11th."
FIFTEEN MEN in their 808 and 90s nodded
in vigorous assent, their garrison caps with pop-
py patches bobbing in one comer ol the decay-
in" Veterans Memorial Hall, 565 W. 18th St., Costa Mesa.
"We had a pretty good turn-out today "
Kripner said after the meeting. Although the
New Mesa Barracks boasts 50 dues-paying
members, few a ttend the twice-a -month
gatherings. Most are too old to driire.
Perhaps the comparatively sizable crowd
at last Wednesday's session was due in part to
the previous days' election. A new president
was coming, one whose views on military pre-
paredness coincide precisely with those or the
aging veterans .
"WE'RE QUITE pleased, believe me," said J oe Mariscal, 84, and a former barracks com-
mander . "I couldn't stand four more years of that
fella."
That fella, Jimmy Carter, gave away the
Panama Canal and the veterans didn't like it,
Mariscal noted. What's more, he feels Carter
shouJd have used American military might to
pressure Iran into releasing its hostages .
•'The fundamental point is that we are very
patriotic," said Mariscal. "We don't like war
and we don't want to see wars, but we want to be prepared."
Another draw might have been the impend·
ing observation of Armistice Day, a holiday
that, for a period of years, floated on the calen-
dar, became melded with Veteran's Day and
was almost for1otten, much to their cha1rin.
"rr'S A VEaY solemn day for veterans of
World War I ," Mariscal explained. "Up until
this year, they bad it in October or they had
som e otherdateexceptNov.11."
It was on that day in 1918 that the armistice
ag!ee_ment was signed in Compiegne, France, ~nr:iglllg Earth's fil"st global conflict lo an an-llchmactic close.
The local veterans commemorated·
Armistice Day today with a ceremony at the.
Orange County His torical and Memorial
Gardens. A flag was raised, colors and taps
sounded and an invocation given by Dave
Reynolds , Costa Mesa resident and senior
chaplain at Long Beach Veterans Administra-tion Hospital.
',',I ~NK . WE'RE gotng to have a big
day, said Man scal as he laid out his plans for
the men of the barracks .
Kipner s uggested that a couple of Boy
Scouts be included in the color guard.
But they are old and, while they take pride
in their longevity, the veterans can see their
numbers dwindling.
''WE HA VE ABOUT 50 paid-up members,"
Mariscal said. "We had almost 100 several
years ago. A lot of them have died or moved
away and we have a hard time getting new members."
Eleven barracks in Orange County have a
total membership of 1,800 veterans, Marisca.l
reported. "They all came here because it's a lot
better cUmate -easier on'em, you know."
NationaUy. Mariscal said the Veterans of
World War I still bas some 860 000 members
"which is not too bad because i think during
World War I we had about S million men in the
service, thereabouts."
He said the fort.nightly meetings (one a
month for business, another for potluck lunch
and bingo) enable the men and their
wives, mem bers of the Ladies Aux -
i liary, t o -e n gage in a bit of
"sociability."
''111E MAIN motivation is that the
Ve,erans of World War I are very
patriotic ," M a riscal explained.
"There's a feeling of comradeship.
They all served in the big war that
changed the character of the United
States, made it a big world power. We
came in and rescued the rest of the
world when things looked pretty black.
"We talk about our troubles. our
pains and aches. When you get to be
this age, infirmities catch up to you.
I'm hard of hearing and several can
barely walk around. It forms a desire to
get together. We learn things from each
other."
And sometimes ther e are surprises.
Mariscal introduced a reporte r to Chuck
Marston, his classmate at the University of
CalifomJa's southern branch (now UCLA > in
1919.
"I met him a few years ago (at a veterans'
meeting) a fte r a SO-year period and I re·
cognized him right away and he recognized
me," said Mariscal.
MARISCAL, WHO re-enlisted in the Navy
at 42 to serve in the second world war, said the
veterans don't believe today's youth share their
concepts of patriotism.
"I don't know what has come about." he
said. "I re member during World War I , boy,
you couldn't find a more patriotic group than
young people then.
•'I feel that if some emergency occured or
we were being attacked by some foreign coun-
try the younger generation would respond.
"But I wouldn't want to put any money on it ...
There 's a feeling
of comradeship ...
We rescued the rest
of the world
when things looked
pretty black. '
C•role-Ann Mcleod (left) hotd8
"lntemattonel Ye•r Of the Child,"
one of the new UNICEF pl•te ••rl••· Above,• n•ttv• child •nd
hi• pet In "Atrtca."
Th• Innocence of childhood
I• recalled In thl•
paatort• plate, c•lled "Europe."
A plgtllfled l•H
hold• • .,..,_, l•ntern
In "M•18J91•."
I
Plate collecting: A delicate pasttime
By JUDITH OLSON
Ot .... Dally~ ... s-
Collecting plates has become a major
pastime for many Americans and people in
other parts of the world.
plates dedicated to raising money for the United
Nations children's fund.
Since the plates were introduced in Europe
several yean ago, Sl million has been raised for
UNICEF. The plates sell for S30 each
Children's Fund at Bullock's, Sherman Oaks, by
Wendelin von Boch. managing director of the
German firm.
She sll'essed that people should buy plates
"because they like them, not because they will
go up in value. though you hope they do."
And the collectors have become smarter,
according to Carole-Ann ~cLeod, vice president
of collectibles for Villeroy & Boch Tableware in
the U.S.
The UNlCEF plates are "not a limited edi·
lion," Ms. McLeod said. "But it's going to a
good cause."
Ms. McLeod said plate collecting in the U.S.
is "different than in Europe. People were
brought up with art around them there."
EutOPEANS THlJS prefer more artistic
plates, while American collectors like "cuter "
designs, she noted.
The Mettlach Collectors' Society was
launched with a S60 "Snow White" plate. a re·
issue of one which sold for around SlO in 1980
That same original plate now costs S4.000, Ms .
McLeod said.
"PEOPLE NOW ARE looking at quality.
Before, they just wanted something pretty," she
said.
The first plate was made with a deaign from
the Villeroy and Bach archives, then German
artist Karin Blume was uked to do the final
five .
"It's difficult' to find the perfect plate for
worldwide distribution.''
WHAT DOES SRE see as the next popular
item in what she calls the "phenomenal plate
market"~
Ms. McLeod r ecently was at Bullock's,
South Coast Plua, to introduce the UNICEF
plate series and the Me1tlach Collectors' Socie-
ty with ita inaugural "Snow White" plate.
"EUROPE" IS THE first title, and the
second is "Asia." Then comes "Africa" and the
current "Malaysia," and the final two will be
"India,'' in 1981, and "Mexico" in Ul82.
Plate collectors here are buying for their
children and grandchildren, Ms . McLeod added.
"That's why the plates with children are so
popular."
Ms. McLeod s aid the only prediction she
has is that the interest in plates is going to
grow.
The newest UNICEF design, titled
"Malaysia,'' is the fourth in a series of si.x
The $1 million check was presented lo the
Los Angeles Chapter of the United NatioDJ
• People also are infiuenced by the names of
the plates, Ms . McLeod said, and buy what ap.
peals to them.
Her company is looking to tap the American
market and will be working with several U.S.
artists ln the near future.
Even the young suffer • • •
I ~ .. ____ ........ __ ....... ~i
7here is no real, cure ... yet
It can be definitely
controlled ... But If you don 1
control It In the first six
months tt> two yee,., It does
become difficult tt> ~onttol later. •
BJ CBalS aOBEaTS
PHILADELPH1A (AP) -Alllson
Kelly ped81ed tbe tricycle around the
physical therapy room at Children's
Hospital, then WU helped otf. Al ate 10,
she h bobbled by juvenil e
rheumatoid artbrltia (JRA), a dJHue
that affect.I about one ln every 10,000
younpten bom ln this country.
It can't be cured, but It can be COD·
trolled, oft.en with aspirin.
AllllOll was 3 years old when her
mother, Jud1 Kelly, first realised
aomethint was wron1. Her dauchter
complalMd of aches and palnl and wu n&DJllnC a sllf,bt fever.
IT W.\8 l'la&T tboucht to be
rbeumaUc fwer. But it 10t wone, and
eventually docton dlaPGMd It a JRA.
In Uie sprint of lt'll, AllilCJa's CODd.l-
Ucm d«erloratect to u.. point that •be
needed matebel. By fall, lbe WU UDA·
bl• to walk at all.
She entered CbJld,.n'• HoloJtal ln
May. and got around either on a metal
walker that lncbed alont. or on the blue
trike that really scooted. Her dally
medication included eight adult-sized
asplri.a tablets to control pain and ln-
nammatloo of her ankle, knee, blp and
elbow joints.
DOCl'OaS SAY Allison will walk
a1ain, and she recently returned home
to her family in Ollbertavllle,
Montiomery County. But more 9'1erclM
and upirin and surtery to correct
dama1e to her jotnta lie ahead.
"Some of tbe cb.llciren really do have
problems, do have joint dama1e, need
wheelchairs or crutches. And that s mall
minority can be aad," says Kathy Bell,
a nurse coordinator ln the boapltal's
Rheumat0Jo1y Cllnlc. "But m oat
cbildreft tend to do very well Betweeo
70 and 80 percent let 1?9tter."
Dr. &.Ju At.breya beads the clinic,
whleb la co·apoaaored by Children'•
Seaabonl Houle,• loaa·term rebabutla·
uoa center In AtlanUc City. 11Mre ate
Hauch cllnica ln the coUlltry.
"JRA la a cbronlc dlH ... , lt'• a
nullaDC9 diMue," aays AtbreJ•. "It
can be crippling, but It is not a killing
disease. The recovery rate is very
good."
No one is sure what causes it, or why
in manycaseslt1lmplf 1oesaway.
"There ls no real cure 11.ke you have
for a kidney infection, or a sore throat,
yet it can be definitely controlled,"
Athreya said.
"Btrl' IF YOU don't control lt in the
first six months to two yean, It does
become very difficult to control lt
later."
The cllnlc la seeing about 90 cbUdren
from a three-state area who are suffer-
ln1 from JRA. An additional JO children
are b el nf treated for other
rbeumatoloOcal dlaorders.
Athreya aald uplrln ls the best
med.lctne for tre~tin1 JRA because It
reducett lnllammallon of t.be Un1Da cellt
, of affeetedjolnt.t.
IL\ "8UALLY concentrates on the
body joint.I, but lt allo can atrkt the
heart. eye1, muacl11, tendonl, llv• and
akin. 8Qm1 chilclrm are'° sdft tlM1 bave
to be cani..S to a bot bath In the momJn1
to Umberthetr mute lea.
Sometimes rashes and fever (as high as
106 dep-ees) are associated with the dis-
ease, but Athreya notes that thes e
symptoms alao can be United to most
vlrua infections.
There are more than 100 types of
arthritis -which can be lrillered by
injury and d.lseue, lncludint viral in-
feetlona 11.ke rubella and bepatlUs, and
even alltttic reactions to food.
Accordin1 to Athreyat... there are five
accept.eel varieties of J ~A. a disorder
that effec:ta youngsten of any aee. •
It ta difficult to diagnose, mainJy
became there ls no one test that will
1ln1le it out. "We UH ne1ative deduc-
tion Ioli~/' said Athreya. "It's not lbi.s,
it'a not tnat. Bulcally, any cbild with
penlat.tnt arthritls for aay more than
six weeb la a tood candldat~."
"TO C:ONTaOL inflamm1Uon, you
need uplrln and you have to UH bll
doaea. One recent study showed that 80
percent ol JR.A 1ufferen coWd do very
well wtth uplrtn alone." Some teen-
•1en, under medical 1-.penlsion, take U
or 11 adalt-tlled uptrtn tableU a day.
T°"'°"°'°: Qmcb and~
t
t
I
I
[!All 'f Pt~Of r~ ..,_.,.._ 11 ,.,
Oeltr ........... _,,.le ............
SUE FENWICK (LEFT) MOml.8 FOR ERA
Ann Yuh•• •nd KeNft ~Watch
• AT ERA PARTY ARE MARTY ARMSTRONG
' (Left), Kay Byrum and D•rretlCllnglngsmlth ·
•'
-JL Horoscope ]
. ~ ~ J : ______________________________ _,
'
• • ~-WEDNESDAY, NOV. U
By SYDNEY OMARR
·-
ARIES (Ma r 21 -Apr. 19): You are on brink
,,, g rdbbing brass ring -jackpot is close at
1ia11d You have something of value.
TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 20): Focus on long·
1listance communication. travel, s ubtle nuances
in connection with legal maneuver or contract.
GEMINI !May 21-June 20): You get what
you ask fo r, including added responsibility and
opportwiity to display business acumen.
CANCER (June 21.July 22): Utilize sense of
perception let go of losing proposition. Accent
on cooperative efforts, partnership proposals.
LEO <July 23-Aug 22): New start indicated
in connection with employm e nt, special
-;ervices and basic c hore which had been s ub-
Ject to numerous delays .
VIRGO <Aug 23-Sept. 22): Personal scenario
reatures sudden changes, a variety of sensations,
I ravel and involvement in "youth movement."
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You may feel
trapped but in actuality you are pavinc way for
greater freedom of thought, action.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov . 21 ): Be aware of
details. special clauses and fine print which
l'C>uld havedirecteffecton your welfare. .
SAGJTl'ARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): You gain
access to information which relates to personal
possessions, payments, collections and location
of "missing link."
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Opporturu-
ly exists to obtain ~enuine bargain. Accent on
ljfestyle, residence, luxury Item.
-... AQUARIUS !J an. 20-Feb. 18): Aura of ii·
lusion prevails; you gain access to secrets and
you can make most of confidential data. Visit or
communicate with one confined to home or
hospital.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): A friendship is
intensified into "meaningful relationship." Ac-
cent on emotions. mone)', responsibility and a
serious commitment.
Wbjle tbe boUdJy social rwb bun't started
yet, tbe ..... have been coc:lrtal..l parties salon,
celebntiaa all aort.I of thtnp from new offices
lo new boob.
&RA Oran1e County bad a fQbion abow
and cocktail party to raile f~ to promote
reUftceUon ol the Equal RJ.Chta Amendment.
Happenings
By Judith Olson
Women modeled clothes for day and even·
lng at Henry Jamea Ltd., Clothiers ln
Wes ter, with ERA rec:etvtn1 10 percent
from clothes sold durinl the even1n1.
e men weren't left out because
storek per James showed clothes for them,
too.
Femate models lncluded AM AYel'J All·
drea. Vlr&iala Trela. GI~ McO..a ... TM1
MUU1u. Velma nmmou, e.,..ue ~.
Aaa Y111au, Melba• You, Ilana Peten and
Slie Feewtck.
Co-chairmen of the event were Victoria
Avey and Kay Bynm.
~
The Orange County C hapter of the
American Institute of Architects showed off its
new offices in the Mercantile Building of South
Coast Village during a giant cocktail party last
Thursday. din More than 400 guests attended lncbl g
Santa Ana Mayor Jim Ward, S&eve BultweU
representing Sen. Jobn Sebm1t1. Walt aad
Sbaroa Prltcbard (he's an AIA honorary
member), Bob Tboma1, Bardette Pal•er,
J
llewanl Bewa ....... C•I••.-, M ..... ,.
Te4 ... Pe9)' Jeteee, Diel er.well and laa earn-.
Al.lo, llr. ud lln. Du w......,e (he's
president ol the it.ate board ol arcbltectural ex·
amlnen), and B.....U E. Pub. tbe ftnt Preti·
dent ol the ctaQter, whitb wu or1anbed ID um.
The first edition of "I Never Pay Retail"
(2,500 copies) bu sold out and the authors, 811e
Lee and S&arr PllllB,., have ordered a second
printing.
They celebrated news with a coclrtail party
and buffet Thursday evening at the Lee home.
The boolt llsta more than 200 rlaces ln
Oran1e County where discount bayin1 can be
done. 1be boetess~ used their own Information
in 1ivtnc the party.
The food was prepared by discount caterers
Marilya ... La Grant. and the beverages were
bou1bt at wholesale.
The outfits worn by Starr and Lee at the
party were bought at the discount houses listed
in their book.
The autbon, both wives .of Fluor executives
and both former elementary school teachers,
spent a year researchlng the boot.
Helping celebrate were Jady aad Jim
ColUu Cabe did some research and be named
the book), Jaa Laada&rom. their publicist, Terry Du•. who designed the cover, ltobena ... llel»
Martollil and Barbara a•d Ray Maltier.
Also, the Lee children, Tracy, Patay and
8Hdy, and the Phlllips offspring, KeUady and
Riek (their daughter Me1 is studying ln Japan).
Starr's husband ••I••· also was there, but
Sue's husband Dana, bas been transferred to
Melbourne, Australia and be bas already left for
his new poet.
Lying through the eyes
'People have more riding on a lie than they do on the truth.·
I don't cheat on my income tax.
I don't lie about my age on my driver's
license.
I don't tell my dentist I floss when I don't.
So bow come I ha..ve trouble looking honest?
Ever see me going through customs? You
can't miss me. I always look like a poodle who
tias just missed the paper.
I contend you can always tell when a person
is lying. He looks you directly in the eyes and
with a s incerity that belongs in the pulpit Mys,
"You can believe me." Maybe it's because peo-
ple have more riding on a lie than they do on the
truth.
I try too hard with the truth . . . especially
when I bear the burden of it. ·
When my husband asks, "How did that dent
get in the car door?" I approach the car like a
bullfiltbter with irregularities . . . a little stiff-
leggea . a little hesitant. Don't be too quick to
find the spot . . . nor too dumb to recognize it
when you see it. Now, run fmgers over it slow·
ly clear throat and say in an even voice, "I
don't know. Thia is the first time I've notieed
it. Who could have done such a thing? I didn't
do it! I certainly would have remembered. Did
someone say I did it? They lie!"
Don't talk too much. Go for more indigna-
tion. "That's a terrible thing to do and tben
run." Look him in the eyes. He's getting sus-
picious. ''I s uppose I could have done it, but . . . "
Ten minutes later, I am making a .full confession
for something I didn 'tdo.
I've seen honest people wrestle with the
problem for years -people wbo feel like Jack
the Ripper because they mistook a $1 for a $5
when they paid their bill, or who were stopped
5'0ing through airJ)ort security for a piece of foll
wrapped around their gum. .
My Armageddon occurs when my charge is
called in for verification. It only takes three or
four hours, but it seems longer. First, I try to
look bored like it's just a formality. Then in a
move of self-assuredness I begin arranging the
package under my arm like it 'a only a matter of
1econds. When the salespenon la not lookin1 at
me, I search her eyes for some alp of pane or
mistrmt. My eyes lack coordination (like Marty
Feldman ) and my throat becomes dry .
Sometimes I hum. If I have to go to the credit
office, will I mate a joke out of it or pass out?
Honesty ... it's painful. Trust me. You
have to believe that . . .
Stop, look, think at crossings
·1 still have nightmares,· says brakeman
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a brakeman
on the Union Pacific. I want to express my
gratitude for that letter from the suburban
mother who was ln a hurry and decided to beat
the train. After she made it, she realized what a
fool she bad been to take such a chance.
Please, Ann, make it plain to your readers
that no train can stop on a dime. Sometimes
there are tons of freight behind that engine. A
heavily loaded train going 60 miles an hour
needs at least two miles to come to a halt.
How I wish the public would give some
thoucbt to the crew on a train that bits a car
aod kil1a several people. It happened to me once
-a· station wagon loaded with kids. I bad to
take two months off work to get my mental
health back. I still have niptmares about lt,
and it happened four years ago.
I'm sure I speak for every railroad
employee ln the country when I say tban.lt you,
Ann Landen, for malting so many people stop
and think. -RENO, NEV.
DEA& at:NO: Tbat'• wlaa& ••• lten r..
bat lt'a alee to lmow rm appreciated. Tlaaab
fortelllllame.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm going with a
26-year-old college graduate. Mike has had three
jobs ln the last 11 months. (All good ones.) I
believe the reuon he can't stay employed is
because he is spaced out half the time. His
"thing" is beer and pills. I don't know what kind r----
Ann
Landers
of pills he is on (he saya headache medicine),
but he is always popping one in bis mouth. I've
seen him take as many as six during an eve-
ning. Mike can wipe out a six-pack in three
hours.
You have published several columns about
mixing alcohol and pills. I cut them and and
showed them to him, but Mike says beer doesn't
count. Please set him straipt. I Jove Lhia guy
and it kills me to sit by and watch him ruin
himself. -D. IN MICHIGAN
DEAa D .: Beer coatalM aleelltel. If _a .
pe ..... drtM.I ...... ., I& Ille cu , .. -.. bombedulile ..W lflte weredrlMlq wlllilll:ey.
y_. frieed meeda men ~ .-
U.u I ca provide. Be ....... p to • dnl
abue cemer Ud 1et la &lie presram. Ola.._.,,
be 11 booked. Look ID <e ~ ..._ ader
"meldal ltealtll, dnal abme.'' Dlffenll& ebfee
•ave d.llfere•& ll1Ua11. U yoar city llaa a
cllapter of Gateway Boue. I reeommfllld I&.
Tbey do aa escellea& job.
I
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•
Play enjoyed
Roosevelt 'only one old
enough to remember . .
By MAaY JANE SCA&CELLO
. ottlleDelty ........
~..Fint·Nlgbters at South Coast Repertory
Theater enjoyed a movina performance Fri-
day evening of Tennessee Williama' "The
Glass Menagerie."
Lee Sballat, play director, conducted a
pre-performance sem inar discussion of
"Ensemble Acting" with James Staley, wbo
plays the Gentleman Caller, and Cliff
Faullmer, set and costume deslper for the
production.
James Roosevelt introduced them with
reminiscences of presidential campaipa
with his father during the Depression.
He joked about being ''the only one here
old enough to remember the period of the
play's setting."
After the performance, a Flrst-Nigbten'
buffet was provided by members ol SCR 's
Huntlniton Valley Guild while actors relaxed
and mingled with the audience.
Centerpiece at the main table was a
sbimmerlq, lee-sculpted unicorn, ecboin1
the character Laura 'a favorite animal from
bercollectiooofminiaturesintbeplay.
It was surrounded by platters of ham,
cheeses, meatballs, fresh fruits, marinated
mushrooms, petlt foun, candles and tiny
cheesecakes.
SCR supporters Don Sroallwood (presi-
dent of the Board of Trmtees), Supervisor
Tom and Emma Jane Riley and the James
Roosevelt.! attended, as did Harriette Witmer
and Barbara Aune.
Dr. Richard and Leonore Penfil. Bill and
Jean Wenke and Dr. Delayne and Catherine
Tbyen (she's chairman of the governing
board of the Friends of SCR) were in t.be au·
dience, too.
RUFFEll'S
UPHOLSTBtY
W"-Y•W.e .... ....
I t U H..t.r ll•d..
Cffte Mele -541·1 I H
PA T'S HALLMARK SHOP
loomolete gift selectiOn) •
1'81-.M-.. _L ,,,._,._ +u~~
H"""~ ("A~
nan .. 11...,•1.U1•
Why not ~ up yu llfesty~?
OrM\atlcally tmprove the WIY you loci, (eel and
appeal to~-It's entovabte·nt _..,than
I ' Mr thr• Powers world famous ~lse.
cau today ror the special HolidaY cours&1Che001e.
That'S the spktt! ~"
Tuesday. November 11 , 1te0 l
Reaga~ plan:] -boost or bust?
a JORN CUHNU t ' ..............
NEW YORK Preald•nt·
tleet Ronald Rea1an hH Ln dluted he will move awlftly to
put hl• propo1al Into practice
.. xt January'"' but 1t aeema that
rew economiC11roreca11ters expect
q uJd1 res ult.a.
they reel wtU be needed to rein
in the wild , undisciplined
t:conomy The reeling rwis the gamut,
rrom establishment analysts
who study the world rrom
skyscraper offices to bedroom-
office individualists, some of
whom shared their maverick
vlews last week in New Orleans.
Howard Rurt, perhaps the
most successful or the financial
evangelists,
who forecast
a terrible day
or judgment
if fiscal and
monetary
p 0 1 i .
cl es aren 't
c o r
reeled ,
see med
unswayed by
the White
House change.
• view that an economy can auJ>.
slst today by borro*lnl from
tomorrow, wtth little notJon of
how to pay the bills, and no in·
cllnation to drop the habit.
' (
\t .. r .lub
l,\onald L . Ziegler,
press secretary during
Richard Nixon's years as president, has a new
job as president of the
National Association of
Truck Stop Operators.
It isn't that lh4:y're discount·
ln1 Reagan's rnoves In advance;
what seems to be indirrerence Is
merely a reneclion of how IQng
The message for next year Is
"the s ame or nearly so: The
problems will persist throughout
the year, although perhaps with
decreasing severity.
The establishment aeen aay
the bad habit.a will be corrected,
but then you have to wonder
what else they can say. Certain-
ly they cannot auaeeat that loans
will never be paid. That In it.self
ls defeat.
Beyond that point the
establishment and maverick
forecasters part company, the
establis hment convinced that
eventually the problems will be
licked, the mavericks tending
toward financial collapse.
Prior to the New Orleans con-
ference, at which he spoke,
Ruff's stair (unlike many at the
conference, bis book, newsletter
and television s how permit a big
staff) issued a typical Ruffian
Tb e ma v er l c Its , the
evangelists, do say it. Meeting In
New Orleans last week they
were convinced that collapse is
the way Americans will learn
the l esson of running an
economy with common sense
and responsibility. .,..,,.....
'" commentary:
··Anyone who does not have a
sound overall investment
philosophy, out of which arises
an overall strategy to be execut-
ed over the long haul, is going to
be impoverished by inflation in
the next few years ."
PacTel lntrod~cing ...
SAN
THE BANK of New York
establishment, for instance, ad-
vised custome rs Oct. 29 that
"The outcome of the preslden·
tial elections will not significant-
ly alter our economic projec-
tions over the forecast horizon."
(AP > -Pacific r /
And in New Orleans just after
the electio.ns. the annual conven-
tion of the National Committee
for Mo net ary Reform
(Mavericks) heard forecasts of
a 1$1° prime rate above 20 per-
cent and inflation of more thc:.n
25 pe rcent.
The announcement conveyed
the usual advice: eurchase gold
coins, South African gold mining
shares. gems, collectUtles and
income-producing small town
real estate.
Telephone will offer
23, 144,821 additional
common s hares to
shareholders, board
Chairman Donald E .
Guinn has announced.
('a111 iott 11r~1••d
One of those speakers, Bert
Dohmen-Ramirez. editor of the
We llington Letter. an invest· APwi._'~m ent advisory service, had
While the establishment and
the evangelists separate on the
eventual outcome of economic problems, they agree that the
problems are as big as any since
the g reat a nd unlamented
depression of the 1930s.
G uinn said be has
been informed by the
American Telephone &
Telegraph Co . that
AT&T expects to
purchase its share of the
offering. AT&T owns 90
percent of Pacific
Telephone. A. W. Clausen, World Bank
president, recently decried
in a Fresno speech, "a ris-
ing tide of protectionism in
the U.S. and elsewhe re'." It
has encouraged a trend
toward restrictions on in-
ternational trade, he said.
originally intended to talk about
30 percent to 35 percent inflation
and a prime rate of 25 percent.
In toning down his numbers,
Dohmen-Ramirez told some peo-
ple, he was merely reducing the
Sj!verity of the numbers , but in
no way d1d the White House
change force hjm to back off
from his debacle forecast.
INFLATION, unemployment.
crippling interest rates, declin-
ing living standards, zero pro-
ductivity growth, high and rising
taxes, budget deficits, instability
of the dollar in foreign trade are
mere symptoms.
The underlyi ng cause, the
groups agree, is a philosophic~!
The proposed offering
would be on the basis of
one new common share
for each eight common
shares and seven new
common shares for each
eight voting preferred
shares held at the close
of business on Dec. 16.
j Gays' plan
'hits snag
The Western Coffee AU«laUoa wiU open a
three-day workshop Friday at the Sheraton
Newport, Newport Beach. A number or issues rele-
Inspired by a '36 Mercedes Benz. this classic new beauty has a GM 3.8 hter V-6 powertra1n and GM chassis. The Centaur 1s almost entirely handmade. Sculpting of the body. interior leather detailing and shaptng of the inch-thick solid mahogany dash are hand done as are moS"'>l lhe luxury appointments.
THE -ROADSTER
Standard equipment includes: automatic transmission, power steering. disc brakes. air condihon1ng. chrome wire wheels. AM/FM stereo cassette. Delivered. in
Calllomla. for $29.600 Tax. lioense and documentary lees are not included.
&b ~~pre, IQc ..
13600 Beach Blvd., Westminster, Ca.
•••••or le•~•w Spru•nce (714) 636-2500 (714) 892-6651
~ Golden Opportunity
Let Inflation Work For You
QUICK CASH SAN FRANCISCO
.(AP) -Plans to open
the nation's first openly
gay-run financial in-
stitution have been de·
layed by difficulties in
raising funds needed to
start operations, direc·
tors say.
(usually 1n 7 to 10 Working Days)
MOOILOW
MOMTHL Y PAYMINTS
L-termy,...,...wt 11d
..,..~
vant to the coffee industry, including utilizing tax·
sheller opportunities, will be discussed. lnrorma-,.... .....
S 1,000 to S20Q,OOO
CALL
TODAY!
CALL Mn11 WB.LS
ABOUT A SECOND
TRUST DEED LOAN
. UP TO 5500,000
Newpor~ ~~::!'!!o'!,:i,~~s~~nc 8
(714) 760.0060
The state has granted
Atlas Savings & Loan
Association a 90-day ex·
tens ion of the time limit
for raising $2 million,
said Ray Herth , a
member or Atlas' board
of directors. He said the
o rganization already
had coll ec t e d Sl.3
million. Herth said the delays
arose because the as -
sociation is raising
capital mainly through
s mall investors a nd
because there is a mis·
conception that no stock
is available.
•
12.11%
A mutual fund lnvHllng primarily In high yleldlng, loweM11ted
corporate bonds to Hrn a high level of cu"9nt Income.
• Dividends paid monthly
• Monthly compounding available through
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• Minimum Investment: $500
• Free exchange with 10 other mutual funds
with varying objectives
• Contln80us supervlsiOn by prafesstonal
lnviitmenl m1111gement
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL
Harold Bostwick
(714) 730-0202
·current annualize<! y11td tor the 30·day per10d enoed October 17. 1980 Yleld 1s computed
by annualivng the most recent monthly drvldend lrom net investment income ( 15 3c) divided
by the avera~e dally ottering pnce ol $15.16 (including maiumum s.lles charge) for the
period tor whtch y11kl 1s presented. Tile vatuf.-01 the Fund's assets and its current yleld wilt vary. For this period. the maJClmum public ottering pri<:e per share ranged Ir~ S14 .92 10
s 15. 42 Y11ld should be considered relatlVe to changes in the value or tne Fund s shares and
risks associated with the Fund's Investment Obtectives and polic111s. The Fund may Invest In
securities in tower rating e11egor1es, unrated secunties and foreign securilles. Because the
value of such securilles may tend to be more volatile and they may be sub1ect to higher rates
of toss of Income and principal, an investment In the Fund's snares may be considered more
speculative than.an investment In shares of a lund which invests primarily In high grade cor·
pc>rate bOnds. This yield should not be considered as represen1a11ve of the Fund's return for
any specillc period In the future. . --------------------For more complete Information about United High In·
come Fund, Including feea and expenses, send thla
coupon for a prospectus. Read ll carefully before you In.
vest or ••tid money.
CITY--------STATI ---ZIP ---
17412 IMM.,., ""'91 • T..un, CA t2tlO •
9 Aftn: 1222
I .
tion (213) 384-3178.
"Protedinl Yoar IDcome ftro9p TH Pia•·
DIDI and Tax Shelters" is the topic or a one-day ·
seminar Saturday at the Saddleback College north
campus in Irvine. John W. Clark. a manaeement
and senior tax consult.ant, will lead the 9 a.m. to I
4:30 p.m. seminar in rooms 212 and 213 at 5500 I Irvine Center Drive-. The ree ls ~ and more in·
formation is available by telepbonin(( 559-1313. I
HUMnMCaTOM llACM
1-•L-I 16400 Pedflc c...t.......,
s.h J" . tJMt
71 4/146-1161 • 2U/HJ..JH7
MIWPOtrf llACH
........... c.Mr-....
#HO ·'2660 -114/644-ltU Av811M>le for up to one year longer
terms available with Interest only payments
Offices and affiliates also in San Bernardino. Riverside. Palm Spnngs; San Diego. Pasadena. San Francisco
Oceanside. Century City
A three-hour seminar, "Manetta1 aad Sales
Projections" is planned for 7 p.m. Nov. 19 in Fine
Arts Hall 119 at Orange Coast College, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Ralph L. Dorl(, a
manufacturers' representative, will conduct the
free session. Further information is available by I
calling 556-5880. ----------------------
Joe M. Quintana has been named manager of
the new Bankers Life of Des Moines brokerage
1
agency in Irvine.
Richard W. Lantz, Fountain Valley, is vice •
, president and manager of California First Bank's
Huntington Beach office.
Japan cars have
high crash rate
WASHINGTON CAP} -Three models of
Japanese-built cars have the highest frequency
rates for accidents resulting in insurance claims
for injuries, says a publication sponsored by the
insurance industry.
A report by the industry's Highway Loss Data
Institute said the frequency of accident claims In-
volving the Datsun 280 ZX was 71 percent above
the average. The frequency or accident claims for
the Japanese-built Plymouth Arrow was 69 percent
above average and the Datsun F-10 was third on
the list with a frequency 57 percent above average,
the report said.
The institute, in the current issue or Status
Report, says three large American-made cars bad
the lowest claim rates: the Oldsmobile Toronado,
the Chrysler Newport and the Buick Estate.
·$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
........ _. Miiiy .. ~ ··--•Co-wet.I ... _ ...... ,
Conta<t our
,_ ............. Mnk.
for vour h11<1ncing n .. eds
(714) 75tM515
••"ICA" HOM« M01ma~ 230 Newport Center 01111e OH 1gn Pl111
Newport Bt1ch. C1hlo11111
92MO
NOW OPEN!
. . 'on r Harbour Branch. Huntmgt~
~
\Orange City Bank.
We squeeze
the .daylight into
\full-service . ~ banking.
Extended hours with extended se1vices And free registered
key tags. At Orange City Bank. HunllJ)gton Harbour, we"re
open Monday-Friday from 9 AM to 6 PM and from 10 AM
to 1 PM each Satu rday. W11h a friendly, competent staff to
assist you in all aspects of personal, as well as commercial
banking. Dedicated to service, we·re on the move. Con·
struction is now underway on our Hunti ngton Harbour
branch. In the meantime. a temporary lo cation al 4972
Warner Avenue is open for your convenience. And of
course. our beautiful main office at 2730 E. Chapman
Avenue in Orange remains at your service. Stop by either
location and pick up a sturdy Orange Clly Bank registered key tag with your
personalized code number. In the event of lost keys. the tag instructs the
finder to deposit the keys in any mail box. Orange City Bank guarante~s the re·
turn postage. we·11 keep your keys, and your money. out or the wrong hands.
Visit us soon. Interest bearing checking accounts beginning December 3 f . 1980.
arc Main Otllc•: 2730 E ,Ch1pln1n Avenur
Orange. Ca. 92669 • 7141771·3300
• ,......,. • ...,....4t72WamerAvenue ~
Huntington Beectl. C.. 92149 ~ 714 a..0.1321 -
• •
M""Nt r 0 IC
r
J
_I
-
t.. OA.11 V PtLO f
'Blightea'· area sees ray of ·i.,a~
I • !1•1
~
Crippled steel town optimi8tic /inancia/, recovery poulble
...........
WORKERSLEAYIESHlf'TIN.aTTIRDAY9ATPLANT
Another firm NCe1111trap1ned ..... wolb
YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio (AP> -The nery 11ow ol molten •teel
haa not lit lbe airy at duak here since Youncatown Sheet It Tube Co.
pulled upltakea three yean a10.
Slnce Oc'tober 19'17, the city bu loet 10,000 induaU')' Jobi. It ls
1tUI crtppled eeooomlcaUy. with 14 unemployment rate almost
double Ole national average, but offlclala in Youncatown and the
Mabonlnl River Valley that tWTOundJ it say they tee some rays of
hope.
Tbey cite these alps of prosreu:
-Unemployment ln Mabonina County eased from U percent
ln July to 12.8 percent in A'UIUlt and 12.5 percent in September -
tUll weU above the national avenge or 7.15 perceftt, but an im-
provement.
-COllMtJTEa AJaCaAn coaP. bouabt M acres of airport
land and plana to put $50 million into a plant that will create 1,500 jobl.
-Jones 6 Lau1hlln Steel Co. sold to the fiedtllnl Youn1stown
Steel Corp. an old open hearth furnace and surroundln1 buildings
that have been idle since 1m. Younptown Steel, wbJcb be1an
operations lul February with 30 workers, eventually hopes to
employ 450 persons.
-A 7-week-old cutback ln lbe week lrom 40 hours to 32 for
almost all city workers was ended Nov. 1.
llAYO& GE08Gt: VUKOVICH -himself an 18-year steel
worker veteran -had instituted tbe aborter work week to save
money in September. when city boob were teetertn1 near tbe red
Int becauae of reduced tuea from reduced lnduatry.
"11m ls the first year ot lmpact from the st.eel mill cloelnp of
1171," explained Walter Swterz, tbe mayor's executive aide.
"lDlteed of rrowth ln taxes, the revftue leveled off -but inflallon
continued to eat loto our purcbuinc power."
.. Energy probes up
THE 8HOaT WEEKS saved the city ~.ooo -enou1h. aaid Swlen, to get the city lhroulh tbe end of the year. But further
trouble looms. City employees struck for one week in May and eventually won
an 18-monlh contract glvln1 them a ' percent wage increase. But the duration of the contract, and an additional 10 percent increue,
was made contingent on taxpayer approval of higher city income WASJD NGTON <AP> -The Interior Department, in one of ill
largest single decisions on public lands, baa opened 11.8 million
• acres in nine Western states to energy development. Tbe declsloa
. last week came after a wholesale review ordered by Con1reu of
the government's land decisions during the early part of the cen -
taxe.fiu. Ohio valley's economic woes began with the flight of the
steel lnduatry, beginnint Oct. 19, 1977, when Youngstown Sheet"
rube moved out, eliminating 4,100 jobs. In late 1979, Jones & ·tury.
~~~-==~==============================,---:========
.·
~.
....
'•
. '· ...
VVe've taken the ads and listings that busi-
nesses use to calJ each other and put them in a
separate book-The Los Angeles Business To
Business Yellow Pages. Yo u11 find materials,
equipment and services from firms all over the
greater Los Angeles market. And you'll find
them faster and easier than ever.
Tubas? They're Hsted in PacificTe~hone's
Lm, Angeles Consumer Yellow Pages.
Now local investors can enjoy
personal service and untraditional rates
Now you can buy and sell through a national broker at bi1
savings on commissions-without giving up most of the
personal service that you're accustomed to. .
We'll save you up to two-thirds of the commissions that you
pay the full -commission houses. On some transactions we
even beat the bare-bones discounters. Try us and see . Call or
write for free brochure and commission discount schtduk.
[ ~) ~~1.~Boye&~
A Wall Street broker that pays locally from a C.Wonda •ad.
660 Newport Center Drive, Suite 23S, Newport lk.ach, CA 92660
New York (714) 644-2983 A clan la
VirJinia In Califorrua, cau 800-432• 7368
Washington, D.C. ..
1 l!lllO Kntp~. llov• 6 Southwood
Mini Office
For '20 Mo.
P 0 Box. Msgs. Pllgs. & Sec
3857 Birch. 0 C Airport
N.wport IHCh
Ca 92660 7141 549-2287
The Post Box
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aedil IPPfoval
I •II 4. " ( t ' f ,, •• : "
.. ' ' ''' J I t I ri t I 1 I'~ f
\I II\ I( I '''
. ~'"'
JYo payn1ent
SWIJYG
Immediate funding on eQUltV 111 homes. unttt or commercial from communttv Hom• Loan, Inc., a ltctnsed Droker.
, ·No payment SWlng Loan Pl•M 1V11l1ble .
n4/9B·2602
... .
Cell 642-5678.
Pul • few words
to work for ou.
Lau1hlln and U.S. Steel Corp. ~ cutt ~ t.a a.•*"' Jobs. .
Soon after the mUb .,.,.,. eloolq, ,,_,.,. tt""'
nounced $100 milllon ln federal ~c ~~ A .. miniJtraUoo loan 1uaranteea to belp U.. _. --• . 1--
added $125 million In loan ruaranteet to btlp' •Id
local indmtrlea. .
The Maboninc Valley Eeooomlc Dev..._• C..,., trldcll
1rew out ol a buslneaa effort to keep old .,...._ .== la-duatry. functions u a clea.nn, boUH for BD4 ..,_. •
In the put 13 moolba, tbe aceney U. aw tt·.1 mllllee
from a revolving loan fund to 12 emu.., ot .e. eom ...... 1boM
companies h"ve been able to keep or create SIO Jotll,
One ot the corporation board memben, UMt -.... ldwa.N Stan·
too, hu made economic progress here Illa full·Um• jab.
HE WAS THE LEADS& of lbe ftnt eff.i te taft die ltMl in· d1.11try afterthein1Ual layoffaln tm.
That effort ~ the Ecumenical Coabdoa ol tM .,.._, ••
Valley, a community-worker eoaJIUOa *blelt ~~.._,ad,..
open the shuttered milll of Yompto9D .... 6 ,,_ _ falle4. ·
Stanton said $250 million wu DMdld .. ,. ti9 8!.t• Ila ibafe
for a profitable operaUon-. "But Ult U.I .. ......, ~
Admlni.slratloo atuck to ltt '100 eaHUOD eellllt oe .... ,_....
and lh1t killed our propoeal," be aald.
Don French, former dty ~ ol lfontoe, M..-.t=. U.. a1ency in June, ualsned to help the v.U., 11t• .. · tta
more than 300 remalnln1 lnduatrtes, bus....._ lib · Reel,
scrap fabricated rubber alld bUllneu furniture. · ·
French admitted be hu no solid aceoaapUalunema topo6etto .
''It doesn't happen that fut but the tnei ol lcU.ttJ '-'flcl•
up," he said. ". . . There are 1ueceu atone. out ...... ~ •atb ti
involved, who can aay the valley's ~~I• aiMil ~? But we've got some positive sip ud optl e ......,..:
"I'd aay lhin11 are looldna better f« tile val&.,.". /
Drilling increased
DENVER CAP) -The nulllber of on ud natural gu welll
drilled in the Roc:lty Mountain region ln the Ullnl quarter of HID in·
creued 21 percent over the same period LD im. Hid aa metiY
data firm. The Petroleum lnformatloo Corp. of 0...Ttr Mid•
wella were drilled during the tblrd period and ~-were billed during the first nine months of 1980.
Over The Counter
MASoU.....,.
MUTUAL FUNDS
11,. ........ ....
I
~
~ [
' Ill n ofl ... ..
"' ut
• ' •
~
'"
1'
1·
Molhl8y'1
Cloel•1 Prleee
'8kery loses
fighting desire
•r llDJl'ON -.auwrn
...
ITl"1 C'AlatUMotal 8akiu. ..ar ol WOIMMr breed and 1'trtatkl • .__, alMr bUid dllle.a.., Mema to be _...
la1 iu nene. Fortuut.e&y tbe ._... 1111 oo tbe block, It ~ Uled to tbu.mb lll GOM at erttlea 9'° cbar1..S lt wu UD·
dennlalM tbe autrWon of Amerlcm eblldnm. ~ But .,.... havtq ·Ill we bloodied ID Hveral eoco
ten wttla bealtll ...iota, ContlMDtal 11 now crou!q
II.net to avoid into ...... ftlbt,
CoatJnentn:: a 10-year record of cootlneo
1kltm.label with the Feclenl Trade Comm.laaioD and self·
appohud IUU'dlw of our beahb. It wu forced to stop
clalmlnf that WOllderu an ut.ra IOW'ce of nutrition. •
It bad to 10 oa TV
wltb corrective ada
pol.btiq out the reason
lta Proftle bread mipt
be a diet aid ii limply
became lt'a allced thin·
ner. And it bad to con-
cede that the aource of
Money
Tree
fiber ln tu Fresh Homou bread ii wood pulp.
That's enou.it to cause someone to think, not to ape.-,
of the unwanted publicity lt received in the 19'79 trial ot
Dan White for the murder of San Francisco Mayor George
Moscone Defense counsel told the jury that White's mind
was addled by heavy con1wnpt.ioo of Twinkies and other
bilbly IQlared producta.
CONTINENTAL WAS BACK to ita old tricks thia fall when it Introduced a new campaip for Wonder, which
reipa u lhe best-sellin1 loaf of bread in America. Continen-
tal bu Iona been pumplD1 vitamins into thls sponay white
bread-andthlstimeitcameupwiththecrytbat Wonder bas
the •'nutrition that even whole wheat can't beat.•'
As tbinbytbmic claim wu being dinned lnto our ears. n1ur• darted across the television tube, citing U.S.
Department of Apiculture sources to show that Wonder
bread bu more vitamin Bl, vitamin 82, niacin and calcium.
than the a,era1e whole-wheat bread. Hence the proud
bout: .. nutrition that even whole wheat can't beat."
CoaUnental was particularly confident of thia ap·
proacb because it bad emeried from a competition con-
ducted earlier this year amon1 advertisinl agencies invit-
ed to present new ideas for Wonder. 11te incumbent agen·
cy, Ted Bates, won out when ita whole· wheat comparbon.
idea scored the bi1best In consumer tests done by an out-
side research company.
BOWEVEa, THE NBW Wonder bread campaip soon
attracted tbe attention of the Wubiqton·bued Center: for
Science In tbe Public IDterest, an old nemesis of ConUnen·
tal Bakiq. Michael F. Jacoblon, executive direetor of this
center, quickly labeled the Wonder campaip deceptive,
poklttnc out that it talked about only four elementa and left
unmentioned about a dosen other nutrieata that "are more
abuaclat ID whole wheat than WQDder bread." Among
these nutrienta are fiber, vitamin E, iron and protein.
J acobeon therefore flJed a form~ complaint with the
Federal Trade Commiulon, ukina pi.at Coatloental be re·
quired to nm corrective advertiatq to clear up any COO·
fultoD :::.::ry bave left In tbe miDdl of conawnen about
tlle aulr auperiorlty of Woader bread.
Betq tbe taraet of sucb a complaiDt ii notblnc new for
Coettnemal. But ita reapome tbll time wu certainly dif.
fer.at. 1mteM of putt1n1 up lta dukes, it instanUy killed the eam~eomputacWondertowbolewbeat bread.
It clktn't want to fl&bt Ul)'IDOre.
,
II
,,
\
(W DAI Y l'H 01 l~"°"""'atlll
MARMADUKE by lrld Anderson PEANUTS by Chttrles M. SChulz
II· 11
SHOE
"I wish you'd do your snoozing
somewhere else!"
J MISS PEACH
• 1
j
t
' 9 '
TOOW IS Vf TEJW6 PAV... ~V AM I 51TTIH6 UE~
ON A MILL WAITING FOR
~AR~ltT AND TMAT
ROVND·~EAOEO KIO?
Cc_,J
v ~
I SHOULD SE WRH
OL I SILL MAULDIN
QVAF~N6 ROOT 6EER5 !
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
I rs EA5'1 TO FORGET ~OW SOON WE FOR6ET !
by Tom Batiuk
I WA~T ro D15C.USS OOUR
P. 5.A.T. SC.0~£5 WITH l,lOO,
FU~Kc,.>.
WHl\'f ARE.A OF THE Tt:~T
DID 400 FEEL GAVE 40U
1Jf£ MOSf iroUBL.E?
FrrnN& WIN~BEAN IN
IHE NAME &RID!
:
'---..C..~~'""'-..L-~~~:tiS0:~9
by Jeff MacNelly
.•. --
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
1H,Ai15 WHAT C,A<5ES
ARE FOR, FRE DC>Y · ·
TO PROTECT YOU
FROM THE O<.JTSIDE
WORL[> ..
-, ..... ·-... ,,, ...... __
by Mell Lazarius
DRABBLE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
J'°OHN AND t'ltKE HAVE.
BE.c.N LOOKING AT
lt10~E PUPPIES RJR
O'\JER
RN
t-\OOR t
OR. SMOCK
'THINK 1'LLGO
SEE WHRi 'S
l<EEP\NG THEM
BIG GEORGE
• C'
~
COMICS I CROSSWORD
"He'll never let you forget he was a yell leader."
I
by Kevin Fagan
1111\ Al.WA'4S A \.l'ffl.E
J~MN ON fM£ MORNIN&
of A Mt~'f0('4 t~AM .
by Lynn Johnston
Tl-\IS \$A mAP,
ISN'T IT ..,-
by George Lemont
'-.!~A AND ,A ia'THlA ~, YOU~ E:-SSl!Y iE~r i:t:E5111J...T~ \
AIZ'e !DfNT"ICAL.. ~ WHAT HAVE Ya.A TO ~AY } 'Ye;S, NU ~Se: ·
OF COURSS J:. CAN HAVe:
GOOP .1 CA USE '1"HeSe we:Re
_,, TO THAT ;:> ~ '-~
~'~I THAT c.AN 8E
E~IL..Y e xPLAtM:D .•.
FOR !He GAL... IN 2 14 AND
D IPN ''1" WAN"f" '1"HSM .'
Jld ~
,,.
I' ~:THE FAMILY Cl RCU S
~
.,,_ ... ·~--·-
by Bil Keane GORDO
FA !I<! CiY. IPLA !Al r;
MR. L:JPE:Z/Tf/E
G..)V£1<JJi.1EAJT
WILL PAV ALL
a:JSTS OF
JUDGE PARKER
I KNOW f-IOVV DlfFICUl.T IT
VISllORS.1
~ _,
I/ I I
by Gus Arriola
,:JI' /HE VEIV
A/)Ot TIOAJ i.:J Yt.JUR
>".:JME.f
~
4~. .. .. • '
by Harold Le Doux I
I
I
I
I
I~ 10 TALK Ar>O\/T AN UN· r----,.,..,.
TIM PRACTICAl..l.Y bAVED MY l.IH •
CHET 0RM~ED ME 8Y THE WR15T,
WA5 TRYINC:1 TO MAKE ME OOUP
"look at that squirrel on th e wire. He's
pretending he's a tightrope walker."
DENNIS THE MENACE
• I Ll71LE PITCHERS 60r 6!G EA~' MflliS T~ TALKIN' A60UT &MTHlr\? JUICY·~
1
~ i
t • •
•
' l <
PLEA~ANT EXPE RIENCE.
JEANNIE ... OUT 11·0 f'OOel&l.E
1 HfY'LL l'>RINC:i CHARC:,E5
AGAlN&T llM!
TUMBLEWEEDS
NANCY
NANCY, YOU
PROMISED ME NAVY
BEAN SOUP FOR
LUNCH
fO HI& Pl.ACE'
HEY···
WHATS
THE.
IDEA i
#
WE DIDN1T
HAVE ANY
NAVY BEANS.
ONLY GREEN
BEANS---
by Tom K. Ryan
~-1111•, '" l\'FJ""/\< 1 i..>N
f'l\C 10 ('
WI '•II I( •
• ...
... . ... . .•. -· ...
by Ernie Busttmiller
. ·.
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUULE
t
ACROSS hetbs
1 Gu1ae 5 7 Carved shoe
5 Elec un1ls 58 Helmsman
9 Crash 59 Grade
14 Mans name 61 Melody
15 B1bhca1 man 62 Unique
16 Celenly 63 Reticule
17 01scor<1 <1e.1y 64 Tn•s Sp
18 Compleled 65 Oarsman
19 Performer 66 Ot>1tga11on
20 Garments 67 Fume
22 Relaltve DOWN
24 Cul up l Smirks
26 Wheel parl 2 Man s name
27 Enlarge 3 Excuse
29 Swine genus 4 Profane
:JO V11a111y 5 In add111on
33 Keep afloat 6 Farm sounds
2 words 7 Breecnes
37 Con1101 8 loves1tlc
38 Bru1~s tooks
39 Shorl poem 2 words
40 T hlCk 9 Huls
4 1 Lowly one 10 Pap1er -
42 Plumber 11 Wine city
44 80tn t2 Commule<
45 Asian com plane
46 Tower 13 '"'ve
47 Allack 21 Pips
49 Ghtters 2:l Slream
53 Old WOl'ld 25 Grackle
2 3 '
"
17
20
24
UNIT.ED Feature Syndleale
Monday·s Puule Solved
Cl A I [ I H I •• I C • ( f
A D IO • If ., If 'T 0 I H f ••
y I II l ii I TE A II I A •O•
s 'T , . y I . ' 0 s I 0 f _,.. ~ I f ... , 4 T T f 0
~~ IE ., KIE-',, .. A •11 IAlltl
IO TI 11 •OILl(I
181.111. IT I' I IT I •-Sll!AIW', -. ... . " ... , l llllllll
s " A• •I• T I '. ·-II T A D g ~ II A "' ro
I II 0 " . MI I y " l y
'-0 If I I A " ' I I (II • f
f I I ( "
285h1rlled
30 Gamb•e Br
31 Instead
32 Fellow
33 Anori
34 T11Ckery
35Water bird
36 Sp1got
37 W1thdra'ilrer
40 Telephones
42 Mulhcoiored
•3 Vapor
S I r o Cl f D
•5 Unruly~
47 Gll$1ened
48 Gladden
50 Maltreat
51 -C1tsto
52 Meat CUI
5J A1mad1llO
54 S!Ol'age Pll
55 Furrow
mike<
56 Aebul!
600ut111
(
I '
I
1': 1
1
"
l
j 11
I .;
I I
I j ,
I ,
I
TONIGHT'S LATEST LlSTINGS Television ftAlday. Novernbef 11, 1980
.. ,tc&:-WOllWt
........ ~IMllt••
• .....,ow~•lllO ..,.....,. ""°"' .._ eo•
... eo-M*ll·Nt\C· ,....lleMY_...
•.-a~ ....,... ........... lOt
~ ..... .,.
• M·~·t•H '•Ill•• Mulc•ny lakH ~ PNMCf over tor • ~!On ~IQally
unet he hMta of the 116)1(1
..tYw-t maoe 1>y •
IWrok MMcoc>ter pilOt
• TMa llNNY HIU.
8HOW
lenny ternaltM Ille Sun-
0.-Kid end ontrO<lueeS
the Fud Puciletl
I ~2·1 CONTACT (R)Q
THE AOYOCATU IN _,
"SlloulO Y041f St•te Carry
10u1 ==encesr Young midow
MICNeWS
,f:30 WILCOMI BACK,
KOTTP
• GOOOTIME8
' Florid• fee~ the WOfSI
wtien • ctrange In lthOOI
c auaas a cnange In
Mlchaet
Valerie Bertinelli plays a bride whose
Marine husband is killed in Vietnam in
the new TV movie 1 'The Promise of
Love," airing tonight at 9 on CBS, Chan-
nel 2.
• oecK CAV£TT
0-t: Steve Tesic:h.
• W -1CONTACT (R)C;J
(J) u•A•a•H
When B.J. attempts to
comfort a nurse who lln
marrl~ troubles. he dls-
COV111S a romantic problem
of his own. ,9 8AANEY MILLER
7:00 I C8S NEWS NeCNEWS
HAPf'Y DAYS AGAIN
Richie the benehwarmer
become$ a buketball stat
ah• replacing an 1n1ured
playe< I A8CNEWS u ·A·s·H
Mysterious happenings In
the 4077th seem lo con-
firm the Korean belle! In an
unaeen world ol demons
and aoces\rat spirits.
• 8AAETTA
When Barette'• aging bud·
dla have a final tung at
Clime. Barella must pro·
tec:t them trom olhef mob-
sters and save them lrom e
pusonte<m f:a OVEREASY
Guests: chairman of the
Council on Wage and Price
Stablltly Allred Kahn, Or.,
James Peterson O
Ql!) MACNEIL / ~RER
REPORT Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
[I MERV ORIFFlN
7:30 II 2 ON THE TOWN
Hosts Steve Edwards and
Melody Rogets travel to
Mexico City 0 FAMILY FEUD 8 SHANANA
Guest· Jayne Kennedy. fl HOLLYWOOO
SQUARES QI ALL IN THE FAMILY
Christmas d1nne1 at the
Bunkers l1nds Archie play-
ing host to 8 dreft dodger
and a lather whose son
was kllled In the war til MACNEIL /LEHRER
REPORT
Channel Lbfittfl•
I KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles
KN8C (NBC) Los Angeles
I KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles
KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(J) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles
0 KCST (ABC) San Diego
I KTIV (Ind.) Los Angeles
KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeles
• KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
Ql!) NEWSCHEQ<
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
CU piano player's hands
8:00 8 OHOMES
Animated A group ol
woodland gnomes prepar-
ing tor the wedding of their
eldest son ere attacked by
vicious trolls who kidnap
tile prospact1ve bride and
i!_OOm
U MOVIE • * • 'Smokey And The
Bandit'' ( 1977) Burt Rey-
nolds. Sally Field A dare·
devil trucker aocepts a
challenge to run a truel<·
load or ~ lrorn Te1tas
back to Georgie In a llmtt-
ed amount or time. (RI
8 MOVIE • • * ··Trapeze" ( 1956)
Burt Lancaster. Tony
Curtis. A French circus act
becomes a s11atter1ng trl·
angle after an American
1oins the act (2 hrs I
8 ®J HAPPY DAYS
(Seaaon Premiere) Joannie
and Chach1 sneak oft 10 e
concert 1n Chicago then
panic when their car
breaks down
8» P.M. MAGAZINE
g) MOVIE
• • • • "The Deer Hunt-
,,.. ( 1978) Robert De Niro.
Meryl Stra.p. Three close.
carefree friends from •
smell Pennsylv1nla steel
town ere chenged f0tever
by experiencing the teNors
of war when they tre draft-
tel tn<I Mnt to Vlelnam.
(P•rent11 011cr1tion
ICMeecl.) (4 hfl.)
• ttTONtGHT
Topic• 1n update on
Saturn Wiich with Clete
Rot>etta and Al H11>bs and
I OllCUUlon on ,..ltrans
end the Vetetan's Adtnln·
l•trato0n. provide• an OYW·
lll4'W on 11141 1mpaet or lhe v .A on houling, ~tlOn
and other wb~• of
lmpoftanc. to the men.
(Pllt 2 ol 5)
• COIMOe
"The Backbone Of Night"
O• Carl Saget1 examines
human thought •bOut lhe
heevena tl\WghOut history
end ettempta to 0tg1nlze
whit IS .-i above us. Q
(J) THI BAXnRS
··wan Until Your Father
GetaHome"
1:30. Ill l.A'JENllE &
St41Al.EY
Shirley llnda out that Car-
mine II running around
behind her back and
decides to play the lield
herseil. (A) D TICTACOOUGH 8» CAROL BURNETT
ANDFAIENOS
• NOVA
"Voyage,. Beyond Jupi-
ter" The spacecraft Voy-
ager rs journey through
the outer solar sys1em to
date 11 das:umenled c;>
Cl) LATIN PROf\l.E
9:00 8 Cl) MOVIE
"The Promise 01 Love··
(Premiere) Valefle Bertine!·
Ii. Jameson P1rker. An 18·
year-old woman attempts
to rebuild her Ille after her
young husband ts kllled In
Vietnam. IJ ®J THREE'S
COMPANY
Jack's llrst day as a diner s
cook heats up when his
attractive boss tries to
si>1ce up her hie with a few
pinches of tl\e new cook
i BULLSEYE a» MERV GRIFFlN
Guests· Roger Mitter.
Sunn Anton. Dudley
Moore. Tom Sharp. Nick
Lewin. Bob Anderson,
Lorenzo and Victor.
8i) NOVA
"Voyager Beyond Jupi-
ter The spacacrall Voy-
ager rs 1ourney through
the outer soler system lo
date Is documented O
9:30 8 0 TOO CLOSE f'OR
COM FOAT
(Premiere) An overly pro-
tective father (Ted Knight)
tries 10 cope wtth the
n0tses from tht apartment
below where his two
daugh:e11 hve.
Q JOKER'S WILD 811 TttEBODYIN
QVESTIOH
"Shaping The Future"
Beginning In an olive grove
on• Greek Island and end-
TUBE TOPPERS
K.HJ e 6:00 -Lakers Basketball.
The world champs travel oo Atlanta to
take on the Hawks.
KCOP e 8 : 00 -"The Deer
Hunte r." Robert DeNiro stars ln this
Oscar-winning movie about three close
friends from a steel town who join the
Army and are sent to Vietnam.
CBS 8 9: 00 -"The Promise of
Love." A young woman (Valerie
Bertinelli > tries to rebuild her life alter
her husband is killed in Vietnam (photo
at left)
Ing on the rockv seashote
of Scotland, Or Jonathan
Miii« otters a 1uc1n11lng
expttnatlon ol genetics
and conception o
10:00 D THE TOM ANO DICK
SMOTH!M BROTHERS
COMEOV 8PICtAl II
Gl•n Campbell, Martin
Mull, Pat Pautaen and Ille
Flytng Karamazov Brothets
join Torn and Diel< for an
hour of comedy and mu5k:.
80 NEWS fl (]JJ HART TO HART
(Season Ptemtere)
Jonathan end Jennifer's
affo111 to hnd a m1ss1ng
bridegroom entangle them
in 8 murde< lnvesllgetlon
stretching from New York
10 Calllornla.
8i) NEWSCHECK
10:30Q) NEWS
fll) PRESENTE
"Agenda For The '80s"
Raquel Ortiz hosts a IOOI<
al Latinos fn the communl·
catl0n5 industry m THEBODYIN
QUESTION
"Shaping The Future
Beginning In an olive grove
on a Greek island and end·
Ing on the rocky seashore
ol Scotland. Or. Jonathan
Miller otlers a 1asc1net1ng
explanation ol genettcs
and conception. D
JOHN DARLING
I 11:00 ID • Cl) O' NEWS
HOLLYWOOO I 80UAAE.S .
D NEWLYWED GAME QI M•A•s•H
Radar borrows Charles'
racord pleyer and 1a11es
over es the M·A·s·H disc
jockey Sl FAST F<>f'WARO
"TatevlSlon·· A look at the
real lmptleatlons of televl·
lion ano today's lnl0tme-
11on tevolutl<>n ts present·
ed
I 11:30 8 Cl) LOV ORANT
81111e w11tes a sertes ol an>-
cies on wile beaung and
then discovers that one of
the Trlb Stell Is guilty ol 11.
(RI
0 TONIGHT
Host Johnny Cah on
Gues1 Charles Neison
Reilly
D PRISONER: CELL
BLOCKH
When Oawd leatns of Pal's
late. he blames Greg end
plots a v1oten 1 revenge fl <IJ ABC NEWS
Q FACE THE MUSIC
QI HOGAN'S HEROES
Hogan 1s ordered to Lon·
don and Col Crittendon is
his replacement
fl) 8i) CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
CQAC.H , TH£. 8UZ2A~05· DEFENSE
HAS 0E£N NICKNAMED -rH~ ·~eeE~ SANO' OEFf.r.l5f ll41!> YEA~!
t t:IOeO MCMOV!e • • • • "lft The Hlel Of
The Nlgh1'' (1M7) SldMy
Poitier, Rod St--A
bteck Oe1ectlvtl from Phil ..
dell)hla arrt-In 1 amatl
MIUIU11)91 town to hollp •
local rtdnedl thefllt IOI,..
emurdetcaae.
-Ml>NGHT-
12:00 e TWIUGHT ZONE
A l0tgotten atat ol lhe '30a
uan her old movie& to re-
c1eate the aplrtt of her ney.
day D OUNSMOt<~
Mall la CO<netlld by three
SIOUX lndlena 11 he goes
to find help 10! the free:rtno
passenger• of 1 trapped
train (Part 2) a» YOVIETYOUAUFE
Buddy Hacllett rnee11 an
amu1ng f\Ousewlfe wt><>
hums el)(I whiatles two dlf·
lerent tunet 11 the same
11me. a woman wno analyz-
es belly t>uttona and a man
who hu 8,000 toilets to
rent
g) ONE STEP BEYOND
··er11nwave" A young
pharmacist's mite on a
ship at aea Is aSkec to help
petf0tm 1 delicate apera-
11on to save a wounded
man's Ille
12:30 D T~ROW
Guest heart transplant
p<oneer Ot Chrlstlaan Bar-
nard 8 MOVIE • * • ··The Last Outpost"
(1951) Ronald Reagan,
Rhonda Fleming Two
brothers flghl on opposite
sides during the Civil War.
(1 hr 40m1n)
QI MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE
Pens fells 1n love with an
-y agent In the midst
of operations to break an
espt0nage 11ng
g) NATIONAL NEWS
12:AO 8 Cl) CBS LATE MOVIE
• • Vacation tn Hell ..
( 19781 Michael Brendon.
Pnsclfle Barnes Five vaca-
tioners at a troplcat resort
are stranded on a remote
parl of tile Island.
1:00 Q THE FBI
"The Bomb That Walked
like A Man"
• M0\111 * * • ''Crldl In TM ..,_ rot" ( tllO) On.I Wiiii,
Jullelte Gteoo. ""-....
IOCIMy ~ IMd "* ~ w .... to""" ~· °' tM io.. oi.M. u_ "'·· ao m1n.1 1:30. MOYll * * * "fh41 ..__ Of
Telemer11'' ( IH5) Klrll
~ AicNtd Hama. i:oo·= * • • "Sapphire" ( 1fft)
Nlgel Petrick, Yvonne
MltcMll.
2:101• H1W1 2:15 MOVlll * * * "A Fine MlldneN" ( 19H) Sean Connery.
Joanne WoodWwO. 2:301 NEWS 2•40 NIW8
3:15 MOVIE * • "Torpedo Alley"
( 1953) Merk St....,,1. Dor·
othy M•lone
4:000 MOVIE
••• ,. "The Way To The
Stare" ( 19451 Michael
Rl!<lgrave, JOhn Miiia.
4:101 NIW8
4:t5 MOW
••• ''The Man wno
Cried Wolf" ( 1937) Lewis
Stone. Tom Brown
4:30• MOVIE • * ~ "Dull Be My Desti-
ny" ( 1939) John Gerllefd.
Priscilla lane
Wedn~•dar1'•
Bayt l•e Mo.,le•
1 11:00 g) *'II .. Ftontlet Horizon"
I {19381 John Wayne. Jen-
nifer Jones
-AFT£RHOON-
12:00 QI * * 'h ··crime Schoof'
( 1938) Humphrey Bogatt,
Dead End Kida.
• * * * * "The GreatMt Show On Earttl" ( 1952)
Chartlon HHton. Betty
Hutton
3:30 D • * ··Houae On Tele-
graph Hiii" (1951) Richard
Baseharl, Valent Ina
Cortese
by Armatrong la B•tluk
ABC start,s new season with some old routines
Bv PETER J . BOYER
A1-IAtM .. r ... Wr~
More of the "stuff we've all been waiting for:
"Too Close for Comfort," premiering tonight
on ABC, wastes no time getting to its purpose:
Two minutes in. a young lovely clad only in a bath
towel presents herself, like a prime time signpost
proc laiming, "This is
ABC." (9:30 p.m., Chan-
(
, ) nel 7) TV REVIEW The nubile dear is
_ _ one of the two daughters "'---------.J of Henry a nd Muriel
Rus h <Ted Knight and
Nancy Dussault). The girls z.re charged with
creating the sitcom problems upon which this little
in.significance is to turn. Much of it, it seems, will
have to do with the girls worrying Daddy about
sex.
IT'S GOOD TO SEE Knight back on the tube.
even though his classic buffoon act honed to
perfection on the old "Mary Tyler Moore Show" is
somewhat strapped here .
Knidlt plays a middle·aged cartoonist and
Suspense mounts
Still no word on J.R. assailant
NEW YORK (AP) -"Who shot
J .R. Ewing?" remained a mystery
today after CBS broadcast the season
Waite in TV drama
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Ralph
Waite, who owns a small farm ln
Connecticut, and Mitchell Ryan, who
bu a bone ranch in California, star
ln the movie "Angel City," which
CBS 1Wtll telecast Wednesday, Nov.
12.
Waite plays a West Vi rginia
farmer -a man ·not unlike John
Walton -who is forced td uproot and
move to the city. Ryan plays a ruth-1•• coatractor. The film also stars
Paul Winfield, Jennifet< Warren and
Jennifer Jaaaon Leigh.
( L M. BOYD -)
INFORMS In the
DAILY PILOT ----
premiere of "Dallas.'' the prime-
time soap opera.
Viewers left in suspense since last
spring about the main character's
shooting were not told who did it, and
network officials have said there
may be seve r al episodes shown
before the detail is revealed.
Speculation on who shot the
character continued throughout the
s ummer and betting on the question
has been noted worldwide.
l.n the eplsode shown Friday Dig.bl,
the story of the Dallas oU family
picked up with J.R., played by Larry
Hagman, belni found wounded in hia
office with DO witnesses but plenty of
s uspect.. ' The premier e episode reviewed
who could have done it and their
myriad reasons for wanting to do ao.
But the .s how ended with the
seriously wounded "J .R .," barely
conscious on the operating t.able, slip-
ping back into unconsciousness Just
as be wu asked by police who bad
s hot him.
::."al: NIA , ..... .... , ....... ~ l'ltl .. ,.,.., -----.. ,..~
No peeking
Penny Marshall tries to stop Cindy Williams
f tom taking a look at the blind date Terry,
Goodman (right) brought for her -Paul
Willson, known as "Erajerhead," on
"Laverne and Shirley" tori.ight at 8:30 on
ABC, Channel 7.
~OPHl~TICAT£0 PROORAMMINB ...
Sports
show set
for KOCE
"Sport.a America." a
look at a wide range of
sports events, premieres
on KOCE, Channel 50,
Wednesday at 9:30 p.m .
The 39-weelt series
ly no reason for anyone of any aee or aender to
watch "Duke Boys" sans Mias Bach, tbe boys or
the car wrecks. ,
DEPtrrY ENOS STRATE (Sonny Slfroyer}
joins the Los Angeles Police Department for bis
new show. which means he'll lose two of the three
ingredients in the "Duke Boys" success. Enoe will
have a black partner. but the comic possibilities
therein need a breed of writing alien to "Dukes of
Hazzard" and not likely forthcoming here.
Enos will get to wreck cars, which might bold
my nephe w's crowd, but the rest of us, being big-
ger, control the nation's channel switches. Put a
certain age, the sight of a crunched Plymouth
holds limited appeal.
BP SIOl J,Q OF 40~
A>jOflP1S'Ol SU~ILl.IW'"
546-Z711
"KIU. OR BE KILLED" ,, •..... ,,.
"BAEAKERI BREAKER!"
1:11-1.-. ·--
"OH 0001 BOOK H" .,,.. ,, ..
"IT'S MY TUAN°1111
"ELECTRIC
HORSEMAN" !NI
t .. PRIVATI f11•
' IBUAMIM ..
I ''THE ELEPHANT
MAN" l'NI
''TtE EMPIRE '"' STRIKES BACK"
will present top r ated "URBAN COWBOY"
men and women com· -----1:...;·;.:l::.:.·•::..•·;.:"=•=----
-lllOP,.._-
peUn1 at prep, college "HALLOWEEN"
and professional levels '~ · •:• · ••
in excitln1 events in· "PAOM NtoKT" "''
cludln1 downhill skiing .• ___ ,_ .... -.".''.·.----• rodeo competition, auto racing and skateboard-----------
ing.
Tbe pre miere pro·
gram features the 1980
men 'a fast-pitch softball
c hampionship game
from Tempe, Ariz. This
faat-movln1 event ls
called "fut-pitch" for
sood reason -the game
centers on pitching
duels.
MOYIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLI """....,_al ,,,.,.....,. • to -
--,,. &llf1'b/Mr"' ,.., ... _,.., __ .,, __
riil Al.L AGEi AOW"1: D ~ 0.-otAwd-
BBBulilul ~lereo M~ia-New~Marine Wealher-
Con~umer Reporlf!-~loak Markel Reporl~ "Al""-A•" ...
''M.UU 8ROT'HPI" (tit
"L.~ DID ..., 111,11...,. ~tvt •
M l!M. Of nt« ..cnlOH "CTUl"I coor "' AV' lllOUlA Tl()H
.. _.. ....
·'THR~"~
I ,
I
' _J ' ! • • • • ' l1 •I •I ~I ..
t I ..
-
T~.~1,.1_,
FRANK SINATRA FAYE DUNAWAY
THE FIRST DEADLY SIN
_,_, _ _...._,
JONI ... "NO '""" ,,.., ........ ,.u ...... ·---.. .,._,, '"' ... , DIADl' llN 111 f,lltl ...... -... 1..---.ae THI AWAKPf'.:.!l:J 1.11111 ..... -... IMI ..... _ ..
NtYATI llNJAMIN 111 ,,,.., ............. , .. .
... ...,.1 .... 1 ...... 1--··
..... , n11 nu wau -c-n.. .,,,.._ THI IWlll JfttKU IAOI: IN t
lll/)ll 1)10 .._., ....... ..,. -..., .._...
....
"'-lll/$3 ... ~IO
...... •'-21l/Ul·tUO
.....
f .......
494 11,14
\ ..... , ......... ,
494 1514
121 ........ -1 .. l•U ..... _ ....
NIVAR llNJAMIN111 121-~.,-l .. lltlS ... ...,.., ....... _., __ _
"Af lAlf, -. ._...
rrl MY TUllN 111 IWMl-_... .. _I_
.. PRIVATE BENJAMIN" (R)
_,..,,_ ... 11·11 __ ,._,_<OCM:»10·>0
"THE ELEPHANT MAN ..
"STARTING OVER"
__ .. _ ... __ ._ ....... -...... -..-.. .......... ... ..
. ·---.. _ .. •" ........... ,. ......... ..
'Shm.Vboat' resurfaces
There an certain momen~ in mualcal the•ter
-Tony's death scene ln 'Wnt Side Story.''
Cervantes ucendinc the stept to the JnqW..ltlon ln
"Man ol La Mancha" -that are calculated to raise
1oosefteaboothemoataeasonedplay1oer.
Rfibt up there with tboee cited examples la tbe1
rich baritone voice of a black atncer lamenttna hlsl
lntermissi6n
Tom Titus
lot in life ln the solo ''Old Man
River" from "Showboat." But
It's ooe beard far leas often,
since lhia vintage Jerome Kem·
Oscar Hammerstein II musical
1lows In her brief sta1e time with the numbers
"Can't Help Loving That Man of Mlne" and "My
Bill.''
is rarely mounted today.
The Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse, which ran the hit
musical "Grease" all summer
and most of the fall, has finally
cban&ed lta procram and offen
Belling out the unforgettable <and t wice
reprised> "Old Man River" is Stephen Finch In a
bravura performance as the vnsel~s black han-
dyman. Michelle Kartler revel.a ln her stereotyped
"SHOWllOAT"
a remarkable contrast in •1u.a
musical styles with the revival of "Showboat.'' the
first production of that vetµcle on the Oran,re Coast in at least lS years. It's as much a musical his·
tory lesson as an entertainment.
A mullutl Dy J•rOf'tW K.ern encl OW'°' tiemnwr111t1n II, dlrKIO<I DY E rne11 !oerrectno, mu.iul dlre<lor Je<k Ellon, ,,_ __ ,.,Jay
Smflll, Wi dlll9" Dy l(.,v,.111 0 L,CJC19e, 'Otl""'" DY Lynne c...r11•, llgllllnQ DY Eugerw Ro.«11, pr .. enlecl ni9'1111 .. uC11 ""°'*"el I JO 11. JO SundeYtl ltlroUQll l'•D. I •I IM ... ,...,..,,, OIMer Playhc>uM,
lJoOl s, HertlOr Blvd , !'>enl• Ane. ReMrvetiOn1 "9SSI1
DlaECl'Oa ERNEST SAallACINO, mindful
of the fact that the old musicala often were over-
long a.na somewhat tedious, has trimmed the s.bow
down to a snappy playing time of under two hours
(plus the obligatory two Intermissions for dinner
theater). In doin1 so, be bas blurred a number of
transitional points, but the "good stuff," those
splendid musical numbers, remains unscathed.
Still, "Showboat" shows Its age when the or-
chestra pauses for rest. Its playing style is
dangerously close to the seagoing melodrama it
lampoons in one scene, and character rela-
tionships are sparsely motivated despite its ex·
cellent cast , The music must make it a ll
worthwhile, and it does.
Particularly impressive in the central role of
the diminutive songbird daughter of the Cotton
Blossom skipper is Elizat>eth Bllls, who conveys
a fresh, natural a ura of unspoiled innocence to
complement her melodious voice. As her shiftless
s wain, gambler Gaylor Ravenal, Brian Richards is
less convincing, but his singing voice is superb. •
DARRYL FERRERA IS first rate as the com-
ical showboat captain, reminiscent of Frank
Morgan's "Wizard of Oz." Fril.zi Burr chills the
scene as hi.s vinegary wife, while Barbara Stock
Me9110Ue Hewti•
CO.ylo•d RewNI
Capleln Andy Perlhy Ann
Jul!• Frenk
Elli• •. Joe
O...enl•
Ve11on/J1M $t••• P·t lt
JO•/CIWorl10
LtndledY
RubOerle<t
TH• CAST ea., ... ,,, e1111
8rt•ft IU<.M r-dt ()erryl ... ,,.,.
FrllJI Burr
8¥11oere Sloc.k
. Jey lo,mllh
~~~~·~~ Mt<Mlle l(ef1ltr
JOftn \""" ""°"' \1.,,. 811 Berrtll M 1<P\RI lA\IOf\hn Keuy Gre.,.,
Merk Miller
"mammy" role, while <.;indy Pingree and Jay
Smith are sterling second bananas whose dance
routines (choreographed by Smith) are a high
point oflhe show. Miss P ingree's racial contortions
are priceless.
The "Showboat" will be docked at the Harle·
quin, 3503 $. Harbor Blvd .. just north of Costa
Mesa, ror the next three ·months. For those who
yearn for musicals ''the way they used to be.'' it's
a joyous experience.
* CAU..BOARD -Tryouts for the drama "The
Runner Stumbles" will be held Nov. 23 and 24 at
7 :30 p.m. at the Saddle back Valley Community
Theater , 25741-C Obre ro, Mission Viejo ...
Herman Boodman is directing the story a bout
forbidden Jove between a priest and a nun .
further information is available at 770-0381.
That's using his head
18th century actor's skull in 'Hamlet'
WEST WINDSOR, N.J. CAP)
-George Frederick Cooke, who
was a hit in Great Britain as a
Shakespearean actor in the 18th
and-early 19th centuries, makes
his television debut this week -
in the only role he could play.
What's left of him will be on
center stage when Hamlet lifts a
skull and intones, "Alas, poor
Yorick." Cooke's skull will be
used in the Mercer Community
Colleee production of the
Shakespeare play.
COOKE WAS one of the first
British actors to become famous
in the United Slates. His skull
was preserved and will be on
loan from Thomas Jefferson
University , a Philadelphia
medical school, for the play,
which begins Friday night.
In "Hamlet,'' Yorick was a
jester who played with Hamlet
when the melancholy Dane was
a young boy . Actor Erick
Fredricksen will speak the
ramous lines while h o lding
Cooke's skull.
It 's believed that Ot>oke's
ph ysician bad the actor 's body
•
buried but saved the skull for ex-
perimentation.
ARTIIUR H. SAXON, a Cooke
expert at Temple University in
Philadelphia, traced the skull to
Thomas Jefferson University.
J ohn Tymour, a librarian
there. said the skull was left to
the school by Ross Paterson. the
dean of the medical school in
1938. Paterson apparently ac·
quired it froru another doctor .
Willi.am J . Flynn, director of
Mercer's "Hamlet " said be
read about the skull in a
Philadelphia newspaper and de·
cided to ask if he could borrow
it.
Audrey, B e n s tar
H OLLYWOOD CAP J
Audrey Hepburn. Ben Gazzara
and John Ritter star in '"They
All Laughed ... a contemporary
comedy now in production in
New York. Peter Bogdanovich is
d irecting rrom hi s o wn
screenplay for Time-Life Produc·
lions.
Movie maker suing
Libya's pre~idenl
ROME CAP> -An Italian film producer hu filed stat against
the Libyan government, claiminl that Col. Moamma.r Khadafy re·
ne1ed on a promlae to star in a mov1e the producer bad planned.
· Dante Vacchl, M, alleaed ln the 1uit that he lost $57,800 in un-
r•·lmburaed expenses prepartn1 a script and hirtna technicians to
1hoot a W·mlnute film entitled ''Kbadafy, Islam and Socialism'' in
1"711.
Khadafy, Libya's leader, afreed to play himself but never
1thowed up durin1 the two weeks planned for the 1bootln1, the suit
char1ed. The au.it In Rome's clv1l court nam~s Jbraim Mohammed
JJecharl, Ubya'• director-general of Information and Cultural Af.
f•tr1. ••the defendant. •
The stage presentation will be
telecast on local cable television
stations, F1ynn said.
David Garrison, who plays
Gro u cho Marx in t h e
Broadway musical "A Day
in Hollywood, a Night in the
Ukraine," clowns with vis-
itor David Prowse, who
played Darth Vader in the
"Star Wars" movies. Both
Davids once were regulars
on the soap oper a ''The
Edge of Night."
ingvalues.
----.---AIOUT
""9MINY*Y .. Mn1u11 ..... ......... ...., I I
I
--------· AIOUT S6 AAsuPERI
e•7DINNERI
Good for 1wtlv1 01ecea ol 1ulcy. goldtn brown Ken1ucky
Fried Cn•clltn w11n ••• rolls. olus your cl'IO•ce of 111ner a
large col• slaw or a large mu ned OOlllOH. ano • small
gravy Ltmll 1wo olle1S per couoon per cuaiomtt.
Cut\.lomer paya all applicable nlH lax
Olfl t eKpirH
N~Del 30. 1980
"''" rney varr •t I*· llcl,_llllO IOClllOM
GoOCI on1y lri '°"''"'"' OelilOff\la Wlleft you
-----;;:;:"'"~ ...
I __ .. _ ... ln""I'*" C111f0tnia w{'l19
YoV ... 1"' Colonel'•, ...
wlnOOw '*"-• ....... CotoMI'• tac. •
~lllMtf.
' . ..... . ' . ..
ENTERTAINMENT I INTERMISSION
(PG) E~h.c..
-ON STAOi -FAiOiY
SOP-.ANO Miii G!Oft(llA LEIGH
SATURDAY
TENOR JIM MARSHA.LL
OAYIO ~NAY flll ....,.,_
IUfHA PMK I EL TOltO . ORAHGE
Bueno Por11 Drive-In SoddlabOcl\ Cinema UA C11y Cinema
821-4070 581-5880 634·3911
COSTA MESA ORANGE SANTA AHA
U.A Cinema Orange Moll Cinema Harbor Blvd Onve-ln
540-0594 637-0340 531-1271
_, WESTMINSTER MAll UA Cinema 893·0546
,
l't..USfll1
AWAKENING
,, '"'"" fUMH 1"1
lO'llNG
COU'LCS
''THI
AWAl(1.NINO ,_··FADITO
ILACK'"
I l
t \,
\ \ ~
~I
: .. • .. ..
I : I
~ .
" I .. . . • . · ..
'
'•
TH llMI .. ~Oft tM Of•nt• CoHt T~.No¥9mMr 11, tMO
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You CM ... "· f'tftd It,
Tr .. M Wtett a Weftl M 8'2•8878 One Call S.~lc•
Fa.VCredlt Approvel .......... •••••••••••••••••••••••
~-
eouAL HOUSING
OPPOATUNITV
W1taw't Mettce:
..\ll rea_I estate advert1i1tlc.I
in I.his newspaper 111 sub·
1e<it to the Federal Fair
Housing Art of 1968
whHh make:. 1t 1lle11ul Lo
ad \ert1se "any pre ference. hm1tat1on. or
dtscnmmatton based vn
race, color , rehg1011, '>t!X.
or national ongm. or an
intention Lo make 3n~
:.uch preterence. hcmtu·
lion. or d1srn m1nat10n '·
n us new~pape1 will not
knowinJIY a ccept J n'
dth ert1sing tor re a l
est at~ which t!> Ill \ 1ola
uon of the law
H1•n .... S. . ••••.......•...... , ••••.....••....••••••.............................•..•......•.••••...... •••r.. IOOJ •••r• 1002 •••r.. 1002 Ganer• 1002 ••....... , .........••.. ·~····················· ~······················ ·····••····•···••······
REALTORS
675-Ht I
COU Of MIWPOU UALTOltS: .W. e ~ .... _.. .. e, ..... .,.. ...... .
•--h ti I 2wJ .......... .. ,...... ............ c ... ..., ...... .
671-lltt ................. .
COU OF NEWPORT REALTORS
Jltl I. c..t Hwy •• Caw .. W.-·
675-5511
SHORES 1.k"R~~·l~LE
$1 ]5,900! ASSU:\IABLE LOANS
\\'I·:--; I I Y '.\
TAYLOR CO.
J U-:t\l.TOH.S ',111c 1· l!l·lt;
SlftAllAn HOME & IMC~S271.000
Prime East Costa Mesa location near
21st & Tustin Ave. You will love this
charming separate 2 Bdrm home of
redwood· siding on wide lot, plus two
2·Bdrm income units. A beautiful
woodSy private patio w/BBQ and huge
expansive spa. Quiet , peaceful &
picturesque. Call for appointment.
WISUT M. TAYioa CO.. llALTOIS
2111 S. Jo••'• ... .._. HIW .... 'P<>lt__.IT_ CIMTH. M.I. '44-49 I 0
UDOISLI
Newly remodeled traditional style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation a;'OOm & 2 patioe. Uving
room has attractve beam cellin1. fireplace & french doors lea.ding onto
brick patio. New kitchen blt·in
appliances. Close to tennis courts,
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold fully f umished $420.000.
IA1JlllONJ
We have several fine homes
with pier & slip
IALIOA PMMSU&.A
Quality oceanfront triplex. 4 Bdrm, 2
bath each unit. Excellent income.
$1.300,boo. .
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
l·l l k"Y'"l' ,), ,,, ~.; H b."., t.lbl
LEASE OPTION
MESA VERDE ---------•I Charming. upi.:r a ded A:-.<D OWN E R WIL L bear h home in Newport HELP FINANCE t his
RAMILER·SI 74,900
T.1:.tefull ~ up.:raded.
single :.tor~ on a quie t
cul de·sac Plank oak
tlo11rs in dinin~ room & kitchen. Custom s hut·
lers. Ilea\~ ~hake roor &
2 patios Large 3 bdrm on
Im el~ tree lined ~treet
'car :\lesa Vl·rde Coun·
try Cluh :'l.e\' on the
marke1
this beaut1tul Npt Bc·h
duplex and get 21 J yr!> of
appreciation at toda~ 's
m rket ,·alue. Ont~ ~teps
to the sands of 10th St
t rum th1::i ~ .\ r old 2 Bdrm
2 Ba and 1 l:Jdrm l Ba
c.luplex. A fantastic front
unit with loft. master
Bdrm. huge li ving rm,
I r1>lc. and hardw ood k1' che11 Presented a l
Sl)l •.lMIO.
ERRORS: Ad••rtisers
...W ctt.ck their ods
dally and r•port er·
rort lmmedlaf•ly. The
DAILY PILOT assumH
liallility for the first in·
cornet htHrflOft only.
...,_..for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••
lienaral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
UNPARALLELED
PANORAMIC OCEA~ . .\N D
COASTLINE \'IEW from
this beautiful .i bdrm. 21,
ha. Tradewmds ~lodel in
Sp' glass. 2459 :--q f1 of
lu'ur) living
lf523 CAMPU5l>a:IRVl'4E
COSTA MESA
SIOS,000
Hugt corner lot. lg ~
bu rm famih home
O\ersize gar.age t oo:
Owner says sell now
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
Cl.US..
HOUH
Advt'ft1nrs may placr lhr1r ads by lctlephonr
8 00 • m lo S 30 p m Monday lhru F"nday
8 lo noon Salurda)'
COSTA MESA OF'f"ICE
330W 81)'
642·S6i8
HUNTINGTON REt.CH
1787S ~ach Olvd
$40-l220
LAGUNA BF.AClt
102'7 N Coast llwy
ujliuna Beach 494 9464;
NORTH COllNTY dial lrtt ~1220
CUSS#lllD
DUDUHIS Du dhne ror copy It kills
IS 5 30 p m the day
brfort publication
C'X<'«'PI ror Sunday a.
Monday Ed1t1ons when
dudhnr 1s Saturday 12
noon
CU.SS#llD
1M41Unat4S ERRORS t.dvr rt1nrs
should <'htck their •ds daily It report r rrors
1m mtdialt ly T HE
DAILY PILOT usumH
Ila bl Illy ror tht firs I
incorrttt /nurtlon only
CA NC ELLA TIONS Wh tn k1tlln1 an ad be
sure to make a rttord or
the KILL r·uM BER
1iven you by your ad taktr u receipt of your
unctllation This kill
numbtr mu st be present r d b y the advtrtlstr In cur of a
dispute
CANC ELl,ATION OR
CORRECTION OF NEW
A D 8 E f" 0 R E
RUNNING Every el'for1 Is madr lo
kill or correct a new ad
that hu been ordered. but we unnol cueranttt 10 do so untU the ad hu
ap~ared In lht P•Pfr
DIME·A·UNE ADS ·
These ads are 1trlUI)'
caah In advantt b)' mill or at any one of our
orrkes. NO phone orden De-dune 3 p m Friday Coat• MeH otn~ ., l2
noon at 111 branch
offkH. THE DAILY P(LOT
tHMHI tht r llht l,o
etH1U1. edJt, censor or r e f u • • a n 1 •dverllaement, ind lo
ch an1c Ila rates .,
re1ulaliont w1lllout prior
not le• a.u..-........ ..._,
P.O. Boa lJIO,
Ca.ta 111111
rl 17 Iii' IAY n:i '• atf ,OU .,.r ror a JO day ad In the
Shores'. 3 RR -2 BA . gorgeous -I Bdrm horn e
Dl·cor.1ted warm Iv . New fam1h rm & lormal c.lin
carpets and wall.paper. ing rm. Only Sl6i.500
J115t listed-won't last '. 1 ·all 979-.'13IU
ra;,; ~~ ALLSTATE
ESTATERS REALTORS
IA Y A VE 4 IHM TOWMHOMI. SI Z I ,500
H..\RD TO FIND" Ha\ Just a mile to the beach, even closer
A\e Charming 3 Br + to schools and shopping this unit is
l'amih room re:.idenn· clean and spac1·ous, w1'th 2'L baths. 2
ret r eat & s undecl. car garage, en c losed pa tio a nd
-~~·,
759-1616
Ur\ LU 0 .\ IS I...\ ~ D
RE.\LTY
• 73·87(141
Babblinq Brook
Or.1mat1c tri·level 1n
lush 1rop1l'a l land~c aped ---------i M!llm.R with outsta11d1ng l'\1 master s uite with 1
1
~
Secluded lush patio ..-2 community pools , tennis, spa a nd TERMS. TERMS
Br rental. S375,000' belts A d d li · Bmboa Bay Prop. green · an Y sting at just This new custom home in
recreation Car1ht1es in·
dudrng tennis. s wim · ming a nt.I sunn 1 n~. 3
be• room 2 1Ja1h home I
d o .. e to :.hoppi ng .
theaters. and ~c h11ols
Full nee onl\' 5129.900
CJll ';51·3l!H •
FIXER Reatton $l 2l.SOO. c;.1p1strano lleJCh "1th 3
S 0 Bllrm., 4!1• Ba and
L>uplt·•c Corona del :\I ar 1-.-•••6•7-·.7-6•0•*--•! U~l()Ull= a-I~....,. II=~ master swte. oceJn , iew T wo 2 Bd r m un1t .-.1• I ._ • lU,...L~ Ci.Ill be pun hao,cd ror
SW 000 c.lvwn 0\\ ner will --Sell wtth EA.'>E' REALTORS. 675·6000 S192,(J()(J Small do" n a nd carr' th e bala n re. Jt'saBREEZL' 11 ()"·c 6 .. -,.120 S283.00o. BKR. 673·8550 "-2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar n H • Class1ftedAds6-12·~ I WE HAVE 4tof'THE B~~T LISTINGS INTOWN • t;::SELECT
D;;;...~._.....~.-.. -...,.. I~~~-!----biJ!gO HE':u~~;~NG DENVER
T" PROPERTIES
WATERFRONT HOME
5 BR. 4 Ba, c ustom
waterfron t hom e
w 17x38' pvt dock. Prit'e
Sl.395 .000. Bui lde r
w /trade for Palm Spr·
mgs Estate. For details
on this hom e and appt t•1
::iee. rail Carol Hoff. agt.
631·0094
PRIME NEWPORT OCEANFIONT
....... .., I 11' ... J .... ._ ....
..._ 11 _. dw I J -... 9'iief
loc ... • • ... llACH. I• • flee '"''I ........ '-ta,... ........ for ... .,..•l•I... PoHIMllllH fer
... F 1111 ••c:-4 .. $64'.IOO.
SWEEPING SHOIECUFFS COINER ................. ..., ...... ..
......, ! '-P ............. J '-4 J ..... ._ ....... ...,,...._. ... ,..,, ··----=·· .. ... c ............................. .
Sll4,500 fee. 611-1400.
PDINSULA PT. BEAUTY!
Mo ................ •••kd J ~J .......... s-..... ....
f .... ,... ..... : ................... .
1tel•M tint, pl•t .. 1.. alHlltera, *rltM• __, ,.ofeulHll l•1111Jc fl I
Two fLeptH ... t-, ,_ ... ...,... ·
...,., .. tlih z....., -.-....... ..,
& Oc-. aw.rs wtl ..... , .... ....
c....t doM ftCl"OW .... Jlltf, 1911.
$465,000. 631-1400.
WOODS, WAIMTll--IU!
•leN&mMlltt .. flll~lwf ~ J~ ~ ....
fluplHe & J •t111:•1L J ... .... ..,,.., ....... c.. .......... ,....
loc..._ wfttl ,_.... YU. ctarell•'
wladaw1 & ..... c ...... •217,500.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATE S..•• R~•.1.il• Propt11, ~•""'1"""'"1
·2436 W Co.u1 H"''Y 31~ Marone Av~ Newoorl Beach S..lboo l•l~nd
Hl-1400 673-6900
AllFOIDAILI JASMt .. came
Lovely 2 BR & den. Very private
yard & s pa . Gua rd gated
community offering tennis,
s wimming & lush greenbelts.
$275,000 with attractive financing.
.... ..... '::~:'i' SCC:\\~lA-4r..tis·
~ "r QAY L *'Ml-----
·~~-~ == low IO I-fOll, llf'llCI .. -do
CLOSE TO IEACH
:l !Jed, 2 baths each unit.
Fu rnished Stone f P
lt>we r Good h u m ·
•)lcr winter rental. Ask "'It S275.000 548·07 t 5 e\'e
EASTSIDE C.M.
TRIPLEX
L<trge 3 Bdrm. 2 bath.
fi re place plus t wo 2
Rdrm, 1 bath in e~•·ellent
cond ition Priced at srn-;.suo
associated
811<1 • I 11 5 llE Al T(illS
Ji ' Ylrr if<Jlt°',-,'1 f'I I It-& J
1~1..1 units with low Ill·
tl'f'e!>t finandng in hoom· mg Denyer Bread and
Buttertype units averag·
1ng 97% occupanry
S.t .300 ,000 C a l l for
brochure
c114• 67Jl4oo
12111 na.2121
HARBOR
Trade your old stuff for
new good ies with ajwantAdHelp" Class1f1ed all 6-12·56i8 · ---
-~---
Q CAUFORNlA
PROPERTY EXCHANGE, Inc. ~ RulEsU#
211:.z USAILE ACRES
V1t•w. xlnt area. S25.000 cash. $28.500 terms
Rer 52662. ask for Jim
·COMMBCIAL CORHB LOT
on Lake Elsmore. 50x90· on busy Graham
A"" Ref 52872. ask for Elaine
HST YIEW IM CAHYOH LAKE
(I" ner \\111 rarry papers 2640 9ff ft home
with atrium Super large bon us room
Proft'ss1onall~ landst·apf'd Xlnt ho me for the
d1-.crrminatrnJ? buH•r R~f 52627. ask for
Ma1k
LAIB.AND VILLACH ~ICE 2 ~ORM HOME Near Lake Elsmore
Many trees 2 patios a nd guest house in rear
that may be used for rental. Ref. 5287 1. ask
for Steve
HIC& Y HMOOB.IO RAMCH HOMI
Overlooking Lake Elsmore. Horses OK 1,,
at•re. owe with (lood terms. Only $55.000.
Ref. 52829. ask for Lori
t ACltlS/Wlll II SPUT
into three 3 acre parcels . Has 10 24x24 pipe
rorrals and outbuildings . For investors or
horse ranchers. Call Dennis. Ref 52889
AYE PltlMI ACllS
with custom mobile home. Parcel can be
split into fou r 11• acres. Fast growth area.
Completely fenced. City water. City gas. All
underground utilities Own/ Agt. Ref. S2603.
ask ror Joan
z11..._.c_,_._..
~•IA1r•,C .. ta•
674-:JICM 67t-lln
STAR GA'ZEK11 .._
~..;.=.:..u.;'----8' CLAY~ POUAN
Ml Y-o.l)'A<tlwrf,~ 1'1.
Y Accwd'"'I •• the Ste·n Y To develop meuoge lo• T.,.sdoy,
rllOd wordt <~"'!! to numbers of )OJI' ZodlOC birth aign ··-aw.,. ........ .. ..., ·-..... ., .. ........ ltfo l'O._...
711u-n1 ... ,.....
7J~ ,._ ,. __
,.°' 11_ ,.,_ ,. .... .o-,.,..._,, ..
3 & 3 DUPLEX
r.ach unit a!> 2 baths
and 1t ·s onh 1 block t ..
the heal·h Open beam·
ttreplace·l·orner lot good
income. Pl us te rm s .
8219.500. Tn. LS'"; down.
JACOBS REALTY 675-6670
Make yo ur s hopping
easier by using the Daily
Pilot Classified ..\ds .
9°10DOWN
Corona del Mar Duplex.
aruuous owner will help
fin.a.nee on two 3 Bdrm
unit duplex. S345.000.
BKR. 673·8550
21& IUIY AVE.
Aitul1bly ........ CHfl 0 1Q ....
....., .. £ ............. , dliw.
L..p ...... JI••.~ 2....,. 4 ....
"-· .. ~. SpacMll Lec•d -..... ............ Slr...t t-at ...,. .. 2 ...,., .... c-lty ............. ,.... ....... ,
LARGE ASSUMABLE LOAN
$495,000
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL EST A TE
Selu . Rtnt.i•. Proi-flv ~nl
JIS Marnw Aw &lboa 1si.nc1
'7Mtt0
5 Br, 5 Ba, huge master suite,
maid's qtrs. beautiful light
decor, entertaining home.
Room for 65' yacht. Consider
option. Priced at $1,100,000.
Bob or Dovie Koop. 831-1286.
Res . 780-1580.
RE/MAX
What's Your Trade?
$2.1'7 per Day
That's Utt.le to pay
OOYOU
INVESTORS
DELIGHT!!!
Clun-refurbh he d !
Prime Cotta ~I esa
du,J>lex. pri ce d to aen-1120.000! Flnanc·
: Hur •! 148·7171
THIE REAL
ES l:ATll:RS
SUMITS
2 Bdrm 1 Ba e:ich, only 2
'eurs old. Good location. i M11er motivated. Ask·
rng ~.ooo.
ABANDONED
CustOMEstate
Brand new 4 Bdrm. 3
bath . 2 700 s q f l
mansion! Stea l it at
9 000. l'all 963·6767
THBREAL
ESTATERS
----------MA~IFtCEHT
1000 Sf'
MANSION with VIEW
Sl ,750,000
Rick Alderette. l:ltr
832-0440
NIWPOIT Hlt•HTS . FIXER
Bring your shovels an~
paint brushes to cash in
on thia sensaUonal value .
Huge comer lot. hoats-·
this 3 Bdrm 2 bath ex~ ecutl\'e home. Countr
kitchen. ll\·1ng room
family room. den a n
:.pa too! Cash in and caH
now!
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
IACKIA Y VIEW
Total l y upgraded
barkbay home with pool
and spa. 3 bedrooms. 23 ..
baths and owner will
rinance at interest with
do\\ll. Call to view this
111\·ely home. 556·2660.
i~n;t~'s Special c;: SELECT
3 Br home. (rplc. Igel tPROPERTIES ~ Jrd. great area tor kids --- ---
Excellent 1 ental proper· $69 900 ty Pnced tor quick s ale' • Chmer transferred & will A rare and spacious 1 help 11n a ncc. Call le\el. 2 Bdrm adult con· !
!Jfi.1·8182 do on lush greenbelt . Try
'..'O' down lo a 12 h 'lc
~~ 1 1m:i~1 ~-
-_ ------POSITIVE \· NEWPORT CASH FLOW : ....
\\1th only S16.000 down in· \ FIXER! cludin~ .management "-.
4 Bdrm 3 bath . huge fee.Pos1t1v~cash flowon ~~
tamih room. rormal din· this beaut iful 3 Bdrm ~· mg a real bargain near 1.'0lldo. Won't last at only •1
Do~er Shores 129".soo. 51i6,900. 540.3666 •
Call for complete details. • • l
§11)-?jU.1 • V-Jhelan t: lTHB REALI RMIESUllle ~ ICSTATERS ._. ~
EXICUTIVE
VIEWTOWMHOME
Rare end unit. Step down
thing room. leads to sun
rilled kitchen. overlook·
1ng spacious t e rrace.
:\laster suite + 2 q ueen
!>tzed bdrms ups tairs .
Pool and spa too! Owner sa~·s be flexible o n
financing. Dial now.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
TWO CAR
GARAGE
Cvndo. 2 car attached
garage. 3 Bdrm. 2 bat h.
huge patio. f antastic
'
DOING ~·:: BUSINESS .::: UNDEAA .... FICTITIOUS -.: NAME?
II you "•" lut llled your new Flcllllou1
au1l10ea1 Na11te alOd ......... ,.. ...... It._. ,.uc1r1 . ,..._
don't fw .. I tftet tM
ll11tltat1ett 11 • .,. ._ .......... n..
DAILT ~ILOT wlll ,...... ,.. •11 ...
lor IJl.I•. O•t
clrculatoft lftCNd9e ....
ontlro Orant• Coa11 i re• and ...., norca.
apt10arlfl .. ......._ln
order to •ub'"4t your
atato lft en t for publlc a tl on 1ond
a119ropriate copy ond • chick to THE DAILY
PILOT, P.O. Bo• 1MO,
Coet1 ...... CA ta2t.
Wo 'II do !tie re•. For lnlorlftllloft obovt legal
ld¥ertt8'ng plelM coll
642-4S21 flit. 332.
linancing $88,500 Ca II "---------546-2313
,. '. .. ·-· .. ...
' 11..· .... r:I . ~= , .. •• ~
r.1 .. :-.. . •
• . .. . • ~-. · .•.
"'
The fastest draw in the '\. •
West. .. a Daily Pilot · "'·
Classified Ad. 642·5678 ~
CIE
110111 ILllllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
rttl .. IAYNOMT
Spectacular 40-Foot Frontage. Pier & Dock
In Exclusive Bayshores Community. Lovely
Master Suite With Fireplace Plus Four
Bedrooms &c Bonus Room &c Den. s .,_cious
Dining Area With Wet Bar. Truly Goreeous
View Of Islands & Channels. And An Extra
, Large Front Patio & Deck. Sl.S50,000.
UOO ISU
Prim e Location. Community Beaches.
Clubhouse & TeM IS. Street To Street. Extra
Larg_e Quiet Corner Lot, With Traditional
Four Bedrooms. Plus Great Guest Quarters With Bath & Bar. Billiard Size Recreation
Room. Beautifully Landscaped Lanai "
Patio. Expandable Lot. Easy Financine.
$435,000.
ti) ·--...... ,.-,.
macnab I Irvine
realty
A 1Uall0tARY OF
THllE IRVINI COMPANY
DIANI co1•oaew
Beautiful "Versaille" in private
location w/Blg Canyoa fairway
view. Many quality appo6Dtmeata
hl1hl11bt thla ete1ant 48R
residence . . . tile entry, CUltOm
wull co\'ertngs. exp1rnsl\'e decklna
private paUOl lc spa Is mueh. mucla
MOREi '815,000. Lnne ValeDtine Mt4oo.(P.eo)
:-..
~ ~l l• t· I. l~ .. .
:". I ~> , . .
I,, : ..
DAILY PILOT
SlaYICI
DIUCTOllY ~ oorr.Nc>Wf
64Z.1'71
• ~wuj;Mjfs Lt"US IN r r r r r I
l !?Rs~amlS I I II I I I
:::.. .. _
=~
ror an ad In the Dally
PUot Servlce Dlr.c:tory
that can •labUab your
profeulooal ld.ntlt)·
For mor• IAtormatlon
call 642.5671. '
OFFER A S&BVICET
1At the public know wttb
u ed ln tbe o.111 PUot s.rvte. ~-ll can
cGll rou u Uttle u 12. lT
ps 491. ror more ln·
larmaUoo -~pa.tel ...._call MHITI, ... ...,,..
Wa ..... C.-
6ttllM
ICl•MoUTS Altlwen .. ~ ... llfl...._ IJOO
" ...... ·-·-.,_
6' 11111 ._,NwinJ
SEU. •dl• Items wilh • o.ib' PUot CJaaslfiedAd. Haft~ tO N UT '42-1178. a.aillad .. dolt .. u.
l '
DM.Y fill Ol ~"·'· H111n,_S. ...... ,...199 .......... ·ote.•···.... ....... ...... , •. 4 ..................................................................... ····•·•·····••·•······• ..•.........•••......•.
,_._ N1u11,_._ H111n..,S. INdt I041 t~tlffdt to6t E"-• ..._,,..,.rty zooo ... .,.,...... 31'9 -.. •••••--...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••-••••••••••••••••••• ._.:;; ••••;z:•• •••••• S. 11 00 •••••••••••••• •• •••• •• ••• .. ••••••••••••• • ••••
8111 81 IMI ...... tOU 0-PeW IOHi OCIAMROMT,ARI( Dr•v _,, h 0 • •••-•••••••••••••••• IUNITS 3Udrm.2bath.P•nln.Pt. ....... ••••••••-•••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••• •••••••••••••••u•••••f 28 ba If ........ -1 ore r, . • homt lllo to mo. or \llrld1\e""~•1.h11Jle~ ~ 2 Point Nt.,uel Cond I ·'t·i!a;ii alnlac>w_jrlr3, •,.o~ ~ewport. rnu1t aell. ;J.uan Capo. ~5.000 2 Woodesta~ .. F101ta )leu. wlntt"r leue S675 •CANYON • Oii.it ..... ,,....,u ...
lrt fari.l\e ... Cu'oo
/U'H 0-fen 911111,, tu.n
\talenre. PrlVan •
s.cwil\ t II \ta.inlll ~ .f bi-. ' ba l 111111m
llllMlr Ill\ Gull <.:uuru
Spac:IO'l11 Cllamoroua
Pool ~pa. Waterhll,
V\ew Oklu Over loolunai Coll Course c 2 J Lu~
udou1 J br . !b• ,...._ ... , LI* Rooms. Hip Ceulna~. Prh ••~ P.-l.06 3 Car G11n1e -000. LA JOU.A lac>ICH S um wt.Lt.ST
LA JOLLA 8l2<l3'7
tT14 14lll·a&48
Dalebout
15ay&Beoch
Red Estate
,........ ,. •.. wv ... 8'73-8851B~owner. .28a.14IO_&g lt.8>rs g "vrNllon. Income lii'J.2113 . ICUlr-tll• Prtme luu· Complex, 2 Bdrm. View, bchs. PoOl If fiahinc/ u . --A&t S4t-~ St0.800 ~·r Price 144$,000 ---------[~. 95.• M4>·4M lommunl~ Pool, Tenn 1Mm 1710 499·311 SIO 000 DOWN Dn ti•~ ment 1130.000 He.Mt UnfwRlthtd
Ceite..... 1014 ~1~~~1.'\ ~~~~~~.P.;i -3Br.ib:coodo,nrHoafl 'NYOURM.H.SPACE OW balonce.alll?t. •••••••••••••••••••••••
....................... \l.uln1& Aat SHl-4.900. .._.,,.. o... Holp. Spa ln patio. 3 car, \GE.W~7;~!i~-83'1i G ... rtll 120.Z ·e ~PLIX ~. 7$9-9100 WteWtltw View 1ar :.~~ool. 110. 000 or prest1&e homes logo :· ... : ............... .. • Sl5,UQU dn. take over Sh11rp 3br + den. 2ba. wel .umtt • ............ ech 1040 3Bdrm38ath.spacloua loans totalling 1125.000 Acn«Jtfor5-1200 RealEstateln,estments &OUd area. S6SO + dep 1141.100 •••••••••••••••••••••• llllth,.., vaulted cell al 11.7~'.. Total price ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3333W <.:ous1Hw~.NB Cll'ta962931l .968·~ •11•--.... LTY t:ondo Uun1inr.on Con-mp, wood floor. built-in Sl39.000. Own/Agt . LSI acres, Al -I P11lmdale 645-6646 ----...__ t-• 3 8 b hooksbelvt!ll, tile enin·. 7522197 XJ · .,.. 1 h II bl 1...-.a 14 linen .. • Ht a, brlotht cwstom kitchen '& · t inv•·atmt 'developmt -_ __ ~\era ouses ava a e
lllC .. S
forced air. W /0, bllin dlnTnc room. lS2·l920. Beaullfulh Decorated potential seller anxiouJ: LAGUNA IEACH in Orange County.
'tOH! 4. rcfria. Access t Pool home'. J. or 4bdrm& Acent 714·64~8084 4 un , a 11 2 Br 11 8 a C M 3 flr 2 Ba 9695
IAITSIDI C.M.
2SUSanta .\na Avv
1 BR, 21~ t>a. contcm1>
des Ip. Sll8. 000
'46-1096 646.609 l
pool 9 '1"i assumable 1Ji ' QU .&.IL C 1_. $380,000. Sl l-'.llOO dn S .\ 3 Br2 Ba IMS
'""'I Ph 213 ?'"'3723 A 21 t biJ 2 rrplcs, S30.000 0 arc • " A. 3 Br 2 Ba •c9c, ""' ,,,. ~ ..... 1600 owe. Xlnt. s Lag 1oc. " ..., ~ PLACE d\ll\, sz.ooo imo, S48~n op•rry Walk lo Village Faire. fin \"I~ 3 Br 2 Ba $650. Nn qu~i1~~~ beach. -··~~M~tE~-c;.; .. • beac:h. etc Debra·agt Whelan Propert~ New luxur> 2 SI\, 3 hr, PllOf'IRTIIS"" 972·9300 Wknd s Management 953·166i 2 I I s 165 0 ·-.,.lilt,...... 9600 SQ.FT. i00.9120
' 1 u m 0 -.-H Leased <·ommerclal-9fil:>' ~l7.~36·6565 ~ industrial units located
l llDIOOM !fil.00 down, no qu1111fying, EMlltALD IA y on one or Laguna's main
F.astslde, quiet location. Sl007 tmo. 3 br. 2 ba lux. highways. Building re·
b l h · Romantic ocean \'iew ti od led H' h ut c OH to s oppini l"wnhome Nr beach cen ~ rem e . 1g
N --1 1 " from this exclusive de d p ew '""'·copper p um · .\II\. 960.1217 . 951 6011 man area. artners
101. hardwood floors, 1 \likei. custom but It 4 bdrm \\ant oot. offerine very
pluter walls. &ood con· -----dream house. priced at attractive financine on a
dition. 1110.000 with an I"• I 044 only S545.000. Own er total pri~e of S575.000
a.'iSutnabll! loan. •••••••••••••• •••••. ••. must sell and mar help "ith 116&.7~ down .
18 UNITS
:1 U1 2 Ba. Garden Gro,e.
I rpl<" 2 l'ur gar , encl
~·ard S.SiL S & I.. SJOO
<!ep. Sec. dep 542-3597
Wboal"-d 3 206
:-.iewer t;n11s. central
Costa )lesa. seperate
mt' l e rs, e n c Io s e d
garages. some with patios Can close this •••••••••••••••••••••••
\ e<.tr $900,UOO. DU\ id
Bouri,e Reah<Jr546·91:15o. YEARLY RENTALS
a_, McCardle lltt-~ finance. For aPPl. to see . Realonomics 675.6700 APPLE VALUY
. OOYH SHORES -r • · · "'""''"WOOD caJ1962·9311 UDO ISLE - --Nearnew4·Plex. 2 bdrm.
An lmpre"clv"', i1at"d l~~~~!~4~1-~7~7~2~9~~~I P""RK A Th' 3 B nd d h 1---------1 2 bath each unit 14 llh
-Little lslan'd Large I
Bd1 m apt. u11lurn
(;ar•Sml ear l s.500
lleaut1tut 2 stor~ 3 Odrm home. unfurn. dbl )(J r.
patio. close tn So. Ba~.
S/Jll('IOUJI room:. SI JOO In·
l" lllll
.... "" ~ • ,,,. L LSTA TE 15 r 11 en omc NEWPORT IEACH nre1>lace. l·nclosed µat10-~18:~een~?· ;~:gn aan'; 1--------· -•I SUPIRHOME ,,. h~~n l'omplelel~ re PrimeCllol57xl20with i;.arage. S165.000 Bill
features \hat def> dis MISA YHDE •Fantastic ass umable -REALTORS ~~~~~:: r~rd ~~~~e~t:ndd older two bed room ~rund~, _R_lt_r._6:5:6161
cription . A great floor CAN COO ~n. intererst at 9.S'7. · ---owner will consider lease honie. Conspit uously Two For One
Pllln with large 11 ' i'ng aymenls o 1675 pr mo. ""'. th I SlO 000 located on Old r\ewport Large 5 Bdrm, 2:1. b;ath . on this 3 Bdrm beaut' HATE GLASS? ..,,,.ton wi ·On Y • I Two units that ,.hQl4
rpom, famrl) room and romer lot. RV 11cce~~. \\llh desirable atrium. Then don't look at thi!> down. Call Ed Dillon for :i,~~~so.ooo. Agent. pnde or 014nersh1µ Both
formal dining room · sprinklers front and elegant Italian llle and 3Br. 2•2Ba 2600sq. ft. detruls. ha\ e pn ,·a te pat 10s ~ooeme~. Ts ~easpcairk011un!' back. Asking Sl82.000. plush carpetini;. Walk inµ c·ustom home with lots of 760..0815 ';re at a s rent a I!>
.. .. Owner will carry 1st TD. d' t t k & 1 wood & windows. Ocean ---------•I f'Wrt to Major lank S15t,S()f1 f or complel e pool and luxuriant plant· Cal1540-1151 view. 1535 Morningside 5 "'°"Sq Ft C details. c all tod a ' mgs pro\'ide lhe much Dr S395 OOO 644 1721 ---------•I ,...,., · ommercial TARBELL, REALTORS sought arter restful ---·-· · · LOVELYLIDO Bldg 1 Blk to l'acific .540-1720
touch. a \er1t11ble LCllJlllMMi~ 1052 Seller ~lotlvated' Price Ocean. Sell S3.50.000 -----
r.etreat from r ealit y ••••••••••••••••••••••• :.lashed b~ SIOOK Hest lease $2,140 Month.
S496.000 !~~~~~~~~·! TLC MHDED buy on island. F:x1ra Wesley N. Taylor Co. 85 PRIDE
631-7100 N.I . WOODIRIDGE Tender 10 , ing ca re larr<e lot 3 fldrm home RHlton 644-4910 UNITS
BAYFttOHT RENTALS
Several .\1 a1l11ble ~ow
2 :1 &~ Bdrms
\\"toter lt•ases from SW~
\ rly lea~es from S800
Lo.I lrechtel & Auoc:.
675-llll
"-etu.fwnl1hllll c;:;;·;;.;;······1i24 .......................
2br '® adul".145·11o.t no PtU. m E. 2ut St 30
MOR. -------....,.,...d ...
2br, 21 l ba. db1 1ar w I
auto door . rrplc.
cvt drps. sk~·llaht. o · cant. pool, kick ok 1875
~~· ll drm. refria. bal. 1ar.
adults. no pets. $300 .
EHS-98.'Si . 548 ... :l91. ---E Side <:osta )leaa 2br
..-den hae. lge bath.new
t•om11let.e kitchen. stove.
rerrl&. lndry rm·w 'd ,
cpts. drps, wallpaper.
a t e. gur, ni ce yard
Adults. small child ok·no
1wts! ~25/mo 111 last
S200 cleanina deposit .
IH6·29'71 _>J
E:.bts1de Duplex. 2 Br. l
Ra garage. encl yard.
IH' 11arking No pets
SI.)(). 645·2994.
-I &lrm & famil~ room. ll
baths. breakfast area,
trplr. corner 101. <luiet
area \\Uil. 12 1/80. $750
mo. &12·-1623. ------
~w Custom Condo
Beumit'ul 3 bdrm. 21 2 bath. 2 frplcs, dbl garage
" opener. s ol.ir bot "11ter ~love in today!
S'iSO mo. 642·4623. ----0.aPoint 3226 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DL"PLEX. Xlra lge 3BR 2Ba lower unit. Plush
cpb & drps. f'enl'ed
'ard. some ocn 'u. close to heh & shops S.S95. Ph !!': .. 1491~99·~_7 __ _
DIRTY DAWG!!!
AssumeS80.600.~br.3ba . :"'t!w Townhouse' 2br. needed to make this 3 ~11Sl.hOOOsfe1rpmarate ;q.1l ~-------Sl,250,000 ram. rm 2141 sq ft 2b;i, 2 car gar. frplc. Bdrm·2 bath P · esetter .... I $134 900 0 e gl ac S Choice•Conter Lot o 11 w n p a _,. m e n t · wn r r a · oven sto\·e. d /v.. 1:162' horn house a superior 'pen.at Sunl·5 p f N
Charming 3 br . g:i r .
"ash dry. can furn. Dec.
l·Jul~ I. S6i5mo 640·8146. 1.-;5 .. 1!l:Jll :"'e.1r ~l.inna. 3 Br. 2 ba
Bring paintbrush and
broom to save sss: Older
2 bedroom cottage on R·2
lot'. Zoning create~ de-
,·elop1 enl potential! On-
1~ SIS.000. lil41759·t501
i:il-0223. 751 ·3191 ,will be complet~ Jan home. Pool sized , ard. 223 Via Ithaca nme area o ewport Sl.<IXJ.OllO A:.k for Bill
lal'ot '\1ne avail. trll next close to park. schools C /21 Newport Center Beach. Useuble 2000 sq 11 DAVIS & CLARK
CQLLEGE
PARK
spnng.673-4485 and shops, Priced for 640..5357 11 bldgorplansforlO,OOO 851·1666
-------fa."t sal~.$121.150. 1----------1 ~Q -fl hldg. Agenl.i'• ---------*•SINGLE STORY S3l-~ -CO-ST-. M-ES-.
Light bright 3 Bdrm YHSAILLIS t---------•19 Attractive Uni1s.OY.C
beaut}·. that won't last. 4 BR-2000 SQ fT CHOICE RESALES 8 PR at 8'. 2 mi lo bch.
Move m co~d1t1on and Ideally located in the 1}4,000to$280,000 5 IZED Sll2.SOO down. ~so.ooo
the best pnce for thel C;ihfornia Homes area 1213N.COAST HWY $to\·erul lo,·ely models. U.._.ITS Co-op OK Agt Les
area Don't miss out.. this customized plan has LAGUNA BEACH Some are front row 180 " Barnhardt 559 ·H i S.
CALL a loan bala,nce of S82.000 497-4848 deg view. Leases a' ail. $3,250, 000 _97_12·!-577 •WATERFRONT ··REorAl"lll"le"r at 121; lnterest'with mon· ~a.-h 1069 from SSSO mo. Barbara 1 ~ .... ""', hi .......... ,_.. -c b J o '' n p a y m e n t PARADISE• l iy payments ol S848 ••••••••••••••'•••••••• o m s . a g e n l Sl,000.000. Ask for Bill
Charming 3 bedroom 754-1202 and as~umable. Askmg ~--------•l•&W-·.14•93.-_.750iiilii·S6-l7___ DAVISlrCLARk
Balboa. Island Cape Cod
Duple,. S:!2!J .!JOO .Xlnt
term:. Owner agl
t>W-4144. 833 3212 home located smack on . - -"SPACIOUS" 151-1666
the ocean with pm ate EASTSIDE I IS THE WOID Bal. Peninsula ~~~~~~~~-·! stairwa\ to the sa!'ld' 2 duplexes on 1 lot. high Lovelv 5 Bdrm 3 bath, 2 Bldg Sile Needs New
beach for ~our enJ01 assum. loan. Rents are ~ . Owner . Step s to SUPER INVESTMENT
HU:'\'T BCH I PLEX
Lnder 5 \rs <Jld. S2~5.000 owe at 12". Agt
536-0123
Q1ent! This exquisite re· low. Income Sl440 mo. Sf' st~ry. ho.me. featuring : Oen/Ba~ Plans for Cstm TRIPLE NET. 10 YR
'Sldenceisoffered atonly S!OSOOO Principals only ---foimal dining room ~nd Home A,·ail. Priced al LEASE, buildin g re·
S790.000 1714 >759 1501 ple~e 957,·0SS-l J$:l Sharp Walnut Square 2br. famtly room. 3 hpatios, Sl:Jl.000 Submit Offers modeled 1980. $l.97i inc _ ------__ _ 11 d l .51 , 182 separate gr een ouse. P ~-i Sl95 000 \gt 4 -C I p k h red OC en uni .~ . ., , new paint in and out Of· Seller :\lottvated! Coo-mo rico::v · ·'
---------Lots for Sale 22 0 0 •.......•.............. o lege ar c armer ·1 for appoin1men1 f d l S2''9 000 C> II tact Janet 640-5639 &16·-1380: 642-~.i; · 3bdrm, 2ba. den. gd --ere a -. · a __ ___ -----
cond. frplc, asummable *•TRI-LEVEL 1>ID-ll5l NEWPORT HEIGHTS Condominiums/Town·
•SACRIFICE•
OCfAM FRONT
llAUTY!
Take a dip right into the
ocean from this 1)cean
front horn~ It ha~ 3 r .
2Ba. w ith ba< helor quarters ,\:"\{) the pnce
has been raised fr•im
MBS.000 to !500.000.
Hurry while it is
stlU a bartaln !
AffOllDMU
~
Here It is! Spacious 2
Bdrm. 2 bath, family &
ut.ility rooms. Bayside
Village. Po<>I . spa &
beach. $61.000.
1006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
>1 0PIHDAILY
216 ltailby-$495,000
IColliltslslGftd
Sl,100,000
Watt1 f1 owt jSoNsbury
673-6900
'
LOU IRECHTEL
CMdA1sociates
RMI Estate
Sales I R...tals
229 w.t.. A•. I .I
'75-llll
loan, Sl26.500. 957·8457. Beautifull\' decQrated <:USTO'.\I HOME am n houses for sal'e I 700
a nd ma'1nta1ned other nice ho'mes0 l 1•••••••••••••••••••••••
()range Count~ D11na
Point Oce<.tn n e" lot Onl~ S65.000 for lot w11h
apµrm ed pl ans I I\\ ner
714 631l· lfJJ.1
EASTSIDE DUPLEX
on comer lot with pool.
Top condition 3 Bdrm & I
Bdrm Good 1n,·estment
or home ·n mrome
Centun 21 Westc hlf
64:;.;221
ON GOLF COURSE
F'ronting S .A C .C .
Beautiful 2-story. 3Br.
3Ba. 2frplc. solar water
htg . lmma c BKR .
5-W-5010.
/.Jn Nlfi[l
llAILEY Ii.
ASSOCIATES
/.Jn Nl[1f l
GAILEY Ii.
A5SUCl /l lf.S
Rnarwood model This neighbors Quiet s treet. BEATTHE
Broadmoor home 1s air•---------partial Ba' \iew.nopro llENTSQUF.EZE'
c onditioned . h as I ----------blemswlthOC Airport Homes from S63.SOO
Bdrms, :1 Baths . O\ er•---------:-lo apts or condos . ~d P irk Orleans offers an \ , . · s 1 2000 :.q l't, atnum. <i nd Peftinsuila D••• !>hopping & :.chools close J I fordable answer to the JCant "".It 54, '224 out 1
I h S h\ .' ,e~· tine props 2800 h1"h l·ost or ren11ng and Side of Eiits Bt!t" c~n ll'> landscaping hows Completely refurbished. " • • " ,.. Id •· L"d " hke a model Call for one blk to bear h. You sq ft . l ievel home in a the inf1Jt1on -f1g h11ng 'rl> enwest "" ~-"Jrus
appl. ov.n the land. Great line location. Call owner benefits of O\\ntng .•our 10 Hunt Uch SJo.oOo. fi~an ing $199 soo 1, 5·6619. own home at pnces from 213·273·&!08 · ' · just 163,500! The "clty"
\\OOdbrldge ,~ Ste¥e Dunn By OWNER Harbor View location In Ora nge ls °1~e 2600
Rully a Co Homes. 4 Br. 2• 2 Ba great\ -close 10 m~Jor ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fam Rm Spa CountQ lreewa~s . Fas hion 551·3000 759-9221 f'r ench. totally Square. the Mall or -'Or\scenrcOreg~n Coast
·-B Pk 1 1 d Orange TO"'n and Coun-Elel'lnc1t~. lent:ed. ~.ut
.. 6¥ arranca w ), rv "" i----------1'11st11m1ze 6H·5965 , & b. " 1 ~tanchni,: ,1ew ai.:ce-,i.1· - - - - -644-7697 II'\ usmess comp ex · , · · LOCATION FORSALEIYOWMH e~ The modern. adull ble.0141ier i92·2.t99
Giant S Br 3 Ba. Only BIGCANYOH I <'und o m inrum !> are 160ACRESPRl\IE LOCATION S269.500 Owner wi II av<1ilahle 14llh one orl"o R le S I D E '\ T I ' L VIEW!! bedrooms. patio or deck. • PRQPL. · T" .... 3 bdrm, 2i,;. ba. Living cari; at Sl.500 monthl~ d I b ll k"t h c. • room looks out onto ma-with 520,000 down. i\o From this fabuloui-eu.xe ui ·In 1 c en. t:!>c alonte and old
. bel M c redit needed. 171-' > SOMERSET model in carpeting. dr'apes. m1r c ... •1•1sh Trail ExO:.ellent Jor ~reen t. any ex· HARBOR \"I E W rored "ardrobes rn ..,.,u' ' tras Tool shed. protect· S.10-1964. HOMES This complete· master swle and much de\elopment property
ed 11atio Nice sized lot.•----------l~ refurbis hed home m11re. The quiet f ·•rl.. Zon~d SR Sl0,000 per
'Ov.ner.,.111 help finance. ..wPC>ltT HllCiHTS teatures 5 bedrooms. ~u rroundings inc ul.le acre l40 acres front on
fomily room, fireplace. pri,·ate recreation. OldSp11nr~hTra1lsand80
CHARMER large yard .. , iew. new lawns. !lowers. a cenlral a('re?> front on Escalante
This remodeled home e,·er)thmg and cul-de· pl,1za. and all the ch~m r\dJoin ~ Saguaro !\'a
leotures· added master ~ac location for S2S9.000 of 1he Old New Ori ans 11onal f'ort~s l Good
bdrm and family room. 3 17141759-1501 French Quarter. See 1s Term~ Contact Rud' fireplaces. hardwood qualil~ A & C Propert es Ha~elman. Delphi Real-
floors , new cof.per ail condominiumconversion t~. •6021885·2393. 6839 plumbing. new roo · RV community today' Cam 1 n o Pr 1 n c i pa I .
1wccss and much, much · Park Orleans Tucson, Anion a 85715
more. Owner will help 660 So Glas:.ell. 1 blk -------
with the financing. Of· north of the Garden F'lor1da , Ba ham a ,
rered at Sl89,900. Call •---------Gro ve Free" d\ 1n l'olorado propert~ 7
5•0·11.\l · WESTCLIFf Orange. For mtorm'auon .icres. total package *•REDUCED! Nicer than new Enjoy l'all. (il4 532·68i.;. ('all ror more inlormu
the . winter s un thru ~···~------t1 on 754·069•: e' e~ ~sq Ct of luxunous liv· sk~ hghts and the ch~ery 't _._ I IOO 114-'-:!151 dah mg. "1lh its own POOL & warmth of this special 3 s -
SPA! This 3 Bdrm & den Bdrm ram , I\ home ••••••••••••••••••••••• ReGI Estate
attach ed home is OPIHD ILY Beautifulh decorated.· perTnplex3 1 2 ~rsold, W..ted 2900 I possibly lhe only exam-A 1g tree·i.. private owner help finance •••••••••••••••••••••••
pie 1n the prestigious 2PMtil DUSIC gardens. 1249.500 owner's unit 3br. 2ba. P\t party would like to
Woodbridge Estates with 2591 Bays h o res Dr. IARRETT frplc, detached duplex m lease w /option to buy GRACIOUS 11 private pool. Call now Ba~shores. 3 Bdrm, d in· REALTY REGISTER rear 2~r. 2ba SS0.000 dwn home in :\tission \ ieJo or &SP""CIOUS tosee&enjoy! mgrm,den.Across from 64•5200 ~-336.'>af~er3PM Costa Mes a ;;4s.9454 , ~ $194 .900 Bar S395,000. See Helene -&16-0034
Huge family oriented • Allison. i----------i6 units. North San Diego home In btfl Mesa Verde [g)ut...AAb Id Waterfront Homes. Inc. I Co. IOX gross L:nited Unlquepatioinpark·like ~I "'""' r ge Realtors 631-1400 s-c........ 1076 Real Estale Group . Rentd1 backy rd. Spacious Realltj ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti14•661·09Sl. •••••••••••••••••••••••
bdrms. formal d in. large c:st 3000 •--------• Hous.sf'Urftlthed ramil) rm, 2 frplcs & "' • Driftwood le.tft ••••••••••••'•••••••• • •
other xtras. This home IS a29 Barra nu Pllw) • 1'"'"" EXCLUSIVE ""EAN VIEW Corona .. Mar 3122 in move· in condition & -s A N CL E M E N T E "" ........... ••••• •••• • • •
priced to sell at $215,000 * •95,000• * CONDO p 714/545·9491 You wtll be amazed al Magnificent 180 deg DU LEX
thi~ home located in THE "'"'"'" wtute water vlew ... walk 2QOI DOWN GHOVES. This unique to sand ... brand new 3 /o
residence features 2 NEWPORT BR .. gate guarded w /In·
O:>o:ntE BEACH
2 Bdrm duplex. \'1ew .
avail. 'tll 12 , 15. Agt
Faye. 640.9900 __ _
bedrooms, and a den. WATlltNOMT tercom ... pvt pool and 12°' INTEREST Upgraded 2Br, 2Ba house
formal dining and over jacuzzi . Offered at /0 w pri\'ate ra r d & ~sq ft. 17141759.1501. Largest floor plan of-'525,000. Z·Spacious 2Br L'n.lt&. carport. ti;75 mo. Aniil -Cap e Cod D up I e x .. ~'.J..-"'"'""------.---$299,900. Xlnt t . ~~4 ·4144 .
c--....... 1022 ;1 :······················
CDMCOTIAGI
I ""'SIMCOMI
OR 3 BDRM 2 bath home i with Isolated master
I bdrm. (Parent retreat or
;Jhtlaw qrtrs. > + a 2 bdrm
VAWE PLUS re.red. Open, fresh and a AM & M. 714·631·6350 Owner will finance a t thru July 15th 1negotla-
Loc .... TIO... all beautiful view. Custom 714.-192.7623 ' Wc for 10 years. Prked bl e >. Bet t ~ Ker r ~ " decor. gold fixtures and 1---------to sell immed. Only 673-ll81. You get back w /this fine man,· up1rades. Boat ~~~e if~.~~~~a ~~r~~: • -.. h I 041 slip ng~41.~oo4:'· ~~~-~!!~ ...... 1 F1easR~~·!t.s or -,-Bo_r_N_J-~-PE-le-~-E-~-c-~-r-p-tc-.
uge '" ng rm· res Y .....,..... ec JAMIS I. GOULD ............... u~1 M8·20R9 Bier. $50 1mo. 640·9900 ,\ sk p aloted If gorgeous••••••••-••••••••••••• -.--.. sparklln& pool. Seller 6l1·15l2 ,_.S. 1100 _ro_rf"_~_'"e_. _ __,... ___ _
says aell at Sl19,900. ON THE BeACH-~blle ·---------.•••••••••••••••• ... •••••Housel 'to be Newport .. ~ l 1,9
7141545-9491 I Home 2Br r ed ood ~ed 1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• , By owner, Newport Crest ' d k d h k ••••••••••••••••••••• •• UOO ISLI I ec . ce ar s a es. condo. plan 4. 9% as· EXCITING hardwood Int , frplc . sumable loan, ocean e e HOOHtobemo\'edtoyour Complelel~· furnished
I &.poo. 1714 > 499-3816 ,1ew. motivated to sell. lot. 3 br, l ba. stucco ex· wrth everythloa ~ ou -1198 000 646 40is S..Cllil lllJ tenor AJ>Prox. 25 yrs need. Remodeled " de
•, couaae. ·An~·way ~·ou
delcribe It, lt"s charm-
In a. up to date and beautirully located.1----------' · ' · Beautllul custom I zed ohl. Sound cond. 1 wlll re· corated. 3 Br. den 2 bulh
THlllGSTIAL 2.4'x60' Vlkln a Home. roof. $5000, plus mo, Ing Sl650. Monthly. 8 11 1
.. Dana Point duplex. 2 br. Gel9-T•w•--• 2Br. 2Ba & enclosed eot>ts.&t6 2389· Grundy, Rltr.67$~16I
EAST,StDE 1 ba upper, 1 br tower. Wlill l5'1o9t Sllp porch. In Laauna Hiil! ...._ ,,. ... rty 2000 UTIFUL
new crpt. fresh paint, 38drm up1radec:t23001q nicest$ 1tar park.•••••••••••'••••••••••• IEA
Pticed at '280.000.
' .C~l.L FOR DETAILS
'" . 7'44-7211
3222 house. at1ached ga r .
Corona del Mar Y<ird. $25. 493-3478 · ··•·····•·········••·•· So. of H"a~. 2 br. Iba, lg h·g rm. frplc. lg kit. no
pets, • lg patio. '2·car gar
$50 mo. 64-'·7710.
Heaut1lul Jbdrm. 2bu, 1500
i.11 ft . dulpe ' unit ,
S611C1 mo Ocean \"iew .
<:all Doc 581-1210 or 131.11m . l..°:'llQUEHll~IE · ------
S of hwy. pleasant IBr. EIToro 3232 2lia or can be made into 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Br 11 desired S.\l::'llA, 2bdrm. :!ba. air, water
frple, patio. "ash dr~ paid. guarded gale.
use. S69S 1mo 536·1453 894·0072
~IL_ _ Fountain Valley 3234
!bdrm house. I car gar.
nt"wh decor \dull, onh
:>o:o ~l~. ~so mo. + S4SO
de1' 640 6i:l6. 9·5pm.
\\kda~s
3 Br house for rent. 702
~larguente. Si65 mo
&12·a312
O:>o:THE BF:.\C.:H
l Br duplex "d rpll·.
$5() mo 641!·99110 Ask
f9f !::~!... __
•••••••••••••••••••••••
HmlES FOR RENT
4 Bdrm Condo &
5 Bdrm House. SS7S·S695.
Ga r age. familie s
pleas 1·. kids & pets
welc me <:all %4-2566 or
973·2971. Agt. no fee.
:"'t'" lu.x 3Rr 2Ba Condo. 2
l'<ir gar w /opor. 1600 sq
It. lrplc. mic owave. air,
:.111gle st~. S751J mo
6-15· 7253 or 552·4477
Lu.' 3Br 2Ba Condo, sgl 3br. 2ba. adulb. S7'.l5 mo. story, Si50 645_7253•
frpll'. cpt drp~ :;.;2.4471 Mt
i59·89fi8
".! hr house. trplc. 2·c~r T~wi1house 2Br + Den
gdrage $Oii mo Da'" Fam Rm·2 car Garage
IH0.9as0, E\ e:-. fi.&CJ ISH!). L~~..,~1t1c09h~n Adults S675 11111.....,. •l
Shorect.lffs 2 bdrm. den. ~----ch J240
Submit on children & ••••••••••••••••••••••• p~t ~ Sl ZOO mo. .\gt. 5 blks to ocean Elegant 2
613·.>.'154 bdrm, fam rm & den,
.! or J Hr h~e. furniture <S725 mo>. Plush crpts.
a\.111. Si50 m o 5(15 2•, ha, cedar & glass
1 ·arnal1on 673·0i2i Dbl car P'1. gar. full~ mamt yd. Adults. n o
pets. Inquire at 527 18th
S l 7 14 f 9 6 0 Ii 3 :1 I o r
960-tl.1.11
3 br. 2 ba dplx. SSOO.
~hl•rol4 .1\e, d1shwa~her
631-2490. 19'1 ·6i13
3224 ...................•...
MESA VERDE 5 Bdrm .
:1 b.ith POOL Reduced t11 g}St) mo Waterfront
Homes. fn c 631· 1400
2 kR DUPLEX Ea:.tside.
2 ba d1~h'" asher. pat IO,
~a!'_S$80 6i5·056~ __
--------llO~IES FOR RENT
J Adrms S525 S650
f'enred )a r ds a nd
garages F amil ies
please Kids & pets
welcome Call 96-l 2561> or
~3·2971 Agt . no fel' __ _
LOOK 3 bdrm 2 ba.gar.
den. f p. .' d for k rds &
~ss.w<>.&11_._21_s_1 __ _
NHDAHOME
847·2151
Lu~unous condo. 2 Br. 2' i
ba. 2 car gar . auto dr OP·
nr. frplc. pool. jac: S675,
Ph. 64~8986 or641· IS45 --- -HOMES FOR RENT
Br.ind :>o:e" • Ocean \'1c'' ! 2. 3 and 4 bdrms frm
:1 Br 2 1 ~ ba condo Sl'Xl CALL847·2151 S8i5 'mn 968·H56 or -----------G <.:undo ;i lrg bdrm I ' ~ba !l62·0491' ask tor rnn~ clean ---------~ar, quiet a rea,
SE\\ 3 BR 3 Ba condo. S550 mo. 975 ·6 100.
lplc. pallo. dbl gar ~r \lf)l·IXSI.
!>hops 5695 mo :>o:o pets ---
;\ g I . 760 ·1 211 or 3 Ir. 2 la, Fam R111 213-596·8209 aft"SP:\I --Ft replace. stove. rerrig.
Brand new 2 BR 2 Ba con· dishwasher. cover ed
do. lge rms . dbl gar. lge
side yd, S650 :"anc).
patio. ~mo. 842·4946,
855-1884. .9900
631·6990
f'.n llLY sized 2 bdrm nr f'or lease 3 BR 2 Ba. 2 car
schb~ garage w 'opener. A lrU·
Call 847·2151 ly lovely home 1 mile to
:"'ear beach 3 bdrm. f p. beach. ~90. Prof. adults
onl~. Call Monika al cnt11 ktchn. gar, lg yd 962·S585 or 963· 1139 :-.iow $.$25. 847·2151 --BRAND new 3 br, 2 ba. HHDAHOME comm. fac. (tennis. pool. 847-2151 clubhse1 So pets. 1695 ---rm. Ownr I Agt. 968-5430 Lge-lbr. Iba. frplc. patio.
separate bldg for 2 car or963·0867
gar. avail. Dec. 2nd. Lovely 3 Br 2 Ba home 11 ~ &JO/mo. 830Congress St . mi. to beach. 1640. Call R41-1733 962-7940 --2 Br. w Ith s lo\e . Dwntwn. Comp. remodel.
Backyard . Ga rage . 211r. frplc, patio. gar.
Carpets & drapes. S4SO Agent 536·0875 mo. 675·0935 :__.:~;-
Ocean view /city lights, 1242 ~
brand new 3 br, 2"'2 ba, •••••••••••••••••••••••
all pos s ible xt ras , Charmin& H untin gton
9lO po. 960466 Harbour 3 bdrm. ' :,ath.
I Just stepi. from sandy ~IESAVERDE beuch &t bay. Move· In 4Br. 3Ba. Fam Rm wet cond Avuil Nov. 30th. bar, prof decor " SIM mo. Incl. gardener.
lndsccfd. 3 car gar. 848·1113 da~·s : 494-2136
Oar ener . S990 . eves.
114mo.1804. 644·7367 Lge 2 bdrm. 2 ba. fflm ---
2Br Couaae w 1iarage & room, din room. Pool & ~d. 10 min to ch. 5450 »II 11men1tles. $750 mo .
mo Ad Its. no pets 2 l3·323·9500 ext. 2318 ~' . . , ' I L I 1! I 1
be.amed ceilings. Trplc. ft.patio townhome. z car <JD&). tirl .... .a •LEX IAYPltOMT ftftl I !USE dlnlnt area" encl. p11tlo. gal'age,_ walk to bay. A.9· ....,.,. ..... ~Sft ..,...-Forever view from e,•er)' UULL Offered for only SH4,000 sumab1e loan. Owner .... "'r ... Tow. Assume 11'' loan. Ex· room. On water with 631-4889 1· dfl)'I. ~,·es n4-840.7aao . f .: Lowett pric Sastttde, FUU.PRlCE! will help finance. Seller lb&S a&r. lBa. front cellent Anaheim loca dock ror 4~· boat . 4 ~ewer '2Br. 11 ,sa. dbl 3 Br. 11, Ba Condo. N.LL_
•• 3 Bdrm 2 bath. lar1e MISSIONREALTY &&.\'lbriJ\iolfer.152·1920 kitchen. Home to have ll<ln. 2·~·· & 2·2's 11 X bdrms. •baths, Im · ger.bltns.adlts.no~ts: cpt. drp. 11nt. pool. ~·1tau. tmmae Nan· famlly~!P900a,cucld1e1 34·0'731
1
. • neWexteriorsuppUedby fr':!!'.f!3°!l:!'e.s~~e~~ m""~~~:O:m~~\nc S450 mo. 642 ·7261 , S>?f mo.t213)399·~U.
· twket wlboftUI rm. Ir aac. ODlY -· · • , ...... CIOUSHOMI J ftll•IL 1eller. All tor 120.000 714 /957 ·4025. Evea &IO-~ __ ... , _,,,1H on qt, can~·on. 669lll .,,..,.. T"'"' (IJGl4e4). ~ Re11ltors 631-1400 .,_ .1144
_, 1 ..... 0 .,·all ot I 3 la• Bdrmt. ·a baths. PLACE .,.., .... 1 • ..,.. S29-3«>4. N,. ~· P 0 rt R 1 ,.1 .. r .. 2 bdrm. renced ''ard, at· ••• .. ••••••••••••••-•• .,. ' ..,. ' I fl)lc •• w--bar. dbl lot. o .. n·'I --... ft "' • d ~h lld " "=b Id .. b "b Ill/••• I ~. f~I price. rm:OOO.I PIONITllS~ MOIAIHOMI MUSTSELLI TownhO\IH. 3Br. ~Ba . tOKach.~ 1ar. c_ ... i .. et " r ,.'!;...", r.rr: :· "'41'50 -2hcMeaon2d"ple•l.u• .... ull" furnlth'""' for ... 90mo.IMZ·._, t -' r ' J• • . I 10' down. Assume lit SALIS ... .. ""' r # """ din ""· A/C. 2 frp~
,_ ......... ~ _.. ... I I TD. ·~r lnt. Jack Hardr fO,. n lilt,..... 2'70lllart.pr,.--A C.M. Beat offer Uk••· "·In ter 'l1ltor1. 41110. 2 Br. little c ute home. earn••• Assn di. ::--
----...,_ j' t Rll)', 714 -675 -UUj • • 140.HU · ~.!'...,nancln1.0wn/Act . mln ltnum. 1725 /mo. w11ar. In prime f:.sld• o . No .,.u. 11 1 ~' DIU1 Pilot a...tlJed Ad. I 213-867:~~ 1 . i----.~-==-==~-==~~·.J.:_..=-==· =====i::M-=7888=.=====:J..::~=· &>==· C=a=u=1112=--=·'=1M=o:;::i':o:.;,;.-~9'7:..:.:5.:..:· "~tt~M..:•..:·am..:..:_>
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..... U44 t .. 1h Weie U,7 ............. JJH .... ,.,..._h 11'9 CaiMMne ll2• ................ 3140 Afat.c .. a&Ww.. · v .......... 4210 " .. ....................... ....................... ··~·'·················· ·············~· .. •••••• ~;~'················· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ...... 44 •:AUrtf\11 • IWnn 1 ISt 1 d en,28 • 1 on do "4(t 2 Sly Dphc Zbr 2 ( 11 Preatl11ou1 ~ t!rUtlles ... ..,.... ._. Jl6t ...... ••-•••0 •
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........_. -motrlt. ' ~V m pcwl Jtpa Allau b1 frpk In Newpourt <'Ondo, I mlnl br, Interior 2 Bdrm 2 80, Townhouu. ~~tift~I) l~le~ 2 Br .. •••••••••••••••••••-.. ·~~'t:·s~ba 1:1n~oh on N~ ocean view oMtf-•• ...,,.lllOlfl• illH 11~0 tncl utd """" STOOmo fUf-6.303 <lccnr . Ir turnl1hed E.a.ICS., 2 yrs old. '490. · r. · Bl n · · • ' ore O " 041 500sq ft irlnt .. rkln1. ~ GM• .-r IUM ---=--· _ · 12L319'll·23'72 · 551-4100 eirt 231.2 da~5 . cld. No pets. 842·1G52 .. versalllM Lu"uJ') lBr. F\iUy tum s 1mlrt. from Cuaai Hwy In L•guni
,..,.;:;. <'09da. : .._.. lJ6t 2 llr l ba roU••e on l&e f'enlnsula. Older bearh 641-Uevea/wknda. ttB. Lux. new condos. t & =~~~ secure . :r~s~. '400/wkly. Reach, S5SO/m o. CJ(JI
dew .Srm fto bea t .... ••• .. ••••••••••••• wooded lot w rd~ d apt i'l blk to w1ter 2 Br 2 Bedroom In su r loca· 2bdrm, ILS00-165() Adultg, PauJ491·*4 act. "
-et.,~t'rt &;~'· br, BLU,fS, patio ~!~~~· :n~~ w~::· ~h I bu $425/mo winter. lion CArptted. null on· !!° ~·1~1, jac. tennis, l br Venaille, nr Hoaa & I.ado I.lie Bayfronl 2 br, Sil Otc. AJrport Busine•s
----~ fl'.'plc. ""•II 11n m t<d . ~ ~ ' 1525 mo \rly Utll incl. ly. no pets ~mo. 568 ~~ -.... _ be.acb. secured. adults. den, 2 ba, sand~ beach. Cntr. Irv. phone itn6w~
Jbdrm.1'.ba,end unit, nr = mn. 1 ... ,,., no p\'t:. t.i557l0 w Wilson.Call 646 1477 L<Hely 2 & 3 Bdrm util51nrl.M7S 731-4134 lrpk.$"'l00wk.675-0120or lng 1tn>ins 1copie"t
pgol tmlU C.:h1ldren 1'641 I.ID() LIDO 3 bdrm . Ne;r ~-h --;---29; 1,,8 a SlOJoAnnSt Townhouses . garage. -BAVFR~VlEW-6'73-23i5 furn tconf rm &\'8Af
C'Jt\ EOO ~Q.\47 evea COll9 C HAltMl a l'OtU1\ urd. ltludm. IJUk ne"h J~co ='t'~ 10 BR. No children. Smull dog patro. laundr.> tac S-i50 & ~ewpon To" er l'ondo. 2 l...tahto Sitar• 4300 S!OO mo. 754 ll-12 ;
lnlN '°"hwood Tbti S 8 d r rn • + d e o . :::f· 8lO mo n 11 fl l\~l. house Sund~)~1 11 2 al P::,~ l'Uos1dered 5410. mo. Z75 Call 213 596 7202 ur br. 2 ba. sec . P<>ol. docks ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rt_;;rated -office spact Lak~" Deluxe l Br loh U.auttfull)• appointed ~ _ :t.:ndSt orcu11 Sl6·!#922 f.>.l2·7:144 ~!/960-7347:.._ a\&11 0\erlooks Lido MO\-lfti'.' Avoid deposit!> & Ciampus Or. 2400 ~Q ~-
1!1\d unit ~Ith rrpk home w /3000 IQ rt s-to AM 3 210 --~cw 2 Br 2•., Ba Condo, \'1llage. CataJ1na Lease. cut II\•!\& ex pen1&s '. Will dh ide. 90' J>er ?>Q.
iultnr<•Yli tennlt PQOI• A\i.11 ll l5 ti0 up l<• l "••••••••••••••••••••• SHORT TERM ~).S445 2 Br 1 Ba Apt Din. rm .. Mirro·wu11e 9l50 mo, Ua~·s 16-0-1933. Profess1ona~ly sin ce Pull setvlce Court~s> o
elc, call wkd) i. s.4 1434 ~ e u r le he A 6' t> n t , Sµ.ll'l.llng l'lean. coz)' 2Br Fl.Im. 3 txlrm. 2 ba apt Curpe1 s. dra11es, pool. trash com pt .. elec. gar. en?) S48 0094. -ur71HOUSIMATES broken; ~O-~. '
Wtnda83l·•t• 673 iJUO u Ider home B 1 ~ Weeki~ or monlhl> · lndry rm. Im med. oc· opener. Tennis. Racquel N H H I "" .,.., __ H I bark.vard. N"ar F.d1nger Agent, 675·8l70 cupanc). Adults only' cat ball. pOOI, Jac • sauna. No • eilr oag osp 2 Story. 832·4134 PRIM1:. ..,
ruRnEROCK ,,ur,.,.,.. om c.IJO(),len· & ,;' ~ ------OK.TSLMumt &42·l6-03 2 Br.1'2 Ba.DiningRm '" .. • "''· d0ttell1bl'h. $695 mo '" a 1n S 150 I mo. Af+I wnh • pets. 1 or2 Ktds 01\ S8SO Llundn hook.up S48S. 1..001\JNGTOSHARE? CORPORATE J ~!!'111>,t!:,! 8dxlnrtmlo'c3aA\1
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n3 f73·6210. u:t71918. _ _ ~shed S4~S49S 2 Br 112 Ba mo. Call 964·2566 or f>.12-Sf\29. Wt-. MATCH ROOM· •• •• • ~ •_.-"'· COZY 2 bdrm. r pls, bll ••••••••••••••••••••••• T\l.nhse. All butll·ins _!!73~1Agt .. nofe~ _ :\IATES' ..-~ .. "" --.o. -1800 MIWPORT HEIGHTS lcAoo Isa.ct 3106 Patio. yard. Lnd rr rm 2hdrm. s.soo mo. M :\1. 7S2·947S OFFICE Sbdrm. 2ba. lrg yrd wilh ms. l(ar. huge> d for pets . Srn child sm pet OK Lge 2 Bdrm. nu cpts ,dr ps. WaJ.k to beach. avail 12 1 -759 953 I _
.... ~1ECR'l.'TIVR•. HOM I:; pool, remodeled with all 5390 &-17·2151 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I milled. ~cupanc>-. TSL µat10. gar Kids OK. $395. Owner 1Agt 559-5164 e' ei.. SllR. eJ(lra lg. 6 br. 3 ba •
aw' e ock ldge 3 br~ new kitchen. SJOOOimo. Detuxe Bayfront 3bdrm. M t 642 1603 7911Holt.847·4803 --home. Nr . OCC. l\lale or ---,-212 ba, 3 car gar. a vail. ~a:.e ln<'I gardener & HUO&SE<'TION ti 2ba. refrig, frplc, adults. gm · --------Oceanfront. Sl200 mo. yr-· Female. Beau673·1697 ~N. o lease on lhis 3so ·
Imme d 9 7 9 . 2 5 6 o. pool mallltenance No Ha\·~nf µro[)l('r" '.' W1e no pets. SSOOtmo y rly. ro4.5 Tustin. 2 br. bit -ins. THE WHIFFLE TREE b lse. 4 Br . 2 ba. frplc. -n ---d · ll deluxe h ofrtce w · 851·0010. 8 ,\ 39()5 µetb 642-2482 or 95i 1166 l'a n e P )OU llX a.\' Ca I 646·7213.644·5138 gar. patio. no pets. 5425. LuxUJ1 Adult units al ar. Furn or unfurn. Agt. oummate w:.inte . clean. pm·ate bat . Super C.
rer A\ a i l approx now ror eo un ~el1nA . IAYFRO ... T &l6-4380 rordable lh·ing 1.2 & 3 i00-ll9!1orGTS·Sl60. qwet. nonsmoker 1, blk l~\1~6:11 -777~ _
Oranietree 2 br hme, or 1 11.15.80 !U7 21SJ " Br Wel l decorated ------from beach. Newport UX RY T
Qr. + den ~ o pet:.. -Westminste-r 3298 ~ice 2 Br l ba w /slip Large to~nhouse. 2 br. I', Olymp1r su.e pool. l1Rhl Snug & <.:oz~ tbr J blk to Be a ch S27S S teve, L U SUI E ,. ~20•mo flOOI. tenn ls.Nt-;WP ~1 R T <:REST ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sll«l/mo. _ 673·533~ ba.ldry,J02SCoohd"e. ed tenniscourt.J acuzzi. bch S395mo + utll 645-5386. l mni,.eds~cupf..ini·~ff~
581·3165, 768-6663 Tom 3bdrm. 2 iba. condo. dbl .14 8 28. . 11_ Balboa PettinMllo 3107 " park like landsrapmg. 673·831.10or673·9105 ~<1. l le 0 8 o tee:. _ ele<> ~ar Id ' wet bllr · r. ;i, ne" cpts "" ~mo,675-0f>OO _ fTomS360R46.0619 -------_ F't>m rmrn1e \\anted -r1·onrerence & rece41
Oranaetreecondo.2 br, I 1 · _,. ' pa111t. i:arage S695 mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• J.:.irgelllr I Ba u nrurn St9250 mo..-1, util tion !\oil Cen te:.r .
ba. refrig, l t>onis e ls. ~~ls.~~:1t~i;w559~:i~:i ~-~3.18.1146_5'!_92 _ · \\ailOec l 2bdrm.lba. 2~~rNew pamt.d_rapes 2S°;;aciousl&2Bdr;Apls S32S H AA!ter6PM9GO·I05!l :-le~port Brh. Contacl ~• · k e , .,., L ,,1 11 ,. u.....---Fu • h d 2 sundecks. gar. ds OK Relrige No Tranquil Settino amonu (_'all""'"·"""l ----1\nn H a r\e~ 12 1 ~1 1 '"""· Jae:, etc, wtdec . \es .... , anu a .. ourt, .--s m l$ e or $00 mo "earlv all ulll pets. S355 mo & u1> & " " · ,...,., ""'" Female roommate want· 5:Jli-~lll. 12.1_:~9S.6iS·9~ __ Opcn Houst>SattSun Unfwnlshed 330 0 pd.64S-s38.1. ·· Sie,ra :\lgmt Co ~t~e~m::. 1 pant' trees Xtrularut'be;iul•l'uf.j Br. ed to s hare new
-••••••••••••••••••••••• ---f>.11·13'24 . AF""oumt~~" . .,~·6. ·"~901 pet!. \\ a I k., t '' b e a .. h I urnished 28 r <'ondo I orona del ~tar offtce!i. A\a1lable now. 2 Br 11 ~Ba Harbor View Ho m~. * ,l'w 1 Br 3 Ua 2 Story COf'OflCI def Mor 3122 ·• .,...,., .,.. "" " p 1st tlr & 2nd fir walkuu Ir,.:_· lownhome in Wood-3"'·1rm. 2ha .. fa· 0, rm. ~ · "111· l '.· Bil Townhiius·b W.1~her Ur_,er hook u.. ool. Jacuu1. g urage L' & ~ "" n pie '.\car <:ha11mun & ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ... MARl+IERS WALi< ,, !>?60 840 68.ls r .;J,.\ al'('ess vark1~ bndg~. Nr park. schools, new crpl. paint. drape:.. Hw~ ss. Orani,:e $795 No 2 Br 1 Ra. So uf PCH, c;arage, 1Jal10. older GJrage. ;\ri pets . S1i5 · · '.\:(J lease req Re~ shopping.SS~ S900. lse, 6-14 5965, pets.549-3<!32,6-1114HO. adults only $400 /ml) mature, q 111et litestyle. Lrg 2 Br 212 Ba From mo 752 i-'74 ____ :w·~ businessman seek:. rates.752·1830 •·
5675. Beauti"ful 4 Br 644·7ti97. . 5'i8·1486bet 9·4. ~ochildren,no pet:.s.150 S175-WESTMEW•ORT qwet.non-s mkr 2br.2ba -----Oran11e ..... " .. cxe•• h"me, -_ _ _ mo c•o_c,79 Lrg3 Br. with \ard $.575. ,... I b n>sn ft approx Pr1vat1· <G reentree.) Comm 8"_.0 ... TCO ... DO ... ·'"" " v .....,.,.. "'ear Hunt ifarbo Lge3 br.2 baupperapl. u.x. apt" 3~ \'lewS290. · "' · · ,.,rft " " I Br 21ill. 3 car <>a1·, Snac 2 Br 2 Ba c pL --·----'' ' ur u 6728 hmh 1-"r"\ con\entent. ~• No pets Clo t d " ,. Ba h 1 SIO 6ll07 :-;11 pets 5675 mo Am. ~~-___ · ...,.... · :.e 2+ en. excellent Inca· m1t·rc1. mod bltns. xlnt draµe~. bit-ms, refn g, ·r eor ~e\\h decor · .,. ~"'ar Nwp l"r wy '&
school.833-3307. twn. S1700 pr mo Boat loc nrOranue liill l'u,.t elec gyr ·'oor Cul-de-greatE0S1deloc.Noveb HiS-llliO Golf Cour se /\pt. ot·n llnstol S225 mo ,\\all
I .. ''" u u 2 Hr garage apt Quiel. TURTUftOCICGLEM ~f~~va1lable .-\gt ~.9i8-J48.\ s,,,.,,\dultsonl.\.nopets. ~-~~! .-\dulls pre ferre d S600 3 lJ r 2 Ba Apt \lew.wlktnbl•h.tenn1s Lll!OitiSSt Cl:m sutfo
SBr. 38a, 3 car garage. --C~iniums -1673-1.Jj;~ Lar~e newer I Br with H:.arcl" ood floors :-; r lilcx·k to beach En<'lsd 1-!_0lf, S_!li5 mo:._499-4692 =I> l'o,tu \lc-.a. 645 78-! (~1988-1234 ext 214 LEASE· ,"\Dl'l,T ST l:OIO Unfumished 3425 P\l Studio w kitchen. garage Adults. no pets ~ach S3SO 5:.IB 711:1_!:1 gara~e. 11at10, all built ,\la le 511 want~ female START '81
-co:-;Do Nr Hoa" Hos" ••••••••••••••••••••••• """'"'. nc1 µet~.-. walk to ~ ~>1·5i66. ll~S .\dulls ~nl~. no pets rnmpanion to shre OICt' W-----v1a ~ .. ... """' ·' DELL')( t-: 28r <!Ba 1 mile ' I I\ T s L M ) t -Y" age .. rn 0 e n v 1 e w . fro m Luxurious condo 2 llr, beh Oa, ... agt 644 -7211 I h · gm one bdrm a pt in e \ 2 Bd condo. S.150/mo. clubhouse 10 min "ulk 21 b 2 t --Z-2 Br 2 Ba Townhouse to >eat: ·Adults. no Pel!>. 1M41 lli03 change for r m /bourd
Avail._now. Call Roger or lo uc11 Guarded gate, un· t!C:,r ':;pn/a~r:l~·r :~ol' C osta Mna 3824 f'rplc. balcon~ $<1.10 mo Sl.iOJmo. 960 ~145 : L •' r" e 3 Br t; "P e r 847-2239_ -----RIGHT
Fred. 559-9400 derground securil' park Jal' $i5 Ph 645-S9R6 · ••••••••••• ••• • ••• • • • • • l all 63l·t>990 Kath~ "r V 1 ... ~Oft " ,. mg Pool. s aun'a, ex &IHS45 o r MfWLYDECOR. \Ian. ·~ 38 Duplex ! house from Roommate wu 11ted tu witttUniqueOffices
errise rm. no pets. S450 -. -. -. I Br gas pd. end gar. ---.----••••••••••••••••••••~•~ ocean. With l>eaut1ru1 share3Br house m c :\I at lido Marina
mo CJll Realtor Bob Nt•\1 2~r + ~!en 2•·,l.ia at d 1washer. pool. Adults. 's~~·pm~,l~l:~~p· di:::etr° CONDO 30· bo;it slip Ba\ \1ew ~~mo 675-8018 Jaruzz1. S250 + utll vm-
REALTOR:--Hindman 17141 6453-174 . bt:h Sec l-~n1r~.tenn1!>, fi4~·5'173 ----fe male 50+ S295 \lew .. 2+den.1Jresllg1ous21Jdrm.lba.~earl~.upµer S48·841fl~1!s __ -~-
RENTALS I( no ans :\Ir H.,offmanl s1>u. pool & i..atllnl( 21r.1 loA~t r-54339 Huntington Harhour a1>a rtmenl. dl'c k s. Fe~1le Rm matc: WantNI
2 br212 ba+den $950 595-1657 . Arlu lt ~ only S97S mo ..!..'. ----SlOSO mo. R H.R .\gt , ti75 ~7.tiiS3504 w shr Cc1ndo '\ B Cdm
3 brii ,ba 1 ------a\ail late :-;ov. !162·!l757 :°'iewl~ decor as pd. E.\STSIOt-: l>harp 2 OR . 6'iJ·i300 _ S60. •bd s h \"II afte1·6P~I t·nclgar,pool.dwasher. \\C-C"TV·1.IFF"2bdrm 1•, a\·ail no w 8250 m o
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3br2~·· ba ""'25 • rm pa nil> 1 a . _ · _ _ ne\I. cpts & 11ainl Encl 1--•-ach 3 848 r...,•~ G" 7"'" • , "" count k 1 h d 1\dults. 642-5073 .,_,.. ... DC hi! T11\l.11house $.535 mo -~ ~ _ 3 br 2' 2 ba SllOO·S14tl(l r~ 1 c en, woo u , P· k , bd 1 ---gar . no pets. S42.5 mo 25 I •••••••••••••••••• • •• •• 4 b 21 b ft>t\I\ S 25 pel(ged flours le<1ded ni . ar . ' rm!> 2 ~ 3 B T h 16 h Pl B .-\tlulb c.nl~. no pet~ 1728 M f' needed to ~hr 2 Br 2
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2baa +bon"""u"s'. 119500 glass "'lndow ·. t ren~h ba.g_r_t!at Grel'nbelt_l.ot r own ouse t ace. Apt Oceanfront. 2bdrm. 2ba. Lledf di .... 87~3 ... Sbr
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doors. Linda 631.6990 ~r 1:ennis. poo l. sµu a\ ail Newly deror g as pd , 546-;,88(1. ask for Pam frplc, deck S8SO t m o . or .ane .,.. · "'·• Ba C.:\1 ap1 S22.5 pr mo
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Laguna \.illage -645.7307 a°'. l2 1 S750 pp 552-1311 enc I ga r . po o I . Ad~ 2 Br 2 Ba. lrg v1tra cle~~497 172.5. I Br LuJ(ury Penthouse l!.l•l pd_;_ 556-0289 afl 5 -
r _a Tuslin~SO H"'RBORRIDGE t>12-S073 cas s. rapl·S. rg enc .Bache lor alJt. beaut Com ed V fl h 3b 2b .,, ---d t was h e r Adults 1 et d 1 1 \ersC11lle!>. Near ocean. Female will share with!
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Kids & pets okay "" Apartments Fumith~d pat 10, pool. $420 mo ocean view. 11vt garden P r ec ,u 0 us &ame. Love!~ furn Apt.
• \lagnaficent new 3 br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• St>a<'1ous Famih 3 bdrm f>.15·4074 ' setting. \I.Oman pref l'rt~rd & fin Sec bldi:. tnC M S230mo .. 140-9398.
new. condo Sec. Sl.500. Balaoa reninsula 3 70 7 2 ba. $395. 2 bdrm $340. 5"00. 499.5304 9.5 pool. g~ m. rec lac $.SSO --------
f>I0.9345. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pla)ground & pool. 2 Brl1'J8aapt,goodlor a m~. A~'l ~~18617 -'i'.°T!..t 4 350 1-------------2 1 H~-l Ba. hay \'1ew. 5'18·9556from 12·7~ lion.2·st~198.~5 2~~~~::;~n1~~~'ia~nf~~e1~· Chll Ha\"en 2 Br. Iba.•••••••••••••••••••••••
THEILUFFS cecr\s.SS95wntr."695H· 3Br 2Ba.Near0CC $450 p\'l road. SR75 mo (rpk. <'Pts llq 1s. :;toq~ Huntington Beach gar
Spacious & s potless 3 ly .-\sk for C11nn1e .A mo t;pper apt. I Ba, Upper 2 BR.adults 499·1997 Older adul1s. no pels SIOO 12131 -133-243.5: Box 449.
bdrm, 2'2 bath end unit 67S.6670 641.8657 onl~. no pets. $345 mo ------~r~'. ~~Iii _ _ Seal Beach90740
with pvt patio on "The BEACHFRONT INN.Low 3HW.Wilson,631-2177 LocJunoHIHs 3850 SanC..,_nt~ 3876 Greenbel t '. in o ur LUXURYLIVIHG -••••••••••••••••••••••• !::.side C.M .. nr 20th ""S"2 C· .. w"'5l)a:'-''"'E original area. Avail. now ~i1~0,!;'40rates S90 up wk In qwet Adult Comxlex. 2br 1470, ut1I pd, Adults Lit gun a Hit 1 s New ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tus tin. s In g I e. Co r ~ '~ ,.,., '"._'" at""'"" Agt 640 cc"" 0 .ro• '"c81"" 0 pets 333 E lak 'd Studio a pt with ocean storage SS0.673-3600 "'7o1U, • •oN'<J'V, ----Spacious 1 BDRM. PT . .....,. ""n · · es1 el Br 2sty. Con· \lel4 Elec. furn 5215 ---------
1 Hr. Carpets. drapei. Dis hwasher. fi replace. 21stSt.MGR3D do , loft . Crplc , a ll moSee Mgr,3.12Enclno 2iOmo.Storageonly.see
College park home 4 ~pt. Crest 2 br. 2 ba~bl Slll\e&refrige l;tilspd. c athedr al cei ling . Deluxe 2bdrm twnhse. ~~.:;;~~~~11 ~~~5. «213 ) Ln.-\plt'.S C. aft UAM a t 325 E . l7lh
bdrm.2ba.comm pool. i;ar. pool. lennis , SiSO l;ten:.111> for ·I S3i5 balcomes,pool&spa.NO lrplc. closed gar . lrg _ ----Ptace.C.M 646-5137
well kept and lanscaped . Aft 7PM 752 2209 675·0935 PETS. 5395 mo. & UJ>. patio. d1.Shwasher. deck. (Jurul Creek. New 2 st or~ 1 MOVE IN IMMED. gardner. S730 lease --------- ., . ---:--~IESAPINF.S '.\lo\·e inrmmed Freshh Sngl gar.~-elec incl. 67 ~-642· 6724 Ca II Ad lilu!fs. ba}·front E plan. 3 -hr. l ba. "inll'r. rental. 26.50 HA RLA A,. E_ Siii5. 388 Ba' St 642-046 l Br View of lake & hills painted & cleaned I & ·2 H B area Ca II \ nswer
Answer•313at642-4300 hr. 21,., 1'a. fam rm . l'(atage. urnil. :'l<ov 16. SPMC 5<19·2447 sh;rp E.s;d;~nit, ~ ;a~~:s~~~~:~;,~ fl~~-Bdrm. Iba S295·S365. Ad•412,2-lhrs.642.,300
2-lhrsper d;H . SUOO/mo.644·4144 s.iso mo, adults onl~ Luxunous condo 2 Br. med ava11. lrg2br.1 ba. 1213 )283-4979aft 5 • Refrigopt1onal Carports <>Hk.Retttal 4 400
· · 9-~ REST---bl5·922!i 2•, ba. 2 car gar. auto new carpets. $495 mo. & laundry rm. Walk to ••••••••••••••••••••••• l:niversity Park Condo 2 A rC 38r2ba.frml . -R--door opnr. frplc. pool. lst la5t + S2SO securit~. LairJ-aHltJUel 3152 beach.4!18-4209&496-3233 ' bdrm. 2 ba w /bar. at· d i ning. en cl ya rd .. 1 B cot_tage. I Ba. new .\gt.957-0'701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTCLIFf-BLDG
NlWi'(.'RT AEhCH t ac h ed gar 11 11 01 greenhse. gardener incl. ~ls ,hga~0 nr '>hopi.1& jac Ph 6"5 8986 or 2mi frombeach.2Br.2Ba ~ntsFumish.d
clubhouse. S600/lease S1050molse c;.i4.4_221 c-,3a.~ ....... aft SoP~ml o ~r ~ &ll tS-15 - - -FOURSEASONSAPTS. condo Adults onl" Pool orUnfuntish•d 3900 '1 VJ"'f.) ~ & J •••••••••••••••••••••••
642·671.4 CallAdAnswer:-.;wptff 4 b 21 b 3 JBdrm.21,bacondo o1s. Couple,nopets.2br,11, rer room 23732
11314 al 6-12·4300 24 hrs . gts, r. 2 a', OCEANFRONT hwshr. trplc, 2 car gar ba twnhse. Patio, pool, Hlllhurst L·ntl a3 or 1 Seawind v1·11a1 perd car gar. gardener. Pl . Bach Penthou~e with P\'t :.t t\vall now. 5'00. 73SJoAnn642-1602. C.Jll 2l3 860 ·2067 C)r e ~~och 3248 S9'25. &15·6098 rn:.1gmrirent \ 1ews for I 9i25 mo 1st last . secun· SJ'iS mo Lg 2Br. lBa. )m .2_!4_·54_1_·634_6· _ _ ~3:i1 i::ts ~~"l 4 1 ;i~~~
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~larcus Channel. 2 Br 2 ~pecial person $410 yrl~1 t~ ,\vail now 673-2282. 9 patio. gar, lndry Cac. lst Newport .. ach 3869 lrom $US. 2 bdrm from
COZY OCEANFRONT Ba Bwlt m~. patio. dock. indd utlls 6i3 6372 to5pm. & last. +sec. 548_5861 ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • $.505 + pools. t ennis.
lBr, iMob1le Home. knot g ara~e. washer dn e r ~d.I Mar-3722 S I B PARK NEWPORT waterfalls. ponds! Ga:.
Call M r Howard
64 5 6101 l'hn1N• prl\alt> uffit·l'
a\ail tmmrd \l.1lh1n at·
et'..i ofl1ces . :"pt l:lch
S2tMl pr mu. least' (:cam
pat1ble prolesssional dt-
s1red 645 4212 i
hook up S825 earJ' ·tunning. a rge 1 r La 1 bd S285 Q t ' k •· h ty pine int, frplc. pvt bch. . ~ , ••••••••••••••••••••••• G d \ I p I R rge rm. u1e .or coo ing ex eating --------adltsonly $75-0mo ,1714 ) biS.9875 ~.1ut lurmshetl \wnh~e. a:e"ae'hss" 710 ~. 18t~c bwlding with heauuful COUNTIYCLUI ~aid. from S~n D1estu 1617 Westchfl N.8 . Want
4!1&-3816 Newport Shores Cana l \lew of ocean. tt!nni~ 'l. St la ndscaping A DUL TS LIVIHG ~"~ dri q> :\orth on financial inst 7000i. f
Front 4bdrm 3ba newh 11001. mu:.t :.ee. S!llS O\'ER 35. ="o pets S I & ~ach to McFadden 1hen I.st noor . .\genlS4l 5032. · ' · · -· 911-I mile to bea"h 2br LEEWARD APTS. 2020 ing es. 1 2 bedroom \\est on :\lcFadde n to ---Ocean view 2 Br+den, 4
decks. lse, S700. No pets
Dave. agt 644 i211.
Oen View 3Br + den,
2i..-t Ba. 2 sty, ~pa .
microwave. S850 mo.
700.9596
EMHALDIAY
Oceanside . rront row
Gorgeous view of tn·ine
Cove. 4 Bdrms. lg rec nn. 494 -0029
L.o1J-o Hiiis 3 250 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Condo. 3bdrm . 2 ba .
washer tdQ·er. gar, no
pets. 1575/mo. 581·1799.
l.olJ-o....... 32 52 •••••••••••••••••••••••
't>rofe s sionall y
Decorated /upgraded Model Hme 3br, 212ba,
lge kitchen & mast~r
bdrm, frplc, 2 palios.
commtr pool/spa. clean
move.in cond no pets
a\>all Jan. $725 /mo.
831·836S
Niguel ~res. 3 br, 2 ba
+den. 11rden home. Nr
comm. pool. tennis. New
paint, crpts . S72S /mo.
"94-~<owne'>t-
M..-Vlefo 3267 •••••••••••••••••••••••
.
HOME FOR RENT
3 Bdrm. ~so. Fenced
yard and 1arage. Fa m ily
plede. Kids It: pets
welcome. Call 964:2S66 or
'73-2971 Aat .. no fee.
decorated. pool. tenn1:.. 2 11~·· • " a ts & townh garden apt dishwash. FUiierton A\ e . I blk E ~ · ouses S ~aw 1 n d \' 1 11 age kOLL CENTER Pnme comer 1111 L p t•
blocksloocean962 6611:1 C ostaMesa 3724 BB(' S425 645·06-15. ofNewponAve.&lblk omS-149 6441900 ii l-1 1893-5198 NEWPORT 4.500s4 t1 full en1rc.>
Beaut 4bdr-m-. Jb-a.-n~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• !>16-2313 So.of Bay 631·0~7 Oceanfront for Winter Rooms - ---4 000 Ele~anl executl\'e sulle:o> modern. gi n s~ b ldJ:
maintenance. prol decor SUS CA SIT AS --------k Rentals. fUm1shed & un· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111 prestige local1on. Wrt h 1~fi3()3
S1Wl1mo. I bloek from f\Jrnlbr apt.$3SO&up \\"1VL nc>w 2 BR. pvt Spar lingdean2Br.S430 fum.Broker.675-1912 OnNe"'portBeach Beach t·umv l e te s upport :"E\~l::XEC.Sl'ln:s beach 548_4769 Enrl gar. ,\dults. no deck ""erlook1ng golf Fenced yard. ut1ls paid Hot e l r oom s m a 11 St'n1ces -----fie\:. 2110 Newport Bl c·ou.rse. new cpts & paint Reing Small l'h1ld 01\ OCEANFRONT. kitrhen <!JOii w ocean 'it<I IGl -0681 Bf.ST 0 C. LOl' .\Tl<a.
For renl be~1ut upgraded a-18 4968 betwn S·:lO & 125 1no Cull 5-16 5880, ~o pets. 1960 Wallace -l Br 2 Ba Ouple1<. Wood front S260 & up + S260 5 " lO fl 2\MI N Tustm AH. I m 2 BR 2 Ba condo. S62S mo. '1P~I a'k for Bill or Pam 5-18-956-0or S48-240ll beam ce1hn~s. l'arpets. ~(.'<' & deposit. 6;3 415.i l:.!. ·iJI .,q II ~rnd r · S \ & :-;" 1•1 f \\ ys c Call964·6010 - ----drape~. all b utll·•n:-t ---uu,~pd fromS85uv 779 tHOt decorated of~
!':>lunn1ng large 1 Hr 2 Br l Ila ~00 lo ~25 DanaPoint 3 826 Enclosed garai::.e w1th1Laguna Beuch :itotor Inn, W 19th St CM Tum Recept11m1st telt•11hon1·
S6··-2 Br I .. 1arden 'I t ool I L) "'a<her oaru u... ••••• •• •••• •• • • •• • • • • • • h d f ·is· l""'l ,;> mo . vJ. g b 1 II re1· -" ·., .. ~ ".I!> er r~er urn or, !i~'> No Pacific Coast · ' "'" '>t•rv . \erox. <'Onf rm
moclemw 1Swed1sh frplc area S38.') 7111 W 18th ~83391 I & 2 Bdrm Garai.te. unfurn s1soo. lmmed. Hw~. Laguna Beach St.~ !ten 11\:iil From nr ocean. \.'acan1 St 0 Wi!Sher. clean. Close ?Ccupanc\ TSL :\lgmt~ 0Jtl), Wttkl) 1'1tt•ht-n CdM Uelu"e Suite!>. 11041 ~7.'imonthh" fi4l1un_ ..;:_...,._. __ h 3740 ~H·i11mko.2BPrll Ha.12860 beat·h rro m S3~5 &121603 available Low \l.tnter Sl)ll AC.ampl pk~. til 95:i11!i3i ~-.... ..,. ...... DC-ll' nr.\ ~ esu -493-595:! Alt 5P :\I ~I r --'" 294 pd 2865 F Cst HW \ ..&..
:\'WPTCREST .i BR ••••••••••••••••••••••• \'t<r<le 'o kids pel~ Blain. ~EW r pts drps 3flr. 2Ba rates 4""''5 r;;s 6900 · ·' luliness Re-ntol -44 ~}1
Sunken Ir. frpk. 3 ba, br, 2ba, lo\'ely lge unit 111 Ht'ls r~ d .. \~ ~9-6221 ~bd,:;; a.pt 5360 2bdrm fllJIC, sar 2 blks bch :"<> Room with kitchen 1m \ -'"THE" ••••••• ••••••••••• • • •..:,•
ram rm. bar. tennis. 4·plex Clse toocn.1enn1s 2 hr. 2 ba Mesa Verde C1ptS450 586.0741. IJets S625 m o ~rl~ Near bus & s hopping For ~tore&offlce~11at e:it
pool, $750. 675·9005 rourts. & jogging 1rak \<lit~. no ii et s . s450 ;68.4541 645-1682. center. Adults onh E\ ~" EXECUTIVE SUITE n·asonable rat~s.
-----8650 16672Algonquin .. .,.,_,921 6-9·30 orwknds 9627520 F'Ull servlceomres in SOOto2700Sq Ft. SEAVIEW 4 Br. 3 Ba M6-511 1 <Jr >l•lfi·5531 K .,...,.. -- -Very nice 2br. Iba frplc, -------NewportC l Port Ro)al \·ie" of Tohm 4le 3Br.:?Ba.frph'.deck. bar-b-que. lge patio ~laleorfemaleforhght& · ener \IESA\EROF:Dll & 2hclrm. l '~ba. bit-ins. pvt S525 mo M arth a SSOO \ I . 675 3504 640·~7~ l'L,\7.A ocean night lights I -. 3744 deck. gar. S4SO lse only 661·1161 494-3672 . r ~ . . bright room in n ew P'' "Z" tS2.5 ~lesu \ erde E t' )I $1600 mo. 4 Br 2•, Aa rvtM ,,.0 ,,,. • -675-2897 townhome 0 C Ocean .,_ "' 545-4123
New Bed.ford. Night light ••••••••••••••••••••••• 760-_.,...,_9_or_i_uv-M09'----Bright airy tbdrm. bal. ~'. Ap;-&° CondJ breezes. Jog or bike to EXECUTIVE SUITES
\'iew $1400. Both a' ail Br. I Ba . adlt:., p()OI. ten SPACIOUS 2Br adult apt. ::.mall ocean \'lew. small rentals Vi lla Renlals belll'h. w~nt cle.10 neat There is a difference."
Dec. lst. Guarded a rea. ms, SS50 mo. 1 \ r lse. Open beam ceilings. lots pet OK. $350 661 8307 675.4912 Broker non smoking ver~ quiet
p00l & tennis. 644-5403. 548-04_12___ of "ood. Incl frige. No - ---I\ pe. Kitch pn v ReC 714 /752-0 2 34 ---· Newport .. ach 37 69 pets . S38S lmo 673-8803 or 2 Br 2 Ba. Pt. Niguel Con· OCEAMFROM Sl40/mo 631·2288i 21162 Michelson Dr r:212
ON W .... ER·. 2 Bdrm. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~7:156. do. Washer/Dryer Pool ,--------2021 BusinessCnlr •213 '" & tennis . ssoo mo 3 Br. 2 ba, duplex com· Nosmoke.nodnnk. l.ove· ---
ba. S.Curily. -/mo. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. '"'''· gu. 4"!·6700 o'66 l·lS2' pl •"ly "'"' bi>hed · j '' '"'". m "' e • b' JOO " It. P" me H 8 ON WATER: 2 Bdrm. nrSo Cst Plaza. No pets. Yearly lease S895 wlbath, ~1~a Verde pool ground floor location.
very clean S77S m o yrl.r. ssso. 644· 1103 3 Br, 2 ba, lge liv rm 673-2113 home 545·5105 aft 6. near beaches. a ll ut1 I.
SECURITY CONDO. 2 w frplc . gar $525 ~ -ot...J ~IOO taxes etc incl S2001mo Bdrm. 2 b a , \ i e w Large 3 Br. 2 Ba. 4-PleJ(, Manha 497-5454. 494-3672 Large 3 br. 2 ba. putio. ,.._..,, M ""'' 84().lOO... 165()/mo patio, garage. n ew ---rrplc. dshwhr. newl) de· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~----
ON WATER. 2 Bdrm. 2 carpet. 1040 B Valencia. Lge'2 Br. I ba, chtld OK,. cor. $650 mo Agt . DO YOU UKE 900 sq rt, prime H B .
ba. exceptionally furn. 5'85.Nopets.545-7933. 5385, Martha 497 -5454, 673-9060. MOTILS? ground floor loca tion.
XB CM . up to 4i00 sq _.,.
,1\ utl at l)rt me corner
17th & '\ew11ort Bl1tl
6'75-6\IOO
'.\.ev.port ~lodern Store or
office. ~r po!tt ofl'irt• s 111 ,
Slf, JCl.!I_ 2~14_!7 700)
DANA POINT
Ofc Apt C:ombo 5 'tlm +: _b_a~ & kitchen 9i5·1 i_tcl
Camn.rcial
Reatah 4475 $1400/mo. ~-3672 Weekly rentals from 134 pear beaches, all uttl. YfAA·AOUNO FUN: A'ail now. freshly paint· Quiet 2 Br. Apt. Garage. & up g46_744s 2274 taxes. etc incl SS751mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Social· Activities Di ed 2 & 3 br apls, J 0 . &Toro 1132 patio. pool. Adi.fits. no Newp0rt Blvd. c .M SW-1964 Aasemenl space avatl Wahrfr.t Homes Inc
......... •3 1-1400 reel'". Free Sunday Property Management. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets 1801 ff. lSth. St. ....oJ~ ----------Approx 4,000 sq ft Oh
Brunch. BBO 5 •Par· 751·2787. •OELUX E CONDO• Newport-Heights. $450. Voe-Rtfltab 4250 ATTIM110MI waterfront. NB. 642·4644
3 Br 2•· ea Fr I c 642· 7340 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Doctor L•wy-ues •Plus muchmore 2 Br 1•2 Ba. Townhouse. , .,..,. . P c, /c l . --MOUMTAIM VIEW ' ... , STORE. ~outh Coust :~sr•~~e~Lesf~ons: Adults, no pets . $395 mo. ~t\~.w~~::: :i~~ AJBal A~l. ".~!etps. 21 Br. 2 VILLAS Ele:::~~.~n"~:!~ of Hw~. L1tguna Bu<;h 646-9507 M1·918J 559. . n om rt'-'· oo. spa, ~ ... IS CLUI Hun ti n g lo n B c h . 000+ sq fl. SSS01mo. Is( &
....... 3J44 trY-. 3244
~······················ ....•..........•.......
macnab I Irvine
realty
(pro & pro shop)• 2 • refrige, d twa.sher lncld. '"""" last. 494.3993 ' Health OuDa•Sauna• 1 Br ~ve. Private pat\o ...... ..., ...... 3140 Across N B. Golf Course :"ear Palm Springs l·~ & w ispac1ous o Hices -------
Hydromassage•Swim· gas paid. Adults. Refs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 54S-48SS 3 bedroom villas sva1la· ak~hllhts. wetba.r. con· \·er)' attractive un~t . ~ "~"0983 · ble Week Iv monthly fel't'nce rm. M< per sq. ft. Sout.h Laguna. BeauUfol
m1ng 0 Dr1111ng Range ......., . .....,.. · __ Brud r,iew l Ir 2 Bdrm. BEACON BAY 2 br 2 ba and annually '. 1 lighted Plus, super 2.000 sq.ft ocean ,-lew, hlf!h beam
IEAUTIRJl APART· PINE BLUFF APTS 17,~1:te fondos. Pool, a p\ 0 c BA)• r RON T tennis courts._ Close lo medk al bldg . well ap· celling. carpet , lull lla\h.
MfNTS: Singles. t ' Spac 2 Br. 2 ~a. Adult ~m'i ~~ l~~at~!:) home. tennis (l\'&il, utils R a~ c h o M 1 r age 's pointed J t 75< _per sq fl S4SO mo. Turner Ass<ic .
A tUaltDtA"Y Of
THI l"VINI CO•ANY
2 Bedrooms • Fur· C.:omplex. Patio. view, .. ,.,,,4721 v 'i · Incl, 1780/mo. ~ rly Restaurant Row. Agent. Fordetalll call 4!M·ll71 '
n1thed & un1u1n1sh1d rrplc, encl g11 r .. gas '""" e es. 67~811119 1714)328-4097 REDCAR PET
•AduttLtving•NoPets stove, dlshwar, spa, Spacious 2.Br. A\·all now La "I Be c bi 893·1351 ~!'!~.~~~ ... ~~~.~ •
• Mooers Open da11y Inch')' rm. From ssoo. $365. Prl vale patio. 2 N)lt Shores, across from Poor ~;Je. ::.ora T~, 2 6118 sq. rt well located LIASI IN ....
Se v e r a l homes fu r nilbe d It
unturnilbed: priced from ._,/mo.
to·•ia1•. New Uatinp com1ni
daily . Call for u p .to-d ate
Information. ..... ,00
9 10 6 SPMC 631·6107 Kids OK. 17401 e f£ee1IQll bch. Bach & 2 Bdrms r 1 1 545 69 Nonh Coeta Mesa office. ~~f:i~~~~ri~t1fle ,.. 01kwood Del 2bd 21 b Lane ut. laat + aecurf· from S345.. 640·»?i rp c, s pe 14. . l~ -Patti next to )'our door ,_,. door. l.MOM Lo n
Garden •ft.9rtmenta douxe rm.I \r,J on· ty. 1213 >598·5326 . Spacious" Private lbr ~ Vl.lley. lrlaho F"u lly f"ully equi pped with _1w.CM.~o-m2,646· 1\ "-• gar. poo • c ren s:n~ · equipped house Sips 8 carpet. a te, cabinets & ..___...-~ .. /So OK. 9>"15tmo. Call rnoma apt In the Bluffs No comfortabl'/ Cl~e to ~kl stor•"• R"a aonabl~ Pnmc llatit m11nufaMV ~..,r,oo 1~' • or eves 5'48·3561. \\'l!ltet Rental. S800 Mo. 3 children or pets . ssso lifts 4' town. Avail Dec. riced~ c~n T~m. Harbor Ina. 1600"sq fl. Front; c.
11oo.1ra1ter11t Nice new adult lBr 'Sarm. 2h Ba. Condo: !15l·Od4 27thruJan lOfor I or 2 BakerProlesslonalHlda. ~111tun& ll l lls, 3 '
111•1 1a..s1u aud4!n apt. for rent Oceaa ., Bay "'lew, 20 NewVenallles 21\r. 2 Ba. weeb rental. Write Box 9157-1.900. ~1~'1
Gura•e 1142-~ . boa\ tllp. Comm tennis S6SO 8 )' Hoaa Hosp 39, Ketch um . tdaho. ----·-----Newport IMch/No. • · · couna, pool. Wash er / Adl,llta M>m1-· ~-tlecis tor lease. view or m> sq f\, 'next to Irvine
880 Irvin• lryou' looki c be Dryer, 2 c..r 1arase -· -.....,.. -ba_\ on Ba~<aide Dnu , lndU$tMal Complex u1
111 161111 tf!' job re )'OU w':!·~~!nt ~ w te\ec. 1ara1e d oor I bdrm pen l h o u 1~ Ocean Bluff Kuult•I Con00do, N.B. Low rate. Approx . fr'w)'S S a. 405. '.\lul\I .1e·
• (71•1 ,..-111>' I • h opener, Private patio. Vera a I Iles c on d 0 . lwk/2 SIOO. ''II 14 14 • l 1500 sq n. XJnt ror law. nant bldg. ssr,o Info
:.11 l e emplo~ment new C&flMl. Wilt con· 1161-3791 eves. 99S·'rt22 wtcr'8 llOO. Goll. tennl•. CPA or de.tgn firm Tenn nettotl•ble. Amrle !'==::::::=====~· wnnsl0Cla11lf1ed. ~furn.'42-1'°3. di)'S. etc.m.7395. .!..~-~nlna._!755880. _
I
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Superior 1111 lh11lneo Rt;MODEL.•R E IJ A lR 1 Ct mmlWorkofall klncli Itta rate:. la"nser\lce. Haullne &Dump J obs. ~ fw 5'a1U B\dl • AOO. quill\ wotk . 2C\d PallOi. sidewalks. bndt Ask ror Rand~ ,_MT I n't Tax "«lb•. 11 )ra In •rel ~orlr f'reee1t S56 0757 htndMt·aplng. sprinkler 549.431,3 • ---ln.oslallll.lllon & repair Ask -------
6 f\nan a l r 1annln1 ' L. IC! Mt ,. • 1° m bo Child c... for :\larvin 979-51114 llvul-mo,·e !'lean up Con \er~ thorough & rehab le
Ml62 RtlK'h Blvd tlU llf\.\\lme91213l4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -. h1 ete remo' "I Dump 118 ~ 1 t 1 ~ • Referencei. a\ailable ,..Arnt:H • ON t hdd l'Urt· nl\ C" :\I (1arten1ng eanup"' t ruck . qull'k 'en Lisa 5411-80fii ":,tenor Painting n: ke.p.t a\1611 lo \'iu 1>41nlr \, 1u1v. ti r11 ho«ne, form_,.r preschool I re•• trimming, mu in fi.l2 76Jl.I -----Spl'c1a l1sts-s tucco re-
, ... on 11t•cou11t1 In m) lflOCW Piii.ib K47 7HI~ tairht•r 631-52'.lA 1111am·e Free ei.t 1\rnie ----Hot1.,ec:l"'unm11+ -\\hat pa11 . "'aterproof in1· --:..:...-------• hartwt 4'4211154 ~afll > ~t~S-114\.1 2 '~. rhpon:.1ble men t'Jll Suds ·n Stull :..i ndblast ing. cu st om
Gt1n1itr11I t"11rpcotq , Controdor haH-3•TIWDtruck.,,d · fordetails 842·0884 work. c o m petlt i\'e A•t• U1111r 11. Sit > Ir i ht s. ....................... Ell,,.rt Cleon•"Pt tret" main. equip. <.:an do pnces Lie. bonded. in:..
••••••••••••••••••••••• R.-motl t.'lll. f'loo r s. Roon1 udd., remod el. Treeslopped re1novctl ~n~thini;:_:OO!l-llll50 lmtdlcap&IM) 6.,2.6005 On'•"•'• Pa rk1nc lut ........ 11.,. Pallo~ ll45 3120 custom houses Lil l.'On· Luwnreno,aterl 75 1 :J4i6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1
Repaar.. !-. ... •frcu1lln1£ """' tn1c1or 548·07H6 .,0 HAt:LlN11 CLE,\:\ING
S&S A1ph1th 6atl U17 1) l'l'ST()~l('\111:"1-:T& J \P \SE:SE<iA" !-.:~EH Tree trim&Paintlng
l.lt 'd llocne ltepa1r 11\l ext. ManNftCJ Construction Cleunuµ. l(.irde n cure. or"" R11). 96-1 -1276
Reas r ut es. luwn sen ice.
landscaµ1ng. sprink ler
1nsta.llat1on & repair. Asl.
tor .\lurnn 979·5814 -( 'hur Hen0, ot ing '•l!n contr foundut ions lo tn m. :113 532 7295
.....,....... tl4S·3?•&ll 11nish. Lu· lie Ins. 496 6!! I , ·-"··caplli", Tr"" Tn m lluutin~ ~en ice. 11 , ton
lrut·k We hu~ drs & win
dow:. Call L es ter
.>ti IJ.127
••••••••••••••••••••••• L.4JUU.*> ~ ~~ Mosonry IJl'F:..'lSl-.DOAV('Al!t: C..,...Service Drywotl ming. l'leJ~.up.s. Free
:\h home C:l>M ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• e.t A\ ilei.. x.u 8h93 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lull pant1me 673 21145 Why Pa~ :.tort' vnces Tape. te~.ture & JCO_!Jstll' •"Ir.RY LOW PRlcr.s * · rree est1mJtt· Kevin w:: w:: ;\OJOBTOOS:\L\LL Buy through tarpet 10· ()rl L"n·'s"ape .'I a111
V.olle\ \lu,.,onr~. Custom
tirepl.1res. llm·k. block.
'tone Quaht~ work 8ab)S1tling, ffi\ hume. ,, ta I I e r I :. e I I 675-0088.673 1503 " u • " OR L.\HGE'. Free ei;l.
lo,ing <·11re. Sµ11ngtJule WHOL l::SALE «·ostl. fhc:tn .. -1 -tenan<'e f'reeest 21 \rs U:J\·e.~;}81>46 I IC =3901182 963 2925
& Edtn&l·r. H B 846 4768 w II b I "' '""' e\p <:t."Urge. 519 2015_ -U11ckwork Small J obs 1 n ng samp es r ree ••••••••••••••••• •• ••.. -u-·--l~i""" •. W k l d ,...,.gon~ ··'7 :'\ewpon.. Cost a Mes a "' M11turl'
mother PT f'·T
751 0281
depentlable
"Ill bau,slt
C ~I a reu
B \fffSITTINl•
:'lh home. near V1c1onu,
C :\I l ~ r & up 642-1:1482
Wlders
l':.I or guaran ee · ELEC.7 Rl<..'IAN-Pntetl ll.\l:Lf.'.\:(i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jn 1ne 675 :u75 e,·es ,\lso l.'arpel la~ed & re· nght·free e:.t1n1.ite on C:ll'.lll·Ulll> llauhn>: Tice \\'.int a RE.\Ll.Y <:LI::.\:'\ l~_•ored.Ja)·7~~~ largeor smallJob' T1 1n1 ,( llt•mo\JI -HOCSE" Call (.;in~ham Mo"inq
Sham""'' & :.team clean Ul'-:337254 673 0359 G .1 r cl c n 1 n g IJ 11 m 1 . <:1rl Frt!e l'St 645-5123 •••••••••••••• •• • •••••• eo1;-hnghtener~ . wht -----. --. •~ll·!lll!O ---d-\111\ llljl ' The Stan 1n ~
<'JXS 10 man bleach. Clea.n Top quaht)'. <Je1>e11dable l'rd1se the Lor srime unc t .. 11e1le Students ha' e
th. din rm, hall Sl5 .-\\'g ~er\1<.'e Hea:._ r~te::. 16 ~al Sff'vicn 1s here· to do ho11!4"11rk ~ro\\n samt-gd sen ice
rm S750. couch Siii. chr _rse'C!X'r 531 ·.J05.l ••••••••••••••••••••••• h.'""''t tloi: ,II, pt!ri.unJI =·1_12-l ·4~l n:. fWl -8-127 _
t·:'-1tt:ne11ct•ll ad m ,11 kt:I t'Jl'C. h1Jne'L & reh11ble
:\ew & rtto,·ers. Repair
Specialists at :.tu) buar
prices. Relf able. B.\C.
548·0512
P a 1nt1 n g Prof. ex TI~
ter 11nter. com m ·1. res. •••••••••••••••••••••-•
.i1>1'. no sp-ra~. 1·eas Dan
K!Y.1·3934 Hultti;t• ..... c •. ~ Guar eliminate pet GardettiftCJ lrli;t ''Cel.'ut1\'<' " rncd1.1 'fop Ref-. 979-IHJ:J t·ve" PaintinqJP.-rtn9 Heas Pnce Int. •Ext.
•••••••••••••••-.••••••• Ollllr Cpl repair 15 yr,s ••••••••••••••••••••••• e:o.penence "ill i·reut l· . . -••••••••••••••••••••••• '1-reee:.1 Ba\' area. Cust
Creat1\'e £n\'1ronments exper. Do work m,,sel C~JHoullnq print ad:-.. 111 ,,rkl-tini:, :O-.l.llJt-rb llouset•le ,n1ng Pa111t1nli & Paperin>: work 636·~-~3 Jack
;\;ew cer amic tile Im ·
proves appea rante &
\'alue at reas. coet . Frt' est. & s u gg estion s.
342.3020 11591 Gothard,
Constr. st JtnetJ gh1ss; re-Reis 531 0101 r. a w n s e r ,. 1 c e . :.ale:. lener!>. r<idio ~l"Jt ,.._ ~pet·t al' u l.1 r r cs u 11 !>. Prof. \I. Ork. Free e!>I -----~._spas. 496·31_21:1 _ Lands(' ape Fr"e E i.t 11ew~lcll"r~. hro"hures 1:iJ 1~'>11!-1. l>I'.! 113\1 tbnbl ~le\ e 547-4281 PACIFIC P.\l .'.':TING --\\ e 1 ure Car pet Cleanerl>. " ~ " ., ' o d b I
C nt St'eam Cle··n •· Uphols t>.12-9'.A!i andPR ('•dli.i5 12JO HOMECLE ....... 1 .... G epen a e. p r o mpt ...,.. .,. a "' ........ ..... 1-'llll' l'Xl 11nt painting b\ ~er\' Serving all o.c H.B. .
••••••••••••••••••••••• \\ork ~uur .TruckMount G-----H~yman 111,lutll:'seH•t)lhmi; t:all Hi1·hard Sinor St Ill . 1· 11 .... h Id at s CvSTOM INT E RIOR l.j it 645.3716 ardenmg L;.inl.lsl·upmjl ....., -.a a.... o 1 a~ r e . C,\RPENTRY ~ --T ree T r1mm1 n,ll & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll:mn:ih .51.5-9201 ~~: Tn mt-llJ6·5555. 24 1Jav~~9·58Sl or 8:l9·1886
Ceramic Tile~rvlces
Free est 4!M-588'7 blefore
9am or aft 6pm. Char'lle. 8 , Jay 6~2 8110~ !',d i wi th EASE ' Rl'mO\'al. ~l aJor <. lelln lld11 for hll'l' no Joh lo<1l\olte11.l' studl'nt "ill , lean . 1 I
---It's a BRF.f.ZE C:p rrec E<.1 Inc\ I ,lllJll C.:hr1!'I. lioll,..l'lopl'rlci·tiou lll•I , lla\'e ,omct h1n1: 111 !'lcll? ~ve sr11neth1ng to ,.,e I? .
Classified Ads 642-5678 l'la,.,:.1ried .\ds t>-12·51i78 ·en:o.1\'e i5i 1349 1111 71 :.1 Bnu·e Ii:'> .lliKI 1 C.:lru.,1l1e<I ,ids do 1t \\ t'll .:_IJ:-.s1r1ed ads do It well. Sell Idle Items -----------,_. -- -' ---
~~ .......... ~~~-~ ~-~~ .... ~~~-~ ~-~-~ ...... ~??.~ ~-~-~-... ~.~??.~!~~: ......... ~?~.~ ~~: ..... : ... ~?~.0.1~~.'!:'~ ..... ~!?!. ~~~ ..... ~!~! ~~~~.f! ,,
t:11 to 10011 ,,q ft in ln111e CASH FORT O's LO S T Sm hi k do ~j -. . I COVER GIRL l.\,.ROSPECIAL I A.OVERTISING -----·---...... " · . 1
;.; Sl\ypark Llrcle url'a • r\ST ACTION . w short hall . & \\ h1 HIL\!>. M:ill' 't•ll•I\\ \lr\SS.\Gl::StOW AU SSfST Mt Xlnl OP.R,t~tor:t~ 1' 549-~iJ.1 \\l.d,s . 559 6062 <:ambna ~ltge 955 3454 breast. luoks like" Poo l:·1h ~ 3 '"' old .'° 1•11 1 • OUTCALL • \I\ STIC.: :\IASSAG E OESIGHlll A A · at'!)~~t\.i.diJ' 6 8 e\· \l.k nt.b -- ----die S.1h,tant1al rt!\\ar<l 1-,Hf\IE~\' B:tl-.er 55h ll5.) !~'l.1-H718 :\IC \'ISr\ l s.;i. 1656SuntaAnil Bus~ ad agency wants ~•MAGB :~~tnuiri emow-. f're~
\\idflW has mnne\' for 2~ 0 ;,.u19210 --1· creative & responsible Draper s La guna Hills \'I C> Ill t efl;,e~' f a p .
MisceUoneous TU No c redit {·heck no SCRAM LETS • • Sl'\(iLE~ :\lee1 ... 111<.'ere. person !or Artist's pos i.t o~e . Mus t b e ex-Outsl ab.tl"I . lad
Rentah 4650 pnll' For a<.'tion ~·all Found Sc·hn.1u1l'r mule. • ~PRIT\: . .\l. IH .\1 11'\GS 1 people like You' l.11\\ Fa::.t pace. lots of pre· perien_ce d 1n. better conditlt>'}:' .f' fn'a:
••••••••••••••••••••••• \CT673-7311 an, time Ldhrado r . pregnanl ANSWERS 111llm-tOµm Full\ Lit d Fl·e CJll 0 \TEI.IN!:: s!>ure. unlimited opptr's. women s read~-lo-we~r benefits & n !Jlttil It.It· \
Fence<l,ard to.11()(isJ11 ----· lemllll•. Shcpherd1 4?'l'2'Jt\or l!U!l031 .11us 1 1rc'<'llOl1l513:!45 _ i l-1 ·556·0460 ask fo r and spo11swear . ..\pply 1n roundlaat1 .'~attlled ·~
.\II or Pllrt W k ~., WILLIUY blktan remalc\l.l',1nni.:1 l.1b1do \'1t;;I <.; 1am1no Rt!lll. San 1 .1 \\ ,.-2140 "hu Penn' person to :\lan agerMa · =~a: .. ~...,~· ft-· 548!11131 or C\ "kndi. 2ftd.l d-4thTD'~ hume-.,.., Newport lll'at·h ' l'au.w <iamliol c·ll·m ul'~lre -· -----bl A ti 23&2lMoulton rrw•U<A u ~
199-3669 0 1 fund rn"w T D'S ~or \rnmai ... helterf>.1-1 3656 TO Fl 1.D I nt-c~' tenderu~s., & to.uch A ID F. Wo r k w h a n · e us "· plic · .. ·.t lr'iae J!f~' ·, -----immed quote. /all ----11"'"1!<1t\hhth1ngalin111 T O MMY'S ·' tn be or<u ... ,.,111n.dl) d a ped adults.:'.lustbe !arltway Plaza ot call 532S t.Jniveiili .··;.ul'": .,
lusNss"n•est/ WICM~T <ilH752·8261 FOL'~U . Ke ~:-.. being (·11111 Il l· t•\t-11 , <W:'o:EWPORT tre•· \\t• might JUSl be ~O: \\illin to assist ,f18.6622torappoJnl ent . Plone 1714~--·' "., Artofti~ Hallo"een :\1ght on OLJk \\l':Jr:-'ungld..,~e!> TU : ESCORT \\hJt uch ulher need:> t t· h g toile ting '· __ .. . .
I,_ t h II C · I F \ 8:19 521 1 IWO ' i5. 2-9:l6K "'121!12 in as s sue as · ______ ... _. __ ~ ' .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ·1 iva e par\~ a:-. W l' llC e. . . , I . reeding gen cleanup. ~. ····..,._' .. _1r~w.·•~·
luliftHs ~~·<.·~~~:;~~.<: 1'!'f for sale U>ST Cahro cat 1im11" 1.0 !', T Hark ll a 1 k I TOUCH A CLASS Tm.h & L11n arl' no"' al E xcel '\'acat ion & an· · . t:<JEJVr /Pf ·
Opportw.ity SOOS 1 1. c 1·1 1 • old 111. ill' ell n t ron t Bc1uk ... t ,1kula1or con1,•1 ESCORTS '-tt•\t-!:> lla1r lfappenmg surance benefits United Al'tlMTIOM!
••••••••••••••••••••••• n a 1h0 a H ~-w :\ R D 01 l'C'll &: 1 ;111ilen \\ e't :!IHHS. 1.~:! 0~17 \\ '-1-Jo.1 1>11 .. !1630 Cefehr'al' P a'ls\· · As'soc The .,.HT J"ll.1. IAI ........... .
st:NTO AR.\SLT(.'1\L(..'lr,oTR:'\yl \ ~ez;nts / 1('5 ~95 I HEW \lll)K ().:111;t •MASSAGE• ~-57f,{) • Illa u Hunt. B~h:~e'# ~hop .
'-p I 5 350 Ple;ise contact u 11 r e -ful\t' -.. ,h1 Re~t11uran1 & lla r T Lost & FoUnd l.o..,t lcm Gt>rman Shep. e rsona s Gr~at Company Tl.Hl\EY SPECl.\L ~wenng Sen ice needs, garding a Sem inar that -lme. ,_.. ~ ··-Real ~:St ate .\hsolut el~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• II H an::a Hew ard •••••••••••••••••••••••' ~u llr :\lu ... ~a gl· r '-
pn me property 10 superb Amo,unc~nts 5100 ~·~.}ti() • 536·3878 l'RI-. I.\\\ ,1udl'11t n«l'<b ESCORTS sn :\'l·:·s ~~:~htoon~a~~c~~~a~ :.t~~ ~d~~~ ~8;;1~~:i':!~~!}: oppt,Ent~.Y-,·~e~:~.Ol'llt, · .. \ .• ~,·f"t.· locution T RI PL~; .\ ••••••••••••••••••••. •• sa;,,1;wi \\111 tin amth111i.: '.!-IHr... llH lllRO 11\IR ll/\PPE NI:o-;G rr
b () I Fou11dmixed shep~1rd . :\I l.t!gal l'11nl1dt·nt1al Cosh /Chec:lcs \:\OSPA only P ermanent P · JObs. us1 n e,,!> r1 ~1na 11 '· h I. \I H .fi.'6·';.,,.,6 ,i94 7n-c--1s~ Ot•J mmer ~lOOK gros~ LonA tan i ac..; · " <' 0 l'r IJ\. P <> "" '!:!I:!. A m Exp /MC /Visa .. ...,., · -><'' ___ -· •• &EAlfrY'OPEAATOR &
term :.ohd in,e:-.tment NOW YOU l·ham. aht 9 mo oltl. \ll' NII !rll.(>3 ~embler. remale Hrs lnt'I BW!ifteH Serviet! lil ..i.; Quah tied prim· 011h Bo'" :\lkl 1 <:nltlen \\ t·'t l35tS2 MacArthur BfVd. Manl~utii . ..,.lth J.IPllM
For conf1dent1al deta 11... &'i 11rkto"n1!162 1611:.! MASSAGE 1•,,ch1cton,..uhJtwn:. ROLLS ROYCE 8\~l-1 30PM S3 SO hr Su1te 32S ln loe ~!"_!..~<.'.o'tic_il. ~s.lpn.
t•all i l4 548 i8l3 C\ es Can . I acl. ESCORTS Small s hop II B .'.\:on ~·· -
Rkr Sell i-;:~~ie'~n~;e~~~1~\0r~~-~~r~~,~~j'~.'~1:1~~n~ ~~i:_!li~-\ISA \IL ~~~~~.Call tor appt l~~~~~~~~~~--iiiii.i.ijiiiiiiiiiJi.~-~
:\larll) n !> <.:lean 1n g & '.\ e w port Fa 1 r Dr 11w.,,..,u~~ b) 12 of the pre LITTLE AHHIES 195· 16 76 ----------Auto met-hal\lc, exper. on l , ·
:\l a 1otenance Co ror ~.;.;1405 lllt.':-.1 11irh. '" Southern ESCORTS -----A-.sembl)' Datsun or Toyota . Good ror rapt~. • • .. .a,. '.-
sale. 548-844-1 ( J Ii I urn I a J a cu 1 z1 · DI\\. J()"'. ·o W.\~. 'TEO: ,. In me-based elect ro111c pa•·•-benefits. 642-204 fin·..,.~fi-.._ •11111.i. More found: ··case". he 511. t o 111 \11 'f · C d t ·' • '.. -,. ':! _,. .. :>duna l' 1· pen am ·• aJor re 1 <·ai·a\ or larger. pr\\ ale distn butor needs full or lslancl ·r, ~ust. lnvflhnent Coast H\I..\ Call '\\\Pl lam. i ila':-. u ''el·k \ 1,.,. C;irds .-\<.'ceptC'cl bl AL70MOTIVE IL Opporiunity S015 Poh<'e.f>ll-J.ll a \I i ,·tlar\lil> Hl·alth R95_1ftif> 11.1rt~ forcash .>,tfl.02118 part lime ea e as ~il~~~. ··\. t a1 •••••••••~•••••••••••• "Ith Dally P ilo t !'>!"' :!ll<! Harh111 llhll I '-I. 1111ndel.l mult-.0•1k1n.11 ~mbl~ people. Contart H&.OIUYll'I ..,..~CT ';'St.~~16·~: -• l:\"\'ESTORS\\.\~TEIJ PF.NS\' PINCHE R F11und "h1tt! fe m.ill· I •r.l a \h•.,a i.15.:111:1 B1 \\cJllh' II H 1,u ,.1 iorl1!m.il••"1thsaml' Bob Trac~. ~I on Fri Of'fAIL& $' §S!iffit?
Join s mall g roupin bo\ ,\OSStillonl~~2. tc u -.!>1a11 Wollh11u111t 1ni: 1h" .111 1or \uu 1 "'"~mun"·.-k111..:at1rJ1 .,15 1'.Gt\2 8:Ul-5P~549-09~ P'OUSHPHSOM .. ·-·--r-~
ing <'untrol ot under lnendl\ \'11 \lt!:-0<1 lh-1 ,,111., 1.al g1 11 '""" \01111.: la1h f11r .1ltl·r E.\penenced necessa,.Y. Boat ToufiN;,,.\ll"-am .
'alued 11uhht· co & 1n 3 lines fur 2 da'~ :\l(lr,C-~I ~<Hili.t; n110111.lJll'' :">:lf.'iij!l>I ~t.u1J()\H•r l0 l'lltl'r l n'n"'' .~semblers Enthusiastic & raponal· .t.. >ti
itiating a<·qu1,.11 1on pro onh ~I acla\ :Ut·.i f r1wid :\l<ile i:ra' long fQXYLAOY * 'out11k11<11A \11ur ... rlfht:t· 1&.UEJUHJOIS! ole. Excellen1 st.op~ Plu• "°°'.JI-., p•t·
gr"m Sle,eill ll lfi i3';1 l111e . hJ1redn1t ln 1m·~1un~ * {;rJml 01.>cninl!. \lens. tl•r Trnn:-.lnrm;;t111nCJI 30 P acka ger s . :\s · \l.otklng condltlons.App-qt~~.:,.'E~~f~~ ;.·
Ad,ert1!'1! one or '' 552-9'.:!..'ii' Ol TI.:\LLO:\l.Y \\•11nen.1ur rt'la,at1on & ~:m111Jn.11'.ll lit12 Is e m b I e r s. & I~ in person 4' Sff John ·~ .,.,, .~i.
Moneytoloan 5025 more lll'ms n1lued 9721138 s11m ulat11m tr.' "Tourh Warehousemen needed Plum merat !::,rdfialm: 5•'ft!.~;~11a .•
••••••••••••••••••••••• l1P t <i JOO f:a<'h Friund Wh11 c rem;il e * · * \'!11~.:~d.~~~:hs~fi~,f.· 1r~~-!:'~.,,.~ ............ ~~~-~ Jor fr\rne ar ea Three -"'""!dis .,, l·• '
/NEED
/MONEY
• CREDIT MO
PRO I LEM
2nd & lrd TD loClfts
978-6531 /855-114S
Arranged by
Cocnt Home loons
_ ~ ~l~rtl!_a~e Broker
YOU CAMIE
SURE WITH A
BANK
2nd TD's
REDUCED RATES
Santfec)O lattk
714-132-5200
Ask for Linda f'1 y nn
or Karen Linn
Equal Housing Lender
aclti1t1onal l~ne IS Gt>rm;in Shepherd c .• 11 .... shlfts ava1I. ~ A.....Lk~·,·· ,~ ... 1·1 '-..:_·,.
11nl) f',()(· for thl' '"0 c,·es 968.1311 FIRST LADY :;:11rn1n \\t> Jc·1·ept Jll •3 THIPS :! PAl<TIF:S TOP PAY' o:::_ .. ~fi'~r• .. ,.~. <la's S1irr\' 110 Es I 1·n•d1t t·ards. 1111cn i h.ID!'> l'HRI S T :\I AS · . .-... u...,rn
1· om men· 1 <i 'i a cl s fulmd Small \lo h1te male c:ort. Mod•'· .ta'" \\ I·:~: K H ESE H \' E CAU THOMAS . ,, t ~·,, tialrt h\u ,'.', ftl
al ln \\t•d C harge Poodle. :\lt•sa o.Jel )l.ir PartyOoncers. XOW 751·4~3S,.'W9·'.ll07 641-1144 , 5'.-pytt:!' ctn•~· .
\'our Penm Pin{'hcr a1eu.54h-:lk4!1 . .>41i.l02:l 11r972-1345 • f'md what ,·ou want m #1 .. 0t.pc:...t rno. Cal 7141 7~'fkllt.
A cl or use \our Want Ad Results 6'2·5678 \ll' & \IS:\ .\t·rep1t•d £!~~·~1~ Class1f1ros EnPoYmt;t! ASSEMILllS -·-2925 Harbor IUvd Irvine ~· ~ .. · -:
B11nk America rd rr.parc COSTA MESA ifl' _ ·" .. : Visa or Master<.'ard· ............. •••••••••• Will train. Apply 7A M. "
School' & MacGreggor Yachts Bab,'Sitter with car for
For more 1nformat1on NOVEMBER lnsfrucffo.t 7005 l6JlPlacentia .CM p re sch ool e r Wh i le \V iti\ u .ift r ·~:•t tn and 10 plal'e your ad n ail ••••••••••••••••••••••• •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml mother tra,·e ls l~\'eral lsudfi& frimi, {~~ ·
642-5678
Lott& Found S300
···••·•••··•··•··•·••··
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
6U-5678
UlCJt or found a pet·· Call :\ n 1 m a I A s s 1 s t a n c e
Lea~ue~ 537·2273. No f~
MID-WEEK
SALE
For Private Parties Only
NOW through NOVEMBER 30th
B11: rig dn,ers needed ASSEMILER da\ a month + aome rerrt+. f'O .~ · Cll\
c; .. , a Clasi. I he now TaAIHEES e\'enmgs 642-9654 licen.tiac
•7111 !l7S lllJ7 e'Ct 41 tor Orange Count~· mrgr of --•••••---• Openinl
info -1 ed~~tsr~1sms~kh1!Jnng1ctarlainpereos-Banl<ing i . ~()\'. enrollini: Co:.tlll .... ~ I,.. rna .. ··-,. ..... ~''=t for da' shift to assemble A TM Tl ..... R -~.., "'ll'll' :\le:-.a Christ ian Pre ei..-ron' ics .. ·1tches &d1s· re:.porislblt r.euon t ,lhoo l 529 so wk =• " Im mediate fullt l tne .. _....:.ii~ pae..>I t••t "'l Pla.\S ,\ppl.\' IO person· nnAning fot t ell-With ~. 1 ·-' ~ • Includes hot lunrh & ..... _...._ c-,·altl .....---"'' tedgtr. If (eCGbcl b Ilk ~ n a c k s fi 4 Ii 5 4 2 3 . .._... ... --r-•' H AT~. backgro14.nd. Ex· stlterMl'lb: ~.,,.~ a~e
fH6.S930 sJ.~zi'flonrovla. i~-_7 c-e!c'aiii 'C:~~·~~at1 Buk ~.:~t~aC-a~.
~=-~:':'!:.~· ..... ~~?.s. ~e ambo,ah~2.~~l(d :;fj: r ... ·.c~" .... ~. :.
P I N .\ss1stant Manager. Ftr. ...,. _. •-·-
ract1 ('a , u.rses. any Sales Clerk F 'T. P tr. •-••••••M"" · ccdtt» shift. xlnt rer s S31 7200. ,1 . · 1 k ..-a 195-2211.661 ·8177 ,, ature. m u~1que c oc ~h~uhl .~rm 'ltb ,, shop at Fashion Island. ed ~· (ft tulf\
SALES Hesp .. sharp lady ifi0.12!S. ::'h'=11t~tiefete1aa-'cS .
would like pos. calling on miiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml In ac:cddllt~ .,~ ... blt .• ,
Org. Ct.' drug. de pt. ASSD!llLllS/ 0011~1«*'. ·Pf , 'of~' · ~tore & suver mkts ., etc. SOLDllHS Immed iate fut ttme .£Ice •6U , 0 , · ef'.~.:.
W~,.: 4 :\lo old Germun ---------•I Sh.epherd. S<1 t;st Pla7.a . SIOll Reward 673-58-19, You C.On Plate A Oolllfild M
To Start On
With lge co. 5 yrs exp. We have immed. open -opening fo r• a tp b .f4 •J'• ·~
sales 1sula ry or dr aw perSOCla!:eller. .._.. ., . ··~'" -.1. I I G3 228ll 1 n g S' f 0 r 8 S · \ngs . expefl Ce tdvbs~· . \ ~. ' Pus> 1...:..__ semblers/solderers with preferred! ply Mt : ..as · jo ~ ~' ! WANT US FAST? 5.19·CW. 642-6585 Any amt· lSl. 2nd. :lrds flex. terms-call now• E
St arr-964·6833. l..()ST Penn) 's 1 Fashion
Island I Jeweln Pouch ----------1 contwning 2 necklaces
EASY MONEY
Oirec1 from the lender
tst &t 2nd T.O.'s
••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~Mft.Co.
All typea ol rut estate
"' ln\'e&t~nt. t lnc:e 111411 Sped .... ...
,. 2 .... 10.
1"4J..Z 171 141-06 rt
c..t for T.D.'1
Amer1oan Mta SJS3·414 l
REWAHO! 573.4927
LOST Cat. whte w /blue "
e• e!>. gray ears. feet &.
twl \'1c Sp~ glass Hill.
C1IM 640-4239
_,
,.,.,
Tuesday. Wednesday or Thursday
and Run
J1AYS
FOR
THE
PRICE
OF 4
HetpW..+ed 7100 a minimum of-6 mont . IRVI NE SAVINOS & rcto.n~~ ,fJfP , •. •••••O•••••• • • ••• • • ••• ex.per. Will be required LOAN lttred .. -wtfl '\t•I•, \Ot
Accounts P ay able & to solder hooks, turret 18M2MacArth"18lvd, ~•Y· tOJI ,f(;e1w•;
Receivable & General terminals. wire sold er & Irvine, CA mt5 Or .it • •• • • tooch·up PCB. Must be •1.0.?0.-· ...... :•· • · Ofrice in F V a rea. • ........ _,,, 546-4313. 41xper 'd. at solde r in g E o.E. M 1t1•~,.. circuit boards. Apply at: Meter S,.Cltllffe,,, , _____ ... _..
1640 Monrovia . C.M.
642-3427 E.O.E.
-.................... ·----...-·-------~--------· .. . .
'. l
,.:
l
!
I
I
'
\'"
....
h { v
...
· 'IMMfl DEFORE
DANCE CENTER
•••-c"o•~ MASTla TIACHa
: " : . 641-8403 J,21 lllCH, NEWPORT llACH
.· , ..............
... lfrdN_,A~•l••.,1oeoot11,-C _.,w......_.._.,.,,.,..._
Dor~thy Jo
Dance Studio
JllS I. Ctt. Hwy. C... DerelllJ , .....
rt 1 ,,, .
.
Schools and
lnstruttion
Necltsa~
s 0 u PH ~ N r ~ l ii I) R ~ 1,, r I) l ! t f; f
Of Mf !.JIL~l ~ iJf N' ~I l AHi l P.S
~l
L. • _.,.
'~
I
This •ariety of fine schools
cOUlcl Introduce
y0u to a new tomorrow
JOLEE MILLER
VOCAL TKAININC DICTION
as openings for s tudents or an
ages a nd l evel s. G r aduate
W e s tminster C hoir Coll ege. Princeton. N .J.
546-6985
rwp ort flusic
<!tons .eruatJtru
Now acc.,._, MW
Students of Piano
fjllitw and orchesh'al ins~
Mary de Pascal e, B.M .
DireClor
I I J6 lri• ... St. ..
... ..,.. ... cl
957-0211
Tftih to be•
DENT AL _LAB TECHNICIAN
AUTHORIZED BY THE
DEPT OF EOUCA TION
STATE OF CALIF
TIAedey, Ncwemoer '1, HMO
Call 642-.56 78
Louise GrHfith
Ext. 322
. .
COME TO WHERE THE JOBS ARE!
Irvine College
of Business
"'"~··ln1M.CAU11 4
556-8890
In a few short months. you'll have
the s kills and confidence to enter
the job market in a n excitin ~.
well·paid. rewarding career as an :
• ,\Dm:\'.ISTRATl\'E St-:l'R FT \RY
• I. E \.1\I. Si':('R ET\ R '\'
• BOOl<KEf':Pt-:1! ~
• .fl":'\ Hiil .\('COl':'\T \~T • <: E:'\ER:\L OF'FICf ASSIST1\NT
• RECEPTIONIST
HELP YOURSELF!
Hundreds of Orange County
companies have hired Irvine
gr aduates. Call now for more
inform ation and broc hures.
The Orange County employers
need you now! Inquire about
financial aid assistance! <You
may be eligible for Feder al
grants and loans .>
GET STARTED
NOW!
CALL 556-8890
•BALLET •TAP
•JAZZ •MODERN DANCE
•CHILDREN • TEENS •ADULTS .................. c-... l 61T ... SHAN.., THI HOUD• YS I ..,.... TO IY'nf'f..C-
HelpW..tH 7100 . ..................... .
I am lookfnl ror 11 per~oll
uJQi\e who needs It nice
phu·e to lhe with own
bath. bdrm & slttint rm
to tW<e orer hskpa. Oc
cassional cookln8 &
marl.etlng ror u mun
\\lfr. & poodle :-<eedi.
own trans 548· 75-19
l•rrocess &
FWtGI htspecton
I ~r exper in electro
mechanic al mlg en
\'1ronmenl re<1 'd '.\lust
I.H i 1am1l iar 'Alth
Mii .SPEC soldenng m
SJlt.'Clion & capable of re
ad1ng blueprint::. using
micrometer!'> & l·ahµers
M.&.' olfer!> 'ou a good
:.alary. eH·ell fr inge
benefit,, & enJO.\ able
work cn\'1ronment
Plcw.e appl~ at
Mostft' Specialties.
1640 Monrona. c.M;.
ti42 2-127 E.O I-:
Interior Desi9ner
:\lodel homl' expr '.\kbl
have portlollu (.'ollegc
g i ,J rl I r 1 111 <' arc a
'<i9-l!li81J
JAMITORIAL
Fu II t me W u r k ' 111
heaut1lul Oan1o1 P«)111
I L1rbor S3 50 per h I' 11hr'
lienetili. A1111I~ T 11es thru
Fri OllnJ Po1111 \I arJna
Co, 24701 Oanu Onve.
1>.11i.1 Point
"E:--;:--;i-:1.
tfa1il. dirty work \111111
1111;!'>. 20 311 hr-, per "'I..
T1.11n Jt minimum 11.a.:1·
~ll·nt llll'l'Ca"" :\lu -.1
h;i1 ~auto 551-1.0:!<I
KEYPUNCH
ln.'iur.inN· agt·n(' lll'l'cl'
OatJ 1-:ntn Pro1 l'!'>!>UI' lu
work ti1rellll untf .. r· Oat ..
l'rm·e:.!>1111i :'II .r11a gcr
Ex1Jl•rlt-nc e hl·lplul
:'II 11>1 I .I Pl' ..i t l e ..i ~l
5:," pm S.i I J r1 t 11n1
m l' n ' u r· :1 l l' " e :1.
Jl('nt•m-e l'Jld c 11111pa111
bt>net•t 'I C:ill Art
:~•1 c;.111
LANDSCAPE
MAIMT. FOREMAM
E.'1ier 1n all phJse,,.. ol
l<tnd.,cape rn;.imt rnt h.111
1ng gd. knuwleJge 01 ·1r
n~at1on Exl·ell op pt 1.
for ad\ anct!m~·nt fo:OE
7M·:H6· 7St3
LEGALSECllET.\RY
Hl_hl) :.krllcd & c'
pcnencetl 1n pluint1lf'!>
personal mJur~ 'alarv
open. 0 C. Airport area
ITTS (J96S.
t ~ . . • .. , 2411 I. Cit. Hwy. C:. ~ ..... , 673-3420
DIMT AL.nCMMOLOGY INSTITUTE
969 N. TUSTIN AVE. (2 ltfw., Souil'I Dt Kalell• "..,Collins) ORANGE I,."" y.......... .. ... , ......
Jo,/111.W oe-....... M:>l 10 S•'""Y .,_ -. ...
. --962-5440--Leqal Secr~tory
, •. , ........ Mill ....... _______ ..
' lc>'l!Wi.."inJlii•ii . 1100 HllpW..e.d 11oo~w---ft o ~· ... 1 e ......,.w 71 ~w..t.c1 1100,H9tf>WGRtect 1100
:\lust be 11leas:in1 & or· -
i:anr:ied. :l-~ ~ r~ exp in
patent law 80 IOOwpm
typrng. 8(J !>hrthnd. $1.300 1 -.~ ... t1-••••••••••••• •••-•• .. •••••••••••••• --wtlllN t 0 t4llp W-.cl 71 00 .. ....,. .ted 00 • ...,. ••••••••••••••••• ••• • •• . ~. ····••••·••••••••••••• ~.. ····••4•••·· .. '··· •·•·••••••············· .....•........................................ CAIMtla · s•• ,..,_.., · ' F1 ont Ot-'k Clerk. exp., HAIR STYLIST & up 0 0£ C all Ann.
~. C11astal Person 1 • -r . Cashiers CHlttSTMAS ~· '-'vvn: Nightshlft. 96 ttrto Oeli\'err person. m ature. ESCROW OFFICER . 1 10 (." d S rl & Im med opening for
P-1t· !anti!fllebl r HOUSEWIVES, Santa AnaVacatlonClub' !ltart.Contact Paul. e'<p moving furn. Gd ·~Ill>~ m ~. u temaletocut&!»t1le "h1s nel ,\gene'. 2790 Harbor
BL .CM ._ 1011 a vai. a. e or needs 10 GOOD ot\4ne 4~-0600 driving record. $4.25 hr. New independant escrow Sa~:h. ~~-t~~7 Laguna d. her's" hair :\·lust ht-~ persai lo ca sh ier 9·3. 101 c e s Home10tfice. f'IJ'. Call Bell) between f:pan~, m W~~ddg~. lit-_a_~ --;mractl\c & µer:.onable '.'>EVER \ fEE E 0 E
,',Man. thru ~I. Contact STUDENTS Gu a r 5 4 3. 7 9 5 i or Co.1metlcian Fulltlme 9.11am. 642-2053. rng or qua ' ie o . G \RDENER W .\'" .. Tf .. I) IJ(·ense & exper rec1 'd , -ror0appt. !>U·2SS1. Ant ENI.\~ SKI~ CARE ' _ _ ficer and i.ecr et a r)' . ·' ~•• o•uas PARTTl'1E "'' h • .,. 13""' Must hiHe stron° follow· i'::.•""rienced ,g;,nlener & Toni.639 9293 LIQUOR STORE " .,.,,_ " -" 1,ewport c . ...,,.. .., Deliv--. On\'er. rem ale. ,.. ""
'
Os.. \'ARIOUSSHt~s ~·~ 1n g a nd handle e:1.-hand1mJn on LaRun.1 nl.._'<is effw1ent C!J,1 mm
1ng m;ilt•!J :'l-l11s1 ha'•'
eomplett' knowll•dge 111
1\lne!> &. liquor Fu II a 11il
part t1m t: .\p pll
Nl'wport Liquor & lkll
29-14 \\' t•-.r C uast H" \
:'\fl
. I t Ul.-tf D.... r 1 f/f, ad drh·lng record, · .........,.. ' S Clencul ~~ h•lJ>, M/F , full or • l'hanges Salury com i':~tate l:;xcep1ional op · Me_,.,.•acts CASHIER ACCOU"'1S ~rr position. no exp. C:OSta Mesa Blueprint mensurate with ab1hl'. portunit~ t:se our t11oh
H<·Jlth F1w1d !'>lort· sale-.
lad' parl tllllt' wkn1h
F'11er p 1 elt:r rl'c1
.'>-Ill !15:Ji 644-13)0 s..taAMTreaseuy ,AYAILI necegary, Good •tarting lOOO Placenha. S-ll!-5571 ,Jnt benefits Ask for :\Ir \lu~t ha' e A I r l'
• . ed ed wage . Ap ply 3700 E. 0e1· ·on.· person want-" K,11lan. 851 ·9575 lt-rence!> Wrlte ,\d ::1;H:.. JOOOS Rristol \\eha,·ean lmm . ne ~Hwy, CdM or call iv~, ........ -----Cashier wanted, exp
. pieaAe. Phillips Buick·
. La1una Hills. 831·24 00 .Joann.
¢ASHIER
1'.t.'O openln(ls. hrs. t o be an-anted. £xpenen ced.
Atll>b· tn ~rson: Ke rm Jllma Har·dware. 266ti ·~el..CM
Plense apply in person for un Accts. Payable .,._.,.,.. ~ PT. must ha\'e gd dn' · EXECUTIVE Dall~ 1 1•111. Ro'\ 1:;i;u
)londay thru Frida' d erit w1min. 0( t tr. re· ~'f'"" . Ing record. 833·1883 SECRETARY (iM;i \le~J. l" \ 9~6<!i
PersonnelOfllce cent Payable~ e1'\l.e.r . COUNTER HELP , Ory OE HVG E ST lhpidl.v expand1nu 1;E:--;F:H \L OFFIC~ F:.O.E . Suecessfulcand1dalA!w1n Cl•ani·ng P l"nt. oa"s. NTAL I NI · " h · r r "' • , 'IUes & Thu. Seal Beach :--;ewport Beach fi nancial F.1ct un ullrl·e o eed:-
ave exper rn a mg · full or part lime. HB. o ffice. 213 .431.2929. firm has an 1rnmed1ate 1~p1st 1.\1111 "di abo
eJl\·ironment & have a &.l& 1391 _., _ _,4 need for an exe•·uu 1. e J11:,v.e1 1,11nn··~. do ,1m
CHAIRSIDE dental asst gd. foundation In EDP _, ,,,..,, E 11
I. . Pl -A.a·~~ . .., ::.eeretar~ xce en t 111e po.;,ting. maintJin nt'Eded. fu ll or part time applcations . ease con· ~,.tswHI.... OIMTALASSIST. sk1l!s and ab1ht~ to or· Illes & iust f!enerJlh
s o me ex pe r n t>ress . tact: ' No Exp. Net. P ays Fl · v 11 963 ganue a must \l lt>ast .i Mattertpecltltf_. =~ 1.20. 48ht we«k Call n. a ey --51l34 •. • k~'\'µlh11\1t:.uq~aru zt>d lor Lag~ac~.494·2517 C ..., ~t'ars execut l\.e 01f1.re :.eieral di...or~..tn llt'tl
1640!\fonrovia. ..... Ii or340l £.Coast Dental Hygenist. 2 da~s expenence required i'.x-·n Si<~imo lil299110 IH2·2A:!l / E.O.E . JfwyCd~I. per week. xlnt pay. C'ellent ~rowth polt>nl1al. m•
----µr h·ate N B ol f1t'e C11ntilCl ~Ian Z1011ek.' Gen'I Ofc.. /Recept
HELP!
tn .. «lsumebod) llELP.
n1it JU~t ,1nybod~ Full
llllll' l'('l'Cpl10111~· t~ Jll'-t
$1 hr Y1111·11 lc11. e 1. our
roh . .\pp!,, Tue:. thru0 S<it
D;.ina Point :\lanna l'o
~1 701 lJJna 1>1 Dan r .. mt
.,_ LOAM
SECRETARY /
PACKAGER
COU='-"TER Per son . dry ,,.,, ..... a ,\me r 1 c a n H o m t'
Cl ·,. I t ••· II · .,....,....,.,. Srnilll t·om"an1 n1•J1 t'n .a · c eaners. n 1 t rain, -:\lortgage Corporation.I .. \\IOfflceSknrs Needed 545-1086 Dental Ass istant Part :"-t•\\jJOrl Be at·h . ntl'on l•l't·d!> mature Temp Pah ttme (><>! 1 person v. 1th m 1 n .;1 r!>
Count-••elp time. expenence RO \ i1~·75!/.lSl5 , ,,.,n·1 uf• e\f>er \« 1\1.'ailable~OW '. "'"" f ed St ---,..,
54"0.aoo Sub"•ay Sandwich Store pre en . a ar~ open. EXPERIENCED P/f t 11ra1e t~ pr~t 51111 pm
:: · C~llOS
.. ·UT.'l'IM CASHIERS
, RL'ILOERS E M
llc .... tt'S!> l'art 11nw d111
ner-, ,\ppl1. in P<'r'.r•n Le
Hiarnt 114 :-.:o :-,; e" port
Rh ti . '\ I\ fl.I!\ liiOU
llutt'I Dt-:.k U erk. e.\p prl'
,,., rE.'CI. <1p ph in (Jl'r.,1111
lluhda~ Inn. :11:11 llrr:.tul
St. C.M. S.1i 3UOO
.\n uut .. r.mdinf! <art•t·i
11pportumt \ 1;. J 1. ,e1 l.i '11l·
"llh fulcht' Ft•dernl .i It· ,111111 g .. ~ ,. 1 n ..: ~ ,, n d
luJn. lor a Lo .. 11
Sel-rl'l.11' Pa e kai,:t>r
E\penem·l' m n •al t!>lall·
loJn pacl..agins: .rnd '"
loan pnX'e~srn~ 1 f pr<.'
I erred. Ti prng ~kill~ '''
1.; 5S arl' requ1 rl'd F 111
more' inforrnat111n pit' a"'
tall :\Ir llnn Pt•J\'\ .ol
•it-1 1 f).12 .tllfHI. t''l 3f~I
· PORlt.:M. a di,·is1on of ~lARKETS The Wickes Com panies.
,,. .. · El Toro 830· 1130 L'-ont ·•es k t"leph1111·· 1·u. ,. H now accepting applic a · G s Cl k ri u ' ' ' &'~~~oc~~~~ tions. alfthifts. We 1unt ;-.-.-.---.-.-•• -~,;,;,;_-.-;.! Pho~~~i.~~~re er l ept 1on XI n l l'O HOUSF.CLE.\~l::HS For imd & Jrd Shirts has immediate openings d\1'\amic!. h6t'CI ~~rking. hcnet1h Ca ll Ell~ Tri "'ork for .L1n1tl'..,
c&.Yk /TYftlST ~ponsibte iftdh·Idual s. llSPATCH EXPERIENCED 11·15·3632 Rag~ed\' Ann P T . H 3.
1 'We-PfC)ftlote to rnanage·
rnet\l. 4' ~open·1slon from
Wiutlft.
W/'INf A CAR BER" Coeta~lesa
, lh Del Mar
631·9421
Laiuna Beach 4!M·92l3
in El Toro for part·t1me
Cash1erli E"per1ent'e
preferred Must be uble
to work e\'enin1is and
weekends
BUILDERS
EMPO.RIUM
24lt2 lockfl.W Rd
8Tero,CA
Equal Opportunity
Employer M/F /H IV
The futest draw in the
We5t ... a Daily Pilot
Classified Ad. 642·5678.
Cashier
With other een 'I orcic ln returtl we ~ill gi\'e FU TI ELECTRICIA..C I General Labor l'art lime rut"> Fri 675·251 1
duties. lmmed. opfftlng. nu sCheclulea, gteat LL ME In commercial. In· Golf club storage f>\l lllll SE"E E l'ER to r
Benefits. Call 8 to S. Mo stm-tlne pa y. complete I::nthuslastic person "'ith dustnal. & motor con· dub. 644·5.ill-l. ex1 ::2i; 111 de r \' 111 L 1, e 1 n
lhru Fri. 646·2435 tralnln11. pr~-uniform11. clean driving record trol 213 422-1191 ---____ __,.. __ ..__-i U~ad)· wotk '+' paid needed. Good company ------l.t·nerC1I Off1l'e '.\l.1ture 'A Oman tu drl\l',
CLOTHESTfM£ v•utic>ns 1' an exclt1n1 beftefit5. Call Pat Tool at F:xp Fl or a I Desi~ n er Growing Co ha::. xlnt llP ~ uok & Ille hskpR .\ll rac
ll'ow hirinl ·pat\\im w~~Iflcentlvepro1ram . 642·4321, ext 257 for ap· w311ted, full part time. portun111es for General 111.l' area Rel·!> re<1'd .
'S ules • tu sls \-•nS Apply In person 14920 Jflntmet1t or informa· tomeinwith expforpro· Of'f1ceperson \lustha\'e "'11 ~120&~i3·29!ll_
manager trainets . Cal\1 ll e a c h 8 l v d . lion. gress1\'e shop with car· general knowledge or lite u-·s...L--wont•d
ror inteniew. 642-1211. .. c;-n al Op E I riage trade 645 0093 & bookk o k b nvu nii--r-r' "' Wtsunlnst er. ....,u por m p oyer · · · ~ping. 1 · ey ~ Helmed lad\' to h1.e m.
"'--«"Help.I> orFi'r. -usk for Diane or Mrs. tr1tJCh. hte typing. Exp priiC1te room. bath
"""""'" Dock ha nd /Shore boat Camµ. nee. Gd working cond. &ii~. f).14 8819 Kulter'a C\ealM!n. \86 E. f'rmge benefits Call The -----
FIDELITY4
FEDERAL
SovirKJs and
loon Assn.
lSIS Westrhff
:"t•wport Beach
An Equal Opportunit}
Employer
160\St. 548·424l. operator, parttlme, Mon. field Representative On Bal h :\I art . 1 7 1-1 I Housekeeper >A anted. lo\ ---~-~-E-R_H_E_L_P __ , & Tues. 12·6pm. Boating a temporary basis to ex· H_7S·4830._~trs. Bu_rkhart_ el~ Balboil Penin home M"CHIHE COUWI' experience nee. Contact l'hange converter s for "" StJP'ER SANf>WICR "-.. l descrambler un·1ts. :\Just G I H l C · 3 school age ch ildren OPERATORS uu..-.mas «, b eneru e p . alenn~ :\lust be exp household
67Sftaularhto,CM fJALBOAYACHTCLUA ha ve depend a l e Warehouse. s tarting manager & possess xlnt lht&lrdShifht 54~·4867 673-351S transportation . W i ll Nov. 24. 8:30am ·I 30. ref Call 673,;643 alter Wenowhaveopenmgsrn
train. Commission App· min each da). 646·8433 Gpm & wkends our fabrication dept. for
ly al Teleprompte r Cable ---m;,chine 11perators. We
T.V. 901 West 16th St. GUARDS -- -would prefer a min. of 6
N.B. Full & part time All HOUSEKEEPE R-P a rt· months recent exper 1n
areas Uniforms rurn'd . time. good ~ourly rate. milling & bridgeport
FILE CLERK Ages 21 or over , r etired 1mmed open mg. 552-4807 machines & the ability to
R.I;. Kautz Is accepting welcome :"o ex per nee. or 894·9825 r~ad blueprints & pre
applicatioosforabegln· pp l ~: l'ni\'ers al HOUSEPAAENTS c1s1on measuring de
ner spot. For a responsi· Protection Service, 1226 M tF couple to relieve \'lees. Apply at. '
ble, h ard wor king person \\ S~h St . Santa Ana In· h 3 re n ls 0 n Most ... s,.cloltle~
In our filing dept. Good terv1ew hrs: 9·12 & 1·4. al~;.::~e ~knds 10 home 1640:\tonrovia. C:~1.
woritlng conditions with J\loo.f'r1. settino w six develop·1642·2t27 E.O.E OfflC£ CASHIEI
Enjoy working •• Office ~r
In s1,vick'1 Jewelers. Dbd .. ·
include verifytn1 ••I• ........
doin1 daily bankinl' tranaeetiGM,
diabursln1 funds ••d ot••r
telated duties . Excelleftt
Compaby Benefit• Pack ....
opportunities tor train· " In g & advancement HAIRSTYLIST mentally d lsa bl ed - ----
Some t~ ping preferred. s Top professional to toke c lients Must ha''<' MAID OR HOUSEMAM
<.lay work week. 8: IS to O\'er t•omplete manage· minimum of 2 ~rs col· 1 • 642-3030 ·
-' JO. Salary $650. Con· ment or J boutlful ne lege iTI Social Science -----,._
t act Pegu ~!H700 ext :-tores . 6·U \616 e\ e:.. area & have had pre· .\l,\INTENANC I-: MAN
237. I ~().385i mornlng \'iOUS Ul)ilnencewlthde·1 Open schedule, S3.SO/hr
velopmentally dis abled Full 1part t ime. Top1
F LOR.\L Designe r HAlRSTVLI ST Am · clients. Responsibilities 645·0222.
needed. :'\ew1><>rt Beach bilious. s h a r p self· include: programming -------· -~
aie..&U--7846. star te r wh o wants In self.help & leisure
FLORIST something different. s kills . beh a\'lor OPPORTUMfTY
DESIGNER r t tirn e. ~~a~!/!~/ _:utsl~ modirlcatlon. & consls· knocks often when you
sallll)' comm. W/exper. ""'l•ntlal. Guaranteed t1ntlsuper\'\8'Qn . Job In· use ra wt.1eltlf\I Dally
OEU V .. RY F ltl .,.. eludes room Jc board .I J>Uol Clusuted Ada to "' m e. as min. for ri&ht person pl~ SlOO per wknd. Unit·' reach UMt Orance <:out
&lstln ahop. H 8. -C.M. area. Ask ed Cerebral Pall>,. market. Apply In ~rson : ror \\ arren. 951-()534. ·I ,.__._,, Phorl• &42•5"71 'm& FLOWER )lfLL '""""'"'
101218 "A" Adams, H.B. WNllAdl Call 642·54171 Have tomethlnl to Mu?
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.W. W...W 7 I 00 H1fp W..t.d 7100 ~~~ ..... ~!~.~ ~~!'!.'.~ ......... ~!~.~ ~ ............. ~!~.~ !::~!:~ ......... ~!~!
HltpW..t.d 7100 W.W-"4 7110,ttllpW_... 7100 ~:;:~;·•••••••••••• ·-Sieft:;,;;;.;.::.~··• AHTIQUES 8-C Hound p.._, twk Pair of T•I• aedi 6
••••••••••••••••••• •••• ~;;T••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SGT l>EPPERON l'S ~pr d. to work w /head Stockr00ttt Aut. Wbol~~~:i::houae =-~•1' to aood hom Fratne1 1)f;:AUTYB£5T
Meilif..-ce M•. :'\~l,IQf'\ Phoh> uhlon1 l'rt Sehool Thcher 1 PIZZA STORE ufN81awflrm Gdskllla. ~~~1~,n~~'!:~a~>~rn .. :~ NOWOPEN ...:*::;..8'1>-~...;;ml...;;.,;; ___ "'.".'"""""7
hll llllH' l"urrq•••n •Ht uw mollelln1 AJU\>.P'l'.~n,r1ta. Nowhirtniirorrull&parl allt'llctlve Law ofc e'I( "c•J>tltude for detail & TOTH£PUBLIC Adorable Cock'" pupa. RIM&!f't&rllOO it .. col•
l1tO hl \pvt) ,, ... , .. l.' llfS73l.'r'16 ~l).10. time ope_nin1• ·~ IOC8· perhelplul.CalJGayleat ~urac\ln slockroomo( ll·Fl0.5 Sa\.9·l2 AKC.Wf.arale/female wTV ... 4.rstoctJ•. n.' •~ r I 1•1.u~llil SIS PaH--iiiiillll-----c t1ons nr OC A1rpor1 ~l-063'S )f11r1ne 'El~. Mf1. flrm. HERJTAGEANTJQUE mo up. PDlhet Cbam· .,. K.lllcnbed. ~-
'' • Vaned da\t. & hrs ldul aR..a.U1tf•1ss Ule llft\na. atock lna. ·-Mt. L .. •"'le~· '*-»'7.-0or'1t-40l4 ... -.. ...... : ~ l'ht11t>•I nur e.1. 1114••· P1£HUAM ......... 1 f __...., " u art rllll M ._ -• ., .-~. =
\I \ ~ \ Ii t II l' I• I com I' a n 1 u n • II ~ ~~),'!'~11 a/11:~~:n::'. <.~ • n v as 4' Yacht ~ 0'1Pi1 t~aln.n~ult f'OWllaln \'alley 96a-1331 ~hna1Utrs. tllnlature. <."Nw c1e1p ilived wd
l ill'\Ulll ! lor , ..... 1 ,~, , •.• Liv• In OQ\, u ..... y ..... t Ourµrosress1\egrow1ng L:~ster~ ~erm F( 1)45.~foral'p.!.:.____ AMTIQUISALE AK c . 9 I wk s. funl, coffee table. bar
n ~ of iou11 •tor1o11• lull J>.11.J't limo poallaun111 1-'or duuhle width H1.1rr1s luc11pany Oiiers oppt~s f:'<p..,.;i.4Pref C:o Bener ts s \Xlem. need a panttme Desks. b"te\. hall tree. ma.1e 1fem.ile. 3 Ru r e bdrm M!ta. screeo, eve .II,.• 111 "'"11t~ \n1t •Hall no~ 1=1 If "l 11res~ Ap11 I• d b d 645~ Bl;icks 2 S P de · ..-..-1 • .,~ -T o...a ... ,. " 11.., 0 ,.. • tor IA \;!nl'emenl use ----Jclb ' 11 30.4 \\kd~s . 1md roUtop. bookcase. piano. . . ........, ....
I' 1111\l' 14111)1 1 tall AtOISIMAC: I .. 111 p1:r,011 bel 11l'c11 on ',, u r Job Sec:r"ef-IDecept. -11111t Satd~s. II ~oure pictures. clorks ae \\Ormed. 2 s hots Pl!JI H .. :.:..:.,,-.,-.ill!l.---...l.---.-0-6"'.'.5~ It. .. 1 1:\:i l~I 'J h• 1 l't!J ooottlScn 1cl.'~ 't.imol1m\ rl Pl t -,/" el · dd ed •. Parvo vac Sl7S A~ISC .. 1 r-111111•-·•.... ,. t 1 ,. pe ormanc~. easan ll°''ine area. Real eatate con! enuow. lln ePtn cessones. art$. us .. .._ .~ .. .,,...7· • ••••••••••••••••••••••• \lu11 lt1lll" .. ,,,,•na~ ... oun ). "' ~Coaat 140C'kana conds ~lust be baAkoround helpful . duble. ~ow hirtn6l tor an&jques . .>48·9882 mem.,..,r ....... ·-... · l11'1'11wr1''cnt•r Or =7"n • " • ood d ------1 Drapen···· blue cu•t_,, ( Ublu \lu '"11 ... $45 0500 Piiot 18 or over A1>pl)· In Salary adj. \\Ith exper. I prep an counter --Frwto You 1045 m.ade. T ie-back pa.Mil: MA"4AGER .1:)11 W Bay St person . Call Paul. 545·6057 or enws .\p11l~ in person f'1tncy Oak. Ph)·siclan ••••••••••••••••••••••• cornices. ~I a.tee orrer,
fullnnw ~ 'l•l 111·111 • ...uasas AIDIS Costa Mesu 230tJSo. East Bristol 497.238,, Slonem11l Tl'rral·e. 2915 cab. china buffet. ribbon , n,.,. \11111 F 1' £quaJOpix1rEmploycr SantaAna ffel"hls ----t lodh1ll cab. h1gh·chair. roll.top. Free ~ltten s + or 964·1649 ·-12 :1ou11111 l'll'jJ>I' i-ul.i • 11' 3 30 t"ert or l'X(I .. See t rv for Ne•port --oaktiomEdlsonw •cab& Mother. To Good Home .__.._ CJ'70 . llt t•f l'ount ry C'lub Cuti\. •Next to Mc Donalds J re II "' . . Teacher·P re School; f'u 11 RC•·. Nat'I brass cash Only 760-1298 _ .... _ 1 trut lntt!I ci11tll111· ul pu.,t lc111p ~1113061 E 0 .£. Be~ch CPA l irm Xlnt time tmmedlule emplo). n ... ••••••••••••••••••••
-DAll.l PIL01 l~. Nooieri•• 11, 18M>
14VI lo. l \f11·111·111 l' ~ Pnnting t~ping & llJ·ke~ adding melll Bene1its for info reg. 4-pc oak & crystal Mixed German Shepherd Diamond ring. ~. h. I.A
,.,.11.11 ' t''l/t>("\t•cl 1" \cl 'l.1tri.1rui Pres:1man wanted. )lust H1'Staurant skills req. Please call call s.&8-2550. doorenU'):..P .P. 831·6956. Pups 9 wk11 old to good stones. 2 star shapf'!. "
•tilll l>.ith hlnl 110 ' Motto~Htlfi.d be e>tperienced on m ulti l'ull or part. lime evening ~-6156 for mlerv1ew. -----ESTAT"' .'NTIQUES SlOOO. 545·3498 tl!s .• I~ l u.,t;i :\It'"' ''~1<!" presses Itek e xper l'ook. Ex1ier. prererred. TELLERS ... " 8371200wk IL\LUl \HK ~'l'tHp ~H Aides . SECRETARY Circa 1850·1900. Lincoln Male --·---· ----.-
U.75 fhr. ~~lp~lld 4 ~~;,, wl>ka ~i.'lh ~ s.I0·2244· Laguna Hills area. )Ion· t:or ~each B~adnc~1est. desk. Bachelor side b' Man's l4Kt yellow gold
MA,.. AGER SALES " ti t " p Id R l d h Fri 7 J "" S700 S800 C II ~.xpenence req · ' n · sl .. -. xJ.nt A.ond. 631·4 '02 · t t .; "" \\ 1 nun o a Laguna Hills. 951 9500__ e:.tauran s an w1c .. :.,.,. · . a sala~ & benefits. App~' uc " ,. bracelet. in nugge e,.·
t)Jlph tor .1111b1t111u!I 111 hol1ll1n.,. bt!g111n1ng 11s maker, rood preµ. P rime :-.abina837-811()(). Personnel: tureci c urb link. m e11sur ·
J 1' \\ 111.' <' l''., .1 1 ' ••XI .1:. hired IJ1.~11ef1ts Production Worker tsl a rea supplier of good -.. RITAGE IA.MK ·~ Buick Rdms tr. Hdtp. Free to ~II home. 7 mo mg l3mm m width. 1r ·
11u.ilt111.1 111111 .. nllt't 1 .. 1\\1e" L"o n,ules cent •lu~t. 1·u11 •ime lolldin" 'ood 1 1 1 Sec:rdariK-L-·• 1. . lullpwr,widewhites2nd :\lanx killen. male Call Se ed h ~ I' • .. I' 11 n rne toriiora e ~ 721 ~o. Eut 1d .. \nahe1m "'-· 90 length. cur wit a h,1\1' .1h1h1 , 111 11u1n I'!: f-lci,1>1l.il. 2055.Thunu. cai.~ellt! hives Apµb '" cornmunll.'. near IJ.C. Immediate ope n l n ~. 9!1l ·3860 V>'ll\et960-55 e\eS 730-25-18 betore4pm concealed box clasp,
'""'" .1h:.,,11c·, te..irn' l \l ~Ii ., ~ ,1rre11 I.I e r s o n T H I:: Airport. needs people fo Heavy lit1 ~alion ex· E.O E. .a.....&..cn 80 I 0 T-e-rr-1e-r-·She-p-her d m1 "'. . wtlh a figure 8 s afe\)' l1 l'r "111.d 11 1 ... 1n"'' f'"a•.1\L f()f'' R T ·E WORD d .... ·ence Good s kills ----------..,.,... " ~""""' ' · C t::A I\ ... 1mple roo prep. ,,_n · • T k 0 ••••··~··•••••••••••••• 10 mi> old. all shot s. clasp. Total weight is 'li,:111l 8114 •·'1!l5 1 ~ooc: Sk kc cle s and"l"h mak ing &I strong organi.iatlon al Tc1"' rul· rl\l"r;• A '11r.111" 1°"" ~pa r •r · "• · l i · •· ··-'ed L"x""'n encedon Hotpotntl-drfrig.2years spa,ed .. vlntheallhtogd ~.92 penn~weights. P· .. St II B 2 I . ' in e ""''"ter hel11 .'·o ex1•6r abihlles n ua11\'e "" '\.""" r;:.. r-. ·' .,.., 000 S II \f ,111 IO I l I U 1· I.. Ill J 111
1en.11wt• & J.:l'lll'r.11 ',11 11
""lk \lu ,t \lo Clll..
~JturdJ1:. I 111lt·d H«11t
\IJ. 7111 \\1 l!llh.1.t:11t7tiCI
Cerii~l.d · l' • • 1 · "'""' ,.. ·' ""' 11 t > l k e h )lust '" e <.: )I area old St75. home with ·' oung bo>' or praised over ~. · e ~9 11l38 n"'' Mon ·fri. 8·-1 Call "'1 ingness l a .,11, ..• ,..,.,.. "'5 5165 for.,0 CI\. 548-64'6. ... ""'d '"~ 'bll't e t' I .. .....,,, .... • children ~5·5718 _...,., .. ... urses ~• e ttul or Susie. :\I F . res1ion.s1 1) e .. ~ n ta __ _
$4.00fhr. Production c:c7 ,,...,., l::\cellenl benefit:. TrJ,ul \••ent' . ..:, Top tre~er. fr ostfree £.-1.L-1050 Sue. Emerald nng. 1.i:; "" ·-· Salary 0110n. Call Linda " " ~ ti v.11d h11hd1" s . bel(111 Help wanted part t1111e "" l•~·rle11ced :\I anage1 & relng . hke nu, $225 ............... ••••••••• Car ats with 12 diamonds. 1110" 11• soc111 .1!> h1re<l. :\la1I room Mon 5P:\I 'lll Re.tuuranl. no11 hiring. R u s ~ e 11 c 0 11 e c 1 <>uts'. tde Sale;.11erso11 1""'5123 «500 p p 646 ~289 h\•n~ftl~ flu'' 1ew l'nn t1111s h Tue~ 5PM ·t1l !>a11dw1l·h 111uker:. & tood 2l3/S56·20oO. l nteniews t'o 11i1uter u ·atned. tor ~-CA"AIMS ... · · · ., ·
l II · t ·•05· h 1 51·0 · · in ~ewpott beach ed N 1 M"'GIC CHEF WATERIED o· d E so ;\l;anulael\11111i.: •a , .... l·e111 0~1Hta . "' :> t1n1:. App y l 1 • prep persons. 11 ~our ------------tull .. utomal to11 . ~ ... 1amon a r rin gs .
GROUP Thunn. I · \I Mrs Far· Placent111 . <.: M con.,cientious and depen SECRET"' RY lueal1on Im med. open· Dooble Q\·en Gas Stove FOR SALE! + V /G, approx. I carat
SECRET•RY l't!ll &12.:1~~'>.t-:OE. dable we need ~ou ~ lll!?7~163l·~O__ ICop perlone l. d diasolitaire also .S0 .. 87,
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·I P It o DU l' 'I' I 0 N Wkd~s >l·<i uppl ~ in For small medic·al elec·i·---------• Rousserie. magit rol top Beautifully fini s h e1 &.S2.540-0208
11 r 0 1rL'1· l 11 r " j Tll.\1 :-\f':t-: Rubber hose 1 tronirs company, near burner. automatic cook natural wood; bookshe r -------
Mmrnl al't unn): 1111-. ;111 , MURSIHG produrls. · )lu;..t 11:c1o:. c•o 1~r!.On Stone mi 1 Ter· ocean. General ofh ce TYPIS·T & •·eep "'arm ovens. $300 headboard with m irror . Mscel•eCMK 101.0 I I I I .. rac•e, 2915 Redhill " " 2 d d l I t 1111 m l'1 tt l' l' c 11 r a Work 111 :1 fnendl\ at· phys1<·al 111<:1 b;.<Ck X duties to CO\\•r broad or best offer. 979·2342 I ra wer pe es a no •••••••• .. ••••""•••••
!>t'l'l'ctan \\tth :1:. 'r!> ul 11111:.phl'fl' .1t ('u:.ta \ll•sa ra,. Takmg applkutionsl Rdui l clerk. co~ta Mes· ::.11ec·trum frhm detail ReKtSter tOl.la~ for loral alter 6pm need for dresse r 1
nx•ent 1•xp1•r pr\'11•rahh \li·ttmn.1l llu.;p1t:1l b 1 " 11 M 1 11 11 11 I ~ Slulloners. 270 E 17th St. t ~ JI in g & w 0 r d tem11ornr~ a!>:.ign menls 1..AFlGE kings1zed bed 1n
w1tl11n n1,111t11.11·t 11r111 1: Med-Surq . 11 1 6 -1 "'11 1•r oressing t o all 5570045 West inghouse 16 r u ft dudes heater . liner. ern1ron11w11t ('.111cl1d.lll' R...a• & LV ... ' Strut 0 ,. ' ' 1 I Costa :\lesa r u l ime. .cms trathe dulit-s A'k • frost free refrigerator matress & padded rails.
mU!llht•,1hlt•\111\\1l•1\\I , ... s ... s \rmstronl(:\\l' lr\'lnC Appl~m1~rsonlO·l2 rorTerri Ill-s:l()()tbs_tofr 673-4080 __ :'>lust sell ASAP. mo,·
"Jim & .1hll· to• u:.l' .1 cl11' i-:,,.11111i.; ~ 1"""' 'h'f\" 1-;o~: A Kentl:ni!> lnrl · r-n.. L -111g~ ssoc11best offer Call 1:1pM11t'.'hnr1hJnif ,~111, t11ll11e11 ... ~p.ir1 t 111w C SalesmanWont•d ~L~!>~S-0845 U \• -IUldinqMaterials8025 tH0-5527or 64fH451 &ask
\\ouh1be:ilkl1111h•pl11' ICU/CCUR,..'s , . 1 ':\I .. 642-3260 Sul·relar.' 10 ''El'. ad· lfMf'OQAJIVl'tl!SONNflSE~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• forExt.224 \1 11 ,1 h,11t· Jh1>\t' Work7d.1\~111u:!week 1 T lountt>il.ir ,( · "'SaleS ' '-' Chrome towel bars and ____ _
,1, t•r.JJ!l' 1111nw111-.cl :.k llh I'·" l>t'11111i I Laguna Hilb ~ T pre I 111 1 11 1 s t .r a 1 1 ' e · 3723 8irch Stre•t paper holders. 40'. un· * * I BUY * *
t..lwahlt•t1>11"'""11..t•\ ICU/CCU 1s~erforLa)!un;1 lli lls 5·S AUTOSALES mathematlral. bO(Jk·1 Mew leach derwholesale. Approx· Good used Furniture & ~houhl lil• ,1hlt• '" ••tl<'1 Sunar•isor ' ~rs 11.XP ne{'lled Apf'I~ & LEASlllt..IG k.eeµmg skills re•1u1red imately 550 units. Bulk .\ppliance.s OR I will
tl\ch l'11m11111111<-.1tt:\\tlh ,..-. .\:\I onl). fl\IC' Center n Challengmgop11ortuntt' -saleonl\.646·6096 sell orSELLforVou
,illlt·\i·l, .. f p,·r~onnl·I Resp•in,iuleforthi•:!I hr ' Cleaners. tl75 Paulanno H S,1la~ 10 $18.00o Sen<.1 VETERlt'olARY ---·-------u ... .r.TERS AUCTIOM 111ier.1t1u11 of our s bed , ·u -·13115 LAGUHABEAC r~umetoC11ll1ns Asso" .·\i'de 10 handle c--as & ~ In .1dd1t1 .. 11 I 11 ·' 'l'I\ ··~11 .· ,.e. l. ·" .:i ""' , _,,... 6 ..... 8686 & 833 .. 625 I "" L>o ~ou feel ~ou are. or SliiSan '\1c·olas Or :>: l:i pharmac~. common s.-.i-ftt 8030 .. _ • ., 1·v1111J(ltlll\ l" '·1 jf\ \\ l' L'c1nla1·t PURCH "'Sl ... G "· th l l al to be .. ...-r-··-r II I ~ ..... 1oa'e epo t:n 1 a cashier. Plea:.anl person ••••••••••••••••••••••• llllt•r J 11 r ,inl!i· 11 llJ rl)Jra.f "t·lseth I PROFESSIU''' 1 h h King sz xt ra l1rm tn r I 11 'n.~11111" for .1 Jr hu.,erj tru ~ •'" S...-cretan . loca c urc . \1 1th abd1t' 111 meet o ··-t.-m miscellaneous · · llt'f\l' lb & '1 lll! 1 ' nllll l>>r of Pnr·onn°I "I"' " I ., II · • I h di d "'"""" n er s p r 1 n g m at l I ", • 111th 2 .I,,:. ex11 10 saesper:.on . so. we m .. tureperson.t,·ping cx ~ubtc. an e recor s. eqt.D'pment.318x24travs. _ lldt..ihlt• ''Ill" i•11\1111n "'2 ''-•"' • W h . "II T • ,. J l h oil box sprge; l'l 1 t ""' ' "" purcha:-111.: Ahle to "'ork want ~ ou e a' e transcribing skills 1m· "'' rain ·' ewport Safe light For black and \\ mac c . · ;~~:~nncl ,',',:;~:~ .:t"n .11 ;f. 0. E. :\I F II 11ndcr pres:-.url' ln\'Cn· qualified pro~peet:. & \\e portanl. Exp necessar~ ~.1<'h Lorallon. IO h r white de,·elop1ng . 11,1 ne'er used. sttll pkg d.
M t S . If IOQ l'Onlrol exp & hu~ in~ need ' o u 1 I ale n l Call G3l-2880 I \\eek Sall dep on e\p . gallons each A & B con· "orth $520. incl deh\'
as er pec1a ies •>I com1lOlll'n1s. o111re. & Stra•Khl sell G:\I deale ----------attitude &12 3840 -centrate 3 gallons .fix S238. cash onl)" Usualh lt;.10 \lo fll\ tJ t. ;\I rr 808 :\'ur~ing m.11ntt>n;cnrl' -;upµl1es 0 ers ••SECRETARIES•• Waitress In 111e . '' 111 concentr ate. 4 pints home.640. 7
ll-l2 21r. 1-. O 1" 1 RH & LYN'S \ble to e)\pedlle all or •Rea:.onable hours 111 lri.ltn 1n ex11erienced hardener concentrate. :\I-,-~jj L . -g Rm Set tiers Full l·um1>an~ &lnda\!.I Legal/corp :\'oShS16.800 pe1,on~. i! opening:.. First$JOlak.esaU . us . l\tn •
\kt h.int i I· ii r•·ii.:n & I Pri•ate Dllty henerits 546 2901 •E\l'eilenl c·omm1:.~wn. GOfc Recpt /BnteSl4.~00 lum·h 11 2pr11 . rlol:.ed Sun i6S·583'7 · Stereo Console. Dtng tbl
. 1 :\'1·edell lcH l'ase 111 ---horn.1. ... plan Sec ShBO EngSH.-100 &hnltda\S .\ltcr9 30am \\ chrs,Lamps5489646
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II
11 •1111 v.-I l f' II &t·---------111 •C11rporalc bcncl ll~ GOlc T60 f/ursSl0.800 u5.~==".· Bell & Howell ffiO\ 1e ----t I 11 I I 1:.at 1 l.':> min,, l'r u .,. ,,.,..,., Sof 10 f I $275 d 1 ~1 ~'.l1J ' ' ' 11 I fl t1m1• pu:.1t1011s a\a1I QUALJTYASSt:H.\:'llCE pack<il(e L11ReindersAgency -----camera, Super 8 proJ. i a. t. ong : .en
r.i\I· .~ l~i· '111 " 111;1."01r '"' ,•acwus sh II ts Call SUPER\'ISOH •Tra1n1ni.: & mi; mt sup ~020 Birch Est ·64 EOE Waitresses wanted yrs old. 675.4-110 tables: S75, electnc ad· ~hop -1 • '' 111 ""11· \I t or .1 I' JI t t; p John Im med. opemni: a,·1111., port :\ewport. 833·8190 /Fr ee I· ull t1111e Ex per uni\. JUSl able twin bed: S250.
&t:> 12:!1 1 lle <1lth t·jre Ser' ice. for a qual'd. i>erson w ~t •Demo plan a vailable Attl'l.1 1n per:.on 3 5P:\l 8;\l:\I mo\·te editor fo r dbl bed w heudboard:
i-: o E i52·0'.I~~ , rs m 1 n e, per •.\rh u11cemcn1 ~o 1•honl' !'alls The .J 11\1 sale p.9 model. still in SlOO. chair SSO Also.
.'I'·. 1 11 \ '\ 1 I' \ 1.1----------~1 ... ampling proiedures. Ple<.1se rail t:ra1g El-l<o~er. 400 Su C<1a:.t box:\I 0499-1479. lamp:.. 673 2287 or
" r ls"orth lor an appoint · ~rdary /Exec. llw~ LaunOJ fWach 675·~10 l.~i;1'1 l·;H OFFICE GIRL mech ins pection & ml·nl Career oppty in fas t· Cah 8035 --
<:ro\\thopp1111111111' \11.• ph1111l.'' hilling, hte m1cro-mspection & able 494-1131 paced Npt Bch invest \\,111re:.-..\\ rarforw1c·ker ... •••••••••••••••••••• 5 pc F'rench PrQ\enllal
\ t .t p1dl\ ••\J1and11q: t'Jlllll!. r:'lu:.t d rt'e to Jnalyz~ problem!... mt?nt firm. Reqwrei. top 11<1 ket lunth ~enH·e Persian kittens & adults. girls bedroom ~et $250
nH·tl • • a I l'" 111po11 1• n I flll·:c~;i111 "'nrktng 1·11nd'.., Re 11 ab 1 Ii 1 ~. t rend SAl.f':S F'u II t 1 me for 'kills <shthnd 90. l~ ping !• 311 1 31tr:\t :\Ion f t 1 CFA "Shaded ,,iln~rs.. Eves 557-3106
LUGGAGE TA.GS
from 'our business card.
Send 'one card Cor eacp
tag plus one spare. We
ret urn pe r m anent!)
~ealed atlracli\'e tag &-
strap, meetiog airline
I D reqwreml.'Ats. Pre-
'ent loss & theft! For a
iiersonalized tag enclose
wallpaper. fabric or
· Oa) Glo" paper & we '"II back &. trim your
taw; Or ll) two cards
back 10 back.
PRICES·
S2 ea or 3 SS
4 5 tags Sl.60 ea
619 tags Sl 50 ea.
10 or more Sl.40 ea.
Sales Tax lnclulled•
NO CARD?
Orll\\ your own or send
name. address. p hone &
we'll make one card per
tag. Add 25< each. '
Send check or money or·
derto:
PfLOT PRIMTltolG
P.O. Box 1560
Costa Mesa. Ca . 92626 _
CERAMIC
TIUllS9UE
111..1.nt1l.1U ur1·1 rt•c11111 t'' J ;;.11, l-"l'·K analysis exp 1:. 1m tt"r lot· al Jewelr~ S\l>l'e Co 75, Sound prolessional 1-.Jrn Sl2j Sl50 "'eek I• s;s up tshots 1 542.2727 ~-------
t·umvetcn1 111d1111l11JI lo tOJnl <J n l .' t h o ... e benefits Will trarn exper. maturity & cor · \luslhene .. t.~r!>onJble l'ear new b'r o w n
fix6 ... 25< per piece. P aint
& glaze your own tiles.
Good for ceramic shops
or pn~·ate part1e.s lo use
"•Ur artistic abililif 5. ~?s33 -. -
strengthen c·ni.:rncertni.: GIRL FRIDAY qualified. pis. call · :\lrs 545-948.5 porate bkgrnd.. helpful. 9~1_1n.~17~7ne·~f~et1~~:\lc:~: Dol)I 8040 naugah~de 3 pc. nving
function!. In< luclc., de Teleµhone & hte l' ping Pierick al 71-1·58t·3830 for ------Ca!J· 64-0-0123 " ••••••••••••••••••••••• room set & coffee nble.
sign draft1111:. ma tt-rials Call lor 1ntl!n t e\\ anappt SALES FASHION ____ •1Pfl!_ __ _ _ KEESHO!"O Pups AKC JIJ{'dblbedset.loveseal,
1e-11ng. ,inti H & 0 pro :'\ewport FloorCo\ertng.I•---------.. FT & PT SJles in ftne SECRET RY WllRD PROCF.SSl;\G Champ sire. :\l F' Pet & barstools,673·2396
Jt.'l't!> \ th-l!r•·t· " prt• '::; 1"31\ ----------11omen'1> ap1Jarrel "tore A 1>a' or E' ening s hift s ho w · P ,. t P I ~ ---
tc1 rl"fl \\1th I .I' l"''" l'\ RealEstate tn :-:ewport Op · 3PM·8PM "''a1l 6hrs u da\ :\laR 21JW7·1345art6p,n T \\ln Barc alounger
h n....rotionsPersonn•I P(Jrt uni'ties be~ond i;)\\P~l. no shorthand. 11 .,,,10 "'." 1 or \rt"" Recliner Ch r s H ig h f.t{'rtl·n1 c· U\\ l'I l'I 1 t· ""r' RY 1. d b ->u ""' ,._ ~i..Je l..ha&a .Anc::o Pu p. 11 b k b ge •·1·nt ••r,1d11.clt"'""th ~11•111 II" l k u I' v. ' r e SALA l' h ri s t mas XI n t app •cants nee .,. ove rall~S2 023-1 .... I Ped,.., S ac . rattan. w e1 " llpt'rJt11r Back uµ a\erage s pellin g & ---"'"" xnt 1gree ire ndon. Onh 4mos new n•tl.'ll'lllC' \\ tll .ii...u I l' I .... h11•r nel"<led for " 1de St 8,000· $24,000 l.enelllS Appl. 641 7IOO._ grammar skills. word Merchmdlse American CH 673·5725 retail S700 ea Sac. SJOOor
t't'l\t' l'111"1dt-rat1oin I\ ~ "''" 11 broker.! g e Phone Work· s.11~ process mg backgroun<I .. ••••••••••••••••••••• both ~&45-'4821 eves 1;1 ea1 "l'l""111111t\ 111 111111 llrm lm1111·d opening ~o sales req HtCKORY FARMS helprul. 752·~ AnHqyn 8005 AKC Englis h Springer
a11 l'\•111111! to·.101 •.ill llelcn )1l'(;1nle' ReaJEs tateL1c rcq 1)11port 11n1 ty to sell•llflll-..11111.-... ,,. .......... ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Spanlels.6wksold. Will 1...ge formal Ommg Rm
2 Cadd~ spoke wheel
rimi.. Sl OO for b oth.
Cf.2()()2 839.9320
Lo•• laMoofts-
Send someone you lov.e a
bouquet of 30 multi_c_EI ·
ored hehum balloons hed
"-tth n bbon & yopr owtl
person al me~sag~.
Perfect for every OC·
cus1on . We ·d eli\'er .
6i3-4-H9 \Jualil 1t•il uppl11 ,1111' 1,,1._,..> ... "' v.•• nt npn\\ 10 work m a ,.. 1i----------hold 'lil Christmas Sl75 . w 10 L:phol Chairs SlOOO • -" ·"-' ..-~urmet roods & gifts for SECRET"'RIES c 11 f 5 3 op •J '1•11d I t''tll111l· t11 fast gro11 Ing :"\wpr Beach hohda\'s t-,ex hrs Will "" WESTMINSTER a ii l · : " Finn Ven Clean 646·2971 STAMP COLLECTIONS
Ch1ct t.11j!tnt•1·1 cink·r lko;k Girl answer Real Estate Firm :\Ir lr<un.' w e,ld ilf Plaza. LoolcirHJfor ABBEY 642·9163. PURCHASE D O a \·e 2:1l\~ll \'i.1 1-'Jhnt·iJnll.' \l.'h:µh1111t",. ~··me t1hng cood1tioned olhces. 642.0972. Fashion Island. A Chanqe?7 ANTIQUE MALL R E A 0 y F 0 R F\JR~ITL'RE-must sell· Cooper. M6·2.387
:\11;.,tl)n \ 1CJO, C.\ !l:!ti!ll \lu:.t h.i' t-grl hand" rll· For an a ppointment to 64Q.ti030 Free & E .O. E Daily 10.6. Fri 10.9 CHRISTMAS·2 week old Eng. oak din tbl w 14
1ng !"all 8 5. P1 l·"1ck hear our orrer on ~our --- ----lrvinePersonnelAgency ClosedTuesday k S . 1 . cha irs. bab ~ .irand Snap o n sirl £' c ab. 3 l'apt:r 5-1!1 1157 saJary call Don ~ow '.' S \LES 488 E 171h C 1 M Coe er panie puppies. piano. hideabed. 2 swivel drawers. I shelf. locka-.\h.-tlical :h~t~t . lronl r.f
I 11·c. for I; I' . 1·x I• pr('
ICll{-0. mail r~·-.umo· 111
a~1.1666 ' . . os a es<i 11751 Westminster Ave. AKC. $200. 540-9444 eves d k h bl "'' ll )ouarea11.11 ressl\·eand Slnte2?4 "42·1·170 Gar .. -nGrove 554.6103 rockers, es . mur e. ()1 ·'l·r l'roccssor \\Ith• .. ----------. ""' "B 631 ""83 51•" 768 "837
u
1
• look ing for a future 1n re·"'!~~~~~~~~~ 1 .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~•JCl=ass=i=Ci~ed~A~ds===64=2=·=56~7~8J..::m:..o.:re=.,-===·&N=-..::..._J __ ""..==.:======·"=,-1:111id tet.-µhone \ 01 ec · -------tail mg ml w /good co r: ; ------1 1 , c 111 ,1 n a ~ c 1 :J ~ 1
ll11i:..ptlal l!d ""' I IM.
' 11 •rl1:<>:1
\11 ~ldllll;. I •llTiffi ('l'rlill,,
ltlms t•\lr,~' \(!~ti Ill'\\
fal'C'' \II .cj!t''lllll''
711 !lfti tJ2o7
i..11nw l\ ping. congenial RECEPT /SEC'Y benefit:. apply in person SECRET A.RY
"ol'ktnl! rond PO. Box Project coord i nator 9am lo lt;Jm Mon thru ADMl .... ASSIST. ~;1, C1l \I. ~•2G25 needed who 15 career F'ri Standard Shoes, 3077 oriented P erman e nt Org anized person
positmn m C !\-! s tainell So Bnstol. C.M \1 good sec · y s k lls. ~lass studio Benefits "'\IF" !.lraftmg. furniture. & •...ln7lil -~. ~,., ron!>truet1011 t''f..tl'r S LOAM S helpful. to handle order-.
PAINT SALES
1•,1n 11rnc. Tue~ 5 111 9_
\\,·d 't t•> I P~I Some
<' , p lo. e r m H 1 Ill .i
11 •• r11"a1 t' 2&.i; llarhor RECE"IOHIST REPRESENTATIVE & <·ustomers I n 1ne
lo rail on banks and l·urn mfr Call h. H
other related busmessc:. ~J..HHSS ___ _
COC' public relations with SECRETARY
111\d 1 \I Per~nnable 1nd1v1duul to
HEED MOMEY? greet our n .ts tomers
\\e hil'C 111ieningl> for IOO ----------•! a~o;wer lhe telephone , & people 111 \\ork appro\ PARTTIME p roce:.s our h1l11ng
1111;i1rh 111 tlj\'< lfelt\t•r GS Growmg compan' " '<
growing 2nd T.D com· Experien ced 1n loan µan~ Some !>ales expr documentation. Xlnt
nt-Cess al') R.E lie prer. salary & benefits Apply
Will tram Xlnl opport & Personnel Director
in}!ldqoh11nt:d1rcllnnl·' EVEMIH Int benefits Call
m the Orun~t: Cuunl~ \tlult:. O\l.'r 21 with nut· 642·1593 .\sk for John
a1eu \\'o11k \11111 ,l\,11l;1 standing ut 1racl l\e c ~~~~~O!We comm Call Equ1t~ I HERITAGE IA.HK hk d,I\ hi;h1 hnur... \ll•n pcr..,inahtie,. "ho enJO)'
or 1111mt•11 O \l•r IR \\Orkmgw1thk1ds S<lper
\\ t·ar' SlJtCOll \\ ,cgon:. hour (all 1>42 4321 Ext
01' ll i:ht trt11 k~ ar1· :!'10 lK.'tween 2 and tiPm •Pleasant personahty. ht e
typmg. Ne\\ Port Deaeh
040·8950
731·2825 721 i'\. Euclid. Anaheim
S•LES LADY 991.3860
E.O E
Exper 'd Cull·l1me .
n1·1·clccl Pl('a.,anl out \.'k lor Lon benefits. pd holidays SECRETARY
door \\Ork. \'Jlld Urt'Y()r., Oranqe Coast Start S185 wk. Regal JPM.8PM
RECEPT /SEC'Y Beauty Suppl~ Z63 E i5WP~I. no shorthand. h1·cn,,c & l.'.1hl llrcnse Daily Pilot
pl;1tls rcqui t t'd Ynu <·trn Equal Oppor Employer Heaq phones. lypini.:. 17th St .. C.~~ _ _ _ applicants need above c:1rn SJ 2.'i ~r; hr 111 more
dcpendmg on ~our spcl'd
of deh''l'n
l"or 1mml·d1.1te 11 ~s11o:11
mt:nl' lollowing a shorl
traimnl{ sc:.l.1011. ap1>I~ at
the l11l·lltiu11 ne<ire:.l you
at Ill 30/\M or l :luP:\I.
dt111\ beginning ;"to' Jtl &
ll uil' thcrealtl•r :ii
R :111\'.\t . 10 30A:\1. or
1.301':\l
filing, handling mail or 5 1 average s pelling &
ders. St art · $2110 , wk a esmen gr ammar skills. word PASTE-UP c all Jan L. at 754.0491. IMSULATIO... processing background
Ex•...,rience preferred, or. --------tam S600 + a week. no helpful. 752-0234. ,,_ RECE"~YPIST credit turn downs. exp ~. will train. Full lime posi· prelerred, will train SICRETAK'l t11111 Co. benefits. Apply '.'\e\\port each L aw s:n-450l. :-..leeded immed. With or
in person· ltWIO Placentia Firm requires good without shortrand. Tem
.\\e .. C.M. phone manner & good SALES/MGMT pora~ & ful time. Call ,"'~TEUr l~pmgskills . Musl beex· Exciting Video store in TodServices at979·8900 ~ perienced. :\Int salar) & Cd!\I. Xlnt field & µoten·
Part time persoo needed henefits il4 ·833·3837 tial 640-5093 Servic• Station
m book pasteup Mon. It Ask for Mrs. Kingdon AttMCkwtt-Lido Af'co
1233 A'•-ei ""•e. Tues No exp oec. App-S "'LESMAH ~Ion thru Fri, 4-0 hr wk. ... ~ Iv Pennysaver. 1660 Reception1sl/Cash1er. " Hrs Oex. S4 per hr Lido
OrancJe t'IJc't'nliaAve .CM :\ton-Fri. 9·6, General Temlory, Orange Coun-Arco.3Ql0Newport Blvd. ~2~:1i;; a1n St So of ,IX OPERATOR ~~~ ~~~~;t~~r~.a;,e:~ :~ ~~~ ~~n~P~~llw~li _NB_673-_1_0._23_· -----
919 r . South St. Willtroin.Fvltorpart 50wpm. phone s k ills. train r ight person S E W ING M ACHI NE
s; IC 72 2 900-8951. OPERATORS needed. Anatteifft time. Swin9 shift & West O.C. V:\ A. 6 Tomqwsl Mach. Co E.xpr. pref. 645·6562
OHEustSlrccl wtcnds Garfield A~·e . ff B. B C
243ow S.hst .64")3013 847·9622. rea. a. Shippin g & recet\'lng
• • ,.,. SALIS. PART TIME clerk. small varts, will
Santa Atta PIX SEC'Y Receptionist-Looking ror CHRISTMAS. USO WK+ train. Call 545·8860 I ·.a Between F ulrvlt>w &. a mature exper'd & resp bo GIRLS ~IEN _i>monh .
SulU\'al\ \\ e of I er x Int c Cl. verso n . M us t be '5 · · · ·--------1
, 88 Fofr Or. lldn .16 benef1b Sa I corrl fashionable as well tor WOMEN. Flex. hrs .. Shoe sales. full time with
Co1t0Me1: 111ens urate w C:\J>. <&bus~ e l ega n t lifgn workdlnr.home.~un&re· or w1out exp .. or will ,1b11lt~.· T~ 111n2 55WPll fashion salon. Richard war ng pos. w ere you train. Good co. benefits. •'Or11nge County F'oir (1~ure tiptilude pleasunl earn S while ~Ou help ,\l>f)I,\ in person 9am to
grounds, enlcr gale :I oft omce N.Y SF.. :\lember Ouellette Salun . 200 othen. Neat " reliable l lum ~Jonthru Fri, Stan·
J\rllnaton f trm. Ct1ll l'or lll>l'l · ~ewport CenterDr.N.B. only.Mr.Ryun.963-01116 dard Shoes, 3077 So
All Aboard For Our
Christmas Gift Train!
An •HY way to Mfl your Chrtatma• Gift lteme.
..
~·
l,
l · I
22772 Gronlte Way 1«4 !r7o.t J oun B111rd Sutro RECEPTIONIST Man111ers earn Sl .000 Bristol, C.M.
lOCJIU"a HiN• ~~·~ ~~0~8~'·e. St. Suite With or without t~ ping mo.S -~-.-A-C..,.K.:..8.:..A...;..R_-_F_OOd __ p_r_e-1.•
Exjt San Diego Frw> at needed. Top pay. Tern· Sehl l4ts Dri•er• par11tion. Openln1 shif\.
Luke 1-·orcs t Ur t 0 PEOPLE P ERSON pora~· & lull time. Call PAR"l' TIME. QualUled ~lature. Seacllrr Co\lntry
Moulson l'arkw11\ 1 1 Locul buslneS:> seeks 3 TodSenicesat 979·8900 appll c a nta wdl be Club.536·8866. 1.hloc~~·IOpporn1111t ~ 1' key people p •T . ForlRental Aaent YePJt bus,·I tra1ned and Jlc'd for im· STATIONERY STORE in
Etllplo.1q1r 11f.1Pl· 494·5168. 8· lOam olll"e llce ·e' r""' • med. emph))'ment. Call CdM need s u leslad •' •
·\
I )
I
-------' · " ~... Caph trano U nified "
Trade >OW' old 11ufr for I 494-~ ~hool Dlat Tranaport•· ~~ c!J:~~s~'~} ·w. Idle items with o new aoodlaa with •'SELL idJe Item• with a lion. 496·8312 for In · l\' fine cl\enteJe. Phone: ~b~~o~~fi~M O~~fied~~~-j~~CTu~ned ~=f~==a=U=oo=.=====~~=~=~=O=~~~~t~.---~~=~:~~~~~~--~~~~~~~-~~~~==~======~, :_::.::=:.=.=__-=:;=...I..==:::::======= i ·-1 r-. ..,, I·
,\
..... ·--,,. ..... __ _ ... ---. ...,._ -----... _......,_-..--.---·-· -......... -·-~·--.. ...,_ .
r-
"tC a a • ¥'11.
T..-day. November 1 t, 1980 Ol.ILV Pll.OT ez
·A Daily p \ lot ad number wi II appear in your ad ...
we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you cal I
in at your convenience during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ... For more information
and to place your ad call 642-5678 . .. ..
~ice w'hen placing your sd ... 642-5678 DAILY PILOT
W11ter Founl•ln , t1uod
cood 3 ~naiht SWIU\IO,
bes t o ff er 64V·1007,
~1129
f\rewood Rlllllroud ue~
Assorted millet.I &
aasoned oak luas Bu.'
all. make offer . 243S
Newporl Bh t.I C M
646--4479
AllWOOD
Orange. Split St5U cord
-it&-5548 after 6P M
Sltna, Am 1Fm. RDA-860 Tr...,alietio.
cM8s & 8-truck pla~er & •••••••••••••••••••••••
rt!Corder 6SR turntable, .WC,..ft t I IO
di111tal t'l()(•k , .a speakers ••••••••••••••••••••• ••
Xlnt $275. 645 :1532 1969 Beech Musketeer ~-& ;._:;,.. ---midtime 1~ l.ycom11~i
~........ e n g •• 2 Com -~av s
••••••••• •• ••• •• •• •• ••• '!ans ponder 848·Z!>09 aft
--.. ...... -1-..& b 6PM. _,_.,..........,.,._.c• -~~---~-~-
Senlce 9 20 C~. S•/
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
JOfO ••AR!IOll BIVO
CO\IA Mt~A 641 0010 •••••••••••••••••••• ••• Rellt 9 I JO
:\IARJNE ELECTRIC I A:'\ ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••• (Juaht~ Work. Call For Sale 1971 '• ton Ford '29 Model A
5"9-2Sl!Oafter6PM camper s pecial Ford MeC'han1<'ally restored
Sears 10·· radial arm s a" •~ Mmiit• p1ck·UP \\llh 1977 King of Also ~00 an ne\\ unul>ell
w11hextras. ...,..~ 9030 the Road self contained «JSmel1c vart~ :\I~ bl)<h
tll58 Pon11at· <:h1ell:111.
S46·0!l3-' ~,...,.. camper. 460 big block man has !>kipped \'ou
--------••••••••••••••••••••• • • eng and trans. forward can ha\ e <1ll for S3950
Chrome Motocross bike 18-5.5 hp Chrysler 0 8 . 35 air. roof air, lots of xtras <'as h. 5~6·5000 "kdaysj
'Sl25. Western saddle, hrs. like ne w. SlOOO. 6iJ,7495 ___ . &.5pm.
. Sl6.S. 642-3001 s.i2-0060 -Motori1ed-.-, .. -.-, 914 0
Top Dollar
Paid
For Your C:ar '
JOHNSON & SON
Linc:oltt-Mere u ry
2626 Harbor Blvd ,.
t:!Jt.la Mesa 540·51)311
We Pay
'ii! ~1Z 2,,. 2 ;; ,p<f 2lK
rn1. l11atled. l1lo..c ne\1
~ .. i4i111rm W!:I :113 1
;5 2HOZ 1111\. m1 .• 1 t'. nl'"
hrake,,, \lnl nmd :\ lnl
Ina St';.}11 •:.!l:l 1!J2J 05 l;J
allt:r H l1\l
'!kl C..:ah f);ibun P\ 11"
ii !HIS. '1enna metallic.
-,11nr0<1f. ll hr. air. «a~~
'15 . .)t(I 6-15 2315 1,-;5.gfj:ll!
•i• !112. ne\\ m11l r11 • lo Ill 1. ne~b mt. SllWO Fl R ~I
til6·:li'C12
;1>~11Su l'.lwd.ko111,,.al
lo1s, s1gna1ure edition
~t ereo Oil er ~!J2 0648
'G.i \'W St.-chin. run!. good ,
~5 17!> E 18lh Sl. L' :vt
548-1487
;o Hui:. t 'al l.ool<. hrantl
nev. paint, cnl! .\ trj llS.
~JS(} i5:.! Ui2!J
·n H l W:ig11n Ori I!
ov.11~r (.'1101111 ... , .... n 'tl
\lint cond S27ill. g:J7 211il
all Ii
l~iti Sc11 "' ('11 111"
11"11lea11,e. \\I I· \l ... tt·rl•11
< .1sset1l' ,\ C:. 'l:lnl i·on<l
t .111 e' l''>. 673 li228 or
s:m.;11s
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•CHEV. NU '80
MALIBU V6
SPORT C OUPE!
,\111 0111al1t· tr:.111!> . Jlr
I' () rl (I -~ 111 H ,. e I
•!'.er (MJ I
O~LY SS998!
HOW ARD Chevrotet
'''" c & Qua 11 ~b.. ~t-;\\'POHT EF:.\Cll 833~0555 .
SEE US FIRST!
\h • hu' l' a j(t111cl selcC'l 11111
o I '.\: 1-: W & C S 1-; J)
l'heH'Olch ~
Elec. Guitar & case Boats. Power 9040 ••••••••••••h••••••·•• ltlnt cond, no rust. rt!bll
,Peave.'· T-60, brand new. ••••••••••••••••••• •••• '79 Moped. xlnl cond. en1une. S20(.I() or trade for
OVER
19-lootl
rm. s;;.oo 111' .. ,,,,u nil' bl'
Sl!t:l Ufl 0111 li!lli Hi:J:, Rolls Royce
-. -9756 ·1-®-
COMMElL
CHEVROLET
~ ILHbor Blvd
1·<~TA MESA
·,.so watt Vox Amp. Bo~ 's ,~ 3 · v I K I N' G · 7 4 S350oroffer. \'W Uul! 11f comparnble
fu spd Schwi~n bike. lc:..tmbrldge, leak pulpit. ___ 642-6107. \alul! 96(1 HSI
Xew student s des k. hsh equip. 2 s tations. C02 '!kJ Puch :\loped. JOO mi. l'OLLEl'TO HS. . l '.tfi:t
v.alnul. 644-0561 ~ystem. twin Crus aders like new. w loek. access. lllat·k Linc. < ont u1ent al.
For Your Good
VW. Porsche or Aud 1
9 723 .........•.••.....•••••
·1;7 l· ••rran .r.111 c ;Tt'
~I tM~t 1111 1111111 roml
li..11 l)ti4)h 111 I) Ii) &.J1i7
······················ "1 DEALER IN U.S.A.
~ ROY
CARVER I Go •
546-1200 ~
·7.~ Monte C..:url11 Land.lit.
:J:'lll \ H .11 1·. \111 F rn
... te1'l'O. 1:lt·t• w1111 l11\\ ~ ,\
:;.outs. cruise control. t ul
I\ l1111dcd S!60U I( Iii 1111;,
Sl2.SOO '.\:ewport Yacht c.•o 3398 \'W PORS F. ( I ...laek LaLanne s pa mem· Exchange675.1800 ~75· .....,. \\n1te 1ntr Lm' mt. ong -·CH · ..\l 1 Fiat "72 5 be h. ..... f L · 'l d · +15 E. Coa!>t HJy. a' 7 rs 1p. ucst o rer 01s. 1~ :\toped 6mo irtt. rare-11vmer .... n\ nm Se\! to H 1 0 •••• •••• ••• •••. ••• ••••• I
ROLLS-ROYCE
1S40J•mboru
topless
in a
Rabbit 556-2314 art 6 35· \'I Kl NG '79. tw 1350 ly used. xlnt. cond. S4SO. app~ec1_ale. ll.'J7 1J:l3 Nl·\\~r:fi!~l'~ ~:~:~:tl!JCJll .78 FIAT 12 8 1
.1 Crus fo'WC:. 7 5 gen.. eau 631_548g ~ ... Roc:e, ---- -· AYS I I ... Wpor'I &.Hh ~ , . iS lmpalu "g11, 11nm:11 .
\,·Jshing machine .S35. j \"HF. fat ho. s um log . ~ ,.. I 1·1 111111«.·r I sµeel'l :13 0001 ClOS~ suNo G Rods 9540 Premium prn e:-. as p ryer $50 Ping -I t ou r n bridge . s la 11 ~~··o!J:::s/ ' µaid lor an~ used t•ar rrnlt'l> Saab 9 760 1
,P,ongtables.50. 548-7174 I shower. Reduced $89.SOO. ~ 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llore1gnordomt'i.l1<' S3499 '•••••••••••••••••••••••! Convertible. I ;,i;M, ...... , r s 1s;,11 H•1h.
i .l:! 5(01 d~,,, li Ill W.llJ
I l!ff1 !'1t.i11:,11 Cpc . I <'' I.
I -.1111. J':.unw leu>ot 111 N wpt Yac ... l E~ch ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7:! Couner Pl". header. I , .. aos.1. B Camping equipment. Y.1n " ,. \\eber carb. Mild cam in;.:oodconditwn ~--· '!J!'. d:' 7 ,..A.
.dowa1r cond1tioner. un !751~ __ '74 HUSQVWR-iOO o frer. 64 1 32!15 :.hel l. ScC't.:,,Fir-;t' ,..._,,. T"'~I TUR80s ~~"'~
I
h11\ •1;,;; 111131 w da '"·
;..-•• lf1i:I l'\ '-'" & \\ f'lld· Good cond. !HSO usualbedroomfurntture. 3:t BA\'L l~ER -551.2395 c hrome v.hls. new HC>:-.IJ\ I HEREMOWI
& ma~y other items ror
1
Su nbrid ge, '80 FWC brakes. reblt t.'n~ &; t" .'L'TOC:1'.~Tl-.R 1~1: , EXCELLE,..T • 13,,1 __
~ VOl.ICSWAGEN, INC
531 ... 100 l'P
sale.Callf>.l5·5131 Volvo's, auto pilot. sm '79XTSOOY.,.ha traru.. fast. Sl8!l.i oner l IR\l'\1-. 8..111·•"'"'! SELECTION! 1 a-a. ....
Contemporan oak din rm
1
dY..11 or trade-take over Vesco tank 3. 7 g11I . &H-32!'5 I I 1 ---------
'it. \Ionia. I.'.' L n1·\\
l S49 500 Plasll·c tenders •. lua ... """--.....I on·-·· n550 . ·-;x 124 Sp\d('r. red ('HO\ I set, tbl-6 't·hrs -ch tn a P.aymen s . · · "' "' ... ,,...._ • .. .., St A'.\l F\l I cabinet s1800. ~ nist 1 :'l;ewport Yacht Exch . gage rack. 2600 miles. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:;,-r.,, 2·t3 "'''16·~s3'1· mal!" BEACH IMPORTS · Vol•o 9772
talh.Jl ttrt.''>, 3 <.,ptl 1;,.\I ,
WI() 192·27:.l/l
.,.... I"""' Sl.200 or trade. Call after '''"""'· ,,_,..-' I R.18 Do\·e St reet ••••••••• ••••••••••••• • Ct-oNsl~ acrdic velvet s wivel 0 •.r """"· 1979 CJ7 R e n egade ., barrel chrs Sl50 ea. 2 21 · fiber g l ass Tug . 6pm.97l ·574o. quadratral'lc lo m1, orig. ·1-1 rrnt TC W,ogon. ne" ~E\~~Rci'9~~ . .\Cll VOLVO ·;·:·:~ ................. .
9925
·studio beds "/bolsters Islander Weekender or '78YA)IAHA400XS·E warr .. incl soll top ---hrake!> & Trun:.. ~el ·1 • I.~ .. t.: l")'ler ="'I !1ew
• SlOO. 968·9864 Character Ba' Launch. 6 spd, rack & siss~ bar . "": s~nlo~f. ha r~85tooJ'I Want ed. t:' on d a , • .i ~, great gal~ m1~eu!,; i.71tH01H 1 Toyota 9 7 65 ' SALES. SERVICE ~:;~','~11~~'.~~i1 [~~,, .\ lni
. fimo. old. \'W Rabbit new battery & lire. 9,000 "" s ee oors 197(}.72. i"·600 \\Ith l1lov.n ong ma es .1.""'1 O l I •••••••••••••••••••••••j A.HD LUSlti&G
Miscel•••s Diesel. F u ll gal l e~-. freeway miles. very biS-5.aOO --I engm!.:_5~l-880l i;iu ~l ;~ l'el11·a L1fthk. dean.) O\'ERSEASOELl\'ERY !Contin~tal 9930
W..ted IOJI f · dbl cl rel'able 55 •·tpg 'i9 Ch k Ch I I to ·t r · !:"\.PERTS '••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sto\'e, re ngerator. . ean. 1 . ·• · • ero ee 1e . 1m· Auto I rt d ·12 12!lSI.. new lirukl'l>. ov. m~ . .!U · s e l'O air.I ~. · I
WANTED: 6.c~·clone or berth. head . complete. Sl95 or Best Offer. mac condition. Ii uou ••••• ~.!':~ •. ~••••••••• :ici-mp~. pa111t. , alH· swso . .>1:.! 5896 1 1972 ll,..COLM
wrought iron fence RR Sl9.S00.646·1S87 631·0148 548-0995 ~iles.Sll.000.833·!12:111. AtfaRCMMo 9705 JOh . -.:Int cond il l . .'orolla.1:rar kedhl11ck . EARLEIKE ~l.\KF:OFF Ell
ties· Bath tub.bar signs 32' LUHRS, 1973. twn 2Yamahas . t2S & 2SO, S350 Tnacks 9560 ... ,••••••••••••••••••• S!l5ll <>BC). 552 S.llll. ,1ll other parts avail VOLVO 675'21113
...,., 8110 1966 Harbor Ul\'d C ..£& 9n3 2 ...,... FWC, Chrys, auto pilot. & S450. Great cond. En· ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • FINAL ALFA ROMEO Honda 97 27 6i5·-'·Hlol l'OS1' AM f':SA OM'C'Tl'e .., ~c,. natural gas galley. hold· duro's. 548·0978 ·77 Rane hero CT. 'er~· CLEARA?'\C E ••••••• •••••••• • • • •• •• • 646-9303 540-9467 ••••••••• ••• •• • • • • • • • • • IMlr-lltt 1013 ing tank. S37.SOO. !'wt clean. Stockt on s hell. ALL ·80s :Vtt:STGO '. i!:I l'ehf'a lilt back. a c. ____ __ _ 78 lnveslnient S1h t•r
••••••••••••••••••••••• Yacht Exchange675·1800 ·791 2 Triumph loaded. a s king S3-19S "We're Dealin'. VISIT YOUR am rm. auto. "8 "' ... GE COU ... TY A111\. Special. L82. bpt!. Bonneville 750cc 5t~9S29. fiiJ-0322 !1:9 1073 VftA...., ,... 11.5(!0 m1 . onl! .,ales lit CO~Directortrombone FACTORY DEMO-· .22· Must sell .760-9539 1981 SPIDERS ORA .... GECO•ST VOLVO e11· Super Cle;.i n ' 11<.'!>t ,..;th case.Excellent con---------f'"9 SR" Log Bed XI " .,. '2C:onnJ.:!d1 auto.~ood "' inboard sport fisher. • :> n ' nt EXCLL'SIV EL \'9\'0LVO ntfer t 711 •359 .. rn;8 'dltion. $100. 675-8052 after ·-;-6 Yamaha 400 Enduro C >nd c RE D S4950 HERE HOW'" HONDA ml•t:h l'Ond. 611.11110 m1 , 6PM. center console. m ,1rlin t ...,.. 1 1 Xlnt 0 d ' a))S. · • • • '1.:...1\,<I ~ "'W Lar~e!'t \'oho Dt-a ler Ford 9 9 4 0
Student
FLUTE
Olds Ambas s ador
Completely overhauled .
realigned. new pads. nev.
CllSe. $150 1080 e\ es
~9100 ask for Lis a.
Marshall 100 wall super
lead brain, 1977 model
Looks like new. Hardi\
used~-Ibanez e lectric
·gui tar. Proress1onal
model with Tree or Life
going up lo the-neck .
Woodgrain bod~ wit h
hard shell ca,,e S500
548-6446
WALL Of
SPUKERS
121 Cabinets J 'x4· ea w .i
lZ" Spkrs. in each \'alue
SJ300 Mus t Sell S37S
!>-15-9227 Terr~ -------
6stnng r>egas guitar. xlnt
rondlt1on. S75
675-4410
office fountffw• & Equi,...... 8085
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Ol~·mp1a typewriter 77-C
m odel . Son y '1deo
cassette VP-2000. Radio
Shack Computer. desks.
sec'y chairs & tbls. fil·
iog cabinets, crfdenza.
storage cab. Si-s tack
a rm chairs -misc .
rurni tu re. 493-69 l~.
~-1230. Iv. message.
Pets 8017
·~····················· Canaries ror sa·le. red
P,actor & yellows.
551-1741.
...... &o,.._, tofO
-~··~·················· •K.awail Grand. 5'9" black.
t4,300. 640 -0505 or
s:n~.
•SALE* Joh\ Brimhall's annual
pre-holiday piano & or·
aan sale. New Grand
Jilano. G .995.00. New ~ & console pianos:
Wk oU. New organs : up
to~ off. 3941 Sc-uth Bristol
·,]J-1121
Bab)' Grand. .,erfect
oond .. 12.000. See in CM
ch.ur. outng~ers. bait s r.:= ega . c n -l93·537'i HEAD'"'UARTERS ·-. in Or.rnge Count.\, •••••••••••••••••••••••
tank. Sl 1.so11. Days onlySOOOmi. S'J0066l·Oli9 'lllCourier bed. make xlnt BEACH IMPORTS TO,..DAYl .• ll. iii Sl9')S 6:JK m1. ~ ... µti. Bl'Yor l,t-:.\SE
S<aS.5033, eves 6i3·109S. ·77 &.izuki ~. 6 s peed. 848 Dove Street Rlue. am radio & heater. DIRECT trailer. SJOO. l'EWPORT BEACH l!lllJ Chris Crart Seask1ff 11.000 mi. S1000. 963·3821. 645·3S32 UNIVERSITY g~<I cond 552·281_-' _ tftM'l~,
't.1 fl cSTJ\ 3.0UOmt JUSl
IJke new S must sell Sl51ltl
ur t:ike over µa) m~nts
Slli mo call .\l.•rl h<.t
l~·Jtii2 or 197 515 I Ta>teshotgunoffpnce 752-0900 S.\LES &SERVICE 35· TS. DCFB. RDF. VOM 9570 -----OS OllLE
VH F. S32.950 840·5914 Motor Ho.Ms, Sale~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMW 97 I 2 OL M
• R~ ~or-I 60 •••••••••••••••• ••• ••• • HONDA
32 Fly.It.OGE '""' ... -,,-1974 Ford Cam per \an, 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tonw/O\'erheadshell tup For the be,.t deal 1n GMCTRUCl<S
Tu1n V8's, dual controls. Rent: 22· Lux. M 910r New ,,ff.road suspen,.aon. Orange Count~ Co ml' :!85(1 Harbor UI\ d
auto p ilot. hot /cold Hme. slps 6, sel(-cont headers. desert mags. SeeCs Toda~·· COST \~I ES\
shower.\'eryclean. S250 t wk . +8• mi . quad s tereo. CB. self-5 40-9640
Sl2.SOO 642·S200 64()..8585 l'Ol1tatned. sleeps 4, orig. ~
. IJ'Gran Manner S6i .OOO i3 27· Winnebago. a ir & (·OSl Sl2.SOO I owner. xlnt ~ '7 CIVIC Sl1p~111 ~" S.SO.OOOloan generator. self cont'd C()nd S6SOO t•r be!>t , SADDLEBACIC :\111\('<tnd 6-120921
a\'nilable Full y 52.000 mi. awning. new 49'l·7-'0R VALLEYIMPORTS l~ifi t\TC 5sp \lot
eqwpped. Perfe~t ll\e· tires :\lust sell. SS,000, Autos Want•d 9590 28402 :\larguerile Pk", wnd, l'lld1al lire:. be!> I
aboard Pvt PIY ;>34·1505 OBO. 556-7723 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mission \'iejo •Iller. 9111111011 orS-l-0-~on boat. • . ---WEPAY TOPDOLl.AH 3 20 O 95 494n -• Trallen, TroHI 9170 ror top used cars-roreign 8 I-4. 4 • ..,
7836Ct dbl ca bm unl-rht.~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• domesucs or t'las:-.ics 1; _Closed ~~~~s
Loaded. l~Shrs. Petet s '68-15' Santa Fe. s leeps 6, your car is extra clean.
Landing shp •229. 17l4 l S700 o r bes t offer seew. FIRST !
774 1101or17141 359-1236. 979-1487
~-----~--:.i · JEFFRJ..ES F 18, SF. Trailen. Utility 9 I 80
tv.11 chrys . microwave •••••••••••••••••••••••
11\en, OF. \'HF. C B. Step Van ·74 Che 'Y 59M.
fa\ho Tot a ll ~ re· ulll trlr tactor~ made.
rurl>1~he d . S26.200. cost Sl200 sell ssoo
'.\:ewport Yacht Exch ti61·27l2 ~~~~~~-~~-1
tii5 IIKll_>_ Ado S«Tiu, Parts
25· W Cra ft No\· a o r & Ac:cftsoriH 9400
tshore, twins. s /s tp S.S •••••••••••••••••••••• •
props, VH F'. Cu\ty. head. S SJ.VE SAVES
tlr etc Sl2.~. Call An· WITH USS> PARTS
d' 645·2963 or iS2·0687
loots. SaU 90 6 O •••••••••••••••••••••••
Imported car parts
IMPORT
AUTO SUPPLY
101 N. Ma nchester
Anaheim 776·9900
4-spndZ
transmission
,, I ... °""'9 C..ty
2§2s Harbor Bl' d
COSTA MES . .\
979-2500
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
COHMRL
C HEVROLET
...... .,... ti 11 r.,r Hi\ ,J
tl\\1t'>\
S4l>-l 200
Own a 3 7 ' c u stom
sailboat No mane.'
down Convenient rinllnc-
ing. Time-share sail.
Write Sharaboat, 12972
Olympia. Santa Ana. CA
92705. ~ :ai::sellaneous 240Z. HIGH IUYElt
76S·583'7 Top dollars for Sports
'78 'VENTURE 2S' Trlr, -----------1 Cars, Bugs. Campers.
outhoard, knot meter . re· Autos for S• 914's, Audi's
CREVIER
&I sr ... H OAO'WAY
·SA~TA A~A
835·3171
•USED BMWs•
722002lit\\ !> r c20fil •
·733 OC'!>-1 :-.pd 105591
·7-12012111s r 103321
·75 2U)2a I 0035 J
'ii630cs1 b pd s r 111J6n 1
'i6 2002 s r .tsp r 15781
'78320l a air. 15169 1
79320i .i spd. s unrl < 1>91i 1
·7s~a. air 160951
795288 -l spd I 1~4 l
'79528\a s r 12615 1
Closed Sultdoys ------ORA ... GE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
&
salla. alcohol stO\'e head. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ask for U !C MG R Sale!>·Service-Leasing
int, cockpit cushions. IMPORTANT JIM MARIMO R C I
\\an1ed H u ntl u r a1
11110 ;2 ' 1.1111 w 11 h bloY. n
t'1').!llh' :l'.11 8HOI
llC tNllA Cl\'ll . 19HO. like
n l' \\ . 1 I ti II ti M1 I •
S.5 .11111 ORO. i~I Old,,
l utlai.s Suprt'me. \Int
111nd S<! :!.'ill 11D l l
1;:11 '.!:UO
1 JOC)llcr 9 73 0
····•·•••••··•······•·• ~I '\Jh nu !!Ill.!
\t·r' ,.h.1rp
1;1;, :'964
Karmann Ghia
llU l><tfO t
Si 2011
9734
••················•··•• 66 Chia neY. eng
pa111t , best oflcr
IJJl 203-1
9738
···•·······••·········· i~ ;\lazda Good c·ond1
tum. One owner Sl 110<1.
l'a I l ~H 3.'i57l
·~ RXi . silver w blk int.
less than 1000 m l. SSSOO
97&.cn~1
9740 ......•.. , ............ . pulplds & lifeline S6500. NO'l'lCETO VOUCSWAGEM f¥V arver, nc.
752·1323 days. 968-7559 REAOERSANO '""tlBeachBl"d. Holts Royce RMW ·7;i 2t¥> Coupe Xlnt t'ond. \'ERTJSERS 40' • 1540Jamboree Al l Ammen $9200
7!• Corolld top shape.
µ111..,tnplnl!.-s poke v. his
:.IOU) ;..;~ H4•1()
Tri~ 9767
·····•·•············•·· 1111 TRi , Con,ert1ble
Special 30th \nnl\'. Ed 1t
fiOO ma. lulh loaded.
m11:.t <,ell. · bs t o fr
It.II 8733
l O 1 20 Garden Grove
Blvd ~ ..... GoN•• 510-f lfO'
Autos, Used .......................
9901 ••..•..•........•..••••
flit 'lass&l·TR~ . .\ IRS. xlnt ·7~ LTD Station \\gn. ·71
drl\C tra in . n e" '.\la\enck. 1;.1 R<iOll)ler
7 O T 0 Fl I N 0 \\ .! n
">75•1 OBO :-.'1"\ 11rr•!>.
good cond 19f; fi4H 1
Linc:otn 9945
···•··········•········ MARKV
r. l!IMI nll s Xlnt • ond
l'\t pl)' Ni!\\ 11111' I""''
S!UM~I ~i~ll l,1•" lha11
l)luC' bk 1;.1:! H\l!l>I
sm.ill trrr (or J.:Jr<ll•ncr gener ator . tares. Y. tre f>t2•91~ '65 lit'st Oflt'r
Y.hee ls. mus t s ell : 548-6770
L !:: \ \' I N G S T r\ T r. Wck 99 I 0
S!fO\ OBO 556·0943 •••••••••• •••• • •• • • • • • • ·79 Cont11wn\ ..il Town c' .11·
. . --.-.-I '75 Electra 1-dr hrdtop. Whilt•" wht l ... ath 1nt1
70 TRli Looks and run!! I new radial 11n·•;. 59 K a c ~SOO 011 Sl5 111111 c ;ti I ~Int. Sl!f95. 962·8068 Aft tual m1 641> i 1 Iii !ltill Hllill i60-09A2 ·
h It -~·1 ---•1 J "' Met-cu 9950 Vdksw~ 9770 62 Spec 1 ,1 I \ l n I ••••••~••••••••••• • •• •
••••••••••••••••••••••• transportu1111n c;oud S!J' 01l,\:-.;c;,.:cc11·-.:TY :-..
19 78 VW RABBIT n11le<1ge si.111 '•7!1 :!55:! FIMEST
thampagne echt1 011 2D. 1,:i 1 ;)-Ii I \.,k I tor Ll~('OI.'\ \lt:R('l 1:\
ISJ)t!('d " fact sunroof. Ranai-1.'' l>E \I 1-.HSlll I'
M t:reo I 2286511
$3995
JIM MARINO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
842·2000
I 975 VW RAlltT
C u!l tom 4D. 4s peed
Great bu~ t7!19M \'C >
$1995
JIMMJ.RIMO
VOU<SWAGEN
1B711 Beach 8 1\'d.
HUNTINGTON BE.\CH
842-2000
'78CONVERTlBLE
Like new. 24.llOO mi .
57500. will lake VW m
I rade. 1-779-8520.
'i 'I UI\ IER.\ 11"111 1. all
the µood1es' .~moo < ull
wkda~s lH ~Iii !li51
·r. R1\'iera. :.! tl1 '>l• rt•11
t ap~. all 11µ1::..
gjllO 0 80 %8 l i ti:J
Codilac 9 9 I 5 ..............••......•
YOUR J*I
CADILLAC
DEALERSHIP IM
ORANGE COUNTY!
S1\LF.S. SF.RVICt:
\NOLEASl ~C
NABERS
~?IA~
I 1'\l'OLN \ll':RCL' ll\
11, Ill \uto l t-nlt'r Dr
~I> F\\ \ Lakt' Fun•!>I t•x1t
IR\'INE
830-7000
MustmMi 9 9 S2 .•..•......••.•......••
I ·1;; \lust. 'lnl eng & hod~.
must sell. SJ250 L 12 lt1!11;,
7M·29:J:I
Oldsmobile 9 9 S 5
···········••·•········ ·79 Olds C u tla >.s
Uroui;tham. all ell'<'. I
I s~»ker stereo, 'e lt1ur
till 552· IS lQ.
Pinto 9957
eves AD HUNTINGTON BEACH Newport Beach 640-6444 752·:!404 days. 552·5477 The price of items 84~2000 eves ·~1 Diesel Rabbit. dlx mdl. ~·LANCER 1980. lall rig
sloop, dsl. wht. stereo. Int
halyards . S44 .9SO .
Newport Yacht Exch
675-1800
ad\'ertised by vehicle --~-------~--••••••••! ----loaded ...., xtras . onl~ ~
2600 Hc\rl>Of 8lvcl (~lt\ ~. 540-9100
·••••·········•········ i6 Pinto. suto. 4 eyl
14,1100 011. new pu1nt.
mags. 1\:\I f'~I OISS
52400, 979 8Ui!I
ar CLIPPER SLOOP .. ..,
w /t rlr. pop-top. drop
keel. 16700. Nwpt Y•cht
Exch675-l800
deale.rs in the vehicle SE C A c classified advertising w .......... ED'. IOI McLAREN's MB '6S JOO pe. I 4100mJ. $7500. 637-6863
I d Al"' I S rf. 97 K . wht r ed. ---,
columns do.a not Inc u e Late model Toyotas and & Beaut' 2131963·1461 ·73 VW Bug. snrf. Am Fm -----any appllcable taxes. v 0 1 v 0 s . c a I l u s . stereo. ne w eng, S2000 l 9 8 0 Se v 1 I I e D s I .
license. tranaler feea, TODAY !!! 280SL. ·10. both tops farm. 675-8240. silver blue 2 tone, all
nnance chat1es.feesfor wht blk int. a m rm . ----xtras.S<l0·3931wkdysbfr
air pallution control de· 850 N Beach Blvd. auto. air. ps. pb, crul!>e. ·79 \ W Van · 7 pass Dark 5pM
\'ice certifications or de· l..A HABRA flawless. S2l ,500 PP. brwn/tan. 13.000 mi. Gd ------
aler documentary pre· <5 Mi. No. of SA t 'w) 1 S3H~S6 cond. i69()0 494 9456 or Coupede\'1lle uni~ 7SK m1.
paratlon char1es un·leas it••...._••• 171415 .. 2 5333 ----eve:s497·3S98 Runs Good. S995 Phil Cape Cod Cat. 22xl0.3. otherwise speclfled by c......... ' ~ MGI 9744 ~-6691
fltymouth 9960
•••·•·················· '7:1 Gold Duster. 6 c~l . ~M. all receipts. fully
eq\Dpped. Sl500. OOO·<IHS7
aft. Spm
Pontioc ton. fully equipped. 4 cyl the advertiser . ~ u~nn wU0.'4'1 &.lnday by Appl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 \'W Bug, dnt cond ---
Inboard. 122.500. 642-2466 t!a .. 95 I 0 ---------1900 :\IGll GT. good cond . SJ.WO. '75 Coup e D e Vi 11 e . •77 Tr-• Am eves -•r• 1 bl 548 6-146 60.000m• Xlnt cond _.
···••••···•·····•••···· •••••••••••••••••••'-••• PORSCHES '79 52Si . i c e green . sun rno . r t eng ---. New tire:.. S2.000 or best P11wer sleerinit. bntkes. IMh. Sia,_/ ':56 Borgward prft for re showrm cond. r\ll OP· ~·ll'i~. _?II 34115_ _ '78 .,_. I " r y. mdows Powe r door •+1z4 .... --..a... 1094 ,,.. __ ...._ 9070 · • · TOL ~1rocco. o m1. ·' Y orrer. Must s e ll this .• ~·n -_. sore. spare e ns trans. t tiont. 2G mpg P-ot 9741 wmty, AM tFM cassette. k 87 .. 4917 lrJCks. rear window uc·
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rare~:C'all 661·8929. WANTED ,~/mo.497-3508. .:~ .. ••••••••••••••• sunrf.673·3.'JOS w_ee __ ._J_·__ r()8ger. 16 MPG with 40:1
•.tu-9502
!W;t.JBAt';EAR.tank. re,.. SUPS NEEDED )R C E COUNTY'S --------1c~ 9917 V8 . A)l /FM !\ trnc\<
8 C b k Pack .,... •·UP "=i All_, ... the o"'""rtunlt~· '78 320l. ice crrn. air, ul· ( AN «'>IV\ 1auae&, ... ac • -• 91ZO V" .... ,...., • PE''GL"OT DIESEL ! 17 DAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,.,.,, .. --..a -67 .. 7100 ' to c-·lder tht purchus • IO,\'S. CliSSelle. xlnt cond v r, ~ 586 84 I 5 ... c. -·-.. -••••••••••••••••••••••• ...-" oeo llEADQU ARTF.llS • "74 Camero. aulo trans. • or tnde·ln of your cleanj thruout 19500. 645·237!i, " ' ""· o.lr, 0·1 tires. vln• I ---'•~
1091
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g ·· &pk.rs. ln each. \'al\14' ••.•••••• .. •••••··~ ••••• You don't need • 1un "'-· 1 963·8712 BEACH IM'°RTS DO tT NOW! root. um tfm tcreo 8 trk 1'"an8Porto.tion. need llt·
$1300 Muat Sell 13~5. 11 Outbrd boat w.1•$ hp "dnw rut" when you ,_2,.. . V ii 3-"'DoveStreet ,._.,642;56~1 muas. radial t ires. Uework.~751-4542 • ~Terry motor. Ju1t overbld. o&.ceanlldlntheD•lly '"11i~,..' • ~F:WPORTBEACH \ooded . a l e. $3450. --~F~-~M~~~~T=-~=~~~~=~=n=~='=~=c=k=e=~=·=o=r=le=s~.~~~~W~~~~~~t ~~~l~l~n~~~d~~~~~~~~~h~~~~~·~ug~~.·~~~~~~~~~~~3 75~ ff~0~--1 ;& q .w~d _e~·--~~~ith~
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LIGHTS
LOWERED TAR & NICOTINE
--~"-~~-~~~~~-.
The spirit of Marlboro in a low tar cigarette.
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 12 mg · 'tar:· 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigaretterFTC Report Oec'.79
----------------Box: 12 mg ''tar:·o.8 mg nicotine av.per cigarette by FTC Method .
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i
VOL. 73, NO. 31'. 4 seCTIONS, 11 P~GES ORANGE COUNTY~ CA~IFORNIA TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
Dr. Alai a won't face d~,.th penalty
8J DA YID &t.rnJl.\NN .................
The <>ranee ~t)' superior
Court murder trta1 of 01', Louil
Alaia of Huntin1ton Beach
opened ll(onday with • lurpftae
announcement by the proeecu·
Uon t.bat it woukl not seek the
death penalty a1ainst the promi·
nenforthopedjc sur1eon.
Deputy District Attorney
Rlclaan:l Farnell tokl report.en
outalde Superior . Court Judie
"We tboueht tbat (not Heldnl the death penalty) wu the ap-
propriate act.ion to take, n the
proaecutor said.
Byron McMlUan's Santa Aiia
courtroom that after reviewlq tbe cue, be bu decided not to
uk f~ the maximum penalty
1bould a Jury convict Alala for the sla)'inp of bis ex-wife and her However, Farnell said sped al
presumedlover. circumstance alle1aUons that
Farnell said b1I declaion was could have led to imposition of
based on a "combination of the death penalty will remain in
various considerations," inch.Id· • force. 'Ibis means should Alaia
ing the circuma,tances of the be convicted of first-degree
case and the physician's murder for either or both of the
persoaal. backiround. ' deaths, be could face life tin-
priaonmeot without ~sibUity of parole.
Alala, 50, is charced with
fatally stabbing hla former wife,
Margy Lou Alaia, and Long
Beach attorney Marvin Tincher
last June 1.3 in the woman's ex·
pensive Huntington Harbour
home.
The physician bad gone to the
home that everun. to pick up bis
two pre-teen children for a
weekend visit, but an arcwnent
euued durlne which AJala al·
le1edly Miled a kitchen lmlte
and attacked bls ex-wife and
Tincher.
Wltnesaina parts of th• al·
tacks were the two children, who
will be the prosecution•a key wit·
nesaes.
The defense, however, con-
tends the physician was tem·
porarily insane at the time, due
in part to their client's use of tbe
medicJtioo Ritalin.
Alaia purportedly suffers from
a -disease known as narcolepey,
or lln uncontrollable ur1e to
sleep, and the Ritalin wu pre-
scribed to counter those effects.
But the medication, def~
attorneys Ed George Jr. and
Albert C.S. Ramsey claim, also
produces side effects such as
anxiety, tension and aggreasive-
iness.
Because of Famell's decision
<See ALA.IA, Page A2>
singer applauded in ahei1n
llB job progra•
Plea entered
in embezzling
Robert L . Cunningham, the
former director of Huntingt.oo
Beach's federally funded job
training procram. entered an in·
nocent plea Monday to felony
em beulement charges. The preliminary bearing for
tbe ~year-old Cunningham is
scheduled Dec. 9 in central
municipal court iD Santa Ana.
-II11n(1Dgton
nudl pla·n
wins OK
A controversial plan to turn a
three-block area in downtown
Hunlincton Beach into a semi·
mall was approved Monday by
tbe South Coast Regional
Coastal Commission.
The city plans to convert a
tbree-block portion of Main Street
from P•cific Coast Highway to
Orange Street into a one-lane,
one-way thorougbf are and to line
it with trees, decorative street
lamps, benches and bicycle
racks.
Tbe proposal bas been opposed
by Chamber of Commerce of·
ficials who claim that the mall
would be a cosmetic remedy only
and that it is not the best use of
federal money.
It also is the contention of the
chamber that the improvements
will be nullified by future develop-
ments.
However, city senior planner
June Catalano told com -
missioners that ttie semi-mall
would be compatible with local
coastal program concepts.
Commissioner Harriett
Weider, who was a Hun\ineton
Beach City Council member
before beeominl Oran1e County
aupe~ in the Second District, acknowledled tbat abe bad beard
a lot ol talk tbat the mall may not
be tbe be9t uaeoffederal money.
She commented, however, that
\be downtown aec:tion baa been
tbe aaddelt part of tbe citr bis·
torlcallJ because it has not moved
abead. She indicated tbat tbe semi·
mall may promote Improve·
menta. Clancy Yoder, wbo voted
a1a1mt tbe project lutyear while
be WU still OD the City Council,
ursed. the eommiaalon to reject
tlM pro~ because It wu a
· • 'foollab wuteof money.''
Cunningham was indicted by
the Orange County Grand Jury
Oct. 14 on charges of misuse of
public funds and grand theft.
(An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by a grand jury. It does not
establlsll guilt or innocence.)
Cunningham is the former
president of Western Institute of
Careers Inc.. a non-profit cor·
poration that at one time
handled the city's annual $2.8
mlWon federal Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act
<CETA) procram.
He is accused of taking an un-
authorized personal Joan of
$16,000 from CET A funds OD
June 13, 19'19.
Re reportedly paid baet the
$16,000 in two installments
before auditors for the <>ranee
County Manpower Commission
dlacovered the loan in a pre-
liminary audit last February. Cunningham resigned~ pres-
ident of the company after the
audit findings became known.
Western Irultitute of Careers.
Inc. was s ubsequently dis·
mantled after numerous other
ch,r1ea of mismanagement were
lod•ed. Tbe indictment was handed
down after the Grand Jury
heard secret testimony from 31
witnesses in early October.
Meanwhile, an audit began
last January by the Orange
County Manpower Commission
hasn't been completed yet,
despite indications it would be
made available in March.
The scheduled completion
date was then pushed back to
August and now there are in·
dications il won 't be made
known until later oext month.
Woman robs
bank in HB
A 300-pound .woman who saJd
she had a 11.m iD her purse robbed
a Hunttnston Beach bank of $3, 700
Monday IDOl"lllnl, police said.
Police saicf the su1pect,
described aa a white woman iD
her mid·20a, about 5 five feet, slx
lnobes tall, entered the Umted
CaWonda Bank, ~ Edlnaer
Ave., at 11:35 a .m ., stood in line
aod banded u.e.teller a robbery
note and a paper baa for the
money.
The 1uaped w .. lutaeeo walk·
Ina toward tbe Hunt1n1ton
Center. police 1aid.
'"
Toast styanled
WW.I vet breaks tradition
P,OBT OOLLINS, Colo. (AJ>) -Clifford Wetaler wu 1up-
poeed to take a bottle ol Im bourboa from tu band~aned.
eedar cootalner today aDd drink a tout to dead World War J
eomndll.
..... WGD't CU'l'J out tM v~ Day ritual .......... r•an••lJWorldWarl.,.......a.aoloelerdrtnb.
W .... Jttllt lllt ...m-:zw ota World War I Lut Mu Club foi'iliilll la INI. bl tn called for bias to aacort a
.......... ., Cream of "-lueb •• ID-proof bomban, and ........ , Hw. · ' .. .......... ...... ..... .. • ,.,. •·lo be ................................... c .....
....... ,.. .............. --~-............... la .... ...... a. .... ., .... .
Salute io unknoena
W. ToW11Send Raplee, 84, joins U.S. Army honor
guard member in salute to the soldier "known only
to God" as wreath is laid at the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier in Arlingt.On National ~metery
during today's Veteran's Day rites. Holiday marks
armistice that ended Werld War I on Nov .11, 1918.
Recycling center
injunction OK'd
In Fouot.ain Valley's 0111oillg
le1al battle against a local re-
cyclln1 firm, an Oran1e County
Superior Court Judae bas
granted the city a preliminary
injunction that wu expect.eel to
cio,e down tbe buliness today. Deputy city attorney Alan
Bums said Judie Ronald Pren·
ner iaaued an injunction tbat
forbids J . Orlando Marqueie
from operating bis recycling
center or an9 other business at
his current location, 17481
Newhope St., without the condi·
tional lmJe permit required by
the city.
Marqueze has operated tbe re-
<See LEGAL. Pase AZ>
B .. d.,rititig ~· t Mrftl
'America
o-wes no
apology'
By FREDEIUCKSCHOEMEBL
Of .. o.M-, ...... IUfl
Former U.S. Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger, speakina in
Anaheim today, said he believes
America will embark on a strong
and rational foreign policy as a re-
sult of Ronald Reagan's election
as president.
''America is through apologiz·
ing, •• Kisainger told a standinc·
room-only crowd of more than
2,500 people attending the Na-
tional Association of Realto.rs
Convention at the Disneyland
Hotel.
Ki11io1er, wbo served aa
secretary of state under the ad·
01inlltratlan of formet preaMSmt
Richard Nbml, dnw two stand·
inS ov.uom and several roundaof
applauae u be addressed the as·
sembly.
Kissinaer, who said he broke
with put tnd.IUon and actlvely
supported Reagan's election, told
the poup in introductory com-
meota tbat, "U the election last
week bad gone a different way,
you would'have bad a much more
fire-breathing speech than you're
going to get."
Kissinger said that as a resuJt of
lhe Reagan eledion that the Unit-
ed States now possesses "a bis·
toric opportunity" to reshape its
foreign policy.
He said he believed that that
policy could be molded without
divisions in the population and
"without lbe guilt feelings of the
last IS years."
The former state secretary
made it clear that be believes that
th~ country must embark on a
stronger program of defense
spending and assuration of its role
as a major world power.
He said that no foreign country
should be permitted "to appeal to
us on a sense of guilt; that when
something is wrong, it mu.st be
our fault." "We will stop this never-never
land in which people are kicking
us arolDld and then demand a re-
ward for kicking us around,"
Kissinger said.
Ki.sainger said tbat the next five
years will be extremely difficult
ones for the United States "re-
gardless of what happened in the
election.''
During a press conference
following his remarks, Kisainger
dee lined to state how be would
s uggeat that president-elect
Reagan conduct bis foreign
policy.
Kissinger said that he bad dis·
cllssed with Reagan potential ap.
polntments to the incoming <See APOLOGY, Pase~>
Allen's fight ~ot over ·
Republican A11embl1 can·
dldate Doria Allen ••14 Moaay
that ahe bas employed a
handwritin& expert ln Iler bid to
win election in the Tl•l Al·
aembly District.
Final reswta, except poAlbly
for a buMlful of abHnt.ee -...
•how Mra . Allen trallln1
Democratic incumbent Cbtt
Wray by 511 votee -n,o. tlD
4',517. a.Jiltri,r al Voten Al 0...
d•clared •ark lD U.. day Uaat
ti.. CO'P:.f al ballall ID ... •·
triet WU but Go:r--· A._. l,llO WloU _.. com&*9 ID tmttu ~.Ile •aid .
Mn. A11eD ..W lbe would fUe
for a recount u 100D u UM elec·
lion reaulta are certified by
Olton, poulbly next week.
She Hid the estimated coet of
a bout ll.0,000 would be abared by
her campalan and by the
Republican Central CommJtt.ee.
lln. Allen, p.,..ideat of tbe
Huntinaton Beacb Un.Ion Hieb
School ~ of Tn<ees, laid
•be ntalned b&Ddwrltlna expert Howard C. Doulder' to eieck tbe
valldl\7 ol voter 1tcnaturee.
Sbe deacrl bed hlm u a
1peclall1t on qutttlontd docu·
tnentl.
Sbe Mid lbe doetn't auaptet
any foul play 1D tbe bard· .....
campaiCD but wantl to IDUe
...... that u. ~ who ~
•re the aame one• wlio rea·
isteredtovote.
She aid she felt compelled to
test the aec:uracy of the Martel
votln1 1)'1'te01 since she came
wttb lele than a llaU .PflreeDtaie
point ol wlDDlna tile eleetloa.
"I don't feel comfortable
enou1b that tM new g1tem
performed adeQutely bot to
quest.ton die retulta," •be 1Ud.
She admitted. lbou1b, that
tb9" JI' .... tban a 50 pet~
cbance that poulble CO\IDtlnl er·
ron wW be •~•i to~ tMr-*t . Sb• ·a11o dalDMCf° tbat elecUon
offtclall, putleularly Relbtrar
Ollon, are "vet'J, yery bofton· .,..,.,,.. ...
l)ejty Piiie""' .....
'THROUGH APOLOGmNO'
I011lnger In County
Bike path
• extension
~pp roved
The South Coast Regional
Coastal Commission has ap-
proved extension of the asphalt
bicycle path that upon comple·
tion will nm nine and one·balf
miles aloog the sand in Hunt-
ington Beach.
The extension of the path will
begin just north of the city's
municipal pier and wind over
the Huntington Beach cliffs and
join the existing path on the
Bolsa Cbi~a State Beach parking
lot.
Upon completion, the 12-foot·
wide path will stretch from the
Santa Ana River bed north to
Warner Avenue, according to
Bill WaddelJ , civil engineer as·
sistant for the city.
~ asphalt path will be about ~· feet west of Pacific Coast
Highway and al its closest point
will be about 100 yards east of
the ocean's high tide line. Wad-
dell said.
The project is expected to cost
a bout $300,000. It will be
financed by state and county
Cunds set aside for bicycle paths,
according to Paul Cook, director
of the city's , Public Works
Department.
Coast
Weather
Fifty percent chance of
rain tonight, 30 percent
W~dnesda y morning,
clearing Wednesday after-
noon. Lows tonight in the
50s. Highs Wednesday in
the 608.
INSIDE TODA 'W
Tlwf cm the lad of fM
doug,.,,.,,,, tlw odnou of
Worl4 War I , Ofld todoJI
belonga .to them. ,,,.. ~
vetmau ceJ.~ Armiltic~
Oaf. Sec l'eattn'ing, ~Cl.
l•tlex
. ~~;...,:.;..:__ __ ~--..::J.~.:Z..------------------~------------~-----------:-------------......:·~!~1 ----:;..,.,.----::----..;......--------_:_: .. --~~~~--:--------r-~--·~·~..;....~--~--------" ..... --~ ..... --,,. " • 't J 11 '
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Realtors
DlOOD
' snapped
., llOll81lT lallEa ,.., .. ..., ....
Voy..... f hurtled ~Ult 1.• ~ll•• aMv• aturn • cnooa1
taa, ~' takln• pha&oe °'
• -·· deu• oraos• •l· moapben •Del 1Pffdln1 evtr
~-..r co Saturn lUelf.
, Wednesday. th• unmanHd ~pace probl• will reach the
cUma,11 of lte •·moDlh, bUUoa·
'alUe trip, tly\DC under ~ rllltl
of th banded ,., 1iant to ••·
1lore tbe planet'• churnln1
Floud1 from lea1 then I0,000
mllet away.
Voy11er '1 came ru, radlo1
and other aelentlftc lnatrwMOa.
tJ.1o will probe t,he ~y1tert• ol
Tethy1 , Mlm11, Encetadu1,
l)ione and Rhea, nve of Satl.U'ft'I
~moons. So far, Voya1e r '1 blHHl
froblem bun'l bffn the uncer
aintle1 of 1pace. but the
weather on Earth. Several houn
,ol data were loet la1t S.tW'(l-.y
when a ralnatorm black41d out a
tncklna stallon In Spain.
8ut ~Jtct 1clentlat Id &unt
'' the chlef m4nltorln1 1ltt1, Pas a den a ·a J 11i Pro pull'hH\
,Laboratory, said Monday Uu•t.
even It there 18 a almlliar oc
,curence dunn.i critlt'al clMl' en·
counten today and Wednl'sd">'·
''it wtll not be a disaster for any
of the science.
The vers1Ule Voyager. he ex·
plained, hu the ab\Uty to rerord
data Cor later playback and to
transmit information on more
than one channel.
The probe ls continuing to
puzzle and delight researchers
with its often tot.ally unexpected
results.
William Sandell, a member of
the Ultraviolet Spectroscopy
Team, announced the finding of
a ring of hydrogen gas surround·
ing Saturn. While the rinp had
been expected. its shape is a sur·
prise, ~mbling an enormous
squashed jelly roll two mlWon
miles across.
Saturn's swarming moons are
also beginning to take on distinct
personalities.
''They are starting to look in-
teresting," exclaimed Imaging
Team leader Brad Smith, ad·
ding that, though one feature on
Rhea is suggestive or an impact
cr ater, it was rar too early to ht'
sure.
The moon Titan conttnu~s to
share the spotlight with Saturn
and its rings as Voyager nears
tonight's 9:41 closest approac.-h
to the haze shrouded satelUte.
The excitement is understan·
dable. 1be huge eni1matic mooo
alone would have been reason
enough for a mission of this
scope, scientists maintain.
The largest moon in the solar
system, Titan is WTapped in a
reddish brown high altitude
smog that has so fa r defied all
attempts to see through -to tbtr
s urface.
The smog is produced when
radiation causes methane in the
atmosphere to undergo complex
reactions, forming hydrocarbons
such as acetylene and ethane.
Several calc ulations suggest
that a continual light snow of
hy drocarbons bas fallen on
Titan's surface for s everal
billion years, and that the layer
of simple petroleum products up
to two miles thick may encrust
the surface.
If Titan'& atmosphere is most-
ly methane. it may be only one
fiftieth as thick as earth. If,
however. it contains a subltan·
lial amount of nitroge n, its sur-
face pressure is twice that of earth 14.7 pounds per square
inch With this high pressure,
nitrogen is able to ,condense into
liquid. Titan's surface may re·
semble the northern Minnesota
lakes region, studded beautifully
with rivers, ponds and lakes or
liquid nitrogen.
Whether Voyager will be able
• lo pierce Titan's s mog, even
from only 2,SOO miles away, ls
anybody's aueu.
. •
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DAILY PILOT
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Deity ............ .., ~--· O'.,_.
Fft11da jfJ'I•• proini
Ac:trt-ss June Fonda (right) appeared at a Buena Park
rally Monday with protest leader Mary Ann Hammer in
hearings on noxious fumes from McColl dump site at
Fullerton. Government tests indicated the dump ts not a
Jong-term health hazard. Miss Fonda urged skepticism in
accepting results.
f'romPag~ Al
LEGAf .•.
cycling firm since July without a
permit.
In September, he failed to ob-
tain pe.nnit approval from the
city's Planning Commission,
which cited insufficient storage
a rea. inadequate parking and
outdoor loading that vlolales ci-
ty standards.
The Cily Council bas upheld
the planners' decision.
But Marqueze has continued
to operate without the permit.
prompting city officials lo seek
the coU11 injunction.
Burns s aid the injunction
papers 'l''Ould be signed by the
· 1udgE' toda.)' and given to Foun·
ta1n \'alley police for enforce·
ment. He said officers could ar-
rest anyone continoinc to
operate the business, u a coo·
tempt of court violation.
M a rqueze , who defended
himself at Monday's injunction
hear ing, was unavailable for
comment oo the matter.
Along with the civil action, the
city also has filed criminal ~m·
pla!nts against the businessman.
At .a jury trial that concluded
in West Orange County Court
last Thursday, Marqueze was
found guilty of two criminal
counts in connection with bis use
of business signs that were not
approved by the city.
Municipal Court Judge Phillip
Cox set a Dec. 10 sentencing
date for the two misdemeanor
violations, which have a max·
i mum sentence of a $SOO fine or
six months iitjail.
• •. ,..,.,. Page A I
ALAIA ...
not to pursue the death penalty,
the procedures for selecting
j urors Monday were simplified
cdnslderably.
It meant new and more com·
pllcated selection procedures re·
qu i r ed b y th e C aliforni a
Supreme Court in death penalty
cases did not have to be used.
The new procedures lncrllded in·
divldual questionln1 of potenUal
jurors outside the presence of
their peers when asked their
views on capital punishment.
Jury aeJtttion in the trial will
continue Wednesday, beeau.te of
today's Veterans' Day holiday,
the courts were cloeed.
Help sought
in Seal Beach
city vacancy
The Seal Beach City Councij
voted Monday night to seek the
help of an outside firm to fmd a
replacement for outgoing Cily
Manager Dennis Courtemarche.
The council received
Courtemarche's lelter of re-
signation earlier in the evening.
It is to take effect Dec. 12.
Councilman Frank Lazlow
said it may take three months or
so before the vacancy can be
rilled.
No dedsion was made on the
selection of a recruiting firm or
for an interim replacement for
Court.emarcbe.
Cowtemartbe, who bu been
city mu.,er since 1171, bu
been under fire in recent
months. There are reports that
several officials have criticized
him for the city's worsening
financial situation.
Lulow deni~. however. that
Courtemarcbe was asked to re-
sign. Courtemarche s aid he is
cons idering several offers in
private industry.
APOLOGY. •
ca binet but declined to elaborate
on what advice he gave th~
president-elect.
As for his own possible ruture in
the Reagan administration, Kiss-
inger said, "I do not expect to be
appointed. I const antly have
taken thal position."
In a humorous sid~ght, Kiss-
1 n ge r said "p resident-elect
Reagan said he wanled new faces,
but who am I to . . . '' and his voict
trailedorf.
Responding to other ques tions.
Kissinger said lhat he was "de·
lighted" with Reagan's election.
"I campaigned for him as I never
have before," Kissingersaid.
Ki ssinger said that he does not
believe that it is in the national ln·
lerest for the United States to be
defended by armed services
madeupolpeoplewhohaveonlya
"pecuniary consideration."
Aa for the tranaltlon between
the adrn.lnislratlon of President
Carter and Ronald Reatan, Kin·
in1er uld, "I've seen several
tranaitlona. As soon as the elee·
tlon 111 over the defeated 1roup can
feel power dralnin1 away with
eachpualn1day.
Persp_eetlve
Down to Earth on Saturn
With diltancet aiH1und ln mUUoM ol mta. and speeds of ao,ooo m.pb commonplaee, UM true 1eal• ol
Voyaser I'• trip to S.twn la dltftowt \o 1raap .
LOOK AT n thl• way: Jr Salum weN \be Ii• ol a
b11kttball, tu rtnp Hteocl1ftt out ftlnt lltMI from ltl
equator, earth would be a plnl""' baU \WO mt.lei awa1 .
Tbe moon ntan, lhen, would bl a ••n.•bOut lll.Mla
of an lftCb Hrou, floaUq at a 4lltaaee (Jf 10 felt from the
bukttball llatum). By eomparteao, V~ ... , I ~ be villba oo.l7 rill
an eledlcla IDiHQHOPe. Voy.,.r woWd be ..............
at 1t1 bdllll per bow.
,.._. n would lkhD t/matol • ..-a-..TllM Md ....... .., ........................... .
IMm.l.,....i mtet•1tti.ctN1•~--.
..
\ I I . , .
• pFOJeCt
'suFge'
-•1 ftmBaJCK SCBOS•BBL ..............
The chlef eeonomllt for the
National AaaodatJoft of Real&on
ii predi~ a •urse ln new eoo-at.nledoe tD Calif orma ln bo<
llllandtm.
la a loneMt IHMCI at a ,...
alt.on' eMV..aJon beth• held at
the ADabelm Convent\on Center,
Jack Carlton aald boualn1
•tarts, ~ are projected to be
off an avera1e ol 11 pereent um
ytar, will increue 12 percent in
1111 ancU4 percent lJl Illa.
Cotnddent with the projeeted
lncreaae Jn 1tart1 for both
1lnale-famlly and mulU·family
dweW.., Carlaoo ta predictlQt
lSt~re..., ln penooaJ income,
the number of Jobi and the
amount tA money held in depoeit
by · Callfornlana. See related
atot y on Governor Brown, Pase
A3.
Private housing starts in 1979,
accordin1 to Carlson's figures,
declined about 10 percent from
the previous year.
In the second quarter of 1980,
when interes t rates were
peaked, housing starts declined
5' percent from year-ago levels,
they have since recovered to In·
dicate a 20 percenl decline from
the same period in 1979, Carlson
said.
California will round out 1980
wllb a housing inventory of
about 8.43 million units, up from
8.27 million units In 1979.
Housing lnventory is projected
to rise to 8.5 million units by the
end of 1981 and 8.&e mUUon units
by the end of um.
Accordi.dg to Carlson's report,
the $250 billion in personal in·
come earned In California in
1980 will increase to 1284 1>illion
in 1981 and to S328 billion in Ul82.
In simpler terms, the average
personal lncome per household
wiU climb from $31,391 this year
to $35,007 in 1981 and $39,699 in
1982.
While the pe rc entage in·
creases are significant, the ln·
creases dillllnish considerably
when inflation ls taken into ac-
counl. The projected percent
change from 1980 to 1981, for ex-
ample, is only one percent, from
1 1981 to 1982, three percent, •ac·
cording to Carlson.
The analyst ia predkting that
more than 9.98 mJllion Calllor·
nians will have jobs ln 1981 com-
pared to 9.79 million th]s year.
About 10.4 million wHJ have
work in 1982, be projected.
1 proposeil ..
WASHINGTON (A~Demoerata OD tbe 8ouM
Committee moftd todar to • Prealdent-eled ..., .. &Ille op.
portunlty -wl ... oNI ..... ~ -to .. ve up. to Ida ea""81•
r,ted1e ol caWn1 t.dera1 ........
0ftep. Robert N. GI al mo, D-
Conn., the eommittee ebalrmaa,
formally propoeed u aam. the-board z percent 1peodlq
cut u put ol the blDdlac,......
budtet eeWns tor· ftleal 1111. Be
denied a Republican leader'• ..
aertioa that tbe move alDOllmt.ed
to polltieal trickery. ·~·· \'lfte'• ~ ..
Senior Joy Allen, 16, ii 1ta>
homecoming queen at Hunt-'
ington Beach's Ocean View
High School. She ia co.
captain of varsity cbeerlead-
ing squad and president of
senior class. Her f atber
Mike, teaches at Ediso~
High. Mother, Anne, works
at Marina High.
HB doctor
retried on
fraud charge
Hun~ington Beach psychiatrist
LouisGlatchJr. wentontrialfora
second time Monday on charges
or defrauding the slate's Medi-Cal
program by submiltin1 bills for
moreworktbanhehaddone.
The state Attorney General's
Office sought a second trial
against Glatch alter the first trial
ended in a mistrial last August
when a superior court jury could
not reach a verdict.
G latch is c.harged with 20 c:ounls
of Medi-Cal fraud, including bill·
ing the state for 28 hours of work in
a24-hourday.
The deren$e has contended,
however, that the billing errors
between 1!1TT and 1979 were simp-
ly mistakes.
G latch also claimed during his
first trial that he used a non-
traditional method of treatment
which was tailored lo offering
counseling for variable periods of
time.
Glatch suspended his practice
more than a year ago because of
his legal troubles. In bis first lrial,
the jury was deadlocked 9 to 3 in
favor of guilt.
It would be up to Realan to
decide bow to· make the cull
alter be tat. office ln January.
"Adoption of. my amendmmt
wou.ld allow tbe new preaideat
Ute opporturl.ity to preaent Ida
propoaed cull to the new
Con1ress ln January " Giaimo
said Monday. "U be w~re unable
to achieve these cuts, P1•·
11umably he would uk for•• In·
creue in the spendin1 ceUJna."
But Giaimo said tbe aetkm was not intended to embarrue
Reagan, who pledged durtna Ida
campaign to cut spending.
"I'm not interested in caWn1
the president's bluff," Giaimo
said. "I'm interested in gettm,
control of spendlnc . . . I'm not
trying to be vindictive."
Rep. James R. Jones, D-Okla..,
a contender to replace the retir-
i ng Giaimo as committee
chairman in the next eo.a,rea,
called the 2 percent cut "quite a
Bandit hits
stereo shop
A man armed with a sawed-<Jff
sholg\Dl robbed a Westminster
stereo shop of S200 Monday
night, police said.
Westminster police said the
suspect, a while man in bis
mid-20s, wearing a green fatisue
jacket, took the cub from
Pacific Stereo, 14990 Golden
West St., al 9:35 p.m.
The gunman then demanded
car keys from the assistant store
manager and fled in the
employee's car, police said. 11»e
stolen vehicle was discovered
abandoned a half-mile from the
scene in a small business com-
plex.
Dri"er ~riti~allg i11jaa«N
driver is reported in critical condition at
Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Wit·
nesses told police the car, northbound on
Placentia. skidded out of control just south
Cos ta Mesa firemen and par'l!l'ledics
worked for nearly a half-hour early this
morning freeing two still unidentified men
from a car that WTapped around a trff on
Placentia Avenue. The HuntinltOO Beach ---________________________ _.').___ 'of Tern Circle at about 12:50 a.m.
I
Oleander peare offering
Oleanders stand ready for planting along
fence that separates De Anza Bayside
Village from Pacific Coast Highway. Resi-
dents of the Newport Beach mobile home
park complained when state highway
workers ripped out old, 18-foot oleanders in
connection with work on nearby Coast
Highway Bridge over Upper Newport Bay.
Residents said big, bushy plants are
needed to block out dust and noise from the
highway. State replaced old oleanders with
fou r-footers, but park residents demanded
bigger ones.
Goll .village plan eyed
Project would 'minimize' flooding in canyon
By DON CHAPMAN
Of .. o.ilJ ~ ... St ...
· An Irvine· Company official
says development of a 36-bole
golf course and. 1,465 homes in
· Laguna Canyon would minimize
flooding problems that annually
plague Laguna Beach.
Wa r ren Roche, a ssociate
director of planning for the·
Irvine Company, says the firm
has cons idere d t he canyon
flooding in its plans.
"We realize the problem
downstream." said Roche. "We
are confident we can ease it with
reten tion basins on the golf l course."
' I : THE IRVINE Company is
; seeking county approval uf '!
general plan a mendMent to
allow the "golf village ' proj~ct
on 1,300 acres on the west side
.. of Laguna Canyon Road. north
~ of El Toro Road.
The co u n ty Pla r.nin g
: Commission and county Board
• of Supervisors are expected to
-consider the amendment next
: year.
. T h e pro perty is now
designated ag r ic ultura l
preserve in ·
: the county's
' general plan.
The Laguna
• Bea c h City
Council voted
in April t o
reject a joint
Sycam o r e
H i lls plan
with t h e
I r v i n e 1tOCH£
Company that would include
1,831 homes on 1,400 acres in the
canyon.
That plan included 100 acfes of
the 522-acre Sycamore HilJs
: parcel. located between Laguna
: Canyon and El Toro Roads. The ! !rvine Compan y's current plan .
in c l ude s two 18 -h ole
c hampionship golf courses on 360acres.
THE COMPLEX would serve
as headquarters for the Southern
California Golf Association.
The two courses would be
within the floor of the canyon
with rural estates in hills above.
and mixed d e nsity homes
around the northernmost golf
course.
The plan also inclu des a
four-acre public park adjacent
to a n existing natural lake on the west side of Laguna Canyon
Road about a mile north or El Toro Road.
Also planned is a 25-acre
recreational-comme rcia l area
on the western edge of the golf
co u r se. T h at sit e wo uld
accommodate a 300-room inn.
and clubhouse. restaurant and
golf-oriented retail shops.
ROCHE SAID in a talk to
the Laguna Beach Rotary Club,
the r e would be "no major
h i I I s ide m odificatio n'' i n
development of the rural estate
homes.
He also said the plan does not
include realignment of Laguna
Can yon Road, a s h ad the
previous joint plan with the City
of Laguna Beach .
But the road would be widened
by two or more lanes where it
passes the golf courses.
The golf courses are expected
to be available to the public
about 90 percent of the time.
Roche said. They would be used
for tournament play the rest of the time.
Providing the genera l plan
amendment · is approved, the
company expects to open the
golf courses and complete the
first, homes in the development
sometime in 1983.
i: Brown tells realtors
~ '•
-GOlF COUASE CJ RESIDENTIAl.
r/J:2~~flic1AL ~RUAAl. ESTAlU
Dall, ........
Newport sets
running clinic
A series of free running clinics
for all age groups and all levels
of a bility starts Wednesday at
&lboa Park in Newport Beach.
The clinics, sponsored by Ex·
tension 9, an Orange County
fund-raising group, are t.() be
held Mondays , Wednesdays and
Fridays at 6 :30 a.m. and acain
at 7:30a.m .
For the early-to-work crowd,
instruction will be repeated
Saturdays at 7 and 8 a.m. For in·
formation, call 675-8740.
.. .. .. >. '• .. :.: .. .. .. .. ::
Housing picture 'dim' .. .. .. ..
:; 87 F&EDEIUCK SCBOEMEllL :: °'-OeM't ........... •• In an address to realtors, Gov. H Edmund Brown Jr. predicts the
•• bouatq industry will be "rather
:; 11111,ull" for at least aix months ~ and quite possibly lonaer. U ef. ~ torta. aimed at redue1n1 inflation
could bring inflation rates as
high as 25 percent.
On other matten, Brown said:
-The $30 billion tax cut pro-
posed by President-elect Rea1an will necessarily me an an in·
crease in borrowtn1 by tbe
federal eovemment.
E ue_a~cesalul, the outloJ>k LAOl~RA paneJ-1! would britbt.en, Brown aaJd. ~---
-j AD~:~~~·.!':':!:. seats vacant P, .eation ol &be National A'80cla·
-Two preaidenta, Jimmy
Carter and Gerald Ford, Jolt in
their ~lection efforts beea\lle
tbelr policies aimed at eoat.roll-
lng increased 1pendln1 rubbed
too many persona tbe wroac
•ay. •
"We have seen the lut two
prealdeni. fallin1 became of
their attempts to control infta.
tJon," Brown aald. cl lion ol 8ealtors. Appllcanta for two se•tl on the I! ~pna Beach Board ol AdjUlt-C: Brown said the moat im-ment abould submit resume1 to
·r. mediate problem facin1 &be real tbe City Clerk prior to Dec. 2. ·
; eatate lnaultry la a abort.1e of Cky COUDC1J memben wW ln· • capital. He aakt persons ud in· 1 u , I Ututloa1 seekln1 mort1a1e ter• ew •PP caota at the Dec. 2
ldoaey muat compete a1alut meeUnc.
' botll eorporate bol'fOWen and ,.b• Board of Adjus tment 1 IMMmDeDt bol'rowen wbo bold ..... 11H1r9da71 at l :IO p.m . to
', priority owr available money. eoostder •atlaneet trom tbe IOQ·
I• ' la1 code. Tbe fin·member
8&0WN MID RS fean \bit e•a•l al.lo 1lta at tile dty'1
die federal pen1111•n will • oee&p Rniew Board. t••Pt to correct tbe moaey
i-orta1e by flrlDI ap tbe Tbe poehJoo P&Y• $40 • .moath.
........... p11Dda1 ..,..._ wl ror more Information, call Ct·
.... ..._ t.Mm ~I &My ty Clerk Vel'lla Rollla1er at wut. '' luth an aetloa, H Hid, 4'7·11U.
'I
-ReaJton aad bUuden mUlt
find waya to make bllber cllmf.
ty boullnl proJeeta more aUnc·
tfve to tbe buyins public u laad
becomea seareer la Caliton.i..
TB• oovsuoa MID u. anawen to futwe proble ... wW
be f ouad tJU'OuP u.. effortl ol
"coal1Uoa1" -eaylroa ....
talittl llld ......... labor .... bulU.., aad .,,.... .....
tbepm.te ...... '' He Hid U. eo.litlon epproea
to problem --. ......... .... fadol' tbat .._ ........ IUlll
natlom • .Japa.
,.
I . .
.:Plan far-rea~~g
.J
County 8eeh8 8upport for transit ~
81 GLSNN ICOIT .. ..., .........
A SI bWlon pl'Ofl'a9' to im· prove tl' .. portatica 9' Onqe
County b1 ...,_,,. tM s.ta
Ana J'reeway aad adclln1 a
U-mile rapid traaalt llDe from
Anaheim to lmae will be tam
before clvtc, bmineu and com-
munity 1rou,. over th• next
three montbl.
Diredon of tbe Oran1e C.O.·
ty Tramlt Distriet and tbe eoma-ty Traaaportadcla Commillion
will be eee1rtn1 support for the
pro1ram before they alt down
to1etber •lain to work out a final plan.
Once that final plan la ap-
proved, wheels will beeln mov-
tn1 to start work on tbe ex-
ten.lve improvement..
TBZ PIAN 18 baaed on a
study of improvemeata for • tbe
Santa Alla traftle eorrtclor. '
Tom Jenkinl, exeeutive dlrtt·
tor for the tramportatioll eom-mlasion,.1notec1 Monday u a pn-
fac;e to unYeilin1 the plu that
the Santa Ana Freeway lies
wtthl.n three milM of half tbe
county's population and 85 per-
cent of its wort bue:
Thus, be said, the improve-
ments are necessary to keep the
increuin1 con1estion on the
well -worn freeway to a
minimum. Oftlcl.U aay a rapid
transit system could remove
about 25 percent of the freeway
trarnc.
0.ltJ ...... M-.
RAl'tD TMNllT SHOWN
wou1c1 .... coneeet1on
increased so commuter train.s
run every 15 m inutes during
peak hours.
-A ttl1 IOLLION plan to
add about 400 more buses to the
OCTD fleet and to coordinate
traffic aipa.15 and build arterial
streets -all to relieve freeway
con1eation, es~cially in the south county.
Al Hollinden, who siu on both
th e transit di s trict a nd
transportation commission:
boards, stressed the need for the·
improvements . He noted that
county population is expected to
increase St percent from 1976 to
1915.
HoUlnden also said tbat the
lmprovementa are not meant to
boo st population arowtt;'
altboua!l they misht cause .l abift in densities cloee r to Uie
rapid transJt lines. ...,
Beca'ule of his double me~
bersh.ip, Holllnden iot to vote
twice on tbe proposals, as cUa
county SuJ>erviaor Ralph Clar~
who also alb on both board.a. 1• . .,
AND ct.AU IS obviously D\
favor ol the plan, too. He safd
the improve me nts will ~
especially important for busi· neases. '•
"The employees must get (~
work-, the products must get~
market, or oiir entire busines)
community will deteriorate," he
s uggested.
Alt.bough Hollinden and Clart
control almost half the voles, it
didn't matter Monday because
preliminary approval of the phm
was unanimous. 1; •
Reichert noted that 30 presen-
tations of the plan for communi-
ty groups already have be~
booked. And six public meetino
are scheduled, including one ilt
the Costa Mesa city councfl
chambers at 7 p.m . Jan. 8 ana
one at the San Juan Capistranp
council chambers at 7 p.m ., J an.
22. I 1
Reichert said if all goes well,
the mass transit line could be Iii
operation as early as 1987,
although the report names 1988
u ~more probable tjme.
IN EPFECI', OPrJCLU,8 are
trytn1 to at.eel' the rapid tramit
sys tem tbrou1h the moat
populated parta of the county,
maklq u one ofttdal noted, a
''downtown Oranp County.''
laflatloa battle
Tbe preliminary plan incl~
four major parts:
-A *1lt million propoaal to
widen tbe Santa Ana Freeway
from a aix to an el1bt-lane
freeway tbrou1bout Oran1e
County. A atal'f report for tbe
meetin1 Included proJectlona
Utat tbe freeway really needa 12
lanes, but oftldala HJ aucll a
project lm't feaaible.
Taxable sales up
in Orange County
-A .. mHllaa ra,W trwtt
ayatem, a .. ltarter liae," to rm
from tM Dimeylud area ,..t
Anabelm Stadium an• then
soutb throuP dow1ltowa s.ta
Ana to QJsta Me.a and fbtally to
the I nine offtee aad industrtal
area -near the Jobn Wayne
Airport.
A second branch of tbe system la acbeduled to extend Uiiroup
Garden Grove to Beach
Boulevard.
Orance County fared sli&hUy
better tban the rest of the state
ln lb baWe qainat inflation aa
the Stata Board of Equallution
reported aecoad quarter tales
totaltftl $1.1 billion. ne t .2 percent increase in
tales over laat quarter was
1liptly better than the stat.e's
averap ol 7.9 percent , but was
Police, fire
to get keys
EVENTUALLY, THE r~r!: transit aystem ts intended t.o Closed-iate communities in
with 1)'1tema ruaniq north t.o San Clemente will have to pro-
Loa Anplies, aaid octD Geeeral vtde police and fire officials with
llana1er James Reichert. He a Irey t.o &be sates, the City Coun-
Hid the system aJao could be ex-cu bu decided. .
tended into Newport Beach and EGtersency crews satd they
into the south county. have beeti delayed at some con-
Officlala are coa1iderln1 dominium deve lopments
several kiDds ot vehicles oa tbe "\ because of locked gates. The
rapid tranait line, be said. OM coun.cil •treed lock boxes, coo-
poHibility la to create a apeclal lain1n1 sate keys, should be
buaway. But be aaid oflidala placed near the entrances of
abo are Jookin1 into quiet, elee-such developmenta. .
trieally-powered veblelea that Tbe lock boxes, which are
could run oo tires a1oo1 a track much stron1er than the ones
or even on a Disneyland-type used by reaJtors to show homes,
monorail. would be accessible only to ~ The track probably would run police and fire officials.
on the O'O\md part of the time ::~~on an elevated tract:, be Car Kills Wife
-A '612 million paclra1e of
improvementa to Amtrak
service, includinc conatruetioa
of a second aet ol tracb t.o re-
duce conflict• wltb frei1ht
service. Tbe acbedulea would be
With the "opening" of the
doors by A9d China and the
courting of trade and trevel
bual neas ther•. we are
beginning to ... IOfM nlc•
exampln ot orlentel art In
. jewelry. Moet of the superiOt
exampi.e .,. old ~ troM
the twelfth or seventeenth
centuries. Tho .. were the
per iod• thet the Chin• ..
re1tlved the tine wt of clolaonne
(t<loy·z~Y) end whll• tt w•
primarily uMd In v .... and
flgurlnee. It w• etlO found
auttab.. tor bMdl and r19ld
~, .. ~
Not •urprtalngty, th• Red
Chlneee would rather Mll tM
,,..., doltonne thet pert wlth
1nctent ftfflUrff. However,
thefe ta aome of both typea
finding Its Wf1t Into the world
INl'keta.
In ctolaonne' work th•
en1~ 11 confined to eetta
INdt ~ aotcWtno thin etr1"9
of ,.,.... or wl,. 10 • tMCll
b .... n.. ltript haW9 been
c1rtfully lhapN to proctuoe
the dMted ....,,.
(The.,.,.. I ,..., to here Ir po..,., ...... not the IOOMf
term eometl'"" _,ll•d to
meny fJn lth••· Includi ng
cef1aln .,.,,.
Th• entfMI, 1ftef "•Int
~·-...... dOttftt eeent. .................. °' ................ a .....
eleotrlo or t•• klln. Th• .....,.,....,. ,._.,,,., .., ...
BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A
M-year-dd Bakenfield man was
booked for investigation of
murder for aUe1edly running
over bia wile early today with
their car.
@
liEM WISS
not enough to keep up with the
rate of inflation.
ORANGE COUNTY ranked
second behind Los Angel~s
County in reporting laxab)e
sales. Statewide sales totalinj
$34.S billion ending June 30 wer'e
the weakest in 22 years, accord-
ing to Ernest J. Dronenburg, Jr:,
me mber of the State Board Qf
Equalization.
Although the county posted ~
overall increase or 9.2 percent,
tbe Cons umer Price Index,
which measures the actual cqist
of goods, rose 17.7 percent. 11ie
C PI is 249.S, meaning that
Californians are paying $249.50
for goods and services that cost
$100 in 1967.
Sales from restaurants in
Orange County totaled $277
million, up 8.6 percent from last
quarter and 10.3 percent over
last year.
NEW CAil SA.LES in Orange
County totaled $245 mHlion,
d own 16 percent from last
quarter and 13. 7 percent from last year.
Retail sales in the county
totaled $2 billion, up 3.5 percent
over last quarter and 6 percent
from last year.
Service station sales which
are only figured on a statewide
basis, rose 47.8 percent to $4. l
billion, although gasoline con-
sumption was down 2.9 percent
from last year.
While saJes for Orange County
increased 9.1 percent during the
second quarter, sales rose 12.4
percent the quarter before and
14.9 percent last year.
somewhat according to the
composition of the •namel. but
it is usually a lairly high red
heat: about 17.a". The result is
glass firmly fixed to the metal
Because the enamel contracts
when fused, the process must
be repeated until the enamel
fills the cells; usually tour or
five appllcallons are required.
After the cells are lilled or
overttlted, {hey are "stoned"
with a small square of emery or
silicon carbide. The ojbect Is to
reduce the enamel to th• level
of the pa.rtions and l)fodUC41 an
even. polished surface. Th1t
accomplished, It is reflred to
get a s.tlsfactory glaze. Finally
It la pollthtd on a herd felt
wt-4.
I've done a t>lt of firing
enernal on copper myaelf and
know how Intricate and'
palnaaklng th• procesa can
be. While mt handiwork would
never be mistaken for.
cloltonne·. It h• given me a
healthy ~t lor the art form.
Some of tti. nice pi.c:.t 01
ololaonne' thllt I bought during
my recent trip to China ate
be~lnnlng to colM In now.
We d llM to Invite you to come
into the ttort and ... th•m.
Thert .,. pltt•. ~· gin99r
jera, Hh tray1, bowl• and
temple pot• , . . all very
bea\lttfull lut then I Mleclld
them, eo netut.itv t 'WWOVlcl think
they _,. ... come In and ... .met you lhlnk •
r
1 · -
CMiM..V N.OT .. .,. ......... .
Iraq seeking
Soviets' aid
Paradise. al.ley?
'IWJC ftSSWAY l'OLUD. PA&T D : Only yest«·
day. tliltt trauport.atioo 11v1Dta ol our Oran1• County re-lion a._,..,-red 1rand uw plw oo bow tbey're aoinc to fb up U.. way .. 1et around. It'• awesome. It'• aotnc to coet two blWon amacken.
P'lnt, lbere'a IOiDI to be a totally new transit system
tbat will wend lta way from somewhere near Anaheim
Stadium on down into our coutal recioa at the Irvine In-
dustrial complex.
Nobody has decided what it's come to be yet. Maybe
lanes for silent electrical buaet. Maybe trolley can.
Maybe a Dianeyland-like moaonU train. But that's all in the future.
NOW AS TO THE OLD Route 5 Santa Ana Freeway.
The savants said the •lint washboard would wort ftne for
future traffic needs by widen.lni it to 12 lanes. But there
An p ~for tlw oll-tWtO COMdW trmuit .,.tem?
isn't enough room to do that. So maybe they'll widen it a
couple of lanes and opt for one ol the added systems noted
above.
All of this is very sophiaticated and futuristic. As fw
the Santa Ana Freeway, most of tbe commuter wortiq
stiffs ol our region would be elated just to bear that the
transportation moguls planned to put a couple of new
li1btbulbs in the unlighted ftftWAy directicmal sips.
EVEN MO&E SHOUTS ol buuah woukl tie beard from
commuters with acbina kidneys and broken car sprinp lf
they announced plana to fill tbe Santa Ana Freeway
potholes and iron out the waabboard upba)t.
Of course, these kinda of creature comforts doll't
sound half so grand as ~g about a "multi-modal
transportation corridor."
Bes.ides that, doin1 over the Santa Ana Freeway sip
lights and diverse deviations in pavement might destroy the
character of the road. It's become so famous it mllht
become immortalized in SOftl, like Route 81. All kinda of
song t.iUes are possible, like:
.. ....., u.e. 8-lla Park lh•ce."
Or, "I IMt •1 Gree•e la G.,.. G,..e."
Or,·-........ AMC ta.e 8u&a Aaa ..... a.''
Or .-.er, "A_,erlllC .... Orule."
Oa FINALLY, "The Anaheim Annihilation,"
sometimes known as "Busted at Ball" or even, "Lambut·
edatLaPalma."
Besides becoming falllOU.9 in sonc. the Santa Ana
Freeway might open up a wbo&e new market for bumper
stickers. The hapless commutercouJd use bwnperslocans to
explain to other passing motorista what happened to his
frayedrearfenderorprel%eledbumper.
Instead of gettin1 curious glances from other driven,
the stricken family heap could carry bumper messages
like:
..... hed at •Jferd."
"TaillMed at Tmda."
"crea..ed Near C .. Ter."
Or, ''Jmked at Jeffrey."
Instead of the old 1849 slogan of the gold rush,
"California or Bust," we could chance it for recular uaen
of the Santa Ana Freeway. Maybe something like, "Mis-
sion Viejo? Mission Impossible." .
Ah well, next time try the train. If you can find one.
BAGHDAD, Iraq CAP) -
rraql Pnaldent Saddam HUIHin seat a petlOGal envoy to lloseow
today to pt more arms for bla
threatened destruction of Iran.
But Iranian President
Abolbuaan Banl-Sclr said natUN
waa on Iran's side and that
winter will deal with the ln-
v ad era "the same fate as
Napoleon's and IDUer'a expedi-
tions In the snows of Russia."
Baabdad Radio reported the
arrival in Moscow of Iraqi Vice
Premier Tattk AW. It was bis
se&nd trip to the Soviet capital
since the war broke out 52 days
aco, and the broadcast said be
carried a message from Huuein
to the Kremlin leaders "dealin1
wlth bilateral and international
affairs."
KUWAITI NEWSPAPERS said Aziz would seek arms,
spare parts and ammunition un·
der the Iraqi-Soviet friendship
treaty. Iraq has ordered 6U
Mlrase jet fighters from France
but deliveries are not eirpeeted
to start until early next year.
Bani-Sadr said bis forces have
"effectively stopped" the Iraqi
advance and were preparing to
counterattack to "push the ln·
vaders back to where they came
from.
"The rains have come,"
Tehran Radio quoted him as
saying. "Nature, the cold winter
or Iran, will besiege the Iraqis
Man jailed
in alleged
sale of baby
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -A
juvenile court judge on Monday
ordered a 3-month-old boy kept
in state custody pending further
investigation into whether a
man had tried to sell the child in
a city park.
Earlier in the day, police re-
leased the 19-year-old man after
ques tioning without filing
charges.
The incident was reeorted
Sunday by two women, ages 19
ana 21, who told police they were
approached by two men with a
baby in Swope Park, on the
city's east side.
''At one point, one of the wit-
nesses said she thought the baby
was cute, and the persort said
'I'll sell it for $10,000'." said
S1t. Carlos Nix of the police
Youth Services Unit.
· WREN THE women didn't ap-
pear interes ted, the men
lowered the asking price to
$2,000, police said.
t>oUce would not release any
names in the case.
Police Sgt. Jim Treece said
the 19-year-old man lives at the
same address as tbe child's
mother, but Is not the father ol
the ·boy.
Showers pelt East Coast
Light snowfall continues in Midwest
Cloudy 1an19M wllll • to .-<<..,I <-• o1 r.i.. oec ... as1"' lo JO ,.,.
c•11t ~., mornlnG. c1e ... 1no ..,._.,..__
CoHl.al and In....,,.._,. In Ille .Oa,
.... 111 -'°'-W•tw. U El....,.., -lerly wlnclt 10
t• II knou 1on1e 111 ll•comtng ""'111~ 16 lo II knot• '#HM._
Clay. Wftt.rly •-II two lo 111,... IMI
Cll•n<• of llgllt sllO-rs 1onlglll.
Partly cloudy WICIMlday.
Oelll•nO u g §«,.,.,_ u.
S...tA~ ... " s100• '7
Thern\al U S1
ll•n-94 n
ei.11-67 JI 111"'°9 7J 14
CatAllM 60 »
El Ceftlro .. SI
LOftO llffc.tl .. 51
H••-19Nd> M • 0..1 ... 10 ., u P••mw..,_ as S4 S...J-u ..
UntaAna " S.S Sant• CNI 61 ..
$am• M..-la 70 41 Tai..ve1 .. ., » Jl
,,.,. AM1E•1CA•
Ac-ko t2 75
.. ,_ • n ·°' .. rm\Hla ,. ti .2'
--~~~~~----------------"-OA_A_U_l_O_,._._.,_c._._.,_,.,, ~-: fs .tt
_,....,.....,..,,,~"°"' .....
IMalo........_
T • ....., • ..,_ .,_,. Ille nMloft
N rty ....,, ,.,... m.tn II .....
111 In ........... P'elll, .....,., to a -.,_In '""'-L••,...._, P'la.
Te llN'nlC.-es
'"Le~ ,, 11 ,. .. .. . " ,. •t »
41 " M .. . ....
.. at
1' SI •• •• at .,.
a •• • at .. ,. . .. ... .. , .
• 11 .. . 11 n .01 . .. aa tt . ,. . .. ••• ,. . .. .. .. . .,. .. • n ,II .. . r~ r:
?. = • it • --
,,....,,, • n
o-Nl•1¥• " • a..--.. ...
Hav-11 n 1.u
l(lf19Stofl • n ..._....., • n
n · =~ : :
MMlcoOty n ..
...... my t2 ~ ... _ • 7S
S--J..... • 1t SI Kitti .. n ....... i,n..
ftMY
~... S:»11.111. e,J ~ ...... ..........
"'"' '"-" n :au.lft. &A P'lrtC... 4:11 a.m. I.I
.01 s.c.Mflitll 1f:4p.lft. u s.c..-... •:""·"'· ... lull n-•:na.tft., ll'tl4:tt "·"'·
MMft "-•:• ··"'·· ll'tlt:~ "·"'·
S.-,._.. C•UtorMia S_., ,.,..,.. .................................. .. ....................
7 ,. ... u
...
t ' • •
... a
' • 4
,
:
. . . ud tile lnqt lnvulon wW
b••• tile 1ame late u
Napoa.a•e Md Hltler'a ~tlou lD tbe ...,... ot Rua1la. '
SNOW l'JtOIS mucb of
Napoleon'• army to deatb'ud preYented tbe J'reacb emperor
from completiJll a eonq-.t of
curial Ruaala In 1812. Tiie
Russian snow allo bait.cl tbe
German offenalve tbat Nul
leader Adolf Hltler moanted
•••Inst tbe Soviet Union in
World Warn.
HUIMID threatened Iran wttb
deatnactloll ii It did not sur-
render ita claim to the dlaputed
waterway between the two coun-
triea.
"We were not happy to see
Iran destroyed <before>. But
since Iran became our enemy,
we shall be v'ry happy to see it
destroyed," Hussein said Mon-
day In response to written ques-
tlon1 from more than 150
jou.rnaliata.
•'We may ftnd lt neceuary to
lacteue twisting Iran's arm un-
til we wreneb our rtghta," be
said. "U the amount la not sufft·
cient, we shall exceed It to the
limit until they are ready to
ne«otlate.
"NO-llATl'E& HOW Iona the
war takes, we are prepared for
it. We are ready for future bat·
ties next year or in two years."
Iraq tnv8ded Iran Sep. 22 to
re1ain sovereignty over the
eastem ball ol the Shatt al·Arab
estuary, which forms part of the
border between the two coun-
tries and la Iraq's only outlet to
the Persian Gulf, and to expel
the Iranians from three tiny
islands at the mouth of the IU1f
wta.Jch the late Sbah llobammad
Resa Pablui aeiled in 1'71.
Wl'IR TllE WA& in ita Slit
day, TebraQ Radio reported that
Iran's Supreme DefeDH Council
decided at a meeting Monday
ni1bt to seek clarification of
peace proposals conveyed by
Cuban 'Foreign Minister Isidoro
Malmierca.
The broadcast said one of the
points Malmierca 1u1gested was
for Iraq to witbdraw from Ira-
nian fenitory if Iran accepted
the 1f75 agreement that 1ave
baU the Shatt al-Arab to Iran.
But Iraq abrolated this pact a
'weelr blfGl'e tt invaded 8Dd now
apparently la aeet:tq territory
on the Iranian side of the
waterway as well u all of the
estuary.
Lurkflliad _ .. ,, ........
Hisao Onuki jogged into Tokyo police station, produced
Identification, and jogged out Tuesday with a check
worth $4619,000. After taxes, he'll keep about $320,000.
Onulti found about bait a million on the street six months
ago and all efforts to identify owner have f atled. Police
theorize it may have belonged to drug dealers afraid to
cl.aim it. '
Porn photographer
gets 'light' tenn.
RENO CAP> -Attorneys for
botb prosecution and defense
agreed that convicted child
pornographer David Ross Miller
should get the maximum poasi·
ble sentence. But the Judie db· agreed.
U .S. District Court Judge
Edward Reed, saying Miller
didn't deserve 10 years in
prison, handed down a sentence
of eight years·Monday.
Miller, .t7, a Sparks railroad
worker, bad pleaded guiltY. to
cbuges ol taking sexually ex-
plicit photos of young girls and
distributing them nationwide.
PUBUC DEFENDE& Marty
Wiener said he'd never before
requested a maximum sentence
for a client. But be sajd Miller
faces ~es in state cowt and
would be fJetter off with a loaett term in a federal prison wbett
be could receive psychological
help.
Miller faces sentencing1 in
W asboe District Court on
separate charges of sexually
abusing children.
U.S. Attorney Edward Kane
a1reed that Miller sbould iet the
maximum term, but said be
dldn 't care whether Miller re-
ceives help. He urged that Miller
be "locked up and kept away
rrom people for 10 years."
Reed, explaining the lower
term, said, "I do not think that I
can make a sentence longer than
the case calls for in order for
Mr. Miller to escape sentencing
in the state penitentiary."
MILLEa, A Wl&Y, baldinl
man with a thick gray beard,
appeared nervous and fidgety
tbrouabout the bearing Moodat. At one point, be told the court in
a waveftnl voice, "I just want to
say I'm sorry.•• He then sat
down and sobbed.
Come. ~st your eyu on the exquJaltdy
warm an<t whimsical world of8ou1-.r.
Tu celebrate her first pen.anal appea rance In two years. you·~ lnvtted to our special exhtbl·
lion and sale of Boulanger'1 latest extraordl·
nary creaUona. Olla.. tapes tr le•. watercolors.
a ny Boulanger purchaee. you11 recelw this
valuable stgned and framed Boulllllger poster
ab90luiety Tree. Think of It aa an offer you can apprttlate.
lithograph• and mo~ . Wilen you meet Boulanger. you11
have the opportunity to a<iqulre
her masterful corrnnemorattve
edition poeter ... a rare flnd
lndttd. Even better. With
Boulanger. Tu h aw and 10 behold. In pereon,
exclu•lvely at The Upetalra Oallery.
•eet 8oal••'9r.-
nwRLv HILLS Th~ Ncweilllber 20th.
7co9p.m. LONO "BEACH
hi~ Noftmber 21.C.
7to9p.m.
Ii I
I 1 I
1. '1\.9mlr. Nole!Mer t t . ,.., Hlf
Third plane in PSA crash 'j>ositively confirmed .
MN ~.JCP) -TM ..... " ol • u.1rd ,.. ... w.r tbe I .,;er '11 ti• ......._ Mrttw JM,MMr ... • uuJl p&ue ..._. tdW Ml ~ Ml bMa •••lUvely c:oaftrmed" by •
-· • ...,... ol aeckltat lnv•t111Uou for the All' U. PUo&I AMoei.U., aUd Monday tbat he waa "certalll tbat ..... ,.._.die *"I,. ..... WIUdl eouJd be a poalble came Of tbe
.,.. .... bltween a aoea., m jltllDel' and a Cessna 112, on Sept. .......
.....,. .. fortlle plane, 1 Ceuna uo. bu been obtained and•
Nard I.I _., way for tbe pilot, aaid Martbinaen, chief ln·
• ........_. b' tbe •.000.memti.r \mion poup. 11 .. wblle, a'apoke1man for the Federal Aviation Adminlltra·
Uoe. wtdeh lnvuUpted the~. said he had not yet received
Vetn-aa IJ!fp•saed
Herman Miller. at 101, one of the oldest Spanisb-
American War veterans, shows. bis decorations but
was disappointed at not being invited to a Veterans
Day program today, bis daughter, Eva McGinnis
says. It is the first such ceremony be bad missed in
78 years. Miller lives in Oceanside.
London Fog
Unmatched For
Look And
Performance!
Both coats are
tailored in Claeth
Cloth,® 65°1o Fortrel-
Poly. & 35 °/o cotton-
Zepel® treated
for rain & stain
repellant.
The Maincoat:
Zip-in zip out
plush lining,
Tan or navy.
120.00
The Golf Jacket:
slash pockets
zip-front,
Tan or navy,
42.50
Reg ....... 4&54
Long .. -... 4&50
X-Long .... 40·50 I
tbe aew bdarmatlma from ll.ar1ldnlm .
WlllialD Rrldneb ...... al the FAA aeddellt ............ dlvtakle. Niel ta. pilata' urDClltiOD'• ftndlnp wwld be .. .rua..a
aJoa1 wttla otbel' ~ wtdeb "ao far does Dot ,..,.,aatlat. tile
esiateace ol a tb1rd plane."
lclentlftcatioa ol tbe plane wu made throqb ,..sar data from
the FAA tn Lot Ant•l• and alt traffle conVol tapea from
MonttomerY Plead, ....,.. tbe llw waa baaed. llartMme NSd ..
The National Traaaportatlan SafetJ Board baa been petltlclMd
to reopen the cue, be &aid. The t •·•·· acddeat oYW Saa Dleto ranked aatbe wont alreollislon in U.S. lllatOl'J wbn ttoeeurred.
Tbe -m jetliner WU Gil final approach, .... tlau two IDUHlll•
from landlnl at Llndberlb 1'eld, when tt eollided with a •iD&le
engine Cesana 112 belnl uaed to train pllob. All 115 aboard tbe P1IA
Rekase of murderer draws ire
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -ProHcuton '4 victim family
members a.re outra1ed that the state Youth Aut.bority bu paroled
a teen-acer convicted of two murden, nine robberiet and aauult
with a deadly weapon. .
adjvdeed by juvenile autlaoritiel to have killed Golden and Donald
E. Smith, 45.. la aeparate rotibery inddenta.
"It's dll«UI~· They let him IO out in society where be can
kill someone elae, said Mn. llbel, who plam to "but tile bell
out of the youth's pa.role officer because abe la ao upeet. The unldenlifted youtb, now ase 11, served leta than four yean
in custody followinl his convictions at aae 15.
"It's an incredible miacarrtaae ol justice," aald Deputy Dia·
trict Attorney Jim Laaarte on Monday_ "It cheapens tbe value of
life."
"He served leas tban four yean for two murders, nine armed
robberies and uaault with a deadly weapon," Luaarte said. "If be
bad been convicted u an adult be could be aerviq 50 yean to •
life." '
E4 Daqherty, an officer of the California Youth Authority i
parole board, said it was board policy to notify Jaw enforcement of. •
ficen with juriadlctioa over the crime areu when a priaoner la up i
for parole. But Dauperty didn't know ii San Franclseo autborities ,
b•d been notilled in t.bia cue. :
Ann Mlsel of San Francisco ia the daqbter of ala)'inl vietim
EdwinT. Golden. Mrs, Muelaayathereleueoftbeyout.bia "dllruat·
log."
Golden was shot to death dwinl a robbery attempt u be
walked his dog near bis home on Nov. ZO, 1m. Tbe youth later wu
• Man held m car thefts
SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -A
14-week, 82-vebicle auto theft in-
vestigation bas ended with the
arrest of a 37-year-old transient
i n Redondo Beach , the
Callromia Hlgbway Patrol says.
( STA.TE ) P"'f"•••I r•J•~••d
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A mo-
tion for formal court-s tyle bear-
ings into tile proposed meraer of
Great Westem Savin1s. Beverly
Hilla, and F\nancial Federation
Inc., a Los Angeles-based 8'lL
boldin1 company, has been
turned down by the California
Savln11 and L oa ns com-
missioner.
Ads in space
proposed
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
If a local advertising ex-
ecutive's plan is im -
plemented, space research
stands to reap millions in
proceeda from discreet,
non-eommercial advertise-
ments to be beamed to
Eartbaide television from
the Space Shuttle next year.
Robert H. Loracb, presi-
dent ol an advertising and
•
Duane William Nottingham
was identified Monday by a
sp-okesman for the CHP's
Coastal Division here as tbe lone
s uspect in the daisy-chain theft
spree that bas plagued car
dealers from Escondido to
Sacrameftto since July 28.
Hayden expressed frustration
with the "off·on nature of
federal funding and commit-
ment to the Border Commiuion
and the ttlioa" and ma• four
propoula fur improved border
reJaUom. Hayden wu appointed
to the commission by Brown in
1979. .-trralp•r111 ••alb
MERCED (AP) -A former
Merced County tax clerk prob-
ably will be anaiped W-ednes·
day on cbarces of embaJHnt
hundreds of tbousanda of
dollan, perhaps $1 million or
more.
marketiq firm, outlined •
Hayde11 411if• paHt-1
SANTA MONICA (AP) ·Tom
Hayden bas announced bis res-
i gnation
from the
Southwest
b o r d e r
Regional
CommJsaion,
where be
served as
Governor F.d·
mund G .
Brown Jr.'a
alternate,
sayinl be wants to put mott
time into "rebuildln1 pro1-
ressive o:uaroots forces."
In a letter to Governor Brown,
\ .
•U 11ftlr 82 •1111011
bis proposal in letters sent
Monday to coognaamen,
aenaton, President Carter EUREKA <AP) -Lesa than
S2 million in damaae wu eauaed
by a powerful earthquake lb.at
jarred thla area of rural
nortbem California over tbe
weekend, olftclah say.
The district attorney's office
bad planned to an-alp Eunice
Howerton Monday but did not
complete paperwork on an
amended complaint. Arraip-
ment ecNld not be held today
bec:aUH of the Veterans Day
holiday.
and president-elect Ronald
Reaian.
Lonch's plan calla for 50
advertisers to pay U
million eacbfor a small pla-
que •tatlne the advertiser's
support for the National
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
mlnl.atradoo's exploration
ofoutet'apace.
The earthquake, wbicb
meaaured 'I .o on the Rlcbter
Scale when lt bit early Saturd&J.
Wal the tarc-t in tbe COD~
48 states in more than JO yeua,
officiala said. ·
j I, J
FINE DRESSES, COATS ANO SUITS
MISS MAGNIN DRESSES, COATS ANO SUITS
DESIGNER. BETTER AND MISS MAGNIN SPORTSWEAR
CONTEMPORARY ANO JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR AND DRESSES
LINGERIE AND FOUNDATIONS-· ACCESSORIES
INFANTS' ANO CHILDREN'S WEAR
SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE
1 /3 OFF ORIGl'4AL PRICES
SALE FOR MEN
1 /3 OFF ORIGl'4AL PRICES
END-OF-SEASON
SWIMWEAR CLEARANCE
2 /3 OFF OAtQHAl PRICES
Sony, no mall or phone orders. All •I• final.
lteme In ltOCk on •le .. me~«t In Md\ d~.
lnt9t1'Mdlm markdowns htw been Uken on tome ttem1.
\
""(I •
irport lawsuits
osdy for coUnty
1'tle Or .... Couaty ao.rd ol SUpervllon bu com·
tted U. mwat1 to 1pect1a1 more taw. •.ooo to bin
ftnm t.bat Will provide "ex.,.rt" t..Umoay in an up-
mlal trial over alleced no1Je dama1e re1u1t1n1 from Jet ·.UO. at Jobn Wayne Airport. n.e county aow la belna aued by m individuals rwmllnc 4' propertiel 1n claims both they and thelr
I014IWl.ID have been d&maeed by noile.
la lhe third time the county has been sued by
~ owners and boUMbolden for damages alle1edly •Ult.lnl from airport oper.UOU.
In the ftnt cue a homeowner who char1ed jet nolae
ad devalued bis property wu awarded $'750,000.
ln. tm. ~ pe~ns. filed suit claimlna noise damage ut a JW"Y reJected thell' claims. In that case a jud.ae bad red that claims of personal injury due to noise were lnad·
ssable.
Both the 1978 case, which is still on appeal, and the
•ew suit doubtless will be affected by a recent U.S.
Supreme Court decision that let atU)d an appeals court
fuling in an unr~lated case. It h~Jd that airport o~rators
4--such as the County of Orange -may be held liable for
ro
' onetary damages in lawsuits filed by persons who sue
r alleged noise·related injuries. .
, So the county has decided to rehire the firms that
rovided the expert witnesses -acoustical engineers and
ppraisers -who successfully argued the 1978 case.
Although the $85,000 cost may seem high, supervisors
elt it would be less costly, comparatively, to present wit·
esses already familiar with the airport issue.
Since the county did come out the winner in the last
ase in which the two firms provided expert testimony, it
s a logical expenditure.
· vers belong to state
Shortly after signing the Peripheral Canal bill in
August,-Gov. Brown made the unprecedented move of
asking Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus to place five
Northern California rivers under federal control in the
National Wild and Scenic Rivers System.
1be move shocked officials of the Metropolitan Water
District and other water agencies since the rivers account
for more than 30 percent of California's runoff.
The streams already are protected under the state
Wlld and Scenic Rivers Act, and that protection was even
more firmly established with the passage of Proposition
8 this month.
That measure makes it impossible to tap water from
the five protected rivers without a vote of the electorate
or a two-thirds vote in the state Legislature.
However, there is always the possibility that the
water will be needed by future generations of Califor·
nians, and for that reason the rivers clearly should re·
main under state control
Once placed under federal jurisdiction, they could be
released only by an act of Congress. AB things stand,
Secretary Andrus could comply with Brown•s request as
an administrative act without further action in the state.
In an effort to block such a move, MWD and nine
<lher State Water ~ject contractors, alon1 with other
. Eencies and counties in ~ Southern and Noribem Ornia are seekinf a court iniunction to block futther
lion on the f edera takeover without public beartnp Ibid approval of the state Legislature.
Apparently Brown's ill·con.sidered request was based
.fn bis distrust of Southern California water authorities
·and fear that somewhere down the line an attempt might
be made to tap the rivers, despite the recent ballot action.
Secretary Andrus, who will not be in office after
January, would be well advised to resist the pressure of
the Brown administration and leave any decision in the matter to his successor. Locking the valuable state rivers
into the federal system at this time is unthinkable.
Peacetim.e protection
Today is Veterans Day, once more restored to its
original place on the calendar to mark the signing of the
Armistice that ended World War I at the 11th hour of the
11th day in the :flth month in 1918.
An attempt to move the holiday around to make yet
another of those three-day weekends resulted in con-
fusion. There were too many who refused to ignore the
:.,,:significance of that long-ago date.
.._ The name of the holiday, however, had to be changed
from Armistice Day. In the decades that followed that
.L.first Nov. 11, there were to be many more conflicts and
Rbany more men and women to be honored for their
service, many of them not even born when World War I
ended.
The veterans of recent wars have not enjoyed the
heroes' welcome home that greeted their fathen and
grandfathers. Many who served in Vietnam received,
sadly, no welcome at all, though they had suffered just as
iA-avely and served their country as truly as did those ~rlier veterans.
• Our hope today must be that there will be no more
veterans of armed conflict. But we still need to honor
those who give up part of their lives to join the services in
peacetlme.
Fol' the very fact that those services exist can be the
key to our security and to the maintenance of peace. . -
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and.
-wtists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. ·~x 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71•) 642·"321. , '
Boyd/Wheaties
BJL .•. BOYD
TbS. b6C interest lo bran
"moq diet.en la not new. The
eaUn1 ol Hme was highly
Dear
Gloomy
t Gus a, tbe Nov. 5 editorial
0.Uom n . Joba: "Pride
In quality work ·
manablp." t;AW -
Waite up!
B.E.B.
recommended to people who
wanted to lose weight back ln
1821. A health clinic operator
in ICjMeapoli11 red his pa-
tients bran gruel for lbat
purpose, in ract. ln stirring lt
on the stove one morning, It
splattered. The small drops
quickly fried into wafers. He
tasted tbem. Not bad, not
bad. He dltcuued it with one
James Bell of the Waabbum
Crosby Co. Let'• experiment,
. sald Bell. They tried bran re·
peatedb'. But In pach1• lt
powdered. Tben they tried
Ulrff .,_. kinda of wbeet.
And ~ '°' it n,bt. ,.... flnt "WbeatJt1." ·
•
Am advtaed the anrace
American wile will 1pend 11
ye an ol her Ult u a widow.
T~"2aosu,1•
Rob«t H Weedl~llNr • Thome1 k•~l IE._
Blrtii.r• Krelblch/Edltorl•I P• Editor
RowliOO Evaoe I Robert Novak.
Critical clioiees for Reagan
w ASHINGTON -Amoaa t.be
myriad elaolcel coDfronUn1 presldlat.a.et Booald Reqan
are two Wblcb will tell whether hll
admlnhtraUon follows
pedeatrlaD Republlcan pre·
deceaaon or eet.11 a radic.al new
coune for the nation.
Choice No. l : Will Rea1ao
rollow widespread advice and
dump two ol
bi s cam ·
paian ·s na-
tional securi·
ty advisers,
Richard Allen -and William
van Cleave?
Choice No.
2 : Will he
pick a pre·
stigious Wall
Street favorite with high gov-
e rnmental experience as
secretary of lhe treasury, or risk
the establishment's scorn wilh
a n unknown but brilliant
iconoclast named Lewis
Lehrman?
THE CHOICES are important
both in themselves and for sym·
bolic content"Purging Allen and
van Cleave, advocates of true
defense pre paredness and
toughened foreign policy, couid
be a move back toward the very
detentist policies that have
weakened the Qation. Avoiding
the establishment's displeasure
in filling the Treasury post
would signal the embrace of
economic orthodoxy.
Taken together, those two
steps would signify Reagan's ln·
tentioo to replicate the Nixoo-
F o rd administration : eight
years of decllnine world prestige
and a deteriorating economy. accompanied by the Republican
Party's stapatioo. They have
acquired a sheen only in con·
lrast to the four Carter years
that followed.
Indeed, widely·speculated
choices for senior Cabinet posts
are all Nixon.Ford retreads. So
are many of the advisers in
;>lace for lhe transition. In addi·
tion to their advantages of num·
be rs and proximity, these Nixon-
Ford veterans wear the cloak of
respectability. Their appoint·
ment will earn instant approval
from commentators who never
wanted Reagan for president
anyway.
The transmutation of Ronald
Reaean as Gerald Ford's
poUUcal executor mi~t have
beeo ma~dable had be won
Richard Reeves
narrowly, u expected. Some
faraiahted au~rten now tell
h.lm that bla l&ncblide carrtea a
mandate that not only permits
but reqwre1 him to build an ad·
minbtration with new and dil·
llnct policle1. bow ever un-
fa m ll hr and radical to
establiahment .Yes.
THE PATE OF Dick Allen,
Reaean's Waablniton consultant
on foreign policy the past four
years, is a test case. Some
Reagan advisers have copied
the Queen of Hearts, who in or-
dering off Alice's bead insisted:
"Sentence first -verdict 11-terw ards... Before conmct-of·
interest charges against him
could even be studied, these ad-
vuers were spreading word that
be was gone from the future ad·
ministration (even if retained
lO help plan tbe traQillon >.
There ii no evidence or com·
pUclty by Henry A. Kis•lncer
<who telephoned Allen con·
dolences abOut h.la troublu). But
Allen ii viewed by conservative
Republican politicians as a
sateeuard against the return of
Kisalneer or Kissioger·style de-
tentiam. In urging Allen to fight
his detractors, one such politi·
ciao wrote him: "You cannot
lose tl\ll battle, for il Is at lbe
heart of lbe filht for the mind
and soul of the Reagan ad-
ministration's foreign and d&
feose policies."
VAN CLEAVE, Reagan's prin·
cipal adviser on arms control,
has no ethical charges against
him. But when the Reagan cam·
palgn Oct. 29 repudiated his
public statement that the
Rea1an admlnlatration mll)t
have to increue defense •llt[Dd·
ins more than 7 pereenl a ~. there were echoes of Ptelideat
Ford'• aacldq of James Schles· lncer u defense secretary f«
refuaU., to cut derenae 1pendtn1,
Like Allen, van Cleave bu been
privately read out of the new ad-
minutraUoo by some Reaaan iD~
siden.
As f« lbe key Treuury J*t.
pubUcly-mentJoned posalbllltiel
are, to the man, Nixo1a-Ford
alumni: William Simon, Alan
Greenspan, Charles Walker. All
are publicly committed, u ii
Reagan, to sustained tu reduc·
tion. But since none of them sup-
ported that policy in their N~·
Ford incarnations, the queat.'°'1
arises: Would they opt ror cau·
tion and respectability in a
Reagan adminislratioo?
Thal question cannot be asked
about Lew Lehrman, a 42·year-
o Id Yale-and Harvard·
educated self-made millionaire
from New York City and an in·
novative economic theorist. Al
the Treasury. Lehrman would
insist on supply.side theori~
with radical tax reduction. He
would start reviving lhe dollar
by· moving toward a return to
gold backing. He is no favorite
of Wall Street but has fervent s upport from lhe supply-side
economic clique and a wide
Republican spectrum in
Congress rangin1 from
moderate Rep. David Stockman
of Michigan to conservative Sen.
Jesse Helms of North Carolina.
Ti 8 E Y A N D 0 T 8 E a
Republican politicians want to
see senior Cabinet members
whose names are not household
words. That would take political
courage for Reagan. So would
appointment as secretary of
state of a name that is familiar:
Democratic Sen. Henry M .
Jackson. Some of Reagan's Nix· on.Ford advisers (especially
Bill Simon) bitterly oppose
Jackson, but he would be a de·
parture from the unhappy
Republican past and an opening
to coalition politics.
The last three presidents to
begin new administrations -
John F. Kennedy, Richard M.
Nixon and Jimmy Carter -
were shackled by hairline vie·
tories. Not so Reagan. who faces
unlimited possibilities with no
need to embrace names and
policies of a past more associat-
ed with failure than success.
How television could help next election
WASHING TON -The "Great television and selling of presl-
Debate," the climax of the 1980 dents. the campaign was essen·
presidential campaign, did not tially print-oriented. The domi·
get very good reviews. Henry nant non·candidates on the trail
Steele Commager. the historian. in those days wer~ the most
writing in the Los Angeles s enior and most respected
Times , commented that newspaper and magasane re·
television de~ates "corrupt the porters -people like James
public judgment and, eventual· Reston of the New York Times
ly, the political process." and, later, David Broder of the
Wilh ueat respect to Com-Washington Post.
mager and others who believe There were daily press COO·
that, I would ferences on the road. Yes, they
s ubmit that were trivial most of the time,
the political but there were follow·up ques-
p r o c es s i s lions by persistent and informed
already cor-reporters. A Broder or a Tom
rupled and Wicker or someone less weJJ-
t h e y don 't known, would lead lhe interroga-
k now what tion of candidates about ideas like
they are talk· $1,000-a-headpoverty grants. ing about .
They have THAT REALLY changed in
not been out 1976. Television correspondents
there, living with the alternatives -particularly aggressive ones
to debate. The Cleveland en· like Sam Donaldson of ABC
counter between Jimmy Carter News ~ took over wilh their
and Ronald Reagan may not have armies of equipment bearers.
threatened the reputations of Dia· There were fewer and fewer
raeli or Lincoln, but It was one of formal and informal question·
the few moments in lhe whole and-answer sessions. They were
campaign that didn't make you replaced by shouted -and
wanttothrowup. filmed -cries of "Mr. Presi· 11 denl, you've been charged with
PRESIDENTIAL campaign. . .. , .. followed by a smile, a
ing bas drastically changed wave and a slammina car door.
since I began the rat·race for That was about all there was
the New York Times in 1988. this year: Rallies, town meet-
Tb en, despite books about lngs with awed citlsens and
Sydney Harris
chats with network and locaJ
anch o rmen without the
knowledge or the requisite ir·
reverence to pu.sh a president or
a possible president. The can-
didates only talk to cameras and
crowds now. Time Magazine bas
not had an interview with Presi·
denl Carter in over a year .
Newsweek bas been shut out for
2'h yean.
"We could just hold the whole
election in Washington -then
we wouldn't have to go through
this charade of running around
the country at great expense,"
said Greg Schneiders. an un-
usually candid assistant to
Carter. "We do media events -
we do television events. We
stage these things because we
k.now that the reality is that
there's going to be an evening
news tonight and they are
budgeted for a Carter s pot and a
Reagan spot."
"l 'M NOT BLAMING
television. TI)e thing has been in·
vented -it has inherent in·
formationaJ limitations -and
now we have to Uve wilh it. The
best thing television does -
maybe the best it can do -is de-
bates or pseudo-debates. ln the
real world of 1984 and beyond,
then, anyone who cares about
polllica and presidents should be
belling or working for debates.
not complaining that they are
not good enough.
Now thal the election is over,
universities and foundations and
other nice organizations will·
begin sponsoring conferences
about what happened and how
we could do all this better. I
wouJd suggest lhat they -and
networks and newspapers. the
League ol Women Voters, Com·
moo Cause and all the good peo·
pie. -try to figure out a struc·
lure to force the next round of
presidential hopefuls into more
debates. more niorous debates.
Forms and structures should
be set up beginning now, berore
the next. campaign begins. Which
will be in about two months. Face
to face encounters with can-
didates questioned by experts in
signficiant fields. Debates
scheduled before the candidates
announce. Demands of and
pressure on candidates and
parties to make debates part of
their campaigns and platforms.
Obviously, candidates couid
refuse to play by the · good
people's rules. But lhat should
be a campaign issue in itself. We
can, •u know. push these peo.
pie around -we pay them. U
the rest. of us -reporters and
citizens alike -don't make our
rules now. we will play again by
t.hei r rules and get a lot of doors
slammed in our dumb faces.
Weight: There's always too 01uch or too little
I'm like !the fellow who sat ture ol me ln 'Nme macutne wouldn't hurt to take off 10
through Uie prelude, the· in· when I was 20 years old. Tbe K · pounds or ao.
terlude and the po1Uude, waiUnt companying story (written in Since then u many of you
for the "lude" that never came. "Tlmese" of that period) .... may aympatbbe with it haa
I've been waiting ror "weiaht" ferred to me, amon1 other been a arhn relentleH and
all my life. lhinta, u "wup-wmted." nearly lo81nC battle to attain my What I mean by this curloul pti ..... The
expreasloo la that I spent the •ND w•ap.w••STBD I ... oth mdum wel_...t. trouble Is
fi If f " ~ IU at uriQI my campal1n to get rat ha o Indeed, welahlDI about 125 heavier lbecame Irremediably
my Ille being pounds wrfnlbiC wet. All dwine addlcted·to sweet.I of all sorta
underweight. my youth and youna manhood I and I beain to twitch like ~
aod lbe la~ter kept quaffln.a malted mlllts and Junkie ll denied a snort of peanut
balr bean1 copious calories of whipped britUeoraaquareoffudcefor~
overweight. fl cream to get a little Oesh on my h9W'I at a nm t o o k I a s bones. · tbou1h t am
never aolnc
t 0 b • .........
~ b I I
melaacboly reflection •H prompted by one of my clalldren
rilfllq t.brGUlb au old ftl•. at
home mes comlnC up with a pie·
Theo, 10metlme lD my 30I, a
curious metabollc cbant•
seemed to take place almo1t
overnttbt, and month by IDOlllb,
year by year, l npanct.d -but
I still retaned the aelf.lmap ol
beln1 .... uotJJ one day lll1
doctor ~•ually •ut••*' tUt tt
GROWING OLDER always
comes u a 119at 1urpriH to•· for we fi1ad It lmpo11lble to-
beU.ve we wW chaqe u m~b
u '"do. at lemt pb19loaolica1-
ly, ud I am lliU Uoc!ked --I
neftpaper la&ervitwer reren to
me lD prtat 11 ''portly.•• alace In
my mind I am still skinny.
As another example, I never
thought J could gel eoouah sleep
when young, and could . happily
stay in lhe kip until noon on any
given day. I looked upon my
father u eccentrtc, If not mad,
for rising early in the monain.g,
even on &mdays and holidays,
as I turned over for another two
hours of blissful slumber.
NOW ON 8\JMMER vaca·
tlona, i find myself paddinC
down to the kitchen at I Lm.,
maklot cottee, and w~
out to I.be Villace l*t offte!9two
hours befon lt opens, alont wtth
a few otber old cod11ra wbo
doa 't know what to do with
tbemHlVH that ..... )'. Tile
wont tridl: Ille plays on ut ta lllllt
tellln• U1 whit to expect ol OUJ'Mf\f8a, I
Laguna/SOuth Coast "••r a ••••••• •• Da lly New8p a p•r
VOL. 13, NO. 316, 4 SECTtONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO TUESDAY, NOVEMBE R 11, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
J~aguna ni~yor raps ~uke «llsaster plan
Tbe expansion of disaster
evacuation iones for nuclear
power plant accidents by the
atate Office of Emereency
Services received a lukewarm
reapoose from an anti-nuclear
apokeawoman and the Laguna
Beacb mayor today.
Monday the state agency,
declaring that the rederal
evacuation. zone· of 10 miles
around nuclear plants inade·
quate, ordered local govern·
menta to develop evacuation
plans encompassing a 35-mile
radius around each reactor.
However, Karen Lipsin, a
spokeswoman for the Alliance
for Survival, which favors the
dismantling of all nuclear
facilities, said extended evact1a·
UpQ zones would not reduce the
risks of a diuster.
''There is no. way that every-·
one could be evacuated from Onofre nuclear generating sta· the area if there is a nuclear dis· tion.
aster, .. MJss Upeln said. "Any "I .,.,_s you could say that any evacuation plad that uses the &-W
f t t .1 out plan to evacuate everyone reeway system o ge peopie within -ou'les of San Onofre would be useless because of the -inevitable traffic coojestion." would not be feasible," she
Miss Lipsin said people would ' added.
have to be asked lo stay inside Laguna Beach Mayor Wayne
their homes to avoid direct ex-Baglin said the Idea to extend
posure to radiation in the event the evacuation boundaries was
or a nuclear accident at the San ··spawned by Gov. Jerry Brown,
who he described as a nuclear
power foe.
·'This waa not necessarily an
impractical decision." Baglin
said. "An evacuation plan for
Laguna Beach would be far
more pra~cal if it was for flood
or earthquake than for a nuclear
accident."
But Baglin said city officials
have a .responsibility to analyze
the rtsk factors in the e¥ent
there is a nuclear disaster,
however remote the chances.
At present the San Onofre
power plant has a 10-mile plan·
ning zone mandated by the
federal Nuc le ar Regulatory
Commission. •
About 36,000 people live in the
basic zone and would have to be
evacuated if the r e were a
catastrophic nuclear accident.
singer applauded in aheim
Laguna tea~laers
' Accreditation
stall promised
Laguna Beach High School
teachers are threatening to stall
a state accreditation review of
the high school unless there is a
rapid conclusion to deadlocked
salary negotiations.
The high sehool ls currently
undergoing State Department of
Lagu~ans
oppose
wide n i n g
Laguna · Beach CUy Council
members went on record Mon-
day opposing the widening of
Coast Highway, after hearing
suggestions that a s ix-lane
thoroughfare ts needed.
Talk of widening the four-lane
highway came during a COWlCil
review of four local coastal
• plans for areas 'neighboring the
city.
Robert L. Rende, manager of
the project planning division of
the Orange County Environmen·
tal Management Agency. told
council members that traffic
studies showed a need for a six·
Jane divided highway from the
north to the city.
And, the council was told the
South Lagwla Specilic Plan pro-
poses future traffic study which
includes widening the highway.
But council members un·
animously voted that Coast
Highway should remain four
lanes through Laguna Beach
and that land uses included in
the South Laguna plan should
relfiect that. The motion al.so in·
eluded opposition to proposed
streets from Hobo Canyon to the
Portafma area.
Rende said there are 45,000 to
50,000 vehicle trips per day on
Coast IDgbway from the north
into Lacuna Beach on a typic.al
summer weekday.
"The traffic studies show thi.s
(widening) is needed," be said.
And lleode said that land use
ln tbe proposed development in
Hobo Canyon in South Laeuna
bad already been established
when the specific plan for that
area was written.
The South Laguna plan, and
Irvlne Coat Local Coastal Plan,
Aliso Creek Plannlng Unit, and
Emerald Bay, Allview Terrace
Local Coastal Plan go before the
Oran1e County Plannlnt Com·
miulon Nov. 18 and Board of
Supervtaon Dec. 10.
Education accreditation study.
Teachers say they will complete
the accreditation process, but
will not turn the results into the
state tmtil the question of wages
and working conditions are set·
tied.
Dave Hagen, president of the
Laguna Beach Unified Faculty
Association, said Monday's
move "comes as a resu.lt of our
frustration and anger (over con-tnct negotiations. )
"We've got to get this thing
concluded so we can get on with
our professional dutieJS ," he
said.
District administrators were
unavailable for comment on the
job action today because of the
Veterans D~ holiday, and could
not be reached at their homes.
What the teacher action
means t.s the state will not re-
ceive results of the high school
accreditation due sometime in
January.
The state requires an evalua-
tion of high schools every five
years.
The report assures state of-
ficials that graduates or the high
schools have taken the ap-
propriate courses with ap-
propriately trained instructors,
in order to enter trade schools or
colleges and univenities.
The document is prepared tly
teachers and some classified
employees working with the
Mgh school principal.
Failure to turn the document
over to the stale could result in
the state ordering more frequent
<See STALL, Page AZ>
~na c ras h
hurts woman
A Laguna Beach woman was
in stable condition in the Sad·
dleback Community Hospital in·
tensive care unit today. follow·
ing a traffic accident on Laguna
Canyon Road Monday.
Brenda Grace Cummings, 21,
of 1738 Ocean Way. Lacuna
Beach, was injured when the car
she was drivine reportedly
crotsed the center Une in the Big
Bend section of Laguna Canyon
Road. and collided with a car
driven by John ff. Murphy, 19, of
El Toro Marine Corps AJr Sta·
lion.
M urpby and three other El
Toro · Marines, Gree Paul
TbomJ)IOO, 11; Ruben Villarreal
Jr., 1.9, and Willy Ray Clark, 1.8,
were treated and released at
Saddleback Community
Hospital.
Toast sty111led
WWI vet breaks tradi,tion
FORT COLLINS, Colo. <AP) -CWford WetiJer wu •'-P-;o.M to take a botUe of Im bourbon from tta band-caned
cedar 00111blMr today and drink a toast to dead World War I
~· ' But M waa't earry out the Vetftam Day rltual •Ire.cl on al ,.an .,o bJ 12 Worl4 War I nteruw. lie no loaler d.rtnb.
W...,. M .U.. lpt 1umvtu member ol a World War I Lut
llan Qab tcniMd la lNJ, lta tndltloa called for bim to unc:oR a ... w bGtl.le ol Crum °' SalllaU)', • IO.prool bourbcia, and
tout 8*balklll.
8'8t W.tdlr, •· •= ~ allout • ,..,.. qo. So b9 .p&w to Altlcm tM lllld lift proc .... to tbe Cane.J' had. TM ........ aytat« Aid ldil tom ud ....,. .. men lD tbe
Lut .... Club dlild ol eaDCW".
Sal.me to unknoena
W. Townsend Raplee, 84, joins . U.S. Army honor
guard member in salute to the soldier "known only
to God" as wreath is laid at the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery
during today's Veteran's Day rites. Holiday marks
armistice that ended World War I on Nov. 11, 1918.
Clemente council
to repay 'bailout'
San Clemente City Council
members decided they'll pay
back $170,657 .45 in "bailout"
fundsduethestate.
However, the action will take
Cive months and is dependent on
state approval.
The council will ask the state to
offset the amount against future
subventions. If approved, tM
state would withhold about $40,000
per month from the city's motor
vehicle tax revenues until the,
bailout hmds are repaid.
The act.Jon came one month
after State Controller Ken Cory
wrote a letter to tbe city wamlng
be mllht hold back future .Ute
funds \D1lea tbedebUa piJd off.
Cory sent let.ten to 48 city sav·
ernments last mootb clllnC debtl
of moretban $5.t million owed the
state by the munlclpalltles.
T he amount owed by San
Clemente is part of tbe re·
allocation of bailout funds p.ro-Yided to the clly folJowinl the
VP,t•r approval of Prol>Ol'UOD JJ. Wben San CJemenw wu ftnt
notified ol the bailout ballyhoo lD
Januaey, city ftnaac. ollldala
contended t.be·1t.t.'1 meam ol ·computtq the amount clue did DOt
conform wttb the elty'1 bookkeep..
ln1 . ' A rMult of the Jarvt. i.DJU.tive
detenniMd how much "•..,.A•''
tbedtyhadlntMbudcet. wttbdle amount ol thole unappropriawd rma~taow aiuebS.
Clemente would recel vein bailout
fundsfromtbeslate.
City officials have been at·
tempting to convince the state
that funds shown as unap-
propriated in the budget -such
as self-insurance, the city reserve
account and the capital improve-
' ment budget -were appropriat-
ed money.
Negotiations ended with the ci·
ty winning $50,000 In bailout
funds. But an additional $170,000
is still due and council members
have decided further talks would
be fiuiUess. Finance Director Dean Porter
said there ian 't much written
material available to support the
city's contention that lta general
fund reserves were actually com-
mitted for city projecta.
But instead of paying a lump
sum, the council said It will ask
the state to offset the amount
alJainlt future subventions from
theatate.
Quake hit8 i8la nd8
GOLDEN, Colo. <AP> -Of-
tlclal1 at the U.S. Geololieal
Survey Center Hid a stton1
earthq uake shook the .Prince
Edward lllanda ntlion· tc*.b of
Alrlca today. The eartbquke
re•l•tend a a.t on the Richter acale at about 3:31 a .ai. today, said Don 1'1n)ey, lnformaUoa ol·
fleer at tbe U.S. Geolotleal
Survey otnce. ·• ..
'America
olVes no
apology'
By FREDERICKSCHOEMEID..
Olt ... o.llyl'l ... li.tf
Former U.S. Secretary of State
Henry Kissinge r, s peaking in
Anaheim today, said he believes
America will embark on a strong
and rational foreign policy as a re-
sult of Ronald Reagan's election
as president . 1
"America is through apologi1·
ing," Kissinger told a standing.
room -only crowd of more than
2,500 people attending the Na-
tional Association of Realtors
Convention at the Disneyland
Hotel.
Kissinger, wbo· served as
secretary of state under the ad·
ministration of former president
Richard Nixon, drew two stand·
ing ovations and several rounds of
applause as he addressed the as·
sembly.
Kisainger, who said he broke
with pat tradition and actively
~upport.ed Reagan's elecUoa, told
lbe group in introductory com· menta that, "lf the election last
week had gone a different way,
you would have had a much more
fire-breathing speech than you're
going to get.'•
Kissinger.said that as a result al
the Reagan election that the Unit·
ed States now possesses ··a his·
toric opportunity" to reshape its
foreign policy.
He said he believed that that
policy could be molded without
divisions in the population and
·'without the guilt feelings of the
last 1.5 years."
The former state secretary
made it clear that he believes that
the country must embark on a
stronger program of defense
spending and assuration of its role
as a major world power.
He said that no foreign country
should be permitted "to appeal to
us on a sense of guilt; that when
<See APOLOGY, Page A.?)
Lagun a teen s
file suit o n
sports ouster
Two Laglllla High School stu·
dents have filed suit seeking to
force the California In·
terscholastic Federation to let
them play varsity sports this
year.
Joseph Heneghan and Sean
Quigley have lived in Laeuna
Beach with their families for
years, but the two youths went
to school last year at the private
Servile High Scbool ln Anabel~.
When they transferred to their
hometown school lhia year. they
were told they have to sit out
their Junior yean before becom·
inl elipble for vanity aWetks.
Both are football playen.
The nale set by the CI F -the
sanctioninl body for hlgb school
sports -was made to dis·
courage students from bopplna
from one school to another and
coaches from recruilln1 top
athletes from neithborint
achoo-.
But ·the two youtha are arcu·
t.01 in tbelr 1ult rued in Oranae
County Superior Court that
recrultlQI Md DOthlnl to do wt&.b
tbel11 aituatloft.
.Thelr attorney. Ronald P.
Kreber. 1ald ~bey tran1ferred
from Servtte to t.belr hometown
public ldtb school becau.e ot \he
cost ol atteodlns the Catholic
boy• acbool.
TMy'U 1et tbelr day In court
on Nov. M wben J.ud1• Edward
Wal.Un wW CO!Gllde"l the.Ir arp myta.
Dally ,., ... s-,,_
'THROUGH APOLOGIZING'
KIMlnger In County
Panel OKs
Niguel
lwusing
By PATIUCKKENNEDY
OfU.IMllyl'l"°'S\Mt
The South Coast Regional
Coastal Commission approved a
405-unit h ousing pro ject in
Laguna Niguel Monday on the
condition that the development be
s hi elded f rom the view of
motorists and beach goers along
Pacific Coast Highway.
The 212-acre de velopment wHI
be west of Crown Valley
Par kwa"y. adjoining Pacific
Island Village at Pacific Island
Drive and Talavera Drive
The commission ruled that the
development be locat ed a nd
landscaped so it is not readily visi-
ble from the coast.
Broadmoor Development Co
got unanimous approval to build
28 single family dwellings on a
15.2 acre parcel, plus 281 con-
domlnuium units and 100 afforda-
ble housing units on another 55
acres. About 141 acres of land is to
be left as open space.
The project was opposed by
nearby residents who expressed
concern that it would stop the
natural drainage of the canyon,
posing the danger of a landslide.
and would disrupt wildlife.
The citizens, residents of lhe
(See NIGUEL, Page 1\2)
Coast
\l'eath er
Fifty percent chance or
rain tonight, 30 percent
Wedne sday morning .
clearing Wednesday after-
noon. U>ws tonight in the sos. Highs Wednesday in
the 60s.
I NSIDE TODA 't'
T~ an IM lolt of Ille
do"fl,.,,,, tlw vetm:i"' o/
World War I . and toda11
"-lonQI to tlwm. Tlw aging
otfnant «'-&rote Annutice 0a.,. SH FtaJ11rln{I, ~CJ
latlex
,,, .... ~
.... ,.,, "•dfy
CBS newsi;nan Dan Rather
'Was held "prisoner" in a
'Cb icago taxi when the
"'driver refused to let him out
''ind raced along at speeds
.tUP to 75 m .p.b. until stopped
~by a police officer. The cab-
.. ~ie said Rather ref used to
•·P~Y the (are.
'· ~Jlealtors
(;:
!:forecast
.~ew surge
~ .. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEID..
Of U. Dally ~Sc.ff
The chief economist for the
National Association of Realtors
is predicting a surge in new con-
struction in California in both
1981 and 1982.
In a forecast issued at a re-
altors' convention being heJd at
the Anaheim Convention Center,
Jack Carlson said housing
starts, which are projected to be
off an average of 31 percent this
year, will increase 32 percent in
1981and34 percent in 1982.
Coincident with the projected
i ncrease in starts for both
single-family and multi-CamiJy
dwellings, Carlson is predicting
increases in personal income.
the number of jobs and the
amount of money held in deposit
,by Californians. <See related
story on Governor Brown, Page •. Aa>.
Private housing starts in 1979,
•1according to Carlson's figures,
• 1<!eclined about 10 percent from
·t he previous year.
1•' In the second quarter of 1980,
when interest rates were
'peaked. housing starts declined
54 percent from year-ago levels,
they have since recovered to in-
dicate a 20 percent decline from
the same period in 1979, Carlson
said.
California will round out 1980
with a housing inventory of
about 8.43 million units, up from
8.27 million units"in 1979
Housing inventory is projected
::to rise to 8.5 million units by the
end or 1981 and 8.66 million units
by the end of 1982.
,· According to Ca rlson's report,
the $250 billion in personal in·
come earned in California in
. 1980 will increase lo $284 billion
in 1981 and to $328 billion in 1982.
Jn simpler terms, the average
personal income per household
• will climb from $31 ,391 this year
to $35,007 in 1981 and $39,699 in
1982.
While the perce ntage in -
, creases are significant, the in-
creases diminish considerably
when inflation is taken into ac-
count. The projected percent
change from 1980 to 1981, for ex-
ample, is only one percent, Crom
1981 to 1982, three percent, ac-
cording to Carlson.
/ The analyst is predkting that
more than 9.98 million Califor-
nians will have jobs in 1981 com-
pared to 9.79 million this year
About 10.4 million will have
work in 1982. he projected.
i ~ ORANGE COAST I. SC
~ I
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" '
Saturn's
moon
snapped
By aoet:aT SCHIE• ..,, ............
Voyaaer I hurtled Just 2,500
mile• above Saturn'• moon,
Titan, toda.)'. tQ.lq pboto9 ol
the moon's deue oruce at·
mo1phere an.d 1peedin1 ever
closer to Saturn '"-•II.
Wedneaday, the unmanned
apace proble will reach the
climax ol lta 38-month, biWon-
mlle trip, fiyiq under tbe rtno
of the banded iu gja.nt to a·
plore the planet's cburninl
clouds from less than 80,000
miles away .
Voyaeer's cameras, radJos
and other scientific instrw:neota
also will probe the mysteries ol
Tethys, Mimas, Enceladua,
Dione aDd Rhea, five of Saturn's
15 moons.
Bighanddrg So far, Voyager's bigaest
probJem hasn't been the uncer-
tainties of space. but the
weather on Earth. Several hours
of data were lost last Saturday
when a rainstorm blacked out a
tracking station ln Spain.
This 20-foot Bayliner was docked above the
highway at Salt Creek Beach in Laguna
Niguel Monday and became somewhat of a
mystery. A note was attached to the ~raft
s~ying it would be moved when the boat
yard opens, signed by "The Owner."
But project scientist Ed Stone
at the chief monitoring site,
Pasadena's J el Propulsion
Laboratory, said Monday that,
even if there is a similar oc-
curence during critical close en-
counters today and Wednesday,
·'it will not be a disaster for any
of the science.
Independent hank
~.
The versatile Voyager. he ex-
plained, has the ability to record
data for later playback and to
trans mit information on more
than one channel.
planned for lagun8
The probe is continuing to
puzzle and delight researchers
with its often totally unexpected
results.
William Sandell, a member of
the Ultraviolet Spectroscopy
A Stanford U n iversity
1radaa&e, Robert ScllJer 11 a
foartll year medical atadeet at
UC lrvlDe, pnpartag to be a
radlologllt. Bia l•teres& la
astronomy a&arted I• grade
scllool wlae• lie wa&clae4 tlae
laaaclalag of maaaed apace
ntgllts.
Team, announced the finding or
a ring of hydrogen gas surround-
ing Saturn. While the rings had
been expected, its shape is a sur-
prise. resembling an enormous
squashed je.Uy roll two million
miles across .
Saturn's swarming moons are
also beginning to take on distinct
personalities.
"They are startine to look in-
teresting," excJaJmed lmaline
Team leader Brad Smith, ad-
ding that, though one feature on
Rhea is suggestive of an impact
crater, it was far too early to be
sure.
The moon Titan continues to
share the spotlight with Saturn
aad its rings as Voyager nears
tonight's 9:41 closest approach
to the haze shrouded satellite.
The excitement is underst.an-
da ble. The huge enigmatic moon
alone would have been reason
enough for a mission or this
scope, scientists maintain.
The largest moon in the solar
system, Titan i.s wrapped in a
reddish brown high altitude
smog that has so rar defied all
attempts to see through to the
surface .
The smog is produced when
radiation causes methane in the
atmosphere t.o \Uldergo complex
reactions, forming hydrocarbons
such as acetylene and ethane
Several calculations s uggest
that a continual li!it snow of
hydrocarbons bas fallen on
Titan's surface for several
billion years, and that the layer
of simple petroleum products up
to two miles thick may encrust
the surface.
If Titan's atmosphere is most-
ly methane, it may be only one
fiftieth as thick as earth. Ir,
however, it contains a substan-
tial amo\Dlt of nitrocen, it.s sur-
face pressure Is twice tbat of
earth 14.7 pounds per square
inch. With this high pressure,
nitrogen i2I able to condense into
liquid. Titan's surface may re-
semble the northern Minnesota
lakes region. studded beautifully
with rivers, ponds and lakes o<
liquid nitrogen.
Whet.her Voyager will be able
to pierce Tita'n's smog, even
from only 2,500 miles away, is
anybod,y'a auas.
Nine residents of Laguna Beach
and South Laguna have med an
application to establish an in-
dependent bank in Laguna Beach.
ll is the second s uch application
in Laguna Beach to be filed with
the federal Comptroller of tbe
Currency in recent weeks.
The nine resident.a seek to form
the Laguna National Bank. No
site has been selected.
Capitalization from shares is-
sued by the bank would total S3
million, the group stated on its ap-
plication.
The group intends to conduct a
search for a site and a chief ex-
ecutiveo(ficerduring the three-to
·five-montl\ period before the al>"
plication is expected to be ap-
proved.
Prospective bank directors are
John Hill. owner of Hill Insurance
Agency; Dick Toomey, owner of
Fro• Page :\ I
APOLOGY. •
somethini is wrong, it must be
our fault."
"We will atop this never-never
land in which people are kicking
us around and then demand a re-
ward for kicking us around,"
Kissinger said.
Kissinger said that the next five
years will be extremely difficult
ones for the United States •·re-
gardless of what happened in the
election.''
During a press conference
following his remarks. Kissinger
declined to state how he would
s uggest that president-elect
Reagan conduct his foreign
policy.
Kissinger said that he bad dis·
c\lssed with Reagan potential ap-
point me nls to the incoming
cabinet but declined to elaborate
on what advice he gave tbe-
president-elect.
As for his own possible future in
the Reagan administration. Kiss-
inger said. "1 do not expect to be
appointed. I cons tantly have
taken that position.''
In a humorous sidelight, Kiss-
1 n g er said "president-elect
Reagan sald he wanted new faces,
but who am I to. . . "and his voicE
trailed off.
Responding to other questions.
Kissinger said that he was "de·
lighted" with Reagan's election.
"I campaigned for him as I never
have before." Kissinger said.
Kissinger said that be does not
believe that it is in the national in-
terest for the UnUed States to be
defended by armed services
made up of people who have only a
"pecuniary consideration."
As for the transition between
the adminiatration of President
Carter and Ronald Reaaan, Kin·
inger said, "I've seen several
transitions. AB soon as the elec-
tion iaoverthedefeated eroupcan
feel power draining away with
each pasain1day.
Perspeetlve
-
Down to Earth on SOturn
With distance• meaaw-ed in mllllooa of miles and
speeds of 30,000 mph commonplace, the true acale ot
Voyager l'a trip to S.turn ls dlmcult to 1rup .
LOO& AT n tbia way: U Saturn were the alae of a
baatetball, its rino eatendinc out nlne l.Dcbes from lts
equator, earth would be a Pini ponaJ>aU two miles away.
The moon Tlten, then, would be a sphere about 1/lltb
of an inch acrou, noauoc at a dlltance of 10 feet from the
basketball <Saturn). By comparilco, Voyacer I woWd be villble only with
im eliedroa mlcroeeope. Voyacer wouJd be •peedin• •Iona at ahr lDchel per bour. ·
TONIGln IT would skim 1/13lb of an inch above Titan
and,._. than• dar later, •wlnl under Salum'• IOUtbem
bemJlpbere, milalnc tbe cloud tope by one foot • .
....
Reef Liquors; Roger Holguin.
own~r of Heavenly Productions;
Steve Brown, o wner o r
Armbruster Clurman Brown and
Co.: Don Killian, a lawyer; Bob
Gamez. a certified public accoun -
tant; Joan Chapman, owner of
Joan Chapman and Associates;
Mike Sagar, a lawyer ; and Mike
Farrell, an orthopedic surgeon.
All are Laguna Beach resi-
dents, except Ms . Chapman, who
lives in South Laguna.
The directors, who would be in
charge or bank operations and
policy, would be making invest-
ments of more than $150,000 each
when laking their unpaid posi-
tions.
Twenty other Laguna Beach
business and professional people
invested $2,000 each to help un-
derwrite the start-up costs or the
effort.
In October, 11 Orange CoWlty
residents announced that they
were filing an application to Corm
a bank and trust company in
Laguna Beach.
Motel room
burglarized
A burglar entered a Laguna
Beach motel room through an
open sliding door and made off
with cash and valuables worth
$1,060.
Police said the s uspect took
binoculars valued at $170, two
cameras worth $300 each, and
cash and traveler 's checks total-
ing $290.
Officers sa id the items
belonged to Paul Westman of
Sweden. a visitor staying at the
Capri Laguna at 1441 S. Coast
Highway.
NATO analyzed
ANKARA. Turkey <API
Gen. David Jones. chairman (I(
the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff.
m et today with Turkey's
military leaders for a d1scU&sion
o f matters concerni n~ tht>
armed forces of the NATO al
lies. official sources reported.
Suicide
threat
related
By DA V1D K\JTZMANN
OfU.Dell•~~
Trabuco Canyon resident
Gerald Barnes, facing trial for
allegedly posing as a doctor and
causing the death of a young
diabetic patient, threatened to
commit suicide if a co-wortcer
exposed him to authorities last
August.
According to the transcripts or
a closed preliminary bearing for
Barnes made public Monday,
the murder defendant said hls
life would be ruined if physi-
cians' assistant Richard D' A-
lessandro told superiors at
Pacific Southwest Medical
Group in Irvine of his ruse.
It was D' Alessandro, the
transcripts indicate, who dis-
covered that Barnes, once a
pharmacist in Illinois, was oot a
licensed physician in California.
Barnes. who has pleaded inno-
cent to the various charges
aga lnat him, ls to stand trial
Jan. 5 in Orange County
Superior Court.
He is accused or murder, pos-
ing as a doctor and falsely pre-
scribing drugs.
The murder count stems Crom
the death of John McKenzie of
Anaheim. who died of uncon-
trolled diabetes two days after
seeing Barnes.
D'Alessandro, who said be ex-
pressed concerns over Barnes'
qualifications after McKenzie's
death, testified at the pre-
limioary hearing in Harbor
Municipal Court that he learned
or the defendant's fraudulent
background through a mutual
fnend of rus and Barnes'.
That acquaintance, an at-
torney. told D'Alessandro he had
bN.•n In C'Ontacl with another
l1tw yC"r in llllnois regarding a
ch\ld r~torly matter for Barnes.
and tlw' Mld-'f'!!t lawyer said he
wos s urpr1l'C'd to hear tha~
lhrnc!' was nQw pracUcinc
mt"dlcint' "inet' he hadn't done so
bf(orc
Ill
Spending
slashes
proposed
WASHINGTON (AP ) -
Democrat.I oe tbe Houe a...-
Commlttee moved today to llW Prnidmt~lect a..,an the op.
portunity -and the obU, ..
-to live up to bla cam.-. ~te ot euttial fechnl •Plllcl-
llep. Robert N. Glalmo, »-
Conn., tbe committee ehalrmaa.
formally propoted aa aet"OM-
tbe-board 2 percent apeDCIJq
cut u part ol the bindln& federal
bud1et celUq for fiscal 1111. He
denied a Republican leader'• U ·
aertion that tbe move amoanted
to political trlckery.
It would be up to Reacan to
decide how to mate tbe cuts
after he tak• office fn January.
"Adoption of my amendment
would allow the new president
the opport..Ut.y to present his
proposed cuts to the new
Congresa in January," Giaimo
sald Monday. "U be were unable
to achieve these cuts, pre-
sumably be would uk for u in-
crease ln the apeodlni ceWq."
f' r.•• Pag• A I
STAl~L ...
evaluations of the high school.
Hagen said.
But Hagen speculated the
worst the state would do "is slap
the district on the wrist and ask
for an extension" ( for comple-
tion of the document.)
Hagen said the job action "is
ju~t one more example of
teachers losing pride in the over-
all program."
He said the results or the vot-
ing "show the examples of this
frustration that is being seen at
all of the schools."
District negotiators and
teacher representatives are to
m eet Nov. 21 with a state
mediator in an effort to continue
negotiations.
Hagen said he expect.a the dis-
trict to charge teachers with in-
subordination as a result of the
job action.
The district has offered
teachers a 4.5 percent pay hike
this year, and 8 percent next
year if the state financial pic-
ture doesn't change.
Teachers are seeking an 8 per-
cent hike this year and a raise
next year lied to the consumer
price index.
NIGUEL •••
Monarch Summit II develop-
ment. presented the commission
with petitions signed by more
than 200persoos.
In other Commission action. an
Environmental Management
Agency request to replace a
storm drain and repair a street in
Dana Point was approved.
The city's present 40-incb
diameter drain will be replaced
by a M-i.nch system to be coo-
structed near tbe old draln.
A portion of Santa Clara Street
that was damaged in the 1*
rains alao will be repaired. About
S,000 yard.a of fill dirt will be tt·
quired to repair the washed out
roadway.
The commission also approved
a request by the Laguna Beach
County Water District to con-
struct a two million-eatlon re-
servoir.
The proposed reservoir at 935
Summit Way wilJ serve the aclja-
cent residential area.
Orange Coast
EDITION
'
~ .. r••••••••·
Dally N••••• .. r
VOL. 73, NO. 316, 4 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T UESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1980 I /C/N TWENTY·FIVE CENTS
Coast boating ~dustry troubles
o.lly ,....._, .... ,_
Pl.EA FOR BOATING
Supervlaor Alley
8)' ALMON LOCKABEY
Deify ...... ~ ......
Oranae County's marine in·
dustry, once the larceat in the
United States, is Ii.lee a foundering
ship and it will take all bands on
deck toaaveit.
Thal wu the gloomy picture
sketched Monday by Fifth Dis·
trict Supervisor Tom Riley in a
talk before the Orange County
Coast Association in a luncheon
meeting at the Newport Inn in
Newi>ort Beach. But Riley wasn't telling the in·
dustry people anything they
didn't aJready know, primarily
that Florida is rapidly keel·
hauling Orange County and
Southern California communities
as the boating capital oftbe U.S.
The onJy salvation -and quite
possibly a slow one -Riley said,
would be the development of new
marinas and marine facilities
along the Orange Coast.
He specifically mentioned the
proposed Bolsa Chica Marina at
Huntington Beach which would
provide an estimated 1,800 slips
tor boats, and the proposed
mari.na at the mouth of the Santa
Ana River capable of handling
2,000 more.
Riley said there are also
possibilities of additional sites in
Upper Newport Bay, barring
technical problems posed by en-
vironmentalists tandotbers.
Directing bis remarks to
several govemmenta). leaders in
the audience, Riley said:
"If the boating industry is to
continue to play a vital part in the
future of our economy and recrea-
tional needs, there is no doubt that
we as government leaders and
members of the industry must
work to seek this balance. I, for
one, am willing to work for this
goal."
Riley's reference to the pro-
posed Bolsa Chica marina elicit·
ed a hearty ''amen" from Har-
riett Wieder, Second District
Supervisor and member of the
Regional Coastal Commission.
Hammering on the theme that
"boating isn't juat fun for a
wealthy few, but vital to the
economy of the county," the
supervisor cited statistics pro-
vided by the Sotfthem California
Marine Association:
-There are more than
46,000 boats registered in this
county with an assessed value of
over $75 million -total value,
$300 million.
-T1da flaure doea not In-
clude thousands of smaller boats
which are not assessed, plus
documented vessels valued at
over$5mlllion.
"We must also recognize that
our marinas and harbors are not
for the exclusive use of boaters,"
Riley said. "Last year, according
to government estimates, the
total visitor days attributed to
just one of our harbors -Dllna
Point -exceeded two million -
more than 50 times our boat.
owning population.
· · Althouah many of these boats
are aimply brouaht in for a day's
pleasure in the bays and Offan,
many others are seeking docking
faciJities in the county. Un-
fortunately, the present capacity
of our developed harbors leaves
space for only 14,000 boats.
·'There are 2,000 boats berthed
at Huntington Harbour-Sunaet,
9,00o at Newport Beach, and 3,000
at Dana Point Harbor."
There is a waiting period of one
to seven years for boat slips in the
county. Riley said.
And that is only one reason for
the down-slide of the marine in·
dustry. Brokers and dealers can-
not sell boats because buyers
would have no place to berth
them. This results in ·a layoff of
many sales people, Riley pointed
out.
Further. said Riley, if there are
no slips to dock newly-built boats
for new owners, boat manufac·
turers will build fewer boats for
local use, SCMA currently
estimates a shortage of 25,000
slips in Southern California -
seen
10,000lnOrangeCounly alone.
"The effect is not just recre•
tional, but more economical,
Riley emphasized.
"Our latest figures list 3,300
boat building and repair
employes in the county ea.ming
wages in excess of $:t5 million per
year.
"You must add to that amount
the 5,500 employes in related in·
dustries who earn over $82.5
million annually as well as the $43
million-plus which is spent al the
retail level by boatine en-
thusiasts. As you can see, boating
has a real effect on the economic
growth of this county."
In addition to the boating relat-
ed businesses, Riley also cited the
impact of the boating industry
contributions to other markets
and revenue sources, s ucb as :
-Marine concessions,
restaurants and hotels.
-Construction and main-
tenance.
(See BOATING, Page A2)
singer applauded in aheim
'-
-Otes mental state
Judge orders
doctor held
By AlfnlUR a. VINSEL °' -o.ity ...... ,..., Disheveled and showing the
-str ain of four days in jail
charged with murderinc bis
friend and mentor, Newport
Beach psycbo\og\at Dr'. Telford
I. Moore beard his own mental atate debated ~ his tint court
appearance Modday.
Arraignment in Orange Coun·
ty Harbor Municipal Court was
500-rooni
hotel due
in Newport
By STEVE MARBLE °' -OMly PilM ,~ .. Newport Beach City Council
members approved plans for a
12-story, 500-room hotel near
John Wayne Airport Monday
evening following a long, loud
and often hostile public bearing.
continued unW Wednesday, bu&
not before Judge Selim S .
Franklin refused to lower
Moore's S2SO.OOO bail.
Jqdee Franklin agreed with
Deputy District Attorney J eek
Sullen• that. conalder tn c
Moore's present mental state, be
should remain in custbdy.
"If he thought he bad emo-
tional problems before, he must
have them In spades now,"
Judge Franklin said as Moore
stood in the prisoner's box,
hands thrust deep into pockets of
his cream-colored Newport
Beach City Jail jumpsuit.
He is charged with the murder
eaTly Thursday of-bis longlime-
business partner Dr. Stanley D.
Espinda, 45, with whom he
shared a home at 8 Jade Cove.
Newport Beach police allege it
was Moore who used Espinda's
own .22-callber revolver to fire
one s hot into the older
psychologist's head as he sat on a
couch in front of tbe television set
in their Spyglass Hill honie.
Police Capt. Wayne Connolly
said it bas been established
through a paraffin test that
Moore bad fired a handgun re-
cently. Only councilmen Don Strauss
and Paul Hummel cast votes
against the Koll Company's
Hyatt Regency hotel, wbjch Koll
officials predict will be open for
business by early 1983.
The hotel will be built at
Days of hunting the missing
weapon ended Sunday when it
was discovered inside a filter in·
a backyard fish pond at the
Moore-Eapinda home.
During Monday's hearing,
Deoutv District Attorney Sullens
(See SIA YING, Pace AZ>
Salute to unknoun A,..WI,.,....
• MacArthur Boulevard near
Birch Street, adjacent to the ex-
istinc Koll Center Newport.
Opponents gave the hotel plan
a three-hour tbrubing, charging
that city planners bad "caved
in" to the wishes of developers
and that two councilmen sbouJd
be barred from votin1 because
of a coollict of interest.
Buying spree
by 'starlet'
interrupted
w. Townsend Raplee, 84, joins U.S. Army honor
guard member in salute to the soldier "known only
to God" as wreath is laid at the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery
during today's Veteran's Day rites. Holiday marks
armistice that ended World War I on Nov. 11, 1918.
(Another photo is on page AS).
Jn tum, Tim Strader, vice pre-
sident of Koll, charged that op.
ponents were 1talin1 a filibuster
and, ukinf bot.el supporters in
the crowd to ralae their bands,
said, "we can have a fUibmter
too."
An ln&lewood woman is await·
ing arraignment on bur1lary
charges after she allegedly
whisked through the J oseph
Mapln atore in Costa Meaa pol·
ins as a movie atudlo property
department employee on a buy·
'Doctor' suicide
~
Opponents, mostly members
of SPON (Stop PolluUn1 Our
Newport), battled the hotel pro-
oosal OD two fronu -that en-
riroament.al documents support-
inl tbe hotel plan were inade·
quate and that a palr of
coundlmen abOuldn 't be allowed
to vote.
threat niade public
SPON memben argued that couneHmen John Cox and Phil ( ...... EL. .... AJ)
inl spree. 87 DAVID IWTZIUN'N Police said they and Mapin oe ... Dlilty,..._
security officiala were ready Trabuco Can1on resident
when Glmdel Faye Kabeon, 39, Gerald Barnes, factna trial for
arrived to pick up more than allecedly poslne aa a aoetor and
$3,000 wortb of clothin1 ordered cauatna the deatb o1 a yoUna
b b l t F ld t b diabetic patient, ,threatened to c:~!,~':! 1101M St~!: 0 e commit suicide tr a co-worker
The ston chain's aecu.rity de-expoted bJm to autboriUea 1Mt
partmeot told police that similar AuA1 .. ~1 ... to ... _ •-...,crt-· ol
.. L--..1 t ---L calls bad been made, Ulinl fie· ""vno.u.. wwi '6 -me911 UIUIU 0 u.aan:D tl\lou1 MGM account and a eloted preliminary hearibl for
purebue order numbera, to Bamea made public Monday, on foOd sale drive •to* 1n the LOI Anielea .,... the murder defendant 1aid Ida
•• ...,, o1 Cotta Ii .. llO oa ~ •.:: JOPouee •aid 111. ~Y:n:ro=la~an~b~~~l:
MaDl'1 ...... .W be maretmc ll•liloe ..nvect at the South • leuandro told auperlora at toor·to4oor t.ldl ..-• ......., CoMt "-·lton late Saturd-., Paclflc Soutbweat Medical
..... ... ........ ....... to 'plC!k up tbe f'riday ..... ~.. . Q~p in lrviDe of h1I naM. Proceed• wUI 10 toward ._ • It wa1 D' AIHHDdro, tbe
I pvelaalta1 bud lutru....u AS~ to leaYe wtjb transertpg lndJeate, •bo dis·
W IDUlle, aeeenH•• to tM u.. · , poUee aalct, an covered ~bat Barnet, once a
Baad 8oo1ter ~·••••ti•. o111_. ID to arNll lier pbarmadlt ln Ullao&I. wu not • Ala1w Id eoMMMil ... WDlld for ••pidm o1 •IWJ. .. Uceaaed pbJ'lldM ID Calilonaia. I lk• to ••k• P•rcllu• ar. wM w. to 0nqe eo.c,, Jail Buw, wbo bM plelded bmo-
agalnat him, is to stand trial
Jan. 5 in Orange County
Superior Court.
He 19 accuaed of murder, pos-
ing u a doctor and falsety pre-
acribln& dnlp.
Tbe murder count stems from
the death of John McKeMie of
Anaheim, who died of uncon-
trolled diabetes two days after
1eeln1 Barnes. D'Aleuandro, who aaJd be ex-
preued coacerna over Bames'
qaallftcaUOl.ll an.r lleKemle's
death, tHtlfled at the pre·
llmlnar1 llearin1 ln Harbor
Munldpal Court &.bet ba leamed
of the defendant'' fraudW.t
baek1round UlrouCb a mutual frieod ol bla and Bal'IMI'.
Tbat aeq_ualntaaee, u at·
tomey, told D',A.lenaadro be bad
been ln contact wltll aaotber
lawitr Ill llllno6I ~ a cbUd C\lltody mata.r tor..,._,
(lee M.a1fD. .... AJ)
'America
-owes no
apology'
By F&EDEaJCKSCBOEMEllL
Ot•Oell'f ........... Former U.S. Secretary of State
Henry K.lulnger, spealnnc ln
Anaheim today, said be believes
America will embark on a strong
and rational foreign policy as a re-
s ult of R.oo.ald Reagan's election
.. president.
.. America is th.rough apololiz-
inc,'' Kissincer told a at~·
room-only crowd of more than
2,500 people attending the Na-
tional Association of ReaJtors
Convention at the Disneyland
Hotel.
Kissinger, who served as
secretary of state under the ad·
ministration of former president
RicbaJ'dl'Nixon, drew two stand·
ine ovations and several rounds of
applause as he addressed the as-
sembly.
Kissinger, who said he broke
with past tradition and actively
supported Reagan's election, told
the group in introductory com-
ments that, "U the eletlion last
week had gone a different way.
you would have had a much more
fire-breathing speech than you're
goingtoget."
Kissinger said lhal as a result of
<See APOLOGY, Pace .U>
Opponents
rap approval
of bay sewer
Opponents of a controversial
sewer line along the banks of the
Upper Newport Bay said they in·
tend to appeal Monday's ap·
prov a1 o( the sewer line by tbe
South Coast Regional Coastal
Commission.
The $1 million project, callinJ
for a sewer line to extend from
the basin of Big Canyon south
along Back Bay Drive to
Newport Dunes where lt would
hook in with an existing line,
was approved unanimously by
the coJDJDis.sion.
Opponents charged that the
sewer line likely would disrupt
habitat areas of a number of en·
daniered apeciea, Including the
California Leut Tem.
Allan Beek, a Newport plan·
nlng commluloaer and one ol
t he three ,members of t he
Orance Colmty Foundation for
the Preservation\ of Public
Property, urced coastal com·
miasiooen to endorse one of two
otber sewer line rout.ea.
Tbe other alternativea, ac·
cordln1 to Oran•• County S.niteUoa distrtd olftelala, are
far more C09t1J but poee Jell
potential damqe to the ovlron·
meat. BeM aakl be would appeal tbe
nalilll to the state Coutal Com·
mlulon.
The aewer line propoaaJ l•
1tmllar to a plan that ultimately
WH nlled by Lbe 6tate CoutaJ
Commt•km ln wn. TtM ~·.
ton ~ the plan then an tM
(leeRWS&.Pa .. AJ)
o.ity Pl ... ,..., ,,....
'THROUGH APOLOGIZING'
Kl..,nger In county
Bay vacuum
cleanrtp plan
too costly?
A plan to scour out the Upper
Newport Bay with a vacuum
cleaner-like pipe system would
cost $14 mill.ion and nearly Sl.5
million per year to maintain, Ci·
ty Council members were told
Monday.
Newport council members.
noting that the price tag far ex·
ceeded the $10 million cost pre-
diction, suggested that the pipe
plQn be passed on to tbe
engineering firm charged with
finding a way to halt the flow of
silt Into the bay.
Engineer Michael Cheney,
who'd been hired to scrutin.Ue
the pipe scheme, noted that the
city likely would face an uphill
battle in obtaining permits for
the pipe plan.
Coast
Weath er
Fifty percent chance of
rain tonight, 30 percent
Wednesday morning ,
clearing by afternoon.
Lows tonilht \n the 50s.
Higrut Wednesday in the
609.
i*ed to~ J18.Ull. . and later Potted ball. cent to tbe varloua obaraet
L~~---~---~~~~--~~~·~~--~-,--~~~~~ JZ ~·
.,
"
~,. ...... '""""
CBS newsman Dan Rather
.. .was held "prisoner" in a
· .. Chicago taxi when the ~.driver refused to let him out
:•and raced along at speeds
up to 75 mph until stopped
"by a police officer. The cab-
. · bie said Rather ref used to
: pay the fare.
,. ... ,,.Page :I I
iM»OLOGY. •
~1lbe Reagan election that the Unit-~~ States now possesses "a his-
. t.oric opportWlity'' to reshape its
foreign policy.
He said he believed that that
policy could be molded without
.d.ivisions in the population and
,,"without the guilt feelings of the
last ts years."
The former state secretary
made it clear that he believes that
the eountry must embark on a
stronger program of defense
spending and assuration of its role
as a major world power.
He said that no foreign country
should be permitted "to appeal to
us on a sense of guilt; that when
something is wrong, it must be
our fault."
"We will stop this never·never
land in which people are kicking •
us aroWld and then demand a re·
. .ward for kicking us around,"
Kissinger said.
, , Kissinger said that the next five
years will be extremely difficult
. ones for the United States "re-
. gardless of what happened in the
·election."
. During a press conference
·rollowing his remarks, Kissinger
, declined to state how he would
s uggest that pres ident-elect
-,.Reagan conduct his foreign
· ·~licy.
· '. Kissinger said that he had dis·
· cd.lsed with Reagan potential ap-
. 'pointments to the incomin1
cabinet but declined to elaborate
1 on what advice he gave the-
presidenl-elect.
As for his own possible future in
the Reagan administration. Kiss-
inger said, "l do not exl)t!ct to be
appointed. I constantly have
taken that position.··
In a humorous sidelight, Kiss-
inger said "president-e lect
Reagan said he wanted new faces.
but who am l to . . ·' and his voicf
trailed off.
Responding to other questions
Kissinger said that he was "de
lighted" with Reagan's election.
"I campaigned for him as I never
have before." Kissinger said.
f'ru• Page .\ I
SLAYING ...
and defense lawyer Leonard
Saaer both made mention of a
history of sometimes-violent
conflict b et w een the two
psychologists.
Testimony included Sager's
claim that in one violent episode
apparently sparked by Espin·
da's possessive jealousy that
Moore was forced to seek
• hospital treatment.
' He also made reference to
; damage lnflicted on the murder
: suspect's car as a result of a
! conflict over Moore's engage-
! ment to Glory Lane. • •
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
fM Or.,. (Mlt 0.Ht' Ptl•I• •lift •NCf\ I\
COf'\"lb1f'W4 ,,. N•w\ Pr•u '' O\lttll1fwd 11, t~
Or•"94 C.0.lt ,,.,.,.•tft•"O C.OMP.tft• ~t•t• MH~\ .,. puOU"'90 Mond•Y. UUovtft ftrtO.'
f4>f Co\ta ...... \4 Ht#~ 8t6<." HVfttl"'Ot~ •••<" Fownt•tn V•lt•Y. ''"''"• L•O'-"' l•H"' s..rt" Cotlt A Wftt .. ttO'Ol\•I ed41'-" " pivOU.,,.. s.two.n ,.,,_. SiwftO•f'1 Tft• .,-.M.~I
.voo._fllinQ P'~t 1\ •t l» Wnt I •• Mr .. t P 0 lex U60. CMLI -W. C..MOtf'H• .,.,.
11_'1 .. -Pu"~"' ·~ PyD11..,...,
,_, ..............
Ml"•Ol"f t:d.t0t
~HI.Ml
A\'h'-"' l'Mn ... "• ••1tot
otftoH c .......... uow ........... . ~!1!:(~~~:,; i.":.~ =~~.
Tel.,ttone (114)~1
CIHaHled AdYel'lllMt Ml•M71
Fremi.•c.ie-..lf ......
,....,.ti'
Saturn's
moon
snapped
a,. aoesaT SCHIE& __ o.lty ......
Voyaser I hurtled Just 2,soo miles above Saturn's moon,
Tlt&.1>. today, takiol photoe ol
the moon's dense oran1e at-
mosphere and speeding ever
closer to Saturn ltaelf,
Wednesday, the unmanned
space proble will reach the
cUmax of lt.s 38-month, blllion-
mUe trlp, nytng under the rtncs
of the banded gas giant to u -
plore the planet's churoln1
clouds from less than 80,000
miles away.
Voyager's cam e ras, radios
and oU>er scientific instruments
also will probe the mysteries of
Tethys, Mimas. Enceladus.
Costa Mesa ol tlte fll/ll,ure'/ A S&a•ford Uaheulty
grad•a&e, a.bert ~.._r .Is a
foartll year meclkal ahNleat at
UC rm., p..-rtJit &o be a radlologlat. Bia laterelt la
aatroaomy started la 1rade
acllool wllea lie wa&clled tlte
laaacl•l•I of ma•aed apace mcttta.
Thi~ is an ~ist:s conceptj~ofthe proposed
rapid transit line on Bristol Street going
through the South Coast Plaza area. The
rapid transit line would be elevated in some
areas to allow street traffic to now smoothly
(see story, PageA3).
Dione and Rhea, five of Saturn's
15 moons.
So far, Voyager's biggest
problem hasn't been the uncer-
tainties or s pace, but the
weather on Earth. Several hours
of data were lost last Saturday
when a rainstorm ~lacked out a
tracking station in Spain.
School closlligs
policy study set
But project scientist Ed Stone
at the chief monitoring site,
Pasadena's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory. said Monday that,
even if there is a similar oc-
curence during critical close en-
counters today and Wednesday,
"it will not be a disaster for any
of the science.
The versatile Voyager, he ex-
plained, has the ability to record
data for later playback and to
transmit information on more
than one channel.
The probe is continuing to
puzzle and delight researchers
with its often totally unexpected
results.
BARNES ...
and the Midwest lawyer said he
was surprised to hear tha~
Barnes was now practicing
medicine since he hadn't done so
before.
Questioned by Chief Deputy
District Altorne)' James Enright, D' Alessandro said he
contacted medical acboob in II·
linois and found no record of a
Gerald Barnes attending.
After talking with the clinic's
medical director and attorney.
D ·Alessandro confronted Barnes
with the information in the office
they shared.
D ·Alessandro said Barnes
wanted to know "why I didn't
come to him, how did I find out,
and who have I told. I asked Dr.
Barnes or Gerald Barnes not to
be something that he's not. And
he ended the conversation by
saying he was going home to kill
himself.
Before leaving that day -the
same day he was fired after
serving three years at the clinic
-Barnes told D'Alessandro that
"I had ruined his life. Then he
left the clinic."
D ·Alessandro said he then
made an anonymous call to the
state's Board of Medical Quality
Assurance reporting there was a
physician practicing medicine
without a license in Irvine.
Woman h~ld
on sex rap
A 33-year-old Costa Mesa
woman was arrested for suspi·
cion of pl'08titution Monday by
an undercover officer who al-
legedly paid for more than a
massage.
The investigator alleged he
was offered a sex act by Linda
Lee Lorenz, of 2001 Arnold Ave.,
in Steve's Hair HaRpening and
Spa at 1751 Newport Blvd.
Ms. Lorem was booked into
Costa Mesa City J all and later
freed on $500 bail.
Newport-Mesa School District
officials have scheduled a four-
hour study session Wednesday to
formulate policy for closing
down schools over the next five
years as enrollment continlleS to
decline. ·
f · rfu• 1•agr . I I
BOATING. • •
-Sales ud property laxes.
;::.J>MV fees and trailer boats.
Loam ud leases.
-Commercial parcllases,
manufacturing and office space.
The boating industry is
beneficial to local government
agencies as well, the supervisor
said.
Boat companies pay property
taxes and income taxes. and their employes pay property, income
and sales taxes .
The boa towner pays sales taxes
on his purchases and unsecured
property taxes on the boat -and
probably leases b1a slip from a
local qtnc:7J (Uueeured tax,.
are paid on auc:b lte~ aa boeta,
airplanes and business invent.or)'.
Secured taxes are paid on real
property, such as homes or busi-
nesses.
Riley said marine industry peo-
ple are becoming alarmed at the
exodus of local manufacturers to
Florida but said the answer is
simple.
"Comparin g the attitude and
pro-boating policies of Florida
coastal areas to those or Southern
Caltfomia are like comparing
night and day. Governmental of·
fictals in Florida welcome lbe
large ryvenue base and economic
growth that the boating industry
orrers .
1·r,u• Page .-1 I
SEWER ...
same persons opposing the plan
now.
The back bay line is needed.
sanitation officials said, because
the existing sewage pump sta-
tion is operating at seven times
its designed capacity, oc-
casieqlly spilling raw sewage
into Big Canyon.
Because or the overworked
pump station, Newport ~ity of·
ficials slapped a moratonum on
ne w building in the station's
service area until a new sewer
line Is built.
The back bay line, officials
note, not only would replace the
pump station but would have the
capac ity for serving up to
another 3,000 persons -more
than 1,000 new homes.
Some city watchdocs claim it is
this point, more than the environ·
m.ental concerns, that has
aroused opponent.a of the sewer
line.
Toast sty1ialed
WWI vet break1 tradition
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) -Clifford Wetzler was sup-,
posed to take a bottle of 1938 bourbon from its band-carved
cedar container today and drink a tout to dead World War I
comrades.
But he won't carry out the Veteran• D•Y ritual a&reed on 38
years aco by 12 World War I vetera.na. He no lonaer drinb.
Wetzler is tile last aurvivini member of a World War I Last
Man Club formed In UNI· Its tradition c.ited for blm to wieort a
sealed bottle of Cream of Kentucky: a 90-proof bourbon, and
to&1t blabuddlM,
But Wetaler, IQ. stopped clrtnkioC about 30 yean •IO· So he
pla.na to audioa the bottle and .Sve proceeda to the Caneer
Fund. Tbe veteran avl•tor said hll IClll and aeveral mea lD tbe
Lut Ila Club dled of caacer.
'
The 2 p.m. session at Harper
CommWlity Center, 425 E . 18th
St., Costa Mesa, will precede a
regular 7:30 p.m. board meeting
in which rules are expected to be
adopted for a citizens' school·
closure committee.
Tru.stess have been discussing
the impact of declining enroll·
menl tor two months.
Administrators contend that
one and possibly two elementary
schools should be closed before
next September.
Wednesday's session is ex-
pected to formulate long-range
policy for closures.
Trustees have been wreslllng
with options calling for moving
lower -grade pupils into high
school buildings as schools are
closed, or for closing down high
schools along with middle and
elementary schools .
Board pres ident Kenneth
Wayman told trustees two weeks
ago to begin gathering names to
make up the special seven-to-11
person school-closures commit·
tee.
That committee, mandated by
state law for formation before =can be •ut down, ll u -to .... tbe board re-
1ardine eventual use ol acboola
to be closed.
But. say administrators, the
committee also might be used in
recommending which schools
should close.
Tiiief seizes
city vehicle
Newport Beach police and city
officials are atiU lookin1 for a
municipal sedan valued at $6,000
that a burglar drove away from
it.s parking spot in the Marine
Departmeht garage Saturday.
Investigators say a beer bottle
left at the scene was used to
shatter a window in the garage
at 70 Newport Pier lo gain entry
to the building.
Once inside after squirming
through the window, the car
thief unlocked the garage door,
found the keys and drove away.
police said.
Frn• Page A I
HOTEL •. ·.
Maurer bad benefited from
$32,000 spent by Koll in the last
election.
The money was used to
bankroll an extensive advertis·
ing campaign aimed al ousting
fo rmer councilmen Paul
Ryckoff and Ray Williams, the
two men WtSealed by Cox and
Maurer.
Councilman Paul Hummel
proposed that the hotel plan be
delayed \Dltil a private law firm
could study lbe alleged conflict
of interest. He s aid he had
serious questions on City At·
tomey Hugh Coffin's legal opi-
nion, which cleared the way for
Cox and Maurer to vote.
Hummel's motion for a delay
was defeated.
Attorney Clement Shute,
representing SPON, said the
new reports prepared by city
planners to answer environmen-
tal questions ·were little more
than "a hastily put together cut
and paste job."
Shute, last month, successful·
ly urged the coWlcil to delay ac-
tion on the hotel until environ-
mental documents could be up-
dated to answer questions on
traffic and housing.
Rites slated
for victim
of slaying
Visitation was scheduled to-
day in St. Louis, Mo., for
Newport Beach murder victim
Dr. Stanley D. Espinda, with
Catholic funeral rites to follow
Wednesday in his home city.
Mass is scheduled at 10 a.m.
at the Epiphany of Our Lord
Church, followed by interment
at Resurrection Cemetery .in St.
Louis. Arrangements are being
bandied by Hoffmeister Colonial
Mortuary.
He leaves his parents, Dr. and
Mrs. Stanley V. Espinda ; a
brother Dr. Leonard L. Espin-
da; a nephew, Larry Eapinda
and a niece, Colleen Espinda, all
of St. Louis. '
The family suggests contribu·
lions to the USC Memorial Fund,
in care of Bob Jenkins, F.N.S.,
312 University Park, Los
Angeles, 93007, according to the
mortuary.
SpeiulinlJ
slashes
proposed
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Democrats oe tbe HoUle Budflt
Committee puahed tbroaO •
plan today to &Ive Pnt.a.nt-
elect R= tbe opportudJ -and tbil aUoa -to llff .. to
bla ea ..... p pledce 6f Ollltiq federal 1Dlftdln1. · Kep. Robert N. Giaimo, »-
Conn .• the committee tbalnnaa,
formally proposed u acnlla-tbe· board 2 percent apndlq
cut u part ot tbe blndlq federal
budcet ceWq for flaeal ltlL Be
denied • Republican leader's aa-
sertlon that the move amouhted
lo poUtical trickery .
It would be up to Reapn to
decide bow to make the cuts
after be takes oftlce in January.
··Adoption of my amendment
would allow the new preaident
the opportunity to' present Ids
proposed cuts to the new Cone~ in January," Giaimo
said MoodQ ... Ube were unable
to •chieve these cuta, pre-
sumably he would uk for an in-
crease in lbe spendini celliq."
Rent; trees
issues before
Irvine council
Proposed mobile home rent
controls and a eucalyptus tree
preservation policy will come
before the Jrvine City Council
for consideration tonight.
Councilman Larry Agro is
backlne the proposal to place a
10-percent ceiling on mobile-
home space rent increases in
Irvine. The ordinance would be
retroactive lo Oct. 1 and would
expire on Sept. 30, 1981.
He says the ordinance is
needed because of • 'uncons-
cionable" 17.S percent rent in·
creases inposed in October Oil
residents of the Meadows Mobile
Home Park, 14851 Jeffrey Road,
Irvine.
The park is primarily populat-
ed with senior citizens on fixed
incomes.
Another issue before the COUil·
cil involves 3,300 eucalyptus
trees in non-developed areas of
Irvine.
The council is expected to
adopt a ~l::+~ the trees, Tbe raol ..
fortll clear n pro. ceid--to be followed .,, ...
owaen wantlal to cut . 4oWD
euealpytaa treea and wotald
specify bow tbe trees should be•
maintained and irrigated.
Community members have
charged in the past that the pre-
sent eucal)'lltus tree preserva-
tion policy is \Dlclear and bas oc-
c u ionally been ignored· by
builders. Additionally, some
eucalyptus trees saved from im-
mediate destruction under the
present policy have died from
improper irrigation and main-
tenance.
Homeowner group
to elect officers
Mesa Del Mar Homeowners
Association will elect officers
Wednesday when it meets at
Davia lliddle School at 7 :30 p.m.
Maureen Di Domenico,
secretary of the Costa Mesa
group, said the meeting also will
emphasize a general
neigbborbood appearance drive.
. . r f !
i
I
'
TRANSACTIONS
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r.--. Nowember ''. itlO H I F
Bread eemp•rbea
·~~eri loses
fighting d esire
•
87 ll&TON llCRowrn
ITl"a O>atineatal 9U1a1, Ill.Iker of Weeder bread aod
Twlnkiet, amoq other babel delleaet., .... ma ao be tow
iAI ill nerve. Fortunately tbe &oup Ill)' OD tbe block, ~
Wied '° tbumb lta MM at crtuc:s •bo cb&rpd It WU \ID•
dermlni.Qs tbe nutrlt.Joa of Amerlcu c~.
But alt.er bariq lb DOM bloodMd ID le'leraJ en~ ten wit!J health aealoll, Owtinlatal Is now cro.1i.Q1
street to avoid 1ettln1 lDto aDOtMr f.ICb&.
Conllnental bas a 10-year record of contlab
aklrmllhea with the fl'ederal,...... Commiuioa and Mlf· •r.polated pardiaDI of 0U.C. bealtb. It WU forced to It.op
c almtnc that Wonder l• an enra aource of nutrltJon. !'r
It luld to 10 on TV
witb corrective ada
pointing out the reuoo
its Proftle bread mtaht be a diet aid Is simply
because it's sliced thin-
nn. And it had to con·
cede tbat the source of
Money
Tree
fiber in it.a Fresh Hori.zoos bread is wood p'1lp.
That's enough to cause someone to think, not to speak
of the unwant«I publicity it received in the tm trial of
Dan White for lbe murder of San Francisco Mayor George
Moscone Defense counsel told the jury that White's mind
was addled by heavy consumpUon of Twink.iea and other
highly au.gared product"
CON'11NENTAL WAS BACK to it.a old tricks th.la fall
when it introduced a new campaien for Wonder, which
reigns as the best·selling loatofbread ln America. Continen·
tal has long been pumpin1 vitamins lnto tbia sponey white
bread-andthiatimeitcame.upwitbthecrythatWonderbas
the " nutrition that even wholewheat can't beat."
As this rhythmic claim was being dinned into our ears,
figures darted across the television tube, citing U.S.
Department of Agriculture sources t-0 show that Wonder
bread bas more vitamin Bl, vitamin B2, niacin and calcium
than the average whole-wheat bread. Hence the proud
bout: ''nutrition that even whole Wheat can't beat.••
Continental was particularly contident of this ap-
proach because it had emerged from a competition con·
ducted earlier this year among advertising ~gencies invil·
ed to present new ideas for Wonder. The incumbent agen·
cy, Ted Bates, won out when Its whole·wheat comparison
idea scored the highest in cooaumer tests done by an out-
side research company.
HOWEVER, THE NEW Wonder bread campaign soon
attracted the attention of the Washington-based Center for
Science in the Public Interest. an old nemesis of Continen-
tal Baking. Michael F . Jacobson, executive director of this
center, quickly labeled the Wonder campaign deceptive,
pointing out that it talked about only four elements and left
unmentioned about a doten other nutrients that "are more
abundant in whole wheat than Wonder bread." Among
these nutrients are fiber, vitamin E , i.ron and protein.
J acobsoo therefore filed a formal complaint with the
Federal Trade Commission, asking that Continental be re-
quired to nm corrective advertising to clear up any COD·
fusion they may have left in the minds of consumers about
the nutritional superiority of Wonder bread.
Being the target of such a complaint is nothing new for
Cont.ineotal. But its response this time wu certainly dif.
ferent. lnatead of putting up it.a dukes, lt lnat.antly killed the
campaign comparint Wonder to whole wheat bread.
It didn't want to ftgbt anymore .
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WHAT &MEX DID
NEW YORK IAP) -10
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l'i.tl-~Ml'O lroy or H v.
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DAILY PI LOT
I I
•
0 ,.
;'J
SHOE
lty lrld A....... PEANUTS
I
l
Q·l
"I wlsh'you'd do your snooz.lng
somewhere else!"
TQatt( IS \fTEIANS DAV ...
tlJW AM J 61"*' MSE ON A MILL IAWTIN' ~
AAlllET AWJ 1MA1
lOUND·MEADED en
FUN'KY WINKERIEAN
r ~~r m 015C.055 l,>OOR
P.5.A.T. SlO«E5 WrTH CJOU, ·
Ff.)~~.
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
TH,Ar1S WH,AT C,A<JES
ARE FOR, FREDDY--
TO PROTECT YOLJ ·
FROM THE OUTSIDE
WORLD ...
, ... Qloc; ... ,_ .. ,_ ..... _
--~· .........
by Mell Luarius
§lrl1 l"MAT ~"-I •I!
l!Ai?IL..V el<PL.AINeD ...
~--_... --.
\-
by CMrlll M. Scllllll llG GEORGI
1rs EJIJ( 10 FMT
~SCX.WERl6ET! .
bJ Tom lltiuk
FrmN<7 Wl~BEAN IN
1ME NAME GRID!
DRAllLE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
~N AND MIKE HAIJE
BEEN l..OOKING AT
THOSE PUPPIES R>R
o~
M l ~.
DR. SMOCK
Yes, NUASI!,
OF COUASES ~CAN HAYe VIS l1'"0AS.'
THl~K I 'LL GO
SEE Wtm''S
l<EEf>\NG THEM
"He'll never let you forget he was 1 yell leader."
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
I I
by George Lemont
GOOP.' 'c.Ause: '"T"He:se w eAe
,-.OA 'IHe GAi.-IN 214 .A.NP SHE!
P IPN''"T" WAN1'" -rHeM /
!•.;THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane GORDO
II· I/
by Gus Arriol~ ~ ..
"look at that squirrel on the wire. He's
pretending he's a tightrope walker."
DENNIS THE MENACE
NANCY
NANCY, YOU
PROMISED ME NAVY
BEAN SOUP FOR "
LUNCH
-------OF THE !JEW
A.DolTIOAJ 10 -VU~
TIM PftACTICAU.Y OAVED MY LIFE!
CHET GRA~&eO ME &Y TJ.4E WR191',
~ TRYIN'1TOMAKEME00 UP
10 HI!; PLACE!
HEY···
WHATS
THE.
lDl!.A ~
we DIDN'T
HAVE ANY
NAVY BEANS,
ONLY GREEN
BEANS·--
>'OW!.{ TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZlE
ACROSS herbt
1 Guide 57 Carved 9/loe
5 Elec. units 58 Helmaman
9 Craa/l 59 Grade
14 Man's name 6 t Melody
15 Bibllcal man 62 Unique
t6 Celerity 63 Retleule
t 7 Otlcord deity 64 This. Sp
t8 Completed · 65 Oar1m1tt
19 Perlonner 66 Obllgalion
20 Garments 67 Fume
22 Aelallw DOWN
24 Cut up 1 Smtrils
28 Wheel pa11 2 Man's name
27 Enlafge 3 ExeuM
29 Swine genu• 4 Profane
30 Vitality 5 In addition
33 Keep afloat. 6 F11m sounds
2 words 7 Bl"teehel
37. Control 8 Lovesick
38 Bn.llMI looks:
39 Snort poem 2 words
40 Thlek 9 Hult
41 Lowly one 10 Papi« -
42 Plumb« 11 Wine city
44 Botn 12 Commuter
45 Allan coin plane
48 Tower 13 Ortw
41 Attack 21 Pipe
49 Glittera 23 Stream
53 Old WOl'ld 25 Grackle
UNITED FNture Syndicate•
Monday'• PuzzJe Solved
28 Shirked 4 5 Unruly one
30 Gamble' Bf 47 Glistened
31 lnttNd 48 Gladden
32 Fellow so MallrNt
33 Anon 51 -Cristo
34 T rlckery 52 Meat cut
35 Watet bird 53 Armadillo
38 Spigot 54 Storage pit
31 Withdrawer 55 Furrow
40 Telephones mlker
42 Muttlcotored 66 Rebu"
43 Vapor 60 Outfit